Book contents
- Frontmatter
- 1 Life of Dante
- 2 Dante and the lyric past
- 3 Approaching the Vita nuova
- 4 From auctor to author: Dante before the Commedia
- 5 Introduction to Inferno
- 6 Introduction to Purgatorio
- 7 Introduction to Paradiso
- 8 Dante and the Bible
- 9 Dante and the classical poets
- 10 Allegory and autobiography
- 11 A poetics of chaos and harmony
- 12 The theology of the Comedy
- 13 The poetry and poetics of the creation
- 14 Dante and Florence
- 15 Dante and the empire
- 16 Dante and his commentators
- 17 Dante in English
- Further reading
- Index
- Series List
11 - A poetics of chaos and harmony
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 May 2007
- Frontmatter
- 1 Life of Dante
- 2 Dante and the lyric past
- 3 Approaching the Vita nuova
- 4 From auctor to author: Dante before the Commedia
- 5 Introduction to Inferno
- 6 Introduction to Purgatorio
- 7 Introduction to Paradiso
- 8 Dante and the Bible
- 9 Dante and the classical poets
- 10 Allegory and autobiography
- 11 A poetics of chaos and harmony
- 12 The theology of the Comedy
- 13 The poetry and poetics of the creation
- 14 Dante and Florence
- 15 Dante and the empire
- 16 Dante and his commentators
- 17 Dante in English
- Further reading
- Index
- Series List
Summary
That Dante presents Hell as a realm of chaos and confusion, and Paradise as one of harmony and union, a reader of the Commedia recognizes in the first reading. The astonishing variety of settings and of infernal guards in Hell, the rapid shifts from one of the many damned souls to another, their hostility to Dante and to their companions, all contrast sharply with Paradise, where the heavens seem to differ only in intensity of light and joy, where the souls come to meet and to share their joy with Dante, and the movement from one soul to another seems slow and dignified. Purgatory is transitional, with fewer changes in setting, guards who instruct rather than control, souls fixed only temporarily where Dante sees them, trying to be helpful to him and to each other. Perhaps because it is transitional, Purgatory is more given to formal and visual patterns which fix it in the mind if not in reality.
These large differences are suggested by the action of the plot, but are reinforced by a whole range of formal elements. I shall consider a number of these here: the length of individual cantos, the relative proportions of narrative and speech, enjambment, and the varieties of rhyme and of rhyme sounds within and beyond terza rima. In each case, the question I put to the poem gave me the expected answer, but sometimes in unexpected ways. I came to see that the apparent increase in the poet's control over formal techniques as he proceeds is an illusion carefully created by Dante, that he exercises as much control and skill to craft the chaos of Hell as the harmony of Paradise.
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- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to Dante , pp. 181 - 200Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2007