Thursday, January 23, 2020

Divine Comedy - Mastery of Language in Dante’s Inferno :: Divine Comedy Inferno Essays

Mastery of Language In The Inferno - Dante’s Immortal Drama of a Journey Through Hell, Dante allows the reader to experience his every move.   His mastery of language, his sensitivity to the sights and sounds of nature, and his infinite store of knowledge allow him to capture and draw the reader into the realm of the terrestrial hell.   In Canto 6, the Gluttons; Canto 13, the Violent Against Themselves; and Canto 23, the Hypocrites; Dante excels in his detailed portrayal of the supernatural world of hell.   In each canto, Dante combines his mastery of language with his sensitivity to the sights and sounds of nature to set the stage.   He then reinforces the image with examples that call upon his infinite store of knowledge, and thus draw a parallel that describes the experience in a further, although more subliminal, detail to the reader.   Ã‚  Ã‚  Ã‚  Ã‚  Ã‚  Ã‚  Ã‚  Ã‚  Ã‚  Ã‚   Through his mastery of language, Dante allows the reader to see what he sees, to hear what he hears, and to feel what he feels, and thus experience his sensitivity to the sights and sounds of nature. In Canto 6, Dante introduces the vicious monster, Cerberus and details his grotesque features to the reader.   He states, â€Å"His eyes are red, his beard is greased with phlegm, / his belly is swollen, and his hands are claws / to rip the wretches and flay and mangle them† (66).   This quote vividly depicts the man-beast Cerberus that Dante encountered, and allows the reader to feel present in the scene with Dante.   He further emphasizes the sights and sounds to portray the hellish environment when he states â€Å"Huge hailstones, dirty water, and black snow/ pour from the dismal air to putrefy/ the putrid slush that waits for them below† (66).   This example is one of many that illustrate Dante’s ability to exh ibit the sights that he encounters.   Dante adds another dimension by providing the ability for the reader to hear the sounds present in Circle III of Hell.   An example of this is when he states â€Å"and they (the victims), too, howl like dogs in the freezing storm† (66).   Furthermore Dante greatly describes how the victims are feeling about their whole situation with the statement â€Å"I lie here rotting like a swollen log† (67).   This quote helps the reader to not only understand how the victims of gluttony are feeling, but also to picture them laying in the sodden mush of garbage.

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