Sri Aurobindo
Letters on Poetry and Art
SABCL - Volume 27
Part 1. Poetry and its Creation
Section 3. Poetic Technique
Metrical Experiments in Bengali
Gadya-chanda
I can’t say that I have
studied or even read Bengali গদ্যছন্দ [gadyachanda],
so I am unable to pronounce. In fact what is
গদ্যছন্দ [gadyachanda]? Is it the equivalent
of European free verse? But there the essence of the thing is that you model
each line freely as you like — regularity of any kind is out of court there. Is
it Nishikanta’s aim to create a kind of rhymed prose metre? On what principle?
He seems to want a movement which will give more volume, strength and sonority
than Bengali verse can succeed in creating but which is yet poetry, not prose
arranged in lines and not even, at the best, poetic prose cut into lines of
different lengths. All things can be tried — the test is success, true poetic
excellence. Nishikanta has sent me some of his
গদ্যছন্দ [gadyachanda] before. It seemed to me
to have much flow and energy, but there is something hanging on to it which
weighs, almost drags — is it the ghost of prose? But that is only a personal
impression; as I have said, on this subject I am not a qualified judge.
29 September 1936