The poet Rainer Maria Rilke uses
language in uniquely powerful ways in his moving poem, “Autumn Day”
(“Herbsttag”). The poem appears in the first section of Rilke’s collection The Book of Pictures, published 1902.
Rainer Maria Rilke (1875–1926)
Here’s my own English translation:
Autumn Day
by Rainer Maria Rilke
Time, Lord, it’s time. The summer
was vast.
Now drape your
shadow over sundials,
And in the
fields, make the winds blast.
Command the
last fruits to brim on the vine;
Give them two
more southerly days,
Push them to
perfection and blaze
The last
sweetness into the heavy wine.
Whoever has no
house yet, will build none.
Whoever is
alone, will stay alone,
Wake up at
night, write long letters, sift
Through pages,
and walk up and down
Tree-lined paths, restless, while
leaves drift.
(translated by Zack Rogow, translation © 2012 by Zack Rogow)
What a
fascinating structure Rilke has created for this poem! He substitutes for the
stanza of regular length his own distinctive formula where each successive stanza acquires
one more line, as if every stanza digs to a deeper layer
of fall and the emotions connected to it.
The
first two stanzas create a sense of fulfillment. This aura is still partly
abstract in the first stanza, beautiful, but limited to disembodied shadows and
winds. In the second stanza he adds color, taste, and smell to the richness of
fall by expanding to the sensual realms of fruit, warmth, and wine.
Now
look at Rilke’s German:
Herbsttag
Herr: es ist Zeit. Der Sommer war sehr groß.
Leg deinen Schatten auf die Sonnenuhren,
und auf den Fluren laß die Winde los.
Befiehl den letzten Früchten voll zu sein;
gieb ihnen noch zwei südlichere Tage,
dränge sie zur Vollendung hin und jage
die letzte Süße in den schweren
Wein.
Wer jetzt kein Haus hat, baut
sich keines mehr.
Wer jetzt allein ist, wird es
lange bleiben,
wird wachen, lesen, lange Briefe
schreiben
und wird in den Alleen hin und
her
unruhig wandern, wenn die Blätter
treiben.
[emphases added]
Rilke highlights the feeling of
fulfillment in the first two stanzas by using the German word voll—full—in
two different forms, the adjective, voll, and the noun, Vollendung, which
means completion, finishing, ending, consummation, perfection. Not only that, Rilke
takes the wide-open vowel o from the
German word for full, and lavishes it over the first stanza: groß, Sonnenuhren, los, emphasizing the
sound by using it in rhyming words that end lines one and three. I’ve
highlighed in blue each word in the poem that contains the letter ‘o’ in the German.
The
sentences in the poem start out very short and then get increasingly long in
the first two stanzas, as the imagery become more lush and hypnotic, while the
picture of fall’s completion develops—“Now drape your shadows over sundials,”
“Command the last fruits to brim on the vine.”
Suddenly,
in stanza three, we are back to short, declarative language: “Whoever has no
house yet, will build none.” The words have the authority and stateliness of a
biblical judgment, or of a proverb. The
second line in the last stanza seems like it’s about to mirror this structure
with another matter-of-fact, symmetrical pronouncement: “Whoever is alone, will
stay alone,” but then surprisingly the sentence continues, sweeps us along until the very end of the poem, taking us into the very private world of the solitary person
whose autumn is not one of fullness but of emptiness and loneliness.
Take
another look at the German. Amazingly, Rilke
is able to write the entire last stanza without once using the vowel o, the vowel in the German word for
‘full’ that saturates the first two stanzas, where it continually evokes the
sense of fullness. There are few other poets who would use sound in such a
methodical, unique, and strange way, foreshadowing the lipogrammatic
experiments of OULIPO group members such as Georges Perec, who wrote his entire
novel A Void without the letter e.
There
is a powerful sense of nostalgia and melancholy in Rilke’s poem, but in two
different shades: in the first two stanzas we have yellow-orange sunlight and
the long shadows of fall afternoons, colors of ripe fruit and the final warm
days; in the last stanza there are the bare trees and the nocturnal scene of
the lone man, a colorless world where nothing seems anchored or still.
What
kind of person is the figure in the last stanza who wakes up late at night,
reads, and writes long letters? An artist, specifically a writer. We know Rilke
lived this kind of restless existence, moving from city to city and country to
country every few months during many periods of his life. Perhaps he is talking
about entering a stage in his life when he will banish himself from the warmth
of a family home, destined to a solitary pursuit of literature and his
correspondence with friends. This was, to some extent, the plot of Rilke’s
life, which he might have seen taking shape at the juncture when he wrote
“Autumn Day.” It’s so paradoxical that the poet has the otherworldly power to
order God to begin the change of season to the fall (“drape,” “Command,”
“push,” etc.), but he ends up alone and isolated at the end, despite that force
(or because of it?).
Rilke was involved for several years with Lou Andreas-Salomé, a brilliant woman of letters who had been romantically connected to the philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche when she was a young woman.
Lou Andreas-Salomé |
There were thoughts Rilke confided only
to Lou, and, as a practicing therapist who herself had been analyzed by Sigmund Freud, she understood the poet Rilke better than
many. She discusses Rilke’s Duino Elegies
in her autobiography, Looking Back:
Memoirs: “…one sees clearly, and with a shudder of certainty, how greatly
Rainer longed for human experience, for the
revelation of life, which, in spite of the perfection of his achievement,
would go beyond the work of art, beyond the poet’s word. Only there could that
which was most deeply human in Rainer find a resting place, and peace.…Nothing
is more certain than that Rainer achieved the joyous affirmation of his own
despair in the celebration of the Elegies.” I find this comment about Rilke
revealing. Maybe “Autumn Day” is, like Rilke’s Duino
Elegies, both a celebration of the poet’s own despair, and his expression
of longing for human warmth. That conflict is part of why "Autumn Day" continues to
fascinate readers and to endure.
Other posts on Rilke:
Learning from Rilke
Rilke's "Archaic Torso of Apollo"
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How to Get Published
Getting the Most from Your Writing Workshop
How Not to Become a Literary Dropout
Putting Together a Book Manuscript
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How to Deliver Your Message
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Why Write Poetry?
Poetic Forms: Introduction; The Sonnet, The Sestina, The Ghazal, The Tanka
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