Friedrich Hölderlin was one of Europe's greatest poets. The strange and
beautiful language of his late poems is recreated by David Constantine
in these remarkable verse translations. This is a new expanded edition
of Constantine's widely-praised Hölderlin Selected Poems (1990/1996),
containing many new translations as well as the whole of Hölderlin's
Sophocles (2001), in which he sought to create an equivalent English for
Hölderlin's extraordinary German recreations of the classic Greek verse
plays. Constantine won the European Poetry Translation Prize in 1997 for
his translations of Hölderlin. This new volume presents a substantial
selection from the work of a poet who, writing around 1800, addresses us
ever more urgently two centuries later. Hölderlin translated all his
writing life. Through translation he reached a poetic language of his
own, so that much of his best poetry reads like a translation from
elsewhere. He was intensely occupied with Sophocles in the winter of
1803-04. His versions of Oedipus Rex and Antigone (he worked at but
never finished Oedipus at Colonus and Ajax) came out in the spring of
1804 and were taken, by the learned, as conclusive proof of his
insanity. He was by then very near to mental collapse, but no one now
would dismiss his work for that. He translated in a radical and
idiosyncratic way, cleaving close to the Greek yet at the same time
striving to interpret these ancient, foreign and - as he thought -
sacred originals, and so bring them home into the modern day and age.
Constantine has translated Hölderlin's translations, carrying as much of
their strangeness as possible into his English. The plays themselves
need no introduction or apology. These double translations, links in
literature from land to land and from age to age, demonstrate the
vitality of ancient and modern poetic tradition. Carl Orff used
Hölderlin's texts for his operas Antigonae (1949) and Oedipus der Tyrann
(1959), with the producers of recent DVDs of Orff's operas later
choosing to use Constantine's texts for their English subtitles.