This article about Divine Comedy by Dante Alighieri was first published in August 2018, a few weeks after I started this blog. I thought about the Divine Comedy for the first time in ages today when I listened to a terrific podcast about this magnificent poem on Tea, Toast and Trivia hosted by Rebecca Bud. You can listen to the podcast here: https://teatoasttrivia.com/2021/06/10/season-3-episode-24-liz-humphreys-on-14-weeks-with-dante-alighieri/. I decided to share an amended version of the post I originally wrote.
When my writing of Through the Nethergate led me down the path of Margaret being kidnapped by Hugh Bigod and taken to Hell in the phantom coach, I immediately thought of Dante’s Inferno, the first part of Dante Alighieri’s 14th century epic poem called Divine Comedy.
The reason I thought of The Inferno, which tells the story of Dante’s journey through Hell guided by the ancient Roman poet Virgil, is because of of its association in mind with the Hell I learned about at school.
Although I had heard of Dante, I knew more about the various artworks which have illustrated the Divine Comedy than the actual poem itself. These paintings and etchings scared me to death when I was a little girl. I remember sitting and looking at my dad’s book including these pictures, eyes as big as saucers, and having nightmares afterwards.

Satan in the Inferno is trapped in the frozen central zone in the Ninth Circle of Hell, Canto XXXIV (Gustave Doré)

Botticelli’s map of Hell

Botticelli’s Inferno painting – You can find out more about Botticelli’s illustrations for Divine Comedy here: https://lovefromtuscany.com/botticelli-map-of-hell/
To augment my thoughts and depictions of Hell, I looked into Dante’s descriptions and read the whole of the Inferno. I was fascinated to discover that in the Inferno, Hell is described as nine concentric circles of torment, located deep within the Earth. The poem starts with the poet lost in a dark wood where he has strayed from the right way of salvation. He attempts to climb a small mountain but his path is blocked by three beasts which he can’t circumvent. The three beasts are said to symbolize the three kinds of sin that bring the unrepentant soul into one of the three major divisions of Hell. These three categories of sin are incontinence which means lacking in moderation or self-control, especially as it relates to sexual desire, violence and bestiality and fraud and malice.
The nine concentric circles are said to infer a gradual increase in wickedness and ultimately end in the centre of the Earth where Satan is held in bondage. The poem further explains that sinners within each circle are punished for all eternity in a way that befits their particular sin with the punishments become harsher towards the centre.
In the central [ninth] circle are sinners, trapped in a large frozen lake of ice, who are guilty of treachery against others ranging from betrayal of family ties, betrayal of community ties, betrayal of guests and betrayal of lords. Trapped in the very centre of Hell is the Devil. Condemned for his ultimate sin of personal treachery against God. The Devil is described as a giant and terrifying beast trapped waist-deep in the ice. The Devil has three faces, each a different colour: red, pale yellow and black.
I thought the depth of thought and meaning in this ancient poem was incredible and have incorporated a bit of this newly found knowledge into my book, Through the Nethergate as follows:
“Who or what is the devil? Will he kill us all as we come out of the elevator?
Her fertile mind conjured up images of the devil. Dante Alighieri’s 14th-century epic poem entitled Divine Comedy came into her head. She had discovered this poem last term at school when her art teacher had shown her class the illustrations created by French illustrator Gustave Doré. These pictures had so captivated her that she had looked up the poem and found it to be equally fascinating.
She particularly enjoyed the first part when Inferno tells of Dante’s journey through Hell. She had re-read this part so many times, she knew parts of it off by heart. In the poem, Hell is depicted as nine concentric circles of torment located within the bowels of the earth.
She thought about the devil, found in the very centre of Hell, condemned for committing the ultimate sin of personal treachery against God. In the poem, the devil is a giant and terrifying beast trapped waist-deep in ice from which he cannot escape. He has three faces, each a different colour: the one on the right is a pale
yellow, the one in the middle is red and the one on the left is black.
Remembered words from the poem filled Margaret’s mind:
… he had three faces: one in front bloodred;
and then another two that, just above,
the midpoint of each shoulder, joined the first;
and at the crown, all three were reattached;
the right looked somewhat yellow, somewhat white;
the left in its appearance was like those,
who come from where the Nile, descending, flows.
Margaret shuddered, her heart filled with trepidation at what she was about to see.
The doors of the elevator slid open. Hugh Bigod reached out and grasped Margaret’s wrist in a vice grip. He stepped out into the penthouse, dragging a reluctant Margaret with him.”
My ideas of Hell are very different but I thought it created a great contrast to include the more traditional thoughts and ideas as expressed by Dante too.
This is a part of my description of Hell:
“She hesitated on the threshold, gazing at the interior of the huge hall. Her stomach twisted and writhed in shock.
It was packed with row after row of cubicles. The walls were high enough to prevent any distracting exchanges or conversations between the occupants of the cubicles. The intense lighting gave the scene a clinical and sterile look, but the cubicles reminded Margaret of the multitude of six-sided cells that make up a honeycomb. There was no relief from the heat inside the building although it was not moist and oppressive.
What is this place?
Each cubicle had a nametag stating the name of its occupant in black capital letters. They were all equipped with a keyboard, computer, second screen and mouse. The glass walls of the hall were dominated by enormous screens. Each screen showed an outline map and row after row of words and figures moved up the sides of the maps.
It was not noisy, but Margaret could hear the occupants. Not voices or breathing, although it was a living sound. Again, she thought of a beehive. The underlying sound, she could sense more than hear, was like the continuous hum of worker bees as they go about their jobs, their lives dedicated to the survival of the queen.
In a beehive, each worker bee has its own role to play and everything is done in a strict pattern. The queen produces a “queen substance”, which controls the behaviour of the worker bees and keeps them together as an orderly community.
It’s the sound of souls. The sudden thought, like a lightning flash, illuminated Margaret’s mind.
There was a sense of timelessness about the scene, as if this brightly lit hall and its occupants would remain here, unchanged, for all of eternity. She had a vision of the souls, working like honey bees into perpetuity, their actions facilitating the continuous expansion of the hive and maintenance of the queen.
Who is the queen bee? The possible answer caused Margaret to raise her hands to cover her eyes, blocking out the room, before her mind tumbled into a black void of horror and despair from which there would be no return.”

A Ghost and His Gold available as an ebook from Amazon
I am happy to announce that, at last, A Ghost and His Gold is available as an ebook from Amazon here: https://www.amazon.com/Ghost-Gold-Robert-Eaton-Cheadle-ebook/dp/B096H39FG3

Your dystopian cubical hell is well described and nightmarish, Robbie. Such a wonderfully vivid (and scary) image!
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Thank you, Priscilla. My version of Hell is not the traditional one.
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I read this because it is one of those books that is oft referred to. Anyone out there in the world needs to understand it to catch the allusions. But, it’s too dark and dystopian for my regular tastes. Good discussion of it.
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Hi Jacqui, it is often referred too. Just like Pilgrims Progress, Shakespeare and Chaucer. I think it is wonderful that a book that was published 700 years ago is still a best seller.
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True and oft-mentioned. Still, did he have to make it so depressing!
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Your version of hell sounds like a call center!
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Thank you, Liz, it is a corporate stock brokerage that trades in souls.
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You’re welcome, Robbie. That vision of hell would scare the bejeebers out of me.
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Haha, you should try living it every day [wink!]
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I’ve never read Dante’s Inferno. It’s much too dark for me, but I found your interpretation interesting, Robbie.
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Hi Mae, I’m glad you enjoyed the post. I do seem to be drawn to dark works and to darkness in my own writing.
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Thanks for sharing the process with us Robbie! – Fascinating
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Hi John, I’m glad you found this post interesting.
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always fun to read where a writer’s inspirations come from. and I would imagine those pictures were frightening to see as a child…
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HI Jim, I have been inspired by many books. I know other writers have been too. When I was reading the works of Edgar Allan Poe recently I saw how one of his stories must have inspired one of Stephen King’s novellas. I am pretty sure Dracula influenced his book Salem’s Lot and Day of the Triffids played into The Stand.
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and if using another writer’s work to inspire you is good enough for Stephen King, it’s good enough for me to do the same!
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For sure, Jim, Charli even told that when you study creative writing they teach you to look carefully at famous authors works and to learn from their style of description and writing when you are writing in a similar vein.
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seems like a ncie way to build a solid foundation, and to then find your own voice…
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I’ve had The Divine Comedy sitting on my shelf for years, but I’ve never been able to bring myself to read it. Botticelli’s images are haunting. I love your take on hell (the cubicles).
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HI Staci, I think the Divine Comedy is a book that fascinates and disturbs us. I have never forgotten this images and they still dominate my ideas about Hell. I did portray it to be a corporate stock brokerage trading in souls, but there was still fire and brimstone.
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Those images and poem would have given me nightmares too, Robbie.
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Yes, they are very scary and these are the words and images that subsequent ideas about Hell were built on.
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😢
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I think we all have our own visions of hell. Your take is vivid and believable. (K)
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Hi Kerfe, I think creative people like us have our own versions of Hell and visual ideas but many people see Hell in the way they have been led to see it by this famous poem and its artwork. Nearly all people see Hell as being a fiery place of eternal suffering.
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That’s probably true. We often let others visualize for us. And they are memorable images.
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I read The Inferno years ago but really have never been able to shake the thought of it and the depiction of punishment. Your post is a good snapshot of the overwhelming horror of that book.
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Hi Bernadette, lovely to see you. You are right, Divine Comedy certainly stays with you. I enjoy its clever uniqueness and the beauty of the poetry but it would have been a powerful tool for instilling fear and ensuring compliance in the past.
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I remember those cubicles well, Robbie. I also remember those pictures from Dante’s Inferno. They were utterly fascinating. I wasn’t from a religious family so I wasn’t particularly frightened by them, but there were creepy and quite memorable. I’ve never read the poem, but that’s so cool how you incorporated it into the book. It’s clear that you put a lot of research into all of your books. And congrats on getting A Ghost and his Gold onto Amazon! Yay.
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Hi Diana, I must be honest, I thought Amazon was not going to upload it. It took four months. I am glad the description of Hell from Through the Nethergate stayed with you. That is lovely to know. I was brought up Catholic, but I think it was the emotion and wretchedness of these pictures that upset me rather than the religious implications.
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Oh yeah. I definitely remember that scene. It was so original!
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I am listening to that podcast right now. I read this so many years ago, perhaps it’s time to reread it.
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Hi Dan, Rebecca’s podcasts are fascinating. I am looking forward to reading it too. Well, I bought it as an audio book and it will be my next read straight after I finish Gone with the Wind.
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Robbie – this is an excellent post and a testament to how you conduct your research and bring that knowledge into writing. I especially appreciated how thoughtful discussion on how Dante has influenced art. Thank you for including the TTT podcast with Liz on her 14 weeks with Dante. Sending many hugs along with my gratitude!
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My pleasure, Rebecca. Thank you for the inspiration and the reminder about it. I found an audio book version of the Divine Comedy which I am going to try.
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Fascinating, Robbie. Coincidentally, I’ve not long finished reading Inferno. Certain passages have stayed with me too. Time to investigate your version… 🙂
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I am thrilled to know you have also read Inferno. I am looking forward to listening to it as soon as Gone with the Wind is finished. I listen to classics and read Indies. In that way I get to experience and enjoy the best of both worlds.
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That’s a good idea, Robbie. Mind you, I tend to fall asleep with audio books. 😉 One ‘weighty’ classic a year for me. Last year was Moby Dick.
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Moby Dick is not a book that has ever appealed to me. My son has read and enjoyed it.
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Your Hell sounds like a day at the office. Haha. I watched a documentary on Botticelli and thought his painting was incredible. I mean, how could it not based on such a brilliant text?
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Hi Micah, it’s lovely to see you. Yes my Hell is a corporate, essentially a stock broker where people work incredibly long hours and deal in souls.
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It is quite sad how hell is just normal life for some people. Sigh.
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I’m not one for delving into the dark recesses of Hell, but you do a fantastic job portraying evil in your books, Robbie- interesting post.
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Thank you, Jacquie. I find ‘dark’ quite fascinating and I was brought up Catholic and have always loved the mythical and superstitious nature of the religion. Father Muike was a real person.
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I know so many folks that have this book and I even had it come up in a class a long time ago – but do not recall too much
– and side note – I like your header – with you and your books – very cool Robbie
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Hi Yvette, I am glad to know people still read this amazing book. Thank you for your kind comment about the header. They change as I have uploaded a variety.
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no – I don’t read it and never really did – but a year ago I was at someone’s house and they had a classic hard cover copy that is collectible – but not my reading choice at all – (ha)
and good idea to rotate the headers 🙂
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I took my second edition copy of She by Rider Haggard on the plane to Botswana with me a few years ago when I was re-reading it. I always buy books to read; that is what they are for after all. I carried it around in a plastic protective covering and people did stare.
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oh your love for books (all types) is truly inspirational
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Hi,
Congratulations! I had to read Dante in the university because I was an English minor, so I am curious as to how this book compares.
Wishing you all the best.
Shalom aloeichem
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Hi Pat, I imagine the audio book is based on the Penguin classic and I will share my review when I get to it. Thanks for visiting.
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That’s a really interesting post. As a kid going to a Catholic school I kept on getting told I’d end up in hell. All that brimstone and wailing. Hopefully none of us will find out!
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Hi Vinny, I also went to a Catholic school and was taught by nuns. They certainly prescribed to this idea of Hell.
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My school was run by priests and it was all purgatory and suffering. I wrote a blog about the nuns and priests and my school days on here. That Dante stuff is scary. I’m hoping it isn’t as bad as Dante’s vision!
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Ahh I keep forgetting to review through the nethergate. I will this week. I really enjoyed it.
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I am delighted to hear that, Jude.
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very thought provoking – many tx for sharing, Robbie
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HI da-AL I am glad you enjoyed this post.
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