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              <date value="1883-01">January 1883</date>
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<pb id="pag75" n="75"/>
<head rend="up">Wagner's Parsifal</head>

<p><hi rend="up">It</hi> is the purpose of this paper
to give the impression made by
the performance of Parsifal at Baireuth, last summer, in view of
certain strictures upon the motive of the drama, and without any
attempt at musical criticism. In order to do this, I shall have to
run over the leading features of the play, already given in the
newspapers. Criticism enough, and of an unfavorable sort, there has
been, though I heard none of it in Baireuth, nor ever any from
those who had been present at the wonderful festival. Perhaps that
was because I happened to meet only disciples of Wagner. I fancy
that the professional critics, who did publish depreciating
comments upon the new opera, and upon Wagner's methods in
general, felt more inclined to that course after they had escaped
from the powerful immediate impression of the performance, from the
atmosphere of Baireuth, and begun to reflect upon the
responsibilities of the special critics to the world at large, and
what in particular was their duty towards the whole Wagner
movement, assumption, presumption, or whatever it is called, than
they did while they were surrounded by the influences that Wagner
had skillfully brought to bear to effect his purpose on them.</p>

<p>I have read two kinds of criticism. One was written by musical
adepts, who had not heard the opera, but who condemned it on
perusal of the score and the libretto; declaring the latter to be
sacrilegious, and the author to be a false prophet among musicians
and a charlatan among managers. The other critics, who also set
themselves against Wagnerism, described the performance in such
terms that all Europe was more and more eager to see it, but
compounded for their reluctant enjoyment by finding unworthy
methods in a success they could not deny. Whatever the triumph was,
they said it was not a pure musical triumph, but one due to the
creation of special conditions and favoring circumstances. 
<pb id="pag76" n="76"/>
Fancy Beethoven pushing his music into popular notice by such
clap-trap means!</p>

<p>It was a great offense, in the first place, that Wagner should
build his theatre in the inaccessible Franconian city,—a
city with scant accommodations for visitors, and off the regular
lines of travel. It was a still greater offense that, after all, he
should be able to attract to this remote and provincial place
pilgrims and strangers, not only from every country in Europe, but
from America, Australia, and India; and that the theatre should be
filled three nights in the week for three months by persons willing
to incur the expense of a long, wearisome journey, and to pay
thirty marks (seven dollars and a half) for a seat, at the end of
it. A success of this sort could scarcely be legitimate. It must be
due to some managerial legerdemain and to a misdirected
enthusiasm.</p>

<p>Perhaps if we knew all the circumstances, the building of the
theatre at Baireuth would not appear to be a whim of arbitrariness.
Years ago, the king of Bavaria desired to erect a theatre in
Munich, on the hill over the Iser. He was so bitterly opposed in
the location of the building by the citizens of Munich that he
abandoned the purpose, and began the construction of a play-house
to suit himself, elsewhere. The new theatre would have been so well
adapted to Wagner's purposes that it may be doubted if Wagner
would have set up his standard at Baireuth, if the Munich project
had been carried out.</p>

<p>Yet it must be owned that the quaint little city, which owes so
much of its romantic interest to Frederick's sister, the
Margravine, has advantages in its very remotenesses and primitive
conditions. The reason why Wagner's operas are enjoyed in
Munich, and fail to please in Paris, is not that they are better
presented in Munich; nor is the comparative failure in Paris due to
the character of the operas, but rather to the atmosphere of Paris
and the character of the audiences. Parsifal is scarcely better
adapted to the meridian and the operatic traditions of Paris than
is the Ober-Ammergau Passion Play.</p>

<p>It is Wagner's well-known theory of the opera that it
should be something other than a series of airs, sung by one or two
or several persons to the audience, with spaces or wastes of
musical declamation between; with an orchestra merely by way of
accompaniment, and a background of scenery that would indifferently
fit a dozen plays, and a plot incoherent and without any special
purpose. Whether Wagner is successful or not in reducing his
theories to practice is still in dispute; but he attempts a
production which has purpose and unity, and which excludes
everything not consistent with the effects lie aims at. A story is
to be told, a lesson is to he taught, an impression is to be
produced on the hearer and spectator; and to this impression the
orchestra, the scenery, and the singing are of almost equal
importance. Nothing is admitted that does not forward the general
purpose, and the unity of the story is not broken by special
appeals to the audience. The effort is made to impress and
stimulate the imagination, and to engage the attention in the work
as a whole rather than in certain lyrical and melodic details.
Wagner desires to move in his audiences sentiments, fervors,
aspirations, in particular directions. Why is it charlatanism in
him to prepare conditions favorable to his purpose. Why is it not
legitimate that he should bring his audiences into such a state of
mind, before the performance begins, that they are predisposed to
enjoy the entertainment he offers. We know how much the
appreciation of a poem depends upon the surroundings in which we
read it or hear it. if Wagner has so contrived it that his
audiences, arriving at the quiet and primitive city where he is almost
<pb id="pag77" n="77"/>
worshiped, regard themselves as pilgrims at a special festival, and
are in a receptive state of mind before they enter the theatre; if
the theatre itself and all the environments heighten this
impression; and if, finally, the performance itself seems to them
more like a spiritual drama than an opera, where is the
charlatanism, even if it can be proved that the impression is
largely due to the accessories of the music? If it is said that
other great composers would not have resorted to such adventitious
aids, I can only think that any composer would have liked to
command the best conditions for the production of his compositions.
It is of course possible that the crowds at Baireuth were victims
of a delusion, and of skillful contrivance. I can answer for many
of them that they would like to be deluded again in just that
way.</p>

<p>When we arrived at the station in Baireuth, it was at once
apparent that the town was <hi>en fête</hi>, and that its
sole occupation was the Wagner festival. Our train, which had
waited at the last junction to bring hundreds of passengers from
the east, was an hour late; it was two o'clock in the
afternoon, and the performance was to begin at four. The bustle at
the station, the ubiquity of committee-men and town officials, the
crowd of vehicles, of all the fashions of the present and the last
century, the air of expectation and the excitement were evidence of
the entire absorption of the town in the great event. An
agricultural fair in a New England village, or a <hi>Fiesta de
Toros</hi> in Spain, could not more stir a community into feverish
and cheerful activity. If the arriving stranger, carpet-bag in
hand, had not the freedom of the city, he had all the city to wait
on him, answer his inquiries, and take interest in him as an
intelligent and profitable pilgrim. We had secured our tickets by
telegraph, and found them ready for us at the banker's. We
had also applied to the burgomeister for accommodations for the
night, and we found that a committee, in permanent session at the
station, had already billeted our party at private houses, to which
we were promptly dispatched. Everything was so perfectly
systematized that the wayfaring man, though a Wagnerite, need not
err therein, and our quarters turned out to be exceedingly
comfortable, and given at moderate prices. All the private houses
of the place appeared to be at the disposal of the committee, and
offered without extortion. If the inhabitants were not all devoted
to Wagner, they were devoted to his festival, and the master
pervaded the town. The musical works of Richard Wagner were
everywhere in sight, and in almost all the shop windows were
photographs of Wagner, engravings of Wagner, busts of Wagner,
statuettes of Wagner. The other chief objects for sale in the town
were photographs of the characters in Parsifal. We liked the old
town, at once for its quaintness and single-mindedness, and we
admitted that there is only one Baireuth, and Wagner is its
prophet.</p>

<p>The pilgrim to the shrine of Wagner is treated like a pilgrim.
He is expected to be willing to put his devotion to a further test,
after reaching the remote town ; for the theatre is set on a hill,
half a mile from the city, so that a carriage is needed for the
majority of visitors, especially if the weather is rainy, as it was
the day of our arrival, and as it was all last summer, four days
out of five, in the German land. This hill places the spiritual
drama one more remove from the bustle of the sinful world, and
helps to isolate the performance from ordinary life. The theatre is
an ungainly brick building, erected only with reference to the
interior accommodations. The great bulk of the stage rises out of
it in defiance of all architectural beauty. The auditorium is
surrounded by an open corridor, from which there are entrances for every
<pb id="pag78" n="78"/>
three rows of seats. Each ticket indicates its entrance, so that
the audience assembles and seats itself without confusion, and the
house can be perfectly emptied in two minutes, without any danger
of a rush or jam. The interior has been so often described that I
need not enter into details. There are no proscenium boxes or side
seats; the rows of chairs rise from the stage, spread out like a
half-open fan, and at the back of the house are a row of private
boxes; above them is a shallow gallery. Every part of the stage can
be perfectly seen from every seat in the house. A low barrier rises
before the front row of seats, separating the auditorium from the
stage by a considerable space. In this sunken space, hidden
completely from the audience, is the orchestra. The house is almost
bare of decoration; only a cool gray color pervades, which is
grateful to the senses. All the splendor is reserved for the stage,
which is of immense proportions.</p>

<p>At four o'clock the fifteen hundred seats were filled, and
a crowd of persons, said to be several hundred, occupied the
standing-room in the rear. Most of the audience were standing, and
the house was in a buzz of conversation and expectation. Suddenly,
at the stroke of a stick behind the scenes, the audience seated
itself; the doors were closed, excluding the light; the hall and
the people were discernible only in an obscure twilight; a profound
silence fell upon the house, indignantly enforced by a hissing
"hushzz " directed at a careless whisperer; and at
another signal the prelude began. The stillness was phenomenal, and
so continued through the entire performance. I had an impression at
the time that the audience was in a temper to lay violent hands on
any one who should break the silence by any sound.</p>

<p>We sat in the luminous darkness, and the prelude began by the
unseen orchestra. From the first note the music was striking; it
portended something. It may have been because the players were
concealed, but I seemed to hear not instruments, but music. And
this music had a supernatural note, an unworldly, not to say a
spiritual, suggestion. It rose and fell, more importunate than
strident, in pleading, in warning, in entreaty. Whether it was good
music or utterly impossible music I cannot say. owing to a
constitutional and cultivated ignorance of musical composition; but
it affected me now and again like the wind in a vast forest of
pines on a summer day. It appealed to the imagination, it excited
expectation, it begat an indefinable longing; and now and then a
minor strain, full of sadness or of passion, suggested a theme,
like the opening of a window into another world,—a theme
which was to be renewed again and again in the drama, when it came
to us like a reminiscence of some former life. When the prelude had
been prolonged until the audience were brought up to the highest
pitch of expectation, the great curtains were drawn aside, and the
domain of the Knights of the Holy Grail, a peaceful, sunny land of
forest, meadow, lake, and mountain, was disclosed.</p>

<p>The composer has made use of one of the earlier legends of the
Grail, at the time when the cup was still in possession of the
knights appointed to guard it. The cup which had been drained at
the Passover feast and had received the holy blood at the cross was
still safe; but the sacred spear, the spear of the cross, which the
heavenly messenger had also committed to the knights, had been
lost. It was in possession of Klingsor, a recreant knight, who
inhabited pagan land, and had by magic transformed a waste desert
into wonderful gardens, and created an enchanted castle, inhabited
by women of charms infernal, who lured the knights to wicked joys
and pains eternal. One of the victims was Amfortas, the king 
<pb id="pag79" n="79"/>
of the knights, who had yielded to the temptations of Kundry, the
temptress and the Magdalen of the play, a witch, who was in the
power of Klingsor, and forced to do his bidding. When Amfortas fell
into the wiles of this bewildering beauty, in one of his
expeditions into pagan land, he was overpowered in his weakness,
lost the sacred spear, and received a grievous wound in the side.
Of this wound of sin he now languished. All the medicines of the
world could not heal it; only in one way, by a man without sin,
could he be cured. Meantime the spear was lost, and so long as this
all-conquering weapon remained in the possession of the enemy, the
cup itself was in danger. Klingsor vaunted his purpose to seize it.
Kundry, at the opening of the drama, is a sort of impish servant
and messenger of the knights, a wild, untrained nature, touched
with remorse, but unable to repent or to free herself from the
power of Klingsor, and full of unrest and contradictory
passions.</p>

<p>The domain of the knights is represented by a charming scene,
simulating nature so closely that the leaves are seen to quiver on
the forest trees. To the audience, looking at it across an empty
space and from a darkened room, it has the delusion of a tableau;
but the figures in it seem the real inhabitants of some remote land
of myth. Gurnemanz, an aged knight, is attended by two esquires.
They are lamenting the sickness and wound of Amfortas, and the
danger to the Grail from the loss of the holy spear. To them enters
the wild witch Kundry, fantastically clad in a savage garb, with a
snake-skin girdle, having a swarthy complexion, piercing black
eyes, and black hair flowing in tangled disorder. She comes from
the end of the earth, riding on the devil's mare, though, for
once, not on the devil's errand. Her self-appointed mission
has been to seek some balm for the wounded king, the victim of her
wiles. She brings to Gurnemanz a balsam from far Arabia, though
well she knows that no balsam can touch his wound. At this moment
Amfortas is borne in on a litter, on the way to his bath in the
sacred spring, the only alleviation of his suffering. The crystal
flask containing the balsam is given to him, and Kundry is bidden
to approach. But the wild maid draws away, tortured by a conscience
half awakened, and struggling with the wickedness of her unsubdued,
animal nature; held by the enchantment of Klingsor, and unable even
to repent, but impelled by a blind notion of merit in good deeds to
render service to the knights; restless, sleepless, pursued by
demons, longing in her fitful despair only to sleep, and to sleep
forever,—a lost soul in pitiful helplessness of human
succor.</p>

<p>This thrilling scene, interpreted by the wailing and sympathetic
orchestra, is at its height, when an interruption occurs that
strikes all with new horror. A swan flutters from over a lake,
strives to fly further, and sinks to the ground, dying, pierced by
an arrow. It is the sacred swan. Who has committed this sacrilege?
The murderer appears, a strong, rude hunter, clad in skins, his bow
in hand. He is proud of his feat. He is accustomed, in the
wilderness, to shoot whatever flies. This is Parsifal, the man of
absolute nature, without sin and without virtue, as ignorant as he
is innocent. It is with difficulty that he comprehends what he has
done, and he slowly understands the woe and horror of the company.
As moral sense begins to dawn in his dark mind, he is seized with
violent trembling, and falls half fainting. He breaks his bow and
casts it from him. Kundry, at sight of him, is as strongly moved as
he. On the return of the train of the king from the bath, Gurnemanz
asks Parsifal to accompany him to the holy feast. If thou art pure,
he says, surely it will feed and refresh thee. What is the Grail?
asks Parsifal. The guide cannot
<pb id="pag80" n="80"/>
say, but knowledge is not hidden to those who are bid to serve it;
yet to it no earthly road leads, and no one not elected can see it.
Gurnemanz lays Parsifal's arm on his own neck, and,
supporting him with one arm, leads him away.</p>

<p>The two appear to be walking slowly through the forest to the
left, pausing here and there in weariness. In fact, the scenery
itself is moving to the right. The country changes its character.
The forest becomes wilder and denser. The travelers make their way
painfully, up steeps and amid rocks and fallen trees. The way is
still more rocky and wild. Dark caverns yawn, and the trees are
more fantastically savage. The music, ever graver, and ever
recurring to the minor sadness, expresses toil, and the weariness
of the way, and the difficulty of seeking. For moments, behind some
giant rock or cluster of trees, the two are lost to view, and
appear again, the red cloak of the knight glowing amid the dark
green. As the travelers move on, the scene still changes. Touches
of the artificial are seen. The caverns and passages in the rock
have been enlarged and worked by man's hand. Here is trace of
an arch, of cut stone, of a wall buttress. We are passing into the
depths of the mountain, by a way in which nature has plainly been
assisted. There is a faint sound of chimes; the orchestra itself is
on the impatient point of disclosing the secret; there is a second
in which all is obscure, and then, in a burst of light, stands
revealed a mighty hall, vast as a giant cathedral. The aisles
stretch away in dim perspective; the arches are supported on lofty
columns of jasper, of <hi>verde antique</hi>, of alabaster, of all
precious marbles; and above is a noble dome, blue and luminous with
golden stars. From the dome streams the light; from it floats down
the faint and fainter peal of the chiming bells. Beneath the dome
stands a long horseshoe curved table, with the ends towards the
audience, leaving the centre of the stage free. In the middle of
this open back- ground is a high table, like an altar, with steps
leading up to it, and behind it is a raised couch, with a canopy.
Upon the communion table are set tall silver cups.</p>

<p>From the far distance in the aisle the knights, clad in robes of
scarlet, enter in slow and stately procession, moving with
reverence and dignity, and chanting as they approach the table and
take their places; from the middle height of the hall come the
responsive voices of younger knights; and then down from the very
summit of the dome float boys' voices. So angels might hail
the supper of our Lord, leaning over the gold bars of heaven.
Immediately, from the other aisle, enters a procession of equal
solemnity and splendor: the bearers of Amfortas on his litter, the
servitors of the holy supper, and the angelic boys who carry and
sustain, under its covering, the sacred cup. But for the intense
solemnity of the scene, one must note the marvelous skill with
which every detail of it, in form and color, has been composed. But
it is only afterwards that we vividly recall this. The bearers of
the cup are less earthly than Raphael's angels, from whom
they may have been copied. And it never occurs to you that they are
stage angels. The whole scene, so necessarily theatrical in
description, does not impress the spectator so; the art of color
and grouping is too perfect, the solemnity is too real. Amfortas is
borne to the couch behind the altar. The holy vessel is deposited
before him. The servitors attend with baskets of bread and tall
silver flagons. At one side, near the entrance of the hall, stands
Parsifal, clad in sheep-skin, as rigid as a stone, a mute and
awe-struck spectator of the scene.</p>

<p>Amfortas, stricken with disease and sin, shrinks from performing
the ordinance. At length, urged by the voices
<pb id="pag81" n="81"/>
from heaven, by the knights, and by the command of his aged father,
he feebly rises. The boys uncover the golden shrine, and take out
of it the cup of the Grail, an antique crystal cup. As Amfortas
bows over it in silent prayer, a gloom spreads through the room; a
ray of light shoots from above upon the cup, which begins to glow
with a purple lustre. When Amfortas raises it and holds it high, it
burns like a ruby,—it is the Holy Grail. In the dusk the
knights are kneeling and worshiping it. When he sets it down the
glow fades, the boys replace the cup in the shrine, and the natural
light returns to the hall. The goblets are then seen to be filled
with wine, and by each is a piece of bread. At intervals in the
progress of the supper alternative voices of youths and boys from
the heights chant in response to the solemn chorus of the knights,
and finally down from the dome comes the benediction,
"Blessed believing." During the repast, of which
Amfortas has not partaken, he sinks from his momentary exaltation,
the wound in his side opens afresh, and he cries out in agony.
Hearing the cry, Parsifal clutches his heart, and seems to share
his agony, but otherwise he stands motionless. The supper over,
Amfortas and the sacred shrine are borne away. The knights rise;
and as they pass out, and meet, two and two, at the ends of the
table, they tenderly embrace, with the kiss of peace and
reconciliation, and slowly depart in the order in which they came.
To the last Parsifal gazes in wonder; and when his guide comes to
speak to him, he is so dazed that Gurnemanz, losing all patience at
his unresponsive stupidity, pushes him out of the door, and spurns
him for a fool. The curtains sweep together, and shut us out from
the world that had come to seem to us more real than our own.</p>

<p>For a moment we sat in absolute silence, a stillness that had
been unbroken during the whole performance. There was not a note of
applause, not a sound. The impression was too profound for
expression. We felt that we had been in the presence of a great
spiritual reality. I have spoken of this as the impression of a
scene. Of course it is understood that this would have been all an
empty theatrical spectacle but for the music, which raised us to
such heights of imagination and vision. For a moment or two, as I
say, the audience sat in silence; many of them were in tears. Then
the doors were opened; the light streamed in. We all arose, with no
bustle and hardly a word spoken, and went out into the pleasant
sunshine. It was almost a surprise to find that there was a light
of common day. We walked upon the esplanade, and looked off upon
the lovely view: upon the old town; upon the Sophienberg and the
Volsbach forests in the Franconian Jura; upon the peaceful meadows
and the hills, over which the breaking clouds were preparing a
golden sunset. We did not care to talk much. The spell was not
broken. How long, I asked a lady, do you think we were in there? An
hour, nearly, she thought. We had been in the theatre nearly two
hours. It was then six o'clock.</p>

<p>On the esplanade are two large and well-appointed restaurants,
adjuncts to the theatre, and in a manner necessary to it. Wagner
understands how much the emotional enjoyment and the intellectual
appreciation depend upon the physical condition, and he has taken
pains to guard his audiences against both hunger and weariness.
During the half-hour interval that elapsed between the first and
the second act, the guests were perfectly refreshed by a leisurely
stroll in the open air, by the charming view, by the relaxation of
their intense absorption, by a cup of coffee or a drop of amber and
perhaps Wagnerian beer, or by a substantial supper. When the notes
of a silver
<pb id="pag82" n="82"/>
trumpet summoned us back to our seats, we were in a mood to enjoy
the play again with all the zest of the first hour.</p>

<p>The second act is of the earth, earthy, and less novel than the
first to opera-goers, accustomed to spectacles, ballets, and the
stage seductions of the senses. It is the temptation of Parsifal,
who has begun his novitiate. The temptation is wholly of the senses
and the passions. The scene is the magic castle and the enchanting
gardens of the magician Klingsor,—a scene of entrancing but
theatrical beauty. The magician is discovered seated in the dungeon
keep of his tower, surrounded by the implements of magic. In the
background is the mouth of a black pit. Casting something into it,
he summons Kundry. A cloud of smoke arises from the pit, growing
luminous and warming into rosy color; and suddenly from the chasm
rises a most beautiful female form, enveloped in a gauzy tissue,
and flushed with rosy light. It is Kundry, no longer in her aspect
of witch, but surpassingly lovely; and yet as unhappy as lovely,
and responding to the summons of her master with a cry and look of
agony. She is bidden to undertake the temptation of Parsifal, who
has been seen from the ramparts approaching the castle. She
refuses. Her whole nature abhors the office. But yield she must to
the power of the charm. Yield she must, and exercise all her power
of fascination and seduction, though she knows that it is only by
the resistance of her blandishments that salvation can be hers. She
knows that only by meeting and being resisted by a sinless one can
her own sin be cured, and yet she is forced to put forth all her
efforts to secure her own ruin and his.</p>

<p>With a gesture of protest and despair, she vanishes as she came.
The tower and the cavern sink away, and in place appear, filling
all the vast stage, a tropical garden, and the battlements and
terraces of an Arabian castle. Parsifal stands upon the wall,
looking down upon the scene in astonishment. From all sides, from
the garden and the palace, rush in groups of lovely damsels,
arranging themselves in haste, as if waked from sleep. Each one in
her dress represents some flower. They are awaiting Parsifal, and
as he descends they surround him, and envelop him, and distract him
with their voluptuous charms. When their blandishments fail
(although the music pleads in all sensuous excitement) to arouse in
the pure youth anything more than perplexity and wonder, the
maidens leave him in disgust, and with the appearance of the
ravishingly beautiful Kundry the dangerous temptation begins.</p>

<p>Gorgeous as is the scene, and opulent as are the female charms
of this second act, there is yet something of the cheap and common
about it,—tawdry splendors, easily seen to be the stock
gorgeousness and the painted temptations of the stage. This seemed
to me an ethical mistake in the drama. Such a man as Parsifal
should have been approached, to his ruin, with subtler and less
gross allurements than these. At least, the guileless nature of
Parsifal would have appeared to the audience in more danger of
being seduced from his knighthood by the appeals of beauty to his
pity, to his sympathy, for an innocent and simple maiden, beset by
dangers, and coming to him for aid and comfort; approaching him
through his higher qualities, and flattering him into forgetfulness
of his mission in the names of virtue and compassionate love. The
devil of modern society appears to understand these things better
than the traditional devil whom Wagner consulted for this scene.
The audience feels from the first that the open solicitations of
Kundry must fail, and that Parsifal is in little danger, even when
she bends over him and impresses upon his lips a kiss of a duration
so long that the spectator is tempted to time it with his watch,
like the passage through
<pb id="pag83" n="83"/>
a railway tunnel. From this embrace, at any rate, Parsifal starts
up in intense terror, clasping his hand to his side, as if he felt
the spear-wound of Amfortas. I need not detail the struggle and the
passion that follow. Failing in this first appeal, the maiden, too
late in his aroused suspicion, pleads for his love, in that it
alone can save her; his love alone can redeem and pardon her. He
resists also this more subtle temptation. "Eternally should I
be damned with thee, if for an hour I forgot my holy
mission." In rage at her final failure, when Parsifal spurns
her as a detestable wretch, Kundry curses him, and calls for help.
The damsels rush in. Klingsor appears upon the battlement, with the
holy spear in his hand; he hurls it at Parsifal; but the spear
remains floating above the latter's head. Parsifal grasps it
with tremulous joy, waves it, and makes with it the sign of the
cross. Instantly the enchantment is broken: down tumble towers and
castle walls; the garden vanishes; the leaves and branches of the
trees strew the earth; the damsels lie on the ground like shriveled
flowers; and Kundry falls insensible, and lies amid the ruins and
the waste of the original desert.</p>

<p>In the background rises a path up a sunny slope to a snow
mountain. Purity and nature have taken the place of the baleful
enchantment. Parsifal turns from the top of the broken wall, over
which he disappears, to look upon the ruin as the curtain
closes.</p>

<p>When the act ended, the audience, still under the spell of the
music, which had at the end risen out of its soft and siren strains
into a burst of triumph and virile exaltation, sat, as before,
silent for a moment. Then it rose <hi>en masse</hi>, and turned to
the high box in the rear, where, concealed behind his friends,
Wagner sat, and hailed him with a long tempest of applause.. The
act had lasted less than an hour. It was followed by an
intermission of three quarters of an hour, which gave the audience
time for supper, and for the refreshment of a stroll and the
soothing effects of the charming view in the fading sunlight.</p>

<p>In the third and last act we return to the high themes of the
first; the touching minor strains of the prelude recur again and
again, soothing the spirit agitated by the period of storm and
stress. The conflict is over. We have passed through the regions of
tumult and passion; we have escaped out of the hot-house air of
temptation. Penitence is possible, and through suffering peace is
dawning with forgiveness in the torn and troubled heart. The
orchestra declares it, and the scene upon which the curtain rises
is the sweet and restful domain of the Grail in the spring-time of
the year. On the edge of the forest, built against a rock, is a
hermitage; a spring is near it, and beyond stretch flowery meadows.
It is the dawn of day, the sky reddening before the coming of the
sun, when Gurnemanz, now extremely aged and feeble, emerges from
the hut. Attracted by moaning in the thicket, he moves aside the
branches, and discovers Kundry, cold and stiff, lying in the hedge
of thorns, which is little better than her grave. He drags forth
the nearly lifeless form, bears her to a mound, chafes her hands
and temples, calls her back to life with the news that the winter
has fled and the spring has come. Slowly the maiden revives, gazes
at him in wonder, and then adjusts her dress and hair, and without
a word goes like a serving-maid to her work.</p>

<p>To Kundry has come a wonderful transformation. The wildness has
gone from her mien and from her eyes; into her face has come the
soft, indescribable light of penitence, and a transcendent
spiritual beauty. She is no longer the fiery witch, full of
disordered passion, contempt, and impish malevolence; she is no
longer the houri of the enchanted garden, with the charms of the
siren and the bewildering allurements of
<pb id="pag84" n="84"/>
Venus Aphrodite. Clad in the simple brown garb of the penitent
Magdalen, subdued and humble, every movement and gesture and her
sad, lovely face proclaim inward purity and longing for
forgiveness. When Gurnemanz upbraids her for her silence and
thanklessness for her rescue from deathly slumber, she bows her
head, as she moves towards the hut, and in a broken voice murmurs,
"Service, service!"—her only exclamation in all the
act.</p>

<p>Kundry comes from the hut, and goes towards the spring with her
water-pot. Looking into the wood, she sees someone approaching, and
calls Gurnemanz's attention to the comer. A knight, in
complete black armor, weary and worn, bruised with conflict and
dusty with travel, slowly and feebly draws near, with closed helmet
and lowered spear. It is Parsifal. Gurnemanz, who does not
recognize him, hails him with friendly greeting. Parsifal only
shakes his head. To all inquiries he is silent, and he is still
speechless when Gurnemanz asks him if he does not know what holy
day has dawned; that it is the hallowed Good-Friday' morn,
when he should doff his armor, and trouble no more the Master who
has died for us.</p>

<p>After an interval, in which the music of the orchestra pleads as
for a lost world, Parsifal rises, thrusts his spear into the
ground, places against it his great shield and sword, unbraces and
removes his helmet, and then, kneeling, raises his eyes in silent
prayer towards the spear's head. Gurnemanz beckons to Kundry,
who had gone within the hut. Do you not know him? Kundry assents
with a nod. Surely, 't is he,—the fool whom I drove
in anger from the hall of the knights. In great emotion Gurnemnnz
recognizes the holy spear. Kundry turns away her sad and longing
face. After his devotions are ended, Parsifal rises, and, gazing
calmly around, recognizes Gurnemanz, and knows where he is. The
murmur of this forest, falling on his tired senses, gives him hope
that he has come to the end of his journey of error and suffering.
He has sought the path that would lead him to the wounded Amfortas,
to whose healing he believed himself ordained; but hitherto that
path has been denied him, and he has wandered at random, driven by
a curse, through countless distresses and battles,—wounded
in every fight, since he was not fit to use the holy spear which he
bore, undefiled, by his side. The ancient knight assures him that
he has come to the Grail's domain, where the knightly band
awaits him, with great need of the blessing he brings. Amfortas is
still struggling with the tortures of his wound; the shrine of the
Holy Grail has long remained shrouded; the Holy Supper is no longer
celebrated; the strength of the knights is withered, for want of
this holy bread; and summoned no more to holy warfare in far
countries, they wander pale, dejected, and lacking a leader; and
Titurel, the old commander, to whom was first committed the cup and
the spear, the father of Amfortas, hopeless of ever beholding again
the refulgence of the Grail, has just expired.</p>

<p>Parsifal hears this with intense anguish, and laments that he
has brought all this woe, since some heinous guilt must still cling
to him that no atonement or expiation can banish, and that he who
was selected to save men must wander undirected, and miss the path
of safety. He is about to fall, when Gurnemanz supports him, and
seats him on a grassy knoll. Kundry, in anxious haste, brings a
basin of water; but Gurnemanz waves her off, saying that only the
pilgrim's bath can wash away his stains; and they turn him
about to the edge of the spring. While Gurnemanz takes off his
corselet and the rest of his heavy armor, Kundry, kneeling, removes
the greaves from his legs, and bathes his feet in the healing
spring. The armor removed, Parsifal appears clad in a soft 
<pb id="pag85" n="85"/>
white tunic, with a cord about the waist, and his long, light hair,
in wavy masses, flows back upon his neck. There is no mistaking the
likeness, in this meek and noble face and figure. Shall I straight
be guided to Amfortas? asks Parsifal, wearily. Surely, says
Gurnemanz, we go at once to the obsequies of the beloved chief. The
Grail will be again uncovered, and the long-neglected office be
performed. As the knight speaks, Parsifal observes, with wonder,
Kundry humbly washing his feet, and gazes on her with a tender
compassion. Taking water in the hollow of his hand, Gurnemanz
sprinkles his head. Blessed be thou, pure one. Care and sin are
driven from thee! Kundry, from a golden flask, pours oil upon
Parsifal's feet, and dries them with the long tresses of her
black hair, which she has unbound for the purpose. Then Parsifal
takes from her the flask, and desires Gurnemanz to anoint his head;
for he is that day to be appointed king. Gurnemanz, pouring the
oil, declares him their king, and the rescuer from sin. And thus I
fulfill my duty, murmurs Parsifal, as he, unperceived, scoops water
from the spring, and, stooping to the kneeling and heart-broken
Kundry, sprinkles her head. "Be thou baptized, and trust in
the Redeemer." Kundry bows her head to the earth, and weeps
uncontrollably. As Parsifal raises both hands, the fingers of one
extended in blessing, we recognize the figure and very attitude of
our Lord in that famous old painting, where he is seated, blessing
little children. The Magdalen, shaken with penitence, and yet
weeping for joy, is cast at his feet. The aged knight stands in
solemn rapture. The scene is inexpressibly touching. The music is
full of pathos and solemn sympathy.</p>

<p>How fair the fields and meadows seem to-day! exclaims Parsifal,
gazing with gentle enjoyment upon the landscape. This is
Good-Friday's spell, my lord! exclaims Gurnemanz. The sad,
repentant tears of sinners have besprinkled field and plain with
holy dew, and made them glow with beauty. As Gurnemanz discourses
of the redemption of man and nature, the transformed Kundry slowly
raises her head, and gazes with moist eyes and beseeching look, out
of which all earthly passion has completely gone, up to Parsifal.
Thou weepest. See! the landscape gloweth, he gently says, and,
stooping, softly kisses her brow. Who would recognize in the pure,
sweet, spiritual face of this forgiven sinner the temptress of the
gardens? I know not how this whole scene may appear in the coldness
of description, but I believe that there was no one who witnessed
it, and heard the strains of melting music which interpreted it,
who was not moved to the depths of his better nature, or for a
moment thought that the drama passed the limits of propriety.</p>

<p>The pealing of distant bells is heard growing louder. Gurnemanz
brings a coat of mail and the mantle of the Knights of the Holy
Grail, with which Parsifal is invested. The landscape changes. The
wood gradually disappears, as the three march on in silence; and
when they are hidden behind the rocky entrances of the caverns,
processions of mourning knights appear in the arched passages. The
bells peal ever louder, and soon the great hall is disclosed. From
one side the knights bear in the bier of Titurel, and from the
other the litter of Amfortas, preceded by the attendants with the
covered shrine of the Grail. The effects of color and grouping are
marvelous; and to eyes familiar with the sacred paintings of the
masters, almost every figure and dress is a reminiscence of some
dear association. The angelic loveliness of the bearers of the
shrine, however, surpasses any picture, as much as life transcends
any counterfeit of it.</p>

<p>At the sight of the body of Titurel there is a cry of distress,
in which Amfortas
<pb id="pag86" n="86"/>
joins; and the knights press upon the latter, urging him
to uncover the shrine and do his office. With a cry of despair he
disengages himself, tears open his mantle and discloses the wound,
and invokes the knights to bury their swords in his breast, and
kill at one stroke the sinner and his pain. At this moment,
Parsifal, who has entered, with his attendants, unperceived, starts
forward, and, stretching out his spear point, touches the wounded
side. Only the weapon that struck can staunch thy wounded side.
Amfortas, who feels himself instantly healed, can scarcely support
himself, for joyful rapture. As Parsifal raises high the spear, the
shining point is red as blood, and the whole assembly, falling upon
their knees, adore it. Parsifal assumes the king ship, takes his
place behind the altar, and commands the cup of the Grail to be
uncovered. Taking it in his hand, and raising it on high, the
crystal burns again like a ruby; from the dome a white dove
descends, and hovers over him ; Kundry—peace at last,
stricken soul—falls dying; the knights are gazing upward in
rapture; and out of the heights come down soft and hardly audible
voices in a chant of benediction.</p>

<p>It was nine o'clock when we went out into the still
lingering twilight. I, for one, did not feel that I had assisted at
an opera, but rather that I had witnessed some sacred drama,
perhaps a modern miracle play. There were many things in the
performance that separated it by a whole world from the opera, as
it is usually understood. The drama had a noble theme; there was
unity of purpose throughout, and unity in the orchestra, the
singing, and the scenery. There were no digressions, no personal
excursions of singers, exhibiting themselves and their voices, to
destroy the illusion. The orchestra was a part of the story, and
not a mere accompaniment. The players never played, the singers
never sang, to the audience. There was not a solo, duet, or any
concerted piece "for effect." No performer came down to
the foot-lights and appealed to the audience, expecting an encore.
No applause was given, no encores were asked, no singer turned to
the spectators. There was no connection or communication between
the stage and the audience. Yet I doubt if singers in any opera
ever made a more profound impression, or received more real
applause. They were satisfied that they were producing the effect
intended. And the composer must have been content when he saw the
audience so take his design as to pay his creation the homage of
rapt appreciation due to a great work of art.</p>

<signed><hi>Charles Dudley Warner.</hi></signed>

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