Dante's Inferno, Up on Your Feet Passage

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Dante Says Up
(A critique on Dante’s The Inferno, Up On Your Feet Passage)
As the great Norman Vincent Peale once said, “The trouble with most of us is that we would rather be ruined by praise than saved by criticism.” In Dante’s The Inferno, he creates a vivid image of what his version of hell looks like. Hell isn’t the typical hell, which they talk about in movies. You have to put everything else away when you start to read about Dante’s The Inferno. In Canto XXIV, circle eight, the passage, “Up On Your Feet,” lives. This passage is a passage that is full of inspiration, and drives a person to be their very best. In Dantes, The Inferno, specifically the “Up On Your Feet,” passage (pg.207) can be critiqued in many ways, three of these ways include, inspirations, self drive, and understanding.
To begin, in the “Up On Your Feet, passage, there are many lines that go within the inspiration category during the critique. The passage as a whole is an inspiration, but there are many things within the passage that relay this message as well. “The man who lies asleep with never waken fame, ...

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