Set in the late medieval period during
the Avignon papacy,
The Name of the
Rose narrates the mysterious and daily deaths of monks in the
monastery where a papal delegation and the leaders of a poverty
movement are meeting. It is a book about words: pious,
deadly, heretical, hypocritical, veiled, and valuable words. At
the same time, it is a book about ideas, because the ideas are conveyed
through the words. Likewise, it is a book about world
views. Is pious thought of paramount importance? What is
pious thought? What makes a heresy? If there are heresies,
should their ideas be censored or allowed to propagate?
The discussion begins as Adso, then a novice sent as the assistant of
William of Baskerville, relates how William introduces himself to the
abbey with a Sherlock Holmes deduction from invisible details
concerning an escaped horse of the abbot's. It is fortunate that
he is a mystery solver, because one of the monks mysteriously committed
suicide the evening before. Detective activities commence and we
learn that the largest library in Christendom is housed in a labyrinth,
that the librarian Malachi has a suspicious disinclination to dispense
books on certain subjects, that his apprentice has a certain hunger
about him, and that the blind Jorge fervently believes that the
Apocalypse is upon us.
Sadly, the night the scholarly Venantius is found dead in the pigs
blood originally destined for puddings, although he did not die
there. We find that the assistant, Berengar, had a certain love
of the first deceased monk, and that Venantius wrote a coded message in
invisible ink in the margins of the notes for the book he was
translating, and that old Alindardo knows the entrance to the
labyrinthine library
(behind the altar with the skulls). William and Adso look at
Venantius' papers in the evening, along with an unknown third party,
who steals a book from Venantius' desk and Williams reading
lenses. They enter the labyrinth and are lucky
to find their way out.
The next night Adso goes to the library by himself and, coming down,
discovers a peasant girl, who has, as it is discovered later, sold
herself for food, but preferred Adso. In the morning Berengar is
found in the bath, with black stains on his tongue.
William discovers that Severinus, the herbalist, had a potent vial of
poison given to him that disappears when his storehouse door became
strangely unfashioned during a storm. William decodes Vanantius'
message, which says something about
finis
Africae. He evokes a confession from the cellarer that he
has a certain passion for the village women. He logics a map of
the library and they enter it again, are not lost, and find
finis Africae but do not know the
secret of entry. As Adso remarks, this library seems withhold
truth rather than dispense it as would seem to be the purpose of a
library.
William is not at the abbey to solve a mystery, however. He is at
the abbey for political reasons, representing the Holy Roman Emperor
for the Friars Minor, who hold that Christ was poor and wish their
monastic sect to do likewise. Pope John, who is accused of loving
money and power while verbally saying otherwise, finds this sect
disturbing and makes life dangerous for them. A delegation from
the Pope is meeting with a delegation from the poverty movement
(sponsored by the Emperor, who would be happy if the Church were poorer
and less potent politically) at the abbey to discuss terms for a
meeting between the Pope and the representative of the movement,
Michael of Cesena.
As is gradually explained, there has been a reaction against the
Church's wealth and power, originally by the Benedictines, but since
they became wealthy and powerful, by the Minorites. The Minorites
merely wish to be permitted to live in poverty, but have been branded
as heretics by the Pope. This is partly because the simple (i.e
the masses) are unable to distinguish orthodoxy and are naturally
misled by those claiming a Minorite viewpoint, but in the notorious
case of Fra Dolcino, really a group rebelling against authority
(literally and rather bloodily). However, the threat that a group
claiming poverty has on the wealthy Church is no small part, either.
So there are several competing ideas. The first is the wealthy
and powerful Pope, who is able to define and enforce orthodoxy.
The second is the Minorite view that one should be free to practice
what Christ so obviously taught. Brother William subscribes to a
variant of this, namely that the Church should be in charge of
spiritual laws but not temporal ones (as the Emperor would naturally
desire). Finally there are the monks, who wish to preserve the
truth of God so that the people can maintain their faith in God.
Adso discovers over the course of his stay in the monastery a wide
range of grey. William at one end, perhaps not entirely orthodox
in his freedom of ideas; Ubertino, a Minorite rather wistful of
women and fond of the Virgin Mary, who is on the edge of heresy yet
still orthodox; the abbot whose subconscious love of riches is
revealed by his pious soliloquies on the language of beautiful things
but firmly orthodox; the librarians, who are hiding secrets
written in books, unwilling to destroy a book whose value they
recognize but whose ideas they see as too dangerous; and finally,
the Inquisitors, enforcers of truth.
The cellarer's servant is discovered performing folk magic, and when
Severinus is murdered, the papal legation assumes authority over the
abbey, conducts a farce of a predetermined trial of the cellarer
himself, who it is discovered to have been a member of Fra Dolcino's
murderous band. In fact, it seems he was one of the simple who
was misled and left after the truth became perhaps too obvious.
Malachi reveals he was carrying a (undelivered) letter from Fra Dolcino
and under pressure from the Inquisitor, the cellarer decides that, as
long as he is destined to die as a heretic, he might as well actually
be one, performs his final act of rebellion before being
imprisoned. In this climate, an agreement of protection for
Michael is simply out of the question.
Benno, suspected of taking the book that seemed to have found its way
to Severinus' lab, is appointed assistant library at Compline and the
abbot decides to avoid potential scrutiny for heresy in his message and
appoints Jorge to give it, who gives a terrifying warning of the
portentous trumpets announcing the Antichrist: Hail (the first
monk died in a hailstorm), blood (Venantius was found in blood), floods
(Berengar), the third part of the sky (Severinus was killed with an
armillary sphere, i.e. mace). The fifth trumpet, scorpions of
fire makes itself known as Malachi stumbles into Matins, late, and dead.
Brother William tells the abbot of his current thinking and the abbot
commands him to halt his investigations, which he does not. Adso
unwittingly leads William to the correct train of thought as well as
the secret to understanding Ventantius' notes on
finis Africae, they enter the
library for the final time and discover
finis Africae and Jorge.
Jorge is himself a protector of the truth, as the library holds the
only, hitherto unknown copy of Aristotle's rumored second volume of
Poetics, discoursing on
laughter. Too many of Aristotle's ideas lead to a lessoning of
the simple Biblical explanations, but if there is an ideological
framework for laughing at an idea in an attempt to understand its
significance that is quite dangerous. For if one can laugh at the
Resurrection, one can render it meaningless. Thus the idea must
be stamped out.
Jorge used Severinus' potion to paint the pages of the book. They
stuck together, so the monks, reading the forbidden text in the
forbidden library, would wet their finger to separate the pages and, to
the extent they wanted knowledge, would poison themselves. Jorge,
having failed to persuade William and failed to trick him, for William
wore gloves and had deduced the poison, began to destroy the book,
ripping the pages out and eating them. William chased after him,
wanting to save the book and in the struggle, Jorge knocks over the oil
lamp, setting fire to the ancient, dusty, dry, and rather incendiary
parchments. The library quickly blazes and although William tries
to carry water himself and Adso rings the church bell to alert the
abbey, without the leadership of the abbot (whom Jorge had trapped in a
secret passage), the monks could not decide on a course of action
before the magnificent library was lost. With the stormy winds,
the magnificent cathedral-church and the rest of the abbey follow the
firey destruction predicted of the defeat of the Antichrist at
Armageddon.
Although written in a piously orthdox style, set in a pious and
orthodox monastery, the story is a ringing critique of thoughtless
orthodoxy, of enforced ideology. The "justice" of the Inquisitor
led to three deaths by people largely innocent of heresy and the
protectionism of ideas led to the destruction of them. An Italian
novel, translated in beautifully archaic, yet modern, English, it
obliquely critiques the modern Catholic Church, which has maintained
its dogmatic orthodoxy, if not entirely its power and wealth.
Perhaps because I saw the movie a long time ago and knew the plot, I
found the two parts of the book somewhat disjoint. On the one
hand, there was the main plot, the mystery, intruiging even to one who
vaguely remembers the unfortunate ending. Yet the theme of the
book was mostly expressed in the discussions concerning the papal
legation and the past events leading up to it. Some creeps in at
the beginning, and it becomes clear at the end, but a few interesting
tidbits of anachronistic modern thinking expounded by William are all
that creep into the main plot. Admittedly, the church history
takes up a rather large section of the book, but since it is an
esoteric discussion unrelated to the plot it is somewhat boring.
It is, however, a magnificent piece of historical fiction which
apparently breathed life back into the genre. Although set in a
rather localalized time period, the scope is, nonetheless, epic, with
ideas developed over long stretches of time meeting in a temporal nexus
clothed by vivid descriptions of buildings and people. Anyone who
has lived the Christian life and read the overly pious monastic
writings, orthodox and somehow irrelevant, will find the characters and
setting to be especially believable. Those thoughtful readers
willing to distill the message will find a subtle critique of the
Church, which while only the standard modern reactionary ideas, still
offers a thoughtful picture counteracting the natural tendency of faith
to become dogmatic.
Review: 8.9
Captures the monastic style quite
vividly. The English translator did an excellent job, although
footnotes for the Latin would be appreciated by the less scholarly of
us. Human nature, is captured beautifully and very
believably. Unfortunately, while Brother William's modern ideas
are eloquently expressed in medieval thoughts, they occasionally reveal
themselves in sharp contrast to the setting. More problematic is
the lack of integration of the ideological discussions and the main
text. It is quite noticeable and leaves even the reader
interested in the message wishing that they were shorter and we could
get back to the plot. A gorgeous setting, but once the mystery
and themes are known, it somehow it doesn't leave me wanting to re-read
it and so it falls short of the top ranks.