Dante and the early astronomers . ^d -^ !i ?d Si ^°^ d ;=! «^ > § eg r^ =; d . bO 5 ^ eg d a>k^ d -^^•-^ o Si ^r t) ^|a d ^ rd eg O o 9 d Sbo 2 Si •^ bo oj a^ ^ 2 >? >i d a o CO bO CO 3 u,« CQ 03 d oQ oO rd dO i dO d eg °.6 >. .-kj fl ^ d a> !3 S-, >-:w o o p. Id do CIS J-, ^ CO d d^ 2 c6 a P, Si) ©do ._. P «2 S bD O d ^ o ^^ i eg -1-3 eg>? r-i T3^ eg g a oj ^ m 02 O 60 dd Si o Sieg COCO o I—I w t S 2 ^ . f-< . to m ft w S^:] fe «2 W hJ o fci < o < <1 o Ts . ^ ^ -^ a 2 ma M g OB fl ^?.^ ill si lii ^-^^^i ^ ^ IJ -111 1^§^ II ?^.^ l£^?§ -^ -« -S- S ^^^ ^S-o S^


Dante and the early astronomers . ^d -^ !i ?d Si ^°^ d ;=! «^ > § eg r^ =; d . bO 5 ^ eg d a>k^ d -^^•-^ o Si ^r t) ^|a d ^ rd eg O o 9 d Sbo 2 Si •^ bo oj a^ ^ 2 >? >i d a o CO bO CO 3 u,« CQ 03 d oQ oO rd dO i dO d eg °.6 >. .-kj fl ^ d a> !3 S-, >-:w o o p. Id do CIS J-, ^ CO d d^ 2 c6 a P, Si) ©do ._. P «2 S bD O d ^ o ^^ i eg -1-3 eg>? r-i T3^ eg g a oj ^ m 02 O 60 dd Si o Sieg COCO o I—I w t S 2 ^ . f-< . to m ft w S^:] fe «2 W hJ o fci < o < <1 o Ts . ^ ^ -^ a 2 ma M g OB fl ^?.^ ill si lii ^-^^^i ^ ^ IJ -111 1^§^ II ?^.^ l£^?§ -^ -« -S- S ^^^ ^S-o S^ ^..^ g^Ht^o a g9.^^ <1 O < H Eh O <I g--g g^ .. g:^ |-g |§ ^:^ >oo *--H •- ri(v;^ ^ J!-na ^ ^si iS-qSa >S ^-t^ ^I^^i S § Bg g :;;a| s|--i i^.i |_sl mg-^ -^ « §« S «• S ce _: ^ « P-2 JS*^a) sag flflSfl «o 1—1 >4 Q M n> W 0) W as S-4 0 H ^ o P5. a, ^ I s ^ a .s 5 ^ -^ 02 300 sh bo 2. THE INFERNO. Using the above table as a guide, we may now seehow Dante uses the movements of the heavenly bodiesboth for time and direction, and wq shall discover howlong his journey takes. Dante has spent a night in a dark forest. The moonwas then full; but we only learn this later, whenVirgil reminds him of it, and he himself mentions it toForese, when talking in the Purgatorio. At dawn hefinds himself at the foot of a hill on which are alreadyshining the first rays of the morning sun—the planetwhich leads all aright by every path. The sun rises:it is in Aries, consequently the moon, being full, mustbe in Libra, and must have set as the sun rose, atabout 6 Virgil appears, rescues the poet fromthree terrible beasts, and announces that he has cometo conduct him through Hell and Purgatory, and tolead him to Beatrice, who will guide him to Paradise. On the evening of the same day, at twilight, thepoets enter the Inferno. This gre


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, booksubjectastronomy, booksubjectdantealighieri