Dante divine comedy hell analysis. Lyrical hero and allegorical meaning of the poem "The Divine Comedy" by Dante

Meanings are not inherent, they are constructed. A poem of 14 thousand lines, where the action of each song takes place in a different place and with new characters, simply cannot have any one meaning that can be taken from there and, here, shown. So let's try it short.

The poem is a hybrid of the life of an Old Testament prophet, an ancient epic, and an Augustine-style spiritual autobiography. It is not only a model of a poem about the world, it is also a model of a poem about oneself.

To go up, you must first go down.

Dante's world is neither medieval nor humanistic. The principle of law in it is not final, but there will be no universal mercy in it either. The only thing that can be said about him is that he is amazing. organic.

Hell is bad.

The main problem of sinners is the lack of an adequate perception, first of all, of themselves. It would seem that being in hell should lead to thoughts. But no.

All troubles come not from the Guelphs/Ghibellines/other group of individuals of your choice, but from factional feuds.

Boniface VIII is not yet in hell, but he will be.

Hell cannot be understood without understanding purgatory and paradise. A person who reads hell and leaves a poem because he "find it all out" leaves with nothing at all.

The process of spiritual recovery is extremely ritualistic. It arises as a result of a sequence of actions that the name simply does, and through them begins to transform. Like cultivating the soil.

God has better sculptures.

There is free will.

There is no determinism.

You can love the right things in the wrong way and you end up with complete bullshit.

Paradise is not for the sinless, but for the repentant. Another thing is that the ability to repent, even if it woke up thirty seconds before death, is still brought up throughout life.

Morality must go before polit. theories. Justinian compiled the Code not because he was well-read, but because he had previously understood his relations with the world.

Centralized power is better than republican, because well, there was a republic in Florence, and look what came of it.

Nothing better than Roman law has yet been invented. If someone else used it, it would be generally great.

Man is saved by repentance, but approaches God by thinking about the universe. In fact, it is possible that the ancient comrades in Limbo, in view of all this, are not so bad.

Dominicans and Franciscans, it turns out, can live in peace, who would have thought.

For Florentines, all bread is salty.

Poetry equally effectively plunges into heresy and righteousness. Politics too.

The main criterion for evaluating any creativity is its truthfulness of the world position presented by it. Quite a Renaissance idea, but what.

Ripheus of Tron is in paradise, and no one knows how he got there.

The ability to believe is largely based on knowledge and the ability to think rationally. Faith is rational.

Aristotle was right about the Prime Mover.

The church really needs to be reformed. It really needs to be reformed. I don’t know, however, how Dante would have reacted to this reform.

Ultimately, the world order is both mystical and rational. As it were, here the Trinity is described as an imposition of equal circles. Do you feel it?

Virgin Mary is the daughter of Christ. Not literally.

Everything ends in much the same way as Wittgenstein did, and you hoped.

In the two greatest creations of Dante Alighieri - "New Life" and in " Divine Comedy”(see its summary) - the same idea was carried out. Both of them are connected by the idea that pure love ennobles the nature of a person, and the knowledge of the frailty of sensual bliss brings a person closer to God. But the "New Life" is only a series of lyrical poems, while the "Divine Comedy" is a whole poem in three parts, containing up to one hundred songs, each of which contains about one hundred and forty verses.

In early youth, Dante experienced a passionate love for Beatrice, daughter of Fulk Portinari. He kept it for last days life, although he never managed to connect with Beatrice. Dante's love was tragic: Beatrice died at a young age, and after her death great poet saw in her a transfigured angel.

Dante Alighieri. Drawing by Giotto, 14th century

IN mature years love for Beatrice began to gradually lose its sensual connotation for Dante, passing into a purely spiritual dimension. Healing from sensual passion was a spiritual baptism for the poet. The Divine Comedy reflects this spiritual healing of Dante, his view of the present and the past, his life and the lives of his friends, art, science, poetry, Guelphs and Ghibellines, on the political parties of "black" and "white". In The Divine Comedy, Dante expressed how he looks at all this comparatively and relatively to the eternal. moral principle of things. In "Hell" and "Purgatory" (he often calls the second "Mountain of propitiation") Dante considers all phenomena only from the side of their external manifestation, from the point of view of state wisdom, personified by him in his "guide" - Virgil, i.e. point of view of law, order and law. In "Paradise" all the phenomena of heaven and earth are presented in the spirit of the contemplation of a deity or the gradual transformation of the soul, by which the finite spirit merges with the infinite nature of things. The transfigured Beatrice, a symbol of divine love, eternal mercy and true knowledge of God, leads him from one sphere to another and leads him to God, where there is no more limited space.

Such poetry might have seemed like a purely theological treatise if Dante had not littered his journey through the world of ideas with living images. The meaning of the "Divine Comedy", where the world and all its phenomena are described and depicted, and the allegory carried out is only slightly indicated, was very often reinterpreted when analyzing the poem. Under clearly allegorical images, they understood either the struggle of the Guelphs and Ghibellines, then politics, the vices of the Roman church, or events in general modern history. This best proves how far Dante was from the empty play of fantasy and how he was wary of drowning out poetry under allegory. It is desirable that his commentators should be as circumspect in their analysis of the Divine Comedy as he was.

Statue of Dante in Piazza Santa Croce in Florence

Dante's Inferno - Analysis

"I think it's for your good that you should follow me. I will show the way and lead you through the countries of eternity, where you will hear the cries of despair, you will see the mournful shadows that lived on earth before you, calling for the death of the soul after the death of the body. Then you will also see others rejoicing in the midst of the purifying flame, because they hope to gain access to the habitation of the blessed through suffering. If you wish to ascend to this dwelling, then a soul worthier than mine will lead you there. She will stay with you when I leave. By the will of the supreme lord, I, who never knew his laws, was not allowed to show the way to his city. The whole universe obeys him, according to his kingdom there. There is his chosen city (sua città), there stands his throne above the clouds. Oh, blessed are those who are sought by him!”

According to Virgil, Dante will have to know in "Hell", not in words, but in deeds, all the disaster of a person who has fallen away from God, and see all the vanity of earthly greatness and ambition. To do this, the poet depicts the underworld in the Divine Comedy, where he combines everything that he knows from mythology, history and his own experience about a person’s violation of the moral law. Dante inhabits this realm with people who have never sought to achieve pure and spiritual existence through labor and struggle, and divides them into circles, showing their relative distance from each other. various degrees sins. These circles of Hell, as he himself says in the eleventh song, personify the moral teaching (ethics) of Aristotle about man's deviation from divine law.

The Divine Comedy by Dante Alighieri is one of the most famous works world literature. It was written at the beginning of the 14th century, but people still read it and try to understand the meaning that the famous native of the city of Florence put into it.

I will try to tell you how I understood the first canto of the Comedy. The first song is introductory. And, in my opinion, it is the most autobiographical in the whole poem. Like all poems, it symbolic images tells about various events in the real and spiritual life of Dante himself.

Dante's wanderings in the afterlife begin in a dense forest, when the poet himself is already about 35 years old; around 1300 Dante began to write his great work:

Having passed half of earthly life,

I found myself in a dark forest...

After the death of Beatrice in 1290, whom Dante loved all his life, he, in his figurative expression, lost his way, "losing the right path in the darkness of the valley." The beginning of the 1300s, when Dante began writing his Comedy, is also associated with political unrest in Florence, as a result of which the poet, who held a high position in the Florentine Republic, was condemned and expelled from his beloved homeland. These years are so difficult for Dante that he does not want to talk about them in detail:

I don't remember how I got in...

Dante saw a high hill in the middle of the forest and, having rested a little, went there, looking for salvation. After all, from a height you can see where to go. And any height brings a person closer to God, that is, to salvation:

When I let my body rest

I went up...

But three terrible wild beasts prevent Dante from escaping from the "wild, dense and threatening forest": a lynx, a lion and a she-wolf. Dante's poem is more symbolic than realistic. These animals represent three human vice, which were characteristic of Dante himself in full:

... Agile and curly lynx,

All in bright spots of a motley pattern ...

This is the description of the lynx, “a beast with whimsical hair”, which symbolizes lust, the desire to satisfy sexual desire. For Dante, this is a terrible sin, because his beloved Beatrice died, but he could not resist and courted other women. The poet is saved from this sin by "Divine Love", which manifested itself as the rising sun:

It was an early hour, and the sun was in the clear firmament

Accompanied by the same stars again

What is the first time when their host is beautiful

Divine moved Love.

Trusting the hour and happy time,

The blood in the heart no longer sank so

At the sight of a beast with whimsical hair...

Pride, arrogance and love of money and power are much more terrible sins for Dante. They are symbolized by a lion and a she-wolf:

A lion with uplifted mane stepped forward.

He stepped on me,

Growling furiously from hunger

And the very air is numb with fear.

And with him a she-wolf, whose thin body,

It seemed that all the greed carries in itself ...

Terrible beasts-sins push Dante to the abyss, to the death of the soul. But Beatrice protects Dante throughout his life. And after death, her “worthiest soul” becomes an angel and does not leave Dante in his wanderings on earth. Beatrice, seeing the suffering of the poet, sends to him the help of Virgil, the famous Roman poet, who:

... entrusted with a hymn,

How the son of Anchises sailed into the sunset

From proud Troy, betrayed by burning.

Dante's contemporaries revered Virgil, and for the poet himself he was "a teacher, a beloved example":

You are my teacher, my favorite example;

Only you alone handed me a legacy

Beautiful style, exalted everywhere.

It is Virgil who will protect Dante in his travels through the world of the dead:

Follow me and into the eternal villages

From these places I will bring you

And you will hear the screams of madness

And the ancient spirits that live there,

ABOUT new death vain prayers...

There are many versions of why Dante chose Virgil as his guide. For example, the reason, perhaps, was the fact that Virgil described in his "Aeneid" the wanderings of the hero Aeneas through the underground realm of the dead. It seems to me that this is not the only reason. After all, the wanderings of Odysseus through Hades were also described by Homer, who has always been a very revered poet. But Virgil is also Dante's countryman, a Roman, and therefore an ancestor of the Italians:

I bring down my family from the Lombards,

And Mantua was their sweet land...

He could not call his work a tragedy only because those, like all genres, “ high literature", were written in Latin. Dante wrote it in his native Italian. The Divine Comedy is the fruit of the entire second half of Dante's life and work. In this work, the worldview of the poet was reflected with the greatest completeness. Dante appears here as the last great poet of the Middle Ages, a poet who continues the line of development of feudal literature.

Editions

Translations into Russian

  • A. S. Norova, “An excerpt from the 3rd song of the poem Hell” (“Son of the Fatherland”, 1823, No. 30);
  • F. Fan-Dim, "Hell", translated from Italian (St. Petersburg, 1842-48; prose);
  • D. E. Min "Hell", translation in the size of the original (Moscow, 1856);
  • D. E. Min, "The First Song of Purgatory" ("Russian Vest.", 1865, 9);
  • V. A. Petrova, “The Divine Comedy” (translated with Italian words, St. Petersburg, 1871, 3rd edition 1872; translated only “Hell”);
  • D. Minaev, "The Divine Comedy" (Lpts. and St. Petersburg. 1874, 1875, 1876, 1879, translated not from the original, in terts);
  • P. I. Weinberg, “Hell”, song 3, “Vestn. Evr.", 1875, No. 5);
  • Golovanov N. N., "The Divine Comedy" (1899-1902);
  • M. L. Lozinsky, "The Divine Comedy" (, Stalin Prize);
  • A. A. Ilyushin (created in the 1980s, first partial publication in 1988, full edition in 1995);
  • V. S. Lemport, The Divine Comedy (1996-1997);
  • V. G. Marantsman, (St. Petersburg, 2006).

Structure

The Divine Comedy is extremely symmetrical. It is divided into three parts: the first part ("Hell") consists of 34 songs, the second ("Purgatory") and the third ("Paradise") - 33 songs each. The first part consists of two introductory songs and 32 describing hell, since there can be no harmony in it. The poem is written in tertsina - stanzas, consisting of three lines. This penchant for certain numbers is explained by the fact that Dante gave them a mystical interpretation - so the number 3 is associated with the Christian idea of ​​the Trinity, the number 33 should remind you of the years of the earthly life of Jesus Christ, etc. There are 100 songs in the Divine Comedy (number 100 - a symbol of perfection).

Plot

Dante's meeting with Virgil and the beginning of their journey through the underworld (medieval miniature)

According to Catholic tradition, the afterlife consists of hell where forever condemned sinners go, purgatory- the places of residence of sinners atoning for their sins, and Raya- the abode of the blessed.

Dante details this representation and describes the device of the afterlife, fixing all the details of its architectonics with graphic certainty. In the opening song, Dante tells how he, having reached the middle life path, once got lost in a dense forest and, like the poet Virgil, having saved him from three wild animals that blocked his path, invited Dante to make a journey through the afterlife. Having learned that Virgil was sent to Beatrice, Dante's deceased beloved, he surrenders without trepidation to the leadership of the poet.

Hell

Hell looks like a colossal funnel, consisting of concentric circles, the narrow end of which rests on the center of the earth. Having passed the threshold of hell, inhabited by the souls of insignificant, indecisive people, they enter the first circle of hell, the so-called limbo (A., IV, 25-151), where the souls of virtuous pagans reside, who did not know the true God, but who approached this knowledge and beyond then delivered from hellish torments. Here Dante sees prominent representatives ancient culture- Aristotle, Euripides, Homer, etc. The next circle is filled with the souls of people who once indulged in unbridled passion. Among those carried by a wild whirlwind, Dante sees Francesca da Rimini and her beloved Paolo, who fell victim to forbidden love for each other. As Dante, accompanied by Virgil, descends lower and lower, he becomes a witness to the torment of gluttons, forced to suffer from rain and hail, misers and spendthrifts, tirelessly rolling huge stones, angry, bogged down in a swamp. They are followed by heretics and heresiarchs engulfed in eternal flames (among them Emperor Frederick II, Pope Anastasius II), tyrants and murderers swimming in streams of boiling blood, suicides turned into plants, blasphemers and rapists burned by falling flames, deceivers of all kinds, torments which are very varied. Finally, Dante enters the last, 9th circle of hell, intended for the most terrible criminals. Here is the abode of traitors and traitors, of which the greatest are Judas Iscariot, Brutus and Cassius, they are gnawed with their three mouths by Lucifer, an angel who once rebelled against God, the king of evil, doomed to imprisonment in the center of the earth. The description of the terrible appearance of Lucifer ends the last song of the first part of the poem.

Purgatory

Purgatory

Having passed a narrow corridor connecting the center of the earth with the second hemisphere, Dante and Virgil come to the surface of the earth. There, in the middle of the island surrounded by the ocean, a mountain rises in the form of a truncated cone - purgatory, like hell, consisting of a series of circles that narrow as they approach the top of the mountain. The angel guarding the entrance to purgatory lets Dante into the first circle of purgatory, having previously drawn seven P (Peccatum - sin) on his forehead with a sword, that is, a symbol of the seven deadly sins. As Dante rises higher and higher, bypassing one circle after another, these letters disappear, so that when Dante, having reached the top of the mountain, enters the "earthly paradise" located on the top of the latter, he is already free from the signs inscribed by the guardian of purgatory. The circles of the latter are inhabited by the souls of sinners atoning for their sins. Here the proud are cleansed, forced to bend under the burden of weights pressing their backs, envious, angry, negligent, greedy, etc. Virgil brings Dante to the gates of paradise, where he, as someone who did not know baptism, has no access.

Paradise

In the earthly paradise, Virgil is replaced by Beatrice, seated on a chariot drawn by a vulture (an allegory of the triumphant church); she prompts Dante to repentance, and then lifts him, enlightened, to heaven. The final part of the poem is devoted to Dante's wanderings in the heavenly paradise. The latter consists of seven spheres encircling the earth and corresponding to seven planets (according to the then widespread Ptolemaic system): the spheres of the Moon, Mercury, Venus, etc., followed by the spheres of fixed stars and crystal, - the crystal sphere is Empyrean, - infinite the region inhabited by the blessed, contemplating God, is the last sphere that gives life to all that exists. Flying through the spheres, led by Bernard, Dante sees the emperor Justinian, introducing him to the history of the Roman Empire, teachers of the faith, martyrs for the faith, whose shining souls form a sparkling cross; Rising higher and higher, Dante sees Christ and the Virgin Mary, angels, and, finally, the “Heavenly Rose” is revealed before him - the abode of the blessed. Here Dante partakes of the highest grace, reaching communion with the Creator.

"Comedy" - the latest and greatest mature work Dante.

Analysis of the work

In form, the poem is an afterlife vision, of which there were many in medieval literature. Like the medieval poets, it rests on an allegorical core. So dense forest, in which the poet got lost halfway through earthly existence, is a symbol of life's complications. Three beasts that attack him there: a lynx, a lion and a she-wolf - the three most strong passions: sensuality, lust for power, greed. These allegories are also given a political interpretation: the lynx is Florence, the spots on the skin of which should indicate the enmity of the Guelph and Ghibelline parties. The lion is a symbol of the rough physical strength- France; she-wolf, greedy and lustful - papal curia. These beasts threaten the national unity of Italy, which Dante dreamed of, a unity held together by the rule of a feudal monarchy (some literary historians give Dante's entire poem a political interpretation). Virgil saves the poet from the beasts - the mind sent to the poet Beatrice (theology - faith). Virgil leads Dante through hell to purgatory, and on the threshold of paradise gives way to Beatrice. The meaning of this allegory is that reason saves a person from passions, and knowledge of divine science delivers eternal bliss.

The Divine Comedy is imbued with the political tendencies of the author. Dante never misses an opportunity to reckon with his ideological, even personal enemies; he hates usurers, condemns credit as "excess", condemns his own age as an age of profit and avarice. In his opinion, money is the source of all evils. He contrasts the dark present with the bright past of bourgeois Florence - feudal Florence, when simplicity of morals, moderation, chivalrous "knowledge" ("Paradise", the story of Cacchagvida), the feudal empire (cf. Dante's treatise "On the Monarchy") dominated. The tercines of "Purgatory", accompanying the appearance of Sordello (Ahi serva Italia), sound like a real hosanna of Ghibellinism. Dante treats the papacy as a principle with the greatest respect, although he hates individual representatives of it, especially those who contributed to the strengthening of the bourgeois system in Italy; some dads Dante meets in hell. His religion is Catholicism, although a personal element is already woven into it, alien to the old orthodoxy, although mysticism and the Franciscan pantheistic religion of love, which are accepted with all passion, are also a sharp deviation from classical Catholicism. His philosophy is theology, his science is scholasticism, his poetry is allegory. Ascetic ideals in Dante have not yet died, and he regards free love as a grave sin (Hell, 2nd circle, the famous episode with Francesca da Rimini and Paolo). But it is not a sin for him to love, which attracts to the object of worship with a pure platonic impulse (cf. “ new life", Dante's love for Beatrice). This is a great world force that "moves the sun and other luminaries." And humility is no longer an absolute virtue. “Whoever in glory does not renew his strength with victory will not taste the fruit that he obtained in the struggle.” And the spirit of inquisitiveness, the desire to widen the circle of knowledge and acquaintance with the world, combined with “virtue” (virtute e conoscenza), which encourages heroic daring, is proclaimed an ideal.

Dante built his vision from pieces real life. Separate corners of Italy, which are placed in it with clear graphic contours, went to the construction of the afterlife. And so many living things are scattered in the poem human images, so many typical figures, so many vivid psychological situations that literature still continues to draw from there. People who suffer in hell, repent in purgatory (moreover, the volume and nature of the punishment corresponds to the volume and nature of sin), abide in bliss in paradise - all living people. In these hundreds of figures, no two are the same. In this huge gallery historical figures there is not a single image that would not be faceted by the unmistakable plastic intuition of the poet. No wonder Florence experienced a period of such intense economic and cultural upsurge. That keen sense of landscape and man, which is shown in the Comedy and which the world learned from Dante, was possible only in the social environment of Florence, which was far ahead of the rest of Europe. Separate episodes of the poem, such as Francesca and Paolo, Farinata in his red-hot grave, Ugolino with children, Capaneus and Ulysses, in no way similar to ancient images, the Black Cherub with subtle devilish logic, Sordello on his stone, are produced to this day strong impression.

The Concept of Hell in The Divine Comedy

Dante and Virgil in Hell

In front of the entrance are pitiful souls who did neither good nor evil during their lifetime, including “bad flock of angels”, who were neither with the devil nor with God.

  • 1st circle (Limb). Unbaptized Infants and Virtuous Non-Christians.
  • 2nd circle. Voluptuaries (fornicators and adulterers).
  • 3rd circle. Gluttons, gluttons.
  • 4th circle. Covetous and spendthrifts (love of excessive spending).
  • 5th circle (Stygian swamp). Angry and lazy.
  • 6th circle (city of Dit). Heretics and false teachers.
  • 7th round.
    • 1st belt. Violators over the neighbor and over his property (tyrants and robbers).
    • 2nd belt. Violators of themselves (suicides) and of their property (players and wasters, that is, senseless destroyers of their property).
    • 3rd belt. Violators of the deity (blasphemers), against nature (sodomites) and art (extortion).
  • 8th round. Deceived the disbelievers. It consists of ten ditches (Zlopazuhi, or Evil Slits), which are separated from each other by ramparts (rifts). Towards the center, the area of ​​Evil Slits slopes, so that each next ditch and each next shaft are located somewhat lower than the previous ones, and the outer, concave slope of each ditch is higher than the inner, curved slope ( Hell , XXIV, 37-40). The first shaft adjoins the circular wall. In the center gapes the depth of a wide and dark well, at the bottom of which lies the last, ninth, circle of Hell. From the foot of the stone heights (v. 16), that is, from the circular wall, stone ridges go to this well in radii, like the spokes of a wheel, crossing ditches and ramparts, and above the ditches they bend in the form of bridges, or vaults. In Evil Slits, deceivers are punished who deceive people who are not connected with them by special bonds of trust.
    • 1st ditch. Procurers and seducers.
    • 2nd ditch. Flatterers.
    • 3rd ditch. Holy merchants, high-ranking clerics who traded in church positions.
    • 4th ditch. Soothsayers, fortune tellers, astrologers, sorceresses.
    • 5th ditch. Bribers, bribe-takers.
    • 6th ditch. Hypocrites.
    • 7th ditch. The thieves .
    • 8th ditch. Wicked advisers.
    • 9th ditch. The instigators of discord (Mohammed, Ali, Dolcino and others).
    • 10th ditch. Alchemists, perjurers, counterfeiters.
  • 9th round. Deceived those who trusted. Ice lake Cocytus.
    • Belt of Cain. Family traitors.
    • Belt of Antenor. Traitors of the motherland and like-minded people.
    • Belt of Tolomei. Traitors of friends and companions.
    • Giudecca belt. Traitors of benefactors, majesty divine and human.
    • In the middle, in the center of the universe, frozen into an ice floe (Lucifer) torments in his three mouths traitors to the majesty of the earthly and heavenly (Judas, Brutus and Cassius).

Building a model of Hell ( Hell , XI, 16-66), Dante follows Aristotle, who in his "Ethics" (book VII, ch. I) refers to the 1st category the sins of intemperance (incontinenza), to the 2nd - the sins of violence ("violent bestiality" or matta bestialitade), to 3 - sins of deceit ("malice" or malizia). Dante has circles 2-5 for the intemperate, 7th for rapists, 8-9 for deceivers (8th is just for deceivers, 9th is for traitors). Thus, the more material the sin, the more forgivable it is.

Heretics - apostates from the faith and deniers of God - are singled out especially from the host of sinners who fill the upper and lower circles, in the sixth circle. In the abyss of the lower Hell (A., VIII, 75), three ledges, like three steps, are three circles - from the seventh to the ninth. In these circles, malice is punished, wielding either force (violence) or deceit.

The Concept of Purgatory in The Divine Comedy

Three holy virtues - the so-called "theological" - faith, hope and love. The rest are four "basic" or "natural" (see note Ch., I, 23-27).

Dante depicts him as a huge mountain rising in southern hemisphere in the middle of the ocean. It has the shape of a truncated cone. The coastline and the lower part of the mountain form the Prepurgatory, and the upper one is surrounded by seven ledges (seven circles of Purgatory proper). On the flat top of the mountain, Dante places the desert forest of the Earthly Paradise.

Virgil expounds the doctrine of love as the source of all good and evil and explains the gradation of the circles of Purgatory: circles I, II, III - love for "another evil", that is, malevolence (pride, envy, anger); circle IV - insufficient love for the true good (despondency); circles V, VI, VII - excessive love for false goods (covetousness, gluttony, voluptuousness). The circles correspond to the biblical deadly sins.

  • Prepurgatory
    • The foot of Mount Purgatory. Here, the newly arrived souls of the dead await access to Purgatory. Those who died under church excommunication, but repented of their sins before death, wait for a period thirty times longer than the time that they spent in "strife with the church."
    • First ledge. Careless, until the hour of death they hesitated to repent.
    • Second ledge. Careless, died a violent death.
  • Valley of Earthly Lords (does not apply to Purgatory)
  • 1st circle. Proud.
  • 2nd circle. Envious.
  • 3rd circle. Angry.
  • 4th circle. Dull.
  • 5th round. Buyers and spendthrifts.
  • 6th round. Gluttons.
  • 7th round. Voluptuaries.
  • Earthly paradise.

The concept of Paradise in The Divine Comedy

(in brackets - examples of personalities given by Dante)

  • 1 sky(Moon) - the abode of those who observe duty (Jephthah, Agamemnon, Constance of Norman).
  • 2 sky(Mercury) - the abode of the reformers (Justinian) and the innocent victims (Iphigenia).
  • 3 sky(Venus) - the abode of lovers (Karl Martell, Kunitzsa, Folco of Marseilles, Dido, "Rhodopeian", Raava).
  • 4 sky(Sun) - the abode of sages and great scientists. They form two circles ("round dance").
    • 1st circle: Thomas Aquinas, Albert von Bolstedt, Francesco Gratiano, Peter of Lombard, Dionysius the Areopagite, Paul Orosius, Boethius, Isidore of Seville, Bede the Venerable, Ricard, Seeger of Brabant.
    • 2nd circle: Bonaventure, Franciscans Augustine and Illuminati, Hugon, Peter the Eater, Peter of Spain, John Chrysostom, Anselm, Elius Donatus, Raban Maurus, Joachim.
  • 5 sky(Mars) - the abode of warriors for the faith (Jesus Nun, Judas Maccabee, Roland, Gottfried of Bouillon, Robert Guiscard).
  • 6 sky(Jupiter) - the abode of just rulers (biblical kings David and Hezekiah, Emperor Trajan, King Guglielmo II the Good and the hero of the "Aeneid" Ripheus).
  • 7 sky(Saturn) - the abode of theologians and monks (Benedict of Nursia, Peter Damiani).
  • 8 sky(sphere of stars).
  • 9 sky(The prime mover, crystal sky). Dante describes the structure of the heavenly inhabitants (see Orders of Angels).
  • 10 sky(Empyrean) - Flaming Rose and Radiant River (the core of the rose and the arena of the heavenly amphitheater) - the abode of the Deity. On the banks of the river (the steps of the amphitheater, which is divided into 2 more semicircles - the Old Testament and the New Testament), blessed souls sit. Mary (Our Lady) - at the head, under her - Adam and Peter, Moses, Rachel and Beatrice, Sarah, Rebekah, Judith, Ruth, etc. John sits opposite, below him - Lucia, Francis, Benedict, Augustine, etc.

Scientific moments, misconceptions and comments

  • Hell , xi, 113-114. The constellation Pisces rose above the horizon, and Woz(constellation Ursa Major) tilted to the northwest(Kavr; lat. Caurus is the name of the northwest wind. This means that there are two hours left before sunrise.
  • Hell , XXIX, 9. That their way is twenty-two district miles.(about the inhabitants of the tenth ditch of the eighth circle) - judging by the medieval approximation of the number Pi, the diameter of the last circle of Hell is 7 miles.
  • Hell , XXX, 74. Baptist sealed alloy- golden Florentine coin, florin (fiormo). On its front side, the patron of the city, John the Baptist, was depicted, and on the reverse side, the Florentine coat of arms, a lily (fiore is a flower, hence the name of the coin).
  • Hell , XXXIV, 139. The word "luminaries" (stelle - stars) ends each of the three canticles of the Divine Comedy.
  • Purgatory , I, 19-21. Beacon of love, beautiful planet- that is, Venus, eclipsing with its brightness the constellation Pisces, in which it was located.
  • Purgatory , I, 22. To awn- that is, to the celestial pole, in this case southern.
  • Purgatory , I, 30. Chariot- Ursa Major, hidden over the horizon.
  • Purgatory , II, 1-3. According to Dante, the Mount of Purgatory and Jerusalem are located at opposite ends of the earth's diameter, so they have a common horizon. In the northern hemisphere, the top of the celestial meridian ("half-day circle") that crosses this horizon falls over Jerusalem. At the hour described, the sun, visible in Jerusalem, was sinking, to soon appear in the sky of Purgatory.
  • Purgatory , II, 4-6. And the night...- According to medieval geography, Jerusalem lies in the very middle of the land, located in the northern hemisphere between the Arctic Circle and the Equator, and extending from west to east by only longitudes. The remaining three quarters of the globe are covered by the waters of the Ocean. Equally distant from Jerusalem are: in the extreme east - the mouth of the Ganges, in the extreme west - the Pillars of Hercules, Spain and Morocco. When the sun sets in Jerusalem, night approaches from the Ganges. At the time of the year described, that is, at the time of the vernal equinox, the night holds the scales in its hands, that is, it is in the constellation Libraopposing the Sun, which is in the constellation Aries. In the autumn, when she “overcomes” the day and becomes longer than it, she will leave the constellation Libra, that is, she will “drop” them.
  • Purgatory , III, 37. Quia- a Latin word meaning "because", and in the Middle Ages it was also used in the sense of quod ("what"). Scholastic science, following Aristotle, distinguished between two kinds of knowledge: scire quia- knowledge of the existing - and scire propter quid- knowledge of the causes of the existing. Virgil advises people to be content with the first kind of knowledge, without delving into the causes of what is.
  • Purgatory , IV, 71-72. The road where the unfortunate Phaeton ruled- zodiac.
  • Purgatory , XXIII, 32-33. Who is looking for "omo"...- it was believed that in features human face you can read "Homo Dei" ("Man of God"), with the eyes depicting two "O", and the eyebrows and nose - the letter M.
  • Purgatory , XXVIII, 97-108. According to Aristotelian physics, atmospheric precipitation is generated by "wet vapor", and wind is generated by "dry vapor". Matelda explains that only below the level of the gates of Purgatory are there such disturbances, generated by steam, which "follows the heat", that is, under the influence of solar heat, rises from the water and from the earth; at the height of the Earthly Paradise, only a uniform wind remains, caused by the rotation of the first firmament.
  • Purgatory , XXVIII, 82-83. Twelve four venerable elders- twenty-four books of the Old Testament.
  • Purgatory , XXXIII, 43. five hundred fifteen- a mysterious designation of the coming deliverer of the church and the restorer of the empire, who will destroy the "thief" (the harlot of song XXXII, who took someone else's place) and the "giant" (the French king). The numbers DXV form, when the signs are rearranged, the word DVX (leader), and the oldest commentators interpret it that way.
  • Purgatory , XXXIII, 139. Account set from the beginning- In the construction of the Divine Comedy, Dante observes strict symmetry. In each of its three parts (cantik) - 33 songs; "Hell" contains, in addition, another song that serves as an introduction to the whole poem. The volume of each of the hundred songs is approximately the same.
  • Paradise , XIII, 51. And there is no other center in the circle- there cannot be two opinions, just as only one center is possible in a circle.
  • Paradise , XIV, 102. The sacred sign was composed of two rays, which is hidden within the borders of the quadrants.- segments of adjacent quadrants (quarters) of the circle form the sign of the cross.
  • Paradise , XVIII, 113. In Lily M- The Gothic M resembles a fleur-de-lis.
  • Paradise , XXV, 101-102: If Cancer has a similar pearl ...- From December 21 to January 21 at sunset, the constellation

At the heart of Dante's poem lies the recognition by mankind of their sins and the ascent to spiritual life and to God. According to the poet, in order to find peace of mind, it is necessary to go through all the circles of hell and give up blessings, and redeem sins with suffering. Each of the three chapters of the poem includes 33 songs. "Hell", "Purgatory" and "Paradise" are the eloquent names of the parts that make up the "Divine Comedy". Summary makes it possible to comprehend the main idea of ​​the poem.

Dante Alighieri created the poem during the years of exile, shortly before his death. She is recognized in world literature as a brilliant creation. The author himself gave her the name "Comedy". So in those days it was customary to call any work that has a happy ending. "Divine" Boccaccio called her, thus putting the highest mark.

Dante's poem "The Divine Comedy", a summary of which schoolchildren pass in the 9th grade, is hardly perceived by modern teenagers. Detailed Analysis some songs cannot give a complete picture of the work, especially considering today's attitude to religion and human sins. However, an acquaintance, albeit an overview, with the work of Dante is necessary to create a complete picture of world fiction.

"The Divine Comedy". Summary of the chapter "Hell"

The protagonist of the work is Dante himself, to whom the shadow appears famous poet Virgil, with a proposal to make a trip to Dante, at first doubts, but agrees after Virgil informs him that Beatrice (the author's lover, who by that time had long died) asked the poet to become his guide.

Path actors starts from hell. In front of the entrance to it are miserable souls who, during their lifetime, did neither good nor evil. Outside the gate flows the river Acheron, through which Charon transports the dead. Heroes are approaching the circles of hell:


Having passed all the circles of hell, Dante and his companion went upstairs and saw the stars.

"The Divine Comedy". Brief summary of the part "Purgatory"

The protagonist and his guide end up in purgatory. Here they are met by the guard Cato, who sends them to the sea to wash. The companions go to the water, where Virgil washes away the soot of the underworld from Dante's face. At this time, a boat sails up to the travelers, which is ruled by an angel. He lands on the shore the souls of the dead who did not go to hell. With them, the heroes make a journey to the mountain of purgatory. On the way, they meet fellow countryman Virgil, the poet Sordello, who joins them.

Dante falls asleep and is transported in a dream to the gates of purgatory. Here the angel writes seven letters on the forehead of the poet, denoting the Hero goes through all the circles of purgatory, being cleansed of sins. After passing each circle, the angel erases from Dante's forehead the letter of the overcome sin. On the last lap, the poet must pass through the flames of fire. Dante is afraid, but Virgil convinces him. The poet passes the test of fire and goes to heaven, where Beatrice is waiting for him. Virgil falls silent and disappears forever. The beloved washes Dante in the sacred river, and the poet feels strength pouring into his body.

"The Divine Comedy". Summary of the part "Paradise"

Beloved ascend to heaven. To the surprise of the protagonist, he was able to take off. Beatrice explained to him that souls not burdened with sins are light. Lovers pass through all heavenly skies:

  • the first sky of the moon, where the souls of the nuns are;
  • the second is Mercury for the ambitious righteous;
  • the third is Venus, the souls of the loving ones rest here;
  • the fourth - the Sun, intended for the sages;
  • the fifth is Mars, which receives warriors;
  • the sixth - Jupiter, for the souls of the just;
  • the seventh is Saturn, where the souls of contemplators are;
  • the eighth is for the spirits of the great righteous;
  • ninth - here are angels and archangels, seraphim and cherubim.

After ascending to the last heaven, the hero sees the Virgin Mary. She is among the shining rays. Dante raises his head up to the bright and blinding light and finds the highest truth. He sees the deity in his trinity.


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