Dante's Divine Comedy's Fictional Tour Dante's Divine Comedy is a moral comedy designed to allow readers to think about their own morals. This poem can be used almost as a guide for medieval people to do what they do and not to do in heaven. Dante took the reader to the journey of "the world after death", pay attention to what happens if they do not obey God's lives, and really to the readers where they will go after death, and where they will die Let me think about what you want to go to.
Inferno is the first part of three parts of Dante's epic "Divine Comedy" depicting an imaginary journey through hell, purgatory, and heaven. Dante was a hero, lost sight of the way in the dark wood, headed to nine areas of nine concentric large funnel walls representing hell. He was led by the ghost of the Roman poet Virgil. And he came to the dark forest to save Dante and lead him through the kingdom of the afterlife. The first circle they entered was Lingbo, which consisted of unwashed people who were sending decent life with their sisters. The second to fifth laps are for sensuality, greed, romance, anger. The sixth circle is where pagans are punished. The seventh ring is committed to punishing violence. The eighth is for those who commit fraud and the ninth is for those who betray others. In the previous section, Satan was still trapped in a frozen lake.
Dante's Divine Comedy's Fictional Tour Dante's Divine Comedy is a moral comedy designed to allow readers to think about their own morals. This poem can be used almost as a guide for medieval people to do what they do and not to do in heaven. Dante took the reader to the journey of "the world after death", pay attention to what happens if they do not obey the life of God, and really to the readers where they will go after death, when they die Let me think about where I want to go.