Inferno

Inferno

By Dante Alighieri

Pages

490

Rating

4.07

Year

1320

ReligionFantasyFictionPoetryClassicsSchool

Description

Of the great poets, Dante is one of the most elusive and therefore one of the most difficult to adequately render into English verse. With this major new translation, Anthony Esolen has succeeded brilliantly in marrying sense with sound, poetry with meaning, capturing both the poem's line-by-line vigor and its allegorically and philosophically exacting structure, yielding an Inferno that will be as popular with general readers as with scholars, teachers, and students. For, as Dante insists, without a trace of sentimentality or intellectual compromise, even Hell is a work of divine art.

This edition includes a substantive introduction, extensive notes, and appendices that reproduce Dante's key sources and influences.

Verse translation by Anthony Esolen. Illustrations by Gustave Doré.

Endorsements

"Professor Esolen's translation of Dante's Inferno is the best one I have seen, for two reasons. His decision to use unrhymed blank verse allows him to come nearly as close to the meaning of the original as any prose reading could do, and allows him also to avoid the harrowing sacrifices that the demand for rhyme imposes on any translator. And his endnotes and other additions provoke answers to almost any question that could arise about the work." — A. Kent Hieatt

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