Dante’s Divine Comedy: Inferno Canto 4. Dante awakens from fainting in Canto 3 Limbo Not exactly a...

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Dante’s Divine Comedy: Inferno Canto 4
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Transcript of Dante’s Divine Comedy: Inferno Canto 4. Dante awakens from fainting in Canto 3 Limbo Not exactly a...

Page 1: Dante’s Divine Comedy: Inferno Canto 4. Dante awakens from fainting in Canto 3 Limbo Not exactly a punishment, but rather “not belonging to the club”

Dante’s Divine Comedy: Inferno

Canto 4

Page 2: Dante’s Divine Comedy: Inferno Canto 4. Dante awakens from fainting in Canto 3 Limbo Not exactly a punishment, but rather “not belonging to the club”

Canto 4

• Dante awakens from fainting in Canto 3

• Limbo• Not exactly a punishment, but rather

“not belonging to the club”• The worthy who lived before

Christianity and those who could not be baptized

• The great poets

Page 3: Dante’s Divine Comedy: Inferno Canto 4. Dante awakens from fainting in Canto 3 Limbo Not exactly a punishment, but rather “not belonging to the club”

Limbo: the realm of those who did not receive the sacrament of Baptism

• Valley, wood, mist• Inability to see is a key• Virgil feels

compassion, because there are great souls here, not sinners

• Deprived of the “beatific vision”: souls cannot see the face of God

Page 4: Dante’s Divine Comedy: Inferno Canto 4. Dante awakens from fainting in Canto 3 Limbo Not exactly a punishment, but rather “not belonging to the club”

Limbo• < “limbus” (lat.) for edge, boundary =

“the edge of hell”• St. Augustine (354-430) – most important

of early Church partriarchs:– formulated concept of original sin– stated: because of original sin, all are condemned

without baptism, even infants

• St. Clement of Alexandria (c. 150-211)– began concept that it wasn’t fair if only those born

after Christ could escape eternal damnation

• Why does early Christianity need this idea?

Page 5: Dante’s Divine Comedy: Inferno Canto 4. Dante awakens from fainting in Canto 3 Limbo Not exactly a punishment, but rather “not belonging to the club”

Original Sin• All humans have guilt b/c of A

& E’s original sin• Human nature is evil, thus we

all are hell-bound• Only through the redemptive

act – Christ’s crucifixion & death, can we go to heaven = be saved

• So: what about the good folks who died before Christ? & babies? – Augustine-> they went to hell!

Page 6: Dante’s Divine Comedy: Inferno Canto 4. Dante awakens from fainting in Canto 3 Limbo Not exactly a punishment, but rather “not belonging to the club”

Limbo• Two Limbos:

– Limbo of the Infants– Limbo of the Fathers

• Dante’s L. = the fathers

• In Dante’s Limbo: the great poets of the classical world– “they did not sin; and yet,

though they have merits– that’s not enough, because

they lacked baptism– the portal of the faith that

you embrace.” (IV, 34-37)

Page 7: Dante’s Divine Comedy: Inferno Canto 4. Dante awakens from fainting in Canto 3 Limbo Not exactly a punishment, but rather “not belonging to the club”

Harrowing of Hell

• The figures of the Old Testament are no longer there

• IV, 53-54: “Great Lord… the crown he wore, a sign of victory.”

• Between crucifixion and resurrection (Good Friday -> Easter Sunday): Christ descended into hell and brought out those who were good but had died before his redemptive act of dying for the sins of humanity

Page 8: Dante’s Divine Comedy: Inferno Canto 4. Dante awakens from fainting in Canto 3 Limbo Not exactly a punishment, but rather “not belonging to the club”

Who is left? • Poets of classical

antiquity– Homer:

• Iliad, Odyssey

– Horace• Poetic works, coined

the phrase carpe diem

– Ovid• Metamorphoses, Ars

Amatoria

– Lucan• Pharsalia

Page 9: Dante’s Divine Comedy: Inferno Canto 4. Dante awakens from fainting in Canto 3 Limbo Not exactly a punishment, but rather “not belonging to the club”

Other Classical Heroines & Heroes• Active Life• Electra, Hector,

Aeneas, Caesar, Camilla, Penthesilea, King Latinus, Lavinia, Brutus, Lucretia, Julia, Marcia, Cornelia

• Saladin (only modern figure: sultan in 12th century, known for his great nobility)

• Contemplative Life• Aristotle, Socrates,

Plato, Democritus, Diogenes, Empedocles, Zeno, Thales, Anaxagoras, Heraclitus, Dioscorides, Orpheus, Tully, Linus, Seneca, Euclid, Ptolemy, Hippocrates, Galen, Avicenna, Averroës

Page 10: Dante’s Divine Comedy: Inferno Canto 4. Dante awakens from fainting in Canto 3 Limbo Not exactly a punishment, but rather “not belonging to the club”

Virgil and Dante depart for the realm of sin

• IV, 151: “And I have reached a part where no thing gleams.”