5 results found, view free essays on page:
-
Dantes Inferno A Journey Through Hell
1,774 wordsThe Inferno, the first part of the Divina Commedia, written around 1307 to 1314, is the masterpiece of Dante Alighieri. The story tells of a pilgrim Dante, not to be confused with the writer Dante, and his journey through hell to the base of the mountain of purgatory. Along the way, Dante accompanied by Virgil (human reason), meet many of Dantes political rivals and many mythological creatures and sinners from throughout history. In the end, the travelers climb down Satan's back, through the cen...
Free research essays on topics related to: world literature, dantes inferno, literature criticism, divine justice, journey through hell -
Salvation In Crime And Punishment
1,631 wordsThe promise of eternal life has been the driving force behind mans quest for salvation. Religion and the understanding of God and implicit faith in divine justice are the keys to salvation. This is the message conveyed by Dostoyevsky's character Sonia, a redemptive figure for Raskolnikov in the novel Crime and Punishment. Written in 1865 and set in Russia, this story is about Raskolnikov, an impoverished young man. He kills an old pawnbroker to prove his theory that superior men are above the la...
Free research essays on topics related to: faith in god, crime and punishment, wanted to find, police station, divine justice -
Divine Justice Main Character
1,024 wordsAn excellent poet in his own right Dante greatly admired the success and personal character of Virgil. Virgil is an interesting character greatly influences Dante as a poet and as the main character in the Inferno. In the Inferno, Dante turned the poet Virgil into the guiding character that was to be responsible for teaching and leading him along his pilgrimage through hell. Throughout the Inferno there are specific situations that demonstrates Virgil's influence among Dante, as a poet and, as t...
Free research essays on topics related to: virgil, divine justice, main character, virgil's, dante -
Tragic Hero Aristotle Definition
776 wordsOthello Aristotle once defined a concept of tragic hero, which should be a character with a flaw in personality or judgment that will lead this character to some actions resulting into disaster. In the play, Othello, written by William Shakespeare, Othello fits the concept of a tragic hero. The tragic end of Othello happened due to the character flaws that he had. Othello was a tragic hero, because of the tragic end that he brought upon himself. Othello is shown as naive, unsophisticated, proud,...
Free research essays on topics related to: aristotle definition, play othello, tragic hero, final moment, divine justice -
Rich And Powerful Divine Justice
1,322 wordsOrestes, the Furies, Croesus, and Cyrus What do all these disparate characters have in common? The answer is that divine justice decides the course that their lives will take. Divine justice plays a large role in both of the works that these characters are from the Oresteia of Aeschylus and The Histories of Herodotus. However, the two works differ on what exactly constitutes divine justice, and how divine justice operates. Aeschylus would argue that divine justice is reactive. In other words, ju...
Free research essays on topics related to: current system, solon, rich and powerful, herodotus, divine justice
5 results found, view free essays on page: