Reading Rilke

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Authors: William H. Gass

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THIS IS A BORZOI BOOK
PUBLISHED BY ALFRED A. KNOPF, INC.

Copyright © 1999 by William H. Gass

All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. Published in the United States by Alfred A. Knopf, Inc., New York, and simultaneously in Canada by Random House of Canada Limited, Toronto. Distributed by Random House, Inc., New York.

www.randomhouse.com

Knopf, Borzoi Books, and the colophon are registered trademarks of Random House, Inc.

Gass, William H., [date]

Reading Rilke : reflections on the problems of translation / by William H. Gass.—1st ed.

p.     cm.

Includes bibliographical references.

eISBN: 978-0-8041-5092-7

1. Rilke, Rainer Maria, 1875–1926—Translating.   2. Rilke, Rainer Maria, 1875–1926. Duineser Elegien.   3. Translating and interpreting.   4. Rilke, Rainer Maria, 1875–1926.   5. Authors, German—20th century—Biography.   I. Title.

PT2635. I65Z

831′.912—dc21

98-50291

v3.1

THIS BOOK IS DEDICATED TO HEIDE ZIEGLER WITH LOVE AND GRATITUDE
.

Self-Portrait from the Year 1906

The distinction of an old, long-noble race

in the heavy arches of the eyebrows.

In the blue eyes, childhood’s anxious

shy look still, not a waiter’s servility

yet feminine, as one who endures.

The mouth made as a mouth is, wide and straight,

not persuasive, yet not unwilling to speak out

if required. A not inferior forehead,

still most comfortable when bent, shading the self.

This, as a countenance, scarcely configured;

never, in either suffering or elation,

brought together for a real achievement;

yet as if, from far away, out of scattered things,

a serious and enduring work were being planned.

“Selbstbildnis aus dem Jahre 1906,” Paris, Spring 1906

CONTENTS
Cover
Other Books by This Author
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Poems Translated in the Text
Other Than the
Duino Elegies
Acknowledgments
Lifeleading
Transreading
Ein Gott Vermags
Inhalation in a God
Schade
The Grace of Great Things
Erect No Memorial Stone
The
Duino Elegies
of Rainer Maria Rilke
Notes
Bibliography

POEMS TRANSLATED IN THE TEXT
OTHER THAN THE
DUINO ELEGIES

Self-Portrait from the Year 1906
Selbstbildnis aus dem Jahre 1906
Rilke’s epitaph
Rose, oh reiner Widerspruch
The Bowl of Roses
Die Rosenschale
from
In Celebration of Myself
Mir zu Feier
A Youthful Portrait of My Father
Jugend-Bildnis meines Vaters
Parting
Abschied
III. 6–7 of
The Book of Hours
Das Stundenbach
Autumn
Herbst
Autumn Day
Herbstag
To Music
An die Musik
The Lace, 11
Die Spitze
, 11
Buddha
Buddha
The Panther
Der Panther
Rilke’s last poem, untitled
The Swan
Der Schwan
Put My Eyes Out, 11.7 of
The Book of Hours
Lösch mir die Augen
Sonnets to Orpheus
, 1, 3
Sonnets to Orpheus
, 1, 1
Sonnets to Orpheus
, 1, 2
Sonnets to Orpheus
, 11, 13
Torso of an Archaic Apollo
Archaïscher Torso Apollos
Lament
Klage
The Spanish Trilogy, 1
Die spanische Trilogie
The Great Night
Die grosse Nacht
Requiem for a Friend
Requiem für eine Freundin
Sonnets to Orpheus
, 11, 1
Sonnets to Orpheus
, 11, 29
Sonnets to Orpheus
, 11, 12
Blue Hydrangea
Blaue Hortensie
Sonnets to Orpheus
, 1, 13
Turning-Point
Wendung
Death
Der Tod
Tell Us, Poet, What Do You Do?
Oh sage, Dichter, was du tust?
“Man Must Die Because He Has Known Them”

Man muss sterben weil man sie kennt

Puppet Theater
Marionettentheater
Sonnets to Orpheus
, 1, 5
Sonnets to Orpheus
, 1, 15
The Death of the Poet
Der Tod des Dichters

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

Heide Ziegler, to whom this book is lovingly dedicated, spent much of her valuable time and energy discussing with me the meanings of the
Duino Elegies
, giving me valuable background information, advising me on strategies, correcting many of my mistakes (impossible to catch them all), and patiently reading and rereading my revisions. This book is half hers. No doubt the better half.

I am also indebted to all those who, before me, have tried to find their way through these difficult poems, and beaten a better path … a path from which, so often, I fear I have strayed.

Early versions of a few of these poems were published in
The American Poetry Review
,
Conjunctions
, and
River Styx
. The first three
Sonnets to Orpheus
, Part 1, were published in
The Chelsea Review
. I have also cannibalized from texts published in
The Nation
and in
The Philosophy of Erotic Love
, a collection from the University of Kansas Press edited by Robert Solomon and Kathleen Higgens.

The poet himself is as close to me as any human being has ever been; not because he has allowed himself—now a shade—at last to be loved; and not because I have been able to obey the stern command from his archaic torso of Apollo to change my life, nor because his person was always so admirable it had to be imitated; but because his work has taught me what real art
ought to be; how it can matter to a life through its lifetime; how commitment can course like blood through the body of your words until the writing stirs, rises, opens its eyes; and, finally, because his work allows me to measure what we call achievement: how tall his is, how small mine.

LIFELEADING

Open-eyed, Rainer Maria Rilke died in the arms of his doctor on December 29, 1926. The leukemia which killed him had been almost reluctantly diagnosed, and had struck like a storm, after a period of gathering clouds. Ulcerous sores appeared in his mouth, pain troubled his stomach and intestines, he slept a lot when his body let him, his spirit was weighed down by depression, while physically he became as thin and fluttery as a leaf. Since, according to the gloom that naturally descended on him, Rilke’s creative life was over, he undertook translations during his last months: of Valéry in particular—“Eupalinos,” “The Cemetery by the Sea”—and composed his epitaph, too, invoking the flower he so devotedly tended.

ROSE
,
O PURE CONTRADICTION
,
DESIRE
TO BE NO ONE’S SLEEP BENEATH SO MANY LIDS
.

The myth concerning the onset of his illness was, even among his myths, the most remarkable. To honor a visitor, the Egyptian beauty Nimet Eloui, 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. According to the preferred story, this was the way Rilke’s disease
announced itself, although Ralph Freedman, his judicious and most recent biographer, puts that melancholy event more than a year earlier.

Roses climb his life as if he were their trellis. Turn the clock back twenty-four years to 1900. Rilke is a guest at Worpswede, an artists’ colony near Bremen, and it is there he has made the acquaintance of the painter Paula Becker and his future wife, Clara Westhoff. One bright Sunday morning, in a romantic mood, Rilke brings his new friends a few flowers, and writes about the gesture in his diary:

I invented a new form of caress: placing a rose gently on a closed eye until its coolness can no longer be felt; only the gentle petal will continue to rest on the eyelid like sleep just before dawn.
1

The poet never forgets a metaphor. Nor do his friends forget the poet’s passions. Move on to 1907 now, when, in Capri, Rilke composes “The Bowl of Roses,” beginning this poem with an abrupt jumble of violent images:

You’ve seen their anger flare, seen two boys
bunch themselves into a ball of animosity
and roll across the ground
like some dumb animal set upon by bees;
you’ve seen those carny barkers, mile-high liars,
the careening tangle of bolting horses,
their upturned eyes and flashing teeth,
as if the skull were peeled back from the mouth.

Bullyboys, actors, tellers of tall tales, runaway horses—fright, force, and falsification—losing composure, pretending, revealing
pain and terror: these are compared to the bowl of roses. Rilke has come from Berlin, where his new publisher, Insel Verlag, has been distressed to discover that Rilke’s former publisher plans to bring out
The Book of Hours
as well as a revised
Cornet
. This does not get the new alliance off to a smooth and trusting start. Moreover, Rilke is broke again. During 1906, the poet had been bankrolled by his friend Karl von der Heydt, who twice generously deposited funds in Rilke’s Paris bank, but Rilke’s habit of staying in deluxe hotels and eating (modestly) in expensive restaurants, his dependence upon porters and maids and trains, had left him holding nothing more than his ticket to Alice Faehndrich’s Villa Discopoli on Capri. Von der Heydt sent him some supplementary funds eventually, but not before making a face. Perhaps these unpleasantries account for the poem’s oddly violent and discordant opening.

But now you know how to forget such things,
for now before you stands the bowl of roses,
unforgettable and wholly filled
with unattainable being and promise,

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