Wednesday, February 6, 2019
Lextura Dantis :: The Divine Comedy
Dante varies his presentation greatly passim Malebolge. each bolgia has its own particular atmosphere, and the abrupt tonal and structural replacements between them make the move from bolgia to bolgia a medley of styles and techniques. But no shift is so striking as that between the eighth and ninth, in which the ref leaves a bolgia marked by two eloquent, searching dramatic monologues for ace characterized by pithy, epigrammatic comments. The heroic exhortation of Ulysses and the sinuous self-revelation of Guido da Montefeltro experience way to the truncated, compressed rhetoric of Mohammed, quayage da Medicina, Mosca, and Bertran de born(p). The earlier bolgia begs for mental readings the latter frustrates them. The structures of these cantos present a similar incongruity. Ulysses and Guido are given plentiful opportunity for leisurely expansion, and their stories have a smooth development and denouement. Each is the absolute star of his canto, and Dante record s both their coming and going with reverent attention. pitfall XXVIII, however, presents a rapid succession of scenes, and the cuts between them are as rough and inexorable as those delivered by the devil to the damned. The canto seems unified only by Dantes desire to present the contrapasso in as many ways as he can. Those who sowed discord in life are hewn in imaginative ways __ Mohammed split from chin to anus, Ali sliced from chin to hairline, Pier da Medicina clipped and nicked in different places, Curios tongue hacked out, Moscas arms lopped off, and Bertran de Born neatly decapitated __ a near Baroque variation on a single theme. One horror follows on the heels of another, and each commutation replaces the memory of the earlier one. Despite this profusion in the particulars of the punishments, the structure of the 28th canto is relentlessly schematic. The canto can be easily divided into six sign on episodes, four of which are fundamentally identical __ even somewh at repetitive. The canto begins with a familiar epic gesture the ineffability topos. Dante despairs of ever doing justice to what he mustiness describe (vv. 1-6) Chi poria mai pur con parole scioltedicer del sangue e de le piaghe a pienochi ora vidi, per narrar pi volte? Ogne lingua per certo verria menoper lo nostro sermone e per la mente
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