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Summary of Act
1
urnemanz, Knight of the Grail, rises from sleep
and rouses his two young esquires in a forest near the castle
of Monsalvat in the Spanish Pyrenees.
Two other knights arrive to prepare a morning bath for the King, Amfortas, who has an apparently incurable wound. They are interrupted by the wild woman Kundry, who has brought balsam from Arabia to alleviate the King's suffering. The King, carried
in on a litter, recalls the prophecy that told him to await a pure fool made wise by compassion.
He accepts Kundry's gift and proceeds to
the lake. Gurnemanz tells his companions how a beautiful woman betrayed Amfortas into the hands of the magician Klingsor, so that the sacred Spear was lost and with it the King wounded.
uddenly
there are cries from the lake and a swan falls to the ground,
fatally injured by an arrow. The knights drag in a youth who, rebuked by Gurnemanz, breaks his bow but cannot give his
name. Kundry is able to do so: the youth is
Parsifal, son of Gamuret and Herzeleide. As Kundry crawls
away to sleep in the undergrowth, the knights carry Amfortas back from the lake. Gurnemanz follows them with the boy, wondering what to make of him.
n the
hall of the Grail Castle, Amfortas is surrounded by his knights who
prepare for the Grail ritual. The voice of his father Titurel is heard from the crypt, bidding Amfortas uncover the Grail and perform the magic that sustains the aged hero. Amfortas at first refuses, as the ritual brings
on his pain. At length he submits and allows the esquires to uncover the chalice, which
produces food and drink to sustain the knights. Parsifal watches but seems to understand nothing;
although at one point when Amfortas cries
out in pain, he lays his hand on his heart. At the end of the ceremony, Gurnemanz angrily drives the boy away. As he is
about to leave, the knight hears a mysterious voice repeat the words of the prophecy.
© Derrick Everett 1996-2004. This page last updated (layout changed) ---27/11/04
18:02:38---.
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