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  1. digitaldante.columbia.edu › dante › divine-comedyInferno 22 – Digital Dante

    [1] Inferno 22 continues the drama initiated in Inferno 21, into which a secondary drama will soon be inserted. The canto opens with a mock-heroic passage that continues the military imagery from Inferno 21 and is a repertory of different kinds of military communication and semiosis.

    • Inferno 5

      [1] We begin by putting Dante’s treatment of lust as a sin...

    • Purgatorio 22

      Purgatorio 22, a canto that is saturated in classical...

    • History

      Dante, the European Cloth Trade, and the Battle of the...

    • Commento Baroliniano

      Digital Dante offers original research and ideas on Dante:...

    • About

      Divine Comedy features Dante’s text in the Petrocchi edition...

    • Intertextual Dante

      Intertextual Author Profile and Context: Ovid. The Latin...

  2. Need help with Canto 22 in Dante Alighieri's Inferno? Check out our revolutionary side-by-side summary and analysis.

  3. Dante’s InfernoCanto 22 - Dante's Divine Comedy. Demons Pull Ciampolo out of the Boiling Pitch by Gustave Dore. Virgil and Dante continue walking among the grafters in company with a troop of devils. Virgil talks with one of the sinners, who also plays a trick on the devils. Chaos ensues. (To read a footnote, click the number in the text.

  4. 4 de dic. de 2017 · Dante Alighieri's epic poem Inferno, the first part of Dante's Divine Comedy, is the classic Italian book about the nine circles of hell. This video gives an in-depth summary and analysis of...

  5. The demons in these cantos are described as no other beasts in the Inferno are described, with great detail and an almost comic-relief like quality. Dante the Pilgrim is simultaneously afraid of and fascinated by these beasts.

  6. Dante: The Divine Comedy - Inferno 22-28. A new complete downloadable English translation with comprehensive index and notes

  7. Dante's Divine Comedy is divided into three parts: Inferno, Purgatorio and Paradiso. You can select the Canto and Line you wish to start at below. Or you may simply select a Canto, and you will be brought to our main Poem Browser starting at line 1 for that Canto.