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Rainer Maria Rilke

René Karl Wilhelm Johann Josef Maria Rilke (4 December 1875 – 29 December 1926), shortened to Rainer Maria Rilke (German: [ˈʁaɪnɐ maˈʁiːa ˈʁɪlkə]), was an Austrian poet and novelist. Acclaimed as an idiosyncratic and expressive poet, he is widely recognized as a significant writer in the German language.[1] His work is viewed by critics and scholars as possessing undertones of mysticism, exploring themes of subjective experience and disbelief.[2][3][4] His writings include one novel, several collections of poetry and several volumes of correspondence.

Rainer Maria Rilke
Rilke in 1900
BornRené Karl Wilhelm Johann Josef Maria Rilke
(1875-12-04)4 December 1875
Prague, Bohemia, Austria-Hungary
Died29 December 1926(1926-12-29) (aged 51)
Montreux, Vaud, Switzerland
OccupationPoet, novelist
LanguageGerman, French
NationalityAustrian
Period1894–1925
Literary movementModernism
Spouse
(m. 1901)
Children1
Signature

Rilke traveled extensively throughout Europe, finally settling in Switzerland, the inspiration for many of his poems. While Rilke is best known for his contributions to German literature, he also wrote in French. Among English-language readers, his best-known works include two poetry collections: Duino Elegies (Duineser Elegien) and Sonnets to Orpheus (Die Sonette an Orpheus), a semi-autobiographical novel The Notebooks of Malte Laurids Brigge (Die Aufzeichnungen des Malte Laurids Brigge), and a collection of ten letters published posthumously Letters to a Young Poet (Briefe an einen jungen Dichter). In the later 20th century, his work found new audiences in citations by self-help authors[5][6][7] and frequent quotations in television shows, books and motion pictures.[8]

Biography

Early life (1875–1896)

 
Rilke, circa 1878–1879

He was born René Karl Wilhelm Johann Josef Maria Rilke in Prague, capital of Bohemia (then part of Austria-Hungary, now capital of the Czech Republic). His childhood and youth in Prague were not always happy. His father, Josef Rilke (1838–1906), found employment as a railway official after an unsuccessful military career. His mother, Sophie ("Phia") Entz (1851–1931), was from a well-to-do family in Prague, the Entz-Kinzelbergers, who lived at Herrengasse (Panská) 8, where René spent many of his early years. The relationship between Phia and her only son was coloured by her mourning for an earlier infant daughter who died within one week. During Rilke's early years, Phia acted as if she sought to recover the lost daughter by treating Rilke as if he were a girl. According to Rilke, he had to wear "fine clothes" and "was a plaything [for his mother], like a big doll".[9][10][11][a] His parents' marriage ended in 1884.

His parents enrolled the poetically and artistically talented youth in a military academy in Sankt Pölten, Lower Austria. He attended classes from 1886 until 1891, but left due to illness. He then moved to Linz, and entered a trade school. Expelled in May 1892, the 16-year-old returned to Prague, where, for three years, he was tutored for the university entrance exam, which he passed in 1895. Until 1896, he took classes in literature, art history, and philosophy in Prague[13] and Munich.[14]

Munich and Saint Petersburg

Rilke met and fell in love with the widely travelled and intellectual woman of letters Lou Andreas-Salomé in 1897 in Munich. He changed his first name from "René" to "Rainer" at Salomé's urging because she thought that name to be more masculine, forceful and Germanic.[15] His relationship with this married woman, with whom he undertook two extensive trips to Russia, lasted until 1900. Even after their separation, Salomé continued to be Rilke's most important confidante until the end of his life. Having trained from 1912 to 1913 as a psychoanalyst with Sigmund Freud, she shared her knowledge of psychoanalysis with Rilke.

In 1898 Rilke undertook a journey lasting several weeks to Italy. The following year he travelled with Lou and her husband, Friedrich Carl Andreas, to Moscow where he met the novelist Leo Tolstoy. Between May and August 1900, a second journey to Russia, accompanied only by Lou, again took him to Moscow and Saint Petersburg, where he met the family of Boris Pasternak and Spiridon Drozhzhin, a peasant poet. Author Anna A. Tavis cites the cultures of Bohemia and Russia as the key influences on Rilke's poetry and consciousness.[16]

In 1900, Rilke stayed at the artists' colony at Worpswede. (Later, his portrait would be painted by the proto-expressionist Paula Modersohn-Becker, whom he got to know at Worpswede.) It was here that he got to know the sculptor Clara Westhoff, whom he married the following year. Their daughter Ruth (1901–1972) was born in December 1901.

Paris (1902–1910)

 
Paula Modersohn-Becker (1876–1907), an early expressionist painter, became acquainted with Rilke in Worpswede and Paris, and painted his portrait in 1906.

In the summer of 1902, Rilke left home and travelled to Paris to write a monograph on the sculptor Auguste Rodin. Before long his wife left their daughter with her parents and joined Rilke there. The relationship between Rilke and Clara Westhoff continued for the rest of his life; a mutually-agreed-upon effort towards a divorce was bureaucratically hindered by the fact that Rilke was a Catholic, albeit a non-practising one.

At first, Rilke had a difficult time in Paris, an experience that he called upon in the first part of his only novel, The Notebooks of Malte Laurids Brigge. At the same time his encounter with modernism was very stimulating: Rilke became deeply involved with the sculpture of Rodin and then the work of Paul Cézanne. For a time, he acted as Rodin's secretary, also lecturing and writing a long essay on Rodin and his work. Rodin taught him the value of objective observation and, under this influence, Rilke dramatically transformed his poetic style from the subjective and sometimes incantatory language of his earlier work into something quite new in European literature. The result was the New Poems, famous for the "thing-poems" expressing Rilke's rejuvenated artistic vision. During these years, Paris increasingly became the writer's main residence.

The most important works of the Paris period were Neue Gedichte (New Poems) (1907), Der Neuen Gedichte Anderer Teil (Another Part of the New Poems) (1908), the two "Requiem" poems (1909), and the novel The Notebooks of Malte Laurids Brigge, started in 1904 and completed in January 1910.[17]

During the later part of this decade, Rilke spent extended periods in Ronda, the famous bullfighting centre in southern Spain, where he kept a permanent room at the Hotel Reina Victoria from December 1912 to February 1913.[18][19]

Duino and the First World War (1911–1919)

 
Duino Castle near Trieste, Italy, was where Rilke began writing the Duino Elegies in 1912, recounting that he heard the famous first line as a voice in the wind while walking along the cliffs and that he wrote it quickly in his notebook.

Between October 1911 and May 1912, Rilke stayed at the Castle Duino, near Trieste, home of Princess Marie of Thurn und Taxis. There, in 1912, he began the poem cycle called the Duino Elegies, which would remain unfinished for a decade because of a long-lasting creativity crisis. Rilke had developed an admiration for El Greco as early as 1908, so he visited Toledo during the winter of 1912/13 to see Greco's paintings. It has been suggested that Greco's manner of depicting angels influenced the conception of the angel in the Duino Elegies.[20] The outbreak of World War I surprised Rilke during a stay in Germany. He was unable to return to Paris, where his property was confiscated and auctioned. He spent the greater part of the war in Munich. From 1914 to 1916 he had a turbulent affair with the painter Lou Albert-Lasard. Rilke was called up at the beginning of 1916 and had to undertake basic training in Vienna. Influential friends interceded on his behalf – he was transferred to the War Records Office and discharged from the military on 9 June 1916. He returned to Munich, interrupted by a stay at Hertha Koenig's [de] manor Gut Bockel [de] in Westphalia. The traumatic experience of military service, a reminder of the horrors of the military academy, almost completely silenced him as a poet.[21]

Switzerland and Muzot (1919–1926)

 
Château de Muzot in Veyras, Switzerland, was where Rilke completed writing the Duino Elegies in "a savage creative storm" in February 1922.

On 11 June 1919, Rilke travelled from Munich to Switzerland. He met Polish-German painter Baladine Klossowska, with whom he was in relationship to his death in 1926. The outward motive was an invitation to lecture in Zurich, but the real reason was the wish to escape the post-war chaos and take up his work on the Duino Elegies once again. The search for a suitable and affordable place to live proved to be very difficult. Among other places, Rilke lived in Soglio, Locarno and Berg am Irchel. It was only in mid-1921 that was he able to find a permanent residence in the Château de Muzot in the commune of Veyras, close to Sierre in Valais. In an intense creative period, Rilke completed the Duino Elegies in several weeks in February 1922. Before and after this period, Rilke rapidly wrote both parts of the poem cycle Sonnets to Orpheus containing 55 entire sonnets. Together, these two have often been taken as constituting the high points of Rilke's work. In May 1922, Rilke's patron Werner Reinhart bought and renovated Muzot so that Rilke could live there rent-free.[22]

During this time, Reinhart introduced Rilke to his protégée, the Australian violinist Alma Moodie.[23] Rilke was so impressed with her playing that he wrote in a letter: "What a sound, what richness, what determination. That and the Sonnets to Orpheus, those were two strings of the same voice. And she plays mostly Bach! Muzot has received its musical christening..."[23][24][25]

From 1923 on, Rilke increasingly struggled with health problems that necessitated many long stays at a sanatorium in Territet near Montreux on Lake Geneva. His long stay in Paris between January and August 1925 was an attempt to escape his illness through a change in location and living conditions. Despite this, numerous important individual poems appeared in the years 1923–1926 (including Gong and Mausoleum), as well as his abundant lyrical work in French. His book of French poems Vergers was published in 1926.

In 1924 Erika Mitterer [de] began writing poems to Rilke, who wrote back with approximately 50 poems of his own and called her verse a Herzlandschaft (landscape of the heart).[26] This was the only time Rilke had a productive poetic collaboration throughout all his work.[27] Mitterer also visited Rilke.[28] In 1950 her Correspondence in Verse with Rilke was published and received much praise.[29]

Rilke supported the Russian Revolution in 1917 as well as the Bavarian Soviet Republic in 1919.[30] He became friends with Ernst Toller and mourned the deaths of Rosa Luxemburg, Kurt Eisner, and Karl Liebknecht.[31] He confided that of the five or six newspapers he read daily, those on the far left came closest to his own opinions.[32] He developed a reputation for supporting left-wing causes and thus, out of fear for his own safety, became more reticent about politics after the Bavarian Republic was crushed by the right-wing Freikorps.[32] In January and February 1926, Rilke wrote three letters to the Mussolini-adversary Aurelia Gallarati Scotti in which he praised Benito Mussolini and described fascism as a healing agent.[33][34][35]

Death and burial

 
Rilke's grave in Raron, Switzerland

Shortly before his death, Rilke's illness was diagnosed as leukemia. He suffered ulcerous sores in his mouth, pain troubled his stomach and intestines, and he struggled with increasingly low spirits.[36] Open-eyed, he died in the arms of his doctor on 29 December 1926, in the Valmont Sanatorium in Switzerland. He was buried on 2 January 1927, in the Raron cemetery to the west of Visp.[36]

Rilke had chosen as his own epitaph this poem:

Rose, oh reiner Widerspruch, Lust,
Niemandes Schlaf zu sein unter soviel
Lidern.

Rose, o pure contradiction, desire
to be no one's sleep beneath so many
lids.

A myth developed surrounding his death and roses. It was said: "To honour a visitor, the Egyptian beauty Nimet Eloui Bey, Rilke gathered some roses from his garden. While doing so, he pricked his hand on a thorn. This small wound failed to heal, grew rapidly worse, soon his entire arm was swollen, and his other arm became affected as well", and so he died.[36]

Writings

The Book of Hours

Rilke's three complete cycles of poems that constitute The Book of Hours (Das Stunden-Buch) were published by Insel Verlag in April 1905. These poems explore the Christian search for God and the nature of Prayer, using symbolism from Saint Francis and Rilke's observation of Orthodox Christianity during his travels in Russia in the early years of the twentieth century.

The Notebooks of Malte Laurids Brigge

Rilke wrote his only novel, Die Aufzeichnungen des Malte Laurids Brigge (translated as The Notebooks of Malte Laurids Brigge), while living in Paris, completing the work in 1910. The narrative takes the form of a rambling novelette filled with poetic language and contains, among other things, a retelling of the prodigal son tale, a striking description of death by illness, an ode to the joys of roaming free during childhood, a chilling description of how people wear false faces with others, and a snarky comment about the weirdness of neighbors.

This semi-autobiographical novel adopts the style and technique that became associated with Expressionism which entered European fiction and art in the early 20th century. He was inspired by Sigbjørn Obstfelder's work A Priest's Diary and Jens Peter Jacobsen's novel Niels Lyhne (1880) which traces the fate of an atheist in a merciless world. Rilke addresses existential themes, profoundly probing the quest for individuality and the significance of death and reflecting on the experience of time as death approaches. He draws considerably on the writings of Nietzsche, whose work he came to know through Lou Andreas-Salomé. His work also incorporates impressionistic techniques that were influenced by Cézanne and Rodin (to whom Rilke was secretary in 1905–1906). He combines these techniques and motifs to conjure images of mankind's anxiety and alienation in the face of an increasingly scientific, industrial and reified world.

Duino Elegies

Rilke began writing the elegies in 1912 while a guest of Princess Marie von Thurn und Taxis (1855–1934) at Duino Castle, near Trieste on the Adriatic Sea. During this ten-year period, the elegies languished incomplete for long stretches of time as Rilke suffered frequently from severe depression, some of which was caused by the events of World War I and his conscripted military service. Aside from brief episodes of writing in 1913 and 1915, Rilke did not return to the work until a few years after the war ended. With a sudden, renewed inspiration – writing in a frantic pace he described as "a savage creative storm" – he completed the collection in February 1922 while staying at Château de Muzot in Veyras, in Switzerland's Rhône Valley. After their publication and his death shortly thereafter, the Duino Elegies were quickly recognized by critics and scholars as Rilke's most important work.[37][38]

The Duino Elegies are intensely religious, mystical poems that weigh beauty and existential suffering.[39] The poems employ a rich symbolism of angels and salvation but not in keeping with typical Christian interpretations. Rilke begins the first elegy in an invocation of philosophical despair, asking: "Who, if I cried out, would hear me among the hierarchies of angels?" (Wer, wenn ich schriee, hörte mich denn aus der Engel Ordnungen?)[40] and later declares that "every angel is terrifying" (Jeder Engel ist schrecklich).[41] While labelling of these poems as "elegies" would typically imply melancholy and lamentation, many passages are marked by their positive energy and "unrestrained enthusiasm".[37] Together, the Duino Elegies are described as a metamorphosis of Rilke's "ontological torment" and an "impassioned monologue about coming to terms with human existence" discussing themes of "the limitations and insufficiency of the human condition and fractured human consciousness ... man's loneliness, the perfection of the angels, life and death, love and lovers, and the task of the poet".[42]

Sonnets to Orpheus

With news of the death of Wera Knoop (1900–1919), his daughter's friend, Rilke was inspired to create and set to work on Sonnets to Orpheus.[43] In 1922, between February 2 and 5, he completed the first section of 26 sonnets. For the next few days he focused on the Duino Elegies, completing them on the evening of February 11. Immediately thereafter, he returned to work on the Sonnets and completed the following section of 29 sonnets in less than two weeks. Throughout the Sonnets, Wera is frequently referenced, both directly by name and indirectly in allusions to a "dancer" and the mythical Eurydice.[44] Although Rilke claimed that the entire cycle was inspired by Wera, she appears as a character in only one of the poems. He insisted, however, that "Wera's own figure ... nevertheless governs and moves the course of the whole."[45]

The sonnets' contents are, as is typical of Rilke, highly metaphorical. The character of Orpheus (whom Rilke refers to as the "god with the lyre"[46]) appears several times in the cycle, as do other mythical characters such as Daphne. There are also biblical allusions, including a reference to Esau. Other themes involve animals, peoples of different cultures, and time and death.

Letters to a Young Poet

 
Letters to a Young Poet, cover of the 1934 edition

In 1929 a minor writer, Franz Xaver Kappus (1883–1966), published a collection of ten letters that Rilke had written to him when Kappus was a 19-year-old officer cadet studying at the Theresian Military Academy in Wiener Neustadt. Rilke had also attended this academy. Between 1902 and 1908 the young Kappus had written Rilke when he was uncertain about his future as a military officer or as a poet. Initially he sought Rilke's advice as to the quality of his poetry and whether he ought to pursue writing as a career. While he declined to comment on Kappus's writings, Rilke advised Kappus on how a poet should feel, love and seek truth in trying to understand and experience the world around him and engage the world of art. These letters offer insight into the ideas and themes that appear in Rilke's poetry and his working process and were written during a key period of Rilke's early artistic development after his reputation as a poet began to be established with the publication of parts of Das Stunden-Buch (The Book of Hours) and Das Buch der Bilder (The Book of Images).[47]

Style and themes

Rilke extensively engaged with metaphors, metonymy and contradictions in his poetry and prose to convey disbelief and a crisis of faith. Figures from Greek mythology, such as Apollo, Hermes and Orpheus, recur as motifs in his poems and are depicted in original interpretations that often double as analogies for his experiences. Rilke's poems also feature figures of angels, famously described in the Duino Elegies as "terrifying" (schrecklich); he also occasionally explored the crisis of his Catholic faith, including in his little-known 1898 poem "Visions of Christ", where he depicted Mary Magdalene as the mother of Jesus' child.[48][49]

Legacy

 
A portrait of Rilke painted two years after his death by Leonid Pasternak

Rilke is one of the best-selling poets in the United States.[50] In popular culture, Rilke is frequently quoted or referenced in television shows, motion pictures, music and other works when these works discuss the subject of love or angels.[51] His work is often described as "mystical" and has been quoted and referenced by self-help authors.[5] Rilke has been reinterpreted "as a master who can lead us to a more fulfilled and less anxious life".[6][52]

Rilke's work has influenced several poets and writers, including William H. Gass,[53] Galway Kinnell,[54] Sidney Keyes,[55][56] Stephen Spender,[38] Robert Bly,[38][57] W. S. Merwin,[58] John Ashbery,[59] novelist Thomas Pynchon[60] and the philosopher Hans-Georg Gadamer.[61][62] British poet W. H. Auden (1907–1973) has been described as "Rilke's most influential English disciple" and he frequently "paid homage to him" or used the imagery of angels in his work.[63]

Works

Complete works

  • Rainer Maria Rilke, Sämtliche Werke in 12 Bänden (Complete Works in 12 Volumes), published by Rilke Archive in association with Ruth Sieber-Rilke, edited by Ernst Zinn. Frankfurt am Main (1976)
  • Rainer Maria Rilke, Werke (Works). Annotated edition in four volumes with supplementary fifth volume, published by Manfred Engel, Ulrich Fülleborn, Dorothea Lauterbach, Horst Nalewski and August Stahl. Frankfurt am Main and Leipzig (1996 and 2003)

Volumes of poetry

  • Leben und Lieder (Life and Songs) (1894)
  • Larenopfer (Offerings to the Lares) (1895)
  • Traumgekrönt (Dream-Crowned) (1897)
  • Advent (Advent) (1898)
  • Das Stunden-Buch (The Book of Hours)
    • Das Buch vom mönchischen Leben (The Book of Monastic Life) (1899)
    • Das Buch von der Pilgerschaft (The Book of Pilgrimage) (1901)
    • Geldbaum (1901)
    • Das Buch von der Armut und vom Tode (The Book of Poverty and Death) (1903)
  • Das Buch der Bilder (The Book of Images) (4 parts, 1902–1906)
  • Neue Gedichte (New Poems) (1907)
  • Duineser Elegien (Duino Elegies) (1922)
  • Sonette an Orpheus (Sonnets to Orpheus) (1922)

Prose collections

Letters

Collected letters

  • Gesammelte Briefe in sechs Bänden (Collected Letters in Six Volumes), published by Ruth Sieber-Rilke and Carl Sieber. Leipzig (1936–1939)
  • Briefe (Letters), published by the Rilke Archive in Weimar. Two volumes, Wiesbaden (1950, reprinted 1987 in single volume).
  • Briefe in Zwei Bänden (Letters in Two Volumes) (Horst Nalewski, Frankfurt and Leipzig, 1991)

Other volumes of letters

  • Briefe an Auguste Rodin (Insel Verlag, 1928)
  • Briefwechsel mit Marie von Thurn und Taxis, two volumes, edited by Ernst Zinn with a foreword by Rudolf Kassner (Editions Max Niehans, 1954)
  • Briefwechsel mit Thankmar von Münchhausen 1913 bis 1925 (Suhrkamp Insel Verlag, 2004)
  • Briefwechsel mit Rolf von Ungern-Sternberg und weitere Dokumente zur Übertragung der Stances von Jean Moréas (Suhrkamp Insel Verlag, 2002)
  • The Dark Interval – Letters for the Grieving Heart, edited and translated by Ulrich C. Baer [de] (New York: Random House, 2018).
  • Noi siamo le api dell’invisibile, Milano, De Piante Editore, 2022, ISBN 979-12-803-6219-3

See also

Notes

  1. ^ From the mid-16th century until the early 20th century, young boys in the Western world were unbreeched and wore gowns or dresses until an age that varied between two and eight.[12]

References

  1. ^ Biography: Rainer Maria Rilke 1875–1926, Poetry Foundation website. Retrieved 2 February 2013.
  2. ^ Müller, Hans Rudolf. Rainer Maria Rilke als Mystiker: Bekenntnis und Lebensdeutung in Rilkes Dichtungen (Berlin: Furche 1935)
  3. ^ Stanley, Patricia H. "Rilke's Duino Elegies: An Alternative Approach to the Study of Mysticism" in Heep, Hartmut (editor). Unreading Rilke: Unorthodox Approaches to a Cultural Myth (New York: Peter Lang 2000).
  4. ^ Freedman 1998, p. 515.
  5. ^ a b Komar, Kathleen L. "Rilke: Metaphysics in a New Age" in Bauschinger, Sigrid and Cocalis, Susan. Rilke-Rezeptionen: Rilke Reconsidered (Tübingen/Basel: Franke, 1995), pp. 155–169. Rilke reinterpreted "as a master who can lead us to a more fulfilled and less anxious life".
  6. ^ a b Komar, Kathleen L. "Rethinking Rilke's Duisiner Elegien at the End of the Millennium" in Metzger, Erika A. A Companion to the Works of Rainer Maria Rilke (Rochester, New York: Camden House, 2004), pp. 188–189.
  7. ^ See also: Mood, John. Rilke on Love and Other Difficulties (New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 1975); and a book released by Rilke’s own publisher Insel Verlag, Hauschild, Vera (ed.), Rilke für Gestreßte (Frankfurt am Main: Insel-Verlag, 1998).
  8. ^ Komar, Kathleen L. "Rethinking Rilke's Duisiner Elegien at the End of the Millennium" in Metzger, Erika A., A Companion to the Works of Rainer Maria Rilke (Rochester, New York: Camden House, 2004), 189.
  9. ^ Prater 1986, p. 5.
  10. ^ Freedman 1998, p. 9.
  11. ^ "Life of a Poet: Rainer Maria Rilke" at www.washingtonpost.com
  12. ^ ""Boy's Dress", V&A Museum of childhood, accessed June 27, 2019".
  13. ^ Freedman 1998, p. 36.
  14. ^ "Rainer Maria Rilke | Austrian-German poet". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 17 July 2017.
  15. ^ Arana, R. Victoria (2008). The Facts on File Companion to World Poetry: 1900 to the Present. Infobase. p. 377. ISBN 978-0-8160-6457-1.
  16. ^ Anna A. Tavis. Rilke's Russia: A Cultural Encounter. Northwestern University Press, 1997. ISBN 0-8101-1466-6. p. 1.
  17. ^ Rilke, Rainer Maria (12 July 2000). "Rainer Maria Rilke". Rainer Maria Rilke. Retrieved 17 July 2017.
  18. ^ "Mit Rilke in Ronda" by Volker Mauersberger [de], Die Zeit, 11 February 1983 (in German)
  19. ^ "Hotel Catalonia Reina Victoria", andalucia.com
  20. ^ Fatima Naqvi-Peters. A Turning Point in Rilke's Evolution: The Experience of El Greco. The Germanic Review: Literature, Culture, Theory, Vol. 72, Is. 4, pp. 344-362, 1997.
  21. ^ "An Kurt Wolf, 28. März 1917." S. Stefan Schank: Rainer Maria Rilke. pp. 119–121.
  22. ^ Freedman 1998, p. 505.
  23. ^ a b "R. M. Rilke: Music as Metaphor".
  24. ^ "Photo and description". Picture-poems.com. Retrieved 7 June 2012.
  25. ^ "Rainer Maria Rilke: a brief biographical overview". Picture-poems.com. Retrieved 7 June 2012.
  26. ^ Katrin Maria Kohl; Ritchie Robertson (2006). A History of Austrian Literature 1918-2000. Camden House. pp. 130ff. ISBN 978-1-57113-276-5.
  27. ^ Karen Leeder; Robert Vilain (21 January 2010). The Cambridge Companion to Rilke. Cambridge University Press. pp. 24ff. ISBN 978-0-521-87943-9.
  28. ^ Rainer Maria Rilke; Robert Vilain; Susan Ranson (14 April 2011). Selected Poems: With Parallel German Text. OUP Oxford. pp. 343ff. ISBN 978-0-19-956941-0.
  29. ^ Erika Mitterer (2004). The prince of darkness. Ariadne Press. p. 663. ISBN 978-1-57241-134-0.
  30. ^ Freedman 1998, pp. 419–420.
  31. ^ Freedman 1998, pp. 421–422.
  32. ^ a b Freedman 1998, p. 422
  33. ^ "Rilke-Briefe: Nirgends ein Führer" (in German), Der Spiegel (21/1957). 22 May 1957. Retrieved 28 January 2014.
  34. ^ "Elegien gegen die Angstträume des Alltags" by Hellmuth Karasek (in German). Der Spiegel (47/1981). 11 November 1981; Karasek calls Rilke a friend of the Fascists.
  35. ^ Rainer Maria Rilke, Lettres Milanaises 1921–1926. Edited by Renée Lang. Paris: Librairie Plon, 1956[page needed]
  36. ^ a b c Excerpt from "Reading Rilke – Reflections on the Problems of Translation" by William H. Gass (1999) ISBN 0-375-40312-4; featured in The New York Times 2000. Accessed 18 August 2010 (subscription required)
  37. ^ a b Hoeniger, F. David. "Symbolism and Pattern in Rilke's Duino Elegies" in German Life and Letters, Volume 3, Issue 4 (July 1950), pp. 271–283.
  38. ^ a b c Perloff, Marjorie, "Reading Gass Reading Rilke" in Parnassus: Poetry in Review, Volume 25, Number 1/2 (2001).
  39. ^ Gass, William H. Reading Rilke: Reflections on the Problems of Translation (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1999).
  40. ^ Rilke, Rainer Maria. "First Elegy" from Duino Elegies, line 1.
  41. ^ Rilke, Rainer Maria. "First Elegy" from Duino Elegies, line 6; "Second Elegy", line 1.
  42. ^ Dash, Bibhudutt. "In the Matrix of the Divine: Approaches to Godhead in Rilke's Duino Elegies and Tennyson's In Memoriam" in Language in India Volume 11 (11 November 2011), pp. 355–371.
  43. ^ Freedman 1998, p. 481.
  44. ^ Sword, Helen. Engendering Inspiration: Visionary Strategies in Rilke, Lawrence, and H.D. (Ann Arbor, Michigan: University of Michigan Press, 1995), pp. 68–70.
  45. ^ Letter to Gertrud Ouckama Knoop, dated 20 April 1923; quoted in Snow, Edward, trans. and ed., Sonnets to Orpheus by Rainer Maria Rilke, bilingual edition, New York: North Point Press, 2004.
  46. ^ Sonette an Orpheus, Erste Teil, XIX, v. 8: "Gott mit der Leier"
  47. ^ Freedman, Ralph. "Das Stunden-Buch and Das Buch der Bilder: Harbingers of Rilke's Maturity" in Metzger, Erika A. and Metzger, Michael M. (editors). A Companion to the Works of Rainer Maria Rilke. (Rochester, New York: Camden House Publishing, 2001), 90–92.
  48. ^ Knapp, Liza (Winter 1999). "Tsvetaeva's Marine Mary Magdalene". Slavic and East European Journal. 43 (4): 597–620. doi:10.2307/309415. JSTOR 309415.
  49. ^ Haskins, Susan (1993). Mary Magdalen: Myth and Metaphor. Harcourt. p. 361. ISBN 9780151577651.
  50. ^ Komar, Kathleen L. "Rilke in America: A Poet Re-Created" in Heep, Hartmut (editor). Unreading Rilke: Unorthodox Approaches to a Cultural Myth (New York: Peter Lang, 2000), pp. 155–178.
  51. ^ Komar, Kathleen L. "Rethinking Rilke's Duisiner Elegien at the End of the Millennium" in Metzger, Erika A. A Companion to the Works of Rainer Maria Rilke (Rochester, New York: Camden House, 2004), p. 189.
  52. ^ See also: Mood, John. Rilke on Love and Other Difficulties (New York: W. W. Norton, 1975); and a book released by Rilke’s own publisher Insel Verlag, Hauschild, Vera (editor). Rilke für Gestreßte (Frankfurt am Main: Insel-Verlag, 1998).
  53. ^ Leclair, Thomas (Summer 1977). "William Gass: The Art of Fiction No. 65". The Paris Review. No. 70.
  54. ^ Malecka, Katarzyna. Death in the Works of Galway Kinnell (Amherst, New York: Cambria Press, 2008), passim.
  55. ^ Guenther, John. Sidney Keyes: A Biographical Enquiry (London: London Magazine Editions, 1967), p. 153.
  56. ^ "Self-Elegy: Keith Douglas and Sidney Keyes" (Chapter 9) in Kendall, Tim. Modern English War Poetry (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2006).
  57. ^ Metzger, Erika A. and Metzger, Michael M. "Introduction" in A Companion to the Works of Rainer Maria Rilke (Rochester, New York: Camden House, 2004), p. 8.
  58. ^ Perloff, Marjorie. "Apocalypse Then: Merwin and the Sorrows of Literary History" in Nelson, Cary and Folsom, Ed (eds). W. S. Merwin: Essays on the Poetry (University of Illinois, 1987), p. 144.
  59. ^ Perloff, Marjorie. "Transparent Selves': The Poetry of John Ashbery and Frank O’Hara," in Yearbook of English Studies: American Literature Special Number 8 (1978):171–196, at p. 175.
  60. ^ Robey, Christopher J. The Rainbow Bridge: On Pynchon's Use of Wittgenstein and Rilke (Olean, New York: St. Bonaventure University, 1982).
  61. ^ Gadamer analyzed many of Rilke's themes and symbols. See: Gadamer, Hans-Georg. "Mythopoietische Umkehrung im Rilke's Duisener Elegien" in Gesammelten Werke, Band 9: Ästhetik und Poetik II Hermenutik im Vollzug (Tübingen: J. C. B. Mohr, 1993), pp. 289–305.
  62. ^ Dworick, Stephanie. In the Company of Rilke: Why a 20th-Century Visionary Poet Speaks So Eloquently to 21st-Century Readers (New York: Penguin, 2011).
  63. ^ Cohn, Stephen (translator). "Introduction" in Rilke, Rainer Maria. Duino Elegies: A Bilingual Edition (Evanston, Illinois: Northwestern University Press, 1989), pp. 17–18. Quote: "Auden, Rilke's most influential English disciple, frequently paid homage to him, as in these lines which tell of the Elegies and of their difficult and chancy genesis..."

Sources

  • Freedman, Ralph (1998). Life of a Poet: Rainer Maria Rilke. New York: Northwestern University Press. ISBN 978-0-810-11543-9.
  • Prater, Donald A. (1986). A Ringing Glass: The Life of Rainer Maria Rilke. Oxford: Clarendon Press.

Further reading

Biographies

  • Corbett, Rachel, You Must Change Your Life: the Story of Rainer Maria Rilke and Auguste Rodin, New York: W. W. Norton and Company, 2016.
  • Tapper, Mirjam, Resa med Rilke, Mita bokförlag.
  • Torgersen, Eric, Dear Friend: Rainer Maria Rilke and Paula Modersohn-Becker, Northwestern University Press, 1998.
  • Von Thurn und Taxis, Princess Marie, The Poet and The Princess: Memories of Rainer Maria Rilke, Amun Press, 2017

Critical studies

  • Chamberlain, Lesley, Rilke the last Inward Man, London: Pushkin Press 2022.
  • Engel, Manfred and Lauterbach, Dorothea (ed.), Rilke Handbuch: Leben – Werk – Wirkung, Stuttgart: Metzler, 2004.
  • Erika, A and Metzger, Michael, A Companion to the Works of Rainer Maria Rilke, Rochester, 2001.
  • Gass, William H. Reading Rilke: Reflections on the Problems of Translation, Alfred A. Knopf, 2000.
  • Goldsmith, Ulrich, ed., Rainer Maria Rilke, a verse concordance to his complete lyrical poetry. Leeds: W. S. Maney, 1980.
  • Hutchinson, Ben. Rilke's Poetics of Becoming, Oxford: Legenda, 2006.
  • Leeder, Karen, and Robert Vilain (eds), The Cambridge Companion to Rilke. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010. ISBN 978-0-521-70508-0
  • Mood, John, A New Reading of Rilke's 'Elegies': Affirming the Unity of 'life-and-death Lewiston, New York: Edwin Mellen Press, 2009. ISBN 978-0-7734-3864-4.
  • Numerous contributors, A Reconsideration of Rainer Maria Rilke, Agenda poetry magazine, vol. 42 nos. 3–4, 2007. ISBN 978-0-902400-83-2.
  • Pechota Vuilleumier, Cornelia, Heim und Unheimlichkeit bei Rainer Maria Rilke und Lou Andreas-Salomé. Literarische Wechselwirkungen. Olms, Hildesheim, 2010. ISBN 978-3-487-14252-4
  • Ryan, Judith. Rilke, Modernism, and Poetic Tradition. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1999.
  • Schwarz, Egon, Poetry and Politics in the Works of Rainer Maria Rilke. Frederick Ungar, 1981. ISBN 978-0-8044-2811-8.
  • Neuman, Claude, The Sonnets to Orpheus and Selected Poems, English and French rhymed and metered translations, trilingual German-English-French editions, Editions www.ressouvenances.fr, 2017, 2018

External links

  • Rainer Maria Rilke: Letters to a Young Poet, The first letter (in English, French, Italian, German, Spanish, and Chamorro)
  • Rainer Rilke and his Poem Black Cat
  • Works by Rainer Maria Rilke at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Rainer Maria Rilke at Internet Archive
  • Works by Rainer Maria Rilke at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Publications by and about Rainer Maria Rilke in the catalogue Helveticat of the Swiss National Library
  • "Literary estate of Rainer Maria Rilke". HelveticArchives. Swiss National Library.
  • Rainer Maria Rilke, Profile at Poets.org
  • International Rilke Society (in German)
  • Rilke, Rainer Maria (1920). Erste Gedichte. Leipzig: Insel.
  • Translator of Rilke into English, interview with Joanna Macy (2010 original, 2019 updated: transcript and audio) for OnBeing.org
  • Poems by Rainer Maria Rilke: a new translation A new translation by Timothy Watson published on February 28, 2018

rainer, maria, rilke, rilke, redirects, here, other, uses, rilke, disambiguation, rené, karl, wilhelm, johann, josef, maria, rilke, december, 1875, december, 1926, shortened, german, ˈʁaɪnɐ, maˈʁiːa, ˈʁɪlkə, austrian, poet, novelist, acclaimed, idiosyncratic, . Rilke redirects here For other uses see Rilke disambiguation Rene Karl Wilhelm Johann Josef Maria Rilke 4 December 1875 29 December 1926 shortened to Rainer Maria Rilke German ˈʁaɪnɐ maˈʁiːa ˈʁɪlke was an Austrian poet and novelist Acclaimed as an idiosyncratic and expressive poet he is widely recognized as a significant writer in the German language 1 His work is viewed by critics and scholars as possessing undertones of mysticism exploring themes of subjective experience and disbelief 2 3 4 His writings include one novel several collections of poetry and several volumes of correspondence Rainer Maria RilkeRilke in 1900BornRene Karl Wilhelm Johann Josef Maria Rilke 1875 12 04 4 December 1875Prague Bohemia Austria HungaryDied29 December 1926 1926 12 29 aged 51 Montreux Vaud SwitzerlandOccupationPoet novelistLanguageGerman FrenchNationalityAustrianPeriod1894 1925Literary movementModernismSpouseClara Westhoff m 1901 wbr Children1SignatureRilke traveled extensively throughout Europe finally settling in Switzerland the inspiration for many of his poems While Rilke is best known for his contributions to German literature he also wrote in French Among English language readers his best known works include two poetry collections Duino Elegies Duineser Elegien and Sonnets to Orpheus Die Sonette an Orpheus a semi autobiographical novel The Notebooks of Malte Laurids Brigge Die Aufzeichnungen des Malte Laurids Brigge and a collection of ten letters published posthumously Letters to a Young Poet Briefe an einen jungen Dichter In the later 20th century his work found new audiences in citations by self help authors 5 6 7 and frequent quotations in television shows books and motion pictures 8 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1875 1896 1 2 Munich and Saint Petersburg 1 3 Paris 1902 1910 1 4 Duino and the First World War 1911 1919 1 5 Switzerland and Muzot 1919 1926 1 6 Death and burial 2 Writings 2 1 The Book of Hours 2 2 The Notebooks of Malte Laurids Brigge 2 3 Duino Elegies 2 4 Sonnets to Orpheus 2 5 Letters to a Young Poet 3 Style and themes 3 1 Legacy 4 Works 4 1 Complete works 4 2 Volumes of poetry 4 3 Prose collections 4 4 Letters 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 Further reading 8 1 Biographies 8 2 Critical studies 9 External linksBiography EditEarly life 1875 1896 Edit Rilke circa 1878 1879 He was born Rene Karl Wilhelm Johann Josef Maria Rilke in Prague capital of Bohemia then part of Austria Hungary now capital of the Czech Republic His childhood and youth in Prague were not always happy His father Josef Rilke 1838 1906 found employment as a railway official after an unsuccessful military career His mother Sophie Phia Entz 1851 1931 was from a well to do family in Prague the Entz Kinzelbergers who lived at Herrengasse Panska 8 where Rene spent many of his early years The relationship between Phia and her only son was coloured by her mourning for an earlier infant daughter who died within one week During Rilke s early years Phia acted as if she sought to recover the lost daughter by treating Rilke as if he were a girl According to Rilke he had to wear fine clothes and was a plaything for his mother like a big doll 9 10 11 a His parents marriage ended in 1884 His parents enrolled the poetically and artistically talented youth in a military academy in Sankt Polten Lower Austria He attended classes from 1886 until 1891 but left due to illness He then moved to Linz and entered a trade school Expelled in May 1892 the 16 year old returned to Prague where for three years he was tutored for the university entrance exam which he passed in 1895 Until 1896 he took classes in literature art history and philosophy in Prague 13 and Munich 14 Munich and Saint Petersburg Edit Rilke met and fell in love with the widely travelled and intellectual woman of letters Lou Andreas Salome in 1897 in Munich He changed his first name from Rene to Rainer at Salome s urging because she thought that name to be more masculine forceful and Germanic 15 His relationship with this married woman with whom he undertook two extensive trips to Russia lasted until 1900 Even after their separation Salome continued to be Rilke s most important confidante until the end of his life Having trained from 1912 to 1913 as a psychoanalyst with Sigmund Freud she shared her knowledge of psychoanalysis with Rilke In 1898 Rilke undertook a journey lasting several weeks to Italy The following year he travelled with Lou and her husband Friedrich Carl Andreas to Moscow where he met the novelist Leo Tolstoy Between May and August 1900 a second journey to Russia accompanied only by Lou again took him to Moscow and Saint Petersburg where he met the family of Boris Pasternak and Spiridon Drozhzhin a peasant poet Author Anna A Tavis cites the cultures of Bohemia and Russia as the key influences on Rilke s poetry and consciousness 16 In 1900 Rilke stayed at the artists colony at Worpswede Later his portrait would be painted by the proto expressionist Paula Modersohn Becker whom he got to know at Worpswede It was here that he got to know the sculptor Clara Westhoff whom he married the following year Their daughter Ruth 1901 1972 was born in December 1901 Paris 1902 1910 Edit Paula Modersohn Becker 1876 1907 an early expressionist painter became acquainted with Rilke in Worpswede and Paris and painted his portrait in 1906 In the summer of 1902 Rilke left home and travelled to Paris to write a monograph on the sculptor Auguste Rodin Before long his wife left their daughter with her parents and joined Rilke there The relationship between Rilke and Clara Westhoff continued for the rest of his life a mutually agreed upon effort towards a divorce was bureaucratically hindered by the fact that Rilke was a Catholic albeit a non practising one At first Rilke had a difficult time in Paris an experience that he called upon in the first part of his only novel The Notebooks of Malte Laurids Brigge At the same time his encounter with modernism was very stimulating Rilke became deeply involved with the sculpture of Rodin and then the work of Paul Cezanne For a time he acted as Rodin s secretary also lecturing and writing a long essay on Rodin and his work Rodin taught him the value of objective observation and under this influence Rilke dramatically transformed his poetic style from the subjective and sometimes incantatory language of his earlier work into something quite new in European literature The result was the New Poems famous for the thing poems expressing Rilke s rejuvenated artistic vision During these years Paris increasingly became the writer s main residence The most important works of the Paris period were Neue Gedichte New Poems 1907 Der Neuen Gedichte Anderer Teil Another Part of the New Poems 1908 the two Requiem poems 1909 and the novel The Notebooks of Malte Laurids Brigge started in 1904 and completed in January 1910 17 During the later part of this decade Rilke spent extended periods in Ronda the famous bullfighting centre in southern Spain where he kept a permanent room at the Hotel Reina Victoria from December 1912 to February 1913 18 19 Duino and the First World War 1911 1919 Edit Duino Castle near Trieste Italy was where Rilke began writing the Duino Elegies in 1912 recounting that he heard the famous first line as a voice in the wind while walking along the cliffs and that he wrote it quickly in his notebook Between October 1911 and May 1912 Rilke stayed at the Castle Duino near Trieste home of Princess Marie of Thurn und Taxis There in 1912 he began the poem cycle called the Duino Elegies which would remain unfinished for a decade because of a long lasting creativity crisis Rilke had developed an admiration for El Greco as early as 1908 so he visited Toledo during the winter of 1912 13 to see Greco s paintings It has been suggested that Greco s manner of depicting angels influenced the conception of the angel in the Duino Elegies 20 The outbreak of World War I surprised Rilke during a stay in Germany He was unable to return to Paris where his property was confiscated and auctioned He spent the greater part of the war in Munich From 1914 to 1916 he had a turbulent affair with the painter Lou Albert Lasard Rilke was called up at the beginning of 1916 and had to undertake basic training in Vienna Influential friends interceded on his behalf he was transferred to the War Records Office and discharged from the military on 9 June 1916 He returned to Munich interrupted by a stay at Hertha Koenig s de manor Gut Bockel de in Westphalia The traumatic experience of military service a reminder of the horrors of the military academy almost completely silenced him as a poet 21 Switzerland and Muzot 1919 1926 Edit Chateau de Muzot in Veyras Switzerland was where Rilke completed writing the Duino Elegies in a savage creative storm in February 1922 On 11 June 1919 Rilke travelled from Munich to Switzerland He met Polish German painter Baladine Klossowska with whom he was in relationship to his death in 1926 The outward motive was an invitation to lecture in Zurich but the real reason was the wish to escape the post war chaos and take up his work on the Duino Elegies once again The search for a suitable and affordable place to live proved to be very difficult Among other places Rilke lived in Soglio Locarno and Berg am Irchel It was only in mid 1921 that was he able to find a permanent residence in the Chateau de Muzot in the commune of Veyras close to Sierre in Valais In an intense creative period Rilke completed the Duino Elegies in several weeks in February 1922 Before and after this period Rilke rapidly wrote both parts of the poem cycle Sonnets to Orpheus containing 55 entire sonnets Together these two have often been taken as constituting the high points of Rilke s work In May 1922 Rilke s patron Werner Reinhart bought and renovated Muzot so that Rilke could live there rent free 22 During this time Reinhart introduced Rilke to his protegee the Australian violinist Alma Moodie 23 Rilke was so impressed with her playing that he wrote in a letter What a sound what richness what determination That and the Sonnets to Orpheus those were two strings of the same voice And she plays mostly Bach Muzot has received its musical christening 23 24 25 From 1923 on Rilke increasingly struggled with health problems that necessitated many long stays at a sanatorium in Territet near Montreux on Lake Geneva His long stay in Paris between January and August 1925 was an attempt to escape his illness through a change in location and living conditions Despite this numerous important individual poems appeared in the years 1923 1926 including Gong and Mausoleum as well as his abundant lyrical work in French His book of French poems Vergers was published in 1926 In 1924 Erika Mitterer de began writing poems to Rilke who wrote back with approximately 50 poems of his own and called her verse a Herzlandschaft landscape of the heart 26 This was the only time Rilke had a productive poetic collaboration throughout all his work 27 Mitterer also visited Rilke 28 In 1950 her Correspondence in Verse with Rilke was published and received much praise 29 Rilke supported the Russian Revolution in 1917 as well as the Bavarian Soviet Republic in 1919 30 He became friends with Ernst Toller and mourned the deaths of Rosa Luxemburg Kurt Eisner and Karl Liebknecht 31 He confided that of the five or six newspapers he read daily those on the far left came closest to his own opinions 32 He developed a reputation for supporting left wing causes and thus out of fear for his own safety became more reticent about politics after the Bavarian Republic was crushed by the right wing Freikorps 32 In January and February 1926 Rilke wrote three letters to the Mussolini adversary Aurelia Gallarati Scotti in which he praised Benito Mussolini and described fascism as a healing agent 33 34 35 Death and burial Edit Rilke s grave in Raron Switzerland Shortly before his death Rilke s illness was diagnosed as leukemia He suffered ulcerous sores in his mouth pain troubled his stomach and intestines and he struggled with increasingly low spirits 36 Open eyed he died in the arms of his doctor on 29 December 1926 in the Valmont Sanatorium in Switzerland He was buried on 2 January 1927 in the Raron cemetery to the west of Visp 36 Rilke had chosen as his own epitaph this poem Rose oh reiner Widerspruch Lust Niemandes Schlaf zu sein unter soviel Lidern Rose o pure contradiction desire to be no one s sleep beneath so many lids A myth developed surrounding his death and roses It was said To honour a visitor the Egyptian beauty Nimet Eloui Bey Rilke gathered some roses from his garden While doing so he pricked his hand on a thorn This small wound failed to heal grew rapidly worse soon his entire arm was swollen and his other arm became affected as well and so he died 36 Writings EditThe Book of Hours Edit See also The Book of Hours Rilke s three complete cycles of poems that constitute The Book of Hours Das Stunden Buch were published by Insel Verlag in April 1905 These poems explore the Christian search for God and the nature of Prayer using symbolism from Saint Francis and Rilke s observation of Orthodox Christianity during his travels in Russia in the early years of the twentieth century The Notebooks of Malte Laurids Brigge Edit See also The Notebooks of Malte Laurids Brigge Rilke wrote his only novel Die Aufzeichnungen des Malte Laurids Brigge translated as The Notebooks of Malte Laurids Brigge while living in Paris completing the work in 1910 The narrative takes the form of a rambling novelette filled with poetic language and contains among other things a retelling of the prodigal son tale a striking description of death by illness an ode to the joys of roaming free during childhood a chilling description of how people wear false faces with others and a snarky comment about the weirdness of neighbors This semi autobiographical novel adopts the style and technique that became associated with Expressionism which entered European fiction and art in the early 20th century He was inspired by Sigbjorn Obstfelder s work A Priest s Diary and Jens Peter Jacobsen s novel Niels Lyhne 1880 which traces the fate of an atheist in a merciless world Rilke addresses existential themes profoundly probing the quest for individuality and the significance of death and reflecting on the experience of time as death approaches He draws considerably on the writings of Nietzsche whose work he came to know through Lou Andreas Salome His work also incorporates impressionistic techniques that were influenced by Cezanne and Rodin to whom Rilke was secretary in 1905 1906 He combines these techniques and motifs to conjure images of mankind s anxiety and alienation in the face of an increasingly scientific industrial and reified world Duino Elegies Edit See also Duino Elegies Rilke began writing the elegies in 1912 while a guest of Princess Marie von Thurn und Taxis 1855 1934 at Duino Castle near Trieste on the Adriatic Sea During this ten year period the elegies languished incomplete for long stretches of time as Rilke suffered frequently from severe depression some of which was caused by the events of World War I and his conscripted military service Aside from brief episodes of writing in 1913 and 1915 Rilke did not return to the work until a few years after the war ended With a sudden renewed inspiration writing in a frantic pace he described as a savage creative storm he completed the collection in February 1922 while staying at Chateau de Muzot in Veyras in Switzerland s Rhone Valley After their publication and his death shortly thereafter the Duino Elegies were quickly recognized by critics and scholars as Rilke s most important work 37 38 The Duino Elegies are intensely religious mystical poems that weigh beauty and existential suffering 39 The poems employ a rich symbolism of angels and salvation but not in keeping with typical Christian interpretations Rilke begins the first elegy in an invocation of philosophical despair asking Who if I cried out would hear me among the hierarchies of angels Wer wenn ich schriee horte mich denn aus der Engel Ordnungen 40 and later declares that every angel is terrifying Jeder Engel ist schrecklich 41 While labelling of these poems as elegies would typically imply melancholy and lamentation many passages are marked by their positive energy and unrestrained enthusiasm 37 Together the Duino Elegies are described as a metamorphosis of Rilke s ontological torment and an impassioned monologue about coming to terms with human existence discussing themes of the limitations and insufficiency of the human condition and fractured human consciousness man s loneliness the perfection of the angels life and death love and lovers and the task of the poet 42 Sonnets to Orpheus Edit See also Sonnets to Orpheus With news of the death of Wera Knoop 1900 1919 his daughter s friend Rilke was inspired to create and set to work on Sonnets to Orpheus 43 In 1922 between February 2 and 5 he completed the first section of 26 sonnets For the next few days he focused on the Duino Elegies completing them on the evening of February 11 Immediately thereafter he returned to work on the Sonnets and completed the following section of 29 sonnets in less than two weeks Throughout the Sonnets Wera is frequently referenced both directly by name and indirectly in allusions to a dancer and the mythical Eurydice 44 Although Rilke claimed that the entire cycle was inspired by Wera she appears as a character in only one of the poems He insisted however that Wera s own figure nevertheless governs and moves the course of the whole 45 The sonnets contents are as is typical of Rilke highly metaphorical The character of Orpheus whom Rilke refers to as the god with the lyre 46 appears several times in the cycle as do other mythical characters such as Daphne There are also biblical allusions including a reference to Esau Other themes involve animals peoples of different cultures and time and death Letters to a Young Poet Edit Letters to a Young Poet cover of the 1934 edition See also Letters to a Young Poet In 1929 a minor writer Franz Xaver Kappus 1883 1966 published a collection of ten letters that Rilke had written to him when Kappus was a 19 year old officer cadet studying at the Theresian Military Academy in Wiener Neustadt Rilke had also attended this academy Between 1902 and 1908 the young Kappus had written Rilke when he was uncertain about his future as a military officer or as a poet Initially he sought Rilke s advice as to the quality of his poetry and whether he ought to pursue writing as a career While he declined to comment on Kappus s writings Rilke advised Kappus on how a poet should feel love and seek truth in trying to understand and experience the world around him and engage the world of art These letters offer insight into the ideas and themes that appear in Rilke s poetry and his working process and were written during a key period of Rilke s early artistic development after his reputation as a poet began to be established with the publication of parts of Das Stunden Buch The Book of Hours and Das Buch der Bilder The Book of Images 47 Style and themes EditRilke extensively engaged with metaphors metonymy and contradictions in his poetry and prose to convey disbelief and a crisis of faith Figures from Greek mythology such as Apollo Hermes and Orpheus recur as motifs in his poems and are depicted in original interpretations that often double as analogies for his experiences Rilke s poems also feature figures of angels famously described in the Duino Elegies as terrifying schrecklich he also occasionally explored the crisis of his Catholic faith including in his little known 1898 poem Visions of Christ where he depicted Mary Magdalene as the mother of Jesus child 48 49 Legacy Edit A portrait of Rilke painted two years after his death by Leonid Pasternak Rilke is one of the best selling poets in the United States 50 In popular culture Rilke is frequently quoted or referenced in television shows motion pictures music and other works when these works discuss the subject of love or angels 51 His work is often described as mystical and has been quoted and referenced by self help authors 5 Rilke has been reinterpreted as a master who can lead us to a more fulfilled and less anxious life 6 52 Rilke s work has influenced several poets and writers including William H Gass 53 Galway Kinnell 54 Sidney Keyes 55 56 Stephen Spender 38 Robert Bly 38 57 W S Merwin 58 John Ashbery 59 novelist Thomas Pynchon 60 and the philosopher Hans Georg Gadamer 61 62 British poet W H Auden 1907 1973 has been described as Rilke s most influential English disciple and he frequently paid homage to him or used the imagery of angels in his work 63 Works EditComplete works Edit Rainer Maria Rilke Samtliche Werke in 12 Banden Complete Works in 12 Volumes published by Rilke Archive in association with Ruth Sieber Rilke edited by Ernst Zinn Frankfurt am Main 1976 Rainer Maria Rilke Werke Works Annotated edition in four volumes with supplementary fifth volume published by Manfred Engel Ulrich Fulleborn Dorothea Lauterbach Horst Nalewski and August Stahl Frankfurt am Main and Leipzig 1996 and 2003 Volumes of poetry Edit Leben und Lieder Life and Songs 1894 Larenopfer Offerings to the Lares 1895 Traumgekront Dream Crowned 1897 Advent Advent 1898 Das Stunden Buch The Book of Hours Das Buch vom monchischen Leben The Book of Monastic Life 1899 Das Buch von der Pilgerschaft The Book of Pilgrimage 1901 Geldbaum 1901 Das Buch von der Armut und vom Tode The Book of Poverty and Death 1903 Das Buch der Bilder The Book of Images 4 parts 1902 1906 Neue Gedichte New Poems 1907 Duineser Elegien Duino Elegies 1922 Sonette an Orpheus Sonnets to Orpheus 1922 Prose collections Edit Geschichten vom Lieben Gott Stories of God Collection of tales 1900 Auguste Rodin 1903 Die Weise von Liebe und Tod des Cornets Christoph Rilke The Lay of the Love and Death of Cornet Christoph Rilke Lyric story 1906 Die Aufzeichnungen des Malte Laurids Brigge The Notebooks of Malte Laurids Brigge Novel 1910 Letters Edit Collected letters Gesammelte Briefe in sechs Banden Collected Letters in Six Volumes published by Ruth Sieber Rilke and Carl Sieber Leipzig 1936 1939 Briefe Letters published by the Rilke Archive in Weimar Two volumes Wiesbaden 1950 reprinted 1987 in single volume Briefe in Zwei Banden Letters in Two Volumes Horst Nalewski Frankfurt and Leipzig 1991 Other volumes of letters Briefe an Auguste Rodin Insel Verlag 1928 Briefwechsel mit Marie von Thurn und Taxis two volumes edited by Ernst Zinn with a foreword by Rudolf Kassner Editions Max Niehans 1954 Briefwechsel mit Thankmar von Munchhausen 1913 bis 1925 Suhrkamp Insel Verlag 2004 Briefwechsel mit Rolf von Ungern Sternberg und weitere Dokumente zur Ubertragung der Stances von Jean Moreas Suhrkamp Insel Verlag 2002 The Dark Interval Letters for the Grieving Heart edited and translated by Ulrich C Baer de New York Random House 2018 Noi siamo le api dell invisibile Milano De Piante Editore 2022 ISBN 979 12 803 6219 3See also Edit Poetry portal Biography portalBaladine Klossowska Rainer Maria Rilke Foundation in Sierre SwitzerlandNotes Edit From the mid 16th century until the early 20th century young boys in the Western world were unbreeched and wore gowns or dresses until an age that varied between two and eight 12 References Edit Biography Rainer Maria Rilke 1875 1926 Poetry Foundation website Retrieved 2 February 2013 Muller Hans Rudolf Rainer Maria Rilke als Mystiker Bekenntnis und Lebensdeutung in Rilkes Dichtungen Berlin Furche 1935 Stanley Patricia H Rilke s Duino Elegies An Alternative Approach to the Study of Mysticism in Heep Hartmut editor Unreading Rilke Unorthodox Approaches to a Cultural Myth New York Peter Lang 2000 Freedman 1998 p 515 a b Komar Kathleen L Rilke Metaphysics in a New Age in Bauschinger Sigrid and Cocalis Susan Rilke Rezeptionen Rilke Reconsidered Tubingen Basel Franke 1995 pp 155 169 Rilke reinterpreted as a master who can lead us to a more fulfilled and less anxious life a b Komar Kathleen L Rethinking Rilke s Duisiner Elegien at the End of the Millennium in Metzger Erika A A Companion to the Works of Rainer Maria Rilke Rochester New York Camden House 2004 pp 188 189 See also Mood John Rilke on Love and Other Difficulties New York W W Norton amp Company 1975 and a book released by Rilke s own publisher Insel Verlag Hauschild Vera ed Rilke fur Gestresste Frankfurt am Main Insel Verlag 1998 Komar Kathleen L Rethinking Rilke s Duisiner Elegien at the End of the Millennium in Metzger Erika A A Companion to the Works of Rainer Maria Rilke Rochester New York Camden House 2004 189 Prater 1986 p 5 Freedman 1998 p 9 Life of a Poet Rainer Maria Rilke at www washingtonpost com Boy s Dress V amp A Museum of childhood accessed June 27 2019 Freedman 1998 p 36 Rainer Maria Rilke Austrian German poet Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 17 July 2017 Arana R Victoria 2008 The Facts on File Companion to World Poetry 1900 to the Present Infobase p 377 ISBN 978 0 8160 6457 1 Anna A Tavis Rilke s Russia A Cultural Encounter Northwestern University Press 1997 ISBN 0 8101 1466 6 p 1 Rilke Rainer Maria 12 July 2000 Rainer Maria Rilke Rainer Maria Rilke Retrieved 17 July 2017 Mit Rilke in Ronda by Volker Mauersberger de Die Zeit 11 February 1983 in German Hotel Catalonia Reina Victoria andalucia com Fatima Naqvi Peters A Turning Point in Rilke s Evolution The Experience of El Greco The Germanic Review Literature Culture Theory Vol 72 Is 4 pp 344 362 1997 An Kurt Wolf 28 Marz 1917 S Stefan Schank Rainer Maria Rilke pp 119 121 Freedman 1998 p 505 a b R M Rilke Music as Metaphor Photo and description Picture poems com Retrieved 7 June 2012 Rainer Maria Rilke a brief biographical overview Picture poems com Retrieved 7 June 2012 Katrin Maria Kohl Ritchie Robertson 2006 A History of Austrian Literature 1918 2000 Camden House pp 130ff ISBN 978 1 57113 276 5 Karen Leeder Robert Vilain 21 January 2010 The Cambridge Companion to Rilke Cambridge University Press pp 24ff ISBN 978 0 521 87943 9 Rainer Maria Rilke Robert Vilain Susan Ranson 14 April 2011 Selected Poems With Parallel German Text OUP Oxford pp 343ff ISBN 978 0 19 956941 0 Erika Mitterer 2004 The prince of darkness Ariadne Press p 663 ISBN 978 1 57241 134 0 Freedman 1998 pp 419 420 Freedman 1998 pp 421 422 a b Freedman 1998 p 422 Rilke Briefe Nirgends ein Fuhrer in German Der Spiegel 21 1957 22 May 1957 Retrieved 28 January 2014 Elegien gegen die Angsttraume des Alltags by Hellmuth Karasek in German Der Spiegel 47 1981 11 November 1981 Karasek calls Rilke a friend of the Fascists Rainer Maria Rilke Lettres Milanaises 1921 1926 Edited by Renee Lang Paris Librairie Plon 1956 page needed a b c Excerpt from Reading Rilke Reflections on the Problems of Translation by William H Gass 1999 ISBN 0 375 40312 4 featured in The New York Times 2000 Accessed 18 August 2010 subscription required a b Hoeniger F David Symbolism and Pattern in Rilke s Duino Elegies in German Life and Letters Volume 3 Issue 4 July 1950 pp 271 283 a b c Perloff Marjorie Reading Gass Reading Rilke in Parnassus Poetry in Review Volume 25 Number 1 2 2001 Gass William H Reading Rilke Reflections on the Problems of Translation New York Alfred A Knopf 1999 Rilke Rainer Maria First Elegy from Duino Elegies line 1 Rilke Rainer Maria First Elegy from Duino Elegies line 6 Second Elegy line 1 Dash Bibhudutt In the Matrix of the Divine Approaches to Godhead in Rilke s Duino Elegies and Tennyson s In Memoriam in Language in India Volume 11 11 November 2011 pp 355 371 Freedman 1998 p 481 Sword Helen Engendering Inspiration Visionary Strategies in Rilke Lawrence and H D Ann Arbor Michigan University of Michigan Press 1995 pp 68 70 Letter to Gertrud Ouckama Knoop dated 20 April 1923 quoted in Snow Edward trans and ed Sonnets to Orpheus by Rainer Maria Rilke bilingual edition New York North Point Press 2004 Sonette an Orpheus Erste Teil XIX v 8 Gott mit der Leier Freedman Ralph Das Stunden Buch and Das Buch der Bilder Harbingers of Rilke s Maturity in Metzger Erika A and Metzger Michael M editors A Companion to the Works of Rainer Maria Rilke Rochester New York Camden House Publishing 2001 90 92 Knapp Liza Winter 1999 Tsvetaeva s Marine Mary Magdalene Slavic and East European Journal 43 4 597 620 doi 10 2307 309415 JSTOR 309415 Haskins Susan 1993 Mary Magdalen Myth and Metaphor Harcourt p 361 ISBN 9780151577651 Komar Kathleen L Rilke in America A Poet Re Created in Heep Hartmut editor Unreading Rilke Unorthodox Approaches to a Cultural Myth New York Peter Lang 2000 pp 155 178 Komar Kathleen L Rethinking Rilke s Duisiner Elegien at the End of the Millennium in Metzger Erika A A Companion to the Works of Rainer Maria Rilke Rochester New York Camden House 2004 p 189 See also Mood John Rilke on Love and Other Difficulties New York W W Norton 1975 and a book released by Rilke s own publisher Insel Verlag Hauschild Vera editor Rilke fur Gestresste Frankfurt am Main Insel Verlag 1998 Leclair Thomas Summer 1977 William Gass The Art of Fiction No 65 The Paris Review No 70 Malecka Katarzyna Death in the Works of Galway Kinnell Amherst New York Cambria Press 2008 passim Guenther John Sidney Keyes A Biographical Enquiry London London Magazine Editions 1967 p 153 Self Elegy Keith Douglas and Sidney Keyes Chapter 9 in Kendall Tim Modern English War Poetry Oxford Oxford University Press 2006 Metzger Erika A and Metzger Michael M Introduction in A Companion to the Works of Rainer Maria Rilke Rochester New York Camden House 2004 p 8 Perloff Marjorie Apocalypse Then Merwin and the Sorrows of Literary History in Nelson Cary and Folsom Ed eds W S Merwin Essays on the Poetry University of Illinois 1987 p 144 Perloff Marjorie Transparent Selves The Poetry of John Ashbery and Frank O Hara in Yearbook of English Studies American Literature Special Number 8 1978 171 196 at p 175 Robey Christopher J The Rainbow Bridge On Pynchon s Use of Wittgenstein and Rilke Olean New York St Bonaventure University 1982 Gadamer analyzed many of Rilke s themes and symbols See Gadamer Hans Georg Mythopoietische Umkehrung im Rilke s Duisener Elegien in Gesammelten Werke Band 9 Asthetik und Poetik II Hermenutik im Vollzug Tubingen J C B Mohr 1993 pp 289 305 Dworick Stephanie In the Company of Rilke Why a 20th Century Visionary Poet Speaks So Eloquently to 21st Century Readers New York Penguin 2011 Cohn Stephen translator Introduction in Rilke Rainer Maria Duino Elegies A Bilingual Edition Evanston Illinois Northwestern University Press 1989 pp 17 18 Quote Auden Rilke s most influential English disciple frequently paid homage to him as in these lines which tell of the Elegies and of their difficult and chancy genesis Sources Freedman Ralph 1998 Life of a Poet Rainer Maria Rilke New York Northwestern University Press ISBN 978 0 810 11543 9 Prater Donald A 1986 A Ringing Glass The Life of Rainer Maria Rilke Oxford Clarendon Press Further reading EditBiographies Edit Corbett Rachel You Must Change Your Life the Story of Rainer Maria Rilke and Auguste Rodin New York W W Norton and Company 2016 Tapper Mirjam Resa med Rilke Mita bokforlag Torgersen Eric Dear Friend Rainer Maria Rilke and Paula Modersohn Becker Northwestern University Press 1998 Von Thurn und Taxis Princess Marie The Poet and The Princess Memories of Rainer Maria Rilke Amun Press 2017Critical studies Edit Chamberlain Lesley Rilke the last Inward Man London Pushkin Press 2022 Engel Manfred and Lauterbach Dorothea ed Rilke Handbuch Leben Werk Wirkung Stuttgart Metzler 2004 Erika A and Metzger Michael A Companion to the Works of Rainer Maria Rilke Rochester 2001 Gass William H Reading Rilke Reflections on the Problems of Translation Alfred A Knopf 2000 Goldsmith Ulrich ed Rainer Maria Rilke a verse concordance to his complete lyrical poetry Leeds W S Maney 1980 Hutchinson Ben Rilke s Poetics of Becoming Oxford Legenda 2006 Leeder Karen and Robert Vilain eds The Cambridge Companion to Rilke Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2010 ISBN 978 0 521 70508 0 Mood John A New Reading of Rilke s Elegies Affirming the Unity of life and death Lewiston New York Edwin Mellen Press 2009 ISBN 978 0 7734 3864 4 Numerous contributors A Reconsideration of Rainer Maria Rilke Agenda poetry magazine vol 42 nos 3 4 2007 ISBN 978 0 902400 83 2 Pechota Vuilleumier Cornelia Heim und Unheimlichkeit bei Rainer Maria Rilke und Lou Andreas Salome Literarische Wechselwirkungen Olms Hildesheim 2010 ISBN 978 3 487 14252 4 Ryan Judith Rilke Modernism and Poetic Tradition Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1999 Schwarz Egon Poetry and Politics in the Works of Rainer Maria Rilke Frederick Ungar 1981 ISBN 978 0 8044 2811 8 Neuman Claude The Sonnets to Orpheus and Selected Poems English and French rhymed and metered translations trilingual German English French editions Editions www ressouvenances fr 2017 2018External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Rainer Maria Rilke German Wikisource has original text related to this article Rainer Maria Rilke Wikisource has original works by or about Rainer Maria Rilke Wikimedia Commons has media related to Rainer Maria Rilke Rainer Maria Rilke Letters to a Young Poet The first letter in English French Italian German Spanish and Chamorro Rainer Rilke and his Poem Black Cat Works by Rainer Maria Rilke at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Rainer Maria Rilke at Internet Archive Works by Rainer Maria Rilke at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Publications by and about Rainer Maria Rilke in the catalogue Helveticat of the Swiss National Library Literary estate of Rainer Maria Rilke HelveticArchives Swiss National Library Rainer Maria Rilke Profile at Poets org International Rilke Society in German Rilke Rainer Maria 1920 Erste Gedichte Leipzig Insel Translator of Rilke into English interview with Joanna Macy 2010 original 2019 updated transcript and audio for OnBeing org Poems by Rainer Maria Rilke a new translation A new translation by Timothy Watson published on February 28 2018 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rainer Maria Rilke amp oldid 1137872558, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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