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  1. The Sonnets to Orpheus (German: Die Sonette an Orpheus) are a cycle of 55 sonnets written in 1922 by the Bohemian-Austrian poet Rainer Maria Rilke (1875–1926). It was first published the following year.

  2. A collection of Rainer Maria Rilke's "Sonnets to Orpheus" translated by Robert Temple, showcasing his significant German poetry.

  3. THE SONNETS TO ORPHEUS by Rainer Maria Rilke, translated by Robert Temple. There the tree rises. Oh pure surpassing! Oh Orpheus sings! Oh great tree of sound! And all is silent, And from this silence arise. New beginnings, intimations, changings. From the stillness animals throng, out of the clear. Snapping forest of lair and nest;

  4. The Sonnets to Orpheus. by Rainer Maria Rilke. Translation by Robert Hunter. PREFACE. This translation approximates the original rhythm & rhyme of The Sonnets to Orpheus.. It is, so far as I know, the only translation to attempt this. The complex rhyme schemes are an integral part of the work, which, content aside, is a virtuoso study in the ...

  5. The descent of Orpheus, the mythical poet-musician of Thrace, into the underworld in a failed attempt to reclaim his dead wife Eurydice, and his subsequent death at the hands of the Bacchantes, provided Rilke with the framework of the sonnets.

  6. Rilkes Sonnets to Orpheus have been called the most consistent myth of artistic experience in modern German literature and one of the strongest affirmations ever of the promise of existential salvation through poetry. Rilke’s Orpheus exemplifies the artist capable of remaking himself, for Rilke had decided that self-analysis and healing ...

  7. The descent of Orpheus, the mythical poet-musician of Thrace, into the underworld in a failed attempt to reclaim his dead wife Eurydice, and his subsequent death at the hands of the Bacchantes, provided Rilke with the framework of the sonnets.