220 likes | 314 Views
Since It Came to Good: The Dark Wood of Error. Feraco Myth to Science Fiction 15 November 2011. Cantos 1 and II: Data File. Settings: The Dark Wood, the True Way, Mount Joy Figures: The Leopard, Lion, and She-Wolf (Three Beasts); Virgil; Beatrice
E N D
Since It Came to Good: The Dark Wood of Error Feraco Myth to Science Fiction 15 November 2011
Cantos 1 and II: Data File • Settings: The Dark Wood, the True Way, Mount Joy • Figures: The Leopard, Lion, and She-Wolf (Three Beasts); Virgil; Beatrice • Allusions: The Greyhound, The Aeneid, Three Blessed Women, Aeneas, and Paul • What Happens: Dante tries to move beyond confusion, but is defeated by his sins. Divine intervention sends him on a different course after some convincing.
Lost in the Wood • At this point, Dante is thirty-five, suffering from a literal midlife crisis • It’s not clear whether he’s lost his morals, or whether his confusion also lies in his exile from Florence • Raffa says the source of his disorientation could be “spiritual, physical, psychological, moral, political – [it’s] difficult to determine at this point” • In any case, his life isn’t unfolding the way he thought it would
The True Way • For Dante, this refers to the correct method of living one’s life in accordance with divine principles • One who adheres to the True Way eventually earns rewards, both in the present and in the afterlife • In medieval thought, abandonment of the "straight way" usually symbolized alienation from God
The Dark Wood I • The opposite of the True Way, the Dark Wood represents the muddled confusion that all too many people experience as they go through life • Sometimes things don’t go as expected, and our views shift without our noticing (Kierkegaard?) • In other instances, we make sacrifices and compromises so frequently, and prioritize so infrequently, that we lose sight of our larger purpose
The Dark Wood II • In still other cases, we never bother to formulate or identify that larger purpose • Some simply hope they’ll be fine as long as they just keep on keeping on. Others remain crippled by fear, reasoning that the man who never plans or dreams can’t have any of those dreams crushed • And others simply don’t care, wandering through life under a cloak of apathy, destined to die without ever having lived
The Dark Wood III • The Dark Wood is different for everyone because different factors cause individuals to wander astray • But the default condition of human beings seems to be one that encourages us to veer into that Wood, and to keep thrashing and crashing once we get there • Even Dante, having finally recognized that he’s lost his way, sets out to return to the Wood once he encounters the Three Beasts • After all, it’s easier to return to the misery of his old ways than to keep forging ahead
Selva Oscura • While it’s clear that the Wood symbolizes confusion and loss, we ask ourselves: why a wood? • Raffa proposes that Virgil’s use of the forest as the underworld’s entrance in The Aeneid inspires it • There’s also a lot of medieval literary tradition to look at; knights were always getting lost in forests in legends • Augustine had linked sin to a “region of unlikeness” in his work • Dante’s also used the forest as a symbol for adolescent confusion in Il Convivo • Finally, there’s Plato’s idea of chaotic matter – unformed, unnamed, unknowable – which Dante’s readers would have recognized
The Mount of Joy • When Dante tries returning to his True Way, he sees a little hill with sunlight shining on it and, overjoyed by the sight, rushes forward • Mount Joy symbolizes salvation for Dante • It represents the pinnacle of human existence, and the final destination of a life well-lived
The Mount of Joy II • Dante also uses the path as a counterexample to the degeneration of his city • To leave the path and lose one’s way is to waste the divine gift, and to live a meaningless life in the process • Here, as in many other places, Dante’s symbols stand for multiple antecedents
The Three Beasts • Dante encounters three animals while attempting to climb the Mount of Joy • Each animal personifies some moral weakness that prevents people from reaching their full potential
The Leopard • It’s the first Beast Dante encounters on the True Way, and its associated sins are the last ones he “recognizes” on his journey through Hell • In some texts, the Leopard represents Avarice and Immoderate Desire; in Ciardi’s translation, it represents Fraud / Betrayal / Malice • This refers to man’s tendency to allow passion, negativity and dishonesty to corrupt him over the years
The Leopard II • The choice of the Leopard here is probably inspired by the Bible’s Jeremiah 5:6: “Wherefore a lion out of the wood hath slain them, a wolf in the evening hath spoiled them, a leopard watcheth for their cities: every one that shall go out thence shall be taken, because their transgressions are multiplied, their rebellions strengthened” • The passage refers to the impending punishment of people who refuse to repent for their wrongdoings • Also important to note is the leopard’s camouflaged hide, symbolizing sin’s ability to cloak itself
The Lion • The Lion is a somewhat simpler figure, with origins identical to those of the Leopard (i.e., based on the Jeremiah passage) • He’s the second Beast Dante encounters on the Path • Unlike the Leopard and the She-Wolf, the Lion’s associated sins are consistently translated: Violence and Ambition • It’s standing in for man’s self-destructive urges – pride, short-sightedness, cruelty, etc. • We see his sins’ “circle” when Dante reaches the seventh circle • The circle itself has three rounds, suggesting a complex response to the Lion’s sins
The She-Wolf • Finally, the She-Wolf represents “Incontinence,” which serves not only as shorthand for a number of weaknesses – most importantly, the inability to control oneself – but almost as a “root sin” • From this essential flaw – your inability to make yourself stable, content, and good when the chips are down – virtually everything sinful and wicked stems • Alternately, the She-Wolf is said to represent avarice, which is a very pretty word for a very rotten affliction: an all-encompassing hunger that consumes everything and everyone in its path, with its bearer doomed to never know satisfaction and never consider consequences
The She-Wolf II • While the She-Wolf also takes her origins from the Jeremiah passage, Dante’s use of a wolf would have had special resonance for Italian readers • The country’s traditions descended from the Roman Empire, and the founders of Rome – the brothers Romulus and Remus – were supposedly nursed and raised in the wild by a She-Wolf • As a result, the She-Wolf became associated with the city • To see one so corrupted and ravening here is to remind readers of the perverse turn Florence has taken as it’s moved into the “modern age”
The Greyhound • Dante includes a prophecy in which a Greyhound that feeds on good will destroy the She-Wolf (which sustains itself on man’s evils) • It’s not clear who the Greyhound represents – Ciardi suggests Cangrande della Scala, a patron Dante proved particularly fond of – but Raffa suggests Dante kept the prophecy intentionally vague
Virgil • Seen here as Dante’s archetypical mentor, Virgil was a Roman poet who lived shortly before Christ’s birth • He’s responsible for some of the greatest literature in history, including one of my favorite works, The Aeneid (which Dante repeatedly references) • In one of his other works (Eclogues), Virgil foretells the coming of a “wonderchild” – something medieval Christian audiences hailed as a prophecy of Christ’s birth
Virgil II • Virgil is one of the Virtuous Pagans in this tale, yet he’s also a conduit for divine guidance • Without him, Dante doesn’t stand a chance of getting through Hell • Virgil’s presence as guide is therefore neither coincidental nor superfluous; he’s almost as important to the narrative as Dante himself
Aeneas and Paul • Dante mentions both men as a way of proving via contrast that he’s unfit to journey into the afterlife • Raffa: “The apostle Paul claims in the Bible to have been transported to the ‘third heaven’ (2 Corinthians 12:2), and Aeneas visits the underworld in book 6 of Virgil's Aeneid.” • These two otherworldly travelers are also associated with Rome, seat of both the empire and the church. • Raffa: “Dante, contrary to Augustine and others, believed the Roman empire in fact prepared the way for Christianity, with Rome as the divinely chosen home of the Papacy.”
Three Blessed Women • Mary is the Virgin Mary, who symbolizes God’s compassion for Dante’s plight here • Saint Lucia, or Lucy of Syracuse, was a martyr who medieval Christians associated with vision / sight • Finally, Beatrice embodies Divine Love; we already know why Dante chose her • “I' son Beatrice che ti faccio andare”: I am Beatrice, who makes you go.
Consider each of the previously mentioned elements from The Inferno’s first canto • In your Houses, try to think of analogues from your own life • Who has serves as your Virgils? • Which Beasts have threatened – or still threaten – your happiness?