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Dante's Inferno Analysis

Decent Essays

Lessons from Dante Politics and religion, justice, virtue, and human nature, many of the great minds throughout history have studied these same topics. Plato with Republic, St. Augustine in Confessions, Paul with his Letters to the Romans, among others examined these questions regarding human life and values. In Inferno, Dante the Poet examines these same questions synthesizing ideas of those who came before with experiences from his own life. Dante’s Inferno begins with the Pilgrim awakening in a dark wood after “wandering from the straight path.” Within the first Canto, Dante meets his guide, Virgil. Virgil is a Roman and a fellow poet who will guide the Pilgrim through the many circles of Hell and their respective sin. Within three major groups of sin are presented: incontinence, violence, …show more content…

Dante uses the Pilgrim’s journey through Hell and interaction with sinners to express his views on the nature of sin and human nature as a whole. By further examining Canto six, 19, and 26, this paper will argue Dante’s equal and fitting punishments due to the sins of those in Hell their applications to life today.
In Canto six of Inferno, Dante the Poet writes about the Pilgrim’s journey through the third circle of Hell. In this region of Hell, the Poet punishes those who he would have placed in Hell for their sins of incontinence, and more specifically in the third circle for their sins of gluttony. As the Pilgrim travels through this region, he gives the reader a vivid description of the punishment inflicted on the people who will be in this circle of Hell for eternity. Dante expresses what the Pilgrim viewed as, “…in the third circle, in the round of rain eternal, cursed, cold, and falling heavy, unchanging beat, unchanging quality. Thick hail and dirty water mixed with snow come down in torrents through the murky air, and the earth is stinking from this soaking rain” (Dante, Inferno, Canto VI, 7-12). With this detailed

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