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Sri Aurobindo

Letters of Sri Aurobindo

SABCL 26

Fragment ID: 7950

Q: According to your five kinds of poetic style – the adequate, the effective, the illumined, the inspired and the pure inevitable which is something indefinable – how would you class Dante’s style? It has a certain simplicity mixed with power which suggests what I may call the forceful adequate – of course at an inevitable pitch – as its definition. Or is it a mixture of the adequate and the effective? A line like –

E venni dal martirio a questa pace1

is evidently adequate; but has this the same style –

Si come quando Marsïa traesti

Della vagina delle membra sue?2

A: The “forceful adequate” might apply to much of Dante’s writing, but much else is pure inevitable; elsewhere it is the inspired style as in the last lines quoted. I would not call the other line merely adequate; it is much more than that. Dante’s simplicity comes from a penetrating directness of poetic vision, it is not the simplicity of an adequate style.

3-11-1936

 

1 And came from that martyrdom into this peace.

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2 As when you pulled Marsyas out of the scabbard of his limbs.

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