Thursday, March 26, 2020
Divide Comedy By Dante Essays - Divine Comedy, Afterlife, Italy
  Divide Comedy By Dante  A significant idea contained within Dante's The Divine Comedy is the Augustinian  concept of ordered and disordered love. Each realm of the afterlife symbolizes  the type of love the inhabitants exercised while they were living on earth. For  example, the Inferno represents disordered love, since the souls in Hell  exhibited little love for mankind and little acknowledgement of God. Because the  kind of love Hell symbolizes is the worst type that anyone could possess, it is  located nearest to the center of the earth, farthest away from God. On the other  hand, Paradise, which is situated closest to God, represents ordered love. This  area is reserved for those who treated their neighbors well and felt connected  to God. Although they sinned during their lifetimes, they fully repented long  before death. However, Purgatory is unlike Paradise or the Inferno. Since the  inhabitants of Purgatory were those who started to repent later in their  lifetimes, but still often only thought of their own individual needs and  corporeal pleasures, it only makes sense that this world be in between Heaven  and Hell. Purgatory, being a "gray area" (that is, neither all good or  all bad), represents a type of love that lies somewhere in between complete  order and complete disorder. Based on the Seven Deadly Sins, each cornice in    Purgatory contains a varying amount of ordered love and disordered love.    However, the nearer the cornice is to Hell, the more disordered love it  represents. According to Dante, three main types of love are depicted in    Purgatory. These include "bad love", "too little love", and  "immoderate love". Bad love, the worst of the three, coincides to the  first three Cornices that represent the sins of pride, envy, and wrath  respectively. Therefore, since the First Cornice contains those who were too  proud during their time on earth, they also exhibited the most disordered love  in comparison with the other six sins. They spent more time exalting themselves  than they did caring for others and developing a relationship with God. As their  punishment, they, "crawling by under such burdens as we at times may dream  of", (Canto XI, lines 26-27) are forced to carry enormous boulders on their  backs. Since they held their heads high during their time on earth, they are now  being debased to the ground, a physical punishment to a psychological behavior.    In fact, all of the penalties created by Dante in The Purgatorio are directly  related to the sin committed. The Proud cared more about their own gains than  anyone else's, a sin that, in Dante's eyes, is the worst of the Seven Deadly    Sins. Continuing with the idea of "bad love", Dante then explains  envy, represented in the Second Cornice. Like pride, this sin is also extremely  egocentric, as the envious person wishes he could take the good fortunes of  others for his own personal gain. Once again, the sinner is spending more time  on himself, hindering his ability to develop good relations with God and  mankind. Envy, which in modern times is described as the "green-eyed  monster", is generally a sin one commits with his eyes. For, if a person  were blind, he would not be able to comprehend what is supposedly  "missing" from his life. Therefore, Dante depicts the sinners as  having their eyes sewn shut, forced to support one another in a way they never  did while living. Finally, wrath, the least of the "bad loves", is  exemplified in the Third Cornice. Since wrath is often carried out as a form of  anger because of vengeance, it lacks all humility, polluting the true spirit of    God. Meekness, the inverse of wrath, is depicted by the souls' chanting  "The Litany of The Lamb of God", a constant reminder of an important  ideal. Also, the entire realm is filled with darkness and smoke, which Dante  describes as having a "sting [that] was more than the eyes could  stand." (Canto XVI, line 7) Because these sinners tainted God's spirit  while living and blocked the light of the Lord, their penalty is to reside in a  defiled environment lacking all sunlight. Like the other two types of "bad  love", wrath also involves a form of self-love. However, since it is  located in the Third Cornice, it involves less disordered love than either pride  or envy. The second type of love explored in The Purgatorio is termed "too  little love", which lends itself exclusively to the sin of sloth. In  general, these slothful people just did not have enough love. They chose to live  life slowly with indifference and laziness.    
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