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Richard Wagner – My Life — Volume 2

My Life — Volume 2 by Richard WagnerDownload

Richard Wagner – My Life, Volume II

by Richard Wagner

Volume II of My Life covers Wagner’s mature and late life, structured around the following historical and biographical periods:


1. Political exile and survival (1849–1861)

From the aftermath of the Dresden uprising (1849) to the lifting of his ban from German territories.
This period includes:


2. Gradual return and renewed visibility (1861–1863)

Wagner’s cautious reintegration into German musical life:


3. Patronage of Ludwig II of Bavaria (1864–1865)

A decisive turning point:


4. Personal transformation and Cosima (1865–1870)

The consolidation of Wagner’s private world:


5. Tribschen years and artistic consolidation (1870–1872)

Residence near Lucerne:


6. Bayreuth project and institutionalization (1872–1876)

The culmination of Wagner’s life narrative:


Chronological span

Approximately 1849 to 1876, with the narrative written retrospectively between 1865 and 1880.


In essence

Volume II charts Wagner’s passage from embattled exile to self-proclaimed historical inevitability, ending not with personal closure but with the establishment of a permanent artistic cult—Bayreuth as destiny rather than event.

Scope and chronological focus

Volume II of My Life covers the central and later phases of Wagner’s existence, when his artistic ambitions, personal conflicts, and ideological convictions reach their most intense and consequential form. This volume moves from the years of exile and struggle into the period of recognition, patronage, and ultimate self-mythologization, culminating in the foundations of Bayreuth and Wagner’s transformation into a cultural institution.

Where Volume I presents the restless, combative Wagner in formation, Volume II shows Wagner consolidating his identity as prophet-composer, increasingly conscious of his historical role.


Major thematic strands

1. Exile, politics, and resentment

Wagner reflects extensively on:

These chapters are marked by bitterness and self-justification, offering invaluable insight into Wagner’s psychology but demanding critical distance from the reader.


2. Artistic mission and aesthetic ideology

Volume II contains Wagner’s most explicit autobiographical statements about:

Rather than neutral recollection, the narrative functions as a retrospective manifesto, aligning past events with his mature theoretical positions.


3. Patronage and the figure of Ludwig II

A central axis of this volume is Wagner’s relationship with Ludwig II of Bavaria, portrayed as:

Wagner emphasizes his rescue from debt, exile, and obscurity, while downplaying political tensions and public backlash. The account reveals both gratitude and manipulation, offering a case study in Wagner’s talent for narrative control.


4. Cosima and the construction of a household

The emergence of Cosima Wagner as Wagner’s emotional and intellectual anchor is treated as a near-mythical turning point. Volume II presents:

This section subtly prepares the ground for the cult-like continuity that would define Wagnerism after his death.


5. Bayreuth and the idea of destiny

The later chapters increasingly frame Wagner’s life as teleological—all previous suffering justified by:

Bayreuth is depicted not as a logistical or financial struggle, but as historical inevitability, reinforcing the autobiographical myth Wagner carefully constructs.


Narrative style and reliability

In Volume II, Wagner’s prose becomes:

Modern scholarship treats this volume not as a factual chronicle but as a strategic act of self-representation. Omissions, distortions, and retrospective reinterpretations are frequent, especially concerning:

Yet precisely for this reason, the text is invaluable as psychological and cultural evidence.


Historical and cultural importance

My Life, Volume II is essential for understanding:

Few composers have so deliberately shaped the narrative of their own lives.


Overall assessment

Volume II is less intimate than Volume I, but vastly more revealing in another sense: it shows Wagner as architect of his own legend. The reader encounters not simply a composer recounting events, but a man writing himself into history, convinced that his life and his art are inseparable from the destiny of German culture.

To read this volume critically is to witness genius, narcissism, vision, and manipulation intertwined—often inseparably.