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Monsalvat: the Parsifal home page | Buddhism | Wagner's Nirvana
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I have now become exclusively preoccupied with a man who -- albeit only in literary form -- has entered my lonely life like a gift from heaven. It is Arthur Schopenhauer, the greatest philosopher since Kant, whose ideas -- as he himself puts it -- he is the first person to think through to their logical conclusion. The German professors have -- very wisely -- ignored him for 40 years; he was recently rediscovered -- to Germany's shame -- by an English critic. What charlatans all these Hegels etc. are beside him! His principal idea, the final denial of the will to live, is of terrible seriousness, but it is uniquely redeeming. Of course it did not strike me as anything new, and nobody can think such a thought if he has not already lived it. But it was this philosopher who first awakened the idea in me with such clarity. When I think back on the storms that have buffeted my heart and on its convulsive efforts to cling to some hope in life -- against my own better judgement -- indeed, now that these storms have swelled so often to the fury of a tempest, -- I have yet found a sedative which has finally helped me to sleep at night: it is the sincere and heartfelt yearning for death: total unconsciousness, complete annihilation, the end of all dreams -- the only ultimate redemption!
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Without Schopenhauer the creation of Tristan und Isolde and Parsifal is unthinkable, out of the question, for essential to their substance are metaphysical insights which Wagner had indeed absorbed into his living tissue and made authentically his own but which he would have been wholly incapable of arriving at by himself.
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Several scholars have shown that seeds of the love tragedy theme -- of the profound, often perplexing, Eros renunciation interplay -- were present in Wagner's works long before he had read Schopenhauer, Burnouf or Köppen.
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Renunciation in one form or another runs through all Wagner's works from The Flying Dutchman to Parsifal. The Dutchman gains redemption, according to Wagner's explanation of the plot, "through a woman who shall sacrifice herself for the love of him. Thus it is the yearning for death that spurs him on to seek this woman."
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Wagner formulates two different answers to unattainable love: union and fulfilment in death as in Tristan und Isolde, and complete renunciation and union on a higher plane as in Die Sieger.
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n the final
act of Die Sieger, the Chandala girl Prakriti is offered a difficult choice by the Buddha (Gautama Shakyamuni). For
the first time the Buddha will accept a woman into the religious community, if Prakriti will accept a life of chastity and humility.
So she can join her beloved Ananda, but only
after she has renounced sex. Prakriti chooses
renunciation so that she can be with Ananda, not
as his wife or lover, but as a sister. (Later, for no obvious reason, Wagner changed the name
of the character to Savitri, the name of the heroine of an entirely separate story.)
Köppen's account of the Buddha's decision to admit women into the order stressed the Buddha's initial refusal and the role played by Ananda in causing him to reverse that prohibition. Wagner chose to see in this final decision the [final] perfection of the Buddha himself -- the redeemer redeemed -- "one final advance to consummate perfection. Ananda, standing nearer to life as yet, and directly affected by the young Chandala maiden's impetuous love, becomes the medium of this last perfecting".
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In the words quoted above, written to Mathilde Wesendonk, Wagner means, beyond any doubt, the perfection of wisdom (prajñápáramitá) which his (fictional) Buddha Shakyamuni obtains through compassion for the outcast maiden Prakriti.
It is a beautiful feature in the legend, that shows the Victoriously Perfect [
der Siegreich Vollendete] at last determined to admit the woman. [In the margin:] Love -- Tragedy.![]()
Where Schopenhauer advocates withdrawal and non-cooperation in order to impose one's own meaning on the essential meaninglessness of life, Wagner's lovers rush to embrace this will with such abandon and vigour that it is difficult to tell whether the force is overcoming the individuals or the individuals are momentarily mastering the force.
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For much of the time when Tristan and Isolde are not narrating or recalling they are gasping their longing for one another. The German word for longing (Sehnen, with a capital as a noun and a small 's' as a verb) provides the focal concept of the Tristan libretto in the same way as Mitleid ('compassion') is the focal concept of the Parsifal libretto; and in each case there is an elaborate substructure underpinning it in the form of Schopenhauer's philosophy, for longing is the key concept of Schopenhauer's metaphysics of existence, and compassion the key concept of his ethics.
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n what many
have regarded as Wagner's most Schopenhauerian work, Tristan und Isolde, the
composer worked out his derivative of Schopenhauer's philosophy.
Here is the romantic death- wish, again, expanded into a philosophy or even perhaps, as Michael Tanner has suggested, a religion. Although there is no
obvious Indian model for any of the text, Isolde's ecstatic transfiguration, with which the
work ends, uses (like the 1856 ending of Götterdämmerung) language strongly
suggesting the influence of Indian religious literature and Buddhist or Brahmin concepts of
deliverance.
t is a
frequently encountered view of Wagner's engagement with the ideas of Schopenhauer and Indian religion respectively, that
sees Tristan und Isolde as the drama most affected by these influences. Even in Guy R. Welbon's study, it is Tristan that is Welbon's
focus of attention when he discusses Wagner. Bryan Magee's recent comment, above, redresses the
balance. Schopenhauer was equally important as the inspiration for
Tristan and for Parsifal, although in the latter case Burnouf and Wolfram too were key elements at the
creative moment. As Bryan Magee knows, Schopenhauer insisted that
his metaphysics and his ethics were inseparable. It should be noted that the key difference
between Tristan and Parsifal is one of emphasis: where the former emphasizes
metaphysical ideas, the latter emphasizes ethical ideas. Specifically, those of Schopenhauer's essay On the Basis of Morality, in which, as Magee
remarked above, the key concept of his ethics is compassion.
t might also
be argued that there are no specifically Buddhist ideas in Tristan. Both Günter
Lanczkowski and Guy R.
Welbon have suggested that there are, while Carl Suneson was
sceptical. On internal evidence alone, it is not clear whether either Tristan or Isolde find
deliverance at the end of the drama, and perhaps Wagner did not consider the question
important. The subject of his Tristan und Isolde is not salvation but the suffering
caused by the desire for extinction. Whether that deliverance or extinction takes the form of
absorption into Brahman or transition into nirvana is unimportant, in the context of
the drama. From a remark that Wagner made to Cosima many years later, that Kundry had undergone
Isolde's transfiguration a thousand times, it would appear that he had reached the view that
Isolde had not yet escaped from samsara, which in notes in the Brown Book he equated to the realm of day; in contrast,
nirvana was the realm of night. So there is sufficient evidence from which to conclude
that, if not during the composition of Tristan und Isolde then at least in reflecting
on it later, Wagner thought of Tristan yearning for nirvana¹,
the realm of night.
agner's
Parsifal deals with (among other Buddhist concepts) samsara (the cycle of
rebirth, which can be heard in the music of Kundry) and deliverance or redemption from this
cycle of rebirth. In one passage in the second act, after the critical kiss, Kundry and
Parsifal speak of desire as burning. In his Fire Sermon
the Buddha used burning as a metaphor for suffering. In the most widely accepted etymology of
nirvana, the word means blowing out, as in the blowing out of a flame. Therefore, at
least on etymological arguments, nirvana is the end of suffering, the blowing out of
the flame when it is no longer fuelled by ignorance and desire. In Parsifal there is
more than a hint of a sub-text about nirvana. It is difficult to avoid the conclusion
that, unlike Isolde, Kundry is released from samsara into nirvana, not by her
own efforts but by the intervention of a Bodhisattva, that is, Parsifal.
The bodhisattva doctrine includes a description of the transfer of merit [Sanskrit: punya] from a bodhisattva to those in need of help. The being who receives this help is freed from further rebirth and the consequences of their actions in earlier lives, karma, are not brought to maturity but absorbed in the depths of the bodhisattva's boundless sea of mercy.
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sthoff is surely right when he says of Kundry: her deliverance
[Erlösung] is extinction in the Buddhist sense
. None of the other commentators on
Parsifal have given this sub-text any attention. Reciprocally, it is the compassion
awakened in Parsifal by Kundry, in exact analogy to Wagner's treatment of the Buddha and
Prakriti, that brings to Parsifal the medium of his last perfecting.