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[Mahler, Gustav. (1860–1911)] Rothberger, Alfred. (1873–1932). Silver Restrike Portrait Medal.
Sterling silver restrike of the Alfred Rothberger medal of Gustav Mahler, cast in Mexico in 1960 for the 100th anniversary of Mahler's birth. Obverse: portrait bust, text: "Año Mahler - Mexico 1960 / Gustav Mahler." Reverse: leaves, text: "Mi dia llegara" (My time will come).  49mm diameter.  Fine.

The oft-quoted remark "My time will yet come" originally appeared in a letter of 31 January 1902 to his fiancée, Alma Schindler. Mahler had just conducted the première of Richard Strauss’s opera Feuersnot at the Vienna Court Opera and had then gone to Semmering, just outside Vienna, for a short period of rest, apparently especially to get away from Strauss and his wife, Pauline de Ahna. "…the whole evening was unsatisfactory for me. The atmosphere that Strauss radiates around him is so disillusioning — one really loses contact with oneself. If these are the fruits that hang on a tree — how can one love the tree? You have hit the bull’s eye with your remark about him. And I am really proud of it, that you hit the truth so spontaneously. Is it not better to eat the bread of poverty together and walk in the light, rather than lose oneself thus in the dirt! The time will come, when men will see the chaff separated from the wheat — and my time will come when his is up…”

[Mahler, Gustav. (1860–1911)] Rothberger, Alfred. (1873–1932) Silver Restrike Portrait Medal

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[Mahler, Gustav. (1860–1911)] Rothberger, Alfred. (1873–1932). Silver Restrike Portrait Medal.
Sterling silver restrike of the Alfred Rothberger medal of Gustav Mahler, cast in Mexico in 1960 for the 100th anniversary of Mahler's birth. Obverse: portrait bust, text: "Año Mahler - Mexico 1960 / Gustav Mahler." Reverse: leaves, text: "Mi dia llegara" (My time will come).  49mm diameter.  Fine.

The oft-quoted remark "My time will yet come" originally appeared in a letter of 31 January 1902 to his fiancée, Alma Schindler. Mahler had just conducted the première of Richard Strauss’s opera Feuersnot at the Vienna Court Opera and had then gone to Semmering, just outside Vienna, for a short period of rest, apparently especially to get away from Strauss and his wife, Pauline de Ahna. "…the whole evening was unsatisfactory for me. The atmosphere that Strauss radiates around him is so disillusioning — one really loses contact with oneself. If these are the fruits that hang on a tree — how can one love the tree? You have hit the bull’s eye with your remark about him. And I am really proud of it, that you hit the truth so spontaneously. Is it not better to eat the bread of poverty together and walk in the light, rather than lose oneself thus in the dirt! The time will come, when men will see the chaff separated from the wheat — and my time will come when his is up…”