Divine Comedy

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The Divine Comedy

Dante Alighieri
Introduction:

Dante Alighieri (1265-1321) wrote his epic poem, the Divine Comedy, during the last thirteen years of his life
(circa 1308-21), while in exile from his native Florence. There are three parts to this massive work: Inferno,
Purgatory and Paradise. In each section Dante the poet recounts the travels of the Pilgrimhis alter ego
through hell, purgatory, and heaven, where he meets God face to face. The primary theme is clear. In a letter to
his patron, Can Grande della Scala, Dante wrote that his poem was, on the literal level, about "The state of souls
after death." It is, of course, that and much more. The poem works on a number of symbolic levels, much like
the Bible, one of its primary sources. Like that sacred text, Dante meant his work and his Pilgrim traveler to
serve as models for the reader. He hoped to lead that reader to a greater understanding of his place in the
universe and to prepare him for the next life, for the life that begins after death.

The greatness of the Divine Comedy lies in its construction as a summa, or a summation of knowledge and
experience. Dante was able to weave together pagan myth, literature, philosophy; Christian theology and
doctrine, physics, astrology, cartography, mathematics, literary theory, history, and politics into a complex
poem that a wide audience, not just the highly educated, could read. For Dante boldly chose to write his poem
of salvation in his own Italian dialect, not in Latin, which was the language of Church, State, and epic poetry
during his time. Its impact was so great that Dante's Tuscan dialect became what we recognize as modern
Italian.

As one of the greatest works, not just of the late Middle Ages but of world literature in its entirety, the influence
of the Divine Comedy has been incalculable. The poem was immediately successful Dante's own sons, Pietro
and Jacopo, wrote the first commentaries on itand it continues to be read and taught today. Many of western
literature's major figures were indebted to Dante's masterwork. A highly selective list includes: Giovanni
Boccaccio (1313-75); Geoffrey Chaucer (circa 1344-1400); Don Inigo Lopez de Mendoza, the first Marques de
Santillana (1389-1458); John Milton (1608-74); William Blake (1757-1827); Victor Hugo (1802-85); Joseph
Conrad (Teodor Josef Konrad Korzeniowski) (1857-1924); James Joyce (1882-1941); Ezra Pound (1885-1972);
Jorge Luis Borges (1899-1986); and Italo Calvino (1923-85).

If this impressive list were not testament enough, one has only to consider the four to five hundred manuscripts
of the Divine Comedy in existence (an almost unheard-of number), the four-hundred-some Italian printed
editions and the hundreds of English translations to get some idea of this work's impact on Western culture.
Clearly, readers have found the Divine Comedy relevant to their lives since its composition nearly seven
hundred years ago. Perhaps this is because Dante Alighieri, for all the differences between his era and
subsequent ones, wrestled with and wrote about concerns that affect all people who have ever stopped to think
about them: What is the purpose of this life? Is there an afterlife? If so, how should I prepare for it? Why, in
short, am I here? Dante's answers to those questions will not necessarily be the same as those of each of his
many readers, but by asking them he forces each reader to ask them, too, and to wonder how to answer them.

The Divine Comedy Summary:

Dante's Divine Comedy is bewilderingly complex to the first-time reader, even on the literal level. (This
complexity remains after many rereadings, but for many readers, it enhances the poem's appeal rather than
hindering the reader's understanding.) Trying to keep track of the poem's more than five hundred characters
often produces frustration, as do attempts to sort out thirteenth- and fourteenth-century Florentine politics and
the city-state's conflicts with the papacy. However Dante lived during a time when categorizationthe orderly
arrangement of knowledgebordered on the obsessional, and his Divine Comedy is no exception. Indeed, it is a
prime example of this drive to order. Therefore, its very structure helps the reader navigate and make sense of
its complex world.
The poem is divided into three books or cantiche. Inferno, Purgatory, and Paradise. Each book is then broken
down into canti or what we might call chapters: Inferno has thirty-four, Purgatory has thirty-three, and
Paradise has thirty-three. There are, then, a total of one hundred canti, and each volume has thirty-three
chapters. (The first one in Inferno introduces the entire poem and thus in a sense stands alone.) This ordering
system is a prime example of medieval Christian numerology, the science of attributing religious significance to
numerals. In this system, three is the ideal number, since it represents the Holy Trinity: God the Father, Christ
the Son, and the Holy Spirit. One hundred, the number of canti in the poem, is the square of the perfect number
10. One hundred represents the belief that the Father, Son and Holy Spirit are individuals yet indivisible from
one another: 100 = 1+0 + 0=1. This simple example only hints at the extent to which Divine Comedy uses such
tight structures to produce meaning and to deliver its message of salvation.

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