Storytelling, Moral Allegory, And The Human Paradox: PURGATORIO, Canto XII, Lines 64 - 72
Description
Dante the poet adds a coda to his (fake) ekphrastic poetry on the reliefs in the road bed of the terrace of pride on Mount Purgatory. He steps back and explains the very nature of the art to us: realer than real, as it were. Then he moves the passage out from its narrative base and into a moral lesson based on an allegorical (and anagogical) reading of his masterwork, COMEDY.
Join me, Mark Scarbrough, as we work through the last passage on the theory of art for this terrace of PURGATORIO.
Here are the segments for this episode of WALKING WITH DANTE:
[01:29] My English translation of the passage: PURGATORIO, Canto XII, lines 64 - 72.
[02:40] Dante seems to double down on the artistic claims of the terrace of pride.
[05:52] Dante reminds us that we're reading an allegorical (and anagogical) poem.
[10:16] Humans create their moral truths by telling lies.
[16:21] Rereading the passage: Purgatorio, Canto XII, lines 64 - 72.
We've come to the middle of PURGATORIO . . . and indeed the middle of COMEDY as a whole. Let's take a breather and review where we've been in Purgatory since our very slow approach sometimes (or often?) causes us to privilege the trees over the forest.
Join me, Mark Scarbrough, as I walk you...
Published 11/20/24
We come to the end of Virgil's (first) discourse on love, as well as the end of the central canto of PURGATORIO.
But it's a strange end since Virgil admits to what he doesn't know. Having been so certain about how human behavior operates, he concludes by telling Dante the pilgrim he's on his own...
Published 11/17/24