The
Center of the Mystery
By
Doug Talley
"O love is the crooked thing,”sang
the poet W. B. Yeats. “There is nobody
wise enough to
find out all that is in it…” (From the poem “Brown Penny”, Selected Poems of William
Butler Yeats, M.L. Rosenthal, editor,
The MacMillan Company, New York, 1972.)
None may be wise enough, yet many have
ventured, and few have articulated that
venture more precisely or obsessively
than Dante Alighieri. From the moment
he first saw Beatrice, at the age of
nine, he was sworn to High Love and
thereby led to a “New Life.” His early
book of that same title was a treatise
on love and poetry both, and he undertook
to describe all he could about both
subjects. From the very outset of the
Vita Nuova he is gripped by joy and
misery and by the spiritual and physical
effects of love, as the following excerpts
attest:
New
Life
by Dante
Alighieri
I
In that
part of the book of my memory before
which there is little to be read, a
rubric is found which says, New Life
Begins. Under this rubric I find written
such words as I intend to copy into
this booklet, and if not all of them,
at least their substance.
II
Nine times
already from my birth the heaven of
light had returned almost to the middle
point of its revolution, when before
my eyes first appeared the glorious
lady of my mind, who was called by many
Beatrice, without understanding the
significance. She had already been so
long in this life that, in her time,
the star-filled heavens had turned to
the East one twelfth of a degree in
a century, so that she was almost at
the beginning of her ninth year when
she appeared to me, and I saw her almost
at the end of my ninth year. She appeared
dressed in a most noble sanguine color,
both modest and right, girded and adorned
in a manner fitting for one of such
young age.
At that
very moment truly, I say, the vital
spirit, which dwells in the hidden most
chamber of the heart, commenced to tremble
so deeply as to manifest throughout
my slightest pulses in a horrible fashion,
and in so trembling, said these words,
Here is a god greater than I, come
to rule over me. At that point the
animal spirit, which dwells in that
high chamber in which all the sensory
spirits bear their perceptions, began
to marvel greatly, and speaking particularly
to the spirits of vision, said these
words, Your beatitude has now appeared.
And then the natural spirit, which dwells
in that part where our nourishment is
ministered, began to cry, and in crying
said these words, Dear Misery, how
frequently will I be burdened hereafter.
From that
time forward, I say, Love ruled my soul,
which was quite disposed to him, and
began to sway over me with such confidence
and such bearing from the force which
my imagination gave him, that it suited
me to do all his pleasure. He commanded
me many times that I seek out this youngest
of angels, wherefore in my boyhood I
often went in search of her, and I saw
in her such a noble and praiseworthy
bearing that the words of the poet Homer
could certainly be said of her, “She
did not seem to be a daughter of mortal
man, but of God.”
And while
her image, which was continually with
me, served the boldness of Love to rule
over me, nevertheless it was of such
a noble quality that at no time did
it suffer that Love govern me without
the faithful counsel of reason in those
matters where such counsel was useful.
And lest it seem that by dwelling on
such passions and acts of early youth
I speak of something fabulous, I will
depart from them, and passing over many
things which could be drawn on as the
example from which these spring, I will
come to those words which are written
in my memory under more expanded paragraphs.
IV
From the
time of this vision forth my natural
spirit was impaired in its function,
because my soul was wholly consumed
with thoughts of this most gentle woman;
accordingly I began shortly to be of
such a frail and weakened condition
that to many friends my countenance
proved troubling, and many others full
of ill-will probed to discover of me
that which I wished to totally conceal
from anyone. And realizing the hostility
of their questioning, by the will of
Love, who directed me according to the
counsel of reason, I responded that
it was Love who so governed me. I spoke
of Love, because I bore in my countenance
so many signs of his influence that
I was not able otherwise to disguise
it. And when they asked me, “By whom
has Love so diminished you,” I only
smiled and said nothing.
XI
I swear
that when she appeared by the way, for
the hope I had of her miraculous greeting,
none remained my enemy, but rather a
flame of charity so kindled within me
that any who had ever offended me I
felt to pardon; and if any would have
posed to me any question whatsoever,
my only response would have been “Love”,
with a countenance clothed in humility.
And when she neared the point of greeting,
a spirit of love, vanquishing all other
spirits of perception, cast out the
feeble spirits of vision and said to
them: “Go and honor your Lady”;
and Love instead took their place.
And any
who wished to know Love could then know
him by gazing at the tremor of my eyes.
And when this most gentle Lady spoke
her greeting, Love would not mediate
to shade me from such intolerable beatitude,
but rather wield an almost excessive
sweetness over me so that my body, which
was wholly governed by his rule, often
proceeded like a sluggish, inanimate
creature. Therefore, it is manifestly
apparent that in her greeting my blessedness
resided, which many times exceeded and
overwhelmed my capacity.
XII
And now,
returning to my matter, I declare that
after her graciousness was denied me,
I was so afflicted with grief that departing
from all others, I went to a solitary
spot to wet the earth with most bitter
tears. And after I was somewhat relieved
by such weeping, I returned to my room
where I was able to mourn without being
heard; and there, calling on the Lady
of courtesy for mercy, and praying,
“O Love, help thy faithful servant,”
I fell asleep like a battered, sobbing
child.
It came
to pass that rather toward the middle
of my sleep I seemed to see a youth
dressed in whitest raiment, sitting
alongside me in my room, who by appearance
seemed absorbed in deep thought as he
regarded me where I lay; and when he
had observed me for some time, it seemed
that he sighed and called my name and
spoke these words, My son, it is
time to abandon our pretense. It
seemed then that I knew him, because
he called on me in the same fashion
as he had called on me before at other
times in my sleep; and regarding him,
it seemed to me that he wept pitifully
and awaited some word from me; wherefore,
gaining assurance, I began accordingly
to speak with him: Lord of nobility,
why do you weep?
And he
responded with these words: I am
like the center of a circle, to which
all points of circumference are equidistant;
you, however, are not so. Pondering
these words, it seemed to me that he
had spoken quite obscurely, so that
I ventured again to speak: What is
this, Lord, that you relate to me so
obliquely? To which he responded
in the vernacular dialect: Do not
require more than is useful to you.
Therefore, I began to discuss with him
the salutation, which had been denied
me, and I asked of him the reason, to
which he replied in this manner: Our
Beatrice heard from certain people speaking
of you that the woman I had named for
you on the path of sighs had received
of you some offense; and because this
most gentle lady is contrary to all
offense, she did not, for fear of a
similar affront, consent to greet you.
Wherefore, seeing that she has truly
known somewhat of your secret for some
time now, I desire that you declare
by rhyme certain words in which you
convey the power that I have over you
because of her and how you were hers
at once from your boyhood. And on this
point, you may call as a witness he
who knows it, and ask him to speak to
her on your behalf, and I, who am he,
will freely reason with her; through
this she will sense your good will,
by which she will then know that the
report of you was ill-informed. Make
these words, as it were, those of an
intercessor to avoid addressing her
directly, which would be undignified;
and do not send them away where they
might be heard by her without me, but
dress them with a pleasant harmony within
which I will intermingle whenever occasion
requires.
Having
spoken these words, he vanished, and
my sleep was broken. Upon reflection,
I found that this vision had appeared
to me during the ninth hour of the day;
and before I left my chamber, I proposed
to write a song, in which I would obey
what my lord had required. I then wrote
this song, which begins: My Song,
I would.
My Song, I would that you should
seek out Love
and with him straightway to our Lady
speed,
that my defense you might with singing
plead,
and with Love’s reasoning, might likewise
prove.
So graciously, my Song, you move at
will
that without company
you nonetheless might venture any place,
but if you wish to go more safely still,
seek first Love’s harmony —
the best, perhaps, to travel with his
grace —
because the Lady whom you then must
face
is, I believe, toward me most ill-disposed,
and if your words without him were composed,
she would, no doubt, quite subtly disapprove.
As you and Love with honeyed sound proceed,
these words you may commence,
though not before you ask her for her
grace:
“My Lady, he that sends me on to plead,
so please you, his defense,
desires that you allow my words some
place.
Love, too, stands by, who through your
lovely face
has power to sink at will this man’s
demeanor.
Wherefore, though Love might make him
eye another,
know this, from you his heart will never
rove."
Say
further, “Lady, his heart has always
favored
you
alone, with such devotion
his
only thought is how to serve your need;
his
heart was early yours and has not wavered.”
But
if she trust no such notion
bid
her ask Love, who knows the truth, indeed,
and
then extend a humble prayer, and plead
to
pardon all offense he might have given.
Should
she, instead, require that I be driven
to
my death, her servant still, and good,
I’d prove.
Before
you leave the Lady’s presence, say this
to
him who pleads my case
and
holds the key of all sympathy as well:
“By virtue of my lovely music’s bliss,
remain
with her and grace
the
hour with your pleading as you will;
and
if she grant him pardon, have her tell
the
news, if only by her look of peace.
My
Gentle Song , take leave now,as you
please;
to
my defense and to your honor move.
This song
is divided into three parts: in the
first I tell it where to proceed and
reassure it so that it might proceed
more confidently, and I advise in whose
company it should travel, if it wishes
to go confidently still and without
danger; in the second I say that which
the song is required to relate; in the
third I give it license to proceed at
will, recommending its journey to the
arms of fortune. The second part begins:
As you and Love with honeyed sound;
the third begins: My Gentle Song.
[D. Talley
Translation]
The
apostle Paul suggested there was a more
excellent way to love in the concept
of charity, a kind of love that is not
a “crooked thing” at all. This is the
frame of mind and heart which is Christ-like,
which suffers long and is kind, which
does not vaunt itself or seek its own
advantage, which is not easily provoked
and which thinks no evil. This, too,
was the mind and heart of Dante throughout
the Vita Nuova and in the eleventh
segment particularly: I swear that
when she appeared by the way, for the
hope I had of her miraculous greeting,
none remained my enemy, but rather a
flame of charity so kindled within me
that any who had ever offended me I
felt to pardon….
Why
is it after the passage of centuries
we are still drawn to Dante? Because
the voice he raised in his time is so
needed in our own. His absolute clarity
in an age of moral ambiguity and relativism.
His denunciation of materialism in an
age saturated with Mammon. His passionate
faithfulness to the idea of ideal love
in an age hardened by cynicism. His
integrity in cutting a path to God that
serves as a touchstone for a godless
age. He brings us to the center of the
mystery itself, which is Love, where
all points of circumference are equidistant,
where the two are made one, and where
the course of God is one eternal round.