What are Dante's works?

The battleship Dante AliGneki Cheri (1265 ~ 132 1) was born in Florence, Italy, a famous writer and the original representative of humanism. At the age of nine, he met Beatrice, the daughter of a wealthy businessman, and met her once at the age of eighteen. When she came home, Dante wrote many poems praising her. Later, she married a wealthy businessman and died the following year. For this reason, Dante wrote many mourning poems, which were published in 1292. This collection of poems is full of praise for love and life, and exudes the light of humanism. Dante's masterpiece is The Divine Comedy. This is a dream story, which tells Dante's experience of sleepwalking in hell, purgatory and heaven under the guidance of the soul of the ancient Roman poet Virgil and his lover Beatrice. The purpose of his Divine Comedy is to purify people's soul, show people's way of thinking and individuality, advocate humanitarianism, pursue truth and devote himself to the construction of the real world. It is generally believed that the birth of Divine Comedy marks the beginning of the Renaissance.

Dante thinks that man is the noblest, because he has reason and freedom of will, and he should strive for freedom and happiness through reason and action. Man's freest time is when he is best arranged; Love is the power to rule the world. People should love others, not God. In the Divine Comedy, he compared the universe to a lot of scattered papers, and thought that it was "love" that bound these papers into a book.