The blood of God! mystic
symbol of divine life “for the blood
is the life thereof.” That is the key-note
of Parsifal, the Knight of the Sangrail.
Wine is the ready symbolical vehicle the
material link between the divine and the human life.
In the old religions, that heightened consciousness,
that intensity of feeling produced by stimulant, was
thought to be the very entering in of the “god” the
union of the divine and human spirit; and in the Eleusinian
mysteries, the “sesame,” the bread of
Demeter, the earth mother, and the “kykeon,”
or wine of Dionysos, the vine god, were thus sacramental.
The passionate desire to approach
and mingle with Deity is the one mystic bond common
to all religions in all lands. It is the “cry
of the human;” it traverses the ages, it exhausts
many symbols and transcends all forms.
To the Christian it is summed up in the “Lord’s
Supper.”
The medieval legend of the Sangrail
(real or royal blood) is the most poetic and pathetic
form of transubstantiation; in it the gross materialism
of the Roman Mass almost ceases to be repulsive; it
possesses the true legendary power of attraction and
assimilation.
As the Knights of the Table Round,
with their holy vows, provided medieval Chivalry with
a center, so did the Lord’s table, with its
Sangrail, provide medieval Religion with its central
attractive point. And as all marvelous tales
of knightly heroism circled round King Arthur’s
table, so did the great legends embodying the Christian
conceptions of sin, punishment, and redemption circle
round the Sangrail and the sacrifice of the “Mass.”
In the legends of Parsifal
and Lohengrin the knightly and religious elements
are welded together. This is enough. We need
approach Parsifal with no deep knowledge of
the various Sagas made use of by Wagner in his
drama. His disciples, while most eager to trace
its various elements to their sources, are most emphatic
in declaring that the Parsifal drama, so intimately
true to the spirit of Roman Catholicism, is nevertheless
a new creation.
Joseph of Arimathea received in a
crystal cup the blood of Christ as it flowed from
the spear-wound made by the Roman soldier. The
cup and the spear were committed to Titurel, who became
a holy knight and head of a sacred brotherhood of
knights. They dwelt in the Visigoth Mountains
of Southern Spain, where, amid impenetrable forests,
rose the legendary palace of Montsalvat. Here
they guarded the sacred relics, issuing forth at times
from their palatial fortress, like Lohengrin, to fight
for innocence and right, and always returning to renew
their youth and strength by the celestial contemplation
of the Sangrail, and by occasional participation in
the holy feast.
Time and history count for very little
in these narratives. It was allowed, however,
that Titurel the Chief had grown extremely aged, but
it was not allowed that he could die in the presence
of the Sangrail. He seemed to have been laid
in a kind of trance, resting in an open tomb beneath
the altar of the Grail; and whenever the cup was uncovered
his voice might be heard joining in the celebration.
Meanwhile, Amfortas, his son, reigned in his stead.
Montsalvat, with its pure, contemplative,
but active brotherhood, and its mystic cup, thus stands
out as the poetic symbol of all that is highest and
best in medieval Christianity.
The note of the wicked world Magic
for Devotion Sensuality for Worship breaks
in upon our vision, as the scene changes from the Halls
of Montsalvat to Klingsor’s palace. Klingsor,
an impure knight, who has been refused admittance
to the order of the “Sangrail,” enters
into a compact with the powers of evil by
magic acquires arts of diabolical fascination fills
his palace and gardens with enchantments, and wages
bitter war against the holy knights, with a view of
corrupting them, and ultimately, it may be, of acquiring
for himself the “Sangrail,” in which all
power is believed to reside. Many knights have
already succumbed to the “insidious arts”
of Klingsor; but the tragical turning-point of the
Parsifal is that Amfortas, himself the son of
Titurel, the official guardian of the Grail, in making
war upon the magician, took with him the sacred spear,
and lost it to Klingsor.
It came about in this way. A
woman of unearthly loveliness won him in the enchanted
bowers adjoining the evil knight’s palace, and
Klingsor, seizing the holy spear, thrust it into Amfortas’s
side, inflicting what seemed an incurable wound.
The brave knight, Gurnemanz, dragged his master fainting
from the garden, his companions of the Sangrail covering
their retreat. But, returned to Montsalvat, the
unhappy king awakes only to bewail his sin, the loss
of the sacred spear, and the ceaseless harrowing smart
of an incurable wound. But who is Parsifal?
The smell of pine woods in July!
The long avenue outside the city of Bayreuth, that
leads straight up the hill, crowned by the Wagner
Theater, a noble structure architecturally
admirable severe, simple, but exactly adapted
to its purpose. I join the stream of pilgrims,
some in carriages, others on foot. As we approach,
a clear blast of trombones and brass from the terrace
in front of the grand entrance plays out the Grail
“motive.” It is the well-known signal there
is no time to be lost. I enter at the prescribed
door, and find myself close to my appointed place.
Every one such is the admirable arrangement seems
to do likewise. In a few minutes about one thousand
persons are seated without confusion. The theater
is darkened, the footlights are lowered, the prelude
begins.