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Rainer Maria Rilke

Poems

  • shoontwniehas quoted7 days ago
    ." And he sums up this one man's greatness: "Sometime it will be realized what has made this great artist so supreme. He was a worker whose only desire was to penetrate with all his forces into the humble and the difficult significance of his tool. Therein lay a certain renunciation of life but in just this renunciation lay his triumph—for Life entered into his work."
  • shoontwniehas quoted7 days ago
    "Kings in old legends seem
    Like mountains rising in the evening light.
    They blind all with their gleam,
    Their loins encircled are by girdles bright,
    Their robes are edged with bands
    Of precious stones—the rarest earth affords—
    With richly jeweled hands
    They hold their slender, shining, naked swords."
  • shoontwniehas quoted21 days ago
    "That is longing: To dwell in the flux of things,
    To have no home in the present.
    And these are wishes: gentle dialogues
    Of the poor hours with eternity."
  • shoontwniehas quoted21 days ago
    "Russia became for me the reality and the deep daily realization that reality is something that comes infinitely slowly to those who have patience. Russia is the country where men are solitary, each one with a world within himself, each one profound in his humbleness and without fear of humiliating himself, and because of that truly pious. Here the words of men are only fragile bridges above their real life."
  • shoontwniehas quoted21 days ago
    Dostoievsky, whom Merejkovsky describes somewhere as the man with the never-young face, the face "with its shadows of suffering and its wrinkles of sunken-in cheeks ... but that which gives to this face its most tortured expression is its seeming immobility, the suddenly interrupted impulse, the life hardened into a stone:" this Dostoievsky and particularly his Rodion Raskolnikov cycle became a profound artistic experience to Rilke.
  • shoontwniehas quoted21 days ago
    A sojourn in Russia and especially the acquaintance with the novels of Dostoievsky became potent factors in Rilke's development and served to deepen creations which without this influence might have terminated in a grandiose æsthesia.
  • shoontwniehas quoted21 days ago
    "How shall I go on tiptoe
    From childhood to Annunciation
    Through the dim twilight
    Into Thy Garden?"
  • shoontwniehas quoted21 days ago
    The Prayers of the Maidens to Mary have not the mild melody of maidenly prayer; they vibrate with the ecstasy of expectant life, and the Madonna is more than the Heavenly Virgin, their longing transforms her into the symbol of earthly love and motherhood.
  • shoontwniehas quoted21 days ago
    "deep into life, out beyond time."
  • shoontwniehas quoted21 days ago
    "Without is everything that I feel within myself, and without and within myself everything is immeasurable, illimitable."
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