『我が生涯 第1巻』 cover
伝記

『我が生涯 第1巻』

本書はワーグナーの自伝第1巻であり、1813年の出生から1849年のチューリヒへの脱出までの彼の生涯を記録し、型破りな教育、芸術形成に影響を与えた要因、ドイツ各都市での初期指揮者活動、最初の主要オペラの制作、ドレスデン5月革命への劇的な関与を記載している。

Wagner, Richard · 2004 · 27 min

選択した言語の要約本文はまだ利用できません。英語版を表示しています。

Part 25 (Chapter 25) / Chapter 28: Betrayal in Riga and the Flight to Paris

The Königsberg theatre crisis of May 1837 left director Hubsch facing inevitable closure after a disastrous season. Wagner spent hours convincing him to persevere, but the only path forward was demanding salary sacrifices from every company member, a move that sparked widespread staff bitterness even as Wagner’s marriage to Minna collapsed under years of accumulated pressure. Their quarrels, already inflamed by Minna’s choice to take extra stage work to support them (work Wagner dismissed as compromising “condescensions” to her profession) grew more violent and frequent: fights left Minna suffering terrifying convulsions, no mutual understanding was possible, and Wagner, buried under the weight of saving the theatre, failed to notice Minna pulling away.

To stabilize the company, Wagner summoned his old Magdeburg friend Friedrich Schmitt, a devoted tenor, to Königsberg. The pair soon crossed paths with Herr Dietrich, a wealthy merchant who had made himself a patron of the theatre’s women, hosting English gentleman-style dinner parties for actresses that Wagner found repulsive. Minna insisted Wagner was being unfairly hostile to Dietrich, but Wagner banned all further contact with the man, sparking more bitter fights. Then Schmitt reported that Dietrich bragged at a public dinner about a suspicious intimacy with Minna; Wagner and Schmitt confronted Dietrich at his home, he denied the claim at first, then secretly wrote to Minna about the interview, giving her fresh cause to accuse Wagner of being unforgivably inconsiderate.

On the morning of May 31, 1837, Wagner left for rehearsals, and Minna and her daughter Nathalie (who passed as her youngest sister to outsiders) embraced him tearfully at the door, refusing to explain their distress. He came home late that evening, exhausted and hungry, to find the house empty: Minna had vanished without a trace, even their maid unaware of her plans. Old friend Abraham Möller tracked Dietrich to a special coach bound for Berlin that morning; Wagner gave chase, but ran out of money in Elbing, forced to pawn their silver wedding presents to continue, and learned at the next stop that Minna had carried on to Dresden to stay with her parents, Dietrich having only accompanied her partway.

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