Love

942 Words2 Pages

Love is what made poetry famous. Everyone from Shakespeare with his sonnets to children with their red roses use poetry to express love. Love is the filling in poetry’s pie, the melody in its symphony, and the pregnancy scare in its soap-opera. In Dante's opinion, not only poetry, but everything is composed of love: Not the Creator nor a single creature, as you know, ever existed without love, the soul's love or the love that comes by nature. (Alighieri 185) The human race has difficulty expressing an emotion as complex as love in regular prose or speech; we need to add another dimension of beauty or meaning for it to be worthy of our most treasured emotion. In Purgatory, Dante capitalizes on this almost archetypal relationship between verse and romance to make a point. Purgatory is a love poem...about God, and Dante doesn't miss any chance to make this completely clear. The very structure of Purgatory begins to form the base of Dante's theme. Even today Italian is the language of love. Maybe this notion stems from an entire generation who, in their childhood, watched the spaghetti scene from Lady and the Tramp one too many times, but the same view was held in the middle ages. Latin was the language of the learned; Italian was not. Everything with any intellectual clout was written in Latin, yet Dante composed his masterpiece in his vernacular, which, at that time, was seen as only suitable for less than astute material. This is the reader's first clue into Dante's purpose. To a medieval readership this apparent discrepancy between intellectual content and plebeian delivery would have been glaring and most certainly would have sparked interest. Beyond the form and construction of the poetry, Dante utilize... ... middle of paper ... ... the passionately swooning eulogies with which his audiences were more familiar. Having completed all the levels of Purgatory, Virgil explains, one's will and desires are synonymous with God's (Alighieri 297). Here we see a comparison to earthly couples who are often (possibly more so in times past) described as having one will. Throughout his work, Dante labored at length to transpose the strong feelings of earthly love into divine love. He attempted to cultivate the same ardor of romantic love between his reader and deity, even enlisting the aid of Venus in the introduction, “The radiant planet fostering love like rain made all the orient heavens laugh with light, veiling the starry Fishes in her train” (Alighieri 5). He emphasized that, although the love of others is commendable, if anything is truly worth loving, it is God.

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