The opening prelude of the third and
last act seems to warn me of the lapse of time.
The music is full of pain and restlessness the
pain of wretched years of long waiting for a deliverer,
who comes not; the restlessness and misery of a hope
deferred, the weariness of life without a single joy.
The motives, discolored as it were by grief, work
up to a distorted version of the Grail subject, which
breaks off as with a cry of despair.
Is the Grail, too, then turned into
a mocking spirit to the unhappy Amfortas?
Relief comes to us with the lovely
scene upon which the curtain rises. Again the
wide summer-land lies stretching away over sunlit moor
and woodland. In the foreground wave the forest
trees, and I hear the ripple of the woodland streams.
Invariably throughout the drama, in the midst of all
human pain and passion, great Nature is there, peaceful,
harmonious in all her loveliest moods, a paradise in
which dwell souls who make of her their own purgatory.
In yonder aged figure, clad in the
Grail pilgrim robe, I discern Gurnemanz; his hair
is white; he stoops with years; a rude hut is hard
by. Presently a groan arrests his attention, moaning
as of a human thing in distress. He clears away
some brushwood, and beneath it finds, waking from
her long trance, the strange figure of Kundry.
For how many years she has slept we know not.
Why is she now recalled to life? She staggers
to her feet; we see that she too is in a pilgrim garb,
with a rope girding her dress of coarse brown serge.
“Service! service!” she mutters, and,
seizing a pitcher, moves mechanically to fill it at
the well, then totters but half awake into the wooden
hut. The forest music breaks forth the
hum of happy insect life, the song of wild birds.
All seems to pass as in a vision, when suddenly enters
a knight clad in black armor from top to toe.
The two eye him curiously, and Gurnemanz,
approaching, bids him lay aside his armor and his
weapons. He carries a long spear. In silence
the knight un-helms, and, sticking the spear into
the ground, kneels before it, and remains lost in
devotional contemplation. The “Spear”
and “Grail” motives mingle together in
the full tide of orchestral sounds carrying on the
emotional undercurrent of the drama. The knight
is soon recognized by both as the long-lost and discarded
Parsifal.
The “guileless one” has
learned wisdom, and discovered his mission he
knows now that he bears the spear which is to heal
the king’s grievous wound, and that he himself
is appointed his successor. Through long strife
and trial and pain he seems to have grown into something
of Christ’s own likeness. Not all at once,
but at last he has found the path. He returns
to bear salvation and pardon both to Kundry and the
wretched king, Amfortas.
The full music flows on while Gurnemanz
relates how the knights have all grown weak and aged,
deprived of the vision and sustenance of the Holy
Grail, while the long-entranced Titurel is at last
dead.
At this news Parsifal, overcome with
grief, swoons away, and Gurnemanz and Kundry loosen
his armor, and sprinkle him with water from the holy
spring. Underneath his black suit of mail he appears
clad in a long white tunic.
The grouping here is admirable.
Gurnemanz is in the Templar’s red and blue robe.
Parsifal in white, his auburn hair parted in front
and flowing down in ringlets on either side, recalls
Leonardo’s favorite conception of the Savior’s
head, and, indeed, from this point Parsifal becomes
a kind of symbolic reflection of the Lord Himself.
Kundry, subdued and awed, lies weeping at his feet;
he lifts his hands to bless her with infinite pity.
She washes his feet, and dries them with the hairs
of her head. It is a bold stroke, but the voices
of nature, the murmur of the summer woods, come with
an infinite healing tenderness and pity, and the act
is seen to be symbolical of the pure devotion of a
sinful creature redeemed from sin. Peace has at
last entered into that wild and troubled heart, and
restless Kundry, delivered from Klingsor’s spell,
receives the sprinkling of baptismal water at the hands
of Parsifal.
The great spaces of silence in the
dialog, broken now by a few sentences from Parsifal,
now from Gurnemanz, are more eloquent than many words.
The tidal music flows on in a ceaseless stream of changing
harmonies, returning constantly to the sweet and slumbrous
sound of a summer-land, full of teeming life and glowing
happiness.
Then Gurnemanz takes up his parable.
It is the Blessed Good Friday on which our dear Lord
suffered. The Love and Faith phrases are chimed
forth, the pain-notes of the Cross agony are sounded
and pass, the Grail motive seems to swoon away in
descending harmonies, sinking into the woodland voices
of universal Nature that trespass-pardoned
Nature that now seems waking to the day of her glory
and innocence.
In that solemn moment Parsifal bends
over the subdued and humbled Kundry, and kisses her
softly on the brow her wild kiss
in the garden had kindled in him fierce fire, mingled
with the bitter wound-pain; his is the seal
of her eternal pardon and peace.
In the distance the great bells of
Montsalvat are now heard booming solemnly the
air darkens, the light fades out, the slow motion of
all the scenery recommences. Again I hear the
wild cave music, strange and hollow sounding the
three move on as in a dream, and are soon lost in
the deep shadows; and through all, louder and louder,
boom the heavy bells of Montsalvat, until the stage
brightens, and we find ourselves once more in the
vast Alhambralike hall of the knights.
For the last time Amfortas is borne
in, and the brotherhood of the Grail form the possession
bearing the sacred relics, which are deposited before
him.
The king, in great agony and despair,
bewails the death of his father and his own backsliding.
With failing but desperate energy he harangues the
assembled knights, and, tottering forward, beseeches
them to free him from his misery and sin-stained life,
and thrust their swords deep into his wounded side.
At this moment Gurnemanz, accompanied by Parsifal
and Kundry, enter. Parsifal steps forward with
the sacred spear, now at length to be restored to
the knights. He touches the side of Amfortas,
the wound is healed, and as he raises the spear on
high the point is seen glowing with the crimson glory
of the Grail. Then stepping up to the shrine,
Parsifal takes the crystal cup, the dark blood glows
bright crimson as he holds it on high, and at that
moment, while all fall on their knees, and celestial
music ("Drink ye all of this”) floats in the
upper air, Kundry falls back dying, her eyes fixed
on the blessed Grail. A white dove descends and
hovers for a moment, poised in mid-air above the glowing
cup. A soft chorus of angels seems to die away
in the clouds beyond the golden dome
“Marvelous mercy!
Victorious Savior!”
Words can add nothing to the completeness
of the drama, and no words can give any idea of the
splendor and complexity of that sound ocean upon which
the drama floats from beginning to end.
The enemies of the Grail are destroyed
or subdued, the wound they have inflicted is healed,
the prey they claimed is rescued; the pure and blameless
Parsifal becomes the consecrated head of the holy brotherhood,
and the beatic vision of God’s eternal love and
Real Presence is restored to the knights of the Sangrail.
When I came out of the theater, at
the end of the third and last act, it was ten o’clock.
The wind was stirring in the fir-trees,
the stars gleamed out fitfully through a sky, across
which the clouds were hurrying wildly, but the moon
rose low and large beyond the shadowy hills, and bathed
the misty valleys with a mild and golden radiance
as of some celestial dawn.