Georges Rodenbach was born in Tournai Belgium in 1855. Best known for Bruges-la-Morte (1892), a poetic evocation of Bruges through symbolist eyes disguised as a novel, he was also a prolific poet, producing a significant number of collections before his untimely death from a chest infection aged only 46. The poems here come from one of the most accomplished of his collections Le Règne du Silence (1891), in which he explores the mournful architecture of a decaying Bruges where objects reveal a hidden life through patient observation. Such a theme fed into the work of later poets, most notably Rainer Maria Rilke. Rodenbach, the most Parisian of the Belgian ‘émigrés’ now occupies a distinctive tomb in Père Lachaise Cemetery.
Georges Rodenbach
the wolf of Ossory (OR: Of the prodigies of our times, and first of a wolf which conversed with a priest)
A letter from Rebecca Cartello in Scarborough, England, to her sister Carla in Longreach, Queensland, 15 December 1955
shadowgraph 73: no longer magic (poetry detected in maria goeppert-mayer’s nobel physics lecture, 1963)