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Dante’s Inferno

Dante’s Inferno. Canto VII. Maia Mast 1 st Period. The Fourth Circle The Hoarders and the Wasters.

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Dante’s Inferno

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  1. Dante’s Inferno Canto VII Maia Mast 1st Period

  2. The Fourth CircleThe Hoarders and the Wasters In the Fourth Circle, Dante and Virgil find the souls of those whose sin was to focus solely on money, which dimmed the light of God inside them. The two types of sinners, the hoarders and the wasters, each roll boulders around the circle, crashing into each other and yelling “‘Why do you hoard?’ and the other ‘Why do you waste?’” at each other. Because they only cared about and focused upon unimportant aspects of their lives, those material things that impacted and benefited them alone, ignoring the light of God, their souls are dimmed to the point that no one can recognize them.

  3. The Fifth CircleThe Wrathful and the Sullen In the fifth circle they find the souls of those who were wrathful and sullen in the River Styx. Those who were easily angered in life are condemned to fight in the slimy marsh of the river for all eternity. The sullen are kept beneath the surface of the sludge, because in life they did not let in the light of the sun, or the glory of God. Virgil shows Dante the souls of the wrathful in the Styx, Gustave Dore

  4. Literary Devices Plutus, one of the demons of hell, attempts to stop Virgil and Dante on their journey. Plutus’ speech, “Papa Satán, Papa Satán, aleppy,” is meaningless in both Italian and English. Dante uses this word choice to portray the demons as being solely evil, and the clear reference to Satan shows their loyalty to serving the devil. Dante shows his lack of pity towards the sinners being punished in this circle by describing them as “madmen” and “maniacs.” He also calls them “wraiths of greed,” which for the first time shows his apathy towards those, as his heart hardens to the awful images of Hell.

  5. The River Styx The inclusion of the River Styx is an allusion to a river by the same name from Greek Mythology. In the myths it is both the name of a deity and that of a river separating Earth and the Underworld, which is ruled by Hades. Dante uses the river to separate the sections of hell instead of being the entrance to hell, which is instead named Acheron. It separates the division of hell dedicated to the sins of Incontinence from the sins of Violence and Fraud. Virgil pushes Filippo Argenti back into the River Styx, Gustave Dore

  6. Works Cited • Bianchetti, Stefano. “Illustration from Dante's Inferno.” Getty Images, 1 Aug. 2012, www.gettyimages.com/detail/news- photo/the-divine-comedy-inferno-canto-7-virgil-shows-dante- the-news-photo/526242910. • Ciardi, John. “Canto VII.” The Inferno, by Dante Alighieri, Signet Classics, 2009, pp. 51–58. • “Dante, Inferno & Pluto.” Historic Houston, Archival Press, 17 Aug. 2013, historichouston1836.com/dante-alighieri- inferno-the-planet-pluto-3/styx-charon-2/. • Geller. “River Styx - Ancient Greek River and Deity.” Mythology.net, 19 Dec. 2016, mythology.net/greek/greek- concepts/river-styx/.

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