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In Zeiten der Wirren: Stefan George's Later Works

from The Poetry

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 April 2017

Michael M. Metzger
Affiliation:
University at Buffalo
Paul Bishop
Affiliation:
Professor of German and Head of Department of German at the University of Glasgow
Ritchie Robertson
Affiliation:
Professor of German and a Fellow of St. John's College at the University of Oxford.
Karla L. Schultz
Affiliation:
University of Oregon
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Summary

Glücklicherweise bewahrt [die Geschichte] aber auch das Gedächtnis an die großen Kämpfer gegen die Geschichte,das heißt gegen die blinde Macht des Wirklichen, und stellt sich dadurch selbst an den Pranger, daß sie jene gerade als die eigentlich historischen Naturen heraushebt, die sich um das “so ist es” wenig kümmerten, um vielmehr mit heiterem Stolze einem “so soll es sein” zu folgen. Nicht ihr Geschlecht zu Grabe zu tragen, sondern ein neues Geschlecht zu begründen — das treibt sie unablässig vorwärts: und wenn sie selbst als Spätlinge geboren werden — es gibt eine Art zu leben, dies vergessen zu machen — die kommenden Geschlechter werden sie nur als Erstlinge kennen.

“Vom Nutzen und Nachteil der Historie für das Leben” (Nietzsche 1: 265)

For Stefan George and Rainer Maria Rilke, the year 1900 was to mark the midpoint in their respective lives. Having then just achieved artistic maturity, Rilke would undergo an astonishing evolution as a thinker and writer, creating such disparate yet related works as the Neue Gedichte (1907), Die Aufzeichnungen des Malte Laurids Brigge (1910), Duineser Elegien (1923), and Die Sonette an Orpheus (1923). By contrast, remarkable constancy within a closely controlled range of ideas and styles characterizes George's three major books of poetry after 1900: Der Siebente Ring (1907), Der Stern des Bundes (1913), and Das Neue Reich (1928). Rilke was embarking on a spiritual journey that would lead him from mastery of the aesthetics and ethics of representation to a visionary poetic philosophy that embraced the world as life and death (Brodsky 37). George, for his part, had fixed upon a new faith that divinity was immanent and potentially incarnate in the present moment. Whereas for Rilke all being yearns to be transformed, George, like Plato, insisted that ideal forms have metaphysical permanence, however changeable earthly phenomena may seem. Rilke urged humanity to glory in mortality and affirm Earth's wisdom in granting us life and taking it away. George, on the other hand, demanded that mankind restore archetypal social and cultural ideals to prove worthy of an unending heroic destiny that he saw figured forth in the stars.

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Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2005

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