β
Perhaps all the dragons in our lives are princesses who are only waiting to see us act, just once, with beauty and courage. Perhaps everything that frightens us is, in its deepest essence, something helpless that wants our love.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke (Letters to a Young Poet)
β
Let everything happen to you
Beauty and terror
Just keep going
No feeling is final
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke
β
Be patient toward all that is unsolved in your heart and try to love the questions themselves, like locked rooms and like books that are now written in a very foreign tongue. Do not now seek the answers, which cannot be given you because you would not be able to live them. And the point is, to live everything. Live the questions now. Perhaps you will then gradually, without noticing it, live along some distant day into the answer.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke
β
We need, in love, to practice only this: letting each other go. For holding on comes easily; we do not need to learn it.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke (Translations from the Poetry of Rainer Maria Rilke)
β
Believe in a love that is being stored up for you like an inheritance, and have faith that in this love there is a strength and a blessing so large that you can travel as far as you wish without having to step outside it.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke (Letters to a Young Poet)
β
Find out the reason that commands you to write; see whether it has spread its roots into the very depth of your heart; confess to yourself you would have to die if you were forbidden to write.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke
β
The work of the eyes is done. Go now and do the heart-work on the images imprisoned within you.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke
β
For beauty is nothing but the beginning of terror
which we are barely able to endure, and it amazes us so,
because it serenely disdains to destroy us.
Every angel is terrible.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke (Duino Elegies)
β
It is spring again. The earth is like a child that knows poems by heart.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke
β
I want to be with those who know secret things or else alone.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke
β
If your daily life seems poor, do not blame it; blame yourself, tell yourself that you are not poet enough to call forth its riches; for to the creator there is no poverty and no poor indifferent place.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke (Letters to a Young Poet)
β
I live my life in widening circles that reach out across the world.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke (Rilke's Book of Hours: Love Poems to God)
β
only someone who is ready for everything, who doesn't exclude any experience, even the most incomprehensible, will live the relationship with another person as something alive and will himself sound the depths of his own being.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke (Letters to a Young Poet)
β
Love consists of this: two solitudes that meet, protect and greet each other.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke
β
Have patience with everything that remains unsolved in your heart.
...live in the question.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke (Letters to a Young Poet)
β
A person isn't who they are during the last conversation you had with them - they're who they've been throughout your whole relationship.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke
β
To love is good, too: love being difficult. For one human being to love another: that is perhaps the most difficult of all our tasks, the ultimate, the last test and proof, the work for which all other work is but preparation.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke
β
Extinguish my eyes, I'll go on seeing you.
Seal my ears, I'll go on hearing you.
And without feet I can make my way to you,
without a mouth I can swear your name.
Break off my arms, I'll take hold of you
with my heart as with a hand.
Stop my heart, and my brain will start to beat.
And if you consume my brain with fire,
I'll feel you burn in every drop of my blood.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke
β
Let life happen to you. Believe me: life is in the right, always.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke
β
The purpose of life is to be defeated by greater and greater things.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke
β
The only journey is the one within.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke
β
Therefore, dear Sir, love your solitude and try to sing out with the pain it causes you. For those who are near you are far away... and this shows that the space around you is beginning to grow vast.... be happy about your growth, in which of course you can't take anyone with you, and be gentle with those who stay behind; be confident and calm in front of them and don't torment them with your doubts and don't frighten them with your faith or joy, which they wouldn't be able to comprehend. Seek out some simple and true feeling of what you have in common with them, which doesn't necessarily have to alter when you yourself change again and again; when you see them, love life in a form that is not your own and be indulgent toward those who are growing old, who are afraid of the aloneness that you trust.... and don't expect any understanding; but believe in a love that is being stored up for you like an inheritance, and have faith that in this love there is a strength and a blessing so large that you can travel as far as you wish without having to step outside it.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke (Letters to a Young Poet)
β
And now we welcome the new year, full of things that have never been
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke
β
The point of marriage is not to create a quick commonality by tearing down all boundaries; on the contrary, a good marriage is one in which each partner appoints the other to be the guardian of his solitude, and thus they show each other the greatest possible trust. A merging of two people is an impossibility, and where it seems to exist, it is a hemming-in, a mutual consent that robs one party or both parties of their fullest freedom and development. But once the realization is accepted that even between the closest people infinite distances exist, a marvelous living side-by-side can grow up for them, if they succeed in loving the expanse between them, which gives them the possibility of always seeing each other as a whole and before an immense sky.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke (Letters to a Young Poet)
β
May what I do flow from me like a river, no forcing and no holding back, the way it is with children.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke
β
Ah, how good it is to be among people who are reading.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke (The Notebooks of Malte Laurids Brigge)
β
I hold this to be the highest task of a bond between two people: that each should stand guard over the solitude of the other.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke (Letters to a Young Poet)
β
If we surrendered
to earth's intelligence
we could rise up rooted, like trees.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke (Rilke's Book of Hours: Love Poems to God)
β
Make your ego porous. Will is of little importance, complaining is nothing, fame is nothing. Openness, patience, receptivity, solitude is everything.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke
β
Yet, no matter how deeply I go down into myself, my God is dark, and like a webbing made of a hundred roots that drink in silence.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke (The Selected Poetry of Rainer Maria Rilke)
β
Have patience with everything that remains unsolved in your heart. Try to love the questions themselves, like locked rooms and like books written in a foreign language. Do not now look for the answers. They cannot now be given to you because you could not live them. It is a question of experiencing everything. At present you need to live the question. Perhaps you will gradually, without even noticing it, find yourself experiencing the answer, some distant day.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke (Letters to a Young Poet)
β
For one human being to love another human being: that is perhaps the most difficult task that has been given to us, the ultimate, the final problem and proof, the work for which all other work is merely preparation.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke (The Selected Poetry of Rainer Maria Rilke)
β
Do not assume that he who seeks to comfort you now, lives untroubled among the simple and quiet words that sometimes do you good. His life may also have much sadness and difficulty, that remains far beyond yours. Were it otherwise, he would never have been able to find these words.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke
β
Every angel is terrifying.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke (Duino Elegies)
β
The only sadnesses that are dangerous and unhealthy are the ones that we carry around in public in order to drown them out with the noise; like diseases that are treated superficially and foolishly, they just withdraw and after a short interval break out again all the more terribly; and gather inside us and are life, are life that is unlived, rejected, lost, life that we can die of.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke (Letters to a Young Poet)
β
Everything is blooming most recklessly; if it were voices instead of colors, there would be an unbelievable shrieking into the heart of the night.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke
β
Embrace your solitude and love it. Endure the pain it causes, and try to sing out with it. For those near to you are distant...
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke (Letters to a Young Poet)
β
I beg you, to have patience with everything unresolved in your heart and to try to love the questions themselves as if they were locked rooms or books written in a very foreign language. Donβt search for the answers, which could not be given to you now, because you would not be able to live them. And the point is to live everything. Live the questions now. Perhaps then, someday far in the future, you will gradually, without even noticing it, live your way into the answer.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke (Letters to a Young Poet)
β
If you are patient in one moment of anger, you will escape a hundred days of sorrow
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke
β
The necessary thing is after all but this; solitude, great inner solitude. Going into oneself for hours meeting no one - this one must be able to attain.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke (Letters to a Young Poet)
β
But your solitude will be a support and a home for you, even in the midst of very unfamiliar circumstances, and from it you will find all your paths.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke (Letters to a Young Poet)
β
Everything terrible is something that needs our love.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke
β
You are not too old
and it is not too late
to dive into your increasing depths
where life calmly gives out
its own secret.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke
β
Don't be too quick to draw conclusions from what happens to you; simply let it happen. Otherwise it will be too easy for you to look with blame... at your past, which naturally has a share with everything that now meets you.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke (Letters to a Young Poet)
β
Why do you want to shut out of your life any uneasiness, any misery, any depression, since after all you don't know what work these conditions are doing inside you? Why do you want to persecute yourself with the question of where all this is coming from and where it is going? Since you know, after all, that you are in the midst of transitions and you wished for nothing so much as to change. If there is anything unhealthy in your reactions, just bear in mind that sickness is the means by which an organism frees itself from what is alien; so one must simply help it to be sick, to have its whole sickness and to break out with it, since that is the way it gets better.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke (Letters to a Young Poet)
β
Things aren't all so tangible and sayable as people would usually have us believe; most experiences are unsayable, they happen in a space that no word has ever entered, and more unsayable than all other things are works of art, those mysterious existences, whose life endures beside our own small, transitory life
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke (Letters to a Young Poet)
β
A billion stars go spinning through the night,
glittering above your head,
But in you is the presence that will be
when all the stars are dead.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke (The Selected Poetry of Rainer Maria Rilke)
β
At no other time (than autumn) does the earth let itself be inhaled in one smell, the ripe earth; in a smell that is in no way inferior to the smell of the sea, bitter where it borders on taste, and more honeysweet where you feel it touching the first sounds. Containing depth within itself, darkness, something of the grave almost.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke (Letters on CΓ©zanne)
β
This is what the things can teach us: to fall, patiently to trust our heaviness. Even a bird has to do that before he can fly.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke
β
Thatβs love: Two lonely persons keep each other safe and touch each other and talk to each other.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke
β
Think... of the world you carry within you.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke
β
At bottom, and just in the deepest and most important things, we are unutterably alone, and for one person to be able to advise or even help another, a lot must happen, a lot must go well, a whole constellation of things must come right in order once to succeed.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke (Letters to a Young Poet)
β
If you will stay close to nature, to its simplicity, to the small things hardly noticeable, those things can unexpectedly become great and immeasurable.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke (Letters to a Young Poet)
β
I am circling around God, around the ancient tower, and I have been circling for a thousand years, and I still don't know if I am a falcon, or a storm, or a great song.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke (Rainer Maria Rilke's The Book of Hours: A New Translation with Commentary (Studies in German Literature Linguistics and Culture) (Volume 19))
β
To love is good, too: love being difficult. For one human being to love another: that is perhaps the most difficult of all our tasks, the ultimate, the last test and proof, the work for which all other work is but preparation...Love is a high inducement to the individual to ripen, to become something in himself, to become world for himself for another's sake, it is a great exacting claim upon him, something that chooses him out and calls him to vast things.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke (Letters to a Young Poet)
β
In the deepest hour of the night, confess to yourself that you would die if you were forbidden to write. And look deep into your heart where it spreads its roots, the answer, and ask yourself, must I write?
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke (Letters to a Young Poet)
β
Rilke wrote: 'These trees are magnificent, but even more magnificent is the sublime and moving space between them, as though with their growth it too increased.
β
β
Gaston Bachelard (The Poetics of Space)
β
You must give birth to your images. They are the future waiting to be born. Fear not the strangeness you feel. The future must enter you long before it happens. Just wait for the birth, for the the hour of the new clarity.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke
β
I live not in dreams but in contemplation of a reality that is perhaps the future.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke
β
It is always what I have already said: always the wish that you may find patience enough in yourself to endure, and simplicity enough to believe; that you may acquire more and more confidence in that which is difficult, and in your solitude among others. And for the rest, let life happen to you. Believe me: life is right, in any case.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke
β
most people come to know only one corner of their room, one spot near the window, one narrow strip on which they keep walking back and forth.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke (Letters to a Young Poet)
β
So don't be frightened, dear friend, if a sadness confronts you larger than any you have ever known, casting its shadow over all you do. You must think that something is happening within you, and remember that life has not forgotten you; it holds you in its hand and will not let you fall. Why would you want to exclude from your life any uneasiness, any pain, any depression, since you don't know what work they are accomplishing within you?
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke (Letters to a Young Poet)
β
Keep growing quietly and seriously throughout your whole development; you cannot disturb it more rudely than by looking outward and expecting from outside replies to questions that only your inmost feeling in your most hushed hour can perhaps answer.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke (Letters to a Young Poet)
β
There are no classes in life for beginners: right away you are always asked to deal with what is most difficult.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke
β
I am too alone in the world, and yet not alone enough
to make every moment holy.
I am too tiny in this world, and not tiny enough
just to lie before you like a thing,
shrewd and secretive.
I want my own will, and I want simply to be with my will,
as it goes toward action;
and in those quiet, sometimes hardly moving times,
when something is coming near,
I want to be with those who know secret things
or else alone.
I want to be a mirror for your whole body,
and I never want to be blind, or to be too old
to hold up your heavy and swaying picture.
I want to unfold.
I donβt want to stay folded anywhere,
because where I am folded, there I am a lie.
and I want my grasp of things to be
true before you. I want to describe myself
like a painting that I looked at
closely for a long time,
like a saying that I finally understood,
like the pitcher I use every day,
like the face of my mother,
like a ship
that carried me
through the wildest storm of all.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke (Rilke's Book of Hours: Love Poems to God)
β
It is not inertia alone that is responsible for human relationships repeating themselves from case to case, indescribably monotonous and unrenewed: it is shyness before any sort of new, unforeseeable experience with which one does not think oneself able to cope. But only someone who is ready for everything, who excludes nothing, not even the most enigmatical will live the relation to another as something alive.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke (Letters to a Young Poet)
β
I love the dark hours of my being.
My mind deepens into them.
There I can find, as in old letters,
the days of my life, already lived,
and held like a legend, and understood.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke (Rilke's Book of Hours: Love Poems to God)
β
How should we be able to forget those ancient myths that are at the beginning of all peoples, the myths about dragons that at the last moment turn into princesses; perhaps all the dragons of our lives are princesses who are only waiting to see us once beautiful and brave. Perhaps everything terrible is in its deepest being something helpless that wants help from us.
So you must not be frightened if a sadness rises up before you larger than any you have ever seen; if a restiveness, like light and cloudshadows, passes over your hands and over all you do. You must think that something is happening with you, that life has not forgotten you, that it holds you in its hand; it will not let you fall. Why do you want to shut out of your life any uneasiness, any miseries, or any depressions? For after all, you do not know what work these conditions are doing inside you.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke (Letters to a Young Poet)
β
Go into yourself. Find out the reason that commands you to write; see whether it has spread its roots into the very depths of your heart; confess to yourself whether you would have to die if you were forbidden to write.
This most of all: ask yourself in the most silent hour of your night: must I write? Dig into yourself for a deep answer. And if this answer rings out in assent, if you meet this solemn question with a strong, simple βI must,β then build your life in accordance with this necessity; your whole life, even into its humblest and most indifferent hour, must become a sign and witness to this impulse. Then come close to Nature. Then, as if no one had ever tried before, try to say what you see and feel and love and lose...
...Describe your sorrows and desires, the thoughts that pass through your mind and your belief in some kind of beauty - describe all these with heartfelt, silent, humble sincerity and, when you express yourself, use the Things around you, the images from your dreams, and the objects that you remember. If your everyday life seems poor, donβt blame it; blame yourself; admit to yourself that you are not enough of a poet to call forth its riches; because for the creator there is not poverty and no poor, indifferent place. And even if you found yourself in some prison, whose walls let in none of the worldβs sounds β wouldnβt you still have your childhood, that jewel beyond all price, that treasure house of memories? Turn your attentions to it. Try to raise up the sunken feelings of this enormous past; your personality will grow stronger, your solitude will expand and become a place where you can live in the twilight, where the noise of other people passes by, far in the distance. - And if out of this turning-within, out of this immersion in your own world, poems come, then you will not think of asking anyone whether they are good or not. Nor will you try to interest magazines in these works: for you will see them as your dear natural possession, a piece of your life, a voice from it. A work of art is good if it has arisen out of necessity. That is the only way one can judge it.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke
β
She who reconciles the ill-matched threads
Of her life, and weaves them gratefully
Into a single cloth β
Itβs she who drives the loudmouths from the hall
And clears it for a different celebration.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke
β
And your doubt can become a good quality if you train it. It must become knowing, it must become criticism. Ask it, whenever it wants to spoil something for you, why something is ugly, demand proofs from it, test it, and you will find it perhaps bewildered and embarrased, perhaps also protesting. But don't give in, insist on arguments, and act in this way, attentive and persistent, every single time, and the day will come when, instead of being a destroyer, it will become one of your best workers--perhaps the most intelligent of all the ones that are building your life.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke (Letters to a Young Poet)
β
How can I keep my soul in me, so that it doesn't touch your soul? How can I raise it high enough, past you, to other things?
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke
β
You who never arrived
in my arms, Beloved, who were lost
from the start,
I don't even know what songs
would please you. I have given up trying
to recognize you in the surging wave of
the next moment. All the immense
images in me -- the far-off, deeply-felt landscape,
cities, towers, and bridges, and un-
suspected turns in the path,
and those powerful lands that were once
pulsing with the life of the gods--
all rise within me to mean
you, who forever elude me.
You, Beloved, who are all
the gardens I have ever gazed at,
longing. An open window
in a country house-- , and you almost
stepped out, pensive, to meet me. Streets that I chanced
upon,--
you had just walked down them and vanished.
And sometimes, in a shop, the mirrors
were still dizzy with your presence and, startled, gave back
my too-sudden image. Who knows? Perhaps the same
bird echoed through both of us
yesterday, separate, in the evening...
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke
β
I am learning to see. I don't know why it is, but everything enters me more deeply and doesn't stop where it once used to. I have an interior that I never knew of... What's the use of telling someone that I am changing? If I'm changing, I am no longer who I was; and if I am something else, it's obvious that I have no acquaintances. And I can't possibly write to strangers.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke (The Notebooks of Malte Laurids Brigge)
β
there is only one solitude, and it is vast, heavy, difficult to bear, and almost everyone has hours when he would gladly exchange it for any kind of sociability, however trivial or cheap, for the tiniest outward agreement with the first person who comes along....
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke (Letters to a Young Poet)
β
I am the rest between two notes which are somehow always in discord.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke
β
Afterward, Isabel drove me home and I shut myself in the study with Rilke, and I read and I wanted.
And leaving you (there arent words to untangle it)
Your life, fearful and immense and blossoming,
So that, sometimes frustrated, and sometimes
understanding
Your life is sometimes a stone in you, and then, a star
I was beginning to undertand poetry.
β
β
Maggie Stiefvater (Shiver (The Wolves of Mercy Falls, #1))
β
Once the realization is accepted that even between the closest human beings infinite distances continue, a wonderful living side by side can grow, if they succeed in loving the distance between them which makes it possible for each to see the other whole against the sky.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke
β
You darkness, that I come from,
I love you more than all the fires
that fence in the world,
for the fire makes
a circle of light for everyone,
and then no one outside learns of you.
But the darkness pulls in everything:
shapes and fires, animals and myself,
how easily it gathers them! -
powers and people -
and it is possible a great energy
is moving near me.
I have faith in nights.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke
β
And you should not let yourself be confused in your solitude by the fact that there is something in you that wants to move out of it.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke (Letters to a Young Poet)
β
No experience has been too unimportant, and the smallest event unfolds like a fate, and fate itself is like a wonderful, wide fabric in which every thread is guided by an infinitely tender hand and laid alongside another thread and is held and supported by a hundred others
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke
β
God speaks to each of us as he makes us,
then walks with us silently out of the night.
These are the words we dimly hear:
You, sent out beyond your recall,
go to the limits of your longing.
Embody me.
Flare up like a flame
and make big shadows I can move in.
Let everything happen to you: beauty and terror.
Just keep going. No feeling is final.
Don't let yourself lose me.
Nearby is the country they call life.
You will know it by its seriousness.
Give me your hand.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke (Rilke's Book of Hours: Love Poems to God)
β
This is the miracle that happens every time to those who really love: the more they give, the more they possess.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke
β
If no one else, the dying must notice how unreal, how full of pretense, is all that we accomplish here, where nothing is allowed to be itself.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke (The Selected Poetry of Rainer Maria Rilke)
β
But there is much beauty here, because there is much beauty everywhere.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke (Letters to a Young Poet)
β
Our heart always transcends us.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke
β
You see, I want a lot.
Perhaps I want everything
the darkness that comes with every infinite fall
and the shivering blaze of every step up.
So many live on and want nothing
And are raised to the rank of prince
By the slippery ease of their light judgments
But what you love to see are faces
that do work and feel thirst.
You love most of all those who need you
as they need a crowbar or a hoe.
You have not grown old, and it is not too late
To dive into your increasing depths
where life calmly gives out its own secret.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke (Rilke's Book of Hours: Love Poems to God)
β
Shattered people are best represented by bits and pieces.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke
β
If we surrendered
to earthβs intelligence
we could rise up rooted, like trees.
Instead we entangle ourselves
in knots of our own making
and struggle, lonely and confused.
So like children, we begin again...
to fall,
patiently to trust our heaviness.
Even a bird has to do that
before he can fly.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke (Rilke's Book of Hours: Love Poems to God)
β
it is clear that we must trust what is difficult; everything alive trusts in it, everything in Nature grows and defends itself any way it can and is spontaneously itself, tries to be itself at all costs and against all opposition. We know little, but that we must trust in what is difficult is a certainty that will never abandon us; it is good to be solitary, for solitude is difficult; that something is difficult must be one more reason for us to do it.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke (Letters to a Young Poet)
β
So you mustn't be frightened, dear Mr. Kappus, if a sadness rises in front of you, larger than any you have ever seen; if an anxiety - like light and cloud-shadows, moves over your hands and everything you do. You must realize that something is happening to you, that life has not forgotten you, that it holds you in the palm of its hand and will not let you fall.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke
β
When anxious, uneasy and bad thoughts come, I go to the sea, and the sea drowns them out with its great wide sounds, cleanses me with its noise, and imposes a rhythm upon everything in me that is bewildered and confused.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke
β
The future enters into us, in order to transform itself in us, long before it happens.
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke
β
Comfort me from wherever you areβalone, we are quickly worn out; if I place my head on the road, let it seem softened by you. Could it be that even from afar we offer each other a gentle breath?
β
β
Rainer Maria Rilke
β
And leaving you (there aren't words to untangle it)
Your life, fearful and immense and blossoming,
so that, sometimes frustrated, and sometimes understanding,
Your life is sometimes a stone in you, and then, a star.
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Maggie Stiefvater (Shiver (The Wolves of Mercy Falls, #1))
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It seems to me that almost all our sadnesses are moments of tension, which we feel as paralysis because we no longer hear our astonished emotions living. Because we are alone with the unfamiliar presence that has entered us; because everything we trust and are used to is for a moment taken away from us; because we stand in the midst of a transition where we cannot remain standing. That is why the sadness passes: the new presence inside us, the presence that has been added, has entered our heart, has gone into its innermost chamber and is no longer even there, - is already in our bloodstream. And we don't know what it was. We could easily be made to believe that nothing happened, and yet we have changed, as a house that a guest has entered changes. We can't say who has come, perhaps we will never know, but many signs indicate that the future enters us in this way in order to be transformed in us, long before it happens. And that is why it is so important to be solitary and attentive when one is sad: because the seemingly uneventful and motionless moment when our future steps into us is so much closer to life than that other loud and accidental point of time when it happens to us as if from outside. The quieter we are, the more patient and open we are in our sadnesses, the more deeply and serenely the new presence can enter us, and the more we can make it our own, the more it becomes our fate.
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Rainer Maria Rilke
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For one human being to love another; that is perhaps the most difficult of all our tasks, the ultimate, the last test and proof, the work for which all other work is but preparation. I hold this to be the highest task for a bond between two people: that each protects the solitude of the other.β¨This is the miracle that happens every time to those who really love: the more they give, the more they possess.
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Rainer Maria Rilke (Letters to a Young Poet)
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You are so young, so before all beginning, and I want to beg you, as much as I can, to be patient toward all that is unsolved in your heart and to try to love the questions themselvesβlike locked rooms and like books that are written in a very foreign tongue. Do not now seek the answers, which cannot be given to you because you would not be able to live them. The point is, to live everything. Live the questions now. Perhaps you will then gradually, without noticing it, live along some distant day into the answer.
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Rainer Maria Rilke (Letters to a Young Poet)
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For the sake of a few lines one must see many cities, men and things. One must know the animals, one must feel how the birds fly and know the gesture with which the small flowers open in the morning. One must be able to think back to roads in unknown regions, to unexpected meetings and to partings which one had long seen coming; to days of childhood that are still unexplained, to parents that one had to hurt when they brought one some joy and one did not grasp it (it was joy for someone else); to childhood illness that so strangely began with a number of profound and grave transformations, to days in rooms withdrawn and quiet and to mornings by the sea, to the sea itself, to seas, to nights of travel that rushed along on high and flew with all the stars-and it is not enough if one may think all of this. One must have memories of many nights of love, none of which was like the others, of the screams of women in labor, and of light, white, sleeping women in childbed, closing again. But one must also have been beside the dying, one must have sat beside the dead in the room with the open window and the fitful noises. And still it is not enough to have memories. One must be able to forget them when they are many, and one must have the great patience to wait until they come again. For it is not yet the memories themselves. Not until they have turned to blood within us, to glance, to gesture, nameless and no longer to be distinguished from ourselves-not until then can it happen that in a most rare hour the first word of a verse arises in their midst and goes forth from them.
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Rainer Maria Rilke (The Notebooks of Malte Laurids Brigge)
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But this is what ... people are so often and disastrously wrong in doing: they (who by their very nature are impatient) fling themselves at each other when love takes hold of them, they scatter themselves, just as they are, in all their messiness, disorder, bewilderment ...
And what can happen then? What can life do with this heap of half broken things that they would like to call their happiness, and their futures?
And so each of them loses himself to the other for the sake of the other person, and loses the other. And loses the vast possibilities ... in exchange for an unfruitful confusion, out of which nothing more can come, nothing but a bit of disgust, disappointment and poverty.
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Rainer Maria Rilke (Letters to a Young Poet)