Abstract
The present study of the philosophical orientation within the poetics of Rilke and Stevens aims to show that in the context of modern poetry, transcendence, or “crossing beyond,” must be understood in two distinct senses, as vertical and horizontal projections. The
usurpation of one by the other or the transfer between them distinguishes
the poetry of Rilke and Stevens and makes a comparative reading particularly
illuminating. The fact that Rilke and Stevens are two of the most
widely invoked poets in the phenomenological tradition will help to establish
a modern sense of transcendence distinct from a traditional or Romantic longing
for a realm above and beyond earthly existence. This would
be an “immanent” transcendence, a crossing of horizons between perception
and imagination or imagination and reality, by the disclosures and inventions
of which, it is argued here, the more traditional notion of transcendence is
usurped in distinct ways.