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 typical fight with the dragon, with the libido in resistance. As these parallels show, psychoanalysis mobiles a part of the life processes, the fundamental importance of which properly illustrates the significance of this process.

After Siegfried has slain the dragon, he meets the father, Wotan, plagued by gloomy cares, for the primitive mother, Erda, has placed in his path the snake, in order to enfeeble his sun. He says to Erda:

Wanderer:

All-wise one, Care's piercing sting by thee was planted In Wotan's dauntless heart With fear of shameful ruin and downfall. Filled was his spirit by tidings Thou didst foretell. Art thou the world's wisest of women? Tell to me now How a god may conquer his care.

Erda:

Thou art not What thou hast said.

It is the same primitive motive which we meet Wagner: the mother has robbed her son, the sun-god, of the joy of life, through a poisonous thorn, and deprives him of his power, which is connected with the name. Isis demands the name of the god; Erda says, "Thou art not what thou hast said." But the "Wanderer" has found the way to conquer the fatal charm of the mother, the fear of death:

"The eternals' downfall No more dismays me, Since their doom I willed.