Sri Aurobindo
Letters on Poetry and Art
SABCL - Volume 27
Part 2. On His Own and Others’ Poetry
Section 2. On Poets and Poetry
Twentieth-Century Poetry
Surrealism [2]
I really can’t tell you what surrealism is, because it
is something — at least the word is — quite new and I have not read either the
reliable theorists of the school nor much of their poetry. What I picked up on
the way was through reviews and quotations, the upshot being that it is a poetry
based on the dream consciousness, but I don’t know if this is correct or merely
an English critic’s idea of it. The inclusion of Baudelaire and Valéry seems to
indicate something wider than that. But the word is of quite recent origin and
nobody spoke formerly of Baudelaire as a surrealist or even of Mallarmé.
Mallarmé was supposed to be the founder of a new trend of poetry — impressionist
and symbolist, followed in varying degrees and not by any means in the same way
by Verlaine, Rimbaud,— both of them poets of great fame. Verlaine is certainly a
great poet and people now say Rimbaud also, but I have never come across his
poetry except in extracts — and developing in Valéry and other noted writers of today. It seems that all these are now claimed as part of or the
origin of the surrealist movement. But I cannot say what are the exact
boundaries or who comes in where. I suppose if Baron communicates to you books
on the subject or more precise information, we shall know more clearly now. In
any case surrealism is part of an increasing attempt of the European mind to
escape from the surface consciousness (in poetry as well as in painting and in
thought) and grope after a deeper truth of things which is not on the surface.
The Dream Consciousness as it is called — meaning not merely what we see in
dreams, but the inner consciousness in which we get into contact with deeper
worlds which underlie, influence and to some extent explain much in our lives,
what the psychologists call the subliminal or the subconscient (the latter a
very ambiguous phrase) offers the first road of escape and the surrealists seem
to be trying to force it. My impression is that there is much fumbling and that
more often it is certain obscure and not always very safe layers that are
tapped. That accounts for the note of diabolism that comes in in Baudelaire, in
Rimbaud also, I believe, and in certain ugly elements in English surrealist
poetry and painting. But this is only an impression.
Nirod’s poetry (what he writes now) is from the Dream
Consciousness, no doubt about that. It has suddenly opened in him and he finds
now a great joy of creation and abundance of inspiration which were and are
quite absent when he tries to write laboriously in the mental way. This seems to
indicate either that the poet in him has his real power there or that he has
opened to the same Force that worked in poets like Mallarmé. My labelling him as
surrealist is partly — though not altogether — a joke. How far it applies
depends on what the real aim and theory of the surrealist school may be.
Obscurity and unintelligibility are not the essence of any poetry and — except
for unconscious or semi-conscious humorists like the Dadaists — cannot be its
aim or principle. True dream-poetry (let us call it so for the nonce) has and
must always have a meaning and a coherence. But it may very well be obscure or
seem meaningless to those who take their stand on the surface or “waking” mind and accept only its links and its logic. Dream poetry is usually full
of images, visions, symbols, phrases that seek to strike at things too deep for
the ordinary means of expression. Nirod does not deliberately make his poems
obscure, he writes what comes through from the source he has tapped and does not
interfere with its flow by his own mental volition. In many modernist poets
there may be labour and a deliberate posturing, but it is not so in his case. I
interpret his poems because he wants me to do it, but I have always told him
that an intellectual rendering narrows the meaning — it has to be seen and felt,
not thought out. Thinking it out may give a satisfaction and an appearance of
mental logicality, but the deeper sense and sequence can only be apprehended by
an inner sense. I myself do not try to find out the meaning of his poems, I try
to feel what they mean in vision and experience and then render into mental
terms. This is a special kind of poetry and has to be dealt with according to
its kind and nature. There is a sequence, a logic, a design in them, but not one
that can satisfy the more rigid law of the logical intelligence.
About Housman’s theory; it is not merely the appeal to emotion that he posits as the test of pure poetry — he deliberately says that pure poetry does not bother about intellectual meaning at all — it is to the intellect nonsense. He says that the interpretations of Blake’s famous poem rather spoil them — they appeal better without being dissected in that way. His theory is questionable but that is what it comes to; he is wrong in using the word “nonsense” and perhaps in speaking of pure and impure poetry. All the same, to Blake and to writers of the Dream Consciousness, his rejection of the intellectual standard is quite applicable.
12 February 1937