Sri Aurobindo
Letters on Poetry and Art
SABCL - Volume 27
Part 1. Poetry and its Creation
Section 1. The Sources of Poetry
Overhead Poetry
The Mantra
The mantra as I have tried
to describe it in The Future Poetry is a word of power and light that
comes from the Overmind inspiration or from some
very high plane of Intuition. Its characteristics are a language that conveys
infinitely more than the mere surface sense of the words seems to indicate, a
rhythm that means even more than the language and is born out of the Infinite
and disappears into it, and the power to convey not merely the mental, vital or
physical contents or indications or values of the thing uttered, but its
significance and figure in some fundamental and original consciousness which is
behind all these and greater. The passages you mention from the Upanishad and
the Gita have certainly the Overmind accent. But ordinarily the Overmind
inspiration does not come out pure in human poetry — it has to come down to an
inferior consciousness and touch it or else to lift it by a seizure and surprise
from above into some infinite largeness. There is always a mixture of the two
elements, not an absolute transformation though the higher may sometimes
dominate. You must remember that the Overmind is a superhuman consciousness and
to be able to write always or purely from an overmind inspiration would mean the
elevation of at least a part of the nature beyond the human level.
But how then do you expect a supramental inspiration to come down here when the Overmind itself is so rarely in human reach? That is always the error of the impatient aspirant, to think he can get the Supermind without going through the intervening stages or to imagine that he has got it when in fact he has only got something from the illumined or intuitive or at the highest some kind of mixed overmind consciousness.
22 June 1931