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Inferno Dante Alighieri
Cantos XIV–XVII
Summary: Canto XIV
Dante gathers the bush's scattered leaves and gives them
to the bush. He and Virgil then proceed through the forest of tree-souls
to the edge of the Third Ring of the Seventh Circle of Hell. Here
they find a desert of red-hot sand, upon which flakes of fire drift
down slowly but ceaselessly. As Virgil expounded in Canto XI, this
ring, reserved for those who were violent against God, is divided
into three zones. The rain of fire falls throughout all three. The
First Zone is for the Blasphemers, who must lie prone on a bank
of sand. The falling flakes of fire keep the sand perpetually hot,
ensuring that the souls burn from above and below. Among these sinners
Dante sees a giant, whom Virgil identifies as Capaneus, one of the
kings who besieged Thebes. Capaneus rages relentlessly, insisting
that the tortures of Hell shall never break his defiance.
The poets reach another river, which runs red, and Virgil
speaks to Dante about the source of Hell's waters. Underneath a
mountain on the island of Crete sits the broken statue of an Old
Man. Tears flow through the cracks in the statue, gathering at his
feet. As they stream away, they form the Acheron, the Styx, the
Phlegethon, and finally Cocytus, the pool at the bottom of Hell.
Summary: Canto XV
Crossing the stream, Virgil and Dante enter the Second
Zone of the Seventh Circle's Third Ring, where the Sodomitesthose
violent against naturemust walk continuously under the rain of
fire. One of these souls, Brunetto Latini, recognizes Dante and
asks him to walk near the sand for a while so that they may converse.
Latini predicts that Dante will be rewarded for his heroic political
actions. Dante dismisses this prediction and says that Fortune will
do as she pleases. Virgil approves of this attitude, and they move
on as Latini returns to his appointed path.
Summary: Canto XVI
Still in the Second Zone among the Sodomites, Dante is
approached by another group of souls, three of whom claim to recognize
Dante as their countryman. The flames have charred their features
beyond recognition, so they tell Dante their names. Dante recalls
their names from his time in Florence and feels great pity for them.
They ask if courtesy and valor still characterize their city, but
Dante sadly replies that acts of excess and arrogance now reign.
Before leaving the Second Zone, Virgil makes a strange
request. He asks for the cord that Dante wears as a belt, then throws
one end of it into a ravine filled with dark water. Dante watches
incredulously as a horrible creature rises up before them.
Summary: Canto XVII
Dante now sees that the creature has the face of a man,
the body of a serpent, and two hairy paws. Approaching it, he and
Virgil descend into the Third Zone of this circle's Third Ring.
Virgil stays to speak with the beast, sending Dante ahead to explore
the zone, inhabited by those who were violent against art (Virgil
has earlier denoted them as the Usurers). Dante sees that these
souls must sit beneath the rain of fire with purses around their
necks; these bear the sinners' respective family emblems, which
each with hungry eyes consumed (XVII.51).
As they appear unwilling to talk, Dante returns to Virgil.
In the meantime, Virgil has talked the human-headed monster into
transporting them down to the Eighth Circle of Hell. Fearful but
trusting of his guide, Dante climbs onto the beast's serpentine back;
Virgil addresses their mount as Geryon. To Dante's terror and
amazement, Geryon rears back and suddenly takes off into the air,
circling slowly downward. After setting them down safely among the
rocks at the edge of the Eighth Circle of Hell, Geryon returns to
his domain.
Analysis: Cantos XIV–XVII
Throughout Inferno, Dante the poet explains
and clarifies the geography of his Hell in the form of periodic
lectures given by Virgil to Dante the character. Canto XIV instances
one such explanation. The Old Manthe statue from which the four
rivers of Hell flowderives in part from the poetry of Ovid and
in part from the Bible's Book of Daniel. Many critics interpret
the crumbling statue as representing the decline of mankind. Virgil
describes it as comprising four materials: gold, silver, brass,
and iron. Understood as a series, these metals correspond to the
four ages of human history that Ovid delineates in his Metamorphoses:
the Golden Age, Silver Age, Bronze (or Brass) Age, and Iron Age.
The left leg of the statue, made of iron, can be seen to represent
the Roman Empire, strong and willfully led, while the right leg,
made of clay, could be the Catholic Churchcracked by its corruption.
Additionally, the statue looks west, toward Rome, in hope of renewal.
This statue, along with the beasts at the beginning of the poem
and Dante's cord in Canto XVI, belongs to a group of apparently
allegorical objects in Inferno whose symbolic meaning
remains ambiguous. Dante may intend them simply to stimulate the
imagination, and to add a sense of mystique to the world of his
poem.
Brunetto Latini was a Florentine Guelph, renowned for
both his writing and his politics; he taught at the university where
Dante studied and helped foster Dante's career. Although Latini
provided him in life with kindness and counsel, the poet Dante rather ungratefully
places him in Hell, and implicitly accuses his teacher of homosexuality
or pedophilia, situating him among the Sodomites.
Perhaps the negative treatment received by Latini at the
hands of Dante testifies to a positive aspect of the poem itself.
Although Dante often uses Inferno to make jabs
at his political enemies and reward his allies, this scene suggests
that the work transcends mere political propaganda. Thus, although
he places many Black Guelphs and Ghibellines in Hell, along with
a number of popes, Dante also sees the flaws among his own White
Guelphs, declaring, so long as conscience is not betrayed, / I
am prepared for Fortune to do her will (XV.89–90).
Thus while he may promote particular emperors, and while he certainly
doesn't repress his anger at the papists, he puts forth the following
of one's conscience as the most important rule to follow, regardless
of party. This attempt to shift his judgments out of partisan territory
also points out religion as Dante's underlying priority: regardless
of one's political beliefs, sin against God still merits full punishment.
Yet while Dante may maintain religion as the guiding force behind
his work, he forgoes few opportunities to make political asides.
In Canto XVI, as he talks with the three Florentine souls, Dante
continues to reveal his pessimism about the political state of affairs
in Florence. His description of the city reflects his state of exileit
is clearly a view from the outside. Moreover, the kinship he feels
toward these souls stems from more than his sense of their common
geographical origins; it comes from his sense of their common fate.
For these three damned sinners are also exiles in their way. Thus,
like Dante, they stand in this scene with their eyes turned back toward
home, bemoaning the evil that is overrunning Florence but unable
to do anything about it.
Dante draws the strange beast Geryon, the guardian of
the Eighth Circle of Hell, from classical mythology, changing his
form and reducing his number of heads but preserving his status
as a symbol of fraud. Having left behind the circles punishing various
types of violence, Virgil and Dante now enter the final two circles.
While these circles contain many subdivisions of their own, they
are both devoted to punishing the greatest sin of allmalice, or
fraud. As a symbol of fraud, Geryon signifies this transition.
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