Siegfried
[[#101]] Second Motif of Mime’s Scheming
Representing Mime’s intent to bring up Siegfried, without teaching Siegfried fear, so that Siegfried can kill Fafner and win for Mime Alberich’s Ring and Tarnhelm. Mime represents all that Wotan loathes in his own nature, the hoard of abhorrent self-knowledge which Wotan repressed into his unconscious mind by confessing it to Bruennhilde.
(#101 is based on #36 with #19’s harmony, while #36 in turn is based on #27. #101, #36, and #27 are in the family of motifs which includes #44 and #116)”
[[#102]] Mime’s inherent inability to re-forge Nothung, due to lack of authentically unconscious inspiration
Mime is unable to re-forge Nothung, or forge any other swords which could meet Siegfried’s demands, because Mime is too wise, too conscious of his own ulterior, egoistic motives. Mime therefore is also incapable of achieving redemption through the restoration of lost innocence. Mime’s inability to forge adequate swords for Siegfried, or re-forge Nothung, is Wagner’s metaphor for Wotan’s need for a hero sufficiently free from Wotan’s egoistic influence, to forge his own identity.
(#102’s motival links, if any, not yet ascertained; however, #102’s notes seem to correspond with the first half of #158, the motif to which Gunther and Siegfried sing their oath of blood-brotherhood, though the harmonies are different; the implication would be that Gunther is unheroic, an unworthy blood-brother for Siegfried. Dunning detects #37’s influence.)
[[#103]] “Siegfried’s Youthful Horncall,” Siegfried’s vital force
This motif expresses Siegfried’s vital force, an innocent will unfettered by Wotan’s intellectual conflicts, self-doubt, or corrupt history, which Wotan has put out of commission, consigned to oblivion, by repressing them into his daughter Bruennhilde during his confession. Because Bruennhilde holds this paralyzing knowledge for Siegfried, Siegfried can freely create redemptive art without suffering from Alberich’s curse of consciousness
(#103 in the family of diatonic nature arpeggios such as #1, #12, and #56)