<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><TEI.2>

  <teiHeader type="text" status="new">
    <fileDesc>
      <titleStmt>
        <title>A Communication to my Friends</title>
        <author>
          <persName>
            <foreName full="yes">Richard</foreName>
            <surname full="yes">Wagner</surname>
          </persName>
        </author>
        <editor role="encoder">
          <persName>
            <foreName full="yes">Patrick</foreName>
            <surname full="yes">Swinkels</surname>
          </persName>
        </editor>
      </titleStmt>
      <editionStmt>
        <edition n="1.0">First edition</edition>
      </editionStmt>
      <extent n="words">46641</extent>
      <publicationStmt>
        <publisher>The Wagner Library</publisher>
        <address><addrLine>http://users.belgacom.net/wagnerlibrary/</addrLine></address>
        <idno type="GUID">7B42F1B4-0B55-11D6-AC23-00C04F03817C</idno>
        <idno type="WLID">wlpr0079</idno>
        <idno type="WLNAME">wagcomm</idno>
        <availability status="free">
          <p>Freely available for non-commercial use only.</p>
        </availability>
      </publicationStmt>
      <seriesStmt>
        <title>Richard Wagner's Prose Works</title>
      </seriesStmt>
      <sourceDesc default="NO">
        <biblStruct default="NO">
          <analytic>
            <title>A Communication to my Friends</title>
          </analytic>
          
<monogr>
  <title level="m">The Art-Work of the Future</title>
  <author>
    <persName>
      <foreName full="yes">Richard</foreName>
      <surname full="yes">Wagner</surname>
    </persName>
  </author>
  <editor role="translator">
    <persName>
      <foreName type="first" full="yes">William</foreName>
      <foreName type="middle" full="yes">Ashton</foreName>
      <surname full="yes">Ellis</surname>
    </persName>
  </editor>
  <imprint>
    <publisher>Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner &amp; Co.</publisher>
    <pubPlace>London</pubPlace>
    <date value="1895">1895</date>
  </imprint>
</monogr>
<series>
  <title level="s">Richard Wagner's Prose Works</title>
  <biblScope type="volume">1</biblScope>
</series>
	
        </biblStruct>
      </sourceDesc>
    </fileDesc>
    <encodingDesc>
      <editorialDecl default="NO">
        <correction status="medium" default="NO" method="silent"><p>OCR errors have been corrected</p></correction>
        <hyphenation eol="some" default="NO"><p>All soft-hyphens have been removed.</p></hyphenation>
      </editorialDecl>
      <tagsDecl>
        
        

<rendition id="b">bold</rendition>
<rendition id="i">italic</rendition>
<rendition id="u">underline</rendition>
<rendition id="dq">double quoted</rendition>
<rendition id="sq">single quoted</rendition>
<rendition id="n">normal</rendition>
<rendition id="r">right</rendition>
<rendition id="l">left</rendition>
<rendition id="c">center</rendition>
<rendition id="j">justify</rendition>
<rendition id="hr">horizontal line</rendition>
<rendition id="lo">lowercase</rendition>
<rendition id="up">uppercase</rendition>

        
        <tagUsage gi="p" render="j"/>
        <tagUsage gi="hi" render="i"/>
      </tagsDecl>
      
      
<classDecl>
  <taxonomy id="BLPC">
    <bibl default="NO">
      <title>British Library Public Catalogue</title>
      <address><addrLine>http://blpc.bl.uk/</addrLine></address>
    </bibl>
  </taxonomy>
  <taxonomy id="DDC">
    <bibl default="NO">
      <title>Dewey Decimal Classification</title>
      <address><addrLine>http://www.oclc.org/dewey/</addrLine></address>
    </bibl>
  </taxonomy>
  <taxonomy id="LCC">
    <bibl default="NO">
      <title>Library of Congress Classification</title>
      <address><addrLine>http://lcweb.loc.gov/catdir/cpso/cpso.html#class</addrLine></address>
    </bibl>
  </taxonomy>
  <taxonomy id="LCSH">
    <bibl default="NO">
      <title>Library of Congress Subject Headings</title>
      <address><addrLine>http://lcweb.loc.gov/catdir/cpso/cpso.html#subjects</addrLine></address>
    </bibl>
  </taxonomy>
  <taxonomy id="NUGI">
    <bibl default="NO">
      <title>Nederlandse Uniforme Genre Indeling</title>
    </bibl>
  </taxonomy>
  <taxonomy id="NUR">
    <category id="nur2002">
      <catDesc>Nederlandstalige Uniforme Rubrieksindeling</catDesc>
      <category id="nur600">
        <catDesc>Non-fictie informatief/professioneel algemeen</catDesc>
        <category id="nur660">
          <catDesc>Muziek algemeen</catDesc>
          <category id="nur661"><catDesc>Biografieën van musici</catDesc></category>
          <category id="nur662"><catDesc>Muziekgeschiedenis</catDesc></category>
          <category id="nur663"><catDesc>Muziektheorie</catDesc></category>
          <category id="nur664"><catDesc>Muziekwetenschap</catDesc></category>
          <category id="nur665"><catDesc>Muziek klassiek</catDesc></category>
          <category id="nur666"><catDesc>Muziek populair</catDesc></category>
          <category id="nur667"><catDesc>Muziekinstrumenten en techniek</catDesc></category>
          <category id="nur668"><catDesc>Bladmuziek</catDesc></category>
          <category id="nur669"><catDesc>Naslagwerken (muziek)</catDesc></category>
        </category>
        <category id="nur670">
          <catDesc>Theater-, film- en televisiewetenschap algemeen</catDesc>
          <category id="nur671"><catDesc>Biografieën podiumkunsten</catDesc></category>
          <category id="nur672"><catDesc>Biografieën film en televisie</catDesc></category>
          <category id="nur673"><catDesc>Radio</catDesc></category>
          <category id="nur674"><catDesc>Film en televisie</catDesc></category>
          <category id="nur675"><catDesc>Toneel en theaterdans</catDesc></category>
          <category id="nur676"><catDesc>Theatergeschiedenis</catDesc></category>
          <category id="nur677"><catDesc>Theatertheorie en -techniek</catDesc></category>
        </category>
      </category> 
    </category>
  </taxonomy>
  <taxonomy id="UDC">
    <bibl default="NO">
      <title>Universal Decimal Classification</title>
      <address><addrLine>http://www.udcc.org/</addrLine></address>
    </bibl>
  </taxonomy>
  <taxonomy id="wl-taxonomy">
    <category id="root">
      <catDesc>The Wagner Library</catDesc>
      <category id="r.pw">
        <catDesc>The Prose Writings</catDesc>
        <category id="r.pw.1">
          <catDesc>Early Writings, 1834-1839</catDesc>
          <category id="r.pw.1.1"><catDesc>Essays and Autobiographical Notes</catDesc></category>
          <category id="r.pw.1.2"><catDesc>Shorter occasional Pieces and Articles</catDesc></category>
        </category>
        <category id="r.pw.2">
          <catDesc>The Paris Years, 1839-1842</catDesc>
          <category id="r.pw.2.1"><catDesc>Writings for the "Revue et Gazette Musicale"</catDesc></category>
          <category id="r.pw.2.2"><catDesc>Feuilletons for "Europa" (Stuttgart)</catDesc></category>
          <category id="r.pw.2.3"><catDesc>Contributions to Schumann's "Neue Zeitschrift für Musik"</catDesc></category>
          <category id="r.pw.2.4"><catDesc>Articles for the Dresden "Abendzeitung"</catDesc></category>
          <category id="r.pw.2.5"><catDesc>Other Paris Writings</catDesc></category>
        </category>
        <category id="r.pw.3"><catDesc>Writings from 1842 to 1848</catDesc></category>
        <category id="r.pw.4">
          <catDesc>The Revolution Years, 1848-49</catDesc>
          <category id="r.pw.4.1"><catDesc>Revolutionary Writings</catDesc></category>
          <category id="r.pw.4.2"><catDesc>Writings on Theater Reform</catDesc></category>
          <category id="r.pw.4.3"><catDesc>Occasional Writings</catDesc></category>
        </category>
        <category id="r.pw.5">
          <catDesc>Writings from the Years 1849 to 1864</catDesc>
          <category id="r.pw.5.1"><catDesc>Major Writings on Aesthetics from the Zurich Period</catDesc></category>
          <category id="r.pw.5.2"><catDesc>Minor Writings on Aesthetics</catDesc></category>
          <category id="r.pw.5.3"><catDesc>Writings on Theater Reform</catDesc></category>
          <category id="r.pw.5.4">
            <catDesc>Autobiographical Writings, Prefaces, and Remarks on Wagner's Musical-Dramatic Works</catDesc>
          </category>
          <category id="r.pw.5.5"><catDesc>Minor Occasional Pieces and Short Articles: Obituaries and Dedications</catDesc></category>
          <category id="r.pw.5.6"><catDesc>Press Statements</catDesc></category>
          <category id="r.pw.5.7"><catDesc>Letters of Thanks</catDesc></category>
          <category id="r.pw.5.8"><catDesc>Program Notes</catDesc></category>
        </category>
        <category id="r.pw.6">
          <catDesc>Writings from 1864 to 1883</catDesc>
          <category id="r.pw.6.1"><catDesc>Autobiographical Works</catDesc></category>
          <category id="r.pw.6.2"><catDesc>Philosophical Writings</catDesc></category>
          <category id="r.pw.6.3"><catDesc>Musical Aesthetics and Drama</catDesc></category>
          <category id="r.pw.6.4"><catDesc>Theater Reform and Bayreuth</catDesc></category>
          <category id="r.pw.6.5"><catDesc>Short and Occasional Pieces and Articles: Obituaries and Dedications</catDesc></category>
          <category id="r.pw.6.6"><catDesc>Reviews and Statements</catDesc></category>
          <category id="r.pw.6.7"><catDesc>Shorter Writings on Various Subjects</catDesc></category>
          <category id="r.pw.6.8"><catDesc>Statements to the Press</catDesc></category>
          <category id="r.pw.6.9"><catDesc>Open Letters, Miscellaneous Fragments and Concert Programs</catDesc></category>
        </category>
      </category> 
      <category id="r.rs">
        <catDesc>Referring String Keys</catDesc>
        <category id="r.rs.person">
          <catDesc>Persons</catDesc>
          <category id="r.rs.composer">
            <catDesc>Composers</catDesc>
              <category id="rs.auber"><catDesc>Auber</catDesc></category>
              <category id="rs.bach"><catDesc>Bach</catDesc></category>
              <category id="rs.bellini"><catDesc>Bellini</catDesc></category>
              <category id="rs.beethoven"><catDesc>Beethoven</catDesc></category>
              <category id="rs.gluck"><catDesc>Gluck</catDesc></category>
              <category id="rs.gretry"><catDesc>Grétry</catDesc></category>
              <category id="rs.handel"><catDesc>Händel</catDesc></category>
              <category id="rs.mozart"><catDesc>Mozart, W. A.</catDesc></category>
              <category id="rs.spohr"><catDesc>Spohr</catDesc></category>
              <category id="rs.spontini"><catDesc>Spontini</catDesc></category>
              <category id="rs.wagner"><catDesc>Wagner, Richard</catDesc></category>
              <category id="rs.weber"><catDesc>Weber</catDesc></category>
          </category>
          <category id="r.rs.singer">
            <catDesc>Singers</catDesc>
            <category id="rs.devrient"><catDesc>Schröder-Devrient, Wilhelmine</catDesc></category>
          </category>
          <category id="rs.schneider"><catDesc>Schneider, Friedrich</catDesc></category>
          <category id="rs.lvoff"><catDesc>Lvoff, Alexis</catDesc></category>
          <category id="rs.feuerbach"><catDesc>Feuerbach, Ludwig</catDesc></category>
          <category id="rs.ludwig"><catDesc>Ludwig II, King</catDesc></category>
          <category id="rs.schiller"><catDesc>Schiller</catDesc></category>
          <category id="rs.schopenhauer"><catDesc>Schopenhauer, Arthur</catDesc></category>
        </category> 
        <category id="r.rs.opera">
          <catDesc>Operas</catDesc>
          <category id="rs.euryanthe"><catDesc>Euryanthe</catDesc></category>
          <category id="rs.figaro"><catDesc>Figaro</catDesc></category>
          <category id="rs.freischutz"><catDesc>Freischütz, Der</catDesc></category>
          <category id="rs.montecchi"><catDesc>Montecchi e Capuleti</catDesc></category>
          <category id="rs.norma"><catDesc>Norma</catDesc></category>
          <category id="rs.hochzeit"><catDesc>Hochzeit, Die</catDesc></category>
          <category id="rs.liebesverbot"><catDesc>Liebesverbot, Das</catDesc></category>
          <category id="rs.feen"><catDesc>Feen, Die</catDesc></category>
          <category id="rs.rienzi"><catDesc>Rienzi, der Letzte der Tribunen</catDesc></category>
          <category id="rs.hollander"><catDesc>Fliegende Holländer, Der</catDesc></category>
          <category id="rs.tannhauser"><catDesc>Tannhäuser und der Sängerkrieg auf Wartburg</catDesc></category>
          <category id="rs.lohengrin"><catDesc>Lohengrin</catDesc></category>
          <category id="rs.ring"><catDesc>Ring des Nibelungen, Der</catDesc></category>
          <category id="rs.rheingold"><catDesc>Rheingold, Das</catDesc></category>
          <category id="rs.walkure"><catDesc>Walküre, Die</catDesc></category>
          <category id="rs.siegfried"><catDesc>Siegfried</catDesc></category>
          <category id="rs.gotterdammerung"><catDesc>Götterdämmerung</catDesc></category>
          <category id="rs.meistersinger"><catDesc>Meistersinger von Nürnberg, Die</catDesc></category>
          <category id="rs.tristan"><catDesc>Tristan und Isolde</catDesc></category>
          <category id="rs.parsifal"><catDesc>Parsifal</catDesc></category>
        </category> 
        <category id="r.rs.composition">
          <catDesc>Compositions</catDesc>
          <category id="rs.messiah"><catDesc>Messiah</catDesc></category>
          <category id="rs.requiem"><catDesc>Requiem</catDesc></category>
        </category> 
        <category id="r.rs.place">
          <catDesc>Places</catDesc>
          <category id="r.rs.city">
            <catDesc>Cities</catDesc>
              <category id="rs.bayreuth"><catDesc>Bayreuth</catDesc></category>
              <category id="rs.berlin"><catDesc>Berlin</catDesc></category>
              <category id="rs.brussels"><catDesc>Brussels</catDesc></category>
              <category id="rs.dresden"><catDesc>Dresden</catDesc></category>
              <category id="rs.leipzig"><catDesc>Leipzig</catDesc></category>
              <category id="rs.london"><catDesc>London</catDesc></category>
              <category id="rs.munich"><catDesc>Munich</catDesc></category>
              <category id="rs.paris"><catDesc>Paris</catDesc></category>
              <category id="rs.riga"><catDesc>Riga</catDesc></category>
          </category>
          <category id="r.rs.region">
            <catDesc>Regions</catDesc>
              <category id="rs.bavaria"><catDesc>Bavaria</catDesc></category>
          </category>
          <category id="r.rs.country">
            <catDesc>Countries</catDesc>
            <category id="rs.france"><catDesc>France</catDesc></category>
            <category id="rs.germany"><catDesc>Germany</catDesc></category>
            <category id="rs.italy"><catDesc>Italy</catDesc></category>
            <category id="rs.lithuania"><catDesc>Lithuania</catDesc></category>
          </category>
        </category> 
        <category id="r.rs.role">
          <catDesc>Roles</catDesc>
          <category id="rs.romeo"><catDesc>Romeo</catDesc></category>
        </category> 
      </category> 
    </category> 
  </taxonomy>
  <taxonomy id="WL">
    <bibl default="NO">
      <title>The Wagner Library</title>
    </bibl>
  </taxonomy>
</classDecl>

    </encodingDesc>
    <profileDesc>
      <langUsage default="NO">
        <language id="de">German</language>
        <language id="en-gb">British English</language>
        <language id="en-us">American English</language>
        <language id="fr">French</language>
        <language id="it">Italian</language>
        <language id="la">Latin</language>
      </langUsage>
      <textClass default="NO">
        <keywords scheme="LCSH">
          <term>Wagner, Richard, 1813-1883</term>
          <term>Art--Philisophy</term>
          <term>Music--Philisophy and aesthetics</term>
          <term>Opera</term>
        </keywords>
        <classCode scheme="DDC">782.1-dc20</classCode>
        <classCode scheme="NUGI">924</classCode>
        <catRef target="r.pw.5.4"/>
      </textClass>
    </profileDesc>
    <revisionDesc>
      <change>
        <date>2002-01-24</date>
        <respStmt>
          <name>Patrick Swinkels</name>
          <resp>encoder</resp>
        </respStmt>
        <item>Level 1 encoding of complete text</item>
      </change>
    </revisionDesc>
  </teiHeader>

<text id="wlpr0079" lang="en-gb">
<front>

<fs type="fact-sheet" rel="sb">
  <f name="encoding-level" rel="eq"><sym value="1" rel="eq"/></f>
  <f name="encoding-status" rel="eq"><sym value="in progress" rel="eq"/></f>
  <f name="original-date" rel="eq"><sym value="1851" rel="eq"/></f>
  <f name="original-title" rel="eq"><str rel="eq">Eine Mittheilung an meine Freunde</str></f>
  <f name="original-source" rel="eq"><str rel="eq"/></f>
  <f name="SSD-volume" rel="eq"><str rel="eq">IV</str></f>
  <f name="SSD-pages" rel="eq"><str rel="eq">230-344</str></f>
  <f name="spellcheck" rel="eq"><minus/></f>
  <f name="proofreading" rel="eq"><minus/></f>
</fs>

<div type="translators-note" rend="i" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N">
<pb id="pag268"/>
<head>Translator's Note</head>

<p>From among the many references to the <hi>Mittheilung</hi>,in the
<hi>Correspondence of Wagner and Liszt</hi> and the <hi>Letters to Uhlig,
Fischer and Heine</hi>, I select the following:—</p>

<p>To Liszt, Nov. <hi>25, 1850</hi>, "When I have finished
<hi>Opera and Drama</hi>, I intend, provided I can
find a publisher, to bring out my three romantic opera-poems with a
Preface introducing them and explaining their genesis."—To
Uhlig, (undated; but apparently written in August <hi>'51</hi>),
"My <hi>Mittheilung</hi> was ready soon after you left. The part
you do <hi>not</hi> know is actually the most important. This is a
decisive work!—The copying took me over a week."—To
Uhlig, Nov. <hi>1, '51</hi>, "Well!—Härtels
have only just read the <hi>Vorwort</hi>, and will
not venture to publish it."—To Liszt, Nov. 
<hi>20, '51</hi>, "The timidity of Messrs Härtel, the proposed
publishers of the book, has taken exception to certain passages in
that Preface to which I did not wish to have any demonstrative
intention attributed, and which I might have expressed just as well
in a different way; and the appearance of the book has in
consequence been much retarded, to my great annoyance...But,
although the Preface, written at the beginning of last August,
appears in the present circumstances too late, the aforesaid
declaration" (as to the intended destiny of <hi>Siegfried</hi>) "will
be given to the public without any change."—To Liszt,
Dec. <hi>14, '51</hi> "The three operatic poems, with a
Communication to my Friends, will appear at the end of this
month.... The conclusion I have recently altered a little,
but in such a manner that everything referring to Weimar remains
unchanged"—To Uhlig, Jan. <hi>1, '52</hi>, "Yesterday
I received the book: 'Three opera poems.'...
This Preface was really the most important message I had to
deliver, for it was absolutely necessary in completion of
<hi>Opera and Drama</hi>... What can I still say, if now my friends do not
clearly understand?"—</p>
</div>
</front>

<body>
<div type="part" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N">
<pb id="pag269"/>
<head>A Communication to my Friends</head>

<p>My motive for this detailed "Communication" took rise
in the necessity I felt of explaining the
apparent, or real, contradiction offered by the character and form
of my hitherto published opera-poems, and of the musical
compositions which had sprung therefrom, to the views and
principles which I have recently set down at considerable length
and laid before the public under the title: "<hi>Opera and Drama</hi>."</p>

<p>This explanation I propose to address to my
<hi>Friends</hi>, because I can only hope to be understood
<note id="rn01" corresp="n01" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
by those who feel a need and inclination to understand me; and
these, again, can only be my Friends.</p>

<p>As such, however, I cannot consider those who pretend to love me
as <hi>artist</hi>, yet deem themselves bound to deny
<pb id="pag270" n="270"/>
me their sympathy as <hi>man</hi>.
<note id="rn02" corresp="n02" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
If the severance of the Artist from the Man is as brainless
an attempt as the divorce of soul from body, and if it be a stable
truth that never was an Artist loved nor his art comprehended,
unless he was also loved—at least unwittingly—as Man,
and with his art his life was also understood: then at the present
moment less than ever, and amid the hopeless desolation of our
public art-affairs, can an artist of my endeavour be loved, and
thus his art be understood, if this understanding and that love
which makes it possible be not above all grounded upon sympathy,
<hi>i.e.</hi> upon a fellow-pain and fellow-feeling with the veriest
human aspect of his life.</p>

<p>Least of all, however, can I deem those to be my
friends who, led by impressions gathered from an incomplete
acquaintance with my artistic doings, transfer the nebulous
uncertainty of this their understanding to the artistic object
itself, and ascribe to a peculiarity of the latter that which finds
its only origin in their own confusion of mind. The position which
these gentry take up against the artist, and seek to fortify by all
the aids of toilsome cunning, they dub "impartial criticism,"
seizing on every opportunity of posing as the only "true Friends"
of the artist,—whose actual Foes are therefore those who take
their stand beside him in full sympathy.—Our language is so
rich in synonymes that, having lost our intuitive understanding of
their meaning, we fancy we may use them at our pleasure and draw
private lines of demarcation between them. Thus do we employ and separate
<pb id="pag271" n="271"/>
"Love" and "Friendship." For my own part, with the
attainment of years of discretion I have host the power of
imagining a Friendship without Love, to say nothing of experiencing
such a feeling; and still harder should I find it, to conceive how
modern Art-Criticism and Friendship for the artist criticised could
possibly be terms of like significance.</p>

<p>The Artist addresses himself to the Feeling, and
not to the Understanding. If he be answered in terms of the
Understanding, then it is as good as said that he has not been
<hi>understood</hi>; and our Criticism is nothing else than the
avowal of the misunderstanding (<hi>Geständniss des
Unverständniss</hi>) of the artwork, which can only be really
understood by the Feeling—admitted, by the formed, and withal
not mis-formed feeling. Whosoever feels impelled, then, to bear
witness to his lack of understanding of an artwork, should take the
precaution to ask himself one simple question, namely: what were
the reasons for this lack? True, that he would come back at last to
the qualities of the artwork itself; but only after he had cleared
up the immediate problem of the physical garb in which it had
addressed itself to his feelings. Was this outward garb unable to
arouse or pacify his feelings, then he would have, before all else,
to endeavour to procure himself an insight into a manifest
imperfection of the artwork; namely, into the grounds of a failure
of harmony between the purpose of the artist and the nature of
those means by which he sought to impart it to the hearer's
Feeling. Only two issues could then lie open for his inquiry,
namely: whether the means of presentation to the senses were in
keeping with the artistic aim, or whether this aim itself was
indeed an artistic one?</p>

<p>We are not here speaking of the works of plastic
art, in which the technical execution is part and parcel of the
creation of the artist himself; but of the Drama, whose physical
garb is merely planned-out by the technique of the poet, but
not—as in the case of the plastic artist—realised also
by him; since it first gains this realisation
<pb id="pag272" n="272"/>
at the hands of a
specific art, the art of dramatic portrayal. Now if the Feeling of
our critical friend has not received a sure and definite impression
from the physical show (<hi>sinnliche Erscheinung</hi>), in the
present case the province of the art of dramatic portrayal, he
ought before all things to perceive that the execution was at any
rate inadequate; for the very essence of physical portrayal
consists in this, that it should exert a sure and definite
impression upon the Feeling. The shortcoming of the means once
recognised, it then would only remain for him to inquire, on what
the disproportion between aim and means was grounded: whether the
aim was of such a character that it was either unworthy of
realisation, or generally unfit for realisation by the means of
Art,—or whether the disproportion simply rested on the
mischaracter of the means which, at a given time and place, and
under given circumstances, had proved themselves insufficient to
realise a given artistic aim. In the latter case, it would be a
question of distinctly understanding an artistic aim which had been
only so far realised as the limited technical means of the dramatic
poet allowed of. But, from the nature of every <hi>artistic</hi> aim,
this understanding cannot be compassed by the sheer unaided
Intellect (<hi>mit dem reinen Verstande</hi>), but only by the
Feeling; and indeed by that more or less <hi>artistically</hi>
cultured feeling which can only be the property of those who find
themselves in a predicament more or less akin to that of the
artist, who have developed amid conditions of life like his, and
who in their inmost being so heartily sympathise with him that they
are prepared, under certain circumstances, to adopt that aim as
their very own, and are able to take an intimate and weighty share
in the struggle for its realisation.</p>

<p>Manifestly these can only be the artist's actual
loving Friends, and not the Critics who place themselves at an
intentional distance from him. When the 'absolute' Critic looks out
upon the Artist from his private peephole, he as good as sees
<hi>nothing</hi>; for the only thing he
<pb id="pag273" n="273"/>
can espy, namely his own
likeness on the mirror of his vanity, is—take it
reasonably—naught. The imperfection of the artwork's
semblance (<hi>Erscheinung</hi>) he by no means traces to its actual
source; he discerns it, at the utmost, in the felt imperfection of
his impression, and endeavours to vindicate the latter by defects
in the artist's aim, which he is the very last person to be in a
position to understand. In fact he has already so thoroughly
practised himself in this procedure, that he finally gives up the
attempt to let himself be influenced by the physical appearance of
the artwork; but fancies that, with his acquired professional
aptness, he may make shift with the written or printed pages on
which the poet or musician—so far as his technical powers
permitted—had set down his aim as such transferring to this
aim itself so much of his discontent—unconsciously developed
in advance—as he desires to base especially thereon. Though
this position is that least fitted for the understanding of any
work of art, particularly in the Present, yet it is the only one
which enables our modern art-critics to maintain their eternal
paper life. But even with this my Communication—alas!
likewise on paper—I do not address myself to them, so proud
in their exalted station: I decline to accept one iota of their
critical Friendship. What I might have to tell them, even
<hi>about</hi> myself and my artistic doings, they would not deign to
understand; for the very good reason that they make it a point of
honour to know everything in the world already.</p>

<p>By thus explaining—to whom I do <hi>not</hi>
address myself I have <hi>ipso facto</hi> defined those to whom I do.
They are those who so far sympathise with me both as man and
artist, that they are able to understand my <hi>aims</hi>, even
though I cannot bring these before them in the perfect realisation
of a fitting physical embodiment because the conditions prior
thereto are lacking in the public art-life of the Present, and I
can therefore only appeal to those who think and feel with
me,—in short: <hi>to my Friends, who love me</hi>.</p>

<p>Only those Friends, however, who above all feel an
<pb id="pag274" n="274"/>
interest in the Man within the Artist, are capable of
understanding him; and that not only in the Present, which forbids
the realisation of any high poetic aim, but at all times and in all
places.—The <hi>absolute artwork</hi>, i.e. the artwork which
shall neither be bound by time and place, nor portrayed by given
men in given circumstances, for the understanding of equally
definite human beings,—is an utter nothing, a chimera of
æsthetic phantasy. Its sponsors have distilled the idea of Art
from the actuality of the artworks of diverse epochs: to give this
idea an imagined reality again, since one otherwise could not have
kept it handy even in the imagination, they have clothed it around
with a conceptual body which, under the firma of the 'absolute
artwork,' avowedly or unavowedly makes out the brain-spook of our
æsthetic critics. Moreover, as this hypothetical body has taken
all the features of its imaginary physical form from the actual
attributes of the artworks of the Past, so also is the æsthetic
belief therein essentially conservative; and therefore the
reduction of this creed to practice, the completest artistic
unfertility.</p>

<p>Only in a truly inartistic era, could the belief
in such an artwork arise within the heads—naturally, not
within the hearts—of men. We descry its first historical
traces in the era of the Alexandrians, after the demise of Grecian
art. To the dogmatic character, however, which this conception has
taken-on in our own time,—to the rigour, obstinacy, and
persecuting savagery with which it mounts the tribune of our
journalistic criticism, it could only grow in an era when Life
itself began to face it with fresh-budding germs of the genuine
artwork, whose qualities every man of healthy feeling could
recognise—though not, for obvious reasons, our art-criticism
that lives upon the refuse of the old and outlived. That the new
germs, especially in the teeth of such a criticism, cannot as yet
reach full unfoldment into flowers, it is, that brings to its
speculative energy a constant store of fresh apparent vindication;
for, amongst its other abstractions from the artworks of the Past,
it has also bottled-off the notion of the actuality of physical show
<pb id="pag275" n="275"/>
being indispensable to the artwork. Now it observes that this
condition, with whose fulfilment itself must certainly cease to
exist, is as yet unfulfilled by the germs of a new and living art,
and for that very reason it denies them the right to life, or in
other words, the right to that impulse which spurs them onward to
the blossom of physical manifestment. Herewith the Science of
Æsthetics assumes a truly art-murderous activity, and carries it
to the pitch of fanatical barbarity; inasmuch as it hugs to its
breast the conservative phantasm of an 'absolute art-work' which it
can never see realised, for the simple reason that its realisation
lies already far behind us in the realm of History, and with
reactionary zeal would sacrifice to that the reality of natural
beginnings of fresh works of art. That which alone can bring those
beginnings to completion, alone those germs to blossom,—That
which must consequently throw the æsthetic phantasm of the
absolute artwork for ever on the dustheap of the ages, is this: the
winning of the <hi>conditions</hi> for the complete and full
appearance of the physical artwork amid and from our actual
Life.</p>

<p>The absolute, i.e. the <hi>un</hi>conditioned
artwork, existing but in Thought, is naturally bound to neither
time nor place, nor yet to definite circumstance. It can, for
instance, be indited two thousand years ago for the democracy of
Athens, and performed to-day before the Prussian Court at Potsdam.
In the conception of our aesthetists it must bear exactly the same
value, possess exactly the same essential features, no matter
whether here or there, to-day or in the days of old; nay, they go
farther, and imagine that, like certain sorts of wine, it gains by
being cellared, and can to-day and here be first entirely
understood aright, because they now forsooth can think into it the
democratic public of Athens, and gain an endlessly augmented store
of knowledge from the criticism of both this phantom public and the
to-be-assumed impression once exercised upon it by the artwork.
<note id="rn03" corresp="n03" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
</p>

<pb id="pag276" n="276"/>

<p>Now however elevating all this may be to the
modern intellect, yet for one thing it forms a sorry outlook,
namely the factor of artistic enjoyment; that factor naturally not
coming into play, since such an enjoyment can only be won through
the Feeling, and not through antiquarian Research. Wherefore if, in
contradistinction to this arid, critical enjoyment of the ghost of
art, we are ever to come to a genuine enjoyment; and if the latter,
in keeping with the nature of Art, can only be approached through
Feeling: then nothing remains for us but to turn to that Art-work
whose attributes present as great a contrast to the fancied
monumental artwork as the living Man to the marble Statue. But
these attributes consist herein, that it proclaims itself in
sharpest definition by Time, by Place, by Circumstance; therefore
that it can never come to living and effective show, if it come not
to show at a given time, in a given place, and amid given
circumstances; in a word, that it strips off every vestige of the
<hi>monumental</hi>.</p>

<p>We shall never gain a clear perception of the
necessity of these attributes, nor shall we ever advance that claim
for the genuine Art-work which such perception must engender, if we
do not first arrive at a proper understanding of what we are to
connote by the term "Universal-human." Until we come to
recognise, and on every hand to demonstrate in practice, that the
very essence of the human species consists in the diversity of
human Individuality,—instead of placing the essence of the
individuality in its conformity to the general characteristics of
the species, and consequently sacrificing it to the latter, as
Religion and State have hitherto done,
<note id="rn04" corresp="n04" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
—neither shall we comprehend that the fully and wholly
Present must once and for
<pb id="pag277" n="277"/>
all supplant the half or wholly Absent,
<hi>the monumental</hi>. In truth, our entire ideas on Art are now so
bound up in the "monumental," that we fancy we may only assign a
value to works of art in measure as we are justified in imputing to
them a monumental character. Though this view may be right as
applied to the offspring of frivolous <hi>Mode</hi>, which never can
content a human need, still we cannot but see that it is at bottom
but a mere reaction of man's nobler feeling of natural shame
against the motley utterances of Mode, and with the ceasing of the
reign of Mode itself, must stand confessed of no more right,
because of no more reason. An absolute respect for the Monumental
is entirely unthinkable: at best, it can only bolster itself upon
aesthetic revulsion against an uncontenting Present. But this
feeling of revulsion has not the needful strength to take
victorious arms gainst such a Present, so long as it merely shows
itself as a passion for the monumental. The utmost which that
passion can eventually effect, is the perversion of the Monumental
itself into another Mode,—such as, to tell the truth, is the
case to-day. And thus we never leave the vicious circle from which
the noblest impulse of the 'monumental' craze itself is striving to
withdraw, regardless that no rational exit is so much as thinkable
except by violent withdrawal of their life-conditions both from
Mode and Monument; for even the Mode has its full justification in
face of the Monumental, to wit as the reaction of the immediate
<pb id="pag278" n="278"/>
vital impulse of the Present from the coldness of that unfelt sense
of beauty which proclaims itself in the passion for the monumental.
But the annihilation of the Monumental together with the Mode is,
in other terms: the entry upon life of the ever freshly present,
ever new-related and warm-appealing Art-work; which, again, is as
much as to say: the winning of the conditions for this artwork
<hi>from Life itself</hi>.</p>

<p>To map out the character of this Art-work: that
it could not be the work of our plastic art of nowadays—in so
far as that art is compelled to proclaim itself as monumental, and
owes its bare existence to our monumental craze,—but could
only be <hi>the Drama</hi>; further, that this Drama could only find
its proper attitude toward Life, when in its every moment it should
be completely present with that Life, in its remotest relations so
bound therewith and issuing therefrom, in its individuality of time
and place and circumstance so characteristic thereof, that for its
understanding (<hi>Verständniss</hi>), i.e., for its enjoyment,
there should be no longer need of the reflecting Intellect
(<hi>Verstand</hi>) but only of the directly seizing Feeling; in
fine, that this understanding could only be brought about when the
contents, in themselves strictly emotional, should be presented to
the senses in their own most fitting form, to wit, by man's
universal-artistic faculty of expression to man's
universal-artistic faculty of reception, and not by one severed
attribute of that one faculty to another fenced-off attribute of
this:—to show all this in general terms, was the object of
my essay "The Art-work of the Future." The nature of the difference
between this art-work and that <hi>monumental</hi> artwork which
hovers in the mist before our critical Æsthetes, lies there
exposed for any one who will trouble himself to understand me; and
to assert that the thing I there demanded is already extant, could
only occur to those for whom true art itself is absolutely
non-extant.</p>

<p>Only <hi>one</hi> situation, in which I
necessarily found myself herewith, could give to even less
prejudiced persons a colour for the cry of "contradictions." It is
this: I place <hi>Life</hi> as
<pb id="pag279" n="279"/>
the first and foremost condition for
the appearance of the Artwork, and not indeed its wilful reflection
in the thought of the philosopher, but the most real and sentient
Life of all, the freest fount of natural Will (<hi>den freiesten
Quell der Unwillkürlichkeit</hi>); yet from my standpoint of
artist of the Present, I sketch the outlines of the "art-work of
the future," and this with reference to a form which only the
artistic instinct of that future Life itself can ever shape aright.
Against this reproach I not merely advance the plea that I have
only suggested the barest <hi>general</hi> features of the Art-work,
but I go farther and observe—not alone for my justification,
but as essential to the understanding of my aim—that the
Artist of the Present must certainly have an influence,
determinative in every respect, upon the Art-work of the Future,
and that he may well count up this influence in advance, for the
very reason that he must grow conscious of it even now. Amid his
noblest striving, this consciousness waxes in him from his inward
feeling of deepest discontent with the life of the Present: he sees
himself pointed to the life of the Future alone, for the
realisation of possibilities whose existence has come to his
consciousness from the promptings of his own artistic powers.</p>

<p>Now he who cherishes the fatalistic view anent
this Life of the Future, that we can conceive absolutely nothing of
it, thereby confesses that he has not got so far with his human
development as to possess a <hi>reasonable Will</hi>
(vernünftigen Willen): for the reasonable Will is the willing
of the recognised Spontaneous and Natural, and only he who has
reached the point of grasping its substance for himself can
presuppose this Will as fashioning the Life of the Future.
Whosoever does not conceive this fashioning of the Future as a
necessary consequence of the reasonable will of the Present,
neither has he the shadow of a reasonable conception of the Present
or the Past: whosoever possesses no initiative in his own
character, neither can he perceive in the Present any initiative
for the Future. But the initiative for the Art-work of the Future
must come
<pb id="pag280" n="280"/>
from the Artist of the Present who is in the position to
grasp this Present, who takes up its powers and its necessary Will
into himself, and withal remains no slave to the Present but shows
himself as its moving, willing, and fashioning organ, as a
consciously-operating portion of that vital impulse which urges it
to reach forth from out itself.</p>

<p>To recognise the Life-stress
(<hi>Lebenstrieb</hi>) of the Present, is to be impelled to put it
into action. But, with <hi>our</hi> Present, such a setting-in-action
cannot possibly proclaim itself in any other way than as a
foreshadowing of the Future; and, indeed, of such a Future as shall
not depend upon the mechanism of the Past, but, in all its
movements free and self-dependent, shall shape from out itself,
i.e., from out of Life. This setting-in-action is the annihilation
of the Monumental, and, in the case of Art, must take that path
which brings it into most immediate contact with ever-present Life;
this path is that of <hi>Drama</hi>. The recognition of the necessity
of Art's taking this direction, to set it in an ever fruitful
interaction with Life, and lift it from the Monumental rut, must
naturally also lead the artist to recognise the inability of
present public life either to further such an artistic tendency or
itself to fall in therewith; for our public life, so far as it
comes into any contact with the phenomena of Art, has shaped itself
under the exclusive influence of the Monumental and its
counterpoise, the Mode. Wherefore only such artists can work in
harmony with present public life as either imitate the monuments of
the past, or stamp themselves as servants of the mode: but both
are, in very truth, no artists at all. The genuine artist, on the
other hand, who moves along the said true path of Drama, cannot but
show himself at variance with the spirit of present public life.
But just as he recognises the true Artwork to be <hi>that</hi> which
can unveil to Life its meaning in fullest physical show, so must he
necessarily throw forward to the Future the realisation of his
highest artistic wish, as to a life enfranchised from the tyranny
of both Monument and Mode; he thus must turn his artist Will
straight toward the Art-work of the Future, no matter
<pb id="pag281" n="281"/>
whether it
shall be himself or others to whom it first is granted to set foot
upon the soil of that Life of the Future which shall bring both
means and consummation.</p>

<p>It is certainly not the professional thinker or
critic, who can ever reach this Will; but only the actual artist,
to whom, from his artistic standpoint in the life of the Present,
thought and criticism have become an indispensable attribute of his
general artistic activity. This attribute is necessarily developed
in him through the survey of his position towards our public life,
which he cannot look on with the cold indifference of a sheer
critical experimentalist, but with the warm desire to address
himself intelligibly thereto. What this artist most perceives, when
he looks upon the public life of the Present, is the utter
impossibility of thus addressing himself by means of the mechanical
implements of prevailing monumental, or modish art. As I am here
dealing with the genuine dramatic poet alone, I allude to the
absence of <hi>that</hi> theatric art, and <hi>that</hi> dramatic
platform, which would be equal to the task of realising his aim.
Our modern theatres are either the tools of monumental
criticism—as witness, the Berlin Sophocles, Shakespeare
&amp;c.—or of absolute fashion. The possibility of entirely
dispensing with these theatres he can only embrace by an
abandonment of every, even the remotest, attempt to realise his
specific purpose: in other words, he must write dramas for the
reading-desk. But since the Drama is just that thing which only in
its fullest physical manifestment can ever become a work of Art, he
is forced at last to content himself with an <hi>incomplete</hi>
realisation of his purpose, so as not to bid entire farewell to his
main endeavour.</p>

<p>But the poet's purpose would first be fully
realised, when he not only saw it adequately expressed upon the
stage, but when this should happen withal at a definite time, under
definite conditions, and before a gathering of spectators connected
by a definite measure of affinity with himself. A poetic aim which
I have conceived with a view to certain relations and surroundings,
can only expend its
<pb id="pag282" n="282"/>
full effect when I impart it amid the same
relations and to the same surroundings: then alone can this aim be
understood apart from the critic's art, and its human purport be
perceived; but not when all these vital conditions shall have
vanished, and the relations changed. When, for instance, before the
first French Revolution, there existed amongst an entire class of
frivolous pleasure-seekers that mood (<hi>Stimmung</hi>) in which a
<hi>Don Juan</hi> could be deemed an entirely comprehensible
phenomenon, the true expression of that mood; when this type was
seized by artists and, in its last process of realisation, embodied
by an actor whose whole temperament was as fitted to this
personality as was the Italian tongue to give this personality an
adequate expression,—the emotional effect of such an
exhibition, at such a time, was certainly most definite and
unmistakable. But what is the complexion of affairs when, to-day,
before the entirely altered Public of the Present composed of
members of the Bourse or State-officialdom the same Don Juan is
played again, by a performer who treats his leisure to beer and
skittles and thus escapes all temptation to be unfaithful to his
wife; a Don Juan transposed, to boot, to the German tongue, and
disguised in a translation from which every trace of the Italian
linguistic character has been washed completely out? Will not this
Don Juan be understood at least <hi>quite otherwise</hi> than as the
poet meant; and is not this quite other understanding—at best
depending on the critic's aid—in truth <hi>no</hi>
understanding of the real Don Juan? Or can ye, perchance, enjoy a
lovely landscape, when ye look on it in darkest midnight?—</p>

<p>In the haphazard and piecemeal fashion in which
the artist now attains the public's ear, he must become the less
intelligible, the more the artistic aim from which his work took
rise has an actual connexion with Life; for such an aim can never
be an accidental, abstract one, conceived amid the generalisms of
aesthetic caprice, but only ripens to the force requisite for
artistic manifestment when it has borrowed from time and
circumstance an individual shape. If the
<pb id="pag283" n="283"/>
realisation of such an aim
can only have its full effect when it comes to manifestment while
the relations which awoke it in the poet are still warm with life,
and when it is brought before those who were included, consciously
or unconsciously, amongst those relations: then the artist who sees
his work treated as a monumental one, which may indifferently be
given at any convenient time or before any audience one pleases,
must be exposed to every conceivable peril of misunderstanding.
Then can he cleave alone to those who, by reason of their general
sympathy with him, <hi>can understand this situation also, and
through their sharing in his endeavour</hi>—which they find
made infinitely more difficult by this his situation—make
<hi>good to him</hi> in self-creative generosity <hi>the fulness of
those furthering conditions</hi> which are denied his artwork by the
actual times.—It is therefore to these fellow-feeling and
fellow-creating Friends alone, that I feel impelled to here address
myself.</p>

<p>To them, whom I have never been able to address
in that fashion which alone could satisfy my wish, I have thus, in
order to make myself completely understood, to explain the
contradictions presented by my hitherto enacted opera-poems to my
recently expressed views upon the operatic <hi>genre</hi> in general.
I speak chiefly of the <hi>poems</hi>, not only because the bond
between my art and my life lies plainest shown in them, but also
because I have to call on them to witness that my musical
working-out, my method of operatic composition, was conditioned by
the very nature of those poems.</p>

<p>The contradictions to which I here allude, do
not at all events exist for any one who has accustomed himself to
regard a phenomenon with due allowance for its development <hi>in
time</hi>. Whosoever in his verdict on a phenomenon takes this
development also into consideration, can only light on
contradictions when the phenomenon is one divorced from time and
place, unnatural, or illogical. But to leave the evolutionary
factor completely out of count, to jumble phases separated by time
and well-marked
<pb id="pag284" n="284"/>
difference into one conglomerate mass, is certainly
itself an unnatural or illogical mode of viewing things, and such
as can only belong to our monumental-historic criticism, not to the
healthy criticism of the sympathetic, feeling heart. This
uncritical demeanour of our modern Criticism is due, among other
things, to the standpoint from which she applies to each and every
object the monumental foot-rule. For her, the artists and
masterpieces of all ages and nations stand piled beside and on each
other, and their differences she treats as merely art-historical,
to be computed by the abstract date, not felt as warm and living;
for with any truth of feeling, their simultaneous exhibition must
needs be utterly insupportable,—about as painful as when we
hear Sebastian Bach performed at a concert by side of Beethoven. In
my own case, also, certain critics, who pretend to judge my
art-doings as a connected whole, have set about their task with
this same uncritical heedlessness and lack of Feeling: views on the
nature of Art, that I have proclaimed from a standpoint which it
took me years of evolution step-by-step to gain, they seize-on for
the standard of their verdict, and point them back upon those very
compositions from which I started on the natural path of evolution
that led me to this standpoint. When, for instance—not from
the standpoint of abstract aesthetics, but from that of practical
artistic <hi>experience</hi>—I denote the Christian principle
as hostile to or incapable of Art (<hi>kunstunfähig</hi>), these
critics point me out the contradiction in which I stand towards my
<hi>earlier</hi> dramatic works, which undoubtedly are filled with a
certain tincture of this principle, so inextricably blended with
our modern evolution. But it never occurs to them that, if they
would only compare the new-won standpoint with that abandoned, the
two are certainly distinct enough yet the one is
organically connected with the other, and that far rather were the
new standpoint to be <hi>explained</hi> from the old, than were this
relinquished to be judged by that adopted. No,—thinking fit
to take my older works as planned and carried out in the light of
the newer standpoint, they find in them
<pb id="pag285" n="285"/>
an inconsequence with, a
contradiction to my present views, and derive the clearest proof of
the erroneous nature of those views from my own contradiction of
them in the practice of my art; and thus, in the most easy-going
fashion in the world, they kill two birds with one stone, inasmuch
as they brand both my artistic and my theoretic labours as the acts
of a critically untrained, confused, and extravagant person. But
the product of their own acumen they call true "Criticism,"
forsooth, and criticism of the "historical" school!—</p>

<p>I have here touched on one essential point of
the above-mentioned contradictions. Since I now wish to address my
friends alone, I might perhaps have left it wholly unregarded; for
in truth no one can be my friend who is not able to detect for
himself the phantom nature of this 'contradiction.' This insight,
however, is immeasurably hindered by the incomplete and fragmentary
fashion in which alone I am able to impart my purpose even to my
Friends. One has witnessed a performance of this, another of that,
of my dramatic works, as chance might hap; his inclination towards
me has sprung from his acquaintance with just this one work; even
this one work has come before him in a halting fashion, at the
best; he has had to fill up many a gap, by drawing on the store of
his own feelings and endeavours, and to gain himself at last a full
enjoyment by importing a perchance preponderating share of himself
and his hobbies into the object of enjoyment. But here comes the
point where we must clearly understand each other: my friends must
see the <hi>whole</hi> of me, in order to decide whether they can be
<hi>wholly</hi> my friends. I can no longer content myself with half
arrangements; I cannot consent that things which were necessities
in my development should appear to good natured people as
accidentals, which they may twist to my advantage according to
their degree of inclination toward me. Thus I face towards <hi>my
Friends</hi>, to render them a clear account of my path of
evolution, in course of which those apparent contradictions, also,
must be thoroughly unriddled.</p>

<pb id="pag286" n="286"/>

<p>I will not, however, attempt to reach this end
by the paths of abstract criticism; but will point out my
evolutionary career, as faithfully as I can now survey it, by
reviewing my works, and the moods of life which called them forth,
in series—not tossing everything upon one heap of
generalities.</p>

<milestone unit="section" rend="hr"/>

<p>Of my earliest efforts I shall have but a brief
report to make: they were the usual attempts of an as yet
undeveloped individuality, to find, with advancing adolescence, its
bearings toward those general impressions of art which affect us
from our youth up. The first artistic Will is nothing else than the
contentment of the instinctive impulse to imitate what most
attracts us.—</p>

<p>If I seek to gain myself a fairly satisfactory
explanation of the artistic faculty, I can only do so by
attributing it chiefly to the <hi>force of the receptive faculty</hi>
(die Kraft des Empfängnissvermögens). The un-artistic,
political temperament may be characterised thus: that from youth up
it sets a check upon impressions from outside, which, in the course
of the man's development, mounts even to a calculation of the
personal profit that his withstanding of the outer world will bring
him, to a talent for referring this outer world to himself and
never himself to it. On the other hand, the un-political, artistic
temperament is marked by this one feature: that its owner gives
himself up without reserve to the impressions which move his
emotional being (<hi>Empfindungswesen</hi>) to sympathy. The motive
power of these impressions, again, is in direct ratio to the force
of the receptive faculty, which latter only gains the strength of
an <hi>impulse to impart</hi> (<hi>Mittheilungsdrang</hi>) when they fill it
to an ecstatic excess (<hi>entzückenden Übermaase</hi>).
<note id="rn05" corresp="n05" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
The
<pb id="pag287" n="287"/>
artistic force is conditioned by the measure of this excess,
for it is nothing else than the need to make away to others the
over-swelling store (<hi>Empfängniss</hi>). This force may
operate in either of two directions, according as it has been set
in motion by <hi>exclusively</hi> artistic impressions, or finally by
impressions <hi>also</hi> harvested from Life itself. That which
first decides the <hi>Artist</hi>, as such, is certainly the purely
artistic impression; if his receptive force be completely absorbed
thereby, so that the impressions to be later received from Life
find his faculty already exhausted, then he will develop as an
<hi>absolute</hi> artist along the path which we must designate the
feminine, i.e. that which embraces alone the feminine element of
art. On this we meet all those artists of the day whose deeds make
out the catalogue of modern art; it is the world of art close
fenced from Life, in which Art plays with herself, drawing
sensitively back from every brush with actuality—not merely
the actuality of the modern Present, but of Life in
general—and treats it as her <hi>absolute</hi> foe; believing
that Life in every age and every land is waging war against
herself; and therefore that any toil to fashion Life is labour
lost, and consequently unbeseeming to the artist. In this class we
find above all Painting and, pre-eminently, Music. The case is
otherwise, where the previously developed artistic receptive-force
has merely formed and focussed the faculty for receiving Life's
impressions; where in place of weakening, it has the rather
strengthened it—in the highest sense of the term. On the path
along which this force evolves, Life itself is at last surveyed in
the light of artistic impressions, and the impulse towards
imparting which gathers from the overfill of these impressions is
the only true <hi>poetic force</hi>. This divorces not itself from
Life, but from the standpoint of Art it strives to tender Life a
fashioning hand. Let us denote this as the masculine, the
generative path of Art.—</p>

<pb id="pag288" n="288"/>

<p>Whosoever may choose to think that with my present Communication I
propose to make out for myself a title to the halo of a "Genius," I
flatly and distinctly contradict him in advance. On the contrary, I
feel prepared to prove that it is a piece of uncommonly vapid and
superficial criticism, to ascribe, as we customarily do, the
definitive operation of a particular artistic force to a gift
(<hi>Befähigung</hi>) which we fancy we have fathomed when we
briefly call it "Genius." In other words, we treat this Genius as a
pure and absolute windfall, which God or Nature casts hither and
thither at pleasure, often without the favoured bounty falling even
to the right man: for how frequently we hear, that "So-and-so does
not know what to be about with his genius."—I attribute the
force which we commonly call Genius solely to the faculty which I
have just described at length. That which operates so mightily upon
this force that it must finally come forth to full productiveness,
we have in truth to regard as the real fashioner and former, as the
only furthering condition for that force's efficacy, and this is
the Art already evolved outside that separate force, the Art which
from the artworks of the ancient and the modern world has shaped
itself into a universal Substance, and hand in hand with actual
Life, reacts upon the individual with the character of the force
that I have elsewhere named the <hi>communistic</hi>. Amid these
all-filling and all-fashioning influences of Art and Life, there
thus remains to the Individual but one chief thing as his own:
namely Force, vital force, force to assimilate the kindred and the
needful; and this is precisely that receptive-force which I have
denoted above, and which—so soon as it opens its arms in love
without reserve—must necessarily, with the attainment of its
perfect strength, become at last productive-force.</p>

<p>In epochs when this force, like the force of Individuality in
general, has been entirely crushed out by state-discipline, or by
the complete fossilisation of the outward forms of Life and
Art—as in China, or in Europe towards the end of the Roman
world-dominion—neither have those phenomena
<pb id="pag289" n="289"/>
which we christen by the name of "Genius" ever come to light: a plain proof
that they are not cast upon life by the caprice of God or Nature.
On the other hand, these phenomena were just as little known in
those ages when both creative forces, the individualistic and the
communistic, reacted on each other with all the freedom of
unfettered Nature, forever fresh-begetting and ever giving birth
anew. These are the so-called prehistoric times, the times when
Speech, and Myth, and Art were really born. Then, too, the thing we
call Genius was unknown: no one man was a Genius, since all men
were it. Only in times like ours, does one know or name these"
Geniuses"; the sole name that we can find for those artistic forces
which withdraw themselves from the drillground of the State and
ruling Dogma, or from the sluggard bolstering-up of tottering forms
of Art, to open out new pathways and fill them with their innate
life. Yet if we look a little closer, we shall find that these new
openings are in no wise arbitrary and private paths, but
continuations of a long-since-hewn main causeway; down which,
before and with these solitary units, a joint and many-membered
force of diverse individualities has poured itself, whose conscious
or unconscious instinct has urged it to the abrogation of those
forms by fashioning newer moulds of Life and Art. Here, then, we
see again a common force, which includes within its coefficients
that individual force we have erstwhile foolishly dismissed with
the appellation "Genius," and, according to our modern notions
thereof, utterly annuls it. By all means, that associate,
communistic force is only brought into play through the medium of
the individual force; for it is, in truth, naught other than the
force of sheer human Individuality in general. The form, however,
that comes eventually to manifestment is nowise, as we
superficially opine, the work of the solitary individual; but the
latter takes his share in the common work—namely that of most
palpably revealing, by its realisation, an existing
potentiality—only by virtue of that one quality which I have
already denoted above, and whose prime energy I wish
<pb id="pag290" n="290"/>
now to express
still more distinctly. An ancient myth which I will now
relate—despite the comminations of the historico-political
school—shall serve me in the stead of definition.</p>

<milestone unit="section"/>

<p>The fair sea-wife Wachilde had born a son to good King Viking:
the three Norns came to greet the child, and dower it with gifts.
The first Norn gave it strength of body, the second wisdom; and the
grateful father bade them take their seat beside his throne. But
the third bestowed upon the child "the ne'er-contented mind that
ever broods the New." Viking, aghast at such a gift, refused the
youngest Norn his thanks; indignant, she recalled her gift, to
punish his ingratitude. The son grew up to strength and mighty
stature; and whate'er there was to know, he mastered it betimes.
But never did he feel the spur to change or venture; with every
turning of his life he was content, and found his home in all. He
never loved, and neither did he hate: but, since he hit by chance
upon a wife, he, too, begat a son, and sent him to take schooling
from the Dwarves, that he might learn what's fit;—this son
was that Wieland whom Want was once to teach to forge himself his
wings. But the Ancient soon became the sport of fools and children,
since every one might plague him, without it moving him to ire; for
he was so wise that he knew that fools and children love to scoff
and tease. Only when they said light words about his mother, did he
kindle into wrath; about <hi>her</hi>, he would bear no jesting. When
he came upon the Sound, it never dawned on him to build a boat and
ship across it, but he waded plump into the waters, shoulder-high;
so the people called him "Wate." One day he wished to get him news
about his son, if the child was well-behaved and making progress
with his lessons; he found the gateway closed, that led into the
cavern of the Dwarves, for they were planning mischief against the
child and wished to balk the father's visit. But he felt no care,
for he was always satisfied: he laid him down beside the entrance,
and fell asleep. His mighty snoring shook
<pb id="pag291" n="291"/>
a boulder that hung above
his head; it hurtled down on him and killed him. Such was the life
of the sage and sturdy giant Wate: thereto had Viking's father-care
brought up the son of the sweet sea-wife Wachilde; and thus art
thou brought up, to this very day, my German Folk!</p>

<p>That one rejected gift: "the ne'er contented
mind, that ever broods the New," the youngest Norn holds out to all
of us when we are born, and through it alone might we each, one
day, become a "Genius;"
<note id="rn06" corresp="n06" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
but now, in our craze for education, 'tis Chance alone that brings
this gift within our grasp,—the accident of <hi>not becoming
educated</hi> (erzogen). Secure against the refusal of a father who
died beside my cradle, perchance the Norn, so often chased away,
stole gently to it, and there bestowed on me her gift; which never
left poor untrained me, and made Life and Art and mine own self my
only, quite anarchic, educators.—</p>

<p>I may pass over the endless variety of
impressions which exercised a lively effect upon me in my earliest
youth; they were as diverse in their operation as in their source.
Whether, under their influence, I ever appeared to any one an
"Infant prodigy" ("<hi>Wunderkind</hi>"), I very much doubt:
mechanical dexterities were never drubbed into me, nor did I ever
show the slightest bent towards them. To play-acting I felt an
inclination, and indulged it in the quiet of my chamber; this was
naturally aroused in me by the close connection of my family with
the stage. The only remarkable thing about it all, was my
repugnance against going to the theatre itself; childish
impressions which I had imbibed from the earnestness of classical
antiquity, so far as I had made its acquaintance in the
'Gymnasium,' may have inspired me with a certain contempt, nay, an
abhorrence of the rouge-and-powdered ways of the Comedian.
<pb id="pag292" n="292"/>
But my passion for imitation (<hi>Nachahmungseifer</hi>) threw itself with
greatest zest into the making of poetry and music,— perhaps
because my stepfather, a portrait-painter, died be-times, and thus
the pictorial element vanished early from among my nearer models;
otherwise I should probably have begun to paint too, although I
cannot but remember that the learning of the technique of the
pencil soon went against my grain. First I wrote plays; but the
acquaintance with Beethoven's Symphonies, which I only made in my
fifteenth year, eventually inflamed me with a passion for music
also, albeit it had long before this exercised a powerful effect
upon me, chiefly through Weber's "<hi>Freischütz</hi>." Amidst
my study of music, the poetic 'imitative-impulse' never quite
forsook me; it subordinated itself, however, to the musical, for
whose contentment I only called it in as aid. Thus I recollect
that, incited by the Pastoral Symphony, I set to work on a
shepherd-play, its dramatic material being prompted by Goethe's
"Lovers' Fancies" ("<hi>Laune der Verliebten</hi>"). I here made no
attempt at a preliminary poetic sketch, but wrote verses and music
together, thus leaving the situations to take their rise from the
music and the verses as I made them.</p>

<p>After many a digression to this side and to
that, toward the commencement of my eighteenth year I was
confronted by the Revolution of July 1830. The effect upon me was
both violent and stimulating; especially keen was my enthusiasm for
the struggling, my sorrow for the vanquished, Poles. But these
impressions were not as yet of any perceptible formative influence
upon my artistic evolution; in that respect they were stimulators
only in a general sense. Indeed, so much were my receptive and
imitative faculties still under the sole dominion of artistic
impressions, that it was precisely at this time that I occupied
myself the most exclusively with music, wrote Sonatas, Overtures,
and a Symphony, and in fact declined a proffered opera-text on the
subject of "Kosziusko."
<note id="rn07" corresp="n07" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
<pb id="pag293" n="293"/>
My passion for reproduction, however, soon turned towards the
drama—at least, towards the opera. On the model of one of
Gozzi's fairy-tales,
<note id="rn08" corresp="n08" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
I wrote for myself an opera-text in verse, "<hi>Die Feen</hi>" ("The
Fairies"); the then predominant "Romantic"-Opera of Weber, and
also of Marschner—who about this time made his first
appearance on the scene, and that at my place of sojourn,
Leipzig—determined me to follow in their footsteps. What I turned
out for myself was nothing more than barely what I wanted, namely
an opera-text; this I set to music according to the impressions
made upon me by Weber, Beethoven, and Marschner.
<note id="rn09" corresp="n09" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
However, what took my fancy in the tale of Gozzi, was not merely
its adaptability for an opera-text, but the fascination of the
'stuff' itself.—A Fairy, who renounces immortality for the
sake of a human lover, can only become a mortal through the
fulfilment of certain hard conditions, the non-compliance wherewith
on the part of her earthly swain threatens her with the direst
penalties; her lover fails in the test, which consists in this,
that however evil and repulsive she may appear to him (in an
obligatory metamorphosis) he shall not reject her in his unbelief.
In Gozzi's tale the Fairy is now changed into a snake; the
remorseful lover frees her from the spell, by kissing the snake:
thus he wins her for his wife. I altered this denouement by
changing the Fairy into a stone, and then releasing her from the
spell by her lover's passionate song; while the lover —
instead of being allowed to carry off his bride into his own
country—is himself admitted by the Fairy-King to the immortal
bliss of Fairyland, together with his fairy wife.—At the
present time, this feature seems to me of some importance: though
it was only the music and the ordinary traditions of opera,
<pb id="pag294" n="294"/>
that gave me then the notion, yet there lay already here the germ of a
weighty factor in my whole development.—</p>

<p>I had now attained that age when the mind of
man, if ever it is to do so, throws itself with greater directness
upon the immediate surroundings of life. The fantastic looseness of
German student-life, after a turbulent bout or two, had quickly
filled me with disgust: <hi>Woman</hi> had begun to dawn on my
horizon. The longing which could nowhere still itself in life found
an ideal food in the reading of Heinse's "<hi>Ardinghello</hi>," as
also the works of Heine, and other members of the then
"Young-German" school of literature. The effect of the impressions
thus received, expressed itself in my actual life in the only way
wherein Nature can utter herself under the pressure of the moral
bigotry of our social system. On the other hand, my artistic
'impulse-to-impart' unburdened itself of these life-impressions
along the line of the artistic impressions which I received at the
like time; among these, the most vivid were those derived from the
newer French, and even Italian, operas. As this genre had, in
effect, gained the upper hand on the German operatic stage, and
figured in its repertoire almost exclusively, so was its influence
inevitable upon one who found himself in a life-mood such as that I
have referred to as mine at that period; there spoke out in this
music, at least for me, all that which I then felt: the joyous
throb of life, emprisoned in the makeshift garment of
frivolity.—But it was a living personality, that kindled this
inclination of mine into an enthusiasm of nobler intent: this was
the <hi>Schröder-Devrient</hi>, in a 'star' engagement
(<hi>Gastspiel</hi>) on the Leipzig stage. The remotest contact with
this extraordinary woman electrified me; for many a long year, down
even to the present day, I saw, I heard, I felt her near me,
whenever the impulse to artistic production seized me.</p>

<p>The fruit of all these impressions, and all
these moods, was an opera: the "<hi>Liebesverbot, or the Novice of
Palermo</hi>." I took its subject from Shakespeare's "Measure for
<pb id="pag295" n="295"/>
Measure." It was Isabella that inspired me: she who leaves her
novitiate in the cloister, to plead with a hardhearted Stateholder
for mercy to her brother, who, in pursuance of a draconic edict,
has been condemned to death for entering on a forbidden, yet
Nature-hallowed love-bond with a maiden. Isabella's chaste soul
urges on the stony judge such cogent reasons for pardoning the
offence, her agitation helps her to paint these reasons in such
entrancing warmth of colour, that the stern protector of morals is
himself seized with passionate love for the superb woman. This
sudden-flaming passion proclaims itself by his promising the pardon
of the brother as the price of the lovely sister's favours. Aghast
at this proposal, Isabella takes refuge in artifice, to unmask the
hypocrite and save her brother. The Stateholder, whom she has
vouchsafed a fictitious indulgence, still thinks good to withhold
the stipulated pardon, so not to sacrifice his stern judicial
conscience to a passing lapse from virtue.—Shakespeare
disentangles the resulting situation by means of the public return
of the Duke, who had hitherto observed events from under a
disguise: his decision is an earnest one, and grounded on the
judge's maxim, "measure for measure." I, on the other hand,
unloosed the knot without the Prince's aid, by means of a
revolution. The scene of action I transferred to the capital of
Sicily, in order to bring in the southern heat of blood to help me
with my scheme; I also made the Stateholder, a puritanical German,
forbid a projected carnival; while a madcap youngster, in love with
Isabella, incites the populace to mask, and keep their weapons
ready: "Who will not dance at our behest, Your steel shall pierce
him through the breast!" The Stateholder, himself induced by
Isabella to come disguised to their rendezvous, is discovered,
unmasked, and hooted;—the brother, in the nick of time, is
freed by force from the executioner's hands; Isabella renounces her
novitiate, and gives her hand to that young leader of the carnival.
In full procession, the maskers go forth to meet their
home-returning
<pb id="pag296" n="296"/>
Prince, assured that he will at least not govern
them so crookedly as had his deputy.
<note id="rn10" corresp="n10" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
</p>

<p>If one compares this subject with that of the
<hi>Feen</hi>, one will see that there was a possibility of my
developing along two diametrically opposite lines: to the reverent
earnestness (<hi>heiligen Ernste</hi>) of my original promptings
there here opposed itself, implanted by impressions gained from
Life, a pert fancy for the wild turmoil of the senses, a defiant
exuberance of glee which seemed to offer to the former mood a
crying contrast. This becomes obvious to myself, when I compare the
musical working-out of the two operas. Music always exercised a
decisive influence upon my emotional fund
(<hi>Empfindungsvermögen</hi>); and indeed this could not well
be otherwise, at a period of my evolution when the impressions of
Life had not as yet made so sharp and definite an effect upon me,
that they could lend me the imperious force of individuality to
hold that receptive power to a definite field of outward action.
The effect of the impressions produced on me by Life was still of
general, and not of individual sort; therefore 'general' music as
yet must dominate my individual powers of artistic fashioning. Even
in the case of the <hi>Liebesverbot</hi>, the music had exercised a
prior sway upon the fashioning and arranging of the subject-matter;
and this music was nothing else than the reflex of the influence of
modern French and (as concerns the melody) Italian Opera upon my
physically-excited receptive faculties. Whosoever should take the
pains to compare this composition with that of the <hi>Feen</hi>,
would scarcely be able to understand how in so short a time so
surprising a reverse of front could have been brought about: the
balancing of the two tendencies was to be the work of my further
course of evolution as an artist.—</p>

<pb id="pag297" n="297"/>

<p>My path led first to utter frivolity in my views
of art; this coincides with my earliest practical contact with the
theatre, as Musical-director.
<note id="rn11" corresp="n11" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
The rehearsing and conducting of those loose-limbed French operas
which were then the mode, the piquant prurience of their orchestral
effects, gave me many a childish thrill ofjoy when I could set the
stew a-frothing right and left from my conductor's desk. In Life,
which henceforth meant for me the motley life of the stage, I
sought by distraction to content an impulse which, as regards the
things of everyday, took the form of a chase after pleasure, and as
regards music, of a prickling, sputtering unrest. My
Feen-composition became utterly indifferent to me, until at last I
gave up all idea of getting that work produced. A performance of
the <hi>Liebesverbot</hi>, carried out with headstrong obstinacy
under the most unfavourable conditions, and completely
unintelligibly rendered, caused me much vexation; yet this
experience was quite insufficient to cure me of the hightmindedness
with which I then set about everything.—The modern requital
of modern levity, however, soon knocked at my unready door. I fell
in love; married in feverish haste; distressed myself and others
with the trials of a poverty-stricken home; and thus fell into that
misery whose nature it is to bring thousands upon thousands to the
ground.</p>

<p>One strong desire then arose in me, and
developed into an all-consuming passion: to force my way out from
the paltry squalor of my situation. This desire, however, was
busied only in the second line with actual Life; its front rank
made towards a brilliant course as Artist. To extricate myself from
the petty commerce of the German stage, and straightway try my luck
in Paris: this, in a word, was the goal I set before me.—A
romance by H. König, "<hi>die Hohe Braut</hi>," had fallen into
my hands; everything which I read
<pb id="pag298" n="298"/>
had only an interest for me when
viewed in the light of its adaptability for an operatic subject: in
my mood of then, the reading of this novel attracted me the more,
as it soon conjured up in my eyes the vision of a grand-opera in
five acts, for Paris. I drafted a complete sketch, and sent it
direct to Scribe in Paris, with the prayer that he would work it up
for the Grand Opera there, and get me appointed for its
composition. Naturally this project ended in smoke.</p>

<p>My home troubles increased; the desire to wrest
myself from a humiliating plight now grew into an eager longing to
begin something on a grand and inspiring scale, even though it
should involve the temporary abandonment of any practical aim. This
mood was fed and fostered by my reading Bulwer's "Rienzi." From the
misery of modern private-life, whence I could nowhere glean the
scantiest stuff for artistic treatment, I was borne away by the
picture of a great historico-political event, in lingering on which
I needs must find a salutary distraction from cares and conditions
that appeared to me as nothing else than absolutely fatal to art.
In accordance with my particular artistic bent, however, I still
kept more or less to the purely musical, or rather: operatic
standpoint. This Rienzi with great thoughts in his head, great
feelings in his heart, amid an entourage of coarseness and
vulgarity, set all my nerves a-quivering with sympathy and love;
yet my plan for an artwork based thereon sprang first from the
perception of a purely lyric element in the hero's atmosphere. The
"Messengers of Peace," the Church's summons to awake, the
Battle-hymns,—these were what impelled me to an
<hi>opera</hi>: "Rienzi."</p>

<p>Before I set about the prosecution of my plan,
however, much thrust itself into my outward life that distracted me
from my inner resolve. I went to Riga, to take up the post of
Musical director to a stage-company just formed there. The somewhat
more orderly state of affairs, and the manifest desire of the
directorate to give at least good performances, prompted me once
more to write something for the forces at my disposal. So I began
the composition
<pb id="pag299" n="299"/>
of a comic opera, the libretto for which I had
founded on a droll story in the "Thousand and one Nights," although
with a complete modernisation of the subject.—Even here,
however, my relations with the theatre soon proved a thorn in my
side. The thing we understand by the term, "the traffic of the
stage" (<hi>Komödiantenwirthschaft</hi>), took no length of time
in showing me the depth and breadth of its economy; and my
composition, begun with a view to this "traffic," suddenly so
revolted me that I threw the whole thing on one side and, as
regards the theatre, confined myself more and more to the bare
fulfilment of my conducting duties. I thus stood more and more
completely aloof from intercourse with the stage <hi>personnel,</hi>
and with drew into that inner fortress of my being where the
yearning to tear myself loose from everyday relations found both
its nurture and its goad.—At this period I made my first
acquaintance with the legend of the "Flying Dutchman"; Heine takes
occasion to relate it, in speaking of the representation of a play,
founded thereon, which he had witnessed—as I believe—at
Amsterdam.
<note id="rn12" corresp="n12" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
This subject fascinated me, and made an indelible impression upon
my fancy: still, it did not as yet acquire the force needful for
its rebirth within me.</p>

<p>To do something grand, to write an opera for
whose production only the most exceptional means should
suffice—a work, therefore, which I should never feel tempted
to bring before the public amid such cramping relations as those
which then oppressed me, and the hope of whose eventual production
should thus incite me to make every sacrifice in order to extricate
myself from those relations,—this is what resolved me to
resume and carry out with all my might my former plan for
"<hi>Rienzi</hi>." In the preparation of this text, also, I took no
thought for anything but the writing of an effective operatic
libretto. The "Grand Opera" with all its scenic and musical
display, its sensationalism and massive vehemence, loomed large
before
<pb id="pag300" n="300"/>
me; and not merely to copy it, but with reckless
extravagance to outbid it in its every detail, became the object of
my artistic ambition.—However, I should be unjust to myself,
did I represent this ambition as my only motive for the conception
and execution of my <hi>Rienzi</hi>. The stuff really aroused my
enthusiasm, and I put nothing into my sketch which had not a direct
bearing on the grounds of this enthusiasm. My chief concern was my
Rienzi himself; and only when I felt quite contented with him, did
I give rein to the notion of a "grand opera." Nevertheless, from a
purely artistic point of view, this "grand opera" was the pair of
spectacles through which I unconsciously regarded my Rienzi-stuff;
nothing in that stuff did I find enthral me, but what could be
looked at through these spectacles. True, that I always fixed my
gaze upon the stuff itself, and did not keep one eye open for
certain ready-made musical effects which I might wish to father on
it by hook or crook; only, I saw it in no other light than that of
a "five-act-opera," with five brilliant "finales," and filled with
hymns, processions, and musical clash of arms. Thus I bestowed no
greater care upon the verse and diction than seemed needful for
turning out a good, and not a trivial, <hi>opera-text</hi>. I did not
set out with the object of writing Duets, Trios, &amp;c.; but they
found their own way in, here and there, because I looked upon my
subject exclusively through the medium of "Opera." For instance, I
by no means hunted about in my stuff for a pretext for a Ballet;
but with the eyes of the opera-composer, I perceived in it a
self-evident festival that Rienzi must give to the People, and at
which he would have to exhibit to them, in dumbshow, a drastic
scene from their ancient history: this scene being the story of
Lucretia and the consequent expulsion of the Tarquins from Rome.
<note id="rn13" corresp="n13" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
Thus in every department of my plan I was certainly ruled
<pb id="pag301" n="301"/>
by the stuff alone; but on the other hand, I ruled this stuff according to
my only chosen pattern, the form of the Grand Opera. My artistic
individuality, in its dealings with the impressions of Life, was
still entirely under the influence of purely artistic, or rather
art-formalistic, mechanically-operating impressions.</p>

<p>I had scarcely finished the composition of the
first two Acts of this opera, when my outward affairs at last
compelled me to break entirely with my former surroundings. Without
being provided with anything like sufficient means, without the
smallest prospect, nay, without even the expectation of meeting so
much as an acquaintance there, I set out from Riga for Paris. I
passed through four weeks of the severest hardship upon the sea, in
the course of which we were driven upon the coast of Norway. Here
the "flying Dutchman" once more arose before me. From my own plight
he won a psychic force; from the storms, the billows, the sailors'
shouts and the rock-bound Northern shore, a physiognomy and
colour.</p>

<p>Paris, however, washed out this figure for a
time.—It is unnecessary to give a detailed account of the
impressions which Paris, with its art-life and art-doings, was
bound to make upon a man in my condition; their influence will be
best recognised in the character of my immediate plans and
undertakings.—The half-finished <hi>Rienzi</hi> I laid at first
upon one side, and busied myself in every way to make myself known
in the world's metropolis. But, for this I lacked the necessary
personal qualifications; I had scarcely even learnt the French
tongue, instinctively distasteful to me, sufficiently for the most
ordinary needs of everyday. Not in the remotest degree did I feel
tempted to assimilate the Frenchman's nature, though I flattered
myself with the hope that I could appeal to it <hi>in my own</hi>
way; I confided in Music, as a cosmopolitan language, to fill up
that gulf between my own and the Parisian character which my inner
feeling could not be blind to.—When I attended the dazzling
performances of the Grand Opera—a thing which did not happen
very often—a pleasurable warmth would
<pb id="pag302" n="302"/>
steal into my brain and
kindle the desire, the hope, aye, even the certainty, that I, also,
could one day triumph there. This splendour of means, once animated
by the fire of an artistic aim, appeared to me the highest summit
of Art; and I felt myself nowise incapable of reaching that summit.
Beyond this, I call to mind a readiness to warm myself at any of
that artworld's <hi>ignes fatui</hi> which showed the least
resemblance to my goal: their sickly unsubstantiality was mantled
with a glittering show, such as never had I seen before. It was
only later, that I became conscious how greatly I deceived myself
in this respect, through an almost artificial state of nervous
excitation. This gratuitous excitement, mounting glibly to the
verge of transport, was nourished, all unawares to myself, by the
feeling of my outward lot; which I must have recognised as
<hi>completely hopeless</hi>, if I had suddenly acknowledged to
myself that all this artistic tinsel, that made up the world in
which I was striving to press forward, was inwardly an object of my
deepest loathing. But my outward Want compelled me to hold this
admission aloof; and I was able to do it with the ready placability
of a man and artist whom an instinctive need of love allows to see
in every smiling semblance the object of his search.</p>

<p>In this mood and situation, I was prompted to
revert to standpoints I had already travelled past. Prospects were
held out to me of getting an opera of lighter genre produced at a
theatre of minor rank; I therefore harked back to my
<hi>Liebesverbot</hi>, and its translation was commenced. I felt all
the more humiliated inwardly by this transaction, as I was forced
to put on the outward mask of hope for its success.—In order
to gain the graces of the Parisian salon-world through its
favourite singers, I composed several French 'romances,' which,
after all my efforts to the contrary, were considered too
out-of-the-way and difficult to be actually sung.—Out of the
depth of my inner uncontent, I armed myself against the crushing
reaction of this outward art-activity by the hasty sketch, and as
hasty composition, of an orchestral piece, which I called an
<pb id="pag303" n="303"/>
"Overture to Goethe's Faust," but which was in reality intended for
the first section of a grand Faust-Symphony.</p>

<p>Owing to the complete failure of all my outer
efforts, financial straits at last compelled me to a still deeper
degradation of the character of my artistic activity: I declared my
willingness to concoct the music for a slangy <hi>vaudeville</hi> at
a Boulevard-theatre. But even this step was frustrated by the
jealousy of a musical money-grubber. So I had to look on it almost
as my salvation, that I obtained the chance of doing violence to
myself with the arrangement of melodies from "favourite" operas for
the cornet-à-pistons. The time which these arrangements left
upon my hands I expended on the completion of the second half of my
<hi>Rienzi</hi>, for which I gave up all thoughts of a French
translation, looking only toward its adoption by some German
Court-Theatre. The last three Acts of this opera were finished,
amid the circumstances I have mentioned, in a proportionately brief
space of time.</p>

<p>After completing <hi>Rienzi</hi>, and while each
day was still occupied by hack-work for the music-publishers, I hit
upon a new vent for my pent-up energy. With the Faust-Overture, I
had sought this before in 'absolute' music; with the musical
completion of an older dramatic plan, the <hi>Rienzi</hi>, I had
endeavoured to give due artistic effect, and at the same time bid
farewell, to the tendency which first led my steps to Paris, and
ahead of which I now saw every opening blocked. That opera once
finished, I stood entirely outside the territory of my recent past.
I was entering upon a new path, <hi>that of Revolution against our
modern Public Art</hi>, with whose traffic I had erstwhile sought to
familiarise myself when I rushed to Paris, there to seek its
glittering crest.—It was the feeling of the <hi>necessity</hi>
of my revolt, that turned me first into a writer. The publisher of
the <hi>Gazette Musicale</hi> commissioned me, besides arranging
melodies for my daily bread, to write him articles for his paper.
To him, it was a matter of indifference <hi>which</hi> I sent: to me,
not. Just as I found my deepest humiliation in the one task, I
greedily snatched at the
<pb id="pag304" n="304"/>
other to revenge myself for that
humiliation. After a few general articles upon music, I wrote a
kind of art-novelette, "<hi>A Pilgrimage to Beethoven</hi>," and
followed it up by a sequel, "<hi>The End of a Musician in
Paris</hi>." In these I described, in a fictitious garb and with a
dash of humour, my personal fate, especially in Paris; excepting in
so far as touched the actual death by hunger, which, at any rate, I
had been lucky enough to escape. Every line that I wrote was a cry
of revolt against the conditions of our modern art: I have been
told that this caused much amusement To the handful of true
friends, however, who gathered cheerily around me of an evening in
the triste retirement of my home, I had herewith passed the word
that I had completely broken with every wish and every expectation
of success in Paris, and that the young man who had come there with
such wishes and expectations in his head was virtually dead and buried.
<note id="rn14" corresp="n14" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
</p>

<p>It was a sorrowful mirth—the mood to which
I then was tuned; it bore me the long-since brooding <hi>Flying
Dutchman</hi>.—All the irony, all the bitter or humoristic
sarcasm which, in a kindred plight, is all that remains to our
literary poets to spur them on to work, I first unburdened in the
above-named, and in certain directly subsequent literary effusions;
<note id="rn15" corresp="n15" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
and thus put it so far behind me, for a while, that I was again in
a position to follow my inner bent toward real artistic fashioning
(<hi>Gestalten</hi>). Seemingly—after what I had gone through,
and from the standpoint on which my experiences of life
<pb id="pag305" n="305"/>
had set me—I should not have been able to do this, if I had devoted
myself from youth up to the acquirement of a knack for literary
poetry; mayhap I should have trodden in the footsteps of our modern
scribes and playwrights, who, under the petty influences of our
stereotyped social system, take the field, with every stroke of
their prose- or rhyme-trimmed quills, against the mere formal
surface of that system, and thus conduct a war like that which
General Willisen and his volunteers have lately waged against the
Danes;
<note id="rn16" corresp="n16" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
to express myself in the vernacular, I should probably have
followed the example of the donkey-driver who beats the bundle in
place of the beast :—had I not been blessed with Something
higher. This Something was my preoccupation with <hi>music</hi>.</p>

<p>I have recently said quite enough about the
nature of music; I will here refer to it simply as the good angel
which preserved me as an artist, nay, which really first made me an
artist when my inner feeling commenced to revolt, with ever greater
resolution, against the whole condition of our modern art. That
this revolt did not find its sphere of action outside the realm of
Art, did not take the coign of vantage either of the criticising
man of letters or the art-denying, socialistically calculating,
political mathematician of our day; but that my revolutionary
ardour itself awoke in me the stress and power for artistic
deeds,—this, as I have said, I owe to Music alone. I have
just called it my good angel: this angel was not sent down to me
from Heaven; it came to me from out the sweat of centuries of human
"Genius." It did not, forsooth, lay the feather-light touch of a
sun-steeped
<pb id="pag306" n="306"/>
hand upon my brow; in the blood-warm night of my
stifling heart, it girt itself for action in the world outside.</p>

<p>I cannot conceive the spirit of Music as aught
but <hi>Love</hi>. Filled with its hallowed might, and with waxing
power of insight into human life, I saw set before me no mere
formalism to criticise; but, clean through the formal semblance,
the force of sympathy displayed to me its background, the
Need-of-Love downtrodden by that loveless formalism. Only he who
feels the need of Love, can recognise that need in others: my
art-receptive faculty, possessed with Music, gave me the power to
recognise this need on every hand, even in that art-world from the
shock of contact with whose outer formalism my own capacity for
love drew smarting back, and in which I felt my hove-need roused to
action by that very smart. Thus I revolted out of sheer love, not
out of spite or envy; and thus did I become an <hi>artist</hi>, and
not a carping man of letters.</p>

<p>The influence which my sense of music
(<hi>musikalisches Empfindungswesen</hi>) exerted on the trend of my
artistic labours, especially upon the choice and moulding of the
poetic material, I will specify after I have first cleared the way
for its understanding by an account of the origin and character of
those works to which I gave birth under that influence. I shall
therefore pass at once to the said account.—</p>

<p>To the path which I struck with the conception
of the <hi>Flying Dutchman</hi> belong the two succeeding dramatic
poems, <hi>Tannhäuser</hi> and <hi>Lohengrin</hi>. I have been
reproached as falling <hi>back</hi>, in all three works, upon a path
already trodden bald—as the opinion goes—by Meyerbeer
in his <hi>Robert the Devil</hi>, and already forsaken by myself in
my <hi>Rienzi</hi>: the path, to wit, of "romantic opera." Those who
level this charge against me are naturally more concerned with the
classification, Romantic <hi>Opera</hi>, than with the <hi>operas</hi>
thus conventionally classified as "romantic." Whether I set about
my task with the formal intention of
<pb id="pag307" n="307"/>
constructing "romantic"
operas, or did nothing of the kind, will become apparent if I
relate in detail the history of the origin of these three
works.</p>

<p>The mood in which I adopted the legend of the
"Flying Dutchman," I have already stated in general terms: the
adoption (<hi>Empfängniss</hi>) was exactly as old as the mood
itself which, at first merely brooding within me and battling
against more seductive impressions, at last attained the power of
outwardly expressing itself in a cognate work of art.—The
figure of the "Flying Dutchman" is a mythical creation of the Folk:
a primal trait of human nature speaks out from it with
heart-enthralling force. This trait, in its most universal meaning,
is the longing after rest from amid the storms of life. In the
blithe world of Greece we meet with it in the wanderings of Ulysses
and his longing after home, house, hearth and—wife: the
attainable, and at last attained reward of the city-loving son of
ancient Hellas. The Christian; without a home on earth, embodied
this trait in the figure of the "Wandering Jew": for that wanderer,
forever doomed to a long-since outlived life, without an aim,
without a joy, there bloomed no earthly ransom; death was the sole
remaining goal of all his strivings; his only hope, the laying-down
of being. At the close of the Middle Ages a new, more active
impulse led the nations to fresh <hi>life</hi>: in the
world-historical direction its most important result was the bent
to voyages of discovery. The sea, in its turn, became the soil of
Life; yet no longer the narrow land-locked sea of the Grecian
world, but the great ocean that engirdles all the earth. The
fetters of the older world were broken; the longing of Ulysses,
back to home and hearth and wedded wife, after feeding on the
sufferings of the "never-dying Jew" until it became a yearning for
Death, had mounted to the craving for a new, an unknown home,
invisible as yet, but dimly boded. This vast-spread feature fronts
us in the mythos of the "Flying Dutchman"; that seaman's poem from
the world-historical age of journeys of discovery. Here we light
upon a remarkable mixture, a
<pb id="pag308" n="308"/>
blend, effected by the spirit of the
Folk, of the character of Ulysses with that of the Wandering Jew.
The Hollandic mariner, in punishment for his temerity, is condemned
by the Devil (here, obviously, the element of Flood and Storm
<note id="rn17" corresp="n17" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>)
to do battle with the unresting waves, to all eternity. Like
Ahasuerus, he yearns for his sufferings to be ended by Death; the
Dutchman, however, may gain this redemption, denied to the undying
Jew, at the hands of—a <hi>Woman</hi> who, of very love, shall
sacrifice herself for him. The yearning for death thus spurs him on
to seek this Woman; but she is no longer the home-tending Penelope
of Ulysses, as courted in the days of old, but the quintessence of
womankind; and yet the still unmanifest, the longed-for, the
dreamt-of, the infinitely womanly Woman,—let me out with it
in one word: <hi>the Woman of the Future</hi>.</p>

<milestone unit="section"/>

<p>This was that "Flying Dutchman" who arose so
often from the swamps and billows of my life, and drew me to him
with such resistless might; this was the first <hi>Folk-poem</hi>
that forced its way into my heart, and called on me as man and
artist to point its meaning, and mould it in a work of art.</p>

<milestone unit="section"/>

<p>From here begins my career as <hi>poet</hi>, and
my farewell to the mere concoctor of opera-texts. And yet I took no
sudden leap. In no wise was I influenced by reflection; for
reflection comes only from the mental combination of existing
models: whereas I nowhere found the specimens which might have
served as beacons on my road. My course was new; it was bidden me
by my inner mood (<hi>Stimmung</hi>), and forced upon me by the
pressing need to impart this mood to others. In order to
enfranchise myself from within outwards, i.e. to address myself to
the understanding of like-feeling men, I was driven to strike out
for myself as artist, a path as yet not pointed me by any outward
<pb id="pag309" n="309"/>
experience; and that which drives a man hereto is Necessity deeply
felt, incognisable by the practical reason, but overmastering
Necessity.</p>

<milestone unit="section"/>

<p>In thus introducing myself to my Friends, as a
poet, I almost ought to hesitate before making my bow with a work
like the <hi>Flying Dutchman</hi>. In it there is so much as yet
inchoate, the joinery of the situations is for the most part so
imperfect, the verse and diction so often bare of individual stamp,
that our modern playwrights—who construct everything
according to a prescribed formula, and, boastful of their formal
aptitude, start out to glean that matter which shall best lend
itself to handling in the lesson-ed form—will be the first to
count my denomination of this "poem" as a piece of impudence that
calls for strenuous castigation. My dread of such prospective
punishment would weigh less with me than my own scruples as to the
poetical form of the <hi>Dutchman</hi>, were it my intention to pose
therewith as a fixed and finished entity; on the contrary, I find a
private relish in here showing my friends myself in process of
'becoming' (<hi>in meinem Werden</hi>). The form of the poem of the
<hi>Flying Dutchman</hi>, however, as that of all my later poems,
down even to the minutiæ of their musical setting, was dictated to
me by the subject-matter alone, insomuch as that had become
absorbed into a definite colouring of my life, and in so far as I
had gained by practice and experience on my own adopted path any
general aptitude for artistic construction.—To the
characteristics of such construction I purpose, as said above, to
return later on. For the present, having satisfied my wish to
indicate the decisive turning-point of my evolutionary career,
alike in its formal as in its material bearings, I will return to
the history of the origin of my dramatic poems.—</p>

<p>Amid outward circumstances which I have already
described elsewhere,
<note id="rn18" corresp="n18" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
I rapidly composed the verse and music for my <hi>Flying
Dutchman</hi>. I had withdrawn from
<pb id="pag310" n="310"/>
Paris into the country, and it
was there that I was once more brought into contact with my German
home. My <hi>Rienzi</hi> had been at last accepted for production in
Dresden. This acceptance, broadly speaking, meant for me an almost
amazingly encouraging omen, and withal a friendly greeting from
Germany that made my feelings all the warmer for my native home as
the worldly blast of Paris was daily freezing me the more. Already,
with all my hopes and all my thoughts, I lived in Germany alone. An
ardent, yearning patriotism awoke within me, such as I had never
dreamt before. This patriotism was free from any political tinge;
for I was alive, at any rate, to the fact that political Germany
had not the slightest attraction to offer me, as compared with,
say, political France. It was the feeling of utter homelessness in
Paris, that aroused my yearning for the German home-land; yet this
longing was not directed to any old familiar haunt that I must win
my way <hi>back</hi> to, but onward to a country pictured in my
dreams, an unknown and still-to-be-discovered haven, of which I
knew this thing alone: that I should certainly <hi>never</hi> find it
here in Paris. It was the longing of my Flying Dutchman for "<hi>das
Weib</hi>,"—not, as I have said before, for the wife who
waited for Ulysses, but for the redeeming Woman, whose features had
never presented themselves to me in any clear-marked outline, but
who hovered before my vision as the element of Womanhood in its
widest sense. This element here found expression in the idea: one's
<hi>Native Home</hi>, i.e. the encirclement by a wide community of
kindred and familiar souls; by a community, however, which as yet I
knew not in the flesh, which I only learnt to yearn for after I had
realised what is generally meant by "home"
<note id="rn19" corresp="n19" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
whereas in my
<pb id="pag311" n="311"/>
former straitened lot it was the remote and alien
that had hovered before me as the redeeming element, and the stress
to find it had driven me to Paris. Just as I had been undeceived in
Paris, so was I doomed to disappointment in Germany. My Flying
Dutchman, sure enough, had not as yet unveiled the <hi>newer</hi>
world: <hi>his</hi> Wife could only redeem him by plunging together
with him beneath the waves of life.—But to proceed!</p>

<p>After completing the <hi>Flying Dutchman</hi>,
although entirely pre-occupied with my return to Germany and with
getting together the necessary wherewithal, I was obliged, for very
sake of the latter, to betake myself once more to hack-work for the
music-sellers. I made arrangements from Halévy's operas. Yet
a new-won pride already saved me from the bitterness with which
this humiliation had erstwhile filled me. I kept of good cheer, and
corresponded with the home-hand about the advancing preparations
for the production of <hi>Rienzi</hi>; while I was further encouraged
by the news that my <hi>Flying Dutchman</hi> itself had been accepted
for Berlin. Already I lived entirely in the longed-for, now soon to
be entered world of Home.—</p>

<p>In this mood, the German Folk's-book
<note id="rn20" corresp="n20" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
of "Tannhäuser" fell into my hands. This wonderful
creation of the Folk at once usurped my liveliest emotions: indeed
it was now that it first <hi>could</hi> do so. Tannhäuser,
however, was by no means a figure completely new to me: I had early
made his acquaintance through Tieck's narration. He had then
aroused my interest in the same fantastically mystic manner in
which Hoffmann's stories had worked upon my young imagination; but
this domain of romance had never exercised any influence upon my
art-productive powers. I now read through again the utterly modern
poem of Tieck, and understood at once why his coquettish
<pb id="pag312" n="312"/>
mysticism and catholic frivolity had not appealed in any definite way to my
sympathy; the Folk's-book and the homely <hi>Tannhäuserlied</hi>
explained this point to me, as they showed me the simple genuine
inspiration of the Tannhäuser-legend in such swiftly-seizable
and undisfigured traits.—But what most irresistibly attracted
me was the connection, however loose, between Tannhäuser and
the "Singers'-Tourney in the Wartburg," which I found established
in that Folk's-book. With this second poetic subject also I had
already made an earlier acquaintance, in a tale of Hoffmann's; but,
as with Tieck's Tannhäuser, it had left me without the
slightest incitation to dramatic treatment. I now decided to trace
this Singers'-Tourney, whose whole entourage breathed on me the air
of home, to its simplest and most genuine source; this led me to
the study of the <hi>mittelhochdeutsch</hi>
<note id="rn21" corresp="n21" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
(middle-high-German) poem of the "<hi>Sängerkrieg</hi>," into
which one of my friends, a German philologist who happened to
possess a copy, was fortunately able to induct me.—This poem,
as is well known, is set in direct connection with a larger epos,
that of "<hi>Lohengrin</hi>." That also I studied, and thus with one
blow a whole new world of poetic stuff was opened out to me; a
world of which in my previous search, mostly for ready-made
material adapted to the genre of Opera, I had not had the slightest
conception.—I must describe a little more minutely the
impressions I derived therefrom.</p>

<pb id="pag313" n="313"/>

<p>To many a hanger-on of the historico-poetical
school it will appear of some weight that, between the completion
of the <hi>Flying Dutchman</hi> and the conception of
<hi>Tannhäuser</hi>, I had busied myself with the sketch for a
<hi>historical</hi> opera-text; but it will be a disappointment for
him, and another proof of my incapacity, when I inform him that I
discarded this sketch in favour of that for <hi>Tannhäuser</hi>.
For the present I will merely narrate the incident, since I shall
have occasion to treat more fully the aesthetical question therein
involved when I come to discuss a later mental conflict of like
kind.</p>

<p>I have said that my yearning for home had
nothing of the character of political patriotism in it; yet I
should be untruthful, did I not admit that a political
interpretation of the German Home was among the objects of my
indefinite longing. This I naturally could not find in the Present,
and any justification of the wish for such a rendering I—
like our whole historical school—could only seek-out in the
Past. In order to assure myself of what it was, in particular, that
I held dear in the German Home for which I was yearning, I recalled
the image of the impressions of my youth, and, to conjure up a
clearer vision, I turned the pages of the book of History. I also
took advantage of this opportunity to <hi>seek</hi> again for an
operatic subject: but nowhere in the ample outlines of the old
German Kaiser-world could I find one; and, although without
distinctly realising it, I felt that the features of this epoch
were unfitted for a faithful and intelligible dramatisation in
exact measure as they presented a dearth of seizable motive to my
musical conception.—At last I fastened on <hi>one</hi> episode,
since it seemed to offer me the chance of giving a freer rein to my
poetic fancy. This was a moment from the last days of the
Hohenstaufian era. Manfred, the son of Friedrich II., tears himself
from his lethargy and abandonment to lyric luxury, and, pressed by
hot need, throws himself upon Luceria; which city, in the heart of
the realms of Holy Church, had been assigned by his father to the
Saracens, after their dislodgement
<pb id="pag314" n="314"/>
from Sicily. Chiefly by aid of
these warlike and lightly kindled Sons of Araby, he wins back from
the Pope and ruling Guelphs the whole of the disputed realm of
Sicily and Apuleia; the dramatic sketch concluding with his
coronation. Into this purely historical plot I wove an imaginary
female figure: I now recall the fact that her form had taken shape
in my mind from the memory of an engraving which I had seen long
previously; this picture represented Friedrich II. surrounded by
his almost exclusively Arabian court, amongst which my fancy was
principally attracted by the oriental forms of singing and dancing
women. The spirit of this Friedrich, my favourite hero, I now
embodied in the person of a Saracen maiden, the fruit of the
embraces ot Friedrich and a daughter of Araby, during the Kaiser's
peaceful sojourn in Palestine. Tidings of the downfall of the
Ghibelline house had come to the girl in her native home; fired
with that same Arabian enthusiasm which not long since gave the
East its songs of ardent love for Bonaparte, she made her way to
Apuleia. There, in the court of the dispirited Manfred, she appears
as a prophetess, inspires him with fresh courage, and spurs him on
to action; she kindles the hearts of the Arabs in Luceria, and,
instilling enthusiasm whithersoever she goes, she leads the
Emperor's son through victory on victory to throne. Her descent she
has kept enwrapt in mystery, the better to work on Manfred's mind,
by the riddle of her apparition; he loves her passionately, and
fain would break the secret's seal: she waves him back with an
oracular saying. His life being attempted, she receives the death -
thrust in her own breast: dying, she confesses herself as Manfred's
sister, and unveils the fulness of her love to him. Manfred,
crowned, takes leave of happiness for ever.</p>

<p>This picture which my homesick phantasy had
painted, not without some warmth of colour, in the departing light
of a historical sunset, completely faded from my sight so soon as
ever the figure of Tannhäuser revealed itself
<pb id="pag315" n="315"/>
to my inner eye.
That picture was conjured from outside: this figure sprang from my
inmost heart. In its infinitely simple traits, it was to me more
wide-embracing, and alike more definite and plain, than the
richly-coloured, shimmering tissue—half historical and half
poetic—which like a showy cloak of many folds concealed the
true, the supple human form my inner wish desired to look on, and
which stepped at once before me in the new-found Tannhäuser. Here
was the very essence of the <hi>Folk's</hi>-poem, that ever seizes on
the <hi>kernel</hi> of the matter <hi>(Erscheinung),</hi> and brings it
again to show (<hi>Erscheinung</hi>) in simple plastic outlines;
whilst there, in the history—i.e. the event not such as it
was, but such alone as it comes within <hi>our</hi> ken—this
matter shows itself in endless trickery of outer facings, and never
attains that fine plasticity of form until the eye of the Folk has
plunged into its inner <hi>soul</hi>, and given it the artistic mould
of Myth.</p>

<milestone unit="section"/>

<p>This Tannhäuser was infinitely more than
Manfred; for he was the spirit of the whole Ghibelline race for
every age, embraced within one only, clearly cut and infinitely
moving form; but in this form a <hi>human being</hi>, right down to
our own day, right into the heart of a poor artist all athirst for
life. But more of that anon!</p>

<milestone unit="section"/>

<p>For the moment I merely note that, in the choice
of the Tannhäuser-stuff also, I acted entirely without
reflection; and thus simply emphasise the fact that I had hitherto
proceeded without any critical consciousness, following absolutely
the dictates of instinctive feeling. My recital alone will have
shown how completely without an axiom I had commenced, in the
<hi>Flying Dutchman</hi>, to strike out my new pathway. With the
"<hi>Sarazenin</hi>" I was on the point of harking back, more or
less, to the road of my <hi>Rienzi</hi>, and again writing a
"historical Grand Opera in five acts"; only the overpowering
subject of Tannhäuser, grappling my individual nature with far
more energetic hold, kept my footsteps firm upon the path which
Necessity had bid me strike. This happened,
<pb id="pag316" n="316"/>
as I will now relate,
amid an active combat—not yet over—with accidental
outer influences, which were destined to gradually enlighten my
consciousness, also, as to the inner nature of that path
itself.— —</p>

<p>At last, after a stay of well-nigh three years,
I left Paris, nine-and-twenty years of age. The direct route to
Dresden took me through the Thuringian valley from which one sees
the Wartburg towering above. How unspeakably homelike and inspiring
was the effect upon me of this castle, already hallowed to me, but
which—strangely enough!—I was not to actually visit
until seven years later when, already proscribed, I cast therefrom
my last look upon that Germany which I had once entered with such
warm affection: only to leave it in contumely, an exile fleeing
from his native land!— —</p>

<p>I arrived in Dresden, to hasten forward the
promised production of my <hi>Rienzi</hi>. Before the actual
commencement of the rehearsals, I made an excursion into the
Bohemian mountains; there I jotted down the complete dramatic
sketch of <hi>Tannhäuser</hi>. Before I could proceed to its
working out, however, I was doomed to be interrupted in a hundred
ways. Preceded by many a trimming and paring of that excessively
protracted composition, the practical study of my <hi>Rienzi</hi>
began. Concernment with the long-awaited production of one of my
operas, under conditions so sufficient as those the Dresden
Court-theatre afforded me, was an entirely new element for me, and
proved a source of active distraction from my inner thoughts. At
this time, I felt myself so buoyantly lifted from out my
fundamental nature, and attracted toward the practical, that I even
took up again an earlier, long-since forgotten sketch for an opera
founded on Königs romance "<hi>die hohe Braut</hi>," and cast it
into racy opera-verse for my future colleague
<note id="rn22" corresp="n22" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
in the office of Dresden <hi>Hofkapellmeister</hi>, who just then
thought himself in need of an
<pb id="pag317" n="317"/>
opera-text, and whom I thus endeavoured to win over.
<note id="rn23" corresp="n23" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
— The growing goodwill of the singers towards my
<hi>Rienzi</hi>, and especially the amiable expressions of enthusiasm
elicited from the pre-eminently gifted singer of the
title-rôle,
<note id="rn24" corresp="n24" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
affected me to an uncommonly pleasant degree. After long battling
amid the paltriest surroundings, after severest struggles,
sufferings and privations in the loveless commerce of Paris art and
Paris life, I suddenly found myself surrounded by an appreciative,
inspiriting, and often quite affectionate group. How pardonable, if
I began to yield to illusions from which, however, I was doomed to
wake with poignant pain! But if one thing was more calculated than
another to deceive me as to my true position towards the existing
state of affairs, it was the remarkable success of the production
of my <hi>Rienzi</hi> in Dresden:—I, a lonely, homeless waif,
found myself suddenly beloved, admired, nay, by many looked on with
amazement; and, according to our general notion of things, this
success was to win me for my whole span of life a solid basis of
social and artistic well-being,—for, to cap it all, I was
nominated to the post of Kapellmeister of the Royal Saxon
Court-band.</p>

<p>It was here that a great self-delusion, forced
upon me by circumstances, though not completely unawares to myself;
became the cause of a fresh development, painful but decisive, of
my character both as artist and as man. My earliest experiences,
then those of Paris, and lastly those already made in Dresden, had
not left me in the dark as to the real nature of our entire public
art, especially as regards its practice in our official
institutions. My repugnance to any concernment with it, farther
than what was absolutely called-for by the production of my operas,
had already
<pb id="pag318" n="318"/>
developed to a considerable pitch. It had been brought
plainly enough before my own eyes that it was not Art such as I had
learnt to know it, but a completely different set of interests,
which only cloaked themselves with an artistic semblance, that was
ministered-to in the daily traffic of our public art-affairs. But I
had not as yet thrust down to the fundamental cause of this
phenomenon, and therefore rather held it as a mere accident,
remediable by a little pains. It was now that I was first to
gradually and sorrowfully discover the cause itself.</p>

<p>To a few more intimate friends I openly declared
my inner aversion, and consequent hesitation, to take up the
proffered post of <hi>Hofkapellmeister</hi> (Conductor of the Royal
orchestra). They could not understand me; and this was natural, for
I myself could only express my inner distaste, without being able
to assign any reasons in terms of the practical understanding. A
glance back to my quondam troublous and disjointed outer
circumstances, which henceforth promised to take on a surer
ordering; and further, the assumption that, in the favourable mood
of my surroundings, and especially considering the brilliant nature
of the artistic forces at my disposal, I should at any rate be able
to do many a good stroke of work for art, soon conquered my avowed
disinclination: a result explicable enough, in view of my still
scanty stock of experience in the last regard. My recognition of
the high opinion that is customarily held of such a post;
<note id="rn25" corresp="n25" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
and finally the signal honour which my selection appeared to
represent in the eyes of all the rest of you, ended by dazzling me
also, and making me behold an unwonted piece of good fortune in
what was but too soon to be for me the source of gnawing pain. I
became—in highest spirits!—a Royal Kapellmeister.—</p>

<pb id="pag319" n="319"/>

<p>The sense of physical comfort, which stole over
me in consequence of the rebound in my outward lot, and grew into a
pleasurable feeling of self-content through my first taste of a
settled position in life—and especially of public favour and
admiration—soon betrayed me into a more and more complete
repudiation and abuse of my inner nature, such as it had hitherto
evolved in necessary consecution. I was chiefly deceived by the not
altogether unreasonable assumption of a speedy—or, if more
tardy, yet bound to come at last—pecuniary success of my
operas through their gaining themselves a footing on the wider
German stage. While this obstinate belief betrayed me, in the long
run, into ever-increasing sacrifices and undertakings, which were
destined, in the absence of success, to dislocate afresh my outward
circumstances: its mainspring, a more or less impatient quest for
pleasure, for a long time led my steps astray from the artistic
path I had already struck out. This episode seems worth narrating,
as it affords a not unweighty contribution to the developmental
history of an artist's individuality.</p>

<p>Immediately after the success of <hi>Rienzi</hi>
at the Dresden Court-theatre, the management determined to bring
out at once my <hi>Flying Dutchman</hi>. The acceptance of this opera
by the Berlin Court-theatre directorate had been nothing more nor
less than a cheap compliment, devoid of any serious meaning. The
Dresden directorate being in earnest, I willingly accepted their
proposal and rehearsed the opera as quickly as possible, without
any special care about the material for its production; the work
seemed to me so immeasurably simpler for performance than its
predecessor <hi>Rienzi</hi>, its scenic arrangements so much easier
to grasp. The chief male rôle I almost forced upon a singer
who had sufficient experience and self-knowledge to declare himself
unfitted for the part.—The main point of the representation
was completely missed. This performance the public felt all the
less inclined to applaud as it was disappointed in the <hi>genre</hi>
of the work itself; having expected and desired something akin to
<hi>Rienzi</hi>, not something
<pb id="pag320" n="320"/>
directly opposite in style. My friends
were crestfallen at the result; almost all they could think about,
was to wipe out its impression upon themselves and the public, and
that by an eager resumption of <hi>Rienzi</hi>. I myself was so
disconcerted, that I held my peace and left the <hi>Dutchman</hi>
undefended. In the mood described above, it was natural that I
should prefer the sweets of immediate success, and benumb my
conscience with the hopes held out by that earlier successful path.
Under the influence of these outward impressions I again began to
vacillate, and my unrest was largely increased by my intercourse
with the <hi>Schröder-Devrient</hi>.—</p>

<p>I have already alluded to the extraordinary and
lasting impression which the artistic genius of this in every
respect exceptional woman had made upon me in my youth. Now, after
an interval of eight years, I came into personal contact with her,
a contact prompted and governed by the deep significance of her art
to me. I found this gifted nature involved in the most manifold
contradictions, which were as disquieting to myself as in her they
took the form of passionate unrest. The motley hollowness of our
modern theatrical life had the less remained without influence on
this artist as, neither as artist nor woman, did she possess that
cold and egoistic composure with which, for example, a Jenny Lind
can place herself entirely outside the frame of the modern stage
and keep free from any compromising intercourse therewith. The
Schröder-Devrient was neither in life nor art an embodiment of
that virtuosodom which flourishes alone in isolation, in it alone
can shine: here as there, she was dramatic through and through, in
the fullest meaning of the word. She was born for intercourse, for
blending with the Whole; and yet this Whole was, both in life and
art, <hi>our</hi> social life, and <hi>our</hi> theatric art. I have
never seen a greater-hearted human being, nor one in battle with
more trivial conceptions, than this woman with those ideas which
she had imbibed from her contact, necessary as her nature made it,
with her surroundings. Upon myself the effect of my deep
<pb id="pag321" n="321"/>
sympathy with this artistic woman was less stimulating than tormenting; and
tormenting because it roused, without contenting me. She studied
the "Senta" of my <hi>Flying Dutchman</hi>, and gave this rôle
with such creative perfection of finish, that her performance alone
saved the opera from being completely misunderstood by the public,
and even evoked the liveliest enthusiasm. This inspired me with the
wish to write a piece expressly for her, and with this object I
reached back to my abandoned sketch for the "<hi>Sarazenin</hi>," the
scenic draft of which I now hastily completed. But this poem, when
submitted, had but little attraction for her; chiefly on account of
certain references which, in her situation at that time, she would
not allow to pass current. One typical feature of my heroine was
expressed in the sentence: "the <hi>Prophetess</hi> can never more
become a <hi>woman</hi>." This artist, however—without putting
it in so many words—would not completely throw aside the
woman; and it is only at the present that I have learnt to rightly
value her instinctive judgment, now that those circumstances which
brought that instinct into play have faded from my sight; whereas
at that time their utter triviality jarred on me to such a degree
that, looking from them to the artist herself; I could not help
regarding her as caught in the toils of a desire unworthy of her.
<note id="rn26" corresp="n26" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
</p>

<p>Under such impressions, I fell into a conflict
with myself; a conflict peculiar to our modern evolution, and only
not experienced, or regarded as already out of date, by those who
have not a vestige of evolutionary force within them and, for their
philosophy of life, content themselves with borrowed
plumes—however new—of theory. I will attempt to
describe, in brief; this conflict, and the mode in which it
expressed itself in my relations to the outer world.</p>

<pb id="pag322" n="322"/>

<p>Through the happy change in the aspect of my outward lot; through
the hopes I cherished, of its even still more favourable
development in the future; and finally through my personal and, in
a sense, intoxicating contact with a new and well-inclined
surrounding, a passion for enjoyment had sprung up within me, that
led my inner nature, formed amid the struggles and impressions of a
painful past, astray from its own peculiar path. A general instinct
that urges every man to take life as he finds it, now pointed me,
in my particular relations as Artist, to a path which, on the other
hand, must soon and bitterly disgust me. This instinct could only
have been appeased in Life on condition of my seeking, as artist,
to wrest myself renown and pleasure by a complete subordination of
my true nature to the demands of the public taste in Art. I should
have had to submit myself to the Mode, and to speculation on its
weaknesses; and here, on this point at least, my feeling showed me
clearly that, with an actual entry on that path, I must inevitably
be engulfed in my own loathing. Thus the pleasures of life
presented themselves to my feeling in the shape alone of what
<hi>our modern world</hi> can offer to the senses; and this again
appeared attainable by me, as artist, solely along the direction
which I had already learnt to recognise as the exploitation of our
public art-morass. In actual life I was at like time
confronted—in the person of a woman for whom I had a sincere
admiration—with the phenomenon that a longing akin to my own
could only imagine itself contented with the paltriest return of
trivial love; a delusion so completely threadbare, that it could
never really mask its nature from the inner need.</p>

<p>If at last I turned impatiently away, and owed the strength of
my repugnance to the independence already developed in my nature,
both as artist and as man: so did that double revolt, of man and
artist, inevitably take-on the form of a yearning for appeasement
in a higher, nobler element; an element which, in its contrast to
the only pleasures that the material Present spreads in modern Life
and modern Art, could but appear to me in the guise of
<pb id="pag323" n="323"/>
a pure, chaste, virginal, unseizable and unapproachable ideal of Love.
What, in fine, could this love-yearning, the noblest thing my heart
could feel—what other could it be than a longing for release
from the Present, for absorption into an element of endless Love, a
love denied to earth and reachable through the gates of Death alone?
<note id="rn27" corresp="n27" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
And what, again, at bottom, could such a longing be, but the
yearning of Love; aye, of a real love seeded in the soil of fullest
sentience (<hi>Sinnlichkeit</hi>),—yet a love that could
<hi>never</hi> come to fruitage on the loathsome soil of
<hi>modern</hi> sentience?—How absurd, then, must those critics
seem to me, who, drawing all their wit from modern wantonness,
insist on reading into my "Tannhäuser" a specifically
Christian and impotently pietistic drift! They recognise nothing
but the fable of their own incompetence, in the story of a man whom
they are utterly unable to comprehend.—</p>

<p>The above is an exact account of the mood in which I was, when
the unlaid ghost of Tannhäuser returned again, and urged me to
complete his poem. When I reached the sketch and working-out of the
<hi>Tannhäuser</hi> music, it was in a state of burning exaltation
(<hi>verzehrend üppige Erregtheit</hi>) that held my blood and
every nerve in fevered throbbing. My true nature—which, in my
loathing of the modern world and ardour to discover something
nobler and beyond-all noblest, had quite returned to me—now
seized, as in a passionate embrace, the opposing channels of my
being, and disembouched them both into <hi>one</hi> stream: a longing
for the highest form of Love.—With this work I penned my
death-warrant: before the world of Modern Art, I now could hope no
more for life. This I <hi>felt</hi>; but as yet I <hi>knew</hi> it not
with full distinctness:—that knowledge I was not to gain
till later.</p>

<p>I have meanwhile to relate how I was confirmed
in my tendency by further experiences from outside.—My hopes
of a rapid success, through the circulation of my operas on the
German stage, remained entirely unfulfilled; my scores
<pb id="pag324" n="324"/>
were returned to me by the principal Theatrical Directors,
unaccepted—often with even their wrappers unopened. It was
only the patient toil of personal friendship, that brought
<hi>Rienzi</hi> to a production in Hamburg: an utterly unsuitable
singer played havoc with the title-r6le, and the Director found his
hopes and all his persevering efforts demolished by the inadequate
result. I then saw, to my astonishment, that even this "Rienzi" was
above folk's heads. Yet, however coldly I may now look back upon
this earlier work of mine, I cannot shut my eyes to the youthful,
heroic strain of enthusiasm that breathes throughout it. Our
public, however, nourished on the masterpieces of modern operatic
manufacture, has accustomed itself to seek the object of its
stage-enthusiasm in something very different to the dominant mood
of a dramatic work. In Dresden I was succoured by something quite
aloof from this; to wit, the purely physical <hi>verve</hi> of the
whole thing, which there, under circumstances favourable in this
respect, and especially by reason of the brilliance of the
stage-material and the personal characteristics of the chief
singer, worked in an intoxicating fashion on the public.</p>

<p>On the other hand, I had quite a different
experience with my <hi>Flying Dutchman</hi>. The old master
<hi>Spohr</hi> had already produced this opera at Cassel, almost
immediately after its original appearance. This happened without
any overtures on my side; nevertheless I feared that I must remain
a stranger to Spohr, since I could not see how my novel bent could
fall in with his taste. What, then, was my astonishment and glad
surprise, when this grey-haired master, although wrapt in a cold
but honourable seclusion from the world of modern music, expressed
to me by letter his unqualified approval, and explained it simply
by his heart-felt joy at meeting with a young artist who plainly
showed that he was taking art in earnest! Spohr, the aged Spohr,
remained the only German Kapellmeister who received me with any
warmth of affection, who nursed my works as far as he was able, and who,
<pb id="pag325" n="325"/>
amid all changes, preserved for me a true and faithful
friendship.</p>

<p>At Berlin, also, the <hi>Flying Dutchman</hi> was
placed upon the boards; I had no grounds for absolute discontent
with this affair. My experience of the effect upon the public,
however, was here most significant: the mistrustful Berlin chill,
only too prone to fault-finding, lasted throughout the whole First
Act, but gave way in the course of the Second to the fullest warmth
of emotion; in fact, I could not but regard the result as
completely favourable. Yet the opera very soon disappeared from the
repertory. A keen instinct for matters theatrical must have
prompted the management, when, even though this opera pleased, they
looked upon it as unfitted for the regular routine. I recognise
today how correct a verdict upon the general nature of our theatric
art was herewith expressed. A piece intended for the operatic
repertoire, to be played before the public throughout a long
season, perhaps for ever, in alternation with other pieces of its
like, must have no <hi>Stimmung</hi>,
<note id="rn28" corresp="n28" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
and require for its understanding no <hi>Stimmung</hi>, that is of
any markedly individual character. To this end, one must provide
pieces which are either of a generally-current <hi>Stimmung</hi> or,
in fact, of none at all, and therefore which do not pretend to
arouse the feeling of the public to any particular mood, but afford
a pleasurable distraction by the brilliance of their 'mounting' and
the more or less personal interest taken in the performing
virtuosi. The revival of earlier so-called "classical" works, which
certainly cannot attain a real understanding without awaking such
an individual <hi>Stimmung</hi>, is never due to the convictions of
the Theatre-directors themselves, but both laborious revival and
success are the artificial outcome of compliance with the demands
of our æsthetical
<pb id="pag326" n="326"/>
critics. The 'stimmung,' however, which my
<hi>Flying Dutchman</hi> was at times so fortunate as to arouse, was
so pregnant, so unaccustomed, and so searching, that it was highly
improbable that those who had experienced it most fully would place
themselves in the way of its recurrence at frequent and brief
intervals. An audience, in its every member, demands that such
impressions shall take it <hi>unawares</hi>: the sudden <hi>shock</hi>
of this surprise, and its lasting after-effects—which form
the object of the artwork—constitute the elevating factor in
any dramatic performance. But the same feeling of surprise either
does not recur at all, or only after a considerable period has been
allowed to intervene, and the events of daily life have gradually
effaced the vividness of the first impression; whereas the
deliberate attempt to galvanise oneself into this feeling, is one
of the pathological symptoms of our modern art-debauchery. With men
who follow in their lives the natural course of evolution, the same
effect is—strictly speaking—never to be obtained from
the performance of one and the same dramatic work; their renewed
demand can be met alone by a fresh work of art, a work proceeding
in its turn from a new developmental phase in the mind of the
artist.—Here I touch on what I have said in the Introduction,
with regard to the Monumental and its manifestments in our
art-doings: for I adduce the logical result of investigation into
the above phenomena as witness to the need of an ever fresh-born
Artwork of the Future, springing directly from, and belonging only
to the Present; an Artwork which shall not be fettered by the
Monumental, but, mirroring the face of Life itself in all its
countless traits, shall proclaim itself in infinitely changeful
multiformity, and thus be understood.</p>

<p>Though I did not clearly formulate the notion at
this time, yet it began to thrust itself upon my inner observation
the more especially through my perception of the uncommonly strong
impression which my <hi>Flying Dutchman</hi> had made on
<hi>individuals</hi>. In Berlin, where for the rest I was entirely
unknown, I received from two persons
<pb id="pag327" n="327"/>
—a gentleman and a lady,
previously total strangers to me, whom the impressions produced by
the <hi>Flying Dutchman</hi> had made my instant friends—the
first definite expression of satisfaction at the new path which I
had struck out, and the first exhortation to continue thereon. From
that time forward I lost more and more the so-called "Public" from
my view: the judgment of definite, individual human beings usurped,
for me, the place of the never to be accurately gauged opinion of
the Mass, which hitherto—without my own full
consciousness—had floated before me, in vague outlines, as
the object to which I should address myself as poet. The
<hi>understanding</hi> of my aim became each day more clearly the
chief thing to be striven for, and, to ensure myself this
understanding, involuntarily I turned no longer to the stranger
<hi>Mass</hi>, but to the individual persons whose moods and ways of
thought were familiar to me.</p>

<p>Again, this better defined position toward those
whom I wished to address, exercised a most weighty influence upon
the future bent of my constructive faculties
(<hi>künstlerisches Gestaltungswesen</hi>). If the impulse to
<hi>intelligibly</hi> impart his aim be the true constructive
standard of the artist, its exercise will necessarily be governed
by the character of those <hi>by whom</hi> he wishes that aim to be
understood. If he picture them as an indefinite, never plainly
cognisable mass, whose tastes are never to be accurately gauged and
whose character it is therefore impossible <hi>for himself</hi> to
understand, in fact as the medley that constitutes our modern
theatrical public : then, in his efforts to expound his aim, the
artist must inevitably be driven to a hazy mode of treatment which
often strays aside into purposeless generalities, nay—for the
matter of that—to a choice of subject-matter dictated by
naught else than its peculiar fitness for this washy treatment. The
artistic defects resulting from such a position were now apparent
to me, upon re-examining my earlier operas. As compared with the
products of modern theatric art, I recognised, it is true, the
greater significance of the subjects of my own
<pb id="pag328" n="328"/>
creations, but at
like time the undecided, often unclear nature of the treatment of
those subjects, which therefore still were lacking in the necessary
features of a sharply-chiselled individuality. Thenceforward, by
addressing myself instinctively to definite individuals allied to
me by community of feeling, I at the same time won the power of
casting my subjects in a more distinct and stable mould. Without
going to work with any deliberate purpose, I divested myself more
and more of the customary method of treating my characters in the
gross; I drew a sharper line of demarcation between the
surroundings and the main figure, which erewhile had frequently
been swamped by them; I raised it into bolder relief, and thus
attained the power of rescuing these surroundings themselves from
their operatic diffuseness, and condensing them into plastic
forms.</p>

<p>It was under influences such as these, and proceeding as just
stated, that I worked away at my <hi>Tannhäuser</hi>, and, after
many and varied interruptions, completed it.—</p>

<p>With this work, I had passed another stage in the new
evolutionary path that I had opened with the <hi>Flying
Dutchman</hi>. My whole being had been so consumed with ardour for
my task that, as I cannot but call to mind, the nearer I approached
its completion the more was I haunted by the fancy that a sudden
death would stay my hand from finishing it; so that, when at last I
wrote its closing chord, I felt as joyful as though I had escaped
some mortal danger.—</p>

<p>Immediately after the conclusion of this task, I obtained leave
to visit a Bohemian wateringplace, for the benefit of my health.
Here, as whenever I could snatch myself away from the footlights
and my "duties" in their dense atmosphere, I soon felt light of
heart and gay; and, for the first time in my life, the strain of
cheerfulness (<hi>Heiterkeit</hi>) inherent in my disposition took
visible shape in an artistic plan. Almost with wilful
premeditation, I had already of late resolved to write a
<hi>comic</hi> opera, so soon as I could set about it; I remember
that this determination had been
<pb id="pag329" n="329"/>
assisted by the well-meant advice
of certain good friends of mine, who wished me to compose an opera
of "lighter genre," since they believed that such a work would open
the doors of most German theatres to me and thus effect a
beneficial change in my outward circumstances, which had certainly
begun to take on a threatening aspect owing to the obstinate
default of that success. Just as a jovial Satyr-play was wont at
Athens to follow on the Tragedy, so on that pleasure-trip there
suddenly occurred to me the picture of a comic piece which well
might form a Satyr-play as pendant to my "<hi>Sängerkrieg auf
Wartburg</hi>" (i.e. Tannhäuser). This was "The Meistersingers
of Nuremberg," with Hans Sachs at their head. I took Hans Sachs as
the last manifestation of the art-productive spirit of the Folk
(<hi>Volksgeist</hi>), and set him, in this sense, in contrast to the
pettyfogging bombast of the other Meistersingers; to whose absurd
pedanticism, of <hi>tabulatur</hi> and prosody, I gave a concrete
personal expression in the figure of the "Marker." This "Marker,"
as is well-known (or as perhaps is <hi>not</hi> known to our
critics), was the examiner appointed by the Singers' Guild to
"mark" each breach of rule in the effusions of the members, and
particularly of fresh candidates, noting them down with crosses:
whosoever was adjudged a certain number of these crosses, had
"out-sung" himself.—In my story, the oldest member of the
guild offered the hand of his young daughter to that "Meister" who
should win the prize at a forthcoming public singing-contest. The
Marker himself had already paid his court to the damsel, but is now
confronted by a rival in the person of a young nobleman who,
inspired by the <hi>Heldenbuch</hi> and the songs of the ancient
Minnesingers, forsakes the ruined castle of his ancestors to learn
the Meistersingers' art at Nuremberg. He applies for admission into
the guild, determined chiefly by a swiftly-kindled passion for the
prize-maiden, "whom none but a Master of the Guild may win." Put to
the test, he sings an enthusiastic song in praise of Woman; but
from the first his verse offends the Marker's ear, so that when
<pb id="pag330" n="330"/>
the aspirant has got but halfway through his song, he is "plucked."
Hans Sachs, who has taken a fancy to the young man, now
frustrates—in the latter's best interest—his despairing
attempt to elope with the damsel; Hans finds occasion, at like
time, to mightily annoy the Marker. For the latter, who had before
this made a savage attack upon Sachs on account of a never-finished
pair of shoes, with the sole object of humiliating him, stations
himself below the maiden's window at night, in order to serenade
her with a foretaste of the song by which he hopes next day to win
her; since he is most anxious to make sure of her casting-vote in
the decision of the prize. At the first note of the Marker's lay,
Sachs, whose cobbler's-stall lies opposite the house be-sung,
begins in his turn to sing aloud, explaining to the indignant wooer
that this is necessary to keep himself awake when he works so late
at night; while no one can know better that the job is pressing
than the Marker, who had rated him so roundly for the non-delivery
of his shoes. At last Sachs promises the unhappy wretch to hold his
peace, provided only that he be allowed to mark according to
<hi>his</hi> mode—as cobbler—the faults which, according
to <hi>his</hi> feeling, he may detect in the Marker's song: namely,
to signal each by a hammer-stroke upon the lasted shoes. The Marker
now sings on; Sachs strikes repeatedly upon the last. Out of all
patience, the Marker makes a rush at him; the Cobbler calmly asks,
Whether the song is done then? "Not by a long way yet," shouts the
other. Sachs lays down the shoes upon the board, with a roar of
laughter, and tells him that they have just been finished by the
"Marker's-crosses." Of the rest of his song, which he bawls out
without a pause, the Marker makes an utter bungle, in his despair
at the violent head-shakings of the female figure at the window, In
deepest dudgeon, he next day begs of Sachs a new song wherewith to
woo the bridal prize; the Cobbler gives him a poem of the young
noble's, pretending not to know how he has come thereby: only he
warns him to be very careful in the selection of a fitting "tune"
to which to sing
<pb id="pag331" n="331"/>
it. As to that, the conceited Marker is perfectly
confident in himself, and proceeds to sing the poem before the full
assembly of Meisters and Folk; but he chooses such an ill-suited
and sense-confounding tune, that again he comes to grief, and this
time decisively. Boiling over with rage, he accuses Sachs of fraud,
in having foisted upon him an infamous poem; the latter declares
that the verse is good enough, but it must be sung to a becoming
tune. It is then decided that whoever can fit it with the right
tune, shall be the victor. The young noble performs this feat, and
wins the bride; but he scorns admission to the Guild, now that it
is proffered him. Sachs champions the Meistersingerhood in a
humorous address, concluding with the couplet:</p>

<quote>"Tho' Holy Roman Empire's pride depart,<lb/>
We'll hold on high our holy German Art."—</quote>

<p>Such was my swiftly planned, and swiftly traced
design. But scarcely had I written it down, when peace forsook me
until I had sketched-out the more detailed plan for
<hi>Lohengrin</hi>. This was during the same brief visit to the
baths, and despite the doctor's warnings against my engaging in any
work of the kind. There is something strange in the fact that, at
the very time when I made that refreshing little excursion into the
realms of mirth, I was driven back so quickly to the earnest,
yearning mood which impelled me to the absorbing task of
<hi>Lohengrin</hi>. The reason now is clear to me, why the cheerful
mood which sought to vent itself in the conception of the
<hi>Meistersinger</hi> could make no lasting stay with me. At that
time it took alone the shape of <hi>Irony</hi>, and, as such, was
busied more with the purely formal side of my artistic views and
aims, than with that core of Art whereof the roots lie hid in Life
itself.</p>

<p>The only form of Mirth (<hi>Heiterkeit</hi>) which
our public of today can understand, and thus the only form in which
an underlying truth can appeal thereto, is that of Irony. It seizes
the formal aspect of our public offences against Nature, and is in
so far effective, as Form, being directly
<pb id="pag332" n="332"/>
cognisable by the senses,
is the thing most patent to the ordinary understanding; whereas the
Content of this form is that hidden mystery at which we fumble all
perplexed, and wherefrom we are involuntarily thrust back again to
utterance in that very form at which we jeer. Thus Irony is
<hi>that</hi> form of Mirth through which the latter can never break
to open revelation of its inner essence, to vivid, individual
exposition as a vital force. But the core that lies beneath the
unnatural semblance of our public intercourse, that kernel which
all Irony must needs leave unexplored, is at like time unseizable
by the power of Mirth, in the latter's purest, most specific
manifestment; it is only to be seized by <hi>that</hi> power which
expresses itself as resistance to an element of life whose very
pressure suffocates the pure breath of Mirth. Thus when we feel
this pressure, we are driven by the primal force of Mirth itself,
and in our endeavour to regain its pristine purity, to a
withstanding whose utterance, in face of modern life, can only
proclaim itself in tones of yearning and finally of revolt, and
therefore in a tragic mood.</p>

<p>My whole nature instantly reacted against the
incomplete attempt to unburden myself of the contents of a mirthful
mood by means of irony; and I must now consider the attempt itself
as the last expression of that desire for enjoyment which fain
would reconcile itself with the triviality of its surroundings, and
from which I had already escaped, by a painful exercise of energy,
in my <hi>Tannhäuser</hi>.—</p>

<p>If it is now clear to me, after
reflection upon my then-prevailing frame of mind, why I so suddenly
relinquished this attempt, and threw myself with such consuming
passion upon the shaping of the Lohengrin- 'stuff': on the other
hand, the peculiarity of that subject itself makes plain to me why
it was that <hi>it</hi>, of all others, so irresistibly attracted and
enthralled me. It was not the mere memory, how this stuff was first
brought before me in intimate connection with Tannhäuser; least of
all was it a frugal husbandry, which might forsooth have bidden me
to make the most of gathered stores: for it is obvious, from the
account of my artistic labours, that, if anything, I was
<pb id="pag333" n="333"/>
in this regard inclined to prodigality. On the contrary, I must here attest
that at the time when I first learnt the story of Lohengrin, in
connection with that of Tannhäuser, the tale indeed affected
me, but in no wise prompted me to store the 'stuff' for future
working-up. Not only because I was then completely saturated with
Tannhäuser, but also because the form in which Lohengrin first
stepped before me made an almost disagreeable impression upon my
feeling, did I not at that time keep a sharper eye upon him. The
medieval poem presented Lohengrin in a mystic twilight, that filled
me with suspicion and that haunting feeling of repugnance with
which we look upon the carved and painted saints and martyrs on the
highways, or in the churches, of Catholic lands. Only when the
immediate impression of this reading had faded, did the shape of
Lohengrin rise repeatedly, and with growing power of attraction,
before my soul; and this power gathered fresh force to itself from
outside, chiefly by reason that I learnt to know the myth of
Lohengrin in its simpler traits, and alike its deeper meaning, as
the genuine poem of the Folk, such as it has been laid bare to us
by the discoveries of the newer searchers into Saga lore. After I
had thus seen it as a noble poem of man's yearning and his
longing—by no means merely seeded from the Christian's bent
toward supernaturalism, but from the truest depths of universal
human nature,—this figure became ever more endeared to me,
and ever stronger grew the urgence to adopt it and thus give
utterance to my own internal longing; so that, at the time of
completing my <hi>Tannhäuser</hi>, it positively became a
dominating need, which thrust back each alien effort to withdraw
myself from its despotic mastery.</p>

<p>This "Lohengrin" is no mere outcome of Christian
meditation (<hi>Anschauung</hi>), but one of man's earliest poetic
ideals; just as, for the matter of that, it is a fundamental error
of our modern superficialism, to consider the specific Christian
legends as by any means original creations. Not one of the most
affecting, not one of the most distinctive
<pb id="pag334" n="334"/>
Christian myths belongs
by right of generation to the Christian spirit, such as we commonly
understand it: it has inherited them all from the purely human
intuitions (<hi>Anschauungen</hi>) of earlier times, and merely
moulded them to fit its own peculiar tenets. To purge them of this
heterogeneous influence, and thus enable us to look straight into
the pure humanity of the eternal poem: such was the task of the
more recent inquirer,
<note id="rn29" corresp="n29" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
a task which it must necessarily remain for the poet to
complete.</p>

<p>Just as the main feature of the mythos of the
"Flying Dutchman" may be clearly traced to an earlier setting in
the Hellenic Odyssey; just as this same Ulysses in his wrench from
the arms of Calypso, in his flight from the charms of Circe, and in
his yearning for the earthly wife of cherished home, embodied the
Hellenic prototype of a longing such as we find in "Tannhäuser"
immeasurably enhanced and widened in its meaning: so do we already
meet in the Grecian mythos—nor is even this by any means its
oldest form—the outlines of the myth of "Lohengrin." Who does
not know the story of "Zeus and Semele"? The god loves a mortal
woman, and for sake of this love, approaches her in human shape;
but the mortal learns that she does not know her lover in his true
estate, and, urged by Love's own ardour, demands that her spouse
shall show himself to physical sense in the full substance of his
being. Zeus knows that she can never grasp him, that the unveiling
of his godhead must destroy her; him self, he suffers by this
knowledge, beneath the stern compulsion to fulfill his loved one's
dreaded wish: he signs his own death-warrant, when the fatal
splendour of his godlike presence strikes Semele dead.—Was
it, forsooth, some priestly fraud that shaped this myth? How
insensate, to attempt to argue from the selfish state-religious,
caste-like exploitation of the noblest human longing, back to the
origin and the genuine meaning of ideals which
<pb id="pag335" n="335"/>
blossomed from a
human fancy that stamped man first as Man! 'Twas no <hi>God</hi>
that sang the meeting of Zeus and Semele; but <hi>Man</hi>, in his
humanest of yearnings. Who had taught Man that a God could burn
with love toward earthly Woman? For certain, only Man himself; who,
however high the object of his yearning may soar above the limits
of his earthly wont, can only stamp it with the imprint of his
human nature. From the highest sphere to which the might of his
desire may bear him up, he finally can only long again for what is
purely human, can only crave the taste of his own nature, as the
one thing worth desiring. What then is the inmost essence of this
Human Nature, whereto the desire which reaches forth to farthest
distance turns back at last, for its only possible appeasement? It
is the <hi>Necessity of Love</hi>; and the essence of this love, in
its truest utterance, is the <hi>longing for utmost physical
reality</hi>, for fruition in an object that can be grasped by all
the senses, held fast with all the force of actual being. In this
finite, physically sure embrace, must not the <hi>God</hi> dissolve
and disappear? Is not the mortal, who had <hi>yearned</hi> for God,
undone, annulled? Yet is not <hi>Love,</hi> in its truest, highest
essence, herein <hi>revealed</hi>?—Marvel, ye erudite Critics,
at the omnipotence of human minstrelsy, unfolded in the simple
<hi>Mythos of the Folk</hi>! Things that all your Understanding can
not so much as comprehend, are there laid bare to human Feeling,
with such a physically perfect surety as <hi>no other means could
bring to pass</hi>.—</p>

<p>The ethereal sphere, from which the god is
yearning to descend to men, had stretched itself, through Christian
longing, to inconceivable bounds of space. To the Hellenes, it was
still the cloud-locked realm of thunder and the thunderbolt, from
which the lusty Zeus moved down, to mix with men in expert
likeness: to the Christian, the blue firmament dissolved into an
infinite sea of yearning ecstasy, in which the forms of all the
gods were melted, until at last it was the lonely image of his own
person, the yearning Man, that alone was left to greet him from the
ocean of his phantasy. One primal, manifold-repeated trait
<pb id="pag336" n="336"/>
runs through the Sagas of those peoples who dwelt beside the sea or
sea-embouching rivers: upon the blue mirror of the waters there
draws nigh an Unknown-being, of utmost. grace and purest virtue,
who moves and wins all hearts by charm resistless; he is the
embodied wish of the yearner who dreams of happiness in that
far-off land he can not sense. This Unknown-being vanishes across
the ocean's waves, so soon as ever questioned on his nature.
Thus—so goes the story—there once came in a swan-drawn
skiff, over the sea to the banks of the Scheldt, an unknown hero:
there he rescued downtrod innocence, and wedded a sweet maiden; but
since she asked him who he was and whence he came, he needs must
seek the sea once more and leave his All behind.—Why this
Saga, when I learnt it in its simplest outlines, so irresistibly
attracted me that, at the very time when I had but just completed
<hi>Tannhäuser</hi>, I could concern myself with naught but it,
was to be made clearer to my feeling by the immediately succeeding
incidents of my life.—</p>

<milestone unit="section"/>

<p>With the finished sketch for the poem of
<hi>Lohengrin,</hi> I returned to Dresden, in order to produce
<hi>Tannhäuser</hi>. This production was prepared with no
inconsiderable outlay on the part of the directorate, who cherished
great hopes of the work. The public, by their enthusiastic
reception of <hi>Rienzi</hi> and cooler welcome of the <hi>Flying
Dutchman</hi>, had plainly shewn me what I must set before them if I
sought to please. I completely undeceived their expectations: they
left the theatre, after the first performance of
<hi>Tannhäuser</hi>, in a confused and discontented
mood.—The feeling of the utter loneliness in which I now
found myself, quite unmanned me. The few friends who gave me hearty
sympathy, felt so depressed by the painfulness of my situation,
that the involuntary exhibition of their own disappointment was the
only sign of friendly life around me. A week passed by, ere a
second performance of <hi>Tannhäuser</hi> could take place; a
thing so needed to correct erroneous impressions, and pave the way
for better understanding.
<pb id="pag337" n="337"/>
To me this week was fraught with the
burden of a lifetime. Not wounded vanity, but the shock of an utter
disillusionment, chilled my very marrow. It became clear to me that
my <hi>Tannhäuser</hi> had appealed to a handful of intimate
friends alone, and not to the heart of a public to whom,
nevertheless, I had instinctively turned in the production of this
my work. Here was a contradiction which I could not but deem
insoluble. There seemed but one possibility of winning the public
also to my side, namely—to secure its <hi>understanding:</hi>
but I here felt, for the first time with any great distinctness,
that the character to which we have grown accustomed in operatic
performances was completely at variance with what <hi>I</hi>
demanded of a representation.—In our Opera the <hi>singer</hi>,
by virtue of the purely material attributes of his voice, usurps
the first place; whilst the <hi>actor</hi> takes the second, or even
a quite subsidiary rank. On the other side of the line, stands,
logically enough, a public that looks chiefly for satisfaction of
the purely sensuous demands of its nerve of hearing, and thus
almost entirely abjures the enjoyment of a dramatic portrayal. My
claim, however, was diametrically opposed to this whole state of
affairs: I required the Actor (<hi>Darsteller</hi>) in the forefront,
and the Singer only as the actor's aid; lastly, therefore, a public
who should join me in this claim. For I was forced to see that not
until such claim were met, could there be the remotest question of
an impression by the story told; whereas any impression must be
nothing but a chaos of confusion, when the fulfilment of that claim
was disregarded upon every hand. Thus I could only look upon myself
as a madman who speaks to the wind and expects it to understand
him; for I was openly speaking of things which were all the more
doomed to stay uncomprehended as not even the <hi>tongue</hi> in
which I uttered them was understood. The gradually awakened
interest in my work, displayed by a portion of the public, appeared
to me like the good- natured sympathy shewn to a lunatic by his
friends: this sympathy impels us to enter into the spirit of the sufferer's
<pb id="pag338" n="338"/>
wanderings, to try to unriddle some meaning therefrom,
and in this unriddled sense at last to answer, in order thus to
make his sad condition a little bearable to him; then throngs
around the indifferent crowd, to whom it is a piquant entertainment
to catch the utterances of a madman, and from the odds and ends of
intelligible matter in his talk to fall into a pleasurable
bewilderment as to whether the madman has suddenly become sane, or
they themselves have lost their reason. This was the precise manner
in which I thenceforth interpreted my position towards the general
"public." The benevolent intentions of the directorate, and, above
all, the friendly zeal and exceptional talent of the performers,
succeeded in gradually establishing my opera in public favour. But
no more could this success deceive me; I now <hi>knew</hi> what I and
the public were to one another, and even if I had still been left
in any doubt, my further experiences would have well enough
dispelled it.</p>

<p>The consequences of my earlier blindness as to
my true position toward the public now made themselves appallingly
evident: the impossibility of procuring <hi>Tannhäuser</hi> a
popular success, or even a circulation among the German theatres,
was clear as day; and therewith I was con fronted with the complete
downfall of my outer circum stances. Almost solely to stave off
that downfall, I still made further efforts to spread this opera;
and, with that end in view, I turned towards Berlin. By the
Intendant of the Royal Prussian Stage I was waved aside with the
critical verdict that my opera was too "epically" constructed to be
suitable for production in Berlin. The General-Intendant of the
Royal Prussian Court-music,
<note id="rn30" corresp="n30" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
however, appeared to be of another opinion. When, in order to gain
the royal interest for the production of my work, I begged him
induce the King to allow me to dedicate <hi>Tannhäuser</hi> to
his Majesty, I received for reply the advice that—seeing, on
the one hand, the King only
<pb id="pag339" n="339"/>
accepted works which were already known
to him, but on the other, there were obstacles in the way of
producing this opera upon the Berlin Court-stage—I had better
assist His Majesty to an acquaintance with the work in question by
arranging something from it for a military band, which something
could then be played before the King during the 'change of
guard.'—I could scarcely have been more deeply humbled, nor
brought to a preciser knowledge of my situation! Henceforth our
entire modern art-publicity began to vanish more and more
completely from my purview.—But what, then, was my position?
And what sort of a mood must that have been which, precisely at
this time, and amid these facts and these impressions, urged me on
with headlong haste to carry out the project of my
<hi>Lohengrin</hi>?—I will endeavour to make it clear to myself and
friends, in order to explain the meaning that the Lohengrin legend bore
for me; and the light in which alone I could regard it, both as man and
artist.</p>

<p>I was now so completely awoken to the utter
<hi>loneliness</hi> of my position as an artist, that the very
feeling of this loneliness supplied me with the spur and the
ability to address myself to my surroundings. Since this prompting
spoke so loud within me that, even without any conscious prospect
of compassing an intelligible message, I yet felt passionately
impelled to unbosom myself,—this could only proceed from a
mood of wellnigh fanatical yearning, which itself was born of that
feeling of isolation.—In <hi>Tannhäuser</hi> I had yearned
to flee a world of frivolous and repellent sensuousness,—the
only form our modern Present has to offer; my impulse lay towards
the unknown land of pure and chaste virginity, as toward the
element that might allay a nobler, but still at bottom sensuous
longing: only, a longing such as our frivolous Present can never
satisfy. By the strength of my longing, I had mounted to the realms
where purity and chastity abide: I felt myself out side the modern
world, and mid a sacred, limpid aether which, in the transport of
my solitude, filled me with that delicious awe we drink-in upon the
summits of the Alps,
<pb id="pag340" n="340"/>
when, circled with a sea of azure air, we look
down upon the lower hills and valleys. Such mountain-peaks the
Thinker climbs, and on this height imagines he is "cleansed" from
all that's "earthly,"
<note id="rn31" corresp="n31" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
the topmost branch upon the tree of man's omnipotence: here at last
may he feed full upon himself, and, midst this self-repast, freeze
finally beneath the Alpine chill into a monument of ice; as which,
philosopher or critic, he stonily frowns down upon the warm and
living world below. The desire, however, that had driven <hi>me</hi>
to those heights, was a desire sprung from art and man's five
senses: it was not the warmth of <hi>Life</hi>, I fain would flee,
but the vaporous morass of trivial sensuousness whose exhalations
form <hi>one definite</hi> shape of Life, the life of modern times.
Upon those heights, more over, I was warmed by the sunny rays of
Love, whose living impulse alone had sped me up. And so it was,
that, hardly had this blessed solitude enwrapt me, when it woke a
new and overpowering desire, the desire <hi>from peak to valley</hi>,
from the dazzling brilliance of chaste Sanctity to the sweet
shadows of Love's humanest caresses. From these heights my longing
glance beheld at last—<hi>das Weib</hi>: the woman for whom the
"Flying Dutch man" yearned, from out the ocean of his misery; the
woman who, star-like, showed to "Tannhäuser" the way that led from
the hot passion of the Venusberg to Heaven;
<pb id="pag341" n="341"/>
the woman who now drew
Lohengrin from sunny heights to the depths of Earth's warm
breast.—</p>

<milestone unit="section"/>

<p>Lohengrin sought the woman who should
<hi>trust</hi> in him; who should not ask how he was hight or whence
he came, but love him as he was, and because he was whate'er she
deemed him. He sought the woman who would not call for explanations
or defence, but who should <hi>love</hi> him with an unconditioned
love. Therefore must he cloak his higher nature, for only in the
non-revealing of this higher (<hi>höheren</hi>)—or more
correctly, heightened (<hi>erhöhten</hi>)—essence, could
there lie the surety that he was not adored because of it alone, or
humbly worshipped as a Being past all under standing—whereas
his longing was <hi>not</hi> for worship nor for adoration, but for
the only thing sufficient to redeem him from his loneliness, to
still his deep desire,—for <hi>Love</hi>, for <hi>being
loved</hi>, for <hi>being understood through Love</hi>. With the
highest powers of his senses, with his fullest fill of
consciousness, he would fain become and be none other than a
warmly-feeling, warmth-inspiring Man; in a word, a <hi>Man</hi> and
not a God—i.e. no 'absolute' artist. Thus yearned he for
Woman,—for the human Heart. And thus did he step down from
out his loneliness of sterile bliss, when he heard this woman's cry
for succour, this heart-cry from humanity below. But there clings
to him the tell-tale halo of his 'heightened' nature; he can not
appear as aught but suprahuman; the gaping of the common herd, the
poisoned trail of envy, throw their shadows even across the loving
maiden's heart; doubt and jealousy convince him that he has not
been <hi>understood</hi>, but only <hi>worshipped</hi>, and force from
him the avowal of his divinity, wherewith, undone, he returns into
his loneliness.—</p>

<p>It seemed then to me, and still it seems, most
hard to comprehend, how the deep tragedy of this subject and this
character should have stayed unfelt; and how the story should have
been so misunderstood that Lohengrin was looked on as a cold,
forbidding figure, more prone to rouse dislike than sympathy. This
reproach was first made
<pb id="pag342" n="342"/>
to me by an intimate friend, whose
knowledge and whose intellectual gifts I highly prize.
<note id="rn32" corresp="n32" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
In his case, however, I reaped an experience which has since been
verified by repetition: namely, that upon the first direct
acquaintance with my poem the impression produced is thoroughly
affecting, and that this reproach only enters when the impression
of the artwork itself has faded, and given place to cold,
reflective criticism.
<note id="rn33" corresp="n33" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
Thus this reproach was not an instinctive act of the
immediate-feeling heart, but a purposed act of mediate reflection.
In this occurrence I therefore found the tragedy of Lohengrin's
character and situation confirmed, as one deep-rooted in our modern
life: it was reproduced upon the artwork and its author, just in
the same way as it had borne down upon the hero of the poem. The
character and situation of this Lohengrin I now recognise, with
clearest sureness, as the <hi>type of the only absolute tragedy</hi>,
in fine, of the <hi>tragic element of modern life</hi>; and that of
just as great significance for the <hi>Present</hi>, as was the
"Antigone "—though in another relation—for the life of
the Hellenic State.
<note id="rn34" corresp="n34" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
From out this sternest tragic moment of the Present one path alone
can lead: the full reunion of sense and soul, the only genuinely
<hi>gladsome</hi> element of the Future's Life and Art, each in its
utmost consummation.—</p>

<p>I must admit that I myself was so far infected with the doubting
spirit of Criticism, that I seriously thought of forcing
<pb id="pag343" n="343"/>
on my poem a complete change of motive.
Through my sharing in this criticism,
I had fallen, for a short time, so far out of touch with the
essence of the story, that I actually strayed into the sketch of a
new denouement, according to which Lohengrin should be allowed to
put aside his higher nature, so soon as revealed, in favour of a
sojourn upon earth with Elsa. The utterly unsatisfactory, and in
the highest sense unnatural character of this denouement, however,
not only was felt by myself—who had conceived it in a moment
of variance with my inner being—but also by my critical
friend. We came to the joint conclusion, that That which jarred
upon our modern critical conscience lay in the unalterable
idiosyncrasy of the Stuff itself; but on the other hand, that this
'stuff' exerted so precise and stimulating an effect upon our
Feeling that, in truth, it must have for us a meaning sufficient to
make its artistic exposition a desirable enrichment of our
emotional impressions, and therewith of our powers of
emotion.—</p>

<p>In effect, this "Lohengrin" is an entirely new phenomenon to the
modern mind; for it could only issue from the <hi>Stimmung</hi> and
the life-views of an artist who, at none other than the present
time, and amid no other relations to Art and Life than those which
had sprung from my own peculiar situation, had developed to exactly
that point where this legend faced me with an imperative demand for
treatment. Wherefore, only he who is able to free himself from all
our modern abstract generalisms, and look Life straight into the
eyes, can understand this Lohengrin. Whoso can <hi>only</hi> class
under one general category the manifold phenomena that spring from
the individual fashioning-force of Life's most active interactions,
can comprehend as good as nothing of them: to wit, not the
phenomenon itself, but only the mere category; whereto—as to
an order laid down in advance—it in truth does not belong. He
to whom there seems nothing comprehensible in Lohengrin beyond the
category "Christian-Romantic," comprehends alone an accidental
surface, but not its underlying essence. This essence, the essence of
<pb id="pag344" n="344"/>
a strictly new and hitherto unbroached phenomenon, can be
comprehended by that faculty alone whereby is brought to man, in
every instance, the fodder for his categorical understanding: and
this is the purely physical faculty of Feeling. But only an artwork
that presents itself in fullest physical show, can convey the new
'stuff,' with due insistence, to this emotional faculty; and only
he who has taken-in this artwork in that complete 
embodiment—i.e. the emotional-man who has thus experienced
an entire satisfaction of his highest powers of receiving—can also
compass the new 'stuff' in all its bearings.</p>

<p>Here I touch the tragic feature in the situation
of the true Artist towards the life of the Present, that very
situation to which I gave artistic effect in the Lohengrin
story.—The most natural and urgent longing of such an artist
is, to be taken up without reserve into the Feeling, and by it
understood; and the <hi>impossibility</hi>—under the modern
conditions of our art-life—of meeting with this Feeling in
such a state of freedom and undoubting sureness as he needs for
being fully understood,—the <hi>compulsion</hi> to address
himself almost solely to the critical Understanding, instead of to
the Feeling: this it is, that forms the tragic element in his
situation; this it is, that, as an artist made of flesh and blood,
I could not help but feel; and this, that, on the pathway of my
further evolution, was to be forced so on my consciousness that I
broke at last into open revolt against the burden of that
situation.—</p>

<p>I now approach the account of my latest
evolutionary period, which I must treat at somewhat greater length;
since the chief aim of this Communication has been to correct the
apparent contradictions which might be discovered betwixt the
nature of my artistic works and the character of my
recently-uttered views on Art and its true position toward
Life,—contradictions which have already, in part, been held
up to opprobrium by superficial critics. In strict connection with
what I have already said, I shall proceed to this account, by way
of the unbroken history of my artistic doings and the moods of mind
from which they sprang.—</p>

<pb id="pag345" n="345"/>

<p>Criticism had proved itself unequal to alter the
denouement of my <hi>Lohengrin</hi>, and by this victorious issue of
the encounter between my instinctive artistic Feeling and the modern
Critical conscience, my zeal for its artistic completion was
kindled to yet brighter flame. In this <hi>completion</hi>, I felt,
would lie the <hi>demonstration</hi> of the rightness of my feeling.
It was clear to my inner sense, that an essential ground of
misunderstanding of the tragical significance of my hero had lain
in the assumption that Lohengrin, having descended from a
glittering realm of painlessly-unearned and cold magnificence, and
in obedience to an unnatural law that bound him will-lessly
thereto, now turned his back upon the strife of earthly passions,
to taste again the pleasures of divinity. As the chief lesson that
this taught me, was the wilfulness of the modern critical mode of
viewing things, which looks away from the instinctive aspect and
twists them round to suit its purpose; and as it was easy for me to
see that this misunderstanding had simply sprung from a wilful
interpretation of that binding law, which in truth was no
outwardly-imposed decree, but the expression of the necessary inner
nature of one who, from the midst of lonely splendour, is athirst
for being understood through <hi>Love</hi>: so, to ensure the desired
correct impression, I held all the faster to the original outlines
of the legend, whose naïve innocence had made so irresistible
an impression upon myself. In order to artistically convey these
outlines in entire accordance with the effect that they had made on
me, I observed a still greater fidelity than in the case of
"Tannhäuser," in my presentment of those half-historical,
half-legendary features by which alone a subject so out of the
beaten path could be brought with due conviction to the answering
senses. This led me, in the conduct of the scenes (<hi>scenische
Haltung</hi>) and dialogue (<hi>sprachlichen Ausdruck</hi>), to a path
which brought me later to the discovery of possibilities whose
logical sequence was certainly to point me out an utter revolution
in the adjustment of those factors which have hitherto made up our
<pb id="pag346" n="346"/>
operatic mode of speech. But toward this path, also, I was led by
<hi>one</hi> sole impulse, namely to convey to others as vividly and
intelligibly as possible, what my own mind's eye had seen; and
here, again, it was always the subject-matter that governed me in
my every choice of form. Utmost clearness was the chief endeavour
of my working-out; and that not the superficial clearness wherewith
a shallow object greets us, but the rich and many-coloured light
wherein alone a comprehensive, broad-related subject can
intelligibly display itself, and yet which cannot help but seem
superficial, and often downright obscure, to those accustomed to
mere form without contents.—</p>

<p>It was midst this struggle for clearness of
exposition, as I remember, that the essence of the heart of Woman,
such as I had to picture in the loving <hi>Elsa</hi>, first dawned
upon me with more and more distinctness. The artist can only attain
the power of convincing portraiture, when he has been able to sink
himself with fullest sympathy into the essence of the character to
be portrayed.
<note id="rn35" corresp="n35" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
In "Elsa" I saw, from the commencement, my desired antithesis to
Lohengrin,—yet naturally, not so absolute an antithesis as
should lie far removed from his own nature, but rather the <hi>other
half</hi> of his being,—the antithesis which is included in
his general nature
<note id="rn36" corresp="n36" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
and forms the necessarily longed-for complement of his specific
man-hood. <hi>Elsa</hi> is the Unconscious, the Undeliberate
(<hi>Unwillkürliche</hi>), into which Lohengrin's conscious,
deliberate (<hi>willkürliche</hi>) being yearns to be redeemed;
but this <hi>yearning</hi>, again, is itself the unconscious,
undeliberate Necessity in Lohengrin, whereby he feels himself akin
to Elsa's being. Through the capability of this "unconscious
consciousness," such as I myself now felt
<pb id="pag347" n="347"/>
alike with Lohengrin, the
nature of Woman also—and that precisely as I felt impelled to
the faithfullest portrayal of its essence—came to ever
clearer understanding in my inner mind. Through this power I
succeeded in so completely transferring myself to this female
principle, that I came to an entire agreement with its utterance by
my loving Elsa. I grew to find her so justified in the final
outburst of her jealousy, that from this very outburst I learnt
first to throughly understand the purely-human element of love; and
I suffered deep and actual grief—often welling into bitter
tears—as I saw the tragical necessity of the parting, the
unavoidable undoing of this pair of lovers. This woman, who with
clear foreknowledge rushes on her doom, for sake of Love's
imperative behest,—who, amid the ecstasy of adoration, wills
yet to lose her all, if so be she cannot all-embrace her loved one;
this woman, who in her contact with this Lohengrin, of all men,
must founder, and in doing so, must shipwreck her beloved too; this
woman, who can love but thus and not otherwise, who, by the very
outburst of her jealousy, wakes first from out the thrill of
worship into the full reality of Love, and by her wreck reveals its
essence to him who had not fathomed it as yet; this glorious woman,
before whom Lohengrin must vanish, for reason that his own specific
nature could not understand her,—I had found her <hi>now:</hi>
and the random shaft that I had shot towards the treasure dreamt
but hitherto <hi>unknown</hi>, was my own Lohengrin, whom now I must
give up as lost; to track more certainly the footsteps of that
<hi>true Woman-hood</hi>, which should one day bring to me and all
the world redemption, after Man-hood's egoism, even in its noblest
form, had shivered into self-crushed dust before her.—Elsa,
the Woman,—Woman hitherto un-understood by me, and understood
at last,—that most positive expression of the purest instinct
of the senses,
<note id="rn37" corresp="n37" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
—made me a Revolutionary at one blow. She was the Spirit of the
<pb id="pag348" n="348"/>
Folk, for whose redeeming hand I too, as artist-man, was
longing.—</p>

<p>But this treasure trove of Knowledge lay hid, at
first, within the silence of my lonely heart: only slowly did it
ripen into loud avowal.—</p>

<milestone unit="section"/>

<p>I must now recall the outward situation of my
life, at that time when—with long and frequent
interruptions—I was working out my <hi>Lohengrin</hi>. This
situation was at the utmost variance with my inner mood. I drew
back into ever greater seclusion, and lived in intimate communion
almost solely with one friend,
<note id="rn38" corresp="n38" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
who went so far in his sympathy with <hi>my</hi> artistic evolution
as to quell the natural impulse to develop, and gain credit for,
his own artistic talents—as he himself confessed to me.
Nothing could I wish so much, as to create in undisturbed
retirement; the possibility of intelligibly conveying the result to
others, albeit the one thing needful, then scarcely troubled me at
all. I consoled myself by saying that my loneliness was no
egoistic, self-sought thing, but absolutely imposed upon me by the
wilderness around. But <hi>one</hi> distasteful bond still chained me
to our public art-affairs,— the obligation of taking thought
for pecuniary profit from my works, in order to eke out my ways and
means. Thus had I still to care for outer success, although I had
already renounced it for myself and inner needs.</p>

<p>Berlin had declined my <hi>Tannhäuser</hi>:
no longer for my self, but for the sake of others,
<note id="rn39" corresp="n39" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
I bestirred myself to secure the production there of my
<hi>Rienzi</hi>, a work I had long since done with. My sole reason
for this step was the experience of this opera's success in
Dresden, and a calculation of the outward advantage which a like
success in Berlin would bring me, in the shape of the
<hi>tantièmes</hi> I should there secure from the receipts of
the performances.
<pb id="pag349" n="349"/>
—I remember with horror, into what a sludge
of contradictions of the vilest sort I was plunged by this sheer
solicitude for outward gain, amid my already fixed ideas regarding
human-things artistic. I was forced to yield myself to the entire
modern crime of hypocrisy and deceit: people whom I despised from
the bottom of my heart, I flattered, or at least sedulously
concealed from them my inner sentiments, because, as circumstances
were, they had within their hands the success or failure of my
enterprise; crafty men, who were ranged upon the side the farthest
from my own true nature, and of whom I knew that they as
mistrustfully disliked me as they themselves were repugnant to my
inner feeling, I sought by an assumed ingenuousness to rob of their
suspicion,—though with small chance of actually effecting
this, as I pretty soon discovered. Naturally, this whole behaviour
stayed without its only intended result, since I was but a
'prentice hand at lying: my candid opinion, which had a knack of
always breaking out, just simply turned me from a dangerous into a
ridiculous being. For instance, nothing did me more harm than a
remark which, conscious of the better work I now could do, I made
in an address to the performers at the commencement of the general
rehearsal; when I described the excessive demands made by
<hi>Rienzi</hi> on their strength, and only to be met by great
exertion, as an "art-crime of my youth." The reporters served this
saying to the public steaming-hot, and gave it thus the cue for its
demeanour towards a work which the composer himself had
characterised as "a miserable failure" (<hi>ein "durchaus
verfehltes"</hi>), and whose presentation to the art-cultured public
of Berlin was therefore a piece of audacity that cried for
chastisement.—Thus I had, in truth, to ascribe my ill success
in Berlin more to my badly-acted rôle of diplomat, than to my
opera itself; which, if I had only gone to work with a complete
belief in its merits and in my own eagerness to bring them forward,
would possibly have made as good a 'hit' in that city as other
works of far less effectiveness (<hi>Wirkungskraft</hi>) have
done.</p>

<pb id="pag350" n="350"/>

<p>It was a hideous state of mind, in which I
returned from Berlin. Only those who have misread my often lasting
outbursts of unbridled ironical mirth, could shut their eyes to the
fact that I now felt all the more wretched as I had made shipwreck
with my enforced attempts at self-dishonouring—commonly
called worldly wisdom. Never was the ghastly curb that the
unbreakable connection of our modern Art and modern Life imposes on
a man's free heart, and makes him bad, more clear to me than at
that time. Was there any possible outlet for a single-handed man to
find, but—Death? How laughable must seem to me those knowing
gabies, who deemed it a point of honour to see nothing in the
yearning for this Death but a "residue of Christian exaltation,
already overcome by Science," and thus objectionable! If, in my
longing to escape from the worthlessness of the modern world, I
showed myself a <hi>Christian</hi>,—then I was a more honest
Christian than any of those who now, with smug impertinence,
upbraid me for my lapse from Christianity.—</p>

<p>One thing, only, kept me on end: <hi>my art</hi>,
which for me was no mere mean to fame and gain, but to the
proclamation of my thoughts to feeling hearts. When, therefore, I
had exorcised that <hi>outer</hi> fiend which had lately tempted me
to speculate on outward profit, I for the first time became plainly
conscious of how imperative a necessity it was to me, to busy
myself about the formation of that artistic organ through which I
might impart my aim to others. This organ was <hi>the theatre</hi>,
or better still: the Art of Stage-portrayal, which I recognised
each day more clearly as the only redeemer of the Poet, who through
it alone can see the object of his Will contented in the certainty
of physically-accomplished Deed. On this weightiest point of all, I
had hitherto been yielding myself more and more to the hazards of
Chance: <hi>now</hi> I felt that it was a question of here, at a
definite place and under definite conditions, bringing the right
and needful thing to pass; and that it never could be brought to
pass, if one's hand were not stretched out at once to work that lay
the closest. The
<pb id="pag351" n="351"/>
winning of the possibility of seeing my artistic
views completely realised in the flesh, by the art of
Stage-portrayal, no matter where—and therefore best at
Dresden, where I was and worked,—seemed henceforth to me my
nighest worthy goal; and in the struggle for its reach, I for the
moment looked quite away from the constitution of that Public which
I thought to gain myself by the mere fact of setting scenic
performances so intellectually and physically complete before it,
that the sympathy to be wrested from its purely-human Feeling would
let it easily be led towards a higher plane.</p>

<p>In this sense I turned back to that
art-institute in whose guidance I had already shared, as
Kapellmeister, for nigh upon six years. I say: turned <hi>back</hi>
to it; since my experiences, reaped thus far, had already reduced
me to a state of hopeless indifference in its regard.—The
ground of my inner repugnance to taking the post of Kapellmeister
to any theatre, especially a Court theatre, had become ever clearer
to my perception, in the course of my practical discharge of the
duties of that office. Our theatrical institutions have, in
general, no other end in view than to cater for a nightly
entertainment, never energetically demanded, but forced down
people's throats by the spirit of Speculation, and lazily swallowed
by the social Ennui of the dwellers in our larger cities. Whatever,
from a purely artistic standpoint, has rebelled against this
mission of the stage, has always shown itself too weak for any
good. The only regulator of distinctions, has been the
<hi>section</hi> for whom this entertainment was to be provided: for
the <hi>rabble</hi>, brought up in tutored grossness, coarse farces
and crass monstrosities were served; the decorous <hi>Philistines</hi>
of our bourgeoisie were treated to moral family-pieces; for the
more delicately cultured, and art-spoilt <hi>higher</hi> and
<hi>highest classes</hi>, only the most elegant art-viands were
dished up, often garnished with aesthetic quips. The genuine Poet,
who from time to time sought to make good his claim, among those of
the three above-named classes, was always driven back with a taunt
peculiar to our theatre-public,
<pb id="pag352" n="352"/>
the taunt of Ennui—at least
until he had become an antiquarian morsel wherewith conveniently to
grace that art-repast.</p>

<p>Now the special feature of our <hi>greater</hi>
theatrical institutions consists in this, that they plan their
performances to catch the taste of all three classes of the public;
they are provided with an auditorium wherein those classes range
themselves entirely apart, according to the figure of their
entrance-money, thus placing the artist in the predicament of
seeking-out his hearers now among the so-called ' Gods,' now in the
Pit, and again in the Boxes. The Director of such institutions, who
proximately has no other concern than to make money, has therefore
to please each section of his public in its turn: this he arranges,
generally with an eye to the business character of the day of the
week, by furnishing the most diverse products of the playwright's
art, giving today a vulgar burlesque, tomorrow a piece of
Philistine sensationalism, and the day after, a toothsome delicacy
for the epicures. This still left one thing to be aimed at, namely
from all three mentioned <hi>genera</hi> to concoct a <hi>genre</hi> of
stage-piece which should satisfy the whole public at one stroke.
That task the modern Opera has with great energy fulfilled: it has
thrown the vulgar, the philistinish, and the exquisite into one
common pot, and now sets the broth before the entire public,
crowded head on head. The Opera has thus succeeded in fining down
the mob, in vulgarising the genteel, and finally in turning the
whole conglomerate audience into a superfinely-mobbish Philistine;
who now, in the shape of the Theatre-public, flings his confused
demands into the face of every man who undertakes the guidance of
an Art-institute.</p>

<p>This position of affairs will not give a
moment's uneasiness to <hi>that</hi> Stage-director whose only
business is to charm the money out of the pockets of the "Public":
the said problem is solved, even with great tact and never-failing
certainty, by every Director of the un-subventioned theatres of our
large or smaller cities. It operates confusingly, however, upon
those who are called by a royal Court to
<pb id="pag353" n="353"/>
manage an exactly similar

institution, differing only in that it is lent the Court aegis to
cover any contingent deficiency in the 'takings.' In virtue of this
protecting aegis, the Director of such a Court-theatre ought to
feel bound to look aside from any speculation on the already
corrupted taste of the masses, and rather to endeavour to improve
that taste by seeing to it that the spirit of the stage
performances be governed by the dictates of a higher
art-intelligence. And, as a matter of fact, such was originally the
good intention of enlightened princes, like Joseph II. of Austria,
in founding their Court-theatres; as a tradition, it has also been
transmitted to the Court-theatre Intendants even of our later days.
Two practical obstacles, however, have stood in the way of
realising this—in itself more munificently chimerical than
actually attainable—object: firstly, the personal incapacity
of the appointed Intendant, who is chosen from the ranks of
court-officials mostly without any regard to acquired professional
skill, or even so much as natural disposition to artistic
sensibility; and secondly, the impossibility of really dispensing
with speculation on the Public's taste. In fact, the ampler
monetary support of the Court-theatres has only led to an increase
in the price of the artistic <hi>matériel</hi>, the systematic
cultivation whereof, so far as concerns theatric art, has never
occurred to the else so education-rabid leaders of our State; and
thus the expenses of these institutions have mounted so high, that
it has become a sheer necessity to the Director of a Court theatre,
beyond all others, to speculate upon the paying public, without
whose active help the outlay could not possibly be met. But on the
other hand, a successful pursuit of this speculation, in the same
sense as that of any other theatrical manager, is made impossible
to the distinguished Court-theatre-intendant by the feeling of his
higher mission; a mission, however, which—in his personal
incapacity for rightly fathoming its import—has been only
taken in the sense of a shadowy Court dignity, and could be so
interpreted that, for any particularly foolish arrangement, the Intendant
<pb id="pag354" n="354"/>
would excuse himself by saying that in a Court-theatre
this was nobody's business. Thus a modern Court-theatre-intendant's
skill can only, and inevitably, result in the perpetual exhibition
of a conflict between a <hi>second-rate</hi> spirit of speculation
and a courtier's red-tape arrogance. An insight into this dilemma
is so easy to be gained, that I here have merely alluded to the
situation, without any wish to throw its details into higher
relief.</p>

<p>That no one, even the best intentioned,
and—to give every man his due—the most accessible to
good advice, can wrest himself from the iron grip of this unnatural
situation, without he finally decide to give his office up for
good: this could not but become perfectly plain to me from my
Dresden experiences. These experiences, themselves, I scarcely
think it necessary to describe more closely; hardly will it need
assurance that, after constantly renewed, and as constantly proved
fruitless, endeavours to gain from the good-will of my Intendant
toward myself a definitely favourable influence on the affairs of
the theatre, I at last fell into a quagmire of torturing
cross-purposes, from which I could only free myself again by giving
up the attempt entirely, and adhering strictly to the letter of my
duties.—</p>

<p>When, then, I left this temporary reserve, and
turned my thoughts again towards the Stage, this—in view of
the proved fruitlessness of all detached attempts—could only
be in the sense of a fundamental and <hi>complete</hi> reform
thereof. I could but see that I here had not to do with isolated
phenomena, but with a wide connexus of phenomena, whereof I was
gradually forced to recognise that <hi>it</hi>, also, was
inextricably involved in the endless-branching system of our whole
social and political affairs. While pondering on the possibility of
a thorough change in our theatrical relations, I was insensibly
driven to a full perception of <hi>the worthlessness of that social
and political system which, of its very nature, could beget no
other public art-conditions than precisely those I then was
grappling with</hi>.—This knowledge was of decisive
consequence for the further development of my whole life</p>

<pb id="pag355" n="355"/>

<p>Never had I occupied myself with politics,
strictly so called. I now remember that I only turned my attention
to the phenomena of the political world in exact measure as in them
was manifested the spirit of Revolution—<hi>i.e.</hi>, as pure Human
Nature rebelled against politico-juristic Formalism. In this sense
a criminal case had the same interest for me as a political action;
I could only take the side of the suffering party, and, indeed, in
exact measure of vehemence as it was engaged in resisting any kind
of oppression. I have never been able to relinquish this manner of'
taking sides,' in favour of any politically constructive notion.
Therefore was my interest in the world of politics always in so far
of an artistic nature, as I looked beneath its formal expression
into its purely human contents. Only when I could strip off from
the phenomena their formal shell, fashioned from the traditions of
Juristic Rights, and light upon their inward kernel of purely human
essence, could they arouse my sympathy; for here I then saw the
same impelling motive which drove myself, as artist-man, to wrest
from the evil physical form of the Present a new physical mould
which should correspond to the true essence of humanity—a
mould which is only to be gained through destruction of the
physical form of the Present, and therefore through Revolution.</p>

<p>Thus, from my artistic standpoint, and specially
on the forementioned path of pondering on the reconstruction of the
Stage,
<note id="rn40" corresp="n40" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
I had arrived at a point where I was in a position to thoroughly
recognise the necessity of the commencing Revolution of 1848. The
formal political channel into which—particularly in
Dresden—the stream of agitation first poured itself, did not
indeed deceive me as to the true nature of the Revolution; still I
held myself at first aloof from any manner of share therein. I set
about drawing up a comprehensive plan for the reorganisation of the
theatre, in order to be fully equipped so soon as ever
<pb id="pag356" n="356"/>
the revolutionary question should reach this institution also. It did
not escape me that, in a new arrangement of the Civil List, such as
was to be expected, the object of the subvention for the Theatre
would be submitted to a searching criticism. As it was to be
foreseen that, so soon as this question arose, the public utility
of the employment of that money would be disputed, my proposed plan
was to start with an admission of this uselessness and aimlessness,
not only from the standpoint of political economy, but also from
that of purely artistic interests; but it was at like time to show
the true social aim of theatric art, and to bring the necessity of
providing such an aim with all the needful means for its attainment
before those who, with righteous indignation, could see nothing in
our <hi>existing</hi> Theatre but a useless, or even harmful public
institution.</p>

<p>All this was prompted by the assumption of a
peaceful <hi>solution</hi> of the imminent, more reformatory than
revolutionary questions, and of the serious will of those in power,
to themselves set on foot an actual reform. The course of political
events was soon to teach me a different lesson; Reaction and
Revolution set themselves squarely face to face, and the necessity
arose, to either return completely to the Old, or throughly break
therewith. My observation of the utter haziness of the views of the
contending parties, as to the essential contents of the Revolution,
decided me one day to openly declare myself <hi>against</hi> the
purely formal and political conception of this Revolution, and
<hi>for</hi> the necessity of keeping its purely human kernel plainly
in the eye. From the results of this step I now saw, for the first
time unmistakably, how our politicians were situated with regard to
a knowledge of the true spirit of Revolution, and that genuine
Revolution could never come from Above, from the standpoint of
erudite intellect, but only from Below, from the urgence of true
human need. The lying and hypocrisy of the political parties filled
me with a disgust that drove me back, at first, into the most utter
solitude.</p>

<p>Here my energy, unsatisfied without, consumed itself
<pb id="pag357" n="357"/>
once more in projects for artistic work.—Two such
projects, which had occupied my thoughts for some time previously,
now claimed my attention wellnigh at the same moment; indeed, the
character of their subjects made them almost seem to me as one.
Even during the musical composition of <hi>Lohengrin</hi>, midst
which I had always felt as though resting by an oasis in the
desert, <hi>both</hi> these subjects had usurped my poetic fancy:
they were "Siegfried" and "Frederic Barbarossa."—</p>

<p>Once again, and that the last time, did Myth and
History stand before me with opposing claims; this while, as good
as forcing me to decide whether it was a musical drama, or a spoken
play, that I had to write. A closer narration of the conflict that
lay behind this question, I have purposely reserved until this
stage, because it was <hi>here</hi> first that I arrived at its
definite answer, and thus at a full consciousness of its true
nature.</p>

<p>Since my return to Germany from Paris, my
favourite study had been that of ancient German lore I have already
dwelt on the deep longing for my native home that filled me then.
This Home, however, in its actual reality, could nowise satisfy my
longing; thus I felt that a deeper instinct lay behind my impulse,
and one that needs must have its source in some other yearning than
merely for the modern homeland. As though to get down to its root,
I sank myself into the primal element of Home, that meets us in the
legends of a Past which attracts us the more warmly as the Present
repels us with its hostile chill. To all our wishes and warm
impulses, which in truth transport us to the <hi>Future,</hi> we seek
to give a physical token by means of pictures from the Past, and
thus to win for them <hi>a</hi> form the modern Present never can
provide In the struggle to give the wishes of my heart artistic
shape, and in the ardour to discover <hi>what</hi> thing it was that
drew me so resistlessly to the primal source of old home Sagas, I
drove step by step into the deeper regions of antiquity, where at
last to my delight, and truly in the <hi>utmost</hi> reaches of old
time, I was to light upon the fair young form of
<pb id="pag358" n="358"/>
<hi>Man</hi>, in all
the freshness of his force My studies thus bore me, through the
legends of the Middle Ages, right down to their foundation in the
old-Germanic Mythos; one swathing after another, which the later
legendary lore had bound around it, I was able to unloose, and thus
at last to gaze upon it in its chastest beauty. What here I saw,
was no longer the Figure of conventional history, whose garment
claims our interest more than does the actual shape inside; but the
real naked Man, in whom I might spy each throbbing of his pulses,
each stir within his mighty muscles, in uncramped, freest motion:
the type of the true <hi>human being</hi>.</p>

<p>At like time I had sought this human being <hi>in
History too</hi>. Here offered themselves <hi>relations</hi>, and
nothing but relations; the <hi>human being</hi> I could only see in
so far as the relations ordered him: and not as he had power to
order <hi>them.</hi> To get to the bottom of these 'relations,' whose
coercive force compelled the strongest man to squander all his
powers on objectless and never-compassed aims, I turned afresh to
the soil of Greek antiquity, and here, again, was pointed at the
last <hi>to Mythos</hi>, in which alone I could touch the ground of
even these <hi>relations</hi>: but in that Mythos, these social
relations were drawn in lines as simple, plastic and distinct as I
had earlier recognised therein the human shape itself. From this
side, also, did Mythos lead me to this Man alone, as to the
involuntary <hi>creator</hi> of those relations, which, in their
documento-monumental perversion, as the excrescences of History
(<hi>Geschichtsmomente</hi>), as traditional fictions and established
rights, have at last usurped dominion over Man and ground to dust
his freedom.</p>

<milestone unit="section"/>

<p>Although the splendid type of <hi>Siegfried</hi>
had long attracted me, it first enthralled my every thought when I
had come to see it in its purest human shape, set free from every
later wrappage Now for the first time, also, did I recognise the
possibility of making him the hero of a drama; a possibility that
had not occurred to me while I
<pb id="pag359" n="359"/>
only knew him from the medieval
<hi>Nibelungenlied</hi>. But at like time with him, had <hi>Friedrich
I.</hi> loomed on me from the study of our History: he appeared to
me, just as he had appeared to the Saga-framing German Folk, a
historical rebirth of the old-pagan Siegfried. When the wave of
political commotion broke lately in upon us, and proclaimed itself
at first, in Germany, as a longing for national unity, it could not
but seem to me that Friedrich I. would lie nearer to the Folk,
<note id="rn41" corresp="n41" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
and be more readily understood, than the downright human Siegfried.
Already I had sketched the plan for a drama in five acts, which
should depict this Friedrich's life, from the Roncalian Diet down
to his entry on the Crusade. But ever and again I turned in
discontentment from my plan. It was no mere desire to mirror
detached historical events, that had prompted my sketch, but the
wish to show a wide connexus of relations, in such a fashion that
its unity might be embraced in easy survey, and understood at once.
In order to make plainly understandable both my hero and the
relations that with giant force he strives to master, only to be at
last subdued by them, I should have felt compelled to adopt the
method of Mythos, in the very teeth of the historic material: the
vast mass of incidents and intricate associations, whereof no
single link could be omitted if the connection of the whole was to
be intelligibly set before the eye, was adapted neither to the
form, nor to the spirit of Drama. Had I chosen to comply with the
imperative demands of History, then had my drama become an
unsurveyable conglomerate of pictured incidents, entirely crowding
out from view the real and only thing I wished to show; and thus,
as artist, I should have met precisely the same fate in my drama as
<pb id="pag360" n="360"/>
did its hero: to wit, I should myself have been crushed by the
weight of the very <hi>relations</hi> that I fain would master—i.e.
portray—, without ever having brought my <hi>purpose</hi>
to an understanding; just as Friedrich could not bring his
<hi>will</hi> to carrying-out To attain my purpose, I should
therefore have had to reduce this mass of relations by <hi>free</hi>
construction, and should have fallen into a treatment that would
have absolutely violated History.
<note id="rn42" corresp="n42" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
Yet I could not but see the contradiction involved herein; for it
was the main characteristic of Friedrich, in my eyes, that he
should be a <hi>historical</hi> hero. If, on the other hand, I wished
to dabble in mythical construction, then, for its ultimate and
highest form, but quite beyond the modern poet's reach, I must go
back to the unadulterated Mythos, which up to now the Folk alone
has hymned, and which I had already found in full
perfection—in the "Siegfried."</p>

<milestone unit="section"/>

<p>I now returned to "Siegfried"—at the
selfsame time as, disgusted with the empty formalistic tendency of
the doings of our political parties, I withdrew from contact with
our public life—and that with a full conviction of History's
unsuitedness to Art. But at like time I had definitely solved for
myself a problem of artistic formalism: namely, the question of
the applicability of the pure, i.e. the merely spoken, Play
(<hi>Schauspiel</hi>) to the Drama of the Future. This question by no
means presented itself to me from the formal æsthetic standpoint,
but I happened on it through the very character of the poetic
'stuff' to be portrayed; which character alone, henceforth, laid
down my lines of treatment When outward instigations prompted me
to take up the sketch of "Friedrich Rothbart," I did not for a
moment doubt that it could only be dealt with as a spoken play, and
by no manner of means as a drama to be set to music. In that
<pb id="pag361" n="361"/>
period of my life when I conceived <hi>Rienzi</hi>; it might perhaps have
struck me to regard the "Rothbart," also, as an opera subject: now,
when it was no longer my purpose to write operas, but before all
to give forth my poetic thoughts (<hi>Anschauungen</hi>) in the most
living of artistic forms, to wit in Drama, I had not the remotest
idea of handling a historico-political subject otherwise than as a
spoken play. Yet when I put aside this 'stuff,' it was nowise from
any scruple that might perchance have come to me as opera-poet and
composer, and forbidden me to leave the trade that I was versed in:
no, it came about— as I have shown—simply because I
learnt to see the general unfitness of the Stuff <hi>for drama</hi>;
and this, again, grew clear to me, not merely from any scruple as
to the artistic form, but from dissatisfaction of that same sheer
human feeling that in actual life was set on edge by the political
formalism of our era. I felt that the highest of what I had seen
from the purely human standpoint, and longed to show to others,
could <hi>not</hi> be imparted in the treatment of a
historico-political subject; that the mere intellectual exposition
of <hi>relations</hi> made impossible to me the presentment of the
purely human Individuality; that I should therefore have had to
leave to be <hi>unriddled</hi> the only and essential thing I was
concerned with, and not to bring it actually and sensibly before
the Feeling. For these reasons, together with the
historico-political <hi>subject</hi> I necessarily also cast aside
that dramatic <hi>art-form</hi> with which alone it could have been
invested: for I recognised that this form had issued only from that
subject, and by it alone was justifiable, but that it was
altogether incapable of convincingly imparting to the Feeling the
purely-human subject on which alone my gaze was henceforth bent;
and thus that, with the disappearance of the historico-political
subject, there must also necessarily vanish, in the future, the
spoken form of play (<hi>die Schauspielform</hi>), as inadequate to
meet the novel subject, incongruous and halting.</p>

<p>I have said that it was not my profession of
Opera-composer that caused me to give up a story merely fitted
<pb id="pag362" n="362"/>
for the Play: nevertheless I must avow, that a recognition of the
essence of the spectacular play and of the historico-political
subject that demands this form, such as had now arisen in me, could
certainly <hi>not</hi> have come to any absolute playwright or
dramatic litterateur, but only to a man and artist who had passed
through a development like mine, under the influence of the spirit
of <hi>music</hi>.—Already in speaking of my Paris period, I have
mentioned how I looked on Music as the good angel, who, amid my
revolt against the baseness of modern public art, preserved me as an
artist and saved me from the mere literary activity of the critic.
In that paragraph, I reserved to myself the opportunity of
describing somewhat more closely the influence that my musical
predisposition (<hi>Stimmung</hi>) exerted on the fashioning of my
artistic works. Although the character of this influence can
scarcely have escaped anyone who has attentively followed the
account of the origination of my poems, yet I must here return to
the matter still more explicitly, since it was precisely now that,
in forming an important artistic decision, this influence came to
my full consciousness.</p>

<p>As far as my <hi>Rienzi</hi> I had it only in my
mind to write an "opera." To this end I sought out my materials,
and, merely concerned for "opera," I chose them from ready-made
stories, and indeed from such as had already been fashioned with
deliberate attention to artistic form:
<note id="rn43" corresp="n43" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
a dramatic fairy-tale of Gozzi's, a play of Shakespeare's, and
finally a romance of Bulwer's, I arranged for the sole end of
Opera. With regard to the <hi>Rienzi</hi>, I have already said that I
manipulated the story—as, for the matter of that, was
unavoidable, from the very nature of a historical romance
—according to my own impressions, and in such a manner
as—to recall my expression—I had seen it through the
"opera-glasses." With the <hi>Flying Dutchman</hi>, whose origin from
specific moods of my own life I have already sufficiently
<pb id="pag363" n="363"/>
described, I struck out a new path; inasmuch as I became, myself;
the artistic modeller of a 'stuff' that lay before me only in the
blunt and simple outlines of Folk-Saga. Henceforward, with all my
dramatic works, I was in the first instance <hi>Poet</hi>, and only
in the complete working-out of the poem, did I become once more
Musician. Only, I was a poet who was conscious in advance of the
faculty of <hi>musical</hi> expression, for the working-out of his
poems. This faculty I had exercised so far, that I was fully aware
of my ability to employ it on the realisation of a poetic aim, and
not only to reckon on its help when drafting a poetic sketch, but
in that knowledge to draw such sketch itself more <hi>freely</hi>,
and more in accordance with poetic necessity, than if I had
designed merely with an eye to the musical effect. Before this, I
had had to acquire facility of musical expression in the same
manner as one learns a language. He who has not made himself
thoroughly at home with a foreign, unaccustomed tongue, must pay
heed to its idiosyncrasies in everything he says; to express
himself intelligibly, he must keep a constant watch upon this mode
of utterance itself, and deliberately reckon for it <hi>What</hi> he
desires to say. Wherefore, for every sentence he is entangled in
the formal rules of speech, and cannot as yet speak out from his
instinctive Feeling, and altogether <hi>how</hi> he. means to,
<hi>what</hi> he feels and what he sees. The rather, for their
utterance, he must model his feelings and seeings, themselves, on a
form of expression whereof he is not so completely master as of his
mother-tongue; in which latter, entirely careless of expression, he
finds the correct expression without an effort.</p>

<p>Now, however, I had completely learnt the speech
of Music; I was at home with it, as with a genuine mother-tongue;
in what I wished to utter, I need no more be careful for the formal
mode: it stood ready at my call, exactly as I needed it, to impart
a definite impression or emotion (<hi>Anschauung oder
Empfindung</hi>) in keeping with my inner impulse. But one can never
speak a foreign tongue without fatigue, and at like time thoroughly
correctly, until one has taken up its spirit into oneself; until
one feels
<pb id="pag364" n="364"/>
and thinks in this tongue, and thus desires to utter
nothing but that which can be uttered in its spirit When, however,
we have arrived at speaking entirely from out the spirit of a
tongue, at feeling and thinking quite instinctively therein, there
also springs up in us the power of broadening this very spirit, of
enriching and extending at once the mode of utterance and the
utter-able in that tongue. Yet that which is utterable in the
speech of Music, is limited to <hi>feelings</hi> and <hi>emotions</hi>:
it expresses, in abundance, that which has been cast adrift from
our Word-speech (<hi>Wortsprache</hi>) at its conversion into a mere
organ of the Intellect, namely, the emotional contents of
Purely-human speech. What thus remains unutterable in the
absolute-musical tongue, is the exact definement of the
<hi>object</hi> of the feeling and emotion, whereby the latter reach
themselves a surer definition. The broadening and extension of the
Musical form of speech (<hi>musikalischer Sprachausdruck</hi>), as
called for by this Object, therefore consists in the attainment of
the power to outline sharply and distinctly the Individual and the
Particular; and this it gains alone by being wed to Word-speech.
But then only can this marriage prove a fruitful one, when the
Musical-speech allies itself directly to its kindred elements in
Word-speech; the union must take place precisely <hi>there</hi>,
where in Word-speech itself there is evinced a mastering desire for
real utterance of Feeling to the senses. This, again, is governed
by the <hi>matter</hi> to be uttered (<hi>Inhalt des
Auszudrückenden</hi>), and the degree in which it becomes, from
a matter of the intellect, a matter of the feeling. A Matter that
is only seizable by the Understanding, can be conveyed alone by
means of Word-speech; but the more it expands into a phase of
Feeling, the more definitely does it also need a mode of expression
that Tone-speech alone can, at the last, confer on it with
answering fulness. Herewith is laid down, quite of itself; the
Matter of what the Word-Tone poet has to utter: it is, <hi>the
Purely-human, freed from every shackle of Convention</hi>.</p>

<milestone unit="section"/>

<p>With the attained facility of speaking in this Tone-speech
<pb id="pag365" n="365"/>
freely from my heart, I naturally could only have to
give my message also in the spirit of that speech; and where, as
artist-man, I felt the most peremptorily urged to its delivery, the
Matter of my message was necessarily dictated by the Spirit of the
means of expression that I had made my own. The poetic 'stuffs'
which urged me to artistic fashioning, could only be of such a
nature that, before all else, they usurped my emotional, and not my
intellectual being: only the Purely-human (<hi>Reinmenschliche</hi>),
loosed from all historical formality, could—once it came
before my vision in its genuine natural shape, unruffled from
outside—arouse my interest, and spur me on to impart what I
beheld. What I beheld, I now looked at solely with the eyes of
Music; though not of <hi>that</hi> music whose formal maxims might
have held me still embarrassed for expression, but of the music
which I had within my heart, and wherein I might express myself as
in a mother-tongue. With this freedom of faculty, I now might
address myself without a hindrance to <hi>that to be expressed</hi>;
henceforth the <hi>object</hi> of expression was the sole matter for
regard in all my workmanship. Thus, precisely by the acquirement of
facility in musical expression, did I become a <hi>poet</hi>;
inasmuch as I no longer had, as fashioning artist, to refer to the mode
of expression itself, but only to its object. Yet, without
deliberately setting about an enrichment of the means of musical
expression, I was absolutely driven to expand them, by the very
nature of the objects I was seeking to express.</p>

<p>Now it lay conditioned in the nature of an
advance from musical emotionalism (<hi>Empfindungswesen</hi>) to the
shaping of poetic stuffs, that I should condense
<note id="rn44" corresp="n44" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
the vague, more general emotional contents of these stuffs to an
ever clearer and more individual precision, and thus at last arrive
at the point where the poet, in his direct concern with Life, takes
a firmer hold of the matter to be conveyed through musical
expression, and stamps it with his own intent Whosoever,
<pb id="pag366" n="366"/>
therefore, will carefully consider the construction
(<hi>Bildung</hi>) of the three accompanying poems, will find that
what I drew in haziest outline in the <hi>Flying Dutchman</hi>, I
brought with ever plainer definition into stabler form in
<hi>Tannhäuser</hi>, and finally in <hi>Lohengrin</hi>. Since by
such a procedure I was enabled to draw nearer and nearer to actual
Life, I must inevitably reach a point of time at last, when, under
certain external impressions, a poetic subject such as that of
"<hi>Friedrich Rothbart</hi>" would present itself to me, for whose
modelling I should have had to downright renounce all musical
expression. But it was precisely here, that my hitherto
<hi>unconscious</hi> procedure came to my <hi>consciousness</hi> as an
artistic Necessity. With this 'stuff,' which would have made me
altogether forget my music, I became aware of the bearings of true
poetic stuffs in general; and <hi>there, where I must have left
unused my faculty of musical expression, I also found that I should
have had to subordinate my poetic attainments to political
abstractions, and thus to radically forswear my artistic
nature</hi>.—Here was it, also, that I had the most urgent occasion
to clear my mind as to the essential difference between the
historico-political, and the purely-human life; and when I
knowingly and willingly gave up the "<hi>Friedrich</hi>," in which I
had approached the closest to that political life, and—by so
much the clearer as to what I wished—gave preference to the
"<hi>Siegfried</hi>," I had entered a new and most decisive period of
my evolution, both as artist and as man the period of <hi>conscious
artistic will</hi> to continue on an altogether novel path, which I
had struck with unconscious necessity, and whereon I now, as man
and artist, press on to meet a newer world.
<note id="rn45" corresp="n45" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
</p>

<p>I have here described the influence that my
possession with the spirit of Music exerted on the choice of my
poetic stuffs, and therewith on their poetic fashioning. I have
next to show the reaction that my poetic procedure, thus
influenced, exercised in turn upon my musical expression and its
form.—This reaction manifested itself chiefly in
<pb id="pag367" n="367"/>
<hi>two</hi> departments: in the <hi>dramatic-musical form</hi> in
general, and in the <hi>melody</hi> in particular.</p>

<p>Seeing that, onward from the said turning-point
of my artistic course, I was once for all determined by <hi>the
stuff</hi>, and by that stuff as seen with the eye of Music: so in
its fashioning, I must necessarily pass forward to a gradual but
complete upheaval of the traditional <hi>operatic form</hi>. This
opera-form was never, of its very nature, a form embracing the
whole Drama, but the rather an arbitrary conglomerate of separate
smaller forms of song, whose fortuitous concatenation of Arias,
Duos, Trios, &amp;c., with Choruses and so-called ensemble-pieces,
made out the actual edifice of Opera. In the poetic fashioning of
my stuffs, it was henceforth impossible for me to contemplate a
filling of these ready-moulded forms, but solely a bringing of the
drama's broader Object to the cognisance of the Feeling. In the
whole course of the drama I saw no possibility of division or
demarcation, other than the Acts in which the place or time, or the
Scenes in which the dramatis personae change. Moreover, the plastic
unity of the Mythic Stuff brought with it this advantage, that, in
the arrangement of my Scenes, all those minor details, which the
modern playwright finds so indispensable for the elucidation of
involved historical occurrences, were quite unnecessary, and the
whole strength of the portrayal could be concentrated upon a few
weighty and decisive moments of development. Upon the working-out
of these fewer scenes, in each of which a decisive <hi>stimmung</hi>
was to be given its full play, I might linger with an
exhaustiveness already reckoned-for in the original draft; I was
not compelled to make shift with mere suggestions, and—for
sake of the outward economy—to hasten on from one suggestion
to another; but with needful repose, I could display the simple
object in the very last connections required to bring it clearly
home to the dramatic understanding. Through this natural attribute
of the Stuff, I was not in the least coerced to strain the planning
of my scenes into any preconceived conformity with given musical forms,
<pb id="pag368" n="368"/>
since they dictated of themselves their mode of musical
completion. In the ever surer feeling hereof, it thus could no more
occur to me to rack with wilful outward canons the musical form
that sprang self-bidden from the very nature of these scenes, to
break its natural mould by violent grafting-in of conventional
slips of operatic song. Thus I by no means set out with the fixed
purpose of a deliberate iconoclast
(<hi>Formumänderer</hi>— lit: changer of forms)
<note id="rn46" corresp="n46" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
to destroy, forsooth, the prevailing operatic forms, of Aria, Duet,
&amp;c.; but the omission of these forms followed from the very
nature of the Stuff, with whose intelligible presentment to the
Feeling through an adequate vehicle, I had alone to do. A
mechanical reflex (<hi>unwillkurliches Wissen</hi>) of those
traditional forms still influenced me so much in my <hi>Flying
Dutchman</hi>, that any attentive investigator will recognise how
often there it governed even the arrangement of my scenes; and only
gradually, in <hi>Tannhäuser</hi>, and yet more decisively in
<hi>Lohengrin</hi>—accordingly, with a more and more practised
knowledge of the nature of my Stuff and the means necessary for its
presentment—did I extricate myself from that form-al
influence, and more and more definitely rule the Form of portrayal
by the requirements and peculiarities of the Stuff and Situation.</p>

<p>This procedure, dictated by the nature of the poetic
<pb id="pag369" n="369"/>
subject, exercised a quite specific influence on the
<hi>tissue</hi> of my music, as regards the characteristic
<hi>combination and ramification of the Thematic Motivs</hi>. Just as
the joinery of my individual Scenes excluded every alien and
unnecessary detail, and led all interest to the dominant Chief-mood
(<hi>vorwaltende Hauptstimmung</hi>), so did the whole building of my
drama join itself into one organic unity, whose easily-surveyed
members were made-out by those fewer scenes and situations which
set the passing mood: no mood (Stimmung) could be permitted to be
struck in any one of these scenes, that did not stand in a weighty
relation to the moods of all the other scenes, so that the
development of the moods from out each other, and the constant
obviousness of this development, should establish the unity of the
drama in its very mode of expression. Each of these chief moods, in
keeping with the nature of the Stuff, must also gain a definite
musical expression, which should display itself to the sense of
hearing as a definite musical Theme. Just as, in the progress of
the drama, the intended climax of a decisory Chief-mood was only to
be reached through a development, continuously present to the
Feeling, of the individual moods already roused: so must the
musical expression, which directly influences the physical feeling,
necessarily take a decisive share in this development to a climax;
and this was brought about, quite of itself, in the shape of a
characteristic tissue of principal themes, that spread itself not
over <hi>one</hi> scene only (as heretofore in separate operatic
'numbers'), but <hi>over the whole drama</hi>, and that in
<hi>intimate connection with the poetic aim</hi>.</p>

<p>The characteristic peculiarity of this thematic
method, and its weighty consequences for the emotional
understanding of a poetic aim, I have minutely described and
vindicated, from the theoretic standpoint, in the third part of my
book: <hi>Opera and Drama</hi>. While referring my readers to that
work, I have only, in keeping with the object of the present
Communication, to underline the fact that in <hi>this</hi> procedure
also, which had never before
<pb id="pag370" n="370"/>
been systematically extended over the
whole drama, I was not prompted by reflection, but solely by
practical experience and the nature of my artistic aim. I remember,
before I set about the actual working-out of the <hi>Flying
Dutchman</hi>, to have drafted first the Ballad of Senta in the
second act, and completed both its verse and melody. In this piece,
I unconsciously laid the thematic germ of the whole music of the
opera: it was the picture <hi>in petto</hi> of the whole drama, such
as it stood before my soul; and when I was about to betitle the
finished work, I felt strongly tempted to call it a "dramatic
ballad." In the eventual composition of the music, the thematic
picture, thus evoked, spread itself quite instinctively over the
whole drama, as one continuous tissue; I had only, without further
initiative, to take the various thematic germs included in the
Ballad and develop them to their legitimate conclusions, and I had
all the Chief-moods of this poem, quite of themselves, in definite
thematic shapes before me. I should have had stubbornly to follow
the example of the self-willed opera-composer, had I chosen to
invent a fresh motiv for each recurrence of one and the same mood
in different scenes; a course whereto I naturally did not feel the
smallest inclination, since I had only in my mind the most
intelligible portrayal of the subject-matter, and not a mere
conglomerate of operatic numbers.</p>

<p><hi>Tannhäuser</hi> I treated in a similar
fashion, and finally <hi>Lohengrin</hi>; only that I here had not a
finished musical piece before me in advance, such as that Ballad,
but from the aspect of the scenes and their organic growth out of
one another I first created the picture itself on which the
thematic rays should all converge, and then let them fall in
changeful play <hi>wherever</hi> necessary for the understanding of
the main situations. Moreover my treatment gained a more definite
artistic form, especially in <hi>Lohengrin</hi>, through a continual
re-modelling of the thematic material to fit the character of the
passing situation; and thus the music won a greater variety of
appearance than was the case, for instance, in the <hi>Flying
Dutchman</hi>, where the reappearance
<pb id="pag371" n="371"/>
of a Theme had often the mere
character of an absolute Reminiscence—a device that had
already been employed, before myself, by other
composers.—</p>

<milestone unit="section"/>

<p>I have still to indicate the influence of my
general poetic method upon the shaping of my Themes themselves,
upon <hi>the Melody</hi>.</p>

<milestone unit="section"/>

<p>From the 'absolute-music' period of my youth, I
recall that I had often posed myself the question: How must I set
about, to invent thoroughly original Melodies, which should bear a
stamp peculiar to myself? The more I approached the period when I
based my musical construction upon the poetic Stuff the more
completely vanished this anxiety for a special style of melody,
until at last I lost it altogether. In my earlier operas I was
purely governed by traditional or modern Melody, whose character I
imitated and, from the solicitude just mentioned, merely sought to
trick with rhythmic and harmonic artifices, and thus to model in a
fashion of my own. I had always, however, a greater leaning to
broad and long-spun melodies than to the short, broken and
contrapuntal <hi>melismus</hi> proper to Instrumental Chamber-music:
in my <hi>Liebesverbot</hi>, indeed, I had openly thrown myself into
the arms of the modern Italian <hi>cantilena</hi>. In <hi>Rienzi</hi>,
wherever the Stuff itself did not already begin to govern my
invention, I was governed by the Franco-Italian Melismus,
especially in the form in which it appealed to me from
<hi>Spontini's</hi> operas. But the Operatic Melody, as stamped upon
the modern ear, lost more and more its influence over me, and at
last entirely, when I took in hand the <hi>Flying Dutchman</hi>.</p>

<p>While the putting-off of that outer influence
followed chiefly from the nature of the general course I opened
with this work, on the other hand I derived a reimbursement for my
melody from the spirit of the Folk-song, to which I there
approached. Already in that Ballad, I was governed by an
instinctive feeling (<hi>unwillkürliches Innehaben</hi>) of the
peculiarities of national Folk-melismus; yet
<pb id="pag372" n="372"/>
more decisively in the
Spinning-Chorus, and most of all in the Sailors' Song.</p>

<p>That which most palpably distinguishes the
Folk-melody from the modern Italian melismus, is principally its
sharp and lively <hi>rhythm</hi>, a family feature from the
Folk-dance. Our <hi>absolute</hi> melody loses all popular
intelligibility, in exact measure as it departs from this rhythmic
quality; and, seeing that the history of modern operatic music is
nothing else than that of Absolute Melody,
<note id="rn47" corresp="n47" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
it seems easy to explain why the newer, especially the French
composers and their imitators, have been compelled to turn back to
the sheer Dance-melody, and now-a-days the <hi>contredanse</hi>, with
its derivatives, inspires the whole of modern Opera-melody. For
myself, however, I had now no more to do with <hi>operatic
melodies</hi>, but with the most fitting vehicle for my subject of
portrayal. In the <hi>Flying Dutchman</hi>, therefore, I touched
indeed the rhythmic melody of the Folk, but only where the Stuff
itself brought me at all into contact with the Folk-element, here
taking more or less a National form. Wherever I had to give
utterance to the emotions of my dramatis personae, as shown by them
in feeling discourse, I was forced to entirely abstain from this
rhythmic melody of the Folk: or rather, it could not so much as
occur to me, to employ that method of expression; nay, here the
dialogue itself, conformably to the emotional contents, was to be
rendered in such a fashion that, <hi>not the melodic Expression, per
se, but the expressed Emotion</hi> should rouse the interest of the
hearer. The melody must therefore spring, quite of itself, from out
the verse; in itself, as sheer melody, it could not be permitted to
attract attention, but only in so far as it was the most expressive
vehicle for an emotion already plainly outlined in the words. With
this strict (<hi>nothwendig</hi>) conception of the melodic element,
I now completely left the usual operatic mode of composition;
inasmuch as I no longer tried intentionally for customary melody,
or, in a sense, for Melody at all, but absolutely <hi>let it take
its rise</hi> from feeling utterance of the words.</p>

<pb id="pag373" n="373"/>

<p>How very gradually this came about, however, as
waned the influence of accustomed operatic melody, will be obvious
from a consideration of my music to the <hi>Flying Dutchman.</hi>
Here I was still so governed by the wonted Melismus, that I even
retained the Cadenza, here and there, in all its nakedness; and to
any one who, on the other hand, must admit that with this <hi>Flying
Dutchman</hi> I commenced my new departure in the matter of melody,
this may serve as proof with how little premeditation I swerved
into that path.—In the further evolution of my melody,
however un-deliberately I followed it in <hi>Tannhäuser</hi> and
<hi>Lohengrin,</hi> at all events I freed myself more and more
definitely from that influence, and that in exact measure as the
Emotion expressed <hi>in the verbal phrase (Sprachvers)</hi> alone
dictated to me its mode of enhancement by musical expression;
nevertheless, here also, and markedly in <hi>Tannhäuser</hi>, a
preoccupation with melodic Form, i.e., the felt necessity of aiming
at a <hi>strictly melodic</hi> garment for my dialogue, is still
distinctly visible. It is clear to me <hi>now</hi>, that this aim was
still thrust upon me by an <hi>imperfection in our modern verse</hi>,
in which I could find no <hi>sensible</hi> trace of natural melodic
source, or standard of musical expression.</p>

<p>Upon the nature of Modern Verse I have spoken at
length, in Part III. of <hi>Opera and Drama</hi>; here, therefore, I
shall only touch upon it in so far as concerns its utter lack of
<hi>genuine Rhythm</hi>. The rhythm of Modern Verse is a mere
<hi>indoctrination</hi>; and no one could feel this more plainly,
than that composer who fain would take from such verse alone the
matter wherewithal to build his melody. In face of this Verse, I
saw myself compelled either to dispense with melodic rhythm
altogether, or, so soon as from the standpoint of sheer Music I
felt a need thereof, to borrow wilfully the rhythmic structure of
my melody from just that of absolute Opera-melody, and often
artificially to bolster it upon the verse. Thus, whenever the
expression of the poetry so gained the upper hand, that I could
only justify the melody to my Feeling by appeal thereto, this
<pb id="pag374" n="374"/>
melody must needs lose almost all rhythmic character, if it were
not to bear a forced relation to the verse; and in treating it so,
I was infinitely more conscientious and true to my purpose, than
when contrariwise I sought to enliven my melody by a capricious
rhythm.</p>

<p>I was hereby brought into the most intimate, and
eventually fruitful concernment with Verse and <hi>Speech</hi>,
wherefrom alone a sound Dramatic melody can gain its vindication.
My melody's loss in rhythmic definition, or better:
<hi>strikingness</hi>, I now made good by a <hi>harmonic</hi> livening
of the expression, such as only a man in <hi>my</hi> situation
towards melody could feel a need of. Whereas modern opera-composers
had merely sought to make the wonted Opera-melody, in its final
utter pauperism and stereotyped immutability, just new and piquant
by far-fetched artifices, 
<note id="rn48" corresp="n48" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
the harmonic suppleness (<hi>Beweglichkeit</hi>) that I gave my
melody had its mainspring in the feeling of a quite other need. I
had now completely given up Traditional Melody, with its want of
any prop, or vindication of its rhythmic structure, in the spoken
text; in place of that <hi>false</hi> rhythmic garb, I gave my melody
a harmonic characterisation, which, with its determinant effect
upon the sense of hearing, made it the answering expression of each
emotion pictured in the verse. Further, I heightened the
individuality of this expression by a more and more symbolic
treatment of the <hi>instrumental orchestra</hi>, to which latter I
assigned the special office of making plain the harmonic
'motivation' of the melody. This method of procedure, at bottom
directed to <hi>dramatic</hi> melody alone, I followed with the most
decision in my <hi>Lohengrin</hi>, in which I have thus pursued to
its necessary consequences the course struck-out in the <hi>Flying
Dutchman</hi>.—One thing alone remained to be discovered, in
this quest for artistic Form: namely, a new <hi>rhythmical</hi>
enlivenment of the melody, to be won from its justification <hi>by
the verse</hi>, by the <hi>speech</hi> itself. This also, I was to attain;
<pb id="pag375" n="375"/>
and that by no turning back upon my road, but by
logical pursuit of a course whose idiosyncrasy consisted herein:
that I derived my artistic bent, not from the <hi>Form</hi>—as
almost all our modern artists have—but from the poetic
<hi>Stuff</hi>.—</p>

<milestone unit="section"/>

<p>When I sketched my "<hi>Siegfried</hi>"—for
the moment leaving altogether out of count its form of musical
completion—I felt the impossibility, or at least the utter
unsuitability, of carrying-out that poem in modern verse. With the
conception of "Siegfried," I had pressed forward to where I saw
before me the Human Being in the most natural and blithest fulness
of his physical life. No historic garment more, confined his limbs;
no outwardly-imposed relation hemmed his movements, which,
springing from, the inner fount of Joy-in-life, so bore themselves
in face of all encounter, that error and bewilderment, though
nurtured on the wildest play of passions, might heap themselves
around until they threatened to destroy him, without the hero
checking for a moment, even in the face of death, the welling
outflow of that inner fount; or ever holding anything the rightful
master of himself and his own movements, but alone the natural
outstreaming of his restless fount of Life. It was " Elsa" who had
taught me to unearth this man: to me, he was the male-embodied
spirit of perennial and sole creative Instinct
(<hi>Unwillkür</hi>), of the doer of true Deeds, of
<hi>Manhood</hi> in the utmost fulness of its inborn strength and
proved loveworthiness. Here, in the promptings of this Man, Love's
brooding Wish had no more place; but bodily lived it there, swelled
every vein, and stirred each muscle of the gladsome being, to
all-enthralling practice of its essence.</p>

<p>Just so as this Human Being moved, must his
spoken utterance need to be. Here sufficed no more the merely
<hi>thought-out</hi> verse, with its hazy, limbless body; the
fantastic cheat of terminal Rhyme could no longer throw its cloak
of seeming flesh above the total lack of living bony framework,
above the viscid cartilage, here stretched capriciously
<pb id="pag376" n="376"/>
and there compressed, that verse's hulk still holds within as makeshift I
must have straightway let my "Siegfried" go, could I have dressed
it only in such verse. Thus I must needs bethink me of a
Speech-melody quite other. And yet, in truth, I had not to bethink,
but merely to resolve me; for at the primal mythic spring where I
had found the fair young Siegfried-man, I also lit, led by his
hand, upon the physically-perfect mode of utterance wherein alone
that man could speak his feelings. This was the <hi>alliterative</hi>
verse, bending itself in natural and lively rhythm to the actual
accents of our speech, yielding itself so readily to every shade of
manifold expression,—that <hi>Stabreim</hi>
<note id="rn49" corresp="n49" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
which the Folk itself once sang, when <hi>it</hi> was still both Poet
and Myth-Maker.
<note id="rn50" corresp="n50" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
</p>

<p>Upon the nature of this verse, how it wins its
shape from the deep begetting force of <hi>Speech</hi> itself, and
how it pours that force again into the female element of Music, to
bring forth there the perfect melody of Rhythmic Tone, I have
likewise dwelt in the said Part III. of <hi>Opera and Drama</hi>;
and, now that I have shown the discovery of this form-al
innovation, too, as being a necessary consequence of my artistic
labours, I might perhaps consider the general aim of this
Communication reached. Since I cannot as yet lay "Siegfried's
Death" before the public, all further reference thereto must needs
to me seem objectless, or at any rate
<pb id="pag377" n="377"/>
exposed to every kind of
mis-understanding. Only in so far as an allusion to my remaining
poetic drafts, and the life-moods whence they sprang, seems still
to me of some importance for the explanation or vindication of my
since-published theoretic writings, do I hold it of any use to
continue this narration.</p>

<p>This I shall do—in brief—all the
more gladly, since in this Communication, besides the aim I
mentioned at the beginning, I have another and a special one:
namely, to make my friends so far acquainted with the course of my
development right down to the present day, that whenever I shall
next come openly before them with a new dramatic work, I may hope
to then address myself to folk entirely familiar. For sortie time
past, I have been utterly cut off from this direct artistic
intercourse; I could only address my friends from time to time, and
now again, as Essayist. Of the pain this kind of address inflicts
upon me, I scarcely need assure those who know me as Artist; they
will recognise it in the very style of my literary works, where I
must torture myself with circumstantial details to express That
which I might show so tersely, easily and trimly in the work of art
itself, were only its fitting physical presentment so ready to my
hand as is its technical description with the pen on paper. But so
hateful to me is the scribblers' art, and the Want that has driven
me into their ranks, that I fain would make this Communication my
last literary appearance before my friends: wherefore I here take
stock of all that, under the prevailing difficulties of my lot, I
still think necessary to say, in order to apprise them definitely
what they have to expect from my newest dramatic work whenever it
shall be set before them in performance; for <hi>that</hi> I wish to
then induct to life <hi>without</hi> a Preface.
<note id="rn51" corresp="n51" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
</p>

<milestone unit="section"/>

<p>I therefore proceed.—</p>

<milestone unit="section"/>

<p>My poem of "Siegfried's Death" I had sketched and
<pb id="pag378" n="378"/>
executed solely to satisfy my inner promptings, and nowise with
the thought of a production on our theatric boards, or with the
dramatic means to hand; which I could not but hold in every respect
unsuitable thereto. Only quite recently has the hope been roused in
me, that, under certain favouring conditions, and in due course of
time, I may be able to bring this drama before the public; however,
only after those preparations needful to guarantee as far as
possible an effective production, shall have come to a happy issue.
This is also the reason why I still keep back the poem.—In
those days, in the autumn of 1848, I never dreamt of the
possibility of a performance of "Siegfried's Death;" but merely
regarded its technical completion in verse, and some fugitive
attempts at its musical composition, as an inner gratification,
which I bestowed upon myself at that time of disgust at public
affairs, and withdrawal from their contact.—This sad and
solitary situation as man and artist, however, could not but be
hereby forced all the more painfully upon my consciousness; and the
gnawing torments of that pain I could only quiet by giving rein to
my restless impulse towards fresh schemes. I was burning to write
Something that should take the message of my tortured brain, and
speak it in a fashion to be understood by present life. Just as
with my Siegfried," the force of my desire had borne me to the
fount of the Eternal Human: so now, when I found this desire cut
off by Modern Life from all appeasement, and saw afresh that the
sole redemption lay in flight from out this life, in casting-off
its claims on me by self-destruction, did I come to the fount of
every modern rendering of such a situation—to <hi>Jesus of
Nazareth</hi> the Man.</p>

<p>While pondering on the wondrous apparition of
this Jesus, I arrived at a judgment particularly resultful for the
Artist, inasmuch as I distinguished between the symbolical Christ
and <hi>Him</hi> who, thought-of as existing at a certain time and
amid definite surroundings, presents so easily embraced an image to
our hearts and minds. When I considered the epoch and the general
life-conditions in
<pb id="pag379" n="379"/>
which so loving and so love-athirst a soul, as
that of Jesus, unfolded itself, nothing seemed to me more natural
than that this <hi>solitary</hi> One—who, fronted with a
materialism (<hi>Sinnlichkeit</hi>) so honourless, so hollow, and so
pitiful as that of the Roman world, and still more of the world
subjected to the Roman's, could not demolish it and build upon its
wrack an order answering to his soul's desire—should
straightway long from out that world, from out the wider world at
large, towards a better land Beyond,—toward Death. Since I
saw the modern world of nowadays a prey to worthlessness akin to
that which then surrounded Jesus, so did I now recognise this
longing, in correspondence with the characteristics of our present
state of things, as in truth deep-rooted in man's sentient nature,
which yearns from out an evil and dishonoured world-of-sense
(<hi>Sinnlichkeit</hi>) towards a nobler reality
<note id="rn52" corresp="n52" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
that shall answer to his nature purified. Here Death is but the
moment of despair; it is the act of demolition that we discharge
upon ourselves, since—as solitary units—we can not
discharge it on the evil order of the tyrant world. But the actual
destruction of the outer, visible bonds of that honourless
materialism, is the duty which devolves on <hi>us</hi>, as the
healthy proclamation of a stress turned heretofore toward
self-destruction.—So the thought attracted me, to present
the nature of Jesus—such as it has gained a meaning for
<hi>our</hi>, for the consciousness directed to the stir of
Life—in such a fashion that his self-offering should be the
but imperfect utterance of that human instinct which drives the
individual into revolt against a loveless whole, into a revolt
which the altogether Isolated can certainly
<pb id="pag380" n="380"/>
only seal by
self-destruction; but yet which in this very self-destruction
proclaims its own true nature, in that it was not directed to the
personal death, but to a disowning of the lovelessness around
(<hi>der lieblosen Allgemeinheit</hi>).
<note id="rn53" corresp="n53" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
</p>

<p>In this sense did I seek to vent my rebellious
feelings in the sketch of a drama, "<hi>Jesus of Nazareth</hi>." Two
overpowering objections, however, held me back from filling up the
preliminary draft: the one arose from the contradictory nature of
the subject-matter, in the guise in which it lies before us; the
other, from the recognised impossibility of bringing this work,
either, to a public hearing. The story, such as it has stamped
itself once and for all on the mind of the Folk, through religious
dogma and popular conception, must be done too grievous a violence,
if I fain would give therein my modern reading of its nature; its
popular features must be touched, and altered with a deliberation
more philosophic than artistic, in order to insensibly withdraw
them from the customary point of view and show them in the light
that I had seen them in. Now, even if I had been able to overcome
<hi>this</hi>, yet I could not shut my eyes to the fact, that the
only thing which could give this subject the meaning I intended,
was just our modern life-conditions; and that this meaning could
only have a due effect, provided it were set <hi>precisely now</hi>
before the Folk, and not <hi>hereafter</hi>, when these same
conditions should have been demolished by that very Revolution
which at like time—on the shore beyond —should open out
the only possibility of publicly producing to the Folk this
drama.</p>

<p>For I had already so far come to an agreement
with myself, concerning the character of the movement around me,
that I deemed we must either remain completely rooted in the Old,
or completely bring the New to burst its swathings. A clear glance
upon the outer world, freed from all illusions, taught me
conclusively that I must altogether give up my <hi>Jesus of
Nazareth</hi>. This glance, which, from
<pb id="pag381" n="381"/>
within my brooding solitude,
I cast upon the political world outside, showed me now the near
approaching catastrophe, that must inevitably engulf each man who
was in earnest for a fundamental change of existing bad conditions,
if, even amid such bad conditions, he loved his own existence above
all else. In face of the open and shamelessly outspoken insolence
of the outlived Old, which would fain maintain itself at any price,
my earlier plans, such as that for a Stage reform, could not but
now take for me a childish light. I gave them up, like all besides
that had filled me with hope, and thus deceived me as to the true
state of affairs. With a foreboding of the unavoidable decisions
which, do what I might, must soon confront me also, if only I
remained true to my nature and my opinions, I now shunned all
drafting of artistic projects; every stroke of the pen that I might
have driven, seemed laughable to me now, when I could no longer
belie or numb myself with any artistic aspiration. Of a morning I
left my chamber with its empty writing-table, and wandered alone in
the open, to sun myself in the waking Spring; and midst its waxing
warmth to cast aside all self-seeking wishes that might still have
enchained me, with their cheating visions, to a world of conditions
from which all my longing was tumultuously urging me forth.</p>

<p>Thus did the Dresden rising come upon me; a
rising which I, with many others, regarded as the beginning of a
general upheaval in Germany. After what I have said, who can be so
intentionally blind as not to see that I had <hi>there</hi> no longer
any choice, where I could only now determinately turn my back upon
a world to which, in my inmost nature, I had long since ceased to
belong?—</p>

<milestone unit="section"/>

<p>With nothing can I compare the feeling of
wellbeing that invaded me—after the first painful impressions
had been effaced—when I felt myself free: free from the world
of torturing and never-granted wishes, free from the relations in
which those wishes had been my sole, my heart-consuming sustenance!
When I, the outlawed and proscribed,
<pb id="pag382" n="382"/>
was bound no more to any lie
of any kind; when I had cast behind me every wish and every hope
from this now triumphant world, and with unrestrained downrightness
could cry aloud and open to it, that I, the Artist, despised it,
this world of canting care for Art and Culture, from the bottom of
my heart; when I could tell it that in all its life-veins there
flowed no single drop of true artistic blood, that it could not
draw one breath of human sentiment, breathe out one whiff of human
beauty:—then did I, for the first time in my life, feel free
from crown to sole, feel hale and blithe in every limb, though I
did not even know what hidingplace the morrow might afford me, in
which to dare respire the air of heaven.</p>

<milestone unit="section"/>

<p>Like a dark shadow from a long done with,
hideous past, did <hi>Paris</hi> once more pass before me; that Paris
to which my steps were next guided by the well-meant advice of a
friend, who, in this instance, took more thought for my outward
fortune than my inward contentment; that Paris which now, on my
first re-survey of its mocking features, I put behind me like a
midnight spectre, as I fled panting to the fresh Swiss highlands,
to shun at least the pestilential breath of modern Babylon. Here,
in the shelter of swift-won sterling friends, I first gathered up
my strength to publicly protest against the momentary conquerors of
the Revolution, from whom I had to strip at least <hi>that</hi> title
of their rulership by which they styled themselves as <hi>Art's</hi>
defenders. Thus did I become once more a Writer, as heretofore in
Paris when I cast behind my wishes for Parisian fame, and took arms
against the formalism of its ruling art: but now I had to direct my
blows against this whole art-system, <hi>in its coherence with the
whole politico-social status of the modern world</hi>; and the
breath that I must draw herefor, had to be deeper in its
draught.</p>

<p>In a shorter essay,
<xref resp="wl" type="wlpr0059" targOrder="U" from="ROOT" to="DITTO"><hi>Art and the Revolution</hi></xref>,
I devoted myself to unmasking <hi>this coherence</hi>,
and did my best to snatch the name of Art from That
which nowadays, protected by such title, exploits the misery and
baseness of
<pb id="pag383" n="383"/>
our modern "Public." In a somewhat more detailed treatise, which
appeared under the name of
<xref resp="wl" type="wlpr0062" targOrder="U" from="ROOT" to="DITTO"><hi>The Art-work of the Future</hi></xref>,
I showed the fatal influence of that connexion upon the
character of Art herself, and how, in her egoistic parcelling into
the modern separate arts, she had become incapable of bringing
forth the genuine artwork—the only admissible, because the
only <hi>intelligible</hi> and alone capable of holding a purely
human content. In my latest literary work,
<xref resp="wl" type="wlpr0063" targOrder="U" from="ROOT" to="DITTO"><hi>Opera and Drama</hi></xref>,
I then showed, in a preciser handling of the sheer artistic aspect
of the matter, how <hi>Opera</hi> had been hitherto mistaken by
critics and artists for that artwork in which the seeds, nay even
the fruitage of the Artwork of the Future, as I conceived it, had
already come to light of day; and I proved that alone by a complete
reversal of the procedure hitherto adopted in Opera, could the
artistic Right be done, inasmuch as I based upon my own artistic
experiences my demonstration of the logical and only fit relation
between the Poet and Musician. With that work, and with the present
Communication, I now feel that I have done enough for the impulse
which lately made me take the Writer's pen; for I think I may
venture to say, that whoso does not even yet understand me, can
never in any circumstances understand me,—because he
<hi>will</hi> not.</p>

<p>During this literary period; however, I had
never bidden entire farewell to my artistic sketches. Though my
eyes were so far open to my general outlook, that I believed the
less in a possibility of <hi>now</hi> seeing one of my works
produced, as I myself, from personal conviction, had given up all
hope of, and therefore all attempt at, successful dealings of any
kind with our theatres; and though I thus no longer cherished
inwardly the intention, but rather the utmost disinclination, to
make possible the Impossible by fresh endeavours: yet at first
there was outward motive in plenty, to place myself at least in a
remoter contact with our public art. I had gone completely helpless
into exile; and a possible success in Paris as Opera-composer must
needs appear to my friends, and even to myself eventually,
<pb id="pag384" n="384"/>
the only promise of a lasting guarantee of my existence. Never, in my inner
heart, could I conceive the possibility of such a success; and that
the less, as even the bare thought of a concernment with Parisian
operatic ways revolted me to the core: yet, in face of outer want,
and since even my most devoted friends could not view my repugnance
to this plan as altogether justified, I at last resigned myself to
a final and exhausting war against my nature. However, even here I
refused to budge one inch from my path; and I sketched for my
Parisian opera-poet the draft for a "<hi>Wieland the Smith</hi>," on
lines which my friends already know from the close of <hi>The
Art-work of the Future</hi>.
<note id="rn54" corresp="n54" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
</p>

<p>So once again I went to Paris. This was, and
will be, the last time that I have ever permitted outward
considerations to coerce my inner nature. That coercion weighed so
terribly and crushingly upon me, that this while, through the mere
burden of its strain, I came nigh to my undoing: an illness,
racking all my nerves, attacked me so severely on my arrival in
Paris, that even for this cause alone, I was obliged to abandon
every step required by my undertaking. My bodily and mental pain
grew soon so insupportable, that, driven by one of Life's blind
instincts, I was about to seek relief in desperate measures, to
break with everything that yet was friendly toward me, to rush out
into God knows what wild unknown world. But in this extremity, at
which I had arrived, I was grasped by truest friends; with a hand
of infinitely tender love, they led my footsteps back. Thanks be to
those who know alone of whom I speak!</p>

<milestone unit="section"/>

<p>Yes! I now learnt to know the fullest, noblest,
fairest love, the only genuine love; which sets up no conditions,
but takes its object altogether as it is, and as it cannot else be,
of its very nature. <hi>It</hi> has held me, too, to art!</p>

<pb id="pag385" n="385"/>

<p>Returned, I took up afresh with the thought of
completely carrying out the music for "<hi>Siegfried's Death</hi>."
Yet still there lurked a half despair in this resolve; for I knew
that this music, now, could only have a paper life. That unbearable
conviction lamed anew my purpose; and feeling that, in all my
endeavours hitherto, I had for the most part been so utterly
misunderstood,
<note id="rn55" corresp="n55" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
I reached back to pen and ink, and wrote my "<hi>Opera and
Drama</hi>."—Again, then, was I completely disheartened for the
embracing of any artistic project: fresh-gotten proofs of the
impossibility of my now addressing any artistic message to the
understanding of the public, brought in their train an access of
distaste for fresh dramatic labours; and I believed that I must
openly avow the End of all my art-creation.—Then rose <hi>one
Friend</hi>, and lifted me from out my deepest discontent. Through
the most searching and overpowering proof that I did not stand
alone, nay, that I was profoundly understood—even by those
who else had almost stood the farthest from me—, did he make
me anew, and now entirely, an Artist. This wondrous Friend of mine
is</p>

<quote>FRANZ LISZT.—</quote>

<p>I here must touch a little closer on the character of this
friendship, since to many it may seem a paradox. I have been
unfortunate enough to earn the reputation of being not only on many
sides forbidding (<hi>abstossend</hi>), but right-down malignant
(<hi>feindselig</hi>); so that the account of an affectionate
relationship becomes, in a certain sense, a pressing need to
me.—</p>

<p>I met <hi>Liszt</hi>, for the first time in my life, during my
<pb id="pag386" n="386"/>
earliest stay in Paris; indeed, not until the second period of that
stay, and at a time when—humiliated and disgusted—I had
given up every hope, nay, all mind for a Paris success, and was
involved in that inward rebellion against this art-world which I
have characterised above. In this encounter, Liszt came before me
as the completest antithesis of my nature and my lot. In that world
which I had longed to tread with lustre, when. I yearned from petty
things to grand, Liszt had unconsciously grown up from tenderest
youth, to be its wonder and its charm at a time when I, already so
far repulsed by the lovelessness and coldness of its contact, could
recognise its void and nullity with all the bitterness of a
disillusioned man. Thus Liszt was more to me than a mere object of
my jealousy. I had no opportunity to make him know me in myself and
doings: superficial, therefore, as was the only knowledge he could
gain of me, equally so was the manner of our interview; and while
this was quite explicable on his part—to wit, from a man who
was daily thronged by the most kaleidoscopic of affairs—, I,
on the other hand, was just then not in the mood to seek quietly
and fairly for the simplest explanation of a behaviour which,
friendly and obliging in itself, was of all others the kind to
ruffle <hi>me.</hi> Beyond that first time, I visited Liszt no more;
and—in like manner without my knowing <hi>him</hi>, nay with an
utter disinclination on <hi>my</hi> side, to even the
attempt—he remained for me one of those phenomena that one
considers foreign and hostile to one's nature.</p>

<p>What I repeatedly expressed to others, in this
continued mood, came later to the ears of Liszt, and indeed at the
time when I had so suddenly attracted notice by the Dresden
production of my <hi>Rienzi</hi>. He was concerned at having been so
hastily misunderstood, as he clearly saw from those expressions, by
a man whose acquaintance he had scarcely made, and whom to know
seemed now not quite unworth the while.—When I now think back
to it, there is to me something exceedingly touching in the
strenuous attempts, renewed with a positive patience, with
<pb id="pag387" n="387"/>
which Liszt troubled himself in order to bring me to another opinion of
him. As yet he had not heard a note of my works, and therefore
there could be no question of any artistic sympathy, in his
endeavour to come into closer contact with me. No, it was simply
the purely-human wish to put an end to any chance-arisen discord in
his relations with another man; coupled, perhaps, with an
infinitely tender misgiving that he might, after all, have really
wounded me. Whoso in all our social relations, and especially in
the bearing of modern artists to one another, knows the appalling
self-seeking and the loveless disregard of others' feelings, as
manifested in such intercourse, must be filled with more than
astonishment, with the highest admiration, when he hears of
personal advances such as those thrust on me by that extraordinary
man.</p>

<p>But I was not then in a position to feel as yet
the uncommon charm and fascination of these tokens of Liszt's
pre-eminently lovable and loving nature: I at first regarded his
overtures with a lingering tinge of wonder, to which, doubter that
I was, I felt often inclined to give an almost trivial
food.—Liszt, however, had attended a performance of
<hi>Rienzi</hi>, which he wellnigh had to extort; and from all the
ends of the earth, whithersoever his virtuoso-tour had borne him, I
received witness, now from this person, and now from that, of
Liszt's restless ardour to impart to others the delight he had
experienced in my music, and thus—as I almost prefer to
believe—quite unintentionally to set on foot a crusade for
me. This happened at a time when, on the other side, it waxed more
and more undoubtable to me, that I and my dramatic works would
remain without a ghost of external success. But in direct
proportion as this utter failure grew more certain, and at the last
quite obvious, did Liszt succeed in his personal efforts to found a
fostering refuge for my art. He, the favoured guest of Europe's
stateliest cities, gave up his royal progresses, and, settling down
in modest little Weimar, took up the Musical Conductor's
bâton. There did I last meet him, when—uncertain,
still, as to the actual nature of
<pb id="pag388" n="388"/>
the prosecution hanging over
me—I halted for a few days on Thuringian soil, in my at last
necessitated flight from Germany. On the very day on which I
received information that made it more and more indubitable, and at
last quite positive, that my person was exposed to the most serious
peril, I heard Liszt conduct a rehearsal of my
<hi>Tannhäuser</hi>. I was astounded to recognise in him my
second self: what I had felt when I conceived this music, he felt
when he performed it; what I had wished to say when I wrote down
the notes, he said when he made them sound. Miraculous! Through the
Love of this rarest of all Friends, and at the moment when I became
a <hi>homeless</hi> man, I won the true, long yearned for, ever
sought amiss, ne'er happed-on <hi>habitation for my art</hi>. Whilst
I was banned to wandering afar, the great world-wanderer had cast
his anchor on a little spot of earth, to turn it into Home for me.
Caring for me everywhere and everywhen, helping ever swiftly and
decisively where help was needed, with heart wide opened to my
every wish, with love the most devoted for my whole
being,—did Liszt become what I had never found before, and in
a measure whose fulness we can only then conceive, when it actually
surrounds us with its own full compass.—</p>

<p>At the end of my latest stay in Paris, as I lay
ill and wretched, gazing brooding into space, my eye fell on the
score of my already almost quite forgotten <hi>Lohengrin</hi>. It
filled me with a sudden grief, to think that these notes should
never ring from off the death-wan paper. Two words I wrote to
Liszt. His answer was none other than an announcement of
preparations the most sumptuous—for the modest means of
Weimar—for <hi>Lohengrin's</hi> production. What men and means
could do, was done, to bring the work to understanding there. The
only thing that—given the unavoidably halting nature of our
present Stage representations—can bring about a needful
understanding, the active, willing Fancy of the public, could not,
distracted by our modern wont, assert itself at once in helpful
strength: mistake and misconception blocked the
<pb id="pag389" n="389"/>
path of hardly-strived success. What was there to do, to make good the
lack, to help on every side to comprehension, and therewith to
success? Liszt swiftly saw and <hi>did</hi> it: he laid before the
public his personal views and feeling of the work, in a fashion
unapproached before for convincing eloquence and potent charm.
Success rewarded him; and, crowned with this success, he ran to
meet me with the cry: <hi>See! Thus far have we brought it. Do thou
create for us anew a work, that we may bring it farther yet!</hi></p>

<p>In effect, it was this summons and this
challenge, that woke in me the liveliest resolve to set myself to
fresh artistic labour. I sketched a poem, and finished it in flying
haste; my hand was already laid to its musical composition. For the
production, to be promptly set on foot, I had only <hi>Liszt</hi> in
view, together with those of my <hi>friends</hi> whom, after my late
experiences, I have learnt to group under the local concept:
<hi>Weimar</hi>.—If, then, I have quite recently been forced to
change this resolution, in some very essential points, so that in
truth it can no longer be carried out in the form in which it had
already been publicly announced: the ground hereof lies chiefly in
the <hi>character of the poetic Stuff</hi> itself, as to whose only
fitting mode of exposition I have but now at last become thoroughly
settled in my mind. I think it not unweighty to give my friends, in
brief and in conclusion, a communication of my views hereon.</p>

<p>When, at every attempt to take it up in earnest,
I was forced to look upon the composition of my "<hi>Siegfried's
Death</hi>" as aimless and impossible, provided I held to my
definite intention of immediately producing it upon the stage: I
was weighted not only by my general knowledge of our present
opera-singers' inability to fulfil a task such as I was setting
before them in this drama, but in particular by the fear that my
poetic purpose (<hi>dichterische Absicht</hi>)—as
such—could not be conveyed in all its bearings to the only
organ at which I aimed, namely, the Feeling's-understanding,
<pb id="pag390" n="390"/>
either in the case of our modern, or of any Public whatsoever. To begin
with, I had set forth this wide-ranging purpose in a sketch of the
Nibelungen-mythos, such as it had become my own poetic property.
"<hi>Siegfried's Death</hi>" was, as I now recognise, only the first
attempt to bring a most important feature of this myth to dramatic
portrayal; in that drama I should have had, involuntarily, to tax
myself to <hi>suggest</hi> a host of huge connexions
(<hi>Beziehungen</hi>), in order to present a notion of the given
feature in its strongest meaning. But these <hi>suggestions</hi>,
naturally, could only be inlaid in <hi>epic</hi> form into the drama;
and here was the point that filled me with misgiving as to the
efficacy of my drama, in its proper sense of a scenic exposition.
Tortured by this feeling, I fell upon the plan of carrying out as
an independent drama a most attractive portion of the mythos, which
in "<hi>Siegfried's Death</hi>" could only have been given in
narrative fashion. Yet here again, it was the Stuff itself that so
urged me to its dramatic moulding, that it only further needed
Liszt's appeal, to call into being, with the swiftness of a
lightning-flash, the "<hi>Young Siegfried</hi>," the Winner of the
Hoard and Waker of Brünnhilde.</p>

<p>Again, however, I had to go through the same
experience with this "<hi>Junge Siegfried</hi>" that had earlier been
brought me in the train of "<hi>Siegfried's Tod</hi>." The richer and
completer the means of imparting my purpose, that it offered me,
all the more forcibly must I feel that, even with these two dramas,
my myth had not as yet entirely passed over into the sensible
reality of Drama; but that Connexions of the most vital importance
had been left un realised, and relegated to the reflective and
co-ordinating powers of the beholder. That these Connexions,
however, in keeping with the unique character of genuine Mythos,
were of such a nature that they could proclaim themselves alone
<hi>in actual physical situations</hi> (Handlungsmomenten), and thus
in 'moments' which can only be intelligibly displayed <hi>in
Drama</hi>,—this quality it was, that, so soon as
<pb id="pag391" n="391"/>
ever I made its glad discovery, led me to find at last the final
fitting form for the conveyance of my comprehensive purpose.</p>

<p>With the framework of this form I now may make
my Friends acquainted, as being the substance of the project to
which alone I shall address myself henceforward.</p>

<p>I propose to produce my myth <hi>in three complete dramas</hi>,
<note id="rn56" corresp="n56" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
preceded by a lengthy <hi>Prelude</hi> (Vorspiel). With these dramas,
however, although each is to constitute a self-included whole, I
have in mind no "Repertory-piece," in the modern theatrical sense;
but, for their performance, I shall abide by the following plan:—</p>

<p>At a specially-appointed Festival, I propose,
some future time, to produce those three Dramas with their Prelude,
<hi>in the course of three days and a fore-evening</hi>. The object
of this production I shall consider thoroughly attained, if I and
my artistic comrades, the actual performers, shall within these
four evenings succeed in <hi>artistically conveying my purpose to
the true Emotional</hi> (not the Critical) <hi>Understanding</hi> of
spectators who shall have gathered together expressly to learn it.
A further issue is as indifferent to me, as it cannot but seem
superfluous.—</p>

<p>From this plan for the <hi>representation</hi>,
every one of my Friends may now also deduce the nature of my plan
for the poetic and musical <hi>working-out</hi>; while every one who
approves thereof, will, <hi>for the nonce</hi>, be equally
unconcerned with myself as to the How and When of the public
realisation of this plan, since he will at least conceive one item,
namely that with <hi>this</hi> undertaking I have nothing more to do
with our Theatre of <hi>to-day</hi>. Then if my Friends take firmly
up this certainty into themselves, they surely will end by taking
also thought with me: <hi>How and under what circumstances</hi> a
plan, such as that just named, can finally
<pb id="pag392" n="392"/>
be carried out; and
thus, perhaps—will there also arise that help of theirs which
alone can bring this thing to pass.—</p>

<p>So now I give You time and ease to think it out:—for only
<hi>with my Work</hi>, will Ye see me again!</p>

<dateline>ZURICH, November 1851.</dateline>
</div> 
</body>

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

<note id="n01" resp="author" place="foot" corresp="rn01" anchored="yes">
<p>I must explain, once and for all, that whenever in the course of this
Communication I speak of "understanding me" or "not understanding
me," it is not as though I fancied myself a shade too lofty, too
deep-meaning, or too high-soaring; but I simply demand of whosoever
may desire to understand me, that he will look upon me no otherwise
than as I am, and in my communications upon Art will only regard as
essential precisely what, in accordance with my general aim and as
far as lay within my powers of exposition, has been put forth in
them by myself. R. WAGNER.—The latter portion of this
sentence is somewhat ambiguous in the German, running thus: "und in
meiner künstlerischen Mittheilungen genau eben nur Das als
wesentlich erkenne, was meiner Absicht und meinem
Darstellungsvermögen gemass in ihnen von mir kundgegeben
wurde." It will be seen that the expression "künstlerischen
Mittheilungen" admits of two interpretations, viz : either
"artistic communications,"—in other words, his
operas,—or "communications upon the subject of Art." After
some hesitation, I have chosen the latter, as it seems to me that
Wagner is here referring to the distortions of his views
promulgated by hostile critics—and nearly all his critics
were both crafty and malicious—e.g. Professor Bischoff and
his perversion of the title: "Artwork of the Future" into "Music of
the Future," together with the consequences he deduced from this
wilful misunderstanding of the author's aim.—TR.</p>
</note>

<note id="n02" resp="author" place="foot" corresp="rn02" anchored="yes">
<p>For the matter of that, they understand by the expression "Man," strictly
speaking, nothing but a "Subject" ("<hi>Unterthan</hi>"); and perhaps
also, in my particular case, one who has his own opinions and
follows them without regard of consequences.—R.WAGNER.—Considerable
light is thrown upon both these notes,
when we reflect that Wagner, at the period of writing, was in exile
for attempting to introduce ethical considerations into politics,
whilst actually—think on it!—a court-salaried Musical
conductor. As regards the present note, its second half
(<hi>i.e.</hi> the words following "Unterthan") does not appear in
the original edition, of the "Three Opera-Poems with a Preface;"
and it should be added that the opening line of the essay referred,
in that edition, to the necessity of publishing in self-defence the
opera-poems themselves—not merely, as now, the
"Communication."—TR.</p>
</note>

<note id="n03" resp="author" place="foot" corresp="rn03" anchored="yes">
<p>Thus, even now, our literary dilettantists know no more refreshing
entertainment for themselves and their aestheto-political public of
idling readers, than for ever and a day to jog round
<hi>Shakespeare</hi> with their writings. It never occurs to them for
a moment, that <hi>that</hi> Shakespeare whom they suck dry with
their critical sponges, is not worth a rushlight, and serves at
utmost as the sheet of foolscap for the exhibition of those proofs
of their intellectual poverty which they take such desperate pains
to air. The Shakespeare, who alone can be worth somewhat to us, is
the ever new-creating poet who, now and in all ages, is That which
Shakespeare once was to his age.—R. WAGNER.</p>
</note>

<note id="n04" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn04" anchored="yes">
<p>"Wie es bisher in Religion und Staat der Fall war, das Wesen der
Individualität in die Gattung setzen, folgerichtig es dieser
aufopfern."—In connection with
<xref resp="wl" type="wlpr0065" n="n3" targOrder="U" from="ROOT" to="DITTO">the footnote to
<hi>Art and Climate</hi>, page 260</xref>,
I would draw attention to page 552 of George Eliot's translation of
<xref resp="url" type="http://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/feuerbach/works/essence/index.htm" targOrder="U" from="ROOT" to="DITTO">
<hi>The Essence of Christianity</hi>
</xref>
(Ludwig Feuerbach) "All divine attributes are attributes of the species,
attributes which in the individual are limited, but the limits of
which are abolished in the essence of the species. My knowledge, my
will is limited; but my limit is not that of another man, to say
nothing of mankind." In the first chapter of Feuerbach's book we
also read, "Certainly the human individual—and herein
consists his distinction from the animal—can and must feel
himself confined by limits; but he can only become conscious of his
limits in that he takes the perfection, the infinitude of the
species as his 'object,' be it the object of his feeling, his
conscious experience, or his reflection. That he nevertheless
confounds <hi>his</hi> limits with the <hi>limits of the species</hi>,
rests upon the illusion whereby he <hi>directly</hi> identifies
himself with the species—an illusion which is intimately
bound up with the indolence, the vanity, and the self-seeking of
the individual."—TR.</p>
</note>

<note id="n05" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn05" anchored="yes">
<p>We have here another instance of the unconscious identity of Wagner's
thought with that of Schopenhauer, who has said in "<hi>Die Welt als
Wille und Vorstellung</hi>":—"It is as if, when genius
appears in an individual, a far greater measure of the power of
knowledge falls to his lot than is necessary for the service of an
individual will; and this superfluity of knowledge, being free, now
becomes <hi>subject</hi> purified from will, a clear mirror of the
inner nature of the world. This explains the activity, amounting
even to disquietude, of men of genius; for the present can seldom
satisfy them, because it does not fill their consciousness. This
gives them that longing for men of similar nature and of like
stature to whom they might communicate themselves."—TR.</p>
</note>

<note id="n06" resp="author" place="foot" corresp="rn06" anchored="yes">
<p>At this assertion, in his time, Professor Bischoff of Cologne waxed mighty
wrath; he considered it a most unbecoming suggestion to make to
himself and his friends.—R. WAGNER.—This sly little
sarcasm does not appear in the original edition. As to our author's
want of "education" (perhaps "bringing-up" would better express the
idea), the statement in the next sentence must not be taken too
literally; see the
"<xref resp="wl" type="wlpr0033" targOrder="U" from="ROOT" to="DITTO"><hi>Autobiographic Sketch</hi></xref>."—TR.</p>
</note>

<note id="n07" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn07" anchored="yes">
<p>The author of this libretto (or sketch for a libretto?) was Heinrich
Laube mentioned by Wagner on
<xref resp="wl" type="wlpr0033" n="pag9" targOrder="U" from="ROOT" to="DITTO">page 9</xref>
of the present volume.—TR.</p>
</note>

<note id="n08" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn08" anchored="yes">
<p>By an oversight, the title of this story was given by me, on
<xref resp="wl" type="wlpr0033" n="pag8" targOrder="U" from="ROOT" to="DITTO">page 8</xref>
(<hi>Autobiographic Sketch</hi>) in the German form, instead of in
the Italian; it should there read: "<hi>La Donna Serpente</hi>," in
place of "<hi>Die Frau als Schlange</hi>."—W. A. E.</p>
</note>

<note id="n09" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn09" anchored="yes">
<p>Note to the original edition:—"Whom people most unjustifiably take for a
<hi>mere</hi> imitator of Weber."</p>
</note>

<note id="n10" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn10" anchored="yes">
<p>Note to original edition.—"Delicious was the spirit of the
negotiations upon which I was compelled to enter with the then-time
Director of the Leipzig theatre, with a view to the production of
this opera. He declared that the Town Council would never grant
permission for the representation of such things, and that he, as a
father, would demolish all the principles in which he had brought
his daughter up, should he allow her to appear in such an
opera,—a condition upon which, for the rest, I by no means
insisted."</p>
</note>

<note id="n11" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn11" anchored="yes">
<p>Our author is here somewhat too hard upon himself, having apparently
forgotten the exact bearing of an article,
"<xref resp="wl" type="wlpr0002" n="pag8" targOrder="U" from="ROOT" to="DITTO"><hi>Pasticcio</hi></xref>,"
which he wrote at this period (1834) for the <hi>Neue Zeitschrift
für Musik</hi> (see No. XVI. of <hi>The Meister</hi>). That
article, though certainly advocating the Italian <hi>method</hi> of
singing (with reservations), by no means looks upon Opera with a
"frivolous" eye.—TR.</p>
</note>

<note id="n12" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn12" anchored="yes">
<p>For an attempt at elucidation of the hypothesis of a Fitzball origin of
Heine's version, see <hi>The Meister</hi>, No. XVII., Feb. 1892.—TR.</p>
</note>

<note id="n13" resp="author" place="foot" corresp="rn13" anchored="yes">
<p>That this Pantomime has had to be omitted from all the stage-performances of
<hi>Rienzi</hi>, has been a serious drawback to me; for the Ballet
that replaced it has obscured my nobler intentions, and turned this
scene into nothing more nor less than an ordinary operatic
spectacle.—R. WAGNER.</p>
</note>

<note id="n14" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn14" anchored="yes">
<p>In a letter to Ferd. Heine (<hi>Wagner's Letters to Uhlig</hi>
&amp;c.—H. Grevel &amp; Co.) dated Paris, Jan. 4th, 1842,
Wagner writes "If you or any other person exactly realised how my
whole situation, all my plans, and all my resolutions were
destroyed by such procrastination, some pity would he surely shown
me.... I am truly quite exhausted! Alas, I meet with so little
that is encouraging, that it would really be of untold import to me
if at least in Dresden things should go according to my wish."—TR.</p>
</note>

<note id="n15" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn15" anchored="yes">
<p>Note to the original edition (1852):—"Among these I may mention the
articles which I wrote for Lewald's magazine, <hi>Europa</hi>, under
the name of 'Freudenfeuer.'"—A translation of these articles
is now (1892) appearing in "<hi>The Meister</hi>," and will be
included, together with Wagner's other early writings, in the last
volume of this present series. —TR.</p>
</note>

<note id="n16" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn16" anchored="yes">
<p>In the revolt of Schleswig-Holstein against Denmark, General Willisen (a
Prussian officer who had been unsuccessful in his dealings with
Poland) was appointed Commander-in-Chief of the Schleswig-Holstein
army of volunteers, in April 1850. General Willisen's tactics were
so ill-conceived and disastrous, that he was removed from the
command in December of that year. Wagner, writing the
<hi>Mittheilung</hi>—at all events, its first
portion—only two or three months after these events, has
fixed upon this particular Commander as a current representative of
red-tape incapacity.—TR.</p>
</note>

<note id="n17" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn17" anchored="yes">
<p>Note to the original edition:—"A critic recently considered
this Devil and this Flying Dutchman as an orthodox
(<hi>dogmatischer</hi>) Devil and an orthodox ghost."</p>
</note>

<note id="n18" resp="author" place="foot" corresp="rn18" anchored="yes">
<p>See the
"<xref resp="wl" type="wlpr0033" targOrder="U" from="ROOT" to="DITTO">Autobiographic Sketch</xref>."—R. WAGNER</p>
</note>

<note id="n19" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn19" anchored="yes">
<p>As this passage is somewhat obscure, I append the original, in case that
any German scholar might prefer to substitute another rendering for
that which—after considerable pondering—I have here
adopted:—"und diess Element gewann hier den Ausdruck <hi>der
Heimath</hi>, d. h. des Umschlossenseins von einem innig vertrauten
Allgemeinen, aber einem Allgemeinen, das ich noch nicht kannte,
sondern eben erst mir ersehnte, nach der Verwirklichung des
Begriffes 'Heimath.'"—TR.</p>
</note>

<note id="n20" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn20" anchored="yes">
<p>This "Volksbuch," alluded to again a few lines lower down, can nowhere
he traced. For the arguments for and against its existence, I must
refer my readers to Dr. Wolfgang Golther's article in the
"<hi>Bayreuther Taschen-Kalender</hi>" for 1891, and to my article on
"The Tannhäuser Drama" in No. XIV. of <hi>The Meister</hi>."—W. A. E.</p>
</note>

<note id="n21" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn21" anchored="yes">
<p>One of the three divisions into which the German literature and mode of
speech are classified, in order of time, by literary historians;
that preceding it being called the <hi>Althochdeutsch</hi>, and that
following it the <hi>Neuhochdeutsch</hi>. According to
<hi>Brockhaus</hi>, the integral distinction between the <hi>M.h.d.</hi>
and its predecessor consisted in the weakening of the
inflectional vowels, after the root-syllable, into a colourless
'e.' The period lasted from the commencement of the 12th century to
about the middle of the 15th. As regards literature, however, the
epoch best known as the <hi>M.h.d.</hi> is that covered chiefly by
the 13th century and coincident with the glories of the
Hohenstaufian reign. Its treasures are represented by the ballads
of the strolling singers from among the Folk (<hi>Der Nibelunger
Not, Wolfdietrich</hi> &amp;c.), and by the lyrics and epics of the
courtly minstrels, among whom Wolfram von Eschenbach, Gottfried von
Strassburg, Walther von der Vogelweide, and Albrecht von Scharffenberg
are of special interest to the Wagnerian student.—TR.</p>
</note>

<note id="n22" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn22" anchored="yes">
<p>Gottlieb Reissiger, successor to Carl Maria von Weber in that post.—TR.</p>
</note>

<note id="n23" resp="author" place="foot" corresp="rn23" anchored="yes">
<p>This is the same text that—after my colleague had apparently found it
beneath his dignity to carry out a cast-off project of
mine—was set to music by <hi>Kittl</hi>, who could nowhere
obtain a libretto more to his mind than just this one. It was
brought to a hearing in Prag, after divers Royal-Imperial-Austrian
alterations, under the title of "<hi>die Franzosen vor Nizza</hi>"
(The French before Nice).—R. WAGNER.</p>
</note>

<note id="n24" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn24" anchored="yes">
<p>Joseph Tichatschek.—TR.</p>
</note>

<note id="n25" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn25" anchored="yes">
<p>The subordinate post of <hi>Musikdirector</hi>, i.e. conductor of the
playhouse-music and the weekday church-music, was that which was
first offered to Wagner, for a probationary year; this he declined,
in a manly letter addressed to v. Lüttichau, Jan. 5, 1843, three
days after the production of the <hi>Flying Dutchman</hi> (see R.
Prölss' "<hi>Beitrage zur Geschichte des Hoftheaters zu
Dresden</hi>"). Lüttichau thereupon offered him the
higher post, in which he shared with Reissiger the supreme control
of the Court orchestra.—TR.</p>
</note>

<note id="n26" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn26" anchored="yes">
<p>Lest any misconception should arise, it may be as well to state that the
unworthy object of Schröder-Devrient's affections was a
certain Saxon officer, von Döring by name, who first inspired
her with a passion for him in 1842, and for the next seven years
dragged her from one 'starring' engagement to another, only to
squander her money on the gaming-tables (vide—Glasenapp's
"<hi>Life of Wagner</hi>").—TR.</p>
</note>

<note id="n27" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn27" anchored="yes">
<p>One scarcely need emphasise this forecast of the
poem of <hi>Tristan und Isolde</hi>, except to compare it with
<xref resp="wl" type="wlpr0062" n="pag116" targOrder="U" from="ROOT" to="DITTO">page 116</xref>,
<hi>Art-work of the Future</hi>.—TR.</p>
</note>

<note id="n28" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn28" anchored="yes">
<p>We have no single word that will adequately replace the German
"<hi>Stimmung</hi>"; the meaning being partly "drift" or "tendency,"
and partly "mood," "impression," or "frame of mind." The term is
gradually finding its way into our conversation, wherefore I may
perhaps be forgiven for occasionally adopting it in
print.—TR.</p>
</note>

<note id="n29" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn29" anchored="yes">
<p>In view of the author's preface to the two volumes in which this
<hi>Communication</hi> was included (see 
<xref resp="wl" type="wlpr0059" n="pag25" targOrder="U" from="ROOT" to="DITTO">page 25</xref> of the present
volume), it would appear that the allusion is to Ludwig Feuerbach's
<xref resp="url" type="http://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/feuerbach/works/essence/index.htm" targOrder="U" from="ROOT" to="DITTO">
<hi>Essence of Christianity</hi></xref>.—TR.</p>
</note>

<note id="n30" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn30" anchored="yes">
<p>In view of the accusation so often levelled against Wagner, of
<hi>ingratitude</hi> toward Meyerbeer, it is as well to bear in mind
that Meyerbeer was at this time 'Generalmusikdirector' at the
Berlin Court.—TR.</p>
</note>

<note id="n31" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn31" anchored="yes">
<p>In a <ref target="n05" targOrder="U">foot-note to page 286</ref>,
I drew attention to the similarity of
Wagner's description of the "artistic temperament" to that given by
Schopenhauer in Chapter 30 of Vol. II. "<hi>Die Welt als Wille und
Vorstellung</hi>"; in like manner he has here unconsciously
approached, though by an opposite path, the same idea as
Schopenhauer expounds in § 34, Vol. I. of that work, where he
refers to the man "who has so plunged and lost himself in
contemplation of Nature, that he is now nothing more than the sheer
perceiving <hi>Subject</hi>, and thus becomes directly conscious
that, as such, he is the bearer of the world and all
<hi>objective</hi> existence, since it shows itself as dependent on
his own. He draws all Nature into his own self, so that he now
regards it as an <hi>accidental</hi> of his being [or essence]. In
this sense it is, that Byron says: Are not the mountains, waves and
skies, a part Of me and of my soul, as I of them?"—It is
significant that to both these thinkers the solitude of the Alps
should have suggested the same line of thought; but perhaps it may
be carried farther back, to the idea underlying the Temptation on
the Mountain.—TR</p>
</note>

<note id="n32" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn32" anchored="yes">
<p>According to the late Mr F. Praeger's "<hi>Wagner as
I knew him</hi>" (page 145) this friend was August Roeckel; but it
seems far more likely to have been Theodor Uhlig or Eduard
Devrient.—TR.</p>
</note>

<note id="n33" resp="author" place="foot" corresp="rn33" anchored="yes">
<p>Of this I have recently been assured again by a talented reporter, who
<hi>during</hi> the performance of <hi>Lohengrin</hi> at
Weimar—according to his own confession—felt nothing
calling for an adverse criticism, but gave himself without
restraint to the enjoyment of a touching story. The doubts that
<hi>afterwards</hi> arose in him, I am delighted to say, in dearest
self-defence, have never attacked the <hi>actual artist</hi>. The
latter could <hi>throughly</hi> understand me: a thing that was
impossible to the critic.—R. WAGNER.</p>
</note>

<note id="n34" resp="author" place="foot" corresp="rn34" anchored="yes">
<p>Exactly as my critic, may the Athenian citizen have felt, who under the
immediate influence of the artwork was seized with unquestioning
sympathy for Antigone, yet in the Areopagus, upon the following
day, would certainly have voted to death the living
heroine.—R. WAGNER.</p>
</note>

<note id="n35" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn35" anchored="yes">
<p>Compare <hi>Art-work of the Future</hi>,
<xref resp="wl" type="wlpr0062" n="pag149" targOrder="U" from="ROOT" to="DITTO">page 149</xref>.—TR.</p>
</note>

<note id="n36" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn36" anchored="yes">
<p>At first sight this looks as though it were written under the influence of
the Hegelian doctrine, of every Reality being the "unification of
two contradictory elements," and every true Idea containing a
"coincidence of opposites"; but there is, so far as I can see, no
warrant for believing that Wagner ever studied Hegel's system of
philosophy, excepting in so far as it had been transformed by
Feuerbach, who seems to have discarded the formula of "Thesis,
antithesis, and synthesis."—TR.</p>
</note>

<note id="n37" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn37" anchored="yes">
<p>"Diese nothwendigste Wesenäusserung der reinsten sinnlichen
Unwillkür."</p>
</note>

<note id="n38" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn38" anchored="yes">
<p>By all accounts, this "friend" was August Roeckel; and according to
Ferdinand Praeger, he withdrew his opera "Farinelli" before its
production, in humble recognition of the supremacy of Wagner's
genius.—TR.</p>
</note>

<note id="n39" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn39" anchored="yes">
<p>For his creditors, who had advanced money for the
publication of the scores of <hi>Rienzi</hi>, <hi>The Flying Dutchman</hi>,
and <hi>Tannhäuser</hi>. See the <hi>Letters to Uhlig and
Fischer</hi>.—TR.</p>
</note>

<note id="n40" resp="author" place="foot" corresp="rn40" anchored="yes">
<p>I lay stress on this, how tasteless soever it may appear to those who
make merry over me as "a revolutionary for the sake of the
theatre."—R. WAGNER</p>
</note>

<note id="n41" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn41" anchored="yes">
<p>The connection of this subject with the events of 1848 is made obvious
by the prefatory note to the <hi>Wibelungen</hi> essay: "I, too, in
the late arousing times, shared the ardent wishes of so many, for
the re-awakening of <hi>Frederick the Red-beard</hi>." The tradition
ran (though now proved to have been originally connected with
Friedrich II.) that the first and greatest Hohenstaufian Kaiser was
still sleeping in the heart of the Kyffhäuser hills, and would
one day come again to free his people and knit them once more into
a sovereign nation.—TR.</p>
</note>

<note id="n42" resp="author" place="foot" corresp="rn42" anchored="yes">
<p>The studies that I made upon these lines, and whose very necessity
decided me to abandon my proposal, I a short while since laid
publicly before my friends—at least, not at the feet of
historico-juristic criticism—in a little essay entitled
"<xref resp="wl" type="wlpr0048" targOrder="U" from="ROOT" to="DITTO"><hi>Die Wibelungen</hi></xref>."—R. WAGNER.</p>
</note>

<note id="n43" resp="author" place="foot" corresp="rn43" anchored="yes">
<p>Here I got no further in the formalities of my trade than did the skilful
Lortzing, who likewise adapted ready-made stage-pieces for his
opera-texts.—R. WAGNER.</p>
</note>

<note id="n44" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn44" anchored="yes">
<p>Again we have the—logical—play of words between
"<hi>dichterisch</hi>" (poetic) and "<hi>verdichten</hi>" (to
condense). Compare
<xref resp="wl" type="wlpr0062" n="pag92" targOrder="U" from="ROOT" to="DITTO">page 92</xref>.—TR.</p>
</note>

<note id="n45" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn45" anchored="yes">
<p>To wit, that ideal condition of society which he still considered
realisable in the near future.—TR.</p>
</note>

<note id="n46" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn46" anchored="yes">
<p>Note to the original edition, of 1852:—"This bugbear of the
generality of musical critics, is the rôle they think
necessary to ascribe to me, whenever they pay me the honour of
their notice. As they never concern themselves about a
<hi>whole</hi>, it is only the <hi>part</hi>, the question of Form,
that can become the object of <hi>their</hi> reflection; and the
blame, that in matters of music they should he compelled to
'reflect,' they lay on <hi>me</hi>, for stepping before them with a
'reflected' music. But herein they make a changeling of me, keeping
<hi>only the musician</hi> in view, and confound me with certain
actual brain-grubbers of Absolute Music, who—as
such—can only exercise their inventive ingenuity on a wilful
variation and twisting-about of forms. In their agony lest I should
upset the forms that keep our musical hotch-potch steady, they go
at last so fax, as to see in every new work projected by me an
imminent disaster; and fan themselves into such a fury, that they
end by fancying my operas, albeit entirely unknown to the
directors, are deluging the German stage. So foolish maketh Fear!"</p>
</note>

<note id="n47" resp="author" place="foot" corresp="rn47" anchored="yes">
<p>See <hi>Opera and Drama</hi>, 
<xref resp="wl" type="wlpr0063" n="pag21" targOrder="U" from="ROOT" to="DITTO">Part I</xref>.—R. WAGNER.</p>
</note>

<note id="n48" resp="author" place="foot" corresp="rn48" anchored="yes">
<p>Take for instance the hideously contorted harmonic variations, wherewith
folk have sought to make the old and threadbare Rossinian
Closing-cadence into something 'à part.'—R. WAGNER.</p>
</note>

<note id="n49" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn49" anchored="yes">
<p>In a  
<xref resp="wl" type="wlpr0062" n="n17" targOrder="U" from="ROOT" to="DITTO">footnote to page 132</xref>
I have endeavoured to give a slight idea of the meaning of this
term.—TR.</p>
</note>

<note id="n50" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn50" anchored="yes">
<p>Note to the first German edition:—"A newest critic, having by chance
obtained a glimpse of its manuscript, has had the questionable
taste to publish his opinion of my poem '<hi>Siegfried's Tod</hi>';
whereas I myself am here careful not to enter closer on the subject
of that work, for the very reason that I cannot as yet present it
to the public in the fashion I should like. Among other things,
this unwarranted critic calls that verse 'old-Frankish rubbish.'
Truly he could not have found a better term to characterise the
blindness that makes him <hi>there</hi> see nothing but the Old,
where we are already living and moving in the wholly
<hi>New!</hi>"—The reference is to an unsigned critique in the
<hi>Grenzboten</hi>, for the "24th week" of 1851 ; this article is
also alluded to, by Wagner, in <ref target="n17" targOrder="U">the footnote to page 308</ref>
of the present volume. A reply, by "Bw" (?Hans von Bülow?),
was printed in the <hi>Neue Zeitschrift für Musik</hi> of
Oct. 10 and 17, 1851.—TR.</p>
</note>

<note id="n51" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn51" anchored="yes">
<p>Note to the edition of 1872:—"This wish, however, was not to be
fulfilled."—It should be also remarked that, as noted
earlier, the <hi>Communication</hi> originally formed a
<hi>preface</hi> to the three Opera-poems.—TR.</p>
</note>

<note id="n52" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn52" anchored="yes">
<p><hi>Wahrnehmbarkeit</hi>—literally, 'the qualities that make an
object perceptible.' It appears that, by opposing the terms
<hi>Sinnlichkeit</hi> and <hi>Wahrnehmbarkeit</hi>, our author here
seeks to draw a distinction between the faculties of the lower and
the higher senses, and thus between the objects on which these
faculties must be exercised. It is perhaps unnecessary to point out
how intrinsically this passage differs from the views of Feuerbach
and his circle, and bow it already foreshadows the
transcendentalism of Wagner's later period, as developed in the
<xref resp="wl" type="wlpr0133" targOrder="U" from="ROOT" to="DITTO"><hi>Beethoven</hi></xref> essay,
<hi>Religion and Art</hi>, and <hi>Parsifal</hi>.—TR.</p>
</note>

<note id="n53" resp="author" place="foot" corresp="rn53" anchored="yes">
<p>It will scarcely fail to be noticed, how much the <hi>artist</hi> was alone
concerned in this conception.—R. WAGNER ("The Editor"), 1872.</p>
</note>

<note id="n54" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn54" anchored="yes">
<p>This, of course, is the summary given on
<xref resp="wl" type="wlpr0062" n="pag210" targOrder="U" from="ROOT" to="DITTO">pages 210-13</xref>; the longer
"Dramatic Sketch," though written about this time, was not printed until
1872, when it made its appearance in Vol. III. of the <hi>Gesammelte
Schriften</hi>.—TR.</p>
</note>

<note id="n55" resp="author" place="foot" corresp="rn55" anchored="yes">
<p>Nothing could more thoroughly reveal this—among other
matters—to me, than a letter I received from a former friend,
a noted composer, in which he adjured me to "leave politics aside,
as they brought no good to any one" ("<hi>doch von der Politik zu
lassen, bei der im Ganzen doch nichts herauskäme</hi>"). This
obstinacy—I know not whether intentional or not—in
taking me sheerly as a politician, and studiously passing over the
artistic tenour of my already promulgated views, had for me
something exasperating.—R. WAGNER.—As may be seen by
letter 59 <hi>to Uhlig</hi>, the "former friend" was Ferdinand
Hiller.—TR.</p>
</note>

<note id="n56" resp="author" place="foot" corresp="rn56" anchored="yes">
<p>I shall never write an <hi>Opera</hi> more. As I have no wish to invent an
arbitrary title for my works, I will call them <hi>Dramas</hi>, since
hereby will at least be clearest indicated the standpoint whence
the thing I offer should be accepted.—R. WAGNER.</p>
</note>
</div> 

<div type="appendix" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N">
<pb id="pag393"/>
<head>Appendix</head>

<p>Author's variants, in the original editions of the works included in
this volume; omitting such as either are altogether
insignificant, and would have called for no difference in
translation, or have already been reproduced in the Footnotes to
the text.</p>

<pb id="pag396" n="396"/>

<p>The opening sentence in the edition of 1852 ran as follows:
"<hi>The reason that decided me to undertake this present
publication of three of my opera-poems lay</hi> in the necessity I
felt of explaining the apparent, or real, contradiction offered by
the character and form of <hi>these</hi> opera-poems, and of the
musical compositions which had sprung therefrom, to the views and
principles which I have recently set down at considerable length
and <hi>shall presently—perhaps simultaneously with
them—lay</hi> before the public under the title of OPERA AND
DRAMA."—The italicised words are those that differ from the
1872 edition (as translated on <ref target="pag269" targOrder="U">page 269</ref>),
and are to be explained
by the fact that the original <hi>Communication</hi>—as stated
in the words: "which I set before the poems as a Preface"—formed
an introduction to the poems of the <hi>Flying Dutchman,
Tannhäuser</hi> and <hi>Lohengrin</hi>, and that the
<hi>Communication</hi> and <hi>Opera and Drama</hi> were in the hands of two
different publishing firms, J. J. Weber and Breitkopf und
Härtel, at the same time. As a matter of fact, <hi>Opera and Drama</hi>
was published in November '51 and the
<hi>Communication</hi> at the end of the following month.</p>

<p><ref target="pag291" targOrder="U">Page 291</ref>, line 17, after
"educators.—" appeared "Look ye! herein lies all Genius!"
(<hi>Seht, hierin liegt alles Genie!</hi>)</p>

<p><ref target="pag294" targOrder="U">Page 294</ref>, line 8, after "horizon." appeared:
"The timid reserve towards the female sex, that is inculcated into
all of us—this ground of all the vices of the modern male
generation, and no less of the stunting of Woman's nature
(<hi>Verkümmerung des Weibes</hi>)—my natural temperament had
only been able to break through by fits and starts, and in isolated
utterances of a pert impetuosity (<hi>kecke Heftigkeit</hi>): a
hasty, conscience-stinging snatch of pleasure must form the
unrequiting substitute for instinctively-desired delight."</p>

<p><ref target="pag294" targOrder="U">Ibidem</ref>, line 15, after "social system"
appeared "to wit, as—using a current expression:
unfortunately to-be-put-up-with—vice."</p>

<p><ref target="pag306" targOrder="U">Page 306</ref>, line 10 from bottom ran as follows:
"belong the three dramatic poems which, in this publication, I lay
before my friends in the order wherein they arose: namely, besides
the just-named <hi>Flying Dutchman</hi>, <hi>Tannhäuser</hi> and
<hi>Lohengrin</hi>."</p>

<p><ref target="pag309" targOrder="U">Page 309</ref>, line 2 from bottom, "in the
<hi>Zeitung für die elegante Welt</hi>, 1843," for "elsewhere."</p>
</div> 

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