Thursday, December 17, 2009

Jessi Genske: Dante's Inferno, chapter 8

Circle five and six begin with Virgil and Dante standing at the endge of Styx. An unkown signal of flames come from the great tower. It is then answered form the other side and almost immediately, Virgil and Dante see Phlegyas, race toward them. He thinks they are new souls for him to torment. Once he sees it is once again the poets, he becomes filled with anger. First he does not want to take them, but Virgil again defeats him with devine will. As the cross the marshy river, a soul from below the muck rises up, it is Filippo Argenti. Dante knows him and wishes to see him farther punished. Virgil approves of this and suddenly, Argenti is attacked by all the other souls and ripped to pieces. The boat soon moves on. Dante then sees the flames which rise from the towers of Dis. Great iron walls guard the the lower Hell which lies inside to seperate the upper and lowers hells. Phlegyas drops them off at the gate only to find it being guarded by the Rebelious Angels. Virgil cannot get the angles to let them through, Human Reason by itself cannot defeat the essence of evil. Virgil sends a prayer and they wait for the assistance of Divine Aid from the Heavenly Messenger.

Circle:five and six
Sin:the wrathful and the fallen angels
Punishment:wrathful are to be sunk in the river of styx constantly attacking one another. The angels are to guard the gates of dis.
Retribution:They were wrathful in life so in death they are to attack and be attacked for all eternity.
Quote: "And I 'Master, it would suit my whim to see the wretch scrubbed down into the swill before we leave this stinking sink and him."
Question: In the quote above, who is the person talking and what are they talking about?
Sinners:Filippo Argenti

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Canto 2--Jeremy Kundtz

As Virgil and Dante are about to enter the Vestibule of Hell, Dante becomes nervous. He questions why it is he who has been chosen to descend, alive, into Hell. To ease Dante's nerves, Virgil explains to Dante that his journey through Hell has been willed by great, heavenly powers. Virgil tells Dante that Beatrice, Dante's symbol of Divine Love, descended into Hell to tell Virgil to be Dante's guide through Hell. Virgil also tells Dante that along with Beatrice, The Virgin Mary (Dante's symbol of Compassion), Santa Lucia (Dante's symbol of Divine Light), and Rachel (Dante's symbol of the Contemplative Life), have all willed Dante's journey into Hell as a living man. Upon learning of the great, heavenly powers that have willed his journey, Dante's confidence is restored to him. Thus, with renewed confidence, Dante and Virgil walk on to the Gates of Hell.

  • What is Rachel's significance? Explain the meaning of living the contemplative life and explain why it is important to Dante.

Tommy Ritz 6th Canto XXII

In canto XXII the poets set off for the 2nd bridge, since the 1st one lay shattered, leaving the second bridge as their only way to the 6th Bolgia. As Dante walks by the tormented sinners he notices how they behave like frogs in a way. This is because when no one is near they leave their heads out of the burning pitch, but whenever a demon draws close they immediately put their heads under the pitch to evade the demon’s wrath. As the poets and their demonic guardians walk by Dante notices an unidentified Navarrese who tries to submerge too late, and is caught by the demons. However before the demons can set upon the Navarrese, Dante asks the demons if he may speak to him. The sinner speaks of how his service to the king and queen of Navarrese forced him to start grafting, which is why he resides in hell. After this brisk conversation, the demons prepare to set upon the sinner; however he tries to cut a deal with the malicious demons. He says if the demons let him go free that he would whistle which would draw all the sinners hiding nearby beneath the pitch to him, whom the demons could then attack. Though suspicious of his plan, the demons agree and as soon as they let the sinner go he jumps into the pitch and escapes. The demons become enraged over this, and two demons even jump into the boiling pitch after him. When they hit the burning pitch, it finally dawns on them that the Navarrese is long gone, so they begin to fight each other. The other demons begin to organize a rescue party to get their brethren to safety. During the chaos, the poets slip away.

1. Why did the unidentified Navarrese tell his story to Dante?
2. Why did the poets slip away while the rest of the demons were distracted?

Maurell James

Canto XVIII
This is circle eight called the Malebolge, and this contains the fraudulent and Malicious. These people sinned because they harmed their neighboor. In the first ditch the poets enconter the panderes and Seducers, and they form two files walking in oppostite directions. They walk at a fast pace, and are hurried by demons who whip them with great lashes. The retribution of this sinner punishment is they hurried others to benefit themselves and in hell they are the ones who are driven. Also the horned demons represent their consicous of their sin. Dante also sees Venedico Cacciamemcio who sold his sister to win favor of the Maquis. They also see Jason who carrried of women and abandoned others. He was a sinner who was a seducer. They also enconter the souls of the flatterrs who are immersed in excrement filled fieces, and they see in the pit Alessio and Thais. In life these people were filled with crap, and telling lies and so they are forever filled in crap.
Quote"And as he spoke, one of those lashes fell across his back, and a demon cried/Move on, you pimp, there are no women left to sell."
-What is the significance of the demon rushing these sinners?
lines 64-66

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Mackenna Crosby Canto III- Canto IV

Canto III



  • Circle: Vestibule of Hell
  • Sin: Opportunists- Took no sides in the Rebellion of the Angels
  • Punishment: Forced to chase after a banner that runs forever
    -Stung by wasps/hornets who make them bleed
    -Worms and maggots below them feast on their blood
  • Sinner: Pope Celestine V
  • Retribution: In life, the Opportunists were not committed to either good or evil, they shifted back and forward for their own personal gain, instead of being loyal to one side. In Hell, these sinners are now punished by being forced to continuously move with no definite direction.
  • In this canto, Dante and Virgil enter the Vestibule of Hell, where they find the opportunists. The vestibule is neither in Hell, nor out of it. They are given no place, because they took no sides. Here the poets come across Pope Celestine V, who was tricked into leaving his position as Pope, so that Boniface VIII could replace him. Dante does not pity him, and does not stop to speak to him. When reaching the river called Acheron, the ferry man, Charon, notices that Dante is alive and refuses to allow him to cross. Virgil forces Charon to take them on his ferry, and once they are aboard, Dante swoons for the first time in his journey.



    Question: Who is Dante referring to in this quote?
    "And some I knew among them; last of all/ I recognized the shadow of that soul/ who, in his cowardice, made the Great Denial." (line 55-57)





    Canto IV

  • Circle: Circle one-Limbo
  • Sin: The Virtuous Pagans- Those who were born before Christianity, or those who were never baptized.
  • Punishment: They have no hope.
  • Sinner: Homer, Horace, Ovid, Lucan
  • Dante awakes after swooning and is now in Limbo, the first circle of Hell. This is the circle in which Virgil resides and he explains to Dante that he pities these souls because they are punished for never learning Christianity. Dante sees souls in the distance coming towards them, and Virgil identifies them as Homer, Horace, Ovid and Lucan. These souls greet Virgil and Dante courteously, addressing Virgil as the "Prince of Poets". The souls lead Dante to the Citadel of Human Reason, where recognizes many Virtuous Pagans, all of whom he considers to be noble. The poets continue their voyage, and make their way to the edge of Circle two.



    Question: Refer to the quote below and explain why Dante's assumption of the reason for Virgil's pale face is incorrect.
    "
    And I, sick with alarm at his new pallor,/ cried out, 'How can I go this way when you/ who are my strength in doubt turn pale with terror?'" (line 16-18
    )

    Dante's Inferno canto XXI- Tommy Ritz 6th

    In canto XXI the poets reach the 5th Bolgia of the 8th circle. Here grafters, or those who bribed, cheated, and used corrupted means to gain political, social, or economical power are punished. The sinner’s punishment is being kept under a ditch full of boiling pitch. Pitch, is the disgusting sticky byproduct of tar. The sinners are surrounded by demons that wield pitch forks, and attack any of the sinners who put their heads above the pitch’s surface. The pitch symbolizes a few things. First off it represents the sticky fingers that the grafters, who ascended to their positions on earth through theft and deceit. Also, the grafters being under the dark colored pitch symbolizes their shady actions being hidden from the eyes of men. The demons can symbolize a few things as well. They probably symbolize how even though the grafters are trying to free themselves from the pitch, aka their sins, their being pushed back in by the demons, aka their corrupt ways. Upon the poets arrival they see a senator from Lucca being thrown into the pitch. Virgil then has Dante hide behind some jagged rocks, as he goes out to the demons to try to negotiate the poet’s safe passage across the Bolgia. Just before the demons stop listening to their leader and give in to their rage and tear Virgil to shreds, Virgil manages to gain safe passage from the leader named Malacoda. He tells the poets about a bridge they can take to go to the 6th Bolgia, and the poets set off to it under the protection of Malacoda who brings a group of demons with him. Upon reaching the bridge the poets discover that it is shatter and uncrossable, but Malacoda tells them of a second bridge a ways away so they set off to it.

    1. What does the pitch symbolize?
    2. What could the demons symbolize?
    3.Why do you think the bridge is shatterd?

    Katie McCluskey


    Canto XXIX (29)


    • The Canto covers Circle 8, Bolgia 10. The sinners in this Bolgia are the Falsifiers. They are in class one, also known as the Alchemists.

    • Punishment: The sinners are punished by darkness, stench, thirst, filth, loathsome diseases, and shrieking din.

    • Retribution: The people corrupted society by their falsifications, so the sinners are subjected to corruption.
    • Key Sinners: Some key sinners in the canto are Griffolino D'Arezzo and Capacchio. Dante speaks with both Griffolino D'Arezzo and Capacchio in this Class Level.
    • Key Plot Points:
      o Geri Del Bello was making threatening gestures at Dante so Virgil had to step in and bring Dante to Bolgia 10.
      o Dante figures out in this Canto that there are four classes of Falsifiers.
      o Bolgia Ten is the Alchemists, or the Falsifiers of Things

    • Question: Use the quote below to answer the question.
      o “The moon already is under our feet; the time we have is short, and there is much that you have yet to see.” --Virgil
      § Lines 10-12
      o What does the above quote mean and why does Virgil say it?

    Canto XXX (30)



    • This canto covers Circle 8, Bolgia 10. The sinners in this Bolgia are the Falsifiers. This Canto includes the last three types of Falsifiers, Evil Impersonators, Counterfeiters, and False Witnesses.

    • Punishment: The Falsifiers are punished with darkness, stench, thirst, filth, loathsome diseases, shrieking din, and running without pause.
    • Retribution: The people corrupted society so they are subjected to corruption.
    • Key Sinners: Gianni Shicchi, Myrrha, Master Adam, Potiphars Wife, and Sinon the Greek. Gianni Schicchi and Myrrha run through the pit endlessly and snatch at the souls, rending them. Master Adam is a Falsifier of Money. Potiphars Wife and Sinon the Greek are Falsifiers of Words.

    • Key Plot Points
      o Dante finds out who Schicchi and Myrrha are when they come to tear apart Capocchio, whom Dante was talking to.
      o Sinon gets angry when Master Adam identifies him so Sinon hurts Master Adam.
      o When Dante sees the Counterfeiters, he is disgusted at the way they look.
      o Virgil makes Dante feel ashamed for watching Master Adam and Sinon fight.

    • Question: Use the quote below to answer the question.
      o “Now keep on looking a little longer and I quarrel with you.”—Virgil
      § Lines 130-133
      o What does the quote above mean and why does Virgil say this?

    Shawn Cooper

    Canto XXVII
    Circle: Eight- Bolgia Eight
    Sinners: The Evil Counselors
    Sin: Those who abused the gifts of the Almighty, to steal his virtues for low purposes
    Retribution: They stolen from sight and hidden in the great flames which are their own guilty consciences. ( This is because in their lives they stole from God in their lives and worked in hidden ways)
    Key Sinners: Count Guido da Montefeltro
    Summary: This Canto begins with Dante and Virgil entering the Eigth Bolgia of the Eigth Circle. They meet the soul of Count Guido Da Montefeltro, a previous Lord of Romagna. Dante tells the count about the current state of Italy and The count tells Dante about his story and how Pope Boniface VIII pursuaded him to sin.

    Question: How did Boniface VII pursuade the count to sin?

    Canto XXVIII
    Circle: Eight - Bolgia Nine
    Sinners: The Sowers of Discord (Religious, Political and Those that created discord between kinsmen)
    Sin: Those that split apart and mutilated what God wanted to be united
    Retribution: Forever mutilated by a giant demon with a bloody sword
    Key Sinners: Mahomet, Pier Da MedicinaTrubune Curio, Mosca Dei Lamberti and Bertrand De Born
    Summary: This Canto begins with Dante and Virgil entering the Ninth Bolgia of the Eigth Circle. In this Bolgia the sinners are sorted into three separate groups. First Dante and Virgil Encounter the Sowers of Religious Discord where they meet Mahomet, who warns them about Fra Dolcino. Next they meet the Sowers of Political Discord and meet Dier Da Medicina, th Tribun Curio and Mosca Dei Lamberti. Finally Dante and Virgil meet the Sowers of Discord between Kinsmen where they meet Berterand De Born.

    Question: Why was Berterand De Born assigned to The Sowers of Discord between Kinsmen?

    Canto XXXIII- Skylor Gomes

    Canto XXXIII

    Circle: 9 Cocytus

    Rounds: 2 (Antenora) and 3 (Ptolomea)

    Sin: Compound Fraud, The treacherous to country, Treacherous to guests and hosts.

    Punishment: Sinners lay in ice on their backs with only faces exposed. Some sinners in round 3 are not actually dead. Their crimes were so bad, they are predestined to be in circle 9 round 3. Demons posess their bodies on earth. Sinners are even denied the comfort of tears. The tears freeze on their face, leaving them unable to cry.

    Key sinners/stories/monsters: Count Ugolino, Archbishop Ruggieri. The two plotted together but Ruggieri betrayed him, and Ugolino starved to death. Ugolino gnaws at the head of Ruggieri as his new source of food. Friar Alberigo and Branca D'Oria. They are not yet dead, but their sin is so bad, they are predestinied to be in round 3 of circle 9.
    Summary: Dante and Virgil meet Ugolino and Ruggieri. As mentioned earlier, Ugolino told his story. Dante and Virgil continue on. Dante asks what is causing the freezing wind, which Virgil says he will see soon enough. That means they will soon be coming on something important. They are coming near the end of their journey. This circle makes Dante feel grief for the sinners once more.

    Questions:
    Why is Count Ugolino gnawing on the head of Archbishop Ruggieri?

    What is different about some sinners in Circle 9 round 3?

    What are the sinners trapped in?

    Instructions-Mrs. Mitchell

    Summarize each canto
    Identify the Sin (explain)/Punishment/Key Sinners
    Write your question after the summary. Make sure you bold the type on your question.
    If you use a quote in your summary or question, remember to include the line number(s) and use quotation marks.

    Mike VeVerka Cantos 25-26

    CANTO 25
    Circle- 8, Bolgia 7
    Sin- Thievery
    Punishment- Sinners in this canto become forced into one another so that the two creatures become one. Sinners constantly attack each other and capture their traits.
    Sinners- Vanni, Agnello, Cianfa, Buoso, Francesco, Pucio Sciancato.
    Summary- Canto 25 is set in circle eight, bolgia seven in Hell. The sinners in this canto were thieves during their time on Earth. Their assigned punishment is that they are compelled to attack and morph with other sinners. This represents their actions in life because when they were on Earth, the sinners took the substance of others and transformed it to their own. No sinner knows which body is his own. This justifies why they are compelled to do the action stated above.
    Q: From what city are Agnello, Ciafa, Buoso, Francesco, and Pucio Sciancato?


    CANTO 26
    Circle- 8, Bolgia 8
    Sin- Evil Counsel
    Punishment- Eternally surrounded behind giant flames.
    Sinners- Ulysses, Diomede
    Summary- this canto is set in circle eight, bolgia 8 in Hell. The Evil Counselors of that infected people on Earth now inhabit this fiery land in the Inferno. Their punishment is that they are eternally hidden behind giant flames so they cannot be seen. This punishment is justified because in life, these people stole from God and abused His virtues for low purposes. Therefore, in Hell, they are stolen from sight, just like how they worked in hidden ways on Earth. I see this punishment fair because their eternal suffering matches the trouble they cause during their time on Earth.
    Q: How did Ulysses describe his death?

    Taylor Tercek Canto XXIII and XXIV

    Canto XXIII
    Virgil and Dante merely escaped from the demons in Bolgia 5 who were sent by Malacoda. They ran and slid down the slope that led to the Sixth Bolgia, and could no longer be pursued by the demons. While exploring this pouch of Circle 8, Dante and Virgil saw many souls walking along a narrow track dressed in leaden capes and hats. These sinners are the Hypocrites. The chief sinner of Bolgia 6 is Caiaphas, who is punished by being crucified to the floor of Hell inside the narrow track by three stakes. The retribution is significant because Christ had to suffer the pain of all the world's sins, so Caiaphas must suffer the pain of all the world's hypocrisy. Virgil and Dante also meet Friar Catalano and Friar Loderigo while traveling along the track. The two friars gave them directions as to how to exit Bolgia 6, and Virgil realized that Malacoda lied to them about the connecting bridge.

    What is the name of the soul being described?
    "--and then I saw a figure crucified upon the ground by three stakes, and I fell still in awe" (pg 201 lines 106-108).


    Canto XXIV
    After finally navigating past the rocks of the collapsed bridge, Virgil and Dante entered the Seventh Bolgia of Circle 8. The thieves are the sinners of this bolgia, and they are punished by the reptile monsters. The reptiles curl around the sinners and they fly through the air pierceing their veins. The sinners then burst into flames and turn to ashes. Then, they slowly and painfully reform. Since the thieves's hands are the part of them that they commited their crime with, the reptiles bind their hand together behind their back. By stealing in life, the thieves made substances disappear, so they are punished by disappearing temporarily over and over again when they turn to ashes. Virgil and Dante also met a thief-Vanni Fucci, who unwillingly revealed his identity and told a dark prophecy against Dante.

    What did Vanni Fucci say in the prophecy that he told Dante?

    Cantos XIII-XIV - Emily Gatautis

    CANTOS XII-XIV

    Canto XII
    Circle- circle seven, round two; the wood of suicides

    Sin- those who were violent against themselves; those who committed suicide.

    Punishment- the suicidal souls are are trapped in gnarly, thorny trees and can only speak when the Harpies rip their branches off of them, causing them to bleed.

    Retribution- They who destroyed their own bodies are, in Hell, denied a human form. since they expressed themselves through self-destruction, the only way for them to speak or express emotion is through what tears and destroys them. only through their own blood can they voice opinion. also, since the Harpies destroy everything they touch, it is fitting that they be the ones to bring destruction and pain to the suicides.

    Key Sinners- Pier delle Vinge, Jacomo da Sant Andrea, and Lano da Siena. Pier is a suicide trapped in a tree that Dante, in the beginning of this canto, rips a branch from. this causes Pier to bleed, and where he then tells Dante and Virgil his story. Jacomo and Lano are both famous squanderers and destroyers of goods. both of these souls are considered Violent Against their Substance—those who intentionally harmed themselves. these sinners are being constantly pursued by a pack of hounds, who rip their limbs from them.

    Key Plot Points- in this round, Dante and Virgil travel through the Wood of Suicides and meet with a couple of suicide victims. they also go to see the Violent Against their Substance and see two naked souls being tormented by a pack of hounds.

    Question-
    Here we shall drag them and in this mournful glade
    our bodies will dangle to the end of time,
    each on the thorns of its tormented shade.
    (lines 106-108)


    What is this quote talking about? Interpret the what the language means.


    ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Canto XIV
    Circle- circle seven, round two, the Plain of Burning Sand

    Sin- the Violent Against God, Nature, and Art. Included are Blasphemers(violent against God), Sodomites(violent against nature), and Usurers(violent against art)

    Punishment- all of these souls are trapped on the Plain of Burning Sands, and are rained upon by fiery rain. However, each sin has a slightly unique punishment. the Blasphemers are sprawled out on the burning sand, the Sodomites are forced to run endless circles, and the Usurers are huddled, crying, on the burning sand.

    Retribution- The burning plain is symbolic of sterility and the fiery rain is symbolic of the wrath of God. since all of these sins are unnatural habits had by humans, the unnaturally hot sands is the sinners' eternal resting place. also, the rain descends as fire, when in nature it should descend as cool fertile water. in conclusion, these sinners were unnatural with their actions during life, so they are placed in torturous and unnaturally horrible conditions to punish them for their sins.

    Key Sinners- Capaneus(chief sinner of this round, Blasphemer) Capaneus was a Blasphemer, and blamed God for everything that happened to him, when in all actuality, it was his temper and way of doing things that got him into trouble. the legend is that when Zeus struck Capaneus with a lightening bolt, he still had an insult toward god on his lips. now, in Hell, he still speaks badly about God and blames him for his troubles.

    Key Plot Points- In this canto, Dante and Virgil leave the Wood of Suicides and onto the Plain of Burning Sand where they find the Blasphemers, Sodomites, and Usurers all being rained on by fire. the poets speak with Capaneus and Virgil tells Dante the legend of the rill that runs along the River of Boiling Blood

    Question-
    He is chosen of iron from there down,
    except that his right foot is terra cotta;
    it is this foot that he rests more weight on.
    (lines 103-105)

    Who is Virgil talking about in this quote? What does the terra cotta foot represent, and how does the meaning reflect Dante's religious views?

    Maurell James

    Canto XVII
    This is cirlce sven round three here contains the usures which are the sinners against the Art. These sinners sinned because they did not use the skills, gifts, and talents that God blessed them with. Instead they used the talents of others to bendefit themselves. Their punishment is thety sit on a plain with fiery sand with a purse around their neck with a coat of arms that causes them enternall lameting. The retribution of theri punishment is since they burdedned others by using them; they are forever with a burden of a purser around their neck forever lameting. Also in this chapter is Dante and Virgil's transportation Geryon which is the symobolical creature for fraud. He carries Dante and Vrigil to the outer edge of the seventh circele. Once the poets rich this part of hell a man questions Dante who is among the living why he is their in hell. After this comment Dante retires back to Virigil who warned him that tat would happen if Dante stayed there too long.

    Quote: " Dogs in the Summer bit by fleas and gadflies, jerking their snouts about, twiching their paws now heree, behave no other wise."
    -interpreing from the quote how does this metaphor relate to their punishment?

    Cantos IX & X- Drew Humphrey

      Canto IX

    Circle: Six

    Sinners: The heretics

    Sin: These souls did violence to God by denying him immortality

    Punishment: Sinners here are placed in tombs forever that are incased by fire, on judgement day their tombs will be closed for eternity.

    Summary: In this canto Dante and Virgil are stopped at the Gate of Dis. The Three Infernal Furies are introduced and call upon Medusa to come and turn Dante to stone because he is alive and they want him to go no further. Right at the moment of greatest anxiety a godly messenger rumbles down to the gate and with a touch and it opens for the poets. they then enter circle six where they discover a large cemetery filled with cries of pain and anguish. This is the eternal resting place of The Heretics.

    "Outcasts of Heaven, you twice-loathsome crew,"/he cried upon
    that terrible sill of Hell,/"how does this insolence still live in you?/Why
    do you set yourselves against that Throne/ whose Will none can deny, and which, times past,/has added to your pain for each rebellion?" (canto IX lines 88-93)

    Who is talking in the quote above?

    Who is he/she talking to and why?

    Canto X

    Circle: Six

    Sinners/Key sinners: The heretics are the sinners, including Farinata Degli Uberti and Cavalcante Dei Cavalcanti

    Sin: These sould did violence to God by denying him immortality

    Punishment: Sinners here are placed in tombs forever that are incased by fire, on judgment day their tombs will be closed for eternity

    Summary: Canto X continues the poets walk through circle six, the eternal cemetery for the Heretics. As they walk by a tomb, a soul inside a tomb, Uberti, recognizes the accent of Dante and appears, strating to talk with Dante about their differing political views. Soon another sould appears and asks why his son Guido is not with Dante, after mistakenly hearing Dante, the soul swoons back into his grave, thinking his son had died. Uberti than continues where he left off when he was interrupted, soon telling Dante the prophesy of Dante's banishment from Florence. Uberti than explains how the Heretics can see into the future but not the present. Dante waits for a moment pitying these souls slightly, but than quickly goes on his way.

    Why does Cavalcanti think his son is dead?

    Why can the Heretics see into the future but not the present?

    Connor Judson - Cantos V-VI

    Dantes Inferno



    Canto V

    Circle: 2
    Sin: The Carnal : Those who abandoned themselves to the tempest of their passions.
    Punishment: The souls are swept around in a tempest (tornado) for all of eternity.
    Retribution: The souls were swept away by love in life and controlled by lust, so in death, they are swept around and controlled by a enourmous tempest or tornado.
    Key Plot Points:
    • 1) Minos, who assigns souls to their punishments, is silenced by Virgil and they are allowed to pass.
    • 2) Dante and Virgil pass through Circle 2 and see the many souls punished there.
    • 3) Dante swoons after hearing the tale of Paolo and Francesca.

    Key Sinners: Paolo and Francesca: These two lovers tell Dante of how they fell in love while reading the story of Lancelot and had an affair while they were still livng (which puts them in circle 2). They were then killed by the husband of Francesca, who was the brother of Paolo, when they were caught. Dante swoons after he is touched by their sorrowful tale.


    Summary: Dante and Virgil enter circle two, as they see Minos, who is the judge of the dead, and the one who sends the dead souls to their correct punishment with his devil's tail. As Virgil did with Charon, he silences Minos, and the two pass by without any trouble. Dante then sees the punishment for those who reside in circle two, which is that they are whipped around in a never ending tornado/tempest. Virgil points out a few sinners who reside there, including Dido, Achilles, Helen, Cleopatra, Paris, and Tristan. This is when Dante spots the two souls who are swept away together and wishes to speak with them. Paolo and Francesca come down to where the two are, and they tell their tragic love story. At the end, Dante is so full of simpathy and sorrow that he swoons, which provides a transtiton into the next canto.



    How did Paolo and Francesca end up in circle two?




    Canto VI


    Circle: 3
    Sin: The Gluttons
    Punishment: The sinners here must lie in a slush that is like a garbage dump, while the monster, Cerberus, rips and tears up those who reside here.
    Retribution: These sinners did nothing in life with the gifts God gave them but eat and drink, and create garbage, so they are placed in garbage. Also, they drooled over their food in life, so in death, Cerberus drools over them.
    Key Plot Points:

    • 1) Dante wakes up from his swoon in circle 3, and sees the slush and freezing rain, which gives it the appearance of a garbage dump.
    • 2) Dante sees Cerberus, the three-headed dog, ripping and tearing up the sinnners who reside in the circle.
    • 3) After Virgil gets them past the monster, they are walking when a sinner sits up and begins to talk to Dante, who finds out it is Ciacco the Hog.
    • 4) Ciacco gives Dante the first political prophecy about the future of Florence.
    • 5) Dante and Virgil walk to the next circle, when they encounter Plutus.

    Key Sinners: Ciacco: He was a resident of Florence that must have seen Dante sometime in life for Dante was alive when Ciacco died. He was nicknamed, "Ciacco the Hog" and his sin was gluttony. He tells Dante of what he sees in the future for politics in Florence.

    Summary: This circle begins with Dante awakening from his swoon, and seeing circle three, with snow and freezing rain falling, creating a layer of slush. This represents a garbage dump, and all of these sinners are foced to lay in this layer. The poets approach Cerberus, the three-headed guard dog, who starts to howl, so Virgil picked up a handful of the slush and throws it down the throat of the dog, who silences and lets them pass.While they continue walking, a sinner sits up and asks Dante if he recognizes him. This is Ciacco, who was from Florence, and he was nicknamed, "Ciacco the Hog", by the Florentines. He gives the first political prophecy about Florence for Dante. The poets commence walking once again and reach the edge of the circle, where they encounter Plutus.

    Why is Ciacco in the third circle?

    Jessi Genske: Chapter 7, Inferno

    Virgil and Dante enter the fourth circle to find a war against the hoarders and the wasters. Each “side” consists of each soul starining madly to push a boulder-like weight. The two “teams” crash the boulders together then separate, pushing the two weights farther apart then start over again. Virgil and Dante then move on as Virgil explains to Dante the point of dame fortune in the divine Scheme. Past midnight of Black Friday, they come across the Marsh of Styx which is the fifth circle, the last of the upper hell. They then see souls attacking each other in the slimy spring. These sinners are the wrathful. Virgil points out the bubbles in the spring and inform Dante that they are from the souls of the sullen who are entombed under the mud for all eternity chanting a hymn.


    Circle: four and five

    Sin: Hoarders and Wasters, Wrathful and Sullen

    Punishment: For the hoarders and wasters, the punishment is to push a great boulder-like weight and clash it into the other. They then push them apart again and restart. Punishment for the wrathful is to be stuck in the Marsh of Styx and attck eachother. Punishment for the sullen is to be sunk under the nasty marsh chanting a hymn for all eternity.

    Retribution: The symbolismof the hoarders' and wasters' punishment is, in life, they did not regulate their expenses; "they destroyed the light of God within themselves by thinking of nothing but money. Thus in death, their souls are encumbered by dead weights and one excess serves to punish the other. Their souls moreover, have become so dimmed and awry in thier friutlss rages that there is no hope of recognizing any among them."

    For the wrathful, their punishment fits them because in life they were wrathful, so in death they attck each other in eternal rage/wrath.

    The sullens' punishment is fit because in life they refused to welcome sunlight and in death they are burried forever below the stinking waters of the Styx.

    Quote: "Hoardering and squandering wasted all their light and brought them screaming to this brawl of wraiths. You need no words of mine to grasp their plight" (lines 58-60)
    Question: What does the boulder symbolize in the punishment for the hoarders and wasters?

    Jessie Wilschek - Canto XXXI

    Canto XXXI
    Circle: 8 - Central Pit of Malebolge
    Sin:
    Nimrod - did not finish the Tower of Babel
    Ephialtes - warred with the gods
    Antaeus - murderer
    Punishment:
    Nimrod - must babble forever
    Ephialtes - his arms are bound forever
    Antaeus - must suffer with the other giants even though he belongs in a less evil circle
    Retribution:
    Nimrod - his babbling goes on forever because his building of the Tower of Babel was interrupted by a confusion of babbling
    Ephialtes - since he was not in control when he was living, he must spend eternity being controlled with his arms bound
    Sinners: Nimrod, Ephialtes, Briareus, Tityos, Typhan, Antaeus

    Dante and Virgil come to the end of Circle 8. They reach the Central Pit of Malebolge. This is where the giants live. This pit is filled with coldness, ice, and strong winds. Dante thinks he sees a city with buildings, but Virgil tells him that those are, in fact, the sinners. Dante meets all of the sinners and hears all of their stories.

    Questions:
    Number 1: Do you believe it is fair that Antaeus has to suffer in a lower circle than he should just because he is a giant?
    Number 2: Explain how the quote below shows that Nimrod is guilty.
    lines 76-78: ""His very babbling testifies the wrong/he did on Earth: he is Nimrod, through whose evil/ mankind no longer speaks a common tongue."

    Canto XXXII - Sarah Scarano

    Canto XXXII


    Circle:
    nine

    Round: (1) Caina and (2)Antenora

    Sin: Compound Fraud: (1)The Treacherous to Kin and (2)The Treacherous to Country


    Punishment:
    (Round 1) The sinners stand in the frozen river, Cocytus, covered in ice up to their neck. They are also permitted to bow their heads to protect themselves from the freezing wind. This also makes it possible for them to cry without their eyes freezing shut. (Round 2) The sinners in round two must also stand in the river up to their necks but they are not permitted to bow their head.


    Retribution: The ice symbolises the fact that the sinners denied love of their friends, which in turn robs them of the warmth of love. Therefore, they will spend eternity in the cold river just as they spent their life in the "cold" without love.


    Key Sinners: (Round 1) Alessandro and Napoleone Degli Alberti are brothers who were so frozen to each other that their hair started to grow together. Dante was told about Alessandro and Napoleone by Camicion de' Pazzi. Camicion spoke to Dante about other sinners in that round in the river and said that he was waiting for his companion, Carlin. (Round 2) In round two, Bocca Degli Abbati was accidentally kicked, quite hard, in the face by Dante. Bocca screamed curses at Dante and refused to give his name. As a result, Dante pulled chunks of hair off the mans head, showing a more intense brutality to Bocca, than to any other sinner. After retreating from Bocca, Dante discovered two more sinners that were connected; but this time, one was chewing on the other mans neck. The story of why is in the next canto.


    Summary: Dante and Virgil enter the ninth circle and find themselves walking across the river Cocytus. A sinner tells Dante to watch where he walks and Dante realizes that the sinners in this circle were frozen up to their necks in the river with their heads bowed. He then comes upon Alessandro and Napoleone who are stuck together. A man named Camicion informs Dante that Alessandro and Napoleone are brothers and then informs Dante of other sinners in the first round called Caina. Then Dante enters the second round, Antenora, where the sinners are also in ice up to their neck, but they are not permitted to bow their head causing their tears to freeze their eyes shut. As Danted is walking, he accidentally kicks a man named Bocca in the face. They get into an argument and Dante rips out fist-fulls of the mans hair and as he walked away. As he is leaving, he sees two men attached and one gnawing on the others neck.

    Questions:

    "Just so the livid dead are sealed in place/ up to the part at which they blushed for shame/ and they beat their teeth like storks" (lines 34-37)

    (1) What is the above quote describing?

    (2) Why do you think Dante reacted so violently towards Bocca when he would not reveal his name?







    Alison Graham Cantos 19-20

    Canto XIX (19)
    Dante comes upon the Simoniacs in Canto XIX, who are the sinners of corrupting or mocking the ways of god. They are placed in bolgia three which is lined with round tube-like holes. The sinners are placed in the holes upside down with the soles of their feet on fire. The intense heat of the fire is a representation of their guilt. The degree of the guilt that the sinners are feeling is proportioned by the heat of the blaze. As new sinners arrive, the souls are dropped through the bottom of the holes and disappear eternally.

    Circle: Eight, Bolgia Three

    Sin: Simoniacs, those who mock or corrupt the chuch/god.

    Punishment: Placed upside down with the soles of their feet on fire until a sinner arrives dropping the previous sinner through the bottom of the hole disappearing eternally.

    Retribution: The Simoniacs made a mockery of the holy office, therefore they are turned upside down in a mockery of the baptismal font. They also mocked the holy water of baptism, so now the fire is a representation of their hellish baptism.
    Key Sinner: Pope Nicholas III
    Quote: " Master, who is that one in the fire who writhes and quivers more than all the others? From him the ruddy flames seem to leap higher" -page 153, Lines 28-30
    Question: Who is the quote refering to?
    Canto XX (20)
    This canto takes place in the forth bolgia where Dante looks down at the souls of the Fortune tellers and Diviners. These are the souls who attempted to look into the future with the use of forbidden arts. Their punishment is to have their turned backwards on their bodies and forced to walk backwards for all of eternity. Another form of the punishment is that their eyes are blinded with tears.
    Circle: Eight, Bolgia four
    Sin: Attempted to see the future with the use of forbidden arts.
    Punishment: To have their heads turned backwards and walk backwards for all of eternity while their eyes are blinded with tears.
    Retribution: Since the sinner cannot see in front of themselves anymore by forcing their heads backwards they can no longer depict the future. Also, the sinners tried to see forward in time but now they must go backwards through all eternity.
    Key Sinners: Amphiareus, Tiresias, Aruns, Manto, Eurypylus, Michael Scott, Guido Bonatti, Asdente
    Quote: "I saw the image of our humanity distorted so that the tears that burst from their eyes ran down the cleft of their buttocks." -page 161, Lines 22-24
    Question: Why do the Simoniacs tears run down to that location?

    Canto 1--Jeremy Kundtz

    Canto 1

    Dante wakes up to find himself in the Dark Wood of Error. The Dark Wood of Error represents Worldliness and Human Sin. Dante, wishing to leave the Dark Wood, tries to run to the Mount of Joy, where he could live happiply, peacefully, and righteously. On his way to the Mount of Joy, however, he is stopped by the Three Beasts of Worldliness: The Leopard, The Lion, and The She-Wolf. The Leopard represents the sins of Malice and Fraud. The Lion represents the sin of Violence. The She-Wolf represents the sins of incontinence, which are basically sins of human nature. Dante is most affected by the She-Wolf. Suddenly, as Dante becomes surrounded by the Three Beasts, a presence appears to him. The presence is Virgil, Dante's symbol of Human Reason. Virgil tells Dante that he was sent by Beatrice, Dante's symobol of Divine Love, to be Dante's guide through the Inferno. Virgil expains that Dante must recognize sin so that he could eventually go to Heaven.
    • The She-Wolf affects Dante the most because the She-Wolf represents incontinence. Explain Incontinence. Why would this sin affect Dante the most?

    Canto XV and Canto XVI - Emily Wilson

    Canto XV

    Circle 7: Round 3

    Sin: Violence Against Nature, Sodomy

    Punishment: Running forever on hot sand through fire rain.

    Retribution: The sinners must run through fire rain. Fire rain is unnatural, as is sodomy.

    Dante and Virgil continue past the hot sandy plain where the violent against Art, Nature and God suffer. As they walk, they pass one of the groups of Sodomites who must run on the hot sand through the raining fire. One sinner, Ser Brunetto Latino, recognizes and stops Dante. Brunetto stops running to walk and talk with Dante for a moment. Brunetto prophesizes the future to Dante as they talk. He tells Dante of the suffering that he will face against the Florentines. Dante comes to terms with his future and accepts the fate that will come to him. Brunetto also tells him of the other souls who are doomed to the same punishment as he. He must then continue to run with the others because of Divine Compulsion.

    What is Dante saying in this quote:
    "Twice already in the eternal shade
    I have heard the prophecy; but let Fortune turn
    her wheel as she please, and the countryman his spade."? (Canto XV, lines 94-96)

    Canto XVI

    Circle 7: Round 3

    Sin: Violence Against Nature, Sodomy

    Punishment: Running forever on hot sand through fire rain.

    Retribution: The sinners must run through fire rain. Fire rain is unnatural, as is sodomy.

    Dante and Virgil continue through the Third Round of the Seventh Circle and can begin to hear the sound of the waterfall that runs over a cliff into the Eighth Circle. Three Florentines recognize Dante and approach him. Jacopo Rusticucci, Guido Guerra, and Tegghiaio Aldobrandi are the sinners and they ask Dante about Florence. The tells them of the present situation of Florence and its misfortunes. The Florentines then must leave and Dante and Virgil continue towards the Eighth Circle. They reach the top of the waterfall and Virgil takes Dante's belt and drops it over the edge of the cliff. They wait to see what comes up from below in the Eighth Circle.

    Who is "them" in this quote and why does Dante wish to embrace them?
    "But seeing I should be burned and cooked , my fear
    overcame the first impulse of my heart
    to leap down and embrace them then and there."


    Canto XXXIV Frank Kacer

    Canto XXXIV

    Circle: 9 Cocytus

    Round: 4 Judecca

    Sin: Compound Fraud, The Treacherous to Their Masters

    Punishment: The Sinners lie completely sealed in ice and are twisted and distorted into weird positions

    Key Sinners/Stories/Monsters: Satan, the image of all evil. Judas Iscariot, who betrayed Christ is head first in the central mouth of Satan. Brutus and Cassius, who betrayed Julius Caesar are in the side mouths of Satan.

    Summary: Dante and Virgil enter the last layer of hell. As they continue to go to the center, below them they see souls frozen in ice, twisted and distorted in weird positions. In the center, the two see a figure, the figure is Satan. Dante is overwhelmed from the sight and is not sure if he is alive or dead.Virgil guides Dante past Satan and when Dante looks back at him, he only saw his legs. Virgil explains to Dante that they crossed the center of the Earth. The two climbed their way out of hell and saw the mountain of Purgatory ahead of them.

    Questions: Who are the three most infamous sinners in history described in this Canto?
    Why does Dante only see Satan's legs after he passes him?

    Lily Alioto Cantos XI-XII

    Canto XI



    • The inner edge of circle 6

    • The sinners in this circle are the Heritics, who are those who did violence to God by denying immortality.

    • The punishment for the Heretics is they lay in an eternal, fiery grave that is sealed forever on the Day of Judgement.

    • The retribution for this sin is a death within a death. Since the Heretics believe in the soul dying with the body, their soul is truly buried forever.

    • One of the key Heretic sinners was Pope Anastasius. Dante and Virgil hide behind his tomb that was sealed forever.

    • A key plot point in this canto is Virgil outlines the divisions of lower hell for Dante.


    In canto XI, the poets find themselves in the inner edge of the sixth circle. This is the last step before they reach the divisions of lower Hell. Once they reach the inner edge, Virgil and Dante are surrounded by jumbles the rocks and leftover rubble of what used to be a cliff. When Christ died, a great earthquake shook Hell and demolished the area. The air is tainted with the awful stence of the Seventh Circle, which lies just below them. Until they are accustomed to the stench, Dante and Virgil take refuge behind the tomb of Pope Anastasius, which is when Virgil takes the time to outline the division of the lower Hell for Dante. When he concludes, Dante becomes aware of the motion of the stars and realizes that it is only a few hours from Holy Saturday.



    Explain in detail why God despises fraud the most. The answer can be fround in the quote below, found in Canto XI, page 104, lines 22-27.



    "Malice is the sin most hated by God. And the aim of malice is to injure others whether by fraud or violence. But since fraud is the vice by which man alone is capable, God loathes it most."

    Canto XII

    • Circle 7, Round 1.
    • The sinners of this canto are the violent against their neighbors.
    • The punishment is to be submersed in the river of blood, the deeper you are the greater the degree of your sin.
    • The retribution is since these sinners wallowed in blood while they were alive, they are immersed in the boiling blood forever.
    • The key sinners and monsters in this canto are Alexander the Great, Attila the scourge of God, the centaurs and the minotaur.
    • The main plot point in this canto is the poets enter circle seven, and the division of lower hell.

    Canto XII is the begining of lower Hell. The poets are confronted by the minotaur as they enter the seventh circle. Virgil tricks the beast and tells Dante to run while the moster is blind with rage. They come upon the river of boiling blood, where the violent against their neighbors are being punished. They are submersed into the blood depending on the degree of the sin they committed. On the banks of the river are the centaurs, who shoot any soul that raises themselves too far out of the blood. Immersed in the deepest part of the river are Alexander the Great and Attila, who are up to their lashes in blood. The centaurs challenge the poets, but Virgil persuades Chiron, the cheif, who grants them safe passage. Nessus is assigned to take Dante and Virgil through the river. He carries the poets until they are only up to their ankles in blood, then races back to his patrol.

    What group of sinners is Virgil referring to in the quote found in canto XII, page 112, lines 46-47.

    "But turn your eyes to the valley; there we shall find the river of boiling blood in which are steeped all who struck down their fellow men."