Sri Aurobindo
Letters of Sri Aurobindo
Third Series
Fragment ID: 20967
1937.05.19I don’t know how I differentiate between the epic and the other kinds of poetic power. Victor Hugo in the ‘Légende des Siècles’ tries to be epic and often succeeds, perhaps even on the whole. Marlowe is sometimes great or sublime, but I would not call him epic. There is a greatness or sublimity that is epic, there is another that is not epic, but more of a romantic type. Shakespeare’s line
In cradle of the rude imperious surge
is as sublime as anything in Homer or Milton, but it does not seem to me to have the epic ring, while a very simple line can have it, e.g. Homer’s
ē de kat’ oulumpoio kerēnōn chōomenos kēr.
(He went down from the peaks of Olympus wroth at heart)
or Virgil’s
Disce, puer, virtutem ex me verumque laborem, Fortunam ex aliis
or Milton’s
Fallen cherub, to be weak is miserable.
What is there in these lines that is not in Shakespeare’s and makes them epic (Shakespeare’s of course has something else as valuable)? For the moment at least, I can’t tell you, but it is there. A tone of the inner spirit perhaps, expressing itself in the rhythm and the turn of the language.... Dante has the epic spirit and tone, what he lacks is the epic élan and swiftness. The distinction you draw – ’epic sublimity has a more natural turn of imagination than the non-epic: it is powerfully wide or deep or high without being outstandingly bold, it also displays less colour’ – applies, no doubt, but I do not know whether it is the essence of the thing or only one result of a certain austerity in the epic Muse. I do not know whether one cannot be coloured provided one keeps that austerity which, be it understood, is not incompatible with a certain finesse and sweetness.