Critics look at someone else's work and say what they think it should have been. It might take a very strong writer to ignore comments like that and keep on doing what he wanted to do.
In Letter 7, paragraph 2, Rilke talks about a poem the young man has written. He follows his own advice and comments on it without being critical of it. In this paragraph he models a way that the poet might think about his own poems, or how he might think about what other people write.
These three paragraphs show Rilke's way of mentoring. He makes suggestions about what to read. He makes suggestions about how to learn about himself. He makes suggestions about what to read, and even what not to read. But he never does what the poet asked for first. He doesn't analyze the poet and tell him exactly what he should...
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