Skip to main content

THE MURIEL RUKEYSER ERA: Nearer to the Well-Spring (1943)

THE MURIEL RUKEYSER ERA
Nearer to the Well-Spring (1943)
  • Show the following:

    Annotations
    Resources
  • Adjust appearance:

    Font
    Font style
    Color Scheme
    Light
    Dark
    Annotation contrast
    Low
    High
    Margins
  • Search within:
    • Notifications
    • Privacy
  • Project HomeThe Muriel Rukeyser Era
  • Projects
  • Learn more about Manifold

Notes

table of contents
  1. Cover
  2. Title
  3. Epigraph
  4. Contents
  5. Acknowledgments and Permissions
  6. List of Abbreviations
  7. Note on This Textual Edition
  8. Editors’ Introduction
    1. All You Have to Do Is Challenge Them: The Muriel Rukeyser Era, Eric Keenaghan and Rowena Kennedy-Epstein
  9. Author’s Introduction
    1. Biographical Statement for “Under Forty: A Symposium on American Literature and the Younger Generation of American Jews” (1944), Muriel Rukeyser
  10. PART I. THE USABLE TRUTH: FIVE TALKS ON COMMUNICATION AND POETRY
    1. 1. “The Fear of Poetry” (1940, 1941)
    2. 2. “The Speed of the Image” (1940)
    3. 3. “Belief and Poetry” (1940)
    4. 4. “Poetry and Peace” (1940)
    5. 5. “Communication and Poetry” (1940)
  11. PART II. TWENTIETH-CENTURY RADICALISM: ON POLITICS, SOCIETY, AND CULTURE
    1. 6. “The Flown Arrow: The Aftermath of the Sacco-Vanzetti Case” (1932)
    2. 7. “From Scottsboro to Decatur” (1933)
    3. 8. “Women and Scottsboro” (1933)
    4. 9. “Barcelona on the Barricades” (1936)
    5. 10. “Barcelona, 1936” (1936)
    6. 11. “Words and Images” (1943)
    7. 12. “War and Poetry” (1945)
    8. 13. “A Pane of Glass” (1953)
    9. 14. “She Came to Us” (1958)
    10. 15. “The Killing of the Children” (1973)
    11. 16. “The Uses of Fear” (1978)
  12. PART III. MEDIA AND DEMOCRATIC EDUCATION: A PHOTO-TEXT AND RADIO SCRIPTS
    1. 17. “So Easy to See” (1946), Photography-and-Text Collaboration with Berenice Abbott
    2. 18. From Sunday at Nine (1949), Scripts for Two Radio Broadcasts
      1. Series Introduction Episode One: Emily Dickinson
      2. Episode Four: The Blues
  13. PART IV. MODERNIST INTERVENTIONS: ON GENDER, POETRY, AND POETICS
    1. 19. “Modern Trends: American Poetry” (1932)
    2. 20. “Long Step Ahead Taken by Gregory in New Epic Poem” (1935), review of Horace Gregory’s Chorus for Survival
    3. 21. “In a Speaking Voice” (1939), review of Robert Frost’s Collected Poems
    4. 22. “The Classic Ground” (1941), review of Marya Zaturenska’s The Listening Landscape
    5. 23. “Nearer to the Well-Spring” (1943), review of Rainer Maria Rilke’s Sonnets to Orpheus
    6. 24. “A Simple Theme” (1949), review of Charlotte Marletto’s Jewel of Our Longing
    7. 25. “A Lorca Evening” (1951)
    8. 26. “Many Keys” (1957), on women’s poetry
    9. 27. “Lyrical ‘Rage’” (1957), review of Kenneth Rexroth’s In Defense of the Earth
    10. 28. “A Crystal for the Metaphysical” (1966), review of Marianne Moore’s Tell Me, Tell Me: Granite, Steel, and Other Topics
    11. 29. “Poetry and the Unverifiable Fact” (1968)
    12. 30. “The Music of Translation” (1971)
    13. 31. “Thoreau and Poetry” (1972)
    14. 32. “Glitter and Wounds, Several Wildnesses” (1973), review of Anne Sexton’s The Book of Folly
    15. 33. “The Life to Which I Belong” (1974), review of Franz Kafka’s Letters to Felice
    16. 34. “Women of Words: A Prefatory Note” (1974)
  14. Appendix: Bibliographic and Archival Information for Selections by Muriel Rukeyser
  15. Notes on Contributors
  16. Selected Bibliography
  17. Index
  18. Copyright

CHAPTER 23

Nearer to the Well-Spring (1943)

Review of Rainer Maria Rilke’s Sonnets to Orpheus, translated by M. D. Herter Norton

[. . .] They [Sonnets to Orpheus] are, as could not be otherwise, of the same “birth” as the Elegies, and their sudden coming up, without my willing it, in association with a girl who had died young, moves them still nearer to the well-spring of their origin; this association is one more connection towards the center of that realm the depth and influence of which we, everywhere unboundaried, share with the dead and with those to come . . .

—Letter from Rilke to Witold von Hulewicz, November 13, 1925

On February 5, 1922, the first of the two sequences of Sonnets to Orpheus was finished, and Rilke sent them to the mother of the dead girl, Vera Knoop. He had entered into the death of this young dancer. Learning of the details of her death at the time of his daughter’s marriage; reading Valéry’s L’Ame et la danse, with its quotation from Socrates speaking of the dance as pure metamorphosis, he remembered this dancer as a nameless flower, pausing as if she were being cast in bronze, at last entering the hopelessly open portal—the unconscious Eurydice, dead and shadow, news of whose death was the news which made these poems fall in a stream.1 Scatterings of the Duino Elegies, they were written in two marvelous bursts of sonnets during the same days as the arrival of the Elegies.2 The first sequence, of twenty-six, was written after Rilke’s letters had complained continually of his inability to concentrate, because of the effect of the war. The last of these complaints occur in two letters written on January 28, 1922. From February 2 to February 5, the twenty-five sonnets were written—hardly written, almost spoken, among the long and powerful music of the Elegies, which were now also being finished. And, in another burst, from February 12 to February 20, the second sequence, of twenty-nine sonnets, was done.

In a great crisis, at Muzot, this book was written down. In the grip of this crisis, Rilke again broke through his isolation. Speaking in the Elegies for angels in their full height and menace, he speaks here for the root, the shadow, the transience, for the song which visits death, visits the gleaming earth, can pass only as song, only as Orpheus. For Eurydice, pure and unconscious, is human to the end, even in afterlife. But the poet, the wound, Rilke-Orpheus, rent and scattered, cannot be destroyed; in the end, he can only be heard, heard everywhere.

There is little use in tracing the poems and myths that echo through these sonnets; both Mrs. Norton’s and Leishman’s notes, as well as Rilke’s letters, do that for us.3 Valéry’s dead are here—the shadowy people at the roots of trees, their lost words, their unique selves—the dead of Le Cimetière marin are close to Rilke’s dead, as the dead of the Greek ancestors, dormant and fluid, in a fruit, a dance, a mirror, a trace of earth.4

But to us existence is still enchanted; at a hundred

points it is origin still.5

In love, in change, in Orpheus singing. Rilke saying it, in the third sonnet:

Song, as you teach it, is not desire,

not suing for something yet in the end attained;

song is existence. Easy for the god.

But when do we exist? [. . .]6

All the pieces of his fear, all the withdrawals, are here; but in this book, since the object is acknowledged dead, there is no threat; and since he as poet is all-powerful, death may be visited and seen as origin. The early magic is here, with its strong symbols, its cries, and the bread and milk of its mysteries. “Nothing can harm for him the valid symbol,” says a line near the end of the sixth sonnet, and the seventh begins in the familiar tone, “Praising, that’s it!”7 That Rilkean praise which must arrive with all lament; lament, which moves in the world of praising, and which, together with praising, can sing the image.

The richness of these sonnets is very great, even in translation.

No matter if the farmer works and worries,

where the seed is turning into summer

he never reaches. The earth bestows.8

This gesture of gift and blessing is balanced by the warning of: “not till a pure whither / outweighs boyish pride / of growing machines” will “one who had neared the distances / be his lone flight’s attaining.”9 But from the line “Killing is a form of wandering sorrow” to “the head and the lyre” of Orpheus killed, to the “O come and go” of the dancer, is a succession of movement and image.10 This sequence must be found all at once and taken completely, in its imagery. Here is the long unfolding of a single image-cluster, transformed and killed and taken up again, sustained by Rilke through wartime. Analogies of isolation are here, and the convalescent breathing of a poet who has come through war to release and poetry again. Much of that breath is lost in translation; Mrs. Norton says disarmingly in her Foreword that she still believes that “the closest adherence to the poetry itself is best achieved through the most literal possible rendering of word, phrase, image, far as the result may prove to remain from the final perfection . . .” and I have printed two sonnets here, in full, attempting in a short space to illustrate this definition.11 Mrs. Norton does not speak of music.12

Rilke’s definition of religion, as “a direction of the heart,” surely applies to poetry; and a “literal rendering” can as surely ignore the direction of a poem as a statement about the “facts” of war can ignore the issues of the war, when “facts” and “literalness” depend on relationship.13 One wishes, then, for a third poem, after the original and the literal translation—an equivalent poem, an English poem.

But Mrs. Norton is making an architectural gift to us of Rilke, book by book. Gift by gift, he increases, even when his faults and softness increase.

(Kenyon Review, 1943)


Rukeyser’s epigraph, here abbreviated, is from Rainer Maria Rilke, letter to Witold von Hulewicz, November 13, 1925, trans. J. B. Leishman, qtd. in M. D. Herter Norton’s “Notes,” in Rainer Maria Rilke, Sonnets to Orpheus, trans. Norton (New York: W. W. Norton, 1942), 132. Rilke’s emphases. All Muriel Rukeyser’s quotations are from this edition. For the full letter, see Rainer Maria Rilke, Letters of Rainer Maria Rilke, 1910–1926, trans. Jane Bannard Greene and M. D. Herter Norton (New York: W. W. Norton, 1948), 372–376.

1. Paul Valéry’s L’Ame et la danse (Dance and the Soul, 1921) is a prose conversation between Greek philosopher Socrates and his disciples Eryximachus and Phaedrus.

2. Rilke’s Duino Elegies (1923) provided Rukeyser the model for her Elegies (1939–1949, in CP, 297–330). Each project consists of ten poems written over a decade. Just as Rilke had written Sonnets to Orpheus (1922) when completing Duino Elegies, Rukeyser composed her long poem “Orpheus” (1949), in CP, 285–296, while finishing her Elegies.

3. In 1936, J. B. Leishman published the first English-language translation of Rilke’s Sonnets to Orpheus with Leonard and Virginia Woolf’s Hogarth Press.

4. Paul Valéry, Le Cimetière marin (The Graveyard by the Sea, 1920).

5. Rilke, “Sonnet 10,” from “Second Part,” in Sonnets to Orpheus, 89.

6. Rilke, “Sonnet 3,” from “First Part,” in Sonnets to Orpheus, 21. Rilke’s emphasis. Quotation abbreviated; Rukeyser cites the entire poem.

7. Rilke, “Sonnet 6” and “Sonnet 7,” from “First Part,” in Sonnets to Orpheus, 27, 29.

8. Rilke, “Sonnet 12,” from “First Part,” in Sonnets to Orpheus, 39. Rilke’s emphasis. Quotation abbreviated.

9. Rilke, “Sonnet 23,” from “First Part,” in Sonnets to Orpheus, 61. Rilke’s emphasis. Quotation abbreviated.

10. Rilke, “Sonnet 11,” “Sonnet 26,” and “Sonnet 28” from “Second Part,” in Sonnets to Orpheus, 91, 121, 125.

11. Norton, foreword to Rilke, Sonnets to Orpheus, 10. Rukeyser’s transcription of full sonnets not reproduced in this edition.

12. See Muriel Rukeyser, “The Music of Translation,” in this volume.

13. Religion “is not knowledge, not content of feeling [. . .], it is not duty and not renunciation, it is not restriction: but in the infinite extent of the universe it is a direction of the heart.” Rilke, letter to Ilse Blumenthal-Weiss, December 28, 1921, in Rilke, Letters, 277. In her second independent clause, Rukeyser reprises but misquotes Norton’s foreword.

Annotate

Next Chapter
A Simple Theme (1949)
PreviousNext
Powered by Manifold Scholarship. Learn more at
Opens in new tab or windowmanifoldapp.org