INFERNO, Episode 95. Cords, Leopards, Medieval Poets, And Medieval Pilgrims, All Straightened Out By Classical Poetry: Inferno, Canto XVI, Lines 106 - 123

Dante the poet is rewriting COMEDY as Dante the pilgrim is providing the raw material only a classical poet can straighten out. COMEDY is getting more complicated, more meta by the line. Join me, Mark Scarbrough, for an exploration of this tough passage from Inferno, Canto XVI, on WALKING WITH DANTE.

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INFERNO, Episode 102. Flying By The Seat Of Your Pants (Also, Geryon): Inferno, Canto XVII, Lines 100 - 134

Geryon’s flight: an imaginative tour de force. But there’s more here. How can this unnatural act of flying be described in the middle of a canto about those who sin against art, the usurers. Is the poet hedging his bets? Or winking at us from behind the text? Either way, he offers us tragic examples of overreach in a canto in which he imagines flight that ends with a minor comedic ending halfway through INFERNO.

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