Follow your bliss!

16 February 2006

Some days it is all about the numbers

4 basic impulses of man

to feed
to flee
to fornicate
to fight

The 4 humors [click on special terms on the left side of the page, then choose humors from the list] or food and the humors

black bile (melancholic)
yellow bile (choleric)
phlegm (phlegmatic)
blood (sanguine)

Dante's Divine Comedy is written in three parts:

Inferno
Purgatorio
Paradiso

and he places the 7 capital (deadly sins) each on their own level of Hell:

Pride
Avarice
Envy
Wrath
Lust
Gluttony
Sloth

For the complete texts of Dante's original Italian and the translations of Longfellow and Mandelbaum, arranged for comparison, you can go here.

Dante also considered each of the sins as offenses against love (take a moment to think that through, if you actually let your mind work on that idea for a while you can understand what he means by that, even if you have never read any of the Divine Comedy. Dante groups the sins accordingly:

Perverted Love: Pride, Envy, Wrath
Insufficient Love: Sloth
Excessive Love of Earthly Goods: Avarice, Gluttony, Lust

I may be off on a tangent at the moment...but I'm not sure this post was ever a coherent thought in my mind, that is I am not sure it ever had a theme to follow, so I will just go where my thoughts are taking me. I read an article by Don W. King, written about the Chronicles of Narnia by C.S. Lewis. The article noted a correlation between the seven deadly sins and the overall themes of each book in the Chronicles of Narnia.

Book 1: The Magician's Nephew [wrath]
Book 2: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe [gluttony]
Book 3: The Horse and His Boy [pride]
Book 4: Prince Caspian [lust] (note that Lewis refers not to the more modern sense of this sin as sexual, but more to a lust for all things in general)
Book 5: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader [avarice]
Book 6: The Silver Chair [sloth]
Book 7: The Last Battle [envy]

For those of you who may not have read the series I do not want to be the one with all the spoilers. Though I will say that though this is a wonderful fantasy series, and I do remember reading it as such as a child...I found it much more interesting reading it as an adult (which I did for an undergrad course). At the point I was aware that C.S. Lewis, who had abandoned his faith (Christianity) at a young age (in his teens I believe), returned to Christianity in his 30's . (I think, pulling this from my mind for the most part...and though I am obviously sitting at a computer with an internet connection...I do not feel like looking any of this up...if you happen to look it up and I am wrong, feel welcome to let me know).

As another link to the deadly sins as well as the Divine Comedy, pay special attention to what happens near the end of the series...you'll notice that Dante was not the only one to use the ideas of levels of existence. I found Lewis' writing in this part of the book of enough interest to use it as a basis for a short story I wrote.

I feel that after that digression, I must add one more list and then I will be done (for now at least).

Douglas Adams' Hitchhiker's Trilogy:

Book 1 - The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
Book 2 - The Restaurant at the End of the Universe
Book 3 - Life, the Universe and Everything
Book 4 - So Long, and Thanks for All the Fish
Book 5 - Mostly Harmless

Ah yes, the five-part trilogy. I miss reading new works by this man.

Alas, Douglas died unexpectedly in May 2001 of a sudden heart attack.
He will be missed. He was an amazing writer and from what I have read, he was a fairly decent human being as well, which is not always an easy thing to be these days.

And so we go from the basic impulses of man to the death of one. Not sure what deeper meaning applies here. I am however, amazed at where my mind takes me when I allow it time to roam and play. I should let it out more often...though I have to be careful that is doesn't get too rambunctious.

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