Speranza
Joseph Campbell on Parsifal
In the Creative Mythology volume of his The Masks of God (1968),
the mythologist Joseph Campbell traced how artists since the Middle Ages have
used myth, which Wagner described as an inexhaustible source for the poet.
Campbell follows trails that lead from the works of the medieval poets
Gottfried von Strasburg and Wolfram von Eschenbach to the handling of the same
myths by Richard Wagner and James Joyce.
The extract below is a digression in
the middle of a longer discussion of the Gawain and Orgeluse section of
Wolfram's Parzival.
Campbell explains how the second act of Wagner's "Parsifal: dramma mistico in tre atti" is
related to the events of book XII in Wolfram's poem and how it differs.
He
begins by referring to the brief mention of Parzival in the story of Orgeluse;
who had offered herself to the hero if he would be her champion, an offer that
he politely declined.
...We are to hear no more from Wolfram of
this encounter of Parzival and Orgeluse.
Wagner, however, devotes to it his
entire second act.
Act I is at the Temple of the Grail.
Act III is to be there
again.
In Act II, however, the curtain rises upon Klingsor, sitting high in the
magic tower of his Castle of Marvels, watching in his necromantic mirror
(Wagner's adaption of the radiant radar-pillar) the unwitting approach of
Parsifal, who here is still the Great Fool.
Klingsor's castle and Titurel's
Temple of the Grail are in Wagner's legend opposed, as evil and good, dark and
light, in a truly Manichean dichotomy.
They are not, as in the earlier work,
equally enspelled by a power alien to both.
Moreover, Kundry, in whom
Wagner has fused the chief female roles and characters of the legend (Orgeluse,
Cundrie, and Sigûne, together with something of the Valkyrie, a touch of
Goethe's Ewig-Weibliches, and a great deal of the Gnostic Sophia ¹, is herself
enspelled by Klingsor and, against her will, his creature, yearning to be free.
It was she, as his creature and agent -- not, as in Wolfram's work, in her own
interest, against his -- who seduced the Grail King, Amfortas.
And it had been
when he was lying heedless in her toils, like Samson seduced by Delilah, that
Klingsor, stealing his unguarded lance -- the same that had pierced Christ's
side -- delivered a wound that would never heal until a saviour -- the
prophesied "guileless fool" -- should appear and touch it with the selfsame
point.
Such a wound suggests, obviously,
the wound of the arrow of
love,
which can be healed only by a touch of the one from whom the arrow came.
In Wagner's work, however, the allegory is of lust and violence transformed by
innocence to compassion (eros and thanatos to agape).
In Wolfram's epic,
Trevrizent states that when the planets are in certain courses, or the moon at a
certain phase, the king's wound pains terribly and the poison on the point of
the spear becomes hot.
Then, he declares, they lay that point on the wound and
it draws the chill from the king's body, which hardens to glass all around the
spear, like ice.
---------------------------------------
There is the Greek legend, furthermore, of the
hero, "Telefo" wounded by Achille in the upper thigh
with a wound that will not heal.
An oracle declares,
"He that wounded shall also
heal!"
and after a long and painful quest Telefo finds Achille and is healed.
Or, according to another reading, the cure is effected by the weapon: the remedy
being scraped off the point and sprinkled on the wound.
It is an
old old mythic theme related to that of Medusa, whose blood from the left side
brought death, but from the right, healing.
Or we may think of the elder Isolt
and poison of Morold's sword. In Wolfram's Parzival it plays but a minor part:
[it] is only once mentioned by Trevrizent.
And the lance, moreover, is there in
the Castle of the Grail, not Clinschor's palace.
Wagner, in contrast, has
elevated the lance theme to the leading role in his opus, in his own mind
equating the poison with Tristan's wound.
And in fact, he had been still at work
on his Tristan when the idea of a Parsifal first occurred to him; still at the
height, moreover, of his own Tristan affair with Mathilde Wesendonck, and even,
even living, together with his tortured wife, Minna, in a house named the "Asyl"
that had been provided by Mathilde and her patient spouse, Otto, adjacent to
their home.
The year, as we read in Wagner's own story of his life, was 1857;
the month, April; and the day [Wagner claimed] -- Good Friday. Richard and Minna
had arrived the previous September in Zurich, and it was there, in the "Asyl",
as the tells, that he finished, that winter, Act I of Siegfried and commenced
work seriously on Tristan.
Now came [he states] beautiful spring
weather, and on Good Friday I awoke to find the sun shining brightly into this
house for the first time; the little garden was blooming and the birds singing,
and at last I could sit out on the parapeted terrace of the little dwelling and
enjoy the longed-for tranquillity that seemed so fraught with promise. Filled
with this sentiment, I suddenly said to myself that this was Good Friday and
recalled how meaningful this had seemed to me 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.
Above: The "Asyl", on a green hill
in the Enge district of Zurich.
Already in Tannhäuser,
1842-1844, the main lines of Wagner's interpretation of the Grail themes had
been anticipated.
The "Venusberg Bacchanal" is there a prelude to Klingsor's
Garden of Enchantment, and the song of the poet Tannhäuser in celebration of the
love grotto, altogether in the spirit of a Tristan:
So that my
yearning may forever burn,
I quicken myself forever at that
spring.
However, the song there assigned to Wolfram as the rival
singer in the song contest is (ironically) a paean to love as a heavenly gift --
not at all "right through the middle"2, between black and white, sky and
earth:
Thou comest as come from God,
And I follow at
respectful distance.
Two years after his Good Friday
morning inspiration in the roof tower of the "Asyl", Wagner was at work in
Lucerne, in May 1859, on the last act of his Tristan, when the analogy of
Tristan's wound with the wound of Amfortas in the opera yet to be written filled
him with an appalled realization of the task he had assigned himself.
What a
devilish business!, he wrote at that time in a letter to Mathilde. Imagine, in
Heaven's name, what has happened! Suddenly it has become hideously clear to me:
Amfortas is my Tristan of Act III in a state of inconceivable
intensification...
Below: The daughters of Mára, lord of love and
death, attempt to seduce the Lord Buddha as he seeks total
enlightenment.
In Wagner's recognition of the
wound of the Grail king as the same as that of Tristan -- with his Parsifal then
standing for an idealized, released and releasing state of sunlike, boyish
innocence -- there is a reflex of his own entangled life, with loyalty to anyone
or anything but himself the last thought in his mind or strain of truth in his
heart.
His Parsifal of Act II is still the "nature boy" of Act I, has gone through
no ordeal of theological disillusionment or entry into knighthood, is unmarried,
in fact knows nothing yet of either love or life, and is simply -- to put it in
so many words -- a two hundred pound bambino with a tenor voice.
The baritone
Klingsor, gazing into his mirror, sees the innocent approaching, jung und dumm,
and like the Indian god of love and death, tempter of the Buddha, conjures up,
to undo the saving hero, a spectacle of damsels in a garden of enchantment,
rushing about, all in disarray, as though suddenly startled from sleep.
But,
like the Buddha on the immovable spot, sitting beneath the Bo-tree, indifferent
to both the allure of sex and the violence of weapons (unlike the Lord Buddha,
however, in that he is not full, but empty, of knowledge), Parsifal, the
guileless fool, simply has no idea of what these simpering women might be.
How
sweet your scent!, he sings to them.
Are you flowers?.
Kundry tells
him of his father's fame and mother's death; of how she knew his father and
mother, and has known himself since childhood (another Brünnhilde to a
Siegfried); tells him it was she who named him Parsi-fal, the "Pure Fool", and,
inviting him to her mothering arms, plants a kiss full on the boy's mouth with a
fervour that fills him first with intense terror, but then ... with an appalled
realization of the sense of Amfortas' wound: not, that is to say, with passion
for the female, but with compassion for the male!
Amfortas! The wound! The wound!
It is burning, now, in my heart.
The
wound I beheld bleeding:
It is bleeding now, within me.
Well,
that is hardly Wolfram von Eschenbach!
Klingsor, like the tempter
of the Buddha, now changing from his character as lord of desire to his other as
lord of death, appears with the precious lance in hand, which with a curse he
flings. But again as in the legend of the Buddha, where the weapons of the lord
of death, though flung at the saviour, never strike him, when the great spear
reaches Parsifal it hangs floating overhead; he simply makes the sign of the
Cross, reaches up, takes hold of it, and will bear it now to Amfortas (Act III)
to heal the sorrowful wound; and as from an earthquake the Castle and Garden of
Enchantment disappear, the damsels collapse to the ground like faded flowers
(see the Buddha's "graveyard vision"), and the curtain falls.
Footnote 1: Divine Wisdom, fallen (or enspelled) through ignorance;
entrapped in the toils of this world illusion, of which -- ironically -- her own
captured energy is the creative force. [Author's note]
Footnote 2: "Right
through the middle" was Wolfram's explanation of the name Parzival. [Editor's
note]
Footnote 3: He means the deva Mára, who, with his army and his
daughters, tried to prevent the Buddha from achieving total enlightenment under
the Bodhi tree. There are many similar accounts of this struggle in Buddhist
texts. For example, the anonymous Apadanatthakatha contains these lines: The
wrathful Mára, unable to contain his surge of anger, hurled his discus towards
the future Buddha. This weapon remained standing like a canopy of flowers above
the one who was absorbed in meditation on the different perfections.
Saturday, February 23, 2013
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