Prof.Karel Werner, Ph.D. - Was Wagner a buddhist?

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Was Wagner a Buddhist? Prof. Karel Werner

Richard Wagner (1813-1883), perhaps the greatest operatic composer ever, was not a religious man in the conventional sense, although he had been baptised in the church of St. Thomas in Leipzig (Wagner, 1993,1; but cf. Osborne, 10). He was, however, preoccupied from his early years till his death with the problems of human destiny and with the search for a final solution to its dilemma: to find fulfilment by embracing life in all its multifarious variety or salvation by resisting its allure and becoming a saint. On top of that he also played with the idea of redemption through the unique beauty of overwhelming love between man and woman stemming from unconstrained sexual love, but leading to the merging of souls and culminating, after their physical death, in the otherworldly dimension of non-being, i.e. not being in the world of temporality and suffering, i.e. in sasāra, but in nirvāa which is untroubled, pure harmony (ungetrübte, reine Harmonie; Wagner, 1975, 198). All this is expressed in his mature operas, partly in words, but fully by a powerful musical language. Of course, Wagner was also aware of the Christian message of vicarious salvation through Jesus’s self-sacrifice, but that has been, in his view, trivialised and distorted by dogmas of official theology. So Wagner sought to supplement and correct it by studying medieval legends and ancient Nordic myths with their hidden truths expressed in peculiar stories and rich symbols. Already his first opera composed when he was twenty, Die Feen (The Fairies, 1833), is set in a mythical past on earth and in a fairy realm and concerns the love of a fairy for a mortal man. Her problem was that she could not become human, although she managed to live with him for a time and bear him two children. However, after many setbacks the two were united in the fairyland forever. So here we have the young Wagner’s dream of salvation in the beyond by the power of love which involves full erotic fulfilment. After two ‘earthly’ operas (Das Libesverbot or ‘The Ban on Love’, 1836, and Rienzi, 1840) it is The Flying Dutchman (1841), which returns to an other-worldly theme and takes it from a‘ghostly’ nautical legend popular among seamen at least since the seventeenth century. It is about a Dutch sea captain who was approaching the Cape of Good Hope in a heavy storm which was pushing his ship off course, but he swore ‘by all the devils in hell’ that he would nevertheless make it round the Cape, even if he had to sail till the Day of Judgment. The devil took him at his word and he is still sailing in his ghost ship unable to find release in death. Many sightings of the ship have been claimed, including one by the future King George V near Australia when on a voyage as Prince of Wales. They were explained as instances of mirage. The legend was, over the years, adapted for the theatre, utilised in ballads and innumerable stories and made into a novel. Heinrich Heine (1797-1856) re-told it in a fictional, somewhat satirical, memoir (Heine, Band 2, 3-37) and added an embellishment: the devil allowed the Dutchman to come ashore once in seven years to find a wife. If she would remain faithful to him till death, he would be released. Wagner read Heine’s version of the story while in Riga (1837-39) and based on it his libretto for the opera. After many betrayals (which meant eternal damnation for the unfaithful wives) the Dutchman found Katharina, who had heard about his fate and knew his likeness from an old picture. Being a romantic soul, she had dreamt since childhood of redeeming him. In Heine’s version they married, but eventually the Dutchman, who loved her so much that he did not want her to share his dreadful fate, boarded his ship and sailed off. Katharina rushed up a cliff and called to him: “I have been faithful to you and know how to preserve my faithfulness till death!” upon which she threw herself into the sea and the Dutchman’s ship immediately sank.

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