The Dark Interval Rilke Quotes

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My life is not this steeply sloping hour, in which you see me hurrying. Much stands behind me; I stand before it like a tree; I am only one of my many mouths, and at that, the one that will be still the soonest. I am the rest between two notes, which are somehow always in discord because Death’s note wants to climb over— but in the dark interval, reconciled, they stay there trembling. And the song goes on, beautiful.
Rainer Maria Rilke (The Selected Poetry of Rainer Maria Rilke)
There is death in life, and it astonishes me that we pretend to ignore this: death, whose unforgiving presence we experience with each change we survive because we must learn to die slowly. We must learn to die: That is all of life.
Rainer Maria Rilke (The Dark Interval: Letters on Loss, Grief, and Transformation (Modern Library Classics))
They all have tired mouths and bright seamless souls. And a longing (as for sin) sometimes haunts their dreams. They are almost all alike; in God's gardens they keep still, like many, many intervals in his might and melody. Only when they spread their wings are they wakers of a wind: as if God with his broad sculptor- hands leafed through the pages in the dark book of the beginning.
Rainer Maria Rilke (The Book of Images)
All of our true relationships, all of our enduring experiences touch upon and pass through everything, Sidie, through life and death. We must live in both, be intimately at home in both.
Rainer Maria Rilke (The Dark Interval: Letters on Loss, Grief, and Transformation (Modern Library Classics))
It is still this death which continues inside of me, which works in me, which transforms my heart, which deepens the red of my blood, which bears down heavily on the life that had been ours so that this death becomes a bittersweet drop coursing through my veins and permeating everything, and which ought to be mine forever.
Rainer Maria Rilke (The Dark Interval: Letters on Loss, Grief, and Transformation (Modern Library Classics))
If people took some simple pleasure in reality (which is entirely independent of time), they would never have needed to come up with the idea that they could ever again lose anything with which they had truly bonded. No constellation is as steadfast, no accomplishment as irrevocable as a connection between human beings which, at the very moment it becomes visible, works more forcefully in those invisible depths where our existence is as lasting as gold lodged in stone, more constant than a star.
Rainer Maria Rilke (The Dark Interval: Letters on Loss, Grief, and Transformation (Modern Library Classics))
Continue to believe that with your feeling and with your work you take part in what is greatest. The more strongly you cultivate this belief inside of you, the more it will give rise to reality and world.
Rainer Maria Rilke (The Dark Interval: Letters on Loss, Grief, and Transformation (Modern Library Classics))
I hope that somewhere in the thicket of your sprawling pain you may come upon the small spring that has already cried all the tears before, and, indeed, for you in advance.
Rainer Maria Rilke (The Dark Interval: Letters on Loss, Grief, and Transformation (Modern Library Classics))
And while I am completely engulfed in my sadness, I am happy to sense that you exist, beautiful one. I am happy to have flung myself without fear into your beauty just as a bird flings itself into space. I am happy, dear, to have walked with steady faith on the waters of our uncertainty all the way to that island which is your heart and where pain blossoms. Finally: happy.
Rainer Maria Rilke (The Dark Interval: Letters on Loss, Grief, and Transformation (Modern Library Classics))
Time itself does not “console,” as people say superficially; at best it assigns things to their proper place and creates an order.
Rainer Maria Rilke (The Dark Interval: Letters on Loss, Grief, and Transformation (Modern Library Classics))
The sleeping and the waking, the bright and the dark, the voice and the silence... la présence et l'absence. All the presumed opposites which converge somewhere in one point where they sing the hymn of their union--and this place is, for the time being, our heart.
Rainer Maria Rilke (The Dark Interval: Letters on Loss, Grief, and Transformation (Modern Library Classics))
You become more protective and more capable of granting protection exactly to the extent that you have lost and now lack protection. The solitude into which you were cast so violently makes you capable of balancing out the loneliness of others to exactly the same degree.
Rainer Maria Rilke (The Dark Interval: Letters on Loss, Grief, and Transformation (Modern Library Classics))
I am very concerned when I imagine how strangled and cut off you currently live, afraid of touching anything that is filled with memories (and what is not filled with memories?). You will freeze in place if you remain this way. You must not, dear. You have to move. You have to return to his things. You have to touch with your hands his things, which through their manifold relations and affinity are after all also yours. You must, Sidie (this is the task that this incomprehensible fate imposes upon you), you must continue his life inside of yours insofar as it was unfinished; his life has now passed onto yours. You, who quite truly knew him, can quite truly continue in his spirit and on his path. Make it the task of your mourning to explore what he had expected of you, had hoped for you, had wished to happen to you. If I could just convince you, my dear friend, that his influence has not vanished from your existence
Rainer Maria Rilke (The Dark Interval: Letters on Loss, Grief, and Transformation (Modern Library Classics))
It is a blessed moment of inner life when one decides or resolves from now on to love with all one’s strength and unflinchingly that which one fears the most, that which has made us—according to our own measure—suffer too much. Don’t you believe that once such a decision has been made, the word “separation” is nothing but a name stripped of all meaning,
Rainer Maria Rilke (The Dark Interval: Letters for the Grieving Heart)
And while I am completely engulfed in my sadness, I am happy to sense that you exist, beautiful one. I am happy to have flung myself without fear into your beauty just as a bird flings itself into space. I am happy, dear, to have walked with steady faith on the waters of our uncertainty all the way to that island which is your heart and where pain blossoms.
Rainer Maria Rilke (The Dark Interval: Letters for the Grieving Heart)
Where things become truly difficult and unbearable, we find ourselves in a place already very close to its transformation.
Rainer Maria Rilke (The Dark Interval: Letters on Loss, Grief, and Transformation (Modern Library Classics))
Through love and through death, our innate ability to transform the loss of control is activated to bring forth a deeper awareness of life.
Rainer Maria Rilke (The Dark Interval: Letters for the Grieving Heart)
But as to the influence of the death of someone near on those he leaves behind, it has long seemed to me that this ought to be no other than a higher responsibility. Does the person who passes away not leave all the things he had begun in hundreds of ways to be continued by those who outlive him, if they had shared any kind of inner bond at all? In recent years I had to live through so many close experiences of death, but not one person has been taken from me without my having found the tasks around me increased. The weight of this unexplained and perhaps greatest event, which only due to a misunderstanding has gained the reputation of being arbitrary and cruel, presses us (I think increasingly) more evenly and more deeply into life and places the utmost obligations on our slowly growing strengths.
Rainer Maria Rilke (The Dark Interval: Letters on Loss, Grief, and Transformation (Modern Library Classics))
I want to encourage you in your pain so that you will completely experience it in all its fullness, because as the experience of a new intensity it is a great life experience and leads everything back again to life, like everything that reaches a certain degree of greatest strength.
Rainer Maria Rilke (The Dark Interval: Letters on Loss, Grief, and Transformation (Modern Library Classics))
No constellation is as steadfast, no accomplishment as irrevocable as a connection between human beings which, at the very moment it becomes visible, works more forcefully in those invisible depths where our existence is as lasting as gold lodged in stone, more constant than a star.
Rainer Maria Rilke (The Dark Interval: Letters on Loss, Grief, and Transformation (Modern Library Classics))
The weight of this unexplained and perhaps greatest event, which only due to a misunder- standing has gained the reputation of being arbitrary and cruel, presses us (I think increasingly) more evenly and more deeply into life and places the utmost obligations on our slowly growing strengths,
Rainer Maria Rilke (The Dark Interval: Letters on Loss, Grief, and Transformation (Modern Library Classics))
The loss that now casts its deep shadow over you is also a task to endure and a matter of coming to terms with all of the suffering that may befall us—for once the mother leaves us, we lose all protection. You have to undergo the terrible process of becoming more resilient. But in return... (and you have also begun to feel this already) in return the power of protection now becomes yours, and all the gentleness which until now you had been able to receive will blossom more and more inside of you into your new capacity to share it as something—inherited and acquired unspeakably, at the deepest price—of your own.
Rainer Maria Rilke (The Dark Interval: Letters on Loss, Grief, and Transformation (Modern Library Classics))
What shouldn't a person be able to achieve with precisely the kind of force that is needed to dissolve the powerful, tremendous attachments of life! From that moment on I have known with certainty that the worst things, and even despair, are only a kind of abundance and an onslaught of existence that one decision of the heart could turn into its opposiite. Where things become truly difficult and unbearable, we find ourselves in a place already very close to its transformation.
Rainer Maria Rilke (The Dark Interval: Letters on Loss, Grief, and Transformation (Modern Library Classics))
He also distrusted the major political ideologies of the modern age, which provided comfort via collective identities, overarching causes, or abstract ideals.
Rainer Maria Rilke (The Dark Interval: Letters for the Grieving Heart)
Who was this woman who lived for other people and yet, beneath everything and without knowing or admitting to it, harbored the demands of an entire life within her as if they had been left there entirely touched, so that one could often get the idea that she was also the opposite of what she wanted to be, and that both of these states would be equally true and equally unreal?
Rainer Maria Rilke (The Dark Interval: Letters on Loss, Grief, and Transformation (Modern Library Classics))
He had been so dear to me that for my entire childhood the mere thought that one day he could no longer exist brought all of nature, both outside and inside of me, to a standstill.—But actually, under the influence of ever deeper initiation, nature eventually became more expressive, touching and moving to me with every loss that I suffered as if it brought me ever closer to its heart.
Rainer Maria Rilke (The Dark Interval: Letters for the Grieving Heart)
How much childhood is in that picture, and how everything is already settled there in the quiet, so indescribably lonely state of being a child, at the time when seated in an armchair one cannot touch the floor and with immense courage just keeps sitting there in that vast space which begins all around one and goes on and on. It is a very sweet and meaningful small picture. Thank you for letting me see it.
Rainer Maria Rilke (The Dark Interval: Letters on Loss, Grief, and Transformation (Modern Library Classics))
You have to undergo the terrible process of becoming more resilient. But in return…(and you have also begun to feel this already) in return the power of protection now becomes yours, and all the gentleness which until now you had been able to receive will blossom more and more inside of you into your new capacity to share it as something—inherited and acquired unspeakably, at the deepest price—of your own.
Rainer Maria Rilke (The Dark Interval: Letters on Loss, Grief, and Transformation (Modern Library Classics))
But on the other hand, I am very concerned when I imagine how strangled and cut off you currently live, afraid of touching anything that is filled with memories and what is not filled with memories?). You will freeze in place if you remain this way. You must not, dear. You have to move. You have to return to his things. You have to touch with your hands his things, which through their manifold relations and affinity are after all also yours.
Rainer Maria Rilke (The Dark Interval: Letters on Loss, Grief, and Transformation (Modern Library Classics))
First, this is what we welcome now above all, that human beings are making a new start here and there to rebuild life with the strength and the faith of their indestructible hearts. There are others who could try this but who still just stand there, staring and trying to make sense of it all, and for whom sadness and sloth finally become utterly insurmountable. And this even though, based on feeling and reflection, only one thing is urgently needed: to attach oneself somewhere to nature with unconditional purpose, to what is strong, striving, and bright, and to move forward without guile, even if it can happen only in the least important, daily matters.
Rainer Maria Rilke (The Dark Interval: Letters on Loss, Grief, and Transformation (Modern Library Classics))
Each time we tackle something with joy, each time we open our eyes toward a yet untouched distance, we transform not only this and the next moment, but we also rearrange and gradually absorb the past inside of us. We dissolve the foreign body of pain of which we know neither its actual consistency and makeup nor how many (perhaps) life-affirming stimuli it imparts, once it has been dissolved, to our blood! Death, especially the most completely felt and experienced death, has never remained an obstacle to life for a surviving individual, because its innermost essence is not contrary to us (as one may occasionally suspect), but it is more knowing about life than we are in our most vital moments. I always think that such a great weight, with its tremendous pressure, somehow has the task of forcing us into a deeper, more intimate layer of life so that we may grow out of it all the more vibrant and fertile. I gained this experience very early on through various circumstances, and it was then confirmed from pain to pain: What is here and now is, after all, what has been given and is expected of us, and we must attempt to transform everything that happens to us into a new familiarity and friendliness with it. For where else should we direct our senses, which after all have been exquisitely designed to grasp and master what is here?
Rainer Maria Rilke (The Dark Interval: Letters on Loss, Grief, and Transformation (Modern Library Classics))