In the mythic architecture of Dante Alighieri’s Divine Comedy, Purgatorio is the middle realm — the bridge between the descent into shadow and the ascent into light. It is often overlooked in favor of the dramatic torments of Inferno or the celestial harmonies of Paradiso, but Purgatorio is arguably the most human, the most intimate, and the most spiritually instructive of the three. It is the realm of transformation, where the soul, having named its distortions, begins the slow, sacred work of integration.