Dante’s opinion of justice reveal that he thinks that that the punishment should fit the offence.In the third Circle which is reserved for gluttony, he writes that their punishment is that “it rains garbage and they had to stand in worms decomposing the mess”(5.2). It’s fitting because over-indulgence is grotesque, ugly, and causes waste, in which the sinners must live in for eternity.And the Ninth Circle of hell is for traitors and backstabbers,where they are frozen in a lake up to their heads.…
Words 352 - Pages 2
VIRGIL'S INFLUENCE ON AND IN DANTE'S INFERNO Dante Alighieri was born in Florence, Italy in 1265. In his life, he created two major books of poetry: Vita Nuova and The Comedy. The Comedy, which was later renamed The Divine Comedy, is an epic poem broken down into three books in each of which Dante recounts his travels through Hell, Purgatory, and Heaven. The first installment of The Comedy, Dante's Inferno, is an especially magnificent narrative. He narrates his descent and observation of Hell…
Words 1528 - Pages 7
Renaissance Case Study: Florence, Dante and Inferno Content Outcomes: 1. Identify the Inferno, the Purgatorio, and the Paradiso as the three parts of the Divine Comedy. 2. Identify and discuss the Inferno as allegory. 3. Describe the structure of Dante’s Hell. 4. Discuss Dante’s conception of Divine Justice. 5. Define contrapasso, the rule of retribution. 6. Recognize the poem’s satire of Dante’s contemporaries in politics, Church leadership, and poetry. 7. Discern the allusions to famous figures…
Words 1577 - Pages 7
After reading the Inferno, Dante's version of Hell turned out to be nothing like the version I thought of. My original version of Hell was this dark, fiery pit of gloom, where all sinners receive the same punishment, but after a trip through the bowels of Hell led by Virgil, I have learned that this may not be the case. One thing that really struck me though, was the cruel was in which justice was shown. As Dante journeyed lower and lower into Hell, the punishments got more extreme, making me wonder…
Words 205 - Pages 1
Jake Lane Medieval Literature Mrs. Crisler March 17, 2014 Dante’s Inferno Compared to the Bible Dante describes Hell in a fictional way that does not completely go along with God’s word in the Bible. Both books suggest that every sin deserves a punishment equal to the sin. Dante’s Inferno clearly suggests that the followers of God that lived before the birth of Jesus were condemned to Hell and were going to be brought to heaven by Jesus at a later time. The Bible gives a subtle idea that patriarchs…
Words 792 - Pages 4
From Cantos 3, Lines 1-9: The lines inscribed above the gates of hell stand out to me the most in Dante’s Inferno. The first thing that Dante reads are these lines, as he and Virgil pass into the Ante-Inferno before the river Acheron. They represent the voice of Hell making it an entity, a force not to be reckoned with. The words declare the city of Hell’s origin, nature and true purpose. It foreshadows the horror yet to come. Th inscription describes Hell as a city. This defines the geographical…
Words 229 - Pages 1
advance toward the giant, mist-shrouded shape. As they approach through the fog, they behold its true form. The sight unnerves Dante to such an extent that he knows not whether he is alive or dead. The figure is Lucifer, Dis, Satan—no one name does justice to his terrible nature. The size of his arms alone exceeds all of the giants of the Eighth Circle of Hell put together. He stands in the icy lake, his torso rising above the surface. Gazing upward, Dante sees that Lucifer has three horrible faces…
Words 1118 - Pages 5
citizens. The authors who have the most to say about this topic are Plato and Dante respectively. Plato demonstrates why we should be civically virtuous and how it is important to both our country and ourselves. On the other hand, Dante with his inferno depicting an inverted version of Plato’s soul, demonstrates the dangers to both society and ourselves if we fail to act the way Plato advises. Plato’s model of how to be civically virtuous begins with his tri-partite model of the soul. As this model…
Words 1291 - Pages 6
life on earth, he needed to experience hell in the inferno. Dante’s depiction of the inferno would imply that we have a cruel and unjust God but personally he is anything but cruel. He creates a place of divine justice for the sinners in the deeper parts of hell, however, the only unfair punishment is that of the unbaptized and the pagans. There’s no reason why Moses and Noah should be anywhere near the inferno even if their punishment is not being able to be in…
Words 1683 - Pages 7
Divine Comedy is the allegorical record of Dante’s quest to overcome sin and find God’s love; in Inferno, Dante explores the nature of sin by traveling through Hell, where evil receives punishment according to God’s justice. Allegorically, Dante’s story represents not only his own life but also what Dante the poet perceived to be the universal Christian quest for God. As a result, Dante the character is rooted in the Everyman allegorical tradition: Dante’s situation is meant to represent that of the…
Words 480 - Pages 2