Relationship Between Pilgrim And Dantes Inferno

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In The Comedy, Dante the Pilgrim develops a relationship with his damned idol, Virgil, in order to journey through both Inferno and Purgatory. Even though Virgil was a good man while living, he lacked understanding of certain virtues, like pride, which prevented him from being able to reach higher levels in the after life. Dante the Poet’s choice to damn Virgil conveys that obeying a higher order is the way to one’s salvation. The developing relationship between Virgil and Dante the Pilgrim throughout the first two canticles brings light to the opposing separation between the two characters because of the devotion Dante has to Christian virtues in comparison to Virgil’s pagan misunderstanding of virtue. While Dante the Pilgrim experiences many …show more content…

Dante the Pilgrim has three separate encounters in which he deals with love and lust. While in Inferno, Dante meets Francesca and Paolo, souls dammed for the sin of lust, and after he listens to their story of adulterous love he is struck by empathy and “fainted, as if [he] had met [his] death” (Inf. 5.141). This reaction seems to be misplaced since Dante is talking to two people who committed a deadly sin; however, this reaction conveys that Dante believes that love itself is a valuable virtue, but the reader must be aware that adulterous love is not virtuous. The position that Dante the Poet establishes is that the souls in Hell are there not only because they commited sins, but because they corrupted pure virtues to work in their favor. In Purgatory, Dante encounters lust and love again, but the soul’s have a love for God in addition to the perverted love they had in their life. Virgil presents to Dante that there is love that is naturally within everyone and that the “natural is always without error / but mental love may choose an evil object / or err through too much or too little” (Pur. 17.94-96).

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