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Torture In Dante's Inferno

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The Hell depicted by Dante Alighieri in the Inferno, the first part in his epic The Divine Comedy, is one full of endless suffering and torture brought on by a completely wrathful God. This is not the place of God’s divine and perfect justice that Dante attempted to construct, but rather one that almost glorifies torture as not only the most effective form of punishment, but the most fitting and just one. The way in which the different circles of Hell are so brutally described make it very hard to see this place as anything other than a place filled with endless amounts of cruel torture. Dante’s Hell consists of nine circles, each one holding people who committed different sins, ranging everywhere from never being baptised, to committing suicide, gluttony, to violence and fraud (just to name a few) and each circle has a different punishment or form of torture. None of these punishments seem to be just of the sin committed to warrant them a place in hell. Even something as little as being placed in Limbo (First Circle) for living life neither on the good or evil has great consequences. The people …show more content…

In the eighth and ninth circles, the punishments get to the point that people found guilty for the act of simony (buying or selling privileges) have their heads forced into the ground with only their legs hanging out of the ground as their soles burn on fire. One of the worst punishments is in the ninth circle of Hell, in the zone called Ptolomea, where the sinners are immobilized in ice up to their necks. Dante states, “Their eyes, which first were only moist within, gushed o’er the eyelids, and the frost congealed the tears between, and locked them up again.” (Canto XXXII lines 46-48). The people in this zone are condemned for being traitors, and eternal freezing is quite a torturous and extreme punishment for this

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