Chapter One
Introduction
This book is grounded in two assertions regarded as axioms: that every important work of literature is centrally concerned with teaching human beings how to live; and that every such work is carefully structured.
Each of the works discussed in the book presumes that an immutable code of conduct exists, imposed upon human beings by transcendence; that human behavior must conform strictly to the code; and that the consequences of conforming to it, or of failing to do so, are unavoidable.
In every case, the immutable code is Christianity.
Because the God of Christianity is beyond comprehension full of love, and as He has sacrificed, in His incarnation, His very self for human beings, the essential mandate of Christian life is to draw as close as possible to Him, in one of two ways, or by an amalgam of both: by clinging to Him, passionately, intuitively, in response to a salvational impulse venerated by the Christian Bible; or by fidelity to the golden mean, appropriated from Aristotle by Thomistic ethics.
In the works discussed (in chronological order), the force that obstructs intimacy with God is evil, in the universe itself, and in human beings. In neither habitation can it be subdued without the assistance of God. In the universe it will be subdued by Him when time ceases to exist. In human beings it will be subdued by His Grace in time in measure as they govern an inborn, perverse and ineradicable attraction to chaos and self-destruction over which reason has no command, and against which, in the absence of His Grace, they are powerless against evil.
To the extent that human beings contend against evil, within themselves and in the universe, cultivating reason, sacred intuition, or both, and incline towards good, they are commended in the works discussed, and in consequence rewarded. To the extent that they do not contend against evil, or actively embrace it, they are censured, and in consequence punished. Those who contend in an especially impressive fashion are heroes; those adamantly devoted to evil are villains. The sole measure of all of the characters, human and metaphysical, in the works discussed is the relation of their actions and thoughts to good and evil.
Because, for the reason noted, the God of the Christian Bible encourages emulation, and because emulation requires that the balance of good and evil in the soul be improved, in all of the works discussed at least one character strives, or is exhorted to strive, for such improvement; that is to say, for spiritual growth.
The struggle between good and evil is rendered in the works discussed in coherent structures. Each work is divided into a number of clearly defined parts. Each part is divided into clearly defined sections. Each part, and each section of each part, performs a clearly defined function. No part or section can be repositioned without detriment to the total structure, and nothing can be removed from, or added to, the structure without detriment.
In every case, the work discussed is thus an artifact constructed of the appropriate number of parts, each part in working order, and positioned with intelligent intent, the total structure crafted to perform a specific task: to teach human beings how to live as Christians.
Because the God of the Christian Bible is incomprehensibly filled with compassion and with love, as solicitous of human beings as the most tender-hearted shepherd is of his flock, prepared to suffer without complaint even ignominy and death on their behalf, He solicits from them the fear and awe that surpassing virtue warrants. They must fear him. But they must also love him. And through fear at least, but through love if possible, they must aspire to shape their lives in conformity with His will, and even, in their most exalted moments, with His consent and encouragement, easily gained, to encounter Him, through ecstatic vision, or directly. He welcomes human beings, and they must strive for completion only in Him.
In three of the works discussed, whether directly or indirectly God is present throughout. In the other two, evil predominates for a long time, because He enters to contend with it only gradually.
In the first of the three, Spenserâs The Faerie Queene, (Book One), He does not appear, and His emissaries are not celestial. Two of them, however, almost are, and the third is a paragon of human virtue. In Miltonâs Paradise Lost, He commissions celestial emissaries to instruct human beings. And in Dostoevskyâs Crime and Punishment, His work is done by an emissary almost celestial in nature.
In the first of the two, in Shakespeareâs Macbeth, an inexplicable satanic force itself impervious to defeat and intent on tormenting Macbeth, one of its devotees, for a long time almost completely unopposed wreaks havoc in him and in society. Then a Christian force is mustered against him, and destroys him (though not the satanic force). And in the second of the two, almost to the end of Hawthorneâs The Scarlet Letter Satan actively corrupts, without effective opposition, almost every human soul at risk. Then God himself intervenes to save two sinners from destruction, and an innocent child from a task that torments her.
In The Faerie Queene, (Book One), the God of the Christian Bible does not appear, nor is conversation with Him imaginable. Nonetheless, His presence is felt throughout, in three of His emissaries, two virtually celestial in character, the other His unwaveringly faithful servant. The essential task of human life is to serve Him by emulating the conduct of His emissaries, Una, Prince Arthur, and Coelia and her cohort in the House of Holiness. The obstacles to serving Him and the means of overcoming them are clearly defined, as are the consequences of spiritual success and failure. The emissaries are distinguished by faith in God, by a fervent wish to serve His cause, and by unremitting opposition to evil. The obstacles to emulating them are a metaphysical force of evil, and a tendency in the insufficiently tutored human soul to chaos. The metaphysical force is embodied in a variety of Satanâs minions, most potently in Archimago and Duessa. The impulse to chaos expresses itself as the preference of the untutored soul for passion over reason as the guide to conduct. The metaphysical force is vanquished as the soul is instructed in the primacy of reason, and in theological truth. The Red Cross Knight is instructed by Una, and by the inhabitants of the House of Holiness, punished while refusing instruction, or deficient as a student, with spiritual decline, and rewarded, when attentive and fully educated, with human felicity in a world in which God is not, except in rare cases, directly accessible to human beings, but which, through His emissaries, He governs and preserves.
Of Macbeth alone of the works discussed nothing salvational can be accomplished, because in Macbeth alone inexplicable evil is embodied in the witches, a metaphysical force that cannot be defeated, and in Macbeth, a human being. Therefore, the best that can be hoped for is the defeat of Macbeth. And both embodiments are especially terrifying because nothing is known about their motives: about why Macbeth is intent on murdering Duncan, or about why the witches are intent on tormenting him. Therefore the evil they occasion is horrific. And the Christian force that alone can defeat Macbeth is mustered only gradually; a force strong enough to destroy him.
Duncan murdered, only the need of a Christian force is broached; no such force is mustered. It coalesces, and attacks, only gradually, as the success of the witches at tormenting Macbeth goads him to a homicidal frenzy that Christianity must contend against.
The frenzy is provoked in Macbeth when he realizes that his insistence on having Banquo and Fleance murdered requires that, for the first time, he oppose his will to that of the witches; an action grossly stupid and inexorably fatal.
Fortunately, it provokes also the resolve in the Christian force, which consolidates its strength, encounters Macbeth, and kills him.
But it does not kill, or in any way punish, the witches. They simply disappear.
In the most explicitly metaphysical of the works discussed, Paradise Lost, the essential task of human life, to obey and to love the God of the Christian Bible, is made clear by His presence throughout, and by the angels He commissions to aid Adam and Eve: in turn, Gabriel to guard them while they sleep, unaware that a mortal enemy exists, Raphael to teach them everything they must know about that enemy to avoid Falling to him, and Michael to lead them, having Fallen, mournfully but with hope, from Paradise. Raphael, the most instructive of them, explains at exhaustive length, and in vivid detail, who Satan is, why he is intent upon destroying them, and the weapon with which he will assault them.
To arm them against the danger within themselves, he stresses emphatically that, if the tendency of the passionsâeven of a beautiful and alluring passionâto undermine their conduct is restrained, Satan cannot succeed against them. He assures them that their spiritual and intellectual resources are adequate to both dangers, and that in consequence they are free to choose between God and Satan. And he explains the consequencesârespectively, life and deathâof their choice. Thus, before they are decisively assaulted, they understand that, to remain indefinitely in the literal and spiritual paradise they inhabit, they have only to remain obedient to God, by remaining alert to their metaphysical enemy, and to the destructive potential of their own emotions. Nonetheless, they opt for disobedience, and suffer its consequences; but consequences mitigated by Godâs Grace, that responds to their contrition by preserving them from immediate death, and by promising them, and their progeny, on condition of continued obedience, sufficient happiness through human history, and, at its close, transfiguration.
Because no celestial emissaries, and only a child of limited power, exist in The Scarlet Letter to guide three sinners toward salvation, at a pivotal moment in their spiritual wanderings God Himself rescues two of them from Satan. (The third has committed irrevocably to serving him.) Often misperceived, even by Hester, as an imp of Satan, Pearl is throughout the voice of conscience, torturing her mother because she has sinned, forbidding both parents the destructive indulgence of deeper sin, and goading her father in particular towards virtue. Because her power, however, is limited, God himself completes her work. Against Hesterâs depraved conviction, nurtured from unendurable suspicion to confident conviction through seven years of solitude, suffering, and errant thought, that romantic love is more important than God, Pearl cannot effectively contend. Nor can she rescue Dimmesdale from his hypocrisy and cowardice, or Chillingworth, transmogrified from a kindly scholar to a minion of Satan obsessed with destroying the adulterer who has destroyed his life. Against such impulses only God can successfully contend. Therefore He intervenes, when Hester convinces Dimmesdale, in the forest, to abandon Him in favor of herself. At that pivotal moment, every concerned soul in the balance, He suddenly takes possession of Dimmesdale, through the gift of Grace infusing in him the strength to confess his sin in public, and thereby, the hold of evil broken, to rescue Hester from herself, to nullify Chillingworthâs satanic destructiveness, to loosen the hold of rage upon Pearl, and to die in felicity, reunited with the good.
In Crime and Punishment, God does not intervene directly. Instead, He acts through Sonia Marmeladov, a saintly Christian almost unbearably burdened by private suffering, and unsupported by direct metaphysical assistance, yet charged with the care of Rashkolnikov, a soul profoundly troubled, but stubbornly resolved not to abandon evil. Warped, and intent upon remaining warped, he murders two women for a reason that is only sporadically, almost grudgingly, explained. How he overcomes his own objections to committing the murders, how he the murders the two women, and how he escapes, though only barely, from the scene of the murders, are vividly dramatized. But of why he murdered only an unconvincing meditation on the unbearable oppression of poverty is presented. The murders done, he is attacked by a combination of conscience, self-disgust, terror at being apprehended for murder, and horror at an isolation he has never felt so crushing that he resolves either to confess or to commit suicide. His preference confession, on his way to a police station he does, in a manner of speaking, confess; but then, suddenly, he meets Sonia, and instantly concludes that spiritual union with herâof all peopleâwill afford him the strength to master the attack. And in that delusion he persists long enough for an investigation to unfold that all but establishes that he murdered the two women, andâfar more importantâfor Sonia to gain the access to his soul sufficient to shatter his resistance to taking up the Cross that alone can empower him to begin the long and painful salvational process he must endure.
Of conscience he feels very little until Sonia has shattered his resistance. But the pressure of the investigation is excruciating. And the pressure of Sonia drawing from Christianity, her impregnable fortress, the strength to save him from the Devil in himself, and despite its residual strength in him, eventually to embrace God, is decisive.
How the Devil worked in himâhow it convinced him to murder the two womenâwhat, that is to say, his motive wasâhe explains to Sonia when she has mastered him. And though the Devil rages in him for confessing, and long afterwards, and though therefore he loathes the Cross, he does bear it. And Sonia and the God of Christianity attend him.
To four of the five works thus far only briefly summarized, the idea of spiritual growth is central. The Red Cross Knight, weakened severely by his willful and dangerous abandonment of Una, must struggle, through reunion with her, to spiritual maturity. Because they disobeyed God, Adam and Eve must struggle to regain some measure of the spiritual harmony they enjoyed in Paradise. Dimmesdale must somehow find his way, despite Hester, to God, in the process depriving Hester of her heartâs deepest, but evil, desire. And Rashkolnikov must find his way to Sonia through the nihilism that defiles his soul.
Only to Macbeth is spiritual growth irrelevant, because only Macbeth, of the protagonists noted, is irredeemably of the satanic force.
In all of the works discussed the Christian mandate is embodied in coherent structures. The number of parts into which the structures are divided varies, as does the disposition, construction, and dramatic function of individual parts. And the parts are sub-divided variously into sections. But in every case, structure is crucial to the dramatization of moral value. In every case, that is to say, construction artfully mandates that human beings live as Christi...