The crime of the uncommitted is refusing to accept the burden of faith, yet not straying far from its path; a soul travels the predestined road, yet they refuse its ideology. The Inferno, an ancient epic poem written by Dante Alighieri, describes a journey through the various circles of Hell, but there is one part of Hell that is very briefly described: The Vestibule. The Vestibule is the false home to those labeled “uncommitted”; the lost souls who travel the boundaries of Hell searching for their meaning. In lines 32-48 of Ciardi's translation of the third canto of the Inferno, Virgil explains to Dante that there are two types of people who inhabit the outer ring, the angels of neutrality and the faithless. The text reveals to us that the angels simply refused to partake in the battle between God or Satan, but it fails to shed any light on the second class of inhabitants, thus leaving it up for interpretation.…