The Moral Situation of the Reader of Inferno
(Robert Hollander)
One of the most difficult problems for a twenty-first-century
reader of the Comedy is to find a moral point of view from
which to consider the actions portrayed in the poem. Doing so is not
quite as problematic for readers of the last two cantiche,
in which those on their way to becoming saints in heaven and those
already there contribute to the establishment of a moral ground that
is unmistakable. Even a non-Christian reader cannot overlook the essential
moral meaning of these parts of the work. Inferno, on the other
hand, at least seems to be a far less morally-defined space.
Indeed, debates about how we are meant to respond to the most attractive
sinners whom we meet in hell have been frequent features of nineteenth-
and twentieth-century discussions of the poem. This will not be an
attempt to review that debate, but only to describe its most salient
features.
The rediscovery of Dante in Europe at the end of
the eighteenth century brought his poem into a context that tended
to reformulate its moral argument. Later Romantic readers only widened
this tendency. The understanding of Dante that we eventually find
in many authoritative late-nineteenth (e.g., Francesco De Sanctis)
and early-twentieth-century (e.g., Benedetto Croce) critics does not,
one should probably agree, conform with the text its author left us.
How may we define this view of the poem? In keeping with some of the
most attractive tenets of Romantic artistic values -- spontaneity
of expression, vividness of portrayed emotion, gravity of subject
matter, integrity of the writer's feeling -- Dante became, as it were,
a contemporary of the Romantics. The core of such a view is located
in the moral point of view of the critic, not in that of the poem.
In a not-very-exaggerated shorthand, Francesca, one of the most beguiling
of Dante's sinners, replaces the sainted Beatrice as the guarantor
of the poem's (and the poet's) greatness; Dante becomes the unrivalled
portraitist of Great Feeling. The debate that continues into our own
day has its roots in the Romantic rediscovery of Dante, one based
particularly on readings of the most moving figures in the Inferno:
Francesca da Rimini (canto V), Farinata degli Uberti (canto X), Pier
delle Vigne (canto XIII), Brunetto Latini (canto XV), Ulysses (canto
XXVI), and Ugolino della Gherardesca (canto XXXIII), with Francesca,
Ulysses, and Ugolino representing perhaps the three most beloved and
discussed of Dante's Infernal characters.
It is not my purpose to argue that Dante's "sympathetic
sinners" are not indeed sympathetic, but that we, as readers, are
meant to avoid the trap into which the poem's protagonist himself
several times falls. We should try to honor the distinction the text
itself clearly draws, that between a narrator, who has had
a journey through the created universe, culminating in his vision
of God, and who, as a result, understands all things about as well
as a human being can, and a protagonist who moves, like St.
Augustine before him (in Dante's own formulation [Conv.I.ii.14]),
"from not good to good, from good to better, and from better to best,"
when at the last he becomes the narrator ([Par
I 1-36]). Dante's poem creates some of its drama from the tension
that operates between the narrator's view of events (in Inferno
often represented by Virgil's interpretive remarks) and that of the
protagonist. What makes our task difficult is that at some pivotal
moments neither the narrator nor Virgil makes clear judgmental statements
of a moralizing kind. Instead, the poet uses irony to undercut the
alluring words of sinners who present themselves rather as victims
than as perpetrators of outrage in the eye of God. The commentary
that accompanies the text of the poem will frequently analyze the
subtleties of Dante's presentation of these sympathetic sinners. Here,
speaking more generally, I would like to resuscitate an old gloss
of Guido da Pisa (Guido.Inf.XX.28-30),
who puts the matter succinctly: "Sed circa miserias damnatorum, Sacra
Pagina attestante, nulla compassione movetur. Et ratio est ista: In
isto enim mundo est tempus misericordie; in alio autem, est solum
tempus iustitie" (But the suffering of the damned should move no one
to compassion, as the Bible attests. And the reason for this is that
the time for mercy is here in this world, while in the world to come
it is time only for justice). If it was John Milton's task to "justify
the ways of God to men" (Paradise Lost I, 26), Dante before
him had taken on the responsibility of showing that all that is found
in this world and in the next is measured by justice. Everything in
God is just; only in the mortal world of sin and death do we find
injustice. It is the mark of Cain on most human agents. And it is
small wonder that Dante believes that it is only few alive in his
time who will find salvation ([Par
XXXII 25-27]). Words for "justice" and "just" recur frequently
in the poem, the noun some thirty-five times, the adjective, some
thirty-six. If one were asked to epitomize the central concern of
the poem in a single word, "justice" might embody the best choice.
In the Inferno we see the justice of God insisted
on from the opening lines describing hell proper, the inscription
over the gate of hell: "Giustizia mosse il mio alto fattore" (Justice
moved my maker on high). If God is just, it follows logically that
there can be absolutely no question concerning the justness of His
judgments. All who are condemned to hell are justly condemned. Thus,
when we observe that the protagonist feels pity for some of the damned,
we are meant to realize that it is he who is at fault. This
is perhaps the most available test of us as readers. If we sympathize
with the damned, we follow a bad example. In such a view, the protagonist's
at times harsh reaction to various sinners, e.g., Filippo Argenti
(canto VIII), Pope Nicholas III (canto XIX), Bocca degli Abati (canto
XXXII), is not (even if it seems so to some contemporary readers)
a sign of his falling into sinful attitudes himself, but proof of
his righteous indignation as he learns to hate sin.
If some readers think that the protagonist is too
zealous in his reaction to some sinners, far more are of the opinion
that his sympathetic responses to others correspond to those that
we ourselves may legitimately feel. To be sure, Francesca is portrayed
more sympathetically than Thaïs (canto XVIII), Ulysses than Mosca
dei Lamberti (canto XXVIII), etc. Yet it also seems to some readers
that Dante's treatment of Francesca, Ulysses, and others asks us to
put the question of damnation to one side, leaving us to admire their
most pleasing human traits in a moral vacuum, as it were. I think
it is better to understand that we are never authorized by the poem
to embrace such a view. If we are struck by Francesca's courteous
speech, we note that she is also in the habit of blaming others for
her own difficulties; if we admire Farinata's magnanimity, we also
note that his soul contains no room for God; if we are wrung by Pier
delle Vigne's piteous narrative, we also consider that he has totally
abandoned his allegiance to God for his belief in the power of his
emperor; if we are moved by Brunetto Latini's devotion to his pupil,
we become aware that his view of Dante's earthly mission has little
of religion in it; if we are swept up in enthusiasm for the noble
vigor of Ulysses, we eventually understand that he is maniacally egotistical;
if we weep for Ugolino's piteous paternal feelings, we finally understand
that he, too, is centrally concerned with himself.
Dante's risky technique was to trust us, his readers,
with the responsibility for seizing upon the details in the narratives
told by these sympathetic sinners in order to condemn them on the
evidence that issues from their own mouths. It was indeed, as we can
see from the many readers who fail to take note of this evidence,
a perilous decision for him to have made. Yet we are given at least
two totally clear indicators of the attitude that should be ours.
Twice in Inferno figures from heaven descend to hell to further
God's purpose in sending Dante on his mission. Virgil relates the
coming of Beatrice to Limbo. She tells him, in no uncertain terms,
that she feels nothing for the tribulations of the damned and cannot
be harmed in any way by them or by the destructive agents of the place
that contains them ([Inf
II 88-93]). All she longs to do is to return to her seat in Paradise
([Inf
II 71]). And when the angelic intercessor arrives to open the
gates of Dis, slammed shut against Virgil, we are told that this benign
presence has absolutely no interest in the situation of the damned
or even of the living Dante. All he desires is to complete his mission
and be done with such things ([Inf
IX 88],
[Inf IX 100-103]), reminding us of Beatrice's similar lack of
interest in the damned.
Such indicators should point us in the right direction.
It is a continuing monument to the complexity of Dante's poem and
to some readers' desire to turn it into a less morally- determined
text than it ultimately is that so many of us have such difficulty
wrestling with its moral implications. This is not to say that the
poem is less because of its complexity, but precisely the opposite.
Its greatness is reflected in its rich and full realization of the
complex nature of human behavior and of the difficulty of moral judgment
for living mortals. It asks us to learn, as does the protagonist,
as we proceed. His journey is the model for our voyage through his
text.
(February 1998)
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