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Fedeli D'amore
Fedeli D'amore
The Fedeli d'Amore (The Faithful of Love) were a group of poets practicing an erotic spirituality, which can be seen as an application of chivalric ideas (including courtly love) to the regeneration of society. Anderson [ADM 80] describes them as, "rare spirits who were struggling to devise a code of life that retained from chivalry the idea of nobility, while making it depend on personal virtue instead of inherited wealth and breeding, and that preserved spiritual aspirations not unlike those of some mendicants without demanding a life of withdrawal or celibacy." They "formed a closed brotherhood devoted to achieving a harmony between the sexual and emotional sides of their natures and their intellectual and mystical aspirations" [ADM 85]. The Fedeli were expected to write only about their own mystical experiences, so actual practice was mandatory, and they apparently had a system of degrees representing the levels of spiritual progress. Their system was based on psychological and spiritual doctrines, probably including a means of divine ascent through Love based on the six stages of St. Bonaventura (see Dantean Ascent), which correspond to Dante's six guides. Their practice also included training the imagination to hold the image of the Beloved in the form of one's Lady, since the pure light of the One would be too much to bear. Some of the group's doctrine was set forth by their leader, Guido Cavalcanti (1250-1300), in his long and elaborately structured poem Donna me prega ("A lady bids me..."). Ficino and other members of the Platonic Academy considered it to be "a supreme Neoplatonic statement of love" [ADM 83], although it is more Averroist-Aristotelian in content, and others have even called it a statement of Averroist doctrine in a secret language. On the other hand, Valli regarded Donna me prega as the manifesto of a secret group devoted to Sapientia (Wisdom). (Dante's perspective on Love was in fact more Platonic than Guido's.) Rossetti apparently originated the idea that the poetry of the Fedeli contains heresies, which were disguised to hide them from the Inquisition. Many terms can be interpreted in two or more ways, but it is not so clear whether this was deliberate secrecy or a symbolic language automatically understandable to initiates. Certainly secrecy is advocated in the works of Dante and his contemporaries, and there was also a tradition of such double-entendres in the troubadours' trobar clus (closed or hermetic poetry), but Dante's poetry was influenced more by the trobar rics (elaborate poetry), which tried to balance clarity and obscurity. In time Dante and the Fedeli transformed the troubadours' symbolism into their dolce stil nuovo (sweet new style), which was intended to embody the beautiful doctrines of the Fedeli in correspondingly beautiful words and meters. Nevertheless, they were explicit in stating that the Lady should be interpreted symbolically. There are many similarities of style and content between Sufi poetry and the poetry of the Fedeli, especially in their idealization of the Beloved as Holy Wisdom or Intelligence. This has led some of Valli's followers to propose that the Fedeli were a tarika, or secret order of Sufi dervishes. However, there were many other sources for Islamic influence, including the troubadour tradition (already discussed) and pilgrims returning from the Holy Land, where they would have heard from Muslim guides about the Prophet's ascent. The Templars may have brought the Fedeli some of these ideas, as well as the tradition of Solomon's Temple as the dwelling place of Wisdom (Sapientia). Indeed, there may have been an alliance between the Fedeli and the Templars.
As was common practice, in 1283 Dante attempted to contact the group by writing a poem to them. In it he described a dream of his in which Amor (Love) appeared with Beatrice, and he invited the Fedeli to interpret the vision. It begins: Dante to the Fedeli d'Amore To every heart which the sweet pain doth move, And unto which these words may now be brought For true interpretation and kind thought, Be greeting in our Lord's name, which is Love. (tr. D. G. Rossetti) Several people responded, including Guido Cavalcanti, who replied in identical meter and rhyme to Dante's poem. (Such exchanges of poetry were also common among the troubadours.) His reply begins: Unto my thinking, thou beheld'st all worth, All joy, as much of good as man may know, If thou wert in his power who here below Is honor's righteous lord throughout this earth. (tr. D. G. Rossetti) Subsequently Dante was invited to join the Fedeli d'Amore, which he did. Guido eventually attracted Dante into "the Whites," his branch of the Guelph party, but Dante seemed to believe that art was a better means of social transformation. For art may create self-fulfilling prophecies, that is, prophecies that have the effect of bringing about the very conditions they predict. Such was the goal of the Commedia.
The Fedele dAmore was an initiatic society of Italian poets, and Dante was the most prominent among them. For these poets, the image of the beloved revealed the Divine Sophia, thereby awakening higher stages of consciousness. For Dante, it was Beatrice who served as his guide. A similar tradition existed among the Islamic poets. Ibn Arabi had his Nizam, the beautiful and intelligent daughter of a patron. For Hafiz, it was the vision of the beautiful daughter of a nobleman that led to his vocation as poet and mystic. Some suspect a direct connection between the Sufis and Dante. However, Dante learned his craft from the Sicilian poets in the court of the Viking Holy Roman Emperor, Frederick II, in Palermo. Since Sicily had previously been ruled by the Arabs, it is not unreasonable to postulate an indirect connection through those Sicilian poets. However, a typological similarity does not necessarily involve an historical connection.
In an attempt to clarify and justify such a spiritual way, I will list the major ways.
development of power through the harnessing of sexual or attractive energies, particularly the power to bring cosmic ideation into material manifestation. Often women are attracted to the sensual nature, particularly if they have been introduced to certain tantric practices prematurely. (It is not so important for men.) The other manifestation of this way is Sex Magick. However, in practice this devolves to little more than a sexualized way of the Fakir. For example, Aleister Crowleys descriptions of sex magick are hardly appealing and turn out to be little more than tedious sexual gymnastics. Certain powers appropriate to the Fakir may be developed in this way, but it is ultimately selflimiting. The true way of Tantrika involves a Knight and a Lady, who participate on the path together. Indications of this are give by Miguel Serrano and Boris Mouravieff in Gnosis. Further elaboration of this topic must await future essays.