You enter a room. At its center, a wicker cradle. Around it, faces softened by a unanimous smile, eyes damp with the same sentiment: pristine wonder. The newborn, a hieroglyph of flesh, stretches its arms in a gesture everyone interprets as promise. It has done nothing, save for crossing the threshold of possibility, and is already crowned. Beautiful, certainly. But it is a beauty we speak of by default, for lack of contrary evidence. It is the white of the page before ink, drop by drop, stains it with meaning, errors, corrections. It is the sole witness of itself, the editio princeps with no variants in the margin. We celebrate it as a perfect text because it has no history yet. Or rather, its history is pure potential, a nebula of conditional futures. It has not taken the misstep, uttered the poisoned word, the betraying silence. It simply is. And in that being, we project the ought to be of all our refracted aspirations.
Then, you enter another room. The flowers are different, heavy with a denser, funereal scent. The faces are solemn, composed into a mask of recollection. The laid-out body has closed the cycle, delivered the final line. And so the immutable verb is spoken: “he was a good person.” Or rather, “a special person.” Sometimes, “a saint.” Life, that tormented text full of erasures, second thoughts, scandalous chapters and boring pages, is suddenly bound into a clean, definitive copy. The critical edition of existence is published in memoriam. The philological apparatus, which should have recorded the author's variants – the rage, the selfishness, the cowardice, the petty spite – is suppressed. Only the constituted, sanitized text, the one that must be passed to posterity, is printed. Death is not just a biological fate; it is the most ruthless and, simultaneously, the most merciful of editors. It clears away the original manuscript with its coffee stains and frayed edges, and publishes the complete works in a deceivingly elegant volume.
The biographer, like the philologist, faces a dilemma: to respect the chaos of the document or to impose the reassuring order of narrative. Often, pity wins. And pity is a form of censorship.
What happens, then, in the interlude? What transforms the unlimited potential of the first act into the univocal, polished epitaph of the last? Life is not an edition from a single witness. It is a tumultuous palimpsest, where each day we write over the script of the day before. The final “goodness,” the “saintliness,” are but the outcome of a long, often unconscious, work of textual constitution. We ourselves are the first philologists of our own lives, engaged in a continuous operation of selection, removal, emphasis. Memory is our critical apparatus: it decides which variants to keep and which to relegate to an oblivion we pretend does not exist.
The Narrative Machinery of Community
The collective is no different. It has a physiological need for coherent stories. The newborn is the beginning of a story the community is ready to welcome. The deceased is the conclusion of a story the community has the power – and the duty – to seal. This process of posthumous canonization is not mere sentimentality. It is a precise social mechanism, a form of psychic hygiene. “Good” and “saint” are categories that neutralize complexity, packing the cumbersome emotional legacy of a life into a manageable, labeled box. They allow mourning to proceed, succession to take place, the community to reorganize around an absence rendered harmless by praise.
But this operation carries an immense cost: the obliteration of human truth. The human being lives in its contradictions, in its being a variant of itself. The critical method applied to literature teaches us that the search for the Urtext, the pure original, is often an illusion. What we have is the history of a tradition, of a text that travels and transforms through the supports – the bodies, relationships, events – that transmit it. The ideal of the “good person” is the attempt to recover a non-existent Urtext of character, an original core of goodness that events merely obscured. It is a form of denial. Denial of the effort of being, of the struggle, the guilt, the repentance, the relapse. That “all were good” uttered at the cemetery is the definitive closure of the apparatus of variants. It is the refusal to read life for what it was: a work in progress, with misprints and corrections that sometimes made it worse.
Serious literary criticism, the kind that is not satisfied with summary but digs into gaps and aporias, could teach us a different approach. We could try to read a life not to judge its final coherence, but to understand its translation. The passage from the language of desire to that of responsibility. The transposition from aspirations to scars. Perhaps, the only respectful “critical edition” of an existence would be a synoptic one: to place side by side the idealized version the person had of themselves at twenty, the corrupted and desperate version of forty, and the, perhaps, resigned and gentler version of the final days. To show their discrepancies not as flaws, but as the true content of the text.
The problem, then, is not that the dead are all falsely beatified. The problem is that the living are forced into a sainthood in deferred payment, into a conduct that qualifies them for that final verdict of absolution. They live under the weight of a judgment that will be issued only when they can no longer feel its benefit or its injury. It is a form of existential schizophrenia. One acts in the bleeding arena of the present, with its rules of survival, yet is already aware of having to provide, one day, the material for a sanitized biography. This creates monsters of hypocrisy, but also angels of authentic, desperate goodness. All engaged in timely correction of their own manuscript, in cleaning up the most compromising pages, before the Definitive Editor takes it away for printing.
For a Philology of Existing
What if we tried to shift perspective? If we stopped thinking of death as the editor publishing the definitive work, and began to see it simply as the archivist closing the file? All the documents are there. Some illegible. Others embarrassing. Others luminous. The archive issues no verdicts. It merely preserves, in dust and silence, the evidence of what has been. Our pity for the dead should resemble the respect of the archivist: do not erase, do not alter, accept the chaotic arrangement of the papers.
Perhaps, the highest task towards those who leave us is not eulogy, but the preservation of complexity. To say of a father: “He was generous to the point of wastefulness and terribly touchy.” Of a friend: “She saw truth with a surgical gaze and then lied to herself in love.” This is not lack of respect. It is the only respect worthy of a soul that fought its battle. To recognize the variants, the corrections, the oversights, is to honor the labor of writing, not just the resulting text. It is to accept that the “beauty” of the beginning and the “goodness” of the end are but the cover and colophon of a book whose value lies in the intermediate pages, in that often uncertain, sometimes sublime, often banal, always unique prose.
In the end, the silence following a funeral is not just emptiness. It is the white noise of all the unspoken words, the silenced truths, the exaggerated praises floating in the air like confetti made of lead. In that silence, the final, definitive philological operation is consummated. The community, with a collective sigh, deposits the text into the display case of memory. From that moment, it will be citable only in excerpts, in anthologies. The critical lesson is complete. The work is closed. But perhaps, true love – for the living and the dead – would begin by reopening that book not to search for a moral, but to reread, with infinite patience, its infinite, contradictory, marvelous variants.
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