The Inferno Of Dante Translation By Robert Pinsky

665 Words3 Pages

1. In the epic poetry, The Inferno of Dante translation by Robert Pinsky (1320), Dante Alighieri implies that whatever punishment the sinners get it is well deserved due to the actions and decisions they made in the mortal world that got them a place in Hell. Alighieri supports this claim by introducing the backstories and the sins that the sinners committed to compare it to the punishment they receive in Hell to show how they are related to each other. The author purposely emphasizes the sinner’s sins in order to show how their punishment is based off those sins and that the sinners are not just getting random punishments but actual well-deserved ones instead. The intended audience appears to be those who blame God for their suffering and their punishments as the author clearly shows the relationship between the sinner’s sins and the type of punishment they got and deserved in accordance. The sinners were often seen not complaining or angered at their punishment and sufferance because they knew at some extent that they put themselves in that situation and they had to deal with the consequences no matter how much they did not like it.
2. …show more content…

–Factual: Why does Venedico Caccianemico try to hide his face when he sees Dante?
-Interpretive: Pope Nicholas III mistakes Dante for his successor Pope Boniface VIII and believes that he will get some relief. Dante is tempted to play along and trick Nicholas but Virgil quickly scolds him and makes him reveal his identity. Has all the fraud and sins that Dante has been around and introduced to affecting him in a sense as seen in the example