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POEMS TO NIGHT

Rainer Maria Rilke

Edited, Translated and with an Introduction by Will Stone

PUSHKIN PRESS

LONDON

I believe in Nightโ€ฆ

                               rilke

(from The Book of Monkish Life, 1899)

CONTENTS

Title Page

Epigraph

List of Poems

Acknowledgements

Introduction

Poems to Night

Poems to Night: Drafts

Further Poems and Sketches around the Theme of Night

Biographical Notes

About the Publisher

Copyright

LIST OF POEMS

Poems to Night

The Siblings

When your face consumes me

Once I took into my hands

From face to face

Look, angels sense through space

Did I not breathe out of midnights

So, now it will be the angel

Away, I asked you finally to taste my smile

Strong, silent, candelabra placed

Out of this cloud, see: the one that so wildly obscures

Why must one go out and take alien things

But for myself, when I find myself back in the citiesโ€™

Straining so hard against the powerful night

Overflowing skies of squandered stars

Where I once was, or am: there you are treading

Thoughts of night, raised from intuited experience

Often I gazed at you in wonder. I stood at the window begun yesterday

I want to hold out. Act. Go over

Ah, from an angelโ€™s touch falls

Is pain โ€“ as soon as the ploughshare

You who super-elevates me with this

Lifting oneโ€™s eyes from the book, from the close and countable lines

Poems to Night: Drafts

Isnโ€™t there a smile? See, what is there

Turned upwards to the nourishing one

Why does the day persuade us

(To the Angel)

How did I hold out this face, that its feeling

When I feed on your face this way

Only now, at the nocturnal hour, am I without fear

Further Poems and Sketches around the Theme of Night

Now the red barberries are already ripening

From a Stormy Night

Night of the Spring Equinox

Stars Behind Olives

Nocturnal Walk

Urban Summer Night

Moonlit Night

Like the evening wind

At night I wish to converse with the angel

Night Sky and Falling Star

Love the angel is space

From the Periphery: Night

Strong star, without need of support

What reaches us with the starlight

Earlier, how often, we stayed, star in star

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

I would like to acknowledge the generous assistance of Brigitte Duvillard, Director of the Fondation Rilke in Sierre, who arranged a residence at the Villa Ruffieux in the Chรขteau Mercier above Sierre during June/July 2019, to enable me to work on these translations. I should also like to express my gratitude to writer and critic Bruce Mueller in San Francisco for his valuable contributions around Rilkeโ€™s biographical details, travel itineraries and publishing history. Lastly, I must give fulsome thanks to Linden Lawson, friend and editor, whose suggestions and editorial input have proved invaluable and have served to maintain this translatorโ€™s foothold at precarious moments on the path.

*

These translations were realized with the assistance of the Fondation Rilke, Sierre, Switzerland.

INTRODUCTION

At the end of 1916, Rainer Maria Rilke presented the writer Rudolf Kassner, his friend and confidant, with a notebook containing twenty-two poems which bore the title Gedichte an die Nacht (Poems to Night). These poems, linked by the recurring theme of night, were copied out in Rilkeโ€™s hallmark meticulous hand. Ernst Zinn, compiler of Rilkeโ€™s Sรคmtliche Werke (Collected Works) [Insel 1992], tells us in his notes that the Poems to Night were written between January 1913 and February 1914. What makes them significant is that they were created at the same time as Rilkeโ€™s most renowned work, the Duineser Elegien (Duino Elegies), whose eighth elegy Rilke dedicated to Kassner, and reveal correspondences to its genesis as well as anticipating its structure and ushering in new psychic and linguistic territories. In fact, Rilke had originally considered adding the night poems to form a second section of the Elegies.

Themes and ideas which run through the Elegies are also to be found in the Poems to Night; yet unlike the Elegies they are more actively hermetic, as if enfolding into themselves and thus demanding of the reader an even greater concentration. The Poems to Night possess the aura of a clandestine text, and resist any assured interpretation. Despite their centrality to Rilkeโ€™s spiritual trajectory, their transcendental disguise, that cosmological searching for the self, has ensured they have remained at the outer margins of his oeuvre, where the poetry-reading public rarely travel. Having said that, a good number of the Poems to Night have been translated over previous decades by a range of translators, especially the poem sometimes known as โ€œThe Great Nightโ€, which begins with the line, โ€œOften I gazed at you in wonderโ€. However, the twenty-two poems have never appeared in English before in their entirety, as they were transcribed for Kassner, but only as odd poems or at best in modest groupings in selections of Rilkeโ€™s poems. Thus they have never been read as a sequence from beginning to end contained in one volume, nor have a number of ancillary poems and fragments by Rilke on the subject of night dating from different periods been assembled as here, in a supplementary section.

The Duino Elegies were conceived and initiated at Castle Duino on the Adriatic coast north-west of Trieste, where Rilke was a guest of Princess Marie of Thurn und Taxis. The first two elegies were composed early in 1912, and through 1913 Rilke laboured on the material which would become the third, sixth and tenth elegies. The first of the Poems to Night were composed in Spain in January and February 1913, but most were written later that same year. It is no surprise to learn that in the autumn of 1913 Rilke was completing the third elegy, which he had begun in 1912 and which shares motifs and elements with the Poems to Night and occupies the same nocturnal realm. After the third elegy Rilke struggled to maintain his creative momentum, a state of stasis that was greatly exacerbated in autumn 1914 by the ensuing conflict in Europe. However, care must be taken not to oversimplify the correlation with the Elegies and to see things that may in fact not be there, for although the meaning of night in the Poems to Night appears sometimes to echo that of the angel in the Elegies, at other times in the poems it seems to suggest an altogether different

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