Sri Aurobindo
Letters on Poetry and Art
SABCL - Volume 27
Part 1. Poetry and its Creation
Section 1. The Sources of Poetry
Sources of Inspiration
Poetic Intelligence and Dynamic Sight
On the plane of poetic intelligence the creation is by
thought, the Idea force is the inspiring Muse and the images are constructed by
the idea, they are mind-images; on the plane of dynamic vision one creates by
sight, by direct grasp either of the thing in itself or of some living
significant symbol or expressive body of it. This dynamic sight is not the
vision that comes by an intense reconstruction of physical seeing or through a
strong vital experience; it is a kind of inner occult sight which sees the
things behind the veil, the forms that are more intimate and expressive than any
outward appearance. It is a very vivid sight and the expression that comes with
it is also extremely vivid and living but with a sort of inner super-life. To be
able to write at will from this plane is sufficiently rare,— but a poet
habitually writing from some other level may stumble into it from time to time
or it may come to him strongly and lift him up out of his ordinary sight or
intelligence. Coleridge had it with great vividness at certain moments. Blake’s
poems are full of it, but it is not confined to
the poetry of the occult or of the supernormal; this vision can take up outward
and physical things, the substance of normal experience, and recreate them in
the light of something deep behind which makes their outward figure look like
mere symbols of some more intense reality within them. In contemporary poetry
there is an attempt at a more frequent or habitual use of the dynamic vision,
but the success is not always commensurate with the energy of the endeavour.
9 July 1931