Dante Alighieri

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Dante's Inferno

translations by twenty contemporary poets
1993
Twenty contemporary poets provide translations of Dante's Inferno. Provides a canto by canto description of Dante's travels in the netherworld.

The comedy of Dante Alighieri, the Florentine

2006
Presents the first cantica of Dante Alighieri's classic work, in which Dante is guided through Hell by the Roman poet Virgil; and includes explanatory notes, diagrams, and a glossary of proper names.

Purgatory

1985
Presents the second volume of The Divine Comedy, where the hero travels to purgatory, and the sinful expiate their crimes.

The divine comedy

1986
Presents Dante's "The Divine Comedy Volume III: Paradise," which finds Dante ascending to Heaven where he encounters the saints and carries on a conversation about history, politics, and Christian doctrine.

Inferno

a verse translation
1982

The divine comedy of Dante Alighieri

the Carlyle-Okey-Wicksted translation
1959
A translated and unabridged version of the epic poem in which the poet describes his spiritual journey through hell, purgatory, and paradise--guided first by the poet Virgil and then by his beloved Beatrice--which results in a purification of his religious faith.

The divine comedy

1977
The standard English translation of Dante Alighieri's classic work, "The Divine Comedy," in which the poet is guided through Hell, Purgatory, and Heaven by, first, Virgil, his literary hero, and then Beatrice, the love he once rejected back on Earth.

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