The American modernist Marianne Moore once wrote that poems are imaginary gardens with real toads in them. This applies nicely to Dante’s “Divine Comedy.” Its garden is the poem’s otherworld—based on ...
Find today’s readings here. In Dante’s Inferno, each punishment is an inversion of the sin: The wrathful fight one another senselessly for all eternity while the sullen “languish in the black slime” ...
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