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Monsalvat: the Parsifal home page |
Prose draft of 1865
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n view of the speed with
which it was written this Prose Draft, dated 27-30 August 1865, cannot have been the first of
Wagner's outlines for Parsifal. There is evidence that an earlier sketch was written in 1857. In his autobiography Mein Leben, Wagner describes the April (or it might have been
early May) morning in 1857 on which he was reminded of the Good Friday
passage in Wolfram's Parzival:
Ever since that stay in Marienbad, where I had conceived Die Meistersinger and Lohengrin, I had not taken another look at that poem; now its ideality came to me in overwhelming form, and from the idea of Good Friday I quickly sketched out an entire drama in three acts.
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We owe the resumption of the work to king Ludwig: from 27 to 30 August 1865 the Parzival-poem was written down in the earliest version known today. The appearance of the young king, who entered the circle of friends of Wagner's Parzival [as the drama and its central character were called at this stage], gave life and warmth to the form of Wolfram's poem. Now there was a kind of reconciliation between Amfortas-Tristan [who had begun to dominate the developing scenario] and the young prince, who moved into the center of the action. Wagner was still in a state of shock following the sudden death of his first Tristan, Ludwig Schnorr von Carolsfeld, on 21 July 1865 in Dresden. Work on Parzival gave Wagner release from grim reality:
that was help in needare the words with which the Master concluded the draft of Parzival. The contents of this draft match almost exactly those of the finished drama, although it begins with background details that were provided for the benefit of the king. These would be compressed in the drama.![]()
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