The Dante
Clubcharacter
|-
| colspan="2"
style="text-align:center;" |
300 px| Font of book
The Dante Club|-
! colspan="2"
style="text-align:center; font-size: larger; background-color:
#001; color: #ffa;" |Benjamin Galvin
|-
! Actual name/title
|
Benjamin Galvin
|-
! Aliases
| Dan Teal (after Dante)
|-
!
Nicknames
| Ben Galvin<br>Dan
|-
! Gender
|
Male|-
! Race
|
Caucasian|-
!
Birth
| Around 1840-45
|-
! Ancestry
|
English
american|-
! Relationships
| Girlfriend, mother and father
unknown
|-
! Enemies
| Augustus Manning<br>Artemus
Healey<br>Phineas Jennison<br>Elisha
Talbot<br>Pliny Mead
|-
! Idols (later enemies)
|
Dante<br>
Henry Wadsworth
Longfellow<br>
Oliver Wendell
Holmes<br>
J.T.Fields<br>
James Russell
Lowell|-
!
M.O.|
Contrapasso,<br>
Personality
disordercaused by
war|-
!
Occupation(s)
|
Union soldier,
Book shophelpmate|-
!Current status:
| Deceased im
winter 1865/66
|-
! Portrayed by:
|
Matthew
Pearl(
The Dante Club)
(literally)
|}
Benjamin Galvinis the
antagonistof
Matthew
Pearl's novel
The Dante Club. Benjamin, who after the war
when he started to listen to
George
Washington Greenesproclamations of
Dante, changed his name to Dan Teal (after Dante,
since he could not spell "Alighieri") after his idol, realizing the
Divine Comedy as more than a masterpiece, believing himself he was
Dante (maybe helped by psychiatric problems received in the
civil
war), as Dante was a soldier he wanted to be, and made himself
Dante by succeding into hell and punishing all those who worked
against the Dante Club translating the work under Henry Longfellow.
As judge Healey had refused taking action in his important
position, not even fought against the club Galvin saw him as a
terrible one of the neutral ones, attacking him once alone in his
mansion, leaving him naked in his own garden immobile, wounded and
covered with
screwworms.<br>Elisha Talbot was (as he was
revealed to more and more of the Inferno, the comedy was at this
point only readable in English and though trying desperately to
learn, the poor-born Benjamin paid a poor Italian and Dante-lover
to learn him, though unsuccessful, he learned the comedy as he
advanced with the killings. Talbot had received money and position
to work against the Dante club and Longfellow, which (in Bens/Teals
eyes) made him a
simonit, a one who has gotten a religious position
cause of irrelevant services, such as work against the release of a
literal art translation. Galvin spied on Talbot for days before
digging a hatch down the catacombs of Boston catholic church (Dante
made many of his accusations against catholic priests in common,
which were severely punished in several of his circles in the
Inferno), attacking the physically inferior Talbot as he walked
through the underground on his way home, undressed him while
fainted, put him upside-down in the pit, filled the rest with dirt
and set his feet ablaze. Shortly after, probably even before
Talbot's death another priest came in and killed the fire, however
too late to catch Galvin.<br>A rich and charming young
athlete and high member of
Bostonsociety, Phineas Jennison were upholding tries
on other's orders (in particarly Manning's) to stop the Dante
translation and still keeping it a secret and trying to "help" the
Club, acting as their friend. About the time Washington Greene had
read for Galvin and other soldiers from the war (as a kind of
charity) of the sowers of discord, those who ripped things apart
(such as religion, which
Muhammadis punished for in the comedy, however this
must be seen as out of Dante's eyes and not objective) Galvin knew
what would be next. Though physically capable of defending himself
and not facing a firearm, Jennison succumbs to panic while being
kidnapped and taken to an old fort (fortress
Malebolge) where he cuts him in
half, though not over the entire body, as he show small signs of
life when discovered two days later, he however dies emmidiately
and leaves the police officers and Oliver Wendell Holmes in shock.
After that, it didn't go long to the next but the Dante Club met
Galvin/Teal in the book shop where he was working, however they had
no idea he was the murderer, but soon they were on his trail. About
to punish last victim Augustus Manning, who is threatening the
entire project by denying Dante to the readers of America, he is
considered the traitor and is visited by Galvin in northern soldier
uniform a late evening. Manning grabs a rifle but is beaten
unconscious and when awaken he is tied, lying in a trailer driven
by Galvin on the way out on a frozen lake. He and student Pliny
Mead are placed naked in a hole in the ice (
Cocytus) to freeze to death, but Lowell and
Holmes interferes, fires against Galvin and saves Manning, Mead is
taken up but dies of
hypothermia. Galvin is surprised and greatly
disappointed and hurt as they who he idolized worked against him
and his art, against the poet's will - or whatever Galvin thought
it was. He however quickly got used to it and started to look on
them as his new enemies. Exposed, Galvin knew (or didn't consider)
his end was drawn on close, he kidnapped Fields and Lowell and hid
them, bound and gagged in a hideout in the catacomb where he had
burned Talbot (with the intention to capture Holmes as well and
force Longfellow to shoot them), but Holmes escaped him and outside
Longfellow's house, he and Longfellow found themselves pointing
guns at each other (Galvin "helping" Longfellow). Holmes suddenly
aimed at Longfellow instead of Galvin and Longfellow began to
crumble, and as the end started to shiver Galvin suddenly felt
someone near, he twisted around and attacked but was shot twice by
the half-recovered Manning (who resided closeby, a couple of days
after his near death) and killed, lying in a pile of snow, bleeding
from his white soldier shirt in his blue uniform, looking up at the
sky.
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