Sri Aurobindo
Letters on Poetry and Art
SABCL - Volume 27
Part 2. On His Own and Others’ Poetry
Section 2. On Poets and Poetry
Great Poets of the World
The World’s Greatest Poets [1]
Goethe certainly goes
much deeper than Shakespeare; he had an incomparably greater intellect than the
English poet and sounded problems of life and thought Shakespeare had no means
of approaching even. But he was certainly not a greater poet; I do not find
myself very ready to admit either that he was Shakespeare’s equal. He wrote out
of a high poetic intelligence, but his style and movement nowhere come near the
poetic power, the magic, the sovereign expression and profound or subtle rhythms
of Shakespeare. Shakespeare was a supreme poet and, one might almost say,
nothing else; Goethe was by far the greater man and the greater brain, but he
was a poet by choice, his mind’s choice among its many high and effulgent
possibilities, rather than by the very necessity of his being. He wrote his
poetry, as he did everything else, with a great skill and effective genius and
an inspired subtlety of language, but it was only part of his genius and not the
whole. There is too a touch mostly wanting in spite of his strength and
excellence,— the touch of an absolute, an intensely inspired or revealing
inevitability; few quite supreme poets have that in abundance, in others it
comes only by occasional jets or flashes.
When I said there were no greater poets than Homer and
Shakespeare, I was thinking of their essential poetic force and beauty — not of
the scope of their work as a whole, for there are poets greater in their range.
The Mahabharata is from that point of view a far greater creation than the
Iliad, the Ramayana than the Odyssey, and either spreads its strength and its
achievement over a larger field than the whole dramatic world of Shakespeare;
both are built on an almost cosmic vastness of plan and take all human life (the
Mahabharata all human thought as well) in their
scope and touch too on things which the Greek and Elizabethan poets could not
even glimpse. But as poets — as masters of rhythm and language and the
expression of poetic beauty — Vyasa and Valmiki are not inferior, but
also not greater than the English or the Greek poet. We can leave aside for the
moment the question whether the Mahabharata was not the creation of the mind of
a people rather than of a single poet, for that doubt has been raised also with
regard to Homer.