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

  <teiHeader type="text" status="new">
    <fileDesc>
      <titleStmt>
        <title>On the name "Musikdrama"</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">2103</extent>
      <publicationStmt>
        <publisher>The Wagner Library</publisher>
        <address>
          <addrLine>http://users.belgacom.net/wagnerlibrary/</addrLine>
        </address>
        <idno type="GUID">7B42F1A5-0B55-11D6-AC23-00C04F03817C</idno>
        <idno type="WLID">wlpr0185</idno>
        <idno type="WLNAME">wagonmsd</idno>
        <availability status="free">
          <p>Freely available for non-commercial use.</p>
        </availability>
      </publicationStmt>
      <seriesStmt>
        <title>Richard Wagner's Prose Works</title>
      </seriesStmt>
      <sourceDesc default="NO">
        <biblStruct default="NO">
          <analytic>
            <title>On the name "Musikdrama"</title>
          </analytic>
          
<monogr>
  <title level="m">Actors and Singers</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="1896">1896</date>
  </imprint>
</monogr>
<series>
  <title level="s">Richard Wagner's Prose Works</title>
  <biblScope type="volume">5</biblScope>
</series>
	
        </biblStruct>
      </sourceDesc>
    </fileDesc>
    <encodingDesc>
      <editorialDecl default="NO">
        <correction status="high" default="NO" method="silent">
          <p>OCR errors have been corrected</p>
        </correction>
        <quotation default="NO" marks="all" form="unknown">
          <p>Quotations have been encoded using the q tag. If quotation marks
          were used for emphasis, terminology, etc., then the rend attribute
          was used on the corresponding tag to indicate the kind of quotation
          (sq or dq).</p>
        </quotation>
        <hyphenation eol="some" default="NO">
          <p>All soft-hyphens have been removed. If a page break occurred in a
          hyphened word, then the pb tag is put AFTER the hyphened word.</p>
        </hyphenation>
        <segmentation default="NO">
          <p>The start of a new sentence is indicated with an empty s
          element. It is empty because of possible overlappings with other
          elements, like q.</p>
        </segmentation>
      </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"/>
        <tagUsage gi="emph" render="i"/>
        <tagUsage gi="q" render="dq"/>
        <tagUsage gi="title" 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>Music—Philosophy and aesthetics.</term>
          <term>Music—19th century—History and criticism.</term>
        </keywords>
        <classCode scheme="DDC">780-dc20</classCode>
        <classCode scheme="NUGI">924</classCode>
        <catRef target="r.pw.6.7"/>
      </textClass>
    </profileDesc>
  </teiHeader>

<text id="wlpr0185" lang="en-gb">

<front>

<fs type="fact-sheet" rel="sb">
  <f name="original-date" rel="eq"><sym value="1872-11-08" rel="eq"/></f>
  <f name="original-title" rel="eq"><str rel="eq">Über die Benennung "Musikdrama".</str></f>
  <f name="original-source" rel="eq"><str rel="eq">Musikalisches Wochenblatt.</str></f>
  <f name="original-place" rel="eq"><str rel="eq"/></f>
  <f name="original-publisher" rel="eq"><str rel="eq"/></f>
  <f name="SSD-volume" rel="eq"><str rel="eq">IX</str></f>
  <f name="SSD-pages" rel="eq"><str rel="eq">302-308</str></f>
</fs>

</front>

<body>
<div type="part" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N">
<pb id="pag299"/>
<head rend="up">On the name <term lang="de" rend="dq">Musikdrama.</term></head>

<p>
<s part="N"/><hi rend="up">We</hi> often read just now of a
<term lang="de" rend="dq">Musikdrama,</term> also hear of a society in
<rs type="city" key="rs-berlin">Berlin</rs>, for instance, that proposes to
help this Music-drama forward—yet without our being able to form an
accurate idea of what is meant.
<s part="N"/>I certainly have reason to suppose that this term was invented for sake of
honouring my later dramatic works with a distinctive classification; but the
less I have felt disposed to accept it, the more have I perceived an
inclination in other quarters to adopt the name for a presumably new
art-genre, which would appear to have been bound to evolve in answer to the
temper and tendences of the day, even without my intervention, and now to lie
ready as a cosy nest for everyone to hatch his musical eggs in.
</p> 

<p>
<s part="N"/>I cannot indulge in the flattering view, that things are so pleasantly
situate; and the less, as I don't know how to read the title 
<term lang="de" rend="dq">Musikdrama.</term>
<s part="N"/>When we unite two substantives to form one word, with any understanding
of the spirit of our language, by the first we always signify in some sort
of way the object of the second; so that
<term lang="de" rend="dq">Zukunftsmusik,</term> though invented in derision
of me, had its sense as <q direct="unspecified">music for the future.</q>
<note id="rn01" corresp="n01" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
<s part="N"/>But <term lang="de" rend="dq">Musikdrama</term> similarly interpreted as
<q direct="unspecified">drama for the object of music</q> would have no sense at all, were it not
point-blank the old familiar libretto, which at anyrate was a drama expressly
constructed for music.
<s part="N"/>Yet this certainly is not what we mean: merely our sense of literary
propriety has become so blunted through a constant reading of the farrago of
our <pb id="pag300" n="300"/>
newspaper-writers and other 
<foreign lang="fr">beaux esprits</foreign>, that we believe we may put any
meaning we choose to the nonsensical words they coin, and in the present case
we use <term lang="de" rend="dq">Musikdrama</term> to denote the very
opposite of the sense the word implies.
</p>
 
<p>
<s part="N"/>Upon closer inspection, however, we find that the solecism here consists in
the now favourite conversion of an adjectival predicate into a substantival
prefix: one had begun by saying <q direct="unspecified">musical drama.</q>
<s part="N"/>Yet it perhaps was not solely that evil habit, that brought about the
abbreviation into <term lang="de" rend="dq">Musikdrama,</term> but also a hazy
feeling that no drama could possibly be <q direct="unspecified">musical,</q> like an instrument or
(in rare enough events) a prima donna.
<s part="N"/>A <q direct="unspecified">musical drama,</q> taken strictly, would be a drama that made music
itself, or was good for making music with, or even that understood music,
somewhat as our musical reporters.
<s part="N"/>As this would not do, the mental confusion thought better to hide behind
a wholly senseless word: for <term lang="de" rend="dq">Musikdrama</term> was
a name which nobody had heard before, and one felt assured that nobody would
ever dream of wilfully misconstruing so seriously-combined a word by its
analogy with <foreign lang="de" rend="dq">Musikdosen</foreign> [musical
snuffbox] and the like.
</p>
 
<p>
<s part="N"/>Now the serious meaning, intended by the term, was probably an actual
<q direct="unspecified">drama set to music.</q>
<s part="N"/>The mental emphasis would therefore fall on the <q direct="unspecified">drama,</q> which one
regarded as differing from the former opera-libretto, and differing in that
a dramatic plot was not to be simply trimmed to the needs of traditional
operatic music, but the musical structure itself was to be shaped by the
requirements characteristic of an actual drama.
<s part="N"/>But if the <q direct="unspecified">drama</q> was thus the main affair, it surely ought to have
been placed before the <q direct="unspecified">music</q> which it governed, and, somewhat like 
<foreign lang="de" rend="dq">Tanzmusik</foreign> or 
<foreign lang="de" rend="dq">Tafelmusik</foreign> [dance, and banquet-music],
we then should have had to say <foreign lang="de" rend="dq">Dramamusik.</foreign>
<s part="N"/>Into this absurdity, however, one did not care to fall; twist and turn it
as one might, <q direct="unspecified">music</q> remained the real encumbrance to the naming, though
everybody dimly felt that it was the chief concern in spite of all
<pb id="pag301" n="301"/>
appearances, and the more so when that music was invited to
develop and put forth its amplest powers through its association with an actual
drama.
</p>
 
<p>
<s part="N"/>The obstacle to devising a name for this artwork was accordingly, in any
event, the assumed necessity of indicating that the new whole had been formed
by welding two disparate elements, music and drama, together.
<s part="N"/>And certainly the greatest difficulty is to place <q direct="unspecified">music</q> in a proper
position toward <q direct="unspecified">drama,</q> since it can be brought into no equality
therewith, as we have just seen, and must rank as either much more or much less
than <q direct="unspecified">drama.</q>
<note id="rn02" corresp="n02" place="unspecified" anchored="yes"/>
<s part="N"/>The reason surely lies in the fact that the word <q direct="unspecified">music</q> denotes an
<hi>art</hi>, originally the whole assemblage of the arts, whilst <q direct="unspecified">drama</q>
strictly denotes a <hi>deed</hi> of art.
<s part="N"/>In coupling words together it is easy to tell by the intelligibleness of
the resulting compound whether we really still understand its constituent
parts, taken separately, or merely employ them after a conventional usage.
<s part="N"/>The primary meaning of <q direct="unspecified">drama</q> is a <hi>deed </hi> or <hi>action</hi>:
as such, displayed upon the stage, it at first formed but a portion of the
Tragedy, i.e. the sacrificial choral chant, but at last invaded it from end to
end and thus became the main affair.
<s part="N"/>By its name one now denoted for all ages an action shewn upon the stage,
and, to lay stress on this being a performance to look at, the place of
assembly was called the <term rend="dq">theatron,</term> the looking-room.
<s part="N"/>Our <foreign lang="de" rend="dq">Schauspiel</foreign> [strictly 
<q direct="unspecified">look-game</q> or <q direct="unspecified">show-play</q>] is therefore a very sensible name for
what the Greeks more naïvely still called <q direct="unspecified">drama,</q> for it still more
definitely expresses the characteristic development of an initial part into
the ultimate main object.
<s part="N"/>But Music is placed in an utterly false relation to this <q direct="unspecified">show-play,</q>
if she now is to form but a part of that whole; as such she is wholly
superfluous and disturbing, and for this reason has at last been quite
excluded from
<pb id="pag302" n="302"/>
the stricter Play.
<s part="N"/>Of a truth she is <q direct="unspecified">the part that once was all,</q> and even now she feels
called to re-assume her ancient dignity, as very mother-womb of Drama.
<s part="N"/>Yet in this high calling she must neither stand before nor behind the Drama:
she is no rival, but its mother.
<s part="N"/>She sounds, and what she sounds ye see upon the stage; for that she gathered
you together: what she is, ye never can but faintly dream; so she opens your
eyes to behold her through the scenic likeness, as a mother tells her children
legends shadowing the mysteries of religion.
</p>
 
<p>
<s part="N"/>The stupendous works of their
<rs type="person" key="rs-aeschylus">Æschylus</rs> the Athenians called
not dramas, but left them with the holy name of their descent: <q direct="unspecified">tragedies,</q>
sacrificial chants in celebration of the god inspiring them.
<s part="N"/>Happy they, to have to puzzle out no name for them!
<s part="N"/>They had the most unheard-of artwork, and—left it nameless.
<s part="N"/>But there came the great critics, the redoubtable reporters; abstract ideas
were found, and where these ran short came words for word's sake.
<s part="N"/>The good <rs type="role" key="rs-r-polonius">Polonius</rs> edifies us with
a handsome list of them in <title rend="dq">Hamlet.</title>
<s part="N"/>The Italians capped it with a
<term lang="it" rend="i dq">Dramma per musica,</term> which expresses much the
same idea, though more grammatically phrased, as our <q direct="unspecified">Musikdrama</q>; but one
manifestly was not satisfied with this expression, and the curious outcome of
the changes introduced by vocal virtuosi had to accept a name as nothing-saying
as the genre itself.
<s part="N"/><q direct="unspecified">Opera,</q> plural of <q direct="unspecified">opus,</q> this new variety of <q direct="unspecified">works</q> was
dubbed; the Italians made a female of it, the French a male, so that the
variety seemed to have turned out 
<foreign lang="la" rend="i">generis utriusque.</foreign>
<s part="N"/>I believe one could find no apter criticism of <q direct="unspecified">Opera,</q> than to allow
this name as legitimate an origin as that of <q direct="unspecified">Tragedy</q>; in neither case
was it a matter of reason (<foreign lang="de" rend="i">Vernunft</foreign>),
but a deep-set instinct here expressed a thing of nameless nonsense, there a
thing of sense indicibly profound.
</p>
 
<p>
<s part="N"/>Now I advise my professional competitors to retain the designation 
<q direct="unspecified">opera,</q> on second thought, for their musical works intended for the
present theatre: it leaves them where they are, gives them no false colour,
lifts them
<pb id="pag303" n="303"/>
above all rivalry with their librettist, and if they are blest with good
ideas for an aria, a duet, or even a drinking-chorus, they will please and
give us something worth acknowledging, without having to overtax their strength
to spoil their prettiest fancies.
<s part="N"/>In every age there have been not only pantomimists, but cithern-players,
flautists, and finally cantores: if some of their tribe were called for once
to do a thing beyond their kind and custom, it was only very solitary units,
whose unexampled rarity the finger of History underlines across the centuries
and tens thereof; but never has a <hi>genre</hi> arisen thence, a genre in
which, once given its proper name, the extra-ordinary lay ready for the common
use of every fumbler.
<s part="N"/>As for myself, with the best of will I should scarcely know what name to
give the child that smiles from out my works a trifle shyly on a good part of
the world we live in.
<s part="N"/>Herr <rs type="person" key="rs-riehl">W. H. Riehl</rs>, as he somewhere has
said, loses sight and hearing at my operas, for with some he hears, with others
sees: how shall one name so inaudible, invisible a thing?
<s part="N"/>I should almost have felt disposed to take my stand on its visibility, and
abide by the <q direct="unspecified">show-play,</q> as I would gladly have called my dramas 
<hi>deeds of Music brought to sight</hi> (<foreign lang="de">ersichtlich
gewordene Thaten der Musik</foreign>).
<s part="N"/>But that would have been quite an art-philosophical title, fit to grace the
catalogue of the future Polonii of our art-struck courts; since one may assume
that, after their soldiers' successes, our Princes next will wish the Theatre
led onward in a corresponding German sense.
<s part="N"/>Only, in spite of all the <q direct="unspecified">play</q> I offer, which many declare to touch
the monstrous, there really would be far too little to see; as for instance I
have been rebuked for not introducing into the second act of 
<rs type="opera" key="rs-tristan" rend="dq">Tristan</rs> a brilliant court-ball,
during which the hapless pair of lovers might hide themselves at the proper
time in some shrubbery or other, where their discovery would create quite a
startling scandal, with all the usual consequences.
<s part="N"/>Instead there passes little more than music in this act, which unfortunately
seems to be so very much music that
<pb id="pag304" n="304"/>
people with the organisation of Herr
<rs type="person" key="rs-riehl">W. H. Riehl</rs> quite lose their hearing
through it; the more's the pity, as I give them next to nothing to see.
</p>
 
<p>
<s part="N"/>As folk would not let my poor works even pass for <q direct="unspecified">operas,</q> mainly
because of their great dissimilarity to
<rs type="opera" key="rs-donjuan" rend="dq">Don Juan,</rs> I have had to
console myself with handing them to the theatres without any designation of
their genre at all; by this device I also think of abiding for just as long
as I have to do with our theatres, which rightly recognise no other genre than
<q direct="unspecified">Opera,</q> and, let one give them never so strict a <q direct="unspecified">music-drama,</q>
would make of it an <q direct="unspecified">opera</q> notwithstanding.
<s part="N"/>To boldly emerge from the whole confusion, I lit, as known, on the thought
of a <term lang="de" rend="i">Bühnenfestspiel</term> 
[stage-festival-play], which I am hoping to bring about at
<rs type="city" key="rs-bayreuth">Bayreuth</rs> with help from my friends.
<s part="N"/>The name suggested itself through the character of my undertaking; for I
knew of <hi>Singing-festivals</hi>, <hi>Gymnastic-fêtes</hi> and so
forth, and could well imagine a theatre-feast—in which the <hi>stage</hi>
and what takes place upon it, appropriately termed a <hi>play,</hi> would of
course be the chief affair.
<s part="N"/>But if any of the visitors to this Bühnenfestspiel shall chance to 
preserve a remembrance thereof, to him there may likewise occur a name for 
that thing I now propose to offer my friends as an unnamed deed of art.
</p>

</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>
<s part="N"/>Namely, for a time when one could get it performed without bungling.—
<s part="N"/>R. WAGNER.
</p>
</note>

<note id="n02" resp="translator" place="foot" corresp="rn02" anchored="yes">
<p>
<s part="N"/><q lang="de" direct="unspecified">Das Schwierigste hierbei ist jedenfalls, die 
<hi rend="sq">Musik</hi> in eine richtige Stellung zum <hi rend="sq">Drama</hi>
zu bringen, da sie, wie wir dieses soeben ersehen mussten, mit diesem in keine
ebenbürtige Verbindung zu bringen ist, und uns entweder viel mehr, oder
viel weniger als das Drama gelten muss.</q>
</p>
</note>

</div> 

<div type="summary" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N">
<pb id="pag353" n="353"/>
<head>Summary</head>

<p>
<s part="N"/>A senseless name, apparently invented in honour of my later works, and now
usurped by imitators.
<s part="N"/>Meaning of German compound words; this one a solecism, condensed from
equally incorrect <q direct="unspecified">musical drama.</q>
<s part="N"/>Music an <hi>art</hi>, Drama a <hi>deed</hi>.
<s part="N"/>Music the part that once was all; Greek <q direct="unspecified">Tragedy,</q> Italian
<q direct="unspecified">Opera,</q> and German <q direct="unspecified">Schauspiel.</q>
<s part="N"/>Let my rivals stick to <q direct="unspecified">opera,</q> which will confuse no one, nor spoil
their prettiest fancies.
<s part="N"/>I should like to call my dramas <q direct="unspecified">deeds of Music brought to sight,</q> but
people say I give them too little to see.
<s part="N"/>Let <q direct="unspecified">Bühnenfestspiel</q> serve for the nonce, for at 
<rs type="city" key="rs-bayreuth">Bayreuth</rs> the <hi>stage</hi> will be the
main object of the <hi>festival</hi> <ref target="pag304" targOrder="U">(304)</ref>.
</p>
</div>

</back>

</text>
</TEI.2>