The quoted canto establishes a purgatorial rule that upward progress stops at night even though souls may still move around below.
Topic brief
A Jiang Lens evidence brief for this topic, built from source tags, transcript matches, and linked source refs.
Night rule
A transcript-matched topic anchored by excerpts such as "to us i'm free to range about and climb as far as i may go i'll be your guide but see now how the..."
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Topic Scope And Freshness
Key Notes
Jiang floats a practical reading that Dante may have simply overslept into daytime, so Lucia's intervention comes after he has stalled rather than as a direct violation of the night rule.
Timestamped Evidence
"to us i'm free to range about and climb as far as i may go i'll be your guide but see now how the..."
"while the horizon has enclosed the day at which my lord as if in under in wonder said lead us then to there where..."
"I would connect it back to prior to our one hour break, we were just told by Sordello that nobody can move ahead at..."
"Right. Okay. I actually took this to I actually interpreted this as like, he was so tired, he slept through the day. And so..."
"Okay. Yes? I had your same interpretation, but then there's a line, it's like the sun rose, and then"
"Yeah, so it's daytime, he's still asleep. Yeah. Right. Okay. Any other suggestions?"
Relevant Lectures And Readings
A source-grounded reading of a five-hour hybrid workshop that begins with Macbeth and ends by turning Purgatory, free will, tragedy, envy, and generosity into one model of human transformation.
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