Sri Aurobindo
Letters on Poetry and Art
SABCL - Volume 27
Part 1. Poetry and its Creation
Section 3. Poetic Technique
Technique, Inspiration, Artistry
Artistry of Technique [1]
I don’t know that Swinburne failed for this reason —
before assenting to such a dictum I should like to know which were these poems
he spoiled by too much artistry of technique. So far as I remember, his best
poems are those in which he is most perfect in artistry, most curious or
skilful, most subtle. I think his decline began
when he felt himself too much at ease and poured himself out in an endless waste
of melody without caring for substance and the finer finenesses of form.
Attention to technique harms only when a writer is so busy with it that he
becomes indifferent to substance. But if the substance is adequate, the
attention to technique can only give it greater beauty. Even devices like a
refrain, internal rhymes, etc. can indeed be great aids to the inspiration and
the expression — just as can ordinary rhyme. It is in my view a serious error to
regard metre or rhyme as artificial elements, mere external and superfluous
equipment restraining the movement and sincerity of poetic form. Metre, on the
contrary, is the most natural mould of expression for certain states of creative
emotion and vision, it is much more natural and spontaneous than a non-metrical
form; the emotion expresses itself best and most powerfully in a balanced rather
than in a loose and shapeless rhythm. The search for technique is simply the
search for the best and most appropriate form for expressing what has to be said
and once it is found, the inspiration can flow quite naturally and fluently into
it. There can be no harm therefore in close attention to technique so long as
there is no inattention to substance.
24 August 1935