Dante's Inferno
Dante Alighieri, one of the greatest poets of the Middle
Ages,
was born in Florence, Italy on June 5, 1265. He was born to a
middle-class Florentine family. At an early age he began to write poetry
and became fascinated with lyrics. During his adolescence, Dante fell in
love with a beautiful girl named Beatrice Portinari. He saw her only
twice but she provided much inspiration for his literary masterpieces.
Her death at a young age left him grief-stricken. His first book, La
Vita Nuova, was written about her. Sometime before 1294, Dante married
Gemma Donati. They had four children.
Dante was active in the political
and military life of Florence.
He entered the army as a youth and held
several important positions in
the Florence government during the 1290's.
During his life, Florence was
divided politically between Guelphs and
Ghibellines. The Guelphs
supported the church and liked to keep things as
they were, unlike the
Ghibellines. The Ghibellines were mostly supporters of
the German
emperor and at the time Dante was born, were relieved of their
power.
When this change took place, the Guelphs for whom Dante's family was
associated took power. Although born into a Guelph family, Dante became
more neutral later in life realizing that the church was corrupt,
believing it should only be involved in spiritual affairs.
At the turn
of the century, Dante rose from city councilman to
ambassador of Florence.
His career ended in 1301 when the Black Guelph
and their French allies
seized control of the city. They took Dante's
possessions and sentenced him
to be permanently banished from Florence,
threatening the death penalty upon
him if he returned.
Dante spent most of his time in exile writing new pieces
of
literature. It is believed that around 1307 he interrupts his unfinished
work, Convivio, a reflection of his love poetry philosophy of the Roman
tradition, to begin The Comedy (later known as The Divine Comedy). He
writes a book called De Vulgari Eloquentia explaining his idea to combine
a number of Italian dialects to create a new national language. In 1310
he writes De Monarchia presenting Dante's case for a one-ruler world
order.
Among his works, his reputation rests on his last work, The
Divine Comedy. He began writing it somewhere between 1307-1314 and
finished it only a short while before his death in 1321, while in exile.
In this work, Dante introduces his invention of the terza rima, or
three-line stanza as well as himself as a character.
The Inferno is the
first of three parts of Dante's epic poem, The
Divine Comedy, which depicts
an imaginary journey through Hell,
Purgatory, and Paradise. Dante is the
hero, who loses his way in the
"dark woods" and journeys to nine regions
arranged around the wall of a
huge funnel in nine concentric circles
representing Hell. He is led by
the ghost of Virgil, the Roman poet, who has
come to rescue Dante from
the dark forest and lead him through the realms of
the afterlife. The
first circle they enter is Limbo, which consists of
heathen and the
unbaptized, who led decent lives. The second through the
fifth circles
are for the lustful, gluttonous, prodigal, and wrathful. The
sixth
circle is where heretics are punished. The seventh circle is devoted
to
the punishment of violence. The eighth is devoted to those guilty of
fraud and the ninth for those who betrayed others. In the last section,
Satan remains imprisoned in a frozen lake.
The journey is difficult and
full of revelations, disappointment
and questions, but they persevere. The
end of their journey leads Dante
and Virgil to the bottom of Hell. Lucifer
is seen in all his ugliness
and they are drawn towards Heaven. They emerge
to the surface, rising
above the ugliness of sin and journey towards their
goal as they catch
sight of the stars shining in the heavens. Their journey
begins on Good
Friday and they emerge from Hell on the day of Resurrection,
Easter
Sunday on the underside of the world, in the hemisphere of water at
the
foot of Mount Purgatory.
Dante's vision expresses his personal
experience, through images
to convey his interpretation of the nature of
human existence. He writes
in the first person so the reader can identify
and deeply understand the
truths he wished to share about the meaning of
life and man's
relationship with the Creator.
Dante is remembered as a
great thinker and one of the most
learned writers of all time. Many scholars
consider his epic poem The
Divine Comedy consisting of Inferno, Paradiso,
and Purgatorio, among the
finest works of all literature. Critics have
praised it not only as
magnificent poetry, but also for its wisdom and
scholarly learning.
Dante was a man who lived, who saw political and
artistic
success, and who was in love. He was also a man who was defeated,
who
felt danger and the humiliation of exile, and who was no stranger to the
cruelty and treachery possible in people. Dante felt he was a victim of
a grave injustice. He also suffered serious self-doubts, natural for a
man in exile. His works reflect his experiences and attempts to answer
some of life's difficult questions.
In 1968, Allen Tate, a
conservative thinker and a convert to Catholicism,
wrote "The Unilateral
Imagination; or, I too Dislike it", in his Essays
of Four Decades. This
critique was established from a lecture given by
Tate in 1955 based on his
works.
An example of Dante's ability to tell so much in one single word
was expressed by Tate when he cited the word "ombre" which translates
"shades," to remind us of the continuity of the Christian Hell and
Virgil's pagan Hades. "Shades" are referred to as three-dimensional
bodies, able to feel pain as if they were alive in solid ice and
immobile, yet to have the intensity of fire. If Dante had tried to touch
one of them, his hand would have met no physical resistance since the
shades would melt into the air.
Tate stands in awe of Dante's abilities
to express such a large
concept or picture in so few words. He says, "I
believe we all wish we
had been able not only to write better poems, but
poems that say much
more than we have been able to say, while at the same
time seeming to say
less."(452)
In 1953, Jacques Maritain, a French
philosopher, theologian, educator,
and essayist, wrote "The Three Epiphanies
of Creative Intuition", in his
book, Creative Intuition in Art and Poetry.
He wrote about how Dante's
Divine Comedy is at the same time poetry of the
song, poetry of the
theater, and poetry of the tale. They are the three
epiphanies of poetic
intuition. Maritain believes that the essence of the
song appears
everywhere in the Divine Comedy, but more so in Paradiso, while
drama
appears everywhere, especially in Purgatorio, and novel is found
everywhere, but especially in the Inferno. (386-387)
Maritain observes
that Dante combines feelings, distinct images,
and a continuous and complex
narrative of a world of an adventure and
destiny in the Inferno. He feels
that the entire poem clearly shows,
that through love, Dante knew his
characters, understood their suffering,
and knew his characters desires.
These traits and Dante's ability to
express his dream caused Maritain to
believe that Dante had the eye of a
genuine novelist.
Ezra Pound, an
American poet and critic, believes that one hears far too
much about Dante's
Hell, and far too little about the Purgatorio, and
Paradiso. Pound wrote an
essay called "Dante" in his book, The Spirit of
Romance written in 1952. He
explains how Hell is the state of man who
has lost the good of his
intelligence, a state of man dominated by his
passions. (129)
Pound
believes that Dante's Inferno should be approached with a
"sense of irony."
His use of simile is carried throughout the Inferno
and enhances the effect
and meaning of his experience in Hell. While it
is natural for man to think
of Hell as a place, Pound understands it as a
condition of man's mental
state in life, continued after death. The
tendency to see objects and
qualities only in one dimension limiting and
drawing the reader away from
the true meaning of Dante's journey. Pound
sees the Inferno as a satire on
man's aimless turmoil and restlessness
that continues to the root of Hell
where it finds its end at the gate of
Purgatory. Dante is represented as
truth, intelligence, and love, and
Pound generates a positive portrayal of
Dante's work.
Tate, Maritain, and Pound give insightful and pertinent
observations of the Inferno, however, one major aspect, which was
overlooked in their critiques, was the theological truths Dante uncovered
on his imaginary journey through Hell. The reality of God, the Creator's
love and man's choice is evidenced throughout the Inferno. On this
spiritual pilgrimage, Dante has lost his way and tries to get back on the
right path to gain salvation, but many temptations are faced along the
way. Dante uses allegory in his story to depict these temptations or
sin. In the dark wood he encounters a leopard, lion, and a she-wolf.
The
leopard stands for lust, the lion for pride, and the she-wolf for
greed. He
takes the reader through the murky, disgusting depths of Hell
using very
graphic, grotesque language and imagery.
The poet communicates his vision
well and his truth comes alive
as the reader follows his spiritual search of
personal salvation.
Because he is the main character, Dante speaks in the
first person and
interprets his experience as he views sin in all its
ugliness. He knows
that life is a pilgrimage of the soul on its way to God,
but has lost his
way. The way is frighteningly real as he enters Hell and on
his way he
encounters many who have chosen greed or lust and turned from
God. Dante
realizes he must face evil (Satan) and rise toward the stars to
the
promise that is found in Heaven. The stars stand as a symbol of divine
order and hope.
Dante's relationship with God is evident in his writing,
which
portrays the experience of a deeply committed Christian. During the
time
he wrote, in the Middle Ages, this religious commitment was widely
accepted and encouraged. It is this spiritual truth: that those who
insist on denying God's will and die unrepentant are eternally damned
unless they repent and walk in the ways of the Lord, which makes Dante's
Inferno a religious and morally challenging experience.
Works Cited
Barbi, Michele. Life of Dante. Ed.
Paul Ruggiers, Berkley-L.A.:
University of California, Press, 1954.
Curtius, Ernst Robert. "Dante." European Literature and the Latin Middle
Ages. New York: Pantheon Books, 1953 348-379.
Maritain, Jacques. "The
Three Epiphanies of Creative Institution."
Creative Intuition in Art and
Poetry. New York: Pantheon Books, 1953
354-405.
Pinsky, Robert. The
Inferno of Dante. New York: Harper Collins, 1994.
Pound, Ezra. "Dante." The
Spirit of Romance. Norfolk: New Directions,
1968 118-165.
Tate, Allen.
"The Unilateral Imagination; or, I, too, Dislike It."
Essays of Four
Decades. Denver: The Swallow Press Inc., 1968 447-461.
Vittorini, Domenico.
The Age of Dante, Syracuse: Syracuse University
Press, 1957.