Sri Aurobindo
Letters on Poetry and Art
SABCL - Volume 27
Part 2. On His Own and Others’ Poetry
Section 2. On Poets and Poetry
Philosophers, Intellectuals, Novelists and Musicians
Lawrence [3]
I must read Huxley’s
preface [to The Letters of D. H. Lawrence]
and glance at some letters before venturing on any comments — like the reviewers
who frisk about, a page here and a page there, and then write an ample or
devastating review. Anyhow it seems to me Lawrence must have been a difficult
man to live with, even for him it must have been difficult to live with himself.
His photograph confirms that view. But a man at war with himself can write
excellent poetry — if he is a poet; often better poetry than another, just as
Shakespeare wrote his best tragedies when he was in a state of chaotic upheaval;
at least so his interpreters say. But one needs a higher and more calm and
poised inspiration to write poems of harmony and divine balance than any
Lawrence ever had. I stick to my idea of the evil influence of theories on a man
of genius. If he had been contented to write things of beauty instead of bare
rockies and dry deserts, he might have done splendidly and ranked among the
great poets.
3 July 1936