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The symbolism of the dreams in Dante’s works In La Vita Nouva, Dante dreams that he is led to Beatrice Portinari’s deathbed, whom he had an undying love for. While he stands looking over Beatrice, two figures in green hold a canopy over her. An angel in red holds Dante’s hand and leans forward to kiss Beatrice. The dream symbolizes the transition between life and death. It shows that there are two worlds, one of the living and one of the dead. It symbolizes that angels are the links between the two worlds.
When the angel holds Dante’s hand, it signifies hope. It symbolizes that Beatrice is not gone forever, but rather, she would eventually be reunited with Dante. The angel kissing Beatrice symbolizes that she is safe and that she would be loved in the world in which she is headed. In the Divine Comedy, Dante spends three nights on his ascent to Purgatory and has a different dream each night. The dreams foreshadow events that are to take place during his journey. Dante’s three unique dreams, all happen in the early morning hours.
Each dream portrays specific happenings and connects events of Dante’s journey. The dreams prepare Dante for events that he is to encounter and prepare readers for his journey. The first dream is the image of a golden eagle, which appears in Canto IX, just before dawn as Dante sleeps outside the gates of Purgatory. The eagle snatches him and soars upwards. This symbolizes the ascension that Dante and humans need to undergo to reach Paradise. The divine characteristics of the eagle are shown.
It’s a fixed and determined flight path (lines 25-28). To Dante, the eagle’s glory symbolizes the glory of the Roman Empire. The dream also prophesies Dante’s ascension. When he awakens, he realizes that he has been physically moved by Divine Lucy to paradise. Among the three dreams, it is the only one that gives a picture of Dante’s physical appearance. The dream ends and immediately Lucy departs, symbolizing the divine transportation that Divine Lucy offers Dante. Dante’s second dream takes place in Canto XIX in the early morning hours.
In this dream, Dante encounters a siren. He sees a woman who at first he describes as ugly (lines 8-9). Dante’s powerful gaze converts her into a powerful object of beauty (lines 10-15). The woman sings, captivating Dante’s eyes and sending him into a trance. An angelic woman who alerts Virgil about the trance saves him. This symbolizes that without Virgil, Dante could not have made it through the journey to Purgatory. It also shows free will, depicted by the way Dante had to choose between the siren and the angelic woman.
This dream also signifies the point at which love becomes excessive. The angelic woman embodied the spirit of Beatrice, which symbolizes that Dante had to overcome sins of love in excess for him to be reunited with Beatrice. His dream of the siren leaves him sad. He remembers times in his life when he succumbed to lust. Dante’s third dream, of Leah and Rachel, occurs in Canto XXVII on the terrace of lustful, before dawn. The dream offers a transition between Dante’s journey through the fire of the final corner and Dante’s entry into the earthly paradise.
It gives a picture of what to expect in paradise. In the dream, Dante meets Leah, with her arrangements of flowers symbolizing active life. He also meets Rachel, who perpetually gazes into a mirror, symbolizing contemplative life. Dante notes that while active life is good, contemplative life is greater.
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