Book Store

Sonnets to Orpheus and Duino Elegies (Dover Thrift Editions)

Sonnets to Orpheus and Duino Elegies (Dover Thrift Editions)

Sonnets to Orpheus and Duino Elegies (Dover Thrift Editions)

By Rainer Maria Rilke
Translated by Jessie Lemont

During three feverish weeks in 1922, Rainer Maria Rilke composed the 55 sonnets that constitute Sonnets to Orpheus. Inspired by the death of a friend's daughter, the poet felt that he was being compelled to write by the girl's ghost. At about the same time he also completed Duino Elegies, which he had begun ten years earlier. Intimately connected to the Sonnets in themes and sensibilities, the Elegies offer meditations on love, death, God, and life's meaning that express Rilke's irresolvable conflict between a longing for solitude and a painful loneliness.

Although his poetry was recognized and admired by leading European artists, the Austro-Bohemian poet was virtually unknown during his lifetime, achieving international acclaim only with these final masterpieces. This edition presents translations by Jessie Lemont, praised by London's Times Literary Supplement for their presentation of Rilke as "a writer of short individual lyrics, often of incomparable, impressionist vividness, plastic vitality and symbolic suggestiveness."

Reprint of The Fine Editions Press, New York, 1945 edition.

Paperback
112 pages
Dover Publications, 2020
5 x 8 inches
ISBN 9780486838670
Literature, Classic

EVERY PURCHASE SUPPORTS THE NEUE GALERIE
$5.00 $5.00