Sri Aurobindo
Letters on Poetry and Art
SABCL - Volume 27
Part 3. Literature, Art, Beauty and Yoga
Section 1. Appreciation of Poetry and the Arts
Appreciation of Poetry
The Subjective Element
All criticism of
poetry is bound to have a strong subjective element in it and that is the source
of the violent differences we find in the appreciation of any given author by
equally “eminent” critics. All is relative here, Art and Beauty also, and our
view of things and our appreciation of them depends on the consciousness which
views and appreciates. Some critics recognise this and go in frankly for a
purely subjective criticism — “this is why I like this and disapprove of that, I
give my own values”. Most labour to fit their personal likes and dislikes to
some standard of criticism which they conceive to be objective; this need of
objectivity, of the support of an impersonal truth independent of our
personality or anybody else’s, is the main source of theories, canons, standards
of art. But the theories, canons, standards themselves vary and are set up in
one age only to be broken in another. Is there then no beauty of art independent
of our varying mentalities? Is beauty a creation of our minds, a construction of
our ideas and our senses, not at all existent in itself? In that case Beauty is
non-existent in Nature, it is put upon Nature by our minds through mental
imposition, adhyāropa. But this contradicts the fact
that it is in response to an object and not independently of it that the idea of
beautiful or not beautiful originally rises within us. Beauty does exist in what
we see, but there are two aspects of it, essential beauty and the forms it
takes. “Eternal beauty wandering on her way” does that wandering by a
multitudinous variation of forms appealing to a multitudinous variation of
consciousnesses. There comes in the difficulty. Each individual consciousness
tries to seize the eternal beauty expressed in a form (here a particular poem or
work of art), but is either assisted by the form or repelled by it, wholly
attracted
or wholly repelled, or partially
attracted and partially repelled. There may be errors in the poet’s or artist’s
transcription of beauty which mar the reception, but even these have different
effects on different people. But the more radical divergences arise from the
variation in the constitution of the mind and its difference of response.
Moreover there are minds, the majority indeed, who do not respond to “artistic”
beauty at all — something inartistic appeals much more to what sense of beauty
they have — or else they are not seeking beauty, but only vital pleasure.
A critic cannot escape altogether from these
limitations. He can try to make himself catholic and objective and find the
merit or special character of all he reads or sees in poetry and art, even when
they do not evoke his strongest sympathy or deepest response. I have little
temperamental sympathy for much of the work of Pope and Dryden, but I can see
their extraordinary perfection or force in their own field, the masterly
conciseness, energy, point, metallic precision into which they cut their thought
or their verse, and I can see too how that can with a little infusion of another
quality be the basis of a really great poetic style, as Dryden himself has shown
in his best work. But there my appreciation stops; I cannot rise to the heights
of admiration of those who put them on a level with or on a higher level than
Wordsworth, Keats or Shelley — I cannot escape from the feeling that their work,
even though more consistently perfect within their limits and in their own
manner (at least Pope’s), was less great in poetic quality. These divergences
rise from a conception of beauty and a feeling for beauty which belongs to the
temperament. So too Housman’s exaltation of Blake results directly from his
feeling and peculiar conception of poetic beauty as an appeal to an inner
sensation, an appeal marred and a beauty deflowered by bringing in a sharp
coating or content of intellectual thought. But that I shall not discuss now.
All this however does not mean that criticism is without any true use. The
critic can help to open the mind to the kinds of beauty he himself sees and not
only to discover but to appreciate at their full value certain elements that
make them beautiful or give them what is most characteristic or unique in their
peculiar beauty. Housman for instance may help
many minds to see in Blake something which they did not see before. They may not
agree with him in his comparison of Blake and Shakespeare, but they can follow
him to a certain extent and seize better that element in poetic beauty which he
overstresses but makes at the same time more vividly visible.
5 October 1934