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    <date value="1898">1898</date>
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<front>

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  <f name="original-date" rel="eq"><sym value="1848" rel="eq"/></f>
  <f name="original-title" rel="eq"><str rel="eq">Die Wiebelungen. Weltgeschichte aus der Saga.</str></f>
  <f name="SSD-volume" rel="eq"><str rel="eq">II</str></f>
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<body>
<div type="part" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N">
<pb id="pag258"/>
<head rend="up">The Wibelungen.</head>
<head type="sub">World-History as told in Saga.</head>

<p>In the stimulating recent past I too was
occupied with the rewakening of <hi>Frederick the Red-beard</hi>, so
longed for by so many, and strove with added zeal to satisfy an
earlier wish to use my feeble breath to breathe poetic life into
the hero-Kaiser for our acting stage. The outcome of the studies by
which I sought to master my subject I have embodied in the
following work: though its details may contain nothing new to the
researcher or student of that branch of literature, yet their
allocation and employment seemed interesting enough to some of my
friends to justify the printing of the little sketch. I consented
the more readily, as this prelude will remain the only fruit of my
labours on the stuff itself; labours which themselves impelled me
to abandon my dramatic plan, for reasons that will not escape the
attentive reader.</p>

<div type="chapter" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N">
<pb id="pag259"/>
<head>The Ur-Kinghood.</head>
<note id="rn1" corresp="n1" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>

<p><hi rend="up">Their</hi> coming from the East has lingered in the
memory of European peoples down to farthest times: Sagas preserved
this recollection, however much disfigured. The maintenance of the
Kingly power among the different nations, its restriction to one
favoured race, the fidelity with which it was accorded solely to
that race even in the latter's deepest degeneracy,—must have
had a deep foundation in the people's consciousness: it rested on
the memory of the Asiatic ur-home, on the origin of folk-stems in
the Family, and on the might of the family's Head, the Stem-father
"sprung from the Gods."</p>

<p>To gain a concrete idea of this, we must think
of that ur-Folk somewhat as follows.—</p>

<p>At the epoch which most Sagas call the
"Sint-Fluth" or Great Deluge, when our earth's Northern hemisphere
was about as much covered by water as now is the Southern,
<note id="rn2" corresp="n2" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
the largest island of this northern world-sea
<pb id="pag260" n="260"/>
would have been the
highest mountain-range of Asia, the so-called Indian Caucasus: upon
this island, i.e. these mountains, we have to seek the cradle of
the present Asiatic peoples, as also of those who wandered forth to
Europe. Here is the ancestral seat of all religions, of every
tongue, of all these nations' Kinghood.</p>

<p>But the Ur-kinghood is the Patriarchate: the
father was the bringer-up and teacher of his children; to them his
discipline and doctrine seemed the power and wisdom of a higher
being, and the larger grew the family, the more prolific in
collateral branches, the more peculiar and divine must seem to it
the mould of its original head, to whom it owed not only its body,
but also all its spiritual life and customs. As this Head laid down
both discipline and doctrine, in him the royal and priestly powers
united of themselves, and his authority was bound to grow in
measure as the family became a Stem, above all in degree as his
original might descended to his body's heirs direct: as the stem
became accustomed to behold in these its chieftains, at last the
long-deceased Stem-father, from whom that undisputed honour flowed,
was certain to appear a god himself, or at least the earthly avatar
of an ideal god; and this idea in turn, enshrined by age, could
only serve to perpetuate the fame of that ur-race whose most
immediate scions formed the chieftains of the day.
<note id="rn3" corresp="n3" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
</p>

<p>Now, when the waters retreated from the northern
hemisphere to flood the southern once again, and the earth thus
took its present guise, the teeming population of that
mountain-isle descended to the new-found valleys, the gradually
emerging plains. What brought about the hardening of the
Patriarchate to a Monarchic despotism among the races dwelling in
the broad and fruitful plains of Asia, has been sufficiently set
forth: the races wandering farther westwards, and reaching Europe
in the end,
<pb id="pag261" n="261"/>
commenced a livelier and freer evolution. Constant war
and want in rawer climes and regions brought forth betimes the
feeling and consciousness of the racial unit's independence, with
its immediate result in the formation of the Commune. Every
head-of-a-family exerted his power over his nearest of kin in
similar fashion as the Stem-head claimed the right of ancient usage
over the whole stem: in the bond of all the heads of families the
king thus found his counterpart, and finally his limitation. The
weightiest point, however, was that the king soon lost his priestly
office, i.e. the first interpreting of God's decree—the sight
of God—since this was now fulfilled for his immediate clan by
every single head-of-family with the same authority as the
Ur-father had fulfilled it for his family. The King accordingly was
left with little more than the application and execution of the
god's decree, as rendered by the members of the commune, in the
equal interest of all and pursuant to the customs of the tribe. But
the more the voice of the community was busied with ideas of
worldly Right, i.e. with Property and the Individual's right to its
enjoyment, the more that Sight of God—which originally had
ranked as an essentially higher prerogative of the
Stem-father—would pass to a personal verdict in matters of
worldly dispute, and consequently the religious element of the
patriarchate would dwindle more and more. Only to the person of the
King and his immediate kinsmen, would the feeling of the stem still
cleave: he was the visible point-of-union of all its members; in
him they saw the successor to the Ur-father of the widely-branching
fellowship, and in each member of his family the purest of that
blood whence the whole Folk had sprung. Though even this idea grew
dim in time, yet awe and honour of the royal stem abode the deeper
in the people's heart the more incomprehensible to it the reason
for original distinction of this house, of which the sole unchanged
tradition said that from no other must its kings be chosen. This
relation we find in almost all the stems that wandered into Europe,
and plainly recognise its bearing
<pb id="pag262" n="262"/>
on the tribal kings of Greek
pre-history; but it manifests itself the clearest in the German
stems, and above all in the ancient royal lineage of the
<hi>Franks</hi>, in which, under the name of the "Wibelingen" or 
"Gibelinen," an ur-old royal claim advanced to the demand of
world-dominion.</p>

<p>The Frankish royal race makes its first
appearance in history under the name of "Merovingians"
("<hi>Merwingen</hi>"): we know that, even in the deepest
degeneration of this race, it never occurred to the Franks to
choose their kings from any other; every male member of this family
was competent to rule; could men not tolerate the vices of the one,
they sided with the other, but never left the family itself; and
this at a time of such corruption of the national code by willing
acceptance of the Romanic taint that almost every bond of noble
wont was loosed, so that the Folk indeed could hardly have been
recognised without its Royal race. 'Twas as if the people knew
that, sans this royal stem, it would cease to be the Folk of
Franks. The idea of the inalienable title of this race must
therefore have been as deeply rooted, as it needed centuries of
fearful struggles to root it out when it had reached its highest
ideal meaning, and with its death begin a wholly new ordainment of
the world. We refer to the going-under of the "Ghibelines."</p>
</div>

<div type="chapter" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N">
<head>The Nibelungen.</head>

<p>The ceaseless strain of men and races toward
never-compassed goals will mostly find a clearer explanation in
their Ur- and Stem-sagas than can be gathered from their entrance
into naked History, which tells us but the consequences of their
essential attributes. If we read the Stem-saga of the Frankish
royal race aright, we find therein an explanation of its historic
deeds past anything obtainable on other paths of scrutiny.</p>

<p>Unquestionably the <hi>Saga of the Nibelungen</hi>
is the birthright
<pb id="pag263" n="263"/>
of the Frankish stem. Research has shewn the
basis of this saga, too, to be of religio-mythic nature: its
deepest meaning was the ur-conscience of the Frankish stem, the
soul of its royal race, under whatsoever name the primal Asiatic
highlands may first have seen that race arise.—</p>

<milestone unit="section"/>

<p>For the moment we will neglect the oldest
meaning of the myth, in which we shall recognise <hi>Siegfried</hi>
as God of Light or Sun-god: to prepare ourselves for its connection
with history, we now will merely take the saga where it clothes
itself with the more human garb of ancient hero-dom. Here we find
Siegfried as the winner of the <hi>Nibelung's Hoard</hi> and with it
might unmeasurable. This Hoard, and the might in it residing,
becomes the immovable centre round which all further shaping of the
saga now revolves: the whole strife and struggle is aimed at this
Hoard of the Nibelungen, as the epitome of earthly power, and he
who owns it, who governs by it, either is or becomes a
Nibelung.</p>

<p>Now the Franks, whom we first meet in history in
the region of the Lower Rhine, have a royal race in which appears
the name "Nibelung"; especially among its purest scions, who even
before the time of Chlodwig were ousted by a kinsman, Merwig [5th
cent.], but regained the kingship later as Pipingen or Karlingen
[Pepins or Carlovingians]. Let this suffice for the present, to
shew, if not the genealogic, at least the mythical identity of the
Frankish royal family with those Nibelungen of the saga; which has
adopted unmistakable features from the history of this stem into
its later, more historical development, where the focus still
remains possession of that Hoard, the cynosure of earthly
rule.—</p>

<p>After the founding of their reign in Roman
Gallia, the Frankish Kings attacked and overthrew the other German
national stems, the Allemani, Bavarians, Thuringians and Saxons; so
that the latter henceforth bore the relation of
<pb id="pag264" n="264"/>
subjects to the
Franks, and though their tribal usages were mostly left them, they
had to suffer the indignity of being totally robbed of their royal
races, so far as these had not already disappeared; this loss
brought home to them the full extent of their dependence, and in
the deprivation of its symbol they mourned the downfall of their
native freedom. Though the heroic lustre of Karl the Great
[Charlemagne]—in whose might the germ of the Nibelungen-hoard
appeared to reach its fullest force—diverted for some time
the German stems' deep discontent, and made them gradually forget
the fame of their own dynasties, yet never did their loathing
vanish quite away; under Karl's successors it leapt so strongly
back to life, that the division of the great Reich, and the
severance therefrom of stricter Germany, must be mainly attributed
to the struggle of the downtrod German stems for freedom from the
Frankish rule. A total severance from that royal Stem of Rulers,
however, was not to take place before still later times ; for
though the purely German stems were now united in one independent
kingdom, yet the bond of this union of earlier autonomous and
severed national stems consisted ever in the Kingly function, and
this could only be arrogated by a member of that Frankish ur-race.
The whole inner movement of Germany therefore made for independence
of the separate stems under new derivatives of old stem-races, and
through annulment of the unifying royal power exerted by that hated
foreign race.</p>

<p>With the death of the last male Karling in
Germany we consequently are brought to the point when a total
sundering of the German stems almost arrived, and would surely have
arrived in full, had there still existed any plainer vestiges of
the ur-old royal races of the single stems. The German Church in
the person of its virtual patriarch, the Archbishop of Mainz, then
saved the (always tottering) unity of the Reich by delivering the
royal authority to Duke Konrad von Franken, who likewise sprang on
the female side from the ancient race of kings: only the weakness
of his rule,
<pb id="pag265" n="265"/>
again, brought the inevitable reaction to a final
head, as shewn in the attempt to choose a king from among the
strongest of the earlier subject, but now no longer manageable
German folk-stems.</p>

<p>In the choice of the Saxon Duke <hi>Heinrich</hi>,
however, and as if for hallowing it, the consideration may have
counted, that his race also was allied by marriage with the
Karlingen. But what a resistance the whole new Saxon royal-house
had constantly to combat, is evident from the mere fact that the
Franks and Lothringians, i.e. those peoples who numbered themselves
with the originally ruling stem, would never recognise as lawful
King the scion of a folk once conquered by them, whilst the other
German stems felt just as little called to pay allegiance to a king
imposed upon them by a stem no higher than their own, and equally
subjected by the Franks in former times. Otto I. was the first to
subdue the whole of Germany, and chiefly through his rousing
against the violent and proud hostility of the strictly Frankish
stems the national feeling of the Allemani and
Bavarians—German stems once trodden down by them—so
that the combination of their interests with his kingly interest
supplied the force to crush the old Frankish pretensions. The
consolidation of his sovereignty, however, appears to have been no
little helped by his attainment of the Romish Cæsarate, renewed in
former days by Karl the Great; for this conferred on him the lustre
of the old Frank ruling-stem, compelling a respect not yet extinct.
As if his family had plainly seen this, his successors made
incessant journeys to Rome and Italy; to return with that halo of
reverence so evidently meant to veil their native lineage in
oblivion and translate them to the rank of that ur-race alone
equipped for rule. They thus had won the "Hoard" and turned to
"Nibelungen."</p>

<p>The century of kingship of the Saxon house,
however, forms a relatively short interregnum in the infinitely
longer empire of the Frankish stem; for after extinction of the
Saxon house the royal power returned to a scion of that Frankish
stem, Konrad the Salier,—in whom, again, a
<pb id="pag266" n="266"/>
female kinship
with the Karlingen was proved and taken in view,—and remained
with it until the downfall of the "Ghibelines." The choice of
Lothar of Saxony, between the extinction of the male Frankish stem
and its continuation by descendants on the distaff side, the
Hohenstaufen, may be deemed a mere reactionary attempt, and this
time of little durability; still more so, the later choice of the
Guelph Otto IV. Only with the beheading of young Konrad at Naples
can one view the ur-old royal race of the "Wibelingen" as totally
extinct; strictly speaking, we must recognise that after him there
were no more German Kings, and still less Kaisers, in the high
ideal import of that dignity indwelling in the Wibelingen.</p>
</div>

<div type="chapter" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N">
<head>Wibelingen or Wibelungen</head>

<p>The name <hi>Wibelingen</hi>, designating the Kaiser-party in
opposition to the <hi>Welfen</hi>, is of frequent occurrence,
especially in Italy, where the two opponents gained their ideal
scope; upon a closer search, however, we find how utterly
impossible it is to explain these highly significant names by
<hi>historical</hi> documents. And this is natural: bare History
scarcely ever offers us, and always incompletely, the material for
a judgment of the inmost (so to say, instinctive) motives of the
ceaseless struggles of whole folks and races; that we must seek in
Religion and Saga, where we mostly shall find it in convincing
clearness.</p> 

<p>Religion and Saga are the pregnant products of
the people's insight into the nature of things and men. From of old
the Folk has had the inimitable faculty of seizing its own essence
according to the Generic idea, and plainly reproducing it in
plastic personification. The Gods and Heroes of its religion and
saga are the concrete personalities in which the Spirit of the Folk
portrays its essence to itself: however sharp the individuality of
these personages, their content (<hi>Inhalt</hi>) is of most
universal, wide-embracing type, and therefore lends these shapes a
strangely lasting lease
<pb id="pag267" n="267"/>
of life; as every new direction of the
people's nature can be gradually imparted to them, they are always
in the mood to suit it. Hence the Folk is thoroughly sincere and
truthful in its stories and inventions, whereas the learned
historian who holds by the mere pragmatic surface of events,
without regard to the direct expression of the people's bond of
solidarity,
<note id="rn4" corresp="n4" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
is pedantically untrue because unable to understand the very
subject of his work with mind and heart, and therefore is driven,
without his knowing it, to arbitrary subjective speculations. The
Folk alone understands the Folk, because each day and hour it does
and consummates in truth what of its very essence it both can and
should; whereas its learned schoolmaster cudgels his head in vain
to comprehend what the Folk does purely of itself.</p>

<p>If—to prove the truthfulness of the
people's insight with reference to our present case—instead
of a history of Lords and Princes we had a Folk-history, we
certainly should also find there how the German peoples always knew
a name for that wondrous Frankish race of Kings which filled them
all with awe and reverence of a higher type; a name we find again
in history at last, Italianly disguised as "<hi>Ghibelini</hi>." That
this name applied not only to the Hohenstaufen in Italy, but
already to their forerunners in Germany, the Frankish Kaisers, is
historically attested by Otto von Freisingen: the current form of
this name in the Upper Germany of his time was "<hi>Wibelingen</hi>"
or "<hi>Wibelungen</hi>." Now this title would entirely conform with
the name of the chief heroes of the ur-Frank stem-saga, as also
with the demonstrably frequent family-name among the Franks, of
Nibeling, if the change of the initial letter N to W could be
accounted for. The linguistic difficulty here is met with ease, if
we rightly weigh the origin of just that consonantal change; this
<pb id="pag268" n="268"/>
lay in the people's mouth, which, following the German idiom's
native bent, made a Stabreim of the two opposing parties, Welfs and
Nibelungs, and gave the preference to the party of the German
folk-stems by placing first the name of the "Welfen" and making
that of the foes of their independence come after it as rhyme. 
"<hi>Welfen</hi> und <hi>Wibelungen</hi>" the Folk will long have known
and named or ever it occurred to learned chroniclers to plague
themselves with the derivation of these, to them, recondite popular
nicknames. The. Italian people, likewise standing nearer to the
Welfs in their feud against the Kaisers, adopted these names from
the German folk-mouth, and turned them quite according to their
dialect to "Guelphi" and "Ghibelini." But the learned agony of
Bishop Otto of Freisingen inspired him to derive the title of the
Kaiser-party from the name of a wholly indifferent hamlet,
Waiblingen—a charming trait that plainly proves how fit are
clever folk to understand phenomena of world-historic import, such
as these immortal names in the people's mouth! The Swabian Folk
knew better who the "Wibelungen" were, for it called the
<hi>Nibelungen</hi> so, and from the time of the ascendence of its
native blood-related Welfs.</p>

<p>If we borrow from the Folk its conviction of the
identity of this name with that of the ur-old Frankish dynasty, the
consequences for an exact and intimate understanding of this race's
wondrous strivings and ambitions, as also of the doings of its
physical and spiritual opponents, in Folk and Church, are so
incalculable that its light alone will let us look into the
mainsprings of one of the most eventful periods of world-historic
evolution with clearer eye and fuller heart than our dry-as-dust
chronicles ever can give us; for in that mighty Nibelungen-saga we
are shewn as if the embryo of a plant, whose natural conditions of
growth, of flower-time and death, are in it certainly foretold to
the attentive observer.</p>

<p>So let us embrace that conviction: and we cannot
do so with a stronger confidence than it inspired in the popular
<pb id="pag269" n="269"/>
mind of the Middle Ages coeval with that race's deeds; a confidence
that survived to the poetic literature of the Hohenstaufen period,
where we may plainly distinguish in the Christian-chivalrous poems
the Welfian element become at last a churchly one, in the
newly-furbished Nibelungenlieder that utterly contrasting
Wibelingian principle with its often still ur-pagan cut.</p>
</div>

<div type="chapter" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N">
<head>The Welfen.</head>

<p>Before proceeding to a minuter examination of
the point last touched, it is requisite to define more closely the
direct opponents of the Wibelingen, the party of the <hi>Welfen</hi>.
In the German language "Welfe" means sucklings, at first of dogs,
and then of quadrupeds in general. The notion of pure descent and
nurture at the mother's breast was easily conjoined to this, and in
the poetic people's-mouth a "whelp" would soon be tantamount to a
pure-bred son, born and suckled by the lawful mother.</p>

<p>In the times of the Karlingen, at its ancient
Swabian stem-seat there enters history a race in which the name of
<hi>Welf</hi> is handed down to farthest generations. It is a Welf
who first arrests the eye of History by declining to accept
enfeoffments from Frankish kings; as he could not stop his sons
from entering relations partly connubial and partly feudal with the
Karlings, the old father left his lands in deep disgust and
withdrew into the wilderness, to be no witness of his race's
shame.</p>

<p>If the dry chronicles of that time thought good
to record this trait, to them so unimportant, we certainly may
assume that it was far more actively embraced and spread abroad by
the people of the downtrod German stem; for this incident, whose
like may have often occurred before, expressed with energy the
proud yet suffering self-consciousness of all the German stems as
against the ruling tribe. Welf may thus have been acclaimed a "true
whelp," a genuine son of the genuine stem-mother; and,
<pb id="pag270" n="270"/>
with the constantly increasing wealth and honour of his race, it might
easily end in the people's viewing the name <hi>Welf</hi> as
synonymous with German tribal independence against the feared but
ne'er-beloved Frankish sovereignty.</p>

<p>In Swabia, their ancestral seat, the Welfs at
last beheld in the advancement of the petty Hohenstaufen through
intermarriage with the Frankish Kaisers and arrival at the dignity
of Swabian, and thereafter Frankish Dukes, a fresh shame put upon
them; and King Lothar used their natural embitterment against this
race as chief means of resistance to the Wibelungen, who openly
impugned his royal right. He increased the power of the Welfs to a
degree unknown before by granting them the two dukedoms of Saxony
and Bavaria at the same date, and only through the great assistance
thus obtained was it possible for him to assert his kingship
against the clamour of the Wibelungen, ay, so to humble them that
they themselves held it not unadvisable to found a future
stronghold among the German stems by intermarriage with the Welfs.
Repeatedly did the possession of the major part of Germany devolve
on the Welfen, and though his Wibeling predecessors had deemed
expedient to withdraw it from them, Friedrich I. appears to have
seen in the recognition of such an estate itself the surest means
of reconcilement with an invincible National party and lastingly
laying the hatred of ages; in a sense, he pacified them by material
possession, the less disturbedly to realise his own ideal of the
Kaiserdom, which he had grasped as none before.</p>

<p>What part is to be ascribed to the Welfs in the
final foundering of the Wibelingen, and with them of the stricter
German monarchy, is plainly told in history: the latter half of the
thirteenth century shews us the fulfilled reaction of the narrower
national spirit of the German stems, in their thirst for
independence, against the royal yoke originally imposed upon all by
the Franks. That these stems themselves were almost entirely
disbanded till then, is to be explained, among other things, by
their having lost their royal families as result of their first
<pb id="pag271" n="271"/>
subjection to the Franks; their other noble houses, the nearest of
kin to the former, could therefore more easily make themselves
absolute (directly holding from the
Reich,—<hi>reichsunmittelbar</hi>) under the shelter and
pretext of inherited imperial fiefs, and thus induce the thorough
disgregation of the stems in whose broader national-interest the
fight against the supremacy of the Wibelungen had first been waged.
The ultimately successful reaction was therefore founded less upon
an actual triumph of the stems, than on the collapse of the central
kingly power undermined from of old by that fight. That it did not
take place in the sense of the Folk, but in the interest of lords
who were splitting up the folk-sterns, is thus the ugly feature in
this historical occurrence, however much that issue lay appointed
by the nature of the existing historic elements themselves. Yet we
may call everything related hereto the "Welfic" principle (devoid
of any stem-saga), in opposition to that of the Wibelungen, which
developed into nothing less than a claim to world-dominion.</p>
</div>

<div type="chapter" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N">
<head>The Nibelungen-hoard in the Frankish Royal race.</head>

<p>Clearly to grasp the inner relation of the
Nibelungen-saga to the historical significance of the Frankish
Kingship, let us once more turn back, and at somewhat greater
length, to a consideration of the historic doings of this ancient
princely race.</p>

<p>In what state of inner dissolution of their
tribal system the Frankish stems at last arrived at their historic
seat, the present Netherlands, cannot be strictly ascertained. We
at first distinguish Salic and Ripuarian Franks; and not merely
this distinction, but also the fact that larger districts
(<hi>Gaue</hi>) had their independent Princes, makes it obvious that
the original Stem-kingship had suffered a strongly democratic
devolution through the rovings and most varied partings, as also
the later re-uniting of branch-races. One thing is certain, that
only from the
<pb id="pag272" n="272"/>
members of the whole stem's oldest race were Kings or
Commanders chosen: their power over the single components was
evidently hereditary, for, though a chief of all the assembled
stems was chosen for great enterprises in common, it could only be,
as said, from out the branches of the ur-old race of Kings.</p>

<p>In "Nibelgau" we see established the undoubtedly
oldest and most genuine section of the race: <hi>Chlojo</hi>, or
<hi>Chlodio</hi>, may be regarded as the earliest historic holder of
the strictly Royal authority, i.e. the Hoard of the Nibelungen.
Victoriously had the Franks invaded the Roman world already, dwelt
under the name of Confederates in the former Roman Belgia, and
Chlojo ruled a subject province with something like a proconsul's
power. Very probably a decisive battle with Roman legions had
preceded this final seizure, and in the spoil there may have been
found, beyond the war-chest, the full insignia of Roman empire. In
these treasures, these insignia, the stem-saga of the
Nibelungen-hoard would reap new realistic matter for its
freshening, and renew alike its ideal import by the increase to the
royal stability of the old stem-ruling race. The previously divided
royal authority thus won a sure combining-point, material and ideal
at once, against which the licence of the degenerate tribal system
broke in vain. To the many collateral branches of the royal house
the advantage of this newly-risen power would be equally obvious,
and they persistently strove to wrest it to themselves. Such an
immediate kinsman was <hi>Merwig</hi>, chieftain of the Merwegau, to
whose protection the dying Chlojo gave his three infant sons;
instead of parcelling out their birthright to his charges, the
faithless cousin seized it for himself and drove the helpless
children out: this trait we meet in the full-fledged
Nibelungen-saga, where Siegfried von Morungen, i.e. Merwungen has
to divide the heirloom Hoard among the sons of Nibelung, but
likewise keeps it for himself. The power and right residing in the
Hoard had thus passed over to the Nibelungen's blood-relations, the
Merwingen: in effect,
<pb id="pag273" n="273"/>
they stretched its physical significance to
ever fuller width by constant conquest and addition to the royal
might, and the latter more especially by a systematic rooting-out
of all the blood-relations of their house.</p>

<p>One of the sons of Chlojo was saved, however;
his descendants fled to Austrasia, regained the Nibelgau,
established themselves at Nivella, and finally re-appeared in
history as the "Pipingen," a name unquestionably given them by the
hearty sympathy of the Folk with the fate of those little sons of
Chlojo, and hereditarily accepted in due gratitude for this
people's helping and protecting love. For these it was reserved,
after recovery of the Nibelungen-hoard, to raise the material value
of the worldly power upbuilt thereon to its uttermost pitch: Karl
the Great, whose predecessor had entirely set aside at last the
puffed-up and degenerate race of the Merwingen, gained and governed
the whole German world, together with the former West-Roman Empire
so far as German peoples dwelt therein; he accordingly might deem
himself de facto successor to the rights of the Roman Cæsars, and
claim their confirmation by the Romish Pontiff.</p>

<p>Arrived at this high stand-point, we now must
prepare ourselves for a survey of the world's condition at that
time, and indeed in the sense of the mighty Nibelung himself; for
this is the point from whence the historic import of that
often-mentioned Frankish saga is to be taken more clearly in
eye.</p>

<p>When Karl the Great looked down from the height
of his West-Roman Kaiser-throne upon the world he knew, the first
thing to strike him, must have been that solely in himself and
family had the German ur-Kingship survived: all the royal races of
the German stems related to him, so far as language proved a common
origin, had passed away or been destroyed by subjugation, and he
thus might deem himself the only representative and lawful heir of
German Ur-Kinghood. This state of affairs would very naturally lead
him and his nearest kin, the Franks, to regard themselves as the
peculiarly-privileged, the oldest and most imperishable stem-race
of all the German nation, and
<pb id="pag274" n="274"/>
eventually to find an ideal right to
that pretension in their primitive stem-saga. In that stem-saga, as
in every ur-old saga of like kind, an originally religious core is
plainly visible. Though we left that kernel on one side at its
earliest mentioning, it now is time to view it closer.</p>
</div>

<div type="chapter" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N">
<head>Origin and evolution of the Nibelungen-myth.</head>

<p>Man receives his first impressions from
surrounding Nature, and none of her phenomena will have reacted on
him so forcibly from the beginning, as that which seemed to him to
form the first condition of the existence, or at least of his
knowledge, of everything contained in Creation: and this is
<hi>Light, the Day, the Sun</hi>. Thanks, and finally worship, would
be paid this element the first; the more so, as its opposite,
Darkness, Night, seemed joyless, hence unfriendly and
fear-compelling. Now, as man drew all his joy and animation from
the light, it soon would come to mean the very fount of Being: it
became the begetter, the father, the god; the breaking of day out
of night at last appeared to him the victory of Light over
Darkness, of Warmth over Cold, and so forth; and this idea may have
been the first to breed in man a moral consciousness and lead him
to distinction of the useful and the harmful, the friendly and
hostile, Good and Bad.</p>

<p>So far, at anyrate, this earliest
nature-impression must be regarded as the common basis of all
Religions of every people. In the individualising of these general
ideas derived from physical observation, however, is to be sought
the gradually-conspicuous cleavage of religions according to the
character of different nations. Now the stem-saga of the Franks has
the high pre-eminence that, in keeping with the stem's peculiarity,
it developed more and more from this beginning to historic life,
whereas a similar growth of the religious myth into a genealogic
saga is nowhere to be found among the other German stems: in exact
degree as these lagged behind in active influence on history, did
their stem-sagas stop short at the religious myth (superlatively
<pb id="pag275" n="275"/>
the case with the Scandinavians), or get lost in wholly undeveloped
fragments at the first shock with historic nations more alive.</p>

<p>At the farthest point to which we can trace it,
the Frank stem-saga shews the individualised Light or Sun-god, who
conquers and lays low the monster of ur-Chaotic night:—this
is the original meaning of <hi>Siegfried's fight with the
Dragon</hi>, a fight like that Apollo fought against the dragon
Python. Yet, as Day succumbs to Night again, as Summer in the end
must yield to Winter, Siegfried too is slain at last: so the god
became man, and as a mortal man he fills our soul with fresh and
stronger sympathy; for, a sacrifice to his deed of blessing us, he
wakes the moral motive of Revenge, i.e. the longing to avenge his
death upon his murderer, and thus renew his deed. The ur-old fight
is now continued by ourselves, and its changeful issue is just the
same as that eternal alternation of day and night, summer and
winter,—and lastly of the human race itself, in ceaseless
sway from life to death, from triumph to defeat, from joy to grief,
and thus perennially rejuvenating in itself the active
consciousness of the immortal fund of Man and Nature. The
quintessence of this constant motion, thus of Life, at last in 
"<hi>Wuotan</hi>" (Zeus) found expression as the chiefest God, the
Father and Pervader of the All. Though his nature marked him as the
highest god, and as such he needs must take the place of father to
the other deities, yet was he nowise an historically older god, but
sprang into existence from man's later, higher consciousness of
self; consequently he is more abstract than the older Nature-god,
whilst the latter is more corporeal and, so to phrase it, more
personally inborn in man.</p>

<p>If this may pass as a general statement of the
evolutionary path of Saga, and finally of History, from the
ur-Myth, our next concern will be that weighty point in the
fashioning of the Franks' stem-saga which gave this race its quite
specific physiognomy,—to wit, the <hi>Hoard</hi>.</p>

<milestone unit="section"/>

<p>In the religious mythos of the Scandinavians the term
<pb id="pag276" n="276"/>
<hi>Nifelheim</hi>, i.e. Nibel=Nebelheim [the Home of
Haze] comes down to us as designation of the (subterranean) sojourn
of the Night-spirits, "Schwarzalben," in opposition to the heavenly
dwelling of the "Asen" and "Lichtalben" ["Light-elves"].
These Black-elves, "Niflûngar," children of Night and Death,
burrow the earth, find out its inner treasures, smelt and smith its
ore: golden gear and keen-edged weapons are their work. Now we find
the name of "Nibelungen," their treasures, arms and trinkets, again
in the Frankish stem-saga, but with the distinction that the idea
originally shared by all the German stems has here evolved to
ethical historic import.</p>

<p>When Light vanquished Darkness, when Siegfried
slew the Nibelungen-dragon, he further won as victor's spoil the
Nibelungen-hoard it guarded. But the possession of this
Hoard—whose properties increase his might beyond all measure,
since he thereby rules the Nibelungen—is also reason of his
death: for the dragon's heir now plots to win it back. This heir
despatches him by stealth, as night the day, and drags him down
into the gloomy realm of Death: <hi>Siegfried thus becomes himself a
Nibelung</hi>. Though doomed to death by acquisition of the Hoard,
each sequent generation strives to seize it : its inmost essence
drives it on, as with necessity of Nature, as day has ever to
dethrone the night anew. For in the Hoard there lies withal the
secret of all earthly might: <hi>it is the Earth itself with all its
splendour, which in joyous shining of the Sun at dawn of day we
recognise as our possession to enjoy, when Night, that held its
ghostly, gloomy dragon's-wings spread fearsomely above the world's
rich stores, has finally been routed</hi>.</p>

<p>If we look closer at this Hoard, <hi>the
Nibelungen's special work</hi>, in it we recognise at first the
metal bowels of the earth, and next what is prepared therefrom:
arms, ruler's-ring, and stores of gold. So that Hoard included in
itself the means of gaining and insuring mastery, as also the one
Talisman of Rule: the hero-god who won it first, and thus became a
Nibelung partly through his power and partly through his death,
left as heirloom to his race the active
<pb id="pag277" n="277"/>
right to claim the Hoard:
to avenge the slain and keep or win the Hoard afresh, this stress
makes out the soul of all the race; by this it may be recognised
throughout the saga, and above all in its history, that race of the
Nibelungen-Franken.</p>

<p>Now, should it be thought too daring to assume
that even in the ur-home of the German tribes that wondrous race
once reigned above them all, or, if the other German stems have
sprung from it, that at their head it once had ruled all other
peoples on that Asiatic mountain-isle, at least a later phase is
irrefutable,—that it actually governed all the German stems
in Europe, and at their head, as we soon shall see, both claimed
and strove for the dominion of every nation in the world. That
deeply innate stress, now stronger and now weaker, this race of
Kings appears to have referred in every age to its prime origin;
and Karl the Great knew perfectly what he was doing, and why, when
he had all songs of the stem-saga most carefully collected and
transcribed: he knew they would confirm the Folk's belief in the
ur-old right of his dynasty.</p>
</div>

<div type="chapter" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N">
<head>The rank of Romish Kaiser and the Roman stem-saga.</head>

<p>The sovereign-instinct of the Nibelungen, till
then more brutal in its satisfaction, was led at last by Karl the
Great towards an ideal aim: this psychologic moment (<hi>der hierzu
anregende Moment</hi>) must be sought in Karl's assumption of the
<hi>Roman Cæsardom</hi>.</p>

<p>If we cast a glance upon the extra-German world,
so far as it lay bare to Karl the Great, we find the selfsame
kingless plight as with the subject German stems. The Romanic
nations ruled by Karl had long since lost their royal races through
the Romans; the Slavonic nations, little valued in themselves and
destined for a more or less thorough Germanising, had never won for
their ruling races, now also falling to decay, a recognition equal
to the German's. Rome alone retained historic claim to rule,
<pb id="pag278" n="278"/>
and that to rule the world; that world-dominion had been exerted by the
Cæsars in the name of a people, not of an ur-old royal race, but
nevertheless in form of Monarchy. These Cæsars, in latter days
capriciously selected first from this, then that component of the
brew of nations, had never had to prove a racial right to the
highest sovereignty in all the world. The deep corruption,
impotence, and shameful foundering of this Roman
Cæsarate—propped up at last by nothing but the German
mercenaries, who had possession of the Roman Empire long years
before its actual extinction—had certainly not faded from the
memory of its Frankish conquerors. Yet, for all the personal
weakness and depravity of the emperors known to the Germans, a deep
awe and reverence of that rank under whose authority this
highly-cultured Roman world was ruled had been implanted in the
minds of the barbaric intruders, and there had stayed until these
later times. And in that feeling there might lurk, not only respect
for a higher culture, but also an old remembrance of the first
brush of the German peoples with the Romans, who under <hi>Julius
Cæsar</hi> once had reared a strong and lasting dam against their
restless inroads.</p>

<p>Already German warriors had hunted Gauls and
Celts, with hardly a stand, over the Alps and across the Rhine; the
conquest of the whole of Gallia was easily within their grasp, when
suddenly in Julius Cæsar they encountered a force unknown to them
before. Beating them back, vanquishing and partly subjugating them,
this supernal captain must have made an indelible impression on the
Germans; and confirmed was their deep awe of him when they later
learnt how all the Roman world had bent to him, how his patronymic
"Cæsar" had been hallowed to the title of the highest earthly
might, whilst he himself had been translated to the Gods from whom
his race had sprung.</p>

<p>This divine descent was grounded on an ur-old
Roman saga, according to which the Romans issued from a primordial
race that, coming once from Asia, had settled
<pb id="pag279" n="279"/>
on the banks of the
Tiber and Arno. The quick of the religious halidom committed to the
offspring of this race indisputably made out for ages the
weightiest heritage of the Roman nation: in it reposed the force
that bound and knit this active people; the "sacra" in the keeping
of the oldest, immemorially-allied patrician families, compelled
the heterogeneous masses of plebeians to obedience. Deep awe and
veneration of the holy things, whose sense enjoined a vigorous
abstemiousness (as practised by the sorely-tried ur-father), make
out the oldest, inconceivably effective laws whereby the headstrong
folk was governed; and the "<hi>pontifex maximus</hi>"—the
unchanging successor of Numa, the moral founder of the Roman
State—was the virtual (spiritual) king of the Romans. Actual
Kings, i.e. hereditary holders of the highest worldly rulership,
are unknown in Roman history: the banished Tarquins were Etruscan
conquerors; in their expulsion we have less to recognise a
political act of insurrection against the royal power, than the old
stem-races' national act of shaking-off a foreign yoke.</p>

<p>Now, when the plebs was no longer to be held in
check by these stern and spiritually-armoured ancient races; when
through constant warfare and privation it had made its strength so
irresistible that, to avoid a destructive discharge thereof against
the inmost core of the Roman State-system, it must be loosed upon
the outer world in conquest, then, and still more as result of this
world-conquest, the last bond of ancient customs slowly snapped,
and religion dropped into its utter opposite through the most
material worldlifying: dominion of the world, enslavement of its
peoples—no more dominion of the inner man, subdual of his
egoistic animal passions—was henceforth Rome's religion. The
Pontificate, though it still stood outward token of the ancient
Rome, passed over to the worldly Imperator as his weightiest
attribute, significantly enough; and the first man to combine both
powers was just that Julius Cæsar, whose race was lauded as the
very oldest emigrant from Asia. Troja (<hi>Ilion</hi>), so
<pb id="pag280" n="280"/>
said the old stem-saga now ripened to historic consciousness, was that
sacred town of Asia whence the Julian (<hi>Ilian</hi>) race had
sprung: during the destruction of his father-town by the united
Hellenic stems Æneas, son of a goddess, had rescued the
holiest relic (the Palladium) preserved in this ur-people's city,
and brought it safe to Italy: from him descend the primal Roman
races, and most directly of them all the Julian; from him, through
the possession of that ur-folk's halidom, was said to date the core
of Romandom, their old religion.</p>
</div>

<div type="chapter" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N">
<head>Trojan descent of the Franks.</head>

<p>How full of meaning is the historically-attested
fact that, shortly after the foundation of their rule in Roman
Gallia, the Franks gave themselves out as likewise <hi>sprung from
Troy</hi>. The chronicle-historian gives a pitying smile to such a
stale conceit, which cannot hold a grain of truth. But he whose
purpose is to vindicate the deeds of men and races by their inmost
views and impulses, will find it of the highest moment to note what
they <hi>believed</hi>, or tried to make others believe, about
themselves. And no feature can be of more striking historic
importance, than this naïve utterance of the Franks' belief in
their ur-right to rule, upon their entry on that Roman world whose
culture and whose past inspired them with reverence, yet to rule
which they were proud enough to base their right directly on the
principles of classic Romandom itself. So they, too, sprang from
Troy; in fact it was their royal race that governed once in Troy.
For one of their ancient stem-kings, <hi>Pharamond</hi>, was none
other than <hi>Priamus</hi>, the very head of the Trojan royal
family, who after the destruction of the city, so they said, had
journeyed into distant parts with a remnant of his people. The
first point for us to notice here, is that the naming of towns or
transformation of their names by an addendum, as also the poetic
adaptations of the Trojan War and incidents allied therewith in
<pb id="pag281" n="281"/>
vogue until the later Middle Ages, afford sufficient evidence of
the wide spread and lasting influence of this new saga. Whether it
was in all respects as new as it looks, and does not contain a germ
far older than its new disguisal in the Græco-Roman
dress,—this certainly is worth inquiry.</p>

<p>The legend of an ur-old town or castle, built by
the earliest human races and circled with Cyclopean walls to guard
their holiest fetish, we find with almost every nation of the
world, and especially with those of whom we may assume that they
spread westward from those ur-hills of Asia. Did the archetype of
these fabled cities not actually once exist in these peoples'
earliest home? Surely there was one oldest, first walled city,
which held in it the oldest and most venerable race, the
well-spring of all patriarchism, i.e. of Kinghood joined with
Priesthood. The farther did the stems move westward from their
ancient home, the holier would grow their memory of that ur-town;
it became to them a city of the Gods, the Asgard of the
Scandinavians, the Asciburg of the related Germans. On their
Olympos we find again among the Greeks the dwelling of the Gods;
before the Romans' Capitol, no less, it may originally have
hovered.</p>

<p>Certain it is, that wherever the stems, now
grown to nations, made their abiding home, there that ur-town was
copied in reality: to it, the new stem-seat of the ruling oldest
race of Kings and Priests, the sanctity of the primordial city was
gradually transferred; and the farther did the races journey from
it in its turn, and build again, the more accountably would wax the
glamour of this new stem-city also. Very naturally, however, with
the freer evolution of these branch-communities, and their growing
sense of self-reliance, the desire for independence would arise;
and in exact degree as the ancient ruling-race, that governed from
the new stem-city, endeavoured to imprint its sovereignty on the
offshoot communes, or cities, and met their stiffening recusance
with added tyranny. The first national Wars of Independence were
therefore those waged by Colonies against the Mother-cities; and so
<pb id="pag282" n="282"/>
obstinate must have grown their enmity, that nothing less than the
destruction of the old stem-city, with the extirpation or total
banishment of the hereditary ruling-race, could still the hate of
the epigoni or lay their fears of fresh oppression. All the greater
historic nations that followed in each other's footsteps from the
Indian Caucasus to the Mediterranean Sea know such a holy city,
copied from the ur-old city of the Gods on earth, as also its
destruction by new generations: very probably they even nursed the
memory of an ur-old war of earliest races against the eldest
ruling-race in that Gods'-city of their hoariest home, and of that
town's destruction: this may have been, in fact, the first general
tussle for the Nibelung's Hoard.</p>

<p>Nothing do we know of great Mother-cities
founded by our German stems on that Ur-town's model in their long
North-westward wandering, which was finally arrested by the German
Ocean and the sword of Julius Cæsar. On the other hand, the memory
of the Gods'-city in their oldest home itself had lingered with
them; and, un-perpetuated to the eye by material reproduction, it
had settled to the more abstract notion of a Gods'-abode in Asgard.
Not till we come to their new and stabler home, our present
Germany, do we meet with signs of Asenburgs.</p>

<p>Different had been the evolution of the peoples
thrusting South-westwards, among whose Hellenic stems the last
distinct remembrance, of their united fight-for-independence
against the Priamids and the razing of Troy, as the most signal
outset of a new historic life, had almost totally extinguished
every other memory. Now, as the Romans, after a closer acquaintance
with the historic stem-saga of the Hellenes, had held themselves
completely justified in linking on the dim remembrances of their
forefathers' descent from Asia to that sharp-cut myth of the
better-cultured nation (as if to represent their subjugation of the
Greeks as a reprisal for the destruction of Troy), just so did the
Franks lay hand on it, perhaps with no less title, when they came
to know the legend and its sequel. If the German memories were less
distinct, at least they were
<pb id="pag283" n="283"/>
still older, for they clung directly
to the earliest home, the burg (Etzel-, i.e. Asci-burg) in which
was stored the Nibelungen-hoard once won by their Stem-god and left
to them and their strong arm; thus the burg whence they had once
already ruled all kindred folks and races. The Grecian Troy became
for them that cradle city, and the King of immemorial right,
dislodged therefrom, in them revived his ancient privilege.</p>

<p>At last confronted with the history of the
South-west wanderers, must not his race regard its wondrous
preservation as a token of the gods' eternal preference? All
peoples now descended from the races that had waged a patricidal
war against the oldest royal race in the cradle-home, and,
victorious then, had forced this race to journey toward the raw
inhospitable North while they fenced in the fertile South for
leisurely expansion,—all these the Franks found
<hi>kingless</hi>. Long since extinct and rooted out, were the oldest
tribes in which these stems had erst known Kings; a last Greek
Stem-King, the Macedonian <hi>Alexander</hi>—offspring of
Achilles, that foremost vanquisher of Troy—, had un-kinged
the whole southern Orient itself, up to the cradle of mankind in
central Asia, as if in last fulfilment of that earliest patricidal
war: with him his race expired too, and from that time none had
rule except unrightful raiders of the royal power, who all had
finally succumbed beneath the weight <hi>of Julian Rome</hi>.</p>

<p>After extinction of the Julian race even the
Roman Emperors were arbitrarily elected, in any case not racially
legitimate, dictators: their empire, or ever they themselves became
aware of it, had long since ceased to be a "Roman" empire as from
of old it had only been bound up by force, and a force maintained
through wellnigh naught but armies, so, now that the Romanic
nations were completely degenerated and effeminate, these armies
were formed of almost none but hired troops of German origin.
Hence, gradually renouncing all material worldly might, after long
estrangement from itself the Roman spirit necessarily turned back
upon itself, to its ur-nature;
<pb id="pag284" n="284"/>
and thus, adopting Christianity, it
gave birth to a new development, the Roman Catholic Church: the
Imperator again became all Pontifex, Cæsar again Numa, in new
peculiarity of import. Now the <hi>Pontifex maximus</hi>, or
<hi>Pope</hi>, was approached by the full-blooded representative of
Ur-world-Kinghood, <hi>Karl the Great</hi>: the bearers of the oldest
Kinghood and the oldest Priesthood, dissevered since the razing of
that cradle city (according to the Trojan saga: the <hi>royal
Priamos</hi> and the <hi>pious Æneas</hi>) met after centuries
of parting, and touched as body and spirit of mankind.</p>

<p>Joyful was their meeting: nothing should ever
part them more; the one should give the other troth and shelter:
the Pontifex crowned the Cæsar, and to the nations preached
obedience toward their lawful King; the Kaiser installed the Priest
of God in his supreme pastorate, in whose exercise he undertook to
shield him with the arm of worldly strength against all
caitiffs.</p>

<p>Now, if this king was de facto master of the
West-Roman empire, and might the thought of the ur-kingly title of
his race awake in him the claim to perfect sovereignty of the
world, in the Kaisership he gained still stronger title to that
claim, especially through his entrustment with the shelter of that
Christian Church which was to span the world. For the further
development of that majestic world-relation, however, it is most
important to remark that this spiritual title set up no altogether
novel claim of the Frankish royal race, but simply woke to plainer
terms a claim ingenerate in the germ of the Frankish stem-saga,
though veiled till then in dimmer consciousness.</p>
</div>

<div type="chapter" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N">
<head>Material and Ideal contents of the Nibelungen-Hoard.</head>

<p>With Karl the Great the often-cited ur-old myth
attains its most material confirmation in a grand harmonious
juncture of world-history. Thenceforward in exact degree
<pb id="pag285" n="285"/>
as its real embodiment dissolved and fell to pieces, its essential
<hi>ideal</hi> content was to mount to such a point that, entirely
divested of the Real, the pure Idea steps plainly formulated into
History, and finally withdraws therefrom to pass, even as to its
outward garment, completely back to Saga.</p>

<p>Whereas in the century after Karl the Great,
under his more and more incompetent successors, the actual kingdom
and the sovereignty over subject peoples had crumbled up and lost
in power, all the atrocities of the Karlings sprang from one
root-instinct common to them all, the longing for sole possession
of the Nibelungen-hoard, i.e. of rule supreme. Since Karl the Great
this seemed to need confirming by the Kaisership, and he who won
the Kaiser-throne believed himself the true possessor of the Hoard,
whatever the diminution of its worldly wealth (in landed property).
The Kaiserhood, with the supreme authority to it alone attaching,
was thus invested with a more and more ideal meaning; and during
the period of total defeat of the Frankish ruling-stem, when the
Saxon Otto seemed to be restoring the real Cæsarate of Karl the
Great in fresh conjunction with Rome, its <hi>ideal</hi> aspect would
appear to have come to ever clearer consciousness in the mind of
that old stem. The Franks and their ducal race of one blood with
the Karlingen, thinking of the saga, may have told themselves
something like this: "What though the real possession of the land
is torn from us, and once more we're thrown upon
ourselves,—can we but regain the Imperial rank, for which
we'll never cease to strive, with it we win again our ancient title
to mastery of the world; and then we'll know to ply it better than
these usurpers of the Hoard, who do not even understand its
use."</p>

<p>In effect, as soon as the Frankish stem regained
the Kaiserdom, the world-question hinging on that dignity advanced
to an ever more important stage, and that through its relation with
the Church.</p>

<p>In measure as the worldly power had lost in real estate
<pb id="pag286" n="286"/>
and approached a more ideal development, the originally
purely ideal Church had attained to worldly possession. Each party
seemed to comprehend that, for its perfect establishment, it must
draw into itself what had lain at first without it; and so from
both sides the original antithesis was mounting to an open fight
for exclusive world-dominion. Through the growing consciousness of
both parties to this more and more stubborn fight, of the prize at
stake for winning or retaining, the Kaiser at last was forced to
the necessity of acquiring the spiritual dominion of the world, if
he meant to safeguard his material title;—the Pope, on the
other hand, must annihilate these material claims, or rather take
them to himself if he meant to remain or become the actual governor
and overseer of the World-Church.</p>

<p>The resultant demands of the Pope were insofar
grounded upon Christian Reason (<hi>Vernunft</hi>) as he felt bound
to adjudge to Spirit the power over Body, consequently to God's
Vicar on earth the supremacy over His creatures. The Kaiser, on the
contrary, saw that his prime concern was to prove his power and
claims quite independent of any hallowing or ratifying, to say
nothing of bestowal, by the Pope; and for this he found what he
deemed a perfect title in the old belief of his stem-race in their
origin.</p>

<p>In its earliest form, the stem-saga of the
Nibelungen went back to the memory of a divine Ur-father, not only
of the Franks, but perhaps of all the nations issued from the
Asiatic home. Very naturally in this Ur-father, as we find with
every patriarchal system, the royal and priestly powers had been
combined as one and the same authority. The later severance of
these powers would rank in any case as consequence of a dissension
in the race, or, had the priestly power devolved on all the fathers
of the commune, in them at most could it be recognised, but never
in an upstart Priest opponent to the King; for the fulfilment of
the priestly office, so far as it was to be assigned to one sole
person for them all, could fall to no
<pb id="pag287" n="287"/>
one but the King, as Father
of the racial whole. That there was no need for those ur-old
notions to be sacrificed in toto on the conversion to Christianity,
not only is proved by facts, but may be deduced with little pains
from the essential content of the old traditions. The abstract
Highest God of the Germans, Wuotan, did not really need to yield
place to the God of the Christians; rather could he be completely
identified with him: merely the physical trappings with which the
various stems had clothed him in accordance with their
idiosyncrasy, their dwelling-place and climate, were to be stripped
off; the universal attributes ascribed to him, for the rest,
completely answered those allotted to the Christian's God. And
Christianity has been unable to our day to extirpate the elementary
or local Nature-gods: quite recent legends of the Folk, and a
wealth of still-prevailing superstitions, attest this in our
nineteenth century.</p>

<p>But that one native Stem-god, from whom the
races all immediately derived their earthly being, was certainly
the last to be given up: for in him was found the striking likeness
to Christ himself, the Son of God, that he too died, was mourned
and avenged,—as we still avenge Christ on the Jews of to-day.
Fidelity and attachment were transferred to Christus all the
easier, as one recognised in him the Stem-god once again; and if
Christ, as Son of God, was father (at least the spiritual) of
<hi>all</hi> men, that harmonised the better and more conclusively
with the divine Stem-father of the Franks, who thought themselves
indeed the oldest race and parent of all others. Christianity
therefore, with their incomplete and physical understanding of it,
would rather strengthen the Franks in their national faith,
particularly against the Roman Church, than make them falter; and
in rejoinder to this vital obstinacy of the Wibelingian
superstition, we see the natural instinct of the Church attacking
with almost a mortal dread this last, but sturdiest survival of
paganism in the deeply hated race.</p>
</div>

<div type="chapter" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N">
<pb id="pag288" n="288"/>
<head>The "Ghibeline" Kaiserdom and Friedrich I.</head>

<p>Now it is highly noteworthy that the stress
toward Ideal vindication of their claims becomes more pronounced in
the Wibelingen or Wibelungen (to name them with the historic
folk-mouth) in measure as their blood departs from immediate
kinship with the ur-old ruling race. If in Karl the Great the drift
of blood was still at height of its ancestral strength, in the
Hohenstaufian <hi>Friedrich I.</hi> we see almost nothing but the
ideal stress: it had become at last the very soul of the Imperial
entity, that could find less and less legitimation in its blood and
real estate, and therefore sought it in the Idea.</p>

<p>Under the last two Kaisers of the Frankish ducal
race of the Salier the great fight with the Church had begun in
deadly earnest. Heinrich V., previously supported by the Church
against his hapless father, had scarcely reached the rank of Kaiser
than he felt the fateful craving to renew his father's wrestle with
the Church, and, as if the only means of combating her claims, to
extend his title over her as well: he must have divined that the
Kaiser were impossible, should his world-dominion not include
dominion of the Church herself. It is characteristic, on the other
hand, that the interim non-Wibelingian Kaiser Lothar adopted an
attitude of peaceful submission to the Church: he did not fathom
what the Kaiser-rank implied; <hi>his</hi> claims did not extend to
world-dominion,—those were the heirloom of the Wibelingen,
the old-legitimist contenders for the Hoard. But clearly and
plainly as none before, great <hi>Friedrich I.</hi> took up the
heir-idea in its sublimest sense. The whole inner and outer
depravation of the world appeared to him the necessary consequence
of the weakness and incompleteness with which the Kaiser's power
had been exerted thitherto: the material might, already in sorry
case, must be perfectly amended by the Kaiser's ideal dignity; and
that could only come to pass when its extreme pretensions were
enforced. The ideal lines of the great fabric that rose before
Friedrich's energetic soul may be drawn (in the
<pb id="pag289" n="289"/>
freer mode of speech allowed to-day) somewhat as follows:—</p>

<p>"In the German Folk survives the oldest lawful
race of Kings in all the world: it issues from a son of God, called
by his nearest kinsmen <hi>Siegfried</hi>, but <hi>Christ</hi> by the
remaining nations of the earth; for the welfare of his race, and
the peoples of the earth derived therefrom, he wrought a deed most
glorious, and for that deed's sake suffered death. The nearest
heirs of his great deed, and of the power won thereby, are the
'Nibelungen,' to whom the earth belongs in name and for the
happiness of every nation. The Germans are the oldest nation, their
blue-blood King is a 'Nibelung,' and at their head he claims
world-rulership. There can therefore exist no right to any sort of
possession or enjoyment, in all this world, that does not emanate
from him and need its hallowing by his feoffment or sanction: all
property or usufruct not bestowed or sanctioned by the Kaiser is
lawless in itself, and counts as robbery; for the Kaiser enfiefs
and sanctions for the good, possession or enjoyment, of <hi>all,</hi>
whereas the unit's self-seized gain is a theft from all.—In
the German Folk the Kaiser grants these feoffments or confirmations
himself; for all other nations their Kings and Princes are
attorneys of the Kaiser, from whom all earthly sovereignty
originally flows, as the planets and their moons receive their
radiance from the sun.—Thus too the Kaiser delegates the
high-priestly power, originally no less pertaining to him than the
earthly might, to the Pope of Rome: the latter has to exercise the
Sight-of-God in his name, and to acquaint him with the
God's-decree, that he may execute the Heavenly Will in name of God
upon the earth. The Pope accordingly is the Kaiser's most important
officer, and the weightier his office, the more does it behove the
Kaiser to keep strict watch that the Pope exerts it in the meaning
of the Kaiser, i.e. for the peace and healing of all nations upon
earth."—</p>

<p>No lower must we reckon Friedrich's estimate of
his rank supreme, his right divine, if we are properly to judge the
motives brought to clearest daylight in his actions.</p>

<pb id="pag290" n="290"/>

<p>We see him in the first place making firm the
base of his material might by composing the territorial strife in
Germany through reconcilement with his relatives the Welfen, and
compelling the princes of bordering peoples, in particular the
Danes, Poles and Hungarians, to accept their lands in fee from him.
Thus fortified he fared to Italy, and, as arbiter over the Lombards
in the Roncalian Diet, for the first time published to the world a
systematic digest of the Kaiser's claims; in which, for all the
influence of Imperial Roman principles, we recognise the strictest
consequences of the aforesaid view of his authority: his Imperial
Right was here extended even to the grant of air and water.</p>

<p>No less determined were his claims against and
over the Church herself, after an initial period of reserve. A
disputed Papal election gave him the opportunity of exerting his
supreme right: with strict observance of what he deemed fit
priestly forms, he had the election scrutinised, deposed the Pope
who seemed to him at fault, and installed the vindicated rival in
his place.</p>

<p>Every trait of Friedrich's, every undertaking,
each decree, bears most indisputable witness to the energetic
congruence with which he ever strove to realise his high ideal. The
unwavering firmness with which he opposed the no less obstinate
Pope Alexander III., the almost superhuman rigour—in a Kaiser
by no means prone to cruelty by nature—with which he doomed
to overthrow the equally undaunted Milan, are incorporate moments
of the grand Idea informing him.</p>

<p>Two mighty foes, however, stood up against the
heaven-storming World-king; the first at starting-point of his
material power, in the German landed system,—the second at
the terminus of his ideal endeavour, the Catholic Church
established in the conscience of Romanic peoples in particular.
Both foes joined forces with a third, on which the Kaiser, in a
sense, himself had first bestowed its consciousness: the
<hi>instinct of freedom in the Lombard communes</hi>.</p>

<pb id="pag291" n="291"/>

<p>If the earliest resistance of the German stems
had had its origin in the thirst for freedom from their Frankish
rulers, that bent had gradually passed over from the shattered
tribal fellowships to the lords who snatched these fragments to
themselves: although the effort of these princes had all the evil
attributes of selfish lust-of-mastery, yet their longing for its
independent satisfaction might rank in their eyes as a fight for
freedom, however less exalted it must seem in ours. The
bent-to-freedom of the Church was more ideal by far, more
universal: in Christian terminology it might count as struggle of
the soul for liberation from the fetters of the sensual world, and
undoubtedly it passed for such in the minds of her greatest chiefs;
she had been forced to share too deeply in the world's material
taste of might, however, and her ultimate victory could therefore
be gained through nothing but the ruin of her inmost soul.</p>

<p>But the spirit of freedom shews out the purest
in the Lombard townships, and precisely (alas! almost solely) in
their decisive fights with Friedrich. These fights are insofar the
most remarkable event of a critical historic period, as in them,
for the first time in the history of the world, the spirit of
ur-human freedom embodied in the Burgher-commune girds up itself to
a fight for life and death with an old established, all-embracing
sovereignty. Athens' fight against the Persians was patriotic
opposition to a huge monarchic piracy: all similar famous deeds of
single townships, until the time of the Lombardians, bear the
selfsame character of defence of ancient <hi>racial</hi> independence
against a foreign conqueror. Now, this ancestral freedom, that
cleaves to the root of a nationality till then untroubled, was in
nowise present with the Lombard communes: history has seen the
population of these cities, compounded of all nations and bare of
any old tradition, fall shameful victim to the greed of every
conqueror; through a thousand years of total impotence, in these
cities lived no nation, i.e. no race with any consciousness of its
earliest origin : in them dwelt merely
<pb id="pag292" n="292"/>
<hi>men</hi>, men led by the
need of mutual insurance of an undisturbed prosperity to an ever
plainer evolution of the principle of Society, and its realisement
through the Commune (<hi>Gemeinde</hi>).</p>

<p>This novel principle, devoid of racial lore or
chronicle arising purely of and for itself; owes its historic
origin to the population of the Lombard cities, who, imperfectly as
they could understand and turn it to a lasting good, yet evolved
themselves thereby from deepest feebleness to agents of the highest
force;—and if its entry into history is to count as the spark
that leaps from the stone, then Friedrich is the steel that struck
it from the stone.</p>

<p>Friedrich, the representative of the last racial
Ur-Folk-Kinghood, in mightiest fulfilment of his indeviable
destiny, struck from the stone of manhood the spark before whose
splendour he himself must pale. The <hi>Pope</hi> launched his ban,
the <hi>Welf Heinrich</hi> forsook his king in his direst
want,—but the sword of the <hi>Lombard band of brothers</hi>
smote the imperial warrior with the terrible rout at Lignano.</p>
</div>

<div type="chapter" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N">
<head>Ascent of the Ideal content of the Hoard into the "Holy Grail."</head>

<p>The World-ruler recognised from whence his
deepest wound had come, and who it was that cried his world-plan
final halt. <hi>It was the spirit of free Manhood loosed from the
nature-soil of race</hi>, that had faced him in this Lombard Bond.
He made short work of both the older foes: to the High-priest he
gave his hand,—he fell with crushing force upon the selfish
Guelphs; and so, once more arrived at summit of his power and
undisputed might,—he <hi>spake the Lombards free, and struck
with them a lasting peace</hi>.</p>

<p>At Mainz he gathered his whole Reich around him;
<note id="rn5" corresp="n5" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
all his feudatories, from the first to the last, he fain would
<pb id="pag293" n="293"/>
greet once more: the clergy and the laity surrounded him; from
every land Kings sent ambassadors with precious gifts, in homage to
his Kaiser-might. But <hi>Palestine</hi> sent forth to him the cry to
save the Holy Tomb.—To the land of morning Friedrich turned
his gaze: a force resistless drew him on toward Asia, to the cradle
of the nations, to the place where God begat the father of all Men.
Wondrous legends had he heard of a lordly country deep in Asia, in
farthest India,—of an ur-divine Priest-King who governed
there a pure and happy people, immortal through the nurture of a
wonder-working relic called "<hi>the Holy Grail</hi>."—Might he
there regain the lost Sight-of-God, now garbled by ambitious
priests in Rome according to their pleasure?—</p>

<p>The old hero girt him up; with splendid
retinue of war he marched through Greece: he might have conquered
it,—what booted that?—unresting he was drawn to
farthest Asia. There on tempestuous field he broke the power of the
Saracens; unchallenged lay the promised land before him; he could
not wait for the construction of a flying bridge, but urged
impatient Eastwards,—on horse he plunged into the stream:
none saw him in this life again.</p>

<milestone unit="section"/>

<p>Since then, the legend went that once the
<hi>Keeper of the Grail</hi> had really brought the holy relic to the
Occident; great wonders had he here performed: in the Netherlands,
the Nibelungen's ancient seat, a Knight of the Grail had appeared,
but vanished when asked forbidden tidings of his origin;—then
was the Grail conducted back by its old guardian to
the distant morning-land;—in a castle on a lofty mount in
India it now was kept once more.</p>

<p>In truth the legend of the Holy Grail,
significantly enough, makes its entry on the world at the very time
when the Kaiserhood attained its more ideal direction, and the
Nibelung's Hoard accordingly was losing more and more in material
worth, to yield to a higher spiritual content. The spiritual
ascension of the Hoard into the Grail was accomplished in the
German conscience, and
<pb id="pag294" n="294"/>
the Grail, at least in the meaning lent it
by German poets, must rank as the Ideal representative or follower
of the Nibelungen-Hoard; it, too, had sprung from Asia, from the
ur-home of mankind; God had guided it to men as paragon of
holiness.</p>

<p>It is of the first importance that its Keeper
was priest and king alike, that is, a Master (<hi>Oberhaupt</hi>) of
all Spiritual Knighthood, such as was introduced from the Orient in
the twelfth century. So this Master was in truth none other than
the Kaiser, from whom all Chivalry proceeded; and thus the real and
ideal world-supremacy, the union of the highest kinghood and
priesthood, seemed completely attained in the Kaiser.</p>

<p>The quest of the Grail henceforth replaces the
struggle for the Nibelungen-Hoard, and as the occidental world,
unsatisfied within, reached out past Rome and Pope to find its
place of healing in the tomb of the Redeemer at
Jerusalem,—as, unsatisfied even there, it cast its yearning
gaze, half spiritual half physical, still farther toward the East
to find the primal shrine of manhood,—so the Grail was said
to have withdrawn from out the ribald West to the pure, chaste,
reachless birth-land of all nations.—</p>

<milestone unit="section"/>

<p>To pass the ur-old Nibelungen-saga in review, we
see it springing like a spiritual germ from an oldest race's
earliest glance at Nature (<hi>Naturanschauung</hi>); we see this
germ develop to a mighty plant on ever more material soil,
especially in the Historic evolution of the saga, so that in Karl
the Great it seems to thrust its knotty fibres deep into the actual
earth; till finally in the Wibelingian Kaiserdom of Friedrich I. we
see this plant unfold its fairest flower to the light: with him the
flower faded; in his grandson Friedrich II., the highest mind of
all the Kaisers, the wondrous perfume of the dying bloom spread
like a lovely fairy-spell through all the world of West and East;
till with the grandson of the last-named Kaiser, the youthful
Konrad, the leafless withered stem
<pb id="pag295" n="295"/>
was torn with all its roots and
fibres from the ground, and stamped to dust.</p>
</div>

<div type="chapter" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N">
<head>Historic residue of the Material content of the Hoard,
in "Real Property."</head>

<p>A shriek of horror rang through every country
when the head of Konrad fell in Naples to the blows of that
<hi>Charles d'Anjou</hi> who in every lineament presents the perfect
archetype of all post-Wibelingian Kinghood. He sprang from the
oldest of the newer royal races: in France the Capets had long
succeeded to the last French Carlovingian. Hugo Capet's origin was
well beknown; everybody knew what his race had been before, and how
he arrived at the throne: cunning, policy, and violence at a pinch,
were the tools of him and his successors, compounding for the right
they lacked in 'the people's eyes. These Capets, mn all their later
branches, were the pattern for the modern King- and Prince-hood: in
no belief in ur-racial descent could it seek foundation for its
claims; of every prince the world, coeval and posterior, knew by
what mere grant, at what purchase-price, or through what deed of
violence, he had attained to power, and by what art or means he
must contrive to keep it.</p>

<p>With the foundering of the Wibelungen, mankind
had been torn from the last fibre whereby it still hung, in a
sense, to its racial-natural origin. The Hoard of the Nibelungen
had evaporated to the realm of Poetry and the Idea; merely an
earthly precipitate remained as its dregs: <hi>real property</hi>.</p>

<p>In the Nibelungen-myth we found expressed by all
the generations who devised, developed and enacted it, an
uncommonly clear idea of the <hi>nature of property, of
ownership</hi>. If in the oldest religious view the Hoard appeared
to be the splendour of the Earth laid bare to all by day light, we
later see it take more compact form as the hero's might-conferring
booty, won as guerdon of the bravest,
<pb id="pag296" n="296"/>
most astounding deed from a
vanquished odious adversary. This Hoard, this talisman of might,
'tis true, is henceforth claimed as with hereditary right by the
descendants of that godlike hero; yet it has this foremost
characteristic, that it is never gained afresh in lazy peace, by
simple contract, but only through a deed akin to that of its first
winner. Moreover, this constantly-repeated deed of heritage has all
the moral meaning of vendetta, of retribution for the murder of a
kinsman: so we see blood, passion, love, hate, in short—both
physically and spiritually—purely-human springs and motives
at work in the winning of the Hoard; man restless and suffering,
man doomed to conscious death by his own deed, his victory, and
most by his possession, at the head of all ideas of the
root-relation of acquirement.—These views, which honoured
<hi>Man</hi> as focus of all power, entirely corresponded with the
mode of treating property in actual life. If in earliest antiquity
there certainly prevailed the simplest and most natural principle
of all, namely that the measure of possession or enjoyment must be
meted by man's Need, among conquering nations with excess of goods
the strength and prowess of the best-famed fighters became as
naturally the measure-giving Subject to the Object of more
enjoyable and richer spoils. In the historic <hi>Feudal system</hi>,
so long as it retained its pristine purity, we see this
heroic-human principle still plainly voiced: the grant of a fief
was merely to this one particular human being who had earned the
right to claim reward for some decisive deed, some weighty service.
From the moment when a fief became <hi>hereditary</hi>, the man, his
personal excellence, his acts and deeds, lost value,—which
passed over to his property: hereditary possession, no longer
personal virtue, now gave their standing to his heirs, and the
resulting deeper and deeper depreciation of Man, against the higher
and higher appreciation of Property, at last took body in the most
contra-human institutions, such as those of Primogeniture; from
which, in strange perversity, the later Noble drew all conceit and
arrogance, without reflecting
<pb id="pag297" n="297"/>
that by deriving his worth from a
stiffened family-possession he was openly disowning any actual
<hi>human nobleness</hi>.</p>

<p>So—after the fall of the heroic-human
Wibelungen—this hereditary ownership, then property <hi>in
general, de facto possession</hi>, became the title for all rights
existing or to be acquired; and Property gave Man that right which
man had theretofore conveyed to property. It was this dreg of the
vanished Nibelungen-Hoard, then, that the sobered German lords had
kept them: though the Kaiser might soar to the highest peak of the
Idea, what clung there to the ground below, the Duchies,
Palatinates, Marks and Counties, all ranks and offices enfeoffed by
the Kaiser, in the hands of his utterly un-idealistic vassals
condensed to mere <hi>possession, property</hi>. Possession now was
consequently <hi>Right</hi>, and upright was it kept by all
Established and Approved being henceforth drawn from that one right
on a more and more elaborate system. He who had a share in
property, or managed to acquire one, <hi>from that instant</hi>
ranked as a natural pillar of the State (<hi>der öffentlichen
Macht</hi>). But this also must be hallowed: what the most glorious
Kaisers had claimed in good faith as their ideal title to rule the
world, these practical gentry now applied to their possessions; the
old divine ur-right was arrogated to himself by every former
crown-official; the God's-decree was expounded by Justinian's Roman
Rights, and, to the bewilderment of property-enslaved mankind,
transcribed in Latin law-books. Kaisers were still appointed,
though directly after the downfall of the Wibelungen their rank had
already been hawked to the highest bidder; no sooner were they
chosen, than to work they set to "<hi>acquire</hi>" a goodly
family-seat "by grace of God," as one henceforth styled the
forcible appropriation or nibbling-off of districts. Grown wiser,
one gladly left the World-dominion to dear God, who behaved by far
more leniently and humanely to the actually-reigning most selfish
and depraved vulgarity of the Sons of the Holy Roman Empire than
erewhile the old heathen Nibelung warriors, who for any act of meanness
<pb id="pag298" n="298"/>
made no bones of packing off a man from court and
holding.—</p>

<p>The "<hi>poor Folk</hi>" sang, read, and printed
in time, the Nibelungenlieder, its only keepsake from the Hoard
belief in it never wavered; only, one knew it was no longer in the
world,—for it had been sunk into an old God's-hill again, a
cave like that whence Siegfried once had won it from the
Nibelungen. The great Kaiser himself had brought it back to that
hill, to save it up for better times. There in the Kyffhäuser
he sits, the old "Redbeard Friedrich"; all round him the treasures
of the Nibelungen, by his side the sharp sword that one-time slew
the dreaded Dragon.</p>
</div>
</div> 
</body>

<back>
<div type="notes" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N">
<head>Notes</head>

<note id="n1" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn1" anchored="yes">
<p><hi>Die Wibelungen</hi> originally appeared as a pamphlet, issued by Wigand
of Leipzig at the end of 1849, evidently with the prefatory note on
the opposite page. In Wagner's <hi>Letters to Uhlig</hi> we read
under date Sep. 16, 1849, "Up to now I have only been able to
scribble in a common-room, and to this circumstance you must
attribute my compliance with your wish that I should get my
Wibelistic essay ready for publication. In fair-copying it,
however, I have made a good many alterations; so that it perhaps
may interest you to compare the accompanying manuscript with the
older version, when I would direct your particular attention to
chapters 3 and 12, dealing with real property, in which you will
find an abundant use of the material."—The "material" would
seem to be the late events in Dresden, possibly also some work of
Feuerbach's that Wagner had recently been reading, for chapter 3
bears strong evidence of the Feuerbachian cast of sentence, and I
find that this is the same letter to which I referred in my Preface
to Vol. 1.—which see.—Tr.</p>
</note>

<note id="n2" resp="author" place="foot" corresp="rn2" anchored="yes">
<p>This hypothesis, I have lately been assured, is not quite
tenable.—Ed. [i.e. R. Wagner, 1871.]</p>
</note>

<note id="n3" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn3" anchored="yes">
<p>For the use of the prefix "ur" I must refer the reader to my
<xref resp="wl" type="wlpr0062" n="n31" targOrder="U" from="ROOT" to="DITTO">footnote to Vol. I. p. 169</xref>.
When translating that volume I felt somewhat timid as
regards the introduction of a neologism, but now that I find the
prefix very widely adopted by learned translators, I am emboldened
to employ it more frequently, albeit merely about half as often as
it occurs in the original.—Tr.</p>
</note>

<note id="n4" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn4" anchored="yes">
<p>"Das Volk ist somit in seinem Dichten und Schaffen durchaus genial und
wahrhaftig, wogegen der gelehrte Geschichtsschreiber, der sich nur
an die pragmatische Oberfläche der Vorfallenheiten hält,
ohne das Band der wesenhaften Volksallgemeinheit nach dem
unmittelbaren Ausdrucke desselben zu erfassen," etc.—</p>
</note>

<note id="n5" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn5" anchored="yes">
<p>It is impossible not to recognise how much of the idea of this
Friedrich I. has passed into Wagner's Wotan.—Tr.</p>
</note>

</div> 
</back>
</text>
</TEI.2>