^eff- GREAT MEN ^!£ WAGNER dlatmll Imocraitg ffiihrara JItljaca, Ntm farh FROM THE BENNO LOEWY LIBRARY COLLECTED BY BENNO LOEWY IB54-I9I9 BEQUEATHED TO CORNELL UNIVERSITY Cornell University Library ML 410.W1C77 3 1924 022 197 309 Cornell University Library The original of this book is in the Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924022197309 RICHARD WAGNER RICHARD WAGNER li^ITH SEVEN ILLUSTRATIONS FROM PHOTOGRAPHS NEW YORK FREDERICK A. STOKES COMPANY PUBLISHERS Copyright, igij, by FREDERICK A. STOKES COMPANY All rights reserved September, 1915 GENERAL NOTE Oj all books perhaps the one best designed for training the mind and forming the charac- ter is "Plutarch." The lives of great men are object-lessons. They teach effort, devotion, in- dustry, heroism and sacrifice. Even one who confines his reading solely to biographies of thinkers, writers, inventors, poets of the spirit or poets of science, will in a short time have acquired an understanding of the whole History of Humanity. And what novel or what drama could be com- pared to such a history? Accurate biographies record narratives which no romancer's imagina- tion could hope to rival. Researches, suffer- ings, labors, triumphs, agonies and disasters, the defeats of destiny, glory, which is the "sun- light of the dead," illuminating the past, whether fortunate or tragic, — such is what the lives of Great Men reveal to us, or, if the phrase vi WAGNER be allowed, paint for us in a series of fascinat- ing and dramatic pictures. This series of biographies is accordingly in/- tended to form a sort of gallery, a museum of the great servants of Art, Science, Thought and Action. On the mountain tops we breathe a purer and more vivifying air. And it is like ascending to a moral mountain top when we live, if only for a moment, with the dead who, in their lives did honour to mankind, and attain the level of those whose eyes now closed, once glowed like beacon-lights, leading humanity on its eternal march through night-time towards the light. CONTENTS Part First THE LIFE OF RICHARD WAGNER CHAPTER PAGE I Richard Wagner's First Steps towards the Light. — From Poetry to the Theatre and TO Music. — A Rebellious Pupil. — An Opera Staged in Ten Days. — The Trials of A Kapellmeister .... 3 II The Calvary or an Artist. — From Hate to Love. — ^A New Art. — ^Waiting between Rays of Hope and Shadows of Despair. — The Revolutionist of Music . . .37 III The Genesis of a Work op Art. — An Asylum : AN Oasis in the Desert. — ^A Romantic Love. — From Real Life to the World of Thought and of Art . . . .57 rV Richard Wagner Greeted with Hisses. — ' The Splendor and Misery of an Artist. — Between Charybdis and Scylla. — On the Way to Success. — ^A King of Dreams and Mysteries . . . . . .76 V Peace and Meditation. — From Dream to Reality. — ^The Apotheosis op Richard Wagnbe 110 vii viii CONTENTS Pabt Second THE WAGNERIAN DRAMA CHAPTEE BAGE I Some Peinciples of Wagnerian Art. — Poetbt AND Music. — Fbom Opeba to Drama . 135 II The Great Wagnerian Themes. — From Love TO Sacrifice. — In the Realm of Dreams AND Beauty 147 III Epic and Lyric. — From Human Deities to Divine Humanity. — ^A Gospel in Music . 168 IV The Wagnerian Gui/r. — Those For and Those Against It. — ^The Initiated and the Profane. — ^Wagner in the Judgment of Posterity 191 ILLUSTRATIONS RICHARD WAGNER . . . Frontispiece FACING PAGE "RICHARD WAGNER, HIS FAMILY AND HIS PRINCIPAL INTERPRETERS AT BAY- REUTH," by G. Pappeeitz From left to right : Siegfried and Frau Cosima Wagner, the painter Lenbach, the singer Scaria, the conductor F. Fischer, the celebrated singer Matema, Richard Wagner, the chief machinist at Bayreuth, Fr. Brandt, the conductors Her- mann Levy and Hans Richter, the composer Liszt, the baritone Betz, the Countess Schlein- itz, the Countess Usedom, the painter Joukow- ski 16 WAGNER'S FAMILY Frau Cosima Wagner and her son Siegfried are indefatigably devoted to the culte of the Master . '48 WAGNER IN CARICATURE Above: Caricature by Faustin (London Fi- garo, 1876) , and by Gill (Eclipse, 1876) . Below: Wagner as Premiere Danseuse, by Tiret-Bo- gnet (1891); Wagner the Tetralogist, by Gill (1876) ... ... 80 ^ ILLUSTRATIONS THE THEATRE AT BAYREUTH ^^^f^ Interior of the Theatre where the Pilgrims of Art commune in the Wagnerian ReUgion . 112 THE PRINCIPAL INTERPRETERS OF WAG- NER IN AMERICA Mmes. Gadski, Destinn, Ober, Fornia. Messrs. Witherspoon, Slezak, Urlu. and Kingston 160 RICHARD WAGNER'S MONUMENT AT BER- LIN This monument, erected in the Tiergarten in BerUn, by the sculptor Elberlein, is worthy of his universal and colossal glory . . . 208 PART FIRST THE LIFE OF RICHARD WAGNER RICHARD WAGNER CHAPTER I RICHAKD WAGNEr's FIRST STEPS TOWARDS THE LIGHT FROM POETRY TO THE THEATER AND TO MUSIC — A REBELLIOUS PUPIL — AN OPERA STAGED IN TEN DAYS — THE TRIALS OF A KAPELLMEISTER ON the manuscript of one of Wagner's earliest operas, written in the days of poverty and anxiety, the following note occurs : "Per aspera ad astra (which may be rendered: By rough ways upward to the stars). God willed it so. Richard Wagner." This formula admirably symbolizes the trou- bled and tumultuous life of this Titan of mod- ern art, whose powerful genius created a world of new sensations and ideas by revolutionizing the aesthetics of music and the drama. It calls to mind at one and the same time his cruel 3 4 RICHARD WAGNER trials, his ardent and sublime mysticism, his errors such as they were, and his marvelous ascension into radiant light. The road that he traveled was full of black shadows and blinding brilliance, a Calvary be- fore it became an apotheosis. As was the case of Berlioz in France, before Wagner succeeded in winning the acclaim of the German nation and the world at large, he went through the atrocious torment of vain endeavor to obtain a hearing. He drained the cup of bitterness to the lees before his lofty inspiration at last triumphed and spread throughout all lands the superb, enchanting and torrential flood of his vast harmonies. The one way to approach Richard Wagner is whole-heartedly, recognizing him as one of the boldest and noblest champions of the Dream and the Ideal. And no one can survey without amazement and something approaching rever- ence his remarkable destiny as musician, poet and dramatist. Notwithstanding a sort of mystery which WAGNER'S FIRST STEPS 5 seems to surround his prodigious career as an artist, it is possible for us to follow it almost without hesitation. And this is largely due to the fact that Wagner himself was profoundly, almost passionately anxious to make his con- temporaries and posterity acquainted with his ideas and his life. We can best initiate ourselves into these lofty ideas and into what we may call the Wag- nerian religion, through the aid of Wagner him- self, thanks to his important literary contribu- tions, his Memoirs, his Correspondence, and the various other writings which bear the stamp of his immense personality. Accordingly we shall rely largely upon Wag- ner himself in our attempt to understand and interpret him. Yet there are many other her- alds of his fame, the majority of whom are as conscientious as they are well informed. For not only in Germany but in France as well Wagner has attracted a host of fervent enthu- siasts. Indeed, it is astonishing to see how many writers have drawn their inspiration 6 RICHARD WAGNER from the Wagnerian spring! Few men have shared with the author of Tannhduser, the Fly- ing Dutchman and the Walkyrie, the gift of attracting and retaining pilgrims of the ideal and the beautiful. Undoubtedly, it was because he was at first misunderstood and even ridiculed, that he was afterwards all the more beloved and venerated. Undoubtedly, his legitimate glory profited by those earlier hostilities, and it was deemed necessary to avenge them by a devotion that was at times over partial and sterile. Yet fash- ion and snobbishness have been as powerless to harm him as was blind hostility. Vain clam- ors and excessive and sterile adulation alike subside necessarily with the passage of years. Yet such abatement takes nothing from the splendor and majesty of Richard Wagner, cre- ator of the musical drama. It is no longer necessary to be fanatical in order to be able to admire him as he deserves and to continue a faithful worshiper at his shrine. "My name is Wilhebn Richard Wagner, and WAGNER'S FIRST STEPS 7 I was born at Leipzig on the 22d of May, 1813. "My father was chief of police, and he died six months after my birth. My step-father, Ludwig Geyer, was an actor and painter; he was also the author of a few comedies; one of them. The Massacre of the Innocents, was suc- cessful. With him, our family removed to Dresden. It was his desire that I too should become a painter, but I had very little talent for drawing. "My step-father also died prematurely, when I was only seven years of age. Shortly before he died, I had learned to play two pieces on the piano, Vb' immer Treu und Redlichkeit and the Jungfernkranz, which then had the advan- tage of being new. The night before he died, he had me play these two pieces in the room adjoining his own; and then I heard him say to my mother in a feeble voice : " 'Perhaps the boy has a talent for music!' "The following morning, after his death, my mother came into the nursery and said to me, 8 RICHARD WAGNER 'He was in hopes of making something of you.' "I remember that for a long time afterwards, I clung to the idea that they were going to make something out of me." Such is the beginning of the Autobiograph- ical Sketch, from the French version by a musical critic of repute, M. J. G. Prud'honome, to whom we owe some valuable details regard- ing Wagner. But we need to supplement the above account with further information in re- gard to Wagner's family and the environment in which he passed his childhood and youth. Let us begin by casting a glance at his progen- itors. They were of Saxon stock and belonged to a class that, although in modest circum- stances, thirsted for culture; in fact, they were most of them organists or school teachers. Wagner's grandfather, who had once made a serious study of theology, and his father, who was passionately fond of the theater, .both led the peaceful life of government employees, the former as a post-office clerk, the latter, as we have already seen, as chief of police, at Leipzig. WAGNER'S FIRST STEPS 9 Richard was Friedrich Wagner's ninth child. And although the family was far from pros- perous, they were all deeply interested in art and learning. His mother, whose maiden name was Rosina Peetz, had many very estimable qualities. His father died on the 22d of No- vember, 1813, a victim of the epidemic which broke out as an after consequence of the san- guinary battle of Leipzig. Ludwig Geyer, his step-father, whom he al- ways after held in grateful memory, had a number of real talents. He was an artist and more especially a portrait painter of some re- pute, an actor of ability, and furthermore he sang in the operas composed by Weber, who appreciated his fine voice and dramatic powers. Adolf Wagner, Richard's uncle, was a scholar and man of letters, author of some remarkable translations and interesting comedies. It was in August, 1814, that Geyer installed himself at Dresden; and from his childhood up, Richard lived among actors and attended re- hearsals, even taking some small part in an 10 RICHARD WAGNER occasional private performance. It was not long before his three sisters went upon the stage, and his brother, who was fourteen years older than Richard and was destined to be his chief protector after Geyer's death, renounced the study of medicine, in order in his turn to adopt the same career. It is worth noting that Wagner, free and in- dependent genius, was never subjected to that harsh intellectual discipline from which so many artists have had to suffer. He grew up in a congenial and pleasant atmosphere, in which every one had the right to consult his own tastes and devote his activity to them. Little Richard, for example, from the moment of his first intellectual awakening, conceived a passionate fondness for the theater. On this point Wagner's own autobiography gives con- clusive testimony: "From the date of my earliest childhood, the theater exercised a great influence over my imagination. I frequented it, not only as §, child spectator, occupying a place in a box WAGNER'S FIRST STEPS 11 which mysteriously communicated with the stage, or as a habitue of the wings, admiring the extraordinary costumes and characteristic dis- guises to be seen there, but I also made my appearance as an actor. I had already seen performances of The Orphan and the Mur- derer, The Two Galley Slaves, and other som- ber dramas which filled me with terror and in which my step-father played the part of villain, when it came my turn to take part in certain comedies. In one piece that was produced on the occasion of the return of the King of Sax- ony from captivity, — The Vineyard on the Banks of the Elbe, — and set to music by the kapellmeister, Karl Maria von Weber, I played the part of an angel, and clad in tights, with wings on my back, posed in a tableau in a graceful attitude that was very difficult to take and to retain. I remember also receiving on this occasion a large sugar cookie, which, they told me, the king had had prepared especially for me. Lastly, I remember having had a speaking part of a few words in Kotzebue's 12 RICHARD WAGNER play, Hate and Repentance, and that I made use at school of the pretext of a long scene to memorize as an excuse for not having done my lessons." We next follow little Richard to Possendorf, near Dresden, to the home of a country clergy- man, named Wetzel, who in the evenings re- lated the adventures of Robinson Crusoe. He also read aloud a biography of Mozart, and newspaper articles about Greece. A little later, we find young Wagner living with an uncle, a goldsmith, at the small and ancient town of Eisleben. He has recorded pleasant memories of a school conducted by a worthy man named Weiss, of Luther's house, and of the Market Place where he lived and where he had occasion to witness the perform- ances of acrobats, who walked upon a tight- rope stretched from tower to tower^ all the way across the square. "For a long time after- wards," writes Richard Wagner, "I retained, as the result of this spectacle, a passionate inter- est in feats of this class. With the aid of a WAGNER'S FIRST STEPS 13 balancing pole, I myself succeeded in walking with some degree of skill upon a cord which I had stretched in the courtyard. Those days left me with a certain fondness for acrobatic exercises which I have not lost, even to this day" (My Life). At eight years of age he entered the Kreuz- schule, in Dresden. It was here that Weber's Freischutz filled him with enthusiasm, and he felt something akin to veneration every time that he saw the illustrious author of this opera, Karl Maria von Weber himself, pass by in the street. One of Wagner's teachers, who taught him Latin, began at this time to. give him piano lessons. The boy had a strong repugnance for scales and exercises and put all his energy into picking out the overture to Der Freischutz after a fashion of his own. Horrified at his fingering, his master predicted that nothing could ever be made of him. As a matter of fact, Wagner never claimed to be a brilhant pianist. It is related that he contented him- self with saying, at any joking reference to his 14 RICHARD WAGNER lack of skill in playing, "I play better than Berlioz," — which was by no means a difficult matter. On the other hand, he seems to have received from boyhood up a solid course of instruction. His classical studies fired him with enthusiasm. At the age of eleven he was already grounded in Latin and Greek, and loved to brood over the great themes of mythology and ancient history. He began to write verse, and he wished to learn English in order to familiarize himself with Shakespeare, to whom he was strongly attracted. He straightway began the composition of a great dramatic work, Leukald and Adelaide, in which he undertook neither more nor less than a combination of Hamlet and King Lear. "The plot," he writes, "was exceptionally magnificent; forty-two personages died during the action of the play, and towards the end I found myself under the necessity of bringing most of them back in the form of ghosts, for all my characters were dead before the begin- WAGNER'S FIRST STEPS 15 jtiing of the last act. This play occupied me for the space of two years." We must not attach an exaggerated impor- tance to the first stammerings of genius nor to the flattering accounts that are so apt to be given of such early manifestations. But it is at least curious to discover in young Richard Wagner this predominant taste for poetry and the drama and a predilection for vast subjects requiring a sovereign imagination and a most uncommon energy. In 1847, the family returned to Leipzig, where Rosalie Wagner, who was then twenty- four years of age, had just secured an engage- ment at the municipal theater. It was at the Nikolaischille, in that city, that Richard lost his fondness for philological studies. Haunted as he was by dreams of the theater, it must be confessed that he proved to be a deplorable pupil. He hated what in later years he called the pedantry of schools and universities, and he did not hesitate to revolt against his teach- ers. Consequently the superintendent was 16 RICHARD WAGNER obliged to make a serious complaint to his uncle, Adolf Wagner, in regard to the undis- ciplined lad. Disgusted with school, Richard took his sis- ter Ottilie into his confidence one day and read her his ambitious drama in the midst of a storm which, terrible as it was, was out-rivaled by his Goethe-like and Shakespearean scenes. His sister, begged him to stop reading; but he continued imperturbably, and she submitted with touching resignation. Mozart's Requiem and more especially the music of Beethoven came to him at this epoch as a revelation. He heard his elder sister, Ros- alie, and more especially the second sister Clara playing the piano. "Clara," he writes, "pos- sessed not only an expressive touch and a pro- nounced artistic feeling, but a voice that was extraordinarily beautiful and full of soul." Young Wagner constantly heard discussions going on around him in regard to German opera and the Italian school. He himself took the side of German opera, partly because the O g g S WAGNER'S FIRST STEPS 17 Italian tenor Sassaroli horrified him with "his high-pitched feminine voice and his noisy laughter, bursting out on all occasions." From this time forth he held to the belief that the mission of music was to instill new life into the theater. He decided to write a score for his tragedy, and there seemed to him to be nothing unnatural in the project. "I assumed without further thought that I was qualified to write the necessary music; but it seemed to me a good idea to begin by acquir- ing some knowledge of the principles of thor- ough-base. So, in order to lose as little time as possible, I borrowed Logier's Method of Thorough-base for a week and studied it zeal- ously. But my efforts did not bear fruit as soon as I expected; the difficulties of the sub- ject stimulated and delighted me; and then and there I determined to become a musician." He became one very speedily, though at first with no very striking results. He planned an opera based upon the legend of Faust, and wrote a quartette and a sonata. At the age of 18 RICHARD WAGNER sixteen he was author of a Pastoral. Weber and Beethoven had opened a path to him, and he boldly entered upon it. His mother once more had him take lessons; but he rebelled against method. Anything in the form of discipline was hateful to him. In- stead of drudging away at arid exercises, he preferred to compose overtures for the full or- chestra, one of which was played at the Leipzig theater, on December 24th, 1830. Wagner's reminiscences regarding this maiden produc- tion are quite picturesque and weU deserve to be reproduced: "This overture was the culminating point of my extravagance. In order to render it easier to understand, I had persisted in writing it with three different iaks, red for the string instru- ments, green for the wood, black for the brass. Beethoven's Ninth Symphony was to be re- duced to the level of a Pleyel sonata, in com- parison with this marvelously complicated Overture. ... A kettle-drum, played fortis- simo at regular intervals of four measures. WAGNER'S FIRST STEPS 19 turned the scales against me. The persistence of that drummer roused the audience, first to surprise, then to ill-concealed disapproval, and finally to an outburst of hilarity that filled me with consternation. That first performance of one of my own compositions has left a lasting memory." Numerous anecdotes relating to Richard Wagner's youthful days have been given to the public by the pianist, Ferdinand Prager. Not- withstanding that, in the estimation of Mr. Chamberlain, their authenticity is extremely questionable, the following story at least ought to be cited: "Richard Wagner's mother," writes Prager, "enjoyed a modest pension as widow of a gov- ernment official. One day young Richard, being then fourteen or fifteen years old, was sent to collect the quarterly payment. On his way home, with the money in his pocket, he passed the door of a public gambling house. At that moment he had a sensation such as he had never before experienced. He felt as 20 RICHARD WAGNER though the hazard of the die would serve him as an oracle of his destiny. The money did not belong to him, but none the less he entered, determined to tempt his fate. At first he was unlucky and lost aU his stakes, untU only a small sum remained. Yet he could not resist the fascinating temptation, but promised him- self that this time he would stake his very life upon the turn of fortune. Fortunately for the world and for art, his luck changed. By a most unlooked-for run of luck, he won back not only the original sum but considerably more besides. He came out from the gambling house far richer than when he entered it. " 'But,' I said to him, 'what would you have done if you had lost it all?' " 'Good God!' he replied, 'before crossing the threshold of that house, I had made a firm re- solve to throw myself into the river, if I lost, and on the contrary to believe in the greatness of my destiny if I won.' "At the time that he told me this story, he was a man forty-three years of age, and I could WAGNER'S FIRST STEPS 21 not resist repeating my question: 'Would you really have done it?' " 'I certainly should/ he answered, briefly and decidedly. "The lad found himself incapable of hiding what he had done from his mother, but told her the whole story as soon as he returned home. " 'Instead of scolding me,' he said, 'she threw her arms around my neck, kissed me tenderly and cried: "Your voluntary confession proves to me that you will never do such a wicked thing again." ' "Wagner told me this story while I was stay- ing with him at Zurich in 1856. This was not the only occasion on which he defied destiny. He was always filled with an invincible faith in his mission, which sustained him through many a trial and at the same time drove him into audacious actions before which a graver mind would have recoiled." ;' It is a weU known fact that3 throughout his life, and notably in a nuhiber of far echoing 22 RICHARD WAGNER pamphlets, Wagner vented his animosity against the Jews, notwithstanding that his or- chestra leader at Bayreuth and a number of his friends were of that race. His resentment in regard to Meyerbeer and Halevy, who at that time were on the top wave of popularity in France and who watched with very doubtful pleasure the rise of a rival star of such magni- tude, would doubtless suffice to explain his anti-Semitism. Prager however gives another version, the responsibility for which we wiU naturally once more leave to him. At all events, it is a pic- turesque story and at least contains some ele- ments of truth, if only the vivacity of feeling, the feverish impetuosity of the young poet. "Wagner," narrates Prager, "knew the Israel- ites from close proximity in his earliest years and shared aU the prejudices of his fellow citi- zens in their regard. In Leipzig there was a whole quarter inhabited by Polish Jews. All the legends with which it is customary to brand the persecuted race were circulated about them. WAGNER'S FIRST STEPS 23 They were accused, among other things, of offering up children in sacrifice. When any- one wished to frighten a little boy in Leipzig, he would teU him, 'The Polish Jew is coming!' The scenes that followed were extremely brutal, and often a poor Jewish child would be chased through the streets by a gang of boys, cruelly beaten and rolled in the mud, regardless of his cries. It is strange that Wagner, who was al- ways opposed to acts of violence and oppres- sion, never took their part. The reason for his antipathy was partly sesthetic and partly personal resentment. He could not pardon the Jews for the vulgar accent with which they spoke German. It seemed to him that they degraded the language. On the other hand, their extravagant gesticulation irritated him. He insisted that 'They acted like galvanized corpses.' " It would seem that a disappointment in love also had its share in this indelible aversion: "Among the friends of his sister Louise was a young girl named Leah David, the daughter of 24 RICHARD WAGNER a wealthy Hebrew family. When she made a round of calls, she often left her dog, a hand- some Dane, at her friend's house. Throughout his life, Wagner was extremely fond of dogs. He soon became strongly attached to the hand- some animal that served the young girl as com- panion and protector. But it was not long before he had formed a far warmer attachment for the young Jewess herself, who was just his own age, namely between fifteen and sixteen years old, and possessed that dazzling and ar- dent oriental beauty that is so frequently met with among the Polish Jews. She was the in- timate friend of Louise Wagner, who shortly afterwards became the wife of the famous Ger- man publisher, Brockhaus. Leah David made a speedy conquest of Richard Wagner. " 'Never before,' he said, 'had I encountered a young girl so richly attired and so beautiful. Never before had I been spoken to with such oriental profusion of caressing politeness. Sur- prised and dazzled, I experienced for the first time the indescribable emotions of first love.' WAGNER'S FIRST STEPS 25 "Wagner was invited to call at the house of Leah's father, Herr David, the luxury and splendor of which completed the mental bewil- derment of the young man. Leah was the only daughter and had lost her mother. The enthu- siastic young musician, deeply attached to the big Dane and madly in love with the young girl, obtained permission to continue his visits. He did not declare his passion, but contented himself with the sympathetic welcome that was extended to him. At this time young Wagner was slender, somewhat undersized and absorbed in his own dreams. He was treated by the David family more as a young boy than as a suitor. If Leah was not at home when he called, he would sit down at the piano, or else amuse himself playing with the dog, lago. His calls became more frequent and his attachment assumed a tone of intimacy. The number of musical evenings multiplied rapidly. At one of them a young Dutchman was present, a nephew of Herr David. He was a pianist and had precisely that technical dexterity which 26 RICHARD WAGNER Wagner lacked. Flattering applause greeted his performance. But Wagner, being jealous, allowed himself to make an indiscreet remark. He claimed that the pianist lacked feeling. Whereupon he was begged to play in his turn. But his playing was so defective that it called forth ironical comments from the Dutchman and a general laugh from the rest of the com- pany. Wagner then lost aU control of himself. Wounded in his most intimate emotions in the presence of the young Jewess whom he loved so madly, he gave rein to the full impetuosity of his temperament and replied in such rude and violent language that a death-like silence followed on the part of Leah's guests. Then he flung himself brusquely out of the room, took up his hat, said farewell to the dog lago, and swore to avenge himself. He waited for two days; then, not having received any com- munication, he returned to the scene of the quarrel. To his great indignation, the door was shut in his face. The following morning, he received a letter bearing Leah's hand-writ- WAGNER'S FIRST STEPS 27 ing. He opened it feverishly, and felt that he had received a mortal blow. Fraulein David announced her forthcoming marriage to the hated Dutchman, Herr Meyers. Richard Wag- ner and Leah David never met again. "In concluding this story, Wagner said: " 'This was my first disappointment in love and I felt that I could never forget it.' "Then he added with characteristic imperti- nence: " 'After all, I believe that I regretted the dog more than I did the young Jewess.' " While a student at the University of Leipzig, Wagner became particularly interested in the political and social ideas which had been dis- seminated by the Revolution of July. At the same time, however, he realized the necessity of working seriously in order to acquire that knowledge of musical technique that would assure him a free expansion of his natural and original powers. Providence, as he afterwards acknowledged, brought him in contact with the very man that 28 RICHARD WAGNER the situation demanded: Theodore Weinlig, cantor at the Thomas-schule in Leipzig. At the end of six months he had mastered the difiBi- culties of counterpoint. "Now you have acquired your independ- ence," his master told him. After composing a new Overture, which had a more encouraging success at the Leipzig the- ater than his former effort, young Wagner ap- plied himself to the production of a symphony, in which the influence of Mozart could be felt. The theater, however, stiU fascinated him. After composing a Scena and Aria, he wrote the libretto for The Wedding, but the subject of this opera, which, as a matter of fact, was far from agreeable, displeased one of his sisters, and in spite of a sextette, which WeinUg pro- nounced quite satisfactory, he renounced the task. This brings us down to 1833. Wagner felt the need of securing some sort of salaried sit- uation. He applied first to the theaters and before long obtained a chance. It was, to be WAGNER'S FIRST STEPS 29 sure, quite modest. The offer came through his brother Albert, actor and director at the theater in Wurzburg. Wagner's duties were to rehearse the choruses and soloists, and he was to receive in payment a monthly salary of ten guldens. He remained there a year, and won a repu- tation for his activity. Meanwhile he was writing the music and verses for The Fairies, a romantic work based upon The Serpent-Wom- an, by Gozzi. Armed with the score of this new opera, in which, notwithstanding his enthusiastic imita- tions of Beethoven and Weber, it was subse- quently recognized that he had embodied the first important draught of a true Wagnerian lyric drama, the young man returned to Leip- zig. He was filled with the most ambitious hopes. Encouraged by the friends who had proclaimed in the public press their, interest in his earlier efforts, he counted upon the sym- pathy of the director of the Leipzig Theater and the support of his sister Rosalie. But the 30 RICHARD WAGNER director, a disciple of Mendelssohn, was unfa- vorably disposed towards him. Wagner was destined to meet with many an- other trial and reverses of every sort. But he gave himself up to the sheer joy of living, and does not seem to have been unreasonably dis- couraged by this first disappointment. The celebrated singer, Schroeder-Devrient, revealed to him the power that lies in dramatic inten- sity, and this again was a fruitful discovery, for it set him dreaming of combining faultless har- monies with emotion and spectacular grandeur. It was from this moment that Wagner began to realize to what an extent a singer may reaUze the ardent thought of the author. Accordingly, in no wise discouraged, he prof- ited by a pleasant summer excursion in Bo- hemia to draft a new opera entitled Das Liebes- verbot (The Love- Veto), or The Novice of Palermo, based upon Shakespeare's Measure for Measure. At this juncture (in 1834) he was appointed musical director, or leader of the orchestra, at WAGNER'S FIRST STEPS 31 the Magdeburg theater. Wagner made a suc- cess in his new line of duties, but the theater's financial affairs were going badly. At the moment when the company was about to be disbanded, he succeeded in having his Liebes- verbot produced. This was in 1836. It was nothing short of a tour de force, and Wagner himself has related in a most amusing manner the history of this more or less sensational pro- duction : "With more light-headedness than sober judgment," he writes, "I ventured to undertake to stage this opera, which contains some ex- tremely difficult parts, within a space of ten days. I placed my trust in the prompter and in my own baton as leader of the orchestra. With all their efforts the singers had not suc- ceeded in memorizing more than half of their parts. To all of us the performance was a sort of bad dream. It is impossible to convey any idea of it. And yet such parts as were even passably rendered received genuine applause." Nevertheless, out of devotion to their leader. 32 RICHARD WAGNER the singers had labored day and night. The leading tenor sought to cloak his unprepared- ness behind a bold presence and a swaggering manner. It should be added that the manage- ment had not found the means to have the librettos printed; consequently, notwithstand- ing the greatest good will on the part of the author, the performers and the audience, the whole production seemed as unreal as though enacted by so many musical ghosts, while the orchestra added to the general havoc its over- whelming crash of confused sounds. After a fruitless journey to Berlin, Wagner, who was now beginning to feel the sharp pinch of adversity, settled at Konigsberg where he obtained an appointment as conductor of an orchestra. It was there, on the 24th of Novem- ber, 1836, that he married a young actress, Wil- helmine Planer, who was quite pretty and greatly admired. The marriage took place in spite of his family's opposition and all sorts of material difficulties. Wagner freely admitted later on that this WAGNER'S FIRST STEPS 33 union was as big a piece of folly as the un- timely production of his opera had been. "I was in love," he said, "and I married out of sheer blind obstinacy. I placed myself and others with me in the lamentable position of a household without resources, precipitated my- self into a condition of poverty which has brought thousands upon thousands of others to their ruin," The situation really was lamentable; there was no exaggeration in the terms he used. In 1837 the theater at Konigsberg went bankrupt, as that of Magdeburg had done before. Wag- ner, now without resources, made matters worse by his extreme jealousy. His wife even thought of leaving him; while he on his part considered the question of divorce. But she could not make up her mind to a separation and accordingly accompanied him to Riga, where he once again secured a position as con- ductor. Wagner performed his functions as musical director with alternate zeal and indifference, 34 RICHARD WAGNER from the month of August, 1837, until June, 1839. At times in his eagerness to achieve a sustained perfection down to the finest shad- ings, he wearied the members of the orchestra by long rehearsals, endlessly repeating the same movement; while at other times, although he chose a great diversity of works, ranging from Mozart and Gliick to Bellini and Cheru- bini, he grew bitter and disheartened at the long delay of success and fame. At this time, it should be added, he gave little evidence of being the herald of a new and radical art. He realized the public demand for scenes portray- ing the pleasures and the passions of life; and he himself had a genuine fondness for Italian opera. After Rule Britannia and the Overture for Columbus, he composed the libretto and the first two acts of Rienzi, based upon the novel by Bulwer Lytton. Staking all his hopes on this great tragic opera in five acts, he made up his mind to leave Riga. On the one hand his contract with the director of the theater was WAGNER'S FIRST STEPS 35 about to end and he was unpleasantly aware that he had competitors; while on the other hand, he was cherishing the project of going to Paris, in search of glory and gold. This vagabond phase of Wagner's career, which had taken him all the way from the Rhine to the Duna, was destined, as Mr. Cham- berlain has very justly pointed out, to be very far from sterile in its effects. In the course of it he had acquired some essential material for the future creation of his great musical dramas. Himself a German poet and playwright, he had learned to know and understand the profound aspirations of the German public. This first period was one of struggles and gropings. Wagner was now in possession, if not of his full measure of genius, at least of his impelling desire to create. He understood the resources of the orchestra, and he thriUed with visions of the noblest emotions known to humanity. He had an immense pride, a daunt- less, almost foolhardy courage, and a limitless desire to achieve beauty through harmony. 36 RICHARD WAGNER Where was he to find a field worthy of him and of his mighty activities, if not in Paris, the preeminent center of civilization, where the most illustrious reputations had been bom and fostered? We shall see that Wagner had not yet fin- ished his struggles against ill fortune. But who can teU whether it was not essential to his genius that it should develop in the midst of suffering? And how could he have celebrated in Tristan and in Parsifal all the sorrows known to humanity if he had not been a hero him- self, a victim of all the tragedies known to that great Drama called Life? CHAPTER II THE CALVARY OF AN ARTIST — FROM HATE TO LOVE — ^A NEW ART — "WAITING BETWEEN RAYS OF HOPE AND SHADOWS OF DESPAIR — THE REVOLUTIONIST OF MUSIC IN September, 1839, Wagner arrived in Paris with his young wife, after a wearisome journey of three weeks and a half. They had embarked on a saiUng vessel; and a raging tempest had compelled the captain to seek shelter in a small Norwegian port. By talk- ing to the sailors, Wagner accumulated all sorts of information regarding the legend of the Flying Dutchman, which has been related by Heine, and which was destined to be the theme of his third opera, published in France under the title of Le Vaisseau Fantome. His maritime adventures in a land wearing the as- pect of dreams and nightmares must have 37 38 RICHARD WAGNER greatly helped him to achieve the exact and picturesque color of his work. He spent a week in London and a month at Boulogne-sur-Mer, where he made the useful acquaintance of Meyerbeer. Without further introductions, without re- sources, and with little acquaintance with the French language and customs, but full of hope and energy, Wagner installed himself in Paris, with his wife and Newfoundland dog, in a furnished house on the Rue de la Tonnellerie, near the Halles. An introduction from Meyerbeer, at that time all powerful, brought him into relations with Anthenor Jolly, director of the Renais- sance Theater, who accepted his Liebesverbot. A vaudeville writer, Dumersan, who also had a reputation as a numismatist, was commis- sioned to adapt the work to the requirements of the French public. Overjoyed and counting upon an early suc- cess, Wagner moved into a more comfortable apartment. No. 25, Rue du Helder. But ill CALVARY OF AN ARTIST 39 luck pursued him: the theater went bankrupt! In France, just as formerly in Germany, he met with the same identical reverse. This time it was a veritable disaster. He passed through atrocious hours of chagrin, despair and ruin- ous destitution. Apropos of his short story, A German Musician in Paris, he wrote: "I myself came very near dying of hunger in Paris, like the hero of my story. My pur- pose, by the way, in writing it, was to utter a cry of revolt against the conditions of art andi artists of our epoch." It would be impossible to paint in colors sufficiently somber the three years of lamenta- ble distress that Wagner passed in Paris. He was forced to squander his energies on all sorts of unworthy tasks in order not to starve to death, grinding out articles for the reviews, and more especially making arrangements for various instruments, including the trombone, of the popular melodies of the hour, the most distinctive pieces by Donizetti and Halevy. Consequently, it is easy to conceive his re- 40 RICHARD WAGNER sentment, not only against these composers who had already "arrived," but against Paris itself, which he had faUed to take by conquest, and in which he had known, to use his own expression, "the black misery of long nights of suspense and anguish." It was all in vain that his young wife performed prodigies of economy and maintained an indomitable courage ; it was equally in vain that his rare moments of leisure gave him a chance to chat pleasantly with a few friends, such as the painter Kietz and the librarian Anders. Nevertheless, despite the bitterness of de- feat and the disheartening melancholy of van- ished hopes and repeated failures, Wagner con- tinued to work. He composed romances, such as The Two Grenadiers, he wrote an Overture to Faust and an Overture to Columbus. The latter, by the way, was the only work by Wag- ner produced in Paris during this period (Feb- ruary, 1841, at the Salle Herz). The doors of the Opera remained implacably closed against this foreign composer. He had CALVARY OF AN ARTIST 41 now finished Rienzi; and being finally con- vinced of the impossibility of succeeding in Paris, he decided to try his luck in Dresden. The winter of 1841 was one of the most critical periods of his whole restless existence. He found small consolation in listening to Beethoven's Symphonies at the Conservatoire, in selling the manuscript of his Flying Dutch- man for five hundred francs, in studying the luxurious stage settings of the great Paris theaters, or even in pouring out his pent-up bitterness and rancor in articles for the Ga- zette Musicale and in literary problems of a morbid humor. The reason why this lugubrious period must be regarded as important in the development of Wagner's real genius is as follows: side by side with his bitter revolt against the bad taste of the public and the vulgar sensuality of the fashionable composers, was born his determina- tion to be a great revolutionist in the domain of musical and theatric art. His hatred of silli- ness and vulgarity, his disgust at all the hu- 42 RICHARD WAGNER miliations inflicted upon his pride were accom- panied by a love of beauty amounting to a magnificent religion. He issued from aU his defeats more exalted, and consequently, stronger than before. Hence came a tenderness and a fervor that added much to the loftiness of his inspiration. In this respect Wagner has admirably analyzed himseK in the following terms: "I wish to speak here of music," he wrote in A Communication to My Friends, "as the good angel that assured my salvation as an artist. I owe it to music that I became an artist, beginning with the day when, in a spirit of revolt, I rose up in protest, with a growing clearness of purpose, against the existing con- ditions under which art had to manifest itself to the public. This feeling of rebellion was not bom from a point of view external to art, like that of our critics, for example, or of our mathematicians of current politics, enemies of art and socialistic calculators; on the contrary, my revolutionary instinct served to awaken CALVARY OF AN ARTIST 43 in my heart an inspiration, the faculty of cre- ating a work of art, — and this I owed to music and to nothing else." And Wagner added, "For my own part I cannot conceive of the spirit of music apart from love. It was love and not hate or envy that made me a rebel; and that is why I be- came an artist and not a critic." It was in this state of mind of mingled pleasure and pain that Wagner installed him- self at Meudon, in the spring of 1841. There he resumed, though not without some misgiv- ings, his interrupted work upon the Flying Dutchman. But after finishing the chorus of sailors and the song of the spinners, he felt sure of himself, and in a short time the opera was completed. This work in a certain way bears the material traces of the composer's struggle against want, for at the end of the second act the manuscript of the Flying Dutch- man contains this painful indication: "To- morrow, must have more money," and at the end of the third we read: "Meudon, August 44 RICHARD WAGNER 22d, 1841. Written in poverty and torments." Seized with nostalgia for his native land, that he aggravated still further by brooding over the popular German legend of Tann- hduser, Wagner impatiently waited for favor- able news. Rienzi, which had been accepted by the Dresden Theater, was at last to be put into rehearsal. Meanwhile, the Flying Dutchman had found favor at Berlin, thanks to the medi- ation of Meyerbeer. Wagner now dreamed of nothing else than his return to Germany. In order to earn the cost of the journey he resumed almost light- heartedly the tasks of a musical hack and pro- ceeded to raise the necessary funds by arrang- ing the scores of Halevy's operas for the piano. Henceforward, however, he was to be relieved from the necessity of any such wretched drudgery. On April 7th, 1842, he left Paris, the vast and tumultuous City of Light, in which he had suffered so keenly from his obscurity, and towards which, in spite of his anger and bit- CALVARY OF AN ARTIST 45 terness, he afterwards looked back wistfully, with a secret desire to see his German achieve- ments and reputation further augmented by the applause of France. When he reached the Rhine he shed tears and swore fidelity to the fatherland. In default of Paris and of France, which were destined later on to recognize his splendid genius, he set forth to conquer Ger- many by drawing his inspiration from her legends and most deep-rooted tradition^. Wagner's sojourn in Dresden, where he re- mained seven years, is a characteristic and decisive epoch in his life. He there accom- plished his definitive rupture with traditional opera, and it was there that he acquired a clear and direct understanding of his tempera- ment, his work and his mission. On October 20th, 1842, Rienzi was produced at the Dresden Opera House, and proved to be not only a success but a veritable triumph. Wagner became famous in a single day, even though he was none too well understood. His fame was not yet the sort that he deserved, 46 RICHARD WAGNER but then in Bienzi he had not yet produced a "Wagnerian" opera. This success brought about a radical altera- tion in Richard Wagner's career. In order to reach a better interpretation of the signifi- cance of such an event in a life which, to borrow his own terms, had hitherto been "dis- jointed and over-burdened," let us see what he himself has said: "After a most painful struggle, after hard conflicts, suffering and privation, in the midst of the agitation and the indifference of Paris, I found myself aU of a sudden in an attentive world, full of encouragement and consideration. . . . How natural it was that I should have allowed myself to be rocked in the cradle of these illusions, from which I must soon be awakened, the victim of a cruel experience! If anything was capable of deceiving me as to my true position at that time, it was the un- common success achieved in Dresden by the performance of my Rienzi. I, a solitary man, friendless and without a country, suddenly CALVARY OF AN ARTIST 47 found myself beloved, admired and flattered by a multitude of followers. In view of the established conditions of life, this success ought to have given my career a lasting founda- tion of artistic and bourgeois prosperity. To the surprise of the general public, I was ap- pointed Kapellmeister to the court of Saxony." This unexpected appointment, due partly to the simultaneous death of two incumbents, and partly to the activity displayed by Wag- ner in training the orchestra at the time his opera was produced, did him almost as much harm as good. To be sure, these functions which he performed from 1843 to 1849, gave him great authority as well as an annual reve- nue of fifteen hundred thalers, or a little more than eleven hundred dollars. But Wagner had the legitimate ambition to develop his new con- ception for the benefit of Saxon and German art, and his apostleship was destined to en- counter the opposition of tradition, incom- prehension, jealousy and even hatred. The Flying Dutchman, also performed at 48 RICHARD WAGNER Dresden, had meanwhile achieved a success comparable to that of Rienzi, notwithstanding its innovations in technique. But before long the critics reconsidered their verdict; and from this moment the campaign against Wagner began, and this splendid and vital creator had need to summon up all his mighty will power, all his colossal energy, in order to hold his own against the adversaries of an art that was at once human and divine. While The Flying Dutchman was announced for production at Berlin, Riga and Cassel, its performance was stopped in Dresden after the fourth occasion. In the king's Intendant, Baron von Luttichau, Wagner had found, if not an open enemy, at least a man who had small intention of abandoning routine and sac- rificing the customary pleasures of the court and the general public, to the idealism of a revolutionary artist, and to his devout worship of the beautiful. Now, as V. H. Lichtenberger, the author of CALVARY OF AN ARTIST 49 some important studies upon Wagner, has done well to remind us, the Dresden Opera House offered an ambitious artist exceptional chances of success. The theater itself, the orchestra, the chorus, the marvelous talent of Schroder- Devrient, whose gifted nature was so splen- didly fitted for interpreting a noble genius, the glorious voice of the tenor Tichatschek, the financial resources at command, all united in enabling him to perform an important service to art, and base his productions on the stable foundations of his own fervid inspiration and his vast and profound experience of music and the theater. Accordingly, we find him interpreting, with all the enthusiastic respect due to such mas- ters as Mozart and Gliick, Armida and Iphi- genia at Aulis, and initiating Dresden into the splendors of Beethoven's Ninth Sympathy. Meanwhile, during the year 1844, after fin- ishing the Love Feast of the Apostles, he ex- pressed his passionate admiration for the au- 60 RICHARD WAGNER thor of Der Freischutz by composing the fu- neral music on the occasion of the transfer of Weber's ashes to Dresden, Wagner had now surrendered himself wholly to his religion of art, and he henceforth pur- sued his task of human and social regenera- tion with a sort of mystical fanaticism. Tann- hduser, the first performance of which he con- ducted on October 19th, 1845, was the fruit of prolonged meditation and the first great mani- festation of Wagnerian art. He was destined to bring his art to a loftier and more sustained perfection. But he had now found himself, he had acquired his characteristic manner, ample, vast, intense; from this time forward he had to be recognized as the master of a system which would become revealed little by little to the initiated and the extraordinary majesty of which was felt even by the unbe- lievers. As Richard Wagner has himself told us in his autobiography, it was in a mood of pain- ful and exuberant excitement, a feverish exal- CALVARY OF AN ARTIST 51 tation, that he composed Tannhauser, the in- spiration of which had come to him, majestic and consoling, during the hopeless days and nights of his exUe in Paris. Through Tann- hauser, he escaped from actual life and its little trivial joys, and soared into an ethereal region, a new and glorious world. However, as Wagner was soon to discover for himself, this work, begotten in suffering, was destined to beget suffering in its turn. Wagner afterwards declared that in writing it he had written his own death sentence. He had not yet learned that the highest honors are often purchased at the cost of the longest and most frightful martjn-doms. The friction between Wagner and the In- tendant, his official superior, had meanwhile been increasing. The campaign waged by the Dresden newspapers against this pioneer in a sublime art had begun to bear its unwholesome fruit. In spite of the sympathizers he had already gained for his drama, and some of them were most zealous, the kapellmeister could not 52 RICHARD WAGNER help recognizing that he had failed in his dar- ing attempt to awaken souls to the sovereign sway of purity and beauty. It was with no little bitterness that he became aware of the unfriendliness of most of the members of the court circle, the timid spirit of some, the in- difference of others. How very few disciples he met along his path, but on the other hand, what hosts of Pharisees! Accordingly there was nothing surprising in Richard Wagner's attitude in re- gard to the insurrection which broke out in Dresden during the Revolution of 1848. It was evidently far less on account of his social and political views, than for the sake of the new world of sensations and ideas that he was striving to establish by the overthrow of idols in the form of traditional rules for the opera, that Wagner looked upon the Revolution pri- marily as the dawn of an era fertile in the bet- terment of individuals and peoples. The fate of his music seemed to him to be closely allied with the desire for independence. CALVARY OF AN ARTIST 53 Accordingly, Wagner allied himself with the leaders of the movement, such as Bakunin, who incidentally was never under any misapprehen- sion as to the true character of this exalted idealist's revolutionary views. He collaborated on the Volksblatter edited by his friend Rolker, and having drafted a Plan for a National Ger- man Theater, for the kingdom of Saxony, he delivered a stirring address in behalf of it be- fore a patriotic club, known as the Vaterlands- verein, in the course of which he recognized the authority of the king, but eloquently advocated republican ideals. What was the part played by Wagner in the riot which broke out at Dresden and was rap- idly repressed by Prussian bayonets? There has been as much exaggeration on the one side as on the other. That he would have consented to set fire to the theater, as has been asserted, through his being confused with a pastry-cook also bearing the name of Wagner, one that is exceedingly common in Germany, is manifestly untrue. But it is certain that 54 RICHARD WAGNER Wagner willingly placed himself at the service of the insurgents. Are we to conclude that it was he who sounded the tocsin from the tower with his own hand? It has never been proved. In any case, his sanguinary zeal does not seem to have been very formidable. The sculptor Kietz informed one of the foremost authorities of Wagnerian literature, Mr. Chamberlain, that the author of Tannhduser took him with him to the top of the tower in order to see the view and hear to better advantage the effect of the beUs blending with the thunder of the artillery. Another witness. Dr. Thum, relates that he also had a conversation with Wagner on the summit of that same tower, on the sub- ject of — music and philosophy, Beethoven and Berlioz ! Accordingly Wagner was able to affirm, with entire good faith, that his participation in pol- itics was always of an artistic nature. The revolution in Dresden lasted only a few days (April 28th to May 8th, 1849), and the activities of the Prussian troops, sent to put CALVARY OF AN ARTIST 55 down the provisional government, resulted al- together in not more than thirty victims. Having compromised himself, Wagner stayed for a time at Chemnitz, in the home of his brother-in-law. Wolfram. But when he learned that an order for his arrest had been issued, he yielded to the advice of his friends and took steps to reach the frontier. Among others, Franz Liszt, who was one of his earliest admirers, gave him hospitality, and provided him with a passport, bearing the name of a certain Dr. Widemann. It is stated that Wagner's first intention was to cross over to England. But he stopped at Zurich, then proceeded to Paris, where he re- mained only a short time, during May and June; after which he installed himself at Zurich. This was the beginning of the fertile period of his exile, which lasted for a dozen years (1849-1861). Wagner had now found himself and had attained the full maturity of his cre- ative powers. He was destined, during these 56 RICHARD WAGNER years of exile, to achieve, in dreamy and melan- choly peace, or in the exhausting effort of final consecration, imperishable masterpieces, bear- ing the hall-mark of his vast and imperious genius. - O^rvvM-tTt Ul^JU^ (la. Facsimile Letter by Wagner CHAPTER III THE GENESIS OF A WORK OF ART — AN ASYLUM: AN OASIS IN THE DESERT — A ROMANTIC LOVE — FROM REAL LIFE TO THE "WORLD OF THOUGHT AND OF ART IN leaving Dresden, Wagner abandoned a settled, and on the whole a brilliant posi- tion. Nevertheless, yielding to what he after- wards called the omnipotence of folly, he had conceived the idea that Dresden was likely to become "the tomb of his art." Accordingly, he resigned himself to exile and retirement, pre- occupied with the single purpose of accom- plishing his task, and quite indifferent to riches and honors. Study, the joy of meditating and philosophizing, the confidence of a few chosen friends, who faithfully awaited the fruition of his original thoughts, a sufficiently warm dress- ing gown, a good piano and the attachment of 67 58 RICHARD WAGNER his pet dog and parrot, were to him amply sufficient. But Minna Wagner, from this time forth, took an entirely different view of their mode of existence. So long as he had occupied an enviable position, she had not been unreason- ably disturbed by her husband's chimerical dreams and by an idealism so ill adapted to the immediate needs of his contemporaries. But now she regarded it as sheer foUy for him to turn deliberately aside from the beaten path, and devote himself, as he was now doing, to the preaching of a new gospel. All that her husband said or wrote, his music, his slightest actions seemed to her the conduct of a vision- ary. Furthermore, she suffered from the loss of those material advantages, with which Wag- ner, absorbed in his dreams, could so easily dispense. "I shall never turn my art-works into merchandise," he once wrote to Liszt, who from the first had estimated him at his true value. But Minna Wagner was far from shar- ing a philosophy so utopian in its conceptions. THE WORLD OF ART 59 She rejoined her husband at Zurich from a sense of conjugal duty, but with a secret hope that he would awaken to a clearer perception of reality and strive for pecuniary success. On the contrary, Wagner became more and more engrossed in his proud, uncompromising cult of beauty. With a sort of dogged ob- stinacy, he grew more and more averse to mak- ing concessions. It was no longer a Rienzi that occupied him; he dreamed of a vast, crowded, mighty work, impossible perhaps ever to stage, but at least conforming to his ideals. He con- sidered the possibihties of such subjects as Achilles, Frederick Barbarossa, The Death of Siegfried; he dreamed of a Jesus of Nazareth, which was later metamorphosed into Parsifal. But before finally consecrating himself to the composition of his great musical dramas, Wagner must needs develop his own artistic creed, and proclaim the principles of his aesthet- ics in a series of special articles, in which he could explain himself at leisure. First came Art and Revolution, and The Art-Work of the 60 RICHARD WAGNER Future (1849), after which he published Art and Climate, Judaism in Music, in which he attacked Meyerbeer (1850), Opera and Drama, the most important of his writings along this line of thought, and A Communication to My Friends. Meanwhile Liszt, who was Wagner's herald, and whose friendship, Wagner insisted, was the greatest event of his life, taught the public at Weimar to appreciate and applaud the earlier works of this genius who was destined to achieve a greater and finer development amidst the solitude of the picturesque Swiss valleys, or in the society of fellow thinkers. Zurich, as it happened, being a university town, was at this time the center of a choice intellectual group. Among others, Wagner here once more encountered Semper, the court architect at Dresden, who was also in exile, and who later on was destined to build the Bay- reuth Theater. There were, besides, poets such as Herweg, and philologists such as EttmuUer; also, he there made the acquaintance of Chal- THE WORLD OF ART 61 lemel-Lacour, who later translated some of his works and became one of the most judicious Wagnerians in France. Although Wagner held himself aloof mis- trustfully, he nevertheless met a number of people who were eager to prove their admira- tion by doing him services. In this respect spe- cial mention should be made of the First Sec- retary of State, Sulzer, who gave Wagner gen- erous financial aid, and Frau Julia Ritter, who for five years secured him a small annual in- come, and whose sons, all talented musicians, were brilliant partisans of this stiU unappre- ciated master. And we must not forget to mention, among the most zealous apostles of Wagnerism, Klindworth, Draesaeke, Theodore Uhhg, and the most ardent of them aU, Wag- ner's one true pupil, Hans von Biilow. Since these years of exile at Zurich are essen- tial for an understanding of the life of Wagner and the development of his works, we could not do better than to conjure up the physiog- nomy of the great musician, as recorded at this 62 RICHARD WAGNER epoch by trustworthy witnesses. Frau EUza Wille, a woroan of keen intelligence and a tal- ented writer, has published a number of the master's letters, together with her own recollec- tions and explanatory notes. They form docu- ments of the first importance. In 1851, Dr. Frangois WiUe, a philosopher and journalist, came with his family to Switzer- land, as the result of reverses brought about by the Revolution of 1848, and established him- self at Mariafeld, distant about a league from Zurich. Frau Wille had previously known Wagner in Dresden, in 1843, at the time of the production of the Flying Dutchman, and his image remained graven on her memory: "That graceful and slender figure, that head with its massive brow, the piercing eye and the strong lines of energy deeply imprinted around the small, decided mouth." A painter one evening called her attention to the straight and prominent chin that looked as though carved froni marble and gave the musician's face its characteristic expression. THE WORLD OF ART 63 Wagner called upon the Willes at Mariafeld for the first time, in May, 1852, but it was a visit which he was to repeat frequently, some- times with the poet Herweg, sometimes with his wife, whom Frau Wills has described as a most solicitous housekeeper, but at this time still much agitated by the stormy scenes of the insurrection, a woman who loved the society of her compatriots, but vastly below the level of her husband. The Willes' home was the meeting-place for discussions of art, literature and philosophy. Carlyle and Schopenhauer were both favorite topics, especially the latter, whose profound and satiric writings had made an enormous im- pression upon Wagner. On one occasion he burst out laughing, after having read some one of the philosopher's Mephistophelian com- ments upon women, and observed, "He certainly must have known my wife, Minna!" Wagner became one of Schopenhauer's adherents, not- withstanding that Schopenhauer encouraged him to cultivate letters at the expense of music. 64 RICHARD WAGNER The doctrines of renouncement, sacrifice and abnegation are quite as much a part of the philosopher of Frankfort and his reconstructed Buddhism, as they are of Christianity. At Mariafeld, Wagner played fragments of Tannhauser and Lohengrin and expounded the character of the Ninth Symphony. Let us once again listen to Frau Eliza Wille, whose recol- lections are extremely instructive: "These gentlemen (Wille and one of his friends) once more plunged into natural his- tory and philological discussions. Hereupon Wagner came over and joined us. 'Good,' said he, 'those two have started in again, digging up roots; they will be at it for a long time.' He began to laugh, then seated himself at the piano. I can never forget the way in which, before beginning, he explained the Ninth Sym- phony to us and made us realize the necessity of the Chorus and the Hymn to Joy as a crown- ing touch to this magnificent tone-poem. Un- der his fingers the key-board became a veritable orchestra. Suddenly he paused and said to me, THE WORLD OF ART 65 'Now, listen: the Muses are entering. Amid warlike accents they are leading a phalanx of young men.' Since then I have frequently heard the Ninth Symphony rendered by a full orchestra, but that Allegro vivace alia marcia I have never heard but once. No conductor, no orchestra has been able to make me hear the firm, light step of the Muses as Wagner did, pianissimo, moving over the clouds and ap- proaching with a sure and sustained movement. Ah! how that magnificent revelation of the rhythm emanated from that marvelous world of sounds! ... A single pulsation more or less, and the soul of the listener soars aloft or remains inert! "Wagner's manner was grave, self-contained, and yet very gracious. One of our friends, an elderly lady, very placid and not easily aroused out of her tranquillity, was fairly electrified when, in a burst of enthusiasm, he intoned with sovereign power: 'Seid umschlungen, Millionen.' 66 RICHARD WAGNER "But all at once he interrupted himself: 'I cannot play the piano, you know,' he said. 'You do not applaud. Now finish it your- selves.' " It was also at Mariafeld that Wagner first read his Nibelung's Ring, before giving a read- ing of it at the Hotel Bauer, in Zurich. In 1853 Liszt made his appearance in Wag- ner's house. Wille asked him if he could not use his influence at the Court at Weimar, in order to make it possible for Wagner to return to Germany. Liszt replied that he knew of no position and of no theater that would be suited to Wagner's needs. Scenery, orchestra, singers would aU have to be created expressly for him. Wille observed that such an enterprise would cost not less than a million. Thereupon Liszt cried out in French, as was his habit when over- excited, "He shall have it! The million shall be found!" That was an occasion when Liszt showed himself to be a good prophet. Frau WUle, to whom we owe these details, took supper on evenings at the Wagners', to- THE WORLD OF ART 67 gether with other friends. At dessert, the mas- ter of the house disappeared, and returned presently wearing the uniform of the King of Saxony's Kapellmeister, his form bent and a sarcastic smile upon his lips. He turned to the guests with a facetious air, and addressing his wife, said, "Yes, yes, Minna, it was all very fine and you hked me this way. It is too bad, poor girl, that the uniform has grown too small for me!" And, in point of fact, that uniform was too small for him! Misanthropic though he was, Wagner had to recognize that there were a great many people in Zurich who not only esteemed him but had an enthusiastic admiration for him. The con- certs which he gave at the Zurich theater brought him veritable ovations. One old musi- cian, a violinist, declared, in speaking of Wag- ner, "When he is present, it makes another man of me, a different order of musician." But although Wagner, with his hypersensi- tive organism, suffered more than another would from home-sickness for the fatherland. 68 RICHARD WAGNER and from the fact that he had not received in Germany the recognition which his artistic pride demanded, it would not be just to say that his years in Zurich taught him the poign- ant agonies of exile. Every man to whom he spoke, records Frau Wille, felt himself hon- ored; and all the musicians looked up to him as to a master who had opened up new and wonderful paths to music. In spite of his occasional speUs of anger and melancholy, he seems to have been treated with a regard verg- ing upon veneration. In the number of friends who exerted them- selves actively in his behalf, special stress should be laid upon his acquaintance with Herr Wesendonck and his wife. Herr Wesendonck was a wealthy merchant who represented a large firm of silk manufacturers in New York. He had settled at Zurich in 1851. Being fond of the arts, he took a keen interest in the destiny of the exiled musician. Frau Wesen- donck was only twenty-five years old at the time of her first meeting with Wagner in 1862, THE WORLD OF ART 69 and possessed a delicate and sensitive nature and a rare artistic temperament. A pleasant intimacy, a sort of tender and idealistic attachment, soon sprang up between the great and still misunderstood composer, striving in obscurity to bring about the proud accomplishment of his gigantic task, and this docile pupil and devoted friend. Towards evening, he used to go to play for her on the piano, often pieces of his own com- position, based upon poems which she had en- trusted to his lofty and melancholy inspira- tion. And then he talked to her of his reading and his work. By this time Wagner had developed the full and complete scheme of the Wagnerian drama, the enchanted frame-work within which he was to embody his pure and heroic visions in trans- cendent harmonies. In 1853 he finished the whole of the poem of the Tetralogy. That same year, in May, he conducted some concerts in the old theater afi Zurich, in which he taught his audiences to 70 RICHARD WAGNER know and appreciate certain of his own com- positions, in all their shadings and their integ- rity. As a matter of fact, there had been times when Wagner was forced, through want of money, to consent to have his works produced in various foreign cities, where for various rea- sons great harm was done him through changes and cuts in both text and music, because they insisted upon regarding his works as operas of a singular sort, and not as dramas developed in accordance with a new formula and system. In 1854 Wagner completed the Prologue to The Nibelung's Ring. This same year Tann- hduser was produced at Zurich. The year fol- lowing he visited London, for the purpose of conducting the concerts of the Philharmonic Society there, and while in London he met Berlioz. After his return to Zurich, Wagner devoted himself to the composition of Siegfried and the Walkyrie. These prodigious masterpieces he accomplished, in spite of the unhappiness of his THE WORLD OF ART 71 domestic life. His wife not only was a sick woman, but she was incapable of understand- ing the gigantic and tumultuous power of his creations in art, poetry and metaphysics, and furthermore she cherished a vindictive jeal- ousy. As a matter of fact, Wagner had aban- doned himself more and more to his intimacy, — a wholly ideal, radiant and consoling inti- macy, — with Frau Wesendonck, who sustained his energy, shared his moments of exaltation and lavished upon him the treasures of her unwavering faith. Both she and her husband surrounded the great man with attentions and ungrudgingly gave him their enthusiastic and devoted support. The house in which Wagner was living was close to that of a tinker, who made a fearful noise, hammering on his anvil. It was un- pleasant music at the best, but especially so to the sensitive ears of Wagner. It is related that he finally made up his mind to try to come to terms with the worthy artisan; but the 72 RICHARD WAGNER latter replied, "Each one to his own trade, Herr Kapellmeister; I beat my anvil and you beat time. I have no wish to stop you." Wesendonck kindly suggested that Wagner should have the benefit of a small house be- longing to him and quite close to the splendid villa which his own family was to occupy, in the suburbs of Zurich, on what was known as the Green Hill. Wagner joyously accepted and promptly transferred himself thither, together with his wife, his parrot Jacquot and his dog Peps. Here he had a study in which he en- joyed the most delightful security, comfort and quiet, and from the windows of which his gaze could wander over the lake and the wonderful panorama of the Alps. It was in this retreat, where he had foreseen that he would find the necessary tranquillity, that he began the com- position of Tristan and Isolde; the first act was finished by the end of the year 1857. But before long he realized that the passion which he cherished for Mathilde Wesendonck was growing stronger; while she, on her side. THE WORLD OF ART 73 found it hard to resist the emotions inspired in her by the noble soul and bursting heart of the great musician. Wagner found himself in the romantic position of a second Werther, but with this difference, that he himself was mar- ried and that his wife, growing more and more jealous, constantly quarreled with him, and even went so far as to demand explanations from Frau Wesendonck. How was this romantic love of the great ideahst destined to end? Neither he nor his enthusiastic pupil abandoned themselves to a culpable passion. Their relations ended quite philosophically, without suicide or intrigue, but with a total and definitive renouncement. Lichtenberger has analyzed with much delicacy this episode in the life of the great poet-musi- cian: "This drama," he says, "which was wholly internal and unspoken, and which no one except a very small number of his most intimate friends even suspected, at the time when it was taking place, awakened in Wag- ner's heart some of the most intense and sub- 74 RICHARD WAGNER lime emotions of which the human soul is capable." And Frau Wesendonck contented herself with writing: "Wagner voluntarily left the asylum which he loved. In witness of that period we have his great work, Tristan and Isolde. The rest is mystery and respectful silence." While Mathilde Wesendonck sought for peace in the calm round of household duties, Minna Wagner waged bitter battles with angry creditors and finally returned home to her own family in Saxony. Richard Wagner was destined to find his consolation in his art. His secret anguish was already exalted in Tristan; and the mystic love which blossomed in his later works and more especially in Parsifal was an immortal echo of the deep hidden and painful emotions of the troubled days of his exile in Zurich. It is possible also that Wagner had other motives for wishing to leave Switzerland. Both as man and artist, as he has himself phrased THE WORLD OF ART 75 it, he was journeying towards a new world. Having entered upon a period of conscious ar- tistic purpose, — to employ in our turn the Wagnerian terminology, — and finding a return to favor denied him by the king of Saxony, he now felt a profound desire to leave his silent retreat and reveal his genius to the light of day. Accordingly, it is easy to understand how some of his biographers, and even some of the most conscientious, have chosen to pass over in silence this episode of his romantic love. Wagner not only had "volcanoes in his brain," as Liszt has said, but, according to the wise observation of M. Ad. JuUien, he also had them in his heart. And it was not until a later date that he was destined to achieve domestic happiness. Nor was the joy of triumphing in his art to be granted him until after a new series of formidable trials. CHAPTER IV RICHAKD WAGNER GREETED WITH HISSES — THE SPLENDOR AND MISERY OF AN ARTIST — BE- TWEEN CHARYBDIS AND SCYLLA — ON THE WAY TO SUCCESS — ^A KING OF DREAMS AND MYS- TERIES IT was in a vein of bitter humor, and while suffering from hunger and the agony of suspense, that Richard Wagner wrote, at the time of his first stay in Paris: "O Poverty, cruel misery, accustomed companion of German artists, it is thou whom I shall invoke first of all in writing these fervent memories! I wish to glorify thee, my faithful patroness, who hast accompanied me always and everywhere ; thou, whose brazen arm has saved me from the as- saults of prosperity which is full of deception, thou who hast so carefully sheltered me from its ardent rays behind thy dark and heavy cloud, constantly hiding from my eyes the mad 76 SPLENDOR AND MISERY 77 vanities of the world. Yes, I am very grate- ful for thy material interest, but couldst thou not for the future bestow it upon some other protege? Out of sheer curiosity, I should be glad, if only for a single day, to enjoy the pleasures of existence without any aid from thee. Forgive me, austere goddess, for cherish- ing this small ambition, but thou knowest the bottom of my heart, thou knowest with what sincere devotion I shall always worship at thy shrine, even if I cease to be thy favorite, the object of thy preference. Amen." This humorous prayer, which was really a cry of hidden pain, was only half heeded by the inconstant goddess, for during his second so- journ in Paris and also throughout his long and weary wanderings (1859-1864) he experi- enced many a day of hard privation, which disappointment and the pain of being misun- derstood, calumniated, and hated made him feel all the more keenly, nothwithstanding his pride in his genius and his intrepid courage. It must be confessed that his extravagant 78 RICHARD WAGNER tastes and his prodigality were a big disadvan- tage to him, and in some cases did him no small harm. The whole life of this most powerful dram- atist of modem times was itself made up of a series of dramas, each composed of innumera- ble acts. In following Richard Wagner to Paris for a second time, and then to Vienna and Munich, we are reaUy witnessing a tragedy in three parts, three separate stage-settings. It was in the autumn of 1859 that Wagner returned to Paris, which it was still his dream to conquer. This time he came with his hands full of works which, if not already famous, had at least received the endorsement of serious artistic successes. He had the admiration of the chosen few, and all the elements essential to success. He installed himself at the start in the Champs-Elysees, on the Avenue Matignon. For does not fortune smile most graciously upon those who are fortunate to start with? And this time Wagner had not come to Paris SPLENDOR AND MISERY 79 to search his path and vegetate on the proceeds of obscure hack-work, but to produce a work that represents one of the mightiest efforts of his vast genius, namely Tannhduser. A short time later he hired a private dwell- ing, previously occupied by the author of The Romance of a Poor Young Man, Octave Feuil- let. It was situated on the Rue Newton, No. 16, near the Avenue du Bois de Boulogne and what was then known as the Barriere de I'Etoile. The building has since been demol- ished. Wagner furnished it mainly with ob- jects that he brought from his retreat in Zurich, and that conjured up tender memories of the charming Mathilde Wesendonck. In his personal recollections, M. E. Michotte has recorded a good many precise details as to the more striking characteristics of the great composer's habits and mode of life at this time. He lived in a tranquil and modest, fashion. Aside from a short walk in the Bois de Bou- logne, whither he went accompanied by a bright and lively little dog, whose antics 80 RICHARD WAGNER amused him, he passed his time in working, either with Edmond Roche on the French translation of Tannhduser, or giving the finish- ing touches to his Tetralogy. Minna Wagner had once again returned to her conjugal duties, and is described at this time as a person of middle-class appearance, simple and self-effaced. Wagner, bold innovator that he was, had come to Paris hoping to find the atmosphere necessary to the success of his art, and he had the good fortune, almost immediately after his arrival, to form some valuable and comforting friendships. Roche, who was a poet and musi- cian of some talent, was working one day rather sadly in the ofl&ce of the Customs Department, when he overheard a heated discussion. A foreigner, a German, was protesting vigorously against some of the formalities to which that department is still only too ready, alas, to force us to submit! The stranger gave his name, Richard Wagner. Roche at once hastened to intervene and smooth away the diflficulties. WAGNER IN CARICATURE Above: Caricature by Faustin (London Figaro, 1876), and by Gill iKclip.^i', 1876). /jc/oic.- \Vap:ncr as Premiere Danscuse, by Tirct-Bognet (1891); Wagner tlie Tetralogist, by Gill (1876) SPLENDOR AND MISERY 81 When Wagner sought to express his gratitude, Roche declared that he had been only too happy to have been of service to so great an artist. "What, you know me then?" asked Wagner, surprised and delighted. Roche smiled and began to hum softly some airs from Tann- hduser and Lohengrin. "Ah," cried Wagner, "what a happy omen! The first Parisian whose acquaintance I make knows my music. I must write and tell Liszt at once. Monsieur, we shall meet again." And he forthwith sent Roche a present of several pieces of music which he unearthed from his trunks and on which he inscribed a dedication. We shall meet Roche again among the few friends who used to gather around Wagner a,t his house on Wednesday evenings, and who included Gasperini, Champfleury, one of his warmest partisans, Gustave Dore, Emile OUi- vier and his wife, the daughter of Liszt, Stephen Heller, ViUot, superintendent of the imperial museums, BerHoz, Jules Ferry, de 82 RICHARD WAGNER Lorbac, Charles Baudelaire, the great poet of Fleurs du Mai, who was one of the first to write a splendid analysis of the romantic art of Richard Wagner. Hans von Biilow soon added himself to the number of the initiated, and used to play for them on the piano, rendering with extraordi- nary mastery portions of Tannhduser and Tristan. Wagner was able to express himself quite fluently in French, and he used to amaze his guests with his furious eloquence, the loftiness of his views on topics of the most diverse sort, as well as by his witticisms, and unexpected and often highly picturesque anecdotes. He interpreted his own works with surpris- ing vigor, and his declamation was uncom- monly powerful. His voice, on the other hand, was not always true. The master had no illu- sions in this respect and freely admitted that a composer with so inharmonious a voice was enough to put to flight all the master singers of the world, including those of Nuremberg. SPLENDOR AND MISERY 83 It is well known that Wagner made no claim of being a better pianist than he was a singer, and no doubt for good reason. Gasperini has related that the author of Tannhduser once invited the director of the Theatre Lirique to come and hear the score of his opera: "Wagner battled with the formidable finale of the second act; he sang, he cried, he raved, he played with his hands, his wrists, his elbows, he smashed the pedals and bruised the keys. In the midst of this chaos, M. Carvalho re- mained as impassive as the man of whom Horace told, waiting with a patience worthy of antiquity for the pandemonium to cease. When Wagner had finished, M. Carvalho mur- mured a few words of thanks, turned on his heel and disappeared." Wagner determined to get the profane public into training before producing Tannhauser. The Theatre des Italiens was hired for the sum of eight thousand francs, exclusive of the cost of the orchestra and the lighting, and the first 84 RICHARD WAGNER of three Wagner concerts was given there on January 25th, 1860. The first half of the program consisted of the overture to the Flying Dutchman and se- lections from Tannhduser, and the second half included the prelude to Tristan and Isolde and selections from Lohengrin. Without dwelling too much upon the recep- tion accorded at that time to Wagner's music, and upon the division of audience, critics and composers into two camps, we will cite the fol- lowing ironic portrait of Wagner, drawn by the incisive pen of Fiorentino, and published in the Constitutionnel : "He has a fine, noble and lofty brow, but the lower part of his face is weak and vulgar. One would say that two fairies, the one ma- licious and the other kind and affectionate, had presided at his birth. The fairy of harmony caressed and beautified the brow from which so many daring conceptions and mighty thoughts were destined to come forth; the fairy SPLENDOR AND MISERY 85 of melody, foreseeing the harm which this child would do her, seated herself upon his face and flattened his nose." The audience was made up of artists, musi- cians and persons of social prominence; and there were many Germans present. Wagner was warmly applauded, and even those of his hearers who were least inclined to be enthu- siastic found themselves forced to accord him their frank admiration after seeing him stand for three hours, baton in hand, conducting both the orchestra and the choruses from memory, without music-rack or score. This concert, which earned Wagner a num- ber of fervent friendships and a few implacable enmities, was followed by two others, on the 1st and 8th of February respectively. M. J. G. Prud'homme records that the deficit for these three performances amounted to the sum of ten thousand francs, which was paid by Mme. de Moukhanoff. Another event, more important, not to say 86 RICHARD WAGNER momentous, was the famous production of Tannhduser at the Opera, March 13, 1861. It was all in vain that Wagner made calls upon the most celebrated composers of the peri- od, since irritable and nervous as he was, he had allowed himself to express a multitude of caus- tic judgments regarding them. He must needs seek to secure some other influences. The most efficacious seems to have been that of the Princesse de Mettemich, for it was thanks to her, so the statement goes, that the Marechal Maignan undertook to interest the Emperor on Wagner's behalf. Roche had now been working for a whole year on his French translation of Tannhduser. Sunday, his one day of freedom from the cus- tom-house, he was in the habit of spending with Wagner. On the basis of Roche's own account, Victorien Sardou has pictured that terrible man, striding up and down, with blaz- ing eye and furious gesture, pounding on the piano as he passed it, singing, shouting, and repeating to his harassed collaborator: SPLENDOR AND MISERY 87 "Go on, go on!" And when finally the latter was forced to sue for mercy, he asked in surprise: "What is the matter?" "I am hungry," answered the unhappy poet. After swallowing a mouthful of food, the two would return to their task; and as twilight set in, poor Roche could see, as in a sort of nightmare, a huge, stooping shadow that seemed to dance around him, in the flickering light of the lamp, stiU pounding on his infernal piano, constantly shouting, "Go on, go on!" and wearying his ears with cabalistic phrases and notes imported from the lower regions. The first rehearsal took place September 24th, 1860. But it was not until after a hun- dred and sixty-four rehearsals, a number which provoked the merriment of journalists and caricaturists, that the first public performance was given. Everything had been done on a truly mag- nificent scale. The leading singers, the tenor Niemann, the baritone Morelli, Mmes. Tedesco 88 RICHARD WAGNER and Marie Sasse were of the foremost rank; the stage settings were sumptuous. But Wagner had aroused all sorts of hostility, against his work, against his reforms in music and the theater, even against himself person- ally. A clique had been formed, composed chiefly of members of the Jockey Club, and the uproar they made rendered a hearing of the opera impossible. Wagner's tempestuous na- ture, his aggressive publications, the more or less disguised hostility of the French compos- ers, his own unwisdom in writing the bac- chanale of the Venusberg in the sjonphonic style of his latest works, and offering it to his audience by way of a ballet after the overture, were quite enough, aside from certain reasons of a political nature, to explain Wagner's fail- ure and what amounted to a riot. It should be added that, in spite of the fervor of the initiated few, a band of independent and auda- cious artists, the French public was not yet ready to understand such complicated instru- mentation, nor the distinctly Germanic nature SPLENDOR AND MISERY 89 of the theme celebrated by this new genius. For the second performance Wagner made certain modifications in the passages which had provoked hilarity. There was less laughter but more disturbance, thanks to an assortment of hunting whistles purchased from an armorer in the Passage de I'Opera and distributed among the members of the Jockey Club. The presence of the emperor and empress in no wise deterred this demonstration, against which a good many people arose in protest, and which called forth an eloquent and indignant denunciation from Charles Baudelaire. Similar scenes of violence greeted the third performance, and Berlioz as- serts with evident satisfaction that Wagner was publicly hailed as a knave, a blackguard and an idiot. Although the receipts amounted to 10,790 francs, 60 centimes, Wagner, acting upon the advice of his friends, withdrew Tannhduser. In addition to Baudelaire, other writers such as Theophile Gautier, Vacquerie and CatuUe Mendes, undertook to defend the insulted art- 90 RICHARD WAGNER ist, who for the next six months signed his let- ters, "The hissed author of Tannhduser." And Jules Janin, the critic on the Debats, suggested a picturesque coat-of-arms for those members of the Jockey Club who had made the demon- stration: "a whistle, on a field of howling throats." Notwithstanding that he answered the at- tacks of his adversaries in a fierce and incisive manner, and that he suffered from this out- come which cruelly aggravated his financial difficulties, Wagner could at least console him- self with the fact that he had been estimated at his real value, as poet, musician and dram- atist, by a select minority of the French public. And that, too, at a time when in Germany he was for the most part more discussed than honored, and where they hesitated to produce such costly spectacles. Nevertheless the author of Tannhduser was profoundly hurt in his pride as an artist, and more especially a Ger- man artist, and he made the mistake of nursing the memory of his enemies rather than his SPLENDOR AND MISERY 91 sympathizers, in connection with these experi- ences in France. Austria, whither he next went, was far less hospitable to him. Vienna appeared to him as the capital city of true frivolity, and al- though Lohengrin had been applauded there, he had to renounce the pleasure of seeing Tristan produced. Paris, on the other hand, in spite of the bitterness of a defeat which was perhaps more apparent than real, had left him, to borrow his own phrase, "some encouraging memories." Vienna, on the contrary, was a solitude in which he felt misunderstood and discouraged. Evidently condemned to a wandering life, Wag- ner now returned to Paris and remained there incognito for two months (December and Jan- uary, 1861-1862), living on the Quai Voltaire, and working on the text of the Meistersinger. He passed the ensuing year at Biberich, on the banks of the Rhine. Then he returned to Aus- tria, making it the starting point for a trip to Russia, where he gave several concerts at Mos- 92 RICHARD WAGNER cow and St. Petersburg (1863), and for visits to. Budapest and Prague, to superintend the production of his works. M. Adolphe JuUien, whose writings on Wag- ner are authoritative, relates that he was very- well received at court and that his concerts brought him in a considerable sum. But like many another artist, Wagner took little pains to economize. With the true instinct of the theatrical profession, he loved all things that pleased the eye, and especially fabrics that lent themselves to harmonious folds. A Viennese dressmaker of high repute, Frau- lein Bertha, made him dressing-gowns and jackets of pink, pale blue and flaming red satin, with hlac or orange ribbons. Lace shirts and satin shoes completed the princely flamboyance of his attire. According to letters dating from 1864 to 1867, the cost of these furnishings amounted in a single year to eight thousand francs. This correspondence betrays the fact that his love of luxury was far greater than his desire to pay his bills promptly. SPLENDOR AND MISERY 93 Without indulging in useless comments, we need not be greatly surprised to find that his financial condition was greatly aggravated. Meanwhile the campaign against this reformer of the operatic stage continued to bear bitter fruit. He was accused of the most heinous misdeeds. At this time he was living in a small house at Penzing on the outskirts of Vienna. Nevertheless, he was reproached for luxurious living and abominable misconduct, even for the champagne which he drank to calm the state of his disordered nerves. Yet in reality, notwithstanding his expensive tastes, he sought his true pleasures in the full development of his musical dramas. His experience as a dram- atist had served only to increase his zeal for revolutionizing both the musical technique of the opera and its methods of portraying human emotions. If he failed to achieve works in full accordance with his desires during these years of trial, he nevertheless abandoned none of his gigantic conceptions, nor marred them by a single concession. But how is an artist to 94 RICHARD WAGNER struggle against the self-interest of some and the settled habits of others, and establish a new system in the art of evoking the beautiful, when he is destitute of resources and must slave desperately merely for the purposes of keeping himself alive? For, after a few profit- able engagements and brilliant performances, Wagner had once more dropped back into silence and isolation. Hounded by his creditors and wearied by so many useless efforts, he left Austria, returned to Switzerland, and took refuge with the Wille family, at Mariafeld. Frau Eliza Wille welcomed her illustrious and unhappy guest with charming gracious- ness. All he wanted was to be let alone and to work in peace upon the last portion of his Meistersinger. She pictures him to us strid- ing up and down the terrace in front of the viUa, in his long tunic of brown velvet and with his black cap on his head, looking like some patrician who has just stepped out of an en- graving by Albrecht Diirer. SPLENDOR AND MISERY 95 This exceptional woman saw that the ener- getic and unconquerable Richard Wagner was now broken down, weary of work, unable to control himself. In addition to the tortures which his own imagination inflicted on him, and the wretched state of his finances, the causes of his present prostration were legion. His irritability had estranged him from his famUy and his life-long friends. As for Frau Minna Wagner, she had gone back to her own family in Dresden. Wagner was worried by his inability to give his wife financial aid. But one day he showed Frau Wille a letter and said that now he could send the money, since the people in Paris were honest enough to pay a royalty to a composer whose works they had publicly produced. Then, becoming excited, he cried out: "Everything would have gone well between my wife and me, if I had not spoUed her so deplorably. . . . She could not understand that a man like me cannot live if his wings are fettered. What did she know of the divine 96 RICHARD WAGNER rights of passion, which I have proclaimed by the blazing funeral pyre of the Walkyrie, ban- ished from heaven by the gods! Love sacri- fices itself in death, that is the significance of the Gdtterddmmerung." It was in vain that Frau Wille lent him books on Napoleon and Frederick the Great, and the works of the German mystics. It was in vain that she foretold the splendid future which awaited him. But let us listen once again to her own words, for she has admirably described Wagner's attitude and utterances during that painful sojourn at Mariafeld. A biographer is only too lucky to have at his dis- posal documents of this sort, written in so fine a style and with such rare psychological discernment: "The sun had just set in all its beauty, and the sky and earth were bathed in light and flame. Wagner said to me : " 'Why do you talk to me of my future, when my manuscripts are still stowed away in the bottom of my closet? Who is going to produce SPLENDOR AND MISERY 97 a work of art which I cannot allow to be per- formed without the collaboration of propitious demons, so that the entire world may know that it is thus that the master conceived it and wished it to be given?' "In the intensity of his excitement, he was striding back and forth through the room. All of a sudden he paused in front of me and cried out: " 'I am differently organized, I have more sensitive nerves, I must have beauty, brilliance and light! The world owes me what I need. I cannot live in a miserable position as organ- ist, like your master Sebastian Bach. Am I incredibly exacting in asking for the small amount of luxury which I crave, I who am preparing delight for thousands upon thou- sands of human beings?' "As he said this, he raised his head as though he were uttering a challenge, then dropped back into his seat in the window alcove and stared out, straight ahead of him." In spite of the heart-breaking cares of pe- 98 RICHARD WAGNER cuniary distress that was only too genuine, in spite of sleeplessness and ailments which forced him to adopt a diet and take the waters of Vichy, Wagner returned to his task and to a short respite of hope. Nevertheless, when he left Mariafeld he said gravely to Frau Wille: "My friend, you do not know the extent of my misfortunes, nor the depths of wretched- ness which await me!" In taking leave of the village barber, he as- sured him that he was going away because the latter's prices were too high ! The good Figaro of the place replied that he need not leave on that account and that henceforward he would give him bargain rates. Wagner was much amused by this incident, notwithstanding his many anxieties. Wagner made his way to Stuttgart. At this moment he had reached the acme of discour- agement and misfortune. He thought of re- turning to Russia, and even of setting out for America. But one cannot help believing that SPLENDOR AND MISERY 99 his "propitious demons" were watching over Wagner and over his immense and pathetic art. An envoy from the young king, Ludwig II of Bavaria, Herr von Pfistermeister, after having vainly sought him in Vienna and Maria- feld, finally discovered him at Stuttgart, in April, 1864. This was an immense good fortune for Wag- ner, and he wrote to tell of it to Frau Eliza Wille, who had helped him to bear so many sorrows and anxieties. He had just been presented to the king, on the 4th of May: "The king," he. wrote, "is unfortunately so handsome, so intelligent, so ardent and so great that I fear that his life will vanish away from this vulgar world like a fugitive and divine dream. He loves me with the ardor and fer- vor of first love, he knows and understands aU that concerns me. He wants me to remain permanently with him, he wants me to work and to rest and to produce my dramas; he is willing to give me everything that I need; he 100 RICHARD WAGNER wants me to finish the Ring of the Nihelung, and he is going to have it produced precisely in the way that I desire. I am to be relieved of every pecuniary care; I am to have everything that I want; and the sole condition is that I remain with him." Thus it was that Wagner became, not the conductor of the Court Theater's orchestra, but the personal friend of this strange sovereign, who craved intellectual intoxication. This dreamer, this mystic, this noble and singular patron of arts and letters saw in Wagnerianism and in the development of the musical drama a source of ecstasies and lofty religious emo- tions. He understood Wagner as he really was, systematic, obstinate and sublime in his concep- tion of a supreme art; indeed, he understood him better than his best friends did. Even Hans von Biilow and Liszt were less devoted followers than he. It looked as though Wagner had now come to the end of his humiliations. For was not this king, who had just succeeded to the throne, SPLENDOR AND MISERY 101 and was so enamored of Wagner, destined to become his "guardian angel"? And indeed, the path towards triumph did seem to have been made easy; yet Wagner had not yet finished climbing his Calvary. Notwithstanding that Ludwig of Bavaria showed such remarkable faith in him, he stiU had to contend against the force of tradition and the settled habits of a public which even yet numbered far too many Philistines. Wagner became all powerful at court. The extraordinary monarch, Ludwig II, began to hoard up his revenues and postponed certain public works undertaken by his father, in order to preserve intact the sum needed for the pro- duction of the Ring of the Nihelung. Conse- quently, the great poet-musician was looked upon as the king's favorite. The socialist Las- salle, as well as the parents of a murderess, ap- pealed to him to intercede on their behalf with Ludwig II. The king appointed Hans von Biilow as his own personal pianist; and Wagner, in a frenzy 102 RICHARD WAGNER of joy, looked upon the kindly monarch as a divine being, endowed with the most marvel- ous faculties. After having had a representation of Tann- hduser at the Court Theater in Munich, he gave a production of the Flying Dutchman at the same theater, on the 4th of December, 1864. For a time, Wagner lived in a sort of enchanted dream, which was nevertheless troubled by the clamors of a certain element which criticized the conduct and infatuation of the king. The latter, with unparalleled sureness of purpose, dreamed of nothing but the realization of the Wagnerian drama ; and it was under admirable conditions that Tristan, an incomparable speci- men of Wagnerian art, was produced (May- June, 1865). These performances, to borrow the author's own phraseology, were veritable artistic festivals, conducted with absolutely no regard to the financial outcome of the venture. It was no longer a question of pleasing or not pleasing, but of at last presenting a "solution of pure problems of art." Among the members of SPLENDOR AND MISERY 103 the cast, special mention should be made of Schnorr von Carolsfeldt and his wife. Hans von Billow had now become conductor at the Court Theater. Wagner and the king, however, were preoccupied with plans for an ideal theater, for the exclusive production of Wagnerian drama, and a small model of which was exhibited to a special public composed of those who showed more or less zeal for the cause. Meanwhile, the hostility against the mon- arch and his protege was increasing and began to be disquieting. While the one was re- proached for his prodigality, the other was cen- sured for his unrestrained sybaritism. Journal- ists circulated calumnies about him, and as- serted that "a great oriental potentate could be very well contented with the standard of living set by Wagner." There is no doubt that Wagner took advan- tage of his prestige in a lordly way and without scruples. The story is told that the principal upholsterer of the city, to whom he owed a 104 RICHARD WAGNER sum equivalent to twenty thousand dollars, waylaid him one day publicly in the theater, and swore that he would not let him go until he had paid his debts. The man raised such an outcry that Wagner was forced to draw him a draft on the royal treasury. If we are to avoid the charge of partiality, we must admit that such occurrences, even if allowance is made for exaggeration, are charac- teristic, and explain the anger of the subjects of Ludwig II. Between him and Wagner a real intimacy existed, and in their intercourse they employed the familiar "thou" and "thee." Ludwig II has left evidence of his affection and his Wag- nerian fervor in a letter addressed to a cousin, the fiancee of his dreams, who had once of- fered him some wild flowers. He tells how he had found on a piano, belonging to relatives of his, the Princesses Max, some of the poet- musician's librettos. He became absorbed in Lohengrin. The mystery of the legend ap- pealed to his own mysterious soul: SPLENDOR AND MISERY 105 "How many times," he wrote, "I have seen in imagination the knight and his faithful swan gUding over the waves! There I found my childhood dreams and my youthful fantasies delightfully realized. And these familiar per- sonages spoke to me in rhythms which intoxi- cated me like the voluptuous perfume of the lindens in bloom." Let us hear further these strange and noble confessions of the poet-king, who found in the art of Wagner the reaUzation of a pure and religious ideal, who said to him, "You and God," and who assured him of his faithful en- thusiasm until even beyond the grave, in the empire of universal death: "How we became friends, friends in the high- est sense of the term, which has been so much abused, the world already knows. And this world, which I have never loved, obliges me to reveal myself continually more and more, because of the manner in which it judges this friendship. What might I not have had to endure from this venial and despicable world, 106 RICHARD WAGNER if I had not been King? . . . God in his good- ness will leave me the joy which I derive from fostering and carrying out the plans of this dear friend, and from being to him in a small measure what he is to me infinitely." In order to understand the tone of this mystic admiration, a form of romanticism fuU of morbid ecstasy, it wiU suffice to read a letter written by Ludwig II to Wagner after the performance of Tristan: "Great and divine friend, I can hardly wait untU tomorrow evening, I am so eager to at- tend the second performance. . . . My soul longs to be ravished once again by that splen- did, lofty, sublime work. All honor to its creator ! All glory to him ! Will you not assure me, my dear friend, that you will never allow yourself to lose the courage to create new works? In the name of those upon whom you have bestowed a happiness such as God alone can give, I pray of you that you will never cease." It is not unprofitable to dwell upon the ex- SPLENDOR AND MISERY 107 altation of this eccentric and unhappy king, for it enables us to define in advance the psy- chology of Wagnerianism, an almost Europe- wide cult of beauty, which is one of the most striking intellectual events of the end of the nineteenth century. Under the auspices of Ludwig II of Bavaria, who as a matter of fact made it possible for him to realize his ambitious dreams in all their integrity, Wagner played the role of a sort of high priest. The documents above cited are also of weighty interest from the simple point of view of the musician's biography, — especially if, having shown an adequate appreciation of these impassioned appeals, these intensely po- etic avowals, we take the trouble to remember that the sum expended in staging Tristan and Isolde at Munich amounted to very nearly forty thousand dollars, and that it had cost over thirty thousand for Lohengrin. And it should be added, without fear of exaggeration, that the royal presents, both in money and in specific 108 RICHARD WAGNER articles, had cost the Treasury something in the neighborhood of a hundred thousand dollars. It can easily be imagined that the Bavarian press did not fail to circulate sensational details and to excite the resentment of the public against a king with such a passion for the fine arts. The Kolnisches Zeitung announced one day that Ludwig II had just presented his favorite musician with a walking stick, the handle of which was a swan wrought of gold and set with diamonds. The performance of Tristan, which had been hours of enchantment for the king, the author and the initiated few, meant little or nothing to the general public. The author himself stopped them after the fourth. Eager to escape the "persecution" of the pop- ulace of Miinich, Wagner withdrew to Geneva. He realized that, in the face of a more or less open animosity, it would be impossible ever to see the theater of his dreams erected in Mu- nich. Accordingly, he decided to live in retire- SPLENDOR AND MISERY 109 ment. But he was not to be forgotten, for Ludwig II remained his faithful friend throughout all the time that he was striving, in obscurity and silence, to complete the crea- tions which were to win the admiration of posterity. CHAPTER V PEACE AND MEDITATION — FROM DREAM TO REAL- ITY — THE APOTHEOSIS OP RICHARD WAGNER IT was in his retreat at Triebschen, pic- turesquely situated on the shore of the Lake of the Four Cantons, that Wagner made the first draft of Parsifal and finished his Meister singer, the first representation of which took place in June, 1868. It was a splendid occasion. The king who occupied the central box, had invited the dram- atist to sit with him. After the end of the first act there were calls for the author to appear upon the stage, but Wagner was unable to find the way. At the end of the perform- ance, at the request of Ludwig II, he arose from his seat and, from the eminence of the royal box, bowed to the audience. Nevertheless, from this time forth Wagner 110 FROM DREAM TO REALITY 111 avoided the Bavarian capital. The first per- formances of the Rhinegold (September 22, 1869) and the Walkyrie (June, 1870), were given without him and suJEfered from his ab- sence. The king, however, continued to hold him in favor, and it is stated that he paid him a visit incognito at Triebschen. There Wagner continued to live, in a state of happiness so great that it bordered upon ecstasy. His wife Minna had died, January 25th, 1866, from heart disease, which for a long time had undermined her health, although it is stated that her condition became especially precarious after the failure of Tannhduser at Paris. The great artist had never found in her that intensity of love, confidence and surrender of which he had dreamed. He once wrote that he would give all his art in return for a woman who would love him without reserve. Such a woman he found in Cosima Liszt, who had married Hans von Biilow, and who left him in order to share the destiny of Wagner. But far 112 RICHARD WAGNER from demanding that he should abandon his art, she aided its development. The Bayreuth Festivals were destined to be her work, quite as much as that of Richard Wagner, and she alone had the necessary intelligence and energy to carry on his sacred task and mission. On this subject let us hear what Wagner himself said, in his last letter to Eliza Wille, dated June 23d, 1870: "Since I last saw you in Munich (this was at the time of the performance of the Meister- singer, two years previous), I have not left my retreat, which since then has been shared by her who was destined to prove that there was something that could be done for me, and that the axiom formulated by so many of my friends, 'There is nothing to be done for Wag- ner,' was not true. She knew that there was something to do and she has done it. She has braved every ignominy and borne the bur- den of every condemnation. She has given me a son who is marvelously beautiful and strong, and whom I have boldly named Siegfried. He FROM DREAM TO REALITY 113 is now as flourishing as my works are, and has given me a renewal of life, for at last I have found a reason for living." Frau WUle herself is the source of some graphic details of Wagner's intimate life during this period of his complex and tumultuous life, — a period as fruitful as that of Zurich, for all that it was more secluded. Neither Frau WiUe nor Nietzsche, who spoke so highly of Wagner before he began to disparage him, could con- ceal their admiration for Frau Cosima, who was a heroic woman and came of a noble race. "The gifted daughter of Liszt," said Frau Wille, "resembled her illustrious father, and yet with a marked difference. The intelligence, the imagination and the poetry that animated her made her the true companion for Wagner and enabled her to follow him, with full under- standing, to aU the heights towards which his genius drew him. She absorbed herself in his music with the most devout enthusiasm, for the world in which he lived was also her own. 114 RICHARD WAGNER Wagner often exerted his genius to pay her some delicate and touching tribute in the form of music. In her home life she was whoUy devoted to her duties as wife and mother, gov- erness and teacher of her children, as Wagner himself has told me in his letters. Her intel- lectual culture, her feminine tact, and her knowledge of the world and of life rendered her conversation most attractive." It can be readily conceived that this atmos- phere of alternate serenity and radiant exalta- tion was essential to Wagner while he was com- posing his wonderful idyll of Siegfried and the greater part of Gdtterddmmerung, not to men- tion numerous articles, such as The Art of Conducting, The Aim of Opera, and Beethoven. We have other picturesque details of the Wagner of the Triebschen period. CatuUe Mendes, who had known him when he was liv- ing in Paris, in the Rue d'Aumale, suffering from all sorts of privations and anxieties, went to pay him a visit on the shores of Lake Lucerne, FROM DREAM TO REALITY 116 "We had hardly stepped from our convey- ance," wrote Mendes, who was accompanied by that rarely gifted poet, Villiers de ITsle Adam, "when we saw a huge straw hat, and beneath it a pale face, with eyes that glanced restlessly from right to left, as if seeking some- thing. It was he. Somewhat overawed, we stood there looking at him, not venturing to advance. He was small, lean, and closely en- veloped in a long frock coat of maroon cloth; and through the suspense of waiting, his whole frail looking body, — which possibly was really very strong, like a bundle of steel springs, — was trembling almost convulsively, like an hysterical woman. But his face retained a magnificent expression of proud serenity. While his mouth, with lips so thin and pale as to be hardly visible, was twisted into the lines of a sour smile, his splendid brow, be- neath the hat that was pushed backward, his splendid, vast, pure brow, surmounted by sin- gularly soft hair, already turning gray, that was brushed back, suggested unalterable peace and 116 RICHARD WAGNER the pursuit of some immense idea. The mo- ment that he saw us, Richard Wagner quivered from head to foot with the suddenness of a violin string vibrating to the rhythm of a piz- zicato, tossed his hat in the air with cries of mad welcome, almost dancing with joy, and flung himself upon us, hung on our necks, seized us by the arm, until hustled, jostled, swept along in a whirlwind of words and ges- tures, we found ourselves at last in the carriage which was to take us to the master's habita- tion." One diverting anecdote is related in connec- tion with this visit of Mendes and Villiers de ITsle Adam. The two French writers noticed that they were treated by the hotel staff with something more than respectful consideration. The proprietor himself kissed their hands obse- quiously. One day, after he had bowed many times, he said to Mendes: "Sire, Your Majesty's wishes shall be obeyed, and since Your Majesty insists, we shall re- spect his incognito." They had mistaken him FROM DREAM TO REALITY 117 for the king, Ludwig of Bavaria, and Villiers for the Prince of Taxis. Mendes further shows us Wagner with his black dog and his black cap, or such as tradi- tion has represented him, clad in frock coat, with trousers of golden satin embroidered over with flower designs of pearls. He had a passion for silks and velvet, and luminous fabrics. He moved tremulously; yet he never remained seated, but talked, talked continuously, inter- spersing his sublime conceptions with puns and witticisms, expounding his dramatic projects and the themes of his plots, and exhausting the vocabulary of terms expressive of pride, tenderness, violence and buffoonery. His hearers laughed with him, wept with him, taken out of themeslves, seeing his vis- ions, yielding to "the terror and the charm of his speech," as to a cyclone of sun-enveloped dust and tenlpest. And undoubtedly Mendes, the belated ro- manticist, and Villiers, the artist of the scin- tillating word, were weU qualified to under- 118 RICHARD WAGNER stand the hero of romantic art, Richard Wagner, Mme. Judith Gautier, in her turn, has given us, in the course of her interesting Souvenirs, a fine moral portrait of Wagner (July, 1869) : "It must be admitted," she writes, "that there are in Wagner's character 'a certain vio- lence and rudeness that are responsible for his being so often misunderstood, but only by those who judge solely from outside appear- ances. Excessively nervous and impression- able as he is, whatever emotion he experiences is carried to the point of paroxysm. A mild disappointment drives him almost to despair; the slightest irritation goads him into fury. His marvelous and exquisitely sensitive organ- ization has passed through terrible crises, and one wonders how he rallies from them; a single day of distress ages him by ten years, but when he is happy again, he is younger than ever within twenty-four hours. He squanders his energies with extraordinary prodigality. He is always sincere, always gives himself up wholly FROM DREAM TO REALITY 119 to whatever he is doing; yet at the same time his nature is extremely changeable, and his opinions and ideas, although quite absolute in the beginning, are not in the least irrevocable ; no one is readier than he to admit an error, but he must needs wait until the first heat is passed." Is it not worth while to meditate upon this judicious portrait, in order to have an intelli- gent understanding of this great artist, who was at one and the same time so greatly adu- lated and so greatly decried? Notwithstanding his impulsive tempera- ment, Wagner's life at Triebschen was on the whole very happy and exceedingly fruitful. From eight o'clock in the morning until five in the afternoon he toiled ceaselessly, in the midst of that majestic and fertile Swiss vaUey. It was during his meditations at Triebschen that the plans were matured for the Festspielhaus, that temple of musical drama, of Wagnerian drama, of German drama, which had been Wagner's dream throughout long years. It was 120 RICHARD WAGNER to be built at Bajreuth, whither even to this day the Wagnerian pilgrimage wends its way in accordance with the established rites. Wag- ner himself openly declared that all his prior successes were founded upon misunderstand- ings and poor performances, and that his repu- tation was not worth a nut-shell. Accordingly, the dawn of his real glory was destined to date from Bajo-euth, where his thoughts were for the first time realized in all their amplitude, in that series of what we may caU the Olympic Games of modem Germany. The laying of the cornerstone of the theater at Bayreuth, built in accordance with the plans drawn by Wagner's old friend, Semper, took place on the 22d of May, 1872, to the accom- paniment of a march written by Wagner in 1864, in honor of the king. The town had donated the site. Nietzsche was present and occupied a place of honor beside Frau Cosima Wagner. Ludwig II sent his secretary to give assurance that the royal coffers would always be open for these sublime manifestations, — and FROM DREAM TO REALITY 121 in point of fact those coffers were drawn upon, time and again, during the years that followed. The king also sent the following telegram to Wagner: "My dearest friend, on this day of such im- portant significance to all Germany, I offer you from the very bottom of my heart, my sincerest and most ardent congratulations. Greeting and benediction upon this great enterprise. Today, more than ever, I am one with you in spirit!" Wagner had good reason for writing, as he did in 1872: "What the king has done means far more' than my life to me. What he has desired and sought on my behalf represents a future of glorious promise. A high intellectual culture, a movement directed towards the noblest des- tinies of which a nation is capable, that is what the relations between him and me express and represent." 122 RICHARD WAGNER From this time forward, Wagner made his permanent home in a house situated some little distance from the Festspielhaus, and which he christened Wahnfried, a somewhat enigmatic term and one difficult to translate, but which we may render "freedom from illusions, after so many disappointments," could it not be more appropriately rendered, "the illusion of freedom," since Wagner, as Mr. Chamberlain has remarked, was still destined to suffer from his uncertainty of achieving that absolute, total, definitive success, for which he had prayed, even at Bayreuth, in the glorious years of his old age? Thanks to the development and activity of the Wagnerian societies, and to the resources furnished by the establishment of a special fund, the cycle of the Ring of the Nibelung, conceived by Wagner "in his confidence in the German spirit and completed to the greater glory of his august benefactor, King Ludwig II of Bavaria," was produced in its integrity in 1876. Yet the attachment of his wife and son. FROM DREAM TO REALITY 123 and the devotion of the king, of Liszt and sev- eral others, such as the Comte de Gobineau and the poet Heinrich von Stein, did not save Wag- ner from being once again misunderstood. In spite of the presence of several kings and other highly influential personages, the result had not come up to the expectations of the master. It was, in fact, a material setback. Nevertheless, a second fund was collected and a school of music and lyric declamation was opened. But the success of this was not pro- portioned to the effort. In July, 1882, through the aid of a new sub- scription, and thanks to various liberal dona- tions, the public was admitted to sixteen repre- sentations of Parsifal, Wagner's crowning work, in which he has developed in heroic form his doctrine of love and regeneration. These per- formances were followed by six representations of the cycle of the Ring. The number of tickets sold was 8,200, and the gross receipts amounted to 240,000 marks ($60,000). 124 RICHARD WAGNER The money subscribed had not been entirely spent, so a fund was started to meet the ex- penses of another series of Wagnerian perform- ances, which owed their success quite as much to dilettanteism as to the zeal of Frau Cosima Wagner, and all the partizans and Wagner- vereine taken together. Accordingly, in spite of some last anxieties and disappointments, Bayreuth represents the apotheosis of Wagner, the great genius so long decried and reviled, but henceforth glorified in an almost religious manner, in those modern mystery plays of drama and music. Consequently, it is to Bayreuth that we must turn in order to conjure up the glorious Wag- ner of these closing years. And first of all the question arises: Why did he choose Bayreuth for the site of a theater which, according to his own statement, was to cost in the neighborhood of $225,000? Wagner's explanation is as fol- lows: "The choice could not be a capital city nor any town already possessing a theater, nor a FROM DREAM TO REALITY 125 bathing resort that during the summer would attract a great crowd of a sort utterly incapable of appreciating such spectacles. It ought to be situated as nearly as possible in the heart of Germany. Besides, I could not choose any other than a Bavarian town, if I was to hope for a place of permanent residence, and it was in Bavaria that I was destined to find it." Mme. Judith Gautier, a Wagnerian from the earliest hour, one might almost say from her birth, and one who in her writings has paid the highest tribute to the illustrious master, may be entrusted to conduct us to Bayreuth. We could scarcely ask for a more competent guide: "This little town . . . which the caprice of a man of genius suddenly made famous, is hid- den behind the cool mountain ranges of upper Franconia: pine woods, rapid streams, vast meadows bounded by hills showing faintly blue against a misty sky; long roads bordered with poplars, along which teams of oxen plod slowly, two by two, straining under the copper yokes 126 RICHARD WAGNER that almost form a crown for their heads: — such are the first impressions as we approach this town that is ordinarily so peaceful; and then suddenly, when the theater standing sim- ply and proudly upon the hill has opened its doors, the same town witnesses a gathering of emperors, kings and princes from all lands, an influx of rejoicing crowds, whom the inn-keep- ers, roused out of their long lethargy, proceed to plunder to the best of their ability." The theater, situated outside of the town and overlooking it, is a structure of simple as- pect, somewhat resembling the Trocadero. In the interior there are neither boxes nor bal- conies. The rows of seats form a segment of a circle of very shght curvature, there are no side seats, there is no prompter's box, and the or- chestra is hidden from view beneath the stage. Such, in Wagner's eyes, was the way that drama should be given; and it may well be asked why we have not followed so good an example. The parterre contains fifteen hun- dred seats, and the "Fiirstengalerie" two hun- FROM DREAM TO REALITY 127 dred. The stage alone is lighted. Trumpets announce the commencement of ea^ch act. Mme. Judith Gautier has also described Wagner's house, which was built after his own plans. It stands at the end of a broad alley; it is almost square, and is built of reddish gray- stone, with no ornamentation excepting a fresco over the front entrance, representing a scene from the Ring. A straight staircase leads to a little ante- chamber, from which one enters a well lighted and lofty vestibule; it contains a gallery on a level with the second story; it has a marble floor and contains a number of marble statues ; to the right is the dining-room, to the left a drawing-room filled with works of art; at the back is a sort of vast library terminating in a rotunda. Mme. Judith Gautier paid a last visit to Wagner on September 29th, 1881. After cross- ing the garden, planted with ampelopsis and jars of Bengal roses, and passing a two-story pavilion, a children's gymnasium and a poul- 128 RICHARD WAGNER try-house, in which she saw peacocks and sil- ver pheasants, she found the master, who wel- comed his visitors "with that tremulous eager- ness that he always showed to those faithful friends whose love, he felt, was of the perfect sort; for Wagner had no taint of that egotisti- cal indifference that so often affects great men when they have arrived at a certain degree of glory." Wagner, on this occasion, seemed to be fuU of gayety and good spirits; and although he spoke French with some difficulty, this fact did not prevent him from indulging in puns and witticisms. He said that he was homesick for sunshine, he wanted to visit India and the Bos- phorus. He took his friends to the studio of the artist Joukowski, and then to call upon the machinist Brandt. Jle talked enthusiastically of his own work. "When one is young," he said, "when the nerves are not yet wearied, and one can still write opera scores with a certain nimbleness (even that of Lohengrin), even if one does not FROM DREAM TO REALITY 129 know all tho resources of tonal coloring and orchestration, the work is not to be compared with the labor demanded by new works that have to be written in ripe old age. Auber, how- ever, continued to compose up to the age of eighty-four without fatigue, but then he had not changed his manner." At sixty-nine years of age, Wagner was still capable of considerable activity; he rose at six o'clock; after his bath, he lay down again, and read untU ten; at eleven he set to work and continued untU two. After dinner he rested again for a short time, reading as before; from four until six he took a carriage ride, after which he resumed his work until eight, spend- ing the rest of the evening with his family. He was a vegetarian by choice. He was patriotic. He was the declared enemy of vivisection, and we know that he always had a great fondness for animals. "Our campaign," he said to his guests, "has already borne good results in Germany. The carpenters who make the instruments of tor- 130 RICHARD WAGNER ture intended for unhappy dogs complain that they do not sell nearly as many." After all the storms and struggles, Richard Wagner still retained his keen and ardent sen- sibility. On the occasion of his seventieth an- niversary, when a benefit performance was given for the aid of needy musicians, he de- clared that he was one of them, since he had the most urgent need — of affection ! Up to the very end of his life he continued to show the same alternations between violence and singu- lar tenderness. The spirit of religious reverence which ani- mates his magnificent Parsifal also inspires his essay on Religion and Art. After 1879 Wagner was in the habit of pass- ing his winters in Italy. On the thirteenth of February, 1883, he died suddenly in Venice, where he had formerly written Tristan, stricken down while at work by apoplexy. On the evening of his death, his gondolier was found weeping bitterly, on the steps of the Vendramini Palace, where he resided and in FROM DREAM TO REALITY 131 which he had a bedroom hung in pale blue and rose-colored satin. Ludwig II of Bavaria gave orders that no one should touch the body until after the ar- rival of his envoy. The body was embalmed by Professor Hofmann of Berlin. The king's secretary escorted the remains to the frontier, and in Munich his adjutant general brought a wreath of laurels and palms, with this inscrip- tion: "King Ludwig of Bavaria to the great poet of word and music, Richard Wagner." Wagner was interred in the Villa Wahnfried with great pomp. It required three wagons to carry the wreaths, of which there were more than two hundred. Ludwig II came next day to weep alone be- side his tomb. Wagner left no fortune at his death, in spite of the fact that the publishing house of Schott, in Mayence, had purchased his score of Par- sijal for a sum amounting to sixty thousand dollars. His works and his memory are faith- fully defended by his widow and his partizans. 132 RICHARD WAGNER He created a human and a superhuman world, which survives him and which transmits his harmonious and richly colored vision of na- ture and Ufe to all succeeding generations. Ac- cordingly, his long martjn^dom, which preceded the far too brief hours of his apotheosis at Bay- reuth, was not endured in vain. Has not Wag- ner himself said that he gave birth in the midst of suffering? This suffering is perpetuated in his majestic works, and is illumined by the rays of love and faith. Thus, the Wagnerian re- ligion was bom of his own religion ; it fortifies and consoles men today as it fortified and con- soled Richard Wagner during his life, a life dedicated to all the infernos and all the glories of immortal art. PART SECOND THE WAGNERIAN DRAMA CHAPTER I SOME PRINCIPLES OF WAGNERIAN ART — POETRY AND MUSIC — FROM OPERA TO DRAMA A WORK of art, says Richard Wagner, "is religion rendered perceptible in a living form." This definition is, at the same time, the definition of Wagnerian drama. Brought up among actors, a poet himself from childhood, drawing his inspiration from the lofty conceptions of the Greek tragedians and from Shakespeare, and nurtured on Wie- land, SchiUer and Goethe, Wagner formed the dream of incorporating music in the drama, and he succeeded perfectly in realizing it. On the other hand, believing that art was able to convey spiritual truths through physical sensations, he was convinced, as Mr. Chamber- lain has ably demonstrated, of the moral sig- nificance of the world, and placed his mighty 135 136 RICHARD WAGNER genius for symphonic construction at the ser- vice of a philosophy of love and pity and human and religious renovation, or, for the sake of using the consecrated term, redemp- tion. Now that we have drawn his portrait and followed the essential vicissitudes of his career, it seems worth while to examine briefly his principal characteristics as poet, dramatist and musician, not to say metaphysician. The poet in him holds considerable place. There have too often been attempts to ignore this, and, besides, his fame as a composer over- shadowed that of poet. Are we not in the habit of contemplating people, and famous men are no exception, from a single angle? This is a wide-spread error, and it is all the more serious when the person in question is a Wagner, whose art is essentially a synthetic art com- posed of the most diverse elements. Wagner left nothing to chance in his work, which was the fruit of flawless genius and of a prodigiously daring and tenacious will. He WAGNERIAN ART 137 wrote all his own librettos, in order that they should be adapted to his music, and in writing them he revealed himself as a delicate and im- passioned poet. Berlioz also worked upon his own librettos, but with various collaborators. Wagner adhered invariably to his system. And therein lay his power and his safety. How many musicians of talent and genius have struggled to infuse life and harmony into shapeless scenarios, mediocre and siUy librettos! Beethoven, for whom Wagner professed a keen admiration, amounting almost to a cult, found himself embarrassed by the libretto of Fidelia, and was unable to do himself fuU justice in that opera. As has been convincingly shown by Al- fred Ernst, Wagner succeeded in attaining a perfect fusion between the poetic and the musical element. As a poet, Wagner was master of his forms even in his earliest productions; he drew his inspiration from ancient texts, he employed both regular rhyme and alliteration, he revived archaic terms, and excelled, especially in Tris- 138 RICHARD WAGNER tan and Isolde, in coining new substances of broad significance. If the composition of the Ring of the Nibe- lung is the work of a master, the poem of Tann- hduser is in itself a profound inspiration, ex- quisite in sentiment, the work of a writer pos- sessed at once of great vigor and great charm. The famous Romance of the Star and the In- vocation of Venus are poems which would do honor to the best poets of contemporary Ger- many. Similarly, the rhythms and cadences in Par- sifal prove him to be an artist of exquisite subtlety in the value of words. It is certain that when such ingenious and discerning wri- ters as Gerard de Nerval, Baudelaire, and Vil- Uers de I'Isle Adam made themselves heralds of the Wagnerian drama, they had an intuitive perception not only of his vast purposes, but of the lyric audacity and wealth of poetic re- sources that are so easily to be found in him. Accordingly, Wagner is a great poet, and it should be at once added, a great dramatic poet. WAGNERIAN ART 139 As a dramatist, he could not limit his genius within the bounds of recorded history. Wagner did not become himself until subsequently to Rienzi. He could move at ease in the midst of immense, mysterious subjects, among legends and myths, in which the characters, while mak- ing us feel their kinship, have no difficulty in taking on the quality of heroes and divinities. Invention and fantasy are not only permissible but even necessary to themes of this character. In their primitive form they already contain symbols; transmitted from generation to gen- eration, they become the embodiment of the soul of a people, and hence lend themselves to the original symbolism of the modern artist. The Wagnerian drama, contained in three acts, which carry us from the exposition to the denouement, through all the fluctuations of the plot, transports us to fairyland by its swift changes of scene and more especially by the pomp and diversity of its spectacles. And as such, it is no longer content to be merely a drama, but becomes a sort of festival, 140 RICHARD WAGNER majestic, national, religious. And why should we be surprised at the luxury and prodigality of Richard Wagner, when we remember his concrete love of sumptuous, amazing, dazzling decorations? Such, for example, as the storm in the Rhinegold, followed by the rainbow; or again the Rhine-Maidens, depicting nature in her strangest and most fascinating aspects. In the midst of these enchanted settings, his personages are exalted, his characters rise above human desire and heroic will to the heights of abnegation and renouncement. Thus it is that we have side by side, Elsa and Isolde, Brunnhilde and Kundry, Wolfram and Lohengrin, Siegfried and Parsifal. Earthly passions join hands with celestial sacrifices. In order to realize of what great variety Wagner is capable in his creation of charac- ters, it will suffice to compare the daring Sieg- fried with the crafty dwarf Mime, and to con- trast the good and adroit Hans Sachs in the Meistersinger, with the sorrowing and divine Tristan. WAGNERIAN ART 141 Is it true that Richard Wagner availed him- self of existing and fully developed types, con- tenting himself with placing them in a setting of musical tragedy? In order to convince our- selves of the contrary, it will be sufficient to consider the differences pointed out by Albert Ernst, between the Scandinavian Odin and the Wotan of the Tetralogy. Wagner's mysticism which, in our opinion, has set in motion throughout the length and breadth of Europe a current of ideas and senti- ments in opposition to the doctrine of posi- tivism, found free scope in this atmosphere of miracles, magic and damnation. And it is the Christian idea of sacrifice which asserts itself all the way from the Flying Dutchman to Parsifal. More than that, as has not failed to be noticed on numerous occasions, Christianity is, in cer- tain cases, contrasted with paganism. For in- stance, in Tannhauser, Venus vanishes when the name of Mary is uttered. As for Parsifal, it is a veritable mystery play, and the triumph of religious feeling in this last 142 RICHARD WAGNER of Wagner's works has been generally recog- nized. It is certain, nevertheless, that Wagner intended it, not as an apology for any particu- lar sect, but as a magnificent affirmation of pure evangelism. Amid all the confusing mass of dissertations and discussions, involving all degrees of Wag- nerianism, it seemed necessary to try to get a clear conception of his general tendencies. Now that we have done so, it remains to ask, what are the laws which govern his musical drama? They become more and more defined, in pro- portion as he departs from conventional opera and develops his own method with a majestic amplitude that is sometimes complex to the point of obscurity. It is above all in the Meis- tersinger and Tristan, or in Parsifal, that we may study his system and compare it with the accepted methods of the opera. In the true Wagnerian musical drama, we no longer have recitatif, no isolated IjtIcs with their required rhythms. The characters carry on a dialogue, there is an orchestral movement WAGNERIAN ART 143 accompanying the action. The orchestra ex- presses and generalizes all the emotions, an- alyzing them to the utmost fugitive shading; and the critics have good reason for drawing a comparison with the role played by the chorus in Greek tragedy when they attempt to define that of the orchestra in the Wagnerian drama. The symphony of motives serves as a descrip- tion of the elements of nature and of the drama: for instance, the undulation of the waves, and the gallop of the Walkyries. The prelude permits us to participate in a sort of dream- vision of the action of the drama, and consists of an idealized commentary on the events we are about to witness. It is a collec- tive and powerfully suggestive meditation, a harmonious philosophizing over the persons and the events which the musician is about to conjure up. It is generally known, furthermore, that in each drama there are a number of leading themes of leitmotiv consisting of basic melo- dies. Gluck, to be sure, had already employed 144 RICHARD WAGNER this method. Wagner certainly did not invent it. Beethoven utilized it, and so did Mozart. But Wagner built up his works on a foundation of these characteristic themes. With him, the melody accompanies the ac- tion and never recurs arbitrarily. The themes employed undergo a multitude of variations, distinguished from one another as a result of successive modifications. This is perfectly logi- cal. An individual remains himself, even when he alters; and it is the same way with every- thing that is human, everything that forms part of the universe and is in a perpetual state of change. In spite of the extreme complexity of cer- tain of these themes, it has been observed that this tempestuous revolutionist never went to extremes, in regard to the vocal difficulties of his roles. But he needed experienced actors, with a gift for mobile and expressive mimicry. His singers have to play and to make use of all their means. Wagner demands of each one all that he can give, in the same way that he WAGNERIAN ART 145 himself exhausts all the combinations in the development and analysis of a passion that has become a musical element. Wagner's harmony unites the traditional counterpoint of the schools with the indepen- dent development of melodies. Whatever may constitute the striking originality of the author of the Tetralogy, his work is not an isolated and unforeseen phenomenon, but it carries on, in a gigantic synthesis, on the one hand the work of Gluck, and on the other that of Bach and Beethoven. Thanks to the innumerable resources of his orchestra, he succeeds in giving a strong and vivid personality even to the minor characters in his dramas. The instruments are appor- tioned in groups, and reunited in families; each one has its own particular role. It has been remarked, for instance, that while, in the Ring of the Nibelung, the tuba-counterbass indi- cates in a certain way the redoubtable person- ality of the giant Fafner, the trombone-coun- terbass indicates that of Wotan, and announces 146 RICHARD WAGNER his profound and dominating voice. We know how many sentiments Wagner has succeeded in expressing in his music-language, enormous and tumultuous, eloquent and tender, thanks to the horns and the clarinets. But let us leave to technical musicians the care of studying in detail and with precision the Wagnerian methods of expression, and, if they choose, his habitual processes, which be- came more and more defined as he attained fuU self-mastery. We will not even stop to ask whether his rules have not done harm to some over-zealous disciples, and hampered the full expansion of certain musical personalities. CHAPTER II THE GREAT WAGNERIAN TI-IEMES — FROM LOVE TO SACRIFICE — IN THE REALM OF DREAMS AND BEAUTY ONE of the most authoritative interpreters of Wagner's works and doctrines, Mr. Chamberlain, has said that the first of Wag- ner's operas. The Fairies (1833), which was produced in Munich some years after the mas- ter's death, in June, 1888, contained "some- thing quite prophetic," not only in some of its musical developments, but also in the theme, in which the plot is subordinate and the idea of redemption is sharply emphasized. But this work survives only as an indication and a curiosity. Although the Liebesverbot, or Novice of Pa- lermo, contains a melody afterwards introduced into Tannhduser (the Pardon of the Pilgrims), 147 148 RICHARD WAGNER it is of very slight significance. The libretto is a veritable imbroglio that reminds one of certain old stock comedies, crowded with hack- neyed episodes such as disguises, abductions, a confused mass of intrigues, letters, exits, en- trances, etc. The work, however, is interesting for two reasons: in the first place, because of the doubled fervor of poet and musician, which re- veals a curious and poignant sense of the pic- turesque; and secondly, because it represents a state of mind. Young Wagner, thirsting for liberty, an enemy of traditional German oper- atic music, here shows himself equally th^ enemy of puritanical hypocrisy. He exalts pleasures and passions. Bienzi, or The Last of the Tribunes, is a con- ventional opera, destined primarily for the Grand Opera at Paris, drawing its inspiration from the customs of the period, and resembling the works of Halevy, Scribe and Meyerbeer. It is an historic drama, with far too much history in it, overburdened with detail and constantly GREAT WAGNERIAN THEMES 149 sacrificing the development of the spiritual con- flicts expressed by the musical motives, to purely human action. The scenic effects are adroitly managed, and the score is not lacking in color nor in strength. Indeed, this strength is carried to the point of brutality. We realize this while listening to the overture, which is none the less fuU of ad- mirable qualities. Wagner himself was the first to see his mistakes, the first to realize what his score lacked; and he underwent a reaction, not only against the other contemporary musi- cians but against himself. The Flying Dutch- man, produced only a few months later than Rienzi, is the manifest and briUiant proof of this. Here we are in the presence of Wagnerian drama in its first phase, with those leitmotivs (the importance of which, as M. J. G. Prud'- homme has very justly observed, Berlioz had already recognized in his Fantastique), with its symphonic orchestration, with its suppression of aU useless diversions tending to interrupt 150 RICHARD WAGNER the dramatic action, with what was then con- sidered the daring freedom of its soaring har- monies, and the especially bold employment of chromatic scales. With the Flying Dutchman, Wagner's rupture with conventional opera was accomplished. By emancipating himself from an illogical form, he was henceforth free to work in a manner congenial to his tempera- ment. Furthermore, he had not only found his sys- tem, but he had also discovered a type of sub- jects that would permit him to expound the human and divine themes of love, anguish, pity and regeneration. The theme of the Flying Dutchman, and the motive of redemption, which is superbly developed in Senta's ballad, are most significant in this regard. Moreover, the popular legend of the Accursed Dutchman was peculiarly calculated to appeal to the mel- ancholy nature of that other wandering and ill- fated soul, the tempestuous, sorrowful and ro- mantic Richard Wagner. He gave a new and deeper color to the orig- GREAT WAGNERIAN THEMES 151 inal version of the legend by his own splendid aspirations, which gave a vibrant intensity to the marvelous prologue to the Flying Dutch- man, and to the score of the opera itself, which, although uneven, is full of vigor and of a lofty and touching psychology. For in this work Wagner no longer wasted his time in binding together a series of episodes, and describing them by external methods. One would say rather, that he had concentrated his attention on the human soul, with all that it contained of pathetic nostalgia and helpless yearning, and had magnified its quivering pulsations. In doing this he left the domain of history and time, and in a certain sense spiritualized his inspiration. Wagner was yet destined to be- come the sonorous echo of those secret religious inquietudes concealed in the inmost depths of the noblest souls. The theme of the Flying Dutchman, imbued as it is with a spirit of wild and somber poetry, was well adapted to the development of Wag- nerian symbolism. The unfortunate victim of 152 RICHARD WAGNER the malediction cannot be saved unless through the tender devotion of a woman. Let us not inquire too closely why Senta, the daughter of Daland, falls in love, in advance, with the ac- cursed stranger. Let us yield ourselves to the mystery within the mystery. Insensible to the passion of Erik the hunter, Senta has yielded her heart to an ideal love. When the Hollan- der reaches shore, she recognizes him as the one whose salvation she is destined to accomplish through the purity of her love. She will fol- low him and give herself to him. When the vessel prepares to depart in the midst of a tem- pest, she ascends a rock and flings herself into the waves, in order to reach the victim of the curse. The sea engulfs the vessel, but love, stronger than death, will unite Senta to him whom she has redeemed, in celestial beatitudes. Under similar circumstances, Elizabeth sacri- fices herself to the knight Tannhduser, in the romantic opera in three acts which bears his name, and which is the outgrowth of a popular GREAT WAGNERIAN THEMES 153 legend and of the war of the singers of the Wartburg. In spite of his numerous experiments with foreign themes, Wagner, from his youth up, was theoretically in favor of a national drama, capable of thrilling the heart of the entire na- tion. It must not be forgotten that it was Weber's Freischutz which first awakened his artistic sensibility and revealed to him the mission of which he was destined little by lit- tle to acquire a clearer and more profound con- ception. Now, Tannhduser furnished him with a theme typical of old Germany — romantic, chivalrous and idealistic. At the same time, the conflict between the senses and the soul, between Venus and the Divine Spirit, under- lies the legend and gives it its human and uni- versal significanee. In the seductive and pic- turesque personage of Tannhauser the mad, unbridled desire for pleasure is at war with the immaculate glory of eternal salvation. The 154 RICHARD WAGNER conception of pagan ebriety, which Nietzsche has undertaken to exalt in all his works, here blends with the ethereal hymn of Christian ecstasies. It is this two-fold and powerful inspiration that animates the magnificent Overture, where- in we see reflected a generalization of the entire drama, and which later animates the drama itself. The young and venturous knight, Tann- hauser, like Goethe's Faust, is in search of hap- piness. Amidst nymphs and bacchantes, in Venus's grotto and at her feet, he savors vo- luptuous joys; indeed, he has savored them too long, since he has wearied of the intoxica- tion of the unbridled senses. That is why his troubled soul is anxious to escape from the Venusberg *and return to its share of earthly trials. But the goddess and her sirens hold him by their seductive power. The hero wishes to break this charm, and when Venus curses him, he invokes the sacred name of Mary. Venus vanishes, and the hero returns to the smiling GREAT WAGNERIAN THEMES 165 valley of the Wartburg and to the common life of men. We are back in the heart of the Middle Ages, in old Thuringia, amid the songs of pil- grims and shepherds. The Landgrave, sur- rounded by his poet-knights, has gone hunting. "Return among us and mingle your voice with ours," his noble rival and friend Wolfram says to Tannhauser. And faithful friendship pours itself out in song in the andante of the sextette which urges him to return and take his place among his peers. Tannhauser hesitates. But when Wolfram speaks of the Landgrave's niece, Elizabeth, who stiU loves him, he decides to accompany them. Everyone knows the al- legro, the stretto of which is interrupted by the hunting horns at the close of the first act of Tannhauser. Now we are at the Wartburg. Even down to the present time it has retained its medieval aspect, and the chamber is still exhibited where Luther threw the ink-bottle at the devil. But to return to Tannhauser: conducted by the 156 RICHARD WAGNER loyal WoLfram, he throws himself at Eliza- beth's feet. Then ensues a sublime love duet, in the course of which the knight pours forth his yearning for infinite ecstasy. Accompanied by his singers, the Landgrave proposes, at this juncture, a singing contest, in which love is to be worthily celebrated in the presence of the lords and noble ladies. Wolfram, who also loves Elizabeth, glorifies his sentiments with equal amplitude and discretion. Tannhauser responds. Little by little, he yields to the magic spell of his memories, and exalts burn- ing passion and the intoxications known only to those who have penetrated the Venusberg. This pagan invocation horrifies his audience. The knights wish to kill the author of such a scandal, but Elizabeth saves him, for she loves him in spite of all. . . . And it is decided that Tannhauser shaU accompany the pilgrims to Rome, in order to sue for pardon. Elizabeth patiently awaits the return of the one to whom she has given her heart and whom she has pardoned in advance. But Tann- GREAT WAGNERIAN THEMES 157 hauser is not to be found among the returning pilgrims. The tender and fair Elizabeth prays for his salvation. Wolfram, in the dim dawn of day, sings his famous Romance of the Star, and Tannhauser advances. He has failed to obtain his pardon. With bitter sarcasm he tells the tale of his journey. At all events, he wiU find intoxication and forgetfulness with Venus, and the nymphs and sirens whom he invokes. Venus who has come at his summons, once more vanishes. A mournful procession escorts the body of the unfortun'ate Elizabeth, who has been unable to survive her grief. The knight Tannhauser finds pure and ideal love as he dies beside his beloved, and he will be reunited to her in the reahn of grace and eter- nity. In Tannhauser, notwithstanding its dream atmosphere, Wagner could not rid himself of certain obligations towards recorded history.- Lohengrin, however, the Knight of the Swan, which he borrowed from the legend of the 158 RICHARD WAGNER Graal, that was destined also to furnish him Parsifal, left fuU liberty to his imagination and fantasy. It is an exquisite conception, and very gen- eral in its symbolism. Wagner himself com- pared it to the story of Jupiter and Semele, and said further: "The tjrpe of Lohengrin appealed to me with a constantly increasing power of attraction. ... I learned to understand the myth of Lo- hengrin in its simplest significance, that is to say, in its most profound significance as a truly popular poem. . . . Lohengrin is by no means exclusively the product of a Christian concep- tion." It is certain, none the less, that the seraphic knight owes a great deal to "Christian concep- tion," whatever may have been Wagner's opinion. The legend is familiar: it is charming, enig- matic, and poignantly poetic. The king of Germany, Henry the Falconer, holds plenary court on the banks of the GREAT WAGNERIAN THEMES 159 Scheldt. Count Telramund, at the instiga- tion of his wife, brings a charge against Elsa, Princess of Brabant, falsely accusing her of having killed her brother, the heir to the throne. They proceed to the trial by combat. If no knight offers himself as Elsa's champion, she is lost. And it seems likely that she will bey since no one comes forward to defend her cause. She prays and supplicates, but in vain. Then, suddenly, a Swan appears, drawing a little boat, whose occupant is the knight of dreams and mystery who is destined to save Elsa. He defeats Telramund in combat, but spares his life. Elsa is to become his wife. But first she must promise that she will never ask to know the name of the Knight of the Swan. The wedding takes place. Elsa is tender and loving; but she is a woman, which means that she is curious. It should be added that the wicked Ortrude arouses painful doubts in her mind. In the nuptial chamber, after soft avowals, Elsa forgets her promise and begs to know where her noble savior and husband has 160 RICHARD WAGNER come from. At this moment, Telramund en- ters, hoping to take the knight unaware, but the latter kills him. Elsa faints; curiosity has extinguished love. When Lohengrin has revealed his name, which is that of the son of the knight Parsifal, king of the Graal, and his mission, which is to defend innocence, he is obliged, in obedience to his oath, to disappear. The Swan returns and Lohengrin departs; we see him fading into the distance. He has gone. It is in vain that Elsa moans and laments. He no longer exists for her; in her despair she falls lifeless; doubt has killed love and happiness. If the drama properly so called lacks the proportions and the interest of Tannhduser, Lohengrin because of its sustained style and magnificent perfection remains the evocation of a melancholy and enchanting dream. Liszt, to whom Wagner's fame owes so large a debt, has expressed his appreciation of the music of Lohengrin in the highest terms. It is, he says, the ideal of synthetic art. "Its princi- GREAT WAGNERIAN THEMES 161 pal characteristic is such perfect unity of con- ception and style that not a phrase nor an en- semble nor a passage of any sort whatever can be found which, if separated from the work as a whole, could be understood in its true sense and definite character." We feel that henceforth Wagner is sure of himself, and of his musical resources ; they are revealed more plainly and definitively in his wonderful Tristan, to write which he interrupt- ed the composition of his Tetralogy. After the separation which followed their noble and melancholy renouncement, Wagner wrote from Venice to Mathilde Wesendonck, in reference to Tristan and Isolde, which was the embodiment of all his despair and all his long- ing to find consolation in his mystic art: "What music this is going to be! Never until now have I done anything to equal it!" And from Zurich, he wrote again to the same friend : "When Tristan is finished, it seems to me that a marvelous period of my life will have 162 RICHARD WAGNER been brought to a close, and that I shall be able henceforth to gaze upon the world peacefully, clearly, profoundly, with a new-bom soul." Accordingly, Tristan and Isolde, taken chiefly from the German poem of Gottfried of Strass- burg, must be thought of as reborn from the love and sorrow of the great romantic poet. As Henri Lichtenberger has well said, the lament of Tristan, tortured by desire and stretching out his arms towards beneficent night and the torches of kindly death, gushed straight from Wagner's very heart. In glorifying an unforgettable love, the itm- sician surpassed himself. After he was cured of his attack of Wagnerianism, Nietzsche, even in the very act of flaying the friend whom he had formerly adored, could not prevent himself from exclaiming: "The world must seem a very poor place to anyone who has never been ill enough to appre- ciate that inferno of passionate love." Evidently, the whole power of the work lies in its effusion, its pessimism, its fever of anni- GREAT WAGNERIAN THEMES 163 hilation, and Buddhism. We know how strong- ly the doctrine of Nirvana, revived by Scho- penhauer, had impressed Wagner during his residence at Zurich. Love and death are the great themes of this drama, and the prelude celebrates them with extraordinary amplitude. Isolde, princess of Ireland, is betrothed, against her will, but in conformity with a treaty between the two countries, to the king of Cornwall, Mark. We first see her on board the ship that is bearing her to this sad union. Con- sequently she is praying for death. The nephew of the king, the peerless knight Tristan, is in command of the ship. He is grave and preoc- cupied. He and Isolde are united in a passion which bursts out of bounds when they drink from a cup into which a love philter has been poured. They are still lost in a mad whirl of emotion when the ship reaches the realm of King Mark. After an interval of suspense the lovers are reunited in a night of love and ecstasy. Their hymn rises and swells, sublime, unlimited, ex- 164 RICHARD WAGNER alted by the harps, and it blends with the mo- tives of glorification and of death. The king surprises them. Why has Tristan betrayed him? And Tristan, begging Isolde to follow across the dark river, allows himself to be wounded. He has risen to the height of re- nunciation, to the sacrifice of death. We are now transferred to Tristan's own castle, where he lies 01, dying amid somber har- monies. The plaintive air of the shepherd's pipe blends with Tristan's dying agony. The faithful Isolde comes to join him on the coast of Brittany, but when she reaches him, he is dead, and she too has come there only to die. The arrival of King Mark, the punishment of Melot, the death of the loyal Kurwenal are aU crowded together in the third act for the pur- pose of accentuating the sacrifice of Isolde, who dies in ecstasy because she is going to be united to Tristan through aU eternity. It was in Paris, after the fiasco of Tann- hduser, that Wagner set to work upon the text of the Meistersinger. GREAT WAGNERIAN THEMES 165 "It is certainly fuiiny," he wrote to his wife, Minna, "that I should be working here on my Master Singers of Nuremberg, and looking out on the Tuileries and the Louvre. I cannot help laughing heartily, many a time, when I look out of the window." The Meistersinger occupies a position by itself among Wagner's works, and it is by no means the smallest jewel in his crown. It is a joyous and radiant satire upon official and con- ventional aesthetics, and at the same time a humorous piece of special pleading pro domo; in a series of comic and ironical situations, it pictures the apotheosis of the genius of an artist who soars to his full height when brought in contact with the genius of his race. Accordingly, the Meistersinger is a sort of musical comedy, but in its technique, as well as in the loftiness of its sentiments, combined with the portrayal of burlesque characters, it is an original work of distinct importance and real power. In this work, Wagner's distinctive manner is revealed in its full perfection. 166 RICHARD WAGNER The young knight, Walther von Stolzing, has come from Franconia to Nuremberg. He is in love with the charming Eva, daughter of the opulent goldsmith, Pogner. Walther, — we almost wrote "Wagner," and probably with good reason, — decides to compete for the grade of master in the singers' guUd of that city. His brave and noble inspiration refuses to be fettered by sterile rules. The town clerk, Beck- messer, is his ridiculous rival. As night approaches, Walther prepares to elope with Eva. But he is prevented by chance events, such as the passing by of the town watchman and the grotesque serenade by Beck- messer. Fortunately the kind-hearted and worthy Hans Sachs, the poet-cobbler, has un- dertaken to defend Walther. It is thanks to his cleverness and far-sighted sagacity that Walther converts both the master-singers and the people, and wins his happiness. The character of Hans Sachs, with his hid- den sorrow, — for he has cast a wistful glance at Eva before coming to the aid of the lovers GREAT WAGNERIAN THEMES 167 and working devotedly for their union, com- pels our admiration, equally with his delight- ful revery beneath the lilacs, on St. John's eve. The much lamented Alfred Ernst was quite justified in seeing in the marriage of the young knight Walther, representative of an exclusive caste, with Eva, daughter of the people, the fruitful union of noble art and popular in- spiration. But quite aside from this happy symbolism, one cannot help being charmed with the series of typical songs so picturesquely interspersed among the leitmotivs. The com- position of the work, showing exceptional abundance and vigor, unites scholastic forms with the most minute details of an "advanced" technique. It sets us thinking of Bach, and then it sets us thinking of . . . none else than Wagner himself, in the full splendor of his polyphonic utterance. CHAPTER III EPIC AND LYEIC — FROM HUMAN DEITIES TO DIVINE HUMANITY — ^A GOSPEL IN MUSIC RICHARD WAGNER, the ^Eschylus of modern times, has written a vast tragic epic, in which he has undertaken, in the course of a gigantic action, human and divine, to ex- amine the problem of destinies and the con- tinuous development of the passions, inter- preted by words and music intimately blended in a universal drama. Such is his Ring of the Nibelung, piously dedicated to King Ludwig II of Bavaria. The Tetralogy consists of a prologue, called the Rhinegold, and three day-long episodes. After listening to the leitmotiv of nature, the great cosmogonic theme of the work, and after meditating upon the forces of the uni- 168 A GOSPEL IN MUSIC 169 verse, distributed among all animate and in- animate things, we see the daughters of the Rhine, Woglinde, WeUgunde, and Flosshilde. The Nibelung, Alberich, drawn hither by de- sire, learns that whoever possesses himself of the river's gold and forges the magic ring, will obtain dominion over the universe. Ambition holds sovereign sway over the soul of Alberich, who snatches the gold of the Rhine. He has renounced love. The desire for power has entered into him. Walhalla, the abode of the gods, next ap- pears to us, and there we find Wotan, king of the gods, and his wife Fricka. Wotan has promised Freia, goddess of youth and beauty, to the giants Fasolt and Fafner, who come to claim her. Through Loge, the fire-god, it is learned that the Nibelung, Alberich, has stolen the gold of the Rhine. Wotan, in his turn, re- linquishes love along with Freia, for the sake of obtaining the gold. The giants depart, tak- ing Freia with them. All nature becomes dark- ened. Loge, the flame which flickers here and 170 RICHARD WAGNER there, advises Wotan to follow him to the Nibelung's forge. From the stolen gold, Alberich has had made Tarnhelm, the helmet that renders its wearer invisible, the sword Nothung, and the ring which renders its possessor master of the uni- verse. The astute Loge flatters the dwarf Alberich and asks him whether it is true that he can assume at will the form of any animal whatever. Alberich metamorphoses himself into a dragon, and then into a toad. He is seized and fettered. Finding himself a prisoner, Alberich consents to yield up his treasures, hoping that he can keep the ring. But Wotan snatches it from him. Vanquished, the Nibelung utters the baleful malediction of .the ring which is destined to overhang all the personages in the trilogy. Warned by the primeval mother of all be- ings, Erda, soul of the world, Wotan yields the ring to the giants who have brought back Freia. The giants quarrel. Fafner kills Fasolt with a blow from a dub. The gods triumph as the A GOSPEL IN MUSIC 171 sky clears. The appearance of a rainbow suc- ceeds the tumult of the storm. The gods re- turn, two by two, to the motiv of Walhalla. But the daughters of the Rhine lament and will continue to lament so long as the sparkle of the gold is missing from the waters of the Rhine. Who will pay the penalty for the crime? Who will be the redeemer? Wotan ponders as he hears the clarion notes of the sword motiv. It should be noted that all the motivs of the triple drama here appear in their first bare simplicity. We have lived with the gods; now we are going to live chiefly with heroes. As we follow in thought the noble prelude of the Walkyrie, the admirable language of the double basses and violoncellos, and the motiv of the Magic fire begun by the bass tubas, and taken up by the trombones and comets, we must needs know or remember that Wotan, having become the God-wolf, hunted by dogs, begot twins, Siegmund and Sieglinde. From 172 RICHARD WAGNER his union with Erda he had his favorite daughter, Brunnhilde; she has been brought up with the Walkyries, whose function is to receive the souls of heroes, in order to trans- port them to Walhalla. We are now in the presence of a barbarous stage of humanity, but nearer to reality than what has gone before. In a cabin in the depths of the forest dwells SiegUnde; here she receives a stranger clad in the skins of beasts; it is Siegmund. She is the wife of Hunding, who is of the race of hunters, while Siegmund belongs to the race of wolves. Nevertheless, Bundling respects the laws of hospitality, since his ene- my is his guest. Siegmund sleeps and dreams of the sword which will give him dominion. Sieglinde comes to htm and shows where the promised sword is hidden. The pair confess their love, in a glorification of youth and spring-time. The incestuous love between brother and sister has not failed to give bitter offense. But are we not in the realrii of myth and legend, A GOSPEL IN MUSIC 173 almost apart from time and space? Far from resenting this idyll of Siegmmnd and Sieglinde, who seeks to be saved from the dog, Hunding, one Wagnerian critic has lauded the beauty of the symbolism; a god incarnated in his chil- dren in order to atone for his own sin, and then compelled himself to decree their death and to see every hope of salvation die with them. Wo tan is gloomy; his ancient sin will not be expiated until the gold is returned to the daughters of the Rhine. Now, it is the will of destiny that Siegmund shall not be the savior; he is not the looked-for hero. He is destined to fall under the blows of the hunter Hunding. This is what Wotan announces to his daughter, the Valkyrie, and his words give the key to the drama : "Announce to the hero Siegmund," he tells her, "that this evening he will enter into Wal- halla! For the purpose of begetting a son who should be the savior of the divine race, I have wandered upon earth, I have become a beast of the woods, a wolf -god hunted by dogs. 174 RICHARD WAGNER Yet today my son Siegmund, who, armed with the sword, was to have returned the gold to the daughters of the Rhine and expiated the sin for which I am torn with remorse, Siegmund, alas, must die!" Brunnhilde appears to Siegmund, who is fleeing through the solitudes, accompanied by Sieglinde. The Valkyrie announces his destiny to him, but on beholding the affection of the pair for each other, Brunnhilde is stirred to pity. Accordingly, when the duel takes place, she herself turns aside Hunding's sword with her silver shield. Hereupon Wotan, who is the instrument of highest Destiny, breaks Siegmund's sword with his own all powerful spear, and Siegmund is pierced through the heart. Then follows the cavalcade of the Valkyries, with their claihors, their songs, their furious stampede. Brunnhilde saves Sieglinde, who must hide the broken fragments of the sword in the for- est. And there in the forest Sieglinde bears a son to the dead hero, who is ordained by the A GOSPEL IN MUSIC 175 fates to achieve the salvation of the gods. The motiv of Siegfried, radiant and victorious, in- forms us of this hope. But the rebellious Brunnhilde must be pun- ished. Wotan himself is obliged to pass sen- tence on his favorite daughter. "You shall sleep," the god tells her, "until a man finds you and awakens you, and you shall become his wife." What humiliation for the proud virgin god- dess of WalhaUa! But at least let this man be a hero, let her retreat be surrounded with a wall of flame. Wotan, himself in despair, con- sents, and we witness their leave-taking. The motiv of Brunnhilde's justification is followed by the motiv of sleep in the bosom of nature. Accordingly, the free and joyous hero, who is destined to recover the ring and to awaken the Valkyrie, is Siegfried, son of Siegmund and Sieglinde. Wotan reveals to us his regrets and his aspirations, and initiates us into the general significance of the work: Siegfried is a splen- did poem of youth, strong, beautiful, naive, sin- 176 RICHARD WAGNER cere, unspoiled by civilization, and in full pos- session of its irresistible and sublime spon- taneity. Siegfried has been brought up by Alberich's brother, the crafty dwarf Mime, who is schem- ing to avail himself of the youth's courage to destroy the dragon. Then he himself can ob- tain possession of the ring, and with it uni- versal power. The naivete of the youth seems to guarantee the success of these dark designs. Meanwhile, Siegfried welds the broken frag- ments of the sword Nothung. He is destined to triumph over the craftiness of the dwarf, as well as over the unchained forces of the ele- ments. The symphony of the forest seems to proclaim the grandeur of his destiny. He is the incarnation of new humanity, in the heart of nature. He watches the beasts of the for- est, he has inborn powers of domination. The dragon, Fafner, who in spite of flames and smoke fails to alarm us seriously, fails equally to alarm Siegfried. Having slain the dragon, he listens to the bird of the wood, echo of our A GOSPEL IN MUSIC 177 thoughts, enters Fafner's cave and places the ring upon his finger. "He alone who has never known fear shall awaken Brunnhilde." Such is the decree of destiny, and Siegfried is the appointed one. Wotan is obliged to allow him to pass, and from that moment foresees the downfall of the gods. Siegfried advances and penetrates with- in the circle of flames, and this passage through the fire is expounded by magnificent cadences upon the harp. He discovers a woman asleep, a majestic and supreme revelation of Love and Beauty. And then comes the incomparable awakening of Brunnhilde. She salutes the light of day. She strives to repulse Siegfried, yet she cannot help loving him because of his triumphant youth and strength. Henceforth the gods may perish, since love has been granted her. Accordingly, the Tetralogy closes with the Gdtterddmmerung, the Twilight of the Gods, which is expounded to us in the prelude. Once 178 RICHARD WAGNER again we hear the horn of Siegfried, blending with the motiv of the primeval elements. The hero Siegfried cannot remain inactive. Like the demi-god of Greek mythology, he must accomplish his mission in the world. The daughters of the Rhine continue to la- ment. Siegfried, in the course of his wander- ings, is received by Gunther and his sister Gutrune, the latter of whom makes htm drink the philter of forgetfulness. And in conse- quence oblivion invades his soul. He asks Gutrune in marriage, and agrees to bring Brunnhilde to be Gunther's bride. In vain Brunnhilde urges her claim upon Siegfried. He is not to remember his love for her until during the hunt, when Hagen makes him drink of a new philter which destroys the effect of the first. Siegfried is relating the story of his youth and his exploits, when he is stricken down by a treacherous blow from Hagen and expires, evoking the memory of BrunnhUde. And the motiv of Siegfried's death seems like the chant of universal mourning. Hagen and A GOSPEL IN MUSIC 179 Gunther quarrel over the possession of the ring, when Brunnhilde appears. She consults destiny and must succumb to the ordained fate of death. And she must give back the ring to the daughters of the Rhine. Redemption through love forms the majestic conclusion to this great epic tragedy. What interpretation are we to give it? Is the Ring socialistic, anarchistic, Christian or pessi- mistic? It seems best to regard the legend as the exposition of eternal ideas and emotions, a summing-up of human attributes and passions, from Siegfried's youthful daring to Wotan's abdication. And above all it is important to recognize it as the embodiment of the Wag- nerian system in aU its splendor, as well as in its austere and somewhat oppressive complex- ity. The lyric and dramatic elements are here profoundly intermingled. The theory of the drama, as opposed to the old conventional opera, robbed of aU fioritura, consecrated wholly to the exposition, through the blended words and music, of superhuman deeds, is here 180 RICHARD WAGNER freely developed, broadly, powerfully, and in definitive manner. Let us not mar the beauty of this immense myth by abstruse dialectics or vain esoteric commentary, but let us be content to accept it as a sublime song of joy and sorrow mag- nified by the dreams and the genius of an artist who is also prodigious from the tech- nical point of view. Better than ansrwhere else, we may foUow his method as it is suc- cinctly expounded by Gasperini: "When Wagner has created a melodic idea, it recurs under a thousand forms, modified by the most delicate processes of modulation, by infinite evolutions of the rhythm, it is devel- oped to a point at which it seems exhausted, it is enriched by unforeseen episodes that sud- denly flow forth, it is prolonged in magnificent amplifications, and then little by little it loses its color, is stripped of its sharp characteris- tics, becomes diluted, melts away, dies out, unrecognizable in one final burst of harmony." As may weU be imagined, the Tetralogy, like A GOSPEL IN MUSIC 181 all the rest of Wagner's works, became a target for the humorists. In Germany, quite as much as in France, the spirit of satire expended it- self freely upon the Ring of the Nibelung. M. Grand-Carteret has shown no little cleverness and erudition in gathering together a collec- tion of these amusing pleasantries. Here, for example, is the manner in which two Berlinese, Schultze and Miiller, have simplified the li- bretto of the Ring, in order to reduce it to the dimensions required for a parlor edition, — and heaven knows that parlor gossip usurped the task of attending to Wagner's reputation and defended it with jealous care, especially after it had practically ceased to be attacked! Seven characters and seven scenes; a spec- tacle accompanied by fuU orchestra, playing variations upon the air, "There were seven who wanted a ring." Scene 1st. The Daughters of the Rhine, while dancing in a circle, lose their golden ring. Alberich arrives and takes possession of it, saying, "With your permission!" 182 RICHARD WAGNER Scene M. Alberich, well satisfied with "what the waves have brought him," ascends to Walhalla; it is already late, and the palace will be shut if he arrives after dark; but sud- denly the god Wotan appears and saying po- litely, "with your permission," takes possession of the ring found on his territory. Scene 3d. Wotan and the giants, who have come to demand either Freia or his treasure. As the god proves somewhat stubborn, they say to him, "We want this ring and we are going to have it!" adding, "with your permis- sion, of course." But since there are two of them, it occurs to Fafner that they cannot both wear one ring, so he forthwith dismisses Fasold into the next world. Scene J^th. Fafner, transformed into a dragon, through fear of thieves, is standing guard over his treasure, when Siegfried arrives. "Let me tell you, O Fafner, how much your ring pleases me!" "Be off with you," cries papa Fafner, "or it A GOSPEL IN MUSIC 183 will be the worse for you ! You can easily find a ring just like it at any jeweler's." "No, yours is the one I must have." "Look out, or I will make it hot for you ! " But Siegfried runs the dragon through, and then says politely, "Now you will have to do as you are told! With your permission!" Scene 5th. Siegfried and Brunnhilde love each other tenderly and are exchanging vows. "Give me your ring," says Brunnhilde cai^ess- ingly. "It will look well on my finger, and in exchange I will let you have my horse, Grane. What, do you hesitate? Then you don't love me! Perhaps you are in love with some other girl! I may take it, mayn't I? With your permission?" Scene 6th. "Brunnhilde, give me back that ring!" And he snatches it from her. Scene 7th. Siegfried is dead, and a certain Hagen has come to steal the ring. But dead 184 RICHARD WAGNER though he is, he can still move his ring finger and "will not permit the much disputed treasure to be removed from it. Finally Brunnhilde ascends the funeral pyre beside Siegfried and restores to the Rhine- maidens the much traveled ring. All of which shows how a whole trilogy can be hung, like the stage curtain, upon a ring. There could be nothing simpler, could there? As may be well imagined, there were a cer- tain number of more or less clever parodies of the Tetralogy, all of which are now quite forgotten. We may cite as examples Rhine- gold-Keingold, "Gold of the Rhine that is no Gold at all," a parody given in 1869 at the Theater of Marionettes at Munich ; Der Tiefe Trunk zu Schweigelsheivi oder die Walkuren, "The deep Dive at Schweigelsheim or the Walkyries," a grand opera performed by the Society of Artists at Vienna, in 1876 and 1879 ; 100,000 Florins und meine Tochter, "A hun- dred thousand Florins and my Daughter," a farce at the Josephstadttheater; and in 1881 A GOSPEL IN MUSIC 185 two other parodies of the Ring, given in Berlin. In the Ring of the Nibelung we witnessed the redemption of the universe through the restitution of the accursed gold to the Daugh- ters of the Rhine. In Parsifal, a profoundly religious work, in spite of the fact that Wagner adhered to no special sect in writing this artis- tic and metaphysical confession of faith, we are initiated into the redemption of the world through a "guileless fool." Amfortas, king of the Grail, has fallen into the snares of the magician, Klingsor. He has yielded to the charnis of Kundry, the temptress, infernal and divine, slave of evil and servant of good. During his sleep, KUngsor has struck him with the sacred spear, and the wound bleeds ceaselessly. Who will atone for the sin? A young and surly lad approaches. The in- stinct of nature possesses him at first, as it did Siegfried. He wounds a swan, but at the sight of the blood he learns to feel pity. This guile- 186 RICHARD WAGNER less fool is destined to be the conqueror of Klingsor. In spite of his innocence, we see hitn pro- tecting himself against the exquisite and dan- gerous sorceries of the Flower-Women. The enchantress Kundry, who is in league with Klingsor, succeeds only in inspiring him with a hatred for evil. In vanquishing this rose of the inferno he has conquered desire, has torn aside the veil of illusion, and is ripe for the sacred task of redemption. And now we see Parsifal on Good Friday, in the valley of Montsalvat. He saves Kundry and baptizes her. It is the hour of the Last Supper. Amfortas is unable to pay the last rites to Titurel, who is dead. Parsifal touches the thigh of Amfortas with the recovered spear. He stands revealed as the Saviour and Kundry dies at his feet. With the return of the king- dom of God upon earth, we have the apothe- osis of Wagner's work. It is worth whUe in connection with this supreme achievement and one of such rare A GOSPEL IN MUSIC 187 religious intensity, to recall the fact that the Master of Bayreuth dwelt at length, in My Lije, upon the character of his mother: "She was," he tells us, "deeply religious. She often preached veritable sermons to us, full of pathos and emotion, in regard to God and the divine element in man. She used to gather the whole family around her bed every morn- ing. She had her coffee-and-milk brought to her, but she never touched it until one of us had read a psalm from the prayer-book." In precisely the same way that it helps us to explain the philosophical evolution of Kant, if we carefully consider the influence of his pietistic education, so in the case of Wagner we find a curious interest in studying the early impressions of his childhood in regard to re- hgion. His anxiety, his fears and his fervor, following upon periods of indifference, to which he also confesses in My Lije, through very val- uable side-lights upon the religious intensity of Parsifal: "At my confirmation, which took place on 188 RICHARD WAGNER Easter, 1827, the spirit of insubordination re- vealed itself by the scant respect which the outward forms of the ceremony aroused in me. The child who a few years earlier had cast glances of painful ecstasy at the altar of the/ Kreutzkirche in Leipzig and formulated a prayer, in his mystical transports, that He might be allowed to be crucified in pfece of the Redeemer, this same child no longer felt the respect due to the paster who was conducting the confirmation. He did not hesitate to join in with other lads who were making sport of the minister, and he even went so far as to spend on sweetmeats part of the money in- tended for the contribution box, in company with a band of young rascals who all met to- gether for the same purpose. Nevertheless, at the moment of my communion I realized my state of mind and was almost terrified by it. While the communicants, of whom -I was one, advanced in a procession towards the altar, the organ swelled forth and the voices of the choir soared upward. My emotion as I re- A GOSPEL IN MUSIC 189 ceived the bread and the wine was so intense that it has remained with me unforgettably ever since. It is for this reason that I have never again, from that time onward, partaken of the communion, for I have always feared that I should be unable to experience the same sensations as before. Such a renunciation was possible in my case, because Protestants do not believe that repeated communion is obliga- tory." It would undoubtedly be rash to take these passages, or other similar ones, as a basis for any sort of a thesis intended to define the re- ligious convictions of Wagner. Instead of los- ing ourselves in aU sorts of hypotheses, it is best to avoid all formulas, and merely recog- nize that his mysticism rests upon certain early impressions and harmonizes well with the de- velopment of his creative mind. The creator is greater in his art than in his dogmatism. We must not demand rigoreus precision from poets and prophets. It is so pleasant at times to live in the midst of their enchantment and 190 RICHARD WAGNER serene radiance. We are quite at liberty later to return to reality and cultivate our garden with much care and prosaic attention. After having poetically expounded the sym- bols contained in the mystic drama of Parsifal, CatuUe Mendes concluded as follows: "The intellectual life of Richard Wagner attained its zenith in that work of sacred purity and angelic faith. Having attained the highest pinnacles of religious dreams, how could he have descended from them? How could he have returned among men, after having been so near to God? To Richard Wagner's tor- tured heart, haunted perhaps by repentance for past hatreds, the grace was given that he should die in the midst of prayer." CHAPTER IV THE WAGNERIAN CULT — THOSE FOR AND THOSE AGAINST IT — THE INITIATED AND THE PRO- PANE — WAGNER IN THE JUDGMENT OF POS- TERITY WAGNER has at last taken a glorious place in the art, the social life, the civilization of France. Although he has not succeeded in effecting a radical and absolute change in contemporary musical drama, and although the enlightened public still has the good taste to be eclectic, no one any longer dreams of denying the bigness of his attempt and the importance of his personality and the part he played in the history of music and the drama. It would be necessary to review an entire epoch of contemporary history, in order to un- derstand thoroughly the influence of Wagner 191 192 RICHARD WAGNER in France. And how hard it is to be impartial! But it is not our province to re-try the case, nor to analyze in detail the struggle that lasted for nearly half a century between the Wag- nerians and anti-Wagnerians. And, strange as it now seems, this struggle was fierce, violent, even savage. As we read over the criticisms, the attacks and rejoinders, as we acquaint our- selves with all the documents both for and against Wagner, the greater part of which have been carefully collected by M. G. Servier, we find ourselves utterly amazed. How far off it all seems, ahnoSt as far off as the quarrel between the supporters of Gluck and Piccini in the eighteenth century! And yet it was really very close to our day. We have among us Wagnerians dating from the first hoiu- or the second, hesitating, timorr ous souls of earlier times who have become converts, former bitter adversaries of the mas- ter of Bayreuth, now more or less disarmed by his success, and Wagnerians of yesterday and WAGNER AND POSTERITY 193 the day before who deserve no credit whatever for defending a fame that is akeady conse- crated. All of these indulge in extravagant trans- ports and are as fanatical in their own way as the most rabid adversaries of the German com- poser are in theirs. They allow no one to touch their idol. Wagner's glory has no need of such excesses of either zeal or insult. Let us examine the passions which swayed the two parties. All sorts of elements must be considered in studying the history of the intro- duction of Wagnerian drama into France. In the first place, we have the morose and intolerant character of Wagner himself, whom his reverses, his unpopularity, his failure to be understood had all tended to embitter. That many people took too literally the proud ca- prices and mordant aphorisms of a romantic artist of uneven temper, profoundly impulsive and excessively nervous, is undeniable. From the time of his first sojourn in Paris, his mis- 194 RICHARD WAGNER fortunes, according to the opinion of a con- temporary, made him "peevish, sullen and in- solent." On the other hand it was certainly not to the interest of the musicians who had already found favor with the public to burn incense before an innovator whose whole thought they could hardly grasp all at once, and who threat- ened to dethrone them. Such was the case of Meyerbeer, who had already triumphed, and of Berlioz, impatient for a weU deserved recog- nition. Nor is it astonishing to see Rossini somewhat troubled by Wagner's creed. It is related that the celebrated author of the Barber of Seville was as much afraid of journalists as he was of catching cold. He blamed these knights of the pen, hard up for copy, for many an ironic para- graph in connection with the composer of Tannhduser, such, for instance, as the follow- ing: At a certain big dinner, an excellent sauce was served, and the mistress of the house was WAGNER AND POSTERITY 195 greatly distressed because the turbot had not been brought in. "Well," Rossini is reported to have observed, "is not that precisely the trouble with Wag- ner's music? Good sauce, but no turbot, no melody." In his Personal Souvenirs, M. Michette tells of an interview between Rossini and Wagner, and he adds that, although they did not meet again, they continued to hold each other in high esteem. Nevertheless, Wagner did not hesitate to ridicule some of the musicians who then en- joyed the highest repute. In his intimate talks with his friends, in the Rue Lord Byron, he said in reference to this same Rossini, that he was filled to overflowing, not with music but with sausage. Auber, on the other hand, im- pressed him as a true Parisian, brilliant and scintillating. The music of Halevy's operas was, he held, merely for surface show: "I admired sincerely when I was young," he added, "I was some- 196 RICHARD WAGNER thing of a fool, as we are all apt to be at that naive age." It is quite true also that Wagner found Halevy himself cold, pretentious and uncon- genial. In Gounod he saw an exalted artist, and a charming conversationalist, but lacking in breadth and depth, and capable only of skim- ming the surface of these qualities, without really attaining them. To the great poet-mu- sician of Tristan Gounod's Faust presented only a surface sentimentality, barely skin-deep, "as superficial as a pair of gloves, not to men- tion rice powder." And Wagner, while hum- miAg the "insipid" air of the Jewel Song, ad- mitted that Gounod had real talent, but was incapable of rising to the height of certain subjects. This vivacity which Wagner showed, both in his conversation and in his writings, some df which impress us, not merely as pamphlets but as searching investigations, explain a host of things. And when Wagner proposed simul- WAGNER AND POSTERITY 197 taneously a new theater and a new worship of the Beautiful, he could not fail to be received with open arms by the initiated, and with hatred by the great majority of. the profane. It was in the middle of the nineteenth cen- tury that the name of Wagner began to pene- trate into France and to be uttered in artistic circles. Gerard de Nerval, having attended a performance of Lohengrin given at the inaugu- ration of the statue of Herder, made no mistake as to the importance of such a revelation. "An original and daring talent has re- vealed itself to Germany, and has so far spoken only its first words." It was at this epoch that Fetis, with iU con- sidered zeal, denounced Wagner as the enemy of sane traditions, in a libel which Charles Baudelaire openly qualified as "undigested and abominable." Fetis accused the German mu- sician of subordinating music to poetry. What was the course of his system? he asked: "Because Wagner is without inspiration, be- cause he has no ideas, because he is conscious 198 RICHARD WAGNER of his own weakness in this respect, and is trying to hide it." At the time of Napoleon Ill's visit to Stutt- gart (1857), an opportunity was officially given to the French journalists to hear Tannhduser. Theophile Gautier, great artist that he was, though in point of fact more interested in painting than in music, concluded his criti- cism in the Moniteur in the following terms: "We should like to see Tannhduser exe- cuted in Paris, at the Grand Opera." We have already seen under what conditions it was destined to be . . . executed a few years later. Reyer, correspondent for the Cowrrier de Paris, while not assuming the role of a neo- phyte, could not hide his very real enthusiasm : "I felt electrified," he confessed, "by the magnificent love duet sung by the Knight Tannhauser and Elizabeth, at the beginning of the second act. And at the end of that act the composer has risen to the most sublime heights of dramatic art." WAGNER AND POSTERITY 199 Thus, the two camps were forming' little by little. It was not to be long before they would come to blows. Meanwhile the debate re- mained fairly pacific. His theories were freely discussed. At all events, he was taken under consideration, and fashion paid him. a more or less ironic tribute. Thus, for example, in the Camaval des Re- vues, an operetta with words by Grange and GUle, and music by Offenbach, the "composer of the future" was seen to rise from a group of musicians of the past, and end by falling head over heels over the prompter's box into the arms of the perturbed conductor! M. Servieres has collected a good deal of curi- ous testimony from various sources regarding the concerts given by Wagner in Paris. We must at least cite this opinion, by one of the boldest champions of the author of Lohengrin: "Wagner has learned how to be great, elo- quent, impassioned, impressive, with the sim- plest of means; his free and penetrating orches- 200 RICHARD WAGNER tration fills the auditorium. The attention is not distracted by any individual instrument, they are all harmoniously blended into a single whole." Hector Berlioz, who was at first regarded as more or less a disciple of Wagner's and who suffered from being so far misunderstood, nev- ertheless added his tribute of praise to Lohen- grin: "It is as smooth and harmonious as it is fine and strong and sonorous. In my opinion it is a masterpiece." But the music of the future had the faculty of kindling his anger, and seemed to awaken in him a personal resentment. Hence his tone was acrid and full of needless rancor. Wagner replied this time with great dignity, in a letter which was published in the Debats, and in which he expressed astonishment at having been so ill treated by an eminent art- ist and an intelligent, cultured and sincere critic, whose friendship he himself had valued. He sought for some ground for conciliation and WAGNER AND POSTERITY 201 complained in his turn of that ridiculous catch- phrase, "the music of the future." We need not dwell further at this point on these famous performances of Tannhduser at the Opera. In his brilliant work on Wagner, CatuUe Mendes has characterized them in ex- cellent Wagnerian terms: "Cries, hisses, howls, boxes rising in revolt, galleries suffocated with laughter behind their fans, orchestra chairs bounding with anger . . . " 'Where has he come from? Who is this new man who dares to change everything? What, not a single cavatina? We especially want roulades, triUs, arias, and other small diversions. And we want ballets, oh ! we abso- lutely insist on ballets ! ' "And, augmenting from scene to scene, from act to act, interrupting the performance, dis- organizing the orchestra, terrifying the actors, the clamors of the hostile crowd, which had begun to laugh and scream and howl even be- fore the curtain was raised, produced an im- mense charivari, a continual rough-house 202 RICHARD WAGNER which could not be drowned out by the searing harmonies of the violins nor by the impas- sioned cries of the courageous Marie Sasse." Mendes had good reason for using the word charivari. The periodical of that name had been persistent in its attacks, through the press of Pierre Veren and the nimble pencil of Cham, upon Wagner and the "composer of the fu- ture." They extended their attacks to the partizans of this noise-loving composer and cheerfully consigned them all to Charenton; they pro- posed that the extract of Wagneriate should be substituted for valerianate of potash, and they urgently advised the dentists to replace the customary drugs employed for allaying pain, with music boxes equipped with selections from Wagner! While Albert Wolff, after a period of inde- cision, opened a fierce attack against Wagner, and Auber defined him as a Berlioz without poetry and asserted that Tannhduser produced the sensation of reading without drawing WAGNER AND POSTERITY 203 breath, a work without punctuation, Prosper Merimee declared in his Correspondence: "One last disappointment, but a colossal one, was Tannhduser. It seems to me that I could write something very like it tomorrow, by- drawing my inspiration from my cat walking up and down the key-board of my piano." The fiasco of Tannhduser at the Opera did not fail to evoke a deluge of witticisms at Paris, some more clever than others, but not calculated on the whole to give a very high impression of that type of humor. Is it to be wondered at that such parodies as Panne aux Airs, by Clairville and Barbier at the Dejazet Theater, and Yameinherr by Thiboust and Delacourt, with music by V. Cheri, at the Va- rietes, had the short-lived success which they merited? Oscar Comettant placed himself at the head of Wagner's detractors, in a veritable frenzy that unsparingly included Schumann and Liszt. He proclaimed : "Wagner thought that he was going to cause 204 RICHARD WAGNER a revolution at the Opera, but he caused noth- ing but a riot." Paul de Saint- Victor talked of musical chaos, and Gozlan blithely insisted that there had not been a musician of such power . . . since Robespierre! The offended Berlioz continued, as Wagner himself did in only too many cases, to sacri- fice justice to his passions, and made the mis- take of declaring himself superbly avenged. Scudo also, in the Revue des Deux Mondes, made a savage assault upon the innovator. Wagner was defended, however, by J. Weber in the Temps, and by Franck-Marie in the Patrie, whUe in Baudelaire, whose death he de- plored later as much as that of Gasperini, he found a clear-minded and eloquent champion. Baudelaire's study of Wagner, which appeared in the Revue Europeenne, and was afterwards reprinted in L'Art Romantique, was a revela- tion to a great many artists and men of letters. Another man who showed an admirable con- stancy and devotion, as well as a fine and dis- WAGNER AND POSTERITY 205 interested discrimination, was Pasdeloup. In spite of incredulous snules, disapprobation and storms of hisses, he devoted himself for more than twenty years (1861-1883) to the heavy, complex, redoubtable task of making Wagner known and understood. Thanks to his ob- scure, but persevering and highly artistic ef- forts, Pasdeloup successively won a hearing for the March from Tannhduser and the Overture to the Flying Dutchman. Little by little, he compelled the attention both of music lovers and of the general public. It was impossible to dispute the interest of such efforts, and besides, their success seemed in a certain measure to justify them. That is why another musician of considerable merit, Charles Lamoureux, followed in the same path. Without wishing to disparage his zeal, we must recognize that he probably profited largely from the initiative taken by Pasdeloup. While Lamoureux was winning applause for the Pilgrims' Chorus from Tannhauser and the Lohengrin Wedding March, Pasdeloup was 206 RICHARD WAGNER making his plans for producing Rienzi at the Theatre Lyrique. It was at this epoch that CatuUe Mendes, one of the most ardent propa- gandists of Wagner and the musical drama, went to Switzerland to pay a visit to the mas- ter. Wagner was undoubtedly on the point of triumphing over prejudice, the ignorance of some and the malevolence of others, when the Franco-Prussian war of 1870-1871 broke out. We have already seen that Wagner's chief preoccupation was to make his work a sort of monument to the German fatherland, and to lay the foundations of a truly national art. As early as 1868 he published an essay in which he formulated his revolutionary theories, en- thusiastically, immoderately, exclusively Ger- manic. Although he did not follow the exam- ple of a large number of German musicians, after the defeat of Prance, and write an ode to the army, a solemn triumphal march for the victors, he did at least make the mistake of writing a stupid and coarse comedy entitled The Capitulation, in which, with rather absurd WAGNER AND POSTERITY 207 pomposity, he chiefly attacked the Government of National Defense. There were a good many people who could not forgive Wagner for this attitude, and they chose, with childish acrimony, to hold his music answerable for his capricious temper, and to accuse him of all manner of misdeeds, thus displaying a futile patriotism which caused even Prancisque Sarcey to express astonish- ment, notwithstanding his small sympathy with innovations and mysticism. Such intolerance was unworthy of the French nation. Mozart's glory is undimmed in France, notwithstanding that he called Frenchmen fools and clowns, and slandered French women who avenged themselves for his insults in no other way than by applauding Don Juan and the Marriage of Figaro, and listening devoutly to those exquisite masterpieces. At aU events, in spite of his mistakes and narrow-mindedness, in spite of the sometimes lamentable results of his pride and his blind hatred, Richard Wagner could not deceive him- 208 RICHARD WAGNER self as to the necessity of winning the sup- port of the enlightened public in France. And after all he was capable of being just and reasonable. For instance, he once wrote as follows to Gabriel Monod: "My productions at Bayreuth have been more fairly and intelligently judged by the French and the English than by the greater part of the German press." On the other hand, he declared to M. de Fourcaud, editor of the Gaulois, in 1879: "It is true that I am not produced, and for sad and trivial reasons ! But let us say no more about it, it is a thing of the past. ... I am supposed to bear malice, malice ! Why should I? Because Tannhduser was hissed? But are they sure that they ever heard Tannhduser as it reaUy is? As for the press, I have not so much to complain of as has been said. I did not pay calls on the critics as I did on Meyer- beer; but Baudelaire, Champfleury and Schure have none the less written the finest things that have yet been said of my dramas. Even ^f9»,^ , m. t i . g )> »» i«t| ,i,>Wl»V« <'f * *W» . ^W i