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![]() Above: "This is Klingsor's magic castle. Concerning this sorcerer dark things are said. No one has seen him: he is known only by his power. That power is magic. The castle is his work, raised miraculously in what was previously a desolate place with only a hermit's hut upon it." (Wagner's 1865 Prose Draft) |
ith the
Second Act we reach the most important deviation which Wagner has made from the original form
of the story; the substitution of a sharp and sudden test of his hero's purity and
steadfastness, for the long period of trial and slow development which the poem assigns to
him. There is no doubt that, dramatically, the story gains much by the change, but as regards
the character of the hero himself the advantage is not so obvious...
n the
Parzival Klingsor never appears personally; he is
lord of the Château Merveil, that mysterious Magic Castle which in one form or another
appears so often in the Grail legends, and which in the poem seems to
be regarded rather as a parallel to the Grail Castle than its
opposite, as suggested in the drama. It is not Klingsor and
his captives, but King Arthur and his court who, in the
Parzival, form the worldly and carnal foil to the spiritual conception of the Grail and its knights.
he
character of Klingsor is, so far as we can tell, peculiar to
the German version of the legend. One of the continuators of the Conte del Graal
relates the story of a certain King Carduel of Nantes and a magician, which, in some
features, strongly resembles the account given by Wolfram of Klingsor; but this is the only parallel, and the name appears
nowhere save in the Parzival. But for some reason difficult to discover the
character took a strong hold of the popular mind, and Wolfram's
magician seems to have become in the eyes of medieval German writers as real and historical
as Wolfram himself. In the Wartburgkrieg both are
represented as taking part, and engaging in a riddling contest, in which Wolfram, as he certainly ought to do, proves victorious. One tradition even
represents Klingsor as a bishop -- a
curious transformation!
ut nowhere
does Klingsor appear as of so really evil character as he
does in the drama. Immoral as he is, and to a certain degree revengeful, as his dealings in
magic are by Wolfram, as by Wagner, ascribed to his desire to
avenge his own well-deserved punishment upon others; but the dwellers in his Magic Castle are
surrounded by luxury and splendour, and have nothing, save their separation from their
friends, to complain of. Nor are they other than innocent in life. Orgeluse expressly states that Klingsor is both wise and courteous, and, moreover, strictly
observant of his pledged word. For the dramatic presentment of Klingsor as an embodiment of evil, the sworn foe and opponent of the
Grail king and his knights, Wagner is alone responsible: the Perceval legend has no traditional villain like Regin or Hagen in
the Siegfried saga.
or is the
Kondrie of the poem as closely connected with the magician --
true, she visits the Magic Castle, but it is apparently at her own free will that she comes
and goes; nor does Klingsor appear to be resident there. But
the parallel of Kundry as represented in the drama will be
sought for in vain elsewhere; the elements of her many-sided character are indeed present in
the legend, but to Wagner alone belongs the credit of having combined these scattered
indications in a creation neither out of harmony with itself nor with its original elements
-- a conception as artistically true as it is dramatically powerful... For the rightful
understanding of so complex a personality we must look beyond the poem which was Wagner's
ostensible source, though we shall find that much is due to the indications of the
Parzival, utilised by the dramatist with rare skill. Wagner's Kundry represents alike Wolfram's Kondrie, the loathly messenger of the Grail,
and the Lady Orgeluse, the sometime love of Anfortas, in whose service he received his incurable wound, who
offers herself to Parzival (who alone, of all knights,
refuses to serve her for such guerdon), and finally marries Gawain. The messenger of the Grail figures in
several versions of the story, her appearance being far more repulsive than could be
represented on the stage, and in more than one instance we find that this hideous aspect is
simply the result of a spell, and when the hero achieves the quest the damsel is released and
transformed into surpassing beauty. The fact that Wolfram knows of
a second Kondrie, Gawain's
sister, resident in the Magic Castle, who is 'Kondrie la
Belle', seems to indicate that the Kondrie of the
Parzival, too, had originally this double character.
hat Orgeluse, though clearly distinct from Kondrie, has also a supernatural origin, appears probably, both from
her surpassing beauty and the fact that Gawain finds her
beside a spring of water (a very general indication of the fairy nature of the lady), and
also from her close connection with the Magic Castle... Therefore, in representing Kundry both as undergoing transformation from extreme ugliness to
brilliant beauty, and as closely and intimately connected with Klingsor and his castle, Wagner is in all probability reproducing
features which, if not originally united in the same person, are yet a very old and integral
part of the legend. But into this strange personality of Kundry are interwoven other elements, foreign to the Perceval legend, yet of great antiquity, and calculated to emphasise
at once her unearthly nature and her close connection with the spiritual significance of the
drama.
he names by
which Klingsor invokes his slumbering tool -- Herodias, Gundryggia -- point
clearly to the mythical element in her character. Both names are known in Germany as
appellations of the Wild Huntress: Gundryggia or Gundr is
also the name of one of the Valkyrie, otherwise there appears to be no special legend
attached to the character; but with Herodias this is not the
case. There is a weird story which relates how the enmity of Herod's
queen towards John the Baptist was really caused by the saint's
rejection of her proffered love. When after death she would have covered the severed head
with tears and kisses, it recoiled, and from the dead lips issued a blast of wind so powerful
that Herodias was carried away by it, and like Dante's
sinful lovers sweeps for ever onward before its resistless force. This curious legend appears
to owe its origin to a misunderstanding of Hrödes, one of the many names of Wotan, who, in his elementary character of the air, is the original Wild
Huntsman. Among the many explanations traditionally given of the object of this
mysterious chase we find the god represented as pursuing his flying bride; and vice- versa
the deserted goddess seeking her lost husband. This chase being closely associated with St.
John's (Midsummer) Day, the remembrance of the saint, coupled with the misunderstanding of
the name, probably contributed to the evolution of this quaint legend (author's footnote: cf.
Simrock, Deutsche Mythologie, 'Herodias').
he effect
of the introduction of this mythical element, so far as the drama is concerned, is to
heighten the interest of the struggle between Kundry and Parsifal, which becomes not merely the struggle between evil
and good, but specifically the struggle between evil and good as represented by paganism and
Christianity. Heathen and Christian myth are here brought into
sharp opposition, the powers of the elements, the earliest object of worship, with the fully
developed and mystical Christianity
symbolised by the Grail.
he fact
that Wagner hints at a legend similar to that of the Wandering Jew
as connected with Kundry emphasizes the identification which
the name of Herodias has suggested; students of mythology
will be well aware that there is a common origin for the two legends, and the 'Ewige Jude' and the 'Ewige Jäger' are, to say the least, very near
relations. If Wagner, in adopting and laying such stress upon the temptation incident, has
departed somewhat from the older form of the Perceval
legend, if we must look for the poet's type of his hero rather in Galahad than in Parzival, it cannot be denied that he has treated the episode with a
force and genius which raise it immeasurably above the level of any of the trials besetting
the hero of the later Grail legends, and this gain in interest is
undoubtedly due to the greater prominence given to the character of Kundry. The conception of this wonderful Second Act may throughout be
considered as the work of Wagner's genius; there are certainly hints and suggestions in Wolfram's poem which doubtless gave to Wagner the impulse of casting
his drama in the particular form he chose, but they are but hints, and only a great dramatic
genius could have made such use of them.
n the
episode of Gawain and Orgeluse the lady bids the enamoured knight fetch her steed from a
garden where it is tied beneath a tree, but to take no heed of any warning addressed to him
by those within:
There he saw many a maiden, and knights so brave and young, And within that goodly garden so gaily they danced and sung... They cared for that lovely garden, on the greensward they stood or lay, Or sat 'neath the tents whose shadow was cool 'gainst the sunlight's ray.
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- but the garden has no connection with the Magic Castle, nor are the dwellers in it other than 'good men and true'. We are told of no garden round the Château Merveil, and the introduction of the magic element and the Flower Maidens into this version of the legend is due to Wagner alone. But when we consider the symbolical nature of the drama, and the typical nature of the hero, so strongly emphasized in the last Act, we cannot but feel that there is a dramatic significance and propriety in Wagner's choice of the scene of Parsifal's trial which cannot be overlooked. Old theologians were wont to dwell lovingly upon the fact that a garden was the scene alike of man's Fall and of his Redemption; what more fitting than that Parsifal, the type [in the theological sense] of the Saviour of mankind, should be tempted, and conquer, in a garden? And here we touch what is the real inwardness, and to many minds will form the undying fascination, of this great drama, viz. the spiritual significance which Wagner has attached to the character of Parsifal; the mystical presentation of his legendary healing task; the identification of the hero of the Grail quest as a type of Christ.
hat led
Wagner so to remodel the legend? In the first place his aim was undoubtedly philosophical;
deeply impressed by Schopenhauer's philosophy, he was desirous of embodying in dramatic form
certain of the leading principles, or formulae, of that philosophy. One of these, the
renunciation of the will to live
, in other words, the sacrifice of self for the sake of
another = altruism, lies at the basis of Wagner's conception of the drama.
ut why did
his choice fall on this special legend, and why did he select its hero as his knight of
compassion
, type of the only perfect sympathy and self- renunciation the world has known?
Here we must give to Wolfram von Eschenbach his true meed of
honour; it was his genius which has impressed on the hero of the Grail quest those characteristics which rendered him the fitting medium for
Wagner's message to the world.
he Good Friday meeting with the Hermit is undoubtedly part of the traditional
story, and occurs both in the Welsh and in more than one French version; but nowhere is the
incident treated so fully, or with such solemnity and dignity, as in the Parzival.
Wolfram devotes the longest and, on the whole, the finest of his
sixteen books (the ninth) to this episode, putting into Trevrezent's mouth a full account of the Grail (paralleled by Gurnemanz's recital in
the First Act), besides an exposition of the plan of salvation, extremely characteristic of
the theological teaching of the day.
here are,
however, important differences here between poem and drama; Kondrie does not appear [on Good Friday] in
the former, and Gurnemanz fills the rôle not only of
Trevrezent but also of the pilgrim knight who directs Parzival to the Hermit's cell. The reproach which Gurnemanz addresses to Parsifal,
for bearing arms on Good Friday, is in the poem spoken by the
knight. An essential difference, too, is found in the fact that is in this concluding Act
that the spiritual significance of the hero's character and career becomes clearly manifest;
here Parsifal is no longer, as in the poem, the absolved,
but the absolver, and as a consequence of this change the entire Good
Friday scene, as rendered by Wagner, is touched with a mystical beauty and tenderness
which are indescribable, and have no dramatic parallel -- it is, emphatically,
Charfreitags Zauber.
he closing
scene of the drama owes its suggestion directly to the poem. In a fine passage at the
commencement of the last Book, Anfortas, despairing of cure,
demands death at the hand of his knights, and reproaches them bitterly when, relying on the
succour promised by the Grail, they refuse to yield to his prayers.
He attempts to bring himself to bring about the desired result by closing his eyes for eight
days to the life-giving sight of the Grail, for it is one of the
special features of the Grail as described by Wolfram that none beholding it can die within eight days of the sight. But
bodily weakness conquers Anfortas' will; when borne by his
knights before the Grail he cannot keep his eyes closed, and is
therefore preserved in life till the coming of Parzival. It
will be understood from this that the Grail is not veiled as in the
drama, and neither Titurel nor the Grail knights are therefore involved, save through sympathy, in the tragedy
of the king's suffering.
t is
somewhat difficult to understand why Titurel, who beholds the
Grail equally with the other inhabitants of the castle, should be
represented by Wolfram as in extreme old age, while the other
members of the family, Anfortas himself and Repanse de Schoie, retain their youthful beauty. The reason probably
is that the character was an original part of the story, and did not undergo modification
with the varied developments of the Grail talisman.
n the
healing of Amfortas the different character ascribed in the
poem and drama to the weapon with which he was wounded naturally affects the situation. The
king, healed in the drama by the touch of the Spear, is, in the
legend, healed by the mysterious question, and at once becomes
possessed of supernatural beauty, exceeding even that of Parzival. He loses his kingdom, not as the result of a voluntary act
of resignation on his part, but at the declared will of the Grail,
which has foretold from the first that with the coming of the promised knight and healer Anfortas shall lose his power; the reason being that he has
transgressed the rules of the Grail Order by vowing himself to
Minne dienst ...
hroughout,
the effect of this last Act, with its Good Friday episode and
closing scene, is, as hinted before, to reinstate the hero, by means of an element foreign to
the original legend, in the position which rightfully belongs to him, i.e. to emphasise Parsifal as a hero of divine origin, though that divinity had
become very completely obscured... Wolfram represents his hero as
a brave man, but slowly wise
; and the attainment of knowledge by suffering, of truest
wisdom by compassion's power, is the task Wagner sets his hero. As a music-drama, the
position assigned to Wagner's latest work may vary; as an attempt to retell an old legend
with due reverence for its traditional form, and full sympathy for the modern spirit, the
Parsifal will, in all probability, remain eternally unrivalled.