Nick Grammos’s Reviews > The Divine Comedy > Status Update
Nick Grammos
is on page 102 of 752
Cantos 20-24 of Inferno featured Dante sliding down a hillside in layer 8-9. Virgil gets a little grumpy about something. We're in the zone of sinners living under pools of hot tar all day with just their noses sticking out like frogs in a pond. Now and then some capo devil will strip a bit of flesh off with pincers. Hypocrites, liars, fortune tellers and diviners down there.
— Apr 06, 2025 05:36PM
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Nick’s Previous Updates
Nick Grammos
is on page 338 of 752
I meant 'precacity', not precocity in the previous update.
— Dec 14, 2025 01:19PM
Nick Grammos
is on page 338 of 752
We got to canto 31, two short of paradise. We ran out of time, we discussed too much after each canto. We tried to understand what was going on. We met Beatrice, she's a bit shirty. There's a sad farewell too Virgil who even as a virtuous pagan cannot go further. Tough break.
There's frolicking in water with nymphs, or something I don't understand the theology of. Bathing in Lethe, too. There's fire, precocity.
— Dec 14, 2025 03:41AM
There's frolicking in water with nymphs, or something I don't understand the theology of. Bathing in Lethe, too. There's fire, precocity.
Nick Grammos
is on page 330 of 752
Back in 16thC the world's richest fellow, Jacob Fugger, financed social housing 500 years ago: it's still going in Augsburg today. Only condition is you have to be needy and pray 3 times a day for Fugger's soul in the chapel. Just in case he ended up in purgatory and needed prayer. Clearly an organised fellow. And people in need are happy to pray for him in return for housing. Pray for souls in purgatory, friends ;-)
— Nov 23, 2025 12:42PM
Nick Grammos
is on page 290 of 752
Another Comedy Night Reading. We're in sight of Paradiso, only 9 cantos to go. Greed and Avarice, Lasciviousness all feature. The lesser vices it seems that a good christian can work through with the help of prayer. We meet residents of purgatory who have managed to get out, and listen to their testimonies - for some it took 500 years to get to paradise. But hey, salvation is good no matter the time it takes, innit.
— Nov 23, 2025 12:35PM
Nick Grammos
is on page 260 of 752
We hit the half-way point. The mid cantos of Purgatory. Here we get a lesson on free will and a treatise straight from Aquinas.
You get the feeling that Dante really wants to clean up the Catholic Church. He knows its venal, of the flesh, too interested in earthly powers. Two popes after all.
He was a reformer from within. Well before Martin Luther but well after Peter Waldo.
— Nov 02, 2025 12:29AM
You get the feeling that Dante really wants to clean up the Catholic Church. He knows its venal, of the flesh, too interested in earthly powers. Two popes after all.
He was a reformer from within. Well before Martin Luther but well after Peter Waldo.
Nick Grammos
is on page 260 of 752
We read 6 cantos aloud to No 14. Most deal with envy. Those encountered tend have some awareness of their sins.
Dante still travels with Virgil, but has assumed some of the characteristics of the penitents he encounters. He is a sinner, too.
Hope for eventual salvation emerges now and then. Prayer for stuck souls essential. And upward motion, gates and fissures tell us symbolically that progress is possible.
— Sep 28, 2025 05:33AM
Dante still travels with Virgil, but has assumed some of the characteristics of the penitents he encounters. He is a sinner, too.
Hope for eventual salvation emerges now and then. Prayer for stuck souls essential. And upward motion, gates and fissures tell us symbolically that progress is possible.
Nick Grammos
is on page 233 of 752
Still stuck in the opening cantos of purgatory. Our group couldn't meet this month because half our group couldn't make it. The slow movement of souls out of purgatory is like the slow movement of our reading aloud group towards the gates of heaven. Perhaps prayer will help? Pray for the cantos, pray for the voices of the readers, pray for anything to push it all along.
— Sep 10, 2025 02:08AM
Nick Grammos
is on page 233 of 752
Purgatory is quite different to hell. During our reading of the first few cantos, one of our group reminded us all that limbo is not purgatory, but the place were unbaptised children go. Here was me thinking they were the same.
The souls in Purgatory move slowly. They rely on prayer from outside to help along. All souls day is for prayers to help those along. Dante is preoccupied by geography, and theres sunlight too
— Jul 31, 2025 05:14AM
The souls in Purgatory move slowly. They rely on prayer from outside to help along. All souls day is for prayers to help those along. Dante is preoccupied by geography, and theres sunlight too

