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Innocent Souls Of The Dead In Dante's Inferno

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In Dante’s Inferno, Dante creates a fantastical, yet dark underworld that portrays the various tortured souls of the dead. The concept is the souls’ committed sins completed in their lifetime is directly related to the punishment they must face in Hell. Through this, the souls forever remember their sins and face the consequences for eternity. Dante’s illustrative, encompassing journey has served as an image of the environment Hell to warn the sinners of the suffering expected when a particular sin is committed and not repented as soon as possible.
The sinners who are positioned in Canto V give in to their sexual desires of lust. They are pulled into a violent storm that exudes intense despair and suffering. The storm represents how those who have sinned felt before death. In Hell, the storm manifests itself into a physical form. Amongst the souls who are engulfed in the storm are two souls that are combined together, Francesca and Paolo. Prior to Francesca and Paolo deaths, Francesca is married but commits …show more content…
The scenery had unnatural trees in forest because the evil harpies plucked the leaves. Dante found this peculiar that there are only trees present and not people like the previous Cantos. When Dante broke off a branch, the tree cries in agony and he comes to the realization that these trees are souls. The souls have injured into trees because they lost their human form. Before the afterlife, the souls decided to throw away their bodies so the souls became trees. The tree said, “wood forevermore shall our bodies hang, each from the thorn bush of its tortured shade” (line 107-108). After they have thrown their life away, a gift from God, they are reminded of their sin they committed. The trees are infinite and they are tortured by the pulling of the Harpies. The punishment to distort was due to refusal of their bodies, which is a sin against life

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