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Sonnets to Orpheus
Sonnets to Orpheus | Rainer Maria Rilke
6 posts | 6 read | 4 to read
Sonnets to Orpheus is Rainer Maria Rilkes first and only sonnet sequence. It is an undisputed masterpiece by one of the greatest modern poets, translated here by a master of translation, David Young. Rilke revived and transformed the traditional sonnet sequence in the Sonnets. Instead of centering on love for a particular person, as has many other sonneteers, he wrote an extended love poem to the world, celebrating such diverse things as mirrors, dogs, fruit, breathing, and childhood. Many of the sonnets are addressed to two recurrent figures: the god Orpheus (prototype of the poet) and a young dancer, whose death is treated elegiacally. These ecstatic and meditative lyric poems are a kind of manual on how to approach the world how to understand and love it. David Youngs is the first most sensitive of the translations of this work, superior to other translations in sound and sense. He captures Rilkes simple, concrete, and colloquial language, writing with a precision close to the original.
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merelybookish
Sonnets to Orpheus | Rainer Maria Rilke
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A little Rilke for Monday morning.
#resolve #poetrymatters @TheSpineView

TheSpineView Great choice! 2y
36 likes1 comment
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merelybookish
Sonnets to Orpheus | Rainer Maria Rilke
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Who else but Rilke for #mystery. 😍
Thanks @TheSpineView for another month of @poetrymatters. Goodbye letter M!

vivastory One of the best imo 3y
TheSpineView My pleasure! I love reading the poems! This is another fabulous poem! 💜💜💜 3y
batsy I'm reading the Sonnets now! Just finished Duino Elegies—no words, really. I'm not sure how to describe how Rilke's poems make me feel. 3y
41 likes3 comments
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LiterRohde
Sonnets to Orpheus | Rainer Maria Rilke
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“Quiet friend who has come so far, feel how your breathing makes more space around you. Let this darkness be a bell tower and you the bell. As you ring, what batters you becomes your strength. Move back and forth into the change. What is it like, such intensity of pain? If the drink is bitter, turn yourself to wine.” 👇

#PoetryMatters | 6: #Water

📷: Made with Typorama

LiterRohde “In this uncontainable night,
be the mystery at the crossroads of your senses, the meaning discovered there. And if the world has ceased to hear you, say to the silent earth: I flow. To the rushing water, speak: I am.”
5y
TheSpineView Wow! Love this one!💜💜💜 5y
45 likes1 stack add2 comments
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LiterRohde
Sonnets to Orpheus | Rainer Maria Rilke
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“Here among the disappearing, in the realm of the transient, be a ringing glass that shatters as it rings.”

#QuotsyMay18 | 6: #Glass

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jen_hayes7
Sonnets to Orpheus | Rainer Maria Rilke
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How have I managed to read 14 of my books for this challenge and not get a Bingo?! Progress is being made though, which is super exciting. #litsyreadingchallenge

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LauraBeth
Sonnets to Orpheus | Rainer Maria Rilke
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This entire sonnet addresses pretty much everything that needs to be said in life. This is just a snippet of it (although Rilke's genius can never be parsed) 😀

Also now wondering why when I type sonnet, my autocorrect changes it to sinner... 🤔#litsypoetry365

SharonGoforth ❤❤ 8y
93 likes1 comment