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ore than any other work of Richard Wagner, his Parsifal is a a
fine mélange , as the composer described one passage he had just composed for the
first act. All was grist to his mill: scenery that he had seen in Paris, costumes worn by
a chorus in London, characters from medieval and modern literature, poetry and prose,
tales from Europe and India. The many ingredients were stirred together and simmered for
twenty years before the result could be written down as the libretto of 1877. The range and variety of these ingredients can be
revealed by examining the composite personality of one of the central characters, Kundry.
In addition to a number of minor ones, it is possible to discern seven major components
in Wagner's Kundry. The following notes are
a summary of these components.
The Beautiful Maiden is Kundry transformed by the power of Klingsor, appearing after his magic maidens
have failed to seduce the future hero. The odd thing about this seduction scene is that
it is difficult to identify anything similar in Wagner's sources, thus it has naturally
been assumed that Wagner invented this scene out of whole cloth. However, a possible
inspiration for the scene is one of the books that Wagner left behind him in Dresden in
1849: a book by Rudolf von Ems, published in Leipzig five years earlier, which contains
the story of the saints Barlaam and Josaphat. Details in the story are
curiously similar to details of the second act of Parsifal. More about St. Josaphat and the Beautiful Maiden.
Condrie or Cundrie is of all characters in
Wolfram's Parzival, the most likely to have inspired Wagner in
creating Kundry. Wagner was scornful of
Wolfram's poem, but a few things stuck in my mind - the Good Friday, the wild appearance of Condrie. Beyond the similarity of name, however, they have
little in common whether of appearance, behaviour or incident. Kundry owes more to two other characters in Wolfram's poem: Orgeluse and Sigune. Condrie is the
loathly damsel, a character with her own literary tradition, which has been traced back
to her origin as the Sovereignty of the land. The loathly damsel has a double
character: she can appear either in her winter aspect as a repulsive hag, or in her
spring aspect as a beautiful maiden. The latter has been identified with the radiant
maiden who bears the Holy Grail. More
about Condrie and the Loathly Damsel.
Herodias is one of the names used by Klingsor in his invocation of Kundry at the start of the second act of Parsifal. Like the
young Parsifal, the wild woman has had
many names. While the other names might be unimportant, the name Herodias looks like it might be significant; it might even be Kundry's original name. As she reveals in
the final part of the second act, Kundry
has been cursed to wander ever since she laughed at the suffering of Jesus. Whilst it
is never stated that Kundry, perhaps in
the first of many lives, was of Jewish race, this is often inferred. Wagner's use of
the name Herodias seems to have been inspired by two
literary sources. One of them is Heine's poem Atta Troll, in
which the poet tells of his love for the princess of Judea, Herodias, who is dead and buried at Jerusalem. She now joins the
Wild Hunt, and with them, like Kundry in act one of Parsifal, laughing, rides across the sky.
Jede Nacht, an deiner Seite, Reit ich mit dem wilden Heere, Und wir kosen
und wir lachen Über meine tollen Reden. The other source was Sue's novel,
published in serial form, Le juif errant. The Wandering Jew of the
title, Ahasuerus, is accompanied by Herodias, who like him
is unable to find rest. More about Herodias.
Mary Magdalene is suggested by the actions of the penitent Kundry in the third act of Wagner's drama. In
late 1848 he had sketched a scenario for a play called Jesus of Nazareth,
which includes a scene in which the penitent Magdalen
kneels in repentance before Jesus on the shore of Lake Gennesareth; later in the play
she was to anoint his head and wash his feet, just as Kundry does toward Parsifal in the opera. There is an interesting parallel between the Magdalen, who desires to serve Jesus and the apostles, and
Prakriti, who wants to join the
community of Shakyamuni, the future Buddha. This desire to
serve is also a characteristic of the penitent Kundry; in fact her only words in the third act are dienen
-- dienen . More about Mary Magdalene.
Prakriti was to have been the principal female character in Wagner's
projected opera based on an Indian text, Die Sieger;
although he later changed the name of this character to Savitri, who was the heroine of
a different tale entirely. It is possible that one of the reasons for Wagner's failure
to make progress with Die Sieger was that many of his
ideas for Prakriti had been used in creating Kundry. In particular, the idea that Kundry is in some sense reborn, that she carries a burden of sins committed in a past life,
and the motif of mocking laughter that is, in Parsifal, an expression of
Schadenfreude, the opposite of Mitleid. More
about Prakriti.
Sigune is (in Wolfram) Parzival's cousin. In the earlier poem by Chrétien, where she is nameless, the hero-to-be meets her
only once; in Wolfram's poem the future hero encounters Sigune several times during the story at what appear to be
milestones in his spiritual development. It is Sigune who
tells Parzival of the death of his mother, and she either reveals to him or causes him to remember
his name. More about Sigune.
lesser
genius than Richard Wagner, starting from Wolfram's epic poem
Parzival, would have kept three distinct,
female characters: Orgeluse, Sigune
and Condrie. Wagner merged them into a single person; not
content with that, he spiced the mixture with characters from completely different
literary and religious traditions: a Chandala girl
from northeast India, a penitent Magdalen, an Indian princess sent to test the virtue of a Bodhisattva, and
Heine's princess of Judea. The result was Kundry.
This page last updated (added summary attributes; adjusted tagging) ---07/10/03
22:17:17---.
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