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 Savitri
On the Inspiration and Writing of the Poem [2]



 You wrote to me the 
other day that Savitri is not supramental 
poetry, but I suppose there are lines in it which can be considered supramental. 
And why have you refrained from making it all supramental? ... As everything in 
the universe, including human language, is derived at the highest from the 
Overmind, I wonder if it will not be necessary to introduce some radical change 
in language to express supramental idea and rhythm. Can supramental speech be 
understood or appreciated by those who haven’t any glimmering of the influence 
of its source? Of course if it has a special symbology, one who is not 
supramentalised will find it very hard to grasp it, until explained, but will 
even its rhythm be incomprehensible?
You wrote to me the 
other day that Savitri is not supramental 
poetry, but I suppose there are lines in it which can be considered supramental. 
And why have you refrained from making it all supramental? ... As everything in 
the universe, including human language, is derived at the highest from the 
Overmind, I wonder if it will not be necessary to introduce some radical change 
in language to express supramental idea and rhythm. Can supramental speech be 
understood or appreciated by those who haven’t any glimmering of the influence 
of its source? Of course if it has a special symbology, one who is not 
supramentalised will find it very hard to grasp it, until explained, but will 
even its rhythm be incomprehensible?
All these are questions for the Supermind to settle when it has got down and settled into power.
2 August 1933