Dante`s Inferno
Transcription
Dante`s Inferno
Published in Great Britain by Scripsi – www.scripsi.org First published 2010 Second edition with corrections and modifications 2013 Copyright © John Lambert, 2010 The right of John Lambert to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the copyright owner. ISBN: 978-0-9552884-2-5 Printed by Printondemand-worldwide 9 Culley Court, Bakewell Road, Orton Southgate, Peterborough, PE2 6XD www.printondemand-worldwide.com Contents Introduction The life of Dante What type of poem is the Comedy? The political backdrop The moral structure of Hell The translation Acknowledgements Hell 1 1 3 6 8 11 12 15 Notes 257 Maps 351 List of plates 353 Hell Canto 1 Canto 2 Canto 3 Canto 4 Canto 5 Canto 6 Canto 7 Canto 8 Canto 9 Canto 10 Canto 11 Canto 12 Canto 13 Canto 14 Canto 15 Canto 16 Canto 17 Canto 18 Canto 19 Canto 20 Canto 21 Canto 22 Canto 23 Canto 24 Canto 25 Canto 26 Canto 27 Canto 28 Canto 29 Canto 30 Canto 31 Canto 32 Canto 33 Canto 34 Dante awakes in a dark wood; meets the lipard, lion & wolf, and his guide Virgil Account of Beatrice visiting Virgil in Limbo to intercede for Dante Upper Hell entry – the uncommitted; Charon rows them over the River Acheron First Circle: Limbo – the worthy unbaptised & pagans; the noble castle Second Circle – the lustful; Minos judges the dead; story of Paolo & Francesca Third Circle – gluttons; Ciacco predicts the decline of Florence Fourth Circle – the avaricious & prodigals; Fifth Circle – the wrathful & slothful Phlegyas rows them over the River Styx to the city of Dis; meet Filippo Argenti The angel opens the gate into Lower Hell; Sixth Circle – heretics Dante speaks to the heretics Farinata & Cavalcante; predictions of Dante’s future The tomb of Pope Anastasius II; Virgil describes the moral structure of Hell Seventh Circle: First Circuit: River Phlegethon – the violent against others Second Circuit – the violent against themselves (suicides & wastrels) Third Circuit – the violent against God (blasphemers) The violent against God/nature (sodomites); Dante talks to Brunetto Latini Dante talks to three Florentine sodomites; Virgil summons Geryon The violent against God/nature/art (usurers); Geryon flies them down the cliff Eighth Circle: First Pocket – panders & seducers; Second Pocket – flatterers Third Pocket – simonists; Pope Nicholas III speaks; Dante criticises the popes Fourth Pocket – diviners; Virgil explains the founding of Mantua Fifth Pocket – barrators; Dante & Virgil meet the Evilclaws The Evilclaws conduct Dante &Virgil to the Sixth Pocket; skirmish in the pitch Dante &Virgil descend into the Sixth Pocket – hypocrites; Friar Catalano speaks Dante & Virgil ascend the bank to reach the Seventh Pocket – thieves The reptilian transformation of the Florentine thieves Eighth Pocket – false counsellors; Ulysses tells of his death near Mt. Purgatory Guido da Montefeltro tells how Pope Boniface VIII brought about his downfall Ninth Pocket – schismatics; Dante talks to Mohammed & Bertran de Born Tenth Pocket – falsifiers; Dante threatened by Geri del Bello, a relative of his Gianni Schicchi & Myrrha appear; Master Adam tells his story; the liars’ dispute The giants guarding the Ninth Circle; Antaeus places Dante & Virgil in it Ninth Circle: River Cocytus: Caïna – traitors to kin; Antenora – traitors to party Count Ugolino tells his story; Ptolomea – traitors to guests Judecca – traitors to high authority; Satan in the ice; exit from Hell to Purgatory Dante in the dark wood Canto 1 Midway along the path of our life I found myself in a dark wood, because the direct way was lost. 3 How hard to say what it was like – that savage wood, and harsh and thick – the thought of which renews my fear! 6 So bitter death’s but little more; and yet, to treat of good I found there, I’ll speak of other things I spied there. 9 I can’t well say just how I came there: I was so full of sleep that point I left the truthful way behind. 12 But when I reached the foot of a hill, just where that valley that’d pierced my heart with fear came to an end, 15 I looked up high and saw its shoulders now clothed in light beams of the planet that leads us straight on every road. 18 So then the fear was hushed a mite that I’d endured in my heart’s lake that night I’d passed so piteously, 21 17 THE COMEDY: HELL and like a man with panting breath, escaping from the main to shore, turns round and scans the parlous sea, 24 just so my mind, though still in flight, turned back to eye again the pass that none’s yet ever left alive. 27 I rested my tired frame a bit, then took way on a desert slope, with e’er my standing foot the lowest. 30 And there! About the steep’s beginning, a lipard, light and very fast, and covered with a spotted coat: 33 it wouldn’t get out of my face, but rather blocked my path so much that many times I turned to return. 36 The start of morning was the time, the sun now climbing with the stars with it the time the Divine Love 39 first set those lovely things in motion, so that the hour of day and sweet season was reason for good hope 42 against that beast with garish skin – but not so much I didn’t fear sight of a lion that appeared! 45 This lion seemed to come against me, his head up high and hungry mad, so that the air appeared to quake – 48 18 The lipard THE COMEDY: HELL and a she-wolf, who in her thinness seemed loaded up with every craving (and many now she’s made live sadly). 51 She gave me such a heaviness through fear that came from sight of her I lost all hope of the ascent. 54 Like one who keenly makes a gain but time arrives to make him lose, who cries in all his thoughts and whines, 57 just so the ruthless beast made me, as, coming on me bit by bit, she drove me where the sun stays silent. 60 Whilst plunging to a place below, my eyes were then presented with a man who from long lull seemed faint. 63 On seeing him in the great desert, I shouted: ‘Miserere on me, whoe’er you are, shade or sure man!’ 66 He answered me: ‘Not man, though man I once was, and with Lombard parents, both of them Mantuans by birth. 69 I was born late sub Julio and I lived under good Augustus in Rome, the time of fake, false gods. 72 A poet I who sang of just Anchises’ son trav’lling from Troy when haughty Ilium was burnt. 75 20 CANTO 1 But why return to such vexation? Why not ascend the charming mountain, the start and cause of every joy?’ 78 ‘Are you that Virgil and that fountain which spreads so wide its stream of speech?’ I answered him shamefacedly. 81 ‘Honour and light of other poets, may the long study and great love that made me search your work avail me. 84 You’re my authority and master; you’re the sole one from whom I took the lovely style that’s brought me honour. 87 Behold the beast from which I turned. Defend me from her, famous sage: she makes my veins and pulses throb.’ 90 ‘But you must take another trip,’ he answered when he saw my tears, ‘if you’d escape this savage place, 93 because this beast which makes you cry allows no-one to pass her way, but hinders them so much she kills, 96 and she’s so vile and wicked natured she never sates her craving will – post-meal she’s hungrier than before. 99 She mates with lots of animals, and there’ll be yet more, till the hound arrives who’ll make her die in pain. 102 21 THE COMEDY: HELL This hound won’t feed on land or pewter, but sapience and love and virtue. His stock’ll be ’tween felt and felt. 105 He’ll save that lowly Italy for which from wounds the virgin Camilla, Euryalus, Turnus, and Nisus died. 108 This hound’ll hunt her through each town until he’s sent her back to Hell, where envy first released her from. 111 And so I think and judge it right you follow me. I’ll be your guide and draw you hence through a timeless place, 114 a place you’ll hear the desp’rate screams and see the doleful ancient spirits who each bewail their second death. 117 You’ll also see those who’re content in the fire, coz they hope to reach, whene’er that is, the blessed people. 120 If then you’d like to climb to them, for that there’ll be a worthier soul – I’ll leave you with her when I go – 123 because that Emp’ror ruling there, coz I rebelled against his law, is loath to let me in his city. 126 All parts He governs, there He reigns; his city’s there and his high seat. How happy him He picks to be there!’ 129 22 CANTO 1 And I to him: ‘I beg you, poet, by that same God you didn’t know, so that I flee this ill and worse, 132 conduct me where you’ve just related, so I may see Saint Peter’s Gate and those you’ve made so melancholy.’ So off he set, and I came after. 136 23 Canto 2 Day was departing and dark air releasing creatures on the earth from their exertions, whilst I, one man 3 alone, prepared to face the strife of both the path and of the pity that mind unerring’ll retrace. 6 Muses, high genius, help me now. You mind, who wrote down what I saw, here your nobility’ll show. 9 I began: ‘Poet who leads me on, check if my power’s capable fore to the deep pass you entrust me. 12 You say the sire of Silvius, though still corruptible, attained the immortal world (and with his senses), 15 but that All Evil’s Foe was courtly to him, in view of the high outcome from him and who and what he was, 18 seems not unfit to men of reason, coz he was picked in the Empyrean as blessed Rome and her empire’s father, 21 24 CANTO 2 both, if you want to speak the truth, established for the sacred place where Great Peter’s successor sits. 24 By this trip, whence you give him glory, he heard the words which were the cause of his success and the pope’s mantle. 27 And then the Chosen Vessel came there to bring back comfort in that faith which is the start of salvation’s way. 30 But why do I go there? Who grants it? I’m not Aeneas, I’m not Paul. Nor I, nor others, think me worthy. 33 And so, if I commit to coming, I fear it may be mad. You’re wise: you realise what I can’t reason.’ 36 Like one who unwills what he’s willed and swaps intent for new ideas, so he forbears to start at all, 39 so I became on that dark slope, for, by reflection, I wasted effort that was so nimble at the start. 42 ‘If I’ve grasped well your speech’s meaning,’ that shade of the great heart replied, ‘your soul’s defiled by cowardice, 45 which many times encumbers man to turn his hon’rable design, like a false sighting a shy beast. 48 25 THE COMEDY: HELL To free you from this fear, I’ll tell you just why I’ve come and what I heard the first time that I grieved for you. 51 Whilst I was with the ones suspended, a lady called me, so blessed and lovely that I beseeched her to command me. 54 Her eyes shone brighter than the stars, and in her own style – sweet and soft, an angel’s voice – she started speaking: 57 “You courtly soul of Mantua, whose fame still lingers in the world and shall as long as the world lasts, 60 my friend, but not a friend of Fortune, is so impeded in his path on the bare slope he’s turned through fright. 63 I fear, from what I’ve heard of him in Heaven, lest he’s now so lost I’ve risen too late to his rescue. 66 Now stir, and with your polished speech and what’s required for his survival assist him, so I may be consoled. 69 I’m Beatrice who compels your going. I come from where I long to return to. Love’s moved me: it compels my speech. 72 When I’m before that Lord of mine, I’ll praise you to Him frequently.” So she fell silent; then I began: 75 26 Beatrice and Virgil THE COMEDY: HELL “Lady of virtue through which alone the human race surpasses all within the lesser circles’ heaven, 78 your word’s so pleasing that obeying, if by now done, would be belated. You need no more than state your wish. 81 But say the reason you don’t mind descending to this centre here from the vast place you burn to return to.” 84 “Because you wish to grasp so much, I’ll tell you briefly,” she replied, “why I don’t fear to enter here. 87 We only ought to fear those things which have the force to do us harm; of the rest, no, coz they’re not scary. 90 I’m fashioned so by God, his grace, that your affliction doesn’t touch me, nor does this fire’s flame assail me. 93 In Heaven there’s a genteel Lady so rues this bind I send you to she breaks stern judgement there above. 96 She summoned Lucy to her, saying: ‘Your faithful one’s in need of you right now and I commend him to you.’ 99 The foe of every cruelty, Lucy, set off and came to where I was, sat down beside the ancient Rachel. 28 102 CANTO 2 She said: ‘Beatrice, true praise of God, why don’t you help he who so loved you for you he left the vulgar crowd? 105 Don’t you hear pity in his cries? Don’t you behold the death that fights him upon the flood where sea’s no clout?’ 108 No earthly folk were e’er so quick to seek their good or flee their harm as I, after such words were spoken, 111 to come down here from my blessed bench, confiding in your honest discourse, which honours you and those who’ve heard it.” 114 As soon as she’d explained this to me, in tears she turned her shining eyes, which made me come more speedily. 117 And so I came here as she wished. I took you from that beast that barred you the short route of the lovely mountain. 120 And so, what’s up? Why, why delay? Why nurse such cowardice in heart? Why’ve you no boldness and resolve, 123 considering three such blessed ladies have care for you in Heaven’s court and my speech promises such good?’ 126 As little flowers bent and closed from nighttime frost, after sun lights them, all open straight upon their stems, 129 29 THE COMEDY: HELL so I became with my drained courage, and so much boldness coursed my heart that I, as one who’s firm, began: 132 ‘How pitying was she who saved me! And courtly you, who quickly obeyed the truthful words she offered you! 135 You’ve so disposed my heart with longing to come along by your remarks I’ve turned back to my first intention. 138 Now go, coz there’s one will for two: you leader, you lord, and you master.’ Thus I addressed him. And once he’d started, I entered on the deep, wild path. 142 30 Notes Canto 1 The allegorical aspect of the Comedy is nowhere in this canticle better demonstrated than in this canto. It is replete with allusions to both biblical and classical literature. At the same time, on the literal level, it’s the tale of a man lost in a wood… 1-3. At once we are aware of man in general (the biblical ‘path of life’ is the path of us all) and one man, Dante himself (‘I found myself’). It’s a moral tale of those ‘who leave the straight paths to walk in dark ways’ (Proverbs 2:13) and one about a man in a midlife crisis. On the literal level, as the midway point of life is thirty-five – ‘The length of our days is seventy years’ (Psalms 90:10) – the story is set in the year 1300, as Dante was born in 1265. The setting is significant: 1300 was the year Pope Boniface VIII proclaimed Christianity’s first Jubilee, a set period during which pilgrims to Rome could gain remission for their sins. From other temporal references, specifically one in Canto 21, 112-114 (see also v. 21), we know that Dante got lost in the wood on Maundy Thursday evening (which occurred on April 7 in 1300). Hence his awakening is allegorically tied to Christ’s Agony in the Garden of Gethsemane, a time of great doubt before he became ‘the atoning sacrifice for our sins, and not only for ours but also for the sins of the whole world’ (1 John 2:1). The wood is not only related to the garden beneath the Mount of Olives, but to the luci Triviae (‘groves of Trivia’) situated before the entrance to the Underworld in Virgil’s Aeneid. Hence there are four rites of passage alluded to here – Christ’s, Aeneas’, Dante’s, and Everyman’s. THE COMEDY: HELL That Dante suffered a crisis of conscience in 1300 is debateable (cf. Canto 2, 107 and Purgatory, Canto 1, 58-60 and notes). This was when he was at the height of his fame and power, which continued until his exile in 1301. The crisis seems an ex post facto artifice to fit with the significance of the year 1300. More than likely, Dante did not fully assess his way of life until after his exile. The Comedy was a response to the wake-up call his exile represented; indeed, would he have felt the need, or had the time, to assess his conduct in such an elaborate manner had he continued his political career successfully? The Comedy is not quite a humble man’s repentance: it may also be seen as the work of a man with great ambitions (not just literary) and a great need, as a result of his rejection by Florence, to set the record straight by judgements, some of them tendentious (if not vindictive), that were traditionally reserved only for God. As Boccaccio said in his Life of Dante: ‘Fu il nostro poeta… d'animo alto e disdegnoso molto’ (‘Our poet was…of lofty and very disdainful spirit’). 8-9. The ‘good’ and ‘other things’ Dante found ‘there’ refer to the whole interrelated redemptive experience of his coming journey from the dark wood of personal sin through the punishments of Hell and Purgatory to salvation in Heaven. 11-12. ‘Sleep’ can lead to error and sin. Dante was asleep to God when he left the ‘truthful way’ behind – ‘I am the way and the truth and the life’ (John 14:6). ‘Are you still sleeping and resting? Look, the hour is near, and the Son of Man is betrayed into the hands of sinners’ (Matthew 26:45). In Aeneid, Book 5, Aeneas wakes up, prior to reaching the Underworld entrance at Cumae, to find his ship unpiloted and drifting – errare – towards the rocks of the Sirens. 13-18. More landscape details. We’re in a valley – ‘the valley of the shadow of death’ (Psalms 23:4). But what is the hill that provides some relief? In the Aeneid, Aeneas has to climb a hill to get to the temple of Apollo, God of the Sun, situated at the portal to the Underworld. In biblical terms, on one level, the hill is the Mount of Olives, from where Christ ascended to Heaven after his resurrection (Acts 1:9-12). It’s also the hill man should 258 NOTES climb to get to the Light of God – ‘Who may ascend the hill of the Lord? Who may stand in his holy place?’ (Psalms 24:3). But it’s a hill Dante can no longer climb: he must take a different journey (v. 91, and see vv. 113-123 for the itinerary). 17. ‘light beams of the planet’ – the sun was considered a planet (in the sense of ‘wandering star’) in Dante’s time. Already, in the first few tercets, we’ve been made aware of the ‘way,’ ‘truth,’ and ‘light’ that is God. It is now the morning of Good Friday. 22-24. The simile here is reminiscent of Aeneas coming to shore after nearly coming to grief on the rocks of the Sirens. 26-27. ‘Stern discipline awaits him who leaves the path; he who hates correction will die’ (Proverbs 15:10). Salvation rests in contrition. The ‘dark wood’ is now a passage (passo) for the unrepentant on their way to Hell. This almost included Dante (as Beatrice confirms in Canto 2, 65-66 and Purgatory, Canto 30, 136-138), but he can escape his fate by making a unique journey. 29. We’re now on a desert slope – a moral wilderness or waste land. Like the Israelites, who escaped their own ‘parlous sea’ into the desert en route to the Promised Land (Exodus 15:22). 30. If the ‘standing’ foot rather than ‘leading’ foot (the left as opposed to the right in medieval thinking) is always the lowest foot, the climb is hard going as you’re dragging it up all the time. 32-60. ‘Therefore a lion from the forest will attack them, a wolf from the desert will ravage them, a leopard will lie in wait near their towns’ (Jeremiah 5:6). Although the animals clearly represent sin barring man’s way to God, the specific significance of the three animals is less clear. Firstly, and most likely, they may represent three of the Seven Deadly Sins – lust (lipard), pride (lion), and avarice (wolf). Secondly, they could represent the major categories of sin in Dante’s Hell: the lipard fraud, punished in the Eight and Ninth Circles; the lion violence, punished in the Seventh Circle; and the wolf, incontinence, punished in the Second to Fifth Circles. The 259 THE COMEDY: HELL lipard is the animal needing most explanation. A lipard (lonza) is a cross between a lion and leopardess. Such a hybrid union was considered by the medieval mind as stemming from unnatural lust. For example, in Purgatory, Canto 26, 41, the lustful penitents cry out the name of Pasiphaë, who was mated by a bull to produce the Minotaur. On the other hand, the dual nature of the lipard may favour the explanation that it represents fraud, particularly as in Canto 16, Geryon, the personification of fraud, is lured to help the travellers by the use of a cord which Dante says, retrospectively, he’d used ‘to capture the lipard with the painted pelt’ (see Canto 16, 106-108). However, interestingly enough, the First Pocket of the Eight Circle that Geryon takes them to is the one that holds panders and seducers, who deceived through lust. Hence, it could be argued that lust has a two-faced nature too. However, the lipard could also represent the ‘prostitute’ envy with his fancy coat (see note to Canto 13, 64-66), which is perhaps why Geryon has to be ‘lured’ from the depths like a fish attracted by a fly. This may lead to a third explanation: the lion represents pride, the lipard envy, and the wolf now (see v. 50) the rest of the appetites (incontinence) – in sum, all the Seven Deadly Sins! As far as Dante is concerned, it’s the wolf that gives him the most difficulty, forcing him eventually to abandon his attempt to climb the hill (vv. 88-96). 37-40. Another temporal reference. The ‘Divine Love’ was believed to have created the stars during the constellation of Aries (March 21-April 19). It’s early morning in spring. 65. ‘Miserere’ – ‘Have mercy…’ (Psalm 51:1). 70. ‘sub Julio’ – in the time of Julius Caesar, i.e. 70 B.C. He was ‘late’ because Julius died in 44 B.C., before Virgil had written his major works. 73-75. Aeneas was the son of Anchises, and the work is of course the Aeneid. Virgil propagated in the Aeneid an old myth that the Romans were descended from those Trojans who fled Troy with Aeneas after the city was burnt down by the Greeks. 260 NOTES 77. The ‘charming mountain,’ the ‘hill’ of v. 13, now seems to resemble Mt. Purgatory, which is topped by the delights of the Garden of Eden (Purgatory, Canto 29, 30), the earthly paradise and stepping stone to Heaven. 85-87. The stylistic relationship between Virgil’s Aeneid and Dante’s Comedy is clear, but less so between Virgil and Dante’s earlier work. Dante, however, believed the opposite was true. 100. Incontinence, or avarice, leads to crossover sins. 101-111. The identity of the virtuous ‘hound’ (veltro) that will drive out incontinence/avarice in Italy is a much-discussed point, exemplifying as with the three beasts the convoluted ramifications of Dantean interpretation. Taking into account similar prophesies in Purgatory and Paradise and Dante’s belief in a politico-moral saviour for Italy, specifically an imperial one, the most likely candidate is the much-admired imperial vicargeneral Can Grande della Scala, Ghibelline ruler of Verona (1311-1329) – who sheltered Dante in exile and to whom Dante dedicated Paradise – in particular because ‘Can’ = ‘dog’ and Verona is between Feltre and Montefeltro. 106-108. Camilla, Euryalus, Turnus and Nisus died during the Latin wars Aeneas fought in establishing a new race in Italy. The veltro is a new Aeneas with a mission to regenerate the country. 111. Envy, like pride, appears throughout Hell (see ‘Introduction: The moral structure of Hell’). It also causes other sins. 118-119. ‘those who’re content in the fire’ – those in Purgatory, whose punishment is temporal. The souls have to go through a fire on the Seventh Cornice to pass into the Garden of Eden. 121-126. Beatrice (‘worthier soul’) becomes Dante’s guide in the Garden of Eden and throughout Heaven (see ‘Introduction: The life of Dante’ for Beatrice). Virgil, because he was not a Christian but worshipped pagan gods (‘rebelled against his law’), cannot enter there. His home’s in the benign First Circle, Limbo. 261 THE COMEDY: HELL Canto 2 1-3. Reminiscent of similar passages in the Aeneid, such as Book 8, 26-27 – ‘Nox erat et terras animalia fessa per omnis/alituum pecudumque genus sopor altus habebat’ (‘It was night, and over every land deep sleep held tired creatures, birds and beasts alike’). It is now Good Friday evening, but unlike Christ Dante still has doubts (vv. 10-36). 7. More classical touches – the traditional invocation of the poet for divine inspiration, for which read the Christian God. There are similar invocations in Purgatory and Paradise. 13-27. Dante saw the colonisation of Italy by Aeneas, and the subsequent founding of Rome and its empire, as being by God’s mandate. This allowed Rome then to become the chosen city for the establishment of the papal authority. The role of Aeneas in this regard is mentioned in both The Banquet and Monarchy. According to Singleton, Dante’s use of the words ‘Tu dici’ (‘You say’) in v. 13 and ‘dai tu’ (‘you give’) in v. 25 implies that, though he believes in a historical Aeneas, his journey to the Underworld was a poetic fiction. This is not the case with Paul’s journey, as the Scriptures were revealed truth. 13. ‘sire of Silvius’ – Aeneas was the father of Silvius. 16. ‘All Evil’s Foe’ – God. 20. ‘the Empyrean’ – the final heaven and abode of God (see the map of Dante’s universe on page 352). 28. St. Paul is the ‘Chosen Vessel’ (Acts 9:15). He went to Heaven whilst still alive (2 Corinthians 12:2-4) and, reputedly, as described here, Hell (apocryphal Apocalypse of Paul). 52. ‘the ones suspended’ – the souls in the First Circle (Limbo) because they are suspended between the punishments of Hell and Purgatory and the delights of Heaven (see also Canto 4, 45.) 262 NOTES 70. Beatrice does not appear again until Canto 30 in Purgatory. 76-78. The phrase ‘the lesser circles’ heaven’ indicates the Sphere of the Moon (see the map of Dante’s universe on page 352) because it encompasses two minor spheres of fire and air below it. These minor spheres also surround the earth, hence, everything ‘within’ the Sphere of the Moon, in this sense of its compass, includes earth. So, the tercet seems to mean that Beatrice’s virtue elevates the human race above its station. 84. ‘the vast place you burn to return to’ – the Empyrean, which has no limits in space, and is cielo di fiamma (heaven of flame), that is, metaphorically, Love. 94. ‘a genteel Lady’ – the Virgin Mary, seemingly in the court of a medieval emperor (see also v. 125 and Canto 1, 124). The word cortese (‘courtly’) is used three times (vv. 16, 58, 134), highlighting the medieval value system permeating this canto. 97. ‘Lucy’ – St. Lucy, a symbol of ‘light,’ and patron of Dante. 102. ‘Rachel’ – sister of Leah in Genesis. 105. This perhaps refers to Dante’s change from the troubadourbased style of his early poems to a new, more spiritual style. 107-108. The ‘flood’ probably refers to Canto 1, 24-27, where the pass is likened to a ‘parlous sea,’ a place no-one leaves alive (as the ‘pass’ is a symbol, the sea literally has no hold over it). The fateful pass also fits the situation as Dante is fighting death during this conversation in the shape of the three beasts. 120. ‘the short route of the lovely mountain’ – straight up the ‘hill’ or ‘charming mountain’ of Canto 1. The longer route is Dante’s trip through Hell. 124. ‘three such blessed ladies’ – typically, Dante has found three virtues (the three ladies of love, pity, and kindness) to help combat the three vices of the three beasts. 263 THE COMEDY: HELL 127-138. Although the dark wood, pass, valley, and desert slope signify Dante’s moral decline, they’re also a transformational space for him to resolve his doubts about which way to go. Canto 3 1-9. Chaucer draws inspiration from Dante for a more benign inscription above a portal in The Parliament of Fowls: Thorgh me men goon in-to that blisful place Of hertes hele and dedly woundes cure; Thorgh me men goon unto the welle of Grace, Ther grene and lusty May shal ever endure; This is the wey to al good aventure; Be glad, thou reder, and thy sorwe of-caste, Al open am I; passe in, and hy the faste! 4-6. ‘Lofty Maker’ = God; ‘Divine Power’ = God the Father; ‘Wisdom Supreme’ = God the Son; ‘Primal Love’ = the Holy Spirit. Based on St. Augustine’s De trinitate. 18. ‘good of the intellect’ – truth, according to Aristotle in Nicomachean Ethics. God is Truth. 35-36. ’those who lived without disgrace yet without praise’ – these are the ‘uncommitted,’ who are neither good or bad, so are stuck following a directionless banner in this vestibule of Hell. Just such a vestibule exists with similar ‘neutrals’ in the Apocalypse of Paul. 55-57. T. S. Eliot utilised this tercet in The Waste Land: Under the brown fog of a winter dawn, A crowd flowed over London Bridge, so many, I had not thought death had undone so many. 59-60. ‘the shade who made through cowardice the Great Refusal’ – this is thought to be Pope Celestine V, who abdicated the papacy in favour of Pope Boniface VIII in 1294. Another 264 Maps Dante’s Hell Dante’s universe List of plates Dante in the dark wood The lipard Beatrice and Virgil The gateway to Hell Charon The honourable folk in Limbo Minos judging the dead Paolo and Francesca Ciacco and the gluttons Pluto The avaricious and prodigals Filippo Argenti and the wrathful The angel opens the gate of the city of Dis Farinata The tomb of Pope Anastasius The Minotaur The centaurs The wood of suicides The crossing over the fiery sands Brunetto Latini Geryon Evilpockets – the panders and seducers Evilpockets – the flatterers Evilpockets – the simonists The Evilclaws The Navarrese escapes Harlequin 16 19 27 32 36 43 47 50 57 61 63 69 77 82 88 94 97 103 112 117 131 136 140 144 157 166 THE COMEDY: HELL The hypocrites Caiaphas The thieves and serpents Agnello and the serpent Ulysses and Diomedes Mohammed and Ali Bertran de Born The alchemists Gianni Schicchi attacking Capocchio The giants Antaeus places Dante and Virgil in Cocytus Dante grabs Bocca Ugolino gnawing Ruggieri Ugolino and his sons/grandsons in the tower Satan Dante and Virgil see the stars 354 171 174 180 186 192 205 209 214 220 229 232 237 240 244 249 255