Lecture XII
Richard Wagner and Mysticism
Berlin 28th March, 1907
To link Richard Wagner
[
Richard Wagner (1813–1883) was a major German opera composer.
]
with mysticism, as we shall do in today's consideration, will
easily give rise to objections based on the misconception
that to speak about an artist from a particular
spiritual-scientific viewpoint is impermissible. Other
objections will be directed against mysticism as such.
Today we shall
look at Richard Wagner's relation to art on the one hand and
mysticism on the other. The objection can be made that Wagner
never spoke, or even hinted at, some of the things that will
be mentioned. Such an objection is so obvious that anyone
would have thought of it before speaking. It must be borne in
mind that when a cultural phenomenon such as Richard Wagner
is to be considered, one cannot be limited to say only what
Wagner spoke about. That would make a discussion on any issue
from a higher point of view impossible.
No one would
suggest that a botanist or a poet should refrain from
expressing what he discovered, or what he felt about plants
and other phenomena. When discussing issues, whether cultural
or natural, one cannot be limited to say only what the
phenomenon conveys. In that case the plant should be able to
convey to the botanist the laws of its growth; and the
feelings and sentiments it aroused in the poet would be
unjustified. The reality is that in the human soul, precisely
what the external world is unable to say about itself is
revealed.
It is in this
sense that what I have to say about the phenomenon that is
Richard Wagner must be taken. Certainly a plant knows nothing
of the laws, however, it nevertheless grows and develops.
Similarly, an artist need not be aware of the laws inherent
in his nature of which the observer with spiritual insight is
able to speak. The artist lives and creates according to
these laws as the plant creates according to laws that are
subsequently discovered. Therefore, the objection should not
be made that Wagner did not speak about things that will be
indicated today.
As regards
other objections concerned with mysticism, the fact is that
people, educated and uneducated alike, speak of mysticism as
of something obscure. In comparison with what is known as the
scientific world view, they find it nebulous. This has not
always been so. The great mystics of the early Christian
centuries, the Gnostics, have thought otherwise, as does
anyone with understanding of mysticism. The Gnostics have
called it “mathesis,” mathematics, not because
mysticism is mathematics, but because genuine mystics have
striven for a similar clarity in the ideas they derive from
spiritual worlds. Properly understood, mysticism, far from
being obscure or sentimental, is in its approach to the world
crystal clear. Having now shown that the two kinds of
objections are invalid, let us proceed with today's
considerations.
Richard Wagner
can indeed be discussed from the highest spiritual scientific
viewpoint. No seeker after Truth of the nineteenth century
strove, his whole life long, more honestly and sincerely to
discover answers to the world-riddles than Richard Wagner.
His house in Bayreuth he named, “Inner Peace”
(Wahnfried), saying that there he found peace from
his “doubts and delusions” (sein Wähnen
Ruhe fand). These words already reveal a great deal
about Richard Wagner.
What is meant
by error and delusion is all too well-known to someone who
honestly and sincerely pursues the path to higher knowledge.
This happens irrespective of whether the spiritual realm a
person believes he will discover finds expression through
art, or takes some other form. He is strongly aware of the
many deluding images that come to block his path and slow his
progress. That person knows that the path to higher knowledge
is neither easy nor straightforward — that truth is
reached only through inner upheavals and tribulations.
Moreover, he is aware that dangers have to be met, but also
that experiences of inner bliss will be his. A person who
travels the path of knowledge will eventually reach that
inner peace that is the result of intimate knowledge of the
secrets of the world. Wagner's awareness and experience of
these things comes to expression when he says: “I name
this house ‘Inner Peace’ because here I found
peace from error and delusions.” (“Weil hier
mein Wahnen Ruhe fand, Wahnfried sei dieses Haus
genannt.”)
Unlike many
artists who attempt to create out of fantasy that lacks
substance, Wagner saw from the start an artistic calling as a
mission of world historical relevance; he felt that the
Beauty created by art should also express truth and
knowledge. Art was to him something holy; he saw the source
of artistic creativity in religious feelings and perceptions.
The artist, he felt, has a kind of priestly calling, and that
what he, Richard Wagner, offered to mankind should have
religious dedication. It should fulfill a religious task and
mission in mankind's evolution. He felt that he was one of
those who must contribute to their era something based on the
fullness of truth and reality.
When spiritual
science is properly understood, it will be seen that, far
from being a gray theory remote from the real issues, it can
help us to understand and to appreciate on his own terms a
cultural phenomenon such as Richard Wagner.
Wagner had a
basic feeling, an inner awareness, that guided him to the
same Truth about mankind's origin and evolution as that
indicated by spiritual science. This inner awareness linked
him to spiritual science and to all genuine mysticism. He
wanted a unification of the arts; he wanted the various
branches of art to work together, complementing one another.
He felt that the lack, the shortcomings, in contemporary art
forms was caused by what he called “their selfishness
and egoism. Instead of the various art forms going their
separate ways, he saw their working together as an ideal,
creating a harmonious whole to which each contributed with
selfless devotion. He insisted that art had once existed in
such an ideal form. He thought to recognize it in ancient
Greece prior to Sophocles,
[
Sophocles (c. 495 B.C.–406
B.C.) was a great Athenian dramatist
and one of the founders of Greek tragedy.
]
Euripides
[
Euripides (c. 480 B.C.–406
B.C.), a Greek dramatist.
]
and others. Before the arts
separated, drama and dance, for example, had worked together
and had selflessly created combined artistic works. Wagner
had a kind of clairvoyant vision of such combined endeavor.
Although history does not speak of it, his vision was true
and points back to a primordial time when not only the arts
but also all spiritual and cultural streams within various
people worked together as a harmonious whole.
Spiritual
science recognizes that what is known today as art and
science are different branches originating from a common
root. Whether we go back to the ancient cultures of Greece,
Egypt, India or Persia, or to our own Germanic origin,
everywhere we find primordial cultures where art and science
are not separated. However, this is a past that is beyond the
reach of external research, and is accessible only to
clairvoyant vision.
In the ancient
civilizations, art and science formed a unity that was looked
upon as a mystery. Mystery centers existed for the
cultivation of wisdom, beauty and religious piety before
these became separated and cultivated in different
establishments.
We can
visualize what took place within the mysteries, with in these
temples, which were places of learning and also of artistic
performances. We can conjure up before our mind's eye the
great dramas, seen by those who had been admitted to the
mysteries. As I said, ordinary history can tell us nothing of
these things. The performances were dramatic musical
interpretations of the wisdom attained within the mysteries,
and they were permeated with deep religious devotion. A few
words will convey what took place in those times of which
nothing is known save what spiritual science has to say.
Those admitted to the Mysteries came together to watch a
drama depicting the world's creation. Such dramas existed
everywhere. They depicted how primordial divine beings
descended from spiritual heights and let their essence stream
out to become world-substance that they then shaped and
formed into the various creature's of the kingdoms of nature:
the mineral, plant and animal kingdoms, and that of humans.
In other words, divine essence streamed into and formed
everything that surrounded us, and it finally celebrated a
kind of resurrection within the human soul.
Thoughtful
people have always felt that the world is of divine origin,
that the divine element attains consciousness in the human
soul, and, as it were, looks out through human eyes observing
itself in its own creation. This descent and resurrection of
the divine element was enacted in Egypt, in the drama of
Osiris, and dramatized also at various places of initiation
in Greece. Those who were permitted to watch saw how art and
knowledge combined to depict in dramatic form the creation of
the world. Deep feelings of religious piety were called up in
the onlooker by this drama, which might be said to be
the archetypal drama. With reverence and awe the
onlooker watched the gods descend into matter, to slumber in
all beings, and resurrect within human beings. Filled with
awe, the onlooker experienced a mood described once by Goethe
in the following significant words: “When man's whole
being functions as a healthy entity, and he feels the world
to be a great, beautiful, worthy and estimable unity; when
pleasure in the harmony gives him pure delight, then, had it
self-awareness, the whole universe, feeling it had reached
its goal, would shout for joy, and admire the pinnacle of its
being and achievement.” A wondrous, deeply religious
mood filled the hearts of those who watched this drama of the
creation of the world.
And not only
was a religious mood created, but the drama also conveyed the
kind of knowledge that was later imparted in scientific
concepts to explain the creation of the world and its beings.
However, at that time one received, in the form of pictures,
a knowledge that was both scientific and religious. Science
and religion were one.
Richard Wagner
had a dim feeling that such harmony had once existed. He
looked back to a very old culture in ancient Greece that
still had a religious character. He saw that in gray
antiquity music, drama, dance and architecture did not
operate as separate undertakings; they all functioned in
conjunction with one another: Knowledge, art and religion
were a unity. He concluded that as they separated the arts
became self-seeking, egoistical. Wagner looked back as it
were to a far distant past when human beings were not so
individual, when a person felt as a member of his dass, of
his whole tribe, when the folk spirit was still regarded as a
concrete reality. In that ancient time a natural selflessness
had existed. And the thought came to him that man, in order
to become an individual, a personality, had to leave the old
clan-community to enable the personal element to assert
itself. Only in this way could man become a free being, but
the price was a certain degree of egoism.
Wagner looked
back to what in a primordial past had held people together in
communities, a selflessness that had to be left behind so
that human beings could become more and more conscious. He
had an intuitive presentiment about the future; he felt that
once individual freedom and independence had been attained,
humans would have to find the way back to fellowship and
caring relationships. Selflessness would have to be
consciously regained, and loving kindness once more would
have to become a prominent factor of life.
For Wagner the
present linked itself with the future, for he visualized as a
distant ideal the existence of selflessness within the arts.
Furthermore, he saw art as playing a significant role in
evolution. Human development and that of art appeared to him
to go hand in hand; both became egoistical when they ceased
to function as a totality. As we see them today, drama,
architecture and dance have gone their independent ways. As
humanity grew more and more selfish, so did art. Wagner
visualized a future when the arts would once more function in
united partnership. Because he saw a commune of artists as a
future ideal, he was referred to as “the
communist.”
He aimed to
contribute all he could to bring forth harmony among the
arts; he saw this as a powerful means of pouring into human
hearts the selflessness that must form the Basis for a future
fraternity. He was a missionary of social selflessness in the
sphere of art; he wanted to pour into every soul the impulse
of selflessness that brings about harmony among people.
Richard Wagner was truly possessed of a deep impulse of a
kind that could only arise and be sustained in someone with a
deep conviction of the reality of spiritual life. Richard
Wagner had that conviction.
Already his
work The Flying Dutchman bears witness to his belief in the
existence of a spiritual world behind the physical. You must
bear in mind that I do not for a moment suggest that Wagner
himself was conscious of the things I am indicating. His
artistic impulse developed according to spiritual laws, as a
plant develops according to laws of which it is not
conscious, but which are discovered by the botanist.
When a
materialist observes his fellowmen, he sees them as physical
entities isolated from one another, their separate souls
enclosed within their bodies. He consequently believes that
all communication between them can only be of an external
physical nature. He regards as real only what one person may
say or do to another. However, once there is awareness of a
spiritual world behind the physical, one is aware also of
hidden influences that act from person to person without a
physical agent. Hidden influences stream from soul to soul,
even when nothing is outwardly expressed. What a person
thinks and feels is not without significance or value for the
person towards whom the thoughts and feelings are directed.
He who thinks materialistically only knows that one can
physically reach and assist another person. He has no notion
that his inner feelings have significance for others, or that
bonds, invisible to physical sight, link soul to soul. A
mystic is well aware of these bonds. Richard Wagner was
profoundly aware of their existence.
To clarify what
is meant by this, let us look at a significant legend from
the Middle Ages that to modern humans is just a legend.
However, its author, and anyone who recognizes its mystical
meaning, is aware that this legend expresses a spiritual
reality. The legend, which is part of an epic, teils us about
Poor Henry who suffered from a dreadful illness. We are told
that only if a pure maiden would sacrifice herself for him
could he be cured of his terrible infliction. This indicates
that the love, offered by a soul that is pure, can directly
influence and do something concretely for another human
life.
Such legends
depict something of which the materialist has no notion,
namely, that purely spiritually one soul can influence
another. Is the maiden's sacrifice for Poor Henry ultimately
anything else than a physical demonstration of what a large
part of mankind believes to be the mystical effect of
sacrifice? Is it not an instance of what the Redeemer on the
Cross had bestowed on mankind; is it not an instance of that
mystical effect that acts from soul to soul? It demonstrates
the existence of a spiritual reality behind the physical that
can be sensed by man, and led Wagner to the legend of The
Flying Dutchman — the legend of a man so entangled
in material existence that he can find no deliverance from
it. The Flying Dutchman is with good reason referred to as
the “Ahasverus of the sea,” that is, The
Wandering Jew of the sea.
Ashasverus'
destiny is caused by the fact that he cannot believe in a
Redeemer; he cannot believe that someone can guide mankind
onwards to ever greater heights and more perfect stages of
evolution. An Ashasverus is someone that has become stuck
where he is; human beings must ascend stage by stage if they
are to progress. Without striving, he unites himself with
matter, with external aspects of life, and becomes stuck in
an existence that goes on and on, at the same level. He pours
scorn on Him that leads mankind upwards, and remains
entangled in matter. What does that mean? Existence keeps
repeating itself for someone who is completely immersed in
external life. Materialistic and spiritual comprehension
differ, because matter repeats itself, whereas spirit
ascends. The moment spirit succumbs to matter, it succumbs to
repetition.
That happens in
the case of The Flying Dutchman. Various peoples
related this idea to the discoveries of foreign lands; the
crossing of oceans and reaching foreign shores was seen as a
means of attaining perfection. He who lacked the urge, who
did not sense the spirit's call, became stuck in sameness, in
what belongs solely to matter. The Flying Dutchman, whose
whole disposition is materialistic, is abandoned by the power
to evolve, by the power of love, which is the means to ascend
to ever greater perfection. He becomes entangled in matter
and consequently in the eternal repetition of the same. Those
who suffer inability to ascend, who lack the urge to evolve,
must come under the influence of a soul that is chaste and
pure. Only an innocent maiden's love can redeem the Flying
Dutchman.
A certain
relationship exists between a soul that is as yet untouched
by material life and one that has become entangled in it.
Wagner has an instinctive feeling for this fact, and portrays
it with great power in his dramas. Only someone with his
mystical sense, and perception of the spirit behind the
physical, would have the courage to take on a cultural
mission of the magnitude Richard Wagner has assigned to
himself. It has enabled him to visualize music and drama in
ways no one has thought of before. He has looked back to
ancient Greece, to a time when various art forms still played
an integral part in performances, when music expressed what
the art of drama could not express, and eternal universal
laws were expressed through the rhythm of dance.
In older works
of art, where dance, rhythm and harmony still collaborated,
he recognized something of the musical-dramatic element of
the artistic works of antiquity. He acquired a unique sense
for harmony, for tonality in music, but insisted that
contributions from related arts were essential. Something
from them must flow into the music. One such related art was
dance, not as it has become, but the dance that once
expressed movements in nature and movements of the stars. In
ancient times, dance originated from a feeling for laws in
nature. Man in his own movements copied those in nature.
Rhythm of dance was reflected in the harmony of the music.
Other arts, such as poetry, whose vehicle is words, also
contributed, and what could not be expressed through words
was contributed by related arts. Harmonious collaboration
existed among dance, music and poetry. The musical element
arose from the cooperation of harmony, rhythm and melody.
This was what
mystics and also Richard Wagner felt as the spirit of art in
ancient times, when the various arts worked together in
brotherly fashion, when melody, rhythm and harmony had not
yet attained their later perfection. When they separated,
dance became an art form in its own right, and poetry
likewise. Consequently, rhythm became a separate experience,
and poetry no longer added its contribution to the musical
element. No longer was there collaboration between the arts.
In tracing the arts up to modern times, Wagner noticed that
the egoism in art increased as human beings egoism
increased.
Let us now look
at attempts made by Wagner to create something harmonious
within the artistic one-sidedness he faced. This is the
sphere that reveals his greatness as he searched for the true
nature of art.
To Richard
Wagner, Beethoven
[
Ludwig van Beethoven (1770–1827) was a German composer born in Bonn.
]
and Shakespeare
[
William Shakespeare (1564–1616) was an English poet,
playwright and actor-manager of the Globe Theatre.
]
represented artists who one-sidedly cultivated the two arts
he particularly wanted to bring together, music and drama. He
only had to look at his own inner being to recognize the
impossibility of conveying, merely through words, the whole
gamut of human feelings, particularly feelings that do not
manifest externally through gestures or words. Shakespeare
was in his view a one-sided dramatist because dramatic words
on their own are incapable of expressing things of deeper
import. Only when inner impulses have become external action,
have become part of space and time, can they be conveyed
through dramatic art. When watching a drama, one must assume
the impulses portrayed to be already experiences that are
past. What one witnesses is no longer drama taking place
within the. person concerned; it has already passed over into
what can be physically seen and heard. Whatever deeper
feelings and sensations are the basis for what is portrayed
on the stage cannot be conveyed by the dramatist.
In music, on
the other hand, Wagner regarded the symphonist, the pure
instrumentalist, to be the most one-sided, for he conveyed in
wonderful tone and scales the inner drama, the whole range of
human feelings, but had no means of expressing impulses once
they became gestures, or became part of space and time. Thus,
Wagner saw music as able to express the inner life, but
unable to convey what came to expression outwardly. Dramatic
art, on the other hand, when refusing to collaborate with
music, only conveyed impulses when they became
externalized.
According to
Wagner, Shakespeare conveyed one aspect of dramatic art, and Mozart,
[
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756–1791), Austrian composer.
]
Haydn
[
Franz Joseph Haydn (1732–1809), Austrian composer who
established the accepted classical forms of the Symphony,
string quartet, and piano sonata.
]
and Beethoven another. In Beethoven's Ninth Symphony
Wagner sensed something that strove to break away from the
one-sidedness of this art form, strove to burst the Shell and
become articulate, strove to permeate the whole world and envelop
mankind with love. Wagner saw it as his mission not to let
this element remain as it was in the Ninth Symphony,
but to bring it out still further into space and time. He
wanted it not only to be an external expression of a soul's
inner drama, but also to flow into words and action. He
wanted to present on the stage both aspects of dramatic art:
in music, the whole range of inner sensations, and in drama,
the aspect of those inner sensations that come to external
expression. What he sought was a higher unity of Shakespeare
and Beethoven. He wanted the whole of humanity represented on
the stage.
When we watch
some action taking place on the stage, we should become aware
of more than can be perceived by eyes and ears. We should be
able to be aware also of deeper impulses residing in the
human soul. This aspect caused dissatisfaction in Wagner with
the old type of opera. Here the dramatist, the poet and the
musician worked separately on a production. The poet wrote
his part, the musician then came along and interpreted what
was written through music. But the task of music is rather to
express what poetry by itself cannot express. Human nature
consists of an inner as well as an outer aspect. The inner
cannot be portrayed through external means; the outer aspect
can indeed be dramatized, but words are incapable of
conveying impulses that live within human beings. Music
should not be there to illustrate the poetry, but to complete
it. What poetry cannot express should be conveyed by
music.
That was
Wagner's great ideal and the sense in which he wanted to
create. He assigned to himself the mission to create a work
of art in which music and poetry worked together selflessly.
Wagner's basic idea was of mystical origin; he wanted to
understand the whole human being, the inner person as well as
what he revealed outwardly. Wagner knew that within human
beings a higher being resides, a higher self that was only
partially revealed in space and time. He sought to understand
that higher entity that rises above the everyday. He felt
that it must approached from as many sides as possible. His
search for the superhuman aspect of man's being, for that
which rises above the merely personal, led him to myths.
Mythical figures were not merely human, they were superhuman:
They revealed the superhuman aspect of a person's being.
Characters like Siegfried and Lohengrin do not display
qualities belonging to a single human being, but to many.
Wagner turned to the superhuman figures portrayed in myths
because he sought understanding of the deeper aspects of the
human being.
A clear look at
his work reveals how deep an insight he had attained into
mankind's evolution. In The Ring of the Nibelung and
Parsifal we witness, powerfully presented, great
riddles of humanity's existence. They reveal his intuitive
perception, his deep feelings for all mankind.
We can do no
more than turn a few spotlights on Wagner's inner experiences
as an artist. In so doing we soon discover his strong
affinity with what could be called "man's mythical past." His
particular interest in the figure of Siegfried can easily be
understood when seen in connection with his concept of
mankind's evolution. Looking back to ancient times, Wagner
saw that formerly the bond between human beings was based on
selfless love within the confines of a tribe. Human
consciousness at that time was duller; he did not yet
experience personal independence. Each one felt himself, not
so much an individual, but rather as a member of his tribe.
He experienced the tribal soul as a reality.
Wagner felt
that especially traits in European culture can be traced back
to the time when natural instinctive love united human beings
in interrelated groups, a time of which spiritual science
also speaks when showing that everything in the world
evolves, and that today's clear consciousness gradually
evolved from a different type, of which there are still
residues. In pictures of dream-consciousness Wagner
recognized echoes of a former picture-consciousness that had
once been the normal consciousness of all mankind. The waking
consciousness of today replaced a much duller type; while it
lasted, human beings were much closer to one another. As
Wagner recognized, those related were bound together by
natural love connected with the blood. Not until later did
individuality, and with it egoism, assert itself. However,
this constitutes a necessary stage in man's evolution.
The subject I
shall now bring up will be familiar to those acquainted with
spiritual science, but others may find it somewhat strange.
The lucid day-consciousness now existing in Europe evolved
from the very different consciousness of a primordial human
race that preceded our own — a humanity that existed on
Atlantis, a continent situated where the Atlantic Ocean is
now. Those who take note of what goes on in the world will be
aware that even natural science speaks of an Atlantean
continent. A scientific journal, Kosmos, recently
carried an article about it. Physical conditions on Atlantis
were very different; the atmosphere in which the ancestors of
today's European lived was a mixture of air and water. Large
areas of the continent were covered with huge masses of dense
mist. The sun was not seen as we see it, but surrounded by
enormous bands of color due to the masses of mist. In
Germanic legends a memory is preserved of that ancient
country, and given descriptive names such as
Niflheim or Nibelungenheim. As the Hood
gradually submerged the Atlantean continent, it also gave
shape to the German plains. The Rhine was regarded as a
remnant of the Atlantean "Being of Mist” that once
covered most of the countries. The water of the Rhine was
thought to have originated in Nibelungenheim or
Nebelheim (Nebel means “mist”),
to have come from the dense mist of ancient Atlantis. Through
a dreamlike consciousness, full of premonition, all this is
told in sagas and myths wherein is described how conditions
caused the people to abandon the area and how, as they
wandered eastwards, their dull consciousness grew ever more
lucid while egoism increased.
A consequence
of the former dull consciousness was a certain selflessness,
but with the clearer air, consciousness grew brighter and
egoism stronger. The vaporous mist had enveloped the people
of Atlantis with an atmosphere saturated with wisdom,
selflessness and love. This selfless, love-filled wisdom
flowed with the water into the Rhine and reposed beneath it
as wisdom, as gold. But this wisdom, if taken hold of by
egoism, provides it with power. As they went eastward, the
former inhabitants of Atlantis saw the Rhine embracing the
hoard of the gold of wisdom that had once been a source of
selflessness. All this is intimated in the world of sagas
that took hold of Wagner. He had such inner kinship with that
lofty spiritual being who preserves memory of the past, whose
spirit lives in sagas and myths, that he extracted from myths
the whole essence of his view of the world. We therefore
witness, dramatized on the stage and echoing through his
music, the consequences of human egoism.
We see the Ring
closing, as Alberich takes the gold of the Rhine from the
Rhine Maidens. Alberich is representative of the
Nibelungs, who have become egoistic, of the human being that
forswears the love through which he is a member of a
unity — a dan or tribe. Wagner links to the plan that
weaves through the legend the power of possession — that
the ancient world arises before his mind's eye, the world
that has produced Walhalla, the world of Wotan, and of the
ancient gods. They represent a kind of group-soul possessing
traits that a people have in common. But when the Ring cioses
around man's “I,” the individual too is taken
hold of by greed for gold.
Wagner
sensitively portrays what lives in Wotan as group-soul
qualities, and in human beings become egoistic craving for
the Rhine-gold. We hear it in his music; how could one fail
to hear it? It should not be said that something arbitrary is
at this point inserted in the music. No human ear could fail
to hear in that long E-flat major in the Rhine-gold the
impact of the emerging human “I.” Wagner's deep
mystical sense can be traced in his music.
We are shown
that Wotan has to come to terms, not with the consciousness
that had become individualized, but with that which had not
yet become so, and still strongly acts as
group-consciousness. When he tries by stealth to take away
the Ring from the giant, he meets this consciousness in the
figure of Erda. She is clearly representing the old
all-encompassing consciousness through which knowledge is
attained clairvoyantly of the whole environment. The words
spoken at this point are most significant:
To thee is known
What lies hidden in the deep,
What weaves in air and water
Through mountain and valley.
Thou breathest through The wele of existence;
When heads ponder Thy sense emerges.
It is said that to thee All things are known.
The old
consciousness that held sway in Nebelheim cannot be better
described than in the words:
My sleep is a dreaming
My dream is a musing
My musing is ruled by wisdom.
The old
consciousness was a dreaming consciousness, but in this dream
human beings knew of the whole surrounding world. The dream
encompassed the depth of nature and spun its wisdom from
person to person, whose musing and actions all stemmed from
this dreaming consciousness. Wotan meets it in the figure of
Erda with the result that a new consciousness arises.
What is of a
higher order is always depicted in myths and sagas as a
female figure. In Goethe's Faust it is indicated in the words
of the Chorus Mysticus: “The eternal feminine
draws us upwards and on.” Various peoples have depicted
a person's inner striving towards a higher consciousness as a
union with a higher aspect of the being that is seen as
feminine. What is depicted as a marriage is a person's union
with the cosmic laws that permeate and illumine his soul. For
example, in ancient Egypt we see Isis, and as always the
female figure that is looked up to as the higher
consciousness has characteristics that correspond to those of
the particular people. What a people feels to be its real
essence, its true nature, is depicted as a female figure
corresponding to this ideal — a feminine aspect with
which the individual human being becomes united after death,
or also while still living.
As we have
seen, man can rise above the sensual, either by leaving it
behind, and in death uniting with the spirit, or he may
attain the union while still living by attaining spiritual
sight. In either case, this higher self is depicted in
Germanic myths as a female figure. The warrior who fought
courageously and died on the battlefield is regarded by
ancestors of today's Middle European as someone who, on
entering the spiritual world, would be united with this
higher aspect of his being. Hence, the Walkyries are shown to
approach the dying warriors and carry them up into spiritual
realms. Union with the Walkyrie represents union with the
higher consciousness. The Walkyrie Brunnhilde is created
through the union of Wotan and Erda. Siegfried is to be
united with her and guided into spiritual life. Thus, the
daughter of Erda represents the higher consciousness of
initiation. Siegfried represents the new, the different human
being that has come into existence. Because of the
configuration and higher perfection of his inner being, he is
united with the Walkyrie already in life.
The hidden
wisdom in Germanic legends comes to expression in Wagner's
artistic creation. He shows that through the
Götterdämmerung (Twilight of the Gods),
the old group-soul consciousness must die out as the new
individual consciousness develops in Siegfried.
Wagner had a deep awareness of the great mysteries connected
with mankind's evolution. A human being's inner experiences
he expressed through music, his action through dramatic
art.
His sense for
the mystical aspect of evolution enabled him to portray a
person's higher development. It made him place at the centre
of one of his dramas the figure of Lohengrin. Who is
Lohengrin? He can be understood only when seen an the
background of the momentous upheavals taking place all over
Europe at the time when the legend was living reality. Only
then can we understand what Wagner had in mind when he
depicts Lohengrin's relationship with the Lady he names as
Elsa von Brabant. Throughout Europe a new epoch was dawning;
An individual's striving personality was coming to the fore.
Though described in prosaic terms, these phenomena hide
events of greatest significance. In France, Scotland, England
and as far away as Russia, a new social structure was
developing, in the form of the “Free City.” In
rural districts, people still lived in groups, in clans;
those who wanted to escape flocked to the cities. The urban
environment promoted individual consciousness and feelings of
independence. People in the city were those who wanted to
strip off the bonds of clan or tribe; they wanted to live
their own lives in their own way.
In reality a
mighty revolution was taking place. Up till then a person's
name decided where he belonged and his status. In the City, a
person's name was of no importance, family background of no
concern. What counted was personal ability; in the city
individuality developed. The evolution from selflessness to
individuality became an evolution from individuality to
brotherhood. The legend depicted this. In the middle of the
Middle Ages the old social structure was being replaced with
a new structure, within which each person contributed
according to his individual capacity.
Formerly,
Leaders and rulers, were always descended from priestly and
aristocratic families. The fact that they came from such a
background was what mattered; they must have the
“right” blood. In the future that would be of no
account; someone chosen as leader might be completely unknown
as regards descent, and it would be regarded as irreverent to
link him with a particular name. The ideal was seen in the
great individuality, in the anonymous sage who continued to
grow and develop; he was not significant because of his
descent, but because of what he was. He was a free individual
acknowledged by others just because his achievements were his
own.
In this sense,
Lohengrin comes before us as representative of man, leading
men to freedom and independence. The lady who becomes his
wife represents the consciousness described as that of
city-dweller of the Middle Ages. He who mediates between the
Lofty Being that guides mankind and the people is always
associated with great individuality, and is always known by a
specific name. Through spiritual knowledge he is known by the
technical name “Swan,” which denotes a particular
stage of higher spiritual development. The Swan mediates
between ordinary people and the Lofty Being that leads
humanity. We see a reflection of this in the legend of
Lohengrin.
If we are to do
justice to the wisdom found in legends, to things revealed
through Wagner's artistry, we must bring to it an open mind
and mobile ideas. If taken in a narrow, pedantic sense, we
are left with empty words instead of being inwardly fired
with enthusiasm by the far-reaching vistas opened up through
his work. I must be permitted to bring these things before
you in concepts that point to a greater perspective. A figure
like Lohengrin must be presented in light of its
world-historical background and significance. And we must
recognize that an understanding of this significance dawned
in Wagner, enabling him to give it artistic
form.
The same also
applies to Wagner's comprehension of the Holy Grail. We
concerned ourselves with the Holy Grail in the previous
lecture: “Who are the Rosicrucians?” It is indeed
a remarkable fact that at a certain moment there arose in
Wagner an inkling of the great teaching that flourished in
the Middle Ages. Before that happened, another idea, as it
were, prepared the way, but first it led him to create a
drama called The Victor; this was in 1856.
The
Victor was never performed, but the idea it embodied was
incorporated into his Parsifal. The Victor
depicted the following:
Ananda, a youth
of the Brahman caste, was loved by a Tschandala maiden;
because of the caste system he cannot reciprocate the love.
Ananda became a follower of Buddha, and he eventually
conquered his human craving: He gained victory over himself.
To the maiden was then revealed that in a former life she was
a Brahman and had overcome her love for the youth who was
then of the Tschandala caste. Thus, she too was a victor. She
and Ananda were spiritually united.
Wagner renders
a beautiful interpretation of this idea, taking it as far as
reincarnation and karma in the Christian-Anthroposophical
sense. We are shown that the maiden herself, in a former
life, brought about the present events. Wagner has worked on
this idea in 1856.
On Good Friday,
1857, he was sitting in the Retreat, “the sanctuary on
the green hill.” Looking out over the fields watching
the plants come to life, sprouting from the earth, an inkling
arose in him of the Power of the germinating force emerging
from the earth in response to the rays of the sun: a driving
force, a motivating force that permeates the whole world and
lives in all beings; a force that must evolve, that cannot
remain as it is; a force that, to reach higher stages, must
pass through death. Watching the plants, he felt the force of
sprouting life, and turning his gaze across the Lake of
Zürich to the village; he contemplated the opposite
idea, that of death — the two polar concepts to which
Goethe gives such eloquent expression in his poem,
Blessed Longing.
And until thou truly hast,
This dying and becoming,
Thou are but a troubled guest
O'er the dark earth roaming.
Goethe rewrote
the words in his hymn to nature saying: “Nature
invented death to have more life; only through death can she
create a higher spiritual life.”
On Good Friday,
as the symbol of death came before mankind in remembrance,
Wagner sensed the connection between life, death and
immortality. He felt a connection between the life sprouting
from the earth and the Death on the Cross, the Death that is
also the source of a Christian belief that life will
ultimately be victorious over death, will become eternal
life. Wagner sensed an inner connection between the sprouting
life of spring and the Good Friday belief in Redemption, the
belief that from Death on the Cross springs Eternal Life.
This thought is the same as that contained in the Quest for
the Holy Grail, where the chaste plant blossom, striving
towards the sun, is contrasted with human desire filled
nature. On the one hand Wagner recognized that human beings
steeped in desires; on the other he looked towards a future
ideal — the ideal that human beings shall attain a higher
consciousness through overcoming their lower nature, shall
attain a higher fructifying power, called forth by the
Spirit.
Looking towards
the Cross, Wagner saw the blood flowing from the Redeemer,
the symbol of Redemption, being caught in the Graul Chalice.
This picture, linked itself within him to the life awakening
in nature. These thoughts were passing through Wagner's soul
on Good Friday, 1857. He jotted down a few words that later
became the basis from which he created his magnificent Good
Friday drama. He wrote: "The blossoming plant springs from
death; eternal life springs from the Death of Christ." At
that moment Wagner had an inner awareness of the Spirit
behind all things, of the Spirit victorious over death.
For a time
other creative ideas pushed those concerned with Parsifal
into the Background. They came to the fore once more near the
end of his life, when, clearer than before, they conveyed to
him a person's path of knowledge. Wagner portrayed the path
to the Holy Graul to show the cleansing of a human beings'
desire nature. As an ideal this is depicted as a pure holy
chalice whose image is the plant calyx's chaste
fructification to new creation by the sunbeam, the holy lance
of love. The sunbeam enters matter as Amfortas' lance enters
sinful blood. But there the result is suffering and death.
The path to the Holy Grail is portrayed as a cleansing of the
sinful blood of lower desires till, on a higher level, it is
as pure and chaste as is the plant calyx in relation to the
sunbeam. Only he who is pure in heart, unworldly, untouched
by temptation, so that he approaches the Holy Grail as an
"innocent fool" filled with questions of its secret, can
discover the path.
Wagner's
Parsifal is born out of his mystical feeling for the Holy
Grail. At one time he meant to incorporate the idea into his
work Die Wibelungen, an historical account of the Middle
Ages. He wanted to elevate the concept of Emperor by letting
Barbarossa journey to the East in search of the original
spirit of Christianity, thus combining the Parsifal legend
with history of the Middle Ages. This idea led to his
wonderful artistic interpretation of the Good Friday
tradition, so that it can truly be said that Wagner has
succeeded in bringing religion into art, in making art
religious.
In his artistic
new creation of the Good Friday tradition, Wagner had the
ingenious idea of combining the subject of faith with that of
the Holy Grail. On the one hand stands the belief that
mankind will be redeemed, and on the other, that through
perfecting its nature humanity itself strives towards
redemption; the belief that the Spirit permeating
mankind — a drop of which lives in each individual as his
higher self — in Christ Jesus foreshadowed humanity's
redemption. All this arose as an inner picture in Wagner's
mind already on that Good Friday in 1857 when he recognized
the connection between the legend of Parsifal and Redemption
through Christ Jesus.
We can begin to
sense the presence of the Christ within mankind's spiritual
environment when, with sensitivity and understanding, we
absorb the story of the Holy Graul. And it can deepen to
concrete inner spiritual experience when we sense the
transition from the midnight of Maundy Thursday — events
of Maundy Thursday — to those of Good Friday, which
symbolize the victory of nature's resurrection.
Wagner's
Parsifal was inspired by the festival of Easter. He
wanted new life to pour into the Christian festivals, which
originally were established out of a deep understanding of
nature. This can be seen especially in the case of the Easter
festival, which was established when it was still known that
the constellation of sun and moon affected human beings.
Today people want Easter celebrated an an arbitrarily chosen
date, which shows that the festival is no longer experienced
as it was when there was still a feeling for the working of
nature. When the spirit was regarded as a reality it was
sensed in all things. If we could still sense what was
bequeathed to us through traditions in regard to the
festivals, then we would also have a feeling for how to
celebrate Good Friday. Richard Wagner did have that feeling,
just as he also perceived that the words of the Redeemer:
“I am with you to the end of the world,” called
human beings to follow the trail that led to the lofty ideal
of the Holy Grail. Then people who lived the Truth would
become redeemers.
Mankind is
redeemed by the Redeemer. But Wagner adds the question: "When
is the Redeemer redeemed?" He is redeemed when He abides in
every human heart. As He has descended into the human heart,
the human heart must ascend. Something of this was also felt
by Wagner, for from the motif of faith he lets sound forth
what is the mystical feeling of mankind in these beautiful
words from Parsifal:
Greatest Healing Wonder
Redemption for the Redeemer!
These words
truly show Wagner's deep commitment to the highest ideal a
person can set himself: to approach that Spiritual Power that
came down to us and lives in our world. When we are worthy,
we bring what resounds at the dose of Richard Wagner's
Parsifal: Redemption for the Redeemer.
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