Sri Aurobindo
Letters on Poetry and Art
SABCL - Volume 27
Part 2. On His Own and Others’ Poetry
Section 1. On His Poetry and Poetic Method
On Some Poems Written during the 1930s
Overhead Inspiration in Some Poems of the 1930s [1]
A long time ago, you wrote to me that the Overmind has
two levels — the intuitive and the gnostic. There are surely several passages in
your own poetry as well as in the Upanishads and the
Gita that sustain an inspiration from the former; but has no poetry ever come
from the Overmind proper which is turned towards the full supramental Gnosis? Do
you remember anything either in Sanskrit or in your own work which derives from
there? If not, is it possible to give some idea as to what quality of rhythm,
language and substance would constitute the difference between the expression of
the Overmind Intuition and the Overmind Gnosis? Those four lines I quoted to you
from yourself the other day — where do they hail from?
Arms taking to a voiceless supreme delight,
Life that meets the Eternal with close breast,
An unwalled mind dissolved in the Infinite,
Force one with unimaginable rest?
It is really very difficult for me to say anything in
this respect about my own poetry; there is too complex a working of the
Consciousness for it to be possible for me to classify and define. As for the
Overmind Gnosis, I cannot yet say anything — I am familiar with its workings,
but they are not easily definable or describable and, as for poetry, I have not
yet observed sufficiently to say whether it enters in anywhere or not. I should
expect its intervention to be extremely rare even as a touch; but I refer at
present all higher overmind intervention to the O.I. [Overmind
Intuition] in order to avoid any risk of overstatement. In the process of
overmental transformation what I have observed is that the Overmind first takes
up the illumined and higher mind and intellect (thinking, perceiving and
reasoning intelligence) into itself and modifies itself to suit the operation —
the result is what may be called a mental Overmind — then it lifts these lower
movements and the intuitive mind together into a higher reach of itself, forming
there the Overmind Intuition, and then all that into the Overmind Gnosis
awaiting the supramental transformation. The overmind “touch” on the Higher Mind
and Illumined Mind can thus raise towards the O.I. or to the O.G. or leave it in
the M.O.; but, estimating at a glance as I have to do, it is not easy to be
quite precise. I may have to revise my estimates later on a little, though not
perhaps very appreciably, when I am able to look at things in a more leisurely
way and fix the meeting lines which often tend
to fade away, leaving an indefinable border.
3 May 1937