Review
After Such Long Experience Let House
Ah, Not Being Sundered
Also To Affirm Even Rapture
And All Never-belonging Be Yours
Are Not The Nights Fashioned From The Sorrowful
Being-silent. Who Keeps Innerly
By The Sun-surrounded Road,
Cheerful Gift From The Chillier
Come You, You Last One, Whom I Avow
Do You Also Ponder That We Are All
Everything Is Play, And Yet Plays
Force Of Gravity
From The Cycle: Nights
Give Me, Oh Earth, Pure Unmingling
Gods Perhaps Are Still Striding Along
Gong
Greek Love-talk
If You'd Attempt This, However: Hand In Hand To Be Mine
Like The Pigtails Of Quickly Grown-up Girls
The Lovers
Magic
Mausoleum
More Uncovered The Land: On Every Way Is Hometurning
Music
Now It Would Be Time That Gods Should Step Out
Play The Deaths, The Single Ones, Quickly
The Poems Praise
The Poet Praises
The Poet Speaks Of Praising
The Quinces Yellow From Their Gray Fluff
The Seven Phallic Poems: 1
The Seven Phallic Poems: 2
The Seven Phallic Poems: 3
The Seven Phallic Poems: 4
The Seven Phallic Poems: 5
The Seven Phallic Poems: 6
The Seven Phallic Poems: 7
Since I Wrote You, Sap Sprang Free
Somewhere Blooms The Blossom Of Parting And Bestrews
Strong Star, Which Needs Not The Help Which
That Which Offers Itself To Us With Starlight
These Soft
This Is The Mute-mouthed Mounting Of The Phalli
Transform Stamen On Stamen
Transformation
The Voices Warned Me So I Desisted
We Are Not To Know Why
What Fields Are Fragrant As Your Hands
Woman's Lament: 1
Woman's Lament: 2
You Declare You Know Love's Nights?
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Table of Poems from Poem Finder®
Product Description
An anthology of Rilke's strongest poetry and prose for both aficionados and new readers. Here is a mini-anthology of poetry and prose for both aficionados and those readers discovering Rainer Maria Rilke for the first time. John J. L. Mood has assembled a collection of Rilke's strongest work, presenting commentary along with the selections. Mood links into an essay passages from letters that show Rilke's profound understanding of men and women and his ardent spirituality, rooted in the senses.
Combining passion and sensitivity, the poems on love presented here are often not only sensual but sexual as well. Others pursue perennial themes in his workdeath and life, growth and transformation. The book concludes with Rilke's reflections on wisdom and openness to experience, on grasping what is most difficult and turning what is most alien into that which we can most trust.
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