Dante's Paradiso Despite great efforts, Dante's Paradiso is not easy to enjoy. This is an alliance between hardship and controversy. This is the story of the so-called paradise tour of Dante. When inserting a philosophical bite argument, he gives us his perception account slowly, it tends to divert the reader's attention away from the virtual plot. Dante insisted that he had talent, and said that all of his experience was filled directly by him.
A critic Ezra Pond, an American poet, thinks that people do not listen too much about Dante's hell, but believe that too much for Purgatorio and Paradiso. In the book written in 1952, "Psychic Romance", the pound wrote an article called "Dante". He explained how hell lost his wisdom, the state of the people ruled by his passion. · (129) pound thinks that Dante's Inferno should be approached with 'satire consciousness'. He uses similar things throughout hell and enhances the effect and meaning of his experience in hell. It is natural to think that hell is a place, but pound thinks it is a state of spiritual state in human life that it will continue to exist after death. The tendency to look at things and qualities in only one dimension restricts readers from the true meaning of Dante's journey and separates them. Dante is expressed by truth, wisdom, and love, but Pound positively depicts Dante's work.
Dante was born in Florence. He is the son of Bailey's son Alighiero II and Alighiero's first wife, Bella's son. Paradiso XXII.109-17, Dante will say to us that his birthday is a sign of Gemini. According to the Julian calendar system which was used until the standard of the 16th century, the sun was in Gemini from May 14th to June 13th in 1265. Dante formed the sonnet of the ciascun 'alma presa entintil core and finally became the first poem by Vita Nuova. At Vita Nuova, Dante will prove that he wrote Sonnets at the age of 18, that is 1283 (VN III.1 - 9). In the next few years, he wrote other poems that will eventually be included in the Vita Nuova prose framework written from 1292 to 1293.
Inferno (pronounced "hell" in Italian) is the first part of the 14th century epic "Divine Comedy" by Italian writer Dante Alighieri. Purgatorio and Paradiso follow. Under the guidance of the ancient Roman poet Virgil, Inferno tells the story of Dante's journey through hell. In this verse hell is depicted as torture of nine concentric circles within the Earth; it is "to deceive or malice them by bending to savage food appetite and violence or by distorting their human wisdom In the area of those who reject their spiritual value, as a fable, the comet of God represents the journey of the soul to God, and hell explains the recognition and refusal of sin.