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Monsalvat: the Parsifal home page | Prose draft of 1865 | Act 2 page 1 | page 2 | page 3 | Notes on Act 2
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agner added
the following, probably a few days later, to the last paragraph of the draft of Act 2: it is
the spear with which Longinus had once wounded the Redeemer in the
side, and of which, as a very valuable means to magic, Klingsor had possessed himself.
ike
Tennyson's Lady of Shalott, Klingsor experiences the world not
face to face, but as reflections in a mirror. In his magic mirror, Klingsor sees Parsifal approach his
castle of maidens. The mirror is a device or instrument for seeing at a distance.
he
inspiration for this element of Klingsor's domain seems to
have been the marvellous pillar of the castle of marvels in Wolfram's Parzival, which
had been brought from the Orient by the magician Clinschor. Like Klingsor's mirror, in Clinschor's pillar one could see for miles
around the castle.
[Parzival, book XI]
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he wonderful
pillar is one of many oriental elements in Wolfram's story. It has been suggested that the
original pillar was, at the time when Wolfram wrote his story, a wonder of the Hindu city of
Ajmer, which was then ruled by the young queen Samyogita (possibly Wolfram's Secundille). This polished iron column, dated to the
fourth century of the Christian era, can now be seen outside a mosque in Delhi, the
Qutb-Minar.
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The Significance of the Kiss
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My dearest friend, how can I speak of such profound matters except in a simile, by means of a comparison? But only the clairvoyant can say what its inner meaning may be. Adam - Eve - Christ. - How would it be if we were to add to them: - 'Anfortas - Kundry: Parzival" ? But with considerable caution!
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The kiss which causes Anfortas to fall into sin, awakens in Parzival a full awareness of that sin, not as his own sin but as that of the grievously afflicted Anfortas whose lamentations he had heard only dully, but the cause of which now dawns upon him in all its brightness, through his sharing the feeling of sin: with the speed of lightning he said to himself, as it were: 'ah! that is the poison that causes him to sicken, whose grief I did not understand until now!' - Thus he knows more that all the others, more, especially than all the assembled Knights of the Grail who continued to think that Anfortas was complaining merely of the spear-wound! Parzival now sees deeper ..."
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ith the
words, Love sends you now a mother's blessing, greets a son with Love's first kiss!
, Kundry kisses Parsifal, who reacts
with revulsion. Up to this point, his thoughts have been concerned with his mother, of whom Kundry has awakened memories; now those thoughts are swept aside by
a revelatory insight, Welthellsicht, and suddenly his overriding concern is for Amfortas and his wound. Deep within, he remembers the strange and
terrible cries he heard in the hall of the Grail, and he sees the wound
bleeding. Then he realises that the pain he experiences is not that of Amfortas but his own. He sees that the burden of guilt is upon him
alone; he cries out to the Redeemer, Erlöser! Heiland!
Parsifal must now suffer and perform deeds of compassion and courage
before he can bring healing to the Grail king.
n the third
act, Kundry's kiss is returned. Wagner may have found the
inspiration for this scene in Wolfram's poem. Although what happens
there is quite different: after years of wandering, Parzival
has arrived at the court of King Arthur. Once before, Condrie had appeared at the same
court and cursed Parzival for his silence at the Grail Castle. Now she appears again, this time begging forgiveness. Condrie kneels before Parzival and
through her tears asks him to forgive her without a kiss of reconciliation. When he has
forgiven her, she stands up, casts aside her veil and declares that Parzival is to heal Anfortas and then
take his place as king of the Grail. In Wagner's version, the
recognition that Parsifal is to bring healing and then become
king is transferred to Gurnemanz and Kundry is mute. As in Wolfram, Kundry weeps, but first she receives a
kiss of forgiveness.