Divine Comedy
Divine Comedy
Divine Comedy
CHAPTER 1
Summary
Dante Alighieri is the author of the Divine Comedy. He is a famous Italian epic poet.
Dante was born into a middle-class Florentine family. He began writing poetry at an
early age, and the lyrics fascinated him. He fell in love with a girl named Beatrice whom
he saw only twice in his life but she was his inspiration for the legendary masterpieces.
She died at an early age which left him heartbroken. In the Divine comedy poem, he is
the main character. The plot is set up in 1300, around the time Dante was in exile from
his native Florence. But the actual writing was done by him between 1308 and 1321 at
the time of his death. The Divine Comedy summary gives a picture of the realms of
Dante’s afterlife.
The Divine Comedy splits into three parts, and each section is broken down into canti or
what is called chapters:
The first part is called the Inferno (hell), Dante starts with descending to hell.
The second section is Purgatorio (purgatory) which is like a God’s waiting room.
The last one is Paradiso (paradise) which is heaven.
Inferno is the first part of the poem. It begins with Dante in the middle of his life getting
lost in a dark wood which is sin and he cannot find a straight path. Scared, he wanders
through the forest and sees the sun shining over a mountain in the distance. He tries
climbing it but gets stumbled by three beasts which are a hungry lion, a leopard which
he tries to evade, and a she-wolf which drives Dante away and he feels scared and
helpless.
Dante goes back to the woods and meets a ghost. At first, Dante is scared and asks
whether the figure is a man or a spirit. It answers with a voice which sounds like it hasn’t
spoken for a long time. He is responded to “not a man now but once I was”, it is the
ghost of the famous Roman poet who wrote Aeneid, Virgil, and he lived in the times of
lying and false gods. Dante praises Virgil and tells him how much he admires him and
that he is his inspiration. Dante tells Virgil how he was chased away by the wild beasts.
Virgil then explains to Dante that he must take a different path as the wolf does not
allow anyone to pass until the greyhound comes and drives her away. Virgil says he has
been sent by Dante’s beloved Beatrice and two other holy women to guide him to
heaven where Beatrice is waiting for him. Virgil states that they must pass through hell
to get there, but afterward, a worthier spirit will guide him through the rest of his journey.
We know this guide to be Beatrice. It is here that their long journey together begins.
Analysis
It is clear that Dante’s Inferno summary is about Dante living a life of sin. He has
strayed from the right path. Dante represents the minority of the society, i. e., the
politicians, the clergy, the lovers, the scholars, etc. These people are all assembled and
punished. It begins when Dante is in his midlife at the age of 35 years. It is not clear if
by getting lost in the forest, he is referring to the earthly or the spiritual place but the
forest represents Dante’s separation from God. Sometimes, a man becomes so
involved in their day to day activities that they forget about God.
For Dante, humans must always try to find the right way to live and to perform righteous
acts. Dante is trying to find the right path by taking the easy shortcut. However, he finds
himself getting blocked by the three beasts which represent sin:
The lion is a symbol of pride as Dante exaggerates the lion’s head so that it is
vast and enormous. It lifts its head haughtily and dares anyone to challenge its
authority.
The leopard’s spotted hide could represent concealment and thus greed or
impurity, therefore symbolizing lust of the flesh.
The she-wolf’s description in detail is that she “carries every craving in her
leanness” meaning she is very lean. This can be seen as greed or avarice as she
has nothing and is desperate to have it all. She will always crave for more and
has an insatiable hunger.
It is possible that Dante drew his inspiration from a biblical passage prophesied
by Jeremiah. It is about the destruction of those who refuse to repent their sins.
“Therefore a lion from the forest will slay them, a wolf from the desert will destroy
them, a leopard will wait to watch near their cities, and anybody who ventures out
will get torn to pieces, for their transgressions are great and their backslidings
many.”(Jeremiah 5:6)
Assuming that the beasts are a representation of sin, there would be an
expectation for them to be described as trying to tempt Dante as opposed to
frightening him. Beatrice, however, tells Virgil that Dante is “stalled in his pathway
along that lonely hillside” Beatrice does not talk about temptation, rather that
Dante has been “turned aside by terror.” This goes to show that what blocks the
shortest way to the mountain is not sin but the fear of wickedness. When Dante
turns back and retreats from the beasts, this does not symbolize sinning, but he
is pretty much forsaking his spiritual goal for the fear that by continuing he might
find himself falling prey to sin. Dante wanting to ascend to the mountain
symbolizes his spiritual progress and him wanting to get closer to God. Though
this puts Dante in danger of sinning, he goes back to the ground where he can
be safe from the sins even though he is still unsaved.
The greyhound represents the coming of Christ who will cast away all sins. He
will come to redirect the world in the path of truth and virtue. Despite Virgil being
a pagan, he represents a good man and an imperative man during his time who
received admiration for his poems. Virgil stands for human reasoning and virtues
which are admirable characters but not good enough to gain you salvation. Virgil
assumes the role of spiritual guide for Dante as it seems that he has already
taken his journey through hell. He is very protective of Dante and is careful to
explain the functions of hell patiently. He knows that Dante is dependent on him
and he’s always concerned about Dante’s well-being. Virgil keeps Dante behind
most times so as not to frighten him in their journey through hell.
Despite Virgil being an upright person, he is still a pagan who worshiped false
gods during the time of the Roman mythology. Virgil cannot take Dante through
the passage of reaching heaven. Dante must, therefore, make this journey alone
and discover on his own the consequences of sinning to find salvation. This is
where Dante takes a voyage to the afterlife. The most important character in the
poem is Beatrice as she is the love of Dante’s life. It is therefore not a shock that
he put her with the Angels where she is waiting for him.
Plot Overview
Inferno opens on the evening of Good Friday in the year 1300. Traveling
through a dark wood, Dante Alighieri has lost his path and now wanders
fearfully through the forest. The sun shines down on a mountain above him,
and he attempts to climb up to it but finds his way blocked by three beasts—a
leopard, a lion, and a she-wolf. Frightened and helpless, Dante returns to the
dark wood. Here he encounters the ghost of Virgil, the great Roman poet, who
has come to guide Dante back to his path, to the top of the mountain. Virgil
says that their path will take them through Hell and that they will eventually
reach Heaven, where Dante’s beloved Beatrice awaits. He adds that it was
Beatrice, along with two other holy women, who, seeing Dante lost in the
wood, sent Virgil to guide him.
Virgil leads Dante through the gates of Hell, marked by the haunting
inscription “abandon all hope, you who enter here” (III.7). They enter the
outlying region of Hell, the Ante-Inferno, where the souls who in life could not
commit to either good or evil now must run in a futile chase after a blank
banner, day after day, while hornets bite them and worms lap their blood.
Dante witnesses their suffering with repugnance and pity. The ferryman
Charon then takes him and his guide across the river Acheron, the real border
of Hell. The First Circle of Hell, Limbo, houses pagans, including Virgil and
many of the other great writers and poets of antiquity, who died without
knowing of Christ. After meeting Horace, Ovid, and Lucan, Dante continues
into the Second Circle of Hell, reserved for the sin of Lust. At the border of the
Second Circle, the monster Minos lurks, assigning condemned souls to their
punishments. He curls his tail around himself a certain number of times,
indicating the number of the circle to which the soul must go. Inside the
Second Circle, Dante watches as the souls of the Lustful swirl about in a
terrible storm; Dante meets Francesca, who tells him the story of her doomed
love affair with Paolo da Rimini, her husband’s brother; the relationship has
landed both in Hell.
In the Third Circle of Hell, the Gluttonous must lie in mud and endure a rain of
filth and excrement. In the Fourth Circle, the Avaricious and the Prodigal are
made to charge at one another with giant boulders. The Fifth Circle of Hell
contains the river Styx, a swampy, fetid cesspool in which the Wrathful spend
eternity struggling with one another; the Sullen lie bound beneath the Styx’s
waters, choking on the mud. Dante glimpses Filippo Argenti, a former political
enemy of his, and watches in delight as other souls tear the man to pieces.
Virgil and Dante next proceed to the walls of the city of Dis, a city contained
within the larger region of Hell. The demons who guard the gates refuse to
open them for Virgil, and an angelic messenger arrives from Heaven to force
the gates open before Dante. The Sixth Circle of Hell houses the Heretics,
and there Dante encounters a rival political leader named Farinata. A deep
valley leads into the First Ring of the Seventh Circle of Hell, where those who
were violent toward others spend eternity in a river of boiling blood. Virgil and
Dante meet a group of Centaurs, creatures who are half man, half horse. One
of them, Nessus, takes them into the Second Ring of the Seventh Circle of
Hell, where they encounter those who were violent toward themselves (the
Suicides). These souls must endure eternity in the form of trees. Dante there
speaks with Pier della Vigna. Going deeper into the Seventh Circle of Hell, the
travelers find those who were violent toward God (the Blasphemers); Dante
meets his old patron, Brunetto Latini, walking among the souls of those who
were violent toward Nature (the Sodomites) on a desert of burning sand. They
also encounter the Usurers, those who were violent toward Art.
The monster Geryon transports Virgil and Dante across a great abyss to the
Eighth Circle of Hell, known as Malebolge, or “evil pockets” (or “pouches”); the
term refers to the circle’s division into various pockets separated by great
folds of earth. In the First Pouch, the Panderers and the Seducers receive
lashings from whips; in the second, the Flatterers must lie in a river of human
feces. The Simoniacs in the Third Pouch hang upside down in baptismal fonts
while their feet burn with fire. In the Fourth Pouch are the Astrologists or
Diviners, forced to walk with their heads on backward, a sight that moves
Dante to great pity. In the Fifth Pouch, the Barrators (those who accepted
bribes) steep in pitch while demons tear them apart. The Hypocrites in the
Sixth Pouch must forever walk in circles, wearing heavy robes made of lead.
Caiphas, the priest who confirmed Jesus’ death sentence, lies crucified on the
ground; the other sinners tread on him as they walk. In the horrifying Seventh
Pouch, the Thieves sit trapped in a pit of vipers, becoming vipers themselves
when bitten; to regain their form, they must bite another thief in turn.
In the Eighth Pouch of the Eighth Circle of Hell, Dante speaks to Ulysses, the
great hero of Homer’s epics, now doomed to an eternity among those guilty of
Spiritual Theft (the False Counselors) for his role in executing the ruse of the
Trojan Horse. In the Ninth Pouch, the souls of Sowers of Scandal and Schism
walk in a circle, constantly afflicted by wounds that open and close repeatedly.
In the Tenth Pouch, the Falsifiers suffer from horrible plagues and diseases.
Virgil and Dante proceed to the Ninth Circle of Hell through the Giants’ Well,
which leads to a massive drop to Cocytus, a great frozen lake. The giant
Antaeus picks Virgil and Dante up and sets them down at the bottom of the
well, in the lowest region of Hell. In Caina, the First Ring of the Ninth Circle of
Hell, those who betrayed their kin stand frozen up to their necks in the lake’s
ice. In Antenora, the Second Ring, those who betrayed their country and party
stand frozen up to their heads; here Dante meets Count Ugolino, who spends
eternity gnawing on the head of the man who imprisoned him in life. In
Ptolomea, the Third Ring, those who betrayed their guests spend eternity
lying on their backs in the frozen lake, their tears making blocks of ice over
their eyes. Dante next follows Virgil into Judecca, the Fourth Ring of the Ninth
Circle of Hell and the lowest depth. Here, those who betrayed their
benefactors spend eternity in complete icy submersion.
A huge, mist-shrouded form lurks ahead, and Dante approaches it. It is the
three-headed giant Lucifer, plunged waist-deep into the ice. His body pierces
the center of the Earth, where he fell when God hurled him down from
Heaven. Each of Lucifer’s mouths chews one of history’s three greatest
sinners: Judas, the betrayer of Christ, and Cassius and Brutus, the betrayers
of Julius Caesar. Virgil leads Dante on a climb down Lucifer’s massive form,
holding on to his frozen tufts of hair. Eventually, the poets reach the Lethe, the
river of forgetfulness, and travel from there out of Hell and back onto Earth.
They emerge from Hell on Easter morning, just before sunrise.
Cantos I–II
Summary: Canto I
Halfway through his life, the poet Dante finds himself wandering alone in a dark forest, having
lost his way on the “true path” (I.10). He says that he does not remember how he lost his way,
but he has wandered into a fearful place, a dark and tangled valley. Above, he sees a great hill
that seems to offer protection from the shadowed glen. The sun shines down from this hilltop,
and Dante attempts to climb toward the light. As he climbs, however, he encounters three angry
beasts in succession—a leopard, a lion, and a she-wolf—which force him to turn back.
Returning in despair to the dark valley, Dante sees a human form in the woods, which soon
reveals itself to be the spirit, or shade, of the great Roman poet Virgil. Thrilled to meet the poet
that he most admires, Dante tells Virgil about the beasts that blocked his path. Virgil replies that
the she-wolf kills all who approach her but that, someday, a magnificent hound will come to
chase the she-wolf back to Hell, where she originated. He adds that the she-wolf’s presence
necessitates the use of a different path to ascend the hill; he offers to serve as Dante’s guide.
He warns Dante, however, that before they can climb the hill they must first pass through the
place of eternal punishment (Hell) and then a place of lesser punishment (Purgatory); only then
can they reach God’s city (Heaven). Encouraged by Virgil’s assurances, Dante sets forth with
his guide.
Summary: Canto II
Dante invokes the Muses, the ancient goddesses of art and poetry, and asks
them to help him tell of his experiences.
Dante relates that as he and Virgil approach the mouth of Hell, his mind turns
to the journey ahead and again he feels the grip of dread. He can recall only
two men who have ever ventured into the afterlife and returned: the Apostle
Paul, who visited the Third Circle of Heaven, and Aeneas, who travels through
Hell in Virgil’s Aeneid. Dante considers himself less worthy than these two and
fears that he may not survive his passage through Hell.
Virgil rebukes Dante for his cowardice and then reassures him with the story
of how he knew to find Dante and act as his guide. According to Virgil, a
woman in Heaven took pity upon Dante when he was lost and came down to
Hell (where Virgil lives) to ask Virgil to help him. This woman was Beatrice,
Dante’s departed love, who now has an honored place among the blessed.
She had learned of Dante’s plight from St. Lucia, also in Heaven, who in turn
heard about the poor poet from an unnamed lady, most likely the Virgin Mary.
Thus, a trio of holy women watches over Dante from above. Virgil says that
Beatrice wept as she told him of Dante’s misery and that he found her
entreaty deeply moving.
Dante feels comforted to hear that his beloved Beatrice has gone to Heaven
and cares so much for him. He praises both her and Virgil for their aid and
then continues to follow Virgil toward Hell.
From a structural point of view, the first two cantos of Inferno function as an introduction,
presenting the main dramatic situation and maneuvering Dante and Virgil to the entrance of
Hell, the journey through which will constitute the main plot of the poem. In a larger sense,
however, the opening cantos help to establish the relationship between Inferno and larger
literary, political, and religious tradition, indicating their points of convergence and deviation.
nferno takes the form of an allegory, a story whose literal plot deals entirely in
symbols, imbuing the story with a second level of meaning implied by, but
broader than, the events of the narrative. On a literal level, The Divine
Comedy portrays Dante’s adventures in the fantastic realms of Hell, Purgatory,
and Heaven, but these adventures allegorically represent a broader subject:
the trials of the human soul to achieve morality and find unity with God. From
the opening lines, Dante makes clear the allegorical intention of his poem:
“Midway on our life’s journey, I found myself / In dark woods, the right road
lost” (I.1–2). By writing “our life’s journey” (emphasis added) and with his
generic phrase “the right road,” Dante links his own personal experience to
that of all humanity. The dark woods symbolize sinful life on Earth, and the
“right road” refers to the virtuous life that leads to God.
In this way, Dante links his poem to the larger tradition of medieval Christian
allegory, most famously represented in English by Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress.
A great deal of medieval Christian allegory portrayed a character type known
as Everyman, a Christian protagonist (even named “Christian” in Bunyan’s
work) representing all of humanity; the Everyman character undergoes trials
and tribulations in his search to find the soul’s true path in life. By making
himself the hero of his story, Dante casts himself in the role of Everyman;
more broadly, Dante literally wishes each individual to put him- or herself in
the position described at the beginning of the poem, since, according to
Christian doctrine, all people know some form of sin and thus wander lost in a
dark wood. Similarly, the path to the blessed afterlife awaits anyone who
seeks to find it.
The opening tercet (a three-line stanza) of Inferno also situates the poem in
time. The Bible’s Psalms describe a human lifespan as being “threescore and
ten years,” or seventy years. Because of the many close links between The
Divine Comedy and the Bible, most critics agree that Dante would have
considered man’s lifespan to be seventy years; thus, “midway on our life’s
journey” would make Dante thirty-five, locating the events in the year 1300.
These cantos contain many passages, however, whose analysis has
produced more disagreement than accord. For example, one can reasonably
assume that the three beasts that menace Dante as he tries to climb the sunlit
hill represent dark forces that threaten mankind, but it is difficult to define them
more concretely. Early commentators on the poem often considered them to
represent the sins of lust, pride, and avarice. The three beasts also have a
biblical analogue in Jeremiah 5:6: “Wherefore a lion out of the forest shall slay
them, and a wolf of the evenings shall spoil them, and a leopard shall watch
over their cities.” Much of the allegory in Inferno takes a political tone, referring
to the situation in Italy (especially Florence) during Dante’s lifetime, and to the
conflict between the pope and the Holy Roman Emperor. It thus seems
probable that the three beasts also carry political connotations, a theory
reinforced by Virgil’s prophecy about the hound that will drive the she-wolf
away, which some critics have read as a symbol for a great leader who would
one day unite Italy.
Virgil tells Dante that he lived in Rome during the time of Augustus, in the age
of “the false gods who lied.” The fact that Virgil recognizes the old Roman
gods as “false” and “lying” (in other words, non-Christian) instances Dante’s
use of a technique called intertemporality—the mingling of elements from
different time periods. Having entered into eternity, Virgil—like many of
Dante’s other characters—can now see into times other than those in which
he lived. He is thus able to understand what Dante considers truthful theology.
The use of intertemporality permeates much of the artistic and literary tradition
of medieval times; biblical characters, for example, were almost always
represented in art as wearing medieval clothing, and the “heathenism” of
medieval Muslims was emphasized by portraying them as worshipping the
ancient Greek god Apollo. Yet, while these forms of intertemporality often
seem merely anachronistic, the technique is more aesthetically and logically
satisfying within the context of Dante’s poem: his characters can see beyond
their time on Earth because in death they exist outside of time.
Cantos I–II
While Dante portrays Virgil as having learned truths from future generations, he
presents himself as having gained knowledge from Virgil, commenting that the ancient
poet taught him “the graceful style” that has brought him fame (I.67). The “graceful
style” denotes the tragic style of the ancients, the style of epic poems—the Odyssey,
the Iliad, the Aeneid. And Dante was indeed capable of commanding this high style; at
the beginning of Canto II, his invocation of the Muses—the traditional way to begin a
classical epic—echoes Virgil’s call for the Muses’ inspiration in the opening of
the Aeneid. However, one may question the statement that it is this particular style that
brought Dante fame: the poet elsewhere employs many other styles with equal skill.
Dante clearly respects tradition but is not beholden to it, as is made clear by the way
that he follows but also breaks from traditional uses of allegory, the trope of the
Everyman, and intertemporality. As the remainder of the poem will make clear, his goal
is not simply to mimic Virgil.
Indeed, Dante’s awareness of the differences between himself and Virgil may have contributed
to his decision to name his work The Comedy: rather than employing exclusively high rhetoric, it
frequently employs the simple, vernacular idiom of its time; and rather than using Latin, the
traditional language of a grand epic, it is written in Italian, the language of the people, and a
language that Dante hoped every man could understand.
Dante Alighieri
Unlike the epic poems of Homer and Virgil, which told the great
stories of their people’s history, Dante’s The Divine Comedy is
a somewhat autobiographical work, set at the time in which he
lived and peopled with contemporary figures. It follow’s Dante’s
own allegorical journey through Hell (Inferno), Purgatory
(Purgatorio), and Paradise (Paradiso). Guided at first by the
character of Virgil, and later by his beloved Beatrice, Dante
wrote of his own path to salvation, offering philosophical and
moral judgments along the way.
Also unlike the epic works that came before, The Divine
Comedy was written in the vernacular Italian, instead of the
more acceptable Latin or Greek. This allowed the work to be
published to a much broader audience, contributing
substantially to world literacy. Due to the monumental
influence the work has had on countless artists, Dante is
considered among the greatest writers to have lived. As the
poet T. S. Eliot wrote, “Dante and Shakespeare divide the
world between them, there is no third.”
Dante, in full Dante Alighieri, (born c. May 21–June 20, 1265, Florence,
Italy—died September 13/14, 1321, Ravenna), Italian poet, prose writer,
literary theorist, moral philosopher, and political thinker. He is best known for
the monumental epic poem La commedia, later named La divina
commedia (The Divine Comedy).