Dante’s Divine Comedy: Cousteau’s Unholy Expedition


As narrated by Jacques Cousteau, with field notes from his beleaguered underwater team.


INFERNO: Into the Abyssal Trench of the Damned

Jacques Cousteau, voice-over:
Ah, my friends… today, we descend into the Mariana Trench of morality—the Inferno, a spiraling whirlpool of the damned, where sins marinate for eternity. The pressure here is unbearable—morally and literally. The descent begins at the rim of limbo, a calm zone of disappointed philosophers sipping lukewarm wine and complaining about being born pre-Christ. It is, how you say… le cocktail party from hell.

Deeper still, through currents of wrath, greed, and heresy, the water grows thick with despair. Lust torpedoes past us—Paolo and Francesca spinning in endless romantic turbulence, like two sock puppets in a malfunctioning jacuzzi. Our cameraman, Jean-Luc, is nearly sucked into the Malebolge whirlpool of fraudulent bureaucrats—an eddy of corporate PowerPoints and forgotten passwords. We tether him to a line made from papal indulgences, which seem to work better here than rope.

At the center, we find the frozen Lucifer, eternally gnawing Judas like a chew toy. A tragic, teeth-gnashing monument to betrayal, spinning in his own frigid tantrum like a toddler in a cryogenic time-out. We try to interview him. He screams. We leave. The ice is too thick for empathy.


PURGATORIO: The Great Saltwater Stairmaster of Soul Rehab

We ascend to warmer, brinier waters—where spirits paddle slowly toward salvation like ghostly otters with existential dread. This is Purgatory: less horror show, more bureaucratic sauna. It is the afterlife’s DMV, but with slightly better views. The sea teems with souls doing cardio for their sins. Slothful monks do underwater burpees. Gluttons run laps in kelp fields, chewing guilt instead of snacks.

At the gate, the angelic customs officer stamps our passports with the seven-P tattoo—P for peccato, sin. The sinners scrub one off with each level, like exfoliating shame from their spectral pores. It is the spiritual equivalent of CrossFit, with more crying.

We observe prideful kings carrying boulders of ego on their backs, hunched like philosophical hermit crabs. Further up, the envious have their eyelids sewn shut with wire—no more side-eye, mes amis. My assistant, Pierre, faints from secondhand humility.

At the summit? Earthly Paradise. A surreal reef of forgotten innocence. There’s an inexplicable breeze, though we are still underwater. Beatrice appears—a celestial dive instructor with zero tolerance for emotional nonsense. She gives me a look that says, “Your flippers are on backward,” and I feel both judged and baptized.


PARADISO: The Effervescent Champagne Bubble of the Just

Now we rise through pearlescent thermoclines of virtue—Paradiso, where water becomes light and light becomes choir music with a side of algebra. We are weightless in intellect and awe. My team, reduced to blinking toddlers, floats in spiritual helium.

We ping upward through nine concentric orbits of moral excellence. The souls here don’t paddle. They vibrate. Saint Thomas Aquinas delivers a lecture on divine justice while juggling galaxies. My microphone melts.

Each sphere is a graduate seminar in cosmic ethics. Martyrs, mystics, and medieval astronomers buzz like philosophical plankton. Justice twirls with Wisdom in an eternal waltz choreographed by Kepler’s ghost. I try to ask a question, but a flaming eagle-shaped constellation silences me with a single blink.

At the Empyrean apex, we meet the Divine, disguised as a living diffraction pattern. God is less a being than an epiphany you weren’t quite ready for. My goggles crack, my crew sobs, and I briefly become fluent in Latin before blacking out.

When we awaken, we are back on our ship. Jean-Luc throws his camera overboard. Pierre writes a sonnet. I, Jacques Cousteau, conclude: the ocean is deep… but not as deep as the soul.

Comments

Leave a comment