As you'll remember, the entire journey through the Inferno is to be completed within Holy Saturday of the great jubilee year, A.D. 1300. Vigil, mindful of this, goads Dante on toward a sharp descent into the Seventh Circle, where, we find, the violent are punished in three different mini-circles for six different expressions of violence (each punished differently). We'll look at the first three types of violent sinners today and the next three tomorrow.
First, however, Dante and Virgil have to get into the Seventh Circle. To do so means they must pass another guard drawn from ancient mythology who is a fitting representation of violence - the Minotaur.
there lay stretched out the infamy of Crete (XII, 12 Musa) |
The Minotaur, half man, half beast, who once glutted himself upon the blood of Athenian boys and girls, falls immediately into a mindless rage at the mention, by Virgil, of Theseus (here called only by his title "the Duke of Athens" in verse 16) and begins bucking uncontrollably, providing just enough time for our pilgrims to descend the broken path and enter into the Circle of the Violent.
Dante, surprised by the destruction of that part of Hell's geography, asks his guide what could have caused such devastation. An Earthquake, caused by Christ's Harrowing of Hell (which also destroyed the gate at the entrance to Hell and led to the freeing of certain souls from Circle One) leveled this section of Hell's dividing wall. Christ's entrance into Hell, on Holy Saturday 1267 years before Dante's journey, was the major even in Hell's history, one which continues to have eternal, physical consequences. Virgil describes the event, from the perspective of a citizen of Hell and as a non-Christian to the best of his abilities,
Now will I have thee know, the other time
I here descended to the nether Hell,
This precipice had not yet fallen down.
But truly, if I well discern, a little
Before His coming who the mighty spoil
Bore off from Dis, in the supernal circle,
Upon all sides the deep and loathsome valleyOnce down the destroyed path, which shifts under the weight of Dante's living feet, Dante is confronted with the first punishment for the unrepentant violent as he beholds the River Phlegethon, a river made of boiling blood. The sinners here, tyrants (e.g. Dionysius of Syracuse), warlords (e.g. Attila the Hun), murders, and highway robbers are here punished eternally for the blood they shed in life. The Phlegethon varies in depth, thus those shades who committed less atrocious acts of violence might be only ankle deep in its bloody waters, while Alexander the Great or Ezzelino da Romano find themselves completely submerged. Any attempt to rise out of the boiling blood is met with arrows slung from yet more half-men, half-beasts, the centaurs (who carried a reputation for bloodshed and violence in their own right).
Trembled so, that I thought the Universe
Was thrilled with love... (XII, 34-42)
Crossing over the Phlegethon, Dante and Virgil immediately find themselves in another "dark wood (cf. Canto One),"
...we were on our way into a forest
that was not marked by any path at all.
No green leaves, but rather black in color,
no smooth branches, but twisted and entangled,
no fruit, but thorns of poison bloomed instead. (XIII, 2-6, Musa)
...its trunk cried, "Why dost thou mangle me?"
After it had become embrowned with blood,
It recommenced its cry: "Why dost thou rend me?
Hast thou no spirit of pity whatsoever?
Men once we were, and now are changed to trees;This, Dante learns, is the shade of Pier della Vigna, counsellor to Emperor Frederick II, stupor mundi ("wonder of the world"), who we learned from Farinata spends his eternity entombed for denying the immortality of the soul. Pier, who was a poet of the "Sicilian school," the primary Italian antecedent to Dante's dolce stil novo, was maligned to the Emperor and lost his position. Such despair enveloped him at the false accusations of disloyalty to his beloved emperor, and at his loss of position, that Pier took his own life. Thus, Dante learns that these tree-like souls are those who committed violence not against their neighbor, but against themselves.
Indeed, thy hand should be more pitiful,
Even if the souls of serpents we had been." (XIII, 33-39)
Frederick II Condemns Pier della Vigna of Treason |
Dante's conversation with Pier ends abruptly as two naked men, pursued by large, vicious dogs appear. The men, Arcolano di Squarcia Maconi and Giacomo da Santo Andrea, are profligates - wasteful spenders who violently spent away their possessions (Giacomo, for example, was known to throw money into a river and to burn his cottages for entertainment). The profligates punished here, as opposed the prodigal spenders punished in Circle Four above, were not just too weak to keep their spending in check (i.e. they weren't merely incontinent spenders), but were maliciously, violently wasteful of possessions that should have been used to succor the poor ("since you have done it unto one of the least of these my brethren you have done it unto me" - Mat 25:40).
After the dogs rip Giacomo apart, along with the suicide-turned-bush he's hiding behind, Dante, in an act of kindness, gathers up the shredded leaves of the unidentified Florentine suicide and learns more about Florence's fate, which, with its constant civil unrest and violence, is compared to a suicide.
Florence, today |
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