Sri Aurobindo
Letters on Poetry and Art
SABCL - Volume 27
Part 1. Poetry and its Creation
Section 3. Poetic Technique
English Metres
Blank Verse
I have often seen that Indians who write in English,
immediately they try blank verse, begin to follow the Victorian model and
especially a sort of pseudo-Tennysonian movement or structure which makes their
work in this kind weak, flat and ineffective. The language inevitably suffers by
the same faults, for with a weak verse-cadence
it is impossible to find a strong or effective turn of language. But Victorian
blank verse at its best is not strong or great, though it may have other
qualities, and at a more common level it is languid or crude or characterless.
Except for a few poems, like Tennyson’s early Morte d’Arthur, Ulysses and
one or two others or Arnold’s Sohrab and Rustam, there is nothing of a
very high order. Tennyson is a perilous model and can have a weakening and
corrupting influence and the Princess and Idylls of the King which
seem to have set the tone for Indo-English blank verse are perhaps the worst
choice possible for such a role. There is plenty of clever craftsmanship but it
is mostly false and artificial and without true strength or inspired movement or
poetic force — the right kind of blank verse for a Victorian drawing-room
poetry, that is all that can be said for it. As for language and substance his
influence tends to bring a thin artificial decorative prettiness or
picturesqueness varied by an elaborate false simplicity and an attempt at a kind
of brilliant, sometimes lusciously brilliant sentimental or sententious
commonplace. The higher quality in his best work is not easily assimilable; the
worst is catching but undesirable as a model.
Blank verse is the most difficult of all English
metres; it has to be very skilfully and strongly done to make up for the absence
of rhyme, and if not very well done, it is better not done at all. In the
ancient languages rhyme was not needed, for they were written in quantitative
metres which gave them the necessary support, but modern languages in their
metrical forms need the help of rhyme. It is only a very masterly hand that can
make blank verse an equally or even a more effective poetic movement. You have
to vary your metre by a skilful play of pauses or by an always changing
distribution of caesura and of stresses and supple combinations of long and
short vowels and by much weaving of vowel or consonant variation and assonance;
or else, if you use a more regular form you have to give a great power and
relief to the verse as did Marlowe at his best. If you do none of these things,
if you write with effaced stresses, without relief and force or, if you do not
succeed in producing harmonious variations in your rhythm, your blank verse becomes a monotonous vapid wash and no amount of mere
thought-colour or image-colour can save it.
28 April 1931