Sri Aurobindo
Letters on Poetry and Art
SABCL - Volume 27
Part 2. On His Own and Others’ Poetry
Section 3. Practical Guidance for Aspiring Writers
Guidance in Writing Poetry
Inspiration and Effort [2]
If I have discovered some lines I must not think of the next lines, but try instead to keep absolutely silent so that with a leap I find that the Greater Mind has simply dropped the necessary rhymed lines, like a good fellow, and I finish off excellently without a drop of black sweat on my wide forehead?
That is the ideal way; but usually there is always an
activity of the mind jumping up and trying to
catch the inspiration. Sometimes the inspiration, the right one, comes in the
midst of this futile jumping, sometimes it sweeps it aside and brings in the
right thing, sometimes it inserts itself between two blunders, sometimes it
waits till the noise quiets down. But even this jumping need not be a mental
effort — it is often only a series of suggestions, the mind of itself seizing on
one or eliminating another, not by laborious thinking and choice, but by a quiet
series of perceptions. This is method no. 2. No. 3 is your Herculean way, quite
the slowest and worst.
31 March 1936