Five years after responding to Kappus for the first time, Rilke found himself contemplating a marble sculpture of a Greek youth that he had seen in the Louvre. Letters summon us in this way so too can art. The invitation is both estranging and thrilling: Could you become the person whose name you read there? Even before you’ve opened the envelope, your identity has been refracted through someone else’s. To hold a letter addressed to you and see your own name in another’s hand is to feel an unsettling kind of pleasure. Kappus wanted to know if his own poems were any good he wanted to know what to write and how to be. “The envelope,” he later wrote, “bore a blue seal and a Paris postmark, weighed heavy in my hand, and presented the same clear, beautiful, confident handwriting on the envelope as the letter itself had from first line to last.” The confidence that Kappus saw in the hand of his correspondent offered an inverse image of the self-doubt that had led him, months earlier, to write to that man-the poet Rainer Maria Rilke. In February, 1903, a nineteen-year-old Austrian military cadet named Franz Xaver Kappus received a letter whose contents, he hoped, would teach him how to live.
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