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Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/Letters on Poetry And Art/Overhead Poetry.htm
Overhead Poetry
Higher Mind and Poetic Intelligence
I mean by the Higher Mind a first plane of spiritual [consciousness] where one becomes constantly and closely aware of the
Self, the One everywhere and knows and sees things habitually with that awareness; but it is still very much on the mind
level although highly spiritual in its essential substance; and its instrumentation is through an elevated thought-power and
comprehensive mental sight ―not illumined by any of the intenser upper lights but as if in a large strong and clear daylight.
It acts as an intermediate state between the Truth-Light above and the human mind; c
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/Letters on Poetry And Art/General Remarks on Beauty.htm
Section Three
Beauty and Its Appreciation
General Remarks on Beauty
Beauty
Beauty is the way in which the physical expresses the Divine ― but the principle and law of Beauty is something inward and spiritual which expresses itself through the form.
23 August 1933
*
What is the meaning of Supramental Beauty? Is it the perception of the Divine as the All-Beautiful and All-Delight?
No, that you can get on any plane, and it becomes easy as soon as one is in contact with the higher Mind. Beauty is the special
divine Manifestation in the physical as Truth
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/Letters on Poetry And Art/Guidance in Writing Prose.htm
Guidance in Writing Prose
Guidance in Writing Prose
Suggestions for Writing Good English
I wonder what to do in order to bring my essay up to the mark. Could you please make some suggestions?
I am afraid I can't make suggestions. Just now I am too busy with other and more strenuous things to be very fit for literary
suggestions. I can only say generally avoid over-writing; let all your sentences be the vehicle of something worth saying and say
it with a vivid precision neither defective nor excessive. Don't let either thought or speech trail or drag or circumvolute. Don't
let the language be more abundant than the sense. Don't indulge
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/Letters on Poetry And Art/APPENDIX III Remarks on a Review.htm
APPENDIX III
Remarks on a Review2
[A]
Marginal Comments
The writer justly contends that Quantitative Verse has, hitherto, been misunderstood by English poets who have used it, because the constituent elements of such verse have not
been correctly appreciated. These elements are accent, stress, and quantity. Accent is voice-weightage on a syllable; stress
is voice-weightage on a one-syllable word (which may or may not be accented by itself) considered
hic et nunc as a
component part of a phrase, clause or sentence;
Not in my theory; stress occurs in English words of all lengths,
not
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/Letters on Poetry And Art/On Some Poems Written during the 1930s.htm
On Some Poems Written
during the 1930s
[The first five letters were published together as an
appendix to Six Poems of Sri Aurobindo in 1934]
The Bird of Fire
and Trance
These two poems are in the nature of metrical experiments. The first is a kind of compromise between the stress system and the
foot measure. The stanza is of four lines, alternately of twelve and ten stresses. The second and fourth line in each stanza can
be read as a ten-foot line of mixed iambs and anapaests, the first and third, though a similar system subject to replacement of a
foot anywhere by a single-syllab
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/Letters on Poetry And Art/Poets of the Ashram.htm
Poets of the Ashram
Some General Remarks
I fear I don't approve of any article on the "Ashram poets" ―least of all a dithyramb of this too splendiferous kind. I shall
give my reasons when I have had time to look at it again ―at present I am slowly recovering from the electric shock it gave
me.
11 September 1934
*
Prithwi Singh was telling me that cultivation of literature here hasn't much
sense, since none will be able to get first class, or outclass Tagore. He
must always remain the only brilliant star in literature. Others won't even
get a chance to shine by his side, not to speak of o
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/Letters on Poetry And Art/Remarks on Individual Poets.htm
Remarks on Individual Poets
The Author of the Bhagavad Gita
Sri Krishna is not supposed to have written anything. The Gita is part of the Mahabharata which is attributed to the sage Vyasa,
the contemporary of Krishna. But in its present form the Mahabharata seems to be of later origin and many scholars say that
the Gita was composed afterwards by someone and put into the Mahabharata.
In any case whoever wrote it was a great Yogi and certainly received his inspiration from Krishna.
Catullus and Horace
You prefer Catullus [to Horace] because he was a philosopher?
You have certainly rolled Lucretius here into Cat
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/Letters on Poetry And Art/Appreciation of Music.htm
Appreciation of Music
On Music
Written words are pale and lifeless things when one has to express the feelings raised by superb music and seem hardly
to mean anything ―not being able to convey what is beyond word and mere mental form
―that is, at least, what I have felt
and why I always find it a little difficult to write anything about music.
20 March 1933
Musical Excellence and General Culture
I have not seen the remarks in question. I don't suppose all-round general culture has much to do with excelling in music. Music
is a gift independent of any such thing and it can hardly be
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/Letters on Poetry And Art/Remarks on English Pronunciation.htm
Remarks on English Pronunciation
Monosyllables and Dissyllables
I wonder why you find fault with the rhythm of "A vision
whose God-delight embraces all." "Vision" is really a monosyllable, and I don't suppose the frequent poetic dissyllabification of it precludes the use of its original sound-length.
You use your intellect too much and with too much ingenuity
where you should train your ear. Another line with the same scansion might very well make an extremely good rhythm; this
one does not. Its rhythm is at once flat and jerky. How is "vision" a monosyllable? You might just as well say that "omnibus" i
Rhyme
Rhyme and Inspiration
Some rhyme with ease ―others find a difficulty. The coming of the rhyme is a part of the inspiration just like the coming of the
form of the language. The rhyme often comes of itself and brings the language and connection of ideas with it. For all these things
are quite ready behind somewhere and it is only a matter of reception and transmission
―it is the physical mind and brain
that make the difficulty.
2 February 1934
Imperfect Rhymes
These ["life" and "cliff", "smile" and "will"] are called in English imperfect rhymes and can be freely but not too freely used. Only yo