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Monsalvat: the Parsifal home page | Richard to Mathilde | Wagner's Letter |
Wagner on Parsifal | Vegetarianism and
Antivivisection
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Thus, because Christian morality leaves animals out of account ..., they are at once outlawed in philosophical morals; they are mere "things", mere means to any ends whatsoever. They can therefore be used for vivisection, hunting, coursing, bullfights and horse racing, and can be whipped to death as they struggle along with heavy carts of stone. Shame on such a morality that is worthy of pariahs, chandalas and mlechchhas, and that fails to recognize the eternal essence that exists in every living thing, and shines forth with inscrutable significance from all eyes that see the sun!
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Since compassion for animals is so intimately associated with goodness of character, it may be confidently asserted that whoever is cruel to animals cannot be a good man.
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The assumption that animals are without rights and the illusion that our treatment of them has no moral significance is a positively outrageous example of Western crudity and barbarity. Universal compassion is the only guarantee of morality.
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uring Friedrich Nietzsche's visits to Triebschen in 1869 Wagner, who was
otherwise impressed by Nietzsche, was scornful of the young professor's commitment to
vegetarianism; despite the fact that, under the influence of Mathilde
Wesendonk, he had already developed an interest in the rights of animals. Wagner had
learned from his mentor Schopenhauer that mankind was a species distinguished from other
animals only by our capacities for reason and compassion. It
was from sympathy with our fellow-creatures that Wagner progressed towards vegetarianism;
although he never became a total vegetarian. In 1879 he responded to an appeal for support from
the anti-vivisectionists:
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Parsifal Act 1 in the 1989 Bayreuth production by Wolfgang Wagner. Parsifal: William Pell, Gurnemanz: Hans Sotin. ©Bayreuther Festspiele.
[Richard Wagner to Ernst von Weber, author of The Torture-Chambers of
Science, 14 August 1879.]
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ere Wagner is
alluding to Schopenhauer's teaching that the best aspects of Christianity were those which it
shared with Buddhism and Hinduism, whereas the worst aspects of Christianity were those which
it had inherited from Judaism. These latter included the Judaeo-Christian attitude to animals,
which in the Old Testament (Genesis 9 v2) had been given by Yahweh into the stewardship of Noah
and his descendants. For Schopenhauer and therefore also for his disciple Wagner, the idea that
men could deal with other animals (including birds and fishes) as they liked, as if animals
were things rather than conscious beings, was abhorrent.
The world is not a piece of machinery and animals are not articles manufactured for our use. Such views should be left to synagogues and philosophical lecture-rooms, which in essence are not so very different.
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n October of
the same year, Wagner penned an article for the Bayreuther Blätter, where it
appeared under the title of, An Open Letter to Hr. Ernst von Weber:
When first it dawned on human wisdom that the same thing breathed in animals as in mankind, it appeared too late to avert the curse which, ranging ourselves with the beasts of prey, we seemed to have called down upon us through the taste of animal food: disease and misery of every kind, to which we did not see mere vegetable-eating men exposed. The insight thus obtained led further to the consciousness of a deep-seated guilt in our earthly being: it moved those fully seized therewith to turn aside from all that stirs the passions, through free-willed poverty and total abstinence from animal food... In our days it required the instruction of a philosopher who fought with dogged ruthlessness against all cant and all pretence, to prove the compassion deep-seated in the human breast the only true foundation of morality... For our conclusion should be couched as follows:- That human dignity begins to assert itself only at the point where Man is distinguishable from the Beast by compassion for it, since compassion for man we ourselves may learn from the animals when treated reasonably and as becomes a human being.
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ven if
Wagner's endorsement of vegetarianism and opposition to vivisection postdates the completion of
his text for Parsifal, there is a connection. In the passage quoted above Wagner
refers to Schopenhauer's ethics (which Wagner had absorbed in the 1850's); in which it is
argued that compassion or sympathy is the only true
foundation of morality
. This teaching lies behind the text and dramatic action of
Parsifal, as can be seen in the incident of the wounded swan in the first act. Gurnemanz accuses Parsifal not merely of killing a
creature for sport but of murder; this tells us that here, in the domain of
the Grail, all creatures are accorded equal respect with humans. The
old knight shows Parsifal the suffering that he has caused; he makes him look upon the face of
the dying swan. By doing so he prompts Parsifal to feel shame at his
misdeed and compassion for the fellow-creature whom he has
harmed. With the first stirrings of his compassion Wagner's
Parsifal takes a first step towards enlightenment. While the libretto of Parsifal
opposes the killing of animals, it does not (as some commentators have claimed) advocate
vegetarianism. The Grail knights eat neither animals nor plants, while they are nourished by
the divine food provided by the Grail. When Amfortas denies them that nourishment, they resort
to eating roots and herbs, not from choice but of necessity.