Sri Aurobindo
Letters on Poetry and Art
SABCL - Volume 27
Part 2. On His Own and Others’ Poetry
Section 1. On His Poetry and Poetic Method
On the Publication of His Poetry
On Two Other Publication Proposals [1]
I have seen the opinion of the publisher consulted by
Amiya Chakrabarty: Dilip’s friend, the novelist Thompson, has also written to
him offering to get a small selection of my poems published. Both opinions agree
that poetry has very little chance of success nowadays. Thompson says that
poetry is out of fashion; the publisher also indicates that new and original
poetry has very little chance with the public. I believe they are both right. I
also agree that if anything is to be published in Europe, it should be something
in prose rather than in poetry. But I do not feel inclined to be in any haste in
either direction; when anything of the kind ought to happen — I mean “ought”
from the inner truth of things, I suppose it will arrange itself. You will
remember that when I consented to let your friend show my poems to some
publishers there, it was more to know what they would say and how they would
take such poetry of an entirely new kind (I speak of course of the six poems and
the sonnets) and not with an idea of immediate publication. Neither mere selling
nor having the books in good print and in a good and pleasing form seems to me a
sufficient justification for the expenditure. If publication agrees with an
inner truth and serves a deeper purpose, then it
will be worth while. I hope my decision will not disappoint you too much; it
seems to me from my point of view the right one.
16 June 1935