Listen "Possibility and Loss in the Poetry of Rainer Maria Rilke"
Episode Synopsis
In his poem “You Who Never Arrived,” Rainer Maria Rilke suggests that we can mourn love as an unrealized possibility, and see this loss signified everywhere in the ordinary objects of the external world. In “Be Ahead of All Parting” (II.13 from his “Sonnets to Orpheus”), he seems to claim that poetry has the capacity to redeem such losses—and retrieve them, so to speak, from their underworld. Wes & Erin discuss these two classics, and whether—as Rilke suggests—death can be put in service of life, and suffering sourced as the principal wellspring of a joyful existence.
More episodes of the podcast Subtext: Conversations about Classic Books and Films
(post)script: Post-Gatsby
08/09/2025
The American Dream in F. Scott Fitzgerald’s “The Great Gatsby” (Re-Release for 100th Anniversary)
02/09/2025
Containment and Play in “Jaws” (Part 2)
25/08/2025
Containment and Play in “Jaws”
18/08/2025
Anti-Mystery in “Picnic at Hanging Rock”
08/07/2025