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The Penguin Book of Hell

Page 25

by Scott G. Bruce


  THE DEATH FACTORIES

  1. Vasily Grossman, “The Hell of Treblinka,” trans. Robert and Elizabeth Chandler with Olga Mukovnikova, in The Road: Stories, Journalism, and Essays (New York: New York Review of Books, 2010), pp. 144–45, 147–50, 153, and 156–60.

  FIRE IN THE SKY

  1. Yoshitaka Kawamoto, “Testimony of Yoshitaka Kawamoto,” Voices of Hibashuka, Hiroshima Peace Cultural Center and NHK, www.inicom.com/hibakusha/yoshitaka.html.

  THE SUM OF SUFFERING

  1. William Blake, “A Sentence Worse Than Death,” in Hell Is a Very Small Place: Voices from Solitary Confinement, eds. Jean Casella, James Ridgeway, and Sarah Shourd (New York and London: The New Press, 2016), pp. 26–33.

  ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ

  Index

  The page numbers in this index refer to the printed version of this book. The link provided will take you to the beginning of that print page. You may need to scroll forward from that location to find the corresponding reference on your e-reader.

  abolitionists, 231

  abominable fancy, 130–35

  Abraham, 45–46

  Abu Ghraib, 253

  Acheron, 20, 25, 144

  Achilles, 4, 15–16, 151, 262n

  Adam, 47–51, 54–56, 106, 145

  Adige, 149

  Aeneas, 22–32, 35

  Aeneid, The (Virgil), xiii–xiv, 5, 22–32, 139, 263n

  Æthelwold, 73–74

  Ajax, 15–16

  Alcmaeon, 256n

  Aldfrith, King, 73

  Alexander the Great, 153, 261n

  alms, 42, 72, 127–28

  anger, 175, 176

  Anglicans, 169–70, 180

  Annas, 47–49, 78

  Anne, Queen of Great Britain, 171

  Anselm, Saint, 180

  Antony, Marc, 262n

  Anubis, xiii, 4

  Apocalypse of Paul, xiv, 37–44, 179

  Aquinas, Thomas, xiv, 130–35, 264n

  Archeron, 90–92

  Arcolano of Siena, 263n

  Ariadne, 262n

  Aristotle, 130, 261n

  Arno, 160

  Athena, 18

  Atlas, 7

  Attila the Hun, 154, 160

  Augustine of Hippo, Saint, xiv, 45, 191, 202

  Augustus, 22, 157

  Auschwitz, 233

  Avernus, 30

  Azzolin, 153

  Babylon, scarlet lady of, 225

  Babylonians, 36

  Bagram, 253

  baptism, 43, 186, 226

  Basil, Saint, 212

  Bede, Venerable, 59

  Dryhthelm’s journey related by, 68–74

  Ecclesiastical History of the English People, 65–67

  Bernard, Saint, 189

  Bhagavad Gita, 240

  Bible, authority of, 199, 225, 227

  bird, 219

  Blake, William, 244–52

  blessed and the damned, 130–35

  as opposed in all things, 193

  whether the blessed pity the miseries of the damned, 132–34

  whether the blessed rejoice in the punishment of the wicked, 134–35

  whether the blessed will see the punishments of the damned, 131–32

  Bonaventure, Saint, 182, 207

  Book of Revelation, 37

  Book of Similitudes, 180

  Book of the Visions and Miracles of Clairvaux, 121

  Brendan, Saint, 60, 75–80

  Briareus, 7, 9, 10

  Brontê, Charlotte, vii

  Brutus, 140, 163

  Bunyan, John, 193

  The Resurrection of the Dead and Eternall Judgement, or, The Truth of the Resurrection and the Bodies Both of Good and Bad at the Last Day, 193–96

  Caeneus, 28

  Caesar, Julius, 140, 157, 263n

  Caesarius of Heisterbach, 118, 264n

  see also Dialogue on Miracles

  Caiphas, 47–49, 78

  Cassius, 140, 163

  Catholics, xv, 169–70, 179, 199, 222, 224, 225

  Jesuits, 179

  Cécina, 155

  centaurs, 24, 151–54

  Cerberus, 4, 7–8, 11, 12–14, 22, 27

  charity, 133

  Charon, 22, 25, 26

  in Dante’s Inferno, 144, 145

  child labor, 231

  children, Hell explained for, 201–21, 222

  Chiron, 151, 152

  Christ, 37, 44, 45, 72, 196, 203, 224

  apostles warned by, 36

  death and resurrection of, 45, 47, 54, 55, 179, 262n

  descent into Hell (Harrowing of Hell), xiv, 45, 47–56, 169, 223

  Jewish patriarchs and prophets and, 45, 47, 48, 56, 169

  Judas Iscariot and, 78, 79, 140, 263n

  Pinamonti on, 182–84

  Christianity, xiii, xiv, xv, 5, 35–36, 37, 45, 47, 59–60, 68, 111, 115, 130–31, 169, 171, 201, 222, 261n

  Aeneid and, 22

  Anglicans, 169–70, 180

  Catholics, xv, 169–70, 179, 199, 222, 224, 225

  Counter-Reformation in, 179

  criticisms against doctrines of, xv, 199, 222–27, 231

  Jesuits, 179

  Protestant Reformation and, xv, 169

  Protestants, 169–70, 179, 180

  Chrysostom, John, 185, 265n

  Circe, 15

  Cistercian order, 125

  Cistercian order, conversions to, 118–24

  by an abbot of Morimond, 118, 119–20

  by a cleric investigating the fate of a local ruler, 118, 122–24

  by a necromancer, 118, 121

  Cocytus, 139, 163

  coffin of fire, 214–15

  cold, 92, 102, 114, 115, 116

  Colenso, Bishop, 224

  compassion, 133

  comprehensors, 134

  Conallus (Conall Cearnach), 91

  concentration camps, see extermination camps

  confession, 111, 129

  Conrad, 122

  conscience, 171–74, 177, 180, 194–95

  Corneto, 155

  Rinier da Corneto, 154

  Counter-Reformation, 179

  Crete, 149

  Cú Chulainn, 258n

  Cyclops, 75

  damned:

  resurrection of, 193–96

  see also blessed and the damned

  Dante Alighieri, xiv

  The Divine Comedy, xiv, 23, 139

  See also Inferno

  darkness, 92, 114, 115, 116

  Furniss on, 205

  Pinamonti on, 181–82

  Darwin, Charles, xv, 199

  David, 53, 56, 223

  Dawes, William, 171–78

  Deianeira, 151, 262n

  della Vigna, Pietro, 263n

  demons, 71, 87, 92, 114, 115–17, 209

  Brendan and, 75, 77–80

  and Ludwig II, Landgrave of Thuringia, 122–23, 126

  and student who had made pact with Satan, 120

  Tundale and, 91–92, 101, 103–4

  see also devils

  detainees, xv, 232, 253–54

  see also prisons

  Devil, see Satan

  devils, 182, 208, 209, 220

  mocking, 209, 211

  striking, 209–11

  see also demons; Satan

  Dialogue on Miracles (Caesarius), 118–24, 125–29

  on abbot of Morimond who died and came back to life, 118, 119–20

  on Bavarian who appeared to his wife after death, 127–28

  on cleric who had practiced necromancy and appeared to a living companion, 118, 12
1

  on cleric who witnessed the torments of Ludwig the Landgrave, 118, 122–24

  on knight who hung serpents and toads on his son’s door, 127

  on Ludwig the Landgrave’s punishment, 125–26

  on nun who killed her child, 128–29

  on priest’ punishment, 126

  on Rudinger and his drink, 129

  Dialogues (Gregory the Great), 61–64, 113

  Dido, 22–23, 28–29

  Dionysius I of Syracuse, 153

  Dis, 13, 22, 150, 161–62, 262n

  Dives, 223

  Divine Comedy, The (Dante), xiv, 23, 139

  See also Inferno

  dots, 219–20

  dragons, 114, 116

  dress of fire, 214

  dungeons of Hell, 213–18

  boiling kettle, 216–17

  deep pit, 214–15

  dress of fire, 214

  red-hot floor, 215–16

  red-hot oven, 217

  sad voice, 218

  Dryhthelm, 68–74

  Ecclesiastical History of the English People (Bede), 65–67

  Echidna, 8

  Egypt, xiii, 3–4, 182, 205

  Elucidarium (Honorius), 113–14, 115

  Engels, Friedrich, 231

  Enquiry into the Nature and Place of Hell, An (Swinden), 170

  envy, 175

  Epic of Gilgamesh, The, 3

  Erebus, 15, 16

  Eriphyle, 28

  eternity, 172, 177–78, 187–92, 194

  Furniss on, 209, 218–20, 227

  sound of, 220–21

  Eurydice, 12

  Eurystheus, 12

  Evadne, 28

  extermination camps, xv, 232, 233

  Treblinka, 233–39

  Ezzelino III da Romano (Azzolin), 153

  Farrar, Frederic William, 131

  fear, 175

  death from, 213

  Furniss on, 213

  of Hell, as persuasion, xvi, 111–12, 115, 171, 199, 222, 227

  of punishment, vs. punishment itself, 190

  Federigo, 157

  Fergusius (Fergus mac Roich), 91

  fire, 4, 29, 36, 114, 115–16, 171, 172, 177, 180, 181, 188–89, 192

  in Apocalypse of Paul, 37–44

  bed of, 212

  Bunyan on, 194–95

  coffin of, 214–15

  dress of, 214

  Dryhthelm and, 68–72

  fiery chains, 114, 116

  fire giants, 75–76

  Furniss on, 202, 204, 205, 208, 209, 212, 214–15, 220

  Fursa and, 65–67

  at gates of Hell, 202

  God and, 185–86

  Holyoake on, 224–26

  intensity of, 185–86

  quality of, 183–84

  quantity of, 184–85

  Tundale and, 88, 89, 92, 93, 96, 100, 103

  First Council of Lyon, 111

  floor, red-hot, 215–16

  Florence, 263n

  fornicators, 38–41, 96–97

  Fourth Lateran Council, 111

  Frances of Rome, Saint, 202–4, 208, 209, 211

  Frederick I (Frederick Barbarossa), Holy Roman Emperor, 122

  Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor, 263n

  Furies, 23, 24, 30, 31

  Furnace, Babylonian, 181

  Furniss, John, 201

  The Sight of Hell, 201–21, 222

  The Terrible Judgment, and the Bad Child, 217

  Fursa, 65–67

  Gabriel (archangel), 202, 203

  Gamaliel, 49

  gates of Hell:

  in Dante’s Inferno, 141–46

  in Furniss’s The Sight of Hell, 202–3

  Gehenna, 35–36

  Gerard, 128

  Glossa Ordinaria, 261n

  gluttons, 96–97

  God

  banishment from enjoyment of, 171–73

  and fire of Hell, 185–86

  as infinite, 191

  and justice in punishment, 191–92

  Gog, 37

  Gospel of Mark, 36

  Gospel of Nicodemus, 47–56

  “Great Below, The” (Reznor), vii

  greed, 90–92

  Greeks, xiii, 4, 35, 37

  Gregory the Great, Pope, 59, 132

  Dialogues, 61–64, 113

  Grossman, Vasily, 233–39

  Guantánamo Bay detention camp, 253–54

  guilty conscience, 171–74, 177, 180, 194–95

  Gyes, 7, 9, 10

  Habakkuk, 56

  Hades, xiii–xiv, 4, 7–8, 11, 12, 13, 35, 48, 60

  Haemgisl, 73

  hammers, 100, 114, 115, 116

  harpies, 24, 155, 158

  Harrowing of Hell (descent of Christ into Hell), xiv, 45, 47–56, 169, 223

  hatred, 175

  Heaven (Paradise), 59, 68, 72–73, 111, 113, 169, 172–74, 183, 218

  Holyoake on, 222–24

  Redbord on, 226–27

  Heaven & Hell: Where Situated? A Search After the Objects of Man’s Fervent Hope & Abiding Terror (Holyoake), 222–27

  Hebe, 17

  Hebrew scriptures, xiii, 35–36

  Hecate, 23, 30

  Hell, xiii–xvi, 169

  belief in reality of, xiii, 169–70, 231

  for children, 201–21, 222

  contemplation of, 179–92

  darkness in, see darkness

  divisions of, 203

  doubt about existence of, xv, 199

  dungeons in, see dungeons of Hell

  fear of, as persuasion, xvi, 111–12, 115, 171, 199, 222, 227

  fire in, see fire

  gates of, see gates of Hell

  geography of, 83, 139

  of guilty conscience, 171–74, 177, 180, 194–95

  location of, 59, 113–14, 169–70, 201–2, 222–25, 231

  as metaphor, xiii, xv, xvi, 231–32

  names for, 224

  punishment and torments in, see punishment and torments

  Purgatory and, 59, 111, 224, 225

  size of, 203

  straitness of, 180–81, 182

  see also Hades

  Hell, journeys to, 59

  Bede’s accounts of, 65–67, 68–74

  Dante’s account of, see Inferno

  by Dryhthelm, 68–74

  Gregory’s accounts of, 61–64

  by student who had made pact with Satan, 118, 119–20

  by Tundale, see Vision of Tundale

  Hell Opened to Christians to Caution Them from Entering into It (Pinamonti), 179–92

  Henry of Almain, Prince, 262n

  Hera, 17

  Heracles, 12–14, 17–18, 262n

  see also Hercules

  Hercules, 26

  Herman I, Landgrave of Thuringia, 122

  Hermes, 18

  Herod, 78

  Hesiod, 7

  Theogony, 7–11

  Hinnom, 35–36

  Hippolytus, 256n

  Hiroshima and Nagasaki, atomic bombing of, 232, 240–43

  Hitler, Adolf, 235

  Holocaust, xv

  see also extermination camps

  Holyoake, Austin, 222–27

  Homer, 22, 60

  Odyssey, 4, 15–18, 75

  Honorius of Autun, 113–14, 115

  Hosea, 45

  Hydra, 30

  Iapetos, 10

  Ignatius of Loyola, 179

  immram, 60, 75

  incarceration, see prisons

  Infants, Limbo of, 169

/>   Inferno (Dante), xiv, 139–40

  the gates of Hell, 141–46

  Nazi extermination camps compared with, 233, 236

  Virgil in, 23, 139, 150, 151, 158

  war and, 241

  Inferus, 48, 51–55

  insects, 212, 218

  interrogation, 253–54

  Isaiah, 49, 53, 116, 131, 185

  Israelites, 35–36, 189

  Jacopo da Santo Andrea, 160

  Jane Eyre (Brontë), vii

  Japan, atomic bombing of, 232, 240–43

  Jerome, Saint, 187

  Jesuits, 179

  Jesus Christ, see Christ

  Jews, xiv, 59

  Hebrew scriptures, xiii, 35–36

  Nazi extermination camps and, see extermination camps

  patriarchs and prophets, 45, 47, 48, 50, 56, 169

  Job, 116, 132, 185, 210–11

  John, Saint, Revelation to, 37, 223, 225

  John Chrysostom, 185, 265n

  John the Baptist, 50, 160

  Joseph of Arimathea, 47–49

  Judas Iscariot

  Brendan’s encounter with, 60, 75, 77–80

  in Dante’s Inferno, 140, 163

  Jesus Christ and, 78, 79, 140, 263n

  Judgment Day, 72, 159, 172, 188, 224

  The Resurrection of the Dead and Eternall Judgement, or, The Truth of the Resurrection and the Bodies Both of Good and Bad at the Last Day (Bunyan), 193–96

  Julius II, Pope, 224–25

  justice, 190–92

  Karinus, 49

  Kawamoto, Yoshitaka, 241–43

  kettle, boiling, 216–17

  King, Martin Luther, Jr., 240–41

  Kottos, 7, 9, 10

  Kronos, 7

  Laertes, 18

  Lano, 159

  Laodamia, 28

  Lazarus, 45–46, 52, 207, 223

  Leitch, A. S., 231

  Leto, 16

  Leucius, 49

  Leviathan, 78

  liberty, 180, 181

  Limbo of Infants, 169

  Limbo of the Patriarchs, 45, 169

  Los Alamos Laboratory, 240

  Loyola, Ignatius, 179

  Lucifer, see Satan

  Ludwig II, Landgrave of Thuringia, 118, 122–24, 125–26

  Ludwig III, Landgrave of Thuringia, 122, 124

  Luther, Martin, 169

  ma’at, 3–4

  Madness of Heracles, The (Seneca), 12–14

  Magog, 37

  malice, 175

  Manchester, 231

  manna, 189

  Mark, Gospel of, 36

  Mars, 160

  Martha, 207

  Martin, Saint, 182

  Mary, 44, 78

  Mass, 111

  Matsui, Kazumi, 241

  Matthew, 116

  Meagher, William, 201

  measurement, 219

  mercy, 133

 

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