Sri Aurobindo
Letters on Poetry and Art
SABCL - Volume 27
Part 3. Literature, Art, Beauty and Yoga
Section 4. Literature, Art, Music and the Practice of Yoga
Literature and Yoga
Fiction-Writing and Sadhana [3]
We remembered that Sahana had said you stopped her writing a novel, because her mind or consciousness was being externalised.
That is when one is already in a steady stream of
spiritual experience, living partly at least in an inner realisation, while the
rest of the being is not yet in it. Writing a novel means then going out of the
inner state of experience and stimulating the rest of the nature. If the writing
is something in harmony with the inner consciousness, then there would be no
necessity for one to stop. On the other hand if one has attained the full
consciousness in both the inner and the outer
nature then also one could write anything one is moved by that consciousness to
write, whatever it might be. In certain cases this rule may not hold. One may be
strong enough to do all kinds of outward things without affecting the inner
state of experience. But ordinarily this can be done freely only in the earlier
stages before one is drawn inwards and kept there or in the later stages when
one is fully conscious spiritually in the outer being also. It is simply a
question of “spiritual tactics” not a hard and fast rule for all in all states
and stages.
Why did Sahana find it necessary to stop?
Because she was losing hold of her inner experience and thinking only of her novel.
When I was writing that novel or even while busy with poems, I had often a curious experience. I used to feel an inclination to read a passage from Sri Aurobindo’s Essays on the Gita.... There I felt a depth which moved and inspired me and I could then sit down to write my novel.... What has a novel to do with the Gita or with Truth Supramental?
There is obviously nothing on their surface connecting the two. It may have been that the literary quality of the Essays and its depth of thought satisfied some ideal in your temperament and therefore put you into touch with the creative force behind you. A poet for instance can feel himself stimulated enough to creation after reading Homer, yet his own work may be quite different, not epic at all and dealing with quite another order of ideas and things. It is only that the reading stimulates his inner being to create, but according to its own quite different way and purpose.
26 October 1935