In Inferno, Nature’s author is God himself and anything described as natural has to honor the Divine. So, the most unnatural scenes occur in the circles of heresy and violence, where familiar or pastoral landscapes become distorted in some huge way.
The violent, especially those who have sinned against nature, demonstrate this best—in the image of reproduction. Usurers gain from the unnaturally speedy accumulation of money, which requires no coupling but simply produces more and more in and of itself. Heretics, in denying man’s immortal soul, reject one of the basic truths. Heresy and violence are considered worse sins than incontinence.
Questions About Man and the Natural World
- In Dante’s philosophy, what is the relationship between nature and God?
- Why are heresy and violence considered sins against nature? What about usury? What natural order do these sins overturn?
- How do the environs in the seventh circle reflect the violent sinners’ relationship with nature?
- Why are there so many man-animal hybrids in the seventh circle? What does this imply about the natural order here?
Chew on This
To support the idea that violent sinners move against the natural order, the environs of the Seventh Circle feature natural settings perverted in one fundamental aspect.
All of the guardians in the Seventh Circle juxtapose the bodies of two different species to reflect the perverted nature of the sinners.