![]() Dante was able to weave together pagan myth, literature, philosophy Christian theology and doctrine, physics, astrology, cartography, mathematics, literary theory, history, and politics into a complex poem that a wide audience, not just the highly educated, could read. ![]() The greatness of the Divine Comedy lies in its construction as a summa, or a summation of knowledge and experience. He hoped to lead that reader to a greater understanding of his place in the universe and to prepare him for the next life, for the life that begins after death. Like that sacred text, Dante meant his work and his Pilgrim traveler to serve as models for the reader. The poem works on a number of symbolic levels, much like the Bible, one of its primary sources. ![]() ![]() In a letter to his patron, Can Grande della Scala, Dante wrote that his poem was, on the literal level, about "The state of souls after death." It is, of course, that and much more. In each section Dante the poet recounts the travels of the Pilgrim-his alter ego-through hell, purgatory, and heaven, where he meets God face to face. ![]() There are three parts to this massive work: Inferno, Purgatory and Paradise. Dante Alighieri (1265-1321) wrote his epic poem, the Divine Comedy, during the last thirteen years of his life (circa 1308-21), while in exile from his native Florence. ![]()
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