LIMITED FIRST EDITION OF RILKE’S DIE SONETTE AN ORPHEUS, ONE OF ONLY 300 COPIES, PRESENTATION COPY, WONDERFULLY INSCRIBED BY RILKE TO JEAN POZZI
RILKE, Rainer Maria. Die Sonette an Orpheus. Leipzig: Insel-Verlag, 1923. Octavo, publisher’s full green calf gilt, gilt-ruled covers, raised bands, patterned endpapers, top edge gilt, uncut and unopened. Housed in a custom leather-trimmed slipcase.
Limited first edition of Rilke’s magnificent verses concerning the role of poetry and art in life, number 126 of only 300 copies, inscribed by the poet to the French diplomat and famed orientalist Jean Pozzi: “A Monsieur Jean Pozzi, heureux de l’affirmer dans la possession de ce livre (que je n’avais jamais vu si soigneusement habilé). R. M. Rilke.”
The sonnets of this sequence were composed during Rilke’s mensis mirabilis (February 1922) at the Château Muzot in the Rhone valley. The work is composed of two linked cycles of 55 sonnets, which Rilke dedicated as a memorial to Vera Knoop (1902-21). Though the dedication suggests a requiem, the sonnets are very much concerned with life, and especially with the role of poetry in art and life. The poems fused elegiac and hymnic elements, transposing the world into poetic forms with the assurance that life was still worth living in spite of the rootlessness and insecurities of the postwar world. In translation the inscription reads: “For Monsieur Jean Pozzi, happy to have him in possession of this book (which I have never seen so carefully bound).” The handsome original calf-gilt binding that Rilke refers to was executed by H. Sperling of Leipzig. Jean Pozzi was the son of the distinguished physician Dr. Samuel Pozzi. Like his father, Jean Pozzi had a stellar academic career, receiving degrees in literature, law, and political science. His diplomatic appointments took him to all countries of Europe, North Africa, and the Middle East. Rilke was often in Switzerland from 1919 onwards, so it is likely that he met Pozzi then.
A beautifully bound inscribed volume of some of the finest poetry of the 20th century, in fine condition with an excellent association.