Starting with Wittgenstein's remark about his allegedly frequent visits to the performance of Wagner's Die Meistersinger von Nurnberg, the paper presents Wagner's opera - being explicitly an opera about rules and rule-following - as a possible stimulus for the later Wittgenstein's thinking about language. Besides Wittgenstein's systematic interest in parallels between music and language, the paper draws on the choice of terminology (such as the comparison of rules to rails) and on Wittgenstein's own examples of rule-following.
More speculatively, the phrasing as well as the solution to what Kripke called Wittgenstein's sceptical paradox is used as a point of comparison that brings Wittgenstein's aesthetic innuendos closer not only to mainstream philosophy of language, but due to the antithetical structure of Kripke's argument, also to the broader philosophical and aesthetic tradition of German idealism.