Sri Aurobindo
Letters on Poetry and Art
SABCL - Volume 27
Part 1. Poetry and its Creation
Section 3. Poetic Technique
Examples of Grades of Perfection in Poetic Style
Examples from Harindranath Chattopadhyaya
Your satisfaction with todays poems is certainly justified, for they are very fine they are among the best. The conciseness and clarity which, by the way, were always there in lyric and sonnet have grown very rapidly and there is nothing here of their opposites. To quote particular lines is difficult, but I may instance
a tremulous drop of rain
Silverly slipped over the voiceless hill
as an example of some kind of inevitability, for there are many kinds, or again in another kind
His marvellous experiment of wings
Crowned with a rich assurance of the height;
or, in yet another
Unmemory yourself of sign and mark
Which draw you still towards the greying earth.
The mark of this inevitability or perfect perfection is the saying of a thing that has to be said with such a felicity of phrase and rhythm that it seems as if it could not be better or otherwise said in the highest poetic way, it sounds final and irrevocable. All in a poem cannot be like that; one has to be satisfied with a more ordinary perfection some critics even hold that this should be so as a matter of deliberate technique so as to bring the greater moments of the poetry into relief all ought not to be Himalayan peaks clustering one upon the other, there must be valleys, plains, plateaus from which they rise. But in any case these moments lift poetical expression to its highest possibilities. There are other lines that could be quoted, but these will suffice.