Analysis of Something Simple, Yet Complicated

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Analysis of Something Simple, Yet Complicated

In canto VII of The Inferno, Virgil and Dante are among the hoarders and wasters in circle four. Dante gets curios the “Fortune” that Virgil speaks of and asks: “Master, Tell me-now that you touch on this Dame Fortune-what is she, which she holds the good things of the world within her clutch?” Virgil responds to his question in a deep lengthy reply in this passage:

And he to me: “O credulous mankind,

Is there one error that has wooed and lost you?

Now listen. And strike error from your mind:

That king whose perfect wisdom transcends all,

made the Heavens and posted angels on them

to guide the eternal light that it might fall

From every sphere to ever sphere the same.

He made earth’s splendors by a like decree

and posted as their minister this high Dame

the Lady of Permutations. All earth’s gear

she changes from nation, from house to house,

in changeless change through ever turning year.

No mortal power may stay her spinning wheel.

The nations rise and fall by her decree.

None may foresee where she will set her heel:

She passes, and things pass. Man’s mortal reason

cannot encompass her. She rules her sphere

as the other gods rule theirs. Season by season

her changes change her changes endlessly,

and those whose turn has come press on her so,

she must be swift by hard necessity.

And this is she so railed at and reviled

that even her debtors in the joys of time

Blaspheme her name. Their oaths are bitter and wild,

But she in her beatitude does not hear.

Among the Primal Beings of God’s joy

She breathes her blessedness and wheels her sphere.

Virgil describes Mother Nature by explaining her actions and how we see her. He seems to go on a tangent which, in ...

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... seems to be happening. When Dante writes “Season by season her changes change her endlessly” it starts to become obvious that he is speaking of Mother Nature because every season practically everything changes causing change in many other things.

In summary Dante gets Virgil’s point across by using a ton of imagery, so much so it is hard to figure out what exactly he is talking about. That is how it seems he wants it to be though, he wants the reader to have to stop and analyze each line. If one doesn’t somewhat analyze each line one will still understand the plot but miss out on some great imagery which makes this and any other book more enjoyable. The Inferno wound not be a historical epic poem had it not been for the imagery on every page it would simply be a book that was unheard of. A book is made great by imagery and Dante proves it in the selected passage.

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