Purgatorio

Second Book of the Divine Comedy (California Dante)

Hardcover, 303 pages

English language

Published May 13, 1982 by University of California Press.

ISBN:
978-0-520-04516-3
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4 stars (1 review)

5 editions

Review of 'Purgatorio' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

The main thing I learned is that the best time to read (or reread) this classic is during Lent. Who knew?

Like the rest of the Commedia, the poem is meticulously structured. The three parts are the arrival at Mount Purgatory (the only landmass opposite the inhabited continents of the known Earth), then the climb up the mountain around the seven cornices of purification, then the allegorical pageant of the blessed in the Earthly Paradise. Unlike the descent into Hell, Dante and Virgil complete their ascent over the course of a few days after Easter AD 1300, and because they may not make upward progress while the Sun is down, there are enforced rest (and dream) periods. This time when Dante interviews the souls they have an orientation toward Heaven; they are already saved, and submit to their trials voluntarily, as a sort of ultimate self-improvement. The stories are sometimes …

Subjects

  • Poetry & poets: classical, early & medieval
  • Italian Poetry
  • Italian
  • Literature: Classics
  • Classics
  • Continental European
  • Literary Criticism & Collections / General
  • Poetry
  • Purgatory