The Inferno begins when Dante strays off the rightful and straight path of moral truth and gets lost in a dark wood. He gets attack by three beasts that symbolize different sins. Fortunately, he then meets the spirit of the Roman epic poet Virgil. Virgil to the rescue! He’s an appropriate guide because he’s very much like Dante, a fellow writer and famous poet. For the rest of the Inferno, Virgil takes Dante on a guided tour of Hell, through all its nine circles and back up into the air of the mortal world.…
In my opinion i think that Gustave Dore's is best to illustrate Dante's Inferno. In the 9 circles of hell it talks about evil gruesome torments and Dore’s pictures best fit the description of dark and evil.…
Dante’s Inferno is a story about how two men and their travels through hell, the different levels of hell, who was in them, and what they did during their time on Earth. There were nine circles and some of them had different levels inside the circles for example the seventh circle of hell is divided between three smaller circles. Then they eventually emerge back out onto the earth but on the opposite side of the earth from where they had started.…
Dante’s Inferno depicts all the different types of major sins you can commit in your lifetime and the punishments you will endure thereafter. Dante had a system for these punishments that worked on the idea of divine justice. Basically, whatever temptations you succumbed to, you will be punished in a deserving manner based on how bad the sin was. Dante’s 9 circles were in order from bad to worse, 9 being the worst.…
Like in the Inferno, where the gates of Hell begin the journey to the bottom, so life is began by birth, and the journey to Eternity begins. Some lives are more easily lead than others, like some of the punishments in Dante's version of Hell are worse than others. Although in Hell, there is no hope, not even the hope of hope, the journey that Dante and Virgil take can be compared with the journey of life. Just the fact that Dante has someone to guide him can be comparison, everyone in life has a Guardian Angel assigned to them, as Dante had his own guide in his journey. But to compare all parts of life to the Inferno, one must start at the beginning to realized the end. The birth of body, and the death of the soul.…
The Inferno is probably the most realistic section of the Divine Comedy because it comes closer to fitting the people's perception of what Hell is really like then than Purgatory and Paradise do. People's mental image of Hell is an evil, dark, and scary place that is full of fire and that is exactly the way Dante depicts it. People are eager to see, hear, and read about violence, blood, and gore and the Inferno is full of it which helps the reader to pay closer attention to it. In a sense Dante is trying to scare the righteousness into people. Dante himself became scared when he read the inscription above the gate of Hell that read "ABANDON EVERY HOPE, YOU WHO ENTER HERE" because he did not realize that the inscription was only intended for those who had already died. The…
The word Hell, or in Italian, Inferno means the abode of Satan and the forces of evil. It is where sinners suffer eternal punishment. Dante was exiled by Pope Boniface, which led him to write this poem, Dante’s Inferno. He wrote the poem because he was exiled and he had nothing left in his life, so he just wrote to express that he was betrayed by his own country, not him betraying his country. Since he was betrayed by his own country, he became a nomad and has been a beggar ever since.…
Dante Alighieri lived from 1265-1321, he was born in Florence, Italy and eventually died in Ravenna, Italy. He was married to Gemma Donati, but was secretly in love with Beatrice Portinari, and wrote poems about her from afar. During his life, he accomplished major things, and had many people and poems that influenced him as a writer, such as: Virgil, a Roman poet, and famous troubadours and their works. After he realized what he loved to write about Dante created his own successes. He wrote some major works, but a very important book he wrote was, Divina Comida, which consists of three parts: Inferno, Purgatorio, and Paradiso. Each part plays a specific role in Dante’s journey from hell to purgatory to heaven. Dante’s Inferno has some major themes throughout the book. Inferno is written as a verse and starts off as a long poem. It was written in Cantos, or literary song, and…
The three most significant influences on Dante Alighieri were his philosophical education, his political struggles in Florence throughout his life, and his infatuation with the woman known as Beatrice.…
The Inferno by Dante Alighieri, written in the fourteenth century, remains regarded as one of the most influential literary works of all time. The epic poem tells of the journey of Dante through the Nine Circles of Hell, and of his many encounters with historical, and mythological figures. Acceptance of God 's ultimate authority on good and evil is portrayed as key test of a mortal soul. The Pilgrim 's journey through Hell is compared to every souls journey during their time on earth. Dante 's ability to so masterfully weave a story of the average man caught at a fork in the road, and deep metaphorical Christian philosophy has led to the poem 's resounding successes. While many…
As Dante reaches the end of his journey through the nine circles of Hell, we are presented with the image of Lucifer. Once the most beautiful of God’s angels, this wretched emperor resides at the very bottom of Hell as punishment for his rebellion against God. Dante’s ironic representation of Lucifer in the Inferno portrays this notorious biblical figure as a joke in comparison to traditional interpretations. Ultimately, this leads to a questionable climax in Dante’s journey due to the unorthodox qualities and attributes expressed by Lucifer.…
The poem Inferno is about a man who has “lost the path that does not stray” (Inferno, Canto I, line 3) where “the path” represents the path to Heaven. Dante, having strayed from the path, is in danger of being sent to Hell. When Beatrice, whom Dante loved before her early death, finds out that Dante has strayed she becomes worried that he will not be able to join her in Heaven. Beatrice wants to help Dante find God again, but because she is an angel, she cannot walk through Hell or Purgatory and in her stead she asks the Roman poet Virgil to guide Dante on a cautionary trip. Much the way Dante travels through Hell in the Divine Comedy, Macbeth must endure the consequences of his actions. The intervention of Beatrice draws parallels to the actions of Lady Macbeth.…
In Dante’s Inferno, Montaigne’s Essays, and Boccaccio’s Decameron, it seems that storytelling functions for entirely different purposes. Dante curiously prods for stories to add to his "notes" or remembrances of his trip to hell, making storytelling a method of entertainment in the depths of hell. Each of Montaigne’s stories are meant to leave his family and friends with an accurate memory of himself and his values, not an attempt to gain fame. The seven women and three men in Boccaccio’s work recount stories to sustain themselves by distracting their minds from the plague, a method of survival. These purposes may appear radically different but actually share a common theme. In all three works the authors seek to blur conventional distinctions…
The Inferno is more than just a fictional story about someone traveling through life. It is actually more like an autobiographical journey of life through its author, Dante Alighieri’s. He basically wrote with the personal purpose of recording where all of the people he came in contact within his life, will go when they die. This could be one of three places; Hell, Purgatory, or Heaven. He went on to design specific, fitting punishments or rewards based on each person’s life. Dante then tied this all together and made himself a character that walks the entire length of the abstracted world. Written in the early 1300s by an angry Dante living in exile, he literally describes a man who has been trapped, and must find a way to escape. He also includes the hidden Renaissances darkness, and the people who are Manipulating. As Dante passes through the depths of hell he begins to see sins that would be punished and tortured in medieval times to the same acts that are displayed in the era of the Renaissance, and yet are treated differently. The Renaissances era that had a lot of influence on Dante and the journey through hell.…
There are some people in this day and age who see history as being irrelevant and only know tip of the ice burg facts. Most people when asked about the Christian church say that it split, however the reading of Chapter 10 from Ways of the World provides much more information on the given topic. The chapter begins with explaining the collapse of the Roman Empire and the continuous establishment of Eastern Christianity in the original church located in Byzantine. Following the collapse which took many years, the East of Europe was better off than the West. Byzantine although small, was full of culture and played important roles in Eurasian trades and clearly defined themselves from being different from Catholics. In the West, the Catholic Church served as a way to unify Western Europe and eventually catch up and develop as well. During the Crusades Europe benefited in many ways by bringing back ideas and goods from the far east and be able to further develop, however at the same time the Catholic and Eastern Orthodox Church grew further apart. Following this era comes the day and age of Dante and the reading of his Inferno. Dante’s Inferno is Dante’s journey trying to find God who ends up on a path into the underworld through hell and is Dante’s own narration of his experience. The reading starts with Dante being in a forest and is approached by three beasts which takes him off his course and leads him to Virgil who takes him to the underworld to Hell. Hell is inside of the earth and consists of nine circles. The circles are Limbo, Lust, Gluttony, Greed, Anger, Heresy, Violence, Fraud, and Treachery. Each circle higher up represents a greater sin. Through his journey, he discovers there are many people from different cultures especially Greece.…