INFERNO, Episode 135. A Review And Reading Of The Entire Fifth Evil Pouch Of Fraud: Inferno, Canto XXI, Line 1 - Canto XXIII, Line 57

The whole thing, the fifth subset of fraud!

We've been through the circle of barratry, of political grift--and now it's time to look back over this vast landscape of text in Dante's INFERNO.

Join me, Mark Scarbrough, as I read the entire passage: from Inferno, Canto XXI, line 1 all the way through Canto XXIII, line 57.

By the way, what follows is my translation. You can find it in bits and pieces in various entries on this website. But I’d rather you just sit back and listen to the story.

 Here are the segments of this episode of the podcast WALKING WITH DANTE:

[02:06] My reading the full passage of the fifth evil pouch, the fifth of the malebolge, in the eighth circle of hell, the circle of INFERNO's fraud: Canto XXI, line 1, through Canto XXIII, line 57.

[19:26] Can you feel the narrative arc?

[20:49] Some thoughts. First, the larger story goes over the canto breaks.

[21:19] Second, the arc moves from what's left out of COMEDY to the literary analysis of other texts.

[22:16] Third, there are long similes that start and end this sequence--and most of those similes are very downscale, very homey, even folkloric.

[24:03] Fourth, at the front of the sequence, Virgil alerts Dante the pilgrim to the danger. At the end, Dante alerts Virgil.

[25:03] Fifth, the demons' wings are open at the beginning and ending of the sequence.

[25:25] Sixth, everyone is at one point or another made into a fool--or perhaps, a mark.

[27:35] Seventh, the characters in the sequence of barratry all have clear motivations--which are actually (or providentially?) fulfilled.

[29:51] Dante the pilgrim is changing--and Dante the poet hopes you are, too.