Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Illustrations
- Abbreviations
- Notes on this Translation
- Introduction: “He could not breathe without her”
- 1 “I have become her despot”: From Love to Marriage
- 2 “Deprived of incipient motherhood”: Riga, London, Paris, 1836–42
- 3 “Home for me is you alone”: Dresden 1842–47
- 4 “My knucklehead of a husband”: Revolution and Its Aftermath, 1848–50
- 5 “This ridiculous, amorous intrigue”: The Jessie Laussot Affair, 1850–51
- 6 “That good, foolish man …”: Exile in Zurich, 1852–54
- 7 “I’m a poor, stupid woman to have let you go …”: Zurich and London, 1854–56
- 8 “Alas, now all our happiness is gone …”: The Wesendonck Scandal, 1857–58
- 9 The Bitter End, 1858–59
- 10 “In love and fidelity, your Emma”: Emma Herwegh
- 11 “Neither wife, housekeeper, nor friend”: Dresden, Paris, Biebrich, 1860–62
- 12 “That weak, blind man …”: The End of a Marriage, 1863–66
- References
- Index
- Eastman Studies in Music
1 - “I have become her despot”: From Love to Marriage
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 January 2023
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Illustrations
- Abbreviations
- Notes on this Translation
- Introduction: “He could not breathe without her”
- 1 “I have become her despot”: From Love to Marriage
- 2 “Deprived of incipient motherhood”: Riga, London, Paris, 1836–42
- 3 “Home for me is you alone”: Dresden 1842–47
- 4 “My knucklehead of a husband”: Revolution and Its Aftermath, 1848–50
- 5 “This ridiculous, amorous intrigue”: The Jessie Laussot Affair, 1850–51
- 6 “That good, foolish man …”: Exile in Zurich, 1852–54
- 7 “I’m a poor, stupid woman to have let you go …”: Zurich and London, 1854–56
- 8 “Alas, now all our happiness is gone …”: The Wesendonck Scandal, 1857–58
- 9 The Bitter End, 1858–59
- 10 “In love and fidelity, your Emma”: Emma Herwegh
- 11 “Neither wife, housekeeper, nor friend”: Dresden, Paris, Biebrich, 1860–62
- 12 “That weak, blind man …”: The End of a Marriage, 1863–66
- References
- Index
- Eastman Studies in Music
Summary
God knows, my wonderful girl, if an hour ever escapes me in which I do not remember you a thousand times! It’s delight and agony at the same time, because to think of you is joy, and to see you so vividly before me and yet to know that you are so far away is agony! […] We have to get out of these sordid theatrical conditions that we have experienced up to now; as a married couple we have to enter further into the echelons of a bourgeois, higher life; and look, my sweet child, I have the sure faith and the firm hope that when we are married, happiness will come and abide with us.
Richard Wagner wrote this to his lover Minna Planer at a time when she was far away from him. Throughout his life, he always strove to improve his circumstances. So it is all the more astonishing that he should have married a woman without a dowry. The decisive factor was his passionate love for her, which overcame him when he was just 21 years old, and which became a constant obsession. At first, to be sure, he had imagined that he might keep the upper hand in their relationship and drop his lover whenever he saw fit. But things turned out differently.
The woman he loved was Christiane Wilhelmine Planer, known to all as Minna. She was born on September 5, 1809, into a poor family in Oederan, a little town in the Erzgebirge some 20 miles to the southwest of Dresden, in the kingdom of Saxony. As her birth-cum-baptismal certificate in the church of Oederan confirms, she was four years older than Richard. Minna’s parents were Johanna Christiana, née Meyer (1782–1856), and Gotthelf Planer (1770–1855), who had married on September 25, 1802. Gotthelf was a trumpeter in the Saxon Army, in which capacity he served under Napoleon in the renowned Battle of Wagram against the Austrians in July 1809, just a few miles outside Vienna. His cavalry regiment from Oederan, the so-called Elector’s regiment, suffered heavy losses, and afterwards returned home to Saxony. Johanna Planer gave birth to ten children, some of whom died in infancy.
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- Information
- Minna WagnerA Life, with Richard Wagner, pp. 12 - 37Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2022