Over a century ago, an Italian scholar leveled a charge at the likes of me (and maybe you, too). People like us have killed Dante’s COMEDY by papering it over with too many footnotes. We’ve lost the artistry of this magnificent poem. So let’s stop and take a breath before we descend to the circle of the violent. Sure, we’re going to untie a lot of interpretive knots ahead. But for now, look how far we’ve come!
Read MoreOur pilgrim, Dante, has a second question for Virgil concerning the old poet’s map of hell he’s laid out in INFERNO, Canto XI. What about those usurers? Why are they punished so far down at the bottom of the sins of violence? The answer is utterly unexpected: Virgil offers a theory of art. Truly, this is a map of the road ahead for our pilgrim as he walks across the known universe.
Read MoreVirgil has completed his map of hell in INFERNO, Canto XI. But maybe he’s not the cartographer he thinks he is. Our pilgrim has questions. In this episode, the first of two. And Virgil? He seems to be furious. What’s more, he doesn’t seem to be the Virgil we first met many cantos ago. Join me, Mark Scarbrough, as I explore the changing theology and the changing narrative itself in this complicated passage from COMEDY.
Read MoreDante-the-poet’s consummately theological poem has taken a dramatic turn with Virgil’s final bit of his map of the abyss ahead in INFERNO, Canto XI. Our poem is changing from one that diagnoses the human condition to one that diagnoses what ails human society. It is the body politic that is sick. And fraud (not pride) is our greatest sin.
Read MoreVirgil’s mapping of hell continues with an explanation of the seventh circle of hell. But gone is Aristotle and his golden mean of ethics. Instead, Virgil’s a scholastic! He offers us divisions of the ring into smaller and smaller parts. What’s more, Dante-the-poet is weaving a wild tapestry of Aristotle, Boethius, Aquinas, the Gospels, and old Roman law into one explanation for the violent.
Read MoreAs our pilgrim rests under the lid of a heretic pope’s tomb, Virgil lays out the first rationale for the lowest parts of the abyss: injustice and malice, force and fraud, powerful combinations of human evil. In other words, Virgil is mapping the world he knows on the cusp of the age of discovery. And he’s giving us the rationale for the regions of the underworld that neither he nor his hero Aeneas could visit in his own poem THE AENEID.
Read MoreDante has to force himself away from Farinata and back to Virgil—who then makes a promise that is never fulfilled in COMEDY. The passage out of the sixth circle of hell is a strange one: heretic popes, Beatrice’s eyes, the edge of blasphemy, and the stench of the deepest parts of hell, the place where the poet Vergil and his hero Aeneas never dared to step. But we’re headed right there!
Read MoreLet’s step back from the lines of Inferno, Canto X, and instead look at its as structure. If we think it through, we’ll realize that we may be misplacing our focus. We tend to see this as Farinata’s canto. But the structure will lead us to realize its Cavalcante’s canto. And mostly, a canto the turns on his horrifying question, “Where is my son?”
Read MoreDante and Farinata arrive at a place we could never have predicted. A machismo match has become camaraderie. They see each other as fellow-sufferers and perhaps honor each other, even in hell. Farinata explains the metaphysics of sight in hell. He even gets to name the farthest point in the future ever named in COMEDY. Then Dante, our pilgrim, repents something. But what? And does it do the trick?
Read MoreCavalcante sinks back into the tomb in fatherly grief—and Farinata, our austere Greco-Roman statue of Stoicism, is ready to pick up his jabbing fight with our pilgrim right where he left off. Except something strange happens. Farinata softens. He does something no heroic figure would ever do: He sighs. What’s going on in this strange passage about factionalism? How do you come to see your great enemy as human, too?
Read MoreDante the pilgrim finds himself face to face with the suffering he himself has caused as the shade of his own poetic friend’s father rises up beside Farinata. Or more than friend. His own poetic rival, Guido Cavalcanti’s father. This is a tough passage, with garbled lines and intentional misunderstandings. And it may tell us that that poet is proving to us that the pilgrim, still sunk in Florentine factionalism, is not ready to be a poet.
Read MoreWhat happens when you come face to face with history? And not the history of the great heroes. Instead, the history of the pain your own family has suffered. Join me, Mark Scarbrough, as Dante-the-pilgrim comes face to face with Farinata degli Uberti in this complicated and rewarding passage from INFERNO.
Read MoreIn the sixth circle of hell, we haven't yet seen any of the damned. Instead, Dante, our pilgrim, and Virgil are picking their way along a "secret path" between the burning sarcophagi and the walls of Dis. Here, Virgil brings up the Last Judgment. But he also starts to pick a fight with our pilgrim. Or maybe Virgil calls out our pilgrim who then responds with a little passive-aggressive anger.
Read MoreWalking with Dante, our pilgrim, we’ve passed through the gates of Dis and have come to the sixth circle of hell, the ring of the heretics. It’s curious, because we’ve stepped beyond Virgil’s landscape from THE AENEID, we’ve stepped beyond the seven deadly sins as a structuring device for the poem, and we’ve stepped into a world where politics and poetry show what people do for but mostly TO each other.
Read MoreWe’ve been standing at the walls of Dis forever! Here comes help . . . in the form of Mercury? The archangel Michael? Christ? Jesus is said to be the word of God made flesh. Mercury brought down the words of the gods. Is this the coming of eloquence as we depart the last of Virgil’s world to fully enter Dante’s imagination of hell?
Read MoreStanding in front of the walls of Dis with out pilgrim, Dante, and Virgil, we encounter the thickest, densest bit of classical imagery we’ve yet seen in INFERNO. And we’re asked to interpret it as an allegory. More than that, we’re asked to go back to classical literature and interpret it as allegory, bringing forward that interpretation into this passage. Complicated, no doubt!
Read MoreWe’ve built quite an interpretive framework on Dante’s masterpiece, COMEDY. Which brings up the question: Did the poet intend all of this? The answer has been various over the historical ages. Join me, Mark Scarbrough, as I give what I think is the definitive answer: No, but also yes. How did our poet construct a work that invites so much movement inside it?
Read MoreDante and Virgil are caught outside the walls of Dis, the city of hell. Virgil seems particularly stuck in a place of doubtful faith. Or maybe faithful doubt. To remedy that, he launches into the story of his first descent to the bottom of hell—thereby complicating Dante’s masterwork COMEDY, causing a rupture in the very fabric of its fiction, repositioning Dante’s work against other classical works, and sticking Virgil himself squarely in the landscape of Lucan’s PHARSALIA.
Read MoreDante the pilgrim is left alone at the walls of Dis. But more importantly, this passage from INFERNO may be the most human since the opening lines of Canto I. So much is changing! Virgil is getting a backstory. Virgil is developing interiority (or an inner emotional space). Virgil is becoming more fatherly. All at the moment when he abandons the pilgrim—and maybe the poet, too.
Read MoreDante-the-pilgrim and Virgil come to an important barrier in hell: the walls of Dis, the geopolitical center of INFERNO. But Dante-the-poet also comes to an important barrier. Aeneas doesn’t enter Dis in THE AENEID. We have reached the limits of Virgil-the-poet’s imagination. But not Dante’s. He will eventually go where his master can’t.
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