Henry Francis Cary

Gustave Doré: Dante, guided by Virgil, observes those guilty of simony in the eighth circle of HellDante (standing right), guided by Virgil, watches those guilty of simony suffer burning while buried head first with their legs and feet exposed in the eighth circle of Hell, illustration by Gustave Doré; from Dante's Inferno, translated by Henry Francis Cary, 1885.

Henry Francis Cary (born December 6, 1772, Gibraltar—died August 14, 1844, London, England) was an English biographer and translator best known for his blank verse translation of The Divine Comedy by Dante.

Educated at the University of Oxford, Cary took Anglican orders in 1796 and was later assistant librarian in the British Museum. He published biographies of English and French poets and translated the ancient Greek writers Aristophanes and Pindar.

Although Cary’s translation of Dante hardly reproduces the original’s great strength, it manages to retain some of its vividness. His translation of the Inferno appeared in 1805–06; the whole work, under the title The Vision, or Hell, Purgatory, and Paradise, of Dante, in 1814. It was long the standard English translation of Dante’s masterpiece.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica This article was most recently revised and updated by René Ostberg.