The Convivio, by Dante Alighieri
Translated by Richard Lansing
Book Four
Canzone: "Le dolci rime d'amor, ch'i' solìa"
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Chapter 1
Love, according to the unanimous opinion of the sages who have spoken
of it and as we see from constant experience, is what joins and unites
the lover with the person loved. Consequently Pythagoras says, "Friendship
unites the many into one."(1) Since things
that are joined by nature have their qualities in common with one another,
to the extent that one is at times completely transformed into the nature
of the other, it follows that the passions of the person loved enter into
the person who loves, so that the love of the one is communicated to the
other, as are hatred and desire and all other passions. Consequently the
friends of the one are loved by the other, and the enemies hated; hence
the Greek proverb says: "Among friends all things must be shared."(2)
Thus having become the friend of this lady who was mentioned above in
the true explanation, I began to love and hate in accordance with her love
and hatred.(3) I therefore began to love
the followers of truth and to hate the followers of error and falsehood,
as did she. But since everything in itself merits love, and nothing hatred
unless malice should overwhelm it, it is reasonable and proper to hate
not the things themselves but the malice within them, and to seek to remove
it from them. If anyone strives to do this, it is my most excellent lady
who strives the most--strives, I mean, to remove the malice in things,
which is the cause of their being hated; because in her is found all reason
and likewise the source of dignity. Taking her actions as well as her feelings
as my example, I sought, as far as I was able, to scorn and despise the
errors of mankind, not to defame or denigrate those who err, but rather
their errors. By blaming them I sought to render them displeasing, and
by rendering them displeasing, to remove them from those persons whom I
hated because of them.
Among these errors was one that I condemned more than any other, one
which is harmful and dangerous not only to those who are caught up in it
but also to those who condemn it, to whom it brings pain and suffering.
This is the error concerning human goodness insofar as it is sown in us
by nature, and which should be called "nobility," an error that was so
entrenched as a result of evil habit and lack of intelligence that the
opinion of almost everyone was thereby rendered fallacious. From this fallacious
opinion sprang fallacious judgments, and from fallacious judgments sprang
unjust reverence and disdain, with the result that the good were held in
base contempt and the bad were honored and exalted. This constituted the
worst confusion in the world, as is apparent to anyone who carefully considers
what the consequences of such confusion might be. Since this lady of mine
had somewhat altered the tenderness of her looks at me, especially in those
features at which I would gaze when seeking to learn whether the primal
matter of the elements was contained within God--for which reason I refrained
for a time from coming into the presence of her countenance--while living,
as it were, in her absence, I set about contemplating the shortcoming within
man concerning the above-mentioned error. To avoid idleness, which is the
greatest enemy of this lady, and to eradicate this error, which robs her
of so many friends, I resolved that I would cry out to those who were walking
along this evil path so that they might place themselves back on the right
way. So I began a canzone commencing with the words The tender rhymes
of love, in which I proposed to bring men back to the right way regarding
the proper conception of true nobility, as may be perceived by gaining
an understanding of the text which I now intend to explain. And since I
sought to provide a very necessary remedy in this canzone, I did not consider
it effective to employ figurative language, but rather to supply this medicine
by the quickest way, so that health, which was already so poisoned that
it was hastening toward an ugly death, might be quickly restored.
Therefore in discussing this canzone it will not be necessary to unveil
any allegory, but only to explain the literal meaning. By "my lady" I mean
the same lady whose meaning I addressed in the previous canzone, namely
that most virtuous light, Philosophy, whose rays make flowers bloom and
bear the fruit of mankind's true nobility.
Chapter 2
It is proper, at the beginning of the explanation here undertaken, to
divide the canzone before us into two parts in order to convey its meaning,
for the first part serves as a preface, while the second follows with the
treatment of the subject. The second part begins at the beginning of the
second stanza, with the words One ruler held that nobility. The
first part can be further seen to comprise three sections. The first states
why I depart from my accustomed speech; in the second I define my subject;
in the third I ask help from what can help me most, namely the truth. The
second section begins And since it seems a time for waiting. The
third begins And at the outset I call upon the lord.
I say therefore that "I must leave aside the tender rhymes of love which
my thoughts once sought out"; and I mark the reason, for I say that it
is not because I no longer intend to write of love but because new looks
have appeared in my lady which for the present have deprived me of material
for speaking of love. Here it must known that the gestures of this lady
are not said to be "disdainful and proud" except by their appearance, as
may be seen in the tenth chapter of the preceding book where, on another
occasion, I said that appearance differed from reality. How it can be that
one and the same thing is both sweet and yet seems bitter, or is clear
and yet seems dark, is made sufficiently evident in that passage.
Next when I say And since it seems a time for waiting, I specify,
as has been said, my intended subject. Here we must not try to skip over
with dry foot what is meant by "time for waiting," since that is the strongest
reason for my change of mind, but rather to consider how reasonable it
is that we should await the proper moment in all our undertakings, and
most of all in speaking.(4) Time, as Aristotle
says in the fourth book of the Physics, is "number of motion with
respect to before and after," and "number of celestial movement" is that
which disposes things here below to receive the informing powers diversely.(5)
For at the beginning of spring the earth is disposed to receive in one
manner the power that informs the grasses and the flowers, and in another
manner in winter; and one season is disposed to receive the seed differently
from another; and likewise our mind, insofar as it is related to the composition
of the body which is disposed to respond to the circling of the heavens
differently at different times. This is why great discretion must be shown
in using or in avoiding the use of words--which are, as it were, the seed
of our activity--so that they may be well received and fruitful in effect,
so as to avoid any defect of sterility on their part. The right moment
must therefore be predetermined, both for the one who speaks as well as
the one who must listen; because if the speaker is ill disposed his words
are often harmful, and if the hearer is ill disposed even good words will
be poorly received. And therefore Solomon says in the book of Ecclesiastes
that "There is a time to speak and a time to keep silence."(6)
Consequently feeling that I was too unsettled in disposition to speak of
love, for the reason stated in the preceding chapter, it seemed to me right
to await the moment that would bring with itself the goal of every desire
and make a present of itself, like a benefactor, to those who are not made
impatient by waiting. Hence St. James the Apostle says in his Epistle:
"Behold, the husbandman waits for the precious fruit of the earth, patiently
abiding until he receives the early and the late."(7)
All our troubles, if we carefully seek out their source, derive in some
way from not knowing how to make a proper use of time.
I say that "since it seems a time for waiting, I will put aside," that
is, forgo "my pleasant style," namely the style to which I've kept in speaking
of love; and I say that I will speak of that "quality" which makes a person
truly noble. Although "quality" can be understood in many different ways,
here it is taken as a natural capacity, or a goodness conferred by nature,
as will be seen below. And I promise to treat of this matter with harsh
and subtle rhymes. Consequently it should be known that "rhyme" can
be understood in two ways, either broadly or narrowly. In the narrow sense
it means the agreement commonly made by the last and the penultimate syllables,
while in the broad sense it means all speech whose cadences are regulated
by rhythm and meter to produce rhymed consonances; and here in this preface
the latter sense is to be taken and understood. Therefore the preface says
harsh with regard to the sound of the words, which should not be
sweet with so weighty a subject as this one; and it says subtle
with regard to the meaning of the words, which proceed by subtle reasoning
and argument. I add By refuting the false and base beliefs, where
I promise to refute the beliefs of those who are laden with error; false,
that is, removed from the truth, and base, that is, affirmed and
promoted by baseness of mind.
And this is to be remarked: namely that in this preface we promise first
to explain what is true and then to refute what is false, while in the
book itself I do the opposite; for first I refute what is false and then
explain what is true, which seems contrary to my promise. Therefore we
must know that although I intend to do both, I intend principally to explain
the truth; and I intend to refute what is false only insofar as the truth
is made more evident. I promise here to explain the truth as my main concern,
which instills in the mind of the listener the desire to listen; in the
book itself what is false is first refuted so that when wrong opinions
have been put to flight the truth may then be more freely received. This
is the method employed by the master of human reason, Aristotle, who always
fought first the foes of the truth and then, after overthrowing them, demonstrated
the truth.
Finally, when I say And first of all I call upon the lord, I
call on truth to be with me, which is the lord that dwells in the eyes
(that is, in the demonstrations) of Philosophy. The truth is lord, for
when married to the soul, the soul becomes a lady; otherwise she is a servant
deprived of all liberty. Then it says And makes this lady love herself,
because Philosophy, which, as has been said in the preceding book, is the
loving use of wisdom, contemplates herself when the beauty of her eyes
is revealed to her. This is but to say that the philosophic soul not only
contemplates the truth but, moreover, contemplates its own contemplation
and the beauty of that act as well, by turning back its glance upon itself
and becoming enamored of itself by reason of the beauty of its first contemplation.
And so ends that which the text of the present book presents, by way
of preface, in three sections.
Chapter 3
Now that the meaning of the preface has been examined, we must consider
the book; and in order to reveal it better it is necessary to divide it
into its principal parts, which are three. For in the first part nobility
is treated according to the opinions of others; in the second it is treated
according to its own opinion; in the third words are addressed to the canzone,
to add beauty to what has been said. The second part begins I say that
every virtue at its source. The third begins My song Against-the-erring-ones,
go forth. After these general divisions other subdivisions must be
made in order to understand properly the concept that is to be set forth.
No one should therefore be surprised if many subdivisions are made in this
manner, because a great and lofty undertaking, little examined by the authorities,
is now under hand and because the book which I now enter upon must of necessity
be long and subtle in order to unravel the text perfectly according to
the meaning which it holds.
I say then that this first part is now divided into two: in the first
the opinions of others are put down, and in the second they are refuted;
and this second subdivision begins He who claims "Man is a living tree."
Furthermore, the first part, the one which remains, has two parts: the
first treats the way in which the opinion of the Emperor goes astray, the
second the way in which the opinion of the common people, which is devoid
of reason, goes astray. The second part begins And someone else of lesser
wit. Then I say: One ruler held, which is to say, one who exercised
imperial authority. Here it should be observed that Frederick of Swabia,
the last of the Roman emperors (the last, I say, up to the present time,
in spite of the fact that Rudolf, Adolf, and Albert were elected after
the death of Frederick and his descendants), when asked what nobility was,
replied that it was ancestral wealth and fine manners.(8)
And I say that there was someone else of lesser wit who, pondering
and examining this definition in all its parts, removed the second half,
namely "fine manners," and retained the first, namely "ancestral wealth";
and since the text seems perhaps doubtful of his having fine manners, not
wishing to lose the name of nobility, he defined the term as ancestral
wealth long possessed simply to suit himself. I state that this opinion
is almost universal by saying that there follow in his wake all those who
count a man as noble if he comes from stock that has had great wealth for
quite some time, since almost everyone barks it out in this manner. These
two opinions--although one, as has been said, is of no concern to us--seem
to have two very weighty reasons to support them. The first is the Philosopher's
belief that what appears true to the majority cannot be entirely false;
the second reasoning stems from the most excellent authority of the Imperial
Majesty.(9) In order that the power of truth,
which outweighs all authority, may be more clearly seen, I intend to discuss
to what extent each of these reasons is useful and valid. Since nothing
can be known about the imperial authority unless its roots are found, it
is first necessary to discuss them expressly in a special chapter.
Chapter 4
The root foundation underlying the Imperial Majesty is, in truth, man's
need for human society, which is established for a single end: namely,
a life of happiness, which no one is able to attain by himself without
the aid of someone else, since one has need of many things which no single
individual is able to provide. Therefore the Philosopher says that man
is by nature a social animal.(10) And just
as for his well-being an individual requires the domestic companionship
provided by family, so for its well-being a household requires a community,
for otherwise it would suffer many defects that would hinder happiness.
And since a community could not provide for its own well-being completely
by itself, it is necessary for this well-being that there be a city.
Moreover, a city requires for the sake of its culture and its defense
mutual relations and brotherhood with the surrounding cities, and for this
reason kingdoms were created. Since the human mind does not rest content
with limited possession of land but always seeks to achieve glory through
further conquest, as we see from experience, discord and war must spring
up between one kingdom and another. Such things are the tribulations of
cities, of the surrounding cities, of the communities, and of the households
of individuals; and so happiness is hindered. Consequently, in order to
do away with these wars and their causes, it is necessary that the whole
earth, and all that is given to the human race to possess, should be a
Monarchy--that is, a single principality, having one prince who, possessing
all things and being unable to desire anything else, would keep the kings
content within the boundaries of their kingdoms and preserve among them
the peace in which the cities might rest. Through this peace the communities
would come to love one another, and by this love all households would provide
for their needs, which when provided would bring man happiness, for this
is the end for which he is born.(11)
In regard to this argument we may refer to the words of the Philosopher
when he says in the Politics that when many are directed to a single
end, one of them should be a governor or a ruler, and all the rest should
be ruled or governed. This is what we observe on a ship, where the different
offices and objectives are directed to a single end: namely, that of reaching
the desired port by a safe route. Just as each officer directs his own
activity to its own end, so there is one individual who takes account of
all these ends and directs them to their final end: and this is the captain,
whose commands all must obey. We see this in religious orders, in armies,
and in all things, as has been said, which are directed to an end. Consequently
it is evident that, in order to bring to perfection the universal social
order of the human species, it is necessary to have a single individual
who, like a captain, upon considering the different conditions in the world,
should have, in order to direct the different and necessary offices, the
universal and indisputable office of complete command. This pre-eminent
office is called the Empire, without qualification, because it is the command
of all other commands. And thus he who is placed in this office is called
the Emperor, since he is the commander of all other commands; and what
he says is law for all and ought to be obeyed by all, and every other command
gains strength and authority from his. And so it is clear that the imperial
majesty and authority are the highest in the fellowship of mankind.
Nevertheless someone might quibble by arguing that although the world
requires an imperial office, there is no sound reason why the authority
of a Roman prince should be supreme--which is the point we seek to prove--because
the power of Rome was acquired neither by reason nor by decree of universal
consensus, but by force, which appears to be the opposite of reason. To
this we may easily reply that the election of this supreme officer must
in the first place derive from that wisdom which provides for all men,
namely God; for otherwise the election would not have been made on behalf
of everyone, since prior to the officer named above there was no one who
attended to the general good. And because no nature ever was or will be
more tempered in the exercise of rule, stronger in its preservation, and
more clever in acquiring it than that of the Latin race (as can be seen
from experience), that sacred people in whom was mingled the lofty blood
of the Trojans, namely Rome, God chose this people for that office. Therefore
since this office could not be attained without the greatest virtue, and
since its exercise required the greatest and most humane kindness, this
was the people best disposed to receive it. Consequently the Roman people
secured it originally not by force but by divine providence, which transcends
all reason.
Vergil concurs in this in the first book of the Aeneid when,
speaking in the person of God, he says: "To these (namely the Romans) I
set no bounds, either in space or time; to these I have given empire without
end."(12) Force was therefore not the moving
cause, as our quibbler supposed, but rather the instrumental cause, as
the blows of a hammer are the cause of a knife, while the mind of the smith
is the efficient and moving cause; and thus not force but reason, and moreover
divine reason, must have been the origin of the Roman Empire. Two very
distinct reasons may be adduced to prove that this city is imperial and
had an origin and progress that were especially arranged by God. But since
this subject could not be treated in this chapter without undue length,
and long chapters are the foe of memory, I will extend my digression to
another chapter to set forth the reasons indicated above, not without profit
and much delight.
Chapter 5
It is no wonder if divine providence, which wholly transcends angelic
and human powers of perception, often proceeds in ways that are hidden
to us, inasmuch as human actions frequently conceal their meanings from
men themselves. But it is a cause for great wonder when the workings of
the eternal counsel are so clearly manifest as to be discerned by our reason.
I am therefore at the beginning of this chapter able to recite the words
of Solomon who says in Proverbs, in the person of Wisdom: "Listen, for
I will speak of great things."(13)
When the infinite goodness of God willed to bring back into conformity
with itself the human creature, who had been deformed by separation from
God through the sin of the first man's transgression, it was decreed, in
that most elevated and most united consistory of the Trinity, that the
Son of God should descend to earth to bring about this harmony.(14)
Since the world (not only heaven, but earth as well) should be properly
disposed for his coming--and the earth is properly disposed under a monarchy
(that is, when it is fully subject to one prince, as has been said above)--divine
providence ordained that those people and that city, namely glorious Rome,
should be chosen to accomplish this end. Since even the abode into which
the celestial king was to enter should be most clean and pure, it was arranged
that a very holy lineage should come into existence, from which after many
virtuous descendants a woman finer than any other should be born to become
the chamber of the Son of God. This was the lineage of David, from which
was born the pride and honor of the human race, namely Mary. Therefore
it is written in Isaiah: "There shall come forth a rod out of the root
of Jesse, and a flower shall spring from his root."(15)
Jesse was the father of the David referred to above. All this occurred
at one point in time: David was born when Rome was born--that is, when
Aeneas came to Italy from Troy, which was the origin of the Roman city,
according to written records. As a result the divine choice of the Roman
empire is made manifest by the birth of the holy city which was contemporaneous
with the root of the family of Mary.
Incidentally, it should be observed that from the time that this heaven
began to revolve, it has never been in a better position than when he who
created and rules it descended from above, as the mathematicians are still
able to ascertain by virtue of their arts. Nor was the world ever, nor
will it be, so perfectly disposed as at the time when it was guided by
the voice of the one sole prince and commander of the Roman people, as
Luke the Evangelist testifies.(16) Since
universal peace reigned everywhere, which it never did before nor ever
shall again, the ship of human society was speeding on an even course directly
toward its proper port. O ineffable and incomprehensible wisdom of God
who at the same hour both over in Syria and here in Italy made your preparations
so well beforehand! O utterly foolish and vile are you brutes who pasture
as if you were men and presume to speak against our faith and, while spinning
wool and tilling the soil, seek to know what God through his great foresight
has ordained! Accursed be you and your presumption, and those who believe
your words!
As has been said above at the end of the preceding chapter of the present
book, God gave Rome not only a special birth but a special evolution. For,
in brief, from Romulus, who was her first parent, up to the age of her
greatest perfection, namely the era of the emperor cited above, her evolution
was effected by means not only of human but also divine undertakings.(17)
For if we consider the seven kings who first governed her--namely Romulus,
Numa, Tullus, Ancus, and the Tarquin kings who were the rulers and the
tutors, so to speak, of her youth--we will discover from the records of
Roman history, especially from Titus Livius, that these were men whose
natures differed according to the requirements of the historical moment.
If we then consider her more advanced youth, after she was emancipated
from the tutelage of the kings, from the time of Brutus, the first consul,
up until Caesar, the first supreme prince, we will find that she was exalted
not with human but with godlike citizens whose love of her was inspired
not by a human but a divine love. This could not and should not have happened
unless there was a special end, conceived for her by God, brought about
through a very great infusion of celestial grace.
Who will say that Fabricius was not divinely inspired when he refused
to accept an almost infinite amount of gold because he would not abandon
his country? Or Curius, whom the Samnites attempted to corrupt, when he
refused to accept a huge quantity of gold for love of his country, saying
that the citizens of Rome sought to possess not gold but the possessors
of the gold? Or Mucius, who set fire to his own hand because the blow by
which he thought to deliver Rome fell wide of its mark? Who will say that
Torquatus, who sentenced his own son to death out of love for the public
good, could have borne his suffering without divine assistance? Similarly
the already mentioned Brutus? Who will say this of the Decii and the Drusi
who laid down their lives for their country? Who will say that the captive
Regulus, having been sent from Carthage to Rome to exchange Cathaginian
prisoners for himself and the other Roman prisoners, was moved solely by
human and not divine nature when for the love of Rome he gave advice to
his own disadvantage after the envoys had withdrawn?
Who will say of Quintus Cincinnatus, who was made dictator and taken
from the plough, that he renounced his office after having completed his
term and returned of his own accord to the plough? Who will say of Camillus
that, after being banished and cast into exile, he returned to free Rome
from her enemies, and that after freeing her he went back into exile of
his own accord in order not to offend the authority of the Senate, without
divine influence? O most hallowed breast of Cato, who will presume to speak
of you?(18) Surely we cannot speak of you
better than by observing silence and by following the example of Jerome,
who says, in his preface to the Bible, where he refers to Paul, that it
is better to keep silent than to say too little. Surely it must be evident
as we recall the lives of these and all the other godlike citizens that
these wondrous events took place, not without some light of the divine
goodness over and above their own natural goodness. It must be evident
that these men of supreme excellence were the instruments with which divine
providence realized the evolution of the Roman empire, where on many occasions
the arm of God appeared to be present. For was the hand of God not evident
in the battle in which the Albans fought with the Romans, at the beginning,
for the control of the Empire, when the liberty of Roman lay in the hands
of a single Roman? Was the hand of God not evident when the Gauls, having
taken all of Rome, secretly seized the Capitol during the night and only
the cry of a goose made it known? Was the hand of God not evident when
in the war of Hannibal the Romans, having lost so many citizens that three
bushels of rings were taken to Carthage, were ready to abandon their country
if that blessed young Scipio had not taken his campaign for the liberation
of Rome into Africa? And was the hand of God not evident when a new citizen
of small means, namely Tully, defended the liberty of Rome against so great
a citizen as Catiline? Most certainly.
Consequently we need seek no further proof in order to see that this
holy city had a special birth and a special evolution, conceived and ordained
by God. I am most certainly of the firm opinion that the stones lodged
in her walls are worthy of reverence and that the soil on which she rests
is more worthy than is commonly proclaimed or established.
Chapter 6
Above, in the third chapter of this book, a promise was made to discuss
the loftiness of the imperial and philosophic authorities. Therefore having
discussed the imperial authority, I must continue my digression and take
up the subject of the authority of the Philosopher, in keeping with my
promise. Here we must first observe what this word "authority" means, for
there is a greater necessity to know this in discussing the philosophic
as opposed to the imperial authority, which by virtue of its majesty does
not seem open to question. It should be known, then, that "authority" is
nothing but "the pronouncement of an author."
This word, namely "auctor" without the third letter c, has two
possible sources of derivation. One is a verb that has very much fallen
out of use in Latin and which signifies more or less "to tie words together,"
that is, "auieo." Anyone who studies it carefully in its first form will
observe that it displays its own meaning, for it is made up only of the
ties of words, that is, of the five vowels alone, which are the soul and
tie of every word, and is composed of them in a different order, so as
to portray the image of a tie.(19) For
beginning with A it turns back to U, goes straight through to I and E,
then turns back and comes to O, so that it truly portrays this image: A,
E, I, O, U, which is the figure of a tie.(20)
Insofar as "author" is derived and comes from this verb, it is used only
to refer to poets who have tied their words together with the art of poetry;
but at present we are not concerned with this meaning. The other source
from which "author" derives, as Uguccione attests in the beginning of his
book Derivations, is a Greek word pronounced "autentin" which
in Latin means "worthy of faith and obedience."(21)
Thus "author," in this derivation, is used for any person deserving of
being believed and obeyed. From this comes the word which we are presently
treating, namely "authority"; hence we can see that authority means "pronouncement
worthy of faith and obedience." Consequently, when I prove that Aristotle
is most worthy of faith and obedience, it will be evident that his words
are the supreme and highest authority.
That Aristotle is the most worthy of faith and obedience may be proved
as follows. Among workmen and craftsmen of various arts and activities
which are ordained to a single final activity or art, the craftsman or
workman pursuing such an end must above all be obeyed and trusted by everyone
as being he alone who considers the final end of all the other ends. Hence
the knight should be trusted by the sword-maker, the bridle-maker, the
saddle-maker, the shield-maker, and all trades that are established for
the purpose of achieving the goals of chivalry. Since all human activities
require a final end, namely the end of human life to which man is directed
insofar as he is human, the master or the craftsman who studies this and
reveals it to us should be obeyed and trusted above all others. That man
is Aristotle: he therefore is the most worthy of faith and obedience.(22)
In order to perceive how Aristotle is the master and leader of human reason,
insofar as it is directed to man's final activity, we must know that this
end of ours, which everyone by nature desires, was sought out in very early
times by the sages. Since, however, those who desire this end are very
numerous and the desires are almost entirely different in each instance,
although they have but a single universal end, it was very difficult to
discern this single end in which every human desire should rightly find
its peace.
There were then very ancient philosophers, the first and most important
of whom was Zeno, who perceived and believed that the end of human life
consisted solely of strict integrity--that is, in strictly, unreservedly
following truth and justice, in not showing sorrow for anything or joy
for anything, in not being responsive to any emotion.(23)
And they defined this integrity as "that which apart from utility or profit
is for its own sake praiseworthy according to reason." They and their sect
were called Stoics, and to them belonged that glorious Cato of whom I did
not dare to speak above.
There were other philosophers whose views and beliefs differed from
theirs, and of these the first and most important was a philosopher called
Epicurus who, seeing that every living creature as soon as it is born is,
as it were, directed by nature toward its proper end, avoiding pain and
seeking pleasure, said that this end of ours was pleasure--that is, delight
free from pain. Because he did not posit any mean between delight and pain,
he claimed that "pleasure" was nothing but the absence of pain," as Tully
seems to relate in the first book of On the End of Goods.(24)
To these, who were called Epicurians after Epicurus, belonged Torquatus,
a Roman noble descended by blood from the glorious Torquatus whom I mentioned
above.
There were others who owe their origin to Socrates and later to his
successor Plato, who, examining with greater care and perceiving that in
our actions we might commit a wrong and do so through excess or through
defect, said that our action when free from excess and defect and in accord
with the mean adopted of our own volition, which is to say virtue, was
that end of which we are presently speaking. They called it "acting with
virtue." These were the Academics, like Plato and his nephew Speusippus,
who were so named for the place in which Plato studied, that is, the Academy.
They did not take their name from Socrates because in his philosophy no
affirmative statements were made.(25)
Aristotle, however, whose surname was Stagirites, and his companion
Xenocrates of Chalcedon, through the singular and almost divine genius
which nature conferred on Aristotle, coming to know this end by much the
same method as that of Socrates and the Academics, put the finishing touches
on moral philosophy and perfected it--especially Aristotle. Because Aristotle
initiated the practice of discoursing while walking backwards and forwards
they (I mean he and his companions) were called Peripatetics, which means
the same as "those who walk about." And because this moral philosophy was
brought to perfection by Aristotle, the name of the Academics faded from
memory, and all those who became affiliated with this sect came to be called
Peripatetics. This group at present holds universal sway in teaching everywhere,
and their doctrine may almost be called universal opinion. Thus it may
be seen that Aristotle is the one who directs and guides mankind to this
goal; and this is what we wished to show.
Therefore, to sum up, my main point is made clear: namely that the authority
of the supreme philosopher with whom we are now concerned is invested with
complete power. His authority is not opposed to the imperial authority;
but the latter authority without the former creates a danger, and the former
authority without the latter creates a weakness, not inherently, but as
a result of the lack of harmony among the people. When the one is united
with the other they are of the greatest utility and possess the most complete
power. Therefore it is written in the book of Wisdom, "Love the
light of wisdom, all you who are before the people," which is to say, "Let
the philosophic be united with the imperial authority, for good and perfect
government."(26)
O pitiful are you who rule at present, and most pitiful you who are
ruled! For no philosophical authority is united with your governments,
whether by virtue of your own study or through the counsel of others, so
that to all may be applied the words of Ecclesiastes, "Woe to you,
O land whose king is a child and whose princes eat in the morning!"; and
to no land may the following words be said: "Blessed is the land whose
king is noble and whose princes devote their time to the people's needs
and not to their own wantonness."(27) Pay
attention to what is by your side, you enemies of God who have seized the
rods of the governments of Italy. I am speaking to you, Charles and Frederick,
and to you other princes and tyrants!(28)
Beware who sits by your side and offers advice, and count how many times
a day your counselors call your attention to this end of human life. Better
would it be for you to fly low like a swallow than to soar aloft like a
kite over things that are totally base.
Chapter 7
Since we have seen what reverence is owed to the imperial and the philosophical
authorities, we must now return to the straight path of our intended course.
I say then that this last opinion is so ingrained in the common people
that unreservedly, without reasonable inquiry, anyone who is the son or
grandson of a worthy person is called noble, even though he is worthless.
This is the part which begins And so ingrained Has this false view become
among us That one calls another noble If he can say `I am the son, Or grandson,
of such and such A famous man,' despite his lack of worth. Consequently
it must be observed that it is extremely dangerous to allow a false opinion
to take root through negligence. For just as grass spreads in an uncultivated
field and overshoots and covers the spikes of wheat so that when seen from
afar the wheat disappears, and the fruit is finally lost, so a false opinion,
if left uncensured and uncorrected, grows and spreads in the mind so that
the spikes of reason, namely of right opinion, are concealed and, as it
were, buried and lost. O how great an enterprise have I undertaken in this
canzone by desiring now to weed an overgrown field like that of common
opinion, so long deprived of cultivation. Certainly I do not intend to
clear the entire field, but only those parts in which the spikes of reason
are not completely overtaken; that is to say, I intend to set straight
those in whom some glimmer of reason still survives by virtue of their
good nature, for the rest deserve no more attention than do the animals;
for it seems to me no less a miracle to restore to reason someone in whom
the light of reason has been entirely extinguished than to restore to life
someone who has been buried in the ground for four days.
After the evil state of this popular opinion has been described, the
canzone suddenly smites it with an extraordinary reproof as if it were
a horrible thing, by saying: "But he appears the basest, To those who
see the truth, in order to reveal its intolerable wickedness by affirming
that they are the worst liars; for he who is wicked though descended from
good stock is not only base (that is, not noble) but the basest of all;
and I give the example of the way that has been pointed out.
To make this clear I must pose a question and then answer it, as follows.
Suppose there is a plain with established paths and fields full of hedges,
ditches, stones, timber, with obstacles of every kind blocking the way
except along the narrow paths. Snow has fallen so that it covers everything
and presents the same image in all places, so that no trace of any path
can been seen. A man comes from one side of the plain and wishes to go
to a dwelling on the other side, and by his own efforts, that is, by using
his own power of observation and intelligence, taking himself as guide,
he proceeds along the straight way in the direction in which he intends
to travel, leaving footprints behind him. After him comes another wishing
to travel to this same dwelling, and he has only to follow the footprints
left behind; yet although he has been shown the way which the other man
was able to find for himself without guidance, by his own fault he wanders
and twists among the bramble and brier and goes where he should not. Which
of these ought to be called a worthy man? I reply, he who went first. And
what should the other be called? I reply, the basest of men. Why is he
not called simply unworthy, which is to say merely base? I reply, because
that man should be called unworthy, which is to say base, who having no
guidance goes astray; but since this one had guidance, his error and fault
could not be greater, and therefore he must be called not simply base but
basest. Thus he who is descended of noble stock through his father or some
ancestor, and is also evil, is not only base but basest and deserving of
contempt and scorn more than any other ill-bred person.
So that we might avoid falling into this utter baseness, Solomon, in
the twenty-second chapter of Proverbs, exhorts those who have had a man
of worth for an ancestor, "Do not transgress the ancient landmarks which
your fathers have set." And in the fourth chapter of the same book he says,
"The path of the just," that is, of men of worth, "leads forward as a shining
light, and the way of the wicked is dark; they know not at what they stumble."(29)
Lastly, when it is said, And walks the earth like one who's dead,
I say that this vilest man is dead, though he seems alive, in order to
discredit him further.
Here it should be observed that a wicked man may truly be said to be
dead, and above all he who strays from the path of his good ancestor. This
may be demonstrated as follows. As Aristotle says in the second book of
On the Soul, "life is the state of being of living things"; and
since life exists in many degrees (as in plants, vegetation; in animals,
vegetation, sensation, and movement; in man, vegetation, sensation, movement,
and reasoning or intelligence), and things must be named from their noblest
part, it is evident that in animals life is sensation--I mean the brutes--and
in man it is the use of reason.(30) Therefore
if such is the life and state of man's being, to abandon one's use of reason
is to abandon one's state of being, which is the same as to be dead. And
does a man not abandon his reason when he does not reflect upon the end
of his life? Does a man not abandon his reason when he does not reflect
upon the path which he must take? Certainly he does, and it is most evident
in the person who has footprints before him and does not regard them. For
this reason Solomon says in the fifth chapter of Proverbs, "He who lacks
instruction dies, and in the greatness of his folly he shall go astray."(31)
This is to say: He is dead who leaves no disciple and does not follow his
master; he is the vilest of all. There are some who might ask: How is it
that he is dead and yet walks the earth? I reply that he is dead as man
and survives as beast. For, as the Philosopher says in the second book
of On the Soul, the powers of the soul stand one above another as
the figure of the quadrangle stands above that of the triangle, and the
pentagon (that is, a figure having five sides) stands above the quadrangle:
so the sensitive power stands above the vegetative power, and the intellectual
power stands above the sensitive power.(32)
Therefore if what is left by removing the last side of a pentagon is a
quadrangle, and no longer a pentagon, then what is left when the last power
of the soul is removed is no longer a man but something possessing only
a sensitive soul, which is to say, a brute. And this is the meaning of
the second stanza of the canzone under examination, in which the opinions
of others are expressed.
Chapter 8
The fairest branch that springs from the root of reason is discrimination.
For as Thomas says at the head of his prologue to the Ethics, "to
know the relationship between one thing and another is the proper act of
reason," and this is discrimination. One of the fairest and sweetest fruits
of this branch is the reverence which a lesser owes to a greater. Consequently
Tully, in the first book of On Offices, speaking of the beauty which
shines forth from integrity, says that reverence is a part of it. And just
as reverence is one of the beauties of integrity, so its opposite is the
defilement and degradation of integrity, and this irreverence in our vernacular
may be called arrogance. Therefore Tully himself says in the same place,
"To fail to know what others think of us is the mark of one who is not
only arrogant but dissolute," which is simply to say that arrogance and
dissoluteness constitute a lack of that self-knowledge which is the source
and the measure of all reverence. Therefore since it is my wish, in observing
all due reverence to the Prince and to the Philosopher, to remove malice
from the minds of some in order to instill there the light of truth, before
proceeding to refute the opinions stated above, I will show how in refuting
them I argue with irreverence toward neither the imperial authority nor
the Philosopher. For if I were to show myself to be irreverent in any part
of this work, it could not be more unbecoming than if it were in this book,
where by treating of nobility I must show myself to be noble and not base.
First I will show that I do not impinge against the authority of the Philosopher;
then I will show that I do not impinge against the Imperial Majesty.
I say then that when the Philosopher states that "what appears true
to the majority cannot be entirely false," he does not mean to speak of
outward appearances (that is, of what is perceived by the senses) but of
what is within (that is, of what is perceived by the mind), because appearances
judged by the senses are, with regard to the majority, in many instances
completely false, especially in the case of objects which are perceptible
to more than one sense, since then the senses are often deceived.(33)
Thus we know that to most people the Sun appears to be a foot in diameter,
and this is quite false. For according to the research and findings that
human reason has made with the aid of its attendant arts, the diameter
of the Sun is 5 ½ times that of the Earth, so that if the Earth
is 6500 miles in diameter, the diameter of the Sun, which by sense perception
appears to measure one foot, is 35,750 miles. Consequently it is evident
that Aristotle did not have sense perception in mind; therefore I do not
go counter to the Philosopher's meaning, nor do I offend the reverence
which is due to him, if I seek only to refute the issue of sense perception.
And that I intend to refute the claims of sense perception is evident.
For those who judge in this way judge only by what they perceive of the
things which fortune can give or take away; for when they see high connections
and marriages made, and marvelous buildings, and extensive possessions,
powerful lordships, they believe that these things are the cause of nobility;
indeed, they believe them to be the essence of nobility itself. For if
they were to judge according to the mind's perception they would say the
opposite, namely that nobility is the cause of these things, as will be
seen below in this book.
And just as I do not impugn, as may be seen, the reverence due to the
Philosopher in my refutation, so I do not impugn the reverence due to the
Empire; and I propose to show the reason why. But because when speaking
in the presence of his adversary a speaker must observe great care in his
choice of words, so that the adversary does not derive from it material
for obscuring the truth, I who speak in this book before a great many adversaries
cannot speak with brevity. If consequently my digressions are lengthy,
let no one be surprised. I say then that in order to show that I am not
irreverent to the majesty of the Empire, we must first see what constitutes
"reverence." I say that reverence is nothing but the confirmation of a
due submission by manifest sign. Once this is perceived, we must then distinguish
between an "irreverent" person and a person who is "not reverent." "Irreverent"
denotes privation, while "not reverent" denotes negation. Irreverence therefore
consists in renouncing a due submission, I mean by manifest sign, while
absence of reverence consists in denying a due submission. A man can disavow
something in two ways. He can express disavowal in one way by offending
against the truth, as when due confirmation is withheld, and this is properly
called "renunciation." He can express disavowal in another way by not offending
against the truth, as when he refuses to affirm that which does not exist,
and this is properly called "denial," for when a man disavows that he is
wholly mortal, this, properly speaking, constitutes a denial.
Consequently if I deny reverence to the Empire I am not irreverent,
but only not reverent, for this is not contrary to reverence since it does
not offend against it, just as the absence of life does not offend against
life but rather against death, which is the privation of it. Death is one
thing and the absence of life is another, for absence of life is found
in stones. Since death denotes privation, which cannot obtain in something
not endowed with habit, and since stones are not endowed with life, so
that they should not be said to be "dead" but "non-living," likewise I,
who in this instance do not owe reverence to the Empire, am not irreverent
in disavowing it but rather not reverent, which is not arrogance, nor something
to condemn. But to be reverent would constitute arrogance, if it could
be called reverence, since one would fall into a real and greater irreverence,
namely irreverence toward truth and toward nature, as will be seen below.
Aristotle, the master of philosophers, defended himself against this error
at the beginning of the Ethics when he said, "If we have two friends
and one of them is truth, we must concur with truth."(34)
Nevertheless since I have said that I am not reverent, which denotes the
denial of reverence (that is, the denial of due submission by manifest
sign), we must see how this is a denial and not a disavowal--that is, how
in this instance I am not duly subject to the Imperial Majesty. And since
the explanation is of necessity lengthy, I intend to demonstrate it without
delay in a separate chapter.
Chapter 9
To see how in this case--that is, in refuting or confirming the Emperor's
opinion--I am not obliged to place myself in submission to him, it is necessary
to recall to mind what was discussed above in the fourth chapter of this
book concerning the imperial office: namely, that the imperial authority
was created in order to perfect human life and that it is by right the
regulator and the ruler of all our activities, and that consequently the
Imperial Majesty has jurisdiction just as broad as our activities extend,
and beyond these limits it does not go. But just as every art and office
of man is held within fixed limits by the imperial office, so this empire
is confined by God within fixed limits; and this is no cause for wonder,
because we see that the office and the art of nature is limited in all
its operations. For if we wish to consider the universal nature of all
things, it has jurisdiction co-extensive with the entire universe, I mean
heaven and earth; and the universe exists within a fixed limit, as is proved
in the third book of the Physics and in the first of On Heaven
and Earth. Therefore the jurisdiction of universal nature is confined
within fixed limits, and so consequently is particular nature; and he who
is limited by nothing at all sets the limits on nature, that is, the first
excellence which is God, who alone comprehends the infinite by his infinite
capacity.
In order to perceive the limits of our activities, we must know that
only those activities are ours which are subject to reason and to will;
for although the digestive activity is found within us, it is not human
but natural. We must further know that our reason is related to four kinds
of activities, which must be regarded as different. For there are activities
which it merely contemplates but does not, and cannot, perform: for example,
things natural, supernatural, and mathematical. There are other activities
which it contemplates and performs by its own act, and these are called
rational, as for example the art of speech. And there are other activities
which it contemplates and performs by means of matter external to itself,
as for example the mechanical arts.(35)
All of these activities, although contemplation of them is dependent on
our will, are not in themselves subject to our will. For however much we
might wish that heavy things should by nature rise upward, however much
we might wish that a syllogism based on false premises should yield a truth
by demonstration, and however much we might wish that a house should stand
as firmly when leaning as when erect, this could not be, because we are
not, properly speaking, the makers of these activities but merely those
who have discovered them. It was another who ordained them, and a greater
maker who made them. There are also activities which our reason contemplates
as an act of the will, as for instance giving offense or assistance, standing
ground or fleeing in battle, and remaining chaste or yielding to lust.(36)
These are completely subject to our will, and therefore we are considered
good or evil, because they are completely of our own making; for as far
as our will can reach, so far do our activities extend. Since in all of
these voluntary activities justice must be preserved and injustice avoided,
and this justice may be lost in two ways (either through not knowing what
it is, or through not willing to follow it), written Law was invented in
order both to establish it and to administer it. So Augustine says, "If
men had known it (namely justice) and, when known, had observed it, there
would have been no need of written Law." Therefore it is written in the
beginning of the Old Digest that "Written law is the art of well-doing
and justice."(37) The official of whom
we are speaking, namely the Emperor, is appointed to formulate, demonstrate,
and enforce precisely this Law, and to him we are subject as far as our
own activities extend, which have already been described, and no further.
For this reason in every art and in every trade the craftsmen and apprentices
are, and should be, subject to the chief and master of the activities within
those arts and trades, outside of which the subjection ceases, because
the rule of the master ceases. Thus we might say of the Emperor, if we
were to describe his office with an image, that he is the one who rides
in the saddle of the human will. How this horse pricks across the plain
without a rider is more than evident, especially in wretched Italy, which
has been left with no means whatsoever to govern herself.(38)
It must be observed that the more a thing is peculiar to an art or a
rule, the more complete is the subjection; for if the cause is intensified,
so is its effect. Hence we must know that there are some things so purely
matters of art that nature becomes an instrument of art, as for example
rowing with an oar, where art makes propulsion, which is a natural movement,
its instrument; or as in threshing wheat where art makes heat, which is
a natural quality, its instrument. Here most of all is subjection due to
the chief and master of the particular art. There are things in which the
art is the instrument of nature, and these are lesser arts; in these the
craftsmen are less subject to their chief, as for example in scattering
seed upon the earth (for here we must wait on the will of nature), or in
leaving port (for here we must wait on the natural disposition of the weather).
Therefore we find that in matters of this kind disputes often arise among
the craftsmen, and the superior seeking the advice of the inferior. There
are others things which do not pertain to the art but seem to be associated
with it, with the result that men are often deceived. In these things the
apprentices are not subject to the master, nor are they bound to submit
to him with respect to their particular art, as for example fishing seems
to be associated with navigation and the knowledge of the virtues of herbs
with agriculture. Yet they have no ground in common since fishing falls
under the art of hunting and is subject to its authority and the knowledge
of the virtues of herbs under medicine or under some higher branch of learning.
In like manner what we have discussed with regard to the other arts
may be seen to hold true for the art of imperial rule. For in the art of
imperial rule there are certain spheres of regulation which are pure arts,
such as laws pertaining to marriage, slavery, military service, succession
in office, in which matters we are entirely subject to the Emperor without
any possible doubt or question. There are other laws which in a sense follow
from the forces of nature, such as determining at what age a man is sufficiently
prepared to manage his own affairs, and in these we are not entirely subject.
There are many others which seem to be associated with the art of imperial
rule, and anyone believing the imperial judgment in such matters to be
authoritative was, and still is, deceived. For example, regarding the definitions
of maturity and of nobility, the imperial judgment cannot compel assent
simply by virtue of the fact that he is Emperor. Therefore let us render
unto God that which belongs to God. Consequently we need not submit or
assent to the Emperor Nero, who said that maturity is beauty and physical
strength, but to him who said that maturity is the pinnacle of the natural
life, and that would be the Philosopher. It is therefore evident that defining
nobility does not fall within the scope of the art of imperial rule; and
if it does not fall within the scope of that art, we are not, in treating
of nobility, subject to the Emperor; and if we are not subject to him,
we are not bound to reverence him in this matter; and this is precisely
the conclusion that we have been in search of. Consequently with full license
and with utter conviction we must now strike at the heart of the received
opinions and throw them to the earth so that by reason of my victory the
true opinion may stand its ground in the minds of those for whom it is
a benefit that this light shines strongly.
Chapter 10
Now that the opinions of others concerning nobility have been set down
and it has been shown that I am free to refute them, I shall proceed to
discuss that part of the canzone which refutes them. It begins, as is said
above, He who claims "Man is a living tree." We ought to know, however,
that the Emperor's opinion, although he put it defectively in one
phrase, namely where he mentioned fine manners, did touch on the
manners of the nobility, and therefore it is not my intention to refute
this particular point. The other phrase which is entirely foreign to the
nature of nobility I do intend to refute, for it appears to mention two
things in speaking of ancestral wealth, namely time and riches,
which are entirely foreign to nobility, as has been said and as will be
demonstrated below. Consequently the refutation is divided into two parts:
first I refute the idea that riches are a cause of wealth, and then that
time is. The second part begins: Nor will they grant that one born base
may yet in time. We must know that by refuting riches not only is the
Emperor's opinion refuted, in the part where he touches on riches, but
also the opinion of the common herd, which was based on wealth alone, in
its entirety. The first part is divided into two: in the first it is said
in general terms that the Emperor erred in his definition of nobility,
and in the second the reason why is shown. The second part begins, For
riches, as is generally thought.
I say then He who claims "Man is a living tree" first says what isn't
true (that is, what is false) insofar as he says "tree"; and then he
leaves much unsaid (that is, he speaks defectively) insofar as he
says "living" and not "rational," which is what distinguishes man from
the beasts. Then I say that in the same way he erred in his definition
of the ruler of the Empire; and I do not say "Emperor" but "he who
was the ruler of the Empire," to show, as has been said above, that deciding
this issue lies outside the scope of the imperial office. Then I say that
he likewise erred by wrongly supposing ancestral wealth to be the subject
of nobility, and afterwards he proceeded to embrace a "defective form,"
or distinction, namely "fine manners," which do not comprise each and every
formal aspect of nobility but only a very small part, as will be shown
below. And though the text is silent on this point, we must not overlook
the fact that in this matter the Emperor erred not only in the constituent
parts of his definition but also in his method of defining, even though
by reputation he was considered a great logician and a very learned man.
For the definition of nobility would be more properly derived from its
effects than from its sources, since it appears itself to be a kind of
source, which cannot be explained by the things that precede it but rather
by those that come after. Then when I say For riches, as is generally
thought, I show how they cannot be the cause of nobility because they
are base; and I show how they cannot take it away because they are quite
distinct from nobility. I prove that they are base by one of their greatest
and most evident defects, and this I do where I say It's evident that
riches.
Lastly, by virtue of what has been said above, I reach the conclusion
that their transformation does not bring about a change in the upright
mind, which proves what has been said above: that they are distinct from
nobility because no union is effected. Here we must know that, as the Philosopher
puts it, all things which produce something must first have perfection
of their own being. Hence he says in the seventh book of the Metaphysics,
"When one thing is produced by another, it is produced by it by existing
in its being."(39)
Moreover, we should know that everything which decomposes does so by
undergoing some change, and each thing that is changed must be connected
with the cause of change, as the Philosopher puts it in the seventh book
of the Physics and in the first book of On Generation. After
setting forth these things I go on to say that riches cannot, as others
believe, confer nobility; and in order to show that they are wholly distinct
from it, I say that they cannot take it away from whoever possesses it.
They cannot give it, since by nature they are base, and by virtue of their
baseness they are the opposite of nobility. Here baseness means degenerateness,
which is the opposite of nobility, since one contrary does not and cannot
produce the other contrary, for the above-stated reason which is briefly
touched on with the words And further, he who paints a form. No
painter could depict any form if he did not first conceive in his imagination
how he wishes it to be. Moreover, they cannot take it away because they
are remote from nobility, and for the reason stated above that whatever
changes or decomposes anything must be connected with it. Therefore I add
Nor can an upright tower be made to bend by a river flowing far away,
which is meant only as a analogy to what has been said above, namely that
riches cannot take away nobility, by saying that this nobility is like
an upright tower and that riches are like a river flowing far away.
Chapter 11
It now remains simply to prove in what way riches are base and how they
are distinct and remote from nobility, and this is proved in two brief
sections of the text to which we presently must turn. After they have been
explained, what I have said will become clear: that is, that riches are
base and remote from nobility, and thereby the arguments already directed
against riches will be completely proved.
I say then, It's evident that riches are imperfect, And base as well.
To make clear what is meant by these words, we must know that the baseness
of each thing derives from its imperfection, and likewise its nobility
from its perfection, so that the more a thing is perfect, the nobler is
its nature; the more imperfect, the baser. Consequently if riches are imperfect,
it is evident that there are base. That they are imperfect is briefly proved
by the text when it says, for however great they are, They bring no
peace, but rather grief. Here not only is their imperfection made evident
but their state shown to be most imperfect, and therefore completely base.
Lucan attests to this when he addresses them by saying, "Without a fight
the laws have perished, and you riches, the basest part of things, have
led the battle."(40) Their imperfection
may clearly be seen briefly in three things: first, in the lack of discretion
attending their appropriation; second, in the danger that accompanies their
increment; thirdly, in the ruin resulting from their possession. Before
I demonstrate this, a doubt which seems to arise must be cleared up: for
since gold, pearls, and property have in their essence a perfect form and
actuality, it does not seem correct to claim that they are imperfect. Therefore
it must be understood that insofar as they are considered in themselves,
they are perfect things, and are not riches but gold or pearls; but insofar
as they are conceived as a possession of man, they are riches, and in this
sense they are full of imperfection. For it is not incongruous for one
thing to be both perfect and imperfect when it is perceived from different
perspectives.
I say that their imperfection may be observed first in the lack of discretion
attending their appropriation, in which no distributive justice is present,
while injustice, which is the effect characteristic of imperfection, almost
always is. For if we consider the ways in which riches are acquired, they
may all be summarized under three headings. They are acquired either purely
by chance, as for example when they are acquired without design or unexpectedly
by virtue of some unplanned event; or they are acquired by chance aided
by reason, as for example by means of testaments and inheritance; or they
are acquired by chance aiding reason, as in the case of acquiring lawful
or unlawful gain. By lawful gain I mean gain deriving from a respectable
craft, commerce, or service; by unlawful gain I mean gain deriving from
theft or robbery. In each of these three ways the injustice of which I
speak is evident, for buried wealth which is discovered or recovered presents
itself more often to the bad than to the good; and this is so evident that
it requires no proof.
Indeed I once saw the place, on the side of a mountain named Falterona,
in Tuscany, where the basest peasant of the entire region found, while
digging about, more than a bushel of Santelenas of the finest silver which
had been waiting for him for perhaps 2000 years or more.(41)
It was because he had observed this injustice that Aristotle remarked that
"the more man is subject to intelligence, the less he is subject to fortune."(42)
I claim that inheritance by bequest or by succession comes more often to
the bad than to the good, though I do not intend to submit any evidence
for this. Rather, let everyone cast his eyes about to discover what it
is that I pass over in silence in order to avoid accusing anyone in particular.
Would that it had been God's pleasure that what the Provençal requested
had come to pass, namely that he who does not inherit goodness should forfeit
the inheritance of possessions!(43) It
is my claim that the recovery of wealth comes more often precisely to the
bad than to the good, for unlawful gain never comes to the good, because
they refuse it. What good man would ever seek gain by means of force or
fraud? That would be an impossibility, for by the very choice of undertaking
an unlawful act he would cease to be good. And lawful gain rarely comes
to the good, because given the fact that it requires a great deal of attention
and the good man's attention is directed to more important matters, rarely
does he devote sufficient attention to it.
Consequently it is evident that the appropriation of these riches in
whatever way results in injustice, and therefore Our Lord called them unrighteous
when he said, "Make to yourselves friends of the money of iniquity," thereby
inviting and encouraging men to render acts of liberality through benefactions,
which engender friendships.(44) How fair
an exchange does he make who gives of these most imperfect things in order
to have and acquire things that are perfect, such as are the hearts of
worthy men! This market is open every day. Indeed, this kind of commerce
is different from all others, for when a man believes he is buying one
person with a benefaction, thousands and thousands are bought with it.
Who does not still keep a place in his heart for Alexander because of his
royal acts of benevolence? Who does not keep a place for the good King
of Castile, or Saladin, or the good Marquis of Monferrato, or the good
Count of Toulouse, or Bertran de Born, or Galeazzo of Montefeltro?(45)
When mention is made of their gifts, certainly not only those who would
willingly do the same, but those as well who would sooner die than do the
same, retain in their memory a love for these men.
Chapter 12
The imperfection of riches, as has been said, may be observed not only
by the fact of their appropriation but also in the danger that accompanies
their increment; and since more of their defect may be perceived in the
latter, the text makes mention of that alone, saying that for however
great they are, they not only do not bring peace, they bring more thirst
and make men more defective and less self-sufficient. Here we should understand
that defective things may bear their defects in such a way that they do
not appear on the surface, but are concealed beneath the guise of perfection;
or they may bear them entirely exposed, so that the imperfection is recognized
openly on the surface. Those things that do not reveal their defects at
first are more dangerous, since we often cannot place ourselves on guard
against them, as we see in the instance of a traitor who on the surface
shows himself as a friend, so that he compels us to have faith in him,
while beneath the guise of friendship he conceals the defect of enmity.
In this way riches are dangerously imperfect in their increment, for by
subverting what they promise they bring about the very opposite.(46)
These false traitresses always promise to bring complete satisfaction
to the person who gathers them in sufficient quantity, and by this promise
they lead the human will into the vice of avarice. For this reason Boethius
in his book The Consolation of Philosophy calls them dangerous,
saying, "Alas! who was it that first unearthed the masses of hidden gold
and the gems, those precious perils, which sought to remain hidden?"(47)
The false traitresses, if one looks closely, promise to take away all thirst
and feeling of want and to supply complete satiety and a feeling of sufficiency.
This is what they do at first for every man, by guaranteeing the fulfillment
of this promise when they have increased to a certain amount; and then
when they have been accumulated to this point, instead of satiety and refreshment
they produce and instill an intolerable and burning thirst in the breast;
and in place of sufficiency they set up a new goal: that is, a greater
quantity to be desired, and once this has been realized, they instill a
great fear and concern for what has been acquired.
Consequently they do not bring peace, but rather grief, which before,
in their absence, was not present. Therefore Tully, in his book On Paradox,
says in denouncing riches, "Never have I ever considered either the money
of these men, or their magnificent mansions, or their riches, or their
lordships, or the delights by which they are altogether captivated, to
be found among things good and desirable, since I have certainly seen men
who abound in these things covet the very things in which they abound.
For never is the thirst of cupidity satisfied or satiated; and not only
are they tormented by a desire to increase the quantity of those things
which they possess, but they are also tormented by a fear of losing them."(48)
These are the very words of Tully, as they are put down in the book which
has been mentioned. Evidence of even greater importance bearing on this
imperfection is found in these words spoken by Boethius in his book The
Consolation of Philosophy: "Even if the goddess of wealth were to lavish
riches equal to the amount of sand tossed by the wind-driven sea or to
the number of stars that shine, the human race would not cease their lament."(49)
Since further evidence is required to establish proof on this point,
let us summon up all that Solomon and his father cry out against them,
all that Seneca, especially in his letters to Lucilius, all that Horace,
all that Juvenal, and, in brief, all that every writer, every poet, and
all that truthful Holy Scripture cries out against these false harlots
who are steeped in every defect. In order that our belief may be supported
by what we see, let us consider the lives of those who chase after them,
and how securely they live when they have amassed them, how satisfied they
are, how untroubled! And what imperils and destroys cities, territories,
and individuals day by day more than the accumulation of wealth by some
new person? Such an accumulation uncovers new desires which cannot be satiated
without causing injury to someone. What else were the two categories of
Law, namely Canon Law and Civil Law, intended to curb if not the surge
of greed brought about by the amassing of wealth? Certainly both categories
of Law make this quite evident if we read their beginnings (that is, the
beginnings of their written record). O how evident it is, indeed how exceedingly
evident, that riches are rendered fully imperfect through by their being
increased, since nothing but imperfection can come from them, however great
their quantity! This is what the text says.
Nevertheless a doubt arises here from a question which cannot be passed
over without being brought up and answered. Someone bent on distorting
the truth by splitting hairs might object that since riches are rendered
imperfect and consequently base by virtue of the fact that their acquisition
increases a desire for them, knowledge for the same reason is imperfect
and base, since the desire for it always increases with its acquisition.
Hence Seneca says, "If I had one foot in the grave I would still wish to
go on learning."(50) But it is not true
that knowledge is made base by imperfection: therefore, by refuting the
consequence of the premise, the increase of desire does not make riches
base.(51) The fact that knowledge is something
perfect is made evident by the Philosopher in the sixth book of the Ethics,
which states that knowledge is the perfect record of things which are certain.
This question requires a brief answer, but first we must see whether
desire is increased by the acquisition of knowledge, as is proposed in
the question, and whether this is for a reason. And so I say that human
desire is increased not only by the acquisition of knowledge and of riches,
but by every kind of acquisition, although in different ways. The reason
is this: that the supreme desire of each thing, and the one that is first
given to it by nature, is to return to its first cause. Now since God is
the cause of our souls and has created them like himself (as it is written,
"Let us make man in our own image and likeness"), the soul desires above
all else to return to him.(52) And just
as the pilgrim who walks along a road on which he has never traveled before
believes that every house which he sees from afar is an inn, and finding
it not so fixes his expectations on the next one, and so moves from house
to house until he comes to the inn, so our soul, as soon as it enters upon
this new and never travelled road of life, fixes its eyes on the goal of
its supreme good, and therefore believes that everything it sees which
seems to possess some good in it is that supreme good.(53)
Because its knowledge is at first imperfect through lack of experience
and instruction, small goods appear great, and so from these it conceives
its first desires. Thus we see little children setting their desire first
of all on an apple, and then growing older desiring to possess a little
bird, and then still later desiring to possess fine clothes, then a horse,
and then a woman, and then modest wealth, then greater riches, and then
still more. This comes about because in none of these things does one find
what one is searching after, but hopes to find it further on. Consequently
it may be seen that one object of desire stands in front of another before
the eyes of our soul very much in the manner of a pyramid, where the smallest
object at first covers them all and is, as it were, the apex of the ultimate
object of desire, namely God, who is, as it were, the base of all the rest.
And so the further we move from the apex toward the base, the greater the
objects of desire appear; this is the reason why acquisition causes human
desires to become progressively inflated.
We may, however, lose this path through error, just as we may the roads
of the earth. For just as from one city to another there is only one road
which is of necessity the best and most direct, and another which leads
completely away (namely the one which goes in the opposite direction),
and many others, some leading away from it and some moving toward it, so
in human life there are different paths, among which only one is the truest
way and another the falsest, and some less true and some less false. And
just as we see that the path which leads most directly to the city fulfills
desire and provides rest when work is finished, while the one which goes
in the opposite direction never fulfills it nor provides rest, so it is
with our life. A wise traveler reaches his goal and rests; the wanderer
never reaches it, but with great lethargy of mind forever directs his hungry
eyes before him. Thus although this explanation does not entirely answer
the question raised above, it at least opens the way for an answer because
it shows that our desires do not all increase in the same way. But since
this chapter has become somewhat protracted, an answer to the question
must be given in a new chapter, and here the entire argument which I presently
intend to make against riches will be brought to a close.
Chapter 13
In answer to this question, I affirm that the desire for knowledge cannot
properly be said to increase, although, as has been said, it grows in a
certain way. For whatever grows, properly speaking, is always one; the
desire for knowledge, however, is not always one but many; and when one
desire ends, another begins; so that, properly speaking, its increase is
not a growth but a progression from small things to great things. For if
I desire to know the principles of natural things, as soon as I know them
this desire is fulfilled and brought to an end. If I then desire to know
what each of these principles is and how each exists, this is a new and
separate desire. Nor by the appearance of this desire am I dispossessed
of the perfection to which I was brought by the other; and this growth
is not the cause of imperfection but of greater perfection.
However, the desire for riches is, properly speaking, an increment,
for it remains always one, so that no progression of goals reached or perfection
attained is found here. If someone were to object that just as the desire
to know the principles of natural objects is one thing and the desire to
know what these principles are is another, so the desire for a hundred
marks is one thing and the desire for a thousand another, I would reply
that this is not true. For a hundred is part of a thousand and is related
to it, just as a part of a line is to the whole line along which there
is a single continuous motion, with no progression nor any movement brought
to completion at any point. But knowing the principles of natural objects
and knowing the nature of each individual principle are not parts of each
other, but are related to each other as different lines along which there
is no single continuous movement, so that when the motion of the one is
completed, it is succeeded by the motion of the other. Thus it appears,
as raised in the question, that knowledge may not be called imperfect because
of the desire for knowledge, the way riches are imperfect because of the
desire for them. For in the desire for knowledge desires are progressively
satisfied and brought to completion, while in the desire for riches they
are not. Hence the question is answered and has no ground for existence.
This person bent on splitting hairs might well still object by claiming
that although many desires are satisfied by the acquisition of knowledge,
yet the ultimate desire is never attained, which is almost like the imperfection
of a desire which, though remaining one and the same, never comes to an
end. Here again we reply that the objection is not true--that is, that
the ultimate desire is never attained; for our natural desires, as has
been shown above in the third book, are satisfied within a certain limit;
and the desire for knowledge is a natural desire, so that a certain limit
satisfies it, even though few, because they take the wrong path, complete
the journey.(54) Anyone who understands
the Commentator's discussion of the third book of The Soul has learned
this from him.(55) Therefore Aristotle
in the tenth book of the Ethics, speaking against the poet Simonides,
says that "A man should be drawn as far as possible to divine things,"
by which he shows that our faculty contemplates a certain end.(56)
Furthermore, in the first book of the Ethics he says that "the trained
student seeks to know the certainty of things, to the degree that their
nature admits of certainty."(57) By this
he shows that one must contemplate an end not only on the part of man who
desires knowledge, but as well on the part of the object of knowledge which
is desired. And therefore Paul says, "Do not seek to know more than is
fitting, but to know in measure."(58) So
that in whatever way the desire for knowledge is understood, whether in
general or in particular, it attains to perfection.(59)
Therefore perfect knowledge is a noble perfection, and its perfection is
not lost by the desire for it, as is the case with detestable riches.
It must now briefly be shown how the possession of riches makes them
harmful, and this is the third sign of their imperfection. Their possession
may be seen to be harmful for two reasons: first, that it is the cause
of evil; second, that it is the privation of good. It is the cause of evil
because it makes the possessor fearful and hateful by mere preoccupation
with them. How great is the fear of one who is aware of having wealth about
him, while either traveling or taking lodging, not only when waking but
when sleeping, a fear not only of losing his possessions but his life because
of his possessions. The contemptible merchants who travel about the world
know this full well, for the leaves swept by the wind make them tremble
when they are carrying riches with them; and when they are not, they shorten
their journey with songs and conversation, being full of a sense of security.
Therefore the Sage says, "If a traveler entered upon his journey empty-handed,
he would sing in the face of the thieves."(60)
This is what Lucan means in the fifth book when he praises poverty for
the security it offers with the words, "O secure ease of the poor man's
life! O constricted dwellings and furnishings! oh not yet understood riches
of the Gods! In what temples, within what walls could this ever happen
without their shaking with fear when the hand of Caesar knocks?"(61)
This is said by Lucan when he tells how Caesar came by night to the cottage
of the fisherman Amyclas in order to cross the Adriatic Sea. How great
is the hatred that everyone bears the possessor of riches, whether out
of envy or out of a desire to seize his possessions! So great is it that
often a son, acting contrary to the love he owes, contrives to kill his
father; indeed the Italians, both in the region of the Po and in the region
of the Tiber, have witnessed the most striking and obvious examples of
this behavior. Therefore Boethius says, in the second book of his Consolation,
"Truly avarice makes men hateful."(62)
The possession of riches is also the privation of good, for by their
possession generosity, which is a virtue, cannot exist; and this virtue
brings about good and makes men illustrious and beloved, which cannot come
to pass through the possession of riches but only through their surrender.
Thus Boethius says, in the same book, "Money, then, is good when, having
been transferred to others through generosity, it is no longer possessed."
Consequently the baseness of riches is quite obvious from all of this evidence,
and therefore a man of right desire and of true knowledge never loves them;
and in not loving them he does not unite himself to them but always wishes
to keep them at a distance, except insofar as they are used to perform
some necessary service. This is reasonable, because what is perfect cannot
be united with what is imperfect. Hence we see that a crooked line never
joined with a straight line, and if there is any joining to speak of, it
is not of line with line but of point with point. Therefore it follows
that the mind which is upright (that is, in its appetite) and true
(that is, in knowledge) is not undone by having lost riches, as the text
states at the end of this section.(63)
In reaching this conclusion the text seeks to prove that riches are a river
flowing far away from the upright tower of reason, or nobility, and that
for this reason riches cannot deprive anyone of the nobility he possesses.
In this way the present canzone moves arguments and proofs against riches.
Chapter 14
Now that the error of others has been refuted, insofar as it is present
in that section which addresses riches, we must proceed to refute it insofar
as it is present in the section in which time is said to be a cause of
nobility with the words ancestral wealth. This refutation is made
in the part that begins Nor will they grant that one born base may yet
be noble. First this is refuted by an argument which those who err
themselves advance; then, to their greater confusion, their argument is
itself destroyed, and this is accomplished where it says It further
follows from what was said above. Last of all, it concludes that their
error is manifest and that therefore it is time to attend to the truth,
and this is accomplished where it says Consequently it is clear to every
healthy mind. I say, then, Nor will they grant that one born base
may yet be noble. Here we must know that it is the opinion of these
wrong-headed men that one born base can never be called noble, and that
the son of a man born base can likewise never be called noble. This, however,
destroys the very claim of theirs in which, by use the term "ancestral,"
they say that nobility requires time, since it is impossible by the passage
of time to arrive at the moment when nobility is engendered, according
to their reasoning already mentioned, which precludes the possibility that
a man born base can ever become noble through his acts, or by chance, and
precludes the possibility of a change from a father born base to a noble
son. For if the son of a man base born is indeed basely born, then his
son is also the son of a man basely born, and his son too, and so on ad
infinitum, so that it is never possible in the passage of time to discover
the point at which nobility begins. If those holding the opposing view
should say by way of defense that nobility will begin at that time when
the low state of his forebears will have been forgotten, I reply that they
contradict themselves since even at that point there would be a change
from baseness to nobility, from one man into another or from father to
son, which is contrary to what they maintain.
If those of the opposing view should defend themselves tenaciously by
arguing that they agree that this change can take place when the forebears'
low state is no longer recollected (though the text does not address this),
it is proper that this gloss should offer a reply. Therefore I give the
following reply, that four extremely serious fallacies arise out of what
they say, so that their reasoning cannot be right. The first is that the
better human nature became, the harder and slower would the creation of
nobility become, which is the greatest fallacy since by nature the better
a thing is the more it is a cause of good; and nobility is counted among
the things that are good. That this is true is proved as follows. If noble
being or nobility, which I understand to be one and the same, were created
by lack of remembrance, then the sooner lack of remembrance occurs the
sooner nobility is created, and the more absent-minded that men were, so
much the more quickly would lack of remembrance occur. Therefore, the more
absent-minded that they were, the more noble would they be; and conversely
the better their memory, the more slowly would they become noble.
The second fallacy is that this distinction between noble and base could
not be made with respect to anything except men, which is highly illogical
for the reason that we find the traits of nobility or baseness in every
species of thing. Hence we often speak of a noble or base horse, a noble
or base falcon, and a noble or base pearl. That this distinction cannot
be made is proved as follows. If lack of remembrance of ancestral baseness
is a cause of nobility, and if where there was no baseness in ancestors,
there could be no lack of remembrance of them--inasmuch as this lack is
a deterioration of the memory, and in the other animals, plants, and minerals
baseness and loftiness are not distinguished, since each of these occupies
the same and equivalent grade of nature--then there can be no creation
of nobility in them, nor any baseness, since both are to be regarded as
habit and privation, which are predicable of one and the same subject;
therefore in these things no distinction could obtain between the one and
the other trait. If those holding the opposing view should say that in
other things nobility signifies the goodness of the thing but in man it
signifies that the memory of their base condition is absent, one would
wish to reply not with words but with a blade to such asininity as that
of attributing the cause of nobility in other things to goodness, while
in the case of men to loss of memory.
The third fallacy is that often what is engendered would come before
that which engenders, which is entirely impossible, and this can be shown
as follows. Suppose that Gherardo da Cammino had been the grandson of the
basest peasant who ever drank of the Sile or the Cagnano, and lack of remembrance
of his grandfather had not yet occurred. Who would dare to say that Gherardo
da Cammino was a base man? Who would not agree with me and say that he
was noble? No one, surely, as presumptuous as he might be, for he was noble,
and so will his memory be forever.(64)
If lack of remembrance of his base ancestor had not occurred, as assumed
in the objection, and he had been a great noble and nobility had been perceived
in him as clearly then as it is now, it would have been in him before that
which engendered it had come into being. This is altogether impossible.
The fourth fallacy is that a man should be considered noble after death
who was not noble while alive, something that could not be more illogical.
This can be demonstrated as follows. Suppose that during the lifetime of
Dardanus the memory of his base ancestors survived, and suppose that during
the lifetime of Laomedon this memory had faded and lack of remembrance
ensued. According to those who oppose us, during their lives Laomedon was
noble and Dardanus was base. We, to whom the memory of their ancestors--I
mean those prior to Dardanus--has not survived, ought to say that Dardanus
was base while alive and noble after death. The claim that Dardanus was
the son of Jove does not contradict this, for that is a fable which, in
discussions of a philosophical nature, ought to be disregarded.(65)
Even if those who oppose us should wish to endorse this fable, certainly
what the fable conceals undoes all of their arguments. Thus it is evident
that the argument that established lack of remembrance as the cause of
nobility is false and erroneous.
Chapter 15
After my canzone has proved by their very own doctrine that time is
not a requirement for nobility, it proceeds immediately to overturn their
previously stated opinion so that their false reasoning does not taint
the mind that is disposed toward the truth. It accomplishes this when it
says, It further follows from what was said above.
Here we must understand that if a man cannot change from base to noble,
nor a noble son be born of a base father, as was stated in their opinion,
one of two fallacies must obtain. One is that there is no such thing as
nobility; the other is that there have always been a great many men in
the world, so that the human race is not descended from a single man alone.
And this can be demonstrated. If nobility is not engendered anew, as their
opinion has many times been said to affirm (that is, its not being engendered
by a base man in himself, nor by a base father in his son), a man always
remains what he was at the time of his birth, and at birth he is like his
father. Hence the evolution of this single condition has continued from
our first parent: for as was the first progenitor, namely Adam, so must
the whole human race be, because by this reasoning it is not possible to
discover any change of condition between Adam and those living in modern
times. Therefore if Adam himself was noble, we are all noble, and if he
was base, we are all base, which eradicates any distinction between these
conditions and so eradicates the conditions themselves. This means that
from what has been said above it follows That each of us is noble or
each base.
If this is not true, still some people must of necessity be called noble
and some base: for since the change from baseness to nobility has been
eradicated, the human race must have descended from different origins--that
is, from one that is noble and from one that is base. My canzone says this
when it states Or else that mankind had no origin, meaning no single
one, for it does not say "origins." This is utterly false according to
the Philosopher, according to our Faith which cannot lie, and according
to the law and ancient doctrines of the Gentiles.(66)
For although the Philosopher does not posit human evolution from a single
individual, he nevertheless considers that there is but one essence in
all men, which different origins could not produce. Plato believes that
all men depend for their existence on only one Idea and not on many, which
is the same as giving them a single origin.(67)
Aristotle would most certainly laugh aloud if he heard talk of two species
of the human race, like those of horses and asses; for (with apologies
to Aristotle) they who have this thought might well be considered asses.
That it is utterly false according to our faith, which must be completely
upheld, is clear from Solomon who, in distinguishing between mankind and
the brute animals, speaks of the former as sons of Adam with the following
words: "Who knows if the spirits of the sons of Adam ascend above and those
of the beasts descend below?"(68) That
the Gentiles considered this to be false is made evident by the first book
of Ovid's Metamorphoses, where he discusses the creation of the
world according to pagan, or Gentile, beliefs, saying, "Man is born" (he
did not say "men": he said "born" and "man"), "whether the maker of things
made him of divine seed or whether the newly made earth, just lately separated
from the noble body of ether, retained the seeds of the kindred heaven.(69)
This earth, mixed with the water of the river, the son of Iapetus, namely
Prometheus, fashioned in the likeness of the gods who govern all." Here
he plainly states that the first man was one alone; and thus my canzone
says But this I do not grant (that is, that man had no origin).
The canzone adds Nor do they either, if they are Christian. It says
"Christian" and not "philosophers" or "Gentiles" (even their opinions are
not to the contrary) because Christian doctrine has greater strength and
destroys all calumny, by virtue of the supreme light of the heaven which
illuminates it.
Then when I say Thus it is clear to every mind that's sound,
I draw the conclusion that their error is refuted and say that it is time
for our eyes to be opened to the truth. I affirm this where I say And
now I wish to say, as I do feel. I say, then, that from what has been
said it is evident to sound minds that these assertions of theirs are empty
(that is, they lack the marrow of truth). It is not without reason that
I say "sound." For we must understand that our intellect may be said to
be sound or sick; and by "intellect" I mean the noble part of our soul,
to which the common term "mind" may be said to refer. It may be called
sound when illness of mind or of body does not impede its activity, which
consists of knowing what things are, as Aristotle asserts in the third
book of On the Soul.(70)
For with regard to the sickness of the soul, I have observed three terrible
infirmities of the human mind. One is caused by arrogance of nature, for
there are many who are so presumptuous as to think that they know everything,
and they therefore take for certain what is uncertain. Tully execrates
this vice above all in the first book of On Offices, as does Thomas
in his book Against the Gentiles where he says, "Many are so presumptuous
of intellect as to believe that all things can be measured with their intellect,
considering true whatever seems to them true and false whatever seems to
them false."(71) Consequently it comes
to pass that they never reach true learning; and believing themselves to
be sufficiently learned, they never ask questions, never listen, seek only
to have questions asked of them, and before a question has even been completed,
they give the wrong answer. It is with them in mind that Solomon says in
Proverbs, "Have you seen a man who is too quick in his answer? From him
can be expected more folly than correction."(72)
The second is caused by weak-mindedness of nature, for there are many
so stubborn in their baseness that they cannot believe that they may be
brought to know anything either by themselves or by others. These are men
who never seek out knowledge or take positions in arguments and never concern
themselves with what others have to say. Aristotle speaks against them
in the first book of the Ethics, calling them incompetent hearers
of moral philosophy.(73) Dull-witted men
such as these live perpetually like beasts, without hope of obtaining any
learning.
The third is caused by natural capriciousness of mind, for there are
many whose fancy is so capricious that they always jump about in their
reasoning and reach their conclusion before establishing the terms of their
syllogism, then jumping from one conclusion to another, all the while fancying
that they have conducted their arguments with great subtlety, while departing
from no established principle, and never truly perceiving in their imagination
any one thing as it really is. The Philosopher says that we should not
concern ourselves with them nor have anything to do with them, stating
in the first book of the Physics that "it is not proper to enter
into argumentation with whoever denies the established principles."(74)
Among these are to be found many uneducated individuals who have scarcely
learned the letters of the alphabet but are nevertheless willingly enter
into discussions of geometry, astrology, and physics.
By reason of sickness or bodily defect, the mind may be unsound sometimes
because of a defect arising from childbirth, as in the case of idiots,
and sometimes by a disturbance of the mind, as in the case of maniacs.
It is this infirmity of mind that the law refers to when the Infortiatum
states "In anyone who makes a will soundness of mind, not of body, is required
at the time when the will is made."(75)
Consequently to those intellects who are not sick through infirmity of
mind or body but are free, unimpeded, and sound in the light of truth,
I say that it is evident that the common opinion referred to is empty (that
is, worthless).
Subsequently I add that I therefore judge them to be false and empty,
and so I refute them; and this is done where it says And hence I claim
their words are false. Then I say that we must proceed to demonstrate
the truth, which means, namely, that we must show what nobility is and
how the man in whom it exists can be recognized. I say this with the words
And now I wish to say, as I do feel.
Chapter 16
"The King shall rejoice in God, and all those who swear by him shall
be praised, because the mouth of those who speak unjust things is shut
tight."(76) These words may rightly serve
here as a beginning because every true king must love truth above all.
Consequently it is written in the Book of Wisdom, "Love the light of wisdom,
you who stand before the people"; and the light of wisdom is truth itself.(77)
I say then that every king shall rejoice because that most false and harmful
opinion of evil and deceived men, who have up to now spoken unjustly of
nobility, has been refuted.
We must now proceed to the part which treats of the truth, according
to the division made above in the third chapter of the present book. This
second part, which begins I say that every virtue, at its source,
proposes to establish the limits of this nobility according to the truth.
This part is divided into two, for in the first we intend to show what
this nobility is, and in the second to show how the one in whom it exists
may be recognized. The second part begins The soul which this goodness
adorns.The first part is again divided into two, for in the first certain
things are examined which are necessary for clarifying the definition of
nobility; in the second the definition itself is examined. And the second
part begins Nobility resides wherever virtue is.
To open a thorough discussion of this subject, two things must first
be examined: first, what is meant by the word "nobility," considered in
and of itself; second, what road must be taken in searching out the definition
mentioned above. I say then that if we should take into consideration the
common manner of speech, the word "nobility" means the perfection of the
nature proper to each thing. It is predicated not only of man but also
of all things, for a stone, plant, horse, or falcon is called noble whenever
perfection is perceived in its nature. Therefore Solomon say in Ecclesiastes,
"Blessed is the land whose kind is noble," which is to say "whose king
is perfect according to the perfection of mind and of body."(78)
This is evident from what he says earlier: "Woe to you, O land, whose king
is a child," that is, a man who has not reached perfection; and a man is
a child not simply because of age but because of disorderly conduct or
congenital defects, as the Philosopher teaches us in the first book of
the Ethics.(79) There are some fools,
it is true, who believe that the word "noble" means "to be acclaimed and
known by many," and they argue that it derives from a verb that signifies
to know, namely nosco. This is utterly false, for if it were true
those things that were most acclaimed and best known of their kind would
be the most noble of their kind. And so the obelisk of St. Peter would
be the most noble stone in the world; Asdente the cobbler of Parma would
be nobler than any of his fellow citizens; Albuino de la Scala would be
nobler than Guido da Castello of Reggio; yet each of these things is utterly
false.(80) Therefore it is utterly false
to say that "noble" comes from "to know." It comes, rather, from non
vile, and consequently "noble" is the same as "not base."
It is this perfection that the Philosopher refers to in the seventh
book of the Physics when he says, "Each thing is most completely
perfect when it reaches and attains its own proper virtue, and it is then
most completely perfect according to its nature. Hence a circle can then
be called perfect when it is truly a circle," that is, when it attains
to its own proper virtue; and then it exists in its nature to the fullest
extent, and then it may be called a noble circle.(81)
This occurs when there is within the circle a point equidistant from the
circumference, which is the virtue particular to it. Therefore the circle
that has the shape of an egg is not noble, nor is the one that has nearly
the shape of a full moon, because its nature is not perfect in it. Thus
we may clearly see that in general this word, namely "nobility," means
in all things perfection of their own nature. This is what we were in search
of in the first place, in order best to open our discussion of the part
under examination.
In the second place we must see how to proceed in order to find the
definition of nobility in man, which is the goal of our present argument.
Since we cannot define the highest perfection in those beings that are
of one species (for example, the human race) by referring to essential
principles which they have in common, it must be defined and known by the
effects of those principles. Therefore we read in the Gospel of St. Matthew
Christ's words, "Beware of false prophets . . .; you shall know them by
their fruits."(82) So the straight way
leads us to find the definition which we are searching after "in their
fruits"--that is, the moral and intellectual virtues of which our very
nobility is the seed, as its definition will make fully clear. These are
the two things that required examination before proceeding to others, as
was stated above in this chapter.
Chapter 17
Now that these two things have been examined, which it seemed useful
to examine before proceeding with the text of the canzone, we must proceed
with it. It begins by saying, I say that every virtue, at its source,
Comes from a single root: Virtue, I mean, which makes man happy In his
actions. And it continues, This is, as stated in the Ethics, A chosen
habit, setting down the full definition of moral virtue as it is defined
by the Philosopher in the second book of the Ethics. He emphasizes
two things of primary importance: one is that every virtue comes from a
single source; the second is that the phrase "every virtue" refers to the
moral virtues, which are our subject. This becomes evident when it says,
This is, as stated in the Ethics. Here we must know that the moral
virtues are the fruits most proper to us, since they lie in every respect
within our own power. They are defined and enumerated in different ways
by different philosophers, but since in matters on which the divine opinion
of Aristotle has been voiced it seems best to leave aside the opinions
of others, and intending to say what they are, I will briefly run through
a discussion of them according to his opinion.
The following are the eleven virtues enumerated by the Philosopher named
above.(83) The first is called Courage,
which is the weapon and bridle for regulating our boldness and timidity
in things which threaten to destroy our lives. The second is Temperance,
which is the control and bridle of our gluttony and excessive abstinence
in things which preserve our lives. The third is Liberality, which regulates
us in the giving and receiving of temporal goods. The fourth is Munificence,
which regulates great expenditures, in administering them and setting limits
to their size. The fifth is Magnanimity, which regulates and procures great
honor and renown.(84) The sixth is Love
of Honor, which regulates and prepares us with respect to the honors of
this world. The seventh is Gentleness, which regulates our wrath and our
excessive patience with regard to evils that confront us. The eighth is
Affability, which enables us to live in agreement with others. The ninth
is called Truth, which restrains us in our speech from vaunting ourselves
as greater than we are and from deprecating ourselves as less than we are.
The tenth is called Good Disposition, which regulates us in our amusements,
enabling us to use them properly. The eleventh is Justice, which disposes
us to love and conduct ourselves with rectitude in all things.
Each of these virtues has two related enemies, that is, vices, one through
excess and the other through shortfall. These virtues constitute the mean
between them, and they spring from a single source, namely from our habit
of good choice. Hence we may say generally of all of them that they are
a chosen habit residing in the mean. It is through the exercise of these
virtues that a man is made content or happy, as the Philosopher says in
the first book of the Ethics where he defines Happiness by saying
that "Happiness is activity in accordance with virtue in a perfect life."(85)
Many place Prudence, or good judgment, rightly among the moral virtues,
but Aristotle numbers it among the intellectual virtues, even though it
is the guide of the moral virtues and shows how they are interrelated and
how without it they could not exist.
We must know, however, that we may have two kinds of happiness in this
life, according to two different paths, one good and the other best, which
lead us there. One is the active life, the other the contemplative life;
and although by the active, as has been said, we may arrive at a happiness
that is good, the other leads us to the best happiness and state of bliss,
as the Philosopher proves in the tenth book of the Ethics. Christ
affirms this with words from his own lips in the Gospel of Luke, when speaking
to Martha and replying to her: "Martha, Martha, you are distressed and
trouble yourself about many things; truly one thing alone is necessary,"
that is, `what you are doing.' He adds: "Mary has chosen the best part,
which shall not be taken from her."(86)
As made clear in the verses just preceding these words of the Gospel,
Mary, who was sitting at the feet of Christ, showed no concern for domestic
affairs, but simply listened to the words of the Savior. The moral sense
of these words is that our Savior sought thereby to show that the contemplative
life was the best, even though the active life was good. This is evident
to anyone who considers well these words of the evangelist. Some, however,
might oppose me by objecting that "Since happiness of the contemplative
life is more excellent than the active life, and both can be and are the
fruit and end of nobility, why not proceed first with the intellectual
rather than with the moral virtues?"(87)
To this I would briefly reply that in every kind of teaching the capacity
of the learner must be taken into consideration, and he should be led along
the path which is most easy for him. Therefore since the moral virtues
seem to be and are more common and better known, and more sought after
than the others, and more imitated through outward demonstration, it was
useful and fitting to proceed by this path rather than by the other; for
we would not gain so good a knowledge of bees by speaking about how they
produce wax rather than about how they produce honey, although bees produce
both of these things.
Chapter 18
In the preceding chapter we determined how every moral virtue springs
from one source, namely good and habitual choice, and this is dealt with
by the present text up to the part which begins Nobility, I say, by
definition. In this part, then, we proceed by inference based on probability
to discover that every virtue named above, whether considered separately
or all together, proceeds from nobility, as does an effect from a cause.(88)
This is founded on a philosophical proposition which states that when two
things are observed to have any one aspect in common they both must be
referred to some third thing, or else one of them to the other, in the
manner of effect with respect to cause; because any one aspect, possessed
primarily and essentially, can have as its cause but one thing; and if
both were not the effect of some third thing, nor one the effect of the
other, both would possess this aspect primarily and essentially, which
is impossible.(89) Therefore the text says
that nobility and virtue, so defined, namely moral virtue, have
in common this: Each term implies praise of the person to whom it is applied.
This is stated in the words So that within a single exegesis The two
agree, by having one effect: that is, praising and commending him who
others say possesses nobility. Then it draws a conclusion based on the
proposition noted above and says that therefore one must proceed from the
other, or both from a third; and it adds that it is to be presumed that
the one comes from the other rather than both from the third, if it appears
that the one equals or is greater in worth than the other; and it says
this in the line But if one has the value of the other.
It should be observed that here we do not proceed by necessary demonstration,
as we would by arguing "if cold generates moisture and we observe clouds
generating moisture then cold generates clouds," but rather by an agreeable
and fitting induction, for if there are in us many things worthy of praise
and the source of the praise we merit is found within us, it is reasonable
to attribute these things to that source; and it is more reasonable to
consider that which comprises several things to be their source than to
consider them to be its source.(90) For
the base of a tree, which comprises all of its limbs, must be called the
source and cause of them, and not they of it. Thus nobility, which comprises
every virtue as cause does effect, and many of our other praiseworthy activities
as well, must be considered such that virtue is referred to it rather than
to a third thing that is in us.(91)
Finally, it says that what has been said (namely, that every moral virtue
derives from a single source, and that such virtue and nobility have one
thing in common, as said above; and that one must therefore be referred
to the other or both to a third; and that if one equals or is greater than
the other it proceeds more likely from the other than from a third) must
all be taken for granted, that is, conceived and set down with what
follows in mind. So ends this stanza and this present section.
Chapter 19
Since in the preceding section certain points have been thoroughly treated
and defined, which was necessary in order to perceive how we might define
this good thing about which we are speaking, we must proceed to the following
section which begins Nobility resides wherever virtue is. This may
be divided into two parts. In the first a certain thing is proved which
was touched on earlier and left unproved; in the second, by way of conclusion,
the definition which we have been in search of is found. The second part
begins And just as perse derives from black.
In order to clarify the first part, we must commit to memory what has
been said above: that if nobility equals and extends beyond virtue, virtue
will rather proceed from it. This claim, namely that nobility extends beyond
it, is proved in the present section, and it offers the heavens as an example,
saying that wherever there is virtue there is nobility.
Here it should be observed that, as it is stated in the Digest
and is held as a rule of Law, there is no need of proof regarding those
things which are self-evident; nothing is more evident than that nobility
exists where virtue exists, and we see that it is commonly understood that
everything after its own nature may be called noble. The text then says
Just as wherever there's a star is heaven, though the converse
is not true: that wherever there is heaven there is a star. Likewise nobility
is present wherever there exits virtue, though virtue does not always exist
wherever nobility is present; and this is an agreeable and fitting comparison,
for truly nobility is a heaven in which many diverse stars shine forth.
In her shine forth the intellectual and moral virtues, in her shine forth
good dispositions conferred by nature, for example piety and religion,
and praiseworthy emotions, for example modesty and mercy and many others;
in her shine forth the perfections of the body, for example beauty, strength
and all but everlasting health.
So many are the stars that spread across the heavens that it surely
cannot surprise us if many diverse fruits are produced by human nobility,
so many are their natures and their powers, brought together and united
in one simple substance; and on them as on diverse branches she bears fruit
in diverse ways. Indeed, I would indeed dare say that human nobility, with
respect to its many fruits, surpasses that of the angels, although the
nobility of the angels is more divine in its unity. The Psalmist had in
mind this nobility of ours, which has produced so many and such various
fruits, when he composed that Psalm which begins: "O Lord our God, how
wonderful is your name in all the earth!", where he praises man, as though
marveling at the divine affection for the human creature, saying: "What
is man, that you, God, do visit him? You have made him a little lower than
the angels, have crowned him with glory and honor, and have set him above
the works of your hands."(92) Therefore
the comparison of human nobility with heaven was truly agreeable and fitting.
Then when the text says In women and in those of tender age,
it proves what I say, showing that nobility extends to places where virtue
does not reside. Then it says we perceive this state of well-being,
referring to nobility, which is indeed a state of true well-being, to be
wherever there is shame (that is, fear of dishonor) as it exists in women
and in young people, in whom shame is good and praiseworthy, although this
shame is not a virtue but a certain kind of good emotion. It says In
women and in those of tender age (that is, in the young people) because
as the Philosopher maintains in the fourth book of the Ethics, "shame
is not praiseworthy or suitable in the elderly or in the virtuous," since
it is necessary for them to keep themselves from those things which cause
them to feel shame.(93) Young people and
women have less need for caution, and therefore the fear of being dishonored
through some fault is praiseworthy in them; for this feeling comes from
nobility, and in them it may be viewed as and given the name of nobility,
just as shamelessness may be viewed as and given the name of baseness and
absence of nobility. Thus it is a good and perfect sign of nobility in
children and in those not fully grown when after a fault shame is painted
on their faces, for then it is the fruit of true nobility.
Chapter 20
Then in the words that follow, And just as perse derives from black,
the text proceeds to the definition of nobility, which we are seeking and
which will allow us to perceive the essence of this nobility, about which
so many speak incorrectly. It says then, drawing a conclusion from what
was said earlier, that every virtue, Or class of virtues (that is,
the chosen habit occupying the mean), will derive from this, namely nobility.
It provides an analogy based on colors, saying that just as perse derives
from black, so does this, namely virtue, derive from nobility. Perse is
a color composed of purple and black, but black predominates, and so it
takes its name from black. Likewise virtue is a thing composed of nobility
and passion, but because nobility predominates in it, virtue takes its
name from it and is called goodness. Then afterwards the text argues, from
what has been said, that no one should think himself to be of nobility
simply because he can say "I belong to her by race," if in fact these fruits
are not in him. It provides an immediate explanation, saying that those
who have this grace, namely this divine thing, are almost
like gods, untainted by vice. No one can grant this gift but God
alone, with whom there is no choice of persons, as the divine Scriptures
make clear.(94) It should not appear too
lofty for the text to use the words For they are almost gods, for
as was stated above in the seventh chapter of the third book, just as there
exist men who are most base and bestial, so there are men who are most
noble and divine, as Aristotle proves in the seventh book of the Ethics
by citing the words of the poet Homer.(95)
So let none of the Uberti of Florence or the Visconti of Milan say "Because
I am of such a race I am noble," for the divine seed does not fall upon
a race (that is, family stock) but on individuals; and as will be proved
below, family stock does not make individuals noble, although individuals
make family stock noble.
Then when it says For God alone bestows it on that soul, it refers
to the one who receives (that is, the subject upon whom this divine gift
descends), for it is truly a divine gift according to the words of the
Apostle: "Every good gift and every perfect gift comes from above, descending
from the Father of lights."(96) It then
says that God alone bestows this grace on the soul of that human being
whom he sees dwelling perfectly within his own person, prepared and disposed
to receive this divine act. For according to what the Philosopher affirms
in the second book of On the Soul, "Things must be well disposed
to their agents if they are to receive their acts."(97)
Hence if the soul dwells imperfectly in a person, it is not well disposed
to receive this blessed and divine infusion, just as if a precious stone
is not well disposed or is imperfect, it cannot receive the celestial virtue,
as the noble Guido Guinizelli said in a canzone of his that begins "Love
hastens ever to the gentle heart."(98)
The soul, therefore, may dwell without vigor in a person because of a defect
of temperament, or perhaps because of a defect of age, and the divine radiance
is never reflected by a soul such as this.(99)
Individuals such as these, whose souls are deprived of this light, may
say that they are like valleys pointing to the north or underground caves,
where the light of the Sun never descends unless it is reflected from some
other place which is illumined by it.
Finally the text draws a conclusion and states, according to what has
been said before (namely, that the virtues are the fruit of nobility which
God places in the well disposed soul), that to some, namely to those
few who have understanding, it is clear that human nobility is nothing
but "the seed of happiness," instilled by God Within the soul that's
properly disposed (that is, the soul whose body is perfectly disposed
in every part). For if the virtues are the fruit of nobility, and happiness
is the sweetness attained, it is clear that this nobility is the seed of
happiness, as has been said. Careful consideration will reveal that this
definition comprises all four causes, namely the material, the formal,
the efficient, and the final: the material in saying the soul that's
properly disposed, which is the material and subject of nobility; the
formal in saying that it is the seed; the efficient in saying instilled
by God Within the soul; the final in saying of happiness.(100)
So now we have defined the nature of our human goodness, which descends
into us from the supreme spiritual virtue as virtue descends into a stone
from the noblest celestial body.(101)
Chapter 21
In order to have a more perfect understanding of the human goodness
which is called nobility, as the source of all good in us, we must clarify
in this special chapter how this goodness descends into us, first by way
of nature and then by way of theology, that is, by way of the divine and
the spiritual. We must first of all know that man is composed of soul and
body, but it is in the soul, as has been said, that nobility resides as
the seed of the divine virtue.
Different philosophers, it is true, have held different opinions regarding
the difference of our souls. For Avicenna and Algazel maintained that they
were noble or vile in and of themselves from their beginning. Plato and
others maintained that they issued from the stars and were more or less
noble according to the nobility of their star. Pythagoras maintained that
all souls were of the same nobility, not only human souls but those of
the brute animals and the plants, and the forms of minerals; and he said
that the only difference lay between their matter and their form.(102)
If each were to defend his own opinion, truth might be seen to exist in
all of them. But since upon first consideration they appear somewhat removed
from the truth, it is better to proceed not according to them but according
to the opinion of Aristotle and the Peripatetics. Therefore I say that
when the seed of man falls into its receptacle, namely the matrix, it carries
with it the virtue of the generative soul, and the virtue of heaven, and
the virtue of the combined elements, namely temperament.(103)
It matures and disposes the material to receive the formative virtue given
by the soul of the generator, and the formative virtue prepares the organs
to receive the celestial virtue, which brings the soul from the potentiality
of the seed into life.(104) As soon as
it is produced it receives from the virtue of the celestial mover the possible
intellect, which draws into itself in potentiality all of the universal
forms as they are found in its maker, to an ever lesser degree the more
it is removed from the primal Intelligence.(105)
No one should be surprised if I speak in a way that seems difficult
to understand, for it seems to me indeed a marvel how such a process can
be fully described and perceived by the intellect. It is something that
cannot be expressed in words--words, I mean, in the vernacular. Consequently
I would say in the words of the Apostle, "O the depth of the riches of
the wisdom of God, how unfathomable are your judgments and your ways past
finding out!"(106) Since the temperament
of the seed may be more or less good, and the disposition of the sower
may be more or less good, and the disposition of Heaven for the effect
may be good, better, or best (varying in accordance with the constellations
which undergo continuous change), it comes to pass that a soul is created
more or less pure from the seed of man and from these virtues. According
to its purity the possible intellectual virtue, mentioned above, descends
into it, in the manner mentioned. If it happens that because of the purity
of the recipient soul the intellectual virtue is quite free of and withdrawn
from every bodily darkness, the divine goodness increases in it as in a
substance suited to receive it; hence it increases this intelligence in
the soul, according to its capacity for receiving it. This is that seed
of happiness of which we are presently speaking.
This accords with the opinion expressed by Tully in his book On Old
Age where he says, speaking in the person of Cato, "Therefore a celestial
soul descended into us coming from the highest dwelling into a place which
is contrary to the divine nature and to eternity."(107)
In a soul such as this there exists its own virtue, the intellectual virtue,
and the divine (that is, the influence mentioned above). Therefore it is
written in the book On Causes, "Every noble soul has three activities,
namely animal, intellectual, and divine."(108)
There are some who would even claim that if all of the preceding virtues
in their best disposition were brought into agreement in the creation of
a soul, so much of the Deity would descend into it that it would almost
become another God incarnate. This is virtually all that can be said according
to the principles of philosophy.
According to the principles of theology it may be said that when the
supreme deity (that is, God) sees his creature prepared to receive his
benefaction, he endows it with as great a gift as it is prepared to receive.
Since these gifts come from ineffable Love, and divine Love is a attribute
of the Holy Spirit, they are called the gifts of the Holy Spirit. These
gifts, as Isaiah distinguishes them, are seven in number: namely Wisdom,
Understanding, Counsel, Strength, Knowledge, Piety, and Fear of God.(109)
O happy harvest, O happy and wondrous seed! O admirable and generous sower,
who waits only for human nature to prepare the earth to be sown! Blessed
are they who rightly cultivate such seed! Here we should know that the
first and most noble shoot to bear fruit which sprouts from this seed is
the appetite of the mind, which in Greek is called hormen.(110)
If this is not cultivated correctly and preserved properly through good
habit, the seed is worth little, and it would have been better if it had
never been sown. Therefore St. Augustine asserts, as does Aristotle in
the second book of the Ethics, that one should make a habit of doing
well and of restraining one's passions in order that this sprout of which
we spoke may grow strong through good habit and be strengthened in its
uprightness, so that it may bear fruit and from this fruit bring forth
the sweetness of human happiness.
Chapter 22
It is a precept of the moral philosophers who have spoken about giving
that one should devote thought and care to making one's gifts as useful
as possible in presenting them to the recipient. Thus, out of a desire
to obey this rule, I intend to make my Convivio as useful as I possibly
can in each of its parts. Since in this part the opportunity to speak at
some length about human happiness presents itself, I intend to speak about
its sweetness, for no other discussion would be more useful to those who
have no knowledge of it. For as the Philosopher says in the first book
of the Ethics, and Tully in his book on The End of Good,
he who does not see the mark aims poorly, and in the same way he who does
not perceive this sweetness cannot attain it properly.(111)
Therefore, since it is our final solace, for the sake of which we live
and devote ourselves to what we undertake to do, it is most useful and
necessary to perceive this mark, in order to direct the bow of our activity
toward it, for he is most highly regarded who points it out to those who
do not perceive it.
Leaving aside, then, the opinions held in this matter by the philosopher
Epicurus and by Zeno, I intend to proceed directly to the true opinion
of Aristotle and the other Peripatetics. As has been said above, there
springs from the divine goodness, sown and infused into us from the beginning
of our generation, a shoot which the Greeks call hormen (that is,
natural appetite of the mind). Just as the various grains which at first,
when springing up, look alike in the grass, and then as they grow come
to lose their similarity, so this natural appetite, which issues from the
divine grace, seems at first not unlike that which comes simply from nature,
but is similar to it, just as the first blades of the different grains
are similar to one another. This similarity is found not only in men, but
in men and in animals; and this is apparent, for every animal, as soon
as it is born, rational as well as brute, loves itself and fears and flees
those things which are opposed to it, and hates them. Then as this appetite
evolves, a dissimilarity, as has been said above, begins to develop in
the course of this appetite, for one takes one path and another another.
Just as the Apostle says, "Many run for the prize, but one alone is he
who captures it," so these human appetites proceed from the beginning along
different paths, and there is but one path alone that leads us to our peace.(112)
Therefore, leaving aside all the others, we must follow in our present
book the one that makes a good beginning.
I say, then, that this appetite loves itself from the beginning, although
in a general sense; then it begins to make distinctions among those things
that it enjoys the most and the least, and hates the most and the least,
and it follows or flees them either more or less, to the degree that its
understanding of them permits it to make distinctions not only among those
things, which it loves secondarily, but to make distinctions within itself,
which it loves primarily. Recognizing different parts within itself, it
loves those in it most which are most noble; and since the mind is a more
noble part of man than the body, it loves that part more. And so loving
first itself and all other things for the sake of itself, and loving to
a greater degree the better part of itself, it is evident that it loves
the mind more than the body or anything else, the mind which it ought by
nature to love more than anything else. Therefore if the mind always delights
in the use of the thing that is loved, which is the fruit of love, and
if in that thing which is loved most of all is found the most delightful
use of all, the use of our mind is most of all delightful to us. And whatever
is most of all delightful to us constitutes our happiness and our blessedness,
beyond which there is no greater delight, nor any equal, as anyone can
see who carefully considers the preceding argument.
Let no one say that every appetite is of the mind, for by mind I mean
here only that which relates to the rational part (that is, the will and
the intellect). Thus if anyone should wish to call the sensitive appetite
"mind," the proposition would not and could not be admissible, for no one
doubts that the rational appetite is more noble than the sensitive appetite
and is therefore more deserving of love. So it is with this appetite of
which we are presently speaking. In point of fact the use of our mind is
twofold, namely practical and speculative ("practical" signifying "operative"),
each of which is most delightful, although that of contemplation is more
so, as has been explained above.(113)
The practical use of the mind consists in our acting in accordance with
virtue (that is, uprightly), with prudence, temperance, fortitude, and
justice; the speculative use consists not in our acting but in reflecting
upon the works of God and nature. This together with the other constitutes
our blessedness and supreme happiness, as may be seen. This is the sweetness
of the seed mentioned above, as is now clearly evident, sweetness to which
the seed often does not attain because it has been poorly cultivated or
its growth has gone astray. Similarly this may occur by means of much correction
and cultivation, for as the seed sprouts some part of its growth may extend
to a place where it does not originally fall, so that it may attain to
this fruit. This procedure constitutes a kind of grafting of one nature
onto a different root. Therefore there is no one who can be excused, for
if a person does not acquire this seed from his own natural roots, he may
well acquire it by means of a graft. Would in fact that those who have
acquired a graft were as many as those who allow themselves to go astray
from the good root!
One of these uses is indeed more full of blessedness than the other--namely
the speculative which, being inviolate, is the use of the most noble part
of our mind which, by reason of that love rooted in us which has been spoken
of, is most of all deserving of love, namely the intellect. In this life
this part cannot have its perfect use, which consists of seeing God, who
is the supreme object of intelligence, except insofar as it contemplates
and beholds him through his effects. We will find, if we look closely,
that the Gospel of St. Mark teaches us to seek out this blessedness as
being the highest, and not the other, namely that of the active life.(114)
Mark says that Mary Magdalene, Mary of James, and Mary Salome went to the
sepulcher to find the Savior and did not find him. But they found a young
man dressed in white who said to them: "You seek the Savior, and I tell
you that he is not here; and do not therefore have fear, but go and say
to his disciples and to Peter that he will go before them into Galilee,
and there you shall see him, as he said unto you." By these three ladies
may be understood the three schools of the active life: namely the Epicureans,
the Stoics, and the Peripatetics, who go to the sepulcher (that is, the
present world, which is a receptacle of corruptible things) and seek out
the Savior (that is, blessedness) and do not find him. But they find a
young man in white garments who, according to the testimony of Matthew
and others as well, was an angel of God. Therefore Matthew said: "The angel
of God descended from heaven, and came and rolled back the stone and sat
upon it. And his countenance was like lightning, and his garments were
white as snow."(115)
This angel is our nobility which comes from God, as has been said, and
speaks within our faculty of reason and says to each one of these schools
(that is, to everyone who goes in search of blessedness in the active life)
that it is not here, but that they should go and tell the disciples and
Peter (that is, those who go seeking him and those who have gone astray,
like Peter who had denied him) that he will go before them into Galilee,
that is, that blessedness will go before us into Galilee (that is, into
contemplation). Galilee means the same as whiteness, and whiteness is a
color more imbued with material light than any other; and likewise contemplation
is more imbued with spiritual light than anything else found here below.(116)
And the angel says: "He will go before you," and not "He will be with you,"
to have us understand that God is always in advance of our contemplation,
and that here below we can never reach him who is our supreme blessedness.
And he says: "There you will see him, as he said unto you" (that is, there
you will possess his sweetness, namely happiness, just as it has been promised
to you here, that is, as it has been decreed that you shall be able to
possess it). And so it appears that we are first able to find our blessedness
(this happiness of which we are speaking) imperfectly, as it were, in the
active life (that is, in the exercise of the moral virtues), and later
almost perfectly in the exercise of the intellectual virtues. These two
kinds of activities are the quickest and most direct paths leading to the
supreme blessedness, which cannot be possessed here, as is quite apparent
from what has been said.
Chapter 23
Now that the definition of nobility has been sufficiently examined and
clarified in all of its parts as far as possible, so that we can now see
what constitutes a noble man, it seems appropriate to proceed to that part
of the text which begins The soul which this goodness adorns, which
identifies the signs by which we may recognize the noble man referred to
above. This is divided into two parts: in the first it is affirmed that
this nobility shines and gleams openly throughout the entire life of a
noble man; in the second it reveals the splendors distinctive of nobility;
the second part begins Sweet, obedient, and full of shame.
With regard to the first part it should be known that this divine seed,
of which we have spoken above, springs up immediately in our soul, growing
and extending itself diversely into each power of the soul according to
its need. It springs up, then, in the vegetative, sensitive, and rational
powers, and branches out through the virtues of all of these, directing
all of them to their perfection and preserving itself in them until the
moment when, together with that part of our soul which never dies, it returns
to heaven to the highest and most glorious sower. It says this in the first
part, which has been spoken of. Then when it says Sweet, obedient, and
full of shame, it shows how we may recognize a man who is noble by
manifest signs, which constitute the activity of this divine goodness;
this part is divided into four, according to its diverse activity in the
four ages: that is, in adolescence, maturity, old age, and senility. The
second part begins: In maturity she's strong and self-restrained;
the third: In old age; the fourth: And then in the fourth phase of life.(117)
This is the general meaning of this part, regarding which it should be
known that every effect, insofar as it is an effect, receives the likeness
of its cause to the degree that it is able to retain it. Consequently since
our life, as has been said, and the life of every living thing here below
is caused by heaven, and heaven discloses itself to all such effects as
these not by a complete circling but by a partial circling--and thus its
movement above them must necessarily rise somewhat like an arc--all earthly
life (and in saying "earthly" I mean both men and the other forms of life),
rising upward and descending, must be similar to the image of an arc. Returning,
then, to human life, which is our sole concern at present, I say that it
takes the likeness of this arc, rising upward and descending.(118)
It should be observed that this arc here below, like the one above,
would be uniform if the material sown into our constitution did not impede
the rule of human nature. But since the fundamental humor, being the substance
and nutriment of the heat which constitutes our life, varies in degree
and in quality, and has greater duration in one effect than in another,
it happens that the arc of one man's life has a greater or lesser span
than that of another.(119) Death is sometimes
violent, or is hastened by sudden illness, but only that death which is
commonly called natural, and which is natural, constitutes that boundary
of which the Psalmist has said: "You have set a boundary which cannot be
passed."(120) Aristotle, the master of
our life, who knew of this arc of which we are now speaking, seems to have
believed that our life is nothing but an ascent and a descent, and therefore
he says in his book On Maturity and Old Age that maturity is nothing
but maturation in life. It is difficult to determine where the highest
point of this arc lies, because of the inequality mentioned above, but
in most lives I believe it is attained between the thirtieth and fortieth
year, and I believe that in those whose nature is perfect it is attained
in the thirty-fifth year. My belief is compelled by the argument that our
Savior Christ had a perfect nature and desired to die in the thirty-fourth
year of his life, because it would not have been fitting for a divinity
to enter into such a decline as this. Nor can it be believed that he would
not have desired to remain alive until he had reached the highest point
of this life of ours, since he had lived here during the low estate of
youth. This is made evident by the hour of the day of his death, for he
desired to make it conform to his life. As Luke says, it was nearly the
sixth hour when he died, which is to say the height of day. Thus we may
take this word "nearly" to signify that the thirty-fifth year in the life
of Christ was the height of his life.
This arc, however, is not characterized in written works solely by reference
to its midpoint, but is divided into four parts, according to the four
combinations of the contrary qualities that comprise our composition, to
which combinations--I mean to each individually--one part of the course
of our life seems to correspond, and these are called the four ages. The
first is adolescence, which corresponds to the hot and moist; the second
is maturity, which corresponds to the hot and dry; the third is old age,
which corresponds to the cold and dry; and the fourth is senility, which
corresponds to the dry and moist, as Albert states in the fourth book of
the Meteorics.(121) These parts
of life are likewise characterized by the year, by spring, summer, autumn,
and winter; and by the day, that is, up to tierce, and then nones (omitting
sext, midway between, for an obvious reason), and then vespers and from
vespers onward.(122) Therefore the gentiles
(that is, the pagans) said that the chariot of the sun had four horses:
the first they called Eoüs, the second Pyroïs, the third Aethon,
and the fourth Phlegon, as Ovid records in the second book of the Metamorphoses.(123)
Concerning the parts of the day it should be briefly observed that,
as was said above in the sixth chapter of the third book, the Church in
distinguishing among the hours of the day makes use of the temporal hours,
of which there are twelve in each day, long or short according to the length
of the solar day. Because the sixth hour (that is, midday) is the most
noble hour of the entire day, and the most virtuous, she draws her offices
near to each side of it (that is to say before and after) as much as possible.
For this reason the office of the first part of the day, namely tierce,
is said at the end of that part of the day, and the offices of the third
and the fourth part are said at their beginning.(124)
And for this reason mid-tierce is said before the bell is rung for that
part of the day, and mid-nones after it is rung for that part of the day,
and as is mid-vespers.(125) It should
be clear to everyone, then, that the proper nones must always be rung at
the beginning of the seventh hour of the day. And this should suffice for
the present digression.
Chapter 24
Returning to the main argument, I say that human life is divided into
four ages. The first is called adolescence, which means "increase of life";
the second is called maturity, which means "the age that can be helpful"
(that is, that can give perfection, and so it is considered a perfect age,
for one can give only what one has); the third is called old age; the fourth
is called senility, as has been said above.
Regarding the first age no one is in doubt, for all learned persons
are in agreement that it lasts up until the twenty-fifth year. Since up
until that time our soul is concerned with the growth and the beauty of
the body, when many and great changes occur in one's person, the rational
part cannot discriminate with perfection. Consequently the Law directs
that prior to reaching this age a person may not do certain things without
a guardian of sufficient age.
Regarding the second age, which is truly the highest point of our life,
there are many different opinions as to its duration. But leaving aside
what the philosophers and physicians have to say about it and referring
to the appropriate law, I say that in the majority (on the basis of which
every judgment regarding what is natural can and must be made) this age
lasts for 20 years. The reasoning which leads me to this conclusion is
that if the highest point of our arc is in the thirty-fifth year, this
age of life must have a descent and an ascent of equal duration; this ascent
and descent are like the handle of a bow in which but little flection is
observed. It obtains, then, that maturity is completed in the forty-fifth
year. Just as adolescence lasts for the first twenty-five years, ascending
toward maturity, so the descent, that is, old age, lasts for the same number
of years following maturity; and so old age concludes in the seventieth
year. But since adolescence does not begin at the beginning of life, taking
it in the sense that has been stated, but nearly eight months later, and
since our nature strives to ascend and holds back in descending because
the natural heat is decreased, and has little power, and the moisture is
condensed--not in quantity but in quality--so that it evaporates and is
consumed less quickly, it happens that beyond old age there remains to
our life a period of perhaps ten years, a little more or a little less;
and this period is called senility.(126)
Hence it is said of Plato, who may be said to have possessed a supremely
excellent nature both for the perfection of its being and for the physiognomic
image which Socrates observed in him when he first saw him, that he lived
to the age of 81, as Tully affirms in his book On Old Age.(127)
I believe that if Christ had not been crucified and had lived out the term
which his life could have encompassed according to its nature, he would
have undergone the change from mortal body to immortal in his eighty-first
year.
Indeed as has been said above, these ages can be longer or shorter according
to our temperament and constitution, but whatever they are, it seems to
me, as has been said, this proportion must be preserved in all men (that
is, to make the ages of life in these men longer or shorter according to
the totality of the full term of their natural life).(128)
Throughout each of these ages the nobility of which we are speaking reveals
its effects diversely in the soul that is ennobled, and this is what this
stanza, about which I am presently writing, is intended to show.(129)
Here it should be observed that our nature when good and upright develops
in us according to what is reasonable, just as we perceive that the nature
of plants develops in them; and therefore some manners and some kinds of
behavior are more reasonable at one age than at another, during which the
soul that is ennobled develops in an orderly manner along a simple path,
employing its activities in the periods and ages of life proper to them
accordingly as they are directed to attaining its ultimate fruit.(130)
Tully voices agreement with this in his book On Old Age.(131)
Leaving aside the allegorical meaning which Vergil applies to the different
ages of human development in the Aeneid, and as well what Egidius
the Hermit says about it in the first part of his book The Regimen of
Princes, and likewise Tully in his book On Offices, and following
only what reason by itself can perceive, I say that this first age is the
door and path by which we enter upon this good life of ours.(132)
This entrance must of necessity provide certain things which the goodness
of nature, never failing in things that are necessary, gives to us, as
we see that she gives leaves to the vine to protect its fruit, and tendrils
by which to defend and bind its weakness so as to bear the weight of the
fruit.
The goodness of nature, then, gives to this age of life four things
necessary for entering into the city of the good life. The first is obedience,
the second sweetness, the third a sense of shame, the fourth loveliness
of being, as the text says in the first section.(133)
We should therefore know that just as someone who has never been in a city
would not know how to make his way without guidance from someone who is
familiar with it, so an adolescent who enters into the meandering forest
of this life would not know how to keep to the right path unless it were
shown to him by his elders.(134) Nor would
it be of any use to point it out if he were not obedient to their commands;
and therefore in this age of life obedience is necessary.
Someone might well say: "Can he then be called obedient who obeys commands
that are bad as well as he who obeys those that are good?" I reply that
this would not be obedience but transgression, for if a king commands one
thing and a servant another, the servant is not to be obeyed, for this
would constitute disobedience to the king, and therefore a transgression.
Therefore Solomon says, in seeking to correct his son (and this is his
first command): "Hear, my son, the teaching of your father."(135)
At once he shields him from the bad advice and teaching of others, saying:
"Do not let sinners have the power to beguile you with flatteries or delights
so that you will go with them." So as a child clings to the mother's breast
as soon as it is born, likewise as soon as some light appears in his mind
he ought to turn to the correction of his father, and his father should
give him instruction. He should make certain that his own actions do not
provide an example that would run counter to his words of correction, for
we see that every son naturally looks more to the footprints of his father
than to those of anyone else. For this reason the Law, which takes this
into account, states and commands that the person of the father should
always appear righteous and upstanding to his sons; so it is clear that
in this age of life obedience is necessary. Therefore Solomon writes in
Proverbs that he who humbly and obediently endures his chastener and his
just reproofs "shall be glorified," and he says "shall be," to indicate
that he is speaking to an adolescent, one who in the present age of life
cannot be glorified.(136)
If someone should protest that "what is said is said only of the father
and not of others," I reply that all other obedience must redound to the
father. Thus the Apostle says to the Colossians: "Children, obey your fathers
in all things, for this is the will of God."(137)
If the father is no longer living, it redounds to him who is designated
father by the father's last will. Should the father die intestate, it redounds
to him to whom the Law entrusts his son's guidance. And next in order teachers
and elders should be obeyed, to whom he seems in some way to have been
entrusted by the father or by him who stands in the father's place. But
since the present chapter has become long on account of the useful digressions
which it contains, the other points will be discussed in another chapter.
Chapter 25
Not only is this good soul and nature obedient in adolescence, it is
also pleasant, which is the other thing which is necessary in this age
of life for passing through the gate of maturity. It is necessary because
we cannot have a perfect life without friends, as Aristotle asserts in
the eighth book of the Ethics; and the majority of friendships appear
to be sown in this first age of life because in this age a man begins to
be gracious, or the contrary.(138) This
graciousness is acquired through pleasant conduct, namely sweet and courteous
speech, and sweet and courteous service and action. This is why Solomon
says to his adolescent son: "God scorns scorners, and to the meek God will
give grace." And elsewhere he says: "Keep far away from you an evil mouth,
and let base actions be far from you."(139)
And so it appears that this pleasantness is necessary, as has been explained.
Furthermore, in this age of life the emotion of shame is necessary,
and therefore a good and noble nature displays it in this age, as the text
says. Since shame is a very prominent sign of nobility in adolescence,
because it is extremely necessary at that time for making a good foundation
for our life, to which the noble nature inclines, we must speak of it with
some care. I say that by shame I mean three emotions necessary for the
foundation of our good life: the first is awe, the second modesty, the
third sense of shame, although the common people do not discern this distinction.
All three are necessary in this age of life for the reasons: it is necessary
to be reverent and eager, in order to learn; to be restrained, in order
to avoid transgressing; to be repentant of an error, so as not to fall
into the habit of error. All of these things comprise the emotions mentioned
above, which together are commonly called shame. For awe is the amazement
of the mind at seeing or hearing, or in some way perceiving, great and
marvelous things. Insofar as they seem great, they instill reverence for
them in him who perceives them; insofar as they seem marvelous they make
him yearn for knowledge about them. For this reason the kings of times
past would place magnificent works of gold, gems, and works of art in their
palaces so that those who saw them would be amazed, and therefore become
reverent, and eager to obtain information about the king's state of honor.
Thus Statius, the sweet poet, in the first book of the Thebaid,
says that when the king of the Argives, Adrastus, saw Polynices clad in
a lion's skin, and Tydeus clad in the hide of a wild boar, and recalled
the reply which Apollo had given concerning his daughters, he was awestruck,
and therefore became more reverent and more eager to gain knowledge.(140)
Modesty is the recoiling of the mind from things which are ugly for
fear of falling into them, as we see in virgins, good women, and adolescents
who are so modest that their faces become pallid or tinged with the color
of red not only in those instances when they are induced or tempted to
commit a fault, but even when some act of sensual pleasure is merely conceived
in the imagination. Thus the above-mentioned poet says in the first book
of the Thebaid, just cited, that when Aceste, the nurse of Argia
and Deiphyle, daughters of King Adrastus, brought them before the eyes
of their noble father in the presence of two strangers, namely Polynices
and Tydeus, the virgins became pallid and flushed, and their eyes averted
the glances of everyone and turned upon their father's face alone, as if
reassured.(141) O how many faults does
this modesty curb! How many dishonorable deeds and entreaties does it silence!
How many dishonorable desires does it bridle! How many evil temptations
does it check, not only in the person who is modest but in the one who
looks on him! How many foul words does it restrain! For as Tully says in
the first book of On Offices, "There is no foul act which it is
not foul to speak of."(142) Therefore
a man who is modest and noble never speaks in such a way that his words
would be unsuitable for a woman. Ah, how ill it becomes a man who goes
in search of honor to speak of things which would be unbecoming on the
lips of any woman!
The sense of shame is the fear of being disgraced for a fault that has
been committed. From this fear springs repentance for the fault, which
consists of a bitterness that acts as a constraint against renewing the
fault. Consequently this same poet says in the same passage that when Polynices
was asked by King Adrastus about his origin, he hesitated before speaking
for shame of the fault he had committed against his father, and also of
the faults of his father Oedipus, for they seemed to abide in the shame
of the son. He did not name his father, but his ancestors, and his native
land and his mother. From this it is quite evident that shame is necessary
in this age of life.(143)
The noble nature in this age of life displays not only obedience, pleasantness,
and shame, but also beauty and poise of body, as the text affirms when
it says And she adorns her body. The word "adorns" is a verb and
not a noun--a verb, I mean, in the present tense indicative of the third
person. Here we must observe that this effect is also necessary for the
goodness of our life, for a great part of the operations of our soul must
be effected by means of the organs of the body, and it effects them well
when the body is well ordered and disposed in its parts. When it is well
ordered and disposed it is then beautiful as a whole and in its parts;
for the due order of our members accords a pleasure of an inexpressibly
wonderful harmony, and their proper disposition, namely their health, confers
upon them a color that is pleasant to behold. So to say that a noble nature
brings beauty to its body and makes it lovely and poised is to say simply
that it adorns it with the perfection of order. It is evident that along
with the other things that have been discussed, this characteristic is
necessary in the age of adolescence. These are the things which the noble
soul (that is, the noble nature as a thing which is sown), as has been
said, by divine providence, intends for it to have from the beginning.
Chapter 26
Now that we have discussed the first section of this part, which shows
how we can recognize a man who is noble by manifest signs, we must proceed
to the second part, which begins: At maturity strong and self-restrained.
It says, then, that as the noble nature in adolescence shows itself obedient,
pleasant and full of shame, adorning its own person, so in maturity
it is strong, self-restrained, loving, courteous, and honest, five
qualities which appear to be, and are, necessary for our perfection insofar
as we regard it with reference to ourselves. Concerning this we should
observe that all that noble nature prepares in the first age of life is
set forth and ordered by the foresight of universal Nature, which orders
particular nature to its perfection.(144)
This perfection of ours can be considered in two ways. It can be considered
with reference to ourselves, and this perfection must be achieved in our
maturity, which is the fullness of our life. It can be considered with
reference to others; and because it is first necessary to be perfect, and
then to communicate this perfection to others, this secondary perfection
must be achieved in the following age of life, namely in old age, as will
be explained below.
Here, then, we must recall what was discussed above in the twenty-second
chapter of this book concerning the appetite which is inborn in us from
our beginning. This appetite never does anything except pursue and flee;
and whenever it pursues what is proper in the right degree and flees what
is proper in the right degree, one keeps within the boundaries of one's
perfection. Nevertheless this appetite must be ridden by reason, for just
as a horse set loose, however noble it may be by nature, cannot act as
its own guide without a good rider, so the appetite, which is called irascible
or concupiscible, however noble it may be, must obey reason, which guides
it with bridle and spurs like a good horseman.(145)
It uses the bridle when appetite is in pursuit, and this bridle is called
temperance, which marks the limit up to which something may be pursued;
it uses the spur when the appetite is in flight, to make it turn back to
the place from which it seeks to flee, and this spur is called courage,
or magnanimity, a virtue which marks the place where one must take a stand
and fight. Vergil, our greatest poet, shows that Aeneas was unrestrained
in this way in that part of the Aeneid in which this age of life
is allegorized, the part comprising the fourth, fifth, and sixth books
of the Aeneid. How great was his restraint when, having experienced
so much pleasure with Dido, as will be recounted below in the seventh book,
and having derived from her so much gratification, he took his departure
from her to follow an honorable, praiseworthy and profitable path, as is
recorded in the fourth book of the Aeneid! What spurring was felt
when this same Aeneas mustered the courage to enter into Hell alone with
the Sibyl in search of the soul of his father Anchises, in the face of
so many perils, as is described in the sixth book of the same history.
From this it is evident that for us to achieve perfection in the age of
maturity it is necessary to be "strong and self-restrained." This is what
goodness of nature accomplishes and demonstrates, as the text expressly
states.
Moreover, it is necessary to be loving in this age of life for its perfection,
because it is appropriate for it to look backward and forward, like something
that lies on the meridian circle. It is appropriate for one to love one's
elders, from whom one has received being, nurture, and education, so as
not to seem ungrateful. It is appropriate for one to love one's juniors,
so that by loving them it may give them some of its benefits by which it
may later, when its prosperity diminishes, derive support and honor from
them. As the previously named poet shows in the fifth book mentioned above,
this is the love that Aeneas had when he left the aged Trojans behind in
Sicily, entrusting them to the care of Acestes, and released them from
their labors, and when in this same site he prepared his young son Ascanius,
with the other youths, for tournament games.(146)
From this it is evident that love is necessary in this age of life, as
the text states.
Moreover, it is necessary in this age of life to be courteous, for although
courteous manners are becoming in all ages of life, in this age they are
especially necessary, because in adolescence absence of courtesy readily
deserves to be excused because of tenderness of age, and because conversely
in old age courtesy is not possible by reason of the seriousness and sternness
which it is required to show; and still more so in senility. Our most exalted
poet shows in the sixth book previously mentioned that Aeneas had this
courtesy when he says that King Aeneas, to honor the lifeless body of Misenus,
who had been Hector's trumpeter and had afterwards placed himself in Aeneas'
trust, made preparations and took up his ax to help hew the wood for the
fire that would be used to burn the body, in keeping with their custom.(147)
From this it is quite evident that courtesy is necessary in maturity, and
therefore the noble soul displays it in that age of life, as has been said.
Moreover, it is necessary in this age of life to be loyal. Loyalty consists
of following and putting into practice what the laws decree, and this is
especially appropriate in one who is mature; for an adolescent, as has
been said, readily deserves to be excused because of tenderness of age;
an elder ought to be just by reason of his greater experience, and he ought
to conduct himself in a just manner, not as a follower of the law, except
insofar as his own right judgment and the law are virtually in conformity,
but almost independently of any law, which someone in the age of maturity
cannot do. It should suffice for him to follow the law and to take delight
in following it, as the previously cited poet in the above-mentioned fifth
book says that Aeneas did when he held the games in Sicily on the anniversary
of his father's death, for he loyally awarded to each victor what he had
promised for victory, according to their longstanding custom, which was
their law. From this it is evident that in this age of life loyalty, courtesy,
love, courage, and temperance are necessary, as the text presently under
discussion states; and therefore the soul that is noble displays them all.
Chapter 27
We have quite sufficiently examined and discussed that section of the
text which displays the attributes which the noble nature confers on maturity.
Consequently it seems proper to take up the third part which begins In
old age, in which the text seeks to show those things which the noble
nature displays and ought to possess in the third age of life, namely old
age. It says that in old age the noble soul is prudent, just, liberal,
and takes delight in speaking well of others' virtues, and of hearing them
well spoken of (that is to say, that it is affable). These four virtues
are indeed extremely suitable to this age of life.
In order to perceive this we must know that, as Tully says in his book
On Old Age: "Our life has a fixed course and our good nature has
but a single path; and in each part of our life a season has been given
for certain things."(148) Consequently
just as to adolescence is given that which will bring us to perfection
and ripeness, as has been said above, so to maturity perfection and ripeness
are given so that the sweetness of its fruit may prove profitable both
to itself and to others; for as Aristotle says, man is a social animal,
and thus it is required of him that he be useful not merely to himself
but to others.(149) Hence we read of Cato
that he thought of himself as born not for himself, but for his country
and for the whole world. Therefore following upon our own perfection, which
we acquire in the age of maturity, should come that perfection which illuminates
not only ourselves but others; one should open out like a rose that can
no longer remain closed, and disperse the fragrance which is produced within;
and this should take place in the third age of life, which is our present
concern. One should therefore be prudent (that is, wise), and being wise
requires a good memory of things seen, a good knowledge of things present,
and a good foresight of things future. For as the Philosopher says in the
sixth book of the Ethics, "It is impossible for a man to be wise
without being good," and therefore one who proceeds with subterfuge and
deceit is not to be called wise but astute; for just as no one would call
a man wise for knowing how to pierce the pupil of an eye with the point
of a dagger, so a man who knows how to perform some evil act should not
be called wise, since in performing it he always harms himself before harming
others.(150)
If we look more closely, from prudence comes good counsel, which guides
a man himself and others to a good end in human affairs and actions. This
is the gift that Solomon asked of God upon finding himself placed at the
helm of the government of the people, as is written in the third book of
Kings.(151) Nor does a prudent man such
as this wait until someone summons him with the words "Counsel me," but,
making provision for him, without being asked, he counsels him, just as
a rose offers its fragrance not only to one who approaches it for this
reason but also to whoever passes near to it. Here some doctor or lawyer
might say: "Am I then to carry my counsel and offer it even though it has
not been asked for, and make no profit from my art?" I reply as our Lord
has said: "Freely have you received, freely give."(152)
I say, therefore, my dear lawyer, that those counsels which are unrelated
to your art and which proceed only from the common sense which God has
given to you (and this is that prudence of which we are now speaking) you
should not sell to the children of him who gave it to you: those that are
related to your art, which you have purchased, you may sell, but not such
that it is not fitting at times to pay a tithe and make an offering to
God (that is, to those unfortunates to whom nothing is left but the gratitude
of God).
It is also fitting in this age of life to be just, so that one's judgments
and authority may be a light and a law to others. Because this singular
virtue, namely justice, was perceived by philosophers in ancient times
to display itself to perfection in this age of life, they entrusted the
rule of the cities to those who were in this age of life; and therefore
the council of rulers was called the "Senate."(153)
O my miserable, miserable homeland! What pity for you constrains me whenever
I read or whenever I write anything that has to do with civil government!
But since justice will be treated in the penultimate book of this work,
let it suffice for the present to have touched on it briefly here.
It is also fitting in this age of life to be generous, because a thing
is fitting when it most satisfies the requisites of its own nature, nor
can the requisites of generosity ever be so satisfied as in this age of
life. For if we but carefully consider Aristotle's reasoning in the fourth
book of the Ethics, and Tully's in his book On Offices, generosity
should occur at a time and a place in which the generous man injures neither
himself nor another.(154) This is something
that cannot be possessed without prudence and justice, virtues which it
is impossible to possess in their perfection by the way of nature prior
to this age of life. Ah, you ill-fated and misbegotten men who defraud
widows and wards, who steal from the very weakest, who rob and seize by
force the rights of others, and with these gains arrange banquets, make
gifts of horses and arms, goods and money, dress in striking attire, erect
wondrous buildings, and believe yourselves to be acting with generosity!
What is this but to act like the thief who takes the cloth from the altar
to cover his own table? We should mock your gifts, you tyrants, like the
thief who would invite guests into his house and spread upon his table
the cloth stolen from the altar with the ecclesiastical signs still upon
it, and think that others would take no notice. Listen, you stubborn men,
to what Tully has to say against you in his book On Offices: "There
are many wishing to be impressive and famous who take from some in order
to give to others, believing that they will be well regarded, and make
them rich for whatever reason they so choose. But nothing is more contrary
to what is proper than this."(155)
It is also fitting in this age of life to be affable, to speak of what
is good and to hear it spoken of willingly, because it is good to speak
of what is good when it has an audience. This age of life even carries
with it an air of authority, because men seem more inclined in this age
to listen to authority than in any earlier age; and it seems that this
age brings with it knowledge of many fine and pleasant stories because
of the long experience of life. Consequently Tully says in his book On
Old Age, in the person of Cato the Elder: "The joy and pleasure I take
from conversation is greater now than in the past."(156)
Ovid teaches us, in the seventh book of the Metamorphoses, that
all four of these things are fitting to this age of life by citing the
myth of how Cephalus of Athens came to King Aeacus for help in the war
that Athens was waging against the Cretans. He shows how old Aeacus was
prudent when, having lost almost all of his people to a plague caused by
a contamination of the air, he wisely turned to God and asked him to restore
his dead people. Because of his wisdom, which enabled him to sustain his
patience and turn to God, his people were restored to him in greater numbers
than before.(157) Ovid shows how he was
just when he says that Aeacus divided and distributed his forsaken lands
to his new people. He shows that Aeacus was generous, by having him say
to Cephalus after his request for aid: "O Athens, do not ask our aid, but
take it; do not think that the forces of this island, along with all that
is in my possession, are uncertain: forces are not lacking, indeed there
are more than are needed; the adversary is mighty, and the time for being
generous is opportune and without excuse."(158)
Ah, how many things there are to note in this reply! But to one who
understands it well it will suffice to set it down here just as Ovid sets
it down.(159) He shows that he was affable
when he tells and diligently recounts, in a long speech to Cephalus, the
story of the plague of his people and their restoration. Consequently it
is quite evident that in this age of life four things are fitting, which
is why the nature that is noble displays them in this age, as the text
states. So that the example that is given might be the more memorable,
he says of King Aeacus that he was the father of Telamon, of Peleus, and
of Phocus, and that from Telamon Ajax was born, and from Peleus Achilles.
Chapter 28
After the section previously discussed we must proceed to the last one:
that is, to the one which begins And then in the fourth phase of life,
by which the text proposes to show how the noble soul acts in the last
age of life (that is, in senility). It says that the noble soul does two
things: first, that it returns to God as to that port from which it departed
when it came to enter into the sea of this life; second, that it blesses
the journey that it has made, because it has been straight and good and
without bitterness of storm.
Here it should be observed that a natural death, as Tully says in his
book On Old Age, is, as it were, a port and site of repose after
our long journey. This is quite true, for just as a good sailor lowers
his sails as he approaches port and, pressing forward lightly, enters it
gently, so we must lower the sails of our worldly preoccupations and return
to God with all our mind and heart, so that we may reach that port with
perfect gentleness and perfect peace. Here our own nature accords us a
great lesson in gentleness, for in such a death as this there is no suffering
or any harshness; but just as a ripe apple drops from its bough gently
and without violence, so without suffering our soul separates itself from
the body in which it has dwelled. Hence in his book On Youth and Old
Age Aristotle says that "death that takes place in old age is without
sadness."(160) And just as a man returning
from a long journey is met by the citizens of his city as he enters its
gates, so the noble soul is met, as it should be, by the citizens of the
eternal life. This they do by means of their good works and thoughts: for
having already surrendered itself to God and disengaged itself from worldly
matters and preoccupations, the soul seems to see those whom it believes
to be with God. Hear what Tully says, in the person of Cato the Elder:
"I seem to see already, and I lift myself with the greatest longing to
see your fathers, whom I loved, and not only them, but also those of whom
I have heard speak."(161) The noble soul,
then, surrenders itself to God in this age of life and awaits the end of
this life with great desire, and seems to be leaving an inn and returning
to its proper dwelling, seems to be coming back from a journey and returning
to the city, seems to be coming in from the sea and returning to port.
O you miserable and debased beings who speed into this port with sails
raised high! Where you should take your rest, you shipwreck yourselves
against the force of the wind and perish at the very place to which you
have so long been journeying! Certainly the knight Lancelot did not wish
to enter with his sails raised high, nor the most noble of our Italians,
Guido of Montefeltro.(162) These noble
men did indeed lower the sails of their worldly preoccupations and late
in life gave themselves to religious orders, forsaking all worldly delights
and affairs. No one can be excused because of the bond of marriage, which
may still bind him late in life; for not only those who conform to the
life and ways of St. Benedict, St. Augustine, St. Francis, and St. Dominic
dedicate themselves to living a religious life, but even those who are
married can dedicate themselves to living a life that is good and truly
religious, for it is in our hearts that God wishes us to be religious.
This is why St. Paul says to the Romans: "He is not a Jew who is one outwardly,
nor is that circumcision which is outwardly manifested in the flesh; but
he is a Jew who is one inwardly, and circumcision is that of the heart,
in spirit and not in the letter, whose praise comes not from men but from
God."(163)
The noble soul in this age of life blesses times past, and well may
it bless them, because by turning its memory to them it recalls its virtuous
actions, without which it could not come to port, to which it draws near,
with so much prosperity and so much gain. It acts like the good merchant
who, as he draws near to his port, examines his profits and says: "If I
had not made my journey along this road, I would not have this treasure,
nor would I have anything in which to take delight in my city, to which
I am drawing near"; and so he blesses the way he has taken. The great poet
Lucan, in the second book of his Pharsalia, shows us by way of an
allegory that these two things are appropriate to this age of life. There
he says that Marcia returned to Cato and begged and implored him to take
her back in her old age.(164) Here Marcia
signifies the noble soul. And we may translate the figure of the allegory
as follows. Marcia was a virgin, and in that state she signifies adolescence;
she later married Cato, and in that state she signifies maturity; then
she bore children, and they signify the virtues which are said above to
be fitting for those who are young; she then left Cato and married Hortensius,
signifying the departure from maturity and the onset of old age; she also
bore this man's children, who signify the virtues which are said above
to be fitting in old age. Hortensius died, by which is signified the end
of old age; and having become a widow--which widowhood signifies senility--Marcia
returned at the beginning of her widowhood to Cato, signifying that the
noble soul returns to God at the beginning of senility. What man on earth
was more worthy to signify God than Cato? Surely none.
What does Marcia say to Cato? "While there was blood in me," that is,
in maturity, "while I had the power to bear children," namely in old age,
which is truly the mother of the other virtues, as has been shown above,
"I," says Marcia, "carried out and accomplished all of your commands"--this
is to say that the soul remained committed to civic duties. She says: "I
took two husbands," that is, "I was fertile in two ages. Now that my womb
is worn-out and I have lost the capacity to bear children," says Marcia,
"I return to you, being unable to serve another spouse"; that is to say
that the noble soul, perceiving that it no longer has a womb for bearing
fruit (that is, when the soul's members feel that they have grown weak),
turns to God, who has no need of bodily members. And Marcia says: "Give
me the rights of our ancient marital chamber; give me only the name of
marriage." This is to say that the noble soul says to God: "My Lord, now
give me your peace; grant me at least that in the little of life that remains
to me I may be called yours." And Marcia says: "Two reasons move me to
say this: one is that after my death it may be said that I died as the
wife of Cato; the other, that after my death it may be said that you did
not spurn me, but through your good will you took my hand in marriage."
The noble soul is moved by these two reasons, and it desires to depart
from this life as the spouse of God, and desires to show that its activity
has been pleasing to God. O you unhappy and misbegotten beings who wish
to depart from this life under the name of Hortensius rather than that
of Cato! It is good to bring to a close what I have had to say about the
signs of nobility with the name of this man, because in him nobility displays
them all in every age of life.
Chapter 29
Now that the text has shown the signs which appear in every age of life
in the noble man, by which he may be recognized and without which he could
not exist, any more than the Sun without light or fire without heat, the
text, at the end of what is said about nobility, cries out to all and says:
"O you who have listened to me, see how many there are who are deceived!":
that is, those who believe themselves noble because they are of famous
and ancient lineage and are descended from excellent fathers, although
they have no nobility in themselves.
Here two questions arise which it is good to consider at the end of
the present book. Manfred da Vico, who now calls himself Pretor and Prefect,
might say: "Whatever I may be, I recall to mind and represent my ancestors,
who on the basis of their nobility earned the office of Prefect, merited
their participation in the coronation of the Emperor, and deserved to receive
the rose from the Roman Pastor: to me are due the honor and the reverence
of the people." This is the first question. The second is that one of the
family of San Nazzaro of Pavia, or one of the Piscitelli of Naples might
say: "If nobility is such as has been said, namely, a divine seed graciously
planted in the human soul, and if the lineage or race has no soul, as is
evident, no lineage or race could be called noble; and this is contrary
to the opinion held by those who say that our lineage is the most noble
to be found their cities."
To the first question Juvenal replies in his eighth satire, where he
begins as if exclaiming: "Of what benefit are these honors which derive
from men of earlier times if he who would clothe himself with them lives
an evil life, if he who speaks of his ancestors and describes their great
and wondrous deeds dedicates himself to wretched and base acts?" "Will
he," says this same satirist, "become noble because of his family, who
is not worthy of that family? This is but to call a dwarf a giant."(165)
Then afterwards he says to a man of this sort: "Between you and the statue
erected in memory of your ancestor there is no difference except that his
head is made of marble and yours is alive." Here, with all due respect,
I disagree with this poet, for a statue of marble, wood, or metal left
as a memorial to some worthy man differs greatly in effect from his worthless
descendants. This is because a statue always confirms the good opinion
of those who have heard tell of the great renown of him whose statue it
is, and engenders it in others. A worthless son or grandson does quite
the reverse, for he weakens the good opinion of those who have heard his
ancestors well spoken of; for one of his thoughts will be: "It is not possible
for the renown of his ancestors to be as great as it is said to be, since
from their seed we see spring such a plant." Consequently he who bears
false witness against the good should receive not honor but dishonor. For
this reason Tully says that "the son of a worthy man must strive to speak
well of his father."(166) Therefore, in
my judgment, just as he who defames a worthy man deserves to be shunned
and ignored by everyone, so a worthless man descended from good ancestors
deserves to be cast out by all, and a good man should close his eyes so
as to avoid witnessing the disgrace perpetrated on goodness, of which the
memory alone remains. This should suffice for the present concerning the
first question that was raised.
To the second question we may reply that lineage has no soul in and
of itself, and yet it is quite true that it is called noble and in a certain
way is noble. It should be observed here that every whole is composed of
its parts. There are some wholes which possess together with their parts
a single essence, as a single man comprises a single essence in common
with all his parts; what is said to exist in a part is said to exist in
the same way in the whole. There are other wholes which do not have their
essence in common with their parts, for example a heap of grain; this kind
of essence is secondary, resulting from the many grains which have a true
and primary essence in themselves. In a whole such as this the qualities
of the parts are said to exist in this way, secondarily, as does its essence;
and so a heap is called white because the grains that comprise it are white.
This whiteness, however, resides first in the grains and secondarily as
a result in the heap as a whole, and so in a secondary sense it may be
called white. In the same way a race or a lineage may be called noble.
Hence it should be observed that just as the white grains must be predominant
in order for a heap to be white, so in order for a lineage to be noble
those who are noble must be predominant in it (I say "predominant" meaning
greater in number), so that their goodness by its renown may obscure and
conceal the presence of the contrary among them. Just as in a white heap
of grain the wheat grain could be removed grain by grain and each grain
replaced by red millet until the color of the whole heap had changed, so
in a noble lineage the good might die off one by one, and the bad be born
into it in sufficient number to bring about a change in its name, so that
it would deserve to be called not noble but base. This should suffice in
reply to the second question.
Chapter 30
As has been shown above in the third chapter of this book, this canzone
has three principal divisions. Therefore, since two of them have been discussed
(the first beginning with the previously mentioned chapter, and the second
with the sixteenth, so that the first is completed in thirteen chapters
and the second in fourteen, not counting the two chapters that comprise
the preface to the book on the canzone), we must briefly discuss, in this
thirtieth and final chapter, the third principal division, which was composed
as a tornata to this canzone by way of adornment and which begins
My song Against-the-erring-ones, go forth. Here it should first
be observed that every good craftsman at the end of his work should ennoble
and embellish it as much as he can, so that it may become more praiseworthy
and more precious when it has left his hands. This I intend to do in this
part, not that I am a good craftsman, but because I follow his example.
I say then: My song Against-the-erring-ones, go forth. Against-the-erring-ones
is a single word, and is the title of this canzone, after the example of
our good brother Thomas Aquinas, who gave the title Against the Gentiles
to a book of his which he wrote to confound all those who stray from our
Faith.(167) I say, then, "go forth" as
if to say: "You are now perfect, and it is no longer time to stand still
but to go forth, for your undertaking is great." And when you come To
where our lady is, tell her your purpose. Here it should be noted that,
as our Lord has said, one should do not cast pearls before swine, for it
does them no good and brings harm to the pearls; and as the poet Aesop
says in his first fable, a grain is worth more than a pearl to a cock,
and he therefore leaves the one and takes the other.(168)
Considering this, as a precaution I direct my canzone to reveal its purpose
where this lady, namely Philosophy, is to be found. This most noble lady
shall then be found when her dwelling-place is found, that is, the soul
in which she dwells. And Philosophy does not dwell in the wise alone, but
also, as has been above proved in another book, wherever the love of her
dwells. To each of these I tell it to disclose its purpose, so that her
meaning will prove useful to them, and be received by them.
I say to my canzone: Tell this lady, "I speak about a friend of yours."
Truly nobility is her friend, for one loves the other so much that nobility
endlessly calls upon her, and Philosophy never turns her most pleasing
gaze on any other. O how great and how beautiful an adornment is this which
is given to her in the closing verses of this canzone, where she is called
the friend of her whose perfection dwells in the most secret recess of
the divine mind!
1. Pythagoras Attributed
to Pythagoras by Cicero in De officiis I, 17, 56.
2. the Greek proverb
Dante's source is again Cicero, De officiis I, 16, 51.
3. this lady who was mentioned above in the true
explanation Philosophy, as described in the
allegorical exposition of the preceding book.
4. not . . . skip over with dry foot
The metaphor translates roughly into our expression "need to get one's
feet wet." In other words, further discussion, is required.
5. Time Physics
IV, 1. The "number of motion" is the movement of the Primum Mobile, the
highest of the physical spheres.
6. Solomon Ecclesiastes
3:7 and 20:6-7.
7. St. James the Apostle
James 5:7.
8. the last of the Roman emperors
Frederick II of Swabia (1194-1250), the "last" of the Holy Roman Emperors
because the others in Dante's list, while elected, were never crowned.
9. the Philosopher's belief
Aristotle's opinion may be found in St. Thomas' Commentary on the Ethics
VII, 13, 1509.
10. man is by nature a social animal
Aristotle, Politics I, 2.
11. should be a Monarchy
The concept of monarchy as the ideal form of government will be more fully
developed in the Latin treatise Monarchia (1312), where Dante will
reiterate the notion that the monarchy, being exempt from greed by virtue
of its possessing universal jurisdiction on earth, is founded on absolute
justice.
12. Vergil concurs in this
Aeneid I, 278.
13. the words of Solomon
Proverbs 8:6.
14. the Son of God should descend to earth
Dante will treat the theology of the redemption more fully in Paradiso
VII.
15. it is written in Isaiah
Isaiah 11:1.
16. as Luke the Evangelist testifies
Luke 2:1 ff.
17. the emperor cited above
Augustus, the first Roman emperor.
18. O most hallowed breast of Cato
Cato of Utica (95-46 B.C) has a special place in Dante's imagination. He
is the guardian of Purgatory and the symbol of human freedom, a pagan endowed
with a "santo petto" [holy breast] (Purg. I, 80). In the Monarchia,
Dante speaks of "the unspeakable sacrifice of Marcus Cato, the strictest
champion of true liberty" (II, 5), words that identify him as a type of
Christ.
19. its first form
According to Uguccione, from whom Dante takes this fanciful etymology,
the Latin verb aueio, or avieo, means "to tie," as does the
other form, vieo (from viere). The verbs do not in fact exist.
For Uguccione (died 1210), see the note below.
20. the figure of a tie
The image Dante is trying to convey is of a hand-drawn line that encircles
these letters in their alphabetical order. The "arte musaica" symbolized
by this image is the art of the Muses, or poetry (and not of music, as
Wicksteed, for example, mistranslates the phrase).
21. as Uguccione attests
The Latin title of this work is Liber de derivationibus verborum,
also known simply as Derivationes.
22. That man is Aristotle
Throughout the Convivio it will be quite evident to the reader that
Aristotle Dante's guide in this world, "the master and leader of human
reason" for all men. This is a role that Dante will give to Vergil in the
Divine Comedy, a change which derives from Dante's increased emphasis,
in part, on the role of the poet, as opposed to philosopher, as moral guide.
23. Zeno Placed among
the pagan philosophers in Limbo (Inf. IV, 138), Zeno of Cithium
was the leader of the Stoics.
24. as Tully seems to relate
Cicero, De finibus I, 9-11.
25. no affirmative statements
Socrates' philosophy, that is, was essentially based on negatives or unresolved
dialectic.
26. in the book of Wisdom
Wisdom 6:23.
27. the words of Ecclesiastes
Ecclesiastes 10:16 and 17.
28. Charles and Frederick
Charles II, the Cripple, King of Naples (1248-1309), and Frederick II of
Aragon, King of Sicily (1296-1337), both referred to in Paradiso
XIX, 127 and 130-135.
29. Solomon Proverbs
22:28 and 4:18.
30. As Aristotle says
On the Soul II, 4, 7 and I, 18, 2.
31. "He who lacks instruction dies . . ."
Proverbs 5:23.
32. the powers of the soul stand one above another
Each succeeding geometric figure contains the previous one, i.e., the triangle's
three sides are contained within the quadrangle which has four sides. The
reference is to On the Soul II, 3, 5.
33. the Philosopher states
Ethics I, 8, and passim.
34. "If we have two friends . . ."
Ethics I, 4.
35. there are activities
There are the speculative uses of the mind, for example, mathematics, in
which man discovers truths but does not create them. A second category
involves the use of logic, which is creative, as in the example of the
art of speech. Finally, there is the use of the practical intellect applied
to external objects, for example, the art of sculpture, which Dante, following
St. Thomas' schema, calls the "mechanical arts."
36. as an act of the will
This is the fourth of the activities, and the one that involves the moral
use of reason.
37. "Written Law . . ."
The Corpus iuris (mentioned in I, 10 above). The source for the
passage in Augustine has not been discovered. The second is taken from
the Digestum vetus de Iustitia et Iure, tit. I.
38. in the saddle of the human will
Dante will elaborate this equestrian image in his famous diatribe against
a meretricious and wayward Italy in Purg. VI, where the saddle is
empty ("la sella è vòta" [89]).
39. "When one thing is produced . . ."
Metaphysics VII, 8.
40. "Without a fight the laws . . ."
Lucan, Pharsalia III, 118.
41. bushel of Santelenas
Coins bearing the effigy of Sant'Elena, the mother of Constantine, made
in Byzantium, but a popular term for any ancient coin.
42. Aristotle remarked
Physics II, 8, probably cited from St. Thomas' commentary on that
text.
43. the Provençal
This is believed to be either Cadenet or possibly Giraut de Borneil.
44. Our Lord called them unrighteous
Luke 16:9, in the Douay Version, reads: "Make unto you friends of the mammon
of iniquity." The King James supplies "the mammon of unrighteousness."
45. Who does not still keep a place in his heart
Alexander the Great is the only one of the seven examples of liberality
from ancient history. Toynbee has identified the King of Castile as Alfonso
VIII (1155-1214), son-in-law of Henry II of England; the Count of Toulouse
as Raymond V (1134-1194); and the Marquis of Monferrato as Boniface II
(1192-1207). Saladin (1137-1193), well known throughout the Middle Ages
for his generosity, appears among the virtuous pagans in Dante's Limbo
(Inf. IV). Dante places Bertran de Born (1140-1215) among the Schismatics
in Inf. XXVIII. Galeazzo of Montefeltro (d. 1300) was the head of
a Ghibelline faction and cousin to Guido da Montefeltro who appears in
Inf. XXVII.
46. by subverting what they promise
The sense is that riches, by their appearance, offer the promise of satisfaction
and thereby diminish the strength of the desire for riches. But once they
are possessed, they take away the promise of satisfaction which first appeared,
and create anew a desire for their possession.
47. "Alas! who was it . . ."
De consolatione philosophiae, II, meter 5, verse 27.
48. "Never have I ever considered . . ."
On Paradox I.
49. "Even if the goddess of wealth . . ."
The Consolation of Philosophy, II, meter 2, verses 1-8.
50. "If I had one foot in the grave . . ."
This saying is not found in Seneca.
51. by refuting the consequence
I follow the edition of Busnelli-Vandelli, which gives the reading "distruzione"
(also accepted by Vasoli in the Ricciardi edition); the Simonelli text
reads "distinzione." Both are technical terms in Scholastic logic.
52. "Let us make man in our own image and likeness."
Genesis 1:26.
53. just as the pilgrim
See Paul, 2 Corinthians 5:6. The medieval topos of the pilgrim on the road
of life will reappear, of course, in the opening verse of the Divine
Comedy. Chaucer employs the topos as well in his Canterbury Tales,
and it should be noted parenthetically that his discussion of gentilesse
in the Wife of Bath's Tale owes much to Dante's definition of nobility
in Convivio IV.
54. in the third book
See above III, 15, 8-10.
55. The Commentator
Averroes (1126-1198), whom Dante refers to in Inf. IV, 144 similarly
as the one "che 'l gran comento feo" [made the great commentary].
56. Therefore Aristotle
Dante derives the citation not from Aristotle directly, who does not mention
Simonides in the passage indicated, but from St. Thomas' Summa contra
Gentiles I, 5.
57. "the trained student . . ."
Ethics I, 2.
58. And therefore Paul says
Romans 12:3.
59. whether in general or in particular
That is, knowledge in general or with respect to specific fields or disciplines
of knowledge.
60. Therefore the Sage says
Boethius, Consolation of Philosophy II, prose 5.
61. Lucan Pharsalia
V, 527-31.
62. "Truly avarice makes men hateful."
Perhaps suggested from passages in II, prose 5.
63. at the end of this section
That is, loss of wealth does not cause the mind to lose its nature. Dante
here concludes his gloss of the third stanza of the canzone.
64. Suppose that Gherardo da Cammino
Gherardo's death in March, 1306, is almost certain evidence that Dante
could not have composed this part and the rest of the Convivio before
this date.
65. Dardanus According
to myth, Dardanus was the son of Jove and Electra, and ancestor of the
Trojans. Laomedon, his descendant, was the father of Priam.
66. according to the Philosopher
See St. Thomas' commentary on Politics II, 12.
67. Plato believes
See St. Thomas, Commentary to the Metaphysics I, 14, 209 and 214.
68. Solomon Ecclesiastes
3:21.
69. the creation of the world
Metamorphoses I, 78 ff.
70. in the third book of On the Soul
This reference probably derives from St. Thomas' Commentary on the Ethics
VI, 5, 1179, and not directly from De anima.
71. "Many are so presumptuous of intellect .
. ." Summa contra Gentiles I, 5.
72. Solomon Proverbs
29:20.
73. Aristotle Nicomachean
Ethics I, 3.
74. in the first book of the Physics
St. Thomas' Commentary to the Physics I, 2.
75. Infortiatum This
is the second part of the Corpus iuris civilis, by Justinian.
76. "The King shall rejoice . . ."
Psalms 63:11 (King James).
77. "Love the light of wisdom . . ."
Wisdom 6:23.
78. Solomon Ecclesiastes
10:16-17.
79. as the Philosopher teaches us
Ethics I, 2.
80. Asdente the cobbler of Parma
An illiterate known for making predictions, he is placed among the soothsayers
in Hell (see Inf. XX, 118-120). Albuino was brother to Can Grande
della Scala, Dante's patron, and ruled Verona from 1304-1311. The poet
pays tribute to Guido da Castello as "the candid Lombard" in Purg.
XVI, 124-126.
81. the Philosopher
Physics VII, 6.
82. Christ's words
Matthew 7:15-16.
83. the eleven virtues
See the Ethics II, 7.
84. The fifth is Magnanimity
Magnanimity means nobleness of mind, awareness of greatness or superiority
over others in a person who is truly superior to others. It does not include
the modern sense of being magnanimous with gifts or praise.
85. where he defines Happiness
Dante is again referring to St. Thomas, Commentary to the Ethics
I, 10, 128-130.
86. Christ affirms
Luke 10:41-42.
87. "why not proceed first . . ."
The reasoning is based on the understanding that the intellectual virtues
regulate the contemplative life, the moral virtues the active life.
88. we proceed by inference based on probability
This type of argument, which is not demonstrative but inductive, proceeds
by syllogistic reasoning in which one of the premisses is probable in nature.
89. possessed primarily and essentially
Dante means by these terms that aspect or quality which is inherent in
a thing as part of its prime essence, as opposed to one which is the result
of incidental circumstances (the Scholastic concept of accident).
90. by an agreeable and fitting induction
In other words, it is more reasonable to consider nobility to be the source
of goodness and the various classes of virtues (e.g., the intellectual,
the moral, etc.) than to consider these virtues and goodness as the source
of nobility, since they are many and diverse, while nobility is one. By
induction, Dante means syllogistic reasoning, as can be deduced from the
example he gives in this sentence. I follow the Busnelli-Vandelli text
in this passage.
91. Thus nobility
Rather than both nobility and virtue to a third thing in man, by implication.
92. The Psalmist had in mind
Psalm 8:1, 8:4-6 (King James version).
93. as the Philosopher maintains
Ethics IV, 9. The term studiosi signifies virtuosi,
as is apparent from St. Thomas' commentary on the text.
94. no choice of persons
Romans 2:11; Galatians 2:6, and elsewhere (King James version). The biblical
phrase is "no respect of persons."
95. Aristotle Ethics
VII, 1, with reference to the Iliad, Book XXIV.
96. "Every good gift . . ."
James 1:17.
97. in the second book of On the Soul
De anima II, 2.
98. the noble Guido Guinizelli
Born in Bologna, Guinizelli developed the dolce stil novo and became
the inspiration for Dante's poetic style. He is venerated in Purg.
XXVI, 92 as "il padre mio." Dante echoes the famous line cited here in
the Vita Nuova, XX, in the sonnet "Amor e 'l cor gentil sono una
cosa" [Love and the gentle heart are a single thing].
99. defect of age
It is not entirely clear what Dante means by this phrase, which has been
taken diversely to refer to the lack of perfection in a fetus before it
is born, to those who are young, as well as to those who are old and in
some way incapacitated. In any case, the souls of these individuals do
not reflect God's divine light.
100. all four causes
Aristotle's discussion of these causes is found in Metaphysics I.3.
The efficient cause is the agent that brings about change; the final cause
is the end for which a change is made; the material cause is that thing
in which a change is made; and the formal cause is that which something
is changed into.
101. supreme spiritual virtue
God, who is present in all virtues.
102. between their matter and their form
Dante, in paraphrasing Pythagoras' theory, means that all of these beings
are equally noble with respect to their form; but with respect to their
material or matter, they are noble in different degrees.
103. combined elements, namely temperament
Earth, water, fire, and air, combined in different measure in different
individuals, produce one of the four traditional characteristic temperaments
or dispositions: the choleric, the phlegmatic, the sanguine, and the melancholic.
104. celestial virtue
This is the divine power which actualizes the potentiality for life within
the seed, thereby bringing to life the vegetative and sensitive souls.
105. the possible intellect
This is the rational, or intellectual, power of the soul, which possesses
the capacity of understanding all truths as they are conveyed by the universal
forms. The intellectual soul possesses this capacity "in potentiality,"
that is, as a power that can be realized or actualized when universal forms
are perceived.
106. the words of the Apostle
Paul, Romans 11:33.
107. the opinion of Tully
Cicero, De senectute XXI, 77.
108. in the book On Causes
Aristotle, De causis III, 27-33.
109. These gifts . . . are seven in number
Isaiah 11:2.
110. the appetite of the mind
The intellect and the will.
111. he who does not see the mark
Aristotle, Ethics I, 1, and Cicero De finibus V, 6, 15.
112. as the Apostle says
Paul, I Corinthians 9:24.
113. the use of our mind is twofold
Dante returns to the discussion of the active and contemplative lives,
which were treated in Chapter 17 above.
114. the Gospel of St. Mark
Mark 16:1 ff.
115. "The angel of God . . ."
Matthew 28:2-3.
116. Galilee means the same as whiteness
Isidore of Seville, Etymologiae XIV, 3, 23, derives the word Galilee
from the Greek word for milk (gala), a derivation to which Dante
had access through Uguccione da Pisa, who carries over Isidore's etymology
verbatim in his Derivationes.
117. the four ages
Dante derives the division of life into four ages from Albert the Great,
De aetate sive de iuventute et senectute I, 2.
118. the likeness of this arc
The flow of this passage is made somewhat problematic by numerous textual
uncertainties, but its general meaning is clear, as is the ruling image
of life as bearing similarity to an arc, or portion of a circle, rather
than to a circle, which, being a perfect form, represents a perfection
to which human life cannot attain. All living things are conceived and
born under the influence of the revolving spheres, during which time a
sphere completes only a portion of its full revolution about the earth.
This portion, or segment of a circle, is conceived by Dante as an arc whose
beginning point initiates a curved line that first rises and then, after
cresting, falls. Human life imitates this movement of ascent and descent,
that is, of growth and decline, in the four ages described below.
119. and of better or worse quality
I follow the Busnelli-Vandelli text here, as does Chiappelli-Fenzi. Simonelli
deletes the phrase "or worse," arguing that it is unnecessary to the sense.
120. "You have set a boundary . . ."
Psalm 104:9 (King James).
121. as Albert states
Dante's passage appears to derive very little from the fourth book of Albert
the Great's De meteoris to which he refers here. The passage, in
fact, is taken in its entirety from another work by Albert, his De aetate
sive iuventute et senectute, mentioned above.
122. (omitting sext, midway between . . .)
The "obvious reason" why Dante omits the sext, which corresponds to noon,
may be that the middle of the day is evident to all by the position of
the sun, whereas all the other temporal hours are not so evident because
they vary, are "long or short," according to the time of the year. See
Dante's previous discussion regarding temporal hours, Conv. III,
6, 3. In the canonical hours, tierce corresponds roughly to 9 a.m., sext
to noon, nones to 3 p.m., and vespers to 6 p.m.
123. four horses
Metamorphoses II, 153 ff.
124. the office of the first part of the day
The office of tierce is said toward the end of tierce, that is, just before
the beginning of sext which runs from 9 a.m. to noon, whereas the offices
for the third and fourth periods, nones and vespers, are said toward the
beginning of those periods. In other words, the offices are said at the
hours which incline toward noon, the most noble part of the day.
125. And for this reason mid-tierce
Mid-tierce (7:30 a.m.) is said before the bell is rung for tierce, which
occurs toward the end of tierce; mid-nones (1:30 p.m.) and mid-vespers
(4:30 p.m.) are said after the bell is rung for those hours, since it is
rung toward the beginning of those hours (noon and 3:00 p.m. respectively).
Proper nones signifies the very beginning of nones, which is noon, the
beginning of the seventh hour of the day, as Dante stresses in the next
sentence.
126. but nearly eight months later
Simonelli's text reads "months" (mesi), which I follow here (as
does the most recent Chiappelli-Fenzi). The Busnelli-Vandelli reads "years"
(anni). The case for mesi was sustained by Moore (Studies,
IV, 110) who notes its appearance in twenty-two manuscripts, as opposed
to only five with anni, and by Pézard (Dante, Oeuvres
complètes, p. 250). The conceptual argument turns on the meaning
of Dante's phrase "the beginning of life." Busnelli-Vandelli take it to
mean, literally, the moment of birth. Moore and Simonelli take it to refer
to the moment of conception, occurring eight months before parturition.
For Simonelli the phrase "taking it [i.e., life] in the way that has been
stated" refers the reader back to Chapter 21, 4-5, where Dante discusses
the process of the conception of a fetus. But while Dante does delineate
the soul's acquisition of its various powers, he does not state clearly
that life is conceived to begin at this point. The phrase might logically
refer back to the opening of this chapter where he defines adolescence
as the "increase of life." Nevertheless the logic of the Busnelli-Vandelli
is not compelling, since it leaves eight years of life unaccounted for
by name, which, given Dante's Scholastic love of completeness ("natura
abhorret vaccuum"), is an improbability.
127. as Tully affirms
Cicero, De senectute V, 13.
128. longer or shorter
The various ages of each individual man, that is, will vary according to
the full term of his life. The age of maturity in someone who dies at a
younger age, for example, would therefore be shorter than the age specified
in the ideal paradigm, whereas in someone who lives longer each of the
four ages would extend, in each age, for a longer period of time.
129. about which I am presently writing
The seventh stanza of the canzone is referred to.
130. its ultimate fruit
The fruit is, as Dante has previously explained, happiness.
131. Tully De
senectute IV, 5.
132. Leaving aside
The references are to the allegorical interpretation of the Aeneid
of Fulgentius, Egidius Colonna's De regimine principum I, 4, 1 ff,
and Cicero's De officiis I, 34, 122.
133. as the text says
Again, of the seventh stanza of the canzone.
134. the meandering forest of this life
The metaphor of the forest as life and the path that leads to goodness
will return, of course, in the first terza rima of the Divine
Comedy.
135. "Hear, my son . . ."
A somewhat free adaptation of Proverbs 1:8-15.
136. Solomon Proverbs
15:31 and 13:18.
137. the Apostle
Paul, Colossians 3:20.
138. as Aristotle asserts
Ethics VIII, 1.
139. Solomon says
Proverbs 3:34.
140. Statius Thebaid
I, 395 ff. and 482 ff.
141. the above mentioned poet
Statius, Thebaid I, 527 ff.
142. as Tully says
Cicero, On Offices I, 35, 127.
143. in the same passage
Thebaid I, 671 ff.
144. the foresight of universal Nature
That is, God.
145. irascible or concupiscible
Scholastic philosophy divided all passions, or desires, into one of two
opposing categories. The concupiscible appetite, which is not to be identified
solely with the desire for sexual gratification, seeks to acquire or merge
itself with some object of desire. The irascible appetite, which likewise
is not to be thought of as relating to anger or wrath, seeks to avoid contact
or propinquity with an object that repels the soul. Neither of these two
kinds of appetites--and two is all that there are--should be thought of
as pertaining to specific sins, for the appetite is in itself neither good
nor evil. Good and evil are determined by action consequent to the enactment
of the will in conjunction with the particular appetites. The image of
the horseman appears repeatedly in Dante's works: see Purg. XVIII,
95-96; Monarchia III, 16.
146. the games in Sicily
Aeneid V, 70 and 304 ff.
147. as was their custom
Aeneid VI, 166 ff.
148. as Tully says
Cicero, De senectute X, 33.
149. as Aristotle says
Dante takes this concept from St. Thomas' Commentary on the Ethics
I, 9, 112, where he says: "Homo naturaliter est animal civile."
150. as the Philosopher says
Ethics VI, 13.
151. the gift which Solomon asked
1 Kings 3:9.
152. "Freely have you received . . ."
Matthew 10:8.
153. the council of rulers
"Senate" is derived from senes, "old men," and is referred to by
Cicero in De senectute VI, 19.
154. if we but carefully consider
Ethics IV, 2; De officiis I, 14, 42.
155. Tully De
officiis I, 14, 42 ff.
156. Consequently Tully
De senectute XIV, 46.
157. his people were restored
Ovid, Metamorphoses VII, 523-660, tells the story of how Aeacus
appealed to Jupiter to provide restitution for his lost people and was
granted his wish when Jupiter created a new race of people by turning ants
into men.
158. Aeacus was generous
Metamorphoses VII, 507-511. Dante's rendering of this passage does
not square well with the original text in several places, possibly because
the manuscript he was working from contained different readings, as Moore
surmises (Studies in Dante, First Series [Oxford, 1896], p. 219).
159. just as Ovid sets it down
That is, without any further commentary.
160. Aristotle says
On Youth and Old Age, 17, 479a, 20-23.
161. Tully De
senectute XXIII, 83. The full title of the book is Cato Maior de
senectute.
162. the most noble of the Italians
Guido da Montefeltro will later find himself placed among the fraudulent
counselors in the eighth bolgia of the eighth circle of Hell (Inf.
XXVII). Lancelot is consigned to the Lustful in the first circle (Inf.
V).
163. St. Paul says
Romans 2:28-29.
164. Marcia returned to Cato
Pharsalia II, 326 ff.
165. call a dwarf a giant
Juvenal, Satires VIII, 1-5, 9-12, 19-20, 30-32, 51-55.
166. For this reason Tully says
The source of this aphorism, which does not appear in any of Cicero's works,
is uncertain.
167. Thomas Aquinas
This is the short title for his Summa de veritate catholicae fidei contra
Gentiles.
168. as our Lord has said
Matthew 7:6.