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vy-laden heart. When his friends need comfort he recommends a retreat to nature. Nearly every summer he leaves hot and dusty Vienna and seeks a quiet spot in the beautiful neighborhood. To call a retired and reposeful little spot his own is his burning desire. 12. On the Kahlenberg, 1812, end of September: Almighty One In the woods I am blessed. Happy every one In the woods. Every tree speaks Through Thee. O God! What glory in the Woodland. On the Heights is Peace,-- Peace to serve Him-- (This poetic exclamation, accompanied by a few notes, is on a page of music paper owned by Joseph Joachim.) 13. "How happy I am to be able to wander among bushes and herbs, under trees and over rocks; no man can love the country as I love it. Woods, trees and rocks send back the echo that man desires." (To Baroness von Drossdick.) 14. "O God! send your glance into beautiful nature and comfort your moody thoughts touching that which must be." (To the "Immortal Beloved," July 6, in the morning.) [Thayer has spoiled the story so long believed, and still spooking in the books of careless writers, that the "Immortal Beloved" was the Countess Giulietta Guicciardi, to whom the C-sharp minor sonata is dedicated. The real person to whom the love-letters were addressed was the Countess Brunswick to whom Beethoven was engaged to be married when he composed the fourth Symphony. H. E. K.] 15. "My miserable hearing does not trouble me here. In the country it seems as if every tree said to me: 'Holy! holy!' Who can give complete expression to the ecstasy of the woods! O, the sweet stillness of the woods!" (July, 1814; he had gone to Baden after the benefit performance of "Fidelio.") 16. "My fatherland, the beautiful locality in which I saw the light of the world, appears before me vividly and just as beautiful as when I left you; I shall count it the happiest experience of my life when I shall again be able to see you, and greet our Father Rhine." (Vienna, June 29, to Wegeler, in Bonn.) [In 1825 Beethoven said to his pupil Ries, "Fare well in the Rhine country which is ever dear to me," and in 1826 wrote to Schott, the publisher in Mayence, about the "Rhine country which I so long to see again."] 17. "Bruhl, at 'The Lamb'
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