Sri Aurobindo
Letters on Poetry and Art
SABCL - Volume 27
Part 2. On His Own and Others’ Poetry
Section 2. On Poets and Poetry
Indian Poetry in English
Writing in a Learned Language [3]
It is not true in all cases that one can’t write
first-class things in a learned language. Both in French and English people to
whom the language was not native have done remarkable work, although that is
rare. What about Jawaharlal’s autobiography? Many English critics think it
first-class in its own kind; of course he was educated at an English public
school, but I suppose he was not born to the
language. Some of Toru Dutt’s poems, Sarojini’s, Harin’s have been highly placed
by good English critics, and I don’t think we need be more queasy than
Englishmen themselves. Of course there were special circumstances, but in your
case also there are special circumstances; I don’t find that you handle the
English language like a foreigner. If first-class excludes everything inferior
to Shakespeare and Milton, that is another matter. I think, as time goes on,
people will become more and more polyglot and these mental barriers will begin
to disappear.
1 October 1943