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Damning Lust And Then Confusing It With Love: Inferno, Canto V, Lines 52 - 87

Damning Lust And Then Confusing It With Love: Inferno, Canto V, Lines 52 - 87

FromWalking With Dante


Damning Lust And Then Confusing It With Love: Inferno, Canto V, Lines 52 - 87

FromWalking With Dante

ratings:
Length:
40 minutes
Released:
Dec 13, 2020
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

When we left Virgil and Dante in the last passage from Canto 5 of INFERNO, the pilgrim had just asked who was being tossed in the winds of lust.
Virgil answers with a surprising list of the "great" sinners out on the wind: figures from shadowy antiquity, through the Trojan War, and up to medieval romance.
In so doing, Virgil redefines lust, away from a "simple" sin to something more earth-shattering and socially disruptive.
Then both he and the pilgrim (and maybe the poet in the background) make a crucial mistake: they confuse love and lust.
Join me, Mark Scarbrough, as I take a slow walk through THE DIVINE COMEDY, passage by passage, and here stop to gawk at the great figures of lust with the pilgrim Dante and his guide, the ever-surprising Virgil.
Here are the segments of this episode:
[01:42] My English translation of the passage from INFERNO for this episode: Canto V, lines 52 - 87. It's so complicated, I read it twice. If you'd like to see my translation, look for it on my website, markscarbrough.com.
[06:13] Virgil's catalogue of seven great, historical figures on the winds of lust--and the shocking movement in the passage from an orthodox definition of lust to the invocation of love, the greatest Christian virtue.
[27:30] Dante-the-pilgrim's request: can I talk to the two who are so light on the wind? Why are the "light"? What does that mean?
[30:16] Irony invades the passage in two ways: irony tints its rhetorical structure (a chiasmus, as I'll explain) and irony invades the simile: doves are on the wind, a traditional symbol for the third person of the Christian trinity.
Released:
Dec 13, 2020
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (100)

Ever wanted to read Dante's Divine Comedy? Come along with us! We're not lost in the scholarly weeds. (Mostly.) We're strolling through the greatest work (to date) of Western literature. Join me, Mark Scarbrough, as I take on this masterpiece passage by passage. I'll give you my rough English translation, show you some of the interpretive knots in the lines, let you in on the 700 years of commentary, and connect Dante's work to our modern world. The pilgrim comes awake in a dark wood, then walks across the known universe. New episodes every Sunday and Wednesday.