
Rating: Not rated 
Tags: Classic Fiction, Lang:en 
Summary
 The Inferno remains literature's most
      hallowed and graphic vision of Hell. Dante plunges readers
      into this unforgettable world with a deceptively simple
      — and now legendary — tercet: Midway upon the journey of our life I
      found myself within a forest dark
       With these words, Dante plunges
      readers into the unforgettable world of the Inferno —
      one of the most graphic visions of Hell ever created. In this
      first part of the epic The Divine Comedy, Dante is led by the
      poet Virgil down into the nine circles of Hell, where he
      travels through nightmare landscapes of fetid cesspools,
      viper pits, frozen lakes, and boiling rivers of blood and
      witnesses sinners being beaten, burned, eaten, defecated
      upon, and torn to pieces by demons. Along the way he meets
      the most fascinating characters known to the classical and
      medieval world — the silver-tongued Ulysses, lustful
      Francesca da Rimini, the heretical Farinata degli Uberti, and
      scores of other intriguing and notorious figures. This edition of the Inferno revives
      the famous Henry Wadsworth Longfellow translation, which
      first introduced Dante’s literary genius to a broad
      American audience. "Opening the book we stand face to face
      with the poet," wrote William Dean Howells of
      Longfellow’s Dante, "and when his voice ceases we may
      marvel if he has not sung to us in his own Tuscan." Lyrically
      graceful and brimming with startlingly vivid images, Dante's
      Inferno is a perpetually engrossing classic that ranks with
      the greatest works of Homer and Shakespeare.
For the straightforward pathway had been lost.