Speranza
This our nineteenth century is commonly esteemed a
prosaic, a material, an unimaginative age. Compared with foregoing periods, it
is called blind to beauty and careless of ideals.
Its amusements are frivolous
or sordid, and what mental activity it spares from the making of money it
devotes to science and not to art.
These strictures—of which Mr. Ruskin has been
the golden-tongued but somewhat narrow-visioned preacher—have certainly much
truth to back them. But leaving out of sight many minor facts which tell in the
contrary direction, there is one great opposing fact of such importance that by
itself alone it calls for at least a partial reversal of the verdict we pass
upon ourselves as children of a non-artistic time. This fact is the place that
music—most unpractical, most unprosaic, most ideal of the arts—has held in
nineteenth-century life.
Each epoch of artistic production has its own
peculiar form of art, most widely practiced and beloved because best able to
express the ideals and the aspirations of the men by whom it works. Poetry has
had more periods of flowering than any other art because it is more versatile
than any. But we can point with decision to the years between Pericles and
Attalus as the greatest epoch of the sculptor's art, and to the fifteenth and
its two succeeding centuries as the greatest age of painting. And in quite the
same way—with, if anything, even greater strictness of limitation—we can point
to our own as the age of music.
Before the days of Gluck and Haydn music was in
a child-like, though not a childish, state of development. And it may seem
doubtful to-day whether there will come men after Beethoven and Wagner to
further develop either symphonic or dramatic composition. It is these facts
which give to the recent festivals at Baireuth a significance and an interest
beyond that which they possess as mere prominent contemporary happenings or mere
tributes of admiration to a popular living artist. It is not a non-artistic
world which has seen the full growth from small beginnings of both
symphonic and dramatic forms in music. It is not a non-artistic generation which
has gone by thousands to Wagner's isolated stage. Music is the æsthetic language
in which our time has spoken, and the Baireuth festivals and the dramas there
presented will, it is very sure, be looked back upon by future generations as
the completest and most characteristic avatars of art our century can show. And
this is what must make them interesting not only to musicians, but to every
student of intellectual developments.
The oft-told tale of Wagner's life—that
tale of early neglect, of following fierce opposal, of bitter struggle and
still-existing cavil—need not be here repeated. But the battle is practically
over, in Germany at least. Each year stragglers from the defeated camp come over
by hundreds to the worship of the novel art, and each year its echoes are
spreading more widely beyond the borders of its fatherland. But a few years back
it was called very scornfully of the future. It is a very present thing to-day.
Every young musician is to some extent Wagner's scholar. The people are thrilled
by and respond to his music as they do to that of no other man. It is clearer,
more easily comprehended, more germane to the public mind and sentiment, than
the far simpler music of his predecessors. Older men have had to study it before
comprehending and admiring. But the young generation thinks and feels and sees
with Wagner by instinct and not by effort. And there could be, I think, no surer
proof that his art is the natural, direct, unforced expression of the æsthetic
feeling of his time and race—not a willful eccentricity, an abnormal
development, attractive by its novelty, but destined to speedily decline and
leave no trace behind.
It was Wagner's outspoken conviction from the very
first that his work would never be quite understood till he should have a
theatre under his own control, and built according to his own ideas. The
determination to have such a stage was strong in days when the world thought him
overambitious in hoping even to see his works on the repertories of existing
houses. What the achievement of his wish implies is realized only if one knows
the opposition of every kind—the rage, the scorn, the laughter, the abuse—with
which he then contended. When, after a score of years, his dream seemed likely
to be realized, many wondered that he should select a remote, neglected town
like Baireuth for a still doubtful enterprise. But Wagner never showed his
judgment and his artistic instinct with more clearness. Neither a smaller nor a
larger, more important place would have done half so well. Baireuth seems as if
designed by history for his purpose: in a central situation, yet off the great
highway of casual travel; large enough to accommodate his audiences, and stately
enough to give his art a fitting]y artistic background, yet small enough and
dead enough to leave him and his theatre as the paramount, nay, the exclusive,
sources of attraction. There is nothing to offend the taste in Baireuth as the
home of a great and splendid art; but there is nothing to compete with that art,
to make us forget why we are there, to interfere, as the Master himself would
say, with the Stimmung appropriate to our pilgrimage.
Baireuth is a city of
some 20,000 inhabitants, which, though much older of course, received its
present shape in the last century. When the sister of Frederick the Great
married tIme Margrave of Baireuth, the town rose to its greatest importance, and
from that period date its chief features of interest—the long, rather
solemn-looking "New Palace," most of the public buildings, the once exquisite
but now deserted and shabby little rococo theatre, and the summer chateaux
outside the gates—the Eremitage and the Phantasie—which, set in their beautiful
gardens, are among the most fantastically love]y eighteenth-century creations.
But Baireuth's importance was soon upon the wane, and for many years it had been
to all intents and purposes shelved and forgotten by the world, when Wagner came
to make it the most living centre of the most living art we have. Naturally he
is the patron saint of the modern Baireuther, whose civic pride and national
importance and private revenues he has so greatly helped. Here is not only the
Master's theatre, but his home, built for him by the King of Bavaria, and
standing in a pleasant garden almost in the centre of the town. Here he lives
during the summer months, not, it will be believed, in the seclusion of strictly
local circles, but constantly surrounded by a host of friends and disciples, and
visited by troops of curious pilgrims. In the winter he goes [542] southward, of
late to Sicily or Venice. But his head-quarters are at Baireuth—Munich, the
scene of his first complete success, haying been almost entirely abandoned. His
house is built in the Renaissance style, square, and with little ornament save a
large sgraffito painting by Robert Krausse over the doorway, surmounted in its
turn by the name of the villa, Wahnfried. This, being freely translated, means
"peace from illusions" or "aberrations," and typifies the rest which Wagner
found when settled at last in his own home near his own theatre, his battles
over and his dreams all realized. The painting typifies his art. In the centre
is the figure of Wotan, who personifies German Mythology; on one side is Greek
Tragedy, and on the other, Music. To this group looks up Siegfried as typical of
the "art of the future," which has resulted from a mingling of the old tragic
art, of music and of the national mythology. Everything connected with Wagner's
life in Baireuth has been made to suggest his work in a degree which seems odd
to people less naïve than these artistic Germans more keenly alive to the
ridiculous, and less blindly wrapped in their enthusiasms. His dogs are called
Wotan, Freia, and Fricka.
His children, even, are named for his creations, the
youngest being Siegfried.
If ever a man is crushed beneath the weight of
a doubly suggestive patronymic, it may well be young Siegfried Wagner when he
shall come to man's estate! In his garden, which stretches back of the house to
the little public park, the Master may be seen taking his morning constitutional
in velvet dressing-gown and cap, and passing up and down before the tomb,
lettered with his own name, which he has already built. We are reminded of
Schliemann's home in Athens, with its Homeric frescoes, and the children named
from heroes of the Iliad.
Entering the house one finds a large hall running
up to the roof, with a painted frieze showing scenes from the Nibelungen. Out of
this hall opens a great square room containing the piano and many rows of
book-shelves, filled for the greater part with works of Eastern philosophy, and
with volumes relating to the old German themes that Wagner has adapted to new
purposes. In a bay-window near the piano is the table at which he sits when
working. Here during the summer season live Wagner and his strangely constituted
family—his wife, who is the daughter of the Abbé Liszt, all her children by her
divorced husband Hans von Bülow, and Wagner's own younger brood. Bülow's
children seem to adore the Master as much as do his own, and to glory in his
fame as though [543] they had a legal share therein. His wife—"Cosima," as she
is familiarly, even affectionately, called on every hand—is a tall,
striking-looking woman of Italian type, with a fine face showing remains of
great youthful beauty. I have rarely seen a more interesting and impressive
looking woman; and while many who admire Wagner as an artist dislike him as a
man, there seems to be but a single feeling of admiration for his wife. She is
not only extremely clever, extremely well educated, and extremely artistic, but
is endowed with social charm and business ability to a degree that has made her
Wagner's right hand since the day of their union. Many believe, indeed, that
without her energy and tact the passionate and rather intractable artist would
not so soon have seen the realization of his dreams. Wagner excused himself for
his elopement, it is said, by declaring that he could not do his work without
her. And the same reason seems to hold her excused in the eyes of her
acquaintances. Liszt, who still retains his early enthusiasm for the artist and
affection for the man in spite of all domestic vagaries, is a frequent visitor
at Wahnfried. He is still a striking and venerable figure, though his former
stately gallantry of manner has got a touch of senile unctuousness with
advancing years. His long silvery hair was conspicuous in Wagner's loge the
night I heard Parsifal, and his appearance was watched for with almost as much
eagerness as that of the man who was once his protégé, but is now called Master
by Liszt as well as others.
Wagner himself, as has been often told, is short
and rather angular, though powerful, in build, scarcely passing by half a head
the shoulder of his stately wife. His head is too large for his body, and his
features are roughly and strongly irregular. About the mouth there is a hint of
weakness—the weakness of a sensuous, passionate, artistic temperament. But in
the chin we see all the indomitable strength of will that has fought his long
battle and won his great success. And the splendid brow and massive head are a
fitting home for the most versatile and majestic artistic intellect of our time.
Owing to his short stature, and want of grace or repose of manner and elegance
of dress, Wagner may disappoint one at first sight. But his face is, I think, in
wonderful accord with his character and genius.
Wagner is hospitality itself
when the Baireuth season is in progress, when he is resting from all labor save
that attendant upon the production of his work. Every night his house is crowded
with a motley assemblage of dignitaries, social, political, literary, and
musical, and with strangers of all sorts and conditions from every part of
Germany and every country of the world. There is often music to be heard. There
is always lively talk of the most variegated kind. The absence of formality, the
effusive gayety of the Master, and the kindly dignity of his wife put the most
insignificant at ease. It is never in the least difficult to get an invitation,
provided one is an enthusiastic Wagnerite, or even an earnest investigator—and
does not the mere fact of his presence in Baireuth imply that a visitor is the
one thing or the other?
Leaving the town we drive for a mile or more through
pleasant suburbs to the low elevation which is crowned by Wagner's theatre.
The
slope of the little hill is prettily planted, and a wide drive sweeps up to the
doors on either side the building. Across the drive to the right as we approach
is a restanrant, well appointed, and eagerly patronized during the long waits
between the acts. The performance of Parsifal began at four in the afternoon and
lasted till a quarter to ten, but with two intermissions of nearly an hour each.
During these pauses we walked about in the garden or in the great portico of the
theatre, or renewed our strength in the restaurant until summoned to our seats
by the sound of a couple of trumpets giving the notes of the "Grail Motive."
Thus the strain, both physical and emotional, of the long, intense performance
is reduced to a minimum, and one is as fresh and appreciative for the third act
as for the first. (1)
The theatre itself is plainly built both
inside and out. It was an experiment, and money was none too plenty—so not a
penny was expended on mere ornament. Passing through one of the many
doors—through which the crowded house can be emptied in less than two minutes—we
see a vast rectangular room with rows of seats rising so steeply toward the back
that each spectator looks well over the heads of those in front. The
time-honored amphitheatre hardly suggests itself, however, for the rows are but
slightly curved. The first is just the width of the proscenium, from which it is
separated by the hood that conceals the orchestra in its lowered space. The
seats then expand gradually toward the rear of the house, where a long curtained
loge, or balcony, receives the Master and his friends. The triangular space left
on either side between the benches and the wall is filled in with great
Corinthian columns rising quite to the plain flat ceiling. These columns are
doubled and tripled as the unoccupied space grows wider toward the front, and
their pedestals increase in height as the floor declines so that their bases are
always on a level. Between these pedestals are the many exits. If one has a side
seat the eye is led along a contracting vista of columns until it reaches those
which immediately flank the stage, and thus the effect as of a picture in its
frame is never lost or interfered with. There are no proscenium boxes, no
visible foot-lights or orchestra, no prompter's hood. My readers, accustomed
only to the distracting architectural accessories of an ordinary theatre, will
hardly conceive, perhaps, how greatly the effect of any scene is enhanced by its
thus being, so to speak, the only thing in sight. And in a house so built no one
can possibly do aught but look and listen to what is on the boards. It is not a
show-place for the audience, but a darkened hall whither one has come for the
drama's sake alone. The concealment of the orchestra is an equally fortunate
arrangement. The power of the music is increased by its thus seeming the work of
invisible agents instead of fiddling, piping, puffing gentlemen in non-dramatic
garb. And the whole volume of sound comes to the ear with far more unity and
precision of effect.
When a full rehearsal is in progress, Wagner takes his
seat in the front row of the auditorium, just behind and above the
Capellmeister, with whom he can communicate through an opening in the hood that
conceals the players. Around him will be his wife and a group of musicians
noting down, for future use in their various arrangements of the work, all the
criticisms and directions which fall from the Master's lips. Every detail of the
performance, dramatic as well as musical, is followed by his keen eye and
directed and corrected by his sure artistic taste. The greatest singers are his
ever-docile pupils, and their most highly prized reward is a word of praise from
Wagner's lips. And whatever he may be with other men to his artists Wagner never
fails in gratitude or in its public acknowledgment.
Wagner's title to have
originated an entirely new development in lyrico-dramatic art does not rest upon
his music in itself considered. He has been a musical innovator to an
extraordinary degree, a creator of novel expressional methods without the aid of
which he could not have put his novel aims in shape. But he has been an
innovator, a creator, in a wider sense than this. He is the first operatic
composer who is above all things a dramatist in the highest, noblest meaning of
the word. His point of departure is not the music, but the kernel of the drama
properly so called—the main idea he wishes to express. (2) He conceives this
with extreme clearness, and elaborates it with perfect singleness of aim by
every means of expression at his command—words, music, action, and stage
settings. No slightest musical ornament or motive, no dramatic situation or
accessory, is planned or allowed without strict reference thereto. With a
greater variety of expressional means than have ever before been used by any
dramatist, Wagner secures a strength and unity of effect unapproached on the
modern stage. And his conceptions, moreover, are of so large and deep a sort as
to [545] put him in the very first rank among poetical creators. It is well
known that he writes his own text-books. But it is not to their verbal structure
that I would point to confirm these words. He conceives as do the greatest
dramatic writers. But lie elaborates, as I have said, in a novel fashion of his
own not with words only, but with words and music both. Therefore we find in his
printed texts a finely impressive plan, admirably calculated developments and
situations, clearly defined personalities, with only just so much dialogue, and
dialogue of only just such a sort, as will give an outline of his intentions.
The filling up which other poets do with words, he does with the plastic,
thrilling, marvellously expressive language of sweet tones.
Planning for
the musical drama, Wagner plans in the same broad way as did the Greeks when
writing for their equally artificial mode of presentation—for the open-air
theatre, the chorus, mask, and buskin. He simplifies and solidifies his story
much more than do other modern dramatists, gives us but a few important figures,
and avoids all sub-plots and minor threads of interest. And he does something
still more important and still more Greek than this. Speaking through music
chiefly, he must speak to the feelings, and not to the reasoning powers. So he
must speak broadly, strongly, and plainly, and only of things which may be
expressed by emotional appeals without the aid of intellectual definitions and
subtle details. Therefore he avoids all even comparatively petty [546] themes,
all tales of transient interest or importance, all characters of local shape or
flavor. He falls back upon the fundamental passions of humanity; deals with
perennial facts and ever-living situations; typifies in his characters the main
forces and the leading impulses, desires, and fatalities of our race. Such a
broadly human theme is the struggle in man's heart between impure love and pure,
which he has painted in Tannhäuser. Such is the lesson that innocence and love
make shipwreck if unsupported by faith and trust, which he has taught in
Lohengrin. For certain artistic reasons connected with scenery and costume, and
with the advisability on the lyric stage of avoiding too close a comparison with
every-day life, he puts his creations in the distant i)ast, and sometimes
outside of the natural world of prose. But not for these reasons only. Dealing
with the realms of fable, legend, and mythology, he has at command the poetic
atmosphere, the larger psychical types, the primitive passions, the variety of
circumstance and catastrophe, his aims demand. He gets outside of
conventionalities, of trivialities, of lesser laws—of all bounds and limitations
save such as art prescribes. Yet with all this his characters are not
unsubstantial myths, or typical abstractions, or puppets of any sort,
allegorical or other. With all their fabulous environment, their superhuman
stature, they are men and women like ourselves only painted on a larger, bolder
scale, to suit the large, bold nature of his art. They are warm with life and
passion—not so much types as incarnations of good or evil; men of old time or of
no time, but distinctly individualized kinsmen of our own, governed by the same
impulses and swayed by the same influences that sway and govern us. To thus make
a work of art broadly human instead of local or transient in its theme to infuse
it with a deep and vital meaning below its palpable story, and yet keep the
outer forum living, coherent, and artistically self-sufficient, is the noblest
thing in art. And Wagner's power in this respect quite justifies the
introduction of the figure of Greek Tragedy in the fresco above his
door.
To his grasp of deep tragic motives Wagner adds a wonderfully
dramatic instinct for situation, an instinct unparalleled, it has often been
said with truth, since [547] Shakspeare's day. Much more is left to be explained
and emphasized by action than is usual on the contemporary stage, whether
lyrical or not. Of course his demands upon his singers are proportionately
great. Some of the finest pieces of acting I have ever seen have been in
Wagner's dramas, though they differed from other acting as his text differs from
the text of others. Lyric acting must be defined with larger, stronger toucbes,
must rise and fall with the broad, deep waves of musical emotion—not be subtly
modulated and delicately expressed as in the spoken drama to suit the delicate,
crowding suggestions of a poet's words. The art of Bernhardt or of Got would be
as out of place on Wagner's stage as the art of Niemann or Materna at the
Théâtre Français. But each style is right in its own place, and this new
lyrico-dramatic style, heroic in mood, with its large methods of interpretation,
was almost unknown before Wagner's day. It is a creation of his own, or, rather,
a complementary art which has sprung up in response to the demands of
his.
"Parsifal: dramma mistico in tre atti" is of especial importance among Wagner's dramas, because while
the latest in time, it is also the deepest in theme and the completest in
execution, showing his musical methods in their highest development and his
intellectual force in its greatest strength.
In it we have a play typical not
only of some of the most fundamental passions of humanity, but of some of the
deadliest and divinest. Its music is more complicated yet more consistent, its
symbolism more important and more clearly shown. In it Wagner approaches as near
to allegory as is possible in work which is to keep its artistic balance and
perfection.
For the crude material of the play he went, as so often before,
to the old German epics, thus getting his wide scope and his supernatural
machinery, while keeping his ideas and personages akin to the natures and the
feelings of his countrymen of to-day.
The legend of the Holy Grail —the
vessel in which Joseph of Arimathea received the blood of Christ, and which was
afterward put by heavenly messengers under the guard of a knightly company, who
drew from it supernatural strength with which to subdue the enemies of right— was
a property common to all Christendom long before the time of Eschenbach.
But
though it was thus common property, and though the scene of the story is still
laid, indeed, in Spain and not in Germany, it was the version of Wolfram von
Esehenbach, written in the thirteenth century, which gave it permanent shape and
life, imbuing it at the same time with truly Teutonic feeling, and incorporating
it with the hereditary treasures of German poetry.
Of course Wagner has greatly
altered the story to suit his dramatic ends.
As ever, he has simplified it,
changed and deepened its meaning, and divested it of all temporary or local
sources of interest. It is no longer a mediæval romance—it is a purely ideal
drama.
It is no longer a legend of the fight of the Christian against the Turk,
but a symbol of the ever-renewing conflict between purity and evil.
The story as
Wagner makes it is as follows.
The sanctuary of the Grail and the home
of its knights is at Monsalvat, in Spain.
Their old king, Titurel, worn out with
age and battles, has given over his headship to his son Amfortas, but still
exists, kept alive by the supernatural strength conferred whenever the Grail is
solemnly unveiled. On the hill opposite Monsalvat stands the castle of the
enchanter Klingsor, who, having once sought admittance to the holy brotherhood,
and having been rejected for his wickedness is now vowed to its destruction. His
garden is filled with sirens (the flower-maidens of the play), but his chief
dependence is upon Kundry, whose extraordinary character will be explained a
little further on. Amfortas had, before the drama opens, heen seduced by her
wiles, and losing his innocence, had lost to Klingsor the invincible holy
spear—the spear which had pierced the side of Christ, and which, togetherwith
[548] the Grail itself, was the source of the brotherhood's supernatural power.
Amfortas was wounded in the side by the spear, and his wound can be healed only
by a touch from the same weapon; but the weapon can only be recovered, according
to a holy oracle, by a "spotless fool, wise through sympathy"—that is, by some
one who knows not of Amfortas's sin and need, but who perceives them when
himself tempted in the same way, and resisting the temptation.
Parsifal is the
destined saviour, and the play begins when his advent is at hand.
As the
curtain rises on the first act we see a broad woodland glade with a lake beyond.
At the foot of a great tree in the centre of the scene are two sleeping pages,
who, as the "Morning Call" sounds from distant trumpets, are awakened by
Gurnemanz, one of the elder knights, and the special friend of the young king.
He bids them pray for the king, who is approaching for his morning bath in the
lake. Then follow short colloquies with the boys and with two knights who
precede the king, then, with a burst of wild accompanying music, Kundry comes
upon the scene. This figure has been crystallized by Wagner from multitude of
varying legends which represent her under different forms but always as a sort
of female Wandering Jew. According to one old tale she is the daughter of
Herodias, cursed for having laughed when the head of the Baptist lay before her,
condemned to roam forever, to forever laugh when she may most wish to weep, and
to be evil always though struggling to be good. Wagner, to insure greater force,
makes her a woman who has laughed at Christ upon the cross. Condemned to evil,
she is yet not entirely lost. for in her better moods she mourns the past and
struggles blindly for redemption. But whenever she falls asleep she is in
Khingsor's power, and obliged afterward to do as he commands. In her desire to
break her bondage she has entered the service of the Grail as a wild, outcast,
almost unacknowledged servant of its knights, who are far from recognizing in
her repulsive form the fair enchantress she becomes in Klingsor's hands, and the
corrupter of their king. Now as she enters with a mad rush, it is to bring the
king a healing balsam that she and her enchanted horse have sought in far
Arabia. Giving it to Gurnemanz, she falls exhausted at the foot of a great rock
just as the long train of knights appear with the litter of Amfortas in their
midst. This is set down while Amfortas speaks with Gurnemanz, who gives him
Kundry's offering. Here the scene on the Baireuth stage was one of exceeding
beauty. All the many knights and pages, including the picturesque figure of the
suffering, pallid, youthful king himself, were costumed in the same colors—in
grayish-blue gowns and long cloaks of a dull coral red. The grouping was
extremely artistic as all clustered around the king, lamenting his sorrow and
reciting the prophecy about his savior. Then the cortége moves again, and the
king is carried to his bath. Gurnemanz remains behind with the two pages, to
whom, in a long recitative, he pleads toleration for the savage but well-meaning
Kundry; and then, in answer to [549] their questions, recounts the story of the
past and of Amfortas's sin and penitence.
As Gurnemanz repeats the prophecy a
wild clamour breaks in from outside.
A wounded swan floats across the stage, and
the startled pages drag in the boyish Parsifal, the hero, its slayer.
Parsifal is reproacbed by
Gurnemanz for killing the sacred, innocent bird within these holy precincts.
But
Parsifal knows nothing of what he has done, being a wild lad, nurtured in the forest
by his mother, whom he left to follow a passing troop of knights.
Gurnemanz's
words awake his concience.
Parsifal breaks his bow with childish petulance and throws
away his arrows.
Then Gurnemanz questions him as to name and origin, but he
replies,
"I know not,"
to almost everything, only telling that his mothers name
is Herzeleid.
Kundry rises from her apparent stupor and tells him his mother is
dead.
At first the boy attacks her with childish fury, then falls back, half
fainting with emotion while Kundry, her savage spirit struggling with her desire
to "serve" sullenly brings water to restore him.
Then, overcome with fatigue,
she sinks unwillingly, as fighting against her fate, into a deep sleep upon the
ground, and thus subjects herself, as we shall see, once more to Klingsor's
power.
Now the cortége of the king again approaches, returning from the bath,
and crosses the stage on its way to Monsalvat. Gurnemanz tells the wondering
Parsifal that the sacred fast is about to occur, and bids him come, saying,
"Thou art pure; to thee too will the Grail give strength."
For, seeing the boys
innocence, he hopes he may be the promised savior.
Now Gurnemanz and
Parsifal with slow- steps appear to advance through the wood, but in reality it
is the scenery which passes by, while they, moving amid its moving forms, are
now in plain sight and now hidden behind rock or tree. It is a bold experiment
in scenic art, and one that could not often be repeated. Indeed, Wagner seems to
have felt as much; for when the same incident occurs again, in the third act,
the curtains are kept closed, and only a repetition of the accompanying music
reminds us of what we have seen before.
But for once the innovation was worth
making, as by its means we felt the same impressions that are supposed to have
worked on Parsifal himself.
The illusion was almost complete, and the scenery
both beautiful and capitally imagined to reveal tbe supernatural character of
Monsalvat. First the great green trees were replaced by rougher and more tangled
shapes; then they assumed almost a rocky form; then came great contorted masses
of rock and stone, suggesting columns and foundations; and then the base of the
castle itself—all by gradual and not by sudden alterations. Then unexpectedly
the walls burst open, and we saw the interior of a beautiful great hall, with
Gurnemanz and Parsifal standing near the front of the scene. Here they remain
while the long processions enter, the former bidding the boy watch with all
attention all that he shall see.
This interior of Monsalvat is the most splendid
and artistic I have ever seen upon the stage.
The Hispano-Moresque
architecture is well conceived, and carried out with accurate beauty of line and
color. In the front of the stage is a large vaulted space, and beyond it, in the
centre, is a great circular open colonnade, supporting a galleried dome, which
rises far out of view, and from which falls the light. On either side several
long vaulted corridors run back, not in pictured but in actual far perspective.
Within the columns and beneath the dome are semicircular tables prepared for the
knights, a wide opening in front giving them admittance thereto, and to the
altar of the Grail, which stands in the middle, and behind it the raised seat
for the king. Troops of pages and children cross the scene from either side, and
pass out of sight in different directions to take their places in the dome,
whence their choruses shall sound. They too are all clothed in the colors of the
Grail. Then the knights enter through the long passages from tbe back, with
solemn tread and chant. Then a band of pages come carrying Amfortas on his
litter, and preceded by others who bear the Grail in its shrine, and the great
urns and baskets with the bread and wine that the glory of the Grail is to endow
with supernatural strength. The king is lifted to his couch, and the Grail
placed upon the altar, while the pages group themselves and their burdens on its
steps. The singular beauty and impressiveness of this scene—so finely composed,
so richly and harmoniously colored, so solemnly portrayed, and accompanied by
music of such ravishing sweetness and such holiness of temper—can hardly be
imagined by those who only know the ordinary spectacles of the ordinary stage.
It seemed no spectacle at all, but an actual, deeply solemn scene.
The spectator
held his breath in awe, as did the bewildered Parsifal, allowed to gaze on
mysteriously impressive rites. The knights place themselves at the tables, last
of all Gurnemanz, after he has vainly motioned to a seat beside him the
unheeding boy, who, until the whole ceremony is completed, stands quite still in
the same spot, as though lost to all consciousness of self. Then we hear a voice
from the invisible Titurel demanding the unveiling of the Grail, which shall
renew his life. Amfortas breaks into agonized protests, telling of his sin, his
suffering, his remorse, and his unworthiness to touch the sacred vessel. The
children's voices from the dome repeat in sweet soprano notes the prophecy which
promises him release and pardon. The knights call upon him to fulfill the duties
of his office. And so at last he gives the signal. The pages take the goblet
from its shrine, remove its coverings, and place it on the altar, while all bow
their heads in silent prayer. Suddenly the room grows dark, and then the goblet
flushes with a brilliant ruddy glow. Amfortas rises to his feet and lifts the
shining vessel, while the pages hold the bread and wine within its rays, [551]
and the far-off soprano strains and tender orchestral harmonies become
triumphant with holy ecstasy. Then the glow dies out; daylight re-appears; and
the pages pass the food to the silent knights, who take it with reverent
gestures, while from the vault above comes the interchange of boys' and
children's voices repeating the prophecy, and singing strains of faith and
comfort. Then the knights join in the strain; but the king, with a reaction from
the momentary strength of his excitement, sinks back upon his litter, and the
pages press about him to stanch the blood again flowing from his wounded side.
Then the processions form once more, and pass out in the same solemn order, last
of all the troops of children from the dome. Gurnemanz remains alone with
Parsifal, whom he asks whether he comprehends what he has seen.
But the boy
shakes his head, and will not even ask a question, and Gurnemanz, disappointed
in his hope, thrusts him from the door.
When the second act begins we are
shown the interior of the magicians enchanted castle. Klingsor sees in his magic
mirror the approach of Parsifal, whom he recognizes as the predicted savior, and
whom he determines to overcome with Kundry's help.
He calls the latter, and she
rises, wrapped from head to foot in ghostly white draperies, through a smoking
pit in the background, on the brink of which she remains, shrouded and
immovable, through the dialogue which follows—a dialogue which consists of
imprecations and commands on Klingsor's part, and of fierce, defiant taunts but
ultimate submission to her fate on Kundry's. Her resistance to the sorcerer's
wish is seen to be even more desperate than usual, as she too has guessed that
Parsifal is the promised helper.
But she disappears with a frantic, hopeless
burst of her cursed laughter, Klingsor and his room sink out of sight, and we
find ourselves in the garden amid the troop of flower-maidens, who on Parsifal's
approach surround him with playful appeals to be their comrade, and with jealous
little quarrels for his favor.
But Kundry enters, and the girls flee in
simulated rage with the unresponsive boy.
Kundry is now in the guise of the most
beautiful of women.
Making Parsifal sit at her feet, she tells him of his
mother's death, and bids him believe that love alone can compensate him for her
loss.
Subtly blending the story of his mothers affection with her own, she
stoops and kisses his not unwilling lips.
But with the kiss a light breaks upon
his mind.
He starts to his feet in horror, exclaiming that he feels in his side
the burning of Amfortas's wound, and sees in Kundry the king's betrayer.
All her
arts are of no avail to work upon the innocent boy, now"wise through sympathy."
With a fine dramatic inspiration Wagner here weaves together the two contrasting
strands of Kundry's character, making her use, under Klingsor's spell, her real
remorse and her real longing for good as an argument to tempt Parsifal to what
she knows must defeat this very aspiration.
As though possessed by a spell
beyond her force to break, she tells with pathetic accents of her sin, her
curse, her unwilling slavery to evil, and she bids him love her, as only through
his love can she be freed and [552] saved.
But even this appeal, so genuine in
its very falsity, and so dangerous because addressed to his noblest feelings,
Parsifal is strong enough to resist. Then her evil nature gains the upper hand.
She curses him with the curse of "wandering," and calls on Klingsor for
assistance.
The magician appears, and hurls the spear at Parsifal, but it
remains poised over the head of innocence.
Parsifal seizes it, and makes the
sign of the cross.
The magician and his enchanted realm disappear forever, and
in their place we see a barren, rocky waste, through which Parsifal departs,
bearing the spear, and leaving Kundry's unconscious form upon the ground. Thus
is Kundry freed from Klingsor's power, but not yet from sin and
suffering.
When the third act opens many years are supposed to have passed,
during which Parsifal has been vainly seeking, hampered by Kundry's curse, the
road to Monsalvat, and during which Kundry seems to have sought penance and
purification in a pilgrim's life. Gurnemanz has grown to be a very old man. Worn
with years and sorrow, he now leads a hermit's life on the edge of the Grail's
domain, watching almost in despair for the helper's advent. As he sits in bitter
reverie by his hut he recognizes Kundry in a fainting pilgrim who approaches.
Taking her in his arms to a sacred spring near by, he brings her back to life,
and asks her what she seeks. Humbly she replies, "To serve—to serve." But
Gurnemanz tells her the knights need no help of hers. No messenger is wanted,
for no labor is attempted by the wretched brotherhood, which has fallen year by
year into greater discouragement and impotence since Amfortas, half mad with
suffering and remorse, refuses to unveil the goblet. Titurel has died for want
of its support, and Amfortas himself prays only for death as his deliverer. Then
a man in armor approaches, carrying a spear, and with his visor closed. The old
man chides him for bearing arms on holy ground, and during Good-Friday's solemn
hours. He makes no reply, save to lay aside his casque and shield, plant his
spear in the ground, and kneel before it. Gurnemanz now recognizes both Parsifal
and the sacred weapon, and hails with joy the delivery so long delayed. Parsifal
laments the long wanderings through which Kundry's curse has led him. But
Gurnemanz tells him he is now at last unwittingly within the sacred boundaries.
He too is exhausted by long wandering, and Gurnemanz seats him by the holy
spring, bidding Kundry lave his feet while he removes his armor. Kundry humbly
washes the feet of the man in whom she sees the savior who resisted her attempts
to ruin himself and her, wipes them with her hair, and kneels with her face in
the dust before him, while Gurnemanz acknowledges the new king of the Grail, and
anoints him with the sacred water. In a strain of ineffable sweetness Parsifal
says the first exercise of his new office must be to release Kundry from her
curse. He baptizes her, and Gurnemanz leads them to Monsalvat. Now occurs behind
closed curtains the transformation we saw in the first act. When the explanatory
music is over and the curtains part again, we see the great hall once more, and
the opening doors, through which again approach the troops of knights They were
in sorrowful mood before, but now they are hopeless and despairing. The children
do not ascend the dome, for they have no cheering prophecies to sing, but kneel
in long rows across the front of the stage, their faces to the altar. The tables
have been removed, as Amfortas persists in his refusal to unveil the Grail and
beg for Heaven's blessing once again One band of bearers bring in the king's
litter, and one the bier of Titurel, which they set down before the altar. In
passionate, heart-broken words Amfortas reproaches himself for his father's
death and their common misery. Starting from his couch, with trembling tread and
agonized body he descends the altar steps, and clings to his father's bier,
praying in his despair to death as his only helper, and declaring that with his
destruction a happier day might dawn for his companions. The knights call upon
him in almost angry tones not to forsake his duty on account of his own
suffering, but to unveil the Grail once more. He refuses, tears open his gown so
his wound may bleed afresh, and bids his friends in mercy hasten death. But as
they stand about him in horror and dismay, Parsifal enters in his white garment,
bearing the spear, and followed by the joyful Gurnemanz, and by Kundry, with the
light of peace at last upon her face. Parsifal touches the king's side with the
spear, which suddenly glows with supernatural light, and declares him healed and
pardoned, but deposed from the [553] [554] headship of the Grail. With solemn
step he then draws near the altar, and himself bids the goblet be unveiled. He
takes it in his hand and falls upon her knees, while all are hushed in prayer.
Suddenly the room again is darkened, the Grail again grows vivid with ruddy
light. Parsifal rises and holds it aloft, the spear in his other hand, the
crimson light falling on his white garments, and a dove descending from heaven
and hovering above his head. All break into a soft cry of solemn gladness, and
Kundry sinks in peaceful death upon the altar steps.
The best musical
materials in Germany were at Wagner's side last summer. The orchestra was that
of the Munich Opera, enlarged by the addition of a few players from Meiningen,
Weimar, Dessau, and Berlin, and numbered in all one hundred and four performers,
under the leadership of Capellmeister Levy of Munich. There were twenty-nine
flower-maidens, six having solo parts to sing. The chorus was sixty in number,
and there was, besides, the choir of fifty boys. Whether or no the chorus
singers were paid, I can not say. At least the expenses of their long stay in
Baireuth were probably made good to them. But the solo singers gave their help
for nothing, and were glad to do so, their reward coming in the instruction they
received and the pleasure in which they shared, and in the universal fame which
can in no way be so quickly and completely gained as by Baireuth triumphs. As
there were fourteen public performances, spreading over a period of four or five
weeks, the different parts were intrusted to several singers each, with the
exception of the barytone part of Amfortas, which was assumed throughout by
Reichmann of Munich. The tenori who played Parsifal were Winkelmann of Hamburg,
Gudehus of Dresden, and Jäger, formerly of Dresden and Vienna. Kundry, the
soprano part, was given to Materna of Vienna, Brandt of Berlin, and Malten of
Dresden. Fuchs of Munich, also a barytone, sang Klingsor, alternating with Hill.
The minor basso part of Titurel was given to Kindermann of Munich, while the
great basso rôle of Gurnemanz was sung by Scaria of Vienna and by Siehr. For the
first performance Wagner selected Materna, Winkelmann, Scaria, and Hill. Materna
was well entitled to the honor, in view of her worldwide reputation. But, as it
proved, even her laurels shrank a little before those of Malten, a young singer
who had never been heard out of Dresden until she won success in London during
the season of last spring. Her art in singing is not quite so perfect as
Materna's, but her voice is fresher, and magnificently powerful, and her acting
shows the greatest dramatic ability. She is beautiful as well, and in the
temptation scene must far have surpassed her rivals. Brandt is an older woman,
devoid of beauty, but with great dramatic talent, and is said to have been
finest in the first act. Reichmann has a marvellous voice, and his impersonation
of the youthful king—suffering, desperate, and overwrought—was consummately
artistic. He, with his common human experience, was the true centre of interest,
even more than the saintly, superhuman Parsifal. Wagner's great reliance upon
the dramatic capabilities of his singers was never more clearly shown than in
the last act of Parsifal. Kundry is on the stage from beginning to end, yet has
but two words to say. Her part is one of pantomime alone, yet of capital
importance. Malten, whom I was fortunate enough to see, filled it so adequately
that it was only afterward one realized she had not sung as well as acted. Great
dramatic ability is indeed required to play this rôle, with its constant change
and contrast of mood—the sullen uncouthness of the first act, the frantic
defiance of the colloquy with Klingsor, the temptation scene with Parsifal; and
then this last pathetic act, the whole meaning of which depends upon appropriate
action and facial expressiveness. That three women were found to fill it so
adequately that its honors were almost equally divided between them proves the
vitality and strength of the new dramatic school we owe to Wagner.
Scaria is
perhaps the greatest basso of our time, and he, too, is equally good
dramatically considered. His magnificent. voice rolls out like an organ with
perfect ease and sureness, giving every word as distinctly as though it had been
spoken and not sung. Jäger sang the evening of my visit, and though his voice
has lost a trifle of its freshness, his acting was superb all through. The
saintly dignity of his conception, the solemn ecstasy of his bearing, in the
last act, will not easily be forgotten, nor the beauty of his white-robed figure
and noble attitude as the [555] curtain fell for the last time upon the shining
Grail and the floating dove. But the other tenori were said to be as adequate,
and Winkelmann's voice is finer. I might easily go on to praise, with much of
detail, all who took part in a wonderfully perfect representation. Yet the most
remarkable thing of all—more admirable than the power of any individual
singer—was the unity of the whole performance, the way in which the
transcendental mood of the drama was preserved in every detail, the spirit of
solemn absorption in a sacred scene which seemed to animate the least performer.
The briefest lapse into commonplace, even, would have marred the impression. The
slightest failure to seize and keep the exalted tone and temper of the work
would have resulted most disastrously to the emotions of the audience. But no
such lapse occurred. From Parsifal down to the smallest page-boy, every
movement, every note, every facial expression, was in accord. Words and music
seemed but to interpret with greater force emotions we saw clearly in each
character upon the boards. But one point in the whole performance could be noted
for criticism. The decorations in the garden scene were unfortunately gaudy in
effect and bad in color, making a poor background both for the flower-maidens in
their graceful evolutions, and for Parsifal and Kundry in their passionate
dialogue.
The deeply moral symbolism of Parsifal will now be
apprehended. The history of Christ is never referred to during the drama, for
Wagner writes no such inartistic things as "allegories." But it is, of course,
suggested—as are certain ceremonies of the Christian religion—by various scenes
which occur quite naturally in the dramatic evolution of the visible characters.
But the work has a still deeper intention than to suggest the facts and beliefs
of any one creed. The visible Parsifal, the suggested Christ, are alike types of
redeeming love and goodness; the visible Kundry, the suggested Magdalen, of sin,
suffering, and salvation. All are used as means of impressing the eternal
law—felt through all religions or in spite of none—the law that evil brings a
curse behind it; that remorse alone will not undo its work; that love and good
deeds are the only salvation of a sinful world. The lesson is a deep one—deeper
than any Wagner had taught before. His thought has never been so profound, his
music never so divine, as in this last drama. With a versatility and freshness
almost inconceivable in a man of seventy, he has tuned his music to an entirely
new mood. The passionate, exciting, sometimes sensuous, sometimes [556] wild,
though always magnificent, strains that were appropriate to such themes as
Tristan and Tannhäuser, the earthlier grace and purity which matched with the
ideas of Lohengrin, have given way to music which is rapt and religious in
spirit from end to end. Even the music of the second act does not disturb the
impression, but serves merely as a foil to the more important phases of the
work. The songs of the flower-maidens are not—as has so often been affirmed by
those who did not hear them—sensuous in mood, but playful, delicate, and dainty.
Even Kundry's temptation music is weird and powerful rather than sensuous in
effect. This is not the place even if there were space to spare—in which to give
an analysis of the strictly musical features of this great drama. Be it only
said that in its elaboration Wagner has carried out with more perfect skill and
fullness than ever before, his theory with regard to Leitmotiven, or "leading
motives," which illustrate and explain, by their recurrence and their constant
variations, the nature of his characters, and the ideas which lie behind their
words or find expression in their silent actions. Every line of the score is so
instinct with subtle meaning that many hearings and long study would not reveal
them all. But the absolute beauty of the music does not depend upon their being
completely apprehended. It becomes, of course, both more beautiful and more
impressive when fully understood in its least note and inflection. But it has an
outer, quite complete, and radiant charm even for a non-musical hearer, who may
not be able to follow a single Leitmotive, or understand a single symbolic
chord.
If I were asked to cite the most beautiful musical compositions I had
ever heard, paying no regard to their meaning as possibly connected with the
drama, one of the first would surely be the great choral scene in the first act
of Parsifal. Needless to say, therefore, that in connection with its dramatic
meaning it becomes one of the grandest of musical creations. From the nature of
the subject no parts of the Parsifal music are as striking, as emotionally
exciting, as some passages in Wagner's other works. But there is more of pure
and delicate beauty in this than in any other. From the first notes of the
exquisite introduction, through the dainty choruses of the flower-girls, the
splendid harmonies of the feast scenes, and the pastoral charm of the
"Good-Friday music" in the third act, to the last rich notes as the curtain
closes, there are a hundred passages which might be cited to refute the old
accusation of the ignorant, that whatever Wagner may do, he can not write
"beautiful music."
Whether or no religious themes are considered suitable for
dramatic presentation will depend upon individual ideas and feelings. The
question need not here be entered into, for it has nothing to do with art in and
for itself considered. One thing is, however, certain. A performance of this
kind, religious throughout in intention, and in execution, must by all minds be
held less objectionable than one where religious incidents are interspersed in a
fabric of alien temper. Wagner himself calls this a "sacred play," and the
question is being debated whether he means ever to let it be given on an
ordinary stage, amid less unique and impressive surroundings than here at
Baireuth.
Notes
1
For the encouragement of readers who may
possibly wish to visit Baireuth at some future time, I will say that the
extortions of the Nibelungen season of 1876 were not repeated in 1882. The
performance lasted but one day instead of four, and was repeated many more
times. So there was neither overcrowding nor overcharging. My companion and
myself were assigned a very large room fronting on the market-place in the fine
old house of a certain Kaufmann Bencker. For this room we paid $2 50 a day. The
German breakfast of bread and butter with coffee, tea, or chocolate was served
in our room at any hour we wished, at a charge of twenty-five cents for the two
portions. Meals were not dear either at the hotels or at the smaller
eating-houses; and a one-horse carriage to take three people to the theatre and
back cost but $1 75. Moreover, trains were run in connection with each
performance, so that it was not a necessity even to stay overnight in the
town.
2
I do not forget, of course, that Wagner had predecessors in this
new path; but they were predecessors in aim and intention chiefly, not to any
vital extent in execution. Gluck announced, but Wagner has created. It is
Gluck's and not Wagner's art which should properly be called of the future,
though in a different sense from the one usually given to the words.
3
When the Crusaders took Cæsare, in the year 1101, the Genoese discovered a
goblet which seemed to have been cut out of an immense emerald. They immediately
decided it was the Grail, and attributed its lack of wonder-working power to
their own unworthiness. For centuries it was preserved in Genoa as an undoubted
relic. But when it was brought with the rest of his imperial loot to Paris by
the first Napoleon, it was ruthlessly submitted to scientific tests, and proved
to be of green glass only. It is now again in Genoa, revered by none, and the
object of curiosity to very few.
4
A clear history of the Parsifal
legend, together with an analysis of Wolfram's epic and of Wagner's drama, may
be found in a little pamphlet called Parsifal, by O. Eichberg. It is, I think,
the best among the many similar treatises which appeared in Germany last summer.
Saturday, February 23, 2013
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment