PURGATORIO, Episode 53. Virgil Returns To Center Stage: PURGATORIO, Canto VII, Lines 1 - 15

After Sordello and Virgil embrace, Dante the poet appears to want to return Virgil to the center of the narrative stage in his walk across the known universe. But can he? How does he renegotiate the damned Virgil’s presence in the sections of COMEDY devoted to the redeemed? And what of Cato, always lurking the theology’s narrative background?

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PURGATORIO, Episode 52. The Rage Comes To Rest (Sort Of): PURGATORIO, Canto VI, Lines 127 - 151

Dante’s invective against political strife comes to an end in PURGATORIO, Canto VI, with two familiar moves: a reference back to the poet’s own experience (never letting the poem get too far from his body) and to an image that brilliantly sums up Florentine strife while also perhaps offering a glimpse of the poet’s dawning, new stance.

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PURGATORIO, Episode 51. The Poet Dante Finally Loses Control: PURGATORIO, Canto VI, Lines 106 - 126

Dante the poet has finally lost control! In the middle of his invective about Italian strife in PURGATORIO, Canto VI, he seems to question God’s counsel, to limit God’s power to that of a human body, and to turn the Christian God into a pagan entity. What is going on in this most complex passage in PURGATORIO?

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PURGATORIO, Episode 49. You Don't Always Get The Poem You Want: PURGATORIO, Canto VI, Lines 76 - 105

The story of Dante’s walk across his known universe breaks in PURGATORIO, Canto VI, right after Virgil and Sordello embrace. The rest of the canto is dedicated to the poet’s rage at the constant warfare on the Italian peninsula and his hope for an iron fist to set things right. Along the way, many of us have to confront our expectations that COMEDY may not be the poem we want it to be.

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PURGATORIO, Episode 48. Sordello, Dante's Second Guide Across The Known Universe: PURGATORIO, Canto VI, Lines 49 - 75

Dante and Virgil encounter the second guide across the known universe: Sordello, a late troubadour poet from Italy who is deeply connected to characters across COMEDY and who practiced a sort of poetry that Dante himself wrote earlier in his career. Sordello is isolated and alone, a strange figure in this broken-in-half sixth canto of PURGATORIO.

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PURGATORIO, Episode 46. Winners, Losers, And Beggars: PURGATORIO, Canto VI, Lines 1 - 24

Six souls who’ve died violent deaths accost Dante the pilgrim on the lower slopes of Mount Purgatory. They all want him to take back news of them, so the living will pray for their ascent. It’s a complicated game of cat and mouse when it comes to their identities. But there’s another game being played, one much closer to Dante’s heart. And it has a real loser: Virgil!

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Mark ScarbroughComment
PURGATORIO, Episode 45. The Strange Brew Of Love And Disgust: Purgatorio, Cantos VI - VIII

Reading Purgatorio, Cantos VI - VIII in my English translation. These are three tough cantos before we arrives at the gate of Purgatory proper. Before we break them down into smaller chunks to study them, let’s read them straight through to discover the issues Virgil, Dante, and the reader face as the journey becomes increasingly difficult.

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PURGATORIO, Episode 44. "Che Son La Pia": PURGATORIO, Canto V, Lines 130 - 136

The third speech in PURGATORIO, Canto V, has given rise to more criticism per line that almost any other moment in COMEDY. Pia comes forward to give her short, enigmatic, elliptical tale, her violent death which must be inferred from her speech. What can we make of its poetics? What is Dante the poet trying to do with this tragic woman who speaks just a few lines after the first moment of the true veneration of Mary in COMEDY?

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PURGATORIO, Episode 42. The Strangely Beautiful And Poetic Death Of Jacopo Del Cassero: PURGATORIO, Canto V, Lines 64 - 84

The rush of unison souls on the first minor ledge of PURGATORIO becomes quiet as one soul steps forward to tell the tale of his death to Dante the poet and Virgil, his guide. This soul’s story begins with a small reprimand and continue through the facts of his death to a beautiful, poetic line. Along the way, we may have a glimpse of what Dante the poet is up to in Ante-Purgatory and the changing poetics of PURGATORIO.

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Mark ScarbroughComment
PURGATORIO, Episode 39. Distractions And The Demands Of Writing PURGATORIO: PURGATORIO, Canto V, Lines 1 - 21

Dante the pilgrim seems flattered when some of the negligent souls notice that he’s still in his own body. Virgil offers a stern reprimand, one of the most strident in COMEDY. But Virgil may be onto something greater: how to write PURGATORIO. It can’t just be idiosyncratic to the pilgrim’s reactions. Otherwise, the poem won’t accomplish what Dante the poet wants.

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Mark ScarbroughComment
PURGATORIO, Episode 38. Mobs On The Mountain: A Read-Through Of PURGATORIO, Canto V

We’ve come to the end of the first narrative arc of Dante’s PURGATORIO: Canto V. The narrative seems to get more and more frenetic until suddenly it does this amazing decrescendo to a very quiet voice, a woman’s voice, seemingly stripped bare of almost all of its details. It’s a haunting conclusion to the first major section of the second canticle of Dante’s COMEDY.

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Mark ScarbroughComment
PURGATORIO, Episode 36. Belacqua, The King Of Misdirection Through Centuries Of Reading Dante's COMEDY: PURGATORIO, Canto IV, Lines 115 - 136

Belacqua has invoked perhaps more interpretive issues for readers of PURGATORIO than any other character in the second canticle of Dante’s COMEDY. Let’s talk about the various ways he can be interpreted and see how both Beatrice and Ulysses sit uneasily behind his words as he confronts the pilgrim Dante and his guide, Virgil, on their climb up the mountain.

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Mark ScarbroughComment