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 Overmind and Aesthetics
Obviously, the Overmind and aesthetics cannot be
equated together. Aesthetics is concerned mainly with beauty, but more generally
with rasa, the response of the mind, the vital feeling and the sense to a
certain “taste” in things which often may be but is not necessarily a spiritual
feeling. Aesthetics belongs to the mental range and all that depends upon it; it
may degenerate into aestheticism or may exaggerate or narrow itself into some
version of the theory of “Art for Art’s sake”. The Overmind is essentially a spiritual power. Mind in it surpasses its ordinary self
and rises and takes its stand on a spiritual foundation. It embraces beauty and
sublimates it; it has an essential aesthesis which is not limited by rules and
canons; it sees a universal and an eternal beauty while it takes up and
transforms all that is limited and particular. It is besides concerned with
things other than beauty or aesthetics. It is concerned especially with truth
and knowledge or rather with a wisdom that exceeds what we call knowledge; its
truth goes beyond truth of fact and truth of thought, even the higher thought
which is the first spiritual range of the thinker. It has the truth of spiritual
thought, spiritual feeling, spiritual sense and at its highest the truth that
comes by the most intimate spiritual touch or by identity. Ultimately, truth and
beauty come together and coincide, but in between there is a difference.
Overmind in all its dealings puts truth first; it brings out the essential truth
(and truths) in things and also its infinite possibilities; it brings out even
the truth that lies behind falsehood and error; it brings out the truth of the
Inconscient and the truth of the Superconscient and all that lies in between.
When it speaks through poetry, this remains its first essential quality; a
limited aesthetical artistic aim is not its purpose. It can take up and uplift
any or every style or at least put some stamp of itself upon it. More or less
all that we have called overhead poetry has something of this character whether
it be from the Overmind or simply intuitive, illumined or strong with the
strength of the higher revealing Thought; even when it is not intrinsically
overhead poetry, still some touch can come in. Even overhead poetry itself does
not always deal in what is new or striking or strange; it can take up the
obvious, the common, the bare and even the bald, the old, even that which
without it would seem stale and hackneyed and raise it to greatness. Take the
lines:
I spoke as one who ne’er would speak again
And as a dying man to dying men.
The writer is not a poet, not even a conspicuously
talented versifier. The statement of the thought is bare and direct and the
rhetorical device used is of the simplest, but the overhead touch somehow got in through a passionate emotion and sincerity and is
unmistakable. In all poetry a poetical aesthesis of some kind there must be in
the writer and the recipient; but aesthesis is of many kinds and the ordinary
kind is not sufficient for appreciating the overhead element in poetry. A
fundamental and universal aesthesis is needed, something also more intense that
listens, sees and feels from deep within and answers to what is far behind the
surface. A greater, wider and deeper aesthesis then which can answer even to the
transcendent and feel too whatever of the transcendent or spiritual enters into
the things of life, mind and sense.
The business of the critical intellect is to appreciate and judge and here too it must judge; but it can judge and appreciate rightly here only if it first learns to see and sense inwardly and interpret. But it is dangerous for it to lay down its own laws or even laws and rules which it thinks it can deduce from some observed practice of the overhead inspiration and use that to wall in the inspiration; for it runs the risk of seeing the overhead inspiration step across its wall and pass on leaving it bewildered and at a loss. The mere critical intellect not touched by a rarer sight can do little here. We can take an extreme case, for in extreme cases certain incompatibilities come out more clearly. What might be called the Johnsonian critical method has obviously little or no place in this field,— the method which expects a precise logical order in thoughts and language and pecks at all that departs from a matter-of-fact or a strict and rational ideative coherence or a sober and restrained classical taste. Johnson himself is plainly out of his element when he deals crudely with one of Gray’s delicate trifles and tramples and flounders about in the poet’s basin of goldfish breaking it with his heavy and vicious kicks. But also this method is useless in dealing with any kind of romantic poetry. What would the Johnsonian critic say to Shakespeare’s famous lines
Or take up arms against a sea of troubles
And by opposing end them?
He would say, “What a mixture of metaphors and jumble
of ideas! Only a lunatic could take up arms
against a sea! A sea of troubles is a too fanciful metaphor and, in any case,
one can’t end the sea by opposing it, it is more likely to end you.” Shakespeare
knew very well what he was doing; he saw the mixture as well as any critic could
and he accepted it because it brought home, with an inspired force which a
neater language could not have had, the exact feeling and idea that he wanted to
bring out. Still more scared would the Johnsonian be by any occult or mystic
poetry. The Veda, for instance, uses with what seems like a deliberate
recklessness the mixture, at least the association of disparate images, of
things not associated together in the material world which in Shakespeare is
only an occasional departure. What would the Johnsonian make of this
ṛk in the Veda: “That splendour of thee, O Fire, which is in heaven and
in the earth and in the plants and in the waters and by which thou hast spread
out the wide mid-air, is a vivid ocean of light which sees with a divine
seeing”? He would say, “What is this nonsense? How can there be a splendour of
light in plants and in water and how can an ocean of light see divinely or
otherwise? Anyhow, what meaning can there be in all this, it is a senseless
mystical jargon.” But, apart from these extremes, the mere critical intellect is
likely to feel a distaste or an incomprehension with regard to mystical poetry
even if that poetry is quite coherent in its ideas and well-appointed in its
language. It is bound to stumble over all sorts of things that are contrary to
its reason and offensive to its taste: association of contraries, excess or
abruptness or crowding of images, disregard of intellectual limitations in the
thought, concretisation of abstractions, the treating of things and forces as if
there were a consciousness and a personality in them and a hundred other
aberrations from the straight intellectual line. It is not likely either to
tolerate departures in technique which disregard the canons of an established
order. Fortunately here the modernists with all their errors have broken old
bounds and the mystic poet may be more free to invent his own technique.
Here is an instance in point. You refer to certain
things I wrote and concessions I made when you were typing an earlier draft of
the first books of Savitri. You instance my readiness to correct or do away with repetitions of words or clashes of sound
such as “magnificent” in one line and “lucent” in the next. True, but I may
observe that at that time I was passing through a transition from the habits of
an old inspiration and technique to which I often deferred and the new
inspiration that had begun to come. I would still alter this clash because it
was a clash, but I would not as in the old days make a fixed rule of this
avoidance. If lines like the following were to come to me now,
His forehead was a dome magnificent,
And there gazed forth two orbs of lucent truth
That made the human air a world of light,
I would not reject them but accept “magnificent” and “lucent” as entirely in their place. But this would not be an undiscriminating acceptance; for if it had run
His forehead was a wide magnificent dome
And there gazed forth two orbs of lucent truth
I would not be so ready to accept it, for the repetition of sound here occurring in the same place in the line would lack the just rhythmical balance. I have accepted in the present version of Savitri several of the freedoms established by the modernists including internal rhyme, exact assonance of syllable, irregularities introduced into the iambic run of the metre and others which would have been equally painful to an earlier taste. But I have not taken this as a mechanical method or a mannerism, but only where I thought it rhythmically justified; for all freedom must have a truth in it and an order, either a rational or an instinctive and intuitive order.
26 April 1946