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Category: Cultural References


 

Literature
Pilot 1

 

     
    The Divine Comedy by Dante Alighieri
      
    The opening lines of the first Canto mirror Jack's awakening in the bamboo forest in "Pilot, Part 1:"
     
    "Midway upon the journey of our life
       I found myself within a forest dark,
       For the straight-forward pathway had been lost.

    Ah me! how hard a thing it is to say
       What was this forest savage, rough, and stern,
       Which in the very thought renews the fear.

    So bitter is it, death is little more;
       But of the good to treat, which there I found,
       Speak will I of the other things I saw there.

    I cannot well repeat how there I entered,
       So full was I of slumber at the moment
       In which I had abandoned the true way."
     
     
The Divine Comedy (Italian: Commedia, later christened "Divina" by Giovanni Boccaccio), written by Dante Alighieri between 1308 and his death in 1321, is widely considered the central epic poem of Italian literature, and is seen as one of the greatest works of world literature ever. A culmination of the medieval world-view of the afterlife, it established the Tuscan dialect in which it is written as the Italian standard. 
The Divine Comedy is composed of three canticas (or "cantiche") — Inferno (Hell), Purgatorio (Purgatory), and Paradiso (Paradise) — composed each of 33 cantos (or "canti"). The very first canto serves as an introduction to the poem and is generally not considered to be part of the first cantica, bringing the total number of cantos to 100. The first cantica, Inferno, is by far the most famous of the three, and is often published separately under the title Dante's Inferno. As a part of the whole literary work, the first canto serves as an introduction to the entire Divine Comedy, making each of the cantiche 33 canti long. The number 3 is prominent in the work, represented here by the length of each cantica. The verse scheme used, terza rima, is the hendecasyllable (line of eleven syllables), with the lines composing tercets according to the rhyme scheme ABA BCB CDC . . . YZY Z.

The poet tells in the first person his travel through the three realms of the dead, lasting during the Easter Triduum in the spring of 1300. His guide through Hell and Purgatory is the Latin poet Virgil, author of the Aeneid and the Fourth Eclogue, and the guide through Paradise is Beatrice, Dante's ideal of a perfect woman. Beatrice was a real Florentine woman whom he met in childhood and admired from afar in the mode of the then-fashionable courtly love tradition which is highlighted in Dante's earlier work La Vita Nuova.

- Wikipedia

 

       


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