Sri Aurobindo
Letters on Poetry and Art
SABCL - Volume 27
Part 1. Poetry and its Creation
Section 2. The Poetry of the Spirit
The Poet and the Poem
The Illusion of Realism
I am afraid your correspondent is under the grip of 
what I may call the illusion of realism. What all artists do is to take 
something from life — even if it be only a partial hint — and transfer it by the 
magic of their imagination and make a world of their own; the realists, e.g., 
Zola, Tolstoy, do it as much as anybody else. Each artist is a creator of his 
own world — why then insist on this legal fiction that the artist’s world must 
appear as an exact imitation of the actual world around us? Even if it does so 
seem, that is only a skilful make-up, an appearance. It may be constructed to 
look like that — but why must it be? The characters and creations of even the 
most sternly objective fiction, much more the characters and creations of poetry 
live by 


 the law of their own life, which is 
something in the inner mind of their creator — they cannot be constructed as 
copies of things outside.
the law of their own life, which is 
something in the inner mind of their creator — they cannot be constructed as 
copies of things outside.
30 January 1933