Purgatory: Canto 20 -- Corruption of French Crown

Tuesday, March 08, 2005

Purgatory: Canto 20 -- The Hoarders and Wasters -- The Whip and Rein

Chris Martin asked a good question at lunch yesterday -- when the voice of Cain (not Carradine of Kung Fu) shouts "All men are my destroyers!" as the rein of envy in canto 14, is it Cain who is thus shouting? Verily, I say unto thee that it is not Cain (for he is probably cooling his jets in Caina in the 9th circle of hell) but a radio broadcast, an echo, as it were. The first three ledges are interesting in that regard, then, for, successively, it's something outside the penitent that serves as the whip and the rein of each capital sin. On the cornice of the proud, it was television. On the cornice of the envious, it was radio. On the cornice of the wrathful, it was a hologram like Star Trek's holodeck. It's not until we get on the ledge of sloth that we actually see the penitent themselves being held accountable for the recitation of the whip and the rein -- in the train of zealots racing around the ledge, we find that the foremost shout the whip and the hindmost shout the rein. On our present ledge, that of the avaricious, we find that everyone is involved in shouting the whip and the rein and that the whip is shouted in daylight and the rein at night as the mood strikes each of those whose souls cleave to the dust. And why not, of course, when everyone feels the power of the earthquake of creation's JOY every time a new soul makes it to God -- what a whip!


An Earthquake that could Shake the Heavens would be Significant -- such is God's Joy when one of us makes it

This is a movement toward developing community, then, if the individual senses (where each person sees and hears these whips and reins singly) lead into the communal (where the group is able to goad themselves as a group on to perfection). What is happening here is the same thing that Pope is writing about when he notes that,

Heav'n forming each on other to depend,
A master, or a servant, or a friend,
Bids each on other for assistance call,
Till one man's weakness grows the strength of all (II, 6, 249-52).

There is also a ripple through all the senses here as the visions lead into acoustic engagement and the acoustic leads into the tactile -- this means that the penitent are becoming more totally invested in their penance, underscored by the fact that Hugh Capet turns Dante's offer for prayers down: "Not for such comfort as the world may give/ do I reply . . . but that such light/ of grace should shine on you while yet you live" (40-2). Once filled with the necessary zeal that the angel of the previous ledge would have given all who have ascended this far, the souls are sufficiently far along in their journey to God to pursue the rest of the distance themselves. This is not to say that they do so "alone" -- rather, their wills are sufficiently turned toward God for them to be "comfortable" in their progress.

This encounter with Hugh Capet (who, like the rest of the penitent on this ledge seems through his response to Dante to have dedicated himself, like St. John of God, to an active regard for others while pursuing his own salvation) is of interest to the Italians at the time Dante is writing it, for at this point in history (as Fr. Witt will discuss on the activities board), the papacy has been moved "by" (and this is an area of scholarly contention) Philip IV to Avignon under the pontificate of Clement V. As the story goes, Philip IV not only suppressed the Knights Templar on Friday, October 13, 1307 (and Friday the 13th has been a bad luck day ever since), but he also forced Clement V's compliance with it and used the leverage to rob the Templars of whatever wealth he could get from them (which wasn't much, leading to much speculation over the past 700 years as to what happened to the gold of the Templars and whether it was smuggled underground to fund the various secret societies that sprung from the hydra -- the Rosicrucians, the Illuminati, the Scottish and Yorkish rites of masonry, etc.). Of course, this was a black moment in the history of both Church and State where the subjugation of the Church by the French king was perceived by some as a stranglehold -- as a Babylonian Captivity. If one could say something was worse than this, it would have been Philip IV's kidnapping of Pope Boniface VIII, whom Dante hated with a passion, if you'll recall, reserving for the man a space in the third bolgia of circle eight in hell. Dante is sympathetic with Boniface VIII on this point, though, because, as Ciardi notes, it's not the man who was humiliated, but the Office of the Pope -- the Vicar of Peter -- and the same love for the Office that drove him to sentence Boniface VIII to hell is the love he's using in condemning Philip IV for abusing it.

That Hugh Capet laments this states of deterioration is important here because we'll see it again in Paradise. Anything that turns us away from the power of love -- and the temporal is as important as the eternal for beings who are both material and spiritual -- is a bad thing, which is why the corruption of man through sin is so utterly wrong. It is also why we are given inspirations to turn ourselves, like the sunflower, back to the Sun. To do this, we use both reason and a natural impulse toward the good, which work together, as we might infer from Pope, as well as they work apart, for "reason raise o'er instinct as you can,/ In this 'tis God directs, in that 'tis man" (Epistle 3, II) Love, though, ultimately triumphs over all -- a point which Dante underscores in directing his love of God's creation (Beatrice) back onto the Creator. He writes in an earlier canto, "The power of Love borne in my lady's eyes imparts its grace to all she looks upon. All turn to gaze at her when she walks by, and when she greets a man his heart beats fast, the color leaves his face, he bows his head and sighs to think of all his imperfections. Anger and pride are forced to flee from her" (XXI, 2). Sure, Dante's in love with Beatrice, so he endows her with supernatural gifts, but on the most simple level he's seeing within another person the light of God's love and warmth and is able, as a result, to see through that person to God in ways that Paolo and Francesca never got around to doing. He underscores this with today's contribution, "I felt a sleeping spirit in my heart awake to Love" (XXIV, 7). So, Sean, what's the difference between the two loves? Had Dante ever caught Beatrice, married her, and bedded her, would he have still had the inspiration to write the Comedy, or, with the dream fulfilled rather than deferred would his poetry have dried up like a raisin in the sun? (to mix whatever metaphors and thoughts one might).

S.

21 Comments:

At 11:52 AM, Blogger Sean Burbach said...

Canto XX

The big difference between Paolo & Francesca and Dante & Beatrice is that Dante’s love for Beatrice rooted in the Divine. With Paolo & Francesca, that is denied. Their love was built on lust for one another, not a covenantal love rooted in the spirit of God. Although Dante & Beatrice are not married, and even if they could have gotten married, it seems plausible that God would have remained at the center of their relationship. Hence, although Beatrice was married, it is never reported that Dante did anything to jeopardize her marriage. That of course is speculative. However, would Dante not produce the writings that he did if he was married to her? It’s hard to tell. His writings would have most-likely had a different bent and maybe even focus. When I think of Dante’s interior disposition for Beatrice, I think of the song “Night in White Satin” by Moody Blues. (It is providential since they have a PBS special right now.) Please excuse the long post in order to replicate the lyrics to the song:

"The Night: Nights In White Satin"

Nights in white satin,
Never reaching the end,
Letters I've written,
Never meaning to send.

Beauty I'd always missed
With these eyes before,
Just what the truth is
I can't say anymore.

'Cause I love you,
Yes, I love you,
Oh, how, I love you.

Gazing at people,
Some hand in hand,
Just what I'm going thru
They can understand.

Some try to tell me
Thoughts they cannot defend,
Just what you want to be
You will be in the end,

And I love you,
Yes, I love you,
Oh, how, I love you.
Oh, how, I love you.

Nights in white satin,
Never reaching the end,
Letters I've written,
Never meaning to send.

Beauty I'd always missed
With these eyes before,
Just what the truth is
I can't say anymore.

'Cause I love you,
Yes, I love you,
Oh, how, I love you.
Oh, how, I love you.

'Cause I love you,
Yes, I love you,
Oh, how, I love you.
Oh, how, I love you.

Dante was very prudent in talking about Beatrice. He never would do anything to jeopardize the pedestal he places her on. If he remained pure in his relationship with Beatrice, I feel it is because there was an invisible wall which restricted Dante from ever being tempted to act forcefully upon his passions. What was that invisible wall? It was the wall of grace that God gave him to remain in purity. Dante humbly submitted!

 
At 2:38 PM, Blogger Fr. Earl Meyer said...

The double image of the avaricious is ironic: they are crowded, they cannot find enough room, because there are so many of them! Is it true that avarice is the most common sin?

Capet explains (102) that during daylight the penitents are generous, at night they return to their greed. We learned earlier that they could atone and advance only during daylight, but is this the only cornice on which they return to their sin at night?

Dante's praise here for Boniface (visited earlier in hell) might seem contradictory. However Sayers explains that Philip's attack on the pope was an attack on the OFFICE of the Vicar of Christ and Boniface was correct in opposing that violation of his office. She writes, "This balance of two equal and opposed indignations is unsurpassed in literature and scarcely paralleled."

 
At 2:42 PM, Blogger Adam M. Henjum said...

Hugh Capet and the near by souls; shout out with one voice "Glory to God in the Highest" shaking the mountain so badly that one would think it was an earth quake. Think about this, it was as Dante says the Shepherds who first heard this glorious song, poor, dirty, lowly and outcasts. Hugh himself says that we was a butcher's son, not the highest of jobs to have am sure, and there was defiantly not and prestige for the job. Isn’t it funny how Hugh had very little when he came to the throne, he got greedy more was given to him and as time went on his one sin provided the many steps needed for his sons to sin as well. But here in Purgatory he and the others sing to the Glory of God to those who are poor in the words but rich in the many blessings of God.

 
At 6:53 PM, Blogger Sebastian Mahfood said...

Here's the first stanza of your Nights in White Satin, Sean. Or should I say, Nights in White SATAN . . . http://www.kenrickparish.com/dante/clips/nights.wma.

I like your idea about Dante's humble submission to God's will, but if you've been reading La Vita Nuova, you know that he used two other women as a smoke screen for his love (to their despair, perhaps) before coming clean with his intentions to Beatrice. That he couldn't keep from swooning in her presence is one thing, that he married Gemma Donati and never mentioned her in the Comedy is quite something else.

S.

 
At 7:05 PM, Blogger Sebastian Mahfood said...

I don't think that it's that avarice is the most common of the seven capital sins though we do see such a number of the penitent on the ground, and in the next canto, Dante draws the image of Virgil and his stepping gingerly between the dust-cleaven bodies so as not to step on any (had Dante only shown as much concern in Antenora when he kicked the head of Bocca degli Abbati). Remember, though, that this place is a cone, and the ledges further up the mountain are necessarily smaller in girth than the ledges below. It may be that there are as many avaricious sinners as there are proud ones -- only the avaricious have less room. Even if we were to say that there were more avaricious than any others, it makes sense in relation to avarice being the worst of the three upper sins where too much love is invested in the creation -- in this case, in the medium of exchange as an end rather than as a means. The hoarders and wasters are on this cornice rather than in hell pushing stones against one another because they turned their eyes to God at some point in their existence. We'll see in the next canto a full explanation of this when Statius gives his account.

As far as line 102 is concerned, the sinners do not return to their sin at night -- they shift from shouting the whip of avarice to shouting the rein of avarice. The rein, as you'll recall from the previous ledges, depicts actions where avarice was the undoing of those guilty of it in an effort to demonstrate for the sinners the wrongness of their pursuit. On the ledge below, the souls chased after the whip of sloth and were chased by the rein of sloth. In either case, they don't need external media to push them to an understanding of their own culpability -- by this point in the mountain, they can push themselves.

S.

 
At 7:09 PM, Blogger Sebastian Mahfood said...

Master Adam, you have truly understood the mystery of love, which, when divided, multiplies boundlessly. If only this could be preached in the tenth bolgia of Circle 8.

This "Glory to God in the Highest" isn't part of the routine of these souls, though -- they only sing it on special occasions, which occur only when a given soul realizes the will to complete his purification and ascend to God. We'll see this soul, Statius, in the next canto.

S.

 
At 8:38 PM, Blogger Sean Burbach said...

Interesting observation, you got me there. I have overlooked the fact that he was married. That adds a new dimension to my understanding of Dante. Hmm! Maybe there is evidence that maybe something impure has occured and that he is trying to cover it up by masking it in Beatrice's beauty, and how he would never cause scandal to her name. I was trying to give him the benefit of doubt and not cast him to hell like Romeo and Juliet. "White Satan" you say? Hmm! Maybe I could reserve a place for him in my inferno with Romeo and Juliet. Or would Dante find himself in the realm of cheats/deceivers/liars? OOOOHHHHHH!!!!!!!!!!! :)

 
At 9:21 PM, Blogger Sebastian Mahfood said...

In Dante's defense, Sean, he didn't marry Gemma Donata until 1291 according to most accounts, which was one year after Beatrice died in 1290. He and Gemma had four children. At the time of her death, Beatrice was married to Simone de' Bardi.

Now, this is where it gets interesting -- La Vita Nuova was finished in 1293, two years after Dante's marriage to Gemma and three years after Beatrice's death.

S.

 
At 8:55 AM, Blogger Fr_Martin_2B said...

I found it interesting that Hugh lamented his lineage. Whereas others that Dante has met along the way have asked questions about family members and their well being, Hugh seems not only to know what has happened but to feel responsible, as if the heirs to the throne had no free will of their own. The "just say no" to drugs commercial comes to mind where the father asks his son "Where did you learn to do this?" and to his shock the son replies "I learned by watching you!"
Perhaps Hugh serves as a warning to all of us about the ripple effect of sin and how we not only harm those in our immediate circumstances, but truly do harm to the corporate body of Christ.

 
At 11:42 AM, Blogger Sebastian Mahfood said...

I think you've touched on something very interesting about Hugh, Fr. Martin 2b. Like other penitent we've stumbled across who talk about the present (take Judge Nino in the Valley of Flowers, for instance), Hugh knows the present moment and understands the implications of it for the greater humanity with which he, though a heaven-bound spirit, is still actively engaged. After all, when he reaches heaven, we'll be able to pray to him to help us just like we are able to do with all the saints in the litanies. The dead, then, are still very interested in the affairs of the living, and that Hugh would lament so greatly what is going on at the present moment with Philip IV (listen to Witt's audios) is significant in our understanding of the responsibility of temporal leadership as being something that ought to edify human community rather than destroy it. Just as Dante lamented, in fact, too much Papal control over temporal affairs, here, he laments, through the person of Hugh Capet, too much temporal control over spiritual affairs. Either excess strikes against his sense of balance that the realm of Caesar should remain the realm of Caesar and the realm of the Church should remain the realm of the Church.

As far as Hugh's personal culpability, remember where he is -- had he been less avaricious in life, perhaps his descendants would have been able to follow his example for the good. Instead, they followed it for the bad so that the sins of the father have persisted "unto the seventh generation."

S.

 
At 7:07 PM, Blogger kschroeder said...

So do the sinners in purgatory spend time there simply for there sins or do they also have to make up for the scandal and disobedience that their sin caused in future generations. Obviously we can't be held accountable for everything that others do on account of our example because they still have their free will but our actions do indeed encourage others to do things they might not otherwise do. So if you "lead one of these little ones into sin" by bad example how do you remove the millstone before it is too late?

 
At 1:27 PM, Blogger Marioneteer said...

Our lives are absolutely connected to the way of the Cross, we cannot hide it, we cannot deny it, we cannot change it, and we cannot ignore it, yet we try. When we experience pain we expect something to be done, immediately and thoroughly; we do not deserve pain and suffering. When an old person, feeble and presumably incoherent, we say their time is up, they have lived their lives and we think it better if they died. When our lives are going good or in the process of going better, we terminate pregnancy because it is bad timing, inconvenient, because it isn’t practical. When someone is sick with a short life expectancy we want to expedite death and terminate life. If we encounter something that compromises our perception of quality life, we expect assistance to commit suicide. If this is not the result of avarice I don’t know what is. We are so committed to the things that define and quantify what life should be we give up on what quality is, what God intended, and what the resurrection means. We don’t want to suffer loss of any kind but it is okay that we inflict suffering on others so we don’t have to suffer ourselves. The rich can get richer only if the poor get poorer. We can gain more knowledge at the expense of the ignorant. The quality of life improves only when the quality of life for another is destroyed. Avarice leads to all kinds of distorted thoughts, only we don’t call it avarice – we call it progress.

 
At 2:11 PM, Blogger Romani Sum said...

As one writing on the idea of community in the Comedy, I am most interested in the Hugh's advice to Dante. We now see the seperation of the sinner from the rest of humanity via his sins drawing closer to fellow humans during the purgation. The grand "s" says that the souls move from personal punishments and persoinal concerns to those of the greater community as a whole. This is merely a lesson that was lacking in their earthly life, namely, helping their brothers and sisters through the journey of life. As the souls realize that their actions are more directed to the good of others, they will, no doubt, grow closer to the gates of Heaven since they are more united to the cause of the "other".

 
At 11:19 AM, Blogger Sebastian Mahfood said...

Kschroeder,

I've sent your question to all three of our moral theologians for a response. My guess is that we are responsible only for our own degree of culpability arising from our intentional acts and that our corrupting the wills of others will weigh us down (as it did the evil counselors in the 8th circle of hell) but that sincere repentence will still enable our salvation. For that reason, had Hitler repented on his deathbed, we'd see him in heaven singing in the choir of angels.

S.

 
At 11:20 AM, Blogger Sebastian Mahfood said...

So, marioneteer, how do you propose we avoid this kind of progress that our culture of death so vigorously promotes?

S.

 
At 11:22 AM, Blogger Sebastian Mahfood said...

Romani Sum, your project is writing itself -- keep following those insights to their natural (if not logical) conclusions.

"the grand" S.

 
At 6:22 PM, Blogger Sebastian Mahfood said...

It turns out, kschroeder, that we are also responsible for the sin into which we lead others -- just in from Fr. Richard:

"CCC 2287 Anyone who uses the power at his disposal in such a way that it leads others to do wrong becomes guilty of scandal and responsible for the evil that he has directly or indirectly encouraged. "Temptations to sin are sure to come; but woe to him by whom they come!"

I cross-referenced this scripturally, and it's from Luke 17:1, which reads in the USCCB NAB, "He said to his disciples, "Things that cause sin will inevitably occur, but woe to the person through whom they occur."

S.

 
At 4:43 AM, Blogger chrisgonzo3652 said...

I read over your blog, and i found it inquisitive, you may find My Blog interesting. My blog is just about my day to day life, as a park ranger. So please Click Here To Read My Blog

 
At 12:05 AM, Blogger joewillis6656 said...

I read over your blog, and i found it inquisitive, you may find My Blog interesting. So please Click Here To Read My Blog

http://pennystockinvestment.blogspot.com

 
At 7:05 PM, Blogger saranelson55523855 said...

Get any Desired College Degree, In less then 2 weeks.

Call this number now 24 hours a day 7 days a week (413) 208-3069

Get these Degrees NOW!!!

"BA", "BSc", "MA", "MSc", "MBA", "PHD",

Get everything within 2 weeks.
100% verifiable, this is a real deal

Act now you owe it to your future.

(413) 208-3069 call now 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.

 
At 5:33 AM, Blogger Roro44 said...

شات دردشه دردشة منتديات حواء بطاقات حب شات خليجي شات عربي شات سعودي خدمات مسجات شات صوتي تبادل نصي دليل مواقع دليل مواقع مواقع سعودية مواقع اماراتية مواقع عراقية مواقع كويتية مواقع عمانية مواقع قطرية سياحة مواقع يمنية مواقع بحرينية دليل مواقع برامج دردشات تحميل العاب العاب بنات شات سعودي شات عربي شات خايجي دردشة سعودية دردشة عربية دردشة خليجية شات كتابي دردشة كتابية

 

Post a Comment

<< Home