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Rainer Maria Rilke Letters To A Young Poet Analysis

Decent Essays

There is a formula of writing that Rainer Maria Rilke explores in his Letters to a Young Poet. This formula, which describes a balance between two extremes, is also applicable to life. In order for true meaning and purpose to be gleaned from life, it has to be lived deeply in a combination of solitude and engaging with the world. In the first letter, Rilke cautions Kappus against turning to outside sources for advice, “you ask whether your verses are any good … you send them to magazines, you compare them to other poems, and you are upset when certain editors reject your work” (Rilke 5). Seeking others to interpret his own poems was a mistake for Kappus, and an abuse of outside sources. Criticism is an aspect of society that combines straightforward words, meaningless connotation, and negative judgement into a harmful concoction of all that is to be avoided in branching out of solitude. Finding the middle ground between blocking out every other voice to accepting criticism is important in the journey of a poet. Rilke’s letters themself are proof of this middle ground. Rilke warns against criticism in the beginning of his first letter, stating that it only results “in more or less fortunate misunderstandings,” yet then goes on to offer his own ideas on Kappus’s work in a fashion that may seem …show more content…

He describes that even the act of eating has been polluted, since “necessity on the one hand, excess on the other; have muddied the clarity of this need” (Rilke 36). Even regarding a simple daily act, the process of ignoring the balance of what is too little and what is too much results in corruption of the pure. Similarly, a mind that is not careful to avoid an excess of societal influence, and at the same time aware of the nessesity of the outside world, will become corrupted and muddied, and the writing quality will not have any important

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