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  • Title: The Divine Comedy
  • Author: Dante Alighieri
  • Release Date: August, 1997 [eBook #1004]
  • [Most recently updated: April 9, 2021]
  • Language: English
  • Character set encoding: UTF-8
  • Produced by: Dennis McCarthy
  • *** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE DIVINE COMEDY ***
  • The Divine Comedy
  • of Dante Alighieri
  • Translated by
  • HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW
  • Contents
  • INFERNO
  • Canto I. The Dark Forest. The Hill of Difficulty. The Panther, the Lion, and the Wolf. Virgil.
  • Canto II. The Descent. Dante’s Protest and Virgil’s Appeal. The Intercession of the Three Ladies Benedight.
  • Canto III. The Gate of Hell. The Inefficient or Indifferent. Pope Celestine V. The Shores of Acheron. Charon. The Earthquake and the Swoon.
  • Canto IV. The First Circle, Limbo: Virtuous Pagans and the Unbaptized. The Four Poets, Homer, Horace, Ovid, and Lucan. The Noble Castle of Philosophy.
  • Canto V. The Second Circle: The Wanton. Minos. The Infernal Hurricane. Francesca da Rimini.
  • Canto VI. The Third Circle: The Gluttonous. Cerberus. The Eternal Rain. Ciacco. Florence.
  • Canto VII. The Fourth Circle: The Avaricious and the Prodigal. Plutus. Fortune and her Wheel. The Fifth Circle: The Irascible and the Sullen. Styx.
  • Canto VIII. Phlegyas. Philippo Argenti. The Gate of the City of Dis.
  • Canto IX. The Furies and Medusa. The Angel. The City of Dis. The Sixth Circle: Heresiarchs.
  • Canto X. Farinata and Cavalcante de’ Cavalcanti. Discourse on the Knowledge of the Damned.
  • Canto XI. The Broken Rocks. Pope Anastasius. General Description of the Inferno and its Divisions.
  • Canto XII. The Minotaur. The Seventh Circle: The Violent. The River Phlegethon. The Violent against their Neighbours. The Centaurs. Tyrants.
  • Canto XIII. The Wood of Thorns. The Harpies. The Violent against themselves. Suicides. Pier della Vigna. Lano and Jacopo da Sant’ Andrea.
  • Canto XIV. The Sand Waste and the Rain of Fire. The Violent against God. Capaneus. The Statue of Time, and the Four Infernal Rivers.
  • Canto XV. The Violent against Nature. Brunetto Latini.
  • Canto XVI. Guidoguerra, Aldobrandi, and Rusticucci. Cataract of the River of Blood.
  • Canto XVII. Geryon. The Violent against Art. Usurers. Descent into the Abyss of Malebolge.
  • Canto XVIII. The Eighth Circle, Malebolge: The Fraudulent and the Malicious. The First Bolgia: Seducers and Panders. Venedico Caccianimico. Jason. The Second Bolgia: Flatterers. Allessio Interminelli. Thais.
  • Canto XIX. The Third Bolgia: Simoniacs. Pope Nicholas III. Dante’s Reproof of corrupt Prelates.
  • Canto XX. The Fourth Bolgia: Soothsayers. Amphiaraus, Tiresias, Aruns, Manto, Eryphylus, Michael Scott, Guido Bonatti, and Asdente. Virgil reproaches Dante’s Pity. Mantua’s Foundation.
  • Canto XXI. The Fifth Bolgia: Peculators. The Elder of Santa Zita. Malacoda and other Devils.
  • Canto XXII. Ciampolo, Friar Gomita, and Michael Zanche. The Malabranche quarrel.
  • Canto XXIII. Escape from the Malabranche. The Sixth Bolgia: Hypocrites. Catalano and Loderingo. Caiaphas.
  • Canto XXIV. The Seventh Bolgia: Thieves. Vanni Fucci. Serpents.
  • Canto XXV. Vanni Fucci’s Punishment. Agnello Brunelleschi, Buoso degli Abati, Puccio Sciancato, Cianfa de’ Donati, and Guercio Cavalcanti.
  • Canto XXVI. The Eighth Bolgia: Evil Counsellors. Ulysses and Diomed. Ulysses’ Last Voyage.
  • Canto XXVII. Guido da Montefeltro. His deception by Pope Boniface VIII.
  • Canto XXVIII. The Ninth Bolgia: Schismatics. Mahomet and Ali. Pier da Medicina, Curio, Mosca, and Bertrand de Born.
  • Canto XXIX. Geri del Bello. The Tenth Bolgia: Alchemists. Griffolino d’ Arezzo and Capocchino.
  • Canto XXX. Other Falsifiers or Forgers. Gianni Schicchi, Myrrha, Adam of Brescia, Potiphar’s Wife, and Sinon of Troy.
  • Canto XXXI. The Giants, Nimrod, Ephialtes, and Antaeus. Descent to Cocytus.
  • Canto XXXII. The Ninth Circle: Traitors. The Frozen Lake of Cocytus. First Division, Caina: Traitors to their Kindred. Camicion de’ Pazzi. Second Division, Antenora: Traitors to their Country. Dante questions Bocca degli Abati. Buoso da Duera.
  • Canto XXXIII. Count Ugolino and the Archbishop Ruggieri. The Death of Count Ugolino’s Sons. Third Division of the Ninth Circle, Ptolomaea: Traitors to their Friends. Friar Alberigo, Branco d’ Oria.
  • Canto XXXIV. Fourth Division of the Ninth Circle, the Judecca: Traitors to their Lords and Benefactors. Lucifer, Judas Iscariot, Brutus, and Cassius. The Chasm of Lethe. The Ascent.
  • PURGATORIO
  • I. The Shores of Purgatory. The Four Stars. Cato of Utica. The Rush.
  • II. The Celestial Pilot. Casella. The Departure.
  • III. Discourse on the Limits of Reason. The Foot of the Mountain. Those who died in Contumacy of Holy Church. Manfredi.
  • IV. Farther Ascent. Nature of the Mountain. The Negligent, who postponed Repentance till the last Hour. Belacqua.
  • V. Those who died by Violence, but repentant. Buonconte di Monfeltro. La Pia.
  • VI. Dante’s Inquiry on Prayers for the Dead. Sordello. Italy.
  • VII. The Valley of Flowers. Negligent Princes.
  • VIII. The Guardian Angels and the Serpent. Nino di Gallura. The Three Stars. Currado Malaspina.
  • IX. Dante’s Dream of the Eagle. The Gate of Purgatory and the Angel. Seven P’s. The Keys.
  • X. The Needle’s Eye. The First Circle: The Proud. The Sculptures on the Wall.
  • XI. The Humble Prayer. Omberto di Santafiore. Oderisi d’ Agobbio. Provenzan Salvani.
  • XII. The Sculptures on the Pavement. Ascent to the Second Circle.
  • XIII. The Second Circle: The Envious. Sapia of Siena.
  • XIV. Guido del Duca and Renier da Calboli. Cities of the Arno Valley. Denunciation of Stubbornness.
  • XV. The Third Circle: The Irascible. Dante’s Visions. The Smoke.
  • XVI. Marco Lombardo. Lament over the State of the World.
  • XVII. Dante’s Dream of Anger. The Fourth Circle: The Slothful. Virgil’s Discourse of Love.
  • XVIII. Virgil further discourses of Love and Free Will. The Abbot of San Zeno.
  • XIX. Dante’s Dream of the Siren. The Fifth Circle: The Avaricious and Prodigal. Pope Adrian V.
  • XX. Hugh Capet. Corruption of the French Crown. Prophecy of the Abduction of Pope Boniface VIII and the Sacrilege of Philip the Fair. The Earthquake.
  • XXI. The Poet Statius. Praise of Virgil.
  • XXII. Statius’ Denunciation of Avarice. The Sixth Circle: The Gluttonous. The Mystic Tree.
  • XXIII. Forese. Reproof of immodest Florentine Women.
  • XXIV. Buonagiunta da Lucca. Pope Martin IV, and others. Inquiry into the State of Poetry.
  • XXV. Discourse of Statius on Generation. The Seventh Circle: The Wanton.
  • XXVI. Sodomites. Guido Guinicelli and Arnaldo Daniello.
  • XXVII. The Wall of Fire and the Angel of God. Dante’s Sleep upon the Stairway, and his Dream of Leah and Rachel. Arrival at the Terrestrial Paradise.
  • XXVIII. The River Lethe. Matilda. The Nature of the Terrestrial Paradise.
  • XXIX. The Triumph of the Church.
  • XXX. Virgil’s Departure. Beatrice. Dante’s Shame.
  • XXXI. Reproaches of Beatrice and Confession of Dante. The Passage of Lethe. The Seven Virtues. The Griffon.
  • XXXII. The Tree of Knowledge. Allegory of the Chariot.
  • XXXIII. Lament over the State of the Church. Final Reproaches of Beatrice. The River Eunoe.
  • PARADISO
  • I. The Ascent to the First Heaven. The Sphere of Fire.
  • II. The First Heaven, the Moon: Spirits who, having taken Sacred Vows, were forced to violate them. The Lunar Spots.
  • III. Piccarda Donati and the Empress Constance.
  • IV. Questionings of the Soul and of Broken Vows.
  • V. Discourse of Beatrice on Vows and Compensations. Ascent to the Second Heaven, Mercury: Spirits who for the Love of Fame achieved great Deeds.
  • VI. Justinian. The Roman Eagle. The Empire. Romeo.
  • VII. Beatrice’s Discourse of the Crucifixion, the Incarnation, the Immortality of the Soul, and the Resurrection of the Body.
  • VIII. Ascent to the Third Heaven, Venus: Lovers. Charles Martel. Discourse on diverse Natures.
  • IX. Cunizza da Romano, Folco of Marseilles, and Rahab. Neglect of the Holy Land.
  • X. The Fourth Heaven, the Sun: Theologians and Fathers of the Church. The First Circle. St. Thomas of Aquinas.
  • XI. St. Thomas recounts the Life of St. Francis. Lament over the State of the Dominican Order.
  • XII. St. Buonaventura recounts the Life of St. Dominic. Lament over the State of the Franciscan Order. The Second Circle.
  • XIII. Of the Wisdom of Solomon. St. Thomas reproaches Dante’s Judgement.
  • XIV. The Third Circle. Discourse on the Resurrection of the Flesh. The Fifth Heaven, Mars: Martyrs and Crusaders who died fighting for the true Faith. The Celestial Cross.
  • XV. Cacciaguida. Florence in the Olden Time.
  • XVI. Dante’s Noble Ancestry. Cacciaguida’s Discourse of the Great Florentines.
  • XVII. Cacciaguida’s Prophecy of Dante’s Banishment.
  • XVIII. The Sixth Heaven, Jupiter: Righteous Kings and Rulers. The Celestial Eagle. Dante’s Invectives against ecclesiastical Avarice.
  • XIX. The Eagle discourses of Salvation, Faith, and Virtue. Condemnation of the vile Kings of A.D. 1300.
  • XX. The Eagle praises the Righteous Kings of old. Benevolence of the Divine Will.
  • XXI. The Seventh Heaven, Saturn: The Contemplative. The Celestial Stairway. St. Peter Damiano. His Invectives against the Luxury of the Prelates.
  • XXII. St. Benedict. His Lamentation over the Corruption of Monks. The Eighth Heaven, the Fixed Stars.
  • XXIII. The Triumph of Christ. The Virgin Mary. The Apostles. Gabriel.
  • XXIV. The Radiant Wheel. St. Peter examines Dante on Faith.
  • XXV. The Laurel Crown. St. James examines Dante on Hope. Dante’s Blindness.
  • XXVI. St. John examines Dante on Charity. Dante’s Sight. Adam.
  • XXVII. St. Peter’s reproof of bad Popes. The Ascent to the Ninth Heaven, the ‘Primum Mobile.’
  • XXVIII. God and the Angelic Hierarchies.
  • XXIX. Beatrice’s Discourse of the Creation of the Angels, and of the Fall of Lucifer. Her Reproof of Foolish and Avaricious Preachers.
  • XXX. The Tenth Heaven, or Empyrean. The River of Light. The Two Courts of Heaven. The White Rose of Paradise. The great Throne.
  • XXXI. The Glory of Paradise. Departure of Beatrice. St. Bernard.
  • XXXII. St. Bernard points out the Saints in the White Rose.
  • XXXIII. Prayer to the Virgin. The Threefold Circle of the Trinity. Mystery of the Divine and Human Nature.
  • APPENDIX
  • INFERNO
  • Inferno: Canto I
  • Midway upon the journey of our life
  • I found myself within a forest dark,
  • For the straightforward pathway had been lost.
  • Ah me! how hard a thing it is to say
  • What was this forest savage, rough, and stern,
  • Which in the very thought renews the fear.
  • So bitter is it, death is little more;
  • But of the good to treat, which there I found,
  • Speak will I of the other things I saw there.
  • I cannot well repeat how there I entered,
  • So full was I of slumber at the moment
  • In which I had abandoned the true way.
  • But after I had reached a mountain’s foot,
  • At that point where the valley terminated,
  • Which had with consternation pierced my heart,
  • Upward I looked, and I beheld its shoulders,
  • Vested already with that planet’s rays
  • Which leadeth others right by every road.
  • Then was the fear a little quieted
  • That in my heart’s lake had endured throughout
  • The night, which I had passed so piteously.
  • And even as he, who, with distressful breath,
  • Forth issued from the sea upon the shore,
  • Turns to the water perilous and gazes;
  • So did my soul, that still was fleeing onward,
  • Turn itself back to re-behold the pass
  • Which never yet a living person left.
  • After my weary body I had rested,
  • The way resumed I on the desert slope,
  • So that the firm foot ever was the lower.
  • And lo! almost where the ascent began,
  • A panther light and swift exceedingly,
  • Which with a spotted skin was covered o’er!
  • And never moved she from before my face,
  • Nay, rather did impede so much my way,
  • That many times I to return had turned.
  • The time was the beginning of the morning,
  • And up the sun was mounting with those stars
  • That with him were, what time the Love Divine
  • At first in motion set those beauteous things;
  • So were to me occasion of good hope,
  • The variegated skin of that wild beast,
  • The hour of time, and the delicious season;
  • But not so much, that did not give me fear
  • A lion’s aspect which appeared to me.
  • He seemed as if against me he were coming
  • With head uplifted, and with ravenous hunger,
  • So that it seemed the air was afraid of him;
  • And a she-wolf, that with all hungerings
  • Seemed to be laden in her meagreness,
  • And many folk has caused to live forlorn!
  • She brought upon me so much heaviness,
  • With the affright that from her aspect came,
  • That I the hope relinquished of the height.
  • And as he is who willingly acquires,
  • And the time comes that causes him to lose,
  • Who weeps in all his thoughts and is despondent,
  • E’en such made me that beast withouten peace,
  • Which, coming on against me by degrees
  • Thrust me back thither where the sun is silent.
  • While I was rushing downward to the lowland,
  • Before mine eyes did one present himself,
  • Who seemed from long-continued silence hoarse.
  • When I beheld him in the desert vast,
  • “Have pity on me,” unto him I cried,
  • “Whiche’er thou art, or shade or real man!”
  • He answered me: “Not man; man once I was,
  • And both my parents were of Lombardy,
  • And Mantuans by country both of them.
  • ‘Sub Julio’ was I born, though it was late,
  • And lived at Rome under the good Augustus,
  • During the time of false and lying gods.
  • A poet was I, and I sang that just
  • Son of Anchises, who came forth from Troy,
  • After that Ilion the superb was burned.
  • But thou, why goest thou back to such annoyance?
  • Why climb’st thou not the Mount Delectable,
  • Which is the source and cause of every joy?”
  • “Now, art thou that Virgilius and that fountain
  • Which spreads abroad so wide a river of speech?”
  • I made response to him with bashful forehead.
  • “O, of the other poets honour and light,
  • Avail me the long study and great love
  • That have impelled me to explore thy volume!
  • Thou art my master, and my author thou,
  • Thou art alone the one from whom I took
  • The beautiful style that has done honour to me.
  • Behold the beast, for which I have turned back;
  • Do thou protect me from her, famous Sage,
  • For she doth make my veins and pulses tremble.”
  • “Thee it behoves to take another road,”
  • Responded he, when he beheld me weeping,
  • “If from this savage place thou wouldst escape;
  • Because this beast, at which thou criest out,
  • Suffers not any one to pass her way,
  • But so doth harass him, that she destroys him;
  • And has a nature so malign and ruthless,
  • That never doth she glut her greedy will,
  • And after food is hungrier than before.
  • Many the animals with whom she weds,
  • And more they shall be still, until the Greyhound
  • Comes, who shall make her perish in her pain.
  • He shall not feed on either earth or pelf,
  • But upon wisdom, and on love and virtue;
  • ’Twixt Feltro and Feltro shall his nation be;
  • Of that low Italy shall he be the saviour,
  • On whose account the maid Camilla died,
  • Euryalus, Turnus, Nisus, of their wounds;
  • Through every city shall he hunt her down,
  • Until he shall have driven her back to Hell,
  • There from whence envy first did let her loose.
  • Therefore I think and judge it for thy best
  • Thou follow me, and I will be thy guide,
  • And lead thee hence through the eternal place,
  • Where thou shalt hear the desperate lamentations,
  • Shalt see the ancient spirits disconsolate,
  • Who cry out each one for the second death;
  • And thou shalt see those who contented are
  • Within the fire, because they hope to come,
  • Whene’er it may be, to the blessed people;
  • To whom, then, if thou wishest to ascend,
  • A soul shall be for that than I more worthy;
  • With her at my departure I will leave thee;
  • Because that Emperor, who reigns above,
  • In that I was rebellious to his law,
  • Wills that through me none come into his city.
  • He governs everywhere, and there he reigns;
  • There is his city and his lofty throne;
  • O happy he whom thereto he elects!”
  • And I to him: “Poet, I thee entreat,
  • By that same God whom thou didst never know,
  • So that I may escape this woe and worse,
  • Thou wouldst conduct me there where thou hast said,
  • That I may see the portal of Saint Peter,
  • And those thou makest so disconsolate.”
  • Then he moved on, and I behind him followed.
  • Inferno: Canto II
  • Day was departing, and the embrowned air
  • Released the animals that are on earth
  • From their fatigues; and I the only one
  • Made myself ready to sustain the war,
  • Both of the way and likewise of the woe,
  • Which memory that errs not shall retrace.
  • O Muses, O high genius, now assist me!
  • O memory, that didst write down what I saw,
  • Here thy nobility shall be manifest!
  • And I began: “Poet, who guidest me,
  • Regard my manhood, if it be sufficient,
  • Ere to the arduous pass thou dost confide me.
  • Thou sayest, that of Silvius the parent,
  • While yet corruptible, unto the world
  • Immortal went, and was there bodily.
  • But if the adversary of all evil
  • Was courteous, thinking of the high effect
  • That issue would from him, and who, and what,
  • To men of intellect unmeet it seems not;
  • For he was of great Rome, and of her empire
  • In the empyreal heaven as father chosen;
  • The which and what, wishing to speak the truth,
  • Were stablished as the holy place, wherein
  • Sits the successor of the greatest Peter.
  • Upon this journey, whence thou givest him vaunt,
  • Things did he hear, which the occasion were
  • Both of his victory and the papal mantle.
  • Thither went afterwards the Chosen Vessel,
  • To bring back comfort thence unto that Faith,
  • Which of salvation’s way is the beginning.
  • But I, why thither come, or who concedes it?
  • I not Aeneas am, I am not Paul,
  • Nor I, nor others, think me worthy of it.
  • Therefore, if I resign myself to come,
  • I fear the coming may be ill-advised;
  • Thou’rt wise, and knowest better than I speak.”
  • And as he is, who unwills what he willed,
  • And by new thoughts doth his intention change,
  • So that from his design he quite withdraws,
  • Such I became, upon that dark hillside,
  • Because, in thinking, I consumed the emprise,
  • Which was so very prompt in the beginning.
  • “If I have well thy language understood,”
  • Replied that shade of the Magnanimous,
  • “Thy soul attainted is with cowardice,
  • Which many times a man encumbers so,
  • It turns him back from honoured enterprise,
  • As false sight doth a beast, when he is shy.
  • That thou mayst free thee from this apprehension,
  • I’ll tell thee why I came, and what I heard
  • At the first moment when I grieved for thee.
  • Among those was I who are in suspense,
  • And a fair, saintly Lady called to me
  • In such wise, I besought her to command me.
  • Her eyes where shining brighter than the Star;
  • And she began to say, gentle and low,
  • With voice angelical, in her own language:
  • ‘O spirit courteous of Mantua,
  • Of whom the fame still in the world endures,
  • And shall endure, long-lasting as the world;
  • A friend of mine, and not the friend of fortune,
  • Upon the desert slope is so impeded
  • Upon his way, that he has turned through terror,
  • And may, I fear, already be so lost,
  • That I too late have risen to his succour,
  • From that which I have heard of him in Heaven.
  • Bestir thee now, and with thy speech ornate,
  • And with what needful is for his release,
  • Assist him so, that I may be consoled.
  • Beatrice am I, who do bid thee go;
  • I come from there, where I would fain return;
  • Love moved me, which compelleth me to speak.
  • When I shall be in presence of my Lord,
  • Full often will I praise thee unto him.’
  • Then paused she, and thereafter I began:
  • ‘O Lady of virtue, thou alone through whom
  • The human race exceedeth all contained
  • Within the heaven that has the lesser circles,
  • So grateful unto me is thy commandment,
  • To obey, if ’twere already done, were late;
  • No farther need’st thou ope to me thy wish.
  • But the cause tell me why thou dost not shun
  • The here descending down into this centre,
  • From the vast place thou burnest to return to.’
  • ‘Since thou wouldst fain so inwardly discern,
  • Briefly will I relate,’ she answered me,
  • ‘Why I am not afraid to enter here.
  • Of those things only should one be afraid
  • Which have the power of doing others harm;
  • Of the rest, no; because they are not fearful.
  • God in his mercy such created me
  • That misery of yours attains me not,
  • Nor any flame assails me of this burning.
  • A gentle Lady is in Heaven, who grieves
  • At this impediment, to which I send thee,
  • So that stern judgment there above is broken.
  • In her entreaty she besought Lucia,
  • And said, “Thy faithful one now stands in need
  • Of thee, and unto thee I recommend him.”
  • Lucia, foe of all that cruel is,
  • Hastened away, and came unto the place
  • Where I was sitting with the ancient Rachel.
  • “Beatrice” said she, “the true praise of God,
  • Why succourest thou not him, who loved thee so,
  • For thee he issued from the vulgar herd?
  • Dost thou not hear the pity of his plaint?
  • Dost thou not see the death that combats him
  • Beside that flood, where ocean has no vaunt?”
  • Never were persons in the world so swift
  • To work their weal and to escape their woe,
  • As I, after such words as these were uttered,
  • Came hither downward from my blessed seat,
  • Confiding in thy dignified discourse,
  • Which honours thee, and those who’ve listened to it.’
  • After she thus had spoken unto me,
  • Weeping, her shining eyes she turned away;
  • Whereby she made me swifter in my coming;
  • And unto thee I came, as she desired;
  • I have delivered thee from that wild beast,
  • Which barred the beautiful mountain’s short ascent.
  • What is it, then? Why, why dost thou delay?
  • Why is such baseness bedded in thy heart?
  • Daring and hardihood why hast thou not,
  • Seeing that three such Ladies benedight
  • Are caring for thee in the court of Heaven,
  • And so much good my speech doth promise thee?”
  • Even as the flowerets, by nocturnal chill,
  • Bowed down and closed, when the sun whitens them,
  • Uplift themselves all open on their stems;
  • Such I became with my exhausted strength,
  • And such good courage to my heart there coursed,
  • That I began, like an intrepid person:
  • “O she compassionate, who succoured me,
  • And courteous thou, who hast obeyed so soon
  • The words of truth which she addressed to thee!
  • Thou hast my heart so with desire disposed
  • To the adventure, with these words of thine,
  • That to my first intent I have returned.
  • Now go, for one sole will is in us both,
  • Thou Leader, and thou Lord, and Master thou.”
  • Thus said I to him; and when he had moved,
  • I entered on the deep and savage way.
  • Inferno: Canto III
  • “Through me the way is to the city dolent;
  • Through me the way is to eternal dole;
  • Through me the way among the people lost.
  • Justice incited my sublime Creator;
  • Created me divine Omnipotence,
  • The highest Wisdom and the primal Love.
  • Before me there were no created things,
  • Only eterne, and I eternal last.
  • All hope abandon, ye who enter in!”
  • These words in sombre colour I beheld
  • Written upon the summit of a gate;
  • Whence I: “Their sense is, Master, hard to me!”
  • And he to me, as one experienced:
  • “Here all suspicion needs must be abandoned,
  • All cowardice must needs be here extinct.
  • We to the place have come, where I have told thee
  • Thou shalt behold the people dolorous
  • Who have foregone the good of intellect.”
  • And after he had laid his hand on mine
  • With joyful mien, whence I was comforted,
  • He led me in among the secret things.
  • There sighs, complaints, and ululations loud
  • Resounded through the air without a star,
  • Whence I, at the beginning, wept thereat.
  • Languages diverse, horrible dialects,
  • Accents of anger, words of agony,
  • And voices high and hoarse, with sound of hands,
  • Made up a tumult that goes whirling on
  • For ever in that air for ever black,
  • Even as the sand doth, when the whirlwind breathes.
  • And I, who had my head with horror bound,
  • Said: “Master, what is this which now I hear?
  • What folk is this, which seems by pain so vanquished?”
  • And he to me: “This miserable mode
  • Maintain the melancholy souls of those
  • Who lived withouten infamy or praise.
  • Commingled are they with that caitiff choir
  • Of Angels, who have not rebellious been,
  • Nor faithful were to God, but were for self.
  • The heavens expelled them, not to be less fair;
  • Nor them the nethermore abyss receives,
  • For glory none the damned would have from them.”
  • And I: “O Master, what so grievous is
  • To these, that maketh them lament so sore?”
  • He answered: “I will tell thee very briefly.
  • These have no longer any hope of death;
  • And this blind life of theirs is so debased,
  • They envious are of every other fate.
  • No fame of them the world permits to be;
  • Misericord and Justice both disdain them.
  • Let us not speak of them, but look, and pass.”
  • And I, who looked again, beheld a banner,
  • Which, whirling round, ran on so rapidly,
  • That of all pause it seemed to me indignant;
  • And after it there came so long a train
  • Of people, that I ne’er would have believed
  • That ever Death so many had undone.
  • When some among them I had recognised,
  • I looked, and I beheld the shade of him
  • Who made through cowardice the great refusal.
  • Forthwith I comprehended, and was certain,
  • That this the sect was of the caitiff wretches
  • Hateful to God and to his enemies.
  • These miscreants, who never were alive,
  • Were naked, and were stung exceedingly
  • By gadflies and by hornets that were there.
  • These did their faces irrigate with blood,
  • Which, with their tears commingled, at their feet
  • By the disgusting worms was gathered up.
  • And when to gazing farther I betook me.
  • People I saw on a great river’s bank;
  • Whence said I: “Master, now vouchsafe to me,
  • That I may know who these are, and what law
  • Makes them appear so ready to pass over,
  • As I discern athwart the dusky light.”
  • And he to me: “These things shall all be known
  • To thee, as soon as we our footsteps stay
  • Upon the dismal shore of Acheron.”
  • Then with mine eyes ashamed and downward cast,
  • Fearing my words might irksome be to him,
  • From speech refrained I till we reached the river.
  • And lo! towards us coming in a boat
  • An old man, hoary with the hair of eld,
  • Crying: “Woe unto you, ye souls depraved!
  • Hope nevermore to look upon the heavens;
  • I come to lead you to the other shore,
  • To the eternal shades in heat and frost.
  • And thou, that yonder standest, living soul,
  • Withdraw thee from these people, who are dead!”
  • But when he saw that I did not withdraw,
  • He said: “By other ways, by other ports
  • Thou to the shore shalt come, not here, for passage;
  • A lighter vessel needs must carry thee.”
  • And unto him the Guide: “Vex thee not, Charon;
  • It is so willed there where is power to do
  • That which is willed; and farther question not.”
  • Thereat were quieted the fleecy cheeks
  • Of him the ferryman of the livid fen,
  • Who round about his eyes had wheels of flame.
  • But all those souls who weary were and naked
  • Their colour changed and gnashed their teeth together,
  • As soon as they had heard those cruel words.
  • God they blasphemed and their progenitors,
  • The human race, the place, the time, the seed
  • Of their engendering and of their birth!
  • Thereafter all together they drew back,
  • Bitterly weeping, to the accursed shore,
  • Which waiteth every man who fears not God.
  • Charon the demon, with the eyes of glede,
  • Beckoning to them, collects them all together,
  • Beats with his oar whoever lags behind.
  • As in the autumn-time the leaves fall off,
  • First one and then another, till the branch
  • Unto the earth surrenders all its spoils;
  • In similar wise the evil seed of Adam
  • Throw themselves from that margin one by one,
  • At signals, as a bird unto its lure.
  • So they depart across the dusky wave,
  • And ere upon the other side they land,
  • Again on this side a new troop assembles.
  • “My son,” the courteous Master said to me,
  • “All those who perish in the wrath of God
  • Here meet together out of every land;
  • And ready are they to pass o’er the river,
  • Because celestial Justice spurs them on,
  • So that their fear is turned into desire.
  • This way there never passes a good soul;
  • And hence if Charon doth complain of thee,
  • Well mayst thou know now what his speech imports.”
  • This being finished, all the dusk champaign
  • Trembled so violently, that of that terror
  • The recollection bathes me still with sweat.
  • The land of tears gave forth a blast of wind,
  • And fulminated a vermilion light,
  • Which overmastered in me every sense,
  • And as a man whom sleep hath seized I fell.
  • Inferno: Canto IV
  • Broke the deep lethargy within my head
  • A heavy thunder, so that I upstarted,
  • Like to a person who by force is wakened;
  • And round about I moved my rested eyes,
  • Uprisen erect, and steadfastly I gazed,
  • To recognise the place wherein I was.
  • True is it, that upon the verge I found me
  • Of the abysmal valley dolorous,
  • That gathers thunder of infinite ululations.
  • Obscure, profound it was, and nebulous,
  • So that by fixing on its depths my sight
  • Nothing whatever I discerned therein.
  • “Let us descend now into the blind world,”
  • Began the Poet, pallid utterly;
  • “I will be first, and thou shalt second be.”
  • And I, who of his colour was aware,
  • Said: “How shall I come, if thou art afraid,
  • Who’rt wont to be a comfort to my fears?”
  • And he to me: “The anguish of the people
  • Who are below here in my face depicts
  • That pity which for terror thou hast taken.
  • Let us go on, for the long way impels us.”
  • Thus he went in, and thus he made me enter
  • The foremost circle that surrounds the abyss.
  • There, as it seemed to me from listening,
  • Were lamentations none, but only sighs,
  • That tremble made the everlasting air.
  • And this arose from sorrow without torment,
  • Which the crowds had, that many were and great,
  • Of infants and of women and of men.
  • To me the Master good: “Thou dost not ask
  • What spirits these, which thou beholdest, are?
  • Now will I have thee know, ere thou go farther,
  • That they sinned not; and if they merit had,
  • ’Tis not enough, because they had not baptism
  • Which is the portal of the Faith thou holdest;
  • And if they were before Christianity,
  • In the right manner they adored not God;
  • And among such as these am I myself.
  • For such defects, and not for other guilt,
  • Lost are we and are only so far punished,
  • That without hope we live on in desire.”
  • Great grief seized on my heart when this I heard,
  • Because some people of much worthiness
  • I knew, who in that Limbo were suspended.
  • “Tell me, my Master, tell me, thou my Lord,”
  • Began I, with desire of being certain
  • Of that Faith which o’ercometh every error,
  • “Came any one by his own merit hence,
  • Or by another’s, who was blessed thereafter?”
  • And he, who understood my covert speech,
  • Replied: “I was a novice in this state,
  • When I saw hither come a Mighty One,
  • With sign of victory incoronate.
  • Hence he drew forth the shade of the First Parent,
  • And that of his son Abel, and of Noah,
  • Of Moses the lawgiver, and the obedient
  • Abraham, patriarch, and David, king,
  • Israel with his father and his children,
  • And Rachel, for whose sake he did so much,
  • And others many, and he made them blessed;
  • And thou must know, that earlier than these
  • Never were any human spirits saved.”
  • We ceased not to advance because he spake,
  • But still were passing onward through the forest,
  • The forest, say I, of thick-crowded ghosts.
  • Not very far as yet our way had gone
  • This side the summit, when I saw a fire
  • That overcame a hemisphere of darkness.
  • We were a little distant from it still,
  • But not so far that I in part discerned not
  • That honourable people held that place.
  • “O thou who honourest every art and science,
  • Who may these be, which such great honour have,
  • That from the fashion of the rest it parts them?”
  • And he to me: “The honourable name,
  • That sounds of them above there in thy life,
  • Wins grace in Heaven, that so advances them.”
  • In the mean time a voice was heard by me:
  • “All honour be to the pre-eminent Poet;
  • His shade returns again, that was departed.”
  • After the voice had ceased and quiet was,
  • Four mighty shades I saw approaching us;
  • Semblance had they nor sorrowful nor glad.
  • To say to me began my gracious Master:
  • “Him with that falchion in his hand behold,
  • Who comes before the three, even as their lord.
  • That one is Homer, Poet sovereign;
  • He who comes next is Horace, the satirist;
  • The third is Ovid, and the last is Lucan.
  • Because to each of these with me applies
  • The name that solitary voice proclaimed,
  • They do me honour, and in that do well.”
  • Thus I beheld assemble the fair school
  • Of that lord of the song pre-eminent,
  • Who o’er the others like an eagle soars.
  • When they together had discoursed somewhat,
  • They turned to me with signs of salutation,
  • And on beholding this, my Master smiled;
  • And more of honour still, much more, they did me,
  • In that they made me one of their own band;
  • So that the sixth was I, ’mid so much wit.
  • Thus we went on as far as to the light,
  • Things saying ’tis becoming to keep silent,
  • As was the saying of them where I was.
  • We came unto a noble castle’s foot,
  • Seven times encompassed with lofty walls,
  • Defended round by a fair rivulet;
  • This we passed over even as firm ground;
  • Through portals seven I entered with these Sages;
  • We came into a meadow of fresh verdure.
  • People were there with solemn eyes and slow,
  • Of great authority in their countenance;
  • They spake but seldom, and with gentle voices.
  • Thus we withdrew ourselves upon one side
  • Into an opening luminous and lofty,
  • So that they all of them were visible.
  • There opposite, upon the green enamel,
  • Were pointed out to me the mighty spirits,
  • Whom to have seen I feel myself exalted.
  • I saw Electra with companions many,
  • ’Mongst whom I knew both Hector and Aeneas,
  • Caesar in armour with gerfalcon eyes;
  • I saw Camilla and Penthesilea
  • On the other side, and saw the King Latinus,
  • Who with Lavinia his daughter sat;
  • I saw that Brutus who drove Tarquin forth,
  • Lucretia, Julia, Marcia, and Cornelia,
  • And saw alone, apart, the Saladin.
  • When I had lifted up my brows a little,
  • The Master I beheld of those who know,
  • Sit with his philosophic family.
  • All gaze upon him, and all do him honour.
  • There I beheld both Socrates and Plato,
  • Who nearer him before the others stand;
  • Democritus, who puts the world on chance,
  • Diogenes, Anaxagoras, and Thales,
  • Zeno, Empedocles, and Heraclitus;
  • Of qualities I saw the good collector,
  • Hight Dioscorides; and Orpheus saw I,
  • Tully and Livy, and moral Seneca,
  • Euclid, geometrician, and Ptolemy,
  • Galen, Hippocrates, and Avicenna,
  • Averroes, who the great Comment made.
  • I cannot all of them pourtray in full,
  • Because so drives me onward the long theme,
  • That many times the word comes short of fact.
  • The sixfold company in two divides;
  • Another way my sapient Guide conducts me
  • Forth from the quiet to the air that trembles;
  • And to a place I come where nothing shines.
  • Inferno: Canto V
  • Thus I descended out of the first circle
  • Down to the second, that less space begirds,
  • And so much greater dole, that goads to wailing.
  • There standeth Minos horribly, and snarls;
  • Examines the transgressions at the entrance;
  • Judges, and sends according as he girds him.
  • I say, that when the spirit evil-born
  • Cometh before him, wholly it confesses;
  • And this discriminator of transgressions
  • Seeth what place in Hell is meet for it;
  • Girds himself with his tail as many times
  • As grades he wishes it should be thrust down.
  • Always before him many of them stand;
  • They go by turns each one unto the judgment;
  • They speak, and hear, and then are downward hurled.
  • “O thou, that to this dolorous hostelry
  • Comest,” said Minos to me, when he saw me,
  • Leaving the practice of so great an office,
  • “Look how thou enterest, and in whom thou trustest;
  • Let not the portal’s amplitude deceive thee.”
  • And unto him my Guide: “Why criest thou too?
  • Do not impede his journey fate-ordained;
  • It is so willed there where is power to do
  • That which is willed; and ask no further question.”
  • And now begin the dolesome notes to grow
  • Audible unto me; now am I come
  • There where much lamentation strikes upon me.
  • I came into a place mute of all light,
  • Which bellows as the sea does in a tempest,
  • If by opposing winds ’t is combated.
  • The infernal hurricane that never rests
  • Hurtles the spirits onward in its rapine;
  • Whirling them round, and smiting, it molests them.
  • When they arrive before the precipice,
  • There are the shrieks, the plaints, and the laments,
  • There they blaspheme the puissance divine.
  • I understood that unto such a torment
  • The carnal malefactors were condemned,
  • Who reason subjugate to appetite.
  • And as the wings of starlings bear them on
  • In the cold season in large band and full,
  • So doth that blast the spirits maledict;
  • It hither, thither, downward, upward, drives them;
  • No hope doth comfort them for evermore,
  • Not of repose, but even of lesser pain.
  • And as the cranes go chanting forth their lays,
  • Making in air a long line of themselves,
  • So saw I coming, uttering lamentations,
  • Shadows borne onward by the aforesaid stress.
  • Whereupon said I: “Master, who are those
  • People, whom the black air so castigates?”
  • “The first of those, of whom intelligence
  • Thou fain wouldst have,” then said he unto me,
  • “The empress was of many languages.
  • To sensual vices she was so abandoned,
  • That lustful she made licit in her law,
  • To remove the blame to which she had been led.
  • She is Semiramis, of whom we read
  • That she succeeded Ninus, and was his spouse;
  • She held the land which now the Sultan rules.
  • The next is she who killed herself for love,
  • And broke faith with the ashes of Sichaeus;
  • Then Cleopatra the voluptuous.”
  • Helen I saw, for whom so many ruthless
  • Seasons revolved; and saw the great Achilles,
  • Who at the last hour combated with Love.
  • Paris I saw, Tristan; and more than a thousand
  • Shades did he name and point out with his finger,
  • Whom Love had separated from our life.
  • After that I had listened to my Teacher,
  • Naming the dames of eld and cavaliers,
  • Pity prevailed, and I was nigh bewildered.
  • And I began: “O Poet, willingly
  • Speak would I to those two, who go together,
  • And seem upon the wind to be so light.”
  • And, he to me: “Thou’lt mark, when they shall be
  • Nearer to us; and then do thou implore them
  • By love which leadeth them, and they will come.”
  • Soon as the wind in our direction sways them,
  • My voice uplift I: “O ye weary souls!
  • Come speak to us, if no one interdicts it.”
  • As turtle-doves, called onward by desire,
  • With open and steady wings to the sweet nest
  • Fly through the air by their volition borne,
  • So came they from the band where Dido is,
  • Approaching us athwart the air malign,
  • So strong was the affectionate appeal.
  • “O living creature gracious and benignant,
  • Who visiting goest through the purple air
  • Us, who have stained the world incarnadine,
  • If were the King of the Universe our friend,
  • We would pray unto him to give thee peace,
  • Since thou hast pity on our woe perverse.
  • Of what it pleases thee to hear and speak,
  • That will we hear, and we will speak to you,
  • While silent is the wind, as it is now.
  • Sitteth the city, wherein I was born,
  • Upon the sea-shore where the Po descends
  • To rest in peace with all his retinue.
  • Love, that on gentle heart doth swiftly seize,
  • Seized this man for the person beautiful
  • That was ta’en from me, and still the mode offends me.
  • Love, that exempts no one beloved from loving,
  • Seized me with pleasure of this man so strongly,
  • That, as thou seest, it doth not yet desert me;
  • Love has conducted us unto one death;
  • Caina waiteth him who quenched our life!”
  • These words were borne along from them to us.
  • As soon as I had heard those souls tormented,
  • I bowed my face, and so long held it down
  • Until the Poet said to me: “What thinkest?”
  • When I made answer, I began: “Alas!
  • How many pleasant thoughts, how much desire,
  • Conducted these unto the dolorous pass!”
  • Then unto them I turned me, and I spake,
  • And I began: “Thine agonies, Francesca,
  • Sad and compassionate to weeping make me.
  • But tell me, at the time of those sweet sighs,
  • By what and in what manner Love conceded,
  • That you should know your dubious desires?”
  • And she to me: “There is no greater sorrow
  • Than to be mindful of the happy time
  • In misery, and that thy Teacher knows.
  • But, if to recognise the earliest root
  • Of love in us thou hast so great desire,
  • I will do even as he who weeps and speaks.
  • One day we reading were for our delight
  • Of Launcelot, how Love did him enthral.
  • Alone we were and without any fear.
  • Full many a time our eyes together drew
  • That reading, and drove the colour from our faces;
  • But one point only was it that o’ercame us.
  • When as we read of the much-longed-for smile
  • Being by such a noble lover kissed,
  • This one, who ne’er from me shall be divided,
  • Kissed me upon the mouth all palpitating.
  • Galeotto was the book and he who wrote it.
  • That day no farther did we read therein.”
  • And all the while one spirit uttered this,
  • The other one did weep so, that, for pity,
  • I swooned away as if I had been dying,
  • And fell, even as a dead body falls.
  • Inferno: Canto VI
  • At the return of consciousness, that closed
  • Before the pity of those two relations,
  • Which utterly with sadness had confused me,
  • New torments I behold, and new tormented
  • Around me, whichsoever way I move,
  • And whichsoever way I turn, and gaze.
  • In the third circle am I of the rain
  • Eternal, maledict, and cold, and heavy;
  • Its law and quality are never new.
  • Huge hail, and water sombre-hued, and snow,
  • Athwart the tenebrous air pour down amain;
  • Noisome the earth is, that receiveth this.
  • Cerberus, monster cruel and uncouth,
  • With his three gullets like a dog is barking
  • Over the people that are there submerged.
  • Red eyes he has, and unctuous beard and black,
  • And belly large, and armed with claws his hands;
  • He rends the spirits, flays, and quarters them.
  • Howl the rain maketh them like unto dogs;
  • One side they make a shelter for the other;
  • Oft turn themselves the wretched reprobates.
  • When Cerberus perceived us, the great worm!
  • His mouths he opened, and displayed his tusks;
  • Not a limb had he that was motionless.
  • And my Conductor, with his spans extended,
  • Took of the earth, and with his fists well filled,
  • He threw it into those rapacious gullets.
  • Such as that dog is, who by barking craves,
  • And quiet grows soon as his food he gnaws,
  • For to devour it he but thinks and struggles,
  • The like became those muzzles filth-begrimed
  • Of Cerberus the demon, who so thunders
  • Over the souls that they would fain be deaf.
  • We passed across the shadows, which subdues
  • The heavy rain-storm, and we placed our feet
  • Upon their vanity that person seems.
  • They all were lying prone upon the earth,
  • Excepting one, who sat upright as soon
  • As he beheld us passing on before him.
  • “O thou that art conducted through this Hell,”
  • He said to me, “recall me, if thou canst;
  • Thyself wast made before I was unmade.”
  • And I to him: “The anguish which thou hast
  • Perhaps doth draw thee out of my remembrance,
  • So that it seems not I have ever seen thee.
  • But tell me who thou art, that in so doleful
  • A place art put, and in such punishment,
  • If some are greater, none is so displeasing.”
  • And he to me: “Thy city, which is full
  • Of envy so that now the sack runs over,
  • Held me within it in the life serene.
  • You citizens were wont to call me Ciacco;
  • For the pernicious sin of gluttony
  • I, as thou seest, am battered by this rain.
  • And I, sad soul, am not the only one,
  • For all these suffer the like penalty
  • For the like sin;” and word no more spake he.
  • I answered him: “Ciacco, thy wretchedness
  • Weighs on me so that it to weep invites me;
  • But tell me, if thou knowest, to what shall come
  • The citizens of the divided city;
  • If any there be just; and the occasion
  • Tell me why so much discord has assailed it.”
  • And he to me: “They, after long contention,
  • Will come to bloodshed; and the rustic party
  • Will drive the other out with much offence.
  • Then afterwards behoves it this one fall
  • Within three suns, and rise again the other
  • By force of him who now is on the coast.
  • High will it hold its forehead a long while,
  • Keeping the other under heavy burdens,
  • Howe’er it weeps thereat and is indignant.
  • The just are two, and are not understood there;
  • Envy and Arrogance and Avarice
  • Are the three sparks that have all hearts enkindled.”
  • Here ended he his tearful utterance;
  • And I to him: “I wish thee still to teach me,
  • And make a gift to me of further speech.
  • Farinata and Tegghiaio, once so worthy,
  • Jacopo Rusticucci, Arrigo, and Mosca,
  • And others who on good deeds set their thoughts,
  • Say where they are, and cause that I may know them;
  • For great desire constraineth me to learn
  • If Heaven doth sweeten them, or Hell envenom.”
  • And he: “They are among the blacker souls;
  • A different sin downweighs them to the bottom;
  • If thou so far descendest, thou canst see them.
  • But when thou art again in the sweet world,
  • I pray thee to the mind of others bring me;
  • No more I tell thee and no more I answer.”
  • Then his straightforward eyes he turned askance,
  • Eyed me a little, and then bowed his head;
  • He fell therewith prone like the other blind.
  • And the Guide said to me: “He wakes no more
  • This side the sound of the angelic trumpet;
  • When shall approach the hostile Potentate,
  • Each one shall find again his dismal tomb,
  • Shall reassume his flesh and his own figure,
  • Shall hear what through eternity re-echoes.”
  • So we passed onward o’er the filthy mixture
  • Of shadows and of rain with footsteps slow,
  • Touching a little on the future life.
  • Wherefore I said: “Master, these torments here,
  • Will they increase after the mighty sentence,
  • Or lesser be, or will they be as burning?”
  • And he to me: “Return unto thy science,
  • Which wills, that as the thing more perfect is,
  • The more it feels of pleasure and of pain.
  • Albeit that this people maledict
  • To true perfection never can attain,
  • Hereafter more than now they look to be.”
  • Round in a circle by that road we went,
  • Speaking much more, which I do not repeat;
  • We came unto the point where the descent is;
  • There we found Plutus the great enemy.
  • Inferno: Canto VII
  • “Pape Satan, Pape Satan, Aleppe!”
  • Thus Plutus with his clucking voice began;
  • And that benignant Sage, who all things knew,
  • Said, to encourage me: “Let not thy fear
  • Harm thee; for any power that he may have
  • Shall not prevent thy going down this crag.”
  • Then he turned round unto that bloated lip,
  • And said: “Be silent, thou accursed wolf;
  • Consume within thyself with thine own rage.
  • Not causeless is this journey to the abyss;
  • Thus is it willed on high, where Michael wrought
  • Vengeance upon the proud adultery.”
  • Even as the sails inflated by the wind
  • Involved together fall when snaps the mast,
  • So fell the cruel monster to the earth.
  • Thus we descended into the fourth chasm,
  • Gaining still farther on the dolesome shore
  • Which all the woe of the universe insacks.
  • Justice of God, ah! who heaps up so many
  • New toils and sufferings as I beheld?
  • And why doth our transgression waste us so?
  • As doth the billow there upon Charybdis,
  • That breaks itself on that which it encounters,
  • So here the folk must dance their roundelay.
  • Here saw I people, more than elsewhere, many,
  • On one side and the other, with great howls,
  • Rolling weights forward by main force of chest.
  • They clashed together, and then at that point
  • Each one turned backward, rolling retrograde,
  • Crying, “Why keepest?” and, “Why squanderest thou?”
  • Thus they returned along the lurid circle
  • On either hand unto the opposite point,
  • Shouting their shameful metre evermore.
  • Then each, when he arrived there, wheeled about
  • Through his half-circle to another joust;
  • And I, who had my heart pierced as it were,
  • Exclaimed: “My Master, now declare to me
  • What people these are, and if all were clerks,
  • These shaven crowns upon the left of us.”
  • And he to me: “All of them were asquint
  • In intellect in the first life, so much
  • That there with measure they no spending made.
  • Clearly enough their voices bark it forth,
  • Whene’er they reach the two points of the circle,
  • Where sunders them the opposite defect.
  • Clerks those were who no hairy covering
  • Have on the head, and Popes and Cardinals,
  • In whom doth Avarice practise its excess.”
  • And I: “My Master, among such as these
  • I ought forsooth to recognise some few,
  • Who were infected with these maladies.”
  • And he to me: “Vain thought thou entertainest;
  • The undiscerning life which made them sordid
  • Now makes them unto all discernment dim.
  • Forever shall they come to these two buttings;
  • These from the sepulchre shall rise again
  • With the fist closed, and these with tresses shorn.
  • Ill giving and ill keeping the fair world
  • Have ta’en from them, and placed them in this scuffle;
  • Whate’er it be, no words adorn I for it.
  • Now canst thou, Son, behold the transient farce
  • Of goods that are committed unto Fortune,
  • For which the human race each other buffet;
  • For all the gold that is beneath the moon,
  • Or ever has been, of these weary souls
  • Could never make a single one repose.”
  • “Master,” I said to him, “now tell me also
  • What is this Fortune which thou speakest of,
  • That has the world’s goods so within its clutches?”
  • And he to me: “O creatures imbecile,
  • What ignorance is this which doth beset you?
  • Now will I have thee learn my judgment of her.
  • He whose omniscience everything transcends
  • The heavens created, and gave who should guide them,
  • That every part to every part may shine,
  • Distributing the light in equal measure;
  • He in like manner to the mundane splendours
  • Ordained a general ministress and guide,
  • That she might change at times the empty treasures
  • From race to race, from one blood to another,
  • Beyond resistance of all human wisdom.
  • Therefore one people triumphs, and another
  • Languishes, in pursuance of her judgment,
  • Which hidden is, as in the grass a serpent.
  • Your knowledge has no counterstand against her;
  • She makes provision, judges, and pursues
  • Her governance, as theirs the other gods.
  • Her permutations have not any truce;
  • Necessity makes her precipitate,
  • So often cometh who his turn obtains.
  • And this is she who is so crucified
  • Even by those who ought to give her praise,
  • Giving her blame amiss, and bad repute.
  • But she is blissful, and she hears it not;
  • Among the other primal creatures gladsome
  • She turns her sphere, and blissful she rejoices.
  • Let us descend now unto greater woe;
  • Already sinks each star that was ascending
  • When I set out, and loitering is forbidden.”
  • We crossed the circle to the other bank,
  • Near to a fount that boils, and pours itself
  • Along a gully that runs out of it.
  • The water was more sombre far than perse;
  • And we, in company with the dusky waves,
  • Made entrance downward by a path uncouth.
  • A marsh it makes, which has the name of Styx,
  • This tristful brooklet, when it has descended
  • Down to the foot of the malign gray shores.
  • And I, who stood intent upon beholding,
  • Saw people mud-besprent in that lagoon,
  • All of them naked and with angry look.
  • They smote each other not alone with hands,
  • But with the head and with the breast and feet,
  • Tearing each other piecemeal with their teeth.
  • Said the good Master: “Son, thou now beholdest
  • The souls of those whom anger overcame;
  • And likewise I would have thee know for certain
  • Beneath the water people are who sigh
  • And make this water bubble at the surface,
  • As the eye tells thee wheresoe’er it turns.
  • Fixed in the mire they say, ‘We sullen were
  • In the sweet air, which by the sun is gladdened,
  • Bearing within ourselves the sluggish reek;
  • Now we are sullen in this sable mire.’
  • This hymn do they keep gurgling in their throats,
  • For with unbroken words they cannot say it.”
  • Thus we went circling round the filthy fen
  • A great arc ’twixt the dry bank and the swamp,
  • With eyes turned unto those who gorge the mire;
  • Unto the foot of a tower we came at last.
  • Inferno: Canto VIII
  • I say, continuing, that long before
  • We to the foot of that high tower had come,
  • Our eyes went upward to the summit of it,
  • By reason of two flamelets we saw placed there,
  • And from afar another answer them,
  • So far, that hardly could the eye attain it.
  • And, to the sea of all discernment turned,
  • I said: “What sayeth this, and what respondeth
  • That other fire? and who are they that made it?”
  • And he to me: “Across the turbid waves
  • What is expected thou canst now discern,
  • If reek of the morass conceal it not.”
  • Cord never shot an arrow from itself
  • That sped away athwart the air so swift,
  • As I beheld a very little boat
  • Come o’er the water tow’rds us at that moment,
  • Under the guidance of a single pilot,
  • Who shouted, “Now art thou arrived, fell soul?”
  • “Phlegyas, Phlegyas, thou criest out in vain
  • For this once,” said my Lord; “thou shalt not have us
  • Longer than in the passing of the slough.”
  • As he who listens to some great deceit
  • That has been done to him, and then resents it,
  • Such became Phlegyas, in his gathered wrath.
  • My Guide descended down into the boat,
  • And then he made me enter after him,
  • And only when I entered seemed it laden.
  • Soon as the Guide and I were in the boat,
  • The antique prow goes on its way, dividing
  • More of the water than ’tis wont with others.
  • While we were running through the dead canal,
  • Uprose in front of me one full of mire,
  • And said, “Who ’rt thou that comest ere the hour?”
  • And I to him: “Although I come, I stay not;
  • But who art thou that hast become so squalid?”
  • “Thou seest that I am one who weeps,” he answered.
  • And I to him: “With weeping and with wailing,
  • Thou spirit maledict, do thou remain;
  • For thee I know, though thou art all defiled.”
  • Then stretched he both his hands unto the boat;
  • Whereat my wary Master thrust him back,
  • Saying, “Away there with the other dogs!”
  • Thereafter with his arms he clasped my neck;
  • He kissed my face, and said: “Disdainful soul,
  • Blessed be she who bore thee in her bosom.
  • That was an arrogant person in the world;
  • Goodness is none, that decks his memory;
  • So likewise here his shade is furious.
  • How many are esteemed great kings up there,
  • Who here shall be like unto swine in mire,
  • Leaving behind them horrible dispraises!”
  • And I: “My Master, much should I be pleased,
  • If I could see him soused into this broth,
  • Before we issue forth out of the lake.”
  • And he to me: “Ere unto thee the shore
  • Reveal itself, thou shalt be satisfied;
  • Such a desire ’tis meet thou shouldst enjoy.”
  • A little after that, I saw such havoc
  • Made of him by the people of the mire,
  • That still I praise and thank my God for it.
  • They all were shouting, “At Philippo Argenti!”
  • And that exasperate spirit Florentine
  • Turned round upon himself with his own teeth.
  • We left him there, and more of him I tell not;
  • But on mine ears there smote a lamentation,
  • Whence forward I intent unbar mine eyes.
  • And the good Master said: “Even now, my Son,
  • The city draweth near whose name is Dis,
  • With the grave citizens, with the great throng.”
  • And I: “Its mosques already, Master, clearly
  • Within there in the valley I discern
  • Vermilion, as if issuing from the fire
  • They were.” And he to me: “The fire eternal
  • That kindles them within makes them look red,
  • As thou beholdest in this nether Hell.”
  • Then we arrived within the moats profound,
  • That circumvallate that disconsolate city;
  • The walls appeared to me to be of iron.
  • Not without making first a circuit wide,
  • We came unto a place where loud the pilot
  • Cried out to us, “Debark, here is the entrance.”
  • More than a thousand at the gates I saw
  • Out of the Heavens rained down, who angrily
  • Were saying, “Who is this that without death
  • Goes through the kingdom of the people dead?”
  • And my sagacious Master made a sign
  • Of wishing secretly to speak with them.
  • A little then they quelled their great disdain,
  • And said: “Come thou alone, and he begone
  • Who has so boldly entered these dominions.
  • Let him return alone by his mad road;
  • Try, if he can; for thou shalt here remain,
  • Who hast escorted him through such dark regions.”
  • Think, Reader, if I was discomforted
  • At utterance of the accursed words;
  • For never to return here I believed.
  • “O my dear Guide, who more than seven times
  • Hast rendered me security, and drawn me
  • From imminent peril that before me stood,
  • Do not desert me,” said I, “thus undone;
  • And if the going farther be denied us,
  • Let us retrace our steps together swiftly.”
  • And that Lord, who had led me thitherward,
  • Said unto me: “Fear not; because our passage
  • None can take from us, it by Such is given.
  • But here await me, and thy weary spirit
  • Comfort and nourish with a better hope;
  • For in this nether world I will not leave thee.”
  • So onward goes and there abandons me
  • My Father sweet, and I remain in doubt,
  • For No and Yes within my head contend.
  • I could not hear what he proposed to them;
  • But with them there he did not linger long,
  • Ere each within in rivalry ran back.
  • They closed the portals, those our adversaries,
  • On my Lord’s breast, who had remained without
  • And turned to me with footsteps far between.
  • His eyes cast down, his forehead shorn had he
  • Of all its boldness, and he said, with sighs,
  • “Who has denied to me the dolesome houses?”
  • And unto me: “Thou, because I am angry,
  • Fear not, for I will conquer in the trial,
  • Whatever for defence within be planned.
  • This arrogance of theirs is nothing new;
  • For once they used it at less secret gate,
  • Which finds itself without a fastening still.
  • O’er it didst thou behold the dead inscription;
  • And now this side of it descends the steep,
  • Passing across the circles without escort,
  • One by whose means the city shall be opened.”
  • Inferno: Canto IX
  • That hue which cowardice brought out on me,
  • Beholding my Conductor backward turn,
  • Sooner repressed within him his new colour.
  • He stopped attentive, like a man who listens,
  • Because the eye could not conduct him far
  • Through the black air, and through the heavy fog.
  • “Still it behoveth us to win the fight,”
  • Began he; “Else. . .Such offered us herself. . .
  • O how I long that some one here arrive!”
  • Well I perceived, as soon as the beginning
  • He covered up with what came afterward,
  • That they were words quite different from the first;
  • But none the less his saying gave me fear,
  • Because I carried out the broken phrase,
  • Perhaps to a worse meaning than he had.
  • “Into this bottom of the doleful conch
  • Doth any e’er descend from the first grade,
  • Which for its pain has only hope cut off?”
  • This question put I; and he answered me:
  • “Seldom it comes to pass that one of us
  • Maketh the journey upon which I go.
  • True is it, once before I here below
  • Was conjured by that pitiless Erictho,
  • Who summoned back the shades unto their bodies.
  • Naked of me short while the flesh had been,
  • Before within that wall she made me enter,
  • To bring a spirit from the circle of Judas;
  • That is the lowest region and the darkest,
  • And farthest from the heaven which circles all.
  • Well know I the way; therefore be reassured.
  • This fen, which a prodigious stench exhales,
  • Encompasses about the city dolent,
  • Where now we cannot enter without anger.”
  • And more he said, but not in mind I have it;
  • Because mine eye had altogether drawn me
  • Tow’rds the high tower with the red-flaming summit,
  • Where in a moment saw I swift uprisen
  • The three infernal Furies stained with blood,
  • Who had the limbs of women and their mien,
  • And with the greenest hydras were begirt;
  • Small serpents and cerastes were their tresses,
  • Wherewith their horrid temples were entwined.
  • And he who well the handmaids of the Queen
  • Of everlasting lamentation knew,
  • Said unto me: “Behold the fierce Erinnys.
  • This is Megaera, on the left-hand side;
  • She who is weeping on the right, Alecto;
  • Tisiphone is between;” and then was silent.
  • Each one her breast was rending with her nails;
  • They beat them with their palms, and cried so loud,
  • That I for dread pressed close unto the Poet.
  • “Medusa come, so we to stone will change him!”
  • All shouted looking down; “in evil hour
  • Avenged we not on Theseus his assault!”
  • “Turn thyself round, and keep thine eyes close shut,
  • For if the Gorgon appear, and thou shouldst see it,
  • No more returning upward would there be.”
  • Thus said the Master; and he turned me round
  • Himself, and trusted not unto my hands
  • So far as not to blind me with his own.
  • O ye who have undistempered intellects,
  • Observe the doctrine that conceals itself
  • Beneath the veil of the mysterious verses!
  • And now there came across the turbid waves
  • The clangour of a sound with terror fraught,
  • Because of which both of the margins trembled;
  • Not otherwise it was than of a wind
  • Impetuous on account of adverse heats,
  • That smites the forest, and, without restraint,
  • The branches rends, beats down, and bears away;
  • Right onward, laden with dust, it goes superb,
  • And puts to flight the wild beasts and the shepherds.
  • Mine eyes he loosed, and said: “Direct the nerve
  • Of vision now along that ancient foam,
  • There yonder where that smoke is most intense.”
  • Even as the frogs before the hostile serpent
  • Across the water scatter all abroad,
  • Until each one is huddled in the earth.
  • More than a thousand ruined souls I saw,
  • Thus fleeing from before one who on foot
  • Was passing o’er the Styx with soles unwet.
  • From off his face he fanned that unctuous air,
  • Waving his left hand oft in front of him,
  • And only with that anguish seemed he weary.
  • Well I perceived one sent from Heaven was he,
  • And to the Master turned; and he made sign
  • That I should quiet stand, and bow before him.
  • Ah! how disdainful he appeared to me!
  • He reached the gate, and with a little rod
  • He opened it, for there was no resistance.
  • “O banished out of Heaven, people despised!”
  • Thus he began upon the horrid threshold;
  • “Whence is this arrogance within you couched?
  • Wherefore recalcitrate against that will,
  • From which the end can never be cut off,
  • And which has many times increased your pain?
  • What helpeth it to butt against the fates?
  • Your Cerberus, if you remember well,
  • For that still bears his chin and gullet peeled.”
  • Then he returned along the miry road,
  • And spake no word to us, but had the look
  • Of one whom other care constrains and goads
  • Than that of him who in his presence is;
  • And we our feet directed tow’rds the city,
  • After those holy words all confident.
  • Within we entered without any contest;
  • And I, who inclination had to see
  • What the condition such a fortress holds,
  • Soon as I was within, cast round mine eye,
  • And see on every hand an ample plain,
  • Full of distress and torment terrible.
  • Even as at Arles, where stagnant grows the Rhone,
  • Even as at Pola near to the Quarnaro,
  • That shuts in Italy and bathes its borders,
  • The sepulchres make all the place uneven;
  • So likewise did they there on every side,
  • Saving that there the manner was more bitter;
  • For flames between the sepulchres were scattered,
  • By which they so intensely heated were,
  • That iron more so asks not any art.
  • All of their coverings uplifted were,
  • And from them issued forth such dire laments,
  • Sooth seemed they of the wretched and tormented.
  • And I: “My Master, what are all those people
  • Who, having sepulture within those tombs,
  • Make themselves audible by doleful sighs?”
  • And he to me: “Here are the Heresiarchs,
  • With their disciples of all sects, and much
  • More than thou thinkest laden are the tombs.
  • Here like together with its like is buried;
  • And more and less the monuments are heated.”
  • And when he to the right had turned, we passed
  • Between the torments and high parapets.
  • Inferno: Canto X
  • Now onward goes, along a narrow path
  • Between the torments and the city wall,
  • My Master, and I follow at his back.
  • “O power supreme, that through these impious circles
  • Turnest me,” I began, “as pleases thee,
  • Speak to me, and my longings satisfy;
  • The people who are lying in these tombs,
  • Might they be seen? already are uplifted
  • The covers all, and no one keepeth guard.”
  • And he to me: “They all will be closed up
  • When from Jehoshaphat they shall return
  • Here with the bodies they have left above.
  • Their cemetery have upon this side
  • With Epicurus all his followers,
  • Who with the body mortal make the soul;
  • But in the question thou dost put to me,
  • Within here shalt thou soon be satisfied,
  • And likewise in the wish thou keepest silent.”
  • And I: “Good Leader, I but keep concealed
  • From thee my heart, that I may speak the less,
  • Nor only now hast thou thereto disposed me.”
  • “O Tuscan, thou who through the city of fire
  • Goest alive, thus speaking modestly,
  • Be pleased to stay thy footsteps in this place.
  • Thy mode of speaking makes thee manifest
  • A native of that noble fatherland,
  • To which perhaps I too molestful was.”
  • Upon a sudden issued forth this sound
  • From out one of the tombs; wherefore I pressed,
  • Fearing, a little nearer to my Leader.
  • And unto me he said: “Turn thee; what dost thou?
  • Behold there Farinata who has risen;
  • From the waist upwards wholly shalt thou see him.”
  • I had already fixed mine eyes on his,
  • And he uprose erect with breast and front
  • E’en as if Hell he had in great despite.
  • And with courageous hands and prompt my Leader
  • Thrust me between the sepulchres towards him,
  • Exclaiming, “Let thy words explicit be.”
  • As soon as I was at the foot of his tomb
  • Somewhat he eyed me, and, as if disdainful,
  • Then asked of me, “Who were thine ancestors?”
  • I, who desirous of obeying was,
  • Concealed it not, but all revealed to him;
  • Whereat he raised his brows a little upward.
  • Then said he: “Fiercely adverse have they been
  • To me, and to my fathers, and my party;
  • So that two several times I scattered them.”
  • “If they were banished, they returned on all sides,”
  • I answered him, “the first time and the second;
  • But yours have not acquired that art aright.”
  • Then there uprose upon the sight, uncovered
  • Down to the chin, a shadow at his side;
  • I think that he had risen on his knees.
  • Round me he gazed, as if solicitude
  • He had to see if some one else were with me,
  • But after his suspicion was all spent,
  • Weeping, he said to me: “If through this blind
  • Prison thou goest by loftiness of genius,
  • Where is my son? and why is he not with thee?”
  • And I to him: “I come not of myself;
  • He who is waiting yonder leads me here,
  • Whom in disdain perhaps your Guido had.”
  • His language and the mode of punishment
  • Already unto me had read his name;
  • On that account my answer was so full.
  • Up starting suddenly, he cried out: “How
  • Saidst thou,—he had? Is he not still alive?
  • Does not the sweet light strike upon his eyes?”
  • When he became aware of some delay,
  • Which I before my answer made, supine
  • He fell again, and forth appeared no more.
  • But the other, magnanimous, at whose desire
  • I had remained, did not his aspect change,
  • Neither his neck he moved, nor bent his side.
  • “And if,” continuing his first discourse,
  • “They have that art,” he said, “not learned aright,
  • That more tormenteth me, than doth this bed.
  • But fifty times shall not rekindled be
  • The countenance of the Lady who reigns here,
  • Ere thou shalt know how heavy is that art;
  • And as thou wouldst to the sweet world return,
  • Say why that people is so pitiless
  • Against my race in each one of its laws?”
  • Whence I to him: “The slaughter and great carnage
  • Which have with crimson stained the Arbia, cause
  • Such orisons in our temple to be made.”
  • After his head he with a sigh had shaken,
  • “There I was not alone,” he said, “nor surely
  • Without a cause had with the others moved.
  • But there I was alone, where every one
  • Consented to the laying waste of Florence,
  • He who defended her with open face.”
  • “Ah! so hereafter may your seed repose,”
  • I him entreated, “solve for me that knot,
  • Which has entangled my conceptions here.
  • It seems that you can see, if I hear rightly,
  • Beforehand whatsoe’er time brings with it,
  • And in the present have another mode.”
  • “We see, like those who have imperfect sight,
  • The things,” he said, “that distant are from us;
  • So much still shines on us the Sovereign Ruler.
  • When they draw near, or are, is wholly vain
  • Our intellect, and if none brings it to us,
  • Not anything know we of your human state.
  • Hence thou canst understand, that wholly dead
  • Will be our knowledge from the moment when
  • The portal of the future shall be closed.”
  • Then I, as if compunctious for my fault,
  • Said: “Now, then, you will tell that fallen one,
  • That still his son is with the living joined.
  • And if just now, in answering, I was dumb,
  • Tell him I did it because I was thinking
  • Already of the error you have solved me.”
  • And now my Master was recalling me,
  • Wherefore more eagerly I prayed the spirit
  • That he would tell me who was with him there.
  • He said: “With more than a thousand here I lie;
  • Within here is the second Frederick,
  • And the Cardinal, and of the rest I speak not.”
  • Thereon he hid himself; and I towards
  • The ancient poet turned my steps, reflecting
  • Upon that saying, which seemed hostile to me.
  • He moved along; and afterward thus going,
  • He said to me, “Why art thou so bewildered?”
  • And I in his inquiry satisfied him.
  • “Let memory preserve what thou hast heard
  • Against thyself,” that Sage commanded me,
  • “And now attend here;” and he raised his finger.
  • “When thou shalt be before the radiance sweet
  • Of her whose beauteous eyes all things behold,
  • From her thou’lt know the journey of thy life.”
  • Unto the left hand then he turned his feet;
  • We left the wall, and went towards the middle,
  • Along a path that strikes into a valley,
  • Which even up there unpleasant made its stench.
  • Inferno: Canto XI
  • Upon the margin of a lofty bank
  • Which great rocks broken in a circle made,
  • We came upon a still more cruel throng;
  • And there, by reason of the horrible
  • Excess of stench the deep abyss throws out,
  • We drew ourselves aside behind the cover
  • Of a great tomb, whereon I saw a writing,
  • Which said: “Pope Anastasius I hold,
  • Whom out of the right way Photinus drew.”
  • “Slow it behoveth our descent to be,
  • So that the sense be first a little used
  • To the sad blast, and then we shall not heed it.”
  • The Master thus; and unto him I said,
  • “Some compensation find, that the time pass not
  • Idly;” and he: “Thou seest I think of that.
  • My son, upon the inside of these rocks,”
  • Began he then to say, “are three small circles,
  • From grade to grade, like those which thou art leaving.
  • They all are full of spirits maledict;
  • But that hereafter sight alone suffice thee,
  • Hear how and wherefore they are in constraint.
  • Of every malice that wins hate in Heaven,
  • Injury is the end; and all such end
  • Either by force or fraud afflicteth others.
  • But because fraud is man’s peculiar vice,
  • More it displeases God; and so stand lowest
  • The fraudulent, and greater dole assails them.
  • All the first circle of the Violent is;
  • But since force may be used against three persons,
  • In three rounds ’tis divided and constructed.
  • To God, to ourselves, and to our neighbour can we
  • Use force; I say on them and on their things,
  • As thou shalt hear with reason manifest.
  • A death by violence, and painful wounds,
  • Are to our neighbour given; and in his substance
  • Ruin, and arson, and injurious levies;
  • Whence homicides, and he who smites unjustly,
  • Marauders, and freebooters, the first round
  • Tormenteth all in companies diverse.
  • Man may lay violent hands upon himself
  • And his own goods; and therefore in the second
  • Round must perforce without avail repent
  • Whoever of your world deprives himself,
  • Who games, and dissipates his property,
  • And weepeth there, where he should jocund be.
  • Violence can be done the Deity,
  • In heart denying and blaspheming Him,
  • And by disdaining Nature and her bounty.
  • And for this reason doth the smallest round
  • Seal with its signet Sodom and Cahors,
  • And who, disdaining God, speaks from the heart.
  • Fraud, wherewithal is every conscience stung,
  • A man may practise upon him who trusts,
  • And him who doth no confidence imburse.
  • This latter mode, it would appear, dissevers
  • Only the bond of love which Nature makes;
  • Wherefore within the second circle nestle
  • Hypocrisy, flattery, and who deals in magic,
  • Falsification, theft, and simony,
  • Panders, and barrators, and the like filth.
  • By the other mode, forgotten is that love
  • Which Nature makes, and what is after added,
  • From which there is a special faith engendered.
  • Hence in the smallest circle, where the point is
  • Of the Universe, upon which Dis is seated,
  • Whoe’er betrays for ever is consumed.”
  • And I: “My Master, clear enough proceeds
  • Thy reasoning, and full well distinguishes
  • This cavern and the people who possess it.
  • But tell me, those within the fat lagoon,
  • Whom the wind drives, and whom the rain doth beat,
  • And who encounter with such bitter tongues,
  • Wherefore are they inside of the red city
  • Not punished, if God has them in his wrath,
  • And if he has not, wherefore in such fashion?”
  • And unto me he said: “Why wanders so
  • Thine intellect from that which it is wont?
  • Or, sooth, thy mind where is it elsewhere looking?
  • Hast thou no recollection of those words
  • With which thine Ethics thoroughly discusses
  • The dispositions three, that Heaven abides not,—
  • Incontinence, and Malice, and insane
  • Bestiality? and how Incontinence
  • Less God offendeth, and less blame attracts?
  • If thou regardest this conclusion well,
  • And to thy mind recallest who they are
  • That up outside are undergoing penance,
  • Clearly wilt thou perceive why from these felons
  • They separated are, and why less wroth
  • Justice divine doth smite them with its hammer.”
  • “O Sun, that healest all distempered vision,
  • Thou dost content me so, when thou resolvest,
  • That doubting pleases me no less than knowing!
  • Once more a little backward turn thee,” said I,
  • “There where thou sayest that usury offends
  • Goodness divine, and disengage the knot.”
  • “Philosophy,” he said, “to him who heeds it,
  • Noteth, not only in one place alone,
  • After what manner Nature takes her course
  • From Intellect Divine, and from its art;
  • And if thy Physics carefully thou notest,
  • After not many pages shalt thou find,
  • That this your art as far as possible
  • Follows, as the disciple doth the master;
  • So that your art is, as it were, God’s grandchild.
  • From these two, if thou bringest to thy mind
  • Genesis at the beginning, it behoves
  • Mankind to gain their life and to advance;
  • And since the usurer takes another way,
  • Nature herself and in her follower
  • Disdains he, for elsewhere he puts his hope.
  • But follow, now, as I would fain go on,
  • For quivering are the Fishes on the horizon,
  • And the Wain wholly over Caurus lies,
  • And far beyond there we descend the crag.”
  • Inferno: Canto XII
  • The place where to descend the bank we came
  • Was alpine, and from what was there, moreover,
  • Of such a kind that every eye would shun it.
  • Such as that ruin is which in the flank
  • Smote, on this side of Trent, the Adige,
  • Either by earthquake or by failing stay,
  • For from the mountain’s top, from which it moved,
  • Unto the plain the cliff is shattered so,
  • Some path ’twould give to him who was above;
  • Even such was the descent of that ravine,
  • And on the border of the broken chasm
  • The infamy of Crete was stretched along,
  • Who was conceived in the fictitious cow;
  • And when he us beheld, he bit himself,
  • Even as one whom anger racks within.
  • My Sage towards him shouted: “Peradventure
  • Thou think’st that here may be the Duke of Athens,
  • Who in the world above brought death to thee?
  • Get thee gone, beast, for this one cometh not
  • Instructed by thy sister, but he comes
  • In order to behold your punishments.”
  • As is that bull who breaks loose at the moment
  • In which he has received the mortal blow,
  • Who cannot walk, but staggers here and there,
  • The Minotaur beheld I do the like;
  • And he, the wary, cried: “Run to the passage;
  • While he wroth, ’tis well thou shouldst descend.”
  • Thus down we took our way o’er that discharge
  • Of stones, which oftentimes did move themselves
  • Beneath my feet, from the unwonted burden.
  • Thoughtful I went; and he said: “Thou art thinking
  • Perhaps upon this ruin, which is guarded
  • By that brute anger which just now I quenched.
  • Now will I have thee know, the other time
  • I here descended to the nether Hell,
  • This precipice had not yet fallen down.
  • But truly, if I well discern, a little
  • Before His coming who the mighty spoil
  • Bore off from Dis, in the supernal circle,
  • Upon all sides the deep and loathsome valley
  • Trembled so, that I thought the Universe
  • Was thrilled with love, by which there are who think
  • The world ofttimes converted into chaos;
  • And at that moment this primeval crag
  • Both here and elsewhere made such overthrow.
  • But fix thine eyes below; for draweth near
  • The river of blood, within which boiling is
  • Whoe’er by violence doth injure others.”
  • O blind cupidity, O wrath insane,
  • That spurs us onward so in our short life,
  • And in the eternal then so badly steeps us!
  • I saw an ample moat bent like a bow,
  • As one which all the plain encompasses,
  • Conformable to what my Guide had said.
  • And between this and the embankment’s foot
  • Centaurs in file were running, armed with arrows,
  • As in the world they used the chase to follow.
  • Beholding us descend, each one stood still,
  • And from the squadron three detached themselves,
  • With bows and arrows in advance selected;
  • And from afar one cried: “Unto what torment
  • Come ye, who down the hillside are descending?
  • Tell us from there; if not, I draw the bow.”
  • My Master said: “Our answer will we make
  • To Chiron, near you there; in evil hour,
  • That will of thine was evermore so hasty.”
  • Then touched he me, and said: “This one is Nessus,
  • Who perished for the lovely Dejanira,
  • And for himself, himself did vengeance take.
  • And he in the midst, who at his breast is gazing,
  • Is the great Chiron, who brought up Achilles;
  • That other Pholus is, who was so wrathful.
  • Thousands and thousands go about the moat
  • Shooting with shafts whatever soul emerges
  • Out of the blood, more than his crime allots.”
  • Near we approached unto those monsters fleet;
  • Chiron an arrow took, and with the notch
  • Backward upon his jaws he put his beard.
  • After he had uncovered his great mouth,
  • He said to his companions: “Are you ware
  • That he behind moveth whate’er he touches?
  • Thus are not wont to do the feet of dead men.”
  • And my good Guide, who now was at his breast,
  • Where the two natures are together joined,
  • Replied: “Indeed he lives, and thus alone
  • Me it behoves to show him the dark valley;
  • Necessity, and not delight, impels us.
  • Some one withdrew from singing Halleluja,
  • Who unto me committed this new office;
  • No thief is he, nor I a thievish spirit.
  • But by that virtue through which I am moving
  • My steps along this savage thoroughfare,
  • Give us some one of thine, to be with us,
  • And who may show us where to pass the ford,
  • And who may carry this one on his back;
  • For ’tis no spirit that can walk the air.”
  • Upon his right breast Chiron wheeled about,
  • And said to Nessus: “Turn and do thou guide them,
  • And warn aside, if other band may meet you.”
  • We with our faithful escort onward moved
  • Along the brink of the vermilion boiling,
  • Wherein the boiled were uttering loud laments.
  • People I saw within up to the eyebrows,
  • And the great Centaur said: “Tyrants are these,
  • Who dealt in bloodshed and in pillaging.
  • Here they lament their pitiless mischiefs; here
  • Is Alexander, and fierce Dionysius
  • Who upon Sicily brought dolorous years.
  • That forehead there which has the hair so black
  • Is Azzolin; and the other who is blond,
  • Obizzo is of Esti, who, in truth,
  • Up in the world was by his stepson slain.”
  • Then turned I to the Poet; and he said,
  • “Now he be first to thee, and second I.”
  • A little farther on the Centaur stopped
  • Above a folk, who far down as the throat
  • Seemed from that boiling stream to issue forth.
  • A shade he showed us on one side alone,
  • Saying: “He cleft asunder in God’s bosom
  • The heart that still upon the Thames is honoured.”
  • Then people saw I, who from out the river
  • Lifted their heads and also all the chest;
  • And many among these I recognised.
  • Thus ever more and more grew shallower
  • That blood, so that the feet alone it covered;
  • And there across the moat our passage was.
  • “Even as thou here upon this side beholdest
  • The boiling stream, that aye diminishes,”
  • The Centaur said, “I wish thee to believe
  • That on this other more and more declines
  • Its bed, until it reunites itself
  • Where it behoveth tyranny to groan.
  • Justice divine, upon this side, is goading
  • That Attila, who was a scourge on earth,
  • And Pyrrhus, and Sextus; and for ever milks
  • The tears which with the boiling it unseals
  • In Rinier da Corneto and Rinier Pazzo,
  • Who made upon the highways so much war.”
  • Then back he turned, and passed again the ford.
  • Inferno: Canto XIII
  • Not yet had Nessus reached the other side,
  • When we had put ourselves within a wood,
  • That was not marked by any path whatever.
  • Not foliage green, but of a dusky colour,
  • Not branches smooth, but gnarled and intertangled,
  • Not apple-trees were there, but thorns with poison.
  • Such tangled thickets have not, nor so dense,
  • Those savage wild beasts, that in hatred hold
  • ’Twixt Cecina and Corneto the tilled places.
  • There do the hideous Harpies make their nests,
  • Who chased the Trojans from the Strophades,
  • With sad announcement of impending doom;
  • Broad wings have they, and necks and faces human,
  • And feet with claws, and their great bellies fledged;
  • They make laments upon the wondrous trees.
  • And the good Master: “Ere thou enter farther,
  • Know that thou art within the second round,”
  • Thus he began to say, “and shalt be, till
  • Thou comest out upon the horrible sand;
  • Therefore look well around, and thou shalt see
  • Things that will credence give unto my speech.”
  • I heard on all sides lamentations uttered,
  • And person none beheld I who might make them,
  • Whence, utterly bewildered, I stood still.
  • I think he thought that I perhaps might think
  • So many voices issued through those trunks
  • From people who concealed themselves from us;
  • Therefore the Master said: “If thou break off
  • Some little spray from any of these trees,
  • The thoughts thou hast will wholly be made vain.”
  • Then stretched I forth my hand a little forward,
  • And plucked a branchlet off from a great thorn;
  • And the trunk cried, “Why dost thou mangle me?”
  • After it had become embrowned with blood,
  • It recommenced its cry: “Why dost thou rend me?
  • Hast thou no spirit of pity whatsoever?
  • Men once we were, and now are changed to trees;
  • Indeed, thy hand should be more pitiful,
  • Even if the souls of serpents we had been.”
  • As out of a green brand, that is on fire
  • At one of the ends, and from the other drips
  • And hisses with the wind that is escaping;
  • So from that splinter issued forth together
  • Both words and blood; whereat I let the tip
  • Fall, and stood like a man who is afraid.
  • “Had he been able sooner to believe,”
  • My Sage made answer, “O thou wounded soul,
  • What only in my verses he has seen,
  • Not upon thee had he stretched forth his hand;
  • Whereas the thing incredible has caused me
  • To put him to an act which grieveth me.
  • But tell him who thou wast, so that by way
  • Of some amends thy fame he may refresh
  • Up in the world, to which he can return.”
  • And the trunk said: “So thy sweet words allure me,
  • I cannot silent be; and you be vexed not,
  • That I a little to discourse am tempted.
  • I am the one who both keys had in keeping
  • Of Frederick’s heart, and turned them to and fro
  • So softly in unlocking and in locking,
  • That from his secrets most men I withheld;
  • Fidelity I bore the glorious office
  • So great, I lost thereby my sleep and pulses.
  • The courtesan who never from the dwelling
  • Of Caesar turned aside her strumpet eyes,
  • Death universal and the vice of courts,
  • Inflamed against me all the other minds,
  • And they, inflamed, did so inflame Augustus,
  • That my glad honours turned to dismal mournings.
  • My spirit, in disdainful exultation,
  • Thinking by dying to escape disdain,
  • Made me unjust against myself, the just.
  • I, by the roots unwonted of this wood,
  • Do swear to you that never broke I faith
  • Unto my lord, who was so worthy of honour;
  • And to the world if one of you return,
  • Let him my memory comfort, which is lying
  • Still prostrate from the blow that envy dealt it.”
  • Waited awhile, and then: “Since he is silent,”
  • The Poet said to me, “lose not the time,
  • But speak, and question him, if more may please thee.”
  • Whence I to him: “Do thou again inquire
  • Concerning what thou thinks’t will satisfy me;
  • For I cannot, such pity is in my heart.”
  • Therefore he recommenced: “So may the man
  • Do for thee freely what thy speech implores,
  • Spirit incarcerate, again be pleased
  • To tell us in what way the soul is bound
  • Within these knots; and tell us, if thou canst,
  • If any from such members e’er is freed.”
  • Then blew the trunk amain, and afterward
  • The wind was into such a voice converted:
  • “With brevity shall be replied to you.
  • When the exasperated soul abandons
  • The body whence it rent itself away,
  • Minos consigns it to the seventh abyss.
  • It falls into the forest, and no part
  • Is chosen for it; but where Fortune hurls it,
  • There like a grain of spelt it germinates.
  • It springs a sapling, and a forest tree;
  • The Harpies, feeding then upon its leaves,
  • Do pain create, and for the pain an outlet.
  • Like others for our spoils shall we return;
  • But not that any one may them revest,
  • For ’tis not just to have what one casts off.
  • Here we shall drag them, and along the dismal
  • Forest our bodies shall suspended be,
  • Each to the thorn of his molested shade.”
  • We were attentive still unto the trunk,
  • Thinking that more it yet might wish to tell us,
  • When by a tumult we were overtaken,
  • In the same way as he is who perceives
  • The boar and chase approaching to his stand,
  • Who hears the crashing of the beasts and branches;
  • And two behold! upon our left-hand side,
  • Naked and scratched, fleeing so furiously,
  • That of the forest, every fan they broke.
  • He who was in advance: “Now help, Death, help!”
  • And the other one, who seemed to lag too much,
  • Was shouting: “Lano, were not so alert
  • Those legs of thine at joustings of the Toppo!”
  • And then, perchance because his breath was failing,
  • He grouped himself together with a bush.
  • Behind them was the forest full of black
  • She-mastiffs, ravenous, and swift of foot
  • As greyhounds, who are issuing from the chain.
  • On him who had crouched down they set their teeth,
  • And him they lacerated piece by piece,
  • Thereafter bore away those aching members.
  • Thereat my Escort took me by the hand,
  • And led me to the bush, that all in vain
  • Was weeping from its bloody lacerations.
  • “O Jacopo,” it said, “of Sant’ Andrea,
  • What helped it thee of me to make a screen?
  • What blame have I in thy nefarious life?”
  • When near him had the Master stayed his steps,
  • He said: “Who wast thou, that through wounds so many
  • Art blowing out with blood thy dolorous speech?”
  • And he to us: “O souls, that hither come
  • To look upon the shameful massacre
  • That has so rent away from me my leaves,
  • Gather them up beneath the dismal bush;
  • I of that city was which to the Baptist
  • Changed its first patron, wherefore he for this
  • Forever with his art will make it sad.
  • And were it not that on the pass of Arno
  • Some glimpses of him are remaining still,
  • Those citizens, who afterwards rebuilt it
  • Upon the ashes left by Attila,
  • In vain had caused their labour to be done.
  • Of my own house I made myself a gibbet.”
  • Inferno: Canto XIV
  • Because the charity of my native place
  • Constrained me, gathered I the scattered leaves,
  • And gave them back to him, who now was hoarse.
  • Then came we to the confine, where disparted
  • The second round is from the third, and where
  • A horrible form of Justice is beheld.
  • Clearly to manifest these novel things,
  • I say that we arrived upon a plain,
  • Which from its bed rejecteth every plant;
  • The dolorous forest is a garland to it
  • All round about, as the sad moat to that;
  • There close upon the edge we stayed our feet.
  • The soil was of an arid and thick sand,
  • Not of another fashion made than that
  • Which by the feet of Cato once was pressed.
  • Vengeance of God, O how much oughtest thou
  • By each one to be dreaded, who doth read
  • That which was manifest unto mine eyes!
  • Of naked souls beheld I many herds,
  • Who all were weeping very miserably,
  • And over them seemed set a law diverse.
  • Supine upon the ground some folk were lying;
  • And some were sitting all drawn up together,
  • And others went about continually.
  • Those who were going round were far the more,
  • And those were less who lay down to their torment,
  • But had their tongues more loosed to lamentation.
  • O’er all the sand-waste, with a gradual fall,
  • Were raining down dilated flakes of fire,
  • As of the snow on Alp without a wind.
  • As Alexander, in those torrid parts
  • Of India, beheld upon his host
  • Flames fall unbroken till they reached the ground.
  • Whence he provided with his phalanxes
  • To trample down the soil, because the vapour
  • Better extinguished was while it was single;
  • Thus was descending the eternal heat,
  • Whereby the sand was set on fire, like tinder
  • Beneath the steel, for doubling of the dole.
  • Without repose forever was the dance
  • Of miserable hands, now there, now here,
  • Shaking away from off them the fresh gleeds.
  • “Master,” began I, “thou who overcomest
  • All things except the demons dire, that issued
  • Against us at the entrance of the gate,
  • Who is that mighty one who seems to heed not
  • The fire, and lieth lowering and disdainful,
  • So that the rain seems not to ripen him?”
  • And he himself, who had become aware
  • That I was questioning my Guide about him,
  • Cried: “Such as I was living, am I, dead.
  • If Jove should weary out his smith, from whom
  • He seized in anger the sharp thunderbolt,
  • Wherewith upon the last day I was smitten,
  • And if he wearied out by turns the others
  • In Mongibello at the swarthy forge,
  • Vociferating, ‘Help, good Vulcan, help!’
  • Even as he did there at the fight of Phlegra,
  • And shot his bolts at me with all his might,
  • He would not have thereby a joyous vengeance.”
  • Then did my Leader speak with such great force,
  • That I had never heard him speak so loud:
  • “O Capaneus, in that is not extinguished
  • Thine arrogance, thou punished art the more;
  • Not any torment, saving thine own rage,
  • Would be unto thy fury pain complete.”
  • Then he turned round to me with better lip,
  • Saying: “One of the Seven Kings was he
  • Who Thebes besieged, and held, and seems to hold
  • God in disdain, and little seems to prize him;
  • But, as I said to him, his own despites
  • Are for his breast the fittest ornaments.
  • Now follow me, and mind thou do not place
  • As yet thy feet upon the burning sand,
  • But always keep them close unto the wood.”
  • Speaking no word, we came to where there gushes
  • Forth from the wood a little rivulet,
  • Whose redness makes my hair still stand on end.
  • As from the Bulicame springs the brooklet,
  • The sinful women later share among them,
  • So downward through the sand it went its way.
  • The bottom of it, and both sloping banks,
  • Were made of stone, and the margins at the side;
  • Whence I perceived that there the passage was.
  • “In all the rest which I have shown to thee
  • Since we have entered in within the gate
  • Whose threshold unto no one is denied,
  • Nothing has been discovered by thine eyes
  • So notable as is the present river,
  • Which all the little flames above it quenches.”
  • These words were of my Leader; whence I prayed him
  • That he would give me largess of the food,
  • For which he had given me largess of desire.
  • “In the mid-sea there sits a wasted land,”
  • Said he thereafterward, “whose name is Crete,
  • Under whose king the world of old was chaste.
  • There is a mountain there, that once was glad
  • With waters and with leaves, which was called Ida;
  • Now ’tis deserted, as a thing worn out.
  • Rhea once chose it for the faithful cradle
  • Of her own son; and to conceal him better,
  • Whene’er he cried, she there had clamours made.
  • A grand old man stands in the mount erect,
  • Who holds his shoulders turned tow’rds Damietta,
  • And looks at Rome as if it were his mirror.
  • His head is fashioned of refined gold,
  • And of pure silver are the arms and breast;
  • Then he is brass as far down as the fork.
  • From that point downward all is chosen iron,
  • Save that the right foot is of kiln-baked clay,
  • And more he stands on that than on the other.
  • Each part, except the gold, is by a fissure
  • Asunder cleft, that dripping is with tears,
  • Which gathered together perforate that cavern.
  • From rock to rock they fall into this valley;
  • Acheron, Styx, and Phlegethon they form;
  • Then downward go along this narrow sluice
  • Unto that point where is no more descending.
  • They form Cocytus; what that pool may be
  • Thou shalt behold, so here ’tis not narrated.”
  • And I to him: “If so the present runnel
  • Doth take its rise in this way from our world,
  • Why only on this verge appears it to us?”
  • And he to me: “Thou knowest the place is round,
  • And notwithstanding thou hast journeyed far,
  • Still to the left descending to the bottom,
  • Thou hast not yet through all the circle turned.
  • Therefore if something new appear to us,
  • It should not bring amazement to thy face.”
  • And I again: “Master, where shall be found
  • Lethe and Phlegethon, for of one thou’rt silent,
  • And sayest the other of this rain is made?”
  • “In all thy questions truly thou dost please me,”
  • Replied he; “but the boiling of the red
  • Water might well solve one of them thou makest.
  • Thou shalt see Lethe, but outside this moat,
  • There where the souls repair to lave themselves,
  • When sin repented of has been removed.”
  • Then said he: “It is time now to abandon
  • The wood; take heed that thou come after me;
  • A way the margins make that are not burning,
  • And over them all vapours are extinguished.”
  • Inferno: Canto XV
  • Now bears us onward one of the hard margins,
  • And so the brooklet’s mist o’ershadows it,
  • From fire it saves the water and the dikes.
  • Even as the Flemings, ’twixt Cadsand and Bruges,
  • Fearing the flood that tow’rds them hurls itself,
  • Their bulwarks build to put the sea to flight;
  • And as the Paduans along the Brenta,
  • To guard their villas and their villages,
  • Or ever Chiarentana feel the heat;
  • In such similitude had those been made,
  • Albeit not so lofty nor so thick,
  • Whoever he might be, the master made them.
  • Now were we from the forest so remote,
  • I could not have discovered where it was,
  • Even if backward I had turned myself,
  • When we a company of souls encountered,
  • Who came beside the dike, and every one
  • Gazed at us, as at evening we are wont
  • To eye each other under a new moon,
  • And so towards us sharpened they their brows
  • As an old tailor at the needle’s eye.
  • Thus scrutinised by such a family,
  • By some one I was recognised, who seized
  • My garment’s hem, and cried out, “What a marvel!”
  • And I, when he stretched forth his arm to me,
  • On his baked aspect fastened so mine eyes,
  • That the scorched countenance prevented not
  • His recognition by my intellect;
  • And bowing down my face unto his own,
  • I made reply, “Are you here, Ser Brunetto?”
  • And he: “May’t not displease thee, O my son,
  • If a brief space with thee Brunetto Latini
  • Backward return and let the trail go on.”
  • I said to him: “With all my power I ask it;
  • And if you wish me to sit down with you,
  • I will, if he please, for I go with him.”
  • “O son,” he said, “whoever of this herd
  • A moment stops, lies then a hundred years,
  • Nor fans himself when smiteth him the fire.
  • Therefore go on; I at thy skirts will come,
  • And afterward will I rejoin my band,
  • Which goes lamenting its eternal doom.”
  • I did not dare to go down from the road
  • Level to walk with him; but my head bowed
  • I held as one who goeth reverently.
  • And he began: “What fortune or what fate
  • Before the last day leadeth thee down here?
  • And who is this that showeth thee the way?”
  • “Up there above us in the life serene,”
  • I answered him, “I lost me in a valley,
  • Or ever yet my age had been completed.
  • But yestermorn I turned my back upon it;
  • This one appeared to me, returning thither,
  • And homeward leadeth me along this road.”
  • And he to me: “If thou thy star do follow,
  • Thou canst not fail thee of a glorious port,
  • If well I judged in the life beautiful.
  • And if I had not died so prematurely,
  • Seeing Heaven thus benignant unto thee,
  • I would have given thee comfort in the work.
  • But that ungrateful and malignant people,
  • Which of old time from Fesole descended,
  • And smacks still of the mountain and the granite,
  • Will make itself, for thy good deeds, thy foe;
  • And it is right; for among crabbed sorbs
  • It ill befits the sweet fig to bear fruit.
  • Old rumour in the world proclaims them blind;
  • A people avaricious, envious, proud;
  • Take heed that of their customs thou do cleanse thee.
  • Thy fortune so much honour doth reserve thee,
  • One party and the other shall be hungry
  • For thee; but far from goat shall be the grass.
  • Their litter let the beasts of Fesole
  • Make of themselves, nor let them touch the plant,
  • If any still upon their dunghill rise,
  • In which may yet revive the consecrated
  • Seed of those Romans, who remained there when
  • The nest of such great malice it became.”
  • “If my entreaty wholly were fulfilled,”
  • Replied I to him, “not yet would you be
  • In banishment from human nature placed;
  • For in my mind is fixed, and touches now
  • My heart the dear and good paternal image
  • Of you, when in the world from hour to hour
  • You taught me how a man becomes eternal;
  • And how much I am grateful, while I live
  • Behoves that in my language be discerned.
  • What you narrate of my career I write,
  • And keep it to be glossed with other text
  • By a Lady who can do it, if I reach her.
  • This much will I have manifest to you;
  • Provided that my conscience do not chide me,
  • For whatsoever Fortune I am ready.
  • Such handsel is not new unto mine ears;
  • Therefore let Fortune turn her wheel around
  • As it may please her, and the churl his mattock.”
  • My Master thereupon on his right cheek
  • Did backward turn himself, and looked at me;
  • Then said: “He listeneth well who noteth it.”
  • Nor speaking less on that account, I go
  • With Ser Brunetto, and I ask who are
  • His most known and most eminent companions.
  • And he to me: “To know of some is well;
  • Of others it were laudable to be silent,
  • For short would be the time for so much speech.
  • Know them in sum, that all of them were clerks,
  • And men of letters great and of great fame,
  • In the world tainted with the selfsame sin.
  • Priscian goes yonder with that wretched crowd,
  • And Francis of Accorso; and thou hadst seen there
  • If thou hadst had a hankering for such scurf,
  • That one, who by the Servant of the Servants
  • From Arno was transferred to Bacchiglione,
  • Where he has left his sin-excited nerves.
  • More would I say, but coming and discoursing
  • Can be no longer; for that I behold
  • New smoke uprising yonder from the sand.
  • A people comes with whom I may not be;
  • Commended unto thee be my Tesoro,
  • In which I still live, and no more I ask.”
  • Then he turned round, and seemed to be of those
  • Who at Verona run for the Green Mantle
  • Across the plain; and seemed to be among them
  • The one who wins, and not the one who loses.
  • Inferno: Canto XVI
  • Now was I where was heard the reverberation
  • Of water falling into the next round,
  • Like to that humming which the beehives make,
  • When shadows three together started forth,
  • Running, from out a company that passed
  • Beneath the rain of the sharp martyrdom.
  • Towards us came they, and each one cried out:
  • “Stop, thou; for by thy garb to us thou seemest
  • To be some one of our depraved city.”
  • Ah me! what wounds I saw upon their limbs,
  • Recent and ancient by the flames burnt in!
  • It pains me still but to remember it.
  • Unto their cries my Teacher paused attentive;
  • He turned his face towards me, and “Now wait,”
  • He said; “to these we should be courteous.
  • And if it were not for the fire that darts
  • The nature of this region, I should say
  • That haste were more becoming thee than them.”
  • As soon as we stood still, they recommenced
  • The old refrain, and when they overtook us,
  • Formed of themselves a wheel, all three of them.
  • As champions stripped and oiled are wont to do,
  • Watching for their advantage and their hold,
  • Before they come to blows and thrusts between them,
  • Thus, wheeling round, did every one his visage
  • Direct to me, so that in opposite wise
  • His neck and feet continual journey made.
  • And, “If the misery of this soft place
  • Bring in disdain ourselves and our entreaties,”
  • Began one, “and our aspect black and blistered,
  • Let the renown of us thy mind incline
  • To tell us who thou art, who thus securely
  • Thy living feet dost move along through Hell.
  • He in whose footprints thou dost see me treading,
  • Naked and skinless though he now may go,
  • Was of a greater rank than thou dost think;
  • He was the grandson of the good Gualdrada;
  • His name was Guidoguerra, and in life
  • Much did he with his wisdom and his sword.
  • The other, who close by me treads the sand,
  • Tegghiaio Aldobrandi is, whose fame
  • Above there in the world should welcome be.
  • And I, who with them on the cross am placed,
  • Jacopo Rusticucci was; and truly
  • My savage wife, more than aught else, doth harm me.”
  • Could I have been protected from the fire,
  • Below I should have thrown myself among them,
  • And think the Teacher would have suffered it;
  • But as I should have burned and baked myself,
  • My terror overmastered my good will,
  • Which made me greedy of embracing them.
  • Then I began: “Sorrow and not disdain
  • Did your condition fix within me so,
  • That tardily it wholly is stripped off,
  • As soon as this my Lord said unto me
  • Words, on account of which I thought within me
  • That people such as you are were approaching.
  • I of your city am; and evermore
  • Your labours and your honourable names
  • I with affection have retraced and heard.
  • I leave the gall, and go for the sweet fruits
  • Promised to me by the veracious Leader;
  • But to the centre first I needs must plunge.”
  • “So may the soul for a long while conduct
  • Those limbs of thine,” did he make answer then,
  • “And so may thy renown shine after thee,
  • Valour and courtesy, say if they dwell
  • Within our city, as they used to do,
  • Or if they wholly have gone out of it;
  • For Guglielmo Borsier, who is in torment
  • With us of late, and goes there with his comrades,
  • Doth greatly mortify us with his words.”
  • “The new inhabitants and the sudden gains,
  • Pride and extravagance have in thee engendered,
  • Florence, so that thou weep’st thereat already!”
  • In this wise I exclaimed with face uplifted;
  • And the three, taking that for my reply,
  • Looked at each other, as one looks at truth.
  • “If other times so little it doth cost thee,”
  • Replied they all, “to satisfy another,
  • Happy art thou, thus speaking at thy will!
  • Therefore, if thou escape from these dark places,
  • And come to rebehold the beauteous stars,
  • When it shall pleasure thee to say, ‘I was,’
  • See that thou speak of us unto the people.”
  • Then they broke up the wheel, and in their flight
  • It seemed as if their agile legs were wings.
  • Not an Amen could possibly be said
  • So rapidly as they had disappeared;
  • Wherefore the Master deemed best to depart.
  • I followed him, and little had we gone,
  • Before the sound of water was so near us,
  • That speaking we should hardly have been heard.
  • Even as that stream which holdeth its own course
  • The first from Monte Veso tow’rds the East,
  • Upon the left-hand slope of Apennine,
  • Which is above called Acquacheta, ere
  • It down descendeth into its low bed,
  • And at Forli is vacant of that name,
  • Reverberates there above San Benedetto
  • From Alps, by falling at a single leap,
  • Where for a thousand there were room enough;
  • Thus downward from a bank precipitate,
  • We found resounding that dark-tinted water,
  • So that it soon the ear would have offended.
  • I had a cord around about me girt,
  • And therewithal I whilom had designed
  • To take the panther with the painted skin.
  • After I this had all from me unloosed,
  • As my Conductor had commanded me,
  • I reached it to him, gathered up and coiled,
  • Whereat he turned himself to the right side,
  • And at a little distance from the verge,
  • He cast it down into that deep abyss.
  • “It must needs be some novelty respond,”
  • I said within myself, “to the new signal
  • The Master with his eye is following so.”
  • Ah me! how very cautious men should be
  • With those who not alone behold the act,
  • But with their wisdom look into the thoughts!
  • He said to me: “Soon there will upward come
  • What I await; and what thy thought is dreaming
  • Must soon reveal itself unto thy sight.”
  • Aye to that truth which has the face of falsehood,
  • A man should close his lips as far as may be,
  • Because without his fault it causes shame;
  • But here I cannot; and, Reader, by the notes
  • Of this my Comedy to thee I swear,
  • So may they not be void of lasting favour,
  • Athwart that dense and darksome atmosphere
  • I saw a figure swimming upward come,
  • Marvellous unto every steadfast heart,
  • Even as he returns who goeth down
  • Sometimes to clear an anchor, which has grappled
  • Reef, or aught else that in the sea is hidden,
  • Who upward stretches, and draws in his feet.
  • Inferno: Canto XVII
  • “Behold the monster with the pointed tail,
  • Who cleaves the hills, and breaketh walls and weapons,
  • Behold him who infecteth all the world.”
  • Thus unto me my Guide began to say,
  • And beckoned him that he should come to shore,
  • Near to the confine of the trodden marble;
  • And that uncleanly image of deceit
  • Came up and thrust ashore its head and bust,
  • But on the border did not drag its tail.
  • The face was as the face of a just man,
  • Its semblance outwardly was so benign,
  • And of a serpent all the trunk beside.
  • Two paws it had, hairy unto the armpits;
  • The back, and breast, and both the sides it had
  • Depicted o’er with nooses and with shields.
  • With colours more, groundwork or broidery
  • Never in cloth did Tartars make nor Turks,
  • Nor were such tissues by Arachne laid.
  • As sometimes wherries lie upon the shore,
  • That part are in the water, part on land;
  • And as among the guzzling Germans there,
  • The beaver plants himself to wage his war;
  • So that vile monster lay upon the border,
  • Which is of stone, and shutteth in the sand.
  • His tail was wholly quivering in the void,
  • Contorting upwards the envenomed fork,
  • That in the guise of scorpion armed its point.
  • The Guide said: “Now perforce must turn aside
  • Our way a little, even to that beast
  • Malevolent, that yonder coucheth him.”
  • We therefore on the right side descended,
  • And made ten steps upon the outer verge,
  • Completely to avoid the sand and flame;
  • And after we are come to him, I see
  • A little farther off upon the sand
  • A people sitting near the hollow place.
  • Then said to me the Master: “So that full
  • Experience of this round thou bear away,
  • Now go and see what their condition is.
  • There let thy conversation be concise;
  • Till thou returnest I will speak with him,
  • That he concede to us his stalwart shoulders.”
  • Thus farther still upon the outermost
  • Head of that seventh circle all alone
  • I went, where sat the melancholy folk.
  • Out of their eyes was gushing forth their woe;
  • This way, that way, they helped them with their hands
  • Now from the flames and now from the hot soil.
  • Not otherwise in summer do the dogs,
  • Now with the foot, now with the muzzle, when
  • By fleas, or flies, or gadflies, they are bitten.
  • When I had turned mine eyes upon the faces
  • Of some, on whom the dolorous fire is falling,
  • Not one of them I knew; but I perceived
  • That from the neck of each there hung a pouch,
  • Which certain colour had, and certain blazon;
  • And thereupon it seems their eyes are feeding.
  • And as I gazing round me come among them,
  • Upon a yellow pouch I azure saw
  • That had the face and posture of a lion.
  • Proceeding then the current of my sight,
  • Another of them saw I, red as blood,
  • Display a goose more white than butter is.
  • And one, who with an azure sow and gravid
  • Emblazoned had his little pouch of white,
  • Said unto me: “What dost thou in this moat?
  • Now get thee gone; and since thou’rt still alive,
  • Know that a neighbour of mine, Vitaliano,
  • Will have his seat here on my left-hand side.
  • A Paduan am I with these Florentines;
  • Full many a time they thunder in mine ears,
  • Exclaiming, ‘Come the sovereign cavalier,
  • He who shall bring the satchel with three goats;’”
  • Then twisted he his mouth, and forth he thrust
  • His tongue, like to an ox that licks its nose.
  • And fearing lest my longer stay might vex
  • Him who had warned me not to tarry long,
  • Backward I turned me from those weary souls.
  • I found my Guide, who had already mounted
  • Upon the back of that wild animal,
  • And said to me: “Now be both strong and bold.
  • Now we descend by stairways such as these;
  • Mount thou in front, for I will be midway,
  • So that the tail may have no power to harm thee.”
  • Such as he is who has so near the ague
  • Of quartan that his nails are blue already,
  • And trembles all, but looking at the shade;
  • Even such became I at those proffered words;
  • But shame in me his menaces produced,
  • Which maketh servant strong before good master.
  • I seated me upon those monstrous shoulders;
  • I wished to say, and yet the voice came not
  • As I believed, “Take heed that thou embrace me.”
  • But he, who other times had rescued me
  • In other peril, soon as I had mounted,
  • Within his arms encircled and sustained me,
  • And said: “Now, Geryon, bestir thyself;
  • The circles large, and the descent be little;
  • Think of the novel burden which thou hast.”
  • Even as the little vessel shoves from shore,
  • Backward, still backward, so he thence withdrew;
  • And when he wholly felt himself afloat,
  • There where his breast had been he turned his tail,
  • And that extended like an eel he moved,
  • And with his paws drew to himself the air.
  • A greater fear I do not think there was
  • What time abandoned Phaeton the reins,
  • Whereby the heavens, as still appears, were scorched;
  • Nor when the wretched Icarus his flanks
  • Felt stripped of feathers by the melting wax,
  • His father crying, “An ill way thou takest!”
  • Than was my own, when I perceived myself
  • On all sides in the air, and saw extinguished
  • The sight of everything but of the monster.
  • Onward he goeth, swimming slowly, slowly;
  • Wheels and descends, but I perceive it only
  • By wind upon my face and from below.
  • I heard already on the right the whirlpool
  • Making a horrible crashing under us;
  • Whence I thrust out my head with eyes cast downward.
  • Then was I still more fearful of the abyss;
  • Because I fires beheld, and heard laments,
  • Whereat I, trembling, all the closer cling.
  • I saw then, for before I had not seen it,
  • The turning and descending, by great horrors
  • That were approaching upon divers sides.
  • As falcon who has long been on the wing,
  • Who, without seeing either lure or bird,
  • Maketh the falconer say, “Ah me, thou stoopest,”
  • Descendeth weary, whence he started swiftly,
  • Thorough a hundred circles, and alights
  • Far from his master, sullen and disdainful;
  • Even thus did Geryon place us on the bottom,
  • Close to the bases of the rough-hewn rock,
  • And being disencumbered of our persons,
  • He sped away as arrow from the string.
  • Inferno: Canto XVIII
  • There is a place in Hell called Malebolge,
  • Wholly of stone and of an iron colour,
  • As is the circle that around it turns.
  • Right in the middle of the field malign
  • There yawns a well exceeding wide and deep,
  • Of which its place the structure will recount.
  • Round, then, is that enclosure which remains
  • Between the well and foot of the high, hard bank,
  • And has distinct in valleys ten its bottom.
  • As where for the protection of the walls
  • Many and many moats surround the castles,
  • The part in which they are a figure forms,
  • Just such an image those presented there;
  • And as about such strongholds from their gates
  • Unto the outer bank are little bridges,
  • So from the precipice’s base did crags
  • Project, which intersected dikes and moats,
  • Unto the well that truncates and collects them.
  • Within this place, down shaken from the back
  • Of Geryon, we found us; and the Poet
  • Held to the left, and I moved on behind.
  • Upon my right hand I beheld new anguish,
  • New torments, and new wielders of the lash,
  • Wherewith the foremost Bolgia was replete.
  • Down at the bottom were the sinners naked;
  • This side the middle came they facing us,
  • Beyond it, with us, but with greater steps;
  • Even as the Romans, for the mighty host,
  • The year of Jubilee, upon the bridge,
  • Have chosen a mode to pass the people over;
  • For all upon one side towards the Castle
  • Their faces have, and go unto St. Peter’s;
  • On the other side they go towards the Mountain.
  • This side and that, along the livid stone
  • Beheld I horned demons with great scourges,
  • Who cruelly were beating them behind.
  • Ah me! how they did make them lift their legs
  • At the first blows! and sooth not any one
  • The second waited for, nor for the third.
  • While I was going on, mine eyes by one
  • Encountered were; and straight I said: “Already
  • With sight of this one I am not unfed.”
  • Therefore I stayed my feet to make him out,
  • And with me the sweet Guide came to a stand,
  • And to my going somewhat back assented;
  • And he, the scourged one, thought to hide himself,
  • Lowering his face, but little it availed him;
  • For said I: “Thou that castest down thine eyes,
  • If false are not the features which thou bearest,
  • Thou art Venedico Caccianimico;
  • But what doth bring thee to such pungent sauces?”
  • And he to me: “Unwillingly I tell it;
  • But forces me thine utterance distinct,
  • Which makes me recollect the ancient world.
  • I was the one who the fair Ghisola
  • Induced to grant the wishes of the Marquis,
  • Howe’er the shameless story may be told.
  • Not the sole Bolognese am I who weeps here;
  • Nay, rather is this place so full of them,
  • That not so many tongues to-day are taught
  • ’Twixt Reno and Savena to say ‘sipa;’
  • And if thereof thou wishest pledge or proof,
  • Bring to thy mind our avaricious heart.”
  • While speaking in this manner, with his scourge
  • A demon smote him, and said: “Get thee gone
  • Pander, there are no women here for coin.”
  • I joined myself again unto mine Escort;
  • Thereafterward with footsteps few we came
  • To where a crag projected from the bank.
  • This very easily did we ascend,
  • And turning to the right along its ridge,
  • From those eternal circles we departed.
  • When we were there, where it is hollowed out
  • Beneath, to give a passage to the scourged,
  • The Guide said: “Wait, and see that on thee strike
  • The vision of those others evil-born,
  • Of whom thou hast not yet beheld the faces,
  • Because together with us they have gone.”
  • From the old bridge we looked upon the train
  • Which tow’rds us came upon the other border,
  • And which the scourges in like manner smite.
  • And the good Master, without my inquiring,
  • Said to me: “See that tall one who is coming,
  • And for his pain seems not to shed a tear;
  • Still what a royal aspect he retains!
  • That Jason is, who by his heart and cunning
  • The Colchians of the Ram made destitute.
  • He by the isle of Lemnos passed along
  • After the daring women pitiless
  • Had unto death devoted all their males.
  • There with his tokens and with ornate words
  • Did he deceive Hypsipyle, the maiden
  • Who first, herself, had all the rest deceived.
  • There did he leave her pregnant and forlorn;
  • Such sin unto such punishment condemns him,
  • And also for Medea is vengeance done.
  • With him go those who in such wise deceive;
  • And this sufficient be of the first valley
  • To know, and those that in its jaws it holds.”
  • We were already where the narrow path
  • Crosses athwart the second dike, and forms
  • Of that a buttress for another arch.
  • Thence we heard people, who are making moan
  • In the next Bolgia, snorting with their muzzles,
  • And with their palms beating upon themselves
  • The margins were incrusted with a mould
  • By exhalation from below, that sticks there,
  • And with the eyes and nostrils wages war.
  • The bottom is so deep, no place suffices
  • To give us sight of it, without ascending
  • The arch’s back, where most the crag impends.
  • Thither we came, and thence down in the moat
  • I saw a people smothered in a filth
  • That out of human privies seemed to flow;
  • And whilst below there with mine eye I search,
  • I saw one with his head so foul with ordure,
  • It was not clear if he were clerk or layman.
  • He screamed to me: “Wherefore art thou so eager
  • To look at me more than the other foul ones?”
  • And I to him: “Because, if I remember,
  • I have already seen thee with dry hair,
  • And thou’rt Alessio Interminei of Lucca;
  • Therefore I eye thee more than all the others.”
  • And he thereon, belabouring his pumpkin:
  • “The flatteries have submerged me here below,
  • Wherewith my tongue was never surfeited.”
  • Then said to me the Guide: “See that thou thrust
  • Thy visage somewhat farther in advance,
  • That with thine eyes thou well the face attain
  • Of that uncleanly and dishevelled drab,
  • Who there doth scratch herself with filthy nails,
  • And crouches now, and now on foot is standing.
  • Thais the harlot is it, who replied
  • Unto her paramour, when he said, ‘Have I
  • Great gratitude from thee?’—‘Nay, marvellous;’
  • And herewith let our sight be satisfied.”
  • Inferno: Canto XIX
  • O Simon Magus, O forlorn disciples,
  • Ye who the things of God, which ought to be
  • The brides of holiness, rapaciously
  • For silver and for gold do prostitute,
  • Now it behoves for you the trumpet sound,
  • Because in this third Bolgia ye abide.
  • We had already on the following tomb
  • Ascended to that portion of the crag
  • Which o’er the middle of the moat hangs plumb.
  • Wisdom supreme, O how great art thou showest
  • In heaven, in earth, and in the evil world,
  • And with what justice doth thy power distribute!
  • I saw upon the sides and on the bottom
  • The livid stone with perforations filled,
  • All of one size, and every one was round.
  • To me less ample seemed they not, nor greater
  • Than those that in my beautiful Saint John
  • Are fashioned for the place of the baptisers,
  • And one of which, not many years ago,
  • I broke for some one, who was drowning in it;
  • Be this a seal all men to undeceive.
  • Out of the mouth of each one there protruded
  • The feet of a transgressor, and the legs
  • Up to the calf, the rest within remained.
  • In all of them the soles were both on fire;
  • Wherefore the joints so violently quivered,
  • They would have snapped asunder withes and bands.
  • Even as the flame of unctuous things is wont
  • To move upon the outer surface only,
  • So likewise was it there from heel to point.
  • “Master, who is that one who writhes himself,
  • More than his other comrades quivering,”
  • I said, “and whom a redder flame is sucking?”
  • And he to me: “If thou wilt have me bear thee
  • Down there along that bank which lowest lies,
  • From him thou’lt know his errors and himself.”
  • And I: “What pleases thee, to me is pleasing;
  • Thou art my Lord, and knowest that I depart not
  • From thy desire, and knowest what is not spoken.”
  • Straightway upon the fourth dike we arrived;
  • We turned, and on the left-hand side descended
  • Down to the bottom full of holes and narrow.
  • And the good Master yet from off his haunch
  • Deposed me not, till to the hole he brought me
  • Of him who so lamented with his shanks.
  • “Whoe’er thou art, that standest upside down,
  • O doleful soul, implanted like a stake,”
  • To say began I, “if thou canst, speak out.”
  • I stood even as the friar who is confessing
  • The false assassin, who, when he is fixed,
  • Recalls him, so that death may be delayed.
  • And he cried out: “Dost thou stand there already,
  • Dost thou stand there already, Boniface?
  • By many years the record lied to me.
  • Art thou so early satiate with that wealth,
  • For which thou didst not fear to take by fraud
  • The beautiful Lady, and then work her woe?”
  • Such I became, as people are who stand,
  • Not comprehending what is answered them,
  • As if bemocked, and know not how to answer.
  • Then said Virgilius: “Say to him straightway,
  • ‘I am not he, I am not he thou thinkest.’”
  • And I replied as was imposed on me.
  • Whereat the spirit writhed with both his feet,
  • Then, sighing, with a voice of lamentation
  • Said to me: “Then what wantest thou of me?
  • If who I am thou carest so much to know,
  • That thou on that account hast crossed the bank,
  • Know that I vested was with the great mantle;
  • And truly was I son of the She-bear,
  • So eager to advance the cubs, that wealth
  • Above, and here myself, I pocketed.
  • Beneath my head the others are dragged down
  • Who have preceded me in simony,
  • Flattened along the fissure of the rock.
  • Below there I shall likewise fall, whenever
  • That one shall come who I believed thou wast,
  • What time the sudden question I proposed.
  • But longer I my feet already toast,
  • And here have been in this way upside down,
  • Than he will planted stay with reddened feet;
  • For after him shall come of fouler deed
  • From tow’rds the west a Pastor without law,
  • Such as befits to cover him and me.
  • New Jason will he be, of whom we read
  • In Maccabees; and as his king was pliant,
  • So he who governs France shall be to this one.”
  • I do not know if I were here too bold,
  • That him I answered only in this metre:
  • “I pray thee tell me now how great a treasure
  • Our Lord demanded of Saint Peter first,
  • Before he put the keys into his keeping?
  • Truly he nothing asked but ‘Follow me.’
  • Nor Peter nor the rest asked of Matthias
  • Silver or gold, when he by lot was chosen
  • Unto the place the guilty soul had lost.
  • Therefore stay here, for thou art justly punished,
  • And keep safe guard o’er the ill-gotten money,
  • Which caused thee to be valiant against Charles.
  • And were it not that still forbids it me
  • The reverence for the keys superlative
  • Thou hadst in keeping in the gladsome life,
  • I would make use of words more grievous still;
  • Because your avarice afflicts the world,
  • Trampling the good and lifting the depraved.
  • The Evangelist you Pastors had in mind,
  • When she who sitteth upon many waters
  • To fornicate with kings by him was seen;
  • The same who with the seven heads was born,
  • And power and strength from the ten horns received,
  • So long as virtue to her spouse was pleasing.
  • Ye have made yourselves a god of gold and silver;
  • And from the idolater how differ ye,
  • Save that he one, and ye a hundred worship?
  • Ah, Constantine! of how much ill was mother,
  • Not thy conversion, but that marriage dower
  • Which the first wealthy Father took from thee!”
  • And while I sang to him such notes as these,
  • Either that anger or that conscience stung him,
  • He struggled violently with both his feet.
  • I think in sooth that it my Leader pleased,
  • With such contented lip he listened ever
  • Unto the sound of the true words expressed.
  • Therefore with both his arms he took me up,
  • And when he had me all upon his breast,
  • Remounted by the way where he descended.
  • Nor did he tire to have me clasped to him;
  • But bore me to the summit of the arch
  • Which from the fourth dike to the fifth is passage.
  • There tenderly he laid his burden down,
  • Tenderly on the crag uneven and steep,
  • That would have been hard passage for the goats:
  • Thence was unveiled to me another valley.
  • Inferno: Canto XX
  • Of a new pain behoves me to make verses
  • And give material to the twentieth canto
  • Of the first song, which is of the submerged.
  • I was already thoroughly disposed
  • To peer down into the uncovered depth,
  • Which bathed itself with tears of agony;
  • And people saw I through the circular valley,
  • Silent and weeping, coming at the pace
  • Which in this world the Litanies assume.
  • As lower down my sight descended on them,
  • Wondrously each one seemed to be distorted
  • From chin to the beginning of the chest;
  • For tow’rds the reins the countenance was turned,
  • And backward it behoved them to advance,
  • As to look forward had been taken from them.
  • Perchance indeed by violence of palsy
  • Some one has been thus wholly turned awry;
  • But I ne’er saw it, nor believe it can be.
  • As God may let thee, Reader, gather fruit
  • From this thy reading, think now for thyself
  • How I could ever keep my face unmoistened,
  • When our own image near me I beheld
  • Distorted so, the weeping of the eyes
  • Along the fissure bathed the hinder parts.
  • Truly I wept, leaning upon a peak
  • Of the hard crag, so that my Escort said
  • To me: “Art thou, too, of the other fools?
  • Here pity lives when it is wholly dead;
  • Who is a greater reprobate than he
  • Who feels compassion at the doom divine?
  • Lift up, lift up thy head, and see for whom
  • Opened the earth before the Thebans’ eyes;
  • Wherefore they all cried: ‘Whither rushest thou,
  • Amphiaraus? Why dost leave the war?’
  • And downward ceased he not to fall amain
  • As far as Minos, who lays hold on all.
  • See, he has made a bosom of his shoulders!
  • Because he wished to see too far before him
  • Behind he looks, and backward goes his way:
  • Behold Tiresias, who his semblance changed,
  • When from a male a female he became,
  • His members being all of them transformed;
  • And afterwards was forced to strike once more
  • The two entangled serpents with his rod,
  • Ere he could have again his manly plumes.
  • That Aruns is, who backs the other’s belly,
  • Who in the hills of Luni, there where grubs
  • The Carrarese who houses underneath,
  • Among the marbles white a cavern had
  • For his abode; whence to behold the stars
  • And sea, the view was not cut off from him.
  • And she there, who is covering up her breasts,
  • Which thou beholdest not, with loosened tresses,
  • And on that side has all the hairy skin,
  • Was Manto, who made quest through many lands,
  • Afterwards tarried there where I was born;
  • Whereof I would thou list to me a little.
  • After her father had from life departed,
  • And the city of Bacchus had become enslaved,
  • She a long season wandered through the world.
  • Above in beauteous Italy lies a lake
  • At the Alp’s foot that shuts in Germany
  • Over Tyrol, and has the name Benaco.
  • By a thousand springs, I think, and more, is bathed,
  • ’Twixt Garda and Val Camonica, Pennino,
  • With water that grows stagnant in that lake.
  • Midway a place is where the Trentine Pastor,
  • And he of Brescia, and the Veronese
  • Might give his blessing, if he passed that way.
  • Sitteth Peschiera, fortress fair and strong,
  • To front the Brescians and the Bergamasks,
  • Where round about the bank descendeth lowest.
  • There of necessity must fall whatever
  • In bosom of Benaco cannot stay,
  • And grows a river down through verdant pastures.
  • Soon as the water doth begin to run,
  • No more Benaco is it called, but Mincio,
  • Far as Governo, where it falls in Po.
  • Not far it runs before it finds a plain
  • In which it spreads itself, and makes it marshy,
  • And oft ’tis wont in summer to be sickly.
  • Passing that way the virgin pitiless
  • Land in the middle of the fen descried,
  • Untilled and naked of inhabitants;
  • There to escape all human intercourse,
  • She with her servants stayed, her arts to practise
  • And lived, and left her empty body there.
  • The men, thereafter, who were scattered round,
  • Collected in that place, which was made strong
  • By the lagoon it had on every side;
  • They built their city over those dead bones,
  • And, after her who first the place selected,
  • Mantua named it, without other omen.
  • Its people once within more crowded were,
  • Ere the stupidity of Casalodi
  • From Pinamonte had received deceit.
  • Therefore I caution thee, if e’er thou hearest
  • Originate my city otherwise,
  • No falsehood may the verity defraud.”
  • And I: “My Master, thy discourses are
  • To me so certain, and so take my faith,
  • That unto me the rest would be spent coals.
  • But tell me of the people who are passing,
  • If any one note-worthy thou beholdest,
  • For only unto that my mind reverts.”
  • Then said he to me: “He who from the cheek
  • Thrusts out his beard upon his swarthy shoulders
  • Was, at the time when Greece was void of males,
  • So that there scarce remained one in the cradle,
  • An augur, and with Calchas gave the moment,
  • In Aulis, when to sever the first cable.
  • Eryphylus his name was, and so sings
  • My lofty Tragedy in some part or other;
  • That knowest thou well, who knowest the whole of it.
  • The next, who is so slender in the flanks,
  • Was Michael Scott, who of a verity
  • Of magical illusions knew the game.
  • Behold Guido Bonatti, behold Asdente,
  • Who now unto his leather and his thread
  • Would fain have stuck, but he too late repents.
  • Behold the wretched ones, who left the needle,
  • The spool and rock, and made them fortune-tellers;
  • They wrought their magic spells with herb and image.
  • But come now, for already holds the confines
  • Of both the hemispheres, and under Seville
  • Touches the ocean-wave, Cain and the thorns,
  • And yesternight the moon was round already;
  • Thou shouldst remember well it did not harm thee
  • From time to time within the forest deep.”
  • Thus spake he to me, and we walked the while.
  • Inferno: Canto XXI
  • From bridge to bridge thus, speaking other things
  • Of which my Comedy cares not to sing,
  • We came along, and held the summit, when
  • We halted to behold another fissure
  • Of Malebolge and other vain laments;
  • And I beheld it marvellously dark.
  • As in the Arsenal of the Venetians
  • Boils in the winter the tenacious pitch
  • To smear their unsound vessels o’er again,
  • For sail they cannot; and instead thereof
  • One makes his vessel new, and one recaulks
  • The ribs of that which many a voyage has made;
  • One hammers at the prow, one at the stern,
  • This one makes oars, and that one cordage twists,
  • Another mends the mainsail and the mizzen;
  • Thus, not by fire, but by the art divine,
  • Was boiling down below there a dense pitch
  • Which upon every side the bank belimed.
  • I saw it, but I did not see within it
  • Aught but the bubbles that the boiling raised,
  • And all swell up and resubside compressed.
  • The while below there fixedly I gazed,
  • My Leader, crying out: “Beware, beware!”
  • Drew me unto himself from where I stood.
  • Then I turned round, as one who is impatient
  • To see what it behoves him to escape,
  • And whom a sudden terror doth unman,
  • Who, while he looks, delays not his departure;
  • And I beheld behind us a black devil,
  • Running along upon the crag, approach.
  • Ah, how ferocious was he in his aspect!
  • And how he seemed to me in action ruthless,
  • With open wings and light upon his feet!
  • His shoulders, which sharp-pointed were and high,
  • A sinner did encumber with both haunches,
  • And he held clutched the sinews of the feet.
  • From off our bridge, he said: “O Malebranche,
  • Behold one of the elders of Saint Zita;
  • Plunge him beneath, for I return for others
  • Unto that town, which is well furnished with them.
  • All there are barrators, except Bonturo;
  • No into Yes for money there is changed.”
  • He hurled him down, and over the hard crag
  • Turned round, and never was a mastiff loosened
  • In so much hurry to pursue a thief.
  • The other sank, and rose again face downward;
  • But the demons, under cover of the bridge,
  • Cried: “Here the Santo Volto has no place!
  • Here swims one otherwise than in the Serchio;
  • Therefore, if for our gaffs thou wishest not,
  • Do not uplift thyself above the pitch.”
  • They seized him then with more than a hundred rakes;
  • They said: “It here behoves thee to dance covered,
  • That, if thou canst, thou secretly mayest pilfer.”
  • Not otherwise the cooks their scullions make
  • Immerse into the middle of the caldron
  • The meat with hooks, so that it may not float.
  • Said the good Master to me: “That it be not
  • Apparent thou art here, crouch thyself down
  • Behind a jag, that thou mayest have some screen;
  • And for no outrage that is done to me
  • Be thou afraid, because these things I know,
  • For once before was I in such a scuffle.”
  • Then he passed on beyond the bridge’s head,
  • And as upon the sixth bank he arrived,
  • Need was for him to have a steadfast front.
  • With the same fury, and the same uproar,
  • As dogs leap out upon a mendicant,
  • Who on a sudden begs, where’er he stops,
  • They issued from beneath the little bridge,
  • And turned against him all their grappling-irons;
  • But he cried out: “Be none of you malignant!
  • Before those hooks of yours lay hold of me,
  • Let one of you step forward, who may hear me,
  • And then take counsel as to grappling me.”
  • They all cried out: “Let Malacoda go;”
  • Whereat one started, and the rest stood still,
  • And he came to him, saying: “What avails it?”
  • “Thinkest thou, Malacoda, to behold me
  • Advanced into this place,” my Master said,
  • “Safe hitherto from all your skill of fence,
  • Without the will divine, and fate auspicious?
  • Let me go on, for it in Heaven is willed
  • That I another show this savage road.”
  • Then was his arrogance so humbled in him,
  • That he let fall his grapnel at his feet,
  • And to the others said: “Now strike him not.”
  • And unto me my Guide: “O thou, who sittest
  • Among the splinters of the bridge crouched down,
  • Securely now return to me again.”
  • Wherefore I started and came swiftly to him;
  • And all the devils forward thrust themselves,
  • So that I feared they would not keep their compact.
  • And thus beheld I once afraid the soldiers
  • Who issued under safeguard from Caprona,
  • Seeing themselves among so many foes.
  • Close did I press myself with all my person
  • Beside my Leader, and turned not mine eyes
  • From off their countenance, which was not good.
  • They lowered their rakes, and “Wilt thou have me hit him,”
  • They said to one another, “on the rump?”
  • And answered: “Yes; see that thou nick him with it.”
  • But the same demon who was holding parley
  • With my Conductor turned him very quickly,
  • And said: “Be quiet, be quiet, Scarmiglione;”
  • Then said to us: “You can no farther go
  • Forward upon this crag, because is lying
  • All shattered, at the bottom, the sixth arch.
  • And if it still doth please you to go onward,
  • Pursue your way along upon this rock;
  • Near is another crag that yields a path.
  • Yesterday, five hours later than this hour,
  • One thousand and two hundred sixty-six
  • Years were complete, that here the way was broken.
  • I send in that direction some of mine
  • To see if any one doth air himself;
  • Go ye with them; for they will not be vicious.
  • Step forward, Alichino and Calcabrina,”
  • Began he to cry out, “and thou, Cagnazzo;
  • And Barbariccia, do thou guide the ten.
  • Come forward, Libicocco and Draghignazzo,
  • And tusked Ciriatto and Graffiacane,
  • And Farfarello and mad Rubicante;
  • Search ye all round about the boiling pitch;
  • Let these be safe as far as the next crag,
  • That all unbroken passes o’er the dens.”
  • “O me! what is it, Master, that I see?
  • Pray let us go,” I said, “without an escort,
  • If thou knowest how, since for myself I ask none.
  • If thou art as observant as thy wont is,
  • Dost thou not see that they do gnash their teeth,
  • And with their brows are threatening woe to us?”
  • And he to me: “I will not have thee fear;
  • Let them gnash on, according to their fancy,
  • Because they do it for those boiling wretches.”
  • Along the left-hand dike they wheeled about;
  • But first had each one thrust his tongue between
  • His teeth towards their leader for a signal;
  • And he had made a trumpet of his rump.
  • Inferno: Canto XXII
  • I have erewhile seen horsemen moving camp,
  • Begin the storming, and their muster make,
  • And sometimes starting off for their escape;
  • Vaunt-couriers have I seen upon your land,
  • O Aretines, and foragers go forth,
  • Tournaments stricken, and the joustings run,
  • Sometimes with trumpets and sometimes with bells,
  • With kettle-drums, and signals of the castles,
  • And with our own, and with outlandish things,
  • But never yet with bagpipe so uncouth
  • Did I see horsemen move, nor infantry,
  • Nor ship by any sign of land or star.
  • We went upon our way with the ten demons;
  • Ah, savage company! but in the church
  • With saints, and in the tavern with the gluttons!
  • Ever upon the pitch was my intent,
  • To see the whole condition of that Bolgia,
  • And of the people who therein were burned.
  • Even as the dolphins, when they make a sign
  • To mariners by arching of the back,
  • That they should counsel take to save their vessel,
  • Thus sometimes, to alleviate his pain,
  • One of the sinners would display his back,
  • And in less time conceal it than it lightens.
  • As on the brink of water in a ditch
  • The frogs stand only with their muzzles out,
  • So that they hide their feet and other bulk,
  • So upon every side the sinners stood;
  • But ever as Barbariccia near them came,
  • Thus underneath the boiling they withdrew.
  • I saw, and still my heart doth shudder at it,
  • One waiting thus, even as it comes to pass
  • One frog remains, and down another dives;
  • And Graffiacan, who most confronted him,
  • Grappled him by his tresses smeared with pitch,
  • And drew him up, so that he seemed an otter.
  • I knew, before, the names of all of them,
  • So had I noted them when they were chosen,
  • And when they called each other, listened how.
  • “O Rubicante, see that thou do lay
  • Thy claws upon him, so that thou mayst flay him,”
  • Cried all together the accursed ones.
  • And I: “My Master, see to it, if thou canst,
  • That thou mayst know who is the luckless wight,
  • Thus come into his adversaries’ hands.”
  • Near to the side of him my Leader drew,
  • Asked of him whence he was; and he replied:
  • “I in the kingdom of Navarre was born;
  • My mother placed me servant to a lord,
  • For she had borne me to a ribald knave,
  • Destroyer of himself and of his things.
  • Then I domestic was of good King Thibault;
  • I set me there to practise barratry,
  • For which I pay the reckoning in this heat.”
  • And Ciriatto, from whose mouth projected,
  • On either side, a tusk, as in a boar,
  • Caused him to feel how one of them could rip.
  • Among malicious cats the mouse had come;
  • But Barbariccia clasped him in his arms,
  • And said: “Stand ye aside, while I enfork him.”
  • And to my Master he turned round his head;
  • “Ask him again,” he said, “if more thou wish
  • To know from him, before some one destroy him.”
  • The Guide: “Now tell then of the other culprits;
  • Knowest thou any one who is a Latian,
  • Under the pitch?” And he: “I separated
  • Lately from one who was a neighbour to it;
  • Would that I still were covered up with him,
  • For I should fear not either claw nor hook!”
  • And Libicocco: “We have borne too much;”
  • And with his grapnel seized him by the arm,
  • So that, by rending, he tore off a tendon.
  • Eke Draghignazzo wished to pounce upon him
  • Down at the legs; whence their Decurion
  • Turned round and round about with evil look.
  • When they again somewhat were pacified,
  • Of him, who still was looking at his wound,
  • Demanded my Conductor without stay:
  • “Who was that one, from whom a luckless parting
  • Thou sayest thou hast made, to come ashore?”
  • And he replied: “It was the Friar Gomita,
  • He of Gallura, vessel of all fraud,
  • Who had the enemies of his Lord in hand,
  • And dealt so with them each exults thereat;
  • Money he took, and let them smoothly off,
  • As he says; and in other offices
  • A barrator was he, not mean but sovereign.
  • Foregathers with him one Don Michael Zanche
  • Of Logodoro; and of Sardinia
  • To gossip never do their tongues feel tired.
  • O me! see that one, how he grinds his teeth;
  • Still farther would I speak, but am afraid
  • Lest he to scratch my itch be making ready.”
  • And the grand Provost, turned to Farfarello,
  • Who rolled his eyes about as if to strike,
  • Said: “Stand aside there, thou malicious bird.”
  • “If you desire either to see or hear,”
  • The terror-stricken recommenced thereon,
  • “Tuscans or Lombards, I will make them come.
  • But let the Malebranche cease a little,
  • So that these may not their revenges fear,
  • And I, down sitting in this very place,
  • For one that I am will make seven come,
  • When I shall whistle, as our custom is
  • To do whenever one of us comes out.”
  • Cagnazzo at these words his muzzle lifted,
  • Shaking his head, and said: “Just hear the trick
  • Which he has thought of, down to throw himself!”
  • Whence he, who snares in great abundance had,
  • Responded: “I by far too cunning am,
  • When I procure for mine a greater sadness.”
  • Alichin held not in, but running counter
  • Unto the rest, said to him: “If thou dive,
  • I will not follow thee upon the gallop,
  • But I will beat my wings above the pitch;
  • The height be left, and be the bank a shield
  • To see if thou alone dost countervail us.”
  • O thou who readest, thou shalt hear new sport!
  • Each to the other side his eyes averted;
  • He first, who most reluctant was to do it.
  • The Navarrese selected well his time;
  • Planted his feet on land, and in a moment
  • Leaped, and released himself from their design.
  • Whereat each one was suddenly stung with shame,
  • But he most who was cause of the defeat;
  • Therefore he moved, and cried: “Thou art o’ertakern.”
  • But little it availed, for wings could not
  • Outstrip the fear; the other one went under,
  • And, flying, upward he his breast directed;
  • Not otherwise the duck upon a sudden
  • Dives under, when the falcon is approaching,
  • And upward he returneth cross and weary.
  • Infuriate at the mockery, Calcabrina
  • Flying behind him followed close, desirous
  • The other should escape, to have a quarrel.
  • And when the barrator had disappeared,
  • He turned his talons upon his companion,
  • And grappled with him right above the moat.
  • But sooth the other was a doughty sparhawk
  • To clapperclaw him well; and both of them
  • Fell in the middle of the boiling pond.
  • A sudden intercessor was the heat;
  • But ne’ertheless of rising there was naught,
  • To such degree they had their wings belimed.
  • Lamenting with the others, Barbariccia
  • Made four of them fly to the other side
  • With all their gaffs, and very speedily
  • This side and that they to their posts descended;
  • They stretched their hooks towards the pitch-ensnared,
  • Who were already baked within the crust,
  • And in this manner busied did we leave them.
  • Inferno: Canto XXIII
  • Silent, alone, and without company
  • We went, the one in front, the other after,
  • As go the Minor Friars along their way.
  • Upon the fable of Aesop was directed
  • My thought, by reason of the present quarrel,
  • Where he has spoken of the frog and mouse;
  • For ‘mo’ and ‘issa’ are not more alike
  • Than this one is to that, if well we couple
  • End and beginning with a steadfast mind.
  • And even as one thought from another springs,
  • So afterward from that was born another,
  • Which the first fear within me double made.
  • Thus did I ponder: “These on our account
  • Are laughed to scorn, with injury and scoff
  • So great, that much I think it must annoy them.
  • If anger be engrafted on ill-will,
  • They will come after us more merciless
  • Than dog upon the leveret which he seizes,”
  • I felt my hair stand all on end already
  • With terror, and stood backwardly intent,
  • When said I: “Master, if thou hidest not
  • Thyself and me forthwith, of Malebranche
  • I am in dread; we have them now behind us;
  • I so imagine them, I already feel them.”
  • And he: “If I were made of leaded glass,
  • Thine outward image I should not attract
  • Sooner to me than I imprint the inner.
  • Just now thy thoughts came in among my own,
  • With similar attitude and similar face,
  • So that of both one counsel sole I made.
  • If peradventure the right bank so slope
  • That we to the next Bolgia can descend,
  • We shall escape from the imagined chase.”
  • Not yet he finished rendering such opinion,
  • When I beheld them come with outstretched wings,
  • Not far remote, with will to seize upon us.
  • My Leader on a sudden seized me up,
  • Even as a mother who by noise is wakened,
  • And close beside her sees the enkindled flames,
  • Who takes her son, and flies, and does not stop,
  • Having more care of him than of herself,
  • So that she clothes her only with a shift;
  • And downward from the top of the hard bank
  • Supine he gave him to the pendent rock,
  • That one side of the other Bolgia walls.
  • Ne’er ran so swiftly water through a sluice
  • To turn the wheel of any land-built mill,
  • When nearest to the paddles it approaches,
  • As did my Master down along that border,
  • Bearing me with him on his breast away,
  • As his own son, and not as a companion.
  • Hardly the bed of the ravine below
  • His feet had reached, ere they had reached the hill
  • Right over us; but he was not afraid;
  • For the high Providence, which had ordained
  • To place them ministers of the fifth moat,
  • The power of thence departing took from all.
  • A painted people there below we found,
  • Who went about with footsteps very slow,
  • Weeping and in their semblance tired and vanquished.
  • They had on mantles with the hoods low down
  • Before their eyes, and fashioned of the cut
  • That in Cologne they for the monks are made.
  • Without, they gilded are so that it dazzles;
  • But inwardly all leaden and so heavy
  • That Frederick used to put them on of straw.
  • O everlastingly fatiguing mantle!
  • Again we turned us, still to the left hand
  • Along with them, intent on their sad plaint;
  • But owing to the weight, that weary folk
  • Came on so tardily, that we were new
  • In company at each motion of the haunch.
  • Whence I unto my Leader: “See thou find
  • Some one who may by deed or name be known,
  • And thus in going move thine eye about.”
  • And one, who understood the Tuscan speech,
  • Cried to us from behind: “Stay ye your feet,
  • Ye, who so run athwart the dusky air!
  • Perhaps thou’lt have from me what thou demandest.”
  • Whereat the Leader turned him, and said: “Wait,
  • And then according to his pace proceed.”
  • I stopped, and two beheld I show great haste
  • Of spirit, in their faces, to be with me;
  • But the burden and the narrow way delayed them.
  • When they came up, long with an eye askance
  • They scanned me without uttering a word.
  • Then to each other turned, and said together:
  • “He by the action of his throat seems living;
  • And if they dead are, by what privilege
  • Go they uncovered by the heavy stole?”
  • Then said to me: “Tuscan, who to the college
  • Of miserable hypocrites art come,
  • Do not disdain to tell us who thou art.”
  • And I to them: “Born was I, and grew up
  • In the great town on the fair river of Arno,
  • And with the body am I’ve always had.
  • But who are ye, in whom there trickles down
  • Along your cheeks such grief as I behold?
  • And what pain is upon you, that so sparkles?”
  • And one replied to me: “These orange cloaks
  • Are made of lead so heavy, that the weights
  • Cause in this way their balances to creak.
  • Frati Gaudenti were we, and Bolognese;
  • I Catalano, and he Loderingo
  • Named, and together taken by thy city,
  • As the wont is to take one man alone,
  • For maintenance of its peace; and we were such
  • That still it is apparent round Gardingo.”
  • “O Friars,” began I, “your iniquitous. . .”
  • But said no more; for to mine eyes there rushed
  • One crucified with three stakes on the ground.
  • When me he saw, he writhed himself all over,
  • Blowing into his beard with suspirations;
  • And the Friar Catalan, who noticed this,
  • Said to me: “This transfixed one, whom thou seest,
  • Counselled the Pharisees that it was meet
  • To put one man to torture for the people.
  • Crosswise and naked is he on the path,
  • As thou perceivest; and he needs must feel,
  • Whoever passes, first how much he weighs;
  • And in like mode his father-in-law is punished
  • Within this moat, and the others of the council,
  • Which for the Jews was a malignant seed.”
  • And thereupon I saw Virgilius marvel
  • O’er him who was extended on the cross
  • So vilely in eternal banishment.
  • Then he directed to the Friar this voice:
  • “Be not displeased, if granted thee, to tell us
  • If to the right hand any pass slope down
  • By which we two may issue forth from here,
  • Without constraining some of the black angels
  • To come and extricate us from this deep.”
  • Then he made answer: “Nearer than thou hopest
  • There is a rock, that forth from the great circle
  • Proceeds, and crosses all the cruel valleys,
  • Save that at this ’tis broken, and does not bridge it;
  • You will be able to mount up the ruin,
  • That sidelong slopes and at the bottom rises.”
  • The Leader stood awhile with head bowed down;
  • Then said: “The business badly he recounted
  • Who grapples with his hook the sinners yonder.”
  • And the Friar: “Many of the Devil’s vices
  • Once heard I at Bologna, and among them,
  • That he’s a liar and the father of lies.”
  • Thereat my Leader with great strides went on,
  • Somewhat disturbed with anger in his looks;
  • Whence from the heavy-laden I departed
  • After the prints of his beloved feet.
  • Inferno: Canto XXIV
  • In that part of the youthful year wherein
  • The Sun his locks beneath Aquarius tempers,
  • And now the nights draw near to half the day,
  • What time the hoar-frost copies on the ground
  • The outward semblance of her sister white,
  • But little lasts the temper of her pen,
  • The husbandman, whose forage faileth him,
  • Rises, and looks, and seeth the champaign
  • All gleaming white, whereat he beats his flank,
  • Returns in doors, and up and down laments,
  • Like a poor wretch, who knows not what to do;
  • Then he returns and hope revives again,
  • Seeing the world has changed its countenance
  • In little time, and takes his shepherd’s crook,
  • And forth the little lambs to pasture drives.
  • Thus did the Master fill me with alarm,
  • When I beheld his forehead so disturbed,
  • And to the ailment came as soon the plaster.
  • For as we came unto the ruined bridge,
  • The Leader turned to me with that sweet look
  • Which at the mountain’s foot I first beheld.
  • His arms he opened, after some advisement
  • Within himself elected, looking first
  • Well at the ruin, and laid hold of me.
  • And even as he who acts and meditates,
  • For aye it seems that he provides beforehand,
  • So upward lifting me towards the summit
  • Of a huge rock, he scanned another crag,
  • Saying: “To that one grapple afterwards,
  • But try first if ’tis such that it will hold thee.”
  • This was no way for one clothed with a cloak;
  • For hardly we, he light, and I pushed upward,
  • Were able to ascend from jag to jag.
  • And had it not been, that upon that precinct
  • Shorter was the ascent than on the other,
  • He I know not, but I had been dead beat.
  • But because Malebolge tow’rds the mouth
  • Of the profoundest well is all inclining,
  • The structure of each valley doth import
  • That one bank rises and the other sinks.
  • Still we arrived at length upon the point
  • Wherefrom the last stone breaks itself asunder.
  • The breath was from my lungs so milked away,
  • When I was up, that I could go no farther,
  • Nay, I sat down upon my first arrival.
  • “Now it behoves thee thus to put off sloth,”
  • My Master said; “for sitting upon down,
  • Or under quilt, one cometh not to fame,
  • Withouten which whoso his life consumes
  • Such vestige leaveth of himself on earth,
  • As smoke in air or in the water foam.
  • And therefore raise thee up, o’ercome the anguish
  • With spirit that o’ercometh every battle,
  • If with its heavy body it sink not.
  • A longer stairway it behoves thee mount;
  • ’Tis not enough from these to have departed;
  • Let it avail thee, if thou understand me.”
  • Then I uprose, showing myself provided
  • Better with breath than I did feel myself,
  • And said: “Go on, for I am strong and bold.”
  • Upward we took our way along the crag,
  • Which jagged was, and narrow, and difficult,
  • And more precipitous far than that before.
  • Speaking I went, not to appear exhausted;
  • Whereat a voice from the next moat came forth,
  • Not well adapted to articulate words.
  • I know not what it said, though o’er the back
  • I now was of the arch that passes there;
  • But he seemed moved to anger who was speaking.
  • I was bent downward, but my living eyes
  • Could not attain the bottom, for the dark;
  • Wherefore I: “Master, see that thou arrive
  • At the next round, and let us descend the wall;
  • For as from hence I hear and understand not,
  • So I look down and nothing I distinguish.”
  • “Other response,” he said, “I make thee not,
  • Except the doing; for the modest asking
  • Ought to be followed by the deed in silence.”
  • We from the bridge descended at its head,
  • Where it connects itself with the eighth bank,
  • And then was manifest to me the Bolgia;
  • And I beheld therein a terrible throng
  • Of serpents, and of such a monstrous kind,
  • That the remembrance still congeals my blood
  • Let Libya boast no longer with her sand;
  • For if Chelydri, Jaculi, and Phareae
  • She breeds, with Cenchri and with Amphisbaena,
  • Neither so many plagues nor so malignant
  • E’er showed she with all Ethiopia,
  • Nor with whatever on the Red Sea is!
  • Among this cruel and most dismal throng
  • People were running naked and affrighted.
  • Without the hope of hole or heliotrope.
  • They had their hands with serpents bound behind them;
  • These riveted upon their reins the tail
  • And head, and were in front of them entwined.
  • And lo! at one who was upon our side
  • There darted forth a serpent, which transfixed him
  • There where the neck is knotted to the shoulders.
  • Nor ‘O’ so quickly e’er, nor ‘I’ was written,
  • As he took fire, and burned; and ashes wholly
  • Behoved it that in falling he became.
  • And when he on the ground was thus destroyed,
  • The ashes drew together, and of themselves
  • Into himself they instantly returned.
  • Even thus by the great sages ’tis confessed
  • The phoenix dies, and then is born again,
  • When it approaches its five-hundredth year;
  • On herb or grain it feeds not in its life,
  • But only on tears of incense and amomum,
  • And nard and myrrh are its last winding-sheet.
  • And as he is who falls, and knows not how,
  • By force of demons who to earth down drag him,
  • Or other oppilation that binds man,
  • When he arises and around him looks,
  • Wholly bewildered by the mighty anguish
  • Which he has suffered, and in looking sighs;
  • Such was that sinner after he had risen.
  • Justice of God! O how severe it is,
  • That blows like these in vengeance poureth down!
  • The Guide thereafter asked him who he was;
  • Whence he replied: “I rained from Tuscany
  • A short time since into this cruel gorge.
  • A bestial life, and not a human, pleased me,
  • Even as the mule I was; I’m Vanni Fucci,
  • Beast, and Pistoia was my worthy den.”
  • And I unto the Guide: “Tell him to stir not,
  • And ask what crime has thrust him here below,
  • For once a man of blood and wrath I saw him.”
  • And the sinner, who had heard, dissembled not,
  • But unto me directed mind and face,
  • And with a melancholy shame was painted.
  • Then said: “It pains me more that thou hast caught me
  • Amid this misery where thou seest me,
  • Than when I from the other life was taken.
  • What thou demandest I cannot deny;
  • So low am I put down because I robbed
  • The sacristy of the fair ornaments,
  • And falsely once ’twas laid upon another;
  • But that thou mayst not such a sight enjoy,
  • If thou shalt e’er be out of the dark places,
  • Thine ears to my announcement ope and hear:
  • Pistoia first of Neri groweth meagre;
  • Then Florence doth renew her men and manners;
  • Mars draws a vapour up from Val di Magra,
  • Which is with turbid clouds enveloped round,
  • And with impetuous and bitter tempest
  • Over Campo Picen shall be the battle;
  • When it shall suddenly rend the mist asunder,
  • So that each Bianco shall thereby be smitten.
  • And this I’ve said that it may give thee pain.”
  • Inferno: Canto XXV
  • At the conclusion of his words, the thief
  • Lifted his hands aloft with both the figs,
  • Crying: “Take that, God, for at thee I aim them.”
  • From that time forth the serpents were my friends;
  • For one entwined itself about his neck
  • As if it said: “I will not thou speak more;”
  • And round his arms another, and rebound him,
  • Clinching itself together so in front,
  • That with them he could not a motion make.
  • Pistoia, ah, Pistoia! why resolve not
  • To burn thyself to ashes and so perish,
  • Since in ill-doing thou thy seed excellest?
  • Through all the sombre circles of this Hell,
  • Spirit I saw not against God so proud,
  • Not he who fell at Thebes down from the walls!
  • He fled away, and spake no further word;
  • And I beheld a Centaur full of rage
  • Come crying out: “Where is, where is the scoffer?”
  • I do not think Maremma has so many
  • Serpents as he had all along his back,
  • As far as where our countenance begins.
  • Upon the shoulders, just behind the nape,
  • With wings wide open was a dragon lying,
  • And he sets fire to all that he encounters.
  • My Master said: “That one is Cacus, who
  • Beneath the rock upon Mount Aventine
  • Created oftentimes a lake of blood.
  • He goes not on the same road with his brothers,
  • By reason of the fraudulent theft he made
  • Of the great herd, which he had near to him;
  • Whereat his tortuous actions ceased beneath
  • The mace of Hercules, who peradventure
  • Gave him a hundred, and he felt not ten.”
  • While he was speaking thus, he had passed by,
  • And spirits three had underneath us come,
  • Of which nor I aware was, nor my Leader,
  • Until what time they shouted: “Who are you?”
  • On which account our story made a halt,
  • And then we were intent on them alone.
  • I did not know them; but it came to pass,
  • As it is wont to happen by some chance,
  • That one to name the other was compelled,
  • Exclaiming: “Where can Cianfa have remained?”
  • Whence I, so that the Leader might attend,
  • Upward from chin to nose my finger laid.
  • If thou art, Reader, slow now to believe
  • What I shall say, it will no marvel be,
  • For I who saw it hardly can admit it.
  • As I was holding raised on them my brows,
  • Behold! a serpent with six feet darts forth
  • In front of one, and fastens wholly on him.
  • With middle feet it bound him round the paunch,
  • And with the forward ones his arms it seized;
  • Then thrust its teeth through one cheek and the other;
  • The hindermost it stretched upon his thighs,
  • And put its tail through in between the two,
  • And up behind along the reins outspread it.
  • Ivy was never fastened by its barbs
  • Unto a tree so, as this horrible reptile
  • Upon the other’s limbs entwined its own.
  • Then they stuck close, as if of heated wax
  • They had been made, and intermixed their colour;
  • Nor one nor other seemed now what he was;
  • E’en as proceedeth on before the flame
  • Upward along the paper a brown colour,
  • Which is not black as yet, and the white dies.
  • The other two looked on, and each of them
  • Cried out: “O me, Agnello, how thou changest!
  • Behold, thou now art neither two nor one.”
  • Already the two heads had one become,
  • When there appeared to us two figures mingled
  • Into one face, wherein the two were lost.
  • Of the four lists were fashioned the two arms,
  • The thighs and legs, the belly and the chest
  • Members became that never yet were seen.
  • Every original aspect there was cancelled;
  • Two and yet none did the perverted image
  • Appear, and such departed with slow pace.
  • Even as a lizard, under the great scourge
  • Of days canicular, exchanging hedge,
  • Lightning appeareth if the road it cross;
  • Thus did appear, coming towards the bellies
  • Of the two others, a small fiery serpent,
  • Livid and black as is a peppercorn.
  • And in that part whereat is first received
  • Our aliment, it one of them transfixed;
  • Then downward fell in front of him extended.
  • The one transfixed looked at it, but said naught;
  • Nay, rather with feet motionless he yawned,
  • Just as if sleep or fever had assailed him.
  • He at the serpent gazed, and it at him;
  • One through the wound, the other through the mouth
  • Smoked violently, and the smoke commingled.
  • Henceforth be silent Lucan, where he mentions
  • Wretched Sabellus and Nassidius,
  • And wait to hear what now shall be shot forth.
  • Be silent Ovid, of Cadmus and Arethusa;
  • For if him to a snake, her to fountain,
  • Converts he fabling, that I grudge him not;
  • Because two natures never front to front
  • Has he transmuted, so that both the forms
  • To interchange their matter ready were.
  • Together they responded in such wise,
  • That to a fork the serpent cleft his tail,
  • And eke the wounded drew his feet together.
  • The legs together with the thighs themselves
  • Adhered so, that in little time the juncture
  • No sign whatever made that was apparent.
  • He with the cloven tail assumed the figure
  • The other one was losing, and his skin
  • Became elastic, and the other’s hard.
  • I saw the arms draw inward at the armpits,
  • And both feet of the reptile, that were short,
  • Lengthen as much as those contracted were.
  • Thereafter the hind feet, together twisted,
  • Became the member that a man conceals,
  • And of his own the wretch had two created.
  • While both of them the exhalation veils
  • With a new colour, and engenders hair
  • On one of them and depilates the other,
  • The one uprose and down the other fell,
  • Though turning not away their impious lamps,
  • Underneath which each one his muzzle changed.
  • He who was standing drew it tow’rds the temples,
  • And from excess of matter, which came thither,
  • Issued the ears from out the hollow cheeks;
  • What did not backward run and was retained
  • Of that excess made to the face a nose,
  • And the lips thickened far as was befitting.
  • He who lay prostrate thrusts his muzzle forward,
  • And backward draws the ears into his head,
  • In the same manner as the snail its horns;
  • And so the tongue, which was entire and apt
  • For speech before, is cleft, and the bi-forked
  • In the other closes up, and the smoke ceases.
  • The soul, which to a reptile had been changed,
  • Along the valley hissing takes to flight,
  • And after him the other speaking sputters.
  • Then did he turn upon him his new shoulders,
  • And said to the other: “I’ll have Buoso run,
  • Crawling as I have done, along this road.”
  • In this way I beheld the seventh ballast
  • Shift and reshift, and here be my excuse
  • The novelty, if aught my pen transgress.
  • And notwithstanding that mine eyes might be
  • Somewhat bewildered, and my mind dismayed,
  • They could not flee away so secretly
  • But that I plainly saw Puccio Sciancato;
  • And he it was who sole of three companions,
  • Which came in the beginning, was not changed;
  • The other was he whom thou, Gaville, weepest.
  • Inferno: Canto XXVI
  • Rejoice, O Florence, since thou art so great,
  • That over sea and land thou beatest thy wings,
  • And throughout Hell thy name is spread abroad!
  • Among the thieves five citizens of thine
  • Like these I found, whence shame comes unto me,
  • And thou thereby to no great honour risest.
  • But if when morn is near our dreams are true,
  • Feel shalt thou in a little time from now
  • What Prato, if none other, craves for thee.
  • And if it now were, it were not too soon;
  • Would that it were, seeing it needs must be,
  • For ’twill aggrieve me more the more I age.
  • We went our way, and up along the stairs
  • The bourns had made us to descend before,
  • Remounted my Conductor and drew me.
  • And following the solitary path
  • Among the rocks and ridges of the crag,
  • The foot without the hand sped not at all.
  • Then sorrowed I, and sorrow now again,
  • When I direct my mind to what I saw,
  • And more my genius curb than I am wont,
  • That it may run not unless virtue guide it;
  • So that if some good star, or better thing,
  • Have given me good, I may myself not grudge it.
  • As many as the hind (who on the hill
  • Rests at the time when he who lights the world
  • His countenance keeps least concealed from us,
  • While as the fly gives place unto the gnat)
  • Seeth the glow-worms down along the valley,
  • Perchance there where he ploughs and makes his vintage;
  • With flames as manifold resplendent all
  • Was the eighth Bolgia, as I grew aware
  • As soon as I was where the depth appeared.
  • And such as he who with the bears avenged him
  • Beheld Elijah’s chariot at departing,
  • What time the steeds to heaven erect uprose,
  • For with his eye he could not follow it
  • So as to see aught else than flame alone,
  • Even as a little cloud ascending upward,
  • Thus each along the gorge of the intrenchment
  • Was moving; for not one reveals the theft,
  • And every flame a sinner steals away.
  • I stood upon the bridge uprisen to see,
  • So that, if I had seized not on a rock,
  • Down had I fallen without being pushed.
  • And the Leader, who beheld me so attent,
  • Exclaimed: “Within the fires the spirits are;
  • Each swathes himself with that wherewith he burns.”
  • “My Master,” I replied, “by hearing thee
  • I am more sure; but I surmised already
  • It might be so, and already wished to ask thee
  • Who is within that fire, which comes so cleft
  • At top, it seems uprising from the pyre
  • Where was Eteocles with his brother placed.”
  • He answered me: “Within there are tormented
  • Ulysses and Diomed, and thus together
  • They unto vengeance run as unto wrath.
  • And there within their flame do they lament
  • The ambush of the horse, which made the door
  • Whence issued forth the Romans’ gentle seed;
  • Therein is wept the craft, for which being dead
  • Deidamia still deplores Achilles,
  • And pain for the Palladium there is borne.”
  • “If they within those sparks possess the power
  • To speak,” I said, “thee, Master, much I pray,
  • And re-pray, that the prayer be worth a thousand,
  • That thou make no denial of awaiting
  • Until the horned flame shall hither come;
  • Thou seest that with desire I lean towards it.”
  • And he to me: “Worthy is thy entreaty
  • Of much applause, and therefore I accept it;
  • But take heed that thy tongue restrain itself.
  • Leave me to speak, because I have conceived
  • That which thou wishest; for they might disdain
  • Perchance, since they were Greeks, discourse of thine.”
  • When now the flame had come unto that point,
  • Where to my Leader it seemed time and place,
  • After this fashion did I hear him speak:
  • “O ye, who are twofold within one fire,
  • If I deserved of you, while I was living,
  • If I deserved of you or much or little
  • When in the world I wrote the lofty verses,
  • Do not move on, but one of you declare
  • Whither, being lost, he went away to die.”
  • Then of the antique flame the greater horn,
  • Murmuring, began to wave itself about
  • Even as a flame doth which the wind fatigues.
  • Thereafterward, the summit to and fro
  • Moving as if it were the tongue that spake,
  • It uttered forth a voice, and said: “When I
  • From Circe had departed, who concealed me
  • More than a year there near unto Gaeta,
  • Or ever yet Aeneas named it so,
  • Nor fondness for my son, nor reverence
  • For my old father, nor the due affection
  • Which joyous should have made Penelope,
  • Could overcome within me the desire
  • I had to be experienced of the world,
  • And of the vice and virtue of mankind;
  • But I put forth on the high open sea
  • With one sole ship, and that small company
  • By which I never had deserted been.
  • Both of the shores I saw as far as Spain,
  • Far as Morocco, and the isle of Sardes,
  • And the others which that sea bathes round about.
  • I and my company were old and slow
  • When at that narrow passage we arrived
  • Where Hercules his landmarks set as signals,
  • That man no farther onward should adventure.
  • On the right hand behind me left I Seville,
  • And on the other already had left Ceuta.
  • ‘O brothers, who amid a hundred thousand
  • Perils,’ I said, ‘have come unto the West,
  • To this so inconsiderable vigil
  • Which is remaining of your senses still
  • Be ye unwilling to deny the knowledge,
  • Following the sun, of the unpeopled world.
  • Consider ye the seed from which ye sprang;
  • Ye were not made to live like unto brutes,
  • But for pursuit of virtue and of knowledge.’
  • So eager did I render my companions,
  • With this brief exhortation, for the voyage,
  • That then I hardly could have held them back.
  • And having turned our stern unto the morning,
  • We of the oars made wings for our mad flight,
  • Evermore gaining on the larboard side.
  • Already all the stars of the other pole
  • The night beheld, and ours so very low
  • It did not rise above the ocean floor.
  • Five times rekindled and as many quenched
  • Had been the splendour underneath the moon,
  • Since we had entered into the deep pass,
  • When there appeared to us a mountain, dim
  • From distance, and it seemed to me so high
  • As I had never any one beheld.
  • Joyful were we, and soon it turned to weeping;
  • For out of the new land a whirlwind rose,
  • And smote upon the fore part of the ship.
  • Three times it made her whirl with all the waters,
  • At the fourth time it made the stern uplift,
  • And the prow downward go, as pleased Another,
  • Until the sea above us closed again.”
  • Inferno: Canto XXVII
  • Already was the flame erect and quiet,
  • To speak no more, and now departed from us
  • With the permission of the gentle Poet;
  • When yet another, which behind it came,
  • Caused us to turn our eyes upon its top
  • By a confused sound that issued from it.
  • As the Sicilian bull (that bellowed first
  • With the lament of him, and that was right,
  • Who with his file had modulated it)
  • Bellowed so with the voice of the afflicted,
  • That, notwithstanding it was made of brass,
  • Still it appeared with agony transfixed;
  • Thus, by not having any way or issue
  • At first from out the fire, to its own language
  • Converted were the melancholy words.
  • But afterwards, when they had gathered way
  • Up through the point, giving it that vibration
  • The tongue had given them in their passage out,
  • We heard it said: “O thou, at whom I aim
  • My voice, and who but now wast speaking Lombard,
  • Saying, ‘Now go thy way, no more I urge thee,’
  • Because I come perchance a little late,
  • To stay and speak with me let it not irk thee;
  • Thou seest it irks not me, and I am burning.
  • If thou but lately into this blind world
  • Hast fallen down from that sweet Latian land,
  • Wherefrom I bring the whole of my transgression,
  • Say, if the Romagnuols have peace or war,
  • For I was from the mountains there between
  • Urbino and the yoke whence Tiber bursts.”
  • I still was downward bent and listening,
  • When my Conductor touched me on the side,
  • Saying: “Speak thou: this one a Latian is.”
  • And I, who had beforehand my reply
  • In readiness, forthwith began to speak:
  • “O soul, that down below there art concealed,
  • Romagna thine is not and never has been
  • Without war in the bosom of its tyrants;
  • But open war I none have left there now.
  • Ravenna stands as it long years has stood;
  • The Eagle of Polenta there is brooding,
  • So that she covers Cervia with her vans.
  • The city which once made the long resistance,
  • And of the French a sanguinary heap,
  • Beneath the Green Paws finds itself again;
  • Verrucchio’s ancient Mastiff and the new,
  • Who made such bad disposal of Montagna,
  • Where they are wont make wimbles of their teeth.
  • The cities of Lamone and Santerno
  • Governs the Lioncel of the white lair,
  • Who changes sides ’twixt summer-time and winter;
  • And that of which the Savio bathes the flank,
  • Even as it lies between the plain and mountain,
  • Lives between tyranny and a free state.
  • Now I entreat thee tell us who thou art;
  • Be not more stubborn than the rest have been,
  • So may thy name hold front there in the world.”
  • After the fire a little more had roared
  • In its own fashion, the sharp point it moved
  • This way and that, and then gave forth such breath:
  • “If I believed that my reply were made
  • To one who to the world would e’er return,
  • This flame without more flickering would stand still;
  • But inasmuch as never from this depth
  • Did any one return, if I hear true,
  • Without the fear of infamy I answer,
  • I was a man of arms, then Cordelier,
  • Believing thus begirt to make amends;
  • And truly my belief had been fulfilled
  • But for the High Priest, whom may ill betide,
  • Who put me back into my former sins;
  • And how and wherefore I will have thee hear.
  • While I was still the form of bone and pulp
  • My mother gave to me, the deeds I did
  • Were not those of a lion, but a fox.
  • The machinations and the covert ways
  • I knew them all, and practised so their craft,
  • That to the ends of earth the sound went forth.
  • When now unto that portion of mine age
  • I saw myself arrived, when each one ought
  • To lower the sails, and coil away the ropes,
  • That which before had pleased me then displeased me;
  • And penitent and confessing I surrendered,
  • Ah woe is me! and it would have bestead me;
  • The Leader of the modern Pharisees
  • Having a war near unto Lateran,
  • And not with Saracens nor with the Jews,
  • For each one of his enemies was Christian,
  • And none of them had been to conquer Acre,
  • Nor merchandising in the Sultan’s land,
  • Nor the high office, nor the sacred orders,
  • In him regarded, nor in me that cord
  • Which used to make those girt with it more meagre;
  • But even as Constantine sought out Sylvester
  • To cure his leprosy, within Soracte,
  • So this one sought me out as an adept
  • To cure him of the fever of his pride.
  • Counsel he asked of me, and I was silent,
  • Because his words appeared inebriate.
  • And then he said: ‘Be not thy heart afraid;
  • Henceforth I thee absolve; and thou instruct me
  • How to raze Palestrina to the ground.
  • Heaven have I power to lock and to unlock,
  • As thou dost know; therefore the keys are two,
  • The which my predecessor held not dear.’
  • Then urged me on his weighty arguments
  • There, where my silence was the worst advice;
  • And said I: ‘Father, since thou washest me
  • Of that sin into which I now must fall,
  • The promise long with the fulfilment short
  • Will make thee triumph in thy lofty seat.’
  • Francis came afterward, when I was dead,
  • For me; but one of the black Cherubim
  • Said to him: ‘Take him not; do me no wrong;
  • He must come down among my servitors,
  • Because he gave the fraudulent advice
  • From which time forth I have been at his hair;
  • For who repents not cannot be absolved,
  • Nor can one both repent and will at once,
  • Because of the contradiction which consents not.’
  • O miserable me! how I did shudder
  • When he seized on me, saying: ‘Peradventure
  • Thou didst not think that I was a logician!’
  • He bore me unto Minos, who entwined
  • Eight times his tail about his stubborn back,
  • And after he had bitten it in great rage,
  • Said: ‘Of the thievish fire a culprit this;’
  • Wherefore, here where thou seest, am I lost,
  • And vested thus in going I bemoan me.”
  • When it had thus completed its recital,
  • The flame departed uttering lamentations,
  • Writhing and flapping its sharp-pointed horn.
  • Onward we passed, both I and my Conductor,
  • Up o’er the crag above another arch,
  • Which the moat covers, where is paid the fee
  • By those who, sowing discord, win their burden.
  • Inferno: Canto XXVIII
  • Who ever could, e’en with untrammelled words,
  • Tell of the blood and of the wounds in full
  • Which now I saw, by many times narrating?
  • Each tongue would for a certainty fall short
  • By reason of our speech and memory,
  • That have small room to comprehend so much.
  • If were again assembled all the people
  • Which formerly upon the fateful land
  • Of Puglia were lamenting for their blood
  • Shed by the Romans and the lingering war
  • That of the rings made such illustrious spoils,
  • As Livy has recorded, who errs not,
  • With those who felt the agony of blows
  • By making counterstand to Robert Guiscard,
  • And all the rest, whose bones are gathered still
  • At Ceperano, where a renegade
  • Was each Apulian, and at Tagliacozzo,
  • Where without arms the old Alardo conquered,
  • And one his limb transpierced, and one lopped off,
  • Should show, it would be nothing to compare
  • With the disgusting mode of the ninth Bolgia.
  • A cask by losing centre-piece or cant
  • Was never shattered so, as I saw one
  • Rent from the chin to where one breaketh wind.
  • Between his legs were hanging down his entrails;
  • His heart was visible, and the dismal sack
  • That maketh excrement of what is eaten.
  • While I was all absorbed in seeing him,
  • He looked at me, and opened with his hands
  • His bosom, saying: “See now how I rend me;
  • How mutilated, see, is Mahomet;
  • In front of me doth Ali weeping go,
  • Cleft in the face from forelock unto chin;
  • And all the others whom thou here beholdest,
  • Disseminators of scandal and of schism
  • While living were, and therefore are cleft thus.
  • A devil is behind here, who doth cleave us
  • Thus cruelly, unto the falchion’s edge
  • Putting again each one of all this ream,
  • When we have gone around the doleful road;
  • By reason that our wounds are closed again
  • Ere any one in front of him repass.
  • But who art thou, that musest on the crag,
  • Perchance to postpone going to the pain
  • That is adjudged upon thine accusations?”
  • “Nor death hath reached him yet, nor guilt doth bring him,”
  • My Master made reply, “to be tormented;
  • But to procure him full experience,
  • Me, who am dead, behoves it to conduct him
  • Down here through Hell, from circle unto circle;
  • And this is true as that I speak to thee.”
  • More than a hundred were there when they heard him,
  • Who in the moat stood still to look at me,
  • Through wonderment oblivious of their torture.
  • “Now say to Fra Dolcino, then, to arm him,
  • Thou, who perhaps wilt shortly see the sun,
  • If soon he wish not here to follow me,
  • So with provisions, that no stress of snow
  • May give the victory to the Novarese,
  • Which otherwise to gain would not be easy.”
  • After one foot to go away he lifted,
  • This word did Mahomet say unto me,
  • Then to depart upon the ground he stretched it.
  • Another one, who had his throat pierced through,
  • And nose cut off close underneath the brows,
  • And had no longer but a single ear,
  • Staying to look in wonder with the others,
  • Before the others did his gullet open,
  • Which outwardly was red in every part,
  • And said: “O thou, whom guilt doth not condemn,
  • And whom I once saw up in Latian land,
  • Unless too great similitude deceive me,
  • Call to remembrance Pier da Medicina,
  • If e’er thou see again the lovely plain
  • That from Vercelli slopes to Marcabo,
  • And make it known to the best two of Fano,
  • To Messer Guido and Angiolello likewise,
  • That if foreseeing here be not in vain,
  • Cast over from their vessel shall they be,
  • And drowned near unto the Cattolica,
  • By the betrayal of a tyrant fell.
  • Between the isles of Cyprus and Majorca
  • Neptune ne’er yet beheld so great a crime,
  • Neither of pirates nor Argolic people.
  • That traitor, who sees only with one eye,
  • And holds the land, which some one here with me
  • Would fain be fasting from the vision of,
  • Will make them come unto a parley with him;
  • Then will do so, that to Focara’s wind
  • They will not stand in need of vow or prayer.”
  • And I to him: “Show to me and declare,
  • If thou wouldst have me bear up news of thee,
  • Who is this person of the bitter vision.”
  • Then did he lay his hand upon the jaw
  • Of one of his companions, and his mouth
  • Oped, crying: “This is he, and he speaks not.
  • This one, being banished, every doubt submerged
  • In Caesar by affirming the forearmed
  • Always with detriment allowed delay.”
  • O how bewildered unto me appeared,
  • With tongue asunder in his windpipe slit,
  • Curio, who in speaking was so bold!
  • And one, who both his hands dissevered had,
  • The stumps uplifting through the murky air,
  • So that the blood made horrible his face,
  • Cried out: “Thou shalt remember Mosca also,
  • Who said, alas! ‘A thing done has an end!’
  • Which was an ill seed for the Tuscan people.”
  • “And death unto thy race,” thereto I added;
  • Whence he, accumulating woe on woe,
  • Departed, like a person sad and crazed.
  • But I remained to look upon the crowd;
  • And saw a thing which I should be afraid,
  • Without some further proof, even to recount,
  • If it were not that conscience reassures me,
  • That good companion which emboldens man
  • Beneath the hauberk of its feeling pure.
  • I truly saw, and still I seem to see it,
  • A trunk without a head walk in like manner
  • As walked the others of the mournful herd.
  • And by the hair it held the head dissevered,
  • Hung from the hand in fashion of a lantern,
  • And that upon us gazed and said: “O me!”
  • It of itself made to itself a lamp,
  • And they were two in one, and one in two;
  • How that can be, He knows who so ordains it.
  • When it was come close to the bridge’s foot,
  • It lifted high its arm with all the head,
  • To bring more closely unto us its words,
  • Which were: “Behold now the sore penalty,
  • Thou, who dost breathing go the dead beholding;
  • Behold if any be as great as this.
  • And so that thou may carry news of me,
  • Know that Bertram de Born am I, the same
  • Who gave to the Young King the evil comfort.
  • I made the father and the son rebellious;
  • Achitophel not more with Absalom
  • And David did with his accursed goadings.
  • Because I parted persons so united,
  • Parted do I now bear my brain, alas!
  • From its beginning, which is in this trunk.
  • Thus is observed in me the counterpoise.”
  • Inferno: Canto XXIX
  • The many people and the divers wounds
  • These eyes of mine had so inebriated,
  • That they were wishful to stand still and weep;
  • But said Virgilius: “What dost thou still gaze at?
  • Why is thy sight still riveted down there
  • Among the mournful, mutilated shades?
  • Thou hast not done so at the other Bolge;
  • Consider, if to count them thou believest,
  • That two-and-twenty miles the valley winds,
  • And now the moon is underneath our feet;
  • Henceforth the time allotted us is brief,
  • And more is to be seen than what thou seest.”
  • “If thou hadst,” I made answer thereupon,
  • “Attended to the cause for which I looked,
  • Perhaps a longer stay thou wouldst have pardoned.”
  • Meanwhile my Guide departed, and behind him
  • I went, already making my reply,
  • And superadding: “In that cavern where
  • I held mine eyes with such attention fixed,
  • I think a spirit of my blood laments
  • The sin which down below there costs so much.”
  • Then said the Master: “Be no longer broken
  • Thy thought from this time forward upon him;
  • Attend elsewhere, and there let him remain;
  • For him I saw below the little bridge,
  • Pointing at thee, and threatening with his finger
  • Fiercely, and heard him called Geri del Bello.
  • So wholly at that time wast thou impeded
  • By him who formerly held Altaforte,
  • Thou didst not look that way; so he departed.”
  • “O my Conductor, his own violent death,
  • Which is not yet avenged for him,” I said,
  • “By any who is sharer in the shame,
  • Made him disdainful; whence he went away,
  • As I imagine, without speaking to me,
  • And thereby made me pity him the more.”
  • Thus did we speak as far as the first place
  • Upon the crag, which the next valley shows
  • Down to the bottom, if there were more light.
  • When we were now right over the last cloister
  • Of Malebolge, so that its lay-brothers
  • Could manifest themselves unto our sight,
  • Divers lamentings pierced me through and through,
  • Which with compassion had their arrows barbed,
  • Whereat mine ears I covered with my hands.
  • What pain would be, if from the hospitals
  • Of Valdichiana, ’twixt July and September,
  • And of Maremma and Sardinia
  • All the diseases in one moat were gathered,
  • Such was it here, and such a stench came from it
  • As from putrescent limbs is wont to issue.
  • We had descended on the furthest bank
  • From the long crag, upon the left hand still,
  • And then more vivid was my power of sight
  • Down tow’rds the bottom, where the ministress
  • Of the high Lord, Justice infallible,
  • Punishes forgers, which she here records.
  • I do not think a sadder sight to see
  • Was in Aegina the whole people sick,
  • (When was the air so full of pestilence,
  • The animals, down to the little worm,
  • All fell, and afterwards the ancient people,
  • According as the poets have affirmed,
  • Were from the seed of ants restored again,)
  • Than was it to behold through that dark valley
  • The spirits languishing in divers heaps.
  • This on the belly, that upon the back
  • One of the other lay, and others crawling
  • Shifted themselves along the dismal road.
  • We step by step went onward without speech,
  • Gazing upon and listening to the sick
  • Who had not strength enough to lift their bodies.
  • I saw two sitting leaned against each other,
  • As leans in heating platter against platter,
  • From head to foot bespotted o’er with scabs;
  • And never saw I plied a currycomb
  • By stable-boy for whom his master waits,
  • Or him who keeps awake unwillingly,
  • As every one was plying fast the bite
  • Of nails upon himself, for the great rage
  • Of itching which no other succour had.
  • And the nails downward with them dragged the scab,
  • In fashion as a knife the scales of bream,
  • Or any other fish that has them largest.
  • “O thou, that with thy fingers dost dismail thee,”
  • Began my Leader unto one of them,
  • “And makest of them pincers now and then,
  • Tell me if any Latian is with those
  • Who are herein; so may thy nails suffice thee
  • To all eternity unto this work.”
  • “Latians are we, whom thou so wasted seest,
  • Both of us here,” one weeping made reply;
  • “But who art thou, that questionest about us?”
  • And said the Guide: “One am I who descends
  • Down with this living man from cliff to cliff,
  • And I intend to show Hell unto him.”
  • Then broken was their mutual support,
  • And trembling each one turned himself to me,
  • With others who had heard him by rebound.
  • Wholly to me did the good Master gather,
  • Saying: “Say unto them whate’er thou wishest.”
  • And I began, since he would have it so:
  • “So may your memory not steal away
  • In the first world from out the minds of men,
  • But so may it survive ’neath many suns,
  • Say to me who ye are, and of what people;
  • Let not your foul and loathsome punishment
  • Make you afraid to show yourselves to me.”
  • “I of Arezzo was,” one made reply,
  • “And Albert of Siena had me burned;
  • But what I died for does not bring me here.
  • ’Tis true I said to him, speaking in jest,
  • That I could rise by flight into the air,
  • And he who had conceit, but little wit,
  • Would have me show to him the art; and only
  • Because no Daedalus I made him, made me
  • Be burned by one who held him as his son.
  • But unto the last Bolgia of the ten,
  • For alchemy, which in the world I practised,
  • Minos, who cannot err, has me condemned.”
  • And to the Poet said I: “Now was ever
  • So vain a people as the Sienese?
  • Not for a certainty the French by far.”
  • Whereat the other leper, who had heard me,
  • Replied unto my speech: “Taking out Stricca,
  • Who knew the art of moderate expenses,
  • And Niccolo, who the luxurious use
  • Of cloves discovered earliest of all
  • Within that garden where such seed takes root;
  • And taking out the band, among whom squandered
  • Caccia d’Ascian his vineyards and vast woods,
  • And where his wit the Abbagliato proffered!
  • But, that thou know who thus doth second thee
  • Against the Sienese, make sharp thine eye
  • Tow’rds me, so that my face well answer thee,
  • And thou shalt see I am Capocchio’s shade,
  • Who metals falsified by alchemy;
  • Thou must remember, if I well descry thee,
  • How I a skilful ape of nature was.”
  • Inferno: Canto XXX
  • ’Twas at the time when Juno was enraged,
  • For Semele, against the Theban blood,
  • As she already more than once had shown,
  • So reft of reason Athamas became,
  • That, seeing his own wife with children twain
  • Walking encumbered upon either hand,
  • He cried: “Spread out the nets, that I may take
  • The lioness and her whelps upon the passage;”
  • And then extended his unpitying claws,
  • Seizing the first, who had the name Learchus,
  • And whirled him round, and dashed him on a rock;
  • And she, with the other burthen, drowned herself;—
  • And at the time when fortune downward hurled
  • The Trojan’s arrogance, that all things dared,
  • So that the king was with his kingdom crushed,
  • Hecuba sad, disconsolate, and captive,
  • When lifeless she beheld Polyxena,
  • And of her Polydorus on the shore
  • Of ocean was the dolorous one aware,
  • Out of her senses like a dog she barked,
  • So much the anguish had her mind distorted;
  • But not of Thebes the furies nor the Trojan
  • Were ever seen in any one so cruel
  • In goading beasts, and much more human members,
  • As I beheld two shadows pale and naked,
  • Who, biting, in the manner ran along
  • That a boar does, when from the sty turned loose.
  • One to Capocchio came, and by the nape
  • Seized with its teeth his neck, so that in dragging
  • It made his belly grate the solid bottom.
  • And the Aretine, who trembling had remained,
  • Said to me: “That mad sprite is Gianni Schicchi,
  • And raving goes thus harrying other people.”
  • “O,” said I to him, “so may not the other
  • Set teeth on thee, let it not weary thee
  • To tell us who it is, ere it dart hence.”
  • And he to me: “That is the ancient ghost
  • Of the nefarious Myrrha, who became
  • Beyond all rightful love her father’s lover.
  • She came to sin with him after this manner,
  • By counterfeiting of another’s form;
  • As he who goeth yonder undertook,
  • That he might gain the lady of the herd,
  • To counterfeit in himself Buoso Donati,
  • Making a will and giving it due form.”
  • And after the two maniacs had passed
  • On whom I held mine eye, I turned it back
  • To look upon the other evil-born.
  • I saw one made in fashion of a lute,
  • If he had only had the groin cut off
  • Just at the point at which a man is forked.
  • The heavy dropsy, that so disproportions
  • The limbs with humours, which it ill concocts,
  • That the face corresponds not to the belly,
  • Compelled him so to hold his lips apart
  • As does the hectic, who because of thirst
  • One tow’rds the chin, the other upward turns.
  • “O ye, who without any torment are,
  • And why I know not, in the world of woe,”
  • He said to us, “behold, and be attentive
  • Unto the misery of Master Adam;
  • I had while living much of what I wished,
  • And now, alas! a drop of water crave.
  • The rivulets, that from the verdant hills
  • Of Cassentin descend down into Arno,
  • Making their channels to be cold and moist,
  • Ever before me stand, and not in vain;
  • For far more doth their image dry me up
  • Than the disease which strips my face of flesh.
  • The rigid justice that chastises me
  • Draweth occasion from the place in which
  • I sinned, to put the more my sighs in flight.
  • There is Romena, where I counterfeited
  • The currency imprinted with the Baptist,
  • For which I left my body burned above.
  • But if I here could see the tristful soul
  • Of Guido, or Alessandro, or their brother,
  • For Branda’s fount I would not give the sight.
  • One is within already, if the raving
  • Shades that are going round about speak truth;
  • But what avails it me, whose limbs are tied?
  • If I were only still so light, that in
  • A hundred years I could advance one inch,
  • I had already started on the way,
  • Seeking him out among this squalid folk,
  • Although the circuit be eleven miles,
  • And be not less than half a mile across.
  • For them am I in such a family;
  • They did induce me into coining florins,
  • Which had three carats of impurity.”
  • And I to him: “Who are the two poor wretches
  • That smoke like unto a wet hand in winter,
  • Lying there close upon thy right-hand confines?”
  • “I found them here,” replied he, “when I rained
  • Into this chasm, and since they have not turned,
  • Nor do I think they will for evermore.
  • One the false woman is who accused Joseph,
  • The other the false Sinon, Greek of Troy;
  • From acute fever they send forth such reek.”
  • And one of them, who felt himself annoyed
  • At being, peradventure, named so darkly,
  • Smote with the fist upon his hardened paunch.
  • It gave a sound, as if it were a drum;
  • And Master Adam smote him in the face,
  • With arm that did not seem to be less hard,
  • Saying to him: “Although be taken from me
  • All motion, for my limbs that heavy are,
  • I have an arm unfettered for such need.”
  • Whereat he answer made: “When thou didst go
  • Unto the fire, thou hadst it not so ready:
  • But hadst it so and more when thou wast coining.”
  • The dropsical: “Thou sayest true in that;
  • But thou wast not so true a witness there,
  • Where thou wast questioned of the truth at Troy.”
  • “If I spake false, thou falsifiedst the coin,”
  • Said Sinon; “and for one fault I am here,
  • And thou for more than any other demon.”
  • “Remember, perjurer, about the horse,”
  • He made reply who had the swollen belly,
  • “And rueful be it thee the whole world knows it.”
  • “Rueful to thee the thirst be wherewith cracks
  • Thy tongue,” the Greek said, “and the putrid water
  • That hedges so thy paunch before thine eyes.”
  • Then the false-coiner: “So is gaping wide
  • Thy mouth for speaking evil, as ’tis wont;
  • Because if I have thirst, and humour stuff me
  • Thou hast the burning and the head that aches,
  • And to lick up the mirror of Narcissus
  • Thou wouldst not want words many to invite thee.”
  • In listening to them was I wholly fixed,
  • When said the Master to me: “Now just look,
  • For little wants it that I quarrel with thee.”
  • When him I heard in anger speak to me,
  • I turned me round towards him with such shame
  • That still it eddies through my memory.
  • And as he is who dreams of his own harm,
  • Who dreaming wishes it may be a dream,
  • So that he craves what is, as if it were not;
  • Such I became, not having power to speak,
  • For to excuse myself I wished, and still
  • Excused myself, and did not think I did it.
  • “Less shame doth wash away a greater fault,”
  • The Master said, “than this of thine has been;
  • Therefore thyself disburden of all sadness,
  • And make account that I am aye beside thee,
  • If e’er it come to pass that fortune bring thee
  • Where there are people in a like dispute;
  • For a base wish it is to wish to hear it.”
  • Inferno: Canto XXXI
  • One and the selfsame tongue first wounded me,
  • So that it tinged the one cheek and the other,
  • And then held out to me the medicine;
  • Thus do I hear that once Achilles’ spear,
  • His and his father’s, used to be the cause
  • First of a sad and then a gracious boon.
  • We turned our backs upon the wretched valley,
  • Upon the bank that girds it round about,
  • Going across it without any speech.
  • There it was less than night, and less than day,
  • So that my sight went little in advance;
  • But I could hear the blare of a loud horn,
  • So loud it would have made each thunder faint,
  • Which, counter to it following its way,
  • Mine eyes directed wholly to one place.
  • After the dolorous discomfiture
  • When Charlemagne the holy emprise lost,
  • So terribly Orlando sounded not.
  • Short while my head turned thitherward I held
  • When many lofty towers I seemed to see,
  • Whereat I: “Master, say, what town is this?”
  • And he to me: “Because thou peerest forth
  • Athwart the darkness at too great a distance,
  • It happens that thou errest in thy fancy.
  • Well shalt thou see, if thou arrivest there,
  • How much the sense deceives itself by distance;
  • Therefore a little faster spur thee on.”
  • Then tenderly he took me by the hand,
  • And said: “Before we farther have advanced,
  • That the reality may seem to thee
  • Less strange, know that these are not towers, but giants,
  • And they are in the well, around the bank,
  • From navel downward, one and all of them.”
  • As, when the fog is vanishing away,
  • Little by little doth the sight refigure
  • Whate’er the mist that crowds the air conceals,
  • So, piercing through the dense and darksome air,
  • More and more near approaching tow’rd the verge,
  • My error fled, and fear came over me;
  • Because as on its circular parapets
  • Montereggione crowns itself with towers,
  • E’en thus the margin which surrounds the well
  • With one half of their bodies turreted
  • The horrible giants, whom Jove menaces
  • E’en now from out the heavens when he thunders.
  • And I of one already saw the face,
  • Shoulders, and breast, and great part of the belly,
  • And down along his sides both of the arms.
  • Certainly Nature, when she left the making
  • Of animals like these, did well indeed,
  • By taking such executors from Mars;
  • And if of elephants and whales she doth not
  • Repent her, whosoever looketh subtly
  • More just and more discreet will hold her for it;
  • For where the argument of intellect
  • Is added unto evil will and power,
  • No rampart can the people make against it.
  • His face appeared to me as long and large
  • As is at Rome the pine-cone of Saint Peter’s,
  • And in proportion were the other bones;
  • So that the margin, which an apron was
  • Down from the middle, showed so much of him
  • Above it, that to reach up to his hair
  • Three Frieslanders in vain had vaunted them;
  • For I beheld thirty great palms of him
  • Down from the place where man his mantle buckles.
  • “Raphael mai amech izabi almi,”
  • Began to clamour the ferocious mouth,
  • To which were not befitting sweeter psalms.
  • And unto him my Guide: “Soul idiotic,
  • Keep to thy horn, and vent thyself with that,
  • When wrath or other passion touches thee.
  • Search round thy neck, and thou wilt find the belt
  • Which keeps it fastened, O bewildered soul,
  • And see it, where it bars thy mighty breast.”
  • Then said to me: “He doth himself accuse;
  • This one is Nimrod, by whose evil thought
  • One language in the world is not still used.
  • Here let us leave him and not speak in vain;
  • For even such to him is every language
  • As his to others, which to none is known.”
  • Therefore a longer journey did we make,
  • Turned to the left, and a crossbow-shot oft
  • We found another far more fierce and large.
  • In binding him, who might the master be
  • I cannot say; but he had pinioned close
  • Behind the right arm, and in front the other,
  • With chains, that held him so begirt about
  • From the neck down, that on the part uncovered
  • It wound itself as far as the fifth gyre.
  • “This proud one wished to make experiment
  • Of his own power against the Supreme Jove,”
  • My Leader said, “whence he has such a guerdon.
  • Ephialtes is his name; he showed great prowess.
  • What time the giants terrified the gods;
  • The arms he wielded never more he moves.”
  • And I to him: “If possible, I should wish
  • That of the measureless Briareus
  • These eyes of mine might have experience.”
  • Whence he replied: “Thou shalt behold Antaeus
  • Close by here, who can speak and is unbound,
  • Who at the bottom of all crime shall place us.
  • Much farther yon is he whom thou wouldst see,
  • And he is bound, and fashioned like to this one,
  • Save that he seems in aspect more ferocious.”
  • There never was an earthquake of such might
  • That it could shake a tower so violently,
  • As Ephialtes suddenly shook himself.
  • Then was I more afraid of death than ever,
  • For nothing more was needful than the fear,
  • If I had not beheld the manacles.
  • Then we proceeded farther in advance,
  • And to Antaeus came, who, full five ells
  • Without the head, forth issued from the cavern.
  • “O thou, who in the valley fortunate,
  • Which Scipio the heir of glory made,
  • When Hannibal turned back with all his hosts,
  • Once brought’st a thousand lions for thy prey,
  • And who, hadst thou been at the mighty war
  • Among thy brothers, some it seems still think
  • The sons of Earth the victory would have gained:
  • Place us below, nor be disdainful of it,
  • There where the cold doth lock Cocytus up.
  • Make us not go to Tityus nor Typhoeus;
  • This one can give of that which here is longed for;
  • Therefore stoop down, and do not curl thy lip.
  • Still in the world can he restore thy fame;
  • Because he lives, and still expects long life,
  • If to itself Grace call him not untimely.”
  • So said the Master; and in haste the other
  • His hands extended and took up my Guide,—
  • Hands whose great pressure Hercules once felt.
  • Virgilius, when he felt himself embraced,
  • Said unto me: “Draw nigh, that I may take thee;”
  • Then of himself and me one bundle made.
  • As seems the Carisenda, to behold
  • Beneath the leaning side, when goes a cloud
  • Above it so that opposite it hangs;
  • Such did Antaeus seem to me, who stood
  • Watching to see him stoop, and then it was
  • I could have wished to go some other way.
  • But lightly in the abyss, which swallows up
  • Judas with Lucifer, he put us down;
  • Nor thus bowed downward made he there delay,
  • But, as a mast does in a ship, uprose.
  • Inferno: Canto XXXII
  • If I had rhymes both rough and stridulous,
  • As were appropriate to the dismal hole
  • Down upon which thrust all the other rocks,
  • I would press out the juice of my conception
  • More fully; but because I have them not,
  • Not without fear I bring myself to speak;
  • For ’tis no enterprise to take in jest,
  • To sketch the bottom of all the universe,
  • Nor for a tongue that cries Mamma and Babbo.
  • But may those Ladies help this verse of mine,
  • Who helped Amphion in enclosing Thebes,
  • That from the fact the word be not diverse.
  • O rabble ill-begotten above all,
  • Who’re in the place to speak of which is hard,
  • ’Twere better ye had here been sheep or goats!
  • When we were down within the darksome well,
  • Beneath the giant’s feet, but lower far,
  • And I was scanning still the lofty wall,
  • I heard it said to me: “Look how thou steppest!
  • Take heed thou do not trample with thy feet
  • The heads of the tired, miserable brothers!”
  • Whereat I turned me round, and saw before me
  • And underfoot a lake, that from the frost
  • The semblance had of glass, and not of water.
  • So thick a veil ne’er made upon its current
  • In winter-time Danube in Austria,
  • Nor there beneath the frigid sky the Don,
  • As there was here; so that if Tambernich
  • Had fallen upon it, or Pietrapana,
  • E’en at the edge ’twould not have given a creak.
  • And as to croak the frog doth place himself
  • With muzzle out of water,—when is dreaming
  • Of gleaning oftentimes the peasant-girl,—
  • Livid, as far down as where shame appears,
  • Were the disconsolate shades within the ice,
  • Setting their teeth unto the note of storks.
  • Each one his countenance held downward bent;
  • From mouth the cold, from eyes the doleful heart
  • Among them witness of itself procures.
  • When round about me somewhat I had looked,
  • I downward turned me, and saw two so close,
  • The hair upon their heads together mingled.
  • “Ye who so strain your breasts together, tell me,”
  • I said, “who are you;” and they bent their necks,
  • And when to me their faces they had lifted,
  • Their eyes, which first were only moist within,
  • Gushed o’er the eyelids, and the frost congealed
  • The tears between, and locked them up again.
  • Clamp never bound together wood with wood
  • So strongly; whereat they, like two he-goats,
  • Butted together, so much wrath o’ercame them.
  • And one, who had by reason of the cold
  • Lost both his ears, still with his visage downward,
  • Said: “Why dost thou so mirror thyself in us?
  • If thou desire to know who these two are,
  • The valley whence Bisenzio descends
  • Belonged to them and to their father Albert.
  • They from one body came, and all Caina
  • Thou shalt search through, and shalt not find a shade
  • More worthy to be fixed in gelatine;
  • Not he in whom were broken breast and shadow
  • At one and the same blow by Arthur’s hand;
  • Focaccia not; not he who me encumbers
  • So with his head I see no farther forward,
  • And bore the name of Sassol Mascheroni;
  • Well knowest thou who he was, if thou art Tuscan.
  • And that thou put me not to further speech,
  • Know that I Camicion de’ Pazzi was,
  • And wait Carlino to exonerate me.”
  • Then I beheld a thousand faces, made
  • Purple with cold; whence o’er me comes a shudder,
  • And evermore will come, at frozen ponds.
  • And while we were advancing tow’rds the middle,
  • Where everything of weight unites together,
  • And I was shivering in the eternal shade,
  • Whether ’twere will, or destiny, or chance,
  • I know not; but in walking ’mong the heads
  • I struck my foot hard in the face of one.
  • Weeping he growled: “Why dost thou trample me?
  • Unless thou comest to increase the vengeance
  • of Montaperti, why dost thou molest me?”
  • And I: “My Master, now wait here for me,
  • That I through him may issue from a doubt;
  • Then thou mayst hurry me, as thou shalt wish.”
  • The Leader stopped; and to that one I said
  • Who was blaspheming vehemently still:
  • “Who art thou, that thus reprehendest others?”
  • “Now who art thou, that goest through Antenora
  • Smiting,” replied he, “other people’s cheeks,
  • So that, if thou wert living, ’twere too much?”
  • “Living I am, and dear to thee it may be,”
  • Was my response, “if thou demandest fame,
  • That ’mid the other notes thy name I place.”
  • And he to me: “For the reverse I long;
  • Take thyself hence, and give me no more trouble;
  • For ill thou knowest to flatter in this hollow.”
  • Then by the scalp behind I seized upon him,
  • And said: “It must needs be thou name thyself,
  • Or not a hair remain upon thee here.”
  • Whence he to me: “Though thou strip off my hair,
  • I will not tell thee who I am, nor show thee,
  • If on my head a thousand times thou fall.”
  • I had his hair in hand already twisted,
  • And more than one shock of it had pulled out,
  • He barking, with his eyes held firmly down,
  • When cried another: “What doth ail thee, Bocca?
  • Is’t not enough to clatter with thy jaws,
  • But thou must bark? what devil touches thee?”
  • “Now,” said I, “I care not to have thee speak,
  • Accursed traitor; for unto thy shame
  • I will report of thee veracious news.”
  • “Begone,” replied he, “and tell what thou wilt,
  • But be not silent, if thou issue hence,
  • Of him who had just now his tongue so prompt;
  • He weepeth here the silver of the French;
  • ‘I saw,’ thus canst thou phrase it, ‘him of Duera
  • There where the sinners stand out in the cold.’
  • If thou shouldst questioned be who else was there,
  • Thou hast beside thee him of Beccaria,
  • Of whom the gorget Florence slit asunder;
  • Gianni del Soldanier, I think, may be
  • Yonder with Ganellon, and Tebaldello
  • Who oped Faenza when the people slep.”
  • Already we had gone away from him,
  • When I beheld two frozen in one hole,
  • So that one head a hood was to the other;
  • And even as bread through hunger is devoured,
  • The uppermost on the other set his teeth,
  • There where the brain is to the nape united.
  • Not in another fashion Tydeus gnawed
  • The temples of Menalippus in disdain,
  • Than that one did the skull and the other things.
  • “O thou, who showest by such bestial sign
  • Thy hatred against him whom thou art eating,
  • Tell me the wherefore,” said I, “with this compact,
  • That if thou rightfully of him complain,
  • In knowing who ye are, and his transgression,
  • I in the world above repay thee for it,
  • If that wherewith I speak be not dried up.”
  • Inferno: Canto XXXIII
  • His mouth uplifted from his grim repast,
  • That sinner, wiping it upon the hair
  • Of the same head that he behind had wasted.
  • Then he began: “Thou wilt that I renew
  • The desperate grief, which wrings my heart already
  • To think of only, ere I speak of it;
  • But if my words be seed that may bear fruit
  • Of infamy to the traitor whom I gnaw,
  • Speaking and weeping shalt thou see together.
  • I know not who thou art, nor by what mode
  • Thou hast come down here; but a Florentine
  • Thou seemest to me truly, when I hear thee.
  • Thou hast to know I was Count Ugolino,
  • And this one was Ruggieri the Archbishop;
  • Now I will tell thee why I am such a neighbour.
  • That, by effect of his malicious thoughts,
  • Trusting in him I was made prisoner,
  • And after put to death, I need not say;
  • But ne’ertheless what thou canst not have heard,
  • That is to say, how cruel was my death,
  • Hear shalt thou, and shalt know if he has wronged me.
  • A narrow perforation in the mew,
  • Which bears because of me the title of Famine,
  • And in which others still must be locked up,
  • Had shown me through its opening many moons
  • Already, when I dreamed the evil dream
  • Which of the future rent for me the veil.
  • This one appeared to me as lord and master,
  • Hunting the wolf and whelps upon the mountain
  • For which the Pisans cannot Lucca see.
  • With sleuth-hounds gaunt, and eager, and well trained,
  • Gualandi with Sismondi and Lanfianchi
  • He had sent out before him to the front.
  • After brief course seemed unto me forespent
  • The father and the sons, and with sharp tushes
  • It seemed to me I saw their flanks ripped open.
  • When I before the morrow was awake,
  • Moaning amid their sleep I heard my sons
  • Who with me were, and asking after bread.
  • Cruel indeed art thou, if yet thou grieve not,
  • Thinking of what my heart foreboded me,
  • And weep’st thou not, what art thou wont to weep at?
  • They were awake now, and the hour drew nigh
  • At which our food used to be brought to us,
  • And through his dream was each one apprehensive;
  • And I heard locking up the under door
  • Of the horrible tower; whereat without a word
  • I gazed into the faces of my sons.
  • I wept not, I within so turned to stone;
  • They wept; and darling little Anselm mine
  • Said: ‘Thou dost gaze so, father, what doth ail thee?’
  • Still not a tear I shed, nor answer made
  • All of that day, nor yet the night thereafter,
  • Until another sun rose on the world.
  • As now a little glimmer made its way
  • Into the dolorous prison, and I saw
  • Upon four faces my own very aspect,
  • Both of my hands in agony I bit;
  • And, thinking that I did it from desire
  • Of eating, on a sudden they uprose,
  • And said they: ‘Father, much less pain ’twill give us
  • If thou do eat of us; thyself didst clothe us
  • With this poor flesh, and do thou strip it off.’
  • I calmed me then, not to make them more sad.
  • That day we all were silent, and the next.
  • Ah! obdurate earth, wherefore didst thou not open?
  • When we had come unto the fourth day, Gaddo
  • Threw himself down outstretched before my feet,
  • Saying, ‘My father, why dost thou not help me?’
  • And there he died; and, as thou seest me,
  • I saw the three fall, one by one, between
  • The fifth day and the sixth; whence I betook me,
  • Already blind, to groping over each,
  • And three days called them after they were dead;
  • Then hunger did what sorrow could not do.”
  • When he had said this, with his eyes distorted,
  • The wretched skull resumed he with his teeth,
  • Which, as a dog’s, upon the bone were strong.
  • Ah! Pisa, thou opprobrium of the people
  • Of the fair land there where the ‘Si’ doth sound,
  • Since slow to punish thee thy neighbours are,
  • Let the Capraia and Gorgona move,
  • And make a hedge across the mouth of Arno
  • That every person in thee it may drown!
  • For if Count Ugolino had the fame
  • Of having in thy castles thee betrayed,
  • Thou shouldst not on such cross have put his sons.
  • Guiltless of any crime, thou modern Thebes!
  • Their youth made Uguccione and Brigata,
  • And the other two my song doth name above!
  • We passed still farther onward, where the ice
  • Another people ruggedly enswathes,
  • Not downward turned, but all of them reversed.
  • Weeping itself there does not let them weep,
  • And grief that finds a barrier in the eyes
  • Turns itself inward to increase the anguish;
  • Because the earliest tears a cluster form,
  • And, in the manner of a crystal visor,
  • Fill all the cup beneath the eyebrow full.
  • And notwithstanding that, as in a callus,
  • Because of cold all sensibility
  • Its station had abandoned in my face,
  • Still it appeared to me I felt some wind;
  • Whence I: “My Master, who sets this in motion?
  • Is not below here every vapour quenched?”
  • Whence he to me: “Full soon shalt thou be where
  • Thine eye shall answer make to thee of this,
  • Seeing the cause which raineth down the blast.”
  • And one of the wretches of the frozen crust
  • Cried out to us: “O souls so merciless
  • That the last post is given unto you,
  • Lift from mine eyes the rigid veils, that I
  • May vent the sorrow which impregns my heart
  • A little, e’er the weeping recongeal.”
  • Whence I to him: “If thou wouldst have me help thee
  • Say who thou wast; and if I free thee not,
  • May I go to the bottom of the ice.”
  • Then he replied: “I am Friar Alberigo;
  • He am I of the fruit of the bad garden,
  • Who here a date am getting for my fig.”
  • “O,” said I to him, “now art thou, too, dead?”
  • And he to me: “How may my body fare
  • Up in the world, no knowledge I possess.
  • Such an advantage has this Ptolomaea,
  • That oftentimes the soul descendeth here
  • Sooner than Atropos in motion sets it.
  • And, that thou mayest more willingly remove
  • From off my countenance these glassy tears,
  • Know that as soon as any soul betrays
  • As I have done, his body by a demon
  • Is taken from him, who thereafter rules it,
  • Until his time has wholly been revolved.
  • Itself down rushes into such a cistern;
  • And still perchance above appears the body
  • Of yonder shade, that winters here behind me.
  • This thou shouldst know, if thou hast just come down;
  • It is Ser Branca d’ Oria, and many years
  • Have passed away since he was thus locked up.”
  • “I think,” said I to him, “thou dost deceive me;
  • For Branca d’ Oria is not dead as yet,
  • And eats, and drinks, and sleeps, and puts on clothes.”
  • “In moat above,” said he, “of Malebranche,
  • There where is boiling the tenacious pitch,
  • As yet had Michel Zanche not arrived,
  • When this one left a devil in his stead
  • In his own body and one near of kin,
  • Who made together with him the betrayal.
  • But hitherward stretch out thy hand forthwith,
  • Open mine eyes;”—and open them I did not,
  • And to be rude to him was courtesy.
  • Ah, Genoese! ye men at variance
  • With every virtue, full of every vice
  • Wherefore are ye not scattered from the world?
  • For with the vilest spirit of Romagna
  • I found of you one such, who for his deeds
  • In soul already in Cocytus bathes,
  • And still above in body seems alive!
  • Inferno: Canto XXXIV
  • “‘Vexilla Regis prodeunt Inferni’
  • Towards us; therefore look in front of thee,”
  • My Master said, “if thou discernest him.”
  • As, when there breathes a heavy fog, or when
  • Our hemisphere is darkening into night,
  • Appears far off a mill the wind is turning,
  • Methought that such a building then I saw;
  • And, for the wind, I drew myself behind
  • My Guide, because there was no other shelter.
  • Now was I, and with fear in verse I put it,
  • There where the shades were wholly covered up,
  • And glimmered through like unto straws in glass.
  • Some prone are lying, others stand erect,
  • This with the head, and that one with the soles;
  • Another, bow-like, face to feet inverts.
  • When in advance so far we had proceeded,
  • That it my Master pleased to show to me
  • The creature who once had the beauteous semblance,
  • He from before me moved and made me stop,
  • Saying: “Behold Dis, and behold the place
  • Where thou with fortitude must arm thyself.”
  • How frozen I became and powerless then,
  • Ask it not, Reader, for I write it not,
  • Because all language would be insufficient.
  • I did not die, and I alive remained not;
  • Think for thyself now, hast thou aught of wit,
  • What I became, being of both deprived.
  • The Emperor of the kingdom dolorous
  • From his mid-breast forth issued from the ice;
  • And better with a giant I compare
  • Than do the giants with those arms of his;
  • Consider now how great must be that whole,
  • Which unto such a part conforms itself.
  • Were he as fair once, as he now is foul,
  • And lifted up his brow against his Maker,
  • Well may proceed from him all tribulation.
  • O, what a marvel it appeared to me,
  • When I beheld three faces on his head!
  • The one in front, and that vermilion was;
  • Two were the others, that were joined with this
  • Above the middle part of either shoulder,
  • And they were joined together at the crest;
  • And the right-hand one seemed ’twixt white and yellow;
  • The left was such to look upon as those
  • Who come from where the Nile falls valley-ward.
  • Underneath each came forth two mighty wings,
  • Such as befitting were so great a bird;
  • Sails of the sea I never saw so large.
  • No feathers had they, but as of a bat
  • Their fashion was; and he was waving them,
  • So that three winds proceeded forth therefrom.
  • Thereby Cocytus wholly was congealed.
  • With six eyes did he weep, and down three chins
  • Trickled the tear-drops and the bloody drivel.
  • At every mouth he with his teeth was crunching
  • A sinner, in the manner of a brake,
  • So that he three of them tormented thus.
  • To him in front the biting was as naught
  • Unto the clawing, for sometimes the spine
  • Utterly stripped of all the skin remained.
  • “That soul up there which has the greatest pain,”
  • The Master said, “is Judas Iscariot;
  • With head inside, he plies his legs without.
  • Of the two others, who head downward are,
  • The one who hangs from the black jowl is Brutus;
  • See how he writhes himself, and speaks no word.
  • And the other, who so stalwart seems, is Cassius.
  • But night is reascending, and ’tis time
  • That we depart, for we have seen the whole.”
  • As seemed him good, I clasped him round the neck,
  • And he the vantage seized of time and place,
  • And when the wings were opened wide apart,
  • He laid fast hold upon the shaggy sides;
  • From fell to fell descended downward then
  • Between the thick hair and the frozen crust.
  • When we were come to where the thigh revolves
  • Exactly on the thickness of the haunch,
  • The Guide, with labour and with hard-drawn breath,
  • Turned round his head where he had had his legs,
  • And grappled to the hair, as one who mounts,
  • So that to Hell I thought we were returning.
  • “Keep fast thy hold, for by such stairs as these,”
  • The Master said, panting as one fatigued,
  • “Must we perforce depart from so much evil.”
  • Then through the opening of a rock he issued,
  • And down upon the margin seated me;
  • Then tow’rds me he outstretched his wary step.
  • I lifted up mine eyes and thought to see
  • Lucifer in the same way I had left him;
  • And I beheld him upward hold his legs.
  • And if I then became disquieted,
  • Let stolid people think who do not see
  • What the point is beyond which I had passed.
  • “Rise up,” the Master said, “upon thy feet;
  • The way is long, and difficult the road,
  • And now the sun to middle-tierce returns.”
  • It was not any palace corridor
  • There where we were, but dungeon natural,
  • With floor uneven and unease of light.
  • “Ere from the abyss I tear myself away,
  • My Master,” said I when I had arisen,
  • “To draw me from an error speak a little;
  • Where is the ice? and how is this one fixed
  • Thus upside down? and how in such short time
  • From eve to morn has the sun made his transit?”
  • And he to me: “Thou still imaginest
  • Thou art beyond the centre, where I grasped
  • The hair of the fell worm, who mines the world.
  • That side thou wast, so long as I descended;
  • When round I turned me, thou didst pass the point
  • To which things heavy draw from every side,
  • And now beneath the hemisphere art come
  • Opposite that which overhangs the vast
  • Dry-land, and ’neath whose cope was put to death
  • The Man who without sin was born and lived.
  • Thou hast thy feet upon the little sphere
  • Which makes the other face of the Judecca.
  • Here it is morn when it is evening there;
  • And he who with his hair a stairway made us
  • Still fixed remaineth as he was before.
  • Upon this side he fell down out of heaven;
  • And all the land, that whilom here emerged,
  • For fear of him made of the sea a veil,
  • And came to our hemisphere; and peradventure
  • To flee from him, what on this side appears
  • Left the place vacant here, and back recoiled.”
  • A place there is below, from Beelzebub
  • As far receding as the tomb extends,
  • Which not by sight is known, but by the sound
  • Of a small rivulet, that there descendeth
  • Through chasm within the stone, which it has gnawed
  • With course that winds about and slightly falls.
  • The Guide and I into that hidden road
  • Now entered, to return to the bright world;
  • And without care of having any rest
  • We mounted up, he first and I the second,
  • Till I beheld through a round aperture
  • Some of the beauteous things that Heaven doth bear;
  • Thence we came forth to rebehold the stars.
  • PURGATORIO
  • Purgatorio: Canto I
  • To run o’er better waters hoists its sail
  • The little vessel of my genius now,
  • That leaves behind itself a sea so cruel;
  • And of that second kingdom will I sing
  • Wherein the human spirit doth purge itself,
  • And to ascend to heaven becometh worthy.
  • But let dead Poesy here rise again,
  • O holy Muses, since that I am yours,
  • And here Calliope somewhat ascend,
  • My song accompanying with that sound,
  • Of which the miserable magpies felt
  • The blow so great, that they despaired of pardon.
  • Sweet colour of the oriental sapphire,
  • That was upgathered in the cloudless aspect
  • Of the pure air, as far as the first circle,
  • Unto mine eyes did recommence delight
  • Soon as I issued forth from the dead air,
  • Which had with sadness filled mine eyes and breast.
  • The beauteous planet, that to love incites,
  • Was making all the orient to laugh,
  • Veiling the Fishes that were in her escort.
  • To the right hand I turned, and fixed my mind
  • Upon the other pole, and saw four stars
  • Ne’er seen before save by the primal people.
  • Rejoicing in their flamelets seemed the heaven.
  • O thou septentrional and widowed site,
  • Because thou art deprived of seeing these!
  • When from regarding them I had withdrawn,
  • Turning a little to the other pole,
  • There where the Wain had disappeared already,
  • I saw beside me an old man alone,
  • Worthy of so much reverence in his look,
  • That more owes not to father any son.
  • A long beard and with white hair intermingled
  • He wore, in semblance like unto the tresses,
  • Of which a double list fell on his breast.
  • The rays of the four consecrated stars
  • Did so adorn his countenance with light,
  • That him I saw as were the sun before him.
  • “Who are you? ye who, counter the blind river,
  • Have fled away from the eternal prison?”
  • Moving those venerable plumes, he said:
  • “Who guided you? or who has been your lamp
  • In issuing forth out of the night profound,
  • That ever black makes the infernal valley?
  • The laws of the abyss, are they thus broken?
  • Or is there changed in heaven some council new,
  • That being damned ye come unto my crags?”
  • Then did my Leader lay his grasp upon me,
  • And with his words, and with his hands and signs,
  • Reverent he made in me my knees and brow;
  • Then answered him: “I came not of myself;
  • A Lady from Heaven descended, at whose prayers
  • I aided this one with my company.
  • But since it is thy will more be unfolded
  • Of our condition, how it truly is,
  • Mine cannot be that this should be denied thee.
  • This one has never his last evening seen,
  • But by his folly was so near to it
  • That very little time was there to turn.
  • As I have said, I unto him was sent
  • To rescue him, and other way was none
  • Than this to which I have myself betaken.
  • I’ve shown him all the people of perdition,
  • And now those spirits I intend to show
  • Who purge themselves beneath thy guardianship.
  • How I have brought him would be long to tell thee.
  • Virtue descendeth from on high that aids me
  • To lead him to behold thee and to hear thee.
  • Now may it please thee to vouchsafe his coming;
  • He seeketh Liberty, which is so dear,
  • As knoweth he who life for her refuses.
  • Thou know’st it; since, for her, to thee not bitter
  • Was death in Utica, where thou didst leave
  • The vesture, that will shine so, the great day.
  • By us the eternal edicts are not broken;
  • Since this one lives, and Minos binds not me;
  • But of that circle I, where are the chaste
  • Eyes of thy Marcia, who in looks still prays thee,
  • O holy breast, to hold her as thine own;
  • For her love, then, incline thyself to us.
  • Permit us through thy sevenfold realm to go;
  • I will take back this grace from thee to her,
  • If to be mentioned there below thou deignest.”
  • “Marcia so pleasing was unto mine eyes
  • While I was on the other side,” then said he,
  • “That every grace she wished of me I granted;
  • Now that she dwells beyond the evil river,
  • She can no longer move me, by that law
  • Which, when I issued forth from there, was made.
  • But if a Lady of Heaven do move and rule thee,
  • As thou dost say, no flattery is needful;
  • Let it suffice thee that for her thou ask me.
  • Go, then, and see thou gird this one about
  • With a smooth rush, and that thou wash his face,
  • So that thou cleanse away all stain therefrom,
  • For ’twere not fitting that the eye o’ercast
  • By any mist should go before the first
  • Angel, who is of those of Paradise.
  • This little island round about its base
  • Below there, yonder, where the billow beats it,
  • Doth rushes bear upon its washy ooze;
  • No other plant that putteth forth the leaf,
  • Or that doth indurate, can there have life,
  • Because it yieldeth not unto the shocks.
  • Thereafter be not this way your return;
  • The sun, which now is rising, will direct you
  • To take the mount by easier ascent.”
  • With this he vanished; and I raised me up
  • Without a word, and wholly drew myself
  • Unto my Guide, and turned mine eyes to him.
  • And he began: “Son, follow thou my steps;
  • Let us turn back, for on this side declines
  • The plain unto its lower boundaries.”
  • The dawn was vanquishing the matin hour
  • Which fled before it, so that from afar
  • I recognised the trembling of the sea.
  • Along the solitary plain we went
  • As one who unto the lost road returns,
  • And till he finds it seems to go in vain.
  • As soon as we were come to where the dew
  • Fights with the sun, and, being in a part
  • Where shadow falls, little evaporates,
  • Both of his hands upon the grass outspread
  • In gentle manner did my Master place;
  • Whence I, who of his action was aware,
  • Extended unto him my tearful cheeks;
  • There did he make in me uncovered wholly
  • That hue which Hell had covered up in me.
  • Then came we down upon the desert shore
  • Which never yet saw navigate its waters
  • Any that afterward had known return.
  • There he begirt me as the other pleased;
  • O marvellous! for even as he culled
  • The humble plant, such it sprang up again
  • Suddenly there where he uprooted it.
  • Purgatorio: Canto II
  • Already had the sun the horizon reached
  • Whose circle of meridian covers o’er
  • Jerusalem with its most lofty point,
  • And night that opposite to him revolves
  • Was issuing forth from Ganges with the Scales
  • That fall from out her hand when she exceedeth;
  • So that the white and the vermilion cheeks
  • Of beautiful Aurora, where I was,
  • By too great age were changing into orange.
  • We still were on the border of the sea,
  • Like people who are thinking of their road,
  • Who go in heart and with the body stay;
  • And lo! as when, upon the approach of morning,
  • Through the gross vapours Mars grows fiery red
  • Down in the West upon the ocean floor,
  • Appeared to me—may I again behold it!—
  • A light along the sea so swiftly coming,
  • Its motion by no flight of wing is equalled;
  • From which when I a little had withdrawn
  • Mine eyes, that I might question my Conductor,
  • Again I saw it brighter grown and larger.
  • Then on each side of it appeared to me
  • I knew not what of white, and underneath it
  • Little by little there came forth another.
  • My Master yet had uttered not a word
  • While the first whiteness into wings unfolded;
  • But when he clearly recognised the pilot,
  • He cried: “Make haste, make haste to bow the knee!
  • Behold the Angel of God! fold thou thy hands!
  • Henceforward shalt thou see such officers!
  • See how he scorneth human arguments,
  • So that nor oar he wants, nor other sail
  • Than his own wings, between so distant shores.
  • See how he holds them pointed up to heaven,
  • Fanning the air with the eternal pinions,
  • That do not moult themselves like mortal hair!”
  • Then as still nearer and more near us came
  • The Bird Divine, more radiant he appeared,
  • So that near by the eye could not endure him,
  • But down I cast it; and he came to shore
  • With a small vessel, very swift and light,
  • So that the water swallowed naught thereof.
  • Upon the stern stood the Celestial Pilot;
  • Beatitude seemed written in his face,
  • And more than a hundred spirits sat within.
  • “In exitu Israel de Aegypto!”
  • They chanted all together in one voice,
  • With whatso in that psalm is after written.
  • Then made he sign of holy rood upon them,
  • Whereat all cast themselves upon the shore,
  • And he departed swiftly as he came.
  • The throng which still remained there unfamiliar
  • Seemed with the place, all round about them gazing,
  • As one who in new matters makes essay.
  • On every side was darting forth the day.
  • The sun, who had with his resplendent shafts
  • From the mid-heaven chased forth the Capricorn,
  • When the new people lifted up their faces
  • Towards us, saying to us: “If ye know,
  • Show us the way to go unto the mountain.”
  • And answer made Virgilius: “Ye believe
  • Perchance that we have knowledge of this place,
  • But we are strangers even as yourselves.
  • Just now we came, a little while before you,
  • Another way, which was so rough and steep,
  • That mounting will henceforth seem sport to us.”
  • The souls who had, from seeing me draw breath,
  • Become aware that I was still alive,
  • Pallid in their astonishment became;
  • And as to messenger who bears the olive
  • The people throng to listen to the news,
  • And no one shows himself afraid of crowding,
  • So at the sight of me stood motionless
  • Those fortunate spirits, all of them, as if
  • Oblivious to go and make them fair.
  • One from among them saw I coming forward,
  • As to embrace me, with such great affection,
  • That it incited me to do the like.
  • O empty shadows, save in aspect only!
  • Three times behind it did I clasp my hands,
  • As oft returned with them to my own breast!
  • I think with wonder I depicted me;
  • Whereat the shadow smiled and backward drew;
  • And I, pursuing it, pressed farther forward.
  • Gently it said that I should stay my steps;
  • Then knew I who it was, and I entreated
  • That it would stop awhile to speak with me.
  • It made reply to me: “Even as I loved thee
  • In mortal body, so I love thee free;
  • Therefore I stop; but wherefore goest thou?”
  • “My own Casella! to return once more
  • There where I am, I make this journey,” said I;
  • “But how from thee has so much time be taken?”
  • And he to me: “No outrage has been done me,
  • If he who takes both when and whom he pleases
  • Has many times denied to me this passage,
  • For of a righteous will his own is made.
  • He, sooth to say, for three months past has taken
  • Whoever wished to enter with all peace;
  • Whence I, who now had turned unto that shore
  • Where salt the waters of the Tiber grow,
  • Benignantly by him have been received.
  • Unto that outlet now his wing is pointed,
  • Because for evermore assemble there
  • Those who tow’rds Acheron do not descend.”
  • And I: “If some new law take not from thee
  • Memory or practice of the song of love,
  • Which used to quiet in me all my longings,
  • Thee may it please to comfort therewithal
  • Somewhat this soul of mine, that with its body
  • Hitherward coming is so much distressed.”
  • “Love, that within my mind discourses with me,”
  • Forthwith began he so melodiously,
  • The melody within me still is sounding.
  • My Master, and myself, and all that people
  • Which with him were, appeared as satisfied
  • As if naught else might touch the mind of any.
  • We all of us were moveless and attentive
  • Unto his notes; and lo! the grave old man,
  • Exclaiming: “What is this, ye laggard spirits?
  • What negligence, what standing still is this?
  • Run to the mountain to strip off the slough,
  • That lets not God be manifest to you.”
  • Even as when, collecting grain or tares,
  • The doves, together at their pasture met,
  • Quiet, nor showing their accustomed pride,
  • If aught appear of which they are afraid,
  • Upon a sudden leave their food alone,
  • Because they are assailed by greater care;
  • So that fresh company did I behold
  • The song relinquish, and go tow’rds the hill,
  • As one who goes, and knows not whitherward;
  • Nor was our own departure less in haste.
  • Purgatorio: Canto III
  • Inasmuch as the instantaneous flight
  • Had scattered them asunder o’er the plain,
  • Turned to the mountain whither reason spurs us,
  • I pressed me close unto my faithful comrade,
  • And how without him had I kept my course?
  • Who would have led me up along the mountain?
  • He seemed to me within himself remorseful;
  • O noble conscience, and without a stain,
  • How sharp a sting is trivial fault to thee!
  • After his feet had laid aside the haste
  • Which mars the dignity of every act,
  • My mind, that hitherto had been restrained,
  • Let loose its faculties as if delighted,
  • And I my sight directed to the hill
  • That highest tow’rds the heaven uplifts itself.
  • The sun, that in our rear was flaming red,
  • Was broken in front of me into the figure
  • Which had in me the stoppage of its rays;
  • Unto one side I turned me, with the fear
  • Of being left alone, when I beheld
  • Only in front of me the ground obscured.
  • “Why dost thou still mistrust?” my Comforter
  • Began to say to me turned wholly round;
  • “Dost thou not think me with thee, and that I guide thee?
  • ’Tis evening there already where is buried
  • The body within which I cast a shadow;
  • ’Tis from Brundusium ta’en, and Naples has it.
  • Now if in front of me no shadow fall,
  • Marvel not at it more than at the heavens,
  • Because one ray impedeth not another
  • To suffer torments, both of cold and heat,
  • Bodies like this that Power provides, which wills
  • That how it works be not unveiled to us.
  • Insane is he who hopeth that our reason
  • Can traverse the illimitable way,
  • Which the one Substance in three Persons follows!
  • Mortals, remain contented at the ‘Quia;’
  • For if ye had been able to see all,
  • No need there were for Mary to give birth;
  • And ye have seen desiring without fruit,
  • Those whose desire would have been quieted,
  • Which evermore is given them for a grief.
  • I speak of Aristotle and of Plato,
  • And many others;”—and here bowed his head,
  • And more he said not, and remained disturbed.
  • We came meanwhile unto the mountain’s foot;
  • There so precipitate we found the rock,
  • That nimble legs would there have been in vain.
  • ’Twixt Lerici and Turbia, the most desert,
  • The most secluded pathway is a stair
  • Easy and open, if compared with that.
  • “Who knoweth now upon which hand the hill
  • Slopes down,” my Master said, his footsteps staying,
  • “So that who goeth without wings may mount?”
  • And while he held his eyes upon the ground
  • Examining the nature of the path,
  • And I was looking up around the rock,
  • On the left hand appeared to me a throng
  • Of souls, that moved their feet in our direction,
  • And did not seem to move, they came so slowly.
  • “Lift up thine eyes,” I to the Master said;
  • “Behold, on this side, who will give us counsel,
  • If thou of thine own self can have it not.”
  • Then he looked at me, and with frank expression
  • Replied: “Let us go there, for they come slowly,
  • And thou be steadfast in thy hope, sweet son.”
  • Still was that people as far off from us,
  • After a thousand steps of ours I say,
  • As a good thrower with his hand would reach,
  • When they all crowded unto the hard masses
  • Of the high bank, and motionless stood and close,
  • As he stands still to look who goes in doubt.
  • “O happy dead! O spirits elect already!”
  • Virgilius made beginning, “by that peace
  • Which I believe is waiting for you all,
  • Tell us upon what side the mountain slopes,
  • So that the going up be possible,
  • For to lose time irks him most who most knows.”
  • As sheep come issuing forth from out the fold
  • By ones and twos and threes, and the others stand
  • Timidly, holding down their eyes and nostrils,
  • And what the foremost does the others do,
  • Huddling themselves against her, if she stop,
  • Simple and quiet and the wherefore know not;
  • So moving to approach us thereupon
  • I saw the leader of that fortunate flock,
  • Modest in face and dignified in gait.
  • As soon as those in the advance saw broken
  • The light upon the ground at my right side,
  • So that from me the shadow reached the rock,
  • They stopped, and backward drew themselves somewhat;
  • And all the others, who came after them,
  • Not knowing why nor wherefore, did the same.
  • “Without your asking, I confess to you
  • This is a human body which you see,
  • Whereby the sunshine on the ground is cleft.
  • Marvel ye not thereat, but be persuaded
  • That not without a power which comes from Heaven
  • Doth he endeavour to surmount this wall.”
  • The Master thus; and said those worthy people:
  • “Return ye then, and enter in before us,”
  • Making a signal with the back o’ the hand
  • And one of them began: “Whoe’er thou art,
  • Thus going turn thine eyes, consider well
  • If e’er thou saw me in the other world.”
  • I turned me tow’rds him, and looked at him closely;
  • Blond was he, beautiful, and of noble aspect,
  • But one of his eyebrows had a blow divided.
  • When with humility I had disclaimed
  • E’er having seen him, “Now behold!” he said,
  • And showed me high upon his breast a wound.
  • Then said he with a smile: “I am Manfredi,
  • The grandson of the Empress Costanza;
  • Therefore, when thou returnest, I beseech thee
  • Go to my daughter beautiful, the mother
  • Of Sicily’s honour and of Aragon’s,
  • And the truth tell her, if aught else be told.
  • After I had my body lacerated
  • By these two mortal stabs, I gave myself
  • Weeping to Him, who willingly doth pardon.
  • Horrible my iniquities had been;
  • But Infinite Goodness hath such ample arms,
  • That it receives whatever turns to it.
  • Had but Cosenza’s pastor, who in chase
  • Of me was sent by Clement at that time,
  • In God read understandingly this page,
  • The bones of my dead body still would be
  • At the bridge-head, near unto Benevento,
  • Under the safeguard of the heavy cairn.
  • Now the rain bathes and moveth them the wind,
  • Beyond the realm, almost beside the Verde,
  • Where he transported them with tapers quenched.
  • By malison of theirs is not so lost
  • Eternal Love, that it cannot return,
  • So long as hope has anything of green.
  • True is it, who in contumacy dies
  • Of Holy Church, though penitent at last,
  • Must wait upon the outside this bank
  • Thirty times told the time that he has been
  • In his presumption, unless such decree
  • Shorter by means of righteous prayers become.
  • See now if thou hast power to make me happy,
  • By making known unto my good Costanza
  • How thou hast seen me, and this ban beside,
  • For those on earth can much advance us here.”
  • Purgatorio: Canto IV
  • Whenever by delight or else by pain,
  • That seizes any faculty of ours,
  • Wholly to that the soul collects itself,
  • It seemeth that no other power it heeds;
  • And this against that error is which thinks
  • One soul above another kindles in us.
  • And hence, whenever aught is heard or seen
  • Which keeps the soul intently bent upon it,
  • Time passes on, and we perceive it not,
  • Because one faculty is that which listens,
  • And other that which the soul keeps entire;
  • This is as if in bonds, and that is free.
  • Of this I had experience positive
  • In hearing and in gazing at that spirit;
  • For fifty full degrees uprisen was
  • The sun, and I had not perceived it, when
  • We came to where those souls with one accord
  • Cried out unto us: “Here is what you ask.”
  • A greater opening ofttimes hedges up
  • With but a little forkful of his thorns
  • The villager, what time the grape imbrowns,
  • Than was the passage-way through which ascended
  • Only my Leader and myself behind him,
  • After that company departed from us.
  • One climbs Sanleo and descends in Noli,
  • And mounts the summit of Bismantova,
  • With feet alone; but here one needs must fly;
  • With the swift pinions and the plumes I say
  • Of great desire, conducted after him
  • Who gave me hope, and made a light for me.
  • We mounted upward through the rifted rock,
  • And on each side the border pressed upon us,
  • And feet and hands the ground beneath required.
  • When we were come upon the upper rim
  • Of the high bank, out on the open slope,
  • “My Master,” said I, “what way shall we take?”
  • And he to me: “No step of thine descend;
  • Still up the mount behind me win thy way,
  • Till some sage escort shall appear to us.”
  • The summit was so high it vanquished sight,
  • And the hillside precipitous far more
  • Than line from middle quadrant to the centre.
  • Spent with fatigue was I, when I began:
  • “O my sweet Father! turn thee and behold
  • How I remain alone, unless thou stay!”
  • “O son,” he said, “up yonder drag thyself,”
  • Pointing me to a terrace somewhat higher,
  • Which on that side encircles all the hill.
  • These words of his so spurred me on, that I
  • Strained every nerve, behind him scrambling up,
  • Until the circle was beneath my feet.
  • Thereon ourselves we seated both of us
  • Turned to the East, from which we had ascended,
  • For all men are delighted to look back.
  • To the low shores mine eyes I first directed,
  • Then to the sun uplifted them, and wondered
  • That on the left hand we were smitten by it.
  • The Poet well perceived that I was wholly
  • Bewildered at the chariot of the light,
  • Where ’twixt us and the Aquilon it entered.
  • Whereon he said to me: “If Castor and Pollux
  • Were in the company of yonder mirror,
  • That up and down conducteth with its light,
  • Thou wouldst behold the zodiac’s jagged wheel
  • Revolving still more near unto the Bears,
  • Unless it swerved aside from its old track.
  • How that may be wouldst thou have power to think,
  • Collected in thyself, imagine Zion
  • Together with this mount on earth to stand,
  • So that they both one sole horizon have,
  • And hemispheres diverse; whereby the road
  • Which Phaeton, alas! knew not to drive,
  • Thou’lt see how of necessity must pass
  • This on one side, when that upon the other,
  • If thine intelligence right clearly heed.”
  • “Truly, my Master,” said I, “never yet
  • Saw I so clearly as I now discern,
  • There where my wit appeared incompetent,
  • That the mid-circle of supernal motion,
  • Which in some art is the Equator called,
  • And aye remains between the Sun and Winter,
  • For reason which thou sayest, departeth hence
  • Tow’rds the Septentrion, what time the Hebrews
  • Beheld it tow’rds the region of the heat.
  • But, if it pleaseth thee, I fain would learn
  • How far we have to go; for the hill rises
  • Higher than eyes of mine have power to rise.”
  • And he to me: “This mount is such, that ever
  • At the beginning down below ’tis tiresome,
  • And aye the more one climbs, the less it hurts.
  • Therefore, when it shall seem so pleasant to thee,
  • That going up shall be to thee as easy
  • As going down the current in a boat,
  • Then at this pathway’s ending thou wilt be;
  • There to repose thy panting breath expect;
  • No more I answer; and this I know for true.”
  • And as he finished uttering these words,
  • A voice close by us sounded: “Peradventure
  • Thou wilt have need of sitting down ere that.”
  • At sound thereof each one of us turned round,
  • And saw upon the left hand a great rock,
  • Which neither I nor he before had noticed.
  • Thither we drew; and there were persons there
  • Who in the shadow stood behind the rock,
  • As one through indolence is wont to stand.
  • And one of them, who seemed to me fatigued,
  • Was sitting down, and both his knees embraced,
  • Holding his face low down between them bowed.
  • “O my sweet Lord,” I said, “do turn thine eye
  • On him who shows himself more negligent
  • Then even Sloth herself his sister were.”
  • Then he turned round to us, and he gave heed,
  • Just lifting up his eyes above his thigh,
  • And said: “Now go thou up, for thou art valiant.”
  • Then knew I who he was; and the distress,
  • That still a little did my breathing quicken,
  • My going to him hindered not; and after
  • I came to him he hardly raised his head,
  • Saying: “Hast thou seen clearly how the sun
  • O’er thy left shoulder drives his chariot?”
  • His sluggish attitude and his curt words
  • A little unto laughter moved my lips;
  • Then I began: “Belacqua, I grieve not
  • For thee henceforth; but tell me, wherefore seated
  • In this place art thou? Waitest thou an escort?
  • Or has thy usual habit seized upon thee?”
  • And he: “O brother, what’s the use of climbing?
  • Since to my torment would not let me go
  • The Angel of God, who sitteth at the gate.
  • First heaven must needs so long revolve me round
  • Outside thereof, as in my life it did,
  • Since the good sighs I to the end postponed,
  • Unless, e’er that, some prayer may bring me aid
  • Which rises from a heart that lives in grace;
  • What profit others that in heaven are heard not?”
  • Meanwhile the Poet was before me mounting,
  • And saying: “Come now; see the sun has touched
  • Meridian, and from the shore the night
  • Covers already with her foot Morocco.”
  • Purgatorio: Canto V
  • I had already from those shades departed,
  • And followed in the footsteps of my Guide,
  • When from behind, pointing his finger at me,
  • One shouted: “See, it seems as if shone not
  • The sunshine on the left of him below,
  • And like one living seems he to conduct him.”
  • Mine eyes I turned at utterance of these words,
  • And saw them watching with astonishment
  • But me, but me, and the light which was broken!
  • “Why doth thy mind so occupy itself,”
  • The Master said, “that thou thy pace dost slacken?
  • What matters it to thee what here is whispered?
  • Come after me, and let the people talk;
  • Stand like a steadfast tower, that never wags
  • Its top for all the blowing of the winds;
  • For evermore the man in whom is springing
  • Thought upon thought, removes from him the mark,
  • Because the force of one the other weakens.”
  • What could I say in answer but “I come”?
  • I said it somewhat with that colour tinged
  • Which makes a man of pardon sometimes worthy.
  • Meanwhile along the mountain-side across
  • Came people in advance of us a little,
  • Singing the Miserere verse by verse.
  • When they became aware I gave no place
  • For passage of the sunshine through my body,
  • They changed their song into a long, hoarse “Oh!”
  • And two of them, in form of messengers,
  • Ran forth to meet us, and demanded of us,
  • “Of your condition make us cognisant.”
  • And said my Master: “Ye can go your way
  • And carry back again to those who sent you,
  • That this one’s body is of very flesh.
  • If they stood still because they saw his shadow,
  • As I suppose, enough is answered them;
  • Him let them honour, it may profit them.”
  • Vapours enkindled saw I ne’er so swiftly
  • At early nightfall cleave the air serene,
  • Nor, at the set of sun, the clouds of August,
  • But upward they returned in briefer time,
  • And, on arriving, with the others wheeled
  • Tow’rds us, like troops that run without a rein.
  • “This folk that presses unto us is great,
  • And cometh to implore thee,” said the Poet;
  • “So still go onward, and in going listen.”
  • “O soul that goest to beatitude
  • With the same members wherewith thou wast born,”
  • Shouting they came, “a little stay thy steps,
  • Look, if thou e’er hast any of us seen,
  • So that o’er yonder thou bear news of him;
  • Ah, why dost thou go on? Ah, why not stay?
  • Long since we all were slain by violence,
  • And sinners even to the latest hour;
  • Then did a light from heaven admonish us,
  • So that, both penitent and pardoning, forth
  • From life we issued reconciled to God,
  • Who with desire to see Him stirs our hearts.”
  • And I: “Although I gaze into your faces,
  • No one I recognize; but if may please you
  • Aught I have power to do, ye well-born spirits,
  • Speak ye, and I will do it, by that peace
  • Which, following the feet of such a Guide,
  • From world to world makes itself sought by me.”
  • And one began: “Each one has confidence
  • In thy good offices without an oath,
  • Unless the I cannot cut off the I will;
  • Whence I, who speak alone before the others,
  • Pray thee, if ever thou dost see the land
  • That ’twixt Romagna lies and that of Charles,
  • Thou be so courteous to me of thy prayers
  • In Fano, that they pray for me devoutly,
  • That I may purge away my grave offences.
  • From thence was I; but the deep wounds, through which
  • Issued the blood wherein I had my seat,
  • Were dealt me in bosom of the Antenori,
  • There where I thought to be the most secure;
  • ’Twas he of Este had it done, who held me
  • In hatred far beyond what justice willed.
  • But if towards the Mira I had fled,
  • When I was overtaken at Oriaco,
  • I still should be o’er yonder where men breathe.
  • I ran to the lagoon, and reeds and mire
  • Did so entangle me I fell, and saw there
  • A lake made from my veins upon the ground.”
  • Then said another: “Ah, be that desire
  • Fulfilled that draws thee to the lofty mountain,
  • As thou with pious pity aidest mine.
  • I was of Montefeltro, and am Buonconte;
  • Giovanna, nor none other cares for me;
  • Hence among these I go with downcast front.”
  • And I to him: “What violence or what chance
  • Led thee astray so far from Campaldino,
  • That never has thy sepulture been known?”
  • “Oh,” he replied, “at Casentino’s foot
  • A river crosses named Archiano, born
  • Above the Hermitage in Apennine.
  • There where the name thereof becometh void
  • Did I arrive, pierced through and through the throat,
  • Fleeing on foot, and bloodying the plain;
  • There my sight lost I, and my utterance
  • Ceased in the name of Mary, and thereat
  • I fell, and tenantless my flesh remained.
  • Truth will I speak, repeat it to the living;
  • God’s Angel took me up, and he of hell
  • Shouted: ‘O thou from heaven, why dost thou rob me?
  • Thou bearest away the eternal part of him,
  • For one poor little tear, that takes him from me;
  • But with the rest I’ll deal in other fashion!’
  • Well knowest thou how in the air is gathered
  • That humid vapour which to water turns,
  • Soon as it rises where the cold doth grasp it.
  • He joined that evil will, which aye seeks evil,
  • To intellect, and moved the mist and wind
  • By means of power, which his own nature gave;
  • Thereafter, when the day was spent, the valley
  • From Pratomagno to the great yoke covered
  • With fog, and made the heaven above intent,
  • So that the pregnant air to water changed;
  • Down fell the rain, and to the gullies came
  • Whate’er of it earth tolerated not;
  • And as it mingled with the mighty torrents,
  • Towards the royal river with such speed
  • It headlong rushed, that nothing held it back.
  • My frozen body near unto its outlet
  • The robust Archian found, and into Arno
  • Thrust it, and loosened from my breast the cross
  • I made of me, when agony o’ercame me;
  • It rolled me on the banks and on the bottom,
  • Then with its booty covered and begirt me.”
  • “Ah, when thou hast returned unto the world,
  • And rested thee from thy long journeying,”
  • After the second followed the third spirit,
  • “Do thou remember me who am the Pia;
  • Siena made me, unmade me Maremma;
  • He knoweth it, who had encircled first,
  • Espousing me, my finger with his gem.”
  • Purgatorio: Canto VI
  • Whene’er is broken up the game of Zara,
  • He who has lost remains behind despondent,
  • The throws repeating, and in sadness learns;
  • The people with the other all depart;
  • One goes in front, and one behind doth pluck him,
  • And at his side one brings himself to mind;
  • He pauses not, and this and that one hears;
  • They crowd no more to whom his hand he stretches,
  • And from the throng he thus defends himself.
  • Even such was I in that dense multitude,
  • Turning to them this way and that my face,
  • And, promising, I freed myself therefrom.
  • There was the Aretine, who from the arms
  • Untamed of Ghin di Tacco had his death,
  • And he who fleeing from pursuit was drowned.
  • There was imploring with his hands outstretched
  • Frederick Novello, and that one of Pisa
  • Who made the good Marzucco seem so strong.
  • I saw Count Orso; and the soul divided
  • By hatred and by envy from its body,
  • As it declared, and not for crime committed,
  • Pierre de la Brosse I say; and here provide
  • While still on earth the Lady of Brabant,
  • So that for this she be of no worse flock!
  • As soon as I was free from all those shades
  • Who only prayed that some one else may pray,
  • So as to hasten their becoming holy,
  • Began I: “It appears that thou deniest,
  • O light of mine, expressly in some text,
  • That orison can bend decree of Heaven;
  • And ne’ertheless these people pray for this.
  • Might then their expectation bootless be?
  • Or is to me thy saying not quite clear?”
  • And he to me: “My writing is explicit,
  • And not fallacious is the hope of these,
  • If with sane intellect ’tis well regarded;
  • For top of judgment doth not vail itself,
  • Because the fire of love fulfils at once
  • What he must satisfy who here installs him.
  • And there, where I affirmed that proposition,
  • Defect was not amended by a prayer,
  • Because the prayer from God was separate.
  • Verily, in so deep a questioning
  • Do not decide, unless she tell it thee,
  • Who light ’twixt truth and intellect shall be.
  • I know not if thou understand; I speak
  • Of Beatrice; her shalt thou see above,
  • Smiling and happy, on this mountain’s top.”
  • And I: “Good Leader, let us make more haste,
  • For I no longer tire me as before;
  • And see, e’en now the hill a shadow casts.”
  • “We will go forward with this day” he answered,
  • “As far as now is possible for us;
  • But otherwise the fact is than thou thinkest.
  • Ere thou art up there, thou shalt see return
  • Him, who now hides himself behind the hill,
  • So that thou dost not interrupt his rays.
  • But yonder there behold! a soul that stationed
  • All, all alone is looking hitherward;
  • It will point out to us the quickest way.”
  • We came up unto it; O Lombard soul,
  • How lofty and disdainful thou didst bear thee,
  • And grand and slow in moving of thine eyes!
  • Nothing whatever did it say to us,
  • But let us go our way, eying us only
  • After the manner of a couchant lion;
  • Still near to it Virgilius drew, entreating
  • That it would point us out the best ascent;
  • And it replied not unto his demand,
  • But of our native land and of our life
  • It questioned us; and the sweet Guide began:
  • “Mantua,”—and the shade, all in itself recluse,
  • Rose tow’rds him from the place where first it was,
  • Saying: “O Mantuan, I am Sordello
  • Of thine own land!” and one embraced the other.
  • Ah! servile Italy, grief’s hostelry!
  • A ship without a pilot in great tempest!
  • No Lady thou of Provinces, but brothel!
  • That noble soul was so impatient, only
  • At the sweet sound of his own native land,
  • To make its citizen glad welcome there;
  • And now within thee are not without war
  • Thy living ones, and one doth gnaw the other
  • Of those whom one wall and one fosse shut in!
  • Search, wretched one, all round about the shores
  • Thy seaboard, and then look within thy bosom,
  • If any part of thee enjoyeth peace!
  • What boots it, that for thee Justinian
  • The bridle mend, if empty be the saddle?
  • Withouten this the shame would be the less.
  • Ah! people, thou that oughtest to be devout,
  • And to let Caesar sit upon the saddle,
  • If well thou hearest what God teacheth thee,
  • Behold how fell this wild beast has become,
  • Being no longer by the spur corrected,
  • Since thou hast laid thy hand upon the bridle.
  • O German Albert! who abandonest
  • Her that has grown recalcitrant and savage,
  • And oughtest to bestride her saddle-bow,
  • May a just judgment from the stars down fall
  • Upon thy blood, and be it new and open,
  • That thy successor may have fear thereof;
  • Because thy father and thyself have suffered,
  • By greed of those transalpine lands distrained,
  • The garden of the empire to be waste.
  • Come and behold Montecchi and Cappelletti,
  • Monaldi and Fillippeschi, careless man!
  • Those sad already, and these doubt-depressed!
  • Come, cruel one! come and behold the oppression
  • Of thy nobility, and cure their wounds,
  • And thou shalt see how safe is Santafiore!
  • Come and behold thy Rome, that is lamenting,
  • Widowed, alone, and day and night exclaims,
  • “My Caesar, why hast thou forsaken me?”
  • Come and behold how loving are the people;
  • And if for us no pity moveth thee,
  • Come and be made ashamed of thy renown!
  • And if it lawful be, O Jove Supreme!
  • Who upon earth for us wast crucified,
  • Are thy just eyes averted otherwhere?
  • Or preparation is ’t, that, in the abyss
  • Of thine own counsel, for some good thou makest
  • From our perception utterly cut off?
  • For all the towns of Italy are full
  • Of tyrants, and becometh a Marcellus
  • Each peasant churl who plays the partisan!
  • My Florence! well mayst thou contented be
  • With this digression, which concerns thee not,
  • Thanks to thy people who such forethought take!
  • Many at heart have justice, but shoot slowly,
  • That unadvised they come not to the bow,
  • But on their very lips thy people have it!
  • Many refuse to bear the common burden;
  • But thy solicitous people answereth
  • Without being asked, and crieth: “I submit.”
  • Now be thou joyful, for thou hast good reason;
  • Thou affluent, thou in peace, thou full of wisdom!
  • If I speak true, the event conceals it not.
  • Athens and Lacedaemon, they who made
  • The ancient laws, and were so civilized,
  • Made towards living well a little sign
  • Compared with thee, who makest such fine-spun
  • Provisions, that to middle of November
  • Reaches not what thou in October spinnest.
  • How oft, within the time of thy remembrance,
  • Laws, money, offices, and usages
  • Hast thou remodelled, and renewed thy members?
  • And if thou mind thee well, and see the light,
  • Thou shalt behold thyself like a sick woman,
  • Who cannot find repose upon her down,
  • But by her tossing wardeth off her pain.
  • Purgatorio: Canto VII
  • After the gracious and glad salutations
  • Had three and four times been reiterated,
  • Sordello backward drew and said, “Who are you?”
  • “Or ever to this mountain were directed
  • The souls deserving to ascend to God,
  • My bones were buried by Octavian.
  • I am Virgilius; and for no crime else
  • Did I lose heaven, than for not having faith;”
  • In this wise then my Leader made reply.
  • As one who suddenly before him sees
  • Something whereat he marvels, who believes
  • And yet does not, saying, “It is! it is not!”
  • So he appeared; and then bowed down his brow,
  • And with humility returned towards him,
  • And, where inferiors embrace, embraced him.
  • “O glory of the Latians, thou,” he said,
  • “Through whom our language showed what it could do
  • O pride eternal of the place I came from,
  • What merit or what grace to me reveals thee?
  • If I to hear thy words be worthy, tell me
  • If thou dost come from Hell, and from what cloister.”
  • “Through all the circles of the doleful realm,”
  • Responded he, “have I come hitherward;
  • Heaven’s power impelled me, and with that I come.
  • I by not doing, not by doing, lost
  • The sight of that high sun which thou desirest,
  • And which too late by me was recognized.
  • A place there is below not sad with torments,
  • But darkness only, where the lamentations
  • Have not the sound of wailing, but are sighs.
  • There dwell I with the little innocents
  • Snatched by the teeth of Death, or ever they
  • Were from our human sinfulness exempt.
  • There dwell I among those who the three saintly
  • Virtues did not put on, and without vice
  • The others knew and followed all of them.
  • But if thou know and can, some indication
  • Give us by which we may the sooner come
  • Where Purgatory has its right beginning.”
  • He answered: “No fixed place has been assigned us;
  • ’Tis lawful for me to go up and round;
  • So far as I can go, as guide I join thee.
  • But see already how the day declines,
  • And to go up by night we are not able;
  • Therefore ’tis well to think of some fair sojourn.
  • Souls are there on the right hand here withdrawn;
  • If thou permit me I will lead thee to them,
  • And thou shalt know them not without delight.”
  • “How is this?” was the answer; “should one wish
  • To mount by night would he prevented be
  • By others? or mayhap would not have power?”
  • And on the ground the good Sordello drew
  • His finger, saying, “See, this line alone
  • Thou couldst not pass after the sun is gone;
  • Not that aught else would hindrance give, however,
  • To going up, save the nocturnal darkness;
  • This with the want of power the will perplexes.
  • We might indeed therewith return below,
  • And, wandering, walk the hill-side round about,
  • While the horizon holds the day imprisoned.”
  • Thereon my Lord, as if in wonder, said:
  • “Do thou conduct us thither, where thou sayest
  • That we can take delight in tarrying.”
  • Little had we withdrawn us from that place,
  • When I perceived the mount was hollowed out
  • In fashion as the valleys here are hollowed.
  • “Thitherward,” said that shade, “will we repair,
  • Where of itself the hill-side makes a lap,
  • And there for the new day will we await.”
  • ’Twixt hill and plain there was a winding path
  • Which led us to the margin of that dell,
  • Where dies the border more than half away.
  • Gold and fine silver, and scarlet and pearl-white,
  • The Indian wood resplendent and serene,
  • Fresh emerald the moment it is broken,
  • By herbage and by flowers within that hollow
  • Planted, each one in colour would be vanquished,
  • As by its greater vanquished is the less.
  • Nor in that place had nature painted only,
  • But of the sweetness of a thousand odours
  • Made there a mingled fragrance and unknown.
  • “Salve Regina,” on the green and flowers
  • There seated, singing, spirits I beheld,
  • Which were not visible outside the valley.
  • “Before the scanty sun now seeks his nest,”
  • Began the Mantuan who had led us thither,
  • “Among them do not wish me to conduct you.
  • Better from off this ledge the acts and faces
  • Of all of them will you discriminate,
  • Than in the plain below received among them.
  • He who sits highest, and the semblance bears
  • Of having what he should have done neglected,
  • And to the others’ song moves not his lips,
  • Rudolph the Emperor was, who had the power
  • To heal the wounds that Italy have slain,
  • So that through others slowly she revives.
  • The other, who in look doth comfort him,
  • Governed the region where the water springs,
  • The Moldau bears the Elbe, and Elbe the sea.
  • His name was Ottocar; and in swaddling-clothes
  • Far better he than bearded Winceslaus
  • His son, who feeds in luxury and ease.
  • And the small-nosed, who close in council seems
  • With him that has an aspect so benign,
  • Died fleeing and disflowering the lily;
  • Look there, how he is beating at his breast!
  • Behold the other one, who for his cheek
  • Sighing has made of his own palm a bed;
  • Father and father-in-law of France’s Pest
  • Are they, and know his vicious life and lewd,
  • And hence proceeds the grief that so doth pierce them.
  • He who appears so stalwart, and chimes in,
  • Singing, with that one of the manly nose,
  • The cord of every valour wore begirt;
  • And if as King had after him remained
  • The stripling who in rear of him is sitting,
  • Well had the valour passed from vase to vase,
  • Which cannot of the other heirs be said.
  • Frederick and Jacomo possess the realms,
  • But none the better heritage possesses.
  • Not oftentimes upriseth through the branches
  • The probity of man; and this He wills
  • Who gives it, so that we may ask of Him.
  • Eke to the large-nosed reach my words, no less
  • Than to the other, Pier, who with him sings;
  • Whence Provence and Apulia grieve already
  • The plant is as inferior to its seed,
  • As more than Beatrice and Margaret
  • Costanza boasteth of her husband still.
  • Behold the monarch of the simple life,
  • Harry of England, sitting there alone;
  • He in his branches has a better issue.
  • He who the lowest on the ground among them
  • Sits looking upward, is the Marquis William,
  • For whose sake Alessandria and her war
  • Make Monferrat and Canavese weep.”
  • Purgatorio: Canto VIII
  • ’Twas now the hour that turneth back desire
  • In those who sail the sea, and melts the heart,
  • The day they’ve said to their sweet friends farewell,
  • And the new pilgrim penetrates with love,
  • If he doth hear from far away a bell
  • That seemeth to deplore the dying day,
  • When I began to make of no avail
  • My hearing, and to watch one of the souls
  • Uprisen, that begged attention with its hand.
  • It joined and lifted upward both its palms,
  • Fixing its eyes upon the orient,
  • As if it said to God, “Naught else I care for.”
  • “Te lucis ante” so devoutly issued
  • Forth from its mouth, and with such dulcet notes,
  • It made me issue forth from my own mind.
  • And then the others, sweetly and devoutly,
  • Accompanied it through all the hymn entire,
  • Having their eyes on the supernal wheels.
  • Here, Reader, fix thine eyes well on the truth,
  • For now indeed so subtile is the veil,
  • Surely to penetrate within is easy.
  • I saw that army of the gentle-born
  • Thereafterward in silence upward gaze,
  • As if in expectation, pale and humble;
  • And from on high come forth and down descend,
  • I saw two Angels with two flaming swords,
  • Truncated and deprived of their points.
  • Green as the little leaflets just now born
  • Their garments were, which, by their verdant pinions
  • Beaten and blown abroad, they trailed behind.
  • One just above us came to take his station,
  • And one descended to the opposite bank,
  • So that the people were contained between them.
  • Clearly in them discerned I the blond head;
  • But in their faces was the eye bewildered,
  • As faculty confounded by excess.
  • “From Mary’s bosom both of them have come,”
  • Sordello said, “as guardians of the valley
  • Against the serpent, that will come anon.”
  • Whereupon I, who knew not by what road,
  • Turned round about, and closely drew myself,
  • Utterly frozen, to the faithful shoulders.
  • And once again Sordello: “Now descend we
  • ’Mid the grand shades, and we will speak to them;
  • Right pleasant will it be for them to see you.”
  • Only three steps I think that I descended,
  • And was below, and saw one who was looking
  • Only at me, as if he fain would know me.
  • Already now the air was growing dark,
  • But not so that between his eyes and mine
  • It did not show what it before locked up.
  • Tow’rds me he moved, and I tow’rds him did move;
  • Noble Judge Nino! how it me delighted,
  • When I beheld thee not among the damned!
  • No greeting fair was left unsaid between us;
  • Then asked he: “How long is it since thou camest
  • O’er the far waters to the mountain’s foot?”
  • “Oh!” said I to him, “through the dismal places
  • I came this morn; and am in the first life,
  • Albeit the other, going thus, I gain.”
  • And on the instant my reply was heard,
  • He and Sordello both shrank back from me,
  • Like people who are suddenly bewildered.
  • One to Virgilius, and the other turned
  • To one who sat there, crying, “Up, Currado!
  • Come and behold what God in grace has willed!”
  • Then, turned to me: “By that especial grace
  • Thou owest unto Him, who so conceals
  • His own first wherefore, that it has no ford,
  • When thou shalt be beyond the waters wide,
  • Tell my Giovanna that she pray for me,
  • Where answer to the innocent is made.
  • I do not think her mother loves me more,
  • Since she has laid aside her wimple white,
  • Which she, unhappy, needs must wish again.
  • Through her full easily is comprehended
  • How long in woman lasts the fire of love,
  • If eye or touch do not relight it often.
  • So fair a hatchment will not make for her
  • The Viper marshalling the Milanese
  • A-field, as would have made Gallura’s Cock.”
  • In this wise spake he, with the stamp impressed
  • Upon his aspect of that righteous zeal
  • Which measurably burneth in the heart.
  • My greedy eyes still wandered up to heaven,
  • Still to that point where slowest are the stars,
  • Even as a wheel the nearest to its axle.
  • And my Conductor: “Son, what dost thou gaze at
  • Up there?” And I to him: “At those three torches
  • With which this hither pole is all on fire.”
  • And he to me: “The four resplendent stars
  • Thou sawest this morning are down yonder low,
  • And these have mounted up to where those were.”
  • As he was speaking, to himself Sordello
  • Drew him, and said, “Lo there our Adversary!”
  • And pointed with his finger to look thither.
  • Upon the side on which the little valley
  • No barrier hath, a serpent was; perchance
  • The same which gave to Eve the bitter food.
  • ’Twixt grass and flowers came on the evil streak,
  • Turning at times its head about, and licking
  • Its back like to a beast that smoothes itself.
  • I did not see, and therefore cannot say
  • How the celestial falcons ’gan to move,
  • But well I saw that they were both in motion.
  • Hearing the air cleft by their verdant wings,
  • The serpent fled, and round the Angels wheeled,
  • Up to their stations flying back alike.
  • The shade that to the Judge had near approached
  • When he had called, throughout that whole assault
  • Had not a moment loosed its gaze on me.
  • “So may the light that leadeth thee on high
  • Find in thine own free-will as much of wax
  • As needful is up to the highest azure,”
  • Began it, “if some true intelligence
  • Of Valdimagra or its neighbourhood
  • Thou knowest, tell it me, who once was great there.
  • Currado Malaspina was I called;
  • I’m not the elder, but from him descended;
  • To mine I bore the love which here refineth.”
  • “O,” said I unto him, “through your domains
  • I never passed, but where is there a dwelling
  • Throughout all Europe, where they are not known?
  • That fame, which doeth honour to your house,
  • Proclaims its Signors and proclaims its land,
  • So that he knows of them who ne’er was there.
  • And, as I hope for heaven, I swear to you
  • Your honoured family in naught abates
  • The glory of the purse and of the sword.
  • It is so privileged by use and nature,
  • That though a guilty head misguide the world,
  • Sole it goes right, and scorns the evil way.”
  • And he: “Now go; for the sun shall not lie
  • Seven times upon the pillow which the Ram
  • With all his four feet covers and bestrides,
  • Before that such a courteous opinion
  • Shall in the middle of thy head be nailed
  • With greater nails than of another’s speech,
  • Unless the course of justice standeth still.”
  • Purgatorio: Canto IX
  • The concubine of old Tithonus now
  • Gleamed white upon the eastern balcony,
  • Forth from the arms of her sweet paramour;
  • With gems her forehead all relucent was,
  • Set in the shape of that cold animal
  • Which with its tail doth smite amain the nations,
  • And of the steps, with which she mounts, the Night
  • Had taken two in that place where we were,
  • And now the third was bending down its wings;
  • When I, who something had of Adam in me,
  • Vanquished by sleep, upon the grass reclined,
  • There were all five of us already sat.
  • Just at the hour when her sad lay begins
  • The little swallow, near unto the morning,
  • Perchance in memory of her former woes,
  • And when the mind of man, a wanderer
  • More from the flesh, and less by thought imprisoned,
  • Almost prophetic in its visions is,
  • In dreams it seemed to me I saw suspended
  • An eagle in the sky, with plumes of gold,
  • With wings wide open, and intent to stoop,
  • And this, it seemed to me, was where had been
  • By Ganymede his kith and kin abandoned,
  • When to the high consistory he was rapt.
  • I thought within myself, perchance he strikes
  • From habit only here, and from elsewhere
  • Disdains to bear up any in his feet.
  • Then wheeling somewhat more, it seemed to me,
  • Terrible as the lightning he descended,
  • And snatched me upward even to the fire.
  • Therein it seemed that he and I were burning,
  • And the imagined fire did scorch me so,
  • That of necessity my sleep was broken.
  • Not otherwise Achilles started up,
  • Around him turning his awakened eyes,
  • And knowing not the place in which he was,
  • What time from Chiron stealthily his mother
  • Carried him sleeping in her arms to Scyros,
  • Wherefrom the Greeks withdrew him afterwards,
  • Than I upstarted, when from off my face
  • Sleep fled away; and pallid I became,
  • As doth the man who freezes with affright.
  • Only my Comforter was at my side,
  • And now the sun was more than two hours high,
  • And turned towards the sea-shore was my face.
  • “Be not intimidated,” said my Lord,
  • “Be reassured, for all is well with us;
  • Do not restrain, but put forth all thy strength.
  • Thou hast at length arrived at Purgatory;
  • See there the cliff that closes it around;
  • See there the entrance, where it seems disjoined.
  • Whilom at dawn, which doth precede the day,
  • When inwardly thy spirit was asleep
  • Upon the flowers that deck the land below,
  • There came a Lady and said: ‘I am Lucia;
  • Let me take this one up, who is asleep;
  • So will I make his journey easier for him.’
  • Sordello and the other noble shapes
  • Remained; she took thee, and, as day grew bright,
  • Upward she came, and I upon her footsteps.
  • She laid thee here; and first her beauteous eyes
  • That open entrance pointed out to me;
  • Then she and sleep together went away.”
  • In guise of one whose doubts are reassured,
  • And who to confidence his fear doth change,
  • After the truth has been discovered to him,
  • So did I change; and when without disquiet
  • My Leader saw me, up along the cliff
  • He moved, and I behind him, tow’rd the height.
  • Reader, thou seest well how I exalt
  • My theme, and therefore if with greater art
  • I fortify it, marvel not thereat.
  • Nearer approached we, and were in such place,
  • That there, where first appeared to me a rift
  • Like to a crevice that disparts a wall,
  • I saw a portal, and three stairs beneath,
  • Diverse in colour, to go up to it,
  • And a gate-keeper, who yet spake no word.
  • And as I opened more and more mine eyes,
  • I saw him seated on the highest stair,
  • Such in the face that I endured it not.
  • And in his hand he had a naked sword,
  • Which so reflected back the sunbeams tow’rds us,
  • That oft in vain I lifted up mine eyes.
  • “Tell it from where you are, what is’t you wish?”
  • Began he to exclaim; “where is the escort?
  • Take heed your coming hither harm you not!”
  • “A Lady of Heaven, with these things conversant,”
  • My Master answered him, “but even now
  • Said to us, ‘Thither go; there is the portal.’”
  • “And may she speed your footsteps in all good,”
  • Again began the courteous janitor;
  • “Come forward then unto these stairs of ours.”
  • Thither did we approach; and the first stair
  • Was marble white, so polished and so smooth,
  • I mirrored myself therein as I appear.
  • The second, tinct of deeper hue than perse,
  • Was of a calcined and uneven stone,
  • Cracked all asunder lengthwise and across.
  • The third, that uppermost rests massively,
  • Porphyry seemed to me, as flaming red
  • As blood that from a vein is spirting forth.
  • Both of his feet was holding upon this
  • The Angel of God, upon the threshold seated,
  • Which seemed to me a stone of diamond.
  • Along the three stairs upward with good will
  • Did my Conductor draw me, saying: “Ask
  • Humbly that he the fastening may undo.”
  • Devoutly at the holy feet I cast me,
  • For mercy’s sake besought that he would open,
  • But first upon my breast three times I smote.
  • Seven P’s upon my forehead he described
  • With the sword’s point, and, “Take heed that thou wash
  • These wounds, when thou shalt be within,” he said.
  • Ashes, or earth that dry is excavated,
  • Of the same colour were with his attire,
  • And from beneath it he drew forth two keys.
  • One was of gold, and the other was of silver;
  • First with the white, and after with the yellow,
  • Plied he the door, so that I was content.
  • “Whenever faileth either of these keys
  • So that it turn not rightly in the lock,”
  • He said to us, “this entrance doth not open.
  • More precious one is, but the other needs
  • More art and intellect ere it unlock,
  • For it is that which doth the knot unloose.
  • From Peter I have them; and he bade me err
  • Rather in opening than in keeping shut,
  • If people but fall down before my feet.”
  • Then pushed the portals of the sacred door,
  • Exclaiming: “Enter; but I give you warning
  • That forth returns whoever looks behind.”
  • And when upon their hinges were turned round
  • The swivels of that consecrated gate,
  • Which are of metal, massive and sonorous,
  • Roared not so loud, nor so discordant seemed
  • Tarpeia, when was ta’en from it the good
  • Metellus, wherefore meagre it remained.
  • At the first thunder-peal I turned attentive,
  • And “Te Deum laudamus” seemed to hear
  • In voices mingled with sweet melody.
  • Exactly such an image rendered me
  • That which I heard, as we are wont to catch,
  • When people singing with the organ stand;
  • For now we hear, and now hear not, the words.
  • Purgatorio: Canto X
  • When we had crossed the threshold of the door
  • Which the perverted love of souls disuses,
  • Because it makes the crooked way seem straight,
  • Re-echoing I heard it closed again;
  • And if I had turned back mine eyes upon it,
  • What for my failing had been fit excuse?
  • We mounted upward through a rifted rock,
  • Which undulated to this side and that,
  • Even as a wave receding and advancing.
  • “Here it behoves us use a little art,”
  • Began my Leader, “to adapt ourselves
  • Now here, now there, to the receding side.”
  • And this our footsteps so infrequent made,
  • That sooner had the moon’s decreasing disk
  • Regained its bed to sink again to rest,
  • Than we were forth from out that needle’s eye;
  • But when we free and in the open were,
  • There where the mountain backward piles itself,
  • I wearied out, and both of us uncertain
  • About our way, we stopped upon a plain
  • More desolate than roads across the deserts.
  • From where its margin borders on the void,
  • To foot of the high bank that ever rises,
  • A human body three times told would measure;
  • And far as eye of mine could wing its flight,
  • Now on the left, and on the right flank now,
  • The same this cornice did appear to me.
  • Thereon our feet had not been moved as yet,
  • When I perceived the embankment round about,
  • Which all right of ascent had interdicted,
  • To be of marble white, and so adorned
  • With sculptures, that not only Polycletus,
  • But Nature’s self, had there been put to shame.
  • The Angel, who came down to earth with tidings
  • Of peace, that had been wept for many a year,
  • And opened Heaven from its long interdict,
  • In front of us appeared so truthfully
  • There sculptured in a gracious attitude,
  • He did not seem an image that is silent.
  • One would have sworn that he was saying, “Ave;”
  • For she was there in effigy portrayed
  • Who turned the key to ope the exalted love,
  • And in her mien this language had impressed,
  • “Ecce ancilla Dei,” as distinctly
  • As any figure stamps itself in wax.
  • “Keep not thy mind upon one place alone,”
  • The gentle Master said, who had me standing
  • Upon that side where people have their hearts;
  • Whereat I moved mine eyes, and I beheld
  • In rear of Mary, and upon that side
  • Where he was standing who conducted me,
  • Another story on the rock imposed;
  • Wherefore I passed Virgilius and drew near,
  • So that before mine eyes it might be set.
  • There sculptured in the self-same marble were
  • The cart and oxen, drawing the holy ark,
  • Wherefore one dreads an office not appointed.
  • People appeared in front, and all of them
  • In seven choirs divided, of two senses
  • Made one say “No,” the other, “Yes, they sing.”
  • Likewise unto the smoke of the frankincense,
  • Which there was imaged forth, the eyes and nose
  • Were in the yes and no discordant made.
  • Preceded there the vessel benedight,
  • Dancing with girded loins, the humble Psalmist,
  • And more and less than King was he in this.
  • Opposite, represented at the window
  • Of a great palace, Michal looked upon him,
  • Even as a woman scornful and afflicted.
  • I moved my feet from where I had been standing,
  • To examine near at hand another story,
  • Which after Michal glimmered white upon me.
  • There the high glory of the Roman Prince
  • Was chronicled, whose great beneficence
  • Moved Gregory to his great victory;
  • ’Tis of the Emperor Trajan I am speaking;
  • And a poor widow at his bridle stood,
  • In attitude of weeping and of grief.
  • Around about him seemed it thronged and full
  • Of cavaliers, and the eagles in the gold
  • Above them visibly in the wind were moving.
  • The wretched woman in the midst of these
  • Seemed to be saying: “Give me vengeance, Lord,
  • For my dead son, for whom my heart is breaking.”
  • And he to answer her: “Now wait until
  • I shall return.” And she: “My Lord,” like one
  • In whom grief is impatient, “shouldst thou not
  • Return?” And he: “Who shall be where I am
  • Will give it thee.” And she: “Good deed of others
  • What boots it thee, if thou neglect thine own?”
  • Whence he: “Now comfort thee, for it behoves me
  • That I discharge my duty ere I move;
  • Justice so wills, and pity doth retain me.”
  • He who on no new thing has ever looked
  • Was the creator of this visible language,
  • Novel to us, for here it is not found.
  • While I delighted me in contemplating
  • The images of such humility,
  • And dear to look on for their Maker’s sake,
  • “Behold, upon this side, but rare they make
  • Their steps,” the Poet murmured, “many people;
  • These will direct us to the lofty stairs.”
  • Mine eyes, that in beholding were intent
  • To see new things, of which they curious are,
  • In turning round towards him were not slow.
  • But still I wish not, Reader, thou shouldst swerve
  • From thy good purposes, because thou hearest
  • How God ordaineth that the debt be paid;
  • Attend not to the fashion of the torment,
  • Think of what follows; think that at the worst
  • It cannot reach beyond the mighty sentence.
  • “Master,” began I, “that which I behold
  • Moving towards us seems to me not persons,
  • And what I know not, so in sight I waver.”
  • And he to me: “The grievous quality
  • Of this their torment bows them so to earth,
  • That my own eyes at first contended with it;
  • But look there fixedly, and disentangle
  • By sight what cometh underneath those stones;
  • Already canst thou see how each is stricken.”
  • O ye proud Christians! wretched, weary ones!
  • Who, in the vision of the mind infirm
  • Confidence have in your backsliding steps,
  • Do ye not comprehend that we are worms,
  • Born to bring forth the angelic butterfly
  • That flieth unto judgment without screen?
  • Why floats aloft your spirit high in air?
  • Like are ye unto insects undeveloped,
  • Even as the worm in whom formation fails!
  • As to sustain a ceiling or a roof,
  • In place of corbel, oftentimes a figure
  • Is seen to join its knees unto its breast,
  • Which makes of the unreal real anguish
  • Arise in him who sees it, fashioned thus
  • Beheld I those, when I had ta’en good heed.
  • True is it, they were more or less bent down,
  • According as they more or less were laden;
  • And he who had most patience in his looks
  • Weeping did seem to say, “I can no more!”
  • Purgatorio: Canto XI
  • “Our Father, thou who dwellest in the heavens,
  • Not circumscribed, but from the greater love
  • Thou bearest to the first effects on high,
  • Praised be thy name and thine omnipotence
  • By every creature, as befitting is
  • To render thanks to thy sweet effluence.
  • Come unto us the peace of thy dominion,
  • For unto it we cannot of ourselves,
  • If it come not, with all our intellect.
  • Even as thine own Angels of their will
  • Make sacrifice to thee, Hosanna singing,
  • So may all men make sacrifice of theirs.
  • Give unto us this day our daily manna,
  • Withouten which in this rough wilderness
  • Backward goes he who toils most to advance.
  • And even as we the trespass we have suffered
  • Pardon in one another, pardon thou
  • Benignly, and regard not our desert.
  • Our virtue, which is easily o’ercome,
  • Put not to proof with the old Adversary,
  • But thou from him who spurs it so, deliver.
  • This last petition verily, dear Lord,
  • Not for ourselves is made, who need it not,
  • But for their sake who have remained behind us.”
  • Thus for themselves and us good furtherance
  • Those shades imploring, went beneath a weight
  • Like unto that of which we sometimes dream,
  • Unequally in anguish round and round
  • And weary all, upon that foremost cornice,
  • Purging away the smoke-stains of the world.
  • If there good words are always said for us,
  • What may not here be said and done for them,
  • By those who have a good root to their will?
  • Well may we help them wash away the marks
  • That hence they carried, so that clean and light
  • They may ascend unto the starry wheels!
  • “Ah! so may pity and justice you disburden
  • Soon, that ye may have power to move the wing,
  • That shall uplift you after your desire,
  • Show us on which hand tow’rd the stairs the way
  • Is shortest, and if more than one the passes,
  • Point us out that which least abruptly falls;
  • For he who cometh with me, through the burden
  • Of Adam’s flesh wherewith he is invested,
  • Against his will is chary of his climbing.”
  • The words of theirs which they returned to those
  • That he whom I was following had spoken,
  • It was not manifest from whom they came,
  • But it was said: “To the right hand come with us
  • Along the bank, and ye shall find a pass
  • Possible for living person to ascend.
  • And were I not impeded by the stone,
  • Which this proud neck of mine doth subjugate,
  • Whence I am forced to hold my visage down,
  • Him, who still lives and does not name himself,
  • Would I regard, to see if I may know him
  • And make him piteous unto this burden.
  • A Latian was I, and born of a great Tuscan;
  • Guglielmo Aldobrandeschi was my father;
  • I know not if his name were ever with you.
  • The ancient blood and deeds of gallantry
  • Of my progenitors so arrogant made me
  • That, thinking not upon the common mother,
  • All men I held in scorn to such extent
  • I died therefor, as know the Sienese,
  • And every child in Campagnatico.
  • I am Omberto; and not to me alone
  • Has pride done harm, but all my kith and kin
  • Has with it dragged into adversity.
  • And here must I this burden bear for it
  • Till God be satisfied, since I did not
  • Among the living, here among the dead.”
  • Listening I downward bent my countenance;
  • And one of them, not this one who was speaking,
  • Twisted himself beneath the weight that cramps him,
  • And looked at me, and knew me, and called out,
  • Keeping his eyes laboriously fixed
  • On me, who all bowed down was going with them.
  • “O,” asked I him, “art thou not Oderisi,
  • Agobbio’s honour, and honour of that art
  • Which is in Paris called illuminating?”
  • “Brother,” said he, “more laughing are the leaves
  • Touched by the brush of Franco Bolognese;
  • All his the honour now, and mine in part.
  • In sooth I had not been so courteous
  • While I was living, for the great desire
  • Of excellence, on which my heart was bent.
  • Here of such pride is paid the forfeiture;
  • And yet I should not be here, were it not
  • That, having power to sin, I turned to God.
  • O thou vain glory of the human powers,
  • How little green upon thy summit lingers,
  • If’t be not followed by an age of grossness!
  • In painting Cimabue thought that he
  • Should hold the field, now Giotto has the cry,
  • So that the other’s fame is growing dim.
  • So has one Guido from the other taken
  • The glory of our tongue, and he perchance
  • Is born, who from the nest shall chase them both.
  • Naught is this mundane rumour but a breath
  • Of wind, that comes now this way and now that,
  • And changes name, because it changes side.
  • What fame shalt thou have more, if old peel off
  • From thee thy flesh, than if thou hadst been dead
  • Before thou left the ‘pappo’ and the ‘dindi,’
  • Ere pass a thousand years? which is a shorter
  • Space to the eterne, than twinkling of an eye
  • Unto the circle that in heaven wheels slowest.
  • With him, who takes so little of the road
  • In front of me, all Tuscany resounded;
  • And now he scarce is lisped of in Siena,
  • Where he was lord, what time was overthrown
  • The Florentine delirium, that superb
  • Was at that day as now ’tis prostitute.
  • Your reputation is the colour of grass
  • Which comes and goes, and that discolours it
  • By which it issues green from out the earth.”
  • And I: “Thy true speech fills my heart with good
  • Humility, and great tumour thou assuagest;
  • But who is he, of whom just now thou spakest?”
  • “That,” he replied, “is Provenzan Salvani,
  • And he is here because he had presumed
  • To bring Siena all into his hands.
  • He has gone thus, and goeth without rest
  • E’er since he died; such money renders back
  • In payment he who is on earth too daring.”
  • And I: “If every spirit who awaits
  • The verge of life before that he repent,
  • Remains below there and ascends not hither,
  • (Unless good orison shall him bestead,)
  • Until as much time as he lived be passed,
  • How was the coming granted him in largess?”
  • “When he in greatest splendour lived,” said he,
  • “Freely upon the Campo of Siena,
  • All shame being laid aside, he placed himself;
  • And there to draw his friend from the duress
  • Which in the prison-house of Charles he suffered,
  • He brought himself to tremble in each vein.
  • I say no more, and know that I speak darkly;
  • Yet little time shall pass before thy neighbours
  • Will so demean themselves that thou canst gloss it.
  • This action has released him from those confines.”
  • Purgatorio: Canto XII
  • Abreast, like oxen going in a yoke,
  • I with that heavy-laden soul went on,
  • As long as the sweet pedagogue permitted;
  • But when he said, “Leave him, and onward pass,
  • For here ’tis good that with the sail and oars,
  • As much as may be, each push on his barque;”
  • Upright, as walking wills it, I redressed
  • My person, notwithstanding that my thoughts
  • Remained within me downcast and abashed.
  • I had moved on, and followed willingly
  • The footsteps of my Master, and we both
  • Already showed how light of foot we were,
  • When unto me he said: “Cast down thine eyes;
  • ’Twere well for thee, to alleviate the way,
  • To look upon the bed beneath thy feet.”
  • As, that some memory may exist of them,
  • Above the buried dead their tombs in earth
  • Bear sculptured on them what they were before;
  • Whence often there we weep for them afresh,
  • From pricking of remembrance, which alone
  • To the compassionate doth set its spur;
  • So saw I there, but of a better semblance
  • In point of artifice, with figures covered
  • Whate’er as pathway from the mount projects.
  • I saw that one who was created noble
  • More than all other creatures, down from heaven
  • Flaming with lightnings fall upon one side.
  • I saw Briareus smitten by the dart
  • Celestial, lying on the other side,
  • Heavy upon the earth by mortal frost.
  • I saw Thymbraeus, Pallas saw, and Mars,
  • Still clad in armour round about their father,
  • Gaze at the scattered members of the giants.
  • I saw, at foot of his great labour, Nimrod,
  • As if bewildered, looking at the people
  • Who had been proud with him in Sennaar.
  • O Niobe! with what afflicted eyes
  • Thee I beheld upon the pathway traced,
  • Between thy seven and seven children slain!
  • O Saul! how fallen upon thy proper sword
  • Didst thou appear there lifeless in Gilboa,
  • That felt thereafter neither rain nor dew!
  • O mad Arachne! so I thee beheld
  • E’en then half spider, sad upon the shreds
  • Of fabric wrought in evil hour for thee!
  • O Rehoboam! no more seems to threaten
  • Thine image there; but full of consternation
  • A chariot bears it off, when none pursues!
  • Displayed moreo’er the adamantine pavement
  • How unto his own mother made Alcmaeon
  • Costly appear the luckless ornament;
  • Displayed how his own sons did throw themselves
  • Upon Sennacherib within the temple,
  • And how, he being dead, they left him there;
  • Displayed the ruin and the cruel carnage
  • That Tomyris wrought, when she to Cyrus said,
  • “Blood didst thou thirst for, and with blood I glut thee!”
  • Displayed how routed fled the Assyrians
  • After that Holofernes had been slain,
  • And likewise the remainder of that slaughter.
  • I saw there Troy in ashes and in caverns;
  • O Ilion! thee, how abject and debased,
  • Displayed the image that is there discerned!
  • Whoe’er of pencil master was or stile,
  • That could portray the shades and traits which there
  • Would cause each subtile genius to admire?
  • Dead seemed the dead, the living seemed alive;
  • Better than I saw not who saw the truth,
  • All that I trod upon while bowed I went.
  • Now wax ye proud, and on with looks uplifted,
  • Ye sons of Eve, and bow not down your faces
  • So that ye may behold your evil ways!
  • More of the mount by us was now encompassed,
  • And far more spent the circuit of the sun,
  • Than had the mind preoccupied imagined,
  • When he, who ever watchful in advance
  • Was going on, began: “Lift up thy head,
  • ’Tis no more time to go thus meditating.
  • Lo there an Angel who is making haste
  • To come towards us; lo, returning is
  • From service of the day the sixth handmaiden.
  • With reverence thine acts and looks adorn,
  • So that he may delight to speed us upward;
  • Think that this day will never dawn again.”
  • I was familiar with his admonition
  • Ever to lose no time; so on this theme
  • He could not unto me speak covertly.
  • Towards us came the being beautiful
  • Vested in white, and in his countenance
  • Such as appears the tremulous morning star.
  • His arms he opened, and opened then his wings;
  • “Come,” said he, “near at hand here are the steps,
  • And easy from henceforth is the ascent.”
  • At this announcement few are they who come!
  • O human creatures, born to soar aloft,
  • Why fall ye thus before a little wind?
  • He led us on to where the rock was cleft;
  • There smote upon my forehead with his wings,
  • Then a safe passage promised unto me.
  • As on the right hand, to ascend the mount
  • Where seated is the church that lordeth it
  • O’er the well-guided, above Rubaconte,
  • The bold abruptness of the ascent is broken
  • By stairways that were made there in the age
  • When still were safe the ledger and the stave,
  • E’en thus attempered is the bank which falls
  • Sheer downward from the second circle there;
  • But on this, side and that the high rock graze.
  • As we were turning thitherward our persons,
  • “Beati pauperes spiritu,” voices
  • Sang in such wise that speech could tell it not.
  • Ah me! how different are these entrances
  • From the Infernal! for with anthems here
  • One enters, and below with wild laments.
  • We now were hunting up the sacred stairs,
  • And it appeared to me by far more easy
  • Than on the plain it had appeared before.
  • Whence I: “My Master, say, what heavy thing
  • Has been uplifted from me, so that hardly
  • Aught of fatigue is felt by me in walking?”
  • He answered: “When the P’s which have remained
  • Still on thy face almost obliterate
  • Shall wholly, as the first is, be erased,
  • Thy feet will be so vanquished by good will,
  • That not alone they shall not feel fatigue,
  • But urging up will be to them delight.”
  • Then did I even as they do who are going
  • With something on the head to them unknown,
  • Unless the signs of others make them doubt,
  • Wherefore the hand to ascertain is helpful,
  • And seeks and finds, and doth fulfill the office
  • Which cannot be accomplished by the sight;
  • And with the fingers of the right hand spread
  • I found but six the letters, that had carved
  • Upon my temples he who bore the keys;
  • Upon beholding which my Leader smiled.
  • Purgatorio: Canto XIII
  • We were upon the summit of the stairs,
  • Where for the second time is cut away
  • The mountain, which ascending shriveth all.
  • There in like manner doth a cornice bind
  • The hill all round about, as does the first,
  • Save that its arc more suddenly is curved.
  • Shade is there none, nor sculpture that appears;
  • So seems the bank, and so the road seems smooth,
  • With but the livid colour of the stone.
  • “If to inquire we wait for people here,”
  • The Poet said, “I fear that peradventure
  • Too much delay will our election have.”
  • Then steadfast on the sun his eyes he fixed,
  • Made his right side the centre of his motion,
  • And turned the left part of himself about.
  • “O thou sweet light! with trust in whom I enter
  • Upon this novel journey, do thou lead us,”
  • Said he, “as one within here should be led.
  • Thou warmest the world, thou shinest over it;
  • If other reason prompt not otherwise,
  • Thy rays should evermore our leaders be!”
  • As much as here is counted for a mile,
  • So much already there had we advanced
  • In little time, by dint of ready will;
  • And tow’rds us there were heard to fly, albeit
  • They were not visible, spirits uttering
  • Unto Love’s table courteous invitations,
  • The first voice that passed onward in its flight,
  • “Vinum non habent,” said in accents loud,
  • And went reiterating it behind us.
  • And ere it wholly grew inaudible
  • Because of distance, passed another, crying,
  • “I am Orestes!” and it also stayed not.
  • “O,” said I, “Father, these, what voices are they?”
  • And even as I asked, behold the third,
  • Saying: “Love those from whom ye have had evil!”
  • And the good Master said: “This circle scourges
  • The sin of envy, and on that account
  • Are drawn from love the lashes of the scourge.
  • The bridle of another sound shall be;
  • I think that thou wilt hear it, as I judge,
  • Before thou comest to the Pass of Pardon.
  • But fix thine eyes athwart the air right steadfast,
  • And people thou wilt see before us sitting,
  • And each one close against the cliff is seated.”
  • Then wider than at first mine eyes I opened;
  • I looked before me, and saw shades with mantles
  • Not from the colour of the stone diverse.
  • And when we were a little farther onward,
  • I heard a cry of, “Mary, pray for us!”
  • A cry of, “Michael, Peter, and all Saints!”
  • I do not think there walketh still on earth
  • A man so hard, that he would not be pierced
  • With pity at what afterward I saw.
  • For when I had approached so near to them
  • That manifest to me their acts became,
  • Drained was I at the eyes by heavy grief.
  • Covered with sackcloth vile they seemed to me,
  • And one sustained the other with his shoulder,
  • And all of them were by the bank sustained.
  • Thus do the blind, in want of livelihood,
  • Stand at the doors of churches asking alms,
  • And one upon another leans his head,
  • So that in others pity soon may rise,
  • Not only at the accent of their words,
  • But at their aspect, which no less implores.
  • And as unto the blind the sun comes not,
  • So to the shades, of whom just now I spake,
  • Heaven’s light will not be bounteous of itself;
  • For all their lids an iron wire transpierces,
  • And sews them up, as to a sparhawk wild
  • Is done, because it will not quiet stay.
  • To me it seemed, in passing, to do outrage,
  • Seeing the others without being seen;
  • Wherefore I turned me to my counsel sage.
  • Well knew he what the mute one wished to say,
  • And therefore waited not for my demand,
  • But said: “Speak, and be brief, and to the point.”
  • I had Virgilius upon that side
  • Of the embankment from which one may fall,
  • Since by no border ’tis engarlanded;
  • Upon the other side of me I had
  • The shades devout, who through the horrible seam
  • Pressed out the tears so that they bathed their cheeks.
  • To them I turned me, and, “O people, certain,”
  • Began I, “of beholding the high light,
  • Which your desire has solely in its care,
  • So may grace speedily dissolve the scum
  • Upon your consciences, that limpidly
  • Through them descend the river of the mind,
  • Tell me, for dear ’twill be to me and gracious,
  • If any soul among you here is Latian,
  • And ’twill perchance be good for him I learn it.”
  • “O brother mine, each one is citizen
  • Of one true city; but thy meaning is,
  • Who may have lived in Italy a pilgrim.”
  • By way of answer this I seemed to hear
  • A little farther on than where I stood,
  • Whereat I made myself still nearer heard.
  • Among the rest I saw a shade that waited
  • In aspect, and should any one ask how,
  • Its chin it lifted upward like a blind man.
  • “Spirit,” I said, “who stoopest to ascend,
  • If thou art he who did reply to me,
  • Make thyself known to me by place or name.”
  • “Sienese was I,” it replied, “and with
  • The others here recleanse my guilty life,
  • Weeping to Him to lend himself to us.
  • Sapient I was not, although I Sapia
  • Was called, and I was at another’s harm
  • More happy far than at my own good fortune.
  • And that thou mayst not think that I deceive thee,
  • Hear if I was as foolish as I tell thee.
  • The arc already of my years descending,
  • My fellow-citizens near unto Colle
  • Were joined in battle with their adversaries,
  • And I was praying God for what he willed.
  • Routed were they, and turned into the bitter
  • Passes of flight; and I, the chase beholding,
  • A joy received unequalled by all others;
  • So that I lifted upward my bold face
  • Crying to God, ‘Henceforth I fear thee not,’
  • As did the blackbird at the little sunshine.
  • Peace I desired with God at the extreme
  • Of my existence, and as yet would not
  • My debt have been by penitence discharged,
  • Had it not been that in remembrance held me
  • Pier Pettignano in his holy prayers,
  • Who out of charity was grieved for me.
  • But who art thou, that into our conditions
  • Questioning goest, and hast thine eyes unbound
  • As I believe, and breathing dost discourse?”
  • “Mine eyes,” I said, “will yet be here ta’en from me,
  • But for short space; for small is the offence
  • Committed by their being turned with envy.
  • Far greater is the fear, wherein suspended
  • My soul is, of the torment underneath,
  • For even now the load down there weighs on me.”
  • And she to me: “Who led thee, then, among us
  • Up here, if to return below thou thinkest?”
  • And I: “He who is with me, and speaks not;
  • And living am I; therefore ask of me,
  • Spirit elect, if thou wouldst have me move
  • O’er yonder yet my mortal feet for thee.”
  • “O, this is such a novel thing to hear,”
  • She answered, “that great sign it is God loves thee;
  • Therefore with prayer of thine sometimes assist me.
  • And I implore, by what thou most desirest,
  • If e’er thou treadest the soil of Tuscany,
  • Well with my kindred reinstate my fame.
  • Them wilt thou see among that people vain
  • Who hope in Talamone, and will lose there
  • More hope than in discovering the Diana;
  • But there still more the admirals will lose.”
  • Purgatorio: Canto XIV
  • “Who is this one that goes about our mountain,
  • Or ever Death has given him power of flight,
  • And opes his eyes and shuts them at his will?”
  • “I know not who, but know he’s not alone;
  • Ask him thyself, for thou art nearer to him,
  • And gently, so that he may speak, accost him.”
  • Thus did two spirits, leaning tow’rds each other,
  • Discourse about me there on the right hand;
  • Then held supine their faces to address me.
  • And said the one: “O soul, that, fastened still
  • Within the body, tow’rds the heaven art going,
  • For charity console us, and declare
  • Whence comest and who art thou; for thou mak’st us
  • As much to marvel at this grace of thine
  • As must a thing that never yet has been.”
  • And I: “Through midst of Tuscany there wanders
  • A streamlet that is born in Falterona,
  • And not a hundred miles of course suffice it;
  • From thereupon do I this body bring.
  • To tell you who I am were speech in vain,
  • Because my name as yet makes no great noise.”
  • “If well thy meaning I can penetrate
  • With intellect of mine,” then answered me
  • He who first spake, “thou speakest of the Arno.”
  • And said the other to him: “Why concealed
  • This one the appellation of that river,
  • Even as a man doth of things horrible?”
  • And thus the shade that questioned was of this
  • Himself acquitted: “I know not; but truly
  • ’Tis fit the name of such a valley perish;
  • For from its fountain-head (where is so pregnant
  • The Alpine mountain whence is cleft Peloro
  • That in few places it that mark surpasses)
  • To where it yields itself in restoration
  • Of what the heaven doth of the sea dry up,
  • Whence have the rivers that which goes with them,
  • Virtue is like an enemy avoided
  • By all, as is a serpent, through misfortune
  • Of place, or through bad habit that impels them;
  • On which account have so transformed their nature
  • The dwellers in that miserable valley,
  • It seems that Circe had them in her pasture.
  • ’Mid ugly swine, of acorns worthier
  • Than other food for human use created,
  • It first directeth its impoverished way.
  • Curs findeth it thereafter, coming downward,
  • More snarling than their puissance demands,
  • And turns from them disdainfully its muzzle.
  • It goes on falling, and the more it grows,
  • The more it finds the dogs becoming wolves,
  • This maledict and misadventurous ditch.
  • Descended then through many a hollow gulf,
  • It finds the foxes so replete with fraud,
  • They fear no cunning that may master them.
  • Nor will I cease because another hears me;
  • And well ’twill be for him, if still he mind him
  • Of what a truthful spirit to me unravels.
  • Thy grandson I behold, who doth become
  • A hunter of those wolves upon the bank
  • Of the wild stream, and terrifies them all.
  • He sells their flesh, it being yet alive;
  • Thereafter slaughters them like ancient beeves;
  • Many of life, himself of praise, deprives.
  • Blood-stained he issues from the dismal forest;
  • He leaves it such, a thousand years from now
  • In its primeval state ’tis not re-wooded.”
  • As at the announcement of impending ills
  • The face of him who listens is disturbed,
  • From whate’er side the peril seize upon him;
  • So I beheld that other soul, which stood
  • Turned round to listen, grow disturbed and sad,
  • When it had gathered to itself the word.
  • The speech of one and aspect of the other
  • Had me desirous made to know their names,
  • And question mixed with prayers I made thereof,
  • Whereat the spirit which first spake to me
  • Began again: “Thou wishest I should bring me
  • To do for thee what thou’lt not do for me;
  • But since God willeth that in thee shine forth
  • Such grace of his, I’ll not be chary with thee;
  • Know, then, that I Guido del Duca am.
  • My blood was so with envy set on fire,
  • That if I had beheld a man make merry,
  • Thou wouldst have seen me sprinkled o’er with pallor.
  • From my own sowing such the straw I reap!
  • O human race! why dost thou set thy heart
  • Where interdict of partnership must be?
  • This is Renier; this is the boast and honour
  • Of the house of Calboli, where no one since
  • Has made himself the heir of his desert.
  • And not alone his blood is made devoid,
  • ’Twixt Po and mount, and sea-shore and the Reno,
  • Of good required for truth and for diversion;
  • For all within these boundaries is full
  • Of venomous roots, so that too tardily
  • By cultivation now would they diminish.
  • Where is good Lizio, and Arrigo Manardi,
  • Pier Traversaro, and Guido di Carpigna,
  • O Romagnuoli into bastards turned?
  • When in Bologna will a Fabbro rise?
  • When in Faenza a Bernardin di Fosco,
  • The noble scion of ignoble seed?
  • Be not astonished, Tuscan, if I weep,
  • When I remember, with Guido da Prata,
  • Ugolin d’ Azzo, who was living with us,
  • Frederick Tignoso and his company,
  • The house of Traversara, and th’ Anastagi,
  • And one race and the other is extinct;
  • The dames and cavaliers, the toils and ease
  • That filled our souls with love and courtesy,
  • There where the hearts have so malicious grown!
  • O Brettinoro! why dost thou not flee,
  • Seeing that all thy family is gone,
  • And many people, not to be corrupted?
  • Bagnacaval does well in not begetting
  • And ill does Castrocaro, and Conio worse,
  • In taking trouble to beget such Counts.
  • Will do well the Pagani, when their Devil
  • Shall have departed; but not therefore pure
  • Will testimony of them e’er remain.
  • O Ugolin de’ Fantoli, secure
  • Thy name is, since no longer is awaited
  • One who, degenerating, can obscure it!
  • But go now, Tuscan, for it now delights me
  • To weep far better than it does to speak,
  • So much has our discourse my mind distressed.”
  • We were aware that those beloved souls
  • Heard us depart; therefore, by keeping silent,
  • They made us of our pathway confident.
  • When we became alone by going onward,
  • Thunder, when it doth cleave the air, appeared
  • A voice, that counter to us came, exclaiming:
  • “Shall slay me whosoever findeth me!”
  • And fled as the reverberation dies
  • If suddenly the cloud asunder bursts.
  • As soon as hearing had a truce from this,
  • Behold another, with so great a crash,
  • That it resembled thunderings following fast:
  • “I am Aglaurus, who became a stone!”
  • And then, to press myself close to the Poet,
  • I backward, and not forward, took a step.
  • Already on all sides the air was quiet;
  • And said he to me: “That was the hard curb
  • That ought to hold a man within his bounds;
  • But you take in the bait so that the hook
  • Of the old Adversary draws you to him,
  • And hence availeth little curb or call.
  • The heavens are calling you, and wheel around you,
  • Displaying to you their eternal beauties,
  • And still your eye is looking on the ground;
  • Whence He, who all discerns, chastises you.”
  • Purgatorio: Canto XV
  • As much as ’twixt the close of the third hour
  • And dawn of day appeareth of that sphere
  • Which aye in fashion of a child is playing,
  • So much it now appeared, towards the night,
  • Was of his course remaining to the sun;
  • There it was evening, and ’twas midnight here;
  • And the rays smote the middle of our faces,
  • Because by us the mount was so encircled,
  • That straight towards the west we now were going
  • When I perceived my forehead overpowered
  • Beneath the splendour far more than at first,
  • And stupor were to me the things unknown,
  • Whereat towards the summit of my brow
  • I raised my hands, and made myself the visor
  • Which the excessive glare diminishes.
  • As when from off the water, or a mirror,
  • The sunbeam leaps unto the opposite side,
  • Ascending upward in the selfsame measure
  • That it descends, and deviates as far
  • From falling of a stone in line direct,
  • (As demonstrate experiment and art,)
  • So it appeared to me that by a light
  • Refracted there before me I was smitten;
  • On which account my sight was swift to flee.
  • “What is that, Father sweet, from which I cannot
  • So fully screen my sight that it avail me,”
  • Said I, “and seems towards us to be moving?”
  • “Marvel thou not, if dazzle thee as yet
  • The family of heaven,” he answered me;
  • “An angel ’tis, who comes to invite us upward.
  • Soon will it be, that to behold these things
  • Shall not be grievous, but delightful to thee
  • As much as nature fashioned thee to feel.”
  • When we had reached the Angel benedight,
  • With joyful voice he said: “Here enter in
  • To stairway far less steep than are the others.”
  • We mounting were, already thence departed,
  • And “Beati misericordes” was
  • Behind us sung, “Rejoice, thou that o’ercomest!”
  • My Master and myself, we two alone
  • Were going upward, and I thought, in going,
  • Some profit to acquire from words of his;
  • And I to him directed me, thus asking:
  • “What did the spirit of Romagna mean,
  • Mentioning interdict and partnership?”
  • Whence he to me: “Of his own greatest failing
  • He knows the harm; and therefore wonder not
  • If he reprove us, that we less may rue it.
  • Because are thither pointed your desires
  • Where by companionship each share is lessened,
  • Envy doth ply the bellows to your sighs.
  • But if the love of the supernal sphere
  • Should upwardly direct your aspiration,
  • There would not be that fear within your breast;
  • For there, as much the more as one says ‘Our,’
  • So much the more of good each one possesses,
  • And more of charity in that cloister burns.”
  • “I am more hungering to be satisfied,”
  • I said, “than if I had before been silent,
  • And more of doubt within my mind I gather.
  • How can it be, that boon distributed
  • The more possessors can more wealthy make
  • Therein, than if by few it be possessed?”
  • And he to me: “Because thou fixest still
  • Thy mind entirely upon earthly things,
  • Thou pluckest darkness from the very light.
  • That goodness infinite and ineffable
  • Which is above there, runneth unto love,
  • As to a lucid body comes the sunbeam.
  • So much it gives itself as it finds ardour,
  • So that as far as charity extends,
  • O’er it increases the eternal valour.
  • And the more people thitherward aspire,
  • More are there to love well, and more they love there,
  • And, as a mirror, one reflects the other.
  • And if my reasoning appease thee not,
  • Thou shalt see Beatrice; and she will fully
  • Take from thee this and every other longing.
  • Endeavour, then, that soon may be extinct,
  • As are the two already, the five wounds
  • That close themselves again by being painful.”
  • Even as I wished to say, “Thou dost appease me,”
  • I saw that I had reached another circle,
  • So that my eager eyes made me keep silence.
  • There it appeared to me that in a vision
  • Ecstatic on a sudden I was rapt,
  • And in a temple many persons saw;
  • And at the door a woman, with the sweet
  • Behaviour of a mother, saying: “Son,
  • Why in this manner hast thou dealt with us?
  • Lo, sorrowing, thy father and myself
  • Were seeking for thee;”—and as here she ceased,
  • That which appeared at first had disappeared.
  • Then I beheld another with those waters
  • Adown her cheeks which grief distils whenever
  • From great disdain of others it is born,
  • And saying: “If of that city thou art lord,
  • For whose name was such strife among the gods,
  • And whence doth every science scintillate,
  • Avenge thyself on those audacious arms
  • That clasped our daughter, O Pisistratus;”
  • And the lord seemed to me benign and mild
  • To answer her with aspect temperate:
  • “What shall we do to those who wish us ill,
  • If he who loves us be by us condemned?”
  • Then saw I people hot in fire of wrath,
  • With stones a young man slaying, clamorously
  • Still crying to each other, “Kill him! kill him!”
  • And him I saw bow down, because of death
  • That weighed already on him, to the earth,
  • But of his eyes made ever gates to heaven,
  • Imploring the high Lord, in so great strife,
  • That he would pardon those his persecutors,
  • With such an aspect as unlocks compassion.
  • Soon as my soul had outwardly returned
  • To things external to it which are true,
  • Did I my not false errors recognize.
  • My Leader, who could see me bear myself
  • Like to a man that rouses him from sleep,
  • Exclaimed: “What ails thee, that thou canst not stand?
  • But hast been coming more than half a league
  • Veiling thine eyes, and with thy legs entangled,
  • In guise of one whom wine or sleep subdues?”
  • “O my sweet Father, if thou listen to me,
  • I’ll tell thee,” said I, “what appeared to me,
  • When thus from me my legs were ta’en away.”
  • And he: “If thou shouldst have a hundred masks
  • Upon thy face, from me would not be shut
  • Thy cogitations, howsoever small.
  • What thou hast seen was that thou mayst not fail
  • To ope thy heart unto the waters of peace,
  • Which from the eternal fountain are diffused.
  • I did not ask, ‘What ails thee?’ as he does
  • Who only looketh with the eyes that see not
  • When of the soul bereft the body lies,
  • But asked it to give vigour to thy feet;
  • Thus must we needs urge on the sluggards, slow
  • To use their wakefulness when it returns.”
  • We passed along, athwart the twilight peering
  • Forward as far as ever eye could stretch
  • Against the sunbeams serotine and lucent;
  • And lo! by slow degrees a smoke approached
  • In our direction, sombre as the night,
  • Nor was there place to hide one’s self therefrom.
  • This of our eyes and the pure air bereft us.
  • Purgatorio: Canto XVI
  • Darkness of hell, and of a night deprived
  • Of every planet under a poor sky,
  • As much as may be tenebrous with cloud,
  • Ne’er made unto my sight so thick a veil,
  • As did that smoke which there enveloped us,
  • Nor to the feeling of so rough a texture;
  • For not an eye it suffered to stay open;
  • Whereat mine escort, faithful and sagacious,
  • Drew near to me and offered me his shoulder.
  • E’en as a blind man goes behind his guide,
  • Lest he should wander, or should strike against
  • Aught that may harm or peradventure kill him,
  • So went I through the bitter and foul air,
  • Listening unto my Leader, who said only,
  • “Look that from me thou be not separated.”
  • Voices I heard, and every one appeared
  • To supplicate for peace and misericord
  • The Lamb of God who takes away our sins.
  • Still “Agnus Dei” their exordium was;
  • One word there was in all, and metre one,
  • So that all harmony appeared among them.
  • “Master,” I said, “are spirits those I hear?”
  • And he to me: “Thou apprehendest truly,
  • And they the knot of anger go unloosing.”
  • “Now who art thou, that cleavest through our smoke
  • And art discoursing of us even as though
  • Thou didst by calends still divide the time?”
  • After this manner by a voice was spoken;
  • Whereon my Master said: “Do thou reply,
  • And ask if on this side the way go upward.”
  • And I: “O creature that dost cleanse thyself
  • To return beautiful to Him who made thee,
  • Thou shalt hear marvels if thou follow me.”
  • “Thee will I follow far as is allowed me,”
  • He answered; “and if smoke prevent our seeing,
  • Hearing shall keep us joined instead thereof.”
  • Thereon began I: “With that swathing band
  • Which death unwindeth am I going upward,
  • And hither came I through the infernal anguish.
  • And if God in his grace has me infolded,
  • So that he wills that I behold his court
  • By method wholly out of modern usage,
  • Conceal not from me who ere death thou wast,
  • But tell it me, and tell me if I go
  • Right for the pass, and be thy words our escort.”
  • “Lombard was I, and I was Marco called;
  • The world I knew, and loved that excellence,
  • At which has each one now unbent his bow.
  • For mounting upward, thou art going right.”
  • Thus he made answer, and subjoined: “I pray thee
  • To pray for me when thou shalt be above.”
  • And I to him: “My faith I pledge to thee
  • To do what thou dost ask me; but am bursting
  • Inly with doubt, unless I rid me of it.
  • First it was simple, and is now made double
  • By thy opinion, which makes certain to me,
  • Here and elsewhere, that which I couple with it.
  • The world forsooth is utterly deserted
  • By every virtue, as thou tellest me,
  • And with iniquity is big and covered;
  • But I beseech thee point me out the cause,
  • That I may see it, and to others show it;
  • For one in the heavens, and here below one puts it.”
  • A sigh profound, that grief forced into Ai!
  • He first sent forth, and then began he: “Brother,
  • The world is blind, and sooth thou comest from it!
  • Ye who are living every cause refer
  • Still upward to the heavens, as if all things
  • They of necessity moved with themselves.
  • If this were so, in you would be destroyed
  • Free will, nor any justice would there be
  • In having joy for good, or grief for evil.
  • The heavens your movements do initiate,
  • I say not all; but granting that I say it,
  • Light has been given you for good and evil,
  • And free volition; which, if some fatigue
  • In the first battles with the heavens it suffers,
  • Afterwards conquers all, if well ’tis nurtured.
  • To greater force and to a better nature,
  • Though free, ye subject are, and that creates
  • The mind in you the heavens have not in charge.
  • Hence, if the present world doth go astray,
  • In you the cause is, be it sought in you;
  • And I therein will now be thy true spy.
  • Forth from the hand of Him, who fondles it
  • Before it is, like to a little girl
  • Weeping and laughing in her childish sport,
  • Issues the simple soul, that nothing knows,
  • Save that, proceeding from a joyous Maker,
  • Gladly it turns to that which gives it pleasure.
  • Of trivial good at first it tastes the savour;
  • Is cheated by it, and runs after it,
  • If guide or rein turn not aside its love.
  • Hence it behoved laws for a rein to place,
  • Behoved a king to have, who at the least
  • Of the true city should discern the tower.
  • The laws exist, but who sets hand to them?
  • No one; because the shepherd who precedes
  • Can ruminate, but cleaveth not the hoof;
  • Wherefore the people that perceives its guide
  • Strike only at the good for which it hankers,
  • Feeds upon that, and farther seeketh not.
  • Clearly canst thou perceive that evil guidance
  • The cause is that has made the world depraved,
  • And not that nature is corrupt in you.
  • Rome, that reformed the world, accustomed was
  • Two suns to have, which one road and the other,
  • Of God and of the world, made manifest.
  • One has the other quenched, and to the crosier
  • The sword is joined, and ill beseemeth it
  • That by main force one with the other go,
  • Because, being joined, one feareth not the other;
  • If thou believe not, think upon the grain,
  • For by its seed each herb is recognized.
  • In the land laved by Po and Adige,
  • Valour and courtesy used to be found,
  • Before that Frederick had his controversy;
  • Now in security can pass that way
  • Whoever will abstain, through sense of shame,
  • From speaking with the good, or drawing near them.
  • True, three old men are left, in whom upbraids
  • The ancient age the new, and late they deem it
  • That God restore them to the better life:
  • Currado da Palazzo, and good Gherardo,
  • And Guido da Castel, who better named is,
  • In fashion of the French, the simple Lombard:
  • Say thou henceforward that the Church of Rome,
  • Confounding in itself two governments,
  • Falls in the mire, and soils itself and burden.”
  • “O Marco mine,” I said, “thou reasonest well;
  • And now discern I why the sons of Levi
  • Have been excluded from the heritage.
  • But what Gherardo is it, who, as sample
  • Of a lost race, thou sayest has remained
  • In reprobation of the barbarous age?”
  • “Either thy speech deceives me, or it tempts me,”
  • He answered me; “for speaking Tuscan to me,
  • It seems of good Gherardo naught thou knowest.
  • By other surname do I know him not,
  • Unless I take it from his daughter Gaia.
  • May God be with you, for I come no farther.
  • Behold the dawn, that through the smoke rays out,
  • Already whitening; and I must depart—
  • Yonder the Angel is—ere he appear.”
  • Thus did he speak, and would no farther hear me.
  • Purgatorio: Canto XVII
  • Remember, Reader, if e’er in the Alps
  • A mist o’ertook thee, through which thou couldst see
  • Not otherwise than through its membrane mole,
  • How, when the vapours humid and condensed
  • Begin to dissipate themselves, the sphere
  • Of the sun feebly enters in among them,
  • And thy imagination will be swift
  • In coming to perceive how I re-saw
  • The sun at first, that was already setting.
  • Thus, to the faithful footsteps of my Master
  • Mating mine own, I issued from that cloud
  • To rays already dead on the low shores.
  • O thou, Imagination, that dost steal us
  • So from without sometimes, that man perceives not,
  • Although around may sound a thousand trumpets,
  • Who moveth thee, if sense impel thee not?
  • Moves thee a light, which in the heaven takes form,
  • By self, or by a will that downward guides it.
  • Of her impiety, who changed her form
  • Into the bird that most delights in singing,
  • In my imagining appeared the trace;
  • And hereupon my mind was so withdrawn
  • Within itself, that from without there came
  • Nothing that then might be received by it.
  • Then reigned within my lofty fantasy
  • One crucified, disdainful and ferocious
  • In countenance, and even thus was dying.
  • Around him were the great Ahasuerus,
  • Esther his wife, and the just Mordecai,
  • Who was in word and action so entire.
  • And even as this image burst asunder
  • Of its own self, in fashion of a bubble
  • In which the water it was made of fails,
  • There rose up in my vision a young maiden
  • Bitterly weeping, and she said: “O queen,
  • Why hast thou wished in anger to be naught?
  • Thou’st slain thyself, Lavinia not to lose;
  • Now hast thou lost me; I am she who mourns,
  • Mother, at thine ere at another’s ruin.”
  • As sleep is broken, when upon a sudden
  • New light strikes in upon the eyelids closed,
  • And broken quivers ere it dieth wholly,
  • So this imagining of mine fell down
  • As soon as the effulgence smote my face,
  • Greater by far than what is in our wont.
  • I turned me round to see where I might be,
  • When said a voice, “Here is the passage up;”
  • Which from all other purposes removed me,
  • And made my wish so full of eagerness
  • To look and see who was it that was speaking,
  • It never rests till meeting face to face;
  • But as before the sun, which quells the sight,
  • And in its own excess its figure veils,
  • Even so my power was insufficient here.
  • “This is a spirit divine, who in the way
  • Of going up directs us without asking,
  • And who with his own light himself conceals.
  • He does with us as man doth with himself;
  • For he who sees the need, and waits the asking,
  • Malignly leans already tow’rds denial.
  • Accord we now our feet to such inviting,
  • Let us make haste to mount ere it grow dark;
  • For then we could not till the day return.”
  • Thus my Conductor said; and I and he
  • Together turned our footsteps to a stairway;
  • And I, as soon as the first step I reached,
  • Near me perceived a motion as of wings,
  • And fanning in the face, and saying, “‘Beati
  • Pacifici,’ who are without ill anger.”
  • Already over us were so uplifted
  • The latest sunbeams, which the night pursues,
  • That upon many sides the stars appeared.
  • “O manhood mine, why dost thou vanish so?”
  • I said within myself; for I perceived
  • The vigour of my legs was put in truce.
  • We at the point were where no more ascends
  • The stairway upward, and were motionless,
  • Even as a ship, which at the shore arrives;
  • And I gave heed a little, if I might hear
  • Aught whatsoever in the circle new;
  • Then to my Master turned me round and said:
  • “Say, my sweet Father, what delinquency
  • Is purged here in the circle where we are?
  • Although our feet may pause, pause not thy speech.”
  • And he to me: “The love of good, remiss
  • In what it should have done, is here restored;
  • Here plied again the ill-belated oar;
  • But still more openly to understand,
  • Turn unto me thy mind, and thou shalt gather
  • Some profitable fruit from our delay.
  • Neither Creator nor a creature ever,
  • Son,” he began, “was destitute of love
  • Natural or spiritual; and thou knowest it.
  • The natural was ever without error;
  • But err the other may by evil object,
  • Or by too much, or by too little vigour.
  • While in the first it well directed is,
  • And in the second moderates itself,
  • It cannot be the cause of sinful pleasure;
  • But when to ill it turns, and, with more care
  • Or lesser than it ought, runs after good,
  • ’Gainst the Creator works his own creation.
  • Hence thou mayst comprehend that love must be
  • The seed within yourselves of every virtue,
  • And every act that merits punishment.
  • Now inasmuch as never from the welfare
  • Of its own subject can love turn its sight,
  • From their own hatred all things are secure;
  • And since we cannot think of any being
  • Standing alone, nor from the First divided,
  • Of hating Him is all desire cut off.
  • Hence if, discriminating, I judge well,
  • The evil that one loves is of one’s neighbour,
  • And this is born in three modes in your clay.
  • There are, who, by abasement of their neighbour,
  • Hope to excel, and therefore only long
  • That from his greatness he may be cast down;
  • There are, who power, grace, honour, and renown
  • Fear they may lose because another rises,
  • Thence are so sad that the reverse they love;
  • And there are those whom injury seems to chafe,
  • So that it makes them greedy for revenge,
  • And such must needs shape out another’s harm.
  • This threefold love is wept for down below;
  • Now of the other will I have thee hear,
  • That runneth after good with measure faulty.
  • Each one confusedly a good conceives
  • Wherein the mind may rest, and longeth for it;
  • Therefore to overtake it each one strives.
  • If languid love to look on this attract you,
  • Or in attaining unto it, this cornice,
  • After just penitence, torments you for it.
  • There’s other good that does not make man happy;
  • ’Tis not felicity, ’tis not the good
  • Essence, of every good the fruit and root.
  • The love that yields itself too much to this
  • Above us is lamented in three circles;
  • But how tripartite it may be described,
  • I say not, that thou seek it for thyself.”
  • Purgatorio: Canto XVIII
  • An end had put unto his reasoning
  • The lofty Teacher, and attent was looking
  • Into my face, if I appeared content;
  • And I, whom a new thirst still goaded on,
  • Without was mute, and said within: “Perchance
  • The too much questioning I make annoys him.”
  • But that true Father, who had comprehended
  • The timid wish, that opened not itself,
  • By speaking gave me hardihood to speak.
  • Whence I: “My sight is, Master, vivified
  • So in thy light, that clearly I discern
  • Whate’er thy speech importeth or describes.
  • Therefore I thee entreat, sweet Father dear,
  • To teach me love, to which thou dost refer
  • Every good action and its contrary.”
  • “Direct,” he said, “towards me the keen eyes
  • Of intellect, and clear will be to thee
  • The error of the blind, who would be leaders.
  • The soul, which is created apt to love,
  • Is mobile unto everything that pleases,
  • Soon as by pleasure she is waked to action.
  • Your apprehension from some real thing
  • An image draws, and in yourselves displays it
  • So that it makes the soul turn unto it.
  • And if, when turned, towards it she incline,
  • Love is that inclination; it is nature,
  • Which is by pleasure bound in you anew
  • Then even as the fire doth upward move
  • By its own form, which to ascend is born,
  • Where longest in its matter it endures,
  • So comes the captive soul into desire,
  • Which is a motion spiritual, and ne’er rests
  • Until she doth enjoy the thing beloved.
  • Now may apparent be to thee how hidden
  • The truth is from those people, who aver
  • All love is in itself a laudable thing;
  • Because its matter may perchance appear
  • Aye to be good; but yet not each impression
  • Is good, albeit good may be the wax.”
  • “Thy words, and my sequacious intellect,”
  • I answered him, “have love revealed to me;
  • But that has made me more impregned with doubt;
  • For if love from without be offered us,
  • And with another foot the soul go not,
  • If right or wrong she go, ’tis not her merit.”
  • And he to me: “What reason seeth here,
  • Myself can tell thee; beyond that await
  • For Beatrice, since ’tis a work of faith.
  • Every substantial form, that segregate
  • From matter is, and with it is united,
  • Specific power has in itself collected,
  • Which without act is not perceptible,
  • Nor shows itself except by its effect,
  • As life does in a plant by the green leaves.
  • But still, whence cometh the intelligence
  • Of the first notions, man is ignorant,
  • And the affection for the first allurements,
  • Which are in you as instinct in the bee
  • To make its honey; and this first desire
  • Merit of praise or blame containeth not.
  • Now, that to this all others may be gathered,
  • Innate within you is the power that counsels,
  • And it should keep the threshold of assent.
  • This is the principle, from which is taken
  • Occasion of desert in you, according
  • As good and guilty loves it takes and winnows.
  • Those who, in reasoning, to the bottom went,
  • Were of this innate liberty aware,
  • Therefore bequeathed they Ethics to the world.
  • Supposing, then, that from necessity
  • Springs every love that is within you kindled,
  • Within yourselves the power is to restrain it.
  • The noble virtue Beatrice understands
  • By the free will; and therefore see that thou
  • Bear it in mind, if she should speak of it.”
  • The moon, belated almost unto midnight,
  • Now made the stars appear to us more rare,
  • Formed like a bucket, that is all ablaze,
  • And counter to the heavens ran through those paths
  • Which the sun sets aflame, when he of Rome
  • Sees it ’twixt Sardes and Corsicans go down;
  • And that patrician shade, for whom is named
  • Pietola more than any Mantuan town,
  • Had laid aside the burden of my lading;
  • Whence I, who reason manifest and plain
  • In answer to my questions had received,
  • Stood like a man in drowsy reverie.
  • But taken from me was this drowsiness
  • Suddenly by a people, that behind
  • Our backs already had come round to us.
  • And as, of old, Ismenus and Asopus
  • Beside them saw at night the rush and throng,
  • If but the Thebans were in need of Bacchus,
  • So they along that circle curve their step,
  • From what I saw of those approaching us,
  • Who by good-will and righteous love are ridden.
  • Full soon they were upon us, because running
  • Moved onward all that mighty multitude,
  • And two in the advance cried out, lamenting,
  • “Mary in haste unto the mountain ran,
  • And Caesar, that he might subdue Ilerda,
  • Thrust at Marseilles, and then ran into Spain.”
  • “Quick! quick! so that the time may not be lost
  • By little love!” forthwith the others cried,
  • “For ardour in well-doing freshens grace!”
  • “O folk, in whom an eager fervour now
  • Supplies perhaps delay and negligence,
  • Put by you in well-doing, through lukewarmness,
  • This one who lives, and truly I lie not,
  • Would fain go up, if but the sun relight us;
  • So tell us where the passage nearest is.”
  • These were the words of him who was my Guide;
  • And some one of those spirits said: “Come on
  • Behind us, and the opening shalt thou find;
  • So full of longing are we to move onward,
  • That stay we cannot; therefore pardon us,
  • If thou for churlishness our justice take.
  • I was San Zeno’s Abbot at Verona,
  • Under the empire of good Barbarossa,
  • Of whom still sorrowing Milan holds discourse;
  • And he has one foot in the grave already,
  • Who shall erelong lament that monastery,
  • And sorry be of having there had power,
  • Because his son, in his whole body sick,
  • And worse in mind, and who was evil-born,
  • He put into the place of its true pastor.”
  • If more he said, or silent was, I know not,
  • He had already passed so far beyond us;
  • But this I heard, and to retain it pleased me.
  • And he who was in every need my succour
  • Said: “Turn thee hitherward; see two of them
  • Come fastening upon slothfulness their teeth.”
  • In rear of all they shouted: “Sooner were
  • The people dead to whom the sea was opened,
  • Than their inheritors the Jordan saw;
  • And those who the fatigue did not endure
  • Unto the issue, with Anchises’ son,
  • Themselves to life withouten glory offered.”
  • Then when from us so separated were
  • Those shades, that they no longer could be seen,
  • Within me a new thought did entrance find,
  • Whence others many and diverse were born;
  • And so I lapsed from one into another,
  • That in a reverie mine eyes I closed,
  • And meditation into dream transmuted.
  • Purgatorio: Canto XIX
  • It was the hour when the diurnal heat
  • No more can warm the coldness of the moon,
  • Vanquished by earth, or peradventure Saturn,
  • When geomancers their Fortuna Major
  • See in the orient before the dawn
  • Rise by a path that long remains not dim,
  • There came to me in dreams a stammering woman,
  • Squint in her eyes, and in her feet distorted,
  • With hands dissevered and of sallow hue.
  • I looked at her; and as the sun restores
  • The frigid members which the night benumbs,
  • Even thus my gaze did render voluble
  • Her tongue, and made her all erect thereafter
  • In little while, and the lost countenance
  • As love desires it so in her did colour.
  • When in this wise she had her speech unloosed,
  • She ’gan to sing so, that with difficulty
  • Could I have turned my thoughts away from her.
  • “I am,” she sang, “I am the Siren sweet
  • Who mariners amid the main unman,
  • So full am I of pleasantness to hear.
  • I drew Ulysses from his wandering way
  • Unto my song, and he who dwells with me
  • Seldom departs so wholly I content him.”
  • Her mouth was not yet closed again, before
  • Appeared a Lady saintly and alert
  • Close at my side to put her to confusion.
  • “Virgilius, O Virgilius! who is this?”
  • Sternly she said; and he was drawing near
  • With eyes still fixed upon that modest one.
  • She seized the other and in front laid open,
  • Rending her garments, and her belly showed me;
  • This waked me with the stench that issued from it.
  • I turned mine eyes, and good Virgilius said:
  • “At least thrice have I called thee; rise and come;
  • Find we the opening by which thou mayst enter.”
  • I rose; and full already of high day
  • Were all the circles of the Sacred Mountain,
  • And with the new sun at our back we went.
  • Following behind him, I my forehead bore
  • Like unto one who has it laden with thought,
  • Who makes himself the half arch of a bridge,
  • When I heard say, “Come, here the passage is,”
  • Spoken in a manner gentle and benign,
  • Such as we hear not in this mortal region.
  • With open wings, which of a swan appeared,
  • Upward he turned us who thus spake to us,
  • Between the two walls of the solid granite.
  • He moved his pinions afterwards and fanned us,
  • Affirming those ‘qui lugent’ to be blessed,
  • For they shall have their souls with comfort filled.
  • “What aileth thee, that aye to earth thou gazest?”
  • To me my Guide began to say, we both
  • Somewhat beyond the Angel having mounted.
  • And I: “With such misgiving makes me go
  • A vision new, which bends me to itself,
  • So that I cannot from the thought withdraw me.”
  • “Didst thou behold,” he said, “that old enchantress,
  • Who sole above us henceforth is lamented?
  • Didst thou behold how man is freed from her?
  • Suffice it thee, and smite earth with thy heels,
  • Thine eyes lift upward to the lure, that whirls
  • The Eternal King with revolutions vast.”
  • Even as the hawk, that first his feet surveys,
  • Then turns him to the call and stretches forward,
  • Through the desire of food that draws him thither,
  • Such I became, and such, as far as cleaves
  • The rock to give a way to him who mounts,
  • Went on to where the circling doth begin.
  • On the fifth circle when I had come forth,
  • People I saw upon it who were weeping,
  • Stretched prone upon the ground, all downward turned.
  • “Adhaesit pavimento anima mea,”
  • I heard them say with sighings so profound,
  • That hardly could the words be understood.
  • “O ye elect of God, whose sufferings
  • Justice and Hope both render less severe,
  • Direct ye us towards the high ascents.”
  • “If ye are come secure from this prostration,
  • And wish to find the way most speedily,
  • Let your right hands be evermore outside.”
  • Thus did the Poet ask, and thus was answered
  • By them somewhat in front of us; whence I
  • In what was spoken divined the rest concealed,
  • And unto my Lord’s eyes mine eyes I turned;
  • Whence he assented with a cheerful sign
  • To what the sight of my desire implored.
  • When of myself I could dispose at will,
  • Above that creature did I draw myself,
  • Whose words before had caused me to take note,
  • Saying: “O Spirit, in whom weeping ripens
  • That without which to God we cannot turn,
  • Suspend awhile for me thy greater care.
  • Who wast thou, and why are your backs turned upwards,
  • Tell me, and if thou wouldst that I procure thee
  • Anything there whence living I departed.”
  • And he to me: “Wherefore our backs the heaven
  • Turns to itself, know shalt thou; but beforehand
  • ‘Scias quod ego fui successor Petri.’
  • Between Siestri and Chiaveri descends
  • A river beautiful, and of its name
  • The title of my blood its summit makes.
  • A month and little more essayed I how
  • Weighs the great cloak on him from mire who keeps it,
  • For all the other burdens seem a feather.
  • Tardy, ah woe is me! was my conversion;
  • But when the Roman Shepherd I was made,
  • Then I discovered life to be a lie.
  • I saw that there the heart was not at rest,
  • Nor farther in that life could one ascend;
  • Whereby the love of this was kindled in me.
  • Until that time a wretched soul and parted
  • From God was I, and wholly avaricious;
  • Now, as thou seest, I here am punished for it.
  • What avarice does is here made manifest
  • In the purgation of these souls converted,
  • And no more bitter pain the Mountain has.
  • Even as our eye did not uplift itself
  • Aloft, being fastened upon earthly things,
  • So justice here has merged it in the earth.
  • As avarice had extinguished our affection
  • For every good, whereby was action lost,
  • So justice here doth hold us in restraint,
  • Bound and imprisoned by the feet and hands;
  • And so long as it pleases the just Lord
  • Shall we remain immovable and prostrate.”
  • I on my knees had fallen, and wished to speak;
  • But even as I began, and he was ’ware,
  • Only by listening, of my reverence,
  • “What cause,” he said, “has downward bent thee thus?”
  • And I to him: “For your own dignity,
  • Standing, my conscience stung me with remorse.”
  • “Straighten thy legs, and upward raise thee, brother,”
  • He answered: “Err not, fellow-servant am I
  • With thee and with the others to one power.
  • If e’er that holy, evangelic sound,
  • Which sayeth ‘neque nubent,’ thou hast heard,
  • Well canst thou see why in this wise I speak.
  • Now go; no longer will I have thee linger,
  • Because thy stay doth incommode my weeping,
  • With which I ripen that which thou hast said.
  • On earth I have a grandchild named Alagia,
  • Good in herself, unless indeed our house
  • Malevolent may make her by example,
  • And she alone remains to me on earth.”
  • Purgatorio: Canto XX
  • Ill strives the will against a better will;
  • Therefore, to pleasure him, against my pleasure
  • I drew the sponge not saturate from the water.
  • Onward I moved, and onward moved my Leader,
  • Through vacant places, skirting still the rock,
  • As on a wall close to the battlements;
  • For they that through their eyes pour drop by drop
  • The malady which all the world pervades,
  • On the other side too near the verge approach.
  • Accursed mayst thou be, thou old she-wolf,
  • That more than all the other beasts hast prey,
  • Because of hunger infinitely hollow!
  • O heaven, in whose gyrations some appear
  • To think conditions here below are changed,
  • When will he come through whom she shall depart?
  • Onward we went with footsteps slow and scarce,
  • And I attentive to the shades I heard
  • Piteously weeping and bemoaning them;
  • And I by peradventure heard “Sweet Mary!”
  • Uttered in front of us amid the weeping
  • Even as a woman does who is in child-birth;
  • And in continuance: “How poor thou wast
  • Is manifested by that hostelry
  • Where thou didst lay thy sacred burden down.”
  • Thereafterward I heard: “O good Fabricius,
  • Virtue with poverty didst thou prefer
  • To the possession of great wealth with vice.”
  • So pleasurable were these words to me
  • That I drew farther onward to have knowledge
  • Touching that spirit whence they seemed to come.
  • He furthermore was speaking of the largess
  • Which Nicholas unto the maidens gave,
  • In order to conduct their youth to honour.
  • “O soul that dost so excellently speak,
  • Tell me who wast thou,” said I, “and why only
  • Thou dost renew these praises well deserved?
  • Not without recompense shall be thy word,
  • If I return to finish the short journey
  • Of that life which is flying to its end.”
  • And he: “I’ll tell thee, not for any comfort
  • I may expect from earth, but that so much
  • Grace shines in thee or ever thou art dead.
  • I was the root of that malignant plant
  • Which overshadows all the Christian world,
  • So that good fruit is seldom gathered from it;
  • But if Douay and Ghent, and Lille and Bruges
  • Had Power, soon vengeance would be taken on it;
  • And this I pray of Him who judges all.
  • Hugh Capet was I called upon the earth;
  • From me were born the Louises and Philips,
  • By whom in later days has France been governed.
  • I was the son of a Parisian butcher,
  • What time the ancient kings had perished all,
  • Excepting one, contrite in cloth of gray.
  • I found me grasping in my hands the rein
  • Of the realm’s government, and so great power
  • Of new acquest, and so with friends abounding,
  • That to the widowed diadem promoted
  • The head of mine own offspring was, from whom
  • The consecrated bones of these began.
  • So long as the great dowry of Provence
  • Out of my blood took not the sense of shame,
  • ’Twas little worth, but still it did no harm.
  • Then it began with falsehood and with force
  • Its rapine; and thereafter, for amends,
  • Took Ponthieu, Normandy, and Gascony.
  • Charles came to Italy, and for amends
  • A victim made of Conradin, and then
  • Thrust Thomas back to heaven, for amends.
  • A time I see, not very distant now,
  • Which draweth forth another Charles from France,
  • The better to make known both him and his.
  • Unarmed he goes, and only with the lance
  • That Judas jousted with; and that he thrusts
  • So that he makes the paunch of Florence burst.
  • He thence not land, but sin and infamy,
  • Shall gain, so much more grievous to himself
  • As the more light such damage he accounts.
  • The other, now gone forth, ta’en in his ship,
  • See I his daughter sell, and chaffer for her
  • As corsairs do with other female slaves.
  • What more, O Avarice, canst thou do to us,
  • Since thou my blood so to thyself hast drawn,
  • It careth not for its own proper flesh?
  • That less may seem the future ill and past,
  • I see the flower-de-luce Alagna enter,
  • And Christ in his own Vicar captive made.
  • I see him yet another time derided;
  • I see renewed the vinegar and gall,
  • And between living thieves I see him slain.
  • I see the modern Pilate so relentless,
  • This does not sate him, but without decretal
  • He to the temple bears his sordid sails!
  • When, O my Lord! shall I be joyful made
  • By looking on the vengeance which, concealed,
  • Makes sweet thine anger in thy secrecy?
  • What I was saying of that only bride
  • Of the Holy Ghost, and which occasioned thee
  • To turn towards me for some commentary,
  • So long has been ordained to all our prayers
  • As the day lasts; but when the night comes on,
  • Contrary sound we take instead thereof.
  • At that time we repeat Pygmalion,
  • Of whom a traitor, thief, and parricide
  • Made his insatiable desire of gold;
  • And the misery of avaricious Midas,
  • That followed his inordinate demand,
  • At which forevermore one needs but laugh.
  • The foolish Achan each one then records,
  • And how he stole the spoils; so that the wrath
  • Of Joshua still appears to sting him here.
  • Then we accuse Sapphira with her husband,
  • We laud the hoof-beats Heliodorus had,
  • And the whole mount in infamy encircles
  • Polymnestor who murdered Polydorus.
  • Here finally is cried: ‘O Crassus, tell us,
  • For thou dost know, what is the taste of gold?’
  • Sometimes we speak, one loud, another low,
  • According to desire of speech, that spurs us
  • To greater now and now to lesser pace.
  • But in the good that here by day is talked of,
  • Erewhile alone I was not; yet near by
  • No other person lifted up his voice.”
  • From him already we departed were,
  • And made endeavour to o’ercome the road
  • As much as was permitted to our power,
  • When I perceived, like something that is falling,
  • The mountain tremble, whence a chill seized on me,
  • As seizes him who to his death is going.
  • Certes so violently shook not Delos,
  • Before Latona made her nest therein
  • To give birth to the two eyes of the heaven.
  • Then upon all sides there began a cry,
  • Such that the Master drew himself towards me,
  • Saying, “Fear not, while I am guiding thee.”
  • “Gloria in excelsis Deo,” all
  • Were saying, from what near I comprehended,
  • Where it was possible to hear the cry.
  • We paused immovable and in suspense,
  • Even as the shepherds who first heard that song,
  • Until the trembling ceased, and it was finished.
  • Then we resumed again our holy path,
  • Watching the shades that lay upon the ground,
  • Already turned to their accustomed plaint.
  • No ignorance ever with so great a strife
  • Had rendered me importunate to know,
  • If erreth not in this my memory,
  • As meditating then I seemed to have;
  • Nor out of haste to question did I dare,
  • Nor of myself I there could aught perceive;
  • So I went onward timorous and thoughtful.
  • Purgatorio: Canto XXI
  • The natural thirst, that ne’er is satisfied
  • Excepting with the water for whose grace
  • The woman of Samaria besought,
  • Put me in travail, and haste goaded me
  • Along the encumbered path behind my Leader
  • And I was pitying that righteous vengeance;
  • And lo! in the same manner as Luke writeth
  • That Christ appeared to two upon the way
  • From the sepulchral cave already risen,
  • A shade appeared to us, and came behind us,
  • Down gazing on the prostrate multitude,
  • Nor were we ware of it, until it spake,
  • Saying, “My brothers, may God give you peace!”
  • We turned us suddenly, and Virgilius rendered
  • To him the countersign thereto conforming.
  • Thereon began he: “In the blessed council,
  • Thee may the court veracious place in peace,
  • That me doth banish in eternal exile!”
  • “How,” said he, and the while we went with speed,
  • “If ye are shades whom God deigns not on high,
  • Who up his stairs so far has guided you?”
  • And said my Teacher: “If thou note the marks
  • Which this one bears, and which the Angel traces
  • Well shalt thou see he with the good must reign.
  • But because she who spinneth day and night
  • For him had not yet drawn the distaff off,
  • Which Clotho lays for each one and compacts,
  • His soul, which is thy sister and my own,
  • In coming upwards could not come alone,
  • By reason that it sees not in our fashion.
  • Whence I was drawn from out the ample throat
  • Of Hell to be his guide, and I shall guide him
  • As far on as my school has power to lead.
  • But tell us, if thou knowest, why such a shudder
  • Erewhile the mountain gave, and why together
  • All seemed to cry, as far as its moist feet?”
  • In asking he so hit the very eye
  • Of my desire, that merely with the hope
  • My thirst became the less unsatisfied.
  • “Naught is there,” he began, “that without order
  • May the religion of the mountain feel,
  • Nor aught that may be foreign to its custom.
  • Free is it here from every permutation;
  • What from itself heaven in itself receiveth
  • Can be of this the cause, and naught beside;
  • Because that neither rain, nor hail, nor snow,
  • Nor dew, nor hoar-frost any higher falls
  • Than the short, little stairway of three steps.
  • Dense clouds do not appear, nor rarefied,
  • Nor coruscation, nor the daughter of Thaumas,
  • That often upon earth her region shifts;
  • No arid vapour any farther rises
  • Than to the top of the three steps I spake of,
  • Whereon the Vicar of Peter has his feet.
  • Lower down perchance it trembles less or more,
  • But, for the wind that in the earth is hidden
  • I know not how, up here it never trembled.
  • It trembles here, whenever any soul
  • Feels itself pure, so that it soars, or moves
  • To mount aloft, and such a cry attends it.
  • Of purity the will alone gives proof,
  • Which, being wholly free to change its convent,
  • Takes by surprise the soul, and helps it fly.
  • First it wills well; but the desire permits not,
  • Which divine justice with the self-same will
  • There was to sin, upon the torment sets.
  • And I, who have been lying in this pain
  • Five hundred years and more, but just now felt
  • A free volition for a better seat.
  • Therefore thou heardst the earthquake, and the pious
  • Spirits along the mountain rendering praise
  • Unto the Lord, that soon he speed them upwards.”
  • So said he to him; and since we enjoy
  • As much in drinking as the thirst is great,
  • I could not say how much it did me good.
  • And the wise Leader: “Now I see the net
  • That snares you here, and how ye are set free,
  • Why the earth quakes, and wherefore ye rejoice.
  • Now who thou wast be pleased that I may know;
  • And why so many centuries thou hast here
  • Been lying, let me gather from thy words.”
  • “In days when the good Titus, with the aid
  • Of the supremest King, avenged the wounds
  • Whence issued forth the blood by Judas sold,
  • Under the name that most endures and honours,
  • Was I on earth,” that spirit made reply,
  • “Greatly renowned, but not with faith as yet.
  • My vocal spirit was so sweet, that Rome
  • Me, a Thoulousian, drew unto herself,
  • Where I deserved to deck my brows with myrtle.
  • Statius the people name me still on earth;
  • I sang of Thebes, and then of great Achilles;
  • But on the way fell with my second burden.
  • The seeds unto my ardour were the sparks
  • Of that celestial flame which heated me,
  • Whereby more than a thousand have been fired;
  • Of the Aeneid speak I, which to me
  • A mother was, and was my nurse in song;
  • Without this weighed I not a drachma’s weight.
  • And to have lived upon the earth what time
  • Virgilius lived, I would accept one sun
  • More than I must ere issuing from my ban.”
  • These words towards me made Virgilius turn
  • With looks that in their silence said, “Be silent!”
  • But yet the power that wills cannot do all things;
  • For tears and laughter are such pursuivants
  • Unto the passion from which each springs forth,
  • In the most truthful least the will they follow.
  • I only smiled, as one who gives the wink;
  • Whereat the shade was silent, and it gazed
  • Into mine eyes, where most expression dwells;
  • And, “As thou well mayst consummate a labour
  • So great,” it said, “why did thy face just now
  • Display to me the lightning of a smile?”
  • Now am I caught on this side and on that;
  • One keeps me silent, one to speak conjures me,
  • Wherefore I sigh, and I am understood.
  • “Speak,” said my Master, “and be not afraid
  • Of speaking, but speak out, and say to him
  • What he demands with such solicitude.”
  • Whence I: “Thou peradventure marvellest,
  • O antique spirit, at the smile I gave;
  • But I will have more wonder seize upon thee.
  • This one, who guides on high these eyes of mine,
  • Is that Virgilius, from whom thou didst learn
  • To sing aloud of men and of the Gods.
  • If other cause thou to my smile imputedst,
  • Abandon it as false, and trust it was
  • Those words which thou hast spoken concerning him.”
  • Already he was stooping to embrace
  • My Teacher’s feet; but he said to him: “Brother,
  • Do not; for shade thou art, and shade beholdest.”
  • And he uprising: “Now canst thou the sum
  • Of love which warms me to thee comprehend,
  • When this our vanity I disremember,
  • Treating a shadow as substantial thing.”
  • Purgatorio: Canto XXII
  • Already was the Angel left behind us,
  • The Angel who to the sixth round had turned us,
  • Having erased one mark from off my face;
  • And those who have in justice their desire
  • Had said to us, “Beati,” in their voices,
  • With “sitio,” and without more ended it.
  • And I, more light than through the other passes,
  • Went onward so, that without any labour
  • I followed upward the swift-footed spirits;
  • When thus Virgilius began: “The love
  • Kindled by virtue aye another kindles,
  • Provided outwardly its flame appear.
  • Hence from the hour that Juvenal descended
  • Among us into the infernal Limbo,
  • Who made apparent to me thy affection,
  • My kindliness towards thee was as great
  • As ever bound one to an unseen person,
  • So that these stairs will now seem short to me.
  • But tell me, and forgive me as a friend,
  • If too great confidence let loose the rein,
  • And as a friend now hold discourse with me;
  • How was it possible within thy breast
  • For avarice to find place, ’mid so much wisdom
  • As thou wast filled with by thy diligence?”
  • These words excited Statius at first
  • Somewhat to laughter; afterward he answered:
  • “Each word of thine is love’s dear sign to me.
  • Verily oftentimes do things appear
  • Which give fallacious matter to our doubts,
  • Instead of the true causes which are hidden!
  • Thy question shows me thy belief to be
  • That I was niggard in the other life,
  • It may be from the circle where I was;
  • Therefore know thou, that avarice was removed
  • Too far from me; and this extravagance
  • Thousands of lunar periods have punished.
  • And were it not that I my thoughts uplifted,
  • When I the passage heard where thou exclaimest,
  • As if indignant, unto human nature,
  • ‘To what impellest thou not, O cursed hunger
  • Of gold, the appetite of mortal men?’
  • Revolving I should feel the dismal joustings.
  • Then I perceived the hands could spread too wide
  • Their wings in spending, and repented me
  • As well of that as of my other sins;
  • How many with shorn hair shall rise again
  • Because of ignorance, which from this sin
  • Cuts off repentance living and in death!
  • And know that the transgression which rebuts
  • By direct opposition any sin
  • Together with it here its verdure dries.
  • Therefore if I have been among that folk
  • Which mourns its avarice, to purify me,
  • For its opposite has this befallen me.”
  • “Now when thou sangest the relentless weapons
  • Of the twofold affliction of Jocasta,”
  • The singer of the Songs Bucolic said,
  • “From that which Clio there with thee preludes,
  • It does not seem that yet had made thee faithful
  • That faith without which no good works suffice.
  • If this be so, what candles or what sun
  • Scattered thy darkness so that thou didst trim
  • Thy sails behind the Fisherman thereafter?”
  • And he to him: “Thou first directedst me
  • Towards Parnassus, in its grots to drink,
  • And first concerning God didst me enlighten.
  • Thou didst as he who walketh in the night,
  • Who bears his light behind, which helps him not,
  • But wary makes the persons after him,
  • When thou didst say: ‘The age renews itself,
  • Justice returns, and man’s primeval time,
  • And a new progeny descends from heaven.’
  • Through thee I Poet was, through thee a Christian;
  • But that thou better see what I design,
  • To colour it will I extend my hand.
  • Already was the world in every part
  • Pregnant with the true creed, disseminated
  • By messengers of the eternal kingdom;
  • And thy assertion, spoken of above,
  • With the new preachers was in unison;
  • Whence I to visit them the custom took.
  • Then they became so holy in my sight,
  • That, when Domitian persecuted them,
  • Not without tears of mine were their laments;
  • And all the while that I on earth remained,
  • Them I befriended, and their upright customs
  • Made me disparage all the other sects.
  • And ere I led the Greeks unto the rivers
  • Of Thebes, in poetry, I was baptized,
  • But out of fear was covertly a Christian,
  • For a long time professing paganism;
  • And this lukewarmness caused me the fourth circle
  • To circuit round more than four centuries.
  • Thou, therefore, who hast raised the covering
  • That hid from me whatever good I speak of,
  • While in ascending we have time to spare,
  • Tell me, in what place is our friend Terentius,
  • Caecilius, Plautus, Varro, if thou knowest;
  • Tell me if they are damned, and in what alley.”
  • “These, Persius and myself, and others many,”
  • Replied my Leader, “with that Grecian are
  • Whom more than all the rest the Muses suckled,
  • In the first circle of the prison blind;
  • Ofttimes we of the mountain hold discourse
  • Which has our nurses ever with itself.
  • Euripides is with us, Antiphon,
  • Simonides, Agatho, and many other
  • Greeks who of old their brows with laurel decked.
  • There some of thine own people may be seen,
  • Antigone, Deiphile and Argia,
  • And there Ismene mournful as of old.
  • There she is seen who pointed out Langia;
  • There is Tiresias’ daughter, and there Thetis,
  • And there Deidamia with her sisters.”
  • Silent already were the poets both,
  • Attent once more in looking round about,
  • From the ascent and from the walls released;
  • And four handmaidens of the day already
  • Were left behind, and at the pole the fifth
  • Was pointing upward still its burning horn,
  • What time my Guide: “I think that tow’rds the edge
  • Our dexter shoulders it behoves us turn,
  • Circling the mount as we are wont to do.”
  • Thus in that region custom was our ensign;
  • And we resumed our way with less suspicion
  • For the assenting of that worthy soul
  • They in advance went on, and I alone
  • Behind them, and I listened to their speech,
  • Which gave me lessons in the art of song.
  • But soon their sweet discourses interrupted
  • A tree which midway in the road we found,
  • With apples sweet and grateful to the smell.
  • And even as a fir-tree tapers upward
  • From bough to bough, so downwardly did that;
  • I think in order that no one might climb it.
  • On that side where our pathway was enclosed
  • Fell from the lofty rock a limpid water,
  • And spread itself abroad upon the leaves.
  • The Poets twain unto the tree drew near,
  • And from among the foliage a voice
  • Cried: “Of this food ye shall have scarcity.”
  • Then said: “More thoughtful Mary was of making
  • The marriage feast complete and honourable,
  • Than of her mouth which now for you responds;
  • And for their drink the ancient Roman women
  • With water were content; and Daniel
  • Disparaged food, and understanding won.
  • The primal age was beautiful as gold;
  • Acorns it made with hunger savorous,
  • And nectar every rivulet with thirst.
  • Honey and locusts were the aliments
  • That fed the Baptist in the wilderness;
  • Whence he is glorious, and so magnified
  • As by the Evangel is revealed to you.”
  • Purgatorio: Canto XXIII
  • The while among the verdant leaves mine eyes
  • I riveted, as he is wont to do
  • Who wastes his life pursuing little birds,
  • My more than Father said unto me: “Son,
  • Come now; because the time that is ordained us
  • More usefully should be apportioned out.”
  • I turned my face and no less soon my steps
  • Unto the Sages, who were speaking so
  • They made the going of no cost to me;
  • And lo! were heard a song and a lament,
  • “Labia mea, Domine,” in fashion
  • Such that delight and dolence it brought forth.
  • “O my sweet Father, what is this I hear?”
  • Began I; and he answered: “Shades that go
  • Perhaps the knot unloosing of their debt.”
  • In the same way that thoughtful pilgrims do,
  • Who, unknown people on the road o’ertaking,
  • Turn themselves round to them, and do not stop,
  • Even thus, behind us with a swifter motion
  • Coming and passing onward, gazed upon us
  • A crowd of spirits silent and devout.
  • Each in his eyes was dark and cavernous,
  • Pallid in face, and so emaciate
  • That from the bones the skin did shape itself.
  • I do not think that so to merest rind
  • Could Erisichthon have been withered up
  • By famine, when most fear he had of it.
  • Thinking within myself I said: “Behold,
  • This is the folk who lost Jerusalem,
  • When Mary made a prey of her own son.”
  • Their sockets were like rings without the gems;
  • Whoever in the face of men reads ‘omo’
  • Might well in these have recognised the ‘m.’
  • Who would believe the odour of an apple,
  • Begetting longing, could consume them so,
  • And that of water, without knowing how?
  • I still was wondering what so famished them,
  • For the occasion not yet manifest
  • Of their emaciation and sad squalor;
  • And lo! from out the hollow of his head
  • His eyes a shade turned on me, and looked keenly;
  • Then cried aloud: “What grace to me is this?”
  • Never should I have known him by his look;
  • But in his voice was evident to me
  • That which his aspect had suppressed within it.
  • This spark within me wholly re-enkindled
  • My recognition of his altered face,
  • And I recalled the features of Forese.
  • “Ah, do not look at this dry leprosy,”
  • Entreated he, “which doth my skin discolour,
  • Nor at default of flesh that I may have;
  • But tell me truth of thee, and who are those
  • Two souls, that yonder make for thee an escort;
  • Do not delay in speaking unto me.”
  • “That face of thine, which dead I once bewept,
  • Gives me for weeping now no lesser grief,”
  • I answered him, “beholding it so changed!
  • But tell me, for God’s sake, what thus denudes you?
  • Make me not speak while I am marvelling,
  • For ill speaks he who’s full of other longings.”
  • And he to me: “From the eternal council
  • Falls power into the water and the tree
  • Behind us left, whereby I grow so thin.
  • All of this people who lamenting sing,
  • For following beyond measure appetite
  • In hunger and thirst are here re-sanctified.
  • Desire to eat and drink enkindles in us
  • The scent that issues from the apple-tree,
  • And from the spray that sprinkles o’er the verdure;
  • And not a single time alone, this ground
  • Encompassing, is refreshed our pain,—
  • I say our pain, and ought to say our solace,—
  • For the same wish doth lead us to the tree
  • Which led the Christ rejoicing to say ‘Eli,’
  • When with his veins he liberated us.”
  • And I to him: “Forese, from that day
  • When for a better life thou changedst worlds,
  • Up to this time five years have not rolled round.
  • If sooner were the power exhausted in thee
  • Of sinning more, than thee the hour surprised
  • Of that good sorrow which to God reweds us,
  • How hast thou come up hitherward already?
  • I thought to find thee down there underneath,
  • Where time for time doth restitution make.”
  • And he to me: “Thus speedily has led me
  • To drink of the sweet wormwood of these torments,
  • My Nella with her overflowing tears;
  • She with her prayers devout and with her sighs
  • Has drawn me from the coast where one where one awaits,
  • And from the other circles set me free.
  • So much more dear and pleasing is to God
  • My little widow, whom so much I loved,
  • As in good works she is the more alone;
  • For the Barbagia of Sardinia
  • By far more modest in its women is
  • Than the Barbagia I have left her in.
  • O brother sweet, what wilt thou have me say?
  • A future time is in my sight already,
  • To which this hour will not be very old,
  • When from the pulpit shall be interdicted
  • To the unblushing womankind of Florence
  • To go about displaying breast and paps.
  • What savages were e’er, what Saracens,
  • Who stood in need, to make them covered go,
  • Of spiritual or other discipline?
  • But if the shameless women were assured
  • Of what swift Heaven prepares for them, already
  • Wide open would they have their mouths to howl;
  • For if my foresight here deceive me not,
  • They shall be sad ere he has bearded cheeks
  • Who now is hushed to sleep with lullaby.
  • O brother, now no longer hide thee from me;
  • See that not only I, but all these people
  • Are gazing there, where thou dost veil the sun.”
  • Whence I to him: “If thou bring back to mind
  • What thou with me hast been and I with thee,
  • The present memory will be grievous still.
  • Out of that life he turned me back who goes
  • In front of me, two days agone when round
  • The sister of him yonder showed herself,”
  • And to the sun I pointed. “Through the deep
  • Night of the truly dead has this one led me,
  • With this true flesh, that follows after him.
  • Thence his encouragements have led me up,
  • Ascending and still circling round the mount
  • That you doth straighten, whom the world made crooked.
  • He says that he will bear me company,
  • Till I shall be where Beatrice will be;
  • There it behoves me to remain without him.
  • This is Virgilius, who thus says to me,”
  • And him I pointed at; “the other is
  • That shade for whom just now shook every slope
  • Your realm, that from itself discharges him.”
  • Purgatorio: Canto XXIV
  • Nor speech the going, nor the going that
  • Slackened; but talking we went bravely on,
  • Even as a vessel urged by a good wind.
  • And shadows, that appeared things doubly dead,
  • From out the sepulchres of their eyes betrayed
  • Wonder at me, aware that I was living.
  • And I, continuing my colloquy,
  • Said: “Peradventure he goes up more slowly
  • Than he would do, for other people’s sake.
  • But tell me, if thou knowest, where is Piccarda;
  • Tell me if any one of note I see
  • Among this folk that gazes at me so.”
  • “My sister, who, ’twixt beautiful and good,
  • I know not which was more, triumphs rejoicing
  • Already in her crown on high Olympus.”
  • So said he first, and then: “’Tis not forbidden
  • To name each other here, so milked away
  • Is our resemblance by our dieting.
  • This,” pointing with his finger, “is Buonagiunta,
  • Buonagiunta, of Lucca; and that face
  • Beyond him there, more peaked than the others,
  • Has held the holy Church within his arms;
  • From Tours was he, and purges by his fasting
  • Bolsena’s eels and the Vernaccia wine.”
  • He named me many others one by one;
  • And all contented seemed at being named,
  • So that for this I saw not one dark look.
  • I saw for hunger bite the empty air
  • Ubaldin dalla Pila, and Boniface,
  • Who with his crook had pastured many people.
  • I saw Messer Marchese, who had leisure
  • Once at Forli for drinking with less dryness,
  • And he was one who ne’er felt satisfied.
  • But as he does who scans, and then doth prize
  • One more than others, did I him of Lucca,
  • Who seemed to take most cognizance of me.
  • He murmured, and I know not what Gentucca
  • From that place heard I, where he felt the wound
  • Of justice, that doth macerate them so.
  • “O soul,” I said, “that seemest so desirous
  • To speak with me, do so that I may hear thee,
  • And with thy speech appease thyself and me.”
  • “A maid is born, and wears not yet the veil,”
  • Began he, “who to thee shall pleasant make
  • My city, howsoever men may blame it.
  • Thou shalt go on thy way with this prevision;
  • If by my murmuring thou hast been deceived,
  • True things hereafter will declare it to thee.
  • But say if him I here behold, who forth
  • Evoked the new-invented rhymes, beginning,
  • ‘Ladies, that have intelligence of love?’”
  • And I to him: “One am I, who, whenever
  • Love doth inspire me, note, and in that measure
  • Which he within me dictates, singing go.”
  • “O brother, now I see,” he said, “the knot
  • Which me, the Notary, and Guittone held
  • Short of the sweet new style that now I hear.
  • I do perceive full clearly how your pens
  • Go closely following after him who dictates,
  • Which with our own forsooth came not to pass;
  • And he who sets himself to go beyond,
  • No difference sees from one style to another;”
  • And as if satisfied, he held his peace.
  • Even as the birds, that winter tow’rds the Nile,
  • Sometimes into a phalanx form themselves,
  • Then fly in greater haste, and go in file;
  • In such wise all the people who were there,
  • Turning their faces, hurried on their steps,
  • Both by their leanness and their wishes light.
  • And as a man, who weary is with trotting,
  • Lets his companions onward go, and walks,
  • Until he vents the panting of his chest;
  • So did Forese let the holy flock
  • Pass by, and came with me behind it, saying,
  • “When will it be that I again shall see thee?”
  • “How long,” I answered, “I may live, I know not;
  • Yet my return will not so speedy be,
  • But I shall sooner in desire arrive;
  • Because the place where I was set to live
  • From day to day of good is more depleted,
  • And unto dismal ruin seems ordained.”
  • “Now go,” he said, “for him most guilty of it
  • At a beast’s tail behold I dragged along
  • Towards the valley where is no repentance.
  • Faster at every step the beast is going,
  • Increasing evermore until it smites him,
  • And leaves the body vilely mutilated.
  • Not long those wheels shall turn,” and he uplifted
  • His eyes to heaven, “ere shall be clear to thee
  • That which my speech no farther can declare.
  • Now stay behind; because the time so precious
  • Is in this kingdom, that I lose too much
  • By coming onward thus abreast with thee.”
  • As sometimes issues forth upon a gallop
  • A cavalier from out a troop that ride,
  • And seeks the honour of the first encounter,
  • So he with greater strides departed from us;
  • And on the road remained I with those two,
  • Who were such mighty marshals of the world.
  • And when before us he had gone so far
  • Mine eyes became to him such pursuivants
  • As was my understanding to his words,
  • Appeared to me with laden and living boughs
  • Another apple-tree, and not far distant,
  • From having but just then turned thitherward.
  • People I saw beneath it lift their hands,
  • And cry I know not what towards the leaves,
  • Like little children eager and deluded,
  • Who pray, and he they pray to doth not answer,
  • But, to make very keen their appetite,
  • Holds their desire aloft, and hides it not.
  • Then they departed as if undeceived;
  • And now we came unto the mighty tree
  • Which prayers and tears so manifold refuses.
  • “Pass farther onward without drawing near;
  • The tree of which Eve ate is higher up,
  • And out of that one has this tree been raised.”
  • Thus said I know not who among the branches;
  • Whereat Virgilius, Statius, and myself
  • Went crowding forward on the side that rises.
  • “Be mindful,” said he, “of the accursed ones
  • Formed of the cloud-rack, who inebriate
  • Combated Theseus with their double breasts;
  • And of the Jews who showed them soft in drinking,
  • Whence Gideon would not have them for companions
  • When he tow’rds Midian the hills descended.”
  • Thus, closely pressed to one of the two borders,
  • On passed we, hearing sins of gluttony,
  • Followed forsooth by miserable gains;
  • Then set at large upon the lonely road,
  • A thousand steps and more we onward went,
  • In contemplation, each without a word.
  • “What go ye thinking thus, ye three alone?”
  • Said suddenly a voice, whereat I started
  • As terrified and timid beasts are wont.
  • I raised my head to see who this might be,
  • And never in a furnace was there seen
  • Metals or glass so lucent and so red
  • As one I saw who said: “If it may please you
  • To mount aloft, here it behoves you turn;
  • This way goes he who goeth after peace.”
  • His aspect had bereft me of my sight,
  • So that I turned me back unto my Teachers,
  • Like one who goeth as his hearing guides him.
  • And as, the harbinger of early dawn,
  • The air of May doth move and breathe out fragrance,
  • Impregnate all with herbage and with flowers,
  • So did I feel a breeze strike in the midst
  • My front, and felt the moving of the plumes
  • That breathed around an odour of ambrosia;
  • And heard it said: “Blessed are they whom grace
  • So much illumines, that the love of taste
  • Excites not in their breasts too great desire,
  • Hungering at all times so far as is just.”
  • Purgatorio: Canto XXV
  • Now was it the ascent no hindrance brooked,
  • Because the sun had his meridian circle
  • To Taurus left, and night to Scorpio;
  • Wherefore as doth a man who tarries not,
  • But goes his way, whate’er to him appear,
  • If of necessity the sting transfix him,
  • In this wise did we enter through the gap,
  • Taking the stairway, one before the other,
  • Which by its narrowness divides the climbers.
  • And as the little stork that lifts its wing
  • With a desire to fly, and does not venture
  • To leave the nest, and lets it downward droop,
  • Even such was I, with the desire of asking
  • Kindled and quenched, unto the motion coming
  • He makes who doth address himself to speak.
  • Not for our pace, though rapid it might be,
  • My father sweet forbore, but said: “Let fly
  • The bow of speech thou to the barb hast drawn.”
  • With confidence I opened then my mouth,
  • And I began: “How can one meagre grow
  • There where the need of nutriment applies not?”
  • “If thou wouldst call to mind how Meleager
  • Was wasted by the wasting of a brand,
  • This would not,” said he, “be to thee so sour;
  • And wouldst thou think how at each tremulous motion
  • Trembles within a mirror your own image;
  • That which seems hard would mellow seem to thee.
  • But that thou mayst content thee in thy wish
  • Lo Statius here; and him I call and pray
  • He now will be the healer of thy wounds.”
  • “If I unfold to him the eternal vengeance,”
  • Responded Statius, “where thou present art,
  • Be my excuse that I can naught deny thee.”
  • Then he began: “Son, if these words of mine
  • Thy mind doth contemplate and doth receive,
  • They’ll be thy light unto the How thou sayest.
  • The perfect blood, which never is drunk up
  • Into the thirsty veins, and which remaineth
  • Like food that from the table thou removest,
  • Takes in the heart for all the human members
  • Virtue informative, as being that
  • Which to be changed to them goes through the veins
  • Again digest, descends it where ’tis better
  • Silent to be than say; and then drops thence
  • Upon another’s blood in natural vase.
  • There one together with the other mingles,
  • One to be passive meant, the other active
  • By reason of the perfect place it springs from;
  • And being conjoined, begins to operate,
  • Coagulating first, then vivifying
  • What for its matter it had made consistent.
  • The active virtue, being made a soul
  • As of a plant, (in so far different,
  • This on the way is, that arrived already,)
  • Then works so much, that now it moves and feels
  • Like a sea-fungus, and then undertakes
  • To organize the powers whose seed it is.
  • Now, Son, dilates and now distends itself
  • The virtue from the generator’s heart,
  • Where nature is intent on all the members.
  • But how from animal it man becomes
  • Thou dost not see as yet; this is a point
  • Which made a wiser man than thou once err
  • So far, that in his doctrine separate
  • He made the soul from possible intellect,
  • For he no organ saw by this assumed.
  • Open thy breast unto the truth that’s coming,
  • And know that, just as soon as in the foetus
  • The articulation of the brain is perfect,
  • The primal Motor turns to it well pleased
  • At so great art of nature, and inspires
  • A spirit new with virtue all replete,
  • Which what it finds there active doth attract
  • Into its substance, and becomes one soul,
  • Which lives, and feels, and on itself revolves.
  • And that thou less may wonder at my word,
  • Behold the sun’s heat, which becometh wine,
  • Joined to the juice that from the vine distils.
  • Whenever Lachesis has no more thread,
  • It separates from the flesh, and virtually
  • Bears with itself the human and divine;
  • The other faculties are voiceless all;
  • The memory, the intelligence, and the will
  • In action far more vigorous than before.
  • Without a pause it falleth of itself
  • In marvellous way on one shore or the other;
  • There of its roads it first is cognizant.
  • Soon as the place there circumscribeth it,
  • The virtue informative rays round about,
  • As, and as much as, in the living members.
  • And even as the air, when full of rain,
  • By alien rays that are therein reflected,
  • With divers colours shows itself adorned,
  • So there the neighbouring air doth shape itself
  • Into that form which doth impress upon it
  • Virtually the soul that has stood still.
  • And then in manner of the little flame,
  • Which followeth the fire where’er it shifts,
  • After the spirit followeth its new form.
  • Since afterwards it takes from this its semblance,
  • It is called shade; and thence it organizes
  • Thereafter every sense, even to the sight.
  • Thence is it that we speak, and thence we laugh;
  • Thence is it that we form the tears and sighs,
  • That on the mountain thou mayhap hast heard.
  • According as impress us our desires
  • And other affections, so the shade is shaped,
  • And this is cause of what thou wonderest at.”
  • And now unto the last of all the circles
  • Had we arrived, and to the right hand turned,
  • And were attentive to another care.
  • There the embankment shoots forth flames of fire,
  • And upward doth the cornice breathe a blast
  • That drives them back, and from itself sequesters.
  • Hence we must needs go on the open side,
  • And one by one; and I did fear the fire
  • On this side, and on that the falling down.
  • My Leader said: “Along this place one ought
  • To keep upon the eyes a tightened rein,
  • Seeing that one so easily might err.”
  • “Summae Deus clementiae,” in the bosom
  • Of the great burning chanted then I heard,
  • Which made me no less eager to turn round;
  • And spirits saw I walking through the flame;
  • Wherefore I looked, to my own steps and theirs
  • Apportioning my sight from time to time.
  • After the close which to that hymn is made,
  • Aloud they shouted, “Virum non cognosco;”
  • Then recommenced the hymn with voices low.
  • This also ended, cried they: “To the wood
  • Diana ran, and drove forth Helice
  • Therefrom, who had of Venus felt the poison.”
  • Then to their song returned they; then the wives
  • They shouted, and the husbands who were chaste.
  • As virtue and the marriage vow imposes.
  • And I believe that them this mode suffices,
  • For all the time the fire is burning them;
  • With such care is it needful, and such food,
  • That the last wound of all should be closed up.
  • Purgatorio: Canto XXVI
  • While on the brink thus one before the other
  • We went upon our way, oft the good Master
  • Said: “Take thou heed! suffice it that I warn thee.”
  • On the right shoulder smote me now the sun,
  • That, raying out, already the whole west
  • Changed from its azure aspect into white.
  • And with my shadow did I make the flame
  • Appear more red; and even to such a sign
  • Shades saw I many, as they went, give heed.
  • This was the cause that gave them a beginning
  • To speak of me; and to themselves began they
  • To say: “That seems not a factitious body!”
  • Then towards me, as far as they could come,
  • Came certain of them, always with regard
  • Not to step forth where they would not be burned.
  • “O thou who goest, not from being slower
  • But reverent perhaps, behind the others,
  • Answer me, who in thirst and fire am burning.
  • Nor to me only is thine answer needful;
  • For all of these have greater thirst for it
  • Than for cold water Ethiop or Indian.
  • Tell us how is it that thou makest thyself
  • A wall unto the sun, as if thou hadst not
  • Entered as yet into the net of death.”
  • Thus one of them addressed me, and I straight
  • Should have revealed myself, were I not bent
  • On other novelty that then appeared.
  • For through the middle of the burning road
  • There came a people face to face with these,
  • Which held me in suspense with gazing at them.
  • There see I hastening upon either side
  • Each of the shades, and kissing one another
  • Without a pause, content with brief salute.
  • Thus in the middle of their brown battalions
  • Muzzle to muzzle one ant meets another
  • Perchance to spy their journey or their fortune.
  • No sooner is the friendly greeting ended,
  • Or ever the first footstep passes onward,
  • Each one endeavours to outcry the other;
  • The new-come people: “Sodom and Gomorrah!”
  • The rest: “Into the cow Pasiphae enters,
  • So that the bull unto her lust may run!”
  • Then as the cranes, that to Riphaean mountains
  • Might fly in part, and part towards the sands,
  • These of the frost, those of the sun avoidant,
  • One folk is going, and the other coming,
  • And weeping they return to their first songs,
  • And to the cry that most befitteth them;
  • And close to me approached, even as before,
  • The very same who had entreated me,
  • Attent to listen in their countenance.
  • I, who their inclination twice had seen,
  • Began: “O souls secure in the possession,
  • Whene’er it may be, of a state of peace,
  • Neither unripe nor ripened have remained
  • My members upon earth, but here are with me
  • With their own blood and their articulations.
  • I go up here to be no longer blind;
  • A Lady is above, who wins this grace,
  • Whereby the mortal through your world I bring.
  • But as your greatest longing satisfied
  • May soon become, so that the Heaven may house you
  • Which full of love is, and most amply spreads,
  • Tell me, that I again in books may write it,
  • Who are you, and what is that multitude
  • Which goes upon its way behind your backs?”
  • Not otherwise with wonder is bewildered
  • The mountaineer, and staring round is dumb,
  • When rough and rustic to the town he goes,
  • Than every shade became in its appearance;
  • But when they of their stupor were disburdened,
  • Which in high hearts is quickly quieted,
  • “Blessed be thou, who of our border-lands,”
  • He recommenced who first had questioned us,
  • “Experience freightest for a better life.
  • The folk that comes not with us have offended
  • In that for which once Caesar, triumphing,
  • Heard himself called in contumely, ‘Queen.’
  • Therefore they separate, exclaiming, ‘Sodom!’
  • Themselves reproving, even as thou hast heard,
  • And add unto their burning by their shame.
  • Our own transgression was hermaphrodite;
  • But because we observed not human law,
  • Following like unto beasts our appetite,
  • In our opprobrium by us is read,
  • When we part company, the name of her
  • Who bestialized herself in bestial wood.
  • Now knowest thou our acts, and what our crime was;
  • Wouldst thou perchance by name know who we are,
  • There is not time to tell, nor could I do it.
  • Thy wish to know me shall in sooth be granted;
  • I’m Guido Guinicelli, and now purge me,
  • Having repented ere the hour extreme.”
  • The same that in the sadness of Lycurgus
  • Two sons became, their mother re-beholding,
  • Such I became, but rise not to such height,
  • The moment I heard name himself the father
  • Of me and of my betters, who had ever
  • Practised the sweet and gracious rhymes of love;
  • And without speech and hearing thoughtfully
  • For a long time I went, beholding him,
  • Nor for the fire did I approach him nearer.
  • When I was fed with looking, utterly
  • Myself I offered ready for his service,
  • With affirmation that compels belief.
  • And he to me: “Thou leavest footprints such
  • In me, from what I hear, and so distinct,
  • Lethe cannot efface them, nor make dim.
  • But if thy words just now the truth have sworn,
  • Tell me what is the cause why thou displayest
  • In word and look that dear thou holdest me?”
  • And I to him: “Those dulcet lays of yours
  • Which, long as shall endure our modern fashion,
  • Shall make for ever dear their very ink!”
  • “O brother,” said he, “he whom I point out,”
  • And here he pointed at a spirit in front,
  • “Was of the mother tongue a better smith.
  • Verses of love and proses of romance,
  • He mastered all; and let the idiots talk,
  • Who think the Lemosin surpasses him.
  • To clamour more than truth they turn their faces,
  • And in this way establish their opinion,
  • Ere art or reason has by them been heard.
  • Thus many ancients with Guittone did,
  • From cry to cry still giving him applause,
  • Until the truth has conquered with most persons.
  • Now, if thou hast such ample privilege
  • ’Tis granted thee to go unto the cloister
  • Wherein is Christ the abbot of the college,
  • To him repeat for me a Paternoster,
  • So far as needful to us of this world,
  • Where power of sinning is no longer ours.”
  • Then, to give place perchance to one behind,
  • Whom he had near, he vanished in the fire
  • As fish in water going to the bottom.
  • I moved a little tow’rds him pointed out,
  • And said that to his name my own desire
  • An honourable place was making ready.
  • He of his own free will began to say:
  • ‘Tan m’ abellis vostre cortes deman,
  • Que jeu nom’ puesc ni vueill a vos cobrire;
  • Jeu sui Arnaut, que plor e vai chantan;
  • Consiros vei la passada folor,
  • E vei jauzen lo jorn qu’ esper denan.
  • Ara vus prec per aquella valor,
  • Que vus condus al som de la scalina,
  • Sovenga vus a temprar ma dolor.’*
  • Then hid him in the fire that purifies them.
  • * So pleases me your courteous demand,
  • I cannot and I will not hide me from you.
  • I am Arnaut, who weep and singing go;
  • Contrite I see the folly of the past,
  • And joyous see the hoped-for day before me.
  • Therefore do I implore you, by that power
  • Which guides you to the summit of the stairs,
  • Be mindful to assuage my suffering!
  • Purgatorio: Canto XXVII
  • As when he vibrates forth his earliest rays,
  • In regions where his Maker shed his blood,
  • (The Ebro falling under lofty Libra,
  • And waters in the Ganges burnt with noon,)
  • So stood the Sun; hence was the day departing,
  • When the glad Angel of God appeared to us.
  • Outside the flame he stood upon the verge,
  • And chanted forth, “Beati mundo corde,”
  • In voice by far more living than our own.
  • Then: “No one farther goes, souls sanctified,
  • If first the fire bite not; within it enter,
  • And be not deaf unto the song beyond.”
  • When we were close beside him thus he said;
  • Wherefore e’en such became I, when I heard him,
  • As he is who is put into the grave.
  • Upon my clasped hands I straightened me,
  • Scanning the fire, and vividly recalling
  • The human bodies I had once seen burned.
  • Towards me turned themselves my good Conductors,
  • And unto me Virgilius said: “My son,
  • Here may indeed be torment, but not death.
  • Remember thee, remember! and if I
  • On Geryon have safely guided thee,
  • What shall I do now I am nearer God?
  • Believe for certain, shouldst thou stand a full
  • Millennium in the bosom of this flame,
  • It could not make thee bald a single hair.
  • And if perchance thou think that I deceive thee,
  • Draw near to it, and put it to the proof
  • With thine own hands upon thy garment’s hem.
  • Now lay aside, now lay aside all fear,
  • Turn hitherward, and onward come securely;”
  • And I still motionless, and ’gainst my conscience!
  • Seeing me stand still motionless and stubborn,
  • Somewhat disturbed he said: “Now look thou, Son,
  • ’Twixt Beatrice and thee there is this wall.”
  • As at the name of Thisbe oped his lids
  • The dying Pyramus, and gazed upon her,
  • What time the mulberry became vermilion,
  • Even thus, my obduracy being softened,
  • I turned to my wise Guide, hearing the name
  • That in my memory evermore is welling.
  • Whereat he wagged his head, and said: “How now?
  • Shall we stay on this side?” then smiled as one
  • Does at a child who’s vanquished by an apple.
  • Then into the fire in front of me he entered,
  • Beseeching Statius to come after me,
  • Who a long way before divided us.
  • When I was in it, into molten glass
  • I would have cast me to refresh myself,
  • So without measure was the burning there!
  • And my sweet Father, to encourage me,
  • Discoursing still of Beatrice went on,
  • Saying: “Her eyes I seem to see already!”
  • A voice, that on the other side was singing,
  • Directed us, and we, attent alone
  • On that, came forth where the ascent began.
  • “Venite, benedicti Patris mei,”
  • Sounded within a splendour, which was there
  • Such it o’ercame me, and I could not look.
  • “The sun departs,” it added, “and night cometh;
  • Tarry ye not, but onward urge your steps,
  • So long as yet the west becomes not dark.”
  • Straight forward through the rock the path ascended
  • In such a way that I cut off the rays
  • Before me of the sun, that now was low.
  • And of few stairs we yet had made assay,
  • Ere by the vanished shadow the sun’s setting
  • Behind us we perceived, I and my Sages.
  • And ere in all its parts immeasurable
  • The horizon of one aspect had become,
  • And Night her boundless dispensation held,
  • Each of us of a stair had made his bed;
  • Because the nature of the mount took from us
  • The power of climbing, more than the delight.
  • Even as in ruminating passive grow
  • The goats, who have been swift and venturesome
  • Upon the mountain-tops ere they were fed,
  • Hushed in the shadow, while the sun is hot,
  • Watched by the herdsman, who upon his staff
  • Is leaning, and in leaning tendeth them;
  • And as the shepherd, lodging out of doors,
  • Passes the night beside his quiet flock,
  • Watching that no wild beast may scatter it,
  • Such at that hour were we, all three of us,
  • I like the goat, and like the herdsmen they,
  • Begirt on this side and on that by rocks.
  • Little could there be seen of things without;
  • But through that little I beheld the stars
  • More luminous and larger than their wont.
  • Thus ruminating, and beholding these,
  • Sleep seized upon me,—sleep, that oftentimes
  • Before a deed is done has tidings of it.
  • It was the hour, I think, when from the East
  • First on the mountain Citherea beamed,
  • Who with the fire of love seems always burning;
  • Youthful and beautiful in dreams methought
  • I saw a lady walking in a meadow,
  • Gathering flowers; and singing she was saying:
  • “Know whosoever may my name demand
  • That I am Leah, and go moving round
  • My beauteous hands to make myself a garland.
  • To please me at the mirror, here I deck me,
  • But never does my sister Rachel leave
  • Her looking-glass, and sitteth all day long.
  • To see her beauteous eyes as eager is she,
  • As I am to adorn me with my hands;
  • Her, seeing, and me, doing satisfies.”
  • And now before the antelucan splendours
  • That unto pilgrims the more grateful rise,
  • As, home-returning, less remote they lodge,
  • The darkness fled away on every side,
  • And slumber with it; whereupon I rose,
  • Seeing already the great Masters risen.
  • “That apple sweet, which through so many branches
  • The care of mortals goeth in pursuit of,
  • To-day shall put in peace thy hungerings.”
  • Speaking to me, Virgilius of such words
  • As these made use; and never were there guerdons
  • That could in pleasantness compare with these.
  • Such longing upon longing came upon me
  • To be above, that at each step thereafter
  • For flight I felt in me the pinions growing.
  • When underneath us was the stairway all
  • Run o’er, and we were on the highest step,
  • Virgilius fastened upon me his eyes,
  • And said: “The temporal fire and the eternal,
  • Son, thou hast seen, and to a place art come
  • Where of myself no farther I discern.
  • By intellect and art I here have brought thee;
  • Take thine own pleasure for thy guide henceforth;
  • Beyond the steep ways and the narrow art thou.
  • Behold the sun, that shines upon thy forehead;
  • Behold the grass, the flowerets, and the shrubs
  • Which of itself alone this land produces.
  • Until rejoicing come the beauteous eyes
  • Which weeping caused me to come unto thee,
  • Thou canst sit down, and thou canst walk among them.
  • Expect no more or word or sign from me;
  • Free and upright and sound is thy free-will,
  • And error were it not to do its bidding;
  • Thee o’er thyself I therefore crown and mitre!”
  • Purgatorio: Canto XXVIII
  • Eager already to search in and round
  • The heavenly forest, dense and living-green,
  • Which tempered to the eyes the new-born day,
  • Withouten more delay I left the bank,
  • Taking the level country slowly, slowly
  • Over the soil that everywhere breathes fragrance.
  • A softly-breathing air, that no mutation
  • Had in itself, upon the forehead smote me
  • No heavier blow than of a gentle wind,
  • Whereat the branches, lightly tremulous,
  • Did all of them bow downward toward that side
  • Where its first shadow casts the Holy Mountain;
  • Yet not from their upright direction swayed,
  • So that the little birds upon their tops
  • Should leave the practice of each art of theirs;
  • But with full ravishment the hours of prime,
  • Singing, received they in the midst of leaves,
  • That ever bore a burden to their rhymes,
  • Such as from branch to branch goes gathering on
  • Through the pine forest on the shore of Chiassi,
  • When Eolus unlooses the Sirocco.
  • Already my slow steps had carried me
  • Into the ancient wood so far, that I
  • Could not perceive where I had entered it.
  • And lo! my further course a stream cut off,
  • Which tow’rd the left hand with its little waves
  • Bent down the grass that on its margin sprang.
  • All waters that on earth most limpid are
  • Would seem to have within themselves some mixture
  • Compared with that which nothing doth conceal,
  • Although it moves on with a brown, brown current
  • Under the shade perpetual, that never
  • Ray of the sun lets in, nor of the moon.
  • With feet I stayed, and with mine eyes I passed
  • Beyond the rivulet, to look upon
  • The great variety of the fresh may.
  • And there appeared to me (even as appears
  • Suddenly something that doth turn aside
  • Through very wonder every other thought)
  • A lady all alone, who went along
  • Singing and culling floweret after floweret,
  • With which her pathway was all painted over.
  • “Ah, beauteous lady, who in rays of love
  • Dost warm thyself, if I may trust to looks,
  • Which the heart’s witnesses are wont to be,
  • May the desire come unto thee to draw
  • Near to this river’s bank,” I said to her,
  • “So much that I might hear what thou art singing.
  • Thou makest me remember where and what
  • Proserpina that moment was when lost
  • Her mother her, and she herself the Spring.”
  • As turns herself, with feet together pressed
  • And to the ground, a lady who is dancing,
  • And hardly puts one foot before the other,
  • On the vermilion and the yellow flowerets
  • She turned towards me, not in other wise
  • Than maiden who her modest eyes casts down;
  • And my entreaties made to be content,
  • So near approaching, that the dulcet sound
  • Came unto me together with its meaning
  • As soon as she was where the grasses are.
  • Bathed by the waters of the beauteous river,
  • To lift her eyes she granted me the boon.
  • I do not think there shone so great a light
  • Under the lids of Venus, when transfixed
  • By her own son, beyond his usual custom!
  • Erect upon the other bank she smiled,
  • Bearing full many colours in her hands,
  • Which that high land produces without seed.
  • Apart three paces did the river make us;
  • But Hellespont, where Xerxes passed across,
  • (A curb still to all human arrogance,)
  • More hatred from Leander did not suffer
  • For rolling between Sestos and Abydos,
  • Than that from me, because it oped not then.
  • “Ye are new-comers; and because I smile,”
  • Began she, “peradventure, in this place
  • Elect to human nature for its nest,
  • Some apprehension keeps you marvelling;
  • But the psalm ‘Delectasti’ giveth light
  • Which has the power to uncloud your intellect.
  • And thou who foremost art, and didst entreat me,
  • Speak, if thou wouldst hear more; for I came ready
  • To all thy questionings, as far as needful.”
  • “The water,” said I, “and the forest’s sound,
  • Are combating within me my new faith
  • In something which I heard opposed to this.”
  • Whence she: “I will relate how from its cause
  • Proceedeth that which maketh thee to wonder,
  • And purge away the cloud that smites upon thee.
  • The Good Supreme, sole in itself delighting,
  • Created man good, and this goodly place
  • Gave him as hansel of eternal peace.
  • By his default short while he sojourned here;
  • By his default to weeping and to toil
  • He changed his innocent laughter and sweet play.
  • That the disturbance which below is made
  • By exhalations of the land and water,
  • (Which far as may be follow after heat,)
  • Might not upon mankind wage any war,
  • This mount ascended tow’rds the heaven so high,
  • And is exempt, from there where it is locked.
  • Now since the universal atmosphere
  • Turns in a circuit with the primal motion
  • Unless the circle is broken on some side,
  • Upon this height, that all is disengaged
  • In living ether, doth this motion strike
  • And make the forest sound, for it is dense;
  • And so much power the stricken plant possesses
  • That with its virtue it impregns the air,
  • And this, revolving, scatters it around;
  • And yonder earth, according as ’tis worthy
  • In self or in its clime, conceives and bears
  • Of divers qualities the divers trees;
  • It should not seem a marvel then on earth,
  • This being heard, whenever any plant
  • Without seed manifest there taketh root.
  • And thou must know, this holy table-land
  • In which thou art is full of every seed,
  • And fruit has in it never gathered there.
  • The water which thou seest springs not from vein
  • Restored by vapour that the cold condenses,
  • Like to a stream that gains or loses breath;
  • But issues from a fountain safe and certain,
  • Which by the will of God as much regains
  • As it discharges, open on two sides.
  • Upon this side with virtue it descends,
  • Which takes away all memory of sin;
  • On that, of every good deed done restores it.
  • Here Lethe, as upon the other side
  • Eunoe, it is called; and worketh not
  • If first on either side it be not tasted.
  • This every other savour doth transcend;
  • And notwithstanding slaked so far may be
  • Thy thirst, that I reveal to thee no more,
  • I’ll give thee a corollary still in grace,
  • Nor think my speech will be to thee less dear
  • If it spread out beyond my promise to thee.
  • Those who in ancient times have feigned in song
  • The Age of Gold and its felicity,
  • Dreamed of this place perhaps upon Parnassus.
  • Here was the human race in innocence;
  • Here evermore was Spring, and every fruit;
  • This is the nectar of which each one speaks.”
  • Then backward did I turn me wholly round
  • Unto my Poets, and saw that with a smile
  • They had been listening to these closing words;
  • Then to the beautiful lady turned mine eyes.
  • Purgatorio: Canto XXIX
  • Singing like unto an enamoured lady
  • She, with the ending of her words, continued:
  • “Beati quorum tecta sunt peccata.”
  • And even as Nymphs, that wandered all alone
  • Among the sylvan shadows, sedulous
  • One to avoid and one to see the sun,
  • She then against the stream moved onward, going
  • Along the bank, and I abreast of her,
  • Her little steps with little steps attending.
  • Between her steps and mine were not a hundred,
  • When equally the margins gave a turn,
  • In such a way, that to the East I faced.
  • Nor even thus our way continued far
  • Before the lady wholly turned herself
  • Unto me, saying, “Brother, look and listen!”
  • And lo! a sudden lustre ran across
  • On every side athwart the spacious forest,
  • Such that it made me doubt if it were lightning.
  • But since the lightning ceases as it comes,
  • And that continuing brightened more and more,
  • Within my thought I said, “What thing is this?”
  • And a delicious melody there ran
  • Along the luminous air, whence holy zeal
  • Made me rebuke the hardihood of Eve;
  • For there where earth and heaven obedient were,
  • The woman only, and but just created,
  • Could not endure to stay ’neath any veil;
  • Underneath which had she devoutly stayed,
  • I sooner should have tasted those delights
  • Ineffable, and for a longer time.
  • While ’mid such manifold first-fruits I walked
  • Of the eternal pleasure all enrapt,
  • And still solicitous of more delights,
  • In front of us like an enkindled fire
  • Became the air beneath the verdant boughs,
  • And the sweet sound as singing now was heard.
  • O Virgins sacrosanct! if ever hunger,
  • Vigils, or cold for you I have endured,
  • The occasion spurs me their reward to claim!
  • Now Helicon must needs pour forth for me,
  • And with her choir Urania must assist me,
  • To put in verse things difficult to think.
  • A little farther on, seven trees of gold
  • In semblance the long space still intervening
  • Between ourselves and them did counterfeit;
  • But when I had approached so near to them
  • The common object, which the sense deceives,
  • Lost not by distance any of its marks,
  • The faculty that lends discourse to reason
  • Did apprehend that they were candlesticks,
  • And in the voices of the song “Hosanna!”
  • Above them flamed the harness beautiful,
  • Far brighter than the moon in the serene
  • Of midnight, at the middle of her month.
  • I turned me round, with admiration filled,
  • To good Virgilius, and he answered me
  • With visage no less full of wonderment.
  • Then back I turned my face to those high things,
  • Which moved themselves towards us so sedately,
  • They had been distanced by new-wedded brides.
  • The lady chid me: “Why dost thou burn only
  • So with affection for the living lights,
  • And dost not look at what comes after them?”
  • Then saw I people, as behind their leaders,
  • Coming behind them, garmented in white,
  • And such a whiteness never was on earth.
  • The water on my left flank was resplendent,
  • And back to me reflected my left side,
  • E’en as a mirror, if I looked therein.
  • When I upon my margin had such post
  • That nothing but the stream divided us,
  • Better to see I gave my steps repose;
  • And I beheld the flamelets onward go,
  • Leaving behind themselves the air depicted,
  • And they of trailing pennons had the semblance,
  • So that it overhead remained distinct
  • With sevenfold lists, all of them of the colours
  • Whence the sun’s bow is made, and Delia’s girdle.
  • These standards to the rearward longer were
  • Than was my sight; and, as it seemed to me,
  • Ten paces were the outermost apart.
  • Under so fair a heaven as I describe
  • The four and twenty Elders, two by two,
  • Came on incoronate with flower-de-luce.
  • They all of them were singing: “Blessed thou
  • Among the daughters of Adam art, and blessed
  • For evermore shall be thy loveliness.”
  • After the flowers and other tender grasses
  • In front of me upon the other margin
  • Were disencumbered of that race elect,
  • Even as in heaven star followeth after star,
  • There came close after them four animals,
  • Incoronate each one with verdant leaf.
  • Plumed with six wings was every one of them,
  • The plumage full of eyes; the eyes of Argus
  • If they were living would be such as these.
  • Reader! to trace their forms no more I waste
  • My rhymes; for other spendings press me so,
  • That I in this cannot be prodigal.
  • But read Ezekiel, who depicteth them
  • As he beheld them from the region cold
  • Coming with cloud, with whirlwind, and with fire;
  • And such as thou shalt find them in his pages,
  • Such were they here; saving that in their plumage
  • John is with me, and differeth from him.
  • The interval between these four contained
  • A chariot triumphal on two wheels,
  • Which by a Griffin’s neck came drawn along;
  • And upward he extended both his wings
  • Between the middle list and three and three,
  • So that he injured none by cleaving it.
  • So high they rose that they were lost to sight;
  • His limbs were gold, so far as he was bird,
  • And white the others with vermilion mingled.
  • Not only Rome with no such splendid car
  • E’er gladdened Africanus, or Augustus,
  • But poor to it that of the Sun would be,—
  • That of the Sun, which swerving was burnt up
  • At the importunate orison of Earth,
  • When Jove was so mysteriously just.
  • Three maidens at the right wheel in a circle
  • Came onward dancing; one so very red
  • That in the fire she hardly had been noted.
  • The second was as if her flesh and bones
  • Had all been fashioned out of emerald;
  • The third appeared as snow but newly fallen.
  • And now they seemed conducted by the white,
  • Now by the red, and from the song of her
  • The others took their step, or slow or swift.
  • Upon the left hand four made holiday
  • Vested in purple, following the measure
  • Of one of them with three eyes m her head.
  • In rear of all the group here treated of
  • Two old men I beheld, unlike in habit,
  • But like in gait, each dignified and grave.
  • One showed himself as one of the disciples
  • Of that supreme Hippocrates, whom nature
  • Made for the animals she holds most dear;
  • Contrary care the other manifested,
  • With sword so shining and so sharp, it caused
  • Terror to me on this side of the river.
  • Thereafter four I saw of humble aspect,
  • And behind all an aged man alone
  • Walking in sleep with countenance acute.
  • And like the foremost company these seven
  • Were habited; yet of the flower-de-luce
  • No garland round about the head they wore,
  • But of the rose, and other flowers vermilion;
  • At little distance would the sight have sworn
  • That all were in a flame above their brows.
  • And when the car was opposite to me
  • Thunder was heard; and all that folk august
  • Seemed to have further progress interdicted,
  • There with the vanward ensigns standing still.
  • Purgatorio: Canto XXX
  • When the Septentrion of the highest heaven
  • (Which never either setting knew or rising,
  • Nor veil of other cloud than that of sin,
  • And which made every one therein aware
  • Of his own duty, as the lower makes
  • Whoever turns the helm to come to port)
  • Motionless halted, the veracious people,
  • That came at first between it and the Griffin,
  • Turned themselves to the car, as to their peace.
  • And one of them, as if by Heaven commissioned,
  • Singing, “Veni, sponsa, de Libano”
  • Shouted three times, and all the others after.
  • Even as the Blessed at the final summons
  • Shall rise up quickened each one from his cavern,
  • Uplifting light the reinvested flesh,
  • So upon that celestial chariot
  • A hundred rose ‘ad vocem tanti senis,’
  • Ministers and messengers of life eternal.
  • They all were saying, “Benedictus qui venis,”
  • And, scattering flowers above and round about,
  • “Manibus o date lilia plenis.”
  • Ere now have I beheld, as day began,
  • The eastern hemisphere all tinged with rose,
  • And the other heaven with fair serene adorned;
  • And the sun’s face, uprising, overshadowed
  • So that by tempering influence of vapours
  • For a long interval the eye sustained it;
  • Thus in the bosom of a cloud of flowers
  • Which from those hands angelical ascended,
  • And downward fell again inside and out,
  • Over her snow-white veil with olive cinct
  • Appeared a lady under a green mantle,
  • Vested in colour of the living flame.
  • And my own spirit, that already now
  • So long a time had been, that in her presence
  • Trembling with awe it had not stood abashed,
  • Without more knowledge having by mine eyes,
  • Through occult virtue that from her proceeded
  • Of ancient love the mighty influence felt.
  • As soon as on my vision smote the power
  • Sublime, that had already pierced me through
  • Ere from my boyhood I had yet come forth,
  • To the left hand I turned with that reliance
  • With which the little child runs to his mother,
  • When he has fear, or when he is afflicted,
  • To say unto Virgilius: “Not a drachm
  • Of blood remains in me, that does not tremble;
  • I know the traces of the ancient flame.”
  • But us Virgilius of himself deprived
  • Had left, Virgilius, sweetest of all fathers,
  • Virgilius, to whom I for safety gave me:
  • Nor whatsoever lost the ancient mother
  • Availed my cheeks now purified from dew,
  • That weeping they should not again be darkened.
  • “Dante, because Virgilius has departed
  • Do not weep yet, do not weep yet awhile;
  • For by another sword thou need’st must weep.”
  • E’en as an admiral, who on poop and prow
  • Comes to behold the people that are working
  • In other ships, and cheers them to well-doing,
  • Upon the left hand border of the car,
  • When at the sound I turned of my own name,
  • Which of necessity is here recorded,
  • I saw the Lady, who erewhile appeared
  • Veiled underneath the angelic festival,
  • Direct her eyes to me across the river.
  • Although the veil, that from her head descended,
  • Encircled with the foliage of Minerva,
  • Did not permit her to appear distinctly,
  • In attitude still royally majestic
  • Continued she, like unto one who speaks,
  • And keeps his warmest utterance in reserve:
  • “Look at me well; in sooth I’m Beatrice!
  • How didst thou deign to come unto the Mountain?
  • Didst thou not know that man is happy here?”
  • Mine eyes fell downward into the clear fountain,
  • But, seeing myself therein, I sought the grass,
  • So great a shame did weigh my forehead down.
  • As to the son the mother seems superb,
  • So she appeared to me; for somewhat bitter
  • Tasteth the savour of severe compassion.
  • Silent became she, and the Angels sang
  • Suddenly, “In te, Domine, speravi:”
  • But beyond ‘pedes meos’ did not pass.
  • Even as the snow among the living rafters
  • Upon the back of Italy congeals,
  • Blown on and drifted by Sclavonian winds,
  • And then, dissolving, trickles through itself
  • Whene’er the land that loses shadow breathes,
  • So that it seems a fire that melts a taper;
  • E’en thus was I without a tear or sigh,
  • Before the song of those who sing for ever
  • After the music of the eternal spheres.
  • But when I heard in their sweet melodies
  • Compassion for me, more than had they said,
  • “O wherefore, lady, dost thou thus upbraid him?”
  • The ice, that was about my heart congealed,
  • To air and water changed, and in my anguish
  • Through mouth and eyes came gushing from my breast.
  • She, on the right-hand border of the car
  • Still firmly standing, to those holy beings
  • Thus her discourse directed afterwards:
  • “Ye keep your watch in the eternal day,
  • So that nor night nor sleep can steal from you
  • One step the ages make upon their path;
  • Therefore my answer is with greater care,
  • That he may hear me who is weeping yonder,
  • So that the sin and dole be of one measure.
  • Not only by the work of those great wheels,
  • That destine every seed unto some end,
  • According as the stars are in conjunction,
  • But by the largess of celestial graces,
  • Which have such lofty vapours for their rain
  • That near to them our sight approaches not,
  • Such had this man become in his new life
  • Potentially, that every righteous habit
  • Would have made admirable proof in him;
  • But so much more malignant and more savage
  • Becomes the land untilled and with bad seed,
  • The more good earthly vigour it possesses.
  • Some time did I sustain him with my look;
  • Revealing unto him my youthful eyes,
  • I led him with me turned in the right way.
  • As soon as ever of my second age
  • I was upon the threshold and changed life,
  • Himself from me he took and gave to others.
  • When from the flesh to spirit I ascended,
  • And beauty and virtue were in me increased,
  • I was to him less dear and less delightful;
  • And into ways untrue he turned his steps,
  • Pursuing the false images of good,
  • That never any promises fulfil;
  • Nor prayer for inspiration me availed,
  • By means of which in dreams and otherwise
  • I called him back, so little did he heed them.
  • So low he fell, that all appliances
  • For his salvation were already short,
  • Save showing him the people of perdition.
  • For this I visited the gates of death,
  • And unto him, who so far up has led him,
  • My intercessions were with weeping borne.
  • God’s lofty fiat would be violated,
  • If Lethe should be passed, and if such viands
  • Should tasted be, withouten any scot
  • Of penitence, that gushes forth in tears.”
  • Purgatorio: Canto XXXI
  • “O thou who art beyond the sacred river,”
  • Turning to me the point of her discourse,
  • That edgewise even had seemed to me so keen,
  • She recommenced, continuing without pause,
  • “Say, say if this be true; to such a charge,
  • Thy own confession needs must be conjoined.”
  • My faculties were in so great confusion,
  • That the voice moved, but sooner was extinct
  • Than by its organs it was set at large.
  • Awhile she waited; then she said: “What thinkest?
  • Answer me; for the mournful memories
  • In thee not yet are by the waters injured.”
  • Confusion and dismay together mingled
  • Forced such a Yes! from out my mouth, that sight
  • Was needful to the understanding of it.
  • Even as a cross-bow breaks, when ’tis discharged
  • Too tensely drawn the bowstring and the bow,
  • And with less force the arrow hits the mark,
  • So I gave way beneath that heavy burden,
  • Outpouring in a torrent tears and sighs,
  • And the voice flagged upon its passage forth.
  • Whence she to me: “In those desires of mine
  • Which led thee to the loving of that good,
  • Beyond which there is nothing to aspire to,
  • What trenches lying traverse or what chains
  • Didst thou discover, that of passing onward
  • Thou shouldst have thus despoiled thee of the hope?
  • And what allurements or what vantages
  • Upon the forehead of the others showed,
  • That thou shouldst turn thy footsteps unto them?”
  • After the heaving of a bitter sigh,
  • Hardly had I the voice to make response,
  • And with fatigue my lips did fashion it.
  • Weeping I said: “The things that present were
  • With their false pleasure turned aside my steps,
  • Soon as your countenance concealed itself.”
  • And she: “Shouldst thou be silent, or deny
  • What thou confessest, not less manifest
  • Would be thy fault, by such a Judge ’tis known.
  • But when from one’s own cheeks comes bursting forth
  • The accusal of the sin, in our tribunal
  • Against the edge the wheel doth turn itself.
  • But still, that thou mayst feel a greater shame
  • For thy transgression, and another time
  • Hearing the Sirens thou mayst be more strong,
  • Cast down the seed of weeping and attend;
  • So shalt thou hear, how in an opposite way
  • My buried flesh should have directed thee.
  • Never to thee presented art or nature
  • Pleasure so great as the fair limbs wherein
  • I was enclosed, which scattered are in earth.
  • And if the highest pleasure thus did fail thee
  • By reason of my death, what mortal thing
  • Should then have drawn thee into its desire?
  • Thou oughtest verily at the first shaft
  • Of things fallacious to have risen up
  • To follow me, who was no longer such.
  • Thou oughtest not to have stooped thy pinions downward
  • To wait for further blows, or little girl,
  • Or other vanity of such brief use.
  • The callow birdlet waits for two or three,
  • But to the eyes of those already fledged,
  • In vain the net is spread or shaft is shot.”
  • Even as children silent in their shame
  • Stand listening with their eyes upon the ground,
  • And conscious of their fault, and penitent;
  • So was I standing; and she said: “If thou
  • In hearing sufferest pain, lift up thy beard
  • And thou shalt feel a greater pain in seeing.”
  • With less resistance is a robust holm
  • Uprooted, either by a native wind
  • Or else by that from regions of Iarbas,
  • Than I upraised at her command my chin;
  • And when she by the beard the face demanded,
  • Well I perceived the venom of her meaning.
  • And as my countenance was lifted up,
  • Mine eye perceived those creatures beautiful
  • Had rested from the strewing of the flowers;
  • And, still but little reassured, mine eyes
  • Saw Beatrice turned round towards the monster,
  • That is one person only in two natures.
  • Beneath her veil, beyond the margent green,
  • She seemed to me far more her ancient self
  • To excel, than others here, when she was here.
  • So pricked me then the thorn of penitence,
  • That of all other things the one which turned me
  • Most to its love became the most my foe.
  • Such self-conviction stung me at the heart
  • O’erpowered I fell, and what I then became
  • She knoweth who had furnished me the cause.
  • Then, when the heart restored my outward sense,
  • The lady I had found alone, above me
  • I saw, and she was saying, “Hold me, hold me.”
  • Up to my throat she in the stream had drawn me,
  • And, dragging me behind her, she was moving
  • Upon the water lightly as a shuttle.
  • When I was near unto the blessed shore,
  • “Asperges me,” I heard so sweetly sung,
  • Remember it I cannot, much less write it.
  • The beautiful lady opened wide her arms,
  • Embraced my head, and plunged me underneath,
  • Where I was forced to swallow of the water.
  • Then forth she drew me, and all dripping brought
  • Into the dance of the four beautiful,
  • And each one with her arm did cover me.
  • ‘We here are Nymphs, and in the Heaven are stars;
  • Ere Beatrice descended to the world,
  • We as her handmaids were appointed her.
  • We’ll lead thee to her eyes; but for the pleasant
  • Light that within them is, shall sharpen thine
  • The three beyond, who more profoundly look.’
  • Thus singing they began; and afterwards
  • Unto the Griffin’s breast they led me with them,
  • Where Beatrice was standing, turned towards us.
  • “See that thou dost not spare thine eyes,” they said;
  • “Before the emeralds have we stationed thee,
  • Whence Love aforetime drew for thee his weapons.”
  • A thousand longings, hotter than the flame,
  • Fastened mine eyes upon those eyes relucent,
  • That still upon the Griffin steadfast stayed.
  • As in a glass the sun, not otherwise
  • Within them was the twofold monster shining,
  • Now with the one, now with the other nature.
  • Think, Reader, if within myself I marvelled,
  • When I beheld the thing itself stand still,
  • And in its image it transformed itself.
  • While with amazement filled and jubilant,
  • My soul was tasting of the food, that while
  • It satisfies us makes us hunger for it,
  • Themselves revealing of the highest rank
  • In bearing, did the other three advance,
  • Singing to their angelic saraband.
  • “Turn, Beatrice, O turn thy holy eyes,”
  • Such was their song, “unto thy faithful one,
  • Who has to see thee ta’en so many steps.
  • In grace do us the grace that thou unveil
  • Thy face to him, so that he may discern
  • The second beauty which thou dost conceal.”
  • O splendour of the living light eternal!
  • Who underneath the shadow of Parnassus
  • Has grown so pale, or drunk so at its cistern,
  • He would not seem to have his mind encumbered
  • Striving to paint thee as thou didst appear,
  • Where the harmonious heaven o’ershadowed thee,
  • When in the open air thou didst unveil?
  • Purgatorio: Canto XXXII
  • So steadfast and attentive were mine eyes
  • In satisfying their decennial thirst,
  • That all my other senses were extinct,
  • And upon this side and on that they had
  • Walls of indifference, so the holy smile
  • Drew them unto itself with the old net
  • When forcibly my sight was turned away
  • Towards my left hand by those goddesses,
  • Because I heard from them a “Too intently!”
  • And that condition of the sight which is
  • In eyes but lately smitten by the sun
  • Bereft me of my vision some short while;
  • But to the less when sight re-shaped itself,
  • I say the less in reference to the greater
  • Splendour from which perforce I had withdrawn,
  • I saw upon its right wing wheeled about
  • The glorious host returning with the sun
  • And with the sevenfold flames upon their faces.
  • As underneath its shields, to save itself,
  • A squadron turns, and with its banner wheels,
  • Before the whole thereof can change its front,
  • That soldiery of the celestial kingdom
  • Which marched in the advance had wholly passed us
  • Before the chariot had turned its pole.
  • Then to the wheels the maidens turned themselves,
  • And the Griffin moved his burden benedight,
  • But so that not a feather of him fluttered.
  • The lady fair who drew me through the ford
  • Followed with Statius and myself the wheel
  • Which made its orbit with the lesser arc.
  • So passing through the lofty forest, vacant
  • By fault of her who in the serpent trusted,
  • Angelic music made our steps keep time.
  • Perchance as great a space had in three flights
  • An arrow loosened from the string o’erpassed,
  • As we had moved when Beatrice descended.
  • I heard them murmur altogether, “Adam!”
  • Then circled they about a tree despoiled
  • Of blooms and other leafage on each bough.
  • Its tresses, which so much the more dilate
  • As higher they ascend, had been by Indians
  • Among their forests marvelled at for height.
  • “Blessed art thou, O Griffin, who dost not
  • Pluck with thy beak these branches sweet to taste,
  • Since appetite by this was turned to evil.”
  • After this fashion round the tree robust
  • The others shouted; and the twofold creature:
  • “Thus is preserved the seed of all the just.”
  • And turning to the pole which he had dragged,
  • He drew it close beneath the widowed bough,
  • And what was of it unto it left bound.
  • In the same manner as our trees (when downward
  • Falls the great light, with that together mingled
  • Which after the celestial Lasca shines)
  • Begin to swell, and then renew themselves,
  • Each one with its own colour, ere the Sun
  • Harness his steeds beneath another star:
  • Less than of rose and more than violet
  • A hue disclosing, was renewed the tree
  • That had erewhile its boughs so desolate.
  • I never heard, nor here below is sung,
  • The hymn which afterward that people sang,
  • Nor did I bear the melody throughout.
  • Had I the power to paint how fell asleep
  • Those eyes compassionless, of Syrinx hearing,
  • Those eyes to which more watching cost so dear,
  • Even as a painter who from model paints
  • I would portray how I was lulled asleep;
  • He may, who well can picture drowsihood.
  • Therefore I pass to what time I awoke,
  • And say a splendour rent from me the veil
  • Of slumber, and a calling: “Rise, what dost thou?”
  • As to behold the apple-tree in blossom
  • Which makes the Angels greedy for its fruit,
  • And keeps perpetual bridals in the Heaven,
  • Peter and John and James conducted were,
  • And, overcome, recovered at the word
  • By which still greater slumbers have been broken,
  • And saw their school diminished by the loss
  • Not only of Elias, but of Moses,
  • And the apparel of their Master changed;
  • So I revived, and saw that piteous one
  • Above me standing, who had been conductress
  • Aforetime of my steps beside the river,
  • And all in doubt I said, “Where’s Beatrice?”
  • And she: “Behold her seated underneath
  • The leafage new, upon the root of it.
  • Behold the company that circles her;
  • The rest behind the Griffin are ascending
  • With more melodious song, and more profound.”
  • And if her speech were more diffuse I know not,
  • Because already in my sight was she
  • Who from the hearing of aught else had shut me.
  • Alone she sat upon the very earth,
  • Left there as guardian of the chariot
  • Which I had seen the biform monster fasten.
  • Encircling her, a cloister made themselves
  • The seven Nymphs, with those lights in their hands
  • Which are secure from Aquilon and Auster.
  • “Short while shalt thou be here a forester,
  • And thou shalt be with me for evermore
  • A citizen of that Rome where Christ is Roman.
  • Therefore, for that world’s good which liveth ill,
  • Fix on the car thine eyes, and what thou seest,
  • Having returned to earth, take heed thou write.”
  • Thus Beatrice; and I, who at the feet
  • Of her commandments all devoted was,
  • My mind and eyes directed where she willed.
  • Never descended with so swift a motion
  • Fire from a heavy cloud, when it is raining
  • From out the region which is most remote,
  • As I beheld the bird of Jove descend
  • Down through the tree, rending away the bark,
  • As well as blossoms and the foliage new,
  • And he with all his might the chariot smote,
  • Whereat it reeled, like vessel in a tempest
  • Tossed by the waves, now starboard and now larboard.
  • Thereafter saw I leap into the body
  • Of the triumphal vehicle a Fox,
  • That seemed unfed with any wholesome food.
  • But for his hideous sins upbraiding him,
  • My Lady put him to as swift a flight
  • As such a fleshless skeleton could bear.
  • Then by the way that it before had come,
  • Into the chariot’s chest I saw the Eagle
  • Descend, and leave it feathered with his plumes.
  • And such as issues from a heart that mourns,
  • A voice from Heaven there issued, and it said:
  • “My little bark, how badly art thou freighted!”
  • Methought, then, that the earth did yawn between
  • Both wheels, and I saw rise from it a Dragon,
  • Who through the chariot upward fixed his tail,
  • And as a wasp that draweth back its sting,
  • Drawing unto himself his tail malign,
  • Drew out the floor, and went his way rejoicing.
  • That which remained behind, even as with grass
  • A fertile region, with the feathers, offered
  • Perhaps with pure intention and benign,
  • Reclothed itself, and with them were reclothed
  • The pole and both the wheels so speedily,
  • A sigh doth longer keep the lips apart.
  • Transfigured thus the holy edifice
  • Thrust forward heads upon the parts of it,
  • Three on the pole and one at either corner.
  • The first were horned like oxen; but the four
  • Had but a single horn upon the forehead;
  • A monster such had never yet been seen!
  • Firm as a rock upon a mountain high,
  • Seated upon it, there appeared to me
  • A shameless whore, with eyes swift glancing round,
  • And, as if not to have her taken from him,
  • Upright beside her I beheld a giant;
  • And ever and anon they kissed each other.
  • But because she her wanton, roving eye
  • Turned upon me, her angry paramour
  • Did scourge her from her head unto her feet.
  • Then full of jealousy, and fierce with wrath,
  • He loosed the monster, and across the forest
  • Dragged it so far, he made of that alone
  • A shield unto the whore and the strange beast.
  • Purgatorio: Canto XXXIII
  • “Deus venerunt gentes,” alternating
  • Now three, now four, melodious psalmody
  • The maidens in the midst of tears began;
  • And Beatrice, compassionate and sighing,
  • Listened to them with such a countenance,
  • That scarce more changed was Mary at the cross.
  • But when the other virgins place had given
  • For her to speak, uprisen to her feet
  • With colour as of fire, she made response:
  • “‘Modicum, et non videbitis me;
  • Et iterum,’ my sisters predilect,
  • ‘Modicum, et vos videbitis me.’”
  • Then all the seven in front of her she placed;
  • And after her, by beckoning only, moved
  • Me and the lady and the sage who stayed.
  • So she moved onward; and I do not think
  • That her tenth step was placed upon the ground,
  • When with her eyes upon mine eyes she smote,
  • And with a tranquil aspect, “Come more quickly,”
  • To me she said, “that, if I speak with thee,
  • To listen to me thou mayst be well placed.”
  • As soon as I was with her as I should be,
  • She said to me: “Why, brother, dost thou not
  • Venture to question now, in coming with me?”
  • As unto those who are too reverential,
  • Speaking in presence of superiors,
  • Who drag no living utterance to their teeth,
  • It me befell, that without perfect sound
  • Began I: “My necessity, Madonna,
  • You know, and that which thereunto is good.”
  • And she to me: “Of fear and bashfulness
  • Henceforward I will have thee strip thyself,
  • So that thou speak no more as one who dreams.
  • Know that the vessel which the serpent broke
  • Was, and is not; but let him who is guilty
  • Think that God’s vengeance does not fear a sop.
  • Without an heir shall not for ever be
  • The Eagle that left his plumes upon the car,
  • Whence it became a monster, then a prey;
  • For verily I see, and hence narrate it,
  • The stars already near to bring the time,
  • From every hindrance safe, and every bar,
  • Within which a Five-hundred, Ten, and Five,
  • One sent from God, shall slay the thievish woman
  • And that same giant who is sinning with her.
  • And peradventure my dark utterance,
  • Like Themis and the Sphinx, may less persuade thee,
  • Since, in their mode, it clouds the intellect;
  • But soon the facts shall be the Naiades
  • Who shall this difficult enigma solve,
  • Without destruction of the flocks and harvests.
  • Note thou; and even as by me are uttered
  • These words, so teach them unto those who live
  • That life which is a running unto death;
  • And bear in mind, whene’er thou writest them,
  • Not to conceal what thou hast seen the plant,
  • That twice already has been pillaged here.
  • Whoever pillages or shatters it,
  • With blasphemy of deed offendeth God,
  • Who made it holy for his use alone.
  • For biting that, in pain and in desire
  • Five thousand years and more the first-born soul
  • Craved Him, who punished in himself the bite.
  • Thy genius slumbers, if it deem it not
  • For special reason so pre-eminent
  • In height, and so inverted in its summit.
  • And if thy vain imaginings had not been
  • Water of Elsa round about thy mind,
  • And Pyramus to the mulberry, their pleasure,
  • Thou by so many circumstances only
  • The justice of the interdict of God
  • Morally in the tree wouldst recognize.
  • But since I see thee in thine intellect
  • Converted into stone and stained with sin,
  • So that the light of my discourse doth daze thee,
  • I will too, if not written, at least painted,
  • Thou bear it back within thee, for the reason
  • That cinct with palm the pilgrim’s staff is borne.”
  • And I: “As by a signet is the wax
  • Which does not change the figure stamped upon it,
  • My brain is now imprinted by yourself.
  • But wherefore so beyond my power of sight
  • Soars your desirable discourse, that aye
  • The more I strive, so much the more I lose it?”
  • “That thou mayst recognize,” she said, “the school
  • Which thou hast followed, and mayst see how far
  • Its doctrine follows after my discourse,
  • And mayst behold your path from the divine
  • Distant as far as separated is
  • From earth the heaven that highest hastens on.”
  • Whence her I answered: “I do not remember
  • That ever I estranged myself from you,
  • Nor have I conscience of it that reproves me.”
  • “And if thou art not able to remember,”
  • Smiling she answered, “recollect thee now
  • That thou this very day hast drunk of Lethe;
  • And if from smoke a fire may be inferred,
  • Such an oblivion clearly demonstrates
  • Some error in thy will elsewhere intent.
  • Truly from this time forward shall my words
  • Be naked, so far as it is befitting
  • To lay them open unto thy rude gaze.”
  • And more coruscant and with slower steps
  • The sun was holding the meridian circle,
  • Which, with the point of view, shifts here and there
  • When halted (as he cometh to a halt,
  • Who goes before a squadron as its escort,
  • If something new he find upon his way)
  • The ladies seven at a dark shadow’s edge,
  • Such as, beneath green leaves and branches black,
  • The Alp upon its frigid border wears.
  • In front of them the Tigris and Euphrates
  • Methought I saw forth issue from one fountain,
  • And slowly part, like friends, from one another.
  • “O light, O glory of the human race!
  • What stream is this which here unfolds itself
  • From out one source, and from itself withdraws?”
  • For such a prayer, ’twas said unto me, “Pray
  • Matilda that she tell thee;” and here answered,
  • As one does who doth free himself from blame,
  • The beautiful lady: “This and other things
  • Were told to him by me; and sure I am
  • The water of Lethe has not hid them from him.”
  • And Beatrice: “Perhaps a greater care,
  • Which oftentimes our memory takes away,
  • Has made the vision of his mind obscure.
  • But Eunoe behold, that yonder rises;
  • Lead him to it, and, as thou art accustomed,
  • Revive again the half-dead virtue in him.”
  • Like gentle soul, that maketh no excuse,
  • But makes its own will of another’s will
  • As soon as by a sign it is disclosed,
  • Even so, when she had taken hold of me,
  • The beautiful lady moved, and unto Statius
  • Said, in her womanly manner, “Come with him.”
  • If, Reader, I possessed a longer space
  • For writing it, I yet would sing in part
  • Of the sweet draught that ne’er would satiate me;
  • But inasmuch as full are all the leaves
  • Made ready for this second canticle,
  • The curb of art no farther lets me go.
  • From the most holy water I returned
  • Regenerate, in the manner of new trees
  • That are renewed with a new foliage,
  • Pure and disposed to mount unto the stars.
  • PARADISO
  • Paradiso: Canto I
  • The glory of Him who moveth everything
  • Doth penetrate the universe, and shine
  • In one part more and in another less.
  • Within that heaven which most his light receives
  • Was I, and things beheld which to repeat
  • Nor knows, nor can, who from above descends;
  • Because in drawing near to its desire
  • Our intellect ingulphs itself so far,
  • That after it the memory cannot go.
  • Truly whatever of the holy realm
  • I had the power to treasure in my mind
  • Shall now become the subject of my song.
  • O good Apollo, for this last emprise
  • Make of me such a vessel of thy power
  • As giving the beloved laurel asks!
  • One summit of Parnassus hitherto
  • Has been enough for me, but now with both
  • I needs must enter the arena left.
  • Enter into my bosom, thou, and breathe
  • As at the time when Marsyas thou didst draw
  • Out of the scabbard of those limbs of his.
  • O power divine, lend’st thou thyself to me
  • So that the shadow of the blessed realm
  • Stamped in my brain I can make manifest,
  • Thou’lt see me come unto thy darling tree,
  • And crown myself thereafter with those leaves
  • Of which the theme and thou shall make me worthy.
  • So seldom, Father, do we gather them
  • For triumph or of Caesar or of Poet,
  • (The fault and shame of human inclinations,)
  • That the Peneian foliage should bring forth
  • Joy to the joyous Delphic deity,
  • When any one it makes to thirst for it.
  • A little spark is followed by great flame;
  • Perchance with better voices after me
  • Shall prayer be made that Cyrrha may respond!
  • To mortal men by passages diverse
  • Uprises the world’s lamp; but by that one
  • Which circles four uniteth with three crosses,
  • With better course and with a better star
  • Conjoined it issues, and the mundane wax
  • Tempers and stamps more after its own fashion.
  • Almost that passage had made morning there
  • And evening here, and there was wholly white
  • That hemisphere, and black the other part,
  • When Beatrice towards the left-hand side
  • I saw turned round, and gazing at the sun;
  • Never did eagle fasten so upon it!
  • And even as a second ray is wont
  • To issue from the first and reascend,
  • Like to a pilgrim who would fain return,
  • Thus of her action, through the eyes infused
  • In my imagination, mine I made,
  • And sunward fixed mine eyes beyond our wont.
  • There much is lawful which is here unlawful
  • Unto our powers, by virtue of the place
  • Made for the human species as its own.
  • Not long I bore it, nor so little while
  • But I beheld it sparkle round about
  • Like iron that comes molten from the fire;
  • And suddenly it seemed that day to day
  • Was added, as if He who has the power
  • Had with another sun the heaven adorned.
  • With eyes upon the everlasting wheels
  • Stood Beatrice all intent, and I, on her
  • Fixing my vision from above removed,
  • Such at her aspect inwardly became
  • As Glaucus, tasting of the herb that made him
  • Peer of the other gods beneath the sea.
  • To represent transhumanise in words
  • Impossible were; the example, then, suffice
  • Him for whom Grace the experience reserves.
  • If I was merely what of me thou newly
  • Createdst, Love who governest the heaven,
  • Thou knowest, who didst lift me with thy light!
  • When now the wheel, which thou dost make eternal
  • Desiring thee, made me attentive to it
  • By harmony thou dost modulate and measure,
  • Then seemed to me so much of heaven enkindled
  • By the sun’s flame, that neither rain nor river
  • E’er made a lake so widely spread abroad.
  • The newness of the sound and the great light
  • Kindled in me a longing for their cause,
  • Never before with such acuteness felt;
  • Whence she, who saw me as I saw myself,
  • To quiet in me my perturbed mind,
  • Opened her mouth, ere I did mine to ask,
  • And she began: “Thou makest thyself so dull
  • With false imagining, that thou seest not
  • What thou wouldst see if thou hadst shaken it off.
  • Thou art not upon earth, as thou believest;
  • But lightning, fleeing its appropriate site,
  • Ne’er ran as thou, who thitherward returnest.”
  • If of my former doubt I was divested
  • By these brief little words more smiled than spoken,
  • I in a new one was the more ensnared;
  • And said: “Already did I rest content
  • From great amazement; but am now amazed
  • In what way I transcend these bodies light.”
  • Whereupon she, after a pitying sigh,
  • Her eyes directed tow’rds me with that look
  • A mother casts on a delirious child;
  • And she began: “All things whate’er they be
  • Have order among themselves, and this is form,
  • That makes the universe resemble God.
  • Here do the higher creatures see the footprints
  • Of the Eternal Power, which is the end
  • Whereto is made the law already mentioned.
  • In the order that I speak of are inclined
  • All natures, by their destinies diverse,
  • More or less near unto their origin;
  • Hence they move onward unto ports diverse
  • O’er the great sea of being; and each one
  • With instinct given it which bears it on.
  • This bears away the fire towards the moon;
  • This is in mortal hearts the motive power
  • This binds together and unites the earth.
  • Nor only the created things that are
  • Without intelligence this bow shoots forth,
  • But those that have both intellect and love.
  • The Providence that regulates all this
  • Makes with its light the heaven forever quiet,
  • Wherein that turns which has the greatest haste.
  • And thither now, as to a site decreed,
  • Bears us away the virtue of that cord
  • Which aims its arrows at a joyous mark.
  • True is it, that as oftentimes the form
  • Accords not with the intention of the art,
  • Because in answering is matter deaf,
  • So likewise from this course doth deviate
  • Sometimes the creature, who the power possesses,
  • Though thus impelled, to swerve some other way,
  • (In the same wise as one may see the fire
  • Fall from a cloud,) if the first impetus
  • Earthward is wrested by some false delight.
  • Thou shouldst not wonder more, if well I judge,
  • At thine ascent, than at a rivulet
  • From some high mount descending to the lowland.
  • Marvel it would be in thee, if deprived
  • Of hindrance, thou wert seated down below,
  • As if on earth the living fire were quiet.”
  • Thereat she heavenward turned again her face.
  • Paradiso: Canto II
  • O Ye, who in some pretty little boat,
  • Eager to listen, have been following
  • Behind my ship, that singing sails along,
  • Turn back to look again upon your shores;
  • Do not put out to sea, lest peradventure,
  • In losing me, you might yourselves be lost.
  • The sea I sail has never yet been passed;
  • Minerva breathes, and pilots me Apollo,
  • And Muses nine point out to me the Bears.
  • Ye other few who have the neck uplifted
  • Betimes to th’ bread of Angels upon which
  • One liveth here and grows not sated by it,
  • Well may you launch upon the deep salt-sea
  • Your vessel, keeping still my wake before you
  • Upon the water that grows smooth again.
  • Those glorious ones who unto Colchos passed
  • Were not so wonder-struck as you shall be,
  • When Jason they beheld a ploughman made!
  • The con-created and perpetual thirst
  • For the realm deiform did bear us on,
  • As swift almost as ye the heavens behold.
  • Upward gazed Beatrice, and I at her;
  • And in such space perchance as strikes a bolt
  • And flies, and from the notch unlocks itself,
  • Arrived I saw me where a wondrous thing
  • Drew to itself my sight; and therefore she
  • From whom no care of mine could be concealed,
  • Towards me turning, blithe as beautiful,
  • Said unto me: “Fix gratefully thy mind
  • On God, who unto the first star has brought us.”
  • It seemed to me a cloud encompassed us,
  • Luminous, dense, consolidate and bright
  • As adamant on which the sun is striking.
  • Into itself did the eternal pearl
  • Receive us, even as water doth receive
  • A ray of light, remaining still unbroken.
  • If I was body, (and we here conceive not
  • How one dimension tolerates another,
  • Which needs must be if body enter body,)
  • More the desire should be enkindled in us
  • That essence to behold, wherein is seen
  • How God and our own nature were united.
  • There will be seen what we receive by faith,
  • Not demonstrated, but self-evident
  • In guise of the first truth that man believes.
  • I made reply: “Madonna, as devoutly
  • As most I can do I give thanks to Him
  • Who has removed me from the mortal world.
  • But tell me what the dusky spots may be
  • Upon this body, which below on earth
  • Make people tell that fabulous tale of Cain?”
  • Somewhat she smiled; and then, “If the opinion
  • Of mortals be erroneous,” she said,
  • “Where’er the key of sense doth not unlock,
  • Certes, the shafts of wonder should not pierce thee
  • Now, forasmuch as, following the senses,
  • Thou seest that the reason has short wings.
  • But tell me what thou think’st of it thyself.”
  • And I: “What seems to us up here diverse,
  • Is caused, I think, by bodies rare and dense.”
  • And she: “Right truly shalt thou see immersed
  • In error thy belief, if well thou hearest
  • The argument that I shall make against it.
  • Lights many the eighth sphere displays to you
  • Which in their quality and quantity
  • May noted be of aspects different.
  • If this were caused by rare and dense alone,
  • One only virtue would there be in all
  • Or more or less diffused, or equally.
  • Virtues diverse must be perforce the fruits
  • Of formal principles; and these, save one,
  • Of course would by thy reasoning be destroyed.
  • Besides, if rarity were of this dimness
  • The cause thou askest, either through and through
  • This planet thus attenuate were of matter,
  • Or else, as in a body is apportioned
  • The fat and lean, so in like manner this
  • Would in its volume interchange the leaves.
  • Were it the former, in the sun’s eclipse
  • It would be manifest by the shining through
  • Of light, as through aught tenuous interfused.
  • This is not so; hence we must scan the other,
  • And if it chance the other I demolish,
  • Then falsified will thy opinion be.
  • But if this rarity go not through and through,
  • There needs must be a limit, beyond which
  • Its contrary prevents the further passing,
  • And thence the foreign radiance is reflected,
  • Even as a colour cometh back from glass,
  • The which behind itself concealeth lead.
  • Now thou wilt say the sunbeam shows itself
  • More dimly there than in the other parts,
  • By being there reflected farther back.
  • From this reply experiment will free thee
  • If e’er thou try it, which is wont to be
  • The fountain to the rivers of your arts.
  • Three mirrors shalt thou take, and two remove
  • Alike from thee, the other more remote
  • Between the former two shall meet thine eyes.
  • Turned towards these, cause that behind thy back
  • Be placed a light, illuming the three mirrors
  • And coming back to thee by all reflected.
  • Though in its quantity be not so ample
  • The image most remote, there shalt thou see
  • How it perforce is equally resplendent.
  • Now, as beneath the touches of warm rays
  • Naked the subject of the snow remains
  • Both of its former colour and its cold,
  • Thee thus remaining in thy intellect,
  • Will I inform with such a living light,
  • That it shall tremble in its aspect to thee.
  • Within the heaven of the divine repose
  • Revolves a body, in whose virtue lies
  • The being of whatever it contains.
  • The following heaven, that has so many eyes,
  • Divides this being by essences diverse,
  • Distinguished from it, and by it contained.
  • The other spheres, by various differences,
  • All the distinctions which they have within them
  • Dispose unto their ends and their effects.
  • Thus do these organs of the world proceed,
  • As thou perceivest now, from grade to grade;
  • Since from above they take, and act beneath.
  • Observe me well, how through this place I come
  • Unto the truth thou wishest, that hereafter
  • Thou mayst alone know how to keep the ford
  • The power and motion of the holy spheres,
  • As from the artisan the hammer’s craft,
  • Forth from the blessed motors must proceed.
  • The heaven, which lights so manifold make fair,
  • From the Intelligence profound, which turns it,
  • The image takes, and makes of it a seal.
  • And even as the soul within your dust
  • Through members different and accommodated
  • To faculties diverse expands itself,
  • So likewise this Intelligence diffuses
  • Its virtue multiplied among the stars.
  • Itself revolving on its unity.
  • Virtue diverse doth a diverse alloyage
  • Make with the precious body that it quickens,
  • In which, as life in you, it is combined.
  • From the glad nature whence it is derived,
  • The mingled virtue through the body shines,
  • Even as gladness through the living pupil.
  • From this proceeds whate’er from light to light
  • Appeareth different, not from dense and rare:
  • This is the formal principle that produces,
  • According to its goodness, dark and bright.”
  • Paradiso: Canto III
  • That Sun, which erst with love my bosom warmed,
  • Of beauteous truth had unto me discovered,
  • By proving and reproving, the sweet aspect.
  • And, that I might confess myself convinced
  • And confident, so far as was befitting,
  • I lifted more erect my head to speak.
  • But there appeared a vision, which withdrew me
  • So close to it, in order to be seen,
  • That my confession I remembered not.
  • Such as through polished and transparent glass,
  • Or waters crystalline and undisturbed,
  • But not so deep as that their bed be lost,
  • Come back again the outlines of our faces
  • So feeble, that a pearl on forehead white
  • Comes not less speedily unto our eyes;
  • Such saw I many faces prompt to speak,
  • So that I ran in error opposite
  • To that which kindled love ’twixt man and fountain.
  • As soon as I became aware of them,
  • Esteeming them as mirrored semblances,
  • To see of whom they were, mine eyes I turned,
  • And nothing saw, and once more turned them forward
  • Direct into the light of my sweet Guide,
  • Who smiling kindled in her holy eyes.
  • “Marvel thou not,” she said to me, “because
  • I smile at this thy puerile conceit,
  • Since on the truth it trusts not yet its foot,
  • But turns thee, as ’tis wont, on emptiness.
  • True substances are these which thou beholdest,
  • Here relegate for breaking of some vow.
  • Therefore speak with them, listen and believe;
  • For the true light, which giveth peace to them,
  • Permits them not to turn from it their feet.”
  • And I unto the shade that seemed most wishful
  • To speak directed me, and I began,
  • As one whom too great eagerness bewilders:
  • “O well-created spirit, who in the rays
  • Of life eternal dost the sweetness taste
  • Which being untasted ne’er is comprehended,
  • Grateful ’twill be to me, if thou content me
  • Both with thy name and with your destiny.”
  • Whereat she promptly and with laughing eyes:
  • “Our charity doth never shut the doors
  • Against a just desire, except as one
  • Who wills that all her court be like herself.
  • I was a virgin sister in the world;
  • And if thy mind doth contemplate me well,
  • The being more fair will not conceal me from thee,
  • But thou shalt recognise I am Piccarda,
  • Who, stationed here among these other blessed,
  • Myself am blessed in the slowest sphere.
  • All our affections, that alone inflamed
  • Are in the pleasure of the Holy Ghost,
  • Rejoice at being of his order formed;
  • And this allotment, which appears so low,
  • Therefore is given us, because our vows
  • Have been neglected and in some part void.”
  • Whence I to her: “In your miraculous aspects
  • There shines I know not what of the divine,
  • Which doth transform you from our first conceptions.
  • Therefore I was not swift in my remembrance;
  • But what thou tellest me now aids me so,
  • That the refiguring is easier to me.
  • But tell me, ye who in this place are happy,
  • Are you desirous of a higher place,
  • To see more or to make yourselves more friends?”
  • First with those other shades she smiled a little;
  • Thereafter answered me so full of gladness,
  • She seemed to burn in the first fire of love:
  • “Brother, our will is quieted by virtue
  • Of charity, that makes us wish alone
  • For what we have, nor gives us thirst for more.
  • If to be more exalted we aspired,
  • Discordant would our aspirations be
  • Unto the will of Him who here secludes us;
  • Which thou shalt see finds no place in these circles,
  • If being in charity is needful here,
  • And if thou lookest well into its nature;
  • Nay, ’tis essential to this blest existence
  • To keep itself within the will divine,
  • Whereby our very wishes are made one;
  • So that, as we are station above station
  • Throughout this realm, to all the realm ’tis pleasing,
  • As to the King, who makes his will our will.
  • And his will is our peace; this is the sea
  • To which is moving onward whatsoever
  • It doth create, and all that nature makes.”
  • Then it was clear to me how everywhere
  • In heaven is Paradise, although the grace
  • Of good supreme there rain not in one measure.
  • But as it comes to pass, if one food sates,
  • And for another still remains the longing,
  • We ask for this, and that decline with thanks,
  • E’en thus did I; with gesture and with word,
  • To learn from her what was the web wherein
  • She did not ply the shuttle to the end.
  • “A perfect life and merit high in-heaven
  • A lady o’er us,” said she, “by whose rule
  • Down in your world they vest and veil themselves,
  • That until death they may both watch and sleep
  • Beside that Spouse who every vow accepts
  • Which charity conformeth to his pleasure.
  • To follow her, in girlhood from the world
  • I fled, and in her habit shut myself,
  • And pledged me to the pathway of her sect.
  • Then men accustomed unto evil more
  • Than unto good, from the sweet cloister tore me;
  • God knows what afterward my life became.
  • This other splendour, which to thee reveals
  • Itself on my right side, and is enkindled
  • With all the illumination of our sphere,
  • What of myself I say applies to her;
  • A nun was she, and likewise from her head
  • Was ta’en the shadow of the sacred wimple.
  • But when she too was to the world returned
  • Against her wishes and against good usage,
  • Of the heart’s veil she never was divested.
  • Of great Costanza this is the effulgence,
  • Who from the second wind of Suabia
  • Brought forth the third and latest puissance.”
  • Thus unto me she spake, and then began
  • “Ave Maria” singing, and in singing
  • Vanished, as through deep water something heavy.
  • My sight, that followed her as long a time
  • As it was possible, when it had lost her
  • Turned round unto the mark of more desire,
  • And wholly unto Beatrice reverted;
  • But she such lightnings flashed into mine eyes,
  • That at the first my sight endured it not;
  • And this in questioning more backward made me.
  • Paradiso: Canto IV
  • Between two viands, equally removed
  • And tempting, a free man would die of hunger
  • Ere either he could bring unto his teeth.
  • So would a lamb between the ravenings
  • Of two fierce wolves stand fearing both alike;
  • And so would stand a dog between two does.
  • Hence, if I held my peace, myself I blame not,
  • Impelled in equal measure by my doubts,
  • Since it must be so, nor do I commend.
  • I held my peace; but my desire was painted
  • Upon my face, and questioning with that
  • More fervent far than by articulate speech.
  • Beatrice did as Daniel had done
  • Relieving Nebuchadnezzar from the wrath
  • Which rendered him unjustly merciless,
  • And said: “Well see I how attracteth thee
  • One and the other wish, so that thy care
  • Binds itself so that forth it does not breathe.
  • Thou arguest, if good will be permanent,
  • The violence of others, for what reason
  • Doth it decrease the measure of my merit?
  • Again for doubting furnish thee occasion
  • Souls seeming to return unto the stars,
  • According to the sentiment of Plato.
  • These are the questions which upon thy wish
  • Are thrusting equally; and therefore first
  • Will I treat that which hath the most of gall.
  • He of the Seraphim most absorbed in God,
  • Moses, and Samuel, and whichever John
  • Thou mayst select, I say, and even Mary,
  • Have not in any other heaven their seats,
  • Than have those spirits that just appeared to thee,
  • Nor of existence more or fewer years;
  • But all make beautiful the primal circle,
  • And have sweet life in different degrees,
  • By feeling more or less the eternal breath.
  • They showed themselves here, not because allotted
  • This sphere has been to them, but to give sign
  • Of the celestial which is least exalted.
  • To speak thus is adapted to your mind,
  • Since only through the sense it apprehendeth
  • What then it worthy makes of intellect.
  • On this account the Scripture condescends
  • Unto your faculties, and feet and hands
  • To God attributes, and means something else;
  • And Holy Church under an aspect human
  • Gabriel and Michael represent to you,
  • And him who made Tobias whole again.
  • That which Timaeus argues of the soul
  • Doth not resemble that which here is seen,
  • Because it seems that as he speaks he thinks.
  • He says the soul unto its star returns,
  • Believing it to have been severed thence
  • Whenever nature gave it as a form.
  • Perhaps his doctrine is of other guise
  • Than the words sound, and possibly may be
  • With meaning that is not to be derided.
  • If he doth mean that to these wheels return
  • The honour of their influence and the blame,
  • Perhaps his bow doth hit upon some truth.
  • This principle ill understood once warped
  • The whole world nearly, till it went astray
  • Invoking Jove and Mercury and Mars.
  • The other doubt which doth disquiet thee
  • Less venom has, for its malevolence
  • Could never lead thee otherwhere from me.
  • That as unjust our justice should appear
  • In eyes of mortals, is an argument
  • Of faith, and not of sin heretical.
  • But still, that your perception may be able
  • To thoroughly penetrate this verity,
  • As thou desirest, I will satisfy thee.
  • If it be violence when he who suffers
  • Co-operates not with him who uses force,
  • These souls were not on that account excused;
  • For will is never quenched unless it will,
  • But operates as nature doth in fire
  • If violence a thousand times distort it.
  • Hence, if it yieldeth more or less, it seconds
  • The force; and these have done so, having power
  • Of turning back unto the holy place.
  • If their will had been perfect, like to that
  • Which Lawrence fast upon his gridiron held,
  • And Mutius made severe to his own hand,
  • It would have urged them back along the road
  • Whence they were dragged, as soon as they were free;
  • But such a solid will is all too rare.
  • And by these words, if thou hast gathered them
  • As thou shouldst do, the argument is refuted
  • That would have still annoyed thee many times.
  • But now another passage runs across
  • Before thine eyes, and such that by thyself
  • Thou couldst not thread it ere thou wouldst be weary.
  • I have for certain put into thy mind
  • That soul beatified could never lie,
  • For it is near the primal Truth,
  • And then thou from Piccarda might’st have heard
  • Costanza kept affection for the veil,
  • So that she seemeth here to contradict me.
  • Many times, brother, has it come to pass,
  • That, to escape from peril, with reluctance
  • That has been done it was not right to do,
  • E’en as Alcmaeon (who, being by his father
  • Thereto entreated, his own mother slew)
  • Not to lose pity pitiless became.
  • At this point I desire thee to remember
  • That force with will commingles, and they cause
  • That the offences cannot be excused.
  • Will absolute consenteth not to evil;
  • But in so far consenteth as it fears,
  • If it refrain, to fall into more harm.
  • Hence when Piccarda uses this expression,
  • She meaneth the will absolute, and I
  • The other, so that both of us speak truth.”
  • Such was the flowing of the holy river
  • That issued from the fount whence springs all truth;
  • This put to rest my wishes one and all.
  • “O love of the first lover, O divine,”
  • Said I forthwith, “whose speech inundates me
  • And warms me so, it more and more revives me,
  • My own affection is not so profound
  • As to suffice in rendering grace for grace;
  • Let Him, who sees and can, thereto respond.
  • Well I perceive that never sated is
  • Our intellect unless the Truth illume it,
  • Beyond which nothing true expands itself.
  • It rests therein, as wild beast in his lair,
  • When it attains it; and it can attain it;
  • If not, then each desire would frustrate be.
  • Therefore springs up, in fashion of a shoot,
  • Doubt at the foot of truth; and this is nature,
  • Which to the top from height to height impels us.
  • This doth invite me, this assurance give me
  • With reverence, Lady, to inquire of you
  • Another truth, which is obscure to me.
  • I wish to know if man can satisfy you
  • For broken vows with other good deeds, so
  • That in your balance they will not be light.”
  • Beatrice gazed upon me with her eyes
  • Full of the sparks of love, and so divine,
  • That, overcome my power, I turned my back
  • And almost lost myself with eyes downcast.
  • Paradiso: Canto V
  • “If in the heat of love I flame upon thee
  • Beyond the measure that on earth is seen,
  • So that the valour of thine eyes I vanquish,
  • Marvel thou not thereat; for this proceeds
  • From perfect sight, which as it apprehends
  • To the good apprehended moves its feet.
  • Well I perceive how is already shining
  • Into thine intellect the eternal light,
  • That only seen enkindles always love;
  • And if some other thing your love seduce,
  • ’Tis nothing but a vestige of the same,
  • Ill understood, which there is shining through.
  • Thou fain wouldst know if with another service
  • For broken vow can such return be made
  • As to secure the soul from further claim.”
  • This Canto thus did Beatrice begin;
  • And, as a man who breaks not off his speech,
  • Continued thus her holy argument:
  • “The greatest gift that in his largess God
  • Creating made, and unto his own goodness
  • Nearest conformed, and that which he doth prize
  • Most highly, is the freedom of the will,
  • Wherewith the creatures of intelligence
  • Both all and only were and are endowed.
  • Now wilt thou see, if thence thou reasonest,
  • The high worth of a vow, if it he made
  • So that when thou consentest God consents:
  • For, closing between God and man the compact,
  • A sacrifice is of this treasure made,
  • Such as I say, and made by its own act.
  • What can be rendered then as compensation?
  • Think’st thou to make good use of what thou’st offered,
  • With gains ill gotten thou wouldst do good deed.
  • Now art thou certain of the greater point;
  • But because Holy Church in this dispenses,
  • Which seems against the truth which I have shown thee,
  • Behoves thee still to sit awhile at table,
  • Because the solid food which thou hast taken
  • Requireth further aid for thy digestion.
  • Open thy mind to that which I reveal,
  • And fix it there within; for ’tis not knowledge,
  • The having heard without retaining it.
  • In the essence of this sacrifice two things
  • Convene together; and the one is that
  • Of which ’tis made, the other is the agreement.
  • This last for evermore is cancelled not
  • Unless complied with, and concerning this
  • With such precision has above been spoken.
  • Therefore it was enjoined upon the Hebrews
  • To offer still, though sometimes what was offered
  • Might be commuted, as thou ought’st to know.
  • The other, which is known to thee as matter,
  • May well indeed be such that one errs not
  • If it for other matter be exchanged.
  • But let none shift the burden on his shoulder
  • At his arbitrament, without the turning
  • Both of the white and of the yellow key;
  • And every permutation deem as foolish,
  • If in the substitute the thing relinquished,
  • As the four is in six, be not contained.
  • Therefore whatever thing has so great weight
  • In value that it drags down every balance,
  • Cannot be satisfied with other spending.
  • Let mortals never take a vow in jest;
  • Be faithful and not blind in doing that,
  • As Jephthah was in his first offering,
  • Whom more beseemed to say, ‘I have done wrong,
  • Than to do worse by keeping; and as foolish
  • Thou the great leader of the Greeks wilt find,
  • Whence wept Iphigenia her fair face,
  • And made for her both wise and simple weep,
  • Who heard such kind of worship spoken of.’
  • Christians, be ye more serious in your movements;
  • Be ye not like a feather at each wind,
  • And think not every water washes you.
  • Ye have the Old and the New Testament,
  • And the Pastor of the Church who guideth you
  • Let this suffice you unto your salvation.
  • If evil appetite cry aught else to you,
  • Be ye as men, and not as silly sheep,
  • So that the Jew among you may not mock you.
  • Be ye not as the lamb that doth abandon
  • Its mother’s milk, and frolicsome and simple
  • Combats at its own pleasure with itself.”
  • Thus Beatrice to me even as I write it;
  • Then all desireful turned herself again
  • To that part where the world is most alive.
  • Her silence and her change of countenance
  • Silence imposed upon my eager mind,
  • That had already in advance new questions;
  • And as an arrow that upon the mark
  • Strikes ere the bowstring quiet hath become,
  • So did we speed into the second realm.
  • My Lady there so joyful I beheld,
  • As into the brightness of that heaven she entered,
  • More luminous thereat the planet grew;
  • And if the star itself was changed and smiled,
  • What became I, who by my nature am
  • Exceeding mutable in every guise!
  • As, in a fish-pond which is pure and tranquil,
  • The fishes draw to that which from without
  • Comes in such fashion that their food they deem it;
  • So I beheld more than a thousand splendours
  • Drawing towards us, and in each was heard:
  • “Lo, this is she who shall increase our love.”
  • And as each one was coming unto us,
  • Full of beatitude the shade was seen,
  • By the effulgence clear that issued from it.
  • Think, Reader, if what here is just beginning
  • No farther should proceed, how thou wouldst have
  • An agonizing need of knowing more;
  • And of thyself thou’lt see how I from these
  • Was in desire of hearing their conditions,
  • As they unto mine eyes were manifest.
  • “O thou well-born, unto whom Grace concedes
  • To see the thrones of the eternal triumph,
  • Or ever yet the warfare be abandoned
  • With light that through the whole of heaven is spread
  • Kindled are we, and hence if thou desirest
  • To know of us, at thine own pleasure sate thee.”
  • Thus by some one among those holy spirits
  • Was spoken, and by Beatrice: “Speak, speak
  • Securely, and believe them even as Gods.”
  • “Well I perceive how thou dost nest thyself
  • In thine own light, and drawest it from thine eyes,
  • Because they coruscate when thou dost smile,
  • But know not who thou art, nor why thou hast,
  • Spirit august, thy station in the sphere
  • That veils itself to men in alien rays.”
  • This said I in direction of the light
  • Which first had spoken to me; whence it became
  • By far more lucent than it was before.
  • Even as the sun, that doth conceal himself
  • By too much light, when heat has worn away
  • The tempering influence of the vapours dense,
  • By greater rapture thus concealed itself
  • In its own radiance the figure saintly,
  • And thus close, close enfolded answered me
  • In fashion as the following Canto sings.
  • Paradiso: Canto VI
  • “After that Constantine the eagle turned
  • Against the course of heaven, which it had followed
  • Behind the ancient who Lavinia took,
  • Two hundred years and more the bird of God
  • In the extreme of Europe held itself,
  • Near to the mountains whence it issued first;
  • And under shadow of the sacred plumes
  • It governed there the world from hand to hand,
  • And, changing thus, upon mine own alighted.
  • Caesar I was, and am Justinian,
  • Who, by the will of primal Love I feel,
  • Took from the laws the useless and redundant;
  • And ere unto the work I was attent,
  • One nature to exist in Christ, not more,
  • Believed, and with such faith was I contented.
  • But blessed Agapetus, he who was
  • The supreme pastor, to the faith sincere
  • Pointed me out the way by words of his.
  • Him I believed, and what was his assertion
  • I now see clearly, even as thou seest
  • Each contradiction to be false and true.
  • As soon as with the Church I moved my feet,
  • God in his grace it pleased with this high task
  • To inspire me, and I gave me wholly to it,
  • And to my Belisarius I commended
  • The arms, to which was heaven’s right hand so joined
  • It was a signal that I should repose.
  • Now here to the first question terminates
  • My answer; but the character thereof
  • Constrains me to continue with a sequel,
  • In order that thou see with how great reason
  • Men move against the standard sacrosanct,
  • Both who appropriate and who oppose it.
  • Behold how great a power has made it worthy
  • Of reverence, beginning from the hour
  • When Pallas died to give it sovereignty.
  • Thou knowest it made in Alba its abode
  • Three hundred years and upward, till at last
  • The three to three fought for it yet again.
  • Thou knowest what it achieved from Sabine wrong
  • Down to Lucretia’s sorrow, in seven kings
  • O’ercoming round about the neighboring nations;
  • Thou knowest what it achieved, borne by the Romans
  • Illustrious against Brennus, against Pyrrhus,
  • Against the other princes and confederates.
  • Torquatus thence and Quinctius, who from locks
  • Unkempt was named, Decii and Fabii,
  • Received the fame I willingly embalm;
  • It struck to earth the pride of the Arabians,
  • Who, following Hannibal, had passed across
  • The Alpine ridges, Po, from which thou glidest;
  • Beneath it triumphed while they yet were young
  • Pompey and Scipio, and to the hill
  • Beneath which thou wast born it bitter seemed;
  • Then, near unto the time when heaven had willed
  • To bring the whole world to its mood serene,
  • Did Caesar by the will of Rome assume it.
  • What it achieved from Var unto the Rhine,
  • Isere beheld and Saone, beheld the Seine,
  • And every valley whence the Rhone is filled;
  • What it achieved when it had left Ravenna,
  • And leaped the Rubicon, was such a flight
  • That neither tongue nor pen could follow it.
  • Round towards Spain it wheeled its legions; then
  • Towards Durazzo, and Pharsalia smote
  • That to the calid Nile was felt the pain.
  • Antandros and the Simois, whence it started,
  • It saw again, and there where Hector lies,
  • And ill for Ptolemy then roused itself.
  • From thence it came like lightning upon Juba;
  • Then wheeled itself again into your West,
  • Where the Pompeian clarion it heard.
  • From what it wrought with the next standard-bearer
  • Brutus and Cassius howl in Hell together,
  • And Modena and Perugia dolent were;
  • Still doth the mournful Cleopatra weep
  • Because thereof, who, fleeing from before it,
  • Took from the adder sudden and black death.
  • With him it ran even to the Red Sea shore;
  • With him it placed the world in so great peace,
  • That unto Janus was his temple closed.
  • But what the standard that has made me speak
  • Achieved before, and after should achieve
  • Throughout the mortal realm that lies beneath it,
  • Becometh in appearance mean and dim,
  • If in the hand of the third Caesar seen
  • With eye unclouded and affection pure,
  • Because the living Justice that inspires me
  • Granted it, in the hand of him I speak of,
  • The glory of doing vengeance for its wrath.
  • Now here attend to what I answer thee;
  • Later it ran with Titus to do vengeance
  • Upon the vengeance of the ancient sin.
  • And when the tooth of Lombardy had bitten
  • The Holy Church, then underneath its wings
  • Did Charlemagne victorious succor her.
  • Now hast thou power to judge of such as those
  • Whom I accused above, and of their crimes,
  • Which are the cause of all your miseries.
  • To the public standard one the yellow lilies
  • Opposes, the other claims it for a party,
  • So that ’tis hard to see which sins the most.
  • Let, let the Ghibellines ply their handicraft
  • Beneath some other standard; for this ever
  • Ill follows he who it and justice parts.
  • And let not this new Charles e’er strike it down,
  • He and his Guelfs, but let him fear the talons
  • That from a nobler lion stripped the fell.
  • Already oftentimes the sons have wept
  • The father’s crime; and let him not believe
  • That God will change His scutcheon for the lilies.
  • This little planet doth adorn itself
  • With the good spirits that have active been,
  • That fame and honour might come after them;
  • And whensoever the desires mount thither,
  • Thus deviating, must perforce the rays
  • Of the true love less vividly mount upward.
  • But in commensuration of our wages
  • With our desert is portion of our joy,
  • Because we see them neither less nor greater.
  • Herein doth living Justice sweeten so
  • Affection in us, that for evermore
  • It cannot warp to any iniquity.
  • Voices diverse make up sweet melodies;
  • So in this life of ours the seats diverse
  • Render sweet harmony among these spheres;
  • And in the compass of this present pearl
  • Shineth the sheen of Romeo, of whom
  • The grand and beauteous work was ill rewarded.
  • But the Provencals who against him wrought,
  • They have not laughed, and therefore ill goes he
  • Who makes his hurt of the good deeds of others.
  • Four daughters, and each one of them a queen,
  • Had Raymond Berenger, and this for him
  • Did Romeo, a poor man and a pilgrim;
  • And then malicious words incited him
  • To summon to a reckoning this just man,
  • Who rendered to him seven and five for ten.
  • Then he departed poor and stricken in years,
  • And if the world could know the heart he had,
  • In begging bit by bit his livelihood,
  • Though much it laud him, it would laud him more.”
  • Paradiso: Canto VII
  • “Osanna sanctus Deus Sabaoth,
  • Superillustrans claritate tua
  • Felices ignes horum malahoth!”
  • In this wise, to his melody returning,
  • This substance, upon which a double light
  • Doubles itself, was seen by me to sing,
  • And to their dance this and the others moved,
  • And in the manner of swift-hurrying sparks
  • Veiled themselves from me with a sudden distance.
  • Doubting was I, and saying, “Tell her, tell her,”
  • Within me, “tell her,” saying, “tell my Lady,”
  • Who slakes my thirst with her sweet effluences;
  • And yet that reverence which doth lord it over
  • The whole of me only by B and ICE,
  • Bowed me again like unto one who drowses.
  • Short while did Beatrice endure me thus;
  • And she began, lighting me with a smile
  • Such as would make one happy in the fire:
  • “According to infallible advisement,
  • After what manner a just vengeance justly
  • Could be avenged has put thee upon thinking,
  • But I will speedily thy mind unloose;
  • And do thou listen, for these words of mine
  • Of a great doctrine will a present make thee.
  • By not enduring on the power that wills
  • Curb for his good, that man who ne’er was born,
  • Damning himself damned all his progeny;
  • Whereby the human species down below
  • Lay sick for many centuries in great error,
  • Till to descend it pleased the Word of God
  • To where the nature, which from its own Maker
  • Estranged itself, he joined to him in person
  • By the sole act of his eternal love.
  • Now unto what is said direct thy sight;
  • This nature when united to its Maker,
  • Such as created, was sincere and good;
  • But by itself alone was banished forth
  • From Paradise, because it turned aside
  • Out of the way of truth and of its life.
  • Therefore the penalty the cross held out,
  • If measured by the nature thus assumed,
  • None ever yet with so great justice stung,
  • And none was ever of so great injustice,
  • Considering who the Person was that suffered,
  • Within whom such a nature was contracted.
  • From one act therefore issued things diverse;
  • To God and to the Jews one death was pleasing;
  • Earth trembled at it and the Heaven was opened.
  • It should no longer now seem difficult
  • To thee, when it is said that a just vengeance
  • By a just court was afterward avenged.
  • But now do I behold thy mind entangled
  • From thought to thought within a knot, from which
  • With great desire it waits to free itself.
  • Thou sayest, ‘Well discern I what I hear;
  • But it is hidden from me why God willed
  • For our redemption only this one mode.’
  • Buried remaineth, brother, this decree
  • Unto the eyes of every one whose nature
  • Is in the flame of love not yet adult.
  • Verily, inasmuch as at this mark
  • One gazes long and little is discerned,
  • Wherefore this mode was worthiest will I say.
  • Goodness Divine, which from itself doth spurn
  • All envy, burning in itself so sparkles
  • That the eternal beauties it unfolds.
  • Whate’er from this immediately distils
  • Has afterwards no end, for ne’er removed
  • Is its impression when it sets its seal.
  • Whate’er from this immediately rains down
  • Is wholly free, because it is not subject
  • Unto the influences of novel things.
  • The more conformed thereto, the more it pleases;
  • For the blest ardour that irradiates all things
  • In that most like itself is most vivacious.
  • With all of these things has advantaged been
  • The human creature; and if one be wanting,
  • From his nobility he needs must fall.
  • ’Tis sin alone which doth disfranchise him,
  • And render him unlike the Good Supreme,
  • So that he little with its light is blanched,
  • And to his dignity no more returns,
  • Unless he fill up where transgression empties
  • With righteous pains for criminal delights.
  • Your nature when it sinned so utterly
  • In its own seed, out of these dignities
  • Even as out of Paradise was driven,
  • Nor could itself recover, if thou notest
  • With nicest subtilty, by any way,
  • Except by passing one of these two fords:
  • Either that God through clemency alone
  • Had pardon granted, or that man himself
  • Had satisfaction for his folly made.
  • Fix now thine eye deep into the abyss
  • Of the eternal counsel, to my speech
  • As far as may be fastened steadfastly!
  • Man in his limitations had not power
  • To satisfy, not having power to sink
  • In his humility obeying then,
  • Far as he disobeying thought to rise;
  • And for this reason man has been from power
  • Of satisfying by himself excluded.
  • Therefore it God behoved in his own ways
  • Man to restore unto his perfect life,
  • I say in one, or else in both of them.
  • But since the action of the doer is
  • So much more grateful, as it more presents
  • The goodness of the heart from which it issues,
  • Goodness Divine, that doth imprint the world,
  • Has been contented to proceed by each
  • And all its ways to lift you up again;
  • Nor ’twixt the first day and the final night
  • Such high and such magnificent proceeding
  • By one or by the other was or shall be;
  • For God more bounteous was himself to give
  • To make man able to uplift himself,
  • Than if he only of himself had pardoned;
  • And all the other modes were insufficient
  • For justice, were it not the Son of God
  • Himself had humbled to become incarnate.
  • Now, to fill fully each desire of thine,
  • Return I to elucidate one place,
  • In order that thou there mayst see as I do.
  • Thou sayst: ‘I see the air, I see the fire,
  • The water, and the earth, and all their mixtures
  • Come to corruption, and short while endure;
  • And these things notwithstanding were created;’
  • Therefore if that which I have said were true,
  • They should have been secure against corruption.
  • The Angels, brother, and the land sincere
  • In which thou art, created may be called
  • Just as they are in their entire existence;
  • But all the elements which thou hast named,
  • And all those things which out of them are made,
  • By a created virtue are informed.
  • Created was the matter which they have;
  • Created was the informing influence
  • Within these stars that round about them go.
  • The soul of every brute and of the plants
  • By its potential temperament attracts
  • The ray and motion of the holy lights;
  • But your own life immediately inspires
  • Supreme Beneficence, and enamours it
  • So with herself, it evermore desires her.
  • And thou from this mayst argue furthermore
  • Your resurrection, if thou think again
  • How human flesh was fashioned at that time
  • When the first parents both of them were made.”
  • Paradiso: Canto VIII
  • The world used in its peril to believe
  • That the fair Cypria delirious love
  • Rayed out, in the third epicycle turning;
  • Wherefore not only unto her paid honour
  • Of sacrifices and of votive cry
  • The ancient nations in the ancient error,
  • But both Dione honoured they and Cupid,
  • That as her mother, this one as her son,
  • And said that he had sat in Dido’s lap;
  • And they from her, whence I beginning take,
  • Took the denomination of the star
  • That woos the sun, now following, now in front.
  • I was not ware of our ascending to it;
  • But of our being in it gave full faith
  • My Lady whom I saw more beauteous grow.
  • And as within a flame a spark is seen,
  • And as within a voice a voice discerned,
  • When one is steadfast, and one comes and goes,
  • Within that light beheld I other lamps
  • Move in a circle, speeding more and less,
  • Methinks in measure of their inward vision.
  • From a cold cloud descended never winds,
  • Or visible or not, so rapidly
  • They would not laggard and impeded seem
  • To any one who had those lights divine
  • Seen come towards us, leaving the gyration
  • Begun at first in the high Seraphim.
  • And behind those that most in front appeared
  • Sounded “Osanna!” so that never since
  • To hear again was I without desire.
  • Then unto us more nearly one approached,
  • And it alone began: “We all are ready
  • Unto thy pleasure, that thou joy in us.
  • We turn around with the celestial Princes,
  • One gyre and one gyration and one thirst,
  • To whom thou in the world of old didst say,
  • ‘Ye who, intelligent, the third heaven are moving;’
  • And are so full of love, to pleasure thee
  • A little quiet will not be less sweet.”
  • After these eyes of mine themselves had offered
  • Unto my Lady reverently, and she
  • Content and certain of herself had made them,
  • Back to the light they turned, which so great promise
  • Made of itself, and “Say, who art thou?” was
  • My voice, imprinted with a great affection.
  • O how and how much I beheld it grow
  • With the new joy that superadded was
  • Unto its joys, as soon as I had spoken!
  • Thus changed, it said to me: “The world possessed me
  • Short time below; and, if it had been more,
  • Much evil will be which would not have been.
  • My gladness keepeth me concealed from thee,
  • Which rayeth round about me, and doth hide me
  • Like as a creature swathed in its own silk.
  • Much didst thou love me, and thou hadst good reason;
  • For had I been below, I should have shown thee
  • Somewhat beyond the foliage of my love.
  • That left-hand margin, which doth bathe itself
  • In Rhone, when it is mingled with the Sorgue,
  • Me for its lord awaited in due time,
  • And that horn of Ausonia, which is towned
  • With Bari, with Gaeta and Catona,
  • Whence Tronto and Verde in the sea disgorge.
  • Already flashed upon my brow the crown
  • Of that dominion which the Danube waters
  • After the German borders it abandons;
  • And beautiful Trinacria, that is murky
  • ’Twixt Pachino and Peloro, (on the gulf
  • Which greatest scath from Eurus doth receive,)
  • Not through Typhoeus, but through nascent sulphur,
  • Would have awaited her own monarchs still,
  • Through me from Charles descended and from Rudolph,
  • If evil lordship, that exasperates ever
  • The subject populations, had not moved
  • Palermo to the outcry of ‘Death! death!’
  • And if my brother could but this foresee,
  • The greedy poverty of Catalonia
  • Straight would he flee, that it might not molest him;
  • For verily ’tis needful to provide,
  • Through him or other, so that on his bark
  • Already freighted no more freight be placed.
  • His nature, which from liberal covetous
  • Descended, such a soldiery would need
  • As should not care for hoarding in a chest.”
  • “Because I do believe the lofty joy
  • Thy speech infuses into me, my Lord,
  • Where every good thing doth begin and end
  • Thou seest as I see it, the more grateful
  • Is it to me; and this too hold I dear,
  • That gazing upon God thou dost discern it.
  • Glad hast thou made me; so make clear to me,
  • Since speaking thou hast stirred me up to doubt,
  • How from sweet seed can bitter issue forth.”
  • This I to him; and he to me: “If I
  • Can show to thee a truth, to what thou askest
  • Thy face thou’lt hold as thou dost hold thy back.
  • The Good which all the realm thou art ascending
  • Turns and contents, maketh its providence
  • To be a power within these bodies vast;
  • And not alone the natures are foreseen
  • Within the mind that in itself is perfect,
  • But they together with their preservation.
  • For whatsoever thing this bow shoots forth
  • Falls foreordained unto an end foreseen,
  • Even as a shaft directed to its mark.
  • If that were not, the heaven which thou dost walk
  • Would in such manner its effects produce,
  • That they no longer would be arts, but ruins.
  • This cannot be, if the Intelligences
  • That keep these stars in motion are not maimed,
  • And maimed the First that has not made them perfect.
  • Wilt thou this truth have clearer made to thee?”
  • And I: “Not so; for ’tis impossible
  • That nature tire, I see, in what is needful.”
  • Whence he again: “Now say, would it be worse
  • For men on earth were they not citizens?”
  • “Yes,” I replied; “and here I ask no reason.”
  • “And can they be so, if below they live not
  • Diversely unto offices diverse?
  • No, if your master writeth well for you.”
  • So came he with deductions to this point;
  • Then he concluded: “Therefore it behoves
  • The roots of your effects to be diverse.
  • Hence one is Solon born, another Xerxes,
  • Another Melchisedec, and another he
  • Who, flying through the air, his son did lose.
  • Revolving Nature, which a signet is
  • To mortal wax, doth practise well her art,
  • But not one inn distinguish from another;
  • Thence happens it that Esau differeth
  • In seed from Jacob; and Quirinus comes
  • From sire so vile that he is given to Mars.
  • A generated nature its own way
  • Would always make like its progenitors,
  • If Providence divine were not triumphant.
  • Now that which was behind thee is before thee;
  • But that thou know that I with thee am pleased,
  • With a corollary will I mantle thee.
  • Evermore nature, if it fortune find
  • Discordant to it, like each other seed
  • Out of its region, maketh evil thrift;
  • And if the world below would fix its mind
  • On the foundation which is laid by nature,
  • Pursuing that, ’twould have the people good.
  • But you unto religion wrench aside
  • Him who was born to gird him with the sword,
  • And make a king of him who is for sermons;
  • Therefore your footsteps wander from the road.”
  • Paradiso: Canto IX
  • Beautiful Clemence, after that thy Charles
  • Had me enlightened, he narrated to me
  • The treacheries his seed should undergo;
  • But said: “Be still and let the years roll round;”
  • So I can only say, that lamentation
  • Legitimate shall follow on your wrongs.
  • And of that holy light the life already
  • Had to the Sun which fills it turned again,
  • As to that good which for each thing sufficeth.
  • Ah, souls deceived, and creatures impious,
  • Who from such good do turn away your hearts,
  • Directing upon vanity your foreheads!
  • And now, behold, another of those splendours
  • Approached me, and its will to pleasure me
  • It signified by brightening outwardly.
  • The eyes of Beatrice, that fastened were
  • Upon me, as before, of dear assent
  • To my desire assurance gave to me.
  • “Ah, bring swift compensation to my wish,
  • Thou blessed spirit,” I said, “and give me proof
  • That what I think in thee I can reflect!”
  • Whereat the light, that still was new to me,
  • Out of its depths, whence it before was singing,
  • As one delighted to do good, continued:
  • “Within that region of the land depraved
  • Of Italy, that lies between Rialto
  • And fountain-heads of Brenta and of Piava,
  • Rises a hill, and mounts not very high,
  • Wherefrom descended formerly a torch
  • That made upon that region great assault.
  • Out of one root were born both I and it;
  • Cunizza was I called, and here I shine
  • Because the splendour of this star o’ercame me.
  • But gladly to myself the cause I pardon
  • Of my allotment, and it does not grieve me;
  • Which would perhaps seem strong unto your vulgar.
  • Of this so luculent and precious jewel,
  • Which of our heaven is nearest unto me,
  • Great fame remained; and ere it die away
  • This hundredth year shall yet quintupled be.
  • See if man ought to make him excellent,
  • So that another life the first may leave!
  • And thus thinks not the present multitude
  • Shut in by Adige and Tagliamento,
  • Nor yet for being scourged is penitent.
  • But soon ’twill be that Padua in the marsh
  • Will change the water that Vicenza bathes,
  • Because the folk are stubborn against duty;
  • And where the Sile and Cagnano join
  • One lordeth it, and goes with lofty head,
  • For catching whom e’en now the net is making.
  • Feltro moreover of her impious pastor
  • Shall weep the crime, which shall so monstrous be
  • That for the like none ever entered Malta.
  • Ample exceedingly would be the vat
  • That of the Ferrarese could hold the blood,
  • And weary who should weigh it ounce by ounce,
  • Of which this courteous priest shall make a gift
  • To show himself a partisan; and such gifts
  • Will to the living of the land conform.
  • Above us there are mirrors, Thrones you call them,
  • From which shines out on us God Judicant,
  • So that this utterance seems good to us.”
  • Here it was silent, and it had the semblance
  • Of being turned elsewhither, by the wheel
  • On which it entered as it was before.
  • The other joy, already known to me,
  • Became a thing transplendent in my sight,
  • As a fine ruby smitten by the sun.
  • Through joy effulgence is acquired above,
  • As here a smile; but down below, the shade
  • Outwardly darkens, as the mind is sad.
  • “God seeth all things, and in Him, blest spirit,
  • Thy sight is,” said I, “so that never will
  • Of his can possibly from thee be hidden;
  • Thy voice, then, that for ever makes the heavens
  • Glad, with the singing of those holy fires
  • Which of their six wings make themselves a cowl,
  • Wherefore does it not satisfy my longings?
  • Indeed, I would not wait thy questioning
  • If I in thee were as thou art in me.”
  • “The greatest of the valleys where the water
  • Expands itself,” forthwith its words began,
  • “That sea excepted which the earth engarlands,
  • Between discordant shores against the sun
  • Extends so far, that it meridian makes
  • Where it was wont before to make the horizon.
  • I was a dweller on that valley’s shore
  • ’Twixt Ebro and Magra that with journey short
  • Doth from the Tuscan part the Genoese.
  • With the same sunset and same sunrise nearly
  • Sit Buggia and the city whence I was,
  • That with its blood once made the harbour hot.
  • Folco that people called me unto whom
  • My name was known; and now with me this heaven
  • Imprints itself, as I did once with it;
  • For more the daughter of Belus never burned,
  • Offending both Sichaeus and Creusa,
  • Than I, so long as it became my locks,
  • Nor yet that Rodophean, who deluded
  • was by Demophoon, nor yet Alcides,
  • When Iole he in his heart had locked.
  • Yet here is no repenting, but we smile,
  • Not at the fault, which comes not back to mind,
  • But at the power which ordered and foresaw.
  • Here we behold the art that doth adorn
  • With such affection, and the good discover
  • Whereby the world above turns that below.
  • But that thou wholly satisfied mayst bear
  • Thy wishes hence which in this sphere are born,
  • Still farther to proceed behoveth me.
  • Thou fain wouldst know who is within this light
  • That here beside me thus is scintillating,
  • Even as a sunbeam in the limpid water.
  • Then know thou, that within there is at rest
  • Rahab, and being to our order joined,
  • With her in its supremest grade ’tis sealed.
  • Into this heaven, where ends the shadowy cone
  • Cast by your world, before all other souls
  • First of Christ’s triumph was she taken up.
  • Full meet it was to leave her in some heaven,
  • Even as a palm of the high victory
  • Which he acquired with one palm and the other,
  • Because she favoured the first glorious deed
  • Of Joshua upon the Holy Land,
  • That little stirs the memory of the Pope.
  • Thy city, which an offshoot is of him
  • Who first upon his Maker turned his back,
  • And whose ambition is so sorely wept,
  • Brings forth and scatters the accursed flower
  • Which both the sheep and lambs hath led astray
  • Since it has turned the shepherd to a wolf.
  • For this the Evangel and the mighty Doctors
  • Are derelict, and only the Decretals
  • So studied that it shows upon their margins.
  • On this are Pope and Cardinals intent;
  • Their meditations reach not Nazareth,
  • There where his pinions Gabriel unfolded;
  • But Vatican and the other parts elect
  • Of Rome, which have a cemetery been
  • Unto the soldiery that followed Peter
  • Shall soon be free from this adultery.”
  • Paradiso: Canto X
  • Looking into his Son with all the Love
  • Which each of them eternally breathes forth,
  • The Primal and unutterable Power
  • Whate’er before the mind or eye revolves
  • With so much order made, there can be none
  • Who this beholds without enjoying Him.
  • Lift up then, Reader, to the lofty wheels
  • With me thy vision straight unto that part
  • Where the one motion on the other strikes,
  • And there begin to contemplate with joy
  • That Master’s art, who in himself so loves it
  • That never doth his eye depart therefrom.
  • Behold how from that point goes branching off
  • The oblique circle, which conveys the planets,
  • To satisfy the world that calls upon them;
  • And if their pathway were not thus inflected,
  • Much virtue in the heavens would be in vain,
  • And almost every power below here dead.
  • If from the straight line distant more or less
  • Were the departure, much would wanting be
  • Above and underneath of mundane order.
  • Remain now, Reader, still upon thy bench,
  • In thought pursuing that which is foretasted,
  • If thou wouldst jocund be instead of weary.
  • I’ve set before thee; henceforth feed thyself,
  • For to itself diverteth all my care
  • That theme whereof I have been made the scribe.
  • The greatest of the ministers of nature,
  • Who with the power of heaven the world imprints
  • And measures with his light the time for us,
  • With that part which above is called to mind
  • Conjoined, along the spirals was revolving,
  • Where each time earlier he presents himself;
  • And I was with him; but of the ascending
  • I was not conscious, saving as a man
  • Of a first thought is conscious ere it come;
  • And Beatrice, she who is seen to pass
  • From good to better, and so suddenly
  • That not by time her action is expressed,
  • How lucent in herself must she have been!
  • And what was in the sun, wherein I entered,
  • Apparent not by colour but by light,
  • I, though I call on genius, art, and practice,
  • Cannot so tell that it could be imagined;
  • Believe one can, and let him long to see it.
  • And if our fantasies too lowly are
  • For altitude so great, it is no marvel,
  • Since o’er the sun was never eye could go.
  • Such in this place was the fourth family
  • Of the high Father, who forever sates it,
  • Showing how he breathes forth and how begets.
  • And Beatrice began: “Give thanks, give thanks
  • Unto the Sun of Angels, who to this
  • Sensible one has raised thee by his grace!”
  • Never was heart of mortal so disposed
  • To worship, nor to give itself to God
  • With all its gratitude was it so ready,
  • As at those words did I myself become;
  • And all my love was so absorbed in Him,
  • That in oblivion Beatrice was eclipsed.
  • Nor this displeased her; but she smiled at it
  • So that the splendour of her laughing eyes
  • My single mind on many things divided.
  • Lights many saw I, vivid and triumphant,
  • Make us a centre and themselves a circle,
  • More sweet in voice than luminous in aspect.
  • Thus girt about the daughter of Latona
  • We sometimes see, when pregnant is the air,
  • So that it holds the thread which makes her zone.
  • Within the court of Heaven, whence I return,
  • Are many jewels found, so fair and precious
  • They cannot be transported from the realm;
  • And of them was the singing of those lights.
  • Who takes not wings that he may fly up thither,
  • The tidings thence may from the dumb await!
  • As soon as singing thus those burning suns
  • Had round about us whirled themselves three times,
  • Like unto stars neighbouring the steadfast poles,
  • Ladies they seemed, not from the dance released,
  • But who stop short, in silence listening
  • Till they have gathered the new melody.
  • And within one I heard beginning: “When
  • The radiance of grace, by which is kindled
  • True love, and which thereafter grows by loving,
  • Within thee multiplied is so resplendent
  • That it conducts thee upward by that stair,
  • Where without reascending none descends,
  • Who should deny the wine out of his vial
  • Unto thy thirst, in liberty were not
  • Except as water which descends not seaward.
  • Fain wouldst thou know with what plants is enflowered
  • This garland that encircles with delight
  • The Lady fair who makes thee strong for heaven.
  • Of the lambs was I of the holy flock
  • Which Dominic conducteth by a road
  • Where well one fattens if he strayeth not.
  • He who is nearest to me on the right
  • My brother and master was; and he Albertus
  • Is of Cologne, I Thomas of Aquinum.
  • If thou of all the others wouldst be certain,
  • Follow behind my speaking with thy sight
  • Upward along the blessed garland turning.
  • That next effulgence issues from the smile
  • Of Gratian, who assisted both the courts
  • In such wise that it pleased in Paradise.
  • The other which near by adorns our choir
  • That Peter was who, e’en as the poor widow,
  • Offered his treasure unto Holy Church.
  • The fifth light, that among us is the fairest,
  • Breathes forth from such a love, that all the world
  • Below is greedy to learn tidings of it.
  • Within it is the lofty mind, where knowledge
  • So deep was put, that, if the true be true,
  • To see so much there never rose a second.
  • Thou seest next the lustre of that taper,
  • Which in the flesh below looked most within
  • The angelic nature and its ministry.
  • Within that other little light is smiling
  • The advocate of the Christian centuries,
  • Out of whose rhetoric Augustine was furnished.
  • Now if thou trainest thy mind’s eye along
  • From light to light pursuant of my praise,
  • With thirst already of the eighth thou waitest.
  • By seeing every good therein exults
  • The sainted soul, which the fallacious world
  • Makes manifest to him who listeneth well;
  • The body whence ’twas hunted forth is lying
  • Down in Cieldauro, and from martyrdom
  • And banishment it came unto this peace.
  • See farther onward flame the burning breath
  • Of Isidore, of Beda, and of Richard
  • Who was in contemplation more than man.
  • This, whence to me returneth thy regard,
  • The light is of a spirit unto whom
  • In his grave meditations death seemed slow.
  • It is the light eternal of Sigier,
  • Who, reading lectures in the Street of Straw,
  • Did syllogize invidious verities.”
  • Then, as a horologe that calleth us
  • What time the Bride of God is rising up
  • With matins to her Spouse that he may love her,
  • Wherein one part the other draws and urges,
  • Ting! ting! resounding with so sweet a note,
  • That swells with love the spirit well disposed,
  • Thus I beheld the glorious wheel move round,
  • And render voice to voice, in modulation
  • And sweetness that can not be comprehended,
  • Excepting there where joy is made eternal.
  • Paradiso: Canto XI
  • O Thou insensate care of mortal men,
  • How inconclusive are the syllogisms
  • That make thee beat thy wings in downward flight!
  • One after laws and one to aphorisms
  • Was going, and one following the priesthood,
  • And one to reign by force or sophistry,
  • And one in theft, and one in state affairs,
  • One in the pleasures of the flesh involved
  • Wearied himself, one gave himself to ease;
  • When I, from all these things emancipate,
  • With Beatrice above there in the Heavens
  • With such exceeding glory was received!
  • When each one had returned unto that point
  • Within the circle where it was before,
  • It stood as in a candlestick a candle;
  • And from within the effulgence which at first
  • Had spoken unto me, I heard begin
  • Smiling while it more luminous became:
  • “Even as I am kindled in its ray,
  • So, looking into the Eternal Light,
  • The occasion of thy thoughts I apprehend.
  • Thou doubtest, and wouldst have me to resift
  • In language so extended and so open
  • My speech, that to thy sense it may be plain,
  • Where just before I said, ‘where well one fattens,’
  • And where I said, ‘there never rose a second;’
  • And here ’tis needful we distinguish well.
  • The Providence, which governeth the world
  • With counsel, wherein all created vision
  • Is vanquished ere it reach unto the bottom,
  • (So that towards her own Beloved might go
  • The bride of Him who, uttering a loud cry,
  • Espoused her with his consecrated blood,
  • Self-confident and unto Him more faithful,)
  • Two Princes did ordain in her behoof,
  • Which on this side and that might be her guide.
  • The one was all seraphical in ardour;
  • The other by his wisdom upon earth
  • A splendour was of light cherubical.
  • One will I speak of, for of both is spoken
  • In praising one, whichever may be taken,
  • Because unto one end their labours were.
  • Between Tupino and the stream that falls
  • Down from the hill elect of blessed Ubald,
  • A fertile slope of lofty mountain hangs,
  • From which Perugia feels the cold and heat
  • Through Porta Sole, and behind it weep
  • Gualdo and Nocera their grievous yoke.
  • From out that slope, there where it breaketh most
  • Its steepness, rose upon the world a sun
  • As this one does sometimes from out the Ganges;
  • Therefore let him who speaketh of that place,
  • Say not Ascesi, for he would say little,
  • But Orient, if he properly would speak.
  • He was not yet far distant from his rising
  • Before he had begun to make the earth
  • Some comfort from his mighty virtue feel.
  • For he in youth his father’s wrath incurred
  • For certain Dame, to whom, as unto death,
  • The gate of pleasure no one doth unlock;
  • And was before his spiritual court
  • ‘Et coram patre’ unto her united;
  • Then day by day more fervently he loved her.
  • She, reft of her first husband, scorned, obscure,
  • One thousand and one hundred years and more,
  • Waited without a suitor till he came.
  • Naught it availed to hear, that with Amyclas
  • Found her unmoved at sounding of his voice
  • He who struck terror into all the world;
  • Naught it availed being constant and undaunted,
  • So that, when Mary still remained below,
  • She mounted up with Christ upon the cross.
  • But that too darkly I may not proceed,
  • Francis and Poverty for these two lovers
  • Take thou henceforward in my speech diffuse.
  • Their concord and their joyous semblances,
  • The love, the wonder, and the sweet regard,
  • They made to be the cause of holy thoughts;
  • So much so that the venerable Bernard
  • First bared his feet, and after so great peace
  • Ran, and, in running, thought himself too slow.
  • O wealth unknown! O veritable good!
  • Giles bares his feet, and bares his feet Sylvester
  • Behind the bridegroom, so doth please the bride!
  • Then goes his way that father and that master,
  • He and his Lady and that family
  • Which now was girding on the humble cord;
  • Nor cowardice of heart weighed down his brow
  • At being son of Peter Bernardone,
  • Nor for appearing marvellously scorned;
  • But regally his hard determination
  • To Innocent he opened, and from him
  • Received the primal seal upon his Order.
  • After the people mendicant increased
  • Behind this man, whose admirable life
  • Better in glory of the heavens were sung,
  • Incoronated with a second crown
  • Was through Honorius by the Eternal Spirit
  • The holy purpose of this Archimandrite.
  • And when he had, through thirst of martyrdom,
  • In the proud presence of the Sultan preached
  • Christ and the others who came after him,
  • And, finding for conversion too unripe
  • The folk, and not to tarry there in vain,
  • Returned to fruit of the Italic grass,
  • On the rude rock ’twixt Tiber and the Arno
  • From Christ did he receive the final seal,
  • Which during two whole years his members bore.
  • When He, who chose him unto so much good,
  • Was pleased to draw him up to the reward
  • That he had merited by being lowly,
  • Unto his friars, as to the rightful heirs,
  • His most dear Lady did he recommend,
  • And bade that they should love her faithfully;
  • And from her bosom the illustrious soul
  • Wished to depart, returning to its realm,
  • And for its body wished no other bier.
  • Think now what man was he, who was a fit
  • Companion over the high seas to keep
  • The bark of Peter to its proper bearings.
  • And this man was our Patriarch; hence whoever
  • Doth follow him as he commands can see
  • That he is laden with good merchandise.
  • But for new pasturage his flock has grown
  • So greedy, that it is impossible
  • They be not scattered over fields diverse;
  • And in proportion as his sheep remote
  • And vagabond go farther off from him,
  • More void of milk return they to the fold.
  • Verily some there are that fear a hurt,
  • And keep close to the shepherd; but so few,
  • That little cloth doth furnish forth their hoods.
  • Now if my utterance be not indistinct,
  • If thine own hearing hath attentive been,
  • If thou recall to mind what I have said,
  • In part contented shall thy wishes be;
  • For thou shalt see the plant that’s chipped away,
  • And the rebuke that lieth in the words,
  • ‘Where well one fattens, if he strayeth not.’”
  • Paradiso: Canto XII
  • Soon as the blessed flame had taken up
  • The final word to give it utterance,
  • Began the holy millstone to revolve,
  • And in its gyre had not turned wholly round,
  • Before another in a ring enclosed it,
  • And motion joined to motion, song to song;
  • Song that as greatly doth transcend our Muses,
  • Our Sirens, in those dulcet clarions,
  • As primal splendour that which is reflected.
  • And as are spanned athwart a tender cloud
  • Two rainbows parallel and like in colour,
  • When Juno to her handmaid gives command,
  • (The one without born of the one within,
  • Like to the speaking of that vagrant one
  • Whom love consumed as doth the sun the vapours,)
  • And make the people here, through covenant
  • God set with Noah, presageful of the world
  • That shall no more be covered with a flood,
  • In such wise of those sempiternal roses
  • The garlands twain encompassed us about,
  • And thus the outer to the inner answered.
  • After the dance, and other grand rejoicings,
  • Both of the singing, and the flaming forth
  • Effulgence with effulgence blithe and tender,
  • Together, at once, with one accord had stopped,
  • (Even as the eyes, that, as volition moves them,
  • Must needs together shut and lift themselves,)
  • Out of the heart of one of the new lights
  • There came a voice, that needle to the star
  • Made me appear in turning thitherward.
  • And it began: “The love that makes me fair
  • Draws me to speak about the other leader,
  • By whom so well is spoken here of mine.
  • ’Tis right, where one is, to bring in the other,
  • That, as they were united in their warfare,
  • Together likewise may their glory shine.
  • The soldiery of Christ, which it had cost
  • So dear to arm again, behind the standard
  • Moved slow and doubtful and in numbers few,
  • When the Emperor who reigneth evermore
  • Provided for the host that was in peril,
  • Through grace alone and not that it was worthy;
  • And, as was said, he to his Bride brought succour
  • With champions twain, at whose deed, at whose word
  • The straggling people were together drawn.
  • Within that region where the sweet west wind
  • Rises to open the new leaves, wherewith
  • Europe is seen to clothe herself afresh,
  • Not far off from the beating of the waves,
  • Behind which in his long career the sun
  • Sometimes conceals himself from every man,
  • Is situate the fortunate Calahorra,
  • Under protection of the mighty shield
  • In which the Lion subject is and sovereign.
  • Therein was born the amorous paramour
  • Of Christian Faith, the athlete consecrate,
  • Kind to his own and cruel to his foes;
  • And when it was created was his mind
  • Replete with such a living energy,
  • That in his mother her it made prophetic.
  • As soon as the espousals were complete
  • Between him and the Faith at holy font,
  • Where they with mutual safety dowered each other,
  • The woman, who for him had given assent,
  • Saw in a dream the admirable fruit
  • That issue would from him and from his heirs;
  • And that he might be construed as he was,
  • A spirit from this place went forth to name him
  • With His possessive whose he wholly was.
  • Dominic was he called; and him I speak of
  • Even as of the husbandman whom Christ
  • Elected to his garden to assist him.
  • Envoy and servant sooth he seemed of Christ,
  • For the first love made manifest in him
  • Was the first counsel that was given by Christ.
  • Silent and wakeful many a time was he
  • Discovered by his nurse upon the ground,
  • As if he would have said, ‘For this I came.’
  • O thou his father, Felix verily!
  • O thou his mother, verily Joanna,
  • If this, interpreted, means as is said!
  • Not for the world which people toil for now
  • In following Ostiense and Taddeo,
  • But through his longing after the true manna,
  • He in short time became so great a teacher,
  • That he began to go about the vineyard,
  • Which fadeth soon, if faithless be the dresser;
  • And of the See, (that once was more benignant
  • Unto the righteous poor, not through itself,
  • But him who sits there and degenerates,)
  • Not to dispense or two or three for six,
  • Not any fortune of first vacancy,
  • ‘Non decimas quae sunt pauperum Dei,’
  • He asked for, but against the errant world
  • Permission to do battle for the seed,
  • Of which these four and twenty plants surround thee.
  • Then with the doctrine and the will together,
  • With office apostolical he moved,
  • Like torrent which some lofty vein out-presses;
  • And in among the shoots heretical
  • His impetus with greater fury smote,
  • Wherever the resistance was the greatest.
  • Of him were made thereafter divers runnels,
  • Whereby the garden catholic is watered,
  • So that more living its plantations stand.
  • If such the one wheel of the Biga was,
  • In which the Holy Church itself defended
  • And in the field its civic battle won,
  • Truly full manifest should be to thee
  • The excellence of the other, unto whom
  • Thomas so courteous was before my coming.
  • But still the orbit, which the highest part
  • Of its circumference made, is derelict,
  • So that the mould is where was once the crust.
  • His family, that had straight forward moved
  • With feet upon his footprints, are turned round
  • So that they set the point upon the heel.
  • And soon aware they will be of the harvest
  • Of this bad husbandry, when shall the tares
  • Complain the granary is taken from them.
  • Yet say I, he who searcheth leaf by leaf
  • Our volume through, would still some page discover
  • Where he could read, ‘I am as I am wont.’
  • ’Twill not be from Casal nor Acquasparta,
  • From whence come such unto the written word
  • That one avoids it, and the other narrows.
  • Bonaventura of Bagnoregio’s life
  • Am I, who always in great offices
  • Postponed considerations sinister.
  • Here are Illuminato and Agostino,
  • Who of the first barefooted beggars were
  • That with the cord the friends of God became.
  • Hugh of Saint Victor is among them here,
  • And Peter Mangiador, and Peter of Spain,
  • Who down below in volumes twelve is shining;
  • Nathan the seer, and metropolitan
  • Chrysostom, and Anselmus, and Donatus
  • Who deigned to lay his hand to the first art;
  • Here is Rabanus, and beside me here
  • Shines the Calabrian Abbot Joachim,
  • He with the spirit of prophecy endowed.
  • To celebrate so great a paladin
  • Have moved me the impassioned courtesy
  • And the discreet discourses of Friar Thomas,
  • And with me they have moved this company.”
  • Paradiso: Canto XIII
  • Let him imagine, who would well conceive
  • What now I saw, and let him while I speak
  • Retain the image as a steadfast rock,
  • The fifteen stars, that in their divers regions
  • The sky enliven with a light so great
  • That it transcends all clusters of the air;
  • Let him the Wain imagine unto which
  • Our vault of heaven sufficeth night and day,
  • So that in turning of its pole it fails not;
  • Let him the mouth imagine of the horn
  • That in the point beginneth of the axis
  • Round about which the primal wheel revolves,—
  • To have fashioned of themselves two signs in heaven,
  • Like unto that which Minos’ daughter made,
  • The moment when she felt the frost of death;
  • And one to have its rays within the other,
  • And both to whirl themselves in such a manner
  • That one should forward go, the other backward;
  • And he will have some shadowing forth of that
  • True constellation and the double dance
  • That circled round the point at which I was;
  • Because it is as much beyond our wont,
  • As swifter than the motion of the Chiana
  • Moveth the heaven that all the rest outspeeds.
  • There sang they neither Bacchus, nor Apollo,
  • But in the divine nature Persons three,
  • And in one person the divine and human.
  • The singing and the dance fulfilled their measure,
  • And unto us those holy lights gave need,
  • Growing in happiness from care to care.
  • Then broke the silence of those saints concordant
  • The light in which the admirable life
  • Of God’s own mendicant was told to me,
  • And said: “Now that one straw is trodden out
  • Now that its seed is garnered up already,
  • Sweet love invites me to thresh out the other.
  • Into that bosom, thou believest, whence
  • Was drawn the rib to form the beauteous cheek
  • Whose taste to all the world is costing dear,
  • And into that which, by the lance transfixed,
  • Before and since, such satisfaction made
  • That it weighs down the balance of all sin,
  • Whate’er of light it has to human nature
  • Been lawful to possess was all infused
  • By the same power that both of them created;
  • And hence at what I said above dost wonder,
  • When I narrated that no second had
  • The good which in the fifth light is enclosed.
  • Now ope thine eyes to what I answer thee,
  • And thou shalt see thy creed and my discourse
  • Fit in the truth as centre in a circle.
  • That which can die, and that which dieth not,
  • Are nothing but the splendour of the idea
  • Which by his love our Lord brings into being;
  • Because that living Light, which from its fount
  • Effulgent flows, so that it disunites not
  • From Him nor from the Love in them intrined,
  • Through its own goodness reunites its rays
  • In nine subsistences, as in a mirror,
  • Itself eternally remaining One.
  • Thence it descends to the last potencies,
  • Downward from act to act becoming such
  • That only brief contingencies it makes;
  • And these contingencies I hold to be
  • Things generated, which the heaven produces
  • By its own motion, with seed and without.
  • Neither their wax, nor that which tempers it,
  • Remains immutable, and hence beneath
  • The ideal signet more and less shines through;
  • Therefore it happens, that the selfsame tree
  • After its kind bears worse and better fruit,
  • And ye are born with characters diverse.
  • If in perfection tempered were the wax,
  • And were the heaven in its supremest virtue,
  • The brilliance of the seal would all appear;
  • But nature gives it evermore deficient,
  • In the like manner working as the artist,
  • Who has the skill of art and hand that trembles.
  • If then the fervent Love, the Vision clear,
  • Of primal Virtue do dispose and seal,
  • Perfection absolute is there acquired.
  • Thus was of old the earth created worthy
  • Of all and every animal perfection;
  • And thus the Virgin was impregnate made;
  • So that thine own opinion I commend,
  • That human nature never yet has been,
  • Nor will be, what it was in those two persons.
  • Now if no farther forth I should proceed,
  • ‘Then in what way was he without a peer?’
  • Would be the first beginning of thy words.
  • But, that may well appear what now appears not,
  • Think who he was, and what occasion moved him
  • To make request, when it was told him, ‘Ask.’
  • I’ve not so spoken that thou canst not see
  • Clearly he was a king who asked for wisdom,
  • That he might be sufficiently a king;
  • ’Twas not to know the number in which are
  • The motors here above, or if ‘necesse’
  • With a contingent e’er ‘necesse’ make,
  • ‘Non si est dare primum motum esse,’
  • Or if in semicircle can be made
  • Triangle so that it have no right angle.
  • Whence, if thou notest this and what I said,
  • A regal prudence is that peerless seeing
  • In which the shaft of my intention strikes.
  • And if on ‘rose’ thou turnest thy clear eyes,
  • Thou’lt see that it has reference alone
  • To kings who’re many, and the good are rare.
  • With this distinction take thou what I said,
  • And thus it can consist with thy belief
  • Of the first father and of our Delight.
  • And lead shall this be always to thy feet,
  • To make thee, like a weary man, move slowly
  • Both to the Yes and No thou seest not;
  • For very low among the fools is he
  • Who affirms without distinction, or denies,
  • As well in one as in the other case;
  • Because it happens that full often bends
  • Current opinion in the false direction,
  • And then the feelings bind the intellect.
  • Far more than uselessly he leaves the shore,
  • (Since he returneth not the same he went,)
  • Who fishes for the truth, and has no skill;
  • And in the world proofs manifest thereof
  • Parmenides, Melissus, Brissus are,
  • And many who went on and knew not whither;
  • Thus did Sabellius, Arius, and those fools
  • Who have been even as swords unto the Scriptures
  • In rendering distorted their straight faces.
  • Nor yet shall people be too confident
  • In judging, even as he is who doth count
  • The corn in field or ever it be ripe.
  • For I have seen all winter long the thorn
  • First show itself intractable and fierce,
  • And after bear the rose upon its top;
  • And I have seen a ship direct and swift
  • Run o’er the sea throughout its course entire,
  • To perish at the harbour’s mouth at last.
  • Let not Dame Bertha nor Ser Martin think,
  • Seeing one steal, another offering make,
  • To see them in the arbitrament divine;
  • For one may rise, and fall the other may.”
  • Paradiso: Canto XIV
  • From centre unto rim, from rim to centre,
  • In a round vase the water moves itself,
  • As from without ’tis struck or from within.
  • Into my mind upon a sudden dropped
  • What I am saying, at the moment when
  • Silent became the glorious life of Thomas,
  • Because of the resemblance that was born
  • Of his discourse and that of Beatrice,
  • Whom, after him, it pleased thus to begin:
  • “This man has need (and does not tell you so,
  • Nor with the voice, nor even in his thought)
  • Of going to the root of one truth more.
  • Declare unto him if the light wherewith
  • Blossoms your substance shall remain with you
  • Eternally the same that it is now;
  • And if it do remain, say in what manner,
  • After ye are again made visible,
  • It can be that it injure not your sight.”
  • As by a greater gladness urged and drawn
  • They who are dancing in a ring sometimes
  • Uplift their voices and their motions quicken;
  • So, at that orison devout and prompt,
  • The holy circles a new joy displayed
  • In their revolving and their wondrous song.
  • Whoso lamenteth him that here we die
  • That we may live above, has never there
  • Seen the refreshment of the eternal rain.
  • The One and Two and Three who ever liveth,
  • And reigneth ever in Three and Two and One,
  • Not circumscribed and all things circumscribing,
  • Three several times was chanted by each one
  • Among those spirits, with such melody
  • That for all merit it were just reward;
  • And, in the lustre most divine of all
  • The lesser ring, I heard a modest voice,
  • Such as perhaps the Angel’s was to Mary,
  • Answer: “As long as the festivity
  • Of Paradise shall be, so long our love
  • Shall radiate round about us such a vesture.
  • Its brightness is proportioned to the ardour,
  • The ardour to the vision; and the vision
  • Equals what grace it has above its worth.
  • When, glorious and sanctified, our flesh
  • Is reassumed, then shall our persons be
  • More pleasing by their being all complete;
  • For will increase whate’er bestows on us
  • Of light gratuitous the Good Supreme,
  • Light which enables us to look on Him;
  • Therefore the vision must perforce increase,
  • Increase the ardour which from that is kindled,
  • Increase the radiance which from this proceeds.
  • But even as a coal that sends forth flame,
  • And by its vivid whiteness overpowers it
  • So that its own appearance it maintains,
  • Thus the effulgence that surrounds us now
  • Shall be o’erpowered in aspect by the flesh,
  • Which still to-day the earth doth cover up;
  • Nor can so great a splendour weary us,
  • For strong will be the organs of the body
  • To everything which hath the power to please us.”
  • So sudden and alert appeared to me
  • Both one and the other choir to say Amen,
  • That well they showed desire for their dead bodies;
  • Nor sole for them perhaps, but for the mothers,
  • The fathers, and the rest who had been dear
  • Or ever they became eternal flames.
  • And lo! all round about of equal brightness
  • Arose a lustre over what was there,
  • Like an horizon that is clearing up.
  • And as at rise of early eve begin
  • Along the welkin new appearances,
  • So that the sight seems real and unreal,
  • It seemed to me that new subsistences
  • Began there to be seen, and make a circle
  • Outside the other two circumferences.
  • O very sparkling of the Holy Spirit,
  • How sudden and incandescent it became
  • Unto mine eyes, that vanquished bore it not!
  • But Beatrice so beautiful and smiling
  • Appeared to me, that with the other sights
  • That followed not my memory I must leave her.
  • Then to uplift themselves mine eyes resumed
  • The power, and I beheld myself translated
  • To higher salvation with my Lady only.
  • Well was I ware that I was more uplifted
  • By the enkindled smiling of the star,
  • That seemed to me more ruddy than its wont.
  • With all my heart, and in that dialect
  • Which is the same in all, such holocaust
  • To God I made as the new grace beseemed;
  • And not yet from my bosom was exhausted
  • The ardour of sacrifice, before I knew
  • This offering was accepted and auspicious;
  • For with so great a lustre and so red
  • Splendours appeared to me in twofold rays,
  • I said: “O Helios who dost so adorn them!”
  • Even as distinct with less and greater lights
  • Glimmers between the two poles of the world
  • The Galaxy that maketh wise men doubt,
  • Thus constellated in the depths of Mars,
  • Those rays described the venerable sign
  • That quadrants joining in a circle make.
  • Here doth my memory overcome my genius;
  • For on that cross as levin gleamed forth Christ,
  • So that I cannot find ensample worthy;
  • But he who takes his cross and follows Christ
  • Again will pardon me what I omit,
  • Seeing in that aurora lighten Christ.
  • From horn to horn, and ’twixt the top and base,
  • Lights were in motion, brightly scintillating
  • As they together met and passed each other;
  • Thus level and aslant and swift and slow
  • We here behold, renewing still the sight,
  • The particles of bodies long and short,
  • Across the sunbeam move, wherewith is listed
  • Sometimes the shade, which for their own defence
  • People with cunning and with art contrive.
  • And as a lute and harp, accordant strung
  • With many strings, a dulcet tinkling make
  • To him by whom the notes are not distinguished,
  • So from the lights that there to me appeared
  • Upgathered through the cross a melody,
  • Which rapt me, not distinguishing the hymn.
  • Well was I ware it was of lofty laud,
  • Because there came to me, “Arise and conquer!”
  • As unto him who hears and comprehends not.
  • So much enamoured I became therewith,
  • That until then there was not anything
  • That e’er had fettered me with such sweet bonds.
  • Perhaps my word appears somewhat too bold,
  • Postponing the delight of those fair eyes,
  • Into which gazing my desire has rest;
  • But who bethinks him that the living seals
  • Of every beauty grow in power ascending,
  • And that I there had not turned round to those,
  • Can me excuse, if I myself accuse
  • To excuse myself, and see that I speak truly:
  • For here the holy joy is not disclosed,
  • Because ascending it becomes more pure.
  • Paradiso: Canto XV
  • A will benign, in which reveals itself
  • Ever the love that righteously inspires,
  • As in the iniquitous, cupidity,
  • Silence imposed upon that dulcet lyre,
  • And quieted the consecrated chords,
  • That Heaven’s right hand doth tighten and relax.
  • How unto just entreaties shall be deaf
  • Those substances, which, to give me desire
  • Of praying them, with one accord grew silent?
  • ’Tis well that without end he should lament,
  • Who for the love of thing that doth not last
  • Eternally despoils him of that love!
  • As through the pure and tranquil evening air
  • There shoots from time to time a sudden fire,
  • Moving the eyes that steadfast were before,
  • And seems to be a star that changeth place,
  • Except that in the part where it is kindled
  • Nothing is missed, and this endureth little;
  • So from the horn that to the right extends
  • Unto that cross’s foot there ran a star
  • Out of the constellation shining there;
  • Nor was the gem dissevered from its ribbon,
  • But down the radiant fillet ran along,
  • So that fire seemed it behind alabaster.
  • Thus piteous did Anchises’ shade reach forward,
  • If any faith our greatest Muse deserve,
  • When in Elysium he his son perceived.
  • “O sanguis meus, O superinfusa
  • Gratia Dei, sicut tibi, cui
  • Bis unquam Coeli janua reclusa?”
  • Thus that effulgence; whence I gave it heed;
  • Then round unto my Lady turned my sight,
  • And on this side and that was stupefied;
  • For in her eyes was burning such a smile
  • That with mine own methought I touched the bottom
  • Both of my grace and of my Paradise!
  • Then, pleasant to the hearing and the sight,
  • The spirit joined to its beginning things
  • I understood not, so profound it spake;
  • Nor did it hide itself from me by choice,
  • But by necessity; for its conception
  • Above the mark of mortals set itself.
  • And when the bow of burning sympathy
  • Was so far slackened, that its speech descended
  • Towards the mark of our intelligence,
  • The first thing that was understood by me
  • Was “Benedight be Thou, O Trine and One,
  • Who hast unto my seed so courteous been!”
  • And it continued: “Hunger long and grateful,
  • Drawn from the reading of the mighty volume
  • Wherein is never changed the white nor dark,
  • Thou hast appeased, my son, within this light
  • In which I speak to thee, by grace of her
  • Who to this lofty flight with plumage clothed thee.
  • Thou thinkest that to me thy thought doth pass
  • From Him who is the first, as from the unit,
  • If that be known, ray out the five and six;
  • And therefore who I am thou askest not,
  • And why I seem more joyous unto thee
  • Than any other of this gladsome crowd.
  • Thou think’st the truth; because the small and great
  • Of this existence look into the mirror
  • Wherein, before thou think’st, thy thought thou showest.
  • But that the sacred love, in which I watch
  • With sight perpetual, and which makes me thirst
  • With sweet desire, may better be fulfilled,
  • Now let thy voice secure and frank and glad
  • Proclaim the wishes, the desire proclaim,
  • To which my answer is decreed already.”
  • To Beatrice I turned me, and she heard
  • Before I spake, and smiled to me a sign,
  • That made the wings of my desire increase;
  • Then in this wise began I: “Love and knowledge,
  • When on you dawned the first Equality,
  • Of the same weight for each of you became;
  • For in the Sun, which lighted you and burned
  • With heat and radiance, they so equal are,
  • That all similitudes are insufficient.
  • But among mortals will and argument,
  • For reason that to you is manifest,
  • Diversely feathered in their pinions are.
  • Whence I, who mortal am, feel in myself
  • This inequality; so give not thanks,
  • Save in my heart, for this paternal welcome.
  • Truly do I entreat thee, living topaz!
  • Set in this precious jewel as a gem,
  • That thou wilt satisfy me with thy name.”
  • “O leaf of mine, in whom I pleasure took
  • E’en while awaiting, I was thine own root!”
  • Such a beginning he in answer made me.
  • Then said to me: “That one from whom is named
  • Thy race, and who a hundred years and more
  • Has circled round the mount on the first cornice,
  • A son of mine and thy great-grandsire was;
  • Well it behoves thee that the long fatigue
  • Thou shouldst for him make shorter with thy works.
  • Florence, within the ancient boundary
  • From which she taketh still her tierce and nones,
  • Abode in quiet, temperate and chaste.
  • No golden chain she had, nor coronal,
  • Nor ladies shod with sandal shoon, nor girdle
  • That caught the eye more than the person did.
  • Not yet the daughter at her birth struck fear
  • Into the father, for the time and dower
  • Did not o’errun this side or that the measure.
  • No houses had she void of families,
  • Not yet had thither come Sardanapalus
  • To show what in a chamber can be done;
  • Not yet surpassed had Montemalo been
  • By your Uccellatojo, which surpassed
  • Shall in its downfall be as in its rise.
  • Bellincion Berti saw I go begirt
  • With leather and with bone, and from the mirror
  • His dame depart without a painted face;
  • And him of Nerli saw, and him of Vecchio,
  • Contented with their simple suits of buff
  • And with the spindle and the flax their dames.
  • O fortunate women! and each one was certain
  • Of her own burial-place, and none as yet
  • For sake of France was in her bed deserted.
  • One o’er the cradle kept her studious watch,
  • And in her lullaby the language used
  • That first delights the fathers and the mothers;
  • Another, drawing tresses from her distaff,
  • Told o’er among her family the tales
  • Of Trojans and of Fesole and Rome.
  • As great a marvel then would have been held
  • A Lapo Salterello, a Cianghella,
  • As Cincinnatus or Cornelia now.
  • To such a quiet, such a beautiful
  • Life of the citizen, to such a safe
  • Community, and to so sweet an inn,
  • Did Mary give me, with loud cries invoked,
  • And in your ancient Baptistery at once
  • Christian and Cacciaguida I became.
  • Moronto was my brother, and Eliseo;
  • From Val di Pado came to me my wife,
  • And from that place thy surname was derived.
  • I followed afterward the Emperor Conrad,
  • And he begirt me of his chivalry,
  • So much I pleased him with my noble deeds.
  • I followed in his train against that law’s
  • Iniquity, whose people doth usurp
  • Your just possession, through your Pastor’s fault.
  • There by that execrable race was I
  • Released from bonds of the fallacious world,
  • The love of which defileth many souls,
  • And came from martyrdom unto this peace.”
  • Paradiso: Canto XVI
  • O thou our poor nobility of blood,
  • If thou dost make the people glory in thee
  • Down here where our affection languishes,
  • A marvellous thing it ne’er will be to me;
  • For there where appetite is not perverted,
  • I say in Heaven, of thee I made a boast!
  • Truly thou art a cloak that quickly shortens,
  • So that unless we piece thee day by day
  • Time goeth round about thee with his shears!
  • With ‘You,’ which Rome was first to tolerate,
  • (Wherein her family less perseveres,)
  • Yet once again my words beginning made;
  • Whence Beatrice, who stood somewhat apart,
  • Smiling, appeared like unto her who coughed
  • At the first failing writ of Guenever.
  • And I began: “You are my ancestor,
  • You give to me all hardihood to speak,
  • You lift me so that I am more than I.
  • So many rivulets with gladness fill
  • My mind, that of itself it makes a joy
  • Because it can endure this and not burst.
  • Then tell me, my beloved root ancestral,
  • Who were your ancestors, and what the years
  • That in your boyhood chronicled themselves?
  • Tell me about the sheepfold of Saint John,
  • How large it was, and who the people were
  • Within it worthy of the highest seats.”
  • As at the blowing of the winds a coal
  • Quickens to flame, so I beheld that light
  • Become resplendent at my blandishments.
  • And as unto mine eyes it grew more fair,
  • With voice more sweet and tender, but not in
  • This modern dialect, it said to me:
  • “From uttering of the ‘Ave,’ till the birth
  • In which my mother, who is now a saint,
  • Of me was lightened who had been her burden,
  • Unto its Lion had this fire returned
  • Five hundred fifty times and thirty more,
  • To reinflame itself beneath his paw.
  • My ancestors and I our birthplace had
  • Where first is found the last ward of the city
  • By him who runneth in your annual game.
  • Suffice it of my elders to hear this;
  • But who they were, and whence they thither came,
  • Silence is more considerate than speech.
  • All those who at that time were there between
  • Mars and the Baptist, fit for bearing arms,
  • Were a fifth part of those who now are living;
  • But the community, that now is mixed
  • With Campi and Certaldo and Figghine,
  • Pure in the lowest artisan was seen.
  • O how much better ’twere to have as neighbours
  • The folk of whom I speak, and at Galluzzo
  • And at Trespiano have your boundary,
  • Than have them in the town, and bear the stench
  • Of Aguglione’s churl, and him of Signa
  • Who has sharp eyes for trickery already.
  • Had not the folk, which most of all the world
  • Degenerates, been a step-dame unto Caesar,
  • But as a mother to her son benignant,
  • Some who turn Florentines, and trade and discount,
  • Would have gone back again to Simifonte
  • There where their grandsires went about as beggars.
  • At Montemurlo still would be the Counts,
  • The Cerchi in the parish of Acone,
  • Perhaps in Valdigrieve the Buondelmonti.
  • Ever the intermingling of the people
  • Has been the source of malady in cities,
  • As in the body food it surfeits on;
  • And a blind bull more headlong plunges down
  • Than a blind lamb; and very often cuts
  • Better and more a single sword than five.
  • If Luni thou regard, and Urbisaglia,
  • How they have passed away, and how are passing
  • Chiusi and Sinigaglia after them,
  • To hear how races waste themselves away,
  • Will seem to thee no novel thing nor hard,
  • Seeing that even cities have an end.
  • All things of yours have their mortality,
  • Even as yourselves; but it is hidden in some
  • That a long while endure, and lives are short;
  • And as the turning of the lunar heaven
  • Covers and bares the shores without a pause,
  • In the like manner fortune does with Florence.
  • Therefore should not appear a marvellous thing
  • What I shall say of the great Florentines
  • Of whom the fame is hidden in the Past.
  • I saw the Ughi, saw the Catellini,
  • Filippi, Greci, Ormanni, and Alberichi,
  • Even in their fall illustrious citizens;
  • And saw, as mighty as they ancient were,
  • With him of La Sannella him of Arca,
  • And Soldanier, Ardinghi, and Bostichi.
  • Near to the gate that is at present laden
  • With a new felony of so much weight
  • That soon it shall be jetsam from the bark,
  • The Ravignani were, from whom descended
  • The County Guido, and whoe’er the name
  • Of the great Bellincione since hath taken.
  • He of La Pressa knew the art of ruling
  • Already, and already Galigajo
  • Had hilt and pommel gilded in his house.
  • Mighty already was the Column Vair,
  • Sacchetti, Giuochi, Fifant, and Barucci,
  • And Galli, and they who for the bushel blush.
  • The stock from which were the Calfucci born
  • Was great already, and already chosen
  • To curule chairs the Sizii and Arrigucci.
  • O how beheld I those who are undone
  • By their own pride! and how the Balls of Gold
  • Florence enflowered in all their mighty deeds!
  • So likewise did the ancestors of those
  • Who evermore, when vacant is your church,
  • Fatten by staying in consistory.
  • The insolent race, that like a dragon follows
  • Whoever flees, and unto him that shows
  • His teeth or purse is gentle as a lamb,
  • Already rising was, but from low people;
  • So that it pleased not Ubertin Donato
  • That his wife’s father should make him their kin.
  • Already had Caponsacco to the Market
  • From Fesole descended, and already
  • Giuda and Infangato were good burghers.
  • I’ll tell a thing incredible, but true;
  • One entered the small circuit by a gate
  • Which from the Della Pera took its name!
  • Each one that bears the beautiful escutcheon
  • Of the great baron whose renown and name
  • The festival of Thomas keepeth fresh,
  • Knighthood and privilege from him received;
  • Though with the populace unites himself
  • To-day the man who binds it with a border.
  • Already were Gualterotti and Importuni;
  • And still more quiet would the Borgo be
  • If with new neighbours it remained unfed.
  • The house from which is born your lamentation,
  • Through just disdain that death among you brought
  • And put an end unto your joyous life,
  • Was honoured in itself and its companions.
  • O Buondelmonte, how in evil hour
  • Thou fled’st the bridal at another’s promptings!
  • Many would be rejoicing who are sad,
  • If God had thee surrendered to the Ema
  • The first time that thou camest to the city.
  • But it behoved the mutilated stone
  • Which guards the bridge, that Florence should provide
  • A victim in her latest hour of peace.
  • With all these families, and others with them,
  • Florence beheld I in so great repose,
  • That no occasion had she whence to weep;
  • With all these families beheld so just
  • And glorious her people, that the lily
  • Never upon the spear was placed reversed,
  • Nor by division was vermilion made.”
  • Paradiso: Canto XVII
  • As came to Clymene, to be made certain
  • Of that which he had heard against himself,
  • He who makes fathers chary still to children,
  • Even such was I, and such was I perceived
  • By Beatrice and by the holy light
  • That first on my account had changed its place.
  • Therefore my Lady said to me: “Send forth
  • The flame of thy desire, so that it issue
  • Imprinted well with the internal stamp;
  • Not that our knowledge may be greater made
  • By speech of thine, but to accustom thee
  • To tell thy thirst, that we may give thee drink.”
  • “O my beloved tree, (that so dost lift thee,
  • That even as minds terrestrial perceive
  • No triangle containeth two obtuse,
  • So thou beholdest the contingent things
  • Ere in themselves they are, fixing thine eyes
  • Upon the point in which all times are present,)
  • While I was with Virgilius conjoined
  • Upon the mountain that the souls doth heal,
  • And when descending into the dead world,
  • Were spoken to me of my future life
  • Some grievous words; although I feel myself
  • In sooth foursquare against the blows of chance.
  • On this account my wish would be content
  • To hear what fortune is approaching me,
  • Because foreseen an arrow comes more slowly.”
  • Thus did I say unto that selfsame light
  • That unto me had spoken before; and even
  • As Beatrice willed was my own will confessed.
  • Not in vague phrase, in which the foolish folk
  • Ensnared themselves of old, ere yet was slain
  • The Lamb of God who taketh sins away,
  • But with clear words and unambiguous
  • Language responded that paternal love,
  • Hid and revealed by its own proper smile:
  • “Contingency, that outside of the volume
  • Of your materiality extends not,
  • Is all depicted in the eternal aspect.
  • Necessity however thence it takes not,
  • Except as from the eye, in which ’tis mirrored,
  • A ship that with the current down descends.
  • From thence, e’en as there cometh to the ear
  • Sweet harmony from an organ, comes in sight
  • To me the time that is preparing for thee.
  • As forth from Athens went Hippolytus,
  • By reason of his step-dame false and cruel,
  • So thou from Florence must perforce depart.
  • Already this is willed, and this is sought for;
  • And soon it shall be done by him who thinks it,
  • Where every day the Christ is bought and sold.
  • The blame shall follow the offended party
  • In outcry as is usual; but the vengeance
  • Shall witness to the truth that doth dispense it.
  • Thou shalt abandon everything beloved
  • Most tenderly, and this the arrow is
  • Which first the bow of banishment shoots forth.
  • Thou shalt have proof how savoureth of salt
  • The bread of others, and how hard a road
  • The going down and up another’s stairs.
  • And that which most shall weigh upon thy shoulders
  • Will be the bad and foolish company
  • With which into this valley thou shalt fall;
  • For all ingrate, all mad and impious
  • Will they become against thee; but soon after
  • They, and not thou, shall have the forehead scarlet.
  • Of their bestiality their own proceedings
  • Shall furnish proof; so ’twill be well for thee
  • A party to have made thee by thyself.
  • Thine earliest refuge and thine earliest inn
  • Shall be the mighty Lombard’s courtesy,
  • Who on the Ladder bears the holy bird,
  • Who such benign regard shall have for thee
  • That ’twixt you twain, in doing and in asking,
  • That shall be first which is with others last.
  • With him shalt thou see one who at his birth
  • Has by this star of strength been so impressed,
  • That notable shall his achievements be.
  • Not yet the people are aware of him
  • Through his young age, since only nine years yet
  • Around about him have these wheels revolved.
  • But ere the Gascon cheat the noble Henry,
  • Some sparkles of his virtue shall appear
  • In caring not for silver nor for toil.
  • So recognized shall his magnificence
  • Become hereafter, that his enemies
  • Will not have power to keep mute tongues about it.
  • On him rely, and on his benefits;
  • By him shall many people be transformed,
  • Changing condition rich and mendicant;
  • And written in thy mind thou hence shalt bear
  • Of him, but shalt not say it”—and things said he
  • Incredible to those who shall be present.
  • Then added: “Son, these are the commentaries
  • On what was said to thee; behold the snares
  • That are concealed behind few revolutions;
  • Yet would I not thy neighbours thou shouldst envy,
  • Because thy life into the future reaches
  • Beyond the punishment of their perfidies.”
  • When by its silence showed that sainted soul
  • That it had finished putting in the woof
  • Into that web which I had given it warped,
  • Began I, even as he who yearneth after,
  • Being in doubt, some counsel from a person
  • Who seeth, and uprightly wills, and loves:
  • “Well see I, father mine, how spurreth on
  • The time towards me such a blow to deal me
  • As heaviest is to him who most gives way.
  • Therefore with foresight it is well I arm me,
  • That, if the dearest place be taken from me,
  • I may not lose the others by my songs.
  • Down through the world of infinite bitterness,
  • And o’er the mountain, from whose beauteous summit
  • The eyes of my own Lady lifted me,
  • And afterward through heaven from light to light,
  • I have learned that which, if I tell again,
  • Will be a savour of strong herbs to many.
  • And if I am a timid friend to truth,
  • I fear lest I may lose my life with those
  • Who will hereafter call this time the olden.”
  • The light in which was smiling my own treasure
  • Which there I had discovered, flashed at first
  • As in the sunshine doth a golden mirror;
  • Then made reply: “A conscience overcast
  • Or with its own or with another’s shame,
  • Will taste forsooth the tartness of thy word;
  • But ne’ertheless, all falsehood laid aside,
  • Make manifest thy vision utterly,
  • And let them scratch wherever is the itch;
  • For if thine utterance shall offensive be
  • At the first taste, a vital nutriment
  • ’Twill leave thereafter, when it is digested.
  • This cry of thine shall do as doth the wind,
  • Which smiteth most the most exalted summits,
  • And that is no slight argument of honour.
  • Therefore are shown to thee within these wheels,
  • Upon the mount and in the dolorous valley,
  • Only the souls that unto fame are known;
  • Because the spirit of the hearer rests not,
  • Nor doth confirm its faith by an example
  • Which has the root of it unknown and hidden,
  • Or other reason that is not apparent.”
  • Paradiso: Canto XVIII
  • Now was alone rejoicing in its word
  • That soul beatified, and I was tasting
  • My own, the bitter tempering with the sweet,
  • And the Lady who to God was leading me
  • Said: “Change thy thought; consider that I am
  • Near unto Him who every wrong disburdens.”
  • Unto the loving accents of my comfort
  • I turned me round, and then what love I saw
  • Within those holy eyes I here relinquish;
  • Not only that my language I distrust,
  • But that my mind cannot return so far
  • Above itself, unless another guide it.
  • Thus much upon that point can I repeat,
  • That, her again beholding, my affection
  • From every other longing was released.
  • While the eternal pleasure, which direct
  • Rayed upon Beatrice, from her fair face
  • Contented me with its reflected aspect,
  • Conquering me with the radiance of a smile,
  • She said to me, “Turn thee about and listen;
  • Not in mine eyes alone is Paradise.”
  • Even as sometimes here do we behold
  • The affection in the look, if it be such
  • That all the soul is wrapt away by it,
  • So, by the flaming of the effulgence holy
  • To which I turned, I recognized therein
  • The wish of speaking to me somewhat farther.
  • And it began: “In this fifth resting-place
  • Upon the tree that liveth by its summit,
  • And aye bears fruit, and never loses leaf,
  • Are blessed spirits that below, ere yet
  • They came to Heaven, were of such great renown
  • That every Muse therewith would affluent be.
  • Therefore look thou upon the cross’s horns;
  • He whom I now shall name will there enact
  • What doth within a cloud its own swift fire.”
  • I saw athwart the Cross a splendour drawn
  • By naming Joshua, (even as he did it,)
  • Nor noted I the word before the deed;
  • And at the name of the great Maccabee
  • I saw another move itself revolving,
  • And gladness was the whip unto that top.
  • Likewise for Charlemagne and for Orlando,
  • Two of them my regard attentive followed
  • As followeth the eye its falcon flying.
  • William thereafterward, and Renouard,
  • And the Duke Godfrey, did attract my sight
  • Along upon that Cross, and Robert Guiscard.
  • Then, moved and mingled with the other lights,
  • The soul that had addressed me showed how great
  • An artist ’twas among the heavenly singers.
  • To my right side I turned myself around,
  • My duty to behold in Beatrice
  • Either by words or gesture signified;
  • And so translucent I beheld her eyes,
  • So full of pleasure, that her countenance
  • Surpassed its other and its latest wont.
  • And as, by feeling greater delectation,
  • A man in doing good from day to day
  • Becomes aware his virtue is increasing,
  • So I became aware that my gyration
  • With heaven together had increased its arc,
  • That miracle beholding more adorned.
  • And such as is the change, in little lapse
  • Of time, in a pale woman, when her face
  • Is from the load of bashfulness unladen,
  • Such was it in mine eyes, when I had turned,
  • Caused by the whiteness of the temperate star,
  • The sixth, which to itself had gathered me.
  • Within that Jovial torch did I behold
  • The sparkling of the love which was therein
  • Delineate our language to mine eyes.
  • And even as birds uprisen from the shore,
  • As in congratulation o’er their food,
  • Make squadrons of themselves, now round, now long,
  • So from within those lights the holy creatures
  • Sang flying to and fro, and in their figures
  • Made of themselves now D, now I, now L.
  • First singing they to their own music moved;
  • Then one becoming of these characters,
  • A little while they rested and were silent.
  • O divine Pegasea, thou who genius
  • Dost glorious make, and render it long-lived,
  • And this through thee the cities and the kingdoms,
  • Illume me with thyself, that I may bring
  • Their figures out as I have them conceived!
  • Apparent be thy power in these brief verses!
  • Themselves then they displayed in five times seven
  • Vowels and consonants; and I observed
  • The parts as they seemed spoken unto me.
  • ‘Diligite justitiam,’ these were
  • First verb and noun of all that was depicted;
  • ‘Qui judicatis terram’ were the last.
  • Thereafter in the M of the fifth word
  • Remained they so arranged, that Jupiter
  • Seemed to be silver there with gold inlaid.
  • And other lights I saw descend where was
  • The summit of the M, and pause there singing
  • The good, I think, that draws them to itself.
  • Then, as in striking upon burning logs
  • Upward there fly innumerable sparks,
  • Whence fools are wont to look for auguries,
  • More than a thousand lights seemed thence to rise,
  • And to ascend, some more, and others less,
  • Even as the Sun that lights them had allotted;
  • And, each one being quiet in its place,
  • The head and neck beheld I of an eagle
  • Delineated by that inlaid fire.
  • He who there paints has none to be his guide;
  • But Himself guides; and is from Him remembered
  • That virtue which is form unto the nest.
  • The other beatitude, that contented seemed
  • At first to bloom a lily on the M,
  • By a slight motion followed out the imprint.
  • O gentle star! what and how many gems
  • Did demonstrate to me, that all our justice
  • Effect is of that heaven which thou ingemmest!
  • Wherefore I pray the Mind, in which begin
  • Thy motion and thy virtue, to regard
  • Whence comes the smoke that vitiates thy rays;
  • So that a second time it now be wroth
  • With buying and with selling in the temple
  • Whose walls were built with signs and martyrdoms!
  • O soldiery of heaven, whom I contemplate,
  • Implore for those who are upon the earth
  • All gone astray after the bad example!
  • Once ’twas the custom to make war with swords;
  • But now ’tis made by taking here and there
  • The bread the pitying Father shuts from none.
  • Yet thou, who writest but to cancel, think
  • That Peter and that Paul, who for this vineyard
  • Which thou art spoiling died, are still alive!
  • Well canst thou say: “So steadfast my desire
  • Is unto him who willed to live alone,
  • And for a dance was led to martyrdom,
  • That I know not the Fisherman nor Paul.”
  • Paradiso: Canto XIX
  • Appeared before me with its wings outspread
  • The beautiful image that in sweet fruition
  • Made jubilant the interwoven souls;
  • Appeared a little ruby each, wherein
  • Ray of the sun was burning so enkindled
  • That each into mine eyes refracted it.
  • And what it now behoves me to retrace
  • Nor voice has e’er reported, nor ink written,
  • Nor was by fantasy e’er comprehended;
  • For speak I saw, and likewise heard, the beak,
  • And utter with its voice both ‘I’ and ‘My,’
  • When in conception it was ‘We’ and ‘Our.’
  • And it began: “Being just and merciful
  • Am I exalted here unto that glory
  • Which cannot be exceeded by desire;
  • And upon earth I left my memory
  • Such, that the evil-minded people there
  • Commend it, but continue not the story.”
  • So doth a single heat from many embers
  • Make itself felt, even as from many loves
  • Issued a single sound from out that image.
  • Whence I thereafter: “O perpetual flowers
  • Of the eternal joy, that only one
  • Make me perceive your odours manifold,
  • Exhaling, break within me the great fast
  • Which a long season has in hunger held me,
  • Not finding for it any food on earth.
  • Well do I know, that if in heaven its mirror
  • Justice Divine another realm doth make,
  • Yours apprehends it not through any veil.
  • You know how I attentively address me
  • To listen; and you know what is the doubt
  • That is in me so very old a fast.”
  • Even as a falcon, issuing from his hood,
  • Doth move his head, and with his wings applaud him,
  • Showing desire, and making himself fine,
  • Saw I become that standard, which of lauds
  • Was interwoven of the grace divine,
  • With such songs as he knows who there rejoices.
  • Then it began: “He who a compass turned
  • On the world’s outer verge, and who within it
  • Devised so much occult and manifest,
  • Could not the impress of his power so make
  • On all the universe, as that his Word
  • Should not remain in infinite excess.
  • And this makes certain that the first proud being,
  • Who was the paragon of every creature,
  • By not awaiting light fell immature.
  • And hence appears it, that each minor nature
  • Is scant receptacle unto that good
  • Which has no end, and by itself is measured.
  • In consequence our vision, which perforce
  • Must be some ray of that intelligence
  • With which all things whatever are replete,
  • Cannot in its own nature be so potent,
  • That it shall not its origin discern
  • Far beyond that which is apparent to it.
  • Therefore into the justice sempiternal
  • The power of vision that your world receives,
  • As eye into the ocean, penetrates;
  • Which, though it see the bottom near the shore,
  • Upon the deep perceives it not, and yet
  • ’Tis there, but it is hidden by the depth.
  • There is no light but comes from the serene
  • That never is o’ercast, nay, it is darkness
  • Or shadow of the flesh, or else its poison.
  • Amply to thee is opened now the cavern
  • Which has concealed from thee the living justice
  • Of which thou mad’st such frequent questioning.
  • For saidst thou: ‘Born a man is on the shore
  • Of Indus, and is none who there can speak
  • Of Christ, nor who can read, nor who can write;
  • And all his inclinations and his actions
  • Are good, so far as human reason sees,
  • Without a sin in life or in discourse:
  • He dieth unbaptised and without faith;
  • Where is this justice that condemneth him?
  • Where is his fault, if he do not believe?’
  • Now who art thou, that on the bench wouldst sit
  • In judgment at a thousand miles away,
  • With the short vision of a single span?
  • Truly to him who with me subtilizes,
  • If so the Scripture were not over you,
  • For doubting there were marvellous occasion.
  • O animals terrene, O stolid minds,
  • The primal will, that in itself is good,
  • Ne’er from itself, the Good Supreme, has moved.
  • So much is just as is accordant with it;
  • No good created draws it to itself,
  • But it, by raying forth, occasions that.”
  • Even as above her nest goes circling round
  • The stork when she has fed her little ones,
  • And he who has been fed looks up at her,
  • So lifted I my brows, and even such
  • Became the blessed image, which its wings
  • Was moving, by so many counsels urged.
  • Circling around it sang, and said: “As are
  • My notes to thee, who dost not comprehend them,
  • Such is the eternal judgment to you mortals.”
  • Those lucent splendours of the Holy Spirit
  • Grew quiet then, but still within the standard
  • That made the Romans reverend to the world.
  • It recommenced: “Unto this kingdom never
  • Ascended one who had not faith in Christ,
  • Before or since he to the tree was nailed.
  • But look thou, many crying are, ‘Christ, Christ!’
  • Who at the judgment shall be far less near
  • To him than some shall be who knew not Christ.
  • Such Christians shall the Ethiop condemn,
  • When the two companies shall be divided,
  • The one for ever rich, the other poor.
  • What to your kings may not the Persians say,
  • When they that volume opened shall behold
  • In which are written down all their dispraises?
  • There shall be seen, among the deeds of Albert,
  • That which ere long shall set the pen in motion,
  • For which the realm of Prague shall be deserted.
  • There shall be seen the woe that on the Seine
  • He brings by falsifying of the coin,
  • Who by the blow of a wild boar shall die.
  • There shall be seen the pride that causes thirst,
  • Which makes the Scot and Englishman so mad
  • That they within their boundaries cannot rest;
  • Be seen the luxury and effeminate life
  • Of him of Spain, and the Bohemian,
  • Who valour never knew and never wished;
  • Be seen the Cripple of Jerusalem,
  • His goodness represented by an I,
  • While the reverse an M shall represent;
  • Be seen the avarice and poltroonery
  • Of him who guards the Island of the Fire,
  • Wherein Anchises finished his long life;
  • And to declare how pitiful he is
  • Shall be his record in contracted letters
  • Which shall make note of much in little space.
  • And shall appear to each one the foul deeds
  • Of uncle and of brother who a nation
  • So famous have dishonoured, and two crowns.
  • And he of Portugal and he of Norway
  • Shall there be known, and he of Rascia too,
  • Who saw in evil hour the coin of Venice.
  • O happy Hungary, if she let herself
  • Be wronged no farther! and Navarre the happy,
  • If with the hills that gird her she be armed!
  • And each one may believe that now, as hansel
  • Thereof, do Nicosia and Famagosta
  • Lament and rage because of their own beast,
  • Who from the others’ flank departeth not.”
  • Paradiso: Canto XX
  • When he who all the world illuminates
  • Out of our hemisphere so far descends
  • That on all sides the daylight is consumed,
  • The heaven, that erst by him alone was kindled,
  • Doth suddenly reveal itself again
  • By many lights, wherein is one resplendent.
  • And came into my mind this act of heaven,
  • When the ensign of the world and of its leaders
  • Had silent in the blessed beak become;
  • Because those living luminaries all,
  • By far more luminous, did songs begin
  • Lapsing and falling from my memory.
  • O gentle Love, that with a smile dost cloak thee,
  • How ardent in those sparks didst thou appear,
  • That had the breath alone of holy thoughts!
  • After the precious and pellucid crystals,
  • With which begemmed the sixth light I beheld,
  • Silence imposed on the angelic bells,
  • I seemed to hear the murmuring of a river
  • That clear descendeth down from rock to rock,
  • Showing the affluence of its mountain-top.
  • And as the sound upon the cithern’s neck
  • Taketh its form, and as upon the vent
  • Of rustic pipe the wind that enters it,
  • Even thus, relieved from the delay of waiting,
  • That murmuring of the eagle mounted up
  • Along its neck, as if it had been hollow.
  • There it became a voice, and issued thence
  • From out its beak, in such a form of words
  • As the heart waited for wherein I wrote them.
  • “The part in me which sees and bears the sun
  • In mortal eagles,” it began to me,
  • “Now fixedly must needs be looked upon;
  • For of the fires of which I make my figure,
  • Those whence the eye doth sparkle in my head
  • Of all their orders the supremest are.
  • He who is shining in the midst as pupil
  • Was once the singer of the Holy Spirit,
  • Who bore the ark from city unto city;
  • Now knoweth he the merit of his song,
  • In so far as effect of his own counsel,
  • By the reward which is commensurate.
  • Of five, that make a circle for my brow,
  • He that approacheth nearest to my beak
  • Did the poor widow for her son console;
  • Now knoweth he how dearly it doth cost
  • Not following Christ, by the experience
  • Of this sweet life and of its opposite.
  • He who comes next in the circumference
  • Of which I speak, upon its highest arc,
  • Did death postpone by penitence sincere;
  • Now knoweth he that the eternal judgment
  • Suffers no change, albeit worthy prayer
  • Maketh below to-morrow of to-day.
  • The next who follows, with the laws and me,
  • Under the good intent that bore bad fruit
  • Became a Greek by ceding to the pastor;
  • Now knoweth he how all the ill deduced
  • From his good action is not harmful to him,
  • Although the world thereby may be destroyed.
  • And he, whom in the downward arc thou seest,
  • Guglielmo was, whom the same land deplores
  • That weepeth Charles and Frederick yet alive;
  • Now knoweth he how heaven enamoured is
  • With a just king; and in the outward show
  • Of his effulgence he reveals it still.
  • Who would believe, down in the errant world,
  • That e’er the Trojan Ripheus in this round
  • Could be the fifth one of the holy lights?
  • Now knoweth he enough of what the world
  • Has not the power to see of grace divine,
  • Although his sight may not discern the bottom.”
  • Like as a lark that in the air expatiates,
  • First singing and then silent with content
  • Of the last sweetness that doth satisfy her,
  • Such seemed to me the image of the imprint
  • Of the eternal pleasure, by whose will
  • Doth everything become the thing it is.
  • And notwithstanding to my doubt I was
  • As glass is to the colour that invests it,
  • To wait the time in silence it endured not,
  • But forth from out my mouth, “What things are these?”
  • Extorted with the force of its own weight;
  • Whereat I saw great joy of coruscation.
  • Thereafterward with eye still more enkindled
  • The blessed standard made to me reply,
  • To keep me not in wonderment suspended:
  • “I see that thou believest in these things
  • Because I say them, but thou seest not how;
  • So that, although believed in, they are hidden.
  • Thou doest as he doth who a thing by name
  • Well apprehendeth, but its quiddity
  • Cannot perceive, unless another show it.
  • ‘Regnum coelorum’ suffereth violence
  • From fervent love, and from that living hope
  • That overcometh the Divine volition;
  • Not in the guise that man o’ercometh man,
  • But conquers it because it will be conquered,
  • And conquered conquers by benignity.
  • The first life of the eyebrow and the fifth
  • Cause thee astonishment, because with them
  • Thou seest the region of the angels painted.
  • They passed not from their bodies, as thou thinkest,
  • Gentiles, but Christians in the steadfast faith
  • Of feet that were to suffer and had suffered.
  • For one from Hell, where no one e’er turns back
  • Unto good will, returned unto his bones,
  • And that of living hope was the reward,—
  • Of living hope, that placed its efficacy
  • In prayers to God made to resuscitate him,
  • So that ’twere possible to move his will.
  • The glorious soul concerning which I speak,
  • Returning to the flesh, where brief its stay,
  • Believed in Him who had the power to aid it;
  • And, in believing, kindled to such fire
  • Of genuine love, that at the second death
  • Worthy it was to come unto this joy.
  • The other one, through grace, that from so deep
  • A fountain wells that never hath the eye
  • Of any creature reached its primal wave,
  • Set all his love below on righteousness;
  • Wherefore from grace to grace did God unclose
  • His eye to our redemption yet to be,
  • Whence he believed therein, and suffered not
  • From that day forth the stench of paganism,
  • And he reproved therefor the folk perverse.
  • Those Maidens three, whom at the right-hand wheel
  • Thou didst behold, were unto him for baptism
  • More than a thousand years before baptizing.
  • O thou predestination, how remote
  • Thy root is from the aspect of all those
  • Who the First Cause do not behold entire!
  • And you, O mortals! hold yourselves restrained
  • In judging; for ourselves, who look on God,
  • We do not know as yet all the elect;
  • And sweet to us is such a deprivation,
  • Because our good in this good is made perfect,
  • That whatsoe’er God wills, we also will.”
  • After this manner by that shape divine,
  • To make clear in me my short-sightedness,
  • Was given to me a pleasant medicine;
  • And as good singer a good lutanist
  • Accompanies with vibrations of the chords,
  • Whereby more pleasantness the song acquires,
  • So, while it spake, do I remember me
  • That I beheld both of those blessed lights,
  • Even as the winking of the eyes concords,
  • Moving unto the words their little flames.
  • Paradiso: Canto XXI
  • Already on my Lady’s face mine eyes
  • Again were fastened, and with these my mind,
  • And from all other purpose was withdrawn;
  • And she smiled not; but “If I were to smile,”
  • She unto me began, “thou wouldst become
  • Like Semele, when she was turned to ashes.
  • Because my beauty, that along the stairs
  • Of the eternal palace more enkindles,
  • As thou hast seen, the farther we ascend,
  • If it were tempered not, is so resplendent
  • That all thy mortal power in its effulgence
  • Would seem a leaflet that the thunder crushes.
  • We are uplifted to the seventh splendour,
  • That underneath the burning Lion’s breast
  • Now radiates downward mingled with his power.
  • Fix in direction of thine eyes the mind,
  • And make of them a mirror for the figure
  • That in this mirror shall appear to thee.”
  • He who could know what was the pasturage
  • My sight had in that blessed countenance,
  • When I transferred me to another care,
  • Would recognize how grateful was to me
  • Obedience unto my celestial escort,
  • By counterpoising one side with the other.
  • Within the crystal which, around the world
  • Revolving, bears the name of its dear leader,
  • Under whom every wickedness lay dead,
  • Coloured like gold, on which the sunshine gleams,
  • A stairway I beheld to such a height
  • Uplifted, that mine eye pursued it not.
  • Likewise beheld I down the steps descending
  • So many splendours, that I thought each light
  • That in the heaven appears was there diffused.
  • And as accordant with their natural custom
  • The rooks together at the break of day
  • Bestir themselves to warm their feathers cold;
  • Then some of them fly off without return,
  • Others come back to where they started from,
  • And others, wheeling round, still keep at home;
  • Such fashion it appeared to me was there
  • Within the sparkling that together came,
  • As soon as on a certain step it struck,
  • And that which nearest unto us remained
  • Became so clear, that in my thought I said,
  • “Well I perceive the love thou showest me;
  • But she, from whom I wait the how and when
  • Of speech and silence, standeth still; whence I
  • Against desire do well if I ask not.”
  • She thereupon, who saw my silentness
  • In the sight of Him who seeth everything,
  • Said unto me, “Let loose thy warm desire.”
  • And I began: “No merit of my own
  • Renders me worthy of response from thee;
  • But for her sake who granteth me the asking,
  • Thou blessed life that dost remain concealed
  • In thy beatitude, make known to me
  • The cause which draweth thee so near my side;
  • And tell me why is silent in this wheel
  • The dulcet symphony of Paradise,
  • That through the rest below sounds so devoutly.”
  • “Thou hast thy hearing mortal as thy sight,”
  • It answer made to me; “they sing not here,
  • For the same cause that Beatrice has not smiled.
  • Thus far adown the holy stairway’s steps
  • Have I descended but to give thee welcome
  • With words, and with the light that mantles me;
  • Nor did more love cause me to be more ready,
  • For love as much and more up there is burning,
  • As doth the flaming manifest to thee.
  • But the high charity, that makes us servants
  • Prompt to the counsel which controls the world,
  • Allotteth here, even as thou dost observe.”
  • “I see full well,” said I, “O sacred lamp!
  • How love unfettered in this court sufficeth
  • To follow the eternal Providence;
  • But this is what seems hard for me to see,
  • Wherefore predestinate wast thou alone
  • Unto this office from among thy consorts.”
  • No sooner had I come to the last word,
  • Than of its middle made the light a centre,
  • Whirling itself about like a swift millstone.
  • When answer made the love that was therein:
  • “On me directed is a light divine,
  • Piercing through this in which I am embosomed,
  • Of which the virtue with my sight conjoined
  • Lifts me above myself so far, I see
  • The supreme essence from which this is drawn.
  • Hence comes the joyfulness with which I flame,
  • For to my sight, as far as it is clear,
  • The clearness of the flame I equal make.
  • But that soul in the heaven which is most pure,
  • That seraph which his eye on God most fixes,
  • Could this demand of thine not satisfy;
  • Because so deeply sinks in the abyss
  • Of the eternal statute what thou askest,
  • From all created sight it is cut off.
  • And to the mortal world, when thou returnest,
  • This carry back, that it may not presume
  • Longer tow’rd such a goal to move its feet.
  • The mind, that shineth here, on earth doth smoke;
  • From this observe how can it do below
  • That which it cannot though the heaven assume it?”
  • Such limit did its words prescribe to me,
  • The question I relinquished, and restricted
  • Myself to ask it humbly who it was.
  • “Between two shores of Italy rise cliffs,
  • And not far distant from thy native place,
  • So high, the thunders far below them sound,
  • And form a ridge that Catria is called,
  • ’Neath which is consecrate a hermitage
  • Wont to be dedicate to worship only.”
  • Thus unto me the third speech recommenced,
  • And then, continuing, it said: “Therein
  • Unto God’s service I became so steadfast,
  • That feeding only on the juice of olives
  • Lightly I passed away the heats and frosts,
  • Contented in my thoughts contemplative.
  • That cloister used to render to these heavens
  • Abundantly, and now is empty grown,
  • So that perforce it soon must be revealed.
  • I in that place was Peter Damiano;
  • And Peter the Sinner was I in the house
  • Of Our Lady on the Adriatic shore.
  • Little of mortal life remained to me,
  • When I was called and dragged forth to the hat
  • Which shifteth evermore from bad to worse.
  • Came Cephas, and the mighty Vessel came
  • Of the Holy Spirit, meagre and barefooted,
  • Taking the food of any hostelry.
  • Now some one to support them on each side
  • The modern shepherds need, and some to lead them,
  • So heavy are they, and to hold their trains.
  • They cover up their palfreys with their cloaks,
  • So that two beasts go underneath one skin;
  • O Patience, that dost tolerate so much!”
  • At this voice saw I many little flames
  • From step to step descending and revolving,
  • And every revolution made them fairer.
  • Round about this one came they and stood still,
  • And a cry uttered of so loud a sound,
  • It here could find no parallel, nor I
  • Distinguished it, the thunder so o’ercame me.
  • Paradiso: Canto XXII
  • Oppressed with stupor, I unto my guide
  • Turned like a little child who always runs
  • For refuge there where he confideth most;
  • And she, even as a mother who straightway
  • Gives comfort to her pale and breathless boy
  • With voice whose wont it is to reassure him,
  • Said to me: “Knowest thou not thou art in heaven,
  • And knowest thou not that heaven is holy all
  • And what is done here cometh from good zeal?
  • After what wise the singing would have changed thee
  • And I by smiling, thou canst now imagine,
  • Since that the cry has startled thee so much,
  • In which if thou hadst understood its prayers
  • Already would be known to thee the vengeance
  • Which thou shalt look upon before thou diest.
  • The sword above here smiteth not in haste
  • Nor tardily, howe’er it seem to him
  • Who fearing or desiring waits for it.
  • But turn thee round towards the others now,
  • For very illustrious spirits shalt thou see,
  • If thou thy sight directest as I say.”
  • As it seemed good to her mine eyes I turned,
  • And saw a hundred spherules that together
  • With mutual rays each other more embellished.
  • I stood as one who in himself represses
  • The point of his desire, and ventures not
  • To question, he so feareth the too much.
  • And now the largest and most luculent
  • Among those pearls came forward, that it might
  • Make my desire concerning it content.
  • Within it then I heard: “If thou couldst see
  • Even as myself the charity that burns
  • Among us, thy conceits would be expressed;
  • But, that by waiting thou mayst not come late
  • To the high end, I will make answer even
  • Unto the thought of which thou art so chary.
  • That mountain on whose slope Cassino stands
  • Was frequented of old upon its summit
  • By a deluded folk and ill-disposed;
  • And I am he who first up thither bore
  • The name of Him who brought upon the earth
  • The truth that so much sublimateth us.
  • And such abundant grace upon me shone
  • That all the neighbouring towns I drew away
  • From the impious worship that seduced the world.
  • These other fires, each one of them, were men
  • Contemplative, enkindled by that heat
  • Which maketh holy flowers and fruits spring up.
  • Here is Macarius, here is Romualdus,
  • Here are my brethren, who within the cloisters
  • Their footsteps stayed and kept a steadfast heart.”
  • And I to him: “The affection which thou showest
  • Speaking with me, and the good countenance
  • Which I behold and note in all your ardours,
  • In me have so my confidence dilated
  • As the sun doth the rose, when it becomes
  • As far unfolded as it hath the power.
  • Therefore I pray, and thou assure me, father,
  • If I may so much grace receive, that I
  • May thee behold with countenance unveiled.”
  • He thereupon: “Brother, thy high desire
  • In the remotest sphere shall be fulfilled,
  • Where are fulfilled all others and my own.
  • There perfect is, and ripened, and complete,
  • Every desire; within that one alone
  • Is every part where it has always been;
  • For it is not in space, nor turns on poles,
  • And unto it our stairway reaches up,
  • Whence thus from out thy sight it steals away.
  • Up to that height the Patriarch Jacob saw it
  • Extending its supernal part, what time
  • So thronged with angels it appeared to him.
  • But to ascend it now no one uplifts
  • His feet from off the earth, and now my Rule
  • Below remaineth for mere waste of paper.
  • The walls that used of old to be an Abbey
  • Are changed to dens of robbers, and the cowls
  • Are sacks filled full of miserable flour.
  • But heavy usury is not taken up
  • So much against God’s pleasure as that fruit
  • Which maketh so insane the heart of monks;
  • For whatsoever hath the Church in keeping
  • Is for the folk that ask it in God’s name,
  • Not for one’s kindred or for something worse.
  • The flesh of mortals is so very soft,
  • That good beginnings down below suffice not
  • From springing of the oak to bearing acorns.
  • Peter began with neither gold nor silver,
  • And I with orison and abstinence,
  • And Francis with humility his convent.
  • And if thou lookest at each one’s beginning,
  • And then regardest whither he has run,
  • Thou shalt behold the white changed into brown.
  • In verity the Jordan backward turned,
  • And the sea’s fleeing, when God willed were more
  • A wonder to behold, than succour here.”
  • Thus unto me he said; and then withdrew
  • To his own band, and the band closed together;
  • Then like a whirlwind all was upward rapt.
  • The gentle Lady urged me on behind them
  • Up o’er that stairway by a single sign,
  • So did her virtue overcome my nature;
  • Nor here below, where one goes up and down
  • By natural law, was motion e’er so swift
  • That it could be compared unto my wing.
  • Reader, as I may unto that devout
  • Triumph return, on whose account I often
  • For my transgressions weep and beat my breast,—
  • Thou hadst not thrust thy finger in the fire
  • And drawn it out again, before I saw
  • The sign that follows Taurus, and was in it.
  • O glorious stars, O light impregnated
  • With mighty virtue, from which I acknowledge
  • All of my genius, whatsoe’er it be,
  • With you was born, and hid himself with you,
  • He who is father of all mortal life,
  • When first I tasted of the Tuscan air;
  • And then when grace was freely given to me
  • To enter the high wheel which turns you round,
  • Your region was allotted unto me.
  • To you devoutly at this hour my soul
  • Is sighing, that it virtue may acquire
  • For the stern pass that draws it to itself.
  • “Thou art so near unto the last salvation,”
  • Thus Beatrice began, “thou oughtest now
  • To have thine eves unclouded and acute;
  • And therefore, ere thou enter farther in,
  • Look down once more, and see how vast a world
  • Thou hast already put beneath thy feet;
  • So that thy heart, as jocund as it may,
  • Present itself to the triumphant throng
  • That comes rejoicing through this rounded ether.”
  • I with my sight returned through one and all
  • The sevenfold spheres, and I beheld this globe
  • Such that I smiled at its ignoble semblance;
  • And that opinion I approve as best
  • Which doth account it least; and he who thinks
  • Of something else may truly be called just.
  • I saw the daughter of Latona shining
  • Without that shadow, which to me was cause
  • That once I had believed her rare and dense.
  • The aspect of thy son, Hyperion,
  • Here I sustained, and saw how move themselves
  • Around and near him Maia and Dione.
  • Thence there appeared the temperateness of Jove
  • ’Twixt son and father, and to me was clear
  • The change that of their whereabout they make;
  • And all the seven made manifest to me
  • How great they are, and eke how swift they are,
  • And how they are in distant habitations.
  • The threshing-floor that maketh us so proud,
  • To me revolving with the eternal Twins,
  • Was all apparent made from hill to harbour!
  • Then to the beauteous eyes mine eyes I turned.
  • Paradiso: Canto XXIII
  • Even as a bird, ’mid the beloved leaves,
  • Quiet upon the nest of her sweet brood
  • Throughout the night, that hideth all things from us,
  • Who, that she may behold their longed-for looks
  • And find the food wherewith to nourish them,
  • In which, to her, grave labours grateful are,
  • Anticipates the time on open spray
  • And with an ardent longing waits the sun,
  • Gazing intent as soon as breaks the dawn:
  • Even thus my Lady standing was, erect
  • And vigilant, turned round towards the zone
  • Underneath which the sun displays less haste;
  • So that beholding her distraught and wistful,
  • Such I became as he is who desiring
  • For something yearns, and hoping is appeased.
  • But brief the space from one When to the other;
  • Of my awaiting, say I, and the seeing
  • The welkin grow resplendent more and more.
  • And Beatrice exclaimed: “Behold the hosts
  • Of Christ’s triumphal march, and all the fruit
  • Harvested by the rolling of these spheres!”
  • It seemed to me her face was all aflame;
  • And eyes she had so full of ecstasy
  • That I must needs pass on without describing.
  • As when in nights serene of the full moon
  • Smiles Trivia among the nymphs eternal
  • Who paint the firmament through all its gulfs,
  • Saw I, above the myriads of lamps,
  • A Sun that one and all of them enkindled,
  • E’en as our own doth the supernal sights,
  • And through the living light transparent shone
  • The lucent substance so intensely clear
  • Into my sight, that I sustained it not.
  • O Beatrice, thou gentle guide and dear!
  • To me she said: “What overmasters thee
  • A virtue is from which naught shields itself.
  • There are the wisdom and the omnipotence
  • That oped the thoroughfares ’twixt heaven and earth,
  • For which there erst had been so long a yearning.”
  • As fire from out a cloud unlocks itself,
  • Dilating so it finds not room therein,
  • And down, against its nature, falls to earth,
  • So did my mind, among those aliments
  • Becoming larger, issue from itself,
  • And that which it became cannot remember.
  • “Open thine eyes, and look at what I am:
  • Thou hast beheld such things, that strong enough
  • Hast thou become to tolerate my smile.”
  • I was as one who still retains the feeling
  • Of a forgotten vision, and endeavours
  • In vain to bring it back into his mind,
  • When I this invitation heard, deserving
  • Of so much gratitude, it never fades
  • Out of the book that chronicles the past.
  • If at this moment sounded all the tongues
  • That Polyhymnia and her sisters made
  • Most lubrical with their delicious milk,
  • To aid me, to a thousandth of the truth
  • It would not reach, singing the holy smile
  • And how the holy aspect it illumed.
  • And therefore, representing Paradise,
  • The sacred poem must perforce leap over,
  • Even as a man who finds his way cut off;
  • But whoso thinketh of the ponderous theme,
  • And of the mortal shoulder laden with it,
  • Should blame it not, if under this it tremble.
  • It is no passage for a little boat
  • This which goes cleaving the audacious prow,
  • Nor for a pilot who would spare himself.
  • “Why doth my face so much enamour thee,
  • That to the garden fair thou turnest not,
  • Which under the rays of Christ is blossoming?
  • There is the Rose in which the Word Divine
  • Became incarnate; there the lilies are
  • By whose perfume the good way was discovered.”
  • Thus Beatrice; and I, who to her counsels
  • Was wholly ready, once again betook me
  • Unto the battle of the feeble brows.
  • As in the sunshine, that unsullied streams
  • Through fractured cloud, ere now a meadow of flowers
  • Mine eyes with shadow covered o’er have seen,
  • So troops of splendours manifold I saw
  • Illumined from above with burning rays,
  • Beholding not the source of the effulgence.
  • O power benignant that dost so imprint them!
  • Thou didst exalt thyself to give more scope
  • There to mine eyes, that were not strong enough.
  • The name of that fair flower I e’er invoke
  • Morning and evening utterly enthralled
  • My soul to gaze upon the greater fire.
  • And when in both mine eyes depicted were
  • The glory and greatness of the living star
  • Which there excelleth, as it here excelled,
  • Athwart the heavens a little torch descended
  • Formed in a circle like a coronal,
  • And cinctured it, and whirled itself about it.
  • Whatever melody most sweetly soundeth
  • On earth, and to itself most draws the soul,
  • Would seem a cloud that, rent asunder, thunders,
  • Compared unto the sounding of that lyre
  • Wherewith was crowned the sapphire beautiful,
  • Which gives the clearest heaven its sapphire hue.
  • “I am Angelic Love, that circle round
  • The joy sublime which breathes from out the womb
  • That was the hostelry of our Desire;
  • And I shall circle, Lady of Heaven, while
  • Thou followest thy Son, and mak’st diviner
  • The sphere supreme, because thou enterest there.”
  • Thus did the circulated melody
  • Seal itself up; and all the other lights
  • Were making to resound the name of Mary.
  • The regal mantle of the volumes all
  • Of that world, which most fervid is and living
  • With breath of God and with his works and ways,
  • Extended over us its inner border,
  • So very distant, that the semblance of it
  • There where I was not yet appeared to me.
  • Therefore mine eyes did not possess the power
  • Of following the incoronated flame,
  • Which mounted upward near to its own seed.
  • And as a little child, that towards its mother
  • Stretches its arms, when it the milk has taken,
  • Through impulse kindled into outward flame,
  • Each of those gleams of whiteness upward reached
  • So with its summit, that the deep affection
  • They had for Mary was revealed to me.
  • Thereafter they remained there in my sight,
  • ‘Regina coeli’ singing with such sweetness,
  • That ne’er from me has the delight departed.
  • O, what exuberance is garnered up
  • Within those richest coffers, which had been
  • Good husbandmen for sowing here below!
  • There they enjoy and live upon the treasure
  • Which was acquired while weeping in the exile
  • Of Babylon, wherein the gold was left.
  • There triumpheth, beneath the exalted Son
  • Of God and Mary, in his victory,
  • Both with the ancient council and the new,
  • He who doth keep the keys of such a glory.
  • Paradiso: Canto XXIV
  • “O company elect to the great supper
  • Of the Lamb benedight, who feedeth you
  • So that for ever full is your desire,
  • If by the grace of God this man foretaste
  • Something of that which falleth from your table,
  • Or ever death prescribe to him the time,
  • Direct your mind to his immense desire,
  • And him somewhat bedew; ye drinking are
  • For ever at the fount whence comes his thought.”
  • Thus Beatrice; and those souls beatified
  • Transformed themselves to spheres on steadfast poles,
  • Flaming intensely in the guise of comets.
  • And as the wheels in works of horologes
  • Revolve so that the first to the beholder
  • Motionless seems, and the last one to fly,
  • So in like manner did those carols, dancing
  • In different measure, of their affluence
  • Give me the gauge, as they were swift or slow.
  • From that one which I noted of most beauty
  • Beheld I issue forth a fire so happy
  • That none it left there of a greater brightness;
  • And around Beatrice three several times
  • It whirled itself with so divine a song,
  • My fantasy repeats it not to me;
  • Therefore the pen skips, and I write it not,
  • Since our imagination for such folds,
  • Much more our speech, is of a tint too glaring.
  • “O holy sister mine, who us implorest
  • With such devotion, by thine ardent love
  • Thou dost unbind me from that beautiful sphere!”
  • Thereafter, having stopped, the blessed fire
  • Unto my Lady did direct its breath,
  • Which spake in fashion as I here have said.
  • And she: “O light eterne of the great man
  • To whom our Lord delivered up the keys
  • He carried down of this miraculous joy,
  • This one examine on points light and grave,
  • As good beseemeth thee, about the Faith
  • By means of which thou on the sea didst walk.
  • If he love well, and hope well, and believe,
  • From thee ’tis hid not; for thou hast thy sight
  • There where depicted everything is seen.
  • But since this kingdom has made citizens
  • By means of the true Faith, to glorify it
  • ’Tis well he have the chance to speak thereof.”
  • As baccalaureate arms himself, and speaks not
  • Until the master doth propose the question,
  • To argue it, and not to terminate it,
  • So did I arm myself with every reason,
  • While she was speaking, that I might be ready
  • For such a questioner and such profession.
  • “Say, thou good Christian; manifest thyself;
  • What is the Faith?” Whereat I raised my brow
  • Unto that light wherefrom was this breathed forth.
  • Then turned I round to Beatrice, and she
  • Prompt signals made to me that I should pour
  • The water forth from my internal fountain.
  • “May grace, that suffers me to make confession,”
  • Began I, “to the great centurion,
  • Cause my conceptions all to be explicit!”
  • And I continued: “As the truthful pen,
  • Father, of thy dear brother wrote of it,
  • Who put with thee Rome into the good way,
  • Faith is the substance of the things we hope for,
  • And evidence of those that are not seen;
  • And this appears to me its quiddity.”
  • Then heard I: “Very rightly thou perceivest,
  • If well thou understandest why he placed it
  • With substances and then with evidences.”
  • And I thereafterward: “The things profound,
  • That here vouchsafe to me their apparition,
  • Unto all eyes below are so concealed,
  • That they exist there only in belief,
  • Upon the which is founded the high hope,
  • And hence it takes the nature of a substance.
  • And it behoveth us from this belief
  • To reason without having other sight,
  • And hence it has the nature of evidence.”
  • Then heard I: “If whatever is acquired
  • Below by doctrine were thus understood,
  • No sophist’s subtlety would there find place.”
  • Thus was breathed forth from that enkindled love;
  • Then added: “Very well has been gone over
  • Already of this coin the alloy and weight;
  • But tell me if thou hast it in thy purse?”
  • And I: “Yes, both so shining and so round
  • That in its stamp there is no peradventure.”
  • Thereafter issued from the light profound
  • That there resplendent was: “This precious jewel,
  • Upon the which is every virtue founded,
  • Whence hadst thou it?” And I: “The large outpouring
  • Of Holy Spirit, which has been diffused
  • Upon the ancient parchments and the new,
  • A syllogism is, which proved it to me
  • With such acuteness, that, compared therewith,
  • All demonstration seems to me obtuse.”
  • And then I heard: “The ancient and the new
  • Postulates, that to thee are so conclusive,
  • Why dost thou take them for the word divine?”
  • And I: “The proofs, which show the truth to me,
  • Are the works subsequent, whereunto Nature
  • Ne’er heated iron yet, nor anvil beat.”
  • ’Twas answered me: “Say, who assureth thee
  • That those works ever were? the thing itself
  • That must be proved, nought else to thee affirms it.”
  • “Were the world to Christianity converted,”
  • I said, “withouten miracles, this one
  • Is such, the rest are not its hundredth part;
  • Because that poor and fasting thou didst enter
  • Into the field to sow there the good plant,
  • Which was a vine and has become a thorn!”
  • This being finished, the high, holy Court
  • Resounded through the spheres, “One God we praise!”
  • In melody that there above is chanted.
  • And then that Baron, who from branch to branch,
  • Examining, had thus conducted me,
  • Till the extremest leaves we were approaching,
  • Again began: “The Grace that dallying
  • Plays with thine intellect thy mouth has opened,
  • Up to this point, as it should opened be,
  • So that I do approve what forth emerged;
  • But now thou must express what thou believest,
  • And whence to thy belief it was presented.”
  • “O holy father, spirit who beholdest
  • What thou believedst so that thou o’ercamest,
  • Towards the sepulchre, more youthful feet,”
  • Began I, “thou dost wish me in this place
  • The form to manifest of my prompt belief,
  • And likewise thou the cause thereof demandest.
  • And I respond: In one God I believe,
  • Sole and eterne, who moveth all the heavens
  • With love and with desire, himself unmoved;
  • And of such faith not only have I proofs
  • Physical and metaphysical, but gives them
  • Likewise the truth that from this place rains down
  • Through Moses, through the Prophets and the Psalms,
  • Through the Evangel, and through you, who wrote
  • After the fiery Spirit sanctified you;
  • In Persons three eterne believe, and these
  • One essence I believe, so one and trine
  • They bear conjunction both with ‘sunt’ and ‘est.’
  • With the profound condition and divine
  • Which now I touch upon, doth stamp my mind
  • Ofttimes the doctrine evangelical.
  • This the beginning is, this is the spark
  • Which afterwards dilates to vivid flame,
  • And, like a star in heaven, is sparkling in me.”
  • Even as a lord who hears what pleaseth him
  • His servant straight embraces, gratulating
  • For the good news as soon as he is silent;
  • So, giving me its benediction, singing,
  • Three times encircled me, when I was silent,
  • The apostolic light, at whose command
  • I spoken had, in speaking I so pleased him.
  • Paradiso: Canto XXV
  • If e’er it happen that the Poem Sacred,
  • To which both heaven and earth have set their hand,
  • So that it many a year hath made me lean,
  • O’ercome the cruelty that bars me out
  • From the fair sheepfold, where a lamb I slumbered,
  • An enemy to the wolves that war upon it,
  • With other voice forthwith, with other fleece
  • Poet will I return, and at my font
  • Baptismal will I take the laurel crown;
  • Because into the Faith that maketh known
  • All souls to God there entered I, and then
  • Peter for her sake thus my brow encircled.
  • Thereafterward towards us moved a light
  • Out of that band whence issued the first-fruits
  • Which of his vicars Christ behind him left,
  • And then my Lady, full of ecstasy,
  • Said unto me: “Look, look! behold the Baron
  • For whom below Galicia is frequented.”
  • In the same way as, when a dove alights
  • Near his companion, both of them pour forth,
  • Circling about and murmuring, their affection,
  • So one beheld I by the other grand
  • Prince glorified to be with welcome greeted,
  • Lauding the food that there above is eaten.
  • But when their gratulations were complete,
  • Silently ‘coram me’ each one stood still,
  • So incandescent it o’ercame my sight.
  • Smiling thereafterwards, said Beatrice:
  • “Illustrious life, by whom the benefactions
  • Of our Basilica have been described,
  • Make Hope resound within this altitude;
  • Thou knowest as oft thou dost personify it
  • As Jesus to the three gave greater clearness.”—
  • “Lift up thy head, and make thyself assured;
  • For what comes hither from the mortal world
  • Must needs be ripened in our radiance.”
  • This comfort came to me from the second fire;
  • Wherefore mine eyes I lifted to the hills,
  • Which bent them down before with too great weight.
  • “Since, through his grace, our Emperor wills that thou
  • Shouldst find thee face to face, before thy death,
  • In the most secret chamber, with his Counts,
  • So that, the truth beholden of this court,
  • Hope, which below there rightfully enamours,
  • Thereby thou strengthen in thyself and others,
  • Say what it is, and how is flowering with it
  • Thy mind, and say from whence it came to thee.”
  • Thus did the second light again continue.
  • And the Compassionate, who piloted
  • The plumage of my wings in such high flight,
  • Did in reply anticipate me thus:
  • “No child whatever the Church Militant
  • Of greater hope possesses, as is written
  • In that Sun which irradiates all our band;
  • Therefore it is conceded him from Egypt
  • To come into Jerusalem to see,
  • Or ever yet his warfare be completed.
  • The two remaining points, that not for knowledge
  • Have been demanded, but that he report
  • How much this virtue unto thee is pleasing,
  • To him I leave; for hard he will not find them,
  • Nor of self-praise; and let him answer them;
  • And may the grace of God in this assist him!”
  • As a disciple, who his teacher follows,
  • Ready and willing, where he is expert,
  • That his proficiency may be displayed,
  • “Hope,” said I, “is the certain expectation
  • Of future glory, which is the effect
  • Of grace divine and merit precedent.
  • From many stars this light comes unto me;
  • But he instilled it first into my heart
  • Who was chief singer unto the chief captain.
  • ‘Sperent in te,’ in the high Theody
  • He sayeth, ‘those who know thy name;’ and who
  • Knoweth it not, if he my faith possess?
  • Thou didst instil me, then, with his instilling
  • In the Epistle, so that I am full,
  • And upon others rain again your rain.”
  • While I was speaking, in the living bosom
  • Of that combustion quivered an effulgence,
  • Sudden and frequent, in the guise of lightning;
  • Then breathed: “The love wherewith I am inflamed
  • Towards the virtue still which followed me
  • Unto the palm and issue of the field,
  • Wills that I breathe to thee that thou delight
  • In her; and grateful to me is thy telling
  • Whatever things Hope promises to thee.”
  • And I: “The ancient Scriptures and the new
  • The mark establish, and this shows it me,
  • Of all the souls whom God hath made his friends.
  • Isaiah saith, that each one garmented
  • In his own land shall be with twofold garments,
  • And his own land is this delightful life.
  • Thy brother, too, far more explicitly,
  • There where he treateth of the robes of white,
  • This revelation manifests to us.”
  • And first, and near the ending of these words,
  • “Sperent in te” from over us was heard,
  • To which responsive answered all the carols.
  • Thereafterward a light among them brightened,
  • So that, if Cancer one such crystal had,
  • Winter would have a month of one sole day.
  • And as uprises, goes, and enters the dance
  • A winsome maiden, only to do honour
  • To the new bride, and not from any failing,
  • Even thus did I behold the brightened splendour
  • Approach the two, who in a wheel revolved
  • As was beseeming to their ardent love.
  • Into the song and music there it entered;
  • And fixed on them my Lady kept her look,
  • Even as a bride silent and motionless.
  • “This is the one who lay upon the breast
  • Of him our Pelican; and this is he
  • To the great office from the cross elected.”
  • My Lady thus; but therefore none the more
  • Did move her sight from its attentive gaze
  • Before or afterward these words of hers.
  • Even as a man who gazes, and endeavours
  • To see the eclipsing of the sun a little,
  • And who, by seeing, sightless doth become,
  • So I became before that latest fire,
  • While it was said, “Why dost thou daze thyself
  • To see a thing which here hath no existence?
  • Earth in the earth my body is, and shall be
  • With all the others there, until our number
  • With the eternal proposition tallies.
  • With the two garments in the blessed cloister
  • Are the two lights alone that have ascended:
  • And this shalt thou take back into your world.”
  • And at this utterance the flaming circle
  • Grew quiet, with the dulcet intermingling
  • Of sound that by the trinal breath was made,
  • As to escape from danger or fatigue
  • The oars that erst were in the water beaten
  • Are all suspended at a whistle’s sound.
  • Ah, how much in my mind was I disturbed,
  • When I turned round to look on Beatrice,
  • That her I could not see, although I was
  • Close at her side and in the Happy World!
  • Paradiso: Canto XXVI
  • While I was doubting for my vision quenched,
  • Out of the flame refulgent that had quenched it
  • Issued a breathing, that attentive made me,
  • Saying: “While thou recoverest the sense
  • Of seeing which in me thou hast consumed,
  • ’Tis well that speaking thou shouldst compensate it.
  • Begin then, and declare to what thy soul
  • Is aimed, and count it for a certainty,
  • Sight is in thee bewildered and not dead;
  • Because the Lady, who through this divine
  • Region conducteth thee, has in her look
  • The power the hand of Ananias had.”
  • I said: “As pleaseth her, or soon or late
  • Let the cure come to eyes that portals were
  • When she with fire I ever burn with entered.
  • The Good, that gives contentment to this Court,
  • The Alpha and Omega is of all
  • The writing that love reads me low or loud.”
  • The selfsame voice, that taken had from me
  • The terror of the sudden dazzlement,
  • To speak still farther put it in my thought;
  • And said: “In verity with finer sieve
  • Behoveth thee to sift; thee it behoveth
  • To say who aimed thy bow at such a target.”
  • And I: “By philosophic arguments,
  • And by authority that hence descends,
  • Such love must needs imprint itself in me;
  • For Good, so far as good, when comprehended
  • Doth straight enkindle love, and so much greater
  • As more of goodness in itself it holds;
  • Then to that Essence (whose is such advantage
  • That every good which out of it is found
  • Is nothing but a ray of its own light)
  • More than elsewhither must the mind be moved
  • Of every one, in loving, who discerns
  • The truth in which this evidence is founded.
  • Such truth he to my intellect reveals
  • Who demonstrates to me the primal love
  • Of all the sempiternal substances.
  • The voice reveals it of the truthful Author,
  • Who says to Moses, speaking of Himself,
  • ‘I will make all my goodness pass before thee.’
  • Thou too revealest it to me, beginning
  • The loud Evangel, that proclaims the secret
  • Of heaven to earth above all other edict.”
  • And I heard say: “By human intellect
  • And by authority concordant with it,
  • Of all thy loves reserve for God the highest.
  • But say again if other cords thou feelest,
  • Draw thee towards Him, that thou mayst proclaim
  • With how many teeth this love is biting thee.”
  • The holy purpose of the Eagle of Christ
  • Not latent was, nay, rather I perceived
  • Whither he fain would my profession lead.
  • Therefore I recommenced: “All of those bites
  • Which have the power to turn the heart to God
  • Unto my charity have been concurrent.
  • The being of the world, and my own being,
  • The death which He endured that I may live,
  • And that which all the faithful hope, as I do,
  • With the forementioned vivid consciousness
  • Have drawn me from the sea of love perverse,
  • And of the right have placed me on the shore.
  • The leaves, wherewith embowered is all the garden
  • Of the Eternal Gardener, do I love
  • As much as he has granted them of good.”
  • As soon as I had ceased, a song most sweet
  • Throughout the heaven resounded, and my Lady
  • Said with the others, “Holy, holy, holy!”
  • And as at some keen light one wakes from sleep
  • By reason of the visual spirit that runs
  • Unto the splendour passed from coat to coat,
  • And he who wakes abhorreth what he sees,
  • So all unconscious is his sudden waking,
  • Until the judgment cometh to his aid,
  • So from before mine eyes did Beatrice
  • Chase every mote with radiance of her own,
  • That cast its light a thousand miles and more.
  • Whence better after than before I saw,
  • And in a kind of wonderment I asked
  • About a fourth light that I saw with us.
  • And said my Lady: “There within those rays
  • Gazes upon its Maker the first soul
  • That ever the first virtue did create.”
  • Even as the bough that downward bends its top
  • At transit of the wind, and then is lifted
  • By its own virtue, which inclines it upward,
  • Likewise did I, the while that she was speaking,
  • Being amazed, and then I was made bold
  • By a desire to speak wherewith I burned.
  • And I began: “O apple, that mature
  • Alone hast been produced, O ancient father,
  • To whom each wife is daughter and daughter-in-law,
  • Devoutly as I can I supplicate thee
  • That thou wouldst speak to me; thou seest my wish;
  • And I, to hear thee quickly, speak it not.”
  • Sometimes an animal, when covered, struggles
  • So that his impulse needs must be apparent,
  • By reason of the wrappage following it;
  • And in like manner the primeval soul
  • Made clear to me athwart its covering
  • How jubilant it was to give me pleasure.
  • Then breathed: “Without thy uttering it to me,
  • Thine inclination better I discern
  • Than thou whatever thing is surest to thee;
  • For I behold it in the truthful mirror,
  • That of Himself all things parhelion makes,
  • And none makes Him parhelion of itself.
  • Thou fain wouldst hear how long ago God placed me
  • Within the lofty garden, where this Lady
  • Unto so long a stairway thee disposed.
  • And how long to mine eyes it was a pleasure,
  • And of the great disdain the proper cause,
  • And the language that I used and that I made.
  • Now, son of mine, the tasting of the tree
  • Not in itself was cause of so great exile,
  • But solely the o’erstepping of the bounds.
  • There, whence thy Lady moved Virgilius,
  • Four thousand and three hundred and two circuits
  • Made by the sun, this Council I desired;
  • And him I saw return to all the lights
  • Of his highway nine hundred times and thirty,
  • Whilst I upon the earth was tarrying.
  • The language that I spake was quite extinct
  • Before that in the work interminable
  • The people under Nimrod were employed;
  • For nevermore result of reasoning
  • (Because of human pleasure that doth change,
  • Obedient to the heavens) was durable.
  • A natural action is it that man speaks;
  • But whether thus or thus, doth nature leave
  • To your own art, as seemeth best to you.
  • Ere I descended to the infernal anguish,
  • ‘El’ was on earth the name of the Chief Good,
  • From whom comes all the joy that wraps me round
  • ‘Eli’ he then was called, and that is proper,
  • Because the use of men is like a leaf
  • On bough, which goeth and another cometh.
  • Upon the mount that highest o’er the wave
  • Rises was I, in life or pure or sinful,
  • From the first hour to that which is the second,
  • As the sun changes quadrant, to the sixth.”
  • Paradiso: Canto XXVII
  • “Glory be to the Father, to the Son,
  • And Holy Ghost!” all Paradise began,
  • So that the melody inebriate made me.
  • What I beheld seemed unto me a smile
  • Of the universe; for my inebriation
  • Found entrance through the hearing and the sight.
  • O joy! O gladness inexpressible!
  • O perfect life of love and peacefulness!
  • O riches without hankering secure!
  • Before mine eyes were standing the four torches
  • Enkindled, and the one that first had come
  • Began to make itself more luminous;
  • And even such in semblance it became
  • As Jupiter would become, if he and Mars
  • Were birds, and they should interchange their feathers.
  • That Providence, which here distributeth
  • Season and service, in the blessed choir
  • Had silence upon every side imposed.
  • When I heard say: “If I my colour change,
  • Marvel not at it; for while I am speaking
  • Thou shalt behold all these their colour change.
  • He who usurps upon the earth my place,
  • My place, my place, which vacant has become
  • Before the presence of the Son of God,
  • Has of my cemetery made a sewer
  • Of blood and stench, whereby the Perverse One,
  • Who fell from here, below there is appeased!”
  • With the same colour which, through sun adverse,
  • Painteth the clouds at evening or at morn,
  • Beheld I then the whole of heaven suffused.
  • And as a modest woman, who abides
  • Sure of herself, and at another’s failing,
  • From listening only, timorous becomes,
  • Even thus did Beatrice change countenance;
  • And I believe in heaven was such eclipse,
  • When suffered the supreme Omnipotence;
  • Thereafterward proceeded forth his words
  • With voice so much transmuted from itself,
  • The very countenance was not more changed.
  • “The spouse of Christ has never nurtured been
  • On blood of mine, of Linus and of Cletus,
  • To be made use of in acquest of gold;
  • But in acquest of this delightful life
  • Sixtus and Pius, Urban and Calixtus,
  • After much lamentation, shed their blood.
  • Our purpose was not, that on the right hand
  • Of our successors should in part be seated
  • The Christian folk, in part upon the other;
  • Nor that the keys which were to me confided
  • Should e’er become the escutcheon on a banner,
  • That should wage war on those who are baptized;
  • Nor I be made the figure of a seal
  • To privileges venal and mendacious,
  • Whereat I often redden and flash with fire.
  • In garb of shepherds the rapacious wolves
  • Are seen from here above o’er all the pastures!
  • O wrath of God, why dost thou slumber still?
  • To drink our blood the Caorsines and Gascons
  • Are making ready. O thou good beginning,
  • Unto how vile an end must thou needs fall!
  • But the high Providence, that with Scipio
  • At Rome the glory of the world defended,
  • Will speedily bring aid, as I conceive;
  • And thou, my son, who by thy mortal weight
  • Shalt down return again, open thy mouth;
  • What I conceal not, do not thou conceal.”
  • As with its frozen vapours downward falls
  • In flakes our atmosphere, what time the horn
  • Of the celestial Goat doth touch the sun,
  • Upward in such array saw I the ether
  • Become, and flaked with the triumphant vapours,
  • Which there together with us had remained.
  • My sight was following up their semblances,
  • And followed till the medium, by excess,
  • The passing farther onward took from it;
  • Whereat the Lady, who beheld me freed
  • From gazing upward, said to me: “Cast down
  • Thy sight, and see how far thou art turned round.”
  • Since the first time that I had downward looked,
  • I saw that I had moved through the whole arc
  • Which the first climate makes from midst to end;
  • So that I saw the mad track of Ulysses
  • Past Gades, and this side, well nigh the shore
  • Whereon became Europa a sweet burden.
  • And of this threshing-floor the site to me
  • Were more unveiled, but the sun was proceeding
  • Under my feet, a sign and more removed.
  • My mind enamoured, which is dallying
  • At all times with my Lady, to bring back
  • To her mine eyes was more than ever ardent.
  • And if or Art or Nature has made bait
  • To catch the eyes and so possess the mind,
  • In human flesh or in its portraiture,
  • All joined together would appear as nought
  • To the divine delight which shone upon me
  • When to her smiling face I turned me round.
  • The virtue that her look endowed me with
  • From the fair nest of Leda tore me forth,
  • And up into the swiftest heaven impelled me.
  • Its parts exceeding full of life and lofty
  • Are all so uniform, I cannot say
  • Which Beatrice selected for my place.
  • But she, who was aware of my desire,
  • Began, the while she smiled so joyously
  • That God seemed in her countenance to rejoice:
  • “The nature of that motion, which keeps quiet
  • The centre and all the rest about it moves,
  • From hence begins as from its starting point.
  • And in this heaven there is no other Where
  • Than in the Mind Divine, wherein is kindled
  • The love that turns it, and the power it rains.
  • Within a circle light and love embrace it,
  • Even as this doth the others, and that precinct
  • He who encircles it alone controls.
  • Its motion is not by another meted,
  • But all the others measured are by this,
  • As ten is by the half and by the fifth.
  • And in what manner time in such a pot
  • May have its roots, and in the rest its leaves,
  • Now unto thee can manifest be made.
  • O Covetousness, that mortals dost ingulf
  • Beneath thee so, that no one hath the power
  • Of drawing back his eyes from out thy waves!
  • Full fairly blossoms in mankind the will;
  • But the uninterrupted rain converts
  • Into abortive wildings the true plums.
  • Fidelity and innocence are found
  • Only in children; afterwards they both
  • Take flight or e’er the cheeks with down are covered.
  • One, while he prattles still, observes the fasts,
  • Who, when his tongue is loosed, forthwith devours
  • Whatever food under whatever moon;
  • Another, while he prattles, loves and listens
  • Unto his mother, who when speech is perfect
  • Forthwith desires to see her in her grave.
  • Even thus is swarthy made the skin so white
  • In its first aspect of the daughter fair
  • Of him who brings the morn, and leaves the night.
  • Thou, that it may not be a marvel to thee,
  • Think that on earth there is no one who governs;
  • Whence goes astray the human family.
  • Ere January be unwintered wholly
  • By the centesimal on earth neglected,
  • Shall these supernal circles roar so loud
  • The tempest that has been so long awaited
  • Shall whirl the poops about where are the prows;
  • So that the fleet shall run its course direct,
  • And the true fruit shall follow on the flower.”
  • Paradiso: Canto XXVIII
  • After the truth against the present life
  • Of miserable mortals was unfolded
  • By her who doth imparadise my mind,
  • As in a looking-glass a taper’s flame
  • He sees who from behind is lighted by it,
  • Before he has it in his sight or thought,
  • And turns him round to see if so the glass
  • Tell him the truth, and sees that it accords
  • Therewith as doth a music with its metre,
  • In similar wise my memory recollecteth
  • That I did, looking into those fair eyes,
  • Of which Love made the springes to ensnare me.
  • And as I turned me round, and mine were touched
  • By that which is apparent in that volume,
  • Whenever on its gyre we gaze intent,
  • A point beheld I, that was raying out
  • Light so acute, the sight which it enkindles
  • Must close perforce before such great acuteness.
  • And whatsoever star seems smallest here
  • Would seem to be a moon, if placed beside it.
  • As one star with another star is placed.
  • Perhaps at such a distance as appears
  • A halo cincturing the light that paints it,
  • When densest is the vapour that sustains it,
  • Thus distant round the point a circle of fire
  • So swiftly whirled, that it would have surpassed
  • Whatever motion soonest girds the world;
  • And this was by another circumcinct,
  • That by a third, the third then by a fourth,
  • By a fifth the fourth, and then by a sixth the fifth;
  • The seventh followed thereupon in width
  • So ample now, that Juno’s messenger
  • Entire would be too narrow to contain it.
  • Even so the eighth and ninth; and every one
  • More slowly moved, according as it was
  • In number distant farther from the first.
  • And that one had its flame most crystalline
  • From which less distant was the stainless spark,
  • I think because more with its truth imbued.
  • My Lady, who in my anxiety
  • Beheld me much perplexed, said: “From that point
  • Dependent is the heaven and nature all.
  • Behold that circle most conjoined to it,
  • And know thou, that its motion is so swift
  • Through burning love whereby it is spurred on.”
  • And I to her: “If the world were arranged
  • In the order which I see in yonder wheels,
  • What’s set before me would have satisfied me;
  • But in the world of sense we can perceive
  • That evermore the circles are diviner
  • As they are from the centre more remote
  • Wherefore if my desire is to be ended
  • In this miraculous and angelic temple,
  • That has for confines only love and light,
  • To hear behoves me still how the example
  • And the exemplar go not in one fashion,
  • Since for myself in vain I contemplate it.”
  • “If thine own fingers unto such a knot
  • Be insufficient, it is no great wonder,
  • So hard hath it become for want of trying.”
  • My Lady thus; then said she: “Do thou take
  • What I shall tell thee, if thou wouldst be sated,
  • And exercise on that thy subtlety.
  • The circles corporal are wide and narrow
  • According to the more or less of virtue
  • Which is distributed through all their parts.
  • The greater goodness works the greater weal,
  • The greater weal the greater body holds,
  • If perfect equally are all its parts.
  • Therefore this one which sweeps along with it
  • The universe sublime, doth correspond
  • Unto the circle which most loves and knows.
  • On which account, if thou unto the virtue
  • Apply thy measure, not to the appearance
  • Of substances that unto thee seem round,
  • Thou wilt behold a marvellous agreement,
  • Of more to greater, and of less to smaller,
  • In every heaven, with its Intelligence.”
  • Even as remaineth splendid and serene
  • The hemisphere of air, when Boreas
  • Is blowing from that cheek where he is mildest,
  • Because is purified and resolved the rack
  • That erst disturbed it, till the welkin laughs
  • With all the beauties of its pageantry;
  • Thus did I likewise, after that my Lady
  • Had me provided with her clear response,
  • And like a star in heaven the truth was seen.
  • And soon as to a stop her words had come,
  • Not otherwise does iron scintillate
  • When molten, than those circles scintillated.
  • Their coruscation all the sparks repeated,
  • And they so many were, their number makes
  • More millions than the doubling of the chess.
  • I heard them sing hosanna choir by choir
  • To the fixed point which holds them at the ‘Ubi,’
  • And ever will, where they have ever been.
  • And she, who saw the dubious meditations
  • Within my mind, “The primal circles,” said,
  • “Have shown thee Seraphim and Cherubim.
  • Thus rapidly they follow their own bonds,
  • To be as like the point as most they can,
  • And can as far as they are high in vision.
  • Those other Loves, that round about them go,
  • Thrones of the countenance divine are called,
  • Because they terminate the primal Triad.
  • And thou shouldst know that they all have delight
  • As much as their own vision penetrates
  • The Truth, in which all intellect finds rest.
  • From this it may be seen how blessedness
  • Is founded in the faculty which sees,
  • And not in that which loves, and follows next;
  • And of this seeing merit is the measure,
  • Which is brought forth by grace, and by good will;
  • Thus on from grade to grade doth it proceed.
  • The second Triad, which is germinating
  • In such wise in this sempiternal spring,
  • That no nocturnal Aries despoils,
  • Perpetually hosanna warbles forth
  • With threefold melody, that sounds in three
  • Orders of joy, with which it is intrined.
  • The three Divine are in this hierarchy,
  • First the Dominions, and the Virtues next;
  • And the third order is that of the Powers.
  • Then in the dances twain penultimate
  • The Principalities and Archangels wheel;
  • The last is wholly of angelic sports.
  • These orders upward all of them are gazing,
  • And downward so prevail, that unto God
  • They all attracted are and all attract.
  • And Dionysius with so great desire
  • To contemplate these Orders set himself,
  • He named them and distinguished them as I do.
  • But Gregory afterwards dissented from him;
  • Wherefore, as soon as he unclosed his eyes
  • Within this heaven, he at himself did smile.
  • And if so much of secret truth a mortal
  • Proffered on earth, I would not have thee marvel,
  • For he who saw it here revealed it to him,
  • With much more of the truth about these circles.”
  • Paradiso: Canto XXIX
  • At what time both the children of Latona,
  • Surmounted by the Ram and by the Scales,
  • Together make a zone of the horizon,
  • As long as from the time the zenith holds them
  • In equipoise, till from that girdle both
  • Changing their hemisphere disturb the balance,
  • So long, her face depicted with a smile,
  • Did Beatrice keep silence while she gazed
  • Fixedly at the point which had o’ercome me.
  • Then she began: “I say, and I ask not
  • What thou dost wish to hear, for I have seen it
  • Where centres every When and every ‘Ubi.’
  • Not to acquire some good unto himself,
  • Which is impossible, but that his splendour
  • In its resplendency may say, ‘Subsisto,’
  • In his eternity outside of time,
  • Outside all other limits, as it pleased him,
  • Into new Loves the Eternal Love unfolded.
  • Nor as if torpid did he lie before;
  • For neither after nor before proceeded
  • The going forth of God upon these waters.
  • Matter and Form unmingled and conjoined
  • Came into being that had no defect,
  • E’en as three arrows from a three-stringed bow.
  • And as in glass, in amber, or in crystal
  • A sunbeam flashes so, that from its coming
  • To its full being is no interval,
  • So from its Lord did the triform effect
  • Ray forth into its being all together,
  • Without discrimination of beginning.
  • Order was con-created and constructed
  • In substances, and summit of the world
  • Were those wherein the pure act was produced.
  • Pure potentiality held the lowest part;
  • Midway bound potentiality with act
  • Such bond that it shall never be unbound.
  • Jerome has written unto you of angels
  • Created a long lapse of centuries
  • Or ever yet the other world was made;
  • But written is this truth in many places
  • By writers of the Holy Ghost, and thou
  • Shalt see it, if thou lookest well thereat.
  • And even reason seeth it somewhat,
  • For it would not concede that for so long
  • Could be the motors without their perfection.
  • Now dost thou know both where and when these Loves
  • Created were, and how; so that extinct
  • In thy desire already are three fires.
  • Nor could one reach, in counting, unto twenty
  • So swiftly, as a portion of these angels
  • Disturbed the subject of your elements.
  • The rest remained, and they began this art
  • Which thou discernest, with so great delight
  • That never from their circling do they cease.
  • The occasion of the fall was the accursed
  • Presumption of that One, whom thou hast seen
  • By all the burden of the world constrained.
  • Those whom thou here beholdest modest were
  • To recognise themselves as of that goodness
  • Which made them apt for so much understanding;
  • On which account their vision was exalted
  • By the enlightening grace and their own merit,
  • So that they have a full and steadfast will.
  • I would not have thee doubt, but certain be,
  • ’Tis meritorious to receive this grace,
  • According as the affection opens to it.
  • Now round about in this consistory
  • Much mayst thou contemplate, if these my words
  • Be gathered up, without all further aid.
  • But since upon the earth, throughout your schools,
  • They teach that such is the angelic nature
  • That it doth hear, and recollect, and will,
  • More will I say, that thou mayst see unmixed
  • The truth that is confounded there below,
  • Equivocating in such like prelections.
  • These substances, since in God’s countenance
  • They jocund were, turned not away their sight
  • From that wherefrom not anything is hidden;
  • Hence they have not their vision intercepted
  • By object new, and hence they do not need
  • To recollect, through interrupted thought.
  • So that below, not sleeping, people dream,
  • Believing they speak truth, and not believing;
  • And in the last is greater sin and shame.
  • Below you do not journey by one path
  • Philosophising; so transporteth you
  • Love of appearance and the thought thereof.
  • And even this above here is endured
  • With less disdain, than when is set aside
  • The Holy Writ, or when it is distorted.
  • They think not there how much of blood it costs
  • To sow it in the world, and how he pleases
  • Who in humility keeps close to it.
  • Each striveth for appearance, and doth make
  • His own inventions; and these treated are
  • By preachers, and the Evangel holds its peace.
  • One sayeth that the moon did backward turn,
  • In the Passion of Christ, and interpose herself
  • So that the sunlight reached not down below;
  • And lies; for of its own accord the light
  • Hid itself; whence to Spaniards and to Indians,
  • As to the Jews, did such eclipse respond.
  • Florence has not so many Lapi and Bindi
  • As fables such as these, that every year
  • Are shouted from the pulpit back and forth,
  • In such wise that the lambs, who do not know,
  • Come back from pasture fed upon the wind,
  • And not to see the harm doth not excuse them.
  • Christ did not to his first disciples say,
  • ‘Go forth, and to the world preach idle tales,’
  • But unto them a true foundation gave;
  • And this so loudly sounded from their lips,
  • That, in the warfare to enkindle Faith,
  • They made of the Evangel shields and lances.
  • Now men go forth with jests and drolleries
  • To preach, and if but well the people laugh,
  • The hood puffs out, and nothing more is asked.
  • But in the cowl there nestles such a bird,
  • That, if the common people were to see it,
  • They would perceive what pardons they confide in,
  • For which so great on earth has grown the folly,
  • That, without proof of any testimony,
  • To each indulgence they would flock together.
  • By this Saint Anthony his pig doth fatten,
  • And many others, who are worse than pigs,
  • Paying in money without mark of coinage.
  • But since we have digressed abundantly,
  • Turn back thine eyes forthwith to the right path,
  • So that the way be shortened with the time.
  • This nature doth so multiply itself
  • In numbers, that there never yet was speech
  • Nor mortal fancy that can go so far.
  • And if thou notest that which is revealed
  • By Daniel, thou wilt see that in his thousands
  • Number determinate is kept concealed.
  • The primal light, that all irradiates it,
  • By modes as many is received therein,
  • As are the splendours wherewith it is mated.
  • Hence, inasmuch as on the act conceptive
  • The affection followeth, of love the sweetness
  • Therein diversely fervid is or tepid.
  • The height behold now and the amplitude
  • Of the eternal power, since it hath made
  • Itself so many mirrors, where ’tis broken,
  • One in itself remaining as before.”
  • Paradiso: Canto XXX
  • Perchance six thousand miles remote from us
  • Is glowing the sixth hour, and now this world
  • Inclines its shadow almost to a level,
  • When the mid-heaven begins to make itself
  • So deep to us, that here and there a star
  • Ceases to shine so far down as this depth,
  • And as advances bright exceedingly
  • The handmaid of the sun, the heaven is closed
  • Light after light to the most beautiful;
  • Not otherwise the Triumph, which for ever
  • Plays round about the point that vanquished me,
  • Seeming enclosed by what itself encloses,
  • Little by little from my vision faded;
  • Whereat to turn mine eyes on Beatrice
  • My seeing nothing and my love constrained me.
  • If what has hitherto been said of her
  • Were all concluded in a single praise,
  • Scant would it be to serve the present turn.
  • Not only does the beauty I beheld
  • Transcend ourselves, but truly I believe
  • Its Maker only may enjoy it all.
  • Vanquished do I confess me by this passage
  • More than by problem of his theme was ever
  • O’ercome the comic or the tragic poet;
  • For as the sun the sight that trembles most,
  • Even so the memory of that sweet smile
  • My mind depriveth of its very self.
  • From the first day that I beheld her face
  • In this life, to the moment of this look,
  • The sequence of my song has ne’er been severed;
  • But now perforce this sequence must desist
  • From following her beauty with my verse,
  • As every artist at his uttermost.
  • Such as I leave her to a greater fame
  • Than any of my trumpet, which is bringing
  • Its arduous matter to a final close,
  • With voice and gesture of a perfect leader
  • She recommenced: “We from the greatest body
  • Have issued to the heaven that is pure light;
  • Light intellectual replete with love,
  • Love of true good replete with ecstasy,
  • Ecstasy that transcendeth every sweetness.
  • Here shalt thou see the one host and the other
  • Of Paradise, and one in the same aspects
  • Which at the final judgment thou shalt see.”
  • Even as a sudden lightning that disperses
  • The visual spirits, so that it deprives
  • The eye of impress from the strongest objects,
  • Thus round about me flashed a living light,
  • And left me swathed around with such a veil
  • Of its effulgence, that I nothing saw.
  • “Ever the Love which quieteth this heaven
  • Welcomes into itself with such salute,
  • To make the candle ready for its flame.”
  • No sooner had within me these brief words
  • An entrance found, than I perceived myself
  • To be uplifted over my own power,
  • And I with vision new rekindled me,
  • Such that no light whatever is so pure
  • But that mine eyes were fortified against it.
  • And light I saw in fashion of a river
  • Fulvid with its effulgence, ’twixt two banks
  • Depicted with an admirable Spring.
  • Out of this river issued living sparks,
  • And on all sides sank down into the flowers,
  • Like unto rubies that are set in gold;
  • And then, as if inebriate with the odours,
  • They plunged again into the wondrous torrent,
  • And as one entered issued forth another.
  • “The high desire, that now inflames and moves thee
  • To have intelligence of what thou seest,
  • Pleaseth me all the more, the more it swells.
  • But of this water it behoves thee drink
  • Before so great a thirst in thee be slaked.”
  • Thus said to me the sunshine of mine eyes;
  • And added: “The river and the topazes
  • Going in and out, and the laughing of the herbage,
  • Are of their truth foreshadowing prefaces;
  • Not that these things are difficult in themselves,
  • But the deficiency is on thy side,
  • For yet thou hast not vision so exalted.”
  • There is no babe that leaps so suddenly
  • With face towards the milk, if he awake
  • Much later than his usual custom is,
  • As I did, that I might make better mirrors
  • Still of mine eyes, down stooping to the wave
  • Which flows that we therein be better made.
  • And even as the penthouse of mine eyelids
  • Drank of it, it forthwith appeared to me
  • Out of its length to be transformed to round.
  • Then as a folk who have been under masks
  • Seem other than before, if they divest
  • The semblance not their own they disappeared in,
  • Thus into greater pomp were changed for me
  • The flowerets and the sparks, so that I saw
  • Both of the Courts of Heaven made manifest.
  • O splendour of God! by means of which I saw
  • The lofty triumph of the realm veracious,
  • Give me the power to say how it I saw!
  • There is a light above, which visible
  • Makes the Creator unto every creature,
  • Who only in beholding Him has peace,
  • And it expands itself in circular form
  • To such extent, that its circumference
  • Would be too large a girdle for the sun.
  • The semblance of it is all made of rays
  • Reflected from the top of Primal Motion,
  • Which takes therefrom vitality and power.
  • And as a hill in water at its base
  • Mirrors itself, as if to see its beauty
  • When affluent most in verdure and in flowers,
  • So, ranged aloft all round about the light,
  • Mirrored I saw in more ranks than a thousand
  • All who above there have from us returned.
  • And if the lowest row collect within it
  • So great a light, how vast the amplitude
  • Is of this Rose in its extremest leaves!
  • My vision in the vastness and the height
  • Lost not itself, but comprehended all
  • The quantity and quality of that gladness.
  • There near and far nor add nor take away;
  • For there where God immediately doth govern,
  • The natural law in naught is relevant.
  • Into the yellow of the Rose Eternal
  • That spreads, and multiplies, and breathes an odour
  • Of praise unto the ever-vernal Sun,
  • As one who silent is and fain would speak,
  • Me Beatrice drew on, and said: “Behold
  • Of the white stoles how vast the convent is!
  • Behold how vast the circuit of our city!
  • Behold our seats so filled to overflowing,
  • That here henceforward are few people wanting!
  • On that great throne whereon thine eyes are fixed
  • For the crown’s sake already placed upon it,
  • Before thou suppest at this wedding feast
  • Shall sit the soul (that is to be Augustus
  • On earth) of noble Henry, who shall come
  • To redress Italy ere she be ready.
  • Blind covetousness, that casts its spell upon you,
  • Has made you like unto the little child,
  • Who dies of hunger and drives off the nurse.
  • And in the sacred forum then shall be
  • A Prefect such, that openly or covert
  • On the same road he will not walk with him.
  • But long of God he will not be endured
  • In holy office; he shall be thrust down
  • Where Simon Magus is for his deserts,
  • And make him of Alagna lower go!”
  • Paradiso: Canto XXXI
  • In fashion then as of a snow-white rose
  • Displayed itself to me the saintly host,
  • Whom Christ in his own blood had made his bride,
  • But the other host, that flying sees and sings
  • The glory of Him who doth enamour it,
  • And the goodness that created it so noble,
  • Even as a swarm of bees, that sinks in flowers
  • One moment, and the next returns again
  • To where its labour is to sweetness turned,
  • Sank into the great flower, that is adorned
  • With leaves so many, and thence reascended
  • To where its love abideth evermore.
  • Their faces had they all of living flame,
  • And wings of gold, and all the rest so white
  • No snow unto that limit doth attain.
  • From bench to bench, into the flower descending,
  • They carried something of the peace and ardour
  • Which by the fanning of their flanks they won.
  • Nor did the interposing ’twixt the flower
  • And what was o’er it of such plenitude
  • Of flying shapes impede the sight and splendour;
  • Because the light divine so penetrates
  • The universe, according to its merit,
  • That naught can be an obstacle against it.
  • This realm secure and full of gladsomeness,
  • Crowded with ancient people and with modern,
  • Unto one mark had all its look and love.
  • O Trinal Light, that in a single star
  • Sparkling upon their sight so satisfies them,
  • Look down upon our tempest here below!
  • If the barbarians, coming from some region
  • That every day by Helice is covered,
  • Revolving with her son whom she delights in,
  • Beholding Rome and all her noble works,
  • Were wonder-struck, what time the Lateran
  • Above all mortal things was eminent,—
  • I who to the divine had from the human,
  • From time unto eternity, had come,
  • From Florence to a people just and sane,
  • With what amazement must I have been filled!
  • Truly between this and the joy, it was
  • My pleasure not to hear, and to be mute.
  • And as a pilgrim who delighteth him
  • In gazing round the temple of his vow,
  • And hopes some day to retell how it was,
  • So through the living light my way pursuing
  • Directed I mine eyes o’er all the ranks,
  • Now up, now down, and now all round about.
  • Faces I saw of charity persuasive,
  • Embellished by His light and their own smile,
  • And attitudes adorned with every grace.
  • The general form of Paradise already
  • My glance had comprehended as a whole,
  • In no part hitherto remaining fixed,
  • And round I turned me with rekindled wish
  • My Lady to interrogate of things
  • Concerning which my mind was in suspense.
  • One thing I meant, another answered me;
  • I thought I should see Beatrice, and saw
  • An Old Man habited like the glorious people.
  • O’erflowing was he in his eyes and cheeks
  • With joy benign, in attitude of pity
  • As to a tender father is becoming.
  • And “She, where is she?” instantly I said;
  • Whence he: “To put an end to thy desire,
  • Me Beatrice hath sent from mine own place.
  • And if thou lookest up to the third round
  • Of the first rank, again shalt thou behold her
  • Upon the throne her merits have assigned her.”
  • Without reply I lifted up mine eyes,
  • And saw her, as she made herself a crown
  • Reflecting from herself the eternal rays.
  • Not from that region which the highest thunders
  • Is any mortal eye so far removed,
  • In whatsoever sea it deepest sinks,
  • As there from Beatrice my sight; but this
  • Was nothing unto me; because her image
  • Descended not to me by medium blurred.
  • “O Lady, thou in whom my hope is strong,
  • And who for my salvation didst endure
  • In Hell to leave the imprint of thy feet,
  • Of whatsoever things I have beheld,
  • As coming from thy power and from thy goodness
  • I recognise the virtue and the grace.
  • Thou from a slave hast brought me unto freedom,
  • By all those ways, by all the expedients,
  • Whereby thou hadst the power of doing it.
  • Preserve towards me thy magnificence,
  • So that this soul of mine, which thou hast healed,
  • Pleasing to thee be loosened from the body.”
  • Thus I implored; and she, so far away,
  • Smiled, as it seemed, and looked once more at me;
  • Then unto the eternal fountain turned.
  • And said the Old Man holy: “That thou mayst
  • Accomplish perfectly thy journeying,
  • Whereunto prayer and holy love have sent me,
  • Fly with thine eyes all round about this garden;
  • For seeing it will discipline thy sight
  • Farther to mount along the ray divine.
  • And she, the Queen of Heaven, for whom I burn
  • Wholly with love, will grant us every grace,
  • Because that I her faithful Bernard am.”
  • As he who peradventure from Croatia
  • Cometh to gaze at our Veronica,
  • Who through its ancient fame is never sated,
  • But says in thought, the while it is displayed,
  • “My Lord, Christ Jesus, God of very God,
  • Now was your semblance made like unto this?”
  • Even such was I while gazing at the living
  • Charity of the man, who in this world
  • By contemplation tasted of that peace.
  • “Thou son of grace, this jocund life,” began he,
  • “Will not be known to thee by keeping ever
  • Thine eyes below here on the lowest place;
  • But mark the circles to the most remote,
  • Until thou shalt behold enthroned the Queen
  • To whom this realm is subject and devoted.”
  • I lifted up mine eyes, and as at morn
  • The oriental part of the horizon
  • Surpasses that wherein the sun goes down,
  • Thus, as if going with mine eyes from vale
  • To mount, I saw a part in the remoteness
  • Surpass in splendour all the other front.
  • And even as there where we await the pole
  • That Phaeton drove badly, blazes more
  • The light, and is on either side diminished,
  • So likewise that pacific oriflamme
  • Gleamed brightest in the centre, and each side
  • In equal measure did the flame abate.
  • And at that centre, with their wings expanded,
  • More than a thousand jubilant Angels saw I,
  • Each differing in effulgence and in kind.
  • I saw there at their sports and at their songs
  • A beauty smiling, which the gladness was
  • Within the eyes of all the other saints;
  • And if I had in speaking as much wealth
  • As in imagining, I should not dare
  • To attempt the smallest part of its delight.
  • Bernard, as soon as he beheld mine eyes
  • Fixed and intent upon its fervid fervour,
  • His own with such affection turned to her
  • That it made mine more ardent to behold.
  • Paradiso: Canto XXXII
  • Absorbed in his delight, that contemplator
  • Assumed the willing office of a teacher,
  • And gave beginning to these holy words:
  • “The wound that Mary closed up and anointed,
  • She at her feet who is so beautiful,
  • She is the one who opened it and pierced it.
  • Within that order which the third seats make
  • Is seated Rachel, lower than the other,
  • With Beatrice, in manner as thou seest.
  • Sarah, Rebecca, Judith, and her who was
  • Ancestress of the Singer, who for dole
  • Of the misdeed said, ‘Miserere mei,’
  • Canst thou behold from seat to seat descending
  • Down in gradation, as with each one’s name
  • I through the Rose go down from leaf to leaf.
  • And downward from the seventh row, even as
  • Above the same, succeed the Hebrew women,
  • Dividing all the tresses of the flower;
  • Because, according to the view which Faith
  • In Christ had taken, these are the partition
  • By which the sacred stairways are divided.
  • Upon this side, where perfect is the flower
  • With each one of its petals, seated are
  • Those who believed in Christ who was to come.
  • Upon the other side, where intersected
  • With vacant spaces are the semicircles,
  • Are those who looked to Christ already come.
  • And as, upon this side, the glorious seat
  • Of the Lady of Heaven, and the other seats
  • Below it, such a great division make,
  • So opposite doth that of the great John,
  • Who, ever holy, desert and martyrdom
  • Endured, and afterwards two years in Hell.
  • And under him thus to divide were chosen
  • Francis, and Benedict, and Augustine,
  • And down to us the rest from round to round.
  • Behold now the high providence divine;
  • For one and other aspect of the Faith
  • In equal measure shall this garden fill.
  • And know that downward from that rank which cleaves
  • Midway the sequence of the two divisions,
  • Not by their proper merit are they seated;
  • But by another’s under fixed conditions;
  • For these are spirits one and all assoiled
  • Before they any true election had.
  • Well canst thou recognise it in their faces,
  • And also in their voices puerile,
  • If thou regard them well and hearken to them.
  • Now doubtest thou, and doubting thou art silent;
  • But I will loosen for thee the strong bond
  • In which thy subtile fancies hold thee fast.
  • Within the amplitude of this domain
  • No casual point can possibly find place,
  • No more than sadness can, or thirst, or hunger;
  • For by eternal law has been established
  • Whatever thou beholdest, so that closely
  • The ring is fitted to the finger here.
  • And therefore are these people, festinate
  • Unto true life, not ‘sine causa’ here
  • More and less excellent among themselves.
  • The King, by means of whom this realm reposes
  • In so great love and in so great delight
  • That no will ventureth to ask for more,
  • In his own joyous aspect every mind
  • Creating, at his pleasure dowers with grace
  • Diversely; and let here the effect suffice.
  • And this is clearly and expressly noted
  • For you in Holy Scripture, in those twins
  • Who in their mother had their anger roused.
  • According to the colour of the hair,
  • Therefore, with such a grace the light supreme
  • Consenteth that they worthily be crowned.
  • Without, then, any merit of their deeds,
  • Stationed are they in different gradations,
  • Differing only in their first acuteness.
  • ’Tis true that in the early centuries,
  • With innocence, to work out their salvation
  • Sufficient was the faith of parents only.
  • After the earlier ages were completed,
  • Behoved it that the males by circumcision
  • Unto their innocent wings should virtue add;
  • But after that the time of grace had come
  • Without the baptism absolute of Christ,
  • Such innocence below there was retained.
  • Look now into the face that unto Christ
  • Hath most resemblance; for its brightness only
  • Is able to prepare thee to see Christ.”
  • On her did I behold so great a gladness
  • Rain down, borne onward in the holy minds
  • Created through that altitude to fly,
  • That whatsoever I had seen before
  • Did not suspend me in such admiration,
  • Nor show me such similitude of God.
  • And the same Love that first descended there,
  • “Ave Maria, gratia plena,” singing,
  • In front of her his wings expanded wide.
  • Unto the canticle divine responded
  • From every part the court beatified,
  • So that each sight became serener for it.
  • “O holy father, who for me endurest
  • To be below here, leaving the sweet place
  • In which thou sittest by eternal lot,
  • Who is the Angel that with so much joy
  • Into the eyes is looking of our Queen,
  • Enamoured so that he seems made of fire?”
  • Thus I again recourse had to the teaching
  • Of that one who delighted him in Mary
  • As doth the star of morning in the sun.
  • And he to me: “Such gallantry and grace
  • As there can be in Angel and in soul,
  • All is in him; and thus we fain would have it;
  • Because he is the one who bore the palm
  • Down unto Mary, when the Son of God
  • To take our burden on himself decreed.
  • But now come onward with thine eyes, as I
  • Speaking shall go, and note the great patricians
  • Of this most just and merciful of empires.
  • Those two that sit above there most enrapture
  • As being very near unto Augusta,
  • Are as it were the two roots of this Rose.
  • He who upon the left is near her placed
  • The father is, by whose audacious taste
  • The human species so much bitter tastes.
  • Upon the right thou seest that ancient father
  • Of Holy Church, into whose keeping Christ
  • The keys committed of this lovely flower.
  • And he who all the evil days beheld,
  • Before his death, of her the beauteous bride
  • Who with the spear and with the nails was won,
  • Beside him sits, and by the other rests
  • That leader under whom on manna lived
  • The people ingrate, fickle, and stiff-necked.
  • Opposite Peter seest thou Anna seated,
  • So well content to look upon her daughter,
  • Her eyes she moves not while she sings Hosanna.
  • And opposite the eldest household father
  • Lucia sits, she who thy Lady moved
  • When to rush downward thou didst bend thy brows.
  • But since the moments of thy vision fly,
  • Here will we make full stop, as a good tailor
  • Who makes the gown according to his cloth,
  • And unto the first Love will turn our eyes,
  • That looking upon Him thou penetrate
  • As far as possible through his effulgence.
  • Truly, lest peradventure thou recede,
  • Moving thy wings believing to advance,
  • By prayer behoves it that grace be obtained;
  • Grace from that one who has the power to aid thee;
  • And thou shalt follow me with thy affection
  • That from my words thy heart turn not aside.”
  • And he began this holy orison.
  • Paradiso: Canto XXXIII
  • “Thou Virgin Mother, daughter of thy Son,
  • Humble and high beyond all other creature,
  • The limit fixed of the eternal counsel,
  • Thou art the one who such nobility
  • To human nature gave, that its Creator
  • Did not disdain to make himself its creature.
  • Within thy womb rekindled was the love,
  • By heat of which in the eternal peace
  • After such wise this flower has germinated.
  • Here unto us thou art a noonday torch
  • Of charity, and below there among mortals
  • Thou art the living fountain-head of hope.
  • Lady, thou art so great, and so prevailing,
  • That he who wishes grace, nor runs to thee,
  • His aspirations without wings would fly.
  • Not only thy benignity gives succour
  • To him who asketh it, but oftentimes
  • Forerunneth of its own accord the asking.
  • In thee compassion is, in thee is pity,
  • In thee magnificence; in thee unites
  • Whate’er of goodness is in any creature.
  • Now doth this man, who from the lowest depth
  • Of the universe as far as here has seen
  • One after one the spiritual lives,
  • Supplicate thee through grace for so much power
  • That with his eyes he may uplift himself
  • Higher towards the uttermost salvation.
  • And I, who never burned for my own seeing
  • More than I do for his, all of my prayers
  • Proffer to thee, and pray they come not short,
  • That thou wouldst scatter from him every cloud
  • Of his mortality so with thy prayers,
  • That the Chief Pleasure be to him displayed.
  • Still farther do I pray thee, Queen, who canst
  • Whate’er thou wilt, that sound thou mayst preserve
  • After so great a vision his affections.
  • Let thy protection conquer human movements;
  • See Beatrice and all the blessed ones
  • My prayers to second clasp their hands to thee!”
  • The eyes beloved and revered of God,
  • Fastened upon the speaker, showed to us
  • How grateful unto her are prayers devout;
  • Then unto the Eternal Light they turned,
  • On which it is not credible could be
  • By any creature bent an eye so clear.
  • And I, who to the end of all desires
  • Was now approaching, even as I ought
  • The ardour of desire within me ended.
  • Bernard was beckoning unto me, and smiling,
  • That I should upward look; but I already
  • Was of my own accord such as he wished;
  • Because my sight, becoming purified,
  • Was entering more and more into the ray
  • Of the High Light which of itself is true.
  • From that time forward what I saw was greater
  • Than our discourse, that to such vision yields,
  • And yields the memory unto such excess.
  • Even as he is who seeth in a dream,
  • And after dreaming the imprinted passion
  • Remains, and to his mind the rest returns not,
  • Even such am I, for almost utterly
  • Ceases my vision, and distilleth yet
  • Within my heart the sweetness born of it;
  • Even thus the snow is in the sun unsealed,
  • Even thus upon the wind in the light leaves
  • Were the soothsayings of the Sibyl lost.
  • O Light Supreme, that dost so far uplift thee
  • From the conceits of mortals, to my mind
  • Of what thou didst appear re-lend a little,
  • And make my tongue of so great puissance,
  • That but a single sparkle of thy glory
  • It may bequeath unto the future people;
  • For by returning to my memory somewhat,
  • And by a little sounding in these verses,
  • More of thy victory shall be conceived!
  • I think the keenness of the living ray
  • Which I endured would have bewildered me,
  • If but mine eyes had been averted from it;
  • And I remember that I was more bold
  • On this account to bear, so that I joined
  • My aspect with the Glory Infinite.
  • O grace abundant, by which I presumed
  • To fix my sight upon the Light Eternal,
  • So that the seeing I consumed therein!
  • I saw that in its depth far down is lying
  • Bound up with love together in one volume,
  • What through the universe in leaves is scattered;
  • Substance, and accident, and their operations,
  • All interfused together in such wise
  • That what I speak of is one simple light.
  • The universal fashion of this knot
  • Methinks I saw, since more abundantly
  • In saying this I feel that I rejoice.
  • One moment is more lethargy to me,
  • Than five and twenty centuries to the emprise
  • That startled Neptune with the shade of Argo!
  • My mind in this wise wholly in suspense,
  • Steadfast, immovable, attentive gazed,
  • And evermore with gazing grew enkindled.
  • In presence of that light one such becomes,
  • That to withdraw therefrom for other prospect
  • It is impossible he e’er consent;
  • Because the good, which object is of will,
  • Is gathered all in this, and out of it
  • That is defective which is perfect there.
  • Shorter henceforward will my language fall
  • Of what I yet remember, than an infant’s
  • Who still his tongue doth moisten at the breast.
  • Not because more than one unmingled semblance
  • Was in the living light on which I looked,
  • For it is always what it was before;
  • But through the sight, that fortified itself
  • In me by looking, one appearance only
  • To me was ever changing as I changed.
  • Within the deep and luminous subsistence
  • Of the High Light appeared to me three circles,
  • Of threefold colour and of one dimension,
  • And by the second seemed the first reflected
  • As Iris is by Iris, and the third
  • Seemed fire that equally from both is breathed.
  • O how all speech is feeble and falls short
  • Of my conceit, and this to what I saw
  • Is such, ’tis not enough to call it little!
  • O Light Eterne, sole in thyself that dwellest,
  • Sole knowest thyself, and, known unto thyself
  • And knowing, lovest and smilest on thyself!
  • That circulation, which being thus conceived
  • Appeared in thee as a reflected light,
  • When somewhat contemplated by mine eyes,
  • Within itself, of its own very colour
  • Seemed to me painted with our effigy,
  • Wherefore my sight was all absorbed therein.
  • As the geometrician, who endeavours
  • To square the circle, and discovers not,
  • By taking thought, the principle he wants,
  • Even such was I at that new apparition;
  • I wished to see how the image to the circle
  • Conformed itself, and how it there finds place;
  • But my own wings were not enough for this,
  • Had it not been that then my mind there smote
  • A flash of lightning, wherein came its wish.
  • Here vigour failed the lofty fantasy:
  • But now was turning my desire and will,
  • Even as a wheel that equally is moved,
  • The Love which moves the sun and the other stars.
  • APPENDIX
  • SIX SONNETS ON DANTE’S DIVINE COMEDY BY HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW
  • (1807-1882)
  • I
  • Oft have I seen at some cathedral door
  • A laborer, pausing in the dust and heat,
  • Lay down his burden, and with reverent feet
  • Enter, and cross himself, and on the floor
  • Kneel to repeat his paternoster o’er;
  • Far off the noises of the world retreat;
  • The loud vociferations of the street
  • Become an undistinguishable roar.
  • So, as I enter here from day to day,
  • And leave my burden at this minster gate,
  • Kneeling in prayer, and not ashamed to pray,
  • The tumult of the time disconsolate
  • To inarticulate murmurs dies away,
  • While the eternal ages watch and wait.
  • II
  • How strange the sculptures that adorn these towers!
  • This crowd of statues, in whose folded sleeves
  • Birds build their nests; while canopied with leaves
  • Parvis and portal bloom like trellised bowers,
  • And the vast minster seems a cross of flowers!
  • But fiends and dragons on the gargoyled eaves
  • Watch the dead Christ between the living thieves,
  • And, underneath, the traitor Judas lowers!
  • Ah! from what agonies of heart and brain,
  • What exultations trampling on despair,
  • What tenderness, what tears, what hate of wrong,
  • What passionate outcry of a soul in pain,
  • Uprose this poem of the earth and air,
  • This mediaeval miracle of song!
  • III
  • I enter, and I see thee in the gloom
  • Of the long aisles, O poet saturnine!
  • And strive to make my steps keep pace with thine.
  • The air is filled with some unknown perfume;
  • The congregation of the dead make room
  • For thee to pass; the votive tapers shine;
  • Like rooks that haunt Ravenna’s groves of pine,
  • The hovering echoes fly from tomb to tomb.
  • From the confessionals I hear arise
  • Rehearsals of forgotten tragedies,
  • And lamentations from the crypts below
  • And then a voice celestial that begins
  • With the pathetic words, “Although your sins
  • As scarlet be,” and ends with “as the snow.”
  • IV
  • With snow-white veil, and garments as of flame,
  • She stands before thee, who so long ago
  • Filled thy young heart with passion and the woe
  • From which thy song in all its splendors came;
  • And while with stern rebuke she speaks thy name,
  • The ice about thy heart melts as the snow
  • On mountain heights, and in swift overflow
  • Comes gushing from thy lips in sobs of shame.
  • Thou makest full confession; and a gleam
  • As of the dawn on some dark forest cast,
  • Seems on thy lifted forehead to increase;
  • Lethe and Eunoe—the remembered dream
  • And the forgotten sorrow—bring at last
  • That perfect pardon which is perfect peace.
  • V
  • I Lift mine eyes, and all the windows blaze
  • With forms of saints and holy men who died,
  • Here martyred and hereafter glorified;
  • And the great Rose upon its leaves displays
  • Christ’s Triumph, and the angelic roundelays,
  • With splendor upon splendor multiplied;
  • And Beatrice again at Dante’s side
  • No more rebukes, but smiles her words of praise.
  • And then the organ sounds, and unseen choirs
  • Sing the old Latin hymns of peace and love
  • And benedictions of the Holy Ghost;
  • And the melodious bells among the spires
  • O’er all the house-tops and through heaven above
  • Proclaim the elevation of the Host!
  • VI
  • O star of morning and of liberty!
  • O bringer of the light, whose splendor shines
  • Above the darkness of the Apennines,
  • Forerunner of the day that is to be!
  • The voices of the city and the sea,
  • The voices of the mountains and the pines,
  • Repeat thy song, till the familiar lines
  • Are footpaths for the thought of Italy!
  • Thy fame is blown abroad from all the heights,
  • Through all the nations; and a sound is heard,
  • As of a mighty wind, and men devout,
  • Strangers of Rome, and the new proselytes,
  • In their own language hear thy wondrous word,
  • And many are amazed and many doubt.
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