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Analysis Of Alighieri's The Divine Comedy

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In Alighieri’s “The Divine Comedy”, Dante learns a lot about the afterlife as he walks through The Inferno, Purgatorio, and Paradiso. The way Alighieri uses first person and imagery changes the “normal” idea of heaven and hell and gives a new perspective on what happens after we die. Some of Alighieri’s most descriptive work is when he writes about the how the souls suffer in The Inferno and Purgatorio. In the beginning of the Inferno, Dante runs into three creatures that stop him from going up the mountain to heaven. It shows that sin stands between us and heaven. When Dante is told by Virgil that they will go through the whole afterlife, it's symbolic that sometimes we have to go through Hell to get to heaven. Not shortly after he is …show more content…

Alighieri writes in a way to make Satan to seem powerless and insignificant. It is further proved when Dante and Virgil crawl on him and he can’t do anything about it. Alighieri’s use of first person adds a large amount of personalized reactions and adds a more human view on hell as opposed to the standard description of this horrible place. Through Dantes experiences, it is clear to see that it is worse than one might think. In the early cantos of The Inferno, Dante is often shocked by what he sees and feels bad for the souls that suffer. He commonly blacks out because the experiences are often too intense for him to handle. It’s not until canto VIII that Dante gets into the correct mindset of these people deserve to be here. “May you weep for all eternity, for I know you, hell dog, filthy as you are.”…“Down! Down! With the other dogs!” It’s a more personal story because Dante can see those who did wrong and truly see that all these souls deserve to be here. Later in Purgatorio, Dante comes across the circle of the proud and he feels like he needs to stay there because he is proud. In the end of Paradiso Dante meets God. Alighieri’s way of showing it is quite unique because he says that he can’t explain what happened, but how he remembers the great feeling that came with it. “The ravished memory swoons and falls away. As one who sees in a dream and wakes to find the emotional impression of his vision

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