Sri Aurobindo
Letters on Poetry and Art
SABCL - Volume 27
Part 3. Literature, Art, Beauty and Yoga
Section 4. Literature, Art, Music and the Practice of Yoga
Literature and Yoga
Poetry and Sadhana [2]
It is obvious that poetry cannot be a substitute for
sadhana; it can be an accompaniment only. If there is a feeling (of devotion,
surrender etc.), it can express and confirm it; if there is an experience, it
can express and strengthen the force of experience. As reading of books like the
Upanishads or Gita or singing of devotional songs can help, especially at one
stage or another, so this can help also. Also it opens a passage between the
exterior consciousness and the inner mind or vital. But if one stops at that,
then nothing much is gained. Sadhana must be the main thing and sadhana means
the purification of the nature, the consecration of the being, the opening of
the psychic and the inner mind and vital, the contact and presence of the
Divine, the realisation of the Divine in all things, surrender, devotion, the
widening of the consciousness into the cosmic Consciousness, the Self one in
all, the psychic and the spiritual transformation of the nature. If these things
are neglected and only poetry and mental development and social contacts occupy
all the time, then that is not sadhana. Also the poetry must be written in the
true spirit, not for fame or self-satisfaction, but as a means of contact with the Divine through aspiration or of the expression of one’s own
inner being, as it was written formerly by those who left behind them so much
devotional and spiritual poetry in India; it does not help if it is written only
in the spirit of the Western artist or littérateur. Even works or
meditation cannot succeed unless they are done in the right spirit of
consecration and spiritual aspiration gathering up the whole being and
dominating all else. It is the lack of this gathering up of the whole life and
nature and turning it towards the one aim, which is the defect in so many here,
that lowers the atmosphere and stands in the way of what is being done by myself
and the Mother.
19 May 1938