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+The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Divine Comedy, by Dante Alighieri
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
+most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
+whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
+of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
+www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
+will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
+using this eBook.
+
+Title: The Divine Comedy
+
+Author: Dante Alighieri
+
+Translator: Henry Francis Cary
+
+Release Date: August, 1997 [eBook #1008]
+[Most recently updated: July 4, 2022]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+Produced by: Judith Smith and Natalie Salter
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE DIVINE COMEDY ***
+
+
+
+
+THE DIVINE COMEDY OF DANTE ALIGHIERI
+
+Translated by
+THE REV. H. F. CARY, M.A.
+
+
+
+
+Contents
+
+ HELL
+ CANTO I.
+ CANTO II.
+ CANTO III.
+ CANTO IV.
+ CANTO V.
+ CANTO VI.
+ CANTO VII.
+ CANTO VIII.
+ CANTO IX.
+ CANTO X.
+ CANTO XI.
+ CANTO XII.
+ CANTO XIII.
+ CANTO XIV.
+ CANTO XV.
+ CANTO XVI.
+ CANTO XVII.
+ CANTO XVIII.
+ CANTO XIX.
+ CANTO XX.
+ CANTO XXI.
+ CANTO XXII.
+ CANTO XXIII.
+ CANTO XXIV.
+ CANTO XXV.
+ CANTO XXVI.
+ CANTO XXVII.
+ CANTO XXVIII.
+ CANTO XXIX.
+ CANTO XXX.
+ CANTO XXXI.
+ CANTO XXXII.
+ CANTO XXXIII.
+ CANTO XXXIV.
+ NOTES TO HELL.
+
+ PURGATORY
+ CANTO I.
+ CANTO II.
+ CANTO III.
+ CANTO IV.
+ CANTO V.
+ CANTO VI.
+ CANTO VII.
+ CANTO VIII.
+ CANTO IX.
+ CANTO X.
+ CANTO XI.
+ CANTO XII.
+ CANTO XIII.
+ CANTO XIV.
+ CANTO XV.
+ CANTO XVI.
+ CANTO XVII.
+ CANTO XVIII.
+ CANTO XIX.
+ CANTO XX.
+ CANTO XXI.
+ CANTO XXII.
+ CANTO XXIII.
+ CANTO XXIV.
+ CANTO XXV.
+ CANTO XXVI.
+ CANTO XXVII.
+ CANTO XXVIII.
+ CANTO XXIX.
+ CANTO XXX.
+ CANTO XXXI.
+ CANTO XXXII.
+ CANTO XXXIII.
+ NOTES TO PURGATORY.
+
+ PARADISE
+ CANTO I.
+ CANTO II.
+ CANTO III.
+ CANTO IV.
+ CANTO V.
+ CANTO VI.
+ CANTO VII.
+ CANTO VIII.
+ CANTO IX.
+ CANTO X.
+ CANTO XI.
+ CANTO XII.
+ CANTO XIII.
+ CANTO XIV.
+ CANTO XV.
+ CANTO XVI.
+ CANTO XVII.
+ CANTO XVIII.
+ CANTO XIX.
+ CANTO XX.
+ CANTO XXI.
+ CANTO XXII.
+ CANTO XXIII.
+ CANTO XXIV.
+ CANTO XXV.
+ CANTO XXVI.
+ CANTO XXVII.
+ CANTO XXVIII.
+ CANTO XXIX.
+ CANTO XXX.
+ CANTO XXXI.
+ CANTO XXXII.
+ CANTO XXXIII.
+ NOTES TO PARADISE.
+
+ PREFACE
+ A CHRONOLOGICAL VIEW
+
+
+
+
+HELL
+
+
+
+
+CANTO I
+
+
+In the midway of this our mortal life,
+I found me in a gloomy wood, astray
+Gone from the path direct: and e’en to tell
+It were no easy task, how savage wild
+That forest, how robust and rough its growth,
+Which to remember only, my dismay
+Renews, in bitterness not far from death.
+Yet to discourse of what there good befell,
+All else will I relate discover’d there.
+How first I enter’d it I scarce can say,
+Such sleepy dullness in that instant weigh’d
+My senses down, when the true path I left,
+But when a mountain’s foot I reach’d, where clos’d
+The valley, that had pierc’d my heart with dread,
+I look’d aloft, and saw his shoulders broad
+Already vested with that planet’s beam,
+Who leads all wanderers safe through every way.
+
+Then was a little respite to the fear,
+That in my heart’s recesses deep had lain,
+All of that night, so pitifully pass’d:
+And as a man, with difficult short breath,
+Forespent with toiling, ’scap’d from sea to shore,
+Turns to the perilous wide waste, and stands
+At gaze; e’en so my spirit, that yet fail’d
+Struggling with terror, turn’d to view the straits,
+That none hath pass’d and liv’d. My weary frame
+After short pause recomforted, again
+I journey’d on over that lonely steep,
+The hinder foot still firmer. Scarce the ascent
+Began, when, lo! a panther, nimble, light,
+And cover’d with a speckled skin, appear’d,
+Nor, when it saw me, vanish’d, rather strove
+To check my onward going; that ofttimes
+With purpose to retrace my steps I turn’d.
+
+The hour was morning’s prime, and on his way
+Aloft the sun ascended with those stars,
+That with him rose, when Love divine first mov’d
+Those its fair works: so that with joyous hope
+All things conspir’d to fill me, the gay skin
+Of that swift animal, the matin dawn
+And the sweet season. Soon that joy was chas’d,
+And by new dread succeeded, when in view
+A lion came, ’gainst me, as it appear’d,
+With his head held aloft and hunger-mad,
+That e’en the air was fear-struck. A she-wolf
+Was at his heels, who in her leanness seem’d
+Full of all wants, and many a land hath made
+Disconsolate ere now. She with such fear
+O’erwhelmed me, at the sight of her appall’d,
+That of the height all hope I lost. As one,
+Who with his gain elated, sees the time
+When all unwares is gone, he inwardly
+Mourns with heart-griping anguish; such was I,
+Haunted by that fell beast, never at peace,
+Who coming o’er against me, by degrees
+Impell’d me where the sun in silence rests.
+
+While to the lower space with backward step
+I fell, my ken discern’d the form one of one,
+Whose voice seem’d faint through long disuse of speech.
+When him in that great desert I espied,
+“Have mercy on me!” cried I out aloud,
+“Spirit! or living man! what e’er thou be!”
+
+He answer’d: “Now not man, man once I was,
+And born of Lombard parents, Mantuana both
+By country, when the power of Julius yet
+Was scarcely firm. At Rome my life was past
+Beneath the mild Augustus, in the time
+Of fabled deities and false. A bard
+Was I, and made Anchises’ upright son
+The subject of my song, who came from Troy,
+When the flames prey’d on Ilium’s haughty towers.
+But thou, say wherefore to such perils past
+Return’st thou? wherefore not this pleasant mount
+Ascendest, cause and source of all delight?”
+“And art thou then that Virgil, that well-spring,
+From which such copious floods of eloquence
+Have issued?” I with front abash’d replied.
+“Glory and light of all the tuneful train!
+May it avail me that I long with zeal
+Have sought thy volume, and with love immense
+Have conn’d it o’er. My master thou and guide!
+Thou he from whom alone I have deriv’d
+That style, which for its beauty into fame
+Exalts me. See the beast, from whom I fled.
+O save me from her, thou illustrious sage!
+For every vein and pulse throughout my frame
+She hath made tremble.” He, soon as he saw
+That I was weeping, answer’d, “Thou must needs
+Another way pursue, if thou wouldst ’scape
+From out that savage wilderness. This beast,
+At whom thou criest, her way will suffer none
+To pass, and no less hindrance makes than death:
+So bad and so accursed in her kind,
+That never sated is her ravenous will,
+Still after food more craving than before.
+To many an animal in wedlock vile
+She fastens, and shall yet to many more,
+Until that greyhound come, who shall destroy
+Her with sharp pain. He will not life support
+By earth nor its base metals, but by love,
+Wisdom, and virtue, and his land shall be
+The land ’twixt either Feltro. In his might
+Shall safety to Italia’s plains arise,
+For whose fair realm, Camilla, virgin pure,
+Nisus, Euryalus, and Turnus fell.
+He with incessant chase through every town
+Shall worry, until he to hell at length
+Restore her, thence by envy first let loose.
+I for thy profit pond’ring now devise,
+That thou mayst follow me, and I thy guide
+Will lead thee hence through an eternal space,
+Where thou shalt hear despairing shrieks, and see
+Spirits of old tormented, who invoke
+A second death; and those next view, who dwell
+Content in fire, for that they hope to come,
+Whene’er the time may be, among the blest,
+Into whose regions if thou then desire
+T’ ascend, a spirit worthier then I
+Must lead thee, in whose charge, when I depart,
+Thou shalt be left: for that Almighty King,
+Who reigns above, a rebel to his law,
+Adjudges me, and therefore hath decreed,
+That to his city none through me should come.
+He in all parts hath sway; there rules, there holds
+His citadel and throne. O happy those,
+Whom there he chooses!” I to him in few:
+“Bard! by that God, whom thou didst not adore,
+I do beseech thee (that this ill and worse
+I may escape) to lead me, where thou saidst,
+That I Saint Peter’s gate may view, and those
+Who as thou tell’st, are in such dismal plight.”
+
+Onward he mov’d, I close his steps pursu’d.
+
+
+
+
+CANTO II
+
+
+Now was the day departing, and the air,
+Imbrown’d with shadows, from their toils releas’d
+All animals on earth; and I alone
+Prepar’d myself the conflict to sustain,
+Both of sad pity, and that perilous road,
+Which my unerring memory shall retrace.
+
+O Muses! O high genius! now vouchsafe
+Your aid! O mind! that all I saw hast kept
+Safe in a written record, here thy worth
+And eminent endowments come to proof.
+
+I thus began: “Bard! thou who art my guide,
+Consider well, if virtue be in me
+Sufficient, ere to this high enterprise
+Thou trust me. Thou hast told that Silvius’ sire,
+Yet cloth’d in corruptible flesh, among
+Th’ immortal tribes had entrance, and was there
+Sensible present. Yet if heaven’s great Lord,
+Almighty foe to ill, such favour shew’d,
+In contemplation of the high effect,
+Both what and who from him should issue forth,
+It seems in reason’s judgment well deserv’d:
+Sith he of Rome, and of Rome’s empire wide,
+In heaven’s empyreal height was chosen sire:
+Both which, if truth be spoken, were ordain’d
+And ’stablish’d for the holy place, where sits
+Who to great Peter’s sacred chair succeeds.
+He from this journey, in thy song renown’d,
+Learn’d things, that to his victory gave rise
+And to the papal robe. In after-times
+The chosen vessel also travel’d there,
+To bring us back assurance in that faith,
+Which is the entrance to salvation’s way.
+But I, why should I there presume? or who
+Permits it? not, Aeneas I nor Paul.
+Myself I deem not worthy, and none else
+Will deem me. I, if on this voyage then
+I venture, fear it will in folly end.
+Thou, who art wise, better my meaning know’st,
+Than I can speak.” As one, who unresolves
+What he hath late resolv’d, and with new thoughts
+Changes his purpose, from his first intent
+Remov’d; e’en such was I on that dun coast,
+Wasting in thought my enterprise, at first
+So eagerly embrac’d. “If right thy words
+I scan,” replied that shade magnanimous,
+“Thy soul is by vile fear assail’d, which oft
+So overcasts a man, that he recoils
+From noblest resolution, like a beast
+At some false semblance in the twilight gloom.
+That from this terror thou mayst free thyself,
+I will instruct thee why I came, and what
+I heard in that same instant, when for thee
+Grief touch’d me first. I was among the tribe,
+Who rest suspended, when a dame, so blest
+And lovely, I besought her to command,
+Call’d me; her eyes were brighter than the star
+Of day; and she with gentle voice and soft
+Angelically tun’d her speech address’d:
+“O courteous shade of Mantua! thou whose fame
+Yet lives, and shall live long as nature lasts!
+A friend, not of my fortune but myself,
+On the wide desert in his road has met
+Hindrance so great, that he through fear has turn’d.
+Now much I dread lest he past help have stray’d,
+And I be ris’n too late for his relief,
+From what in heaven of him I heard. Speed now,
+And by thy eloquent persuasive tongue,
+And by all means for his deliverance meet,
+Assist him. So to me will comfort spring.
+I who now bid thee on this errand forth
+Am Beatrice; from a place I come
+Revisited with joy. Love brought me thence,
+Who prompts my speech. When in my Master’s sight
+I stand, thy praise to him I oft will tell.”
+
+(Note: Beatrice. I use this word, as it is pronounced in the Italian,
+as consisting of four syllables, of which the third is a long one.)
+
+
+She then was silent, and I thus began:
+“O Lady! by whose influence alone,
+Mankind excels whatever is contain’d
+Within that heaven which hath the smallest orb,
+So thy command delights me, that to obey,
+If it were done already, would seem late.
+No need hast thou farther to speak thy will;
+Yet tell the reason, why thou art not loth
+To leave that ample space, where to return
+Thou burnest, for this centre here beneath.”
+
+She then: “Since thou so deeply wouldst inquire,
+I will instruct thee briefly, why no dread
+Hinders my entrance here. Those things alone
+Are to be fear’d, whence evil may proceed,
+None else, for none are terrible beside.
+I am so fram’d by God, thanks to his grace!
+That any suff’rance of your misery
+Touches me not, nor flame of that fierce fire
+Assails me. In high heaven a blessed dame
+Besides, who mourns with such effectual grief
+That hindrance, which I send thee to remove,
+That God’s stern judgment to her will inclines.
+To Lucia calling, her she thus bespake:
+“Now doth thy faithful servant need thy aid
+And I commend him to thee.” At her word
+Sped Lucia, of all cruelty the foe,
+And coming to the place, where I abode
+Seated with Rachel, her of ancient days,
+She thus address’d me: “Thou true praise of God!
+Beatrice! why is not thy succour lent
+To him, who so much lov’d thee, as to leave
+For thy sake all the multitude admires?
+Dost thou not hear how pitiful his wail,
+Nor mark the death, which in the torrent flood,
+Swoln mightier than a sea, him struggling holds?”
+Ne’er among men did any with such speed
+Haste to their profit, flee from their annoy,
+As when these words were spoken, I came here,
+Down from my blessed seat, trusting the force
+Of thy pure eloquence, which thee, and all
+Who well have mark’d it, into honour brings.”
+
+“When she had ended, her bright beaming eyes
+Tearful she turn’d aside; whereat I felt
+Redoubled zeal to serve thee. As she will’d,
+Thus am I come: I sav’d thee from the beast,
+Who thy near way across the goodly mount
+Prevented. What is this comes o’er thee then?
+Why, why dost thou hang back? why in thy breast
+Harbour vile fear? why hast not courage there
+And noble daring? Since three maids so blest
+Thy safety plan, e’en in the court of heaven;
+And so much certain good my words forebode.”
+
+As florets, by the frosty air of night
+Bent down and clos’d, when day has blanch’d their leaves,
+Rise all unfolded on their spiry stems;
+So was my fainting vigour new restor’d,
+And to my heart such kindly courage ran,
+That I as one undaunted soon replied:
+“O full of pity she, who undertook
+My succour! and thou kind who didst perform
+So soon her true behest! With such desire
+Thou hast dispos’d me to renew my voyage,
+That my first purpose fully is resum’d.
+Lead on: one only will is in us both.
+Thou art my guide, my master thou, and lord.”
+
+So spake I; and when he had onward mov’d,
+I enter’d on the deep and woody way.
+
+
+
+
+CANTO III
+
+
+“Through me you pass into the city of woe:
+Through me you pass into eternal pain:
+Through me among the people lost for aye.
+Justice the founder of my fabric mov’d:
+To rear me was the task of power divine,
+Supremest wisdom, and primeval love.
+Before me things create were none, save things
+Eternal, and eternal I endure.
+All hope abandon ye who enter here.”
+
+Such characters in colour dim I mark’d
+Over a portal’s lofty arch inscrib’d:
+Whereat I thus: “Master, these words import
+Hard meaning.” He as one prepar’d replied:
+“Here thou must all distrust behind thee leave;
+Here be vile fear extinguish’d. We are come
+Where I have told thee we shall see the souls
+To misery doom’d, who intellectual good
+Have lost.” And when his hand he had stretch’d forth
+To mine, with pleasant looks, whence I was cheer’d,
+Into that secret place he led me on.
+
+Here sighs with lamentations and loud moans
+Resounded through the air pierc’d by no star,
+That e’en I wept at entering. Various tongues,
+Horrible languages, outcries of woe,
+Accents of anger, voices deep and hoarse,
+With hands together smote that swell’d the sounds,
+Made up a tumult, that for ever whirls
+Round through that air with solid darkness stain’d,
+Like to the sand that in the whirlwind flies.
+
+I then, with error yet encompass’d, cried:
+“O master! What is this I hear? What race
+Are these, who seem so overcome with woe?”
+
+He thus to me: “This miserable fate
+Suffer the wretched souls of those, who liv’d
+Without or praise or blame, with that ill band
+Of angels mix’d, who nor rebellious prov’d
+Nor yet were true to God, but for themselves
+Were only. From his bounds Heaven drove them forth,
+Not to impair his lustre, nor the depth
+Of Hell receives them, lest th’ accursed tribe
+Should glory thence with exultation vain.”
+
+I then: “Master! what doth aggrieve them thus,
+That they lament so loud?” He straight replied:
+“That will I tell thee briefly. These of death
+No hope may entertain: and their blind life
+So meanly passes, that all other lots
+They envy. Fame of them the world hath none,
+Nor suffers; mercy and justice scorn them both.
+Speak not of them, but look, and pass them by.”
+
+And I, who straightway look’d, beheld a flag,
+Which whirling ran around so rapidly,
+That it no pause obtain’d: and following came
+Such a long train of spirits, I should ne’er
+Have thought, that death so many had despoil’d.
+
+When some of these I recogniz’d, I saw
+And knew the shade of him, who to base fear
+Yielding, abjur’d his high estate. Forthwith
+I understood for certain this the tribe
+Of those ill spirits both to God displeasing
+And to his foes. These wretches, who ne’er lived,
+Went on in nakedness, and sorely stung
+By wasps and hornets, which bedew’d their cheeks
+With blood, that mix’d with tears dropp’d to their feet,
+And by disgustful worms was gather’d there.
+
+Then looking farther onwards I beheld
+A throng upon the shore of a great stream:
+Whereat I thus: “Sir! grant me now to know
+Whom here we view, and whence impell’d they seem
+So eager to pass o’er, as I discern
+Through the blear light?” He thus to me in few:
+“This shalt thou know, soon as our steps arrive
+Beside the woeful tide of Acheron.”
+
+Then with eyes downward cast and fill’d with shame,
+Fearing my words offensive to his ear,
+Till we had reach’d the river, I from speech
+Abstain’d. And lo! toward us in a bark
+Comes on an old man hoary white with eld,
+Crying, “Woe to you wicked spirits! hope not
+Ever to see the sky again. I come
+To take you to the other shore across,
+Into eternal darkness, there to dwell
+In fierce heat and in ice. And thou, who there
+Standest, live spirit! get thee hence, and leave
+These who are dead.” But soon as he beheld
+I left them not, “By other way,” said he,
+“By other haven shalt thou come to shore,
+Not by this passage; thee a nimbler boat
+Must carry.” Then to him thus spake my guide:
+“Charon! thyself torment not: so ’tis will’d,
+Where will and power are one: ask thou no more.”
+
+Straightway in silence fell the shaggy cheeks
+Of him the boatman o’er the livid lake,
+Around whose eyes glar’d wheeling flames. Meanwhile
+Those spirits, faint and naked, color chang’d,
+And gnash’d their teeth, soon as the cruel words
+They heard. God and their parents they blasphem’d,
+The human kind, the place, the time, and seed
+That did engender them and give them birth.
+
+Then all together sorely wailing drew
+To the curs’d strand, that every man must pass
+Who fears not God. Charon, demoniac form,
+With eyes of burning coal, collects them all,
+Beck’ning, and each, that lingers, with his oar
+Strikes. As fall off the light autumnal leaves,
+One still another following, till the bough
+Strews all its honours on the earth beneath;
+E’en in like manner Adam’s evil brood
+Cast themselves one by one down from the shore,
+Each at a beck, as falcon at his call.
+
+Thus go they over through the umber’d wave,
+And ever they on the opposing bank
+Be landed, on this side another throng
+Still gathers. “Son,” thus spake the courteous guide,
+“Those, who die subject to the wrath of God,
+All here together come from every clime,
+And to o’erpass the river are not loth:
+For so heaven’s justice goads them on, that fear
+Is turn’d into desire. Hence ne’er hath past
+Good spirit. If of thee Charon complain,
+Now mayst thou know the import of his words.”
+
+This said, the gloomy region trembling shook
+So terribly, that yet with clammy dews
+Fear chills my brow. The sad earth gave a blast,
+That, lightening, shot forth a vermilion flame,
+Which all my senses conquer’d quite, and I
+Down dropp’d, as one with sudden slumber seiz’d.
+
+
+
+
+CANTO IV
+
+
+Broke the deep slumber in my brain a crash
+Of heavy thunder, that I shook myself,
+As one by main force rous’d. Risen upright,
+My rested eyes I mov’d around, and search’d
+With fixed ken to know what place it was,
+Wherein I stood. For certain on the brink
+I found me of the lamentable vale,
+The dread abyss, that joins a thund’rous sound
+Of plaints innumerable. Dark and deep,
+And thick with clouds o’erspread, mine eye in vain
+Explor’d its bottom, nor could aught discern.
+
+“Now let us to the blind world there beneath
+Descend;” the bard began all pale of look:
+“I go the first, and thou shalt follow next.”
+
+Then I his alter’d hue perceiving, thus:
+“How may I speed, if thou yieldest to dread,
+Who still art wont to comfort me in doubt?”
+
+He then: “The anguish of that race below
+With pity stains my cheek, which thou for fear
+Mistakest. Let us on. Our length of way
+Urges to haste.” Onward, this said, he mov’d;
+And ent’ring led me with him on the bounds
+Of the first circle, that surrounds th’ abyss.
+Here, as mine ear could note, no plaint was heard
+Except of sighs, that made th’ eternal air
+Tremble, not caus’d by tortures, but from grief
+Felt by those multitudes, many and vast,
+Of men, women, and infants. Then to me
+The gentle guide: “Inquir’st thou not what spirits
+Are these, which thou beholdest? Ere thou pass
+Farther, I would thou know, that these of sin
+Were blameless; and if aught they merited,
+It profits not, since baptism was not theirs,
+The portal to thy faith. If they before
+The Gospel liv’d, they serv’d not God aright;
+And among such am I. For these defects,
+And for no other evil, we are lost;
+Only so far afflicted, that we live
+Desiring without hope.” So grief assail’d
+My heart at hearing this, for well I knew
+Suspended in that Limbo many a soul
+Of mighty worth. “O tell me, sire rever’d!
+Tell me, my master!” I began through wish
+Of full assurance in that holy faith,
+Which vanquishes all error; “say, did e’er
+Any, or through his own or other’s merit,
+Come forth from thence, whom afterward was blest?”
+
+Piercing the secret purport of my speech,
+He answer’d: “I was new to that estate,
+When I beheld a puissant one arrive
+Amongst us, with victorious trophy crown’d.
+He forth the shade of our first parent drew,
+Abel his child, and Noah righteous man,
+Of Moses lawgiver for faith approv’d,
+Of patriarch Abraham, and David king,
+Israel with his sire and with his sons,
+Nor without Rachel whom so hard he won,
+And others many more, whom he to bliss
+Exalted. Before these, be thou assur’d,
+No spirit of human kind was ever sav’d.”
+
+We, while he spake, ceas’d not our onward road,
+Still passing through the wood; for so I name
+Those spirits thick beset. We were not far
+On this side from the summit, when I kenn’d
+A flame, that o’er the darken’d hemisphere
+Prevailing shin’d. Yet we a little space
+Were distant, not so far but I in part
+Discover’d, that a tribe in honour high
+That place possess’d. “O thou, who every art
+And science valu’st! who are these, that boast
+Such honour, separate from all the rest?”
+
+He answer’d: “The renown of their great names
+That echoes through your world above, acquires
+Favour in heaven, which holds them thus advanc’d.”
+Meantime a voice I heard: “Honour the bard
+Sublime! his shade returns that left us late!”
+No sooner ceas’d the sound, than I beheld
+Four mighty spirits toward us bend their steps,
+Of semblance neither sorrowful nor glad.
+
+When thus my master kind began: “Mark him,
+Who in his right hand bears that falchion keen,
+The other three preceding, as their lord.
+This is that Homer, of all bards supreme:
+Flaccus the next in satire’s vein excelling;
+The third is Naso; Lucan is the last.
+Because they all that appellation own,
+With which the voice singly accosted me,
+Honouring they greet me thus, and well they judge.”
+
+So I beheld united the bright school
+Of him the monarch of sublimest song,
+That o’er the others like an eagle soars.
+When they together short discourse had held,
+They turn’d to me, with salutation kind
+Beck’ning me; at the which my master smil’d:
+Nor was this all; but greater honour still
+They gave me, for they made me of their tribe;
+And I was sixth amid so learn’d a band.
+
+Far as the luminous beacon on we pass’d
+Speaking of matters, then befitting well
+To speak, now fitter left untold. At foot
+Of a magnificent castle we arriv’d,
+Seven times with lofty walls begirt, and round
+Defended by a pleasant stream. O’er this
+As o’er dry land we pass’d. Next through seven gates
+I with those sages enter’d, and we came
+Into a mead with lively verdure fresh.
+
+There dwelt a race, who slow their eyes around
+Majestically mov’d, and in their port
+Bore eminent authority; they spake
+Seldom, but all their words were tuneful sweet.
+
+We to one side retir’d, into a place
+Open and bright and lofty, whence each one
+Stood manifest to view. Incontinent
+There on the green enamel of the plain
+Were shown me the great spirits, by whose sight
+I am exalted in my own esteem.
+
+Electra there I saw accompanied
+By many, among whom Hector I knew,
+Anchises’ pious son, and with hawk’s eye
+Caesar all arm’d, and by Camilla there
+Penthesilea. On the other side
+Old King Latinus, seated by his child
+Lavinia, and that Brutus I beheld,
+Who Tarquin chas’d, Lucretia, Cato’s wife
+Marcia, with Julia and Cornelia there;
+And sole apart retir’d, the Soldan fierce.
+
+Then when a little more I rais’d my brow,
+I spied the master of the sapient throng,
+Seated amid the philosophic train.
+Him all admire, all pay him rev’rence due.
+There Socrates and Plato both I mark’d,
+Nearest to him in rank; Democritus,
+Who sets the world at chance, Diogenes,
+With Heraclitus, and Empedocles,
+And Anaxagoras, and Thales sage,
+Zeno, and Dioscorides well read
+In nature’s secret lore. Orpheus I mark’d
+And Linus, Tully and moral Seneca,
+Euclid and Ptolemy, Hippocrates,
+Galenus, Avicen, and him who made
+That commentary vast, Averroes.
+
+Of all to speak at full were vain attempt;
+For my wide theme so urges, that ofttimes
+My words fall short of what bechanc’d. In two
+The six associates part. Another way
+My sage guide leads me, from that air serene,
+Into a climate ever vex’d with storms:
+And to a part I come where no light shines.
+
+
+
+
+CANTO V
+
+
+From the first circle I descended thus
+Down to the second, which, a lesser space
+Embracing, so much more of grief contains
+Provoking bitter moans. There, Minos stands
+Grinning with ghastly feature: he, of all
+Who enter, strict examining the crimes,
+Gives sentence, and dismisses them beneath,
+According as he foldeth him around:
+For when before him comes th’ ill fated soul,
+It all confesses; and that judge severe
+Of sins, considering what place in hell
+Suits the transgression, with his tail so oft
+Himself encircles, as degrees beneath
+He dooms it to descend. Before him stand
+Always a num’rous throng; and in his turn
+Each one to judgment passing, speaks, and hears
+His fate, thence downward to his dwelling hurl’d.
+
+“O thou! who to this residence of woe
+Approachest?” when he saw me coming, cried
+Minos, relinquishing his dread employ,
+“Look how thou enter here; beware in whom
+Thou place thy trust; let not the entrance broad
+Deceive thee to thy harm.” To him my guide:
+“Wherefore exclaimest? Hinder not his way
+By destiny appointed; so ’tis will’d
+Where will and power are one. Ask thou no more.”
+
+Now ’gin the rueful wailings to be heard.
+Now am I come where many a plaining voice
+Smites on mine ear. Into a place I came
+Where light was silent all. Bellowing there groan’d
+A noise as of a sea in tempest torn
+By warring winds. The stormy blast of hell
+With restless fury drives the spirits on
+Whirl’d round and dash’d amain with sore annoy.
+When they arrive before the ruinous sweep,
+There shrieks are heard, there lamentations, moans,
+And blasphemies ’gainst the good Power in heaven.
+
+I understood that to this torment sad
+The carnal sinners are condemn’d, in whom
+Reason by lust is sway’d. As in large troops
+And multitudinous, when winter reigns,
+The starlings on their wings are borne abroad;
+So bears the tyrannous gust those evil souls.
+On this side and on that, above, below,
+It drives them: hope of rest to solace them
+Is none, nor e’en of milder pang. As cranes,
+Chanting their dol’rous notes, traverse the sky,
+Stretch’d out in long array: so I beheld
+Spirits, who came loud wailing, hurried on
+By their dire doom. Then I: “Instructor! who
+Are these, by the black air so scourg’d?”—” The first
+’Mong those, of whom thou question’st,” he replied,
+“O’er many tongues was empress. She in vice
+Of luxury was so shameless, that she made
+Liking be lawful by promulg’d decree,
+To clear the blame she had herself incurr’d.
+This is Semiramis, of whom ’tis writ,
+That she succeeded Ninus her espous’d;
+And held the land, which now the Soldan rules.
+The next in amorous fury slew herself,
+And to Sicheus’ ashes broke her faith:
+Then follows Cleopatra, lustful queen.”
+
+There mark’d I Helen, for whose sake so long
+The time was fraught with evil; there the great
+Achilles, who with love fought to the end.
+Paris I saw, and Tristan; and beside
+A thousand more he show’d me, and by name
+Pointed them out, whom love bereav’d of life.
+
+When I had heard my sage instructor name
+Those dames and knights of antique days, o’erpower’d
+By pity, well-nigh in amaze my mind
+Was lost; and I began: “Bard! willingly
+I would address those two together coming,
+Which seem so light before the wind.” He thus:
+“Note thou, when nearer they to us approach.
+Then by that love which carries them along,
+Entreat; and they will come.” Soon as the wind
+Sway’d them toward us, I thus fram’d my speech:
+“O wearied spirits! come, and hold discourse
+With us, if by none else restrain’d.” As doves
+By fond desire invited, on wide wings
+And firm, to their sweet nest returning home,
+Cleave the air, wafted by their will along;
+Thus issu’d from that troop, where Dido ranks,
+They through the ill air speeding; with such force
+My cry prevail’d by strong affection urg’d.
+
+“O gracious creature and benign! who go’st
+Visiting, through this element obscure,
+Us, who the world with bloody stain imbru’d;
+If for a friend the King of all we own’d,
+Our pray’r to him should for thy peace arise,
+Since thou hast pity on our evil plight.
+()f whatsoe’er to hear or to discourse
+It pleases thee, that will we hear, of that
+Freely with thee discourse, while e’er the wind,
+As now, is mute. The land, that gave me birth,
+Is situate on the coast, where Po descends
+To rest in ocean with his sequent streams.
+
+“Love, that in gentle heart is quickly learnt,
+Entangled him by that fair form, from me
+Ta’en in such cruel sort, as grieves me still:
+Love, that denial takes from none belov’d,
+Caught me with pleasing him so passing well,
+That, as thou see’st, he yet deserts me not.
+Love brought us to one death: Caina waits
+The soul, who spilt our life.” Such were their words;
+At hearing which downward I bent my looks,
+And held them there so long, that the bard cried:
+“What art thou pond’ring?” I in answer thus:
+“Alas! by what sweet thoughts, what fond desire
+Must they at length to that ill pass have reach’d!”
+
+Then turning, I to them my speech address’d.
+And thus began: “Francesca! your sad fate
+Even to tears my grief and pity moves.
+But tell me; in the time of your sweet sighs,
+By what, and how love granted, that ye knew
+Your yet uncertain wishes?” She replied:
+“No greater grief than to remember days
+Of joy, when mis’ry is at hand! That kens
+Thy learn’d instructor. Yet so eagerly
+If thou art bent to know the primal root,
+From whence our love gat being, I will do,
+As one, who weeps and tells his tale. One day
+For our delight we read of Lancelot,
+How him love thrall’d. Alone we were, and no
+Suspicion near us. Ofttimes by that reading
+Our eyes were drawn together, and the hue
+Fled from our alter’d cheek. But at one point
+Alone we fell. When of that smile we read,
+The wished smile, rapturously kiss’d
+By one so deep in love, then he, who ne’er
+From me shall separate, at once my lips
+All trembling kiss’d. The book and writer both
+Were love’s purveyors. In its leaves that day
+We read no more.” While thus one spirit spake,
+The other wail’d so sorely, that heartstruck
+I through compassion fainting, seem’d not far
+From death, and like a corpse fell to the ground.
+
+
+
+
+CANTO VI
+
+
+My sense reviving, that erewhile had droop’d
+With pity for the kindred shades, whence grief
+O’ercame me wholly, straight around I see
+New torments, new tormented souls, which way
+Soe’er I move, or turn, or bend my sight.
+In the third circle I arrive, of show’rs
+Ceaseless, accursed, heavy, and cold, unchang’d
+For ever, both in kind and in degree.
+Large hail, discolour’d water, sleety flaw
+Through the dun midnight air stream’d down amain:
+Stank all the land whereon that tempest fell.
+
+Cerberus, cruel monster, fierce and strange,
+Through his wide threefold throat barks as a dog
+Over the multitude immers’d beneath.
+His eyes glare crimson, black his unctuous beard,
+His belly large, and claw’d the hands, with which
+He tears the spirits, flays them, and their limbs
+Piecemeal disparts. Howling there spread, as curs,
+Under the rainy deluge, with one side
+The other screening, oft they roll them round,
+A wretched, godless crew. When that great worm
+Descried us, savage Cerberus, he op’d
+His jaws, and the fangs show’d us; not a limb
+Of him but trembled. Then my guide, his palms
+Expanding on the ground, thence filled with earth
+Rais’d them, and cast it in his ravenous maw.
+E’en as a dog, that yelling bays for food
+His keeper, when the morsel comes, lets fall
+His fury, bent alone with eager haste
+To swallow it; so dropp’d the loathsome cheeks
+Of demon Cerberus, who thund’ring stuns
+The spirits, that they for deafness wish in vain.
+
+We, o’er the shades thrown prostrate by the brunt
+Of the heavy tempest passing, set our feet
+Upon their emptiness, that substance seem’d.
+
+They all along the earth extended lay
+Save one, that sudden rais’d himself to sit,
+Soon as that way he saw us pass. “O thou!”
+He cried, “who through the infernal shades art led,
+Own, if again thou know’st me. Thou wast fram’d
+Or ere my frame was broken.” I replied:
+“The anguish thou endur’st perchance so takes
+Thy form from my remembrance, that it seems
+As if I saw thee never. But inform
+Me who thou art, that in a place so sad
+Art set, and in such torment, that although
+Other be greater, more disgustful none
+Can be imagin’d.” He in answer thus:
+“Thy city heap’d with envy to the brim,
+Ay that the measure overflows its bounds,
+Held me in brighter days. Ye citizens
+Were wont to name me Ciacco. For the sin
+Of glutt’ny, damned vice, beneath this rain,
+E’en as thou see’st, I with fatigue am worn;
+Nor I sole spirit in this woe: all these
+Have by like crime incurr’d like punishment.”
+
+No more he said, and I my speech resum’d:
+“Ciacco! thy dire affliction grieves me much,
+Even to tears. But tell me, if thou know’st,
+What shall at length befall the citizens
+Of the divided city; whether any just one
+Inhabit there: and tell me of the cause,
+Whence jarring discord hath assail’d it thus?”
+
+He then: “After long striving they will come
+To blood; and the wild party from the woods
+Will chase the other with much injury forth.
+Then it behoves, that this must fall, within
+Three solar circles; and the other rise
+By borrow’d force of one, who under shore
+Now rests. It shall a long space hold aloof
+Its forehead, keeping under heavy weight
+The other oppress’d, indignant at the load,
+And grieving sore. The just are two in number,
+But they neglected. Av’rice, envy, pride,
+Three fatal sparks, have set the hearts of all
+On fire.” Here ceas’d the lamentable sound;
+And I continu’d thus: “Still would I learn
+More from thee, farther parley still entreat.
+Of Farinata and Tegghiaio say,
+They who so well deserv’d, of Giacopo,
+Arrigo, Mosca, and the rest, who bent
+Their minds on working good. Oh! tell me where
+They bide, and to their knowledge let me come.
+For I am press’d with keen desire to hear,
+If heaven’s sweet cup or poisonous drug of hell
+Be to their lip assign’d.” He answer’d straight:
+“These are yet blacker spirits. Various crimes
+Have sunk them deeper in the dark abyss.
+If thou so far descendest, thou mayst see them.
+But to the pleasant world when thou return’st,
+Of me make mention, I entreat thee, there.
+No more I tell thee, answer thee no more.”
+
+This said, his fixed eyes he turn’d askance,
+A little ey’d me, then bent down his head,
+And ’midst his blind companions with it fell.
+
+When thus my guide: “No more his bed he leaves,
+Ere the last angel-trumpet blow. The Power
+Adverse to these shall then in glory come,
+Each one forthwith to his sad tomb repair,
+Resume his fleshly vesture and his form,
+And hear the eternal doom re-echoing rend
+The vault.” So pass’d we through that mixture foul
+Of spirits and rain, with tardy steps; meanwhile
+Touching, though slightly, on the life to come.
+For thus I question’d: “Shall these tortures, Sir!
+When the great sentence passes, be increas’d,
+Or mitigated, or as now severe?”
+
+He then: “Consult thy knowledge; that decides
+That as each thing to more perfection grows,
+It feels more sensibly both good and pain.
+Though ne’er to true perfection may arrive
+This race accurs’d, yet nearer then than now
+They shall approach it.” Compassing that path
+Circuitous we journeyed, and discourse
+Much more than I relate between us pass’d:
+Till at the point, where the steps led below,
+Arriv’d, there Plutus, the great foe, we found.
+
+
+
+
+CANTO VII
+
+
+“Ah me! O Satan! Satan!” loud exclaim’d
+Plutus, in accent hoarse of wild alarm:
+And the kind sage, whom no event surpris’d,
+To comfort me thus spake: “Let not thy fear
+Harm thee, for power in him, be sure, is none
+To hinder down this rock thy safe descent.”
+Then to that sworn lip turning, “ Peace!” he cried,
+“Curs’d wolf! thy fury inward on thyself
+Prey, and consume thee! Through the dark profound
+Not without cause he passes. So ’tis will’d
+On high, there where the great Archangel pour’d
+Heav’n’s vengeance on the first adulterer proud.”
+
+As sails full spread and bellying with the wind
+Drop suddenly collaps’d, if the mast split;
+So to the ground down dropp’d the cruel fiend.
+
+Thus we, descending to the fourth steep ledge,
+Gain’d on the dismal shore, that all the woe
+Hems in of all the universe. Ah me!
+Almighty Justice! in what store thou heap’st
+New pains, new troubles, as I here beheld!
+Wherefore doth fault of ours bring us to this?
+
+E’en as a billow, on Charybdis rising,
+Against encounter’d billow dashing breaks;
+Such is the dance this wretched race must lead,
+Whom more than elsewhere numerous here I found,
+From one side and the other, with loud voice,
+Both roll’d on weights by main forge of their breasts,
+Then smote together, and each one forthwith
+Roll’d them back voluble, turning again,
+Exclaiming these, “Why holdest thou so fast?”
+Those answering, “And why castest thou away?”
+So still repeating their despiteful song,
+They to the opposite point on either hand
+Travers’d the horrid circle: then arriv’d,
+Both turn’d them round, and through the middle space
+Conflicting met again. At sight whereof
+I, stung with grief, thus spake: “O say, my guide!
+What race is this? Were these, whose heads are shorn,
+On our left hand, all sep’rate to the church?”
+
+He straight replied: “In their first life these all
+In mind were so distorted, that they made,
+According to due measure, of their wealth,
+No use. This clearly from their words collect,
+Which they howl forth, at each extremity
+Arriving of the circle, where their crime
+Contrary’ in kind disparts them. To the church
+Were separate those, that with no hairy cowls
+Are crown’d, both Popes and Cardinals, o’er whom
+Av’rice dominion absolute maintains.”
+
+I then: “Mid such as these some needs must be,
+Whom I shall recognize, that with the blot
+Of these foul sins were stain’d.” He answering thus:
+“Vain thought conceiv’st thou. That ignoble life,
+Which made them vile before, now makes them dark,
+And to all knowledge indiscernible.
+Forever they shall meet in this rude shock:
+These from the tomb with clenched grasp shall rise,
+Those with close-shaven locks. That ill they gave,
+And ill they kept, hath of the beauteous world
+Depriv’d, and set them at this strife, which needs
+No labour’d phrase of mine to set if off.
+Now may’st thou see, my son! how brief, how vain,
+The goods committed into fortune’s hands,
+For which the human race keep such a coil!
+Not all the gold, that is beneath the moon,
+Or ever hath been, of these toil-worn souls
+Might purchase rest for one.” I thus rejoin’d:
+
+“My guide! of thee this also would I learn;
+This fortune, that thou speak’st of, what it is,
+Whose talons grasp the blessings of the world?”
+
+He thus: “O beings blind! what ignorance
+Besets you? Now my judgment hear and mark.
+He, whose transcendent wisdom passes all,
+The heavens creating, gave them ruling powers
+To guide them, so that each part shines to each,
+Their light in equal distribution pour’d.
+By similar appointment he ordain’d
+Over the world’s bright images to rule.
+Superintendence of a guiding hand
+And general minister, which at due time
+May change the empty vantages of life
+From race to race, from one to other’s blood,
+Beyond prevention of man’s wisest care:
+Wherefore one nation rises into sway,
+Another languishes, e’en as her will
+Decrees, from us conceal’d, as in the grass
+The serpent train. Against her nought avails
+Your utmost wisdom. She with foresight plans,
+Judges, and carries on her reign, as theirs
+The other powers divine. Her changes know
+Nore intermission: by necessity
+She is made swift, so frequent come who claim
+Succession in her favours. This is she,
+So execrated e’en by those, whose debt
+To her is rather praise; they wrongfully
+With blame requite her, and with evil word;
+But she is blessed, and for that recks not:
+Amidst the other primal beings glad
+Rolls on her sphere, and in her bliss exults.
+Now on our way pass we, to heavier woe
+Descending: for each star is falling now,
+That mounted at our entrance, and forbids
+Too long our tarrying.” We the circle cross’d
+To the next steep, arriving at a well,
+That boiling pours itself down to a foss
+Sluic’d from its source. Far murkier was the wave
+Than sablest grain: and we in company
+Of the’ inky waters, journeying by their side,
+Enter’d, though by a different track, beneath.
+Into a lake, the Stygian nam’d, expands
+The dismal stream, when it hath reach’d the foot
+Of the grey wither’d cliffs. Intent I stood
+To gaze, and in the marish sunk descried
+A miry tribe, all naked, and with looks
+Betok’ning rage. They with their hands alone
+Struck not, but with the head, the breast, the feet,
+Cutting each other piecemeal with their fangs.
+
+The good instructor spake; “Now seest thou, son!
+The souls of those, whom anger overcame.
+This too for certain know, that underneath
+The water dwells a multitude, whose sighs
+Into these bubbles make the surface heave,
+As thine eye tells thee wheresoe’er it turn.
+Fix’d in the slime they say: “Sad once were we
+In the sweet air made gladsome by the sun,
+Carrying a foul and lazy mist within:
+Now in these murky settlings are we sad.”
+Such dolorous strain they gurgle in their throats.
+But word distinct can utter none.” Our route
+Thus compass’d we, a segment widely stretch’d
+Between the dry embankment, and the core
+Of the loath’d pool, turning meanwhile our eyes
+Downward on those who gulp’d its muddy lees;
+Nor stopp’d, till to a tower’s low base we came.
+
+
+
+
+CANTO VIII
+
+
+My theme pursuing, I relate that ere
+We reach’d the lofty turret’s base, our eyes
+Its height ascended, where two cressets hung
+We mark’d, and from afar another light
+Return the signal, so remote, that scarce
+The eye could catch its beam. I turning round
+To the deep source of knowledge, thus inquir’d:
+“Say what this means? and what that other light
+In answer set? what agency doth this?”
+
+“There on the filthy waters,” he replied,
+“E’en now what next awaits us mayst thou see,
+If the marsh-gender’d fog conceal it not.”
+
+Never was arrow from the cord dismiss’d,
+That ran its way so nimbly through the air,
+As a small bark, that through the waves I spied
+Toward us coming, under the sole sway
+Of one that ferried it, who cried aloud:
+“Art thou arriv’d, fell spirit?”—“Phlegyas, Phlegyas,
+This time thou criest in vain,” my lord replied;
+“No longer shalt thou have us, but while o’er
+The slimy pool we pass.” As one who hears
+Of some great wrong he hath sustain’d, whereat
+Inly he pines; so Phlegyas inly pin’d
+In his fierce ire. My guide descending stepp’d
+Into the skiff, and bade me enter next
+Close at his side; nor till my entrance seem’d
+The vessel freighted. Soon as both embark’d,
+Cutting the waves, goes on the ancient prow,
+More deeply than with others it is wont.
+
+While we our course o’er the dead channel held.
+One drench’d in mire before me came, and said;
+“Who art thou, that thou comest ere thine hour?”
+
+I answer’d: “Though I come, I tarry not;
+But who art thou, that art become so foul?”
+
+“One, as thou seest, who mourn: “ he straight replied.
+
+To which I thus: “ In mourning and in woe,
+Curs’d spirit! tarry thou. I know thee well,
+E’en thus in filth disguis’d.” Then stretch’d he forth
+Hands to the bark; whereof my teacher sage
+Aware, thrusting him back: “Away! down there
+To the’ other dogs!” then, with his arms my neck
+Encircling, kiss’d my cheek, and spake: “O soul
+Justly disdainful! blest was she in whom
+Thou was conceiv’d! He in the world was one
+For arrogance noted; to his memory
+No virtue lends its lustre; even so
+Here is his shadow furious. There above
+How many now hold themselves mighty kings
+Who here like swine shall wallow in the mire,
+Leaving behind them horrible dispraise!”
+
+I then: “Master! him fain would I behold
+Whelm’d in these dregs, before we quit the lake.”
+
+He thus: “Or ever to thy view the shore
+Be offer’d, satisfied shall be that wish,
+Which well deserves completion.” Scarce his words
+Were ended, when I saw the miry tribes
+Set on him with such violence, that yet
+For that render I thanks to God and praise
+“To Filippo Argenti:” cried they all:
+And on himself the moody Florentine
+Turn’d his avenging fangs. Him here we left,
+Nor speak I of him more. But on mine ear
+Sudden a sound of lamentation smote,
+Whereat mine eye unbarr’d I sent abroad.
+
+And thus the good instructor: “Now, my son!
+Draws near the city, that of Dis is nam’d,
+With its grave denizens, a mighty throng.”
+
+I thus: “The minarets already, Sir!
+There certes in the valley I descry,
+Gleaming vermilion, as if they from fire
+Had issu’d.” He replied: “Eternal fire,
+That inward burns, shows them with ruddy flame
+Illum’d; as in this nether hell thou seest.”
+
+We came within the fosses deep, that moat
+This region comfortless. The walls appear’d
+As they were fram’d of iron. We had made
+Wide circuit, ere a place we reach’d, where loud
+The mariner cried vehement: “Go forth!
+The’ entrance is here!” Upon the gates I spied
+More than a thousand, who of old from heaven
+Were hurl’d. With ireful gestures, “Who is this,”
+They cried, “that without death first felt, goes through
+The regions of the dead?” My sapient guide
+Made sign that he for secret parley wish’d;
+Whereat their angry scorn abating, thus
+They spake: “Come thou alone; and let him go
+Who hath so hardily enter’d this realm.
+Alone return he by his witless way;
+If well he know it, let him prove. For thee,
+Here shalt thou tarry, who through clime so dark
+Hast been his escort.” Now bethink thee, reader!
+What cheer was mine at sound of those curs’d words.
+I did believe I never should return.
+
+“O my lov’d guide! who more than seven times
+Security hast render’d me, and drawn
+From peril deep, whereto I stood expos’d,
+Desert me not,” I cried, “in this extreme.
+And if our onward going be denied,
+Together trace we back our steps with speed.”
+
+My liege, who thither had conducted me,
+Replied: “Fear not: for of our passage none
+Hath power to disappoint us, by such high
+Authority permitted. But do thou
+Expect me here; meanwhile thy wearied spirit
+Comfort, and feed with kindly hope, assur’d
+I will not leave thee in this lower world.”
+
+This said, departs the sire benevolent,
+And quits me. Hesitating I remain
+At war ’twixt will and will not in my thoughts.
+
+I could not hear what terms he offer’d them,
+But they conferr’d not long, for all at once
+To trial fled within. Clos’d were the gates
+By those our adversaries on the breast
+Of my liege lord: excluded he return’d
+To me with tardy steps. Upon the ground
+His eyes were bent, and from his brow eras’d
+All confidence, while thus with sighs he spake:
+“Who hath denied me these abodes of woe?”
+Then thus to me: “That I am anger’d, think
+No ground of terror: in this trial I
+Shall vanquish, use what arts they may within
+For hindrance. This their insolence, not new,
+Erewhile at gate less secret they display’d,
+Which still is without bolt; upon its arch
+Thou saw’st the deadly scroll: and even now
+On this side of its entrance, down the steep,
+Passing the circles, unescorted, comes
+One whose strong might can open us this land.”
+
+
+
+
+CANTO IX
+
+
+The hue, which coward dread on my pale cheeks
+Imprinted, when I saw my guide turn back,
+Chas’d that from his which newly they had worn,
+And inwardly restrain’d it. He, as one
+Who listens, stood attentive: for his eye
+Not far could lead him through the sable air,
+And the thick-gath’ring cloud. “It yet behooves
+We win this fight”—thus he began—” if not—
+Such aid to us is offer’d.—Oh, how long
+Me seems it, ere the promis’d help arrive!”
+
+I noted, how the sequel of his words
+Clok’d their beginning; for the last he spake
+Agreed not with the first. But not the less
+My fear was at his saying; sith I drew
+To import worse perchance, than that he held,
+His mutilated speech. “Doth ever any
+Into this rueful concave’s extreme depth
+Descend, out of the first degree, whose pain
+Is deprivation merely of sweet hope?”
+
+Thus I inquiring. “Rarely,” he replied,
+“It chances, that among us any makes
+This journey, which I wend. Erewhile ’tis true
+Once came I here beneath, conjur’d by fell
+Erictho, sorceress, who compell’d the shades
+Back to their bodies. No long space my flesh
+Was naked of me, when within these walls
+She made me enter, to draw forth a spirit
+From out of Judas’ circle. Lowest place
+Is that of all, obscurest, and remov’d
+Farthest from heav’n’s all-circling orb. The road
+Full well I know: thou therefore rest secure.
+That lake, the noisome stench exhaling, round
+The city’ of grief encompasses, which now
+We may not enter without rage.” Yet more
+He added: but I hold it not in mind,
+For that mine eye toward the lofty tower
+Had drawn me wholly, to its burning top.
+Where in an instant I beheld uprisen
+At once three hellish furies stain’d with blood:
+In limb and motion feminine they seem’d;
+Around them greenest hydras twisting roll’d
+Their volumes; adders and cerastes crept
+Instead of hair, and their fierce temples bound.
+
+He knowing well the miserable hags
+Who tend the queen of endless woe, thus spake:
+“Mark thou each dire Erinnys. To the left
+This is Megaera; on the right hand she,
+Who wails, Alecto; and Tisiphone
+I’ th’ midst.” This said, in silence he remain’d
+Their breast they each one clawing tore; themselves
+Smote with their palms, and such shrill clamour rais’d,
+That to the bard I clung, suspicion-bound.
+“Hasten Medusa: so to adamant
+Him shall we change;” all looking down exclaim’d.
+“E’en when by Theseus’ might assail’d, we took
+No ill revenge.” “Turn thyself round, and keep
+Thy count’nance hid; for if the Gorgon dire
+Be shown, and thou shouldst view it, thy return
+Upwards would be for ever lost.” This said,
+Himself my gentle master turn’d me round,
+Nor trusted he my hands, but with his own
+He also hid me. Ye of intellect
+Sound and entire, mark well the lore conceal’d
+Under close texture of the mystic strain!
+
+And now there came o’er the perturbed waves
+Loud-crashing, terrible, a sound that made
+Either shore tremble, as if of a wind
+Impetuous, from conflicting vapours sprung,
+That ’gainst some forest driving all its might,
+Plucks off the branches, beats them down and hurls
+Afar; then onward passing proudly sweeps
+Its whirlwind rage, while beasts and shepherds fly.
+
+Mine eyes he loos’d, and spake: “And now direct
+Thy visual nerve along that ancient foam,
+There, thickest where the smoke ascends.” As frogs
+Before their foe the serpent, through the wave
+Ply swiftly all, till at the ground each one
+Lies on a heap; more than a thousand spirits
+Destroy’d, so saw I fleeing before one
+Who pass’d with unwet feet the Stygian sound.
+He, from his face removing the gross air,
+Oft his left hand forth stretch’d, and seem’d alone
+By that annoyance wearied. I perceiv’d
+That he was sent from heav’n, and to my guide
+Turn’d me, who signal made that I should stand
+Quiet, and bend to him. Ah me! how full
+Of noble anger seem’d he! To the gate
+He came, and with his wand touch’d it, whereat
+Open without impediment it flew.
+
+“Outcasts of heav’n! O abject race and scorn’d!”
+Began he on the horrid grunsel standing,
+“Whence doth this wild excess of insolence
+Lodge in you? wherefore kick you ’gainst that will
+Ne’er frustrate of its end, and which so oft
+Hath laid on you enforcement of your pangs?
+What profits at the fays to but the horn?
+Your Cerberus, if ye remember, hence
+Bears still, peel’d of their hair, his throat and maw.”
+
+This said, he turn’d back o’er the filthy way,
+And syllable to us spake none, but wore
+The semblance of a man by other care
+Beset, and keenly press’d, than thought of him
+Who in his presence stands. Then we our steps
+Toward that territory mov’d, secure
+After the hallow’d words. We unoppos’d
+There enter’d; and my mind eager to learn
+What state a fortress like to that might hold,
+I soon as enter’d throw mine eye around,
+And see on every part wide-stretching space
+Replete with bitter pain and torment ill.
+
+As where Rhone stagnates on the plains of Arles,
+Or as at Pola, near Quarnaro’s gulf,
+That closes Italy and laves her bounds,
+The place is all thick spread with sepulchres;
+So was it here, save what in horror here
+Excell’d: for ’midst the graves were scattered flames,
+Wherewith intensely all throughout they burn’d,
+That iron for no craft there hotter needs.
+
+Their lids all hung suspended, and beneath
+From them forth issu’d lamentable moans,
+Such as the sad and tortur’d well might raise.
+
+I thus: “Master! say who are these, interr’d
+Within these vaults, of whom distinct we hear
+The dolorous sighs?” He answer thus return’d:
+
+“The arch-heretics are here, accompanied
+By every sect their followers; and much more,
+Than thou believest, tombs are freighted: like
+With like is buried; and the monuments
+Are different in degrees of heat. “This said,
+He to the right hand turning, on we pass’d
+Betwixt the afflicted and the ramparts high.
+
+
+
+
+CANTO X
+
+
+Now by a secret pathway we proceed,
+Between the walls, that hem the region round,
+And the tormented souls: my master first,
+I close behind his steps. “Virtue supreme!”
+I thus began; “who through these ample orbs
+In circuit lead’st me, even as thou will’st,
+Speak thou, and satisfy my wish. May those,
+Who lie within these sepulchres, be seen?
+Already all the lids are rais’d, and none
+O’er them keeps watch.” He thus in answer spake
+“They shall be closed all, what-time they here
+From Josaphat return’d shall come, and bring
+Their bodies, which above they now have left.
+The cemetery on this part obtain
+With Epicurus all his followers,
+Who with the body make the spirit die.
+Here therefore satisfaction shall be soon
+Both to the question ask’d, and to the wish,
+Which thou conceal’st in silence.” I replied:
+“I keep not, guide belov’d! from thee my heart
+Secreted, but to shun vain length of words,
+A lesson erewhile taught me by thyself.”
+
+“O Tuscan! thou who through the city of fire
+Alive art passing, so discreet of speech!
+Here please thee stay awhile. Thy utterance
+Declares the place of thy nativity
+To be that noble land, with which perchance
+I too severely dealt.” Sudden that sound
+Forth issu’d from a vault, whereat in fear
+I somewhat closer to my leader’s side
+Approaching, he thus spake: “What dost thou? Turn.
+Lo, Farinata, there! who hath himself
+Uplifted: from his girdle upwards all
+Expos’d behold him.” On his face was mine
+Already fix’d; his breast and forehead there
+Erecting, seem’d as in high scorn he held
+E’en hell. Between the sepulchres to him
+My guide thrust me with fearless hands and prompt,
+This warning added: “See thy words be clear!”
+
+He, soon as there I stood at the tomb’s foot,
+Ey’d me a space, then in disdainful mood
+Address’d me: “Say, what ancestors were thine?”
+
+I, willing to obey him, straight reveal’d
+The whole, nor kept back aught: whence he, his brow
+Somewhat uplifting, cried: “Fiercely were they
+Adverse to me, my party, and the blood
+From whence I sprang: twice therefore I abroad
+Scatter’d them.” “Though driv’n out, yet they each time
+From all parts,” answer’d I, “return’d; an art
+Which yours have shown, they are not skill’d to learn.”
+
+Then, peering forth from the unclosed jaw,
+Rose from his side a shade, high as the chin,
+Leaning, methought, upon its knees uprais’d.
+It look’d around, as eager to explore
+If there were other with me; but perceiving
+That fond imagination quench’d, with tears
+Thus spake: “If thou through this blind prison go’st.
+Led by thy lofty genius and profound,
+Where is my son? and wherefore not with thee?”
+
+I straight replied: “Not of myself I come,
+By him, who there expects me, through this clime
+Conducted, whom perchance Guido thy son
+Had in contempt.” Already had his words
+And mode of punishment read me his name,
+Whence I so fully answer’d. He at once
+Exclaim’d, up starting, “How! said’st thou he HAD?
+No longer lives he? Strikes not on his eye
+The blessed daylight?” Then of some delay
+I made ere my reply aware, down fell
+Supine, not after forth appear’d he more.
+
+Meanwhile the other, great of soul, near whom
+I yet was station’d, chang’d not count’nance stern,
+Nor mov’d the neck, nor bent his ribbed side.
+“And if,” continuing the first discourse,
+“They in this art,” he cried, “small skill have shown,
+That doth torment me more e’en than this bed.
+But not yet fifty times shall be relum’d
+Her aspect, who reigns here Queen of this realm,
+Ere thou shalt know the full weight of that art.
+So to the pleasant world mayst thou return,
+As thou shalt tell me, why in all their laws,
+Against my kin this people is so fell?”
+
+“The slaughter and great havoc,” I replied,
+“That colour’d Arbia’s flood with crimson stain—
+To these impute, that in our hallow’d dome
+Such orisons ascend.” Sighing he shook
+The head, then thus resum’d: “In that affray
+I stood not singly, nor without just cause
+Assuredly should with the rest have stirr’d;
+But singly there I stood, when by consent
+Of all, Florence had to the ground been raz’d,
+The one who openly forbad the deed.”
+
+“So may thy lineage find at last repose,”
+I thus adjur’d him, “as thou solve this knot,
+Which now involves my mind. If right I hear,
+Ye seem to view beforehand, that which time
+Leads with him, of the present uninform’d.”
+
+“We view, as one who hath an evil sight,”
+He answer’d, “plainly, objects far remote:
+So much of his large spendour yet imparts
+The’ Almighty Ruler; but when they approach
+Or actually exist, our intellect
+Then wholly fails, nor of your human state
+Except what others bring us know we aught.
+Hence therefore mayst thou understand, that all
+Our knowledge in that instant shall expire,
+When on futurity the portals close.”
+
+Then conscious of my fault, and by remorse
+Smitten, I added thus: “Now shalt thou say
+To him there fallen, that his offspring still
+Is to the living join’d; and bid him know,
+That if from answer silent I abstain’d,
+’Twas that my thought was occupied intent
+Upon that error, which thy help hath solv’d.”
+
+But now my master summoning me back
+I heard, and with more eager haste besought
+The spirit to inform me, who with him
+Partook his lot. He answer thus return’d:
+
+“More than a thousand with me here are laid
+Within is Frederick, second of that name,
+And the Lord Cardinal, and of the rest
+I speak not.” He, this said, from sight withdrew.
+But I my steps towards the ancient bard
+Reverting, ruminated on the words
+Betokening me such ill. Onward he mov’d,
+And thus in going question’d: “Whence the’ amaze
+That holds thy senses wrapt?” I satisfied
+The’ inquiry, and the sage enjoin’d me straight:
+“Let thy safe memory store what thou hast heard
+To thee importing harm; and note thou this,”
+With his rais’d finger bidding me take heed,
+
+“When thou shalt stand before her gracious beam,
+Whose bright eye all surveys, she of thy life
+The future tenour will to thee unfold.”
+
+Forthwith he to the left hand turn’d his feet:
+We left the wall, and tow’rds the middle space
+Went by a path, that to a valley strikes;
+Which e’en thus high exhal’d its noisome steam.
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XI
+
+
+Upon the utmost verge of a high bank,
+By craggy rocks environ’d round, we came,
+Where woes beneath more cruel yet were stow’d:
+And here to shun the horrible excess
+Of fetid exhalation, upward cast
+From the profound abyss, behind the lid
+Of a great monument we stood retir’d,
+Whereon this scroll I mark’d: “I have in charge
+Pope Anastasius, whom Photinus drew
+From the right path.—Ere our descent behooves
+We make delay, that somewhat first the sense,
+To the dire breath accustom’d, afterward
+Regard it not.” My master thus; to whom
+Answering I spake: “Some compensation find
+That the time past not wholly lost.” He then:
+“Lo! how my thoughts e’en to thy wishes tend!
+My son! within these rocks,” he thus began,
+“Are three close circles in gradation plac’d,
+As these which now thou leav’st. Each one is full
+Of spirits accurs’d; but that the sight alone
+Hereafter may suffice thee, listen how
+And for what cause in durance they abide.
+
+“Of all malicious act abhorr’d in heaven,
+The end is injury; and all such end
+Either by force or fraud works other’s woe
+But fraud, because of man peculiar evil,
+To God is more displeasing; and beneath
+The fraudulent are therefore doom’d to’ endure
+Severer pang. The violent occupy
+All the first circle; and because to force
+Three persons are obnoxious, in three rounds
+Hach within other sep’rate is it fram’d.
+To God, his neighbour, and himself, by man
+Force may be offer’d; to himself I say
+And his possessions, as thou soon shalt hear
+At full. Death, violent death, and painful wounds
+Upon his neighbour he inflicts; and wastes
+By devastation, pillage, and the flames,
+His substance. Slayers, and each one that smites
+In malice, plund’rers, and all robbers, hence
+The torment undergo of the first round
+In different herds. Man can do violence
+To himself and his own blessings: and for this
+He in the second round must aye deplore
+With unavailing penitence his crime,
+Whoe’er deprives himself of life and light,
+In reckless lavishment his talent wastes,
+And sorrows there where he should dwell in joy.
+To God may force be offer’d, in the heart
+Denying and blaspheming his high power,
+And nature with her kindly law contemning.
+And thence the inmost round marks with its seal
+Sodom and Cahors, and all such as speak
+Contemptuously’ of the Godhead in their hearts.
+
+“Fraud, that in every conscience leaves a sting,
+May be by man employ’d on one, whose trust
+He wins, or on another who withholds
+Strict confidence. Seems as the latter way
+Broke but the bond of love which Nature makes.
+Whence in the second circle have their nest
+Dissimulation, witchcraft, flatteries,
+Theft, falsehood, simony, all who seduce
+To lust, or set their honesty at pawn,
+With such vile scum as these. The other way
+Forgets both Nature’s general love, and that
+Which thereto added afterwards gives birth
+To special faith. Whence in the lesser circle,
+Point of the universe, dread seat of Dis,
+The traitor is eternally consum’d.”
+
+I thus: “Instructor, clearly thy discourse
+Proceeds, distinguishing the hideous chasm
+And its inhabitants with skill exact.
+But tell me this: they of the dull, fat pool,
+Whom the rain beats, or whom the tempest drives,
+Or who with tongues so fierce conflicting meet,
+Wherefore within the city fire-illum’d
+Are not these punish’d, if God’s wrath be on them?
+And if it be not, wherefore in such guise
+Are they condemned?” He answer thus return’d:
+“Wherefore in dotage wanders thus thy mind,
+Not so accustom’d? or what other thoughts
+Possess it? Dwell not in thy memory
+The words, wherein thy ethic page describes
+Three dispositions adverse to Heav’n’s will,
+Incont’nence, malice, and mad brutishness,
+And how incontinence the least offends
+God, and least guilt incurs? If well thou note
+This judgment, and remember who they are,
+Without these walls to vain repentance doom’d,
+Thou shalt discern why they apart are plac’d
+From these fell spirits, and less wreakful pours
+Justice divine on them its vengeance down.”
+
+“O Sun! who healest all imperfect sight,
+Thou so content’st me, when thou solv’st my doubt,
+That ignorance not less than knowledge charms.
+Yet somewhat turn thee back,” I in these words
+Continu’d, “where thou saidst, that usury
+Offends celestial Goodness; and this knot
+Perplex’d unravel.” He thus made reply:
+“Philosophy, to an attentive ear,
+Clearly points out, not in one part alone,
+How imitative nature takes her course
+From the celestial mind and from its art:
+And where her laws the Stagyrite unfolds,
+Not many leaves scann’d o’er, observing well
+Thou shalt discover, that your art on her
+Obsequious follows, as the learner treads
+In his instructor’s step, so that your art
+Deserves the name of second in descent
+From God. These two, if thou recall to mind
+Creation’s holy book, from the beginning
+Were the right source of life and excellence
+To human kind. But in another path
+The usurer walks; and Nature in herself
+And in her follower thus he sets at nought,
+Placing elsewhere his hope. But follow now
+My steps on forward journey bent; for now
+The Pisces play with undulating glance
+Along the’ horizon, and the Wain lies all
+O’er the north-west; and onward there a space
+Is our steep passage down the rocky height.”
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XII
+
+
+The place where to descend the precipice
+We came, was rough as Alp, and on its verge
+Such object lay, as every eye would shun.
+
+As is that ruin, which Adice’s stream
+On this side Trento struck, should’ring the wave,
+Or loos’d by earthquake or for lack of prop;
+For from the mountain’s summit, whence it mov’d
+To the low level, so the headlong rock
+Is shiver’d, that some passage it might give
+To him who from above would pass; e’en such
+Into the chasm was that descent: and there
+At point of the disparted ridge lay stretch’d
+The infamy of Crete, detested brood
+Of the feign’d heifer: and at sight of us
+It gnaw’d itself, as one with rage distract.
+To him my guide exclaim’d: “Perchance thou deem’st
+The King of Athens here, who, in the world
+Above, thy death contriv’d. Monster! avaunt!
+He comes not tutor’d by thy sister’s art,
+But to behold your torments is he come.”
+
+Like to a bull, that with impetuous spring
+Darts, at the moment when the fatal blow
+Hath struck him, but unable to proceed
+Plunges on either side; so saw I plunge
+The Minotaur; whereat the sage exclaim’d:
+“Run to the passage! while he storms, ’tis well
+That thou descend.” Thus down our road we took
+Through those dilapidated crags, that oft
+Mov’d underneath my feet, to weight like theirs
+Unus’d. I pond’ring went, and thus he spake:
+
+“Perhaps thy thoughts are of this ruin’d steep,
+Guarded by the brute violence, which I
+Have vanquish’d now. Know then, that when I erst
+Hither descended to the nether hell,
+This rock was not yet fallen. But past doubt
+(If well I mark) not long ere He arrived,
+Who carried off from Dis the mighty spoil
+Of the highest circle, then through all its bounds
+Such trembling seiz’d the deep concave and foul,
+I thought the universe was thrill’d with love,
+Whereby, there are who deem, the world hath oft
+Been into chaos turn’d: and in that point,
+Here, and elsewhere, that old rock toppled down.
+But fix thine eyes beneath: the river of blood
+Approaches, in the which all those are steep’d,
+Who have by violence injur’d.” O blind lust!
+O foolish wrath! who so dost goad us on
+In the brief life, and in the eternal then
+Thus miserably o’erwhelm us. I beheld
+An ample foss, that in a bow was bent,
+As circling all the plain; for so my guide
+Had told. Between it and the rampart’s base
+On trail ran Centaurs, with keen arrows arm’d,
+As to the chase they on the earth were wont.
+
+At seeing us descend they each one stood;
+And issuing from the troop, three sped with bows
+And missile weapons chosen first; of whom
+One cried from far: “Say to what pain ye come
+Condemn’d, who down this steep have journied? Speak
+From whence ye stand, or else the bow I draw.”
+
+To whom my guide: “Our answer shall be made
+To Chiron, there, when nearer him we come.
+Ill was thy mind, thus ever quick and rash.”
+
+Then me he touch’d, and spake: “Nessus is this,
+Who for the fair Deianira died,
+And wrought himself revenge for his own fate.
+He in the midst, that on his breast looks down,
+Is the great Chiron who Achilles nurs’d;
+That other Pholus, prone to wrath.” Around
+The foss these go by thousands, aiming shafts
+At whatsoever spirit dares emerge
+From out the blood, more than his guilt allows.
+
+We to those beasts, that rapid strode along,
+Drew near, when Chiron took an arrow forth,
+And with the notch push’d back his shaggy beard
+To the cheek-bone, then his great mouth to view
+Exposing, to his fellows thus exclaim’d:
+“Are ye aware, that he who comes behind
+Moves what he touches? The feet of the dead
+Are not so wont.” My trusty guide, who now
+Stood near his breast, where the two natures join,
+Thus made reply: “He is indeed alive,
+And solitary so must needs by me
+Be shown the gloomy vale, thereto induc’d
+By strict necessity, not by delight.
+She left her joyful harpings in the sky,
+Who this new office to my care consign’d.
+He is no robber, no dark spirit I.
+But by that virtue, which empowers my step
+To treat so wild a path, grant us, I pray,
+One of thy band, whom we may trust secure,
+Who to the ford may lead us, and convey
+Across, him mounted on his back; for he
+Is not a spirit that may walk the air.”
+
+Then on his right breast turning, Chiron thus
+To Nessus spake: “Return, and be their guide.
+And if ye chance to cross another troop,
+Command them keep aloof.” Onward we mov’d,
+The faithful escort by our side, along
+The border of the crimson-seething flood,
+Whence from those steep’d within loud shrieks arose.
+
+Some there I mark’d, as high as to their brow
+Immers’d, of whom the mighty Centaur thus:
+“These are the souls of tyrants, who were given
+To blood and rapine. Here they wail aloud
+Their merciless wrongs. Here Alexander dwells,
+And Dionysius fell, who many a year
+Of woe wrought for fair Sicily. That brow
+Whereon the hair so jetty clust’ring hangs,
+Is Azzolino; that with flaxen locks
+Obizzo’ of Este, in the world destroy’d
+By his foul step-son.” To the bard rever’d
+I turned me round, and thus he spake; “Let him
+Be to thee now first leader, me but next
+To him in rank.” Then farther on a space
+The Centaur paus’d, near some, who at the throat
+Were extant from the wave; and showing us
+A spirit by itself apart retir’d,
+Exclaim’d: “He in God’s bosom smote the heart,
+Which yet is honour’d on the bank of Thames.”
+
+A race I next espied, who held the head,
+And even all the bust above the stream.
+’Midst these I many a face remember’d well.
+Thus shallow more and more the blood became,
+So that at last it but imbru’d the feet;
+And there our passage lay athwart the foss.
+
+“As ever on this side the boiling wave
+Thou seest diminishing,” the Centaur said,
+“So on the other, be thou well assur’d,
+It lower still and lower sinks its bed,
+Till in that part it reuniting join,
+Where ’tis the lot of tyranny to mourn.
+There Heav’n’s stern justice lays chastising hand
+On Attila, who was the scourge of earth,
+On Sextus, and on Pyrrhus, and extracts
+Tears ever by the seething flood unlock’d
+From the Rinieri, of Corneto this,
+Pazzo the other nam’d, who fill’d the ways
+With violence and war.” This said, he turn’d,
+And quitting us, alone repass’d the ford.
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XIII
+
+
+Ere Nessus yet had reach’d the other bank,
+We enter’d on a forest, where no track
+Of steps had worn a way. Not verdant there
+The foliage, but of dusky hue; not light
+The boughs and tapering, but with knares deform’d
+And matted thick: fruits there were none, but thorns
+Instead, with venom fill’d. Less sharp than these,
+Less intricate the brakes, wherein abide
+Those animals, that hate the cultur’d fields,
+Betwixt Corneto and Cecina’s stream.
+
+Here the brute Harpies make their nest, the same
+Who from the Strophades the Trojan band
+Drove with dire boding of their future woe.
+Broad are their pennons, of the human form
+Their neck and count’nance, arm’d with talons keen
+The feet, and the huge belly fledge with wings
+These sit and wail on the drear mystic wood.
+
+The kind instructor in these words began:
+“Ere farther thou proceed, know thou art now
+I’ th’ second round, and shalt be, till thou come
+Upon the horrid sand: look therefore well
+Around thee, and such things thou shalt behold,
+As would my speech discredit.” On all sides
+I heard sad plainings breathe, and none could see
+From whom they might have issu’d. In amaze
+Fast bound I stood. He, as it seem’d, believ’d,
+That I had thought so many voices came
+From some amid those thickets close conceal’d,
+And thus his speech resum’d: “If thou lop off
+A single twig from one of those ill plants,
+The thought thou hast conceiv’d shall vanish quite.”
+
+Thereat a little stretching forth my hand,
+From a great wilding gather’d I a branch,
+And straight the trunk exclaim’d: “Why pluck’st thou me?”
+Then as the dark blood trickled down its side,
+These words it added: “Wherefore tear’st me thus?
+Is there no touch of mercy in thy breast?
+Men once were we, that now are rooted here.
+Thy hand might well have spar’d us, had we been
+The souls of serpents.” As a brand yet green,
+That burning at one end from the’ other sends
+A groaning sound, and hisses with the wind
+That forces out its way, so burst at once,
+Forth from the broken splinter words and blood.
+
+I, letting fall the bough, remain’d as one
+Assail’d by terror, and the sage replied:
+“If he, O injur’d spirit! could have believ’d
+What he hath seen but in my verse describ’d,
+He never against thee had stretch’d his hand.
+But I, because the thing surpass’d belief,
+Prompted him to this deed, which even now
+Myself I rue. But tell me, who thou wast;
+That, for this wrong to do thee some amends,
+In the upper world (for thither to return
+Is granted him) thy fame he may revive.”
+
+“That pleasant word of thine,” the trunk replied
+“Hath so inveigled me, that I from speech
+Cannot refrain, wherein if I indulge
+A little longer, in the snare detain’d,
+Count it not grievous. I it was, who held
+Both keys to Frederick’s heart, and turn’d the wards,
+Opening and shutting, with a skill so sweet,
+That besides me, into his inmost breast
+Scarce any other could admittance find.
+The faith I bore to my high charge was such,
+It cost me the life-blood that warm’d my veins.
+The harlot, who ne’er turn’d her gloating eyes
+From Caesar’s household, common vice and pest
+Of courts, ’gainst me inflam’d the minds of all;
+And to Augustus they so spread the flame,
+That my glad honours chang’d to bitter woes.
+My soul, disdainful and disgusted, sought
+Refuge in death from scorn, and I became,
+Just as I was, unjust toward myself.
+By the new roots, which fix this stem, I swear,
+That never faith I broke to my liege lord,
+Who merited such honour; and of you,
+If any to the world indeed return,
+Clear he from wrong my memory, that lies
+Yet prostrate under envy’s cruel blow.”
+
+First somewhat pausing, till the mournful words
+Were ended, then to me the bard began:
+“Lose not the time; but speak and of him ask,
+If more thou wish to learn.” Whence I replied:
+“Question thou him again of whatsoe’er
+Will, as thou think’st, content me; for no power
+Have I to ask, such pity’ is at my heart.”
+
+He thus resum’d; “So may he do for thee
+Freely what thou entreatest, as thou yet
+Be pleas’d, imprison’d Spirit! to declare,
+How in these gnarled joints the soul is tied;
+And whether any ever from such frame
+Be loosen’d, if thou canst, that also tell.”
+
+Thereat the trunk breath’d hard, and the wind soon
+Chang’d into sounds articulate like these;
+
+Briefly ye shall be answer’d. When departs
+The fierce soul from the body, by itself
+Thence torn asunder, to the seventh gulf
+By Minos doom’d, into the wood it falls,
+No place assign’d, but wheresoever chance
+Hurls it, there sprouting, as a grain of spelt,
+It rises to a sapling, growing thence
+A savage plant. The Harpies, on its leaves
+Then feeding, cause both pain and for the pain
+A vent to grief. We, as the rest, shall come
+For our own spoils, yet not so that with them
+We may again be clad; for what a man
+Takes from himself it is not just he have.
+Here we perforce shall drag them; and throughout
+The dismal glade our bodies shall be hung,
+Each on the wild thorn of his wretched shade.”
+
+Attentive yet to listen to the trunk
+We stood, expecting farther speech, when us
+A noise surpris’d, as when a man perceives
+The wild boar and the hunt approach his place
+Of station’d watch, who of the beasts and boughs
+Loud rustling round him hears. And lo! there came
+Two naked, torn with briers, in headlong flight,
+That they before them broke each fan o’ th’ wood.
+“Haste now,” the foremost cried, “now haste thee death!”
+The’ other, as seem’d, impatient of delay
+Exclaiming, “Lano! not so bent for speed
+Thy sinews, in the lists of Toppo’s field.”
+And then, for that perchance no longer breath
+Suffic’d him, of himself and of a bush
+One group he made. Behind them was the wood
+Full of black female mastiffs, gaunt and fleet,
+As greyhounds that have newly slipp’d the leash.
+On him, who squatted down, they stuck their fangs,
+And having rent him piecemeal bore away
+The tortur’d limbs. My guide then seiz’d my hand,
+And led me to the thicket, which in vain
+Mourn’d through its bleeding wounds: “O Giacomo
+Of Sant’ Andrea! what avails it thee,”
+It cried, “that of me thou hast made thy screen?
+For thy ill life what blame on me recoils?”
+
+When o’er it he had paus’d, my master spake:
+“Say who wast thou, that at so many points
+Breath’st out with blood thy lamentable speech?”
+
+He answer’d: “Oh, ye spirits: arriv’d in time
+To spy the shameful havoc, that from me
+My leaves hath sever’d thus, gather them up,
+And at the foot of their sad parent-tree
+Carefully lay them. In that city’ I dwelt,
+Who for the Baptist her first patron chang’d,
+Whence he for this shall cease not with his art
+To work her woe: and if there still remain’d not
+On Arno’s passage some faint glimpse of him,
+Those citizens, who rear’d once more her walls
+Upon the ashes left by Attila,
+Had labour’d without profit of their toil.
+I slung the fatal noose from my own roof.”
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XIV
+
+
+Soon as the charity of native land
+Wrought in my bosom, I the scatter’d leaves
+Collected, and to him restor’d, who now
+Was hoarse with utt’rance. To the limit thence
+We came, which from the third the second round
+Divides, and where of justice is display’d
+Contrivance horrible. Things then first seen
+Clearlier to manifest, I tell how next
+A plain we reach’d, that from its sterile bed
+Each plant repell’d. The mournful wood waves round
+Its garland on all sides, as round the wood
+Spreads the sad foss. There, on the very edge,
+Our steps we stay’d. It was an area wide
+Of arid sand and thick, resembling most
+The soil that erst by Cato’s foot was trod.
+
+Vengeance of Heav’n! Oh ! how shouldst thou be fear’d
+By all, who read what here my eyes beheld!
+
+Of naked spirits many a flock I saw,
+All weeping piteously, to different laws
+Subjected: for on the’ earth some lay supine,
+Some crouching close were seated, others pac’d
+Incessantly around; the latter tribe,
+More numerous, those fewer who beneath
+The torment lay, but louder in their grief.
+
+O’er all the sand fell slowly wafting down
+Dilated flakes of fire, as flakes of snow
+On Alpine summit, when the wind is hush’d.
+As in the torrid Indian clime, the son
+Of Ammon saw upon his warrior band
+Descending, solid flames, that to the ground
+Came down: whence he bethought him with his troop
+To trample on the soil; for easier thus
+The vapour was extinguish’d, while alone;
+So fell the eternal fiery flood, wherewith
+The marble glow’d underneath, as under stove
+The viands, doubly to augment the pain.
+Unceasing was the play of wretched hands,
+Now this, now that way glancing, to shake off
+The heat, still falling fresh. I thus began:
+“Instructor! thou who all things overcom’st,
+Except the hardy demons, that rush’d forth
+To stop our entrance at the gate, say who
+Is yon huge spirit, that, as seems, heeds not
+The burning, but lies writhen in proud scorn,
+As by the sultry tempest immatur’d?”
+
+Straight he himself, who was aware I ask’d
+My guide of him, exclaim’d: “Such as I was
+When living, dead such now I am. If Jove
+Weary his workman out, from whom in ire
+He snatch’d the lightnings, that at my last day
+Transfix’d me, if the rest be weary out
+At their black smithy labouring by turns
+In Mongibello, while he cries aloud;
+“Help, help, good Mulciber!” as erst he cried
+In the Phlegraean warfare, and the bolts
+Launch he full aim’d at me with all his might,
+He never should enjoy a sweet revenge.”
+
+Then thus my guide, in accent higher rais’d
+Than I before had heard him: “Capaneus!
+Thou art more punish’d, in that this thy pride
+Lives yet unquench’d: no torrent, save thy rage,
+Were to thy fury pain proportion’d full.”
+
+Next turning round to me with milder lip
+He spake: “This of the seven kings was one,
+Who girt the Theban walls with siege, and held,
+As still he seems to hold, God in disdain,
+And sets his high omnipotence at nought.
+But, as I told him, his despiteful mood
+Is ornament well suits the breast that wears it.
+Follow me now; and look thou set not yet
+Thy foot in the hot sand, but to the wood
+Keep ever close.” Silently on we pass’d
+To where there gushes from the forest’s bound
+A little brook, whose crimson’d wave yet lifts
+My hair with horror. As the rill, that runs
+From Bulicame, to be portion’d out
+Among the sinful women; so ran this
+Down through the sand, its bottom and each bank
+Stone-built, and either margin at its side,
+Whereon I straight perceiv’d our passage lay.
+
+“Of all that I have shown thee, since that gate
+We enter’d first, whose threshold is to none
+Denied, nought else so worthy of regard,
+As is this river, has thine eye discern’d,
+O’er which the flaming volley all is quench’d.”
+
+So spake my guide; and I him thence besought,
+That having giv’n me appetite to know,
+The food he too would give, that hunger crav’d.
+
+“In midst of ocean,” forthwith he began,
+“A desolate country lies, which Crete is nam’d,
+Under whose monarch in old times the world
+Liv’d pure and chaste. A mountain rises there,
+Call’d Ida, joyous once with leaves and streams,
+Deserted now like a forbidden thing.
+It was the spot which Rhea, Saturn’s spouse,
+Chose for the secret cradle of her son;
+And better to conceal him, drown’d in shouts
+His infant cries. Within the mount, upright
+An ancient form there stands and huge, that turns
+His shoulders towards Damiata, and at Rome
+As in his mirror looks. Of finest gold
+His head is shap’d, pure silver are the breast
+And arms; thence to the middle is of brass.
+And downward all beneath well-temper’d steel,
+Save the right foot of potter’s clay, on which
+Than on the other more erect he stands,
+Each part except the gold, is rent throughout;
+And from the fissure tears distil, which join’d
+Penetrate to that cave. They in their course
+Thus far precipitated down the rock
+Form Acheron, and Styx, and Phlegethon;
+Then by this straiten’d channel passing hence
+Beneath, e’en to the lowest depth of all,
+Form there Cocytus, of whose lake (thyself
+Shall see it) I here give thee no account.”
+
+Then I to him: “If from our world this sluice
+Be thus deriv’d; wherefore to us but now
+Appears it at this edge?” He straight replied:
+“The place, thou know’st, is round; and though great part
+Thou have already pass’d, still to the left
+Descending to the nethermost, not yet
+Hast thou the circuit made of the whole orb.
+Wherefore if aught of new to us appear,
+It needs not bring up wonder in thy looks.”
+
+Then I again inquir’d: “Where flow the streams
+Of Phlegethon and Lethe? for of one
+Thou tell’st not, and the other of that shower,
+Thou say’st, is form’d.” He answer thus return’d:
+“Doubtless thy questions all well pleas’d I hear.
+Yet the red seething wave might have resolv’d
+One thou proposest. Lethe thou shalt see,
+But not within this hollow, in the place,
+Whither to lave themselves the spirits go,
+Whose blame hath been by penitence remov’d.”
+He added: “Time is now we quit the wood.
+Look thou my steps pursue: the margins give
+Safe passage, unimpeded by the flames;
+For over them all vapour is extinct.”
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XV
+
+
+One of the solid margins bears us now
+Envelop’d in the mist, that from the stream
+Arising, hovers o’er, and saves from fire
+Both piers and water. As the Flemings rear
+Their mound, ’twixt Ghent and Bruges, to chase back
+The ocean, fearing his tumultuous tide
+That drives toward them, or the Paduans theirs
+Along the Brenta, to defend their towns
+And castles, ere the genial warmth be felt
+On Chiarentana’s top; such were the mounds,
+So fram’d, though not in height or bulk to these
+Made equal, by the master, whosoe’er
+He was, that rais’d them here. We from the wood
+Were not so far remov’d, that turning round
+I might not have discern’d it, when we met
+A troop of spirits, who came beside the pier.
+
+They each one ey’d us, as at eventide
+One eyes another under a new moon,
+And toward us sharpen’d their sight as keen,
+As an old tailor at his needle’s eye.
+
+Thus narrowly explor’d by all the tribe,
+I was agniz’d of one, who by the skirt
+Caught me, and cried, “What wonder have we here!”
+
+And I, when he to me outstretch’d his arm,
+Intently fix’d my ken on his parch’d looks,
+That although smirch’d with fire, they hinder’d not
+But I remember’d him; and towards his face
+My hand inclining, answer’d: “Sir! Brunetto!
+And art thou here?” He thus to me: “My son!
+Oh let it not displease thee, if Brunetto
+Latini but a little space with thee
+Turn back, and leave his fellows to proceed.”
+
+I thus to him replied: “Much as I can,
+I thereto pray thee; and if thou be willing,
+That I here seat me with thee, I consent;
+His leave, with whom I journey, first obtain’d.”
+
+“O son!” said he, “ whoever of this throng
+One instant stops, lies then a hundred years,
+No fan to ventilate him, when the fire
+Smites sorest. Pass thou therefore on. I close
+Will at thy garments walk, and then rejoin
+My troop, who go mourning their endless doom.”
+
+I dar’d not from the path descend to tread
+On equal ground with him, but held my head
+Bent down, as one who walks in reverent guise.
+
+“What chance or destiny,” thus be began,
+“Ere the last day conducts thee here below?
+And who is this, that shows to thee the way?”
+
+“There up aloft,” I answer’d, “in the life
+Serene, I wander’d in a valley lost,
+Before mine age had to its fullness reach’d.
+But yester-morn I left it: then once more
+Into that vale returning, him I met;
+And by this path homeward he leads me back.”
+
+“If thou,” he answer’d, “follow but thy star,
+Thou canst not miss at last a glorious haven:
+Unless in fairer days my judgment err’d.
+And if my fate so early had not chanc’d,
+Seeing the heav’ns thus bounteous to thee, I
+Had gladly giv’n thee comfort in thy work.
+But that ungrateful and malignant race,
+Who in old times came down from Fesole,
+Ay and still smack of their rough mountain-flint,
+Will for thy good deeds shew thee enmity.
+Nor wonder; for amongst ill-savour’d crabs
+It suits not the sweet fig-tree lay her fruit.
+Old fame reports them in the world for blind,
+Covetous, envious, proud. Look to it well:
+Take heed thou cleanse thee of their ways. For thee
+Thy fortune hath such honour in reserve,
+That thou by either party shalt be crav’d
+With hunger keen: but be the fresh herb far
+From the goat’s tooth. The herd of Fesole
+May of themselves make litter, not touch the plant,
+If any such yet spring on their rank bed,
+In which the holy seed revives, transmitted
+From those true Romans, who still there remain’d,
+When it was made the nest of so much ill.”
+
+“Were all my wish fulfill’d,” I straight replied,
+“Thou from the confines of man’s nature yet
+Hadst not been driven forth; for in my mind
+Is fix’d, and now strikes full upon my heart
+The dear, benign, paternal image, such
+As thine was, when so lately thou didst teach me
+The way for man to win eternity;
+And how I priz’d the lesson, it behooves,
+That, long as life endures, my tongue should speak,
+What of my fate thou tell’st, that write I down:
+And with another text to comment on
+For her I keep it, the celestial dame,
+Who will know all, if I to her arrive.
+This only would I have thee clearly note:
+That so my conscience have no plea against me;
+Do fortune as she list, I stand prepar’d.
+Not new or strange such earnest to mine ear.
+Speed fortune then her wheel, as likes her best,
+The clown his mattock; all things have their course.”
+
+Thereat my sapient guide upon his right
+Turn’d himself back, then look’d at me and spake:
+“He listens to good purpose who takes note.”
+
+I not the less still on my way proceed,
+Discoursing with Brunetto, and inquire
+Who are most known and chief among his tribe.
+
+“To know of some is well;” thus he replied,
+“But of the rest silence may best beseem.
+Time would not serve us for report so long.
+In brief I tell thee, that all these were clerks,
+Men of great learning and no less renown,
+By one same sin polluted in the world.
+With them is Priscian, and Accorso’s son
+Francesco herds among that wretched throng:
+And, if the wish of so impure a blotch
+Possess’d thee, him thou also might’st have seen,
+Who by the servants’ servant was transferr’d
+From Arno’s seat to Bacchiglione, where
+His ill-strain’d nerves he left. I more would add,
+But must from farther speech and onward way
+Alike desist, for yonder I behold
+A mist new-risen on the sandy plain.
+A company, with whom I may not sort,
+Approaches. I commend my TREASURE to thee,
+Wherein I yet survive; my sole request.”
+
+This said he turn’d, and seem’d as one of those,
+Who o’er Verona’s champain try their speed
+For the green mantle, and of them he seem’d,
+Not he who loses but who gains the prize.
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XVI
+
+
+Now came I where the water’s din was heard,
+As down it fell into the other round,
+Resounding like the hum of swarming bees:
+When forth together issu’d from a troop,
+That pass’d beneath the fierce tormenting storm,
+Three spirits, running swift. They towards us came,
+And each one cried aloud, “Oh do thou stay!
+Whom by the fashion of thy garb we deem
+To be some inmate of our evil land.”
+
+Ah me! what wounds I mark’d upon their limbs,
+Recent and old, inflicted by the flames!
+E’en the remembrance of them grieves me yet.
+
+Attentive to their cry my teacher paus’d,
+And turn’d to me his visage, and then spake;
+“Wait now! our courtesy these merit well:
+And were ’t not for the nature of the place,
+Whence glide the fiery darts, I should have said,
+That haste had better suited thee than them.”
+
+They, when we stopp’d, resum’d their ancient wail,
+And soon as they had reach’d us, all the three
+Whirl’d round together in one restless wheel.
+As naked champions, smear’d with slippery oil,
+Are wont intent to watch their place of hold
+And vantage, ere in closer strife they meet;
+Thus each one, as he wheel’d, his countenance
+At me directed, so that opposite
+The neck mov’d ever to the twinkling feet.
+
+“If misery of this drear wilderness,”
+Thus one began, “added to our sad cheer
+And destitute, do call forth scorn on us
+And our entreaties, let our great renown
+Incline thee to inform us who thou art,
+That dost imprint with living feet unharm’d
+The soil of Hell. He, in whose track thou see’st
+My steps pursuing, naked though he be
+And reft of all, was of more high estate
+Than thou believest; grandchild of the chaste
+Gualdrada, him they Guidoguerra call’d,
+Who in his lifetime many a noble act
+Achiev’d, both by his wisdom and his sword.
+The other, next to me that beats the sand,
+Is Aldobrandi, name deserving well,
+In the’ upper world, of honour; and myself
+Who in this torment do partake with them,
+Am Rusticucci, whom, past doubt, my wife
+Of savage temper, more than aught beside
+Hath to this evil brought.” If from the fire
+I had been shelter’d, down amidst them straight
+I then had cast me, nor my guide, I deem,
+Would have restrain’d my going; but that fear
+Of the dire burning vanquish’d the desire,
+Which made me eager of their wish’d embrace.
+
+I then began: “Not scorn, but grief much more,
+Such as long time alone can cure, your doom
+Fix’d deep within me, soon as this my lord
+Spake words, whose tenour taught me to expect
+That such a race, as ye are, was at hand.
+I am a countryman of yours, who still
+Affectionate have utter’d, and have heard
+Your deeds and names renown’d. Leaving the gall
+For the sweet fruit I go, that a sure guide
+Hath promis’d to me. But behooves, that far
+As to the centre first I downward tend.”
+
+“So may long space thy spirit guide thy limbs,”
+He answer straight return’d; “and so thy fame
+Shine bright, when thou art gone; as thou shalt tell,
+If courtesy and valour, as they wont,
+Dwell in our city, or have vanish’d clean?
+For one amidst us late condemn’d to wail,
+Borsiere, yonder walking with his peers,
+Grieves us no little by the news he brings.”
+
+“An upstart multitude and sudden gains,
+Pride and excess, O Florence! have in thee
+Engender’d, so that now in tears thou mourn’st!”
+Thus cried I with my face uprais’d, and they
+All three, who for an answer took my words,
+Look’d at each other, as men look when truth
+Comes to their ear. “If thou at other times,”
+They all at once rejoin’d, “so easily
+Satisfy those, who question, happy thou,
+Gifted with words, so apt to speak thy thought!
+Wherefore if thou escape this darksome clime,
+Returning to behold the radiant stars,
+When thou with pleasure shalt retrace the past,
+See that of us thou speak among mankind.”
+
+This said, they broke the circle, and so swift
+Fled, that as pinions seem’d their nimble feet.
+
+Not in so short a time might one have said
+“Amen,” as they had vanish’d. Straight my guide
+Pursu’d his track. I follow’d; and small space
+Had we pass’d onward, when the water’s sound
+Was now so near at hand, that we had scarce
+Heard one another’s speech for the loud din.
+
+E’en as the river, that holds on its course
+Unmingled, from the mount of Vesulo,
+On the left side of Apennine, toward
+The east, which Acquacheta higher up
+They call, ere it descend into the vale,
+At Forli by that name no longer known,
+Rebellows o’er Saint Benedict, roll’d on
+From the’ Alpine summit down a precipice,
+Where space enough to lodge a thousand spreads;
+Thus downward from a craggy steep we found,
+That this dark wave resounded, roaring loud,
+So that the ear its clamour soon had stunn’d.
+
+I had a cord that brac’d my girdle round,
+Wherewith I erst had thought fast bound to take
+The painted leopard. This when I had all
+Unloosen’d from me (so my master bade)
+I gather’d up, and stretch’d it forth to him.
+Then to the right he turn’d, and from the brink
+Standing few paces distant, cast it down
+Into the deep abyss. “And somewhat strange,”
+Thus to myself I spake, “signal so strange
+Betokens, which my guide with earnest eye
+Thus follows.” Ah! what caution must men use
+With those who look not at the deed alone,
+But spy into the thoughts with subtle skill!
+
+“Quickly shall come,” he said, “what I expect,
+Thine eye discover quickly, that whereof
+Thy thought is dreaming.” Ever to that truth,
+Which but the semblance of a falsehood wears,
+A man, if possible, should bar his lip;
+Since, although blameless, he incurs reproach.
+But silence here were vain; and by these notes
+Which now I sing, reader! I swear to thee,
+So may they favour find to latest times!
+That through the gross and murky air I spied
+A shape come swimming up, that might have quell’d
+The stoutest heart with wonder, in such guise
+As one returns, who hath been down to loose
+An anchor grappled fast against some rock,
+Or to aught else that in the salt wave lies,
+Who upward springing close draws in his feet.
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XVII
+
+
+“Lo! the fell monster with the deadly sting!
+Who passes mountains, breaks through fenced walls
+And firm embattled spears, and with his filth
+Taints all the world!” Thus me my guide address’d,
+And beckon’d him, that he should come to shore,
+Near to the stony causeway’s utmost edge.
+
+Forthwith that image vile of fraud appear’d,
+His head and upper part expos’d on land,
+But laid not on the shore his bestial train.
+His face the semblance of a just man’s wore,
+So kind and gracious was its outward cheer;
+The rest was serpent all: two shaggy claws
+Reach’d to the armpits, and the back and breast,
+And either side, were painted o’er with nodes
+And orbits. Colours variegated more
+Nor Turks nor Tartars e’er on cloth of state
+With interchangeable embroidery wove,
+Nor spread Arachne o’er her curious loom.
+As ofttimes a light skiff, moor’d to the shore,
+Stands part in water, part upon the land;
+Or, as where dwells the greedy German boor,
+The beaver settles watching for his prey;
+So on the rim, that fenc’d the sand with rock,
+Sat perch’d the fiend of evil. In the void
+Glancing, his tail upturn’d its venomous fork,
+With sting like scorpion’s arm’d. Then thus my guide:
+“Now need our way must turn few steps apart,
+Far as to that ill beast, who couches there.”
+
+Thereat toward the right our downward course
+We shap’d, and, better to escape the flame
+And burning marle, ten paces on the verge
+Proceeded. Soon as we to him arrive,
+A little further on mine eye beholds
+A tribe of spirits, seated on the sand
+Near the wide chasm. Forthwith my master spake:
+“That to the full thy knowledge may extend
+Of all this round contains, go now, and mark
+The mien these wear: but hold not long discourse.
+Till thou returnest, I with him meantime
+Will parley, that to us he may vouchsafe
+The aid of his strong shoulders.” Thus alone
+Yet forward on the’ extremity I pac’d
+Of that seventh circle, where the mournful tribe
+Were seated. At the eyes forth gush’d their pangs.
+Against the vapours and the torrid soil
+Alternately their shifting hands they plied.
+Thus use the dogs in summer still to ply
+Their jaws and feet by turns, when bitten sore
+By gnats, or flies, or gadflies swarming round.
+
+Noting the visages of some, who lay
+Beneath the pelting of that dolorous fire,
+One of them all I knew not; but perceiv’d,
+That pendent from his neck each bore a pouch
+With colours and with emblems various mark’d,
+On which it seem’d as if their eye did feed.
+
+And when amongst them looking round I came,
+A yellow purse I saw with azure wrought,
+That wore a lion’s countenance and port.
+Then still my sight pursuing its career,
+Another I beheld, than blood more red.
+A goose display of whiter wing than curd.
+And one, who bore a fat and azure swine
+Pictur’d on his white scrip, addressed me thus:
+“What dost thou in this deep? Go now and know,
+Since yet thou livest, that my neighbour here
+Vitaliano on my left shall sit.
+A Paduan with these Florentines am I.
+Ofttimes they thunder in mine ears, exclaiming
+“O haste that noble knight! he who the pouch
+With the three beaks will bring!” This said, he writh’d
+The mouth, and loll’d the tongue out, like an ox
+That licks his nostrils. I, lest longer stay
+He ill might brook, who bade me stay not long,
+Backward my steps from those sad spirits turn’d.
+
+My guide already seated on the haunch
+Of the fierce animal I found; and thus
+He me encourag’d. “Be thou stout; be bold.
+Down such a steep flight must we now descend!
+Mount thou before: for that no power the tail
+May have to harm thee, I will be i’ th’ midst.”
+
+As one, who hath an ague fit so near,
+His nails already are turn’d blue, and he
+Quivers all o’er, if he but eye the shade;
+Such was my cheer at hearing of his words.
+But shame soon interpos’d her threat, who makes
+The servant bold in presence of his lord.
+
+I settled me upon those shoulders huge,
+And would have said, but that the words to aid
+My purpose came not, “Look thou clasp me firm!”
+
+But he whose succour then not first I prov’d,
+Soon as I mounted, in his arms aloft,
+Embracing, held me up, and thus he spake:
+“Geryon! now move thee! be thy wheeling gyres
+Of ample circuit, easy thy descent.
+Think on th’ unusual burden thou sustain’st.”
+
+As a small vessel, back’ning out from land,
+Her station quits; so thence the monster loos’d,
+And when he felt himself at large, turn’d round
+There where the breast had been, his forked tail.
+Thus, like an eel, outstretch’d at length he steer’d,
+Gath’ring the air up with retractile claws.
+
+Not greater was the dread when Phaeton
+The reins let drop at random, whence high heaven,
+Whereof signs yet appear, was wrapt in flames;
+Nor when ill-fated Icarus perceiv’d,
+By liquefaction of the scalded wax,
+The trusted pennons loosen’d from his loins,
+His sire exclaiming loud, “Ill way thou keep’st!”
+Than was my dread, when round me on each part
+The air I view’d, and other object none
+Save the fell beast. He slowly sailing, wheels
+His downward motion, unobserv’d of me,
+But that the wind, arising to my face,
+Breathes on me from below. Now on our right
+I heard the cataract beneath us leap
+With hideous crash; whence bending down to’ explore,
+New terror I conceiv’d at the steep plunge:
+For flames I saw, and wailings smote mine ear:
+So that all trembling close I crouch’d my limbs,
+And then distinguish’d, unperceiv’d before,
+By the dread torments that on every side
+Drew nearer, how our downward course we wound.
+
+As falcon, that hath long been on the wing,
+But lure nor bird hath seen, while in despair
+The falconer cries, “Ah me! thou stoop’st to earth!”
+Wearied descends, and swiftly down the sky
+In many an orbit wheels, then lighting sits
+At distance from his lord in angry mood;
+So Geryon lighting places us on foot
+Low down at base of the deep-furrow’d rock,
+And, of his burden there discharg’d, forthwith
+Sprang forward, like an arrow from the string.
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XVIII
+
+
+There is a place within the depths of hell
+Call’d Malebolge, all of rock dark-stain’d
+With hue ferruginous, e’en as the steep
+That round it circling winds. Right in the midst
+Of that abominable region, yawns
+A spacious gulf profound, whereof the frame
+Due time shall tell. The circle, that remains,
+Throughout its round, between the gulf and base
+Of the high craggy banks, successive forms
+Ten trenches, in its hollow bottom sunk.
+
+As where to guard the walls, full many a foss
+Begirds some stately castle, sure defence
+Affording to the space within, so here
+Were model’d these; and as like fortresses
+E’en from their threshold to the brink without,
+Are flank’d with bridges; from the rock’s low base
+Thus flinty paths advanc’d, that ’cross the moles
+And dikes, struck onward far as to the gulf,
+That in one bound collected cuts them off.
+Such was the place, wherein we found ourselves
+From Geryon’s back dislodg’d. The bard to left
+Held on his way, and I behind him mov’d.
+
+On our right hand new misery I saw,
+New pains, new executioners of wrath,
+That swarming peopled the first chasm. Below
+Were naked sinners. Hitherward they came,
+Meeting our faces from the middle point,
+With us beyond but with a larger stride.
+E’en thus the Romans, when the year returns
+Of Jubilee, with better speed to rid
+The thronging multitudes, their means devise
+For such as pass the bridge; that on one side
+All front toward the castle, and approach
+Saint Peter’s fane, on th’ other towards the mount.
+
+Each divers way along the grisly rock,
+Horn’d demons I beheld, with lashes huge,
+That on their back unmercifully smote.
+Ah! how they made them bound at the first stripe!
+None for the second waited nor the third.
+
+Meantime as on I pass’d, one met my sight
+Whom soon as view’d; “Of him,” cried I, “not yet
+Mine eye hath had his fill.” With fixed gaze
+I therefore scann’d him. Straight the teacher kind
+Paus’d with me, and consented I should walk
+Backward a space, and the tormented spirit,
+Who thought to hide him, bent his visage down.
+But it avail’d him nought; for I exclaim’d:
+“Thou who dost cast thy eye upon the ground,
+Unless thy features do belie thee much,
+Venedico art thou. But what brings thee
+Into this bitter seas’ning? “ He replied:
+“Unwillingly I answer to thy words.
+But thy clear speech, that to my mind recalls
+The world I once inhabited, constrains me.
+Know then ’twas I who led fair Ghisola
+To do the Marquis’ will, however fame
+The shameful tale have bruited. Nor alone
+Bologna hither sendeth me to mourn
+Rather with us the place is so o’erthrong’d
+That not so many tongues this day are taught,
+Betwixt the Reno and Savena’s stream,
+To answer SIPA in their country’s phrase.
+And if of that securer proof thou need,
+Remember but our craving thirst for gold.”
+
+Him speaking thus, a demon with his thong
+Struck, and exclaim’d, “Away! corrupter! here
+Women are none for sale.” Forthwith I join’d
+My escort, and few paces thence we came
+To where a rock forth issued from the bank.
+That easily ascended, to the right
+Upon its splinter turning, we depart
+From those eternal barriers. When arriv’d,
+Where underneath the gaping arch lets pass
+The scourged souls: “Pause here,” the teacher said,
+“And let these others miserable, now
+Strike on thy ken, faces not yet beheld,
+For that together they with us have walk’d.”
+
+From the old bridge we ey’d the pack, who came
+From th’ other side towards us, like the rest,
+Excoriate from the lash. My gentle guide,
+By me unquestion’d, thus his speech resum’d:
+“Behold that lofty shade, who this way tends,
+And seems too woe-begone to drop a tear.
+How yet the regal aspect he retains!
+Jason is he, whose skill and prowess won
+The ram from Colchos. To the Lemnian isle
+His passage thither led him, when those bold
+And pitiless women had slain all their males.
+There he with tokens and fair witching words
+Hypsipyle beguil’d, a virgin young,
+Who first had all the rest herself beguil’d.
+Impregnated he left her there forlorn.
+Such is the guilt condemns him to this pain.
+Here too Medea’s inj’ries are avenged.
+All bear him company, who like deceit
+To his have practis’d. And thus much to know
+Of the first vale suffice thee, and of those
+Whom its keen torments urge.” Now had we come
+Where, crossing the next pier, the straighten’d path
+Bestrides its shoulders to another arch.
+
+Hence in the second chasm we heard the ghosts,
+Who jibber in low melancholy sounds,
+With wide-stretch’d nostrils snort, and on themselves
+Smite with their palms. Upon the banks a scurf
+From the foul steam condens’d, encrusting hung,
+That held sharp combat with the sight and smell.
+
+So hollow is the depth, that from no part,
+Save on the summit of the rocky span,
+Could I distinguish aught. Thus far we came;
+And thence I saw, within the foss below,
+A crowd immers’d in ordure, that appear’d
+Draff of the human body. There beneath
+Searching with eye inquisitive, I mark’d
+One with his head so grim’d, ’twere hard to deem,
+If he were clerk or layman. Loud he cried:
+“Why greedily thus bendest more on me,
+Than on these other filthy ones, thy ken?”
+
+“Because if true my mem’ry,” I replied,
+“I heretofore have seen thee with dry locks,
+And thou Alessio art of Lucca sprung.
+Therefore than all the rest I scan thee more.”
+
+Then beating on his brain these words he spake:
+“Me thus low down my flatteries have sunk,
+Wherewith I ne’er enough could glut my tongue.”
+
+My leader thus: “A little further stretch
+Thy face, that thou the visage well mayst note
+Of that besotted, sluttish courtezan,
+Who there doth rend her with defiled nails,
+Now crouching down, now risen on her feet.
+Thais is this, the harlot, whose false lip
+Answer’d her doting paramour that ask’d,
+‘Thankest me much!’—‘Say rather wondrously,’
+And seeing this here satiate be our view.”
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XIX
+
+
+Woe to thee, Simon Magus! woe to you,
+His wretched followers! who the things of God,
+Which should be wedded unto goodness, them,
+Rapacious as ye are, do prostitute
+For gold and silver in adultery!
+Now must the trumpet sound for you, since yours
+Is the third chasm. Upon the following vault
+We now had mounted, where the rock impends
+Directly o’er the centre of the foss.
+
+Wisdom Supreme! how wonderful the art,
+Which thou dost manifest in heaven, in earth,
+And in the evil world, how just a meed
+Allotting by thy virtue unto all!
+
+I saw the livid stone, throughout the sides
+And in its bottom full of apertures,
+All equal in their width, and circular each,
+Nor ample less nor larger they appear’d
+Than in Saint John’s fair dome of me belov’d
+Those fram’d to hold the pure baptismal streams,
+One of the which I brake, some few years past,
+To save a whelming infant; and be this
+A seal to undeceive whoever doubts
+The motive of my deed. From out the mouth
+Of every one, emerg’d a sinner’s feet
+And of the legs high upward as the calf
+The rest beneath was hid. On either foot
+The soles were burning, whence the flexile joints
+Glanc’d with such violent motion, as had snapt
+Asunder cords or twisted withs. As flame,
+Feeding on unctuous matter, glides along
+The surface, scarcely touching where it moves;
+So here, from heel to point, glided the flames.
+
+“Master! say who is he, than all the rest
+Glancing in fiercer agony, on whom
+A ruddier flame doth prey?” I thus inquir’d.
+
+“If thou be willing,” he replied, “that I
+Carry thee down, where least the slope bank falls,
+He of himself shall tell thee and his wrongs.”
+
+I then: “As pleases thee to me is best.
+Thou art my lord; and know’st that ne’er I quit
+Thy will: what silence hides that knowest thou.”
+Thereat on the fourth pier we came, we turn’d,
+And on our left descended to the depth,
+A narrow strait and perforated close.
+Nor from his side my leader set me down,
+Till to his orifice he brought, whose limb
+Quiv’ring express’d his pang. “Whoe’er thou art,
+Sad spirit! thus revers’d, and as a stake
+Driv’n in the soil!” I in these words began,
+“If thou be able, utter forth thy voice.”
+
+There stood I like the friar, that doth shrive
+A wretch for murder doom’d, who e’en when fix’d,
+Calleth him back, whence death awhile delays.
+
+He shouted: “Ha! already standest there?
+Already standest there, O Boniface!
+By many a year the writing play’d me false.
+So early dost thou surfeit with the wealth,
+For which thou fearedst not in guile to take
+The lovely lady, and then mangle her?”
+
+I felt as those who, piercing not the drift
+Of answer made them, stand as if expos’d
+In mockery, nor know what to reply,
+When Virgil thus admonish’d: “Tell him quick,
+I am not he, not he, whom thou believ’st.”
+
+And I, as was enjoin’d me, straight replied.
+
+That heard, the spirit all did wrench his feet,
+And sighing next in woeful accent spake:
+“What then of me requirest?” If to know
+So much imports thee, who I am, that thou
+Hast therefore down the bank descended, learn
+That in the mighty mantle I was rob’d,
+And of a she-bear was indeed the son,
+So eager to advance my whelps, that there
+My having in my purse above I stow’d,
+And here myself. Under my head are dragg’d
+The rest, my predecessors in the guilt
+Of simony. Stretch’d at their length they lie
+Along an opening in the rock. ’Midst them
+I also low shall fall, soon as he comes,
+For whom I took thee, when so hastily
+I question’d. But already longer time
+Hath pass’d, since my souls kindled, and I thus
+Upturn’d have stood, than is his doom to stand
+Planted with fiery feet. For after him,
+One yet of deeds more ugly shall arrive,
+From forth the west, a shepherd without law,
+Fated to cover both his form and mine.
+He a new Jason shall be call’d, of whom
+In Maccabees we read; and favour such
+As to that priest his king indulgent show’d,
+Shall be of France’s monarch shown to him.”
+
+I know not if I here too far presum’d,
+But in this strain I answer’d: “Tell me now,
+What treasures from St. Peter at the first
+Our Lord demanded, when he put the keys
+Into his charge? Surely he ask’d no more
+But, Follow me! Nor Peter nor the rest
+Or gold or silver of Matthias took,
+When lots were cast upon the forfeit place
+Of the condemned soul. Abide thou then;
+Thy punishment of right is merited:
+And look thou well to that ill-gotten coin,
+Which against Charles thy hardihood inspir’d.
+If reverence of the keys restrain’d me not,
+Which thou in happier time didst hold, I yet
+Severer speech might use. Your avarice
+O’ercasts the world with mourning, under foot
+Treading the good, and raising bad men up.
+Of shepherds, like to you, th’ Evangelist
+Was ware, when her, who sits upon the waves,
+With kings in filthy whoredom he beheld,
+She who with seven heads tower’d at her birth,
+And from ten horns her proof of glory drew,
+Long as her spouse in virtue took delight.
+Of gold and silver ye have made your god,
+Diff’ring wherein from the idolater,
+But he that worships one, a hundred ye?
+Ah, Constantine! to how much ill gave birth,
+Not thy conversion, but that plenteous dower,
+Which the first wealthy Father gain’d from thee!”
+
+Meanwhile, as thus I sung, he, whether wrath
+Or conscience smote him, violent upsprang
+Spinning on either sole. I do believe
+My teacher well was pleas’d, with so compos’d
+A lip, he listen’d ever to the sound
+Of the true words I utter’d. In both arms
+He caught, and to his bosom lifting me
+Upward retrac’d the way of his descent.
+
+Nor weary of his weight he press’d me close,
+Till to the summit of the rock we came,
+Our passage from the fourth to the fifth pier.
+His cherish’d burden there gently he plac’d
+Upon the rugged rock and steep, a path
+Not easy for the clamb’ring goat to mount.
+
+Thence to my view another vale appear’d
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XX
+
+
+And now the verse proceeds to torments new,
+Fit argument of this the twentieth strain
+Of the first song, whose awful theme records
+The spirits whelm’d in woe. Earnest I look’d
+Into the depth, that open’d to my view,
+Moisten’d with tears of anguish, and beheld
+A tribe, that came along the hollow vale,
+In silence weeping: such their step as walk
+Quires chanting solemn litanies on earth.
+
+As on them more direct mine eye descends,
+Each wondrously seem’d to be revers’d
+At the neck-bone, so that the countenance
+Was from the reins averted: and because
+None might before him look, they were compell’d
+To’ advance with backward gait. Thus one perhaps
+Hath been by force of palsy clean transpos’d,
+But I ne’er saw it nor believe it so.
+
+Now, reader! think within thyself, so God
+Fruit of thy reading give thee! how I long
+Could keep my visage dry, when I beheld
+Near me our form distorted in such guise,
+That on the hinder parts fall’n from the face
+The tears down-streaming roll’d. Against a rock
+I leant and wept, so that my guide exclaim’d:
+“What, and art thou too witless as the rest?
+Here pity most doth show herself alive,
+When she is dead. What guilt exceedeth his,
+Who with Heaven’s judgment in his passion strives?
+Raise up thy head, raise up, and see the man,
+Before whose eyes earth gap’d in Thebes, when all
+Cried out, ‘Amphiaraus, whither rushest?
+‘Why leavest thou the war?’ He not the less
+Fell ruining far as to Minos down,
+Whose grapple none eludes. Lo! how he makes
+The breast his shoulders, and who once too far
+Before him wish’d to see, now backward looks,
+And treads reverse his path. Tiresias note,
+Who semblance chang’d, when woman he became
+Of male, through every limb transform’d, and then
+Once more behov’d him with his rod to strike
+The two entwining serpents, ere the plumes,
+That mark’d the better sex, might shoot again.
+
+“Aruns, with rere his belly facing, comes.
+On Luni’s mountains ’midst the marbles white,
+Where delves Carrara’s hind, who wons beneath,
+A cavern was his dwelling, whence the stars
+And main-sea wide in boundless view he held.
+
+“The next, whose loosen’d tresses overspread
+Her bosom, which thou seest not (for each hair
+On that side grows) was Manto, she who search’d
+Through many regions, and at length her seat
+Fix’d in my native land, whence a short space
+My words detain thy audience. When her sire
+From life departed, and in servitude
+The city dedicate to Bacchus mourn’d,
+Long time she went a wand’rer through the world.
+Aloft in Italy’s delightful land
+A lake there lies, at foot of that proud Alp,
+That o’er the Tyrol locks Germania in,
+Its name Benacus, which a thousand rills,
+Methinks, and more, water between the vale
+Camonica and Garda and the height
+Of Apennine remote. There is a spot
+At midway of that lake, where he who bears
+Of Trento’s flock the past’ral staff, with him
+Of Brescia, and the Veronese, might each
+Passing that way his benediction give.
+A garrison of goodly site and strong
+Peschiera stands, to awe with front oppos’d
+The Bergamese and Brescian, whence the shore
+More slope each way descends. There, whatsoev’er
+Benacus’ bosom holds not, tumbling o’er
+Down falls, and winds a river flood beneath
+Through the green pastures. Soon as in his course
+The steam makes head, Benacus then no more
+They call the name, but Mincius, till at last
+Reaching Governo into Po he falls.
+Not far his course hath run, when a wide flat
+It finds, which overstretchmg as a marsh
+It covers, pestilent in summer oft.
+Hence journeying, the savage maiden saw
+’Midst of the fen a territory waste
+And naked of inhabitants. To shun
+All human converse, here she with her slaves
+Plying her arts remain’d, and liv’d, and left
+Her body tenantless. Thenceforth the tribes,
+Who round were scatter’d, gath’ring to that place
+Assembled; for its strength was great, enclos’d
+On all parts by the fen. On those dead bones
+They rear’d themselves a city, for her sake,
+Calling it Mantua, who first chose the spot,
+Nor ask’d another omen for the name,
+Wherein more numerous the people dwelt,
+Ere Casalodi’s madness by deceit
+Was wrong’d of Pinamonte. If thou hear
+Henceforth another origin assign’d
+Of that my country, I forewarn thee now,
+That falsehood none beguile thee of the truth.”
+
+I answer’d: “Teacher, I conclude thy words
+So certain, that all else shall be to me
+As embers lacking life. But now of these,
+Who here proceed, instruct me, if thou see
+Any that merit more especial note.
+For thereon is my mind alone intent.”
+
+He straight replied: “That spirit, from whose cheek
+The beard sweeps o’er his shoulders brown, what time
+Graecia was emptied of her males, that scarce
+The cradles were supplied, the seer was he
+In Aulis, who with Calchas gave the sign
+When first to cut the cable. Him they nam’d
+Eurypilus: so sings my tragic strain,
+In which majestic measure well thou know’st,
+Who know’st it all. That other, round the loins
+So slender of his shape, was Michael Scot,
+Practis’d in ev’ry slight of magic wile.
+
+“Guido Bonatti see: Asdente mark,
+Who now were willing, he had tended still
+The thread and cordwain; and too late repents.
+
+“See next the wretches, who the needle left,
+The shuttle and the spindle, and became
+Diviners: baneful witcheries they wrought
+With images and herbs. But onward now:
+For now doth Cain with fork of thorns confine
+On either hemisphere, touching the wave
+Beneath the towers of Seville. Yesternight
+The moon was round. Thou mayst remember well:
+For she good service did thee in the gloom
+Of the deep wood.” This said, both onward mov’d.
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XXI
+
+
+Thus we from bridge to bridge, with other talk,
+The which my drama cares not to rehearse,
+Pass’d on; and to the summit reaching, stood
+To view another gap, within the round
+Of Malebolge, other bootless pangs.
+
+Marvelous darkness shadow’d o’er the place.
+
+In the Venetians’ arsenal as boils
+Through wintry months tenacious pitch, to smear
+Their unsound vessels; for th’ inclement time
+Sea-faring men restrains, and in that while
+His bark one builds anew, another stops
+The ribs of his, that hath made many a voyage;
+One hammers at the prow, one at the poop;
+This shapeth oars, that other cables twirls,
+The mizen one repairs and main-sail rent
+So not by force of fire but art divine
+Boil’d here a glutinous thick mass, that round
+Lim’d all the shore beneath. I that beheld,
+But therein nought distinguish’d, save the surge,
+Rais’d by the boiling, in one mighty swell
+Heave, and by turns subsiding and fall. While there
+I fix’d my ken below, “Mark! mark!” my guide
+Exclaiming, drew me towards him from the place,
+Wherein I stood. I turn’d myself as one,
+Impatient to behold that which beheld
+He needs must shun, whom sudden fear unmans,
+That he his flight delays not for the view.
+Behind me I discern’d a devil black,
+That running, up advanc’d along the rock.
+Ah! what fierce cruelty his look bespake!
+In act how bitter did he seem, with wings
+Buoyant outstretch’d and feet of nimblest tread!
+His shoulder proudly eminent and sharp
+Was with a sinner charg’d; by either haunch
+He held him, the foot’s sinew griping fast.
+
+“Ye of our bridge!” he cried, “keen-talon’d fiends!
+Lo! one of Santa Zita’s elders! Him
+Whelm ye beneath, while I return for more.
+That land hath store of such. All men are there,
+Except Bonturo, barterers: of ‘no’
+For lucre there an ‘aye’ is quickly made.”
+
+Him dashing down, o’er the rough rock he turn’d,
+Nor ever after thief a mastiff loos’d
+Sped with like eager haste. That other sank
+And forthwith writing to the surface rose.
+But those dark demons, shrouded by the bridge,
+Cried “Here the hallow’d visage saves not: here
+Is other swimming than in Serchio’s wave.
+Wherefore if thou desire we rend thee not,
+Take heed thou mount not o’er the pitch.” This said,
+They grappled him with more than hundred hooks,
+And shouted: “Cover’d thou must sport thee here;
+So, if thou canst, in secret mayst thou filch.”
+E’en thus the cook bestirs him, with his grooms,
+To thrust the flesh into the caldron down
+With flesh-hooks, that it float not on the top.
+
+Me then my guide bespake: “Lest they descry,
+That thou art here, behind a craggy rock
+Bend low and screen thee; and whate’er of force
+Be offer’d me, or insult, fear thou not:
+For I am well advis’d, who have been erst
+In the like fray.” Beyond the bridge’s head
+Therewith he pass’d, and reaching the sixth pier,
+Behov’d him then a forehead terror-proof.
+
+With storm and fury, as when dogs rush forth
+Upon the poor man’s back, who suddenly
+From whence he standeth makes his suit; so rush’d
+Those from beneath the arch, and against him
+Their weapons all they pointed. He aloud:
+“Be none of you outrageous: ere your time
+Dare seize me, come forth from amongst you one,
+Who having heard my words, decide he then
+If he shall tear these limbs.” They shouted loud,
+“Go, Malacoda!” Whereat one advanc’d,
+The others standing firm, and as he came,
+“What may this turn avail him?” he exclaim’d.
+
+“Believ’st thou, Malacoda! I had come
+Thus far from all your skirmishing secure,”
+My teacher answered, “without will divine
+And destiny propitious? Pass we then
+For so Heaven’s pleasure is, that I should lead
+Another through this savage wilderness.”
+
+Forthwith so fell his pride, that he let drop
+The instrument of torture at his feet,
+And to the rest exclaim’d: “We have no power
+To strike him.” Then to me my guide: “O thou!
+Who on the bridge among the crags dost sit
+Low crouching, safely now to me return.”
+
+I rose, and towards him moved with speed: the fiends
+Meantime all forward drew: me terror seiz’d
+Lest they should break the compact they had made.
+Thus issuing from Caprona, once I saw
+Th’ infantry dreading, lest his covenant
+The foe should break; so close he hemm’d them round.
+
+I to my leader’s side adher’d, mine eyes
+With fixt and motionless observance bent
+On their unkindly visage. They their hooks
+Protruding, one the other thus bespake:
+“Wilt thou I touch him on the hip?” To whom
+Was answer’d: “Even so; nor miss thy aim.”
+
+But he, who was in conf’rence with my guide,
+Turn’d rapid round, and thus the demon spake:
+“Stay, stay thee, Scarmiglione!” Then to us
+He added: “Further footing to your step
+This rock affords not, shiver’d to the base
+Of the sixth arch. But would you still proceed,
+Up by this cavern go: not distant far,
+Another rock will yield you passage safe.
+Yesterday, later by five hours than now,
+Twelve hundred threescore years and six had fill’d
+The circuit of their course, since here the way
+Was broken. Thitherward I straight dispatch
+Certain of these my scouts, who shall espy
+If any on the surface bask. With them
+Go ye: for ye shall find them nothing fell.
+Come Alichino forth,” with that he cried,
+“And Calcabrina, and Cagnazzo thou!
+The troop of ten let Barbariccia lead.
+With Libicocco Draghinazzo haste,
+Fang’d Ciriatto, Grafflacane fierce,
+And Farfarello, and mad Rubicant.
+Search ye around the bubbling tar. For these,
+In safety lead them, where the other crag
+Uninterrupted traverses the dens.”
+
+I then: “O master! what a sight is there!
+Ah! without escort, journey we alone,
+Which, if thou know the way, I covet not.
+Unless thy prudence fail thee, dost not mark
+How they do gnarl upon us, and their scowl
+Threatens us present tortures?” He replied:
+“I charge thee fear not: let them, as they will,
+Gnarl on: ’tis but in token of their spite
+Against the souls, who mourn in torment steep’d.”
+
+To leftward o’er the pier they turn’d; but each
+Had first between his teeth prest close the tongue,
+Toward their leader for a signal looking,
+Which he with sound obscene triumphant gave.
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XXII
+
+
+It hath been heretofore my chance to see
+Horsemen with martial order shifting camp,
+To onset sallying, or in muster rang’d,
+Or in retreat sometimes outstretch’d for flight;
+Light-armed squadrons and fleet foragers
+Scouring thy plains, Arezzo! have I seen,
+And clashing tournaments, and tilting jousts,
+Now with the sound of trumpets, now of bells,
+Tabors, or signals made from castled heights,
+And with inventions multiform, our own,
+Or introduc’d from foreign land; but ne’er
+To such a strange recorder I beheld,
+In evolution moving, horse nor foot,
+Nor ship, that tack’d by sign from land or star.
+
+With the ten demons on our way we went;
+Ah fearful company! but in the church
+With saints, with gluttons at the tavern’s mess.
+
+Still earnest on the pitch I gaz’d, to mark
+All things whate’er the chasm contain’d, and those
+Who burn’d within. As dolphins, that, in sign
+To mariners, heave high their arched backs,
+That thence forewarn’d they may advise to save
+Their threaten’d vessels; so, at intervals,
+To ease the pain his back some sinner show’d,
+Then hid more nimbly than the lightning glance.
+
+E’en as the frogs, that of a wat’ry moat
+Stand at the brink, with the jaws only out,
+Their feet and of the trunk all else concealed,
+Thus on each part the sinners stood, but soon
+As Barbariccia was at hand, so they
+Drew back under the wave. I saw, and yet
+My heart doth stagger, one, that waited thus,
+As it befalls that oft one frog remains,
+While the next springs away: and Graffiacan,
+Who of the fiends was nearest, grappling seiz’d
+His clotted locks, and dragg’d him sprawling up,
+That he appear’d to me an otter. Each
+Already by their names I knew, so well
+When they were chosen, I observ’d, and mark’d
+How one the other call’d. “O Rubicant!
+See that his hide thou with thy talons flay,”
+Shouted together all the cursed crew.
+
+Then I: “Inform thee, master! if thou may,
+What wretched soul is this, on whom their hand
+His foes have laid.” My leader to his side
+Approach’d, and whence he came inquir’d, to whom
+Was answer’d thus: “Born in Navarre’s domain
+My mother plac’d me in a lord’s retinue,
+For she had borne me to a losel vile,
+A spendthrift of his substance and himself.
+The good king Thibault after that I serv’d,
+To peculating here my thoughts were turn’d,
+Whereof I give account in this dire heat.”
+
+Straight Ciriatto, from whose mouth a tusk
+Issued on either side, as from a boar,
+Ript him with one of these. ’Twixt evil claws
+The mouse had fall’n: but Barbariccia cried,
+Seizing him with both arms: “Stand thou apart,
+While I do fix him on my prong transpierc’d.”
+Then added, turning to my guide his face,
+“Inquire of him, if more thou wish to learn,
+Ere he again be rent.” My leader thus:
+“Then tell us of the partners in thy guilt;
+Knowest thou any sprung of Latian land
+Under the tar?”—“I parted,” he replied,
+“But now from one, who sojourn’d not far thence;
+So were I under shelter now with him!
+Nor hook nor talon then should scare me more.”—.
+
+“Too long we suffer,” Libicocco cried,
+Then, darting forth a prong, seiz’d on his arm,
+And mangled bore away the sinewy part.
+Him Draghinazzo by his thighs beneath
+Would next have caught, whence angrily their chief,
+Turning on all sides round, with threat’ning brow
+Restrain’d them. When their strife a little ceas’d,
+Of him, who yet was gazing on his wound,
+My teacher thus without delay inquir’d:
+“Who was the spirit, from whom by evil hap
+Parting, as thou has told, thou cam’st to shore?”—
+
+“It was the friar Gomita,” he rejoin’d,
+“He of Gallura, vessel of all guile,
+Who had his master’s enemies in hand,
+And us’d them so that they commend him well.
+Money he took, and them at large dismiss’d.
+So he reports: and in each other charge
+Committed to his keeping, play’d the part
+Of barterer to the height: with him doth herd
+The chief of Logodoro, Michel Zanche.
+Sardinia is a theme, whereof their tongue
+Is never weary. Out! alas! behold
+That other, how he grins! More would I say,
+But tremble lest he mean to maul me sore.”
+
+Their captain then to Farfarello turning,
+Who roll’d his moony eyes in act to strike,
+Rebuk’d him thus: “Off! cursed bird! Avaunt!”—
+
+“If ye desire to see or hear,” he thus
+Quaking with dread resum’d, “or Tuscan spirits
+Or Lombard, I will cause them to appear.
+Meantime let these ill talons bate their fury,
+So that no vengeance they may fear from them,
+And I, remaining in this self-same place,
+Will for myself but one, make sev’n appear,
+When my shrill whistle shall be heard; for so
+Our custom is to call each other up.”
+
+Cagnazzo at that word deriding grinn’d,
+Then wagg’d the head and spake: “Hear his device,
+Mischievous as he is, to plunge him down.”
+
+Whereto he thus, who fail’d not in rich store
+Of nice-wove toils; “ Mischief forsooth extreme,
+Meant only to procure myself more woe!”
+
+No longer Alichino then refrain’d,
+But thus, the rest gainsaying, him bespake:
+“If thou do cast thee down, I not on foot
+Will chase thee, but above the pitch will beat
+My plumes. Quit we the vantage ground, and let
+The bank be as a shield, that we may see
+If singly thou prevail against us all.”
+
+Now, reader, of new sport expect to hear!
+
+They each one turn’d his eyes to the’ other shore,
+He first, who was the hardest to persuade.
+The spirit of Navarre chose well his time,
+Planted his feet on land, and at one leap
+Escaping disappointed their resolve.
+
+Them quick resentment stung, but him the most,
+Who was the cause of failure; in pursuit
+He therefore sped, exclaiming; “Thou art caught.”
+
+But little it avail’d: terror outstripp’d
+His following flight: the other plung’d beneath,
+And he with upward pinion rais’d his breast:
+E’en thus the water-fowl, when she perceives
+The falcon near, dives instant down, while he
+Enrag’d and spent retires. That mockery
+In Calcabrina fury stirr’d, who flew
+After him, with desire of strife inflam’d;
+And, for the barterer had ’scap’d, so turn’d
+His talons on his comrade. O’er the dyke
+In grapple close they join’d; but the’ other prov’d
+A goshawk able to rend well his foe;
+And in the boiling lake both fell. The heat
+Was umpire soon between them, but in vain
+To lift themselves they strove, so fast were glued
+Their pennons. Barbariccia, as the rest,
+That chance lamenting, four in flight dispatch’d
+From the’ other coast, with all their weapons arm’d.
+They, to their post on each side speedily
+Descending, stretch’d their hooks toward the fiends,
+Who flounder’d, inly burning from their scars:
+And we departing left them to that broil.
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XXIII
+
+
+In silence and in solitude we went,
+One first, the other following his steps,
+As minor friars journeying on their road.
+
+The present fray had turn’d my thoughts to muse
+Upon old Aesop’s fable, where he told
+What fate unto the mouse and frog befell.
+For language hath not sounds more like in sense,
+Than are these chances, if the origin
+And end of each be heedfully compar’d.
+And as one thought bursts from another forth,
+So afterward from that another sprang,
+Which added doubly to my former fear.
+For thus I reason’d: “These through us have been
+So foil’d, with loss and mock’ry so complete,
+As needs must sting them sore. If anger then
+Be to their evil will conjoin’d, more fell
+They shall pursue us, than the savage hound
+Snatches the leveret, panting ’twixt his jaws.”
+
+Already I perceiv’d my hair stand all
+On end with terror, and look’d eager back.
+
+“Teacher,” I thus began, “if speedily
+Thyself and me thou hide not, much I dread
+Those evil talons. Even now behind
+They urge us: quick imagination works
+So forcibly, that I already feel them.”
+
+He answer’d: “Were I form’d of leaded glass,
+I should not sooner draw unto myself
+Thy outward image, than I now imprint
+That from within. This moment came thy thoughts
+Presented before mine, with similar act
+And count’nance similar, so that from both
+I one design have fram’d. If the right coast
+Incline so much, that we may thence descend
+Into the other chasm, we shall escape
+Secure from this imagined pursuit.”
+
+He had not spoke his purpose to the end,
+When I from far beheld them with spread wings
+Approach to take us. Suddenly my guide
+Caught me, ev’n as a mother that from sleep
+Is by the noise arous’d, and near her sees
+The climbing fires, who snatches up her babe
+And flies ne’er pausing, careful more of him
+Than of herself, that but a single vest
+Clings round her limbs. Down from the jutting beach
+Supine he cast him, to that pendent rock,
+Which closes on one part the other chasm.
+
+Never ran water with such hurrying pace
+Adown the tube to turn a landmill’s wheel,
+When nearest it approaches to the spokes,
+As then along that edge my master ran,
+Carrying me in his bosom, as a child,
+Not a companion. Scarcely had his feet
+Reach’d to the lowest of the bed beneath,
+When over us the steep they reach’d; but fear
+In him was none; for that high Providence,
+Which plac’d them ministers of the fifth foss,
+Power of departing thence took from them all.
+
+There in the depth we saw a painted tribe,
+Who pac’d with tardy steps around, and wept,
+Faint in appearance and o’ercome with toil.
+Caps had they on, with hoods, that fell low down
+Before their eyes, in fashion like to those
+Worn by the monks in Cologne. Their outside
+Was overlaid with gold, dazzling to view,
+But leaden all within, and of such weight,
+That Frederick’s compar’d to these were straw.
+Oh, everlasting wearisome attire!
+
+We yet once more with them together turn’d
+To leftward, on their dismal moan intent.
+But by the weight oppress’d, so slowly came
+The fainting people, that our company
+Was chang’d at every movement of the step.
+
+Whence I my guide address’d: “See that thou find
+Some spirit, whose name may by his deeds be known,
+And to that end look round thee as thou go’st.”
+
+Then one, who understood the Tuscan voice,
+Cried after us aloud: “Hold in your feet,
+Ye who so swiftly speed through the dusk air.
+Perchance from me thou shalt obtain thy wish.”
+
+Whereat my leader, turning, me bespake:
+“Pause, and then onward at their pace proceed.”
+
+I staid, and saw two Spirits in whose look
+Impatient eagerness of mind was mark’d
+To overtake me; but the load they bare
+And narrow path retarded their approach.
+
+Soon as arriv’d, they with an eye askance
+Perus’d me, but spake not: then turning each
+To other thus conferring said: “This one
+Seems, by the action of his throat, alive.
+And, be they dead, what privilege allows
+They walk unmantled by the cumbrous stole?”
+
+Then thus to me: “Tuscan, who visitest
+The college of the mourning hypocrites,
+Disdain not to instruct us who thou art.”
+
+“By Arno’s pleasant stream,” I thus replied,
+“In the great city I was bred and grew,
+And wear the body I have ever worn.
+but who are ye, from whom such mighty grief,
+As now I witness, courseth down your cheeks?
+What torment breaks forth in this bitter woe?”
+“Our bonnets gleaming bright with orange hue,”
+One of them answer’d, “are so leaden gross,
+That with their weight they make the balances
+To crack beneath them. Joyous friars we were,
+Bologna’s natives, Catalano I,
+He Loderingo nam’d, and by thy land
+Together taken, as men used to take
+A single and indifferent arbiter,
+To reconcile their strifes. How there we sped,
+Gardingo’s vicinage can best declare.”
+
+“O friars!” I began, “your miseries—” But there brake off, for one had
+caught my eye,
+Fix’d to a cross with three stakes on the ground:
+He, when he saw me, writh’d himself, throughout
+Distorted, ruffling with deep sighs his beard.
+And Catalano, who thereof was ’ware,
+Thus spake: “That pierced spirit, whom intent
+Thou view’st, was he who gave the Pharisees
+Counsel, that it were fitting for one man
+To suffer for the people. He doth lie
+Transverse; nor any passes, but him first
+Behoves make feeling trial how each weighs.
+In straits like this along the foss are plac’d
+The father of his consort, and the rest
+Partakers in that council, seed of ill
+And sorrow to the Jews.” I noted then,
+How Virgil gaz’d with wonder upon him,
+Thus abjectly extended on the cross
+In banishment eternal. To the friar
+He next his words address’d: “We pray ye tell,
+If so be lawful, whether on our right
+Lies any opening in the rock, whereby
+We both may issue hence, without constraint
+On the dark angels, that compell’d they come
+To lead us from this depth.” He thus replied:
+“Nearer than thou dost hope, there is a rock
+From the next circle moving, which o’ersteps
+Each vale of horror, save that here his cope
+Is shatter’d. By the ruin ye may mount:
+For on the side it slants, and most the height
+Rises below.” With head bent down awhile
+My leader stood, then spake: “He warn’d us ill,
+Who yonder hangs the sinners on his hook.”
+
+To whom the friar: At Bologna erst
+I many vices of the devil heard,
+Among the rest was said, ‘He is a liar,
+And the father of lies!’” When he had spoke,
+My leader with large strides proceeded on,
+Somewhat disturb’d with anger in his look.
+
+I therefore left the spirits heavy laden,
+And following, his beloved footsteps mark’d.
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XXIV
+
+
+In the year’s early nonage, when the sun
+Tempers his tresses in Aquarius’ urn,
+And now towards equal day the nights recede,
+When as the rime upon the earth puts on
+Her dazzling sister’s image, but not long
+Her milder sway endures, then riseth up
+The village hind, whom fails his wintry store,
+And looking out beholds the plain around
+All whiten’d, whence impatiently he smites
+His thighs, and to his hut returning in,
+There paces to and fro, wailing his lot,
+As a discomfited and helpless man;
+Then comes he forth again, and feels new hope
+Spring in his bosom, finding e’en thus soon
+The world hath chang’d its count’nance, grasps his crook,
+And forth to pasture drives his little flock:
+So me my guide dishearten’d when I saw
+His troubled forehead, and so speedily
+That ill was cur’d; for at the fallen bridge
+Arriving, towards me with a look as sweet,
+He turn’d him back, as that I first beheld
+At the steep mountain’s foot. Regarding well
+The ruin, and some counsel first maintain’d
+With his own thought, he open’d wide his arm
+And took me up. As one, who, while he works,
+Computes his labour’s issue, that he seems
+Still to foresee the’ effect, so lifting me
+Up to the summit of one peak, he fix’d
+His eye upon another. “Grapple that,”
+Said he, “but first make proof, if it be such
+As will sustain thee.” For one capp’d with lead
+This were no journey. Scarcely he, though light,
+And I, though onward push’d from crag to crag,
+Could mount. And if the precinct of this coast
+Were not less ample than the last, for him
+I know not, but my strength had surely fail’d.
+But Malebolge all toward the mouth
+Inclining of the nethermost abyss,
+The site of every valley hence requires,
+That one side upward slope, the other fall.
+
+At length the point of our descent we reach’d
+From the last flag: soon as to that arriv’d,
+So was the breath exhausted from my lungs,
+I could no further, but did seat me there.
+
+“Now needs thy best of man;” so spake my guide:
+“For not on downy plumes, nor under shade
+Of canopy reposing, fame is won,
+Without which whosoe’er consumes his days
+Leaveth such vestige of himself on earth,
+As smoke in air or foam upon the wave.
+Thou therefore rise: vanish thy weariness
+By the mind’s effort, in each struggle form’d
+To vanquish, if she suffer not the weight
+Of her corporeal frame to crush her down.
+A longer ladder yet remains to scale.
+From these to have escap’d sufficeth not.
+If well thou note me, profit by my words.”
+
+I straightway rose, and show’d myself less spent
+Than I in truth did feel me. “On,” I cried,
+“For I am stout and fearless.” Up the rock
+Our way we held, more rugged than before,
+Narrower and steeper far to climb. From talk
+I ceas’d not, as we journey’d, so to seem
+Least faint; whereat a voice from the other foss
+Did issue forth, for utt’rance suited ill.
+Though on the arch that crosses there I stood,
+What were the words I knew not, but who spake
+Seem’d mov’d in anger. Down I stoop’d to look,
+But my quick eye might reach not to the depth
+For shrouding darkness; wherefore thus I spake:
+“To the next circle, Teacher, bend thy steps,
+And from the wall dismount we; for as hence
+I hear and understand not, so I see
+Beneath, and naught discern.”—“I answer not,”
+Said he, “but by the deed. To fair request
+Silent performance maketh best return.”
+
+We from the bridge’s head descended, where
+To the eighth mound it joins, and then the chasm
+Opening to view, I saw a crowd within
+Of serpents terrible, so strange of shape
+And hideous, that remembrance in my veins
+Yet shrinks the vital current. Of her sands
+Let Lybia vaunt no more: if Jaculus,
+Pareas and Chelyder be her brood,
+Cenchris and Amphisboena, plagues so dire
+Or in such numbers swarming ne’er she shew’d,
+Not with all Ethiopia, and whate’er
+Above the Erythraean sea is spawn’d.
+
+Amid this dread exuberance of woe
+Ran naked spirits wing’d with horrid fear,
+Nor hope had they of crevice where to hide,
+Or heliotrope to charm them out of view.
+With serpents were their hands behind them bound,
+Which through their reins infix’d the tail and head
+Twisted in folds before. And lo! on one
+Near to our side, darted an adder up,
+And, where the neck is on the shoulders tied,
+Transpierc’d him. Far more quickly than e’er pen
+Wrote O or I, he kindled, burn’d, and chang’d
+To ashes, all pour’d out upon the earth.
+When there dissolv’d he lay, the dust again
+Uproll’d spontaneous, and the self-same form
+Instant resumed. So mighty sages tell,
+The’ Arabian Phoenix, when five hundred years
+Have well nigh circled, dies, and springs forthwith
+Renascent. Blade nor herb throughout his life
+He tastes, but tears of frankincense alone
+And odorous amomum: swaths of nard
+And myrrh his funeral shroud. As one that falls,
+He knows not how, by force demoniac dragg’d
+To earth, or through obstruction fettering up
+In chains invisible the powers of man,
+Who, risen from his trance, gazeth around,
+Bewilder’d with the monstrous agony
+He hath endur’d, and wildly staring sighs;
+So stood aghast the sinner when he rose.
+
+Oh! how severe God’s judgment, that deals out
+Such blows in stormy vengeance! Who he was
+My teacher next inquir’d, and thus in few
+He answer’d: “Vanni Fucci am I call’d,
+Not long since rained down from Tuscany
+To this dire gullet. Me the beastial life
+And not the human pleas’d, mule that I was,
+Who in Pistoia found my worthy den.”
+
+I then to Virgil: “Bid him stir not hence,
+And ask what crime did thrust him hither: once
+A man I knew him choleric and bloody.”
+
+The sinner heard and feign’d not, but towards me
+His mind directing and his face, wherein
+Was dismal shame depictur’d, thus he spake:
+“It grieves me more to have been caught by thee
+In this sad plight, which thou beholdest, than
+When I was taken from the other life.
+I have no power permitted to deny
+What thou inquirest.” I am doom’d thus low
+To dwell, for that the sacristy by me
+Was rifled of its goodly ornaments,
+And with the guilt another falsely charged.
+But that thou mayst not joy to see me thus,
+So as thou e’er shalt ’scape this darksome realm
+Open thine ears and hear what I forebode.
+Reft of the Neri first Pistoia pines,
+Then Florence changeth citizens and laws.
+From Valdimagra, drawn by wrathful Mars,
+A vapour rises, wrapt in turbid mists,
+And sharp and eager driveth on the storm
+With arrowy hurtling o’er Piceno’s field,
+Whence suddenly the cloud shall burst, and strike
+Each helpless Bianco prostrate to the ground.
+This have I told, that grief may rend thy heart.”
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XXV
+
+
+When he had spoke, the sinner rais’d his hands
+Pointed in mockery, and cried: “Take them, God!
+I level them at thee!” From that day forth
+The serpents were my friends; for round his neck
+One of then rolling twisted, as it said,
+“Be silent, tongue!” Another to his arms
+Upgliding, tied them, riveting itself
+So close, it took from them the power to move.
+
+Pistoia! Ah Pistoia! why dost doubt
+To turn thee into ashes, cumb’ring earth
+No longer, since in evil act so far
+Thou hast outdone thy seed? I did not mark,
+Through all the gloomy circles of the’ abyss,
+Spirit, that swell’d so proudly ’gainst his God,
+Not him, who headlong fell from Thebes. He fled,
+Nor utter’d more; and after him there came
+A centaur full of fury, shouting, “Where
+Where is the caitiff?” On Maremma’s marsh
+Swarm not the serpent tribe, as on his haunch
+They swarm’d, to where the human face begins.
+Behind his head upon the shoulders lay,
+With open wings, a dragon breathing fire
+On whomsoe’er he met. To me my guide:
+“Cacus is this, who underneath the rock
+Of Aventine spread oft a lake of blood.
+He, from his brethren parted, here must tread
+A different journey, for his fraudful theft
+Of the great herd, that near him stall’d; whence found
+His felon deeds their end, beneath the mace
+Of stout Alcides, that perchance laid on
+A hundred blows, and not the tenth was felt.”
+
+While yet he spake, the centaur sped away:
+And under us three spirits came, of whom
+Nor I nor he was ware, till they exclaim’d;
+“Say who are ye?” We then brake off discourse,
+Intent on these alone. I knew them not;
+But, as it chanceth oft, befell, that one
+Had need to name another. “Where,” said he,
+“Doth Cianfa lurk?” I, for a sign my guide
+Should stand attentive, plac’d against my lips
+The finger lifted. If, O reader! now
+Thou be not apt to credit what I tell,
+No marvel; for myself do scarce allow
+The witness of mine eyes. But as I looked
+Toward them, lo! a serpent with six feet
+Springs forth on one, and fastens full upon him:
+His midmost grasp’d the belly, a forefoot
+Seiz’d on each arm (while deep in either cheek
+He flesh’d his fangs); the hinder on the thighs
+Were spread, ’twixt which the tail inserted curl’d
+Upon the reins behind. Ivy ne’er clasp’d
+A dodder’d oak, as round the other’s limbs
+The hideous monster intertwin’d his own.
+Then, as they both had been of burning wax,
+Each melted into other, mingling hues,
+That which was either now was seen no more.
+Thus up the shrinking paper, ere it burns,
+A brown tint glides, not turning yet to black,
+And the clean white expires. The other two
+Look’d on exclaiming: “Ah, how dost thou change,
+Agnello! See! Thou art nor double now,
+Nor only one.” The two heads now became
+One, and two figures blended in one form
+Appear’d, where both were lost. Of the four lengths
+Two arms were made: the belly and the chest
+The thighs and legs into such members chang’d,
+As never eye hath seen. Of former shape
+All trace was vanish’d. Two yet neither seem’d
+That image miscreate, and so pass’d on
+With tardy steps. As underneath the scourge
+Of the fierce dog-star, that lays bare the fields,
+Shifting from brake to brake, the lizard seems
+A flash of lightning, if he thwart the road,
+So toward th’ entrails of the other two
+Approaching seem’d, an adder all on fire,
+As the dark pepper-grain, livid and swart.
+In that part, whence our life is nourish’d first,
+One he transpierc’d; then down before him fell
+Stretch’d out. The pierced spirit look’d on him
+But spake not; yea stood motionless and yawn’d,
+As if by sleep or fev’rous fit assail’d.
+He ey’d the serpent, and the serpent him.
+One from the wound, the other from the mouth
+Breath’d a thick smoke, whose vap’ry columns join’d.
+
+Lucan in mute attention now may hear,
+Nor thy disastrous fate, Sabellus! tell,
+Nor shine, Nasidius! Ovid now be mute.
+What if in warbling fiction he record
+Cadmus and Arethusa, to a snake
+Him chang’d, and her into a fountain clear,
+I envy not; for never face to face
+Two natures thus transmuted did he sing,
+Wherein both shapes were ready to assume
+The other’s substance. They in mutual guise
+So answer’d, that the serpent split his train
+Divided to a fork, and the pierc’d spirit
+Drew close his steps together, legs and thighs
+Compacted, that no sign of juncture soon
+Was visible: the tail disparted took
+The figure which the spirit lost, its skin
+Soft’ning, his indurated to a rind.
+The shoulders next I mark’d, that ent’ring join’d
+The monster’s arm-pits, whose two shorter feet
+So lengthen’d, as the other’s dwindling shrunk.
+The feet behind then twisting up became
+That part that man conceals, which in the wretch
+Was cleft in twain. While both the shadowy smoke
+With a new colour veils, and generates
+Th’ excrescent pile on one, peeling it off
+From th’ other body, lo! upon his feet
+One upright rose, and prone the other fell.
+Not yet their glaring and malignant lamps
+Were shifted, though each feature chang’d beneath.
+Of him who stood erect, the mounting face
+Retreated towards the temples, and what there
+Superfluous matter came, shot out in ears
+From the smooth cheeks, the rest, not backward dragg’d,
+Of its excess did shape the nose; and swell’d
+Into due size protuberant the lips.
+He, on the earth who lay, meanwhile extends
+His sharpen’d visage, and draws down the ears
+Into the head, as doth the slug his horns.
+His tongue continuous before and apt
+For utt’rance, severs; and the other’s fork
+Closing unites. That done the smoke was laid.
+The soul, transform’d into the brute, glides off,
+Hissing along the vale, and after him
+The other talking sputters; but soon turn’d
+His new-grown shoulders on him, and in few
+Thus to another spake: “Along this path
+Crawling, as I have done, speed Buoso now!”
+
+So saw I fluctuate in successive change
+Th’ unsteady ballast of the seventh hold:
+And here if aught my tongue have swerv’d, events
+So strange may be its warrant. O’er mine eyes
+Confusion hung, and on my thoughts amaze.
+
+Yet ’scap’d they not so covertly, but well
+I mark’d Sciancato: he alone it was
+Of the three first that came, who chang’d not: thou,
+The other’s fate, Gaville, still dost rue.
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XXVI
+
+
+Florence exult! for thou so mightily
+Hast thriven, that o’er land and sea thy wings
+Thou beatest, and thy name spreads over hell!
+Among the plund’rers such the three I found
+Thy citizens, whence shame to me thy son,
+And no proud honour to thyself redounds.
+
+But if our minds, when dreaming near the dawn,
+Are of the truth presageful, thou ere long
+Shalt feel what Prato, (not to say the rest)
+Would fain might come upon thee; and that chance
+Were in good time, if it befell thee now.
+Would so it were, since it must needs befall!
+For as time wears me, I shall grieve the more.
+
+We from the depth departed; and my guide
+Remounting scal’d the flinty steps, which late
+We downward trac’d, and drew me up the steep.
+Pursuing thus our solitary way
+Among the crags and splinters of the rock,
+Sped not our feet without the help of hands.
+
+Then sorrow seiz’d me, which e’en now revives,
+As my thought turns again to what I saw,
+And, more than I am wont, I rein and curb
+The powers of nature in me, lest they run
+Where Virtue guides not; that if aught of good
+My gentle star, or something better gave me,
+I envy not myself the precious boon.
+
+As in that season, when the sun least veils
+His face that lightens all, what time the fly
+Gives way to the shrill gnat, the peasant then
+Upon some cliff reclin’d, beneath him sees
+Fire-flies innumerous spangling o’er the vale,
+Vineyard or tilth, where his day-labour lies:
+With flames so numberless throughout its space
+Shone the eighth chasm, apparent, when the depth
+Was to my view expos’d. As he, whose wrongs
+The bears aveng’d, at its departure saw
+Elijah’s chariot, when the steeds erect
+Rais’d their steep flight for heav’n; his eyes meanwhile,
+Straining pursu’d them, till the flame alone
+Upsoaring like a misty speck he kenn’d;
+E’en thus along the gulf moves every flame,
+A sinner so enfolded close in each,
+That none exhibits token of the theft.
+
+Upon the bridge I forward bent to look,
+And grasp’d a flinty mass, or else had fall’n,
+Though push’d not from the height. The guide, who mark d
+How I did gaze attentive, thus began:
+“Within these ardours are the spirits, each
+Swath’d in confining fire.”—“Master, thy word,”
+I answer’d, “hath assur’d me; yet I deem’d
+Already of the truth, already wish’d
+To ask thee, who is in yon fire, that comes
+So parted at the summit, as it seem’d
+Ascending from that funeral pile, where lay
+The Theban brothers?” He replied: “Within
+Ulysses there and Diomede endure
+Their penal tortures, thus to vengeance now
+Together hasting, as erewhile to wrath.
+These in the flame with ceaseless groans deplore
+The ambush of the horse, that open’d wide
+A portal for that goodly seed to pass,
+Which sow’d imperial Rome; nor less the guile
+Lament they, whence of her Achilles ’reft
+Deidamia yet in death complains.
+And there is rued the stratagem, that Troy
+Of her Palladium spoil’d.”—“If they have power
+Of utt’rance from within these sparks,” said I,
+“O master! think my prayer a thousand fold
+In repetition urg’d, that thou vouchsafe
+To pause, till here the horned flame arrive.
+See, how toward it with desire I bend.”
+
+He thus: “Thy prayer is worthy of much praise,
+And I accept it therefore: but do thou
+Thy tongue refrain: to question them be mine,
+For I divine thy wish: and they perchance,
+For they were Greeks, might shun discourse with thee.”
+
+When there the flame had come, where time and place
+Seem’d fitting to my guide, he thus began:
+“O ye, who dwell two spirits in one fire!
+If living I of you did merit aught,
+Whate’er the measure were of that desert,
+When in the world my lofty strain I pour’d,
+Move ye not on, till one of you unfold
+In what clime death o’ertook him self-destroy’d.”
+
+Of the old flame forthwith the greater horn
+Began to roll, murmuring, as a fire
+That labours with the wind, then to and fro
+Wagging the top, as a tongue uttering sounds,
+Threw out its voice, and spake: “When I escap’d
+From Circe, who beyond a circling year
+Had held me near Caieta, by her charms,
+Ere thus Aeneas yet had nam’d the shore,
+Nor fondness for my son, nor reverence
+Of my old father, nor return of love,
+That should have crown’d Penelope with joy,
+Could overcome in me the zeal I had
+T’ explore the world, and search the ways of life,
+Man’s evil and his virtue. Forth I sail’d
+Into the deep illimitable main,
+With but one bark, and the small faithful band
+That yet cleav’d to me. As Iberia far,
+Far as Morocco either shore I saw,
+And the Sardinian and each isle beside
+Which round that ocean bathes. Tardy with age
+Were I and my companions, when we came
+To the strait pass, where Hercules ordain’d
+The bound’ries not to be o’erstepp’d by man.
+The walls of Seville to my right I left,
+On the’ other hand already Ceuta past.
+“O brothers!” I began, “who to the west
+Through perils without number now have reach’d,
+To this the short remaining watch, that yet
+Our senses have to wake, refuse not proof
+Of the unpeopled world, following the track
+Of Phoebus. Call to mind from whence we sprang:
+Ye were not form’d to live the life of brutes
+But virtue to pursue and knowledge high.
+With these few words I sharpen’d for the voyage
+The mind of my associates, that I then
+Could scarcely have withheld them. To the dawn
+Our poop we turn’d, and for the witless flight
+Made our oars wings, still gaining on the left.
+Each star of the’ other pole night now beheld,
+And ours so low, that from the ocean-floor
+It rose not. Five times re-illum’d, as oft
+Vanish’d the light from underneath the moon
+Since the deep way we enter’d, when from far
+Appear’d a mountain dim, loftiest methought
+Of all I e’er beheld. Joy seiz’d us straight,
+But soon to mourning changed. From the new land
+A whirlwind sprung, and at her foremost side
+Did strike the vessel. Thrice it whirl’d her round
+With all the waves, the fourth time lifted up
+The poop, and sank the prow: so fate decreed:
+And over us the booming billow clos’d.”
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XXVII
+
+
+Now upward rose the flame, and still’d its light
+To speak no more, and now pass’d on with leave
+From the mild poet gain’d, when following came
+Another, from whose top a sound confus’d,
+Forth issuing, drew our eyes that way to look.
+
+As the Sicilian bull, that rightfully
+His cries first echoed, who had shap’d its mould,
+Did so rebellow, with the voice of him
+Tormented, that the brazen monster seem’d
+Pierc’d through with pain; thus while no way they found
+Nor avenue immediate through the flame,
+Into its language turn’d the dismal words:
+But soon as they had won their passage forth,
+Up from the point, which vibrating obey’d
+Their motion at the tongue, these sounds we heard:
+“O thou! to whom I now direct my voice!
+That lately didst exclaim in Lombard phrase,
+
+Depart thou, I solicit thee no more,’
+Though somewhat tardy I perchance arrive
+Let it not irk thee here to pause awhile,
+And with me parley: lo! it irks not me
+And yet I burn. If but e’en now thou fall
+into this blind world, from that pleasant land
+Of Latium, whence I draw my sum of guilt,
+Tell me if those, who in Romagna dwell,
+Have peace or war. For of the mountains there
+Was I, betwixt Urbino and the height,
+Whence Tyber first unlocks his mighty flood.”
+
+Leaning I listen’d yet with heedful ear,
+When, as he touch’d my side, the leader thus:
+“Speak thou: he is a Latian.” My reply
+Was ready, and I spake without delay:
+
+“O spirit! who art hidden here below!
+Never was thy Romagna without war
+In her proud tyrants’ bosoms, nor is now:
+But open war there left I none. The state,
+Ravenna hath maintain’d this many a year,
+Is steadfast. There Polenta’s eagle broods,
+And in his broad circumference of plume
+O’ershadows Cervia. The green talons grasp
+The land, that stood erewhile the proof so long,
+And pil’d in bloody heap the host of France.
+
+“The’ old mastiff of Verruchio and the young,
+That tore Montagna in their wrath, still make,
+Where they are wont, an augre of their fangs.
+
+“Lamone’s city and Santerno’s range
+Under the lion of the snowy lair.
+Inconstant partisan! that changeth sides,
+Or ever summer yields to winter’s frost.
+And she, whose flank is wash’d of Savio’s wave,
+As ’twixt the level and the steep she lies,
+Lives so ’twixt tyrant power and liberty.
+
+“Now tell us, I entreat thee, who art thou?
+Be not more hard than others. In the world,
+So may thy name still rear its forehead high.”
+
+Then roar’d awhile the fire, its sharpen’d point
+On either side wav’d, and thus breath’d at last:
+“If I did think, my answer were to one,
+Who ever could return unto the world,
+This flame should rest unshaken. But since ne’er,
+If true be told me, any from this depth
+Has found his upward way, I answer thee,
+Nor fear lest infamy record the words.
+
+“A man of arms at first, I cloth’d me then
+In good Saint Francis’ girdle, hoping so
+T’ have made amends. And certainly my hope
+Had fail’d not, but that he, whom curses light on,
+The’ high priest again seduc’d me into sin.
+And how and wherefore listen while I tell.
+Long as this spirit mov’d the bones and pulp
+My mother gave me, less my deeds bespake
+The nature of the lion than the fox.
+All ways of winding subtlety I knew,
+And with such art conducted, that the sound
+Reach’d the world’s limit. Soon as to that part
+Of life I found me come, when each behoves
+To lower sails and gather in the lines;
+That which before had pleased me then I rued,
+And to repentance and confession turn’d;
+Wretch that I was! and well it had bested me!
+The chief of the new Pharisees meantime,
+Waging his warfare near the Lateran,
+Not with the Saracens or Jews (his foes
+All Christians were, nor against Acre one
+Had fought, nor traffic’d in the Soldan’s land),
+He his great charge nor sacred ministry
+In himself, rev’renc’d, nor in me that cord,
+Which us’d to mark with leanness whom it girded.
+As in Socrate, Constantine besought
+To cure his leprosy Sylvester’s aid,
+So me to cure the fever of his pride
+This man besought: my counsel to that end
+He ask’d: and I was silent: for his words
+Seem’d drunken: but forthwith he thus resum’d:
+“From thy heart banish fear: of all offence
+I hitherto absolve thee. In return,
+Teach me my purpose so to execute,
+That Penestrino cumber earth no more.
+Heav’n, as thou knowest, I have power to shut
+And open: and the keys are therefore twain,
+The which my predecessor meanly priz’d.”
+
+Then, yielding to the forceful arguments,
+Of silence as more perilous I deem’d,
+And answer’d: “Father! since thou washest me
+Clear of that guilt wherein I now must fall,
+Large promise with performance scant, be sure,
+Shall make thee triumph in thy lofty seat.”
+
+“When I was number’d with the dead, then came
+Saint Francis for me; but a cherub dark
+He met, who cried: “‘Wrong me not; he is mine,
+And must below to join the wretched crew,
+For the deceitful counsel which he gave.
+E’er since I watch’d him, hov’ring at his hair,
+No power can the impenitent absolve;
+Nor to repent and will at once consist,
+By contradiction absolute forbid.”
+Oh mis’ry! how I shook myself, when he
+Seiz’d me, and cried, “Thou haply thought’st me not
+A disputant in logic so exact.”
+To Minos down he bore me, and the judge
+Twin’d eight times round his callous back the tail,
+Which biting with excess of rage, he spake:
+“This is a guilty soul, that in the fire
+Must vanish.’ Hence perdition-doom’d I rove
+A prey to rankling sorrow in this garb.”
+
+When he had thus fulfill’d his words, the flame
+In dolour parted, beating to and fro,
+And writhing its sharp horn. We onward went,
+I and my leader, up along the rock,
+Far as another arch, that overhangs
+The foss, wherein the penalty is paid
+Of those, who load them with committed sin.
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XXVIII
+
+
+Who, e’en in words unfetter’d, might at full
+Tell of the wounds and blood that now I saw,
+Though he repeated oft the tale? No tongue
+So vast a theme could equal, speech and thought
+Both impotent alike. If in one band
+Collected, stood the people all, who e’er
+Pour’d on Apulia’s happy soil their blood,
+Slain by the Trojans, and in that long war
+When of the rings the measur’d booty made
+A pile so high, as Rome’s historian writes
+Who errs not, with the multitude, that felt
+The grinding force of Guiscard’s Norman steel,
+And those the rest, whose bones are gather’d yet
+At Ceperano, there where treachery
+Branded th’ Apulian name, or where beyond
+Thy walls, O Tagliacozzo, without arms
+The old Alardo conquer’d; and his limbs
+One were to show transpierc’d, another his
+Clean lopt away; a spectacle like this
+Were but a thing of nought, to the’ hideous sight
+Of the ninth chasm. A rundlet, that hath lost
+Its middle or side stave, gapes not so wide,
+As one I mark’d, torn from the chin throughout
+Down to the hinder passage: ’twixt the legs
+Dangling his entrails hung, the midriff lay
+Open to view, and wretched ventricle,
+That turns th’ englutted aliment to dross.
+
+Whilst eagerly I fix on him my gaze,
+He ey’d me, with his hands laid his breast bare,
+And cried; “Now mark how I do rip me! lo!
+How is Mohammed mangled! before me
+Walks Ali weeping, from the chin his face
+Cleft to the forelock; and the others all
+Whom here thou seest, while they liv’d, did sow
+Scandal and schism, and therefore thus are rent.
+A fiend is here behind, who with his sword
+Hacks us thus cruelly, slivering again
+Each of this ream, when we have compast round
+The dismal way, for first our gashes close
+Ere we repass before him. But say who
+Art thou, that standest musing on the rock,
+Haply so lingering to delay the pain
+Sentenc’d upon thy crimes?”—“Him death not yet,”
+My guide rejoin’d, “hath overta’en, nor sin
+Conducts to torment; but, that he may make
+Full trial of your state, I who am dead
+Must through the depths of hell, from orb to orb,
+Conduct him. Trust my words, for they are true.”
+
+More than a hundred spirits, when that they heard,
+Stood in the foss to mark me, through amazed,
+Forgetful of their pangs. “Thou, who perchance
+Shalt shortly view the sun, this warning thou
+Bear to Dolcino: bid him, if he wish not
+Here soon to follow me, that with good store
+Of food he arm him, lest impris’ning snows
+Yield him a victim to Novara’s power,
+No easy conquest else.” With foot uprais’d
+For stepping, spake Mohammed, on the ground
+Then fix’d it to depart. Another shade,
+Pierc’d in the throat, his nostrils mutilate
+E’en from beneath the eyebrows, and one ear
+Lopt off, who with the rest through wonder stood
+Gazing, before the rest advanc’d, and bar’d
+His wind-pipe, that without was all o’ersmear’d
+With crimson stain. “O thou!” said ‘he, “whom sin
+Condemns not, and whom erst (unless too near
+Resemblance do deceive me) I aloft
+Have seen on Latian ground, call thou to mind
+Piero of Medicina, if again
+Returning, thou behold’st the pleasant land
+That from Vercelli slopes to Mercabo;
+And there instruct the twain, whom Fano boasts
+Her worthiest sons, Guido and Angelo,
+That if ’tis giv’n us here to scan aright
+The future, they out of life’s tenement
+Shall be cast forth, and whelm’d under the waves
+Near to Cattolica, through perfidy
+Of a fell tyrant. ’Twixt the Cyprian isle
+And Balearic, ne’er hath Neptune seen
+An injury so foul, by pirates done
+Or Argive crew of old. That one-ey’d traitor
+(Whose realm there is a spirit here were fain
+His eye had still lack’d sight of) them shall bring
+To conf’rence with him, then so shape his end,
+That they shall need not ’gainst Focara’s wind
+Offer up vow nor pray’r.” I answering thus:
+
+“Declare, as thou dost wish that I above
+May carry tidings of thee, who is he,
+In whom that sight doth wake such sad remembrance?”
+
+Forthwith he laid his hand on the cheek-bone
+Of one, his fellow-spirit, and his jaws
+Expanding, cried: “Lo! this is he I wot of;
+He speaks not for himself: the outcast this
+Who overwhelm’d the doubt in Caesar’s mind,
+Affirming that delay to men prepar’d
+Was ever harmful. “Oh how terrified
+Methought was Curio, from whose throat was cut
+The tongue, which spake that hardy word. Then one
+Maim’d of each hand, uplifted in the gloom
+The bleeding stumps, that they with gory spots
+Sullied his face, and cried: “‘Remember thee
+Of Mosca, too, I who, alas! exclaim’d,
+‘The deed once done there is an end,’ that prov’d
+A seed of sorrow to the Tuscan race.”
+
+I added: “Ay, and death to thine own tribe.”
+
+Whence heaping woe on woe he hurried off,
+As one grief stung to madness. But I there
+Still linger’d to behold the troop, and saw
+Things, such as I may fear without more proof
+To tell of, but that conscience makes me firm,
+The boon companion, who her strong breast-plate
+Buckles on him, that feels no guilt within
+And bids him on and fear not. Without doubt
+I saw, and yet it seems to pass before me,
+A headless trunk, that even as the rest
+Of the sad flock pac’d onward. By the hair
+It bore the sever’d member, lantern-wise
+Pendent in hand, which look’d at us and said,
+“Woe’s me!” The spirit lighted thus himself,
+And two there were in one, and one in two.
+How that may be he knows who ordereth so.
+
+When at the bridge’s foot direct he stood,
+His arm aloft he rear’d, thrusting the head
+Full in our view, that nearer we might hear
+The words, which thus it utter’d: “Now behold
+This grievous torment, thou, who breathing go’st
+To spy the dead; behold if any else
+Be terrible as this. And that on earth
+Thou mayst bear tidings of me, know that I
+Am Bertrand, he of Born, who gave King John
+The counsel mischievous. Father and son
+I set at mutual war. For Absalom
+And David more did not Ahitophel,
+Spurring them on maliciously to strife.
+For parting those so closely knit, my brain
+Parted, alas! I carry from its source,
+That in this trunk inhabits. Thus the law
+Of retribution fiercely works in me.”
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XXIX
+
+
+So were mine eyes inebriate with view
+Of the vast multitude, whom various wounds
+Disfigur’d, that they long’d to stay and weep.
+
+But Virgil rous’d me: “What yet gazest on?
+Wherefore doth fasten yet thy sight below
+Among the maim’d and miserable shades?
+Thou hast not shewn in any chasm beside
+This weakness. Know, if thou wouldst number them
+That two and twenty miles the valley winds
+Its circuit, and already is the moon
+Beneath our feet: the time permitted now
+Is short, and more not seen remains to see.”
+
+“If thou,” I straight replied, “hadst weigh’d the cause
+For which I look’d, thou hadst perchance excus’d
+The tarrying still.” My leader part pursu’d
+His way, the while I follow’d, answering him,
+And adding thus: “Within that cave I deem,
+Whereon so fixedly I held my ken,
+There is a spirit dwells, one of my blood,
+Wailing the crime that costs him now so dear.”
+
+Then spake my master: “Let thy soul no more
+Afflict itself for him. Direct elsewhere
+Its thought, and leave him. At the bridge’s foot
+I mark’d how he did point with menacing look
+At thee, and heard him by the others nam’d
+Geri of Bello. Thou so wholly then
+Wert busied with his spirit, who once rul’d
+The towers of Hautefort, that thou lookedst not
+That way, ere he was gone.”—“O guide belov’d!
+His violent death yet unaveng’d,” said I,
+“By any, who are partners in his shame,
+Made him contemptuous: therefore, as I think,
+He pass’d me speechless by; and doing so
+Hath made me more compassionate his fate.”
+
+So we discours’d to where the rock first show’d
+The other valley, had more light been there,
+E’en to the lowest depth. Soon as we came
+O’er the last cloister in the dismal rounds
+Of Malebolge, and the brotherhood
+Were to our view expos’d, then many a dart
+Of sore lament assail’d me, headed all
+With points of thrilling pity, that I clos’d
+Both ears against the volley with mine hands.
+
+As were the torment, if each lazar-house
+Of Valdichiana, in the sultry time
+’Twixt July and September, with the isle
+Sardinia and Maremma’s pestilent fen,
+Had heap’d their maladies all in one foss
+Together; such was here the torment: dire
+The stench, as issuing steams from fester’d limbs.
+
+We on the utmost shore of the long rock
+Descended still to leftward. Then my sight
+Was livelier to explore the depth, wherein
+The minister of the most mighty Lord,
+All-searching Justice, dooms to punishment
+The forgers noted on her dread record.
+
+More rueful was it not methinks to see
+The nation in Aegina droop, what time
+Each living thing, e’en to the little worm,
+All fell, so full of malice was the air
+(And afterward, as bards of yore have told,
+The ancient people were restor’d anew
+From seed of emmets) than was here to see
+The spirits, that languish’d through the murky vale
+Up-pil’d on many a stack. Confus’d they lay,
+One o’er the belly, o’er the shoulders one
+Roll’d of another; sideling crawl’d a third
+Along the dismal pathway. Step by step
+We journey’d on, in silence looking round
+And list’ning those diseas’d, who strove in vain
+To lift their forms. Then two I mark’d, that sat
+Propp’d ’gainst each other, as two brazen pans
+Set to retain the heat. From head to foot,
+A tetter bark’d them round. Nor saw I e’er
+Groom currying so fast, for whom his lord
+Impatient waited, or himself perchance
+Tir’d with long watching, as of these each one
+Plied quickly his keen nails, through furiousness
+Of ne’er abated pruriency. The crust
+Came drawn from underneath in flakes, like scales
+Scrap’d from the bream or fish of broader mail.
+
+“O thou, who with thy fingers rendest off
+Thy coat of proof,” thus spake my guide to one,
+“And sometimes makest tearing pincers of them,
+Tell me if any born of Latian land
+Be among these within: so may thy nails
+Serve thee for everlasting to this toil.”
+
+“Both are of Latium,” weeping he replied,
+“Whom tortur’d thus thou seest: but who art thou
+That hast inquir’d of us?” To whom my guide:
+“One that descend with this man, who yet lives,
+From rock to rock, and show him hell’s abyss.”
+
+Then started they asunder, and each turn’d
+Trembling toward us, with the rest, whose ear
+Those words redounding struck. To me my liege
+Address’d him: “Speak to them whate’er thou list.”
+
+And I therewith began: “So may no time
+Filch your remembrance from the thoughts of men
+In th’ upper world, but after many suns
+Survive it, as ye tell me, who ye are,
+And of what race ye come. Your punishment,
+Unseemly and disgustful in its kind,
+Deter you not from opening thus much to me.”
+
+“Arezzo was my dwelling,” answer’d one,
+“And me Albero of Sienna brought
+To die by fire; but that, for which I died,
+Leads me not here. True is in sport I told him,
+That I had learn’d to wing my flight in air.
+And he admiring much, as he was void
+Of wisdom, will’d me to declare to him
+The secret of mine art: and only hence,
+Because I made him not a Daedalus,
+Prevail’d on one suppos’d his sire to burn me.
+But Minos to this chasm last of the ten,
+For that I practis’d alchemy on earth,
+Has doom’d me. Him no subterfuge eludes.”
+
+Then to the bard I spake: “Was ever race
+Light as Sienna’s? Sure not France herself
+Can show a tribe so frivolous and vain.”
+
+The other leprous spirit heard my words,
+And thus return’d: “Be Stricca from this charge
+Exempted, he who knew so temp’rately
+To lay out fortune’s gifts; and Niccolo
+Who first the spice’s costly luxury
+Discover’d in that garden, where such seed
+Roots deepest in the soil: and be that troop
+Exempted, with whom Caccia of Asciano
+Lavish’d his vineyards and wide-spreading woods,
+And his rare wisdom Abbagliato show’d
+A spectacle for all. That thou mayst know
+Who seconds thee against the Siennese
+Thus gladly, bend this way thy sharpen’d sight,
+That well my face may answer to thy ken;
+So shalt thou see I am Capocchio’s ghost,
+Who forg’d transmuted metals by the power
+Of alchemy; and if I scan thee right,
+Thus needs must well remember how I aped
+Creative nature by my subtle art.”
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XXX
+
+
+What time resentment burn’d in Juno’s breast
+For Semele against the Theban blood,
+As more than once in dire mischance was rued,
+Such fatal frenzy seiz’d on Athamas,
+That he his spouse beholding with a babe
+Laden on either arm, “Spread out,” he cried,
+“The meshes, that I take the lioness
+And the young lions at the pass: “then forth
+Stretch’d he his merciless talons, grasping one,
+One helpless innocent, Learchus nam’d,
+Whom swinging down he dash’d upon a rock,
+And with her other burden self-destroy’d
+The hapless mother plung’d: and when the pride
+Of all-presuming Troy fell from its height,
+By fortune overwhelm’d, and the old king
+With his realm perish’d, then did Hecuba,
+A wretch forlorn and captive, when she saw
+Polyxena first slaughter’d, and her son,
+Her Polydorus, on the wild sea-beach
+Next met the mourner’s view, then reft of sense
+Did she run barking even as a dog;
+Such mighty power had grief to wrench her soul.
+Bet ne’er the Furies or of Thebes or Troy
+With such fell cruelty were seen, their goads
+Infixing in the limbs of man or beast,
+As now two pale and naked ghost I saw
+That gnarling wildly scamper’d, like the swine
+Excluded from his stye. One reach’d Capocchio,
+And in the neck-joint sticking deep his fangs,
+Dragg’d him, that o’er the solid pavement rubb’d
+His belly stretch’d out prone. The other shape,
+He of Arezzo, there left trembling, spake;
+“That sprite of air is Schicchi; in like mood
+Of random mischief vent he still his spite.”
+
+To whom I answ’ring: “Oh! as thou dost hope,
+The other may not flesh its jaws on thee,
+Be patient to inform us, who it is,
+Ere it speed hence.”—” That is the ancient soul
+Of wretched Myrrha,” he replied, “who burn’d
+With most unholy flame for her own sire,
+And a false shape assuming, so perform’d
+The deed of sin; e’en as the other there,
+That onward passes, dar’d to counterfeit
+Donati’s features, to feign’d testament
+The seal affixing, that himself might gain,
+For his own share, the lady of the herd.”
+
+When vanish’d the two furious shades, on whom
+Mine eye was held, I turn’d it back to view
+The other cursed spirits. One I saw
+In fashion like a lute, had but the groin
+Been sever’d, where it meets the forked part.
+Swoln dropsy, disproportioning the limbs
+With ill-converted moisture, that the paunch
+Suits not the visage, open’d wide his lips
+Gasping as in the hectic man for drought,
+One towards the chin, the other upward curl’d.
+
+“O ye, who in this world of misery,
+Wherefore I know not, are exempt from pain,”
+Thus he began, “attentively regard
+Adamo’s woe. When living, full supply
+Ne’er lack’d me of what most I coveted;
+One drop of water now, alas! I crave.
+The rills, that glitter down the grassy slopes
+Of Casentino, making fresh and soft
+The banks whereby they glide to Arno’s stream,
+Stand ever in my view; and not in vain;
+For more the pictur’d semblance dries me up,
+Much more than the disease, which makes the flesh
+Desert these shrivel’d cheeks. So from the place,
+Where I transgress’d, stern justice urging me,
+Takes means to quicken more my lab’ring sighs.
+There is Romena, where I falsified
+The metal with the Baptist’s form imprest,
+For which on earth I left my body burnt.
+But if I here might see the sorrowing soul
+Of Guido, Alessandro, or their brother,
+For Branda’s limpid spring I would not change
+The welcome sight. One is e’en now within,
+If truly the mad spirits tell, that round
+Are wand’ring. But wherein besteads me that?
+My limbs are fetter’d. Were I but so light,
+That I each hundred years might move one inch,
+I had set forth already on this path,
+Seeking him out amidst the shapeless crew,
+Although eleven miles it wind, not more
+Than half of one across. They brought me down
+Among this tribe; induc’d by them I stamp’d
+The florens with three carats of alloy.”
+
+“Who are that abject pair,” I next inquir’d,
+“That closely bounding thee upon thy right
+Lie smoking, like a band in winter steep’d
+In the chill stream?”—“When to this gulf I dropt,”
+He answer’d, “here I found them; since that hour
+They have not turn’d, nor ever shall, I ween,
+Till time hath run his course. One is that dame
+The false accuser of the Hebrew youth;
+Sinon the other, that false Greek from Troy.
+Sharp fever drains the reeky moistness out,
+In such a cloud upsteam’d.” When that he heard,
+One, gall’d perchance to be so darkly nam’d,
+With clench’d hand smote him on the braced paunch,
+That like a drum resounded: but forthwith
+Adamo smote him on the face, the blow
+Returning with his arm, that seem’d as hard.
+
+“Though my o’erweighty limbs have ta’en from me
+The power to move,” said he, “I have an arm
+At liberty for such employ.” To whom
+Was answer’d: “When thou wentest to the fire,
+Thou hadst it not so ready at command,
+Then readier when it coin’d th’ impostor gold.”
+
+And thus the dropsied: “Ay, now speak’st thou true.
+But there thou gav’st not such true testimony,
+When thou wast question’d of the truth, at Troy.”
+
+“If I spake false, thou falsely stamp’dst the coin,”
+Said Sinon; “I am here but for one fault,
+And thou for more than any imp beside.”
+
+“Remember,” he replied, “O perjur’d one,
+The horse remember, that did teem with death,
+And all the world be witness to thy guilt.”
+
+“To thine,” return’d the Greek, “witness the thirst
+Whence thy tongue cracks, witness the fluid mound,
+Rear’d by thy belly up before thine eyes,
+A mass corrupt.” To whom the coiner thus:
+“Thy mouth gapes wide as ever to let pass
+Its evil saying. Me if thirst assails,
+Yet I am stuff’d with moisture. Thou art parch’d,
+Pains rack thy head, no urging would’st thou need
+To make thee lap Narcissus’ mirror up.”
+
+I was all fix’d to listen, when my guide
+Admonish’d: “Now beware: a little more.
+And I do quarrel with thee.” I perceiv’d
+How angrily he spake, and towards him turn’d
+With shame so poignant, as remember’d yet
+Confounds me. As a man that dreams of harm
+Befall’n him, dreaming wishes it a dream,
+And that which is, desires as if it were not,
+Such then was I, who wanting power to speak
+Wish’d to excuse myself, and all the while
+Excus’d me, though unweeting that I did.
+
+“More grievous fault than thine has been, less shame,”
+My master cried, “might expiate. Therefore cast
+All sorrow from thy soul; and if again
+Chance bring thee, where like conference is held,
+Think I am ever at thy side. To hear
+Such wrangling is a joy for vulgar minds.”
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XXXI
+
+
+The very tongue, whose keen reproof before
+Had wounded me, that either cheek was stain’d,
+Now minister’d my cure. So have I heard,
+Achilles and his father’s javelin caus’d
+Pain first, and then the boon of health restor’d.
+
+Turning our back upon the vale of woe,
+W cross’d th’ encircled mound in silence. There
+Was twilight dim, that far long the gloom
+Mine eye advanc’d not: but I heard a horn
+Sounded aloud. The peal it blew had made
+The thunder feeble. Following its course
+The adverse way, my strained eyes were bent
+On that one spot. So terrible a blast
+Orlando blew not, when that dismal rout
+O’erthrew the host of Charlemagne, and quench’d
+His saintly warfare. Thitherward not long
+My head was rais’d, when many lofty towers
+Methought I spied. “Master,” said I, “what land
+Is this?” He answer’d straight: “Too long a space
+Of intervening darkness has thine eye
+To traverse: thou hast therefore widely err’d
+In thy imagining. Thither arriv’d
+Thou well shalt see, how distance can delude
+The sense. A little therefore urge thee on.”
+
+Then tenderly he caught me by the hand;
+“Yet know,” said he, “ere farther we advance,
+That it less strange may seem, these are not towers,
+But giants. In the pit they stand immers’d,
+Each from his navel downward, round the bank.”
+
+As when a fog disperseth gradually,
+Our vision traces what the mist involves
+Condens’d in air; so piercing through the gross
+And gloomy atmosphere, as more and more
+We near’d toward the brink, mine error fled,
+And fear came o’er me. As with circling round
+Of turrets, Montereggion crowns his walls,
+E’en thus the shore, encompassing th’ abyss,
+Was turreted with giants, half their length
+Uprearing, horrible, whom Jove from heav’n
+Yet threatens, when his mutt’ring thunder rolls.
+
+Of one already I descried the face,
+Shoulders, and breast, and of the belly huge
+Great part, and both arms down along his ribs.
+
+All-teeming nature, when her plastic hand
+Left framing of these monsters, did display
+Past doubt her wisdom, taking from mad War
+Such slaves to do his bidding; and if she
+Repent her not of th’ elephant and whale,
+Who ponders well confesses her therein
+Wiser and more discreet; for when brute force
+And evil will are back’d with subtlety,
+Resistance none avails. His visage seem’d
+In length and bulk, as doth the pine, that tops
+Saint Peter’s Roman fane; and th’ other bones
+Of like proportion, so that from above
+The bank, which girdled him below, such height
+Arose his stature, that three Friezelanders
+Had striv’n in vain to reach but to his hair.
+Full thirty ample palms was he expos’d
+Downward from whence a man his garments loops.
+“Raphel bai ameth sabi almi,”
+So shouted his fierce lips, which sweeter hymns
+Became not; and my guide address’d him thus:
+“O senseless spirit! let thy horn for thee
+Interpret: therewith vent thy rage, if rage
+Or other passion wring thee. Search thy neck,
+There shalt thou find the belt that binds it on.
+Wild spirit! lo, upon thy mighty breast
+Where hangs the baldrick!” Then to me he spake:
+“He doth accuse himself. Nimrod is this,
+Through whose ill counsel in the world no more
+One tongue prevails. But pass we on, nor waste
+Our words; for so each language is to him,
+As his to others, understood by none.”
+
+Then to the leftward turning sped we forth,
+And at a sling’s throw found another shade
+Far fiercer and more huge. I cannot say
+What master hand had girt him; but he held
+Behind the right arm fetter’d, and before
+The other with a chain, that fasten’d him
+From the neck down, and five times round his form
+Apparent met the wreathed links. “This proud one
+Would of his strength against almighty Jove
+Make trial,” said my guide; “whence he is thus
+Requited: Ephialtes him they call.
+Great was his prowess, when the giants brought
+Fear on the gods: those arms, which then he piled,
+Now moves he never.” Forthwith I return’d:
+“Fain would I, if ’twere possible, mine eyes
+Of Briareus immeasurable gain’d
+Experience next.” He answer’d: “Thou shalt see
+Not far from hence Antaeus, who both speaks
+And is unfetter’d, who shall place us there
+Where guilt is at its depth. Far onward stands
+Whom thou wouldst fain behold, in chains, and made
+Like to this spirit, save that in his looks
+More fell he seems.” By violent earthquake rock’d
+Ne’er shook a tow’r, so reeling to its base,
+As Ephialtes. More than ever then
+I dreaded death, nor than the terror more
+Had needed, if I had not seen the cords
+That held him fast. We, straightway journeying on,
+Came to Antaeus, who five ells complete
+Without the head, forth issued from the cave.
+
+“O thou, who in the fortunate vale, that made
+Great Scipio heir of glory, when his sword
+Drove back the troop of Hannibal in flight,
+Who thence of old didst carry for thy spoil
+An hundred lions; and if thou hadst fought
+In the high conflict on thy brethren’s side,
+Seems as men yet believ’d, that through thine arm
+The sons of earth had conquer’d, now vouchsafe
+To place us down beneath, where numbing cold
+Locks up Cocytus. Force not that we crave
+Or Tityus’ help or Typhon’s. Here is one
+Can give what in this realm ye covet. Stoop
+Therefore, nor scornfully distort thy lip.
+He in the upper world can yet bestow
+Renown on thee, for he doth live, and looks
+For life yet longer, if before the time
+Grace call him not unto herself.” Thus spake
+The teacher. He in haste forth stretch’d his hands,
+And caught my guide. Alcides whilom felt
+That grapple straighten’d score. Soon as my guide
+Had felt it, he bespake me thus: “This way
+That I may clasp thee;” then so caught me up,
+That we were both one burden. As appears
+The tower of Carisenda, from beneath
+Where it doth lean, if chance a passing cloud
+So sail across, that opposite it hangs,
+Such then Antaeus seem’d, as at mine ease
+I mark’d him stooping. I were fain at times
+T’ have pass’d another way. Yet in th’ abyss,
+That Lucifer with Judas low ingulfs,
+I,ightly he plac’d us; nor there leaning stay’d,
+But rose as in a bark the stately mast.
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XXXII
+
+
+Could I command rough rhimes and hoarse, to suit
+That hole of sorrow, o’er which ev’ry rock
+His firm abutment rears, then might the vein
+Of fancy rise full springing: but not mine
+Such measures, and with falt’ring awe I touch
+The mighty theme; for to describe the depth
+Of all the universe, is no emprize
+To jest with, and demands a tongue not us’d
+To infant babbling. But let them assist
+My song, the tuneful maidens, by whose aid
+Amphion wall’d in Thebes, so with the truth
+My speech shall best accord. Oh ill-starr’d folk,
+Beyond all others wretched! who abide
+In such a mansion, as scarce thought finds words
+To speak of, better had ye here on earth
+Been flocks or mountain goats. As down we stood
+In the dark pit beneath the giants’ feet,
+But lower far than they, and I did gaze
+Still on the lofty battlement, a voice
+Bespoke me thus: “Look how thou walkest. Take
+Good heed, thy soles do tread not on the heads
+Of thy poor brethren.” Thereupon I turn’d,
+And saw before and underneath my feet
+A lake, whose frozen surface liker seem’d
+To glass than water. Not so thick a veil
+In winter e’er hath Austrian Danube spread
+O’er his still course, nor Tanais far remote
+Under the chilling sky. Roll’d o’er that mass
+Had Tabernich or Pietrapana fall’n,
+Not e’en its rim had creak’d. As peeps the frog
+Croaking above the wave, what time in dreams
+The village gleaner oft pursues her toil,
+So, to where modest shame appears, thus low
+Blue pinch’d and shrin’d in ice the spirits stood,
+Moving their teeth in shrill note like the stork.
+His face each downward held; their mouth the cold,
+Their eyes express’d the dolour of their heart.
+
+A space I look’d around, then at my feet
+Saw two so strictly join’d, that of their head
+The very hairs were mingled. “Tell me ye,
+Whose bosoms thus together press,” said I,
+“Who are ye?” At that sound their necks they bent,
+And when their looks were lifted up to me,
+Straightway their eyes, before all moist within,
+Distill’d upon their lips, and the frost bound
+The tears betwixt those orbs and held them there.
+Plank unto plank hath never cramp clos’d up
+So stoutly. Whence like two enraged goats
+They clash’d together; them such fury seiz’d.
+
+And one, from whom the cold both ears had reft,
+Exclaim’d, still looking downward: “Why on us
+Dost speculate so long? If thou wouldst know
+Who are these two, the valley, whence his wave
+Bisenzio slopes, did for its master own
+Their sire Alberto, and next him themselves.
+They from one body issued; and throughout
+Caina thou mayst search, nor find a shade
+More worthy in congealment to be fix’d,
+Not him, whose breast and shadow Arthur’s land
+At that one blow dissever’d, not Focaccia,
+No not this spirit, whose o’erjutting head
+Obstructs my onward view: he bore the name
+Of Mascheroni: Tuscan if thou be,
+Well knowest who he was: and to cut short
+All further question, in my form behold
+What once was Camiccione. I await
+Carlino here my kinsman, whose deep guilt
+Shall wash out mine.” A thousand visages
+Then mark’d I, which the keen and eager cold
+Had shap’d into a doggish grin; whence creeps
+A shiv’ring horror o’er me, at the thought
+Of those frore shallows. While we journey’d on
+Toward the middle, at whose point unites
+All heavy substance, and I trembling went
+Through that eternal chillness, I know not
+If will it were or destiny, or chance,
+But, passing ’midst the heads, my foot did strike
+With violent blow against the face of one.
+
+“Wherefore dost bruise me?” weeping, he exclaim’d,
+“Unless thy errand be some fresh revenge
+For Montaperto, wherefore troublest me?”
+
+I thus: “Instructor, now await me here,
+That I through him may rid me of my doubt.
+Thenceforth what haste thou wilt.” The teacher paus’d,
+And to that shade I spake, who bitterly
+Still curs’d me in his wrath. “What art thou, speak,
+That railest thus on others?” He replied:
+“Now who art thou, that smiting others’ cheeks
+Through Antenora roamest, with such force
+As were past suff’rance, wert thou living still?”
+
+“And I am living, to thy joy perchance,”
+Was my reply, “if fame be dear to thee,
+That with the rest I may thy name enrol.”
+
+“The contrary of what I covet most,”
+Said he, “thou tender’st: hence; nor vex me more.
+Ill knowest thou to flatter in this vale.”
+
+Then seizing on his hinder scalp, I cried:
+“Name thee, or not a hair shall tarry here.”
+
+“Rend all away,” he answer’d, “yet for that
+I will not tell nor show thee who I am,
+Though at my head thou pluck a thousand times.”
+
+Now I had grasp’d his tresses, and stript off
+More than one tuft, he barking, with his eyes
+Drawn in and downward, when another cried,
+“What ails thee, Bocca? Sound not loud enough
+Thy chatt’ring teeth, but thou must bark outright?
+What devil wrings thee?”—” Now,” said I, “be dumb,
+Accursed traitor! to thy shame of thee
+True tidings will I bear.”—” Off,” he replied,
+“Tell what thou list; but as thou escape from hence
+To speak of him whose tongue hath been so glib,
+Forget not: here he wails the Frenchman’s gold.
+‘Him of Duera,’ thou canst say, ‘I mark’d,
+Where the starv’d sinners pine.’ If thou be ask’d
+What other shade was with them, at thy side
+Is Beccaria, whose red gorge distain’d
+The biting axe of Florence. Farther on,
+If I misdeem not, Soldanieri bides,
+With Ganellon, and Tribaldello, him
+Who op’d Faenza when the people slept.”
+
+We now had left him, passing on our way,
+When I beheld two spirits by the ice
+Pent in one hollow, that the head of one
+Was cowl unto the other; and as bread
+Is raven’d up through hunger, th’ uppermost
+Did so apply his fangs to th’ other’s brain,
+Where the spine joins it. Not more furiously
+On Menalippus’ temples Tydeus gnaw’d,
+Than on that skull and on its garbage he.
+
+“O thou who show’st so beastly sign of hate
+’Gainst him thou prey’st on, let me hear,” said I
+“The cause, on such condition, that if right
+Warrant thy grievance, knowing who ye are,
+And what the colour of his sinning was,
+I may repay thee in the world above,
+If that, wherewith I speak be moist so long.”
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XXXIII
+
+
+His jaws uplifting from their fell repast,
+That sinner wip’d them on the hairs o’ th’ head,
+Which he behind had mangled, then began:
+“Thy will obeying, I call up afresh
+Sorrow past cure, which but to think of wrings
+My heart, or ere I tell on’t. But if words,
+That I may utter, shall prove seed to bear
+Fruit of eternal infamy to him,
+The traitor whom I gnaw at, thou at once
+Shalt see me speak and weep. Who thou mayst be
+I know not, nor how here below art come:
+But Florentine thou seemest of a truth,
+When I do hear thee. Know I was on earth
+Count Ugolino, and th’ Archbishop he
+Ruggieri. Why I neighbour him so close,
+Now list. That through effect of his ill thoughts
+In him my trust reposing, I was ta’en
+And after murder’d, need is not I tell.
+What therefore thou canst not have heard, that is,
+How cruel was the murder, shalt thou hear,
+And know if he have wrong’d me. A small grate
+Within that mew, which for my sake the name
+Of famine bears, where others yet must pine,
+Already through its opening sev’ral moons
+Had shown me, when I slept the evil sleep,
+That from the future tore the curtain off.
+This one, methought, as master of the sport,
+Rode forth to chase the gaunt wolf and his whelps
+Unto the mountain, which forbids the sight
+Of Lucca to the Pisan. With lean brachs
+Inquisitive and keen, before him rang’d
+Lanfranchi with Sismondi and Gualandi.
+After short course the father and the sons
+Seem’d tir’d and lagging, and methought I saw
+The sharp tusks gore their sides. When I awoke
+Before the dawn, amid their sleep I heard
+My sons (for they were with me) weep and ask
+For bread. Right cruel art thou, if no pang
+Thou feel at thinking what my heart foretold;
+And if not now, why use thy tears to flow?
+Now had they waken’d; and the hour drew near
+When they were wont to bring us food; the mind
+Of each misgave him through his dream, and I
+Heard, at its outlet underneath lock’d up
+The’ horrible tower: whence uttering not a word
+I look’d upon the visage of my sons.
+I wept not: so all stone I felt within.
+They wept: and one, my little Anslem, cried:
+“Thou lookest so! Father what ails thee?” Yet
+I shed no tear, nor answer’d all that day
+Nor the next night, until another sun
+Came out upon the world. When a faint beam
+Had to our doleful prison made its way,
+And in four countenances I descry’d
+The image of my own, on either hand
+Through agony I bit, and they who thought
+I did it through desire of feeding, rose
+O’ th’ sudden, and cried, ‘Father, we should grieve
+Far less, if thou wouldst eat of us: thou gav’st
+These weeds of miserable flesh we wear,
+And do thou strip them off from us again.’
+Then, not to make them sadder, I kept down
+My spirit in stillness. That day and the next
+We all were silent. Ah, obdurate earth!
+Why open’dst not upon us? When we came
+To the fourth day, then Geddo at my feet
+Outstretch’d did fling him, crying, ‘Hast no help
+For me, my father!’ “There he died, and e’en
+Plainly as thou seest me, saw I the three
+Fall one by one ’twixt the fifth day and sixth:
+Whence I betook me now grown blind to grope
+Over them all, and for three days aloud
+Call’d on them who were dead. Then fasting got
+The mastery of grief.” Thus having spoke,
+Once more upon the wretched skull his teeth
+He fasten’d, like a mastiff’s ’gainst the bone
+Firm and unyielding. Oh thou Pisa! shame
+Of all the people, who their dwelling make
+In that fair region, where th’ Italian voice
+Is heard, since that thy neighbours are so slack
+To punish, from their deep foundations rise
+Capraia and Gorgona, and dam up
+The mouth of Arno, that each soul in thee
+May perish in the waters! What if fame
+Reported that thy castles were betray’d
+By Ugolino, yet no right hadst thou
+To stretch his children on the rack. For them,
+Brigata, Ugaccione, and the pair
+Of gentle ones, of whom my song hath told,
+Their tender years, thou modern Thebes! did make
+Uncapable of guilt. Onward we pass’d,
+Where others skarf’d in rugged folds of ice
+Not on their feet were turn’d, but each revers’d
+
+There very weeping suffers not to weep;
+For at their eyes grief seeking passage finds
+Impediment, and rolling inward turns
+For increase of sharp anguish: the first tears
+Hang cluster’d, and like crystal vizors show,
+Under the socket brimming all the cup.
+
+Now though the cold had from my face dislodg’d
+Each feeling, as ’twere callous, yet me seem’d
+Some breath of wind I felt. “Whence cometh this,”
+Said I, “my master? Is not here below
+All vapour quench’d?”—“‘Thou shalt be speedily,”
+He answer’d, “where thine eye shall tell thee whence
+The cause descrying of this airy shower.”
+
+Then cried out one in the chill crust who mourn’d:
+“O souls so cruel! that the farthest post
+Hath been assign’d you, from this face remove
+The harden’d veil, that I may vent the grief
+Impregnate at my heart, some little space
+Ere it congeal again!” I thus replied:
+“Say who thou wast, if thou wouldst have mine aid;
+And if I extricate thee not, far down
+As to the lowest ice may I descend!”
+
+“The friar Alberigo,” answered he,
+“Am I, who from the evil garden pluck’d
+Its fruitage, and am here repaid, the date
+More luscious for my fig.”—“Hah!” I exclaim’d,
+“Art thou too dead!”—“How in the world aloft
+It fareth with my body,” answer’d he,
+“I am right ignorant. Such privilege
+Hath Ptolomea, that ofttimes the soul
+Drops hither, ere by Atropos divorc’d.
+And that thou mayst wipe out more willingly
+The glazed tear-drops that o’erlay mine eyes,
+Know that the soul, that moment she betrays,
+As I did, yields her body to a fiend
+Who after moves and governs it at will,
+Till all its time be rounded; headlong she
+Falls to this cistern. And perchance above
+Doth yet appear the body of a ghost,
+Who here behind me winters. Him thou know’st,
+If thou but newly art arriv’d below.
+The years are many that have pass’d away,
+Since to this fastness Branca Doria came.”
+
+“Now,” answer’d I, “methinks thou mockest me,
+For Branca Doria never yet hath died,
+But doth all natural functions of a man,
+Eats, drinks, and sleeps, and putteth raiment on.”
+
+He thus: “Not yet unto that upper foss
+By th’ evil talons guarded, where the pitch
+Tenacious boils, had Michael Zanche reach’d,
+When this one left a demon in his stead
+In his own body, and of one his kin,
+Who with him treachery wrought. But now put forth
+Thy hand, and ope mine eyes.” I op’d them not.
+Ill manners were best courtesy to him.
+
+Ah Genoese! men perverse in every way,
+With every foulness stain’d, why from the earth
+Are ye not cancel’d? Such an one of yours
+I with Romagna’s darkest spirit found,
+As for his doings even now in soul
+Is in Cocytus plung’d, and yet doth seem
+In body still alive upon the earth.
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XXXIV
+
+
+“The banners of Hell’s Monarch do come forth
+Towards us; therefore look,” so spake my guide,
+“If thou discern him.” As, when breathes a cloud
+Heavy and dense, or when the shades of night
+Fall on our hemisphere, seems view’d from far
+A windmill, which the blast stirs briskly round,
+Such was the fabric then methought I saw,
+
+To shield me from the wind, forthwith I drew
+Behind my guide: no covert else was there.
+
+Now came I (and with fear I bid my strain
+Record the marvel) where the souls were all
+Whelm’d underneath, transparent, as through glass
+Pellucid the frail stem. Some prone were laid,
+Others stood upright, this upon the soles,
+That on his head, a third with face to feet
+Arch’d like a bow. When to the point we came,
+Whereat my guide was pleas’d that I should see
+The creature eminent in beauty once,
+He from before me stepp’d and made me pause.
+
+“Lo!” he exclaim’d, “lo Dis! and lo the place,
+Where thou hast need to arm thy heart with strength.”
+
+How frozen and how faint I then became,
+Ask me not, reader! for I write it not,
+Since words would fail to tell thee of my state.
+I was not dead nor living. Think thyself
+If quick conception work in thee at all,
+How I did feel. That emperor, who sways
+The realm of sorrow, at mid breast from th’ ice
+Stood forth; and I in stature am more like
+A giant, than the giants are in his arms.
+Mark now how great that whole must be, which suits
+With such a part. If he were beautiful
+As he is hideous now, and yet did dare
+To scowl upon his Maker, well from him
+May all our mis’ry flow. Oh what a sight!
+How passing strange it seem’d, when I did spy
+Upon his head three faces: one in front
+Of hue vermilion, th’ other two with this
+Midway each shoulder join’d and at the crest;
+The right ’twixt wan and yellow seem’d: the left
+To look on, such as come from whence old Nile
+Stoops to the lowlands. Under each shot forth
+Two mighty wings, enormous as became
+A bird so vast. Sails never such I saw
+Outstretch’d on the wide sea. No plumes had they,
+But were in texture like a bat, and these
+He flapp’d i’ th’ air, that from him issued still
+Three winds, wherewith Cocytus to its depth
+Was frozen. At six eyes he wept: the tears
+Adown three chins distill’d with bloody foam.
+At every mouth his teeth a sinner champ’d
+Bruis’d as with pond’rous engine, so that three
+Were in this guise tormented. But far more
+Than from that gnawing, was the foremost pang’d
+By the fierce rending, whence ofttimes the back
+Was stript of all its skin. “That upper spirit,
+Who hath worse punishment,” so spake my guide,
+“Is Judas, he that hath his head within
+And plies the feet without. Of th’ other two,
+Whose heads are under, from the murky jaw
+Who hangs, is Brutus: lo! how he doth writhe
+And speaks not! Th’ other Cassius, that appears
+So large of limb. But night now re-ascends,
+And it is time for parting. All is seen.”
+
+I clipp’d him round the neck, for so he bade;
+And noting time and place, he, when the wings
+Enough were op’d, caught fast the shaggy sides,
+And down from pile to pile descending stepp’d
+Between the thick fell and the jagged ice.
+
+Soon as he reach’d the point, whereat the thigh
+Upon the swelling of the haunches turns,
+My leader there with pain and struggling hard
+Turn’d round his head, where his feet stood before,
+And grappled at the fell, as one who mounts,
+That into hell methought we turn’d again.
+
+“Expect that by such stairs as these,” thus spake
+The teacher, panting like a man forespent,
+“We must depart from evil so extreme.”
+Then at a rocky opening issued forth,
+And plac’d me on a brink to sit, next join’d
+With wary step my side. I rais’d mine eyes,
+Believing that I Lucifer should see
+Where he was lately left, but saw him now
+With legs held upward. Let the grosser sort,
+Who see not what the point was I had pass’d,
+Bethink them if sore toil oppress’d me then.
+
+“Arise,” my master cried, “upon thy feet.
+“The way is long, and much uncouth the road;
+And now within one hour and half of noon
+The sun returns.” It was no palace-hall
+Lofty and luminous wherein we stood,
+But natural dungeon where ill footing was
+And scant supply of light. “Ere from th’ abyss
+I sep’rate,” thus when risen I began,
+“My guide! vouchsafe few words to set me free
+From error’s thralldom. Where is now the ice?
+How standeth he in posture thus revers’d?
+And how from eve to morn in space so brief
+Hath the sun made his transit?” He in few
+Thus answering spake: “Thou deemest thou art still
+On th’ other side the centre, where I grasp’d
+Th’ abhorred worm, that boreth through the world.
+Thou wast on th’ other side, so long as I
+Descended; when I turn’d, thou didst o’erpass
+That point, to which from ev’ry part is dragg’d
+All heavy substance. Thou art now arriv’d
+Under the hemisphere opposed to that,
+Which the great continent doth overspread,
+And underneath whose canopy expir’d
+The Man, that was born sinless, and so liv’d.
+Thy feet are planted on the smallest sphere,
+Whose other aspect is Judecca. Morn
+Here rises, when there evening sets: and he,
+Whose shaggy pile was scal’d, yet standeth fix’d,
+As at the first. On this part he fell down
+From heav’n; and th’ earth, here prominent before,
+Through fear of him did veil her with the sea,
+And to our hemisphere retir’d. Perchance
+To shun him was the vacant space left here
+By what of firm land on this side appears,
+That sprang aloof.” There is a place beneath,
+From Belzebub as distant, as extends
+The vaulted tomb, discover’d not by sight,
+But by the sound of brooklet, that descends
+This way along the hollow of a rock,
+Which, as it winds with no precipitous course,
+The wave hath eaten. By that hidden way
+My guide and I did enter, to return
+To the fair world: and heedless of repose
+We climbed, he first, I following his steps,
+Till on our view the beautiful lights of heav’n
+Dawn, through a circular opening in the cave:
+Thus issuing we again beheld the stars.
+
+
+
+
+NOTES TO HELL
+
+CANTO I
+
+
+Verse 1. In the midway.] That the era of the Poem is intended by these
+words to be fixed to the thirty fifth year of the poet’s age, A.D.
+1300, will appear more plainly in Canto XXI. where that date is
+explicitly marked.
+
+v. 16. That planet’s beam.] The sun.
+
+v. 29. The hinder foot.] It is to be remembered, that in ascending a
+hill the weight of the body rests on the hinder foot.
+
+v. 30. A panther.] Pleasure or luxury.
+
+v. 36. With those stars.] The sun was in Aries, in which sign he
+supposes it to have begun its course at the creation.
+
+v. 43. A lion.] Pride or ambition.
+
+v. 45. A she wolf.] Avarice.
+
+v. 56. Where the sun in silence rests.] Hence Milton appears to have
+taken his idea in the Samson Agonistes:
+
+ The sun to me is dark
+
+ And silent as the moon, &c
+The same metaphor will recur, Canto V. v. 29.
+
+ Into a place I came
+
+ Where light was silent all.
+
+v. 65. When the power of Julius.] This is explained by the commentators
+to mean “Although it was rather late with respect to my birth before
+Julius Caesar assumed the supreme authority, and made himself perpetual
+dictator.”
+
+v. 98. That greyhound.] This passage is intended as an eulogium on the
+liberal spirit of his Veronese patron Can Grande della Scala.
+
+v. 102. ’Twizt either Feltro.] Verona, the country of Can della Scala,
+is situated between Feltro, a city in the Marca Trivigiana, and Monte
+Feltro, a city in the territory of Urbino.
+
+v. 103. Italia’s plains.] “Umile Italia,” from Virgil, Aen lib.
+iii. 522.
+
+ Humilemque videmus
+
+ Italiam.
+
+v. 115. Content in fire.] The spirits in Purgatory.
+
+v. 118. A spirit worthier.] Beatrice, who conducts the Poet through
+Paradise.
+
+v. 130. Saint Peter’s gate.] The gate of Purgatory, which the Poet
+feigns to be guarded by an angel placed on that station by St. Peter.
+
+CANTO II
+
+
+v. 1. Now was the day.] A compendium of Virgil’s description Aen. lib.
+iv 522. Nox erat, &c. Compare Apollonius Rhodius, lib iii. 744, and
+lib. iv. 1058
+
+v. 8. O mind.]
+
+ O thought that write all that I met,
+
+ And in the tresorie it set
+
+ Of my braine, now shall men see
+
+ If any virtue in thee be.
+
+ Chaucer. Temple of Fame, b. ii. v.18
+
+v. 14. Silvius’sire.] Aeneas.
+
+v. 30. The chosen vessel.] St.Paul, Acts, c. ix. v. 15. “But the Lord
+said unto him, Go thy way; for he is a chosen vessel unto me.”
+
+v. 46. Thy soul.] L’anima tua e da viltate offesa. So in Berni, Orl
+Inn.lib. iii. c. i. st. 53. Se l’alma avete offesa da viltate.
+
+v. 64. Who rest suspended.] The spirits in Limbo, neither admitted to a
+state of glory nor doomed to punishment.
+
+v. 61. A friend not of my fortune, but myself.] Se non fortunae sed
+hominibus solere esse amicum. Cornelii Nepotis Attici Vitae, c. ix.
+
+v. 78. Whatever is contain’d.] Every other thing comprised within the
+lunar heaven, which, being the lowest of all, has the smallest circle.
+
+v. 93. A blessed dame.] The divine mercy.
+
+v. 97. Lucia.] The enlightening grace of heaven.
+
+v. 124. Three maids.] The divine mercy, Lucia, and Beatrice.
+
+v. 127. As florets.] This simile is well translated by Chaucer— But
+right as floures through the cold of night Iclosed, stoupen in her
+stalkes lowe, Redressen hem agen the sunne bright, And speden in her
+kinde course by rowe, &c. Troilus and Creseide, b.ii. It has been
+imitated by many others, among whom see Berni, Orl.Inn. Iib. 1. c. xii.
+st. 86. Marino, Adone, c. xvii. st. 63. and Sor. “Donna vestita di
+nero.” and Spenser’s Faery Queen, b.4. c. xii. st. 34. and b. 6 c. ii.
+st. 35.
+
+CANTO III
+
+
+v. 5. Power divine Supremest wisdom, and primeval love.] The three
+persons of the blessed Trinity. v. 9. all hope abandoned.] Lasciate
+ogni speranza voi ch’entrate. So Berni, Orl. Inn. lib. i. c. 8. st. 53.
+Lascia pur della vita ogni speranza.
+
+v. 29. Like to the sand.]
+
+ Unnumber’d as the sands
+
+ Of Barca or Cyrene’s torrid soil
+
+ Levied to side with warring winds, and poise
+
+ Their lighter wings.
+
+ Milton, P. L. ii. 908.
+
+v. 40. Lest th’ accursed tribe.] Lest the rebellious angels should
+exult at seeing those who were neutral and therefore less guilty,
+condemned to the same punishment with themselves.
+
+v. 50. A flag.]
+
+ All the grisly legions that troop
+
+ Under the sooty flag of Acheron
+
+ Milton. Comus.
+
+v. 56. Who to base fear Yielding, abjur’d his high estate.] This is
+commonly understood of Celestine the Fifth, who abdicated the papal
+power in 1294. Venturi mentions a work written by Innocenzio
+Barcellini, of the Celestine order, and printed in Milan in 1701, In
+which an attempt is made to put a different interpretation on this
+passage.
+
+v. 70. through the blear light.]
+
+ Lo fioco lume
+So Filicaja, canz. vi. st. 12.
+
+ Qual fioco lume.
+
+v. 77. An old man.]
+
+ Portitor has horrendus aquas et flumina servat
+
+ Terribili squalore Charon, cui plurima mento
+
+ Canities inculta jacet; stant lumina flamma.
+
+ Virg. 7. Aen. Iib. vi. 2.
+
+v. 82. In fierce heat and in ice.]
+
+ The delighted spirit
+
+ To bathe in fiery floods or to reside
+
+ In thrilling regions of thick ribbed ice.
+
+ Shakesp. Measure for Measure, a. iii.s.1.
+Compare Milton, P. L. b. ii. 600.
+
+v. 92. The livid lake.] Vada livida.
+
+ Virg. Aen. Iib. vi. 320
+
+ Totius ut Lacus putidaeque paludis
+
+ Lividissima, maximeque est profunda vorago.
+
+ Catullus. xviii. 10.
+
+v. 102. With eyes of burning coal.]
+
+ His looks were dreadful, and his fiery eyes
+
+ Like two great beacons glared bright and wide.
+
+ Spenser. F.Q. b. vi. c. vii.st. 42
+
+v. 104. As fall off the light of autumnal leaves.]
+
+ Quam multa in silvis autumul frigore primo
+
+ Lapsa cadunt folia.
+
+ Virg. Aen. lib. vi. 309
+Compare Apoll. Rhod. lib. iv. 214.
+
+CANTO IV
+
+
+v. 8. A thund’rous sound.] Imitated, as Mr. Thyer has remarked,
+by Milton, P. L. b. viii. 242.
+
+ But long ere our approaching heard
+
+ Noise, other, than the sound of dance or song
+
+ Torment, and loud lament, and furious rage.
+
+v. 50. a puissant one.] Our Saviour.
+
+v. 75. Honour the bard
+
+ Sublime.]
+
+ Onorate l’altissimo poeta.
+So Chiabrera, Canz. Eroiche. 32.
+
+ Onorando l’altissimo poeta.
+
+v. 79. Of semblance neither sorrowful nor glad.]
+
+ She nas to sober ne to glad.
+
+ Chaucer’s Dream.
+
+v. 90. The Monarch of sublimest song.] Homer.
+
+v. 100. Fitter left untold.]
+
+ Che’l tacere e bello,
+So our Poet, in Canzone 14.
+
+ La vide in parte che’l tacere e bello,
+Ruccellai, Le Api, 789.
+
+ Ch’a dire e brutto ed a tacerlo e bello
+And Bembo,
+
+ “Vie pui bello e il tacerle, che il favellarne.”
+
+ Gli. Asol. lib. 1.
+
+v. 117. Electra.] The daughter of Atlas, and mother of Dardanus the
+founder of Troy. See Virg. Aen. b. viii. 134. as referred to by Dante
+in treatise “De Monarchia,” lib. ii. “Electra, scilicet, nata magni
+nombris regis Atlantis, ut de ambobus testimonium reddit poeta noster
+in octavo ubi Aeneas ad Avandrum sic ait “Dardanus Iliacae,” &c.
+
+v. 125. Julia.] The daughter of Julius Caesar, and wife of Pompey.
+
+v. 126. The Soldan fierce.] Saladin or Salaheddin, the rival of Richard
+coeur de lion. See D’Herbelot, Bibl. Orient. and Knolles’s Hist. of the
+Turks p. 57 to 73 and the Life of Saladin, by Bohao’edin Ebn Shedad,
+published by Albert Schultens, with a Latin translation. He is
+introduced by Petrarch in the Triumph of Fame, c. ii
+
+v. 128. The master of the sapient throng.]
+
+ Maestro di color che sanno.
+Aristotle—Petrarch assigns the first place to Plato. See Triumph
+of Fame, c. iii.
+Pulci, in his Morgante Maggiore, c. xviii. says,
+
+ Tu se’il maestro di color che sanno.
+
+v. 132. Democritus Who sets the world at chance.] Democritus,who
+maintained the world to have been formed by the fortuitous concourse of
+atoms.
+
+v. 140. Avicen.] See D’Herbelot Bibl. Orient. article Sina. He died in
+1050. Pulci here again imitates our poet:
+
+ Avicenna quel che il sentimento
+
+ Intese di Aristotile e i segreti,
+
+ Averrois che fece il gran comento.
+
+ Morg. Mag. c. xxv.
+
+v. 140. Him who made That commentary vast, Averroes.] Averroes, called
+by the Arabians Roschd, translated and commented the works of
+Aristotle. According to Tiraboschi (storia della Lett. Ital. t. v. 1.
+ii. c. ii. sect. 4.) he was the source of modern philosophical impiety.
+The critic quotes some passages from Petrarch (Senil. 1. v. ep. iii.
+et. Oper. v. ii. p. 1143) to show how strongly such sentiments
+prevailed in the time of that poet, by whom they were held in horror
+and detestation He adds, that this fanatic admirer of Aristotle
+translated his writings with that felicity, which might be expected
+from one who did not know a syllable of Greek, and who was therefore
+compelled to avail himself of the unfaithful Arabic versions.
+D’Herbelot, on the other hand, informs us, that “Averroes was the first
+who translated Aristotle from Greek into Arabic, before the Jews had
+made their translation: and that we had for a long time no other text
+of Aristotle, except that of the Latin translation, which was made from
+this Arabic version of this great philosopher (Averroes), who
+afterwards added to it a very ample commentary, of which Thomas
+Aquinas, and the other scholastic writers, availed themselves, before
+the Greek originals of Aristotle and his commentators were known to us
+in Europe.” According to D’Herbelot, he died in 1198: but Tiraboschi
+places that event about 1206.
+
+CANTO V
+
+
+v. 5. Grinning with ghastly feature.] Hence Milton:
+
+ Death
+
+ Grinn’d horrible a ghastly smile.
+
+ P. L. b. ii. 845.
+
+v. 46. As cranes.] This simile is imitated by Lorenzo de
+Medici, in his Ambra, a poem, first published by Mr. Roscoe, in
+the Appendix to his Life of Lorenzo.
+
+ Marking the tracts of air, the clamorous cranes
+
+ Wheel their due flight in varied ranks descried:
+
+ And each with outstretch’d neck his rank maintains
+
+ In marshal’d order through th’ ethereal void.
+
+ Roscoe, v. i. c. v. p. 257. 4to edit.
+Compare Homer. Il. iii. 3. Virgil. Aeneid. 1 x. 264, and
+Ruccellai, Le Api, 942, and Dante’s Purgatory, Canto XXIV. 63.
+
+v. 96. The land.] Ravenna.
+
+v. 99 Love, that in gentle heart is quickly learnt.] Amor, Ch’ al cor
+gentil ratto s’apprende. A line taken by Marino, Adone, c. cxli. st.
+251.
+
+v. 102. Love, that denial takes from none belov’d.]
+
+ Amor, ch’ a null’ amato amar perdona.
+So Boccacio, in his Filocopo. l.1.
+
+ Amore mal non perdono l’amore a nullo amato.
+And Pulci, in the Morgante Maggiore, c. iv.
+
+ E perche amor mal volontier perdona,
+
+ Che non sia al fin sempre amato chi ama.
+Indeed many of the Italian poets have repeated this verse.
+
+v. 105. Caina.] The place to which murderers are doomed.
+
+v. 113. Francesca.] Francesca, daughter of Guido da Polenta, lord of
+Ravenna, was given by her father in marriage to Lanciotto, son of
+Malatesta, lord of Rimini, a man of extraordinary courage, but deformed
+in his person. His brother Paolo, who unhappily possessed those graces
+which the husband of Francesca wanted, engaged her affections; and
+being taken in adultery, they were both put to death by the enraged
+Lanciotto. See Notes to Canto XXVII. v. 43 The whole of this passage is
+alluded to by Petrarch, in his Triumph of Love c. iii.
+
+v. 118.
+
+ No greater grief than to remember days
+
+ Of joy,xwhen mis’ry is at hand!]
+Imitated by Marino:
+
+ Che non ha doglia il misero maggiore
+
+ Che ricordar la giola entro il dolore.
+
+ Adone, c. xiv. st. 100
+And by Fortiguerra:
+
+ Rimembrare il ben perduto
+
+ Fa piu meschino lo presente stato.
+
+ Ricciardetto, c. xi. st. 83.
+The original perhaps was in Boetius de Consol. Philosoph. “In
+omni adversitate fortunae infelicissimum genus est infortunii
+fuisse felicem et non esse.” 1. 2. pr. 4
+
+v. 124. Lancelot.] One of the Knights of the Round Table, and the lover
+of Ginevra, or Guinever, celebrated in romance. The incident alluded to
+seems to have made a strong impression on the imagination of Dante, who
+introduces it again, less happily, in the Paradise, Canto XVI.
+
+v. 128. At one point.]
+
+ Questo quel punto fu, che sol mi vinse.
+
+ Tasso, Il Torrismondo, a. i. s. 3.
+
+v. 136. And like a corpse fell to the ground ]
+
+ E caddi, come corpo morto cade.
+So Pulci:
+
+ E cadde come morto in terra cade.
+Morgante Maggoire, c. xxii
+
+CANTO VI
+
+
+v. 1. My sense reviving.]
+
+ Al tornar della mente, che si chiuse
+
+ Dinanzi alla pieta de’ duo cognati.
+Berni has made a sportive application of these lines, in his Orl.
+Inn. l. iii. c. viii. st. 1.
+
+v. 21. That great worm.] So in Canto XXXIV Lucifer is called
+
+ Th’ abhorred worm, that boreth through the world.
+Ariosto has imitated Dante:
+
+ Ch’ al gran verme infernal mette la briglia,
+
+ E che di lui come a lei par dispone.
+
+ Orl. Fur. c. xlvi. st. 76.
+
+v. 52. Ciacco.] So called from his inordinate appetite: Ciacco, in
+Italian, signifying a pig. The real name of this glutton has not been
+transmitted to us. He is introduced in Boccaccio’s Decameron, Giorn.
+ix. Nov. 8.
+
+v. 61. The divided city.] The city of Florence, divided into the
+Bianchi and Neri factions.
+
+v. 65. The wild party from the woods.] So called, because it was headed
+by Veri de’ Cerchi, whose family had lately come into the city from
+Acone, and the woody country of the Val di Nievole.
+
+v. 66. The other.] The opposite parts of the Neri, at the head of which
+was Corso Donati.
+
+v. 67. This must fall.] The Bianchi.
+
+v. 69. Of one, who under shore Now rests.] Charles of Valois, by whose
+means the Neri were replaced.
+
+v. 73. The just are two in number.] Who these two were, the
+commentators are not agreed.
+
+v. 79. Of Farinata and Tegghiaio.] See Canto X. and Notes, and Canto
+XVI, and Notes.
+
+v. 80. Giacopo.] Giacopo Rusticucci. See Canto XVI, and Notes.
+
+v. 81. Arrigo, Mosca.] Of Arrigo, who is said by the commentators to
+have been of the noble family of the Fifanti, no mention afterwards
+occurs. Mosca degli Uberti is introduced in Canto XXVIII. v.
+
+108. Consult thy knowledge.] We are referred to the following passage
+in St. Augustin:—“Cum fiet resurrectio carnis, et bonorum gaudia et
+malorum tormenta majora erunt. “—At the resurrection of the flesh, both
+the happiness of the good and the torments of the wicked will be
+increased.”
+
+CANTO VII
+
+
+v. 1. Ah me! O Satan! Satan!] Pape Satan, Pape Satan, aleppe. Pape is
+said by the commentators to be the same as the Latin word papae!
+“strange!” Of aleppe they do not give a more satisfactory account. See
+the Life of Benvenuto Cellini, translated by Dr. Nugent, v. ii. b. iii
+c. vii. p 113, where he mentions “having heard the words Paix, paix,
+Satan! allez, paix! in the court of justice at Paris. I recollected
+what Dante said, when he with his master Virgil entered the gates of
+hell: for Dante, and Giotto the painter, were together in France, and
+visited Paris with particular attention, where the court of justice may
+be considered as hell. Hence it is that Dante, who was likewise perfect
+master of the French, made use of that expression, and I have often
+been surprised that it was never understood in that sense.”
+
+v. 12. The first adulterer proud.] Satan.
+
+v. 22. E’en as a billow.]
+
+ As when two billows in the Irish sowndes
+
+ Forcibly driven with contrarie tides
+
+ Do meet together, each aback rebounds
+
+ With roaring rage, and dashing on all sides,
+
+ That filleth all the sea with foam, divides
+
+ The doubtful current into divers waves.
+
+ Spenser, F.Q. b. iv. c. 1. st. 42.
+
+v. 48. Popes and cardinals.] Ariosto, having personified
+Avarice as a strange and hideous monster, says of her—
+
+ Peggio facea nella Romana corte
+
+ Che v’avea uccisi Cardinali e Papi.
+
+ Orl. Fur. c. xxvi. st. 32.
+
+ Worse did she in the court of Rome, for there
+
+ She had slain Popes and Cardinals.
+
+v. 91. By necessity.] This sentiment called forth the reprehension of
+Cecco d’Ascoli, in his Acerba, l. 1. c. i.
+
+ In cio peccasti, O Fiorentin poeta, &c.
+
+ Herein, O bard of Florence, didst thou err
+
+ Laying it down that fortune’s largesses
+
+ Are fated to their goal. Fortune is none,
+
+ That reason cannot conquer. Mark thou, Dante,
+
+ If any argument may gainsay this.
+
+CANTO VIII
+
+
+v. 18. Phlegyas.] Phlegyas, who was so incensed against Apollo for
+having violated his daughter Coronis, that he set fire to the temple of
+that deity, by whose vengeance he was cast into Tartarus. See Virg.
+Aen. l. vi. 618.
+
+v. 59. Filippo Argenti.] Boccaccio tells us, “he was a man remarkable
+for the large proportions and extraordinary vigor of his bodily frame,
+and the extreme waywardness and irascibility of his temper.” Decam. g.
+ix. n. 8.
+
+v. 66. The city, that of Dis is nam’d.] So Ariosto. Orl. Fur. c. xl.
+st. 32
+
+v. 94. Seven times.] The commentators, says Venturi, perplex themselves
+with the inquiry what seven perils these were from which Dante had been
+delivered by Virgil. Reckoning the beasts in the first Canto as one of
+them, and adding Charon, Minos, Cerberus, Plutus, Phlegyas and Filippo
+Argenti, as so many others, we shall have the number, and if this be
+not satisfactory, we may suppose a determinate to have been put for an
+indeterminate number.
+
+v. 109. At war ’twixt will and will not.] Che si, e no nel capo mi
+tenzona. So Boccaccio, Ninf. Fiesol. st. 233.
+
+ Il si e il no nel capo gli contende.
+The words I have adopted as a translation, are Shakespeare’s,
+Measure for Measure. a. ii. s. 1.
+
+v. 122. This their insolence, not new.] Virgil assures our poet, that
+these evil spirits had formerly shown the same insolence when our
+Savior descended into hell. They attempted to prevent him from entering
+at the gate, over which Dante had read the fatal inscription. “That
+gate which,” says the Roman poet, “an angel has just passed, by whose
+aid we shall overcome this opposition, and gain admittance into the
+city.”
+
+CANTO IX
+
+
+v. 1. The hue.] Virgil, perceiving that Dante was pale with fear,
+restrained those outward tokens of displeasure which his own
+countenance had betrayed.
+
+v. 23. Erictho.] Erictho, a Thessalian sorceress, according to Lucan,
+Pharsal. l. vi. was employed by Sextus, son of Pompey the Great, to
+conjure up a spirit, who should inform him of the issue of the civil
+wars between his father and Caesar.
+
+v. 25. No long space my flesh
+
+ Was naked of me.]
+
+ Quae corpus complexa animae tam fortis inane.
+
+ Ovid. Met. l. xiii f. 2
+Dante appears to have fallen into a strange anachronism. Virgil’s
+death did not happen till long after this period.
+
+v. 42. Adders and cerastes.]
+
+ Vipereum crinem vittis innexa cruentis.
+
+ Virg. Aen. l. vi. 281.
+
+ —spinaque vagi torquente cerastae
+
+ . . . et torrida dipsas
+
+ Et gravis in geminum vergens eaput amphisbaena.
+
+ Lucan. Pharsal. l. ix. 719.
+So Milton:
+
+ Scorpion and asp, and amphisbaena dire,
+
+ Cerastes horn’d, hydrus and elops drear,
+
+ And dipsas.
+
+ P. L. b. x. 524.
+
+v. 67. A wind.] Imitated by Berni, Orl. Inn. l. 1. e. ii. st. 6.
+
+v. 83. With his wand.]
+
+ She with her rod did softly smite the raile
+
+ Which straight flew ope.
+
+ Spenser. F. Q. b. iv. c. iii. st. 46.
+
+v. 96. What profits at the fays to but the horn.] “Of what avail can it
+be to offer violence to impassive beings?”
+
+v. 97. Your Cerberus.] Cerberus is feigned to have been dragged by
+Hercules, bound with a three fold chain, of which, says the angel, he
+still bears the marks.
+
+v. 111. The plains of Arles.] In Provence. See Ariosto, Orl. Fur. c.
+xxxix. st. 72
+
+v. 112. At Pola.] A city of Istria, situated near the gulf of Quarnaro,
+in the Adriatic sea.
+
+CANTO X
+
+
+v. 12. Josaphat.] It seems to have been a common opinion among the
+Jews, as well as among many Christians, that the general judgment will
+be held in the valley of Josaphat, or Jehoshaphat: “I will also gather
+all nations, and will bring them down into the valley of Jehoshaphat,
+and will plead with them there for my people, and for my heritage
+Israel, whom they have scattered among the nations, and parted my
+land.” Joel, iii. 2.
+
+v. 32. Farinata.] Farinata degli Uberti, a noble Florentine, was the
+leader of the Ghibelline faction, when they obtained a signal victory
+over the Guelfi at Montaperto, near the river Arbia. Macchiavelli calls
+him “a man of exalted soul, and great military talents.” Hist. of Flor.
+b. ii.
+
+v. 52. A shade.] The spirit of Cavalcante Cavalcanti, a noble
+Florentine, of the Guelph party.
+
+v. 59. My son.] Guido, the son of Cavalcante Cavalcanti; “he whom I
+call the first of my friends,” says Dante in his Vita Nuova, where the
+commencement of their friendship is related. >From the character given
+of him by contemporary writers his temper was well formed to assimilate
+with that of our poet. “He was,” according to G. Villani, l. viii. c.
+41. “of a philosophical and elegant mind, if he had not been too
+delicate and fastidious.” And Dino Compagni terms him “a young and
+noble knight, brave and courteous, but of a lofty scornful spirit, much
+addicted to solitude and study.” Muratori. Rer. Ital. Script t. 9 l. 1.
+p. 481. He died, either in exile at Serrazana, or soon after his return
+to Florence, December 1300, during the spring of which year the action
+of this poem is supposed to be passing. v. 62. Guido thy son Had in
+contempt.] Guido Cavalcanti, being more given to philosophy than
+poetry, was perhaps no great admirer of Virgil. Some poetical
+compositions by Guido are, however, still extant; and his reputation
+for skill in the art was such as to eclipse that of his predecessor and
+namesake Guido Guinicelli, as we shall see in the Purgatory, Canto XI.
+His “Canzone sopra il Terreno Amore” was thought worthy of being
+illustrated by numerous and ample commentaries. Crescimbeni Ist. della
+Volg. Poes. l. v. For a playful sonnet which Dante addressed to him,
+and a spirited translation of it, see Hayley’s Essay on Epic Poetry,
+Notes to Ep. iii.
+
+v. 66. Saidst thou he had?] In Aeschylus, the shade of Darius is
+represented as inquiring with similar anxiety after the fate of his son
+Xerxes.
+
+[GREEK HERE]
+
+
+Atossa: Xerxes astonish’d, desolate, alone—
+Ghost of Dar: How will this end? Nay, pause not. Is he safe?
+
+ The Persians. Potter’s Translation.
+
+v. 77. Not yet fifty times.] “Not fifty months shall be passed, before
+thou shalt learn, by woeful experience, the difficulty of returning
+from banishment to thy native city”
+
+v.83. The slaughter.] “By means of Farinata degli Uberti, the Guelfi
+were conquered by the army of King Manfredi, near the river Arbia, with
+so great a slaughter, that those who escaped from that defeat took
+refuge not in Florence, which city they considered as lost to them, but
+in Lucca.” Macchiavelli. Hist. of Flor. b 2.
+
+v. 86. Such orisons.] This appears to allude to certain prayers which
+were offered up in the churches of Florence, for deliverance from the
+hostile attempts of the Uberti.
+
+v. 90. Singly there I stood.] Guido Novello assembled a council of the
+Ghibellini at Empoli where it was agreed by all, that, in order to
+maintain the ascendancy of the Ghibelline party in Tuscany, it was
+necessary to destroy Florence, which could serve only (the people of
+that city beingvGuelfi) to enable the party attached to the church to
+recover its strength. This cruel sentence, passed upon so noble a city,
+met with no opposition from any of its citizens or friends, except
+Farinata degli Uberti, who openly and without reserve forbade the
+measure, affirming that he had endured so many hardships, and
+encountered so many dangers, with no other view than that of being able
+to pass his days in his own country. Macchiavelli. Hist. of Flor. b. 2.
+
+v. 103. My fault.] Dante felt remorse for not having returned an
+immediate answer to the inquiry of Cavalcante, from which delay he was
+led to believe that his son Guido was no longer living.
+
+v. 120. Frederick.] The Emperor Frederick the Second, who died in 1250.
+See Notes to Canto XIII.
+
+v. 121. The Lord Cardinal.] Ottaviano Ubaldini, a Florentine, made
+Cardinal in 1245, and deceased about 1273. On account of his great
+influence, he was generally known by the appellation of “the Cardinal.”
+It is reported of him that he declared, if there were any such thing as
+a human soul, he had lost his for the Ghibellini.
+
+v. 132. Her gracious beam.] Beatrice.
+
+CANTO XI
+
+
+v. 9. Pope Anastasius.] The commentators are not agreed concerning the
+identity of the person, who is here mentioned as a follower of the
+heretical Photinus. By some he is supposed to have been Anastasius the
+Second, by others, the Fourth of that name; while a third set, jealous
+of the integrity of the papal faith, contend that our poet has
+confounded him with Anastasius 1. Emperor of the East.
+
+v. 17. My son.] The remainder of the present Canto may be considered as
+a syllabus of the whole of this part of the poem.
+
+v. 48. And sorrows.] This fine moral, that not to enjoy our being is to
+be ungrateful to the Author of it, is well expressed in Spenser, F. Q.
+b. iv. c. viii. st. 15. For he whose daies in wilful woe are worne The
+grace of his Creator doth despise, That will not use his gifts for
+thankless nigardise.
+
+v. 53. Cahors.] A city in Guienne, much frequented by usurers
+
+v. 83. Thy ethic page.] He refers to Aristotle’s Ethics.
+
+[GREEK HERE]
+
+
+“In the next place, entering, on another division of the subject, let
+it be defined. that respecting morals there are three sorts of things
+to be avoided, malice, incontinence, and brutishness.”
+
+v. 104. Her laws.] Aristotle’s Physics. [GREEK HERE] “Art imitates
+nature.” —See the Coltivazione of Alamanni, l. i.
+
+-I’arte umana, &c.
+
+v. 111. Creation’s holy book.] Genesis, c. iii. v. 19. “In the sweat of
+thy face shalt thou eat bread.”
+
+v. 119. The wain.] The constellation Bootes, or Charles’s wain.
+
+CANTO XII
+
+
+v. 17. The king of Athens.] Theseus, who was enabled, by the
+instructions of Ariadne, the sister of the Minotaur, to destroy that
+monster.
+
+v. 21. Like to a bull.] [GREEK HERE] Homer Il. xvii 522
+
+ As when some vig’rous youth with sharpen’d axe
+
+ A pastur’d bullock smites behind the horns
+
+ And hews the muscle through; he, at the stroke
+
+ Springs forth and falls.
+
+ Cowper’s Translation.
+
+v. 36. He arriv’d.] Our Saviour, who, according to Dante, when he
+ascended from hell, carried with him the souls of the patriarchs, and
+other just men, out of the first circle. See Canto IV.
+
+v. 96. Nessus.] Our poet was probably induced, by the following
+line in Ovid, to assign to Nessus the task of conducting them
+over the ford:
+
+ Nessus edit membrisque valens scitusque vadorum.
+
+ Metam, l. ix.
+And Ovid’s authority was Sophocles, who says of this Centaur—
+[GREEK HERE] Trach.570
+
+ He in his arms, Evenus’ stream
+
+ Deep flowing, bore the passenger for hire
+
+ Without or sail or billow cleaving oar.
+
+v. 110. Ezzolino.] Ezzolino, or Azzolino di Romano, a most cruel tyrant
+in the Marca Trivigiana, Lord of Padua, Vicenza, Verona, and Brescia,
+who died in 1260. His atrocities form the subject of a Latin tragedy,
+called Eccerinis, by Albertino Mussato, of Padua, the contemporary of
+Dante, and the most elegant writer of Latin verse of that age. See also
+the Paradise, Canto IX. Berni Orl. Inn. l ii c. xxv. st. 50. Ariosto.
+Orl. Fur. c. iii. st. 33. and Tassoni Secchia Rapita, c. viii. st 11.
+
+v. 111. Obizzo’ of Este.] Marquis of Ferrara and of the Marca d’Ancona,
+was murdered by his own son (whom, for the most unnatural act Dante
+calls his step-son), for the sake of the treasures which his rapacity
+had amassed. See Ariosto. Orl. Fur. c. iii. st 32. He died in 1293
+according to Gibbon. Ant. of the House of Brunswick. Posth. Works, v.
+ii. 4to.
+
+v. 119. He.] “Henrie, the brother of this Edmund, and son to the
+foresaid king of Almaine (Richard, brother of Henry III. of England) as
+he returned from Affrike, where he had been with Prince Edward, was
+slain at Viterbo in Italy (whither he was come about business which he
+had to do with the Pope) by the hand of Guy de Montfort, the son of
+Simon de Montfort, Earl of Leicester, in revenge of the same Simon’s
+death. The murther was committed afore the high altar, as the same
+Henrie kneeled there to hear divine service.” A.D. 1272, Holinshed’s
+chronicles p 275. See also Giov. Villani Hist. I. vii. c. 40.
+
+v. 135. On Sextus and on Pyrrhus.] Sextus either the son of Tarquin the
+Proud, or of Pompey the Great: or as Vellutelli conjectures, Sextus
+Claudius Nero, and Pyrrhus king of Epirus.
+
+v. 137.
+
+ The Rinieri, of Corneto this,
+
+ Pazzo the other named.]
+Two noted marauders, by whose depredations the public ways in
+Italy were infested. The latter was of the noble family of Pazzi
+in Florence.
+
+CANTO XIII
+
+
+v. 10. Betwixt Corneto and Cecina’s stream.] A wild and woody tract of
+country, abounding in deer, goats, and wild boars. Cecina is a river
+not far to the south of Leghorn, Corneto, a small city on the same
+coast in the patrimony of the church.
+
+v. 12. The Strophades.] See Virg. Aen. l. iii. 210.
+
+v. 14. Broad are their pennons.] From Virg. Aen. l. iii. 216.
+
+v. 48. In my verse described.] The commentators explain this, “If he
+could have believed, in consequence of my assurances alone, that of
+which he hath now had ocular proof, he would not have stretched forth
+his hand against thee.” But I am of opinion that Dante makes Virgil
+allude to his own story of Polydorus in the third book of the Aeneid.
+
+v. 56. That pleasant word of thine.] “Since you have inveigled me to
+speak my holding forth so gratifying an expectation, let it not
+displease you if I am as it were detained in the snare you have spread
+for me, so as to be somewhat prolix in my answer.”
+
+v. 60. I it was.] Pietro delle Vigne, a native of Capua, who, from a
+low condition, raised himself by his eloquence and legal knowledge to
+the office of Chancellor to the Emperor Frederick II. whose confidence
+in him was such, that his influence in the empire became unbounded. The
+courtiers, envious of his exalted situation, contrived, by means of
+forged letters, to make Frederick believe that he held a secret and
+traitorous intercourse with the Pope, who was then at enmity with the
+Emperor. In consequence of this supposed crime he was cruelly condemned
+by his too credulous sovereign to lose his eyes, and, being driven to
+despair by his unmerited calamity and disgrace, he put an end to his
+life by dashing out his brains against the walls of a church, in the
+year 1245. Both Frederick and Pietro delle Vigne composed verses in the
+Sicilian dialect which are yet extant.
+
+v. 67. The harlot.] Envy. Chaucer alludes to this in the
+Prologue to the Legende of Good women.
+
+ Envie is lavender to the court alway,
+
+ For she ne parteth neither night ne day
+
+ Out of the house of Cesar; thus saith Dant.
+
+v. 119. Each fan o’ th’ wood.] Hence perhaps Milton:
+
+ Leaves and fuming rills, Aurora’s fan.
+
+ P. L. b. v. 6.
+
+v. 122. Lano.] Lano, a Siennese, who, being reduced by prodigality to a
+state of extreme want, found his existence no longer supportable; and,
+having been sent by his countrymen on a military expedition, to assist
+the Florentine against the Aretini, took that opportunity of exposing
+himself to certain death, in the engagement which took place at Toppo
+near Arezzo. See G. Villani, Hist. l. 7. c. cxix.
+
+v. 133. O Giocomo Of Sant’ Andrea!] Jacopo da Sant’ Andrea, a Paduan,
+who, having wasted his property in the most wanton acts of profusion,
+killed himself in despair. v. 144. In that City.] “I was an inhabitant
+of Florence, that city which changed her first patron Mars for St. John
+the Baptist, for which reason the vengeance of the deity thus slighted
+will never be appeased: and, if some remains of his status were not
+still visible on the bridge over the Arno, she would have been already
+leveled to the ground; and thus the citizens, who raised her again from
+the ashes to which Attila had reduced her, would have laboured in
+vain.” See Paradise, Canto XVI. 44. The relic of antiquity to which the
+superstition of Florence attached so high an importance, was carried
+away by a flood, that destroyed the bridge on which it stood, in the
+year 1337, but without the ill effects that were apprehended from the
+loss of their fancied Palladium.
+
+v. 152. I slung the fatal noose.] We are not informed who this suicide
+was.
+
+CANTO XIV
+
+
+v. 15. By Cato’s foot.] See Lucan, Phars, l. 9.
+
+v. 26. Dilated flakes of fire.] Compare Tasso. G. L. c. x. st. 61.
+
+v. 28. As, in the torrid Indian clime.] Landino refers to Albertus
+Magnus for the circumstance here alluded to.
+
+v. 53. In Mongibello.]
+
+ More hot than Aetn’ or flaming Mongibell.
+
+ Spenser, F. Q. b. ii. c. ix. st. 29.
+See Virg. Aen. 1. viii. 416. and Berni. Orl. Inn 1. i. c. xvi.
+st. 21. It would be endless to refer to parallel passages in the
+Greek writers.
+
+v. 64. This of the seven kings was one.] Compare Aesch. Seven Chiefs,
+425. Euripides, Phoen. 1179 and Statius. Theb. l. x. 821.
+
+v. 76. Bulicame.] A warm medicinal spring near Viterbo, the waters of
+which, as Landino and Vellutelli affirm, passed by a place of ill fame.
+Venturi, with less probability, conjectures that Dante would imply,
+that it was the scene of much licentious merriment among those who
+frequented its baths.
+
+v. 91. Under whose monarch.]
+
+ Credo pudicitiam Saturno rege moratam
+
+ In terris.
+
+ Juv. Satir. vi.
+
+v. 102. His head.] Daniel, ch. ii. 32, 33.
+
+v. 133. Whither.] On the other side of Purgatory.
+
+CANTO XV
+
+
+v. 10. Chiarentana.] A part of the Alps where the Brenta rises, which
+river is much swoln as soon as the snow begins to dissolve on the
+mountains.
+
+v. 28. Brunetto.] “Ser Brunetto, a Florentine, the secretary or
+chancellor of the city, and Dante’s preceptor, hath left us a work so
+little read, that both the subject of it and the language of it have
+been mistaken. It is in the French spoken in the reign of St.
+Louis,under the title of Tresor, and contains a species of
+philosophical course of lectures divided into theory and practice, or,
+as he expresses it, “un enchaussement des choses divines et humaines,”
+&c. Sir R. Clayton’s Translation of Tenhove’s Memoirs of the Medici,
+vol. i. ch. ii. p. 104. The Tresor has never been printed in the
+original language. There is a fine manuscript of it in the British
+Museum, with an illuminated portrait of Brunetto in his study prefixed.
+Mus. Brit. MSS. 17, E. 1. Tesor. It is divided into four books, the
+first, on Cosmogony and Theology, the second, a translation of
+Aristotle’s Ethics; the third on Virtues and Vices; the fourth, on
+Rhetoric. For an interesting memoir relating to this work, see Hist. de
+l’Acad. des Inscriptions, tom. vii. 296. His Tesoretto, one of the
+earliest productions of Italian poetry, is a curious work, not unlike
+the writings of Chaucer in style and numbers, though Bembo remarks,
+that his pupil, however largely he had stolen from it, could not have
+much enriched himself. As it is perhaps but little known, I will here
+add a slight sketch of it.
+
+Brunetto describes himself as returning from an embassy to the King of
+Spain, on which he had been sent by the Guelph party from Florence. On
+the plain of Roncesvalles he meets a scholar on a bay mule, who tells
+him that the Guelfi are driven out of the city with great loss.
+
+Struck with grief at these mournful tidings, and musing with his head
+bent downwards, he loses his road, and wanders into a wood. Here
+Nature, whose figure is described with sublimity, appears, and
+discloses to him the secrets of her operations. After this he wanders
+into a desert; but at length proceeds on his way, under the protection
+of a banner, with which Nature had furnished him, till on the third day
+he finds himself in a large pleasant champaign, where are assembled
+many emperors, kings, and sages. It is the habitation of Virtue and her
+daughters, the four Cardinal Virtues. Here Brunetto sees also Courtesy,
+Bounty, Loyalty, and Prowess, and hears the instructions they give to a
+knight, which occupy about a fourth part of the poem. Leaving this
+territory, he passes over valleys, mountains, woods, forests, and
+bridges, till he arrives in a beautiful valley covered with flowers on
+all sides, and the richest in the world; but which was continually
+shifting its appearance from a round figure to a square, from obscurity
+to light, and from populousness to solitude. This is the region of
+Pleasure, or Cupid, who is accompanied by four ladies, Love, Hope,
+Fear, and Desire. In one part of it he meets with Ovid, and is
+instructed by him how to conquer the passion of love, and to escape
+from that place. After his escape he makes his confession to a friar,
+and then returns to the forest of visions: and ascending a mountain, he
+meets with Ptolemy, a venerable old man. Here the narrative breaks off.
+The poem ends, as it began, with an address to Rustico di Filippo, on
+whom he lavishes every sort of praise.
+
+It has been observed, that Dante derived the idea of opening his poem
+by describing himself as lost in a wood, from the Tesoretto of his
+master. I know not whether it has been remarked, that the crime of
+usury is branded by both these poets as offensive to God and Nature: or
+that the sin for which Brunetto is condemned by his pupil, is mentioned
+in the Tesoretto with great horror. Dante’s twenty-fifth sonnet is a
+jocose one, addressed to Brunetto. He died in 1295.
+
+v. 62. Who in old times came down from Fesole.] See G. Villani Hist. l.
+iv. c. 5. and Macchiavelli Hist. of Flor. b. ii.
+
+v. 89. With another text.] He refers to the prediction of Farinata, in
+Canto X.
+
+v. 110. Priscian.] There is no reason to believe, as the commentators
+observe that the grammarian of this name was stained with the vice
+imputed to him; and we must therefore suppose that Dante puts the
+individual for the species, and implies the frequency of the crime
+among those who abused the opportunities which the education of youth
+afforded them, to so abominable a purpose.
+
+v. 111. Francesco.] Son of Accorso, a Florentine, celebrated for his
+skill in jurisprudence, and commonly known by the name of Accursius.
+
+v. 113. Him.] Andrea de’ Mozzi, who, that his scandalous life might be
+less exposed to observation, was translated either by Nicholas III, or
+Boniface VIII from the see of Florence to that of Vicenza, through
+which passes the river Baccchiglione. At the latter of these places he
+died.
+
+v. 114. The servants’ servant.] Servo de’ servi. So Ariosto,
+Sat. 3.
+
+ Degli servi
+
+ Io sia il gran servo.
+
+v. 124. I commend my Treasure to thee.] Brunetto’s great work,
+the Tresor.
+Sieti raccomandato ’l mio Tesoro.
+So Giusto de’ Conti, in his Bella Mano, Son. “Occhi:”
+
+ Siavi raccommandato il mio Tesoro.
+
+CANTO XVI
+
+
+v. 38. Gualdrada.] Gualdrada was the daughter of Bellincione Berti, of
+whom mention is made in the Paradise, Canto XV, and XVI. He was of the
+family of Ravignani, a branch of the Adimari.
+
+The Emperor Otho IV. being at a festival in Florence, where Gualdrada
+was present, was struck with her beauty; and inquiring who she was, was
+answered by Bellincione, that she was the daughter of one who, if it
+was his Majesty’s pleasure, would make her admit the honour of his
+salute. On overhearing this, she arose from her seat, and blushing, in
+an animated tone of voice, desired her father that he would not be so
+liberal in his offers, for that no man should ever be allowed that
+freedom, except him who should be her lawful husband. The Emperor was
+not less delighted by her resolute modesty than he had before been by
+the loveliness of her person, and calling to him Guido, one of his
+barons, gave her to him in marriage, at the same time raising him
+
+to the rank of a count, and bestowing on her the whole of Casentino,
+and a part of the territory of Romagna, as her portion. Two sons were
+the offspring of this union, Guglielmo and Ruggieri, the latter of whom
+was father of Guidoguerra, a man of great military skill and prowess
+who, at the head of four hundred Florentines of the Guelph party, was
+signally instrumental to the victory obtained at Benevento by Charles
+of Anjou, over Manfredi, King of Naples, in 1265. One of the
+consequences of this victory was the expulsion of the Ghibellini, and
+the re-establishment of the Guelfi at Florence.
+
+v. 39. Many a noble act.] Compare Tasso, G. L. c. i. st. 1.
+
+v. 42. Aldobrandiu] Tegghiaio Aldobrandi was of the noble family of
+Adimari, and much esteemed for his military talents. He endeavored to
+dissuade the Florentines from the attack, which they meditated against
+the Siennese, and the rejection of his counsel occasioned the memorable
+defeat, which the former sustained at Montaperto, and the consequent
+banishment of the Guelfi from Florence.
+
+v. 45. Rusticucci.] Giacopo Rusticucci, a Florentine, remarkable for
+his opulence and the generosity of his spirit.
+
+v. 70. Borsiere.] Guglielmo Borsiere, another Florentine, whom
+Boccaccio, in a story which he relates of him, terms “a man of
+courteous and elegant manners, and of great readiness in conversation.”
+Dec. Giorn. i. Nov. 8.
+
+v. 84. When thou with pleasure shalt retrace the past.]
+
+ Quando ti giovera dicere io fui.
+So Tasso, G. L. c. xv. st. 38.
+
+ Quando mi giovera narrar altrui
+
+ Le novita vedute, e dire; io fui.
+
+v. 121. Ever to that truth.] This memorable apophthegm is repeated by
+Luigi Pulci and Trissino.
+
+ Sempre a quel ver, ch’ ha faccia di menzogna
+
+ E piu senno tacer la lingua cheta
+
+ Che spesso senza colpa fa vergogna.
+
+ Morgante. Magg. c. xxiv.
+
+ La verita, che par mensogna
+
+ Si dovrebbe tacer dall’ uom ch’e saggio.
+
+ Italia. Lib. C. xvi.
+
+CANTO XVII
+
+
+v. 1. The fell monster.] Fraud.
+
+v. 53. A pouch.] A purse, whereon the armorial bearings of each were
+emblazoned. According to Landino, our poet implies that the usurer can
+pretend to no other honour, than such as he derives from his purse and
+his family.
+
+v. 57. A yellow purse.] The arms of the Gianfigliazzi of Florence.
+
+v. 60. Another.] Those of the Ubbriachi, another Florentine family of
+high distinction.
+
+v. 62. A fat and azure swine.] The arms of the Scrovigni a noble family
+of Padua.
+
+v. 66. Vitaliano.] Vitaliano del Dente, a Paduan.
+
+v. 69. That noble knight.] Giovanni Bujamonti, a Florentine usurer, the
+most infamous of his time.
+
+CANTO XVIII
+
+
+v. 28. With us beyond.] Beyond the middle point they tended the same
+way with us, but their pace was quicker than ours.
+
+v. 29. E’en thus the Romans.] In the year 1300, Pope Boniface VIII., to
+remedy the inconvenience occasioned by the press of people who were
+passing over the bridge of St. Angelo during the time of the Jubilee,
+caused it to be divided length wise by a partition, and ordered, that
+all those who were going to St. Peter’s should keep one side, and those
+returning the other.
+
+v. 50. Venedico.] Venedico Caccianimico, a Bolognese, who prevailed on
+his sister Ghisola to prostitute herself to Obizzo da Este, Marquis of
+Ferrara, whom we have seen among the tyrants, Canto XII.
+
+v. 62. To answer Sipa.] He denotes Bologna by its situation between the
+rivers Savena to the east, and Reno to the west of that city; and by a
+peculiarity of dialect, the use of the affirmative sipa instead of si.
+
+v. 90. Hypsipyle.] See Appolonius Rhodius, l. i. and Valerius Flaccus
+l.ii. Hypsipyle deceived the other women by concealing her father
+Thoas, when they had agreed to put all their males to death.
+
+v. 120. Alessio.] Alessio, of an ancient and considerable family in
+Lucca, called the Interminei.
+
+v. 130. Thais.] He alludes to that passage in the Eunuchus of Terence
+where Thraso asks if Thais was obliged to him for the present he had
+sent her, and Gnatho replies, that she had expressed her obligation in
+the most forcible terms. T. Magnas vero agere gratias Thais mihi? G.
+Ingentes. Eun. a. iii. s. i.
+
+CANTO XIX
+
+
+v. 18. Saint John’s fair dome.] The apertures in the rock were of the
+same dimensions as the fonts of St. John the Baptist at Florence, one
+of which, Dante says he had broken, to rescue a child that was playing
+near and fell in. He intimates that the motive of his breaking the font
+had been maliciously represented by his enemies.
+
+v. 55. O Boniface!] The spirit mistakes Dante for Boniface VIII. who
+was then alive, and who he did not expect would have arrived so soon,
+in consequence, as it should seem, of a prophecy, which predicted the
+death of that Pope at a later period. Boniface died in 1303.
+
+v. 58. In guile.] “Thou didst presume to arrive by fraudulent means at
+the papal power, and afterwards to abuse it.”
+
+v. 71. In the mighty mantle I was rob’d.] Nicholas III, of the Orsini
+family, whom the poet therefore calls “figliuol dell’ orsa,” “son of
+the she-bear.” He died in 1281.
+
+v. 86. From forth the west, a shepherd without law.] Bertrand de Got
+Archbishop of Bordeaux, who succeeded to the pontificate in 1305, and
+assumed the title of Clement V. He transferred the holy see to Avignon
+in 1308 (where it remained till 1376), and died in 1314.
+
+v. 88. A new Jason.] See Maccabees, b. ii. c. iv. 7,8.
+
+v. 97. Nor Peter.] Acts of the Apostles, c.i. 26.
+
+v. 100. The condemned soul.] Judas.
+
+v. 103. Against Charles.] Nicholas III. was enraged against Charles I,
+King of Sicily, because he rejected with scorn a proposition made by
+that Pope for an alliance between their families. See G. Villani, Hist.
+l. vii. c. liv.
+
+v. 109. Th’ Evangelist.] Rev. c. xvii. 1, 2, 3. Compare Petrarch. Opera
+fol. ed. Basil. 1551. Epist. sine titulo liber. ep. xvi. p. 729.
+
+v. 118. Ah, Constantine.] He alludes to the pretended gift of the
+Lateran by Constantine to Silvester, of which Dante himself seems to
+imply a doubt, in his treatise “De Monarchia.” - “Ergo scindere
+Imperium, Imperatori non licet. Si ergo aliquae, dignitates per
+Constantinum essent alienatae, (ut dicunt) ab Imperio,” &c. l. iii. The
+gift is by Ariosto very humorously placed in the moon, among the things
+lost or abused on earth. Di varj fiori, &c. O. F. c. xxxiv. st. 80.
+
+Milton has translated both this passage and that in the text.
+Prose works, vol. i. p. 11. ed. 1753.
+
+CANTO XX
+
+
+v. 11. Revers’d.] Compare Spenser, F. Q. b. i. c. viii. st. 31
+
+v. 30. Before whose eyes.] Amphiaraus, one of the seven kings who
+besieged Thebes. He is said to have been swallowed up by an opening of
+the earth. See Lidgate’s Storie of Thebes, Part III where it is told
+how the “Bishop Amphiaraus” fell down to hell. And thus the devill for
+his outrages, Like his desert payed him his wages. A different reason
+for his being doomed thus to perish is assigned by Pindar. [GREEK HERE]
+Nem ix.
+
+ For thee, Amphiaraus, earth,
+
+ By Jove’s all-riving thunder cleft
+
+ Her mighty bosom open’d wide,
+
+ Thee and thy plunging steeds to hide,
+
+ Or ever on thy back the spear
+
+ Of Periclymenus impress’d
+
+ A wound to shame thy warlike breast
+
+ For struck with panic fear
+
+ The gods’ own children flee.
+
+v. 37. Tiresias.]
+
+ Duo magnorum viridi coeuntia sylva
+
+ Corpora serpentum baculi violaverat ictu, &c.
+
+ Ovid. Met. iii.
+
+v. 43. Aruns.] Aruns is said to have dwelt in the mountains of Luni
+(from whence that territory is still called Lunigiana), above Carrara,
+celebrated for its marble. Lucan. Phars. l. i. 575. So Boccaccio in the
+Fiammetta, l. iii. “Quale Arunte,” &c.
+
+“Like Aruns, who amidst the white marbles of Luni, contemplated the
+celestial bodies and their motions.”
+
+v. 50. Manto.] The daughter of Tiresias of Thebes, a city dedicated to
+Bacchus. From Manto Mantua, the country of Virgil derives its name. The
+Poet proceeds to describe the situation of that place.
+
+v. 61. Between the vale.] The lake Benacus, now called the Lago di
+Garda, though here said to lie between Garda, Val Camonica, and the
+Apennine, is, however, very distant from the latter two
+
+v. 63. There is a spot.] Prato di Fame, where the dioceses of Trento,
+Verona, and Brescia met.
+
+v. 69. Peschiera.] A garrison situated to the south of the lake, where
+it empties itself and forms the Mincius.
+
+v. 94. Casalodi’s madness.] Alberto da Casalodi, who had got possession
+of Mantua, was persuaded by Pinamonte Buonacossi, that he might
+ingratiate himself with the people by banishing to their
+
+own castles the nobles, who were obnoxious to them. No sooner was this
+done, than Pinamonte put himself at the head of the populace, drove out
+Casalodi and his adherents, and obtained the sovereignty for himself.
+
+v. 111. So sings my tragic strain.]
+
+ Suspensi Eurypilum scitatum oracula Phoebi
+
+ Mittimus.
+
+ Virg. Aeneid. ii. 14.
+
+v. 115. Michael Scot.] Sir Michael Scott, of Balwearie, astrologer to
+the Emperor Frederick II. lived in the thirteenth century. For further
+particulars relating to this singular man, see Warton’s History of
+English Poetry, vol. i. diss. ii. and sect. ix. p 292, and the Notes to
+Mr. Scott’s “Lay of the Last Minstrel,” a poem in which a happy use is
+made of the traditions that are still current in North Britain
+concerning him. He is mentioned by G. Villani. Hist. l. x. c. cv. and
+cxli. and l. xii. c. xviii. and by Boccaccio, Dec. Giorn. viii. Nov. 9.
+
+v. 116. Guido Bonatti.] An astrologer of Forli, on whose skill Guido da
+Montefeltro, lord of that place, so much relied, that he is reported
+never to have gone into battle, except in the hour recommended to him
+as fortunate by Bonatti.
+
+Landino and Vellutello, speak of a book, which he composed on the
+subject of his art.
+
+v. 116. Asdente.] A shoemaker at Parma, who deserted his business to
+practice the arts of divination.
+
+v. 123. Cain with fork of thorns.] By Cain and the thorns, or what is
+still vulgarly called the Man in the Moon, the Poet denotes that
+luminary. The same superstition is alluded to in the Paradise, Canto
+II. 52. The curious reader may consult Brand on Popular Antiquities,
+4to. 1813. vol. ii. p. 476.
+
+CANTO XXI
+
+
+v. 7. In the Venetians’ arsenal.] Compare Ruccellai, Le Api, 165, and
+Dryden’s Annus Mirabilis, st. 146, &c.
+
+v. 37. One of Santa Zita’s elders.] The elders or chief magistrates of
+Lucca, where Santa Zita was held in especial veneration. The name of
+this sinner is supposed to have been Martino Botaio.
+
+v. 40. Except Bonturo, barterers.] This is said ironically of Bonturo
+de’ Dati. By barterers are meant peculators, of every description; all
+who traffic the interests of the public for their own private
+advantage.
+
+v. 48. Is other swimming than in Serchio’s wave.]
+
+ Qui si nuota altrimenti che nel Serchio.
+Serchio is the river that flows by Lucca. So Pulci, Morg. Mag.
+c. xxiv.
+
+ Qui si nuota nel sangue, e non nel Serchio.
+
+v. 92. From Caprona.] The surrender of the castle of Caprona to the
+combined forces of Florence and Lucca, on condition that the garrison
+should march out in safety, to which event Dante was a witness, took
+place in 1290. See G. Villani, Hist. l. vii. c. 136.
+
+v. 109. Yesterday.] This passage fixes the era of Dante’s descent at
+Good Friday, in the year 1300 (34 years from our blessed Lord’s
+incarnation being added to 1266), and at the thirty-fifth year of our
+poet’s age. See Canto I. v. 1.
+
+The awful event alluded to, the Evangelists inform us, happened “at the
+ninth hour,” that is, our sixth, when “the rocks were rent,” and the
+convulsion, according to Dante, was felt even in the depths in Hell.
+See Canto XII. 38.
+
+CANTO XXII
+
+
+v. 16. In the church.] This proverb is repeated by Pulci, Morg. Magg.
+c. xvii.
+
+v. 47. Born in Navarre’s domain.] The name of this peculator is said to
+have been Ciampolo.
+
+v. 51. The good king Thibault.] “Thibault I. king of Navarre, died on
+the 8th of June, 1233, as much to be commended for the desire he showed
+of aiding the war in the Holy Land, as reprehensible and faulty for his
+design of oppressing the rights and privileges of the church, on which
+account it is said that the whole kingdom was under an interdict for
+the space of three entire years. Thibault undoubtedly merits praise, as
+for his other endowments, so especially for his cultivation of the
+liberal arts, his exercise and knowledge of music and poetry in which
+he much excelled, that he was accustomed to compose verses and sing
+them to the viol, and to exhibit his poetical compositions publicly in
+his palace, that they might be criticized by all.” Mariana, History of
+Spain, b. xiii. c. 9.
+
+An account of Thibault, and two of his songs, with what were probably
+the original melodies, may be seen in Dr. Burney’s History of Music, v.
+ii. c. iv. His poems, which are in the French language, were edited by
+M. l’Eveque de la Ravalliere. Paris. 1742. 2 vol. 12mo. Dante twice
+quotes one of his verses in the Treatise de Vulg. Eloq. l. i. c. ix.
+and l. ii. c. v. and refers to him again, l. ii. c. vi.
+
+From “the good king Thibault” are descended the good, but more
+unfortunate monarch, Louis XVI. of France, and consequently the present
+legitimate sovereign of that realm. See Henault, Abrege Chron. 1252, 2,
+4.
+
+v. 80. The friar Gomita.] He was entrusted by Nino de’ Visconti with
+the government of Gallura, one of the four jurisdictions into which
+Sardinia was divided. Having his master’s enemies in his power, he took
+a bribe from them, and allowed them to escape. Mention of Nino will
+recur in the Notes to Canto XXXIII. and in the Purgatory, Canto VIII.
+
+v. 88. Michel Zanche.] The president of Logodoro, another of the four
+Sardinian jurisdictions. See Canto XXXIII.
+
+CANTO XXIII
+
+
+v. 5. Aesop’s fable.] The fable of the frog, who offered to carry the
+mouse across a ditch, with the intention of drowning him when both were
+carried off by a kite. It is not among those Greek Fables which go
+under the name of Aesop.
+
+v. 63. Monks in Cologne.] They wore their cowls unusually large. v. 66.
+Frederick’s.] The Emperor Frederick II. is said to have punished those
+who were guilty of high treason, by wrapping them up in lead, and
+casting them into a furnace.
+
+v. 101. Our bonnets gleaming bright with orange hue.] It is observed by
+Venturi, that the word “rance” does not here signify “rancid or
+disgustful,” as it is explained by the old commentators, but
+“orange-coloured,” in which sense it occurs in the Purgatory, Canto II.
+9.
+
+v. 104. Joyous friars.] “Those who ruled the city of Florence on the
+part of the Ghibillines, perceiving this discontent and murmuring,
+which they were fearful might produce a rebellion against themselves,
+in order to satisfy the people, made choice of two knights, Frati
+Godenti (joyous friars) of Bologna, on whom they conferred the chief
+power in Florence. One named M. Catalano de’ Malavolti, the other M.
+Loderingo di Liandolo; one an adherent of the Guelph, the other of the
+Ghibelline party. It is to be remarked, that the Joyous Friars were
+called Knights of St. Mary, and became knights on taking that habit:
+their robes were white, the mantle sable, and the arms a white field
+and red cross with two stars. Their office was to defend widows and
+orphans; they were to act as mediators; they had internal regulations
+like other religious bodies. The above-mentioned M. Loderingo was the
+founder of that order. But it was not long before they too well
+deserved the appellation given them, and were found to be more bent on
+enjoying themselves than on any other subject. These two friars were
+called in by the Florentines, and had a residence assigned them in the
+palace belonging to the people over against the Abbey. Such was the
+dependence placed on the character of their order that it was expected
+they would be impartial, and would save the commonwealth any
+unnecessary expense; instead of which, though inclined to opposite
+parties, they secretly and hypocritically concurred in promoting their
+own advantage rather than the public good.” G. Villani, b. vii. c.13.
+This happened in 1266.
+
+v. 110. Gardingo’s vicinage.] The name of that part of the city which
+was inhabited by the powerful Ghibelline family of Uberti, and
+destroyed under the partial and iniquitous administration of Catalano
+and Loderingo.
+
+v. 117. That pierced spirit.] Caiaphas.
+
+v. 124. The father of his consort.] Annas, father-in-law to Caiaphas.
+
+v. 146. He is a liar.] John, c. viii. 44. Dante had perhaps heard this
+text from one of the pulpits in Bologna.
+
+CANTO XXIV
+
+
+v. 1. In the year’s early nonage.] “At the latter part of January, when
+the sun enters into Aquarius, and the equinox is drawing near, when the
+hoar-frosts in the morning often wear the appearance of snow but are
+melted by the rising sun.”
+
+v. 51. Vanquish thy weariness.]
+
+ Quin corpus onustum
+
+ Hesternis vitiis animum quoque praegravat una,
+
+ Atque affigit humi divinae particulam aurae.
+
+ Hor. Sat. ii. l. ii. 78.
+
+v. 82. Of her sands.] Compare Lucan, Phars. l. ix. 703.
+
+v. 92. Heliotrope.] The occult properties of this stone are described
+by Solinus, c. xl, and by Boccaccio, in his humorous tale of
+Calandrino. Decam. G. viii. N. 3.
+
+In Chiabrera’s Ruggiero, Scaltrimento begs of Sofia, who is
+sending him on a perilous errand, to lend him the heliotrope.
+
+ In mia man fida
+
+ L’elitropia, per cui possa involarmi
+
+ Secondo il mio talento agli occhi altrui.
+
+ c. vi.
+
+ Trust to my hand the heliotrope, by which
+
+ I may at will from others’ eyes conceal me
+Compare Ariosto, II Negromante, a. 3. s. 3. Pulci, Morg. Magg.
+c xxv. and Fortiguerra, Ricciardetto, c. x. st. 17.
+Gower in his Confessio Amantis, lib. vii, enumerates it among the
+jewels in the diadem of the sun.
+
+ Jaspis and helitropius.
+
+v. 104. The Arabian phoenix.] This is translated from Ovid,
+Metam. l. xv.
+
+ Una est quae reparat, seque ipsa reseminat ales,
+&c.
+See also Petrarch, Canzone:
+
+“Qual piu,” &c.
+
+v. 120. Vanni Fucci.] He is said to have been an illegitimate offspring
+of the family of Lazari in Pistoia, and, having robbed the sacristy of
+the church of St. James in that city, to have charged Vanni della Nona
+with the sacrilege, in consequence of which accusation the latter
+suffered death.
+
+v. 142. Pistoia.] “In May 1301, the Bianchi party, of Pistoia, with the
+assistance and favor of the Bianchi who ruled Florence, drove out the
+Neri party from the former place, destroying their houses, Palaces and
+farms.” Giov. Villani, Hist. l. viii. e xliv.
+
+v. 144. From Valdimagra.] The commentators explain this prophetical
+threat to allude to the victory obtained by the Marquis Marcello
+Malaspina of Valdimagra (a tract of country now called the Lunigiana)
+who put himself at the head of the Neri and defeated their opponents
+the Bianchi, in the Campo Piceno near Pistoia, soon after the
+occurrence related in the preceding note.
+
+Of this engagement I find no mention in Villani. Currado Malaspina is
+introduced in the eighth Canto of Purgatory; where it appears that,
+although on the present occaision they espoused contrary sides, some
+important favours were nevertheless conferred by that family on our
+poet at a subsequent perid of his exile in 1307.
+
+Canto XXV
+
+v.1. The sinner ] So Trissino
+
+ Poi facea con le man le fiche al cielo
+
+ Dicendo: Togli, Iddio; che puoi piu farmi?
+
+ L’ital. Lib. c. xii
+
+v. 12. Thy seed] Thy ancestry.
+
+v. 15. Not him] Capanaeus. Canto XIV.
+
+v. 18. On Marenna’s marsh.] An extensive tract near the sea-shore in
+Tuscany.
+
+v. 24. Cacus.] Virgil, Aen. l. viii. 193.
+
+v. 31. A hundred blows.] Less than ten blows, out of the hundred
+Hercules gave him, deprived him of feeling.
+
+v. 39. Cianfa] He is said to have been of the family of Donati at
+Florence.
+
+v. 57. Thus up the shrinking paper.]
+
+ —All my bowels crumble up to dust.
+
+ I am a scribbled form, drawn up with a pen
+
+ Upon a parchment; and against this fire
+
+ Do I shrink up.
+
+ Shakespeare, K. John, a. v. s. 7.
+
+v. 61. Agnello.] Agnello Brunelleschi
+
+v. 77. In that part.] The navel.
+
+v. 81. As if by sleep or fev’rous fit assail’d.]
+
+ O Rome! thy head
+
+ Is drown’d in sleep, and all thy body fev’ry.
+
+ Ben Jonson’s Catiline.
+
+v. 85. Lucan.] Phars. l. ix. 766 and 793.
+
+v. 87. Ovid.] Metam. l. iv. and v.
+
+v. 121. His sharpen’d visage.] Compare Milton, P. L. b. x. 511 &c.
+
+v. 131. Buoso.] He is said to have been of the Donati family.
+
+v. 138. Sciancato.] Puccio Sciancato, a noted robber, whose familly,
+Venturi says, he has not been able to discover.
+
+v. 140. Gaville.] Francesco Guercio Cavalcante was killed at Gaville,
+near Florence; and in revenge of his death several inhabitants of that
+district were put to death.
+
+CANTO XXVI
+
+
+v. 7. But if our minds.]
+
+ Namque sub Auroram, jam dormitante lucerna,
+
+ Somnia quo cerni tempore vera solent.
+
+ Ovid, Epist. xix
+
+The same poetical superstition is alluded to in the Purgatory,
+Cant. IX. and XXVII.
+
+v. 9. Shall feel what Prato.] The poet prognosticates the calamities
+which were soon to befal his native city, and which he says, even her
+nearest neighbor, Prato, would wish her. The calamities more
+particularly pointed at, are said to be the fall of a wooden bridge
+over the Arno, in May, 1304, where a large multitude were assembled to
+witness a representation of hell nnd the infernal torments, in
+consequence of which accident many lives were lost; and a conflagration
+that in the following month destroyed more than seventeen hundred
+houses, many ofthem sumptuous buildings. See G. Villani, Hist. l. viii.
+c. 70 and 71.
+
+v. 22. More than I am wont.] “When I reflect on the punishment allotted
+to those who do not give sincere and upright advice to others I am more
+anxious than ever not to abuse to so bad a purpose those talents,
+whatever they may be, which Nature, or rather Providence, has conferred
+on me.” It is probable that this declaration was the result of real
+feeling Textd have given great weight to any opinion or party he had
+espoused, and to whom indigence and exile might have offerred strong
+temptations to deviate from that line of conduct which a strict sense
+of duty prescribed.
+
+v. 35. as he, whose wrongs.] Kings, b. ii. c. ii.
+
+v. 54. ascending from that funeral pile.] The flame is said to
+have divided on the funeral pile which consumed tile bodies of
+Eteocles and Polynices, as if conscious of the enmity that
+actuated them while living.
+
+ Ecce iterum fratris, &c.
+
+ Statius, Theb. l. xii.
+
+ Ostendens confectas flamma, &c.
+
+ Lucan, Pharsal. l. 1. 145.
+
+v. 60. The ambush of the horse.] “The ambush of the wooden horse, that
+caused Aeneas to quit the city of Troy and seek his fortune in Italy,
+where his descendants founded the Roman empire.”
+
+v. 91. Caieta.] Virgil, Aeneid. l. vii. 1.
+
+v. 93. Nor fondness for my son] Imitated hp Tasso, G. L. c.
+viii.
+
+ Ne timor di fatica o di periglio,
+
+ Ne vaghezza del regno, ne pietade
+
+ Del vecchio genitor, si degno affetto
+
+ Intiepedir nel generoso petto.
+This imagined voyage of Ulysses into the Atlantic is alluded to
+by Pulci.
+
+ E sopratutto commendava Ulisse,
+
+ Che per veder nell’ altro mondo gisse.
+
+ Morg. Magg. c. xxv
+And by Tasso, G. L. c. xv. 25.
+
+v. 106. The strait pass.] The straits of Gibraltar.
+
+v. 122. Made our oars wings.l So Chiabrera, Cant. Eroiche. xiii Faro
+de’remi un volo. And Tasso Ibid. 26.
+
+v. 128. A mountain dim.] The mountain of Purgatorg
+
+CANTO XXVII.
+
+
+v. 6. The Sicilian Bull.] The engine of torture invented by Perillus,
+for the tyrant Phalaris.
+
+v. 26. Of the mountains there.] Montefeltro.
+
+v. 38. Polenta’s eagle.] Guido Novello da Polenta, who bore an eagle
+for his coat of arms. The name of Polenta was derived from a castle so
+called in the neighbourhood of Brittonoro. Cervia is a small maritime
+city, about fifteen miles to the south of Ravenna. Guido was the son of
+Ostasio da Polenta, and made himself master of Ravenna, in 1265. In
+1322 he was deprived of his sovereignty, and died at Bologna in the
+year following. This last and most munificent patron of Dante is
+himself enumerated, by the historian of Italian literature, among the
+poets of his time. Tiraboschi, Storia della Lett. Ital. t. v. 1. iii.
+c. ii. 13. The passnge in the text might have removed the uncertainty
+wwhich Tiraboschi expressed, respecting the duration of Guido’s absence
+from Ravenna, when he was driven from that city in 1295, by the arms of
+Pietro, archbishop of Monreale. It must evidently have been very short,
+since his government is here represented (in 1300) as not having
+suffered any material disturbance for many years.
+
+v. 41. The land.l The territory of Forli, the inhabitants of which, in
+1282, mere enabled, hy the strategem of Guido da Montefeltro, who then
+governed it, to defeat with great slaughter the French army by which it
+had been besieged. See G. Villani, l. vii. c. 81. The poet informs
+Guido, its former ruler, that it is now in the possession of Sinibaldo
+Ordolaffi, or Ardelaffi, whom he designates by his coat of arms, a lion
+vert.
+
+v. 43. The old mastiff of Verucchio and the young.] Malatesta and
+Malatestino his son, lords of Rimini, called, from their ferocity, the
+mastiffs of Verruchio, which was the name of their castle.
+
+v. 44. Montagna.] Montagna de’Parcitati, a noble knight, and leader of
+the Ghibelline party at Rimini, murdered by Malatestino.
+
+v. 46. Lamone’s city and Santerno’s.] Lamone is the river at Faenza,
+and Santerno at Imola.
+
+v. 47. The lion of the snowy lair.] Machinardo Pagano, whose arms were
+a lion azure on a field argent; mentioned again in the Purgatory, Canto
+XIV. 122. See G. Villani passim, where he is called Machinardo da
+Susinana.
+
+v. 50. Whose flank is wash’d of SSavio’s wave.] Cesena, situated at the
+foot of a mountain, and washed by the river Savio, that often descends
+with a swoln and rapid stream from the Appenine.
+
+v. 64. A man of arms.] Guido da Montefeltro.
+
+v. 68. The high priest.] Boniface VIII.
+
+v. 72. The nature of the lion than the fox.] Non furon leonine ma di
+volpe. So Pulci, Morg. Magg. c. xix.
+
+ E furon le sua opre e le sue colpe
+
+ Non creder leonine ma di volpe.
+
+v. 81. The chief of the new Pharisee.] Boniface VIII. whose enmity to
+the family of Colonna prompted him to destroy their houses near the
+Lateran. Wishing to obtain possession of their other seat, Penestrino,
+he consulted with Guido da Montefeltro how he might accomplish his
+purpose, offering him at the same time absolution for his past sins, as
+well as for that which he was then tempting him to commit. Guido’s
+advice was, that kind words and fair promises nonld put his enemies
+into his power; and they accordingly soon aftermards fell into the
+snare laid for them, A.D. 1298. See G. Villani, l. viii. c. 23.
+
+v. 84. Nor against Acre one Had fought.] He alludes to the renegade
+Christians, by whom the Saracens, in Apri., 1291, were assisted to
+recover St.John d’Acre, the last possession of the Christians in the
+Iloly Land. The regret expressed by the Florentine annalist G. Villani,
+for the loss of this valuable fortress, is well worthy of observation,
+l. vii. c. 144.
+
+v. 89. As in Soracte Constantine besought.] So in Dante’s treatise De
+Monarchia: “Dicunt quidam adhue, quod Constantinus Imperator, mundatus
+a lepra intercessione Syvestri, tunc summni pontificis imperii sedem,
+scilicet Romam, donavit ecclesiae, cum multis allis imperii
+dignitatibus.” Lib.iii.
+
+v. 101. My predecessor.] Celestine V. See Notes to Canto III.
+
+CANTO XXVIII.
+
+
+v.8. In that long war.] The war of Hannibal in Italy. “When Mago
+brought news of his victories to Carthage, in order to make his
+successes more easily credited, he commanded the golden rings to be
+poured out in the senate house, which made so large a heap, that, as
+some relate, they filled three modii and a half. A more probable
+account represents them not to have exceeded one modius.” Livy, Hist.
+
+v. 12. Guiscard’s Norman steel.] Robert Guiscard, who conquered the
+kingdom of Naples, and died in 1110. G. Villani, l. iv. c. 18. He is
+introduced in the Paradise, Canto XVIII.
+
+v. 13. And those the rest.] The army of Manfredi, which, through the
+treachery of the Apulian troops, wns overcome by Charles of Anjou in
+1205, and fell in such numbers that the bones of the slain were still
+gathered near Ceperano. G. Villani, l. vii. c. 9. See the Purgatory,
+Canto III.
+
+v. 10. O Tagliocozzo.] He alludes to tile victory which Charles gained
+over Conradino, by the sage advice of the Sieur de Valeri, in 1208. G.
+Villani, l. vii. c. 27.
+
+v. 32. Ali.] The disciple of Mohammed.
+
+v. 53. Dolcino.] “In 1305, a friar, called Dolcino, who belonged to no
+regular order, contrived to raise in Novarra, in Lombardy, a large
+company of the meaner sort of people, declaring himself to be a true
+apostle of Christ, and promulgating a community of property and of
+wives, with many other such heretical doctrines. He blamed the pope,
+cardinals, and other prelates of the holy church, for not observing
+their duty, nor leading the angelic life, and affirmed that he ought to
+be pope. He was followed by more than three thousand men and women, who
+lived promiscuously on the mountains together, like beasts, and, when
+they wanted provisions, supplied themselves by depredation and rapine.
+This lasted for two years till, many being struck with compunction at
+the dissolute life they led, his sect was much diminished; and through
+failure of food, and the severity of the snows, he was taken by the
+people of Novarra, and burnt, with Margarita his companion and many
+other men and women whom his errors had seduced.” G. Villanni, l. viii.
+c. 84.
+
+Landino observes, that he was possessed of singular eloquence, and that
+both he and Margarita endored their fate with a firmness worthy of a
+better cause. For a further account of him, see Muratori Rer. Ital.
+Script. t. ix. p. 427.
+
+v. 69. Medicina.] A place in the territory of Bologna. Piero fomented
+dissensions among the inhabitants of that city, and among the leaders
+of the neighbouring states.
+
+v. 70. The pleasant land.] Lombardy.
+
+v. 72. The twain.] Guido dal Cassero and Angiolello da Cagnano, two of
+the worthiest and most distinguished citizens of Fano, were invited by
+Malatestino da Rimini to an entertainment on pretence that he had some
+important business to transact with them: and, according to
+instructions given by him, they mere drowned in their passage near
+Catolica, between Rimini and Fano.
+
+v. 85. Focara’s wind.] Focara is a mountain, from which a wind blows
+that is peculiarly dangerous to the navigators of that coast.
+
+v. 94. The doubt in Caesar’s mind.] Curio, whose speech (according to
+Lucan) determined Julius Caesar to proceed when he had arrived at
+Rimini (the ancient Ariminum), and doubted whether he should prosecute
+the civil war. Tolle moras: semper nocuit differre paratis Pharsal, l.
+i. 281.
+
+v. 102. Mosca.] Buondelmonte was engaged to marry a lady of the Amidei
+family, but broke his promise and united himself to one of the Donati.
+This was so much resented by the former, that a meeting of themselves
+and their kinsmen was held, to consider of the best means of revenging
+the insult. Mosca degli Uberti persuaded them to resolve on the
+assassination of Buondelmonte, exclaiming to them “the thing once done,
+there is an end.” The counsel and its effects were the source of many
+terrible calamities to the state of Florence. “This murder,” says G.
+Villani, l. v. c. 38, “was the cause and beginning of the accursed
+Guelph and Ghibelline parties in Florence.” It happened in 1215. See
+the Paradise, Canto XVI. 139.
+
+v. 111. The boon companion.] What stronger breastplate than a heart
+untainted? Shakespeare, 2 Hen. VI. a. iii. s. 2.
+
+v. 160. Bertrand.] Bertrand de Born, Vicomte de Hautefort, near
+Perigueux in Guienne, who incited John to rebel against his father,
+Henry II. of England. Bertrand holds a distinguished place among the
+Provencal poets. He is quoted in Dante, “De Vulg. Eloq.” l. ii. c. 2.
+For the translation of some extracts from his poems, see Millot, Hist.
+Litteraire des Troubadors t. i. p. 210; but the historical parts of
+that work are, I believe, not to be relied on.
+
+CANTO XXIX.
+
+
+v. 26. Geri of Bello.] A kinsman of the Poet’s, who was murdered by one
+of the Sacchetti family. His being placed here, may be considered as a
+proof that Dante was more impartial in the allotment of his punishments
+than has generally been supposed.
+
+v. 44. As were the torment.] It is very probable that these
+lines gave Milton the idea of his celebrated description:
+
+ Immediately a place
+
+ Before their eyes appear’d, sad, noisome, dark,
+
+ A lasar-house it seem’d, wherein were laid
+
+ Numbers of all diseas’d, all maladies, &c.
+
+ P. L. b. xi. 477.
+
+v. 45. Valdichiana.] The valley through which passes the river Chiana,
+bounded by Arezzo, Cortona, Montepulciano, and Chiusi. In the heat of
+autumn it was formerly rendered unwholesome by the stagnation of the
+water, but has since been drained by the Emperor Leopold II. The Chiana
+is mentioned as a remarkably sluggish stream, in the Paradise, Canto
+XIII. 21.
+
+v. 47. Maremma’s pestilent fen.] See Note to Canto XXV. v. 18.
+
+v. 58. In Aegina.] He alludes to the fable of the ants changed into
+Myrmidons. Ovid, Met. 1. vii.
+
+v. 104. Arezzo was my dwelling.] Grifolino of Arezzo, who promised
+Albero, son of the Bishop of Sienna, that he would teach him the art of
+flying; and because be did not keep his promise, Albero prevailed on
+his father to have him burnt for a necromancer.
+
+v. 117.
+
+ Was ever race
+
+ Light as Sienna’s?]
+The same imputation is again cast on the Siennese, Purg. Canto
+XIII. 141.
+
+v. 121. Stricca.] This is said ironically. Stricca, Niccolo Salimbeni,
+Caccia of Asciano, and Abbagliato, or Meo de Folcacchieri, belonged to
+a company of prodigal and luxurious young men in Sienna, called the
+“brigata godereccia.” Niccolo was the inventor of a new manner of using
+cloves in cookery, not very well understood by the commentators, and
+which was termed the “costuma ricca.”
+
+v. 125. In that garden.] Sienna.
+
+v. 134. Cappocchio’s ghost.] Capocchio of Sienna, who is said to have
+been a fellow-student of Dante’s in natural philosophy.
+
+CANTO XXX.
+
+
+v. 4. Athamas.] From Ovid, Metam. 1. iv. Protinos Aelides, &c.
+
+v. 16. Hecuba. See Euripedes, Hecuba; and Ovid, Metnm. l. xiii.
+
+v. 33. Schicchi.] Gianni Schicci, who was of the family of Cavalcanti,
+possessed such a faculty of moulding his features to the resemblance of
+others, that he was employed by Simon Donati to personate Buoso Donati,
+then recently deceased, and to make a will, leaving Simon his heir; for
+which service he was renumerated with a mare of extraordinary value,
+here called “the lady of the herd.”
+
+v. 39. Myrrha.] See Ovid, Metam. l. x.
+
+v. 60. Adamo’s woe.] Adamo of Breschia, at the instigation of Cuido
+Alessandro, and their brother Aghinulfo, lords of Romena, coonterfeited
+the coin of Florence; for which crime he was burnt. Landino says, that
+in his time the peasants still pointed out a pile of stones near Romena
+as the place of his execution.
+
+v. 64. Casentino.] Romena is a part of Casentino.
+
+v. 77. Branda’s limpid spring.] A fountain in Sienna.
+
+v. 88. The florens with three carats of alloy.] The floren was a coin
+that ought to have had tmenty-four carats of pure gold. Villani
+relates, that it was first used at Florence in 1253, an aera of great
+prosperity in the annals of the republic; before which time their most
+valuable coinage was of silver. Hist. l. vi. c. 54.
+
+v. 98. The false accuser.] Potiphar’s wife.
+
+CANTO XXXI.
+
+
+v. 1. The very tongue.] Vulnus in Herculeo quae quondam fecerat hoste
+Vulneris auxilium Pellas hasta fuit. Ovid, Rem. Amor. 47. The same
+allusion was made by Bernard de Ventadour, a Provencal poet in the
+middle of the twelfth century: and Millot observes, that it was a
+singular instance of erudition in a Troubadour. But it is not
+impossible, as Warton remarks, (Hist. of Engl. Poetry, vol. ii. sec. x.
+p 215.) but that he might have been indebted for it to some of the
+early romances.
+
+In Chaucer’s Squier’s Tale, a sword of similar quality is
+introduced:
+
+ And other folk have wondred on the sweard,
+
+ That could so piercen through every thing;
+
+ And fell in speech of Telephus the king,
+
+ And of Achillcs for his queint spere,
+
+ For he couth with it both heale and dere.
+So Shakspeare, Henry VI. p. ii. a. 5. s. 1.
+
+ Whose smile and frown like to Achilles’ spear
+
+ Is able with the change to kill and cure.
+
+v. 14. Orlando.l When Charlemain with all his peerage fell At
+Fontarabia Milton, P. L. b. i. 586. See Warton’s Hist. of Eng. Poetrg,
+v. i. sect. iii. p. 132. “This is the horn which Orlando won from the
+giant Jatmund, and which as Turpin and the Islandic bards report, was
+endued with magical power, and might be heard at the distance of twenty
+miles.” Charlemain and Orlando are introduced in the Paradise, Canto
+XVIII.
+
+v. 36. Montereggnon.] A castle near Sienna.
+
+v. 105. The fortunate vale.] The country near Carthage. See Liv. Hist.
+l. xxx. and Lucan, Phars. l. iv. 590. Dante has kept the latter of
+these writers in his eye throughout all this passage.
+
+v. 123. Alcides.] The combat between Hercules Antaeus is adduced by the
+Poet in his treatise “De Monarchia,” l. ii. as a proof of the judgment
+of God displayed in the duel, according to the singular superstition of
+those times.
+
+v. 128. The tower of Carisenda.] The leaning tower at Bologna
+
+CANTO XXXII.
+
+
+v. 8. A tongue not us’d To infant babbling.] Ne da lingua, che chiami
+mamma, o babbo. Dante in his treatise “ De Vulg. Eloq.” speaking of
+words not admissble in the loftier, or as he calls it, tragic style of
+poetry, says- “In quorum numero nec puerilia propter suam simplicitatem
+ut Mamma et Babbo,” l. ii. c. vii.
+
+v. 29. Tabernich or Pietrapana.] The one a mountain in Sclavonia, the
+other in that tract of country called the Garfagnana, not far from
+Lucca.
+
+v. 33. To where modest shame appears.] “As high as to the face.”
+
+v. 35. Moving their teeth in shrill note like the stork.] Mettendo i
+denti in nota di cicogna. So Boccaccio, G. viii. n. 7. “Lo scolar
+cattivello quasi cicogna divenuto si forte batteva i denti.”
+
+v. 53. Who are these two.] Alessandro and Napoleone, sons of Alberto
+Alberti, who murdered each other. They were proprietors of the valley
+of Falterona, where the Bisenzio has its source, a river that falls
+into the Arno about six miles from Florence.
+
+v. 59. Not him,] Mordrec, son of King Arthur.
+
+v. 60. Foccaccia.] Focaccia of Cancellieri, (the Pistoian family) whose
+atrocious act of revenge against his uncle is said to have given rise
+to the parties of the Bianchi and Neri, in the year 1300. See G.
+Villani, Hist. l, viii. c. 37. and Macchiavelli, Hist. l. ii. The
+account of the latter writer differs much from that given by Landino in
+his Commentary.
+
+v. 63. Mascheroni.] Sassol Mascheroni, a Florentiue, who also murdered
+his uncle.
+
+v. 66. Camiccione.] Camiccione de’ Pazzi of Valdarno, by whom his
+kinsman Ubertino was treacherously pnt to death.
+
+v. 67. Carlino.] One of the same family. He betrayed the Castel di
+Piano Travigne, in Valdarno, to the Florentines, after the refugees of
+the Bianca and Ghibelline party had defended it against a siege for
+twenty-nine days, in the summer of 1302. See G. Villani, l. viii. c. 52
+and Dino Compagni, l. ii.
+
+v. 81. Montaperto.] The defeat of the Guelfi at Montaperto, occasioned
+by the treachery of Bocca degli Abbati, who, during the engagement, cut
+off the hand of Giacopo del Vacca de’Pazzi, bearer of the Florentine
+standard. G. Villani, l. vi. c. 80, and Notes to Canto X. This event
+happened in 1260.
+
+v. 113. Him of Duera.] Buoso of Cremona, of the family of Duera, who
+was bribed by Guy de Montfort, to leave a pass between Piedmont and
+Parma, with the defence of which he had been entrusted by the
+Ghibellines, open to the army of Charles of Anjou, A.D. 1265, at which
+the people of Cremona were so enraged, that they extirpated the whole
+family. G. Villani, l. vii. c. 4.
+
+v. 118. Beccaria.] Abbot of Vallombrosa, who was the Pope’s Legate at
+Florence, where his intrigues in favour of the Ghibellines being
+discovered, he was beheaded. I do not find the occurrence in Vallini,
+nor do the commentators say to what pope he was legate. By Landino he
+is reported to have been from Parma, by Vellutello from Pavia.
+
+v. 118. Soldanieri.] “Gianni Soldanieri,” says Villani, Hist. l. vii.
+c14, “put himself at the head of the people, in the hopes of rising
+into power, not aware that the result would be mischief to the
+Ghibelline party, and his own ruin; an event which seems ever to have
+befallen him, who has headed the populace in Florence.” A.D. 1266.
+
+v. 119. Ganellon.] The betrayer of Charlemain, mentioned by Archbishop
+Turpin. He is a common instance of treachery with the poets of the
+middle ages. Trop son fol e mal pensant, Pis valent que Guenelon.
+Thibaut, roi de Navarre O new Scariot, and new Ganilion, O false
+dissembler, &c. Chaucer, Nonne’s Prieste’s Tale And in the Monke’s
+Tale, Peter of Spaine. v. 119. Tribaldello.] Tribaldello de’Manfredi,
+who was bribed to betray the city of Faonza, A. D. 1282. G. Villani, l.
+vii. c. 80
+
+v. 128. Tydeus.] See Statius, Theb. l. viii. ad finem.
+
+CANTO XXXIII.
+
+
+v. 14. Count Ugolino.] “In the year 1288, in the month of July, Pisa
+was much divided by competitors for the sovereignty; one party,
+composed of certain of the Guelphi, being headed by the Judge Nino di
+Gallura de’Visconti; another, consisting of others of the same faction,
+by the Count Ugolino de’ Gherardeschi; and the third by the Archbishop
+Ruggieri degli Ubaldini, with the Lanfranchi, Sismondi, Gualandi, and
+other Ghibelline houses. The Count Ugolino,to effect his purpose,
+united with the Archbishop and his party, and having betrayed Nino, his
+sister’s son, they contrived that he and his followers should either be
+driven out of Pisa, or their persons seized. Nino hearing this, and not
+seeing any means of defending himself, retired to Calci, his castle,
+and formed an alliance with the Florentines and people of Lucca,
+against the Pisans. The Count, before Nino was gone, in order to cover
+his treachery, when everything was settled for his expulsion, quitted
+Pisa, and repaired to a manor of his called Settimo; whence, as soon as
+he was informed of Nino’s departure, he returned to Pisa with great
+rejoicing and festivity, and was elevated to the supreme power with
+every demonstration of triumph and honour. But his greatness was not of
+long continuauce. It pleased the Almighty that a total reverse of
+fortune should ensue, as a punishment for his acts of treachery and
+guilt: for he was said to have poisoned the Count Anselmo da Capraia,
+his sister’s son, on account of the envy and fear excited in his mind
+by the high esteem in which the gracious manners of Anselmo were held
+by the Pisans. The power of the Guelphi being so much diminished, the
+Archbishop devised means to betray the Count Uglino and caused him to
+be suddenly attacked in his palace by the fury of the people, whom he
+had exasperated, by telling them that Ugolino had betrayed Pisa, and
+given up their castles to the citizens of Florence and of Lucca. He was
+immediately compelled to surrender; his bastard son and his grandson
+fell in the assault; and two of his sons, with their two sons also,
+were conveyed to prison.” G. Villani l. vii. c. 120.
+
+“In the following march, the Pisans, who had imprisoned the Count
+Uglino, with two of his sons and two of his grandchildren, the
+offspring of his son the Count Guelfo, in a tower on the Piazza of the
+Anzania, caused the tower to be locked, the key thrown into the Arno,
+and all food to be withheld from them. In a few days they died of
+hunger; but the Count first with loud cries declared his penitence, and
+yet neither priest nor friar was allowed to shrive him. All the five,
+when dead, were dragged out of the prison, and meanly interred; and
+from thence forward the tower was called the tower of famine, and so
+shall ever be.” Ibid. c. 127.
+
+Chancer has briefly told Ugolino’s story. See Monke’s Tale,
+Hugeline of Pise.
+
+v. 29. Unto the mountain.] The mountain S. Giuliano, between Pisa and
+Lucca.
+
+v. 59. Thou gav’st.]
+
+ Tu ne vestisti
+
+ Queste misere carni, e tu le spoglia.
+Imitated by Filicaja, Canz. iii.
+
+ Di questa imperial caduca spoglia
+
+ Tu, Signor, me vestisti e tu mi spoglia:
+
+ Ben puoi’l Regno me tor tu che me’l desti.
+And by Maffei, in the Merope:
+
+ Tu disciogleste
+
+ Queste misere membra e tu le annodi.
+
+v. 79. In that fair region.] Del bel paese la, dove’l si suona. Italy
+as explained by Dante himself, in his treatise De Vulg. Eloq. l. i. c.
+8. “Qui autem Si dicunt a praedictis finibus. (Januensiem) Oreintalem
+(Meridionalis Europae partem) tenent; videlicet usque ad promontorium
+illud Italiae, qua sinus Adriatici maris incipit et Siciliam.”
+
+v. 82. Capraia and Gorgona.] Small islands near the mouth of the Arno.
+
+v. 94. There very weeping suffers not to weep,] Lo pianto stesso li
+pianger non lascia. So Giusto de’Conti, Bella Mano. Son. “Quanto il
+ciel.” Che il troppo pianto a me pianger non lassa. v. 116. The friar
+Albigero.] Alberigo de’Manfredi, of Faenza, one of the Frati Godenti,
+Joyons Friars who having quarrelled with some of his brotherhood, under
+pretence of wishing to be reconciled, invited them to a banquet, at the
+conclusion of which he called for the fruit, a signal for the assassins
+to rush in and dispatch those whom he had marked for destruction.
+Hence, adds Landino, it is said proverbially of one who has been
+stabbed, that he has had some of the friar Alberigo’s fruit. Thus
+Pulci, Morg. Magg. c. xxv. Le frutte amare di frate Alberico.
+
+v. 123. Ptolomea.] This circle is named Ptolomea from Ptolemy, the son
+of Abubus, by whom Simon and his sons were murdered, at a great banquet
+he had made for them. See Maccabees, ch xvi.
+
+v. 126. The glazed tear-drops.]
+
+-sorrow’s eye, glazed with blinding tears. Shakspeare, Rich. II. a. 2.
+s. 2.
+
+v. 136. Branca Doria.] The family of Doria was possessed of great
+influence in Genoa. Branca is said to have murdered his father-in-law,
+Michel Zanche, introduced in Canto XXII.
+
+v. 162 Romagna’s darkest spirit.] The friar Alberigo.
+
+Canto XXXIV.
+
+v. 6. A wind-mill.] The author of the Caliph Vathek, in the notes to
+that tale, justly observes, that it is more than probable that Don
+Quixote’s mistake of the wind-mills for giants was suggested to
+Cervantes by this simile.
+
+v. 37. Three faces.] It can scarcely be doubted but that Milton derived
+his description of Satan in those lines,
+
+ Each passion dimm’d his face
+
+ Thrice chang’d with pale, ire, envy, and despair.
+
+ P. L. b. iv. 114.
+from this passage, coupled with the remark of Vellutello upon it:
+
+“The first of these sins is anger which he signifies by the red face;
+the second, represented by that between pale and yellow is envy and
+not, as others have said, avarice; and the third, denoted by the black,
+is a melancholy humour that causes a man’s thoughts to be dark and
+evil, and averse from all joy and tranquillity.”
+
+v. 44. Sails.]
+
+ —His sail-broad vans
+
+ He spreads for flight.
+
+ Milton, P. L. b. ii. 927.
+Compare Spenser, F. Q. b. i. c. xi. st. 10; Ben Jonson’s Every
+Man out of his humour, v. 7; and Fletcher’s Prophetess, a. 2. s.
+3.
+
+v. 46. Like a bat.] The description of an imaginary being, who is
+called Typhurgo, in the Zodiacus Vitae, has some touches very like this
+of Dante’s Lucifer.
+
+ Ingentem vidi regem ingentique sedentem
+
+ In solio, crines flammanti stemmate cinctum
+
+ —-utrinque patentes
+
+ Alae humeris magnae, quales vespertilionum
+
+ Membranis contextae amplis—
+
+ Nudus erat longis sed opertus corpora villis.
+
+ M. Palingenii, Zod. Vit. l. ix.
+
+ A mighty king I might discerne,
+
+ Plac’d hie on lofty chaire,
+
+ His haire with fyry garland deckt
+
+ Puft up in fiendish wise.
+
+ x x x x x x
+
+ Large wings on him did grow
+
+ Framde like the wings of flinder mice, &c.
+
+ Googe’s Translation
+
+v. 61. Brutus.] Landino struggles, but I fear in vain, to extricate
+Brutus from the unworthy lot which is here assigned him. He maintains,
+that by Brutus and Cassius are not meant the individuals known by those
+names, but any who put a lawful monarch to death. Yet if Caesar was
+such, the conspirators might be regarded as deserving of their doom.
+
+v. 89. Within one hour and half of noon.] The poet uses the Hebrew
+manner of computing the day, according to which the third hour answers
+to our twelve o’clock at noon.
+
+v. 120. By what of firm land on this side appears.] The mountain of
+Purgatory.
+
+v.123. The vaulted tomb.] “La tomba.” This word is used to express the
+whole depth of the infernal region.
+
+
+
+
+PURGATORY
+
+
+
+
+CANTO I
+
+
+O’er better waves to speed her rapid course
+The light bark of my genius lifts the sail,
+Well pleas’d to leave so cruel sea behind;
+And of that second region will I sing,
+In which the human spirit from sinful blot
+Is purg’d, and for ascent to Heaven prepares.
+
+Here, O ye hallow’d Nine! for in your train
+I follow, here the deadened strain revive;
+Nor let Calliope refuse to sound
+A somewhat higher song, of that loud tone,
+Which when the wretched birds of chattering note
+Had heard, they of forgiveness lost all hope.
+
+Sweet hue of eastern sapphire, that was spread
+O’er the serene aspect of the pure air,
+High up as the first circle, to mine eyes
+Unwonted joy renew’d, soon as I ’scap’d
+Forth from the atmosphere of deadly gloom,
+That had mine eyes and bosom fill’d with grief.
+The radiant planet, that to love invites,
+Made all the orient laugh, and veil’d beneath
+The Pisces’ light, that in his escort came.
+
+To the right hand I turn’d, and fix’d my mind
+On the’ other pole attentive, where I saw
+Four stars ne’er seen before save by the ken
+Of our first parents. Heaven of their rays
+Seem’d joyous. O thou northern site, bereft
+Indeed, and widow’d, since of these depriv’d!
+
+As from this view I had desisted, straight
+Turning a little tow’rds the other pole,
+There from whence now the wain had disappear’d,
+I saw an old man standing by my side
+Alone, so worthy of rev’rence in his look,
+That ne’er from son to father more was ow’d.
+Low down his beard and mix’d with hoary white
+Descended, like his locks, which parting fell
+Upon his breast in double fold. The beams
+Of those four luminaries on his face
+So brightly shone, and with such radiance clear
+Deck’d it, that I beheld him as the sun.
+
+“Say who are ye, that stemming the blind stream,
+Forth from th’ eternal prison-house have fled?”
+He spoke and moved those venerable plumes.
+“Who hath conducted, or with lantern sure
+Lights you emerging from the depth of night,
+That makes the infernal valley ever black?
+Are the firm statutes of the dread abyss
+Broken, or in high heaven new laws ordain’d,
+That thus, condemn’d, ye to my caves approach?”
+
+My guide, then laying hold on me, by words
+And intimations given with hand and head,
+Made my bent knees and eye submissive pay
+Due reverence; then thus to him replied.
+
+“Not of myself I come; a Dame from heaven
+Descending, had besought me in my charge
+To bring. But since thy will implies, that more
+Our true condition I unfold at large,
+Mine is not to deny thee thy request.
+This mortal ne’er hath seen the farthest gloom.
+But erring by his folly had approach’d
+So near, that little space was left to turn.
+Then, as before I told, I was dispatch’d
+To work his rescue, and no way remain’d
+Save this which I have ta’en. I have display’d
+Before him all the regions of the bad;
+And purpose now those spirits to display,
+That under thy command are purg’d from sin.
+How I have brought him would be long to say.
+From high descends the virtue, by whose aid
+I to thy sight and hearing him have led.
+Now may our coming please thee. In the search
+Of liberty he journeys: that how dear
+They know, who for her sake have life refus’d.
+Thou knowest, to whom death for her was sweet
+In Utica, where thou didst leave those weeds,
+That in the last great day will shine so bright.
+For us the’ eternal edicts are unmov’d:
+He breathes, and I am free of Minos’ power,
+Abiding in that circle where the eyes
+Of thy chaste Marcia beam, who still in look
+Prays thee, O hallow’d spirit! to own her shine.
+Then by her love we’ implore thee, let us pass
+Through thy sev’n regions; for which best thanks
+I for thy favour will to her return,
+If mention there below thou not disdain.”
+
+“Marcia so pleasing in my sight was found,”
+He then to him rejoin’d, “while I was there,
+That all she ask’d me I was fain to grant.
+Now that beyond the’ accursed stream she dwells,
+She may no longer move me, by that law,
+Which was ordain’d me, when I issued thence.
+Not so, if Dame from heaven, as thou sayst,
+Moves and directs thee; then no flattery needs.
+Enough for me that in her name thou ask.
+Go therefore now: and with a slender reed
+See that thou duly gird him, and his face
+Lave, till all sordid stain thou wipe from thence.
+For not with eye, by any cloud obscur’d,
+Would it be seemly before him to come,
+Who stands the foremost minister in heaven.
+This islet all around, there far beneath,
+Where the wave beats it, on the oozy bed
+Produces store of reeds. No other plant,
+Cover’d with leaves, or harden’d in its stalk,
+There lives, not bending to the water’s sway.
+After, this way return not; but the sun
+Will show you, that now rises, where to take
+The mountain in its easiest ascent.”
+
+He disappear’d; and I myself uprais’d
+Speechless, and to my guide retiring close,
+Toward him turn’d mine eyes. He thus began;
+“My son! observant thou my steps pursue.
+We must retreat to rearward, for that way
+The champain to its low extreme declines.”
+
+The dawn had chas’d the matin hour of prime,
+Which deaf before it, so that from afar
+I spy’d the trembling of the ocean stream.
+
+We travers’d the deserted plain, as one
+Who, wander’d from his track, thinks every step
+Trodden in vain till he regain the path.
+
+When we had come, where yet the tender dew
+Strove with the sun, and in a place, where fresh
+The wind breath’d o’er it, while it slowly dried;
+Both hands extended on the watery grass
+My master plac’d, in graceful act and kind.
+Whence I of his intent before appriz’d,
+Stretch’d out to him my cheeks suffus’d with tears.
+There to my visage he anew restor’d
+That hue, which the dun shades of hell conceal’d.
+
+Then on the solitary shore arriv’d,
+That never sailing on its waters saw
+Man, that could after measure back his course,
+He girt me in such manner as had pleas’d
+Him who instructed, and O, strange to tell!
+As he selected every humble plant,
+Wherever one was pluck’d, another there
+Resembling, straightway in its place arose.
+
+
+
+
+CANTO II
+
+
+Now had the sun to that horizon reach’d,
+That covers, with the most exalted point
+Of its meridian circle, Salem’s walls,
+And night, that opposite to him her orb
+Sounds, from the stream of Ganges issued forth,
+Holding the scales, that from her hands are dropp’d
+When she reigns highest: so that where I was,
+Aurora’s white and vermeil-tinctur’d cheek
+To orange turn’d as she in age increas’d.
+
+Meanwhile we linger’d by the water’s brink,
+Like men, who, musing on their road, in thought
+Journey, while motionless the body rests.
+When lo! as near upon the hour of dawn,
+Through the thick vapours Mars with fiery beam
+Glares down in west, over the ocean floor;
+So seem’d, what once again I hope to view,
+A light so swiftly coming through the sea,
+No winged course might equal its career.
+From which when for a space I had withdrawn
+Thine eyes, to make inquiry of my guide,
+Again I look’d and saw it grown in size
+And brightness: thou on either side appear’d
+Something, but what I knew not of bright hue,
+And by degrees from underneath it came
+Another. My preceptor silent yet
+Stood, while the brightness, that we first discern’d,
+Open’d the form of wings: then when he knew
+The pilot, cried aloud, “Down, down; bend low
+Thy knees; behold God’s angel: fold thy hands:
+Now shalt thou see true Ministers indeed.
+Lo how all human means he sets at naught!
+So that nor oar he needs, nor other sail
+Except his wings, between such distant shores.
+Lo how straight up to heaven he holds them rear’d,
+Winnowing the air with those eternal plumes,
+That not like mortal hairs fall off or change!”
+
+As more and more toward us came, more bright
+Appear’d the bird of God, nor could the eye
+Endure his splendor near: I mine bent down.
+He drove ashore in a small bark so swift
+And light, that in its course no wave it drank.
+The heav’nly steersman at the prow was seen,
+Visibly written blessed in his looks.
+Within a hundred spirits and more there sat.
+“In Exitu Israel de Aegypto;”
+All with one voice together sang, with what
+In the remainder of that hymn is writ.
+Then soon as with the sign of holy cross
+He bless’d them, they at once leap’d out on land,
+The swiftly as he came return’d. The crew,
+There left, appear’d astounded with the place,
+Gazing around as one who sees new sights.
+
+From every side the sun darted his beams,
+And with his arrowy radiance from mid heav’n
+Had chas’d the Capricorn, when that strange tribe
+Lifting their eyes towards us: If ye know,
+Declare what path will Lead us to the mount.”
+
+Them Virgil answer’d. “Ye suppose perchance
+Us well acquainted with this place: but here,
+We, as yourselves, are strangers. Not long erst
+We came, before you but a little space,
+By other road so rough and hard, that now
+The’ ascent will seem to us as play.” The spirits,
+Who from my breathing had perceiv’d I liv’d,
+Grew pale with wonder. As the multitude
+Flock round a herald, sent with olive branch,
+To hear what news he brings, and in their haste
+Tread one another down, e’en so at sight
+Of me those happy spirits were fix’d, each one
+Forgetful of its errand, to depart,
+Where cleans’d from sin, it might be made all fair.
+
+Then one I saw darting before the rest
+With such fond ardour to embrace me, I
+To do the like was mov’d. O shadows vain
+Except in outward semblance! thrice my hands
+I clasp’d behind it, they as oft return’d
+Empty into my breast again. Surprise
+I needs must think was painted in my looks,
+For that the shadow smil’d and backward drew.
+To follow it I hasten’d, but with voice
+Of sweetness it enjoin’d me to desist.
+Then who it was I knew, and pray’d of it,
+To talk with me, it would a little pause.
+It answered: “Thee as in my mortal frame
+I lov’d, so loos’d forth it I love thee still,
+And therefore pause; but why walkest thou here?”
+
+“Not without purpose once more to return,
+Thou find’st me, my Casella, where I am
+Journeying this way;” I said, “but how of thee
+Hath so much time been lost?” He answer’d straight:
+“No outrage hath been done to me, if he
+Who when and whom he chooses takes, me oft
+This passage hath denied, since of just will
+His will he makes. These three months past indeed,
+He, whose chose to enter, with free leave
+Hath taken; whence I wand’ring by the shore
+Where Tyber’s wave grows salt, of him gain’d kind
+Admittance, at that river’s mouth, tow’rd which
+His wings are pointed, for there always throng
+All such as not to Archeron descend.”
+
+Then I: “If new laws have not quite destroy’d
+Memory and use of that sweet song of love,
+That while all my cares had power to ’swage;
+Please thee with it a little to console
+My spirit, that incumber’d with its frame,
+Travelling so far, of pain is overcome.”
+
+“Love that discourses in my thoughts.” He then
+Began in such soft accents, that within
+The sweetness thrills me yet. My gentle guide
+And all who came with him, so well were pleas’d,
+That seem’d naught else might in their thoughts have room.
+
+Fast fix’d in mute attention to his notes
+We stood, when lo! that old man venerable
+Exclaiming, “How is this, ye tardy spirits?
+What negligence detains you loit’ring here?
+Run to the mountain to cast off those scales,
+That from your eyes the sight of God conceal.”
+
+As a wild flock of pigeons, to their food
+Collected, blade or tares, without their pride
+Accustom’d, and in still and quiet sort,
+If aught alarm them, suddenly desert
+Their meal, assail’d by more important care;
+So I that new-come troop beheld, the song
+Deserting, hasten to the mountain’s side,
+As one who goes yet where he tends knows not.
+
+Nor with less hurried step did we depart.
+
+
+
+
+CANTO III
+
+
+Them sudden flight had scatter’d over the plain,
+Turn’d tow’rds the mountain, whither reason’s voice
+Drives us; I to my faithful company
+Adhering, left it not. For how of him
+Depriv’d, might I have sped, or who beside
+Would o’er the mountainous tract have led my steps
+He with the bitter pang of self-remorse
+Seem’d smitten. O clear conscience and upright
+How doth a little fling wound thee sore!
+
+Soon as his feet desisted (slack’ning pace),
+From haste, that mars all decency of act,
+My mind, that in itself before was wrapt,
+Its thoughts expanded, as with joy restor’d:
+And full against the steep ascent I set
+My face, where highest to heav’n its top o’erflows.
+
+The sun, that flar’d behind, with ruddy beam
+Before my form was broken; for in me
+His rays resistance met. I turn’d aside
+With fear of being left, when I beheld
+Only before myself the ground obscur’d.
+When thus my solace, turning him around,
+Bespake me kindly: “Why distrustest thou?
+Believ’st not I am with thee, thy sure guide?
+It now is evening there, where buried lies
+The body, in which I cast a shade, remov’d
+To Naples from Brundusium’s wall. Nor thou
+Marvel, if before me no shadow fall,
+More than that in the sky element
+One ray obstructs not other. To endure
+Torments of heat and cold extreme, like frames
+That virtue hath dispos’d, which how it works
+Wills not to us should be reveal’d. Insane
+Who hopes, our reason may that space explore,
+Which holds three persons in one substance knit.
+Seek not the wherefore, race of human kind;
+Could ye have seen the whole, no need had been
+For Mary to bring forth. Moreover ye
+Have seen such men desiring fruitlessly;
+To whose desires repose would have been giv’n,
+That now but serve them for eternal grief.
+I speak of Plato, and the Stagyrite,
+And others many more.” And then he bent
+Downwards his forehead, and in troubled mood
+Broke off his speech. Meanwhile we had arriv’d
+Far as the mountain’s foot, and there the rock
+Found of so steep ascent, that nimblest steps
+To climb it had been vain. The most remote
+Most wild untrodden path, in all the tract
+’Twixt Lerice and Turbia were to this
+A ladder easy’ and open of access.
+
+“Who knows on which hand now the steep declines?”
+My master said and paus’d, “so that he may
+Ascend, who journeys without aid of wine,?”
+And while with looks directed to the ground
+The meaning of the pathway he explor’d,
+And I gaz’d upward round the stony height,
+Of spirits, that toward us mov’d their steps,
+Yet moving seem’d not, they so slow approach’d.
+
+I thus my guide address’d: “Upraise thine eyes,
+Lo that way some, of whom thou may’st obtain
+Counsel, if of thyself thou find’st it not!”
+
+Straightway he look’d, and with free speech replied:
+“Let us tend thither: they but softly come.
+And thou be firm in hope, my son belov’d.”
+
+Now was that people distant far in space
+A thousand paces behind ours, as much
+As at a throw the nervous arm could fling,
+When all drew backward on the messy crags
+Of the steep bank, and firmly stood unmov’d
+As one who walks in doubt might stand to look.
+
+“O spirits perfect! O already chosen!”
+Virgil to them began, “by that blest peace,
+Which, as I deem, is for you all prepar’d,
+Instruct us where the mountain low declines,
+So that attempt to mount it be not vain.
+For who knows most, him loss of time most grieves.”
+
+As sheep, that step from forth their fold, by one,
+Or pairs, or three at once; meanwhile the rest
+Stand fearfully, bending the eye and nose
+To ground, and what the foremost does, that do
+The others, gath’ring round her, if she stops,
+Simple and quiet, nor the cause discern;
+So saw I moving to advance the first,
+Who of that fortunate crew were at the head,
+Of modest mien and graceful in their gait.
+When they before me had beheld the light
+From my right side fall broken on the ground,
+So that the shadow reach’d the cave, they stopp’d
+And somewhat back retir’d: the same did all,
+Who follow’d, though unweeting of the cause
+
+“Unask’d of you, yet freely I confess,
+This is a human body which ye see.
+That the sun’s light is broken on the ground,
+Marvel not: but believe, that not without
+Virtue deriv’d from Heaven, we to climb
+Over this wall aspire.” So them bespake
+My master; and that virtuous tribe rejoin’d;
+“ Turn, and before you there the entrance lies,”
+Making a signal to us with bent hands.
+
+Then of them one began. “Whoe’er thou art,
+Who journey’st thus this way, thy visage turn,
+Think if me elsewhere thou hast ever seen.”
+
+I tow’rds him turn’d, and with fix’d eye beheld.
+Comely, and fair, and gentle of aspect,
+He seem’d, but on one brow a gash was mark’d.
+
+When humbly I disclaim’d to have beheld
+Him ever: “Now behold!” he said, and show’d
+High on his breast a wound: then smiling spake.
+
+“I am Manfredi, grandson to the Queen
+Costanza: whence I pray thee, when return’d,
+To my fair daughter go, the parent glad
+Of Aragonia and Sicilia’s pride;
+And of the truth inform her, if of me
+Aught else be told. When by two mortal blows
+My frame was shatter’d, I betook myself
+Weeping to him, who of free will forgives.
+My sins were horrible; but so wide arms
+Hath goodness infinite, that it receives
+All who turn to it. Had this text divine
+Been of Cosenza’s shepherd better scann’d,
+Who then by Clement on my hunt was set,
+Yet at the bridge’s head my bones had lain,
+Near Benevento, by the heavy mole
+Protected; but the rain now drenches them,
+And the wind drives, out of the kingdom’s bounds,
+Far as the stream of Verde, where, with lights
+Extinguish’d, he remov’d them from their bed.
+Yet by their curse we are not so destroy’d,
+But that the eternal love may turn, while hope
+Retains her verdant blossoms. True it is,
+That such one as in contumacy dies
+Against the holy church, though he repent,
+Must wander thirty-fold for all the time
+In his presumption past; if such decree
+Be not by prayers of good men shorter made
+Look therefore if thou canst advance my bliss;
+Revealing to my good Costanza, how
+Thou hast beheld me, and beside the terms
+Laid on me of that interdict; for here
+By means of those below much profit comes.”
+
+
+
+
+CANTO IV
+
+
+When by sensations of delight or pain,
+That any of our faculties hath seiz’d,
+Entire the soul collects herself, it seems
+She is intent upon that power alone,
+And thus the error is disprov’d which holds
+The soul not singly lighted in the breast.
+And therefore when as aught is heard or seen,
+That firmly keeps the soul toward it turn’d,
+Time passes, and a man perceives it not.
+For that, whereby he hearken, is one power,
+Another that, which the whole spirit hash;
+This is as it were bound, while that is free.
+
+This found I true by proof, hearing that spirit
+And wond’ring; for full fifty steps aloft
+The sun had measur’d unobserv’d of me,
+When we arriv’d where all with one accord
+The spirits shouted, “Here is what ye ask.”
+
+A larger aperture ofttimes is stopp’d
+With forked stake of thorn by villager,
+When the ripe grape imbrowns, than was the path,
+By which my guide, and I behind him close,
+Ascended solitary, when that troop
+Departing left us. On Sanleo’s road
+Who journeys, or to Noli low descends,
+Or mounts Bismantua’s height, must use his feet;
+But here a man had need to fly, I mean
+With the swift wing and plumes of high desire,
+Conducted by his aid, who gave me hope,
+And with light furnish’d to direct my way.
+
+We through the broken rock ascended, close
+Pent on each side, while underneath the ground
+Ask’d help of hands and feet. When we arriv’d
+Near on the highest ridge of the steep bank,
+Where the plain level open’d I exclaim’d,
+“O master! say which way can we proceed?”
+
+He answer’d, “Let no step of thine recede.
+Behind me gain the mountain, till to us
+Some practis’d guide appear.” That eminence
+Was lofty that no eye might reach its point,
+And the side proudly rising, more than line
+From the mid quadrant to the centre drawn.
+I wearied thus began: “Parent belov’d!
+Turn, and behold how I remain alone,
+If thou stay not.”—” My son!” He straight reply’d,
+“Thus far put forth thy strength; “and to a track
+Pointed, that, on this side projecting, round
+Circles the hill. His words so spurr’d me on,
+That I behind him clamb’ring, forc’d myself,
+Till my feet press’d the circuit plain beneath.
+There both together seated, turn’d we round
+To eastward, whence was our ascent: and oft
+Many beside have with delight look’d back.
+
+First on the nether shores I turn’d my eyes,
+Then rais’d them to the sun, and wond’ring mark’d
+That from the left it smote us. Soon perceiv’d
+That Poet sage how at the car of light
+Amaz’d I stood, where ’twixt us and the north
+Its course it enter’d. Whence he thus to me:
+“Were Leda’s offspring now in company
+Of that broad mirror, that high up and low
+Imparts his light beneath, thou might’st behold
+The ruddy zodiac nearer to the bears
+Wheel, if its ancient course it not forsook.
+How that may be if thou would’st think; within
+Pond’ring, imagine Sion with this mount
+Plac’d on the earth, so that to both be one
+Horizon, and two hemispheres apart,
+Where lies the path that Phaeton ill knew
+To guide his erring chariot: thou wilt see
+How of necessity by this on one
+He passes, while by that on the’ other side,
+If with clear view shine intellect attend.”
+
+“Of truth, kind teacher!” I exclaim’d, “so clear
+Aught saw I never, as I now discern
+Where seem’d my ken to fail, that the mid orb
+Of the supernal motion (which in terms
+Of art is called the Equator, and remains
+Ever between the sun and winter) for the cause
+Thou hast assign’d, from hence toward the north
+Departs, when those who in the Hebrew land
+Inhabit, see it tow’rds the warmer part.
+But if it please thee, I would gladly know,
+How far we have to journey: for the hill
+Mounts higher, than this sight of mine can mount.”
+
+He thus to me: “Such is this steep ascent,
+That it is ever difficult at first,
+But, more a man proceeds, less evil grows.
+When pleasant it shall seem to thee, so much
+That upward going shall be easy to thee.
+As in a vessel to go down the tide,
+Then of this path thou wilt have reach’d the end.
+There hope to rest thee from thy toil. No more
+I answer, and thus far for certain know.”
+As he his words had spoken, near to us
+A voice there sounded: “Yet ye first perchance
+May to repose you by constraint be led.”
+At sound thereof each turn’d, and on the left
+A huge stone we beheld, of which nor I
+Nor he before was ware. Thither we drew,
+find there were some, who in the shady place
+Behind the rock were standing, as a man
+Thru’ idleness might stand. Among them one,
+Who seem’d to me much wearied, sat him down,
+And with his arms did fold his knees about,
+Holding his face between them downward bent.
+
+“Sweet Sir!” I cry’d, “behold that man, who shows
+Himself more idle, than if laziness
+Were sister to him.” Straight he turn’d to us,
+And, o’er the thigh lifting his face, observ’d,
+Then in these accents spake: “Up then, proceed
+Thou valiant one.” Straight who it was I knew;
+Nor could the pain I felt (for want of breath
+Still somewhat urg’d me) hinder my approach.
+And when I came to him, he scarce his head
+Uplifted, saying “Well hast thou discern’d,
+How from the left the sun his chariot leads.”
+
+His lazy acts and broken words my lips
+To laughter somewhat mov’d; when I began:
+“Belacqua, now for thee I grieve no more.
+But tell, why thou art seated upright there?
+Waitest thou escort to conduct thee hence?
+Or blame I only shine accustom’d ways?”
+Then he: “My brother, of what use to mount,
+When to my suffering would not let me pass
+The bird of God, who at the portal sits?
+Behooves so long that heav’n first bear me round
+Without its limits, as in life it bore,
+Because I to the end repentant Sighs
+Delay’d, if prayer do not aid me first,
+That riseth up from heart which lives in grace.
+What other kind avails, not heard in heaven?”
+
+Before me now the Poet up the mount
+Ascending, cried: “Haste thee, for see the sun
+Has touch’d the point meridian, and the night
+Now covers with her foot Marocco’s shore.”
+
+
+
+
+CANTO V
+
+
+Now had I left those spirits, and pursued
+The steps of my Conductor, when beheld
+Pointing the finger at me one exclaim’d:
+“See how it seems as if the light not shone
+From the left hand of him beneath, and he,
+As living, seems to be led on.” Mine eyes
+I at that sound reverting, saw them gaze
+Through wonder first at me, and then at me
+And the light broken underneath, by turns.
+“Why are thy thoughts thus riveted?” my guide
+Exclaim’d, “that thou hast slack’d thy pace? or how
+Imports it thee, what thing is whisper’d here?
+Come after me, and to their babblings leave
+The crowd. Be as a tower, that, firmly set,
+Shakes not its top for any blast that blows!
+He, in whose bosom thought on thought shoots out,
+Still of his aim is wide, in that the one
+Sicklies and wastes to nought the other’s strength.”
+
+What other could I answer save “I come?”
+I said it, somewhat with that colour ting’d
+Which ofttimes pardon meriteth for man.
+
+Meanwhile traverse along the hill there came,
+A little way before us, some who sang
+The “Miserere” in responsive Strains.
+When they perceiv’d that through my body I
+Gave way not for the rays to pass, their song
+Straight to a long and hoarse exclaim they chang’d;
+And two of them, in guise of messengers,
+Ran on to meet us, and inquiring ask’d:
+Of your condition we would gladly learn.”
+
+To them my guide. “Ye may return, and bear
+Tidings to them who sent you, that his frame
+Is real flesh. If, as I deem, to view
+His shade they paus’d, enough is answer’d them.
+Him let them honour, they may prize him well.”
+
+Ne’er saw I fiery vapours with such speed
+Cut through the serene air at fall of night,
+Nor August’s clouds athwart the setting sun,
+That upward these did not in shorter space
+Return; and, there arriving, with the rest
+Wheel back on us, as with loose rein a troop.
+
+“Many,” exclaim’d the bard, “are these, who throng
+Around us: to petition thee they come.
+Go therefore on, and listen as thou go’st.”
+
+“O spirit! who go’st on to blessedness
+With the same limbs, that clad thee at thy birth.”
+Shouting they came, “a little rest thy step.
+Look if thou any one amongst our tribe
+Hast e’er beheld, that tidings of him there
+Thou mayst report. Ah, wherefore go’st thou on?
+Ah wherefore tarriest thou not? We all
+By violence died, and to our latest hour
+Were sinners, but then warn’d by light from heav’n,
+So that, repenting and forgiving, we
+Did issue out of life at peace with God,
+Who with desire to see him fills our heart.”
+
+Then I: “The visages of all I scan
+Yet none of ye remember. But if aught,
+That I can do, may please you, gentle spirits!
+Speak; and I will perform it, by that peace,
+Which on the steps of guide so excellent
+Following from world to world intent I seek.”
+
+In answer he began: “None here distrusts
+Thy kindness, though not promis’d with an oath;
+So as the will fail not for want of power.
+Whence I, who sole before the others speak,
+Entreat thee, if thou ever see that land,
+Which lies between Romagna and the realm
+Of Charles, that of thy courtesy thou pray
+Those who inhabit Fano, that for me
+Their adorations duly be put up,
+By which I may purge off my grievous sins.
+From thence I came. But the deep passages,
+Whence issued out the blood wherein I dwelt,
+Upon my bosom in Antenor’s land
+Were made, where to be more secure I thought.
+The author of the deed was Este’s prince,
+Who, more than right could warrant, with his wrath
+Pursued me. Had I towards Mira fled,
+When overta’en at Oriaco, still
+Might I have breath’d. But to the marsh I sped,
+And in the mire and rushes tangled there
+Fell, and beheld my life-blood float the plain.”
+
+Then said another: “Ah! so may the wish,
+That takes thee o’er the mountain, be fulfill’d,
+As thou shalt graciously give aid to mine.
+Of Montefeltro I; Buonconte I:
+Giovanna nor none else have care for me,
+Sorrowing with these I therefore go.” I thus:
+“From Campaldino’s field what force or chance
+Drew thee, that ne’er thy sepulture was known?”
+
+“Oh!” answer’d he, “at Casentino’s foot
+A stream there courseth, nam’d Archiano, sprung
+In Apennine above the Hermit’s seat.
+E’en where its name is cancel’d, there came I,
+Pierc’d in the heart, fleeing away on foot,
+And bloodying the plain. Here sight and speech
+Fail’d me, and finishing with Mary’s name
+I fell, and tenantless my flesh remain’d.
+I will report the truth; which thou again0
+Tell to the living. Me God’s angel took,
+Whilst he of hell exclaim’d: “O thou from heav’n!
+Say wherefore hast thou robb’d me? Thou of him
+Th’ eternal portion bear’st with thee away
+For one poor tear that he deprives me of.
+But of the other, other rule I make.”
+
+“Thou knowest how in the atmosphere collects
+That vapour dank, returning into water,
+Soon as it mounts where cold condenses it.
+That evil will, which in his intellect
+Still follows evil, came, and rais’d the wind
+And smoky mist, by virtue of the power
+Given by his nature. Thence the valley, soon
+As day was spent, he cover’d o’er with cloud
+From Pratomagno to the mountain range,
+And stretch’d the sky above, so that the air
+Impregnate chang’d to water. Fell the rain,
+And to the fosses came all that the land
+Contain’d not; and, as mightiest streams are wont,
+To the great river with such headlong sweep
+Rush’d, that nought stay’d its course. My stiffen’d frame
+Laid at his mouth the fell Archiano found,
+And dash’d it into Arno, from my breast
+Loos’ning the cross, that of myself I made
+When overcome with pain. He hurl’d me on,
+Along the banks and bottom of his course;
+Then in his muddy spoils encircling wrapt.”
+
+“Ah! when thou to the world shalt be return’d,
+And rested after thy long road,” so spake
+Next the third spirit; “then remember me.
+I once was Pia. Sienna gave me life,
+Maremma took it from me. That he knows,
+Who me with jewell’d ring had first espous’d.”
+
+
+
+
+CANTO VI
+
+
+When from their game of dice men separate,
+He, who hath lost, remains in sadness fix’d,
+Revolving in his mind, what luckless throws
+He cast: but meanwhile all the company
+Go with the other; one before him runs,
+And one behind his mantle twitches, one
+Fast by his side bids him remember him.
+He stops not; and each one, to whom his hand
+Is stretch’d, well knows he bids him stand aside;
+And thus he from the press defends himself.
+E’en such was I in that close-crowding throng;
+And turning so my face around to all,
+And promising, I ’scap’d from it with pains.
+
+Here of Arezzo him I saw, who fell
+By Ghino’s cruel arm; and him beside,
+Who in his chase was swallow’d by the stream.
+Here Frederic Novello, with his hand
+Stretch’d forth, entreated; and of Pisa he,
+Who put the good Marzuco to such proof
+Of constancy. Count Orso I beheld;
+And from its frame a soul dismiss’d for spite
+And envy, as it said, but for no crime:
+I speak of Peter de la Brosse; and here,
+While she yet lives, that Lady of Brabant
+Let her beware; lest for so false a deed
+She herd with worse than these. When I was freed
+From all those spirits, who pray’d for others’ prayers
+To hasten on their state of blessedness;
+Straight I began: “O thou, my luminary!
+It seems expressly in thy text denied,
+That heaven’s supreme decree can never bend
+To supplication; yet with this design
+Do these entreat. Can then their hope be vain,
+Or is thy saying not to me reveal’d?”
+
+He thus to me: “Both what I write is plain,
+And these deceiv’d not in their hope, if well
+Thy mind consider, that the sacred height
+Of judgment doth not stoop, because love’s flame
+In a short moment all fulfils, which he
+Who sojourns here, in right should satisfy.
+Besides, when I this point concluded thus,
+By praying no defect could be supplied;
+Because the pray’r had none access to God.
+Yet in this deep suspicion rest thou not
+Contented unless she assure thee so,
+Who betwixt truth and mind infuses light.
+I know not if thou take me right; I mean
+Beatrice. Her thou shalt behold above,
+Upon this mountain’s crown, fair seat of joy.”
+
+Then I: “Sir! let us mend our speed; for now
+I tire not as before; and lo! the hill
+Stretches its shadow far.” He answer’d thus:
+“Our progress with this day shall be as much
+As we may now dispatch; but otherwise
+Than thou supposest is the truth. For there
+Thou canst not be, ere thou once more behold
+Him back returning, who behind the steep
+Is now so hidden, that as erst his beam
+Thou dost not break. But lo! a spirit there
+Stands solitary, and toward us looks:
+It will instruct us in the speediest way.”
+
+We soon approach’d it. O thou Lombard spirit!
+How didst thou stand, in high abstracted mood,
+Scarce moving with slow dignity thine eyes!
+It spoke not aught, but let us onward pass,
+Eyeing us as a lion on his watch.
+I3ut Virgil with entreaty mild advanc’d,
+Requesting it to show the best ascent.
+It answer to his question none return’d,
+But of our country and our kind of life
+Demanded. When my courteous guide began,
+“Mantua,” the solitary shadow quick
+Rose towards us from the place in which it stood,
+And cry’d, “Mantuan! I am thy countryman
+Sordello.” Each the other then embrac’d.
+
+Ah slavish Italy! thou inn of grief,
+Vessel without a pilot in loud storm,
+Lady no longer of fair provinces,
+But brothel-house impure! this gentle spirit,
+Ev’n from the Pleasant sound of his dear land
+Was prompt to greet a fellow citizen
+With such glad cheer; while now thy living ones
+In thee abide not without war; and one
+Malicious gnaws another, ay of those
+Whom the same wall and the same moat contains,
+Seek, wretched one! around thy sea-coasts wide;
+Then homeward to thy bosom turn, and mark
+If any part of the sweet peace enjoy.
+What boots it, that thy reins Justinian’s hand
+Befitted, if thy saddle be unpress’d?
+Nought doth he now but aggravate thy shame.
+Ah people! thou obedient still shouldst live,
+And in the saddle let thy Caesar sit,
+If well thou marked’st that which God commands
+
+Look how that beast to felness hath relaps’d
+From having lost correction of the spur,
+Since to the bridle thou hast set thine hand,
+O German Albert! who abandon’st her,
+That is grown savage and unmanageable,
+When thou should’st clasp her flanks with forked heels.
+Just judgment from the stars fall on thy blood!
+And be it strange and manifest to all!
+Such as may strike thy successor with dread!
+For that thy sire and thou have suffer’d thus,
+Through greediness of yonder realms detain’d,
+The garden of the empire to run waste.
+Come see the Capulets and Montagues,
+The Philippeschi and Monaldi! man
+Who car’st for nought! those sunk in grief, and these
+With dire suspicion rack’d. Come, cruel one!
+Come and behold the’ oppression of the nobles,
+And mark their injuries: and thou mayst see.
+What safety Santafiore can supply.
+Come and behold thy Rome, who calls on thee,
+Desolate widow! day and night with moans:
+“My Caesar, why dost thou desert my side?”
+Come and behold what love among thy people:
+And if no pity touches thee for us,
+Come and blush for thine own report. For me,
+If it be lawful, O Almighty Power,
+Who wast in earth for our sakes crucified!
+Are thy just eyes turn’d elsewhere? or is this
+A preparation in the wond’rous depth
+Of thy sage counsel made, for some good end,
+Entirely from our reach of thought cut off?
+So are the’ Italian cities all o’erthrong’d
+With tyrants, and a great Marcellus made
+Of every petty factious villager.
+
+My Florence! thou mayst well remain unmov’d
+At this digression, which affects not thee:
+Thanks to thy people, who so wisely speed.
+Many have justice in their heart, that long
+Waiteth for counsel to direct the bow,
+Or ere it dart unto its aim: but shine
+Have it on their lip’s edge. Many refuse
+To bear the common burdens: readier thine
+Answer uneall’d, and cry, “Behold I stoop!”
+
+Make thyself glad, for thou hast reason now,
+Thou wealthy! thou at peace! thou wisdom-fraught!
+Facts best witness if I speak the truth.
+Athens and Lacedaemon, who of old
+Enacted laws, for civil arts renown’d,
+Made little progress in improving life
+Tow’rds thee, who usest such nice subtlety,
+That to the middle of November scarce
+Reaches the thread thou in October weav’st.
+How many times, within thy memory,
+Customs, and laws, and coins, and offices
+Have been by thee renew’d, and people chang’d!
+
+If thou remember’st well and can’st see clear,
+Thou wilt perceive thyself like a sick wretch,
+Who finds no rest upon her down, hut oft
+Shifting her side, short respite seeks from pain.
+
+
+
+
+CANTO VII
+
+
+After their courteous greetings joyfully
+Sev’n times exchang’d, Sordello backward drew
+Exclaiming, “Who are ye?” “Before this mount
+By spirits worthy of ascent to God
+Was sought, my bones had by Octavius’ care
+Been buried. I am Virgil, for no sin
+Depriv’d of heav’n, except for lack of faith.”
+
+So answer’d him in few my gentle guide.
+
+As one, who aught before him suddenly
+Beholding, whence his wonder riseth, cries
+“It is yet is not,” wav’ring in belief;
+Such he appear’d; then downward bent his eyes,
+And drawing near with reverential step,
+Caught him, where of mean estate might clasp
+His lord. “Glory of Latium!” he exclaim’d,
+“In whom our tongue its utmost power display’d!
+Boast of my honor’d birth-place! what desert
+Of mine, what favour rather undeserv’d,
+Shows thee to me? If I to hear that voice
+Am worthy, say if from below thou com’st
+And from what cloister’s pale?”—“Through every orb
+Of that sad region,” he reply’d, “thus far
+Am I arriv’d, by heav’nly influence led
+And with such aid I come. There is a place
+There underneath, not made by torments sad,
+But by dun shades alone; where mourning’s voice
+Sounds not of anguish sharp, but breathes in sighs.
+There I with little innocents abide,
+Who by death’s fangs were bitten, ere exempt
+From human taint. There I with those abide,
+Who the three holy virtues put not on,
+But understood the rest, and without blame
+Follow’d them all. But if thou know’st and canst,
+Direct us, how we soonest may arrive,
+Where Purgatory its true beginning takes.”
+
+He answer’d thus: “We have no certain place
+Assign’d us: upwards I may go or round,
+Far as I can, I join thee for thy guide.
+But thou beholdest now how day declines:
+And upwards to proceed by night, our power
+Excels: therefore it may be well to choose
+A place of pleasant sojourn. To the right
+Some spirits sit apart retir’d. If thou
+Consentest, I to these will lead thy steps:
+And thou wilt know them, not without delight.”
+
+“How chances this?” was answer’d; “who so wish’d
+To ascend by night, would he be thence debarr’d
+By other, or through his own weakness fail?”
+
+The good Sordello then, along the ground
+Trailing his finger, spoke: “Only this line
+Thou shalt not overpass, soon as the sun
+Hath disappear’d; not that aught else impedes
+Thy going upwards, save the shades of night.
+These with the wont of power perplex the will.
+With them thou haply mightst return beneath,
+Or to and fro around the mountain’s side
+Wander, while day is in the horizon shut.”
+
+My master straight, as wond’ring at his speech,
+Exclaim’d: “Then lead us quickly, where thou sayst,
+That, while we stay, we may enjoy delight.”
+
+A little space we were remov’d from thence,
+When I perceiv’d the mountain hollow’d out.
+Ev’n as large valleys hollow’d out on earth,
+
+“That way,” the’ escorting spirit cried, “we go,
+Where in a bosom the high bank recedes:
+And thou await renewal of the day.”
+
+Betwixt the steep and plain a crooked path
+Led us traverse into the ridge’s side,
+Where more than half the sloping edge expires.
+Refulgent gold, and silver thrice refin’d,
+And scarlet grain and ceruse, Indian wood
+Of lucid dye serene, fresh emeralds
+But newly broken, by the herbs and flowers
+Plac’d in that fair recess, in color all
+Had been surpass’d, as great surpasses less.
+Nor nature only there lavish’d her hues,
+But of the sweetness of a thousand smells
+A rare and undistinguish’d fragrance made.
+
+“Salve Regina,” on the grass and flowers
+Here chanting I beheld those spirits sit
+Who not beyond the valley could be seen.
+
+“Before the west’ring sun sink to his bed,”
+Began the Mantuan, who our steps had turn’d,
+
+“’Mid those desires not that I lead ye on.
+For from this eminence ye shall discern
+Better the acts and visages of all,
+Than in the nether vale among them mix’d.
+He, who sits high above the rest, and seems
+To have neglected that he should have done,
+And to the others’ song moves not his lip,
+The Emperor Rodolph call, who might have heal’d
+The wounds whereof fair Italy hath died,
+So that by others she revives but slowly,
+He, who with kindly visage comforts him,
+Sway’d in that country, where the water springs,
+That Moldaw’s river to the Elbe, and Elbe
+Rolls to the ocean: Ottocar his name:
+Who in his swaddling clothes was of more worth
+Than Winceslaus his son, a bearded man,
+Pamper’d with rank luxuriousness and ease.
+And that one with the nose depress, who close
+In counsel seems with him of gentle look,
+Flying expir’d, with’ring the lily’s flower.
+Look there how he doth knock against his breast!
+The other ye behold, who for his cheek
+Makes of one hand a couch, with frequent sighs.
+They are the father and the father-in-law
+Of Gallia’s bane: his vicious life they know
+And foul; thence comes the grief that rends them thus.
+
+“He, so robust of limb, who measure keeps
+In song, with him of feature prominent,
+With ev’ry virtue bore his girdle brac’d.
+And if that stripling who behinds him sits,
+King after him had liv’d, his virtue then
+From vessel to like vessel had been pour’d;
+Which may not of the other heirs be said.
+By James and Frederick his realms are held;
+Neither the better heritage obtains.
+Rarely into the branches of the tree
+Doth human worth mount up; and so ordains
+He who bestows it, that as his free gift
+It may be call’d. To Charles my words apply
+No less than to his brother in the song;
+Which Pouille and Provence now with grief confess.
+So much that plant degenerates from its seed,
+As more than Beatrice and Margaret
+Costanza still boasts of her valorous spouse.
+
+“Behold the king of simple life and plain,
+Harry of England, sitting there alone:
+He through his branches better issue spreads.
+
+“That one, who on the ground beneath the rest
+Sits lowest, yet his gaze directs aloft,
+Us William, that brave Marquis, for whose cause
+The deed of Alexandria and his war
+Makes Conferrat and Canavese weep.”
+
+
+
+
+CANTO VIII
+
+
+Now was the hour that wakens fond desire
+In men at sea, and melts their thoughtful heart,
+Who in the morn have bid sweet friends farewell,
+And pilgrim newly on his road with love
+Thrills, if he hear the vesper bell from far,
+That seems to mourn for the expiring day:
+When I, no longer taking heed to hear
+Began, with wonder, from those spirits to mark
+One risen from its seat, which with its hand
+Audience implor’d. Both palms it join’d and rais’d,
+Fixing its steadfast gaze towards the east,
+As telling God, “I care for naught beside.”
+
+“Te Lucis Ante,” so devoutly then
+Came from its lip, and in so soft a strain,
+That all my sense in ravishment was lost.
+And the rest after, softly and devout,
+Follow’d through all the hymn, with upward gaze
+Directed to the bright supernal wheels.
+
+Here, reader! for the truth makes thine eyes keen:
+For of so subtle texture is this veil,
+That thou with ease mayst pass it through unmark’d.
+
+I saw that gentle band silently next
+Look up, as if in expectation held,
+Pale and in lowly guise; and from on high
+I saw forth issuing descend beneath
+Two angels with two flame-illumin’d swords,
+Broken and mutilated at their points.
+Green as the tender leaves but newly born,
+Their vesture was, the which by wings as green
+Beaten, they drew behind them, fann’d in air.
+A little over us one took his stand,
+The other lighted on the’ Opposing hill,
+So that the troop were in the midst contain’d.
+
+Well I descried the whiteness on their heads;
+But in their visages the dazzled eye
+Was lost, as faculty that by too much
+Is overpower’d. “From Mary’s bosom both
+Are come,” exclaim’d Sordello, “as a guard
+Over the vale, ganst him, who hither tends,
+The serpent.” Whence, not knowing by which path
+He came, I turn’d me round, and closely press’d,
+All frozen, to my leader’s trusted side.
+
+Sordello paus’d not: “To the valley now
+(For it is time) let us descend; and hold
+Converse with those great shadows: haply much
+Their sight may please ye.” Only three steps down
+Methinks I measur’d, ere I was beneath,
+And noted one who look’d as with desire
+To know me. Time was now that air arrow dim;
+Yet not so dim, that ’twixt his eyes and mine
+It clear’d not up what was conceal’d before.
+Mutually tow’rds each other we advanc’d.
+Nino, thou courteous judge! what joy I felt,
+When I perceiv’d thou wert not with the bad!
+
+No salutation kind on either part
+Was left unsaid. He then inquir’d: “How long
+Since thou arrived’st at the mountain’s foot,
+Over the distant waves?”—“O!” answer’d I,
+“Through the sad seats of woe this morn I came,
+And still in my first life, thus journeying on,
+The other strive to gain.” Soon as they heard
+My words, he and Sordello backward drew,
+As suddenly amaz’d. To Virgil one,
+The other to a spirit turn’d, who near
+Was seated, crying: “Conrad! up with speed:
+Come, see what of his grace high God hath will’d.”
+Then turning round to me: “By that rare mark
+Of honour which thou ow’st to him, who hides
+So deeply his first cause, it hath no ford,
+When thou shalt he beyond the vast of waves.
+Tell my Giovanna, that for me she call
+There, where reply to innocence is made.
+Her mother, I believe, loves me no more;
+Since she has chang’d the white and wimpled folds,
+Which she is doom’d once more with grief to wish.
+By her it easily may be perceiv’d,
+How long in women lasts the flame of love,
+If sight and touch do not relume it oft.
+For her so fair a burial will not make
+The viper which calls Milan to the field,
+As had been made by shrill Gallura’s bird.”
+
+He spoke, and in his visage took the stamp
+Of that right seal, which with due temperature
+Glows in the bosom. My insatiate eyes
+Meanwhile to heav’n had travel’d, even there
+Where the bright stars are slowest, as a wheel
+Nearest the axle; when my guide inquir’d:
+“What there aloft, my son, has caught thy gaze?”
+
+I answer’d: “The three torches, with which here
+The pole is all on fire. “He then to me:
+“The four resplendent stars, thou saw’st this morn
+Are there beneath, and these ris’n in their stead.”
+
+While yet he spoke. Sordello to himself
+Drew him, and cry’d: “Lo there our enemy!”
+And with his hand pointed that way to look.
+
+Along the side, where barrier none arose
+Around the little vale, a serpent lay,
+Such haply as gave Eve the bitter food.
+Between the grass and flowers, the evil snake
+Came on, reverting oft his lifted head;
+And, as a beast that smoothes its polish’d coat,
+Licking his hack. I saw not, nor can tell,
+How those celestial falcons from their seat
+Mov’d, but in motion each one well descried,
+Hearing the air cut by their verdant plumes.
+The serpent fled; and to their stations back
+The angels up return’d with equal flight.
+
+The Spirit (who to Nino, when he call’d,
+Had come), from viewing me with fixed ken,
+Through all that conflict, loosen’d not his sight.
+
+“So may the lamp, which leads thee up on high,
+Find, in thy destin’d lot, of wax so much,
+As may suffice thee to the enamel’s height.”
+It thus began: “If any certain news
+Of Valdimagra and the neighbour part
+Thou know’st, tell me, who once was mighty there
+They call’d me Conrad Malaspina, not
+That old one, but from him I sprang. The love
+I bore my people is now here refin’d.”
+
+“In your dominions,” I answer’d, “ne’er was I.
+But through all Europe where do those men dwell,
+To whom their glory is not manifest?
+The fame, that honours your illustrious house,
+Proclaims the nobles and proclaims the land;
+So that he knows it who was never there.
+I swear to you, so may my upward route
+Prosper! your honour’d nation not impairs
+The value of her coffer and her sword.
+Nature and use give her such privilege,
+That while the world is twisted from his course
+By a bad head, she only walks aright,
+And has the evil way in scorn.” He then:
+“Now pass thee on: sev’n times the tired sun
+Revisits not the couch, which with four feet
+The forked Aries covers, ere that kind
+Opinion shall be nail’d into thy brain
+With stronger nails than other’s speech can drive,
+If the sure course of judgment be not stay’d.”
+
+
+
+
+CANTO IX
+
+
+Now the fair consort of Tithonus old,
+Arisen from her mate’s beloved arms,
+Look’d palely o’er the eastern cliff: her brow,
+Lucent with jewels, glitter’d, set in sign
+Of that chill animal, who with his train
+Smites fearful nations: and where then we were,
+Two steps of her ascent the night had past,
+And now the third was closing up its wing,
+When I, who had so much of Adam with me,
+Sank down upon the grass, o’ercome with sleep,
+There where all five were seated. In that hour,
+When near the dawn the swallow her sad lay,
+Rememb’ring haply ancient grief, renews,
+And with our minds more wand’rers from the flesh,
+And less by thought restrain’d are, as ’twere, full
+Of holy divination in their dreams,
+Then in a vision did I seem to view
+A golden-feather’d eagle in the sky,
+With open wings, and hov’ring for descent,
+And I was in that place, methought, from whence
+Young Ganymede, from his associates ’reft,
+Was snatch’d aloft to the high consistory.
+“Perhaps,” thought I within me, “here alone
+He strikes his quarry, and elsewhere disdains
+To pounce upon the prey.” Therewith, it seem’d,
+A little wheeling in his airy tour
+Terrible as the lightning rush’d he down,
+And snatch’d me upward even to the fire.
+There both, I thought, the eagle and myself
+Did burn; and so intense th’ imagin’d flames,
+That needs my sleep was broken off. As erst
+Achilles shook himself, and round him roll’d
+His waken’d eyeballs wond’ring where he was,
+Whenas his mother had from Chiron fled
+To Scyros, with him sleeping in her arms;
+E’en thus I shook me, soon as from my face
+The slumber parted, turning deadly pale,
+Like one ice-struck with dread. Solo at my side
+My comfort stood: and the bright sun was now
+More than two hours aloft: and to the sea
+My looks were turn’d. “Fear not,” my master cried,
+“Assur’d we are at happy point. Thy strength
+Shrink not, but rise dilated. Thou art come
+To Purgatory now. Lo! there the cliff
+That circling bounds it! Lo! the entrance there,
+Where it doth seem disparted! Ere the dawn
+Usher’d the daylight, when thy wearied soul
+Slept in thee, o’er the flowery vale beneath
+A lady came, and thus bespake me: “I
+Am Lucia. Suffer me to take this man,
+Who slumbers. Easier so his way shall speed.”
+Sordello and the other gentle shapes
+Tarrying, she bare thee up: and, as day shone,
+This summit reach’d: and I pursued her steps.
+Here did she place thee. First her lovely eyes
+That open entrance show’d me; then at once
+She vanish’d with thy sleep.” Like one, whose doubts
+Are chas’d by certainty, and terror turn’d
+To comfort on discovery of the truth,
+Such was the change in me: and as my guide
+Beheld me fearless, up along the cliff
+He mov’d, and I behind him, towards the height.
+
+Reader! thou markest how my theme doth rise,
+Nor wonder therefore, if more artfully
+I prop the structure! Nearer now we drew,
+Arriv’d’ whence in that part, where first a breach
+As of a wall appear’d, I could descry
+A portal, and three steps beneath, that led
+For inlet there, of different colour each,
+And one who watch’d, but spake not yet a word.
+As more and more mine eye did stretch its view,
+I mark’d him seated on the highest step,
+In visage such, as past my power to bear.
+Grasp’d in his hand a naked sword, glanc’d back
+The rays so toward me, that I oft in vain
+My sight directed. “Speak from whence ye stand:”
+He cried: “What would ye? Where is your escort?
+Take heed your coming upward harm ye not.”
+
+“A heavenly dame, not skilless of these things,”
+Replied the’ instructor, “told us, even now,
+Pass that way: here the gate is.”—“And may she
+Befriending prosper your ascent,” resum’d
+The courteous keeper of the gate: “Come then
+Before our steps.” We straightway thither came.
+
+The lowest stair was marble white so smooth
+And polish’d, that therein my mirror’d form
+Distinct I saw. The next of hue more dark
+Than sablest grain, a rough and singed block,
+Crack’d lengthwise and across. The third, that lay
+Massy above, seem’d porphyry, that flam’d
+Red as the life-blood spouting from a vein.
+On this God’s angel either foot sustain’d,
+Upon the threshold seated, which appear’d
+A rock of diamond. Up the trinal steps
+My leader cheerily drew me. “Ask,” said he,
+
+“With humble heart, that he unbar the bolt.”
+
+Piously at his holy feet devolv’d
+I cast me, praying him for pity’s sake
+That he would open to me: but first fell
+Thrice on my bosom prostrate. Seven times0
+The letter, that denotes the inward stain,
+He on my forehead with the blunted point
+Of his drawn sword inscrib’d. And “Look,” he cried,
+“When enter’d, that thou wash these scars away.”
+
+Ashes, or earth ta’en dry out of the ground,
+Were of one colour with the robe he wore.
+From underneath that vestment forth he drew
+Two keys of metal twain: the one was gold,
+Its fellow silver. With the pallid first,
+And next the burnish’d, he so ply’d the gate,
+As to content me well. “Whenever one
+Faileth of these, that in the keyhole straight
+It turn not, to this alley then expect
+Access in vain.” Such were the words he spake.
+“One is more precious: but the other needs
+Skill and sagacity, large share of each,
+Ere its good task to disengage the knot
+Be worthily perform’d. From Peter these
+I hold, of him instructed, that I err
+Rather in opening than in keeping fast;
+So but the suppliant at my feet implore.”
+
+Then of that hallow’d gate he thrust the door,
+Exclaiming, “Enter, but this warning hear:
+He forth again departs who looks behind.”
+
+As in the hinges of that sacred ward
+The swivels turn’d, sonorous metal strong,
+Harsh was the grating; nor so surlily
+Roar’d the Tarpeian, when by force bereft
+Of good Metellus, thenceforth from his loss
+To leanness doom’d. Attentively I turn’d,
+List’ning the thunder, that first issued forth;
+And “We praise thee, O God,” methought I heard
+In accents blended with sweet melody.
+The strains came o’er mine ear, e’en as the sound
+Of choral voices, that in solemn chant
+With organ mingle, and, now high and clear,
+Come swelling, now float indistinct away.
+
+
+
+
+CANTO X
+
+
+When we had passed the threshold of the gate
+(Which the soul’s ill affection doth disuse,
+Making the crooked seem the straighter path),
+I heard its closing sound. Had mine eyes turn’d,
+For that offence what plea might have avail’d?
+
+We mounted up the riven rock, that wound
+On either side alternate, as the wave
+Flies and advances. “Here some little art
+Behooves us,” said my leader, “that our steps
+Observe the varying flexure of the path.”
+
+Thus we so slowly sped, that with cleft orb
+The moon once more o’erhangs her wat’ry couch,
+Ere we that strait have threaded. But when free
+We came and open, where the mount above
+One solid mass retires, I spent, with toil,
+And both, uncertain of the way, we stood,
+Upon a plain more lonesome, than the roads
+That traverse desert wilds. From whence the brink
+Borders upon vacuity, to foot
+Of the steep bank, that rises still, the space
+Had measur’d thrice the stature of a man:
+And, distant as mine eye could wing its flight,
+To leftward now and now to right dispatch’d,
+That cornice equal in extent appear’d.
+
+Not yet our feet had on that summit mov’d,
+When I discover’d that the bank around,
+Whose proud uprising all ascent denied,
+Was marble white, and so exactly wrought
+With quaintest sculpture, that not there alone
+Had Polycletus, but e’en nature’s self
+Been sham’d. The angel who came down to earth
+With tidings of the peace so many years
+Wept for in vain, that op’d the heavenly gates
+From their long interdict) before us seem’d,
+In a sweet act, so sculptur’d to the life,
+He look’d no silent image. One had sworn
+He had said, “Hail!” for she was imag’d there,
+By whom the key did open to God’s love,
+And in her act as sensibly impress
+That word, “Behold the handmaid of the Lord,”
+As figure seal’d on wax. “Fix not thy mind
+On one place only,” said the guide belov’d,
+Who had me near him on that part where lies
+The heart of man. My sight forthwith I turn’d
+And mark’d, behind the virgin mother’s form,
+Upon that side, where he, that mov’d me, stood,
+Another story graven on the rock.
+
+I passed athwart the bard, and drew me near,
+That it might stand more aptly for my view.
+There in the self-same marble were engrav’d
+The cart and kine, drawing the sacred ark,
+That from unbidden office awes mankind.
+Before it came much people; and the whole
+Parted in seven quires. One sense cried, “Nay,”
+Another, “Yes, they sing.” Like doubt arose
+Betwixt the eye and smell, from the curl’d fume
+Of incense breathing up the well-wrought toil.
+Preceding the blest vessel, onward came
+With light dance leaping, girt in humble guise,
+Sweet Israel’s harper: in that hap he seem’d
+Less and yet more than kingly. Opposite,
+At a great palace, from the lattice forth
+Look’d Michol, like a lady full of scorn
+And sorrow. To behold the tablet next,
+Which at the hack of Michol whitely shone,
+I mov’d me. There was storied on the rock
+The’ exalted glory of the Roman prince,
+Whose mighty worth mov’d Gregory to earn
+His mighty conquest, Trajan th’ Emperor.
+A widow at his bridle stood, attir’d
+In tears and mourning. Round about them troop’d
+Full throng of knights, and overhead in gold
+The eagles floated, struggling with the wind.
+The wretch appear’d amid all these to say:
+“Grant vengeance, sire! for, woe beshrew this heart
+My son is murder’d.” He replying seem’d;
+
+“Wait now till I return.” And she, as one
+Made hasty by her grief; “O sire, if thou
+Dost not return?”—“Where I am, who then is,
+May right thee.”—” What to thee is other’s good,
+If thou neglect thy own?”—“Now comfort thee,”
+At length he answers. “It beseemeth well
+My duty be perform’d, ere I move hence:
+So justice wills; and pity bids me stay.”
+
+He, whose ken nothing new surveys, produc’d
+That visible speaking, new to us and strange
+The like not found on earth. Fondly I gaz’d
+Upon those patterns of meek humbleness,
+Shapes yet more precious for their artist’s sake,
+When “Lo,” the poet whisper’d, “where this way
+(But slack their pace), a multitude advance.
+These to the lofty steps shall guide us on.”
+
+Mine eyes, though bent on view of novel sights
+Their lov’d allurement, were not slow to turn.
+
+Reader! I would not that amaz’d thou miss
+Of thy good purpose, hearing how just God
+Decrees our debts be cancel’d. Ponder not
+The form of suff’ring. Think on what succeeds,
+Think that at worst beyond the mighty doom
+It cannot pass. “Instructor,” I began,
+“What I see hither tending, bears no trace
+Of human semblance, nor of aught beside
+That my foil’d sight can guess.” He answering thus:
+“So courb’d to earth, beneath their heavy teems
+Of torment stoop they, that mine eye at first
+Struggled as thine. But look intently thither,
+An disentangle with thy lab’ring view,
+What underneath those stones approacheth: now,
+E’en now, mayst thou discern the pangs of each.”
+
+Christians and proud! O poor and wretched ones!
+That feeble in the mind’s eye, lean your trust
+Upon unstaid perverseness! Know ye not
+That we are worms, yet made at last to form
+The winged insect, imp’d with angel plumes
+That to heaven’s justice unobstructed soars?
+Why buoy ye up aloft your unfleg’d souls?
+Abortive then and shapeless ye remain,
+Like the untimely embryon of a worm!
+
+As, to support incumbent floor or roof,
+For corbel is a figure sometimes seen,
+That crumples up its knees unto its breast,
+With the feign’d posture stirring ruth unfeign’d
+In the beholder’s fancy; so I saw
+These fashion’d, when I noted well their guise.
+
+Each, as his back was laden, came indeed
+Or more or less contract; but it appear’d
+As he, who show’d most patience in his look,
+Wailing exclaim’d: “I can endure no more.”
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XI
+
+
+O thou Almighty Father, who dost make
+The heavens thy dwelling, not in bounds confin’d,
+But that with love intenser there thou view’st
+Thy primal effluence, hallow’d be thy name:
+Join each created being to extol
+Thy might, for worthy humblest thanks and praise
+Is thy blest Spirit. May thy kingdom’s peace
+Come unto us; for we, unless it come,
+With all our striving thither tend in vain.
+As of their will the angels unto thee
+Tender meet sacrifice, circling thy throne
+With loud hosannas, so of theirs be done
+By saintly men on earth. Grant us this day
+Our daily manna, without which he roams
+Through this rough desert retrograde, who most
+Toils to advance his steps. As we to each
+Pardon the evil done us, pardon thou
+Benign, and of our merit take no count.
+’Gainst the old adversary prove thou not
+Our virtue easily subdu’d; but free
+From his incitements and defeat his wiles.
+This last petition, dearest Lord! is made
+Not for ourselves, since that were needless now,
+But for their sakes who after us remain.”
+
+Thus for themselves and us good speed imploring,
+Those spirits went beneath a weight like that
+We sometimes feel in dreams, all, sore beset,
+But with unequal anguish, wearied all,
+Round the first circuit, purging as they go,
+The world’s gross darkness off: In our behalf
+If there vows still be offer’d, what can here
+For them be vow’d and done by such, whose wills
+Have root of goodness in them? Well beseems
+That we should help them wash away the stains
+They carried hence, that so made pure and light,
+They may spring upward to the starry spheres.
+
+“Ah! so may mercy-temper’d justice rid
+Your burdens speedily, that ye have power
+To stretch your wing, which e’en to your desire
+Shall lift you, as ye show us on which hand
+Toward the ladder leads the shortest way.
+And if there be more passages than one,
+Instruct us of that easiest to ascend;
+For this man who comes with me, and bears yet
+The charge of fleshly raiment Adam left him,
+Despite his better will but slowly mounts.”
+From whom the answer came unto these words,
+Which my guide spake, appear’d not; but ’twas said
+
+“Along the bank to rightward come with us,
+And ye shall find a pass that mocks not toil
+Of living man to climb: and were it not
+That I am hinder’d by the rock, wherewith
+This arrogant neck is tam’d, whence needs I stoop
+My visage to the ground, him, who yet lives,
+Whose name thou speak’st not him I fain would view.
+To mark if e’er I knew him? and to crave
+His pity for the fardel that I bear.
+I was of Latiun, of a Tuscan horn
+A mighty one: Aldobranlesco’s name
+My sire’s, I know not if ye e’er have heard.
+My old blood and forefathers’ gallant deeds
+Made me so haughty, that I clean forgot
+The common mother, and to such excess,
+Wax’d in my scorn of all men, that I fell,
+Fell therefore; by what fate Sienna’s sons,
+Each child in Campagnatico, can tell.
+I am Omberto; not me only pride
+Hath injur’d, but my kindred all involv’d
+In mischief with her. Here my lot ordains
+Under this weight to groan, till I appease
+God’s angry justice, since I did it not
+Amongst the living, here amongst the dead.”
+
+List’ning I bent my visage down: and one
+(Not he who spake) twisted beneath the weight
+That urg’d him, saw me, knew me straight, and call’d,
+Holding his eyes With difficulty fix’d
+Intent upon me, stooping as I went
+Companion of their way. “O!” I exclaim’d,
+
+“Art thou not Oderigi, art not thou
+Agobbio’s glory, glory of that art
+Which they of Paris call the limmer’s skill?”
+
+“Brother!” said he, “with tints that gayer smile,
+Bolognian Franco’s pencil lines the leaves.
+His all the honour now; mine borrow’d light.
+In truth I had not been thus courteous to him,
+The whilst I liv’d, through eagerness of zeal
+For that pre-eminence my heart was bent on.
+Here of such pride the forfeiture is paid.
+Nor were I even here; if, able still
+To sin, I had not turn’d me unto God.
+O powers of man! how vain your glory, nipp’d
+E’en in its height of verdure, if an age
+Less bright succeed not! Cimabue thought
+To lord it over painting’s field; and now
+The cry is Giotto’s, and his name eclips’d.
+Thus hath one Guido from the other snatch’d
+The letter’d prize: and he perhaps is born,
+Who shall drive either from their nest. The noise
+Of worldly fame is but a blast of wind,
+That blows from divers points, and shifts its name
+Shifting the point it blows from. Shalt thou more
+Live in the mouths of mankind, if thy flesh
+Part shrivel’d from thee, than if thou hadst died,
+Before the coral and the pap were left,
+Or ere some thousand years have passed? and that
+Is, to eternity compar’d, a space,
+Briefer than is the twinkling of an eye
+To the heaven’s slowest orb. He there who treads
+So leisurely before me, far and wide
+Through Tuscany resounded once; and now
+Is in Sienna scarce with whispers nam’d:
+There was he sov’reign, when destruction caught
+The madd’ning rage of Florence, in that day
+Proud as she now is loathsome. Your renown
+Is as the herb, whose hue doth come and go,
+And his might withers it, by whom it sprang
+Crude from the lap of earth.” I thus to him:
+“True are thy sayings: to my heart they breathe
+The kindly spirit of meekness, and allay
+What tumours rankle there. But who is he
+Of whom thou spak’st but now?”—“This,” he replied,
+“Is Provenzano. He is here, because
+He reach’d, with grasp presumptuous, at the sway
+Of all Sienna. Thus he still hath gone,
+Thus goeth never-resting, since he died.
+Such is th’ acquittance render’d back of him,
+Who, beyond measure, dar’d on earth.” I then:
+“If soul that to the verge of life delays
+Repentance, linger in that lower space,
+Nor hither mount, unless good prayers befriend,
+How chanc’d admittance was vouchsaf’d to him?”
+
+“When at his glory’s topmost height,” said he,
+“Respect of dignity all cast aside,
+Freely He fix’d him on Sienna’s plain,
+A suitor to redeem his suff’ring friend,
+Who languish’d in the prison-house of Charles,
+Nor for his sake refus’d through every vein
+To tremble. More I will not say; and dark,
+I know, my words are, but thy neighbours soon
+Shall help thee to a comment on the text.
+This is the work, that from these limits freed him.”
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XII
+
+
+With equal pace as oxen in the yoke,
+I with that laden spirit journey’d on
+Long as the mild instructor suffer’d me;
+But when he bade me quit him, and proceed
+(For “here,” said he, “behooves with sail and oars
+Each man, as best he may, push on his bark”),
+Upright, as one dispos’d for speed, I rais’d
+My body, still in thought submissive bow’d.
+
+I now my leader’s track not loth pursued;
+And each had shown how light we far’d along
+When thus he warn’d me: “Bend thine eyesight down:
+For thou to ease the way shall find it good
+To ruminate the bed beneath thy feet.”
+
+As in memorial of the buried, drawn
+Upon earth-level tombs, the sculptur’d form
+Of what was once, appears (at sight whereof
+Tears often stream forth by remembrance wak’d,
+Whose sacred stings the piteous only feel),
+So saw I there, but with more curious skill
+Of portraiture o’erwrought, whate’er of space
+From forth the mountain stretches. On one part
+Him I beheld, above all creatures erst
+Created noblest, light’ning fall from heaven:
+On th’ other side with bolt celestial pierc’d
+Briareus: cumb’ring earth he lay through dint
+Of mortal ice-stroke. The Thymbraean god
+With Mars, I saw, and Pallas, round their sire,
+Arm’d still, and gazing on the giant’s limbs
+Strewn o’er th’ ethereal field. Nimrod I saw:
+At foot of the stupendous work he stood,
+As if bewilder’d, looking on the crowd
+Leagued in his proud attempt on Sennaar’s plain.
+
+O Niobe! in what a trance of woe
+Thee I beheld, upon that highway drawn,
+Sev’n sons on either side thee slain! O Saul!
+How ghastly didst thou look! on thine own sword
+Expiring in Gilboa, from that hour
+Ne’er visited with rain from heav’n or dew!
+
+O fond Arachne! thee I also saw
+Half spider now in anguish crawling up
+Th’ unfinish’d web thou weaved’st to thy bane!
+
+O Rehoboam! here thy shape doth seem
+Louring no more defiance! but fear-smote
+With none to chase him in his chariot whirl’d.
+
+Was shown beside upon the solid floor
+How dear Alcmaeon forc’d his mother rate
+That ornament in evil hour receiv’d:
+How in the temple on Sennacherib fell
+His sons, and how a corpse they left him there.
+Was shown the scath and cruel mangling made
+By Tomyris on Cyrus, when she cried:
+“Blood thou didst thirst for, take thy fill of blood!”
+Was shown how routed in the battle fled
+Th’ Assyrians, Holofernes slain, and e’en
+The relics of the carnage. Troy I mark’d
+In ashes and in caverns. Oh! how fall’n,
+How abject, Ilion, was thy semblance there!
+
+What master of the pencil or the style
+Had trac’d the shades and lines, that might have made
+The subtlest workman wonder? Dead the dead,
+The living seem’d alive; with clearer view
+His eye beheld not who beheld the truth,
+Than mine what I did tread on, while I went
+Low bending. Now swell out; and with stiff necks
+Pass on, ye sons of Eve! veil not your looks,
+Lest they descry the evil of your path!
+
+I noted not (so busied was my thought)
+How much we now had circled of the mount,
+And of his course yet more the sun had spent,
+When he, who with still wakeful caution went,
+Admonish’d: “Raise thou up thy head: for know
+Time is not now for slow suspense. Behold
+That way an angel hasting towards us! Lo
+Where duly the sixth handmaid doth return
+From service on the day. Wear thou in look
+And gesture seemly grace of reverent awe,
+That gladly he may forward us aloft.
+Consider that this day ne’er dawns again.”
+
+Time’s loss he had so often warn’d me ’gainst,
+I could not miss the scope at which he aim’d.
+
+The goodly shape approach’d us, snowy white
+In vesture, and with visage casting streams
+Of tremulous lustre like the matin star.
+His arms he open’d, then his wings; and spake:
+“Onward: the steps, behold! are near; and now
+Th’ ascent is without difficulty gain’d.”
+
+A scanty few are they, who when they hear
+Such tidings, hasten. O ye race of men
+Though born to soar, why suffer ye a wind
+So slight to baffle ye? He led us on
+Where the rock parted; here against my front
+Did beat his wings, then promis’d I should fare
+In safety on my way. As to ascend
+That steep, upon whose brow the chapel stands
+(O’er Rubaconte, looking lordly down
+On the well-guided city,) up the right
+Th’ impetuous rise is broken by the steps
+Carv’d in that old and simple age, when still
+The registry and label rested safe;
+Thus is th’ acclivity reliev’d, which here
+Precipitous from the other circuit falls:
+But on each hand the tall cliff presses close.
+
+As ent’ring there we turn’d, voices, in strain
+Ineffable, sang: “Blessed are the poor
+In spirit.” Ah how far unlike to these
+The straits of hell; here songs to usher us,
+There shrieks of woe! We climb the holy stairs:
+And lighter to myself by far I seem’d
+Than on the plain before, whence thus I spake:
+“Say, master, of what heavy thing have I
+Been lighten’d, that scarce aught the sense of toil
+Affects me journeying?” He in few replied:
+“When sin’s broad characters, that yet remain
+Upon thy temples, though well nigh effac’d,
+Shall be, as one is, all clean razed out,
+Then shall thy feet by heartiness of will
+Be so o’ercome, they not alone shall feel
+No sense of labour, but delight much more
+Shall wait them urg’d along their upward way.”
+
+Then like to one, upon whose head is plac’d
+Somewhat he deems not of but from the becks
+Of others as they pass him by; his hand
+Lends therefore help to’ assure him, searches, finds,
+And well performs such office as the eye
+Wants power to execute: so stretching forth
+The fingers of my right hand, did I find
+Six only of the letters, which his sword
+Who bare the keys had trac’d upon my brow.
+The leader, as he mark’d mine action, smil’d.
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XIII
+
+
+We reach’d the summit of the scale, and stood
+Upon the second buttress of that mount
+Which healeth him who climbs. A cornice there,
+Like to the former, girdles round the hill;
+Save that its arch with sweep less ample bends.
+
+Shadow nor image there is seen; all smooth
+The rampart and the path, reflecting nought
+But the rock’s sullen hue. “If here we wait
+For some to question,” said the bard, “I fear
+Our choice may haply meet too long delay.”
+
+Then fixedly upon the sun his eyes
+He fastn’d, made his right the central point
+From whence to move, and turn’d the left aside.
+“O pleasant light, my confidence and hope,
+Conduct us thou,” he cried, “on this new way,
+Where now I venture, leading to the bourn
+We seek. The universal world to thee
+Owes warmth and lustre. If no other cause
+Forbid, thy beams should ever be our guide.”
+
+Far, as is measur’d for a mile on earth,
+In brief space had we journey’d; such prompt will
+Impell’d; and towards us flying, now were heard
+Spirits invisible, who courteously
+Unto love’s table bade the welcome guest.
+The voice, that first? flew by, call’d forth aloud,
+“They have no wine; “ so on behind us past,
+Those sounds reiterating, nor yet lost
+In the faint distance, when another came
+Crying, “I am Orestes,” and alike
+Wing’d its fleet way. “Oh father!” I exclaim’d,
+“What tongues are these?” and as I question’d, lo!
+A third exclaiming, “Love ye those have wrong’d you.”
+
+“This circuit,” said my teacher, “knots the scourge
+For envy, and the cords are therefore drawn
+By charity’s correcting hand. The curb
+Is of a harsher sound, as thou shalt hear
+(If I deem rightly), ere thou reach the pass,
+Where pardon sets them free. But fix thine eyes
+Intently through the air, and thou shalt see
+A multitude before thee seated, each
+Along the shelving grot.” Then more than erst
+I op’d my eyes, before me view’d, and saw
+Shadows with garments dark as was the rock;
+And when we pass’d a little forth, I heard
+A crying, “Blessed Mary! pray for us,
+Michael and Peter! all ye saintly host!”
+
+I do not think there walks on earth this day
+Man so remorseless, that he hath not yearn’d
+With pity at the sight that next I saw.
+Mine eyes a load of sorrow teemed, when now
+I stood so near them, that their semblances
+Came clearly to my view. Of sackcloth vile
+Their cov’ring seem’d; and on his shoulder one
+Did stay another, leaning, and all lean’d
+Against the cliff. E’en thus the blind and poor,
+Near the confessionals, to crave an alms,
+Stand, each his head upon his fellow’s sunk,
+So most to stir compassion, not by sound
+Of words alone, but that, which moves not less,
+The sight of mis’ry. And as never beam
+Of noonday visiteth the eyeless man,
+E’en so was heav’n a niggard unto these
+Of his fair light; for, through the orbs of all,
+A thread of wire, impiercing, knits them up,
+As for the taming of a haggard hawk.
+
+It were a wrong, methought, to pass and look
+On others, yet myself the while unseen.
+To my sage counsel therefore did I turn.
+He knew the meaning of the mute appeal,
+Nor waited for my questioning, but said:
+“Speak; and be brief, be subtle in thy words.”
+
+On that part of the cornice, whence no rim
+Engarlands its steep fall, did Virgil come;
+On the’ other side me were the spirits, their cheeks
+Bathing devout with penitential tears,
+That through the dread impalement forc’d a way.
+
+I turn’d me to them, and “O shades!” said I,
+
+“Assur’d that to your eyes unveil’d shall shine
+The lofty light, sole object of your wish,
+So may heaven’s grace clear whatsoe’er of foam
+Floats turbid on the conscience, that thenceforth
+The stream of mind roll limpid from its source,
+As ye declare (for so shall ye impart
+A boon I dearly prize) if any soul
+Of Latium dwell among ye; and perchance
+That soul may profit, if I learn so much.”
+
+“My brother, we are each one citizens
+Of one true city. Any thou wouldst say,
+Who lived a stranger in Italia’s land.”
+
+So heard I answering, as appeal’d, a voice
+That onward came some space from whence I stood.
+
+A spirit I noted, in whose look was mark’d
+Expectance. Ask ye how? The chin was rais’d
+As in one reft of sight. “Spirit,” said I,
+“Who for thy rise are tutoring (if thou be
+That which didst answer to me,) or by place
+Or name, disclose thyself, that I may know thee.”
+
+“I was,” it answer’d, “of Sienna: here
+I cleanse away with these the evil life,
+Soliciting with tears that He, who is,
+Vouchsafe him to us. Though Sapia nam’d
+In sapience I excell’d not, gladder far
+Of others’ hurt, than of the good befell me.
+That thou mayst own I now deceive thee not,
+Hear, if my folly were not as I speak it.
+When now my years slop’d waning down the arch,
+It so bechanc’d, my fellow citizens
+Near Colle met their enemies in the field,
+And I pray’d God to grant what He had will’d.
+There were they vanquish’d, and betook themselves
+Unto the bitter passages of flight.
+I mark’d the hunt, and waxing out of bounds
+In gladness, lifted up my shameless brow,
+And like the merlin cheated by a gleam,
+Cried, “It is over. Heav’n! I fear thee not.”
+Upon my verge of life I wish’d for peace
+With God; nor repentance had supplied
+What I did lack of duty, were it not
+The hermit Piero, touch’d with charity,
+In his devout orisons thought on me.
+But who art thou that question’st of our state,
+Who go’st to my belief, with lids unclos’d,
+And breathest in thy talk?”—“Mine eyes,” said I,
+“May yet be here ta’en from me; but not long;
+For they have not offended grievously
+With envious glances. But the woe beneath
+Urges my soul with more exceeding dread.
+That nether load already weighs me down.”
+
+She thus: “Who then amongst us here aloft
+Hath brought thee, if thou weenest to return?”
+
+“He,” answer’d I, “who standeth mute beside me.
+I live: of me ask therefore, chosen spirit,
+If thou desire I yonder yet should move
+For thee my mortal feet.”—“Oh!” she replied,
+“This is so strange a thing, it is great sign
+That God doth love thee. Therefore with thy prayer
+Sometime assist me: and by that I crave,
+Which most thou covetest, that if thy feet
+E’er tread on Tuscan soil, thou save my fame
+Amongst my kindred. Them shalt thou behold
+With that vain multitude, who set their hope
+On Telamone’s haven, there to fail
+Confounded, more shall when the fancied stream
+They sought of Dian call’d: but they who lead
+Their navies, more than ruin’d hopes shall mourn.”
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XIV
+
+
+“Say who is he around our mountain winds,
+Or ever death has prun’d his wing for flight,
+That opes his eyes and covers them at will?”
+
+“I know not who he is, but know thus much
+He comes not singly. Do thou ask of him,
+For thou art nearer to him, and take heed
+Accost him gently, so that he may speak.”
+
+Thus on the right two Spirits bending each
+Toward the other, talk’d of me, then both
+Addressing me, their faces backward lean’d,
+And thus the one began: “O soul, who yet
+Pent in the body, tendest towards the sky!
+For charity, we pray thee’ comfort us,
+Recounting whence thou com’st, and who thou art:
+For thou dost make us at the favour shown thee
+Marvel, as at a thing that ne’er hath been.”
+
+“There stretches through the midst of Tuscany,
+I straight began: “a brooklet, whose well-head
+Springs up in Falterona, with his race
+Not satisfied, when he some hundred miles
+Hath measur’d. From his banks bring, I this frame.
+To tell you who I am were words misspent:
+For yet my name scarce sounds on rumour’s lip.”
+
+“If well I do incorp’rate with my thought
+The meaning of thy speech,” said he, who first
+Addrest me, “thou dost speak of Arno’s wave.”
+
+To whom the other: “Why hath he conceal’d
+The title of that river, as a man
+Doth of some horrible thing?” The spirit, who
+Thereof was question’d, did acquit him thus:
+“I know not: but ’tis fitting well the name
+Should perish of that vale; for from the source
+Where teems so plenteously the Alpine steep
+Maim’d of Pelorus, (that doth scarcely pass
+Beyond that limit,) even to the point
+Whereunto ocean is restor’d, what heaven
+Drains from th’ exhaustless store for all earth’s streams,
+Throughout the space is virtue worried down,
+As ’twere a snake, by all, for mortal foe,
+Or through disastrous influence on the place,
+Or else distortion of misguided wills,
+That custom goads to evil: whence in those,
+The dwellers in that miserable vale,
+Nature is so transform’d, it seems as they
+Had shar’d of Circe’s feeding. ’Midst brute swine,
+Worthier of acorns than of other food
+Created for man’s use, he shapeth first
+His obscure way; then, sloping onward, finds
+Curs, snarlers more in spite than power, from whom
+He turns with scorn aside: still journeying down,
+By how much more the curst and luckless foss
+Swells out to largeness, e’en so much it finds
+Dogs turning into wolves. Descending still
+Through yet more hollow eddies, next he meets
+A race of foxes, so replete with craft,
+They do not fear that skill can master it.
+Nor will I cease because my words are heard
+By other ears than thine. It shall be well
+For this man, if he keep in memory
+What from no erring Spirit I reveal.
+Lo! I behold thy grandson, that becomes
+A hunter of those wolves, upon the shore
+Of the fierce stream, and cows them all with dread:
+Their flesh yet living sets he up to sale,
+Then like an aged beast to slaughter dooms.
+Many of life he reaves, himself of worth
+And goodly estimation. Smear’d with gore
+Mark how he issues from the rueful wood,
+Leaving such havoc, that in thousand years
+It spreads not to prime lustihood again.”
+
+As one, who tidings hears of woe to come,
+Changes his looks perturb’d, from whate’er part
+The peril grasp him, so beheld I change
+That spirit, who had turn’d to listen, struck
+With sadness, soon as he had caught the word.
+
+His visage and the other’s speech did raise
+Desire in me to know the names of both,
+whereof with meek entreaty I inquir’d.
+
+The shade, who late addrest me, thus resum’d:
+“Thy wish imports that I vouchsafe to do
+For thy sake what thou wilt not do for mine.
+But since God’s will is that so largely shine
+His grace in thee, I will be liberal too.
+Guido of Duca know then that I am.
+Envy so parch’d my blood, that had I seen
+A fellow man made joyous, thou hadst mark’d
+A livid paleness overspread my cheek.
+Such harvest reap I of the seed I sow’d.
+O man, why place thy heart where there doth need
+Exclusion of participants in good?
+This is Rinieri’s spirit, this the boast
+And honour of the house of Calboli,
+Where of his worth no heritage remains.
+Nor his the only blood, that hath been stript
+(’twixt Po, the mount, the Reno, and the shore,)
+Of all that truth or fancy asks for bliss;
+But in those limits such a growth has sprung
+Of rank and venom’d roots, as long would mock
+Slow culture’s toil. Where is good Lizio? where
+Manardi, Traversalo, and Carpigna?
+O bastard slips of old Romagna’s line!
+When in Bologna the low artisan,
+And in Faenza yon Bernardin sprouts,
+A gentle cyon from ignoble stem.
+Wonder not, Tuscan, if thou see me weep,
+When I recall to mind those once lov’d names,
+Guido of Prata, and of Azzo him
+That dwelt with you; Tignoso and his troop,
+With Traversaro’s house and Anastagio s,
+(Each race disherited) and beside these,
+The ladies and the knights, the toils and ease,
+That witch’d us into love and courtesy;
+Where now such malice reigns in recreant hearts.
+O Brettinoro! wherefore tarriest still,
+Since forth of thee thy family hath gone,
+And many, hating evil, join’d their steps?
+Well doeth he, that bids his lineage cease,
+Bagnacavallo; Castracaro ill,
+And Conio worse, who care to propagate
+A race of Counties from such blood as theirs.
+Well shall ye also do, Pagani, then
+When from amongst you tries your demon child.
+Not so, howe’er, that henceforth there remain
+True proof of what ye were. O Hugolin!
+Thou sprung of Fantolini’s line! thy name
+Is safe, since none is look’d for after thee
+To cloud its lustre, warping from thy stock.
+But, Tuscan, go thy ways; for now I take
+Far more delight in weeping than in words.
+Such pity for your sakes hath wrung my heart.”
+
+We knew those gentle spirits at parting heard
+Our steps. Their silence therefore of our way
+Assur’d us. Soon as we had quitted them,
+Advancing onward, lo! a voice that seem’d
+Like vollied light’ning, when it rives the air,
+Met us, and shouted, “Whosoever finds
+Will slay me,” then fled from us, as the bolt
+Lanc’d sudden from a downward-rushing cloud.
+When it had giv’n short truce unto our hearing,
+Behold the other with a crash as loud
+As the quick-following thunder: “Mark in me
+Aglauros turn’d to rock.” I at the sound
+Retreating drew more closely to my guide.
+
+Now in mute stillness rested all the air:
+And thus he spake: “There was the galling bit.
+But your old enemy so baits his hook,
+He drags you eager to him. Hence nor curb
+Avails you, nor reclaiming call. Heav’n calls
+And round about you wheeling courts your gaze
+With everlasting beauties. Yet your eye
+Turns with fond doting still upon the earth.
+Therefore He smites you who discerneth all.”
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XV
+
+
+As much as ’twixt the third hour’s close and dawn,
+Appeareth of heav’n’s sphere, that ever whirls
+As restless as an infant in his play,
+So much appear’d remaining to the sun
+Of his slope journey towards the western goal.
+
+Evening was there, and here the noon of night;
+and full upon our forehead smote the beams.
+For round the mountain, circling, so our path
+Had led us, that toward the sun-set now
+Direct we journey’d: when I felt a weight
+Of more exceeding splendour, than before,
+Press on my front. The cause unknown, amaze
+Possess’d me, and both hands against my brow
+Lifting, I interpos’d them, as a screen,
+That of its gorgeous superflux of light
+Clipp’d the diminish’d orb. As when the ray,
+Striking On water or the surface clear
+Of mirror, leaps unto the opposite part,
+Ascending at a glance, e’en as it fell,
+(And so much differs from the stone, that falls
+Through equal space, as practice skill hath shown;
+Thus with refracted light before me seemed
+The ground there smitten; whence in sudden haste
+My sight recoil’d. “What is this, sire belov’d!
+’Gainst which I strive to shield the sight in vain?”
+Cried I, “and which towards us moving seems?”
+
+“Marvel not, if the family of heav’n,”
+He answer’d, “yet with dazzling radiance dim
+Thy sense it is a messenger who comes,
+Inviting man’s ascent. Such sights ere long,
+Not grievous, shall impart to thee delight,
+As thy perception is by nature wrought
+Up to their pitch.” The blessed angel, soon
+As we had reach’d him, hail’d us with glad voice:
+“Here enter on a ladder far less steep
+Than ye have yet encounter’d.” We forthwith
+Ascending, heard behind us chanted sweet,
+“Blessed the merciful,” and “happy thou!
+That conquer’st.” Lonely each, my guide and I
+Pursued our upward way; and as we went,
+Some profit from his words I hop’d to win,
+And thus of him inquiring, fram’d my speech:
+
+“What meant Romagna’s spirit, when he spake
+Of bliss exclusive with no partner shar’d?”
+
+He straight replied: “No wonder, since he knows,
+What sorrow waits on his own worst defect,
+If he chide others, that they less may mourn.
+Because ye point your wishes at a mark,
+Where, by communion of possessors, part
+Is lessen’d, envy bloweth up the sighs of men.
+No fear of that might touch ye, if the love
+Of higher sphere exalted your desire.
+For there, by how much more they call it ours,
+So much propriety of each in good
+Increases more, and heighten’d charity
+Wraps that fair cloister in a brighter flame.”
+
+“Now lack I satisfaction more,” said I,
+“Than if thou hadst been silent at the first,
+And doubt more gathers on my lab’ring thought.
+How can it chance, that good distributed,
+The many, that possess it, makes more rich,
+Than if ’twere shar’d by few?” He answering thus:
+“Thy mind, reverting still to things of earth,
+Strikes darkness from true light. The highest good
+Unlimited, ineffable, doth so speed
+To love, as beam to lucid body darts,
+Giving as much of ardour as it finds.
+The sempiternal effluence streams abroad
+Spreading, wherever charity extends.
+So that the more aspirants to that bliss
+Are multiplied, more good is there to love,
+And more is lov’d; as mirrors, that reflect,
+Each unto other, propagated light.
+If these my words avail not to allay
+Thy thirsting, Beatrice thou shalt see,
+Who of this want, and of all else thou hast,
+Shall rid thee to the full. Provide but thou
+That from thy temples may be soon eras’d,
+E’en as the two already, those five scars,
+That when they pain thee worst, then kindliest heal,”
+
+“Thou,” I had said, “content’st me,” when I saw
+The other round was gain’d, and wond’ring eyes
+Did keep me mute. There suddenly I seem’d
+By an ecstatic vision wrapt away;
+And in a temple saw, methought, a crowd
+Of many persons; and at th’ entrance stood
+A dame, whose sweet demeanour did express
+A mother’s love, who said, “Child! why hast thou
+Dealt with us thus? Behold thy sire and I
+Sorrowing have sought thee;” and so held her peace,
+And straight the vision fled. A female next
+Appear’d before me, down whose visage cours’d
+Those waters, that grief forces out from one
+By deep resentment stung, who seem’d to say:
+“If thou, Pisistratus, be lord indeed
+Over this city, nam’d with such debate
+Of adverse gods, and whence each science sparkles,
+Avenge thee of those arms, whose bold embrace
+Hath clasp’d our daughter; “and to fuel, meseem’d,
+Benign and meek, with visage undisturb’d,
+Her sovran spake: “How shall we those requite,
+Who wish us evil, if we thus condemn
+The man that loves us?” After that I saw
+A multitude, in fury burning, slay
+With stones a stripling youth, and shout amain
+“Destroy, destroy: “and him I saw, who bow’d
+Heavy with death unto the ground, yet made
+His eyes, unfolded upward, gates to heav’n,
+Praying forgiveness of th’ Almighty Sire,
+Amidst that cruel conflict, on his foes,
+With looks, that With compassion to their aim.
+
+Soon as my spirit, from her airy flight
+Returning, sought again the things, whose truth
+Depends not on her shaping, I observ’d
+How she had rov’d to no unreal scenes
+
+Meanwhile the leader, who might see I mov’d,
+As one, who struggles to shake off his sleep,
+Exclaim’d: “What ails thee, that thou canst not hold
+Thy footing firm, but more than half a league
+Hast travel’d with clos’d eyes and tott’ring gait,
+Like to a man by wine or sleep o’ercharg’d?”
+
+“Beloved father! so thou deign,” said I,
+“To listen, I will tell thee what appear’d
+Before me, when so fail’d my sinking steps.”
+
+He thus: “Not if thy Countenance were mask’d
+With hundred vizards, could a thought of thine
+How small soe’er, elude me. What thou saw’st
+Was shown, that freely thou mightst ope thy heart
+To the waters of peace, that flow diffus’d
+From their eternal fountain. I not ask’d,
+What ails thee? for such cause as he doth, who
+Looks only with that eye which sees no more,
+When spiritless the body lies; but ask’d,
+To give fresh vigour to thy foot. Such goads
+The slow and loit’ring need; that they be found
+Not wanting, when their hour of watch returns.”
+
+So on we journey’d through the evening sky
+Gazing intent, far onward, as our eyes
+With level view could stretch against the bright
+Vespertine ray: and lo! by slow degrees
+Gath’ring, a fog made tow’rds us, dark as night.
+There was no room for ’scaping; and that mist
+Bereft us, both of sight and the pure air.
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XVI
+
+
+Hell’s dunnest gloom, or night unlustrous, dark,
+Of every planes ’reft, and pall’d in clouds,
+Did never spread before the sight a veil
+In thickness like that fog, nor to the sense
+So palpable and gross. Ent’ring its shade,
+Mine eye endured not with unclosed lids;
+Which marking, near me drew the faithful guide,
+Offering me his shoulder for a stay.
+
+As the blind man behind his leader walks,
+Lest he should err, or stumble unawares
+On what might harm him, or perhaps destroy,
+I journey’d through that bitter air and foul,
+Still list’ning to my escort’s warning voice,
+“Look that from me thou part not.” Straight I heard
+Voices, and each one seem’d to pray for peace,
+And for compassion, to the Lamb of God
+That taketh sins away. Their prelude still
+Was “Agnus Dei,” and through all the choir,
+One voice, one measure ran, that perfect seem’d
+The concord of their song. “Are these I hear
+Spirits, O master?” I exclaim’d; and he:
+“Thou aim’st aright: these loose the bonds of wrath.”
+
+“Now who art thou, that through our smoke dost cleave?
+And speak’st of us, as thou thyself e’en yet
+Dividest time by calends?” So one voice
+Bespake me; whence my master said: “Reply;
+And ask, if upward hence the passage lead.”
+
+“O being! who dost make thee pure, to stand
+Beautiful once more in thy Maker’s sight!
+Along with me: and thou shalt hear and wonder.”
+Thus I, whereto the spirit answering spake:
+“Long as ’tis lawful for me, shall my steps
+Follow on thine; and since the cloudy smoke
+Forbids the seeing, hearing in its stead
+Shall keep us join’d.” I then forthwith began
+“Yet in my mortal swathing, I ascend
+To higher regions, and am hither come
+Through the fearful agony of hell.
+And, if so largely God hath doled his grace,
+That, clean beside all modern precedent,
+He wills me to behold his kingly state,
+From me conceal not who thou wast, ere death
+Had loos’d thee; but instruct me: and instruct
+If rightly to the pass I tend; thy words
+The way directing as a safe escort.”
+
+“I was of Lombardy, and Marco call’d:
+Not inexperienc’d of the world, that worth
+I still affected, from which all have turn’d
+The nerveless bow aside. Thy course tends right
+Unto the summit:” and, replying thus,
+He added, “I beseech thee pray for me,
+When thou shalt come aloft.” And I to him:
+“Accept my faith for pledge I will perform
+What thou requirest. Yet one doubt remains,
+That wrings me sorely, if I solve it not,
+Singly before it urg’d me, doubled now
+By thine opinion, when I couple that
+With one elsewhere declar’d, each strength’ning other.
+The world indeed is even so forlorn
+Of all good as thou speak’st it and so swarms
+With every evil. Yet, beseech thee, point
+The cause out to me, that myself may see,
+And unto others show it: for in heaven
+One places it, and one on earth below.”
+
+Then heaving forth a deep and audible sigh,
+“Brother!” he thus began, “the world is blind;
+And thou in truth com’st from it. Ye, who live,
+Do so each cause refer to heav’n above,
+E’en as its motion of necessity
+Drew with it all that moves. If this were so,
+Free choice in you were none; nor justice would
+There should be joy for virtue, woe for ill.
+Your movements have their primal bent from heaven;
+Not all; yet said I all; what then ensues?
+Light have ye still to follow evil or good,
+And of the will free power, which, if it stand
+Firm and unwearied in Heav’n’s first assay,
+Conquers at last, so it be cherish’d well,
+Triumphant over all. To mightier force,
+To better nature subject, ye abide
+Free, not constrain’d by that, which forms in you
+The reasoning mind uninfluenc’d of the stars.
+If then the present race of mankind err,
+Seek in yourselves the cause, and find it there.
+Herein thou shalt confess me no false spy.
+
+“Forth from his plastic hand, who charm’d beholds
+Her image ere she yet exist, the soul
+Comes like a babe, that wantons sportively
+Weeping and laughing in its wayward moods,
+As artless and as ignorant of aught,
+Save that her Maker being one who dwells
+With gladness ever, willingly she turns
+To whate’er yields her joy. Of some slight good
+The flavour soon she tastes; and, snar’d by that,
+With fondness she pursues it, if no guide
+Recall, no rein direct her wand’ring course.
+Hence it behov’d, the law should be a curb;
+A sovereign hence behov’d, whose piercing view
+Might mark at least the fortress and main tower
+Of the true city. Laws indeed there are:
+But who is he observes them? None; not he,
+Who goes before, the shepherd of the flock,
+Who chews the cud but doth not cleave the hoof.
+Therefore the multitude, who see their guide
+Strike at the very good they covet most,
+Feed there and look no further. Thus the cause
+Is not corrupted nature in yourselves,
+But ill-conducting, that hath turn’d the world
+To evil. Rome, that turn’d it unto good,
+Was wont to boast two suns, whose several beams
+Cast light on either way, the world’s and God’s.
+One since hath quench’d the other; and the sword
+Is grafted on the crook; and so conjoin’d
+Each must perforce decline to worse, unaw’d
+By fear of other. If thou doubt me, mark
+The blade: each herb is judg’d of by its seed.
+That land, through which Adice and the Po
+Their waters roll, was once the residence
+Of courtesy and velour, ere the day,
+That frown’d on Frederick; now secure may pass
+Those limits, whosoe’er hath left, for shame,
+To talk with good men, or come near their haunts.
+Three aged ones are still found there, in whom
+The old time chides the new: these deem it long
+Ere God restore them to a better world:
+The good Gherardo, of Palazzo he
+Conrad, and Guido of Castello, nam’d
+In Gallic phrase more fitly the plain Lombard.
+On this at last conclude. The church of Rome,
+Mixing two governments that ill assort,
+Hath miss’d her footing, fall’n into the mire,
+And there herself and burden much defil’d.”
+
+“O Marco!” I replied, shine arguments
+Convince me: and the cause I now discern
+Why of the heritage no portion came
+To Levi’s offspring. But resolve me this
+Who that Gherardo is, that as thou sayst
+Is left a sample of the perish’d race,
+And for rebuke to this untoward age?”
+
+“Either thy words,” said he, “deceive; or else
+Are meant to try me; that thou, speaking Tuscan,
+Appear’st not to have heard of good Gherado;
+The sole addition that, by which I know him;
+Unless I borrow’d from his daughter Gaia
+Another name to grace him. God be with you.
+I bear you company no more. Behold
+The dawn with white ray glimm’ring through the mist.
+I must away—the angel comes—ere he
+Appear.” He said, and would not hear me more.
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XVII
+
+
+Call to remembrance, reader, if thou e’er
+Hast, on a mountain top, been ta’en by cloud,
+Through which thou saw’st no better, than the mole
+Doth through opacous membrane; then, whene’er
+The wat’ry vapours dense began to melt
+Into thin air, how faintly the sun’s sphere
+Seem’d wading through them; so thy nimble thought
+May image, how at first I re-beheld
+The sun, that bedward now his couch o’erhung.
+
+Thus with my leader’s feet still equaling pace
+From forth that cloud I came, when now expir’d
+The parting beams from off the nether shores.
+
+O quick and forgetive power! that sometimes dost
+So rob us of ourselves, we take no mark
+Though round about us thousand trumpets clang!
+What moves thee, if the senses stir not? Light
+Kindled in heav’n, spontaneous, self-inform’d,
+Or likelier gliding down with swift illapse
+By will divine. Portray’d before me came
+The traces of her dire impiety,
+Whose form was chang’d into the bird, that most
+Delights itself in song: and here my mind
+Was inwardly so wrapt, it gave no place
+To aught that ask’d admittance from without.
+
+Next shower’d into my fantasy a shape
+As of one crucified, whose visage spake
+Fell rancour, malice deep, wherein he died;
+And round him Ahasuerus the great king,
+Esther his bride, and Mordecai the just,
+Blameless in word and deed. As of itself
+That unsubstantial coinage of the brain
+Burst, like a bubble, Which the water fails
+That fed it; in my vision straight uprose
+A damsel weeping loud, and cried, “O queen!
+O mother! wherefore has intemperate ire
+Driv’n thee to loath thy being? Not to lose
+Lavinia, desp’rate thou hast slain thyself.
+Now hast thou lost me. I am she, whose tears
+Mourn, ere I fall, a mother’s timeless end.”
+
+E’en as a sleep breaks off, if suddenly
+New radiance strike upon the closed lids,
+The broken slumber quivering ere it dies;
+Thus from before me sunk that imagery
+Vanishing, soon as on my face there struck
+The light, outshining far our earthly beam.
+As round I turn’d me to survey what place
+I had arriv’d at, “Here ye mount,” exclaim’d
+A voice, that other purpose left me none,
+Save will so eager to behold who spake,
+I could not choose but gaze. As ’fore the sun,
+That weighs our vision down, and veils his form
+In light transcendent, thus my virtue fail’d
+Unequal. “This is Spirit from above,
+Who marshals us our upward way, unsought;
+And in his own light shrouds him;. As a man
+Doth for himself, so now is done for us.
+For whoso waits imploring, yet sees need
+Of his prompt aidance, sets himself prepar’d
+For blunt denial, ere the suit be made.
+Refuse we not to lend a ready foot
+At such inviting: haste we to ascend,
+Before it darken: for we may not then,
+Till morn again return.” So spake my guide;
+And to one ladder both address’d our steps;
+And the first stair approaching, I perceiv’d
+Near me as ’twere the waving of a wing,
+That fann’d my face and whisper’d: “Blessed they
+The peacemakers: they know not evil wrath.”
+
+Now to such height above our heads were rais’d
+The last beams, follow’d close by hooded night,
+That many a star on all sides through the gloom
+Shone out. “Why partest from me, O my strength?”
+So with myself I commun’d; for I felt
+My o’ertoil’d sinews slacken. We had reach’d
+The summit, and were fix’d like to a bark
+Arriv’d at land. And waiting a short space,
+If aught should meet mine ear in that new round,
+Then to my guide I turn’d, and said: “Lov’d sire!
+Declare what guilt is on this circle purg’d.
+If our feet rest, no need thy speech should pause.”
+
+He thus to me: “The love of good, whate’er
+Wanted of just proportion, here fulfils.
+Here plies afresh the oar, that loiter’d ill.
+But that thou mayst yet clearlier understand,
+Give ear unto my words, and thou shalt cull
+Some fruit may please thee well, from this delay.
+
+“Creator, nor created being, ne’er,
+My son,” he thus began, “was without love,
+Or natural, or the free spirit’s growth.
+Thou hast not that to learn. The natural still
+Is without error; but the other swerves,
+If on ill object bent, or through excess
+Of vigour, or defect. While e’er it seeks
+The primal blessings, or with measure due
+Th’ inferior, no delight, that flows from it,
+Partakes of ill. But let it warp to evil,
+Or with more ardour than behooves, or less.
+Pursue the good, the thing created then
+Works ’gainst its Maker. Hence thou must infer
+That love is germin of each virtue in ye,
+And of each act no less, that merits pain.
+Now since it may not be, but love intend
+The welfare mainly of the thing it loves,
+All from self-hatred are secure; and since
+No being can be thought t’ exist apart
+And independent of the first, a bar
+Of equal force restrains from hating that.
+
+“Grant the distinction just; and it remains
+The’ evil must be another’s, which is lov’d.
+Three ways such love is gender’d in your clay.
+There is who hopes (his neighbour’s worth deprest,)
+Preeminence himself, and coverts hence
+For his own greatness that another fall.
+There is who so much fears the loss of power,
+Fame, favour, glory (should his fellow mount
+Above him), and so sickens at the thought,
+He loves their opposite: and there is he,
+Whom wrong or insult seems to gall and shame
+That he doth thirst for vengeance, and such needs
+Must doat on other’s evil. Here beneath
+This threefold love is mourn’d. Of th’ other sort
+Be now instructed, that which follows good
+But with disorder’d and irregular course.
+
+“All indistinctly apprehend a bliss
+On which the soul may rest, the hearts of all
+Yearn after it, and to that wished bourn
+All therefore strive to tend. If ye behold
+Or seek it with a love remiss and lax,
+This cornice after just repenting lays
+Its penal torment on ye. Other good
+There is, where man finds not his happiness:
+It is not true fruition, not that blest
+Essence, of every good the branch and root.
+The love too lavishly bestow’d on this,
+Along three circles over us, is mourn’d.
+Account of that division tripartite
+Expect not, fitter for thine own research.
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XVIII
+
+
+The teacher ended, and his high discourse
+Concluding, earnest in my looks inquir’d
+If I appear’d content; and I, whom still
+Unsated thirst to hear him urg’d, was mute,
+Mute outwardly, yet inwardly I said:
+“Perchance my too much questioning offends
+But he, true father, mark’d the secret wish
+By diffidence restrain’d, and speaking, gave
+Me boldness thus to speak: “Master, my Sight
+Gathers so lively virtue from thy beams,
+That all, thy words convey, distinct is seen.
+Wherefore I pray thee, father, whom this heart
+Holds dearest! thou wouldst deign by proof t’ unfold
+That love, from which as from their source thou bring’st
+All good deeds and their opposite.” He then:
+“To what I now disclose be thy clear ken
+Directed, and thou plainly shalt behold
+How much those blind have err’d, who make themselves
+The guides of men. The soul, created apt
+To love, moves versatile which way soe’er
+Aught pleasing prompts her, soon as she is wak’d
+By pleasure into act. Of substance true
+Your apprehension forms its counterfeit,
+And in you the ideal shape presenting
+Attracts the soul’s regard. If she, thus drawn,
+incline toward it, love is that inclining,
+And a new nature knit by pleasure in ye.
+Then as the fire points up, and mounting seeks
+His birth-place and his lasting seat, e’en thus
+Enters the captive soul into desire,
+Which is a spiritual motion, that ne’er rests
+Before enjoyment of the thing it loves.
+Enough to show thee, how the truth from those
+Is hidden, who aver all love a thing
+Praise-worthy in itself: although perhaps
+Its substance seem still good. Yet if the wax
+Be good, it follows not th’ impression must.”
+“What love is,” I return’d, “thy words, O guide!
+And my own docile mind, reveal. Yet thence
+New doubts have sprung. For from without if love
+Be offer’d to us, and the spirit knows
+No other footing, tend she right or wrong,
+Is no desert of hers.” He answering thus:
+“What reason here discovers I have power
+To show thee: that which lies beyond, expect
+From Beatrice, faith not reason’s task.
+Spirit, substantial form, with matter join’d
+Not in confusion mix’d, hath in itself
+Specific virtue of that union born,
+Which is not felt except it work, nor prov’d
+But through effect, as vegetable life
+By the green leaf. From whence his intellect
+Deduced its primal notices of things,
+Man therefore knows not, or his appetites
+Their first affections; such in you, as zeal
+In bees to gather honey; at the first,
+Volition, meriting nor blame nor praise.
+But o’er each lower faculty supreme,
+That as she list are summon’d to her bar,
+Ye have that virtue in you, whose just voice
+Uttereth counsel, and whose word should keep
+The threshold of assent. Here is the source,
+Whence cause of merit in you is deriv’d,
+E’en as the affections good or ill she takes,
+Or severs, winnow’d as the chaff. Those men
+Who reas’ning went to depth profoundest, mark’d
+That innate freedom, and were thence induc’d
+To leave their moral teaching to the world.
+Grant then, that from necessity arise
+All love that glows within you; to dismiss
+Or harbour it, the pow’r is in yourselves.
+Remember, Beatrice, in her style,
+Denominates free choice by eminence
+The noble virtue, if in talk with thee
+She touch upon that theme.” The moon, well nigh
+To midnight hour belated, made the stars
+Appear to wink and fade; and her broad disk
+Seem’d like a crag on fire, as up the vault
+That course she journey’d, which the sun then warms,
+When they of Rome behold him at his set.
+Betwixt Sardinia and the Corsic isle.
+And now the weight, that hung upon my thought,
+Was lighten’d by the aid of that clear spirit,
+Who raiseth Andes above Mantua’s name.
+I therefore, when my questions had obtain’d
+Solution plain and ample, stood as one
+Musing in dreary slumber; but not long
+Slumber’d; for suddenly a multitude,
+The steep already turning, from behind,
+Rush’d on. With fury and like random rout,
+As echoing on their shores at midnight heard
+Ismenus and Asopus, for his Thebes
+If Bacchus’ help were needed; so came these
+Tumultuous, curving each his rapid step,
+By eagerness impell’d of holy love.
+
+Soon they o’ertook us; with such swiftness mov’d
+The mighty crowd. Two spirits at their head
+Cried weeping; “Blessed Mary sought with haste
+The hilly region. Caesar to subdue
+Ilerda, darted in Marseilles his sting,
+And flew to Spain.”—“Oh tarry not: away;”
+The others shouted; “let not time be lost
+Through slackness of affection. Hearty zeal
+To serve reanimates celestial grace.”
+
+“O ye, in whom intenser fervency
+Haply supplies, where lukewarm erst ye fail’d,
+Slow or neglectful, to absolve your part
+Of good and virtuous, this man, who yet lives,
+(Credit my tale, though strange) desires t’ ascend,
+So morning rise to light us. Therefore say
+Which hand leads nearest to the rifted rock?”
+
+So spake my guide, to whom a shade return’d:
+“Come after us, and thou shalt find the cleft.
+We may not linger: such resistless will
+Speeds our unwearied course. Vouchsafe us then
+Thy pardon, if our duty seem to thee
+Discourteous rudeness. In Verona I
+Was abbot of San Zeno, when the hand
+Of Barbarossa grasp’d Imperial sway,
+That name, ne’er utter’d without tears in Milan.
+And there is he, hath one foot in his grave,
+Who for that monastery ere long shall weep,
+Ruing his power misus’d: for that his son,
+Of body ill compact, and worse in mind,
+And born in evil, he hath set in place
+Of its true pastor.” Whether more he spake,
+Or here was mute, I know not: he had sped
+E’en now so far beyond us. Yet thus much
+I heard, and in rememb’rance treasur’d it.
+
+He then, who never fail’d me at my need,
+Cried, “Hither turn. Lo! two with sharp remorse
+Chiding their sin!” In rear of all the troop
+These shouted: “First they died, to whom the sea
+Open’d, or ever Jordan saw his heirs:
+And they, who with Aeneas to the end
+Endur’d not suffering, for their portion chose
+Life without glory.” Soon as they had fled
+Past reach of sight, new thought within me rose
+By others follow’d fast, and each unlike
+Its fellow: till led on from thought to thought,
+And pleasur’d with the fleeting train, mine eye
+Was clos’d, and meditation chang’d to dream.
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XIX
+
+
+It was the hour, when of diurnal heat
+No reliques chafe the cold beams of the moon,
+O’erpower’d by earth, or planetary sway
+Of Saturn; and the geomancer sees
+His Greater Fortune up the east ascend,
+Where gray dawn checkers first the shadowy cone;
+When ’fore me in my dream a woman’s shape
+There came, with lips that stammer’d, eyes aslant,
+Distorted feet, hands maim’d, and colour pale.
+
+I look’d upon her; and as sunshine cheers
+Limbs numb’d by nightly cold, e’en thus my look
+Unloos’d her tongue, next in brief space her form
+Decrepit rais’d erect, and faded face
+With love’s own hue illum’d. Recov’ring speech
+She forthwith warbling such a strain began,
+That I, how loth soe’er, could scarce have held
+Attention from the song. “I,” thus she sang,
+“I am the Siren, she, whom mariners
+On the wide sea are wilder’d when they hear:
+Such fulness of delight the list’ner feels.
+I from his course Ulysses by my lay
+Enchanted drew. Whoe’er frequents me once
+Parts seldom; so I charm him, and his heart
+Contented knows no void.” Or ere her mouth
+Was clos’d, to shame her at her side appear’d
+A dame of semblance holy. With stern voice
+She utter’d; “Say, O Virgil, who is this?”
+Which hearing, he approach’d, with eyes still bent
+Toward that goodly presence: th’ other seiz’d her,
+And, her robes tearing, open’d her before,
+And show’d the belly to me, whence a smell,
+Exhaling loathsome, wak’d me. Round I turn’d
+Mine eyes, and thus the teacher: “At the least
+Three times my voice hath call’d thee. Rise, begone.
+Let us the opening find where thou mayst pass.”
+
+I straightway rose. Now day, pour’d down from high,
+Fill’d all the circuits of the sacred mount;
+And, as we journey’d, on our shoulder smote
+The early ray. I follow’d, stooping low
+My forehead, as a man, o’ercharg’d with thought,
+Who bends him to the likeness of an arch,
+That midway spans the flood; when thus I heard,
+“Come, enter here,” in tone so soft and mild,
+As never met the ear on mortal strand.
+
+With swan-like wings dispread and pointing up,
+Who thus had spoken marshal’d us along,
+Where each side of the solid masonry
+The sloping, walls retir’d; then mov’d his plumes,
+And fanning us, affirm’d that those, who mourn,
+Are blessed, for that comfort shall be theirs.
+
+“What aileth thee, that still thou look’st to earth?”
+Began my leader; while th’ angelic shape
+A little over us his station took.
+
+“New vision,” I replied, “hath rais’d in me
+8urmisings strange and anxious doubts, whereon
+My soul intent allows no other thought
+Or room or entrance.—“Hast thou seen,” said he,
+“That old enchantress, her, whose wiles alone
+The spirits o’er us weep for? Hast thou seen
+How man may free him of her bonds? Enough.
+Let thy heels spurn the earth, and thy rais’d ken
+Fix on the lure, which heav’n’s eternal King
+Whirls in the rolling spheres.” As on his feet
+The falcon first looks down, then to the sky
+Turns, and forth stretches eager for the food,
+That woos him thither; so the call I heard,
+So onward, far as the dividing rock
+Gave way, I journey’d, till the plain was reach’d.
+
+On the fifth circle when I stood at large,
+A race appear’d before me, on the ground
+All downward lying prone and weeping sore.
+“My soul hath cleaved to the dust,” I heard
+With sighs so deep, they well nigh choak’d the words.
+“O ye elect of God, whose penal woes
+Both hope and justice mitigate, direct
+Tow’rds the steep rising our uncertain way.”
+
+“If ye approach secure from this our doom,
+Prostration—and would urge your course with speed,
+See that ye still to rightward keep the brink.”
+
+So them the bard besought; and such the words,
+Beyond us some short space, in answer came.
+
+I noted what remain’d yet hidden from them:
+Thence to my liege’s eyes mine eyes I bent,
+And he, forthwith interpreting their suit,
+Beckon’d his glad assent. Free then to act,
+As pleas’d me, I drew near, and took my stand
+O`er that shade, whose words I late had mark’d.
+And, “Spirit!” I said, “in whom repentant tears
+Mature that blessed hour, when thou with God
+Shalt find acceptance, for a while suspend
+For me that mightier care. Say who thou wast,
+Why thus ye grovel on your bellies prone,
+And if in aught ye wish my service there,
+Whence living I am come.” He answering spake
+“The cause why Heav’n our back toward his cope
+Reverses, shalt thou know: but me know first
+The successor of Peter, and the name
+And title of my lineage from that stream,
+That’ twixt Chiaveri and Siestri draws
+His limpid waters through the lowly glen.
+A month and little more by proof I learnt,
+With what a weight that robe of sov’reignty
+Upon his shoulder rests, who from the mire
+Would guard it: that each other fardel seems
+But feathers in the balance. Late, alas!
+Was my conversion: but when I became
+Rome’s pastor, I discern’d at once the dream
+And cozenage of life, saw that the heart
+Rested not there, and yet no prouder height
+Lur’d on the climber: wherefore, of that life
+No more enamour’d, in my bosom love
+Of purer being kindled. For till then
+I was a soul in misery, alienate
+From God, and covetous of all earthly things;
+Now, as thou seest, here punish’d for my doting.
+Such cleansing from the taint of avarice
+Do spirits converted need. This mount inflicts
+No direr penalty. E’en as our eyes
+Fasten’d below, nor e’er to loftier clime
+Were lifted, thus hath justice level’d us
+Here on the earth. As avarice quench’d our love
+Of good, without which is no working, thus
+Here justice holds us prison’d, hand and foot
+Chain’d down and bound, while heaven’s just Lord shall please.
+So long to tarry motionless outstretch’d.”
+
+My knees I stoop’d, and would have spoke; but he,
+Ere my beginning, by his ear perceiv’d
+I did him reverence; and “What cause,” said he,
+“Hath bow’d thee thus!”—” Compunction,” I rejoin’d.
+“And inward awe of your high dignity.”
+
+“Up,” he exclaim’d, “brother! upon thy feet
+Arise: err not: thy fellow servant I,
+(Thine and all others’) of one Sovran Power.
+If thou hast ever mark’d those holy sounds
+Of gospel truth, ‘nor shall be given ill marriage,’
+Thou mayst discern the reasons of my speech.
+Go thy ways now; and linger here no more.
+Thy tarrying is a let unto the tears,
+With which I hasten that whereof thou spak’st.
+I have on earth a kinswoman; her name
+Alagia, worthy in herself, so ill
+Example of our house corrupt her not:
+And she is all remaineth of me there.”
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XX
+
+
+Ill strives the will, ’gainst will more wise that strives
+His pleasure therefore to mine own preferr’d,
+I drew the sponge yet thirsty from the wave.
+
+Onward I mov’d: he also onward mov’d,
+Who led me, coasting still, wherever place
+Along the rock was vacant, as a man
+Walks near the battlements on narrow wall.
+For those on th’ other part, who drop by drop
+Wring out their all-infecting malady,
+Too closely press the verge. Accurst be thou!
+Inveterate wolf! whose gorge ingluts more prey,
+Than every beast beside, yet is not fill’d!
+So bottomless thy maw!—Ye spheres of heaven!
+To whom there are, as seems, who attribute
+All change in mortal state, when is the day
+Of his appearing, for whom fate reserves
+To chase her hence?—With wary steps and slow
+We pass’d; and I attentive to the shades,
+Whom piteously I heard lament and wail;
+And, ’midst the wailing, one before us heard
+Cry out “O blessed Virgin!” as a dame
+In the sharp pangs of childbed; and “How poor
+Thou wast,” it added, “witness that low roof
+Where thou didst lay thy sacred burden down.
+O good Fabricius! thou didst virtue choose
+With poverty, before great wealth with vice.”
+
+The words so pleas’d me, that desire to know
+The spirit, from whose lip they seem’d to come,
+Did draw me onward. Yet it spake the gift
+Of Nicholas, which on the maidens he
+Bounteous bestow’d, to save their youthful prime
+Unblemish’d. “Spirit! who dost speak of deeds
+So worthy, tell me who thou was,” I said,
+“And why thou dost with single voice renew
+Memorial of such praise. That boon vouchsaf’d
+Haply shall meet reward; if I return
+To finish the Short pilgrimage of life,
+Still speeding to its close on restless wing.”
+
+“I,” answer’d he, “will tell thee, not for hell,
+Which thence I look for; but that in thyself
+Grace so exceeding shines, before thy time
+Of mortal dissolution. I was root
+Of that ill plant, whose shade such poison sheds
+O’er all the Christian land, that seldom thence
+Good fruit is gather’d. Vengeance soon should come,
+Had Ghent and Douay, Lille and Bruges power;
+And vengeance I of heav’n’s great Judge implore.
+Hugh Capet was I high: from me descend
+The Philips and the Louis, of whom France
+Newly is govern’d; born of one, who ply’d
+The slaughterer’s trade at Paris. When the race
+Of ancient kings had vanish’d (all save one
+Wrapt up in sable weeds) within my gripe
+I found the reins of empire, and such powers
+Of new acquirement, with full store of friends,
+That soon the widow’d circlet of the crown
+Was girt upon the temples of my son,
+He, from whose bones th’ anointed race begins.
+Till the great dower of Provence had remov’d
+The stains, that yet obscur’d our lowly blood,
+Its sway indeed was narrow, but howe’er
+It wrought no evil: there, with force and lies,
+Began its rapine; after, for amends,
+Poitou it seiz’d, Navarre and Gascony.
+To Italy came Charles, and for amends
+Young Conradine an innocent victim slew,
+And sent th’ angelic teacher back to heav’n,
+Still for amends. I see the time at hand,
+That forth from France invites another Charles
+To make himself and kindred better known.
+Unarm’d he issues, saving with that lance,
+Which the arch-traitor tilted with; and that
+He carries with so home a thrust, as rives
+The bowels of poor Florence. No increase
+Of territory hence, but sin and shame
+Shall be his guerdon, and so much the more
+As he more lightly deems of such foul wrong.
+I see the other, who a prisoner late
+Had steps on shore, exposing to the mart
+His daughter, whom he bargains for, as do
+The Corsairs for their slaves. O avarice!
+What canst thou more, who hast subdued our blood
+So wholly to thyself, they feel no care
+Of their own flesh? To hide with direr guilt
+Past ill and future, lo! the flower-de-luce
+Enters Alagna! in his Vicar Christ
+Himself a captive, and his mockery
+Acted again! Lo! to his holy lip
+The vinegar and gall once more applied!
+And he ’twixt living robbers doom’d to bleed!
+Lo! the new Pilate, of whose cruelty
+Such violence cannot fill the measure up,
+With no degree to sanction, pushes on
+Into the temple his yet eager sails!
+
+“O sovran Master! when shall I rejoice
+To see the vengeance, which thy wrath well-pleas’d
+In secret silence broods?—While daylight lasts,
+So long what thou didst hear of her, sole spouse
+Of the Great Spirit, and on which thou turn’dst
+To me for comment, is the general theme
+Of all our prayers: but when it darkens, then
+A different strain we utter, then record
+Pygmalion, whom his gluttonous thirst of gold
+Made traitor, robber, parricide: the woes
+Of Midas, which his greedy wish ensued,
+Mark’d for derision to all future times:
+And the fond Achan, how he stole the prey,
+That yet he seems by Joshua’s ire pursued.
+Sapphira with her husband next, we blame;
+And praise the forefeet, that with furious ramp
+Spurn’d Heliodorus. All the mountain round
+Rings with the infamy of Thracia’s king,
+Who slew his Phrygian charge: and last a shout
+Ascends: “Declare, O Crassus! for thou know’st,
+The flavour of thy gold.” The voice of each
+Now high now low, as each his impulse prompts,
+Is led through many a pitch, acute or grave.
+Therefore, not singly, I erewhile rehears’d
+That blessedness we tell of in the day:
+But near me none beside his accent rais’d.”
+
+From him we now had parted, and essay’d
+With utmost efforts to surmount the way,
+When I did feel, as nodding to its fall,
+The mountain tremble; whence an icy chill
+Seiz’d on me, as on one to death convey’d.
+So shook not Delos, when Latona there
+Couch’d to bring forth the twin-born eyes of heaven.
+
+Forthwith from every side a shout arose
+So vehement, that suddenly my guide
+Drew near, and cried: “Doubt not, while I conduct thee.”
+“Glory!” all shouted (such the sounds mine ear
+Gather’d from those, who near me swell’d the sounds)
+“Glory in the highest be to God.” We stood
+Immovably suspended, like to those,
+The shepherds, who first heard in Bethlehem’s field
+That song: till ceas’d the trembling, and the song
+Was ended: then our hallow’d path resum’d,
+Eying the prostrate shadows, who renew’d
+Their custom’d mourning. Never in my breast
+Did ignorance so struggle with desire
+Of knowledge, if my memory do not err,
+As in that moment; nor through haste dar’d I
+To question, nor myself could aught discern,
+So on I far’d in thoughtfulness and dread.
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XXI
+
+
+The natural thirst, ne’er quench’d but from the well,
+Whereof the woman of Samaria crav’d,
+Excited: haste along the cumber’d path,
+After my guide, impell’d; and pity mov’d
+My bosom for the ’vengeful deed, though just.
+When lo! even as Luke relates, that Christ
+Appear’d unto the two upon their way,
+New-risen from his vaulted grave; to us
+A shade appear’d, and after us approach’d,
+Contemplating the crowd beneath its feet.
+We were not ware of it; so first it spake,
+Saying, “God give you peace, my brethren!” then
+Sudden we turn’d: and Virgil such salute,
+As fitted that kind greeting, gave, and cried:
+“Peace in the blessed council be thy lot
+Awarded by that righteous court, which me
+To everlasting banishment exiles!”
+
+“How!” he exclaim’d, nor from his speed meanwhile
+Desisting, “If that ye be spirits, whom God
+Vouchsafes not room above, who up the height
+Has been thus far your guide?” To whom the bard:
+“If thou observe the tokens, which this man
+Trac’d by the finger of the angel bears,
+’Tis plain that in the kingdom of the just
+He needs must share. But sithence she, whose wheel
+Spins day and night, for him not yet had drawn
+That yarn, which, on the fatal distaff pil’d,
+Clotho apportions to each wight that breathes,
+His soul, that sister is to mine and thine,
+Not of herself could mount, for not like ours
+Her ken: whence I, from forth the ample gulf
+Of hell was ta’en, to lead him, and will lead
+Far as my lore avails. But, if thou know,
+Instruct us for what cause, the mount erewhile
+Thus shook and trembled: wherefore all at once
+Seem’d shouting, even from his wave-wash’d foot.”
+
+That questioning so tallied with my wish,
+The thirst did feel abatement of its edge
+E’en from expectance. He forthwith replied,
+“In its devotion nought irregular
+This mount can witness, or by punctual rule
+Unsanction’d; here from every change exempt.
+Other than that, which heaven in itself
+Doth of itself receive, no influence
+Can reach us. Tempest none, shower, hail or snow,
+Hoar frost or dewy moistness, higher falls
+Than that brief scale of threefold steps: thick clouds
+Nor scudding rack are ever seen: swift glance
+Ne’er lightens, nor Thaumantian Iris gleams,
+That yonder often shift on each side heav’n.
+Vapour adust doth never mount above
+The highest of the trinal stairs, whereon
+Peter’s vicegerent stands. Lower perchance,
+With various motion rock’d, trembles the soil:
+But here, through wind in earth’s deep hollow pent,
+I know not how, yet never trembled: then
+Trembles, when any spirit feels itself
+So purified, that it may rise, or move
+For rising, and such loud acclaim ensues.
+Purification by the will alone
+Is prov’d, that free to change society
+Seizes the soul rejoicing in her will.
+Desire of bliss is present from the first;
+But strong propension hinders, to that wish
+By the just ordinance of heav’n oppos’d;
+Propension now as eager to fulfil
+Th’ allotted torment, as erewhile to sin.
+And I who in this punishment had lain
+Five hundred years and more, but now have felt
+Free wish for happier clime. Therefore thou felt’st
+The mountain tremble, and the spirits devout
+Heard’st, over all his limits, utter praise
+To that liege Lord, whom I entreat their joy
+To hasten.” Thus he spake: and since the draught
+Is grateful ever as the thirst is keen,
+No words may speak my fullness of content.
+
+“Now,” said the instructor sage, “I see the net
+That takes ye here, and how the toils are loos’d,
+Why rocks the mountain and why ye rejoice.
+Vouchsafe, that from thy lips I next may learn,
+Who on the earth thou wast, and wherefore here
+So many an age wert prostrate.”—“In that time,
+When the good Titus, with Heav’n’s King to help,
+Aveng’d those piteous gashes, whence the blood
+By Judas sold did issue, with the name
+Most lasting and most honour’d there was I
+Abundantly renown’d,” the shade reply’d,
+“Not yet with faith endued. So passing sweet
+My vocal Spirit, from Tolosa, Rome
+To herself drew me, where I merited
+A myrtle garland to inwreathe my brow.
+Statius they name me still. Of Thebes I sang,
+And next of great Achilles: but i’ th’ way
+Fell with the second burthen. Of my flame
+Those sparkles were the seeds, which I deriv’d
+From the bright fountain of celestial fire
+That feeds unnumber’d lamps, the song I mean
+Which sounds Aeneas’ wand’rings: that the breast
+I hung at, that the nurse, from whom my veins
+Drank inspiration: whose authority
+Was ever sacred with me. To have liv’d
+Coeval with the Mantuan, I would bide
+The revolution of another sun
+Beyond my stated years in banishment.”
+
+The Mantuan, when he heard him, turn’d to me,
+And holding silence: by his countenance
+Enjoin’d me silence but the power which wills,
+Bears not supreme control: laughter and tears
+Follow so closely on the passion prompts them,
+They wait not for the motions of the will
+In natures most sincere. I did but smile,
+As one who winks; and thereupon the shade
+Broke off, and peer’d into mine eyes, where best
+Our looks interpret. “So to good event
+Mayst thou conduct such great emprize,” he cried,
+“Say, why across thy visage beam’d, but now,
+The lightning of a smile!” On either part
+Now am I straiten’d; one conjures me speak,
+Th’ other to silence binds me: whence a sigh
+I utter, and the sigh is heard. “Speak on; “
+The teacher cried; “and do not fear to speak,
+But tell him what so earnestly he asks.”
+Whereon I thus: “Perchance, O ancient spirit!
+Thou marvel’st at my smiling. There is room
+For yet more wonder. He who guides my ken
+On high, he is that Mantuan, led by whom
+Thou didst presume of men arid gods to sing.
+If other cause thou deem’dst for which I smil’d,
+Leave it as not the true one; and believe
+Those words, thou spak’st of him, indeed the cause.”
+
+Now down he bent t’ embrace my teacher’s feet;
+But he forbade him: “Brother! do it not:
+Thou art a shadow, and behold’st a shade.”
+He rising answer’d thus: “Now hast thou prov’d
+The force and ardour of the love I bear thee,
+When I forget we are but things of air,
+And as a substance treat an empty shade.”
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XXII
+
+
+Now we had left the angel, who had turn’d
+To the sixth circle our ascending step,
+One gash from off my forehead raz’d: while they,
+Whose wishes tend to justice, shouted forth:
+“Blessed!” and ended with, “I thirst:” and I,
+More nimble than along the other straits,
+So journey’d, that, without the sense of toil,
+I follow’d upward the swift-footed shades;
+When Virgil thus began: “Let its pure flame
+From virtue flow, and love can never fail
+To warm another’s bosom’ so the light
+Shine manifestly forth. Hence from that hour,
+When ’mongst us in the purlieus of the deep,
+Came down the spirit of Aquinum’s hard,
+Who told of thine affection, my good will
+Hath been for thee of quality as strong
+As ever link’d itself to one not seen.
+Therefore these stairs will now seem short to me.
+But tell me: and if too secure I loose
+The rein with a friend’s license, as a friend
+Forgive me, and speak now as with a friend:
+How chanc’d it covetous desire could find
+Place in that bosom, ’midst such ample store
+Of wisdom, as thy zeal had treasur’d there?”
+
+First somewhat mov’d to laughter by his words,
+Statius replied: “Each syllable of thine
+Is a dear pledge of love. Things oft appear
+That minister false matters to our doubts,
+When their true causes are remov’d from sight.
+Thy question doth assure me, thou believ’st
+I was on earth a covetous man, perhaps
+Because thou found’st me in that circle plac’d.
+Know then I was too wide of avarice:
+And e’en for that excess, thousands of moons
+Have wax’d and wan’d upon my sufferings.
+And were it not that I with heedful care
+Noted where thou exclaim’st as if in ire
+With human nature, ‘Why, thou cursed thirst
+Of gold! dost not with juster measure guide
+The appetite of mortals?’ I had met
+The fierce encounter of the voluble rock.
+Then was I ware that with too ample wing
+The hands may haste to lavishment, and turn’d,
+As from my other evil, so from this
+In penitence. How many from their grave
+Shall with shorn locks arise, who living, aye
+And at life’s last extreme, of this offence,
+Through ignorance, did not repent. And know,
+The fault which lies direct from any sin
+In level opposition, here With that
+Wastes its green rankness on one common heap.
+Therefore if I have been with those, who wail
+Their avarice, to cleanse me, through reverse
+Of their transgression, such hath been my lot.”
+
+To whom the sovran of the pastoral song:
+“While thou didst sing that cruel warfare wag’d
+By the twin sorrow of Jocasta’s womb,
+From thy discourse with Clio there, it seems
+As faith had not been shine: without the which
+Good deeds suffice not. And if so, what sun
+Rose on thee, or what candle pierc’d the dark
+That thou didst after see to hoist the sail,
+And follow, where the fisherman had led?”
+
+He answering thus: “By thee conducted first,
+I enter’d the Parnassian grots, and quaff’d
+Of the clear spring; illumin’d first by thee
+Open’d mine eyes to God. Thou didst, as one,
+Who, journeying through the darkness, hears a light
+Behind, that profits not himself, but makes
+His followers wise, when thou exclaimedst, ‘Lo!
+A renovated world! Justice return’d!
+Times of primeval innocence restor’d!
+And a new race descended from above!’
+Poet and Christian both to thee I owed.
+That thou mayst mark more clearly what I trace,
+My hand shall stretch forth to inform the lines
+With livelier colouring. Soon o’er all the world,
+By messengers from heav’n, the true belief
+Teem’d now prolific, and that word of thine
+Accordant, to the new instructors chim’d.
+Induc’d by which agreement, I was wont
+Resort to them; and soon their sanctity
+So won upon me, that, Domitian’s rage
+Pursuing them, I mix’d my tears with theirs,
+And, while on earth I stay’d, still succour’d them;
+And their most righteous customs made me scorn
+All sects besides. Before I led the Greeks
+In tuneful fiction, to the streams of Thebes,
+I was baptiz’d; but secretly, through fear,
+Remain’d a Christian, and conform’d long time
+To Pagan rites. Five centuries and more,
+T for that lukewarmness was fain to pace
+Round the fourth circle. Thou then, who hast rais’d
+The covering, which did hide such blessing from me,
+Whilst much of this ascent is yet to climb,
+Say, if thou know, where our old Terence bides,
+Caecilius, Plautus, Varro: if condemn’d
+They dwell, and in what province of the deep.”
+“These,” said my guide, “with Persius and myself,
+And others many more, are with that Greek,
+Of mortals, the most cherish’d by the Nine,
+In the first ward of darkness. There ofttimes
+We of that mount hold converse, on whose top
+For aye our nurses live. We have the bard
+Of Pella, and the Teian, Agatho,
+Simonides, and many a Grecian else
+Ingarlanded with laurel. Of thy train
+Antigone is there, Deiphile,
+Argia, and as sorrowful as erst
+Ismene, and who show’d Langia’s wave:
+Deidamia with her sisters there,
+And blind Tiresias’ daughter, and the bride
+Sea-born of Peleus.” Either poet now
+Was silent, and no longer by th’ ascent
+Or the steep walls obstructed, round them cast
+Inquiring eyes. Four handmaids of the day
+Had finish’d now their office, and the fifth
+Was at the chariot-beam, directing still
+Its balmy point aloof, when thus my guide:
+“Methinks, it well behooves us to the brink
+Bend the right shoulder’ circuiting the mount,
+As we have ever us’d.” So custom there
+Was usher to the road, the which we chose
+Less doubtful, as that worthy shade complied.
+
+They on before me went; I sole pursued,
+List’ning their speech, that to my thoughts convey’d
+Mysterious lessons of sweet poesy.
+But soon they ceas’d; for midway of the road
+A tree we found, with goodly fruitage hung,
+And pleasant to the smell: and as a fir
+Upward from bough to bough less ample spreads,
+So downward this less ample spread, that none.
+Methinks, aloft may climb. Upon the side,
+That clos’d our path, a liquid crystal fell
+From the steep rock, and through the sprays above
+Stream’d showering. With associate step the bards
+Drew near the plant; and from amidst the leaves
+A voice was heard: “Ye shall be chary of me;”
+And after added: “Mary took more thought
+For joy and honour of the nuptial feast,
+Than for herself who answers now for you.
+The women of old Rome were satisfied
+With water for their beverage. Daniel fed
+On pulse, and wisdom gain’d. The primal age
+Was beautiful as gold; and hunger then
+Made acorns tasteful, thirst each rivulet
+Run nectar. Honey and locusts were the food,
+Whereon the Baptist in the wilderness
+Fed, and that eminence of glory reach’d
+And greatness, which the’ Evangelist records.”
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XXIII
+
+
+On the green leaf mine eyes were fix’d, like his
+Who throws away his days in idle chase
+Of the diminutive, when thus I heard
+The more than father warn me: “Son! our time
+Asks thriftier using. Linger not: away.”
+
+Thereat my face and steps at once I turn’d
+Toward the sages, by whose converse cheer’d
+I journey’d on, and felt no toil: and lo!
+A sound of weeping and a song: “My lips,
+O Lord!” and these so mingled, it gave birth
+To pleasure and to pain. “O Sire, belov’d!
+Say what is this I hear?” Thus I inquir’d.
+
+“Spirits,” said he, “who as they go, perchance,
+Their debt of duty pay.” As on their road
+The thoughtful pilgrims, overtaking some
+Not known unto them, turn to them, and look,
+But stay not; thus, approaching from behind
+With speedier motion, eyed us, as they pass’d,
+A crowd of spirits, silent and devout.
+The eyes of each were dark and hollow: pale
+Their visage, and so lean withal, the bones
+Stood staring thro’ the skin. I do not think
+Thus dry and meagre Erisicthon show’d,
+When pinc’ed by sharp-set famine to the quick.
+
+“Lo!” to myself I mus’d, “the race, who lost
+Jerusalem, when Mary with dire beak
+Prey’d on her child.” The sockets seem’d as rings,
+From which the gems were drops. Who reads the name
+Of man upon his forehead, there the M
+Had trac’d most plainly. Who would deem, that scent
+Of water and an apple, could have prov’d
+Powerful to generate such pining want,
+Not knowing how it wrought? While now I stood
+Wond’ring what thus could waste them (for the cause
+Of their gaunt hollowness and scaly rind
+Appear’d not) lo! a spirit turn’d his eyes
+In their deep-sunken cell, and fasten’d then
+On me, then cried with vehemence aloud:
+“What grace is this vouchsaf’d me?” By his looks
+I ne’er had recogniz’d him: but the voice
+Brought to my knowledge what his cheer conceal’d.
+Remembrance of his alter’d lineaments
+Was kindled from that spark; and I agniz’d
+The visage of Forese. “Ah! respect
+This wan and leprous wither’d skin,” thus he
+Suppliant implor’d, “this macerated flesh.
+Speak to me truly of thyself. And who
+Are those twain spirits, that escort thee there?
+Be it not said thou Scorn’st to talk with me.”
+
+“That face of thine,” I answer’d him, “which dead
+I once bewail’d, disposes me not less
+For weeping, when I see It thus transform’d.
+Say then, by Heav’n, what blasts ye thus? The whilst
+I wonder, ask not Speech from me: unapt
+Is he to speak, whom other will employs.
+
+He thus: “The water and tee plant we pass’d,
+Virtue possesses, by th’ eternal will
+Infus’d, the which so pines me. Every spirit,
+Whose song bewails his gluttony indulg’d
+Too grossly, here in hunger and in thirst
+Is purified. The odour, which the fruit,
+And spray, that showers upon the verdure, breathe,
+Inflames us with desire to feed and drink.
+Nor once alone encompassing our route
+We come to add fresh fuel to the pain:
+Pain, said I? solace rather: for that will
+To the tree leads us, by which Christ was led
+To call Elias, joyful when he paid
+Our ransom from his vein.” I answering thus:
+“Forese! from that day, in which the world
+For better life thou changedst, not five years
+Have circled. If the power of sinning more
+Were first concluded in thee, ere thou knew’st
+That kindly grief, which re-espouses us
+To God, how hither art thou come so soon?
+I thought to find thee lower, there, where time
+Is recompense for time.” He straight replied:
+“To drink up the sweet wormwood of affliction
+I have been brought thus early by the tears
+Stream’d down my Nella’s cheeks. Her prayers devout,
+Her sighs have drawn me from the coast, where oft
+Expectance lingers, and have set me free
+From th’ other circles. In the sight of God
+So much the dearer is my widow priz’d,
+She whom I lov’d so fondly, as she ranks
+More singly eminent for virtuous deeds.
+The tract most barb’rous of Sardinia’s isle,
+Hath dames more chaste and modester by far
+Than that wherein I left her. O sweet brother!
+What wouldst thou have me say? A time to come
+Stands full within my view, to which this hour
+Shall not be counted of an ancient date,
+When from the pulpit shall be loudly warn’d
+Th’ unblushing dames of Florence, lest they bare
+Unkerchief’d bosoms to the common gaze.
+What savage women hath the world e’er seen,
+What Saracens, for whom there needed scourge
+Of spiritual or other discipline,
+To force them walk with cov’ring on their limbs!
+But did they see, the shameless ones, that Heav’n
+Wafts on swift wing toward them, while I speak,
+Their mouths were op’d for howling: they shall taste
+Of Borrow (unless foresight cheat me here)
+Or ere the cheek of him be cloth’d with down
+Who is now rock’d with lullaby asleep.
+Ah! now, my brother, hide thyself no more,
+Thou seest how not I alone but all
+Gaze, where thou veil’st the intercepted sun.”
+
+Whence I replied: “If thou recall to mind
+What we were once together, even yet
+Remembrance of those days may grieve thee sore.
+That I forsook that life, was due to him
+Who there precedes me, some few evenings past,
+When she was round, who shines with sister lamp
+To his, that glisters yonder,” and I show’d
+The sun. “Tis he, who through profoundest night
+Of he true dead has brought me, with this flesh
+As true, that follows. From that gloom the aid
+Of his sure comfort drew me on to climb,
+And climbing wind along this mountain-steep,
+Which rectifies in you whate’er the world
+Made crooked and deprav’d I have his word,
+That he will bear me company as far
+As till I come where Beatrice dwells:
+But there must leave me. Virgil is that spirit,
+Who thus hath promis’d,” and I pointed to him;
+“The other is that shade, for whom so late
+Your realm, as he arose, exulting shook
+Through every pendent cliff and rocky bound.”
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XXIV
+
+
+Our journey was not slacken’d by our talk,
+Nor yet our talk by journeying. Still we spake,
+And urg’d our travel stoutly, like a ship
+When the wind sits astern. The shadowy forms,
+That seem’d things dead and dead again, drew in
+At their deep-delved orbs rare wonder of me,
+Perceiving I had life; and I my words
+Continued, and thus spake; “He journeys up
+Perhaps more tardily then else he would,
+For others’ sake. But tell me, if thou know’st,
+Where is Piccarda? Tell me, if I see
+Any of mark, among this multitude,
+Who eye me thus.”—“My sister (she for whom,
+’Twixt beautiful and good I cannot say
+Which name was fitter) wears e’en now her crown,
+And triumphs in Olympus.” Saying this,
+He added: “Since spare diet hath so worn
+Our semblance out, ’tis lawful here to name
+Each one . This,” and his finger then he rais’d,
+“Is Buonaggiuna,—Buonaggiuna, he
+Of Lucca: and that face beyond him, pierc’d
+Unto a leaner fineness than the rest,
+Had keeping of the church: he was of Tours,
+And purges by wan abstinence away
+Bolsena’s eels and cups of muscadel.”
+
+He show’d me many others, one by one,
+And all, as they were nam’d, seem’d well content;
+For no dark gesture I discern’d in any.
+I saw through hunger Ubaldino grind
+His teeth on emptiness; and Boniface,
+That wav’d the crozier o’er a num’rous flock.
+I saw the Marquis, who tad time erewhile
+To swill at Forli with less drought, yet so
+Was one ne’er sated. I howe’er, like him,
+That gazing ’midst a crowd, singles out one,
+So singled him of Lucca; for methought
+Was none amongst them took such note of me.
+Somewhat I heard him whisper of Gentucca:
+The sound was indistinct, and murmur’d there,
+Where justice, that so strips them, fix’d her sting.
+
+“Spirit!” said I, “it seems as thou wouldst fain
+Speak with me. Let me hear thee. Mutual wish
+To converse prompts, which let us both indulge.”
+
+He, answ’ring, straight began: “Woman is born,
+Whose brow no wimple shades yet, that shall make
+My city please thee, blame it as they may.
+Go then with this forewarning. If aught false
+My whisper too implied, th’ event shall tell
+But say, if of a truth I see the man
+Of that new lay th’ inventor, which begins
+With ‘Ladies, ye that con the lore of love’.”
+
+To whom I thus: “Count of me but as one
+Who am the scribe of love; that, when he breathes,
+Take up my pen, and, as he dictates, write.”
+
+“Brother!” said he, “the hind’rance which once held
+The notary with Guittone and myself,
+Short of that new and sweeter style I hear,
+Is now disclos’d. I see how ye your plumes
+Stretch, as th’ inditer guides them; which, no question,
+Ours did not. He that seeks a grace beyond,
+Sees not the distance parts one style from other.”
+And, as contented, here he held his peace.
+
+Like as the bird, that winter near the Nile,
+In squared regiment direct their course,
+Then stretch themselves in file for speedier flight;
+Thus all the tribe of spirits, as they turn’d
+Their visage, faster deaf, nimble alike
+Through leanness and desire. And as a man,
+Tir’d With the motion of a trotting steed,
+Slacks pace, and stays behind his company,
+Till his o’erbreathed lungs keep temperate time;
+E’en so Forese let that holy crew
+Proceed, behind them lingering at my side,
+And saying: “When shall I again behold thee?”
+
+“How long my life may last,” said I, “I know not;
+This know, how soon soever I return,
+My wishes will before me have arriv’d.
+Sithence the place, where I am set to live,
+Is, day by day, more scoop’d of all its good,
+And dismal ruin seems to threaten it.”
+
+“Go now,” he cried: “lo! he, whose guilt is most,
+Passes before my vision, dragg’d at heels
+Of an infuriate beast. Toward the vale,
+Where guilt hath no redemption, on it speeds,
+Each step increasing swiftness on the last;
+Until a blow it strikes, that leaveth him
+A corse most vilely shatter’d. No long space
+Those wheels have yet to roll” (therewith his eyes
+Look’d up to heav’n) “ere thou shalt plainly see
+That which my words may not more plainly tell.
+I quit thee: time is precious here: I lose
+Too much, thus measuring my pace with shine.”
+
+As from a troop of well-rank’d chivalry
+One knight, more enterprising than the rest,
+Pricks forth at gallop, eager to display
+His prowess in the first encounter prov’d
+So parted he from us with lengthen’d strides,
+And left me on the way with those twain spirits,
+Who were such mighty marshals of the world.
+
+When he beyond us had so fled mine eyes
+No nearer reach’d him, than my thought his words,
+The branches of another fruit, thick hung,
+And blooming fresh, appear’d. E’en as our steps
+Turn’d thither, not far off it rose to view.
+Beneath it were a multitude, that rais’d
+Their hands, and shouted forth I know not What
+Unto the boughs; like greedy and fond brats,
+That beg, and answer none obtain from him,
+Of whom they beg; but more to draw them on,
+He at arm’s length the object of their wish
+Above them holds aloft, and hides it not.
+
+At length, as undeceiv’d they went their way:
+And we approach the tree, who vows and tears
+Sue to in vain, the mighty tree. “Pass on,
+And come not near. Stands higher up the wood,
+Whereof Eve tasted, and from it was ta’en
+‘this plant.” Such sounds from midst the thickets came.
+Whence I, with either bard, close to the side
+That rose, pass’d forth beyond. “Remember,” next
+We heard, “those noblest creatures of the clouds,
+How they their twofold bosoms overgorg’d
+Oppos’d in fight to Theseus: call to mind
+The Hebrews, how effeminate they stoop’d
+To ease their thirst; whence Gideon’s ranks were thinn’d,
+As he to Midian march’d adown the hills.”
+
+Thus near one border coasting, still we heard
+The sins of gluttony, with woe erewhile
+Reguerdon’d. Then along the lonely path,
+Once more at large, full thousand paces on
+We travel’d, each contemplative and mute.
+
+“Why pensive journey thus ye three alone?”
+Thus suddenly a voice exclaim’d: whereat
+I shook, as doth a scar’d and paltry beast;
+Then rais’d my head to look from whence it came.
+
+Was ne’er, in furnace, glass, or metal seen
+So bright and glowing red, as was the shape
+I now beheld. “If ye desire to mount,”
+He cried, “here must ye turn. This way he goes,
+Who goes in quest of peace.” His countenance
+Had dazzled me; and to my guides I fac’d
+Backward, like one who walks, as sound directs.
+
+As when, to harbinger the dawn, springs up
+On freshen’d wing the air of May, and breathes
+Of fragrance, all impregn’d with herb and flowers,
+E’en such a wind I felt upon my front
+Blow gently, and the moving of a wing
+Perceiv’d, that moving shed ambrosial smell;
+And then a voice: “Blessed are they, whom grace
+Doth so illume, that appetite in them
+Exhaleth no inordinate desire,
+Still hung’ring as the rule of temperance wills.”
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XXV
+
+
+It was an hour, when he who climbs, had need
+To walk uncrippled: for the sun had now
+To Taurus the meridian circle left,
+And to the Scorpion left the night. As one
+That makes no pause, but presses on his road,
+Whate’er betide him, if some urgent need
+Impel: so enter’d we upon our way,
+One before other; for, but singly, none
+That steep and narrow scale admits to climb.
+
+E’en as the young stork lifteth up his wing
+Through wish to fly, yet ventures not to quit
+The nest, and drops it; so in me desire
+Of questioning my guide arose, and fell,
+Arriving even to the act, that marks
+A man prepar’d for speech. Him all our haste
+Restrain’d not, but thus spake the sire belov’d:
+Fear not to speed the shaft, that on thy lip
+Stands trembling for its flight.” Encourag’d thus
+I straight began: “How there can leanness come,
+Where is no want of nourishment to feed?”
+
+“If thou,” he answer’d, “hadst remember’d thee,
+How Meleager with the wasting brand
+Wasted alike, by equal fires consm’d,
+This would not trouble thee: and hadst thou thought,
+How in the mirror your reflected form
+With mimic motion vibrates, what now seems
+Hard, had appear’d no harder than the pulp
+Of summer fruit mature. But that thy will
+In certainty may find its full repose,
+Lo Statius here! on him I call, and pray
+That he would now be healer of thy wound.”
+
+“If in thy presence I unfold to him
+The secrets of heaven’s vengeance, let me plead
+Thine own injunction, to exculpate me.”
+So Statius answer’d, and forthwith began:
+“Attend my words, O son, and in thy mind
+Receive them: so shall they be light to clear
+The doubt thou offer’st. Blood, concocted well,
+Which by the thirsty veins is ne’er imbib’d,
+And rests as food superfluous, to be ta’en
+From the replenish’d table, in the heart
+Derives effectual virtue, that informs
+The several human limbs, as being that,
+Which passes through the veins itself to make them.
+Yet more concocted it descends, where shame
+Forbids to mention: and from thence distils
+In natural vessel on another’s blood.
+Then each unite together, one dispos’d
+T’ endure, to act the other, through meet frame
+Of its recipient mould: that being reach’d,
+It ’gins to work, coagulating first;
+Then vivifies what its own substance caus’d
+To bear. With animation now indued,
+The active virtue (differing from a plant
+No further, than that this is on the way
+And at its limit that) continues yet
+To operate, that now it moves, and feels,
+As sea sponge clinging to the rock: and there
+Assumes th’ organic powers its seed convey’d.
+‘This is the period, son! at which the virtue,
+That from the generating heart proceeds,
+Is pliant and expansive; for each limb
+Is in the heart by forgeful nature plann’d.
+How babe of animal becomes, remains
+For thy consid’ring. At this point, more wise,
+Than thou hast err’d, making the soul disjoin’d
+From passive intellect, because he saw
+No organ for the latter’s use assign’d.
+
+“Open thy bosom to the truth that comes.
+Know soon as in the embryo, to the brain,
+Articulation is complete, then turns
+The primal Mover with a smile of joy
+On such great work of nature, and imbreathes
+New spirit replete with virtue, that what here
+Active it finds, to its own substance draws,
+And forms an individual soul, that lives,
+And feels, and bends reflective on itself.
+And that thou less mayst marvel at the word,
+Mark the sun’s heat, how that to wine doth change,
+Mix’d with the moisture filter’d through the vine.
+
+“When Lachesis hath spun the thread, the soul
+Takes with her both the human and divine,
+Memory, intelligence, and will, in act
+Far keener than before, the other powers
+Inactive all and mute. No pause allow’d,
+In wond’rous sort self-moving, to one strand
+Of those, where the departed roam, she falls,
+Here learns her destin’d path. Soon as the place
+Receives her, round the plastic virtue beams,
+Distinct as in the living limbs before:
+And as the air, when saturate with showers,
+The casual beam refracting, decks itself
+With many a hue; so here the ambient air
+Weareth that form, which influence of the soul
+Imprints on it; and like the flame, that where
+The fire moves, thither follows, so henceforth
+The new form on the spirit follows still:
+Hence hath it semblance, and is shadow call’d,
+With each sense even to the sight endued:
+Hence speech is ours, hence laughter, tears, and sighs
+Which thou mayst oft have witness’d on the mount
+Th’ obedient shadow fails not to present
+Whatever varying passion moves within us.
+And this the cause of what thou marvel’st at.”
+
+Now the last flexure of our way we reach’d,
+And to the right hand turning, other care
+Awaits us. Here the rocky precipice
+Hurls forth redundant flames, and from the rim
+A blast upblown, with forcible rebuff
+Driveth them back, sequester’d from its bound.
+
+Behoov’d us, one by one, along the side,
+That border’d on the void, to pass; and I
+Fear’d on one hand the fire, on th’ other fear’d
+Headlong to fall: when thus th’ instructor warn’d:
+“Strict rein must in this place direct the eyes.
+A little swerving and the way is lost.”
+
+Then from the bosom of the burning mass,
+“O God of mercy!” heard I sung; and felt
+No less desire to turn. And when I saw
+Spirits along the flame proceeding, I
+Between their footsteps and mine own was fain
+To share by turns my view. At the hymn’s close
+They shouted loud, “I do not know a man;”
+Then in low voice again took up the strain,
+Which once more ended, “To the wood,” they cried,
+“Ran Dian, and drave forth Callisto, stung
+With Cytherea’s poison:” then return’d
+Unto their song; then marry a pair extoll’d,
+Who liv’d in virtue chastely, and the bands
+Of wedded love. Nor from that task, I ween,
+Surcease they; whilesoe’er the scorching fire
+Enclasps them. Of such skill appliance needs
+To medicine the wound, that healeth last.
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XXVI
+
+
+While singly thus along the rim we walk’d,
+Oft the good master warn’d me: “Look thou well.
+Avail it that I caution thee.” The sun
+Now all the western clime irradiate chang’d
+From azure tinct to white; and, as I pass’d,
+My passing shadow made the umber’d flame
+Burn ruddier. At so strange a sight I mark’d
+That many a spirit marvel’d on his way.
+
+This bred occasion first to speak of me,
+“He seems,” said they, “no insubstantial frame:”
+Then to obtain what certainty they might,
+Stretch’d towards me, careful not to overpass
+The burning pale. “O thou, who followest
+The others, haply not more slow than they,
+But mov’d by rev’rence, answer me, who burn
+In thirst and fire: nor I alone, but these
+All for thine answer do more thirst, than doth
+Indian or Aethiop for the cooling stream.
+Tell us, how is it that thou mak’st thyself
+A wall against the sun, as thou not yet
+Into th’ inextricable toils of death
+Hadst enter’d?” Thus spake one, and I had straight
+Declar’d me, if attention had not turn’d
+To new appearance. Meeting these, there came,
+Midway the burning path, a crowd, on whom
+Earnestly gazing, from each part I view
+The shadows all press forward, sev’rally
+Each snatch a hasty kiss, and then away.
+E’en so the emmets, ’mid their dusky troops,
+Peer closely one at other, to spy out
+Their mutual road perchance, and how they thrive.
+
+That friendly greeting parted, ere dispatch
+Of the first onward step, from either tribe
+Loud clamour rises: those, who newly come,
+Shout Sodom and Gomorrah!” these, “The cow
+Pasiphae enter’d, that the beast she woo’d
+Might rush unto her luxury.” Then as cranes,
+That part towards the Riphaean mountains fly,
+Part towards the Lybic sands, these to avoid
+The ice, and those the sun; so hasteth off
+One crowd, advances th’ other; and resume
+Their first song weeping, and their several shout.
+
+Again drew near my side the very same,
+Who had erewhile besought me, and their looks
+Mark’d eagerness to listen. I, who twice
+Their will had noted, spake: “O spirits secure,
+Whene’er the time may be, of peaceful end!
+My limbs, nor crude, nor in mature old age,
+Have I left yonder: here they bear me, fed
+With blood, and sinew-strung. That I no more
+May live in blindness, hence I tend aloft.
+There is a dame on high, who wind for us
+This grace, by which my mortal through your realm
+I bear. But may your utmost wish soon meet
+Such full fruition, that the orb of heaven,
+Fullest of love, and of most ample space,
+Receive you, as ye tell (upon my page
+Henceforth to stand recorded) who ye are,
+And what this multitude, that at your backs
+Have past behind us.” As one, mountain-bred,
+Rugged and clownish, if some city’s walls
+He chance to enter, round him stares agape,
+Confounded and struck dumb; e’en such appear’d
+Each spirit. But when rid of that amaze,
+(Not long the inmate of a noble heart)
+He, who before had question’d, thus resum’d:
+“O blessed, who, for death preparing, tak’st
+Experience of our limits, in thy bark!
+Their crime, who not with us proceed, was that,
+For which, as he did triumph, Caesar heard
+The snout of ‘queen,’ to taunt him. Hence their cry
+Of ‘Sodom,’ as they parted, to rebuke
+Themselves, and aid the burning by their shame.
+Our sinning was Hermaphrodite: but we,
+Because the law of human kind we broke,
+Following like beasts our vile concupiscence,
+Hence parting from them, to our own disgrace
+Record the name of her, by whom the beast
+In bestial tire was acted. Now our deeds
+Thou know’st, and how we sinn’d. If thou by name
+Wouldst haply know us, time permits not now
+To tell so much, nor can I. Of myself
+Learn what thou wishest. Guinicelli I,
+Who having truly sorrow’d ere my last,
+Already cleanse me.” With such pious joy,
+As the two sons upon their mother gaz’d
+From sad Lycurgus rescu’d, such my joy
+(Save that I more represt it) when I heard
+From his own lips the name of him pronounc’d,
+Who was a father to me, and to those
+My betters, who have ever us’d the sweet
+And pleasant rhymes of love. So nought I heard
+Nor spake, but long time thoughtfully I went,
+Gazing on him; and, only for the fire,
+Approach’d not nearer. When my eyes were fed
+By looking on him, with such solemn pledge,
+As forces credence, I devoted me
+Unto his service wholly. In reply
+He thus bespake me: “What from thee I hear
+Is grav’d so deeply on my mind, the waves
+Of Lethe shall not wash it off, nor make
+A whit less lively. But as now thy oath
+Has seal’d the truth, declare what cause impels
+That love, which both thy looks and speech bewray.”
+
+“Those dulcet lays,” I answer’d, “which, as long
+As of our tongue the beauty does not fade,
+Shall make us love the very ink that trac’d them.”
+
+“Brother!” he cried, and pointed at a shade
+Before him, “there is one, whose mother speech
+Doth owe to him a fairer ornament.
+He in love ditties and the tales of prose
+Without a rival stands, and lets the fools
+Talk on, who think the songster of Limoges
+O’ertops him. Rumour and the popular voice
+They look to more than truth, and so confirm
+Opinion, ere by art or reason taught.
+Thus many of the elder time cried up
+Guittone, giving him the prize, till truth
+By strength of numbers vanquish’d. If thou own
+So ample privilege, as to have gain’d
+Free entrance to the cloister, whereof Christ
+Is Abbot of the college, say to him
+One paternoster for me, far as needs
+For dwellers in this world, where power to sin
+No longer tempts us.” Haply to make way
+For one, that follow’d next, when that was said,
+He vanish’d through the fire, as through the wave
+A fish, that glances diving to the deep.
+
+I, to the spirit he had shown me, drew
+A little onward, and besought his name,
+For which my heart, I said, kept gracious room.
+He frankly thus began: “Thy courtesy
+So wins on me, I have nor power nor will
+To hide me. I am Arnault; and with songs,
+Sorely lamenting for my folly past,
+Thorough this ford of fire I wade, and see
+The day, I hope for, smiling in my view.
+I pray ye by the worth that guides ye up
+Unto the summit of the scale, in time
+Remember ye my suff’rings.” With such words
+He disappear’d in the refining flame.
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XXVII
+
+
+Now was the sun so station’d, as when first
+His early radiance quivers on the heights,
+Where stream’d his Maker’s blood, while Libra hangs
+Above Hesperian Ebro, and new fires
+Meridian flash on Ganges’ yellow tide.
+
+So day was sinking, when the’ angel of God
+Appear’d before us. Joy was in his mien.
+Forth of the flame he stood upon the brink,
+And with a voice, whose lively clearness far
+Surpass’d our human, “Blessed are the pure
+In heart,” he Sang: then near him as we came,
+“Go ye not further, holy spirits!” he cried,
+“Ere the fire pierce you: enter in; and list
+Attentive to the song ye hear from thence.”
+
+I, when I heard his saying, was as one
+Laid in the grave. My hands together clasp’d,
+And upward stretching, on the fire I look’d,
+And busy fancy conjur’d up the forms
+Erewhile beheld alive consum’d in flames.
+
+Th’ escorting spirits turn’d with gentle looks
+Toward me, and the Mantuan spake: “My son,
+Here torment thou mayst feel, but canst not death.
+Remember thee, remember thee, if I
+Safe e’en on Geryon brought thee: now I come
+More near to God, wilt thou not trust me now?
+Of this be sure: though in its womb that flame
+A thousand years contain’d thee, from thy head
+No hair should perish. If thou doubt my truth,
+Approach, and with thy hands thy vesture’s hem
+Stretch forth, and for thyself confirm belief.
+Lay now all fear, O lay all fear aside.
+Turn hither, and come onward undismay’d.”
+I still, though conscience urg’d’ no step advanc’d.
+
+When still he saw me fix’d and obstinate,
+Somewhat disturb’d he cried: “Mark now, my son,
+From Beatrice thou art by this wall
+Divided.” As at Thisbe’s name the eye
+Of Pyramus was open’d (when life ebb’d
+Fast from his veins), and took one parting glance,
+While vermeil dyed the mulberry; thus I turn’d
+To my sage guide, relenting, when I heard
+The name, that springs forever in my breast.
+
+He shook his forehead; and, “How long,” he said,
+“Linger we now?” then smil’d, as one would smile
+Upon a child, that eyes the fruit and yields.
+Into the fire before me then he walk’d;
+And Statius, who erewhile no little space
+Had parted us, he pray’d to come behind.
+
+I would have cast me into molten glass
+To cool me, when I enter’d; so intense
+Rag’d the conflagrant mass. The sire belov’d,
+To comfort me, as he proceeded, still
+Of Beatrice talk’d. “Her eyes,” saith he,
+“E’en now I seem to view.” From the other side
+A voice, that sang, did guide us, and the voice
+Following, with heedful ear, we issued forth,
+There where the path led upward. “Come,” we heard,
+“Come, blessed of my Father.” Such the sounds,
+That hail’d us from within a light, which shone
+So radiant, I could not endure the view.
+“The sun,” it added, “hastes: and evening comes.
+Delay not: ere the western sky is hung
+With blackness, strive ye for the pass.” Our way
+Upright within the rock arose, and fac’d
+Such part of heav’n, that from before my steps
+The beams were shrouded of the sinking sun.
+
+Nor many stairs were overpass, when now
+By fading of the shadow we perceiv’d
+The sun behind us couch’d: and ere one face
+Of darkness o’er its measureless expanse
+Involv’d th’ horizon, and the night her lot
+Held individual, each of us had made
+A stair his pallet: not that will, but power,
+Had fail’d us, by the nature of that mount
+Forbidden further travel. As the goats,
+That late have skipp’d and wanton’d rapidly
+Upon the craggy cliffs, ere they had ta’en
+Their supper on the herb, now silent lie
+And ruminate beneath the umbrage brown,
+While noonday rages; and the goatherd leans
+Upon his staff, and leaning watches them:
+And as the swain, that lodges out all night
+In quiet by his flock, lest beast of prey
+Disperse them; even so all three abode,
+I as a goat and as the shepherds they,
+Close pent on either side by shelving rock.
+
+A little glimpse of sky was seen above;
+Yet by that little I beheld the stars
+In magnitude and rustle shining forth
+With more than wonted glory. As I lay,
+Gazing on them, and in that fit of musing,
+Sleep overcame me, sleep, that bringeth oft
+Tidings of future hap. About the hour,
+As I believe, when Venus from the east
+First lighten’d on the mountain, she whose orb
+Seems always glowing with the fire of love,
+A lady young and beautiful, I dream’d,
+Was passing o’er a lea; and, as she came,
+Methought I saw her ever and anon
+Bending to cull the flowers; and thus she sang:
+“Know ye, whoever of my name would ask,
+That I am Leah: for my brow to weave
+A garland, these fair hands unwearied ply.
+To please me at the crystal mirror, here
+I deck me. But my sister Rachel, she
+Before her glass abides the livelong day,
+Her radiant eyes beholding, charm’d no less,
+Than I with this delightful task. Her joy
+In contemplation, as in labour mine.”
+
+And now as glimm’ring dawn appear’d, that breaks
+More welcome to the pilgrim still, as he
+Sojourns less distant on his homeward way,
+Darkness from all sides fled, and with it fled
+My slumber; whence I rose and saw my guide
+Already risen. “That delicious fruit,
+Which through so many a branch the zealous care
+Of mortals roams in quest of, shall this day
+Appease thy hunger.” Such the words I heard
+From Virgil’s lip; and never greeting heard
+So pleasant as the sounds. Within me straight
+Desire so grew upon desire to mount,
+Thenceforward at each step I felt the wings
+Increasing for my flight. When we had run
+O’er all the ladder to its topmost round,
+As there we stood, on me the Mantuan fix’d
+His eyes, and thus he spake: “Both fires, my son,
+The temporal and eternal, thou hast seen,
+And art arriv’d, where of itself my ken
+No further reaches. I with skill and art
+Thus far have drawn thee. Now thy pleasure take
+For guide. Thou hast o’ercome the steeper way,
+O’ercome the straighter. Lo! the sun, that darts
+His beam upon thy forehead! lo! the herb,
+The arboreta and flowers, which of itself
+This land pours forth profuse! Till those bright eyes
+With gladness come, which, weeping, made me haste
+To succour thee, thou mayst or seat thee down,
+Or wander where thou wilt. Expect no more
+Sanction of warning voice or sign from me,
+Free of thy own arbitrement to choose,
+Discreet, judicious. To distrust thy sense
+Were henceforth error. I invest thee then
+With crown and mitre, sovereign o’er thyself.”
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XXVIII
+
+
+Through that celestial forest, whose thick shade
+With lively greenness the new-springing day
+Attemper’d, eager now to roam, and search
+Its limits round, forthwith I left the bank,
+Along the champain leisurely my way
+Pursuing, o’er the ground, that on all sides
+Delicious odour breath’d. A pleasant air,
+That intermitted never, never veer’d,
+Smote on my temples, gently, as a wind
+Of softest influence: at which the sprays,
+Obedient all, lean’d trembling to that part
+Where first the holy mountain casts his shade,
+Yet were not so disorder’d, but that still
+Upon their top the feather’d quiristers
+Applied their wonted art, and with full joy
+Welcom’d those hours of prime, and warbled shrill
+Amid the leaves, that to their jocund lays
+inept tenor; even as from branch to branch,
+Along the piney forests on the shore
+Of Chiassi, rolls the gath’ring melody,
+When Eolus hath from his cavern loos’d
+The dripping south. Already had my steps,
+Though slow, so far into that ancient wood
+Transported me, I could not ken the place
+Where I had enter’d, when behold! my path
+Was bounded by a rill, which to the left
+With little rippling waters bent the grass,
+That issued from its brink. On earth no wave
+How clean soe’er, that would not seem to have
+Some mixture in itself, compar’d with this,
+Transpicuous, clear; yet darkly on it roll’d,
+Darkly beneath perpetual gloom, which ne’er
+Admits or sun or moon light there to shine.
+
+My feet advanc’d not; but my wond’ring eyes
+Pass’d onward, o’er the streamlet, to survey
+The tender May-bloom, flush’d through many a hue,
+In prodigal variety: and there,
+As object, rising suddenly to view,
+That from our bosom every thought beside
+With the rare marvel chases, I beheld
+A lady all alone, who, singing, went,
+And culling flower from flower, wherewith her way
+Was all o’er painted. “Lady beautiful!
+Thou, who (if looks, that use to speak the heart,
+Are worthy of our trust), with love’s own beam
+Dost warm thee,” thus to her my speech I fram’d:
+“Ah! please thee hither towards the streamlet bend
+Thy steps so near, that I may list thy song.
+Beholding thee and this fair place, methinks,
+I call to mind where wander’d and how look’d
+Proserpine, in that season, when her child
+The mother lost, and she the bloomy spring.”
+
+As when a lady, turning in the dance,
+Doth foot it featly, and advances scarce
+One step before the other to the ground;
+Over the yellow and vermilion flowers
+Thus turn’d she at my suit, most maiden-like,
+Valing her sober eyes, and came so near,
+That I distinctly caught the dulcet sound.
+Arriving where the limped waters now
+Lav’d the green sward, her eyes she deign’d to raise,
+That shot such splendour on me, as I ween
+Ne’er glanced from Cytherea’s, when her son
+Had sped his keenest weapon to her heart.
+Upon the opposite bank she stood and smil’d
+through her graceful fingers shifted still
+The intermingling dyes, which without seed
+That lofty land unbosoms. By the stream
+Three paces only were we sunder’d: yet
+The Hellespont, where Xerxes pass’d it o’er,
+(A curb for ever to the pride of man)
+Was by Leander not more hateful held
+For floating, with inhospitable wave
+’Twixt Sestus and Abydos, than by me
+That flood, because it gave no passage thence.
+
+“Strangers ye come, and haply in this place,
+That cradled human nature in its birth,
+Wond’ring, ye not without suspicion view
+My smiles: but that sweet strain of psalmody,
+‘Thou, Lord! hast made me glad,’ will give ye light,
+Which may uncloud your minds. And thou, who stand’st
+The foremost, and didst make thy suit to me,
+Say if aught else thou wish to hear: for I
+Came prompt to answer every doubt of thine.”
+
+She spake; and I replied: “l know not how
+To reconcile this wave and rustling sound
+Of forest leaves, with what I late have heard
+Of opposite report.” She answering thus:
+“I will unfold the cause, whence that proceeds,
+Which makes thee wonder; and so purge the cloud
+That hath enwraps thee. The First Good, whose joy
+Is only in himself, created man
+For happiness, and gave this goodly place,
+His pledge and earnest of eternal peace.
+Favour’d thus highly, through his own defect
+He fell, and here made short sojourn; he fell,
+And, for the bitterness of sorrow, chang’d
+Laughter unblam’d and ever-new delight.
+That vapours none, exhal’d from earth beneath,
+Or from the waters (which, wherever heat
+Attracts them, follow), might ascend thus far
+To vex man’s peaceful state, this mountain rose
+So high toward the heav’n, nor fears the rage
+0f elements contending, from that part
+Exempted, where the gate his limit bars.
+Because the circumambient air throughout
+With its first impulse circles still, unless
+Aught interpose to cheek or thwart its course;
+Upon the summit, which on every side
+To visitation of th’ impassive air
+Is open, doth that motion strike, and makes
+Beneath its sway th’ umbrageous wood resound:
+And in the shaken plant such power resides,
+That it impregnates with its efficacy
+The voyaging breeze, upon whose subtle plume
+That wafted flies abroad; and th’ other land
+Receiving (as ’tis worthy in itself,
+Or in the clime, that warms it), doth conceive,
+And from its womb produces many a tree
+Of various virtue. This when thou hast heard,
+The marvel ceases, if in yonder earth
+Some plant without apparent seed be found
+To fix its fibrous stem. And further learn,
+That with prolific foison of all seeds,
+This holy plain is fill’d, and in itself
+Bears fruit that ne’er was pluck’d on other soil.
+ “The water, thou behold’st, springs not from vein,
+As stream, that intermittently repairs
+And spends his pulse of life, but issues forth
+From fountain, solid, undecaying, sure;
+And by the will omnific, full supply
+Feeds whatsoe’er On either side it pours;
+On this devolv’d with power to take away
+Remembrance of offence, on that to bring
+Remembrance back of every good deed done.
+From whence its name of Lethe on this part;
+On th’ other Eunoe: both of which must first
+Be tasted ere it work; the last exceeding
+All flavours else. Albeit thy thirst may now
+Be well contented, if I here break off,
+No more revealing: yet a corollary
+I freely give beside: nor deem my words
+Less grateful to thee, if they somewhat pass
+The stretch of promise. They, whose verse of yore
+The golden age recorded and its bliss,
+On the Parnassian mountain, of this place
+Perhaps had dream’d. Here was man guiltless, here
+Perpetual spring and every fruit, and this
+The far-fam’d nectar.” Turning to the bards,
+When she had ceas’d, I noted in their looks
+A smile at her conclusion; then my face
+Again directed to the lovely dame.
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XXIX
+
+
+Singing, as if enamour’d, she resum’d
+And clos’d the song, with “Blessed they whose sins
+Are cover’d.” Like the wood-nymphs then, that tripp’d
+Singly across the sylvan shadows, one
+Eager to view and one to ’scape the sun,
+So mov’d she on, against the current, up
+The verdant rivage. I, her mincing step
+Observing, with as tardy step pursued.
+
+Between us not an hundred paces trod,
+The bank, on each side bending equally,
+Gave me to face the orient. Nor our way
+Far onward brought us, when to me at once
+She turn’d, and cried: “My brother! look and hearken.”
+And lo! a sudden lustre ran across
+Through the great forest on all parts, so bright
+I doubted whether lightning were abroad;
+But that expiring ever in the spleen,
+That doth unfold it, and this during still
+And waxing still in splendor, made me question
+What it might be: and a sweet melody
+Ran through the luminous air. Then did I chide
+With warrantable zeal the hardihood
+Of our first parent, for that there were earth
+Stood in obedience to the heav’ns, she only,
+Woman, the creature of an hour, endur’d not
+Restraint of any veil: which had she borne
+Devoutly, joys, ineffable as these,
+Had from the first, and long time since, been mine.
+
+While through that wilderness of primy sweets
+That never fade, suspense I walk’d, and yet
+Expectant of beatitude more high,
+Before us, like a blazing fire, the air
+Under the green boughs glow’d; and, for a song,
+Distinct the sound of melody was heard.
+
+O ye thrice holy virgins! for your sakes
+If e’er I suffer’d hunger, cold and watching,
+Occasion calls on me to crave your bounty.
+Now through my breast let Helicon his stream
+Pour copious; and Urania with her choir
+Arise to aid me: while the verse unfolds
+Things that do almost mock the grasp of thought.
+
+Onward a space, what seem’d seven trees of gold,
+The intervening distance to mine eye
+Falsely presented; but when I was come
+So near them, that no lineament was lost
+Of those, with which a doubtful object, seen
+Remotely, plays on the misdeeming sense,
+Then did the faculty, that ministers
+Discourse to reason, these for tapers of gold
+Distinguish, and it th’ singing trace the sound
+“Hosanna.” Above, their beauteous garniture
+Flam’d with more ample lustre, than the moon
+Through cloudless sky at midnight in her full.
+
+I turn’d me full of wonder to my guide;
+And he did answer with a countenance
+Charg’d with no less amazement: whence my view
+Reverted to those lofty things, which came
+So slowly moving towards us, that the bride
+Would have outstript them on her bridal day.
+
+The lady called aloud: “Why thus yet burns
+Affection in thee for these living, lights,
+And dost not look on that which follows them?”
+
+I straightway mark’d a tribe behind them walk,
+As if attendant on their leaders, cloth’d
+With raiment of such whiteness, as on earth
+Was never. On my left, the wat’ry gleam
+Borrow’d, and gave me back, when there I look’d.
+As in a mirror, my left side portray’d.
+
+When I had chosen on the river’s edge
+Such station, that the distance of the stream
+Alone did separate me; there I stay’d
+My steps for clearer prospect, and beheld
+The flames go onward, leaving, as they went,
+The air behind them painted as with trail
+Of liveliest pencils! so distinct were mark’d
+All those sev’n listed colours, whence the sun
+Maketh his bow, and Cynthia her zone.
+These streaming gonfalons did flow beyond
+My vision; and ten paces, as I guess,
+Parted the outermost. Beneath a sky
+So beautiful, came foul and-twenty elders,
+By two and two, with flower-de-luces crown’d.
+All sang one song: “Blessed be thou among
+The daughters of Adam! and thy loveliness
+Blessed for ever!” After that the flowers,
+And the fresh herblets, on the opposite brink,
+Were free from that elected race; as light
+In heav’n doth second light, came after them
+Four animals, each crown’d with verdurous leaf.
+With six wings each was plum’d, the plumage full
+Of eyes, and th’ eyes of Argus would be such,
+Were they endued with life. Reader, more rhymes
+Will not waste in shadowing forth their form:
+For other need no straitens, that in this
+I may not give my bounty room. But read
+Ezekiel; for he paints them, from the north
+How he beheld them come by Chebar’s flood,
+In whirlwind, cloud and fire; and even such
+As thou shalt find them character’d by him,
+Here were they; save as to the pennons; there,
+From him departing, John accords with me.
+
+The space, surrounded by the four, enclos’d
+A car triumphal: on two wheels it came
+Drawn at a Gryphon’s neck; and he above
+Stretch’d either wing uplifted, ’tween the midst
+And the three listed hues, on each side three;
+So that the wings did cleave or injure none;
+And out of sight they rose. The members, far
+As he was bird, were golden; white the rest
+With vermeil intervein’d. So beautiful
+A car in Rome ne’er grac’d Augustus pomp,
+Or Africanus’: e’en the sun’s itself
+Were poor to this, that chariot of the sun
+Erroneous, which in blazing ruin fell
+At Tellus’ pray’r devout, by the just doom
+Mysterious of all-seeing Jove. Three nymphs
+,k the right wheel, came circling in smooth dance;
+The one so ruddy, that her form had scarce
+Been known within a furnace of clear flame:
+The next did look, as if the flesh and bones
+Were emerald: snow new-fallen seem’d the third.
+Now seem’d the white to lead, the ruddy now;
+And from her song who led, the others took
+Their treasure, swift or slow. At th’ other wheel,
+A band quaternion, each in purple clad,
+Advanc’d with festal step, as of them one
+The rest conducted, one, upon whose front
+Three eyes were seen. In rear of all this group,
+Two old men I beheld, dissimilar
+In raiment, but in port and gesture like,
+Solid and mainly grave; of whom the one
+Did show himself some favour’d counsellor
+Of the great Coan, him, whom nature made
+To serve the costliest creature of her tribe.
+His fellow mark’d an opposite intent,
+Bearing a sword, whose glitterance and keen edge,
+E’en as I view’d it with the flood between,
+Appall’d me. Next four others I beheld,
+Of humble seeming: and, behind them all,
+One single old man, sleeping, as he came,
+With a shrewd visage. And these seven, each
+Like the first troop were habited, hut wore
+No braid of lilies on their temples wreath’d.
+Rather with roses and each vermeil flower,
+A sight, but little distant, might have sworn,
+That they were all on fire above their brow.
+
+Whenas the car was o’er against me, straight.
+Was heard a thund’ring, at whose voice it seem’d
+The chosen multitude were stay’d; for there,
+With the first ensigns, made they solemn halt.
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XXX
+
+
+Soon as the polar light, which never knows
+Setting nor rising, nor the shadowy veil
+Of other cloud than sin, fair ornament
+Of the first heav’n, to duty each one there
+Safely convoying, as that lower doth
+The steersman to his port, stood firmly fix’d;
+Forthwith the saintly tribe, who in the van
+Between the Gryphon and its radiance came,
+Did turn them to the car, as to their rest:
+And one, as if commission’d from above,
+In holy chant thrice shorted forth aloud:
+“Come, spouse, from Libanus!” and all the rest
+Took up the song—At the last audit so
+The blest shall rise, from forth his cavern each
+Uplifting lightly his new-vested flesh,
+As, on the sacred litter, at the voice
+Authoritative of that elder, sprang
+A hundred ministers and messengers
+Of life eternal. “Blessed thou! who com’st!”
+And, “O,” they cried, “from full hands scatter ye
+Unwith’ring lilies;” and, so saying, cast
+Flowers over head and round them on all sides.
+
+I have beheld, ere now, at break of day,
+The eastern clime all roseate, and the sky
+Oppos’d, one deep and beautiful serene,
+And the sun’s face so shaded, and with mists
+Attemper’d at lids rising, that the eye
+Long while endur’d the sight: thus in a cloud
+Of flowers, that from those hands angelic rose,
+And down, within and outside of the car,
+Fell showering, in white veil with olive wreath’d,
+A virgin in my view appear’d, beneath
+Green mantle, rob’d in hue of living flame:
+And o’er my Spirit, that in former days
+Within her presence had abode so long,
+No shudd’ring terror crept. Mine eyes no more
+Had knowledge of her; yet there mov’d from her
+A hidden virtue, at whose touch awak’d,
+The power of ancient love was strong within me.
+
+No sooner on my vision streaming, smote
+The heav’nly influence, which years past, and e’en
+In childhood, thrill’d me, than towards Virgil I
+Turn’d me to leftward, panting, like a babe,
+That flees for refuge to his mother’s breast,
+If aught have terrified or work’d him woe:
+And would have cried: “There is no dram of blood,
+That doth not quiver in me. The old flame
+Throws out clear tokens of reviving fire:”
+But Virgil had bereav’d us of himself,
+Virgil, my best-lov’d father; Virgil, he
+To whom I gave me up for safety: nor,
+All, our prime mother lost, avail’d to save
+My undew’d cheeks from blur of soiling tears.
+
+“Dante, weep not, that Virgil leaves thee: nay,
+Weep thou not yet: behooves thee feel the edge
+Of other sword, and thou shalt weep for that.”
+
+As to the prow or stern, some admiral
+Paces the deck, inspiriting his crew,
+When ’mid the sail-yards all hands ply aloof;
+Thus on the left side of the car I saw,
+(Turning me at the sound of mine own name,
+Which here I am compell’d to register)
+The virgin station’d, who before appeared
+Veil’d in that festive shower angelical.
+
+Towards me, across the stream, she bent her eyes;
+Though from her brow the veil descending, bound
+With foliage of Minerva, suffer’d not
+That I beheld her clearly; then with act
+Full royal, still insulting o’er her thrall,
+Added, as one, who speaking keepeth back
+The bitterest saying, to conclude the speech:
+“Observe me well. I am, in sooth, I am
+Beatrice. What! and hast thou deign’d at last
+Approach the mountain? knewest not, O man!
+Thy happiness is whole?” Down fell mine eyes
+On the clear fount, but there, myself espying,
+Recoil’d, and sought the greensward: such a weight
+Of shame was on my forehead. With a mien
+Of that stern majesty, which doth surround
+mother’s presence to her awe-struck child,
+She look’d; a flavour of such bitterness
+Was mingled in her pity. There her words
+Brake off, and suddenly the angels sang:
+“In thee, O gracious Lord, my hope hath been:”
+But went no farther than, “Thou Lord, hast set
+My feet in ample room.” As snow, that lies
+Amidst the living rafters on the back
+Of Italy congeal’d when drifted high
+And closely pil’d by rough Sclavonian blasts,
+Breathe but the land whereon no shadow falls,
+And straightway melting it distils away,
+Like a fire-wasted taper: thus was I,
+Without a sigh or tear, or ever these
+Did sing, that with the chiming of heav’n’s sphere,
+Still in their warbling chime: but when the strain
+Of dulcet symphony, express’d for me
+Their soft compassion, more than could the words
+“Virgin, why so consum’st him?” then the ice,
+Congeal’d about my bosom, turn’d itself
+To spirit and water, and with anguish forth
+Gush’d through the lips and eyelids from the heart.
+
+Upon the chariot’s right edge still she stood,
+Immovable, and thus address’d her words
+To those bright semblances with pity touch’d:
+“Ye in th’ eternal day your vigils keep,
+So that nor night nor slumber, with close stealth,
+Conveys from you a single step in all
+The goings on of life: thence with more heed
+I shape mine answer, for his ear intended,
+Who there stands weeping, that the sorrow now
+May equal the transgression. Not alone
+Through operation of the mighty orbs,
+That mark each seed to some predestin’d aim,
+As with aspect or fortunate or ill
+The constellations meet, but through benign
+Largess of heav’nly graces, which rain down
+From such a height, as mocks our vision, this man
+Was in the freshness of his being, such,
+So gifted virtually, that in him
+All better habits wond’rously had thriv’d.
+The more of kindly strength is in the soil,
+So much doth evil seed and lack of culture
+Mar it the more, and make it run to wildness.
+These looks sometime upheld him; for I show’d
+My youthful eyes, and led him by their light
+In upright walking. Soon as I had reach’d
+The threshold of my second age, and chang’d
+My mortal for immortal, then he left me,
+And gave himself to others. When from flesh
+To spirit I had risen, and increase
+Of beauty and of virtue circled me,
+I was less dear to him, and valued less.
+His steps were turn’d into deceitful ways,
+Following false images of good, that make
+No promise perfect. Nor avail’d me aught
+To sue for inspirations, with the which,
+I, both in dreams of night, and otherwise,
+Did call him back; of them so little reck’d him,
+Such depth he fell, that all device was short
+Of his preserving, save that he should view
+The children of perdition. To this end
+I visited the purlieus of the dead:
+And one, who hath conducted him thus high,
+Receiv’d my supplications urg’d with weeping.
+It were a breaking of God’s high decree,
+If Lethe should be past, and such food tasted
+Without the cost of some repentant tear.”
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XXXI
+
+
+“O Thou!” her words she thus without delay
+Resuming, turn’d their point on me, to whom
+They but with lateral edge seem’d harsh before,
+‘Say thou, who stand’st beyond the holy stream,
+If this be true. A charge so grievous needs
+Thine own avowal.” On my faculty
+Such strange amazement hung, the voice expir’d
+Imperfect, ere its organs gave it birth.
+
+A little space refraining, then she spake:
+“What dost thou muse on? Answer me. The wave
+On thy remembrances of evil yet
+Hath done no injury.” A mingled sense
+Of fear and of confusion, from my lips
+Did such a “Yea “ produce, as needed help
+Of vision to interpret. As when breaks
+In act to be discharg’d, a cross-bow bent
+Beyond its pitch, both nerve and bow o’erstretch’d,
+The flagging weapon feebly hits the mark;
+Thus, tears and sighs forth gushing, did I burst
+Beneath the heavy load, and thus my voice
+Was slacken’d on its way. She straight began:
+“When my desire invited thee to love
+The good, which sets a bound to our aspirings,
+What bar of thwarting foss or linked chain
+Did meet thee, that thou so should’st quit the hope
+Of further progress, or what bait of ease
+Or promise of allurement led thee on
+Elsewhere, that thou elsewhere should’st rather wait?”
+
+A bitter sigh I drew, then scarce found voice
+To answer, hardly to these sounds my lips
+Gave utterance, wailing: “Thy fair looks withdrawn,
+Things present, with deceitful pleasures, turn’d
+My steps aside.” She answering spake: “Hadst thou
+Been silent, or denied what thou avow’st,
+Thou hadst not hid thy sin the more: such eye
+Observes it. But whene’er the sinner’s cheek
+Breaks forth into the precious-streaming tears
+Of self-accusing, in our court the wheel
+Of justice doth run counter to the edge.
+Howe’er that thou may’st profit by thy shame
+For errors past, and that henceforth more strength
+May arm thee, when thou hear’st the Siren-voice,
+Lay thou aside the motive to this grief,
+And lend attentive ear, while I unfold
+How opposite a way my buried flesh
+Should have impell’d thee. Never didst thou spy
+In art or nature aught so passing sweet,
+As were the limbs, that in their beauteous frame
+Enclos’d me, and are scatter’d now in dust.
+If sweetest thing thus fail’d thee with my death,
+What, afterward, of mortal should thy wish
+Have tempted? When thou first hadst felt the dart
+Of perishable things, in my departing
+For better realms, thy wing thou should’st have prun’d
+To follow me, and never stoop’d again
+To ’bide a second blow for a slight girl,
+Or other gaud as transient and as vain.
+The new and inexperienc’d bird awaits,
+Twice it may be, or thrice, the fowler’s aim;
+But in the sight of one, whose plumes are full,
+In vain the net is spread, the arrow wing’d.”
+
+I stood, as children silent and asham’d
+Stand, list’ning, with their eyes upon the earth,
+Acknowledging their fault and self-condemn’d.
+And she resum’d: “If, but to hear thus pains thee,
+Raise thou thy beard, and lo! what sight shall do!”
+
+With less reluctance yields a sturdy holm,
+Rent from its fibers by a blast, that blows
+From off the pole, or from Iarbas’ land,
+Than I at her behest my visage rais’d:
+And thus the face denoting by the beard,
+I mark’d the secret sting her words convey’d.
+
+No sooner lifted I mine aspect up,
+Than downward sunk that vision I beheld
+Of goodly creatures vanish; and mine eyes
+Yet unassur’d and wavering, bent their light
+On Beatrice. Towards the animal,
+Who joins two natures in one form, she turn’d,
+And, even under shadow of her veil,
+And parted by the verdant rill, that flow’d
+Between, in loveliness appear’d as much
+Her former self surpassing, as on earth
+All others she surpass’d. Remorseful goads
+Shot sudden through me. Each thing else, the more
+Its love had late beguil’d me, now the more
+I Was loathsome. On my heart so keenly smote
+The bitter consciousness, that on the ground
+O’erpower’d I fell: and what my state was then,
+She knows who was the cause. When now my strength
+Flow’d back, returning outward from the heart,
+The lady, whom alone I first had seen,
+I found above me. “Loose me not,” she cried:
+“Loose not thy hold;” and lo! had dragg’d me high
+As to my neck into the stream, while she,
+Still as she drew me after, swept along,
+Swift as a shuttle, bounding o’er the wave.
+
+The blessed shore approaching then was heard
+So sweetly, “Tu asperges me,” that I
+May not remember, much less tell the sound.
+The beauteous dame, her arms expanding, clasp’d
+My temples, and immerg’d me, where ’twas fit
+The wave should drench me: and thence raising up,
+Within the fourfold dance of lovely nymphs
+Presented me so lav’d, and with their arm
+They each did cover me. “Here are we nymphs,
+And in the heav’n are stars. Or ever earth
+Was visited of Beatrice, we
+Appointed for her handmaids, tended on her.
+We to her eyes will lead thee; but the light
+Of gladness that is in them, well to scan,
+Those yonder three, of deeper ken than ours,
+Thy sight shall quicken.” Thus began their song;
+And then they led me to the Gryphon’s breast,
+While, turn’d toward us, Beatrice stood.
+“Spare not thy vision. We have stationed thee
+Before the emeralds, whence love erewhile
+Hath drawn his weapons on thee. “As they spake,
+A thousand fervent wishes riveted
+Mine eyes upon her beaming eyes, that stood
+Still fix’d toward the Gryphon motionless.
+As the sun strikes a mirror, even thus
+Within those orbs the twofold being, shone,
+For ever varying, in one figure now
+Reflected, now in other. Reader! muse
+How wond’rous in my sight it seem’d to mark
+A thing, albeit steadfast in itself,
+Yet in its imag’d semblance mutable.
+
+Full of amaze, and joyous, while my soul
+Fed on the viand, whereof still desire
+Grows with satiety, the other three
+With gesture, that declar’d a loftier line,
+Advanc’d: to their own carol on they came
+Dancing in festive ring angelical.
+
+“Turn, Beatrice!” was their song: “O turn
+Thy saintly sight on this thy faithful one,
+Who to behold thee many a wearisome pace
+Hath measur’d. Gracious at our pray’r vouchsafe
+Unveil to him thy cheeks: that he may mark
+Thy second beauty, now conceal’d.” O splendour!
+O sacred light eternal! who is he
+So pale with musing in Pierian shades,
+Or with that fount so lavishly imbued,
+Whose spirit should not fail him in th’ essay
+To represent thee such as thou didst seem,
+When under cope of the still-chiming heaven
+Thou gav’st to open air thy charms reveal’d.
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XXXII
+
+
+Mine eyes with such an eager coveting,
+Were bent to rid them of their ten years’ thirst,
+No other sense was waking: and e’en they
+Were fenc’d on either side from heed of aught;
+So tangled in its custom’d toils that smile
+Of saintly brightness drew me to itself,
+When forcibly toward the left my sight
+The sacred virgins turn’d; for from their lips
+I heard the warning sounds: “Too fix’d a gaze!”
+
+Awhile my vision labor’d; as when late
+Upon the’ o’erstrained eyes the sun hath smote:
+But soon to lesser object, as the view
+Was now recover’d (lesser in respect
+To that excess of sensible, whence late
+I had perforce been sunder’d) on their right
+I mark’d that glorious army wheel, and turn,
+Against the sun and sev’nfold lights, their front.
+As when, their bucklers for protection rais’d,
+A well-rang’d troop, with portly banners curl’d,
+Wheel circling, ere the whole can change their ground:
+E’en thus the goodly regiment of heav’n
+Proceeding, all did pass us, ere the car
+Had slop’d his beam. Attendant at the wheels
+The damsels turn’d; and on the Gryphon mov’d
+The sacred burden, with a pace so smooth,
+No feather on him trembled. The fair dame
+Who through the wave had drawn me, companied
+By Statius and myself, pursued the wheel,
+Whose orbit, rolling, mark’d a lesser arch.
+
+Through the high wood, now void (the more her blame,
+Who by the serpent was beguil’d) I past
+With step in cadence to the harmony
+Angelic. Onward had we mov’d, as far
+Perchance as arrow at three several flights
+Full wing’d had sped, when from her station down
+Descended Beatrice. With one voice
+All murmur’d “Adam,” circling next a plant
+Despoil’d of flowers and leaf on every bough.
+Its tresses, spreading more as more they rose,
+Were such, as ’midst their forest wilds for height
+The Indians might have gaz’d at. “Blessed thou!
+Gryphon, whose beak hath never pluck’d that tree
+Pleasant to taste: for hence the appetite
+Was warp’d to evil.” Round the stately trunk
+Thus shouted forth the rest, to whom return’d
+The animal twice-gender’d: “Yea: for so
+The generation of the just are sav’d.”
+And turning to the chariot-pole, to foot
+He drew it of the widow’d branch, and bound
+There left unto the stock whereon it grew.
+
+As when large floods of radiance from above
+Stream, with that radiance mingled, which ascends
+Next after setting of the scaly sign,
+Our plants then burgeon, and each wears anew
+His wonted colours, ere the sun have yok’d
+Beneath another star his flamy steeds;
+Thus putting forth a hue, more faint than rose,
+And deeper than the violet, was renew’d
+The plant, erewhile in all its branches bare.
+
+Unearthly was the hymn, which then arose.
+I understood it not, nor to the end
+Endur’d the harmony. Had I the skill
+To pencil forth, how clos’d th’ unpitying eyes
+Slumb’ring, when Syrinx warbled, (eyes that paid
+So dearly for their watching,) then like painter,
+That with a model paints, I might design
+The manner of my falling into sleep.
+But feign who will the slumber cunningly;
+I pass it by to when I wak’d, and tell
+How suddenly a flash of splendour rent
+The curtain of my sleep, and one cries out:
+“Arise, what dost thou?” As the chosen three,
+On Tabor’s mount, admitted to behold
+The blossoming of that fair tree, whose fruit
+Is coveted of angels, and doth make
+Perpetual feast in heaven, to themselves
+Returning at the word, whence deeper sleeps
+Were broken, that they their tribe diminish’d saw,
+Both Moses and Elias gone, and chang’d
+The stole their master wore: thus to myself
+Returning, over me beheld I stand
+The piteous one, who cross the stream had brought
+My steps. “And where,” all doubting, I exclaim’d,
+“Is Beatrice?”—“See her,” she replied,
+“Beneath the fresh leaf seated on its root.
+Behold th’ associate choir that circles her.
+The others, with a melody more sweet
+And more profound, journeying to higher realms,
+Upon the Gryphon tend.” If there her words
+Were clos’d, I know not; but mine eyes had now
+Ta’en view of her, by whom all other thoughts
+Were barr’d admittance. On the very ground
+Alone she sat, as she had there been left
+A guard upon the wain, which I beheld
+Bound to the twyform beast. The seven nymphs
+Did make themselves a cloister round about her,
+And in their hands upheld those lights secure
+From blast septentrion and the gusty south.
+
+“A little while thou shalt be forester here:
+And citizen shalt be forever with me,
+Of that true Rome, wherein Christ dwells a Roman
+To profit the misguided world, keep now
+Thine eyes upon the car; and what thou seest,
+Take heed thou write, returning to that place.”
+
+Thus Beatrice: at whose feet inclin’d
+Devout, at her behest, my thought and eyes,
+I, as she bade, directed. Never fire,
+With so swift motion, forth a stormy cloud
+Leap’d downward from the welkin’s farthest bound,
+As I beheld the bird of Jove descending
+Pounce on the tree, and, as he rush’d, the rind,
+Disparting crush beneath him, buds much more
+And leaflets. On the car with all his might
+He struck, whence, staggering like a ship, it reel’d,
+At random driv’n, to starboard now, o’ercome,
+And now to larboard, by the vaulting waves.
+
+Next springing up into the chariot’s womb
+A fox I saw, with hunger seeming pin’d
+Of all good food. But, for his ugly sins
+The saintly maid rebuking him, away
+Scamp’ring he turn’d, fast as his hide-bound corpse
+Would bear him. Next, from whence before he came,
+I saw the eagle dart into the hull
+O’ th’ car, and leave it with his feathers lin’d;
+And then a voice, like that which issues forth
+From heart with sorrow riv’d, did issue forth
+From heav’n, and, “O poor bark of mine!” it cried,
+“How badly art thou freighted!” Then, it seem’d,
+That the earth open’d between either wheel,
+And I beheld a dragon issue thence,
+That through the chariot fix’d his forked train;
+And like a wasp that draggeth back the sting,
+So drawing forth his baleful train, he dragg’d
+Part of the bottom forth, and went his way
+Exulting. What remain’d, as lively turf
+With green herb, so did clothe itself with plumes,
+Which haply had with purpose chaste and kind
+Been offer’d; and therewith were cloth’d the wheels,
+Both one and other, and the beam, so quickly
+A sigh were not breath’d sooner. Thus transform’d,
+The holy structure, through its several parts,
+Did put forth heads, three on the beam, and one
+On every side; the first like oxen horn’d,
+But with a single horn upon their front
+The four. Like monster sight hath never seen.
+O’er it methought there sat, secure as rock
+On mountain’s lofty top, a shameless whore,
+Whose ken rov’d loosely round her. At her side,
+As ’twere that none might bear her off, I saw
+A giant stand; and ever, and anon
+They mingled kisses. But, her lustful eyes
+Chancing on me to wander, that fell minion
+Scourg’d her from head to foot all o’er; then full
+Of jealousy, and fierce with rage, unloos’d
+The monster, and dragg’d on, so far across
+The forest, that from me its shades alone
+Shielded the harlot and the new-form’d brute.
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XXXIII
+
+
+“The heathen, Lord! are come!” responsive thus,
+The trinal now, and now the virgin band
+Quaternion, their sweet psalmody began,
+Weeping; and Beatrice listen’d, sad
+And sighing, to the song’, in such a mood,
+That Mary, as she stood beside the cross,
+Was scarce more chang’d. But when they gave her place
+To speak, then, risen upright on her feet,
+She, with a colour glowing bright as fire,
+Did answer: “Yet a little while, and ye
+Shall see me not; and, my beloved sisters,
+Again a little while, and ye shall see me.”
+
+Before her then she marshall’d all the seven,
+And, beck’ning only motion’d me, the dame,
+And that remaining sage, to follow her.
+
+So on she pass’d; and had not set, I ween,
+Her tenth step to the ground, when with mine eyes
+Her eyes encounter’d; and, with visage mild,
+“So mend thy pace,” she cried, “that if my words
+Address thee, thou mayst still be aptly plac’d
+To hear them.” Soon as duly to her side
+I now had hasten’d: “Brother!” she began,
+“Why mak’st thou no attempt at questioning,
+As thus we walk together?” Like to those
+Who, speaking with too reverent an awe
+Before their betters, draw not forth the voice
+Alive unto their lips, befell me shell
+That I in sounds imperfect thus began:
+“Lady! what I have need of, that thou know’st,
+And what will suit my need.” She answering thus:
+“Of fearfulness and shame, I will, that thou
+Henceforth do rid thee: that thou speak no more,
+As one who dreams. Thus far be taught of me:
+The vessel, which thou saw’st the serpent break,
+Was and is not: let him, who hath the blame,
+Hope not to scare God’s vengeance with a sop.
+Without an heir for ever shall not be
+That eagle, he, who left the chariot plum’d,
+Which monster made it first and next a prey.
+Plainly I view, and therefore speak, the stars
+E’en now approaching, whose conjunction, free
+From all impediment and bar, brings on
+A season, in the which, one sent from God,
+(Five hundred, five, and ten, do mark him out)
+That foul one, and th’ accomplice of her guilt,
+The giant, both shall slay. And if perchance
+My saying, dark as Themis or as Sphinx,
+Fail to persuade thee, (since like them it foils
+The intellect with blindness) yet ere long
+Events shall be the Naiads, that will solve
+This knotty riddle, and no damage light
+On flock or field. Take heed; and as these words
+By me are utter’d, teach them even so
+To those who live that life, which is a race
+To death: and when thou writ’st them, keep in mind
+Not to conceal how thou hast seen the plant,
+That twice hath now been spoil’d. This whoso robs,
+This whoso plucks, with blasphemy of deed
+Sins against God, who for his use alone
+Creating hallow’d it. For taste of this,
+In pain and in desire, five thousand years
+And upward, the first soul did yearn for him,
+Who punish’d in himself the fatal gust.
+
+“Thy reason slumbers, if it deem this height
+And summit thus inverted of the plant,
+Without due cause: and were not vainer thoughts,
+As Elsa’s numbing waters, to thy soul,
+And their fond pleasures had not dyed it dark
+As Pyramus the mulberry, thou hadst seen,
+In such momentous circumstance alone,
+God’s equal justice morally implied
+In the forbidden tree. But since I mark thee
+In understanding harden’d into stone,
+And, to that hardness, spotted too and stain’d,
+So that thine eye is dazzled at my word,
+I will, that, if not written, yet at least
+Painted thou take it in thee, for the cause,
+That one brings home his staff inwreath’d with palm.
+
+“I thus: “As wax by seal, that changeth not
+Its impress, now is stamp’d my brain by thee.
+But wherefore soars thy wish’d-for speech so high
+Beyond my sight, that loses it the more,
+The more it strains to reach it?”—“To the end
+That thou mayst know,” she answer’d straight, “the school,
+That thou hast follow’d; and how far behind,
+When following my discourse, its learning halts:
+And mayst behold your art, from the divine
+As distant, as the disagreement is
+’Twixt earth and heaven’s most high and rapturous orb.”
+
+“I not remember,” I replied, “that e’er
+I was estrang’d from thee, nor for such fault
+Doth conscience chide me.” Smiling she return’d:
+“If thou canst, not remember, call to mind
+How lately thou hast drunk of Lethe’s wave;
+And, sure as smoke doth indicate a flame,
+In that forgetfulness itself conclude
+Blame from thy alienated will incurr’d.
+From henceforth verily my words shall be
+As naked as will suit them to appear
+In thy unpractis’d view.” More sparkling now,
+And with retarded course the sun possess’d
+The circle of mid-day, that varies still
+As th’ aspect varies of each several clime,
+When, as one, sent in vaward of a troop
+For escort, pauses, if perchance he spy
+Vestige of somewhat strange and rare: so paus’d
+The sev’nfold band, arriving at the verge
+Of a dun umbrage hoar, such as is seen,
+Beneath green leaves and gloomy branches, oft
+To overbrow a bleak and alpine cliff.
+And, where they stood, before them, as it seem’d,
+Tigris and Euphrates both beheld,
+Forth from one fountain issue; and, like friends,
+Linger at parting. “O enlight’ning beam!
+O glory of our kind! beseech thee say
+What water this, which from one source deriv’d
+Itself removes to distance from itself?”
+
+To such entreaty answer thus was made:
+“Entreat Matilda, that she teach thee this.”
+
+And here, as one, who clears himself of blame
+Imputed, the fair dame return’d: “Of me
+He this and more hath learnt; and I am safe
+That Lethe’s water hath not hid it from him.”
+
+And Beatrice: “Some more pressing care
+That oft the memory ’reeves, perchance hath made
+His mind’s eye dark. But lo! where Eunoe cows!
+Lead thither; and, as thou art wont, revive
+His fainting virtue.” As a courteous spirit,
+That proffers no excuses, but as soon
+As he hath token of another’s will,
+Makes it his own; when she had ta’en me, thus
+The lovely maiden mov’d her on, and call’d
+To Statius with an air most lady-like:
+“Come thou with him.” Were further space allow’d,
+Then, Reader, might I sing, though but in part,
+That beverage, with whose sweetness I had ne’er
+Been sated. But, since all the leaves are full,
+Appointed for this second strain, mine art
+With warning bridle checks me. I return’d
+From the most holy wave, regenerate,
+If ’en as new plants renew’d with foliage new,
+Pure and made apt for mounting to the stars.
+
+
+
+
+NOTES TO PURGATORY
+
+CANTO I
+
+
+Verse 1. O’er better waves.] Berni, Orl. Inn. L 2. c. i.
+Per correr maggior acqua alza le vele,
+O debil navicella del mio ingegno.
+
+v. 11. Birds of chattering note.] For the fable of the daughters of
+Pierus, who challenged the muses to sing, and were by them changed into
+magpies, see Ovid, Met. 1. v. fab. 5.
+
+v. 19. Planet.] Venus.
+
+v. 20. Made all the orient laugh.] Hence Chaucer, Knight’s Tale: And
+all the orisont laugheth of the sight.
+
+It is sometimes read “orient.”
+
+v. 24. Four stars.] Symbolical of the four cardinal virtues, Prudence
+Justice, Fortitude, and Temperance. See Canto XXXI v. 105.
+
+v. 30. The wain.] Charles’s wain, or Bootes.
+
+v. 31. An old man.] Cato.
+
+v. 92. Venerable plumes.] The same metaphor has occurred in Hell Canto
+XX. v. 41:
+
+—the plumes, That mark’d the better sex.
+
+It is used by Ford in the Lady’s Trial, a. 4. s. 2.
+
+Now the down
+Of softness is exchang’d for plumes of age.
+
+v. 58. The farthest gloom.] L’ultima sera. Ariosto, Oroando Furioso c.
+xxxiv st. 59: Che non hen visto ancor l’ultima sera.
+
+And Filicaja, c. ix. Al Sonno.
+L’ultima sera.
+
+v. 79. Marcia.]
+Da fredera prisci
+Illibata tori: da tantum nomen inane
+Connubil: liceat tumulo scripsisse, Catonis
+Martia
+Lucan, Phars. 1. ii. 344.
+
+v. 110. I spy’d the trembling of the ocean stream.] Connubil il
+tremolar della marina.
+
+Trissino, in the Sofonisba.]
+E resta in tremolar l’onda marina
+
+And Fortiguerra, Rleelardetto, c. ix. st. 17. —visto il tremolar della
+marine.
+
+v. 135. another.] From Virg, Aen. 1. vi. 143. Primo avulso non deficit
+alter
+
+CANTO II
+
+
+v. 1. Now had the sun.] Dante was now antipodal to Jerusalem, so that
+while the sun was setting with respect to that place which he supposes
+to be the middle of the inhabited earth, to him it was rising.
+
+v. 6. The scales.] The constellation Libra.
+
+v. 35. Winnowing the air.] Trattando l’acre con l’eterne penne.
+
+80 Filicaja, canz. viii. st. 11. Ma trattar l’acre coll’ eterne plume
+
+v. 45. In exitu.] “When Israel came out of Egypt.” Ps. cxiv.
+
+v. 75. Thrice my hands.]
+Ter conatus ibi eollo dare brachia eircum,
+Ter frustra eomprensa manus effugit imago,
+Par levibus ventis voluerique simillima sommo.
+Virg. Aen. ii. 794.
+
+Compare Homer, Od. xl. 205.
+
+v. 88. My Casella.] A Florentine, celebrated for his skill in music,
+“in whose company,” says Landine, “Dante often recreated his spirits
+wearied by severe studies.” See Dr. Burney’s History of Music, vol. ii.
+c. iv. p. 322. Milton has a fine allusion to this meeting in his sonnet
+to Henry Lawes.
+
+v. 90. Hath so much time been lost.] Casella had been dead some years
+but was only just arrived.
+
+v. 91. He.] The eonducting angel.
+
+v. 94. These three months past.] Since the time of the Jubilee, during
+which all spirits not condemned to eternal punishment, were supposed to
+pass over to Purgatory as soon as they pleased.
+
+v. 96. The shore.] Ostia.
+
+v. 170. “Love that discourses in my thoughts.”] “Amor che nella mente
+mi ragiona.” The first verse of a eanzone or song in the Convito of
+Dante, which he again cites in his Treatise de Vulg. Eloq. 1. ii. c.
+vi.
+
+CANTO III
+
+
+v. 9. How doth a little failing wound thee sore.] (Ch’era al cor
+picciol fallo amaro morso. Tasso, G. L. c. x. st. 59.
+
+v. 11. Haste, that mars all decency of act. Aristotle in his Physiog
+iii. reekons it among the “the signs of an impudent man,” that he is
+“quick in his motions.” Compare Sophoeles, Electra, 878.
+
+v. 26. To Naples.] Virgil died at Brundusium, from whence his body is
+said to have been removed to Naples.
+
+v. 38. Desiring fruitlessly.] See H. Canto IV, 39.
+
+v. 49. ’Twixt Lerice and Turbia.] At that time the two extremities of
+the Genoese republic, the former on the east, the latter on the west. A
+very ingenious writer has had occasion, for a different purpose, to
+mention one of these places as remarkably secluded by its mountainous
+situation “On an eminence among the mountains, between the two little
+cities, Nice and Manoca, is the village of Torbia, a name formed from
+the Greek [GREEK HERE] Mitford on the Harmony of Language, sect. x. p.
+351. 2d edit.
+
+v. 78. As sheep.] The imitative nature of these animals supplies our
+Poet with another comparison in his Convito Opere, t. i. p 34. Ediz.
+Ven. 1793.
+
+v. 110. Manfredi. King of Naples and Sicily, and the natural son of
+Frederick II. He was lively end agreeable in his manners, and delighted
+in poetry, music, and dancing. But he was luxurious and ambitious. Void
+of religion, and in his philosophy an Epicurean. See G. Villani l. vi.
+c. xlvii. and Mr. Matthias’s Tiraboschi, v. I. p. 38. He fell in the
+battle with Charles of Anjou in 1265, alluded to in Canto XXVIII, of
+Hell, v. 13, “Dying, excommunicated, King Charles did allow of his
+being buried in sacred ground, but he was interred near the bridge of
+Benevento, and on his grave there was cast a stone by every one of the
+army whence there was formed a great mound of stones. But some ave
+said, that afterwards, by command of the Pope. the Bishop of Cosenza
+took up his body and sent it out of the kingdom, because it was the
+land of the church, and that it was buried by the river Verde, on the
+borders of the kingdom and of Carapagna. this, however, we do not
+affirm.” G. Villani, Hist. l. vii. c. 9.
+
+v. 111. Costanza.] See Paradise Canto III. v. 121.
+
+v. 112. My fair daughter.] Costanza, the daughter of Manfredi, and wife
+of Peter III. King of Arragon, by whom she was mother to Frederick,
+King of Sicily and James, King of Arragon With the latter of these she
+was at Rome 1296. See G. Villani, 1. viii. c. 18. and notes to Canto
+VII.
+
+v. 122. Clement.] Pope Clement IV.
+
+v. 127. The stream of Verde.] A river near Ascoli, that falls into he
+Toronto. The “xtinguished lights “ formed part of the ceremony t the
+interment of one excommunicated.
+
+v. 130. Hope.] Mentre che la speranza ha fior del verde. Tasso, G. L.
+c. xix. st. 53. —infin che verde e fior di speme.
+
+CANTO IV
+
+
+v. 1. When.] It must be owned the beginning of this Canto is somewhat
+obscure. Bellutello refers, for an elucidation of it, to the reasoning
+of Statius in the twenty-fifth canto. Perhaps some illustration may be
+derived from the following, passage in South’s Sermons, in which I have
+ventured to supply the words between crotchets that seemed to be
+wanting to complete the sense. Now whether these three, judgement
+memory, and invention, are three distinct things, both in being
+distinguished from one another, and likewise from the substance of the
+soul itself, considered without any such faculties, (or whether the
+soul be one individual substance) but only receiving these several
+denominations rom the several respects arising from the several actions
+exerted immediately by itself upon several objects, or several
+qualities of the same object, I say whether of these it is, is not easy
+to decide, and it is well that it is not necessary Aquinas, and most
+with him, affirm the former, and Scotus with his followers the latter.”
+Vol. iv. Serm. 1.
+
+v. 23. Sanleo.] A fortress on the summit of Montefeltro.
+
+v. 24. Noli.] In the Genoese territory, between Finale and Savona.
+
+v. 25. Bismantua.] A steep mountain in the territory of Reggio.
+
+v. 55. From the left.] Vellutello observes an imitation of Lucan in
+this passage:
+
+Ignotum vobis, Arabes, venistis in orbem,
+Umbras mirati nemornm non ire sinistras.
+Phars. s. 1. iii. 248
+
+v. 69 Thou wilt see.] “If you consider that this mountain of Purgatory
+and that of Sion are antipodal to each other, you will perceive that
+the sun must rise on opposite sides of the respective eminences.”
+
+v. 119. Belacqua.] Concerning this man, the commentators afford no
+information.
+
+CANTO V
+
+
+v. 14. Be as a tower.] Sta ome torre ferma
+
+Berni, Orl. Inn. 1. 1. c. xvi. st. 48:
+In quei due piedi sta fermo il gigante
+Com’ una torre in mezzo d’un castello.
+
+And Milton, P. L. b. i. 591.
+Stood like a tower.
+
+v. 36. Ne’er saw I fiery vapours.] Imitated by Tasso, G. L, c.
+xix t. 62:
+Tal suol fendendo liquido sereno
+Stella cader della gran madre in seno.
+
+And by Milton, P. L. b. iv. 558:
+Swift as a shooting star
+In autumn thwarts the night, when vapours fir’d
+Impress the air.
+
+v. 67. That land.] The Marca d’Ancona, between Romagna and Apulia, the
+kingdom of Charles of Anjou.
+
+v. 76. From thence I came.] Giacopo del Cassero, a citizen of Fano who
+having spoken ill of Azzo da Este, Marquis of Ferrara, was by his
+orders put to death. Giacopo, was overtaken by the assassins at Oriaco
+a place near the Brenta, from whence, if he had fled towards Mira,
+higher up on that river, instead of making for the marsh on the sea
+shore, he might have escaped.
+
+v. 75. Antenor’s land.] The city of Padua, said to be founded by
+Antenor.
+
+v. 87. Of Montefeltro I.] Buonconte (son of Guido da Montefeltro, whom
+we have had in the twenty-seventh Canto of Hell) fell in the battle of
+Campaldino (1289), fighting on the side of the Aretini.
+
+v. 88. Giovanna.] Either the wife, or kinswoman, of Buonconte.
+
+v. 91. The hermit’s seat.] The hermitage of Camaldoli.
+
+v. 95. Where its name is cancel’d.] That is, between Bibbiena and
+Poppi, where the Archiano falls into the Arno.
+
+v. 115. From Pratomagno to the mountain range.] From Pratomagno now
+called Prato Vecchio (which divides the Valdarno from Casentino) as far
+as to the Apennine.
+
+v. 131. Pia.] She is said to have been a Siennese lady, of the family
+of Tolommei, secretly made away with by her husband, Nello della
+Pietra, of the same city, in Maremma, where he had some possessions.
+
+CANTO VI
+
+
+v. 14. Of Arezzo him.] Benincasa of Arezzo, eminent for his skill in
+jurisprudence, who, having condemned to death Turrino da Turrita
+brother of Ghino di Tacco, for his robberies in Maremma, was murdered
+by Ghino, in an apartment of his own house, in the presence of many
+witnesses. Ghino was not only suffered to escape in safety, but (as the
+commentators inform us) obtained so high a reputation by the liberality
+with which he was accustomed to dispense the fruits of his plunder, and
+treated those who fell into his hands with so much courtesy, that he
+was afterwards invited to Rome, and knighted by Boniface VIII. A story
+is told of him by Boccaccio, G. x. N. 2.
+
+v. 15. Him beside.] Ciacco de’ Tariatti of Arezzo. He is said to have
+been carried by his horse into the Arno, and there drowned, while he
+was in pursuit of certain of his enemies.
+
+v. 17. Frederic Novello.] Son of the Conte Guido da Battifolle, and
+slain by one of the family of Bostoli.
+
+v. 18. Of Pisa he.] Farinata de’ Scornigiani of Pisa. His father
+Marzuco, who had entered the order of the Frati Minori, so entirely
+overcame the feelings of resentment, that he even kissed the hands of
+the slayer of his son, and, as he was following the funeral, exhorted
+his kinsmen to reconciliation.
+
+v. 20. Count 0rso.] Son of Napoleone da Cerbaia, slain by Alberto da
+Mangona, his uncle.
+
+v. 23. Peter de la Brosse.] Secretary of Philip III of France. The
+courtiers, envying the high place which he held in the king’s favour,
+prevailed on Mary of Brabant to charge him falsely with an attempt upon
+her person for which supposed crime he suffered death. So say the
+Italian commentators. Henault represents the matter very differently:
+“Pierre de la Brosse, formerly barber to St. Louis, afterwards the
+favorite of Philip, fearing the too great attachment of the king for
+his wife Mary, accuses this princess of having poisoned Louis, eldest
+son of Philip, by his first marriage. This calumny is discovered by a
+nun of Nivelle in Flanders. La Brosse is hung.” Abrege Chron. t. 275,
+&c.
+
+v. 30. In thy text.] He refers to Virgil, Aen. 1, vi. 376.
+Desine fata deum flecti sperare precando, 37. The sacred height
+Of judgment. Shakespeare, Measure for Measure, a. ii. s. 2.
+If he, which is the top of judgment
+
+v. 66. Eyeing us as a lion on his watch.] A guisa di Leon quando si
+posa. A line taken by Tasso, G. L. c. x. st. 56.
+
+v. 76. Sordello.] The history of Sordello’s life is wrapt in the
+obscurity of romance. That he distinguished himself by his skill in
+Provencal poetry is certain. It is probable that he was born towards
+the end of the twelfth, and died about the middle of the succeeding
+century. Tiraboschi has taken much pains to sift all the notices he
+could collect relating to him. Honourable mention of his name is made
+by our Poet in the Treatise de Vulg. Eloq. 1. i. c. 15.
+
+v. 76. Thou inn of grief.]
+Thou most beauteous inn
+Why should hard-favour’d grief be lodg’d in thee?
+Shakespeare, Richard II a. 5. s. 1.
+
+v. 89. Justinian’s hand.] “What avails it that Justinian delivered thee
+from the Goths, and reformed thy laws, if thou art no longer under the
+control of his successors in the empire?”
+
+v. 94. That which God commands.] He alludes to the precept- “Render
+unto Caesar the things which are Caesar’s.”
+
+v. 98. O German Albert!] The Emperor Albert I. succeeded Adolphus in
+1298, and was murdered in 1308. See Par Canto XIX 114 v. 103. Thy
+successor.] The successor of Albert was Henry of Luxembourg, by whose
+interposition in the affairs of Italy our Poet hoped to have been
+reinstated in his native city.
+
+v. 101. Thy sire.] The Emperor Rodolph, too intent on increasing his
+power in Germany to give much of his thoughts to Italy, “the garden of
+the empire.”
+
+v. 107. Capulets and Montagues.] Our ears are so familiarized to the
+names of these rival families in the language of Shakespeare, that I
+have used them instead of the “Montecchi” and “Cappelletti.”
+
+v. 108. Philippeschi and Monaldi.] Two other rival families in Orvieto.
+
+v. 113. What safety, Santafiore can supply.] A place between Pisa and
+Sienna. What he alludes to is so doubtful, that it is not certain
+whether we should not read “come si cura”—” How Santafiore is
+governed.” Perhaps the event related in the note to v. 58, Canto XI.
+may be pointed at.
+
+v. 127. Marcellus.]
+Un Marcel diventa
+Ogni villan che parteggiando viene.
+Repeated by Alamanni in his Coltivazione, 1. i.
+
+v. 51. I sick wretch.] Imitated by the Cardinal de Polignac in his
+Anti-Lucretius, 1. i. 1052.
+
+Ceu lectum peragrat membris languentibus aeger
+In latus alterne faevum dextrumque recumbens
+Nec javat: inde oculos tollit resupinus in altum:
+Nusquam inventa quies; semper quaesita: quod illi
+Primum in deliciis fuerat, mox torquet et angit:
+Nec morburm sanat, nec fallit taedia morbi.
+
+CANTO VII
+
+
+v. 14. Where one of mean estate might clasp his lord.] Ariosto Orl. F.
+c. xxiv. st. 19
+
+E l’abbracciaro, ove il maggior s’abbraccia
+Col capo nudo e col ginocchio chino.
+
+v. 31. The three holy virtues.] Faith, Hope and Charity.
+
+v. 32. The red.] Prudence, Justice, Fortitude, and Temperance.
+
+v. 72. Fresh emeralds.]
+Under foot the violet,
+Crocus, and hyacinth with rich inlay
+Broider’d the ground, more colour’d than with stone
+Of costliest emblem.
+Milton, P. L. b. iv. 793
+
+Compare Ariosto, Orl. F. c. xxxiv. st. 49.
+
+v. 79. Salve Regina.] The beginning of a prayer to the Virgin. It is
+sufficient here to observe, that in similar instances I shall either
+preserve the original Latin words or translate them, as it may seem
+best to suit the purpose of the verse.
+
+v. 91. The Emperor Rodolph.] See the last Canto, v. 104. He died in
+1291.
+
+v. 95. That country.] Bohemia.
+
+v. 97. Ottocar.] King of Bohemia, was killed in the battle of
+Marchfield, fought with Rodolph, August 26, 1278. Winceslaus II. His
+son,who succeeded him in the kingdom of Bohemia. died in 1305. He is
+again taxed with luxury in the Paradise Canto XIX. 123.
+
+v. 101. That one with the nose deprest. ] Philip III of France, who
+died in 1285, at Perpignan, in his retreat from Arragon.
+
+v. 102. Him of gentle look.] Henry of Naverre, father of Jane married
+to Philip IV of France, whom Dante calls “mal di Francia” -“Gallia’s
+bane.”
+
+v. 110. He so robust of limb.] Peter III called the Great, King of
+Arragon, who died in 1285, leaving four sons, Alonzo, James, Frederick
+and Peter. The two former succeeded him in the kingdom of Arragon, and
+Frederick in that of Sicily. See G. Villani, 1. vii. c. 102. and
+Mariana, I. xiv. c. 9. He is enumerated among the Provencal poets by
+Millot, Hist. Litt. Des Troubadours, t. iii. p. 150.
+
+v. 111. Him of feature prominent.] “Dal maschio naso”-with the
+masculine nose.” Charles I. King of Naples, Count of Anjou, and brother
+of St. Lonis. He died in 1284. The annalist of Florence remarks, that
+“there had been no sovereign of the house of France, since the time of
+Charlemagne, by whom Charles was surpassed either in military renown,
+and prowess, or in the loftiness of his understanding.” G. Villani, 1.
+vii. c. 94. We shall, however, find many of his actions severely
+reprobated in the twentieth Canto.
+
+v. 113. That stripling.] Either (as the old commentators suppose)
+Alonzo III King of Arragon, the eldest son of Peter III who died in
+1291, at the age of 27, or, according to Venturi, Peter the youngest
+son. The former was a young prince of virtue sufficient to have
+justified the eulogium and the hopes of Dante.
+
+See Mariana, 1. xiv. c. 14.
+
+v. 119. Rarely.]
+Full well can the wise poet of Florence
+That hight Dante, speaken in this sentence
+Lo! in such manner rime is Dantes tale.
+Full selde upriseth by his branches smale
+Prowesse of man for God of his goodnesse
+Woll that we claim of him our gentlenesse:
+For of our elders may we nothing claime
+But temporal thing, that men may hurt and maime.
+Chaucer, Wife of Bathe’s Tale.
+
+Compare Homer, Od. b. ii. v. 276; Pindar, Nem. xi. 48 and
+Euripides, Electra, 369.
+
+v. 122. To Charles.] “Al Nasuto.” -“Charles II King of Naples, is no
+less inferior to his father Charles I. than James and Frederick to
+theirs, Peter III.”
+
+v. 127. Costanza.] Widow of Peter III She has been already mentioned in
+the third Canto, v. 112. By Beatrice and Margaret are probably meant
+two of the daughters of Raymond Berenger, Count of Provence; the former
+married to St. Louis of France, the latter to his brother Charles of
+Anjou. See Paradise, Canto Vl. 135. Dante therefore considers Peter as
+the most illustrious of the three monarchs.
+
+v. 129. Harry of England.] Henry III.
+
+v. 130. Better issue.] Edward l. of whose glory our Poet was perhaps a
+witness, in his visit to England.
+
+v. 133. William, that brave Marquis.] William, Marquis of Monferrat,
+was treacherously seized by his own subjects, at Alessandria, in
+Lombardy, A.D. 1290, and ended his life in prison. See G. Villani, 1.
+vii. c. 135. A war ensued between the people of Alessandria and those
+of Monferrat and the Canavese.
+
+CANTO VIII
+
+
+v. 6. That seems to mourn for the expiring day.] The curfew tolls the
+knell of parting day. Gray’s Elegy.
+
+v. 13. Te Lucis Ante.] The beginning of one of the evening hymns.
+
+v. 36. As faculty.]
+
+My earthly by his heav’nly overpower’d
+
+* * * *
+As with an object, that excels the sense,
+Dazzled and spent.
+Milton, P. L. b. viii. 457.
+
+v. 53. Nino, thou courteous judge.] Nino di Gallura de’ Visconti nephew
+to Count Ugolino de’ Gherardeschi, and betrayed by him. See Notes to
+Hell Canto XXXIII.
+
+v. 65. Conrad.] Currado Malaspina.
+
+v. 71 My Giovanna.] The daughter of Nino, and wife of Riccardo da
+Cammino of Trevigi.
+
+v. 73. Her mother.] Beatrice, marchioness of Este wife of Nino, and
+after his death married to Galeazzo de’ Visconti of Milan.
+
+v. 74. The white and wimpled folds.] The weeds of widowhood.
+
+v. 80. The viper.] The arms of Galeazzo and the ensign of the Milanese.
+
+v. 81. Shrill Gallura’s bird.] The cock was the ensign of Gallura,
+Nino’s province in Sardinia. Hell, Canto XXII. 80. and Notes.
+
+v. 115. Valdimagra.] See Hell, Canto XXIV. 144. and Notes.
+
+v. 133. Sev’n times the tired sun.] “The sun shall not enter into the
+constellation of Aries seven times more, before thou shalt have still
+better cause for the good opinion thou expresses” of Valdimagra, in the
+kind reception thou shalt there meet with.” Dante was hospitably
+received by the Marchese Marcello Malaspina, during his banishment.
+A.D. 1307.
+
+CANTO IX
+
+
+v. 1. Now the fair consort of Tithonus old.]
+La concubina di Titone antico.
+So Tassoni, Secchia Rapita, c. viii. st. 15.
+La puttanella del canuto amante.
+
+v. 5. Of that chill animal.] The scorpion.
+
+v. 14. Our minds.] Compare Hell, Canto XXVI. 7.
+
+v. 18. A golden-feathered eagle. ] Chaucer, in the house of Fame at the
+conclusion of the first book and beginning of the second, represents
+himself carried up by the “grim pawes” of a golden eagle. Much of his
+description is closely imitated from Dante.
+
+v. 50. Lucia.] The enIightening, grace of heaven Hell, Canto II. 97.
+
+v. 85. The lowest stair.] By the white step is meant the distinctness
+with which the conscience of the penitent reflects his offences, by the
+burnt and cracked one, his contrition on, their account; and by that of
+porphyry, the fervour with which he resolves on the future pursuit of
+piety and virtue. Hence, no doubt, Milton describing “the gate of
+heaven,” P. L. b. iii. 516.
+
+Each stair mysteriously was meant.
+
+v. 100. Seven times.] Seven P’s, to denote the seven sins (Peccata) of
+which he was to be cleansed in his passage through purgatory.
+
+v. 115. One is more precious.] The golden key denotes the divine
+authority by which the priest absolves the sinners the silver expresses
+the learning and judgment requisite for the due discharge of that
+office.
+
+v. 127. Harsh was the grating.]
+On a sudden open fly
+With impetuous recoil and jarring, sound
+Th’ infernal doors, and on their hinges grate
+Harsh thunder
+Milton, P. L. b. ii 882
+
+v. 128. The Turpeian.]
+Protinus, abducto patuerunt temple Metello.
+Tunc rupes Tarpeia sonat: magnoque reclusas
+Testatur stridore fores: tune conditus imo
+Eruitur tempo multis intactus ab annnis
+Romani census populi, &c.
+Lucan. Ph. 1. iii. 157.
+
+CANTO X
+
+
+v. 6. That Wound.] Venturi justly observes, that the Padre d’Aquino has
+misrepresented the sense of this passage in his translation.
+
+—dabat ascensum tendentibus ultra Scissa tremensque silex, tenuique
+erratica motu.
+
+The verb “muover” is used in the same signification in the
+Inferno, Canto XVIII. 21.
+
+Cosi da imo della roccia scogli
+Moven.
+
+—from the rock’s low base Thus flinty paths advanc’d.
+
+In neither place is actual motion intended to be expressed.
+
+v. 52. That from unbidden. office awes mankind.] Seo 2 Sam. G.
+
+v 58. Preceding.] Ibid. 14, &c.
+
+v. 68. Gregory.] St. Gregory’s prayers are said to have delivered
+Trajan from hell. See Paradise, Canto XX. 40.
+
+v. 69. Trajan the Emperor. For this story, Landino refers to two
+writers, whom he calls “Heunando,” of France, by whom he means Elinand,
+a monk and chronicler, in the reign of Philip Augustus, and
+“Polycrato,” of England, by whom is meant John of Salisbury, author of
+the Polycraticus de Curialium Nugis, in the twelfth century. The
+passage in the text I find to be nearly a translation from that work,
+1. v. c. 8. The original appears to be in Dio Cassius, where it is told
+of the Emperor Hadrian, lib. I xix. [GREEK HERE] When a woman appeared
+to him with a suit, as he was on a journey, at first he answered her,
+‘I have no leisure,’ but she crying out to him, ‘then reign no longer’
+he turned about, and heard her cause.”
+
+v. 119. As to support.] Chillingworth, ch.vi. 54. speaks of “those
+crouching anticks, which seem in great buildings to labour under the
+weight they bear.” And Lord Shaftesbury has a similar illustration in
+his Essay on Wit and Humour, p. 4. s. 3.
+
+CANTO XI
+
+
+v. 1. 0 thou Mighty Father.] The first four lines are borrowed by
+Pulci, Morg. Magg. c. vi. Dante, in his ‘Credo,’ has again versified
+the Lord’s prayer.
+
+v. 58. I was of Latinum.] Omberto, the son of Guglielino Aldobrandeseo,
+Count of Santafiore, in the territory of Sienna His arrogance provoked
+his countrymen to such a pitch of fury against him, that he was
+murdered by them at Campagnatico.
+
+v. 79. Oderigi.] The illuminator, or miniature painter, a friend of
+Giotto and Dante
+
+v. 83. Bolognian Franco.] Franco of Bologna, who is said to have been a
+pupil of Oderigi’s.
+
+v. 93. Cimabue.] Giovanni Cimabue, the restorer of painting, was born
+at Florence, of a noble family, in 1240, and died in 1300. The passage
+in the text is an illusion to his epitaph:
+
+Credidit ut Cimabos picturae castra tenere,
+Sic tenuit vivens: nunc tenet astra poli.
+
+v. 95. The cry is Giotto’s.] In Giotto we have a proof at how early a
+period the fine arts were encouraged in Italy. His talents were
+discovered by Cimabue, while he was tending sheep for his father in the
+neighbourhood of Florence, and he was afterwards patronized by Pope
+Benedict XI and Robert King of Naples, and enjoyed the society and
+friendship of Dante, whose likeness he has transmitted to posterity. He
+died in 1336, at the age of 60.
+
+v. 96. One Guido from the other.] Guido Cavalcanti, the friend of our
+Poet, (see Hell, Canto X. 59.) had eclipsed the literary fame of Guido
+Guinicelli, of a noble family in Bologna, whom we shall meet with in
+the twenty-sixth Canto and of whom frequent mention is made by our Poet
+in his Treatise de Vulg. Eloq. Guinicelli died in 1276. Many of
+Cavalcanti’s writings, hitherto in MS. are now publishing at Florence”
+Esprit des Journaux, Jan. 1813.
+
+v. 97. He perhaps is born.] Some imagine, with much probability, that
+Dante here augurs the greatness of his own poetical reputation. Others
+have fancied that he prophesies the glory of Petrarch. But Petrarch was
+not yet born.
+
+v. 136. suitor.] Provenzano salvani humbled himself so far for the sake
+of one of his friends, who was detained in captivity by Charles I of
+Sicily, as personally to supplicate the people of Sienna to contribute
+the sum required by the king for his ransom:
+
+and this act of self-abasement atoned for his general ambition and
+pride.
+
+v. 140. Thy neighbours soon.] “Thou wilt know in the time of thy
+banishment, which is near at hand, what it is to solicit favours of
+others and ‘tremble through every vein,’ lest they should be refused
+thee.”
+
+CANTO XII
+
+
+v. 26. The Thymbraen god.] Apollo
+
+Si modo, quem perhibes, pater est Thymbraeus Apollo. Virg. Georg. iv.
+323.
+
+v. 37. Mars.]
+
+With such a grace,
+The giants that attempted to scale heaven
+When they lay dead on the Phlegren plain
+Mars did appear to Jove.
+Beaumont and Fletcher, The Prophetess, a. 2. s. 3.
+
+v. 42. O Rehoboam.] 1 Kings, c. xii. 18.
+
+v. 46. A1cmaeon.] Virg. Aen. l. vi. 445, and Homer, Od. xi. 325.
+
+v. 48. Sennacherib.] 2 Kings, c. xix. 37.
+
+v. 58. What master of the pencil or the style.] —inimitable on earth By
+model, or by shading pencil drawn. Milton, P. L. b. iii. 509.
+
+v. 94. The chapel stands.] The church of San Miniato in Florence
+situated on a height that overlooks the Arno, where it is crossed by
+the bridge Rubaconte, so called from Messer Rubaconte da Mandelia, of
+Milan chief magistrate of Florence, by whom the bridge was founded in
+1237. See G. Villani, 1. vi. c. 27.
+
+v. 96. The well-guided city] This is said ironically of Florence.
+
+v. 99. The registry.] In allusion to certain instances of fraud
+committed with respect to the public accounts and measures See Paradise
+Canto XVI. 103.
+
+CANTO XIII
+
+
+v. 26. They have no wine.] John, ii. 3. These words of the Virgin are
+referred to as an instance of charity.
+
+v. 29. Orestes] Alluding to his friendship with Pylades
+
+v. 32. Love ye those have wrong’d you.] Matt. c. v. 44.
+
+v. 33. The scourge.] “The chastisement of envy consists in hearing
+examples of the opposite virtue, charity. As a curb and restraint on
+this vice, you will presently hear very different sounds, those of
+threatening and punishment.”
+
+v. 87. Citizens Of one true city.] “For here we have no continuing
+city, but we seek to come.” Heb. C. xiii. 14.
+
+v. 101. Sapia.] A lady of Sienna, who, living in exile at Colle, was so
+overjoyed at a defeat which her countrymen sustained near that place
+that she declared nothing more was wanting to make her die contented.
+
+v. 114. The merlin.] The story of the merlin is that having been
+induced by a gleam of fine weather in the winter to escape from his
+master, he was soon oppressed by the rigour of the season.
+
+v. 119. The hermit Piero.] Piero Pettinagno, a holy hermit of Florence.
+
+v. 141. That vain multitude.] The Siennese. See Hell, Canto XXIX. 117.
+“Their acquisition of Telamone, a seaport on the confines of the
+Maremma, has led them to conceive hopes of becoming a naval power: but
+this scheme will prove as chimerical as their former plan for the
+discovery of a subterraneous stream under their city.” Why they gave
+the appellation of Diana to the imagined stream, Venturi says he leaves
+it to the antiquaries of Sienna to conjecture.
+
+CANTO XIV
+
+
+v. 34. Maim’d of Pelorus.] Virg. Aen. 1. iii. 414.
+
+—a hill Torn from Pelorus Milton P. L. b. i. 232
+
+v. 45. ’Midst brute swine.] The people of Casentino.
+
+v. 49. Curs.] The Arno leaves Arezzo about four miles to the left.
+
+v. 53. Wolves.] The Florentines.
+
+v. 55. Foxes.] The Pisans
+
+v. 61. Thy grandson.] Fulcieri de’ Calboli, grandson of Rinieri de’
+Calboli, who is here spoken to. The atrocities predicted came to pass
+in 1302. See G. Villani, 1. viii c. 59
+
+v. 95. ’Twixt Po, the mount, the Reno, and the shore.] The boundaries
+of Romagna.
+
+v. 99. Lizio.] Lizio da Valbona, introduced into Boccaccio’s Decameron,
+G. v. N, 4.
+
+v. 100. Manardi, Traversaro, and Carpigna.1 Arrigo Manardi of Faenza,
+or as some say, of Brettinoro, Pier Traversaro, lord of Ravenna, and
+Guido di Carpigna of Montefeltro.
+
+v. 102. In Bologna the low artisan.] One who had been a mechanic named
+Lambertaccio, arrived at almost supreme power in Bologna.
+
+v. 103. Yon Bernardin.] Bernardin di Fosco, a man of low origin but
+great talents, who governed at Faenza.
+
+v. 107. Prata.] A place between Faenza and Ravenna
+
+v. 107. Of Azzo him.] Ugolino of the Ubaldini family in Tuscany He is
+recounted among the poets by Crescimbeni and Tiraboschi.
+
+v. 108. Tignoso.] Federigo Tignoso of Rimini.
+
+v. 109. Traversaro’s house and Anastagio’s.] Two noble families of
+Ravenna. She to whom Dryden has given the name of Honoria, in the fable
+so admirably paraphrased from Boccaccio, was of the former: her lover
+and the specter were of the Anastagi family.
+
+v. 111. The ladies, &c.] These two lines express the true spirit of
+chivalry. “Agi” is understood by the commentators whom I have
+consulted,to mean “the ease procured for others by the exertions of
+knight-errantry.” But surely it signifies the alternation of ease with
+labour.
+
+v. 114. O Brettinoro.] A beautifully situated castle in Romagna, the
+hospitable residence of Guido del Duca, who is here speaking.
+
+v. 118. Baynacavallo.] A castle between Imola and Ravenna
+
+v. 118. Castracaro ill And Conio worse.] Both in Romagna.
+
+v. 121. Pagani.] The Pagani were lords of Faenza and Imola. One of them
+Machinardo, was named the Demon, from his treachery. See Hell, Canto
+XXVII. 47, and Note.
+
+v. 124. Hugolin.] Ugolino Ubaldini, a noble and virtuous person in
+Faenza, who, on account of his age probably, was not likely to leave
+any offspring behind him. He is enumerated among the poets by
+Crescimbeni, and Tiraboschi. Mr. Matthias’s edit. vol. i. 143
+
+v. 136. Whosoever finds Will slay me.] The words of Cain, Gen. e. iv.
+14.
+
+v. 142. Aglauros.] Ovid, Met. I, ii. fate. 12.
+
+v. 145. There was the galling bit.] Referring to what had been before
+said, Canto XIII. 35.
+
+CANTO XV
+
+
+v. 1. As much.] It wanted three hours of sunset.
+
+v. 16. As when the ray.] Compare Virg. Aen. 1.viii. 22, and Apol. Rhod.
+1. iii. 755.
+
+v. 19. Ascending at a glance.] Lucretius, 1. iv. 215.
+
+v. 20. Differs from the stone.] The motion of light being quicker than
+that of a stone through an equal space.
+
+v. 38. Blessed the merciful. Matt. c. v. 7.
+
+v. 43. Romagna’s spirit.] Guido del Duea, of Brettinoro whom we have
+seen in the preceding Canto.
+
+v. 87. A dame.] Luke, c. ii. 18
+
+v. 101. How shall we those requite.] The answer of Pisistratus the
+tyrant to his wife, when she urged him to inflict the punishment of
+death on a young man, who, inflamed with love for his daughter, had
+snatched from her a kiss in public. The story is told by Valerius
+Maximus, 1.v. 1.
+
+v. 105. A stripling youth.] The protomartyr Stephen.
+
+CANTO XVI
+
+
+v. 94. As thou.] “If thou wert still living.”
+
+v. 46. I was of Lombardy, and Marco call’d.] A Venetian gentleman.
+“Lombardo” both was his surname and denoted the country to which he
+belonged. G. Villani, 1. vii. c. 120, terms him “a wise and worthy
+courtier.”
+
+v. 58. Elsewhere.] He refers to what Guido del Duca had said in the
+thirteenth Canto, concerning the degeneracy of his countrymen.
+
+v. 70. If this were so.] Mr. Crowe in his Lewesdon Hill has expressed
+similar sentiments with much energy.
+
+Of this be sure,
+Where freedom is not, there no virtue is, &c.
+
+Compare Origen in Genesim, Patrum Graecorum, vol. xi. p. 14. Wirer
+burgi, 1783. 8vo.
+
+v. 79. To mightier force.] “Though ye are subject to a higher power
+than that of the heavenly constellations, e`en to the power of the
+great Creator himself, yet ye are still left in the possession of
+liberty.”
+
+v. 88. Like a babe that wantons sportively.] This reminds one of the
+Emperor Hadrian’s verses to his departing soul:
+
+Animula vagula blandula, &c
+
+v. 99. The fortress.] Justice, the most necessary virtue in the chief
+magistrate, as the commentators explain it.
+
+v. 103. Who.] He compares the Pope, on account of the union of the
+temporal with the spiritual power in his person, to an unclean beast in
+the levitical law. “The camel, because he cheweth the cud, but divideth
+not the hoof, he is unclean unto you.” Levit. c. xi. 4.
+
+v. 110. Two sons.] The Emperor and the Bishop of Rome.
+
+v. 117. That land.] Lombardy.
+
+v. 119. Ere the day.] Before the Emperor Frederick II was defeated
+before Parma, in 1248. G. Villani, 1. vi. c. 35.
+
+v. 126. The good Gherardo.] Gherardo di Camino of Trevigi. He is
+honourably mentioned in our Poet’s “Convito.” Opere di Dante, t. i. p.
+173 Venez. 8vo. 1793. And Tiraboschi supposes him to have been the same
+Gherardo with whom the Provencal poets were used to meet with
+hospitable reception. See Mr. Matthias’s edition, t. i. p. 137, v. 127.
+Conrad.] Currado da Palazzo, a gentleman of Brescia.
+
+v. 127. Guido of Castello.] Of Reggio. All the Italians were called
+Lombards by the French.
+
+v. 144. His daughter Gaia.] A lady equally admired for her modesty, the
+beauty of her person, and the excellency of her talents. Gaia, says
+Tiraboschi, may perhaps lay claim to the praise of having been the
+first among the Italian ladies, by whom the vernacular poetry was
+cultivated. Ibid. p. 137.
+
+CANTO XVII
+
+
+v. 21. The bird, that most Delights itself in song.] I cannot think
+with Vellutello, that the swallow is here meant. Dante probably alludes
+to the story of Philomela, as it is found in Homer’s Odyssey, b. xix.
+518 rather than as later poets have told it. “She intended to slay the
+son of her husband’s brother Amphion, incited to it, by the envy of his
+wife, who had six children, while herself had only two, but through
+mistake slew her own son Itylus, and for her punishment was transformed
+by Jupiter into a nightingale.” Cowper’s note on the passage. In
+speaking of the nightingale, let me observe, that while some have
+considered its song as a melancholy, and others as a cheerful one,
+Chiabrera appears to have come nearest the truth, when he says, in the
+Alcippo, a. l. s. 1, Non mal si stanca d’ iterar le note O gioconde o
+dogliose, Al sentir dilettose.
+
+Unwearied still reiterates her lays,
+Jocund or sad, delightful to the ear.
+
+v. 26. One crucified.] Haman. See the book of Esther, c. vii. v. 34. A
+damsel.] Lavinia, mourning for her mother Amata, who, impelled by grief
+and indignation for the supposed death of Turnus, destroyed herself.
+Aen. 1. xii. 595.
+
+v. 43. The broken slumber quivering ere it dies.] Venturi suggests that
+this bold and unusual metaphor may have been formed on that in Virgil.
+
+Tempus erat quo prima quies mortalibus aegris
+Incipit, et dono divun gratissima serpit.
+Aen. 1. ii. 268.
+
+v. 68. The peace-makers.] Matt. c. v. 9.
+
+v. 81. The love.] “A defect in our love towards God, or lukewarmness in
+piety, is here removed.”
+
+v. 94. The primal blessings.] Spiritual good.
+
+v. 95. Th’ inferior.] Temporal good.
+
+v. 102. Now.] “It is impossible for any being, either to hate itself,
+or to hate the First Cause of all, by which it exists. We can therefore
+only rejoice in the evil which befalls others.”
+
+v. 111. There is.] The proud.
+
+v. 114. There is.] The envious.
+
+v. 117. There is he.] The resentful.
+
+v. 135. Along Three circles.] According to the allegorical
+commentators, as Venturi has observed, Reason is represented under the
+person of Virgil, and Sense under that of Dante. The former leaves to
+the latter to discover for itself the three carnal sins, avarice,
+gluttony and libidinousness; having already declared the nature of the
+spiritual sins, pride, envy, anger, and indifference, or lukewarmness
+in piety, which the Italians call accidia, from the Greek word. [GREEK
+HERE]
+
+CANTO XVIII
+
+
+v. 1. The teacher ended.] Compare Plato, Protagoras, v. iii. p. 123.
+Bip. edit. [GREEK HERE] Apoll. Rhod. 1. i. 513, and Milton, P. L. b.
+viii. 1. The angel ended, &c.
+
+v. 23. Your apprehension.] It is literally, “Your apprehensive faculty
+derives intention from a thing really existing, and displays the
+intention within you, so that it makes the soul turn to it.” The
+commentators labour in explaining this; and whatever sense they have
+elicited may, I think, be resolved into the words of the translation in
+the text.
+
+v. 47. Spirit.] The human soul, which differs from that of brutes,
+inasmuch as, though united with the body, it has a separate existence
+of its own. v. 65. Three men.] The great moral philosophers among the
+heathens.
+
+v. 78. A crag.] I have preferred the reading of Landino, scheggion,
+“crag,” conceiving it to be more poetical than secchion, “bucket,”
+which is the common reading. The same cause, the vapours, which the
+commentators say might give the appearance of increased magnitude to
+the moon, might also make her seem broken at her rise.
+
+v. 78. Up the vault.] The moon passed with a motion opposite to that of
+the heavens, through the constellation of the scorpion, in which the
+sun is, when to those who are in Rome he appears to set between the
+isles of Corsica and Sardinia.
+
+v. 84. Andes.] Andes, now Pietola, made more famous than Mantua near
+which it is situated, by having been the birthplace of Virgil.
+
+v. 92. Ismenus and Asopus.] Rivers near Thebes
+
+v. 98. Mary.] Luke, c i. 39, 40
+
+v. 99. Caesar.] See Lucan, Phars. I. iii. and iv, and Caesar de Bello
+Civiii, I. i. Caesar left Brutus to complete the siege of Marseilles,
+and hastened on to the attack of Afranius and Petreius, the generals of
+Pompey, at Ilerda (Lerida) in Spain.
+
+v. 118. abbot.] Alberto, abbot of San Zeno in Verona, when Frederick I
+was emperor, by whom Milan was besieged and reduced to ashes.
+
+v. 121. There is he.] Alberto della Scala, lord of Verona, who had made
+his natural son abbot of San Zeno.
+
+v. 133. First they died.] The Israelites, who, on account of their
+disobedience, died before reaching the promised land.
+
+v. 135. And they.] Virg Aen. 1. v.
+
+CANTO XIX
+
+
+v. 1. The hour.] Near the dawn.
+
+v. 4. The geomancer.] The geomancers, says Landino, when they divined,
+drew a figure consisting of sixteen marks, named from so many stars
+which constitute the end of Aquarius and the beginning of Pisces. One
+of these they called “the greater fortune.”
+
+v. 7. A woman’s shape.] Worldly happiness. This allegory reminds us of
+the “Choice of Hercules.”
+
+v. 14. Love’s own hue.]
+A smile that glow’d
+Celestial rosy red, love’s proper hue.
+Milton, P. L. b. viii. 619
+
+—facies pulcherrima tune est
+Quum porphyriaco variatur candida rubro
+Quid color hic roseus sibi vult? designat amorem:
+Quippe amor est igni similis; flammasque rubentes
+Ignus habere solet.
+Palingenii Zodiacus Vitae, 1. xii.
+
+v. 26. A dame.] Philosophy.
+
+v. 49. Who mourn.] Matt. c. v. 4.
+
+v. 72. My soul.] Psalm cxix. 5
+
+v. 97. The successor of Peter Ottobuono, of the family of Fieschi
+Counts of Lavagna, died thirty-nine days after he became Pope, with the
+title of Adrian V, in 1276.
+
+v. 98. That stream.] The river Lavagna, in the Genoese territory.
+
+v. 135. nor shall be giv’n in marriage.] Matt. c. xxii. 30. “Since in
+this state we neither marry nor are given in marriage, I am no longer
+the spouse of the church, and therefore no longer retain my former
+dignity.
+
+v. 140. A kinswoman.] Alagia is said to have been the wife of the
+Marchese Marcello Malaspina, one of the poet’s protectors during his
+exile. See Canto VIII. 133.
+
+CANTO XX
+
+
+v. 3. I drew the sponge.] “I did not persevere in my inquiries from the
+spirit though still anxious to learn more.” v. 11. Wolf.] Avarice.
+
+v. 16. Of his appearing.] He is thought to allude to Can Grande della
+Scala. See Hell, Canto I. 98.
+
+v. 25. Fabricius.] Compare Petrarch, Tr. della Fama, c. 1.
+
+Un Curio ed un Fabricio, &c.
+
+v. 30. Nicholas.] The story of Nicholas is, that an angel having
+revealed to him that the father of a family was so impoverished as to
+resolve on exposing the chastity of his three daughters to sale, he
+threw in at the window of their house three bags of money, containing a
+sufficient portion for each of them. v. 42. Root.] Hugh Capet, ancestor
+of Philip IV. v. 46. Had Ghent and Douay, Lille and Bruges power.]
+These cities had lately been seized by Philip IV. The spirit is made to
+imitate the approaching defeat of the French army by the Flemings, in
+the battle of Courtrai, which happened in 1302. v. 51. The slaughter’s
+trade.] This reflection on the birth of his ancestor induced Francis I
+to forbid the reading of Dante in his dominions Hugh Capet, who came to
+the throne of France in 987, was however the grandson of Robert, who
+was the brother of Eudes, King of France in 888.
+
+v. 52. All save one.] The posterity of Charlemagne, the second race of
+French monarchs, had failed, with the exception of Charles of Lorraine
+who is said, on account of the melancholy temper of his mind, to have
+always clothed himself in black. Venturi suggest that Dante may have
+confounded him with Childeric III the last of the Merosvingian, or
+first, race, who was deposed and made a monk in 751.
+
+v. 57. My son.] Hugh Capet caused his son Robert to be crowned at
+Orleans.
+
+v. 59. The Great dower of Provence.] Louis IX, and his brother Charles
+of Anjou, married two of the four daughters of Raymond Berenger Count
+of Provence. See Par. Canto VI. 135.
+
+v. 63. For amends.] This is ironical
+
+v. 64. Poitou it seiz’d, Navarre and Gascony.] I venture to read- Potti
+e Navarra prese e Guascogna,
+
+instead of
+
+Ponti e Normandia prese e Guascogna
+Seiz’d Ponthieu, Normandy and Gascogny.
+
+Landino has “Potti,” and he is probably right for Poitou was annexed to
+the French crown by Philip IV. See Henault, Abrege Chron. A.D. l283,
+&c. Normandy had been united to it long before by Philip Augustus, a
+circumstance of which it is difficult to imagine that Dante should have
+been ignorant, but Philip IV, says Henault, ibid., took the title of
+King of Navarre: and the subjugation of Navarre is also alluded to in
+the Paradise, Canto XIX. 140. In 1293, Philip IV summoned Edward I. to
+do him homage for the duchy of Gascogny, which he had conceived the
+design of seizing. See G. Villani, l. viii. c. 4.
+
+v. 66. Young Conradine.] Charles of Anjou put Conradine to death in
+1268; and became King of Naples. See Hell, Canto XXVIII, 16, and Note.
+
+v. 67. Th’ angelic teacher.] Thomas Aquinas. He was reported to have
+been poisoned by a physician, who wished to ingratiate himself with
+Charles of Anjou. G. Villani, I. ix. c. 218. We shall find him in the
+Paradise, Canto X.
+
+v. 69. Another Charles.] Charles of Valois, brother of Philip IV, was
+sent by Pope Boniface VIII to settle the disturbed state of Florence.
+In consequence of the measures he adopted for that purpose, our poet
+and his friend, were condemned to exile and death.
+
+v. 71. -with that lance Which the arch-traitor tilted with.]
+
+con la lancia Con la qual giostro Guida.
+
+If I remember right, in one of the old romances, Judas is represented
+tilting with our Saviour.
+
+v. 78. The other.] Charles, King of Naples, the eldest son of Charles
+of Anjou, having, contrary to the directions of his father, engaged
+with Ruggier de Lauria, the admiral of Peter of Arragon, was made
+prisoner and carried into Sicily, June, 1284. He afterwards, in
+consideration of a large sum of money, married his daughter to Azzo
+VI11, Marquis of Ferrara.
+
+v. 85. The flower-de-luce.] Boniface VIII was seized at Alagna in
+Campagna, by order of Philip IV., in the year 1303, and soon after died
+of grief. G. Villani, 1. viii. c. 63.
+
+v. 94. Into the temple.] It is uncertain whether our Poet alludes still
+to the event mentioned in the preceding Note, or to the destruction of
+the order of the Templars in 1310, but the latter appears more
+probable.
+
+v. 103. Pygmalion.] Virg. Aen. 1. i. 348.
+
+v. 107. Achan.] Joshua, c. vii.
+
+v. 111. Heliodorus.] 2 Maccabees, c. iii. 25. “For there appeared unto
+them a horse, with a terrible rider upon him, and adorned with a very
+fair covering, and he ran fiercely and smote at Heliodorus with his
+forefeet.”
+
+v. 112. Thracia’s king.] Polymnestor, the murderer of Polydorus. Hell,
+Canto XXX, 19.
+
+v. 114. Crassus.] Marcus Crassus, who fell miserably in the Parthian
+war. See Appian, Parthica.
+
+CANTO XXI
+
+
+v. 26. She.] Lachesis, one of the three fates.
+
+v. 43. —that, which heaven in itself Doth of itself receive.] Venturi,
+I think rightly interprets this to be light.
+
+v. 49. Thaumantian.] Figlia di Taumante [GREEK HERE]
+
+Compare Plato, Theaet. v. ii. p. 76. Bip. edit., Virg; Aen. ix. 5, and
+Spenser, Faery Queen, b. v. c. 3. st. 25.
+
+v. 85. The name.] The name of Poet.
+
+v. 89. From Tolosa.] Dante, as many others have done, confounds Statius
+the poet, who was a Neapolitan, with a rhetorician of the same name,
+who was of Tolosa, or Thoulouse. Thus Chaucer, Temple of Fame, b. iii.
+The Tholason, that height Stace.
+
+v. 94. Fell.] Statius lived to write only a small part of the
+Achilleid.
+
+CANTO XXII
+
+
+v. 5. Blessed.] Matt. v. 6.
+
+v. 14. Aquinum’s bard.] Juvenal had celebrated his contemporary
+Statius, Sat. vii. 82; though some critics imagine that there is a
+secret derision couched under his praise.
+
+v. 28. Why.] Quid non mortalia pecaora cogis Anri sacra fames? Virg.
+Aen. 1. iii. 57
+
+Venturi supposes that Dante might have mistaken the meaning of the word
+sacra, and construed it “holy,” instead of “cursed.” But I see no
+necessity for having recourse to so improbable a conjecture.
+
+v. 41. The fierce encounter.] See Hell, Canto VII. 26.
+
+v. 46. With shorn locks.] Ibid. 58.
+
+v. 57. The twin sorrow of Jocasta’s womb.] Eteocles and Polynices
+
+v. 71. A renovated world.] Virg. Ecl. iv. 5
+
+v. 100. That Greek.] Homer
+
+v. 107. Of thy train. ] Of those celebrated in thy Poem.”
+
+v. 112. Tiresias’ daughter.] Dante appears to have forgotten that he
+had placed Manto, the daughter of Tiresias, among the sorcerers. See
+Hell Canto XX. Vellutello endeavours, rather awkwardly, to reconcile
+the inconsistency, by observing, that although she was placed there as
+a sinner, yet, as one of famous memory, she had also a place among the
+worthies in Limbo.
+
+Lombardi excuses our author better, by observing that Tiresias had a
+daughter named Daphne. See Diodorus Siculus, 1. iv. 66.
+
+v. 139. Mary took more thought.] “The blessed virgin, who answers for
+yon now in heaven, when she said to Jesus, at the marriage in Cana of
+Galilee, ‘they have no wine,’ regarded not the gratification of her own
+taste, but the honour of the nuptial banquet.”
+
+v. 142 The women of old Rome.] See Valerius Maximus, 1. ii. c. i.
+
+CANTO XXIII
+
+
+v. 9. My lips.] Psalm ii. 15.
+
+v. 20. The eyes.] Compare Ovid, Metam. 1. viii. 801
+
+v. 26. When Mary.] Josephus, De Bello Jud. 1. vii. c. xxi. p. 954 Ed
+Genev. fol. 1611. The shocking story is well told
+
+v. 27. Rings.]
+In this habit
+Met I my father with his bleeding rings
+Their precious stones new lost.
+Shakespeare, Lear, a. 5. s. 3
+
+v. 28. Who reads the name.] “He, who pretends to distinguish the
+letters which form OMO in the features of the human face, “might easily
+have traced out the M on their emaciated countenances.” The temples,
+nose, and forehead are supposed to represent this letter; and the eyes
+the two O’s placed within each side of it.
+
+v. 44. Forese.] One of the brothers of Piccarda, she who is again
+spoken of in the next Canto, and introduced in the Paradise, Canto III.
+
+V. 72. If the power.] “If thou didst delay thy repentance to the last,
+when thou hadst lost the power of sinning, how happens it thou art
+arrived here so early?”
+
+v. 76. Lower.] In the Ante-Purgatory. See Canto II.
+
+v. 80. My Nella.] The wife of Forese.
+
+v. 87. The tract most barb’rous of Sardinia’s isle.] The Barbagia is
+part of Sardinia, to which that name was given, on account of the
+uncivilized state of its inhabitants, who are said to have gone nearly
+naked.
+
+v. 91. The’ unblushing domes of Florence.] Landino’s note exhibits a
+curious instance of the changeableness of his countrywomen. He even
+goes beyond the acrimony of the original. “In those days,” says the
+commentator, “no less than in ours, the Florentine ladies exposed the
+neck and bosom, a dress, no doubt, more suitable to a harlot than a
+matron. But, as they changed soon after, insomuch that they wore
+collars up to the chin, covering the whole of the neck and throat, so
+have I hopes they will change again; not indeed so much from motives of
+decency, as through that fickleness, which pervades every action of
+their lives.”
+
+v. 97. Saracens.] “This word, during the middle ages, was
+indiscriminately applied to Pagans and Mahometans; in short, to all
+nations (except the Jew’s) who did not profess Christianity.” Mr.
+Ellis’s specimens of Early English Metrical Romances, vol. i. page 196,
+a note. Lond. 8vo. 1805.
+
+CANTO XXIV
+
+
+v. 20. Buonaggiunta.] Buonaggiunta Urbiciani, of Lucca. “There is a
+canzone by this poet, printed in the collection made by the Giunti, (p.
+209,).land a sonnet to Guido Guinicelli in that made by Corbinelli, (p
+169,) from which we collect that he lived not about 1230, as Quadrio
+supposes, (t. ii. p. 159,) but towards the end of the thirteenth
+century. Concerning, other poems by Buonaggiunta, that are preserved in
+MS. in some libraries, Crescimbeni may be consulted.” Tiraboschi, Mr.
+Matthias’s ed. v. i. p. 115.
+
+v. 23. He was of Tours.] Simon of Tours became Pope, with the title of
+Martin IV in 1281 and died in 1285.
+
+v. 29. Ubaldino.] Ubaldino degli Ubaldini, of Pila, in the Florentine
+territory.
+
+v. 30. Boniface.] Archbishop of Ravenna. By Venturi he is called
+Bonifazio de Fieschi, a Genoese, by Vellutello, the son of the above,
+mentioned Ubaldini and by Laudino Francioso, a Frenchman.
+
+v. 32. The Marquis.] The Marchese de’ Rigogliosi, of Forli.
+
+v. 38. gentucca.] Of this lady it is thought that our Poet became
+enamoured during his exile. v. 45. Whose brow no wimple shades yet.]
+“Who has not yet assumed the dress of a woman.”
+
+v. 46. Blame it as they may.] See Hell, Canto XXI. 39.
+
+v. 51. Ladies, ye that con the lore of love.]Donne ch’ avete intelletto
+d’amore.The first verse of a canzone in our author’s Vita Nuova.
+
+v. 56. The Notary.] Jucopo da Lentino, called the Notary, a poet of
+these times. He was probably an Apulian: for Dante, (De Vulg. Eloq. I.
+i. c 12.) quoting a verse which belongs to a canzone of his published
+by the Giunti, without mentioning the writer’s name, terms him one of
+“the illustrious Apulians,” praefulgentes Apuli. See Tiraboschi, Mr.
+Matthias’s edit. vol. i. p. 137. Crescimbeni (1. i. Della Volg. Poes p.
+72. 4to. ed. 1698) gives an extract from one of his poems, printed in
+Allacci’s Collection, to show that the whimsical compositions called
+“Ariette “ are not of modern invention.
+
+v. 56. Guittone.] Fra Guittone, of Arezzo, holds a distinguished place
+in Italian literature, as besides his poems printed in the collection
+of the Giunti, he has left a collection of letters, forty in number,
+which afford the earliest specimen of that kind of writing in the
+language. They were published at Rome in 1743, with learned
+illustrations by Giovanni Bottari. He was also the first who gave to
+the sonnet its regular and legitimate form, a species of composition in
+which not only his own countrymen, but many of the best poets in all
+the cultivated languages of modern Europe, have since so much
+delighted.
+
+Guittone, a native of Arezzo, was the son of Viva di Michele. He was of
+the order of the “ Frati Godenti,” of which an account may be seen in
+the Notes to Hell, Canto XXIII. In the year 1293, he founded a
+monastery of the order of Camaldoli, in Florence, and died in the
+following year. Tiraboschi, Ibid. p. 119. Dante, in the Treatise de
+Vulg. Eloq. 1. i. c. 13, and 1. ii. c. 6., blames him for preferring
+the plebeian to the mor courtly style; and Petrarch twice places him in
+the company of our Poet. Triumph of Love, cap. iv. and Son. Par. See
+“Sennuccio mio”
+
+v. 63. The birds.] Hell, Canto V. 46, Euripides, Helena, 1495, and
+Statius; Theb. 1. V. 12. v. 81. He.] Corso Donati was suspected of
+aiming at the sovereignty of Florence. To escape the fury of his fellow
+citizens, he fled away on horseback, but failing, was overtaken and
+slain, A.D. 1308. The contemporary annalist, after relating at length
+the circumstances of his fate, adds, “that he was one of the wisest and
+most valorous knights the best speaker, the most expert statesman, the
+most renowned and enterprising, man of his age in Italy, a comely
+knight and of graceful carriage, but very worldly, and in his time had
+formed many conspiracies in Florence and entered into many scandalous
+practices, for the sake of attaining state and lordship.” G. Villani,
+1. viii. c. 96. The character of Corso is forcibly drawn by another of
+his contemporaries Dino Compagni. 1. iii., Muratori, Rer. Ital. Script.
+t. ix. p. 523.
+
+v. 129. Creatures of the clouds.] The Centaurs. Ovid. Met. 1. fab. 4 v.
+123. The Hebrews.] Judges, c. vii.
+
+CANTO XXV
+
+
+v. 58. As sea-sponge.] The fetus is in this stage is zoophyte.
+
+v. 66. -More wise Than thou, has erred.] Averroes is said to be here
+meant. Venturi refers to his commentary on Aristotle, De Anim 1. iii.
+c. 5. for the opinion that there is only one universal intellect or
+mind pervading every individual of the human race. Much of the
+knowledge displayed by our Poet in the present Canto appears to have
+been derived from the medical work o+ Averroes, called the Colliget.
+Lib. ii. f. 10. Ven. 1400. fol.
+
+v. 79. Mark the sun’s heat.] Redi and Tiraboschi (Mr. Matthias’s ed. v.
+ii. p. 36.) have considered this an anticipation of a profound
+discovery of Galileo’s in natural philosophy, but it is in reality
+taken from a passage in Cicero “de Senectute,” where, speaking of the
+grape, he says, “ quae, et succo terrae et calore solis augescens,
+primo est peracerba gustatu, deinde maturata dulcescit.”
+
+v. 123. I do, not know a man.] Luke, c. i. 34.
+
+v. 126. Callisto.] See Ovid, Met. 1. ii. fab. 5.
+
+CANTO XXVI
+
+
+v. 70. Caesar.] For the opprobrium east on Caesar’s effeminacy, see
+Suetonius, Julius Caesar, c. 49.
+
+v. 83. Guinicelli.] See Note to Canto XI. 96.
+
+v. 87. lycurgus.] Statius, Theb. 1. iv. and v. Hypsipile had left her
+infant charge, the son of Lycurgus, on a bank, where it was destroyed
+by a serpent, when she went to show the Argive army the river of
+Langia: and, on her escaping the effects of Lycurgus’s resentment, the
+joy her own children felt at the sight of her was such as our Poet felt
+on beholding his predecessor Guinicelli.
+
+The incidents are beautifully described in Statius, and seem to have
+made an impression on Dante, for he again (Canto XXII. 110.)
+characterizes Hypsipile, as her- Who show’d Langia’s wave.
+
+v. 111. He.] The united testimony of Dante, and of Petrarch, in his
+Triumph of Love, e. iv. places Arnault Daniel at the head of the
+Provencal poets. That he was born of poor but noble parents, at the
+castle of Ribeyrae in Perigord, and that he was at the English court,
+is the amount of Millot’s information concerning him (t. ii. p. 479).
+
+The account there given of his writings is not much more satisfactory,
+and the criticism on them must go for little better than nothing.
+
+It is to be regretted that we have not an opportunity of judging for
+ourselves of his “love ditties and his tales of prose “
+
+Versi d’amore e prose di romanzi.
+
+Our Poet frequently cities him in the work De Vulgari Eloquentia.
+According to Crescimbeni, (Della Volg. Poes. 1. 1. p. 7. ed. 1698.) He
+died in 1189.
+
+v. 113. The songster of Limoges.] Giraud de Borneil, of Sideuil, a
+castle in Limoges. He was a troubadour, much admired and caressed in
+his day, and appears to have been in favour with the monarchs of
+Castile, Leon, Navarre, and Arragon He is quoted by Dante, De Vulg.
+Eloq., and many of his poems are still remaining in MS. According to
+Nostradamus he died in 1278. Millot, Hist. Litt. des Troub. t. ii. p. 1
+and 23. But I suspect that there is some error in this date, and that
+he did not live to see so late a period.
+
+v. 118. Guittone.] See Cano XXIV. 56.
+
+v. 123. Far as needs.] See Canto XI. 23.
+
+v. 132. Thy courtesy.] Arnault is here made to speak in his own tongue,
+the Provencal. According to Dante, (De Vulg. Eloq. 1. 1. c. 8.) the
+Provencal was one language with the Spanish. What he says on this
+subject is so curious, that the reader will perhaps not be displeased
+it I give an abstract of it.
+
+He first makes three great divisions of the European languages. “One of
+these extends from the mouths of the Danube, or the lake of Maeotis, to
+the western limits of England, and is bounded by the limits of the
+French and Italians, and by the ocean. One idiom obtained over the
+whole of this space: but was afterwards subdivided into, the
+Sclavonian, Hungarian, Teutonic, Saxon, English, and the vernacular
+tongues of several other people, one sign remaining to all, that they
+use the affirmative io, (our English ay.) The whole of Europe,
+beginning from the Hungarian limits and stretching towards the east,
+has a second idiom which reaches still further than the end of Europe
+into Asia. This is the Greek. In all that remains of Europe, there is a
+third idiom subdivided into three dialects, which may be severally
+distinguished by the use of the affirmatives, oc, oil, and si; the
+first spoken by the Spaniards, the next by the French, and the third by
+the Latins (or Italians). The first occupy the western part of southern
+Europe, beginning from the limits of the Genoese. The third occupy the
+eastern part from the said limits, as far, that is, as the promontory
+of Italy, where the Adriatic sea begins, and to Sicily. The second are
+in a manner northern with respect to these for they have the Germans to
+the east and north, on the west they are bounded by the English sea,
+and the mountains of Arragon, and on the south by the people of
+Provence and the declivity of the Apennine.” Ibid. c. x. “Each of these
+three,” he observes, “has its own claims to distinction The excellency
+of the French language consists in its being best adapted, on account
+of its facility and agreeableness, to prose narration, (quicquid
+redactum, sive inventum est ad vulgare prosaicum suum est); and he
+instances the books compiled on the gests of the Trojans and Romans and
+the delightful adventures of King Arthur, with many other histories and
+works of instruction. The Spanish (or Provencal) may boast of its
+having produced such as first cultivated in this as in a more perfect
+and sweet language, the vernacular poetry: among whom are Pierre
+d’Auvergne, and others more ancient. The privileges of the Latin, or
+Italian are two: first that it may reckon for its own those writers who
+have adopted a more sweet and subtle style of poetry, in the number of
+whom are Cino, da Pistoia and his friend, and the next, that its
+writers seem to adhere to, certain general rules of grammar, and in so
+doing give it, in the opinion of the intelligent, a very weighty
+pretension to preference.”
+
+CANTO XXVII
+
+
+v. 1. The sun.] At Jerusalem it was dawn, in Spain midnight, and in
+India noonday, while it was sunset in Purgatory
+
+v. 10. Blessed.] Matt. c. v. 8.
+
+v. 57. Come.] Matt. c. xxv. 34.
+
+v. 102. I am Leah.] By Leah is understood the active life, as Rachel
+figures the contemplative. The divinity is the mirror in which the
+latter looks. Michel Angelo has made these allegorical personages the
+subject of two statues on the monument of Julius II. in the church of
+S. Pietro in Vincolo. See Mr. Duppa’s Life of Michel Angelo, Sculpture
+viii. And x. and p 247.
+
+v. 135. Those bright eyes.] The eyes of Beatrice.
+
+CANTO XXVIII
+
+
+v. 11. To that part.] The west.
+
+v. 14. The feather’d quiristers] Imitated by Boccaccio, Fiammetta, 1.
+iv. “Odi i queruli uccelli,” &c. —“Hear the querulous birds plaining
+with sweet songs, and the boughs trembling, and, moved by a gentle
+wind, as it were keeping tenor to their notes.”
+
+v. 7. A pleasant air.] Compare Ariosto, O. F. c. xxxiv. st. 50.
+
+v. Chiassi.] This is the wood where the scene of Boccaccio’s sublimest
+story is laid. See Dec. g. 5. n. 8. and Dryden’s Theodore and Honoria
+Our Poet perhaps wandered in it daring his abode with Guido Novello da
+Polenta.
+
+v. 41. A lady.] Most of the commentators suppose, that by this lady,
+who in the last Canto is called Matilda, is to be understood the
+Countess Matilda, who endowed the holy see with the estates called the
+Patrimony of St. Peter, and died in 1115. See G. Villani, 1. iv. e. 20
+But it seems more probable that she should be intended for an
+allegorical personage.
+
+v. 80. Thou, Lord hast made me glad.] Psalm xcii. 4
+
+v. 146. On the Parnassian mountain.] In bicipiti somniasse Parnasso.
+Persius Prol.
+
+CANTO XXIX
+
+
+v. 76. Listed colours.]
+Di sette liste tutte in quel colori, &c.
+—a bow
+Conspicuous with three listed colours gay.
+Milton, P. L. b. xi. 865.
+
+v. 79. Ten paces.] For an explanation of the allegorical meaning of
+this mysterious procession, Venturi refers those “who would see in the
+dark” to the commentaries of Landino, Vellutello, and others: and adds
+that it is evident the Poet has accommodated to his own fancy many
+sacred images in the Apocalypse. In Vasari’s Life of Giotto, we learn
+that Dante recommended that book to his friend, as affording fit
+subjects for his pencil.
+
+v. 89. Four.] The four evangelists.
+
+v. 96. Ezekiel.] Chap. 1. 4.
+
+v. 101. John.] Rev. c. iv. 8.
+
+v. 104. Gryphon.] Under the Gryphon, an imaginary creature, the
+forepart of which is an eagle, and the hinder a lion, is shadowed forth
+the union of the divine and human nature in Jesus Christ. The car is
+the church.
+
+v. 115. Tellus’ prayer.] Ovid, Met. 1. ii. v. 279.
+
+v. 116. Three nymphs.] The three evangelical virtues: the first
+Charity, the next Hope, and the third Faith. Faith may be produced by
+charity, or charity by faith, but the inducements to hope must arise
+either from one or other of these.
+
+v. 125. A band quaternion.] The four moral or cardinal virtues, of whom
+Prudence directs the others.
+
+v. 129. Two old men.] Saint Luke, characterized as the writer of the
+Arts of the Apostles and Saint Paul.
+
+v. 133. Of the great Coan.] Hippocrates, “whom nature made for the
+benefit of her favourite creature, man.”
+
+v. 138. Four others.] “The commentators,” says Venturi; “suppose these
+four to be the four evangelists, but I should rather take them to be
+four principal doctors of the church.” Yet both Landino and Vellutello
+expressly call them the authors of the epistles, James, Peter, John and
+Jude.
+
+v. 140. One single old man.] As some say, St. John, under his character
+of the author of the Apocalypse. But in the poem attributed to Giacopo,
+the son of our Poet, which in some MSS, accompanies the original of
+this work, and is descriptive of its plan, this old man is said to be
+Moses.
+
+E’l vecchio, ch’ era dietro a tutti loro
+Fu Moyse.
+
+And the old man, who was behind them all,
+Was Moses.
+See No. 3459 of the Harl. MSS. in the British Museum.
+
+CANTO XXX
+
+
+v. 1. The polar light.] The seven candlesticks.
+
+v. 12. Come.] Song of Solomon, c. iv. 8.
+
+v. 19. Blessed.] Matt. c. xxi. 9.
+
+v. 20. From full hands.] Virg. Aen 1. vi. 884.
+
+v. 97. The old flame.] Agnosco veteris vestigia flammae Virg. Aen. I.
+I. 23.
+
+Conosco i segni dell’ antico fuoco.
+Giusto de’ Conti, La Bella Mano.
+
+v. 61. Nor.] “Not all the beauties of the terrestrial Paradise; in
+which I was, were sufficient to allay my grief.”
+
+v. 85. But.] They sang the thirty-first Psalm, to the end of the eighth
+verse.
+
+v. 87. The living rafters.] The leafless woods on the Apennine.
+
+v. 90. The land whereon no shadow falls.] “When the wind blows, from
+off Africa, where, at the time of the equinox, bodies being under the
+equator cast little or no shadow; or, in other words, when the wind is
+south.”
+
+v. 98. The ice.] Milton has transferred this conceit, though scarcely
+worth the pains of removing, into one of his Italian poems, son.
+
+CANTO XXXI
+
+
+v. 3. With lateral edge.] The words of Beatrice, when not addressed
+directly to himself, but speaking to the angel of hell, Dante had
+thought sufficiently harsh.
+
+v. 39. Counter to the edge.] “The weapons of divine justice are blunted
+by the confession and sorrow of the offender.”
+
+v. 58. Bird.] Prov. c. i. 17
+
+v. 69. From Iarbas’ land.] The south.
+
+v. 71. The beard.] “I perceived, that when she desired me to raise my
+beard, instead of telling me to lift up my head, a severe reflection
+was implied on my want of that wisdom which should accompany the age of
+manhood.”
+
+v. 98. Tu asperges me.] A prayer repeated by the priest at sprinkling
+the holy water.
+
+v. 106. And in the heaven are stars.] See Canto I. 24.
+
+v. 116. The emeralds.] The eyes of Beatrice.
+
+CANTO XXXII
+
+
+v. 2. Their ten years’ thirst.] Beatrice had been dead ten years.
+
+v. 9. Two fix’d a gaze.] The allegorical interpretation of Vellutello
+whether it be considered as justly terrible from the text or not,
+conveys so useful a lesson, that it deserves our notice. “The
+understanding is sometimes so intently engaged in contemplating the
+light of divine truth in the scriptures, that it becomes dazzled, and
+is made less capable of attaining such knowledge, than if it had sought
+after it with greater moderation”
+
+v. 39. Its tresses.] Daniel, c. iv. 10, &c.
+
+v. 41. The Indians.]
+Quos oceano proprior gerit India lucos.
+Virg. Georg. 1. ii. 122,
+Such as at this day to Indians known.
+Milton, P. L. b. ix. 1102.
+
+v. 51. When large floods of radiance.] When the sun enters into Aries,
+the constellation next to that of the Fish.
+
+v. 63. Th’ unpitying eyes.] See Ovid, Met. 1. i. 689.
+
+v. 74. The blossoming of that fair tree.] Our Saviour’s
+transfiguration.
+
+v. 97. Those lights.] The tapers of gold.
+
+v. 101. That true Rome.] Heaven.
+
+v. 110. The bird of Jove.] This, which is imitated from Ezekiel, c.
+xvii. 3, 4. appears to be typical of the persecutions which the church
+sustained from the Roman Emperors.
+
+v. 118. A fox.] By the fox perhaps is represented the treachery of the
+heretics.
+
+v. 124. With his feathers lin’d.]. An allusion to the donations made by
+the Roman Emperors to the church.
+
+v. 130. A dragon.] Probably Mahomet.
+
+v. 136. With plumes.] The donations before mentioned.
+
+v. 142. Heads.] By the seven heads, it is supposed with sufficient
+probability, are meant the seven capital sins, by the three with two
+horns, pride, anger, and avarice, injurious both to man himself and to
+his neighbor: by the four with one horn, gluttony, lukewarmness,
+concupiscence, and envy, hurtful, at least in their primary effects,
+chiefly to him who is guilty of them.
+
+v. 146. O’er it.] The harlot is thought to represent the state of the
+church under Boniface VIII and the giant to figure Philip IV of France.
+
+v. 155. Dragg’d on.] The removal of the Pope’s residence from Rome to
+Avignon is pointed at.
+
+CANTO XXXIII
+
+
+v. 1. The Heathen.] Psalm lxxix. 1.
+
+v. 36. Hope not to scare God’s vengeance with a sop.] “Let not him who
+hath occasioned the destruction of the church, that vessel which the
+serpent brake, hope to appease the anger of the Deity by any outward
+acts of religious, or rather superstitious, ceremony, such as was that,
+in our poet’s time, performed by a murderer at Florence, who imagined
+himself secure from vengeance, if he ate a sop of bread in wine, upon
+the grave of the person murdered, within the space of nine days.”
+
+v. 38. That eagle.] He prognosticates that the Emperor of Germany will
+not always continue to submit to the usurpations of the Pope, and
+foretells the coming of Henry VII Duke of Luxembourg signified by the
+numerical figures DVX; or, as Lombardi supposes, of Can Grande della
+Scala, appointed the leader of the Ghibelline forces. It is unnecessary
+to point out the imitation of the Apocalypse in the manner of this
+prophecy.
+
+v. 50. The Naiads.] Dante, it is observed, has been led into a mistake
+by a corruption in the text of Ovid’s Metam. I. vii. 75, where he
+found- Carmina Naiades non intellecta priorum;
+
+instead of Carmina Laiades, &c. as it has been since corrected.
+Lombardi refers to Pansanias, where “the Nymphs” are spoken of as
+expounders of oracles for a vindication of the poet’s accuracy. Should
+the reader blame me for not departing from the error of the original
+(if error it be), he may substitute
+
+Events shall be the Oedipus will solve, &c.
+
+v. 67. Elsa’s numbing waters.] The Elsa, a little stream, which flows
+into the Arno about twenty miles below Florence, is said to possess a
+petrifying quality.
+
+v. 78. That one brings home his staff inwreath’d with palm.] “For the
+same cause that the pilgrim, returning from Palestine, brings home his
+staff, or bourdon, bound with palm,” that is, to show where he has
+been.
+
+Che si reca ’I bordon di palma cinto.
+
+“In regard to the word bourdon, why it has been applied to a pilgrim’s
+staff, it is not easy to guess. I believe, however that this name has
+been given to such sort of staves, because pilgrims usually travel and
+perform their pilgrimages on foot, their staves serving them instead of
+horses or mules, then called bourdons and burdones, by writers in the
+middle ages.” Mr. Johnes’s Translation of Joinville’s Memoirs.
+Dissertation xv, by M. du Cange p. 152. 4to. edit. The word is thrice
+used by Chaucer in the Romaunt of the Rose.
+
+
+
+
+PARADISE
+
+
+
+
+CANTO I
+
+
+His glory, by whose might all things are mov’d,
+Pierces the universe, and in one part
+Sheds more resplendence, elsewhere less. In heav’n,
+That largeliest of his light partakes, was I,
+Witness of things, which to relate again
+Surpasseth power of him who comes from thence;
+For that, so near approaching its desire
+Our intellect is to such depth absorb’d,
+That memory cannot follow. Nathless all,
+That in my thoughts I of that sacred realm
+Could store, shall now be matter of my song.
+
+Benign Apollo! this last labour aid,
+And make me such a vessel of thy worth,
+As thy own laurel claims of me belov’d.
+Thus far hath one of steep Parnassus’ brows
+Suffic’d me; henceforth there is need of both
+For my remaining enterprise Do thou
+Enter into my bosom, and there breathe
+So, as when Marsyas by thy hand was dragg’d
+Forth from his limbs unsheath’d. O power divine!
+If thou to me of shine impart so much,
+That of that happy realm the shadow’d form
+Trac’d in my thoughts I may set forth to view,
+Thou shalt behold me of thy favour’d tree
+Come to the foot, and crown myself with leaves;
+For to that honour thou, and my high theme
+Will fit me. If but seldom, mighty Sire!
+To grace his triumph gathers thence a wreath
+Caesar or bard (more shame for human wills
+Deprav’d) joy to the Delphic god must spring
+From the Pierian foliage, when one breast
+Is with such thirst inspir’d. From a small spark
+Great flame hath risen: after me perchance
+Others with better voice may pray, and gain
+From the Cirrhaean city answer kind.
+
+Through diver passages, the world’s bright lamp
+Rises to mortals, but through that which joins
+Four circles with the threefold cross, in best
+Course, and in happiest constellation set
+He comes, and to the worldly wax best gives
+Its temper and impression. Morning there,
+Here eve was by almost such passage made;
+And whiteness had o’erspread that hemisphere,
+Blackness the other part; when to the left
+I saw Beatrice turn’d, and on the sun
+Gazing, as never eagle fix’d his ken.
+As from the first a second beam is wont
+To issue, and reflected upwards rise,
+E’en as a pilgrim bent on his return,
+So of her act, that through the eyesight pass’d
+Into my fancy, mine was form’d; and straight,
+Beyond our mortal wont, I fix’d mine eyes
+Upon the sun. Much is allowed us there,
+That here exceeds our pow’r; thanks to the place
+Made for the dwelling of the human kind
+
+I suffer’d it not long, and yet so long
+That I beheld it bick’ring sparks around,
+As iron that comes boiling from the fire.
+And suddenly upon the day appear’d
+A day new-ris’n, as he, who hath the power,
+Had with another sun bedeck’d the sky.
+
+Her eyes fast fix’d on the eternal wheels,
+Beatrice stood unmov’d; and I with ken
+Fix’d upon her, from upward gaze remov’d
+At her aspect, such inwardly became
+As Glaucus, when he tasted of the herb,
+That made him peer among the ocean gods;
+Words may not tell of that transhuman change:
+And therefore let the example serve, though weak,
+For those whom grace hath better proof in store
+
+If I were only what thou didst create,
+Then newly, Love! by whom the heav’n is rul’d,
+Thou know’st, who by thy light didst bear me up.
+Whenas the wheel which thou dost ever guide,
+Desired Spirit! with its harmony
+Temper’d of thee and measur’d, charm’d mine ear,
+Then seem’d to me so much of heav’n to blaze
+With the sun’s flame, that rain or flood ne’er made
+A lake so broad. The newness of the sound,
+And that great light, inflam’d me with desire,
+Keener than e’er was felt, to know their cause.
+
+Whence she who saw me, clearly as myself,
+To calm my troubled mind, before I ask’d,
+Open’d her lips, and gracious thus began:
+“With false imagination thou thyself
+Mak’st dull, so that thou seest not the thing,
+Which thou hadst seen, had that been shaken off.
+Thou art not on the earth as thou believ’st;
+For light’ning scap’d from its own proper place
+Ne’er ran, as thou hast hither now return’d.”
+
+Although divested of my first-rais’d doubt,
+By those brief words, accompanied with smiles,
+Yet in new doubt was I entangled more,
+And said: “Already satisfied, I rest
+From admiration deep, but now admire
+How I above those lighter bodies rise.”
+
+Whence, after utt’rance of a piteous sigh,
+She tow’rds me bent her eyes, with such a look,
+As on her frenzied child a mother casts;
+Then thus began: “Among themselves all things
+Have order; and from hence the form, which makes
+The universe resemble God. In this
+The higher creatures see the printed steps
+Of that eternal worth, which is the end
+Whither the line is drawn. All natures lean,
+In this their order, diversely, some more,
+Some less approaching to their primal source.
+Thus they to different havens are mov’d on
+Through the vast sea of being, and each one
+With instinct giv’n, that bears it in its course;
+This to the lunar sphere directs the fire,
+This prompts the hearts of mortal animals,
+This the brute earth together knits, and binds.
+Nor only creatures, void of intellect,
+Are aim’d at by this bow; hut even those,
+That have intelligence and love, are pierc’d.
+That Providence, who so well orders all,
+With her own light makes ever calm the heaven,
+In which the substance, that hath greatest speed,
+Is turn’d: and thither now, as to our seat
+Predestin’d, we are carried by the force
+Of that strong cord, that never looses dart,
+But at fair aim and glad. Yet is it true,
+That as ofttimes but ill accords the form
+To the design of art, through sluggishness
+Of unreplying matter, so this course
+Is sometimes quitted by the creature, who
+Hath power, directed thus, to bend elsewhere;
+As from a cloud the fire is seen to fall,
+From its original impulse warp’d, to earth,
+By vicious fondness. Thou no more admire
+Thy soaring, (if I rightly deem,) than lapse
+Of torrent downwards from a mountain’s height.
+There would in thee for wonder be more cause,
+If, free of hind’rance, thou hadst fix’d thyself
+Below, like fire unmoving on the earth.”
+
+So said, she turn’d toward the heav’n her face.
+
+
+
+
+CANTO II
+
+
+All ye, who in small bark have following sail’d,
+Eager to listen, on the advent’rous track
+Of my proud keel, that singing cuts its way,
+Backward return with speed, and your own shores
+Revisit, nor put out to open sea,
+Where losing me, perchance ye may remain
+Bewilder’d in deep maze. The way I pass
+Ne’er yet was run: Minerva breathes the gale,
+Apollo guides me, and another Nine
+To my rapt sight the arctic beams reveal.
+Ye other few, who have outstretch’d the neck.
+Timely for food of angels, on which here
+They live, yet never know satiety,
+Through the deep brine ye fearless may put out
+Your vessel, marking, well the furrow broad
+Before you in the wave, that on both sides
+Equal returns. Those, glorious, who pass’d o’er
+To Colchos, wonder’d not as ye will do,
+When they saw Jason following the plough.
+
+The increate perpetual thirst, that draws
+Toward the realm of God’s own form, bore us
+Swift almost as the heaven ye behold.
+
+Beatrice upward gaz’d, and I on her,
+And in such space as on the notch a dart
+Is plac’d, then loosen’d flies, I saw myself
+Arriv’d, where wond’rous thing engag’d my sight.
+Whence she, to whom no work of mine was hid,
+Turning to me, with aspect glad as fair,
+Bespake me: “Gratefully direct thy mind
+To God, through whom to this first star we come.”
+
+Me seem’d as if a cloud had cover’d us,
+Translucent, solid, firm, and polish’d bright,
+Like adamant, which the sun’s beam had smit
+Within itself the ever-during pearl
+Receiv’d us, as the wave a ray of light
+Receives, and rests unbroken. If I then
+Was of corporeal frame, and it transcend
+Our weaker thought, how one dimension thus
+Another could endure, which needs must be
+If body enter body, how much more
+Must the desire inflame us to behold
+That essence, which discovers by what means
+God and our nature join’d! There will be seen
+That which we hold through faith, not shown by proof,
+But in itself intelligibly plain,
+E’en as the truth that man at first believes.
+
+I answered: “Lady! I with thoughts devout,
+Such as I best can frame, give thanks to Him,
+Who hath remov’d me from the mortal world.
+But tell, I pray thee, whence the gloomy spots
+Upon this body, which below on earth
+Give rise to talk of Cain in fabling quaint?”
+
+She somewhat smil’d, then spake: “If mortals err
+In their opinion, when the key of sense
+Unlocks not, surely wonder’s weapon keen
+Ought not to pierce thee; since thou find’st, the wings
+Of reason to pursue the senses’ flight
+Are short. But what thy own thought is, declare.”
+
+Then I: “What various here above appears,
+Is caus’d, I deem, by bodies dense or rare.”
+
+She then resum’d: “Thou certainly wilt see
+In falsehood thy belief o’erwhelm’d, if well
+Thou listen to the arguments, which I
+Shall bring to face it. The eighth sphere displays
+Numberless lights, the which in kind and size
+May be remark’d of different aspects;
+If rare or dense of that were cause alone,
+One single virtue then would be in all,
+Alike distributed, or more, or less.
+Different virtues needs must be the fruits
+Of formal principles, and these, save one,
+Will by thy reasoning be destroy’d. Beside,
+If rarity were of that dusk the cause,
+Which thou inquirest, either in some part
+That planet must throughout be void, nor fed
+With its own matter; or, as bodies share
+Their fat and leanness, in like manner this
+Must in its volume change the leaves. The first,
+If it were true, had through the sun’s eclipse
+Been manifested, by transparency
+Of light, as through aught rare beside effus’d.
+But this is not. Therefore remains to see
+The other cause: and if the other fall,
+Erroneous so must prove what seem’d to thee.
+If not from side to side this rarity
+Pass through, there needs must be a limit, whence
+Its contrary no further lets it pass.
+And hence the beam, that from without proceeds,
+Must be pour’d back, as colour comes, through glass
+Reflected, which behind it lead conceals.
+Now wilt thou say, that there of murkier hue
+Than in the other part the ray is shown,
+By being thence refracted farther back.
+From this perplexity will free thee soon
+Experience, if thereof thou trial make,
+The fountain whence your arts derive their streame.
+Three mirrors shalt thou take, and two remove
+From thee alike, and more remote the third.
+Betwixt the former pair, shall meet thine eyes;
+Then turn’d toward them, cause behind thy back
+A light to stand, that on the three shall shine,
+And thus reflected come to thee from all.
+Though that beheld most distant do not stretch
+A space so ample, yet in brightness thou
+Will own it equaling the rest. But now,
+As under snow the ground, if the warm ray
+Smites it, remains dismantled of the hue
+And cold, that cover’d it before, so thee,
+Dismantled in thy mind, I will inform
+With light so lively, that the tremulous beam
+Shall quiver where it falls. Within the heaven,
+Where peace divine inhabits, circles round
+A body, in whose virtue dies the being
+Of all that it contains. The following heaven,
+That hath so many lights, this being divides,
+Through different essences, from it distinct,
+And yet contain’d within it. The other orbs
+Their separate distinctions variously
+Dispose, for their own seed and produce apt.
+Thus do these organs of the world proceed,
+As thou beholdest now, from step to step,
+Their influences from above deriving,
+And thence transmitting downwards. Mark me well,
+How through this passage to the truth I ford,
+The truth thou lov’st, that thou henceforth alone,
+May’st know to keep the shallows, safe, untold.
+
+“The virtue and motion of the sacred orbs,
+As mallet by the workman’s hand, must needs
+By blessed movers be inspir’d. This heaven,
+Made beauteous by so many luminaries,
+From the deep spirit, that moves its circling sphere,
+Its image takes an impress as a seal:
+And as the soul, that dwells within your dust,
+Through members different, yet together form’d,
+In different pow’rs resolves itself; e’en so
+The intellectual efficacy unfolds
+Its goodness multiplied throughout the stars;
+On its own unity revolving still.
+Different virtue compact different
+Makes with the precious body it enlivens,
+With which it knits, as life in you is knit.
+From its original nature full of joy,
+The virtue mingled through the body shines,
+As joy through pupil of the living eye.
+From hence proceeds, that which from light to light
+Seems different, and not from dense or rare.
+This is the formal cause, that generates
+Proportion’d to its power, the dusk or clear.”
+
+
+
+
+CANTO III
+
+
+That sun, which erst with love my bosom warm’d
+Had of fair truth unveil’d the sweet aspect,
+By proof of right, and of the false reproof;
+And I, to own myself convinc’d and free
+Of doubt, as much as needed, rais’d my head
+Erect for speech. But soon a sight appear’d,
+Which, so intent to mark it, held me fix’d,
+That of confession I no longer thought.
+
+As through translucent and smooth glass, or wave
+Clear and unmov’d, and flowing not so deep
+As that its bed is dark, the shape returns
+So faint of our impictur’d lineaments,
+That on white forehead set a pearl as strong
+Comes to the eye: such saw I many a face,
+All stretch’d to speak, from whence I straight conceiv’d
+Delusion opposite to that, which rais’d
+Between the man and fountain, amorous flame.
+
+Sudden, as I perceiv’d them, deeming these
+Reflected semblances to see of whom
+They were, I turn’d mine eyes, and nothing saw;
+Then turn’d them back, directed on the light
+Of my sweet guide, who smiling shot forth beams
+From her celestial eyes. “Wonder not thou,”
+She cry’d, “at this my smiling, when I see
+Thy childish judgment; since not yet on truth
+It rests the foot, but, as it still is wont,
+Makes thee fall back in unsound vacancy.
+True substances are these, which thou behold’st,
+Hither through failure of their vow exil’d.
+But speak thou with them; listen, and believe,
+That the true light, which fills them with desire,
+Permits not from its beams their feet to stray.”
+
+Straight to the shadow which for converse seem’d
+Most earnest, I addressed me, and began,
+As one by over-eagerness perplex’d:
+“O spirit, born for joy! who in the rays
+Of life eternal, of that sweetness know’st
+The flavour, which, not tasted, passes far
+All apprehension, me it well would please,
+If thou wouldst tell me of thy name, and this
+Your station here.” Whence she, with kindness prompt,
+And eyes glist’ning with smiles: “Our charity,
+To any wish by justice introduc’d,
+Bars not the door, no more than she above,
+Who would have all her court be like herself.
+I was a virgin sister in the earth;
+And if thy mind observe me well, this form,
+With such addition grac’d of loveliness,
+Will not conceal me long, but thou wilt know
+Piccarda, in the tardiest sphere thus plac’d,
+Here ’mid these other blessed also blest.
+Our hearts, whose high affections burn alone
+With pleasure, from the Holy Spirit conceiv’d,
+Admitted to his order dwell in joy.
+And this condition, which appears so low,
+Is for this cause assign’d us, that our vows
+Were in some part neglected and made void.”
+
+Whence I to her replied: “Something divine
+Beams in your countenance, wond’rous fair,
+From former knowledge quite transmuting you.
+Therefore to recollect was I so slow.
+But what thou sayst hath to my memory
+Given now such aid, that to retrace your forms
+Is easier. Yet inform me, ye, who here
+Are happy, long ye for a higher place
+More to behold, and more in love to dwell?”
+
+She with those other spirits gently smil’d,
+Then answer’d with such gladness, that she seem’d
+With love’s first flame to glow: “Brother! our will
+Is in composure settled by the power
+Of charity, who makes us will alone
+What we possess, and nought beyond desire;
+If we should wish to be exalted more,
+Then must our wishes jar with the high will
+Of him, who sets us here, which in these orbs
+Thou wilt confess not possible, if here
+To be in charity must needs befall,
+And if her nature well thou contemplate.
+Rather it is inherent in this state
+Of blessedness, to keep ourselves within
+The divine will, by which our wills with his
+Are one. So that as we from step to step
+Are plac’d throughout this kingdom, pleases all,
+E’en as our King, who in us plants his will;
+And in his will is our tranquillity;
+It is the mighty ocean, whither tends
+Whatever it creates and nature makes.”
+
+Then saw I clearly how each spot in heav’n
+Is Paradise, though with like gracious dew
+The supreme virtue show’r not over all.
+
+But as it chances, if one sort of food
+Hath satiated, and of another still
+The appetite remains, that this is ask’d,
+And thanks for that return’d; e’en so did I
+In word and motion, bent from her to learn
+What web it was, through which she had not drawn
+The shuttle to its point. She thus began:
+“Exalted worth and perfectness of life
+The Lady higher up enshrine in heaven,
+By whose pure laws upon your nether earth
+The robe and veil they wear, to that intent,
+That e’en till death they may keep watch or sleep
+With their great bridegroom, who accepts each vow,
+Which to his gracious pleasure love conforms.
+from the world, to follow her, when young
+Escap’d; and, in her vesture mantling me,
+Made promise of the way her sect enjoins.
+Thereafter men, for ill than good more apt,
+Forth snatch’d me from the pleasant cloister’s pale.
+God knows how after that my life was fram’d.
+This other splendid shape, which thou beholdst
+At my right side, burning with all the light
+Of this our orb, what of myself I tell
+May to herself apply. From her, like me
+A sister, with like violence were torn
+The saintly folds, that shaded her fair brows.
+E’en when she to the world again was brought
+In spite of her own will and better wont,
+Yet not for that the bosom’s inward veil
+Did she renounce. This is the luminary
+Of mighty Constance, who from that loud blast,
+Which blew the second over Suabia’s realm,
+That power produc’d, which was the third and last.”
+
+She ceas’d from further talk, and then began
+“Ave Maria” singing, and with that song
+Vanish’d, as heavy substance through deep wave.
+
+Mine eye, that far as it was capable,
+Pursued her, when in dimness she was lost,
+Turn’d to the mark where greater want impell’d,
+And bent on Beatrice all its gaze.
+But she as light’ning beam’d upon my looks:
+So that the sight sustain’d it not at first.
+Whence I to question her became less prompt.
+
+
+
+
+CANTO IV
+
+
+Between two kinds of food, both equally
+Remote and tempting, first a man might die
+Of hunger, ere he one could freely choose.
+E’en so would stand a lamb between the maw
+Of two fierce wolves, in dread of both alike:
+E’en so between two deer a dog would stand,
+Wherefore, if I was silent, fault nor praise
+I to myself impute, by equal doubts
+Held in suspense, since of necessity
+It happen’d. Silent was I, yet desire
+Was painted in my looks; and thus I spake
+My wish more earnestly than language could.
+
+As Daniel, when the haughty king he freed
+From ire, that spurr’d him on to deeds unjust
+And violent; so look’d Beatrice then.
+
+“Well I discern,” she thus her words address’d,
+“How contrary desires each way constrain thee,
+So that thy anxious thought is in itself
+Bound up and stifled, nor breathes freely forth.
+Thou arguest; if the good intent remain;
+What reason that another’s violence
+Should stint the measure of my fair desert?
+
+“Cause too thou findst for doubt, in that it seems,
+That spirits to the stars, as Plato deem’d,
+Return. These are the questions which thy will
+Urge equally; and therefore I the first
+Of that will treat which hath the more of gall.
+Of seraphim he who is most ensky’d,
+Moses and Samuel, and either John,
+Choose which thou wilt, nor even Mary’s self,
+Have not in any other heav’n their seats,
+Than have those spirits which so late thou saw’st;
+Nor more or fewer years exist; but all
+Make the first circle beauteous, diversely
+Partaking of sweet life, as more or less
+Afflation of eternal bliss pervades them.
+Here were they shown thee, not that fate assigns
+This for their sphere, but for a sign to thee
+Of that celestial furthest from the height.
+Thus needs, that ye may apprehend, we speak:
+Since from things sensible alone ye learn
+That, which digested rightly after turns
+To intellectual. For no other cause
+The scripture, condescending graciously
+To your perception, hands and feet to God
+Attributes, nor so means: and holy church
+Doth represent with human countenance
+Gabriel, and Michael, and him who made
+Tobias whole. Unlike what here thou seest,
+The judgment of Timaeus, who affirms
+Each soul restor’d to its particular star,
+Believing it to have been taken thence,
+When nature gave it to inform her mold:
+Since to appearance his intention is
+E’en what his words declare: or else to shun
+Derision, haply thus he hath disguis’d
+His true opinion. If his meaning be,
+That to the influencing of these orbs revert
+The honour and the blame in human acts,
+Perchance he doth not wholly miss the truth.
+This principle, not understood aright,
+Erewhile perverted well nigh all the world;
+So that it fell to fabled names of Jove,
+And Mercury, and Mars. That other doubt,
+Which moves thee, is less harmful; for it brings
+No peril of removing thee from me.
+
+“That, to the eye of man, our justice seems
+Unjust, is argument for faith, and not
+For heretic declension. To the end
+This truth may stand more clearly in your view,
+I will content thee even to thy wish
+
+“If violence be, when that which suffers, nought
+Consents to that which forceth, not for this
+These spirits stood exculpate. For the will,
+That will not, still survives unquench’d, and doth
+As nature doth in fire, tho’ violence
+Wrest it a thousand times; for, if it yield
+Or more or less, so far it follows force.
+And thus did these, whom they had power to seek
+The hallow’d place again. In them, had will
+Been perfect, such as once upon the bars
+Held Laurence firm, or wrought in Scaevola
+To his own hand remorseless, to the path,
+Whence they were drawn, their steps had hasten’d back,
+When liberty return’d: but in too few
+Resolve so steadfast dwells. And by these words
+If duly weigh’d, that argument is void,
+Which oft might have perplex’d thee still. But now
+Another question thwarts thee, which to solve
+Might try thy patience without better aid.
+I have, no doubt, instill’d into thy mind,
+That blessed spirit may not lie; since near
+The source of primal truth it dwells for aye:
+And thou might’st after of Piccarda learn
+That Constance held affection to the veil;
+So that she seems to contradict me here.
+Not seldom, brother, it hath chanc’d for men
+To do what they had gladly left undone,
+Yet to shun peril they have done amiss:
+E’en as Alcmaeon, at his father’s suit
+Slew his own mother, so made pitiless
+Not to lose pity. On this point bethink thee,
+That force and will are blended in such wise
+As not to make the’ offence excusable.
+Absolute will agrees not to the wrong,
+That inasmuch as there is fear of woe
+From non-compliance, it agrees. Of will
+Thus absolute Piccarda spake, and I
+Of th’ other; so that both have truly said.”
+
+Such was the flow of that pure rill, that well’d
+From forth the fountain of all truth; and such
+The rest, that to my wond’ring thoughts l found.
+
+“O thou of primal love the prime delight!
+Goddess! “I straight reply’d, “whose lively words
+Still shed new heat and vigour through my soul!
+Affection fails me to requite thy grace
+With equal sum of gratitude: be his
+To recompense, who sees and can reward thee.
+Well I discern, that by that truth alone
+Enlighten’d, beyond which no truth may roam,
+Our mind can satisfy her thirst to know:
+Therein she resteth, e’en as in his lair
+The wild beast, soon as she hath reach’d that bound,
+And she hath power to reach it; else desire
+Were given to no end. And thence doth doubt
+Spring, like a shoot, around the stock of truth;
+And it is nature which from height to height
+On to the summit prompts us. This invites,
+This doth assure me, lady, rev’rently
+To ask thee of other truth, that yet
+Is dark to me. I fain would know, if man
+By other works well done may so supply
+The failure of his vows, that in your scale
+They lack not weight.” I spake; and on me straight
+Beatrice look’d with eyes that shot forth sparks
+Of love celestial in such copious stream,
+That, virtue sinking in me overpower’d,
+I turn’d, and downward bent confus’d my sight.
+
+
+
+
+CANTO V
+
+
+“If beyond earthly wont, the flame of love
+Illume me, so that I o’ercome thy power
+Of vision, marvel not: but learn the cause
+In that perfection of the sight, which soon
+As apprehending, hasteneth on to reach
+The good it apprehends. I well discern,
+How in thine intellect already shines
+The light eternal, which to view alone
+Ne’er fails to kindle love; and if aught else
+Your love seduces, ’tis but that it shows
+Some ill-mark’d vestige of that primal beam.
+
+“This would’st thou know, if failure of the vow
+By other service may be so supplied,
+As from self-question to assure the soul.”
+
+Thus she her words, not heedless of my wish,
+Began; and thus, as one who breaks not off
+Discourse, continued in her saintly strain.
+“Supreme of gifts, which God creating gave
+Of his free bounty, sign most evident
+Of goodness, and in his account most priz’d,
+Was liberty of will, the boon wherewith
+All intellectual creatures, and them sole
+He hath endow’d. Hence now thou mayst infer
+Of what high worth the vow, which so is fram’d
+That when man offers, God well-pleas’d accepts;
+For in the compact between God and him,
+This treasure, such as I describe it to thee,
+He makes the victim, and of his own act.
+What compensation therefore may he find?
+If that, whereof thou hast oblation made,
+By using well thou think’st to consecrate,
+Thou would’st of theft do charitable deed.
+Thus I resolve thee of the greater point.
+
+“But forasmuch as holy church, herein
+Dispensing, seems to contradict the truth
+I have discover’d to thee, yet behooves
+Thou rest a little longer at the board,
+Ere the crude aliment, which thou hast taken,
+Digested fitly to nutrition turn.
+Open thy mind to what I now unfold,
+And give it inward keeping. Knowledge comes
+Of learning well retain’d, unfruitful else.
+
+“This sacrifice in essence of two things
+Consisteth; one is that, whereof ’tis made,
+The covenant the other. For the last,
+It ne’er is cancell’d if not kept: and hence
+I spake erewhile so strictly of its force.
+For this it was enjoin’d the Israelites,
+Though leave were giv’n them, as thou know’st, to change
+The offering, still to offer. Th’ other part,
+The matter and the substance of the vow,
+May well be such, to that without offence
+It may for other substance be exchang’d.
+But at his own discretion none may shift
+The burden on his shoulders, unreleas’d
+By either key, the yellow and the white.
+Nor deem of any change, as less than vain,
+If the last bond be not within the new
+Included, as the quatre in the six.
+No satisfaction therefore can be paid
+For what so precious in the balance weighs,
+That all in counterpoise must kick the beam.
+Take then no vow at random: ta’en, with faith
+Preserve it; yet not bent, as Jephthah once,
+Blindly to execute a rash resolve,
+Whom better it had suited to exclaim,
+‘I have done ill,’ than to redeem his pledge
+By doing worse or, not unlike to him
+In folly, that great leader of the Greeks:
+Whence, on the alter, Iphigenia mourn’d
+Her virgin beauty, and hath since made mourn
+Both wise and simple, even all, who hear
+Of so fell sacrifice. Be ye more staid,
+O Christians, not, like feather, by each wind
+Removable: nor think to cleanse ourselves
+In every water. Either testament,
+The old and new, is yours: and for your guide
+The shepherd of the church let this suffice
+To save you. When by evil lust entic’d,
+Remember ye be men, not senseless beasts;
+Nor let the Jew, who dwelleth in your streets,
+Hold you in mock’ry. Be not, as the lamb,
+That, fickle wanton, leaves its mother’s milk,
+To dally with itself in idle play.”
+
+Such were the words that Beatrice spake:
+These ended, to that region, where the world
+Is liveliest, full of fond desire she turn’d.
+
+Though mainly prompt new question to propose,
+Her silence and chang’d look did keep me dumb.
+And as the arrow, ere the cord is still,
+Leapeth unto its mark; so on we sped
+Into the second realm. There I beheld
+The dame, so joyous enter, that the orb
+Grew brighter at her smiles; and, if the star
+Were mov’d to gladness, what then was my cheer,
+Whom nature hath made apt for every change!
+
+As in a quiet and clear lake the fish,
+If aught approach them from without, do draw
+Towards it, deeming it their food; so drew
+Full more than thousand splendours towards us,
+And in each one was heard: “Lo! one arriv’d
+To multiply our loves!” and as each came
+The shadow, streaming forth effulgence new,
+Witness’d augmented joy. Here, reader! think,
+If thou didst miss the sequel of my tale,
+To know the rest how sorely thou wouldst crave;
+And thou shalt see what vehement desire
+Possess’d me, as soon as these had met my view,
+To know their state. “O born in happy hour!
+Thou to whom grace vouchsafes, or ere thy close
+Of fleshly warfare, to behold the thrones
+Of that eternal triumph, know to us
+The light communicated, which through heaven
+Expatiates without bound. Therefore, if aught
+Thou of our beams wouldst borrow for thine aid,
+Spare not; and of our radiance take thy fill.”
+
+Thus of those piteous spirits one bespake me;
+And Beatrice next: “Say on; and trust
+As unto gods!”—“How in the light supreme
+Thou harbour’st, and from thence the virtue bring’st,
+That, sparkling in thine eyes, denotes thy joy,
+l mark; but, who thou art, am still to seek;
+Or wherefore, worthy spirit! for thy lot
+This sphere assign’d, that oft from mortal ken
+Is veil’d by others’ beams.” I said, and turn’d
+Toward the lustre, that with greeting, kind
+Erewhile had hail’d me. Forthwith brighter far
+Than erst, it wax’d: and, as himself the sun
+Hides through excess of light, when his warm gaze
+Hath on the mantle of thick vapours prey’d;
+Within its proper ray the saintly shape
+Was, through increase of gladness, thus conceal’d;
+And, shrouded so in splendour answer’d me,
+E’en as the tenour of my song declares.
+
+
+
+
+CANTO VI
+
+
+“After that Constantine the eagle turn’d
+Against the motions of the heav’n, that roll’d
+Consenting with its course, when he of yore,
+Lavinia’s spouse, was leader of the flight,
+A hundred years twice told and more, his seat
+At Europe’s extreme point, the bird of Jove
+Held, near the mountains, whence he issued first.
+There, under shadow of his sacred plumes
+Swaying the world, till through successive hands
+To mine he came devolv’d. Caesar I was,
+And am Justinian; destin’d by the will
+Of that prime love, whose influence I feel,
+From vain excess to clear th’ encumber’d laws.
+Or ere that work engag’d me, I did hold
+Christ’s nature merely human, with such faith
+Contented. But the blessed Agapete,
+Who was chief shepherd, he with warning voice
+To the true faith recall’d me. I believ’d
+His words: and what he taught, now plainly see,
+As thou in every contradiction seest
+The true and false oppos’d. Soon as my feet
+Were to the church reclaim’d, to my great task,
+By inspiration of God’s grace impell’d,
+I gave me wholly, and consign’d mine arms
+To Belisarius, with whom heaven’s right hand
+Was link’d in such conjointment, ’twas a sign
+That I should rest. To thy first question thus
+I shape mine answer, which were ended here,
+But that its tendency doth prompt perforce
+To some addition; that thou well, mayst mark
+What reason on each side they have to plead,
+By whom that holiest banner is withstood,
+Both who pretend its power and who oppose.
+ “Beginning from that hour, when Pallas died
+To give it rule, behold the valorous deeds
+Have made it worthy reverence. Not unknown
+To thee, how for three hundred years and more
+It dwelt in Alba, up to those fell lists
+Where for its sake were met the rival three;
+Nor aught unknown to thee, which it achiev’d
+Down to the Sabines’ wrong to Lucrece’ woe,
+With its sev’n kings conqu’ring the nation round;
+Nor all it wrought, by Roman worthies home
+’Gainst Brennus and th’ Epirot prince, and hosts
+Of single chiefs, or states in league combin’d
+Of social warfare; hence Torquatus stern,
+And Quintius nam’d of his neglected locks,
+The Decii, and the Fabii hence acquir’d
+Their fame, which I with duteous zeal embalm.
+By it the pride of Arab hordes was quell’d,
+When they led on by Hannibal o’erpass’d
+The Alpine rocks, whence glide thy currents, Po!
+Beneath its guidance, in their prime of days
+Scipio and Pompey triumph’d; and that hill,
+Under whose summit thou didst see the light,
+Rued its stern bearing. After, near the hour,
+When heav’n was minded that o’er all the world
+His own deep calm should brood, to Caesar’s hand
+Did Rome consign it; and what then it wrought
+From Var unto the Rhine, saw Isere’s flood,
+Saw Loire and Seine, and every vale, that fills
+The torrent Rhone. What after that it wrought,
+When from Ravenna it came forth, and leap’d
+The Rubicon, was of so bold a flight,
+That tongue nor pen may follow it. Tow’rds Spain
+It wheel’d its bands, then tow’rd Dyrrachium smote,
+And on Pharsalia with so fierce a plunge,
+E’en the warm Nile was conscious to the pang;
+Its native shores Antandros, and the streams
+Of Simois revisited, and there
+Where Hector lies; then ill for Ptolemy
+His pennons shook again; lightning thence fell
+On Juba; and the next upon your west,
+At sound of the Pompeian trump, return’d.
+
+“What following and in its next bearer’s gripe
+It wrought, is now by Cassius and Brutus
+Bark’d off in hell, and by Perugia’s sons
+And Modena’s was mourn’d. Hence weepeth still
+Sad Cleopatra, who, pursued by it,
+Took from the adder black and sudden death.
+With him it ran e’en to the Red Sea coast;
+With him compos’d the world to such a peace,
+That of his temple Janus barr’d the door.
+
+“But all the mighty standard yet had wrought,
+And was appointed to perform thereafter,
+Throughout the mortal kingdom which it sway’d,
+Falls in appearance dwindled and obscur’d,
+If one with steady eye and perfect thought
+On the third Caesar look; for to his hands,
+The living Justice, in whose breath I move,
+Committed glory, e’en into his hands,
+To execute the vengeance of its wrath.
+
+“Hear now and wonder at what next I tell.
+After with Titus it was sent to wreak
+Vengeance for vengeance of the ancient sin,
+And, when the Lombard tooth, with fangs impure,
+Did gore the bosom of the holy church,
+Under its wings victorious, Charlemagne
+Sped to her rescue. Judge then for thyself
+Of those, whom I erewhile accus’d to thee,
+What they are, and how grievous their offending,
+Who are the cause of all your ills. The one
+Against the universal ensign rears
+The yellow lilies, and with partial aim
+That to himself the other arrogates:
+So that ’tis hard to see which more offends.
+Be yours, ye Ghibellines, to veil your arts
+Beneath another standard: ill is this
+Follow’d of him, who severs it and justice:
+And let not with his Guelphs the new-crown’d Charles
+Assail it, but those talons hold in dread,
+Which from a lion of more lofty port
+Have rent the easing. Many a time ere now
+The sons have for the sire’s transgression wail’d;
+Nor let him trust the fond belief, that heav’n
+Will truck its armour for his lilied shield.
+
+“This little star is furnish’d with good spirits,
+Whose mortal lives were busied to that end,
+That honour and renown might wait on them:
+And, when desires thus err in their intention,
+True love must needs ascend with slacker beam.
+But it is part of our delight, to measure
+Our wages with the merit; and admire
+The close proportion. Hence doth heav’nly justice
+Temper so evenly affection in us,
+It ne’er can warp to any wrongfulness.
+Of diverse voices is sweet music made:
+So in our life the different degrees
+Render sweet harmony among these wheels.
+
+“Within the pearl, that now encloseth us,
+Shines Romeo’s light, whose goodly deed and fair
+Met ill acceptance. But the Provencals,
+That were his foes, have little cause for mirth.
+Ill shapes that man his course, who makes his wrong
+Of other’s worth. Four daughters were there born
+To Raymond Berenger, and every one
+Became a queen; and this for him did Romeo,
+Though of mean state and from a foreign land.
+Yet envious tongues incited him to ask
+A reckoning of that just one, who return’d
+Twelve fold to him for ten. Aged and poor
+He parted thence: and if the world did know
+The heart he had, begging his life by morsels,
+’Twould deem the praise, it yields him, scantly dealt.”
+
+
+
+
+CANTO VII
+
+
+“Hosanna Sanctus Deus Sabaoth
+Superillustrans claritate tua
+Felices ignes horum malahoth!”
+Thus chanting saw I turn that substance bright
+With fourfold lustre to its orb again,
+Revolving; and the rest unto their dance
+With it mov’d also; and like swiftest sparks,
+In sudden distance from my sight were veil’d.
+
+Me doubt possess’d, and “Speak,” it whisper’d me,
+“Speak, speak unto thy lady, that she quench
+Thy thirst with drops of sweetness.” Yet blank awe,
+Which lords it o’er me, even at the sound
+Of Beatrice’s name, did bow me down
+As one in slumber held. Not long that mood
+Beatrice suffer’d: she, with such a smile,
+As might have made one blest amid the flames,
+Beaming upon me, thus her words began:
+“Thou in thy thought art pond’ring (as I deem,
+And what I deem is truth how just revenge
+Could be with justice punish’d: from which doubt
+I soon will free thee; so thou mark my words;
+For they of weighty matter shall possess thee.
+
+“That man, who was unborn, himself condemn’d,
+And, in himself, all, who since him have liv’d,
+His offspring: whence, below, the human kind
+Lay sick in grievous error many an age;
+Until it pleas’d the Word of God to come
+Amongst them down, to his own person joining
+The nature, from its Maker far estrang’d,
+By the mere act of his eternal love.
+Contemplate here the wonder I unfold.
+The nature with its Maker thus conjoin’d,
+Created first was blameless, pure and good;
+But through itself alone was driven forth
+From Paradise, because it had eschew’d
+The way of truth and life, to evil turn’d.
+Ne’er then was penalty so just as that
+Inflicted by the cross, if thou regard
+The nature in assumption doom’d: ne’er wrong
+So great, in reference to him, who took
+Such nature on him, and endur’d the doom.
+God therefore and the Jews one sentence pleased:
+So different effects flow’d from one act,
+And heav’n was open’d, though the earth did quake.
+Count it not hard henceforth, when thou dost hear
+That a just vengeance was by righteous court
+Justly reveng’d. But yet I see thy mind
+By thought on thought arising sore perplex’d,
+And with how vehement desire it asks
+Solution of the maze. What I have heard,
+Is plain, thou sayst: but wherefore God this way
+For our redemption chose, eludes my search.
+
+“Brother! no eye of man not perfected,
+Nor fully ripen’d in the flame of love,
+May fathom this decree. It is a mark,
+In sooth, much aim’d at, and but little kenn’d:
+And I will therefore show thee why such way
+Was worthiest. The celestial love, that spume
+All envying in its bounty, in itself
+With such effulgence blazeth, as sends forth
+All beauteous things eternal. What distils
+Immediate thence, no end of being knows,
+Bearing its seal immutably impress’d.
+Whatever thence immediate falls, is free,
+Free wholly, uncontrollable by power
+Of each thing new: by such conformity
+More grateful to its author, whose bright beams,
+Though all partake their shining, yet in those
+Are liveliest, which resemble him the most.
+These tokens of pre-eminence on man
+Largely bestow’d, if any of them fail,
+He needs must forfeit his nobility,
+No longer stainless. Sin alone is that,
+Which doth disfranchise him, and make unlike
+To the chief good; for that its light in him
+Is darken’d. And to dignity thus lost
+Is no return; unless, where guilt makes void,
+He for ill pleasure pay with equal pain.
+Your nature, which entirely in its seed
+Trangress’d, from these distinctions fell, no less
+Than from its state in Paradise; nor means
+Found of recovery (search all methods out
+As strickly as thou may) save one of these,
+The only fords were left through which to wade,
+Either that God had of his courtesy
+Releas’d him merely, or else man himself
+For his own folly by himself aton’d.
+
+“Fix now thine eye, intently as thou canst,
+On th’ everlasting counsel, and explore,
+Instructed by my words, the dread abyss.
+
+“Man in himself had ever lack’d the means
+Of satisfaction, for he could not stoop
+Obeying, in humility so low,
+As high he, disobeying, thought to soar:
+And for this reason he had vainly tried
+Out of his own sufficiency to pay
+The rigid satisfaction. Then behooved
+That God should by his own ways lead him back
+Unto the life, from whence he fell, restor’d:
+By both his ways, I mean, or one alone.
+But since the deed is ever priz’d the more,
+The more the doer’s good intent appears,
+Goodness celestial, whose broad signature
+Is on the universe, of all its ways
+To raise ye up, was fain to leave out none,
+Nor aught so vast or so magnificent,
+Either for him who gave or who receiv’d
+Between the last night and the primal day,
+Was or can be. For God more bounty show’d.
+Giving himself to make man capable
+Of his return to life, than had the terms
+Been mere and unconditional release.
+And for his justice, every method else
+Were all too scant, had not the Son of God
+Humbled himself to put on mortal flesh.
+
+“Now, to fulfil each wish of thine, remains
+I somewhat further to thy view unfold.
+That thou mayst see as clearly as myself.
+
+“I see, thou sayst, the air, the fire I see,
+The earth and water, and all things of them
+Compounded, to corruption turn, and soon
+Dissolve. Yet these were also things create,
+Because, if what were told me, had been true
+They from corruption had been therefore free.
+
+“The angels, O my brother! and this clime
+Wherein thou art, impassible and pure,
+I call created, as indeed they are
+In their whole being. But the elements,
+Which thou hast nam’d, and what of them is made,
+Are by created virtue’ inform’d: create
+Their substance, and create the’ informing virtue
+In these bright stars, that round them circling move
+The soul of every brute and of each plant,
+The ray and motion of the sacred lights,
+With complex potency attract and turn.
+But this our life the’ eternal good inspires
+Immediate, and enamours of itself;
+So that our wishes rest for ever here.
+
+“And hence thou mayst by inference conclude
+Our resurrection certain, if thy mind
+Consider how the human flesh was fram’d,
+When both our parents at the first were made.”
+
+
+
+
+CANTO VIII
+
+
+The world was in its day of peril dark
+Wont to believe the dotage of fond love
+From the fair Cyprian deity, who rolls
+In her third epicycle, shed on men
+By stream of potent radiance: therefore they
+Of elder time, in their old error blind,
+Not her alone with sacrifice ador’d
+And invocation, but like honours paid
+To Cupid and Dione, deem’d of them
+Her mother, and her son, him whom they feign’d
+To sit in Dido’s bosom: and from her,
+Whom I have sung preluding, borrow’d they
+The appellation of that star, which views,
+Now obvious and now averse, the sun.
+
+I was not ware that I was wafted up
+Into its orb; but the new loveliness
+That grac’d my lady, gave me ample proof
+That we had entered there. And as in flame
+A sparkle is distinct, or voice in voice
+Discern’d, when one its even tenour keeps,
+The other comes and goes; so in that light
+I other luminaries saw, that cours’d
+In circling motion. rapid more or less,
+As their eternal phases each impels.
+
+Never was blast from vapour charged with cold,
+Whether invisible to eye or no,
+Descended with such speed, it had not seem’d
+To linger in dull tardiness, compar’d
+To those celestial lights, that tow’rds us came,
+Leaving the circuit of their joyous ring,
+Conducted by the lofty seraphim.
+And after them, who in the van appear’d,
+Such an hosanna sounded, as hath left
+Desire, ne’er since extinct in me, to hear
+Renew’d the strain. Then parting from the rest
+One near us drew, and sole began: “We all
+Are ready at thy pleasure, well dispos’d
+To do thee gentle service. We are they,
+To whom thou in the world erewhile didst Sing
+‘O ye! whose intellectual ministry
+Moves the third heaven!’ and in one orb we roll,
+One motion, one impulse, with those who rule
+Princedoms in heaven; yet are of love so full,
+That to please thee ’twill be as sweet to rest.”
+
+After mine eyes had with meek reverence
+Sought the celestial guide, and were by her
+Assur’d, they turn’d again unto the light
+Who had so largely promis’d, and with voice
+That bare the lively pressure of my zeal,
+“Tell who ye are,” I cried. Forthwith it grew
+In size and splendour, through augmented joy;
+And thus it answer’d: “A short date below
+The world possess’d me. Had the time been more,
+Much evil, that will come, had never chanc’d.
+My gladness hides thee from me, which doth shine .
+Around, and shroud me, as an animal
+In its own silk enswath’d. Thou lov’dst me well,
+And had’st good cause; for had my sojourning
+Been longer on the earth, the love I bare thee
+Had put forth more than blossoms. The left bank,
+That Rhone, when he hath mix’d with Sorga, laves.
+In me its lord expected, and that horn
+Of fair Ausonia, with its boroughs old,
+Bari, and Croton, and Gaeta pil’d,
+From where the Trento disembogues his waves,
+With Verde mingled, to the salt sea-flood.
+Already on my temples beam’d the crown,
+Which gave me sov’reignty over the land
+By Danube wash’d, whenas he strays beyond
+The limits of his German shores. The realm,
+Where, on the gulf by stormy Eurus lash’d,
+Betwixt Pelorus and Pachynian heights,
+The beautiful Trinacria lies in gloom
+(Not through Typhaeus, but the vap’ry cloud
+Bituminous upsteam’d), THAT too did look
+To have its scepter wielded by a race
+Of monarchs, sprung through me from Charles and Rodolph;
+had not ill lording which doth spirit up
+The people ever, in Palermo rais’d
+The shout of ‘death,’ re-echo’d loud and long.
+Had but my brother’s foresight kenn’d as much,
+He had been warier that the greedy want
+Of Catalonia might not work his bale.
+And truly need there is, that he forecast,
+Or other for him, lest more freight be laid
+On his already over-laden bark.
+Nature in him, from bounty fall’n to thrift,
+Would ask the guard of braver arms, than such
+As only care to have their coffers fill’d.”
+
+“My liege, it doth enhance the joy thy words
+Infuse into me, mighty as it is,
+To think my gladness manifest to thee,
+As to myself, who own it, when thou lookst
+Into the source and limit of all good,
+There, where thou markest that which thou dost speak,
+Thence priz’d of me the more. Glad thou hast made me.
+Now make intelligent, clearing the doubt
+Thy speech hath raised in me; for much I muse,
+How bitter can spring up, when sweet is sown.”
+
+I thus inquiring; he forthwith replied:
+“If I have power to show one truth, soon that
+Shall face thee, which thy questioning declares
+Behind thee now conceal’d. The Good, that guides
+And blessed makes this realm, which thou dost mount,
+Ordains its providence to be the virtue
+In these great bodies: nor th’ all perfect Mind
+Upholds their nature merely, but in them
+Their energy to save: for nought, that lies
+Within the range of that unerring bow,
+But is as level with the destin’d aim,
+As ever mark to arrow’s point oppos’d.
+Were it not thus, these heavens, thou dost visit,
+Would their effect so work, it would not be
+Art, but destruction; and this may not chance,
+If th’ intellectual powers, that move these stars,
+Fail not, or who, first faulty made them fail.
+Wilt thou this truth more clearly evidenc’d?”
+
+To whom I thus: “It is enough: no fear,
+I see, lest nature in her part should tire.”
+
+He straight rejoin’d: “Say, were it worse for man,
+If he liv’d not in fellowship on earth?”
+
+“Yea,” answer’d I; “nor here a reason needs.”
+
+“And may that be, if different estates
+Grow not of different duties in your life?
+Consult your teacher, and he tells you ‘no.’”
+
+Thus did he come, deducing to this point,
+And then concluded: “For this cause behooves,
+The roots, from whence your operations come,
+Must differ. Therefore one is Solon born;
+Another, Xerxes; and Melchisidec
+A third; and he a fourth, whose airy voyage
+Cost him his son. In her circuitous course,
+Nature, that is the seal to mortal wax,
+Doth well her art, but no distinctions owns
+’Twixt one or other household. Hence befalls
+That Esau is so wide of Jacob: hence
+Quirinus of so base a father springs,
+He dates from Mars his lineage. Were it not
+That providence celestial overrul’d,
+Nature, in generation, must the path
+Trac’d by the generator, still pursue
+Unswervingly. Thus place I in thy sight
+That, which was late behind thee. But, in sign
+Of more affection for thee, ’tis my will
+Thou wear this corollary. Nature ever
+Finding discordant fortune, like all seed
+Out of its proper climate, thrives but ill.
+And were the world below content to mark
+And work on the foundation nature lays,
+It would not lack supply of excellence.
+But ye perversely to religion strain
+Him, who was born to gird on him the sword,
+And of the fluent phrasemen make your king;
+Therefore your steps have wander’d from the paths.”
+
+
+
+
+CANTO IX
+
+
+After solution of my doubt, thy Charles,
+O fair Clemenza, of the treachery spake
+That must befall his seed: but, “Tell it not,”
+Said he, “and let the destin’d years come round.”
+Nor may I tell thee more, save that the meed
+Of sorrow well-deserv’d shall quit your wrongs.
+
+And now the visage of that saintly light
+Was to the sun, that fills it, turn’d again,
+As to the good, whose plenitude of bliss
+Sufficeth all. O ye misguided souls!
+Infatuate, who from such a good estrange
+Your hearts, and bend your gaze on vanity,
+Alas for you!—And lo! toward me, next,
+Another of those splendent forms approach’d,
+That, by its outward bright’ning, testified
+The will it had to pleasure me. The eyes
+Of Beatrice, resting, as before,
+Firmly upon me, manifested forth
+Approva1 of my wish. “And O,” I cried,
+Blest spirit! quickly be my will perform’d;
+And prove thou to me, that my inmost thoughts
+I can reflect on thee.” Thereat the light,
+That yet was new to me, from the recess,
+Where it before was singing, thus began,
+As one who joys in kindness: “In that part
+Of the deprav’d Italian land, which lies
+Between Rialto, and the fountain-springs
+Of Brenta and of Piava, there doth rise,
+But to no lofty eminence, a hill,
+From whence erewhile a firebrand did descend,
+That sorely sheet the region. From one root
+I and it sprang; my name on earth Cunizza:
+And here I glitter, for that by its light
+This star o’ercame me. Yet I naught repine,
+Nor grudge myself the cause of this my lot,
+Which haply vulgar hearts can scarce conceive.
+
+“This jewel, that is next me in our heaven,
+Lustrous and costly, great renown hath left,
+And not to perish, ere these hundred years
+Five times absolve their round. Consider thou,
+If to excel be worthy man’s endeavour,
+When such life may attend the first. Yet they
+Care not for this, the crowd that now are girt
+By Adice and Tagliamento, still
+Impenitent, tho’ scourg’d. The hour is near,
+When for their stubbornness at Padua’s marsh
+The water shall be chang’d, that laves Vicena
+And where Cagnano meets with Sile, one
+Lords it, and bears his head aloft, for whom
+The web is now a-warping. Feltro too
+Shall sorrow for its godless shepherd’s fault,
+Of so deep stain, that never, for the like,
+Was Malta’s bar unclos’d. Too large should be
+The skillet, that would hold Ferrara’s blood,
+And wearied he, who ounce by ounce would weight it,
+The which this priest, in show of party-zeal,
+Courteous will give; nor will the gift ill suit
+The country’s custom. We descry above,
+Mirrors, ye call them thrones, from which to us
+Reflected shine the judgments of our God:
+Whence these our sayings we avouch for good.”
+
+She ended, and appear’d on other thoughts
+Intent, re-ent’ring on the wheel she late
+Had left. That other joyance meanwhile wax’d
+A thing to marvel at, in splendour glowing,
+Like choicest ruby stricken by the sun,
+For, in that upper clime, effulgence comes
+Of gladness, as here laughter: and below,
+As the mind saddens, murkier grows the shade.
+
+“God seeth all: and in him is thy sight,”
+Said I, “blest Spirit! Therefore will of his
+Cannot to thee be dark. Why then delays
+Thy voice to satisfy my wish untold,
+That voice which joins the inexpressive song,
+Pastime of heav’n, the which those ardours sing,
+That cowl them with six shadowing wings outspread?
+I would not wait thy asking, wert thou known
+To me, as thoroughly I to thee am known.”
+
+He forthwith answ’ring, thus his words began:
+“The valley’ of waters, widest next to that
+Which doth the earth engarland, shapes its course,
+Between discordant shores, against the sun
+Inward so far, it makes meridian there,
+Where was before th’ horizon. Of that vale
+Dwelt I upon the shore, ’twixt Ebro’s stream
+And Macra’s, that divides with passage brief
+Genoan bounds from Tuscan. East and west
+Are nearly one to Begga and my land,
+Whose haven erst was with its own blood warm.
+Who knew my name were wont to call me Folco:
+And I did bear impression of this heav’n,
+That now bears mine: for not with fiercer flame
+Glow’d Belus’ daughter, injuring alike
+Sichaeus and Creusa, than did I,
+Long as it suited the unripen’d down
+That fledg’d my cheek: nor she of Rhodope,
+That was beguiled of Demophoon;
+Nor Jove’s son, when the charms of Iole
+Were shrin’d within his heart. And yet there hides
+No sorrowful repentance here, but mirth,
+Not for the fault (that doth not come to mind),
+But for the virtue, whose o’erruling sway
+And providence have wrought thus quaintly. Here
+The skill is look’d into, that fashioneth
+With such effectual working, and the good
+Discern’d, accruing to this upper world
+From that below. But fully to content
+Thy wishes, all that in this sphere have birth,
+Demands my further parle. Inquire thou wouldst,
+Who of this light is denizen, that here
+Beside me sparkles, as the sun-beam doth
+On the clear wave. Know then, the soul of Rahab
+Is in that gladsome harbour, to our tribe
+United, and the foremost rank assign’d.
+He to that heav’n, at which the shadow ends
+Of your sublunar world, was taken up,
+First, in Christ’s triumph, of all souls redeem’d:
+For well behoov’d, that, in some part of heav’n,
+She should remain a trophy, to declare
+The mighty contest won with either palm;
+For that she favour’d first the high exploit
+Of Joshua on the holy land, whereof
+The Pope recks little now. Thy city, plant
+Of him, that on his Maker turn’d the back,
+And of whose envying so much woe hath sprung,
+Engenders and expands the cursed flower,
+That hath made wander both the sheep and lambs,
+Turning the shepherd to a wolf. For this,
+The gospel and great teachers laid aside,
+The decretals, as their stuft margins show,
+Are the sole study. Pope and Cardinals,
+Intent on these, ne’er journey but in thought
+To Nazareth, where Gabriel op’d his wings.
+Yet it may chance, erelong, the Vatican,
+And other most selected parts of Rome,
+That were the grave of Peter’s soldiery,
+Shall be deliver’d from the adult’rous bond.”
+
+
+
+
+CANTO X
+
+
+Looking into his first-born with the love,
+Which breathes from both eternal, the first Might
+Ineffable, whence eye or mind
+Can roam, hath in such order all dispos’d,
+As none may see and fail to’ enjoy. Raise, then,
+O reader! to the lofty wheels, with me,
+Thy ken directed to the point, whereat
+One motion strikes on th’ other. There begin
+Thy wonder of the mighty Architect,
+Who loves his work so inwardly, his eye
+Doth ever watch it. See, how thence oblique
+Brancheth the circle, where the planets roll
+To pour their wished influence on the world;
+Whose path not bending thus, in heav’n above
+Much virtue would be lost, and here on earth,
+All power well nigh extinct: or, from direct
+Were its departure distant more or less,
+I’ th’ universal order, great defect
+Must, both in heav’n and here beneath, ensue.
+
+Now rest thee, reader! on thy bench, and muse
+Anticipative of the feast to come;
+So shall delight make thee not feel thy toil.
+Lo! I have set before thee, for thyself
+Feed now: the matter I indite, henceforth
+Demands entire my thought. Join’d with the part,
+Which late we told of, the great minister
+Of nature, that upon the world imprints
+The virtue of the heaven, and doles out
+Time for us with his beam, went circling on
+Along the spires, where each hour sooner comes;
+And I was with him, weetless of ascent,
+As one, who till arriv’d, weets not his coming.
+
+For Beatrice, she who passeth on
+So suddenly from good to better, time
+Counts not the act, oh then how great must needs
+Have been her brightness! What she was i’ th’ sun
+(Where I had enter’d), not through change of hue,
+But light transparent—did I summon up
+Genius, art, practice—I might not so speak,
+It should be e’er imagin’d: yet believ’d
+It may be, and the sight be justly crav’d.
+And if our fantasy fail of such height,
+What marvel, since no eye above the sun
+Hath ever travel’d? Such are they dwell here,
+Fourth family of the Omnipotent Sire,
+Who of his spirit and of his offspring shows;
+And holds them still enraptur’d with the view.
+And thus to me Beatrice: “Thank, oh thank,
+The Sun of angels, him, who by his grace
+To this perceptible hath lifted thee.”
+
+Never was heart in such devotion bound,
+And with complacency so absolute
+Dispos’d to render up itself to God,
+As mine was at those words: and so entire
+The love for Him, that held me, it eclips’d
+Beatrice in oblivion. Naught displeas’d
+Was she, but smil’d thereat so joyously,
+That of her laughing eyes the radiance brake
+And scatter’d my collected mind abroad.
+
+Then saw I a bright band, in liveliness
+Surpassing, who themselves did make the crown,
+And us their centre: yet more sweet in voice,
+Than in their visage beaming. Cinctur’d thus,
+Sometime Latona’s daughter we behold,
+When the impregnate air retains the thread,
+That weaves her zone. In the celestial court,
+Whence I return, are many jewels found,
+So dear and beautiful, they cannot brook
+Transporting from that realm: and of these lights
+Such was the song. Who doth not prune his wing
+To soar up thither, let him look from thence
+For tidings from the dumb. When, singing thus,
+Those burning suns that circled round us thrice,
+As nearest stars around the fixed pole,
+Then seem’d they like to ladies, from the dance
+Not ceasing, but suspense, in silent pause,
+List’ning, till they have caught the strain anew:
+Suspended so they stood: and, from within,
+Thus heard I one, who spake: “Since with its beam
+The grace, whence true love lighteth first his flame,
+That after doth increase by loving, shines
+So multiplied in thee, it leads thee up
+Along this ladder, down whose hallow’d steps
+None e’er descend, and mount them not again,
+Who from his phial should refuse thee wine
+To slake thy thirst, no less constrained were,
+Than water flowing not unto the sea.
+Thou fain wouldst hear, what plants are these, that bloom
+In the bright garland, which, admiring, girds
+This fair dame round, who strengthens thee for heav’n.
+I then was of the lambs, that Dominic
+Leads, for his saintly flock, along the way,
+Where well they thrive, not sworn with vanity.
+He, nearest on my right hand, brother was,
+And master to me: Albert of Cologne
+Is this: and of Aquinum, Thomas I.
+If thou of all the rest wouldst be assur’d,
+Let thine eye, waiting on the words I speak,
+In circuit journey round the blessed wreath.
+That next resplendence issues from the smile
+Of Gratian, who to either forum lent
+Such help, as favour wins in Paradise.
+The other, nearest, who adorns our quire,
+Was Peter, he that with the widow gave
+To holy church his treasure. The fifth light,
+Goodliest of all, is by such love inspired,
+That all your world craves tidings of its doom:
+Within, there is the lofty light, endow’d
+With sapience so profound, if truth be truth,
+That with a ken of such wide amplitude
+No second hath arisen. Next behold
+That taper’s radiance, to whose view was shown,
+Clearliest, the nature and the ministry
+Angelical, while yet in flesh it dwelt.
+In the other little light serenely smiles
+That pleader for the Christian temples, he
+Who did provide Augustin of his lore.
+Now, if thy mind’s eye pass from light to light,
+Upon my praises following, of the eighth
+Thy thirst is next. The saintly soul, that shows
+The world’s deceitfulness, to all who hear him,
+Is, with the sight of all the good, that is,
+Blest there. The limbs, whence it was driven, lie
+Down in Cieldauro, and from martyrdom
+And exile came it here. Lo! further on,
+Where flames the arduous Spirit of Isidore,
+Of Bede, and Richard, more than man, erewhile,
+In deep discernment. Lastly this, from whom
+Thy look on me reverteth, was the beam
+Of one, whose spirit, on high musings bent,
+Rebuk’d the ling’ring tardiness of death.
+It is the eternal light of Sigebert,
+Who ’scap’d not envy, when of truth he argued,
+Reading in the straw-litter’d street.” Forthwith,
+As clock, that calleth up the spouse of God
+To win her bridegroom’s love at matin’s hour,
+Each part of other fitly drawn and urg’d,
+Sends out a tinkling sound, of note so sweet,
+Affection springs in well-disposed breast;
+Thus saw I move the glorious wheel, thus heard
+Voice answ’ring voice, so musical and soft,
+It can be known but where day endless shines.
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XI
+
+
+O fond anxiety of mortal men!
+How vain and inconclusive arguments
+Are those, which make thee beat thy wings below
+For statues one, and one for aphorisms
+Was hunting; this the priesthood follow’d, that
+By force or sophistry aspir’d to rule;
+To rob another, and another sought
+By civil business wealth; one moiling lay
+Tangled in net of sensual delight,
+And one to witless indolence resign’d;
+What time from all these empty things escap’d,
+With Beatrice, I thus gloriously
+Was rais’d aloft, and made the guest of heav’n.
+
+They of the circle to that point, each one.
+Where erst it was, had turn’d; and steady glow’d,
+As candle in his socket. Then within
+The lustre, that erewhile bespake me, smiling
+With merer gladness, heard I thus begin:
+
+“E’en as his beam illumes me, so I look
+Into the eternal light, and clearly mark
+Thy thoughts, from whence they rise. Thou art in doubt,
+And wouldst, that I should bolt my words afresh
+In such plain open phrase, as may be smooth
+To thy perception, where I told thee late
+That ‘well they thrive;’ and that ‘no second such
+Hath risen,’ which no small distinction needs.
+
+“The providence, that governeth the world,
+In depth of counsel by created ken
+Unfathomable, to the end that she,
+Who with loud cries was ’spous’d in precious blood,
+Might keep her footing towards her well-belov’d,
+Safe in herself and constant unto him,
+Hath two ordain’d, who should on either hand
+In chief escort her: one seraphic all
+In fervency; for wisdom upon earth,
+The other splendour of cherubic light.
+I but of one will tell: he tells of both,
+Who one commendeth. which of them so’er
+Be taken: for their deeds were to one end.
+
+“Between Tupino, and the wave, that falls
+From blest Ubaldo’s chosen hill, there hangs
+Rich slope of mountain high, whence heat and cold
+Are wafted through Perugia’s eastern gate:
+And Norcera with Gualdo, in its rear
+Mourn for their heavy yoke. Upon that side,
+Where it doth break its steepness most, arose
+A sun upon the world, as duly this
+From Ganges doth: therefore let none, who speak
+Of that place, say Ascesi; for its name
+Were lamely so deliver’d; but the East,
+To call things rightly, be it henceforth styl’d.
+He was not yet much distant from his rising,
+When his good influence ’gan to bless the earth.
+A dame to whom none openeth pleasure’s gate
+More than to death, was, ’gainst his father’s will,
+His stripling choice: and he did make her his,
+Before the Spiritual court, by nuptial bonds,
+And in his father’s sight: from day to day,
+Then lov’d her more devoutly. She, bereav’d
+Of her first husband, slighted and obscure,
+Thousand and hundred years and more, remain’d
+Without a single suitor, till he came.
+Nor aught avail’d, that, with Amyclas, she
+Was found unmov’d at rumour of his voice,
+Who shook the world: nor aught her constant boldness
+Whereby with Christ she mounted on the cross,
+When Mary stay’d beneath. But not to deal
+Thus closely with thee longer, take at large
+The rovers’ titles—Poverty and Francis.
+Their concord and glad looks, wonder and love,
+And sweet regard gave birth to holy thoughts,
+So much, that venerable Bernard first
+Did bare his feet, and, in pursuit of peace
+So heavenly, ran, yet deem’d his footing slow.
+O hidden riches! O prolific good!
+Egidius bares him next, and next Sylvester,
+And follow both the bridegroom; so the bride
+Can please them. Thenceforth goes he on his way,
+The father and the master, with his spouse,
+And with that family, whom now the cord
+Girt humbly: nor did abjectness of heart
+Weigh down his eyelids, for that he was son
+Of Pietro Bernardone, and by men
+In wond’rous sort despis’d. But royally
+His hard intention he to Innocent
+Set forth, and from him first receiv’d the seal
+On his religion. Then, when numerous flock’d
+The tribe of lowly ones, that trac’d HIS steps,
+Whose marvellous life deservedly were sung
+In heights empyreal, through Honorius’ hand
+A second crown, to deck their Guardian’s virtues,
+Was by the eternal Spirit inwreath’d: and when
+He had, through thirst of martyrdom, stood up
+In the proud Soldan’s presence, and there preach’d
+Christ and his followers; but found the race
+Unripen’d for conversion: back once more
+He hasted (not to intermit his toil),
+And reap’d Ausonian lands. On the hard rock,
+’Twixt Arno and the Tyber, he from Christ
+Took the last Signet, which his limbs two years
+Did carry. Then the season come, that he,
+Who to such good had destin’d him, was pleas’d
+T’ advance him to the meed, which he had earn’d
+By his self-humbling, to his brotherhood,
+As their just heritage, he gave in charge
+His dearest lady, and enjoin’d their love
+And faith to her: and, from her bosom, will’d
+His goodly spirit should move forth, returning
+To its appointed kingdom, nor would have
+His body laid upon another bier.
+
+“Think now of one, who were a fit colleague,
+To keep the bark of Peter in deep sea
+Helm’d to right point; and such our Patriarch was.
+Therefore who follow him, as he enjoins,
+Thou mayst be certain, take good lading in.
+But hunger of new viands tempts his flock,
+So that they needs into strange pastures wide
+Must spread them: and the more remote from him
+The stragglers wander, so much mole they come
+Home to the sheep-fold, destitute of milk.
+There are of them, in truth, who fear their harm,
+And to the shepherd cleave; but these so few,
+A little stuff may furnish out their cloaks.
+
+“Now, if my words be clear, if thou have ta’en
+Good heed, if that, which I have told, recall
+To mind, thy wish may be in part fulfill’d:
+For thou wilt see the point from whence they split,
+Nor miss of the reproof, which that implies,
+‘That well they thrive not sworn with vanity.’”
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XII
+
+
+Soon as its final word the blessed flame
+Had rais’d for utterance, straight the holy mill
+Began to wheel, nor yet had once revolv’d,
+Or ere another, circling, compass’d it,
+Motion to motion, song to song, conjoining,
+Song, that as much our muses doth excel,
+Our Sirens with their tuneful pipes, as ray
+Of primal splendour doth its faint reflex.
+
+As when, if Juno bid her handmaid forth,
+Two arches parallel, and trick’d alike,
+Span the thin cloud, the outer taking birth
+From that within (in manner of that voice
+Whom love did melt away, as sun the mist),
+And they who gaze, presageful call to mind
+The compact, made with Noah, of the world
+No more to be o’erflow’d; about us thus
+Of sempiternal roses, bending, wreath’d
+Those garlands twain, and to the innermost
+E’en thus th’ external answered. When the footing,
+And other great festivity, of song,
+And radiance, light with light accordant, each
+Jocund and blythe, had at their pleasure still’d
+(E’en as the eyes by quick volition mov’d,
+Are shut and rais’d together), from the heart
+Of one amongst the new lights mov’d a voice,
+That made me seem like needle to the star,
+In turning to its whereabout, and thus
+Began: “The love, that makes me beautiful,
+Prompts me to tell of th’ other guide, for whom
+Such good of mine is spoken. Where one is,
+The other worthily should also be;
+That as their warfare was alike, alike
+Should be their glory. Slow, and full of doubt,
+And with thin ranks, after its banner mov’d
+The army of Christ (which it so clearly cost
+To reappoint), when its imperial Head,
+Who reigneth ever, for the drooping host
+Did make provision, thorough grace alone,
+And not through its deserving. As thou heard’st,
+Two champions to the succour of his spouse
+He sent, who by their deeds and words might join
+Again his scatter’d people. In that clime,
+Where springs the pleasant west-wind to unfold
+The fresh leaves, with which Europe sees herself
+New-garmented; nor from those billows far,
+Beyond whose chiding, after weary course,
+The sun doth sometimes hide him, safe abides
+The happy Callaroga, under guard
+Of the great shield, wherein the lion lies
+Subjected and supreme. And there was born
+The loving million of the Christian faith,
+The hollow’d wrestler, gentle to his own,
+And to his enemies terrible. So replete
+His soul with lively virtue, that when first
+Created, even in the mother’s womb,
+It prophesied. When, at the sacred font,
+The spousals were complete ’twixt faith and him,
+Where pledge of mutual safety was exchang’d,
+The dame, who was his surety, in her sleep
+Beheld the wondrous fruit, that was from him
+And from his heirs to issue. And that such
+He might be construed, as indeed he was,
+She was inspir’d to name him of his owner,
+Whose he was wholly, and so call’d him Dominic.
+And I speak of him, as the labourer,
+Whom Christ in his own garden chose to be
+His help-mate. Messenger he seem’d, and friend
+Fast-knit to Christ; and the first love he show’d,
+Was after the first counsel that Christ gave.
+Many a time his nurse, at entering found
+That he had ris’n in silence, and was prostrate,
+As who should say, “My errand was for this.”
+O happy father! Felix rightly nam’d!
+O favour’d mother! rightly nam’d Joanna!
+If that do mean, as men interpret it.
+Not for the world’s sake, for which now they pore
+Upon Ostiense and Taddeo’s page,
+But for the real manna, soon he grew
+Mighty in learning, and did set himself
+To go about the vineyard, that soon turns
+To wan and wither’d, if not tended well:
+And from the see (whose bounty to the just
+And needy is gone by, not through its fault,
+But his who fills it basely), he besought,
+No dispensation for commuted wrong,
+Nor the first vacant fortune, nor the tenth),
+That to God’s paupers rightly appertain,
+But, ’gainst an erring and degenerate world,
+Licence to fight, in favour of that seed,
+From which the twice twelve cions gird thee round.
+Then, with sage doctrine and good will to help,
+Forth on his great apostleship he far’d,
+Like torrent bursting from a lofty vein;
+And, dashing ’gainst the stocks of heresy,
+Smote fiercest, where resistance was most stout.
+Thence many rivulets have since been turn’d,
+Over the garden Catholic to lead
+Their living waters, and have fed its plants.
+
+“If such one wheel of that two-yoked car,
+Wherein the holy church defended her,
+And rode triumphant through the civil broil.
+Thou canst not doubt its fellow’s excellence,
+Which Thomas, ere my coming, hath declar’d
+So courteously unto thee. But the track,
+Which its smooth fellies made, is now deserted:
+That mouldy mother is where late were lees.
+His family, that wont to trace his path,
+Turn backward, and invert their steps; erelong
+To rue the gathering in of their ill crop,
+When the rejected tares in vain shall ask
+Admittance to the barn. I question not
+But he, who search’d our volume, leaf by leaf,
+Might still find page with this inscription on’t,
+‘I am as I was wont.’ Yet such were not
+From Acquasparta nor Casale, whence
+Of those, who come to meddle with the text,
+One stretches and another cramps its rule.
+Bonaventura’s life in me behold,
+From Bagnororegio, one, who in discharge
+Of my great offices still laid aside
+All sinister aim. Illuminato here,
+And Agostino join me: two they were,
+Among the first of those barefooted meek ones,
+Who sought God’s friendship in the cord: with them
+Hugues of Saint Victor, Pietro Mangiadore,
+And he of Spain in his twelve volumes shining,
+Nathan the prophet, Metropolitan
+Chrysostom, and Anselmo, and, who deign’d
+To put his hand to the first art, Donatus.
+Raban is here: and at my side there shines
+Calabria’s abbot, Joachim , endow’d
+With soul prophetic. The bright courtesy
+Of friar Thomas, and his goodly lore,
+Have mov’d me to the blazon of a peer
+So worthy, and with me have mov’d this throng.”
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XIII
+
+
+Let him, who would conceive what now I saw,
+Imagine (and retain the image firm,
+As mountain rock, the whilst he hears me speak),
+Of stars fifteen, from midst the ethereal host
+Selected, that, with lively ray serene,
+O’ercome the massiest air: thereto imagine
+The wain, that, in the bosom of our sky,
+Spins ever on its axle night and day,
+With the bright summit of that horn which swells
+Due from the pole, round which the first wheel rolls,
+T’ have rang’d themselves in fashion of two signs
+In heav’n, such as Ariadne made,
+When death’s chill seized her; and that one of them
+Did compass in the other’s beam; and both
+In such sort whirl around, that each should tend
+With opposite motion and, conceiving thus,
+Of that true constellation, and the dance
+Twofold, that circled me, he shall attain
+As ’twere the shadow; for things there as much
+Surpass our usage, as the swiftest heav’n
+Is swifter than the Chiana. There was sung
+No Bacchus, and no Io Paean, but
+Three Persons in the Godhead, and in one
+Substance that nature and the human join’d.
+
+The song fulfill’d its measure; and to us
+Those saintly lights attended, happier made
+At each new minist’ring. Then silence brake,
+Amid th’ accordant sons of Deity,
+That luminary, in which the wondrous life
+Of the meek man of God was told to me;
+And thus it spake: “One ear o’ th’ harvest thresh’d,
+And its grain safely stor’d, sweet charity
+Invites me with the other to like toil.
+
+“Thou know’st, that in the bosom, whence the rib
+Was ta’en to fashion that fair cheek, whose taste
+All the world pays for, and in that, which pierc’d
+By the keen lance, both after and before
+Such satisfaction offer’d, as outweighs
+Each evil in the scale, whate’er of light
+To human nature is allow’d, must all
+Have by his virtue been infus’d, who form’d
+Both one and other: and thou thence admir’st
+In that I told thee, of beatitudes
+A second, there is none, to his enclos’d
+In the fifth radiance. Open now thine eyes
+To what I answer thee; and thou shalt see
+Thy deeming and my saying meet in truth,
+As centre in the round. That which dies not,
+And that which can die, are but each the beam
+Of that idea, which our Soverign Sire
+Engendereth loving; for that lively light,
+Which passeth from his brightness; not disjoin’d
+From him, nor from his love triune with them,
+Doth, through his bounty, congregate itself,
+Mirror’d, as ’twere in new existences,
+Itself unalterable and ever one.
+
+“Descending hence unto the lowest powers,
+Its energy so sinks, at last it makes
+But brief contingencies: for so I name
+Things generated, which the heav’nly orbs
+Moving, with seed or without seed, produce.
+Their wax, and that which molds it, differ much:
+And thence with lustre, more or less, it shows
+Th’ ideal stamp impress: so that one tree
+According to his kind, hath better fruit,
+And worse: and, at your birth, ye, mortal men,
+Are in your talents various. Were the wax
+Molded with nice exactness, and the heav’n
+In its disposing influence supreme,
+The lustre of the seal should be complete:
+But nature renders it imperfect ever,
+Resembling thus the artist in her work,
+Whose faultering hand is faithless to his skill.
+Howe’er, if love itself dispose, and mark
+The primal virtue, kindling with bright view,
+There all perfection is vouchsafed; and such
+The clay was made, accomplish’d with each gift,
+That life can teem with; such the burden fill’d
+The virgin’s bosom: so that I commend
+Thy judgment, that the human nature ne’er
+Was or can be, such as in them it was.
+
+“Did I advance no further than this point,
+‘How then had he no peer?’ thou might’st reply.
+But, that what now appears not, may appear
+Right plainly, ponder, who he was, and what
+(When he was bidden ‘Ask’), the motive sway’d
+To his requesting. I have spoken thus,
+That thou mayst see, he was a king, who ask’d
+For wisdom, to the end he might be king
+Sufficient: not the number to search out
+Of the celestial movers; or to know,
+If necessary with contingent e’er
+Have made necessity; or whether that
+Be granted, that first motion is; or if
+Of the mid circle can, by art, be made
+Triangle with each corner, blunt or sharp.
+
+“Whence, noting that, which I have said, and this,
+Thou kingly prudence and that ken mayst learn,
+At which the dart of my intention aims.
+And, marking clearly, that I told thee, ‘Risen,’
+Thou shalt discern it only hath respect
+To kings, of whom are many, and the good
+Are rare. With this distinction take my words;
+And they may well consist with that which thou
+Of the first human father dost believe,
+And of our well-beloved. And let this
+Henceforth be led unto thy feet, to make
+Thee slow in motion, as a weary man,
+Both to the ‘yea’ and to the ‘nay’ thou seest not.
+For he among the fools is down full low,
+Whose affirmation, or denial, is
+Without distinction, in each case alike
+Since it befalls, that in most instances
+Current opinion leads to false: and then
+Affection bends the judgment to her ply.
+
+“Much more than vainly doth he loose from shore,
+Since he returns not such as he set forth,
+Who fishes for the truth and wanteth skill.
+And open proofs of this unto the world
+Have been afforded in Parmenides,
+Melissus, Bryso, and the crowd beside,
+Who journey’d on, and knew not whither: so did
+Sabellius, Arius, and the other fools,
+Who, like to scymitars, reflected back
+The scripture-image, by distortion marr’d.
+
+“Let not the people be too swift to judge,
+As one who reckons on the blades in field,
+Or ere the crop be ripe. For I have seen
+The thorn frown rudely all the winter long
+And after bear the rose upon its top;
+And bark, that all the way across the sea
+Ran straight and speedy, perish at the last,
+E’en in the haven’s mouth seeing one steal,
+Another brine, his offering to the priest,
+Let not Dame Birtha and Sir Martin thence
+Into heav’n’s counsels deem that they can pry:
+For one of these may rise, the other fall.”
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XIV
+
+
+From centre to the circle, and so back
+From circle to the centre, water moves
+In the round chalice, even as the blow
+Impels it, inwardly, or from without.
+Such was the image glanc’d into my mind,
+As the great spirit of Aquinum ceas’d;
+And Beatrice after him her words
+Resum’d alternate: “Need there is (tho’ yet
+He tells it to you not in words, nor e’en
+In thought) that he should fathom to its depth
+Another mystery. Tell him, if the light,
+Wherewith your substance blooms, shall stay with you
+Eternally, as now: and, if it doth,
+How, when ye shall regain your visible forms,
+The sight may without harm endure the change,
+That also tell.” As those, who in a ring
+Tread the light measure, in their fitful mirth
+Raise loud the voice, and spring with gladder bound;
+Thus, at the hearing of that pious suit,
+The saintly circles in their tourneying
+And wond’rous note attested new delight.
+
+Whoso laments, that we must doff this garb
+Of frail mortality, thenceforth to live
+Immortally above, he hath not seen
+The sweet refreshing, of that heav’nly shower.
+
+Him, who lives ever, and for ever reigns
+In mystic union of the Three in One,
+Unbounded, bounding all, each spirit thrice
+Sang, with such melody, as but to hear
+For highest merit were an ample meed.
+And from the lesser orb the goodliest light,
+With gentle voice and mild, such as perhaps
+The angel’s once to Mary, thus replied:
+“Long as the joy of Paradise shall last,
+Our love shall shine around that raiment, bright,
+As fervent; fervent, as in vision blest;
+And that as far in blessedness exceeding,
+As it hath grave beyond its virtue great.
+Our shape, regarmented with glorious weeds
+Of saintly flesh, must, being thus entire,
+Show yet more gracious. Therefore shall increase,
+Whate’er of light, gratuitous, imparts
+The Supreme Good; light, ministering aid,
+The better disclose his glory: whence
+The vision needs increasing, much increase
+The fervour, which it kindles; and that too
+The ray, that comes from it. But as the greed
+Which gives out flame, yet it its whiteness shines
+More lively than that, and so preserves
+Its proper semblance; thus this circling sphere
+Of splendour, shall to view less radiant seem,
+Than shall our fleshly robe, which yonder earth
+Now covers. Nor will such excess of light
+O’erpower us, in corporeal organs made
+Firm, and susceptible of all delight.”
+
+So ready and so cordial an “Amen,”
+Followed from either choir, as plainly spoke
+Desire of their dead bodies; yet perchance
+Not for themselves, but for their kindred dear,
+Mothers and sires, and those whom best they lov’d,
+Ere they were made imperishable flame.
+
+And lo! forthwith there rose up round about
+A lustre over that already there,
+Of equal clearness, like the brightening up
+Of the horizon. As at an evening hour
+Of twilight, new appearances through heav’n
+Peer with faint glimmer, doubtfully descried;
+So there new substances, methought began
+To rise in view; and round the other twain
+Enwheeling, sweep their ampler circuit wide.
+
+O gentle glitter of eternal beam!
+With what a such whiteness did it flow,
+O’erpowering vision in me! But so fair,
+So passing lovely, Beatrice show’d,
+Mind cannot follow it, nor words express
+Her infinite sweetness. Thence mine eyes regain’d
+Power to look up, and I beheld myself,
+Sole with my lady, to more lofty bliss
+Translated: for the star, with warmer smile
+Impurpled, well denoted our ascent.
+
+With all the heart, and with that tongue which speaks
+The same in all, an holocaust I made
+To God, befitting the new grace vouchsaf’d.
+And from my bosom had not yet upsteam’d
+The fuming of that incense, when I knew
+The rite accepted. With such mighty sheen
+And mantling crimson, in two listed rays
+The splendours shot before me, that I cried,
+“God of Sabaoth! that does prank them thus!”
+
+As leads the galaxy from pole to pole,
+Distinguish’d into greater lights and less,
+Its pathway, which the wisest fail to spell;
+So thickly studded, in the depth of Mars,
+Those rays describ’d the venerable sign,
+That quadrants in the round conjoining frame.
+Here memory mocks the toil of genius. Christ
+Beam’d on that cross; and pattern fails me now.
+But whoso takes his cross, and follows Christ
+Will pardon me for that I leave untold,
+When in the flecker’d dawning he shall spy
+The glitterance of Christ. From horn to horn,
+And ’tween the summit and the base did move
+Lights, scintillating, as they met and pass’d.
+Thus oft are seen, with ever-changeful glance,
+Straight or athwart, now rapid and now slow,
+The atomies of bodies, long or short,
+To move along the sunbeam, whose slant line
+Checkers the shadow, interpos’d by art
+Against the noontide heat. And as the chime
+Of minstrel music, dulcimer, and help
+With many strings, a pleasant dining makes
+To him, who heareth not distinct the note;
+So from the lights, which there appear’d to me,
+Gather’d along the cross a melody,
+That, indistinctly heard, with ravishment
+Possess’d me. Yet I mark’d it was a hymn
+Of lofty praises; for there came to me
+“Arise and conquer,” as to one who hears
+And comprehends not. Me such ecstasy
+O’ercame, that never till that hour was thing
+That held me in so sweet imprisonment.
+
+Perhaps my saying over bold appears,
+Accounting less the pleasure of those eyes,
+Whereon to look fulfilleth all desire.
+But he, who is aware those living seals
+Of every beauty work with quicker force,
+The higher they are ris’n; and that there
+I had not turn’d me to them; he may well
+Excuse me that, whereof in my excuse
+I do accuse me, and may own my truth;
+That holy pleasure here not yet reveal’d,
+Which grows in transport as we mount aloof.
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XV
+
+
+True love, that ever shows itself as clear
+In kindness, as loose appetite in wrong,
+Silenced that lyre harmonious, and still’d
+The sacred chords, that are by heav’n’s right hand
+Unwound and tighten’d, flow to righteous prayers
+Should they not hearken, who, to give me will
+For praying, in accordance thus were mute?
+He hath in sooth good cause for endless grief,
+Who, for the love of thing that lasteth not,
+Despoils himself forever of that love.
+
+As oft along the still and pure serene,
+At nightfall, glides a sudden trail of fire,
+Attracting with involuntary heed
+The eye to follow it, erewhile at rest,
+And seems some star that shifted place in heav’n,
+Only that, whence it kindles, none is lost,
+And it is soon extinct; thus from the horn,
+That on the dexter of the cross extends,
+Down to its foot, one luminary ran
+From mid the cluster shone there; yet no gem
+Dropp’d from its foil; and through the beamy list
+Like flame in alabaster, glow’d its course.
+
+So forward stretch’d him (if of credence aught
+Our greater muse may claim) the pious ghost
+Of old Anchises, in the’ Elysian bower,
+When he perceiv’d his son. “O thou, my blood!
+O most exceeding grace divine! to whom,
+As now to thee, hath twice the heav’nly gate
+Been e’er unclos’d?” so spake the light; whence I
+Turn’d me toward him; then unto my dame
+My sight directed, and on either side
+Amazement waited me; for in her eyes
+Was lighted such a smile, I thought that mine
+Had div’d unto the bottom of my grace
+And of my bliss in Paradise. Forthwith
+To hearing and to sight grateful alike,
+The spirit to his proem added things
+I understood not, so profound he spake;
+Yet not of choice but through necessity
+Mysterious; for his high conception scar’d
+Beyond the mark of mortals. When the flight
+Of holy transport had so spent its rage,
+That nearer to the level of our thought
+The speech descended, the first sounds I heard
+Were, “Best he thou, Triunal Deity!
+That hast such favour in my seed vouchsaf’d!”
+Then follow’d: “No unpleasant thirst, tho’ long,
+Which took me reading in the sacred book,
+Whose leaves or white or dusky never change,
+Thou hast allay’d, my son, within this light,
+From whence my voice thou hear’st; more thanks to her.
+Who for such lofty mounting has with plumes
+Begirt thee. Thou dost deem thy thoughts to me
+From him transmitted, who is first of all,
+E’en as all numbers ray from unity;
+And therefore dost not ask me who I am,
+Or why to thee more joyous I appear,
+Than any other in this gladsome throng.
+The truth is as thou deem’st; for in this hue
+Both less and greater in that mirror look,
+In which thy thoughts, or ere thou think’st, are shown.
+But, that the love, which keeps me wakeful ever,
+Urging with sacred thirst of sweet desire,
+May be contended fully, let thy voice,
+Fearless, and frank and jocund, utter forth
+Thy will distinctly, utter forth the wish,
+Whereto my ready answer stands decreed.”
+
+I turn’d me to Beatrice; and she heard
+Ere I had spoken, smiling, an assent,
+That to my will gave wings; and I began
+“To each among your tribe, what time ye kenn’d
+The nature, in whom naught unequal dwells,
+Wisdom and love were in one measure dealt;
+For that they are so equal in the sun,
+From whence ye drew your radiance and your heat,
+As makes all likeness scant. But will and means,
+In mortals, for the cause ye well discern,
+With unlike wings are fledge. A mortal I
+Experience inequality like this,
+And therefore give no thanks, but in the heart,
+For thy paternal greeting. This howe’er
+I pray thee, living topaz! that ingemm’st
+This precious jewel, let me hear thy name.”
+
+“I am thy root, O leaf! whom to expect
+Even, hath pleas’d me: “thus the prompt reply
+Prefacing, next it added; “he, of whom
+Thy kindred appellation comes, and who,
+These hundred years and more, on its first ledge
+Hath circuited the mountain, was my son
+And thy great grandsire. Well befits, his long
+Endurance should he shorten’d by thy deeds.
+
+“Florence, within her ancient limit-mark,
+Which calls her still to matin prayers and noon,
+Was chaste and sober, and abode in peace.
+She had no armlets and no head-tires then,
+No purfled dames, no zone, that caught the eye
+More than the person did. Time was not yet,
+When at his daughter’s birth the sire grew pale.
+For fear the age and dowry should exceed
+On each side just proportion. House was none
+Void of its family; nor yet had come
+Hardanapalus, to exhibit feats
+Of chamber prowess. Montemalo yet
+O’er our suburban turret rose; as much
+To be surpass in fall, as in its rising.
+I saw Bellincione Berti walk abroad
+In leathern girdle and a clasp of bone;
+And, with no artful colouring on her cheeks,
+His lady leave the glass. The sons I saw
+Of Nerli and of Vecchio well content
+With unrob’d jerkin; and their good dames handling
+The spindle and the flax; O happy they!
+Each sure of burial in her native land,
+And none left desolate a-bed for France!
+One wak’d to tend the cradle, hushing it
+With sounds that lull’d the parent’s infancy:
+Another, with her maidens, drawing off
+The tresses from the distaff, lectur’d them
+Old tales of Troy and Fesole and Rome.
+A Salterello and Cianghella we
+Had held as strange a marvel, as ye would
+A Cincinnatus or Cornelia now.
+
+“In such compos’d and seemly fellowship,
+Such faithful and such fair equality,
+In so sweet household, Mary at my birth
+Bestow’d me, call’d on with loud cries; and there
+In your old baptistery, I was made
+Christian at once and Cacciaguida; as were
+My brethren, Eliseo and Moronto.
+
+“From Valdipado came to me my spouse,
+And hence thy surname grew. I follow’d then
+The Emperor Conrad; and his knighthood he
+Did gird on me; in such good part he took
+My valiant service. After him I went
+To testify against that evil law,
+Whose people, by the shepherd’s fault, possess
+Your right, usurping. There, by that foul crew
+Was I releas’d from the deceitful world,
+Whose base affection many a spirit soils,
+And from the martyrdom came to this peace.”
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XVI
+
+
+O slight respect of man’s nobility!
+I never shall account it marvelous,
+That our infirm affection here below
+Thou mov’st to boasting, when I could not choose,
+E’en in that region of unwarp’d desire,
+In heav’n itself, but make my vaunt in thee!
+Yet cloak thou art soon shorten’d, for that time,
+Unless thou be eked out from day to day,
+Goes round thee with his shears. Resuming then
+With greeting such, as Rome, was first to bear,
+But since hath disaccustom’d I began;
+And Beatrice, that a little space
+Was sever’d, smil’d reminding me of her,
+Whose cough embolden’d (as the story holds)
+To first offence the doubting Guenever.
+
+“You are my sire,” said I, “you give me heart
+Freely to speak my thought: above myself
+You raise me. Through so many streams with joy
+My soul is fill’d, that gladness wells from it;
+So that it bears the mighty tide, and bursts not
+Say then, my honour’d stem! what ancestors
+Where those you sprang from, and what years were mark’d
+In your first childhood? Tell me of the fold,
+That hath Saint John for guardian, what was then
+Its state, and who in it were highest seated?”
+
+As embers, at the breathing of the wind,
+Their flame enliven, so that light I saw
+Shine at my blandishments; and, as it grew
+More fair to look on, so with voice more sweet,
+Yet not in this our modern phrase, forthwith
+It answer’d: “From the day, when it was said
+‘Hail Virgin!’ to the throes, by which my mother,
+Who now is sainted, lighten’d her of me
+Whom she was heavy with, this fire had come,
+Five hundred fifty times and thrice, its beams
+To reilumine underneath the foot
+Of its own lion. They, of whom I sprang,
+And I, had there our birth-place, where the last
+Partition of our city first is reach’d
+By him, that runs her annual game. Thus much
+Suffice of my forefathers: who they were,
+And whence they hither came, more honourable
+It is to pass in silence than to tell.
+All those, who in that time were there from Mars
+Until the Baptist, fit to carry arms,
+Were but the fifth of them this day alive.
+But then the citizen’s blood, that now is mix’d
+From Campi and Certaldo and Fighine,
+Ran purely through the last mechanic’s veins.
+O how much better were it, that these people
+Were neighbours to you, and that at Galluzzo
+And at Trespiano, ye should have your bound’ry,
+Than to have them within, and bear the stench
+Of Aguglione’s hind, and Signa’s, him,
+That hath his eye already keen for bart’ring!
+Had not the people, which of all the world
+Degenerates most, been stepdame unto Caesar,
+But, as a mother, gracious to her son;
+Such one, as hath become a Florentine,
+And trades and traffics, had been turn’d adrift
+To Simifonte, where his grandsire ply’d
+The beggar’s craft. The Conti were possess’d
+Of Montemurlo still: the Cerchi still
+Were in Acone’s parish; nor had haply
+From Valdigrieve past the Buondelmonte.
+The city’s malady hath ever source
+In the confusion of its persons, as
+The body’s, in variety of food:
+And the blind bull falls with a steeper plunge,
+Than the blind lamb; and oftentimes one sword
+Doth more and better execution,
+Than five. Mark Luni, Urbisaglia mark,
+How they are gone, and after them how go
+Chiusi and Sinigaglia; and ’twill seem
+No longer new or strange to thee to hear,
+That families fail, when cities have their end.
+All things, that appertain t’ ye, like yourselves,
+Are mortal: but mortality in some
+Ye mark not, they endure so long, and you
+Pass by so suddenly. And as the moon
+Doth, by the rolling of her heav’nly sphere,
+Hide and reveal the strand unceasingly;
+So fortune deals with Florence. Hence admire not
+At what of them I tell thee, whose renown
+Time covers, the first Florentines. I saw
+The Ughi, Catilini and Filippi,
+The Alberichi, Greci and Ormanni,
+Now in their wane, illustrious citizens:
+And great as ancient, of Sannella him,
+With him of Arca saw, and Soldanieri
+And Ardinghi, and Bostichi. At the poop,
+That now is laden with new felony,
+So cumb’rous it may speedily sink the bark,
+The Ravignani sat, of whom is sprung
+The County Guido, and whoso hath since
+His title from the fam’d Bellincione ta’en.
+Fair governance was yet an art well priz’d
+By him of Pressa: Galigaio show’d
+The gilded hilt and pommel, in his house.
+The column, cloth’d with verrey, still was seen
+Unshaken: the Sacchetti still were great,
+Giouchi, Sifanti, Galli and Barucci,
+With them who blush to hear the bushel nam’d.
+Of the Calfucci still the branchy trunk
+Was in its strength: and to the curule chairs
+Sizii and Arigucci yet were drawn.
+How mighty them I saw, whom since their pride
+Hath undone! and in all her goodly deeds
+Florence was by the bullets of bright gold
+O’erflourish’d. Such the sires of those, who now,
+As surely as your church is vacant, flock
+Into her consistory, and at leisure
+There stall them and grow fat. The o’erweening brood,
+That plays the dragon after him that flees,
+But unto such, as turn and show the tooth,
+Ay or the purse, is gentle as a lamb,
+Was on its rise, but yet so slight esteem’d,
+That Ubertino of Donati grudg’d
+His father-in-law should yoke him to its tribe.
+Already Caponsacco had descended
+Into the mart from Fesole: and Giuda
+And Infangato were good citizens.
+A thing incredible I tell, tho’ true:
+The gateway, named from those of Pera, led
+Into the narrow circuit of your walls.
+Each one, who bears the sightly quarterings
+Of the great Baron (he whose name and worth
+The festival of Thomas still revives)
+His knighthood and his privilege retain’d;
+Albeit one, who borders them With gold,
+This day is mingled with the common herd.
+In Borgo yet the Gualterotti dwelt,
+And Importuni: well for its repose
+Had it still lack’d of newer neighbourhood.
+The house, from whence your tears have had their spring,
+Through the just anger that hath murder’d ye
+And put a period to your gladsome days,
+Was honour’d, it, and those consorted with it.
+O Buondelmonte! what ill counseling
+Prevail’d on thee to break the plighted bond
+Many, who now are weeping, would rejoice,
+Had God to Ema giv’n thee, the first time
+Thou near our city cam’st. But so was doom’d:
+On that maim’d stone set up to guard the bridge,
+At thy last peace, the victim, Florence! fell.
+With these and others like to them, I saw
+Florence in such assur’d tranquility,
+She had no cause at which to grieve: with these
+Saw her so glorious and so just, that ne’er
+The lily from the lance had hung reverse,
+Or through division been with vermeil dyed.”
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XVII
+
+
+Such as the youth, who came to Clymene
+To certify himself of that reproach,
+Which had been fasten’d on him, (he whose end
+Still makes the fathers chary to their sons,
+E’en such was I; nor unobserv’d was such
+Of Beatrice, and that saintly lamp,
+Who had erewhile for me his station mov’d;
+When thus by lady: “Give thy wish free vent,
+That it may issue, bearing true report
+Of the mind’s impress; not that aught thy words
+May to our knowledge add, but to the end,
+That thou mayst use thyself to own thy thirst
+And men may mingle for thee when they hear.”
+
+“O plant! from whence I spring! rever’d and lov’d!
+Who soar’st so high a pitch, thou seest as clear,
+As earthly thought determines two obtuse
+In one triangle not contain’d, so clear
+Dost see contingencies, ere in themselves
+Existent, looking at the point whereto
+All times are present, I, the whilst I scal’d
+With Virgil the soul purifying mount,
+And visited the nether world of woe,
+Touching my future destiny have heard
+Words grievous, though I feel me on all sides
+Well squar’d to fortune’s blows. Therefore my will
+Were satisfied to know the lot awaits me,
+The arrow, seen beforehand, slacks its flight.”
+
+So said I to the brightness, which erewhile
+To me had spoken, and my will declar’d,
+As Beatrice will’d, explicitly.
+Nor with oracular response obscure,
+Such, as or ere the Lamb of God was slain,
+Beguil’d the credulous nations; but, in terms
+Precise and unambiguous lore, replied
+The spirit of paternal love, enshrin’d,
+Yet in his smile apparent; and thus spake:
+“Contingency, unfolded not to view
+Upon the tablet of your mortal mold,
+Is all depictur’d in the’ eternal sight;
+But hence deriveth not necessity,
+More then the tall ship, hurried down the flood,
+Doth from the vision, that reflects the scene.
+From thence, as to the ear sweet harmony
+From organ comes, so comes before mine eye
+The time prepar’d for thee. Such as driv’n out
+From Athens, by his cruel stepdame’s wiles,
+Hippolytus departed, such must thou
+Depart from Florence. This they wish, and this
+Contrive, and will ere long effectuate, there,
+Where gainful merchandize is made of Christ,
+Throughout the livelong day. The common cry,
+Will, as ’tis ever wont, affix the blame
+Unto the party injur’d: but the truth
+Shall, in the vengeance it dispenseth, find
+A faithful witness. Thou shall leave each thing
+Belov’d most dearly: this is the first shaft
+Shot from the bow of exile. Thou shalt prove
+How salt the savour is of other’s bread,
+How hard the passage to descend and climb
+By other’s stairs, But that shall gall thee most
+Will he the worthless and vile company,
+With whom thou must be thrown into these straits.
+For all ungrateful, impious all and mad,
+Shall turn ’gainst thee: but in a little while
+Theirs and not thine shall be the crimson’d brow
+Their course shall so evince their brutishness
+T’ have ta’en thy stand apart shall well become thee.
+
+“First refuge thou must find, first place of rest,
+In the great Lombard’s courtesy, who bears
+Upon the ladder perch’d the sacred bird.
+He shall behold thee with such kind regard,
+That ’twixt ye two, the contrary to that
+Which falls ’twixt other men, the granting shall
+Forerun the asking. With him shalt thou see
+That mortal, who was at his birth impress
+So strongly from this star, that of his deeds
+The nations shall take note. His unripe age
+Yet holds him from observance; for these wheels
+Only nine years have compass him about.
+But, ere the Gascon practice on great Harry,
+Sparkles of virtue shall shoot forth in him,
+In equal scorn of labours and of gold.
+His bounty shall be spread abroad so widely,
+As not to let the tongues e’en of his foes
+Be idle in its praise. Look thou to him
+And his beneficence: for he shall cause
+Reversal of their lot to many people,
+Rich men and beggars interchanging fortunes.
+And thou shalt bear this written in thy soul
+Of him, but tell it not; “and things he told
+Incredible to those who witness them;
+Then added: “So interpret thou, my son,
+What hath been told thee.—Lo! the ambushment
+That a few circling seasons hide for thee!
+Yet envy not thy neighbours: time extends
+Thy span beyond their treason’s chastisement.”
+
+Soon, as the saintly spirit, by his silence,
+Had shown the web, which I had streteh’d for him
+Upon the warp, was woven, I began,
+As one, who in perplexity desires
+Counsel of other, wise, benign and friendly:
+“My father! well I mark how time spurs on
+Toward me, ready to inflict the blow,
+Which falls most heavily on him, who most
+Abandoned himself. Therefore ’tis good
+I should forecast, that driven from the place
+Most dear to me, I may not lose myself
+All others by my song. Down through the world
+Of infinite mourning, and along the mount
+From whose fair height my lady’s eyes did lift me,
+And after through this heav’n from light to light,
+Have I learnt that, which if I tell again,
+It may with many woefully disrelish;
+And, if I am a timid friend to truth,
+I fear my life may perish among those,
+To whom these days shall be of ancient date.”
+
+The brightness, where enclos’d the treasure smil’d,
+Which I had found there, first shone glisteningly,
+Like to a golden mirror in the sun;
+Next answer’d: “Conscience, dimm’d or by its own
+Or other’s shame, will feel thy saying sharp.
+Thou, notwithstanding, all deceit remov’d,
+See the whole vision be made manifest.
+And let them wince who have their withers wrung.
+What though, when tasted first, thy voice shall prove
+Unwelcome, on digestion it will turn
+To vital nourishment. The cry thou raisest,
+Shall, as the wind doth, smite the proudest summits;
+Which is of honour no light argument,
+For this there only have been shown to thee,
+Throughout these orbs, the mountain, and the deep,
+Spirits, whom fame hath note of. For the mind
+Of him, who hears, is loth to acquiesce
+And fix its faith, unless the instance brought
+Be palpable, and proof apparent urge.”
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XVIII
+
+
+Now in his word, sole, ruminating, joy’d
+That blessed spirit; and I fed on mine,
+Tempting the sweet with bitter: she meanwhile,
+Who led me unto God, admonish’d: “Muse
+On other thoughts: bethink thee, that near Him
+I dwell, who recompenseth every wrong.”
+
+At the sweet sounds of comfort straight I turn’d;
+And, in the saintly eyes what love was seen,
+I leave in silence here: nor through distrust
+Of my words only, but that to such bliss
+The mind remounts not without aid. Thus much
+Yet may I speak; that, as I gaz’d on her,
+Affection found no room for other wish.
+While the everlasting pleasure, that did full
+On Beatrice shine, with second view
+From her fair countenance my gladden’d soul
+Contented; vanquishing me with a beam
+Of her soft smile, she spake: “Turn thee, and list.
+These eyes are not thy only Paradise.”
+
+As here we sometimes in the looks may see
+Th’ affection mark’d, when that its sway hath ta’en
+The spirit wholly; thus the hallow’d light,
+To whom I turn’d, flashing, bewray’d its will
+To talk yet further with me, and began:
+“On this fifth lodgment of the tree, whose life
+Is from its top, whose fruit is ever fair
+And leaf unwith’ring, blessed spirits abide,
+That were below, ere they arriv’d in heav’n,
+So mighty in renown, as every muse
+Might grace her triumph with them. On the horns
+Look therefore of the cross: he, whom I name,
+Shall there enact, as doth 1n summer cloud
+Its nimble fire.” Along the cross I saw,
+At the repeated name of Joshua,
+A splendour gliding; nor, the word was said,
+Ere it was done: then, at the naming saw
+Of the great Maccabee, another move
+With whirling speed; and gladness was the scourge
+Unto that top. The next for Charlemagne
+And for the peer Orlando, two my gaze
+Pursued, intently, as the eye pursues
+A falcon flying. Last, along the cross,
+William, and Renard, and Duke Godfrey drew
+My ken, and Robert Guiscard. And the soul,
+Who spake with me among the other lights
+Did move away, and mix; and with the choir
+Of heav’nly songsters prov’d his tuneful skill.
+
+To Beatrice on my right l bent,
+Looking for intimation or by word
+Or act, what next behoov’d; and did descry
+Such mere effulgence in her eyes, such joy,
+It past all former wont. And, as by sense
+Of new delight, the man, who perseveres
+In good deeds doth perceive from day to day
+His virtue growing; I e’en thus perceiv’d
+Of my ascent, together with the heav’n
+The circuit widen’d, noting the increase
+Of beauty in that wonder. Like the change
+In a brief moment on some maiden’s cheek,
+Which from its fairness doth discharge the weight
+Of pudency, that stain’d it; such in her,
+And to mine eyes so sudden was the change,
+Through silvery whiteness of that temperate star,
+Whose sixth orb now enfolded us. I saw,
+Within that Jovial cresset, the clear sparks
+Of love, that reign’d there, fashion to my view
+Our language. And as birds, from river banks
+Arisen, now in round, now lengthen’d troop,
+Array them in their flight, greeting, as seems,
+Their new-found pastures; so, within the lights,
+The saintly creatures flying, sang, and made
+Now D. now I. now L. figur’d I’ th’ air.
+First, singing, to their notes they mov’d, then one
+Becoming of these signs, a little while
+Did rest them, and were mute. O nymph divine
+Of Pegasean race! whose souls, which thou
+Inspir’st, mak’st glorious and long-liv’d, as they
+Cities and realms by thee! thou with thyself
+Inform me; that I may set forth the shapes,
+As fancy doth present them. Be thy power
+Display’d in this brief song. The characters,
+Vocal and consonant, were five-fold seven.
+In order each, as they appear’d, I mark’d.
+Diligite Justitiam, the first,
+Both verb and noun all blazon’d; and the extreme
+Qui judicatis terram. In the M.
+Of the fifth word they held their station,
+Making the star seem silver streak’d with gold.
+And on the summit of the M. I saw
+Descending other lights, that rested there,
+Singing, methinks, their bliss and primal good.
+Then, as at shaking of a lighted brand,
+Sparkles innumerable on all sides
+Rise scatter’d, source of augury to th’ unwise;
+Thus more than thousand twinkling lustres hence
+Seem’d reascending, and a higher pitch
+Some mounting, and some less; e’en as the sun,
+Which kindleth them, decreed. And when each one
+Had settled in his place, the head and neck
+Then saw I of an eagle, lively
+Grav’d in that streaky fire. Who painteth there,
+Hath none to guide him; of himself he guides;
+And every line and texture of the nest
+Doth own from him the virtue, fashions it.
+The other bright beatitude, that seem’d
+Erewhile, with lilied crowning, well content
+To over-canopy the M. mov’d forth,
+Following gently the impress of the bird.
+
+ Sweet star! what glorious and thick-studded gems
+Declar’d to me our justice on the earth
+To be the effluence of that heav’n, which thou,
+Thyself a costly jewel, dost inlay!
+Therefore I pray the Sovran Mind, from whom
+Thy motion and thy virtue are begun,
+That he would look from whence the fog doth rise,
+To vitiate thy beam: so that once more
+He may put forth his hand ’gainst such, as drive
+Their traffic in that sanctuary, whose walls
+With miracles and martyrdoms were built.
+
+Ye host of heaven! whose glory I survey l
+O beg ye grace for those, that are on earth
+All after ill example gone astray.
+War once had for its instrument the sword:
+But now ’tis made, taking the bread away
+Which the good Father locks from none.—And thou,
+That writes but to cancel, think, that they,
+Who for the vineyard, which thou wastest, died,
+Peter and Paul live yet, and mark thy doings.
+Thou hast good cause to cry, “My heart so cleaves
+To him, that liv’d in solitude remote,
+And from the wilds was dragg’d to martyrdom,
+I wist not of the fisherman nor Paul.”
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XIX
+
+
+Before my sight appear’d, with open wings,
+The beauteous image, in fruition sweet
+Gladdening the thronged spirits. Each did seem
+A little ruby, whereon so intense
+The sun-beam glow’d that to mine eyes it came
+In clear refraction. And that, which next
+Befalls me to portray, voice hath not utter’d,
+Nor hath ink written, nor in fantasy
+Was e’er conceiv’d. For I beheld and heard
+The beak discourse; and, what intention form’d
+Of many, singly as of one express,
+Beginning: “For that I was just and piteous,
+l am exalted to this height of glory,
+The which no wish exceeds: and there on earth
+Have I my memory left, e’en by the bad
+Commended, while they leave its course untrod.”
+
+Thus is one heat from many embers felt,
+As in that image many were the loves,
+And one the voice, that issued from them all.
+Whence I address them: “O perennial flowers
+Of gladness everlasting! that exhale
+In single breath your odours manifold!
+Breathe now; and let the hunger be appeas’d,
+That with great craving long hath held my soul,
+Finding no food on earth. This well I know,
+That if there be in heav’n a realm, that shows
+In faithful mirror the celestial Justice,
+Yours without veil reflects it. Ye discern
+The heed, wherewith I do prepare myself
+To hearken; ye the doubt that urges me
+With such inveterate craving.” Straight I saw,
+Like to a falcon issuing from the hood,
+That rears his head, and claps him with his wings,
+His beauty and his eagerness bewraying.
+So saw I move that stately sign, with praise
+Of grace divine inwoven and high song
+Of inexpressive joy. “He,” it began,
+“Who turn’d his compass on the world’s extreme,
+And in that space so variously hath wrought,
+Both openly, and in secret, in such wise
+Could not through all the universe display
+Impression of his glory, that the Word
+Of his omniscience should not still remain
+In infinite excess. In proof whereof,
+He first through pride supplanted, who was sum
+Of each created being, waited not
+For light celestial, and abortive fell.
+Whence needs each lesser nature is but scant
+Receptacle unto that Good, which knows
+No limit, measur’d by itself alone.
+Therefore your sight, of th’ omnipresent Mind
+A single beam, its origin must own
+Surpassing far its utmost potency.
+The ken, your world is gifted with, descends
+In th’ everlasting Justice as low down,
+As eye doth in the sea; which though it mark
+The bottom from the shore, in the wide main
+Discerns it not; and ne’ertheless it is,
+But hidden through its deepness. Light is none,
+Save that which cometh from the pure serene
+Of ne’er disturbed ether: for the rest,
+’Tis darkness all, or shadow of the flesh,
+Or else its poison. Here confess reveal’d
+That covert, which hath hidden from thy search
+The living justice, of the which thou mad’st
+Such frequent question; for thou saidst—‘A man
+Is born on Indus’ banks, and none is there
+Who speaks of Christ, nor who doth read nor write,
+And all his inclinations and his acts,
+As far as human reason sees, are good,
+And he offendeth not in word or deed.
+But unbaptiz’d he dies, and void of faith.
+Where is the justice that condemns him? where
+His blame, if he believeth not?’—What then,
+And who art thou, that on the stool wouldst sit
+To judge at distance of a thousand miles
+With the short-sighted vision of a span?
+To him, who subtilizes thus with me,
+There would assuredly be room for doubt
+Even to wonder, did not the safe word
+Of scripture hold supreme authority.
+
+“O animals of clay! O spirits gross I
+The primal will, that in itself is good,
+Hath from itself, the chief Good, ne’er been mov’d.
+Justice consists in consonance with it,
+Derivable by no created good,
+Whose very cause depends upon its beam.”
+
+As on her nest the stork, that turns about
+Unto her young, whom lately she hath fed,
+While they with upward eyes do look on her;
+So lifted I my gaze; and bending so
+The ever-blessed image wav’d its wings,
+Lab’ring with such deep counsel. Wheeling round
+It warbled, and did say: “As are my notes
+To thee, who understand’st them not, such is
+Th’ eternal judgment unto mortal ken.”
+
+Then still abiding in that ensign rang’d,
+Wherewith the Romans over-awed the world,
+Those burning splendours of the Holy Spirit
+Took up the strain; and thus it spake again:
+“None ever hath ascended to this realm,
+Who hath not a believer been in Christ,
+Either before or after the blest limbs
+Were nail’d upon the wood. But lo! of those
+Who call ‘Christ, Christ,’ there shall be many found,
+ In judgment, further off from him by far,
+Than such, to whom his name was never known.
+Christians like these the Ethiop shall condemn:
+When that the two assemblages shall part;
+One rich eternally, the other poor.
+
+“What may the Persians say unto your kings,
+When they shall see that volume, in the which
+All their dispraise is written, spread to view?
+There amidst Albert’s works shall that be read,
+Which will give speedy motion to the pen,
+When Prague shall mourn her desolated realm.
+There shall be read the woe, that he doth work
+With his adulterate money on the Seine,
+Who by the tusk will perish: there be read
+The thirsting pride, that maketh fool alike
+The English and Scot, impatient of their bound.
+There shall be seen the Spaniard’s luxury,
+The delicate living there of the Bohemian,
+Who still to worth has been a willing stranger.
+The halter of Jerusalem shall see
+A unit for his virtue, for his vices
+No less a mark than million. He, who guards
+The isle of fire by old Anchises honour’d
+Shall find his avarice there and cowardice;
+And better to denote his littleness,
+The writing must be letters maim’d, that speak
+Much in a narrow space. All there shall know
+His uncle and his brother’s filthy doings,
+Who so renown’d a nation and two crowns
+Have bastardized. And they, of Portugal
+And Norway, there shall be expos’d with him
+Of Ratza, who hath counterfeited ill
+The coin of Venice. O blest Hungary!
+If thou no longer patiently abid’st
+Thy ill-entreating! and, O blest Navarre!
+If with thy mountainous girdle thou wouldst arm thee
+In earnest of that day, e’en now are heard
+Wailings and groans in Famagosta’s streets
+And Nicosia’s, grudging at their beast,
+Who keepeth even footing with the rest.”
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XX
+
+
+When, disappearing, from our hemisphere,
+The world’s enlightener vanishes, and day
+On all sides wasteth, suddenly the sky,
+Erewhile irradiate only with his beam,
+Is yet again unfolded, putting forth
+Innumerable lights wherein one shines.
+Of such vicissitude in heaven I thought,
+As the great sign, that marshaleth the world
+And the world’s leaders, in the blessed beak
+Was silent; for that all those living lights,
+Waxing in splendour, burst forth into songs,
+Such as from memory glide and fall away.
+
+Sweet love! that dost apparel thee in smiles,
+How lustrous was thy semblance in those sparkles,
+Which merely are from holy thoughts inspir’d!
+
+After the precious and bright beaming stones,
+That did ingem the sixth light, ceas’d the chiming
+Of their angelic bells; methought I heard
+The murmuring of a river, that doth fall
+From rock to rock transpicuous, making known
+The richness of his spring-head: and as sound
+Of cistern, at the fret-board, or of pipe,
+Is, at the wind-hole, modulate and tun’d;
+Thus up the neck, as it were hollow, rose
+That murmuring of the eagle, and forthwith
+Voice there assum’d, and thence along the beak
+Issued in form of words, such as my heart
+Did look for, on whose tables I inscrib’d them.
+
+“The part in me, that sees, and bears the sun,,
+In mortal eagles,” it began, “must now
+Be noted steadfastly: for of the fires,
+That figure me, those, glittering in mine eye,
+Are chief of all the greatest. This, that shines
+Midmost for pupil, was the same, who sang
+The Holy Spirit’s song, and bare about
+The ark from town to town; now doth he know
+The merit of his soul-impassion’d strains
+By their well-fitted guerdon. Of the five,
+That make the circle of the vision, he
+Who to the beak is nearest, comforted
+The widow for her son: now doth he know
+How dear he costeth not to follow Christ,
+Both from experience of this pleasant life,
+And of its opposite. He next, who follows
+In the circumference, for the over arch,
+By true repenting slack’d the pace of death:
+Now knoweth he, that the degrees of heav’n
+Alter not, when through pious prayer below
+Today’s is made tomorrow’s destiny.
+The other following, with the laws and me,
+To yield the shepherd room, pass’d o’er to Greece,
+From good intent producing evil fruit:
+Now knoweth he, how all the ill, deriv’d
+From his well doing, doth not helm him aught,
+Though it have brought destruction on the world.
+That, which thou seest in the under bow,
+Was William, whom that land bewails, which weeps
+For Charles and Frederick living: now he knows
+How well is lov’d in heav’n the righteous king,
+Which he betokens by his radiant seeming.
+Who in the erring world beneath would deem,
+That Trojan Ripheus in this round was set
+Fifth of the saintly splendours? now he knows
+Enough of that, which the world cannot see,
+The grace divine, albeit e’en his sight
+Reach not its utmost depth.” Like to the lark,
+That warbling in the air expatiates long,
+Then, trilling out his last sweet melody,
+Drops satiate with the sweetness; such appear’d
+That image stampt by the’ everlasting pleasure,
+Which fashions like itself all lovely things.
+
+I, though my doubting were as manifest,
+As is through glass the hue that mantles it,
+In silence waited not: for to my lips
+“What things are these?” involuntary rush’d,
+And forc’d a passage out: whereat I mark’d
+A sudden lightening and new revelry.
+The eye was kindled: and the blessed sign
+No more to keep me wond’ring and suspense,
+Replied: “I see that thou believ’st these things,
+Because I tell them, but discern’st not how;
+So that thy knowledge waits not on thy faith:
+As one who knows the name of thing by rote,
+But is a stranger to its properties,
+Till other’s tongue reveal them. Fervent love
+And lively hope with violence assail
+The kingdom of the heavens, and overcome
+The will of the Most high; not in such sort
+As man prevails o’er man; but conquers it,
+Because ’tis willing to be conquer’d, still,
+Though conquer’d, by its mercy conquering.
+
+“Those, in the eye who live the first and fifth,
+Cause thee to marvel, in that thou behold’st
+The region of the angels deck’d with them.
+They quitted not their bodies, as thou deem’st,
+Gentiles but Christians, in firm rooted faith,
+This of the feet in future to be pierc’d,
+That of feet nail’d already to the cross.
+One from the barrier of the dark abyss,
+Where never any with good will returns,
+Came back unto his bones. Of lively hope
+Such was the meed; of lively hope, that wing’d
+The prayers sent up to God for his release,
+And put power into them to bend his will.
+The glorious Spirit, of whom I speak to thee,
+A little while returning to the flesh,
+Believ’d in him, who had the means to help,
+And, in believing, nourish’d such a flame
+Of holy love, that at the second death
+He was made sharer in our gamesome mirth.
+The other, through the riches of that grace,
+Which from so deep a fountain doth distil,
+As never eye created saw its rising,
+Plac’d all his love below on just and right:
+Wherefore of grace God op’d in him the eye
+To the redemption of mankind to come;
+Wherein believing, he endur’d no more
+The filth of paganism, and for their ways
+Rebuk’d the stubborn nations. The three nymphs,
+Whom at the right wheel thou beheldst advancing,
+Were sponsors for him more than thousand years
+Before baptizing. O how far remov’d,
+Predestination! is thy root from such
+As see not the First cause entire: and ye,
+O mortal men! be wary how ye judge:
+For we, who see our Maker, know not yet
+The number of the chosen: and esteem
+Such scantiness of knowledge our delight:
+For all our good is in that primal good
+Concentrate, and God’s will and ours are one.”
+
+So, by that form divine, was giv’n to me
+Sweet medicine to clear and strengthen sight,
+And, as one handling skillfully the harp,
+Attendant on some skilful songster’s voice
+Bids the chords vibrate, and therein the song
+Acquires more pleasure; so, the whilst it spake,
+It doth remember me, that I beheld
+The pair of blessed luminaries move.
+Like the accordant twinkling of two eyes,
+Their beamy circlets, dancing to the sounds.
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XXI
+
+
+Again mine eyes were fix’d on Beatrice,
+And with mine eyes my soul, that in her looks
+Found all contentment. Yet no smile she wore
+And, “Did I smile,” quoth she, “thou wouldst be straight
+Like Semele when into ashes turn’d:
+For, mounting these eternal palace-stairs,
+My beauty, which the loftier it climbs,
+As thou hast noted, still doth kindle more,
+So shines, that, were no temp’ring interpos’d,
+Thy mortal puissance would from its rays
+Shrink, as the leaf doth from the thunderbolt.
+Into the seventh splendour are we wafted,
+That underneath the burning lion’s breast
+Beams, in this hour, commingled with his might,
+Thy mind be with thine eyes: and in them mirror’d
+The shape, which in this mirror shall be shown.”
+Whoso can deem, how fondly I had fed
+My sight upon her blissful countenance,
+May know, when to new thoughts I chang’d, what joy
+To do the bidding of my heav’nly guide:
+In equal balance poising either weight.
+
+Within the crystal, which records the name,
+(As its remoter circle girds the world)
+Of that lov’d monarch, in whose happy reign
+No ill had power to harm, I saw rear’d up,
+In colour like to sun-illumin’d gold.
+A ladder, which my ken pursued in vain,
+So lofty was the summit; down whose steps
+I saw the splendours in such multitude
+Descending, ev’ry light in heav’n, methought,
+Was shed thence. As the rooks, at dawn of day
+Bestirring them to dry their feathers chill,
+Some speed their way a-field, and homeward some,
+Returning, cross their flight, while some abide
+And wheel around their airy lodge; so seem’d
+That glitterance, wafted on alternate wing,
+As upon certain stair it met, and clash’d
+Its shining. And one ling’ring near us, wax’d
+So bright, that in my thought: said: “The love,
+Which this betokens me, admits no doubt.”
+
+Unwillingly from question I refrain,
+To her, by whom my silence and my speech
+Are order’d, looking for a sign: whence she,
+Who in the sight of Him, that seeth all,
+Saw wherefore I was silent, prompted me
+T’ indulge the fervent wish; and I began:
+“I am not worthy, of my own desert,
+That thou shouldst answer me; but for her sake,
+Who hath vouchsaf’d my asking, spirit blest!
+That in thy joy art shrouded! say the cause,
+Which bringeth thee so near: and wherefore, say,
+Doth the sweet symphony of Paradise
+Keep silence here, pervading with such sounds
+Of rapt devotion ev’ry lower sphere?”
+“Mortal art thou in hearing as in sight;”
+Was the reply: “and what forbade the smile
+Of Beatrice interrupts our song.
+Only to yield thee gladness of my voice,
+And of the light that vests me, I thus far
+Descend these hallow’d steps: not that more love
+Invites me; for lo! there aloft, as much
+Or more of love is witness’d in those flames:
+But such my lot by charity assign’d,
+That makes us ready servants, as thou seest,
+To execute the counsel of the Highest.
+“That in this court,” said I, “O sacred lamp!
+Love no compulsion needs, but follows free
+Th’ eternal Providence, I well discern:
+This harder find to deem, why of thy peers
+Thou only to this office wert foredoom’d.”
+I had not ended, when, like rapid mill,
+Upon its centre whirl’d the light; and then
+The love, that did inhabit there, replied:
+“Splendour eternal, piercing through these folds,
+Its virtue to my vision knits, and thus
+Supported, lifts me so above myself,
+That on the sov’ran essence, which it wells from,
+I have the power to gaze: and hence the joy,
+Wherewith I sparkle, equaling with my blaze
+The keenness of my sight. But not the soul,
+That is in heav’n most lustrous, nor the seraph
+That hath his eyes most fix’d on God, shall solve
+What thou hast ask’d: for in th’ abyss it lies
+Of th’ everlasting statute sunk so low,
+That no created ken may fathom it.
+And, to the mortal world when thou return’st,
+Be this reported; that none henceforth dare
+Direct his footsteps to so dread a bourn.
+The mind, that here is radiant, on the earth
+Is wrapt in mist. Look then if she may do,
+Below, what passeth her ability,
+When she is ta’en to heav’n.” By words like these
+Admonish’d, I the question urg’d no more;
+And of the spirit humbly sued alone
+T’ instruct me of its state. “’Twixt either shore
+Of Italy, nor distant from thy land,
+A stony ridge ariseth, in such sort,
+The thunder doth not lift his voice so high,
+They call it Catria: at whose foot a cell
+Is sacred to the lonely Eremite,
+For worship set apart and holy rites.”
+A third time thus it spake; then added: “There
+So firmly to God’s service I adher’d,
+That with no costlier viands than the juice
+Of olives, easily I pass’d the heats
+Of summer and the winter frosts, content
+In heav’n-ward musings. Rich were the returns
+And fertile, which that cloister once was us’d
+To render to these heavens: now ’tis fall’n
+Into a waste so empty, that ere long
+Detection must lay bare its vanity
+Pietro Damiano there was I y-clept:
+Pietro the sinner, when before I dwelt
+Beside the Adriatic, in the house
+Of our blest Lady. Near upon my close
+Of mortal life, through much importuning
+I was constrain’d to wear the hat that still
+From bad to worse it shifted.—Cephas came;
+He came, who was the Holy Spirit’s vessel,
+Barefoot and lean, eating their bread, as chanc’d,
+At the first table. Modern Shepherd’s need
+Those who on either hand may prop and lead them,
+So burly are they grown: and from behind
+Others to hoist them. Down the palfrey’s sides
+Spread their broad mantles, so as both the beasts
+Are cover’d with one skin. O patience! thou
+That lookst on this and doth endure so long.”
+I at those accents saw the splendours down
+From step to step alight, and wheel, and wax,
+Each circuiting, more beautiful. Round this
+They came, and stay’d them; uttered them a shout
+So loud, it hath no likeness here: nor I
+Wist what it spake, so deaf’ning was the thunder.
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XXII
+
+
+Astounded, to the guardian of my steps
+I turn’d me, like the chill, who always runs
+Thither for succour, where he trusteth most,
+And she was like the mother, who her son
+Beholding pale and breathless, with her voice
+Soothes him, and he is cheer’d; for thus she spake,
+Soothing me: “Know’st not thou, thou art in heav’n?
+And know’st not thou, whatever is in heav’n,
+Is holy, and that nothing there is done
+But is done zealously and well? Deem now,
+What change in thee the song, and what my smile
+had wrought, since thus the shout had pow’r to move thee.
+In which couldst thou have understood their prayers,
+The vengeance were already known to thee,
+Which thou must witness ere thy mortal hour,
+The sword of heav’n is not in haste to smite,
+Nor yet doth linger, save unto his seeming,
+Who in desire or fear doth look for it.
+But elsewhere now l bid thee turn thy view;
+So shalt thou many a famous spirit behold.”
+Mine eyes directing, as she will’d, I saw
+A hundred little spheres, that fairer grew
+By interchange of splendour. I remain’d,
+As one, who fearful of o’er-much presuming,
+Abates in him the keenness of desire,
+Nor dares to question, when amid those pearls,
+One largest and most lustrous onward drew,
+That it might yield contentment to my wish;
+And from within it these the sounds I heard.
+
+“If thou, like me, beheldst the charity
+That burns amongst us, what thy mind conceives,
+Were utter’d. But that, ere the lofty bound
+Thou reach, expectance may not weary thee,
+I will make answer even to the thought,
+Which thou hast such respect of. In old days,
+That mountain, at whose side Cassino rests,
+Was on its height frequented by a race
+Deceived and ill dispos’d: and I it was,
+Who thither carried first the name of Him,
+Who brought the soul-subliming truth to man.
+And such a speeding grace shone over me,
+That from their impious worship I reclaim’d
+The dwellers round about, who with the world
+Were in delusion lost. These other flames,
+The spirits of men contemplative, were all
+Enliven’d by that warmth, whose kindly force
+Gives birth to flowers and fruits of holiness.
+Here is Macarius; Romoaldo here:
+And here my brethren, who their steps refrain’d
+Within the cloisters, and held firm their heart.”
+
+I answ’ring, thus; “Thy gentle words and kind,
+And this the cheerful semblance, I behold
+Not unobservant, beaming in ye all,
+Have rais’d assurance in me, wakening it
+Full-blossom’d in my bosom, as a rose
+Before the sun, when the consummate flower
+Has spread to utmost amplitude. Of thee
+Therefore entreat I, father! to declare
+If I may gain such favour, as to gaze
+Upon thine image, by no covering veil’d.”
+
+“Brother!” he thus rejoin’d, “in the last sphere
+Expect completion of thy lofty aim,
+For there on each desire completion waits,
+And there on mine: where every aim is found
+Perfect, entire, and for fulfillment ripe.
+There all things are as they have ever been:
+For space is none to bound, nor pole divides,
+Our ladder reaches even to that clime,
+And so at giddy distance mocks thy view.
+Thither the Patriarch Jacob saw it stretch
+Its topmost round, when it appear’d to him
+With angels laden. But to mount it now
+None lifts his foot from earth: and hence my rule
+Is left a profitless stain upon the leaves;
+The walls, for abbey rear’d, turned into dens,
+The cowls to sacks choak’d up with musty meal.
+Foul usury doth not more lift itself
+Against God’s pleasure, than that fruit which makes
+The hearts of monks so wanton: for whate’er
+Is in the church’s keeping, all pertains.
+To such, as sue for heav’n’s sweet sake, and not
+To those who in respect of kindred claim,
+Or on more vile allowance. Mortal flesh
+Is grown so dainty, good beginnings last not
+From the oak’s birth, unto the acorn’s setting.
+His convent Peter founded without gold
+Or silver; I with pray’rs and fasting mine;
+And Francis his in meek humility.
+And if thou note the point, whence each proceeds,
+Then look what it hath err’d to, thou shalt find
+The white grown murky. Jordan was turn’d back;
+And a less wonder, then the refluent sea,
+May at God’s pleasure work amendment here.”
+
+So saying, to his assembly back he drew:
+And they together cluster’d into one,
+Then all roll’d upward like an eddying wind.
+
+The sweet dame beckon’d me to follow them:
+And, by that influence only, so prevail’d
+Over my nature, that no natural motion,
+Ascending or descending here below,
+Had, as I mounted, with my pennon vied.
+
+So, reader, as my hope is to return
+Unto the holy triumph, for the which
+I ofttimes wail my sins, and smite my breast,
+Thou hadst been longer drawing out and thrusting
+Thy finger in the fire, than I was, ere
+The sign, that followeth Taurus, I beheld,
+And enter’d its precinct. O glorious stars!
+O light impregnate with exceeding virtue!
+To whom whate’er of genius lifteth me
+Above the vulgar, grateful I refer;
+With ye the parent of all mortal life
+Arose and set, when I did first inhale
+The Tuscan air; and afterward, when grace
+Vouchsaf’d me entrance to the lofty wheel
+That in its orb impels ye, fate decreed
+My passage at your clime. To you my soul
+Devoutly sighs, for virtue even now
+To meet the hard emprize that draws me on.
+
+“Thou art so near the sum of blessedness,”
+Said Beatrice, “that behooves thy ken
+Be vigilant and clear. And, to this end,
+Or even thou advance thee further, hence
+Look downward, and contemplate, what a world
+Already stretched under our feet there lies:
+So as thy heart may, in its blithest mood,
+Present itself to the triumphal throng,
+Which through the’ etherial concave comes rejoicing.”
+
+I straight obey’d; and with mine eye return’d
+Through all the seven spheres, and saw this globe
+So pitiful of semblance, that perforce
+It moved my smiles: and him in truth I hold
+For wisest, who esteems it least: whose thoughts
+Elsewhere are fix’d, him worthiest call and best.
+I saw the daughter of Latona shine
+Without the shadow, whereof late I deem’d
+That dense and rare were cause. Here I sustain’d
+The visage, Hyperion! of thy sun;
+And mark’d, how near him with their circle, round
+Move Maia and Dione; here discern’d
+Jove’s tempering ’twixt his sire and son; and hence
+Their changes and their various aspects
+Distinctly scann’d. Nor might I not descry
+Of all the seven, how bulky each, how swift;
+Nor of their several distances not learn.
+This petty area (o’er the which we stride
+So fiercely), as along the eternal twins
+I wound my way, appear’d before me all,
+Forth from the havens stretch’d unto the hills.
+Then to the beauteous eyes mine eyes return’d.
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XXIII
+
+
+E’en as the bird, who midst the leafy bower
+Has, in her nest, sat darkling through the night,
+With her sweet brood, impatient to descry
+Their wished looks, and to bring home their food,
+In the fond quest unconscious of her toil:
+She, of the time prevenient, on the spray,
+That overhangs their couch, with wakeful gaze
+Expects the sun; nor ever, till the dawn,
+Removeth from the east her eager ken;
+So stood the dame erect, and bent her glance
+Wistfully on that region, where the sun
+Abateth most his speed; that, seeing her
+Suspense and wand’ring, I became as one,
+In whom desire is waken’d, and the hope
+Of somewhat new to come fills with delight.
+
+Short space ensued; I was not held, I say,
+Long in expectance, when I saw the heav’n
+Wax more and more resplendent; and, “Behold,”
+Cried Beatrice, “the triumphal hosts
+Of Christ, and all the harvest reap’d at length
+Of thy ascending up these spheres.” Meseem’d,
+That, while she spake her image all did burn,
+And in her eyes such fullness was of joy,
+And I am fain to pass unconstrued by.
+
+As in the calm full moon, when Trivia smiles,
+In peerless beauty, ’mid th’ eternal nympus,
+That paint through all its gulfs the blue profound
+In bright pre-eminence so saw I there,
+O’er million lamps a sun, from whom all drew
+Their radiance as from ours the starry train:
+And through the living light so lustrous glow’d
+The substance, that my ken endur’d it not.
+
+O Beatrice! sweet and precious guide!
+Who cheer’d me with her comfortable words!
+“Against the virtue, that o’erpow’reth thee,
+Avails not to resist. Here is the might,
+And here the wisdom, which did open lay
+The path, that had been yearned for so long,
+Betwixt the heav’n and earth.” Like to the fire,
+That, in a cloud imprison’d doth break out
+Expansive, so that from its womb enlarg’d,
+It falleth against nature to the ground;
+Thus in that heav’nly banqueting my soul
+Outgrew herself; and, in the transport lost.
+Holds now remembrance none of what she was.
+
+“Ope thou thine eyes, and mark me: thou hast seen
+Things, that empower thee to sustain my smile.”
+
+I was as one, when a forgotten dream
+Doth come across him, and he strives in vain
+To shape it in his fantasy again,
+Whenas that gracious boon was proffer’d me,
+Which never may be cancel’d from the book,
+Wherein the past is written. Now were all
+Those tongues to sound, that have on sweetest milk
+Of Polyhymnia and her sisters fed
+And fatten’d, not with all their help to boot,
+Unto the thousandth parcel of the truth,
+My song might shadow forth that saintly smile,
+flow merely in her saintly looks it wrought.
+And with such figuring of Paradise
+The sacred strain must leap, like one, that meets
+A sudden interruption to his road.
+But he, who thinks how ponderous the theme,
+And that ’tis lain upon a mortal shoulder,
+May pardon, if it tremble with the burden.
+The track, our ventrous keel must furrow, brooks
+No unribb’d pinnace, no self-sparing pilot.
+
+“Why doth my face,” said Beatrice, “thus
+Enamour thee, as that thou dost not turn
+Unto the beautiful garden, blossoming
+Beneath the rays of Christ? Here is the rose,
+Wherein the word divine was made incarnate;
+And here the lilies, by whose odour known
+The way of life was follow’d.” Prompt I heard
+Her bidding, and encounter once again
+The strife of aching vision. As erewhile,
+Through glance of sunlight, stream’d through broken cloud,
+Mine eyes a flower-besprinkled mead have seen,
+Though veil’d themselves in shade; so saw I there
+Legions of splendours, on whom burning rays
+Shed lightnings from above, yet saw I not
+The fountain whence they flow’d. O gracious virtue!
+Thou, whose broad stamp is on them, higher up
+Thou didst exalt thy glory to give room
+To my o’erlabour’d sight: when at the name
+Of that fair flower, whom duly I invoke
+Both morn and eve, my soul, with all her might
+Collected, on the goodliest ardour fix’d.
+And, as the bright dimensions of the star
+In heav’n excelling, as once here on earth
+Were, in my eyeballs lively portray’d,
+Lo! from within the sky a cresset fell,
+Circling in fashion of a diadem,
+And girt the star, and hov’ring round it wheel’d.
+
+Whatever melody sounds sweetest here,
+And draws the spirit most unto itself,
+Might seem a rent cloud when it grates the thunder,
+Compar’d unto the sounding of that lyre,
+Wherewith the goodliest sapphire, that inlays
+The floor of heav’n, was crown’d. “ Angelic Love
+I am, who thus with hov’ring flight enwheel
+The lofty rapture from that womb inspir’d,
+Where our desire did dwell: and round thee so,
+Lady of Heav’n! will hover; long as thou
+Thy Son shalt follow, and diviner joy
+Shall from thy presence gild the highest sphere.”
+
+Such close was to the circling melody:
+And, as it ended, all the other lights
+Took up the strain, and echoed Mary’s name.
+
+The robe, that with its regal folds enwraps
+The world, and with the nearer breath of God
+Doth burn and quiver, held so far retir’d
+Its inner hem and skirting over us,
+That yet no glimmer of its majesty
+Had stream’d unto me: therefore were mine eyes
+Unequal to pursue the crowned flame,
+That rose and sought its natal seed of fire;
+And like to babe, that stretches forth its arms
+For very eagerness towards the breast,
+After the milk is taken; so outstretch’d
+Their wavy summits all the fervent band,
+Through zealous love to Mary: then in view
+There halted, and “Regina Coeli “ sang
+So sweetly, the delight hath left me never.
+
+O what o’erflowing plenty is up-pil’d
+In those rich-laden coffers, which below
+Sow’d the good seed, whose harvest now they keep.
+
+Here are the treasures tasted, that with tears
+Were in the Babylonian exile won,
+When gold had fail’d them. Here in synod high
+Of ancient council with the new conven’d,
+Under the Son of Mary and of God,
+Victorious he his mighty triumph holds,
+To whom the keys of glory were assign’d.
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XXIV
+
+
+“O ye! in chosen fellowship advanc’d
+To the great supper of the blessed Lamb,
+Whereon who feeds hath every wish fulfill’d!
+If to this man through God’s grace be vouchsaf’d
+Foretaste of that, which from your table falls,
+Or ever death his fated term prescribe;
+Be ye not heedless of his urgent will;
+But may some influence of your sacred dews
+Sprinkle him. Of the fount ye alway drink,
+Whence flows what most he craves.” Beatrice spake,
+And the rejoicing spirits, like to spheres
+On firm-set poles revolving, trail’d a blaze
+Of comet splendour; and as wheels, that wind
+Their circles in the horologe, so work
+The stated rounds, that to th’ observant eye
+The first seems still, and, as it flew, the last;
+E’en thus their carols weaving variously,
+They by the measure pac’d, or swift, or slow,
+Made me to rate the riches of their joy.
+
+From that, which I did note in beauty most
+Excelling, saw I issue forth a flame
+So bright, as none was left more goodly there.
+Round Beatrice thrice it wheel’d about,
+With so divine a song, that fancy’s ear
+Records it not; and the pen passeth on
+And leaves a blank: for that our mortal speech,
+Nor e’en the inward shaping of the brain,
+Hath colours fine enough to trace such folds.
+
+“O saintly sister mine! thy prayer devout
+Is with so vehement affection urg’d,
+Thou dost unbind me from that beauteous sphere.”
+
+Such were the accents towards my lady breath’d
+From that blest ardour, soon as it was stay’d:
+To whom she thus: “O everlasting light
+Of him, within whose mighty grasp our Lord
+Did leave the keys, which of this wondrous bliss
+He bare below! tent this man, as thou wilt,
+With lighter probe or deep, touching the faith,
+By the which thou didst on the billows walk.
+If he in love, in hope, and in belief,
+Be steadfast, is not hid from thee: for thou
+Hast there thy ken, where all things are beheld
+In liveliest portraiture. But since true faith
+Has peopled this fair realm with citizens,
+Meet is, that to exalt its glory more,
+Thou in his audience shouldst thereof discourse.”
+
+Like to the bachelor, who arms himself,
+And speaks not, till the master have propos’d
+The question, to approve, and not to end it;
+So I, in silence, arm’d me, while she spake,
+Summoning up each argument to aid;
+As was behooveful for such questioner,
+And such profession: “As good Christian ought,
+Declare thee, What is faith?” Whereat I rais’d
+My forehead to the light, whence this had breath’d,
+Then turn’d to Beatrice, and in her looks
+Approval met, that from their inmost fount
+I should unlock the waters. “May the grace,
+That giveth me the captain of the church
+For confessor,” said I, “vouchsafe to me
+Apt utterance for my thoughts!” then added: “Sire!
+E’en as set down by the unerring style
+Of thy dear brother, who with thee conspir’d
+To bring Rome in unto the way of life,
+Faith of things hop’d is substance, and the proof
+Of things not seen; and herein doth consist
+Methinks its essence,”—” Rightly hast thou deem’d,”
+Was answer’d: “if thou well discern, why first
+He hath defin’d it, substance, and then proof.”
+
+“The deep things,” I replied, “which here I scan
+Distinctly, are below from mortal eye
+So hidden, they have in belief alone
+Their being, on which credence hope sublime
+Is built; and therefore substance it intends.
+And inasmuch as we must needs infer
+From such belief our reasoning, all respect
+To other view excluded, hence of proof
+Th’ intention is deriv’d.” Forthwith I heard:
+“If thus, whate’er by learning men attain,
+Were understood, the sophist would want room
+To exercise his wit.” So breath’d the flame
+Of love: then added: “Current is the coin
+Thou utter’st, both in weight and in alloy.
+But tell me, if thou hast it in thy purse.”
+
+“Even so glittering and so round,” said I,
+“I not a whit misdoubt of its assay.”
+
+Next issued from the deep imbosom’d splendour:
+“Say, whence the costly jewel, on the which
+Is founded every virtue, came to thee.”
+“The flood,” I answer’d, “from the Spirit of God
+Rain’d down upon the ancient bond and new,—
+Here is the reas’ning, that convinceth me
+So feelingly, each argument beside
+Seems blunt and forceless in comparison.”
+Then heard I: “Wherefore holdest thou that each,
+The elder proposition and the new,
+Which so persuade thee, are the voice of heav’n?”
+
+“The works, that follow’d, evidence their truth; “
+I answer’d: “Nature did not make for these
+The iron hot, or on her anvil mould them.”
+“Who voucheth to thee of the works themselves,
+Was the reply, “that they in very deed
+Are that they purport? None hath sworn so to thee.”
+
+“That all the world,” said I, “should have bee turn’d
+To Christian, and no miracle been wrought,
+Would in itself be such a miracle,
+The rest were not an hundredth part so great.
+E’en thou wentst forth in poverty and hunger
+To set the goodly plant, that from the vine,
+It once was, now is grown unsightly bramble.”
+That ended, through the high celestial court
+Resounded all the spheres. “Praise we one God!”
+In song of most unearthly melody.
+And when that Worthy thus, from branch to branch,
+Examining, had led me, that we now
+Approach’d the topmost bough, he straight resum’d;
+“The grace, that holds sweet dalliance with thy soul,
+So far discreetly hath thy lips unclos’d
+That, whatsoe’er has past them, I commend.
+Behooves thee to express, what thou believ’st,
+The next, and whereon thy belief hath grown.”
+
+“O saintly sire and spirit!” I began,
+“Who seest that, which thou didst so believe,
+As to outstrip feet younger than thine own,
+Toward the sepulchre? thy will is here,
+That I the tenour of my creed unfold;
+And thou the cause of it hast likewise ask’d.
+And I reply: I in one God believe,
+One sole eternal Godhead, of whose love
+All heav’n is mov’d, himself unmov’d the while.
+Nor demonstration physical alone,
+Or more intelligential and abstruse,
+Persuades me to this faith; but from that truth
+It cometh to me rather, which is shed
+Through Moses, the rapt Prophets, and the Psalms.
+The Gospel, and that ye yourselves did write,
+When ye were gifted of the Holy Ghost.
+In three eternal Persons I believe,
+Essence threefold and one, mysterious league
+Of union absolute, which, many a time,
+The word of gospel lore upon my mind
+Imprints: and from this germ, this firstling spark,
+The lively flame dilates, and like heav’n’s star
+Doth glitter in me.” As the master hears,
+Well pleas’d, and then enfoldeth in his arms
+The servant, who hath joyful tidings brought,
+And having told the errand keeps his peace;
+Thus benediction uttering with song
+Soon as my peace I held, compass’d me thrice
+The apostolic radiance, whose behest
+Had op’d lips; so well their answer pleas’d.
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XXV
+
+
+If e’er the sacred poem that hath made
+Both heav’n and earth copartners in its toil,
+And with lean abstinence, through many a year,
+Faded my brow, be destin’d to prevail
+Over the cruelty, which bars me forth
+Of the fair sheep-fold, where a sleeping lamb
+The wolves set on and fain had worried me,
+With other voice and fleece of other grain
+I shall forthwith return, and, standing up
+At my baptismal font, shall claim the wreath
+Due to the poet’s temples: for I there
+First enter’d on the faith which maketh souls
+Acceptable to God: and, for its sake,
+Peter had then circled my forehead thus.
+
+Next from the squadron, whence had issued forth
+The first fruit of Christ’s vicars on the earth,
+Toward us mov’d a light, at view whereof
+My Lady, full of gladness, spake to me:
+“Lo! lo! behold the peer of mickle might,
+That makes Falicia throng’d with visitants!”
+
+As when the ring-dove by his mate alights,
+In circles each about the other wheels,
+And murmuring cooes his fondness; thus saw I
+One, of the other great and glorious prince,
+With kindly greeting hail’d, extolling both
+Their heavenly banqueting; but when an end
+Was to their gratulation, silent, each,
+Before me sat they down, so burning bright,
+I could not look upon them. Smiling then,
+Beatrice spake: “O life in glory shrin’d!”
+Who didst the largess of our kingly court
+Set down with faithful pen! let now thy voice
+Of hope the praises in this height resound.
+For thou, who figur’st them in shapes, as clear,
+As Jesus stood before thee, well can’st speak them.”
+
+“Lift up thy head, and be thou strong in trust:
+For that, which hither from the mortal world
+Arriveth, must be ripen’d in our beam.”
+
+Such cheering accents from the second flame
+Assur’d me; and mine eyes I lifted up
+Unto the mountains that had bow’d them late
+With over-heavy burden. “Sith our Liege
+Wills of his grace that thou, or ere thy death,
+In the most secret council, with his lords
+Shouldst be confronted, so that having view’d
+The glories of our court, thou mayst therewith
+Thyself, and all who hear, invigorate
+With hope, that leads to blissful end; declare,
+What is that hope, how it doth flourish in thee,
+And whence thou hadst it?” Thus proceeding still,
+The second light: and she, whose gentle love
+My soaring pennons in that lofty flight
+Escorted, thus preventing me, rejoin’d:
+Among her sons, not one more full of hope,
+Hath the church militant: so ’tis of him
+Recorded in the sun, whose liberal orb
+Enlighteneth all our tribe: and ere his term
+Of warfare, hence permitted he is come,
+From Egypt to Jerusalem, to see.
+The other points, both which thou hast inquir’d,
+Not for more knowledge, but that he may tell
+How dear thou holdst the virtue, these to him
+Leave I; for he may answer thee with ease,
+And without boasting, so God give him grace.”
+Like to the scholar, practis’d in his task,
+Who, willing to give proof of diligence,
+Seconds his teacher gladly, “Hope,” said I,
+“Is of the joy to come a sure expectance,
+Th’ effect of grace divine and merit preceding.
+This light from many a star visits my heart,
+But flow’d to me the first from him, who sang
+The songs of the Supreme, himself supreme
+Among his tuneful brethren. ‘Let all hope
+In thee,’ so speak his anthem, ‘who have known
+Thy name;’ and with my faith who know not that?
+From thee, the next, distilling from his spring,
+In thine epistle, fell on me the drops
+So plenteously, that I on others shower
+The influence of their dew.” Whileas I spake,
+A lamping, as of quick and vollied lightning,
+Within the bosom of that mighty sheen,
+Play’d tremulous; then forth these accents breath’d:
+“Love for the virtue which attended me
+E’en to the palm, and issuing from the field,
+Glows vigorous yet within me, and inspires
+To ask of thee, whom also it delights;
+What promise thou from hope in chief dost win.”
+
+“Both scriptures, new and ancient,” I reply’d;
+“Propose the mark (which even now I view)
+For souls belov’d of God. Isaias saith,
+
+That, in their own land, each one must be clad
+In twofold vesture; and their proper lands this delicious life.
+In terms more full,
+And clearer far, thy brother hath set forth
+This revelation to us, where he tells
+Of the white raiment destin’d to the saints.”
+And, as the words were ending, from above,
+“They hope in thee,” first heard we cried: whereto
+Answer’d the carols all. Amidst them next,
+A light of so clear amplitude emerg’d,
+That winter’s month were but a single day,
+Were such a crystal in the Cancer’s sign.
+
+Like as a virgin riseth up, and goes,
+And enters on the mazes of the dance,
+Though gay, yet innocent of worse intent,
+Than to do fitting honour to the bride;
+So I beheld the new effulgence come
+Unto the other two, who in a ring
+Wheel’d, as became their rapture. In the dance
+And in the song it mingled. And the dame
+Held on them fix’d her looks: e’en as the spouse
+Silent and moveless. “This is he, who lay
+Upon the bosom of our pelican:
+This he, into whose keeping from the cross
+The mighty charge was given.” Thus she spake,
+Yet therefore naught the more remov’d her Sight
+From marking them, or ere her words began,
+Or when they clos’d. As he, who looks intent,
+And strives with searching ken, how he may see
+The sun in his eclipse, and, through desire
+Of seeing, loseth power of sight: so I
+Peer’d on that last resplendence, while I heard:
+“Why dazzlest thou thine eyes in seeking that,
+Which here abides not? Earth my body is,
+In earth: and shall be, with the rest, so long,
+As till our number equal the decree
+Of the Most High. The two that have ascended,
+In this our blessed cloister, shine alone
+With the two garments. So report below.”
+
+As when, for ease of labour, or to shun
+Suspected peril at a whistle’s breath,
+The oars, erewhile dash’d frequent in the wave,
+All rest; the flamy circle at that voice
+So rested, and the mingling sound was still,
+Which from the trinal band soft-breathing rose.
+I turn’d, but ah! how trembled in my thought,
+When, looking at my side again to see
+Beatrice, I descried her not, although
+Not distant, on the happy coast she stood.
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XXVI
+
+
+With dazzled eyes, whilst wond’ring I remain’d,
+Forth of the beamy flame which dazzled me,
+Issued a breath, that in attention mute
+Detain’d me; and these words it spake: “’Twere well,
+That, long as till thy vision, on my form
+O’erspent, regain its virtue, with discourse
+Thou compensate the brief delay. Say then,
+Beginning, to what point thy soul aspires:
+And meanwhile rest assur’d, that sight in thee
+Is but o’erpowered a space, not wholly quench’d:
+Since thy fair guide and lovely, in her look
+Hath potency, the like to that which dwelt
+In Ananias’ hand.” I answering thus:
+“Be to mine eyes the remedy or late
+Or early, at her pleasure; for they were
+The gates, at which she enter’d, and did light
+Her never dying fire. My wishes here
+Are centered; in this palace is the weal,
+That Alpha and Omega, is to all
+The lessons love can read me.” Yet again
+The voice which had dispers’d my fear, when daz’d
+With that excess, to converse urg’d, and spake:
+“Behooves thee sift more narrowly thy terms,
+And say, who level’d at this scope thy bow.”
+
+“Philosophy,” said I, “hath arguments,
+And this place hath authority enough
+’T’ imprint in me such love: for, of constraint,
+Good, inasmuch as we perceive the good,
+Kindles our love, and in degree the more,
+As it comprises more of goodness in ’t.
+The essence then, where such advantage is,
+That each good, found without it, is naught else
+But of his light the beam, must needs attract
+The soul of each one, loving, who the truth
+Discerns, on which this proof is built. Such truth
+Learn I from him, who shows me the first love
+Of all intelligential substances
+Eternal: from his voice I learn, whose word
+Is truth, that of himself to Moses saith,
+‘I will make all my good before thee pass.’
+Lastly from thee I learn, who chief proclaim’st,
+E’en at the outset of thy heralding,
+In mortal ears the mystery of heav’n.”
+
+“Through human wisdom, and th’ authority
+Therewith agreeing,” heard I answer’d, “keep
+The choicest of thy love for God. But say,
+If thou yet other cords within thee feel’st
+That draw thee towards him; so that thou report
+How many are the fangs, with which this love
+Is grappled to thy soul.” I did not miss,
+To what intent the eagle of our Lord
+Had pointed his demand; yea noted well
+Th’ avowal, which he led to; and resum’d:
+“All grappling bonds, that knit the heart to God,
+Confederate to make fast our clarity.
+The being of the world, and mine own being,
+The death which he endur’d that I should live,
+And that, which all the faithful hope, as I do,
+To the foremention’d lively knowledge join’d,
+Have from the sea of ill love sav’d my bark,
+And on the coast secur’d it of the right.
+As for the leaves, that in the garden bloom,
+My love for them is great, as is the good
+Dealt by th’ eternal hand, that tends them all.”
+
+I ended, and therewith a song most sweet
+Rang through the spheres; and “Holy, holy, holy,”
+Accordant with the rest my lady sang.
+And as a sleep is broken and dispers’d
+Through sharp encounter of the nimble light,
+With the eye’s spirit running forth to meet
+The ray, from membrane on to the membrane urg’d;
+And the upstartled wight loathes that be sees;
+So, at his sudden waking, he misdeems
+Of all around him, till assurance waits
+On better judgment: thus the saintly came
+Drove from before mine eyes the motes away,
+With the resplendence of her own, that cast
+Their brightness downward, thousand miles below.
+Whence I my vision, clearer shall before,
+Recover’d; and, well nigh astounded, ask’d
+Of a fourth light, that now with us I saw.
+
+And Beatrice: “The first diving soul,
+That ever the first virtue fram’d, admires
+Within these rays his Maker.” Like the leaf,
+That bows its lithe top till the blast is blown;
+By its own virtue rear’d then stands aloof;
+So I, the whilst she said, awe-stricken bow’d.
+Then eagerness to speak embolden’d me;
+And I began: “O fruit! that wast alone
+Mature, when first engender’d! Ancient father!
+That doubly seest in every wedded bride
+Thy daughter by affinity and blood!
+Devoutly as I may, I pray thee hold
+Converse with me: my will thou seest; and I,
+More speedily to hear thee, tell it not “
+
+It chanceth oft some animal bewrays,
+Through the sleek cov’ring of his furry coat.
+The fondness, that stirs in him and conforms
+His outside seeming to the cheer within:
+And in like guise was Adam’s spirit mov’d
+To joyous mood, that through the covering shone,
+Transparent, when to pleasure me it spake:
+“No need thy will be told, which I untold
+Better discern, than thou whatever thing
+Thou holdst most certain: for that will I see
+In Him, who is truth’s mirror, and Himself
+Parhelion unto all things, and naught else
+To him. This wouldst thou hear; how long since God
+Plac’d me high garden, from whose hounds
+She led me up in this ladder, steep and long;
+What space endur’d my season of delight;
+Whence truly sprang the wrath that banish’d me;
+And what the language, which I spake and fram’d
+Not that I tasted of the tree, my son,
+Was in itself the cause of that exile,
+But only my transgressing of the mark
+Assign’d me. There, whence at thy lady’s hest
+The Mantuan mov’d him, still was I debarr’d
+This council, till the sun had made complete,
+Four thousand and three hundred rounds and twice,
+His annual journey; and, through every light
+In his broad pathway, saw I him return,
+Thousand save sev’nty times, the whilst I dwelt
+Upon the earth. The language I did use
+Was worn away, or ever Nimrod’s race
+Their unaccomplishable work began.
+For naught, that man inclines to, ere was lasting,
+Left by his reason free, and variable,
+As is the sky that sways him. That he speaks,
+Is nature’s prompting: whether thus or thus,
+She leaves to you, as ye do most affect it.
+Ere I descended into hell’s abyss,
+El was the name on earth of the Chief Good,
+Whose joy enfolds me: Eli then ’twas call’d
+And so beseemeth: for, in mortals, use
+Is as the leaf upon the bough; that goes,
+And other comes instead. Upon the mount
+Most high above the waters, all my life,
+Both innocent and guilty, did but reach
+From the first hour, to that which cometh next
+(As the sun changes quarter), to the sixth.
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XXVII
+
+
+Then “Glory to the Father, to the Son,
+And to the Holy Spirit,” rang aloud
+Throughout all Paradise, that with the song
+My spirit reel’d, so passing sweet the strain:
+And what I saw was equal ecstasy;
+One universal smile it seem’d of all things,
+Joy past compare, gladness unutterable,
+Imperishable life of peace and love,
+Exhaustless riches and unmeasur’d bliss.
+
+Before mine eyes stood the four torches lit;
+And that, which first had come, began to wax
+In brightness, and in semblance such became,
+As Jove might be, if he and Mars were birds,
+And interchang’d their plumes. Silence ensued,
+Through the blest quire, by Him, who here appoints
+Vicissitude of ministry, enjoin’d;
+When thus I heard: “Wonder not, if my hue
+Be chang’d; for, while I speak, these shalt thou see
+All in like manner change with me. My place
+He who usurps on earth (my place, ay, mine,
+Which in the presence of the Son of God
+Is void), the same hath made my cemetery
+A common sewer of puddle and of blood:
+The more below his triumph, who from hence
+Malignant fell.” Such colour, as the sun,
+At eve or morning, paints and adverse cloud,
+Then saw I sprinkled over all the sky.
+And as th’ unblemish’d dame, who in herself
+Secure of censure, yet at bare report
+Of other’s failing, shrinks with maiden fear;
+So Beatrice in her semblance chang’d:
+And such eclipse in heav’n methinks was seen,
+When the Most Holy suffer’d. Then the words
+Proceeded, with voice, alter’d from itself
+So clean, the semblance did not alter more.
+“Not to this end was Christ’s spouse with my blood,
+With that of Linus, and of Cletus fed:
+That she might serve for purchase of base gold:
+But for the purchase of this happy life
+Did Sextus, Pius, and Callixtus bleed,
+And Urban, they, whose doom was not without
+Much weeping seal’d. No purpose was of our
+That on the right hand of our successors
+Part of the Christian people should be set,
+And part upon their left; nor that the keys,
+Which were vouchsaf’d me, should for ensign serve
+Unto the banners, that do levy war
+On the baptiz’d: nor I, for sigil-mark
+Set upon sold and lying privileges;
+Which makes me oft to bicker and turn red.
+In shepherd’s clothing greedy wolves below
+Range wide o’er all the pastures. Arm of God!
+Why longer sleepst thou? Caorsines and Gascona
+Prepare to quaff our blood. O good beginning
+To what a vile conclusion must thou stoop!
+But the high providence, which did defend
+Through Scipio the world’s glory unto Rome,
+Will not delay its succour: and thou, son,
+Who through thy mortal weight shall yet again
+Return below, open thy lips, nor hide
+What is by me not hidden.” As a Hood
+Of frozen vapours streams adown the air,
+What time the she-goat with her skiey horn
+Touches the sun; so saw I there stream wide
+The vapours, who with us had linger’d late
+And with glad triumph deck th’ ethereal cope.
+Onward my sight their semblances pursued;
+So far pursued, as till the space between
+From its reach sever’d them: whereat the guide
+Celestial, marking me no more intent
+On upward gazing, said, “Look down and see
+What circuit thou hast compass’d.” From the hour
+When I before had cast my view beneath,
+All the first region overpast I saw,
+Which from the midmost to the bound’ry winds;
+That onward thence from Gades I beheld
+The unwise passage of Laertes’ son,
+And hitherward the shore, where thou, Europa!
+Mad’st thee a joyful burden: and yet more
+Of this dim spot had seen, but that the sun,
+A constellation off and more, had ta’en
+His progress in the zodiac underneath.
+
+Then by the spirit, that doth never leave
+Its amorous dalliance with my lady’s looks,
+Back with redoubled ardour were mine eyes
+Led unto her: and from her radiant smiles,
+Whenas I turn’d me, pleasure so divine
+Did lighten on me, that whatever bait
+Or art or nature in the human flesh,
+Or in its limn’d resemblance, can combine
+Through greedy eyes to take the soul withal,
+Were to her beauty nothing. Its boon influence
+From the fair nest of Leda rapt me forth,
+And wafted on into the swiftest heav’n.
+
+What place for entrance Beatrice chose,
+I may not say, so uniform was all,
+Liveliest and loftiest. She my secret wish
+Divin’d; and with such gladness, that God’s love
+Seem’d from her visage shining, thus began:
+“Here is the goal, whence motion on his race
+Starts; motionless the centre, and the rest
+All mov’d around. Except the soul divine,
+Place in this heav’n is none, the soul divine,
+Wherein the love, which ruleth o’er its orb,
+Is kindled, and the virtue that it sheds;
+One circle, light and love, enclasping it,
+As this doth clasp the others; and to Him,
+Who draws the bound, its limit only known.
+Measur’d itself by none, it doth divide
+Motion to all, counted unto them forth,
+As by the fifth or half ye count forth ten.
+The vase, wherein time’s roots are plung’d, thou seest,
+Look elsewhere for the leaves. O mortal lust!
+That canst not lift thy head above the waves
+Which whelm and sink thee down! The will in man
+Bears goodly blossoms; but its ruddy promise
+Is, by the dripping of perpetual rain,
+Made mere abortion: faith and innocence
+Are met with but in babes, each taking leave
+Ere cheeks with down are sprinkled; he, that fasts,
+While yet a stammerer, with his tongue let loose
+Gluts every food alike in every moon.
+One yet a babbler, loves and listens to
+His mother; but no sooner hath free use
+Of speech, than he doth wish her in her grave.
+So suddenly doth the fair child of him,
+Whose welcome is the morn and eve his parting,
+To negro blackness change her virgin white.
+
+“Thou, to abate thy wonder, note that none
+Bears rule in earth, and its frail family
+Are therefore wand’rers. Yet before the date,
+When through the hundredth in his reck’ning drops
+Pale January must be shor’d aside
+From winter’s calendar, these heav’nly spheres
+Shall roar so loud, that fortune shall be fain
+To turn the poop, where she hath now the prow;
+So that the fleet run onward; and true fruit,
+Expected long, shall crown at last the bloom!”
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XXVIII
+
+
+So she who doth imparadise my soul,
+Had drawn the veil from off our pleasant life,
+And bar’d the truth of poor mortality;
+When lo! as one who, in a mirror, spies
+The shining of a flambeau at his back,
+Lit sudden ore he deem of its approach,
+And turneth to resolve him, if the glass
+Have told him true, and sees the record faithful
+As note is to its metre; even thus,
+I well remember, did befall to me,
+Looking upon the beauteous eyes, whence love
+Had made the leash to take me. As I turn’d;
+And that, which, in their circles, none who spies,
+Can miss of, in itself apparent, struck
+On mine; a point I saw, that darted light
+So sharp, no lid, unclosing, may bear up
+Against its keenness. The least star we view
+From hence, had seem’d a moon, set by its side,
+As star by side of star. And so far off,
+Perchance, as is the halo from the light
+Which paints it, when most dense the vapour spreads,
+There wheel’d about the point a circle of fire,
+More rapid than the motion, which first girds
+The world. Then, circle after circle, round
+Enring’d each other; till the seventh reach’d
+Circumference so ample, that its bow,
+Within the span of Juno’s messenger,
+lied scarce been held entire. Beyond the sev’nth,
+Follow’d yet other two. And every one,
+As more in number distant from the first,
+Was tardier in motion; and that glow’d
+With flame most pure, that to the sparkle’ of truth
+Was nearest, as partaking most, methinks,
+Of its reality. The guide belov’d
+Saw me in anxious thought suspense, and spake:
+“Heav’n, and all nature, hangs upon that point.
+The circle thereto most conjoin’d observe;
+And know, that by intenser love its course
+Is to this swiftness wing’d. “To whom I thus:
+“It were enough; nor should I further seek,
+Had I but witness’d order, in the world
+Appointed, such as in these wheels is seen.
+But in the sensible world such diff’rence is,
+That is each round shows more divinity,
+As each is wider from the centre. Hence,
+If in this wondrous and angelic temple,
+That hath for confine only light and love,
+My wish may have completion I must know,
+Wherefore such disagreement is between
+Th’ exemplar and its copy: for myself,
+Contemplating, I fail to pierce the cause.”
+
+“It is no marvel, if thy fingers foil’d
+Do leave the knot untied: so hard ’tis grown
+For want of tenting.” Thus she said: “But take,”
+She added, “if thou wish thy cure, my words,
+And entertain them subtly. Every orb
+Corporeal, doth proportion its extent
+Unto the virtue through its parts diffus’d.
+The greater blessedness preserves the more.
+The greater is the body (if all parts
+Share equally) the more is to preserve.
+Therefore the circle, whose swift course enwheels
+The universal frame answers to that,
+Which is supreme in knowledge and in love
+Thus by the virtue, not the seeming, breadth
+Of substance, measure, thou shalt see the heav’ns,
+Each to the’ intelligence that ruleth it,
+Greater to more, and smaller unto less,
+Suited in strict and wondrous harmony.”
+
+As when the sturdy north blows from his cheek
+A blast, that scours the sky, forthwith our air,
+Clear’d of the rack, that hung on it before,
+Glitters; and, With his beauties all unveil’d,
+The firmament looks forth serene, and smiles;
+Such was my cheer, when Beatrice drove
+With clear reply the shadows back, and truth
+Was manifested, as a star in heaven.
+And when the words were ended, not unlike
+To iron in the furnace, every cirque
+Ebullient shot forth scintillating fires:
+And every sparkle shivering to new blaze,
+In number did outmillion the account
+Reduplicate upon the chequer’d board.
+Then heard I echoing on from choir to choir,
+“Hosanna,” to the fixed point, that holds,
+And shall for ever hold them to their place,
+From everlasting, irremovable.
+
+Musing awhile I stood: and she, who saw
+by inward meditations, thus began:
+“In the first circles, they, whom thou beheldst,
+Are seraphim and cherubim. Thus swift
+Follow their hoops, in likeness to the point,
+Near as they can, approaching; and they can
+The more, the loftier their vision. Those,
+That round them fleet, gazing the Godhead next,
+Are thrones; in whom the first trine ends. And all
+Are blessed, even as their sight descends
+Deeper into the truth, wherein rest is
+For every mind. Thus happiness hath root
+In seeing, not in loving, which of sight
+Is aftergrowth. And of the seeing such
+The meed, as unto each in due degree
+Grace and good-will their measure have assign’d.
+The other trine, that with still opening buds
+In this eternal springtide blossom fair,
+Fearless of bruising from the nightly ram,
+Breathe up in warbled melodies threefold
+Hosannas blending ever, from the three
+Transmitted. hierarchy of gods, for aye
+Rejoicing, dominations first, next then
+Virtues, and powers the third. The next to whom
+Are princedoms and archangels, with glad round
+To tread their festal ring; and last the band
+Angelical, disporting in their sphere.
+All, as they circle in their orders, look
+Aloft, and downward with such sway prevail,
+That all with mutual impulse tend to God.
+These once a mortal view beheld. Desire
+In Dionysius so intently wrought,
+That he, as I have done rang’d them; and nam’d
+Their orders, marshal’d in his thought. From him
+Dissentient, one refus’d his sacred read.
+But soon as in this heav’n his doubting eyes
+Were open’d, Gregory at his error smil’d
+Nor marvel, that a denizen of earth
+Should scan such secret truth; for he had learnt
+Both this and much beside of these our orbs,
+From an eye-witness to heav’n’s mysteries.”
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XXIX
+
+
+No longer than what time Latona’s twins
+Cover’d of Libra and the fleecy star,
+Together both, girding the’ horizon hang,
+In even balance from the zenith pois’d,
+Till from that verge, each, changing hemisphere,
+Part the nice level; e’en so brief a space
+Did Beatrice’s silence hold. A smile
+Bat painted on her cheek; and her fix’d gaze
+Bent on the point, at which my vision fail’d:
+When thus her words resuming she began:
+“I speak, nor what thou wouldst inquire demand;
+For I have mark’d it, where all time and place
+Are present. Not for increase to himself
+Of good, which may not be increas’d, but forth
+To manifest his glory by its beams,
+Inhabiting his own eternity,
+Beyond time’s limit or what bound soe’er
+To circumscribe his being, as he will’d,
+Into new natures, like unto himself,
+Eternal Love unfolded. Nor before,
+As if in dull inaction torpid lay.
+For not in process of before or aft
+Upon these waters mov’d the Spirit of God.
+Simple and mix’d, both form and substance, forth
+To perfect being started, like three darts
+Shot from a bow three-corded. And as ray
+In crystal, glass, and amber, shines entire,
+E’en at the moment of its issuing; thus
+Did, from th’ eternal Sovran, beam entire
+His threefold operation, at one act
+Produc’d coeval. Yet in order each
+Created his due station knew: those highest,
+Who pure intelligence were made: mere power
+The lowest: in the midst, bound with strict league,
+Intelligence and power, unsever’d bond.
+Long tract of ages by the angels past,
+Ere the creating of another world,
+Describ’d on Jerome’s pages thou hast seen.
+But that what I disclose to thee is true,
+Those penmen, whom the Holy Spirit mov’d
+In many a passage of their sacred book
+Attest; as thou by diligent search shalt find
+And reason in some sort discerns the same,
+Who scarce would grant the heav’nly ministers
+Of their perfection void, so long a space.
+Thus when and where these spirits of love were made,
+Thou know’st, and how: and knowing hast allay’d
+Thy thirst, which from the triple question rose.
+Ere one had reckon’d twenty, e’en so soon
+Part of the angels fell: and in their fall
+Confusion to your elements ensued.
+The others kept their station: and this task,
+Whereon thou lookst, began with such delight,
+That they surcease not ever, day nor night,
+Their circling. Of that fatal lapse the cause
+Was the curst pride of him, whom thou hast seen
+Pent with the world’s incumbrance. Those, whom here
+Thou seest, were lowly to confess themselves
+Of his free bounty, who had made them apt
+For ministries so high: therefore their views
+Were by enlight’ning grace and their own merit
+Exalted; so that in their will confirm’d
+They stand, nor feel to fall. For do not doubt,
+But to receive the grace, which heav’n vouchsafes,
+Is meritorious, even as the soul
+With prompt affection welcometh the guest.
+Now, without further help, if with good heed
+My words thy mind have treasur’d, thou henceforth
+This consistory round about mayst scan,
+And gaze thy fill. But since thou hast on earth
+Heard vain disputers, reasoners in the schools,
+Canvas the’ angelic nature, and dispute
+Its powers of apprehension, memory, choice;
+Therefore, ’tis well thou take from me the truth,
+Pure and without disguise, which they below,
+Equivocating, darken and perplex.
+
+“Know thou, that, from the first, these substances,
+Rejoicing in the countenance of God,
+Have held unceasingly their view, intent
+Upon the glorious vision, from the which
+Naught absent is nor hid: where then no change
+Of newness with succession interrupts,
+Remembrance there needs none to gather up
+Divided thought and images remote
+
+“So that men, thus at variance with the truth
+Dream, though their eyes be open; reckless some
+Of error; others well aware they err,
+To whom more guilt and shame are justly due.
+Each the known track of sage philosophy
+Deserts, and has a byway of his own:
+So much the restless eagerness to shine
+And love of singularity prevail.
+Yet this, offensive as it is, provokes
+Heav’n’s anger less, than when the book of God
+Is forc’d to yield to man’s authority,
+Or from its straightness warp’d: no reck’ning made
+What blood the sowing of it in the world
+Has cost; what favour for himself he wins,
+Who meekly clings to it. The aim of all
+Is how to shine: e’en they, whose office is
+To preach the Gospel, let the gospel sleep,
+And pass their own inventions off instead.
+One tells, how at Christ’s suffering the wan moon
+Bent back her steps, and shadow’d o’er the sun
+With intervenient disk, as she withdrew:
+Another, how the light shrouded itself
+Within its tabernacle, and left dark
+The Spaniard and the Indian, with the Jew.
+Such fables Florence in her pulpit hears,
+Bandied about more frequent, than the names
+Of Bindi and of Lapi in her streets.
+The sheep, meanwhile, poor witless ones, return
+From pasture, fed with wind: and what avails
+For their excuse, they do not see their harm?
+Christ said not to his first conventicle,
+‘Go forth and preach impostures to the world,’
+But gave them truth to build on; and the sound
+Was mighty on their lips; nor needed they,
+Beside the gospel, other spear or shield,
+To aid them in their warfare for the faith.
+The preacher now provides himself with store
+Of jests and gibes; and, so there be no lack
+Of laughter, while he vents them, his big cowl
+Distends, and he has won the meed he sought:
+Could but the vulgar catch a glimpse the while
+Of that dark bird which nestles in his hood,
+They scarce would wait to hear the blessing said.
+Which now the dotards hold in such esteem,
+That every counterfeit, who spreads abroad
+The hands of holy promise, finds a throng
+Of credulous fools beneath. Saint Anthony
+Fattens with this his swine, and others worse
+Than swine, who diet at his lazy board,
+Paying with unstamp’d metal for their fare.
+
+“But (for we far have wander’d) let us seek
+The forward path again; so as the way
+Be shorten’d with the time. No mortal tongue
+Nor thought of man hath ever reach’d so far,
+That of these natures he might count the tribes.
+What Daniel of their thousands hath reveal’d
+With finite number infinite conceals.
+The fountain at whose source these drink their beams,
+With light supplies them in as many modes,
+As there are splendours, that it shines on: each
+According to the virtue it conceives,
+Differing in love and sweet affection.
+Look then how lofty and how huge in breadth
+The’ eternal might, which, broken and dispers’d
+Over such countless mirrors, yet remains
+Whole in itself and one, as at the first.”
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XXX
+
+
+Noon’s fervid hour perchance six thousand miles
+From hence is distant; and the shadowy cone
+Almost to level on our earth declines;
+When from the midmost of this blue abyss
+By turns some star is to our vision lost.
+And straightway as the handmaid of the sun
+Puts forth her radiant brow, all, light by light,
+Fade, and the spangled firmament shuts in,
+E’en to the loveliest of the glittering throng.
+Thus vanish’d gradually from my sight
+The triumph, which plays ever round the point,
+That overcame me, seeming (for it did)
+Engirt by that it girdeth. Wherefore love,
+With loss of other object, forc’d me bend
+Mine eyes on Beatrice once again.
+
+If all, that hitherto is told of her,
+Were in one praise concluded, ’twere too weak
+To furnish out this turn. Mine eyes did look
+On beauty, such, as I believe in sooth,
+Not merely to exceed our human, but,
+That save its Maker, none can to the full
+Enjoy it. At this point o’erpower’d I fail,
+Unequal to my theme, as never bard
+Of buskin or of sock hath fail’d before.
+For, as the sun doth to the feeblest sight,
+E’en so remembrance of that witching smile
+Hath dispossess my spirit of itself.
+Not from that day, when on this earth I first
+Beheld her charms, up to that view of them,
+Have I with song applausive ever ceas’d
+To follow, but not follow them no more;
+My course here bounded, as each artist’s is,
+When it doth touch the limit of his skill.
+
+She (such as I bequeath her to the bruit
+Of louder trump than mine, which hasteneth on,
+Urging its arduous matter to the close),
+Her words resum’d, in gesture and in voice
+Resembling one accustom’d to command:
+“Forth from the last corporeal are we come
+Into the heav’n, that is unbodied light,
+Light intellectual replete with love,
+Love of true happiness replete with joy,
+Joy, that transcends all sweetness of delight.
+Here shalt thou look on either mighty host
+Of Paradise; and one in that array,
+Which in the final judgment thou shalt see.”
+
+As when the lightning, in a sudden spleen
+Unfolded, dashes from the blinding eyes
+The visive spirits dazzled and bedimm’d;
+So, round about me, fulminating streams
+Of living radiance play’d, and left me swath’d
+And veil’d in dense impenetrable blaze.
+Such weal is in the love, that stills this heav’n;
+For its own flame the torch this fitting ever!
+
+No sooner to my list’ning ear had come
+The brief assurance, than I understood
+New virtue into me infus’d, and sight
+Kindled afresh, with vigour to sustain
+Excess of light, however pure. I look’d;
+And in the likeness of a river saw
+Light flowing, from whose amber-seeming waves
+Flash’d up effulgence, as they glided on
+’Twixt banks, on either side, painted with spring,
+Incredible how fair; and, from the tide,
+There ever and anon, outstarting, flew
+Sparkles instinct with life; and in the flow’rs
+Did set them, like to rubies chas’d in gold;
+Then, as if drunk with odors, plung’d again
+Into the wondrous flood; from which, as one
+Re’enter’d, still another rose. “The thirst
+Of knowledge high, whereby thou art inflam’d,
+To search the meaning of what here thou seest,
+The more it warms thee, pleases me the more.
+But first behooves thee of this water drink,
+Or ere that longing be allay’d.” So spake
+The day-star of mine eyes; then thus subjoin’d:
+“This stream, and these, forth issuing from its gulf,
+And diving back, a living topaz each,
+With all this laughter on its bloomy shores,
+Are but a preface, shadowy of the truth
+They emblem: not that, in themselves, the things
+Are crude; but on thy part is the defect,
+For that thy views not yet aspire so high.”
+Never did babe, that had outslept his wont,
+Rush, with such eager straining, to the milk,
+As I toward the water, bending me,
+To make the better mirrors of mine eyes
+In the refining wave; and, as the eaves
+Of mine eyelids did drink of it, forthwith
+Seem’d it unto me turn’d from length to round,
+Then as a troop of maskers, when they put
+Their vizors off, look other than before,
+The counterfeited semblance thrown aside;
+So into greater jubilee were chang’d
+Those flowers and sparkles, and distinct I saw
+Before me either court of heav’n displac’d.
+
+O prime enlightener! thou who crav’st me strength
+On the high triumph of thy realm to gaze!
+Grant virtue now to utter what I kenn’d,
+ There is in heav’n a light, whose goodly shine
+Makes the Creator visible to all
+Created, that in seeing him alone
+Have peace; and in a circle spreads so far,
+That the circumference were too loose a zone
+To girdle in the sun. All is one beam,
+Reflected from the summit of the first,
+That moves, which being hence and vigour takes,
+And as some cliff, that from the bottom eyes
+Its image mirror’d in the crystal flood,
+As if ’t admire its brave appareling
+Of verdure and of flowers: so, round about,
+Eyeing the light, on more than million thrones,
+Stood, eminent, whatever from our earth
+Has to the skies return’d. How wide the leaves
+Extended to their utmost of this rose,
+Whose lowest step embosoms such a space
+Of ample radiance! Yet, nor amplitude
+Nor height impeded, but my view with ease
+Took in the full dimensions of that joy.
+Near or remote, what there avails, where God
+Immediate rules, and Nature, awed, suspends
+Her sway? Into the yellow of the rose
+Perennial, which in bright expansiveness,
+Lays forth its gradual blooming, redolent
+Of praises to the never-wint’ring sun,
+As one, who fain would speak yet holds his peace,
+Beatrice led me; and, “Behold,” she said,
+“This fair assemblage! stoles of snowy white
+How numberless! The city, where we dwell,
+Behold how vast! and these our seats so throng’d
+Few now are wanting here! In that proud stall,
+On which, the crown, already o’er its state
+Suspended, holds thine eyes—or ere thyself
+Mayst at the wedding sup,—shall rest the soul
+Of the great Harry, he who, by the world
+Augustas hail’d, to Italy must come,
+Before her day be ripe. But ye are sick,
+And in your tetchy wantonness as blind,
+As is the bantling, that of hunger dies,
+And drives away the nurse. Nor may it be,
+That he, who in the sacred forum sways,
+Openly or in secret, shall with him
+Accordant walk: Whom God will not endure
+I’ th’ holy office long; but thrust him down
+To Simon Magus, where Magna’s priest
+Will sink beneath him: such will be his meed.”
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XXXI
+
+
+In fashion, as a snow-white rose, lay then
+Before my view the saintly multitude,
+Which in his own blood Christ espous’d. Meanwhile
+That other host, that soar aloft to gaze
+And celebrate his glory, whom they love,
+Hover’d around; and, like a troop of bees,
+Amid the vernal sweets alighting now,
+Now, clustering, where their fragrant labour glows,
+Flew downward to the mighty flow’r, or rose
+From the redundant petals, streaming back
+Unto the steadfast dwelling of their joy.
+Faces had they of flame, and wings of gold;
+The rest was whiter than the driven snow.
+And as they flitted down into the flower,
+From range to range, fanning their plumy loins,
+Whisper’d the peace and ardour, which they won
+From that soft winnowing. Shadow none, the vast
+Interposition of such numerous flight
+Cast, from above, upon the flower, or view
+Obstructed aught. For, through the universe,
+Wherever merited, celestial light
+Glides freely, and no obstacle prevents.
+
+All there, who reign in safety and in bliss,
+Ages long past or new, on one sole mark
+Their love and vision fix’d. O trinal beam
+Of individual star, that charmst them thus,
+Vouchsafe one glance to gild our storm below!
+
+If the grim brood, from Arctic shores that roam’d,
+(Where helice, forever, as she wheels,
+Sparkles a mother’s fondness on her son)
+Stood in mute wonder ’mid the works of Rome,
+When to their view the Lateran arose
+In greatness more than earthly; I, who then
+From human to divine had past, from time
+Unto eternity, and out of Florence
+To justice and to truth, how might I choose
+But marvel too? ’Twixt gladness and amaze,
+In sooth no will had I to utter aught,
+Or hear. And, as a pilgrim, when he rests
+Within the temple of his vow, looks round
+In breathless awe, and hopes some time to tell
+Of all its goodly state: e’en so mine eyes
+Cours’d up and down along the living light,
+Now low, and now aloft, and now around,
+Visiting every step. Looks I beheld,
+Where charity in soft persuasion sat,
+Smiles from within and radiance from above,
+And in each gesture grace and honour high.
+
+So rov’d my ken, and its general form
+All Paradise survey’d: when round I turn’d
+With purpose of my lady to inquire
+Once more of things, that held my thought suspense,
+But answer found from other than I ween’d;
+For, Beatrice, when I thought to see,
+I saw instead a senior, at my side,
+ Rob’d, as the rest, in glory. Joy benign
+Glow’d in his eye, and o’er his cheek diffus’d,
+With gestures such as spake a father’s love.
+And, “Whither is she vanish’d?” straight I ask’d.
+
+“By Beatrice summon’d,” he replied,
+“I come to aid thy wish. Looking aloft
+To the third circle from the highest, there
+Behold her on the throne, wherein her merit
+Hath plac’d her.” Answering not, mine eyes I rais’d,
+And saw her, where aloof she sat, her brow
+A wreath reflecting of eternal beams.
+Not from the centre of the sea so far
+Unto the region of the highest thunder,
+As was my ken from hers; and yet the form
+Came through that medium down, unmix’d and pure,
+
+“O Lady! thou in whom my hopes have rest!
+Who, for my safety, hast not scorn’d, in hell
+To leave the traces of thy footsteps mark’d!
+For all mine eyes have seen, I, to thy power
+And goodness, virtue owe and grace. Of slave,
+Thou hast to freedom brought me; and no means,
+For my deliverance apt, hast left untried.
+Thy liberal bounty still toward me keep.
+That, when my spirit, which thou madest whole,
+Is loosen’d from this body, it may find
+Favour with thee.” So I my suit preferr’d:
+And she, so distant, as appear’d, look’d down,
+And smil’d; then tow’rds th’ eternal fountain turn’d.
+
+And thus the senior, holy and rever’d:
+“That thou at length mayst happily conclude
+Thy voyage (to which end I was dispatch’d,
+By supplication mov’d and holy love)
+Let thy upsoaring vision range, at large,
+This garden through: for so, by ray divine
+Kindled, thy ken a higher flight shall mount;
+And from heav’n’s queen, whom fervent I adore,
+All gracious aid befriend us; for that I
+Am her own faithful Bernard.” Like a wight,
+Who haply from Croatia wends to see
+Our Veronica, and the while ’tis shown,
+Hangs over it with never-sated gaze,
+And, all that he hath heard revolving, saith
+Unto himself in thought: “And didst thou look
+E’en thus, O Jesus, my true Lord and God?
+And was this semblance thine?” So gaz’d I then
+Adoring; for the charity of him,
+Who musing, in the world that peace enjoy’d,
+Stood lively before me. “Child of grace!”
+Thus he began: “thou shalt not knowledge gain
+Of this glad being, if thine eyes are held
+Still in this depth below. But search around
+The circles, to the furthest, till thou spy
+Seated in state, the queen, that of this realm
+Is sovran.” Straight mine eyes I rais’d; and bright,
+As, at the birth of morn, the eastern clime
+Above th’ horizon, where the sun declines;
+To mine eyes, that upward, as from vale
+To mountain sped, at th’ extreme bound, a part
+Excell’d in lustre all the front oppos’d.
+And as the glow burns ruddiest o’er the wave,
+That waits the sloping beam, which Phaeton
+Ill knew to guide, and on each part the light
+Diminish’d fades, intensest in the midst;
+So burn’d the peaceful oriflamb, and slack’d
+On every side the living flame decay’d.
+And in that midst their sportive pennons wav’d
+Thousands of angels; in resplendence each
+Distinct, and quaint adornment. At their glee
+And carol, smil’d the Lovely One of heav’n,
+That joy was in the eyes of all the blest.
+
+Had I a tongue in eloquence as rich,
+As is the colouring in fancy’s loom,
+’Twere all too poor to utter the least part
+Of that enchantment. When he saw mine eyes
+Intent on her, that charm’d him, Bernard gaz’d
+With so exceeding fondness, as infus’d
+Ardour into my breast, unfelt before.
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XXXII
+
+
+Freely the sage, though wrapt in musings high,
+Assum’d the teacher’s part, and mild began:
+“The wound, that Mary clos’d, she open’d first,
+Who sits so beautiful at Mary’s feet.
+The third in order, underneath her, lo!
+Rachel with Beatrice. Sarah next,
+Judith, Rebecca, and the gleaner maid,
+Meek ancestress of him, who sang the songs
+Of sore repentance in his sorrowful mood.
+All, as I name them, down from deaf to leaf,
+Are in gradation throned on the rose.
+And from the seventh step, successively,
+Adown the breathing tresses of the flow’r
+Still doth the file of Hebrew dames proceed.
+For these are a partition wall, whereby
+The sacred stairs are sever’d, as the faith
+In Christ divides them. On this part, where blooms
+Each leaf in full maturity, are set
+Such as in Christ, or ere he came, believ’d.
+On th’ other, where an intersected space
+Yet shows the semicircle void, abide
+All they, who look’d to Christ already come.
+And as our Lady on her glorious stool,
+And they who on their stools beneath her sit,
+This way distinction make: e’en so on his,
+The mighty Baptist that way marks the line
+(He who endur’d the desert and the pains
+Of martyrdom, and for two years of hell,
+Yet still continued holy), and beneath,
+Augustin, Francis, Benedict, and the rest,
+Thus far from round to round. So heav’n’s decree
+Forecasts, this garden equally to fill.
+With faith in either view, past or to come,
+Learn too, that downward from the step, which cleaves
+Midway the twain compartments, none there are
+Who place obtain for merit of their own,
+But have through others’ merit been advanc’d,
+On set conditions: spirits all releas’d,
+Ere for themselves they had the power to choose.
+And, if thou mark and listen to them well,
+Their childish looks and voice declare as much.
+
+“Here, silent as thou art, I know thy doubt;
+And gladly will I loose the knot, wherein
+Thy subtle thoughts have bound thee. From this realm
+Excluded, chalice no entrance here may find,
+No more shall hunger, thirst, or sorrow can.
+A law immutable hath establish’d all;
+Nor is there aught thou seest, that doth not fit,
+Exactly, as the finger to the ring.
+It is not therefore without cause, that these,
+O’erspeedy comers to immortal life,
+Are different in their shares of excellence.
+Our Sovran Lord—that settleth this estate
+In love and in delight so absolute,
+That wish can dare no further—every soul,
+Created in his joyous sight to dwell,
+With grace at pleasure variously endows.
+And for a proof th’ effect may well suffice.
+And ’tis moreover most expressly mark’d
+In holy scripture, where the twins are said
+To, have struggled in the womb. Therefore, as grace
+Inweaves the coronet, so every brow
+Weareth its proper hue of orient light.
+And merely in respect to his prime gift,
+Not in reward of meritorious deed,
+Hath each his several degree assign’d.
+In early times with their own innocence
+More was not wanting, than the parents’ faith,
+To save them: those first ages past, behoov’d
+That circumcision in the males should imp
+The flight of innocent wings: but since the day
+Of grace hath come, without baptismal rites
+In Christ accomplish’d, innocence herself
+Must linger yet below. Now raise thy view
+Unto the visage most resembling Christ:
+For, in her splendour only, shalt thou win
+The pow’r to look on him.” Forthwith I saw
+Such floods of gladness on her visage shower’d,
+From holy spirits, winging that profound;
+That, whatsoever I had yet beheld,
+Had not so much suspended me with wonder,
+Or shown me such similitude of God.
+And he, who had to her descended, once,
+On earth, now hail’d in heav’n; and on pois’d wing.
+“Ave, Maria, Gratia Plena,” sang:
+To whose sweet anthem all the blissful court,
+From all parts answ’ring, rang: that holier joy
+Brooded the deep serene. “Father rever’d:
+Who deign’st, for me, to quit the pleasant place,
+Wherein thou sittest, by eternal lot!
+Say, who that angel is, that with such glee
+Beholds our queen, and so enamour’d glows
+Of her high beauty, that all fire he seems.”
+So I again resorted to the lore
+Of my wise teacher, he, whom Mary’s charms
+Embellish’d, as the sun the morning star;
+Who thus in answer spake: “In him are summ’d,
+Whatever of buxomness and free delight
+May be in Spirit, or in angel, met:
+And so beseems: for that he bare the palm
+Down unto Mary, when the Son of God
+Vouchsaf’d to clothe him in terrestrial weeds.
+Now let thine eyes wait heedful on my words,
+And note thou of this just and pious realm
+The chiefest nobles. Those, highest in bliss,
+The twain, on each hand next our empress thron’d,
+Are as it were two roots unto this rose.
+He to the left, the parent, whose rash taste
+Proves bitter to his seed; and, on the right,
+That ancient father of the holy church,
+Into whose keeping Christ did give the keys
+Of this sweet flow’r: near whom behold the seer,
+That, ere he died, saw all the grievous times
+Of the fair bride, who with the lance and nails
+Was won. And, near unto the other, rests
+The leader, under whom on manna fed
+Th’ ungrateful nation, fickle and perverse.
+On th’ other part, facing to Peter, lo!
+Where Anna sits, so well content to look
+On her lov’d daughter, that with moveless eye
+She chants the loud hosanna: while, oppos’d
+To the first father of your mortal kind,
+Is Lucia, at whose hest thy lady sped,
+When on the edge of ruin clos’d thine eye.
+
+“But (for the vision hasteneth so an end)
+Here break we off, as the good workman doth,
+That shapes the cloak according to the cloth:
+And to the primal love our ken shall rise;
+That thou mayst penetrate the brightness, far
+As sight can bear thee. Yet, alas! in sooth
+Beating thy pennons, thinking to advance,
+Thou backward fall’st. Grace then must first be gain’d;
+Her grace, whose might can help thee. Thou in prayer
+Seek her: and, with affection, whilst I sue,
+Attend, and yield me all thy heart.” He said,
+And thus the saintly orison began.
+
+
+
+
+CANTO XXXIII
+
+
+“O virgin mother, daughter of thy Son,
+Created beings all in lowliness
+Surpassing, as in height, above them all,
+Term by th’ eternal counsel pre-ordain’d,
+Ennobler of thy nature, so advanc’d
+In thee, that its great Maker did not scorn,
+Himself, in his own work enclos’d to dwell!
+For in thy womb rekindling shone the love
+Reveal’d, whose genial influence makes now
+This flower to germin in eternal peace!
+Here thou to us, of charity and love,
+Art, as the noon-day torch: and art, beneath,
+To mortal men, of hope a living spring.
+So mighty art thou, lady! and so great,
+That he who grace desireth, and comes not
+To thee for aidance, fain would have desire
+Fly without wings. Nor only him who asks,
+Thy bounty succours, but doth freely oft
+Forerun the asking. Whatsoe’er may be
+Of excellence in creature, pity mild,
+Relenting mercy, large munificence,
+Are all combin’d in thee. Here kneeleth one,
+Who of all spirits hath review’d the state,
+From the world’s lowest gap unto this height.
+Suppliant to thee he kneels, imploring grace
+For virtue, yet more high to lift his ken
+Toward the bliss supreme. And I, who ne’er
+Coveted sight, more fondly, for myself,
+Than now for him, my prayers to thee prefer,
+(And pray they be not scant) that thou wouldst drive
+Each cloud of his mortality away;
+That on the sovran pleasure he may gaze.
+This also I entreat of thee, O queen!
+Who canst do what thou wilt! that in him thou
+Wouldst after all he hath beheld, preserve
+Affection sound, and human passions quell.
+Lo! Where, with Beatrice, many a saint
+Stretch their clasp’d hands, in furtherance of my suit!”
+
+The eyes, that heav’n with love and awe regards,
+Fix’d on the suitor, witness’d, how benign
+She looks on pious pray’rs: then fasten’d they
+On th’ everlasting light, wherein no eye
+Of creature, as may well be thought, so far
+Can travel inward. I, meanwhile, who drew
+Near to the limit, where all wishes end,
+The ardour of my wish (for so behooved),
+Ended within me. Beck’ning smil’d the sage,
+That I should look aloft: but, ere he bade,
+Already of myself aloft I look’d;
+For visual strength, refining more and more,
+Bare me into the ray authentical
+Of sovran light. Thenceforward, what I saw,
+Was not for words to speak, nor memory’s self
+To stand against such outrage on her skill.
+As one, who from a dream awaken’d, straight,
+All he hath seen forgets; yet still retains
+Impression of the feeling in his dream;
+E’en such am I: for all the vision dies,
+As ’twere, away; and yet the sense of sweet,
+That sprang from it, still trickles in my heart.
+Thus in the sun-thaw is the snow unseal’d;
+Thus in the winds on flitting leaves was lost
+The Sybil’s sentence. O eternal beam!
+(Whose height what reach of mortal thought may soar?)
+Yield me again some little particle
+Of what thou then appearedst, give my tongue
+Power, but to leave one sparkle of thy glory,
+Unto the race to come, that shall not lose
+Thy triumph wholly, if thou waken aught
+Of memory in me, and endure to hear
+The record sound in this unequal strain.
+
+Such keenness from the living ray I met,
+That, if mine eyes had turn’d away, methinks,
+I had been lost; but, so embolden’d, on
+I pass’d, as I remember, till my view
+Hover’d the brink of dread infinitude.
+
+O grace! unenvying of thy boon! that gav’st
+Boldness to fix so earnestly my ken
+On th’ everlasting splendour, that I look’d,
+While sight was unconsum’d, and, in that depth,
+Saw in one volume clasp’d of love, whatever
+The universe unfolds; all properties
+Of substance and of accident, beheld,
+Compounded, yet one individual light
+The whole. And of such bond methinks I saw
+The universal form: for that whenever
+I do but speak of it, my soul dilates
+Beyond her proper self; and, till I speak,
+One moment seems a longer lethargy,
+Than five-and-twenty ages had appear’d
+To that emprize, that first made Neptune wonder
+At Argo’s shadow darkening on his flood.
+
+With fixed heed, suspense and motionless,
+Wond’ring I gaz’d; and admiration still
+Was kindled, as I gaz’d. It may not be,
+That one, who looks upon that light, can turn
+To other object, willingly, his view.
+For all the good, that will may covet, there
+Is summ’d; and all, elsewhere defective found,
+Complete. My tongue shall utter now, no more
+E’en what remembrance keeps, than could the babe’s
+That yet is moisten’d at his mother’s breast.
+Not that the semblance of the living light
+Was chang’d (that ever as at first remain’d)
+But that my vision quickening, in that sole
+Appearance, still new miracles descry’d,
+And toil’d me with the change. In that abyss
+Of radiance, clear and lofty, seem’d methought,
+Three orbs of triple hue clipt in one bound:
+And, from another, one reflected seem’d,
+As rainbow is from rainbow: and the third
+Seem’d fire, breath’d equally from both. Oh speech
+How feeble and how faint art thou, to give
+Conception birth! Yet this to what I saw
+Is less than little. Oh eternal light!
+Sole in thyself that dwellst; and of thyself
+Sole understood, past, present, or to come!
+Thou smiledst; on that circling, which in thee
+Seem’d as reflected splendour, while I mus’d;
+For I therein, methought, in its own hue
+Beheld our image painted: steadfastly
+I therefore por’d upon the view. As one
+Who vers’d in geometric lore, would fain
+Measure the circle; and, though pondering long
+And deeply, that beginning, which he needs,
+Finds not; e’en such was I, intent to scan
+The novel wonder, and trace out the form,
+How to the circle fitted, and therein
+How plac’d: but the flight was not for my wing;
+Had not a flash darted athwart my mind,
+And in the spleen unfolded what it sought.
+
+Here vigour fail’d the tow’ring fantasy:
+But yet the will roll’d onward, like a wheel
+In even motion, by the Love impell’d,
+That moves the sun in heav’n and all the stars.
+
+
+
+
+NOTES TO PARADISE
+
+CANTO 1
+
+
+Verse 12. Benign Apollo.] Chaucer has imitated this invention very
+closely at the beginning of the Third Booke of Fame.
+
+If, divine vertue, thou
+Wilt helpe me to shewe now
+That in my head ymarked is,
+
+* * * * *
+Thou shalt see me go as blive
+Unto the next laurer I see,
+And kisse it for it is thy tree
+Now entre thou my breast anone.
+
+v. 15. Thus for.] He appears to mean nothing more than that this part
+of his poem will require a greater exertion of his powers than the
+former.
+
+v. 19. Marsyas.] Ovid, Met. 1. vi. fab. 7. Compare Boccaccio, II
+Filocopo, 1. 5. p. 25. v. ii. Ediz. Fir. 1723. “Egli nel mio petto
+entri,” &c. - “May he enter my bosom, and let my voice sound like his
+own, when he made that daring mortal deserve to come forth unsheathed
+from his limbs. “ v. 29. Caesar, or bard.] So Petrarch, Son. Par.
+Prima.
+
+Arbor vittoriosa e trionfale,
+Onor d’imperadori e di poeti.
+
+And Spenser, F. Q. b. i. c. 1. st. 9,
+The laurel, meed of mighty conquerours
+And poets sage.
+
+v. 37. Through that.] “Where the four circles, the horizon, the zodiac,
+the equator, and the equinoctial colure, join; the last
+threeintersecting each other so as to form three crosses, as may be
+seen in the armillary sphere.”
+
+v. 39. In happiest constellation.] Aries. Some understand the
+planetVenus by the “miglior stella “
+
+v. 44. To the left.] Being in the opposite hemisphere to ours, Beatrice
+that she may behold the rising sun, turns herself to the left.
+
+v. 47. As from the first a second beam.] “Like a reflected sunbeam,”
+which he compares to a pilgrim hastening homewards.
+
+Ne simil tanto mal raggio secondo
+Dal primo usci.
+Filicaja, canz. 15. st. 4.
+
+v. 58. As iron that comes boiling from the fire.] So Milton, P. L. b.
+iii. 594. —As glowing iron with fire.
+
+v. 69. Upon the day appear’d.
+
+—If the heaven had ywonne,
+All new of God another sunne.
+Chaucer, First Booke of Fame
+
+E par ch’ agginuga un altro sole al cielo.
+Ariosto, O F. c. x. st. 109.
+
+Ed ecco un lustro lampeggiar d’ intorno
+Che sole a sole aggiunse e giorno a giorno.
+Manno, Adone. c. xi. st. 27.
+
+Quando a paro col sol ma piu lucente
+L’angelo gli appari sull; oriente
+Tasso, G. L. c. i.
+
+-Seems another morn
+Ris’n on mid-noon.
+Milton, P. L. b. v. 311.
+
+Compare Euripides, Ion. 1550. [GREEK HERE] 66. as Glaucus. ] Ovid, Met.
+1. Xiii. Fab. 9
+
+v. 71. If.] “Thou O divine Spirit, knowest whether 1 had not risen
+above my human nature, and were not merely such as thou hadst then,
+formed me.”
+
+v. 125. Through sluggishness.] Perch’ a risponder la materia e sorda.
+
+So Filicaja, canz. vi. st 9.
+Perche a risponder la discordia e sorda
+
+“The workman hath in his heart a purpose, he carrieth in mind the whole
+form which his work should have; there wanteth not him skill and desire
+to bring his labour to the best effect, only the matter, which he hath
+to work on is unframeable.” Hooker’s Eccl. Polity, b. 5. 9.
+
+CANTO II
+
+
+v. 1. In small bark.]
+
+Con la barchetta mia cantando in rima
+Pulci, Morg. Magg. c. xxviii.
+
+Io me n’andro con la barchetta mia,
+Quanto l’acqua comporta un picciol legno
+Ibid.
+
+v. 30. This first star.] the moon
+
+v. 46. E’en as the truth.] Like a truth that does not need
+demonstration, but is self-evident.”
+
+v. 52. Cain.] Compare Hell, Canto XX. 123. And Note
+
+v. 65. Number1ess lights.] The fixed stars, which differ both in bulk
+and splendor.
+
+v. 71. Save one.] “Except that principle of rarity and denseness which
+thou hast assigned.” By “formal principles, “principj formali, are
+meant constituent or essential causes.” Milton, in imitation of this
+passage, introduces the angel arguing with Adam respecting the causes
+of the spots on the moon.
+
+But, as a late French translator of the Paradise well remarks, his
+reasoning is physical; that of Dante partly metaphysical and partly
+theologic.
+
+v. 111. Within the heaven.] According to our Poet’s system, there are
+ten heavens; the seven planets, the eighth spheres containing the fixed
+stars, the primum mobile, and the empyrean.
+
+v. 143. The virtue mingled.] Virg. Aen. 1. vi 724. Principio coelum,
+&c.
+
+CANTO III
+
+
+v. 16. Delusion.] “An error the contrary to that of Narcissus, because
+he mistook a shadow for a substance, I a substance for a shadow.”
+
+v. 50. Piccarda.] The sister of Forese whom we have seen in the
+Purgatory, Canto XXIII.
+
+v. 90. The Lady.] St. Clare, the foundress of the order called after
+her She was born of opulent and noble parents at Assisi, in 1193, and
+died in 1253. See Biogr. Univ. t. 1. p. 598. 8vo. Paris, 1813.
+
+v. 121. Constance.] Daughter of Ruggieri, king of Sicily, who, being
+taken by force out of a monastery where she had professed, was married
+to the Emperor Henry Vl. and by him was mother to Frederick 11. She was
+fifty years old or more at the time, and “because it was not credited
+that she could have a child at that age, she was delivered in a
+pavilion and it was given out, that any lady, who pleased, was at
+liberty to see her. Many came, and saw her, and the suspicion ceased.”
+Ricordano Malaspina in Muratori, Rer. It. Script. t. viii. p. 939; and
+G. Villani, in the same words, Hist. I v. c. 16
+
+The French translator above mentored speaks of her having poisoned her
+husband. The death of Henry Vl. is recorded in the Chronicon Siciliae,
+by an anonymous writer, (Muratori, t. x.) but not a word of his having
+been poisoned by Constance, and Ricordano Malaspina even mentions her
+decease as happening before that of her husband, Henry V., for so this
+author, with some others, terms him. v. 122. The second.] Henry Vl. son
+of Frederick I was the second emperor of the house of Saab; and his son
+Frederick II “the third and last.”
+
+CANTO IV
+
+
+v. 6. Between two deer]
+
+Tigris ut auditis, diversa valle duorum
+Extimulata fame, mugitibus armentorum
+Neseit utro potius ruat, et ruere ardet utroque.
+Ovid, Metam. 1. v. 166
+
+v. 13. Daniel.] See Daniel, c. ii.
+
+v. 24. Plato.] [GREEK HERE] Plato Timaeus v. ix. p. 326. Edit. Bip.
+“The Creator, when he had framed the universe, distributed to the stars
+an equal number of souls, appointing to each soul its several star.”
+
+v. 27. Of that.] Plato’s opinion.
+
+v. 34. The first circle.] The empyrean.
+
+v. 48. Him who made Tobias whole.]
+
+Raphael, the sociable spirit, that deign’d
+To travel with Tobias, and secur’d
+His marriage with the sev’n times wedded maid,
+Milton, P. L. b. v. 223.
+
+v. 67. That to the eye of man.] “That the ways of divine justice are
+often inscrutable to man, ought rather to be a motive to faith than an
+inducement to heresy.” Such appears to me the most satisfactory
+explanation of the passage.
+
+v. 82. Laurence.] Who suffered martyrdom in the third century.
+
+v. 82. Scaevola.] See Liv. Hist. D. 1. 1. ii. 12.
+
+v. 100. Alcmaeon.] Ovid, Met. 1. ix. f. 10.
+
+—Ultusque parente parentem
+Natus, erit facto pius et sceleratus eodem.
+
+v. 107. Of will.] “What Piccarda asserts of Constance, that she
+retained her affection to the monastic life, is said absolutely and
+without relation to circumstances; and that which I affirm is spoken of
+the will conditionally and respectively: so that our apparent
+difference is without any disagreement.” v. 119. That truth.] The light
+of divine truth.
+
+CANTO V
+
+
+v. 43. Two things.] The one, the substance of the vow; the other, the
+compact, or form of it.
+
+v. 48. It was enjoin’d the Israelites.] See Lev. e. xii, and xxvii.
+
+v. 56. Either key.] Purgatory, Canto IX. 108.
+
+v. 86. That region.] As some explain it, the east, according to others
+the equinoctial line.
+
+v. 124. This sphere.] The planet Mercury, which, being nearest to the
+sun, is oftenest hidden by that luminary
+
+CANTO VI
+
+
+v. 1. After that Constantine the eagle turn’d.] Constantine, in
+transferring the seat of empire from Rome to Byzantium, carried the
+eagle, the Imperial ensign, from the west to the east. Aeneas, on the
+contrary had moved along with the sun’s course, when he passed from
+Troy to Italy.
+
+v. 5. A hundred years twice told and more.] The Emperor Constantine
+entered Byzantium in 324, and Justinian began his reign in 527.
+
+v. 6. At Europe’s extreme point.] Constantinople being situated at the
+extreme of Europe, and on the borders of Asia, near those mountains in
+the neighbourhood of Troy, from whence the first founders of Rome had
+emigrated.
+
+v. 13. To clear th’ incumber’d laws.] The code of laws was abridged and
+reformed by Justinian.
+
+v. 15. Christ’s nature merely human.] Justinian is said to have been a
+follower of the heretical Opinions held by Eutyches,” who taught that
+in Christ there was but one nature, viz. that of the incarnate word.”
+Maclaine’s Mosheim, t. ii. Cent. v. p. ii. c. v. 13.
+
+v. 16. Agapete.] Agapetus, Bishop of Rome, whose Scheda Regia,
+addressed to the Emperor Justinian, procured him a place among the
+wisest and most judicious writers of this century.” Ibid. Cent. vi. p.
+ii c. ii. 8.
+
+v. 33. Who pretend its power.] The Ghibellines.
+
+v. 33. And who oppose ] The Guelphs.
+
+v. 34. Pallas died.] See Virgil, Aen. 1. X.
+
+v. 39. The rival three.] The Horatii and Curiatii.
+
+v. 41. Down.] “From the rape of the Sabine women to the violation of
+Lucretia.” v. 47. Quintius.] Quintius Cincinnatus.
+
+E Cincinnato dall’ inculta chioma.
+Petrarca.
+
+v. 50. Arab hordes.] The Arabians seem to be put for the barbarians in
+general.
+
+v. 54. That hill.] The city of Fesulae, which was sacked by the Romans
+after the defeat of Cataline.
+
+v. 56. Near the hour.] Near the time of our Saviour’s birth.
+
+v. 59. What then it wrought.] In the following fifteen lines the Poet
+has comprised the exploits of Julius Caesar.
+
+v. 75. In its next bearer’s gripe.] With Augustus Caesar.
+
+v. 89. The third Caesar.] “Tiberius the third of the Caesars, had it in
+his power to surpass the glory of all who either preceded or came after
+him, by destroying the city of .Jerusalem, as Titus afterwards did, and
+thus revenging the cause of God himself on the Jews.”
+
+v. 95. Vengeance for vengeance ] This will be afterwards explained by
+the Poet himself. v. 98. Charlemagne.] Dante could not be ignorant that
+the reign of Justinian was long prior to that of Charlemagne; but the
+spirit of the former emperor is represented, both in this instance and
+in what follows, as conscious of the events that had taken place after
+his own time.
+
+v. 104. The yellow lilies.] The French ensign.
+
+v. 110. Charles.] The commentators explain this to mean Charles II,
+king of Naples and Sicily. Is it not more likely to allude to Charles
+of Valois, son of Philip III of France, who was sent for, about this
+time, into Italy by Pope Boniface, with the promise of being made
+emperor? See G. Villani, 1. viii. c. 42.
+
+v. 131. Romeo’s light.] The story of Romeo is involved in some
+uncertainty. The French writers assert the continuance of his
+ministerial office even after the decease of his soverign Raymond
+Berenger, count of Provence: and they rest this assertion chiefly on
+the fact of a certain Romieu de Villeneuve, who was the contemporary of
+that prince, having left large possessions behind him, as appears by
+his will, preserved in the archives of the bishopric of Venice. There
+might however have been more than one person of the name of Romieu, or
+Romeo which answers to that of Palmer in our language. Nor is it
+probable that the Italians, who lived so near the time, were
+misinformed in an occurrence of such notoriety. According to them,
+after he had long been a faithful steward to Raymond, when an account
+was required from him of the revenues whichhe had carefully husbanded,
+and his master as lavishly disbursed, “He demanded the little mule, the
+staff, and the scrip, with which he had first entered into the count’s
+service, a stranger pilgrim from the shrine of St. James in Galicia,
+and parted as he came; nor was it ever known whence he was or wither he
+went.” G. Villani, 1. vi. c. 92.
+
+v. 135. Four daughters.] Of the four daughters of Raymond Berenger,
+Margaret, the eldest, was married to Louis IX of France; Eleanor; the
+next, to Henry III, of England; Sancha, the third, to Richard, Henry’s
+brother, and King of the Romans; and the youngest, Beatrice, to Charles
+I, King of Naples and Sicily, and brother to Louis.
+
+v. 136. Raymond Berenger.] This prince, the last of the house of
+Barcelona, who was count of Provence, died in 1245. He is in the list
+of Provencal poets. See Millot, Hist, Litt des Troubadours, t. ii. P.
+112.
+
+CANTO VII
+
+
+v. 3. Malahoth.] A Hebrew word, signifying “kingdoms.”
+
+v. 4. That substance bright.] Justinian.
+
+v. 17. As might have made one blest amid the flames.] So Giusto de’
+Conti, Bella Mano. “Qual salamandra.”
+
+Che puommi nelle fiammi far beato.
+
+v. 23. That man who was unborn.] Adam.
+
+v. 61. What distils.] “That which proceeds immediately from God, and
+without intervention of secondary causes, in immortal.”
+
+v. 140. Our resurrection certain.] “Venturi appears to mistake the
+Poet’s reasoning, when he observes: “Wretched for us, if we had not
+arguments more convincing, and of a higher kind, to assure us of the
+truth of our resurrection.” It is here intended, I think, that the
+whole of God’s dispensations to man should be considered as a proof of
+our resurrection. The conclusion is that as before sin man was
+immortal, so being restored to the favor of heaven by the expiation
+made for sin, he necessarily recovers his claim to immortality.
+
+There is much in this poem to justify the encomium which the learned
+Salvini has passed on it, when, in an epistle to Redi, imitating what
+Horace had said of Homer, that the duties of life might be better
+learnt from the Grecian bard than from the teachers of the porch or the
+academy, he says—
+
+And dost thou ask, what themes my mind engage?
+The lonely hours I give to Dante’s page;
+And meet more sacred learning in his lines
+Than I had gain’d from all the school divines.
+
+Se volete saper la vita mia,
+Studiando io sto lungi da tutti gli nomini
+Ed ho irnparato piu teologia
+In questi giorni, che ho riletto Dante,
+Che nelle scuole fattto io non avria.
+
+CANTO VIII
+
+
+v. 4. Epicycle,] “In sul dosso di questo cerchio,” &c. Convito di
+Dante, Opere, t. i. p. 48, ed. Ven. 1793. “Upon the back of this
+circle, in the heaven of Venus, whereof we are now treating, is a
+little sphere, which has in that heaven a revolution of its own: whose
+circle the astronomers term epicycle.”
+
+v. 11. To sit in Dido’s bosom.] Virgil. Aen. 1. i. 718,
+
+v. 40. ‘O ye whose intellectual ministry.] Voi ch’ intendendo il terzo
+ciel movete. The first line in our Poet” first canzone. See his
+Convito, Ibid. p. 40.
+
+v. 53. had the time been more.] The spirit now speaking is Charles
+Martel crowned king of Hungary, and son of Charles 11 king of Naples
+and Sicily, to which dominions dying in his father’s lifetime, he did
+not succeed.
+
+v. 57. Thou lov’dst me well.] Charles Martel might have been known to
+our poet at Florence whither he came to meet his father in 1295, the
+year of his death. The retinue and the habiliments of the young monarch
+are minutely described by G. Villani, who adds, that “he remained more
+than twenty days in Florence, waiting for his father King Charles and
+his brothers during which time great honour was done him by the,
+Florentines and he showed no less love towards them, and he was much in
+favour with all.” 1. viii. c. 13. His brother Robert, king of Naples,
+was the friend of Petrarch.
+
+v. 60. The left bank.] Provence.
+
+v. 62. That horn Of fair Ausonia.] The kingdom of Naples.
+
+v. 68. The land.] Hungary.
+
+v. 73. The beautiful Trinaeria.] Sicily, so called from its three
+promontories, of which Pachynus and Pelorus, here mentioned, are two.
+
+v. 14 Typhaeus.] The giant whom Jupiter is fabled to have overwhelmed
+under the mountain Aetna from whence he vomits forth smoke and flame.
+
+v. 77. Sprang through me from Charles and Rodolph.] “Sicily would be
+still ruled by a race of monarchs, descended through me from Charles I
+and Rodolph I the former my grandfather king of Naples and Sicily; the
+latter emperor of Germany, my father-in-law; “both celebrated in the
+Purgatory Canto, Vll.
+
+v. 78. Had not ill lording.] “If the ill conduct of our governors in
+Sicily had not excited the resentment and hatred of the people and
+stimulated them to that dreadful massacre at the Sicilian vespers;” in
+consequence of which the kingdom fell into the hands of Peter III of
+Arragon, in 1282
+
+v. 81. My brother’s foresight.] He seems to tax his brother Robert with
+employing necessitous and greedy Catalonians to administer the affairs
+of his kingdom.
+
+v. 99. How bitter can spring up.] “How a covetous son can spring from a
+liberal father.” Yet that father has himself been accused of avarice in
+the Purgatory Canto XX. v. 78; though his general character was that of
+a bounteous prince.
+
+v. 125. Consult your teacher.] Aristole. [GREEK HERE] De Rep. 1. iii.
+c. 4. “Since a state is made up of members differing from one another,
+(for even as an animal, in the first instance, consists of soul and
+body, and the soul, of reason and desire; and a family, of man and
+woman, and property of master and slave; in like manner a state
+consists both of all these and besides these of other dissimilar
+kinds,) it necessarily follows that the excellence of all the members
+of the state cannot be one and the same.”
+
+v. 136. Esau.] Genesis c. xxv. 22.
+
+v. 137. Quirinus.] Romulus, born of so obscure a father, that his
+parentage was attributed to Mars.
+
+CANTO IX
+
+
+v. 2. O fair Clemenza.] Daughter of Charles Martel, and second wife of
+Louis X. of France.
+
+v. 2. The treachery.] He alludes to the occupation of the kingdom of
+Sicily by Robert, in exclusion of his brother s son Carobert, or
+Charles. Robert, the rightful heir. See G. Villani, 1. viii. c. 112.
+
+v. 7. That saintly light.] Charles Martel.
+
+v. 25. In that part.] Between Rialto and the Venetian territory, and
+the sources of the rivers Brenta and Piava is situated a castle called
+Romano, the birth-place of the famous tyrant Ezzolino or Azzolino, the
+brother of Cunizza, who is now speaking. The tyrant we have seen in
+“the river of blood.” Hell, Canto XII. v. 110.
+
+v. 32. Cunizza.] The adventures of Cunizza, overcome by the influence
+of her star, are related by the chronicler Rolandino of Padua, 1. i. c.
+3, in Muratori Rer. It. Script. t. viii. p. 173.
+
+She eloped from her first husband, Richard of St. Boniface, in the
+company of Sordello, (see Purgatory, Canto VI. and VII. ) with whom she
+is supposed to have cohabited before her marriage: then lived with a
+soldier of Trevigi, whose wife was living at the same time in the same
+city, and on his being murdered by her brother the tyrant, was by her
+brother married to a nobleman of Braganzo, lastly when he also had
+fallen by the same hand she, after her brother’s death, was again
+wedded in Verona.
+
+v. 37. This.] Folco of Genoa, a celebrated Provencal poet, commonly
+termed Folques of Marseilles, of which place he was perhaps bishop.
+Many errors of Nostradamus, regarding him, which have been followed by
+Crescimbeni, Quadrio, and Millot, are detected by the diligence of
+Tiraboschi. Mr. Matthias’s ed. v. 1. P. 18. All that appears certain,
+is what we are told in this Canto, that he was of Genoa, and by
+Petrarch in the Triumph of Love, c. iv. that he was better known by the
+appellation he derived from Marseilles, and at last resumed the
+religious habit. One of his verses is cited by Dante, De Vulg. Eloq. 1.
+ii. c. 6.
+
+v. 40. Five times.] The five hundred years are elapsed: and unless the
+Provencal MSS. should be brought to light the poetical reputation of
+Folco must rest on the mention made of him by the more fortunate
+Italians.
+
+v. 43 The crowd.] The people who inhabited the tract of country bounded
+by the river Tagliamento to the east, and Adice to the west.
+
+v. 45. The hour is near.] Cunizza foretells the defeat of Giacopo da
+Carrara, Lord of Padua by Can Grande, at Vicenza, on the 18th September
+1314. See G. Villani, 1. ix. c. 62. v. 48. One.] She predicts also the
+fate of Ricciardo da Camino, who is said to have been murdered at
+Trevigi, where the rivers (Sile and Cagnano meet) while he was engaged
+in playing at chess.
+
+v. 50. The web.] The net or snare into, which he is destined to fall.
+
+v. 50. Feltro.] The Bishop of Felto having received a number of
+fugitives from Ferrara, who were in opposition to the Pope, under a
+promise of protection, afterwards gave them up, so that they were
+reconducted to that city, and the greater part of them there put to
+death.
+
+v. 53. Malta’s.] A tower, either in the citadel of Padua, which under
+the tyranny of Ezzolino, had been “with many a foul and midnight murder
+fed,” or (as some say) near a river of the same name, that falls into
+the lake of Bolsena, in which the Pope was accustomed to imprison such
+as had been guilty of an irremissible sin.
+
+v. 56 This priest.] The bishop, who, to show himself a zealous partisan
+of the Pope, had committed the above-mentioned act of treachery.
+
+v. 58. We descry.] “We behold the things that we predict, in the
+mirrors of eternal truth.”
+
+v. 64. That other joyance.] Folco.
+
+v. 76. Six shadowing wings.] “Above it stood the seraphims: each one
+had six wings.” Isaiah, c. vi. 2.
+
+v. 80. The valley of waters.] The Mediterranean sea.
+
+v. 80. That.] The great ocean.
+
+v. 82. Discordant shores.] Europe and Africa.
+
+v. 83. Meridian.] Extending to the east, the Mediterranean at last
+reaches the coast of Palestine, which is on its horizon when it enters
+the straits of Gibraltar. “Wherever a man is,” says Vellutello, “there
+he has, above his head, his own particular meridian circle.”
+
+v. 85. —’Twixt Ebro’s stream
+And Macra’s.]
+Eora, a river to the west, and Macra, to the east of Genoa, where
+Folco was born.
+
+v. 88. Begga.] A place in Africa, nearly opposite to Genoa.
+
+v. 89. Whose haven.] Alluding to the terrible slaughter of the Genoese
+made by the Saracens in 936, for which event Vellutello refers to the
+history of Augustino Giustiniani.
+
+v. 91. This heav’n.] The planet Venus.
+
+v. 93. Belus’ daughter.] Dido.
+
+v. 96. She of Rhodope.] Phyllis.
+
+v. 98. Jove’s son.] Hercules.
+
+v. 112. Rahab.] Heb. c. xi. 31.
+
+v. 120. With either palm.] “By the crucifixion of Christ”
+
+v. 126. The cursed flower.] The coin of Florence, called the florin.
+
+v. 130. The decretals.] The canon law.
+
+v. 134. The Vatican.] He alludes either to the death of Pope Boniface
+VIII. or, as Venturi supposes, to the coming of the Emperor Henry VII.
+into Italy, or else, according to the yet more probable conjecture of
+Lombardi, to the transfer of the holy see from Rome to Avignon, which
+took place in the pontificate of Clement V.
+
+CANTO X
+
+
+v. 7. The point.] “To that part of heaven,” as Venturi explains it, “in
+which the equinoctial circle and the Zodiac intersect each other, where
+the common motion of the heavens from east to west may be said to
+strike with greatest force against the motion proper to the planets;
+and this repercussion, as it were, is here the strongest, because the
+velocity of each is increased to the utmost by their respective
+distance from the poles. Such at least is the system of Dante.”
+
+v. 11. Oblique.] The zodiac.
+
+v. 25. The part.] The above-mentioned intersection of the equinoctial
+circle and the zodiac.
+
+v. 26. Minister.] The sun.
+
+v. 30. Where.] In which the sun rises every day earlier after the
+vernal equinox.
+
+v. 45. Fourth family.] The inhabitants of the sun, the fourth planet.
+
+v. 46. Of his spirit and of his offspring.] The procession of the
+third, and the generation of the second person in the Trinity.
+
+v. 70. Such was the song.] “The song of these spirits was ineffable.
+
+v. 86. No less constrained.] “The rivers might as easily cease to flow
+towards the sea, as we could deny thee thy request.”
+
+v. 91. I then.] “I was of the Dominican order.”
+
+v. 95. Albert of Cologne.] Albertus Magnus was born at Laugingen, in
+Thuringia, in 1193, and studied at Paris and at Padua, at the latter of
+which places he entered into the Dominican order. He then taught
+theology in various parts of Germany, and particularly at Cologne.
+Thomas Aquinas was his favourite pupil. In 1260, he reluctantly
+accepted the bishopric of Ratisbon, and in two years after resigned it,
+and returned to his cell in Cologne, where the remainder of his life
+was passed in superintending the school, and in composing his
+voluminous works on divinity and natural science. He died in 1280. The
+absurd imputation of his having dealt in the magical art is well known;
+and his biographers take some pains to clear him of it. Scriptores
+Ordinis Praedicatorum, by Quetif and Echard, Lut. Par. 1719. fol. t. 1.
+p. 162.
+
+v. 96. Of Aquinum, Thomas.] Thomas Aquinas, of whom Bucer is reported
+to have said, “Take but Thomas away, and I will overturn the church of
+Rome,” and whom Hooker terms “the greatest among the school divines,”
+(Eccl. Pol. b. 3. 9), was born of noble parents, who anxiously, but
+vainly, endeavoured to divert him from a life of celibacy and study;
+and died in 1274, at the age of fourty-seven. Echard and Quetif, ibid.
+p. 271. See also Purgatory Canto XX. v. 67.
+
+v. 101. Gratian.] “Gratian, a Benedictine monk belonging to the convent
+of St. Felix and Nabor, at Bologna, and by birth a Tuscan, composed,
+about the year 1130, for the use of the schools, an abridgment or
+epitome of canon law, drawn from the letters of the pontiffs, the
+decrees of councils, and the writings of the ancient doctors.”
+Maclaine’s Mosheim, v. iii. cent. 12. part 2. c. i. 6.
+
+v. 101. To either forum.] “By reconciling,” as Venturi explains it “the
+civil with the canon law.”
+
+v. 104. Peter.] “Pietro Lombardo was of obscure origin, nor is the
+place of his birth in Lombardy ascertained. With a recommendation from
+the bishop of Lucca to St. Bernard, he went into France to continue his
+studies, and for that purpose remained some time at Rheims, whence he
+afterwards proceeded to Paris. Here his reputation was so great that
+Philip, brother of Louis VII., being chosen bishop of Paris, resigned
+that dignity to Pietro, whose pupil he had been. He held his bishopric
+only one year, and died in 1160. His Liber Sententiarum is highly
+esteemed. It contains a system of scholastic theology, so much more
+complete than any which had been yet seen, that it may be deemed an
+original work.” Tiraboschi, Storia della Lett. Ital. t. iii. 1. 4. c.
+2.
+
+v. 104. Who with the widow gave.] This alludes to the beginning of the
+Liber Sententiarum, where Peter says: “Cupiens aliquid de penuria ac
+tenuitate nostra cum paupercula in gazophylacium domini mittere,” v.
+105. The fifth light.] Solomon.
+
+v. 112. That taper’s radiance.] St. Dionysius the Areopagite. “The
+famous Grecian fanatic, who gave himself out for Dionysius the
+Areopagite, disciple of St. Paul, and who, under the protection of this
+venerable name, gave laws and instructions to those that were desirous
+of raising their souls above all human things in order to unite them to
+their great source by sublime contemplation, lived most probably in
+this century (the fourth), though some place him before, others after,
+the present period.” Maclaine’s Mosheim, v. i. cent. iv. p. 2. c. 3.
+12.
+
+v. 116. That pleader.] 1n the fifth century, Paulus Orosius, “acquired
+a considerable degree of reputation by the History he wrote to refute
+the cavils of the Pagans against Christianity, and by his books against
+the Pelagians and Priscillianists.” Ibid. v. ii. cent. v. p. 2. c. 2.
+11. A similar train of argument was pursued by Augustine, in his book
+De Civitate Dei. Orosius is classed by Dante, in his treatise De Vulg.
+Eloq. I ii c. 6. as one of his favourite authors, among those “qui usi
+sunt altissimas prosas,”—” who have written prose with the greatest
+loftiness of style.”
+
+v. 119. The eighth.] Boetius, whose book De Consolatione Philosophiae
+excited so much attention during the middle ages, was born, as
+Tiraboschi conjectures, about 470. “In 524 he was cruelly put to death
+by command of Theodoric, either on real or pretended suspicion of his
+being engaged in a conspiracy.” Della Lett. Ital. t. iii. 1. i. c. 4.
+
+v. 124. Cieldauro.] Boetius was buried at Pavia, in the monastery of
+St. Pietro in Ciel d’oro.
+
+v. 126. Isidore.] He was Archbishop of Seville during forty years, and
+died in 635. See Mariana, Hist. 1. vi. c. 7. Mosheim, whose critical
+opinions in general must be taken with some allowance, observes that
+“his grammatical theological, and historical productions, discover more
+learning and pedantry, than judgment and taste.”
+
+v. 127. Bede.] Bede, whose virtues obtained him the appellation of the
+Venerable, was born in 672 at Wearmouth and Jarrow, in the bishopric of
+Durham, and died in 735. Invited to Rome by Pope Sergius I., he
+preferred passing almost the whole of his life in the seclusion of a
+monastery. A catalogue of his numerous writings may be seen in Kippis’s
+Biographia Britannica, v. ii.
+
+v. 127. Richard.] Richard of St. Victor, a native either of Scotland or
+Ireland, was canon and prior of the monastery of that name at Paris and
+died in 1173. “He was at the head of the Mystics in this century and
+his treatise, entitled the Mystical Ark, which contains as it were the
+marrow of this kind of theology, was received with the greatest
+avidity.” Maclaine’s Mosheim, v. iii. cent. xii. p. 2. c. 2. 23.
+
+v. 132. Sigebert.] “A monk of the abbey of Gemblours who was in high
+repute at the end of the eleventh, and beginning of the twelfth
+century.” Dict. de Moreri.
+
+v. 131. The straw-litter’d street.] The name of a street in Paris: the
+“Rue du Fouarre.”
+
+v. 136. The spouse of God.] The church.
+
+CANTO XI
+
+
+v. 1. O fond anxiety of mortal men.] Lucretius, 1. ii. 14
+
+O miseras hominum mentes ! O pectora caeca
+Qualibus in tenebris vitae quantisque periclis
+Degitur hoc aevi quodcunque est!
+
+v. 4. Aphorisms,] The study of medicine.
+
+v. 17. The lustre.] The spirit of Thomas Aquinas
+
+v. 29. She.] The church.
+
+v. 34. One.] Saint Francis.
+
+v. 36. The other.] Saint Dominic.
+
+v. 40. Tupino.] A rivulet near Assisi, or Ascesi where Francis was born
+in 1182.
+
+v. 40. The wave.] Chiascio, a stream that rises in a mountain near
+Agobbio, chosen by St. Ubaldo for the place of his retirement.
+
+v. 42. Heat and cold.] Cold from the snow, and heat from the reflection
+of the sun.
+
+v. 45. Yoke.] Vellutello understands this of the vicinity of the
+mountain to Nocera and Gualdo; and Venturi (as I have taken it) of the
+heavy impositions laid on those places by the Perugians. For GIOGO,
+like the Latin JUGUM, will admit of either sense.
+
+v. 50. The east.]
+
+This is the east, and Juliet is the sun.
+Shakespeare.
+
+v. 55. Gainst his father’s will.] In opposition to the wishes of his
+natural father
+
+v. 58. In his father’s sight.] The spiritual father, or bishop, in
+whose presence he made a profession of poverty.
+
+v. 60. Her first husband.] Christ.
+
+v. 63. Amyclas.] Lucan makes Caesar exclaim, on witnessing the secure
+poverty of the fisherman Amyclas:
+
+—O vite tuta facultas
+Pauperis, angustique lares! O munera nondum
+Intellecta deum! quibus hoc contingere templis,
+Aut potuit muris, nullo trepidare tumultu,
+Caesarea pulsante manu?
+Lucan Phars. 1. v. 531.
+
+v. 72. Bernard.] One of the first followers of the saint.
+
+v. 76. Egidius.] The third of his disciples, who died in 1262. His
+work, entitled Verba Aurea, was published in 1534, at Antwerp See Lucas
+Waddingus, Annales Ordinis Minoris, p. 5.
+
+v. 76. Sylvester.] Another of his earliest associates.
+
+v. 83. Pietro Bernardone.] A man in an humble station of life at
+Assisi.
+
+v. 86. Innocent.] Pope Innocent III.
+
+v. 90. Honorius.] His successor Honorius III who granted certain
+privileges to the Franciscans.
+
+v. 93. On the hard rock.] The mountain Alverna in the Apennine.
+
+v. 100. The last signet.] Alluding to the stigmata, or marks resembling
+the wounds of Christ, said to have been found on the saint’s body.
+
+v. 106. His dearest lady.] Poverty.
+
+v. 113. Our Patriarch ] Saint Dominic.
+
+v. 316. His flock ] The Dominicans.
+
+v. 127. The planet from whence they split.] “The rule of their order,
+which the Dominicans neglect to observe.”
+
+CANTO XII
+
+
+v. 1. The blessed flame.] Thomas Aquinas
+
+v. 12. That voice.] The nymph Echo, transformed into the repercussion
+of the voice.
+
+v. 25. One.] Saint Buonaventura, general of the Franciscan order, in
+which he effected some reformation, and one of the most profound
+divines of his age. “He refused the archbishopric of York, which was
+offered him by Clement IV, but afterwards was prevailed on to accept
+the bishopric of Albano and a cardinal’s hat. He was born at Bagnoregio
+or Bagnorea, in Tuscany, A.D. 1221, and died in 1274.” Dict. Histor.
+par Chaudon et Delandine. Ed. Lyon. 1804.
+
+v. 28. The love.] By an act of mutual courtesy, Buonaventura, a
+Franciscan, is made to proclaim the praises of St. Dominic, as Thomas
+Aquinas, a Dominican, has celebrated those of St. Francis.
+
+v. 42. In that clime.] Spain.
+
+v. 48. Callaroga.] Between Osma and Aranda, in Old Castile, designated
+by the royal coat of arms.
+
+v. 51. The loving minion of the Christian faith.] Dominic was born
+April 5, 1170, and died August 6, 1221. His birthplace, Callaroga; his
+father and mother’s names, Felix and Joanna, his mother’s dream; his
+name of Dominic, given him in consequence of a vision by a noble
+matron, who stood sponsor to him, are all told in an anonymous life of
+the saint, said to be written in the thirteenth century, and published
+by Quetif and Echard, Scriptores Ordinis Praedicatorum. Par. 1719. fol.
+t 1. p. 25. These writers deny his having been an inquisitor, and
+indeed the establishment of the inquisition itself before the fourth
+Lateran council. Ibid. p. 88.
+
+v. 55. In the mother’s womb.] His mother, when pregnant with him, is
+said to have dreamt that she should bring forth a white and black dog,
+with a lighted torch in its mouth.
+
+v. 59. The dame.] His godmother’s dream was, that he had one star in
+his forehead, and another in the nape of his neck, from which he
+communicated light to the east and the west.
+
+v. 73. Felix.] Felix Gusman.
+
+v. 75. As men interpret it.] Grace or gift of the Lord.
+
+v. 77. Ostiense.] A cardinal, who explained the decretals.
+
+v. 77. Taddeo.] A physician, of Florence.
+
+v. 82. The see.] “The apostolic see, which no longer continues its
+wonted liberality towards the indigent and deserving; not indeed
+through its own fault, as its doctrines are still the same, but through
+the fault of the pontiff, who is seated in it.”
+
+v. 85. No dispensation.] Dominic did not ask license to compound for
+the use of unjust acquisitions, by dedicating a part of them to pious
+purposes.
+
+v. 89. In favour of that seed.] “For that seed of the divine word, from
+which have sprung up these four-and-twenty plants, that now environ
+thee.”
+
+v. 101. But the track.] “But the rule of St. Francis is already
+deserted and the lees of the wine are turned into mouldiness.”
+
+v. 110. Tares.] He adverts to the parable of the taxes and the wheat.
+
+v. 111. I question not.] “Some indeed might be found, who still observe
+the rule of the order, but such would come neither from Casale nor
+Acquasparta:” of the former of which places was Uberto, one master
+general, by whom the discipline had been relaxed; and of the latter,
+Matteo, another, who had enforced it with unnecessary rigour.
+
+v. 121. -Illuminato here, And Agostino.] Two among the earliest
+followers of St. Francis.
+
+v. 125. Hugues of St. Victor.] A Saxon of the monastery of Saint Victor
+at Paris, who fed ill 1142 at the age of forty-four. “A man
+distinguished by the fecundity of his genius, who treated in his
+writings of all the branches of sacred and profane erudition that were
+known in his time, and who composed several dissertations that are not
+destitute of merit.” Maclaine’s Mosheim, Eccl. Hist. v. iii . cent.
+xii. p. 2. 2. 23. I have looked into his writings, and found some
+reason for this high eulogium.
+
+v. 125. Piatro Mangiadore.] “Petrus Comestor, or the Eater, born at
+Troyes, was canon and dean of that church, and afterwards chancellor of
+the church of Paris. He relinquished these benefices to become a
+regular canon of St. Victor at Paris, where he died in 1198. Chaudon et
+Delandine Dict. Hist. Ed. Lyon. 1804. The work by which he is best
+known, is his Historia Scolastica, which I shall have occasion to cite
+in the Notes to Canto XXVI.
+
+v. 126. He of Spain.] “To Pope Adrian V succeeded John XXI a native of
+Lisbon a man of great genius and extraordinary acquirements, especially
+in logic and in medicine, as his books, written in the name of Peter of
+Spain (by which he was known before he became Pope), may testify. His
+life was not much longer than that of his predecessors, for he was
+killed at Viterbo, by the falling in of the roof of his chamber, after
+he had been pontiff only eight months and as many days. A.D. 1277.
+Mariana, Hist. de Esp. l. xiv. c. 2.
+
+v. 128. Chrysostom.] The eloquent patriarch of Constantinople.
+
+v. 128. Anselmo.] “Anselm, Archbishop of Canterbury, was born at Aosta,
+about 1034, and studied under Lanfrane at the monastery of Bec, in
+Normandy, where he afterwards devoted himself to a religious life, in
+his twenty-seventh year. In three years he was made prior, and then
+abbot of that monastery! from whence he was taken, in 1093, to succeed
+to the archbishopric, vacant by the death of Lanfrane. He enjoyed this
+dignity till his death, in 1109, though it was disturbed by many
+dissentions with William II and Henry I respecting the immunities and
+investitures. There is much depth and precisian in his theological
+works.” Tiraboschi, Stor. della Lett. Ital. t. iii.
+
+1. iv. c. 2. Ibid. c. v. “It is an observation made by many modern
+writers, that the demonstration of the existence of God, taken from the
+idea of a Supreme Being, of which Des Cartes is thought to be the
+author, was so many ages back discovered and brought to light by
+Anselm. Leibnitz himself makes the remark, vol. v. Oper. p. 570. Edit.
+Genev. 1768.”
+
+v. 129. Donatus.] Aelius Donatus, the grammarian, in the fourth
+century, one of the preceptors of St. Jerome.
+
+v. 130. Raban.] “Rabanus Maurus, Archbishop of Mentz, is deservedly
+placed at the head of the Latin writers of this age.” Mosheim, v. ii.
+cent. ix. p. 2 c. 2. 14.
+
+v. 131. Joachim.] Abbot of Flora in Calabria; “whom the multitude
+revered as a person divinely inspired and equal to the most illustrious
+prophets of ancient times.” Ibid. v. iii. cent. xiii. p. 2. c. 2. 33.
+
+v. 134. A peer.] St. Dominic.
+
+CANTO XIII
+
+
+v. 1. Let him.] “Whoever would conceive the sight that now presented
+itself to me, must imagine to himself fifteen of the brightest stars in
+heaven, together with seven stars of Arcturus Major and two of Arcturus
+Minor, ranged in two circles, one within the other, each resembling the
+crown of Ariadne, and moving round m opposite directions.”
+
+v. 21. The Chiava.] See Hell, Canto XXIX. 45.
+
+v. 29. That luminary.] Thomas Aquinas.
+
+v. 31. One ear.] “Having solved one of thy questions, I proceed to
+answer the other. Thou thinkest, then, that Adam and Christ were both
+endued with all the perfection of which the human nature is capable and
+therefore wonderest at what has been said concerning Solomon”
+
+v. 48. That.] “Things corruptible and incorruptible, are only
+emanations from the archetypal idea residing in the Divine mind.”
+
+v. 52. His brightness.] The Word: the Son of God.
+
+v. 53. His love triune with them.] The Holy Ghost.
+
+v. 55. New existences.] Angels and human souls.
+
+v. 57. The lowest powers.] Irrational life and brute matter.
+
+v. 62. Their wax and that which moulds it.] Matter, and the virtue or
+energy that acts on it.
+
+v. 68. The heav’n.] The influence of the planetary bodies.
+
+v. 77. The clay.] Adam.
+
+v. 88. Who ask’d.] “He did not desire to know the number of the stars,
+or to pry into the subtleties of metaphysical and mathematical science:
+but asked for that wisdom which might fit him for his kingly office.”
+
+v. 120. —Parmenides Melissus Bryso.] For the singular opinions
+entertained by the two former of these heathen philosophers, see
+Diogenes Laertius, 1. ix. and Aristot. de Caelo, 1. iii. c. 1 and Phys.
+l. i. c. 2. The last is also twice adduced by 2. Aristotle (Anal Post.
+1. i. c. 9. and Rhet. 1. iii. c. 2.) as 3. affording instances of false
+reasoning.
+
+v. 123. Sabellius, Arius.] Well-known heretics.
+
+v. 124. Scymitars.] A passage in the travels of Bertradon de la
+Brocquiere, translated by Mr. Johnes, will explain this allusion, which
+has given some trouble to the commentators. That traveler, who wrote
+before Dante, informs us, p. 138, that the wandering Arabs used their
+scymitars as mirrors.
+
+v. 126. Let not.] “Let not short-sighted mortals presume to decide on
+the future doom of any man, from a consideration of his present
+character and actions.”
+
+CANTO XIV
+
+
+v. 5. Such was the image.] The voice of Thomas Aquinas proceeding, from
+the circle to the centre and that of Beatrice from the centre to the
+circle.
+
+v. 26. Him.] Literally translated by Chaucer, Troilus and Cresseide.
+
+Thou one two, and three eterne on live
+That raignest aie in three, two and one
+Uncircumscript, and all maist circonscrive,
+
+v. 81. The goodliest light.] Solomon.
+
+v. 78. To more lofty bliss.] To the planet Mars.
+
+v. 94. The venerable sign.] The cross.
+
+v. 125. He.] “He who considers that the eyes of Beatrice became more
+radiant the higher we ascended, must not wonder that I do not except
+even them as I had not yet beheld them since our entrance into this
+planet.”
+
+CANTO XV
+
+
+v. 24. Our greater Muse.] Virgil Aen. 1. vi. 684. v. 84. I am thy
+root.] Cacciaguida, father to Alighieri, of whom our Poet was the
+great-grandson.
+
+v. 89. The mountain.] Purgatory.
+
+v. 92. Florence.] See G. Villani, l. iii. c. 2.
+
+v. 93. Which calls her still.] The public clock being still within the
+circuit of the ancient walls.
+
+v. 98. When.] When the women were not married at too early an age, and
+did not expect too large a portion.
+
+v. 101. Void.] Through the civil wars.
+
+v. 102 Sardanapalus.] The luxurious monarch of Assyria Juvenal is here
+imitated, who uses his name for an instance of effeminacy. Sat.
+
+v. 103. Montemalo ] Either an elevated spot between Rome and Viterbo,
+or Monte Mario, the site of the villa Mellini, commanding a view of
+Rome.
+
+v. 101. Our suburban turret.] Uccellatojo, near Florence, from whence
+that city was discovered.
+
+v. 103. Bellincion Berti.] Hell, Canto XVI. 38. nd Notes. There is a
+curious description of the simple manner in which the earlier
+Florentines dressed themselves in G. Villani, 1 vi. c. 71.
+
+v. 110. Of Nerli and of Vecchio.] Two of the most opulent families in
+Florence.
+
+v. 113. Each.] “None fearful either of dying in banishment, or of being
+deserted by her husband on a scheme of battle in France.
+
+v. 120. A Salterello and Cianghella.] The latter a shameless woman of
+the family of Tosa, married to Lito degli Alidosi of Imola: the former
+Lapo Salterello, a lawyer, with whom Dante was at variance.
+
+v. 125. Mary.] The Virgin was involved in the pains of child-birth
+Purgatory, Canto XX. 21.
+
+v. 130 Valdipado.] Cacciaguida’s wife, whose family name was
+Aldighieri; came from Ferrara, called Val di Pado, from its being
+watered by the Po.
+
+v. 131. Conrad.] The Emperor Conrad III who died in 1152. See G.
+Villani, 1. iv. 34.
+
+v. 136. Whose people.] The Mahometans, who were left in possession of
+the Holy Land, through the supineness of the Pope.
+
+CANTO XVI
+
+
+v. 10. With greeting.] The Poet, who had addressed the spirit, not
+knowing him to be his ancestor, with a plain “Thou,” now uses more
+ceremony, and calls him “You,” according to a custom introduced among
+the Romans in the latter times of the empire.
+
+v. 15. Guinever.] Beatrice’s smile encouraged him to proceed just as
+the cough of Ginevra’s female servant gave her mistress assurance to
+admit the freedoms of Lancelot. See Hell, Canto V. 124.
+
+v. 23. The fold.] Florence, of which John the Baptist was the patron
+saint.
+
+v. 31. From the day.] From the Incarnation to the birth of Cacciaguida,
+the planet Mars had returned five hundred and fifty-three times to the
+constellation of Leo, with which it is supposed to have a congenial
+influence. His birth may, therefore, be placed about 1106.
+
+v. 38. The last.] The city was divided into four compartments. The
+Elisei, the ancestors of Dante, resided near the entrance of that named
+from the Porta S. Piero, which was the last reached by the competitor
+in the annual race at Florence. See G. Villani, 1. iv. c. 10.
+
+v. 44. From Mars.] “Both in the times of heathenish and of
+Christianity.” Hell, Canto XIII. 144.
+
+v. 48. Campi and Certaldo and Fighine.] Country places near Florence.
+
+v. 50. That these people.] That the inhabitants of the above- mentioned
+places had not been mixed with the citizens: nor the limits of Florence
+extended beyond Galluzzo and Trespiano.”
+
+v. 54. Aguglione’s hind and Signa’s.] Baldo of Aguglione, and Bonifazio
+of Signa.
+
+v. 56. Had not the people.] If Rome had continued in her allegiance to
+the emperor, and the Guelph and Ghibelline factions had thus been
+prevented, Florence would not have been polluted by a race of upstarts,
+nor lost the most respectable of her ancient families.
+
+v. 61. Simifonte.] A castle dismantled by the Florentines. G. Villani,
+1. v. c. 30. The individual here alluded to is no longer known.
+
+v. 69. The blind bull.] So Chaucer, Troilus and Cresseide. b. 2.
+
+For swifter course cometh thing that is of wight
+When it descendeth than done things light.
+
+Compare Aristotle, Ethic. Nic. l. vi. c. 13. [GREEK HERE]
+
+v. 72. Luni, Urbisaglia.] Cities formerly of importance, but then
+fallen to decay.
+
+v. 74. Chiusi and Sinigaglia.] The same.
+
+v. 80. As the moon.] “The fortune of us, that are the moon’s men doth
+ebb and flow like the sea.” Shakespeare, 1 Henry IV. a. i. s. 2.
+
+v. 86. The Ughi.] Whoever is curious to know the habitations of these
+and the other ancient Florentines, may consult G. Villani, l. iv.
+
+v. 91. At the poop.] Many editions read porta, “gate.” -The same
+metaphor is found in Aeschylus, Supp. 356, and is there also scarce
+understood by the critics. [GREEK HERE] Respect these wreaths, that
+crown your city’s poop.
+
+v. 99. The gilded hilt and pommel.] The symbols of knighthood
+
+v. 100. The column cloth’d with verrey.] The arms of the Pigli.
+
+v. 103. With them.] Either the Chiaramontesi, or the Tosinghi one of
+which had committed a fraud in measuring out the wheat from the public
+granary. See Purgatory, Canto XII. 99
+
+v. 109. The bullets of bright gold.] The arms of the Abbati, as it is
+conjectured.
+
+v. 110. The sires of those.] “Of the Visdomini, the Tosinghi and the
+Cortigiani, who, being sprung from the founders of the bishopric of
+Florence are the curators of its revenues, which they do not spare,
+whenever it becomes vacant.”
+
+v. 113. Th’ o’erweening brood.] The Adimari. This family was so little
+esteemed, that Ubertino Donato, who had married a daughter of
+Bellincion Berti, himself indeed derived from the same stock (see Note
+to Hell Canto XVI. 38.) was offended with his father-in-law, for giving
+another of his daughters in marriage to one of them.
+
+v. 124. The gateway.] Landino refers this to the smallness of the city:
+Vellutello, with less probability, to the simplicity of the people in
+naming one of the gates after a private family.
+
+v. 127. The great baron.] The Marchese Ugo, who resided at Florence as
+lieutenant of the Emperor Otho III, gave many of the chief families
+license to bear his arms. See G. Villani, 1. iv. c. 2., where the
+vision is related, in consequence of which he sold all his possessions
+in Germany, and founded seven abbeys, in one whereof his memory was
+celebrated at Florence on St. Thomas’s day. v. 130. One.] Giano della
+Bella, belonging to one of the families thus distinguished, who no
+longer retained his place among the nobility, and had yet added to his
+arms a bordure or. See Macchiavelli, 1st. Fior. 1. ii. p. 86. Ediz.
+Giolito.
+
+v. 132. -Gualterotti dwelt And Importuni.] Two families in the
+compartment of the city called Borgo.
+
+v. 135. The house.] Of Amidei. See Notes to Canto XXVIII. of Hell. v.
+102.
+
+v. 142. To Ema.] “It had been well for the city, if thy ancestor had
+been drowned in the Ema, when he crossed that stream on his way from
+Montebuono to Florence.”
+
+v. 144. On that maim’d stone.] See Hell, Canto XIII. 144. Near the
+remains of the statue of Mars. Buondelmonti was slain, as if he had
+been a victim to the god; and Florence had not since known the blessing
+of peace.
+
+v. 150. The lily.] “The arms of Florence had never hung reversed on the
+spear of her enemies, in token of her defeat; nor been changed from
+argent to gules;” as they afterwards were, when the Guelfi gained the
+predominance.
+
+CANTO XVII
+
+
+v. 1. The youth.] Phaeton, who came to his mother Clymene, to inquire
+of her if he were indeed the son of Apollo. See Ovid, Met. 1. i. ad
+finem.
+
+v. 6. That saintly lamp.] Cacciaguida.
+
+v. 12. To own thy thirst.] “That thou mayst obtain from others a
+solution of any doubt that may occur to thee.”
+
+v. 15. Thou seest as clear.] “Thou beholdest future events, with the
+same clearness of evidence, that we discern the simplest mathematical
+demonstrations.”
+
+v. 19. The point.] The divine nature.
+
+v. 27. The arrow.] Nam praevisa minus laedere tela solent. Ovid.
+
+Che piaga antiveduta assai men duole.
+Petrarca, Trionfo del Tempo
+
+v. 38. Contingency.] “The evidence with which we see the future
+portrayed in the source of all truth, no more necessitates that future
+than does the image, reflected in the sight by a ship sailing down a
+stream, necessitate the motion of the vessel.”
+
+v. 43. From thence.] “From the eternal sight; the view of the Deity.
+
+v. 49. There.] At Rome, where the expulsion of Dante’s party from
+Florence was then plotting, in 1300.
+
+v. 65. Theirs.] “They shall be ashamed of the part they have taken
+aga’nst thee.”
+
+v. 69. The great Lombard.] Either Alberto della Scala, or Bartolommeo
+his eldest son. Their coat of arms was a ladder and an eagle.
+
+v. 75. That mortal.] Can Grande della Scala, born under the influence
+of Mars, but at this time only nine years old
+
+v. 80. The Gascon.] Pope Clement V.
+
+v. 80. Great Harry.] The Emperor Henry VII.
+
+v. 127. The cry thou raisest.] “Thou shalt stigmatize the faults of
+those who are most eminent and powerful.”
+
+CANTO XVIII
+
+
+v. 3. Temp’ring the sweet with bitter.] Chewing the end of sweet and
+bitter fancy. Shakespeare, As you Like it, a. 3. s. 3.
+
+v. 26. On this fifth lodgment of the tree.] Mars, the fifth ot the @
+
+v. 37. The great Maccabee.] Judas Maccabeus.
+
+v. 39. Charlemagne.] L. Pulci commends Dante for placing
+Charlemagne and Orlando here:
+Io mi confido ancor molto qui a Dante
+Che non sanza cagion nel ciel su misse
+Carlo ed Orlando in quelle croci sante,
+Che come diligente intese e scrisse.
+Morg. Magg. c. 28.
+
+v. 43. William and Renard.] Probably not, as the commentators have
+imagined, William II of Orange, and his kinsman Raimbaud, two of the
+crusaders under Godfrey of Bouillon, (Maimbourg, Hist. des Croisades,
+ed. Par. 1682. 12mo. t. i. p. 96.) but rather the two more celebrated
+heroes in the age of Charlemagne. The former, William l. of Orange,
+supposed to have been the founder of the present illustrious family of
+that name, died about 808, according to Joseph de la Piser, Tableau de
+l’Hist. des Princes et Principante d’Orange. Our countryman, Ordericus
+Vitalis, professes to give his true life, which had been misrepresented
+in the songs of the itinerant bards.” Vulgo canitur a joculatoribus de
+illo, cantilena; sed jure praeferenda est relatio authentica.” Eccl.
+Hist. in Duchesne, Hist. Normann Script. p. 508. The latter is better
+known by having been celebrated by Ariosto, under the name of Rinaldo.
+
+v. 43. Duke Godfey.] Godfrey of Bouillon.
+
+v. 46. Robert Guiscard.] See Hell, Canto XXVIII. v. 12.
+
+v. 81. The characters.] Diligite justitiam qui judicatis terrarm. “Love
+righteousness, ye that be judges of the earth “ Wisdom of Solomon, c.
+i. 1.
+
+v. 116. That once more.] “That he may again drive out those who buy and
+sell in the temple.”
+
+v. 124. Taking the bread away.] “Excommunication, or the interdiction
+of the Eucharist, is now employed as a weapon of warfare.”
+
+v. 126. That writest but to cancel.] “And thou, Pope Boniface, who
+writest thy ecclesiastical censures for no other purpose than to be
+paid for revoking them.”
+
+v. 130. To him.] The coin of Florence was stamped with the impression
+of John the Baptist.
+
+CANTO XIX
+
+
+v. 38. Who turn’d his compass.] Compare Proverbs, c. viii. 27. And
+Milton, P. L. b. vii 224.
+
+v. 42. The Word] “The divine nature still remained incomprehensible. Of
+this Lucifer was a proof; for had he thoroughly comprehended it, he
+would not have fallen.”
+
+v. 108. The Ethiop.] Matt. c. xii. 41.
+
+v. 112. That volume.] Rev. c. xx. 12.
+
+v. 114. Albert.] Purgatory, Canto VI. v. 98.
+
+v. 116. Prague.] The eagle predicts the devastation of Bohemia by
+Albert, which happened soon after this time, when that Emperor obtained
+the kingdom for his eldest son Rodolph. See Coxe’s House of Austria,
+4to. ed. v. i. part 1. p. 87
+
+v. 117. He.] Philip IV of France, after the battle of Courtrai, 1302,
+in which the French were defeated by the Flemings, raised the nominal
+value of the coin. This king died in consequence of his horse being
+thrown to the ground by a wild boar, in 1314
+
+v. 121. The English and Scot.] He adverts to the disputes between John
+Baliol and Edward I, the latter of whom is commended in the Purgatory,
+Canto VII. v. 130.
+
+v. 122. The Spaniard’s luxury.] The commentators refer this to Alonzo X
+of Spain. It seems probable that the allusion is to Ferdinand IV who
+came to the crown in 1295, and died in 1312, at the age of twenty four,
+in consequence, as it was supposed, of his extreme intemperance. See
+Mariana, Hist I. xv. c. 11.
+
+v. 123. The Bohemian.] Winceslaus II. Purgatory, Canto VII. v.
+
+v. 125. The halter of Jerusalem.] Charles II of Naples and Jerusalem
+who was lame. See note to Purgatory, Canto VII. v. 122, and XX. v. 78.
+
+v. 127. He.] Frederick of Sicily son of Peter III of Arragon.
+Purgatory, Canto VII. v. 117. The isle of fire is Sicily, where was the
+tomb of Anchises.
+
+v. 133. His uncle.] James, king of Majorca and Minorca, brother to
+Peter III.
+
+v. 133. His brother.] James II of Arragon, who died in 1327. See
+Purgatory, Canto VII. v. 117.
+
+v. 135. Of Portugal.] In the time of Dante, Dionysius was king of
+Portugal. He died in 1328, after a reign of near forty-six years, and
+does not seem to have deserved the stigma here fastened on him. See
+Mariana. and 1. xv. c. 18. Perhaps the rebellious son of Dionysius may
+be alluded to.
+
+v. 136. Norway.] Haquin, king of Norway, is probably meant; who, having
+given refuge to the murderers of Eric VII king of Denmark, A D. 1288,
+commenced a war against his successor, Erie VIII, “which continued for
+nine years, almost to the utter ruin and destruction of both kingdoms.”
+Modern Univ. Hist. v. xxxii p. 215.
+
+v. 136. -Him Of Ratza.] One of the dynasty of the house of Nemagna,
+which ruled the kingdom of Rassia, or Ratza, in Sclavonia, from 1161 to
+1371, and whose history may be found in Mauro Orbino, Regno degli
+Slavi, Ediz. Pesaro. 1601. Uladislaus appears to have been the
+sovereign in Dante’s time, but the disgraceful forgery adverted to in
+the text, is not recorded by the historian v. 138. Hungary.] The
+kingdom of Hungary was about this time disputed by Carobert, son of
+Charles Martel, and Winceslaus, prince of Bohemia, son of Winceslaus
+II. See Coxe’s House of Austria, vol. i. p. 1. p. 86.
+
+4to edit.
+
+v. 140. Navarre.] Navarre was now under the yoke of France. It soon
+after (in 1328) followed the advice of Dante and had a monarch of its
+own. Mariana, 1. xv. c. 19.
+
+v. 141. Mountainous girdle.] The Pyrenees.
+
+v. 143. -Famagosta’s streets And Nicosia’s.]
+
+Cities in the kingdom of Cyprus, at that time ruled by Henry II a
+pusillanimous prince. Vertot. Hist. des Chev. de Malte, 1. iii. iv. The
+meaning appears to be, that the complaints made by those cities of
+their weak and worthless governor, may be regarded as an earnest of his
+condemnation at the last doom.
+
+CANTO XX
+
+
+v. 6. Wherein one shines.] The light of the sun, whence he supposes the
+other celestial bodies to derive their light
+
+v. 8. The great sign.] The eagle, the Imperial ensign.
+
+v. 34. Who.] David.
+
+v. 39. He.] Trajan. See Purgatory, Canto X. 68.
+
+v. 44. He next.] Hezekiah.
+
+v. 50. The other following.] Constantine. There is no passage in which
+Dante’s opinion of the evil; that had arisen from the mixture of the
+civil with the ecclesiastical power, is more unequivocally declared.
+
+v. 57. William.] William II, king of Sicily, at the latter part of the
+twelfth century He was of the Norman line of sovereigns, and obtained
+the appellation of “the Good” and, as the poet says his loss was as
+much the subject of regret in his dominions, as the presence of Charles
+I of Anjou and Frederick of Arragon, was of sorrow and complaint.
+
+v. 62. Trojan Ripheus.]
+Ripheus, justissimus unus
+Qui fuit in Teneris, et servantissimus aequi.
+Virg. Aen. 1. ii. 4—.
+
+v. 97. This.] Ripheus.
+
+v. 98. That.] Trajan.
+
+v. 103. The prayers,] The prayers of St. Gregory
+
+v. 119. The three nymphs.] Faith, Hope, and Charity. Purgatory, Canto
+XXIX. 116. v. 138. The pair.] Ripheus and Trajan.
+
+CANTO XXI
+
+
+v. 12. The seventh splendour.] The planet Saturn
+
+v. 13. The burning lion’s breast.] The constellation Leo.
+
+v. 21. In equal balance.] “My pleasure was as great in complying with
+her will as in beholding her countenance.”
+
+v. 24. Of that lov’d monarch.] Saturn. Compare Hell, Canto XIV. 91.
+
+v. 56. What forbade the smile.] “Because it would have overcome thee.”
+
+v. 61. There aloft.] Where the other souls were.
+
+v. 97. A stony ridge.] The Apennine.
+
+v. 112. Pietro Damiano.] “S. Pietro Damiano obtained a great and
+well-merited reputation, by the pains he took to correct the abuses
+among the clergy. Ravenna is supposed to have been the place of his
+birth, about 1007. He was employed in several important missions, and
+rewarded by Stephen IX with the dignity of cardinal, and the bishopric
+of Ostia, to which, however, he preferred his former retreat in the
+monastery of Fonte Aveliana, and prevailed on Alexander II to permit
+him to retire thither. Yet he did not long continue in this seclusion,
+before he was sent on other embassies. He died at Faenza in 1072. His
+letters throw much light on the obscure history of these times. Besides
+them, he has left several treatises on sacred and ecclesiastical
+subjects. His eloquence is worthy of a better age.” Tiraboschi, Storia
+della Lett Ital. t. iii. 1. iv. c. 2.
+
+v. 114. Beside the Adriatic.] At Ravenna. Some editions have FU instead
+of FUI, according to which reading, Pietro distinguishes himself from
+another Pietro, who was termed “Peccator,” the sinner.
+
+v. 117. The hat.] The cardinal’s hat.
+
+v. 118. Cephas.] St. Peter.
+
+v. 119 The Holy Spirit’s vessel.] St. Paul. See Hell, Canto II. 30.
+
+v. 130. Round this.] Round the spirit of Pietro Damiano.
+
+CANTO XXII
+
+
+v. 14. The vengeance.] Beatrice, it is supposed, intimates the
+approaching fate of Boniface VIII. See Purgatory, Canto XX. 86.
+
+v. 36. Cassino.] A castle in the Terra di Lavoro.
+
+v. 38. I it was.] “A new order of monks, which in a manner absorbed all
+the others that were established in the west, was instituted, A.D. 529,
+by Benedict of Nursis, a man of piety and reputation for the age he
+lived in.” Maclaine’s Mosheim, Eccles. Hist. v. ii. cent. vi. p. 2. ch.
+2 - 6.
+
+v. 48. Macarius.] There are two of this name enumerated by Mosheim
+among the Greek theologians of the fourth century, v. i. cent. iv p. 11
+ch. 2 - 9. In the following chapter, 10, it is said, “Macarius, an
+Egyptian monk, undoubtedly deserves the first rank among the practical
+matters of this time, as his works displayed, some few things excepted,
+the brightest and most lovely portraiture of sanctity and virtue.”
+
+v. 48. Romoaldo.] S. Romoaldo, a native of Ravenna, and the founder of
+the order of Camaldoli, died in 1027. He was the author of a commentary
+on the Psalms.
+
+v. 70. The patriarch Jacob.] So Milton, P. L. b. iii. 510:
+The stairs were such, as whereon Jacob saw
+Angels ascending and descending, bands
+Of guardians bright.
+
+v. 107. The sign.] The constellation of Gemini.
+
+v. 130. This globe.] So Chaucer, Troilus and Cresseide, b. v,
+
+And down from thence fast he gan avise
+This little spot of earth, that with the sea
+Embraced is, and fully gan despite
+This wretched world.
+
+Compare Cicero, Somn. Scip. “Jam ipsa terra ita mihi parva visa est.”
+&c. Lucan, Phar 1. ix. 11; and Tasso, G. L. c. xiv. st, 9, 10, 11.
+
+v. 140. Maia and Dione.] The planets Mercury and Venus.
+
+CANTO XXIII
+
+
+v. 11. That region.] Towards the south, where the course of the sun
+appears less rapid, than, when he is in the east or the west.
+
+v. 26. Trivia.] A name of Diana.
+
+v. 26. Th’ eternal nymphs.] The stars.
+
+v. 36. The Might.] Our Saviour
+
+v. 71. The rose.] The Virgin Mary.
+
+v. 73. The lilies.] The apostles.
+
+v. 84. Thou didst exalt thy glory.] The diving light retired upwards,
+to render the eyes of Dante more capable of enduring the spectacle
+which now presented itself.
+
+v. 86. The name of that fair flower.] The name of the Virgin.
+
+v. 92. A cresset.] The angel Gabriel.
+
+v. 98. That lyre.] By synecdoche, the lyre is put for the angel
+
+v. 99. The goodliest sapphire.] The Virgin
+
+v. 126. Those rich-laden coffers.] Those spirits who, having sown the
+seed of good works on earth, now contain the fruit of their pious
+endeavours.
+
+v. 129. In the Babylonian exile.] During their abode in this world.
+
+v. 133. He.] St. Peter, with the other holy men of the Old and New
+testament.
+
+CANTO XXIV
+
+
+v. 28. Such folds.] Pindar has the same bold image: [GREEK HERE?] On
+which Hayne strangely remarks: Ad ambitus stropharum vldetur
+
+v. 65. Faith.] Hebrews, c. xi. 1. So Marino, in one of his sonnets,
+which calls Divozioni:
+
+Fede e sustanza di sperate cose,
+E delle non visioili argomento.
+
+v. 82. Current.] “The answer thou hast made is right; but let me know
+if thy inward persuasion is conformable to thy profession.”
+
+v. 91. The ancient bond and new.] The Old and New Testament.
+
+v. 114. That Worthy.] Quel Baron. In the next Canto, St. James is
+called “Barone.” So in Boccaccio, G. vi. N. 10, we find “Baron Messer
+Santo Antonio.” v. 124. As to outstrip.] Venturi insists that the Poet
+has here, “made a slip;” for that John came first to the sepulchre,
+though Peter was the first to enter it. But let Dante have leave to
+explain his own meaning, in a passage from his third book De Monarchia:
+“Dicit etiam Johannes ipsum (scilicet Petrum) introiisse SUBITO, cum
+venit in monumentum, videns allum discipulum cunctantem ad ostium.”
+Opere de Dante, Ven. 1793. T. ii. P. 146.
+
+CANTO XXV
+
+
+v. 6. The fair sheep-fold.] Florence, whence he was banished.
+
+v. 13. For its sake.] For the sake of that faith.
+
+v. 20. Galicia throng’d with visitants.] See Mariana, Hist. 1. xi.
+
+v. 13. “En el tiempo,” &c. “At the time that the sepulchre of the
+apostle St. James was discovered, the devotion for that place extended
+itself not only over all Spain, but even round about to foreign
+nations. Multitudes from all parts of the world came to visit it. Many
+others were deterred by the difficulty for the journey, by the
+roughness and barrenness of those parts, and by the incursions of the
+Moors, who made captives many of the pilgrims. The canons of St. Eloy
+afterwards (the precise time is not known), with a desire of remedying
+these evils, built, in many places, along the whole read, which reached
+as far as to France, hospitals for the reception of the pilgrims.”
+
+v. 31. Who.] The Epistle of St. James is here attributed to the elder
+apostle of that name, whose shrine was at Compostella, in Galicia.
+Which of the two was the author of it is yet doubtful. The learned and
+candid Michaelis contends very forcibly for its having been written by
+James the Elder. Lardner rejects that opinion as absurd; while Benson
+argues against it, but is well answered by Michaelis, who after all, is
+obliged to leave the question undecided. See his Introduction to the
+New Testament, translated by Dr. Marsh, ed. Cambridge, 1793. V. iv. c.
+26. - 1, 2, 3.
+
+v. 35. As Jesus.] In the transfiguration on Mount Tabor.
+
+v. 39. The second flame.] St. James.
+
+v. 40. I lifted up.] “I will lift up mine eyes unto the hills, from
+whence cometh my help.” Ps. Cxxi. 1.
+
+v. 59. From Egypt to Jerusalem.] From the lower world to heaven.
+
+v. 67. Hope.] This is from the Sentences of Petrus Lombardus. “Est
+autem spes virtus, qua spiritualia et aeterna bona speratam, id est,
+beatitudinem aeternam. Sine meritis enim aliquid sperare non spes, sed
+praesumptio, dici potest.” Pet. Lomb. Sent. 1. Iii. Dist. 26. Ed. Bas.
+1486. Fol.
+
+v. 74. His anthem.] Psalm ix. 10.
+
+v. 90. Isaias ] Chap. lxi. 10.
+
+v. 94. Thy brother.] St. John in the Revelation, c. vii. 9.
+
+v. 101. Winter’s month.] “If a luminary, like that which now appeared,
+were to shine throughout the month following the winter solstice during
+which the constellation Cancer appears in the east at the setting of
+the sun, there would be no interruption to the light, but the whole
+month would be as a single day.”
+
+v. 112. This.] St. John, who reclined on the bosom of our Saviour, and
+to whose charge Jesus recommended his mother.
+
+v. 121. So I.] He looked so earnestly, to descry whether St. John were
+present there in body, or in spirit only, having had his doubts raised
+by that saying of our Saviour’s: “If I will, that he tarry till I come
+what is that to thee.”
+
+v. 127. The two.] Christ and Mary, whom he has described, in the last
+Canto but one, as rising above his sight
+
+CANTO XXVI
+
+
+v. 2. The beamy flame.] St. John.
+
+v. 13. Ananias’ hand.] Who, by putting his hand on St. Paul, restored
+his sight. Acts, c. ix. 17.
+
+v. 36. From him.] Some suppose that Plato is here meant, who, in his
+Banquet, makes Phaedrus say: “Love is confessedly amongst the eldest of
+beings, and, being the eldest, is the cause to us of the greatest goods
+“ Plat. Op. t. x. p. 177. Bip. ed. Others have understood it of
+Aristotle, and others, of the writer who goes by the name of Dionysius
+the Areopagite, referred to in the twenty-eighth Canto.
+
+v. 40. I will make.] Exodus, c. xxxiii. 19.
+
+v. 42. At the outset.] John, c. i. 1. &c.
+
+v. 51. The eagle of our Lord.] St. John
+
+v. 62. The leaves.] Created beings.
+
+v. 82. The first living soul.] Adam.
+
+v. 107. Parhelion.] Who enlightens and comprehends all things; but is
+himself enlightened and comprehended by none.
+
+v. 117. Whence.] That is, from Limbo. See Hell, Canto II. 53. Adam says
+that 5232 years elapsed from his creation to the time of his
+deliverance, which followed the death of Christ.
+
+v. 133. EL] Some read UN, “One,” instead of EL: but the latter of these
+readings is confirmed by a passage from Dante’s Treatise De Vulg. Eloq.
+1. i. cap. 4. “Quod prius vox primi loquentis sonaverit, viro sanae
+mentis in promptu esse non dubito ipsum fuisse quod Deus est, videlicet
+El.” St. Isidore in the Origines, 1. vii. c. 1. had said, “Primum apud
+Hebraeos Dei nomen El dicitur.”
+
+v. 135. Use.] From Horace, Ars. Poet. 62.
+
+v. 138. All my life.] “I remained in the terrestrial Paradise only
+tothe seventh hour.” In the Historia Scolastica of Petrus Comestor, it
+is said of our first parents: Quidam tradunt eos fuisse in Paradiso
+septem horae.” I. 9. ed. Par. 1513. 4to.
+
+CANTO XXVII
+
+
+v. 1. Four torches.] St. Peter, St. James, St. John, and Adam.
+
+v. 11. That.] St. Peter’ who looked as the planet Jupiter would, if it
+assumed the sanguine appearance of liars.
+
+v. 20. He.] Boniface VIII.
+
+v. 26. such colour.]
+Qui color infectis adversi solis ab ietu
+Nubibus esse solet; aut purpureae Aurorae.
+Ovid, Met. 1. iii. 184.
+
+v. 37. Of Linus and of Cletus.] Bishops of Rome in the first century.
+
+v. 40. Did Sextus, Pius, and Callixtus bleed And Urban.] The former
+two, bishops of the same see, in the second; and the others, in the
+fourth century. v. 42. No purpose was of ours.] “We did not intend that
+our successors should take any part in the political divisions among
+Christians, or that my figure (the seal of St. Peter) should serve as a
+mark to authorize iniquitous grants and privileges.”
+
+v. 51. Wolves.] Compare Milton, P. L. b. xii. 508, &c.
+
+v. 53. Cahorsines and Gascons.] He alludes to Jacques d’Ossa, a native
+of Cahors, who filled the papal chair in 1316, after it had been two
+years vacant, and assumed the name of John XXII., and to Clement V, a
+Gascon, of whom see Hell, Canto XIX. 86, and Note.
+
+v. 63. The she-goat.] When the sun is in Capricorn.
+
+v. 72. From the hour.] Since he had last looked (see Canto XXII.) he
+perceived that he had passed from the meridian circle to the eastern
+horizon, the half of our hemisphere, and a quarter of the heaven.
+
+v. 76. From Gades.] See Hell, Canto XXVI. 106
+
+v. 78. The shore.] Phoenicia, where Europa, the daughter of Agenor
+mounted on the back of Jupiter, in his shape of a bull.
+
+v. 80. The sun.] Dante was in the constellation Gemini, and the sun in
+Aries. There was, therefore, part of those two constellations, and the
+whole of Taurus, between them.
+
+v. 93. The fair nest of Leda.] “From the Gemini;” thus called, because
+Leda was the mother of the twins, Castor and Pollux
+
+v. 112. Time’s roots.] “Here,” says Beatrice, “are the roots, from
+whence time springs: for the parts, into which it is divided, the other
+heavens must be considered.” And she then breaks out into an
+exclamation on the degeneracy of human nature, which does not lift
+itself to the contemplation of divine things.
+
+v. 126. The fair child of him.] So she calls human nature. Pindar by a
+more easy figure, terms the day, “child of the sun.”
+
+v. 129. None.] Because, as has been before said, the shepherds are
+become wolves.
+
+v. 131. Before the date.] “Before many ages are past, before those
+fractions, which are drops in the reckoning of every year, shall amount
+to so large a portion of time, that January shall be no more a winter
+month.” By this periphrasis is meant “ in a short time,” as we say
+familiarly, such a thing will happen before a thousand years are over
+when we mean, it will happen soon.
+
+v. 135. Fortune shall be fain.] The commentators in general suppose
+that our Poet here augurs that great reform, which he vainly hoped
+would follow on the arrival of the Emperor Henry VII. in Italy.
+Lombardi refers the prognostication to Can Grande della Scala: and,
+when we consider that this Canto was not finished till after the death
+of Henry, as appears from the mention that is made of John XXII, it
+cannot be denied but the conjecture is probable.
+
+CANTO XXVIII
+
+
+v. 36. Heav’n, and all nature, hangs upon that point.] [GREEK HERE]
+Aristot. Metaph. 1. xii. c. 7. “From that beginning depend heaven and
+nature.”
+
+v. 43. Such diff’rence.] The material world and the intelligential (the
+copy and the pattern) appear to Dante to differ in this respect, that
+the orbits of the latter are more swift, the nearer they are to the
+centre, whereas the contrary is the case with the orbits of the former.
+The seeming contradiction is thus accounted for by Beatrice. In the
+material world, the more ample the body is, the greater is the good of
+which itis capable supposing all the parts to be equally perfect. But
+in the intelligential world, the circles are more excellent and
+powerful, the more they approximate to the central point, which is God.
+Thus the first circle, that of the seraphim, corresponds to the ninth
+sphere, or primum mobile, the second, that of the cherubim, to the
+eighth sphere, or heaven of fixed stars; the third, or circle of
+thrones, to the seventh sphere, or planet of Saturn; and in like manner
+throughout the two other trines of circles and spheres.
+
+In orbs
+Of circuit inexpressible they stood,
+Orb within orb
+Milton, P. L. b. v. 596.
+
+v. 70. The sturdy north.] Compare Homer, II. b. v. 524.
+
+v. 82. In number.] The sparkles exceeded the number which would be
+produced by the sixty-four squares of a chess-board, if for the first
+we reckoned one, for the next, two; for the third, four; and so went on
+doubling to the end of the account.
+
+v. 106. Fearless of bruising from the nightly ram.] Not injured, like
+the productions of our spring, by the influence of autumn, when the
+constellation Aries rises at sunset.
+
+v. 110. Dominations.]
+Hear all ye angels, progeny of light,
+Thrones, domination’s, princedoms, virtues, powers.
+Milton, P. L. b. v. 601.
+
+v. 119. Dionysius.] The Areopagite, in his book De Caelesti Hierarchia.
+
+v. 124. Gregory.] Gregory the Great. “Novem vero angelorum ordines
+diximus, quia videlicet esse, testante sacro eloquio, scimus: Angelos,
+archangelos, virtutes, potestates, principatus, dominationae, thronos,
+cherubin atque seraphin.” Divi Gregorii, Hom. xxxiv. f. 125. ed. Par.
+1518. fol.
+
+v. 126. He had learnt.] Dionysius, he says, had learnt from St. Paul.
+It is almost unnecessary to add, that the book, above referred to,
+which goes under his name, was the production of a later age.
+
+CANTO XXIX
+
+
+v. 1. No longer.] As short a space, as the sun and moon are in changing
+hemispheres, when they are opposite to one another, the one under the
+sign of Aries, and the other under that of Libra, and both hang for a
+moment, noised as it were in the hand of the zenith.
+
+v. 22. For, not in process of before or aft.] There was neither “before
+nor after,” no distinction, that is, of time, till the creation of the
+world.
+
+v. 30. His threefold operation.] He seems to mean that spiritual
+beings, brute matter, and the intermediate part of the creation, which
+participates both of spirit and matter, were produced at once.
+
+v. 38. On Jerome’s pages.] St. Jerome had described the angels as
+created before the rest of the universe: an opinion which Thomas
+Aquinas controverted; and the latter, as Dante thinks, had Scripture on
+his side.
+
+v. 51. Pent.] See Hell, Canto XXXIV. 105.
+
+v. 111. Of Bindi and of Lapi.] Common names of men at Florence
+
+v. 112. The sheep.] So Milton, Lycidas.
+The hungry sheep look up and are not fed,
+But, swoln with wind and the rank mist they draw,
+Rot inwardly.
+
+v. 121. The preacher.] Thus Cowper, Task, b. ii.
+
+’Tis pitiful
+To court a grin, when you should woo a soul, &c.
+
+v. 131. Saint Anthony. Fattens with this his swine.] On the sale of
+these blessings, the brothers of St. Anthony supported themselves and
+their paramours. From behind the swine of St. Anthony, our Poet levels
+a blow at the object of his inveterate enmity, Boniface VIII, from
+whom, “in 1297, they obtained the dignity and privileges of an
+independent congregation.” See Mosheim’s Eccles. History in Dr.
+Maclaine’s Translation, v. ii. cent. xi. p. 2. c. 2. - 28.
+
+v. 140. Daniel.] “Thousand thousands ministered unto him, and ten
+thousand times ten thousand stood before him.” Dan. c. vii. 10.
+
+CANTO XXX
+
+
+v. 1. Six thousand miles.] He compares the vanishing of the vision to
+the fading away of the stars at dawn, when it is noon-day six thousand
+miles off, and the shadow, formed by the earth over the part of it
+inhabited by the Poet, is about to disappear.
+
+v. 13. Engirt.] “ ppearing to be encompassed by these angelic bands,
+which are in reality encompassed by it.”
+
+v. 18. This turn.] Questa vice. Hence perhaps Milton, P. L. b. viii.
+491. This turn hath made amends.
+
+v. 39. Forth.] From the ninth sphere to the empyrean, which is more
+light.
+
+v. 44. Either mighty host.] Of angels, that remained faithful, and of
+beatified souls, the latter in that form which they will have at the
+last day. v. 61. Light flowing.] “And he showed me a pure river of
+water of life, clear as crystal, proceeding out of the throne of God
+and of the Lamb.” Rev. cxxii. I.
+
+—underneath a bright sea flow’d Of jasper, or of liquid pearl. Milton,
+P. L. b. iii. 518.
+
+v. 80. Shadowy of the truth.]
+Son di lor vero ombriferi prefazii.
+So Mr. Coleridge, in his Religious Musings, v. 406.
+Life is a vision shadowy of truth.
+
+v. 88. —the eves Of mine eyelids.] Thus Shakespeare calls the eyelids
+“penthouse lids.” Macbeth, a, 1. s, 3.
+
+v. 108. As some cliff.]
+A lake
+That to the fringed bank with myrtle crown’d
+Her crystal mirror holds.
+Milton, P. L. b. iv. 263.
+
+v. 118. My view with ease.]
+Far and wide his eye commands
+For sight no obstacle found here, nor shade, But all sunshine.
+Milton, P. l. b. iii. 616.
+
+v. 135. Of the great Harry.] The Emperor Henry VII, who died in 1313.
+
+v. 141. He.] Pope Clement V. See Canto XXVII. 53.
+
+v. 145. Alagna’s priest.] Pope Boniface VIII. Hell, Canto XIX.
+
+79.
+
+CANTO XXXI
+
+
+v. 6. Bees.] Compare Homer, Iliad, ii. 87. Virg. Aen. I. 430, and
+Milton, P. L. b. 1. 768.
+
+v. 29. Helice.] Callisto, and her son Arcas, changed into the
+constellations of the Greater Bear and Arctophylax, or Bootes. See
+Ovid, Met. l. ii. fab. v. vi.
+
+v. 93. Bernard.] St. Bernard, the venerable abbot of Clairvaux, and the
+great promoter of the second crusade, who died A.D. 1153, in his
+sixty-third year. His sermons are called by Henault, “chefs~d’oeuvres
+de sentiment et de force.” Abrege Chron. de l’Hist. de Fr. 1145. They
+have even been preferred to al1 the productions of the ancients, and
+the author has been termed the last of the fathers of the church. It is
+uncertain whether they were not delivered originally in the French
+tongue.
+
+That the part he acts in the present Poem should be assigned to him.
+appears somewhat remarkable, when we consider that he severely censured
+the new festival established in honour of the Immaculate Conception of
+the virgin, and opposed the doctrine itself with the greatest vigour,
+as it supposed her being honoured with a privilegewhich belonged to
+Christ Alone Dr. Maclaine’s Mosheim, v. iii. cent. xii. p. ii. c. 3 -
+19.
+
+v. 95. Our Veronica ] The holy handkerchief, then preserved at Rome, on
+which the countenance of our Saviour was supposed to have been imprest.
+
+v. 101. Him.] St. Bernard.
+
+v. 108. The queen.] The Virgin Mary.
+
+v. 119. Oriflamb.] Menage on this word quotes the Roman des
+Royau
+-Iignages of Guillaume Ghyart.
+Oriflamme est une banniere
+De cendal roujoyant et simple
+Sans portraiture d’autre affaire,
+
+CANTO XXXII
+
+
+v. 3. She.] Eve.
+
+v. 8. Ancestress.] Ruth, the ancestress of David.
+
+v. 60. In holy scripture.] Gen. c. xxv. 22. v. 123. Lucia.] See Hell,
+Canto II. 97.
+
+CANTO XXXIII
+
+
+v. 63. The Sybil’s sentence.] Virg. Aen. iii. 445.
+
+v. 89. One moment.] “A moment seems to me more tedious, than
+five-and-twenty ages would have appeared to the Argonauts, when they
+had resolved on their expedition.
+
+v. 92. Argo’s shadow]
+Quae simul ac rostro ventosnm proscidit aequor,
+Tortaque remigio spumis incanduit unda,
+Emersere feri candenti e gurgite vultus
+Aequoreae monstrum Nereides admirantes.
+Catullus, De Nupt. Pel. et Thet. 15.
+
+v. 109. Three orbs of triple hue, clipt in one bound.] The Trinity.
+
+v. 118. That circling.] The second of the circles, “Light of Light,” in
+which he dimly beheld the mystery of the incarnation.
+
+End Paradise.
+
+PREFACE
+
+
+In the years 1805 and 1806, I published the first part of the following
+translation, with the text of the original. Since that period, two
+impressions of the whole of the Divina Commedia, in Italian, have made
+their appearance in this country. It is not necessary that I should add
+a third: and I am induced to hope that the Poem, even in the present
+version of it, may not be without interest for the mere English reader.
+
+The translation of the second and third parts, “The Purgatory” and “The
+Paradise,” was begun long before the first, and as early as the year
+1797; but, owing to many interruptions, not concluded till the summer
+before last. On a retrospect of the time and exertions that have been
+thus employed, I do not regard those hours as the least happy of my
+life, during which (to use the eloquent language of Mr. Coleridge) “my
+individual recollections have been suspended, and lulled to sleep amid
+the music of nobler thoughts;” nor that study as misapplied, which has
+familiarized me with one of the sublimest efforts of the human
+invention.
+
+To those, who shall be at the trouble of examining into the degree of
+accuracy with which the task has been executed, I may be allowed to
+suggest, that their judgment should not be formed on a comparison with
+any single text of my Author; since, in more instances than I have
+noticed, I have had to make my choice out of a variety of readings and
+interpretations, presented by different editions and commentators.
+
+In one or two of those editions is to be found the title of “The
+Vision,” which I have adopted, as more conformable to the genius of our
+language than that of “The Divine Comedy.” Dante himself, I believe,
+termed it simply “The Comedy;” in the first place, because the style
+was of the middle kind: and in the next, because the story (if story it
+may be called) ends happily.
+
+Instead of a Life of my Author, I have subjoined, in chronological
+order, a view not only of the principal events which befell him, but of
+the chief public occurrences that happened in his time: concerning both
+of which the reader may obtain further information, by turning to the
+passages referred to in the Poem and Notes.
+
+January, 1814
+
+A CHRONOLOGICAL VIEW
+
+OF
+
+THE AGE OF DANTE
+
+A. D.
+
+1265. Dante, son of Alighieri degli Alighieri and Bella, is born at
+Florence. Of his own ancestry he speaks in the Paradise, Canto XV. and
+XVI.
+
+In the same year, Manfredi, king of Naples and Sicily, is defeated and
+slain by Charles of Anjou. Hell, C. XXVIII. 13. And Purgatory, C. III.
+110.
+
+Guido Novello of Polenta obtains the sovereignty of Ravenna.
+H. C. XXVII. 38.
+
+1266. Two of the Frati Godenti chosen arbitrators of the differences at
+Florence. H. C. XXIII. 104. Gianni de’ Soldanieri heads the populace in
+that city. H. C. XXXII. 118.
+
+1268. Charles of Anjou puts Conradine to death, and becomes King of
+Naples. H. C. XXVIII. 16 and Purg C. XX. 66.
+
+1272. Henry III. of England is succeeded by Edward I. Purg. C. VII.
+129.
+
+1274. Our Poet first sees Beatrice, daughter of Folco Portinari.
+
+Fra.
+Guittone d’Arezzo, the poet, dies. Purg. C. XXIV. 56.
+Thomas Aquinas dies. Purg. C. XX. 67. and Par. C. X. 96.
+Buonaventura dies. Par. C. XII. 25.
+
+1275. Pierre de la Brosse, secretary to Philip III. of France,
+executed. Purg. C. VI. 23.
+
+1276. Giotto, the painter, is born. Purg. C. XI. 95. Pope Adrian V.
+dies. Purg. C. XIX. 97. Guido Guinicelli, the poet, dies. Purg. C. XI.
+96. and C. XXVI. 83.
+
+1277. Pope John XXI. dies. Par. C. XII. 126.
+
+1278. Ottocar, king of Bohemia, dies. Purg. C. VII. 97.
+
+1279. Dionysius succeeds to the throne of Portugal. Par. C. XIX. 135.
+
+1280. Albertus Magnus dies. Par. C. X. 95.
+
+1281. Pope Nicholas III. dies. H. C. XIX 71. Dante studies at the
+universities of Bologna and Padua.
+
+1282. The Sicilian vespers. Par. C. VIII. 80.
+The French defeated by the people of Forli. H. C. XXVII. 41.
+Tribaldello de’ Manfredi betrays the city of Faenza. H. C.
+XXXII. 119.
+
+1284. Prince Charles of Anjou is defeated and made prisoner by Rugiez
+de Lauria, admiral to Peter III. of Arragon. Purg. C. XX. 78. Charles
+I. king of Naples, dies. Purg. C. VII. 111.
+
+1285. Pope Martin IV. dies. Purg. C. XXIV. 23.
+Philip III. of France, and Peter III. of Arragon, die. Purg. C.
+VII. 101 and
+110.
+Henry II. king of Cyprus, comes to the throne. Par. C. XIX. 144.
+
+1287. Guido dalle Colonne (mentioned by Dante in his De Vulgari
+Eloquio) writes “The War of Troy.”
+
+1288. Haquin, king of Norway, makes war on Denmark. Par. C. XIX. 135.
+Count Ugolino de’ Gherardeschi dies of famine. H. C. XXXIII. 14.
+
+1289. Dante is in the battle of Campaldino, where the Florentines
+defeat the people of Arezzo, June 11. Purg. C. V. 90.
+
+1290. Beatrice dies. Purg. C. XXXII. 2. He serves in the war waged by
+the Florentines upon the Pisans, and is present at the surrender of
+Caprona in the autumn. H. C. XXI. 92.
+
+1291. He marries Gemma de’ Donati, with whom he lives unhappily.
+
+By this marriage he had five sons and a daughter.
+Can Grande della Scala is born, March 9. H. C. I. 98. Purg. C.
+XX. 16. Par. C. XVII. 75. and XXVII. 135.
+The renegade Christians assist the Saracens to recover St. John
+D’Acre. H. C. XXVII. 84.
+The Emperor Rodolph dies. Purg. C. VI. 104. and VII. 91.
+Alonzo III. of Arragon dies, and is succeeded by James II.
+Purg. C. VII. 113. and Par. C. XIX. 133.
+
+1294. Clement V. abdicates the papal chair. H. C. III. 56. Dante writes
+his Vita Nuova.
+
+1295. His preceptor, Brunetto Latini, dies. H. C. XV. 28. Charles
+Martel, king of Hungary, visits Florence, Par. C. VIII. 57. and dies in
+the same year. Frederick, son of Peter III. of Arragon, becomes king of
+Sicily. Purg. C. VII. 117. and Par. C. XIX. 127.
+
+1296. Forese, the companion of Dante, dies. Purg. C. XXXIII. 44.
+
+1300. The Bianca and Nera parties take their rise in Pistoia.
+H. C. XXXII. 60.
+This is the year in which he supposes himself to see his Vision.
+H. C. I. 1. and XXI. 109.
+He is chosen chief magistrate, or first of the Priors of
+Florence; and continues in office from June 15 to August 15.
+Cimabue, the painter, dies. Purg. C. XI. 93.
+Guido Cavalcanti, the most beloved of our Poet’s friends, dies.
+H. C. X. 59. and Purg C. XI. 96.
+
+1301. The Bianca party expels the Nera from Pistoia. H. C. XXIV. 142.
+
+1302. January 27. During his absence at Rome, Dante is mulcted
+by his fellow-citizens in the sum of 8000 lire, and condemned to
+two years’ banishment.
+March 10. He is sentenced, if taken, to be burned.
+Fulcieri de’ Calboli commits great atrocities on certain of the
+Ghibelline party. Purg. C. XIV. 61.
+Carlino de’ Pazzi betrays the castle di Piano Travigne, in
+Valdarno, to the Florentines. H. C. XXXII. 67.
+The French vanquished in the battle of Courtrai. Purg. C. XX. 47.
+James, king of Majorca and Minorca, dies. Par. C. XIX. 133.
+
+1303. Pope Boniface VIII. dies. H. C. XIX. 55. Purg. C. XX. 86. XXXII.
+146. and Par. C. XXVII. 20. The other exiles appoint Dante one of a
+council of twelve, under Alessandro da Romena. He appears to have been
+much dissatisfied with his colleagues. Par. C. XVII. 61.
+
+1304. He joins with the exiles in an unsuccessful attack on the city of
+Florence. May. The bridge over the Arno breaks down during a
+representation of the infernal torments exhibited on that river. H. C.
+XXVI. 9. July 20. Petrarch, whose father had been banished two years
+before from Florence, is born at Arezzo.
+
+1305. Winceslaus II. king of Bohemia, dies. Purg. C. VII. 99. and Par.
+C. XIX 123. A conflagration happens at Florence. H. C. XXVI. 9.
+
+1306. Dante visits Padua.
+
+1307. He is in Lunigiana with the Marchese Marcello Malaspina. Purg. C.
+VIII. 133. and C. XIX. 140. Dolcino, the fanatic, is burned. H. C.
+XXVIII. 53.
+
+1308. The Emperor Albert I. murdered. Purg. C. VI. 98. and
+Par. C. XIX. 114.
+Corso Donati, Dante’s political enemy, slain. Purg. C. XXIV. 81.
+He seeks an asylum at Verona, under the roof of the Signori della
+
+Scala. Par. C. XVII. 69. He wanders, about this time, over various
+parts of Italy. See his Convito. He is at Paris twice; and, as one of
+the early commentators reports, at Oxford.
+
+1309. Charles II. king of Naples, dies. Par. C. XIX. 125.
+
+1310. The Order of the Templars abolished. Purg. C. XX. 94.
+
+1313. The Emperor Henry of Luxemburg, by whom he had hoped to be
+restored to Florence, dies. Par. C. XVII. 80. and XXX. 135. He takes
+refuge at Ravenna with Guido Novello da Polenta.
+
+1314. Pope Clement V. dies. H. C. XIX. 86. and
+Par. C. XXVII. 53. and XXX. 141.
+Philip IV. of France dies. Purg. C. VII. 108. and Par. C. XIX.
+117.
+Ferdinand IV. of Spain, dies. Par. C. XIX. 122.
+Giacopo da Carrara defeated by Can Grande. Par. C. IX. 45.
+
+1316. John XXII. elected Pope. Par. C. XXVII. 53.
+
+1321. July. Dante dies at Ravenna, of a complaint brought on by
+disappointment at his failure in a negotiation which he had been
+conducting with the Venetians, for his patron Guido Novello da Polenta.
+His obsequies are sumptuously performed at Ravenna by Guido, who
+himself died in the ensuing year.
+
+
+
+
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+<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Divine Comedy, by Dante Alighieri</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
+most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
+whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
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+</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: The Divine Comedy</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Dante Alighieri</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Translator: Henry Francis Cary</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: August, 1997 [eBook #1008]<br />
+[Most recently updated: July 4, 2022]</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: Judith Smith and Natalie Salter</div>
+<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE DIVINE COMEDY ***</div>
+
+<h1>THE DIVINE COMEDY OF DANTE ALIGHIERI</h1>
+
+<h2 class="no-break">Translated by<br />
+THE REV. H. F. CARY, M.A.</h2>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2>Contents</h2>
+
+<table summary="" style="">
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoI.0"><b>HELL</b></a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoI.I">CANTO I.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoI.II">CANTO II.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoI.III">CANTO III.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoI.IV">CANTO IV.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoI.V">CANTO V.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoI.VI">CANTO VI.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoI.VII">CANTO VII.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoI.VIII">CANTO VIII.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoI.IX">CANTO IX.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoI.X">CANTO X.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoI.XI">CANTO XI.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoI.XII">CANTO XII.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoI.XIII">CANTO XIII.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoI.XIV">CANTO XIV.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoI.XV">CANTO XV.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoI.XVI">CANTO XVI.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoI.XVII">CANTO XVII.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoI.XVIII">CANTO XVIII.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoI.XIX">CANTO XIX.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoI.XX">CANTO XX.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoI.XXI">CANTO XXI.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoI.XXII">CANTO XXII.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoI.XXIII">CANTO XXIII.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoI.XXIV">CANTO XXIV.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoI.XXV">CANTO XXV.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoI.XXVI">CANTO XXVI.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoI.XXVII">CANTO XXVII.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoI.XXVIII">CANTO XXVIII.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoI.XXIX">CANTO XXIX.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoI.XXX">CANTO XXX.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoI.XXXI">CANTO XXXI.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoI.XXXII">CANTO XXXII.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoI.XXXIII">CANTO XXXIII.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoI.XXXIV">CANTO XXXIV.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#notes01">NOTES TO HELL.</a><br /><br /></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoII.0"><b>PURGATORY</b></a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoII.I">CANTO I.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoII.II">CANTO II.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoII.III">CANTO III.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoII.IV">CANTO IV.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoII.V">CANTO V.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoII.VI">CANTO VI.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoII.VII">CANTO VII.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoII.VIII">CANTO VIII.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoII.IX">CANTO IX.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoII.X">CANTO X.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoII.XI">CANTO XI.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoII.XII">CANTO XII.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoII.XIII">CANTO XIII.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoII.XIV">CANTO XIV.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoII.XV">CANTO XV.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoII.XVI">CANTO XVI.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoII.XVII">CANTO XVII.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoII.XVIII">CANTO XVIII.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoII.XIX">CANTO XIX.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoII.XX">CANTO XX.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoII.XXI">CANTO XXI.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoII.XXII">CANTO XXII.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoII.XXIII">CANTO XXIII.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoII.XXIV">CANTO XXIV.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoII.XXV">CANTO XXV.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoII.XXVI">CANTO XXVI.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoII.XXVII">CANTO XXVII.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoII.XXVIII">CANTO XXVIII.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoII.XXIX">CANTO XXIX.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoII.XXX">CANTO XXX.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoII.XXXI">CANTO XXXI.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoII.XXXII">CANTO XXXII.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoII.XXXIII">CANTO XXXIII.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#notes02">NOTES TO PURGATORY.</a><br /><br /></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoIII.0"><b>PARADISE</b></a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoIII.I">CANTO I.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoIII.II">CANTO II.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoIII.III">CANTO III.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoIII.IV">CANTO IV.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoIII.V">CANTO V.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoIII.VI">CANTO VI.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoIII.VII">CANTO VII.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoIII.VIII">CANTO VIII.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoIII.IX">CANTO IX.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoIII.X">CANTO X.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoIII.XI">CANTO XI.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoIII.XII">CANTO XII.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoIII.XIII">CANTO XIII.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoIII.XIV">CANTO XIV.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoIII.XV">CANTO XV.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoIII.XVI">CANTO XVI.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoIII.XVII">CANTO XVII.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoIII.XVIII">CANTO XVIII.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoIII.XIX">CANTO XIX.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoIII.XX">CANTO XX.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoIII.XXI">CANTO XXI.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoIII.XXII">CANTO XXII.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoIII.XXIII">CANTO XXIII.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoIII.XXIV">CANTO XXIV.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoIII.XXV">CANTO XXV.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoIII.XXVI">CANTO XXVI.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoIII.XXVII">CANTO XXVII.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoIII.XXVIII">CANTO XXVIII.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoIII.XXIX">CANTO XXIX.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoIII.XXX">CANTO XXX.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoIII.XXXI">CANTO XXXI.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoIII.XXXII">CANTO XXXII.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#cantoIII.XXXIII">CANTO XXXIII.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#notes03">NOTES TO PARADISE.</a><br /><br /></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#pref01">PREFACE</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#pref02">A CHRONOLOGICAL VIEW</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoI.0"></a>HELL</h2>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoI.I"></a>CANTO I</h2>
+
+<p>
+In the midway of this our mortal life,<br/>
+I found me in a gloomy wood, astray<br/>
+Gone from the path direct: and e&rsquo;en to tell<br/>
+It were no easy task, how savage wild<br/>
+That forest, how robust and rough its growth,<br/>
+Which to remember only, my dismay<br/>
+Renews, in bitterness not far from death.<br/>
+Yet to discourse of what there good befell,<br/>
+All else will I relate discover&rsquo;d there.<br/>
+How first I enter&rsquo;d it I scarce can say,<br/>
+Such sleepy dullness in that instant weigh&rsquo;d<br/>
+My senses down, when the true path I left,<br/>
+But when a mountain&rsquo;s foot I reach&rsquo;d, where clos&rsquo;d<br/>
+The valley, that had pierc&rsquo;d my heart with dread,<br/>
+I look&rsquo;d aloft, and saw his shoulders broad<br/>
+Already vested with that planet&rsquo;s beam,<br/>
+Who leads all wanderers safe through every way.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then was a little respite to the fear,<br/>
+That in my heart&rsquo;s recesses deep had lain,<br/>
+All of that night, so pitifully pass&rsquo;d:<br/>
+And as a man, with difficult short breath,<br/>
+Forespent with toiling, &rsquo;scap&rsquo;d from sea to shore,<br/>
+Turns to the perilous wide waste, and stands<br/>
+At gaze; e&rsquo;en so my spirit, that yet fail&rsquo;d<br/>
+Struggling with terror, turn&rsquo;d to view the straits,<br/>
+That none hath pass&rsquo;d and liv&rsquo;d. My weary frame<br/>
+After short pause recomforted, again<br/>
+I journey&rsquo;d on over that lonely steep,<br/>
+The hinder foot still firmer. Scarce the ascent<br/>
+Began, when, lo! a panther, nimble, light,<br/>
+And cover&rsquo;d with a speckled skin, appear&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Nor, when it saw me, vanish&rsquo;d, rather strove<br/>
+To check my onward going; that ofttimes<br/>
+With purpose to retrace my steps I turn&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The hour was morning&rsquo;s prime, and on his way<br/>
+Aloft the sun ascended with those stars,<br/>
+That with him rose, when Love divine first mov&rsquo;d<br/>
+Those its fair works: so that with joyous hope<br/>
+All things conspir&rsquo;d to fill me, the gay skin<br/>
+Of that swift animal, the matin dawn<br/>
+And the sweet season. Soon that joy was chas&rsquo;d,<br/>
+And by new dread succeeded, when in view<br/>
+A lion came, &rsquo;gainst me, as it appear&rsquo;d,<br/>
+With his head held aloft and hunger-mad,<br/>
+That e&rsquo;en the air was fear-struck. A she-wolf<br/>
+Was at his heels, who in her leanness seem&rsquo;d<br/>
+Full of all wants, and many a land hath made<br/>
+Disconsolate ere now. She with such fear<br/>
+O&rsquo;erwhelmed me, at the sight of her appall&rsquo;d,<br/>
+That of the height all hope I lost. As one,<br/>
+Who with his gain elated, sees the time<br/>
+When all unwares is gone, he inwardly<br/>
+Mourns with heart-griping anguish; such was I,<br/>
+Haunted by that fell beast, never at peace,<br/>
+Who coming o&rsquo;er against me, by degrees<br/>
+Impell&rsquo;d me where the sun in silence rests.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+While to the lower space with backward step<br/>
+I fell, my ken discern&rsquo;d the form one of one,<br/>
+Whose voice seem&rsquo;d faint through long disuse of speech.<br/>
+When him in that great desert I espied,<br/>
+&ldquo;Have mercy on me!&rdquo; cried I out aloud,<br/>
+&ldquo;Spirit! or living man! what e&rsquo;er thou be!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He answer&rsquo;d: &ldquo;Now not man, man once I was,<br/>
+And born of Lombard parents, Mantuana both<br/>
+By country, when the power of Julius yet<br/>
+Was scarcely firm. At Rome my life was past<br/>
+Beneath the mild Augustus, in the time<br/>
+Of fabled deities and false. A bard<br/>
+Was I, and made Anchises&rsquo; upright son<br/>
+The subject of my song, who came from Troy,<br/>
+When the flames prey&rsquo;d on Ilium&rsquo;s haughty towers.<br/>
+But thou, say wherefore to such perils past<br/>
+Return&rsquo;st thou? wherefore not this pleasant mount<br/>
+Ascendest, cause and source of all delight?&rdquo;<br/>
+&ldquo;And art thou then that Virgil, that well-spring,<br/>
+From which such copious floods of eloquence<br/>
+Have issued?&rdquo; I with front abash&rsquo;d replied.<br/>
+&ldquo;Glory and light of all the tuneful train!<br/>
+May it avail me that I long with zeal<br/>
+Have sought thy volume, and with love immense<br/>
+Have conn&rsquo;d it o&rsquo;er. My master thou and guide!<br/>
+Thou he from whom alone I have deriv&rsquo;d<br/>
+That style, which for its beauty into fame<br/>
+Exalts me. See the beast, from whom I fled.<br/>
+O save me from her, thou illustrious sage!<br/>
+For every vein and pulse throughout my frame<br/>
+She hath made tremble.&rdquo; He, soon as he saw<br/>
+That I was weeping, answer&rsquo;d, &ldquo;Thou must needs<br/>
+Another way pursue, if thou wouldst &rsquo;scape<br/>
+From out that savage wilderness. This beast,<br/>
+At whom thou criest, her way will suffer none<br/>
+To pass, and no less hindrance makes than death:<br/>
+So bad and so accursed in her kind,<br/>
+That never sated is her ravenous will,<br/>
+Still after food more craving than before.<br/>
+To many an animal in wedlock vile<br/>
+She fastens, and shall yet to many more,<br/>
+Until that greyhound come, who shall destroy<br/>
+Her with sharp pain. He will not life support<br/>
+By earth nor its base metals, but by love,<br/>
+Wisdom, and virtue, and his land shall be<br/>
+The land &rsquo;twixt either Feltro. In his might<br/>
+Shall safety to Italia&rsquo;s plains arise,<br/>
+For whose fair realm, Camilla, virgin pure,<br/>
+Nisus, Euryalus, and Turnus fell.<br/>
+He with incessant chase through every town<br/>
+Shall worry, until he to hell at length<br/>
+Restore her, thence by envy first let loose.<br/>
+I for thy profit pond&rsquo;ring now devise,<br/>
+That thou mayst follow me, and I thy guide<br/>
+Will lead thee hence through an eternal space,<br/>
+Where thou shalt hear despairing shrieks, and see<br/>
+Spirits of old tormented, who invoke<br/>
+A second death; and those next view, who dwell<br/>
+Content in fire, for that they hope to come,<br/>
+Whene&rsquo;er the time may be, among the blest,<br/>
+Into whose regions if thou then desire<br/>
+T&rsquo; ascend, a spirit worthier then I<br/>
+Must lead thee, in whose charge, when I depart,<br/>
+Thou shalt be left: for that Almighty King,<br/>
+Who reigns above, a rebel to his law,<br/>
+Adjudges me, and therefore hath decreed,<br/>
+That to his city none through me should come.<br/>
+He in all parts hath sway; there rules, there holds<br/>
+His citadel and throne. O happy those,<br/>
+Whom there he chooses!&rdquo; I to him in few:<br/>
+&ldquo;Bard! by that God, whom thou didst not adore,<br/>
+I do beseech thee (that this ill and worse<br/>
+I may escape) to lead me, where thou saidst,<br/>
+That I Saint Peter&rsquo;s gate may view, and those<br/>
+Who as thou tell&rsquo;st, are in such dismal plight.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Onward he mov&rsquo;d, I close his steps pursu&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoI.II"></a>CANTO II</h2>
+
+<p>
+Now was the day departing, and the air,<br/>
+Imbrown&rsquo;d with shadows, from their toils releas&rsquo;d<br/>
+All animals on earth; and I alone<br/>
+Prepar&rsquo;d myself the conflict to sustain,<br/>
+Both of sad pity, and that perilous road,<br/>
+Which my unerring memory shall retrace.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+O Muses! O high genius! now vouchsafe<br/>
+Your aid! O mind! that all I saw hast kept<br/>
+Safe in a written record, here thy worth<br/>
+And eminent endowments come to proof.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I thus began: &ldquo;Bard! thou who art my guide,<br/>
+Consider well, if virtue be in me<br/>
+Sufficient, ere to this high enterprise<br/>
+Thou trust me. Thou hast told that Silvius&rsquo; sire,<br/>
+Yet cloth&rsquo;d in corruptible flesh, among<br/>
+Th&rsquo; immortal tribes had entrance, and was there<br/>
+Sensible present. Yet if heaven&rsquo;s great Lord,<br/>
+Almighty foe to ill, such favour shew&rsquo;d,<br/>
+In contemplation of the high effect,<br/>
+Both what and who from him should issue forth,<br/>
+It seems in reason&rsquo;s judgment well deserv&rsquo;d:<br/>
+Sith he of Rome, and of Rome&rsquo;s empire wide,<br/>
+In heaven&rsquo;s empyreal height was chosen sire:<br/>
+Both which, if truth be spoken, were ordain&rsquo;d<br/>
+And &rsquo;stablish&rsquo;d for the holy place, where sits<br/>
+Who to great Peter&rsquo;s sacred chair succeeds.<br/>
+He from this journey, in thy song renown&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Learn&rsquo;d things, that to his victory gave rise<br/>
+And to the papal robe. In after-times<br/>
+The chosen vessel also travel&rsquo;d there,<br/>
+To bring us back assurance in that faith,<br/>
+Which is the entrance to salvation&rsquo;s way.<br/>
+But I, why should I there presume? or who<br/>
+Permits it? not, Aeneas I nor Paul.<br/>
+Myself I deem not worthy, and none else<br/>
+Will deem me. I, if on this voyage then<br/>
+I venture, fear it will in folly end.<br/>
+Thou, who art wise, better my meaning know&rsquo;st,<br/>
+Than I can speak.&rdquo; As one, who unresolves<br/>
+What he hath late resolv&rsquo;d, and with new thoughts<br/>
+Changes his purpose, from his first intent<br/>
+Remov&rsquo;d; e&rsquo;en such was I on that dun coast,<br/>
+Wasting in thought my enterprise, at first<br/>
+So eagerly embrac&rsquo;d. &ldquo;If right thy words<br/>
+I scan,&rdquo; replied that shade magnanimous,<br/>
+&ldquo;Thy soul is by vile fear assail&rsquo;d, which oft<br/>
+So overcasts a man, that he recoils<br/>
+From noblest resolution, like a beast<br/>
+At some false semblance in the twilight gloom.<br/>
+That from this terror thou mayst free thyself,<br/>
+I will instruct thee why I came, and what<br/>
+I heard in that same instant, when for thee<br/>
+Grief touch&rsquo;d me first. I was among the tribe,<br/>
+Who rest suspended, when a dame, so blest<br/>
+And lovely, I besought her to command,<br/>
+Call&rsquo;d me; her eyes were brighter than the star<br/>
+Of day; and she with gentle voice and soft<br/>
+Angelically tun&rsquo;d her speech address&rsquo;d:<br/>
+&ldquo;O courteous shade of Mantua! thou whose fame<br/>
+Yet lives, and shall live long as nature lasts!<br/>
+A friend, not of my fortune but myself,<br/>
+On the wide desert in his road has met<br/>
+Hindrance so great, that he through fear has turn&rsquo;d.<br/>
+Now much I dread lest he past help have stray&rsquo;d,<br/>
+And I be ris&rsquo;n too late for his relief,<br/>
+From what in heaven of him I heard. Speed now,<br/>
+And by thy eloquent persuasive tongue,<br/>
+And by all means for his deliverance meet,<br/>
+Assist him. So to me will comfort spring.<br/>
+I who now bid thee on this errand forth<br/>
+Am Beatrice; from a place I come<br/>
+Revisited with joy. Love brought me thence,<br/>
+Who prompts my speech. When in my Master&rsquo;s sight<br/>
+I stand, thy praise to him I oft will tell.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+(Note: Beatrice. I use this word, as it is pronounced in the Italian, as
+consisting of four syllables, of which the third is a long one.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She then was silent, and I thus began:<br/>
+&ldquo;O Lady! by whose influence alone,<br/>
+Mankind excels whatever is contain&rsquo;d<br/>
+Within that heaven which hath the smallest orb,<br/>
+So thy command delights me, that to obey,<br/>
+If it were done already, would seem late.<br/>
+No need hast thou farther to speak thy will;<br/>
+Yet tell the reason, why thou art not loth<br/>
+To leave that ample space, where to return<br/>
+Thou burnest, for this centre here beneath.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She then: &ldquo;Since thou so deeply wouldst inquire,<br/>
+I will instruct thee briefly, why no dread<br/>
+Hinders my entrance here. Those things alone<br/>
+Are to be fear&rsquo;d, whence evil may proceed,<br/>
+None else, for none are terrible beside.<br/>
+I am so fram&rsquo;d by God, thanks to his grace!<br/>
+That any suff&rsquo;rance of your misery<br/>
+Touches me not, nor flame of that fierce fire<br/>
+Assails me. In high heaven a blessed dame<br/>
+Besides, who mourns with such effectual grief<br/>
+That hindrance, which I send thee to remove,<br/>
+That God&rsquo;s stern judgment to her will inclines.<br/>
+To Lucia calling, her she thus bespake:<br/>
+&ldquo;Now doth thy faithful servant need thy aid<br/>
+And I commend him to thee.&rdquo; At her word<br/>
+Sped Lucia, of all cruelty the foe,<br/>
+And coming to the place, where I abode<br/>
+Seated with Rachel, her of ancient days,<br/>
+She thus address&rsquo;d me: &ldquo;Thou true praise of God!<br/>
+Beatrice! why is not thy succour lent<br/>
+To him, who so much lov&rsquo;d thee, as to leave<br/>
+For thy sake all the multitude admires?<br/>
+Dost thou not hear how pitiful his wail,<br/>
+Nor mark the death, which in the torrent flood,<br/>
+Swoln mightier than a sea, him struggling holds?&rdquo;<br/>
+Ne&rsquo;er among men did any with such speed<br/>
+Haste to their profit, flee from their annoy,<br/>
+As when these words were spoken, I came here,<br/>
+Down from my blessed seat, trusting the force<br/>
+Of thy pure eloquence, which thee, and all<br/>
+Who well have mark&rsquo;d it, into honour brings.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;When she had ended, her bright beaming eyes<br/>
+Tearful she turn&rsquo;d aside; whereat I felt<br/>
+Redoubled zeal to serve thee. As she will&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Thus am I come: I sav&rsquo;d thee from the beast,<br/>
+Who thy near way across the goodly mount<br/>
+Prevented. What is this comes o&rsquo;er thee then?<br/>
+Why, why dost thou hang back? why in thy breast<br/>
+Harbour vile fear? why hast not courage there<br/>
+And noble daring? Since three maids so blest<br/>
+Thy safety plan, e&rsquo;en in the court of heaven;<br/>
+And so much certain good my words forebode.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As florets, by the frosty air of night<br/>
+Bent down and clos&rsquo;d, when day has blanch&rsquo;d their leaves,<br/>
+Rise all unfolded on their spiry stems;<br/>
+So was my fainting vigour new restor&rsquo;d,<br/>
+And to my heart such kindly courage ran,<br/>
+That I as one undaunted soon replied:<br/>
+&ldquo;O full of pity she, who undertook<br/>
+My succour! and thou kind who didst perform<br/>
+So soon her true behest! With such desire<br/>
+Thou hast dispos&rsquo;d me to renew my voyage,<br/>
+That my first purpose fully is resum&rsquo;d.<br/>
+Lead on: one only will is in us both.<br/>
+Thou art my guide, my master thou, and lord.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So spake I; and when he had onward mov&rsquo;d,<br/>
+I enter&rsquo;d on the deep and woody way.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoI.III"></a>CANTO III</h2>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Through me you pass into the city of woe:<br/>
+Through me you pass into eternal pain:<br/>
+Through me among the people lost for aye.<br/>
+Justice the founder of my fabric mov&rsquo;d:<br/>
+To rear me was the task of power divine,<br/>
+Supremest wisdom, and primeval love.<br/>
+Before me things create were none, save things<br/>
+Eternal, and eternal I endure.<br/>
+All hope abandon ye who enter here.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Such characters in colour dim I mark&rsquo;d<br/>
+Over a portal&rsquo;s lofty arch inscrib&rsquo;d:<br/>
+Whereat I thus: &ldquo;Master, these words import<br/>
+Hard meaning.&rdquo; He as one prepar&rsquo;d replied:<br/>
+&ldquo;Here thou must all distrust behind thee leave;<br/>
+Here be vile fear extinguish&rsquo;d. We are come<br/>
+Where I have told thee we shall see the souls<br/>
+To misery doom&rsquo;d, who intellectual good<br/>
+Have lost.&rdquo; And when his hand he had stretch&rsquo;d forth<br/>
+To mine, with pleasant looks, whence I was cheer&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Into that secret place he led me on.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Here sighs with lamentations and loud moans<br/>
+Resounded through the air pierc&rsquo;d by no star,<br/>
+That e&rsquo;en I wept at entering. Various tongues,<br/>
+Horrible languages, outcries of woe,<br/>
+Accents of anger, voices deep and hoarse,<br/>
+With hands together smote that swell&rsquo;d the sounds,<br/>
+Made up a tumult, that for ever whirls<br/>
+Round through that air with solid darkness stain&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Like to the sand that in the whirlwind flies.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I then, with error yet encompass&rsquo;d, cried:<br/>
+&ldquo;O master! What is this I hear? What race<br/>
+Are these, who seem so overcome with woe?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He thus to me: &ldquo;This miserable fate<br/>
+Suffer the wretched souls of those, who liv&rsquo;d<br/>
+Without or praise or blame, with that ill band<br/>
+Of angels mix&rsquo;d, who nor rebellious prov&rsquo;d<br/>
+Nor yet were true to God, but for themselves<br/>
+Were only. From his bounds Heaven drove them forth,<br/>
+Not to impair his lustre, nor the depth<br/>
+Of Hell receives them, lest th&rsquo; accursed tribe<br/>
+Should glory thence with exultation vain.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I then: &ldquo;Master! what doth aggrieve them thus,<br/>
+That they lament so loud?&rdquo; He straight replied:<br/>
+&ldquo;That will I tell thee briefly. These of death<br/>
+No hope may entertain: and their blind life<br/>
+So meanly passes, that all other lots<br/>
+They envy. Fame of them the world hath none,<br/>
+Nor suffers; mercy and justice scorn them both.<br/>
+Speak not of them, but look, and pass them by.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And I, who straightway look&rsquo;d, beheld a flag,<br/>
+Which whirling ran around so rapidly,<br/>
+That it no pause obtain&rsquo;d: and following came<br/>
+Such a long train of spirits, I should ne&rsquo;er<br/>
+Have thought, that death so many had despoil&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When some of these I recogniz&rsquo;d, I saw<br/>
+And knew the shade of him, who to base fear<br/>
+Yielding, abjur&rsquo;d his high estate. Forthwith<br/>
+I understood for certain this the tribe<br/>
+Of those ill spirits both to God displeasing<br/>
+And to his foes. These wretches, who ne&rsquo;er lived,<br/>
+Went on in nakedness, and sorely stung<br/>
+By wasps and hornets, which bedew&rsquo;d their cheeks<br/>
+With blood, that mix&rsquo;d with tears dropp&rsquo;d to their feet,<br/>
+And by disgustful worms was gather&rsquo;d there.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then looking farther onwards I beheld<br/>
+A throng upon the shore of a great stream:<br/>
+Whereat I thus: &ldquo;Sir! grant me now to know<br/>
+Whom here we view, and whence impell&rsquo;d they seem<br/>
+So eager to pass o&rsquo;er, as I discern<br/>
+Through the blear light?&rdquo; He thus to me in few:<br/>
+&ldquo;This shalt thou know, soon as our steps arrive<br/>
+Beside the woeful tide of Acheron.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then with eyes downward cast and fill&rsquo;d with shame,<br/>
+Fearing my words offensive to his ear,<br/>
+Till we had reach&rsquo;d the river, I from speech<br/>
+Abstain&rsquo;d. And lo! toward us in a bark<br/>
+Comes on an old man hoary white with eld,<br/>
+Crying, &ldquo;Woe to you wicked spirits! hope not<br/>
+Ever to see the sky again. I come<br/>
+To take you to the other shore across,<br/>
+Into eternal darkness, there to dwell<br/>
+In fierce heat and in ice. And thou, who there<br/>
+Standest, live spirit! get thee hence, and leave<br/>
+These who are dead.&rdquo; But soon as he beheld<br/>
+I left them not, &ldquo;By other way,&rdquo; said he,<br/>
+&ldquo;By other haven shalt thou come to shore,<br/>
+Not by this passage; thee a nimbler boat<br/>
+Must carry.&rdquo; Then to him thus spake my guide:<br/>
+&ldquo;Charon! thyself torment not: so &rsquo;tis will&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Where will and power are one: ask thou no more.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Straightway in silence fell the shaggy cheeks<br/>
+Of him the boatman o&rsquo;er the livid lake,<br/>
+Around whose eyes glar&rsquo;d wheeling flames. Meanwhile<br/>
+Those spirits, faint and naked, color chang&rsquo;d,<br/>
+And gnash&rsquo;d their teeth, soon as the cruel words<br/>
+They heard. God and their parents they blasphem&rsquo;d,<br/>
+The human kind, the place, the time, and seed<br/>
+That did engender them and give them birth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then all together sorely wailing drew<br/>
+To the curs&rsquo;d strand, that every man must pass<br/>
+Who fears not God. Charon, demoniac form,<br/>
+With eyes of burning coal, collects them all,<br/>
+Beck&rsquo;ning, and each, that lingers, with his oar<br/>
+Strikes. As fall off the light autumnal leaves,<br/>
+One still another following, till the bough<br/>
+Strews all its honours on the earth beneath;<br/>
+E&rsquo;en in like manner Adam&rsquo;s evil brood<br/>
+Cast themselves one by one down from the shore,<br/>
+Each at a beck, as falcon at his call.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus go they over through the umber&rsquo;d wave,<br/>
+And ever they on the opposing bank<br/>
+Be landed, on this side another throng<br/>
+Still gathers. &ldquo;Son,&rdquo; thus spake the courteous guide,<br/>
+&ldquo;Those, who die subject to the wrath of God,<br/>
+All here together come from every clime,<br/>
+And to o&rsquo;erpass the river are not loth:<br/>
+For so heaven&rsquo;s justice goads them on, that fear<br/>
+Is turn&rsquo;d into desire. Hence ne&rsquo;er hath past<br/>
+Good spirit. If of thee Charon complain,<br/>
+Now mayst thou know the import of his words.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This said, the gloomy region trembling shook<br/>
+So terribly, that yet with clammy dews<br/>
+Fear chills my brow. The sad earth gave a blast,<br/>
+That, lightening, shot forth a vermilion flame,<br/>
+Which all my senses conquer&rsquo;d quite, and I<br/>
+Down dropp&rsquo;d, as one with sudden slumber seiz&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoI.IV"></a>CANTO IV</h2>
+
+<p>
+Broke the deep slumber in my brain a crash<br/>
+Of heavy thunder, that I shook myself,<br/>
+As one by main force rous&rsquo;d. Risen upright,<br/>
+My rested eyes I mov&rsquo;d around, and search&rsquo;d<br/>
+With fixed ken to know what place it was,<br/>
+Wherein I stood. For certain on the brink<br/>
+I found me of the lamentable vale,<br/>
+The dread abyss, that joins a thund&rsquo;rous sound<br/>
+Of plaints innumerable. Dark and deep,<br/>
+And thick with clouds o&rsquo;erspread, mine eye in vain<br/>
+Explor&rsquo;d its bottom, nor could aught discern.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now let us to the blind world there beneath<br/>
+Descend;&rdquo; the bard began all pale of look:<br/>
+&ldquo;I go the first, and thou shalt follow next.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then I his alter&rsquo;d hue perceiving, thus:<br/>
+&ldquo;How may I speed, if thou yieldest to dread,<br/>
+Who still art wont to comfort me in doubt?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He then: &ldquo;The anguish of that race below<br/>
+With pity stains my cheek, which thou for fear<br/>
+Mistakest. Let us on. Our length of way<br/>
+Urges to haste.&rdquo; Onward, this said, he mov&rsquo;d;<br/>
+And ent&rsquo;ring led me with him on the bounds<br/>
+Of the first circle, that surrounds th&rsquo; abyss.<br/>
+Here, as mine ear could note, no plaint was heard<br/>
+Except of sighs, that made th&rsquo; eternal air<br/>
+Tremble, not caus&rsquo;d by tortures, but from grief<br/>
+Felt by those multitudes, many and vast,<br/>
+Of men, women, and infants. Then to me<br/>
+The gentle guide: &ldquo;Inquir&rsquo;st thou not what spirits<br/>
+Are these, which thou beholdest? Ere thou pass<br/>
+Farther, I would thou know, that these of sin<br/>
+Were blameless; and if aught they merited,<br/>
+It profits not, since baptism was not theirs,<br/>
+The portal to thy faith. If they before<br/>
+The Gospel liv&rsquo;d, they serv&rsquo;d not God aright;<br/>
+And among such am I. For these defects,<br/>
+And for no other evil, we are lost;<br/>
+Only so far afflicted, that we live<br/>
+Desiring without hope.&rdquo; So grief assail&rsquo;d<br/>
+My heart at hearing this, for well I knew<br/>
+Suspended in that Limbo many a soul<br/>
+Of mighty worth. &ldquo;O tell me, sire rever&rsquo;d!<br/>
+Tell me, my master!&rdquo; I began through wish<br/>
+Of full assurance in that holy faith,<br/>
+Which vanquishes all error; &ldquo;say, did e&rsquo;er<br/>
+Any, or through his own or other&rsquo;s merit,<br/>
+Come forth from thence, whom afterward was blest?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Piercing the secret purport of my speech,<br/>
+He answer&rsquo;d: &ldquo;I was new to that estate,<br/>
+When I beheld a puissant one arrive<br/>
+Amongst us, with victorious trophy crown&rsquo;d.<br/>
+He forth the shade of our first parent drew,<br/>
+Abel his child, and Noah righteous man,<br/>
+Of Moses lawgiver for faith approv&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Of patriarch Abraham, and David king,<br/>
+Israel with his sire and with his sons,<br/>
+Nor without Rachel whom so hard he won,<br/>
+And others many more, whom he to bliss<br/>
+Exalted. Before these, be thou assur&rsquo;d,<br/>
+No spirit of human kind was ever sav&rsquo;d.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We, while he spake, ceas&rsquo;d not our onward road,<br/>
+Still passing through the wood; for so I name<br/>
+Those spirits thick beset. We were not far<br/>
+On this side from the summit, when I kenn&rsquo;d<br/>
+A flame, that o&rsquo;er the darken&rsquo;d hemisphere<br/>
+Prevailing shin&rsquo;d. Yet we a little space<br/>
+Were distant, not so far but I in part<br/>
+Discover&rsquo;d, that a tribe in honour high<br/>
+That place possess&rsquo;d. &ldquo;O thou, who every art<br/>
+And science valu&rsquo;st! who are these, that boast<br/>
+Such honour, separate from all the rest?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He answer&rsquo;d: &ldquo;The renown of their great names<br/>
+That echoes through your world above, acquires<br/>
+Favour in heaven, which holds them thus advanc&rsquo;d.&rdquo;<br/>
+Meantime a voice I heard: &ldquo;Honour the bard<br/>
+Sublime! his shade returns that left us late!&rdquo;<br/>
+No sooner ceas&rsquo;d the sound, than I beheld<br/>
+Four mighty spirits toward us bend their steps,<br/>
+Of semblance neither sorrowful nor glad.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When thus my master kind began: &ldquo;Mark him,<br/>
+Who in his right hand bears that falchion keen,<br/>
+The other three preceding, as their lord.<br/>
+This is that Homer, of all bards supreme:<br/>
+Flaccus the next in satire&rsquo;s vein excelling;<br/>
+The third is Naso; Lucan is the last.<br/>
+Because they all that appellation own,<br/>
+With which the voice singly accosted me,<br/>
+Honouring they greet me thus, and well they judge.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So I beheld united the bright school<br/>
+Of him the monarch of sublimest song,<br/>
+That o&rsquo;er the others like an eagle soars.<br/>
+When they together short discourse had held,<br/>
+They turn&rsquo;d to me, with salutation kind<br/>
+Beck&rsquo;ning me; at the which my master smil&rsquo;d:<br/>
+Nor was this all; but greater honour still<br/>
+They gave me, for they made me of their tribe;<br/>
+And I was sixth amid so learn&rsquo;d a band.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Far as the luminous beacon on we pass&rsquo;d<br/>
+Speaking of matters, then befitting well<br/>
+To speak, now fitter left untold. At foot<br/>
+Of a magnificent castle we arriv&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Seven times with lofty walls begirt, and round<br/>
+Defended by a pleasant stream. O&rsquo;er this<br/>
+As o&rsquo;er dry land we pass&rsquo;d. Next through seven gates<br/>
+I with those sages enter&rsquo;d, and we came<br/>
+Into a mead with lively verdure fresh.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There dwelt a race, who slow their eyes around<br/>
+Majestically mov&rsquo;d, and in their port<br/>
+Bore eminent authority; they spake<br/>
+Seldom, but all their words were tuneful sweet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We to one side retir&rsquo;d, into a place<br/>
+Open and bright and lofty, whence each one<br/>
+Stood manifest to view. Incontinent<br/>
+There on the green enamel of the plain<br/>
+Were shown me the great spirits, by whose sight<br/>
+I am exalted in my own esteem.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Electra there I saw accompanied<br/>
+By many, among whom Hector I knew,<br/>
+Anchises&rsquo; pious son, and with hawk&rsquo;s eye<br/>
+Caesar all arm&rsquo;d, and by Camilla there<br/>
+Penthesilea. On the other side<br/>
+Old King Latinus, seated by his child<br/>
+Lavinia, and that Brutus I beheld,<br/>
+Who Tarquin chas&rsquo;d, Lucretia, Cato&rsquo;s wife<br/>
+Marcia, with Julia and Cornelia there;<br/>
+And sole apart retir&rsquo;d, the Soldan fierce.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then when a little more I rais&rsquo;d my brow,<br/>
+I spied the master of the sapient throng,<br/>
+Seated amid the philosophic train.<br/>
+Him all admire, all pay him rev&rsquo;rence due.<br/>
+There Socrates and Plato both I mark&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Nearest to him in rank; Democritus,<br/>
+Who sets the world at chance, Diogenes,<br/>
+With Heraclitus, and Empedocles,<br/>
+And Anaxagoras, and Thales sage,<br/>
+Zeno, and Dioscorides well read<br/>
+In nature&rsquo;s secret lore. Orpheus I mark&rsquo;d<br/>
+And Linus, Tully and moral Seneca,<br/>
+Euclid and Ptolemy, Hippocrates,<br/>
+Galenus, Avicen, and him who made<br/>
+That commentary vast, Averroes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of all to speak at full were vain attempt;<br/>
+For my wide theme so urges, that ofttimes<br/>
+My words fall short of what bechanc&rsquo;d. In two<br/>
+The six associates part. Another way<br/>
+My sage guide leads me, from that air serene,<br/>
+Into a climate ever vex&rsquo;d with storms:<br/>
+And to a part I come where no light shines.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoI.V"></a>CANTO V</h2>
+
+<p>
+From the first circle I descended thus<br/>
+Down to the second, which, a lesser space<br/>
+Embracing, so much more of grief contains<br/>
+Provoking bitter moans. There, Minos stands<br/>
+Grinning with ghastly feature: he, of all<br/>
+Who enter, strict examining the crimes,<br/>
+Gives sentence, and dismisses them beneath,<br/>
+According as he foldeth him around:<br/>
+For when before him comes th&rsquo; ill fated soul,<br/>
+It all confesses; and that judge severe<br/>
+Of sins, considering what place in hell<br/>
+Suits the transgression, with his tail so oft<br/>
+Himself encircles, as degrees beneath<br/>
+He dooms it to descend. Before him stand<br/>
+Always a num&rsquo;rous throng; and in his turn<br/>
+Each one to judgment passing, speaks, and hears<br/>
+His fate, thence downward to his dwelling hurl&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;O thou! who to this residence of woe<br/>
+Approachest?&rdquo; when he saw me coming, cried<br/>
+Minos, relinquishing his dread employ,<br/>
+&ldquo;Look how thou enter here; beware in whom<br/>
+Thou place thy trust; let not the entrance broad<br/>
+Deceive thee to thy harm.&rdquo; To him my guide:<br/>
+&ldquo;Wherefore exclaimest? Hinder not his way<br/>
+By destiny appointed; so &rsquo;tis will&rsquo;d<br/>
+Where will and power are one. Ask thou no more.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now &rsquo;gin the rueful wailings to be heard.<br/>
+Now am I come where many a plaining voice<br/>
+Smites on mine ear. Into a place I came<br/>
+Where light was silent all. Bellowing there groan&rsquo;d<br/>
+A noise as of a sea in tempest torn<br/>
+By warring winds. The stormy blast of hell<br/>
+With restless fury drives the spirits on<br/>
+Whirl&rsquo;d round and dash&rsquo;d amain with sore annoy.<br/>
+When they arrive before the ruinous sweep,<br/>
+There shrieks are heard, there lamentations, moans,<br/>
+And blasphemies &rsquo;gainst the good Power in heaven.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I understood that to this torment sad<br/>
+The carnal sinners are condemn&rsquo;d, in whom<br/>
+Reason by lust is sway&rsquo;d. As in large troops<br/>
+And multitudinous, when winter reigns,<br/>
+The starlings on their wings are borne abroad;<br/>
+So bears the tyrannous gust those evil souls.<br/>
+On this side and on that, above, below,<br/>
+It drives them: hope of rest to solace them<br/>
+Is none, nor e&rsquo;en of milder pang. As cranes,<br/>
+Chanting their dol&rsquo;rous notes, traverse the sky,<br/>
+Stretch&rsquo;d out in long array: so I beheld<br/>
+Spirits, who came loud wailing, hurried on<br/>
+By their dire doom. Then I: &ldquo;Instructor! who<br/>
+Are these, by the black air so scourg&rsquo;d?&rdquo;&mdash;&rdquo; The
+first<br/>
+&rsquo;Mong those, of whom thou question&rsquo;st,&rdquo; he replied,<br/>
+&ldquo;O&rsquo;er many tongues was empress. She in vice<br/>
+Of luxury was so shameless, that she made<br/>
+Liking be lawful by promulg&rsquo;d decree,<br/>
+To clear the blame she had herself incurr&rsquo;d.<br/>
+This is Semiramis, of whom &rsquo;tis writ,<br/>
+That she succeeded Ninus her espous&rsquo;d;<br/>
+And held the land, which now the Soldan rules.<br/>
+The next in amorous fury slew herself,<br/>
+And to Sicheus&rsquo; ashes broke her faith:<br/>
+Then follows Cleopatra, lustful queen.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There mark&rsquo;d I Helen, for whose sake so long<br/>
+The time was fraught with evil; there the great<br/>
+Achilles, who with love fought to the end.<br/>
+Paris I saw, and Tristan; and beside<br/>
+A thousand more he show&rsquo;d me, and by name<br/>
+Pointed them out, whom love bereav&rsquo;d of life.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When I had heard my sage instructor name<br/>
+Those dames and knights of antique days, o&rsquo;erpower&rsquo;d<br/>
+By pity, well-nigh in amaze my mind<br/>
+Was lost; and I began: &ldquo;Bard! willingly<br/>
+I would address those two together coming,<br/>
+Which seem so light before the wind.&rdquo; He thus:<br/>
+&ldquo;Note thou, when nearer they to us approach.<br/>
+Then by that love which carries them along,<br/>
+Entreat; and they will come.&rdquo; Soon as the wind<br/>
+Sway&rsquo;d them toward us, I thus fram&rsquo;d my speech:<br/>
+&ldquo;O wearied spirits! come, and hold discourse<br/>
+With us, if by none else restrain&rsquo;d.&rdquo; As doves<br/>
+By fond desire invited, on wide wings<br/>
+And firm, to their sweet nest returning home,<br/>
+Cleave the air, wafted by their will along;<br/>
+Thus issu&rsquo;d from that troop, where Dido ranks,<br/>
+They through the ill air speeding; with such force<br/>
+My cry prevail&rsquo;d by strong affection urg&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;O gracious creature and benign! who go&rsquo;st<br/>
+Visiting, through this element obscure,<br/>
+Us, who the world with bloody stain imbru&rsquo;d;<br/>
+If for a friend the King of all we own&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Our pray&rsquo;r to him should for thy peace arise,<br/>
+Since thou hast pity on our evil plight.<br/>
+()f whatsoe&rsquo;er to hear or to discourse<br/>
+It pleases thee, that will we hear, of that<br/>
+Freely with thee discourse, while e&rsquo;er the wind,<br/>
+As now, is mute. The land, that gave me birth,<br/>
+Is situate on the coast, where Po descends<br/>
+To rest in ocean with his sequent streams.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Love, that in gentle heart is quickly learnt,<br/>
+Entangled him by that fair form, from me<br/>
+Ta&rsquo;en in such cruel sort, as grieves me still:<br/>
+Love, that denial takes from none belov&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Caught me with pleasing him so passing well,<br/>
+That, as thou see&rsquo;st, he yet deserts me not.<br/>
+Love brought us to one death: Caina waits<br/>
+The soul, who spilt our life.&rdquo; Such were their words;<br/>
+At hearing which downward I bent my looks,<br/>
+And held them there so long, that the bard cried:<br/>
+&ldquo;What art thou pond&rsquo;ring?&rdquo; I in answer thus:<br/>
+&ldquo;Alas! by what sweet thoughts, what fond desire<br/>
+Must they at length to that ill pass have reach&rsquo;d!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then turning, I to them my speech address&rsquo;d.<br/>
+And thus began: &ldquo;Francesca! your sad fate<br/>
+Even to tears my grief and pity moves.<br/>
+But tell me; in the time of your sweet sighs,<br/>
+By what, and how love granted, that ye knew<br/>
+Your yet uncertain wishes?&rdquo; She replied:<br/>
+&ldquo;No greater grief than to remember days<br/>
+Of joy, when mis&rsquo;ry is at hand! That kens<br/>
+Thy learn&rsquo;d instructor. Yet so eagerly<br/>
+If thou art bent to know the primal root,<br/>
+From whence our love gat being, I will do,<br/>
+As one, who weeps and tells his tale. One day<br/>
+For our delight we read of Lancelot,<br/>
+How him love thrall&rsquo;d. Alone we were, and no<br/>
+Suspicion near us. Ofttimes by that reading<br/>
+Our eyes were drawn together, and the hue<br/>
+Fled from our alter&rsquo;d cheek. But at one point<br/>
+Alone we fell. When of that smile we read,<br/>
+The wished smile, rapturously kiss&rsquo;d<br/>
+By one so deep in love, then he, who ne&rsquo;er<br/>
+From me shall separate, at once my lips<br/>
+All trembling kiss&rsquo;d. The book and writer both<br/>
+Were love&rsquo;s purveyors. In its leaves that day<br/>
+We read no more.&rdquo; While thus one spirit spake,<br/>
+The other wail&rsquo;d so sorely, that heartstruck<br/>
+I through compassion fainting, seem&rsquo;d not far<br/>
+From death, and like a corpse fell to the ground.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoI.VI"></a>CANTO VI</h2>
+
+<p>
+My sense reviving, that erewhile had droop&rsquo;d<br/>
+With pity for the kindred shades, whence grief<br/>
+O&rsquo;ercame me wholly, straight around I see<br/>
+New torments, new tormented souls, which way<br/>
+Soe&rsquo;er I move, or turn, or bend my sight.<br/>
+In the third circle I arrive, of show&rsquo;rs<br/>
+Ceaseless, accursed, heavy, and cold, unchang&rsquo;d<br/>
+For ever, both in kind and in degree.<br/>
+Large hail, discolour&rsquo;d water, sleety flaw<br/>
+Through the dun midnight air stream&rsquo;d down amain:<br/>
+Stank all the land whereon that tempest fell.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cerberus, cruel monster, fierce and strange,<br/>
+Through his wide threefold throat barks as a dog<br/>
+Over the multitude immers&rsquo;d beneath.<br/>
+His eyes glare crimson, black his unctuous beard,<br/>
+His belly large, and claw&rsquo;d the hands, with which<br/>
+He tears the spirits, flays them, and their limbs<br/>
+Piecemeal disparts. Howling there spread, as curs,<br/>
+Under the rainy deluge, with one side<br/>
+The other screening, oft they roll them round,<br/>
+A wretched, godless crew. When that great worm<br/>
+Descried us, savage Cerberus, he op&rsquo;d<br/>
+His jaws, and the fangs show&rsquo;d us; not a limb<br/>
+Of him but trembled. Then my guide, his palms<br/>
+Expanding on the ground, thence filled with earth<br/>
+Rais&rsquo;d them, and cast it in his ravenous maw.<br/>
+E&rsquo;en as a dog, that yelling bays for food<br/>
+His keeper, when the morsel comes, lets fall<br/>
+His fury, bent alone with eager haste<br/>
+To swallow it; so dropp&rsquo;d the loathsome cheeks<br/>
+Of demon Cerberus, who thund&rsquo;ring stuns<br/>
+The spirits, that they for deafness wish in vain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We, o&rsquo;er the shades thrown prostrate by the brunt<br/>
+Of the heavy tempest passing, set our feet<br/>
+Upon their emptiness, that substance seem&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They all along the earth extended lay<br/>
+Save one, that sudden rais&rsquo;d himself to sit,<br/>
+Soon as that way he saw us pass. &ldquo;O thou!&rdquo;<br/>
+He cried, &ldquo;who through the infernal shades art led,<br/>
+Own, if again thou know&rsquo;st me. Thou wast fram&rsquo;d<br/>
+Or ere my frame was broken.&rdquo; I replied:<br/>
+&ldquo;The anguish thou endur&rsquo;st perchance so takes<br/>
+Thy form from my remembrance, that it seems<br/>
+As if I saw thee never. But inform<br/>
+Me who thou art, that in a place so sad<br/>
+Art set, and in such torment, that although<br/>
+Other be greater, more disgustful none<br/>
+Can be imagin&rsquo;d.&rdquo; He in answer thus:<br/>
+&ldquo;Thy city heap&rsquo;d with envy to the brim,<br/>
+Ay that the measure overflows its bounds,<br/>
+Held me in brighter days. Ye citizens<br/>
+Were wont to name me Ciacco. For the sin<br/>
+Of glutt&rsquo;ny, damned vice, beneath this rain,<br/>
+E&rsquo;en as thou see&rsquo;st, I with fatigue am worn;<br/>
+Nor I sole spirit in this woe: all these<br/>
+Have by like crime incurr&rsquo;d like punishment.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No more he said, and I my speech resum&rsquo;d:<br/>
+&ldquo;Ciacco! thy dire affliction grieves me much,<br/>
+Even to tears. But tell me, if thou know&rsquo;st,<br/>
+What shall at length befall the citizens<br/>
+Of the divided city; whether any just one<br/>
+Inhabit there: and tell me of the cause,<br/>
+Whence jarring discord hath assail&rsquo;d it thus?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He then: &ldquo;After long striving they will come<br/>
+To blood; and the wild party from the woods<br/>
+Will chase the other with much injury forth.<br/>
+Then it behoves, that this must fall, within<br/>
+Three solar circles; and the other rise<br/>
+By borrow&rsquo;d force of one, who under shore<br/>
+Now rests. It shall a long space hold aloof<br/>
+Its forehead, keeping under heavy weight<br/>
+The other oppress&rsquo;d, indignant at the load,<br/>
+And grieving sore. The just are two in number,<br/>
+But they neglected. Av&rsquo;rice, envy, pride,<br/>
+Three fatal sparks, have set the hearts of all<br/>
+On fire.&rdquo; Here ceas&rsquo;d the lamentable sound;<br/>
+And I continu&rsquo;d thus: &ldquo;Still would I learn<br/>
+More from thee, farther parley still entreat.<br/>
+Of Farinata and Tegghiaio say,<br/>
+They who so well deserv&rsquo;d, of Giacopo,<br/>
+Arrigo, Mosca, and the rest, who bent<br/>
+Their minds on working good. Oh! tell me where<br/>
+They bide, and to their knowledge let me come.<br/>
+For I am press&rsquo;d with keen desire to hear,<br/>
+If heaven&rsquo;s sweet cup or poisonous drug of hell<br/>
+Be to their lip assign&rsquo;d.&rdquo; He answer&rsquo;d straight:<br/>
+&ldquo;These are yet blacker spirits. Various crimes<br/>
+Have sunk them deeper in the dark abyss.<br/>
+If thou so far descendest, thou mayst see them.<br/>
+But to the pleasant world when thou return&rsquo;st,<br/>
+Of me make mention, I entreat thee, there.<br/>
+No more I tell thee, answer thee no more.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This said, his fixed eyes he turn&rsquo;d askance,<br/>
+A little ey&rsquo;d me, then bent down his head,<br/>
+And &rsquo;midst his blind companions with it fell.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When thus my guide: &ldquo;No more his bed he leaves,<br/>
+Ere the last angel-trumpet blow. The Power<br/>
+Adverse to these shall then in glory come,<br/>
+Each one forthwith to his sad tomb repair,<br/>
+Resume his fleshly vesture and his form,<br/>
+And hear the eternal doom re-echoing rend<br/>
+The vault.&rdquo; So pass&rsquo;d we through that mixture foul<br/>
+Of spirits and rain, with tardy steps; meanwhile<br/>
+Touching, though slightly, on the life to come.<br/>
+For thus I question&rsquo;d: &ldquo;Shall these tortures, Sir!<br/>
+When the great sentence passes, be increas&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Or mitigated, or as now severe?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He then: &ldquo;Consult thy knowledge; that decides<br/>
+That as each thing to more perfection grows,<br/>
+It feels more sensibly both good and pain.<br/>
+Though ne&rsquo;er to true perfection may arrive<br/>
+This race accurs&rsquo;d, yet nearer then than now<br/>
+They shall approach it.&rdquo; Compassing that path<br/>
+Circuitous we journeyed, and discourse<br/>
+Much more than I relate between us pass&rsquo;d:<br/>
+Till at the point, where the steps led below,<br/>
+Arriv&rsquo;d, there Plutus, the great foe, we found.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoI.VII"></a>CANTO VII</h2>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah me! O Satan! Satan!&rdquo; loud exclaim&rsquo;d<br/>
+Plutus, in accent hoarse of wild alarm:<br/>
+And the kind sage, whom no event surpris&rsquo;d,<br/>
+To comfort me thus spake: &ldquo;Let not thy fear<br/>
+Harm thee, for power in him, be sure, is none<br/>
+To hinder down this rock thy safe descent.&rdquo;<br/>
+Then to that sworn lip turning, &ldquo; Peace!&rdquo; he cried,<br/>
+&ldquo;Curs&rsquo;d wolf! thy fury inward on thyself<br/>
+Prey, and consume thee! Through the dark profound<br/>
+Not without cause he passes. So &rsquo;tis will&rsquo;d<br/>
+On high, there where the great Archangel pour&rsquo;d<br/>
+Heav&rsquo;n&rsquo;s vengeance on the first adulterer proud.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As sails full spread and bellying with the wind<br/>
+Drop suddenly collaps&rsquo;d, if the mast split;<br/>
+So to the ground down dropp&rsquo;d the cruel fiend.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus we, descending to the fourth steep ledge,<br/>
+Gain&rsquo;d on the dismal shore, that all the woe<br/>
+Hems in of all the universe. Ah me!<br/>
+Almighty Justice! in what store thou heap&rsquo;st<br/>
+New pains, new troubles, as I here beheld!<br/>
+Wherefore doth fault of ours bring us to this?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+E&rsquo;en as a billow, on Charybdis rising,<br/>
+Against encounter&rsquo;d billow dashing breaks;<br/>
+Such is the dance this wretched race must lead,<br/>
+Whom more than elsewhere numerous here I found,<br/>
+From one side and the other, with loud voice,<br/>
+Both roll&rsquo;d on weights by main forge of their breasts,<br/>
+Then smote together, and each one forthwith<br/>
+Roll&rsquo;d them back voluble, turning again,<br/>
+Exclaiming these, &ldquo;Why holdest thou so fast?&rdquo;<br/>
+Those answering, &ldquo;And why castest thou away?&rdquo;<br/>
+So still repeating their despiteful song,<br/>
+They to the opposite point on either hand<br/>
+Travers&rsquo;d the horrid circle: then arriv&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Both turn&rsquo;d them round, and through the middle space<br/>
+Conflicting met again. At sight whereof<br/>
+I, stung with grief, thus spake: &ldquo;O say, my guide!<br/>
+What race is this? Were these, whose heads are shorn,<br/>
+On our left hand, all sep&rsquo;rate to the church?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He straight replied: &ldquo;In their first life these all<br/>
+In mind were so distorted, that they made,<br/>
+According to due measure, of their wealth,<br/>
+No use. This clearly from their words collect,<br/>
+Which they howl forth, at each extremity<br/>
+Arriving of the circle, where their crime<br/>
+Contrary&rsquo; in kind disparts them. To the church<br/>
+Were separate those, that with no hairy cowls<br/>
+Are crown&rsquo;d, both Popes and Cardinals, o&rsquo;er whom<br/>
+Av&rsquo;rice dominion absolute maintains.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I then: &ldquo;Mid such as these some needs must be,<br/>
+Whom I shall recognize, that with the blot<br/>
+Of these foul sins were stain&rsquo;d.&rdquo; He answering thus:<br/>
+&ldquo;Vain thought conceiv&rsquo;st thou. That ignoble life,<br/>
+Which made them vile before, now makes them dark,<br/>
+And to all knowledge indiscernible.<br/>
+Forever they shall meet in this rude shock:<br/>
+These from the tomb with clenched grasp shall rise,<br/>
+Those with close-shaven locks. That ill they gave,<br/>
+And ill they kept, hath of the beauteous world<br/>
+Depriv&rsquo;d, and set them at this strife, which needs<br/>
+No labour&rsquo;d phrase of mine to set if off.<br/>
+Now may&rsquo;st thou see, my son! how brief, how vain,<br/>
+The goods committed into fortune&rsquo;s hands,<br/>
+For which the human race keep such a coil!<br/>
+Not all the gold, that is beneath the moon,<br/>
+Or ever hath been, of these toil-worn souls<br/>
+Might purchase rest for one.&rdquo; I thus rejoin&rsquo;d:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My guide! of thee this also would I learn;<br/>
+This fortune, that thou speak&rsquo;st of, what it is,<br/>
+Whose talons grasp the blessings of the world?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He thus: &ldquo;O beings blind! what ignorance<br/>
+Besets you? Now my judgment hear and mark.<br/>
+He, whose transcendent wisdom passes all,<br/>
+The heavens creating, gave them ruling powers<br/>
+To guide them, so that each part shines to each,<br/>
+Their light in equal distribution pour&rsquo;d.<br/>
+By similar appointment he ordain&rsquo;d<br/>
+Over the world&rsquo;s bright images to rule.<br/>
+Superintendence of a guiding hand<br/>
+And general minister, which at due time<br/>
+May change the empty vantages of life<br/>
+From race to race, from one to other&rsquo;s blood,<br/>
+Beyond prevention of man&rsquo;s wisest care:<br/>
+Wherefore one nation rises into sway,<br/>
+Another languishes, e&rsquo;en as her will<br/>
+Decrees, from us conceal&rsquo;d, as in the grass<br/>
+The serpent train. Against her nought avails<br/>
+Your utmost wisdom. She with foresight plans,<br/>
+Judges, and carries on her reign, as theirs<br/>
+The other powers divine. Her changes know<br/>
+Nore intermission: by necessity<br/>
+She is made swift, so frequent come who claim<br/>
+Succession in her favours. This is she,<br/>
+So execrated e&rsquo;en by those, whose debt<br/>
+To her is rather praise; they wrongfully<br/>
+With blame requite her, and with evil word;<br/>
+But she is blessed, and for that recks not:<br/>
+Amidst the other primal beings glad<br/>
+Rolls on her sphere, and in her bliss exults.<br/>
+Now on our way pass we, to heavier woe<br/>
+Descending: for each star is falling now,<br/>
+That mounted at our entrance, and forbids<br/>
+Too long our tarrying.&rdquo; We the circle cross&rsquo;d<br/>
+To the next steep, arriving at a well,<br/>
+That boiling pours itself down to a foss<br/>
+Sluic&rsquo;d from its source. Far murkier was the wave<br/>
+Than sablest grain: and we in company<br/>
+Of the&rsquo; inky waters, journeying by their side,<br/>
+Enter&rsquo;d, though by a different track, beneath.<br/>
+Into a lake, the Stygian nam&rsquo;d, expands<br/>
+The dismal stream, when it hath reach&rsquo;d the foot<br/>
+Of the grey wither&rsquo;d cliffs. Intent I stood<br/>
+To gaze, and in the marish sunk descried<br/>
+A miry tribe, all naked, and with looks<br/>
+Betok&rsquo;ning rage. They with their hands alone<br/>
+Struck not, but with the head, the breast, the feet,<br/>
+Cutting each other piecemeal with their fangs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The good instructor spake; &ldquo;Now seest thou, son!<br/>
+The souls of those, whom anger overcame.<br/>
+This too for certain know, that underneath<br/>
+The water dwells a multitude, whose sighs<br/>
+Into these bubbles make the surface heave,<br/>
+As thine eye tells thee wheresoe&rsquo;er it turn.<br/>
+Fix&rsquo;d in the slime they say: &ldquo;Sad once were we<br/>
+In the sweet air made gladsome by the sun,<br/>
+Carrying a foul and lazy mist within:<br/>
+Now in these murky settlings are we sad.&rdquo;<br/>
+Such dolorous strain they gurgle in their throats.<br/>
+But word distinct can utter none.&rdquo; Our route<br/>
+Thus compass&rsquo;d we, a segment widely stretch&rsquo;d<br/>
+Between the dry embankment, and the core<br/>
+Of the loath&rsquo;d pool, turning meanwhile our eyes<br/>
+Downward on those who gulp&rsquo;d its muddy lees;<br/>
+Nor stopp&rsquo;d, till to a tower&rsquo;s low base we came.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoI.VIII"></a>CANTO VIII</h2>
+
+<p>
+My theme pursuing, I relate that ere<br/>
+We reach&rsquo;d the lofty turret&rsquo;s base, our eyes<br/>
+Its height ascended, where two cressets hung<br/>
+We mark&rsquo;d, and from afar another light<br/>
+Return the signal, so remote, that scarce<br/>
+The eye could catch its beam. I turning round<br/>
+To the deep source of knowledge, thus inquir&rsquo;d:<br/>
+&ldquo;Say what this means? and what that other light<br/>
+In answer set? what agency doth this?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There on the filthy waters,&rdquo; he replied,<br/>
+&ldquo;E&rsquo;en now what next awaits us mayst thou see,<br/>
+If the marsh-gender&rsquo;d fog conceal it not.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Never was arrow from the cord dismiss&rsquo;d,<br/>
+That ran its way so nimbly through the air,<br/>
+As a small bark, that through the waves I spied<br/>
+Toward us coming, under the sole sway<br/>
+Of one that ferried it, who cried aloud:<br/>
+&ldquo;Art thou arriv&rsquo;d, fell spirit?&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;Phlegyas,
+Phlegyas,<br/>
+This time thou criest in vain,&rdquo; my lord replied;<br/>
+&ldquo;No longer shalt thou have us, but while o&rsquo;er<br/>
+The slimy pool we pass.&rdquo; As one who hears<br/>
+Of some great wrong he hath sustain&rsquo;d, whereat<br/>
+Inly he pines; so Phlegyas inly pin&rsquo;d<br/>
+In his fierce ire. My guide descending stepp&rsquo;d<br/>
+Into the skiff, and bade me enter next<br/>
+Close at his side; nor till my entrance seem&rsquo;d<br/>
+The vessel freighted. Soon as both embark&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Cutting the waves, goes on the ancient prow,<br/>
+More deeply than with others it is wont.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+While we our course o&rsquo;er the dead channel held.<br/>
+One drench&rsquo;d in mire before me came, and said;<br/>
+&ldquo;Who art thou, that thou comest ere thine hour?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I answer&rsquo;d: &ldquo;Though I come, I tarry not;<br/>
+But who art thou, that art become so foul?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;One, as thou seest, who mourn: &ldquo; he straight replied.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To which I thus: &ldquo; In mourning and in woe,<br/>
+Curs&rsquo;d spirit! tarry thou. I know thee well,<br/>
+E&rsquo;en thus in filth disguis&rsquo;d.&rdquo; Then stretch&rsquo;d he
+forth<br/>
+Hands to the bark; whereof my teacher sage<br/>
+Aware, thrusting him back: &ldquo;Away! down there<br/>
+To the&rsquo; other dogs!&rdquo; then, with his arms my neck<br/>
+Encircling, kiss&rsquo;d my cheek, and spake: &ldquo;O soul<br/>
+Justly disdainful! blest was she in whom<br/>
+Thou was conceiv&rsquo;d! He in the world was one<br/>
+For arrogance noted; to his memory<br/>
+No virtue lends its lustre; even so<br/>
+Here is his shadow furious. There above<br/>
+How many now hold themselves mighty kings<br/>
+Who here like swine shall wallow in the mire,<br/>
+Leaving behind them horrible dispraise!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I then: &ldquo;Master! him fain would I behold<br/>
+Whelm&rsquo;d in these dregs, before we quit the lake.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He thus: &ldquo;Or ever to thy view the shore<br/>
+Be offer&rsquo;d, satisfied shall be that wish,<br/>
+Which well deserves completion.&rdquo; Scarce his words<br/>
+Were ended, when I saw the miry tribes<br/>
+Set on him with such violence, that yet<br/>
+For that render I thanks to God and praise<br/>
+&ldquo;To Filippo Argenti:&rdquo; cried they all:<br/>
+And on himself the moody Florentine<br/>
+Turn&rsquo;d his avenging fangs. Him here we left,<br/>
+Nor speak I of him more. But on mine ear<br/>
+Sudden a sound of lamentation smote,<br/>
+Whereat mine eye unbarr&rsquo;d I sent abroad.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And thus the good instructor: &ldquo;Now, my son!<br/>
+Draws near the city, that of Dis is nam&rsquo;d,<br/>
+With its grave denizens, a mighty throng.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I thus: &ldquo;The minarets already, Sir!<br/>
+There certes in the valley I descry,<br/>
+Gleaming vermilion, as if they from fire<br/>
+Had issu&rsquo;d.&rdquo; He replied: &ldquo;Eternal fire,<br/>
+That inward burns, shows them with ruddy flame<br/>
+Illum&rsquo;d; as in this nether hell thou seest.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We came within the fosses deep, that moat<br/>
+This region comfortless. The walls appear&rsquo;d<br/>
+As they were fram&rsquo;d of iron. We had made<br/>
+Wide circuit, ere a place we reach&rsquo;d, where loud<br/>
+The mariner cried vehement: &ldquo;Go forth!<br/>
+The&rsquo; entrance is here!&rdquo; Upon the gates I spied<br/>
+More than a thousand, who of old from heaven<br/>
+Were hurl&rsquo;d. With ireful gestures, &ldquo;Who is this,&rdquo;<br/>
+They cried, &ldquo;that without death first felt, goes through<br/>
+The regions of the dead?&rdquo; My sapient guide<br/>
+Made sign that he for secret parley wish&rsquo;d;<br/>
+Whereat their angry scorn abating, thus<br/>
+They spake: &ldquo;Come thou alone; and let him go<br/>
+Who hath so hardily enter&rsquo;d this realm.<br/>
+Alone return he by his witless way;<br/>
+If well he know it, let him prove. For thee,<br/>
+Here shalt thou tarry, who through clime so dark<br/>
+Hast been his escort.&rdquo; Now bethink thee, reader!<br/>
+What cheer was mine at sound of those curs&rsquo;d words.<br/>
+I did believe I never should return.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;O my lov&rsquo;d guide! who more than seven times<br/>
+Security hast render&rsquo;d me, and drawn<br/>
+From peril deep, whereto I stood expos&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Desert me not,&rdquo; I cried, &ldquo;in this extreme.<br/>
+And if our onward going be denied,<br/>
+Together trace we back our steps with speed.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My liege, who thither had conducted me,<br/>
+Replied: &ldquo;Fear not: for of our passage none<br/>
+Hath power to disappoint us, by such high<br/>
+Authority permitted. But do thou<br/>
+Expect me here; meanwhile thy wearied spirit<br/>
+Comfort, and feed with kindly hope, assur&rsquo;d<br/>
+I will not leave thee in this lower world.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This said, departs the sire benevolent,<br/>
+And quits me. Hesitating I remain<br/>
+At war &rsquo;twixt will and will not in my thoughts.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I could not hear what terms he offer&rsquo;d them,<br/>
+But they conferr&rsquo;d not long, for all at once<br/>
+To trial fled within. Clos&rsquo;d were the gates<br/>
+By those our adversaries on the breast<br/>
+Of my liege lord: excluded he return&rsquo;d<br/>
+To me with tardy steps. Upon the ground<br/>
+His eyes were bent, and from his brow eras&rsquo;d<br/>
+All confidence, while thus with sighs he spake:<br/>
+&ldquo;Who hath denied me these abodes of woe?&rdquo;<br/>
+Then thus to me: &ldquo;That I am anger&rsquo;d, think<br/>
+No ground of terror: in this trial I<br/>
+Shall vanquish, use what arts they may within<br/>
+For hindrance. This their insolence, not new,<br/>
+Erewhile at gate less secret they display&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Which still is without bolt; upon its arch<br/>
+Thou saw&rsquo;st the deadly scroll: and even now<br/>
+On this side of its entrance, down the steep,<br/>
+Passing the circles, unescorted, comes<br/>
+One whose strong might can open us this land.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoI.IX"></a>CANTO IX</h2>
+
+<p>
+The hue, which coward dread on my pale cheeks<br/>
+Imprinted, when I saw my guide turn back,<br/>
+Chas&rsquo;d that from his which newly they had worn,<br/>
+And inwardly restrain&rsquo;d it. He, as one<br/>
+Who listens, stood attentive: for his eye<br/>
+Not far could lead him through the sable air,<br/>
+And the thick-gath&rsquo;ring cloud. &ldquo;It yet behooves<br/>
+We win this fight&rdquo;&mdash;thus he began&mdash;&rdquo; if not&mdash;<br/>
+Such aid to us is offer&rsquo;d.&mdash;Oh, how long<br/>
+Me seems it, ere the promis&rsquo;d help arrive!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I noted, how the sequel of his words<br/>
+Clok&rsquo;d their beginning; for the last he spake<br/>
+Agreed not with the first. But not the less<br/>
+My fear was at his saying; sith I drew<br/>
+To import worse perchance, than that he held,<br/>
+His mutilated speech. &ldquo;Doth ever any<br/>
+Into this rueful concave&rsquo;s extreme depth<br/>
+Descend, out of the first degree, whose pain<br/>
+Is deprivation merely of sweet hope?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus I inquiring. &ldquo;Rarely,&rdquo; he replied,<br/>
+&ldquo;It chances, that among us any makes<br/>
+This journey, which I wend. Erewhile &rsquo;tis true<br/>
+Once came I here beneath, conjur&rsquo;d by fell<br/>
+Erictho, sorceress, who compell&rsquo;d the shades<br/>
+Back to their bodies. No long space my flesh<br/>
+Was naked of me, when within these walls<br/>
+She made me enter, to draw forth a spirit<br/>
+From out of Judas&rsquo; circle. Lowest place<br/>
+Is that of all, obscurest, and remov&rsquo;d<br/>
+Farthest from heav&rsquo;n&rsquo;s all-circling orb. The road<br/>
+Full well I know: thou therefore rest secure.<br/>
+That lake, the noisome stench exhaling, round<br/>
+The city&rsquo; of grief encompasses, which now<br/>
+We may not enter without rage.&rdquo; Yet more<br/>
+He added: but I hold it not in mind,<br/>
+For that mine eye toward the lofty tower<br/>
+Had drawn me wholly, to its burning top.<br/>
+Where in an instant I beheld uprisen<br/>
+At once three hellish furies stain&rsquo;d with blood:<br/>
+In limb and motion feminine they seem&rsquo;d;<br/>
+Around them greenest hydras twisting roll&rsquo;d<br/>
+Their volumes; adders and cerastes crept<br/>
+Instead of hair, and their fierce temples bound.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He knowing well the miserable hags<br/>
+Who tend the queen of endless woe, thus spake:<br/>
+&ldquo;Mark thou each dire Erinnys. To the left<br/>
+This is Megaera; on the right hand she,<br/>
+Who wails, Alecto; and Tisiphone<br/>
+I&rsquo; th&rsquo; midst.&rdquo; This said, in silence he remain&rsquo;d<br/>
+Their breast they each one clawing tore; themselves<br/>
+Smote with their palms, and such shrill clamour rais&rsquo;d,<br/>
+That to the bard I clung, suspicion-bound.<br/>
+&ldquo;Hasten Medusa: so to adamant<br/>
+Him shall we change;&rdquo; all looking down exclaim&rsquo;d.<br/>
+&ldquo;E&rsquo;en when by Theseus&rsquo; might assail&rsquo;d, we took<br/>
+No ill revenge.&rdquo; &ldquo;Turn thyself round, and keep<br/>
+Thy count&rsquo;nance hid; for if the Gorgon dire<br/>
+Be shown, and thou shouldst view it, thy return<br/>
+Upwards would be for ever lost.&rdquo; This said,<br/>
+Himself my gentle master turn&rsquo;d me round,<br/>
+Nor trusted he my hands, but with his own<br/>
+He also hid me. Ye of intellect<br/>
+Sound and entire, mark well the lore conceal&rsquo;d<br/>
+Under close texture of the mystic strain!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And now there came o&rsquo;er the perturbed waves<br/>
+Loud-crashing, terrible, a sound that made<br/>
+Either shore tremble, as if of a wind<br/>
+Impetuous, from conflicting vapours sprung,<br/>
+That &rsquo;gainst some forest driving all its might,<br/>
+Plucks off the branches, beats them down and hurls<br/>
+Afar; then onward passing proudly sweeps<br/>
+Its whirlwind rage, while beasts and shepherds fly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mine eyes he loos&rsquo;d, and spake: &ldquo;And now direct<br/>
+Thy visual nerve along that ancient foam,<br/>
+There, thickest where the smoke ascends.&rdquo; As frogs<br/>
+Before their foe the serpent, through the wave<br/>
+Ply swiftly all, till at the ground each one<br/>
+Lies on a heap; more than a thousand spirits<br/>
+Destroy&rsquo;d, so saw I fleeing before one<br/>
+Who pass&rsquo;d with unwet feet the Stygian sound.<br/>
+He, from his face removing the gross air,<br/>
+Oft his left hand forth stretch&rsquo;d, and seem&rsquo;d alone<br/>
+By that annoyance wearied. I perceiv&rsquo;d<br/>
+That he was sent from heav&rsquo;n, and to my guide<br/>
+Turn&rsquo;d me, who signal made that I should stand<br/>
+Quiet, and bend to him. Ah me! how full<br/>
+Of noble anger seem&rsquo;d he! To the gate<br/>
+He came, and with his wand touch&rsquo;d it, whereat<br/>
+Open without impediment it flew.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Outcasts of heav&rsquo;n! O abject race and scorn&rsquo;d!&rdquo;<br/>
+Began he on the horrid grunsel standing,<br/>
+&ldquo;Whence doth this wild excess of insolence<br/>
+Lodge in you? wherefore kick you &rsquo;gainst that will<br/>
+Ne&rsquo;er frustrate of its end, and which so oft<br/>
+Hath laid on you enforcement of your pangs?<br/>
+What profits at the fays to but the horn?<br/>
+Your Cerberus, if ye remember, hence<br/>
+Bears still, peel&rsquo;d of their hair, his throat and maw.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This said, he turn&rsquo;d back o&rsquo;er the filthy way,<br/>
+And syllable to us spake none, but wore<br/>
+The semblance of a man by other care<br/>
+Beset, and keenly press&rsquo;d, than thought of him<br/>
+Who in his presence stands. Then we our steps<br/>
+Toward that territory mov&rsquo;d, secure<br/>
+After the hallow&rsquo;d words. We unoppos&rsquo;d<br/>
+There enter&rsquo;d; and my mind eager to learn<br/>
+What state a fortress like to that might hold,<br/>
+I soon as enter&rsquo;d throw mine eye around,<br/>
+And see on every part wide-stretching space<br/>
+Replete with bitter pain and torment ill.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As where Rhone stagnates on the plains of Arles,<br/>
+Or as at Pola, near Quarnaro&rsquo;s gulf,<br/>
+That closes Italy and laves her bounds,<br/>
+The place is all thick spread with sepulchres;<br/>
+So was it here, save what in horror here<br/>
+Excell&rsquo;d: for &rsquo;midst the graves were scattered flames,<br/>
+Wherewith intensely all throughout they burn&rsquo;d,<br/>
+That iron for no craft there hotter needs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Their lids all hung suspended, and beneath<br/>
+From them forth issu&rsquo;d lamentable moans,<br/>
+Such as the sad and tortur&rsquo;d well might raise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I thus: &ldquo;Master! say who are these, interr&rsquo;d<br/>
+Within these vaults, of whom distinct we hear<br/>
+The dolorous sighs?&rdquo; He answer thus return&rsquo;d:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The arch-heretics are here, accompanied<br/>
+By every sect their followers; and much more,<br/>
+Than thou believest, tombs are freighted: like<br/>
+With like is buried; and the monuments<br/>
+Are different in degrees of heat. &ldquo;This said,<br/>
+He to the right hand turning, on we pass&rsquo;d<br/>
+Betwixt the afflicted and the ramparts high.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoI.X"></a>CANTO X</h2>
+
+<p>
+Now by a secret pathway we proceed,<br/>
+Between the walls, that hem the region round,<br/>
+And the tormented souls: my master first,<br/>
+I close behind his steps. &ldquo;Virtue supreme!&rdquo;<br/>
+I thus began; &ldquo;who through these ample orbs<br/>
+In circuit lead&rsquo;st me, even as thou will&rsquo;st,<br/>
+Speak thou, and satisfy my wish. May those,<br/>
+Who lie within these sepulchres, be seen?<br/>
+Already all the lids are rais&rsquo;d, and none<br/>
+O&rsquo;er them keeps watch.&rdquo; He thus in answer spake<br/>
+&ldquo;They shall be closed all, what-time they here<br/>
+From Josaphat return&rsquo;d shall come, and bring<br/>
+Their bodies, which above they now have left.<br/>
+The cemetery on this part obtain<br/>
+With Epicurus all his followers,<br/>
+Who with the body make the spirit die.<br/>
+Here therefore satisfaction shall be soon<br/>
+Both to the question ask&rsquo;d, and to the wish,<br/>
+Which thou conceal&rsquo;st in silence.&rdquo; I replied:<br/>
+&ldquo;I keep not, guide belov&rsquo;d! from thee my heart<br/>
+Secreted, but to shun vain length of words,<br/>
+A lesson erewhile taught me by thyself.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;O Tuscan! thou who through the city of fire<br/>
+Alive art passing, so discreet of speech!<br/>
+Here please thee stay awhile. Thy utterance<br/>
+Declares the place of thy nativity<br/>
+To be that noble land, with which perchance<br/>
+I too severely dealt.&rdquo; Sudden that sound<br/>
+Forth issu&rsquo;d from a vault, whereat in fear<br/>
+I somewhat closer to my leader&rsquo;s side<br/>
+Approaching, he thus spake: &ldquo;What dost thou? Turn.<br/>
+Lo, Farinata, there! who hath himself<br/>
+Uplifted: from his girdle upwards all<br/>
+Expos&rsquo;d behold him.&rdquo; On his face was mine<br/>
+Already fix&rsquo;d; his breast and forehead there<br/>
+Erecting, seem&rsquo;d as in high scorn he held<br/>
+E&rsquo;en hell. Between the sepulchres to him<br/>
+My guide thrust me with fearless hands and prompt,<br/>
+This warning added: &ldquo;See thy words be clear!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He, soon as there I stood at the tomb&rsquo;s foot,<br/>
+Ey&rsquo;d me a space, then in disdainful mood<br/>
+Address&rsquo;d me: &ldquo;Say, what ancestors were thine?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I, willing to obey him, straight reveal&rsquo;d<br/>
+The whole, nor kept back aught: whence he, his brow<br/>
+Somewhat uplifting, cried: &ldquo;Fiercely were they<br/>
+Adverse to me, my party, and the blood<br/>
+From whence I sprang: twice therefore I abroad<br/>
+Scatter&rsquo;d them.&rdquo; &ldquo;Though driv&rsquo;n out, yet they each
+time<br/>
+From all parts,&rdquo; answer&rsquo;d I, &ldquo;return&rsquo;d; an art<br/>
+Which yours have shown, they are not skill&rsquo;d to learn.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then, peering forth from the unclosed jaw,<br/>
+Rose from his side a shade, high as the chin,<br/>
+Leaning, methought, upon its knees uprais&rsquo;d.<br/>
+It look&rsquo;d around, as eager to explore<br/>
+If there were other with me; but perceiving<br/>
+That fond imagination quench&rsquo;d, with tears<br/>
+Thus spake: &ldquo;If thou through this blind prison go&rsquo;st.<br/>
+Led by thy lofty genius and profound,<br/>
+Where is my son? and wherefore not with thee?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I straight replied: &ldquo;Not of myself I come,<br/>
+By him, who there expects me, through this clime<br/>
+Conducted, whom perchance Guido thy son<br/>
+Had in contempt.&rdquo; Already had his words<br/>
+And mode of punishment read me his name,<br/>
+Whence I so fully answer&rsquo;d. He at once<br/>
+Exclaim&rsquo;d, up starting, &ldquo;How! said&rsquo;st thou he HAD?<br/>
+No longer lives he? Strikes not on his eye<br/>
+The blessed daylight?&rdquo; Then of some delay<br/>
+I made ere my reply aware, down fell<br/>
+Supine, not after forth appear&rsquo;d he more.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile the other, great of soul, near whom<br/>
+I yet was station&rsquo;d, chang&rsquo;d not count&rsquo;nance stern,<br/>
+Nor mov&rsquo;d the neck, nor bent his ribbed side.<br/>
+&ldquo;And if,&rdquo; continuing the first discourse,<br/>
+&ldquo;They in this art,&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;small skill have shown,<br/>
+That doth torment me more e&rsquo;en than this bed.<br/>
+But not yet fifty times shall be relum&rsquo;d<br/>
+Her aspect, who reigns here Queen of this realm,<br/>
+Ere thou shalt know the full weight of that art.<br/>
+So to the pleasant world mayst thou return,<br/>
+As thou shalt tell me, why in all their laws,<br/>
+Against my kin this people is so fell?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The slaughter and great havoc,&rdquo; I replied,<br/>
+&ldquo;That colour&rsquo;d Arbia&rsquo;s flood with crimson stain&mdash;<br/>
+To these impute, that in our hallow&rsquo;d dome<br/>
+Such orisons ascend.&rdquo; Sighing he shook<br/>
+The head, then thus resum&rsquo;d: &ldquo;In that affray<br/>
+I stood not singly, nor without just cause<br/>
+Assuredly should with the rest have stirr&rsquo;d;<br/>
+But singly there I stood, when by consent<br/>
+Of all, Florence had to the ground been raz&rsquo;d,<br/>
+The one who openly forbad the deed.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;So may thy lineage find at last repose,&rdquo;<br/>
+I thus adjur&rsquo;d him, &ldquo;as thou solve this knot,<br/>
+Which now involves my mind. If right I hear,<br/>
+Ye seem to view beforehand, that which time<br/>
+Leads with him, of the present uninform&rsquo;d.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We view, as one who hath an evil sight,&rdquo;<br/>
+He answer&rsquo;d, &ldquo;plainly, objects far remote:<br/>
+So much of his large spendour yet imparts<br/>
+The&rsquo; Almighty Ruler; but when they approach<br/>
+Or actually exist, our intellect<br/>
+Then wholly fails, nor of your human state<br/>
+Except what others bring us know we aught.<br/>
+Hence therefore mayst thou understand, that all<br/>
+Our knowledge in that instant shall expire,<br/>
+When on futurity the portals close.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then conscious of my fault, and by remorse<br/>
+Smitten, I added thus: &ldquo;Now shalt thou say<br/>
+To him there fallen, that his offspring still<br/>
+Is to the living join&rsquo;d; and bid him know,<br/>
+That if from answer silent I abstain&rsquo;d,<br/>
+&rsquo;Twas that my thought was occupied intent<br/>
+Upon that error, which thy help hath solv&rsquo;d.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But now my master summoning me back<br/>
+I heard, and with more eager haste besought<br/>
+The spirit to inform me, who with him<br/>
+Partook his lot. He answer thus return&rsquo;d:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;More than a thousand with me here are laid<br/>
+Within is Frederick, second of that name,<br/>
+And the Lord Cardinal, and of the rest<br/>
+I speak not.&rdquo; He, this said, from sight withdrew.<br/>
+But I my steps towards the ancient bard<br/>
+Reverting, ruminated on the words<br/>
+Betokening me such ill. Onward he mov&rsquo;d,<br/>
+And thus in going question&rsquo;d: &ldquo;Whence the&rsquo; amaze<br/>
+That holds thy senses wrapt?&rdquo; I satisfied<br/>
+The&rsquo; inquiry, and the sage enjoin&rsquo;d me straight:<br/>
+&ldquo;Let thy safe memory store what thou hast heard<br/>
+To thee importing harm; and note thou this,&rdquo;<br/>
+With his rais&rsquo;d finger bidding me take heed,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;When thou shalt stand before her gracious beam,<br/>
+Whose bright eye all surveys, she of thy life<br/>
+The future tenour will to thee unfold.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Forthwith he to the left hand turn&rsquo;d his feet:<br/>
+We left the wall, and tow&rsquo;rds the middle space<br/>
+Went by a path, that to a valley strikes;<br/>
+Which e&rsquo;en thus high exhal&rsquo;d its noisome steam.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoI.XI"></a>CANTO XI</h2>
+
+<p>
+Upon the utmost verge of a high bank,<br/>
+By craggy rocks environ&rsquo;d round, we came,<br/>
+Where woes beneath more cruel yet were stow&rsquo;d:<br/>
+And here to shun the horrible excess<br/>
+Of fetid exhalation, upward cast<br/>
+From the profound abyss, behind the lid<br/>
+Of a great monument we stood retir&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Whereon this scroll I mark&rsquo;d: &ldquo;I have in charge<br/>
+Pope Anastasius, whom Photinus drew<br/>
+From the right path.&mdash;Ere our descent behooves<br/>
+We make delay, that somewhat first the sense,<br/>
+To the dire breath accustom&rsquo;d, afterward<br/>
+Regard it not.&rdquo; My master thus; to whom<br/>
+Answering I spake: &ldquo;Some compensation find<br/>
+That the time past not wholly lost.&rdquo; He then:<br/>
+&ldquo;Lo! how my thoughts e&rsquo;en to thy wishes tend!<br/>
+My son! within these rocks,&rdquo; he thus began,<br/>
+&ldquo;Are three close circles in gradation plac&rsquo;d,<br/>
+As these which now thou leav&rsquo;st. Each one is full<br/>
+Of spirits accurs&rsquo;d; but that the sight alone<br/>
+Hereafter may suffice thee, listen how<br/>
+And for what cause in durance they abide.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Of all malicious act abhorr&rsquo;d in heaven,<br/>
+The end is injury; and all such end<br/>
+Either by force or fraud works other&rsquo;s woe<br/>
+But fraud, because of man peculiar evil,<br/>
+To God is more displeasing; and beneath<br/>
+The fraudulent are therefore doom&rsquo;d to&rsquo; endure<br/>
+Severer pang. The violent occupy<br/>
+All the first circle; and because to force<br/>
+Three persons are obnoxious, in three rounds<br/>
+Hach within other sep&rsquo;rate is it fram&rsquo;d.<br/>
+To God, his neighbour, and himself, by man<br/>
+Force may be offer&rsquo;d; to himself I say<br/>
+And his possessions, as thou soon shalt hear<br/>
+At full. Death, violent death, and painful wounds<br/>
+Upon his neighbour he inflicts; and wastes<br/>
+By devastation, pillage, and the flames,<br/>
+His substance. Slayers, and each one that smites<br/>
+In malice, plund&rsquo;rers, and all robbers, hence<br/>
+The torment undergo of the first round<br/>
+In different herds. Man can do violence<br/>
+To himself and his own blessings: and for this<br/>
+He in the second round must aye deplore<br/>
+With unavailing penitence his crime,<br/>
+Whoe&rsquo;er deprives himself of life and light,<br/>
+In reckless lavishment his talent wastes,<br/>
+And sorrows there where he should dwell in joy.<br/>
+To God may force be offer&rsquo;d, in the heart<br/>
+Denying and blaspheming his high power,<br/>
+And nature with her kindly law contemning.<br/>
+And thence the inmost round marks with its seal<br/>
+Sodom and Cahors, and all such as speak<br/>
+Contemptuously&rsquo; of the Godhead in their hearts.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Fraud, that in every conscience leaves a sting,<br/>
+May be by man employ&rsquo;d on one, whose trust<br/>
+He wins, or on another who withholds<br/>
+Strict confidence. Seems as the latter way<br/>
+Broke but the bond of love which Nature makes.<br/>
+Whence in the second circle have their nest<br/>
+Dissimulation, witchcraft, flatteries,<br/>
+Theft, falsehood, simony, all who seduce<br/>
+To lust, or set their honesty at pawn,<br/>
+With such vile scum as these. The other way<br/>
+Forgets both Nature&rsquo;s general love, and that<br/>
+Which thereto added afterwards gives birth<br/>
+To special faith. Whence in the lesser circle,<br/>
+Point of the universe, dread seat of Dis,<br/>
+The traitor is eternally consum&rsquo;d.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I thus: &ldquo;Instructor, clearly thy discourse<br/>
+Proceeds, distinguishing the hideous chasm<br/>
+And its inhabitants with skill exact.<br/>
+But tell me this: they of the dull, fat pool,<br/>
+Whom the rain beats, or whom the tempest drives,<br/>
+Or who with tongues so fierce conflicting meet,<br/>
+Wherefore within the city fire-illum&rsquo;d<br/>
+Are not these punish&rsquo;d, if God&rsquo;s wrath be on them?<br/>
+And if it be not, wherefore in such guise<br/>
+Are they condemned?&rdquo; He answer thus return&rsquo;d:<br/>
+&ldquo;Wherefore in dotage wanders thus thy mind,<br/>
+Not so accustom&rsquo;d? or what other thoughts<br/>
+Possess it? Dwell not in thy memory<br/>
+The words, wherein thy ethic page describes<br/>
+Three dispositions adverse to Heav&rsquo;n&rsquo;s will,<br/>
+Incont&rsquo;nence, malice, and mad brutishness,<br/>
+And how incontinence the least offends<br/>
+God, and least guilt incurs? If well thou note<br/>
+This judgment, and remember who they are,<br/>
+Without these walls to vain repentance doom&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Thou shalt discern why they apart are plac&rsquo;d<br/>
+From these fell spirits, and less wreakful pours<br/>
+Justice divine on them its vengeance down.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;O Sun! who healest all imperfect sight,<br/>
+Thou so content&rsquo;st me, when thou solv&rsquo;st my doubt,<br/>
+That ignorance not less than knowledge charms.<br/>
+Yet somewhat turn thee back,&rdquo; I in these words<br/>
+Continu&rsquo;d, &ldquo;where thou saidst, that usury<br/>
+Offends celestial Goodness; and this knot<br/>
+Perplex&rsquo;d unravel.&rdquo; He thus made reply:<br/>
+&ldquo;Philosophy, to an attentive ear,<br/>
+Clearly points out, not in one part alone,<br/>
+How imitative nature takes her course<br/>
+From the celestial mind and from its art:<br/>
+And where her laws the Stagyrite unfolds,<br/>
+Not many leaves scann&rsquo;d o&rsquo;er, observing well<br/>
+Thou shalt discover, that your art on her<br/>
+Obsequious follows, as the learner treads<br/>
+In his instructor&rsquo;s step, so that your art<br/>
+Deserves the name of second in descent<br/>
+From God. These two, if thou recall to mind<br/>
+Creation&rsquo;s holy book, from the beginning<br/>
+Were the right source of life and excellence<br/>
+To human kind. But in another path<br/>
+The usurer walks; and Nature in herself<br/>
+And in her follower thus he sets at nought,<br/>
+Placing elsewhere his hope. But follow now<br/>
+My steps on forward journey bent; for now<br/>
+The Pisces play with undulating glance<br/>
+Along the&rsquo; horizon, and the Wain lies all<br/>
+O&rsquo;er the north-west; and onward there a space<br/>
+Is our steep passage down the rocky height.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoI.XII"></a>CANTO XII</h2>
+
+<p>
+The place where to descend the precipice<br/>
+We came, was rough as Alp, and on its verge<br/>
+Such object lay, as every eye would shun.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As is that ruin, which Adice&rsquo;s stream<br/>
+On this side Trento struck, should&rsquo;ring the wave,<br/>
+Or loos&rsquo;d by earthquake or for lack of prop;<br/>
+For from the mountain&rsquo;s summit, whence it mov&rsquo;d<br/>
+To the low level, so the headlong rock<br/>
+Is shiver&rsquo;d, that some passage it might give<br/>
+To him who from above would pass; e&rsquo;en such<br/>
+Into the chasm was that descent: and there<br/>
+At point of the disparted ridge lay stretch&rsquo;d<br/>
+The infamy of Crete, detested brood<br/>
+Of the feign&rsquo;d heifer: and at sight of us<br/>
+It gnaw&rsquo;d itself, as one with rage distract.<br/>
+To him my guide exclaim&rsquo;d: &ldquo;Perchance thou deem&rsquo;st<br/>
+The King of Athens here, who, in the world<br/>
+Above, thy death contriv&rsquo;d. Monster! avaunt!<br/>
+He comes not tutor&rsquo;d by thy sister&rsquo;s art,<br/>
+But to behold your torments is he come.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Like to a bull, that with impetuous spring<br/>
+Darts, at the moment when the fatal blow<br/>
+Hath struck him, but unable to proceed<br/>
+Plunges on either side; so saw I plunge<br/>
+The Minotaur; whereat the sage exclaim&rsquo;d:<br/>
+&ldquo;Run to the passage! while he storms, &rsquo;tis well<br/>
+That thou descend.&rdquo; Thus down our road we took<br/>
+Through those dilapidated crags, that oft<br/>
+Mov&rsquo;d underneath my feet, to weight like theirs<br/>
+Unus&rsquo;d. I pond&rsquo;ring went, and thus he spake:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Perhaps thy thoughts are of this ruin&rsquo;d steep,<br/>
+Guarded by the brute violence, which I<br/>
+Have vanquish&rsquo;d now. Know then, that when I erst<br/>
+Hither descended to the nether hell,<br/>
+This rock was not yet fallen. But past doubt<br/>
+(If well I mark) not long ere He arrived,<br/>
+Who carried off from Dis the mighty spoil<br/>
+Of the highest circle, then through all its bounds<br/>
+Such trembling seiz&rsquo;d the deep concave and foul,<br/>
+I thought the universe was thrill&rsquo;d with love,<br/>
+Whereby, there are who deem, the world hath oft<br/>
+Been into chaos turn&rsquo;d: and in that point,<br/>
+Here, and elsewhere, that old rock toppled down.<br/>
+But fix thine eyes beneath: the river of blood<br/>
+Approaches, in the which all those are steep&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Who have by violence injur&rsquo;d.&rdquo; O blind lust!<br/>
+O foolish wrath! who so dost goad us on<br/>
+In the brief life, and in the eternal then<br/>
+Thus miserably o&rsquo;erwhelm us. I beheld<br/>
+An ample foss, that in a bow was bent,<br/>
+As circling all the plain; for so my guide<br/>
+Had told. Between it and the rampart&rsquo;s base<br/>
+On trail ran Centaurs, with keen arrows arm&rsquo;d,<br/>
+As to the chase they on the earth were wont.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At seeing us descend they each one stood;<br/>
+And issuing from the troop, three sped with bows<br/>
+And missile weapons chosen first; of whom<br/>
+One cried from far: &ldquo;Say to what pain ye come<br/>
+Condemn&rsquo;d, who down this steep have journied? Speak<br/>
+From whence ye stand, or else the bow I draw.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To whom my guide: &ldquo;Our answer shall be made<br/>
+To Chiron, there, when nearer him we come.<br/>
+Ill was thy mind, thus ever quick and rash.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then me he touch&rsquo;d, and spake: &ldquo;Nessus is this,<br/>
+Who for the fair Deianira died,<br/>
+And wrought himself revenge for his own fate.<br/>
+He in the midst, that on his breast looks down,<br/>
+Is the great Chiron who Achilles nurs&rsquo;d;<br/>
+That other Pholus, prone to wrath.&rdquo; Around<br/>
+The foss these go by thousands, aiming shafts<br/>
+At whatsoever spirit dares emerge<br/>
+From out the blood, more than his guilt allows.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We to those beasts, that rapid strode along,<br/>
+Drew near, when Chiron took an arrow forth,<br/>
+And with the notch push&rsquo;d back his shaggy beard<br/>
+To the cheek-bone, then his great mouth to view<br/>
+Exposing, to his fellows thus exclaim&rsquo;d:<br/>
+&ldquo;Are ye aware, that he who comes behind<br/>
+Moves what he touches? The feet of the dead<br/>
+Are not so wont.&rdquo; My trusty guide, who now<br/>
+Stood near his breast, where the two natures join,<br/>
+Thus made reply: &ldquo;He is indeed alive,<br/>
+And solitary so must needs by me<br/>
+Be shown the gloomy vale, thereto induc&rsquo;d<br/>
+By strict necessity, not by delight.<br/>
+She left her joyful harpings in the sky,<br/>
+Who this new office to my care consign&rsquo;d.<br/>
+He is no robber, no dark spirit I.<br/>
+But by that virtue, which empowers my step<br/>
+To treat so wild a path, grant us, I pray,<br/>
+One of thy band, whom we may trust secure,<br/>
+Who to the ford may lead us, and convey<br/>
+Across, him mounted on his back; for he<br/>
+Is not a spirit that may walk the air.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then on his right breast turning, Chiron thus<br/>
+To Nessus spake: &ldquo;Return, and be their guide.<br/>
+And if ye chance to cross another troop,<br/>
+Command them keep aloof.&rdquo; Onward we mov&rsquo;d,<br/>
+The faithful escort by our side, along<br/>
+The border of the crimson-seething flood,<br/>
+Whence from those steep&rsquo;d within loud shrieks arose.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Some there I mark&rsquo;d, as high as to their brow<br/>
+Immers&rsquo;d, of whom the mighty Centaur thus:<br/>
+&ldquo;These are the souls of tyrants, who were given<br/>
+To blood and rapine. Here they wail aloud<br/>
+Their merciless wrongs. Here Alexander dwells,<br/>
+And Dionysius fell, who many a year<br/>
+Of woe wrought for fair Sicily. That brow<br/>
+Whereon the hair so jetty clust&rsquo;ring hangs,<br/>
+Is Azzolino; that with flaxen locks<br/>
+Obizzo&rsquo; of Este, in the world destroy&rsquo;d<br/>
+By his foul step-son.&rdquo; To the bard rever&rsquo;d<br/>
+I turned me round, and thus he spake; &ldquo;Let him<br/>
+Be to thee now first leader, me but next<br/>
+To him in rank.&rdquo; Then farther on a space<br/>
+The Centaur paus&rsquo;d, near some, who at the throat<br/>
+Were extant from the wave; and showing us<br/>
+A spirit by itself apart retir&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Exclaim&rsquo;d: &ldquo;He in God&rsquo;s bosom smote the heart,<br/>
+Which yet is honour&rsquo;d on the bank of Thames.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A race I next espied, who held the head,<br/>
+And even all the bust above the stream.<br/>
+&rsquo;Midst these I many a face remember&rsquo;d well.<br/>
+Thus shallow more and more the blood became,<br/>
+So that at last it but imbru&rsquo;d the feet;<br/>
+And there our passage lay athwart the foss.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;As ever on this side the boiling wave<br/>
+Thou seest diminishing,&rdquo; the Centaur said,<br/>
+&ldquo;So on the other, be thou well assur&rsquo;d,<br/>
+It lower still and lower sinks its bed,<br/>
+Till in that part it reuniting join,<br/>
+Where &rsquo;tis the lot of tyranny to mourn.<br/>
+There Heav&rsquo;n&rsquo;s stern justice lays chastising hand<br/>
+On Attila, who was the scourge of earth,<br/>
+On Sextus, and on Pyrrhus, and extracts<br/>
+Tears ever by the seething flood unlock&rsquo;d<br/>
+From the Rinieri, of Corneto this,<br/>
+Pazzo the other nam&rsquo;d, who fill&rsquo;d the ways<br/>
+With violence and war.&rdquo; This said, he turn&rsquo;d,<br/>
+And quitting us, alone repass&rsquo;d the ford.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoI.XIII"></a>CANTO XIII</h2>
+
+<p>
+Ere Nessus yet had reach&rsquo;d the other bank,<br/>
+We enter&rsquo;d on a forest, where no track<br/>
+Of steps had worn a way. Not verdant there<br/>
+The foliage, but of dusky hue; not light<br/>
+The boughs and tapering, but with knares deform&rsquo;d<br/>
+And matted thick: fruits there were none, but thorns<br/>
+Instead, with venom fill&rsquo;d. Less sharp than these,<br/>
+Less intricate the brakes, wherein abide<br/>
+Those animals, that hate the cultur&rsquo;d fields,<br/>
+Betwixt Corneto and Cecina&rsquo;s stream.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Here the brute Harpies make their nest, the same<br/>
+Who from the Strophades the Trojan band<br/>
+Drove with dire boding of their future woe.<br/>
+Broad are their pennons, of the human form<br/>
+Their neck and count&rsquo;nance, arm&rsquo;d with talons keen<br/>
+The feet, and the huge belly fledge with wings<br/>
+These sit and wail on the drear mystic wood.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The kind instructor in these words began:<br/>
+&ldquo;Ere farther thou proceed, know thou art now<br/>
+I&rsquo; th&rsquo; second round, and shalt be, till thou come<br/>
+Upon the horrid sand: look therefore well<br/>
+Around thee, and such things thou shalt behold,<br/>
+As would my speech discredit.&rdquo; On all sides<br/>
+I heard sad plainings breathe, and none could see<br/>
+From whom they might have issu&rsquo;d. In amaze<br/>
+Fast bound I stood. He, as it seem&rsquo;d, believ&rsquo;d,<br/>
+That I had thought so many voices came<br/>
+From some amid those thickets close conceal&rsquo;d,<br/>
+And thus his speech resum&rsquo;d: &ldquo;If thou lop off<br/>
+A single twig from one of those ill plants,<br/>
+The thought thou hast conceiv&rsquo;d shall vanish quite.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thereat a little stretching forth my hand,<br/>
+From a great wilding gather&rsquo;d I a branch,<br/>
+And straight the trunk exclaim&rsquo;d: &ldquo;Why pluck&rsquo;st thou
+me?&rdquo;<br/>
+Then as the dark blood trickled down its side,<br/>
+These words it added: &ldquo;Wherefore tear&rsquo;st me thus?<br/>
+Is there no touch of mercy in thy breast?<br/>
+Men once were we, that now are rooted here.<br/>
+Thy hand might well have spar&rsquo;d us, had we been<br/>
+The souls of serpents.&rdquo; As a brand yet green,<br/>
+That burning at one end from the&rsquo; other sends<br/>
+A groaning sound, and hisses with the wind<br/>
+That forces out its way, so burst at once,<br/>
+Forth from the broken splinter words and blood.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I, letting fall the bough, remain&rsquo;d as one<br/>
+Assail&rsquo;d by terror, and the sage replied:<br/>
+&ldquo;If he, O injur&rsquo;d spirit! could have believ&rsquo;d<br/>
+What he hath seen but in my verse describ&rsquo;d,<br/>
+He never against thee had stretch&rsquo;d his hand.<br/>
+But I, because the thing surpass&rsquo;d belief,<br/>
+Prompted him to this deed, which even now<br/>
+Myself I rue. But tell me, who thou wast;<br/>
+That, for this wrong to do thee some amends,<br/>
+In the upper world (for thither to return<br/>
+Is granted him) thy fame he may revive.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That pleasant word of thine,&rdquo; the trunk replied<br/>
+&ldquo;Hath so inveigled me, that I from speech<br/>
+Cannot refrain, wherein if I indulge<br/>
+A little longer, in the snare detain&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Count it not grievous. I it was, who held<br/>
+Both keys to Frederick&rsquo;s heart, and turn&rsquo;d the wards,<br/>
+Opening and shutting, with a skill so sweet,<br/>
+That besides me, into his inmost breast<br/>
+Scarce any other could admittance find.<br/>
+The faith I bore to my high charge was such,<br/>
+It cost me the life-blood that warm&rsquo;d my veins.<br/>
+The harlot, who ne&rsquo;er turn&rsquo;d her gloating eyes<br/>
+From Caesar&rsquo;s household, common vice and pest<br/>
+Of courts, &rsquo;gainst me inflam&rsquo;d the minds of all;<br/>
+And to Augustus they so spread the flame,<br/>
+That my glad honours chang&rsquo;d to bitter woes.<br/>
+My soul, disdainful and disgusted, sought<br/>
+Refuge in death from scorn, and I became,<br/>
+Just as I was, unjust toward myself.<br/>
+By the new roots, which fix this stem, I swear,<br/>
+That never faith I broke to my liege lord,<br/>
+Who merited such honour; and of you,<br/>
+If any to the world indeed return,<br/>
+Clear he from wrong my memory, that lies<br/>
+Yet prostrate under envy&rsquo;s cruel blow.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+First somewhat pausing, till the mournful words<br/>
+Were ended, then to me the bard began:<br/>
+&ldquo;Lose not the time; but speak and of him ask,<br/>
+If more thou wish to learn.&rdquo; Whence I replied:<br/>
+&ldquo;Question thou him again of whatsoe&rsquo;er<br/>
+Will, as thou think&rsquo;st, content me; for no power<br/>
+Have I to ask, such pity&rsquo; is at my heart.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He thus resum&rsquo;d; &ldquo;So may he do for thee<br/>
+Freely what thou entreatest, as thou yet<br/>
+Be pleas&rsquo;d, imprison&rsquo;d Spirit! to declare,<br/>
+How in these gnarled joints the soul is tied;<br/>
+And whether any ever from such frame<br/>
+Be loosen&rsquo;d, if thou canst, that also tell.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thereat the trunk breath&rsquo;d hard, and the wind soon<br/>
+Chang&rsquo;d into sounds articulate like these;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Briefly ye shall be answer&rsquo;d. When departs<br/>
+The fierce soul from the body, by itself<br/>
+Thence torn asunder, to the seventh gulf<br/>
+By Minos doom&rsquo;d, into the wood it falls,<br/>
+No place assign&rsquo;d, but wheresoever chance<br/>
+Hurls it, there sprouting, as a grain of spelt,<br/>
+It rises to a sapling, growing thence<br/>
+A savage plant. The Harpies, on its leaves<br/>
+Then feeding, cause both pain and for the pain<br/>
+A vent to grief. We, as the rest, shall come<br/>
+For our own spoils, yet not so that with them<br/>
+We may again be clad; for what a man<br/>
+Takes from himself it is not just he have.<br/>
+Here we perforce shall drag them; and throughout<br/>
+The dismal glade our bodies shall be hung,<br/>
+Each on the wild thorn of his wretched shade.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Attentive yet to listen to the trunk<br/>
+We stood, expecting farther speech, when us<br/>
+A noise surpris&rsquo;d, as when a man perceives<br/>
+The wild boar and the hunt approach his place<br/>
+Of station&rsquo;d watch, who of the beasts and boughs<br/>
+Loud rustling round him hears. And lo! there came<br/>
+Two naked, torn with briers, in headlong flight,<br/>
+That they before them broke each fan o&rsquo; th&rsquo; wood.<br/>
+&ldquo;Haste now,&rdquo; the foremost cried, &ldquo;now haste thee
+death!&rdquo;<br/>
+The&rsquo; other, as seem&rsquo;d, impatient of delay<br/>
+Exclaiming, &ldquo;Lano! not so bent for speed<br/>
+Thy sinews, in the lists of Toppo&rsquo;s field.&rdquo;<br/>
+And then, for that perchance no longer breath<br/>
+Suffic&rsquo;d him, of himself and of a bush<br/>
+One group he made. Behind them was the wood<br/>
+Full of black female mastiffs, gaunt and fleet,<br/>
+As greyhounds that have newly slipp&rsquo;d the leash.<br/>
+On him, who squatted down, they stuck their fangs,<br/>
+And having rent him piecemeal bore away<br/>
+The tortur&rsquo;d limbs. My guide then seiz&rsquo;d my hand,<br/>
+And led me to the thicket, which in vain<br/>
+Mourn&rsquo;d through its bleeding wounds: &ldquo;O Giacomo<br/>
+Of Sant&rsquo; Andrea! what avails it thee,&rdquo;<br/>
+It cried, &ldquo;that of me thou hast made thy screen?<br/>
+For thy ill life what blame on me recoils?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When o&rsquo;er it he had paus&rsquo;d, my master spake:<br/>
+&ldquo;Say who wast thou, that at so many points<br/>
+Breath&rsquo;st out with blood thy lamentable speech?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He answer&rsquo;d: &ldquo;Oh, ye spirits: arriv&rsquo;d in time<br/>
+To spy the shameful havoc, that from me<br/>
+My leaves hath sever&rsquo;d thus, gather them up,<br/>
+And at the foot of their sad parent-tree<br/>
+Carefully lay them. In that city&rsquo; I dwelt,<br/>
+Who for the Baptist her first patron chang&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Whence he for this shall cease not with his art<br/>
+To work her woe: and if there still remain&rsquo;d not<br/>
+On Arno&rsquo;s passage some faint glimpse of him,<br/>
+Those citizens, who rear&rsquo;d once more her walls<br/>
+Upon the ashes left by Attila,<br/>
+Had labour&rsquo;d without profit of their toil.<br/>
+I slung the fatal noose from my own roof.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoI.XIV"></a>CANTO XIV</h2>
+
+<p>
+Soon as the charity of native land<br/>
+Wrought in my bosom, I the scatter&rsquo;d leaves<br/>
+Collected, and to him restor&rsquo;d, who now<br/>
+Was hoarse with utt&rsquo;rance. To the limit thence<br/>
+We came, which from the third the second round<br/>
+Divides, and where of justice is display&rsquo;d<br/>
+Contrivance horrible. Things then first seen<br/>
+Clearlier to manifest, I tell how next<br/>
+A plain we reach&rsquo;d, that from its sterile bed<br/>
+Each plant repell&rsquo;d. The mournful wood waves round<br/>
+Its garland on all sides, as round the wood<br/>
+Spreads the sad foss. There, on the very edge,<br/>
+Our steps we stay&rsquo;d. It was an area wide<br/>
+Of arid sand and thick, resembling most<br/>
+The soil that erst by Cato&rsquo;s foot was trod.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Vengeance of Heav&rsquo;n! Oh ! how shouldst thou be fear&rsquo;d<br/>
+By all, who read what here my eyes beheld!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of naked spirits many a flock I saw,<br/>
+All weeping piteously, to different laws<br/>
+Subjected: for on the&rsquo; earth some lay supine,<br/>
+Some crouching close were seated, others pac&rsquo;d<br/>
+Incessantly around; the latter tribe,<br/>
+More numerous, those fewer who beneath<br/>
+The torment lay, but louder in their grief.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+O&rsquo;er all the sand fell slowly wafting down<br/>
+Dilated flakes of fire, as flakes of snow<br/>
+On Alpine summit, when the wind is hush&rsquo;d.<br/>
+As in the torrid Indian clime, the son<br/>
+Of Ammon saw upon his warrior band<br/>
+Descending, solid flames, that to the ground<br/>
+Came down: whence he bethought him with his troop<br/>
+To trample on the soil; for easier thus<br/>
+The vapour was extinguish&rsquo;d, while alone;<br/>
+So fell the eternal fiery flood, wherewith<br/>
+The marble glow&rsquo;d underneath, as under stove<br/>
+The viands, doubly to augment the pain.<br/>
+Unceasing was the play of wretched hands,<br/>
+Now this, now that way glancing, to shake off<br/>
+The heat, still falling fresh. I thus began:<br/>
+&ldquo;Instructor! thou who all things overcom&rsquo;st,<br/>
+Except the hardy demons, that rush&rsquo;d forth<br/>
+To stop our entrance at the gate, say who<br/>
+Is yon huge spirit, that, as seems, heeds not<br/>
+The burning, but lies writhen in proud scorn,<br/>
+As by the sultry tempest immatur&rsquo;d?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Straight he himself, who was aware I ask&rsquo;d<br/>
+My guide of him, exclaim&rsquo;d: &ldquo;Such as I was<br/>
+When living, dead such now I am. If Jove<br/>
+Weary his workman out, from whom in ire<br/>
+He snatch&rsquo;d the lightnings, that at my last day<br/>
+Transfix&rsquo;d me, if the rest be weary out<br/>
+At their black smithy labouring by turns<br/>
+In Mongibello, while he cries aloud;<br/>
+&ldquo;Help, help, good Mulciber!&rdquo; as erst he cried<br/>
+In the Phlegraean warfare, and the bolts<br/>
+Launch he full aim&rsquo;d at me with all his might,<br/>
+He never should enjoy a sweet revenge.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then thus my guide, in accent higher rais&rsquo;d<br/>
+Than I before had heard him: &ldquo;Capaneus!<br/>
+Thou art more punish&rsquo;d, in that this thy pride<br/>
+Lives yet unquench&rsquo;d: no torrent, save thy rage,<br/>
+Were to thy fury pain proportion&rsquo;d full.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Next turning round to me with milder lip<br/>
+He spake: &ldquo;This of the seven kings was one,<br/>
+Who girt the Theban walls with siege, and held,<br/>
+As still he seems to hold, God in disdain,<br/>
+And sets his high omnipotence at nought.<br/>
+But, as I told him, his despiteful mood<br/>
+Is ornament well suits the breast that wears it.<br/>
+Follow me now; and look thou set not yet<br/>
+Thy foot in the hot sand, but to the wood<br/>
+Keep ever close.&rdquo; Silently on we pass&rsquo;d<br/>
+To where there gushes from the forest&rsquo;s bound<br/>
+A little brook, whose crimson&rsquo;d wave yet lifts<br/>
+My hair with horror. As the rill, that runs<br/>
+From Bulicame, to be portion&rsquo;d out<br/>
+Among the sinful women; so ran this<br/>
+Down through the sand, its bottom and each bank<br/>
+Stone-built, and either margin at its side,<br/>
+Whereon I straight perceiv&rsquo;d our passage lay.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Of all that I have shown thee, since that gate<br/>
+We enter&rsquo;d first, whose threshold is to none<br/>
+Denied, nought else so worthy of regard,<br/>
+As is this river, has thine eye discern&rsquo;d,<br/>
+O&rsquo;er which the flaming volley all is quench&rsquo;d.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So spake my guide; and I him thence besought,<br/>
+That having giv&rsquo;n me appetite to know,<br/>
+The food he too would give, that hunger crav&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;In midst of ocean,&rdquo; forthwith he began,<br/>
+&ldquo;A desolate country lies, which Crete is nam&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Under whose monarch in old times the world<br/>
+Liv&rsquo;d pure and chaste. A mountain rises there,<br/>
+Call&rsquo;d Ida, joyous once with leaves and streams,<br/>
+Deserted now like a forbidden thing.<br/>
+It was the spot which Rhea, Saturn&rsquo;s spouse,<br/>
+Chose for the secret cradle of her son;<br/>
+And better to conceal him, drown&rsquo;d in shouts<br/>
+His infant cries. Within the mount, upright<br/>
+An ancient form there stands and huge, that turns<br/>
+His shoulders towards Damiata, and at Rome<br/>
+As in his mirror looks. Of finest gold<br/>
+His head is shap&rsquo;d, pure silver are the breast<br/>
+And arms; thence to the middle is of brass.<br/>
+And downward all beneath well-temper&rsquo;d steel,<br/>
+Save the right foot of potter&rsquo;s clay, on which<br/>
+Than on the other more erect he stands,<br/>
+Each part except the gold, is rent throughout;<br/>
+And from the fissure tears distil, which join&rsquo;d<br/>
+Penetrate to that cave. They in their course<br/>
+Thus far precipitated down the rock<br/>
+Form Acheron, and Styx, and Phlegethon;<br/>
+Then by this straiten&rsquo;d channel passing hence<br/>
+Beneath, e&rsquo;en to the lowest depth of all,<br/>
+Form there Cocytus, of whose lake (thyself<br/>
+Shall see it) I here give thee no account.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then I to him: &ldquo;If from our world this sluice<br/>
+Be thus deriv&rsquo;d; wherefore to us but now<br/>
+Appears it at this edge?&rdquo; He straight replied:<br/>
+&ldquo;The place, thou know&rsquo;st, is round; and though great part<br/>
+Thou have already pass&rsquo;d, still to the left<br/>
+Descending to the nethermost, not yet<br/>
+Hast thou the circuit made of the whole orb.<br/>
+Wherefore if aught of new to us appear,<br/>
+It needs not bring up wonder in thy looks.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then I again inquir&rsquo;d: &ldquo;Where flow the streams<br/>
+Of Phlegethon and Lethe? for of one<br/>
+Thou tell&rsquo;st not, and the other of that shower,<br/>
+Thou say&rsquo;st, is form&rsquo;d.&rdquo; He answer thus return&rsquo;d:<br/>
+&ldquo;Doubtless thy questions all well pleas&rsquo;d I hear.<br/>
+Yet the red seething wave might have resolv&rsquo;d<br/>
+One thou proposest. Lethe thou shalt see,<br/>
+But not within this hollow, in the place,<br/>
+Whither to lave themselves the spirits go,<br/>
+Whose blame hath been by penitence remov&rsquo;d.&rdquo;<br/>
+He added: &ldquo;Time is now we quit the wood.<br/>
+Look thou my steps pursue: the margins give<br/>
+Safe passage, unimpeded by the flames;<br/>
+For over them all vapour is extinct.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoI.XV"></a>CANTO XV</h2>
+
+<p>
+One of the solid margins bears us now<br/>
+Envelop&rsquo;d in the mist, that from the stream<br/>
+Arising, hovers o&rsquo;er, and saves from fire<br/>
+Both piers and water. As the Flemings rear<br/>
+Their mound, &rsquo;twixt Ghent and Bruges, to chase back<br/>
+The ocean, fearing his tumultuous tide<br/>
+That drives toward them, or the Paduans theirs<br/>
+Along the Brenta, to defend their towns<br/>
+And castles, ere the genial warmth be felt<br/>
+On Chiarentana&rsquo;s top; such were the mounds,<br/>
+So fram&rsquo;d, though not in height or bulk to these<br/>
+Made equal, by the master, whosoe&rsquo;er<br/>
+He was, that rais&rsquo;d them here. We from the wood<br/>
+Were not so far remov&rsquo;d, that turning round<br/>
+I might not have discern&rsquo;d it, when we met<br/>
+A troop of spirits, who came beside the pier.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They each one ey&rsquo;d us, as at eventide<br/>
+One eyes another under a new moon,<br/>
+And toward us sharpen&rsquo;d their sight as keen,<br/>
+As an old tailor at his needle&rsquo;s eye.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus narrowly explor&rsquo;d by all the tribe,<br/>
+I was agniz&rsquo;d of one, who by the skirt<br/>
+Caught me, and cried, &ldquo;What wonder have we here!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And I, when he to me outstretch&rsquo;d his arm,<br/>
+Intently fix&rsquo;d my ken on his parch&rsquo;d looks,<br/>
+That although smirch&rsquo;d with fire, they hinder&rsquo;d not<br/>
+But I remember&rsquo;d him; and towards his face<br/>
+My hand inclining, answer&rsquo;d: &ldquo;Sir! Brunetto!<br/>
+And art thou here?&rdquo; He thus to me: &ldquo;My son!<br/>
+Oh let it not displease thee, if Brunetto<br/>
+Latini but a little space with thee<br/>
+Turn back, and leave his fellows to proceed.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I thus to him replied: &ldquo;Much as I can,<br/>
+I thereto pray thee; and if thou be willing,<br/>
+That I here seat me with thee, I consent;<br/>
+His leave, with whom I journey, first obtain&rsquo;d.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;O son!&rdquo; said he, &ldquo; whoever of this throng<br/>
+One instant stops, lies then a hundred years,<br/>
+No fan to ventilate him, when the fire<br/>
+Smites sorest. Pass thou therefore on. I close<br/>
+Will at thy garments walk, and then rejoin<br/>
+My troop, who go mourning their endless doom.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I dar&rsquo;d not from the path descend to tread<br/>
+On equal ground with him, but held my head<br/>
+Bent down, as one who walks in reverent guise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What chance or destiny,&rdquo; thus be began,<br/>
+&ldquo;Ere the last day conducts thee here below?<br/>
+And who is this, that shows to thee the way?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There up aloft,&rdquo; I answer&rsquo;d, &ldquo;in the life<br/>
+Serene, I wander&rsquo;d in a valley lost,<br/>
+Before mine age had to its fullness reach&rsquo;d.<br/>
+But yester-morn I left it: then once more<br/>
+Into that vale returning, him I met;<br/>
+And by this path homeward he leads me back.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If thou,&rdquo; he answer&rsquo;d, &ldquo;follow but thy star,<br/>
+Thou canst not miss at last a glorious haven:<br/>
+Unless in fairer days my judgment err&rsquo;d.<br/>
+And if my fate so early had not chanc&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Seeing the heav&rsquo;ns thus bounteous to thee, I<br/>
+Had gladly giv&rsquo;n thee comfort in thy work.<br/>
+But that ungrateful and malignant race,<br/>
+Who in old times came down from Fesole,<br/>
+Ay and still smack of their rough mountain-flint,<br/>
+Will for thy good deeds shew thee enmity.<br/>
+Nor wonder; for amongst ill-savour&rsquo;d crabs<br/>
+It suits not the sweet fig-tree lay her fruit.<br/>
+Old fame reports them in the world for blind,<br/>
+Covetous, envious, proud. Look to it well:<br/>
+Take heed thou cleanse thee of their ways. For thee<br/>
+Thy fortune hath such honour in reserve,<br/>
+That thou by either party shalt be crav&rsquo;d<br/>
+With hunger keen: but be the fresh herb far<br/>
+From the goat&rsquo;s tooth. The herd of Fesole<br/>
+May of themselves make litter, not touch the plant,<br/>
+If any such yet spring on their rank bed,<br/>
+In which the holy seed revives, transmitted<br/>
+From those true Romans, who still there remain&rsquo;d,<br/>
+When it was made the nest of so much ill.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Were all my wish fulfill&rsquo;d,&rdquo; I straight replied,<br/>
+&ldquo;Thou from the confines of man&rsquo;s nature yet<br/>
+Hadst not been driven forth; for in my mind<br/>
+Is fix&rsquo;d, and now strikes full upon my heart<br/>
+The dear, benign, paternal image, such<br/>
+As thine was, when so lately thou didst teach me<br/>
+The way for man to win eternity;<br/>
+And how I priz&rsquo;d the lesson, it behooves,<br/>
+That, long as life endures, my tongue should speak,<br/>
+What of my fate thou tell&rsquo;st, that write I down:<br/>
+And with another text to comment on<br/>
+For her I keep it, the celestial dame,<br/>
+Who will know all, if I to her arrive.<br/>
+This only would I have thee clearly note:<br/>
+That so my conscience have no plea against me;<br/>
+Do fortune as she list, I stand prepar&rsquo;d.<br/>
+Not new or strange such earnest to mine ear.<br/>
+Speed fortune then her wheel, as likes her best,<br/>
+The clown his mattock; all things have their course.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thereat my sapient guide upon his right<br/>
+Turn&rsquo;d himself back, then look&rsquo;d at me and spake:<br/>
+&ldquo;He listens to good purpose who takes note.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I not the less still on my way proceed,<br/>
+Discoursing with Brunetto, and inquire<br/>
+Who are most known and chief among his tribe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To know of some is well;&rdquo; thus he replied,<br/>
+&ldquo;But of the rest silence may best beseem.<br/>
+Time would not serve us for report so long.<br/>
+In brief I tell thee, that all these were clerks,<br/>
+Men of great learning and no less renown,<br/>
+By one same sin polluted in the world.<br/>
+With them is Priscian, and Accorso&rsquo;s son<br/>
+Francesco herds among that wretched throng:<br/>
+And, if the wish of so impure a blotch<br/>
+Possess&rsquo;d thee, him thou also might&rsquo;st have seen,<br/>
+Who by the servants&rsquo; servant was transferr&rsquo;d<br/>
+From Arno&rsquo;s seat to Bacchiglione, where<br/>
+His ill-strain&rsquo;d nerves he left. I more would add,<br/>
+But must from farther speech and onward way<br/>
+Alike desist, for yonder I behold<br/>
+A mist new-risen on the sandy plain.<br/>
+A company, with whom I may not sort,<br/>
+Approaches. I commend my TREASURE to thee,<br/>
+Wherein I yet survive; my sole request.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This said he turn&rsquo;d, and seem&rsquo;d as one of those,<br/>
+Who o&rsquo;er Verona&rsquo;s champain try their speed<br/>
+For the green mantle, and of them he seem&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Not he who loses but who gains the prize.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoI.XVI"></a>CANTO XVI</h2>
+
+<p>
+Now came I where the water&rsquo;s din was heard,<br/>
+As down it fell into the other round,<br/>
+Resounding like the hum of swarming bees:<br/>
+When forth together issu&rsquo;d from a troop,<br/>
+That pass&rsquo;d beneath the fierce tormenting storm,<br/>
+Three spirits, running swift. They towards us came,<br/>
+And each one cried aloud, &ldquo;Oh do thou stay!<br/>
+Whom by the fashion of thy garb we deem<br/>
+To be some inmate of our evil land.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ah me! what wounds I mark&rsquo;d upon their limbs,<br/>
+Recent and old, inflicted by the flames!<br/>
+E&rsquo;en the remembrance of them grieves me yet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Attentive to their cry my teacher paus&rsquo;d,<br/>
+And turn&rsquo;d to me his visage, and then spake;<br/>
+&ldquo;Wait now! our courtesy these merit well:<br/>
+And were &rsquo;t not for the nature of the place,<br/>
+Whence glide the fiery darts, I should have said,<br/>
+That haste had better suited thee than them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They, when we stopp&rsquo;d, resum&rsquo;d their ancient wail,<br/>
+And soon as they had reach&rsquo;d us, all the three<br/>
+Whirl&rsquo;d round together in one restless wheel.<br/>
+As naked champions, smear&rsquo;d with slippery oil,<br/>
+Are wont intent to watch their place of hold<br/>
+And vantage, ere in closer strife they meet;<br/>
+Thus each one, as he wheel&rsquo;d, his countenance<br/>
+At me directed, so that opposite<br/>
+The neck mov&rsquo;d ever to the twinkling feet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If misery of this drear wilderness,&rdquo;<br/>
+Thus one began, &ldquo;added to our sad cheer<br/>
+And destitute, do call forth scorn on us<br/>
+And our entreaties, let our great renown<br/>
+Incline thee to inform us who thou art,<br/>
+That dost imprint with living feet unharm&rsquo;d<br/>
+The soil of Hell. He, in whose track thou see&rsquo;st<br/>
+My steps pursuing, naked though he be<br/>
+And reft of all, was of more high estate<br/>
+Than thou believest; grandchild of the chaste<br/>
+Gualdrada, him they Guidoguerra call&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Who in his lifetime many a noble act<br/>
+Achiev&rsquo;d, both by his wisdom and his sword.<br/>
+The other, next to me that beats the sand,<br/>
+Is Aldobrandi, name deserving well,<br/>
+In the&rsquo; upper world, of honour; and myself<br/>
+Who in this torment do partake with them,<br/>
+Am Rusticucci, whom, past doubt, my wife<br/>
+Of savage temper, more than aught beside<br/>
+Hath to this evil brought.&rdquo; If from the fire<br/>
+I had been shelter&rsquo;d, down amidst them straight<br/>
+I then had cast me, nor my guide, I deem,<br/>
+Would have restrain&rsquo;d my going; but that fear<br/>
+Of the dire burning vanquish&rsquo;d the desire,<br/>
+Which made me eager of their wish&rsquo;d embrace.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I then began: &ldquo;Not scorn, but grief much more,<br/>
+Such as long time alone can cure, your doom<br/>
+Fix&rsquo;d deep within me, soon as this my lord<br/>
+Spake words, whose tenour taught me to expect<br/>
+That such a race, as ye are, was at hand.<br/>
+I am a countryman of yours, who still<br/>
+Affectionate have utter&rsquo;d, and have heard<br/>
+Your deeds and names renown&rsquo;d. Leaving the gall<br/>
+For the sweet fruit I go, that a sure guide<br/>
+Hath promis&rsquo;d to me. But behooves, that far<br/>
+As to the centre first I downward tend.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;So may long space thy spirit guide thy limbs,&rdquo;<br/>
+He answer straight return&rsquo;d; &ldquo;and so thy fame<br/>
+Shine bright, when thou art gone; as thou shalt tell,<br/>
+If courtesy and valour, as they wont,<br/>
+Dwell in our city, or have vanish&rsquo;d clean?<br/>
+For one amidst us late condemn&rsquo;d to wail,<br/>
+Borsiere, yonder walking with his peers,<br/>
+Grieves us no little by the news he brings.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;An upstart multitude and sudden gains,<br/>
+Pride and excess, O Florence! have in thee<br/>
+Engender&rsquo;d, so that now in tears thou mourn&rsquo;st!&rdquo;<br/>
+Thus cried I with my face uprais&rsquo;d, and they<br/>
+All three, who for an answer took my words,<br/>
+Look&rsquo;d at each other, as men look when truth<br/>
+Comes to their ear. &ldquo;If thou at other times,&rdquo;<br/>
+They all at once rejoin&rsquo;d, &ldquo;so easily<br/>
+Satisfy those, who question, happy thou,<br/>
+Gifted with words, so apt to speak thy thought!<br/>
+Wherefore if thou escape this darksome clime,<br/>
+Returning to behold the radiant stars,<br/>
+When thou with pleasure shalt retrace the past,<br/>
+See that of us thou speak among mankind.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This said, they broke the circle, and so swift<br/>
+Fled, that as pinions seem&rsquo;d their nimble feet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Not in so short a time might one have said<br/>
+&ldquo;Amen,&rdquo; as they had vanish&rsquo;d. Straight my guide<br/>
+Pursu&rsquo;d his track. I follow&rsquo;d; and small space<br/>
+Had we pass&rsquo;d onward, when the water&rsquo;s sound<br/>
+Was now so near at hand, that we had scarce<br/>
+Heard one another&rsquo;s speech for the loud din.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+E&rsquo;en as the river, that holds on its course<br/>
+Unmingled, from the mount of Vesulo,<br/>
+On the left side of Apennine, toward<br/>
+The east, which Acquacheta higher up<br/>
+They call, ere it descend into the vale,<br/>
+At Forli by that name no longer known,<br/>
+Rebellows o&rsquo;er Saint Benedict, roll&rsquo;d on<br/>
+From the&rsquo; Alpine summit down a precipice,<br/>
+Where space enough to lodge a thousand spreads;<br/>
+Thus downward from a craggy steep we found,<br/>
+That this dark wave resounded, roaring loud,<br/>
+So that the ear its clamour soon had stunn&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I had a cord that brac&rsquo;d my girdle round,<br/>
+Wherewith I erst had thought fast bound to take<br/>
+The painted leopard. This when I had all<br/>
+Unloosen&rsquo;d from me (so my master bade)<br/>
+I gather&rsquo;d up, and stretch&rsquo;d it forth to him.<br/>
+Then to the right he turn&rsquo;d, and from the brink<br/>
+Standing few paces distant, cast it down<br/>
+Into the deep abyss. &ldquo;And somewhat strange,&rdquo;<br/>
+Thus to myself I spake, &ldquo;signal so strange<br/>
+Betokens, which my guide with earnest eye<br/>
+Thus follows.&rdquo; Ah! what caution must men use<br/>
+With those who look not at the deed alone,<br/>
+But spy into the thoughts with subtle skill!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Quickly shall come,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;what I expect,<br/>
+Thine eye discover quickly, that whereof<br/>
+Thy thought is dreaming.&rdquo; Ever to that truth,<br/>
+Which but the semblance of a falsehood wears,<br/>
+A man, if possible, should bar his lip;<br/>
+Since, although blameless, he incurs reproach.<br/>
+But silence here were vain; and by these notes<br/>
+Which now I sing, reader! I swear to thee,<br/>
+So may they favour find to latest times!<br/>
+That through the gross and murky air I spied<br/>
+A shape come swimming up, that might have quell&rsquo;d<br/>
+The stoutest heart with wonder, in such guise<br/>
+As one returns, who hath been down to loose<br/>
+An anchor grappled fast against some rock,<br/>
+Or to aught else that in the salt wave lies,<br/>
+Who upward springing close draws in his feet.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoI.XVII"></a>CANTO XVII</h2>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Lo! the fell monster with the deadly sting!<br/>
+Who passes mountains, breaks through fenced walls<br/>
+And firm embattled spears, and with his filth<br/>
+Taints all the world!&rdquo; Thus me my guide address&rsquo;d,<br/>
+And beckon&rsquo;d him, that he should come to shore,<br/>
+Near to the stony causeway&rsquo;s utmost edge.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Forthwith that image vile of fraud appear&rsquo;d,<br/>
+His head and upper part expos&rsquo;d on land,<br/>
+But laid not on the shore his bestial train.<br/>
+His face the semblance of a just man&rsquo;s wore,<br/>
+So kind and gracious was its outward cheer;<br/>
+The rest was serpent all: two shaggy claws<br/>
+Reach&rsquo;d to the armpits, and the back and breast,<br/>
+And either side, were painted o&rsquo;er with nodes<br/>
+And orbits. Colours variegated more<br/>
+Nor Turks nor Tartars e&rsquo;er on cloth of state<br/>
+With interchangeable embroidery wove,<br/>
+Nor spread Arachne o&rsquo;er her curious loom.<br/>
+As ofttimes a light skiff, moor&rsquo;d to the shore,<br/>
+Stands part in water, part upon the land;<br/>
+Or, as where dwells the greedy German boor,<br/>
+The beaver settles watching for his prey;<br/>
+So on the rim, that fenc&rsquo;d the sand with rock,<br/>
+Sat perch&rsquo;d the fiend of evil. In the void<br/>
+Glancing, his tail upturn&rsquo;d its venomous fork,<br/>
+With sting like scorpion&rsquo;s arm&rsquo;d. Then thus my guide:<br/>
+&ldquo;Now need our way must turn few steps apart,<br/>
+Far as to that ill beast, who couches there.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thereat toward the right our downward course<br/>
+We shap&rsquo;d, and, better to escape the flame<br/>
+And burning marle, ten paces on the verge<br/>
+Proceeded. Soon as we to him arrive,<br/>
+A little further on mine eye beholds<br/>
+A tribe of spirits, seated on the sand<br/>
+Near the wide chasm. Forthwith my master spake:<br/>
+&ldquo;That to the full thy knowledge may extend<br/>
+Of all this round contains, go now, and mark<br/>
+The mien these wear: but hold not long discourse.<br/>
+Till thou returnest, I with him meantime<br/>
+Will parley, that to us he may vouchsafe<br/>
+The aid of his strong shoulders.&rdquo; Thus alone<br/>
+Yet forward on the&rsquo; extremity I pac&rsquo;d<br/>
+Of that seventh circle, where the mournful tribe<br/>
+Were seated. At the eyes forth gush&rsquo;d their pangs.<br/>
+Against the vapours and the torrid soil<br/>
+Alternately their shifting hands they plied.<br/>
+Thus use the dogs in summer still to ply<br/>
+Their jaws and feet by turns, when bitten sore<br/>
+By gnats, or flies, or gadflies swarming round.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Noting the visages of some, who lay<br/>
+Beneath the pelting of that dolorous fire,<br/>
+One of them all I knew not; but perceiv&rsquo;d,<br/>
+That pendent from his neck each bore a pouch<br/>
+With colours and with emblems various mark&rsquo;d,<br/>
+On which it seem&rsquo;d as if their eye did feed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And when amongst them looking round I came,<br/>
+A yellow purse I saw with azure wrought,<br/>
+That wore a lion&rsquo;s countenance and port.<br/>
+Then still my sight pursuing its career,<br/>
+Another I beheld, than blood more red.<br/>
+A goose display of whiter wing than curd.<br/>
+And one, who bore a fat and azure swine<br/>
+Pictur&rsquo;d on his white scrip, addressed me thus:<br/>
+&ldquo;What dost thou in this deep? Go now and know,<br/>
+Since yet thou livest, that my neighbour here<br/>
+Vitaliano on my left shall sit.<br/>
+A Paduan with these Florentines am I.<br/>
+Ofttimes they thunder in mine ears, exclaiming<br/>
+&ldquo;O haste that noble knight! he who the pouch<br/>
+With the three beaks will bring!&rdquo; This said, he writh&rsquo;d<br/>
+The mouth, and loll&rsquo;d the tongue out, like an ox<br/>
+That licks his nostrils. I, lest longer stay<br/>
+He ill might brook, who bade me stay not long,<br/>
+Backward my steps from those sad spirits turn&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My guide already seated on the haunch<br/>
+Of the fierce animal I found; and thus<br/>
+He me encourag&rsquo;d. &ldquo;Be thou stout; be bold.<br/>
+Down such a steep flight must we now descend!<br/>
+Mount thou before: for that no power the tail<br/>
+May have to harm thee, I will be i&rsquo; th&rsquo; midst.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As one, who hath an ague fit so near,<br/>
+His nails already are turn&rsquo;d blue, and he<br/>
+Quivers all o&rsquo;er, if he but eye the shade;<br/>
+Such was my cheer at hearing of his words.<br/>
+But shame soon interpos&rsquo;d her threat, who makes<br/>
+The servant bold in presence of his lord.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I settled me upon those shoulders huge,<br/>
+And would have said, but that the words to aid<br/>
+My purpose came not, &ldquo;Look thou clasp me firm!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But he whose succour then not first I prov&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Soon as I mounted, in his arms aloft,<br/>
+Embracing, held me up, and thus he spake:<br/>
+&ldquo;Geryon! now move thee! be thy wheeling gyres<br/>
+Of ample circuit, easy thy descent.<br/>
+Think on th&rsquo; unusual burden thou sustain&rsquo;st.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As a small vessel, back&rsquo;ning out from land,<br/>
+Her station quits; so thence the monster loos&rsquo;d,<br/>
+And when he felt himself at large, turn&rsquo;d round<br/>
+There where the breast had been, his forked tail.<br/>
+Thus, like an eel, outstretch&rsquo;d at length he steer&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Gath&rsquo;ring the air up with retractile claws.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Not greater was the dread when Phaeton<br/>
+The reins let drop at random, whence high heaven,<br/>
+Whereof signs yet appear, was wrapt in flames;<br/>
+Nor when ill-fated Icarus perceiv&rsquo;d,<br/>
+By liquefaction of the scalded wax,<br/>
+The trusted pennons loosen&rsquo;d from his loins,<br/>
+His sire exclaiming loud, &ldquo;Ill way thou keep&rsquo;st!&rdquo;<br/>
+Than was my dread, when round me on each part<br/>
+The air I view&rsquo;d, and other object none<br/>
+Save the fell beast. He slowly sailing, wheels<br/>
+His downward motion, unobserv&rsquo;d of me,<br/>
+But that the wind, arising to my face,<br/>
+Breathes on me from below. Now on our right<br/>
+I heard the cataract beneath us leap<br/>
+With hideous crash; whence bending down to&rsquo; explore,<br/>
+New terror I conceiv&rsquo;d at the steep plunge:<br/>
+For flames I saw, and wailings smote mine ear:<br/>
+So that all trembling close I crouch&rsquo;d my limbs,<br/>
+And then distinguish&rsquo;d, unperceiv&rsquo;d before,<br/>
+By the dread torments that on every side<br/>
+Drew nearer, how our downward course we wound.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As falcon, that hath long been on the wing,<br/>
+But lure nor bird hath seen, while in despair<br/>
+The falconer cries, &ldquo;Ah me! thou stoop&rsquo;st to earth!&rdquo;<br/>
+Wearied descends, and swiftly down the sky<br/>
+In many an orbit wheels, then lighting sits<br/>
+At distance from his lord in angry mood;<br/>
+So Geryon lighting places us on foot<br/>
+Low down at base of the deep-furrow&rsquo;d rock,<br/>
+And, of his burden there discharg&rsquo;d, forthwith<br/>
+Sprang forward, like an arrow from the string.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoI.XVIII"></a>CANTO XVIII</h2>
+
+<p>
+There is a place within the depths of hell<br/>
+Call&rsquo;d Malebolge, all of rock dark-stain&rsquo;d<br/>
+With hue ferruginous, e&rsquo;en as the steep<br/>
+That round it circling winds. Right in the midst<br/>
+Of that abominable region, yawns<br/>
+A spacious gulf profound, whereof the frame<br/>
+Due time shall tell. The circle, that remains,<br/>
+Throughout its round, between the gulf and base<br/>
+Of the high craggy banks, successive forms<br/>
+Ten trenches, in its hollow bottom sunk.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As where to guard the walls, full many a foss<br/>
+Begirds some stately castle, sure defence<br/>
+Affording to the space within, so here<br/>
+Were model&rsquo;d these; and as like fortresses<br/>
+E&rsquo;en from their threshold to the brink without,<br/>
+Are flank&rsquo;d with bridges; from the rock&rsquo;s low base<br/>
+Thus flinty paths advanc&rsquo;d, that &rsquo;cross the moles<br/>
+And dikes, struck onward far as to the gulf,<br/>
+That in one bound collected cuts them off.<br/>
+Such was the place, wherein we found ourselves<br/>
+From Geryon&rsquo;s back dislodg&rsquo;d. The bard to left<br/>
+Held on his way, and I behind him mov&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On our right hand new misery I saw,<br/>
+New pains, new executioners of wrath,<br/>
+That swarming peopled the first chasm. Below<br/>
+Were naked sinners. Hitherward they came,<br/>
+Meeting our faces from the middle point,<br/>
+With us beyond but with a larger stride.<br/>
+E&rsquo;en thus the Romans, when the year returns<br/>
+Of Jubilee, with better speed to rid<br/>
+The thronging multitudes, their means devise<br/>
+For such as pass the bridge; that on one side<br/>
+All front toward the castle, and approach<br/>
+Saint Peter&rsquo;s fane, on th&rsquo; other towards the mount.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Each divers way along the grisly rock,<br/>
+Horn&rsquo;d demons I beheld, with lashes huge,<br/>
+That on their back unmercifully smote.<br/>
+Ah! how they made them bound at the first stripe!<br/>
+None for the second waited nor the third.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meantime as on I pass&rsquo;d, one met my sight<br/>
+Whom soon as view&rsquo;d; &ldquo;Of him,&rdquo; cried I, &ldquo;not yet<br/>
+Mine eye hath had his fill.&rdquo; With fixed gaze<br/>
+I therefore scann&rsquo;d him. Straight the teacher kind<br/>
+Paus&rsquo;d with me, and consented I should walk<br/>
+Backward a space, and the tormented spirit,<br/>
+Who thought to hide him, bent his visage down.<br/>
+But it avail&rsquo;d him nought; for I exclaim&rsquo;d:<br/>
+&ldquo;Thou who dost cast thy eye upon the ground,<br/>
+Unless thy features do belie thee much,<br/>
+Venedico art thou. But what brings thee<br/>
+Into this bitter seas&rsquo;ning? &ldquo; He replied:<br/>
+&ldquo;Unwillingly I answer to thy words.<br/>
+But thy clear speech, that to my mind recalls<br/>
+The world I once inhabited, constrains me.<br/>
+Know then &rsquo;twas I who led fair Ghisola<br/>
+To do the Marquis&rsquo; will, however fame<br/>
+The shameful tale have bruited. Nor alone<br/>
+Bologna hither sendeth me to mourn<br/>
+Rather with us the place is so o&rsquo;erthrong&rsquo;d<br/>
+That not so many tongues this day are taught,<br/>
+Betwixt the Reno and Savena&rsquo;s stream,<br/>
+To answer SIPA in their country&rsquo;s phrase.<br/>
+And if of that securer proof thou need,<br/>
+Remember but our craving thirst for gold.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Him speaking thus, a demon with his thong<br/>
+Struck, and exclaim&rsquo;d, &ldquo;Away! corrupter! here<br/>
+Women are none for sale.&rdquo; Forthwith I join&rsquo;d<br/>
+My escort, and few paces thence we came<br/>
+To where a rock forth issued from the bank.<br/>
+That easily ascended, to the right<br/>
+Upon its splinter turning, we depart<br/>
+From those eternal barriers. When arriv&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Where underneath the gaping arch lets pass<br/>
+The scourged souls: &ldquo;Pause here,&rdquo; the teacher said,<br/>
+&ldquo;And let these others miserable, now<br/>
+Strike on thy ken, faces not yet beheld,<br/>
+For that together they with us have walk&rsquo;d.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From the old bridge we ey&rsquo;d the pack, who came<br/>
+From th&rsquo; other side towards us, like the rest,<br/>
+Excoriate from the lash. My gentle guide,<br/>
+By me unquestion&rsquo;d, thus his speech resum&rsquo;d:<br/>
+&ldquo;Behold that lofty shade, who this way tends,<br/>
+And seems too woe-begone to drop a tear.<br/>
+How yet the regal aspect he retains!<br/>
+Jason is he, whose skill and prowess won<br/>
+The ram from Colchos. To the Lemnian isle<br/>
+His passage thither led him, when those bold<br/>
+And pitiless women had slain all their males.<br/>
+There he with tokens and fair witching words<br/>
+Hypsipyle beguil&rsquo;d, a virgin young,<br/>
+Who first had all the rest herself beguil&rsquo;d.<br/>
+Impregnated he left her there forlorn.<br/>
+Such is the guilt condemns him to this pain.<br/>
+Here too Medea&rsquo;s inj&rsquo;ries are avenged.<br/>
+All bear him company, who like deceit<br/>
+To his have practis&rsquo;d. And thus much to know<br/>
+Of the first vale suffice thee, and of those<br/>
+Whom its keen torments urge.&rdquo; Now had we come<br/>
+Where, crossing the next pier, the straighten&rsquo;d path<br/>
+Bestrides its shoulders to another arch.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hence in the second chasm we heard the ghosts,<br/>
+Who jibber in low melancholy sounds,<br/>
+With wide-stretch&rsquo;d nostrils snort, and on themselves<br/>
+Smite with their palms. Upon the banks a scurf<br/>
+From the foul steam condens&rsquo;d, encrusting hung,<br/>
+That held sharp combat with the sight and smell.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So hollow is the depth, that from no part,<br/>
+Save on the summit of the rocky span,<br/>
+Could I distinguish aught. Thus far we came;<br/>
+And thence I saw, within the foss below,<br/>
+A crowd immers&rsquo;d in ordure, that appear&rsquo;d<br/>
+Draff of the human body. There beneath<br/>
+Searching with eye inquisitive, I mark&rsquo;d<br/>
+One with his head so grim&rsquo;d, &rsquo;twere hard to deem,<br/>
+If he were clerk or layman. Loud he cried:<br/>
+&ldquo;Why greedily thus bendest more on me,<br/>
+Than on these other filthy ones, thy ken?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Because if true my mem&rsquo;ry,&rdquo; I replied,<br/>
+&ldquo;I heretofore have seen thee with dry locks,<br/>
+And thou Alessio art of Lucca sprung.<br/>
+Therefore than all the rest I scan thee more.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then beating on his brain these words he spake:<br/>
+&ldquo;Me thus low down my flatteries have sunk,<br/>
+Wherewith I ne&rsquo;er enough could glut my tongue.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My leader thus: &ldquo;A little further stretch<br/>
+Thy face, that thou the visage well mayst note<br/>
+Of that besotted, sluttish courtezan,<br/>
+Who there doth rend her with defiled nails,<br/>
+Now crouching down, now risen on her feet.<br/>
+Thais is this, the harlot, whose false lip<br/>
+Answer&rsquo;d her doting paramour that ask&rsquo;d,<br/>
+&lsquo;Thankest me much!&rsquo;&mdash;&lsquo;Say rather wondrously,&rsquo;<br/>
+And seeing this here satiate be our view.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoI.XIX"></a>CANTO XIX</h2>
+
+<p>
+Woe to thee, Simon Magus! woe to you,<br/>
+His wretched followers! who the things of God,<br/>
+Which should be wedded unto goodness, them,<br/>
+Rapacious as ye are, do prostitute<br/>
+For gold and silver in adultery!<br/>
+Now must the trumpet sound for you, since yours<br/>
+Is the third chasm. Upon the following vault<br/>
+We now had mounted, where the rock impends<br/>
+Directly o&rsquo;er the centre of the foss.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Wisdom Supreme! how wonderful the art,<br/>
+Which thou dost manifest in heaven, in earth,<br/>
+And in the evil world, how just a meed<br/>
+Allotting by thy virtue unto all!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I saw the livid stone, throughout the sides<br/>
+And in its bottom full of apertures,<br/>
+All equal in their width, and circular each,<br/>
+Nor ample less nor larger they appear&rsquo;d<br/>
+Than in Saint John&rsquo;s fair dome of me belov&rsquo;d<br/>
+Those fram&rsquo;d to hold the pure baptismal streams,<br/>
+One of the which I brake, some few years past,<br/>
+To save a whelming infant; and be this<br/>
+A seal to undeceive whoever doubts<br/>
+The motive of my deed. From out the mouth<br/>
+Of every one, emerg&rsquo;d a sinner&rsquo;s feet<br/>
+And of the legs high upward as the calf<br/>
+The rest beneath was hid. On either foot<br/>
+The soles were burning, whence the flexile joints<br/>
+Glanc&rsquo;d with such violent motion, as had snapt<br/>
+Asunder cords or twisted withs. As flame,<br/>
+Feeding on unctuous matter, glides along<br/>
+The surface, scarcely touching where it moves;<br/>
+So here, from heel to point, glided the flames.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Master! say who is he, than all the rest<br/>
+Glancing in fiercer agony, on whom<br/>
+A ruddier flame doth prey?&rdquo; I thus inquir&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If thou be willing,&rdquo; he replied, &ldquo;that I<br/>
+Carry thee down, where least the slope bank falls,<br/>
+He of himself shall tell thee and his wrongs.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I then: &ldquo;As pleases thee to me is best.<br/>
+Thou art my lord; and know&rsquo;st that ne&rsquo;er I quit<br/>
+Thy will: what silence hides that knowest thou.&rdquo;<br/>
+Thereat on the fourth pier we came, we turn&rsquo;d,<br/>
+And on our left descended to the depth,<br/>
+A narrow strait and perforated close.<br/>
+Nor from his side my leader set me down,<br/>
+Till to his orifice he brought, whose limb<br/>
+Quiv&rsquo;ring express&rsquo;d his pang. &ldquo;Whoe&rsquo;er thou art,<br/>
+Sad spirit! thus revers&rsquo;d, and as a stake<br/>
+Driv&rsquo;n in the soil!&rdquo; I in these words began,<br/>
+&ldquo;If thou be able, utter forth thy voice.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There stood I like the friar, that doth shrive<br/>
+A wretch for murder doom&rsquo;d, who e&rsquo;en when fix&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Calleth him back, whence death awhile delays.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He shouted: &ldquo;Ha! already standest there?<br/>
+Already standest there, O Boniface!<br/>
+By many a year the writing play&rsquo;d me false.<br/>
+So early dost thou surfeit with the wealth,<br/>
+For which thou fearedst not in guile to take<br/>
+The lovely lady, and then mangle her?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I felt as those who, piercing not the drift<br/>
+Of answer made them, stand as if expos&rsquo;d<br/>
+In mockery, nor know what to reply,<br/>
+When Virgil thus admonish&rsquo;d: &ldquo;Tell him quick,<br/>
+I am not he, not he, whom thou believ&rsquo;st.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And I, as was enjoin&rsquo;d me, straight replied.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That heard, the spirit all did wrench his feet,<br/>
+And sighing next in woeful accent spake:<br/>
+&ldquo;What then of me requirest?&rdquo; If to know<br/>
+So much imports thee, who I am, that thou<br/>
+Hast therefore down the bank descended, learn<br/>
+That in the mighty mantle I was rob&rsquo;d,<br/>
+And of a she-bear was indeed the son,<br/>
+So eager to advance my whelps, that there<br/>
+My having in my purse above I stow&rsquo;d,<br/>
+And here myself. Under my head are dragg&rsquo;d<br/>
+The rest, my predecessors in the guilt<br/>
+Of simony. Stretch&rsquo;d at their length they lie<br/>
+Along an opening in the rock. &rsquo;Midst them<br/>
+I also low shall fall, soon as he comes,<br/>
+For whom I took thee, when so hastily<br/>
+I question&rsquo;d. But already longer time<br/>
+Hath pass&rsquo;d, since my souls kindled, and I thus<br/>
+Upturn&rsquo;d have stood, than is his doom to stand<br/>
+Planted with fiery feet. For after him,<br/>
+One yet of deeds more ugly shall arrive,<br/>
+From forth the west, a shepherd without law,<br/>
+Fated to cover both his form and mine.<br/>
+He a new Jason shall be call&rsquo;d, of whom<br/>
+In Maccabees we read; and favour such<br/>
+As to that priest his king indulgent show&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Shall be of France&rsquo;s monarch shown to him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I know not if I here too far presum&rsquo;d,<br/>
+But in this strain I answer&rsquo;d: &ldquo;Tell me now,<br/>
+What treasures from St. Peter at the first<br/>
+Our Lord demanded, when he put the keys<br/>
+Into his charge? Surely he ask&rsquo;d no more<br/>
+But, Follow me! Nor Peter nor the rest<br/>
+Or gold or silver of Matthias took,<br/>
+When lots were cast upon the forfeit place<br/>
+Of the condemned soul. Abide thou then;<br/>
+Thy punishment of right is merited:<br/>
+And look thou well to that ill-gotten coin,<br/>
+Which against Charles thy hardihood inspir&rsquo;d.<br/>
+If reverence of the keys restrain&rsquo;d me not,<br/>
+Which thou in happier time didst hold, I yet<br/>
+Severer speech might use. Your avarice<br/>
+O&rsquo;ercasts the world with mourning, under foot<br/>
+Treading the good, and raising bad men up.<br/>
+Of shepherds, like to you, th&rsquo; Evangelist<br/>
+Was ware, when her, who sits upon the waves,<br/>
+With kings in filthy whoredom he beheld,<br/>
+She who with seven heads tower&rsquo;d at her birth,<br/>
+And from ten horns her proof of glory drew,<br/>
+Long as her spouse in virtue took delight.<br/>
+Of gold and silver ye have made your god,<br/>
+Diff&rsquo;ring wherein from the idolater,<br/>
+But he that worships one, a hundred ye?<br/>
+Ah, Constantine! to how much ill gave birth,<br/>
+Not thy conversion, but that plenteous dower,<br/>
+Which the first wealthy Father gain&rsquo;d from thee!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile, as thus I sung, he, whether wrath<br/>
+Or conscience smote him, violent upsprang<br/>
+Spinning on either sole. I do believe<br/>
+My teacher well was pleas&rsquo;d, with so compos&rsquo;d<br/>
+A lip, he listen&rsquo;d ever to the sound<br/>
+Of the true words I utter&rsquo;d. In both arms<br/>
+He caught, and to his bosom lifting me<br/>
+Upward retrac&rsquo;d the way of his descent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nor weary of his weight he press&rsquo;d me close,<br/>
+Till to the summit of the rock we came,<br/>
+Our passage from the fourth to the fifth pier.<br/>
+His cherish&rsquo;d burden there gently he plac&rsquo;d<br/>
+Upon the rugged rock and steep, a path<br/>
+Not easy for the clamb&rsquo;ring goat to mount.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thence to my view another vale appear&rsquo;d
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoI.XX"></a>CANTO XX</h2>
+
+<p>
+And now the verse proceeds to torments new,<br/>
+Fit argument of this the twentieth strain<br/>
+Of the first song, whose awful theme records<br/>
+The spirits whelm&rsquo;d in woe. Earnest I look&rsquo;d<br/>
+Into the depth, that open&rsquo;d to my view,<br/>
+Moisten&rsquo;d with tears of anguish, and beheld<br/>
+A tribe, that came along the hollow vale,<br/>
+In silence weeping: such their step as walk<br/>
+Quires chanting solemn litanies on earth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As on them more direct mine eye descends,<br/>
+Each wondrously seem&rsquo;d to be revers&rsquo;d<br/>
+At the neck-bone, so that the countenance<br/>
+Was from the reins averted: and because<br/>
+None might before him look, they were compell&rsquo;d<br/>
+To&rsquo; advance with backward gait. Thus one perhaps<br/>
+Hath been by force of palsy clean transpos&rsquo;d,<br/>
+But I ne&rsquo;er saw it nor believe it so.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, reader! think within thyself, so God<br/>
+Fruit of thy reading give thee! how I long<br/>
+Could keep my visage dry, when I beheld<br/>
+Near me our form distorted in such guise,<br/>
+That on the hinder parts fall&rsquo;n from the face<br/>
+The tears down-streaming roll&rsquo;d. Against a rock<br/>
+I leant and wept, so that my guide exclaim&rsquo;d:<br/>
+&ldquo;What, and art thou too witless as the rest?<br/>
+Here pity most doth show herself alive,<br/>
+When she is dead. What guilt exceedeth his,<br/>
+Who with Heaven&rsquo;s judgment in his passion strives?<br/>
+Raise up thy head, raise up, and see the man,<br/>
+Before whose eyes earth gap&rsquo;d in Thebes, when all<br/>
+Cried out, &lsquo;Amphiaraus, whither rushest?<br/>
+&lsquo;Why leavest thou the war?&rsquo; He not the less<br/>
+Fell ruining far as to Minos down,<br/>
+Whose grapple none eludes. Lo! how he makes<br/>
+The breast his shoulders, and who once too far<br/>
+Before him wish&rsquo;d to see, now backward looks,<br/>
+And treads reverse his path. Tiresias note,<br/>
+Who semblance chang&rsquo;d, when woman he became<br/>
+Of male, through every limb transform&rsquo;d, and then<br/>
+Once more behov&rsquo;d him with his rod to strike<br/>
+The two entwining serpents, ere the plumes,<br/>
+That mark&rsquo;d the better sex, might shoot again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Aruns, with rere his belly facing, comes.<br/>
+On Luni&rsquo;s mountains &rsquo;midst the marbles white,<br/>
+Where delves Carrara&rsquo;s hind, who wons beneath,<br/>
+A cavern was his dwelling, whence the stars<br/>
+And main-sea wide in boundless view he held.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The next, whose loosen&rsquo;d tresses overspread<br/>
+Her bosom, which thou seest not (for each hair<br/>
+On that side grows) was Manto, she who search&rsquo;d<br/>
+Through many regions, and at length her seat<br/>
+Fix&rsquo;d in my native land, whence a short space<br/>
+My words detain thy audience. When her sire<br/>
+From life departed, and in servitude<br/>
+The city dedicate to Bacchus mourn&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Long time she went a wand&rsquo;rer through the world.<br/>
+Aloft in Italy&rsquo;s delightful land<br/>
+A lake there lies, at foot of that proud Alp,<br/>
+That o&rsquo;er the Tyrol locks Germania in,<br/>
+Its name Benacus, which a thousand rills,<br/>
+Methinks, and more, water between the vale<br/>
+Camonica and Garda and the height<br/>
+Of Apennine remote. There is a spot<br/>
+At midway of that lake, where he who bears<br/>
+Of Trento&rsquo;s flock the past&rsquo;ral staff, with him<br/>
+Of Brescia, and the Veronese, might each<br/>
+Passing that way his benediction give.<br/>
+A garrison of goodly site and strong<br/>
+Peschiera stands, to awe with front oppos&rsquo;d<br/>
+The Bergamese and Brescian, whence the shore<br/>
+More slope each way descends. There, whatsoev&rsquo;er<br/>
+Benacus&rsquo; bosom holds not, tumbling o&rsquo;er<br/>
+Down falls, and winds a river flood beneath<br/>
+Through the green pastures. Soon as in his course<br/>
+The steam makes head, Benacus then no more<br/>
+They call the name, but Mincius, till at last<br/>
+Reaching Governo into Po he falls.<br/>
+Not far his course hath run, when a wide flat<br/>
+It finds, which overstretchmg as a marsh<br/>
+It covers, pestilent in summer oft.<br/>
+Hence journeying, the savage maiden saw<br/>
+&rsquo;Midst of the fen a territory waste<br/>
+And naked of inhabitants. To shun<br/>
+All human converse, here she with her slaves<br/>
+Plying her arts remain&rsquo;d, and liv&rsquo;d, and left<br/>
+Her body tenantless. Thenceforth the tribes,<br/>
+Who round were scatter&rsquo;d, gath&rsquo;ring to that place<br/>
+Assembled; for its strength was great, enclos&rsquo;d<br/>
+On all parts by the fen. On those dead bones<br/>
+They rear&rsquo;d themselves a city, for her sake,<br/>
+Calling it Mantua, who first chose the spot,<br/>
+Nor ask&rsquo;d another omen for the name,<br/>
+Wherein more numerous the people dwelt,<br/>
+Ere Casalodi&rsquo;s madness by deceit<br/>
+Was wrong&rsquo;d of Pinamonte. If thou hear<br/>
+Henceforth another origin assign&rsquo;d<br/>
+Of that my country, I forewarn thee now,<br/>
+That falsehood none beguile thee of the truth.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I answer&rsquo;d: &ldquo;Teacher, I conclude thy words<br/>
+So certain, that all else shall be to me<br/>
+As embers lacking life. But now of these,<br/>
+Who here proceed, instruct me, if thou see<br/>
+Any that merit more especial note.<br/>
+For thereon is my mind alone intent.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He straight replied: &ldquo;That spirit, from whose cheek<br/>
+The beard sweeps o&rsquo;er his shoulders brown, what time<br/>
+Graecia was emptied of her males, that scarce<br/>
+The cradles were supplied, the seer was he<br/>
+In Aulis, who with Calchas gave the sign<br/>
+When first to cut the cable. Him they nam&rsquo;d<br/>
+Eurypilus: so sings my tragic strain,<br/>
+In which majestic measure well thou know&rsquo;st,<br/>
+Who know&rsquo;st it all. That other, round the loins<br/>
+So slender of his shape, was Michael Scot,<br/>
+Practis&rsquo;d in ev&rsquo;ry slight of magic wile.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Guido Bonatti see: Asdente mark,<br/>
+Who now were willing, he had tended still<br/>
+The thread and cordwain; and too late repents.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;See next the wretches, who the needle left,<br/>
+The shuttle and the spindle, and became<br/>
+Diviners: baneful witcheries they wrought<br/>
+With images and herbs. But onward now:<br/>
+For now doth Cain with fork of thorns confine<br/>
+On either hemisphere, touching the wave<br/>
+Beneath the towers of Seville. Yesternight<br/>
+The moon was round. Thou mayst remember well:<br/>
+For she good service did thee in the gloom<br/>
+Of the deep wood.&rdquo; This said, both onward mov&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoI.XXI"></a>CANTO XXI</h2>
+
+<p>
+Thus we from bridge to bridge, with other talk,<br/>
+The which my drama cares not to rehearse,<br/>
+Pass&rsquo;d on; and to the summit reaching, stood<br/>
+To view another gap, within the round<br/>
+Of Malebolge, other bootless pangs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Marvelous darkness shadow&rsquo;d o&rsquo;er the place.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the Venetians&rsquo; arsenal as boils<br/>
+Through wintry months tenacious pitch, to smear<br/>
+Their unsound vessels; for th&rsquo; inclement time<br/>
+Sea-faring men restrains, and in that while<br/>
+His bark one builds anew, another stops<br/>
+The ribs of his, that hath made many a voyage;<br/>
+One hammers at the prow, one at the poop;<br/>
+This shapeth oars, that other cables twirls,<br/>
+The mizen one repairs and main-sail rent<br/>
+So not by force of fire but art divine<br/>
+Boil&rsquo;d here a glutinous thick mass, that round<br/>
+Lim&rsquo;d all the shore beneath. I that beheld,<br/>
+But therein nought distinguish&rsquo;d, save the surge,<br/>
+Rais&rsquo;d by the boiling, in one mighty swell<br/>
+Heave, and by turns subsiding and fall. While there<br/>
+I fix&rsquo;d my ken below, &ldquo;Mark! mark!&rdquo; my guide<br/>
+Exclaiming, drew me towards him from the place,<br/>
+Wherein I stood. I turn&rsquo;d myself as one,<br/>
+Impatient to behold that which beheld<br/>
+He needs must shun, whom sudden fear unmans,<br/>
+That he his flight delays not for the view.<br/>
+Behind me I discern&rsquo;d a devil black,<br/>
+That running, up advanc&rsquo;d along the rock.<br/>
+Ah! what fierce cruelty his look bespake!<br/>
+In act how bitter did he seem, with wings<br/>
+Buoyant outstretch&rsquo;d and feet of nimblest tread!<br/>
+His shoulder proudly eminent and sharp<br/>
+Was with a sinner charg&rsquo;d; by either haunch<br/>
+He held him, the foot&rsquo;s sinew griping fast.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ye of our bridge!&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;keen-talon&rsquo;d
+fiends!<br/>
+Lo! one of Santa Zita&rsquo;s elders! Him<br/>
+Whelm ye beneath, while I return for more.<br/>
+That land hath store of such. All men are there,<br/>
+Except Bonturo, barterers: of &lsquo;no&rsquo;<br/>
+For lucre there an &lsquo;aye&rsquo; is quickly made.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Him dashing down, o&rsquo;er the rough rock he turn&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Nor ever after thief a mastiff loos&rsquo;d<br/>
+Sped with like eager haste. That other sank<br/>
+And forthwith writing to the surface rose.<br/>
+But those dark demons, shrouded by the bridge,<br/>
+Cried &ldquo;Here the hallow&rsquo;d visage saves not: here<br/>
+Is other swimming than in Serchio&rsquo;s wave.<br/>
+Wherefore if thou desire we rend thee not,<br/>
+Take heed thou mount not o&rsquo;er the pitch.&rdquo; This said,<br/>
+They grappled him with more than hundred hooks,<br/>
+And shouted: &ldquo;Cover&rsquo;d thou must sport thee here;<br/>
+So, if thou canst, in secret mayst thou filch.&rdquo;<br/>
+E&rsquo;en thus the cook bestirs him, with his grooms,<br/>
+To thrust the flesh into the caldron down<br/>
+With flesh-hooks, that it float not on the top.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Me then my guide bespake: &ldquo;Lest they descry,<br/>
+That thou art here, behind a craggy rock<br/>
+Bend low and screen thee; and whate&rsquo;er of force<br/>
+Be offer&rsquo;d me, or insult, fear thou not:<br/>
+For I am well advis&rsquo;d, who have been erst<br/>
+In the like fray.&rdquo; Beyond the bridge&rsquo;s head<br/>
+Therewith he pass&rsquo;d, and reaching the sixth pier,<br/>
+Behov&rsquo;d him then a forehead terror-proof.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With storm and fury, as when dogs rush forth<br/>
+Upon the poor man&rsquo;s back, who suddenly<br/>
+From whence he standeth makes his suit; so rush&rsquo;d<br/>
+Those from beneath the arch, and against him<br/>
+Their weapons all they pointed. He aloud:<br/>
+&ldquo;Be none of you outrageous: ere your time<br/>
+Dare seize me, come forth from amongst you one,<br/>
+Who having heard my words, decide he then<br/>
+If he shall tear these limbs.&rdquo; They shouted loud,<br/>
+&ldquo;Go, Malacoda!&rdquo; Whereat one advanc&rsquo;d,<br/>
+The others standing firm, and as he came,<br/>
+&ldquo;What may this turn avail him?&rdquo; he exclaim&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Believ&rsquo;st thou, Malacoda! I had come<br/>
+Thus far from all your skirmishing secure,&rdquo;<br/>
+My teacher answered, &ldquo;without will divine<br/>
+And destiny propitious? Pass we then<br/>
+For so Heaven&rsquo;s pleasure is, that I should lead<br/>
+Another through this savage wilderness.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Forthwith so fell his pride, that he let drop<br/>
+The instrument of torture at his feet,<br/>
+And to the rest exclaim&rsquo;d: &ldquo;We have no power<br/>
+To strike him.&rdquo; Then to me my guide: &ldquo;O thou!<br/>
+Who on the bridge among the crags dost sit<br/>
+Low crouching, safely now to me return.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I rose, and towards him moved with speed: the fiends<br/>
+Meantime all forward drew: me terror seiz&rsquo;d<br/>
+Lest they should break the compact they had made.<br/>
+Thus issuing from Caprona, once I saw<br/>
+Th&rsquo; infantry dreading, lest his covenant<br/>
+The foe should break; so close he hemm&rsquo;d them round.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I to my leader&rsquo;s side adher&rsquo;d, mine eyes<br/>
+With fixt and motionless observance bent<br/>
+On their unkindly visage. They their hooks<br/>
+Protruding, one the other thus bespake:<br/>
+&ldquo;Wilt thou I touch him on the hip?&rdquo; To whom<br/>
+Was answer&rsquo;d: &ldquo;Even so; nor miss thy aim.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But he, who was in conf&rsquo;rence with my guide,<br/>
+Turn&rsquo;d rapid round, and thus the demon spake:<br/>
+&ldquo;Stay, stay thee, Scarmiglione!&rdquo; Then to us<br/>
+He added: &ldquo;Further footing to your step<br/>
+This rock affords not, shiver&rsquo;d to the base<br/>
+Of the sixth arch. But would you still proceed,<br/>
+Up by this cavern go: not distant far,<br/>
+Another rock will yield you passage safe.<br/>
+Yesterday, later by five hours than now,<br/>
+Twelve hundred threescore years and six had fill&rsquo;d<br/>
+The circuit of their course, since here the way<br/>
+Was broken. Thitherward I straight dispatch<br/>
+Certain of these my scouts, who shall espy<br/>
+If any on the surface bask. With them<br/>
+Go ye: for ye shall find them nothing fell.<br/>
+Come Alichino forth,&rdquo; with that he cried,<br/>
+&ldquo;And Calcabrina, and Cagnazzo thou!<br/>
+The troop of ten let Barbariccia lead.<br/>
+With Libicocco Draghinazzo haste,<br/>
+Fang&rsquo;d Ciriatto, Grafflacane fierce,<br/>
+And Farfarello, and mad Rubicant.<br/>
+Search ye around the bubbling tar. For these,<br/>
+In safety lead them, where the other crag<br/>
+Uninterrupted traverses the dens.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I then: &ldquo;O master! what a sight is there!<br/>
+Ah! without escort, journey we alone,<br/>
+Which, if thou know the way, I covet not.<br/>
+Unless thy prudence fail thee, dost not mark<br/>
+How they do gnarl upon us, and their scowl<br/>
+Threatens us present tortures?&rdquo; He replied:<br/>
+&ldquo;I charge thee fear not: let them, as they will,<br/>
+Gnarl on: &rsquo;tis but in token of their spite<br/>
+Against the souls, who mourn in torment steep&rsquo;d.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To leftward o&rsquo;er the pier they turn&rsquo;d; but each<br/>
+Had first between his teeth prest close the tongue,<br/>
+Toward their leader for a signal looking,<br/>
+Which he with sound obscene triumphant gave.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoI.XXII"></a>CANTO XXII</h2>
+
+<p>
+It hath been heretofore my chance to see<br/>
+Horsemen with martial order shifting camp,<br/>
+To onset sallying, or in muster rang&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Or in retreat sometimes outstretch&rsquo;d for flight;<br/>
+Light-armed squadrons and fleet foragers<br/>
+Scouring thy plains, Arezzo! have I seen,<br/>
+And clashing tournaments, and tilting jousts,<br/>
+Now with the sound of trumpets, now of bells,<br/>
+Tabors, or signals made from castled heights,<br/>
+And with inventions multiform, our own,<br/>
+Or introduc&rsquo;d from foreign land; but ne&rsquo;er<br/>
+To such a strange recorder I beheld,<br/>
+In evolution moving, horse nor foot,<br/>
+Nor ship, that tack&rsquo;d by sign from land or star.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With the ten demons on our way we went;<br/>
+Ah fearful company! but in the church<br/>
+With saints, with gluttons at the tavern&rsquo;s mess.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Still earnest on the pitch I gaz&rsquo;d, to mark<br/>
+All things whate&rsquo;er the chasm contain&rsquo;d, and those<br/>
+Who burn&rsquo;d within. As dolphins, that, in sign<br/>
+To mariners, heave high their arched backs,<br/>
+That thence forewarn&rsquo;d they may advise to save<br/>
+Their threaten&rsquo;d vessels; so, at intervals,<br/>
+To ease the pain his back some sinner show&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Then hid more nimbly than the lightning glance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+E&rsquo;en as the frogs, that of a wat&rsquo;ry moat<br/>
+Stand at the brink, with the jaws only out,<br/>
+Their feet and of the trunk all else concealed,<br/>
+Thus on each part the sinners stood, but soon<br/>
+As Barbariccia was at hand, so they<br/>
+Drew back under the wave. I saw, and yet<br/>
+My heart doth stagger, one, that waited thus,<br/>
+As it befalls that oft one frog remains,<br/>
+While the next springs away: and Graffiacan,<br/>
+Who of the fiends was nearest, grappling seiz&rsquo;d<br/>
+His clotted locks, and dragg&rsquo;d him sprawling up,<br/>
+That he appear&rsquo;d to me an otter. Each<br/>
+Already by their names I knew, so well<br/>
+When they were chosen, I observ&rsquo;d, and mark&rsquo;d<br/>
+How one the other call&rsquo;d. &ldquo;O Rubicant!<br/>
+See that his hide thou with thy talons flay,&rdquo;<br/>
+Shouted together all the cursed crew.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then I: &ldquo;Inform thee, master! if thou may,<br/>
+What wretched soul is this, on whom their hand<br/>
+His foes have laid.&rdquo; My leader to his side<br/>
+Approach&rsquo;d, and whence he came inquir&rsquo;d, to whom<br/>
+Was answer&rsquo;d thus: &ldquo;Born in Navarre&rsquo;s domain<br/>
+My mother plac&rsquo;d me in a lord&rsquo;s retinue,<br/>
+For she had borne me to a losel vile,<br/>
+A spendthrift of his substance and himself.<br/>
+The good king Thibault after that I serv&rsquo;d,<br/>
+To peculating here my thoughts were turn&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Whereof I give account in this dire heat.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Straight Ciriatto, from whose mouth a tusk<br/>
+Issued on either side, as from a boar,<br/>
+Ript him with one of these. &rsquo;Twixt evil claws<br/>
+The mouse had fall&rsquo;n: but Barbariccia cried,<br/>
+Seizing him with both arms: &ldquo;Stand thou apart,<br/>
+While I do fix him on my prong transpierc&rsquo;d.&rdquo;<br/>
+Then added, turning to my guide his face,<br/>
+&ldquo;Inquire of him, if more thou wish to learn,<br/>
+Ere he again be rent.&rdquo; My leader thus:<br/>
+&ldquo;Then tell us of the partners in thy guilt;<br/>
+Knowest thou any sprung of Latian land<br/>
+Under the tar?&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;I parted,&rdquo; he replied,<br/>
+&ldquo;But now from one, who sojourn&rsquo;d not far thence;<br/>
+So were I under shelter now with him!<br/>
+Nor hook nor talon then should scare me more.&rdquo;&mdash;.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Too long we suffer,&rdquo; Libicocco cried,<br/>
+Then, darting forth a prong, seiz&rsquo;d on his arm,<br/>
+And mangled bore away the sinewy part.<br/>
+Him Draghinazzo by his thighs beneath<br/>
+Would next have caught, whence angrily their chief,<br/>
+Turning on all sides round, with threat&rsquo;ning brow<br/>
+Restrain&rsquo;d them. When their strife a little ceas&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Of him, who yet was gazing on his wound,<br/>
+My teacher thus without delay inquir&rsquo;d:<br/>
+&ldquo;Who was the spirit, from whom by evil hap<br/>
+Parting, as thou has told, thou cam&rsquo;st to shore?&rdquo;&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It was the friar Gomita,&rdquo; he rejoin&rsquo;d,<br/>
+&ldquo;He of Gallura, vessel of all guile,<br/>
+Who had his master&rsquo;s enemies in hand,<br/>
+And us&rsquo;d them so that they commend him well.<br/>
+Money he took, and them at large dismiss&rsquo;d.<br/>
+So he reports: and in each other charge<br/>
+Committed to his keeping, play&rsquo;d the part<br/>
+Of barterer to the height: with him doth herd<br/>
+The chief of Logodoro, Michel Zanche.<br/>
+Sardinia is a theme, whereof their tongue<br/>
+Is never weary. Out! alas! behold<br/>
+That other, how he grins! More would I say,<br/>
+But tremble lest he mean to maul me sore.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Their captain then to Farfarello turning,<br/>
+Who roll&rsquo;d his moony eyes in act to strike,<br/>
+Rebuk&rsquo;d him thus: &ldquo;Off! cursed bird! Avaunt!&rdquo;&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If ye desire to see or hear,&rdquo; he thus<br/>
+Quaking with dread resum&rsquo;d, &ldquo;or Tuscan spirits<br/>
+Or Lombard, I will cause them to appear.<br/>
+Meantime let these ill talons bate their fury,<br/>
+So that no vengeance they may fear from them,<br/>
+And I, remaining in this self-same place,<br/>
+Will for myself but one, make sev&rsquo;n appear,<br/>
+When my shrill whistle shall be heard; for so<br/>
+Our custom is to call each other up.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cagnazzo at that word deriding grinn&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Then wagg&rsquo;d the head and spake: &ldquo;Hear his device,<br/>
+Mischievous as he is, to plunge him down.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whereto he thus, who fail&rsquo;d not in rich store<br/>
+Of nice-wove toils; &ldquo; Mischief forsooth extreme,<br/>
+Meant only to procure myself more woe!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No longer Alichino then refrain&rsquo;d,<br/>
+But thus, the rest gainsaying, him bespake:<br/>
+&ldquo;If thou do cast thee down, I not on foot<br/>
+Will chase thee, but above the pitch will beat<br/>
+My plumes. Quit we the vantage ground, and let<br/>
+The bank be as a shield, that we may see<br/>
+If singly thou prevail against us all.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, reader, of new sport expect to hear!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They each one turn&rsquo;d his eyes to the&rsquo; other shore,<br/>
+He first, who was the hardest to persuade.<br/>
+The spirit of Navarre chose well his time,<br/>
+Planted his feet on land, and at one leap<br/>
+Escaping disappointed their resolve.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Them quick resentment stung, but him the most,<br/>
+Who was the cause of failure; in pursuit<br/>
+He therefore sped, exclaiming; &ldquo;Thou art caught.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But little it avail&rsquo;d: terror outstripp&rsquo;d<br/>
+His following flight: the other plung&rsquo;d beneath,<br/>
+And he with upward pinion rais&rsquo;d his breast:<br/>
+E&rsquo;en thus the water-fowl, when she perceives<br/>
+The falcon near, dives instant down, while he<br/>
+Enrag&rsquo;d and spent retires. That mockery<br/>
+In Calcabrina fury stirr&rsquo;d, who flew<br/>
+After him, with desire of strife inflam&rsquo;d;<br/>
+And, for the barterer had &rsquo;scap&rsquo;d, so turn&rsquo;d<br/>
+His talons on his comrade. O&rsquo;er the dyke<br/>
+In grapple close they join&rsquo;d; but the&rsquo; other prov&rsquo;d<br/>
+A goshawk able to rend well his foe;<br/>
+And in the boiling lake both fell. The heat<br/>
+Was umpire soon between them, but in vain<br/>
+To lift themselves they strove, so fast were glued<br/>
+Their pennons. Barbariccia, as the rest,<br/>
+That chance lamenting, four in flight dispatch&rsquo;d<br/>
+From the&rsquo; other coast, with all their weapons arm&rsquo;d.<br/>
+They, to their post on each side speedily<br/>
+Descending, stretch&rsquo;d their hooks toward the fiends,<br/>
+Who flounder&rsquo;d, inly burning from their scars:<br/>
+And we departing left them to that broil.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoI.XXIII"></a>CANTO XXIII</h2>
+
+<p>
+In silence and in solitude we went,<br/>
+One first, the other following his steps,<br/>
+As minor friars journeying on their road.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The present fray had turn&rsquo;d my thoughts to muse<br/>
+Upon old Aesop&rsquo;s fable, where he told<br/>
+What fate unto the mouse and frog befell.<br/>
+For language hath not sounds more like in sense,<br/>
+Than are these chances, if the origin<br/>
+And end of each be heedfully compar&rsquo;d.<br/>
+And as one thought bursts from another forth,<br/>
+So afterward from that another sprang,<br/>
+Which added doubly to my former fear.<br/>
+For thus I reason&rsquo;d: &ldquo;These through us have been<br/>
+So foil&rsquo;d, with loss and mock&rsquo;ry so complete,<br/>
+As needs must sting them sore. If anger then<br/>
+Be to their evil will conjoin&rsquo;d, more fell<br/>
+They shall pursue us, than the savage hound<br/>
+Snatches the leveret, panting &rsquo;twixt his jaws.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Already I perceiv&rsquo;d my hair stand all<br/>
+On end with terror, and look&rsquo;d eager back.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Teacher,&rdquo; I thus began, &ldquo;if speedily<br/>
+Thyself and me thou hide not, much I dread<br/>
+Those evil talons. Even now behind<br/>
+They urge us: quick imagination works<br/>
+So forcibly, that I already feel them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He answer&rsquo;d: &ldquo;Were I form&rsquo;d of leaded glass,<br/>
+I should not sooner draw unto myself<br/>
+Thy outward image, than I now imprint<br/>
+That from within. This moment came thy thoughts<br/>
+Presented before mine, with similar act<br/>
+And count&rsquo;nance similar, so that from both<br/>
+I one design have fram&rsquo;d. If the right coast<br/>
+Incline so much, that we may thence descend<br/>
+Into the other chasm, we shall escape<br/>
+Secure from this imagined pursuit.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He had not spoke his purpose to the end,<br/>
+When I from far beheld them with spread wings<br/>
+Approach to take us. Suddenly my guide<br/>
+Caught me, ev&rsquo;n as a mother that from sleep<br/>
+Is by the noise arous&rsquo;d, and near her sees<br/>
+The climbing fires, who snatches up her babe<br/>
+And flies ne&rsquo;er pausing, careful more of him<br/>
+Than of herself, that but a single vest<br/>
+Clings round her limbs. Down from the jutting beach<br/>
+Supine he cast him, to that pendent rock,<br/>
+Which closes on one part the other chasm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Never ran water with such hurrying pace<br/>
+Adown the tube to turn a landmill&rsquo;s wheel,<br/>
+When nearest it approaches to the spokes,<br/>
+As then along that edge my master ran,<br/>
+Carrying me in his bosom, as a child,<br/>
+Not a companion. Scarcely had his feet<br/>
+Reach&rsquo;d to the lowest of the bed beneath,<br/>
+When over us the steep they reach&rsquo;d; but fear<br/>
+In him was none; for that high Providence,<br/>
+Which plac&rsquo;d them ministers of the fifth foss,<br/>
+Power of departing thence took from them all.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There in the depth we saw a painted tribe,<br/>
+Who pac&rsquo;d with tardy steps around, and wept,<br/>
+Faint in appearance and o&rsquo;ercome with toil.<br/>
+Caps had they on, with hoods, that fell low down<br/>
+Before their eyes, in fashion like to those<br/>
+Worn by the monks in Cologne. Their outside<br/>
+Was overlaid with gold, dazzling to view,<br/>
+But leaden all within, and of such weight,<br/>
+That Frederick&rsquo;s compar&rsquo;d to these were straw.<br/>
+Oh, everlasting wearisome attire!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We yet once more with them together turn&rsquo;d<br/>
+To leftward, on their dismal moan intent.<br/>
+But by the weight oppress&rsquo;d, so slowly came<br/>
+The fainting people, that our company<br/>
+Was chang&rsquo;d at every movement of the step.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whence I my guide address&rsquo;d: &ldquo;See that thou find<br/>
+Some spirit, whose name may by his deeds be known,<br/>
+And to that end look round thee as thou go&rsquo;st.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then one, who understood the Tuscan voice,<br/>
+Cried after us aloud: &ldquo;Hold in your feet,<br/>
+Ye who so swiftly speed through the dusk air.<br/>
+Perchance from me thou shalt obtain thy wish.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whereat my leader, turning, me bespake:<br/>
+&ldquo;Pause, and then onward at their pace proceed.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I staid, and saw two Spirits in whose look<br/>
+Impatient eagerness of mind was mark&rsquo;d<br/>
+To overtake me; but the load they bare<br/>
+And narrow path retarded their approach.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Soon as arriv&rsquo;d, they with an eye askance<br/>
+Perus&rsquo;d me, but spake not: then turning each<br/>
+To other thus conferring said: &ldquo;This one<br/>
+Seems, by the action of his throat, alive.<br/>
+And, be they dead, what privilege allows<br/>
+They walk unmantled by the cumbrous stole?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then thus to me: &ldquo;Tuscan, who visitest<br/>
+The college of the mourning hypocrites,<br/>
+Disdain not to instruct us who thou art.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;By Arno&rsquo;s pleasant stream,&rdquo; I thus replied,<br/>
+&ldquo;In the great city I was bred and grew,<br/>
+And wear the body I have ever worn.<br/>
+but who are ye, from whom such mighty grief,<br/>
+As now I witness, courseth down your cheeks?<br/>
+What torment breaks forth in this bitter woe?&rdquo;<br/>
+&ldquo;Our bonnets gleaming bright with orange hue,&rdquo;<br/>
+One of them answer&rsquo;d, &ldquo;are so leaden gross,<br/>
+That with their weight they make the balances<br/>
+To crack beneath them. Joyous friars we were,<br/>
+Bologna&rsquo;s natives, Catalano I,<br/>
+He Loderingo nam&rsquo;d, and by thy land<br/>
+Together taken, as men used to take<br/>
+A single and indifferent arbiter,<br/>
+To reconcile their strifes. How there we sped,<br/>
+Gardingo&rsquo;s vicinage can best declare.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;O friars!&rdquo; I began, &ldquo;your miseries&mdash;&rdquo; But there
+brake off, for one had caught my eye,<br/>
+Fix&rsquo;d to a cross with three stakes on the ground:<br/>
+He, when he saw me, writh&rsquo;d himself, throughout<br/>
+Distorted, ruffling with deep sighs his beard.<br/>
+And Catalano, who thereof was &rsquo;ware,<br/>
+Thus spake: &ldquo;That pierced spirit, whom intent<br/>
+Thou view&rsquo;st, was he who gave the Pharisees<br/>
+Counsel, that it were fitting for one man<br/>
+To suffer for the people. He doth lie<br/>
+Transverse; nor any passes, but him first<br/>
+Behoves make feeling trial how each weighs.<br/>
+In straits like this along the foss are plac&rsquo;d<br/>
+The father of his consort, and the rest<br/>
+Partakers in that council, seed of ill<br/>
+And sorrow to the Jews.&rdquo; I noted then,<br/>
+How Virgil gaz&rsquo;d with wonder upon him,<br/>
+Thus abjectly extended on the cross<br/>
+In banishment eternal. To the friar<br/>
+He next his words address&rsquo;d: &ldquo;We pray ye tell,<br/>
+If so be lawful, whether on our right<br/>
+Lies any opening in the rock, whereby<br/>
+We both may issue hence, without constraint<br/>
+On the dark angels, that compell&rsquo;d they come<br/>
+To lead us from this depth.&rdquo; He thus replied:<br/>
+&ldquo;Nearer than thou dost hope, there is a rock<br/>
+From the next circle moving, which o&rsquo;ersteps<br/>
+Each vale of horror, save that here his cope<br/>
+Is shatter&rsquo;d. By the ruin ye may mount:<br/>
+For on the side it slants, and most the height<br/>
+Rises below.&rdquo; With head bent down awhile<br/>
+My leader stood, then spake: &ldquo;He warn&rsquo;d us ill,<br/>
+Who yonder hangs the sinners on his hook.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To whom the friar: At Bologna erst<br/>
+I many vices of the devil heard,<br/>
+Among the rest was said, &lsquo;He is a liar,<br/>
+And the father of lies!&rsquo;&rdquo; When he had spoke,<br/>
+My leader with large strides proceeded on,<br/>
+Somewhat disturb&rsquo;d with anger in his look.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I therefore left the spirits heavy laden,<br/>
+And following, his beloved footsteps mark&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoI.XXIV"></a>CANTO XXIV</h2>
+
+<p>
+In the year&rsquo;s early nonage, when the sun<br/>
+Tempers his tresses in Aquarius&rsquo; urn,<br/>
+And now towards equal day the nights recede,<br/>
+When as the rime upon the earth puts on<br/>
+Her dazzling sister&rsquo;s image, but not long<br/>
+Her milder sway endures, then riseth up<br/>
+The village hind, whom fails his wintry store,<br/>
+And looking out beholds the plain around<br/>
+All whiten&rsquo;d, whence impatiently he smites<br/>
+His thighs, and to his hut returning in,<br/>
+There paces to and fro, wailing his lot,<br/>
+As a discomfited and helpless man;<br/>
+Then comes he forth again, and feels new hope<br/>
+Spring in his bosom, finding e&rsquo;en thus soon<br/>
+The world hath chang&rsquo;d its count&rsquo;nance, grasps his crook,<br/>
+And forth to pasture drives his little flock:<br/>
+So me my guide dishearten&rsquo;d when I saw<br/>
+His troubled forehead, and so speedily<br/>
+That ill was cur&rsquo;d; for at the fallen bridge<br/>
+Arriving, towards me with a look as sweet,<br/>
+He turn&rsquo;d him back, as that I first beheld<br/>
+At the steep mountain&rsquo;s foot. Regarding well<br/>
+The ruin, and some counsel first maintain&rsquo;d<br/>
+With his own thought, he open&rsquo;d wide his arm<br/>
+And took me up. As one, who, while he works,<br/>
+Computes his labour&rsquo;s issue, that he seems<br/>
+Still to foresee the&rsquo; effect, so lifting me<br/>
+Up to the summit of one peak, he fix&rsquo;d<br/>
+His eye upon another. &ldquo;Grapple that,&rdquo;<br/>
+Said he, &ldquo;but first make proof, if it be such<br/>
+As will sustain thee.&rdquo; For one capp&rsquo;d with lead<br/>
+This were no journey. Scarcely he, though light,<br/>
+And I, though onward push&rsquo;d from crag to crag,<br/>
+Could mount. And if the precinct of this coast<br/>
+Were not less ample than the last, for him<br/>
+I know not, but my strength had surely fail&rsquo;d.<br/>
+But Malebolge all toward the mouth<br/>
+Inclining of the nethermost abyss,<br/>
+The site of every valley hence requires,<br/>
+That one side upward slope, the other fall.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At length the point of our descent we reach&rsquo;d<br/>
+From the last flag: soon as to that arriv&rsquo;d,<br/>
+So was the breath exhausted from my lungs,<br/>
+I could no further, but did seat me there.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now needs thy best of man;&rdquo; so spake my guide:<br/>
+&ldquo;For not on downy plumes, nor under shade<br/>
+Of canopy reposing, fame is won,<br/>
+Without which whosoe&rsquo;er consumes his days<br/>
+Leaveth such vestige of himself on earth,<br/>
+As smoke in air or foam upon the wave.<br/>
+Thou therefore rise: vanish thy weariness<br/>
+By the mind&rsquo;s effort, in each struggle form&rsquo;d<br/>
+To vanquish, if she suffer not the weight<br/>
+Of her corporeal frame to crush her down.<br/>
+A longer ladder yet remains to scale.<br/>
+From these to have escap&rsquo;d sufficeth not.<br/>
+If well thou note me, profit by my words.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I straightway rose, and show&rsquo;d myself less spent<br/>
+Than I in truth did feel me. &ldquo;On,&rdquo; I cried,<br/>
+&ldquo;For I am stout and fearless.&rdquo; Up the rock<br/>
+Our way we held, more rugged than before,<br/>
+Narrower and steeper far to climb. From talk<br/>
+I ceas&rsquo;d not, as we journey&rsquo;d, so to seem<br/>
+Least faint; whereat a voice from the other foss<br/>
+Did issue forth, for utt&rsquo;rance suited ill.<br/>
+Though on the arch that crosses there I stood,<br/>
+What were the words I knew not, but who spake<br/>
+Seem&rsquo;d mov&rsquo;d in anger. Down I stoop&rsquo;d to look,<br/>
+But my quick eye might reach not to the depth<br/>
+For shrouding darkness; wherefore thus I spake:<br/>
+&ldquo;To the next circle, Teacher, bend thy steps,<br/>
+And from the wall dismount we; for as hence<br/>
+I hear and understand not, so I see<br/>
+Beneath, and naught discern.&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;I answer not,&rdquo;<br/>
+Said he, &ldquo;but by the deed. To fair request<br/>
+Silent performance maketh best return.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We from the bridge&rsquo;s head descended, where<br/>
+To the eighth mound it joins, and then the chasm<br/>
+Opening to view, I saw a crowd within<br/>
+Of serpents terrible, so strange of shape<br/>
+And hideous, that remembrance in my veins<br/>
+Yet shrinks the vital current. Of her sands<br/>
+Let Lybia vaunt no more: if Jaculus,<br/>
+Pareas and Chelyder be her brood,<br/>
+Cenchris and Amphisboena, plagues so dire<br/>
+Or in such numbers swarming ne&rsquo;er she shew&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Not with all Ethiopia, and whate&rsquo;er<br/>
+Above the Erythraean sea is spawn&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Amid this dread exuberance of woe<br/>
+Ran naked spirits wing&rsquo;d with horrid fear,<br/>
+Nor hope had they of crevice where to hide,<br/>
+Or heliotrope to charm them out of view.<br/>
+With serpents were their hands behind them bound,<br/>
+Which through their reins infix&rsquo;d the tail and head<br/>
+Twisted in folds before. And lo! on one<br/>
+Near to our side, darted an adder up,<br/>
+And, where the neck is on the shoulders tied,<br/>
+Transpierc&rsquo;d him. Far more quickly than e&rsquo;er pen<br/>
+Wrote O or I, he kindled, burn&rsquo;d, and chang&rsquo;d<br/>
+To ashes, all pour&rsquo;d out upon the earth.<br/>
+When there dissolv&rsquo;d he lay, the dust again<br/>
+Uproll&rsquo;d spontaneous, and the self-same form<br/>
+Instant resumed. So mighty sages tell,<br/>
+The&rsquo; Arabian Phoenix, when five hundred years<br/>
+Have well nigh circled, dies, and springs forthwith<br/>
+Renascent. Blade nor herb throughout his life<br/>
+He tastes, but tears of frankincense alone<br/>
+And odorous amomum: swaths of nard<br/>
+And myrrh his funeral shroud. As one that falls,<br/>
+He knows not how, by force demoniac dragg&rsquo;d<br/>
+To earth, or through obstruction fettering up<br/>
+In chains invisible the powers of man,<br/>
+Who, risen from his trance, gazeth around,<br/>
+Bewilder&rsquo;d with the monstrous agony<br/>
+He hath endur&rsquo;d, and wildly staring sighs;<br/>
+So stood aghast the sinner when he rose.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Oh! how severe God&rsquo;s judgment, that deals out<br/>
+Such blows in stormy vengeance! Who he was<br/>
+My teacher next inquir&rsquo;d, and thus in few<br/>
+He answer&rsquo;d: &ldquo;Vanni Fucci am I call&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Not long since rained down from Tuscany<br/>
+To this dire gullet. Me the beastial life<br/>
+And not the human pleas&rsquo;d, mule that I was,<br/>
+Who in Pistoia found my worthy den.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I then to Virgil: &ldquo;Bid him stir not hence,<br/>
+And ask what crime did thrust him hither: once<br/>
+A man I knew him choleric and bloody.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sinner heard and feign&rsquo;d not, but towards me<br/>
+His mind directing and his face, wherein<br/>
+Was dismal shame depictur&rsquo;d, thus he spake:<br/>
+&ldquo;It grieves me more to have been caught by thee<br/>
+In this sad plight, which thou beholdest, than<br/>
+When I was taken from the other life.<br/>
+I have no power permitted to deny<br/>
+What thou inquirest.&rdquo; I am doom&rsquo;d thus low<br/>
+To dwell, for that the sacristy by me<br/>
+Was rifled of its goodly ornaments,<br/>
+And with the guilt another falsely charged.<br/>
+But that thou mayst not joy to see me thus,<br/>
+So as thou e&rsquo;er shalt &rsquo;scape this darksome realm<br/>
+Open thine ears and hear what I forebode.<br/>
+Reft of the Neri first Pistoia pines,<br/>
+Then Florence changeth citizens and laws.<br/>
+From Valdimagra, drawn by wrathful Mars,<br/>
+A vapour rises, wrapt in turbid mists,<br/>
+And sharp and eager driveth on the storm<br/>
+With arrowy hurtling o&rsquo;er Piceno&rsquo;s field,<br/>
+Whence suddenly the cloud shall burst, and strike<br/>
+Each helpless Bianco prostrate to the ground.<br/>
+This have I told, that grief may rend thy heart.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoI.XXV"></a>CANTO XXV</h2>
+
+<p>
+When he had spoke, the sinner rais&rsquo;d his hands<br/>
+Pointed in mockery, and cried: &ldquo;Take them, God!<br/>
+I level them at thee!&rdquo; From that day forth<br/>
+The serpents were my friends; for round his neck<br/>
+One of then rolling twisted, as it said,<br/>
+&ldquo;Be silent, tongue!&rdquo; Another to his arms<br/>
+Upgliding, tied them, riveting itself<br/>
+So close, it took from them the power to move.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Pistoia! Ah Pistoia! why dost doubt<br/>
+To turn thee into ashes, cumb&rsquo;ring earth<br/>
+No longer, since in evil act so far<br/>
+Thou hast outdone thy seed? I did not mark,<br/>
+Through all the gloomy circles of the&rsquo; abyss,<br/>
+Spirit, that swell&rsquo;d so proudly &rsquo;gainst his God,<br/>
+Not him, who headlong fell from Thebes. He fled,<br/>
+Nor utter&rsquo;d more; and after him there came<br/>
+A centaur full of fury, shouting, &ldquo;Where<br/>
+Where is the caitiff?&rdquo; On Maremma&rsquo;s marsh<br/>
+Swarm not the serpent tribe, as on his haunch<br/>
+They swarm&rsquo;d, to where the human face begins.<br/>
+Behind his head upon the shoulders lay,<br/>
+With open wings, a dragon breathing fire<br/>
+On whomsoe&rsquo;er he met. To me my guide:<br/>
+&ldquo;Cacus is this, who underneath the rock<br/>
+Of Aventine spread oft a lake of blood.<br/>
+He, from his brethren parted, here must tread<br/>
+A different journey, for his fraudful theft<br/>
+Of the great herd, that near him stall&rsquo;d; whence found<br/>
+His felon deeds their end, beneath the mace<br/>
+Of stout Alcides, that perchance laid on<br/>
+A hundred blows, and not the tenth was felt.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+While yet he spake, the centaur sped away:<br/>
+And under us three spirits came, of whom<br/>
+Nor I nor he was ware, till they exclaim&rsquo;d;<br/>
+&ldquo;Say who are ye?&rdquo; We then brake off discourse,<br/>
+Intent on these alone. I knew them not;<br/>
+But, as it chanceth oft, befell, that one<br/>
+Had need to name another. &ldquo;Where,&rdquo; said he,<br/>
+&ldquo;Doth Cianfa lurk?&rdquo; I, for a sign my guide<br/>
+Should stand attentive, plac&rsquo;d against my lips<br/>
+The finger lifted. If, O reader! now<br/>
+Thou be not apt to credit what I tell,<br/>
+No marvel; for myself do scarce allow<br/>
+The witness of mine eyes. But as I looked<br/>
+Toward them, lo! a serpent with six feet<br/>
+Springs forth on one, and fastens full upon him:<br/>
+His midmost grasp&rsquo;d the belly, a forefoot<br/>
+Seiz&rsquo;d on each arm (while deep in either cheek<br/>
+He flesh&rsquo;d his fangs); the hinder on the thighs<br/>
+Were spread, &rsquo;twixt which the tail inserted curl&rsquo;d<br/>
+Upon the reins behind. Ivy ne&rsquo;er clasp&rsquo;d<br/>
+A dodder&rsquo;d oak, as round the other&rsquo;s limbs<br/>
+The hideous monster intertwin&rsquo;d his own.<br/>
+Then, as they both had been of burning wax,<br/>
+Each melted into other, mingling hues,<br/>
+That which was either now was seen no more.<br/>
+Thus up the shrinking paper, ere it burns,<br/>
+A brown tint glides, not turning yet to black,<br/>
+And the clean white expires. The other two<br/>
+Look&rsquo;d on exclaiming: &ldquo;Ah, how dost thou change,<br/>
+Agnello! See! Thou art nor double now,<br/>
+Nor only one.&rdquo; The two heads now became<br/>
+One, and two figures blended in one form<br/>
+Appear&rsquo;d, where both were lost. Of the four lengths<br/>
+Two arms were made: the belly and the chest<br/>
+The thighs and legs into such members chang&rsquo;d,<br/>
+As never eye hath seen. Of former shape<br/>
+All trace was vanish&rsquo;d. Two yet neither seem&rsquo;d<br/>
+That image miscreate, and so pass&rsquo;d on<br/>
+With tardy steps. As underneath the scourge<br/>
+Of the fierce dog-star, that lays bare the fields,<br/>
+Shifting from brake to brake, the lizard seems<br/>
+A flash of lightning, if he thwart the road,<br/>
+So toward th&rsquo; entrails of the other two<br/>
+Approaching seem&rsquo;d, an adder all on fire,<br/>
+As the dark pepper-grain, livid and swart.<br/>
+In that part, whence our life is nourish&rsquo;d first,<br/>
+One he transpierc&rsquo;d; then down before him fell<br/>
+Stretch&rsquo;d out. The pierced spirit look&rsquo;d on him<br/>
+But spake not; yea stood motionless and yawn&rsquo;d,<br/>
+As if by sleep or fev&rsquo;rous fit assail&rsquo;d.<br/>
+He ey&rsquo;d the serpent, and the serpent him.<br/>
+One from the wound, the other from the mouth<br/>
+Breath&rsquo;d a thick smoke, whose vap&rsquo;ry columns join&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lucan in mute attention now may hear,<br/>
+Nor thy disastrous fate, Sabellus! tell,<br/>
+Nor shine, Nasidius! Ovid now be mute.<br/>
+What if in warbling fiction he record<br/>
+Cadmus and Arethusa, to a snake<br/>
+Him chang&rsquo;d, and her into a fountain clear,<br/>
+I envy not; for never face to face<br/>
+Two natures thus transmuted did he sing,<br/>
+Wherein both shapes were ready to assume<br/>
+The other&rsquo;s substance. They in mutual guise<br/>
+So answer&rsquo;d, that the serpent split his train<br/>
+Divided to a fork, and the pierc&rsquo;d spirit<br/>
+Drew close his steps together, legs and thighs<br/>
+Compacted, that no sign of juncture soon<br/>
+Was visible: the tail disparted took<br/>
+The figure which the spirit lost, its skin<br/>
+Soft&rsquo;ning, his indurated to a rind.<br/>
+The shoulders next I mark&rsquo;d, that ent&rsquo;ring join&rsquo;d<br/>
+The monster&rsquo;s arm-pits, whose two shorter feet<br/>
+So lengthen&rsquo;d, as the other&rsquo;s dwindling shrunk.<br/>
+The feet behind then twisting up became<br/>
+That part that man conceals, which in the wretch<br/>
+Was cleft in twain. While both the shadowy smoke<br/>
+With a new colour veils, and generates<br/>
+Th&rsquo; excrescent pile on one, peeling it off<br/>
+From th&rsquo; other body, lo! upon his feet<br/>
+One upright rose, and prone the other fell.<br/>
+Not yet their glaring and malignant lamps<br/>
+Were shifted, though each feature chang&rsquo;d beneath.<br/>
+Of him who stood erect, the mounting face<br/>
+Retreated towards the temples, and what there<br/>
+Superfluous matter came, shot out in ears<br/>
+From the smooth cheeks, the rest, not backward dragg&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Of its excess did shape the nose; and swell&rsquo;d<br/>
+Into due size protuberant the lips.<br/>
+He, on the earth who lay, meanwhile extends<br/>
+His sharpen&rsquo;d visage, and draws down the ears<br/>
+Into the head, as doth the slug his horns.<br/>
+His tongue continuous before and apt<br/>
+For utt&rsquo;rance, severs; and the other&rsquo;s fork<br/>
+Closing unites. That done the smoke was laid.<br/>
+The soul, transform&rsquo;d into the brute, glides off,<br/>
+Hissing along the vale, and after him<br/>
+The other talking sputters; but soon turn&rsquo;d<br/>
+His new-grown shoulders on him, and in few<br/>
+Thus to another spake: &ldquo;Along this path<br/>
+Crawling, as I have done, speed Buoso now!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So saw I fluctuate in successive change<br/>
+Th&rsquo; unsteady ballast of the seventh hold:<br/>
+And here if aught my tongue have swerv&rsquo;d, events<br/>
+So strange may be its warrant. O&rsquo;er mine eyes<br/>
+Confusion hung, and on my thoughts amaze.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yet &rsquo;scap&rsquo;d they not so covertly, but well<br/>
+I mark&rsquo;d Sciancato: he alone it was<br/>
+Of the three first that came, who chang&rsquo;d not: thou,<br/>
+The other&rsquo;s fate, Gaville, still dost rue.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoI.XXVI"></a>CANTO XXVI</h2>
+
+<p>
+Florence exult! for thou so mightily<br/>
+Hast thriven, that o&rsquo;er land and sea thy wings<br/>
+Thou beatest, and thy name spreads over hell!<br/>
+Among the plund&rsquo;rers such the three I found<br/>
+Thy citizens, whence shame to me thy son,<br/>
+And no proud honour to thyself redounds.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But if our minds, when dreaming near the dawn,<br/>
+Are of the truth presageful, thou ere long<br/>
+Shalt feel what Prato, (not to say the rest)<br/>
+Would fain might come upon thee; and that chance<br/>
+Were in good time, if it befell thee now.<br/>
+Would so it were, since it must needs befall!<br/>
+For as time wears me, I shall grieve the more.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We from the depth departed; and my guide<br/>
+Remounting scal&rsquo;d the flinty steps, which late<br/>
+We downward trac&rsquo;d, and drew me up the steep.<br/>
+Pursuing thus our solitary way<br/>
+Among the crags and splinters of the rock,<br/>
+Sped not our feet without the help of hands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then sorrow seiz&rsquo;d me, which e&rsquo;en now revives,<br/>
+As my thought turns again to what I saw,<br/>
+And, more than I am wont, I rein and curb<br/>
+The powers of nature in me, lest they run<br/>
+Where Virtue guides not; that if aught of good<br/>
+My gentle star, or something better gave me,<br/>
+I envy not myself the precious boon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As in that season, when the sun least veils<br/>
+His face that lightens all, what time the fly<br/>
+Gives way to the shrill gnat, the peasant then<br/>
+Upon some cliff reclin&rsquo;d, beneath him sees<br/>
+Fire-flies innumerous spangling o&rsquo;er the vale,<br/>
+Vineyard or tilth, where his day-labour lies:<br/>
+With flames so numberless throughout its space<br/>
+Shone the eighth chasm, apparent, when the depth<br/>
+Was to my view expos&rsquo;d. As he, whose wrongs<br/>
+The bears aveng&rsquo;d, at its departure saw<br/>
+Elijah&rsquo;s chariot, when the steeds erect<br/>
+Rais&rsquo;d their steep flight for heav&rsquo;n; his eyes meanwhile,<br/>
+Straining pursu&rsquo;d them, till the flame alone<br/>
+Upsoaring like a misty speck he kenn&rsquo;d;<br/>
+E&rsquo;en thus along the gulf moves every flame,<br/>
+A sinner so enfolded close in each,<br/>
+That none exhibits token of the theft.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Upon the bridge I forward bent to look,<br/>
+And grasp&rsquo;d a flinty mass, or else had fall&rsquo;n,<br/>
+Though push&rsquo;d not from the height. The guide, who mark d<br/>
+How I did gaze attentive, thus began:<br/>
+&ldquo;Within these ardours are the spirits, each<br/>
+Swath&rsquo;d in confining fire.&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;Master, thy
+word,&rdquo;<br/>
+I answer&rsquo;d, &ldquo;hath assur&rsquo;d me; yet I deem&rsquo;d<br/>
+Already of the truth, already wish&rsquo;d<br/>
+To ask thee, who is in yon fire, that comes<br/>
+So parted at the summit, as it seem&rsquo;d<br/>
+Ascending from that funeral pile, where lay<br/>
+The Theban brothers?&rdquo; He replied: &ldquo;Within<br/>
+Ulysses there and Diomede endure<br/>
+Their penal tortures, thus to vengeance now<br/>
+Together hasting, as erewhile to wrath.<br/>
+These in the flame with ceaseless groans deplore<br/>
+The ambush of the horse, that open&rsquo;d wide<br/>
+A portal for that goodly seed to pass,<br/>
+Which sow&rsquo;d imperial Rome; nor less the guile<br/>
+Lament they, whence of her Achilles &rsquo;reft<br/>
+Deidamia yet in death complains.<br/>
+And there is rued the stratagem, that Troy<br/>
+Of her Palladium spoil&rsquo;d.&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;If they have power<br/>
+Of utt&rsquo;rance from within these sparks,&rdquo; said I,<br/>
+&ldquo;O master! think my prayer a thousand fold<br/>
+In repetition urg&rsquo;d, that thou vouchsafe<br/>
+To pause, till here the horned flame arrive.<br/>
+See, how toward it with desire I bend.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He thus: &ldquo;Thy prayer is worthy of much praise,<br/>
+And I accept it therefore: but do thou<br/>
+Thy tongue refrain: to question them be mine,<br/>
+For I divine thy wish: and they perchance,<br/>
+For they were Greeks, might shun discourse with thee.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When there the flame had come, where time and place<br/>
+Seem&rsquo;d fitting to my guide, he thus began:<br/>
+&ldquo;O ye, who dwell two spirits in one fire!<br/>
+If living I of you did merit aught,<br/>
+Whate&rsquo;er the measure were of that desert,<br/>
+When in the world my lofty strain I pour&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Move ye not on, till one of you unfold<br/>
+In what clime death o&rsquo;ertook him self-destroy&rsquo;d.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of the old flame forthwith the greater horn<br/>
+Began to roll, murmuring, as a fire<br/>
+That labours with the wind, then to and fro<br/>
+Wagging the top, as a tongue uttering sounds,<br/>
+Threw out its voice, and spake: &ldquo;When I escap&rsquo;d<br/>
+From Circe, who beyond a circling year<br/>
+Had held me near Caieta, by her charms,<br/>
+Ere thus Aeneas yet had nam&rsquo;d the shore,<br/>
+Nor fondness for my son, nor reverence<br/>
+Of my old father, nor return of love,<br/>
+That should have crown&rsquo;d Penelope with joy,<br/>
+Could overcome in me the zeal I had<br/>
+T&rsquo; explore the world, and search the ways of life,<br/>
+Man&rsquo;s evil and his virtue. Forth I sail&rsquo;d<br/>
+Into the deep illimitable main,<br/>
+With but one bark, and the small faithful band<br/>
+That yet cleav&rsquo;d to me. As Iberia far,<br/>
+Far as Morocco either shore I saw,<br/>
+And the Sardinian and each isle beside<br/>
+Which round that ocean bathes. Tardy with age<br/>
+Were I and my companions, when we came<br/>
+To the strait pass, where Hercules ordain&rsquo;d<br/>
+The bound&rsquo;ries not to be o&rsquo;erstepp&rsquo;d by man.<br/>
+The walls of Seville to my right I left,<br/>
+On the&rsquo; other hand already Ceuta past.<br/>
+&ldquo;O brothers!&rdquo; I began, &ldquo;who to the west<br/>
+Through perils without number now have reach&rsquo;d,<br/>
+To this the short remaining watch, that yet<br/>
+Our senses have to wake, refuse not proof<br/>
+Of the unpeopled world, following the track<br/>
+Of Phoebus. Call to mind from whence we sprang:<br/>
+Ye were not form&rsquo;d to live the life of brutes<br/>
+But virtue to pursue and knowledge high.<br/>
+With these few words I sharpen&rsquo;d for the voyage<br/>
+The mind of my associates, that I then<br/>
+Could scarcely have withheld them. To the dawn<br/>
+Our poop we turn&rsquo;d, and for the witless flight<br/>
+Made our oars wings, still gaining on the left.<br/>
+Each star of the&rsquo; other pole night now beheld,<br/>
+And ours so low, that from the ocean-floor<br/>
+It rose not. Five times re-illum&rsquo;d, as oft<br/>
+Vanish&rsquo;d the light from underneath the moon<br/>
+Since the deep way we enter&rsquo;d, when from far<br/>
+Appear&rsquo;d a mountain dim, loftiest methought<br/>
+Of all I e&rsquo;er beheld. Joy seiz&rsquo;d us straight,<br/>
+But soon to mourning changed. From the new land<br/>
+A whirlwind sprung, and at her foremost side<br/>
+Did strike the vessel. Thrice it whirl&rsquo;d her round<br/>
+With all the waves, the fourth time lifted up<br/>
+The poop, and sank the prow: so fate decreed:<br/>
+And over us the booming billow clos&rsquo;d.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoI.XXVII"></a>CANTO XXVII</h2>
+
+<p>
+Now upward rose the flame, and still&rsquo;d its light<br/>
+To speak no more, and now pass&rsquo;d on with leave<br/>
+From the mild poet gain&rsquo;d, when following came<br/>
+Another, from whose top a sound confus&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Forth issuing, drew our eyes that way to look.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As the Sicilian bull, that rightfully<br/>
+His cries first echoed, who had shap&rsquo;d its mould,<br/>
+Did so rebellow, with the voice of him<br/>
+Tormented, that the brazen monster seem&rsquo;d<br/>
+Pierc&rsquo;d through with pain; thus while no way they found<br/>
+Nor avenue immediate through the flame,<br/>
+Into its language turn&rsquo;d the dismal words:<br/>
+But soon as they had won their passage forth,<br/>
+Up from the point, which vibrating obey&rsquo;d<br/>
+Their motion at the tongue, these sounds we heard:<br/>
+&ldquo;O thou! to whom I now direct my voice!<br/>
+That lately didst exclaim in Lombard phrase,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Depart thou, I solicit thee no more,&rsquo;<br/>
+Though somewhat tardy I perchance arrive<br/>
+Let it not irk thee here to pause awhile,<br/>
+And with me parley: lo! it irks not me<br/>
+And yet I burn. If but e&rsquo;en now thou fall<br/>
+into this blind world, from that pleasant land<br/>
+Of Latium, whence I draw my sum of guilt,<br/>
+Tell me if those, who in Romagna dwell,<br/>
+Have peace or war. For of the mountains there<br/>
+Was I, betwixt Urbino and the height,<br/>
+Whence Tyber first unlocks his mighty flood.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Leaning I listen&rsquo;d yet with heedful ear,<br/>
+When, as he touch&rsquo;d my side, the leader thus:<br/>
+&ldquo;Speak thou: he is a Latian.&rdquo; My reply<br/>
+Was ready, and I spake without delay:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;O spirit! who art hidden here below!<br/>
+Never was thy Romagna without war<br/>
+In her proud tyrants&rsquo; bosoms, nor is now:<br/>
+But open war there left I none. The state,<br/>
+Ravenna hath maintain&rsquo;d this many a year,<br/>
+Is steadfast. There Polenta&rsquo;s eagle broods,<br/>
+And in his broad circumference of plume<br/>
+O&rsquo;ershadows Cervia. The green talons grasp<br/>
+The land, that stood erewhile the proof so long,<br/>
+And pil&rsquo;d in bloody heap the host of France.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The&rsquo; old mastiff of Verruchio and the young,<br/>
+That tore Montagna in their wrath, still make,<br/>
+Where they are wont, an augre of their fangs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Lamone&rsquo;s city and Santerno&rsquo;s range<br/>
+Under the lion of the snowy lair.<br/>
+Inconstant partisan! that changeth sides,<br/>
+Or ever summer yields to winter&rsquo;s frost.<br/>
+And she, whose flank is wash&rsquo;d of Savio&rsquo;s wave,<br/>
+As &rsquo;twixt the level and the steep she lies,<br/>
+Lives so &rsquo;twixt tyrant power and liberty.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now tell us, I entreat thee, who art thou?<br/>
+Be not more hard than others. In the world,<br/>
+So may thy name still rear its forehead high.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then roar&rsquo;d awhile the fire, its sharpen&rsquo;d point<br/>
+On either side wav&rsquo;d, and thus breath&rsquo;d at last:<br/>
+&ldquo;If I did think, my answer were to one,<br/>
+Who ever could return unto the world,<br/>
+This flame should rest unshaken. But since ne&rsquo;er,<br/>
+If true be told me, any from this depth<br/>
+Has found his upward way, I answer thee,<br/>
+Nor fear lest infamy record the words.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A man of arms at first, I cloth&rsquo;d me then<br/>
+In good Saint Francis&rsquo; girdle, hoping so<br/>
+T&rsquo; have made amends. And certainly my hope<br/>
+Had fail&rsquo;d not, but that he, whom curses light on,<br/>
+The&rsquo; high priest again seduc&rsquo;d me into sin.<br/>
+And how and wherefore listen while I tell.<br/>
+Long as this spirit mov&rsquo;d the bones and pulp<br/>
+My mother gave me, less my deeds bespake<br/>
+The nature of the lion than the fox.<br/>
+All ways of winding subtlety I knew,<br/>
+And with such art conducted, that the sound<br/>
+Reach&rsquo;d the world&rsquo;s limit. Soon as to that part<br/>
+Of life I found me come, when each behoves<br/>
+To lower sails and gather in the lines;<br/>
+That which before had pleased me then I rued,<br/>
+And to repentance and confession turn&rsquo;d;<br/>
+Wretch that I was! and well it had bested me!<br/>
+The chief of the new Pharisees meantime,<br/>
+Waging his warfare near the Lateran,<br/>
+Not with the Saracens or Jews (his foes<br/>
+All Christians were, nor against Acre one<br/>
+Had fought, nor traffic&rsquo;d in the Soldan&rsquo;s land),<br/>
+He his great charge nor sacred ministry<br/>
+In himself, rev&rsquo;renc&rsquo;d, nor in me that cord,<br/>
+Which us&rsquo;d to mark with leanness whom it girded.<br/>
+As in Socrate, Constantine besought<br/>
+To cure his leprosy Sylvester&rsquo;s aid,<br/>
+So me to cure the fever of his pride<br/>
+This man besought: my counsel to that end<br/>
+He ask&rsquo;d: and I was silent: for his words<br/>
+Seem&rsquo;d drunken: but forthwith he thus resum&rsquo;d:<br/>
+&ldquo;From thy heart banish fear: of all offence<br/>
+I hitherto absolve thee. In return,<br/>
+Teach me my purpose so to execute,<br/>
+That Penestrino cumber earth no more.<br/>
+Heav&rsquo;n, as thou knowest, I have power to shut<br/>
+And open: and the keys are therefore twain,<br/>
+The which my predecessor meanly priz&rsquo;d.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then, yielding to the forceful arguments,<br/>
+Of silence as more perilous I deem&rsquo;d,<br/>
+And answer&rsquo;d: &ldquo;Father! since thou washest me<br/>
+Clear of that guilt wherein I now must fall,<br/>
+Large promise with performance scant, be sure,<br/>
+Shall make thee triumph in thy lofty seat.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;When I was number&rsquo;d with the dead, then came<br/>
+Saint Francis for me; but a cherub dark<br/>
+He met, who cried: &ldquo;&lsquo;Wrong me not; he is mine,<br/>
+And must below to join the wretched crew,<br/>
+For the deceitful counsel which he gave.<br/>
+E&rsquo;er since I watch&rsquo;d him, hov&rsquo;ring at his hair,<br/>
+No power can the impenitent absolve;<br/>
+Nor to repent and will at once consist,<br/>
+By contradiction absolute forbid.&rdquo;<br/>
+Oh mis&rsquo;ry! how I shook myself, when he<br/>
+Seiz&rsquo;d me, and cried, &ldquo;Thou haply thought&rsquo;st me not<br/>
+A disputant in logic so exact.&rdquo;<br/>
+To Minos down he bore me, and the judge<br/>
+Twin&rsquo;d eight times round his callous back the tail,<br/>
+Which biting with excess of rage, he spake:<br/>
+&ldquo;This is a guilty soul, that in the fire<br/>
+Must vanish.&rsquo; Hence perdition-doom&rsquo;d I rove<br/>
+A prey to rankling sorrow in this garb.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When he had thus fulfill&rsquo;d his words, the flame<br/>
+In dolour parted, beating to and fro,<br/>
+And writhing its sharp horn. We onward went,<br/>
+I and my leader, up along the rock,<br/>
+Far as another arch, that overhangs<br/>
+The foss, wherein the penalty is paid<br/>
+Of those, who load them with committed sin.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoI.XXVIII"></a>CANTO XXVIII</h2>
+
+<p>
+Who, e&rsquo;en in words unfetter&rsquo;d, might at full<br/>
+Tell of the wounds and blood that now I saw,<br/>
+Though he repeated oft the tale? No tongue<br/>
+So vast a theme could equal, speech and thought<br/>
+Both impotent alike. If in one band<br/>
+Collected, stood the people all, who e&rsquo;er<br/>
+Pour&rsquo;d on Apulia&rsquo;s happy soil their blood,<br/>
+Slain by the Trojans, and in that long war<br/>
+When of the rings the measur&rsquo;d booty made<br/>
+A pile so high, as Rome&rsquo;s historian writes<br/>
+Who errs not, with the multitude, that felt<br/>
+The grinding force of Guiscard&rsquo;s Norman steel,<br/>
+And those the rest, whose bones are gather&rsquo;d yet<br/>
+At Ceperano, there where treachery<br/>
+Branded th&rsquo; Apulian name, or where beyond<br/>
+Thy walls, O Tagliacozzo, without arms<br/>
+The old Alardo conquer&rsquo;d; and his limbs<br/>
+One were to show transpierc&rsquo;d, another his<br/>
+Clean lopt away; a spectacle like this<br/>
+Were but a thing of nought, to the&rsquo; hideous sight<br/>
+Of the ninth chasm. A rundlet, that hath lost<br/>
+Its middle or side stave, gapes not so wide,<br/>
+As one I mark&rsquo;d, torn from the chin throughout<br/>
+Down to the hinder passage: &rsquo;twixt the legs<br/>
+Dangling his entrails hung, the midriff lay<br/>
+Open to view, and wretched ventricle,<br/>
+That turns th&rsquo; englutted aliment to dross.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whilst eagerly I fix on him my gaze,<br/>
+He ey&rsquo;d me, with his hands laid his breast bare,<br/>
+And cried; &ldquo;Now mark how I do rip me! lo!<br/>
+How is Mohammed mangled! before me<br/>
+Walks Ali weeping, from the chin his face<br/>
+Cleft to the forelock; and the others all<br/>
+Whom here thou seest, while they liv&rsquo;d, did sow<br/>
+Scandal and schism, and therefore thus are rent.<br/>
+A fiend is here behind, who with his sword<br/>
+Hacks us thus cruelly, slivering again<br/>
+Each of this ream, when we have compast round<br/>
+The dismal way, for first our gashes close<br/>
+Ere we repass before him. But say who<br/>
+Art thou, that standest musing on the rock,<br/>
+Haply so lingering to delay the pain<br/>
+Sentenc&rsquo;d upon thy crimes?&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;Him death not
+yet,&rdquo;<br/>
+My guide rejoin&rsquo;d, &ldquo;hath overta&rsquo;en, nor sin<br/>
+Conducts to torment; but, that he may make<br/>
+Full trial of your state, I who am dead<br/>
+Must through the depths of hell, from orb to orb,<br/>
+Conduct him. Trust my words, for they are true.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+More than a hundred spirits, when that they heard,<br/>
+Stood in the foss to mark me, through amazed,<br/>
+Forgetful of their pangs. &ldquo;Thou, who perchance<br/>
+Shalt shortly view the sun, this warning thou<br/>
+Bear to Dolcino: bid him, if he wish not<br/>
+Here soon to follow me, that with good store<br/>
+Of food he arm him, lest impris&rsquo;ning snows<br/>
+Yield him a victim to Novara&rsquo;s power,<br/>
+No easy conquest else.&rdquo; With foot uprais&rsquo;d<br/>
+For stepping, spake Mohammed, on the ground<br/>
+Then fix&rsquo;d it to depart. Another shade,<br/>
+Pierc&rsquo;d in the throat, his nostrils mutilate<br/>
+E&rsquo;en from beneath the eyebrows, and one ear<br/>
+Lopt off, who with the rest through wonder stood<br/>
+Gazing, before the rest advanc&rsquo;d, and bar&rsquo;d<br/>
+His wind-pipe, that without was all o&rsquo;ersmear&rsquo;d<br/>
+With crimson stain. &ldquo;O thou!&rdquo; said &lsquo;he, &ldquo;whom sin<br/>
+Condemns not, and whom erst (unless too near<br/>
+Resemblance do deceive me) I aloft<br/>
+Have seen on Latian ground, call thou to mind<br/>
+Piero of Medicina, if again<br/>
+Returning, thou behold&rsquo;st the pleasant land<br/>
+That from Vercelli slopes to Mercabo;<br/>
+And there instruct the twain, whom Fano boasts<br/>
+Her worthiest sons, Guido and Angelo,<br/>
+That if &rsquo;tis giv&rsquo;n us here to scan aright<br/>
+The future, they out of life&rsquo;s tenement<br/>
+Shall be cast forth, and whelm&rsquo;d under the waves<br/>
+Near to Cattolica, through perfidy<br/>
+Of a fell tyrant. &rsquo;Twixt the Cyprian isle<br/>
+And Balearic, ne&rsquo;er hath Neptune seen<br/>
+An injury so foul, by pirates done<br/>
+Or Argive crew of old. That one-ey&rsquo;d traitor<br/>
+(Whose realm there is a spirit here were fain<br/>
+His eye had still lack&rsquo;d sight of) them shall bring<br/>
+To conf&rsquo;rence with him, then so shape his end,<br/>
+That they shall need not &rsquo;gainst Focara&rsquo;s wind<br/>
+Offer up vow nor pray&rsquo;r.&rdquo; I answering thus:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Declare, as thou dost wish that I above<br/>
+May carry tidings of thee, who is he,<br/>
+In whom that sight doth wake such sad remembrance?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Forthwith he laid his hand on the cheek-bone<br/>
+Of one, his fellow-spirit, and his jaws<br/>
+Expanding, cried: &ldquo;Lo! this is he I wot of;<br/>
+He speaks not for himself: the outcast this<br/>
+Who overwhelm&rsquo;d the doubt in Caesar&rsquo;s mind,<br/>
+Affirming that delay to men prepar&rsquo;d<br/>
+Was ever harmful. &ldquo;Oh how terrified<br/>
+Methought was Curio, from whose throat was cut<br/>
+The tongue, which spake that hardy word. Then one<br/>
+Maim&rsquo;d of each hand, uplifted in the gloom<br/>
+The bleeding stumps, that they with gory spots<br/>
+Sullied his face, and cried: &ldquo;&lsquo;Remember thee<br/>
+Of Mosca, too, I who, alas! exclaim&rsquo;d,<br/>
+&lsquo;The deed once done there is an end,&rsquo; that prov&rsquo;d<br/>
+A seed of sorrow to the Tuscan race.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I added: &ldquo;Ay, and death to thine own tribe.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whence heaping woe on woe he hurried off,<br/>
+As one grief stung to madness. But I there<br/>
+Still linger&rsquo;d to behold the troop, and saw<br/>
+Things, such as I may fear without more proof<br/>
+To tell of, but that conscience makes me firm,<br/>
+The boon companion, who her strong breast-plate<br/>
+Buckles on him, that feels no guilt within<br/>
+And bids him on and fear not. Without doubt<br/>
+I saw, and yet it seems to pass before me,<br/>
+A headless trunk, that even as the rest<br/>
+Of the sad flock pac&rsquo;d onward. By the hair<br/>
+It bore the sever&rsquo;d member, lantern-wise<br/>
+Pendent in hand, which look&rsquo;d at us and said,<br/>
+&ldquo;Woe&rsquo;s me!&rdquo; The spirit lighted thus himself,<br/>
+And two there were in one, and one in two.<br/>
+How that may be he knows who ordereth so.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When at the bridge&rsquo;s foot direct he stood,<br/>
+His arm aloft he rear&rsquo;d, thrusting the head<br/>
+Full in our view, that nearer we might hear<br/>
+The words, which thus it utter&rsquo;d: &ldquo;Now behold<br/>
+This grievous torment, thou, who breathing go&rsquo;st<br/>
+To spy the dead; behold if any else<br/>
+Be terrible as this. And that on earth<br/>
+Thou mayst bear tidings of me, know that I<br/>
+Am Bertrand, he of Born, who gave King John<br/>
+The counsel mischievous. Father and son<br/>
+I set at mutual war. For Absalom<br/>
+And David more did not Ahitophel,<br/>
+Spurring them on maliciously to strife.<br/>
+For parting those so closely knit, my brain<br/>
+Parted, alas! I carry from its source,<br/>
+That in this trunk inhabits. Thus the law<br/>
+Of retribution fiercely works in me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoI.XXIX"></a>CANTO XXIX</h2>
+
+<p>
+So were mine eyes inebriate with view<br/>
+Of the vast multitude, whom various wounds<br/>
+Disfigur&rsquo;d, that they long&rsquo;d to stay and weep.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Virgil rous&rsquo;d me: &ldquo;What yet gazest on?<br/>
+Wherefore doth fasten yet thy sight below<br/>
+Among the maim&rsquo;d and miserable shades?<br/>
+Thou hast not shewn in any chasm beside<br/>
+This weakness. Know, if thou wouldst number them<br/>
+That two and twenty miles the valley winds<br/>
+Its circuit, and already is the moon<br/>
+Beneath our feet: the time permitted now<br/>
+Is short, and more not seen remains to see.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If thou,&rdquo; I straight replied, &ldquo;hadst weigh&rsquo;d the
+cause<br/>
+For which I look&rsquo;d, thou hadst perchance excus&rsquo;d<br/>
+The tarrying still.&rdquo; My leader part pursu&rsquo;d<br/>
+His way, the while I follow&rsquo;d, answering him,<br/>
+And adding thus: &ldquo;Within that cave I deem,<br/>
+Whereon so fixedly I held my ken,<br/>
+There is a spirit dwells, one of my blood,<br/>
+Wailing the crime that costs him now so dear.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then spake my master: &ldquo;Let thy soul no more<br/>
+Afflict itself for him. Direct elsewhere<br/>
+Its thought, and leave him. At the bridge&rsquo;s foot<br/>
+I mark&rsquo;d how he did point with menacing look<br/>
+At thee, and heard him by the others nam&rsquo;d<br/>
+Geri of Bello. Thou so wholly then<br/>
+Wert busied with his spirit, who once rul&rsquo;d<br/>
+The towers of Hautefort, that thou lookedst not<br/>
+That way, ere he was gone.&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;O guide belov&rsquo;d!<br/>
+His violent death yet unaveng&rsquo;d,&rdquo; said I,<br/>
+&ldquo;By any, who are partners in his shame,<br/>
+Made him contemptuous: therefore, as I think,<br/>
+He pass&rsquo;d me speechless by; and doing so<br/>
+Hath made me more compassionate his fate.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So we discours&rsquo;d to where the rock first show&rsquo;d<br/>
+The other valley, had more light been there,<br/>
+E&rsquo;en to the lowest depth. Soon as we came<br/>
+O&rsquo;er the last cloister in the dismal rounds<br/>
+Of Malebolge, and the brotherhood<br/>
+Were to our view expos&rsquo;d, then many a dart<br/>
+Of sore lament assail&rsquo;d me, headed all<br/>
+With points of thrilling pity, that I clos&rsquo;d<br/>
+Both ears against the volley with mine hands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As were the torment, if each lazar-house<br/>
+Of Valdichiana, in the sultry time<br/>
+&rsquo;Twixt July and September, with the isle<br/>
+Sardinia and Maremma&rsquo;s pestilent fen,<br/>
+Had heap&rsquo;d their maladies all in one foss<br/>
+Together; such was here the torment: dire<br/>
+The stench, as issuing steams from fester&rsquo;d limbs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We on the utmost shore of the long rock<br/>
+Descended still to leftward. Then my sight<br/>
+Was livelier to explore the depth, wherein<br/>
+The minister of the most mighty Lord,<br/>
+All-searching Justice, dooms to punishment<br/>
+The forgers noted on her dread record.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+More rueful was it not methinks to see<br/>
+The nation in Aegina droop, what time<br/>
+Each living thing, e&rsquo;en to the little worm,<br/>
+All fell, so full of malice was the air<br/>
+(And afterward, as bards of yore have told,<br/>
+The ancient people were restor&rsquo;d anew<br/>
+From seed of emmets) than was here to see<br/>
+The spirits, that languish&rsquo;d through the murky vale<br/>
+Up-pil&rsquo;d on many a stack. Confus&rsquo;d they lay,<br/>
+One o&rsquo;er the belly, o&rsquo;er the shoulders one<br/>
+Roll&rsquo;d of another; sideling crawl&rsquo;d a third<br/>
+Along the dismal pathway. Step by step<br/>
+We journey&rsquo;d on, in silence looking round<br/>
+And list&rsquo;ning those diseas&rsquo;d, who strove in vain<br/>
+To lift their forms. Then two I mark&rsquo;d, that sat<br/>
+Propp&rsquo;d &rsquo;gainst each other, as two brazen pans<br/>
+Set to retain the heat. From head to foot,<br/>
+A tetter bark&rsquo;d them round. Nor saw I e&rsquo;er<br/>
+Groom currying so fast, for whom his lord<br/>
+Impatient waited, or himself perchance<br/>
+Tir&rsquo;d with long watching, as of these each one<br/>
+Plied quickly his keen nails, through furiousness<br/>
+Of ne&rsquo;er abated pruriency. The crust<br/>
+Came drawn from underneath in flakes, like scales<br/>
+Scrap&rsquo;d from the bream or fish of broader mail.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;O thou, who with thy fingers rendest off<br/>
+Thy coat of proof,&rdquo; thus spake my guide to one,<br/>
+&ldquo;And sometimes makest tearing pincers of them,<br/>
+Tell me if any born of Latian land<br/>
+Be among these within: so may thy nails<br/>
+Serve thee for everlasting to this toil.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Both are of Latium,&rdquo; weeping he replied,<br/>
+&ldquo;Whom tortur&rsquo;d thus thou seest: but who art thou<br/>
+That hast inquir&rsquo;d of us?&rdquo; To whom my guide:<br/>
+&ldquo;One that descend with this man, who yet lives,<br/>
+From rock to rock, and show him hell&rsquo;s abyss.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then started they asunder, and each turn&rsquo;d<br/>
+Trembling toward us, with the rest, whose ear<br/>
+Those words redounding struck. To me my liege<br/>
+Address&rsquo;d him: &ldquo;Speak to them whate&rsquo;er thou list.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And I therewith began: &ldquo;So may no time<br/>
+Filch your remembrance from the thoughts of men<br/>
+In th&rsquo; upper world, but after many suns<br/>
+Survive it, as ye tell me, who ye are,<br/>
+And of what race ye come. Your punishment,<br/>
+Unseemly and disgustful in its kind,<br/>
+Deter you not from opening thus much to me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Arezzo was my dwelling,&rdquo; answer&rsquo;d one,<br/>
+&ldquo;And me Albero of Sienna brought<br/>
+To die by fire; but that, for which I died,<br/>
+Leads me not here. True is in sport I told him,<br/>
+That I had learn&rsquo;d to wing my flight in air.<br/>
+And he admiring much, as he was void<br/>
+Of wisdom, will&rsquo;d me to declare to him<br/>
+The secret of mine art: and only hence,<br/>
+Because I made him not a Daedalus,<br/>
+Prevail&rsquo;d on one suppos&rsquo;d his sire to burn me.<br/>
+But Minos to this chasm last of the ten,<br/>
+For that I practis&rsquo;d alchemy on earth,<br/>
+Has doom&rsquo;d me. Him no subterfuge eludes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then to the bard I spake: &ldquo;Was ever race<br/>
+Light as Sienna&rsquo;s? Sure not France herself<br/>
+Can show a tribe so frivolous and vain.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The other leprous spirit heard my words,<br/>
+And thus return&rsquo;d: &ldquo;Be Stricca from this charge<br/>
+Exempted, he who knew so temp&rsquo;rately<br/>
+To lay out fortune&rsquo;s gifts; and Niccolo<br/>
+Who first the spice&rsquo;s costly luxury<br/>
+Discover&rsquo;d in that garden, where such seed<br/>
+Roots deepest in the soil: and be that troop<br/>
+Exempted, with whom Caccia of Asciano<br/>
+Lavish&rsquo;d his vineyards and wide-spreading woods,<br/>
+And his rare wisdom Abbagliato show&rsquo;d<br/>
+A spectacle for all. That thou mayst know<br/>
+Who seconds thee against the Siennese<br/>
+Thus gladly, bend this way thy sharpen&rsquo;d sight,<br/>
+That well my face may answer to thy ken;<br/>
+So shalt thou see I am Capocchio&rsquo;s ghost,<br/>
+Who forg&rsquo;d transmuted metals by the power<br/>
+Of alchemy; and if I scan thee right,<br/>
+Thus needs must well remember how I aped<br/>
+Creative nature by my subtle art.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoI.XXX"></a>CANTO XXX</h2>
+
+<p>
+What time resentment burn&rsquo;d in Juno&rsquo;s breast<br/>
+For Semele against the Theban blood,<br/>
+As more than once in dire mischance was rued,<br/>
+Such fatal frenzy seiz&rsquo;d on Athamas,<br/>
+That he his spouse beholding with a babe<br/>
+Laden on either arm, &ldquo;Spread out,&rdquo; he cried,<br/>
+&ldquo;The meshes, that I take the lioness<br/>
+And the young lions at the pass: &ldquo;then forth<br/>
+Stretch&rsquo;d he his merciless talons, grasping one,<br/>
+One helpless innocent, Learchus nam&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Whom swinging down he dash&rsquo;d upon a rock,<br/>
+And with her other burden self-destroy&rsquo;d<br/>
+The hapless mother plung&rsquo;d: and when the pride<br/>
+Of all-presuming Troy fell from its height,<br/>
+By fortune overwhelm&rsquo;d, and the old king<br/>
+With his realm perish&rsquo;d, then did Hecuba,<br/>
+A wretch forlorn and captive, when she saw<br/>
+Polyxena first slaughter&rsquo;d, and her son,<br/>
+Her Polydorus, on the wild sea-beach<br/>
+Next met the mourner&rsquo;s view, then reft of sense<br/>
+Did she run barking even as a dog;<br/>
+Such mighty power had grief to wrench her soul.<br/>
+Bet ne&rsquo;er the Furies or of Thebes or Troy<br/>
+With such fell cruelty were seen, their goads<br/>
+Infixing in the limbs of man or beast,<br/>
+As now two pale and naked ghost I saw<br/>
+That gnarling wildly scamper&rsquo;d, like the swine<br/>
+Excluded from his stye. One reach&rsquo;d Capocchio,<br/>
+And in the neck-joint sticking deep his fangs,<br/>
+Dragg&rsquo;d him, that o&rsquo;er the solid pavement rubb&rsquo;d<br/>
+His belly stretch&rsquo;d out prone. The other shape,<br/>
+He of Arezzo, there left trembling, spake;<br/>
+&ldquo;That sprite of air is Schicchi; in like mood<br/>
+Of random mischief vent he still his spite.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To whom I answ&rsquo;ring: &ldquo;Oh! as thou dost hope,<br/>
+The other may not flesh its jaws on thee,<br/>
+Be patient to inform us, who it is,<br/>
+Ere it speed hence.&rdquo;&mdash;&rdquo; That is the ancient soul<br/>
+Of wretched Myrrha,&rdquo; he replied, &ldquo;who burn&rsquo;d<br/>
+With most unholy flame for her own sire,<br/>
+And a false shape assuming, so perform&rsquo;d<br/>
+The deed of sin; e&rsquo;en as the other there,<br/>
+That onward passes, dar&rsquo;d to counterfeit<br/>
+Donati&rsquo;s features, to feign&rsquo;d testament<br/>
+The seal affixing, that himself might gain,<br/>
+For his own share, the lady of the herd.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When vanish&rsquo;d the two furious shades, on whom<br/>
+Mine eye was held, I turn&rsquo;d it back to view<br/>
+The other cursed spirits. One I saw<br/>
+In fashion like a lute, had but the groin<br/>
+Been sever&rsquo;d, where it meets the forked part.<br/>
+Swoln dropsy, disproportioning the limbs<br/>
+With ill-converted moisture, that the paunch<br/>
+Suits not the visage, open&rsquo;d wide his lips<br/>
+Gasping as in the hectic man for drought,<br/>
+One towards the chin, the other upward curl&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;O ye, who in this world of misery,<br/>
+Wherefore I know not, are exempt from pain,&rdquo;<br/>
+Thus he began, &ldquo;attentively regard<br/>
+Adamo&rsquo;s woe. When living, full supply<br/>
+Ne&rsquo;er lack&rsquo;d me of what most I coveted;<br/>
+One drop of water now, alas! I crave.<br/>
+The rills, that glitter down the grassy slopes<br/>
+Of Casentino, making fresh and soft<br/>
+The banks whereby they glide to Arno&rsquo;s stream,<br/>
+Stand ever in my view; and not in vain;<br/>
+For more the pictur&rsquo;d semblance dries me up,<br/>
+Much more than the disease, which makes the flesh<br/>
+Desert these shrivel&rsquo;d cheeks. So from the place,<br/>
+Where I transgress&rsquo;d, stern justice urging me,<br/>
+Takes means to quicken more my lab&rsquo;ring sighs.<br/>
+There is Romena, where I falsified<br/>
+The metal with the Baptist&rsquo;s form imprest,<br/>
+For which on earth I left my body burnt.<br/>
+But if I here might see the sorrowing soul<br/>
+Of Guido, Alessandro, or their brother,<br/>
+For Branda&rsquo;s limpid spring I would not change<br/>
+The welcome sight. One is e&rsquo;en now within,<br/>
+If truly the mad spirits tell, that round<br/>
+Are wand&rsquo;ring. But wherein besteads me that?<br/>
+My limbs are fetter&rsquo;d. Were I but so light,<br/>
+That I each hundred years might move one inch,<br/>
+I had set forth already on this path,<br/>
+Seeking him out amidst the shapeless crew,<br/>
+Although eleven miles it wind, not more<br/>
+Than half of one across. They brought me down<br/>
+Among this tribe; induc&rsquo;d by them I stamp&rsquo;d<br/>
+The florens with three carats of alloy.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who are that abject pair,&rdquo; I next inquir&rsquo;d,<br/>
+&ldquo;That closely bounding thee upon thy right<br/>
+Lie smoking, like a band in winter steep&rsquo;d<br/>
+In the chill stream?&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;When to this gulf I dropt,&rdquo;<br/>
+He answer&rsquo;d, &ldquo;here I found them; since that hour<br/>
+They have not turn&rsquo;d, nor ever shall, I ween,<br/>
+Till time hath run his course. One is that dame<br/>
+The false accuser of the Hebrew youth;<br/>
+Sinon the other, that false Greek from Troy.<br/>
+Sharp fever drains the reeky moistness out,<br/>
+In such a cloud upsteam&rsquo;d.&rdquo; When that he heard,<br/>
+One, gall&rsquo;d perchance to be so darkly nam&rsquo;d,<br/>
+With clench&rsquo;d hand smote him on the braced paunch,<br/>
+That like a drum resounded: but forthwith<br/>
+Adamo smote him on the face, the blow<br/>
+Returning with his arm, that seem&rsquo;d as hard.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Though my o&rsquo;erweighty limbs have ta&rsquo;en from me<br/>
+The power to move,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;I have an arm<br/>
+At liberty for such employ.&rdquo; To whom<br/>
+Was answer&rsquo;d: &ldquo;When thou wentest to the fire,<br/>
+Thou hadst it not so ready at command,<br/>
+Then readier when it coin&rsquo;d th&rsquo; impostor gold.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And thus the dropsied: &ldquo;Ay, now speak&rsquo;st thou true.<br/>
+But there thou gav&rsquo;st not such true testimony,<br/>
+When thou wast question&rsquo;d of the truth, at Troy.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If I spake false, thou falsely stamp&rsquo;dst the coin,&rdquo;<br/>
+Said Sinon; &ldquo;I am here but for one fault,<br/>
+And thou for more than any imp beside.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Remember,&rdquo; he replied, &ldquo;O perjur&rsquo;d one,<br/>
+The horse remember, that did teem with death,<br/>
+And all the world be witness to thy guilt.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;To thine,&rdquo; return&rsquo;d the Greek, &ldquo;witness the
+thirst<br/>
+Whence thy tongue cracks, witness the fluid mound,<br/>
+Rear&rsquo;d by thy belly up before thine eyes,<br/>
+A mass corrupt.&rdquo; To whom the coiner thus:<br/>
+&ldquo;Thy mouth gapes wide as ever to let pass<br/>
+Its evil saying. Me if thirst assails,<br/>
+Yet I am stuff&rsquo;d with moisture. Thou art parch&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Pains rack thy head, no urging would&rsquo;st thou need<br/>
+To make thee lap Narcissus&rsquo; mirror up.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I was all fix&rsquo;d to listen, when my guide<br/>
+Admonish&rsquo;d: &ldquo;Now beware: a little more.<br/>
+And I do quarrel with thee.&rdquo; I perceiv&rsquo;d<br/>
+How angrily he spake, and towards him turn&rsquo;d<br/>
+With shame so poignant, as remember&rsquo;d yet<br/>
+Confounds me. As a man that dreams of harm<br/>
+Befall&rsquo;n him, dreaming wishes it a dream,<br/>
+And that which is, desires as if it were not,<br/>
+Such then was I, who wanting power to speak<br/>
+Wish&rsquo;d to excuse myself, and all the while<br/>
+Excus&rsquo;d me, though unweeting that I did.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;More grievous fault than thine has been, less shame,&rdquo;<br/>
+My master cried, &ldquo;might expiate. Therefore cast<br/>
+All sorrow from thy soul; and if again<br/>
+Chance bring thee, where like conference is held,<br/>
+Think I am ever at thy side. To hear<br/>
+Such wrangling is a joy for vulgar minds.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoI.XXXI"></a>CANTO XXXI</h2>
+
+<p>
+The very tongue, whose keen reproof before<br/>
+Had wounded me, that either cheek was stain&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Now minister&rsquo;d my cure. So have I heard,<br/>
+Achilles and his father&rsquo;s javelin caus&rsquo;d<br/>
+Pain first, and then the boon of health restor&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Turning our back upon the vale of woe,<br/>
+W cross&rsquo;d th&rsquo; encircled mound in silence. There<br/>
+Was twilight dim, that far long the gloom<br/>
+Mine eye advanc&rsquo;d not: but I heard a horn<br/>
+Sounded aloud. The peal it blew had made<br/>
+The thunder feeble. Following its course<br/>
+The adverse way, my strained eyes were bent<br/>
+On that one spot. So terrible a blast<br/>
+Orlando blew not, when that dismal rout<br/>
+O&rsquo;erthrew the host of Charlemagne, and quench&rsquo;d<br/>
+His saintly warfare. Thitherward not long<br/>
+My head was rais&rsquo;d, when many lofty towers<br/>
+Methought I spied. &ldquo;Master,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;what land<br/>
+Is this?&rdquo; He answer&rsquo;d straight: &ldquo;Too long a space<br/>
+Of intervening darkness has thine eye<br/>
+To traverse: thou hast therefore widely err&rsquo;d<br/>
+In thy imagining. Thither arriv&rsquo;d<br/>
+Thou well shalt see, how distance can delude<br/>
+The sense. A little therefore urge thee on.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then tenderly he caught me by the hand;<br/>
+&ldquo;Yet know,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;ere farther we advance,<br/>
+That it less strange may seem, these are not towers,<br/>
+But giants. In the pit they stand immers&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Each from his navel downward, round the bank.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As when a fog disperseth gradually,<br/>
+Our vision traces what the mist involves<br/>
+Condens&rsquo;d in air; so piercing through the gross<br/>
+And gloomy atmosphere, as more and more<br/>
+We near&rsquo;d toward the brink, mine error fled,<br/>
+And fear came o&rsquo;er me. As with circling round<br/>
+Of turrets, Montereggion crowns his walls,<br/>
+E&rsquo;en thus the shore, encompassing th&rsquo; abyss,<br/>
+Was turreted with giants, half their length<br/>
+Uprearing, horrible, whom Jove from heav&rsquo;n<br/>
+Yet threatens, when his mutt&rsquo;ring thunder rolls.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of one already I descried the face,<br/>
+Shoulders, and breast, and of the belly huge<br/>
+Great part, and both arms down along his ribs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All-teeming nature, when her plastic hand<br/>
+Left framing of these monsters, did display<br/>
+Past doubt her wisdom, taking from mad War<br/>
+Such slaves to do his bidding; and if she<br/>
+Repent her not of th&rsquo; elephant and whale,<br/>
+Who ponders well confesses her therein<br/>
+Wiser and more discreet; for when brute force<br/>
+And evil will are back&rsquo;d with subtlety,<br/>
+Resistance none avails. His visage seem&rsquo;d<br/>
+In length and bulk, as doth the pine, that tops<br/>
+Saint Peter&rsquo;s Roman fane; and th&rsquo; other bones<br/>
+Of like proportion, so that from above<br/>
+The bank, which girdled him below, such height<br/>
+Arose his stature, that three Friezelanders<br/>
+Had striv&rsquo;n in vain to reach but to his hair.<br/>
+Full thirty ample palms was he expos&rsquo;d<br/>
+Downward from whence a man his garments loops.<br/>
+&ldquo;Raphel bai ameth sabi almi,&rdquo;<br/>
+So shouted his fierce lips, which sweeter hymns<br/>
+Became not; and my guide address&rsquo;d him thus:<br/>
+&ldquo;O senseless spirit! let thy horn for thee<br/>
+Interpret: therewith vent thy rage, if rage<br/>
+Or other passion wring thee. Search thy neck,<br/>
+There shalt thou find the belt that binds it on.<br/>
+Wild spirit! lo, upon thy mighty breast<br/>
+Where hangs the baldrick!&rdquo; Then to me he spake:<br/>
+&ldquo;He doth accuse himself. Nimrod is this,<br/>
+Through whose ill counsel in the world no more<br/>
+One tongue prevails. But pass we on, nor waste<br/>
+Our words; for so each language is to him,<br/>
+As his to others, understood by none.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then to the leftward turning sped we forth,<br/>
+And at a sling&rsquo;s throw found another shade<br/>
+Far fiercer and more huge. I cannot say<br/>
+What master hand had girt him; but he held<br/>
+Behind the right arm fetter&rsquo;d, and before<br/>
+The other with a chain, that fasten&rsquo;d him<br/>
+From the neck down, and five times round his form<br/>
+Apparent met the wreathed links. &ldquo;This proud one<br/>
+Would of his strength against almighty Jove<br/>
+Make trial,&rdquo; said my guide; &ldquo;whence he is thus<br/>
+Requited: Ephialtes him they call.<br/>
+Great was his prowess, when the giants brought<br/>
+Fear on the gods: those arms, which then he piled,<br/>
+Now moves he never.&rdquo; Forthwith I return&rsquo;d:<br/>
+&ldquo;Fain would I, if &rsquo;twere possible, mine eyes<br/>
+Of Briareus immeasurable gain&rsquo;d<br/>
+Experience next.&rdquo; He answer&rsquo;d: &ldquo;Thou shalt see<br/>
+Not far from hence Antaeus, who both speaks<br/>
+And is unfetter&rsquo;d, who shall place us there<br/>
+Where guilt is at its depth. Far onward stands<br/>
+Whom thou wouldst fain behold, in chains, and made<br/>
+Like to this spirit, save that in his looks<br/>
+More fell he seems.&rdquo; By violent earthquake rock&rsquo;d<br/>
+Ne&rsquo;er shook a tow&rsquo;r, so reeling to its base,<br/>
+As Ephialtes. More than ever then<br/>
+I dreaded death, nor than the terror more<br/>
+Had needed, if I had not seen the cords<br/>
+That held him fast. We, straightway journeying on,<br/>
+Came to Antaeus, who five ells complete<br/>
+Without the head, forth issued from the cave.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;O thou, who in the fortunate vale, that made<br/>
+Great Scipio heir of glory, when his sword<br/>
+Drove back the troop of Hannibal in flight,<br/>
+Who thence of old didst carry for thy spoil<br/>
+An hundred lions; and if thou hadst fought<br/>
+In the high conflict on thy brethren&rsquo;s side,<br/>
+Seems as men yet believ&rsquo;d, that through thine arm<br/>
+The sons of earth had conquer&rsquo;d, now vouchsafe<br/>
+To place us down beneath, where numbing cold<br/>
+Locks up Cocytus. Force not that we crave<br/>
+Or Tityus&rsquo; help or Typhon&rsquo;s. Here is one<br/>
+Can give what in this realm ye covet. Stoop<br/>
+Therefore, nor scornfully distort thy lip.<br/>
+He in the upper world can yet bestow<br/>
+Renown on thee, for he doth live, and looks<br/>
+For life yet longer, if before the time<br/>
+Grace call him not unto herself.&rdquo; Thus spake<br/>
+The teacher. He in haste forth stretch&rsquo;d his hands,<br/>
+And caught my guide. Alcides whilom felt<br/>
+That grapple straighten&rsquo;d score. Soon as my guide<br/>
+Had felt it, he bespake me thus: &ldquo;This way<br/>
+That I may clasp thee;&rdquo; then so caught me up,<br/>
+That we were both one burden. As appears<br/>
+The tower of Carisenda, from beneath<br/>
+Where it doth lean, if chance a passing cloud<br/>
+So sail across, that opposite it hangs,<br/>
+Such then Antaeus seem&rsquo;d, as at mine ease<br/>
+I mark&rsquo;d him stooping. I were fain at times<br/>
+T&rsquo; have pass&rsquo;d another way. Yet in th&rsquo; abyss,<br/>
+That Lucifer with Judas low ingulfs,<br/>
+I,ightly he plac&rsquo;d us; nor there leaning stay&rsquo;d,<br/>
+But rose as in a bark the stately mast.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoI.XXXII"></a>CANTO XXXII</h2>
+
+<p>
+Could I command rough rhimes and hoarse, to suit<br/>
+That hole of sorrow, o&rsquo;er which ev&rsquo;ry rock<br/>
+His firm abutment rears, then might the vein<br/>
+Of fancy rise full springing: but not mine<br/>
+Such measures, and with falt&rsquo;ring awe I touch<br/>
+The mighty theme; for to describe the depth<br/>
+Of all the universe, is no emprize<br/>
+To jest with, and demands a tongue not us&rsquo;d<br/>
+To infant babbling. But let them assist<br/>
+My song, the tuneful maidens, by whose aid<br/>
+Amphion wall&rsquo;d in Thebes, so with the truth<br/>
+My speech shall best accord. Oh ill-starr&rsquo;d folk,<br/>
+Beyond all others wretched! who abide<br/>
+In such a mansion, as scarce thought finds words<br/>
+To speak of, better had ye here on earth<br/>
+Been flocks or mountain goats. As down we stood<br/>
+In the dark pit beneath the giants&rsquo; feet,<br/>
+But lower far than they, and I did gaze<br/>
+Still on the lofty battlement, a voice<br/>
+Bespoke me thus: &ldquo;Look how thou walkest. Take<br/>
+Good heed, thy soles do tread not on the heads<br/>
+Of thy poor brethren.&rdquo; Thereupon I turn&rsquo;d,<br/>
+And saw before and underneath my feet<br/>
+A lake, whose frozen surface liker seem&rsquo;d<br/>
+To glass than water. Not so thick a veil<br/>
+In winter e&rsquo;er hath Austrian Danube spread<br/>
+O&rsquo;er his still course, nor Tanais far remote<br/>
+Under the chilling sky. Roll&rsquo;d o&rsquo;er that mass<br/>
+Had Tabernich or Pietrapana fall&rsquo;n,<br/>
+Not e&rsquo;en its rim had creak&rsquo;d. As peeps the frog<br/>
+Croaking above the wave, what time in dreams<br/>
+The village gleaner oft pursues her toil,<br/>
+So, to where modest shame appears, thus low<br/>
+Blue pinch&rsquo;d and shrin&rsquo;d in ice the spirits stood,<br/>
+Moving their teeth in shrill note like the stork.<br/>
+His face each downward held; their mouth the cold,<br/>
+Their eyes express&rsquo;d the dolour of their heart.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A space I look&rsquo;d around, then at my feet<br/>
+Saw two so strictly join&rsquo;d, that of their head<br/>
+The very hairs were mingled. &ldquo;Tell me ye,<br/>
+Whose bosoms thus together press,&rdquo; said I,<br/>
+&ldquo;Who are ye?&rdquo; At that sound their necks they bent,<br/>
+And when their looks were lifted up to me,<br/>
+Straightway their eyes, before all moist within,<br/>
+Distill&rsquo;d upon their lips, and the frost bound<br/>
+The tears betwixt those orbs and held them there.<br/>
+Plank unto plank hath never cramp clos&rsquo;d up<br/>
+So stoutly. Whence like two enraged goats<br/>
+They clash&rsquo;d together; them such fury seiz&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And one, from whom the cold both ears had reft,<br/>
+Exclaim&rsquo;d, still looking downward: &ldquo;Why on us<br/>
+Dost speculate so long? If thou wouldst know<br/>
+Who are these two, the valley, whence his wave<br/>
+Bisenzio slopes, did for its master own<br/>
+Their sire Alberto, and next him themselves.<br/>
+They from one body issued; and throughout<br/>
+Caina thou mayst search, nor find a shade<br/>
+More worthy in congealment to be fix&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Not him, whose breast and shadow Arthur&rsquo;s land<br/>
+At that one blow dissever&rsquo;d, not Focaccia,<br/>
+No not this spirit, whose o&rsquo;erjutting head<br/>
+Obstructs my onward view: he bore the name<br/>
+Of Mascheroni: Tuscan if thou be,<br/>
+Well knowest who he was: and to cut short<br/>
+All further question, in my form behold<br/>
+What once was Camiccione. I await<br/>
+Carlino here my kinsman, whose deep guilt<br/>
+Shall wash out mine.&rdquo; A thousand visages<br/>
+Then mark&rsquo;d I, which the keen and eager cold<br/>
+Had shap&rsquo;d into a doggish grin; whence creeps<br/>
+A shiv&rsquo;ring horror o&rsquo;er me, at the thought<br/>
+Of those frore shallows. While we journey&rsquo;d on<br/>
+Toward the middle, at whose point unites<br/>
+All heavy substance, and I trembling went<br/>
+Through that eternal chillness, I know not<br/>
+If will it were or destiny, or chance,<br/>
+But, passing &rsquo;midst the heads, my foot did strike<br/>
+With violent blow against the face of one.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Wherefore dost bruise me?&rdquo; weeping, he exclaim&rsquo;d,<br/>
+&ldquo;Unless thy errand be some fresh revenge<br/>
+For Montaperto, wherefore troublest me?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I thus: &ldquo;Instructor, now await me here,<br/>
+That I through him may rid me of my doubt.<br/>
+Thenceforth what haste thou wilt.&rdquo; The teacher paus&rsquo;d,<br/>
+And to that shade I spake, who bitterly<br/>
+Still curs&rsquo;d me in his wrath. &ldquo;What art thou, speak,<br/>
+That railest thus on others?&rdquo; He replied:<br/>
+&ldquo;Now who art thou, that smiting others&rsquo; cheeks<br/>
+Through Antenora roamest, with such force<br/>
+As were past suff&rsquo;rance, wert thou living still?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And I am living, to thy joy perchance,&rdquo;<br/>
+Was my reply, &ldquo;if fame be dear to thee,<br/>
+That with the rest I may thy name enrol.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The contrary of what I covet most,&rdquo;<br/>
+Said he, &ldquo;thou tender&rsquo;st: hence; nor vex me more.<br/>
+Ill knowest thou to flatter in this vale.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then seizing on his hinder scalp, I cried:<br/>
+&ldquo;Name thee, or not a hair shall tarry here.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Rend all away,&rdquo; he answer&rsquo;d, &ldquo;yet for that<br/>
+I will not tell nor show thee who I am,<br/>
+Though at my head thou pluck a thousand times.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now I had grasp&rsquo;d his tresses, and stript off<br/>
+More than one tuft, he barking, with his eyes<br/>
+Drawn in and downward, when another cried,<br/>
+&ldquo;What ails thee, Bocca? Sound not loud enough<br/>
+Thy chatt&rsquo;ring teeth, but thou must bark outright?<br/>
+What devil wrings thee?&rdquo;&mdash;&rdquo; Now,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;be
+dumb,<br/>
+Accursed traitor! to thy shame of thee<br/>
+True tidings will I bear.&rdquo;&mdash;&rdquo; Off,&rdquo; he replied,<br/>
+&ldquo;Tell what thou list; but as thou escape from hence<br/>
+To speak of him whose tongue hath been so glib,<br/>
+Forget not: here he wails the Frenchman&rsquo;s gold.<br/>
+&lsquo;Him of Duera,&rsquo; thou canst say, &lsquo;I mark&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Where the starv&rsquo;d sinners pine.&rsquo; If thou be ask&rsquo;d<br/>
+What other shade was with them, at thy side<br/>
+Is Beccaria, whose red gorge distain&rsquo;d<br/>
+The biting axe of Florence. Farther on,<br/>
+If I misdeem not, Soldanieri bides,<br/>
+With Ganellon, and Tribaldello, him<br/>
+Who op&rsquo;d Faenza when the people slept.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We now had left him, passing on our way,<br/>
+When I beheld two spirits by the ice<br/>
+Pent in one hollow, that the head of one<br/>
+Was cowl unto the other; and as bread<br/>
+Is raven&rsquo;d up through hunger, th&rsquo; uppermost<br/>
+Did so apply his fangs to th&rsquo; other&rsquo;s brain,<br/>
+Where the spine joins it. Not more furiously<br/>
+On Menalippus&rsquo; temples Tydeus gnaw&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Than on that skull and on its garbage he.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;O thou who show&rsquo;st so beastly sign of hate<br/>
+&rsquo;Gainst him thou prey&rsquo;st on, let me hear,&rdquo; said I<br/>
+&ldquo;The cause, on such condition, that if right<br/>
+Warrant thy grievance, knowing who ye are,<br/>
+And what the colour of his sinning was,<br/>
+I may repay thee in the world above,<br/>
+If that, wherewith I speak be moist so long.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoI.XXXIII"></a>CANTO XXXIII</h2>
+
+<p>
+His jaws uplifting from their fell repast,<br/>
+That sinner wip&rsquo;d them on the hairs o&rsquo; th&rsquo; head,<br/>
+Which he behind had mangled, then began:<br/>
+&ldquo;Thy will obeying, I call up afresh<br/>
+Sorrow past cure, which but to think of wrings<br/>
+My heart, or ere I tell on&rsquo;t. But if words,<br/>
+That I may utter, shall prove seed to bear<br/>
+Fruit of eternal infamy to him,<br/>
+The traitor whom I gnaw at, thou at once<br/>
+Shalt see me speak and weep. Who thou mayst be<br/>
+I know not, nor how here below art come:<br/>
+But Florentine thou seemest of a truth,<br/>
+When I do hear thee. Know I was on earth<br/>
+Count Ugolino, and th&rsquo; Archbishop he<br/>
+Ruggieri. Why I neighbour him so close,<br/>
+Now list. That through effect of his ill thoughts<br/>
+In him my trust reposing, I was ta&rsquo;en<br/>
+And after murder&rsquo;d, need is not I tell.<br/>
+What therefore thou canst not have heard, that is,<br/>
+How cruel was the murder, shalt thou hear,<br/>
+And know if he have wrong&rsquo;d me. A small grate<br/>
+Within that mew, which for my sake the name<br/>
+Of famine bears, where others yet must pine,<br/>
+Already through its opening sev&rsquo;ral moons<br/>
+Had shown me, when I slept the evil sleep,<br/>
+That from the future tore the curtain off.<br/>
+This one, methought, as master of the sport,<br/>
+Rode forth to chase the gaunt wolf and his whelps<br/>
+Unto the mountain, which forbids the sight<br/>
+Of Lucca to the Pisan. With lean brachs<br/>
+Inquisitive and keen, before him rang&rsquo;d<br/>
+Lanfranchi with Sismondi and Gualandi.<br/>
+After short course the father and the sons<br/>
+Seem&rsquo;d tir&rsquo;d and lagging, and methought I saw<br/>
+The sharp tusks gore their sides. When I awoke<br/>
+Before the dawn, amid their sleep I heard<br/>
+My sons (for they were with me) weep and ask<br/>
+For bread. Right cruel art thou, if no pang<br/>
+Thou feel at thinking what my heart foretold;<br/>
+And if not now, why use thy tears to flow?<br/>
+Now had they waken&rsquo;d; and the hour drew near<br/>
+When they were wont to bring us food; the mind<br/>
+Of each misgave him through his dream, and I<br/>
+Heard, at its outlet underneath lock&rsquo;d up<br/>
+The&rsquo; horrible tower: whence uttering not a word<br/>
+I look&rsquo;d upon the visage of my sons.<br/>
+I wept not: so all stone I felt within.<br/>
+They wept: and one, my little Anslem, cried:<br/>
+&ldquo;Thou lookest so! Father what ails thee?&rdquo; Yet<br/>
+I shed no tear, nor answer&rsquo;d all that day<br/>
+Nor the next night, until another sun<br/>
+Came out upon the world. When a faint beam<br/>
+Had to our doleful prison made its way,<br/>
+And in four countenances I descry&rsquo;d<br/>
+The image of my own, on either hand<br/>
+Through agony I bit, and they who thought<br/>
+I did it through desire of feeding, rose<br/>
+O&rsquo; th&rsquo; sudden, and cried, &lsquo;Father, we should grieve<br/>
+Far less, if thou wouldst eat of us: thou gav&rsquo;st<br/>
+These weeds of miserable flesh we wear,<br/>
+And do thou strip them off from us again.&rsquo;<br/>
+Then, not to make them sadder, I kept down<br/>
+My spirit in stillness. That day and the next<br/>
+We all were silent. Ah, obdurate earth!<br/>
+Why open&rsquo;dst not upon us? When we came<br/>
+To the fourth day, then Geddo at my feet<br/>
+Outstretch&rsquo;d did fling him, crying, &lsquo;Hast no help<br/>
+For me, my father!&rsquo; &ldquo;There he died, and e&rsquo;en<br/>
+Plainly as thou seest me, saw I the three<br/>
+Fall one by one &rsquo;twixt the fifth day and sixth:<br/>
+Whence I betook me now grown blind to grope<br/>
+Over them all, and for three days aloud<br/>
+Call&rsquo;d on them who were dead. Then fasting got<br/>
+The mastery of grief.&rdquo; Thus having spoke,<br/>
+Once more upon the wretched skull his teeth<br/>
+He fasten&rsquo;d, like a mastiff&rsquo;s &rsquo;gainst the bone<br/>
+Firm and unyielding. Oh thou Pisa! shame<br/>
+Of all the people, who their dwelling make<br/>
+In that fair region, where th&rsquo; Italian voice<br/>
+Is heard, since that thy neighbours are so slack<br/>
+To punish, from their deep foundations rise<br/>
+Capraia and Gorgona, and dam up<br/>
+The mouth of Arno, that each soul in thee<br/>
+May perish in the waters! What if fame<br/>
+Reported that thy castles were betray&rsquo;d<br/>
+By Ugolino, yet no right hadst thou<br/>
+To stretch his children on the rack. For them,<br/>
+Brigata, Ugaccione, and the pair<br/>
+Of gentle ones, of whom my song hath told,<br/>
+Their tender years, thou modern Thebes! did make<br/>
+Uncapable of guilt. Onward we pass&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Where others skarf&rsquo;d in rugged folds of ice<br/>
+Not on their feet were turn&rsquo;d, but each revers&rsquo;d
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There very weeping suffers not to weep;<br/>
+For at their eyes grief seeking passage finds<br/>
+Impediment, and rolling inward turns<br/>
+For increase of sharp anguish: the first tears<br/>
+Hang cluster&rsquo;d, and like crystal vizors show,<br/>
+Under the socket brimming all the cup.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now though the cold had from my face dislodg&rsquo;d<br/>
+Each feeling, as &rsquo;twere callous, yet me seem&rsquo;d<br/>
+Some breath of wind I felt. &ldquo;Whence cometh this,&rdquo;<br/>
+Said I, &ldquo;my master? Is not here below<br/>
+All vapour quench&rsquo;d?&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;&lsquo;Thou shalt be
+speedily,&rdquo;<br/>
+He answer&rsquo;d, &ldquo;where thine eye shall tell thee whence<br/>
+The cause descrying of this airy shower.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then cried out one in the chill crust who mourn&rsquo;d:<br/>
+&ldquo;O souls so cruel! that the farthest post<br/>
+Hath been assign&rsquo;d you, from this face remove<br/>
+The harden&rsquo;d veil, that I may vent the grief<br/>
+Impregnate at my heart, some little space<br/>
+Ere it congeal again!&rdquo; I thus replied:<br/>
+&ldquo;Say who thou wast, if thou wouldst have mine aid;<br/>
+And if I extricate thee not, far down<br/>
+As to the lowest ice may I descend!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The friar Alberigo,&rdquo; answered he,<br/>
+&ldquo;Am I, who from the evil garden pluck&rsquo;d<br/>
+Its fruitage, and am here repaid, the date<br/>
+More luscious for my fig.&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;Hah!&rdquo; I
+exclaim&rsquo;d,<br/>
+&ldquo;Art thou too dead!&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;How in the world aloft<br/>
+It fareth with my body,&rdquo; answer&rsquo;d he,<br/>
+&ldquo;I am right ignorant. Such privilege<br/>
+Hath Ptolomea, that ofttimes the soul<br/>
+Drops hither, ere by Atropos divorc&rsquo;d.<br/>
+And that thou mayst wipe out more willingly<br/>
+The glazed tear-drops that o&rsquo;erlay mine eyes,<br/>
+Know that the soul, that moment she betrays,<br/>
+As I did, yields her body to a fiend<br/>
+Who after moves and governs it at will,<br/>
+Till all its time be rounded; headlong she<br/>
+Falls to this cistern. And perchance above<br/>
+Doth yet appear the body of a ghost,<br/>
+Who here behind me winters. Him thou know&rsquo;st,<br/>
+If thou but newly art arriv&rsquo;d below.<br/>
+The years are many that have pass&rsquo;d away,<br/>
+Since to this fastness Branca Doria came.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now,&rdquo; answer&rsquo;d I, &ldquo;methinks thou mockest me,<br/>
+For Branca Doria never yet hath died,<br/>
+But doth all natural functions of a man,<br/>
+Eats, drinks, and sleeps, and putteth raiment on.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He thus: &ldquo;Not yet unto that upper foss<br/>
+By th&rsquo; evil talons guarded, where the pitch<br/>
+Tenacious boils, had Michael Zanche reach&rsquo;d,<br/>
+When this one left a demon in his stead<br/>
+In his own body, and of one his kin,<br/>
+Who with him treachery wrought. But now put forth<br/>
+Thy hand, and ope mine eyes.&rdquo; I op&rsquo;d them not.<br/>
+Ill manners were best courtesy to him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ah Genoese! men perverse in every way,<br/>
+With every foulness stain&rsquo;d, why from the earth<br/>
+Are ye not cancel&rsquo;d? Such an one of yours<br/>
+I with Romagna&rsquo;s darkest spirit found,<br/>
+As for his doings even now in soul<br/>
+Is in Cocytus plung&rsquo;d, and yet doth seem<br/>
+In body still alive upon the earth.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoI.XXXIV"></a>CANTO XXXIV</h2>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The banners of Hell&rsquo;s Monarch do come forth<br/>
+Towards us; therefore look,&rdquo; so spake my guide,<br/>
+&ldquo;If thou discern him.&rdquo; As, when breathes a cloud<br/>
+Heavy and dense, or when the shades of night<br/>
+Fall on our hemisphere, seems view&rsquo;d from far<br/>
+A windmill, which the blast stirs briskly round,<br/>
+Such was the fabric then methought I saw,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To shield me from the wind, forthwith I drew<br/>
+Behind my guide: no covert else was there.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now came I (and with fear I bid my strain<br/>
+Record the marvel) where the souls were all<br/>
+Whelm&rsquo;d underneath, transparent, as through glass<br/>
+Pellucid the frail stem. Some prone were laid,<br/>
+Others stood upright, this upon the soles,<br/>
+That on his head, a third with face to feet<br/>
+Arch&rsquo;d like a bow. When to the point we came,<br/>
+Whereat my guide was pleas&rsquo;d that I should see<br/>
+The creature eminent in beauty once,<br/>
+He from before me stepp&rsquo;d and made me pause.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Lo!&rdquo; he exclaim&rsquo;d, &ldquo;lo Dis! and lo the place,<br/>
+Where thou hast need to arm thy heart with strength.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+How frozen and how faint I then became,<br/>
+Ask me not, reader! for I write it not,<br/>
+Since words would fail to tell thee of my state.<br/>
+I was not dead nor living. Think thyself<br/>
+If quick conception work in thee at all,<br/>
+How I did feel. That emperor, who sways<br/>
+The realm of sorrow, at mid breast from th&rsquo; ice<br/>
+Stood forth; and I in stature am more like<br/>
+A giant, than the giants are in his arms.<br/>
+Mark now how great that whole must be, which suits<br/>
+With such a part. If he were beautiful<br/>
+As he is hideous now, and yet did dare<br/>
+To scowl upon his Maker, well from him<br/>
+May all our mis&rsquo;ry flow. Oh what a sight!<br/>
+How passing strange it seem&rsquo;d, when I did spy<br/>
+Upon his head three faces: one in front<br/>
+Of hue vermilion, th&rsquo; other two with this<br/>
+Midway each shoulder join&rsquo;d and at the crest;<br/>
+The right &rsquo;twixt wan and yellow seem&rsquo;d: the left<br/>
+To look on, such as come from whence old Nile<br/>
+Stoops to the lowlands. Under each shot forth<br/>
+Two mighty wings, enormous as became<br/>
+A bird so vast. Sails never such I saw<br/>
+Outstretch&rsquo;d on the wide sea. No plumes had they,<br/>
+But were in texture like a bat, and these<br/>
+He flapp&rsquo;d i&rsquo; th&rsquo; air, that from him issued still<br/>
+Three winds, wherewith Cocytus to its depth<br/>
+Was frozen. At six eyes he wept: the tears<br/>
+Adown three chins distill&rsquo;d with bloody foam.<br/>
+At every mouth his teeth a sinner champ&rsquo;d<br/>
+Bruis&rsquo;d as with pond&rsquo;rous engine, so that three<br/>
+Were in this guise tormented. But far more<br/>
+Than from that gnawing, was the foremost pang&rsquo;d<br/>
+By the fierce rending, whence ofttimes the back<br/>
+Was stript of all its skin. &ldquo;That upper spirit,<br/>
+Who hath worse punishment,&rdquo; so spake my guide,<br/>
+&ldquo;Is Judas, he that hath his head within<br/>
+And plies the feet without. Of th&rsquo; other two,<br/>
+Whose heads are under, from the murky jaw<br/>
+Who hangs, is Brutus: lo! how he doth writhe<br/>
+And speaks not! Th&rsquo; other Cassius, that appears<br/>
+So large of limb. But night now re-ascends,<br/>
+And it is time for parting. All is seen.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I clipp&rsquo;d him round the neck, for so he bade;<br/>
+And noting time and place, he, when the wings<br/>
+Enough were op&rsquo;d, caught fast the shaggy sides,<br/>
+And down from pile to pile descending stepp&rsquo;d<br/>
+Between the thick fell and the jagged ice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Soon as he reach&rsquo;d the point, whereat the thigh<br/>
+Upon the swelling of the haunches turns,<br/>
+My leader there with pain and struggling hard<br/>
+Turn&rsquo;d round his head, where his feet stood before,<br/>
+And grappled at the fell, as one who mounts,<br/>
+That into hell methought we turn&rsquo;d again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Expect that by such stairs as these,&rdquo; thus spake<br/>
+The teacher, panting like a man forespent,<br/>
+&ldquo;We must depart from evil so extreme.&rdquo;<br/>
+Then at a rocky opening issued forth,<br/>
+And plac&rsquo;d me on a brink to sit, next join&rsquo;d<br/>
+With wary step my side. I rais&rsquo;d mine eyes,<br/>
+Believing that I Lucifer should see<br/>
+Where he was lately left, but saw him now<br/>
+With legs held upward. Let the grosser sort,<br/>
+Who see not what the point was I had pass&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Bethink them if sore toil oppress&rsquo;d me then.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Arise,&rdquo; my master cried, &ldquo;upon thy feet.<br/>
+&ldquo;The way is long, and much uncouth the road;<br/>
+And now within one hour and half of noon<br/>
+The sun returns.&rdquo; It was no palace-hall<br/>
+Lofty and luminous wherein we stood,<br/>
+But natural dungeon where ill footing was<br/>
+And scant supply of light. &ldquo;Ere from th&rsquo; abyss<br/>
+I sep&rsquo;rate,&rdquo; thus when risen I began,<br/>
+&ldquo;My guide! vouchsafe few words to set me free<br/>
+From error&rsquo;s thralldom. Where is now the ice?<br/>
+How standeth he in posture thus revers&rsquo;d?<br/>
+And how from eve to morn in space so brief<br/>
+Hath the sun made his transit?&rdquo; He in few<br/>
+Thus answering spake: &ldquo;Thou deemest thou art still<br/>
+On th&rsquo; other side the centre, where I grasp&rsquo;d<br/>
+Th&rsquo; abhorred worm, that boreth through the world.<br/>
+Thou wast on th&rsquo; other side, so long as I<br/>
+Descended; when I turn&rsquo;d, thou didst o&rsquo;erpass<br/>
+That point, to which from ev&rsquo;ry part is dragg&rsquo;d<br/>
+All heavy substance. Thou art now arriv&rsquo;d<br/>
+Under the hemisphere opposed to that,<br/>
+Which the great continent doth overspread,<br/>
+And underneath whose canopy expir&rsquo;d<br/>
+The Man, that was born sinless, and so liv&rsquo;d.<br/>
+Thy feet are planted on the smallest sphere,<br/>
+Whose other aspect is Judecca. Morn<br/>
+Here rises, when there evening sets: and he,<br/>
+Whose shaggy pile was scal&rsquo;d, yet standeth fix&rsquo;d,<br/>
+As at the first. On this part he fell down<br/>
+From heav&rsquo;n; and th&rsquo; earth, here prominent before,<br/>
+Through fear of him did veil her with the sea,<br/>
+And to our hemisphere retir&rsquo;d. Perchance<br/>
+To shun him was the vacant space left here<br/>
+By what of firm land on this side appears,<br/>
+That sprang aloof.&rdquo; There is a place beneath,<br/>
+From Belzebub as distant, as extends<br/>
+The vaulted tomb, discover&rsquo;d not by sight,<br/>
+But by the sound of brooklet, that descends<br/>
+This way along the hollow of a rock,<br/>
+Which, as it winds with no precipitous course,<br/>
+The wave hath eaten. By that hidden way<br/>
+My guide and I did enter, to return<br/>
+To the fair world: and heedless of repose<br/>
+We climbed, he first, I following his steps,<br/>
+Till on our view the beautiful lights of heav&rsquo;n<br/>
+Dawn, through a circular opening in the cave:<br/>
+Thus issuing we again beheld the stars.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="notes01"></a>NOTES TO HELL</h2>
+
+<h5>CANTO I</h5>
+
+<p>
+Verse 1. In the midway.] That the era of the Poem is intended by these words to
+be fixed to the thirty fifth year of the poet&rsquo;s age, A.D. 1300, will
+appear more plainly in Canto XXI. where that date is explicitly marked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 16. That planet&rsquo;s beam.] The sun.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 29. The hinder foot.] It is to be remembered, that in ascending a hill the
+weight of the body rests on the hinder foot.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 30. A panther.] Pleasure or luxury.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 36. With those stars.] The sun was in Aries, in which sign he supposes it to
+have begun its course at the creation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 43. A lion.] Pride or ambition.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 45. A she wolf.] Avarice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 56. Where the sun in silence rests.] Hence Milton appears to have taken his
+idea in the Samson Agonistes:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+        The sun to me is dark
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          And silent as the moon, &amp;c<br/>
+The same metaphor will recur, Canto V. v. 29.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Into a place I came
+</p>
+
+<p>
+  Where light was silent all.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 65. When the power of Julius.] This is explained by the commentators to mean
+&ldquo;Although it was rather late with respect to my birth before Julius
+Caesar assumed the supreme authority, and made himself perpetual
+dictator.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 98. That greyhound.] This passage is intended as an eulogium on the liberal
+spirit of his Veronese patron Can Grande della Scala.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 102. &rsquo;Twizt either Feltro.] Verona, the country of Can della Scala, is
+situated between Feltro, a city in the Marca Trivigiana, and Monte Feltro, a
+city in the territory of Urbino.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 103. Italia&rsquo;s plains.] &ldquo;Umile Italia,&rdquo; from Virgil, Aen
+lib.<br/>
+iii. 522.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Humilemque videmus
+</p>
+
+<p>
+  Italiam.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 115. Content in fire.] The spirits in Purgatory.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 118. A spirit worthier.] Beatrice, who conducts the Poet through Paradise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 130. Saint Peter&rsquo;s gate.] The gate of Purgatory, which the Poet feigns
+to be guarded by an angel placed on that station by St. Peter.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO II</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 1. Now was the day.] A compendium of Virgil&rsquo;s description Aen. lib. iv
+522. Nox erat, &amp;c. Compare Apollonius Rhodius, lib iii. 744, and lib. iv.
+1058
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 8. O mind.]
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   O thought that write all that I met,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   And in the tresorie it set
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Of my braine, now shall men see
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   If any virtue in thee be.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          Chaucer. Temple of Fame, b. ii. v.18
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 14. Silvius&rsquo;sire.] Aeneas.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 30. The chosen vessel.] St.Paul, Acts, c. ix. v. 15. &ldquo;But the Lord
+said unto him, Go thy way; for he is a chosen vessel unto me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 46. Thy soul.] L&rsquo;anima tua e da viltate offesa. So in Berni, Orl
+Inn.lib. iii. c. i. st. 53. Se l&rsquo;alma avete offesa da viltate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 64. Who rest suspended.] The spirits in Limbo, neither admitted to a state
+of glory nor doomed to punishment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 61. A friend not of my fortune, but myself.] Se non fortunae sed hominibus
+solere esse amicum. Cornelii Nepotis Attici Vitae, c. ix.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 78. Whatever is contain&rsquo;d.] Every other thing comprised within the
+lunar heaven, which, being the lowest of all, has the smallest circle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 93. A blessed dame.] The divine mercy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 97. Lucia.] The enlightening grace of heaven.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 124. Three maids.] The divine mercy, Lucia, and Beatrice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 127. As florets.] This simile is well translated by Chaucer&mdash; But right
+as floures through the cold of night Iclosed, stoupen in her stalkes lowe,
+Redressen hem agen the sunne bright, And speden in her kinde course by rowe,
+&amp;c. Troilus and Creseide, b.ii. It has been imitated by many others, among
+whom see Berni, Orl.Inn. Iib. 1. c. xii. st. 86. Marino, Adone, c. xvii. st.
+63. and Sor. &ldquo;Donna vestita di nero.&rdquo; and Spenser&rsquo;s Faery
+Queen, b.4. c. xii. st. 34. and b. 6 c. ii. st. 35.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO III</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 5. Power divine Supremest wisdom, and primeval love.] The three persons of
+the blessed Trinity. v. 9. all hope abandoned.] Lasciate ogni speranza voi
+ch&rsquo;entrate. So Berni, Orl. Inn. lib. i. c. 8. st. 53. Lascia pur della
+vita ogni speranza.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 29. Like to the sand.]
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          Unnumber&rsquo;d as the sands
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Of Barca or Cyrene&rsquo;s torrid soil
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Levied to side with warring winds, and poise
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Their lighter wings.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          Milton, P. L. ii. 908.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 40. Lest th&rsquo; accursed tribe.] Lest the rebellious angels should exult
+at seeing those who were neutral and therefore less guilty, condemned to the
+same punishment with themselves.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 50. A flag.]
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          All the grisly legions that troop
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Under the sooty flag of Acheron
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          Milton. Comus.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 56. Who to base fear Yielding, abjur&rsquo;d his high estate.] This is
+commonly understood of Celestine the Fifth, who abdicated the papal power in
+1294. Venturi mentions a work written by Innocenzio Barcellini, of the
+Celestine order, and printed in Milan in 1701, In which an attempt is made to
+put a different interpretation on this passage.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 70. through the blear light.]
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Lo fioco lume<br/>
+So Filicaja, canz. vi. st. 12.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Qual fioco lume.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 77. An old man.]
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Portitor has horrendus aquas et flumina servat
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Terribili squalore Charon, cui plurima mento
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Canities inculta jacet; stant lumina flamma.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          Virg. 7. Aen. Iib. vi. 2.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 82. In fierce heat and in ice.]
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          The delighted spirit
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   To bathe in fiery floods or to reside
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   In thrilling regions of thick ribbed ice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          Shakesp. Measure for Measure, a. iii.s.1.<br/>
+Compare Milton, P. L. b. ii. 600.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 92. The livid lake.] Vada livida.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          Virg. Aen. Iib. vi. 320
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          Totius ut Lacus putidaeque paludis
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Lividissima, maximeque est profunda vorago.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          Catullus. xviii. 10.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 102. With eyes of burning coal.]
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   His looks were dreadful, and his fiery eyes
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Like two great beacons glared bright and wide.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          Spenser. F.Q. b. vi. c. vii.st. 42
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 104. As fall off the light of autumnal leaves.]
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Quam multa in silvis autumul frigore primo
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Lapsa cadunt folia.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          Virg. Aen. lib. vi. 309<br/>
+Compare Apoll. Rhod. lib. iv. 214.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO IV</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 8. A thund&rsquo;rous sound.] Imitated, as Mr. Thyer has remarked,<br/>
+by Milton, P. L. b. viii. 242.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          But long ere our approaching heard
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Noise, other, than the sound of dance or song
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Torment, and loud lament, and furious rage.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 50. a puissant one.] Our Saviour.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 75. Honour the bard
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Sublime.]
+</p>
+
+<p>
+        Onorate l&rsquo;altissimo poeta.<br/>
+So Chiabrera, Canz. Eroiche. 32.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Onorando l&rsquo;altissimo poeta.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 79. Of semblance neither sorrowful nor glad.]
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   She nas to sober ne to glad.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          Chaucer&rsquo;s Dream.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 90. The Monarch of sublimest song.] Homer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 100. Fitter left untold.]
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Che&rsquo;l tacere e bello,<br/>
+So our Poet, in Canzone 14.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   La vide in parte che&rsquo;l tacere e bello,<br/>
+Ruccellai, Le Api, 789.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Ch&rsquo;a dire e brutto ed a tacerlo e bello<br/>
+And Bembo,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   &ldquo;Vie pui bello e il tacerle, che il favellarne.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          Gli. Asol. lib. 1.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 117. Electra.] The daughter of Atlas, and mother of Dardanus the founder of
+Troy. See Virg. Aen. b. viii. 134. as referred to by Dante in treatise
+&ldquo;De Monarchia,&rdquo; lib. ii. &ldquo;Electra, scilicet, nata magni
+nombris regis Atlantis, ut de ambobus testimonium reddit poeta noster in octavo
+ubi Aeneas ad Avandrum sic ait &ldquo;Dardanus Iliacae,&rdquo; &amp;c.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 125. Julia.] The daughter of Julius Caesar, and wife of Pompey.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 126. The Soldan fierce.] Saladin or Salaheddin, the rival of Richard coeur
+de lion. See D&rsquo;Herbelot, Bibl. Orient. and Knolles&rsquo;s Hist. of the
+Turks p. 57 to 73 and the Life of Saladin, by Bohao&rsquo;edin Ebn Shedad,
+published by Albert Schultens, with a Latin translation. He is introduced by
+Petrarch in the Triumph of Fame, c. ii
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 128. The master of the sapient throng.]
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Maestro di color che sanno.<br/>
+Aristotle&mdash;Petrarch assigns the first place to Plato. See Triumph<br/>
+of Fame, c. iii.<br/>
+Pulci, in his Morgante Maggiore, c. xviii. says,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Tu se&rsquo;il maestro di color che sanno.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 132. Democritus Who sets the world at chance.] Democritus,who maintained the
+world to have been formed by the fortuitous concourse of atoms.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 140. Avicen.] See D&rsquo;Herbelot Bibl. Orient. article Sina. He died in
+1050. Pulci here again imitates our poet:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+        Avicenna quel che il sentimento
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Intese di Aristotile e i segreti,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Averrois che fece il gran comento.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          Morg. Mag. c. xxv.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 140. Him who made That commentary vast, Averroes.] Averroes, called by the
+Arabians Roschd, translated and commented the works of Aristotle. According to
+Tiraboschi (storia della Lett. Ital. t. v. 1. ii. c. ii. sect. 4.) he was the
+source of modern philosophical impiety. The critic quotes some passages from
+Petrarch (Senil. 1. v. ep. iii. et. Oper. v. ii. p. 1143) to show how strongly
+such sentiments prevailed in the time of that poet, by whom they were held in
+horror and detestation He adds, that this fanatic admirer of Aristotle
+translated his writings with that felicity, which might be expected from one
+who did not know a syllable of Greek, and who was therefore compelled to avail
+himself of the unfaithful Arabic versions. D&rsquo;Herbelot, on the other hand,
+informs us, that &ldquo;Averroes was the first who translated Aristotle from
+Greek into Arabic, before the Jews had made their translation: and that we had
+for a long time no other text of Aristotle, except that of the Latin
+translation, which was made from this Arabic version of this great philosopher
+(Averroes), who afterwards added to it a very ample commentary, of which Thomas
+Aquinas, and the other scholastic writers, availed themselves, before the Greek
+originals of Aristotle and his commentators were known to us in Europe.&rdquo;
+According to D&rsquo;Herbelot, he died in 1198: but Tiraboschi places that
+event about 1206.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO V</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 5. Grinning with ghastly feature.] Hence Milton:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          Death
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Grinn&rsquo;d horrible a ghastly smile.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          P. L. b. ii. 845.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 46. As cranes.] This simile is imitated by Lorenzo de<br/>
+Medici, in his Ambra, a poem, first published by Mr. Roscoe, in<br/>
+the Appendix to his Life of Lorenzo.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Marking the tracts of air, the clamorous cranes
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Wheel their due flight in varied ranks descried:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   And each with outstretch&rsquo;d neck his rank maintains
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   In marshal&rsquo;d order through th&rsquo; ethereal void.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          Roscoe, v. i. c. v. p. 257. 4to edit.<br/>
+Compare Homer. Il. iii. 3. Virgil. Aeneid. 1 x. 264, and<br/>
+Ruccellai, Le Api, 942, and Dante&rsquo;s Purgatory, Canto XXIV. 63.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 96. The land.] Ravenna.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 99 Love, that in gentle heart is quickly learnt.] Amor, Ch&rsquo; al cor
+gentil ratto s&rsquo;apprende. A line taken by Marino, Adone, c. cxli. st. 251.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 102. Love, that denial takes from none belov&rsquo;d.]
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Amor, ch&rsquo; a null&rsquo; amato amar perdona.<br/>
+So Boccacio, in his Filocopo. l.1.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Amore mal non perdono l&rsquo;amore a nullo amato.<br/>
+And Pulci, in the Morgante Maggiore, c. iv.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   E perche amor mal volontier perdona,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Che non sia al fin sempre amato chi ama.<br/>
+Indeed many of the Italian poets have repeated this verse.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 105. Caina.] The place to which murderers are doomed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 113. Francesca.] Francesca, daughter of Guido da Polenta, lord of Ravenna,
+was given by her father in marriage to Lanciotto, son of Malatesta, lord of
+Rimini, a man of extraordinary courage, but deformed in his person. His brother
+Paolo, who unhappily possessed those graces which the husband of Francesca
+wanted, engaged her affections; and being taken in adultery, they were both put
+to death by the enraged Lanciotto. See Notes to Canto XXVII. v. 43 The whole of
+this passage is alluded to by Petrarch, in his Triumph of Love c. iii.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 118.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   No greater grief than to remember days
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Of joy,xwhen mis&rsquo;ry is at hand!]<br/>
+Imitated by Marino:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Che non ha doglia il misero maggiore
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Che ricordar la giola entro il dolore.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          Adone, c. xiv. st. 100<br/>
+And by Fortiguerra:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          Rimembrare il ben perduto
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Fa piu meschino lo presente stato.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          Ricciardetto, c. xi. st. 83.<br/>
+The original perhaps was in Boetius de Consol. Philosoph. &ldquo;In<br/>
+omni adversitate fortunae infelicissimum genus est infortunii<br/>
+fuisse felicem et non esse.&rdquo; 1. 2. pr. 4
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 124. Lancelot.] One of the Knights of the Round Table, and the lover of
+Ginevra, or Guinever, celebrated in romance. The incident alluded to seems to
+have made a strong impression on the imagination of Dante, who introduces it
+again, less happily, in the Paradise, Canto XVI.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 128. At one point.]
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Questo quel punto fu, che sol mi vinse.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          Tasso, Il Torrismondo, a. i. s. 3.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 136. And like a corpse fell to the ground ]
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   E caddi, come corpo morto cade.<br/>
+So Pulci:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   E cadde come morto in terra cade.<br/>
+Morgante Maggoire, c. xxii
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO VI</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 1. My sense reviving.]
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Al tornar della mente, che si chiuse
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Dinanzi alla pieta de&rsquo; duo cognati.<br/>
+Berni has made a sportive application of these lines, in his Orl.<br/>
+Inn. l. iii. c. viii. st. 1.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 21. That great worm.] So in Canto XXXIV Lucifer is called
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Th&rsquo; abhorred worm, that boreth through the world.<br/>
+Ariosto has imitated Dante:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Ch&rsquo; al gran verme infernal mette la briglia,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   E che di lui come a lei par dispone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          Orl. Fur. c. xlvi. st. 76.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 52. Ciacco.] So called from his inordinate appetite: Ciacco, in Italian,
+signifying a pig. The real name of this glutton has not been transmitted to us.
+He is introduced in Boccaccio&rsquo;s Decameron, Giorn. ix. Nov. 8.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 61. The divided city.] The city of Florence, divided into the Bianchi and
+Neri factions.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 65. The wild party from the woods.] So called, because it was headed by Veri
+de&rsquo; Cerchi, whose family had lately come into the city from Acone, and
+the woody country of the Val di Nievole.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 66. The other.] The opposite parts of the Neri, at the head of which was
+Corso Donati.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 67. This must fall.] The Bianchi.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 69. Of one, who under shore Now rests.] Charles of Valois, by whose means
+the Neri were replaced.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 73. The just are two in number.] Who these two were, the commentators are
+not agreed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 79. Of Farinata and Tegghiaio.] See Canto X. and Notes, and Canto XVI, and
+Notes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 80. Giacopo.] Giacopo Rusticucci. See Canto XVI, and Notes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 81. Arrigo, Mosca.] Of Arrigo, who is said by the commentators to have been
+of the noble family of the Fifanti, no mention afterwards occurs. Mosca degli
+Uberti is introduced in Canto XXVIII. v.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+108. Consult thy knowledge.] We are referred to the following passage in St.
+Augustin:&mdash;&ldquo;Cum fiet resurrectio carnis, et bonorum gaudia et
+malorum tormenta majora erunt. &ldquo;&mdash;At the resurrection of the flesh,
+both the happiness of the good and the torments of the wicked will be
+increased.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO VII</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 1. Ah me! O Satan! Satan!] Pape Satan, Pape Satan, aleppe. Pape is said by
+the commentators to be the same as the Latin word papae! &ldquo;strange!&rdquo;
+Of aleppe they do not give a more satisfactory account. See the Life of
+Benvenuto Cellini, translated by Dr. Nugent, v. ii. b. iii c. vii. p 113, where
+he mentions &ldquo;having heard the words Paix, paix, Satan! allez, paix! in
+the court of justice at Paris. I recollected what Dante said, when he with his
+master Virgil entered the gates of hell: for Dante, and Giotto the painter,
+were together in France, and visited Paris with particular attention, where the
+court of justice may be considered as hell. Hence it is that Dante, who was
+likewise perfect master of the French, made use of that expression, and I have
+often been surprised that it was never understood in that sense.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 12. The first adulterer proud.] Satan.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 22. E&rsquo;en as a billow.]
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   As when two billows in the Irish sowndes
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Forcibly driven with contrarie tides
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Do meet together, each aback rebounds
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   With roaring rage, and dashing on all sides,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   That filleth all the sea with foam, divides
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   The doubtful current into divers waves.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          Spenser, F.Q. b. iv. c. 1. st. 42.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 48. Popes and cardinals.] Ariosto, having personified<br/>
+Avarice as a strange and hideous monster, says of her&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Peggio facea nella Romana corte
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Che v&rsquo;avea uccisi Cardinali e Papi.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          Orl. Fur. c. xxvi. st. 32.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Worse did she in the court of Rome, for there
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   She had slain Popes and Cardinals.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 91. By necessity.] This sentiment called forth the reprehension of Cecco
+d&rsquo;Ascoli, in his Acerba, l. 1. c. i.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+               In cio peccasti, O Fiorentin poeta, &amp;c.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Herein, O bard of Florence, didst thou err
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Laying it down that fortune&rsquo;s largesses
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Are fated to their goal. Fortune is none,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   That reason cannot conquer. Mark thou, Dante,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   If any argument may gainsay this.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO VIII</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 18. Phlegyas.] Phlegyas, who was so incensed against Apollo for having
+violated his daughter Coronis, that he set fire to the temple of that deity, by
+whose vengeance he was cast into Tartarus. See Virg. Aen. l. vi. 618.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 59. Filippo Argenti.] Boccaccio tells us, &ldquo;he was a man remarkable for
+the large proportions and extraordinary vigor of his bodily frame, and the
+extreme waywardness and irascibility of his temper.&rdquo; Decam. g. ix. n. 8.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 66. The city, that of Dis is nam&rsquo;d.] So Ariosto. Orl. Fur. c. xl. st.
+32
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 94. Seven times.] The commentators, says Venturi, perplex themselves with
+the inquiry what seven perils these were from which Dante had been delivered by
+Virgil. Reckoning the beasts in the first Canto as one of them, and adding
+Charon, Minos, Cerberus, Plutus, Phlegyas and Filippo Argenti, as so many
+others, we shall have the number, and if this be not satisfactory, we may
+suppose a determinate to have been put for an indeterminate number.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 109. At war &rsquo;twixt will and will not.] Che si, e no nel capo mi
+tenzona. So Boccaccio, Ninf. Fiesol. st. 233.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+        Il si e il no nel capo gli contende.<br/>
+The words I have adopted as a translation, are Shakespeare&rsquo;s,<br/>
+Measure for Measure. a. ii. s. 1.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 122. This their insolence, not new.] Virgil assures our poet, that these
+evil spirits had formerly shown the same insolence when our Savior descended
+into hell. They attempted to prevent him from entering at the gate, over which
+Dante had read the fatal inscription. &ldquo;That gate which,&rdquo; says the
+Roman poet, &ldquo;an angel has just passed, by whose aid we shall overcome
+this opposition, and gain admittance into the city.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO IX</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 1. The hue.] Virgil, perceiving that Dante was pale with fear, restrained
+those outward tokens of displeasure which his own countenance had betrayed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 23. Erictho.] Erictho, a Thessalian sorceress, according to Lucan, Pharsal.
+l. vi. was employed by Sextus, son of Pompey the Great, to conjure up a spirit,
+who should inform him of the issue of the civil wars between his father and
+Caesar.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 25. No long space my flesh
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Was naked of me.]
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Quae corpus complexa animae tam fortis inane.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          Ovid. Met. l. xiii f. 2<br/>
+Dante appears to have fallen into a strange anachronism. Virgil&rsquo;s<br/>
+death did not happen till long after this period.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 42. Adders and cerastes.]
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Vipereum crinem vittis innexa cruentis.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          Virg. Aen. l. vi. 281.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   &mdash;spinaque vagi torquente cerastae
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          . . . et torrida dipsas
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Et gravis in geminum vergens eaput amphisbaena.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+                 Lucan. Pharsal. l. ix. 719.<br/>
+So Milton:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Scorpion and asp, and amphisbaena dire,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Cerastes horn&rsquo;d, hydrus and elops drear,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   And dipsas.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          P. L. b. x. 524.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 67. A wind.] Imitated by Berni, Orl. Inn. l. 1. e. ii. st. 6.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 83. With his wand.]
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   She with her rod did softly smite the raile
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Which straight flew ope.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          Spenser. F. Q. b. iv. c. iii. st. 46.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 96. What profits at the fays to but the horn.] &ldquo;Of what avail can it
+be to offer violence to impassive beings?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 97. Your Cerberus.] Cerberus is feigned to have been dragged by Hercules,
+bound with a three fold chain, of which, says the angel, he still bears the
+marks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 111. The plains of Arles.] In Provence. See Ariosto, Orl. Fur. c. xxxix. st.
+72
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 112. At Pola.] A city of Istria, situated near the gulf of Quarnaro, in the
+Adriatic sea.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO X</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 12. Josaphat.] It seems to have been a common opinion among the Jews, as
+well as among many Christians, that the general judgment will be held in the
+valley of Josaphat, or Jehoshaphat: &ldquo;I will also gather all nations, and
+will bring them down into the valley of Jehoshaphat, and will plead with them
+there for my people, and for my heritage Israel, whom they have scattered among
+the nations, and parted my land.&rdquo; Joel, iii. 2.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 32. Farinata.] Farinata degli Uberti, a noble Florentine, was the leader of
+the Ghibelline faction, when they obtained a signal victory over the Guelfi at
+Montaperto, near the river Arbia. Macchiavelli calls him &ldquo;a man of
+exalted soul, and great military talents.&rdquo; Hist. of Flor. b. ii.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 52. A shade.] The spirit of Cavalcante Cavalcanti, a noble Florentine, of
+the Guelph party.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 59. My son.] Guido, the son of Cavalcante Cavalcanti; &ldquo;he whom I call
+the first of my friends,&rdquo; says Dante in his Vita Nuova, where the
+commencement of their friendship is related. &gt;From the character given of
+him by contemporary writers his temper was well formed to assimilate with that
+of our poet. &ldquo;He was,&rdquo; according to G. Villani, l. viii. c. 41.
+&ldquo;of a philosophical and elegant mind, if he had not been too delicate and
+fastidious.&rdquo; And Dino Compagni terms him &ldquo;a young and noble knight,
+brave and courteous, but of a lofty scornful spirit, much addicted to solitude
+and study.&rdquo; Muratori. Rer. Ital. Script t. 9 l. 1. p. 481. He died,
+either in exile at Serrazana, or soon after his return to Florence, December
+1300, during the spring of which year the action of this poem is supposed to be
+passing. v. 62. Guido thy son Had in contempt.] Guido Cavalcanti, being more
+given to philosophy than poetry, was perhaps no great admirer of Virgil. Some
+poetical compositions by Guido are, however, still extant; and his reputation
+for skill in the art was such as to eclipse that of his predecessor and
+namesake Guido Guinicelli, as we shall see in the Purgatory, Canto XI. His
+&ldquo;Canzone sopra il Terreno Amore&rdquo; was thought worthy of being
+illustrated by numerous and ample commentaries. Crescimbeni Ist. della Volg.
+Poes. l. v. For a playful sonnet which Dante addressed to him, and a spirited
+translation of it, see Hayley&rsquo;s Essay on Epic Poetry, Notes to Ep. iii.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 66. Saidst thou he had?] In Aeschylus, the shade of Darius is represented as
+inquiring with similar anxiety after the fate of his son Xerxes.
+</p>
+
+<h5>[GREEK HERE]</h5>
+
+<p>
+Atossa: Xerxes astonish&rsquo;d, desolate, alone&mdash;<br/>
+Ghost of Dar: How will this end? Nay, pause not. Is he safe?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          The Persians. Potter&rsquo;s Translation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 77. Not yet fifty times.] &ldquo;Not fifty months shall be passed, before
+thou shalt learn, by woeful experience, the difficulty of returning from
+banishment to thy native city&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v.83. The slaughter.] &ldquo;By means of Farinata degli Uberti, the Guelfi were
+conquered by the army of King Manfredi, near the river Arbia, with so great a
+slaughter, that those who escaped from that defeat took refuge not in Florence,
+which city they considered as lost to them, but in Lucca.&rdquo; Macchiavelli.
+Hist. of Flor. b 2.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 86. Such orisons.] This appears to allude to certain prayers which were
+offered up in the churches of Florence, for deliverance from the hostile
+attempts of the Uberti.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 90. Singly there I stood.] Guido Novello assembled a council of the
+Ghibellini at Empoli where it was agreed by all, that, in order to maintain the
+ascendancy of the Ghibelline party in Tuscany, it was necessary to destroy
+Florence, which could serve only (the people of that city beingvGuelfi) to
+enable the party attached to the church to recover its strength. This cruel
+sentence, passed upon so noble a city, met with no opposition from any of its
+citizens or friends, except Farinata degli Uberti, who openly and without
+reserve forbade the measure, affirming that he had endured so many hardships,
+and encountered so many dangers, with no other view than that of being able to
+pass his days in his own country. Macchiavelli. Hist. of Flor. b. 2.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 103. My fault.] Dante felt remorse for not having returned an immediate
+answer to the inquiry of Cavalcante, from which delay he was led to believe
+that his son Guido was no longer living.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 120. Frederick.] The Emperor Frederick the Second, who died in 1250. See
+Notes to Canto XIII.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 121. The Lord Cardinal.] Ottaviano Ubaldini, a Florentine, made Cardinal in
+1245, and deceased about 1273. On account of his great influence, he was
+generally known by the appellation of &ldquo;the Cardinal.&rdquo; It is
+reported of him that he declared, if there were any such thing as a human soul,
+he had lost his for the Ghibellini.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 132. Her gracious beam.] Beatrice.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XI</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 9. Pope Anastasius.] The commentators are not agreed concerning the identity
+of the person, who is here mentioned as a follower of the heretical Photinus.
+By some he is supposed to have been Anastasius the Second, by others, the
+Fourth of that name; while a third set, jealous of the integrity of the papal
+faith, contend that our poet has confounded him with Anastasius 1. Emperor of
+the East.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 17. My son.] The remainder of the present Canto may be considered as a
+syllabus of the whole of this part of the poem.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 48. And sorrows.] This fine moral, that not to enjoy our being is to be
+ungrateful to the Author of it, is well expressed in Spenser, F. Q. b. iv. c.
+viii. st. 15. For he whose daies in wilful woe are worne The grace of his
+Creator doth despise, That will not use his gifts for thankless nigardise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 53. Cahors.] A city in Guienne, much frequented by usurers
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 83. Thy ethic page.] He refers to Aristotle&rsquo;s Ethics.
+</p>
+
+<h5>[GREEK HERE]</h5>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;In the next place, entering, on another division of the subject, let it
+be defined. that respecting morals there are three sorts of things to be
+avoided, malice, incontinence, and brutishness.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 104. Her laws.] Aristotle&rsquo;s Physics. [GREEK HERE] &ldquo;Art imitates
+nature.&rdquo; &mdash;See the Coltivazione of Alamanni, l. i.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+-I&rsquo;arte umana, &amp;c.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 111. Creation&rsquo;s holy book.] Genesis, c. iii. v. 19. &ldquo;In the
+sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 119. The wain.] The constellation Bootes, or Charles&rsquo;s wain.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XII</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 17. The king of Athens.] Theseus, who was enabled, by the instructions of
+Ariadne, the sister of the Minotaur, to destroy that monster.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 21. Like to a bull.] [GREEK HERE] Homer Il. xvii 522
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   As when some vig&rsquo;rous youth with sharpen&rsquo;d axe
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   A pastur&rsquo;d bullock smites behind the horns
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   And hews the muscle through; he, at the stroke
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Springs forth and falls.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          Cowper&rsquo;s Translation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 36. He arriv&rsquo;d.] Our Saviour, who, according to Dante, when he
+ascended from hell, carried with him the souls of the patriarchs, and other
+just men, out of the first circle. See Canto IV.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 96. Nessus.] Our poet was probably induced, by the following<br/>
+line in Ovid, to assign to Nessus the task of conducting them<br/>
+over the ford:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Nessus edit membrisque valens scitusque vadorum.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Metam, l. ix.<br/>
+And Ovid&rsquo;s authority was Sophocles, who says of this Centaur&mdash;<br/>
+[GREEK HERE] Trach.570
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   He in his arms, Evenus&rsquo; stream
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Deep flowing, bore the passenger for hire
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Without or sail or billow cleaving oar.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 110. Ezzolino.] Ezzolino, or Azzolino di Romano, a most cruel tyrant in the
+Marca Trivigiana, Lord of Padua, Vicenza, Verona, and Brescia, who died in
+1260. His atrocities form the subject of a Latin tragedy, called Eccerinis, by
+Albertino Mussato, of Padua, the contemporary of Dante, and the most elegant
+writer of Latin verse of that age. See also the Paradise, Canto IX. Berni Orl.
+Inn. l ii c. xxv. st. 50. Ariosto. Orl. Fur. c. iii. st. 33. and Tassoni
+Secchia Rapita, c. viii. st 11.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 111. Obizzo&rsquo; of Este.] Marquis of Ferrara and of the Marca
+d&rsquo;Ancona, was murdered by his own son (whom, for the most unnatural act
+Dante calls his step-son), for the sake of the treasures which his rapacity had
+amassed. See Ariosto. Orl. Fur. c. iii. st 32. He died in 1293 according to
+Gibbon. Ant. of the House of Brunswick. Posth. Works, v. ii. 4to.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 119. He.] &ldquo;Henrie, the brother of this Edmund, and son to the foresaid
+king of Almaine (Richard, brother of Henry III. of England) as he returned from
+Affrike, where he had been with Prince Edward, was slain at Viterbo in Italy
+(whither he was come about business which he had to do with the Pope) by the
+hand of Guy de Montfort, the son of Simon de Montfort, Earl of Leicester, in
+revenge of the same Simon&rsquo;s death. The murther was committed afore the
+high altar, as the same Henrie kneeled there to hear divine service.&rdquo;
+A.D. 1272, Holinshed&rsquo;s chronicles p 275. See also Giov. Villani Hist. I.
+vii. c. 40.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 135. On Sextus and on Pyrrhus.] Sextus either the son of Tarquin the Proud,
+or of Pompey the Great: or as Vellutelli conjectures, Sextus Claudius Nero, and
+Pyrrhus king of Epirus.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 137.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          The Rinieri, of Corneto this,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Pazzo the other named.]<br/>
+Two noted marauders, by whose depredations the public ways in<br/>
+Italy were infested. The latter was of the noble family of Pazzi<br/>
+in Florence.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XIII</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 10. Betwixt Corneto and Cecina&rsquo;s stream.] A wild and woody tract of
+country, abounding in deer, goats, and wild boars. Cecina is a river not far to
+the south of Leghorn, Corneto, a small city on the same coast in the patrimony
+of the church.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 12. The Strophades.] See Virg. Aen. l. iii. 210.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 14. Broad are their pennons.] From Virg. Aen. l. iii. 216.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 48. In my verse described.] The commentators explain this, &ldquo;If he
+could have believed, in consequence of my assurances alone, that of which he
+hath now had ocular proof, he would not have stretched forth his hand against
+thee.&rdquo; But I am of opinion that Dante makes Virgil allude to his own
+story of Polydorus in the third book of the Aeneid.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 56. That pleasant word of thine.] &ldquo;Since you have inveigled me to
+speak my holding forth so gratifying an expectation, let it not displease you
+if I am as it were detained in the snare you have spread for me, so as to be
+somewhat prolix in my answer.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 60. I it was.] Pietro delle Vigne, a native of Capua, who, from a low
+condition, raised himself by his eloquence and legal knowledge to the office of
+Chancellor to the Emperor Frederick II. whose confidence in him was such, that
+his influence in the empire became unbounded. The courtiers, envious of his
+exalted situation, contrived, by means of forged letters, to make Frederick
+believe that he held a secret and traitorous intercourse with the Pope, who was
+then at enmity with the Emperor. In consequence of this supposed crime he was
+cruelly condemned by his too credulous sovereign to lose his eyes, and, being
+driven to despair by his unmerited calamity and disgrace, he put an end to his
+life by dashing out his brains against the walls of a church, in the year 1245.
+Both Frederick and Pietro delle Vigne composed verses in the Sicilian dialect
+which are yet extant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 67. The harlot.] Envy. Chaucer alludes to this in the<br/>
+Prologue to the Legende of Good women.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Envie is lavender to the court alway,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   For she ne parteth neither night ne day
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Out of the house of Cesar; thus saith Dant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 119. Each fan o&rsquo; th&rsquo; wood.] Hence perhaps Milton:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Leaves and fuming rills, Aurora&rsquo;s fan.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          P. L. b. v. 6.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 122. Lano.] Lano, a Siennese, who, being reduced by prodigality to a state
+of extreme want, found his existence no longer supportable; and, having been
+sent by his countrymen on a military expedition, to assist the Florentine
+against the Aretini, took that opportunity of exposing himself to certain
+death, in the engagement which took place at Toppo near Arezzo. See G. Villani,
+Hist. l. 7. c. cxix.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 133. O Giocomo Of Sant&rsquo; Andrea!] Jacopo da Sant&rsquo; Andrea, a
+Paduan, who, having wasted his property in the most wanton acts of profusion,
+killed himself in despair. v. 144. In that City.] &ldquo;I was an inhabitant of
+Florence, that city which changed her first patron Mars for St. John the
+Baptist, for which reason the vengeance of the deity thus slighted will never
+be appeased: and, if some remains of his status were not still visible on the
+bridge over the Arno, she would have been already leveled to the ground; and
+thus the citizens, who raised her again from the ashes to which Attila had
+reduced her, would have laboured in vain.&rdquo; See Paradise, Canto XVI. 44.
+The relic of antiquity to which the superstition of Florence attached so high
+an importance, was carried away by a flood, that destroyed the bridge on which
+it stood, in the year 1337, but without the ill effects that were apprehended
+from the loss of their fancied Palladium.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 152. I slung the fatal noose.] We are not informed who this suicide was.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XIV</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 15. By Cato&rsquo;s foot.] See Lucan, Phars, l. 9.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 26. Dilated flakes of fire.] Compare Tasso. G. L. c. x. st. 61.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 28. As, in the torrid Indian clime.] Landino refers to Albertus Magnus for
+the circumstance here alluded to.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 53. In Mongibello.]
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   More hot than Aetn&rsquo; or flaming Mongibell.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          Spenser, F. Q. b. ii. c. ix. st. 29.<br/>
+See Virg. Aen. 1. viii. 416. and Berni. Orl. Inn 1. i. c. xvi.<br/>
+st. 21. It would be endless to refer to parallel passages in the<br/>
+Greek writers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 64. This of the seven kings was one.] Compare Aesch. Seven Chiefs, 425.
+Euripides, Phoen. 1179 and Statius. Theb. l. x. 821.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 76. Bulicame.] A warm medicinal spring near Viterbo, the waters of which, as
+Landino and Vellutelli affirm, passed by a place of ill fame. Venturi, with
+less probability, conjectures that Dante would imply, that it was the scene of
+much licentious merriment among those who frequented its baths.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 91. Under whose monarch.]
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Credo pudicitiam Saturno rege moratam
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   In terris.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          Juv. Satir. vi.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 102. His head.] Daniel, ch. ii. 32, 33.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 133. Whither.] On the other side of Purgatory.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XV</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 10. Chiarentana.] A part of the Alps where the Brenta rises, which river is
+much swoln as soon as the snow begins to dissolve on the mountains.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 28. Brunetto.] &ldquo;Ser Brunetto, a Florentine, the secretary or
+chancellor of the city, and Dante&rsquo;s preceptor, hath left us a work so
+little read, that both the subject of it and the language of it have been
+mistaken. It is in the French spoken in the reign of St. Louis,under the title
+of Tresor, and contains a species of philosophical course of lectures divided
+into theory and practice, or, as he expresses it, &ldquo;un enchaussement des
+choses divines et humaines,&rdquo; &amp;c. Sir R. Clayton&rsquo;s Translation
+of Tenhove&rsquo;s Memoirs of the Medici, vol. i. ch. ii. p. 104. The Tresor
+has never been printed in the original language. There is a fine manuscript of
+it in the British Museum, with an illuminated portrait of Brunetto in his study
+prefixed. Mus. Brit. MSS. 17, E. 1. Tesor. It is divided into four books, the
+first, on Cosmogony and Theology, the second, a translation of
+Aristotle&rsquo;s Ethics; the third on Virtues and Vices; the fourth, on
+Rhetoric. For an interesting memoir relating to this work, see Hist. de
+l&rsquo;Acad. des Inscriptions, tom. vii. 296. His Tesoretto, one of the
+earliest productions of Italian poetry, is a curious work, not unlike the
+writings of Chaucer in style and numbers, though Bembo remarks, that his pupil,
+however largely he had stolen from it, could not have much enriched himself. As
+it is perhaps but little known, I will here add a slight sketch of it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Brunetto describes himself as returning from an embassy to the King of Spain,
+on which he had been sent by the Guelph party from Florence. On the plain of
+Roncesvalles he meets a scholar on a bay mule, who tells him that the Guelfi
+are driven out of the city with great loss.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Struck with grief at these mournful tidings, and musing with his head bent
+downwards, he loses his road, and wanders into a wood. Here Nature, whose
+figure is described with sublimity, appears, and discloses to him the secrets
+of her operations. After this he wanders into a desert; but at length proceeds
+on his way, under the protection of a banner, with which Nature had furnished
+him, till on the third day he finds himself in a large pleasant champaign,
+where are assembled many emperors, kings, and sages. It is the habitation of
+Virtue and her daughters, the four Cardinal Virtues. Here Brunetto sees also
+Courtesy, Bounty, Loyalty, and Prowess, and hears the instructions they give to
+a knight, which occupy about a fourth part of the poem. Leaving this territory,
+he passes over valleys, mountains, woods, forests, and bridges, till he arrives
+in a beautiful valley covered with flowers on all sides, and the richest in the
+world; but which was continually shifting its appearance from a round figure to
+a square, from obscurity to light, and from populousness to solitude. This is
+the region of Pleasure, or Cupid, who is accompanied by four ladies, Love,
+Hope, Fear, and Desire. In one part of it he meets with Ovid, and is instructed
+by him how to conquer the passion of love, and to escape from that place. After
+his escape he makes his confession to a friar, and then returns to the forest
+of visions: and ascending a mountain, he meets with Ptolemy, a venerable old
+man. Here the narrative breaks off. The poem ends, as it began, with an address
+to Rustico di Filippo, on whom he lavishes every sort of praise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It has been observed, that Dante derived the idea of opening his poem by
+describing himself as lost in a wood, from the Tesoretto of his master. I know
+not whether it has been remarked, that the crime of usury is branded by both
+these poets as offensive to God and Nature: or that the sin for which Brunetto
+is condemned by his pupil, is mentioned in the Tesoretto with great horror.
+Dante&rsquo;s twenty-fifth sonnet is a jocose one, addressed to Brunetto. He
+died in 1295.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 62. Who in old times came down from Fesole.] See G. Villani Hist. l. iv. c.
+5. and Macchiavelli Hist. of Flor. b. ii.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 89. With another text.] He refers to the prediction of Farinata, in Canto X.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 110. Priscian.] There is no reason to believe, as the commentators observe
+that the grammarian of this name was stained with the vice imputed to him; and
+we must therefore suppose that Dante puts the individual for the species, and
+implies the frequency of the crime among those who abused the opportunities
+which the education of youth afforded them, to so abominable a purpose.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 111. Francesco.] Son of Accorso, a Florentine, celebrated for his skill in
+jurisprudence, and commonly known by the name of Accursius.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 113. Him.] Andrea de&rsquo; Mozzi, who, that his scandalous life might be
+less exposed to observation, was translated either by Nicholas III, or Boniface
+VIII from the see of Florence to that of Vicenza, through which passes the
+river Baccchiglione. At the latter of these places he died.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 114. The servants&rsquo; servant.] Servo de&rsquo; servi. So Ariosto,<br/>
+Sat. 3.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          Degli servi
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Io sia il gran servo.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 124. I commend my Treasure to thee.] Brunetto&rsquo;s great work,<br/>
+the Tresor.<br/>
+Sieti raccomandato &rsquo;l mio Tesoro.<br/>
+So Giusto de&rsquo; Conti, in his Bella Mano, Son. &ldquo;Occhi:&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Siavi raccommandato il mio Tesoro.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XVI</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 38. Gualdrada.] Gualdrada was the daughter of Bellincione Berti, of whom
+mention is made in the Paradise, Canto XV, and XVI. He was of the family of
+Ravignani, a branch of the Adimari.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Emperor Otho IV. being at a festival in Florence, where Gualdrada was
+present, was struck with her beauty; and inquiring who she was, was answered by
+Bellincione, that she was the daughter of one who, if it was his
+Majesty&rsquo;s pleasure, would make her admit the honour of his salute. On
+overhearing this, she arose from her seat, and blushing, in an animated tone of
+voice, desired her father that he would not be so liberal in his offers, for
+that no man should ever be allowed that freedom, except him who should be her
+lawful husband. The Emperor was not less delighted by her resolute modesty than
+he had before been by the loveliness of her person, and calling to him Guido,
+one of his barons, gave her to him in marriage, at the same time raising him
+</p>
+
+<p>
+to the rank of a count, and bestowing on her the whole of Casentino, and a part
+of the territory of Romagna, as her portion. Two sons were the offspring of
+this union, Guglielmo and Ruggieri, the latter of whom was father of
+Guidoguerra, a man of great military skill and prowess who, at the head of four
+hundred Florentines of the Guelph party, was signally instrumental to the
+victory obtained at Benevento by Charles of Anjou, over Manfredi, King of
+Naples, in 1265. One of the consequences of this victory was the expulsion of
+the Ghibellini, and the re-establishment of the Guelfi at Florence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 39. Many a noble act.] Compare Tasso, G. L. c. i. st. 1.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 42. Aldobrandiu] Tegghiaio Aldobrandi was of the noble family of Adimari,
+and much esteemed for his military talents. He endeavored to dissuade the
+Florentines from the attack, which they meditated against the Siennese, and the
+rejection of his counsel occasioned the memorable defeat, which the former
+sustained at Montaperto, and the consequent banishment of the Guelfi from
+Florence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 45. Rusticucci.] Giacopo Rusticucci, a Florentine, remarkable for his
+opulence and the generosity of his spirit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 70. Borsiere.] Guglielmo Borsiere, another Florentine, whom Boccaccio, in a
+story which he relates of him, terms &ldquo;a man of courteous and elegant
+manners, and of great readiness in conversation.&rdquo; Dec. Giorn. i. Nov. 8.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 84. When thou with pleasure shalt retrace the past.]
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Quando ti giovera dicere io fui.<br/>
+So Tasso, G. L. c. xv. st. 38.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Quando mi giovera narrar altrui
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Le novita vedute, e dire; io fui.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 121. Ever to that truth.] This memorable apophthegm is repeated by Luigi
+Pulci and Trissino.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+        Sempre a quel ver, ch&rsquo; ha faccia di menzogna
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   E piu senno tacer la lingua cheta
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Che spesso senza colpa fa vergogna.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          Morgante. Magg. c. xxiv.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+               La verita, che par mensogna
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Si dovrebbe tacer dall&rsquo; uom ch&rsquo;e saggio.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          Italia. Lib. C. xvi.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XVII</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 1. The fell monster.] Fraud.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 53. A pouch.] A purse, whereon the armorial bearings of each were
+emblazoned. According to Landino, our poet implies that the usurer can pretend
+to no other honour, than such as he derives from his purse and his family.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 57. A yellow purse.] The arms of the Gianfigliazzi of Florence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 60. Another.] Those of the Ubbriachi, another Florentine family of high
+distinction.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 62. A fat and azure swine.] The arms of the Scrovigni a noble family of
+Padua.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 66. Vitaliano.] Vitaliano del Dente, a Paduan.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 69. That noble knight.] Giovanni Bujamonti, a Florentine usurer, the most
+infamous of his time.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XVIII</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 28. With us beyond.] Beyond the middle point they tended the same way with
+us, but their pace was quicker than ours.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 29. E&rsquo;en thus the Romans.] In the year 1300, Pope Boniface VIII., to
+remedy the inconvenience occasioned by the press of people who were passing
+over the bridge of St. Angelo during the time of the Jubilee, caused it to be
+divided length wise by a partition, and ordered, that all those who were going
+to St. Peter&rsquo;s should keep one side, and those returning the other.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 50. Venedico.] Venedico Caccianimico, a Bolognese, who prevailed on his
+sister Ghisola to prostitute herself to Obizzo da Este, Marquis of Ferrara,
+whom we have seen among the tyrants, Canto XII.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 62. To answer Sipa.] He denotes Bologna by its situation between the rivers
+Savena to the east, and Reno to the west of that city; and by a peculiarity of
+dialect, the use of the affirmative sipa instead of si.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 90. Hypsipyle.] See Appolonius Rhodius, l. i. and Valerius Flaccus l.ii.
+Hypsipyle deceived the other women by concealing her father Thoas, when they
+had agreed to put all their males to death.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 120. Alessio.] Alessio, of an ancient and considerable family in Lucca,
+called the Interminei.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 130. Thais.] He alludes to that passage in the Eunuchus of Terence where
+Thraso asks if Thais was obliged to him for the present he had sent her, and
+Gnatho replies, that she had expressed her obligation in the most forcible
+terms. T. Magnas vero agere gratias Thais mihi? G. Ingentes. Eun. a. iii. s. i.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XIX</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 18. Saint John&rsquo;s fair dome.] The apertures in the rock were of the
+same dimensions as the fonts of St. John the Baptist at Florence, one of which,
+Dante says he had broken, to rescue a child that was playing near and fell in.
+He intimates that the motive of his breaking the font had been maliciously
+represented by his enemies.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 55. O Boniface!] The spirit mistakes Dante for Boniface VIII. who was then
+alive, and who he did not expect would have arrived so soon, in consequence, as
+it should seem, of a prophecy, which predicted the death of that Pope at a
+later period. Boniface died in 1303.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 58. In guile.] &ldquo;Thou didst presume to arrive by fraudulent means at
+the papal power, and afterwards to abuse it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 71. In the mighty mantle I was rob&rsquo;d.] Nicholas III, of the Orsini
+family, whom the poet therefore calls &ldquo;figliuol dell&rsquo; orsa,&rdquo;
+&ldquo;son of the she-bear.&rdquo; He died in 1281.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 86. From forth the west, a shepherd without law.] Bertrand de Got Archbishop
+of Bordeaux, who succeeded to the pontificate in 1305, and assumed the title of
+Clement V. He transferred the holy see to Avignon in 1308 (where it remained
+till 1376), and died in 1314.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 88. A new Jason.] See Maccabees, b. ii. c. iv. 7,8.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 97. Nor Peter.] Acts of the Apostles, c.i. 26.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 100. The condemned soul.] Judas.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 103. Against Charles.] Nicholas III. was enraged against Charles I, King of
+Sicily, because he rejected with scorn a proposition made by that Pope for an
+alliance between their families. See G. Villani, Hist. l. vii. c. liv.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 109. Th&rsquo; Evangelist.] Rev. c. xvii. 1, 2, 3. Compare Petrarch. Opera
+fol. ed. Basil. 1551. Epist. sine titulo liber. ep. xvi. p. 729.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 118. Ah, Constantine.] He alludes to the pretended gift of the Lateran by
+Constantine to Silvester, of which Dante himself seems to imply a doubt, in his
+treatise &ldquo;De Monarchia.&rdquo; - &ldquo;Ergo scindere Imperium,
+Imperatori non licet. Si ergo aliquae, dignitates per Constantinum essent
+alienatae, (ut dicunt) ab Imperio,&rdquo; &amp;c. l. iii. The gift is by
+Ariosto very humorously placed in the moon, among the things lost or abused on
+earth. Di varj fiori, &amp;c. O. F. c. xxxiv. st. 80.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Milton has translated both this passage and that in the text.<br/>
+Prose works, vol. i. p. 11. ed. 1753.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XX</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 11. Revers&rsquo;d.] Compare Spenser, F. Q. b. i. c. viii. st. 31
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 30. Before whose eyes.] Amphiaraus, one of the seven kings who besieged
+Thebes. He is said to have been swallowed up by an opening of the earth. See
+Lidgate&rsquo;s Storie of Thebes, Part III where it is told how the
+&ldquo;Bishop Amphiaraus&rdquo; fell down to hell. And thus the devill for his
+outrages, Like his desert payed him his wages. A different reason for his being
+doomed thus to perish is assigned by Pindar. [GREEK HERE] Nem ix.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+        For thee, Amphiaraus, earth,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   By Jove&rsquo;s all-riving thunder cleft
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Her mighty bosom open&rsquo;d wide,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Thee and thy plunging steeds to hide,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Or ever on thy back the spear
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Of Periclymenus impress&rsquo;d
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   A wound to shame thy warlike breast
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   For struck with panic fear
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   The gods&rsquo; own children flee.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 37. Tiresias.]
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Duo magnorum viridi coeuntia sylva
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Corpora serpentum baculi violaverat ictu, &amp;c.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          Ovid. Met. iii.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 43. Aruns.] Aruns is said to have dwelt in the mountains of Luni (from
+whence that territory is still called Lunigiana), above Carrara, celebrated for
+its marble. Lucan. Phars. l. i. 575. So Boccaccio in the Fiammetta, l. iii.
+&ldquo;Quale Arunte,&rdquo; &amp;c.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Like Aruns, who amidst the white marbles of Luni, contemplated the
+celestial bodies and their motions.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 50. Manto.] The daughter of Tiresias of Thebes, a city dedicated to Bacchus.
+From Manto Mantua, the country of Virgil derives its name. The Poet proceeds to
+describe the situation of that place.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 61. Between the vale.] The lake Benacus, now called the Lago di Garda,
+though here said to lie between Garda, Val Camonica, and the Apennine, is,
+however, very distant from the latter two
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 63. There is a spot.] Prato di Fame, where the dioceses of Trento, Verona,
+and Brescia met.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 69. Peschiera.] A garrison situated to the south of the lake, where it
+empties itself and forms the Mincius.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 94. Casalodi&rsquo;s madness.] Alberto da Casalodi, who had got possession
+of Mantua, was persuaded by Pinamonte Buonacossi, that he might ingratiate
+himself with the people by banishing to their
+</p>
+
+<p>
+own castles the nobles, who were obnoxious to them. No sooner was this done,
+than Pinamonte put himself at the head of the populace, drove out Casalodi and
+his adherents, and obtained the sovereignty for himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 111. So sings my tragic strain.]
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Suspensi Eurypilum scitatum oracula Phoebi
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Mittimus.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          Virg. Aeneid. ii. 14.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 115. Michael Scot.] Sir Michael Scott, of Balwearie, astrologer to the
+Emperor Frederick II. lived in the thirteenth century. For further particulars
+relating to this singular man, see Warton&rsquo;s History of English Poetry,
+vol. i. diss. ii. and sect. ix. p 292, and the Notes to Mr. Scott&rsquo;s
+&ldquo;Lay of the Last Minstrel,&rdquo; a poem in which a happy use is made of
+the traditions that are still current in North Britain concerning him. He is
+mentioned by G. Villani. Hist. l. x. c. cv. and cxli. and l. xii. c. xviii. and
+by Boccaccio, Dec. Giorn. viii. Nov. 9.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 116. Guido Bonatti.] An astrologer of Forli, on whose skill Guido da
+Montefeltro, lord of that place, so much relied, that he is reported never to
+have gone into battle, except in the hour recommended to him as fortunate by
+Bonatti.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Landino and Vellutello, speak of a book, which he composed on the subject of
+his art.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 116. Asdente.] A shoemaker at Parma, who deserted his business to practice
+the arts of divination.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 123. Cain with fork of thorns.] By Cain and the thorns, or what is still
+vulgarly called the Man in the Moon, the Poet denotes that luminary. The same
+superstition is alluded to in the Paradise, Canto II. 52. The curious reader
+may consult Brand on Popular Antiquities, 4to. 1813. vol. ii. p. 476.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XXI</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 7. In the Venetians&rsquo; arsenal.] Compare Ruccellai, Le Api, 165, and
+Dryden&rsquo;s Annus Mirabilis, st. 146, &amp;c.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 37. One of Santa Zita&rsquo;s elders.] The elders or chief magistrates of
+Lucca, where Santa Zita was held in especial veneration. The name of this
+sinner is supposed to have been Martino Botaio.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 40. Except Bonturo, barterers.] This is said ironically of Bonturo de&rsquo;
+Dati. By barterers are meant peculators, of every description; all who traffic
+the interests of the public for their own private advantage.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 48. Is other swimming than in Serchio&rsquo;s wave.]
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Qui si nuota altrimenti che nel Serchio.<br/>
+Serchio is the river that flows by Lucca. So Pulci, Morg. Mag.<br/>
+c. xxiv.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Qui si nuota nel sangue, e non nel Serchio.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 92. From Caprona.] The surrender of the castle of Caprona to the combined
+forces of Florence and Lucca, on condition that the garrison should march out
+in safety, to which event Dante was a witness, took place in 1290. See G.
+Villani, Hist. l. vii. c. 136.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 109. Yesterday.] This passage fixes the era of Dante&rsquo;s descent at Good
+Friday, in the year 1300 (34 years from our blessed Lord&rsquo;s incarnation
+being added to 1266), and at the thirty-fifth year of our poet&rsquo;s age. See
+Canto I. v. 1.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The awful event alluded to, the Evangelists inform us, happened &ldquo;at the
+ninth hour,&rdquo; that is, our sixth, when &ldquo;the rocks were rent,&rdquo;
+and the convulsion, according to Dante, was felt even in the depths in Hell.
+See Canto XII. 38.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XXII</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 16. In the church.] This proverb is repeated by Pulci, Morg. Magg. c. xvii.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 47. Born in Navarre&rsquo;s domain.] The name of this peculator is said to
+have been Ciampolo.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 51. The good king Thibault.] &ldquo;Thibault I. king of Navarre, died on the
+8th of June, 1233, as much to be commended for the desire he showed of aiding
+the war in the Holy Land, as reprehensible and faulty for his design of
+oppressing the rights and privileges of the church, on which account it is said
+that the whole kingdom was under an interdict for the space of three entire
+years. Thibault undoubtedly merits praise, as for his other endowments, so
+especially for his cultivation of the liberal arts, his exercise and knowledge
+of music and poetry in which he much excelled, that he was accustomed to
+compose verses and sing them to the viol, and to exhibit his poetical
+compositions publicly in his palace, that they might be criticized by
+all.&rdquo; Mariana, History of Spain, b. xiii. c. 9.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+An account of Thibault, and two of his songs, with what were probably the
+original melodies, may be seen in Dr. Burney&rsquo;s History of Music, v. ii.
+c. iv. His poems, which are in the French language, were edited by M.
+l&rsquo;Eveque de la Ravalliere. Paris. 1742. 2 vol. 12mo. Dante twice quotes
+one of his verses in the Treatise de Vulg. Eloq. l. i. c. ix. and l. ii. c. v.
+and refers to him again, l. ii. c. vi.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From &ldquo;the good king Thibault&rdquo; are descended the good, but more
+unfortunate monarch, Louis XVI. of France, and consequently the present
+legitimate sovereign of that realm. See Henault, Abrege Chron. 1252, 2, 4.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 80. The friar Gomita.] He was entrusted by Nino de&rsquo; Visconti with the
+government of Gallura, one of the four jurisdictions into which Sardinia was
+divided. Having his master&rsquo;s enemies in his power, he took a bribe from
+them, and allowed them to escape. Mention of Nino will recur in the Notes to
+Canto XXXIII. and in the Purgatory, Canto VIII.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 88. Michel Zanche.] The president of Logodoro, another of the four Sardinian
+jurisdictions. See Canto XXXIII.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XXIII</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 5. Aesop&rsquo;s fable.] The fable of the frog, who offered to carry the
+mouse across a ditch, with the intention of drowning him when both were carried
+off by a kite. It is not among those Greek Fables which go under the name of
+Aesop.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 63. Monks in Cologne.] They wore their cowls unusually large. v. 66.
+Frederick&rsquo;s.] The Emperor Frederick II. is said to have punished those
+who were guilty of high treason, by wrapping them up in lead, and casting them
+into a furnace.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 101. Our bonnets gleaming bright with orange hue.] It is observed by
+Venturi, that the word &ldquo;rance&rdquo; does not here signify &ldquo;rancid
+or disgustful,&rdquo; as it is explained by the old commentators, but
+&ldquo;orange-coloured,&rdquo; in which sense it occurs in the Purgatory, Canto
+II. 9.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 104. Joyous friars.] &ldquo;Those who ruled the city of Florence on the part
+of the Ghibillines, perceiving this discontent and murmuring, which they were
+fearful might produce a rebellion against themselves, in order to satisfy the
+people, made choice of two knights, Frati Godenti (joyous friars) of Bologna,
+on whom they conferred the chief power in Florence. One named M. Catalano
+de&rsquo; Malavolti, the other M. Loderingo di Liandolo; one an adherent of the
+Guelph, the other of the Ghibelline party. It is to be remarked, that the
+Joyous Friars were called Knights of St. Mary, and became knights on taking
+that habit: their robes were white, the mantle sable, and the arms a white
+field and red cross with two stars. Their office was to defend widows and
+orphans; they were to act as mediators; they had internal regulations like
+other religious bodies. The above-mentioned M. Loderingo was the founder of
+that order. But it was not long before they too well deserved the appellation
+given them, and were found to be more bent on enjoying themselves than on any
+other subject. These two friars were called in by the Florentines, and had a
+residence assigned them in the palace belonging to the people over against the
+Abbey. Such was the dependence placed on the character of their order that it
+was expected they would be impartial, and would save the commonwealth any
+unnecessary expense; instead of which, though inclined to opposite parties,
+they secretly and hypocritically concurred in promoting their own advantage
+rather than the public good.&rdquo; G. Villani, b. vii. c.13. This happened in
+1266.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 110. Gardingo&rsquo;s vicinage.] The name of that part of the city which was
+inhabited by the powerful Ghibelline family of Uberti, and destroyed under the
+partial and iniquitous administration of Catalano and Loderingo.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 117. That pierced spirit.] Caiaphas.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 124. The father of his consort.] Annas, father-in-law to Caiaphas.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 146. He is a liar.] John, c. viii. 44. Dante had perhaps heard this text
+from one of the pulpits in Bologna.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XXIV</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 1. In the year&rsquo;s early nonage.] &ldquo;At the latter part of January,
+when the sun enters into Aquarius, and the equinox is drawing near, when the
+hoar-frosts in the morning often wear the appearance of snow but are melted by
+the rising sun.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 51. Vanquish thy weariness.]
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          Quin corpus onustum
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Hesternis vitiis animum quoque praegravat una,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Atque affigit humi divinae particulam aurae.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          Hor. Sat. ii. l. ii. 78.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 82. Of her sands.] Compare Lucan, Phars. l. ix. 703.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 92. Heliotrope.] The occult properties of this stone are described by
+Solinus, c. xl, and by Boccaccio, in his humorous tale of Calandrino. Decam. G.
+viii. N. 3.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In Chiabrera&rsquo;s Ruggiero, Scaltrimento begs of Sofia, who is<br/>
+sending him on a perilous errand, to lend him the heliotrope.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          In mia man fida
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   L&rsquo;elitropia, per cui possa involarmi
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Secondo il mio talento agli occhi altrui.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          c. vi.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Trust to my hand the heliotrope, by which
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   I may at will from others&rsquo; eyes conceal me<br/>
+Compare Ariosto, II Negromante, a. 3. s. 3. Pulci, Morg. Magg.<br/>
+c xxv. and Fortiguerra, Ricciardetto, c. x. st. 17.<br/>
+Gower in his Confessio Amantis, lib. vii, enumerates it among the<br/>
+jewels in the diadem of the sun.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Jaspis and helitropius.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 104. The Arabian phoenix.] This is translated from Ovid,<br/>
+Metam. l. xv.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Una est quae reparat, seque ipsa reseminat ales,<br/>
+&amp;c.<br/>
+See also Petrarch, Canzone:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Qual piu,&rdquo; &amp;c.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 120. Vanni Fucci.] He is said to have been an illegitimate offspring of the
+family of Lazari in Pistoia, and, having robbed the sacristy of the church of
+St. James in that city, to have charged Vanni della Nona with the sacrilege, in
+consequence of which accusation the latter suffered death.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 142. Pistoia.] &ldquo;In May 1301, the Bianchi party, of Pistoia, with the
+assistance and favor of the Bianchi who ruled Florence, drove out the Neri
+party from the former place, destroying their houses, Palaces and farms.&rdquo;
+Giov. Villani, Hist. l. viii. e xliv.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 144. From Valdimagra.] The commentators explain this prophetical threat to
+allude to the victory obtained by the Marquis Marcello Malaspina of Valdimagra
+(a tract of country now called the Lunigiana) who put himself at the head of
+the Neri and defeated their opponents the Bianchi, in the Campo Piceno near
+Pistoia, soon after the occurrence related in the preceding note.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of this engagement I find no mention in Villani. Currado Malaspina is
+introduced in the eighth Canto of Purgatory; where it appears that, although on
+the present occaision they espoused contrary sides, some important favours were
+nevertheless conferred by that family on our poet at a subsequent perid of his
+exile in 1307.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Canto XXV
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v.1. The sinner ] So Trissino
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Poi facea con le man le fiche al cielo
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Dicendo: Togli, Iddio; che puoi piu farmi?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          L&rsquo;ital. Lib. c. xii
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 12. Thy seed] Thy ancestry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 15. Not him] Capanaeus. Canto XIV.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 18. On Marenna&rsquo;s marsh.] An extensive tract near the sea-shore in
+Tuscany.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 24. Cacus.] Virgil, Aen. l. viii. 193.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 31. A hundred blows.] Less than ten blows, out of the hundred Hercules gave
+him, deprived him of feeling.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 39. Cianfa] He is said to have been of the family of Donati at Florence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 57. Thus up the shrinking paper.]
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   &mdash;All my bowels crumble up to dust.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   I am a scribbled form, drawn up with a pen
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Upon a parchment; and against this fire
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Do I shrink up.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          Shakespeare, K. John, a. v. s. 7.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 61. Agnello.] Agnello Brunelleschi
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 77. In that part.] The navel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 81. As if by sleep or fev&rsquo;rous fit assail&rsquo;d.]
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          O Rome! thy head
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Is drown&rsquo;d in sleep, and all thy body fev&rsquo;ry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          Ben Jonson&rsquo;s Catiline.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 85. Lucan.] Phars. l. ix. 766 and 793.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 87. Ovid.] Metam. l. iv. and v.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 121. His sharpen&rsquo;d visage.] Compare Milton, P. L. b. x. 511 &amp;c.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 131. Buoso.] He is said to have been of the Donati family.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 138. Sciancato.] Puccio Sciancato, a noted robber, whose familly, Venturi
+says, he has not been able to discover.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 140. Gaville.] Francesco Guercio Cavalcante was killed at Gaville, near
+Florence; and in revenge of his death several inhabitants of that district were
+put to death.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XXVI</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 7. But if our minds.]
+</p>
+
+<p>
+        Namque sub Auroram, jam dormitante lucerna,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Somnia quo cerni tempore vera solent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          Ovid, Epist. xix
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The same poetical superstition is alluded to in the Purgatory,<br/>
+Cant. IX. and XXVII.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 9. Shall feel what Prato.] The poet prognosticates the calamities which were
+soon to befal his native city, and which he says, even her nearest neighbor,
+Prato, would wish her. The calamities more particularly pointed at, are said to
+be the fall of a wooden bridge over the Arno, in May, 1304, where a large
+multitude were assembled to witness a representation of hell nnd the infernal
+torments, in consequence of which accident many lives were lost; and a
+conflagration that in the following month destroyed more than seventeen hundred
+houses, many ofthem sumptuous buildings. See G. Villani, Hist. l. viii. c. 70
+and 71.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 22. More than I am wont.] &ldquo;When I reflect on the punishment allotted
+to those who do not give sincere and upright advice to others I am more anxious
+than ever not to abuse to so bad a purpose those talents, whatever they may be,
+which Nature, or rather Providence, has conferred on me.&rdquo; It is probable
+that this declaration was the result of real feeling Textd have given great
+weight to any opinion or party he had espoused, and to whom indigence and exile
+might have offerred strong temptations to deviate from that line of conduct
+which a strict sense of duty prescribed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 35. as he, whose wrongs.] Kings, b. ii. c. ii.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 54. ascending from that funeral pile.] The flame is said to<br/>
+have divided on the funeral pile which consumed tile bodies of<br/>
+Eteocles and Polynices, as if conscious of the enmity that<br/>
+actuated them while living.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Ecce iterum fratris, &amp;c.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          Statius, Theb. l. xii.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Ostendens confectas flamma, &amp;c.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          Lucan, Pharsal. l. 1. 145.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 60. The ambush of the horse.] &ldquo;The ambush of the wooden horse, that
+caused Aeneas to quit the city of Troy and seek his fortune in Italy, where his
+descendants founded the Roman empire.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 91. Caieta.] Virgil, Aeneid. l. vii. 1.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 93. Nor fondness for my son] Imitated hp Tasso, G. L. c.<br/>
+viii.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Ne timor di fatica o di periglio,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Ne vaghezza del regno, ne pietade
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Del vecchio genitor, si degno affetto
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Intiepedir nel generoso petto.<br/>
+This imagined voyage of Ulysses into the Atlantic is alluded to<br/>
+by Pulci.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   E sopratutto commendava Ulisse,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Che per veder nell&rsquo; altro mondo gisse.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          Morg. Magg. c. xxv<br/>
+And by Tasso, G. L. c. xv. 25.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 106. The strait pass.] The straits of Gibraltar.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 122. Made our oars wings.l So Chiabrera, Cant. Eroiche. xiii Faro
+de&rsquo;remi un volo. And Tasso Ibid. 26.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 128. A mountain dim.] The mountain of Purgatorg
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XXVII.</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 6. The Sicilian Bull.] The engine of torture invented by Perillus, for the
+tyrant Phalaris.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 26. Of the mountains there.] Montefeltro.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 38. Polenta&rsquo;s eagle.] Guido Novello da Polenta, who bore an eagle for
+his coat of arms. The name of Polenta was derived from a castle so called in
+the neighbourhood of Brittonoro. Cervia is a small maritime city, about fifteen
+miles to the south of Ravenna. Guido was the son of Ostasio da Polenta, and
+made himself master of Ravenna, in 1265. In 1322 he was deprived of his
+sovereignty, and died at Bologna in the year following. This last and most
+munificent patron of Dante is himself enumerated, by the historian of Italian
+literature, among the poets of his time. Tiraboschi, Storia della Lett. Ital.
+t. v. 1. iii. c. ii. 13. The passnge in the text might have removed the
+uncertainty wwhich Tiraboschi expressed, respecting the duration of
+Guido&rsquo;s absence from Ravenna, when he was driven from that city in 1295,
+by the arms of Pietro, archbishop of Monreale. It must evidently have been very
+short, since his government is here represented (in 1300) as not having
+suffered any material disturbance for many years.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 41. The land.l The territory of Forli, the inhabitants of which, in 1282,
+mere enabled, hy the strategem of Guido da Montefeltro, who then governed it,
+to defeat with great slaughter the French army by which it had been besieged.
+See G. Villani, l. vii. c. 81. The poet informs Guido, its former ruler, that
+it is now in the possession of Sinibaldo Ordolaffi, or Ardelaffi, whom he
+designates by his coat of arms, a lion vert.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 43. The old mastiff of Verucchio and the young.] Malatesta and Malatestino
+his son, lords of Rimini, called, from their ferocity, the mastiffs of
+Verruchio, which was the name of their castle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 44. Montagna.] Montagna de&rsquo;Parcitati, a noble knight, and leader of
+the Ghibelline party at Rimini, murdered by Malatestino.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 46. Lamone&rsquo;s city and Santerno&rsquo;s.] Lamone is the river at
+Faenza, and Santerno at Imola.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 47. The lion of the snowy lair.] Machinardo Pagano, whose arms were a lion
+azure on a field argent; mentioned again in the Purgatory, Canto XIV. 122. See
+G. Villani passim, where he is called Machinardo da Susinana.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 50. Whose flank is wash&rsquo;d of SSavio&rsquo;s wave.] Cesena, situated at
+the foot of a mountain, and washed by the river Savio, that often descends with
+a swoln and rapid stream from the Appenine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 64. A man of arms.] Guido da Montefeltro.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 68. The high priest.] Boniface VIII.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 72. The nature of the lion than the fox.] Non furon leonine ma di volpe. So
+Pulci, Morg. Magg. c. xix.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+        E furon le sua opre e le sue colpe
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Non creder leonine ma di volpe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 81. The chief of the new Pharisee.] Boniface VIII. whose enmity to the
+family of Colonna prompted him to destroy their houses near the Lateran.
+Wishing to obtain possession of their other seat, Penestrino, he consulted with
+Guido da Montefeltro how he might accomplish his purpose, offering him at the
+same time absolution for his past sins, as well as for that which he was then
+tempting him to commit. Guido&rsquo;s advice was, that kind words and fair
+promises nonld put his enemies into his power; and they accordingly soon
+aftermards fell into the snare laid for them, A.D. 1298. See G. Villani, l.
+viii. c. 23.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 84. Nor against Acre one Had fought.] He alludes to the renegade Christians,
+by whom the Saracens, in Apri., 1291, were assisted to recover St.John
+d&rsquo;Acre, the last possession of the Christians in the Iloly Land. The
+regret expressed by the Florentine annalist G. Villani, for the loss of this
+valuable fortress, is well worthy of observation, l. vii. c. 144.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 89. As in Soracte Constantine besought.] So in Dante&rsquo;s treatise De
+Monarchia: &ldquo;Dicunt quidam adhue, quod Constantinus Imperator, mundatus a
+lepra intercessione Syvestri, tunc summni pontificis imperii sedem, scilicet
+Romam, donavit ecclesiae, cum multis allis imperii dignitatibus.&rdquo;
+Lib.iii.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 101. My predecessor.] Celestine V. See Notes to Canto III.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XXVIII.</h5>
+
+<p>
+v.8. In that long war.] The war of Hannibal in Italy. &ldquo;When Mago brought
+news of his victories to Carthage, in order to make his successes more easily
+credited, he commanded the golden rings to be poured out in the senate house,
+which made so large a heap, that, as some relate, they filled three modii and a
+half. A more probable account represents them not to have exceeded one
+modius.&rdquo; Livy, Hist.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 12. Guiscard&rsquo;s Norman steel.] Robert Guiscard, who conquered the
+kingdom of Naples, and died in 1110. G. Villani, l. iv. c. 18. He is introduced
+in the Paradise, Canto XVIII.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 13. And those the rest.] The army of Manfredi, which, through the treachery
+of the Apulian troops, wns overcome by Charles of Anjou in 1205, and fell in
+such numbers that the bones of the slain were still gathered near Ceperano. G.
+Villani, l. vii. c. 9. See the Purgatory, Canto III.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 10. O Tagliocozzo.] He alludes to tile victory which Charles gained over
+Conradino, by the sage advice of the Sieur de Valeri, in 1208. G. Villani, l.
+vii. c. 27.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 32. Ali.] The disciple of Mohammed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 53. Dolcino.] &ldquo;In 1305, a friar, called Dolcino, who belonged to no
+regular order, contrived to raise in Novarra, in Lombardy, a large company of
+the meaner sort of people, declaring himself to be a true apostle of Christ,
+and promulgating a community of property and of wives, with many other such
+heretical doctrines. He blamed the pope, cardinals, and other prelates of the
+holy church, for not observing their duty, nor leading the angelic life, and
+affirmed that he ought to be pope. He was followed by more than three thousand
+men and women, who lived promiscuously on the mountains together, like beasts,
+and, when they wanted provisions, supplied themselves by depredation and
+rapine. This lasted for two years till, many being struck with compunction at
+the dissolute life they led, his sect was much diminished; and through failure
+of food, and the severity of the snows, he was taken by the people of Novarra,
+and burnt, with Margarita his companion and many other men and women whom his
+errors had seduced.&rdquo; G. Villanni, l. viii. c. 84.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Landino observes, that he was possessed of singular eloquence, and that both he
+and Margarita endored their fate with a firmness worthy of a better cause. For
+a further account of him, see Muratori Rer. Ital. Script. t. ix. p. 427.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 69. Medicina.] A place in the territory of Bologna. Piero fomented
+dissensions among the inhabitants of that city, and among the leaders of the
+neighbouring states.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 70. The pleasant land.] Lombardy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 72. The twain.] Guido dal Cassero and Angiolello da Cagnano, two of the
+worthiest and most distinguished citizens of Fano, were invited by Malatestino
+da Rimini to an entertainment on pretence that he had some important business
+to transact with them: and, according to instructions given by him, they mere
+drowned in their passage near Catolica, between Rimini and Fano.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 85. Focara&rsquo;s wind.] Focara is a mountain, from which a wind blows that
+is peculiarly dangerous to the navigators of that coast.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 94. The doubt in Caesar&rsquo;s mind.] Curio, whose speech (according to
+Lucan) determined Julius Caesar to proceed when he had arrived at Rimini (the
+ancient Ariminum), and doubted whether he should prosecute the civil war. Tolle
+moras: semper nocuit differre paratis Pharsal, l. i. 281.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 102. Mosca.] Buondelmonte was engaged to marry a lady of the Amidei family,
+but broke his promise and united himself to one of the Donati. This was so much
+resented by the former, that a meeting of themselves and their kinsmen was
+held, to consider of the best means of revenging the insult. Mosca degli Uberti
+persuaded them to resolve on the assassination of Buondelmonte, exclaiming to
+them &ldquo;the thing once done, there is an end.&rdquo; The counsel and its
+effects were the source of many terrible calamities to the state of Florence.
+&ldquo;This murder,&rdquo; says G. Villani, l. v. c. 38, &ldquo;was the cause
+and beginning of the accursed Guelph and Ghibelline parties in Florence.&rdquo;
+It happened in 1215. See the Paradise, Canto XVI. 139.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 111. The boon companion.] What stronger breastplate than a heart untainted?
+Shakespeare, 2 Hen. VI. a. iii. s. 2.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 160. Bertrand.] Bertrand de Born, Vicomte de Hautefort, near Perigueux in
+Guienne, who incited John to rebel against his father, Henry II. of England.
+Bertrand holds a distinguished place among the Provencal poets. He is quoted in
+Dante, &ldquo;De Vulg. Eloq.&rdquo; l. ii. c. 2. For the translation of some
+extracts from his poems, see Millot, Hist. Litteraire des Troubadors t. i. p.
+210; but the historical parts of that work are, I believe, not to be relied on.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XXIX.</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 26. Geri of Bello.] A kinsman of the Poet&rsquo;s, who was murdered by one
+of the Sacchetti family. His being placed here, may be considered as a proof
+that Dante was more impartial in the allotment of his punishments than has
+generally been supposed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 44. As were the torment.] It is very probable that these<br/>
+lines gave Milton the idea of his celebrated description:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          Immediately a place
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Before their eyes appear&rsquo;d, sad, noisome, dark,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   A lasar-house it seem&rsquo;d, wherein were laid
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Numbers of all diseas&rsquo;d, all maladies, &amp;c.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          P. L. b. xi. 477.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 45. Valdichiana.] The valley through which passes the river Chiana, bounded
+by Arezzo, Cortona, Montepulciano, and Chiusi. In the heat of autumn it was
+formerly rendered unwholesome by the stagnation of the water, but has since
+been drained by the Emperor Leopold II. The Chiana is mentioned as a remarkably
+sluggish stream, in the Paradise, Canto XIII. 21.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 47. Maremma&rsquo;s pestilent fen.] See Note to Canto XXV. v. 18.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 58. In Aegina.] He alludes to the fable of the ants changed into Myrmidons.
+Ovid, Met. 1. vii.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 104. Arezzo was my dwelling.] Grifolino of Arezzo, who promised Albero, son
+of the Bishop of Sienna, that he would teach him the art of flying; and because
+be did not keep his promise, Albero prevailed on his father to have him burnt
+for a necromancer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 117.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          Was ever race
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Light as Sienna&rsquo;s?]<br/>
+The same imputation is again cast on the Siennese, Purg. Canto<br/>
+XIII. 141.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 121. Stricca.] This is said ironically. Stricca, Niccolo Salimbeni, Caccia
+of Asciano, and Abbagliato, or Meo de Folcacchieri, belonged to a company of
+prodigal and luxurious young men in Sienna, called the &ldquo;brigata
+godereccia.&rdquo; Niccolo was the inventor of a new manner of using cloves in
+cookery, not very well understood by the commentators, and which was termed the
+&ldquo;costuma ricca.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 125. In that garden.] Sienna.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 134. Cappocchio&rsquo;s ghost.] Capocchio of Sienna, who is said to have
+been a fellow-student of Dante&rsquo;s in natural philosophy.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XXX.</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 4. Athamas.] From Ovid, Metam. 1. iv. Protinos Aelides, &amp;c.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 16. Hecuba. See Euripedes, Hecuba; and Ovid, Metnm. l. xiii.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 33. Schicchi.] Gianni Schicci, who was of the family of Cavalcanti,
+possessed such a faculty of moulding his features to the resemblance of others,
+that he was employed by Simon Donati to personate Buoso Donati, then recently
+deceased, and to make a will, leaving Simon his heir; for which service he was
+renumerated with a mare of extraordinary value, here called &ldquo;the lady of
+the herd.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 39. Myrrha.] See Ovid, Metam. l. x.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 60. Adamo&rsquo;s woe.] Adamo of Breschia, at the instigation of Cuido
+Alessandro, and their brother Aghinulfo, lords of Romena, coonterfeited the
+coin of Florence; for which crime he was burnt. Landino says, that in his time
+the peasants still pointed out a pile of stones near Romena as the place of his
+execution.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 64. Casentino.] Romena is a part of Casentino.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 77. Branda&rsquo;s limpid spring.] A fountain in Sienna.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 88. The florens with three carats of alloy.] The floren was a coin that
+ought to have had tmenty-four carats of pure gold. Villani relates, that it was
+first used at Florence in 1253, an aera of great prosperity in the annals of
+the republic; before which time their most valuable coinage was of silver.
+Hist. l. vi. c. 54.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 98. The false accuser.] Potiphar&rsquo;s wife.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XXXI.</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 1. The very tongue.] Vulnus in Herculeo quae quondam fecerat hoste Vulneris
+auxilium Pellas hasta fuit. Ovid, Rem. Amor. 47. The same allusion was made by
+Bernard de Ventadour, a Provencal poet in the middle of the twelfth century:
+and Millot observes, that it was a singular instance of erudition in a
+Troubadour. But it is not impossible, as Warton remarks, (Hist. of Engl.
+Poetry, vol. ii. sec. x. p 215.) but that he might have been indebted for it to
+some of the early romances.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In Chaucer&rsquo;s Squier&rsquo;s Tale, a sword of similar quality is<br/>
+introduced:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   And other folk have wondred on the sweard,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   That could so piercen through every thing;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   And fell in speech of Telephus the king,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   And of Achillcs for his queint spere,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   For he couth with it both heale and dere.<br/>
+So Shakspeare, Henry VI. p. ii. a. 5. s. 1.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Whose smile and frown like to Achilles&rsquo; spear
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Is able with the change to kill and cure.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 14. Orlando.l When Charlemain with all his peerage fell At Fontarabia
+Milton, P. L. b. i. 586. See Warton&rsquo;s Hist. of Eng. Poetrg, v. i. sect.
+iii. p. 132. &ldquo;This is the horn which Orlando won from the giant Jatmund,
+and which as Turpin and the Islandic bards report, was endued with magical
+power, and might be heard at the distance of twenty miles.&rdquo; Charlemain
+and Orlando are introduced in the Paradise, Canto XVIII.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 36. Montereggnon.] A castle near Sienna.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 105. The fortunate vale.] The country near Carthage. See Liv. Hist. l. xxx.
+and Lucan, Phars. l. iv. 590. Dante has kept the latter of these writers in his
+eye throughout all this passage.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 123. Alcides.] The combat between Hercules Antaeus is adduced by the Poet in
+his treatise &ldquo;De Monarchia,&rdquo; l. ii. as a proof of the judgment of
+God displayed in the duel, according to the singular superstition of those
+times.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 128. The tower of Carisenda.] The leaning tower at Bologna
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XXXII.</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 8. A tongue not us&rsquo;d To infant babbling.] Ne da lingua, che chiami
+mamma, o babbo. Dante in his treatise &ldquo; De Vulg. Eloq.&rdquo; speaking of
+words not admissble in the loftier, or as he calls it, tragic style of poetry,
+says- &ldquo;In quorum numero nec puerilia propter suam simplicitatem ut Mamma
+et Babbo,&rdquo; l. ii. c. vii.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 29. Tabernich or Pietrapana.] The one a mountain in Sclavonia, the other in
+that tract of country called the Garfagnana, not far from Lucca.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 33. To where modest shame appears.] &ldquo;As high as to the face.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 35. Moving their teeth in shrill note like the stork.] Mettendo i denti in
+nota di cicogna. So Boccaccio, G. viii. n. 7. &ldquo;Lo scolar cattivello quasi
+cicogna divenuto si forte batteva i denti.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 53. Who are these two.] Alessandro and Napoleone, sons of Alberto Alberti,
+who murdered each other. They were proprietors of the valley of Falterona,
+where the Bisenzio has its source, a river that falls into the Arno about six
+miles from Florence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 59. Not him,] Mordrec, son of King Arthur.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 60. Foccaccia.] Focaccia of Cancellieri, (the Pistoian family) whose
+atrocious act of revenge against his uncle is said to have given rise to the
+parties of the Bianchi and Neri, in the year 1300. See G. Villani, Hist. l,
+viii. c. 37. and Macchiavelli, Hist. l. ii. The account of the latter writer
+differs much from that given by Landino in his Commentary.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 63. Mascheroni.] Sassol Mascheroni, a Florentiue, who also murdered his
+uncle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 66. Camiccione.] Camiccione de&rsquo; Pazzi of Valdarno, by whom his kinsman
+Ubertino was treacherously pnt to death.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 67. Carlino.] One of the same family. He betrayed the Castel di Piano
+Travigne, in Valdarno, to the Florentines, after the refugees of the Bianca and
+Ghibelline party had defended it against a siege for twenty-nine days, in the
+summer of 1302. See G. Villani, l. viii. c. 52 and Dino Compagni, l. ii.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 81. Montaperto.] The defeat of the Guelfi at Montaperto, occasioned by the
+treachery of Bocca degli Abbati, who, during the engagement, cut off the hand
+of Giacopo del Vacca de&rsquo;Pazzi, bearer of the Florentine standard. G.
+Villani, l. vi. c. 80, and Notes to Canto X. This event happened in 1260.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 113. Him of Duera.] Buoso of Cremona, of the family of Duera, who was bribed
+by Guy de Montfort, to leave a pass between Piedmont and Parma, with the
+defence of which he had been entrusted by the Ghibellines, open to the army of
+Charles of Anjou, A.D. 1265, at which the people of Cremona were so enraged,
+that they extirpated the whole family. G. Villani, l. vii. c. 4.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 118. Beccaria.] Abbot of Vallombrosa, who was the Pope&rsquo;s Legate at
+Florence, where his intrigues in favour of the Ghibellines being discovered, he
+was beheaded. I do not find the occurrence in Vallini, nor do the commentators
+say to what pope he was legate. By Landino he is reported to have been from
+Parma, by Vellutello from Pavia.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 118. Soldanieri.] &ldquo;Gianni Soldanieri,&rdquo; says Villani, Hist. l.
+vii. c14, &ldquo;put himself at the head of the people, in the hopes of rising
+into power, not aware that the result would be mischief to the Ghibelline
+party, and his own ruin; an event which seems ever to have befallen him, who
+has headed the populace in Florence.&rdquo; A.D. 1266.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 119. Ganellon.] The betrayer of Charlemain, mentioned by Archbishop Turpin.
+He is a common instance of treachery with the poets of the middle ages. Trop
+son fol e mal pensant, Pis valent que Guenelon. Thibaut, roi de Navarre O new
+Scariot, and new Ganilion, O false dissembler, &amp;c. Chaucer, Nonne&rsquo;s
+Prieste&rsquo;s Tale And in the Monke&rsquo;s Tale, Peter of Spaine. v. 119.
+Tribaldello.] Tribaldello de&rsquo;Manfredi, who was bribed to betray the city
+of Faonza, A. D. 1282. G. Villani, l. vii. c. 80
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 128. Tydeus.] See Statius, Theb. l. viii. ad finem.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XXXIII.</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 14. Count Ugolino.] &ldquo;In the year 1288, in the month of July, Pisa was
+much divided by competitors for the sovereignty; one party, composed of certain
+of the Guelphi, being headed by the Judge Nino di Gallura de&rsquo;Visconti;
+another, consisting of others of the same faction, by the Count Ugolino
+de&rsquo; Gherardeschi; and the third by the Archbishop Ruggieri degli
+Ubaldini, with the Lanfranchi, Sismondi, Gualandi, and other Ghibelline houses.
+The Count Ugolino,to effect his purpose, united with the Archbishop and his
+party, and having betrayed Nino, his sister&rsquo;s son, they contrived that he
+and his followers should either be driven out of Pisa, or their persons seized.
+Nino hearing this, and not seeing any means of defending himself, retired to
+Calci, his castle, and formed an alliance with the Florentines and people of
+Lucca, against the Pisans. The Count, before Nino was gone, in order to cover
+his treachery, when everything was settled for his expulsion, quitted Pisa, and
+repaired to a manor of his called Settimo; whence, as soon as he was informed
+of Nino&rsquo;s departure, he returned to Pisa with great rejoicing and
+festivity, and was elevated to the supreme power with every demonstration of
+triumph and honour. But his greatness was not of long continuauce. It pleased
+the Almighty that a total reverse of fortune should ensue, as a punishment for
+his acts of treachery and guilt: for he was said to have poisoned the Count
+Anselmo da Capraia, his sister&rsquo;s son, on account of the envy and fear
+excited in his mind by the high esteem in which the gracious manners of Anselmo
+were held by the Pisans. The power of the Guelphi being so much diminished, the
+Archbishop devised means to betray the Count Uglino and caused him to be
+suddenly attacked in his palace by the fury of the people, whom he had
+exasperated, by telling them that Ugolino had betrayed Pisa, and given up their
+castles to the citizens of Florence and of Lucca. He was immediately compelled
+to surrender; his bastard son and his grandson fell in the assault; and two of
+his sons, with their two sons also, were conveyed to prison.&rdquo; G. Villani
+l. vii. c. 120.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;In the following march, the Pisans, who had imprisoned the Count Uglino,
+with two of his sons and two of his grandchildren, the offspring of his son the
+Count Guelfo, in a tower on the Piazza of the Anzania, caused the tower to be
+locked, the key thrown into the Arno, and all food to be withheld from them. In
+a few days they died of hunger; but the Count first with loud cries declared
+his penitence, and yet neither priest nor friar was allowed to shrive him. All
+the five, when dead, were dragged out of the prison, and meanly interred; and
+from thence forward the tower was called the tower of famine, and so shall ever
+be.&rdquo; Ibid. c. 127.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Chancer has briefly told Ugolino&rsquo;s story. See Monke&rsquo;s Tale,<br/>
+Hugeline of Pise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 29. Unto the mountain.] The mountain S. Giuliano, between Pisa and Lucca.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 59. Thou gav&rsquo;st.]
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          Tu ne vestisti
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Queste misere carni, e tu le spoglia.<br/>
+Imitated by Filicaja, Canz. iii.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Di questa imperial caduca spoglia
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Tu, Signor, me vestisti e tu mi spoglia:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Ben puoi&rsquo;l Regno me tor tu che me&rsquo;l desti.<br/>
+And by Maffei, in the Merope:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          Tu disciogleste
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Queste misere membra e tu le annodi.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 79. In that fair region.] Del bel paese la, dove&rsquo;l si suona. Italy as
+explained by Dante himself, in his treatise De Vulg. Eloq. l. i. c. 8.
+&ldquo;Qui autem Si dicunt a praedictis finibus. (Januensiem) Oreintalem
+(Meridionalis Europae partem) tenent; videlicet usque ad promontorium illud
+Italiae, qua sinus Adriatici maris incipit et Siciliam.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 82. Capraia and Gorgona.] Small islands near the mouth of the Arno.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 94. There very weeping suffers not to weep,] Lo pianto stesso li pianger non
+lascia. So Giusto de&rsquo;Conti, Bella Mano. Son. &ldquo;Quanto il
+ciel.&rdquo; Che il troppo pianto a me pianger non lassa. v. 116. The friar
+Albigero.] Alberigo de&rsquo;Manfredi, of Faenza, one of the Frati Godenti,
+Joyons Friars who having quarrelled with some of his brotherhood, under
+pretence of wishing to be reconciled, invited them to a banquet, at the
+conclusion of which he called for the fruit, a signal for the assassins to rush
+in and dispatch those whom he had marked for destruction. Hence, adds Landino,
+it is said proverbially of one who has been stabbed, that he has had some of
+the friar Alberigo&rsquo;s fruit. Thus Pulci, Morg. Magg. c. xxv. Le frutte
+amare di frate Alberico.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 123. Ptolomea.] This circle is named Ptolomea from Ptolemy, the son of
+Abubus, by whom Simon and his sons were murdered, at a great banquet he had
+made for them. See Maccabees, ch xvi.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 126. The glazed tear-drops.]
+</p>
+
+<p>
+-sorrow&rsquo;s eye, glazed with blinding tears. Shakspeare, Rich. II. a. 2. s.
+2.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 136. Branca Doria.] The family of Doria was possessed of great influence in
+Genoa. Branca is said to have murdered his father-in-law, Michel Zanche,
+introduced in Canto XXII.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 162 Romagna&rsquo;s darkest spirit.] The friar Alberigo.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Canto XXXIV.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 6. A wind-mill.] The author of the Caliph Vathek, in the notes to that tale,
+justly observes, that it is more than probable that Don Quixote&rsquo;s mistake
+of the wind-mills for giants was suggested to Cervantes by this simile.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 37. Three faces.] It can scarcely be doubted but that Milton derived his
+description of Satan in those lines,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+               Each passion dimm&rsquo;d his face
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Thrice chang&rsquo;d with pale, ire, envy, and despair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          P. L. b. iv. 114.<br/>
+from this passage, coupled with the remark of Vellutello upon it:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The first of these sins is anger which he signifies by the red face; the
+second, represented by that between pale and yellow is envy and not, as others
+have said, avarice; and the third, denoted by the black, is a melancholy humour
+that causes a man&rsquo;s thoughts to be dark and evil, and averse from all joy
+and tranquillity.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 44. Sails.]
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          &mdash;His sail-broad vans
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   He spreads for flight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          Milton, P. L. b. ii. 927.<br/>
+Compare Spenser, F. Q. b. i. c. xi. st. 10; Ben Jonson&rsquo;s Every<br/>
+Man out of his humour, v. 7; and Fletcher&rsquo;s Prophetess, a. 2. s.<br/>
+3.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 46. Like a bat.] The description of an imaginary being, who is called
+Typhurgo, in the Zodiacus Vitae, has some touches very like this of
+Dante&rsquo;s Lucifer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+        Ingentem vidi regem ingentique sedentem
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   In solio, crines flammanti stemmate cinctum
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          &mdash;-utrinque patentes
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Alae humeris magnae, quales vespertilionum
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Membranis contextae amplis&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Nudus erat longis sed opertus corpora villis.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          M. Palingenii, Zod. Vit. l. ix.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   A mighty king I might discerne,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          Plac&rsquo;d hie on lofty chaire,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   His haire with fyry garland deckt
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          Puft up in fiendish wise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   x x x x x x
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          Large wings on him did grow
+</p>
+
+<p>
+   Framde like the wings of flinder mice, &amp;c.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+          Googe&rsquo;s Translation
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 61. Brutus.] Landino struggles, but I fear in vain, to extricate Brutus from
+the unworthy lot which is here assigned him. He maintains, that by Brutus and
+Cassius are not meant the individuals known by those names, but any who put a
+lawful monarch to death. Yet if Caesar was such, the conspirators might be
+regarded as deserving of their doom.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 89. Within one hour and half of noon.] The poet uses the Hebrew manner of
+computing the day, according to which the third hour answers to our twelve
+o&rsquo;clock at noon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 120. By what of firm land on this side appears.] The mountain of Purgatory.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v.123. The vaulted tomb.] &ldquo;La tomba.&rdquo; This word is used to express
+the whole depth of the infernal region.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoII.0"></a>PURGATORY</h2>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoII.I"></a>CANTO I</h2>
+
+<p>
+O&rsquo;er better waves to speed her rapid course<br/>
+The light bark of my genius lifts the sail,<br/>
+Well pleas&rsquo;d to leave so cruel sea behind;<br/>
+And of that second region will I sing,<br/>
+In which the human spirit from sinful blot<br/>
+Is purg&rsquo;d, and for ascent to Heaven prepares.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Here, O ye hallow&rsquo;d Nine! for in your train<br/>
+I follow, here the deadened strain revive;<br/>
+Nor let Calliope refuse to sound<br/>
+A somewhat higher song, of that loud tone,<br/>
+Which when the wretched birds of chattering note<br/>
+Had heard, they of forgiveness lost all hope.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sweet hue of eastern sapphire, that was spread<br/>
+O&rsquo;er the serene aspect of the pure air,<br/>
+High up as the first circle, to mine eyes<br/>
+Unwonted joy renew&rsquo;d, soon as I &rsquo;scap&rsquo;d<br/>
+Forth from the atmosphere of deadly gloom,<br/>
+That had mine eyes and bosom fill&rsquo;d with grief.<br/>
+The radiant planet, that to love invites,<br/>
+Made all the orient laugh, and veil&rsquo;d beneath<br/>
+The Pisces&rsquo; light, that in his escort came.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To the right hand I turn&rsquo;d, and fix&rsquo;d my mind<br/>
+On the&rsquo; other pole attentive, where I saw<br/>
+Four stars ne&rsquo;er seen before save by the ken<br/>
+Of our first parents. Heaven of their rays<br/>
+Seem&rsquo;d joyous. O thou northern site, bereft<br/>
+Indeed, and widow&rsquo;d, since of these depriv&rsquo;d!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As from this view I had desisted, straight<br/>
+Turning a little tow&rsquo;rds the other pole,<br/>
+There from whence now the wain had disappear&rsquo;d,<br/>
+I saw an old man standing by my side<br/>
+Alone, so worthy of rev&rsquo;rence in his look,<br/>
+That ne&rsquo;er from son to father more was ow&rsquo;d.<br/>
+Low down his beard and mix&rsquo;d with hoary white<br/>
+Descended, like his locks, which parting fell<br/>
+Upon his breast in double fold. The beams<br/>
+Of those four luminaries on his face<br/>
+So brightly shone, and with such radiance clear<br/>
+Deck&rsquo;d it, that I beheld him as the sun.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Say who are ye, that stemming the blind stream,<br/>
+Forth from th&rsquo; eternal prison-house have fled?&rdquo;<br/>
+He spoke and moved those venerable plumes.<br/>
+&ldquo;Who hath conducted, or with lantern sure<br/>
+Lights you emerging from the depth of night,<br/>
+That makes the infernal valley ever black?<br/>
+Are the firm statutes of the dread abyss<br/>
+Broken, or in high heaven new laws ordain&rsquo;d,<br/>
+That thus, condemn&rsquo;d, ye to my caves approach?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My guide, then laying hold on me, by words<br/>
+And intimations given with hand and head,<br/>
+Made my bent knees and eye submissive pay<br/>
+Due reverence; then thus to him replied.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not of myself I come; a Dame from heaven<br/>
+Descending, had besought me in my charge<br/>
+To bring. But since thy will implies, that more<br/>
+Our true condition I unfold at large,<br/>
+Mine is not to deny thee thy request.<br/>
+This mortal ne&rsquo;er hath seen the farthest gloom.<br/>
+But erring by his folly had approach&rsquo;d<br/>
+So near, that little space was left to turn.<br/>
+Then, as before I told, I was dispatch&rsquo;d<br/>
+To work his rescue, and no way remain&rsquo;d<br/>
+Save this which I have ta&rsquo;en. I have display&rsquo;d<br/>
+Before him all the regions of the bad;<br/>
+And purpose now those spirits to display,<br/>
+That under thy command are purg&rsquo;d from sin.<br/>
+How I have brought him would be long to say.<br/>
+From high descends the virtue, by whose aid<br/>
+I to thy sight and hearing him have led.<br/>
+Now may our coming please thee. In the search<br/>
+Of liberty he journeys: that how dear<br/>
+They know, who for her sake have life refus&rsquo;d.<br/>
+Thou knowest, to whom death for her was sweet<br/>
+In Utica, where thou didst leave those weeds,<br/>
+That in the last great day will shine so bright.<br/>
+For us the&rsquo; eternal edicts are unmov&rsquo;d:<br/>
+He breathes, and I am free of Minos&rsquo; power,<br/>
+Abiding in that circle where the eyes<br/>
+Of thy chaste Marcia beam, who still in look<br/>
+Prays thee, O hallow&rsquo;d spirit! to own her shine.<br/>
+Then by her love we&rsquo; implore thee, let us pass<br/>
+Through thy sev&rsquo;n regions; for which best thanks<br/>
+I for thy favour will to her return,<br/>
+If mention there below thou not disdain.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Marcia so pleasing in my sight was found,&rdquo;<br/>
+He then to him rejoin&rsquo;d, &ldquo;while I was there,<br/>
+That all she ask&rsquo;d me I was fain to grant.<br/>
+Now that beyond the&rsquo; accursed stream she dwells,<br/>
+She may no longer move me, by that law,<br/>
+Which was ordain&rsquo;d me, when I issued thence.<br/>
+Not so, if Dame from heaven, as thou sayst,<br/>
+Moves and directs thee; then no flattery needs.<br/>
+Enough for me that in her name thou ask.<br/>
+Go therefore now: and with a slender reed<br/>
+See that thou duly gird him, and his face<br/>
+Lave, till all sordid stain thou wipe from thence.<br/>
+For not with eye, by any cloud obscur&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Would it be seemly before him to come,<br/>
+Who stands the foremost minister in heaven.<br/>
+This islet all around, there far beneath,<br/>
+Where the wave beats it, on the oozy bed<br/>
+Produces store of reeds. No other plant,<br/>
+Cover&rsquo;d with leaves, or harden&rsquo;d in its stalk,<br/>
+There lives, not bending to the water&rsquo;s sway.<br/>
+After, this way return not; but the sun<br/>
+Will show you, that now rises, where to take<br/>
+The mountain in its easiest ascent.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He disappear&rsquo;d; and I myself uprais&rsquo;d<br/>
+Speechless, and to my guide retiring close,<br/>
+Toward him turn&rsquo;d mine eyes. He thus began;<br/>
+&ldquo;My son! observant thou my steps pursue.<br/>
+We must retreat to rearward, for that way<br/>
+The champain to its low extreme declines.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The dawn had chas&rsquo;d the matin hour of prime,<br/>
+Which deaf before it, so that from afar<br/>
+I spy&rsquo;d the trembling of the ocean stream.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We travers&rsquo;d the deserted plain, as one<br/>
+Who, wander&rsquo;d from his track, thinks every step<br/>
+Trodden in vain till he regain the path.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When we had come, where yet the tender dew<br/>
+Strove with the sun, and in a place, where fresh<br/>
+The wind breath&rsquo;d o&rsquo;er it, while it slowly dried;<br/>
+Both hands extended on the watery grass<br/>
+My master plac&rsquo;d, in graceful act and kind.<br/>
+Whence I of his intent before appriz&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Stretch&rsquo;d out to him my cheeks suffus&rsquo;d with tears.<br/>
+There to my visage he anew restor&rsquo;d<br/>
+That hue, which the dun shades of hell conceal&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then on the solitary shore arriv&rsquo;d,<br/>
+That never sailing on its waters saw<br/>
+Man, that could after measure back his course,<br/>
+He girt me in such manner as had pleas&rsquo;d<br/>
+Him who instructed, and O, strange to tell!<br/>
+As he selected every humble plant,<br/>
+Wherever one was pluck&rsquo;d, another there<br/>
+Resembling, straightway in its place arose.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoII.II"></a>CANTO II</h2>
+
+<p>
+Now had the sun to that horizon reach&rsquo;d,<br/>
+That covers, with the most exalted point<br/>
+Of its meridian circle, Salem&rsquo;s walls,<br/>
+And night, that opposite to him her orb<br/>
+Sounds, from the stream of Ganges issued forth,<br/>
+Holding the scales, that from her hands are dropp&rsquo;d<br/>
+When she reigns highest: so that where I was,<br/>
+Aurora&rsquo;s white and vermeil-tinctur&rsquo;d cheek<br/>
+To orange turn&rsquo;d as she in age increas&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile we linger&rsquo;d by the water&rsquo;s brink,<br/>
+Like men, who, musing on their road, in thought<br/>
+Journey, while motionless the body rests.<br/>
+When lo! as near upon the hour of dawn,<br/>
+Through the thick vapours Mars with fiery beam<br/>
+Glares down in west, over the ocean floor;<br/>
+So seem&rsquo;d, what once again I hope to view,<br/>
+A light so swiftly coming through the sea,<br/>
+No winged course might equal its career.<br/>
+From which when for a space I had withdrawn<br/>
+Thine eyes, to make inquiry of my guide,<br/>
+Again I look&rsquo;d and saw it grown in size<br/>
+And brightness: thou on either side appear&rsquo;d<br/>
+Something, but what I knew not of bright hue,<br/>
+And by degrees from underneath it came<br/>
+Another. My preceptor silent yet<br/>
+Stood, while the brightness, that we first discern&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Open&rsquo;d the form of wings: then when he knew<br/>
+The pilot, cried aloud, &ldquo;Down, down; bend low<br/>
+Thy knees; behold God&rsquo;s angel: fold thy hands:<br/>
+Now shalt thou see true Ministers indeed.<br/>
+Lo how all human means he sets at naught!<br/>
+So that nor oar he needs, nor other sail<br/>
+Except his wings, between such distant shores.<br/>
+Lo how straight up to heaven he holds them rear&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Winnowing the air with those eternal plumes,<br/>
+That not like mortal hairs fall off or change!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As more and more toward us came, more bright<br/>
+Appear&rsquo;d the bird of God, nor could the eye<br/>
+Endure his splendor near: I mine bent down.<br/>
+He drove ashore in a small bark so swift<br/>
+And light, that in its course no wave it drank.<br/>
+The heav&rsquo;nly steersman at the prow was seen,<br/>
+Visibly written blessed in his looks.<br/>
+Within a hundred spirits and more there sat.<br/>
+&ldquo;In Exitu Israel de Aegypto;&rdquo;<br/>
+All with one voice together sang, with what<br/>
+In the remainder of that hymn is writ.<br/>
+Then soon as with the sign of holy cross<br/>
+He bless&rsquo;d them, they at once leap&rsquo;d out on land,<br/>
+The swiftly as he came return&rsquo;d. The crew,<br/>
+There left, appear&rsquo;d astounded with the place,<br/>
+Gazing around as one who sees new sights.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From every side the sun darted his beams,<br/>
+And with his arrowy radiance from mid heav&rsquo;n<br/>
+Had chas&rsquo;d the Capricorn, when that strange tribe<br/>
+Lifting their eyes towards us: If ye know,<br/>
+Declare what path will Lead us to the mount.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Them Virgil answer&rsquo;d. &ldquo;Ye suppose perchance<br/>
+Us well acquainted with this place: but here,<br/>
+We, as yourselves, are strangers. Not long erst<br/>
+We came, before you but a little space,<br/>
+By other road so rough and hard, that now<br/>
+The&rsquo; ascent will seem to us as play.&rdquo; The spirits,<br/>
+Who from my breathing had perceiv&rsquo;d I liv&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Grew pale with wonder. As the multitude<br/>
+Flock round a herald, sent with olive branch,<br/>
+To hear what news he brings, and in their haste<br/>
+Tread one another down, e&rsquo;en so at sight<br/>
+Of me those happy spirits were fix&rsquo;d, each one<br/>
+Forgetful of its errand, to depart,<br/>
+Where cleans&rsquo;d from sin, it might be made all fair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then one I saw darting before the rest<br/>
+With such fond ardour to embrace me, I<br/>
+To do the like was mov&rsquo;d. O shadows vain<br/>
+Except in outward semblance! thrice my hands<br/>
+I clasp&rsquo;d behind it, they as oft return&rsquo;d<br/>
+Empty into my breast again. Surprise<br/>
+I needs must think was painted in my looks,<br/>
+For that the shadow smil&rsquo;d and backward drew.<br/>
+To follow it I hasten&rsquo;d, but with voice<br/>
+Of sweetness it enjoin&rsquo;d me to desist.<br/>
+Then who it was I knew, and pray&rsquo;d of it,<br/>
+To talk with me, it would a little pause.<br/>
+It answered: &ldquo;Thee as in my mortal frame<br/>
+I lov&rsquo;d, so loos&rsquo;d forth it I love thee still,<br/>
+And therefore pause; but why walkest thou here?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not without purpose once more to return,<br/>
+Thou find&rsquo;st me, my Casella, where I am<br/>
+Journeying this way;&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;but how of thee<br/>
+Hath so much time been lost?&rdquo; He answer&rsquo;d straight:<br/>
+&ldquo;No outrage hath been done to me, if he<br/>
+Who when and whom he chooses takes, me oft<br/>
+This passage hath denied, since of just will<br/>
+His will he makes. These three months past indeed,<br/>
+He, whose chose to enter, with free leave<br/>
+Hath taken; whence I wand&rsquo;ring by the shore<br/>
+Where Tyber&rsquo;s wave grows salt, of him gain&rsquo;d kind<br/>
+Admittance, at that river&rsquo;s mouth, tow&rsquo;rd which<br/>
+His wings are pointed, for there always throng<br/>
+All such as not to Archeron descend.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then I: &ldquo;If new laws have not quite destroy&rsquo;d<br/>
+Memory and use of that sweet song of love,<br/>
+That while all my cares had power to &rsquo;swage;<br/>
+Please thee with it a little to console<br/>
+My spirit, that incumber&rsquo;d with its frame,<br/>
+Travelling so far, of pain is overcome.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Love that discourses in my thoughts.&rdquo; He then<br/>
+Began in such soft accents, that within<br/>
+The sweetness thrills me yet. My gentle guide<br/>
+And all who came with him, so well were pleas&rsquo;d,<br/>
+That seem&rsquo;d naught else might in their thoughts have room.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fast fix&rsquo;d in mute attention to his notes<br/>
+We stood, when lo! that old man venerable<br/>
+Exclaiming, &ldquo;How is this, ye tardy spirits?<br/>
+What negligence detains you loit&rsquo;ring here?<br/>
+Run to the mountain to cast off those scales,<br/>
+That from your eyes the sight of God conceal.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As a wild flock of pigeons, to their food<br/>
+Collected, blade or tares, without their pride<br/>
+Accustom&rsquo;d, and in still and quiet sort,<br/>
+If aught alarm them, suddenly desert<br/>
+Their meal, assail&rsquo;d by more important care;<br/>
+So I that new-come troop beheld, the song<br/>
+Deserting, hasten to the mountain&rsquo;s side,<br/>
+As one who goes yet where he tends knows not.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nor with less hurried step did we depart.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoII.III"></a>CANTO III</h2>
+
+<p>
+Them sudden flight had scatter&rsquo;d over the plain,<br/>
+Turn&rsquo;d tow&rsquo;rds the mountain, whither reason&rsquo;s voice<br/>
+Drives us; I to my faithful company<br/>
+Adhering, left it not. For how of him<br/>
+Depriv&rsquo;d, might I have sped, or who beside<br/>
+Would o&rsquo;er the mountainous tract have led my steps<br/>
+He with the bitter pang of self-remorse<br/>
+Seem&rsquo;d smitten. O clear conscience and upright<br/>
+How doth a little fling wound thee sore!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Soon as his feet desisted (slack&rsquo;ning pace),<br/>
+From haste, that mars all decency of act,<br/>
+My mind, that in itself before was wrapt,<br/>
+Its thoughts expanded, as with joy restor&rsquo;d:<br/>
+And full against the steep ascent I set<br/>
+My face, where highest to heav&rsquo;n its top o&rsquo;erflows.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sun, that flar&rsquo;d behind, with ruddy beam<br/>
+Before my form was broken; for in me<br/>
+His rays resistance met. I turn&rsquo;d aside<br/>
+With fear of being left, when I beheld<br/>
+Only before myself the ground obscur&rsquo;d.<br/>
+When thus my solace, turning him around,<br/>
+Bespake me kindly: &ldquo;Why distrustest thou?<br/>
+Believ&rsquo;st not I am with thee, thy sure guide?<br/>
+It now is evening there, where buried lies<br/>
+The body, in which I cast a shade, remov&rsquo;d<br/>
+To Naples from Brundusium&rsquo;s wall. Nor thou<br/>
+Marvel, if before me no shadow fall,<br/>
+More than that in the sky element<br/>
+One ray obstructs not other. To endure<br/>
+Torments of heat and cold extreme, like frames<br/>
+That virtue hath dispos&rsquo;d, which how it works<br/>
+Wills not to us should be reveal&rsquo;d. Insane<br/>
+Who hopes, our reason may that space explore,<br/>
+Which holds three persons in one substance knit.<br/>
+Seek not the wherefore, race of human kind;<br/>
+Could ye have seen the whole, no need had been<br/>
+For Mary to bring forth. Moreover ye<br/>
+Have seen such men desiring fruitlessly;<br/>
+To whose desires repose would have been giv&rsquo;n,<br/>
+That now but serve them for eternal grief.<br/>
+I speak of Plato, and the Stagyrite,<br/>
+And others many more.&rdquo; And then he bent<br/>
+Downwards his forehead, and in troubled mood<br/>
+Broke off his speech. Meanwhile we had arriv&rsquo;d<br/>
+Far as the mountain&rsquo;s foot, and there the rock<br/>
+Found of so steep ascent, that nimblest steps<br/>
+To climb it had been vain. The most remote<br/>
+Most wild untrodden path, in all the tract<br/>
+&rsquo;Twixt Lerice and Turbia were to this<br/>
+A ladder easy&rsquo; and open of access.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who knows on which hand now the steep declines?&rdquo;<br/>
+My master said and paus&rsquo;d, &ldquo;so that he may<br/>
+Ascend, who journeys without aid of wine,?&rdquo;<br/>
+And while with looks directed to the ground<br/>
+The meaning of the pathway he explor&rsquo;d,<br/>
+And I gaz&rsquo;d upward round the stony height,<br/>
+Of spirits, that toward us mov&rsquo;d their steps,<br/>
+Yet moving seem&rsquo;d not, they so slow approach&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I thus my guide address&rsquo;d: &ldquo;Upraise thine eyes,<br/>
+Lo that way some, of whom thou may&rsquo;st obtain<br/>
+Counsel, if of thyself thou find&rsquo;st it not!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Straightway he look&rsquo;d, and with free speech replied:<br/>
+&ldquo;Let us tend thither: they but softly come.<br/>
+And thou be firm in hope, my son belov&rsquo;d.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now was that people distant far in space<br/>
+A thousand paces behind ours, as much<br/>
+As at a throw the nervous arm could fling,<br/>
+When all drew backward on the messy crags<br/>
+Of the steep bank, and firmly stood unmov&rsquo;d<br/>
+As one who walks in doubt might stand to look.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;O spirits perfect! O already chosen!&rdquo;<br/>
+Virgil to them began, &ldquo;by that blest peace,<br/>
+Which, as I deem, is for you all prepar&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Instruct us where the mountain low declines,<br/>
+So that attempt to mount it be not vain.<br/>
+For who knows most, him loss of time most grieves.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As sheep, that step from forth their fold, by one,<br/>
+Or pairs, or three at once; meanwhile the rest<br/>
+Stand fearfully, bending the eye and nose<br/>
+To ground, and what the foremost does, that do<br/>
+The others, gath&rsquo;ring round her, if she stops,<br/>
+Simple and quiet, nor the cause discern;<br/>
+So saw I moving to advance the first,<br/>
+Who of that fortunate crew were at the head,<br/>
+Of modest mien and graceful in their gait.<br/>
+When they before me had beheld the light<br/>
+From my right side fall broken on the ground,<br/>
+So that the shadow reach&rsquo;d the cave, they stopp&rsquo;d<br/>
+And somewhat back retir&rsquo;d: the same did all,<br/>
+Who follow&rsquo;d, though unweeting of the cause
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Unask&rsquo;d of you, yet freely I confess,<br/>
+This is a human body which ye see.<br/>
+That the sun&rsquo;s light is broken on the ground,<br/>
+Marvel not: but believe, that not without<br/>
+Virtue deriv&rsquo;d from Heaven, we to climb<br/>
+Over this wall aspire.&rdquo; So them bespake<br/>
+My master; and that virtuous tribe rejoin&rsquo;d;<br/>
+&ldquo; Turn, and before you there the entrance lies,&rdquo;<br/>
+Making a signal to us with bent hands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then of them one began. &ldquo;Whoe&rsquo;er thou art,<br/>
+Who journey&rsquo;st thus this way, thy visage turn,<br/>
+Think if me elsewhere thou hast ever seen.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I tow&rsquo;rds him turn&rsquo;d, and with fix&rsquo;d eye beheld.<br/>
+Comely, and fair, and gentle of aspect,<br/>
+He seem&rsquo;d, but on one brow a gash was mark&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When humbly I disclaim&rsquo;d to have beheld<br/>
+Him ever: &ldquo;Now behold!&rdquo; he said, and show&rsquo;d<br/>
+High on his breast a wound: then smiling spake.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am Manfredi, grandson to the Queen<br/>
+Costanza: whence I pray thee, when return&rsquo;d,<br/>
+To my fair daughter go, the parent glad<br/>
+Of Aragonia and Sicilia&rsquo;s pride;<br/>
+And of the truth inform her, if of me<br/>
+Aught else be told. When by two mortal blows<br/>
+My frame was shatter&rsquo;d, I betook myself<br/>
+Weeping to him, who of free will forgives.<br/>
+My sins were horrible; but so wide arms<br/>
+Hath goodness infinite, that it receives<br/>
+All who turn to it. Had this text divine<br/>
+Been of Cosenza&rsquo;s shepherd better scann&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Who then by Clement on my hunt was set,<br/>
+Yet at the bridge&rsquo;s head my bones had lain,<br/>
+Near Benevento, by the heavy mole<br/>
+Protected; but the rain now drenches them,<br/>
+And the wind drives, out of the kingdom&rsquo;s bounds,<br/>
+Far as the stream of Verde, where, with lights<br/>
+Extinguish&rsquo;d, he remov&rsquo;d them from their bed.<br/>
+Yet by their curse we are not so destroy&rsquo;d,<br/>
+But that the eternal love may turn, while hope<br/>
+Retains her verdant blossoms. True it is,<br/>
+That such one as in contumacy dies<br/>
+Against the holy church, though he repent,<br/>
+Must wander thirty-fold for all the time<br/>
+In his presumption past; if such decree<br/>
+Be not by prayers of good men shorter made<br/>
+Look therefore if thou canst advance my bliss;<br/>
+Revealing to my good Costanza, how<br/>
+Thou hast beheld me, and beside the terms<br/>
+Laid on me of that interdict; for here<br/>
+By means of those below much profit comes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoII.IV"></a>CANTO IV</h2>
+
+<p>
+When by sensations of delight or pain,<br/>
+That any of our faculties hath seiz&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Entire the soul collects herself, it seems<br/>
+She is intent upon that power alone,<br/>
+And thus the error is disprov&rsquo;d which holds<br/>
+The soul not singly lighted in the breast.<br/>
+And therefore when as aught is heard or seen,<br/>
+That firmly keeps the soul toward it turn&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Time passes, and a man perceives it not.<br/>
+For that, whereby he hearken, is one power,<br/>
+Another that, which the whole spirit hash;<br/>
+This is as it were bound, while that is free.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This found I true by proof, hearing that spirit<br/>
+And wond&rsquo;ring; for full fifty steps aloft<br/>
+The sun had measur&rsquo;d unobserv&rsquo;d of me,<br/>
+When we arriv&rsquo;d where all with one accord<br/>
+The spirits shouted, &ldquo;Here is what ye ask.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A larger aperture ofttimes is stopp&rsquo;d<br/>
+With forked stake of thorn by villager,<br/>
+When the ripe grape imbrowns, than was the path,<br/>
+By which my guide, and I behind him close,<br/>
+Ascended solitary, when that troop<br/>
+Departing left us. On Sanleo&rsquo;s road<br/>
+Who journeys, or to Noli low descends,<br/>
+Or mounts Bismantua&rsquo;s height, must use his feet;<br/>
+But here a man had need to fly, I mean<br/>
+With the swift wing and plumes of high desire,<br/>
+Conducted by his aid, who gave me hope,<br/>
+And with light furnish&rsquo;d to direct my way.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We through the broken rock ascended, close<br/>
+Pent on each side, while underneath the ground<br/>
+Ask&rsquo;d help of hands and feet. When we arriv&rsquo;d<br/>
+Near on the highest ridge of the steep bank,<br/>
+Where the plain level open&rsquo;d I exclaim&rsquo;d,<br/>
+&ldquo;O master! say which way can we proceed?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He answer&rsquo;d, &ldquo;Let no step of thine recede.<br/>
+Behind me gain the mountain, till to us<br/>
+Some practis&rsquo;d guide appear.&rdquo; That eminence<br/>
+Was lofty that no eye might reach its point,<br/>
+And the side proudly rising, more than line<br/>
+From the mid quadrant to the centre drawn.<br/>
+I wearied thus began: &ldquo;Parent belov&rsquo;d!<br/>
+Turn, and behold how I remain alone,<br/>
+If thou stay not.&rdquo;&mdash;&rdquo; My son!&rdquo; He straight
+reply&rsquo;d,<br/>
+&ldquo;Thus far put forth thy strength; &ldquo;and to a track<br/>
+Pointed, that, on this side projecting, round<br/>
+Circles the hill. His words so spurr&rsquo;d me on,<br/>
+That I behind him clamb&rsquo;ring, forc&rsquo;d myself,<br/>
+Till my feet press&rsquo;d the circuit plain beneath.<br/>
+There both together seated, turn&rsquo;d we round<br/>
+To eastward, whence was our ascent: and oft<br/>
+Many beside have with delight look&rsquo;d back.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+First on the nether shores I turn&rsquo;d my eyes,<br/>
+Then rais&rsquo;d them to the sun, and wond&rsquo;ring mark&rsquo;d<br/>
+That from the left it smote us. Soon perceiv&rsquo;d<br/>
+That Poet sage how at the car of light<br/>
+Amaz&rsquo;d I stood, where &rsquo;twixt us and the north<br/>
+Its course it enter&rsquo;d. Whence he thus to me:<br/>
+&ldquo;Were Leda&rsquo;s offspring now in company<br/>
+Of that broad mirror, that high up and low<br/>
+Imparts his light beneath, thou might&rsquo;st behold<br/>
+The ruddy zodiac nearer to the bears<br/>
+Wheel, if its ancient course it not forsook.<br/>
+How that may be if thou would&rsquo;st think; within<br/>
+Pond&rsquo;ring, imagine Sion with this mount<br/>
+Plac&rsquo;d on the earth, so that to both be one<br/>
+Horizon, and two hemispheres apart,<br/>
+Where lies the path that Phaeton ill knew<br/>
+To guide his erring chariot: thou wilt see<br/>
+How of necessity by this on one<br/>
+He passes, while by that on the&rsquo; other side,<br/>
+If with clear view shine intellect attend.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Of truth, kind teacher!&rdquo; I exclaim&rsquo;d, &ldquo;so clear<br/>
+Aught saw I never, as I now discern<br/>
+Where seem&rsquo;d my ken to fail, that the mid orb<br/>
+Of the supernal motion (which in terms<br/>
+Of art is called the Equator, and remains<br/>
+Ever between the sun and winter) for the cause<br/>
+Thou hast assign&rsquo;d, from hence toward the north<br/>
+Departs, when those who in the Hebrew land<br/>
+Inhabit, see it tow&rsquo;rds the warmer part.<br/>
+But if it please thee, I would gladly know,<br/>
+How far we have to journey: for the hill<br/>
+Mounts higher, than this sight of mine can mount.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He thus to me: &ldquo;Such is this steep ascent,<br/>
+That it is ever difficult at first,<br/>
+But, more a man proceeds, less evil grows.<br/>
+When pleasant it shall seem to thee, so much<br/>
+That upward going shall be easy to thee.<br/>
+As in a vessel to go down the tide,<br/>
+Then of this path thou wilt have reach&rsquo;d the end.<br/>
+There hope to rest thee from thy toil. No more<br/>
+I answer, and thus far for certain know.&rdquo;<br/>
+As he his words had spoken, near to us<br/>
+A voice there sounded: &ldquo;Yet ye first perchance<br/>
+May to repose you by constraint be led.&rdquo;<br/>
+At sound thereof each turn&rsquo;d, and on the left<br/>
+A huge stone we beheld, of which nor I<br/>
+Nor he before was ware. Thither we drew,<br/>
+find there were some, who in the shady place<br/>
+Behind the rock were standing, as a man<br/>
+Thru&rsquo; idleness might stand. Among them one,<br/>
+Who seem&rsquo;d to me much wearied, sat him down,<br/>
+And with his arms did fold his knees about,<br/>
+Holding his face between them downward bent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Sweet Sir!&rdquo; I cry&rsquo;d, &ldquo;behold that man, who shows<br/>
+Himself more idle, than if laziness<br/>
+Were sister to him.&rdquo; Straight he turn&rsquo;d to us,<br/>
+And, o&rsquo;er the thigh lifting his face, observ&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Then in these accents spake: &ldquo;Up then, proceed<br/>
+Thou valiant one.&rdquo; Straight who it was I knew;<br/>
+Nor could the pain I felt (for want of breath<br/>
+Still somewhat urg&rsquo;d me) hinder my approach.<br/>
+And when I came to him, he scarce his head<br/>
+Uplifted, saying &ldquo;Well hast thou discern&rsquo;d,<br/>
+How from the left the sun his chariot leads.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His lazy acts and broken words my lips<br/>
+To laughter somewhat mov&rsquo;d; when I began:<br/>
+&ldquo;Belacqua, now for thee I grieve no more.<br/>
+But tell, why thou art seated upright there?<br/>
+Waitest thou escort to conduct thee hence?<br/>
+Or blame I only shine accustom&rsquo;d ways?&rdquo;<br/>
+Then he: &ldquo;My brother, of what use to mount,<br/>
+When to my suffering would not let me pass<br/>
+The bird of God, who at the portal sits?<br/>
+Behooves so long that heav&rsquo;n first bear me round<br/>
+Without its limits, as in life it bore,<br/>
+Because I to the end repentant Sighs<br/>
+Delay&rsquo;d, if prayer do not aid me first,<br/>
+That riseth up from heart which lives in grace.<br/>
+What other kind avails, not heard in heaven?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Before me now the Poet up the mount<br/>
+Ascending, cried: &ldquo;Haste thee, for see the sun<br/>
+Has touch&rsquo;d the point meridian, and the night<br/>
+Now covers with her foot Marocco&rsquo;s shore.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoII.V"></a>CANTO V</h2>
+
+<p>
+Now had I left those spirits, and pursued<br/>
+The steps of my Conductor, when beheld<br/>
+Pointing the finger at me one exclaim&rsquo;d:<br/>
+&ldquo;See how it seems as if the light not shone<br/>
+From the left hand of him beneath, and he,<br/>
+As living, seems to be led on.&rdquo; Mine eyes<br/>
+I at that sound reverting, saw them gaze<br/>
+Through wonder first at me, and then at me<br/>
+And the light broken underneath, by turns.<br/>
+&ldquo;Why are thy thoughts thus riveted?&rdquo; my guide<br/>
+Exclaim&rsquo;d, &ldquo;that thou hast slack&rsquo;d thy pace? or how<br/>
+Imports it thee, what thing is whisper&rsquo;d here?<br/>
+Come after me, and to their babblings leave<br/>
+The crowd. Be as a tower, that, firmly set,<br/>
+Shakes not its top for any blast that blows!<br/>
+He, in whose bosom thought on thought shoots out,<br/>
+Still of his aim is wide, in that the one<br/>
+Sicklies and wastes to nought the other&rsquo;s strength.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What other could I answer save &ldquo;I come?&rdquo;<br/>
+I said it, somewhat with that colour ting&rsquo;d<br/>
+Which ofttimes pardon meriteth for man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile traverse along the hill there came,<br/>
+A little way before us, some who sang<br/>
+The &ldquo;Miserere&rdquo; in responsive Strains.<br/>
+When they perceiv&rsquo;d that through my body I<br/>
+Gave way not for the rays to pass, their song<br/>
+Straight to a long and hoarse exclaim they chang&rsquo;d;<br/>
+And two of them, in guise of messengers,<br/>
+Ran on to meet us, and inquiring ask&rsquo;d:<br/>
+Of your condition we would gladly learn.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To them my guide. &ldquo;Ye may return, and bear<br/>
+Tidings to them who sent you, that his frame<br/>
+Is real flesh. If, as I deem, to view<br/>
+His shade they paus&rsquo;d, enough is answer&rsquo;d them.<br/>
+Him let them honour, they may prize him well.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ne&rsquo;er saw I fiery vapours with such speed<br/>
+Cut through the serene air at fall of night,<br/>
+Nor August&rsquo;s clouds athwart the setting sun,<br/>
+That upward these did not in shorter space<br/>
+Return; and, there arriving, with the rest<br/>
+Wheel back on us, as with loose rein a troop.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Many,&rdquo; exclaim&rsquo;d the bard, &ldquo;are these, who throng<br/>
+Around us: to petition thee they come.<br/>
+Go therefore on, and listen as thou go&rsquo;st.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;O spirit! who go&rsquo;st on to blessedness<br/>
+With the same limbs, that clad thee at thy birth.&rdquo;<br/>
+Shouting they came, &ldquo;a little rest thy step.<br/>
+Look if thou any one amongst our tribe<br/>
+Hast e&rsquo;er beheld, that tidings of him there<br/>
+Thou mayst report. Ah, wherefore go&rsquo;st thou on?<br/>
+Ah wherefore tarriest thou not? We all<br/>
+By violence died, and to our latest hour<br/>
+Were sinners, but then warn&rsquo;d by light from heav&rsquo;n,<br/>
+So that, repenting and forgiving, we<br/>
+Did issue out of life at peace with God,<br/>
+Who with desire to see him fills our heart.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then I: &ldquo;The visages of all I scan<br/>
+Yet none of ye remember. But if aught,<br/>
+That I can do, may please you, gentle spirits!<br/>
+Speak; and I will perform it, by that peace,<br/>
+Which on the steps of guide so excellent<br/>
+Following from world to world intent I seek.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In answer he began: &ldquo;None here distrusts<br/>
+Thy kindness, though not promis&rsquo;d with an oath;<br/>
+So as the will fail not for want of power.<br/>
+Whence I, who sole before the others speak,<br/>
+Entreat thee, if thou ever see that land,<br/>
+Which lies between Romagna and the realm<br/>
+Of Charles, that of thy courtesy thou pray<br/>
+Those who inhabit Fano, that for me<br/>
+Their adorations duly be put up,<br/>
+By which I may purge off my grievous sins.<br/>
+From thence I came. But the deep passages,<br/>
+Whence issued out the blood wherein I dwelt,<br/>
+Upon my bosom in Antenor&rsquo;s land<br/>
+Were made, where to be more secure I thought.<br/>
+The author of the deed was Este&rsquo;s prince,<br/>
+Who, more than right could warrant, with his wrath<br/>
+Pursued me. Had I towards Mira fled,<br/>
+When overta&rsquo;en at Oriaco, still<br/>
+Might I have breath&rsquo;d. But to the marsh I sped,<br/>
+And in the mire and rushes tangled there<br/>
+Fell, and beheld my life-blood float the plain.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then said another: &ldquo;Ah! so may the wish,<br/>
+That takes thee o&rsquo;er the mountain, be fulfill&rsquo;d,<br/>
+As thou shalt graciously give aid to mine.<br/>
+Of Montefeltro I; Buonconte I:<br/>
+Giovanna nor none else have care for me,<br/>
+Sorrowing with these I therefore go.&rdquo; I thus:<br/>
+&ldquo;From Campaldino&rsquo;s field what force or chance<br/>
+Drew thee, that ne&rsquo;er thy sepulture was known?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; answer&rsquo;d he, &ldquo;at Casentino&rsquo;s foot<br/>
+A stream there courseth, nam&rsquo;d Archiano, sprung<br/>
+In Apennine above the Hermit&rsquo;s seat.<br/>
+E&rsquo;en where its name is cancel&rsquo;d, there came I,<br/>
+Pierc&rsquo;d in the heart, fleeing away on foot,<br/>
+And bloodying the plain. Here sight and speech<br/>
+Fail&rsquo;d me, and finishing with Mary&rsquo;s name<br/>
+I fell, and tenantless my flesh remain&rsquo;d.<br/>
+I will report the truth; which thou again0<br/>
+Tell to the living. Me God&rsquo;s angel took,<br/>
+Whilst he of hell exclaim&rsquo;d: &ldquo;O thou from heav&rsquo;n!<br/>
+Say wherefore hast thou robb&rsquo;d me? Thou of him<br/>
+Th&rsquo; eternal portion bear&rsquo;st with thee away<br/>
+For one poor tear that he deprives me of.<br/>
+But of the other, other rule I make.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou knowest how in the atmosphere collects<br/>
+That vapour dank, returning into water,<br/>
+Soon as it mounts where cold condenses it.<br/>
+That evil will, which in his intellect<br/>
+Still follows evil, came, and rais&rsquo;d the wind<br/>
+And smoky mist, by virtue of the power<br/>
+Given by his nature. Thence the valley, soon<br/>
+As day was spent, he cover&rsquo;d o&rsquo;er with cloud<br/>
+From Pratomagno to the mountain range,<br/>
+And stretch&rsquo;d the sky above, so that the air<br/>
+Impregnate chang&rsquo;d to water. Fell the rain,<br/>
+And to the fosses came all that the land<br/>
+Contain&rsquo;d not; and, as mightiest streams are wont,<br/>
+To the great river with such headlong sweep<br/>
+Rush&rsquo;d, that nought stay&rsquo;d its course. My stiffen&rsquo;d
+frame<br/>
+Laid at his mouth the fell Archiano found,<br/>
+And dash&rsquo;d it into Arno, from my breast<br/>
+Loos&rsquo;ning the cross, that of myself I made<br/>
+When overcome with pain. He hurl&rsquo;d me on,<br/>
+Along the banks and bottom of his course;<br/>
+Then in his muddy spoils encircling wrapt.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah! when thou to the world shalt be return&rsquo;d,<br/>
+And rested after thy long road,&rdquo; so spake<br/>
+Next the third spirit; &ldquo;then remember me.<br/>
+I once was Pia. Sienna gave me life,<br/>
+Maremma took it from me. That he knows,<br/>
+Who me with jewell&rsquo;d ring had first espous&rsquo;d.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoII.VI"></a>CANTO VI</h2>
+
+<p>
+When from their game of dice men separate,<br/>
+He, who hath lost, remains in sadness fix&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Revolving in his mind, what luckless throws<br/>
+He cast: but meanwhile all the company<br/>
+Go with the other; one before him runs,<br/>
+And one behind his mantle twitches, one<br/>
+Fast by his side bids him remember him.<br/>
+He stops not; and each one, to whom his hand<br/>
+Is stretch&rsquo;d, well knows he bids him stand aside;<br/>
+And thus he from the press defends himself.<br/>
+E&rsquo;en such was I in that close-crowding throng;<br/>
+And turning so my face around to all,<br/>
+And promising, I &rsquo;scap&rsquo;d from it with pains.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Here of Arezzo him I saw, who fell<br/>
+By Ghino&rsquo;s cruel arm; and him beside,<br/>
+Who in his chase was swallow&rsquo;d by the stream.<br/>
+Here Frederic Novello, with his hand<br/>
+Stretch&rsquo;d forth, entreated; and of Pisa he,<br/>
+Who put the good Marzuco to such proof<br/>
+Of constancy. Count Orso I beheld;<br/>
+And from its frame a soul dismiss&rsquo;d for spite<br/>
+And envy, as it said, but for no crime:<br/>
+I speak of Peter de la Brosse; and here,<br/>
+While she yet lives, that Lady of Brabant<br/>
+Let her beware; lest for so false a deed<br/>
+She herd with worse than these. When I was freed<br/>
+From all those spirits, who pray&rsquo;d for others&rsquo; prayers<br/>
+To hasten on their state of blessedness;<br/>
+Straight I began: &ldquo;O thou, my luminary!<br/>
+It seems expressly in thy text denied,<br/>
+That heaven&rsquo;s supreme decree can never bend<br/>
+To supplication; yet with this design<br/>
+Do these entreat. Can then their hope be vain,<br/>
+Or is thy saying not to me reveal&rsquo;d?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He thus to me: &ldquo;Both what I write is plain,<br/>
+And these deceiv&rsquo;d not in their hope, if well<br/>
+Thy mind consider, that the sacred height<br/>
+Of judgment doth not stoop, because love&rsquo;s flame<br/>
+In a short moment all fulfils, which he<br/>
+Who sojourns here, in right should satisfy.<br/>
+Besides, when I this point concluded thus,<br/>
+By praying no defect could be supplied;<br/>
+Because the pray&rsquo;r had none access to God.<br/>
+Yet in this deep suspicion rest thou not<br/>
+Contented unless she assure thee so,<br/>
+Who betwixt truth and mind infuses light.<br/>
+I know not if thou take me right; I mean<br/>
+Beatrice. Her thou shalt behold above,<br/>
+Upon this mountain&rsquo;s crown, fair seat of joy.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then I: &ldquo;Sir! let us mend our speed; for now<br/>
+I tire not as before; and lo! the hill<br/>
+Stretches its shadow far.&rdquo; He answer&rsquo;d thus:<br/>
+&ldquo;Our progress with this day shall be as much<br/>
+As we may now dispatch; but otherwise<br/>
+Than thou supposest is the truth. For there<br/>
+Thou canst not be, ere thou once more behold<br/>
+Him back returning, who behind the steep<br/>
+Is now so hidden, that as erst his beam<br/>
+Thou dost not break. But lo! a spirit there<br/>
+Stands solitary, and toward us looks:<br/>
+It will instruct us in the speediest way.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We soon approach&rsquo;d it. O thou Lombard spirit!<br/>
+How didst thou stand, in high abstracted mood,<br/>
+Scarce moving with slow dignity thine eyes!<br/>
+It spoke not aught, but let us onward pass,<br/>
+Eyeing us as a lion on his watch.<br/>
+I3ut Virgil with entreaty mild advanc&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Requesting it to show the best ascent.<br/>
+It answer to his question none return&rsquo;d,<br/>
+But of our country and our kind of life<br/>
+Demanded. When my courteous guide began,<br/>
+&ldquo;Mantua,&rdquo; the solitary shadow quick<br/>
+Rose towards us from the place in which it stood,<br/>
+And cry&rsquo;d, &ldquo;Mantuan! I am thy countryman<br/>
+Sordello.&rdquo; Each the other then embrac&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ah slavish Italy! thou inn of grief,<br/>
+Vessel without a pilot in loud storm,<br/>
+Lady no longer of fair provinces,<br/>
+But brothel-house impure! this gentle spirit,<br/>
+Ev&rsquo;n from the Pleasant sound of his dear land<br/>
+Was prompt to greet a fellow citizen<br/>
+With such glad cheer; while now thy living ones<br/>
+In thee abide not without war; and one<br/>
+Malicious gnaws another, ay of those<br/>
+Whom the same wall and the same moat contains,<br/>
+Seek, wretched one! around thy sea-coasts wide;<br/>
+Then homeward to thy bosom turn, and mark<br/>
+If any part of the sweet peace enjoy.<br/>
+What boots it, that thy reins Justinian&rsquo;s hand<br/>
+Befitted, if thy saddle be unpress&rsquo;d?<br/>
+Nought doth he now but aggravate thy shame.<br/>
+Ah people! thou obedient still shouldst live,<br/>
+And in the saddle let thy Caesar sit,<br/>
+If well thou marked&rsquo;st that which God commands
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Look how that beast to felness hath relaps&rsquo;d<br/>
+From having lost correction of the spur,<br/>
+Since to the bridle thou hast set thine hand,<br/>
+O German Albert! who abandon&rsquo;st her,<br/>
+That is grown savage and unmanageable,<br/>
+When thou should&rsquo;st clasp her flanks with forked heels.<br/>
+Just judgment from the stars fall on thy blood!<br/>
+And be it strange and manifest to all!<br/>
+Such as may strike thy successor with dread!<br/>
+For that thy sire and thou have suffer&rsquo;d thus,<br/>
+Through greediness of yonder realms detain&rsquo;d,<br/>
+The garden of the empire to run waste.<br/>
+Come see the Capulets and Montagues,<br/>
+The Philippeschi and Monaldi! man<br/>
+Who car&rsquo;st for nought! those sunk in grief, and these<br/>
+With dire suspicion rack&rsquo;d. Come, cruel one!<br/>
+Come and behold the&rsquo; oppression of the nobles,<br/>
+And mark their injuries: and thou mayst see.<br/>
+What safety Santafiore can supply.<br/>
+Come and behold thy Rome, who calls on thee,<br/>
+Desolate widow! day and night with moans:<br/>
+&ldquo;My Caesar, why dost thou desert my side?&rdquo;<br/>
+Come and behold what love among thy people:<br/>
+And if no pity touches thee for us,<br/>
+Come and blush for thine own report. For me,<br/>
+If it be lawful, O Almighty Power,<br/>
+Who wast in earth for our sakes crucified!<br/>
+Are thy just eyes turn&rsquo;d elsewhere? or is this<br/>
+A preparation in the wond&rsquo;rous depth<br/>
+Of thy sage counsel made, for some good end,<br/>
+Entirely from our reach of thought cut off?<br/>
+So are the&rsquo; Italian cities all o&rsquo;erthrong&rsquo;d<br/>
+With tyrants, and a great Marcellus made<br/>
+Of every petty factious villager.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My Florence! thou mayst well remain unmov&rsquo;d<br/>
+At this digression, which affects not thee:<br/>
+Thanks to thy people, who so wisely speed.<br/>
+Many have justice in their heart, that long<br/>
+Waiteth for counsel to direct the bow,<br/>
+Or ere it dart unto its aim: but shine<br/>
+Have it on their lip&rsquo;s edge. Many refuse<br/>
+To bear the common burdens: readier thine<br/>
+Answer uneall&rsquo;d, and cry, &ldquo;Behold I stoop!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Make thyself glad, for thou hast reason now,<br/>
+Thou wealthy! thou at peace! thou wisdom-fraught!<br/>
+Facts best witness if I speak the truth.<br/>
+Athens and Lacedaemon, who of old<br/>
+Enacted laws, for civil arts renown&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Made little progress in improving life<br/>
+Tow&rsquo;rds thee, who usest such nice subtlety,<br/>
+That to the middle of November scarce<br/>
+Reaches the thread thou in October weav&rsquo;st.<br/>
+How many times, within thy memory,<br/>
+Customs, and laws, and coins, and offices<br/>
+Have been by thee renew&rsquo;d, and people chang&rsquo;d!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+If thou remember&rsquo;st well and can&rsquo;st see clear,<br/>
+Thou wilt perceive thyself like a sick wretch,<br/>
+Who finds no rest upon her down, hut oft<br/>
+Shifting her side, short respite seeks from pain.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoII.VII"></a>CANTO VII</h2>
+
+<p>
+After their courteous greetings joyfully<br/>
+Sev&rsquo;n times exchang&rsquo;d, Sordello backward drew<br/>
+Exclaiming, &ldquo;Who are ye?&rdquo; &ldquo;Before this mount<br/>
+By spirits worthy of ascent to God<br/>
+Was sought, my bones had by Octavius&rsquo; care<br/>
+Been buried. I am Virgil, for no sin<br/>
+Depriv&rsquo;d of heav&rsquo;n, except for lack of faith.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So answer&rsquo;d him in few my gentle guide.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As one, who aught before him suddenly<br/>
+Beholding, whence his wonder riseth, cries<br/>
+&ldquo;It is yet is not,&rdquo; wav&rsquo;ring in belief;<br/>
+Such he appear&rsquo;d; then downward bent his eyes,<br/>
+And drawing near with reverential step,<br/>
+Caught him, where of mean estate might clasp<br/>
+His lord. &ldquo;Glory of Latium!&rdquo; he exclaim&rsquo;d,<br/>
+&ldquo;In whom our tongue its utmost power display&rsquo;d!<br/>
+Boast of my honor&rsquo;d birth-place! what desert<br/>
+Of mine, what favour rather undeserv&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Shows thee to me? If I to hear that voice<br/>
+Am worthy, say if from below thou com&rsquo;st<br/>
+And from what cloister&rsquo;s pale?&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;Through every orb<br/>
+Of that sad region,&rdquo; he reply&rsquo;d, &ldquo;thus far<br/>
+Am I arriv&rsquo;d, by heav&rsquo;nly influence led<br/>
+And with such aid I come. There is a place<br/>
+There underneath, not made by torments sad,<br/>
+But by dun shades alone; where mourning&rsquo;s voice<br/>
+Sounds not of anguish sharp, but breathes in sighs.<br/>
+There I with little innocents abide,<br/>
+Who by death&rsquo;s fangs were bitten, ere exempt<br/>
+From human taint. There I with those abide,<br/>
+Who the three holy virtues put not on,<br/>
+But understood the rest, and without blame<br/>
+Follow&rsquo;d them all. But if thou know&rsquo;st and canst,<br/>
+Direct us, how we soonest may arrive,<br/>
+Where Purgatory its true beginning takes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He answer&rsquo;d thus: &ldquo;We have no certain place<br/>
+Assign&rsquo;d us: upwards I may go or round,<br/>
+Far as I can, I join thee for thy guide.<br/>
+But thou beholdest now how day declines:<br/>
+And upwards to proceed by night, our power<br/>
+Excels: therefore it may be well to choose<br/>
+A place of pleasant sojourn. To the right<br/>
+Some spirits sit apart retir&rsquo;d. If thou<br/>
+Consentest, I to these will lead thy steps:<br/>
+And thou wilt know them, not without delight.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;How chances this?&rdquo; was answer&rsquo;d; &ldquo;who so
+wish&rsquo;d<br/>
+To ascend by night, would he be thence debarr&rsquo;d<br/>
+By other, or through his own weakness fail?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The good Sordello then, along the ground<br/>
+Trailing his finger, spoke: &ldquo;Only this line<br/>
+Thou shalt not overpass, soon as the sun<br/>
+Hath disappear&rsquo;d; not that aught else impedes<br/>
+Thy going upwards, save the shades of night.<br/>
+These with the wont of power perplex the will.<br/>
+With them thou haply mightst return beneath,<br/>
+Or to and fro around the mountain&rsquo;s side<br/>
+Wander, while day is in the horizon shut.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My master straight, as wond&rsquo;ring at his speech,<br/>
+Exclaim&rsquo;d: &ldquo;Then lead us quickly, where thou sayst,<br/>
+That, while we stay, we may enjoy delight.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A little space we were remov&rsquo;d from thence,<br/>
+When I perceiv&rsquo;d the mountain hollow&rsquo;d out.<br/>
+Ev&rsquo;n as large valleys hollow&rsquo;d out on earth,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That way,&rdquo; the&rsquo; escorting spirit cried, &ldquo;we go,<br/>
+Where in a bosom the high bank recedes:<br/>
+And thou await renewal of the day.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Betwixt the steep and plain a crooked path<br/>
+Led us traverse into the ridge&rsquo;s side,<br/>
+Where more than half the sloping edge expires.<br/>
+Refulgent gold, and silver thrice refin&rsquo;d,<br/>
+And scarlet grain and ceruse, Indian wood<br/>
+Of lucid dye serene, fresh emeralds<br/>
+But newly broken, by the herbs and flowers<br/>
+Plac&rsquo;d in that fair recess, in color all<br/>
+Had been surpass&rsquo;d, as great surpasses less.<br/>
+Nor nature only there lavish&rsquo;d her hues,<br/>
+But of the sweetness of a thousand smells<br/>
+A rare and undistinguish&rsquo;d fragrance made.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Salve Regina,&rdquo; on the grass and flowers<br/>
+Here chanting I beheld those spirits sit<br/>
+Who not beyond the valley could be seen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Before the west&rsquo;ring sun sink to his bed,&rdquo;<br/>
+Began the Mantuan, who our steps had turn&rsquo;d,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;&rsquo;Mid those desires not that I lead ye on.<br/>
+For from this eminence ye shall discern<br/>
+Better the acts and visages of all,<br/>
+Than in the nether vale among them mix&rsquo;d.<br/>
+He, who sits high above the rest, and seems<br/>
+To have neglected that he should have done,<br/>
+And to the others&rsquo; song moves not his lip,<br/>
+The Emperor Rodolph call, who might have heal&rsquo;d<br/>
+The wounds whereof fair Italy hath died,<br/>
+So that by others she revives but slowly,<br/>
+He, who with kindly visage comforts him,<br/>
+Sway&rsquo;d in that country, where the water springs,<br/>
+That Moldaw&rsquo;s river to the Elbe, and Elbe<br/>
+Rolls to the ocean: Ottocar his name:<br/>
+Who in his swaddling clothes was of more worth<br/>
+Than Winceslaus his son, a bearded man,<br/>
+Pamper&rsquo;d with rank luxuriousness and ease.<br/>
+And that one with the nose depress, who close<br/>
+In counsel seems with him of gentle look,<br/>
+Flying expir&rsquo;d, with&rsquo;ring the lily&rsquo;s flower.<br/>
+Look there how he doth knock against his breast!<br/>
+The other ye behold, who for his cheek<br/>
+Makes of one hand a couch, with frequent sighs.<br/>
+They are the father and the father-in-law<br/>
+Of Gallia&rsquo;s bane: his vicious life they know<br/>
+And foul; thence comes the grief that rends them thus.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He, so robust of limb, who measure keeps<br/>
+In song, with him of feature prominent,<br/>
+With ev&rsquo;ry virtue bore his girdle brac&rsquo;d.<br/>
+And if that stripling who behinds him sits,<br/>
+King after him had liv&rsquo;d, his virtue then<br/>
+From vessel to like vessel had been pour&rsquo;d;<br/>
+Which may not of the other heirs be said.<br/>
+By James and Frederick his realms are held;<br/>
+Neither the better heritage obtains.<br/>
+Rarely into the branches of the tree<br/>
+Doth human worth mount up; and so ordains<br/>
+He who bestows it, that as his free gift<br/>
+It may be call&rsquo;d. To Charles my words apply<br/>
+No less than to his brother in the song;<br/>
+Which Pouille and Provence now with grief confess.<br/>
+So much that plant degenerates from its seed,<br/>
+As more than Beatrice and Margaret<br/>
+Costanza still boasts of her valorous spouse.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Behold the king of simple life and plain,<br/>
+Harry of England, sitting there alone:<br/>
+He through his branches better issue spreads.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That one, who on the ground beneath the rest<br/>
+Sits lowest, yet his gaze directs aloft,<br/>
+Us William, that brave Marquis, for whose cause<br/>
+The deed of Alexandria and his war<br/>
+Makes Conferrat and Canavese weep.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoII.VIII"></a>CANTO VIII</h2>
+
+<p>
+Now was the hour that wakens fond desire<br/>
+In men at sea, and melts their thoughtful heart,<br/>
+Who in the morn have bid sweet friends farewell,<br/>
+And pilgrim newly on his road with love<br/>
+Thrills, if he hear the vesper bell from far,<br/>
+That seems to mourn for the expiring day:<br/>
+When I, no longer taking heed to hear<br/>
+Began, with wonder, from those spirits to mark<br/>
+One risen from its seat, which with its hand<br/>
+Audience implor&rsquo;d. Both palms it join&rsquo;d and rais&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Fixing its steadfast gaze towards the east,<br/>
+As telling God, &ldquo;I care for naught beside.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Te Lucis Ante,&rdquo; so devoutly then<br/>
+Came from its lip, and in so soft a strain,<br/>
+That all my sense in ravishment was lost.<br/>
+And the rest after, softly and devout,<br/>
+Follow&rsquo;d through all the hymn, with upward gaze<br/>
+Directed to the bright supernal wheels.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Here, reader! for the truth makes thine eyes keen:<br/>
+For of so subtle texture is this veil,<br/>
+That thou with ease mayst pass it through unmark&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I saw that gentle band silently next<br/>
+Look up, as if in expectation held,<br/>
+Pale and in lowly guise; and from on high<br/>
+I saw forth issuing descend beneath<br/>
+Two angels with two flame-illumin&rsquo;d swords,<br/>
+Broken and mutilated at their points.<br/>
+Green as the tender leaves but newly born,<br/>
+Their vesture was, the which by wings as green<br/>
+Beaten, they drew behind them, fann&rsquo;d in air.<br/>
+A little over us one took his stand,<br/>
+The other lighted on the&rsquo; Opposing hill,<br/>
+So that the troop were in the midst contain&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Well I descried the whiteness on their heads;<br/>
+But in their visages the dazzled eye<br/>
+Was lost, as faculty that by too much<br/>
+Is overpower&rsquo;d. &ldquo;From Mary&rsquo;s bosom both<br/>
+Are come,&rdquo; exclaim&rsquo;d Sordello, &ldquo;as a guard<br/>
+Over the vale, ganst him, who hither tends,<br/>
+The serpent.&rdquo; Whence, not knowing by which path<br/>
+He came, I turn&rsquo;d me round, and closely press&rsquo;d,<br/>
+All frozen, to my leader&rsquo;s trusted side.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sordello paus&rsquo;d not: &ldquo;To the valley now<br/>
+(For it is time) let us descend; and hold<br/>
+Converse with those great shadows: haply much<br/>
+Their sight may please ye.&rdquo; Only three steps down<br/>
+Methinks I measur&rsquo;d, ere I was beneath,<br/>
+And noted one who look&rsquo;d as with desire<br/>
+To know me. Time was now that air arrow dim;<br/>
+Yet not so dim, that &rsquo;twixt his eyes and mine<br/>
+It clear&rsquo;d not up what was conceal&rsquo;d before.<br/>
+Mutually tow&rsquo;rds each other we advanc&rsquo;d.<br/>
+Nino, thou courteous judge! what joy I felt,<br/>
+When I perceiv&rsquo;d thou wert not with the bad!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No salutation kind on either part<br/>
+Was left unsaid. He then inquir&rsquo;d: &ldquo;How long<br/>
+Since thou arrived&rsquo;st at the mountain&rsquo;s foot,<br/>
+Over the distant waves?&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;O!&rdquo; answer&rsquo;d I,<br/>
+&ldquo;Through the sad seats of woe this morn I came,<br/>
+And still in my first life, thus journeying on,<br/>
+The other strive to gain.&rdquo; Soon as they heard<br/>
+My words, he and Sordello backward drew,<br/>
+As suddenly amaz&rsquo;d. To Virgil one,<br/>
+The other to a spirit turn&rsquo;d, who near<br/>
+Was seated, crying: &ldquo;Conrad! up with speed:<br/>
+Come, see what of his grace high God hath will&rsquo;d.&rdquo;<br/>
+Then turning round to me: &ldquo;By that rare mark<br/>
+Of honour which thou ow&rsquo;st to him, who hides<br/>
+So deeply his first cause, it hath no ford,<br/>
+When thou shalt he beyond the vast of waves.<br/>
+Tell my Giovanna, that for me she call<br/>
+There, where reply to innocence is made.<br/>
+Her mother, I believe, loves me no more;<br/>
+Since she has chang&rsquo;d the white and wimpled folds,<br/>
+Which she is doom&rsquo;d once more with grief to wish.<br/>
+By her it easily may be perceiv&rsquo;d,<br/>
+How long in women lasts the flame of love,<br/>
+If sight and touch do not relume it oft.<br/>
+For her so fair a burial will not make<br/>
+The viper which calls Milan to the field,<br/>
+As had been made by shrill Gallura&rsquo;s bird.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He spoke, and in his visage took the stamp<br/>
+Of that right seal, which with due temperature<br/>
+Glows in the bosom. My insatiate eyes<br/>
+Meanwhile to heav&rsquo;n had travel&rsquo;d, even there<br/>
+Where the bright stars are slowest, as a wheel<br/>
+Nearest the axle; when my guide inquir&rsquo;d:<br/>
+&ldquo;What there aloft, my son, has caught thy gaze?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I answer&rsquo;d: &ldquo;The three torches, with which here<br/>
+The pole is all on fire. &ldquo;He then to me:<br/>
+&ldquo;The four resplendent stars, thou saw&rsquo;st this morn<br/>
+Are there beneath, and these ris&rsquo;n in their stead.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+While yet he spoke. Sordello to himself<br/>
+Drew him, and cry&rsquo;d: &ldquo;Lo there our enemy!&rdquo;<br/>
+And with his hand pointed that way to look.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Along the side, where barrier none arose<br/>
+Around the little vale, a serpent lay,<br/>
+Such haply as gave Eve the bitter food.<br/>
+Between the grass and flowers, the evil snake<br/>
+Came on, reverting oft his lifted head;<br/>
+And, as a beast that smoothes its polish&rsquo;d coat,<br/>
+Licking his hack. I saw not, nor can tell,<br/>
+How those celestial falcons from their seat<br/>
+Mov&rsquo;d, but in motion each one well descried,<br/>
+Hearing the air cut by their verdant plumes.<br/>
+The serpent fled; and to their stations back<br/>
+The angels up return&rsquo;d with equal flight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Spirit (who to Nino, when he call&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Had come), from viewing me with fixed ken,<br/>
+Through all that conflict, loosen&rsquo;d not his sight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;So may the lamp, which leads thee up on high,<br/>
+Find, in thy destin&rsquo;d lot, of wax so much,<br/>
+As may suffice thee to the enamel&rsquo;s height.&rdquo;<br/>
+It thus began: &ldquo;If any certain news<br/>
+Of Valdimagra and the neighbour part<br/>
+Thou know&rsquo;st, tell me, who once was mighty there<br/>
+They call&rsquo;d me Conrad Malaspina, not<br/>
+That old one, but from him I sprang. The love<br/>
+I bore my people is now here refin&rsquo;d.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;In your dominions,&rdquo; I answer&rsquo;d, &ldquo;ne&rsquo;er was
+I.<br/>
+But through all Europe where do those men dwell,<br/>
+To whom their glory is not manifest?<br/>
+The fame, that honours your illustrious house,<br/>
+Proclaims the nobles and proclaims the land;<br/>
+So that he knows it who was never there.<br/>
+I swear to you, so may my upward route<br/>
+Prosper! your honour&rsquo;d nation not impairs<br/>
+The value of her coffer and her sword.<br/>
+Nature and use give her such privilege,<br/>
+That while the world is twisted from his course<br/>
+By a bad head, she only walks aright,<br/>
+And has the evil way in scorn.&rdquo; He then:<br/>
+&ldquo;Now pass thee on: sev&rsquo;n times the tired sun<br/>
+Revisits not the couch, which with four feet<br/>
+The forked Aries covers, ere that kind<br/>
+Opinion shall be nail&rsquo;d into thy brain<br/>
+With stronger nails than other&rsquo;s speech can drive,<br/>
+If the sure course of judgment be not stay&rsquo;d.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoII.IX"></a>CANTO IX</h2>
+
+<p>
+Now the fair consort of Tithonus old,<br/>
+Arisen from her mate&rsquo;s beloved arms,<br/>
+Look&rsquo;d palely o&rsquo;er the eastern cliff: her brow,<br/>
+Lucent with jewels, glitter&rsquo;d, set in sign<br/>
+Of that chill animal, who with his train<br/>
+Smites fearful nations: and where then we were,<br/>
+Two steps of her ascent the night had past,<br/>
+And now the third was closing up its wing,<br/>
+When I, who had so much of Adam with me,<br/>
+Sank down upon the grass, o&rsquo;ercome with sleep,<br/>
+There where all five were seated. In that hour,<br/>
+When near the dawn the swallow her sad lay,<br/>
+Rememb&rsquo;ring haply ancient grief, renews,<br/>
+And with our minds more wand&rsquo;rers from the flesh,<br/>
+And less by thought restrain&rsquo;d are, as &rsquo;twere, full<br/>
+Of holy divination in their dreams,<br/>
+Then in a vision did I seem to view<br/>
+A golden-feather&rsquo;d eagle in the sky,<br/>
+With open wings, and hov&rsquo;ring for descent,<br/>
+And I was in that place, methought, from whence<br/>
+Young Ganymede, from his associates &rsquo;reft,<br/>
+Was snatch&rsquo;d aloft to the high consistory.<br/>
+&ldquo;Perhaps,&rdquo; thought I within me, &ldquo;here alone<br/>
+He strikes his quarry, and elsewhere disdains<br/>
+To pounce upon the prey.&rdquo; Therewith, it seem&rsquo;d,<br/>
+A little wheeling in his airy tour<br/>
+Terrible as the lightning rush&rsquo;d he down,<br/>
+And snatch&rsquo;d me upward even to the fire.<br/>
+There both, I thought, the eagle and myself<br/>
+Did burn; and so intense th&rsquo; imagin&rsquo;d flames,<br/>
+That needs my sleep was broken off. As erst<br/>
+Achilles shook himself, and round him roll&rsquo;d<br/>
+His waken&rsquo;d eyeballs wond&rsquo;ring where he was,<br/>
+Whenas his mother had from Chiron fled<br/>
+To Scyros, with him sleeping in her arms;<br/>
+E&rsquo;en thus I shook me, soon as from my face<br/>
+The slumber parted, turning deadly pale,<br/>
+Like one ice-struck with dread. Solo at my side<br/>
+My comfort stood: and the bright sun was now<br/>
+More than two hours aloft: and to the sea<br/>
+My looks were turn&rsquo;d. &ldquo;Fear not,&rdquo; my master cried,<br/>
+&ldquo;Assur&rsquo;d we are at happy point. Thy strength<br/>
+Shrink not, but rise dilated. Thou art come<br/>
+To Purgatory now. Lo! there the cliff<br/>
+That circling bounds it! Lo! the entrance there,<br/>
+Where it doth seem disparted! Ere the dawn<br/>
+Usher&rsquo;d the daylight, when thy wearied soul<br/>
+Slept in thee, o&rsquo;er the flowery vale beneath<br/>
+A lady came, and thus bespake me: &ldquo;I<br/>
+Am Lucia. Suffer me to take this man,<br/>
+Who slumbers. Easier so his way shall speed.&rdquo;<br/>
+Sordello and the other gentle shapes<br/>
+Tarrying, she bare thee up: and, as day shone,<br/>
+This summit reach&rsquo;d: and I pursued her steps.<br/>
+Here did she place thee. First her lovely eyes<br/>
+That open entrance show&rsquo;d me; then at once<br/>
+She vanish&rsquo;d with thy sleep.&rdquo; Like one, whose doubts<br/>
+Are chas&rsquo;d by certainty, and terror turn&rsquo;d<br/>
+To comfort on discovery of the truth,<br/>
+Such was the change in me: and as my guide<br/>
+Beheld me fearless, up along the cliff<br/>
+He mov&rsquo;d, and I behind him, towards the height.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Reader! thou markest how my theme doth rise,<br/>
+Nor wonder therefore, if more artfully<br/>
+I prop the structure! Nearer now we drew,<br/>
+Arriv&rsquo;d&rsquo; whence in that part, where first a breach<br/>
+As of a wall appear&rsquo;d, I could descry<br/>
+A portal, and three steps beneath, that led<br/>
+For inlet there, of different colour each,<br/>
+And one who watch&rsquo;d, but spake not yet a word.<br/>
+As more and more mine eye did stretch its view,<br/>
+I mark&rsquo;d him seated on the highest step,<br/>
+In visage such, as past my power to bear.<br/>
+Grasp&rsquo;d in his hand a naked sword, glanc&rsquo;d back<br/>
+The rays so toward me, that I oft in vain<br/>
+My sight directed. &ldquo;Speak from whence ye stand:&rdquo;<br/>
+He cried: &ldquo;What would ye? Where is your escort?<br/>
+Take heed your coming upward harm ye not.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A heavenly dame, not skilless of these things,&rdquo;<br/>
+Replied the&rsquo; instructor, &ldquo;told us, even now,<br/>
+Pass that way: here the gate is.&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;And may she<br/>
+Befriending prosper your ascent,&rdquo; resum&rsquo;d<br/>
+The courteous keeper of the gate: &ldquo;Come then<br/>
+Before our steps.&rdquo; We straightway thither came.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The lowest stair was marble white so smooth<br/>
+And polish&rsquo;d, that therein my mirror&rsquo;d form<br/>
+Distinct I saw. The next of hue more dark<br/>
+Than sablest grain, a rough and singed block,<br/>
+Crack&rsquo;d lengthwise and across. The third, that lay<br/>
+Massy above, seem&rsquo;d porphyry, that flam&rsquo;d<br/>
+Red as the life-blood spouting from a vein.<br/>
+On this God&rsquo;s angel either foot sustain&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Upon the threshold seated, which appear&rsquo;d<br/>
+A rock of diamond. Up the trinal steps<br/>
+My leader cheerily drew me. &ldquo;Ask,&rdquo; said he,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;With humble heart, that he unbar the bolt.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Piously at his holy feet devolv&rsquo;d<br/>
+I cast me, praying him for pity&rsquo;s sake<br/>
+That he would open to me: but first fell<br/>
+Thrice on my bosom prostrate. Seven times0<br/>
+The letter, that denotes the inward stain,<br/>
+He on my forehead with the blunted point<br/>
+Of his drawn sword inscrib&rsquo;d. And &ldquo;Look,&rdquo; he cried,<br/>
+&ldquo;When enter&rsquo;d, that thou wash these scars away.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ashes, or earth ta&rsquo;en dry out of the ground,<br/>
+Were of one colour with the robe he wore.<br/>
+From underneath that vestment forth he drew<br/>
+Two keys of metal twain: the one was gold,<br/>
+Its fellow silver. With the pallid first,<br/>
+And next the burnish&rsquo;d, he so ply&rsquo;d the gate,<br/>
+As to content me well. &ldquo;Whenever one<br/>
+Faileth of these, that in the keyhole straight<br/>
+It turn not, to this alley then expect<br/>
+Access in vain.&rdquo; Such were the words he spake.<br/>
+&ldquo;One is more precious: but the other needs<br/>
+Skill and sagacity, large share of each,<br/>
+Ere its good task to disengage the knot<br/>
+Be worthily perform&rsquo;d. From Peter these<br/>
+I hold, of him instructed, that I err<br/>
+Rather in opening than in keeping fast;<br/>
+So but the suppliant at my feet implore.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then of that hallow&rsquo;d gate he thrust the door,<br/>
+Exclaiming, &ldquo;Enter, but this warning hear:<br/>
+He forth again departs who looks behind.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As in the hinges of that sacred ward<br/>
+The swivels turn&rsquo;d, sonorous metal strong,<br/>
+Harsh was the grating; nor so surlily<br/>
+Roar&rsquo;d the Tarpeian, when by force bereft<br/>
+Of good Metellus, thenceforth from his loss<br/>
+To leanness doom&rsquo;d. Attentively I turn&rsquo;d,<br/>
+List&rsquo;ning the thunder, that first issued forth;<br/>
+And &ldquo;We praise thee, O God,&rdquo; methought I heard<br/>
+In accents blended with sweet melody.<br/>
+The strains came o&rsquo;er mine ear, e&rsquo;en as the sound<br/>
+Of choral voices, that in solemn chant<br/>
+With organ mingle, and, now high and clear,<br/>
+Come swelling, now float indistinct away.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoII.X"></a>CANTO X</h2>
+
+<p>
+When we had passed the threshold of the gate<br/>
+(Which the soul&rsquo;s ill affection doth disuse,<br/>
+Making the crooked seem the straighter path),<br/>
+I heard its closing sound. Had mine eyes turn&rsquo;d,<br/>
+For that offence what plea might have avail&rsquo;d?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We mounted up the riven rock, that wound<br/>
+On either side alternate, as the wave<br/>
+Flies and advances. &ldquo;Here some little art<br/>
+Behooves us,&rdquo; said my leader, &ldquo;that our steps<br/>
+Observe the varying flexure of the path.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus we so slowly sped, that with cleft orb<br/>
+The moon once more o&rsquo;erhangs her wat&rsquo;ry couch,<br/>
+Ere we that strait have threaded. But when free<br/>
+We came and open, where the mount above<br/>
+One solid mass retires, I spent, with toil,<br/>
+And both, uncertain of the way, we stood,<br/>
+Upon a plain more lonesome, than the roads<br/>
+That traverse desert wilds. From whence the brink<br/>
+Borders upon vacuity, to foot<br/>
+Of the steep bank, that rises still, the space<br/>
+Had measur&rsquo;d thrice the stature of a man:<br/>
+And, distant as mine eye could wing its flight,<br/>
+To leftward now and now to right dispatch&rsquo;d,<br/>
+That cornice equal in extent appear&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Not yet our feet had on that summit mov&rsquo;d,<br/>
+When I discover&rsquo;d that the bank around,<br/>
+Whose proud uprising all ascent denied,<br/>
+Was marble white, and so exactly wrought<br/>
+With quaintest sculpture, that not there alone<br/>
+Had Polycletus, but e&rsquo;en nature&rsquo;s self<br/>
+Been sham&rsquo;d. The angel who came down to earth<br/>
+With tidings of the peace so many years<br/>
+Wept for in vain, that op&rsquo;d the heavenly gates<br/>
+From their long interdict) before us seem&rsquo;d,<br/>
+In a sweet act, so sculptur&rsquo;d to the life,<br/>
+He look&rsquo;d no silent image. One had sworn<br/>
+He had said, &ldquo;Hail!&rdquo; for she was imag&rsquo;d there,<br/>
+By whom the key did open to God&rsquo;s love,<br/>
+And in her act as sensibly impress<br/>
+That word, &ldquo;Behold the handmaid of the Lord,&rdquo;<br/>
+As figure seal&rsquo;d on wax. &ldquo;Fix not thy mind<br/>
+On one place only,&rdquo; said the guide belov&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Who had me near him on that part where lies<br/>
+The heart of man. My sight forthwith I turn&rsquo;d<br/>
+And mark&rsquo;d, behind the virgin mother&rsquo;s form,<br/>
+Upon that side, where he, that mov&rsquo;d me, stood,<br/>
+Another story graven on the rock.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I passed athwart the bard, and drew me near,<br/>
+That it might stand more aptly for my view.<br/>
+There in the self-same marble were engrav&rsquo;d<br/>
+The cart and kine, drawing the sacred ark,<br/>
+That from unbidden office awes mankind.<br/>
+Before it came much people; and the whole<br/>
+Parted in seven quires. One sense cried, &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo;<br/>
+Another, &ldquo;Yes, they sing.&rdquo; Like doubt arose<br/>
+Betwixt the eye and smell, from the curl&rsquo;d fume<br/>
+Of incense breathing up the well-wrought toil.<br/>
+Preceding the blest vessel, onward came<br/>
+With light dance leaping, girt in humble guise,<br/>
+Sweet Israel&rsquo;s harper: in that hap he seem&rsquo;d<br/>
+Less and yet more than kingly. Opposite,<br/>
+At a great palace, from the lattice forth<br/>
+Look&rsquo;d Michol, like a lady full of scorn<br/>
+And sorrow. To behold the tablet next,<br/>
+Which at the hack of Michol whitely shone,<br/>
+I mov&rsquo;d me. There was storied on the rock<br/>
+The&rsquo; exalted glory of the Roman prince,<br/>
+Whose mighty worth mov&rsquo;d Gregory to earn<br/>
+His mighty conquest, Trajan th&rsquo; Emperor.<br/>
+A widow at his bridle stood, attir&rsquo;d<br/>
+In tears and mourning. Round about them troop&rsquo;d<br/>
+Full throng of knights, and overhead in gold<br/>
+The eagles floated, struggling with the wind.<br/>
+The wretch appear&rsquo;d amid all these to say:<br/>
+&ldquo;Grant vengeance, sire! for, woe beshrew this heart<br/>
+My son is murder&rsquo;d.&rdquo; He replying seem&rsquo;d;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Wait now till I return.&rdquo; And she, as one<br/>
+Made hasty by her grief; &ldquo;O sire, if thou<br/>
+Dost not return?&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;Where I am, who then is,<br/>
+May right thee.&rdquo;&mdash;&rdquo; What to thee is other&rsquo;s good,<br/>
+If thou neglect thy own?&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;Now comfort thee,&rdquo;<br/>
+At length he answers. &ldquo;It beseemeth well<br/>
+My duty be perform&rsquo;d, ere I move hence:<br/>
+So justice wills; and pity bids me stay.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He, whose ken nothing new surveys, produc&rsquo;d<br/>
+That visible speaking, new to us and strange<br/>
+The like not found on earth. Fondly I gaz&rsquo;d<br/>
+Upon those patterns of meek humbleness,<br/>
+Shapes yet more precious for their artist&rsquo;s sake,<br/>
+When &ldquo;Lo,&rdquo; the poet whisper&rsquo;d, &ldquo;where this way<br/>
+(But slack their pace), a multitude advance.<br/>
+These to the lofty steps shall guide us on.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mine eyes, though bent on view of novel sights<br/>
+Their lov&rsquo;d allurement, were not slow to turn.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Reader! I would not that amaz&rsquo;d thou miss<br/>
+Of thy good purpose, hearing how just God<br/>
+Decrees our debts be cancel&rsquo;d. Ponder not<br/>
+The form of suff&rsquo;ring. Think on what succeeds,<br/>
+Think that at worst beyond the mighty doom<br/>
+It cannot pass. &ldquo;Instructor,&rdquo; I began,<br/>
+&ldquo;What I see hither tending, bears no trace<br/>
+Of human semblance, nor of aught beside<br/>
+That my foil&rsquo;d sight can guess.&rdquo; He answering thus:<br/>
+&ldquo;So courb&rsquo;d to earth, beneath their heavy teems<br/>
+Of torment stoop they, that mine eye at first<br/>
+Struggled as thine. But look intently thither,<br/>
+An disentangle with thy lab&rsquo;ring view,<br/>
+What underneath those stones approacheth: now,<br/>
+E&rsquo;en now, mayst thou discern the pangs of each.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Christians and proud! O poor and wretched ones!<br/>
+That feeble in the mind&rsquo;s eye, lean your trust<br/>
+Upon unstaid perverseness! Know ye not<br/>
+That we are worms, yet made at last to form<br/>
+The winged insect, imp&rsquo;d with angel plumes<br/>
+That to heaven&rsquo;s justice unobstructed soars?<br/>
+Why buoy ye up aloft your unfleg&rsquo;d souls?<br/>
+Abortive then and shapeless ye remain,<br/>
+Like the untimely embryon of a worm!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As, to support incumbent floor or roof,<br/>
+For corbel is a figure sometimes seen,<br/>
+That crumples up its knees unto its breast,<br/>
+With the feign&rsquo;d posture stirring ruth unfeign&rsquo;d<br/>
+In the beholder&rsquo;s fancy; so I saw<br/>
+These fashion&rsquo;d, when I noted well their guise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Each, as his back was laden, came indeed<br/>
+Or more or less contract; but it appear&rsquo;d<br/>
+As he, who show&rsquo;d most patience in his look,<br/>
+Wailing exclaim&rsquo;d: &ldquo;I can endure no more.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoII.XI"></a>CANTO XI</h2>
+
+<p>
+O thou Almighty Father, who dost make<br/>
+The heavens thy dwelling, not in bounds confin&rsquo;d,<br/>
+But that with love intenser there thou view&rsquo;st<br/>
+Thy primal effluence, hallow&rsquo;d be thy name:<br/>
+Join each created being to extol<br/>
+Thy might, for worthy humblest thanks and praise<br/>
+Is thy blest Spirit. May thy kingdom&rsquo;s peace<br/>
+Come unto us; for we, unless it come,<br/>
+With all our striving thither tend in vain.<br/>
+As of their will the angels unto thee<br/>
+Tender meet sacrifice, circling thy throne<br/>
+With loud hosannas, so of theirs be done<br/>
+By saintly men on earth. Grant us this day<br/>
+Our daily manna, without which he roams<br/>
+Through this rough desert retrograde, who most<br/>
+Toils to advance his steps. As we to each<br/>
+Pardon the evil done us, pardon thou<br/>
+Benign, and of our merit take no count.<br/>
+&rsquo;Gainst the old adversary prove thou not<br/>
+Our virtue easily subdu&rsquo;d; but free<br/>
+From his incitements and defeat his wiles.<br/>
+This last petition, dearest Lord! is made<br/>
+Not for ourselves, since that were needless now,<br/>
+But for their sakes who after us remain.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus for themselves and us good speed imploring,<br/>
+Those spirits went beneath a weight like that<br/>
+We sometimes feel in dreams, all, sore beset,<br/>
+But with unequal anguish, wearied all,<br/>
+Round the first circuit, purging as they go,<br/>
+The world&rsquo;s gross darkness off: In our behalf<br/>
+If there vows still be offer&rsquo;d, what can here<br/>
+For them be vow&rsquo;d and done by such, whose wills<br/>
+Have root of goodness in them? Well beseems<br/>
+That we should help them wash away the stains<br/>
+They carried hence, that so made pure and light,<br/>
+They may spring upward to the starry spheres.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah! so may mercy-temper&rsquo;d justice rid<br/>
+Your burdens speedily, that ye have power<br/>
+To stretch your wing, which e&rsquo;en to your desire<br/>
+Shall lift you, as ye show us on which hand<br/>
+Toward the ladder leads the shortest way.<br/>
+And if there be more passages than one,<br/>
+Instruct us of that easiest to ascend;<br/>
+For this man who comes with me, and bears yet<br/>
+The charge of fleshly raiment Adam left him,<br/>
+Despite his better will but slowly mounts.&rdquo;<br/>
+From whom the answer came unto these words,<br/>
+Which my guide spake, appear&rsquo;d not; but &rsquo;twas said
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Along the bank to rightward come with us,<br/>
+And ye shall find a pass that mocks not toil<br/>
+Of living man to climb: and were it not<br/>
+That I am hinder&rsquo;d by the rock, wherewith<br/>
+This arrogant neck is tam&rsquo;d, whence needs I stoop<br/>
+My visage to the ground, him, who yet lives,<br/>
+Whose name thou speak&rsquo;st not him I fain would view.<br/>
+To mark if e&rsquo;er I knew him? and to crave<br/>
+His pity for the fardel that I bear.<br/>
+I was of Latiun, of a Tuscan horn<br/>
+A mighty one: Aldobranlesco&rsquo;s name<br/>
+My sire&rsquo;s, I know not if ye e&rsquo;er have heard.<br/>
+My old blood and forefathers&rsquo; gallant deeds<br/>
+Made me so haughty, that I clean forgot<br/>
+The common mother, and to such excess,<br/>
+Wax&rsquo;d in my scorn of all men, that I fell,<br/>
+Fell therefore; by what fate Sienna&rsquo;s sons,<br/>
+Each child in Campagnatico, can tell.<br/>
+I am Omberto; not me only pride<br/>
+Hath injur&rsquo;d, but my kindred all involv&rsquo;d<br/>
+In mischief with her. Here my lot ordains<br/>
+Under this weight to groan, till I appease<br/>
+God&rsquo;s angry justice, since I did it not<br/>
+Amongst the living, here amongst the dead.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+List&rsquo;ning I bent my visage down: and one<br/>
+(Not he who spake) twisted beneath the weight<br/>
+That urg&rsquo;d him, saw me, knew me straight, and call&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Holding his eyes With difficulty fix&rsquo;d<br/>
+Intent upon me, stooping as I went<br/>
+Companion of their way. &ldquo;O!&rdquo; I exclaim&rsquo;d,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Art thou not Oderigi, art not thou<br/>
+Agobbio&rsquo;s glory, glory of that art<br/>
+Which they of Paris call the limmer&rsquo;s skill?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Brother!&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;with tints that gayer smile,<br/>
+Bolognian Franco&rsquo;s pencil lines the leaves.<br/>
+His all the honour now; mine borrow&rsquo;d light.<br/>
+In truth I had not been thus courteous to him,<br/>
+The whilst I liv&rsquo;d, through eagerness of zeal<br/>
+For that pre-eminence my heart was bent on.<br/>
+Here of such pride the forfeiture is paid.<br/>
+Nor were I even here; if, able still<br/>
+To sin, I had not turn&rsquo;d me unto God.<br/>
+O powers of man! how vain your glory, nipp&rsquo;d<br/>
+E&rsquo;en in its height of verdure, if an age<br/>
+Less bright succeed not! Cimabue thought<br/>
+To lord it over painting&rsquo;s field; and now<br/>
+The cry is Giotto&rsquo;s, and his name eclips&rsquo;d.<br/>
+Thus hath one Guido from the other snatch&rsquo;d<br/>
+The letter&rsquo;d prize: and he perhaps is born,<br/>
+Who shall drive either from their nest. The noise<br/>
+Of worldly fame is but a blast of wind,<br/>
+That blows from divers points, and shifts its name<br/>
+Shifting the point it blows from. Shalt thou more<br/>
+Live in the mouths of mankind, if thy flesh<br/>
+Part shrivel&rsquo;d from thee, than if thou hadst died,<br/>
+Before the coral and the pap were left,<br/>
+Or ere some thousand years have passed? and that<br/>
+Is, to eternity compar&rsquo;d, a space,<br/>
+Briefer than is the twinkling of an eye<br/>
+To the heaven&rsquo;s slowest orb. He there who treads<br/>
+So leisurely before me, far and wide<br/>
+Through Tuscany resounded once; and now<br/>
+Is in Sienna scarce with whispers nam&rsquo;d:<br/>
+There was he sov&rsquo;reign, when destruction caught<br/>
+The madd&rsquo;ning rage of Florence, in that day<br/>
+Proud as she now is loathsome. Your renown<br/>
+Is as the herb, whose hue doth come and go,<br/>
+And his might withers it, by whom it sprang<br/>
+Crude from the lap of earth.&rdquo; I thus to him:<br/>
+&ldquo;True are thy sayings: to my heart they breathe<br/>
+The kindly spirit of meekness, and allay<br/>
+What tumours rankle there. But who is he<br/>
+Of whom thou spak&rsquo;st but now?&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;This,&rdquo; he
+replied,<br/>
+&ldquo;Is Provenzano. He is here, because<br/>
+He reach&rsquo;d, with grasp presumptuous, at the sway<br/>
+Of all Sienna. Thus he still hath gone,<br/>
+Thus goeth never-resting, since he died.<br/>
+Such is th&rsquo; acquittance render&rsquo;d back of him,<br/>
+Who, beyond measure, dar&rsquo;d on earth.&rdquo; I then:<br/>
+&ldquo;If soul that to the verge of life delays<br/>
+Repentance, linger in that lower space,<br/>
+Nor hither mount, unless good prayers befriend,<br/>
+How chanc&rsquo;d admittance was vouchsaf&rsquo;d to him?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;When at his glory&rsquo;s topmost height,&rdquo; said he,<br/>
+&ldquo;Respect of dignity all cast aside,<br/>
+Freely He fix&rsquo;d him on Sienna&rsquo;s plain,<br/>
+A suitor to redeem his suff&rsquo;ring friend,<br/>
+Who languish&rsquo;d in the prison-house of Charles,<br/>
+Nor for his sake refus&rsquo;d through every vein<br/>
+To tremble. More I will not say; and dark,<br/>
+I know, my words are, but thy neighbours soon<br/>
+Shall help thee to a comment on the text.<br/>
+This is the work, that from these limits freed him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoII.XII"></a>CANTO XII</h2>
+
+<p>
+With equal pace as oxen in the yoke,<br/>
+I with that laden spirit journey&rsquo;d on<br/>
+Long as the mild instructor suffer&rsquo;d me;<br/>
+But when he bade me quit him, and proceed<br/>
+(For &ldquo;here,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;behooves with sail and oars<br/>
+Each man, as best he may, push on his bark&rdquo;),<br/>
+Upright, as one dispos&rsquo;d for speed, I rais&rsquo;d<br/>
+My body, still in thought submissive bow&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I now my leader&rsquo;s track not loth pursued;<br/>
+And each had shown how light we far&rsquo;d along<br/>
+When thus he warn&rsquo;d me: &ldquo;Bend thine eyesight down:<br/>
+For thou to ease the way shall find it good<br/>
+To ruminate the bed beneath thy feet.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As in memorial of the buried, drawn<br/>
+Upon earth-level tombs, the sculptur&rsquo;d form<br/>
+Of what was once, appears (at sight whereof<br/>
+Tears often stream forth by remembrance wak&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Whose sacred stings the piteous only feel),<br/>
+So saw I there, but with more curious skill<br/>
+Of portraiture o&rsquo;erwrought, whate&rsquo;er of space<br/>
+From forth the mountain stretches. On one part<br/>
+Him I beheld, above all creatures erst<br/>
+Created noblest, light&rsquo;ning fall from heaven:<br/>
+On th&rsquo; other side with bolt celestial pierc&rsquo;d<br/>
+Briareus: cumb&rsquo;ring earth he lay through dint<br/>
+Of mortal ice-stroke. The Thymbraean god<br/>
+With Mars, I saw, and Pallas, round their sire,<br/>
+Arm&rsquo;d still, and gazing on the giant&rsquo;s limbs<br/>
+Strewn o&rsquo;er th&rsquo; ethereal field. Nimrod I saw:<br/>
+At foot of the stupendous work he stood,<br/>
+As if bewilder&rsquo;d, looking on the crowd<br/>
+Leagued in his proud attempt on Sennaar&rsquo;s plain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+O Niobe! in what a trance of woe<br/>
+Thee I beheld, upon that highway drawn,<br/>
+Sev&rsquo;n sons on either side thee slain! O Saul!<br/>
+How ghastly didst thou look! on thine own sword<br/>
+Expiring in Gilboa, from that hour<br/>
+Ne&rsquo;er visited with rain from heav&rsquo;n or dew!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+O fond Arachne! thee I also saw<br/>
+Half spider now in anguish crawling up<br/>
+Th&rsquo; unfinish&rsquo;d web thou weaved&rsquo;st to thy bane!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+O Rehoboam! here thy shape doth seem<br/>
+Louring no more defiance! but fear-smote<br/>
+With none to chase him in his chariot whirl&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Was shown beside upon the solid floor<br/>
+How dear Alcmaeon forc&rsquo;d his mother rate<br/>
+That ornament in evil hour receiv&rsquo;d:<br/>
+How in the temple on Sennacherib fell<br/>
+His sons, and how a corpse they left him there.<br/>
+Was shown the scath and cruel mangling made<br/>
+By Tomyris on Cyrus, when she cried:<br/>
+&ldquo;Blood thou didst thirst for, take thy fill of blood!&rdquo;<br/>
+Was shown how routed in the battle fled<br/>
+Th&rsquo; Assyrians, Holofernes slain, and e&rsquo;en<br/>
+The relics of the carnage. Troy I mark&rsquo;d<br/>
+In ashes and in caverns. Oh! how fall&rsquo;n,<br/>
+How abject, Ilion, was thy semblance there!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What master of the pencil or the style<br/>
+Had trac&rsquo;d the shades and lines, that might have made<br/>
+The subtlest workman wonder? Dead the dead,<br/>
+The living seem&rsquo;d alive; with clearer view<br/>
+His eye beheld not who beheld the truth,<br/>
+Than mine what I did tread on, while I went<br/>
+Low bending. Now swell out; and with stiff necks<br/>
+Pass on, ye sons of Eve! veil not your looks,<br/>
+Lest they descry the evil of your path!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I noted not (so busied was my thought)<br/>
+How much we now had circled of the mount,<br/>
+And of his course yet more the sun had spent,<br/>
+When he, who with still wakeful caution went,<br/>
+Admonish&rsquo;d: &ldquo;Raise thou up thy head: for know<br/>
+Time is not now for slow suspense. Behold<br/>
+That way an angel hasting towards us! Lo<br/>
+Where duly the sixth handmaid doth return<br/>
+From service on the day. Wear thou in look<br/>
+And gesture seemly grace of reverent awe,<br/>
+That gladly he may forward us aloft.<br/>
+Consider that this day ne&rsquo;er dawns again.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Time&rsquo;s loss he had so often warn&rsquo;d me &rsquo;gainst,<br/>
+I could not miss the scope at which he aim&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The goodly shape approach&rsquo;d us, snowy white<br/>
+In vesture, and with visage casting streams<br/>
+Of tremulous lustre like the matin star.<br/>
+His arms he open&rsquo;d, then his wings; and spake:<br/>
+&ldquo;Onward: the steps, behold! are near; and now<br/>
+Th&rsquo; ascent is without difficulty gain&rsquo;d.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A scanty few are they, who when they hear<br/>
+Such tidings, hasten. O ye race of men<br/>
+Though born to soar, why suffer ye a wind<br/>
+So slight to baffle ye? He led us on<br/>
+Where the rock parted; here against my front<br/>
+Did beat his wings, then promis&rsquo;d I should fare<br/>
+In safety on my way. As to ascend<br/>
+That steep, upon whose brow the chapel stands<br/>
+(O&rsquo;er Rubaconte, looking lordly down<br/>
+On the well-guided city,) up the right<br/>
+Th&rsquo; impetuous rise is broken by the steps<br/>
+Carv&rsquo;d in that old and simple age, when still<br/>
+The registry and label rested safe;<br/>
+Thus is th&rsquo; acclivity reliev&rsquo;d, which here<br/>
+Precipitous from the other circuit falls:<br/>
+But on each hand the tall cliff presses close.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As ent&rsquo;ring there we turn&rsquo;d, voices, in strain<br/>
+Ineffable, sang: &ldquo;Blessed are the poor<br/>
+In spirit.&rdquo; Ah how far unlike to these<br/>
+The straits of hell; here songs to usher us,<br/>
+There shrieks of woe! We climb the holy stairs:<br/>
+And lighter to myself by far I seem&rsquo;d<br/>
+Than on the plain before, whence thus I spake:<br/>
+&ldquo;Say, master, of what heavy thing have I<br/>
+Been lighten&rsquo;d, that scarce aught the sense of toil<br/>
+Affects me journeying?&rdquo; He in few replied:<br/>
+&ldquo;When sin&rsquo;s broad characters, that yet remain<br/>
+Upon thy temples, though well nigh effac&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Shall be, as one is, all clean razed out,<br/>
+Then shall thy feet by heartiness of will<br/>
+Be so o&rsquo;ercome, they not alone shall feel<br/>
+No sense of labour, but delight much more<br/>
+Shall wait them urg&rsquo;d along their upward way.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then like to one, upon whose head is plac&rsquo;d<br/>
+Somewhat he deems not of but from the becks<br/>
+Of others as they pass him by; his hand<br/>
+Lends therefore help to&rsquo; assure him, searches, finds,<br/>
+And well performs such office as the eye<br/>
+Wants power to execute: so stretching forth<br/>
+The fingers of my right hand, did I find<br/>
+Six only of the letters, which his sword<br/>
+Who bare the keys had trac&rsquo;d upon my brow.<br/>
+The leader, as he mark&rsquo;d mine action, smil&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoII.XIII"></a>CANTO XIII</h2>
+
+<p>
+We reach&rsquo;d the summit of the scale, and stood<br/>
+Upon the second buttress of that mount<br/>
+Which healeth him who climbs. A cornice there,<br/>
+Like to the former, girdles round the hill;<br/>
+Save that its arch with sweep less ample bends.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Shadow nor image there is seen; all smooth<br/>
+The rampart and the path, reflecting nought<br/>
+But the rock&rsquo;s sullen hue. &ldquo;If here we wait<br/>
+For some to question,&rdquo; said the bard, &ldquo;I fear<br/>
+Our choice may haply meet too long delay.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then fixedly upon the sun his eyes<br/>
+He fastn&rsquo;d, made his right the central point<br/>
+From whence to move, and turn&rsquo;d the left aside.<br/>
+&ldquo;O pleasant light, my confidence and hope,<br/>
+Conduct us thou,&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;on this new way,<br/>
+Where now I venture, leading to the bourn<br/>
+We seek. The universal world to thee<br/>
+Owes warmth and lustre. If no other cause<br/>
+Forbid, thy beams should ever be our guide.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Far, as is measur&rsquo;d for a mile on earth,<br/>
+In brief space had we journey&rsquo;d; such prompt will<br/>
+Impell&rsquo;d; and towards us flying, now were heard<br/>
+Spirits invisible, who courteously<br/>
+Unto love&rsquo;s table bade the welcome guest.<br/>
+The voice, that first? flew by, call&rsquo;d forth aloud,<br/>
+&ldquo;They have no wine; &ldquo; so on behind us past,<br/>
+Those sounds reiterating, nor yet lost<br/>
+In the faint distance, when another came<br/>
+Crying, &ldquo;I am Orestes,&rdquo; and alike<br/>
+Wing&rsquo;d its fleet way. &ldquo;Oh father!&rdquo; I exclaim&rsquo;d,<br/>
+&ldquo;What tongues are these?&rdquo; and as I question&rsquo;d, lo!<br/>
+A third exclaiming, &ldquo;Love ye those have wrong&rsquo;d you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This circuit,&rdquo; said my teacher, &ldquo;knots the scourge<br/>
+For envy, and the cords are therefore drawn<br/>
+By charity&rsquo;s correcting hand. The curb<br/>
+Is of a harsher sound, as thou shalt hear<br/>
+(If I deem rightly), ere thou reach the pass,<br/>
+Where pardon sets them free. But fix thine eyes<br/>
+Intently through the air, and thou shalt see<br/>
+A multitude before thee seated, each<br/>
+Along the shelving grot.&rdquo; Then more than erst<br/>
+I op&rsquo;d my eyes, before me view&rsquo;d, and saw<br/>
+Shadows with garments dark as was the rock;<br/>
+And when we pass&rsquo;d a little forth, I heard<br/>
+A crying, &ldquo;Blessed Mary! pray for us,<br/>
+Michael and Peter! all ye saintly host!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I do not think there walks on earth this day<br/>
+Man so remorseless, that he hath not yearn&rsquo;d<br/>
+With pity at the sight that next I saw.<br/>
+Mine eyes a load of sorrow teemed, when now<br/>
+I stood so near them, that their semblances<br/>
+Came clearly to my view. Of sackcloth vile<br/>
+Their cov&rsquo;ring seem&rsquo;d; and on his shoulder one<br/>
+Did stay another, leaning, and all lean&rsquo;d<br/>
+Against the cliff. E&rsquo;en thus the blind and poor,<br/>
+Near the confessionals, to crave an alms,<br/>
+Stand, each his head upon his fellow&rsquo;s sunk,<br/>
+So most to stir compassion, not by sound<br/>
+Of words alone, but that, which moves not less,<br/>
+The sight of mis&rsquo;ry. And as never beam<br/>
+Of noonday visiteth the eyeless man,<br/>
+E&rsquo;en so was heav&rsquo;n a niggard unto these<br/>
+Of his fair light; for, through the orbs of all,<br/>
+A thread of wire, impiercing, knits them up,<br/>
+As for the taming of a haggard hawk.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It were a wrong, methought, to pass and look<br/>
+On others, yet myself the while unseen.<br/>
+To my sage counsel therefore did I turn.<br/>
+He knew the meaning of the mute appeal,<br/>
+Nor waited for my questioning, but said:<br/>
+&ldquo;Speak; and be brief, be subtle in thy words.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On that part of the cornice, whence no rim<br/>
+Engarlands its steep fall, did Virgil come;<br/>
+On the&rsquo; other side me were the spirits, their cheeks<br/>
+Bathing devout with penitential tears,<br/>
+That through the dread impalement forc&rsquo;d a way.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I turn&rsquo;d me to them, and &ldquo;O shades!&rdquo; said I,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Assur&rsquo;d that to your eyes unveil&rsquo;d shall shine<br/>
+The lofty light, sole object of your wish,<br/>
+So may heaven&rsquo;s grace clear whatsoe&rsquo;er of foam<br/>
+Floats turbid on the conscience, that thenceforth<br/>
+The stream of mind roll limpid from its source,<br/>
+As ye declare (for so shall ye impart<br/>
+A boon I dearly prize) if any soul<br/>
+Of Latium dwell among ye; and perchance<br/>
+That soul may profit, if I learn so much.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My brother, we are each one citizens<br/>
+Of one true city. Any thou wouldst say,<br/>
+Who lived a stranger in Italia&rsquo;s land.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So heard I answering, as appeal&rsquo;d, a voice<br/>
+That onward came some space from whence I stood.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A spirit I noted, in whose look was mark&rsquo;d<br/>
+Expectance. Ask ye how? The chin was rais&rsquo;d<br/>
+As in one reft of sight. &ldquo;Spirit,&rdquo; said I,<br/>
+&ldquo;Who for thy rise are tutoring (if thou be<br/>
+That which didst answer to me,) or by place<br/>
+Or name, disclose thyself, that I may know thee.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I was,&rdquo; it answer&rsquo;d, &ldquo;of Sienna: here<br/>
+I cleanse away with these the evil life,<br/>
+Soliciting with tears that He, who is,<br/>
+Vouchsafe him to us. Though Sapia nam&rsquo;d<br/>
+In sapience I excell&rsquo;d not, gladder far<br/>
+Of others&rsquo; hurt, than of the good befell me.<br/>
+That thou mayst own I now deceive thee not,<br/>
+Hear, if my folly were not as I speak it.<br/>
+When now my years slop&rsquo;d waning down the arch,<br/>
+It so bechanc&rsquo;d, my fellow citizens<br/>
+Near Colle met their enemies in the field,<br/>
+And I pray&rsquo;d God to grant what He had will&rsquo;d.<br/>
+There were they vanquish&rsquo;d, and betook themselves<br/>
+Unto the bitter passages of flight.<br/>
+I mark&rsquo;d the hunt, and waxing out of bounds<br/>
+In gladness, lifted up my shameless brow,<br/>
+And like the merlin cheated by a gleam,<br/>
+Cried, &ldquo;It is over. Heav&rsquo;n! I fear thee not.&rdquo;<br/>
+Upon my verge of life I wish&rsquo;d for peace<br/>
+With God; nor repentance had supplied<br/>
+What I did lack of duty, were it not<br/>
+The hermit Piero, touch&rsquo;d with charity,<br/>
+In his devout orisons thought on me.<br/>
+But who art thou that question&rsquo;st of our state,<br/>
+Who go&rsquo;st to my belief, with lids unclos&rsquo;d,<br/>
+And breathest in thy talk?&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;Mine eyes,&rdquo; said I,<br/>
+&ldquo;May yet be here ta&rsquo;en from me; but not long;<br/>
+For they have not offended grievously<br/>
+With envious glances. But the woe beneath<br/>
+Urges my soul with more exceeding dread.<br/>
+That nether load already weighs me down.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She thus: &ldquo;Who then amongst us here aloft<br/>
+Hath brought thee, if thou weenest to return?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He,&rdquo; answer&rsquo;d I, &ldquo;who standeth mute beside me.<br/>
+I live: of me ask therefore, chosen spirit,<br/>
+If thou desire I yonder yet should move<br/>
+For thee my mortal feet.&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; she replied,<br/>
+&ldquo;This is so strange a thing, it is great sign<br/>
+That God doth love thee. Therefore with thy prayer<br/>
+Sometime assist me: and by that I crave,<br/>
+Which most thou covetest, that if thy feet<br/>
+E&rsquo;er tread on Tuscan soil, thou save my fame<br/>
+Amongst my kindred. Them shalt thou behold<br/>
+With that vain multitude, who set their hope<br/>
+On Telamone&rsquo;s haven, there to fail<br/>
+Confounded, more shall when the fancied stream<br/>
+They sought of Dian call&rsquo;d: but they who lead<br/>
+Their navies, more than ruin&rsquo;d hopes shall mourn.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoII.XIV"></a>CANTO XIV</h2>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Say who is he around our mountain winds,<br/>
+Or ever death has prun&rsquo;d his wing for flight,<br/>
+That opes his eyes and covers them at will?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I know not who he is, but know thus much<br/>
+He comes not singly. Do thou ask of him,<br/>
+For thou art nearer to him, and take heed<br/>
+Accost him gently, so that he may speak.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus on the right two Spirits bending each<br/>
+Toward the other, talk&rsquo;d of me, then both<br/>
+Addressing me, their faces backward lean&rsquo;d,<br/>
+And thus the one began: &ldquo;O soul, who yet<br/>
+Pent in the body, tendest towards the sky!<br/>
+For charity, we pray thee&rsquo; comfort us,<br/>
+Recounting whence thou com&rsquo;st, and who thou art:<br/>
+For thou dost make us at the favour shown thee<br/>
+Marvel, as at a thing that ne&rsquo;er hath been.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There stretches through the midst of Tuscany,<br/>
+I straight began: &ldquo;a brooklet, whose well-head<br/>
+Springs up in Falterona, with his race<br/>
+Not satisfied, when he some hundred miles<br/>
+Hath measur&rsquo;d. From his banks bring, I this frame.<br/>
+To tell you who I am were words misspent:<br/>
+For yet my name scarce sounds on rumour&rsquo;s lip.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If well I do incorp&rsquo;rate with my thought<br/>
+The meaning of thy speech,&rdquo; said he, who first<br/>
+Addrest me, &ldquo;thou dost speak of Arno&rsquo;s wave.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To whom the other: &ldquo;Why hath he conceal&rsquo;d<br/>
+The title of that river, as a man<br/>
+Doth of some horrible thing?&rdquo; The spirit, who<br/>
+Thereof was question&rsquo;d, did acquit him thus:<br/>
+&ldquo;I know not: but &rsquo;tis fitting well the name<br/>
+Should perish of that vale; for from the source<br/>
+Where teems so plenteously the Alpine steep<br/>
+Maim&rsquo;d of Pelorus, (that doth scarcely pass<br/>
+Beyond that limit,) even to the point<br/>
+Whereunto ocean is restor&rsquo;d, what heaven<br/>
+Drains from th&rsquo; exhaustless store for all earth&rsquo;s streams,<br/>
+Throughout the space is virtue worried down,<br/>
+As &rsquo;twere a snake, by all, for mortal foe,<br/>
+Or through disastrous influence on the place,<br/>
+Or else distortion of misguided wills,<br/>
+That custom goads to evil: whence in those,<br/>
+The dwellers in that miserable vale,<br/>
+Nature is so transform&rsquo;d, it seems as they<br/>
+Had shar&rsquo;d of Circe&rsquo;s feeding. &rsquo;Midst brute swine,<br/>
+Worthier of acorns than of other food<br/>
+Created for man&rsquo;s use, he shapeth first<br/>
+His obscure way; then, sloping onward, finds<br/>
+Curs, snarlers more in spite than power, from whom<br/>
+He turns with scorn aside: still journeying down,<br/>
+By how much more the curst and luckless foss<br/>
+Swells out to largeness, e&rsquo;en so much it finds<br/>
+Dogs turning into wolves. Descending still<br/>
+Through yet more hollow eddies, next he meets<br/>
+A race of foxes, so replete with craft,<br/>
+They do not fear that skill can master it.<br/>
+Nor will I cease because my words are heard<br/>
+By other ears than thine. It shall be well<br/>
+For this man, if he keep in memory<br/>
+What from no erring Spirit I reveal.<br/>
+Lo! I behold thy grandson, that becomes<br/>
+A hunter of those wolves, upon the shore<br/>
+Of the fierce stream, and cows them all with dread:<br/>
+Their flesh yet living sets he up to sale,<br/>
+Then like an aged beast to slaughter dooms.<br/>
+Many of life he reaves, himself of worth<br/>
+And goodly estimation. Smear&rsquo;d with gore<br/>
+Mark how he issues from the rueful wood,<br/>
+Leaving such havoc, that in thousand years<br/>
+It spreads not to prime lustihood again.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As one, who tidings hears of woe to come,<br/>
+Changes his looks perturb&rsquo;d, from whate&rsquo;er part<br/>
+The peril grasp him, so beheld I change<br/>
+That spirit, who had turn&rsquo;d to listen, struck<br/>
+With sadness, soon as he had caught the word.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His visage and the other&rsquo;s speech did raise<br/>
+Desire in me to know the names of both,<br/>
+whereof with meek entreaty I inquir&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The shade, who late addrest me, thus resum&rsquo;d:<br/>
+&ldquo;Thy wish imports that I vouchsafe to do<br/>
+For thy sake what thou wilt not do for mine.<br/>
+But since God&rsquo;s will is that so largely shine<br/>
+His grace in thee, I will be liberal too.<br/>
+Guido of Duca know then that I am.<br/>
+Envy so parch&rsquo;d my blood, that had I seen<br/>
+A fellow man made joyous, thou hadst mark&rsquo;d<br/>
+A livid paleness overspread my cheek.<br/>
+Such harvest reap I of the seed I sow&rsquo;d.<br/>
+O man, why place thy heart where there doth need<br/>
+Exclusion of participants in good?<br/>
+This is Rinieri&rsquo;s spirit, this the boast<br/>
+And honour of the house of Calboli,<br/>
+Where of his worth no heritage remains.<br/>
+Nor his the only blood, that hath been stript<br/>
+(&rsquo;twixt Po, the mount, the Reno, and the shore,)<br/>
+Of all that truth or fancy asks for bliss;<br/>
+But in those limits such a growth has sprung<br/>
+Of rank and venom&rsquo;d roots, as long would mock<br/>
+Slow culture&rsquo;s toil. Where is good Lizio? where<br/>
+Manardi, Traversalo, and Carpigna?<br/>
+O bastard slips of old Romagna&rsquo;s line!<br/>
+When in Bologna the low artisan,<br/>
+And in Faenza yon Bernardin sprouts,<br/>
+A gentle cyon from ignoble stem.<br/>
+Wonder not, Tuscan, if thou see me weep,<br/>
+When I recall to mind those once lov&rsquo;d names,<br/>
+Guido of Prata, and of Azzo him<br/>
+That dwelt with you; Tignoso and his troop,<br/>
+With Traversaro&rsquo;s house and Anastagio s,<br/>
+(Each race disherited) and beside these,<br/>
+The ladies and the knights, the toils and ease,<br/>
+That witch&rsquo;d us into love and courtesy;<br/>
+Where now such malice reigns in recreant hearts.<br/>
+O Brettinoro! wherefore tarriest still,<br/>
+Since forth of thee thy family hath gone,<br/>
+And many, hating evil, join&rsquo;d their steps?<br/>
+Well doeth he, that bids his lineage cease,<br/>
+Bagnacavallo; Castracaro ill,<br/>
+And Conio worse, who care to propagate<br/>
+A race of Counties from such blood as theirs.<br/>
+Well shall ye also do, Pagani, then<br/>
+When from amongst you tries your demon child.<br/>
+Not so, howe&rsquo;er, that henceforth there remain<br/>
+True proof of what ye were. O Hugolin!<br/>
+Thou sprung of Fantolini&rsquo;s line! thy name<br/>
+Is safe, since none is look&rsquo;d for after thee<br/>
+To cloud its lustre, warping from thy stock.<br/>
+But, Tuscan, go thy ways; for now I take<br/>
+Far more delight in weeping than in words.<br/>
+Such pity for your sakes hath wrung my heart.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We knew those gentle spirits at parting heard<br/>
+Our steps. Their silence therefore of our way<br/>
+Assur&rsquo;d us. Soon as we had quitted them,<br/>
+Advancing onward, lo! a voice that seem&rsquo;d<br/>
+Like vollied light&rsquo;ning, when it rives the air,<br/>
+Met us, and shouted, &ldquo;Whosoever finds<br/>
+Will slay me,&rdquo; then fled from us, as the bolt<br/>
+Lanc&rsquo;d sudden from a downward-rushing cloud.<br/>
+When it had giv&rsquo;n short truce unto our hearing,<br/>
+Behold the other with a crash as loud<br/>
+As the quick-following thunder: &ldquo;Mark in me<br/>
+Aglauros turn&rsquo;d to rock.&rdquo; I at the sound<br/>
+Retreating drew more closely to my guide.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now in mute stillness rested all the air:<br/>
+And thus he spake: &ldquo;There was the galling bit.<br/>
+But your old enemy so baits his hook,<br/>
+He drags you eager to him. Hence nor curb<br/>
+Avails you, nor reclaiming call. Heav&rsquo;n calls<br/>
+And round about you wheeling courts your gaze<br/>
+With everlasting beauties. Yet your eye<br/>
+Turns with fond doting still upon the earth.<br/>
+Therefore He smites you who discerneth all.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoII.XV"></a>CANTO XV</h2>
+
+<p>
+As much as &rsquo;twixt the third hour&rsquo;s close and dawn,<br/>
+Appeareth of heav&rsquo;n&rsquo;s sphere, that ever whirls<br/>
+As restless as an infant in his play,<br/>
+So much appear&rsquo;d remaining to the sun<br/>
+Of his slope journey towards the western goal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Evening was there, and here the noon of night;<br/>
+and full upon our forehead smote the beams.<br/>
+For round the mountain, circling, so our path<br/>
+Had led us, that toward the sun-set now<br/>
+Direct we journey&rsquo;d: when I felt a weight<br/>
+Of more exceeding splendour, than before,<br/>
+Press on my front. The cause unknown, amaze<br/>
+Possess&rsquo;d me, and both hands against my brow<br/>
+Lifting, I interpos&rsquo;d them, as a screen,<br/>
+That of its gorgeous superflux of light<br/>
+Clipp&rsquo;d the diminish&rsquo;d orb. As when the ray,<br/>
+Striking On water or the surface clear<br/>
+Of mirror, leaps unto the opposite part,<br/>
+Ascending at a glance, e&rsquo;en as it fell,<br/>
+(And so much differs from the stone, that falls<br/>
+Through equal space, as practice skill hath shown;<br/>
+Thus with refracted light before me seemed<br/>
+The ground there smitten; whence in sudden haste<br/>
+My sight recoil&rsquo;d. &ldquo;What is this, sire belov&rsquo;d!<br/>
+&rsquo;Gainst which I strive to shield the sight in vain?&rdquo;<br/>
+Cried I, &ldquo;and which towards us moving seems?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Marvel not, if the family of heav&rsquo;n,&rdquo;<br/>
+He answer&rsquo;d, &ldquo;yet with dazzling radiance dim<br/>
+Thy sense it is a messenger who comes,<br/>
+Inviting man&rsquo;s ascent. Such sights ere long,<br/>
+Not grievous, shall impart to thee delight,<br/>
+As thy perception is by nature wrought<br/>
+Up to their pitch.&rdquo; The blessed angel, soon<br/>
+As we had reach&rsquo;d him, hail&rsquo;d us with glad voice:<br/>
+&ldquo;Here enter on a ladder far less steep<br/>
+Than ye have yet encounter&rsquo;d.&rdquo; We forthwith<br/>
+Ascending, heard behind us chanted sweet,<br/>
+&ldquo;Blessed the merciful,&rdquo; and &ldquo;happy thou!<br/>
+That conquer&rsquo;st.&rdquo; Lonely each, my guide and I<br/>
+Pursued our upward way; and as we went,<br/>
+Some profit from his words I hop&rsquo;d to win,<br/>
+And thus of him inquiring, fram&rsquo;d my speech:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What meant Romagna&rsquo;s spirit, when he spake<br/>
+Of bliss exclusive with no partner shar&rsquo;d?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He straight replied: &ldquo;No wonder, since he knows,<br/>
+What sorrow waits on his own worst defect,<br/>
+If he chide others, that they less may mourn.<br/>
+Because ye point your wishes at a mark,<br/>
+Where, by communion of possessors, part<br/>
+Is lessen&rsquo;d, envy bloweth up the sighs of men.<br/>
+No fear of that might touch ye, if the love<br/>
+Of higher sphere exalted your desire.<br/>
+For there, by how much more they call it ours,<br/>
+So much propriety of each in good<br/>
+Increases more, and heighten&rsquo;d charity<br/>
+Wraps that fair cloister in a brighter flame.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now lack I satisfaction more,&rdquo; said I,<br/>
+&ldquo;Than if thou hadst been silent at the first,<br/>
+And doubt more gathers on my lab&rsquo;ring thought.<br/>
+How can it chance, that good distributed,<br/>
+The many, that possess it, makes more rich,<br/>
+Than if &rsquo;twere shar&rsquo;d by few?&rdquo; He answering thus:<br/>
+&ldquo;Thy mind, reverting still to things of earth,<br/>
+Strikes darkness from true light. The highest good<br/>
+Unlimited, ineffable, doth so speed<br/>
+To love, as beam to lucid body darts,<br/>
+Giving as much of ardour as it finds.<br/>
+The sempiternal effluence streams abroad<br/>
+Spreading, wherever charity extends.<br/>
+So that the more aspirants to that bliss<br/>
+Are multiplied, more good is there to love,<br/>
+And more is lov&rsquo;d; as mirrors, that reflect,<br/>
+Each unto other, propagated light.<br/>
+If these my words avail not to allay<br/>
+Thy thirsting, Beatrice thou shalt see,<br/>
+Who of this want, and of all else thou hast,<br/>
+Shall rid thee to the full. Provide but thou<br/>
+That from thy temples may be soon eras&rsquo;d,<br/>
+E&rsquo;en as the two already, those five scars,<br/>
+That when they pain thee worst, then kindliest heal,&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou,&rdquo; I had said, &ldquo;content&rsquo;st me,&rdquo; when I
+saw<br/>
+The other round was gain&rsquo;d, and wond&rsquo;ring eyes<br/>
+Did keep me mute. There suddenly I seem&rsquo;d<br/>
+By an ecstatic vision wrapt away;<br/>
+And in a temple saw, methought, a crowd<br/>
+Of many persons; and at th&rsquo; entrance stood<br/>
+A dame, whose sweet demeanour did express<br/>
+A mother&rsquo;s love, who said, &ldquo;Child! why hast thou<br/>
+Dealt with us thus? Behold thy sire and I<br/>
+Sorrowing have sought thee;&rdquo; and so held her peace,<br/>
+And straight the vision fled. A female next<br/>
+Appear&rsquo;d before me, down whose visage cours&rsquo;d<br/>
+Those waters, that grief forces out from one<br/>
+By deep resentment stung, who seem&rsquo;d to say:<br/>
+&ldquo;If thou, Pisistratus, be lord indeed<br/>
+Over this city, nam&rsquo;d with such debate<br/>
+Of adverse gods, and whence each science sparkles,<br/>
+Avenge thee of those arms, whose bold embrace<br/>
+Hath clasp&rsquo;d our daughter; &ldquo;and to fuel, meseem&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Benign and meek, with visage undisturb&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Her sovran spake: &ldquo;How shall we those requite,<br/>
+Who wish us evil, if we thus condemn<br/>
+The man that loves us?&rdquo; After that I saw<br/>
+A multitude, in fury burning, slay<br/>
+With stones a stripling youth, and shout amain<br/>
+&ldquo;Destroy, destroy: &ldquo;and him I saw, who bow&rsquo;d<br/>
+Heavy with death unto the ground, yet made<br/>
+His eyes, unfolded upward, gates to heav&rsquo;n,<br/>
+Praying forgiveness of th&rsquo; Almighty Sire,<br/>
+Amidst that cruel conflict, on his foes,<br/>
+With looks, that With compassion to their aim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Soon as my spirit, from her airy flight<br/>
+Returning, sought again the things, whose truth<br/>
+Depends not on her shaping, I observ&rsquo;d<br/>
+How she had rov&rsquo;d to no unreal scenes
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile the leader, who might see I mov&rsquo;d,<br/>
+As one, who struggles to shake off his sleep,<br/>
+Exclaim&rsquo;d: &ldquo;What ails thee, that thou canst not hold<br/>
+Thy footing firm, but more than half a league<br/>
+Hast travel&rsquo;d with clos&rsquo;d eyes and tott&rsquo;ring gait,<br/>
+Like to a man by wine or sleep o&rsquo;ercharg&rsquo;d?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Beloved father! so thou deign,&rdquo; said I,<br/>
+&ldquo;To listen, I will tell thee what appear&rsquo;d<br/>
+Before me, when so fail&rsquo;d my sinking steps.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He thus: &ldquo;Not if thy Countenance were mask&rsquo;d<br/>
+With hundred vizards, could a thought of thine<br/>
+How small soe&rsquo;er, elude me. What thou saw&rsquo;st<br/>
+Was shown, that freely thou mightst ope thy heart<br/>
+To the waters of peace, that flow diffus&rsquo;d<br/>
+From their eternal fountain. I not ask&rsquo;d,<br/>
+What ails thee? for such cause as he doth, who<br/>
+Looks only with that eye which sees no more,<br/>
+When spiritless the body lies; but ask&rsquo;d,<br/>
+To give fresh vigour to thy foot. Such goads<br/>
+The slow and loit&rsquo;ring need; that they be found<br/>
+Not wanting, when their hour of watch returns.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So on we journey&rsquo;d through the evening sky<br/>
+Gazing intent, far onward, as our eyes<br/>
+With level view could stretch against the bright<br/>
+Vespertine ray: and lo! by slow degrees<br/>
+Gath&rsquo;ring, a fog made tow&rsquo;rds us, dark as night.<br/>
+There was no room for &rsquo;scaping; and that mist<br/>
+Bereft us, both of sight and the pure air.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoII.XVI"></a>CANTO XVI</h2>
+
+<p>
+Hell&rsquo;s dunnest gloom, or night unlustrous, dark,<br/>
+Of every planes &rsquo;reft, and pall&rsquo;d in clouds,<br/>
+Did never spread before the sight a veil<br/>
+In thickness like that fog, nor to the sense<br/>
+So palpable and gross. Ent&rsquo;ring its shade,<br/>
+Mine eye endured not with unclosed lids;<br/>
+Which marking, near me drew the faithful guide,<br/>
+Offering me his shoulder for a stay.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As the blind man behind his leader walks,<br/>
+Lest he should err, or stumble unawares<br/>
+On what might harm him, or perhaps destroy,<br/>
+I journey&rsquo;d through that bitter air and foul,<br/>
+Still list&rsquo;ning to my escort&rsquo;s warning voice,<br/>
+&ldquo;Look that from me thou part not.&rdquo; Straight I heard<br/>
+Voices, and each one seem&rsquo;d to pray for peace,<br/>
+And for compassion, to the Lamb of God<br/>
+That taketh sins away. Their prelude still<br/>
+Was &ldquo;Agnus Dei,&rdquo; and through all the choir,<br/>
+One voice, one measure ran, that perfect seem&rsquo;d<br/>
+The concord of their song. &ldquo;Are these I hear<br/>
+Spirits, O master?&rdquo; I exclaim&rsquo;d; and he:<br/>
+&ldquo;Thou aim&rsquo;st aright: these loose the bonds of wrath.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now who art thou, that through our smoke dost cleave?<br/>
+And speak&rsquo;st of us, as thou thyself e&rsquo;en yet<br/>
+Dividest time by calends?&rdquo; So one voice<br/>
+Bespake me; whence my master said: &ldquo;Reply;<br/>
+And ask, if upward hence the passage lead.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;O being! who dost make thee pure, to stand<br/>
+Beautiful once more in thy Maker&rsquo;s sight!<br/>
+Along with me: and thou shalt hear and wonder.&rdquo;<br/>
+Thus I, whereto the spirit answering spake:<br/>
+&ldquo;Long as &rsquo;tis lawful for me, shall my steps<br/>
+Follow on thine; and since the cloudy smoke<br/>
+Forbids the seeing, hearing in its stead<br/>
+Shall keep us join&rsquo;d.&rdquo; I then forthwith began<br/>
+&ldquo;Yet in my mortal swathing, I ascend<br/>
+To higher regions, and am hither come<br/>
+Through the fearful agony of hell.<br/>
+And, if so largely God hath doled his grace,<br/>
+That, clean beside all modern precedent,<br/>
+He wills me to behold his kingly state,<br/>
+From me conceal not who thou wast, ere death<br/>
+Had loos&rsquo;d thee; but instruct me: and instruct<br/>
+If rightly to the pass I tend; thy words<br/>
+The way directing as a safe escort.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I was of Lombardy, and Marco call&rsquo;d:<br/>
+Not inexperienc&rsquo;d of the world, that worth<br/>
+I still affected, from which all have turn&rsquo;d<br/>
+The nerveless bow aside. Thy course tends right<br/>
+Unto the summit:&rdquo; and, replying thus,<br/>
+He added, &ldquo;I beseech thee pray for me,<br/>
+When thou shalt come aloft.&rdquo; And I to him:<br/>
+&ldquo;Accept my faith for pledge I will perform<br/>
+What thou requirest. Yet one doubt remains,<br/>
+That wrings me sorely, if I solve it not,<br/>
+Singly before it urg&rsquo;d me, doubled now<br/>
+By thine opinion, when I couple that<br/>
+With one elsewhere declar&rsquo;d, each strength&rsquo;ning other.<br/>
+The world indeed is even so forlorn<br/>
+Of all good as thou speak&rsquo;st it and so swarms<br/>
+With every evil. Yet, beseech thee, point<br/>
+The cause out to me, that myself may see,<br/>
+And unto others show it: for in heaven<br/>
+One places it, and one on earth below.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then heaving forth a deep and audible sigh,<br/>
+&ldquo;Brother!&rdquo; he thus began, &ldquo;the world is blind;<br/>
+And thou in truth com&rsquo;st from it. Ye, who live,<br/>
+Do so each cause refer to heav&rsquo;n above,<br/>
+E&rsquo;en as its motion of necessity<br/>
+Drew with it all that moves. If this were so,<br/>
+Free choice in you were none; nor justice would<br/>
+There should be joy for virtue, woe for ill.<br/>
+Your movements have their primal bent from heaven;<br/>
+Not all; yet said I all; what then ensues?<br/>
+Light have ye still to follow evil or good,<br/>
+And of the will free power, which, if it stand<br/>
+Firm and unwearied in Heav&rsquo;n&rsquo;s first assay,<br/>
+Conquers at last, so it be cherish&rsquo;d well,<br/>
+Triumphant over all. To mightier force,<br/>
+To better nature subject, ye abide<br/>
+Free, not constrain&rsquo;d by that, which forms in you<br/>
+The reasoning mind uninfluenc&rsquo;d of the stars.<br/>
+If then the present race of mankind err,<br/>
+Seek in yourselves the cause, and find it there.<br/>
+Herein thou shalt confess me no false spy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Forth from his plastic hand, who charm&rsquo;d beholds<br/>
+Her image ere she yet exist, the soul<br/>
+Comes like a babe, that wantons sportively<br/>
+Weeping and laughing in its wayward moods,<br/>
+As artless and as ignorant of aught,<br/>
+Save that her Maker being one who dwells<br/>
+With gladness ever, willingly she turns<br/>
+To whate&rsquo;er yields her joy. Of some slight good<br/>
+The flavour soon she tastes; and, snar&rsquo;d by that,<br/>
+With fondness she pursues it, if no guide<br/>
+Recall, no rein direct her wand&rsquo;ring course.<br/>
+Hence it behov&rsquo;d, the law should be a curb;<br/>
+A sovereign hence behov&rsquo;d, whose piercing view<br/>
+Might mark at least the fortress and main tower<br/>
+Of the true city. Laws indeed there are:<br/>
+But who is he observes them? None; not he,<br/>
+Who goes before, the shepherd of the flock,<br/>
+Who chews the cud but doth not cleave the hoof.<br/>
+Therefore the multitude, who see their guide<br/>
+Strike at the very good they covet most,<br/>
+Feed there and look no further. Thus the cause<br/>
+Is not corrupted nature in yourselves,<br/>
+But ill-conducting, that hath turn&rsquo;d the world<br/>
+To evil. Rome, that turn&rsquo;d it unto good,<br/>
+Was wont to boast two suns, whose several beams<br/>
+Cast light on either way, the world&rsquo;s and God&rsquo;s.<br/>
+One since hath quench&rsquo;d the other; and the sword<br/>
+Is grafted on the crook; and so conjoin&rsquo;d<br/>
+Each must perforce decline to worse, unaw&rsquo;d<br/>
+By fear of other. If thou doubt me, mark<br/>
+The blade: each herb is judg&rsquo;d of by its seed.<br/>
+That land, through which Adice and the Po<br/>
+Their waters roll, was once the residence<br/>
+Of courtesy and velour, ere the day,<br/>
+That frown&rsquo;d on Frederick; now secure may pass<br/>
+Those limits, whosoe&rsquo;er hath left, for shame,<br/>
+To talk with good men, or come near their haunts.<br/>
+Three aged ones are still found there, in whom<br/>
+The old time chides the new: these deem it long<br/>
+Ere God restore them to a better world:<br/>
+The good Gherardo, of Palazzo he<br/>
+Conrad, and Guido of Castello, nam&rsquo;d<br/>
+In Gallic phrase more fitly the plain Lombard.<br/>
+On this at last conclude. The church of Rome,<br/>
+Mixing two governments that ill assort,<br/>
+Hath miss&rsquo;d her footing, fall&rsquo;n into the mire,<br/>
+And there herself and burden much defil&rsquo;d.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;O Marco!&rdquo; I replied, shine arguments<br/>
+Convince me: and the cause I now discern<br/>
+Why of the heritage no portion came<br/>
+To Levi&rsquo;s offspring. But resolve me this<br/>
+Who that Gherardo is, that as thou sayst<br/>
+Is left a sample of the perish&rsquo;d race,<br/>
+And for rebuke to this untoward age?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Either thy words,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;deceive; or else<br/>
+Are meant to try me; that thou, speaking Tuscan,<br/>
+Appear&rsquo;st not to have heard of good Gherado;<br/>
+The sole addition that, by which I know him;<br/>
+Unless I borrow&rsquo;d from his daughter Gaia<br/>
+Another name to grace him. God be with you.<br/>
+I bear you company no more. Behold<br/>
+The dawn with white ray glimm&rsquo;ring through the mist.<br/>
+I must away&mdash;the angel comes&mdash;ere he<br/>
+Appear.&rdquo; He said, and would not hear me more.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoII.XVII"></a>CANTO XVII</h2>
+
+<p>
+Call to remembrance, reader, if thou e&rsquo;er<br/>
+Hast, on a mountain top, been ta&rsquo;en by cloud,<br/>
+Through which thou saw&rsquo;st no better, than the mole<br/>
+Doth through opacous membrane; then, whene&rsquo;er<br/>
+The wat&rsquo;ry vapours dense began to melt<br/>
+Into thin air, how faintly the sun&rsquo;s sphere<br/>
+Seem&rsquo;d wading through them; so thy nimble thought<br/>
+May image, how at first I re-beheld<br/>
+The sun, that bedward now his couch o&rsquo;erhung.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus with my leader&rsquo;s feet still equaling pace<br/>
+From forth that cloud I came, when now expir&rsquo;d<br/>
+The parting beams from off the nether shores.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+O quick and forgetive power! that sometimes dost<br/>
+So rob us of ourselves, we take no mark<br/>
+Though round about us thousand trumpets clang!<br/>
+What moves thee, if the senses stir not? Light<br/>
+Kindled in heav&rsquo;n, spontaneous, self-inform&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Or likelier gliding down with swift illapse<br/>
+By will divine. Portray&rsquo;d before me came<br/>
+The traces of her dire impiety,<br/>
+Whose form was chang&rsquo;d into the bird, that most<br/>
+Delights itself in song: and here my mind<br/>
+Was inwardly so wrapt, it gave no place<br/>
+To aught that ask&rsquo;d admittance from without.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Next shower&rsquo;d into my fantasy a shape<br/>
+As of one crucified, whose visage spake<br/>
+Fell rancour, malice deep, wherein he died;<br/>
+And round him Ahasuerus the great king,<br/>
+Esther his bride, and Mordecai the just,<br/>
+Blameless in word and deed. As of itself<br/>
+That unsubstantial coinage of the brain<br/>
+Burst, like a bubble, Which the water fails<br/>
+That fed it; in my vision straight uprose<br/>
+A damsel weeping loud, and cried, &ldquo;O queen!<br/>
+O mother! wherefore has intemperate ire<br/>
+Driv&rsquo;n thee to loath thy being? Not to lose<br/>
+Lavinia, desp&rsquo;rate thou hast slain thyself.<br/>
+Now hast thou lost me. I am she, whose tears<br/>
+Mourn, ere I fall, a mother&rsquo;s timeless end.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+E&rsquo;en as a sleep breaks off, if suddenly<br/>
+New radiance strike upon the closed lids,<br/>
+The broken slumber quivering ere it dies;<br/>
+Thus from before me sunk that imagery<br/>
+Vanishing, soon as on my face there struck<br/>
+The light, outshining far our earthly beam.<br/>
+As round I turn&rsquo;d me to survey what place<br/>
+I had arriv&rsquo;d at, &ldquo;Here ye mount,&rdquo; exclaim&rsquo;d<br/>
+A voice, that other purpose left me none,<br/>
+Save will so eager to behold who spake,<br/>
+I could not choose but gaze. As &rsquo;fore the sun,<br/>
+That weighs our vision down, and veils his form<br/>
+In light transcendent, thus my virtue fail&rsquo;d<br/>
+Unequal. &ldquo;This is Spirit from above,<br/>
+Who marshals us our upward way, unsought;<br/>
+And in his own light shrouds him;. As a man<br/>
+Doth for himself, so now is done for us.<br/>
+For whoso waits imploring, yet sees need<br/>
+Of his prompt aidance, sets himself prepar&rsquo;d<br/>
+For blunt denial, ere the suit be made.<br/>
+Refuse we not to lend a ready foot<br/>
+At such inviting: haste we to ascend,<br/>
+Before it darken: for we may not then,<br/>
+Till morn again return.&rdquo; So spake my guide;<br/>
+And to one ladder both address&rsquo;d our steps;<br/>
+And the first stair approaching, I perceiv&rsquo;d<br/>
+Near me as &rsquo;twere the waving of a wing,<br/>
+That fann&rsquo;d my face and whisper&rsquo;d: &ldquo;Blessed they<br/>
+The peacemakers: they know not evil wrath.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now to such height above our heads were rais&rsquo;d<br/>
+The last beams, follow&rsquo;d close by hooded night,<br/>
+That many a star on all sides through the gloom<br/>
+Shone out. &ldquo;Why partest from me, O my strength?&rdquo;<br/>
+So with myself I commun&rsquo;d; for I felt<br/>
+My o&rsquo;ertoil&rsquo;d sinews slacken. We had reach&rsquo;d<br/>
+The summit, and were fix&rsquo;d like to a bark<br/>
+Arriv&rsquo;d at land. And waiting a short space,<br/>
+If aught should meet mine ear in that new round,<br/>
+Then to my guide I turn&rsquo;d, and said: &ldquo;Lov&rsquo;d sire!<br/>
+Declare what guilt is on this circle purg&rsquo;d.<br/>
+If our feet rest, no need thy speech should pause.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He thus to me: &ldquo;The love of good, whate&rsquo;er<br/>
+Wanted of just proportion, here fulfils.<br/>
+Here plies afresh the oar, that loiter&rsquo;d ill.<br/>
+But that thou mayst yet clearlier understand,<br/>
+Give ear unto my words, and thou shalt cull<br/>
+Some fruit may please thee well, from this delay.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Creator, nor created being, ne&rsquo;er,<br/>
+My son,&rdquo; he thus began, &ldquo;was without love,<br/>
+Or natural, or the free spirit&rsquo;s growth.<br/>
+Thou hast not that to learn. The natural still<br/>
+Is without error; but the other swerves,<br/>
+If on ill object bent, or through excess<br/>
+Of vigour, or defect. While e&rsquo;er it seeks<br/>
+The primal blessings, or with measure due<br/>
+Th&rsquo; inferior, no delight, that flows from it,<br/>
+Partakes of ill. But let it warp to evil,<br/>
+Or with more ardour than behooves, or less.<br/>
+Pursue the good, the thing created then<br/>
+Works &rsquo;gainst its Maker. Hence thou must infer<br/>
+That love is germin of each virtue in ye,<br/>
+And of each act no less, that merits pain.<br/>
+Now since it may not be, but love intend<br/>
+The welfare mainly of the thing it loves,<br/>
+All from self-hatred are secure; and since<br/>
+No being can be thought t&rsquo; exist apart<br/>
+And independent of the first, a bar<br/>
+Of equal force restrains from hating that.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Grant the distinction just; and it remains<br/>
+The&rsquo; evil must be another&rsquo;s, which is lov&rsquo;d.<br/>
+Three ways such love is gender&rsquo;d in your clay.<br/>
+There is who hopes (his neighbour&rsquo;s worth deprest,)<br/>
+Preeminence himself, and coverts hence<br/>
+For his own greatness that another fall.<br/>
+There is who so much fears the loss of power,<br/>
+Fame, favour, glory (should his fellow mount<br/>
+Above him), and so sickens at the thought,<br/>
+He loves their opposite: and there is he,<br/>
+Whom wrong or insult seems to gall and shame<br/>
+That he doth thirst for vengeance, and such needs<br/>
+Must doat on other&rsquo;s evil. Here beneath<br/>
+This threefold love is mourn&rsquo;d. Of th&rsquo; other sort<br/>
+Be now instructed, that which follows good<br/>
+But with disorder&rsquo;d and irregular course.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;All indistinctly apprehend a bliss<br/>
+On which the soul may rest, the hearts of all<br/>
+Yearn after it, and to that wished bourn<br/>
+All therefore strive to tend. If ye behold<br/>
+Or seek it with a love remiss and lax,<br/>
+This cornice after just repenting lays<br/>
+Its penal torment on ye. Other good<br/>
+There is, where man finds not his happiness:<br/>
+It is not true fruition, not that blest<br/>
+Essence, of every good the branch and root.<br/>
+The love too lavishly bestow&rsquo;d on this,<br/>
+Along three circles over us, is mourn&rsquo;d.<br/>
+Account of that division tripartite<br/>
+Expect not, fitter for thine own research.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoII.XVIII"></a>CANTO XVIII</h2>
+
+<p>
+The teacher ended, and his high discourse<br/>
+Concluding, earnest in my looks inquir&rsquo;d<br/>
+If I appear&rsquo;d content; and I, whom still<br/>
+Unsated thirst to hear him urg&rsquo;d, was mute,<br/>
+Mute outwardly, yet inwardly I said:<br/>
+&ldquo;Perchance my too much questioning offends<br/>
+But he, true father, mark&rsquo;d the secret wish<br/>
+By diffidence restrain&rsquo;d, and speaking, gave<br/>
+Me boldness thus to speak: &ldquo;Master, my Sight<br/>
+Gathers so lively virtue from thy beams,<br/>
+That all, thy words convey, distinct is seen.<br/>
+Wherefore I pray thee, father, whom this heart<br/>
+Holds dearest! thou wouldst deign by proof t&rsquo; unfold<br/>
+That love, from which as from their source thou bring&rsquo;st<br/>
+All good deeds and their opposite.&rdquo; He then:<br/>
+&ldquo;To what I now disclose be thy clear ken<br/>
+Directed, and thou plainly shalt behold<br/>
+How much those blind have err&rsquo;d, who make themselves<br/>
+The guides of men. The soul, created apt<br/>
+To love, moves versatile which way soe&rsquo;er<br/>
+Aught pleasing prompts her, soon as she is wak&rsquo;d<br/>
+By pleasure into act. Of substance true<br/>
+Your apprehension forms its counterfeit,<br/>
+And in you the ideal shape presenting<br/>
+Attracts the soul&rsquo;s regard. If she, thus drawn,<br/>
+incline toward it, love is that inclining,<br/>
+And a new nature knit by pleasure in ye.<br/>
+Then as the fire points up, and mounting seeks<br/>
+His birth-place and his lasting seat, e&rsquo;en thus<br/>
+Enters the captive soul into desire,<br/>
+Which is a spiritual motion, that ne&rsquo;er rests<br/>
+Before enjoyment of the thing it loves.<br/>
+Enough to show thee, how the truth from those<br/>
+Is hidden, who aver all love a thing<br/>
+Praise-worthy in itself: although perhaps<br/>
+Its substance seem still good. Yet if the wax<br/>
+Be good, it follows not th&rsquo; impression must.&rdquo;<br/>
+&ldquo;What love is,&rdquo; I return&rsquo;d, &ldquo;thy words, O guide!<br/>
+And my own docile mind, reveal. Yet thence<br/>
+New doubts have sprung. For from without if love<br/>
+Be offer&rsquo;d to us, and the spirit knows<br/>
+No other footing, tend she right or wrong,<br/>
+Is no desert of hers.&rdquo; He answering thus:<br/>
+&ldquo;What reason here discovers I have power<br/>
+To show thee: that which lies beyond, expect<br/>
+From Beatrice, faith not reason&rsquo;s task.<br/>
+Spirit, substantial form, with matter join&rsquo;d<br/>
+Not in confusion mix&rsquo;d, hath in itself<br/>
+Specific virtue of that union born,<br/>
+Which is not felt except it work, nor prov&rsquo;d<br/>
+But through effect, as vegetable life<br/>
+By the green leaf. From whence his intellect<br/>
+Deduced its primal notices of things,<br/>
+Man therefore knows not, or his appetites<br/>
+Their first affections; such in you, as zeal<br/>
+In bees to gather honey; at the first,<br/>
+Volition, meriting nor blame nor praise.<br/>
+But o&rsquo;er each lower faculty supreme,<br/>
+That as she list are summon&rsquo;d to her bar,<br/>
+Ye have that virtue in you, whose just voice<br/>
+Uttereth counsel, and whose word should keep<br/>
+The threshold of assent. Here is the source,<br/>
+Whence cause of merit in you is deriv&rsquo;d,<br/>
+E&rsquo;en as the affections good or ill she takes,<br/>
+Or severs, winnow&rsquo;d as the chaff. Those men<br/>
+Who reas&rsquo;ning went to depth profoundest, mark&rsquo;d<br/>
+That innate freedom, and were thence induc&rsquo;d<br/>
+To leave their moral teaching to the world.<br/>
+Grant then, that from necessity arise<br/>
+All love that glows within you; to dismiss<br/>
+Or harbour it, the pow&rsquo;r is in yourselves.<br/>
+Remember, Beatrice, in her style,<br/>
+Denominates free choice by eminence<br/>
+The noble virtue, if in talk with thee<br/>
+She touch upon that theme.&rdquo; The moon, well nigh<br/>
+To midnight hour belated, made the stars<br/>
+Appear to wink and fade; and her broad disk<br/>
+Seem&rsquo;d like a crag on fire, as up the vault<br/>
+That course she journey&rsquo;d, which the sun then warms,<br/>
+When they of Rome behold him at his set.<br/>
+Betwixt Sardinia and the Corsic isle.<br/>
+And now the weight, that hung upon my thought,<br/>
+Was lighten&rsquo;d by the aid of that clear spirit,<br/>
+Who raiseth Andes above Mantua&rsquo;s name.<br/>
+I therefore, when my questions had obtain&rsquo;d<br/>
+Solution plain and ample, stood as one<br/>
+Musing in dreary slumber; but not long<br/>
+Slumber&rsquo;d; for suddenly a multitude,<br/>
+The steep already turning, from behind,<br/>
+Rush&rsquo;d on. With fury and like random rout,<br/>
+As echoing on their shores at midnight heard<br/>
+Ismenus and Asopus, for his Thebes<br/>
+If Bacchus&rsquo; help were needed; so came these<br/>
+Tumultuous, curving each his rapid step,<br/>
+By eagerness impell&rsquo;d of holy love.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Soon they o&rsquo;ertook us; with such swiftness mov&rsquo;d<br/>
+The mighty crowd. Two spirits at their head<br/>
+Cried weeping; &ldquo;Blessed Mary sought with haste<br/>
+The hilly region. Caesar to subdue<br/>
+Ilerda, darted in Marseilles his sting,<br/>
+And flew to Spain.&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;Oh tarry not: away;&rdquo;<br/>
+The others shouted; &ldquo;let not time be lost<br/>
+Through slackness of affection. Hearty zeal<br/>
+To serve reanimates celestial grace.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;O ye, in whom intenser fervency<br/>
+Haply supplies, where lukewarm erst ye fail&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Slow or neglectful, to absolve your part<br/>
+Of good and virtuous, this man, who yet lives,<br/>
+(Credit my tale, though strange) desires t&rsquo; ascend,<br/>
+So morning rise to light us. Therefore say<br/>
+Which hand leads nearest to the rifted rock?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So spake my guide, to whom a shade return&rsquo;d:<br/>
+&ldquo;Come after us, and thou shalt find the cleft.<br/>
+We may not linger: such resistless will<br/>
+Speeds our unwearied course. Vouchsafe us then<br/>
+Thy pardon, if our duty seem to thee<br/>
+Discourteous rudeness. In Verona I<br/>
+Was abbot of San Zeno, when the hand<br/>
+Of Barbarossa grasp&rsquo;d Imperial sway,<br/>
+That name, ne&rsquo;er utter&rsquo;d without tears in Milan.<br/>
+And there is he, hath one foot in his grave,<br/>
+Who for that monastery ere long shall weep,<br/>
+Ruing his power misus&rsquo;d: for that his son,<br/>
+Of body ill compact, and worse in mind,<br/>
+And born in evil, he hath set in place<br/>
+Of its true pastor.&rdquo; Whether more he spake,<br/>
+Or here was mute, I know not: he had sped<br/>
+E&rsquo;en now so far beyond us. Yet thus much<br/>
+I heard, and in rememb&rsquo;rance treasur&rsquo;d it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He then, who never fail&rsquo;d me at my need,<br/>
+Cried, &ldquo;Hither turn. Lo! two with sharp remorse<br/>
+Chiding their sin!&rdquo; In rear of all the troop<br/>
+These shouted: &ldquo;First they died, to whom the sea<br/>
+Open&rsquo;d, or ever Jordan saw his heirs:<br/>
+And they, who with Aeneas to the end<br/>
+Endur&rsquo;d not suffering, for their portion chose<br/>
+Life without glory.&rdquo; Soon as they had fled<br/>
+Past reach of sight, new thought within me rose<br/>
+By others follow&rsquo;d fast, and each unlike<br/>
+Its fellow: till led on from thought to thought,<br/>
+And pleasur&rsquo;d with the fleeting train, mine eye<br/>
+Was clos&rsquo;d, and meditation chang&rsquo;d to dream.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoII.XIX"></a>CANTO XIX</h2>
+
+<p>
+It was the hour, when of diurnal heat<br/>
+No reliques chafe the cold beams of the moon,<br/>
+O&rsquo;erpower&rsquo;d by earth, or planetary sway<br/>
+Of Saturn; and the geomancer sees<br/>
+His Greater Fortune up the east ascend,<br/>
+Where gray dawn checkers first the shadowy cone;<br/>
+When &rsquo;fore me in my dream a woman&rsquo;s shape<br/>
+There came, with lips that stammer&rsquo;d, eyes aslant,<br/>
+Distorted feet, hands maim&rsquo;d, and colour pale.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I look&rsquo;d upon her; and as sunshine cheers<br/>
+Limbs numb&rsquo;d by nightly cold, e&rsquo;en thus my look<br/>
+Unloos&rsquo;d her tongue, next in brief space her form<br/>
+Decrepit rais&rsquo;d erect, and faded face<br/>
+With love&rsquo;s own hue illum&rsquo;d. Recov&rsquo;ring speech<br/>
+She forthwith warbling such a strain began,<br/>
+That I, how loth soe&rsquo;er, could scarce have held<br/>
+Attention from the song. &ldquo;I,&rdquo; thus she sang,<br/>
+&ldquo;I am the Siren, she, whom mariners<br/>
+On the wide sea are wilder&rsquo;d when they hear:<br/>
+Such fulness of delight the list&rsquo;ner feels.<br/>
+I from his course Ulysses by my lay<br/>
+Enchanted drew. Whoe&rsquo;er frequents me once<br/>
+Parts seldom; so I charm him, and his heart<br/>
+Contented knows no void.&rdquo; Or ere her mouth<br/>
+Was clos&rsquo;d, to shame her at her side appear&rsquo;d<br/>
+A dame of semblance holy. With stern voice<br/>
+She utter&rsquo;d; &ldquo;Say, O Virgil, who is this?&rdquo;<br/>
+Which hearing, he approach&rsquo;d, with eyes still bent<br/>
+Toward that goodly presence: th&rsquo; other seiz&rsquo;d her,<br/>
+And, her robes tearing, open&rsquo;d her before,<br/>
+And show&rsquo;d the belly to me, whence a smell,<br/>
+Exhaling loathsome, wak&rsquo;d me. Round I turn&rsquo;d<br/>
+Mine eyes, and thus the teacher: &ldquo;At the least<br/>
+Three times my voice hath call&rsquo;d thee. Rise, begone.<br/>
+Let us the opening find where thou mayst pass.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I straightway rose. Now day, pour&rsquo;d down from high,<br/>
+Fill&rsquo;d all the circuits of the sacred mount;<br/>
+And, as we journey&rsquo;d, on our shoulder smote<br/>
+The early ray. I follow&rsquo;d, stooping low<br/>
+My forehead, as a man, o&rsquo;ercharg&rsquo;d with thought,<br/>
+Who bends him to the likeness of an arch,<br/>
+That midway spans the flood; when thus I heard,<br/>
+&ldquo;Come, enter here,&rdquo; in tone so soft and mild,<br/>
+As never met the ear on mortal strand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With swan-like wings dispread and pointing up,<br/>
+Who thus had spoken marshal&rsquo;d us along,<br/>
+Where each side of the solid masonry<br/>
+The sloping, walls retir&rsquo;d; then mov&rsquo;d his plumes,<br/>
+And fanning us, affirm&rsquo;d that those, who mourn,<br/>
+Are blessed, for that comfort shall be theirs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What aileth thee, that still thou look&rsquo;st to earth?&rdquo;<br/>
+Began my leader; while th&rsquo; angelic shape<br/>
+A little over us his station took.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;New vision,&rdquo; I replied, &ldquo;hath rais&rsquo;d in me<br/>
+8urmisings strange and anxious doubts, whereon<br/>
+My soul intent allows no other thought<br/>
+Or room or entrance.&mdash;&ldquo;Hast thou seen,&rdquo; said he,<br/>
+&ldquo;That old enchantress, her, whose wiles alone<br/>
+The spirits o&rsquo;er us weep for? Hast thou seen<br/>
+How man may free him of her bonds? Enough.<br/>
+Let thy heels spurn the earth, and thy rais&rsquo;d ken<br/>
+Fix on the lure, which heav&rsquo;n&rsquo;s eternal King<br/>
+Whirls in the rolling spheres.&rdquo; As on his feet<br/>
+The falcon first looks down, then to the sky<br/>
+Turns, and forth stretches eager for the food,<br/>
+That woos him thither; so the call I heard,<br/>
+So onward, far as the dividing rock<br/>
+Gave way, I journey&rsquo;d, till the plain was reach&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the fifth circle when I stood at large,<br/>
+A race appear&rsquo;d before me, on the ground<br/>
+All downward lying prone and weeping sore.<br/>
+&ldquo;My soul hath cleaved to the dust,&rdquo; I heard<br/>
+With sighs so deep, they well nigh choak&rsquo;d the words.<br/>
+&ldquo;O ye elect of God, whose penal woes<br/>
+Both hope and justice mitigate, direct<br/>
+Tow&rsquo;rds the steep rising our uncertain way.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If ye approach secure from this our doom,<br/>
+Prostration&mdash;and would urge your course with speed,<br/>
+See that ye still to rightward keep the brink.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So them the bard besought; and such the words,<br/>
+Beyond us some short space, in answer came.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I noted what remain&rsquo;d yet hidden from them:<br/>
+Thence to my liege&rsquo;s eyes mine eyes I bent,<br/>
+And he, forthwith interpreting their suit,<br/>
+Beckon&rsquo;d his glad assent. Free then to act,<br/>
+As pleas&rsquo;d me, I drew near, and took my stand<br/>
+O`er that shade, whose words I late had mark&rsquo;d.<br/>
+And, &ldquo;Spirit!&rdquo; I said, &ldquo;in whom repentant tears<br/>
+Mature that blessed hour, when thou with God<br/>
+Shalt find acceptance, for a while suspend<br/>
+For me that mightier care. Say who thou wast,<br/>
+Why thus ye grovel on your bellies prone,<br/>
+And if in aught ye wish my service there,<br/>
+Whence living I am come.&rdquo; He answering spake<br/>
+&ldquo;The cause why Heav&rsquo;n our back toward his cope<br/>
+Reverses, shalt thou know: but me know first<br/>
+The successor of Peter, and the name<br/>
+And title of my lineage from that stream,<br/>
+That&rsquo; twixt Chiaveri and Siestri draws<br/>
+His limpid waters through the lowly glen.<br/>
+A month and little more by proof I learnt,<br/>
+With what a weight that robe of sov&rsquo;reignty<br/>
+Upon his shoulder rests, who from the mire<br/>
+Would guard it: that each other fardel seems<br/>
+But feathers in the balance. Late, alas!<br/>
+Was my conversion: but when I became<br/>
+Rome&rsquo;s pastor, I discern&rsquo;d at once the dream<br/>
+And cozenage of life, saw that the heart<br/>
+Rested not there, and yet no prouder height<br/>
+Lur&rsquo;d on the climber: wherefore, of that life<br/>
+No more enamour&rsquo;d, in my bosom love<br/>
+Of purer being kindled. For till then<br/>
+I was a soul in misery, alienate<br/>
+From God, and covetous of all earthly things;<br/>
+Now, as thou seest, here punish&rsquo;d for my doting.<br/>
+Such cleansing from the taint of avarice<br/>
+Do spirits converted need. This mount inflicts<br/>
+No direr penalty. E&rsquo;en as our eyes<br/>
+Fasten&rsquo;d below, nor e&rsquo;er to loftier clime<br/>
+Were lifted, thus hath justice level&rsquo;d us<br/>
+Here on the earth. As avarice quench&rsquo;d our love<br/>
+Of good, without which is no working, thus<br/>
+Here justice holds us prison&rsquo;d, hand and foot<br/>
+Chain&rsquo;d down and bound, while heaven&rsquo;s just Lord shall please.<br/>
+So long to tarry motionless outstretch&rsquo;d.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My knees I stoop&rsquo;d, and would have spoke; but he,<br/>
+Ere my beginning, by his ear perceiv&rsquo;d<br/>
+I did him reverence; and &ldquo;What cause,&rdquo; said he,<br/>
+&ldquo;Hath bow&rsquo;d thee thus!&rdquo;&mdash;&rdquo; Compunction,&rdquo; I
+rejoin&rsquo;d.<br/>
+&ldquo;And inward awe of your high dignity.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Up,&rdquo; he exclaim&rsquo;d, &ldquo;brother! upon thy feet<br/>
+Arise: err not: thy fellow servant I,<br/>
+(Thine and all others&rsquo;) of one Sovran Power.<br/>
+If thou hast ever mark&rsquo;d those holy sounds<br/>
+Of gospel truth, &lsquo;nor shall be given ill marriage,&rsquo;<br/>
+Thou mayst discern the reasons of my speech.<br/>
+Go thy ways now; and linger here no more.<br/>
+Thy tarrying is a let unto the tears,<br/>
+With which I hasten that whereof thou spak&rsquo;st.<br/>
+I have on earth a kinswoman; her name<br/>
+Alagia, worthy in herself, so ill<br/>
+Example of our house corrupt her not:<br/>
+And she is all remaineth of me there.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoII.XX"></a>CANTO XX</h2>
+
+<p>
+Ill strives the will, &rsquo;gainst will more wise that strives<br/>
+His pleasure therefore to mine own preferr&rsquo;d,<br/>
+I drew the sponge yet thirsty from the wave.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Onward I mov&rsquo;d: he also onward mov&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Who led me, coasting still, wherever place<br/>
+Along the rock was vacant, as a man<br/>
+Walks near the battlements on narrow wall.<br/>
+For those on th&rsquo; other part, who drop by drop<br/>
+Wring out their all-infecting malady,<br/>
+Too closely press the verge. Accurst be thou!<br/>
+Inveterate wolf! whose gorge ingluts more prey,<br/>
+Than every beast beside, yet is not fill&rsquo;d!<br/>
+So bottomless thy maw!&mdash;Ye spheres of heaven!<br/>
+To whom there are, as seems, who attribute<br/>
+All change in mortal state, when is the day<br/>
+Of his appearing, for whom fate reserves<br/>
+To chase her hence?&mdash;With wary steps and slow<br/>
+We pass&rsquo;d; and I attentive to the shades,<br/>
+Whom piteously I heard lament and wail;<br/>
+And, &rsquo;midst the wailing, one before us heard<br/>
+Cry out &ldquo;O blessed Virgin!&rdquo; as a dame<br/>
+In the sharp pangs of childbed; and &ldquo;How poor<br/>
+Thou wast,&rdquo; it added, &ldquo;witness that low roof<br/>
+Where thou didst lay thy sacred burden down.<br/>
+O good Fabricius! thou didst virtue choose<br/>
+With poverty, before great wealth with vice.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The words so pleas&rsquo;d me, that desire to know<br/>
+The spirit, from whose lip they seem&rsquo;d to come,<br/>
+Did draw me onward. Yet it spake the gift<br/>
+Of Nicholas, which on the maidens he<br/>
+Bounteous bestow&rsquo;d, to save their youthful prime<br/>
+Unblemish&rsquo;d. &ldquo;Spirit! who dost speak of deeds<br/>
+So worthy, tell me who thou was,&rdquo; I said,<br/>
+&ldquo;And why thou dost with single voice renew<br/>
+Memorial of such praise. That boon vouchsaf&rsquo;d<br/>
+Haply shall meet reward; if I return<br/>
+To finish the Short pilgrimage of life,<br/>
+Still speeding to its close on restless wing.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I,&rdquo; answer&rsquo;d he, &ldquo;will tell thee, not for hell,<br/>
+Which thence I look for; but that in thyself<br/>
+Grace so exceeding shines, before thy time<br/>
+Of mortal dissolution. I was root<br/>
+Of that ill plant, whose shade such poison sheds<br/>
+O&rsquo;er all the Christian land, that seldom thence<br/>
+Good fruit is gather&rsquo;d. Vengeance soon should come,<br/>
+Had Ghent and Douay, Lille and Bruges power;<br/>
+And vengeance I of heav&rsquo;n&rsquo;s great Judge implore.<br/>
+Hugh Capet was I high: from me descend<br/>
+The Philips and the Louis, of whom France<br/>
+Newly is govern&rsquo;d; born of one, who ply&rsquo;d<br/>
+The slaughterer&rsquo;s trade at Paris. When the race<br/>
+Of ancient kings had vanish&rsquo;d (all save one<br/>
+Wrapt up in sable weeds) within my gripe<br/>
+I found the reins of empire, and such powers<br/>
+Of new acquirement, with full store of friends,<br/>
+That soon the widow&rsquo;d circlet of the crown<br/>
+Was girt upon the temples of my son,<br/>
+He, from whose bones th&rsquo; anointed race begins.<br/>
+Till the great dower of Provence had remov&rsquo;d<br/>
+The stains, that yet obscur&rsquo;d our lowly blood,<br/>
+Its sway indeed was narrow, but howe&rsquo;er<br/>
+It wrought no evil: there, with force and lies,<br/>
+Began its rapine; after, for amends,<br/>
+Poitou it seiz&rsquo;d, Navarre and Gascony.<br/>
+To Italy came Charles, and for amends<br/>
+Young Conradine an innocent victim slew,<br/>
+And sent th&rsquo; angelic teacher back to heav&rsquo;n,<br/>
+Still for amends. I see the time at hand,<br/>
+That forth from France invites another Charles<br/>
+To make himself and kindred better known.<br/>
+Unarm&rsquo;d he issues, saving with that lance,<br/>
+Which the arch-traitor tilted with; and that<br/>
+He carries with so home a thrust, as rives<br/>
+The bowels of poor Florence. No increase<br/>
+Of territory hence, but sin and shame<br/>
+Shall be his guerdon, and so much the more<br/>
+As he more lightly deems of such foul wrong.<br/>
+I see the other, who a prisoner late<br/>
+Had steps on shore, exposing to the mart<br/>
+His daughter, whom he bargains for, as do<br/>
+The Corsairs for their slaves. O avarice!<br/>
+What canst thou more, who hast subdued our blood<br/>
+So wholly to thyself, they feel no care<br/>
+Of their own flesh? To hide with direr guilt<br/>
+Past ill and future, lo! the flower-de-luce<br/>
+Enters Alagna! in his Vicar Christ<br/>
+Himself a captive, and his mockery<br/>
+Acted again! Lo! to his holy lip<br/>
+The vinegar and gall once more applied!<br/>
+And he &rsquo;twixt living robbers doom&rsquo;d to bleed!<br/>
+Lo! the new Pilate, of whose cruelty<br/>
+Such violence cannot fill the measure up,<br/>
+With no degree to sanction, pushes on<br/>
+Into the temple his yet eager sails!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;O sovran Master! when shall I rejoice<br/>
+To see the vengeance, which thy wrath well-pleas&rsquo;d<br/>
+In secret silence broods?&mdash;While daylight lasts,<br/>
+So long what thou didst hear of her, sole spouse<br/>
+Of the Great Spirit, and on which thou turn&rsquo;dst<br/>
+To me for comment, is the general theme<br/>
+Of all our prayers: but when it darkens, then<br/>
+A different strain we utter, then record<br/>
+Pygmalion, whom his gluttonous thirst of gold<br/>
+Made traitor, robber, parricide: the woes<br/>
+Of Midas, which his greedy wish ensued,<br/>
+Mark&rsquo;d for derision to all future times:<br/>
+And the fond Achan, how he stole the prey,<br/>
+That yet he seems by Joshua&rsquo;s ire pursued.<br/>
+Sapphira with her husband next, we blame;<br/>
+And praise the forefeet, that with furious ramp<br/>
+Spurn&rsquo;d Heliodorus. All the mountain round<br/>
+Rings with the infamy of Thracia&rsquo;s king,<br/>
+Who slew his Phrygian charge: and last a shout<br/>
+Ascends: &ldquo;Declare, O Crassus! for thou know&rsquo;st,<br/>
+The flavour of thy gold.&rdquo; The voice of each<br/>
+Now high now low, as each his impulse prompts,<br/>
+Is led through many a pitch, acute or grave.<br/>
+Therefore, not singly, I erewhile rehears&rsquo;d<br/>
+That blessedness we tell of in the day:<br/>
+But near me none beside his accent rais&rsquo;d.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From him we now had parted, and essay&rsquo;d<br/>
+With utmost efforts to surmount the way,<br/>
+When I did feel, as nodding to its fall,<br/>
+The mountain tremble; whence an icy chill<br/>
+Seiz&rsquo;d on me, as on one to death convey&rsquo;d.<br/>
+So shook not Delos, when Latona there<br/>
+Couch&rsquo;d to bring forth the twin-born eyes of heaven.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Forthwith from every side a shout arose<br/>
+So vehement, that suddenly my guide<br/>
+Drew near, and cried: &ldquo;Doubt not, while I conduct thee.&rdquo;<br/>
+&ldquo;Glory!&rdquo; all shouted (such the sounds mine ear<br/>
+Gather&rsquo;d from those, who near me swell&rsquo;d the sounds)<br/>
+&ldquo;Glory in the highest be to God.&rdquo; We stood<br/>
+Immovably suspended, like to those,<br/>
+The shepherds, who first heard in Bethlehem&rsquo;s field<br/>
+That song: till ceas&rsquo;d the trembling, and the song<br/>
+Was ended: then our hallow&rsquo;d path resum&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Eying the prostrate shadows, who renew&rsquo;d<br/>
+Their custom&rsquo;d mourning. Never in my breast<br/>
+Did ignorance so struggle with desire<br/>
+Of knowledge, if my memory do not err,<br/>
+As in that moment; nor through haste dar&rsquo;d I<br/>
+To question, nor myself could aught discern,<br/>
+So on I far&rsquo;d in thoughtfulness and dread.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoII.XXI"></a>CANTO XXI</h2>
+
+<p>
+The natural thirst, ne&rsquo;er quench&rsquo;d but from the well,<br/>
+Whereof the woman of Samaria crav&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Excited: haste along the cumber&rsquo;d path,<br/>
+After my guide, impell&rsquo;d; and pity mov&rsquo;d<br/>
+My bosom for the &rsquo;vengeful deed, though just.<br/>
+When lo! even as Luke relates, that Christ<br/>
+Appear&rsquo;d unto the two upon their way,<br/>
+New-risen from his vaulted grave; to us<br/>
+A shade appear&rsquo;d, and after us approach&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Contemplating the crowd beneath its feet.<br/>
+We were not ware of it; so first it spake,<br/>
+Saying, &ldquo;God give you peace, my brethren!&rdquo; then<br/>
+Sudden we turn&rsquo;d: and Virgil such salute,<br/>
+As fitted that kind greeting, gave, and cried:<br/>
+&ldquo;Peace in the blessed council be thy lot<br/>
+Awarded by that righteous court, which me<br/>
+To everlasting banishment exiles!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;How!&rdquo; he exclaim&rsquo;d, nor from his speed meanwhile<br/>
+Desisting, &ldquo;If that ye be spirits, whom God<br/>
+Vouchsafes not room above, who up the height<br/>
+Has been thus far your guide?&rdquo; To whom the bard:<br/>
+&ldquo;If thou observe the tokens, which this man<br/>
+Trac&rsquo;d by the finger of the angel bears,<br/>
+&rsquo;Tis plain that in the kingdom of the just<br/>
+He needs must share. But sithence she, whose wheel<br/>
+Spins day and night, for him not yet had drawn<br/>
+That yarn, which, on the fatal distaff pil&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Clotho apportions to each wight that breathes,<br/>
+His soul, that sister is to mine and thine,<br/>
+Not of herself could mount, for not like ours<br/>
+Her ken: whence I, from forth the ample gulf<br/>
+Of hell was ta&rsquo;en, to lead him, and will lead<br/>
+Far as my lore avails. But, if thou know,<br/>
+Instruct us for what cause, the mount erewhile<br/>
+Thus shook and trembled: wherefore all at once<br/>
+Seem&rsquo;d shouting, even from his wave-wash&rsquo;d foot.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That questioning so tallied with my wish,<br/>
+The thirst did feel abatement of its edge<br/>
+E&rsquo;en from expectance. He forthwith replied,<br/>
+&ldquo;In its devotion nought irregular<br/>
+This mount can witness, or by punctual rule<br/>
+Unsanction&rsquo;d; here from every change exempt.<br/>
+Other than that, which heaven in itself<br/>
+Doth of itself receive, no influence<br/>
+Can reach us. Tempest none, shower, hail or snow,<br/>
+Hoar frost or dewy moistness, higher falls<br/>
+Than that brief scale of threefold steps: thick clouds<br/>
+Nor scudding rack are ever seen: swift glance<br/>
+Ne&rsquo;er lightens, nor Thaumantian Iris gleams,<br/>
+That yonder often shift on each side heav&rsquo;n.<br/>
+Vapour adust doth never mount above<br/>
+The highest of the trinal stairs, whereon<br/>
+Peter&rsquo;s vicegerent stands. Lower perchance,<br/>
+With various motion rock&rsquo;d, trembles the soil:<br/>
+But here, through wind in earth&rsquo;s deep hollow pent,<br/>
+I know not how, yet never trembled: then<br/>
+Trembles, when any spirit feels itself<br/>
+So purified, that it may rise, or move<br/>
+For rising, and such loud acclaim ensues.<br/>
+Purification by the will alone<br/>
+Is prov&rsquo;d, that free to change society<br/>
+Seizes the soul rejoicing in her will.<br/>
+Desire of bliss is present from the first;<br/>
+But strong propension hinders, to that wish<br/>
+By the just ordinance of heav&rsquo;n oppos&rsquo;d;<br/>
+Propension now as eager to fulfil<br/>
+Th&rsquo; allotted torment, as erewhile to sin.<br/>
+And I who in this punishment had lain<br/>
+Five hundred years and more, but now have felt<br/>
+Free wish for happier clime. Therefore thou felt&rsquo;st<br/>
+The mountain tremble, and the spirits devout<br/>
+Heard&rsquo;st, over all his limits, utter praise<br/>
+To that liege Lord, whom I entreat their joy<br/>
+To hasten.&rdquo; Thus he spake: and since the draught<br/>
+Is grateful ever as the thirst is keen,<br/>
+No words may speak my fullness of content.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now,&rdquo; said the instructor sage, &ldquo;I see the net<br/>
+That takes ye here, and how the toils are loos&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Why rocks the mountain and why ye rejoice.<br/>
+Vouchsafe, that from thy lips I next may learn,<br/>
+Who on the earth thou wast, and wherefore here<br/>
+So many an age wert prostrate.&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;In that time,<br/>
+When the good Titus, with Heav&rsquo;n&rsquo;s King to help,<br/>
+Aveng&rsquo;d those piteous gashes, whence the blood<br/>
+By Judas sold did issue, with the name<br/>
+Most lasting and most honour&rsquo;d there was I<br/>
+Abundantly renown&rsquo;d,&rdquo; the shade reply&rsquo;d,<br/>
+&ldquo;Not yet with faith endued. So passing sweet<br/>
+My vocal Spirit, from Tolosa, Rome<br/>
+To herself drew me, where I merited<br/>
+A myrtle garland to inwreathe my brow.<br/>
+Statius they name me still. Of Thebes I sang,<br/>
+And next of great Achilles: but i&rsquo; th&rsquo; way<br/>
+Fell with the second burthen. Of my flame<br/>
+Those sparkles were the seeds, which I deriv&rsquo;d<br/>
+From the bright fountain of celestial fire<br/>
+That feeds unnumber&rsquo;d lamps, the song I mean<br/>
+Which sounds Aeneas&rsquo; wand&rsquo;rings: that the breast<br/>
+I hung at, that the nurse, from whom my veins<br/>
+Drank inspiration: whose authority<br/>
+Was ever sacred with me. To have liv&rsquo;d<br/>
+Coeval with the Mantuan, I would bide<br/>
+The revolution of another sun<br/>
+Beyond my stated years in banishment.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Mantuan, when he heard him, turn&rsquo;d to me,<br/>
+And holding silence: by his countenance<br/>
+Enjoin&rsquo;d me silence but the power which wills,<br/>
+Bears not supreme control: laughter and tears<br/>
+Follow so closely on the passion prompts them,<br/>
+They wait not for the motions of the will<br/>
+In natures most sincere. I did but smile,<br/>
+As one who winks; and thereupon the shade<br/>
+Broke off, and peer&rsquo;d into mine eyes, where best<br/>
+Our looks interpret. &ldquo;So to good event<br/>
+Mayst thou conduct such great emprize,&rdquo; he cried,<br/>
+&ldquo;Say, why across thy visage beam&rsquo;d, but now,<br/>
+The lightning of a smile!&rdquo; On either part<br/>
+Now am I straiten&rsquo;d; one conjures me speak,<br/>
+Th&rsquo; other to silence binds me: whence a sigh<br/>
+I utter, and the sigh is heard. &ldquo;Speak on; &ldquo;<br/>
+The teacher cried; &ldquo;and do not fear to speak,<br/>
+But tell him what so earnestly he asks.&rdquo;<br/>
+Whereon I thus: &ldquo;Perchance, O ancient spirit!<br/>
+Thou marvel&rsquo;st at my smiling. There is room<br/>
+For yet more wonder. He who guides my ken<br/>
+On high, he is that Mantuan, led by whom<br/>
+Thou didst presume of men arid gods to sing.<br/>
+If other cause thou deem&rsquo;dst for which I smil&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Leave it as not the true one; and believe<br/>
+Those words, thou spak&rsquo;st of him, indeed the cause.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now down he bent t&rsquo; embrace my teacher&rsquo;s feet;<br/>
+But he forbade him: &ldquo;Brother! do it not:<br/>
+Thou art a shadow, and behold&rsquo;st a shade.&rdquo;<br/>
+He rising answer&rsquo;d thus: &ldquo;Now hast thou prov&rsquo;d<br/>
+The force and ardour of the love I bear thee,<br/>
+When I forget we are but things of air,<br/>
+And as a substance treat an empty shade.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoII.XXII"></a>CANTO XXII</h2>
+
+<p>
+Now we had left the angel, who had turn&rsquo;d<br/>
+To the sixth circle our ascending step,<br/>
+One gash from off my forehead raz&rsquo;d: while they,<br/>
+Whose wishes tend to justice, shouted forth:<br/>
+&ldquo;Blessed!&rdquo; and ended with, &ldquo;I thirst:&rdquo; and I,<br/>
+More nimble than along the other straits,<br/>
+So journey&rsquo;d, that, without the sense of toil,<br/>
+I follow&rsquo;d upward the swift-footed shades;<br/>
+When Virgil thus began: &ldquo;Let its pure flame<br/>
+From virtue flow, and love can never fail<br/>
+To warm another&rsquo;s bosom&rsquo; so the light<br/>
+Shine manifestly forth. Hence from that hour,<br/>
+When &rsquo;mongst us in the purlieus of the deep,<br/>
+Came down the spirit of Aquinum&rsquo;s hard,<br/>
+Who told of thine affection, my good will<br/>
+Hath been for thee of quality as strong<br/>
+As ever link&rsquo;d itself to one not seen.<br/>
+Therefore these stairs will now seem short to me.<br/>
+But tell me: and if too secure I loose<br/>
+The rein with a friend&rsquo;s license, as a friend<br/>
+Forgive me, and speak now as with a friend:<br/>
+How chanc&rsquo;d it covetous desire could find<br/>
+Place in that bosom, &rsquo;midst such ample store<br/>
+Of wisdom, as thy zeal had treasur&rsquo;d there?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+First somewhat mov&rsquo;d to laughter by his words,<br/>
+Statius replied: &ldquo;Each syllable of thine<br/>
+Is a dear pledge of love. Things oft appear<br/>
+That minister false matters to our doubts,<br/>
+When their true causes are remov&rsquo;d from sight.<br/>
+Thy question doth assure me, thou believ&rsquo;st<br/>
+I was on earth a covetous man, perhaps<br/>
+Because thou found&rsquo;st me in that circle plac&rsquo;d.<br/>
+Know then I was too wide of avarice:<br/>
+And e&rsquo;en for that excess, thousands of moons<br/>
+Have wax&rsquo;d and wan&rsquo;d upon my sufferings.<br/>
+And were it not that I with heedful care<br/>
+Noted where thou exclaim&rsquo;st as if in ire<br/>
+With human nature, &lsquo;Why, thou cursed thirst<br/>
+Of gold! dost not with juster measure guide<br/>
+The appetite of mortals?&rsquo; I had met<br/>
+The fierce encounter of the voluble rock.<br/>
+Then was I ware that with too ample wing<br/>
+The hands may haste to lavishment, and turn&rsquo;d,<br/>
+As from my other evil, so from this<br/>
+In penitence. How many from their grave<br/>
+Shall with shorn locks arise, who living, aye<br/>
+And at life&rsquo;s last extreme, of this offence,<br/>
+Through ignorance, did not repent. And know,<br/>
+The fault which lies direct from any sin<br/>
+In level opposition, here With that<br/>
+Wastes its green rankness on one common heap.<br/>
+Therefore if I have been with those, who wail<br/>
+Their avarice, to cleanse me, through reverse<br/>
+Of their transgression, such hath been my lot.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To whom the sovran of the pastoral song:<br/>
+&ldquo;While thou didst sing that cruel warfare wag&rsquo;d<br/>
+By the twin sorrow of Jocasta&rsquo;s womb,<br/>
+From thy discourse with Clio there, it seems<br/>
+As faith had not been shine: without the which<br/>
+Good deeds suffice not. And if so, what sun<br/>
+Rose on thee, or what candle pierc&rsquo;d the dark<br/>
+That thou didst after see to hoist the sail,<br/>
+And follow, where the fisherman had led?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He answering thus: &ldquo;By thee conducted first,<br/>
+I enter&rsquo;d the Parnassian grots, and quaff&rsquo;d<br/>
+Of the clear spring; illumin&rsquo;d first by thee<br/>
+Open&rsquo;d mine eyes to God. Thou didst, as one,<br/>
+Who, journeying through the darkness, hears a light<br/>
+Behind, that profits not himself, but makes<br/>
+His followers wise, when thou exclaimedst, &lsquo;Lo!<br/>
+A renovated world! Justice return&rsquo;d!<br/>
+Times of primeval innocence restor&rsquo;d!<br/>
+And a new race descended from above!&rsquo;<br/>
+Poet and Christian both to thee I owed.<br/>
+That thou mayst mark more clearly what I trace,<br/>
+My hand shall stretch forth to inform the lines<br/>
+With livelier colouring. Soon o&rsquo;er all the world,<br/>
+By messengers from heav&rsquo;n, the true belief<br/>
+Teem&rsquo;d now prolific, and that word of thine<br/>
+Accordant, to the new instructors chim&rsquo;d.<br/>
+Induc&rsquo;d by which agreement, I was wont<br/>
+Resort to them; and soon their sanctity<br/>
+So won upon me, that, Domitian&rsquo;s rage<br/>
+Pursuing them, I mix&rsquo;d my tears with theirs,<br/>
+And, while on earth I stay&rsquo;d, still succour&rsquo;d them;<br/>
+And their most righteous customs made me scorn<br/>
+All sects besides. Before I led the Greeks<br/>
+In tuneful fiction, to the streams of Thebes,<br/>
+I was baptiz&rsquo;d; but secretly, through fear,<br/>
+Remain&rsquo;d a Christian, and conform&rsquo;d long time<br/>
+To Pagan rites. Five centuries and more,<br/>
+T for that lukewarmness was fain to pace<br/>
+Round the fourth circle. Thou then, who hast rais&rsquo;d<br/>
+The covering, which did hide such blessing from me,<br/>
+Whilst much of this ascent is yet to climb,<br/>
+Say, if thou know, where our old Terence bides,<br/>
+Caecilius, Plautus, Varro: if condemn&rsquo;d<br/>
+They dwell, and in what province of the deep.&rdquo;<br/>
+&ldquo;These,&rdquo; said my guide, &ldquo;with Persius and myself,<br/>
+And others many more, are with that Greek,<br/>
+Of mortals, the most cherish&rsquo;d by the Nine,<br/>
+In the first ward of darkness. There ofttimes<br/>
+We of that mount hold converse, on whose top<br/>
+For aye our nurses live. We have the bard<br/>
+Of Pella, and the Teian, Agatho,<br/>
+Simonides, and many a Grecian else<br/>
+Ingarlanded with laurel. Of thy train<br/>
+Antigone is there, Deiphile,<br/>
+Argia, and as sorrowful as erst<br/>
+Ismene, and who show&rsquo;d Langia&rsquo;s wave:<br/>
+Deidamia with her sisters there,<br/>
+And blind Tiresias&rsquo; daughter, and the bride<br/>
+Sea-born of Peleus.&rdquo; Either poet now<br/>
+Was silent, and no longer by th&rsquo; ascent<br/>
+Or the steep walls obstructed, round them cast<br/>
+Inquiring eyes. Four handmaids of the day<br/>
+Had finish&rsquo;d now their office, and the fifth<br/>
+Was at the chariot-beam, directing still<br/>
+Its balmy point aloof, when thus my guide:<br/>
+&ldquo;Methinks, it well behooves us to the brink<br/>
+Bend the right shoulder&rsquo; circuiting the mount,<br/>
+As we have ever us&rsquo;d.&rdquo; So custom there<br/>
+Was usher to the road, the which we chose<br/>
+Less doubtful, as that worthy shade complied.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They on before me went; I sole pursued,<br/>
+List&rsquo;ning their speech, that to my thoughts convey&rsquo;d<br/>
+Mysterious lessons of sweet poesy.<br/>
+But soon they ceas&rsquo;d; for midway of the road<br/>
+A tree we found, with goodly fruitage hung,<br/>
+And pleasant to the smell: and as a fir<br/>
+Upward from bough to bough less ample spreads,<br/>
+So downward this less ample spread, that none.<br/>
+Methinks, aloft may climb. Upon the side,<br/>
+That clos&rsquo;d our path, a liquid crystal fell<br/>
+From the steep rock, and through the sprays above<br/>
+Stream&rsquo;d showering. With associate step the bards<br/>
+Drew near the plant; and from amidst the leaves<br/>
+A voice was heard: &ldquo;Ye shall be chary of me;&rdquo;<br/>
+And after added: &ldquo;Mary took more thought<br/>
+For joy and honour of the nuptial feast,<br/>
+Than for herself who answers now for you.<br/>
+The women of old Rome were satisfied<br/>
+With water for their beverage. Daniel fed<br/>
+On pulse, and wisdom gain&rsquo;d. The primal age<br/>
+Was beautiful as gold; and hunger then<br/>
+Made acorns tasteful, thirst each rivulet<br/>
+Run nectar. Honey and locusts were the food,<br/>
+Whereon the Baptist in the wilderness<br/>
+Fed, and that eminence of glory reach&rsquo;d<br/>
+And greatness, which the&rsquo; Evangelist records.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoII.XXIII"></a>CANTO XXIII</h2>
+
+<p>
+On the green leaf mine eyes were fix&rsquo;d, like his<br/>
+Who throws away his days in idle chase<br/>
+Of the diminutive, when thus I heard<br/>
+The more than father warn me: &ldquo;Son! our time<br/>
+Asks thriftier using. Linger not: away.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thereat my face and steps at once I turn&rsquo;d<br/>
+Toward the sages, by whose converse cheer&rsquo;d<br/>
+I journey&rsquo;d on, and felt no toil: and lo!<br/>
+A sound of weeping and a song: &ldquo;My lips,<br/>
+O Lord!&rdquo; and these so mingled, it gave birth<br/>
+To pleasure and to pain. &ldquo;O Sire, belov&rsquo;d!<br/>
+Say what is this I hear?&rdquo; Thus I inquir&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Spirits,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;who as they go, perchance,<br/>
+Their debt of duty pay.&rdquo; As on their road<br/>
+The thoughtful pilgrims, overtaking some<br/>
+Not known unto them, turn to them, and look,<br/>
+But stay not; thus, approaching from behind<br/>
+With speedier motion, eyed us, as they pass&rsquo;d,<br/>
+A crowd of spirits, silent and devout.<br/>
+The eyes of each were dark and hollow: pale<br/>
+Their visage, and so lean withal, the bones<br/>
+Stood staring thro&rsquo; the skin. I do not think<br/>
+Thus dry and meagre Erisicthon show&rsquo;d,<br/>
+When pinc&rsquo;ed by sharp-set famine to the quick.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Lo!&rdquo; to myself I mus&rsquo;d, &ldquo;the race, who lost<br/>
+Jerusalem, when Mary with dire beak<br/>
+Prey&rsquo;d on her child.&rdquo; The sockets seem&rsquo;d as rings,<br/>
+From which the gems were drops. Who reads the name<br/>
+Of man upon his forehead, there the M<br/>
+Had trac&rsquo;d most plainly. Who would deem, that scent<br/>
+Of water and an apple, could have prov&rsquo;d<br/>
+Powerful to generate such pining want,<br/>
+Not knowing how it wrought? While now I stood<br/>
+Wond&rsquo;ring what thus could waste them (for the cause<br/>
+Of their gaunt hollowness and scaly rind<br/>
+Appear&rsquo;d not) lo! a spirit turn&rsquo;d his eyes<br/>
+In their deep-sunken cell, and fasten&rsquo;d then<br/>
+On me, then cried with vehemence aloud:<br/>
+&ldquo;What grace is this vouchsaf&rsquo;d me?&rdquo; By his looks<br/>
+I ne&rsquo;er had recogniz&rsquo;d him: but the voice<br/>
+Brought to my knowledge what his cheer conceal&rsquo;d.<br/>
+Remembrance of his alter&rsquo;d lineaments<br/>
+Was kindled from that spark; and I agniz&rsquo;d<br/>
+The visage of Forese. &ldquo;Ah! respect<br/>
+This wan and leprous wither&rsquo;d skin,&rdquo; thus he<br/>
+Suppliant implor&rsquo;d, &ldquo;this macerated flesh.<br/>
+Speak to me truly of thyself. And who<br/>
+Are those twain spirits, that escort thee there?<br/>
+Be it not said thou Scorn&rsquo;st to talk with me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That face of thine,&rdquo; I answer&rsquo;d him, &ldquo;which dead<br/>
+I once bewail&rsquo;d, disposes me not less<br/>
+For weeping, when I see It thus transform&rsquo;d.<br/>
+Say then, by Heav&rsquo;n, what blasts ye thus? The whilst<br/>
+I wonder, ask not Speech from me: unapt<br/>
+Is he to speak, whom other will employs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He thus: &ldquo;The water and tee plant we pass&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Virtue possesses, by th&rsquo; eternal will<br/>
+Infus&rsquo;d, the which so pines me. Every spirit,<br/>
+Whose song bewails his gluttony indulg&rsquo;d<br/>
+Too grossly, here in hunger and in thirst<br/>
+Is purified. The odour, which the fruit,<br/>
+And spray, that showers upon the verdure, breathe,<br/>
+Inflames us with desire to feed and drink.<br/>
+Nor once alone encompassing our route<br/>
+We come to add fresh fuel to the pain:<br/>
+Pain, said I? solace rather: for that will<br/>
+To the tree leads us, by which Christ was led<br/>
+To call Elias, joyful when he paid<br/>
+Our ransom from his vein.&rdquo; I answering thus:<br/>
+&ldquo;Forese! from that day, in which the world<br/>
+For better life thou changedst, not five years<br/>
+Have circled. If the power of sinning more<br/>
+Were first concluded in thee, ere thou knew&rsquo;st<br/>
+That kindly grief, which re-espouses us<br/>
+To God, how hither art thou come so soon?<br/>
+I thought to find thee lower, there, where time<br/>
+Is recompense for time.&rdquo; He straight replied:<br/>
+&ldquo;To drink up the sweet wormwood of affliction<br/>
+I have been brought thus early by the tears<br/>
+Stream&rsquo;d down my Nella&rsquo;s cheeks. Her prayers devout,<br/>
+Her sighs have drawn me from the coast, where oft<br/>
+Expectance lingers, and have set me free<br/>
+From th&rsquo; other circles. In the sight of God<br/>
+So much the dearer is my widow priz&rsquo;d,<br/>
+She whom I lov&rsquo;d so fondly, as she ranks<br/>
+More singly eminent for virtuous deeds.<br/>
+The tract most barb&rsquo;rous of Sardinia&rsquo;s isle,<br/>
+Hath dames more chaste and modester by far<br/>
+Than that wherein I left her. O sweet brother!<br/>
+What wouldst thou have me say? A time to come<br/>
+Stands full within my view, to which this hour<br/>
+Shall not be counted of an ancient date,<br/>
+When from the pulpit shall be loudly warn&rsquo;d<br/>
+Th&rsquo; unblushing dames of Florence, lest they bare<br/>
+Unkerchief&rsquo;d bosoms to the common gaze.<br/>
+What savage women hath the world e&rsquo;er seen,<br/>
+What Saracens, for whom there needed scourge<br/>
+Of spiritual or other discipline,<br/>
+To force them walk with cov&rsquo;ring on their limbs!<br/>
+But did they see, the shameless ones, that Heav&rsquo;n<br/>
+Wafts on swift wing toward them, while I speak,<br/>
+Their mouths were op&rsquo;d for howling: they shall taste<br/>
+Of Borrow (unless foresight cheat me here)<br/>
+Or ere the cheek of him be cloth&rsquo;d with down<br/>
+Who is now rock&rsquo;d with lullaby asleep.<br/>
+Ah! now, my brother, hide thyself no more,<br/>
+Thou seest how not I alone but all<br/>
+Gaze, where thou veil&rsquo;st the intercepted sun.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whence I replied: &ldquo;If thou recall to mind<br/>
+What we were once together, even yet<br/>
+Remembrance of those days may grieve thee sore.<br/>
+That I forsook that life, was due to him<br/>
+Who there precedes me, some few evenings past,<br/>
+When she was round, who shines with sister lamp<br/>
+To his, that glisters yonder,&rdquo; and I show&rsquo;d<br/>
+The sun. &ldquo;Tis he, who through profoundest night<br/>
+Of he true dead has brought me, with this flesh<br/>
+As true, that follows. From that gloom the aid<br/>
+Of his sure comfort drew me on to climb,<br/>
+And climbing wind along this mountain-steep,<br/>
+Which rectifies in you whate&rsquo;er the world<br/>
+Made crooked and deprav&rsquo;d I have his word,<br/>
+That he will bear me company as far<br/>
+As till I come where Beatrice dwells:<br/>
+But there must leave me. Virgil is that spirit,<br/>
+Who thus hath promis&rsquo;d,&rdquo; and I pointed to him;<br/>
+&ldquo;The other is that shade, for whom so late<br/>
+Your realm, as he arose, exulting shook<br/>
+Through every pendent cliff and rocky bound.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoII.XXIV"></a>CANTO XXIV</h2>
+
+<p>
+Our journey was not slacken&rsquo;d by our talk,<br/>
+Nor yet our talk by journeying. Still we spake,<br/>
+And urg&rsquo;d our travel stoutly, like a ship<br/>
+When the wind sits astern. The shadowy forms,<br/>
+That seem&rsquo;d things dead and dead again, drew in<br/>
+At their deep-delved orbs rare wonder of me,<br/>
+Perceiving I had life; and I my words<br/>
+Continued, and thus spake; &ldquo;He journeys up<br/>
+Perhaps more tardily then else he would,<br/>
+For others&rsquo; sake. But tell me, if thou know&rsquo;st,<br/>
+Where is Piccarda? Tell me, if I see<br/>
+Any of mark, among this multitude,<br/>
+Who eye me thus.&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;My sister (she for whom,<br/>
+&rsquo;Twixt beautiful and good I cannot say<br/>
+Which name was fitter) wears e&rsquo;en now her crown,<br/>
+And triumphs in Olympus.&rdquo; Saying this,<br/>
+He added: &ldquo;Since spare diet hath so worn<br/>
+Our semblance out, &rsquo;tis lawful here to name<br/>
+Each one . This,&rdquo; and his finger then he rais&rsquo;d,<br/>
+&ldquo;Is Buonaggiuna,&mdash;Buonaggiuna, he<br/>
+Of Lucca: and that face beyond him, pierc&rsquo;d<br/>
+Unto a leaner fineness than the rest,<br/>
+Had keeping of the church: he was of Tours,<br/>
+And purges by wan abstinence away<br/>
+Bolsena&rsquo;s eels and cups of muscadel.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He show&rsquo;d me many others, one by one,<br/>
+And all, as they were nam&rsquo;d, seem&rsquo;d well content;<br/>
+For no dark gesture I discern&rsquo;d in any.<br/>
+I saw through hunger Ubaldino grind<br/>
+His teeth on emptiness; and Boniface,<br/>
+That wav&rsquo;d the crozier o&rsquo;er a num&rsquo;rous flock.<br/>
+I saw the Marquis, who tad time erewhile<br/>
+To swill at Forli with less drought, yet so<br/>
+Was one ne&rsquo;er sated. I howe&rsquo;er, like him,<br/>
+That gazing &rsquo;midst a crowd, singles out one,<br/>
+So singled him of Lucca; for methought<br/>
+Was none amongst them took such note of me.<br/>
+Somewhat I heard him whisper of Gentucca:<br/>
+The sound was indistinct, and murmur&rsquo;d there,<br/>
+Where justice, that so strips them, fix&rsquo;d her sting.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Spirit!&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;it seems as thou wouldst fain<br/>
+Speak with me. Let me hear thee. Mutual wish<br/>
+To converse prompts, which let us both indulge.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He, answ&rsquo;ring, straight began: &ldquo;Woman is born,<br/>
+Whose brow no wimple shades yet, that shall make<br/>
+My city please thee, blame it as they may.<br/>
+Go then with this forewarning. If aught false<br/>
+My whisper too implied, th&rsquo; event shall tell<br/>
+But say, if of a truth I see the man<br/>
+Of that new lay th&rsquo; inventor, which begins<br/>
+With &lsquo;Ladies, ye that con the lore of love&rsquo;.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To whom I thus: &ldquo;Count of me but as one<br/>
+Who am the scribe of love; that, when he breathes,<br/>
+Take up my pen, and, as he dictates, write.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Brother!&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;the hind&rsquo;rance which once
+held<br/>
+The notary with Guittone and myself,<br/>
+Short of that new and sweeter style I hear,<br/>
+Is now disclos&rsquo;d. I see how ye your plumes<br/>
+Stretch, as th&rsquo; inditer guides them; which, no question,<br/>
+Ours did not. He that seeks a grace beyond,<br/>
+Sees not the distance parts one style from other.&rdquo;<br/>
+And, as contented, here he held his peace.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Like as the bird, that winter near the Nile,<br/>
+In squared regiment direct their course,<br/>
+Then stretch themselves in file for speedier flight;<br/>
+Thus all the tribe of spirits, as they turn&rsquo;d<br/>
+Their visage, faster deaf, nimble alike<br/>
+Through leanness and desire. And as a man,<br/>
+Tir&rsquo;d With the motion of a trotting steed,<br/>
+Slacks pace, and stays behind his company,<br/>
+Till his o&rsquo;erbreathed lungs keep temperate time;<br/>
+E&rsquo;en so Forese let that holy crew<br/>
+Proceed, behind them lingering at my side,<br/>
+And saying: &ldquo;When shall I again behold thee?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;How long my life may last,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;I know not;<br/>
+This know, how soon soever I return,<br/>
+My wishes will before me have arriv&rsquo;d.<br/>
+Sithence the place, where I am set to live,<br/>
+Is, day by day, more scoop&rsquo;d of all its good,<br/>
+And dismal ruin seems to threaten it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Go now,&rdquo; he cried: &ldquo;lo! he, whose guilt is most,<br/>
+Passes before my vision, dragg&rsquo;d at heels<br/>
+Of an infuriate beast. Toward the vale,<br/>
+Where guilt hath no redemption, on it speeds,<br/>
+Each step increasing swiftness on the last;<br/>
+Until a blow it strikes, that leaveth him<br/>
+A corse most vilely shatter&rsquo;d. No long space<br/>
+Those wheels have yet to roll&rdquo; (therewith his eyes<br/>
+Look&rsquo;d up to heav&rsquo;n) &ldquo;ere thou shalt plainly see<br/>
+That which my words may not more plainly tell.<br/>
+I quit thee: time is precious here: I lose<br/>
+Too much, thus measuring my pace with shine.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As from a troop of well-rank&rsquo;d chivalry<br/>
+One knight, more enterprising than the rest,<br/>
+Pricks forth at gallop, eager to display<br/>
+His prowess in the first encounter prov&rsquo;d<br/>
+So parted he from us with lengthen&rsquo;d strides,<br/>
+And left me on the way with those twain spirits,<br/>
+Who were such mighty marshals of the world.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When he beyond us had so fled mine eyes<br/>
+No nearer reach&rsquo;d him, than my thought his words,<br/>
+The branches of another fruit, thick hung,<br/>
+And blooming fresh, appear&rsquo;d. E&rsquo;en as our steps<br/>
+Turn&rsquo;d thither, not far off it rose to view.<br/>
+Beneath it were a multitude, that rais&rsquo;d<br/>
+Their hands, and shouted forth I know not What<br/>
+Unto the boughs; like greedy and fond brats,<br/>
+That beg, and answer none obtain from him,<br/>
+Of whom they beg; but more to draw them on,<br/>
+He at arm&rsquo;s length the object of their wish<br/>
+Above them holds aloft, and hides it not.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At length, as undeceiv&rsquo;d they went their way:<br/>
+And we approach the tree, who vows and tears<br/>
+Sue to in vain, the mighty tree. &ldquo;Pass on,<br/>
+And come not near. Stands higher up the wood,<br/>
+Whereof Eve tasted, and from it was ta&rsquo;en<br/>
+&lsquo;this plant.&rdquo; Such sounds from midst the thickets came.<br/>
+Whence I, with either bard, close to the side<br/>
+That rose, pass&rsquo;d forth beyond. &ldquo;Remember,&rdquo; next<br/>
+We heard, &ldquo;those noblest creatures of the clouds,<br/>
+How they their twofold bosoms overgorg&rsquo;d<br/>
+Oppos&rsquo;d in fight to Theseus: call to mind<br/>
+The Hebrews, how effeminate they stoop&rsquo;d<br/>
+To ease their thirst; whence Gideon&rsquo;s ranks were thinn&rsquo;d,<br/>
+As he to Midian march&rsquo;d adown the hills.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus near one border coasting, still we heard<br/>
+The sins of gluttony, with woe erewhile<br/>
+Reguerdon&rsquo;d. Then along the lonely path,<br/>
+Once more at large, full thousand paces on<br/>
+We travel&rsquo;d, each contemplative and mute.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why pensive journey thus ye three alone?&rdquo;<br/>
+Thus suddenly a voice exclaim&rsquo;d: whereat<br/>
+I shook, as doth a scar&rsquo;d and paltry beast;<br/>
+Then rais&rsquo;d my head to look from whence it came.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Was ne&rsquo;er, in furnace, glass, or metal seen<br/>
+So bright and glowing red, as was the shape<br/>
+I now beheld. &ldquo;If ye desire to mount,&rdquo;<br/>
+He cried, &ldquo;here must ye turn. This way he goes,<br/>
+Who goes in quest of peace.&rdquo; His countenance<br/>
+Had dazzled me; and to my guides I fac&rsquo;d<br/>
+Backward, like one who walks, as sound directs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As when, to harbinger the dawn, springs up<br/>
+On freshen&rsquo;d wing the air of May, and breathes<br/>
+Of fragrance, all impregn&rsquo;d with herb and flowers,<br/>
+E&rsquo;en such a wind I felt upon my front<br/>
+Blow gently, and the moving of a wing<br/>
+Perceiv&rsquo;d, that moving shed ambrosial smell;<br/>
+And then a voice: &ldquo;Blessed are they, whom grace<br/>
+Doth so illume, that appetite in them<br/>
+Exhaleth no inordinate desire,<br/>
+Still hung&rsquo;ring as the rule of temperance wills.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoII.XXV"></a>CANTO XXV</h2>
+
+<p>
+It was an hour, when he who climbs, had need<br/>
+To walk uncrippled: for the sun had now<br/>
+To Taurus the meridian circle left,<br/>
+And to the Scorpion left the night. As one<br/>
+That makes no pause, but presses on his road,<br/>
+Whate&rsquo;er betide him, if some urgent need<br/>
+Impel: so enter&rsquo;d we upon our way,<br/>
+One before other; for, but singly, none<br/>
+That steep and narrow scale admits to climb.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+E&rsquo;en as the young stork lifteth up his wing<br/>
+Through wish to fly, yet ventures not to quit<br/>
+The nest, and drops it; so in me desire<br/>
+Of questioning my guide arose, and fell,<br/>
+Arriving even to the act, that marks<br/>
+A man prepar&rsquo;d for speech. Him all our haste<br/>
+Restrain&rsquo;d not, but thus spake the sire belov&rsquo;d:<br/>
+Fear not to speed the shaft, that on thy lip<br/>
+Stands trembling for its flight.&rdquo; Encourag&rsquo;d thus<br/>
+I straight began: &ldquo;How there can leanness come,<br/>
+Where is no want of nourishment to feed?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If thou,&rdquo; he answer&rsquo;d, &ldquo;hadst remember&rsquo;d
+thee,<br/>
+How Meleager with the wasting brand<br/>
+Wasted alike, by equal fires consm&rsquo;d,<br/>
+This would not trouble thee: and hadst thou thought,<br/>
+How in the mirror your reflected form<br/>
+With mimic motion vibrates, what now seems<br/>
+Hard, had appear&rsquo;d no harder than the pulp<br/>
+Of summer fruit mature. But that thy will<br/>
+In certainty may find its full repose,<br/>
+Lo Statius here! on him I call, and pray<br/>
+That he would now be healer of thy wound.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If in thy presence I unfold to him<br/>
+The secrets of heaven&rsquo;s vengeance, let me plead<br/>
+Thine own injunction, to exculpate me.&rdquo;<br/>
+So Statius answer&rsquo;d, and forthwith began:<br/>
+&ldquo;Attend my words, O son, and in thy mind<br/>
+Receive them: so shall they be light to clear<br/>
+The doubt thou offer&rsquo;st. Blood, concocted well,<br/>
+Which by the thirsty veins is ne&rsquo;er imbib&rsquo;d,<br/>
+And rests as food superfluous, to be ta&rsquo;en<br/>
+From the replenish&rsquo;d table, in the heart<br/>
+Derives effectual virtue, that informs<br/>
+The several human limbs, as being that,<br/>
+Which passes through the veins itself to make them.<br/>
+Yet more concocted it descends, where shame<br/>
+Forbids to mention: and from thence distils<br/>
+In natural vessel on another&rsquo;s blood.<br/>
+Then each unite together, one dispos&rsquo;d<br/>
+T&rsquo; endure, to act the other, through meet frame<br/>
+Of its recipient mould: that being reach&rsquo;d,<br/>
+It &rsquo;gins to work, coagulating first;<br/>
+Then vivifies what its own substance caus&rsquo;d<br/>
+To bear. With animation now indued,<br/>
+The active virtue (differing from a plant<br/>
+No further, than that this is on the way<br/>
+And at its limit that) continues yet<br/>
+To operate, that now it moves, and feels,<br/>
+As sea sponge clinging to the rock: and there<br/>
+Assumes th&rsquo; organic powers its seed convey&rsquo;d.<br/>
+&lsquo;This is the period, son! at which the virtue,<br/>
+That from the generating heart proceeds,<br/>
+Is pliant and expansive; for each limb<br/>
+Is in the heart by forgeful nature plann&rsquo;d.<br/>
+How babe of animal becomes, remains<br/>
+For thy consid&rsquo;ring. At this point, more wise,<br/>
+Than thou hast err&rsquo;d, making the soul disjoin&rsquo;d<br/>
+From passive intellect, because he saw<br/>
+No organ for the latter&rsquo;s use assign&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Open thy bosom to the truth that comes.<br/>
+Know soon as in the embryo, to the brain,<br/>
+Articulation is complete, then turns<br/>
+The primal Mover with a smile of joy<br/>
+On such great work of nature, and imbreathes<br/>
+New spirit replete with virtue, that what here<br/>
+Active it finds, to its own substance draws,<br/>
+And forms an individual soul, that lives,<br/>
+And feels, and bends reflective on itself.<br/>
+And that thou less mayst marvel at the word,<br/>
+Mark the sun&rsquo;s heat, how that to wine doth change,<br/>
+Mix&rsquo;d with the moisture filter&rsquo;d through the vine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;When Lachesis hath spun the thread, the soul<br/>
+Takes with her both the human and divine,<br/>
+Memory, intelligence, and will, in act<br/>
+Far keener than before, the other powers<br/>
+Inactive all and mute. No pause allow&rsquo;d,<br/>
+In wond&rsquo;rous sort self-moving, to one strand<br/>
+Of those, where the departed roam, she falls,<br/>
+Here learns her destin&rsquo;d path. Soon as the place<br/>
+Receives her, round the plastic virtue beams,<br/>
+Distinct as in the living limbs before:<br/>
+And as the air, when saturate with showers,<br/>
+The casual beam refracting, decks itself<br/>
+With many a hue; so here the ambient air<br/>
+Weareth that form, which influence of the soul<br/>
+Imprints on it; and like the flame, that where<br/>
+The fire moves, thither follows, so henceforth<br/>
+The new form on the spirit follows still:<br/>
+Hence hath it semblance, and is shadow call&rsquo;d,<br/>
+With each sense even to the sight endued:<br/>
+Hence speech is ours, hence laughter, tears, and sighs<br/>
+Which thou mayst oft have witness&rsquo;d on the mount<br/>
+Th&rsquo; obedient shadow fails not to present<br/>
+Whatever varying passion moves within us.<br/>
+And this the cause of what thou marvel&rsquo;st at.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now the last flexure of our way we reach&rsquo;d,<br/>
+And to the right hand turning, other care<br/>
+Awaits us. Here the rocky precipice<br/>
+Hurls forth redundant flames, and from the rim<br/>
+A blast upblown, with forcible rebuff<br/>
+Driveth them back, sequester&rsquo;d from its bound.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Behoov&rsquo;d us, one by one, along the side,<br/>
+That border&rsquo;d on the void, to pass; and I<br/>
+Fear&rsquo;d on one hand the fire, on th&rsquo; other fear&rsquo;d<br/>
+Headlong to fall: when thus th&rsquo; instructor warn&rsquo;d:<br/>
+&ldquo;Strict rein must in this place direct the eyes.<br/>
+A little swerving and the way is lost.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then from the bosom of the burning mass,<br/>
+&ldquo;O God of mercy!&rdquo; heard I sung; and felt<br/>
+No less desire to turn. And when I saw<br/>
+Spirits along the flame proceeding, I<br/>
+Between their footsteps and mine own was fain<br/>
+To share by turns my view. At the hymn&rsquo;s close<br/>
+They shouted loud, &ldquo;I do not know a man;&rdquo;<br/>
+Then in low voice again took up the strain,<br/>
+Which once more ended, &ldquo;To the wood,&rdquo; they cried,<br/>
+&ldquo;Ran Dian, and drave forth Callisto, stung<br/>
+With Cytherea&rsquo;s poison:&rdquo; then return&rsquo;d<br/>
+Unto their song; then marry a pair extoll&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Who liv&rsquo;d in virtue chastely, and the bands<br/>
+Of wedded love. Nor from that task, I ween,<br/>
+Surcease they; whilesoe&rsquo;er the scorching fire<br/>
+Enclasps them. Of such skill appliance needs<br/>
+To medicine the wound, that healeth last.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoII.XXVI"></a>CANTO XXVI</h2>
+
+<p>
+While singly thus along the rim we walk&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Oft the good master warn&rsquo;d me: &ldquo;Look thou well.<br/>
+Avail it that I caution thee.&rdquo; The sun<br/>
+Now all the western clime irradiate chang&rsquo;d<br/>
+From azure tinct to white; and, as I pass&rsquo;d,<br/>
+My passing shadow made the umber&rsquo;d flame<br/>
+Burn ruddier. At so strange a sight I mark&rsquo;d<br/>
+That many a spirit marvel&rsquo;d on his way.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This bred occasion first to speak of me,<br/>
+&ldquo;He seems,&rdquo; said they, &ldquo;no insubstantial frame:&rdquo;<br/>
+Then to obtain what certainty they might,<br/>
+Stretch&rsquo;d towards me, careful not to overpass<br/>
+The burning pale. &ldquo;O thou, who followest<br/>
+The others, haply not more slow than they,<br/>
+But mov&rsquo;d by rev&rsquo;rence, answer me, who burn<br/>
+In thirst and fire: nor I alone, but these<br/>
+All for thine answer do more thirst, than doth<br/>
+Indian or Aethiop for the cooling stream.<br/>
+Tell us, how is it that thou mak&rsquo;st thyself<br/>
+A wall against the sun, as thou not yet<br/>
+Into th&rsquo; inextricable toils of death<br/>
+Hadst enter&rsquo;d?&rdquo; Thus spake one, and I had straight<br/>
+Declar&rsquo;d me, if attention had not turn&rsquo;d<br/>
+To new appearance. Meeting these, there came,<br/>
+Midway the burning path, a crowd, on whom<br/>
+Earnestly gazing, from each part I view<br/>
+The shadows all press forward, sev&rsquo;rally<br/>
+Each snatch a hasty kiss, and then away.<br/>
+E&rsquo;en so the emmets, &rsquo;mid their dusky troops,<br/>
+Peer closely one at other, to spy out<br/>
+Their mutual road perchance, and how they thrive.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That friendly greeting parted, ere dispatch<br/>
+Of the first onward step, from either tribe<br/>
+Loud clamour rises: those, who newly come,<br/>
+Shout Sodom and Gomorrah!&rdquo; these, &ldquo;The cow<br/>
+Pasiphae enter&rsquo;d, that the beast she woo&rsquo;d<br/>
+Might rush unto her luxury.&rdquo; Then as cranes,<br/>
+That part towards the Riphaean mountains fly,<br/>
+Part towards the Lybic sands, these to avoid<br/>
+The ice, and those the sun; so hasteth off<br/>
+One crowd, advances th&rsquo; other; and resume<br/>
+Their first song weeping, and their several shout.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Again drew near my side the very same,<br/>
+Who had erewhile besought me, and their looks<br/>
+Mark&rsquo;d eagerness to listen. I, who twice<br/>
+Their will had noted, spake: &ldquo;O spirits secure,<br/>
+Whene&rsquo;er the time may be, of peaceful end!<br/>
+My limbs, nor crude, nor in mature old age,<br/>
+Have I left yonder: here they bear me, fed<br/>
+With blood, and sinew-strung. That I no more<br/>
+May live in blindness, hence I tend aloft.<br/>
+There is a dame on high, who wind for us<br/>
+This grace, by which my mortal through your realm<br/>
+I bear. But may your utmost wish soon meet<br/>
+Such full fruition, that the orb of heaven,<br/>
+Fullest of love, and of most ample space,<br/>
+Receive you, as ye tell (upon my page<br/>
+Henceforth to stand recorded) who ye are,<br/>
+And what this multitude, that at your backs<br/>
+Have past behind us.&rdquo; As one, mountain-bred,<br/>
+Rugged and clownish, if some city&rsquo;s walls<br/>
+He chance to enter, round him stares agape,<br/>
+Confounded and struck dumb; e&rsquo;en such appear&rsquo;d<br/>
+Each spirit. But when rid of that amaze,<br/>
+(Not long the inmate of a noble heart)<br/>
+He, who before had question&rsquo;d, thus resum&rsquo;d:<br/>
+&ldquo;O blessed, who, for death preparing, tak&rsquo;st<br/>
+Experience of our limits, in thy bark!<br/>
+Their crime, who not with us proceed, was that,<br/>
+For which, as he did triumph, Caesar heard<br/>
+The snout of &lsquo;queen,&rsquo; to taunt him. Hence their cry<br/>
+Of &lsquo;Sodom,&rsquo; as they parted, to rebuke<br/>
+Themselves, and aid the burning by their shame.<br/>
+Our sinning was Hermaphrodite: but we,<br/>
+Because the law of human kind we broke,<br/>
+Following like beasts our vile concupiscence,<br/>
+Hence parting from them, to our own disgrace<br/>
+Record the name of her, by whom the beast<br/>
+In bestial tire was acted. Now our deeds<br/>
+Thou know&rsquo;st, and how we sinn&rsquo;d. If thou by name<br/>
+Wouldst haply know us, time permits not now<br/>
+To tell so much, nor can I. Of myself<br/>
+Learn what thou wishest. Guinicelli I,<br/>
+Who having truly sorrow&rsquo;d ere my last,<br/>
+Already cleanse me.&rdquo; With such pious joy,<br/>
+As the two sons upon their mother gaz&rsquo;d<br/>
+From sad Lycurgus rescu&rsquo;d, such my joy<br/>
+(Save that I more represt it) when I heard<br/>
+From his own lips the name of him pronounc&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Who was a father to me, and to those<br/>
+My betters, who have ever us&rsquo;d the sweet<br/>
+And pleasant rhymes of love. So nought I heard<br/>
+Nor spake, but long time thoughtfully I went,<br/>
+Gazing on him; and, only for the fire,<br/>
+Approach&rsquo;d not nearer. When my eyes were fed<br/>
+By looking on him, with such solemn pledge,<br/>
+As forces credence, I devoted me<br/>
+Unto his service wholly. In reply<br/>
+He thus bespake me: &ldquo;What from thee I hear<br/>
+Is grav&rsquo;d so deeply on my mind, the waves<br/>
+Of Lethe shall not wash it off, nor make<br/>
+A whit less lively. But as now thy oath<br/>
+Has seal&rsquo;d the truth, declare what cause impels<br/>
+That love, which both thy looks and speech bewray.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Those dulcet lays,&rdquo; I answer&rsquo;d, &ldquo;which, as long<br/>
+As of our tongue the beauty does not fade,<br/>
+Shall make us love the very ink that trac&rsquo;d them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Brother!&rdquo; he cried, and pointed at a shade<br/>
+Before him, &ldquo;there is one, whose mother speech<br/>
+Doth owe to him a fairer ornament.<br/>
+He in love ditties and the tales of prose<br/>
+Without a rival stands, and lets the fools<br/>
+Talk on, who think the songster of Limoges<br/>
+O&rsquo;ertops him. Rumour and the popular voice<br/>
+They look to more than truth, and so confirm<br/>
+Opinion, ere by art or reason taught.<br/>
+Thus many of the elder time cried up<br/>
+Guittone, giving him the prize, till truth<br/>
+By strength of numbers vanquish&rsquo;d. If thou own<br/>
+So ample privilege, as to have gain&rsquo;d<br/>
+Free entrance to the cloister, whereof Christ<br/>
+Is Abbot of the college, say to him<br/>
+One paternoster for me, far as needs<br/>
+For dwellers in this world, where power to sin<br/>
+No longer tempts us.&rdquo; Haply to make way<br/>
+For one, that follow&rsquo;d next, when that was said,<br/>
+He vanish&rsquo;d through the fire, as through the wave<br/>
+A fish, that glances diving to the deep.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I, to the spirit he had shown me, drew<br/>
+A little onward, and besought his name,<br/>
+For which my heart, I said, kept gracious room.<br/>
+He frankly thus began: &ldquo;Thy courtesy<br/>
+So wins on me, I have nor power nor will<br/>
+To hide me. I am Arnault; and with songs,<br/>
+Sorely lamenting for my folly past,<br/>
+Thorough this ford of fire I wade, and see<br/>
+The day, I hope for, smiling in my view.<br/>
+I pray ye by the worth that guides ye up<br/>
+Unto the summit of the scale, in time<br/>
+Remember ye my suff&rsquo;rings.&rdquo; With such words<br/>
+He disappear&rsquo;d in the refining flame.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoII.XXVII"></a>CANTO XXVII</h2>
+
+<p>
+Now was the sun so station&rsquo;d, as when first<br/>
+His early radiance quivers on the heights,<br/>
+Where stream&rsquo;d his Maker&rsquo;s blood, while Libra hangs<br/>
+Above Hesperian Ebro, and new fires<br/>
+Meridian flash on Ganges&rsquo; yellow tide.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So day was sinking, when the&rsquo; angel of God<br/>
+Appear&rsquo;d before us. Joy was in his mien.<br/>
+Forth of the flame he stood upon the brink,<br/>
+And with a voice, whose lively clearness far<br/>
+Surpass&rsquo;d our human, &ldquo;Blessed are the pure<br/>
+In heart,&rdquo; he Sang: then near him as we came,<br/>
+&ldquo;Go ye not further, holy spirits!&rdquo; he cried,<br/>
+&ldquo;Ere the fire pierce you: enter in; and list<br/>
+Attentive to the song ye hear from thence.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I, when I heard his saying, was as one<br/>
+Laid in the grave. My hands together clasp&rsquo;d,<br/>
+And upward stretching, on the fire I look&rsquo;d,<br/>
+And busy fancy conjur&rsquo;d up the forms<br/>
+Erewhile beheld alive consum&rsquo;d in flames.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Th&rsquo; escorting spirits turn&rsquo;d with gentle looks<br/>
+Toward me, and the Mantuan spake: &ldquo;My son,<br/>
+Here torment thou mayst feel, but canst not death.<br/>
+Remember thee, remember thee, if I<br/>
+Safe e&rsquo;en on Geryon brought thee: now I come<br/>
+More near to God, wilt thou not trust me now?<br/>
+Of this be sure: though in its womb that flame<br/>
+A thousand years contain&rsquo;d thee, from thy head<br/>
+No hair should perish. If thou doubt my truth,<br/>
+Approach, and with thy hands thy vesture&rsquo;s hem<br/>
+Stretch forth, and for thyself confirm belief.<br/>
+Lay now all fear, O lay all fear aside.<br/>
+Turn hither, and come onward undismay&rsquo;d.&rdquo;<br/>
+I still, though conscience urg&rsquo;d&rsquo; no step advanc&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When still he saw me fix&rsquo;d and obstinate,<br/>
+Somewhat disturb&rsquo;d he cried: &ldquo;Mark now, my son,<br/>
+From Beatrice thou art by this wall<br/>
+Divided.&rdquo; As at Thisbe&rsquo;s name the eye<br/>
+Of Pyramus was open&rsquo;d (when life ebb&rsquo;d<br/>
+Fast from his veins), and took one parting glance,<br/>
+While vermeil dyed the mulberry; thus I turn&rsquo;d<br/>
+To my sage guide, relenting, when I heard<br/>
+The name, that springs forever in my breast.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He shook his forehead; and, &ldquo;How long,&rdquo; he said,<br/>
+&ldquo;Linger we now?&rdquo; then smil&rsquo;d, as one would smile<br/>
+Upon a child, that eyes the fruit and yields.<br/>
+Into the fire before me then he walk&rsquo;d;<br/>
+And Statius, who erewhile no little space<br/>
+Had parted us, he pray&rsquo;d to come behind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I would have cast me into molten glass<br/>
+To cool me, when I enter&rsquo;d; so intense<br/>
+Rag&rsquo;d the conflagrant mass. The sire belov&rsquo;d,<br/>
+To comfort me, as he proceeded, still<br/>
+Of Beatrice talk&rsquo;d. &ldquo;Her eyes,&rdquo; saith he,<br/>
+&ldquo;E&rsquo;en now I seem to view.&rdquo; From the other side<br/>
+A voice, that sang, did guide us, and the voice<br/>
+Following, with heedful ear, we issued forth,<br/>
+There where the path led upward. &ldquo;Come,&rdquo; we heard,<br/>
+&ldquo;Come, blessed of my Father.&rdquo; Such the sounds,<br/>
+That hail&rsquo;d us from within a light, which shone<br/>
+So radiant, I could not endure the view.<br/>
+&ldquo;The sun,&rdquo; it added, &ldquo;hastes: and evening comes.<br/>
+Delay not: ere the western sky is hung<br/>
+With blackness, strive ye for the pass.&rdquo; Our way<br/>
+Upright within the rock arose, and fac&rsquo;d<br/>
+Such part of heav&rsquo;n, that from before my steps<br/>
+The beams were shrouded of the sinking sun.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nor many stairs were overpass, when now<br/>
+By fading of the shadow we perceiv&rsquo;d<br/>
+The sun behind us couch&rsquo;d: and ere one face<br/>
+Of darkness o&rsquo;er its measureless expanse<br/>
+Involv&rsquo;d th&rsquo; horizon, and the night her lot<br/>
+Held individual, each of us had made<br/>
+A stair his pallet: not that will, but power,<br/>
+Had fail&rsquo;d us, by the nature of that mount<br/>
+Forbidden further travel. As the goats,<br/>
+That late have skipp&rsquo;d and wanton&rsquo;d rapidly<br/>
+Upon the craggy cliffs, ere they had ta&rsquo;en<br/>
+Their supper on the herb, now silent lie<br/>
+And ruminate beneath the umbrage brown,<br/>
+While noonday rages; and the goatherd leans<br/>
+Upon his staff, and leaning watches them:<br/>
+And as the swain, that lodges out all night<br/>
+In quiet by his flock, lest beast of prey<br/>
+Disperse them; even so all three abode,<br/>
+I as a goat and as the shepherds they,<br/>
+Close pent on either side by shelving rock.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A little glimpse of sky was seen above;<br/>
+Yet by that little I beheld the stars<br/>
+In magnitude and rustle shining forth<br/>
+With more than wonted glory. As I lay,<br/>
+Gazing on them, and in that fit of musing,<br/>
+Sleep overcame me, sleep, that bringeth oft<br/>
+Tidings of future hap. About the hour,<br/>
+As I believe, when Venus from the east<br/>
+First lighten&rsquo;d on the mountain, she whose orb<br/>
+Seems always glowing with the fire of love,<br/>
+A lady young and beautiful, I dream&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Was passing o&rsquo;er a lea; and, as she came,<br/>
+Methought I saw her ever and anon<br/>
+Bending to cull the flowers; and thus she sang:<br/>
+&ldquo;Know ye, whoever of my name would ask,<br/>
+That I am Leah: for my brow to weave<br/>
+A garland, these fair hands unwearied ply.<br/>
+To please me at the crystal mirror, here<br/>
+I deck me. But my sister Rachel, she<br/>
+Before her glass abides the livelong day,<br/>
+Her radiant eyes beholding, charm&rsquo;d no less,<br/>
+Than I with this delightful task. Her joy<br/>
+In contemplation, as in labour mine.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And now as glimm&rsquo;ring dawn appear&rsquo;d, that breaks<br/>
+More welcome to the pilgrim still, as he<br/>
+Sojourns less distant on his homeward way,<br/>
+Darkness from all sides fled, and with it fled<br/>
+My slumber; whence I rose and saw my guide<br/>
+Already risen. &ldquo;That delicious fruit,<br/>
+Which through so many a branch the zealous care<br/>
+Of mortals roams in quest of, shall this day<br/>
+Appease thy hunger.&rdquo; Such the words I heard<br/>
+From Virgil&rsquo;s lip; and never greeting heard<br/>
+So pleasant as the sounds. Within me straight<br/>
+Desire so grew upon desire to mount,<br/>
+Thenceforward at each step I felt the wings<br/>
+Increasing for my flight. When we had run<br/>
+O&rsquo;er all the ladder to its topmost round,<br/>
+As there we stood, on me the Mantuan fix&rsquo;d<br/>
+His eyes, and thus he spake: &ldquo;Both fires, my son,<br/>
+The temporal and eternal, thou hast seen,<br/>
+And art arriv&rsquo;d, where of itself my ken<br/>
+No further reaches. I with skill and art<br/>
+Thus far have drawn thee. Now thy pleasure take<br/>
+For guide. Thou hast o&rsquo;ercome the steeper way,<br/>
+O&rsquo;ercome the straighter. Lo! the sun, that darts<br/>
+His beam upon thy forehead! lo! the herb,<br/>
+The arboreta and flowers, which of itself<br/>
+This land pours forth profuse! Till those bright eyes<br/>
+With gladness come, which, weeping, made me haste<br/>
+To succour thee, thou mayst or seat thee down,<br/>
+Or wander where thou wilt. Expect no more<br/>
+Sanction of warning voice or sign from me,<br/>
+Free of thy own arbitrement to choose,<br/>
+Discreet, judicious. To distrust thy sense<br/>
+Were henceforth error. I invest thee then<br/>
+With crown and mitre, sovereign o&rsquo;er thyself.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoII.XXVIII"></a>CANTO XXVIII</h2>
+
+<p>
+Through that celestial forest, whose thick shade<br/>
+With lively greenness the new-springing day<br/>
+Attemper&rsquo;d, eager now to roam, and search<br/>
+Its limits round, forthwith I left the bank,<br/>
+Along the champain leisurely my way<br/>
+Pursuing, o&rsquo;er the ground, that on all sides<br/>
+Delicious odour breath&rsquo;d. A pleasant air,<br/>
+That intermitted never, never veer&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Smote on my temples, gently, as a wind<br/>
+Of softest influence: at which the sprays,<br/>
+Obedient all, lean&rsquo;d trembling to that part<br/>
+Where first the holy mountain casts his shade,<br/>
+Yet were not so disorder&rsquo;d, but that still<br/>
+Upon their top the feather&rsquo;d quiristers<br/>
+Applied their wonted art, and with full joy<br/>
+Welcom&rsquo;d those hours of prime, and warbled shrill<br/>
+Amid the leaves, that to their jocund lays<br/>
+inept tenor; even as from branch to branch,<br/>
+Along the piney forests on the shore<br/>
+Of Chiassi, rolls the gath&rsquo;ring melody,<br/>
+When Eolus hath from his cavern loos&rsquo;d<br/>
+The dripping south. Already had my steps,<br/>
+Though slow, so far into that ancient wood<br/>
+Transported me, I could not ken the place<br/>
+Where I had enter&rsquo;d, when behold! my path<br/>
+Was bounded by a rill, which to the left<br/>
+With little rippling waters bent the grass,<br/>
+That issued from its brink. On earth no wave<br/>
+How clean soe&rsquo;er, that would not seem to have<br/>
+Some mixture in itself, compar&rsquo;d with this,<br/>
+Transpicuous, clear; yet darkly on it roll&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Darkly beneath perpetual gloom, which ne&rsquo;er<br/>
+Admits or sun or moon light there to shine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My feet advanc&rsquo;d not; but my wond&rsquo;ring eyes<br/>
+Pass&rsquo;d onward, o&rsquo;er the streamlet, to survey<br/>
+The tender May-bloom, flush&rsquo;d through many a hue,<br/>
+In prodigal variety: and there,<br/>
+As object, rising suddenly to view,<br/>
+That from our bosom every thought beside<br/>
+With the rare marvel chases, I beheld<br/>
+A lady all alone, who, singing, went,<br/>
+And culling flower from flower, wherewith her way<br/>
+Was all o&rsquo;er painted. &ldquo;Lady beautiful!<br/>
+Thou, who (if looks, that use to speak the heart,<br/>
+Are worthy of our trust), with love&rsquo;s own beam<br/>
+Dost warm thee,&rdquo; thus to her my speech I fram&rsquo;d:<br/>
+&ldquo;Ah! please thee hither towards the streamlet bend<br/>
+Thy steps so near, that I may list thy song.<br/>
+Beholding thee and this fair place, methinks,<br/>
+I call to mind where wander&rsquo;d and how look&rsquo;d<br/>
+Proserpine, in that season, when her child<br/>
+The mother lost, and she the bloomy spring.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As when a lady, turning in the dance,<br/>
+Doth foot it featly, and advances scarce<br/>
+One step before the other to the ground;<br/>
+Over the yellow and vermilion flowers<br/>
+Thus turn&rsquo;d she at my suit, most maiden-like,<br/>
+Valing her sober eyes, and came so near,<br/>
+That I distinctly caught the dulcet sound.<br/>
+Arriving where the limped waters now<br/>
+Lav&rsquo;d the green sward, her eyes she deign&rsquo;d to raise,<br/>
+That shot such splendour on me, as I ween<br/>
+Ne&rsquo;er glanced from Cytherea&rsquo;s, when her son<br/>
+Had sped his keenest weapon to her heart.<br/>
+Upon the opposite bank she stood and smil&rsquo;d<br/>
+through her graceful fingers shifted still<br/>
+The intermingling dyes, which without seed<br/>
+That lofty land unbosoms. By the stream<br/>
+Three paces only were we sunder&rsquo;d: yet<br/>
+The Hellespont, where Xerxes pass&rsquo;d it o&rsquo;er,<br/>
+(A curb for ever to the pride of man)<br/>
+Was by Leander not more hateful held<br/>
+For floating, with inhospitable wave<br/>
+&rsquo;Twixt Sestus and Abydos, than by me<br/>
+That flood, because it gave no passage thence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Strangers ye come, and haply in this place,<br/>
+That cradled human nature in its birth,<br/>
+Wond&rsquo;ring, ye not without suspicion view<br/>
+My smiles: but that sweet strain of psalmody,<br/>
+&lsquo;Thou, Lord! hast made me glad,&rsquo; will give ye light,<br/>
+Which may uncloud your minds. And thou, who stand&rsquo;st<br/>
+The foremost, and didst make thy suit to me,<br/>
+Say if aught else thou wish to hear: for I<br/>
+Came prompt to answer every doubt of thine.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She spake; and I replied: &ldquo;l know not how<br/>
+To reconcile this wave and rustling sound<br/>
+Of forest leaves, with what I late have heard<br/>
+Of opposite report.&rdquo; She answering thus:<br/>
+&ldquo;I will unfold the cause, whence that proceeds,<br/>
+Which makes thee wonder; and so purge the cloud<br/>
+That hath enwraps thee. The First Good, whose joy<br/>
+Is only in himself, created man<br/>
+For happiness, and gave this goodly place,<br/>
+His pledge and earnest of eternal peace.<br/>
+Favour&rsquo;d thus highly, through his own defect<br/>
+He fell, and here made short sojourn; he fell,<br/>
+And, for the bitterness of sorrow, chang&rsquo;d<br/>
+Laughter unblam&rsquo;d and ever-new delight.<br/>
+That vapours none, exhal&rsquo;d from earth beneath,<br/>
+Or from the waters (which, wherever heat<br/>
+Attracts them, follow), might ascend thus far<br/>
+To vex man&rsquo;s peaceful state, this mountain rose<br/>
+So high toward the heav&rsquo;n, nor fears the rage<br/>
+0f elements contending, from that part<br/>
+Exempted, where the gate his limit bars.<br/>
+Because the circumambient air throughout<br/>
+With its first impulse circles still, unless<br/>
+Aught interpose to cheek or thwart its course;<br/>
+Upon the summit, which on every side<br/>
+To visitation of th&rsquo; impassive air<br/>
+Is open, doth that motion strike, and makes<br/>
+Beneath its sway th&rsquo; umbrageous wood resound:<br/>
+And in the shaken plant such power resides,<br/>
+That it impregnates with its efficacy<br/>
+The voyaging breeze, upon whose subtle plume<br/>
+That wafted flies abroad; and th&rsquo; other land<br/>
+Receiving (as &rsquo;tis worthy in itself,<br/>
+Or in the clime, that warms it), doth conceive,<br/>
+And from its womb produces many a tree<br/>
+Of various virtue. This when thou hast heard,<br/>
+The marvel ceases, if in yonder earth<br/>
+Some plant without apparent seed be found<br/>
+To fix its fibrous stem. And further learn,<br/>
+That with prolific foison of all seeds,<br/>
+This holy plain is fill&rsquo;d, and in itself<br/>
+Bears fruit that ne&rsquo;er was pluck&rsquo;d on other soil.<br/>
+ &ldquo;The water, thou behold&rsquo;st, springs not from vein,<br/>
+As stream, that intermittently repairs<br/>
+And spends his pulse of life, but issues forth<br/>
+From fountain, solid, undecaying, sure;<br/>
+And by the will omnific, full supply<br/>
+Feeds whatsoe&rsquo;er On either side it pours;<br/>
+On this devolv&rsquo;d with power to take away<br/>
+Remembrance of offence, on that to bring<br/>
+Remembrance back of every good deed done.<br/>
+From whence its name of Lethe on this part;<br/>
+On th&rsquo; other Eunoe: both of which must first<br/>
+Be tasted ere it work; the last exceeding<br/>
+All flavours else. Albeit thy thirst may now<br/>
+Be well contented, if I here break off,<br/>
+No more revealing: yet a corollary<br/>
+I freely give beside: nor deem my words<br/>
+Less grateful to thee, if they somewhat pass<br/>
+The stretch of promise. They, whose verse of yore<br/>
+The golden age recorded and its bliss,<br/>
+On the Parnassian mountain, of this place<br/>
+Perhaps had dream&rsquo;d. Here was man guiltless, here<br/>
+Perpetual spring and every fruit, and this<br/>
+The far-fam&rsquo;d nectar.&rdquo; Turning to the bards,<br/>
+When she had ceas&rsquo;d, I noted in their looks<br/>
+A smile at her conclusion; then my face<br/>
+Again directed to the lovely dame.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoII.XXIX"></a>CANTO XXIX</h2>
+
+<p>
+Singing, as if enamour&rsquo;d, she resum&rsquo;d<br/>
+And clos&rsquo;d the song, with &ldquo;Blessed they whose sins<br/>
+Are cover&rsquo;d.&rdquo; Like the wood-nymphs then, that tripp&rsquo;d<br/>
+Singly across the sylvan shadows, one<br/>
+Eager to view and one to &rsquo;scape the sun,<br/>
+So mov&rsquo;d she on, against the current, up<br/>
+The verdant rivage. I, her mincing step<br/>
+Observing, with as tardy step pursued.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Between us not an hundred paces trod,<br/>
+The bank, on each side bending equally,<br/>
+Gave me to face the orient. Nor our way<br/>
+Far onward brought us, when to me at once<br/>
+She turn&rsquo;d, and cried: &ldquo;My brother! look and hearken.&rdquo;<br/>
+And lo! a sudden lustre ran across<br/>
+Through the great forest on all parts, so bright<br/>
+I doubted whether lightning were abroad;<br/>
+But that expiring ever in the spleen,<br/>
+That doth unfold it, and this during still<br/>
+And waxing still in splendor, made me question<br/>
+What it might be: and a sweet melody<br/>
+Ran through the luminous air. Then did I chide<br/>
+With warrantable zeal the hardihood<br/>
+Of our first parent, for that there were earth<br/>
+Stood in obedience to the heav&rsquo;ns, she only,<br/>
+Woman, the creature of an hour, endur&rsquo;d not<br/>
+Restraint of any veil: which had she borne<br/>
+Devoutly, joys, ineffable as these,<br/>
+Had from the first, and long time since, been mine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+While through that wilderness of primy sweets<br/>
+That never fade, suspense I walk&rsquo;d, and yet<br/>
+Expectant of beatitude more high,<br/>
+Before us, like a blazing fire, the air<br/>
+Under the green boughs glow&rsquo;d; and, for a song,<br/>
+Distinct the sound of melody was heard.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+O ye thrice holy virgins! for your sakes<br/>
+If e&rsquo;er I suffer&rsquo;d hunger, cold and watching,<br/>
+Occasion calls on me to crave your bounty.<br/>
+Now through my breast let Helicon his stream<br/>
+Pour copious; and Urania with her choir<br/>
+Arise to aid me: while the verse unfolds<br/>
+Things that do almost mock the grasp of thought.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Onward a space, what seem&rsquo;d seven trees of gold,<br/>
+The intervening distance to mine eye<br/>
+Falsely presented; but when I was come<br/>
+So near them, that no lineament was lost<br/>
+Of those, with which a doubtful object, seen<br/>
+Remotely, plays on the misdeeming sense,<br/>
+Then did the faculty, that ministers<br/>
+Discourse to reason, these for tapers of gold<br/>
+Distinguish, and it th&rsquo; singing trace the sound<br/>
+&ldquo;Hosanna.&rdquo; Above, their beauteous garniture<br/>
+Flam&rsquo;d with more ample lustre, than the moon<br/>
+Through cloudless sky at midnight in her full.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I turn&rsquo;d me full of wonder to my guide;<br/>
+And he did answer with a countenance<br/>
+Charg&rsquo;d with no less amazement: whence my view<br/>
+Reverted to those lofty things, which came<br/>
+So slowly moving towards us, that the bride<br/>
+Would have outstript them on her bridal day.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The lady called aloud: &ldquo;Why thus yet burns<br/>
+Affection in thee for these living, lights,<br/>
+And dost not look on that which follows them?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I straightway mark&rsquo;d a tribe behind them walk,<br/>
+As if attendant on their leaders, cloth&rsquo;d<br/>
+With raiment of such whiteness, as on earth<br/>
+Was never. On my left, the wat&rsquo;ry gleam<br/>
+Borrow&rsquo;d, and gave me back, when there I look&rsquo;d.<br/>
+As in a mirror, my left side portray&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When I had chosen on the river&rsquo;s edge<br/>
+Such station, that the distance of the stream<br/>
+Alone did separate me; there I stay&rsquo;d<br/>
+My steps for clearer prospect, and beheld<br/>
+The flames go onward, leaving, as they went,<br/>
+The air behind them painted as with trail<br/>
+Of liveliest pencils! so distinct were mark&rsquo;d<br/>
+All those sev&rsquo;n listed colours, whence the sun<br/>
+Maketh his bow, and Cynthia her zone.<br/>
+These streaming gonfalons did flow beyond<br/>
+My vision; and ten paces, as I guess,<br/>
+Parted the outermost. Beneath a sky<br/>
+So beautiful, came foul and-twenty elders,<br/>
+By two and two, with flower-de-luces crown&rsquo;d.<br/>
+All sang one song: &ldquo;Blessed be thou among<br/>
+The daughters of Adam! and thy loveliness<br/>
+Blessed for ever!&rdquo; After that the flowers,<br/>
+And the fresh herblets, on the opposite brink,<br/>
+Were free from that elected race; as light<br/>
+In heav&rsquo;n doth second light, came after them<br/>
+Four animals, each crown&rsquo;d with verdurous leaf.<br/>
+With six wings each was plum&rsquo;d, the plumage full<br/>
+Of eyes, and th&rsquo; eyes of Argus would be such,<br/>
+Were they endued with life. Reader, more rhymes<br/>
+Will not waste in shadowing forth their form:<br/>
+For other need no straitens, that in this<br/>
+I may not give my bounty room. But read<br/>
+Ezekiel; for he paints them, from the north<br/>
+How he beheld them come by Chebar&rsquo;s flood,<br/>
+In whirlwind, cloud and fire; and even such<br/>
+As thou shalt find them character&rsquo;d by him,<br/>
+Here were they; save as to the pennons; there,<br/>
+From him departing, John accords with me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The space, surrounded by the four, enclos&rsquo;d<br/>
+A car triumphal: on two wheels it came<br/>
+Drawn at a Gryphon&rsquo;s neck; and he above<br/>
+Stretch&rsquo;d either wing uplifted, &rsquo;tween the midst<br/>
+And the three listed hues, on each side three;<br/>
+So that the wings did cleave or injure none;<br/>
+And out of sight they rose. The members, far<br/>
+As he was bird, were golden; white the rest<br/>
+With vermeil intervein&rsquo;d. So beautiful<br/>
+A car in Rome ne&rsquo;er grac&rsquo;d Augustus pomp,<br/>
+Or Africanus&rsquo;: e&rsquo;en the sun&rsquo;s itself<br/>
+Were poor to this, that chariot of the sun<br/>
+Erroneous, which in blazing ruin fell<br/>
+At Tellus&rsquo; pray&rsquo;r devout, by the just doom<br/>
+Mysterious of all-seeing Jove. Three nymphs<br/>
+,k the right wheel, came circling in smooth dance;<br/>
+The one so ruddy, that her form had scarce<br/>
+Been known within a furnace of clear flame:<br/>
+The next did look, as if the flesh and bones<br/>
+Were emerald: snow new-fallen seem&rsquo;d the third.<br/>
+Now seem&rsquo;d the white to lead, the ruddy now;<br/>
+And from her song who led, the others took<br/>
+Their treasure, swift or slow. At th&rsquo; other wheel,<br/>
+A band quaternion, each in purple clad,<br/>
+Advanc&rsquo;d with festal step, as of them one<br/>
+The rest conducted, one, upon whose front<br/>
+Three eyes were seen. In rear of all this group,<br/>
+Two old men I beheld, dissimilar<br/>
+In raiment, but in port and gesture like,<br/>
+Solid and mainly grave; of whom the one<br/>
+Did show himself some favour&rsquo;d counsellor<br/>
+Of the great Coan, him, whom nature made<br/>
+To serve the costliest creature of her tribe.<br/>
+His fellow mark&rsquo;d an opposite intent,<br/>
+Bearing a sword, whose glitterance and keen edge,<br/>
+E&rsquo;en as I view&rsquo;d it with the flood between,<br/>
+Appall&rsquo;d me. Next four others I beheld,<br/>
+Of humble seeming: and, behind them all,<br/>
+One single old man, sleeping, as he came,<br/>
+With a shrewd visage. And these seven, each<br/>
+Like the first troop were habited, hut wore<br/>
+No braid of lilies on their temples wreath&rsquo;d.<br/>
+Rather with roses and each vermeil flower,<br/>
+A sight, but little distant, might have sworn,<br/>
+That they were all on fire above their brow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whenas the car was o&rsquo;er against me, straight.<br/>
+Was heard a thund&rsquo;ring, at whose voice it seem&rsquo;d<br/>
+The chosen multitude were stay&rsquo;d; for there,<br/>
+With the first ensigns, made they solemn halt.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoII.XXX"></a>CANTO XXX</h2>
+
+<p>
+Soon as the polar light, which never knows<br/>
+Setting nor rising, nor the shadowy veil<br/>
+Of other cloud than sin, fair ornament<br/>
+Of the first heav&rsquo;n, to duty each one there<br/>
+Safely convoying, as that lower doth<br/>
+The steersman to his port, stood firmly fix&rsquo;d;<br/>
+Forthwith the saintly tribe, who in the van<br/>
+Between the Gryphon and its radiance came,<br/>
+Did turn them to the car, as to their rest:<br/>
+And one, as if commission&rsquo;d from above,<br/>
+In holy chant thrice shorted forth aloud:<br/>
+&ldquo;Come, spouse, from Libanus!&rdquo; and all the rest<br/>
+Took up the song&mdash;At the last audit so<br/>
+The blest shall rise, from forth his cavern each<br/>
+Uplifting lightly his new-vested flesh,<br/>
+As, on the sacred litter, at the voice<br/>
+Authoritative of that elder, sprang<br/>
+A hundred ministers and messengers<br/>
+Of life eternal. &ldquo;Blessed thou! who com&rsquo;st!&rdquo;<br/>
+And, &ldquo;O,&rdquo; they cried, &ldquo;from full hands scatter ye<br/>
+Unwith&rsquo;ring lilies;&rdquo; and, so saying, cast<br/>
+Flowers over head and round them on all sides.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I have beheld, ere now, at break of day,<br/>
+The eastern clime all roseate, and the sky<br/>
+Oppos&rsquo;d, one deep and beautiful serene,<br/>
+And the sun&rsquo;s face so shaded, and with mists<br/>
+Attemper&rsquo;d at lids rising, that the eye<br/>
+Long while endur&rsquo;d the sight: thus in a cloud<br/>
+Of flowers, that from those hands angelic rose,<br/>
+And down, within and outside of the car,<br/>
+Fell showering, in white veil with olive wreath&rsquo;d,<br/>
+A virgin in my view appear&rsquo;d, beneath<br/>
+Green mantle, rob&rsquo;d in hue of living flame:<br/>
+And o&rsquo;er my Spirit, that in former days<br/>
+Within her presence had abode so long,<br/>
+No shudd&rsquo;ring terror crept. Mine eyes no more<br/>
+Had knowledge of her; yet there mov&rsquo;d from her<br/>
+A hidden virtue, at whose touch awak&rsquo;d,<br/>
+The power of ancient love was strong within me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No sooner on my vision streaming, smote<br/>
+The heav&rsquo;nly influence, which years past, and e&rsquo;en<br/>
+In childhood, thrill&rsquo;d me, than towards Virgil I<br/>
+Turn&rsquo;d me to leftward, panting, like a babe,<br/>
+That flees for refuge to his mother&rsquo;s breast,<br/>
+If aught have terrified or work&rsquo;d him woe:<br/>
+And would have cried: &ldquo;There is no dram of blood,<br/>
+That doth not quiver in me. The old flame<br/>
+Throws out clear tokens of reviving fire:&rdquo;<br/>
+But Virgil had bereav&rsquo;d us of himself,<br/>
+Virgil, my best-lov&rsquo;d father; Virgil, he<br/>
+To whom I gave me up for safety: nor,<br/>
+All, our prime mother lost, avail&rsquo;d to save<br/>
+My undew&rsquo;d cheeks from blur of soiling tears.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Dante, weep not, that Virgil leaves thee: nay,<br/>
+Weep thou not yet: behooves thee feel the edge<br/>
+Of other sword, and thou shalt weep for that.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As to the prow or stern, some admiral<br/>
+Paces the deck, inspiriting his crew,<br/>
+When &rsquo;mid the sail-yards all hands ply aloof;<br/>
+Thus on the left side of the car I saw,<br/>
+(Turning me at the sound of mine own name,<br/>
+Which here I am compell&rsquo;d to register)<br/>
+The virgin station&rsquo;d, who before appeared<br/>
+Veil&rsquo;d in that festive shower angelical.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Towards me, across the stream, she bent her eyes;<br/>
+Though from her brow the veil descending, bound<br/>
+With foliage of Minerva, suffer&rsquo;d not<br/>
+That I beheld her clearly; then with act<br/>
+Full royal, still insulting o&rsquo;er her thrall,<br/>
+Added, as one, who speaking keepeth back<br/>
+The bitterest saying, to conclude the speech:<br/>
+&ldquo;Observe me well. I am, in sooth, I am<br/>
+Beatrice. What! and hast thou deign&rsquo;d at last<br/>
+Approach the mountain? knewest not, O man!<br/>
+Thy happiness is whole?&rdquo; Down fell mine eyes<br/>
+On the clear fount, but there, myself espying,<br/>
+Recoil&rsquo;d, and sought the greensward: such a weight<br/>
+Of shame was on my forehead. With a mien<br/>
+Of that stern majesty, which doth surround<br/>
+mother&rsquo;s presence to her awe-struck child,<br/>
+She look&rsquo;d; a flavour of such bitterness<br/>
+Was mingled in her pity. There her words<br/>
+Brake off, and suddenly the angels sang:<br/>
+&ldquo;In thee, O gracious Lord, my hope hath been:&rdquo;<br/>
+But went no farther than, &ldquo;Thou Lord, hast set<br/>
+My feet in ample room.&rdquo; As snow, that lies<br/>
+Amidst the living rafters on the back<br/>
+Of Italy congeal&rsquo;d when drifted high<br/>
+And closely pil&rsquo;d by rough Sclavonian blasts,<br/>
+Breathe but the land whereon no shadow falls,<br/>
+And straightway melting it distils away,<br/>
+Like a fire-wasted taper: thus was I,<br/>
+Without a sigh or tear, or ever these<br/>
+Did sing, that with the chiming of heav&rsquo;n&rsquo;s sphere,<br/>
+Still in their warbling chime: but when the strain<br/>
+Of dulcet symphony, express&rsquo;d for me<br/>
+Their soft compassion, more than could the words<br/>
+&ldquo;Virgin, why so consum&rsquo;st him?&rdquo; then the ice,<br/>
+Congeal&rsquo;d about my bosom, turn&rsquo;d itself<br/>
+To spirit and water, and with anguish forth<br/>
+Gush&rsquo;d through the lips and eyelids from the heart.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Upon the chariot&rsquo;s right edge still she stood,<br/>
+Immovable, and thus address&rsquo;d her words<br/>
+To those bright semblances with pity touch&rsquo;d:<br/>
+&ldquo;Ye in th&rsquo; eternal day your vigils keep,<br/>
+So that nor night nor slumber, with close stealth,<br/>
+Conveys from you a single step in all<br/>
+The goings on of life: thence with more heed<br/>
+I shape mine answer, for his ear intended,<br/>
+Who there stands weeping, that the sorrow now<br/>
+May equal the transgression. Not alone<br/>
+Through operation of the mighty orbs,<br/>
+That mark each seed to some predestin&rsquo;d aim,<br/>
+As with aspect or fortunate or ill<br/>
+The constellations meet, but through benign<br/>
+Largess of heav&rsquo;nly graces, which rain down<br/>
+From such a height, as mocks our vision, this man<br/>
+Was in the freshness of his being, such,<br/>
+So gifted virtually, that in him<br/>
+All better habits wond&rsquo;rously had thriv&rsquo;d.<br/>
+The more of kindly strength is in the soil,<br/>
+So much doth evil seed and lack of culture<br/>
+Mar it the more, and make it run to wildness.<br/>
+These looks sometime upheld him; for I show&rsquo;d<br/>
+My youthful eyes, and led him by their light<br/>
+In upright walking. Soon as I had reach&rsquo;d<br/>
+The threshold of my second age, and chang&rsquo;d<br/>
+My mortal for immortal, then he left me,<br/>
+And gave himself to others. When from flesh<br/>
+To spirit I had risen, and increase<br/>
+Of beauty and of virtue circled me,<br/>
+I was less dear to him, and valued less.<br/>
+His steps were turn&rsquo;d into deceitful ways,<br/>
+Following false images of good, that make<br/>
+No promise perfect. Nor avail&rsquo;d me aught<br/>
+To sue for inspirations, with the which,<br/>
+I, both in dreams of night, and otherwise,<br/>
+Did call him back; of them so little reck&rsquo;d him,<br/>
+Such depth he fell, that all device was short<br/>
+Of his preserving, save that he should view<br/>
+The children of perdition. To this end<br/>
+I visited the purlieus of the dead:<br/>
+And one, who hath conducted him thus high,<br/>
+Receiv&rsquo;d my supplications urg&rsquo;d with weeping.<br/>
+It were a breaking of God&rsquo;s high decree,<br/>
+If Lethe should be past, and such food tasted<br/>
+Without the cost of some repentant tear.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoII.XXXI"></a>CANTO XXXI</h2>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;O Thou!&rdquo; her words she thus without delay<br/>
+Resuming, turn&rsquo;d their point on me, to whom<br/>
+They but with lateral edge seem&rsquo;d harsh before,<br/>
+&lsquo;Say thou, who stand&rsquo;st beyond the holy stream,<br/>
+If this be true. A charge so grievous needs<br/>
+Thine own avowal.&rdquo; On my faculty<br/>
+Such strange amazement hung, the voice expir&rsquo;d<br/>
+Imperfect, ere its organs gave it birth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A little space refraining, then she spake:<br/>
+&ldquo;What dost thou muse on? Answer me. The wave<br/>
+On thy remembrances of evil yet<br/>
+Hath done no injury.&rdquo; A mingled sense<br/>
+Of fear and of confusion, from my lips<br/>
+Did such a &ldquo;Yea &ldquo; produce, as needed help<br/>
+Of vision to interpret. As when breaks<br/>
+In act to be discharg&rsquo;d, a cross-bow bent<br/>
+Beyond its pitch, both nerve and bow o&rsquo;erstretch&rsquo;d,<br/>
+The flagging weapon feebly hits the mark;<br/>
+Thus, tears and sighs forth gushing, did I burst<br/>
+Beneath the heavy load, and thus my voice<br/>
+Was slacken&rsquo;d on its way. She straight began:<br/>
+&ldquo;When my desire invited thee to love<br/>
+The good, which sets a bound to our aspirings,<br/>
+What bar of thwarting foss or linked chain<br/>
+Did meet thee, that thou so should&rsquo;st quit the hope<br/>
+Of further progress, or what bait of ease<br/>
+Or promise of allurement led thee on<br/>
+Elsewhere, that thou elsewhere should&rsquo;st rather wait?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A bitter sigh I drew, then scarce found voice<br/>
+To answer, hardly to these sounds my lips<br/>
+Gave utterance, wailing: &ldquo;Thy fair looks withdrawn,<br/>
+Things present, with deceitful pleasures, turn&rsquo;d<br/>
+My steps aside.&rdquo; She answering spake: &ldquo;Hadst thou<br/>
+Been silent, or denied what thou avow&rsquo;st,<br/>
+Thou hadst not hid thy sin the more: such eye<br/>
+Observes it. But whene&rsquo;er the sinner&rsquo;s cheek<br/>
+Breaks forth into the precious-streaming tears<br/>
+Of self-accusing, in our court the wheel<br/>
+Of justice doth run counter to the edge.<br/>
+Howe&rsquo;er that thou may&rsquo;st profit by thy shame<br/>
+For errors past, and that henceforth more strength<br/>
+May arm thee, when thou hear&rsquo;st the Siren-voice,<br/>
+Lay thou aside the motive to this grief,<br/>
+And lend attentive ear, while I unfold<br/>
+How opposite a way my buried flesh<br/>
+Should have impell&rsquo;d thee. Never didst thou spy<br/>
+In art or nature aught so passing sweet,<br/>
+As were the limbs, that in their beauteous frame<br/>
+Enclos&rsquo;d me, and are scatter&rsquo;d now in dust.<br/>
+If sweetest thing thus fail&rsquo;d thee with my death,<br/>
+What, afterward, of mortal should thy wish<br/>
+Have tempted? When thou first hadst felt the dart<br/>
+Of perishable things, in my departing<br/>
+For better realms, thy wing thou should&rsquo;st have prun&rsquo;d<br/>
+To follow me, and never stoop&rsquo;d again<br/>
+To &rsquo;bide a second blow for a slight girl,<br/>
+Or other gaud as transient and as vain.<br/>
+The new and inexperienc&rsquo;d bird awaits,<br/>
+Twice it may be, or thrice, the fowler&rsquo;s aim;<br/>
+But in the sight of one, whose plumes are full,<br/>
+In vain the net is spread, the arrow wing&rsquo;d.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I stood, as children silent and asham&rsquo;d<br/>
+Stand, list&rsquo;ning, with their eyes upon the earth,<br/>
+Acknowledging their fault and self-condemn&rsquo;d.<br/>
+And she resum&rsquo;d: &ldquo;If, but to hear thus pains thee,<br/>
+Raise thou thy beard, and lo! what sight shall do!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With less reluctance yields a sturdy holm,<br/>
+Rent from its fibers by a blast, that blows<br/>
+From off the pole, or from Iarbas&rsquo; land,<br/>
+Than I at her behest my visage rais&rsquo;d:<br/>
+And thus the face denoting by the beard,<br/>
+I mark&rsquo;d the secret sting her words convey&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No sooner lifted I mine aspect up,<br/>
+Than downward sunk that vision I beheld<br/>
+Of goodly creatures vanish; and mine eyes<br/>
+Yet unassur&rsquo;d and wavering, bent their light<br/>
+On Beatrice. Towards the animal,<br/>
+Who joins two natures in one form, she turn&rsquo;d,<br/>
+And, even under shadow of her veil,<br/>
+And parted by the verdant rill, that flow&rsquo;d<br/>
+Between, in loveliness appear&rsquo;d as much<br/>
+Her former self surpassing, as on earth<br/>
+All others she surpass&rsquo;d. Remorseful goads<br/>
+Shot sudden through me. Each thing else, the more<br/>
+Its love had late beguil&rsquo;d me, now the more<br/>
+I Was loathsome. On my heart so keenly smote<br/>
+The bitter consciousness, that on the ground<br/>
+O&rsquo;erpower&rsquo;d I fell: and what my state was then,<br/>
+She knows who was the cause. When now my strength<br/>
+Flow&rsquo;d back, returning outward from the heart,<br/>
+The lady, whom alone I first had seen,<br/>
+I found above me. &ldquo;Loose me not,&rdquo; she cried:<br/>
+&ldquo;Loose not thy hold;&rdquo; and lo! had dragg&rsquo;d me high<br/>
+As to my neck into the stream, while she,<br/>
+Still as she drew me after, swept along,<br/>
+Swift as a shuttle, bounding o&rsquo;er the wave.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The blessed shore approaching then was heard<br/>
+So sweetly, &ldquo;Tu asperges me,&rdquo; that I<br/>
+May not remember, much less tell the sound.<br/>
+The beauteous dame, her arms expanding, clasp&rsquo;d<br/>
+My temples, and immerg&rsquo;d me, where &rsquo;twas fit<br/>
+The wave should drench me: and thence raising up,<br/>
+Within the fourfold dance of lovely nymphs<br/>
+Presented me so lav&rsquo;d, and with their arm<br/>
+They each did cover me. &ldquo;Here are we nymphs,<br/>
+And in the heav&rsquo;n are stars. Or ever earth<br/>
+Was visited of Beatrice, we<br/>
+Appointed for her handmaids, tended on her.<br/>
+We to her eyes will lead thee; but the light<br/>
+Of gladness that is in them, well to scan,<br/>
+Those yonder three, of deeper ken than ours,<br/>
+Thy sight shall quicken.&rdquo; Thus began their song;<br/>
+And then they led me to the Gryphon&rsquo;s breast,<br/>
+While, turn&rsquo;d toward us, Beatrice stood.<br/>
+&ldquo;Spare not thy vision. We have stationed thee<br/>
+Before the emeralds, whence love erewhile<br/>
+Hath drawn his weapons on thee. &ldquo;As they spake,<br/>
+A thousand fervent wishes riveted<br/>
+Mine eyes upon her beaming eyes, that stood<br/>
+Still fix&rsquo;d toward the Gryphon motionless.<br/>
+As the sun strikes a mirror, even thus<br/>
+Within those orbs the twofold being, shone,<br/>
+For ever varying, in one figure now<br/>
+Reflected, now in other. Reader! muse<br/>
+How wond&rsquo;rous in my sight it seem&rsquo;d to mark<br/>
+A thing, albeit steadfast in itself,<br/>
+Yet in its imag&rsquo;d semblance mutable.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Full of amaze, and joyous, while my soul<br/>
+Fed on the viand, whereof still desire<br/>
+Grows with satiety, the other three<br/>
+With gesture, that declar&rsquo;d a loftier line,<br/>
+Advanc&rsquo;d: to their own carol on they came<br/>
+Dancing in festive ring angelical.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Turn, Beatrice!&rdquo; was their song: &ldquo;O turn<br/>
+Thy saintly sight on this thy faithful one,<br/>
+Who to behold thee many a wearisome pace<br/>
+Hath measur&rsquo;d. Gracious at our pray&rsquo;r vouchsafe<br/>
+Unveil to him thy cheeks: that he may mark<br/>
+Thy second beauty, now conceal&rsquo;d.&rdquo; O splendour!<br/>
+O sacred light eternal! who is he<br/>
+So pale with musing in Pierian shades,<br/>
+Or with that fount so lavishly imbued,<br/>
+Whose spirit should not fail him in th&rsquo; essay<br/>
+To represent thee such as thou didst seem,<br/>
+When under cope of the still-chiming heaven<br/>
+Thou gav&rsquo;st to open air thy charms reveal&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoII.XXXII"></a>CANTO XXXII</h2>
+
+<p>
+Mine eyes with such an eager coveting,<br/>
+Were bent to rid them of their ten years&rsquo; thirst,<br/>
+No other sense was waking: and e&rsquo;en they<br/>
+Were fenc&rsquo;d on either side from heed of aught;<br/>
+So tangled in its custom&rsquo;d toils that smile<br/>
+Of saintly brightness drew me to itself,<br/>
+When forcibly toward the left my sight<br/>
+The sacred virgins turn&rsquo;d; for from their lips<br/>
+I heard the warning sounds: &ldquo;Too fix&rsquo;d a gaze!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Awhile my vision labor&rsquo;d; as when late<br/>
+Upon the&rsquo; o&rsquo;erstrained eyes the sun hath smote:<br/>
+But soon to lesser object, as the view<br/>
+Was now recover&rsquo;d (lesser in respect<br/>
+To that excess of sensible, whence late<br/>
+I had perforce been sunder&rsquo;d) on their right<br/>
+I mark&rsquo;d that glorious army wheel, and turn,<br/>
+Against the sun and sev&rsquo;nfold lights, their front.<br/>
+As when, their bucklers for protection rais&rsquo;d,<br/>
+A well-rang&rsquo;d troop, with portly banners curl&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Wheel circling, ere the whole can change their ground:<br/>
+E&rsquo;en thus the goodly regiment of heav&rsquo;n<br/>
+Proceeding, all did pass us, ere the car<br/>
+Had slop&rsquo;d his beam. Attendant at the wheels<br/>
+The damsels turn&rsquo;d; and on the Gryphon mov&rsquo;d<br/>
+The sacred burden, with a pace so smooth,<br/>
+No feather on him trembled. The fair dame<br/>
+Who through the wave had drawn me, companied<br/>
+By Statius and myself, pursued the wheel,<br/>
+Whose orbit, rolling, mark&rsquo;d a lesser arch.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Through the high wood, now void (the more her blame,<br/>
+Who by the serpent was beguil&rsquo;d) I past<br/>
+With step in cadence to the harmony<br/>
+Angelic. Onward had we mov&rsquo;d, as far<br/>
+Perchance as arrow at three several flights<br/>
+Full wing&rsquo;d had sped, when from her station down<br/>
+Descended Beatrice. With one voice<br/>
+All murmur&rsquo;d &ldquo;Adam,&rdquo; circling next a plant<br/>
+Despoil&rsquo;d of flowers and leaf on every bough.<br/>
+Its tresses, spreading more as more they rose,<br/>
+Were such, as &rsquo;midst their forest wilds for height<br/>
+The Indians might have gaz&rsquo;d at. &ldquo;Blessed thou!<br/>
+Gryphon, whose beak hath never pluck&rsquo;d that tree<br/>
+Pleasant to taste: for hence the appetite<br/>
+Was warp&rsquo;d to evil.&rdquo; Round the stately trunk<br/>
+Thus shouted forth the rest, to whom return&rsquo;d<br/>
+The animal twice-gender&rsquo;d: &ldquo;Yea: for so<br/>
+The generation of the just are sav&rsquo;d.&rdquo;<br/>
+And turning to the chariot-pole, to foot<br/>
+He drew it of the widow&rsquo;d branch, and bound<br/>
+There left unto the stock whereon it grew.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As when large floods of radiance from above<br/>
+Stream, with that radiance mingled, which ascends<br/>
+Next after setting of the scaly sign,<br/>
+Our plants then burgeon, and each wears anew<br/>
+His wonted colours, ere the sun have yok&rsquo;d<br/>
+Beneath another star his flamy steeds;<br/>
+Thus putting forth a hue, more faint than rose,<br/>
+And deeper than the violet, was renew&rsquo;d<br/>
+The plant, erewhile in all its branches bare.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Unearthly was the hymn, which then arose.<br/>
+I understood it not, nor to the end<br/>
+Endur&rsquo;d the harmony. Had I the skill<br/>
+To pencil forth, how clos&rsquo;d th&rsquo; unpitying eyes<br/>
+Slumb&rsquo;ring, when Syrinx warbled, (eyes that paid<br/>
+So dearly for their watching,) then like painter,<br/>
+That with a model paints, I might design<br/>
+The manner of my falling into sleep.<br/>
+But feign who will the slumber cunningly;<br/>
+I pass it by to when I wak&rsquo;d, and tell<br/>
+How suddenly a flash of splendour rent<br/>
+The curtain of my sleep, and one cries out:<br/>
+&ldquo;Arise, what dost thou?&rdquo; As the chosen three,<br/>
+On Tabor&rsquo;s mount, admitted to behold<br/>
+The blossoming of that fair tree, whose fruit<br/>
+Is coveted of angels, and doth make<br/>
+Perpetual feast in heaven, to themselves<br/>
+Returning at the word, whence deeper sleeps<br/>
+Were broken, that they their tribe diminish&rsquo;d saw,<br/>
+Both Moses and Elias gone, and chang&rsquo;d<br/>
+The stole their master wore: thus to myself<br/>
+Returning, over me beheld I stand<br/>
+The piteous one, who cross the stream had brought<br/>
+My steps. &ldquo;And where,&rdquo; all doubting, I exclaim&rsquo;d,<br/>
+&ldquo;Is Beatrice?&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;See her,&rdquo; she replied,<br/>
+&ldquo;Beneath the fresh leaf seated on its root.<br/>
+Behold th&rsquo; associate choir that circles her.<br/>
+The others, with a melody more sweet<br/>
+And more profound, journeying to higher realms,<br/>
+Upon the Gryphon tend.&rdquo; If there her words<br/>
+Were clos&rsquo;d, I know not; but mine eyes had now<br/>
+Ta&rsquo;en view of her, by whom all other thoughts<br/>
+Were barr&rsquo;d admittance. On the very ground<br/>
+Alone she sat, as she had there been left<br/>
+A guard upon the wain, which I beheld<br/>
+Bound to the twyform beast. The seven nymphs<br/>
+Did make themselves a cloister round about her,<br/>
+And in their hands upheld those lights secure<br/>
+From blast septentrion and the gusty south.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A little while thou shalt be forester here:<br/>
+And citizen shalt be forever with me,<br/>
+Of that true Rome, wherein Christ dwells a Roman<br/>
+To profit the misguided world, keep now<br/>
+Thine eyes upon the car; and what thou seest,<br/>
+Take heed thou write, returning to that place.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus Beatrice: at whose feet inclin&rsquo;d<br/>
+Devout, at her behest, my thought and eyes,<br/>
+I, as she bade, directed. Never fire,<br/>
+With so swift motion, forth a stormy cloud<br/>
+Leap&rsquo;d downward from the welkin&rsquo;s farthest bound,<br/>
+As I beheld the bird of Jove descending<br/>
+Pounce on the tree, and, as he rush&rsquo;d, the rind,<br/>
+Disparting crush beneath him, buds much more<br/>
+And leaflets. On the car with all his might<br/>
+He struck, whence, staggering like a ship, it reel&rsquo;d,<br/>
+At random driv&rsquo;n, to starboard now, o&rsquo;ercome,<br/>
+And now to larboard, by the vaulting waves.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Next springing up into the chariot&rsquo;s womb<br/>
+A fox I saw, with hunger seeming pin&rsquo;d<br/>
+Of all good food. But, for his ugly sins<br/>
+The saintly maid rebuking him, away<br/>
+Scamp&rsquo;ring he turn&rsquo;d, fast as his hide-bound corpse<br/>
+Would bear him. Next, from whence before he came,<br/>
+I saw the eagle dart into the hull<br/>
+O&rsquo; th&rsquo; car, and leave it with his feathers lin&rsquo;d;<br/>
+And then a voice, like that which issues forth<br/>
+From heart with sorrow riv&rsquo;d, did issue forth<br/>
+From heav&rsquo;n, and, &ldquo;O poor bark of mine!&rdquo; it cried,<br/>
+&ldquo;How badly art thou freighted!&rdquo; Then, it seem&rsquo;d,<br/>
+That the earth open&rsquo;d between either wheel,<br/>
+And I beheld a dragon issue thence,<br/>
+That through the chariot fix&rsquo;d his forked train;<br/>
+And like a wasp that draggeth back the sting,<br/>
+So drawing forth his baleful train, he dragg&rsquo;d<br/>
+Part of the bottom forth, and went his way<br/>
+Exulting. What remain&rsquo;d, as lively turf<br/>
+With green herb, so did clothe itself with plumes,<br/>
+Which haply had with purpose chaste and kind<br/>
+Been offer&rsquo;d; and therewith were cloth&rsquo;d the wheels,<br/>
+Both one and other, and the beam, so quickly<br/>
+A sigh were not breath&rsquo;d sooner. Thus transform&rsquo;d,<br/>
+The holy structure, through its several parts,<br/>
+Did put forth heads, three on the beam, and one<br/>
+On every side; the first like oxen horn&rsquo;d,<br/>
+But with a single horn upon their front<br/>
+The four. Like monster sight hath never seen.<br/>
+O&rsquo;er it methought there sat, secure as rock<br/>
+On mountain&rsquo;s lofty top, a shameless whore,<br/>
+Whose ken rov&rsquo;d loosely round her. At her side,<br/>
+As &rsquo;twere that none might bear her off, I saw<br/>
+A giant stand; and ever, and anon<br/>
+They mingled kisses. But, her lustful eyes<br/>
+Chancing on me to wander, that fell minion<br/>
+Scourg&rsquo;d her from head to foot all o&rsquo;er; then full<br/>
+Of jealousy, and fierce with rage, unloos&rsquo;d<br/>
+The monster, and dragg&rsquo;d on, so far across<br/>
+The forest, that from me its shades alone<br/>
+Shielded the harlot and the new-form&rsquo;d brute.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoII.XXXIII"></a>CANTO XXXIII</h2>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The heathen, Lord! are come!&rdquo; responsive thus,<br/>
+The trinal now, and now the virgin band<br/>
+Quaternion, their sweet psalmody began,<br/>
+Weeping; and Beatrice listen&rsquo;d, sad<br/>
+And sighing, to the song&rsquo;, in such a mood,<br/>
+That Mary, as she stood beside the cross,<br/>
+Was scarce more chang&rsquo;d. But when they gave her place<br/>
+To speak, then, risen upright on her feet,<br/>
+She, with a colour glowing bright as fire,<br/>
+Did answer: &ldquo;Yet a little while, and ye<br/>
+Shall see me not; and, my beloved sisters,<br/>
+Again a little while, and ye shall see me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Before her then she marshall&rsquo;d all the seven,<br/>
+And, beck&rsquo;ning only motion&rsquo;d me, the dame,<br/>
+And that remaining sage, to follow her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So on she pass&rsquo;d; and had not set, I ween,<br/>
+Her tenth step to the ground, when with mine eyes<br/>
+Her eyes encounter&rsquo;d; and, with visage mild,<br/>
+&ldquo;So mend thy pace,&rdquo; she cried, &ldquo;that if my words<br/>
+Address thee, thou mayst still be aptly plac&rsquo;d<br/>
+To hear them.&rdquo; Soon as duly to her side<br/>
+I now had hasten&rsquo;d: &ldquo;Brother!&rdquo; she began,<br/>
+&ldquo;Why mak&rsquo;st thou no attempt at questioning,<br/>
+As thus we walk together?&rdquo; Like to those<br/>
+Who, speaking with too reverent an awe<br/>
+Before their betters, draw not forth the voice<br/>
+Alive unto their lips, befell me shell<br/>
+That I in sounds imperfect thus began:<br/>
+&ldquo;Lady! what I have need of, that thou know&rsquo;st,<br/>
+And what will suit my need.&rdquo; She answering thus:<br/>
+&ldquo;Of fearfulness and shame, I will, that thou<br/>
+Henceforth do rid thee: that thou speak no more,<br/>
+As one who dreams. Thus far be taught of me:<br/>
+The vessel, which thou saw&rsquo;st the serpent break,<br/>
+Was and is not: let him, who hath the blame,<br/>
+Hope not to scare God&rsquo;s vengeance with a sop.<br/>
+Without an heir for ever shall not be<br/>
+That eagle, he, who left the chariot plum&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Which monster made it first and next a prey.<br/>
+Plainly I view, and therefore speak, the stars<br/>
+E&rsquo;en now approaching, whose conjunction, free<br/>
+From all impediment and bar, brings on<br/>
+A season, in the which, one sent from God,<br/>
+(Five hundred, five, and ten, do mark him out)<br/>
+That foul one, and th&rsquo; accomplice of her guilt,<br/>
+The giant, both shall slay. And if perchance<br/>
+My saying, dark as Themis or as Sphinx,<br/>
+Fail to persuade thee, (since like them it foils<br/>
+The intellect with blindness) yet ere long<br/>
+Events shall be the Naiads, that will solve<br/>
+This knotty riddle, and no damage light<br/>
+On flock or field. Take heed; and as these words<br/>
+By me are utter&rsquo;d, teach them even so<br/>
+To those who live that life, which is a race<br/>
+To death: and when thou writ&rsquo;st them, keep in mind<br/>
+Not to conceal how thou hast seen the plant,<br/>
+That twice hath now been spoil&rsquo;d. This whoso robs,<br/>
+This whoso plucks, with blasphemy of deed<br/>
+Sins against God, who for his use alone<br/>
+Creating hallow&rsquo;d it. For taste of this,<br/>
+In pain and in desire, five thousand years<br/>
+And upward, the first soul did yearn for him,<br/>
+Who punish&rsquo;d in himself the fatal gust.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thy reason slumbers, if it deem this height<br/>
+And summit thus inverted of the plant,<br/>
+Without due cause: and were not vainer thoughts,<br/>
+As Elsa&rsquo;s numbing waters, to thy soul,<br/>
+And their fond pleasures had not dyed it dark<br/>
+As Pyramus the mulberry, thou hadst seen,<br/>
+In such momentous circumstance alone,<br/>
+God&rsquo;s equal justice morally implied<br/>
+In the forbidden tree. But since I mark thee<br/>
+In understanding harden&rsquo;d into stone,<br/>
+And, to that hardness, spotted too and stain&rsquo;d,<br/>
+So that thine eye is dazzled at my word,<br/>
+I will, that, if not written, yet at least<br/>
+Painted thou take it in thee, for the cause,<br/>
+That one brings home his staff inwreath&rsquo;d with palm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I thus: &ldquo;As wax by seal, that changeth not<br/>
+Its impress, now is stamp&rsquo;d my brain by thee.<br/>
+But wherefore soars thy wish&rsquo;d-for speech so high<br/>
+Beyond my sight, that loses it the more,<br/>
+The more it strains to reach it?&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;To the end<br/>
+That thou mayst know,&rdquo; she answer&rsquo;d straight, &ldquo;the
+school,<br/>
+That thou hast follow&rsquo;d; and how far behind,<br/>
+When following my discourse, its learning halts:<br/>
+And mayst behold your art, from the divine<br/>
+As distant, as the disagreement is<br/>
+&rsquo;Twixt earth and heaven&rsquo;s most high and rapturous orb.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I not remember,&rdquo; I replied, &ldquo;that e&rsquo;er<br/>
+I was estrang&rsquo;d from thee, nor for such fault<br/>
+Doth conscience chide me.&rdquo; Smiling she return&rsquo;d:<br/>
+&ldquo;If thou canst, not remember, call to mind<br/>
+How lately thou hast drunk of Lethe&rsquo;s wave;<br/>
+And, sure as smoke doth indicate a flame,<br/>
+In that forgetfulness itself conclude<br/>
+Blame from thy alienated will incurr&rsquo;d.<br/>
+From henceforth verily my words shall be<br/>
+As naked as will suit them to appear<br/>
+In thy unpractis&rsquo;d view.&rdquo; More sparkling now,<br/>
+And with retarded course the sun possess&rsquo;d<br/>
+The circle of mid-day, that varies still<br/>
+As th&rsquo; aspect varies of each several clime,<br/>
+When, as one, sent in vaward of a troop<br/>
+For escort, pauses, if perchance he spy<br/>
+Vestige of somewhat strange and rare: so paus&rsquo;d<br/>
+The sev&rsquo;nfold band, arriving at the verge<br/>
+Of a dun umbrage hoar, such as is seen,<br/>
+Beneath green leaves and gloomy branches, oft<br/>
+To overbrow a bleak and alpine cliff.<br/>
+And, where they stood, before them, as it seem&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Tigris and Euphrates both beheld,<br/>
+Forth from one fountain issue; and, like friends,<br/>
+Linger at parting. &ldquo;O enlight&rsquo;ning beam!<br/>
+O glory of our kind! beseech thee say<br/>
+What water this, which from one source deriv&rsquo;d<br/>
+Itself removes to distance from itself?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To such entreaty answer thus was made:<br/>
+&ldquo;Entreat Matilda, that she teach thee this.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And here, as one, who clears himself of blame<br/>
+Imputed, the fair dame return&rsquo;d: &ldquo;Of me<br/>
+He this and more hath learnt; and I am safe<br/>
+That Lethe&rsquo;s water hath not hid it from him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And Beatrice: &ldquo;Some more pressing care<br/>
+That oft the memory &rsquo;reeves, perchance hath made<br/>
+His mind&rsquo;s eye dark. But lo! where Eunoe cows!<br/>
+Lead thither; and, as thou art wont, revive<br/>
+His fainting virtue.&rdquo; As a courteous spirit,<br/>
+That proffers no excuses, but as soon<br/>
+As he hath token of another&rsquo;s will,<br/>
+Makes it his own; when she had ta&rsquo;en me, thus<br/>
+The lovely maiden mov&rsquo;d her on, and call&rsquo;d<br/>
+To Statius with an air most lady-like:<br/>
+&ldquo;Come thou with him.&rdquo; Were further space allow&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Then, Reader, might I sing, though but in part,<br/>
+That beverage, with whose sweetness I had ne&rsquo;er<br/>
+Been sated. But, since all the leaves are full,<br/>
+Appointed for this second strain, mine art<br/>
+With warning bridle checks me. I return&rsquo;d<br/>
+From the most holy wave, regenerate,<br/>
+If &rsquo;en as new plants renew&rsquo;d with foliage new,<br/>
+Pure and made apt for mounting to the stars.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="notes02"></a>NOTES TO PURGATORY</h2>
+
+<h5>CANTO I</h5>
+
+<p>
+Verse 1. O&rsquo;er better waves.] Berni, Orl. Inn. L 2. c. i.<br/>
+Per correr maggior acqua alza le vele,<br/>
+O debil navicella del mio ingegno.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 11. Birds of chattering note.] For the fable of the daughters of Pierus, who
+challenged the muses to sing, and were by them changed into magpies, see Ovid,
+Met. 1. v. fab. 5.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 19. Planet.] Venus.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 20. Made all the orient laugh.] Hence Chaucer, Knight&rsquo;s Tale: And all
+the orisont laugheth of the sight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is sometimes read &ldquo;orient.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 24. Four stars.] Symbolical of the four cardinal virtues, Prudence Justice,
+Fortitude, and Temperance. See Canto XXXI v. 105.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 30. The wain.] Charles&rsquo;s wain, or Bootes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 31. An old man.] Cato.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 92. Venerable plumes.] The same metaphor has occurred in Hell Canto XX. v.
+41:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&mdash;the plumes, That mark&rsquo;d the better sex.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is used by Ford in the Lady&rsquo;s Trial, a. 4. s. 2.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now the down<br/>
+Of softness is exchang&rsquo;d for plumes of age.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 58. The farthest gloom.] L&rsquo;ultima sera. Ariosto, Oroando Furioso c.
+xxxiv st. 59: Che non hen visto ancor l&rsquo;ultima sera.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And Filicaja, c. ix. Al Sonno.<br/>
+L&rsquo;ultima sera.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 79. Marcia.]<br/>
+Da fredera prisci<br/>
+Illibata tori: da tantum nomen inane<br/>
+Connubil: liceat tumulo scripsisse, Catonis<br/>
+Martia<br/>
+Lucan, Phars. 1. ii. 344.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 110. I spy&rsquo;d the trembling of the ocean stream.] Connubil il tremolar
+della marina.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Trissino, in the Sofonisba.]<br/>
+E resta in tremolar l&rsquo;onda marina
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And Fortiguerra, Rleelardetto, c. ix. st. 17. &mdash;visto il tremolar della
+marine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 135. another.] From Virg, Aen. 1. vi. 143. Primo avulso non deficit alter
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO II</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 1. Now had the sun.] Dante was now antipodal to Jerusalem, so that while the
+sun was setting with respect to that place which he supposes to be the middle
+of the inhabited earth, to him it was rising.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 6. The scales.] The constellation Libra.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 35. Winnowing the air.] Trattando l&rsquo;acre con l&rsquo;eterne penne.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+80 Filicaja, canz. viii. st. 11. Ma trattar l&rsquo;acre coll&rsquo; eterne
+plume
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 45. In exitu.] &ldquo;When Israel came out of Egypt.&rdquo; Ps. cxiv.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 75. Thrice my hands.]<br/>
+Ter conatus ibi eollo dare brachia eircum,<br/>
+Ter frustra eomprensa manus effugit imago,<br/>
+Par levibus ventis voluerique simillima sommo.<br/>
+Virg. Aen. ii. 794.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Compare Homer, Od. xl. 205.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 88. My Casella.] A Florentine, celebrated for his skill in music, &ldquo;in
+whose company,&rdquo; says Landine, &ldquo;Dante often recreated his spirits
+wearied by severe studies.&rdquo; See Dr. Burney&rsquo;s History of Music, vol.
+ii. c. iv. p. 322. Milton has a fine allusion to this meeting in his sonnet to
+Henry Lawes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 90. Hath so much time been lost.] Casella had been dead some years but was
+only just arrived.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 91. He.] The eonducting angel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 94. These three months past.] Since the time of the Jubilee, during which
+all spirits not condemned to eternal punishment, were supposed to pass over to
+Purgatory as soon as they pleased.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 96. The shore.] Ostia.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 170. &ldquo;Love that discourses in my thoughts.&rdquo;] &ldquo;Amor che
+nella mente mi ragiona.&rdquo; The first verse of a eanzone or song in the
+Convito of Dante, which he again cites in his Treatise de Vulg. Eloq. 1. ii. c.
+vi.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO III</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 9. How doth a little failing wound thee sore.] (Ch&rsquo;era al cor picciol
+fallo amaro morso. Tasso, G. L. c. x. st. 59.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 11. Haste, that mars all decency of act. Aristotle in his Physiog iii.
+reekons it among the &ldquo;the signs of an impudent man,&rdquo; that he is
+&ldquo;quick in his motions.&rdquo; Compare Sophoeles, Electra, 878.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 26. To Naples.] Virgil died at Brundusium, from whence his body is said to
+have been removed to Naples.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 38. Desiring fruitlessly.] See H. Canto IV, 39.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 49. &rsquo;Twixt Lerice and Turbia.] At that time the two extremities of the
+Genoese republic, the former on the east, the latter on the west. A very
+ingenious writer has had occasion, for a different purpose, to mention one of
+these places as remarkably secluded by its mountainous situation &ldquo;On an
+eminence among the mountains, between the two little cities, Nice and Manoca,
+is the village of Torbia, a name formed from the Greek [GREEK HERE] Mitford on
+the Harmony of Language, sect. x. p. 351. 2d edit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 78. As sheep.] The imitative nature of these animals supplies our Poet with
+another comparison in his Convito Opere, t. i. p 34. Ediz. Ven. 1793.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 110. Manfredi. King of Naples and Sicily, and the natural son of Frederick
+II. He was lively end agreeable in his manners, and delighted in poetry, music,
+and dancing. But he was luxurious and ambitious. Void of religion, and in his
+philosophy an Epicurean. See G. Villani l. vi. c. xlvii. and Mr.
+Matthias&rsquo;s Tiraboschi, v. I. p. 38. He fell in the battle with Charles of
+Anjou in 1265, alluded to in Canto XXVIII, of Hell, v. 13, &ldquo;Dying,
+excommunicated, King Charles did allow of his being buried in sacred ground,
+but he was interred near the bridge of Benevento, and on his grave there was
+cast a stone by every one of the army whence there was formed a great mound of
+stones. But some ave said, that afterwards, by command of the Pope. the Bishop
+of Cosenza took up his body and sent it out of the kingdom, because it was the
+land of the church, and that it was buried by the river Verde, on the borders
+of the kingdom and of Carapagna. this, however, we do not affirm.&rdquo; G.
+Villani, Hist. l. vii. c. 9.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 111. Costanza.] See Paradise Canto III. v. 121.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 112. My fair daughter.] Costanza, the daughter of Manfredi, and wife of
+Peter III. King of Arragon, by whom she was mother to Frederick, King of Sicily
+and James, King of Arragon With the latter of these she was at Rome 1296. See
+G. Villani, 1. viii. c. 18. and notes to Canto VII.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 122. Clement.] Pope Clement IV.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 127. The stream of Verde.] A river near Ascoli, that falls into he Toronto.
+The &ldquo;xtinguished lights &ldquo; formed part of the ceremony t the
+interment of one excommunicated.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 130. Hope.] Mentre che la speranza ha fior del verde. Tasso, G. L. c. xix.
+st. 53. &mdash;infin che verde e fior di speme.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO IV</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 1. When.] It must be owned the beginning of this Canto is somewhat obscure.
+Bellutello refers, for an elucidation of it, to the reasoning of Statius in the
+twenty-fifth canto. Perhaps some illustration may be derived from the
+following, passage in South&rsquo;s Sermons, in which I have ventured to supply
+the words between crotchets that seemed to be wanting to complete the sense.
+Now whether these three, judgement memory, and invention, are three distinct
+things, both in being distinguished from one another, and likewise from the
+substance of the soul itself, considered without any such faculties, (or
+whether the soul be one individual substance) but only receiving these several
+denominations rom the several respects arising from the several actions exerted
+immediately by itself upon several objects, or several qualities of the same
+object, I say whether of these it is, is not easy to decide, and it is well
+that it is not necessary Aquinas, and most with him, affirm the former, and
+Scotus with his followers the latter.&rdquo; Vol. iv. Serm. 1.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 23. Sanleo.] A fortress on the summit of Montefeltro.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 24. Noli.] In the Genoese territory, between Finale and Savona.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 25. Bismantua.] A steep mountain in the territory of Reggio.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 55. From the left.] Vellutello observes an imitation of Lucan in this
+passage:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ignotum vobis, Arabes, venistis in orbem,<br/>
+Umbras mirati nemornm non ire sinistras.<br/>
+Phars. s. 1. iii. 248
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 69 Thou wilt see.] &ldquo;If you consider that this mountain of Purgatory
+and that of Sion are antipodal to each other, you will perceive that the sun
+must rise on opposite sides of the respective eminences.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 119. Belacqua.] Concerning this man, the commentators afford no information.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO V</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 14. Be as a tower.] Sta ome torre ferma
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Berni, Orl. Inn. 1. 1. c. xvi. st. 48:<br/>
+In quei due piedi sta fermo il gigante<br/>
+Com&rsquo; una torre in mezzo d&rsquo;un castello.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And Milton, P. L. b. i. 591.<br/>
+Stood like a tower.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 36. Ne&rsquo;er saw I fiery vapours.] Imitated by Tasso, G. L, c.<br/>
+xix t. 62:<br/>
+Tal suol fendendo liquido sereno<br/>
+Stella cader della gran madre in seno.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And by Milton, P. L. b. iv. 558:<br/>
+Swift as a shooting star<br/>
+In autumn thwarts the night, when vapours fir&rsquo;d<br/>
+Impress the air.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 67. That land.] The Marca d&rsquo;Ancona, between Romagna and Apulia, the
+kingdom of Charles of Anjou.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 76. From thence I came.] Giacopo del Cassero, a citizen of Fano who having
+spoken ill of Azzo da Este, Marquis of Ferrara, was by his orders put to death.
+Giacopo, was overtaken by the assassins at Oriaco a place near the Brenta, from
+whence, if he had fled towards Mira, higher up on that river, instead of making
+for the marsh on the sea shore, he might have escaped.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 75. Antenor&rsquo;s land.] The city of Padua, said to be founded by Antenor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 87. Of Montefeltro I.] Buonconte (son of Guido da Montefeltro, whom we have
+had in the twenty-seventh Canto of Hell) fell in the battle of Campaldino
+(1289), fighting on the side of the Aretini.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 88. Giovanna.] Either the wife, or kinswoman, of Buonconte.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 91. The hermit&rsquo;s seat.] The hermitage of Camaldoli.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 95. Where its name is cancel&rsquo;d.] That is, between Bibbiena and Poppi,
+where the Archiano falls into the Arno.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 115. From Pratomagno to the mountain range.] From Pratomagno now called
+Prato Vecchio (which divides the Valdarno from Casentino) as far as to the
+Apennine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 131. Pia.] She is said to have been a Siennese lady, of the family of
+Tolommei, secretly made away with by her husband, Nello della Pietra, of the
+same city, in Maremma, where he had some possessions.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO VI</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 14. Of Arezzo him.] Benincasa of Arezzo, eminent for his skill in
+jurisprudence, who, having condemned to death Turrino da Turrita brother of
+Ghino di Tacco, for his robberies in Maremma, was murdered by Ghino, in an
+apartment of his own house, in the presence of many witnesses. Ghino was not
+only suffered to escape in safety, but (as the commentators inform us) obtained
+so high a reputation by the liberality with which he was accustomed to dispense
+the fruits of his plunder, and treated those who fell into his hands with so
+much courtesy, that he was afterwards invited to Rome, and knighted by Boniface
+VIII. A story is told of him by Boccaccio, G. x. N. 2.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 15. Him beside.] Ciacco de&rsquo; Tariatti of Arezzo. He is said to have
+been carried by his horse into the Arno, and there drowned, while he was in
+pursuit of certain of his enemies.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 17. Frederic Novello.] Son of the Conte Guido da Battifolle, and slain by
+one of the family of Bostoli.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 18. Of Pisa he.] Farinata de&rsquo; Scornigiani of Pisa. His father Marzuco,
+who had entered the order of the Frati Minori, so entirely overcame the
+feelings of resentment, that he even kissed the hands of the slayer of his son,
+and, as he was following the funeral, exhorted his kinsmen to reconciliation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 20. Count 0rso.] Son of Napoleone da Cerbaia, slain by Alberto da Mangona,
+his uncle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 23. Peter de la Brosse.] Secretary of Philip III of France. The courtiers,
+envying the high place which he held in the king&rsquo;s favour, prevailed on
+Mary of Brabant to charge him falsely with an attempt upon her person for which
+supposed crime he suffered death. So say the Italian commentators. Henault
+represents the matter very differently: &ldquo;Pierre de la Brosse, formerly
+barber to St. Louis, afterwards the favorite of Philip, fearing the too great
+attachment of the king for his wife Mary, accuses this princess of having
+poisoned Louis, eldest son of Philip, by his first marriage. This calumny is
+discovered by a nun of Nivelle in Flanders. La Brosse is hung.&rdquo; Abrege
+Chron. t. 275, &amp;c.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 30. In thy text.] He refers to Virgil, Aen. 1, vi. 376.<br/>
+Desine fata deum flecti sperare precando, 37. The sacred height<br/>
+Of judgment. Shakespeare, Measure for Measure, a. ii. s. 2.<br/>
+If he, which is the top of judgment
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 66. Eyeing us as a lion on his watch.] A guisa di Leon quando si posa. A
+line taken by Tasso, G. L. c. x. st. 56.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 76. Sordello.] The history of Sordello&rsquo;s life is wrapt in the
+obscurity of romance. That he distinguished himself by his skill in Provencal
+poetry is certain. It is probable that he was born towards the end of the
+twelfth, and died about the middle of the succeeding century. Tiraboschi has
+taken much pains to sift all the notices he could collect relating to him.
+Honourable mention of his name is made by our Poet in the Treatise de Vulg.
+Eloq. 1. i. c. 15.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 76. Thou inn of grief.]<br/>
+Thou most beauteous inn<br/>
+Why should hard-favour&rsquo;d grief be lodg&rsquo;d in thee?<br/>
+Shakespeare, Richard II a. 5. s. 1.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 89. Justinian&rsquo;s hand.] &ldquo;What avails it that Justinian delivered
+thee from the Goths, and reformed thy laws, if thou art no longer under the
+control of his successors in the empire?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 94. That which God commands.] He alludes to the precept- &ldquo;Render unto
+Caesar the things which are Caesar&rsquo;s.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 98. O German Albert!] The Emperor Albert I. succeeded Adolphus in 1298, and
+was murdered in 1308. See Par Canto XIX 114 v. 103. Thy successor.] The
+successor of Albert was Henry of Luxembourg, by whose interposition in the
+affairs of Italy our Poet hoped to have been reinstated in his native city.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 101. Thy sire.] The Emperor Rodolph, too intent on increasing his power in
+Germany to give much of his thoughts to Italy, &ldquo;the garden of the
+empire.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 107. Capulets and Montagues.] Our ears are so familiarized to the names of
+these rival families in the language of Shakespeare, that I have used them
+instead of the &ldquo;Montecchi&rdquo; and &ldquo;Cappelletti.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 108. Philippeschi and Monaldi.] Two other rival families in Orvieto.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 113. What safety, Santafiore can supply.] A place between Pisa and Sienna.
+What he alludes to is so doubtful, that it is not certain whether we should not
+read &ldquo;come si cura&rdquo;&mdash;&rdquo; How Santafiore is
+governed.&rdquo; Perhaps the event related in the note to v. 58, Canto XI. may
+be pointed at.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 127. Marcellus.]<br/>
+Un Marcel diventa<br/>
+Ogni villan che parteggiando viene.<br/>
+Repeated by Alamanni in his Coltivazione, 1. i.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 51. I sick wretch.] Imitated by the Cardinal de Polignac in his
+Anti-Lucretius, 1. i. 1052.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ceu lectum peragrat membris languentibus aeger<br/>
+In latus alterne faevum dextrumque recumbens<br/>
+Nec javat: inde oculos tollit resupinus in altum:<br/>
+Nusquam inventa quies; semper quaesita: quod illi<br/>
+Primum in deliciis fuerat, mox torquet et angit:<br/>
+Nec morburm sanat, nec fallit taedia morbi.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO VII</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 14. Where one of mean estate might clasp his lord.] Ariosto Orl. F. c. xxiv.
+st. 19
+</p>
+
+<p>
+E l&rsquo;abbracciaro, ove il maggior s&rsquo;abbraccia<br/>
+Col capo nudo e col ginocchio chino.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 31. The three holy virtues.] Faith, Hope and Charity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 32. The red.] Prudence, Justice, Fortitude, and Temperance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 72. Fresh emeralds.]<br/>
+Under foot the violet,<br/>
+Crocus, and hyacinth with rich inlay<br/>
+Broider&rsquo;d the ground, more colour&rsquo;d than with stone<br/>
+Of costliest emblem.<br/>
+Milton, P. L. b. iv. 793
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Compare Ariosto, Orl. F. c. xxxiv. st. 49.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 79. Salve Regina.] The beginning of a prayer to the Virgin. It is sufficient
+here to observe, that in similar instances I shall either preserve the original
+Latin words or translate them, as it may seem best to suit the purpose of the
+verse.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 91. The Emperor Rodolph.] See the last Canto, v. 104. He died in 1291.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 95. That country.] Bohemia.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 97. Ottocar.] King of Bohemia, was killed in the battle of Marchfield,
+fought with Rodolph, August 26, 1278. Winceslaus II. His son,who succeeded him
+in the kingdom of Bohemia. died in 1305. He is again taxed with luxury in the
+Paradise Canto XIX. 123.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 101. That one with the nose deprest. ] Philip III of France, who died in
+1285, at Perpignan, in his retreat from Arragon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 102. Him of gentle look.] Henry of Naverre, father of Jane married to Philip
+IV of France, whom Dante calls &ldquo;mal di Francia&rdquo;
+-&ldquo;Gallia&rsquo;s bane.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 110. He so robust of limb.] Peter III called the Great, King of Arragon, who
+died in 1285, leaving four sons, Alonzo, James, Frederick and Peter. The two
+former succeeded him in the kingdom of Arragon, and Frederick in that of
+Sicily. See G. Villani, 1. vii. c. 102. and Mariana, I. xiv. c. 9. He is
+enumerated among the Provencal poets by Millot, Hist. Litt. Des Troubadours, t.
+iii. p. 150.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 111. Him of feature prominent.] &ldquo;Dal maschio naso&rdquo;-with the
+masculine nose.&rdquo; Charles I. King of Naples, Count of Anjou, and brother
+of St. Lonis. He died in 1284. The annalist of Florence remarks, that
+&ldquo;there had been no sovereign of the house of France, since the time of
+Charlemagne, by whom Charles was surpassed either in military renown, and
+prowess, or in the loftiness of his understanding.&rdquo; G. Villani, 1. vii.
+c. 94. We shall, however, find many of his actions severely reprobated in the
+twentieth Canto.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 113. That stripling.] Either (as the old commentators suppose) Alonzo III
+King of Arragon, the eldest son of Peter III who died in 1291, at the age of
+27, or, according to Venturi, Peter the youngest son. The former was a young
+prince of virtue sufficient to have justified the eulogium and the hopes of
+Dante.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+See Mariana, 1. xiv. c. 14.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 119. Rarely.]<br/>
+Full well can the wise poet of Florence<br/>
+That hight Dante, speaken in this sentence<br/>
+Lo! in such manner rime is Dantes tale.<br/>
+Full selde upriseth by his branches smale<br/>
+Prowesse of man for God of his goodnesse<br/>
+Woll that we claim of him our gentlenesse:<br/>
+For of our elders may we nothing claime<br/>
+But temporal thing, that men may hurt and maime.<br/>
+Chaucer, Wife of Bathe&rsquo;s Tale.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Compare Homer, Od. b. ii. v. 276; Pindar, Nem. xi. 48 and<br/>
+Euripides, Electra, 369.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 122. To Charles.] &ldquo;Al Nasuto.&rdquo; -&ldquo;Charles II King of
+Naples, is no less inferior to his father Charles I. than James and Frederick
+to theirs, Peter III.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 127. Costanza.] Widow of Peter III She has been already mentioned in the
+third Canto, v. 112. By Beatrice and Margaret are probably meant two of the
+daughters of Raymond Berenger, Count of Provence; the former married to St.
+Louis of France, the latter to his brother Charles of Anjou. See Paradise,
+Canto Vl. 135. Dante therefore considers Peter as the most illustrious of the
+three monarchs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 129. Harry of England.] Henry III.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 130. Better issue.] Edward l. of whose glory our Poet was perhaps a witness,
+in his visit to England.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 133. William, that brave Marquis.] William, Marquis of Monferrat, was
+treacherously seized by his own subjects, at Alessandria, in Lombardy, A.D.
+1290, and ended his life in prison. See G. Villani, 1. vii. c. 135. A war
+ensued between the people of Alessandria and those of Monferrat and the
+Canavese.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO VIII</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 6. That seems to mourn for the expiring day.] The curfew tolls the knell of
+parting day. Gray&rsquo;s Elegy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 13. Te Lucis Ante.] The beginning of one of the evening hymns.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 36. As faculty.]
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My earthly by his heav&rsquo;nly overpower&rsquo;d
+</p>
+
+<p>
+* * * *<br/>
+As with an object, that excels the sense,<br/>
+Dazzled and spent.<br/>
+Milton, P. L. b. viii. 457.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 53. Nino, thou courteous judge.] Nino di Gallura de&rsquo; Visconti nephew
+to Count Ugolino de&rsquo; Gherardeschi, and betrayed by him. See Notes to Hell
+Canto XXXIII.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 65. Conrad.] Currado Malaspina.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 71 My Giovanna.] The daughter of Nino, and wife of Riccardo da Cammino of
+Trevigi.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 73. Her mother.] Beatrice, marchioness of Este wife of Nino, and after his
+death married to Galeazzo de&rsquo; Visconti of Milan.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 74. The white and wimpled folds.] The weeds of widowhood.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 80. The viper.] The arms of Galeazzo and the ensign of the Milanese.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 81. Shrill Gallura&rsquo;s bird.] The cock was the ensign of Gallura,
+Nino&rsquo;s province in Sardinia. Hell, Canto XXII. 80. and Notes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 115. Valdimagra.] See Hell, Canto XXIV. 144. and Notes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 133. Sev&rsquo;n times the tired sun.] &ldquo;The sun shall not enter into
+the constellation of Aries seven times more, before thou shalt have still
+better cause for the good opinion thou expresses&rdquo; of Valdimagra, in the
+kind reception thou shalt there meet with.&rdquo; Dante was hospitably received
+by the Marchese Marcello Malaspina, during his banishment. A.D. 1307.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO IX</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 1. Now the fair consort of Tithonus old.]<br/>
+La concubina di Titone antico.<br/>
+So Tassoni, Secchia Rapita, c. viii. st. 15.<br/>
+La puttanella del canuto amante.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 5. Of that chill animal.] The scorpion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 14. Our minds.] Compare Hell, Canto XXVI. 7.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 18. A golden-feathered eagle. ] Chaucer, in the house of Fame at the
+conclusion of the first book and beginning of the second, represents himself
+carried up by the &ldquo;grim pawes&rdquo; of a golden eagle. Much of his
+description is closely imitated from Dante.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 50. Lucia.] The enIightening, grace of heaven Hell, Canto II. 97.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 85. The lowest stair.] By the white step is meant the distinctness with
+which the conscience of the penitent reflects his offences, by the burnt and
+cracked one, his contrition on, their account; and by that of porphyry, the
+fervour with which he resolves on the future pursuit of piety and virtue.
+Hence, no doubt, Milton describing &ldquo;the gate of heaven,&rdquo; P. L. b.
+iii. 516.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Each stair mysteriously was meant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 100. Seven times.] Seven P&rsquo;s, to denote the seven sins (Peccata) of
+which he was to be cleansed in his passage through purgatory.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 115. One is more precious.] The golden key denotes the divine authority by
+which the priest absolves the sinners the silver expresses the learning and
+judgment requisite for the due discharge of that office.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 127. Harsh was the grating.]<br/>
+On a sudden open fly<br/>
+With impetuous recoil and jarring, sound<br/>
+Th&rsquo; infernal doors, and on their hinges grate<br/>
+Harsh thunder<br/>
+Milton, P. L. b. ii 882
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 128. The Turpeian.]<br/>
+Protinus, abducto patuerunt temple Metello.<br/>
+Tunc rupes Tarpeia sonat: magnoque reclusas<br/>
+Testatur stridore fores: tune conditus imo<br/>
+Eruitur tempo multis intactus ab annnis<br/>
+Romani census populi, &amp;c.<br/>
+Lucan. Ph. 1. iii. 157.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO X</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 6. That Wound.] Venturi justly observes, that the Padre d&rsquo;Aquino has
+misrepresented the sense of this passage in his translation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&mdash;dabat ascensum tendentibus ultra Scissa tremensque silex, tenuique
+erratica motu.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The verb &ldquo;muover&rdquo; is used in the same signification in the<br/>
+Inferno, Canto XVIII. 21.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cosi da imo della roccia scogli<br/>
+Moven.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&mdash;from the rock&rsquo;s low base Thus flinty paths advanc&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In neither place is actual motion intended to be expressed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 52. That from unbidden. office awes mankind.] Seo 2 Sam. G.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v 58. Preceding.] Ibid. 14, &amp;c.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 68. Gregory.] St. Gregory&rsquo;s prayers are said to have delivered Trajan
+from hell. See Paradise, Canto XX. 40.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 69. Trajan the Emperor. For this story, Landino refers to two writers, whom
+he calls &ldquo;Heunando,&rdquo; of France, by whom he means Elinand, a monk
+and chronicler, in the reign of Philip Augustus, and &ldquo;Polycrato,&rdquo;
+of England, by whom is meant John of Salisbury, author of the Polycraticus de
+Curialium Nugis, in the twelfth century. The passage in the text I find to be
+nearly a translation from that work, 1. v. c. 8. The original appears to be in
+Dio Cassius, where it is told of the Emperor Hadrian, lib. I xix. [GREEK HERE]
+When a woman appeared to him with a suit, as he was on a journey, at first he
+answered her, &lsquo;I have no leisure,&rsquo; but she crying out to him,
+&lsquo;then reign no longer&rsquo; he turned about, and heard her cause.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 119. As to support.] Chillingworth, ch.vi. 54. speaks of &ldquo;those
+crouching anticks, which seem in great buildings to labour under the weight
+they bear.&rdquo; And Lord Shaftesbury has a similar illustration in his Essay
+on Wit and Humour, p. 4. s. 3.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XI</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 1. 0 thou Mighty Father.] The first four lines are borrowed by Pulci, Morg.
+Magg. c. vi. Dante, in his &lsquo;Credo,&rsquo; has again versified the
+Lord&rsquo;s prayer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 58. I was of Latinum.] Omberto, the son of Guglielino Aldobrandeseo, Count
+of Santafiore, in the territory of Sienna His arrogance provoked his countrymen
+to such a pitch of fury against him, that he was murdered by them at
+Campagnatico.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 79. Oderigi.] The illuminator, or miniature painter, a friend of Giotto and
+Dante
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 83. Bolognian Franco.] Franco of Bologna, who is said to have been a pupil
+of Oderigi&rsquo;s.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 93. Cimabue.] Giovanni Cimabue, the restorer of painting, was born at
+Florence, of a noble family, in 1240, and died in 1300. The passage in the text
+is an illusion to his epitaph:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Credidit ut Cimabos picturae castra tenere,<br/>
+Sic tenuit vivens: nunc tenet astra poli.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 95. The cry is Giotto&rsquo;s.] In Giotto we have a proof at how early a
+period the fine arts were encouraged in Italy. His talents were discovered by
+Cimabue, while he was tending sheep for his father in the neighbourhood of
+Florence, and he was afterwards patronized by Pope Benedict XI and Robert King
+of Naples, and enjoyed the society and friendship of Dante, whose likeness he
+has transmitted to posterity. He died in 1336, at the age of 60.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 96. One Guido from the other.] Guido Cavalcanti, the friend of our Poet,
+(see Hell, Canto X. 59.) had eclipsed the literary fame of Guido Guinicelli, of
+a noble family in Bologna, whom we shall meet with in the twenty-sixth Canto
+and of whom frequent mention is made by our Poet in his Treatise de Vulg. Eloq.
+Guinicelli died in 1276. Many of Cavalcanti&rsquo;s writings, hitherto in MS.
+are now publishing at Florence&rdquo; Esprit des Journaux, Jan. 1813.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 97. He perhaps is born.] Some imagine, with much probability, that Dante
+here augurs the greatness of his own poetical reputation. Others have fancied
+that he prophesies the glory of Petrarch. But Petrarch was not yet born.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 136. suitor.] Provenzano salvani humbled himself so far for the sake of one
+of his friends, who was detained in captivity by Charles I of Sicily, as
+personally to supplicate the people of Sienna to contribute the sum required by
+the king for his ransom:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+and this act of self-abasement atoned for his general ambition and pride.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 140. Thy neighbours soon.] &ldquo;Thou wilt know in the time of thy
+banishment, which is near at hand, what it is to solicit favours of others and
+&lsquo;tremble through every vein,&rsquo; lest they should be refused
+thee.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XII</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 26. The Thymbraen god.] Apollo
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Si modo, quem perhibes, pater est Thymbraeus Apollo. Virg. Georg. iv. 323.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 37. Mars.]
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With such a grace,<br/>
+The giants that attempted to scale heaven<br/>
+When they lay dead on the Phlegren plain<br/>
+Mars did appear to Jove.<br/>
+Beaumont and Fletcher, The Prophetess, a. 2. s. 3.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 42. O Rehoboam.] 1 Kings, c. xii. 18.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 46. A1cmaeon.] Virg. Aen. l. vi. 445, and Homer, Od. xi. 325.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 48. Sennacherib.] 2 Kings, c. xix. 37.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 58. What master of the pencil or the style.] &mdash;inimitable on earth By
+model, or by shading pencil drawn. Milton, P. L. b. iii. 509.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 94. The chapel stands.] The church of San Miniato in Florence situated on a
+height that overlooks the Arno, where it is crossed by the bridge Rubaconte, so
+called from Messer Rubaconte da Mandelia, of Milan chief magistrate of
+Florence, by whom the bridge was founded in 1237. See G. Villani, 1. vi. c. 27.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 96. The well-guided city] This is said ironically of Florence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 99. The registry.] In allusion to certain instances of fraud committed with
+respect to the public accounts and measures See Paradise Canto XVI. 103.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XIII</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 26. They have no wine.] John, ii. 3. These words of the Virgin are referred
+to as an instance of charity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 29. Orestes] Alluding to his friendship with Pylades
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 32. Love ye those have wrong&rsquo;d you.] Matt. c. v. 44.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 33. The scourge.] &ldquo;The chastisement of envy consists in hearing
+examples of the opposite virtue, charity. As a curb and restraint on this vice,
+you will presently hear very different sounds, those of threatening and
+punishment.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 87. Citizens Of one true city.] &ldquo;For here we have no continuing city,
+but we seek to come.&rdquo; Heb. C. xiii. 14.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 101. Sapia.] A lady of Sienna, who, living in exile at Colle, was so
+overjoyed at a defeat which her countrymen sustained near that place that she
+declared nothing more was wanting to make her die contented.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 114. The merlin.] The story of the merlin is that having been induced by a
+gleam of fine weather in the winter to escape from his master, he was soon
+oppressed by the rigour of the season.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 119. The hermit Piero.] Piero Pettinagno, a holy hermit of Florence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 141. That vain multitude.] The Siennese. See Hell, Canto XXIX. 117.
+&ldquo;Their acquisition of Telamone, a seaport on the confines of the Maremma,
+has led them to conceive hopes of becoming a naval power: but this scheme will
+prove as chimerical as their former plan for the discovery of a subterraneous
+stream under their city.&rdquo; Why they gave the appellation of Diana to the
+imagined stream, Venturi says he leaves it to the antiquaries of Sienna to
+conjecture.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XIV</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 34. Maim&rsquo;d of Pelorus.] Virg. Aen. 1. iii. 414.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&mdash;a hill Torn from Pelorus Milton P. L. b. i. 232
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 45. &rsquo;Midst brute swine.] The people of Casentino.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 49. Curs.] The Arno leaves Arezzo about four miles to the left.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 53. Wolves.] The Florentines.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 55. Foxes.] The Pisans
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 61. Thy grandson.] Fulcieri de&rsquo; Calboli, grandson of Rinieri de&rsquo;
+Calboli, who is here spoken to. The atrocities predicted came to pass in 1302.
+See G. Villani, 1. viii c. 59
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 95. &rsquo;Twixt Po, the mount, the Reno, and the shore.] The boundaries of
+Romagna.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 99. Lizio.] Lizio da Valbona, introduced into Boccaccio&rsquo;s Decameron,
+G. v. N, 4.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 100. Manardi, Traversaro, and Carpigna.1 Arrigo Manardi of Faenza, or as
+some say, of Brettinoro, Pier Traversaro, lord of Ravenna, and Guido di
+Carpigna of Montefeltro.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 102. In Bologna the low artisan.] One who had been a mechanic named
+Lambertaccio, arrived at almost supreme power in Bologna.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 103. Yon Bernardin.] Bernardin di Fosco, a man of low origin but great
+talents, who governed at Faenza.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 107. Prata.] A place between Faenza and Ravenna
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 107. Of Azzo him.] Ugolino of the Ubaldini family in Tuscany He is recounted
+among the poets by Crescimbeni and Tiraboschi.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 108. Tignoso.] Federigo Tignoso of Rimini.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 109. Traversaro&rsquo;s house and Anastagio&rsquo;s.] Two noble families of
+Ravenna. She to whom Dryden has given the name of Honoria, in the fable so
+admirably paraphrased from Boccaccio, was of the former: her lover and the
+specter were of the Anastagi family.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 111. The ladies, &amp;c.] These two lines express the true spirit of
+chivalry. &ldquo;Agi&rdquo; is understood by the commentators whom I have
+consulted,to mean &ldquo;the ease procured for others by the exertions of
+knight-errantry.&rdquo; But surely it signifies the alternation of ease with
+labour.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 114. O Brettinoro.] A beautifully situated castle in Romagna, the hospitable
+residence of Guido del Duca, who is here speaking.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 118. Baynacavallo.] A castle between Imola and Ravenna
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 118. Castracaro ill And Conio worse.] Both in Romagna.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 121. Pagani.] The Pagani were lords of Faenza and Imola. One of them
+Machinardo, was named the Demon, from his treachery. See Hell, Canto XXVII. 47,
+and Note.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 124. Hugolin.] Ugolino Ubaldini, a noble and virtuous person in Faenza, who,
+on account of his age probably, was not likely to leave any offspring behind
+him. He is enumerated among the poets by Crescimbeni, and Tiraboschi. Mr.
+Matthias&rsquo;s edit. vol. i. 143
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 136. Whosoever finds Will slay me.] The words of Cain, Gen. e. iv. 14.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 142. Aglauros.] Ovid, Met. I, ii. fate. 12.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 145. There was the galling bit.] Referring to what had been before said,
+Canto XIII. 35.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XV</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 1. As much.] It wanted three hours of sunset.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 16. As when the ray.] Compare Virg. Aen. 1.viii. 22, and Apol. Rhod. 1. iii.
+755.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 19. Ascending at a glance.] Lucretius, 1. iv. 215.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 20. Differs from the stone.] The motion of light being quicker than that of
+a stone through an equal space.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 38. Blessed the merciful. Matt. c. v. 7.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 43. Romagna&rsquo;s spirit.] Guido del Duea, of Brettinoro whom we have seen
+in the preceding Canto.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 87. A dame.] Luke, c. ii. 18
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 101. How shall we those requite.] The answer of Pisistratus the tyrant to
+his wife, when she urged him to inflict the punishment of death on a young man,
+who, inflamed with love for his daughter, had snatched from her a kiss in
+public. The story is told by Valerius Maximus, 1.v. 1.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 105. A stripling youth.] The protomartyr Stephen.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XVI</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 94. As thou.] &ldquo;If thou wert still living.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 46. I was of Lombardy, and Marco call&rsquo;d.] A Venetian gentleman.
+&ldquo;Lombardo&rdquo; both was his surname and denoted the country to which he
+belonged. G. Villani, 1. vii. c. 120, terms him &ldquo;a wise and worthy
+courtier.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 58. Elsewhere.] He refers to what Guido del Duca had said in the thirteenth
+Canto, concerning the degeneracy of his countrymen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 70. If this were so.] Mr. Crowe in his Lewesdon Hill has expressed similar
+sentiments with much energy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of this be sure,<br/>
+Where freedom is not, there no virtue is, &amp;c.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Compare Origen in Genesim, Patrum Graecorum, vol. xi. p. 14. Wirer burgi, 1783.
+8vo.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 79. To mightier force.] &ldquo;Though ye are subject to a higher power than
+that of the heavenly constellations, e`en to the power of the great Creator
+himself, yet ye are still left in the possession of liberty.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 88. Like a babe that wantons sportively.] This reminds one of the Emperor
+Hadrian&rsquo;s verses to his departing soul:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Animula vagula blandula, &amp;c
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 99. The fortress.] Justice, the most necessary virtue in the chief
+magistrate, as the commentators explain it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 103. Who.] He compares the Pope, on account of the union of the temporal
+with the spiritual power in his person, to an unclean beast in the levitical
+law. &ldquo;The camel, because he cheweth the cud, but divideth not the hoof,
+he is unclean unto you.&rdquo; Levit. c. xi. 4.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 110. Two sons.] The Emperor and the Bishop of Rome.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 117. That land.] Lombardy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 119. Ere the day.] Before the Emperor Frederick II was defeated before
+Parma, in 1248. G. Villani, 1. vi. c. 35.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 126. The good Gherardo.] Gherardo di Camino of Trevigi. He is honourably
+mentioned in our Poet&rsquo;s &ldquo;Convito.&rdquo; Opere di Dante, t. i. p.
+173 Venez. 8vo. 1793. And Tiraboschi supposes him to have been the same
+Gherardo with whom the Provencal poets were used to meet with hospitable
+reception. See Mr. Matthias&rsquo;s edition, t. i. p. 137, v. 127. Conrad.]
+Currado da Palazzo, a gentleman of Brescia.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 127. Guido of Castello.] Of Reggio. All the Italians were called Lombards by
+the French.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 144. His daughter Gaia.] A lady equally admired for her modesty, the beauty
+of her person, and the excellency of her talents. Gaia, says Tiraboschi, may
+perhaps lay claim to the praise of having been the first among the Italian
+ladies, by whom the vernacular poetry was cultivated. Ibid. p. 137.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XVII</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 21. The bird, that most Delights itself in song.] I cannot think with
+Vellutello, that the swallow is here meant. Dante probably alludes to the story
+of Philomela, as it is found in Homer&rsquo;s Odyssey, b. xix. 518 rather than
+as later poets have told it. &ldquo;She intended to slay the son of her
+husband&rsquo;s brother Amphion, incited to it, by the envy of his wife, who
+had six children, while herself had only two, but through mistake slew her own
+son Itylus, and for her punishment was transformed by Jupiter into a
+nightingale.&rdquo; Cowper&rsquo;s note on the passage. In speaking of the
+nightingale, let me observe, that while some have considered its song as a
+melancholy, and others as a cheerful one, Chiabrera appears to have come
+nearest the truth, when he says, in the Alcippo, a. l. s. 1, Non mal si stanca
+d&rsquo; iterar le note O gioconde o dogliose, Al sentir dilettose.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Unwearied still reiterates her lays,<br/>
+Jocund or sad, delightful to the ear.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 26. One crucified.] Haman. See the book of Esther, c. vii. v. 34. A damsel.]
+Lavinia, mourning for her mother Amata, who, impelled by grief and indignation
+for the supposed death of Turnus, destroyed herself. Aen. 1. xii. 595.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 43. The broken slumber quivering ere it dies.] Venturi suggests that this
+bold and unusual metaphor may have been formed on that in Virgil.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Tempus erat quo prima quies mortalibus aegris<br/>
+Incipit, et dono divun gratissima serpit.<br/>
+Aen. 1. ii. 268.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 68. The peace-makers.] Matt. c. v. 9.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 81. The love.] &ldquo;A defect in our love towards God, or lukewarmness in
+piety, is here removed.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 94. The primal blessings.] Spiritual good.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 95. Th&rsquo; inferior.] Temporal good.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 102. Now.] &ldquo;It is impossible for any being, either to hate itself, or
+to hate the First Cause of all, by which it exists. We can therefore only
+rejoice in the evil which befalls others.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 111. There is.] The proud.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 114. There is.] The envious.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 117. There is he.] The resentful.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 135. Along Three circles.] According to the allegorical commentators, as
+Venturi has observed, Reason is represented under the person of Virgil, and
+Sense under that of Dante. The former leaves to the latter to discover for
+itself the three carnal sins, avarice, gluttony and libidinousness; having
+already declared the nature of the spiritual sins, pride, envy, anger, and
+indifference, or lukewarmness in piety, which the Italians call accidia, from
+the Greek word. [GREEK HERE]
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XVIII</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 1. The teacher ended.] Compare Plato, Protagoras, v. iii. p. 123. Bip. edit.
+[GREEK HERE] Apoll. Rhod. 1. i. 513, and Milton, P. L. b. viii. 1. The angel
+ended, &amp;c.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 23. Your apprehension.] It is literally, &ldquo;Your apprehensive faculty
+derives intention from a thing really existing, and displays the intention
+within you, so that it makes the soul turn to it.&rdquo; The commentators
+labour in explaining this; and whatever sense they have elicited may, I think,
+be resolved into the words of the translation in the text.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 47. Spirit.] The human soul, which differs from that of brutes, inasmuch as,
+though united with the body, it has a separate existence of its own. v. 65.
+Three men.] The great moral philosophers among the heathens.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 78. A crag.] I have preferred the reading of Landino, scheggion,
+&ldquo;crag,&rdquo; conceiving it to be more poetical than secchion,
+&ldquo;bucket,&rdquo; which is the common reading. The same cause, the vapours,
+which the commentators say might give the appearance of increased magnitude to
+the moon, might also make her seem broken at her rise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 78. Up the vault.] The moon passed with a motion opposite to that of the
+heavens, through the constellation of the scorpion, in which the sun is, when
+to those who are in Rome he appears to set between the isles of Corsica and
+Sardinia.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 84. Andes.] Andes, now Pietola, made more famous than Mantua near which it
+is situated, by having been the birthplace of Virgil.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 92. Ismenus and Asopus.] Rivers near Thebes
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 98. Mary.] Luke, c i. 39, 40
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 99. Caesar.] See Lucan, Phars. I. iii. and iv, and Caesar de Bello Civiii,
+I. i. Caesar left Brutus to complete the siege of Marseilles, and hastened on
+to the attack of Afranius and Petreius, the generals of Pompey, at Ilerda
+(Lerida) in Spain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 118. abbot.] Alberto, abbot of San Zeno in Verona, when Frederick I was
+emperor, by whom Milan was besieged and reduced to ashes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 121. There is he.] Alberto della Scala, lord of Verona, who had made his
+natural son abbot of San Zeno.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 133. First they died.] The Israelites, who, on account of their
+disobedience, died before reaching the promised land.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 135. And they.] Virg Aen. 1. v.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XIX</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 1. The hour.] Near the dawn.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 4. The geomancer.] The geomancers, says Landino, when they divined, drew a
+figure consisting of sixteen marks, named from so many stars which constitute
+the end of Aquarius and the beginning of Pisces. One of these they called
+&ldquo;the greater fortune.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 7. A woman&rsquo;s shape.] Worldly happiness. This allegory reminds us of
+the &ldquo;Choice of Hercules.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 14. Love&rsquo;s own hue.]<br/>
+A smile that glow&rsquo;d<br/>
+Celestial rosy red, love&rsquo;s proper hue.<br/>
+Milton, P. L. b. viii. 619
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&mdash;facies pulcherrima tune est<br/>
+Quum porphyriaco variatur candida rubro<br/>
+Quid color hic roseus sibi vult? designat amorem:<br/>
+Quippe amor est igni similis; flammasque rubentes<br/>
+Ignus habere solet.<br/>
+Palingenii Zodiacus Vitae, 1. xii.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 26. A dame.] Philosophy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 49. Who mourn.] Matt. c. v. 4.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 72. My soul.] Psalm cxix. 5
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 97. The successor of Peter Ottobuono, of the family of Fieschi Counts of
+Lavagna, died thirty-nine days after he became Pope, with the title of Adrian
+V, in 1276.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 98. That stream.] The river Lavagna, in the Genoese territory.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 135. nor shall be giv&rsquo;n in marriage.] Matt. c. xxii. 30. &ldquo;Since
+in this state we neither marry nor are given in marriage, I am no longer the
+spouse of the church, and therefore no longer retain my former dignity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 140. A kinswoman.] Alagia is said to have been the wife of the Marchese
+Marcello Malaspina, one of the poet&rsquo;s protectors during his exile. See
+Canto VIII. 133.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XX</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 3. I drew the sponge.] &ldquo;I did not persevere in my inquiries from the
+spirit though still anxious to learn more.&rdquo; v. 11. Wolf.] Avarice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 16. Of his appearing.] He is thought to allude to Can Grande della Scala.
+See Hell, Canto I. 98.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 25. Fabricius.] Compare Petrarch, Tr. della Fama, c. 1.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Un Curio ed un Fabricio, &amp;c.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 30. Nicholas.] The story of Nicholas is, that an angel having revealed to
+him that the father of a family was so impoverished as to resolve on exposing
+the chastity of his three daughters to sale, he threw in at the window of their
+house three bags of money, containing a sufficient portion for each of them. v.
+42. Root.] Hugh Capet, ancestor of Philip IV. v. 46. Had Ghent and Douay, Lille
+and Bruges power.] These cities had lately been seized by Philip IV. The spirit
+is made to imitate the approaching defeat of the French army by the Flemings,
+in the battle of Courtrai, which happened in 1302. v. 51. The slaughter&rsquo;s
+trade.] This reflection on the birth of his ancestor induced Francis I to
+forbid the reading of Dante in his dominions Hugh Capet, who came to the throne
+of France in 987, was however the grandson of Robert, who was the brother of
+Eudes, King of France in 888.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 52. All save one.] The posterity of Charlemagne, the second race of French
+monarchs, had failed, with the exception of Charles of Lorraine who is said, on
+account of the melancholy temper of his mind, to have always clothed himself in
+black. Venturi suggest that Dante may have confounded him with Childeric III
+the last of the Merosvingian, or first, race, who was deposed and made a monk
+in 751.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 57. My son.] Hugh Capet caused his son Robert to be crowned at Orleans.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 59. The Great dower of Provence.] Louis IX, and his brother Charles of
+Anjou, married two of the four daughters of Raymond Berenger Count of Provence.
+See Par. Canto VI. 135.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 63. For amends.] This is ironical
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 64. Poitou it seiz&rsquo;d, Navarre and Gascony.] I venture to read- Potti e
+Navarra prese e Guascogna,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+instead of
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ponti e Normandia prese e Guascogna<br/>
+Seiz&rsquo;d Ponthieu, Normandy and Gascogny.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Landino has &ldquo;Potti,&rdquo; and he is probably right for Poitou was
+annexed to the French crown by Philip IV. See Henault, Abrege Chron. A.D. l283,
+&amp;c. Normandy had been united to it long before by Philip Augustus, a
+circumstance of which it is difficult to imagine that Dante should have been
+ignorant, but Philip IV, says Henault, ibid., took the title of King of
+Navarre: and the subjugation of Navarre is also alluded to in the Paradise,
+Canto XIX. 140. In 1293, Philip IV summoned Edward I. to do him homage for the
+duchy of Gascogny, which he had conceived the design of seizing. See G.
+Villani, l. viii. c. 4.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 66. Young Conradine.] Charles of Anjou put Conradine to death in 1268; and
+became King of Naples. See Hell, Canto XXVIII, 16, and Note.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 67. Th&rsquo; angelic teacher.] Thomas Aquinas. He was reported to have been
+poisoned by a physician, who wished to ingratiate himself with Charles of
+Anjou. G. Villani, I. ix. c. 218. We shall find him in the Paradise, Canto X.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 69. Another Charles.] Charles of Valois, brother of Philip IV, was sent by
+Pope Boniface VIII to settle the disturbed state of Florence. In consequence of
+the measures he adopted for that purpose, our poet and his friend, were
+condemned to exile and death.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 71. -with that lance Which the arch-traitor tilted with.]
+</p>
+
+<p>
+con la lancia Con la qual giostro Guida.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+If I remember right, in one of the old romances, Judas is represented tilting
+with our Saviour.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 78. The other.] Charles, King of Naples, the eldest son of Charles of Anjou,
+having, contrary to the directions of his father, engaged with Ruggier de
+Lauria, the admiral of Peter of Arragon, was made prisoner and carried into
+Sicily, June, 1284. He afterwards, in consideration of a large sum of money,
+married his daughter to Azzo VI11, Marquis of Ferrara.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 85. The flower-de-luce.] Boniface VIII was seized at Alagna in Campagna, by
+order of Philip IV., in the year 1303, and soon after died of grief. G.
+Villani, 1. viii. c. 63.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 94. Into the temple.] It is uncertain whether our Poet alludes still to the
+event mentioned in the preceding Note, or to the destruction of the order of
+the Templars in 1310, but the latter appears more probable.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 103. Pygmalion.] Virg. Aen. 1. i. 348.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 107. Achan.] Joshua, c. vii.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 111. Heliodorus.] 2 Maccabees, c. iii. 25. &ldquo;For there appeared unto
+them a horse, with a terrible rider upon him, and adorned with a very fair
+covering, and he ran fiercely and smote at Heliodorus with his forefeet.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 112. Thracia&rsquo;s king.] Polymnestor, the murderer of Polydorus. Hell,
+Canto XXX, 19.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 114. Crassus.] Marcus Crassus, who fell miserably in the Parthian war. See
+Appian, Parthica.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XXI</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 26. She.] Lachesis, one of the three fates.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 43. &mdash;that, which heaven in itself Doth of itself receive.] Venturi, I
+think rightly interprets this to be light.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 49. Thaumantian.] Figlia di Taumante [GREEK HERE]
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Compare Plato, Theaet. v. ii. p. 76. Bip. edit., Virg; Aen. ix. 5, and Spenser,
+Faery Queen, b. v. c. 3. st. 25.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 85. The name.] The name of Poet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 89. From Tolosa.] Dante, as many others have done, confounds Statius the
+poet, who was a Neapolitan, with a rhetorician of the same name, who was of
+Tolosa, or Thoulouse. Thus Chaucer, Temple of Fame, b. iii. The Tholason, that
+height Stace.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 94. Fell.] Statius lived to write only a small part of the Achilleid.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XXII</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 5. Blessed.] Matt. v. 6.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 14. Aquinum&rsquo;s bard.] Juvenal had celebrated his contemporary Statius,
+Sat. vii. 82; though some critics imagine that there is a secret derision
+couched under his praise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 28. Why.] Quid non mortalia pecaora cogis Anri sacra fames? Virg. Aen. 1.
+iii. 57
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Venturi supposes that Dante might have mistaken the meaning of the word sacra,
+and construed it &ldquo;holy,&rdquo; instead of &ldquo;cursed.&rdquo; But I see
+no necessity for having recourse to so improbable a conjecture.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 41. The fierce encounter.] See Hell, Canto VII. 26.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 46. With shorn locks.] Ibid. 58.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 57. The twin sorrow of Jocasta&rsquo;s womb.] Eteocles and Polynices
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 71. A renovated world.] Virg. Ecl. iv. 5
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 100. That Greek.] Homer
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 107. Of thy train. ] Of those celebrated in thy Poem.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 112. Tiresias&rsquo; daughter.] Dante appears to have forgotten that he had
+placed Manto, the daughter of Tiresias, among the sorcerers. See Hell Canto XX.
+Vellutello endeavours, rather awkwardly, to reconcile the inconsistency, by
+observing, that although she was placed there as a sinner, yet, as one of
+famous memory, she had also a place among the worthies in Limbo.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lombardi excuses our author better, by observing that Tiresias had a daughter
+named Daphne. See Diodorus Siculus, 1. iv. 66.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 139. Mary took more thought.] &ldquo;The blessed virgin, who answers for yon
+now in heaven, when she said to Jesus, at the marriage in Cana of Galilee,
+&lsquo;they have no wine,&rsquo; regarded not the gratification of her own
+taste, but the honour of the nuptial banquet.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 142 The women of old Rome.] See Valerius Maximus, 1. ii. c. i.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XXIII</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 9. My lips.] Psalm ii. 15.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 20. The eyes.] Compare Ovid, Metam. 1. viii. 801
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 26. When Mary.] Josephus, De Bello Jud. 1. vii. c. xxi. p. 954 Ed Genev.
+fol. 1611. The shocking story is well told
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 27. Rings.]<br/>
+In this habit<br/>
+Met I my father with his bleeding rings<br/>
+Their precious stones new lost.<br/>
+Shakespeare, Lear, a. 5. s. 3
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 28. Who reads the name.] &ldquo;He, who pretends to distinguish the letters
+which form OMO in the features of the human face, &ldquo;might easily have
+traced out the M on their emaciated countenances.&rdquo; The temples, nose, and
+forehead are supposed to represent this letter; and the eyes the two O&rsquo;s
+placed within each side of it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 44. Forese.] One of the brothers of Piccarda, she who is again spoken of in
+the next Canto, and introduced in the Paradise, Canto III.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+V. 72. If the power.] &ldquo;If thou didst delay thy repentance to the last,
+when thou hadst lost the power of sinning, how happens it thou art arrived here
+so early?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 76. Lower.] In the Ante-Purgatory. See Canto II.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 80. My Nella.] The wife of Forese.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 87. The tract most barb&rsquo;rous of Sardinia&rsquo;s isle.] The Barbagia
+is part of Sardinia, to which that name was given, on account of the
+uncivilized state of its inhabitants, who are said to have gone nearly naked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 91. The&rsquo; unblushing domes of Florence.] Landino&rsquo;s note exhibits
+a curious instance of the changeableness of his countrywomen. He even goes
+beyond the acrimony of the original. &ldquo;In those days,&rdquo; says the
+commentator, &ldquo;no less than in ours, the Florentine ladies exposed the
+neck and bosom, a dress, no doubt, more suitable to a harlot than a matron.
+But, as they changed soon after, insomuch that they wore collars up to the
+chin, covering the whole of the neck and throat, so have I hopes they will
+change again; not indeed so much from motives of decency, as through that
+fickleness, which pervades every action of their lives.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 97. Saracens.] &ldquo;This word, during the middle ages, was
+indiscriminately applied to Pagans and Mahometans; in short, to all nations
+(except the Jew&rsquo;s) who did not profess Christianity.&rdquo; Mr.
+Ellis&rsquo;s specimens of Early English Metrical Romances, vol. i. page 196, a
+note. Lond. 8vo. 1805.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XXIV</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 20. Buonaggiunta.] Buonaggiunta Urbiciani, of Lucca. &ldquo;There is a
+canzone by this poet, printed in the collection made by the Giunti, (p.
+209,).land a sonnet to Guido Guinicelli in that made by Corbinelli, (p 169,)
+from which we collect that he lived not about 1230, as Quadrio supposes, (t.
+ii. p. 159,) but towards the end of the thirteenth century. Concerning, other
+poems by Buonaggiunta, that are preserved in MS. in some libraries, Crescimbeni
+may be consulted.&rdquo; Tiraboschi, Mr. Matthias&rsquo;s ed. v. i. p. 115.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 23. He was of Tours.] Simon of Tours became Pope, with the title of Martin
+IV in 1281 and died in 1285.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 29. Ubaldino.] Ubaldino degli Ubaldini, of Pila, in the Florentine
+territory.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 30. Boniface.] Archbishop of Ravenna. By Venturi he is called Bonifazio de
+Fieschi, a Genoese, by Vellutello, the son of the above, mentioned Ubaldini and
+by Laudino Francioso, a Frenchman.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 32. The Marquis.] The Marchese de&rsquo; Rigogliosi, of Forli.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 38. gentucca.] Of this lady it is thought that our Poet became enamoured
+during his exile. v. 45. Whose brow no wimple shades yet.] &ldquo;Who has not
+yet assumed the dress of a woman.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 46. Blame it as they may.] See Hell, Canto XXI. 39.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 51. Ladies, ye that con the lore of love.]Donne ch&rsquo; avete intelletto
+d&rsquo;amore.The first verse of a canzone in our author&rsquo;s Vita Nuova.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 56. The Notary.] Jucopo da Lentino, called the Notary, a poet of these
+times. He was probably an Apulian: for Dante, (De Vulg. Eloq. I. i. c 12.)
+quoting a verse which belongs to a canzone of his published by the Giunti,
+without mentioning the writer&rsquo;s name, terms him one of &ldquo;the
+illustrious Apulians,&rdquo; praefulgentes Apuli. See Tiraboschi, Mr.
+Matthias&rsquo;s edit. vol. i. p. 137. Crescimbeni (1. i. Della Volg. Poes p.
+72. 4to. ed. 1698) gives an extract from one of his poems, printed in
+Allacci&rsquo;s Collection, to show that the whimsical compositions called
+&ldquo;Ariette &ldquo; are not of modern invention.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 56. Guittone.] Fra Guittone, of Arezzo, holds a distinguished place in
+Italian literature, as besides his poems printed in the collection of the
+Giunti, he has left a collection of letters, forty in number, which afford the
+earliest specimen of that kind of writing in the language. They were published
+at Rome in 1743, with learned illustrations by Giovanni Bottari. He was also
+the first who gave to the sonnet its regular and legitimate form, a species of
+composition in which not only his own countrymen, but many of the best poets in
+all the cultivated languages of modern Europe, have since so much delighted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Guittone, a native of Arezzo, was the son of Viva di Michele. He was of the
+order of the &ldquo; Frati Godenti,&rdquo; of which an account may be seen in
+the Notes to Hell, Canto XXIII. In the year 1293, he founded a monastery of the
+order of Camaldoli, in Florence, and died in the following year. Tiraboschi,
+Ibid. p. 119. Dante, in the Treatise de Vulg. Eloq. 1. i. c. 13, and 1. ii. c.
+6., blames him for preferring the plebeian to the mor courtly style; and
+Petrarch twice places him in the company of our Poet. Triumph of Love, cap. iv.
+and Son. Par. See &ldquo;Sennuccio mio&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 63. The birds.] Hell, Canto V. 46, Euripides, Helena, 1495, and Statius;
+Theb. 1. V. 12. v. 81. He.] Corso Donati was suspected of aiming at the
+sovereignty of Florence. To escape the fury of his fellow citizens, he fled
+away on horseback, but failing, was overtaken and slain, A.D. 1308. The
+contemporary annalist, after relating at length the circumstances of his fate,
+adds, &ldquo;that he was one of the wisest and most valorous knights the best
+speaker, the most expert statesman, the most renowned and enterprising, man of
+his age in Italy, a comely knight and of graceful carriage, but very worldly,
+and in his time had formed many conspiracies in Florence and entered into many
+scandalous practices, for the sake of attaining state and lordship.&rdquo; G.
+Villani, 1. viii. c. 96. The character of Corso is forcibly drawn by another of
+his contemporaries Dino Compagni. 1. iii., Muratori, Rer. Ital. Script. t. ix.
+p. 523.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 129. Creatures of the clouds.] The Centaurs. Ovid. Met. 1. fab. 4 v. 123.
+The Hebrews.] Judges, c. vii.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XXV</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 58. As sea-sponge.] The fetus is in this stage is zoophyte.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 66. -More wise Than thou, has erred.] Averroes is said to be here meant.
+Venturi refers to his commentary on Aristotle, De Anim 1. iii. c. 5. for the
+opinion that there is only one universal intellect or mind pervading every
+individual of the human race. Much of the knowledge displayed by our Poet in
+the present Canto appears to have been derived from the medical work o+
+Averroes, called the Colliget. Lib. ii. f. 10. Ven. 1400. fol.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 79. Mark the sun&rsquo;s heat.] Redi and Tiraboschi (Mr. Matthias&rsquo;s
+ed. v. ii. p. 36.) have considered this an anticipation of a profound discovery
+of Galileo&rsquo;s in natural philosophy, but it is in reality taken from a
+passage in Cicero &ldquo;de Senectute,&rdquo; where, speaking of the grape, he
+says, &ldquo; quae, et succo terrae et calore solis augescens, primo est
+peracerba gustatu, deinde maturata dulcescit.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 123. I do, not know a man.] Luke, c. i. 34.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 126. Callisto.] See Ovid, Met. 1. ii. fab. 5.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XXVI</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 70. Caesar.] For the opprobrium east on Caesar&rsquo;s effeminacy, see
+Suetonius, Julius Caesar, c. 49.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 83. Guinicelli.] See Note to Canto XI. 96.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 87. lycurgus.] Statius, Theb. 1. iv. and v. Hypsipile had left her infant
+charge, the son of Lycurgus, on a bank, where it was destroyed by a serpent,
+when she went to show the Argive army the river of Langia: and, on her escaping
+the effects of Lycurgus&rsquo;s resentment, the joy her own children felt at
+the sight of her was such as our Poet felt on beholding his predecessor
+Guinicelli.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The incidents are beautifully described in Statius, and seem to have made an
+impression on Dante, for he again (Canto XXII. 110.) characterizes Hypsipile,
+as her- Who show&rsquo;d Langia&rsquo;s wave.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 111. He.] The united testimony of Dante, and of Petrarch, in his Triumph of
+Love, e. iv. places Arnault Daniel at the head of the Provencal poets. That he
+was born of poor but noble parents, at the castle of Ribeyrae in Perigord, and
+that he was at the English court, is the amount of Millot&rsquo;s information
+concerning him (t. ii. p. 479).
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The account there given of his writings is not much more satisfactory, and the
+criticism on them must go for little better than nothing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is to be regretted that we have not an opportunity of judging for ourselves
+of his &ldquo;love ditties and his tales of prose &ldquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Versi d&rsquo;amore e prose di romanzi.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Our Poet frequently cities him in the work De Vulgari Eloquentia. According to
+Crescimbeni, (Della Volg. Poes. 1. 1. p. 7. ed. 1698.) He died in 1189.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 113. The songster of Limoges.] Giraud de Borneil, of Sideuil, a castle in
+Limoges. He was a troubadour, much admired and caressed in his day, and appears
+to have been in favour with the monarchs of Castile, Leon, Navarre, and Arragon
+He is quoted by Dante, De Vulg. Eloq., and many of his poems are still
+remaining in MS. According to Nostradamus he died in 1278. Millot, Hist. Litt.
+des Troub. t. ii. p. 1 and 23. But I suspect that there is some error in this
+date, and that he did not live to see so late a period.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 118. Guittone.] See Cano XXIV. 56.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 123. Far as needs.] See Canto XI. 23.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 132. Thy courtesy.] Arnault is here made to speak in his own tongue, the
+Provencal. According to Dante, (De Vulg. Eloq. 1. 1. c. 8.) the Provencal was
+one language with the Spanish. What he says on this subject is so curious, that
+the reader will perhaps not be displeased it I give an abstract of it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He first makes three great divisions of the European languages. &ldquo;One of
+these extends from the mouths of the Danube, or the lake of Maeotis, to the
+western limits of England, and is bounded by the limits of the French and
+Italians, and by the ocean. One idiom obtained over the whole of this space:
+but was afterwards subdivided into, the Sclavonian, Hungarian, Teutonic, Saxon,
+English, and the vernacular tongues of several other people, one sign remaining
+to all, that they use the affirmative io, (our English ay.) The whole of
+Europe, beginning from the Hungarian limits and stretching towards the east,
+has a second idiom which reaches still further than the end of Europe into
+Asia. This is the Greek. In all that remains of Europe, there is a third idiom
+subdivided into three dialects, which may be severally distinguished by the use
+of the affirmatives, oc, oil, and si; the first spoken by the Spaniards, the
+next by the French, and the third by the Latins (or Italians). The first occupy
+the western part of southern Europe, beginning from the limits of the Genoese.
+The third occupy the eastern part from the said limits, as far, that is, as the
+promontory of Italy, where the Adriatic sea begins, and to Sicily. The second
+are in a manner northern with respect to these for they have the Germans to the
+east and north, on the west they are bounded by the English sea, and the
+mountains of Arragon, and on the south by the people of Provence and the
+declivity of the Apennine.&rdquo; Ibid. c. x. &ldquo;Each of these
+three,&rdquo; he observes, &ldquo;has its own claims to distinction The
+excellency of the French language consists in its being best adapted, on
+account of its facility and agreeableness, to prose narration, (quicquid
+redactum, sive inventum est ad vulgare prosaicum suum est); and he instances
+the books compiled on the gests of the Trojans and Romans and the delightful
+adventures of King Arthur, with many other histories and works of instruction.
+The Spanish (or Provencal) may boast of its having produced such as first
+cultivated in this as in a more perfect and sweet language, the vernacular
+poetry: among whom are Pierre d&rsquo;Auvergne, and others more ancient. The
+privileges of the Latin, or Italian are two: first that it may reckon for its
+own those writers who have adopted a more sweet and subtle style of poetry, in
+the number of whom are Cino, da Pistoia and his friend, and the next, that its
+writers seem to adhere to, certain general rules of grammar, and in so doing
+give it, in the opinion of the intelligent, a very weighty pretension to
+preference.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XXVII</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 1. The sun.] At Jerusalem it was dawn, in Spain midnight, and in India
+noonday, while it was sunset in Purgatory
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 10. Blessed.] Matt. c. v. 8.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 57. Come.] Matt. c. xxv. 34.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 102. I am Leah.] By Leah is understood the active life, as Rachel figures
+the contemplative. The divinity is the mirror in which the latter looks. Michel
+Angelo has made these allegorical personages the subject of two statues on the
+monument of Julius II. in the church of S. Pietro in Vincolo. See Mr.
+Duppa&rsquo;s Life of Michel Angelo, Sculpture viii. And x. and p 247.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 135. Those bright eyes.] The eyes of Beatrice.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XXVIII</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 11. To that part.] The west.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 14. The feather&rsquo;d quiristers] Imitated by Boccaccio, Fiammetta, 1. iv.
+&ldquo;Odi i queruli uccelli,&rdquo; &amp;c. &mdash;&ldquo;Hear the querulous
+birds plaining with sweet songs, and the boughs trembling, and, moved by a
+gentle wind, as it were keeping tenor to their notes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 7. A pleasant air.] Compare Ariosto, O. F. c. xxxiv. st. 50.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. Chiassi.] This is the wood where the scene of Boccaccio&rsquo;s sublimest
+story is laid. See Dec. g. 5. n. 8. and Dryden&rsquo;s Theodore and Honoria Our
+Poet perhaps wandered in it daring his abode with Guido Novello da Polenta.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 41. A lady.] Most of the commentators suppose, that by this lady, who in the
+last Canto is called Matilda, is to be understood the Countess Matilda, who
+endowed the holy see with the estates called the Patrimony of St. Peter, and
+died in 1115. See G. Villani, 1. iv. e. 20 But it seems more probable that she
+should be intended for an allegorical personage.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 80. Thou, Lord hast made me glad.] Psalm xcii. 4
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 146. On the Parnassian mountain.] In bicipiti somniasse Parnasso. Persius
+Prol.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XXIX</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 76. Listed colours.]<br/>
+Di sette liste tutte in quel colori, &amp;c.<br/>
+&mdash;a bow<br/>
+Conspicuous with three listed colours gay.<br/>
+Milton, P. L. b. xi. 865.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 79. Ten paces.] For an explanation of the allegorical meaning of this
+mysterious procession, Venturi refers those &ldquo;who would see in the
+dark&rdquo; to the commentaries of Landino, Vellutello, and others: and adds
+that it is evident the Poet has accommodated to his own fancy many sacred
+images in the Apocalypse. In Vasari&rsquo;s Life of Giotto, we learn that Dante
+recommended that book to his friend, as affording fit subjects for his pencil.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 89. Four.] The four evangelists.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 96. Ezekiel.] Chap. 1. 4.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 101. John.] Rev. c. iv. 8.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 104. Gryphon.] Under the Gryphon, an imaginary creature, the forepart of
+which is an eagle, and the hinder a lion, is shadowed forth the union of the
+divine and human nature in Jesus Christ. The car is the church.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 115. Tellus&rsquo; prayer.] Ovid, Met. 1. ii. v. 279.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 116. Three nymphs.] The three evangelical virtues: the first Charity, the
+next Hope, and the third Faith. Faith may be produced by charity, or charity by
+faith, but the inducements to hope must arise either from one or other of
+these.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 125. A band quaternion.] The four moral or cardinal virtues, of whom
+Prudence directs the others.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 129. Two old men.] Saint Luke, characterized as the writer of the Arts of
+the Apostles and Saint Paul.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 133. Of the great Coan.] Hippocrates, &ldquo;whom nature made for the
+benefit of her favourite creature, man.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 138. Four others.] &ldquo;The commentators,&rdquo; says Venturi;
+&ldquo;suppose these four to be the four evangelists, but I should rather take
+them to be four principal doctors of the church.&rdquo; Yet both Landino and
+Vellutello expressly call them the authors of the epistles, James, Peter, John
+and Jude.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 140. One single old man.] As some say, St. John, under his character of the
+author of the Apocalypse. But in the poem attributed to Giacopo, the son of our
+Poet, which in some MSS, accompanies the original of this work, and is
+descriptive of its plan, this old man is said to be Moses.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+E&rsquo;l vecchio, ch&rsquo; era dietro a tutti loro<br/>
+Fu Moyse.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And the old man, who was behind them all,<br/>
+Was Moses.<br/>
+See No. 3459 of the Harl. MSS. in the British Museum.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XXX</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 1. The polar light.] The seven candlesticks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 12. Come.] Song of Solomon, c. iv. 8.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 19. Blessed.] Matt. c. xxi. 9.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 20. From full hands.] Virg. Aen 1. vi. 884.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 97. The old flame.] Agnosco veteris vestigia flammae Virg. Aen. I. I. 23.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Conosco i segni dell&rsquo; antico fuoco.<br/>
+Giusto de&rsquo; Conti, La Bella Mano.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 61. Nor.] &ldquo;Not all the beauties of the terrestrial Paradise; in which
+I was, were sufficient to allay my grief.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 85. But.] They sang the thirty-first Psalm, to the end of the eighth verse.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 87. The living rafters.] The leafless woods on the Apennine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 90. The land whereon no shadow falls.] &ldquo;When the wind blows, from off
+Africa, where, at the time of the equinox, bodies being under the equator cast
+little or no shadow; or, in other words, when the wind is south.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 98. The ice.] Milton has transferred this conceit, though scarcely worth the
+pains of removing, into one of his Italian poems, son.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XXXI</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 3. With lateral edge.] The words of Beatrice, when not addressed directly to
+himself, but speaking to the angel of hell, Dante had thought sufficiently
+harsh.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 39. Counter to the edge.] &ldquo;The weapons of divine justice are blunted
+by the confession and sorrow of the offender.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 58. Bird.] Prov. c. i. 17
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 69. From Iarbas&rsquo; land.] The south.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 71. The beard.] &ldquo;I perceived, that when she desired me to raise my
+beard, instead of telling me to lift up my head, a severe reflection was
+implied on my want of that wisdom which should accompany the age of
+manhood.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 98. Tu asperges me.] A prayer repeated by the priest at sprinkling the holy
+water.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 106. And in the heaven are stars.] See Canto I. 24.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 116. The emeralds.] The eyes of Beatrice.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XXXII</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 2. Their ten years&rsquo; thirst.] Beatrice had been dead ten years.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 9. Two fix&rsquo;d a gaze.] The allegorical interpretation of Vellutello
+whether it be considered as justly terrible from the text or not, conveys so
+useful a lesson, that it deserves our notice. &ldquo;The understanding is
+sometimes so intently engaged in contemplating the light of divine truth in the
+scriptures, that it becomes dazzled, and is made less capable of attaining such
+knowledge, than if it had sought after it with greater moderation&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 39. Its tresses.] Daniel, c. iv. 10, &amp;c.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 41. The Indians.]<br/>
+Quos oceano proprior gerit India lucos.<br/>
+Virg. Georg. 1. ii. 122,<br/>
+Such as at this day to Indians known.<br/>
+Milton, P. L. b. ix. 1102.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 51. When large floods of radiance.] When the sun enters into Aries, the
+constellation next to that of the Fish.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 63. Th&rsquo; unpitying eyes.] See Ovid, Met. 1. i. 689.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 74. The blossoming of that fair tree.] Our Saviour&rsquo;s transfiguration.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 97. Those lights.] The tapers of gold.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 101. That true Rome.] Heaven.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 110. The bird of Jove.] This, which is imitated from Ezekiel, c. xvii. 3, 4.
+appears to be typical of the persecutions which the church sustained from the
+Roman Emperors.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 118. A fox.] By the fox perhaps is represented the treachery of the
+heretics.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 124. With his feathers lin&rsquo;d.]. An allusion to the donations made by
+the Roman Emperors to the church.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 130. A dragon.] Probably Mahomet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 136. With plumes.] The donations before mentioned.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 142. Heads.] By the seven heads, it is supposed with sufficient probability,
+are meant the seven capital sins, by the three with two horns, pride, anger,
+and avarice, injurious both to man himself and to his neighbor: by the four
+with one horn, gluttony, lukewarmness, concupiscence, and envy, hurtful, at
+least in their primary effects, chiefly to him who is guilty of them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 146. O&rsquo;er it.] The harlot is thought to represent the state of the
+church under Boniface VIII and the giant to figure Philip IV of France.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 155. Dragg&rsquo;d on.] The removal of the Pope&rsquo;s residence from Rome
+to Avignon is pointed at.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XXXIII</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 1. The Heathen.] Psalm lxxix. 1.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 36. Hope not to scare God&rsquo;s vengeance with a sop.] &ldquo;Let not him
+who hath occasioned the destruction of the church, that vessel which the
+serpent brake, hope to appease the anger of the Deity by any outward acts of
+religious, or rather superstitious, ceremony, such as was that, in our
+poet&rsquo;s time, performed by a murderer at Florence, who imagined himself
+secure from vengeance, if he ate a sop of bread in wine, upon the grave of the
+person murdered, within the space of nine days.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 38. That eagle.] He prognosticates that the Emperor of Germany will not
+always continue to submit to the usurpations of the Pope, and foretells the
+coming of Henry VII Duke of Luxembourg signified by the numerical figures DVX;
+or, as Lombardi supposes, of Can Grande della Scala, appointed the leader of
+the Ghibelline forces. It is unnecessary to point out the imitation of the
+Apocalypse in the manner of this prophecy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 50. The Naiads.] Dante, it is observed, has been led into a mistake by a
+corruption in the text of Ovid&rsquo;s Metam. I. vii. 75, where he found-
+Carmina Naiades non intellecta priorum;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+instead of Carmina Laiades, &amp;c. as it has been since corrected. Lombardi
+refers to Pansanias, where &ldquo;the Nymphs&rdquo; are spoken of as expounders
+of oracles for a vindication of the poet&rsquo;s accuracy. Should the reader
+blame me for not departing from the error of the original (if error it be), he
+may substitute
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Events shall be the Oedipus will solve, &amp;c.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 67. Elsa&rsquo;s numbing waters.] The Elsa, a little stream, which flows
+into the Arno about twenty miles below Florence, is said to possess a
+petrifying quality.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 78. That one brings home his staff inwreath&rsquo;d with palm.] &ldquo;For
+the same cause that the pilgrim, returning from Palestine, brings home his
+staff, or bourdon, bound with palm,&rdquo; that is, to show where he has been.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Che si reca &rsquo;I bordon di palma cinto.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;In regard to the word bourdon, why it has been applied to a
+pilgrim&rsquo;s staff, it is not easy to guess. I believe, however that this
+name has been given to such sort of staves, because pilgrims usually travel and
+perform their pilgrimages on foot, their staves serving them instead of horses
+or mules, then called bourdons and burdones, by writers in the middle
+ages.&rdquo; Mr. Johnes&rsquo;s Translation of Joinville&rsquo;s Memoirs.
+Dissertation xv, by M. du Cange p. 152. 4to. edit. The word is thrice used by
+Chaucer in the Romaunt of the Rose.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoIII.0"></a>PARADISE</h2>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoIII.I"></a>CANTO I</h2>
+
+<p>
+His glory, by whose might all things are mov&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Pierces the universe, and in one part<br/>
+Sheds more resplendence, elsewhere less. In heav&rsquo;n,<br/>
+That largeliest of his light partakes, was I,<br/>
+Witness of things, which to relate again<br/>
+Surpasseth power of him who comes from thence;<br/>
+For that, so near approaching its desire<br/>
+Our intellect is to such depth absorb&rsquo;d,<br/>
+That memory cannot follow. Nathless all,<br/>
+That in my thoughts I of that sacred realm<br/>
+Could store, shall now be matter of my song.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Benign Apollo! this last labour aid,<br/>
+And make me such a vessel of thy worth,<br/>
+As thy own laurel claims of me belov&rsquo;d.<br/>
+Thus far hath one of steep Parnassus&rsquo; brows<br/>
+Suffic&rsquo;d me; henceforth there is need of both<br/>
+For my remaining enterprise Do thou<br/>
+Enter into my bosom, and there breathe<br/>
+So, as when Marsyas by thy hand was dragg&rsquo;d<br/>
+Forth from his limbs unsheath&rsquo;d. O power divine!<br/>
+If thou to me of shine impart so much,<br/>
+That of that happy realm the shadow&rsquo;d form<br/>
+Trac&rsquo;d in my thoughts I may set forth to view,<br/>
+Thou shalt behold me of thy favour&rsquo;d tree<br/>
+Come to the foot, and crown myself with leaves;<br/>
+For to that honour thou, and my high theme<br/>
+Will fit me. If but seldom, mighty Sire!<br/>
+To grace his triumph gathers thence a wreath<br/>
+Caesar or bard (more shame for human wills<br/>
+Deprav&rsquo;d) joy to the Delphic god must spring<br/>
+From the Pierian foliage, when one breast<br/>
+Is with such thirst inspir&rsquo;d. From a small spark<br/>
+Great flame hath risen: after me perchance<br/>
+Others with better voice may pray, and gain<br/>
+From the Cirrhaean city answer kind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Through diver passages, the world&rsquo;s bright lamp<br/>
+Rises to mortals, but through that which joins<br/>
+Four circles with the threefold cross, in best<br/>
+Course, and in happiest constellation set<br/>
+He comes, and to the worldly wax best gives<br/>
+Its temper and impression. Morning there,<br/>
+Here eve was by almost such passage made;<br/>
+And whiteness had o&rsquo;erspread that hemisphere,<br/>
+Blackness the other part; when to the left<br/>
+I saw Beatrice turn&rsquo;d, and on the sun<br/>
+Gazing, as never eagle fix&rsquo;d his ken.<br/>
+As from the first a second beam is wont<br/>
+To issue, and reflected upwards rise,<br/>
+E&rsquo;en as a pilgrim bent on his return,<br/>
+So of her act, that through the eyesight pass&rsquo;d<br/>
+Into my fancy, mine was form&rsquo;d; and straight,<br/>
+Beyond our mortal wont, I fix&rsquo;d mine eyes<br/>
+Upon the sun. Much is allowed us there,<br/>
+That here exceeds our pow&rsquo;r; thanks to the place<br/>
+Made for the dwelling of the human kind
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I suffer&rsquo;d it not long, and yet so long<br/>
+That I beheld it bick&rsquo;ring sparks around,<br/>
+As iron that comes boiling from the fire.<br/>
+And suddenly upon the day appear&rsquo;d<br/>
+A day new-ris&rsquo;n, as he, who hath the power,<br/>
+Had with another sun bedeck&rsquo;d the sky.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her eyes fast fix&rsquo;d on the eternal wheels,<br/>
+Beatrice stood unmov&rsquo;d; and I with ken<br/>
+Fix&rsquo;d upon her, from upward gaze remov&rsquo;d<br/>
+At her aspect, such inwardly became<br/>
+As Glaucus, when he tasted of the herb,<br/>
+That made him peer among the ocean gods;<br/>
+Words may not tell of that transhuman change:<br/>
+And therefore let the example serve, though weak,<br/>
+For those whom grace hath better proof in store
+</p>
+
+<p>
+If I were only what thou didst create,<br/>
+Then newly, Love! by whom the heav&rsquo;n is rul&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Thou know&rsquo;st, who by thy light didst bear me up.<br/>
+Whenas the wheel which thou dost ever guide,<br/>
+Desired Spirit! with its harmony<br/>
+Temper&rsquo;d of thee and measur&rsquo;d, charm&rsquo;d mine ear,<br/>
+Then seem&rsquo;d to me so much of heav&rsquo;n to blaze<br/>
+With the sun&rsquo;s flame, that rain or flood ne&rsquo;er made<br/>
+A lake so broad. The newness of the sound,<br/>
+And that great light, inflam&rsquo;d me with desire,<br/>
+Keener than e&rsquo;er was felt, to know their cause.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whence she who saw me, clearly as myself,<br/>
+To calm my troubled mind, before I ask&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Open&rsquo;d her lips, and gracious thus began:<br/>
+&ldquo;With false imagination thou thyself<br/>
+Mak&rsquo;st dull, so that thou seest not the thing,<br/>
+Which thou hadst seen, had that been shaken off.<br/>
+Thou art not on the earth as thou believ&rsquo;st;<br/>
+For light&rsquo;ning scap&rsquo;d from its own proper place<br/>
+Ne&rsquo;er ran, as thou hast hither now return&rsquo;d.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Although divested of my first-rais&rsquo;d doubt,<br/>
+By those brief words, accompanied with smiles,<br/>
+Yet in new doubt was I entangled more,<br/>
+And said: &ldquo;Already satisfied, I rest<br/>
+From admiration deep, but now admire<br/>
+How I above those lighter bodies rise.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whence, after utt&rsquo;rance of a piteous sigh,<br/>
+She tow&rsquo;rds me bent her eyes, with such a look,<br/>
+As on her frenzied child a mother casts;<br/>
+Then thus began: &ldquo;Among themselves all things<br/>
+Have order; and from hence the form, which makes<br/>
+The universe resemble God. In this<br/>
+The higher creatures see the printed steps<br/>
+Of that eternal worth, which is the end<br/>
+Whither the line is drawn. All natures lean,<br/>
+In this their order, diversely, some more,<br/>
+Some less approaching to their primal source.<br/>
+Thus they to different havens are mov&rsquo;d on<br/>
+Through the vast sea of being, and each one<br/>
+With instinct giv&rsquo;n, that bears it in its course;<br/>
+This to the lunar sphere directs the fire,<br/>
+This prompts the hearts of mortal animals,<br/>
+This the brute earth together knits, and binds.<br/>
+Nor only creatures, void of intellect,<br/>
+Are aim&rsquo;d at by this bow; hut even those,<br/>
+That have intelligence and love, are pierc&rsquo;d.<br/>
+That Providence, who so well orders all,<br/>
+With her own light makes ever calm the heaven,<br/>
+In which the substance, that hath greatest speed,<br/>
+Is turn&rsquo;d: and thither now, as to our seat<br/>
+Predestin&rsquo;d, we are carried by the force<br/>
+Of that strong cord, that never looses dart,<br/>
+But at fair aim and glad. Yet is it true,<br/>
+That as ofttimes but ill accords the form<br/>
+To the design of art, through sluggishness<br/>
+Of unreplying matter, so this course<br/>
+Is sometimes quitted by the creature, who<br/>
+Hath power, directed thus, to bend elsewhere;<br/>
+As from a cloud the fire is seen to fall,<br/>
+From its original impulse warp&rsquo;d, to earth,<br/>
+By vicious fondness. Thou no more admire<br/>
+Thy soaring, (if I rightly deem,) than lapse<br/>
+Of torrent downwards from a mountain&rsquo;s height.<br/>
+There would in thee for wonder be more cause,<br/>
+If, free of hind&rsquo;rance, thou hadst fix&rsquo;d thyself<br/>
+Below, like fire unmoving on the earth.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So said, she turn&rsquo;d toward the heav&rsquo;n her face.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoIII.II"></a>CANTO II</h2>
+
+<p>
+All ye, who in small bark have following sail&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Eager to listen, on the advent&rsquo;rous track<br/>
+Of my proud keel, that singing cuts its way,<br/>
+Backward return with speed, and your own shores<br/>
+Revisit, nor put out to open sea,<br/>
+Where losing me, perchance ye may remain<br/>
+Bewilder&rsquo;d in deep maze. The way I pass<br/>
+Ne&rsquo;er yet was run: Minerva breathes the gale,<br/>
+Apollo guides me, and another Nine<br/>
+To my rapt sight the arctic beams reveal.<br/>
+Ye other few, who have outstretch&rsquo;d the neck.<br/>
+Timely for food of angels, on which here<br/>
+They live, yet never know satiety,<br/>
+Through the deep brine ye fearless may put out<br/>
+Your vessel, marking, well the furrow broad<br/>
+Before you in the wave, that on both sides<br/>
+Equal returns. Those, glorious, who pass&rsquo;d o&rsquo;er<br/>
+To Colchos, wonder&rsquo;d not as ye will do,<br/>
+When they saw Jason following the plough.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The increate perpetual thirst, that draws<br/>
+Toward the realm of God&rsquo;s own form, bore us<br/>
+Swift almost as the heaven ye behold.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Beatrice upward gaz&rsquo;d, and I on her,<br/>
+And in such space as on the notch a dart<br/>
+Is plac&rsquo;d, then loosen&rsquo;d flies, I saw myself<br/>
+Arriv&rsquo;d, where wond&rsquo;rous thing engag&rsquo;d my sight.<br/>
+Whence she, to whom no work of mine was hid,<br/>
+Turning to me, with aspect glad as fair,<br/>
+Bespake me: &ldquo;Gratefully direct thy mind<br/>
+To God, through whom to this first star we come.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Me seem&rsquo;d as if a cloud had cover&rsquo;d us,<br/>
+Translucent, solid, firm, and polish&rsquo;d bright,<br/>
+Like adamant, which the sun&rsquo;s beam had smit<br/>
+Within itself the ever-during pearl<br/>
+Receiv&rsquo;d us, as the wave a ray of light<br/>
+Receives, and rests unbroken. If I then<br/>
+Was of corporeal frame, and it transcend<br/>
+Our weaker thought, how one dimension thus<br/>
+Another could endure, which needs must be<br/>
+If body enter body, how much more<br/>
+Must the desire inflame us to behold<br/>
+That essence, which discovers by what means<br/>
+God and our nature join&rsquo;d! There will be seen<br/>
+That which we hold through faith, not shown by proof,<br/>
+But in itself intelligibly plain,<br/>
+E&rsquo;en as the truth that man at first believes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I answered: &ldquo;Lady! I with thoughts devout,<br/>
+Such as I best can frame, give thanks to Him,<br/>
+Who hath remov&rsquo;d me from the mortal world.<br/>
+But tell, I pray thee, whence the gloomy spots<br/>
+Upon this body, which below on earth<br/>
+Give rise to talk of Cain in fabling quaint?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She somewhat smil&rsquo;d, then spake: &ldquo;If mortals err<br/>
+In their opinion, when the key of sense<br/>
+Unlocks not, surely wonder&rsquo;s weapon keen<br/>
+Ought not to pierce thee; since thou find&rsquo;st, the wings<br/>
+Of reason to pursue the senses&rsquo; flight<br/>
+Are short. But what thy own thought is, declare.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then I: &ldquo;What various here above appears,<br/>
+Is caus&rsquo;d, I deem, by bodies dense or rare.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She then resum&rsquo;d: &ldquo;Thou certainly wilt see<br/>
+In falsehood thy belief o&rsquo;erwhelm&rsquo;d, if well<br/>
+Thou listen to the arguments, which I<br/>
+Shall bring to face it. The eighth sphere displays<br/>
+Numberless lights, the which in kind and size<br/>
+May be remark&rsquo;d of different aspects;<br/>
+If rare or dense of that were cause alone,<br/>
+One single virtue then would be in all,<br/>
+Alike distributed, or more, or less.<br/>
+Different virtues needs must be the fruits<br/>
+Of formal principles, and these, save one,<br/>
+Will by thy reasoning be destroy&rsquo;d. Beside,<br/>
+If rarity were of that dusk the cause,<br/>
+Which thou inquirest, either in some part<br/>
+That planet must throughout be void, nor fed<br/>
+With its own matter; or, as bodies share<br/>
+Their fat and leanness, in like manner this<br/>
+Must in its volume change the leaves. The first,<br/>
+If it were true, had through the sun&rsquo;s eclipse<br/>
+Been manifested, by transparency<br/>
+Of light, as through aught rare beside effus&rsquo;d.<br/>
+But this is not. Therefore remains to see<br/>
+The other cause: and if the other fall,<br/>
+Erroneous so must prove what seem&rsquo;d to thee.<br/>
+If not from side to side this rarity<br/>
+Pass through, there needs must be a limit, whence<br/>
+Its contrary no further lets it pass.<br/>
+And hence the beam, that from without proceeds,<br/>
+Must be pour&rsquo;d back, as colour comes, through glass<br/>
+Reflected, which behind it lead conceals.<br/>
+Now wilt thou say, that there of murkier hue<br/>
+Than in the other part the ray is shown,<br/>
+By being thence refracted farther back.<br/>
+From this perplexity will free thee soon<br/>
+Experience, if thereof thou trial make,<br/>
+The fountain whence your arts derive their streame.<br/>
+Three mirrors shalt thou take, and two remove<br/>
+From thee alike, and more remote the third.<br/>
+Betwixt the former pair, shall meet thine eyes;<br/>
+Then turn&rsquo;d toward them, cause behind thy back<br/>
+A light to stand, that on the three shall shine,<br/>
+And thus reflected come to thee from all.<br/>
+Though that beheld most distant do not stretch<br/>
+A space so ample, yet in brightness thou<br/>
+Will own it equaling the rest. But now,<br/>
+As under snow the ground, if the warm ray<br/>
+Smites it, remains dismantled of the hue<br/>
+And cold, that cover&rsquo;d it before, so thee,<br/>
+Dismantled in thy mind, I will inform<br/>
+With light so lively, that the tremulous beam<br/>
+Shall quiver where it falls. Within the heaven,<br/>
+Where peace divine inhabits, circles round<br/>
+A body, in whose virtue dies the being<br/>
+Of all that it contains. The following heaven,<br/>
+That hath so many lights, this being divides,<br/>
+Through different essences, from it distinct,<br/>
+And yet contain&rsquo;d within it. The other orbs<br/>
+Their separate distinctions variously<br/>
+Dispose, for their own seed and produce apt.<br/>
+Thus do these organs of the world proceed,<br/>
+As thou beholdest now, from step to step,<br/>
+Their influences from above deriving,<br/>
+And thence transmitting downwards. Mark me well,<br/>
+How through this passage to the truth I ford,<br/>
+The truth thou lov&rsquo;st, that thou henceforth alone,<br/>
+May&rsquo;st know to keep the shallows, safe, untold.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The virtue and motion of the sacred orbs,<br/>
+As mallet by the workman&rsquo;s hand, must needs<br/>
+By blessed movers be inspir&rsquo;d. This heaven,<br/>
+Made beauteous by so many luminaries,<br/>
+From the deep spirit, that moves its circling sphere,<br/>
+Its image takes an impress as a seal:<br/>
+And as the soul, that dwells within your dust,<br/>
+Through members different, yet together form&rsquo;d,<br/>
+In different pow&rsquo;rs resolves itself; e&rsquo;en so<br/>
+The intellectual efficacy unfolds<br/>
+Its goodness multiplied throughout the stars;<br/>
+On its own unity revolving still.<br/>
+Different virtue compact different<br/>
+Makes with the precious body it enlivens,<br/>
+With which it knits, as life in you is knit.<br/>
+From its original nature full of joy,<br/>
+The virtue mingled through the body shines,<br/>
+As joy through pupil of the living eye.<br/>
+From hence proceeds, that which from light to light<br/>
+Seems different, and not from dense or rare.<br/>
+This is the formal cause, that generates<br/>
+Proportion&rsquo;d to its power, the dusk or clear.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoIII.III"></a>CANTO III</h2>
+
+<p>
+That sun, which erst with love my bosom warm&rsquo;d<br/>
+Had of fair truth unveil&rsquo;d the sweet aspect,<br/>
+By proof of right, and of the false reproof;<br/>
+And I, to own myself convinc&rsquo;d and free<br/>
+Of doubt, as much as needed, rais&rsquo;d my head<br/>
+Erect for speech. But soon a sight appear&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Which, so intent to mark it, held me fix&rsquo;d,<br/>
+That of confession I no longer thought.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As through translucent and smooth glass, or wave<br/>
+Clear and unmov&rsquo;d, and flowing not so deep<br/>
+As that its bed is dark, the shape returns<br/>
+So faint of our impictur&rsquo;d lineaments,<br/>
+That on white forehead set a pearl as strong<br/>
+Comes to the eye: such saw I many a face,<br/>
+All stretch&rsquo;d to speak, from whence I straight conceiv&rsquo;d<br/>
+Delusion opposite to that, which rais&rsquo;d<br/>
+Between the man and fountain, amorous flame.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sudden, as I perceiv&rsquo;d them, deeming these<br/>
+Reflected semblances to see of whom<br/>
+They were, I turn&rsquo;d mine eyes, and nothing saw;<br/>
+Then turn&rsquo;d them back, directed on the light<br/>
+Of my sweet guide, who smiling shot forth beams<br/>
+From her celestial eyes. &ldquo;Wonder not thou,&rdquo;<br/>
+She cry&rsquo;d, &ldquo;at this my smiling, when I see<br/>
+Thy childish judgment; since not yet on truth<br/>
+It rests the foot, but, as it still is wont,<br/>
+Makes thee fall back in unsound vacancy.<br/>
+True substances are these, which thou behold&rsquo;st,<br/>
+Hither through failure of their vow exil&rsquo;d.<br/>
+But speak thou with them; listen, and believe,<br/>
+That the true light, which fills them with desire,<br/>
+Permits not from its beams their feet to stray.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Straight to the shadow which for converse seem&rsquo;d<br/>
+Most earnest, I addressed me, and began,<br/>
+As one by over-eagerness perplex&rsquo;d:<br/>
+&ldquo;O spirit, born for joy! who in the rays<br/>
+Of life eternal, of that sweetness know&rsquo;st<br/>
+The flavour, which, not tasted, passes far<br/>
+All apprehension, me it well would please,<br/>
+If thou wouldst tell me of thy name, and this<br/>
+Your station here.&rdquo; Whence she, with kindness prompt,<br/>
+And eyes glist&rsquo;ning with smiles: &ldquo;Our charity,<br/>
+To any wish by justice introduc&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Bars not the door, no more than she above,<br/>
+Who would have all her court be like herself.<br/>
+I was a virgin sister in the earth;<br/>
+And if thy mind observe me well, this form,<br/>
+With such addition grac&rsquo;d of loveliness,<br/>
+Will not conceal me long, but thou wilt know<br/>
+Piccarda, in the tardiest sphere thus plac&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Here &rsquo;mid these other blessed also blest.<br/>
+Our hearts, whose high affections burn alone<br/>
+With pleasure, from the Holy Spirit conceiv&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Admitted to his order dwell in joy.<br/>
+And this condition, which appears so low,<br/>
+Is for this cause assign&rsquo;d us, that our vows<br/>
+Were in some part neglected and made void.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whence I to her replied: &ldquo;Something divine<br/>
+Beams in your countenance, wond&rsquo;rous fair,<br/>
+From former knowledge quite transmuting you.<br/>
+Therefore to recollect was I so slow.<br/>
+But what thou sayst hath to my memory<br/>
+Given now such aid, that to retrace your forms<br/>
+Is easier. Yet inform me, ye, who here<br/>
+Are happy, long ye for a higher place<br/>
+More to behold, and more in love to dwell?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She with those other spirits gently smil&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Then answer&rsquo;d with such gladness, that she seem&rsquo;d<br/>
+With love&rsquo;s first flame to glow: &ldquo;Brother! our will<br/>
+Is in composure settled by the power<br/>
+Of charity, who makes us will alone<br/>
+What we possess, and nought beyond desire;<br/>
+If we should wish to be exalted more,<br/>
+Then must our wishes jar with the high will<br/>
+Of him, who sets us here, which in these orbs<br/>
+Thou wilt confess not possible, if here<br/>
+To be in charity must needs befall,<br/>
+And if her nature well thou contemplate.<br/>
+Rather it is inherent in this state<br/>
+Of blessedness, to keep ourselves within<br/>
+The divine will, by which our wills with his<br/>
+Are one. So that as we from step to step<br/>
+Are plac&rsquo;d throughout this kingdom, pleases all,<br/>
+E&rsquo;en as our King, who in us plants his will;<br/>
+And in his will is our tranquillity;<br/>
+It is the mighty ocean, whither tends<br/>
+Whatever it creates and nature makes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then saw I clearly how each spot in heav&rsquo;n<br/>
+Is Paradise, though with like gracious dew<br/>
+The supreme virtue show&rsquo;r not over all.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But as it chances, if one sort of food<br/>
+Hath satiated, and of another still<br/>
+The appetite remains, that this is ask&rsquo;d,<br/>
+And thanks for that return&rsquo;d; e&rsquo;en so did I<br/>
+In word and motion, bent from her to learn<br/>
+What web it was, through which she had not drawn<br/>
+The shuttle to its point. She thus began:<br/>
+&ldquo;Exalted worth and perfectness of life<br/>
+The Lady higher up enshrine in heaven,<br/>
+By whose pure laws upon your nether earth<br/>
+The robe and veil they wear, to that intent,<br/>
+That e&rsquo;en till death they may keep watch or sleep<br/>
+With their great bridegroom, who accepts each vow,<br/>
+Which to his gracious pleasure love conforms.<br/>
+from the world, to follow her, when young<br/>
+Escap&rsquo;d; and, in her vesture mantling me,<br/>
+Made promise of the way her sect enjoins.<br/>
+Thereafter men, for ill than good more apt,<br/>
+Forth snatch&rsquo;d me from the pleasant cloister&rsquo;s pale.<br/>
+God knows how after that my life was fram&rsquo;d.<br/>
+This other splendid shape, which thou beholdst<br/>
+At my right side, burning with all the light<br/>
+Of this our orb, what of myself I tell<br/>
+May to herself apply. From her, like me<br/>
+A sister, with like violence were torn<br/>
+The saintly folds, that shaded her fair brows.<br/>
+E&rsquo;en when she to the world again was brought<br/>
+In spite of her own will and better wont,<br/>
+Yet not for that the bosom&rsquo;s inward veil<br/>
+Did she renounce. This is the luminary<br/>
+Of mighty Constance, who from that loud blast,<br/>
+Which blew the second over Suabia&rsquo;s realm,<br/>
+That power produc&rsquo;d, which was the third and last.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She ceas&rsquo;d from further talk, and then began<br/>
+&ldquo;Ave Maria&rdquo; singing, and with that song<br/>
+Vanish&rsquo;d, as heavy substance through deep wave.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mine eye, that far as it was capable,<br/>
+Pursued her, when in dimness she was lost,<br/>
+Turn&rsquo;d to the mark where greater want impell&rsquo;d,<br/>
+And bent on Beatrice all its gaze.<br/>
+But she as light&rsquo;ning beam&rsquo;d upon my looks:<br/>
+So that the sight sustain&rsquo;d it not at first.<br/>
+Whence I to question her became less prompt.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoIII.IV"></a>CANTO IV</h2>
+
+<p>
+Between two kinds of food, both equally<br/>
+Remote and tempting, first a man might die<br/>
+Of hunger, ere he one could freely choose.<br/>
+E&rsquo;en so would stand a lamb between the maw<br/>
+Of two fierce wolves, in dread of both alike:<br/>
+E&rsquo;en so between two deer a dog would stand,<br/>
+Wherefore, if I was silent, fault nor praise<br/>
+I to myself impute, by equal doubts<br/>
+Held in suspense, since of necessity<br/>
+It happen&rsquo;d. Silent was I, yet desire<br/>
+Was painted in my looks; and thus I spake<br/>
+My wish more earnestly than language could.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As Daniel, when the haughty king he freed<br/>
+From ire, that spurr&rsquo;d him on to deeds unjust<br/>
+And violent; so look&rsquo;d Beatrice then.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well I discern,&rdquo; she thus her words address&rsquo;d,<br/>
+&ldquo;How contrary desires each way constrain thee,<br/>
+So that thy anxious thought is in itself<br/>
+Bound up and stifled, nor breathes freely forth.<br/>
+Thou arguest; if the good intent remain;<br/>
+What reason that another&rsquo;s violence<br/>
+Should stint the measure of my fair desert?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Cause too thou findst for doubt, in that it seems,<br/>
+That spirits to the stars, as Plato deem&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Return. These are the questions which thy will<br/>
+Urge equally; and therefore I the first<br/>
+Of that will treat which hath the more of gall.<br/>
+Of seraphim he who is most ensky&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Moses and Samuel, and either John,<br/>
+Choose which thou wilt, nor even Mary&rsquo;s self,<br/>
+Have not in any other heav&rsquo;n their seats,<br/>
+Than have those spirits which so late thou saw&rsquo;st;<br/>
+Nor more or fewer years exist; but all<br/>
+Make the first circle beauteous, diversely<br/>
+Partaking of sweet life, as more or less<br/>
+Afflation of eternal bliss pervades them.<br/>
+Here were they shown thee, not that fate assigns<br/>
+This for their sphere, but for a sign to thee<br/>
+Of that celestial furthest from the height.<br/>
+Thus needs, that ye may apprehend, we speak:<br/>
+Since from things sensible alone ye learn<br/>
+That, which digested rightly after turns<br/>
+To intellectual. For no other cause<br/>
+The scripture, condescending graciously<br/>
+To your perception, hands and feet to God<br/>
+Attributes, nor so means: and holy church<br/>
+Doth represent with human countenance<br/>
+Gabriel, and Michael, and him who made<br/>
+Tobias whole. Unlike what here thou seest,<br/>
+The judgment of Timaeus, who affirms<br/>
+Each soul restor&rsquo;d to its particular star,<br/>
+Believing it to have been taken thence,<br/>
+When nature gave it to inform her mold:<br/>
+Since to appearance his intention is<br/>
+E&rsquo;en what his words declare: or else to shun<br/>
+Derision, haply thus he hath disguis&rsquo;d<br/>
+His true opinion. If his meaning be,<br/>
+That to the influencing of these orbs revert<br/>
+The honour and the blame in human acts,<br/>
+Perchance he doth not wholly miss the truth.<br/>
+This principle, not understood aright,<br/>
+Erewhile perverted well nigh all the world;<br/>
+So that it fell to fabled names of Jove,<br/>
+And Mercury, and Mars. That other doubt,<br/>
+Which moves thee, is less harmful; for it brings<br/>
+No peril of removing thee from me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That, to the eye of man, our justice seems<br/>
+Unjust, is argument for faith, and not<br/>
+For heretic declension. To the end<br/>
+This truth may stand more clearly in your view,<br/>
+I will content thee even to thy wish
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If violence be, when that which suffers, nought<br/>
+Consents to that which forceth, not for this<br/>
+These spirits stood exculpate. For the will,<br/>
+That will not, still survives unquench&rsquo;d, and doth<br/>
+As nature doth in fire, tho&rsquo; violence<br/>
+Wrest it a thousand times; for, if it yield<br/>
+Or more or less, so far it follows force.<br/>
+And thus did these, whom they had power to seek<br/>
+The hallow&rsquo;d place again. In them, had will<br/>
+Been perfect, such as once upon the bars<br/>
+Held Laurence firm, or wrought in Scaevola<br/>
+To his own hand remorseless, to the path,<br/>
+Whence they were drawn, their steps had hasten&rsquo;d back,<br/>
+When liberty return&rsquo;d: but in too few<br/>
+Resolve so steadfast dwells. And by these words<br/>
+If duly weigh&rsquo;d, that argument is void,<br/>
+Which oft might have perplex&rsquo;d thee still. But now<br/>
+Another question thwarts thee, which to solve<br/>
+Might try thy patience without better aid.<br/>
+I have, no doubt, instill&rsquo;d into thy mind,<br/>
+That blessed spirit may not lie; since near<br/>
+The source of primal truth it dwells for aye:<br/>
+And thou might&rsquo;st after of Piccarda learn<br/>
+That Constance held affection to the veil;<br/>
+So that she seems to contradict me here.<br/>
+Not seldom, brother, it hath chanc&rsquo;d for men<br/>
+To do what they had gladly left undone,<br/>
+Yet to shun peril they have done amiss:<br/>
+E&rsquo;en as Alcmaeon, at his father&rsquo;s suit<br/>
+Slew his own mother, so made pitiless<br/>
+Not to lose pity. On this point bethink thee,<br/>
+That force and will are blended in such wise<br/>
+As not to make the&rsquo; offence excusable.<br/>
+Absolute will agrees not to the wrong,<br/>
+That inasmuch as there is fear of woe<br/>
+From non-compliance, it agrees. Of will<br/>
+Thus absolute Piccarda spake, and I<br/>
+Of th&rsquo; other; so that both have truly said.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Such was the flow of that pure rill, that well&rsquo;d<br/>
+From forth the fountain of all truth; and such<br/>
+The rest, that to my wond&rsquo;ring thoughts l found.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;O thou of primal love the prime delight!<br/>
+Goddess! &ldquo;I straight reply&rsquo;d, &ldquo;whose lively words<br/>
+Still shed new heat and vigour through my soul!<br/>
+Affection fails me to requite thy grace<br/>
+With equal sum of gratitude: be his<br/>
+To recompense, who sees and can reward thee.<br/>
+Well I discern, that by that truth alone<br/>
+Enlighten&rsquo;d, beyond which no truth may roam,<br/>
+Our mind can satisfy her thirst to know:<br/>
+Therein she resteth, e&rsquo;en as in his lair<br/>
+The wild beast, soon as she hath reach&rsquo;d that bound,<br/>
+And she hath power to reach it; else desire<br/>
+Were given to no end. And thence doth doubt<br/>
+Spring, like a shoot, around the stock of truth;<br/>
+And it is nature which from height to height<br/>
+On to the summit prompts us. This invites,<br/>
+This doth assure me, lady, rev&rsquo;rently<br/>
+To ask thee of other truth, that yet<br/>
+Is dark to me. I fain would know, if man<br/>
+By other works well done may so supply<br/>
+The failure of his vows, that in your scale<br/>
+They lack not weight.&rdquo; I spake; and on me straight<br/>
+Beatrice look&rsquo;d with eyes that shot forth sparks<br/>
+Of love celestial in such copious stream,<br/>
+That, virtue sinking in me overpower&rsquo;d,<br/>
+I turn&rsquo;d, and downward bent confus&rsquo;d my sight.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoIII.V"></a>CANTO V</h2>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If beyond earthly wont, the flame of love<br/>
+Illume me, so that I o&rsquo;ercome thy power<br/>
+Of vision, marvel not: but learn the cause<br/>
+In that perfection of the sight, which soon<br/>
+As apprehending, hasteneth on to reach<br/>
+The good it apprehends. I well discern,<br/>
+How in thine intellect already shines<br/>
+The light eternal, which to view alone<br/>
+Ne&rsquo;er fails to kindle love; and if aught else<br/>
+Your love seduces, &rsquo;tis but that it shows<br/>
+Some ill-mark&rsquo;d vestige of that primal beam.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This would&rsquo;st thou know, if failure of the vow<br/>
+By other service may be so supplied,<br/>
+As from self-question to assure the soul.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus she her words, not heedless of my wish,<br/>
+Began; and thus, as one who breaks not off<br/>
+Discourse, continued in her saintly strain.<br/>
+&ldquo;Supreme of gifts, which God creating gave<br/>
+Of his free bounty, sign most evident<br/>
+Of goodness, and in his account most priz&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Was liberty of will, the boon wherewith<br/>
+All intellectual creatures, and them sole<br/>
+He hath endow&rsquo;d. Hence now thou mayst infer<br/>
+Of what high worth the vow, which so is fram&rsquo;d<br/>
+That when man offers, God well-pleas&rsquo;d accepts;<br/>
+For in the compact between God and him,<br/>
+This treasure, such as I describe it to thee,<br/>
+He makes the victim, and of his own act.<br/>
+What compensation therefore may he find?<br/>
+If that, whereof thou hast oblation made,<br/>
+By using well thou think&rsquo;st to consecrate,<br/>
+Thou would&rsquo;st of theft do charitable deed.<br/>
+Thus I resolve thee of the greater point.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But forasmuch as holy church, herein<br/>
+Dispensing, seems to contradict the truth<br/>
+I have discover&rsquo;d to thee, yet behooves<br/>
+Thou rest a little longer at the board,<br/>
+Ere the crude aliment, which thou hast taken,<br/>
+Digested fitly to nutrition turn.<br/>
+Open thy mind to what I now unfold,<br/>
+And give it inward keeping. Knowledge comes<br/>
+Of learning well retain&rsquo;d, unfruitful else.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This sacrifice in essence of two things<br/>
+Consisteth; one is that, whereof &rsquo;tis made,<br/>
+The covenant the other. For the last,<br/>
+It ne&rsquo;er is cancell&rsquo;d if not kept: and hence<br/>
+I spake erewhile so strictly of its force.<br/>
+For this it was enjoin&rsquo;d the Israelites,<br/>
+Though leave were giv&rsquo;n them, as thou know&rsquo;st, to change<br/>
+The offering, still to offer. Th&rsquo; other part,<br/>
+The matter and the substance of the vow,<br/>
+May well be such, to that without offence<br/>
+It may for other substance be exchang&rsquo;d.<br/>
+But at his own discretion none may shift<br/>
+The burden on his shoulders, unreleas&rsquo;d<br/>
+By either key, the yellow and the white.<br/>
+Nor deem of any change, as less than vain,<br/>
+If the last bond be not within the new<br/>
+Included, as the quatre in the six.<br/>
+No satisfaction therefore can be paid<br/>
+For what so precious in the balance weighs,<br/>
+That all in counterpoise must kick the beam.<br/>
+Take then no vow at random: ta&rsquo;en, with faith<br/>
+Preserve it; yet not bent, as Jephthah once,<br/>
+Blindly to execute a rash resolve,<br/>
+Whom better it had suited to exclaim,<br/>
+&lsquo;I have done ill,&rsquo; than to redeem his pledge<br/>
+By doing worse or, not unlike to him<br/>
+In folly, that great leader of the Greeks:<br/>
+Whence, on the alter, Iphigenia mourn&rsquo;d<br/>
+Her virgin beauty, and hath since made mourn<br/>
+Both wise and simple, even all, who hear<br/>
+Of so fell sacrifice. Be ye more staid,<br/>
+O Christians, not, like feather, by each wind<br/>
+Removable: nor think to cleanse ourselves<br/>
+In every water. Either testament,<br/>
+The old and new, is yours: and for your guide<br/>
+The shepherd of the church let this suffice<br/>
+To save you. When by evil lust entic&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Remember ye be men, not senseless beasts;<br/>
+Nor let the Jew, who dwelleth in your streets,<br/>
+Hold you in mock&rsquo;ry. Be not, as the lamb,<br/>
+That, fickle wanton, leaves its mother&rsquo;s milk,<br/>
+To dally with itself in idle play.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Such were the words that Beatrice spake:<br/>
+These ended, to that region, where the world<br/>
+Is liveliest, full of fond desire she turn&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Though mainly prompt new question to propose,<br/>
+Her silence and chang&rsquo;d look did keep me dumb.<br/>
+And as the arrow, ere the cord is still,<br/>
+Leapeth unto its mark; so on we sped<br/>
+Into the second realm. There I beheld<br/>
+The dame, so joyous enter, that the orb<br/>
+Grew brighter at her smiles; and, if the star<br/>
+Were mov&rsquo;d to gladness, what then was my cheer,<br/>
+Whom nature hath made apt for every change!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As in a quiet and clear lake the fish,<br/>
+If aught approach them from without, do draw<br/>
+Towards it, deeming it their food; so drew<br/>
+Full more than thousand splendours towards us,<br/>
+And in each one was heard: &ldquo;Lo! one arriv&rsquo;d<br/>
+To multiply our loves!&rdquo; and as each came<br/>
+The shadow, streaming forth effulgence new,<br/>
+Witness&rsquo;d augmented joy. Here, reader! think,<br/>
+If thou didst miss the sequel of my tale,<br/>
+To know the rest how sorely thou wouldst crave;<br/>
+And thou shalt see what vehement desire<br/>
+Possess&rsquo;d me, as soon as these had met my view,<br/>
+To know their state. &ldquo;O born in happy hour!<br/>
+Thou to whom grace vouchsafes, or ere thy close<br/>
+Of fleshly warfare, to behold the thrones<br/>
+Of that eternal triumph, know to us<br/>
+The light communicated, which through heaven<br/>
+Expatiates without bound. Therefore, if aught<br/>
+Thou of our beams wouldst borrow for thine aid,<br/>
+Spare not; and of our radiance take thy fill.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus of those piteous spirits one bespake me;<br/>
+And Beatrice next: &ldquo;Say on; and trust<br/>
+As unto gods!&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;How in the light supreme<br/>
+Thou harbour&rsquo;st, and from thence the virtue bring&rsquo;st,<br/>
+That, sparkling in thine eyes, denotes thy joy,<br/>
+l mark; but, who thou art, am still to seek;<br/>
+Or wherefore, worthy spirit! for thy lot<br/>
+This sphere assign&rsquo;d, that oft from mortal ken<br/>
+Is veil&rsquo;d by others&rsquo; beams.&rdquo; I said, and turn&rsquo;d<br/>
+Toward the lustre, that with greeting, kind<br/>
+Erewhile had hail&rsquo;d me. Forthwith brighter far<br/>
+Than erst, it wax&rsquo;d: and, as himself the sun<br/>
+Hides through excess of light, when his warm gaze<br/>
+Hath on the mantle of thick vapours prey&rsquo;d;<br/>
+Within its proper ray the saintly shape<br/>
+Was, through increase of gladness, thus conceal&rsquo;d;<br/>
+And, shrouded so in splendour answer&rsquo;d me,<br/>
+E&rsquo;en as the tenour of my song declares.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoIII.VI"></a>CANTO VI</h2>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;After that Constantine the eagle turn&rsquo;d<br/>
+Against the motions of the heav&rsquo;n, that roll&rsquo;d<br/>
+Consenting with its course, when he of yore,<br/>
+Lavinia&rsquo;s spouse, was leader of the flight,<br/>
+A hundred years twice told and more, his seat<br/>
+At Europe&rsquo;s extreme point, the bird of Jove<br/>
+Held, near the mountains, whence he issued first.<br/>
+There, under shadow of his sacred plumes<br/>
+Swaying the world, till through successive hands<br/>
+To mine he came devolv&rsquo;d. Caesar I was,<br/>
+And am Justinian; destin&rsquo;d by the will<br/>
+Of that prime love, whose influence I feel,<br/>
+From vain excess to clear th&rsquo; encumber&rsquo;d laws.<br/>
+Or ere that work engag&rsquo;d me, I did hold<br/>
+Christ&rsquo;s nature merely human, with such faith<br/>
+Contented. But the blessed Agapete,<br/>
+Who was chief shepherd, he with warning voice<br/>
+To the true faith recall&rsquo;d me. I believ&rsquo;d<br/>
+His words: and what he taught, now plainly see,<br/>
+As thou in every contradiction seest<br/>
+The true and false oppos&rsquo;d. Soon as my feet<br/>
+Were to the church reclaim&rsquo;d, to my great task,<br/>
+By inspiration of God&rsquo;s grace impell&rsquo;d,<br/>
+I gave me wholly, and consign&rsquo;d mine arms<br/>
+To Belisarius, with whom heaven&rsquo;s right hand<br/>
+Was link&rsquo;d in such conjointment, &rsquo;twas a sign<br/>
+That I should rest. To thy first question thus<br/>
+I shape mine answer, which were ended here,<br/>
+But that its tendency doth prompt perforce<br/>
+To some addition; that thou well, mayst mark<br/>
+What reason on each side they have to plead,<br/>
+By whom that holiest banner is withstood,<br/>
+Both who pretend its power and who oppose.<br/>
+    &ldquo;Beginning from that hour, when Pallas died<br/>
+To give it rule, behold the valorous deeds<br/>
+Have made it worthy reverence. Not unknown<br/>
+To thee, how for three hundred years and more<br/>
+It dwelt in Alba, up to those fell lists<br/>
+Where for its sake were met the rival three;<br/>
+Nor aught unknown to thee, which it achiev&rsquo;d<br/>
+Down to the Sabines&rsquo; wrong to Lucrece&rsquo; woe,<br/>
+With its sev&rsquo;n kings conqu&rsquo;ring the nation round;<br/>
+Nor all it wrought, by Roman worthies home<br/>
+&rsquo;Gainst Brennus and th&rsquo; Epirot prince, and hosts<br/>
+Of single chiefs, or states in league combin&rsquo;d<br/>
+Of social warfare; hence Torquatus stern,<br/>
+And Quintius nam&rsquo;d of his neglected locks,<br/>
+The Decii, and the Fabii hence acquir&rsquo;d<br/>
+Their fame, which I with duteous zeal embalm.<br/>
+By it the pride of Arab hordes was quell&rsquo;d,<br/>
+When they led on by Hannibal o&rsquo;erpass&rsquo;d<br/>
+The Alpine rocks, whence glide thy currents, Po!<br/>
+Beneath its guidance, in their prime of days<br/>
+Scipio and Pompey triumph&rsquo;d; and that hill,<br/>
+Under whose summit thou didst see the light,<br/>
+Rued its stern bearing. After, near the hour,<br/>
+When heav&rsquo;n was minded that o&rsquo;er all the world<br/>
+His own deep calm should brood, to Caesar&rsquo;s hand<br/>
+Did Rome consign it; and what then it wrought<br/>
+From Var unto the Rhine, saw Isere&rsquo;s flood,<br/>
+Saw Loire and Seine, and every vale, that fills<br/>
+The torrent Rhone. What after that it wrought,<br/>
+When from Ravenna it came forth, and leap&rsquo;d<br/>
+The Rubicon, was of so bold a flight,<br/>
+That tongue nor pen may follow it. Tow&rsquo;rds Spain<br/>
+It wheel&rsquo;d its bands, then tow&rsquo;rd Dyrrachium smote,<br/>
+And on Pharsalia with so fierce a plunge,<br/>
+E&rsquo;en the warm Nile was conscious to the pang;<br/>
+Its native shores Antandros, and the streams<br/>
+Of Simois revisited, and there<br/>
+Where Hector lies; then ill for Ptolemy<br/>
+His pennons shook again; lightning thence fell<br/>
+On Juba; and the next upon your west,<br/>
+At sound of the Pompeian trump, return&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What following and in its next bearer&rsquo;s gripe<br/>
+It wrought, is now by Cassius and Brutus<br/>
+Bark&rsquo;d off in hell, and by Perugia&rsquo;s sons<br/>
+And Modena&rsquo;s was mourn&rsquo;d. Hence weepeth still<br/>
+Sad Cleopatra, who, pursued by it,<br/>
+Took from the adder black and sudden death.<br/>
+With him it ran e&rsquo;en to the Red Sea coast;<br/>
+With him compos&rsquo;d the world to such a peace,<br/>
+That of his temple Janus barr&rsquo;d the door.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But all the mighty standard yet had wrought,<br/>
+And was appointed to perform thereafter,<br/>
+Throughout the mortal kingdom which it sway&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Falls in appearance dwindled and obscur&rsquo;d,<br/>
+If one with steady eye and perfect thought<br/>
+On the third Caesar look; for to his hands,<br/>
+The living Justice, in whose breath I move,<br/>
+Committed glory, e&rsquo;en into his hands,<br/>
+To execute the vengeance of its wrath.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hear now and wonder at what next I tell.<br/>
+After with Titus it was sent to wreak<br/>
+Vengeance for vengeance of the ancient sin,<br/>
+And, when the Lombard tooth, with fangs impure,<br/>
+Did gore the bosom of the holy church,<br/>
+Under its wings victorious, Charlemagne<br/>
+Sped to her rescue. Judge then for thyself<br/>
+Of those, whom I erewhile accus&rsquo;d to thee,<br/>
+What they are, and how grievous their offending,<br/>
+Who are the cause of all your ills. The one<br/>
+Against the universal ensign rears<br/>
+The yellow lilies, and with partial aim<br/>
+That to himself the other arrogates:<br/>
+So that &rsquo;tis hard to see which more offends.<br/>
+Be yours, ye Ghibellines, to veil your arts<br/>
+Beneath another standard: ill is this<br/>
+Follow&rsquo;d of him, who severs it and justice:<br/>
+And let not with his Guelphs the new-crown&rsquo;d Charles<br/>
+Assail it, but those talons hold in dread,<br/>
+Which from a lion of more lofty port<br/>
+Have rent the easing. Many a time ere now<br/>
+The sons have for the sire&rsquo;s transgression wail&rsquo;d;<br/>
+Nor let him trust the fond belief, that heav&rsquo;n<br/>
+Will truck its armour for his lilied shield.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This little star is furnish&rsquo;d with good spirits,<br/>
+Whose mortal lives were busied to that end,<br/>
+That honour and renown might wait on them:<br/>
+And, when desires thus err in their intention,<br/>
+True love must needs ascend with slacker beam.<br/>
+But it is part of our delight, to measure<br/>
+Our wages with the merit; and admire<br/>
+The close proportion. Hence doth heav&rsquo;nly justice<br/>
+Temper so evenly affection in us,<br/>
+It ne&rsquo;er can warp to any wrongfulness.<br/>
+Of diverse voices is sweet music made:<br/>
+So in our life the different degrees<br/>
+Render sweet harmony among these wheels.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Within the pearl, that now encloseth us,<br/>
+Shines Romeo&rsquo;s light, whose goodly deed and fair<br/>
+Met ill acceptance. But the Provencals,<br/>
+That were his foes, have little cause for mirth.<br/>
+Ill shapes that man his course, who makes his wrong<br/>
+Of other&rsquo;s worth. Four daughters were there born<br/>
+To Raymond Berenger, and every one<br/>
+Became a queen; and this for him did Romeo,<br/>
+Though of mean state and from a foreign land.<br/>
+Yet envious tongues incited him to ask<br/>
+A reckoning of that just one, who return&rsquo;d<br/>
+Twelve fold to him for ten. Aged and poor<br/>
+He parted thence: and if the world did know<br/>
+The heart he had, begging his life by morsels,<br/>
+&rsquo;Twould deem the praise, it yields him, scantly dealt.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoIII.VII"></a>CANTO VII</h2>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hosanna Sanctus Deus Sabaoth<br/>
+Superillustrans claritate tua<br/>
+Felices ignes horum malahoth!&rdquo;<br/>
+Thus chanting saw I turn that substance bright<br/>
+With fourfold lustre to its orb again,<br/>
+Revolving; and the rest unto their dance<br/>
+With it mov&rsquo;d also; and like swiftest sparks,<br/>
+In sudden distance from my sight were veil&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Me doubt possess&rsquo;d, and &ldquo;Speak,&rdquo; it whisper&rsquo;d me,<br/>
+&ldquo;Speak, speak unto thy lady, that she quench<br/>
+Thy thirst with drops of sweetness.&rdquo; Yet blank awe,<br/>
+Which lords it o&rsquo;er me, even at the sound<br/>
+Of Beatrice&rsquo;s name, did bow me down<br/>
+As one in slumber held. Not long that mood<br/>
+Beatrice suffer&rsquo;d: she, with such a smile,<br/>
+As might have made one blest amid the flames,<br/>
+Beaming upon me, thus her words began:<br/>
+&ldquo;Thou in thy thought art pond&rsquo;ring (as I deem,<br/>
+And what I deem is truth how just revenge<br/>
+Could be with justice punish&rsquo;d: from which doubt<br/>
+I soon will free thee; so thou mark my words;<br/>
+For they of weighty matter shall possess thee.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That man, who was unborn, himself condemn&rsquo;d,<br/>
+And, in himself, all, who since him have liv&rsquo;d,<br/>
+His offspring: whence, below, the human kind<br/>
+Lay sick in grievous error many an age;<br/>
+Until it pleas&rsquo;d the Word of God to come<br/>
+Amongst them down, to his own person joining<br/>
+The nature, from its Maker far estrang&rsquo;d,<br/>
+By the mere act of his eternal love.<br/>
+Contemplate here the wonder I unfold.<br/>
+The nature with its Maker thus conjoin&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Created first was blameless, pure and good;<br/>
+But through itself alone was driven forth<br/>
+From Paradise, because it had eschew&rsquo;d<br/>
+The way of truth and life, to evil turn&rsquo;d.<br/>
+Ne&rsquo;er then was penalty so just as that<br/>
+Inflicted by the cross, if thou regard<br/>
+The nature in assumption doom&rsquo;d: ne&rsquo;er wrong<br/>
+So great, in reference to him, who took<br/>
+Such nature on him, and endur&rsquo;d the doom.<br/>
+God therefore and the Jews one sentence pleased:<br/>
+So different effects flow&rsquo;d from one act,<br/>
+And heav&rsquo;n was open&rsquo;d, though the earth did quake.<br/>
+Count it not hard henceforth, when thou dost hear<br/>
+That a just vengeance was by righteous court<br/>
+Justly reveng&rsquo;d. But yet I see thy mind<br/>
+By thought on thought arising sore perplex&rsquo;d,<br/>
+And with how vehement desire it asks<br/>
+Solution of the maze. What I have heard,<br/>
+Is plain, thou sayst: but wherefore God this way<br/>
+For our redemption chose, eludes my search.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Brother! no eye of man not perfected,<br/>
+Nor fully ripen&rsquo;d in the flame of love,<br/>
+May fathom this decree. It is a mark,<br/>
+In sooth, much aim&rsquo;d at, and but little kenn&rsquo;d:<br/>
+And I will therefore show thee why such way<br/>
+Was worthiest. The celestial love, that spume<br/>
+All envying in its bounty, in itself<br/>
+With such effulgence blazeth, as sends forth<br/>
+All beauteous things eternal. What distils<br/>
+Immediate thence, no end of being knows,<br/>
+Bearing its seal immutably impress&rsquo;d.<br/>
+Whatever thence immediate falls, is free,<br/>
+Free wholly, uncontrollable by power<br/>
+Of each thing new: by such conformity<br/>
+More grateful to its author, whose bright beams,<br/>
+Though all partake their shining, yet in those<br/>
+Are liveliest, which resemble him the most.<br/>
+These tokens of pre-eminence on man<br/>
+Largely bestow&rsquo;d, if any of them fail,<br/>
+He needs must forfeit his nobility,<br/>
+No longer stainless. Sin alone is that,<br/>
+Which doth disfranchise him, and make unlike<br/>
+To the chief good; for that its light in him<br/>
+Is darken&rsquo;d. And to dignity thus lost<br/>
+Is no return; unless, where guilt makes void,<br/>
+He for ill pleasure pay with equal pain.<br/>
+Your nature, which entirely in its seed<br/>
+Trangress&rsquo;d, from these distinctions fell, no less<br/>
+Than from its state in Paradise; nor means<br/>
+Found of recovery (search all methods out<br/>
+As strickly as thou may) save one of these,<br/>
+The only fords were left through which to wade,<br/>
+Either that God had of his courtesy<br/>
+Releas&rsquo;d him merely, or else man himself<br/>
+For his own folly by himself aton&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Fix now thine eye, intently as thou canst,<br/>
+On th&rsquo; everlasting counsel, and explore,<br/>
+Instructed by my words, the dread abyss.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Man in himself had ever lack&rsquo;d the means<br/>
+Of satisfaction, for he could not stoop<br/>
+Obeying, in humility so low,<br/>
+As high he, disobeying, thought to soar:<br/>
+And for this reason he had vainly tried<br/>
+Out of his own sufficiency to pay<br/>
+The rigid satisfaction. Then behooved<br/>
+That God should by his own ways lead him back<br/>
+Unto the life, from whence he fell, restor&rsquo;d:<br/>
+By both his ways, I mean, or one alone.<br/>
+But since the deed is ever priz&rsquo;d the more,<br/>
+The more the doer&rsquo;s good intent appears,<br/>
+Goodness celestial, whose broad signature<br/>
+Is on the universe, of all its ways<br/>
+To raise ye up, was fain to leave out none,<br/>
+Nor aught so vast or so magnificent,<br/>
+Either for him who gave or who receiv&rsquo;d<br/>
+Between the last night and the primal day,<br/>
+Was or can be. For God more bounty show&rsquo;d.<br/>
+Giving himself to make man capable<br/>
+Of his return to life, than had the terms<br/>
+Been mere and unconditional release.<br/>
+And for his justice, every method else<br/>
+Were all too scant, had not the Son of God<br/>
+Humbled himself to put on mortal flesh.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now, to fulfil each wish of thine, remains<br/>
+I somewhat further to thy view unfold.<br/>
+That thou mayst see as clearly as myself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I see, thou sayst, the air, the fire I see,<br/>
+The earth and water, and all things of them<br/>
+Compounded, to corruption turn, and soon<br/>
+Dissolve. Yet these were also things create,<br/>
+Because, if what were told me, had been true<br/>
+They from corruption had been therefore free.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The angels, O my brother! and this clime<br/>
+Wherein thou art, impassible and pure,<br/>
+I call created, as indeed they are<br/>
+In their whole being. But the elements,<br/>
+Which thou hast nam&rsquo;d, and what of them is made,<br/>
+Are by created virtue&rsquo; inform&rsquo;d: create<br/>
+Their substance, and create the&rsquo; informing virtue<br/>
+In these bright stars, that round them circling move<br/>
+The soul of every brute and of each plant,<br/>
+The ray and motion of the sacred lights,<br/>
+With complex potency attract and turn.<br/>
+But this our life the&rsquo; eternal good inspires<br/>
+Immediate, and enamours of itself;<br/>
+So that our wishes rest for ever here.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And hence thou mayst by inference conclude<br/>
+Our resurrection certain, if thy mind<br/>
+Consider how the human flesh was fram&rsquo;d,<br/>
+When both our parents at the first were made.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoIII.VIII"></a>CANTO VIII</h2>
+
+<p>
+The world was in its day of peril dark<br/>
+Wont to believe the dotage of fond love<br/>
+From the fair Cyprian deity, who rolls<br/>
+In her third epicycle, shed on men<br/>
+By stream of potent radiance: therefore they<br/>
+Of elder time, in their old error blind,<br/>
+Not her alone with sacrifice ador&rsquo;d<br/>
+And invocation, but like honours paid<br/>
+To Cupid and Dione, deem&rsquo;d of them<br/>
+Her mother, and her son, him whom they feign&rsquo;d<br/>
+To sit in Dido&rsquo;s bosom: and from her,<br/>
+Whom I have sung preluding, borrow&rsquo;d they<br/>
+The appellation of that star, which views,<br/>
+Now obvious and now averse, the sun.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I was not ware that I was wafted up<br/>
+Into its orb; but the new loveliness<br/>
+That grac&rsquo;d my lady, gave me ample proof<br/>
+That we had entered there. And as in flame<br/>
+A sparkle is distinct, or voice in voice<br/>
+Discern&rsquo;d, when one its even tenour keeps,<br/>
+The other comes and goes; so in that light<br/>
+I other luminaries saw, that cours&rsquo;d<br/>
+In circling motion. rapid more or less,<br/>
+As their eternal phases each impels.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Never was blast from vapour charged with cold,<br/>
+Whether invisible to eye or no,<br/>
+Descended with such speed, it had not seem&rsquo;d<br/>
+To linger in dull tardiness, compar&rsquo;d<br/>
+To those celestial lights, that tow&rsquo;rds us came,<br/>
+Leaving the circuit of their joyous ring,<br/>
+Conducted by the lofty seraphim.<br/>
+And after them, who in the van appear&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Such an hosanna sounded, as hath left<br/>
+Desire, ne&rsquo;er since extinct in me, to hear<br/>
+Renew&rsquo;d the strain. Then parting from the rest<br/>
+One near us drew, and sole began: &ldquo;We all<br/>
+Are ready at thy pleasure, well dispos&rsquo;d<br/>
+To do thee gentle service. We are they,<br/>
+To whom thou in the world erewhile didst Sing<br/>
+&lsquo;O ye! whose intellectual ministry<br/>
+Moves the third heaven!&rsquo; and in one orb we roll,<br/>
+One motion, one impulse, with those who rule<br/>
+Princedoms in heaven; yet are of love so full,<br/>
+That to please thee &rsquo;twill be as sweet to rest.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After mine eyes had with meek reverence<br/>
+Sought the celestial guide, and were by her<br/>
+Assur&rsquo;d, they turn&rsquo;d again unto the light<br/>
+Who had so largely promis&rsquo;d, and with voice<br/>
+That bare the lively pressure of my zeal,<br/>
+&ldquo;Tell who ye are,&rdquo; I cried. Forthwith it grew<br/>
+In size and splendour, through augmented joy;<br/>
+And thus it answer&rsquo;d: &ldquo;A short date below<br/>
+The world possess&rsquo;d me. Had the time been more,<br/>
+Much evil, that will come, had never chanc&rsquo;d.<br/>
+My gladness hides thee from me, which doth shine .<br/>
+Around, and shroud me, as an animal<br/>
+In its own silk enswath&rsquo;d. Thou lov&rsquo;dst me well,<br/>
+And had&rsquo;st good cause; for had my sojourning<br/>
+Been longer on the earth, the love I bare thee<br/>
+Had put forth more than blossoms. The left bank,<br/>
+That Rhone, when he hath mix&rsquo;d with Sorga, laves.<br/>
+In me its lord expected, and that horn<br/>
+Of fair Ausonia, with its boroughs old,<br/>
+Bari, and Croton, and Gaeta pil&rsquo;d,<br/>
+From where the Trento disembogues his waves,<br/>
+With Verde mingled, to the salt sea-flood.<br/>
+Already on my temples beam&rsquo;d the crown,<br/>
+Which gave me sov&rsquo;reignty over the land<br/>
+By Danube wash&rsquo;d, whenas he strays beyond<br/>
+The limits of his German shores. The realm,<br/>
+Where, on the gulf by stormy Eurus lash&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Betwixt Pelorus and Pachynian heights,<br/>
+The beautiful Trinacria lies in gloom<br/>
+(Not through Typhaeus, but the vap&rsquo;ry cloud<br/>
+Bituminous upsteam&rsquo;d), THAT too did look<br/>
+To have its scepter wielded by a race<br/>
+Of monarchs, sprung through me from Charles and Rodolph;<br/>
+had not ill lording which doth spirit up<br/>
+The people ever, in Palermo rais&rsquo;d<br/>
+The shout of &lsquo;death,&rsquo; re-echo&rsquo;d loud and long.<br/>
+Had but my brother&rsquo;s foresight kenn&rsquo;d as much,<br/>
+He had been warier that the greedy want<br/>
+Of Catalonia might not work his bale.<br/>
+And truly need there is, that he forecast,<br/>
+Or other for him, lest more freight be laid<br/>
+On his already over-laden bark.<br/>
+Nature in him, from bounty fall&rsquo;n to thrift,<br/>
+Would ask the guard of braver arms, than such<br/>
+As only care to have their coffers fill&rsquo;d.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My liege, it doth enhance the joy thy words<br/>
+Infuse into me, mighty as it is,<br/>
+To think my gladness manifest to thee,<br/>
+As to myself, who own it, when thou lookst<br/>
+Into the source and limit of all good,<br/>
+There, where thou markest that which thou dost speak,<br/>
+Thence priz&rsquo;d of me the more. Glad thou hast made me.<br/>
+Now make intelligent, clearing the doubt<br/>
+Thy speech hath raised in me; for much I muse,<br/>
+How bitter can spring up, when sweet is sown.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I thus inquiring; he forthwith replied:<br/>
+&ldquo;If I have power to show one truth, soon that<br/>
+Shall face thee, which thy questioning declares<br/>
+Behind thee now conceal&rsquo;d. The Good, that guides<br/>
+And blessed makes this realm, which thou dost mount,<br/>
+Ordains its providence to be the virtue<br/>
+In these great bodies: nor th&rsquo; all perfect Mind<br/>
+Upholds their nature merely, but in them<br/>
+Their energy to save: for nought, that lies<br/>
+Within the range of that unerring bow,<br/>
+But is as level with the destin&rsquo;d aim,<br/>
+As ever mark to arrow&rsquo;s point oppos&rsquo;d.<br/>
+Were it not thus, these heavens, thou dost visit,<br/>
+Would their effect so work, it would not be<br/>
+Art, but destruction; and this may not chance,<br/>
+If th&rsquo; intellectual powers, that move these stars,<br/>
+Fail not, or who, first faulty made them fail.<br/>
+Wilt thou this truth more clearly evidenc&rsquo;d?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To whom I thus: &ldquo;It is enough: no fear,<br/>
+I see, lest nature in her part should tire.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He straight rejoin&rsquo;d: &ldquo;Say, were it worse for man,<br/>
+If he liv&rsquo;d not in fellowship on earth?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yea,&rdquo; answer&rsquo;d I; &ldquo;nor here a reason needs.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And may that be, if different estates<br/>
+Grow not of different duties in your life?<br/>
+Consult your teacher, and he tells you &lsquo;no.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus did he come, deducing to this point,<br/>
+And then concluded: &ldquo;For this cause behooves,<br/>
+The roots, from whence your operations come,<br/>
+Must differ. Therefore one is Solon born;<br/>
+Another, Xerxes; and Melchisidec<br/>
+A third; and he a fourth, whose airy voyage<br/>
+Cost him his son. In her circuitous course,<br/>
+Nature, that is the seal to mortal wax,<br/>
+Doth well her art, but no distinctions owns<br/>
+&rsquo;Twixt one or other household. Hence befalls<br/>
+That Esau is so wide of Jacob: hence<br/>
+Quirinus of so base a father springs,<br/>
+He dates from Mars his lineage. Were it not<br/>
+That providence celestial overrul&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Nature, in generation, must the path<br/>
+Trac&rsquo;d by the generator, still pursue<br/>
+Unswervingly. Thus place I in thy sight<br/>
+That, which was late behind thee. But, in sign<br/>
+Of more affection for thee, &rsquo;tis my will<br/>
+Thou wear this corollary. Nature ever<br/>
+Finding discordant fortune, like all seed<br/>
+Out of its proper climate, thrives but ill.<br/>
+And were the world below content to mark<br/>
+And work on the foundation nature lays,<br/>
+It would not lack supply of excellence.<br/>
+But ye perversely to religion strain<br/>
+Him, who was born to gird on him the sword,<br/>
+And of the fluent phrasemen make your king;<br/>
+Therefore your steps have wander&rsquo;d from the paths.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoIII.IX"></a>CANTO IX</h2>
+
+<p>
+After solution of my doubt, thy Charles,<br/>
+O fair Clemenza, of the treachery spake<br/>
+That must befall his seed: but, &ldquo;Tell it not,&rdquo;<br/>
+Said he, &ldquo;and let the destin&rsquo;d years come round.&rdquo;<br/>
+Nor may I tell thee more, save that the meed<br/>
+Of sorrow well-deserv&rsquo;d shall quit your wrongs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And now the visage of that saintly light<br/>
+Was to the sun, that fills it, turn&rsquo;d again,<br/>
+As to the good, whose plenitude of bliss<br/>
+Sufficeth all. O ye misguided souls!<br/>
+Infatuate, who from such a good estrange<br/>
+Your hearts, and bend your gaze on vanity,<br/>
+Alas for you!&mdash;And lo! toward me, next,<br/>
+Another of those splendent forms approach&rsquo;d,<br/>
+That, by its outward bright&rsquo;ning, testified<br/>
+The will it had to pleasure me. The eyes<br/>
+Of Beatrice, resting, as before,<br/>
+Firmly upon me, manifested forth<br/>
+Approva1 of my wish. &ldquo;And O,&rdquo; I cried,<br/>
+Blest spirit! quickly be my will perform&rsquo;d;<br/>
+And prove thou to me, that my inmost thoughts<br/>
+I can reflect on thee.&rdquo; Thereat the light,<br/>
+That yet was new to me, from the recess,<br/>
+Where it before was singing, thus began,<br/>
+As one who joys in kindness: &ldquo;In that part<br/>
+Of the deprav&rsquo;d Italian land, which lies<br/>
+Between Rialto, and the fountain-springs<br/>
+Of Brenta and of Piava, there doth rise,<br/>
+But to no lofty eminence, a hill,<br/>
+From whence erewhile a firebrand did descend,<br/>
+That sorely sheet the region. From one root<br/>
+I and it sprang; my name on earth Cunizza:<br/>
+And here I glitter, for that by its light<br/>
+This star o&rsquo;ercame me. Yet I naught repine,<br/>
+Nor grudge myself the cause of this my lot,<br/>
+Which haply vulgar hearts can scarce conceive.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;This jewel, that is next me in our heaven,<br/>
+Lustrous and costly, great renown hath left,<br/>
+And not to perish, ere these hundred years<br/>
+Five times absolve their round. Consider thou,<br/>
+If to excel be worthy man&rsquo;s endeavour,<br/>
+When such life may attend the first. Yet they<br/>
+Care not for this, the crowd that now are girt<br/>
+By Adice and Tagliamento, still<br/>
+Impenitent, tho&rsquo; scourg&rsquo;d. The hour is near,<br/>
+When for their stubbornness at Padua&rsquo;s marsh<br/>
+The water shall be chang&rsquo;d, that laves Vicena<br/>
+And where Cagnano meets with Sile, one<br/>
+Lords it, and bears his head aloft, for whom<br/>
+The web is now a-warping. Feltro too<br/>
+Shall sorrow for its godless shepherd&rsquo;s fault,<br/>
+Of so deep stain, that never, for the like,<br/>
+Was Malta&rsquo;s bar unclos&rsquo;d. Too large should be<br/>
+The skillet, that would hold Ferrara&rsquo;s blood,<br/>
+And wearied he, who ounce by ounce would weight it,<br/>
+The which this priest, in show of party-zeal,<br/>
+Courteous will give; nor will the gift ill suit<br/>
+The country&rsquo;s custom. We descry above,<br/>
+Mirrors, ye call them thrones, from which to us<br/>
+Reflected shine the judgments of our God:<br/>
+Whence these our sayings we avouch for good.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She ended, and appear&rsquo;d on other thoughts<br/>
+Intent, re-ent&rsquo;ring on the wheel she late<br/>
+Had left. That other joyance meanwhile wax&rsquo;d<br/>
+A thing to marvel at, in splendour glowing,<br/>
+Like choicest ruby stricken by the sun,<br/>
+For, in that upper clime, effulgence comes<br/>
+Of gladness, as here laughter: and below,<br/>
+As the mind saddens, murkier grows the shade.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;God seeth all: and in him is thy sight,&rdquo;<br/>
+Said I, &ldquo;blest Spirit! Therefore will of his<br/>
+Cannot to thee be dark. Why then delays<br/>
+Thy voice to satisfy my wish untold,<br/>
+That voice which joins the inexpressive song,<br/>
+Pastime of heav&rsquo;n, the which those ardours sing,<br/>
+That cowl them with six shadowing wings outspread?<br/>
+I would not wait thy asking, wert thou known<br/>
+To me, as thoroughly I to thee am known.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He forthwith answ&rsquo;ring, thus his words began:<br/>
+&ldquo;The valley&rsquo; of waters, widest next to that<br/>
+Which doth the earth engarland, shapes its course,<br/>
+Between discordant shores, against the sun<br/>
+Inward so far, it makes meridian there,<br/>
+Where was before th&rsquo; horizon. Of that vale<br/>
+Dwelt I upon the shore, &rsquo;twixt Ebro&rsquo;s stream<br/>
+And Macra&rsquo;s, that divides with passage brief<br/>
+Genoan bounds from Tuscan. East and west<br/>
+Are nearly one to Begga and my land,<br/>
+Whose haven erst was with its own blood warm.<br/>
+Who knew my name were wont to call me Folco:<br/>
+And I did bear impression of this heav&rsquo;n,<br/>
+That now bears mine: for not with fiercer flame<br/>
+Glow&rsquo;d Belus&rsquo; daughter, injuring alike<br/>
+Sichaeus and Creusa, than did I,<br/>
+Long as it suited the unripen&rsquo;d down<br/>
+That fledg&rsquo;d my cheek: nor she of Rhodope,<br/>
+That was beguiled of Demophoon;<br/>
+Nor Jove&rsquo;s son, when the charms of Iole<br/>
+Were shrin&rsquo;d within his heart. And yet there hides<br/>
+No sorrowful repentance here, but mirth,<br/>
+Not for the fault (that doth not come to mind),<br/>
+But for the virtue, whose o&rsquo;erruling sway<br/>
+And providence have wrought thus quaintly. Here<br/>
+The skill is look&rsquo;d into, that fashioneth<br/>
+With such effectual working, and the good<br/>
+Discern&rsquo;d, accruing to this upper world<br/>
+From that below. But fully to content<br/>
+Thy wishes, all that in this sphere have birth,<br/>
+Demands my further parle. Inquire thou wouldst,<br/>
+Who of this light is denizen, that here<br/>
+Beside me sparkles, as the sun-beam doth<br/>
+On the clear wave. Know then, the soul of Rahab<br/>
+Is in that gladsome harbour, to our tribe<br/>
+United, and the foremost rank assign&rsquo;d.<br/>
+He to that heav&rsquo;n, at which the shadow ends<br/>
+Of your sublunar world, was taken up,<br/>
+First, in Christ&rsquo;s triumph, of all souls redeem&rsquo;d:<br/>
+For well behoov&rsquo;d, that, in some part of heav&rsquo;n,<br/>
+She should remain a trophy, to declare<br/>
+The mighty contest won with either palm;<br/>
+For that she favour&rsquo;d first the high exploit<br/>
+Of Joshua on the holy land, whereof<br/>
+The Pope recks little now. Thy city, plant<br/>
+Of him, that on his Maker turn&rsquo;d the back,<br/>
+And of whose envying so much woe hath sprung,<br/>
+Engenders and expands the cursed flower,<br/>
+That hath made wander both the sheep and lambs,<br/>
+Turning the shepherd to a wolf. For this,<br/>
+The gospel and great teachers laid aside,<br/>
+The decretals, as their stuft margins show,<br/>
+Are the sole study. Pope and Cardinals,<br/>
+Intent on these, ne&rsquo;er journey but in thought<br/>
+To Nazareth, where Gabriel op&rsquo;d his wings.<br/>
+Yet it may chance, erelong, the Vatican,<br/>
+And other most selected parts of Rome,<br/>
+That were the grave of Peter&rsquo;s soldiery,<br/>
+Shall be deliver&rsquo;d from the adult&rsquo;rous bond.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoIII.X"></a>CANTO X</h2>
+
+<p>
+Looking into his first-born with the love,<br/>
+Which breathes from both eternal, the first Might<br/>
+Ineffable, whence eye or mind<br/>
+Can roam, hath in such order all dispos&rsquo;d,<br/>
+As none may see and fail to&rsquo; enjoy. Raise, then,<br/>
+O reader! to the lofty wheels, with me,<br/>
+Thy ken directed to the point, whereat<br/>
+One motion strikes on th&rsquo; other. There begin<br/>
+Thy wonder of the mighty Architect,<br/>
+Who loves his work so inwardly, his eye<br/>
+Doth ever watch it. See, how thence oblique<br/>
+Brancheth the circle, where the planets roll<br/>
+To pour their wished influence on the world;<br/>
+Whose path not bending thus, in heav&rsquo;n above<br/>
+Much virtue would be lost, and here on earth,<br/>
+All power well nigh extinct: or, from direct<br/>
+Were its departure distant more or less,<br/>
+I&rsquo; th&rsquo; universal order, great defect<br/>
+Must, both in heav&rsquo;n and here beneath, ensue.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now rest thee, reader! on thy bench, and muse<br/>
+Anticipative of the feast to come;<br/>
+So shall delight make thee not feel thy toil.<br/>
+Lo! I have set before thee, for thyself<br/>
+Feed now: the matter I indite, henceforth<br/>
+Demands entire my thought. Join&rsquo;d with the part,<br/>
+Which late we told of, the great minister<br/>
+Of nature, that upon the world imprints<br/>
+The virtue of the heaven, and doles out<br/>
+Time for us with his beam, went circling on<br/>
+Along the spires, where each hour sooner comes;<br/>
+And I was with him, weetless of ascent,<br/>
+As one, who till arriv&rsquo;d, weets not his coming.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For Beatrice, she who passeth on<br/>
+So suddenly from good to better, time<br/>
+Counts not the act, oh then how great must needs<br/>
+Have been her brightness! What she was i&rsquo; th&rsquo; sun<br/>
+(Where I had enter&rsquo;d), not through change of hue,<br/>
+But light transparent&mdash;did I summon up<br/>
+Genius, art, practice&mdash;I might not so speak,<br/>
+It should be e&rsquo;er imagin&rsquo;d: yet believ&rsquo;d<br/>
+It may be, and the sight be justly crav&rsquo;d.<br/>
+And if our fantasy fail of such height,<br/>
+What marvel, since no eye above the sun<br/>
+Hath ever travel&rsquo;d? Such are they dwell here,<br/>
+Fourth family of the Omnipotent Sire,<br/>
+Who of his spirit and of his offspring shows;<br/>
+And holds them still enraptur&rsquo;d with the view.<br/>
+And thus to me Beatrice: &ldquo;Thank, oh thank,<br/>
+The Sun of angels, him, who by his grace<br/>
+To this perceptible hath lifted thee.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Never was heart in such devotion bound,<br/>
+And with complacency so absolute<br/>
+Dispos&rsquo;d to render up itself to God,<br/>
+As mine was at those words: and so entire<br/>
+The love for Him, that held me, it eclips&rsquo;d<br/>
+Beatrice in oblivion. Naught displeas&rsquo;d<br/>
+Was she, but smil&rsquo;d thereat so joyously,<br/>
+That of her laughing eyes the radiance brake<br/>
+And scatter&rsquo;d my collected mind abroad.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then saw I a bright band, in liveliness<br/>
+Surpassing, who themselves did make the crown,<br/>
+And us their centre: yet more sweet in voice,<br/>
+Than in their visage beaming. Cinctur&rsquo;d thus,<br/>
+Sometime Latona&rsquo;s daughter we behold,<br/>
+When the impregnate air retains the thread,<br/>
+That weaves her zone. In the celestial court,<br/>
+Whence I return, are many jewels found,<br/>
+So dear and beautiful, they cannot brook<br/>
+Transporting from that realm: and of these lights<br/>
+Such was the song. Who doth not prune his wing<br/>
+To soar up thither, let him look from thence<br/>
+For tidings from the dumb. When, singing thus,<br/>
+Those burning suns that circled round us thrice,<br/>
+As nearest stars around the fixed pole,<br/>
+Then seem&rsquo;d they like to ladies, from the dance<br/>
+Not ceasing, but suspense, in silent pause,<br/>
+List&rsquo;ning, till they have caught the strain anew:<br/>
+Suspended so they stood: and, from within,<br/>
+Thus heard I one, who spake: &ldquo;Since with its beam<br/>
+The grace, whence true love lighteth first his flame,<br/>
+That after doth increase by loving, shines<br/>
+So multiplied in thee, it leads thee up<br/>
+Along this ladder, down whose hallow&rsquo;d steps<br/>
+None e&rsquo;er descend, and mount them not again,<br/>
+Who from his phial should refuse thee wine<br/>
+To slake thy thirst, no less constrained were,<br/>
+Than water flowing not unto the sea.<br/>
+Thou fain wouldst hear, what plants are these, that bloom<br/>
+In the bright garland, which, admiring, girds<br/>
+This fair dame round, who strengthens thee for heav&rsquo;n.<br/>
+I then was of the lambs, that Dominic<br/>
+Leads, for his saintly flock, along the way,<br/>
+Where well they thrive, not sworn with vanity.<br/>
+He, nearest on my right hand, brother was,<br/>
+And master to me: Albert of Cologne<br/>
+Is this: and of Aquinum, Thomas I.<br/>
+If thou of all the rest wouldst be assur&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Let thine eye, waiting on the words I speak,<br/>
+In circuit journey round the blessed wreath.<br/>
+That next resplendence issues from the smile<br/>
+Of Gratian, who to either forum lent<br/>
+Such help, as favour wins in Paradise.<br/>
+The other, nearest, who adorns our quire,<br/>
+Was Peter, he that with the widow gave<br/>
+To holy church his treasure. The fifth light,<br/>
+Goodliest of all, is by such love inspired,<br/>
+That all your world craves tidings of its doom:<br/>
+Within, there is the lofty light, endow&rsquo;d<br/>
+With sapience so profound, if truth be truth,<br/>
+That with a ken of such wide amplitude<br/>
+No second hath arisen. Next behold<br/>
+That taper&rsquo;s radiance, to whose view was shown,<br/>
+Clearliest, the nature and the ministry<br/>
+Angelical, while yet in flesh it dwelt.<br/>
+In the other little light serenely smiles<br/>
+That pleader for the Christian temples, he<br/>
+Who did provide Augustin of his lore.<br/>
+Now, if thy mind&rsquo;s eye pass from light to light,<br/>
+Upon my praises following, of the eighth<br/>
+Thy thirst is next. The saintly soul, that shows<br/>
+The world&rsquo;s deceitfulness, to all who hear him,<br/>
+Is, with the sight of all the good, that is,<br/>
+Blest there. The limbs, whence it was driven, lie<br/>
+Down in Cieldauro, and from martyrdom<br/>
+And exile came it here. Lo! further on,<br/>
+Where flames the arduous Spirit of Isidore,<br/>
+Of Bede, and Richard, more than man, erewhile,<br/>
+In deep discernment. Lastly this, from whom<br/>
+Thy look on me reverteth, was the beam<br/>
+Of one, whose spirit, on high musings bent,<br/>
+Rebuk&rsquo;d the ling&rsquo;ring tardiness of death.<br/>
+It is the eternal light of Sigebert,<br/>
+Who &rsquo;scap&rsquo;d not envy, when of truth he argued,<br/>
+Reading in the straw-litter&rsquo;d street.&rdquo; Forthwith,<br/>
+As clock, that calleth up the spouse of God<br/>
+To win her bridegroom&rsquo;s love at matin&rsquo;s hour,<br/>
+Each part of other fitly drawn and urg&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Sends out a tinkling sound, of note so sweet,<br/>
+Affection springs in well-disposed breast;<br/>
+Thus saw I move the glorious wheel, thus heard<br/>
+Voice answ&rsquo;ring voice, so musical and soft,<br/>
+It can be known but where day endless shines.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoIII.XI"></a>CANTO XI</h2>
+
+<p>
+O fond anxiety of mortal men!<br/>
+How vain and inconclusive arguments<br/>
+Are those, which make thee beat thy wings below<br/>
+For statues one, and one for aphorisms<br/>
+Was hunting; this the priesthood follow&rsquo;d, that<br/>
+By force or sophistry aspir&rsquo;d to rule;<br/>
+To rob another, and another sought<br/>
+By civil business wealth; one moiling lay<br/>
+Tangled in net of sensual delight,<br/>
+And one to witless indolence resign&rsquo;d;<br/>
+What time from all these empty things escap&rsquo;d,<br/>
+With Beatrice, I thus gloriously<br/>
+Was rais&rsquo;d aloft, and made the guest of heav&rsquo;n.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They of the circle to that point, each one.<br/>
+Where erst it was, had turn&rsquo;d; and steady glow&rsquo;d,<br/>
+As candle in his socket. Then within<br/>
+The lustre, that erewhile bespake me, smiling<br/>
+With merer gladness, heard I thus begin:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;E&rsquo;en as his beam illumes me, so I look<br/>
+Into the eternal light, and clearly mark<br/>
+Thy thoughts, from whence they rise. Thou art in doubt,<br/>
+And wouldst, that I should bolt my words afresh<br/>
+In such plain open phrase, as may be smooth<br/>
+To thy perception, where I told thee late<br/>
+That &lsquo;well they thrive;&rsquo; and that &lsquo;no second such<br/>
+Hath risen,&rsquo; which no small distinction needs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The providence, that governeth the world,<br/>
+In depth of counsel by created ken<br/>
+Unfathomable, to the end that she,<br/>
+Who with loud cries was &rsquo;spous&rsquo;d in precious blood,<br/>
+Might keep her footing towards her well-belov&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Safe in herself and constant unto him,<br/>
+Hath two ordain&rsquo;d, who should on either hand<br/>
+In chief escort her: one seraphic all<br/>
+In fervency; for wisdom upon earth,<br/>
+The other splendour of cherubic light.<br/>
+I but of one will tell: he tells of both,<br/>
+Who one commendeth. which of them so&rsquo;er<br/>
+Be taken: for their deeds were to one end.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Between Tupino, and the wave, that falls<br/>
+From blest Ubaldo&rsquo;s chosen hill, there hangs<br/>
+Rich slope of mountain high, whence heat and cold<br/>
+Are wafted through Perugia&rsquo;s eastern gate:<br/>
+And Norcera with Gualdo, in its rear<br/>
+Mourn for their heavy yoke. Upon that side,<br/>
+Where it doth break its steepness most, arose<br/>
+A sun upon the world, as duly this<br/>
+From Ganges doth: therefore let none, who speak<br/>
+Of that place, say Ascesi; for its name<br/>
+Were lamely so deliver&rsquo;d; but the East,<br/>
+To call things rightly, be it henceforth styl&rsquo;d.<br/>
+He was not yet much distant from his rising,<br/>
+When his good influence &rsquo;gan to bless the earth.<br/>
+A dame to whom none openeth pleasure&rsquo;s gate<br/>
+More than to death, was, &rsquo;gainst his father&rsquo;s will,<br/>
+His stripling choice: and he did make her his,<br/>
+Before the Spiritual court, by nuptial bonds,<br/>
+And in his father&rsquo;s sight: from day to day,<br/>
+Then lov&rsquo;d her more devoutly. She, bereav&rsquo;d<br/>
+Of her first husband, slighted and obscure,<br/>
+Thousand and hundred years and more, remain&rsquo;d<br/>
+Without a single suitor, till he came.<br/>
+Nor aught avail&rsquo;d, that, with Amyclas, she<br/>
+Was found unmov&rsquo;d at rumour of his voice,<br/>
+Who shook the world: nor aught her constant boldness<br/>
+Whereby with Christ she mounted on the cross,<br/>
+When Mary stay&rsquo;d beneath. But not to deal<br/>
+Thus closely with thee longer, take at large<br/>
+The rovers&rsquo; titles&mdash;Poverty and Francis.<br/>
+Their concord and glad looks, wonder and love,<br/>
+And sweet regard gave birth to holy thoughts,<br/>
+So much, that venerable Bernard first<br/>
+Did bare his feet, and, in pursuit of peace<br/>
+So heavenly, ran, yet deem&rsquo;d his footing slow.<br/>
+O hidden riches! O prolific good!<br/>
+Egidius bares him next, and next Sylvester,<br/>
+And follow both the bridegroom; so the bride<br/>
+Can please them. Thenceforth goes he on his way,<br/>
+The father and the master, with his spouse,<br/>
+And with that family, whom now the cord<br/>
+Girt humbly: nor did abjectness of heart<br/>
+Weigh down his eyelids, for that he was son<br/>
+Of Pietro Bernardone, and by men<br/>
+In wond&rsquo;rous sort despis&rsquo;d. But royally<br/>
+His hard intention he to Innocent<br/>
+Set forth, and from him first receiv&rsquo;d the seal<br/>
+On his religion. Then, when numerous flock&rsquo;d<br/>
+The tribe of lowly ones, that trac&rsquo;d HIS steps,<br/>
+Whose marvellous life deservedly were sung<br/>
+In heights empyreal, through Honorius&rsquo; hand<br/>
+A second crown, to deck their Guardian&rsquo;s virtues,<br/>
+Was by the eternal Spirit inwreath&rsquo;d: and when<br/>
+He had, through thirst of martyrdom, stood up<br/>
+In the proud Soldan&rsquo;s presence, and there preach&rsquo;d<br/>
+Christ and his followers; but found the race<br/>
+Unripen&rsquo;d for conversion: back once more<br/>
+He hasted (not to intermit his toil),<br/>
+And reap&rsquo;d Ausonian lands. On the hard rock,<br/>
+&rsquo;Twixt Arno and the Tyber, he from Christ<br/>
+Took the last Signet, which his limbs two years<br/>
+Did carry. Then the season come, that he,<br/>
+Who to such good had destin&rsquo;d him, was pleas&rsquo;d<br/>
+T&rsquo; advance him to the meed, which he had earn&rsquo;d<br/>
+By his self-humbling, to his brotherhood,<br/>
+As their just heritage, he gave in charge<br/>
+His dearest lady, and enjoin&rsquo;d their love<br/>
+And faith to her: and, from her bosom, will&rsquo;d<br/>
+His goodly spirit should move forth, returning<br/>
+To its appointed kingdom, nor would have<br/>
+His body laid upon another bier.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Think now of one, who were a fit colleague,<br/>
+To keep the bark of Peter in deep sea<br/>
+Helm&rsquo;d to right point; and such our Patriarch was.<br/>
+Therefore who follow him, as he enjoins,<br/>
+Thou mayst be certain, take good lading in.<br/>
+But hunger of new viands tempts his flock,<br/>
+So that they needs into strange pastures wide<br/>
+Must spread them: and the more remote from him<br/>
+The stragglers wander, so much mole they come<br/>
+Home to the sheep-fold, destitute of milk.<br/>
+There are of them, in truth, who fear their harm,<br/>
+And to the shepherd cleave; but these so few,<br/>
+A little stuff may furnish out their cloaks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now, if my words be clear, if thou have ta&rsquo;en<br/>
+Good heed, if that, which I have told, recall<br/>
+To mind, thy wish may be in part fulfill&rsquo;d:<br/>
+For thou wilt see the point from whence they split,<br/>
+Nor miss of the reproof, which that implies,<br/>
+&lsquo;That well they thrive not sworn with vanity.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoIII.XII"></a>CANTO XII</h2>
+
+<p>
+Soon as its final word the blessed flame<br/>
+Had rais&rsquo;d for utterance, straight the holy mill<br/>
+Began to wheel, nor yet had once revolv&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Or ere another, circling, compass&rsquo;d it,<br/>
+Motion to motion, song to song, conjoining,<br/>
+Song, that as much our muses doth excel,<br/>
+Our Sirens with their tuneful pipes, as ray<br/>
+Of primal splendour doth its faint reflex.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As when, if Juno bid her handmaid forth,<br/>
+Two arches parallel, and trick&rsquo;d alike,<br/>
+Span the thin cloud, the outer taking birth<br/>
+From that within (in manner of that voice<br/>
+Whom love did melt away, as sun the mist),<br/>
+And they who gaze, presageful call to mind<br/>
+The compact, made with Noah, of the world<br/>
+No more to be o&rsquo;erflow&rsquo;d; about us thus<br/>
+Of sempiternal roses, bending, wreath&rsquo;d<br/>
+Those garlands twain, and to the innermost<br/>
+E&rsquo;en thus th&rsquo; external answered. When the footing,<br/>
+And other great festivity, of song,<br/>
+And radiance, light with light accordant, each<br/>
+Jocund and blythe, had at their pleasure still&rsquo;d<br/>
+(E&rsquo;en as the eyes by quick volition mov&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Are shut and rais&rsquo;d together), from the heart<br/>
+Of one amongst the new lights mov&rsquo;d a voice,<br/>
+That made me seem like needle to the star,<br/>
+In turning to its whereabout, and thus<br/>
+Began: &ldquo;The love, that makes me beautiful,<br/>
+Prompts me to tell of th&rsquo; other guide, for whom<br/>
+Such good of mine is spoken. Where one is,<br/>
+The other worthily should also be;<br/>
+That as their warfare was alike, alike<br/>
+Should be their glory. Slow, and full of doubt,<br/>
+And with thin ranks, after its banner mov&rsquo;d<br/>
+The army of Christ (which it so clearly cost<br/>
+To reappoint), when its imperial Head,<br/>
+Who reigneth ever, for the drooping host<br/>
+Did make provision, thorough grace alone,<br/>
+And not through its deserving. As thou heard&rsquo;st,<br/>
+Two champions to the succour of his spouse<br/>
+He sent, who by their deeds and words might join<br/>
+Again his scatter&rsquo;d people. In that clime,<br/>
+Where springs the pleasant west-wind to unfold<br/>
+The fresh leaves, with which Europe sees herself<br/>
+New-garmented; nor from those billows far,<br/>
+Beyond whose chiding, after weary course,<br/>
+The sun doth sometimes hide him, safe abides<br/>
+The happy Callaroga, under guard<br/>
+Of the great shield, wherein the lion lies<br/>
+Subjected and supreme. And there was born<br/>
+The loving million of the Christian faith,<br/>
+The hollow&rsquo;d wrestler, gentle to his own,<br/>
+And to his enemies terrible. So replete<br/>
+His soul with lively virtue, that when first<br/>
+Created, even in the mother&rsquo;s womb,<br/>
+It prophesied. When, at the sacred font,<br/>
+The spousals were complete &rsquo;twixt faith and him,<br/>
+Where pledge of mutual safety was exchang&rsquo;d,<br/>
+The dame, who was his surety, in her sleep<br/>
+Beheld the wondrous fruit, that was from him<br/>
+And from his heirs to issue. And that such<br/>
+He might be construed, as indeed he was,<br/>
+She was inspir&rsquo;d to name him of his owner,<br/>
+Whose he was wholly, and so call&rsquo;d him Dominic.<br/>
+And I speak of him, as the labourer,<br/>
+Whom Christ in his own garden chose to be<br/>
+His help-mate. Messenger he seem&rsquo;d, and friend<br/>
+Fast-knit to Christ; and the first love he show&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Was after the first counsel that Christ gave.<br/>
+Many a time his nurse, at entering found<br/>
+That he had ris&rsquo;n in silence, and was prostrate,<br/>
+As who should say, &ldquo;My errand was for this.&rdquo;<br/>
+O happy father! Felix rightly nam&rsquo;d!<br/>
+O favour&rsquo;d mother! rightly nam&rsquo;d Joanna!<br/>
+If that do mean, as men interpret it.<br/>
+Not for the world&rsquo;s sake, for which now they pore<br/>
+Upon Ostiense and Taddeo&rsquo;s page,<br/>
+But for the real manna, soon he grew<br/>
+Mighty in learning, and did set himself<br/>
+To go about the vineyard, that soon turns<br/>
+To wan and wither&rsquo;d, if not tended well:<br/>
+And from the see (whose bounty to the just<br/>
+And needy is gone by, not through its fault,<br/>
+But his who fills it basely), he besought,<br/>
+No dispensation for commuted wrong,<br/>
+Nor the first vacant fortune, nor the tenth),<br/>
+That to God&rsquo;s paupers rightly appertain,<br/>
+But, &rsquo;gainst an erring and degenerate world,<br/>
+Licence to fight, in favour of that seed,<br/>
+From which the twice twelve cions gird thee round.<br/>
+Then, with sage doctrine and good will to help,<br/>
+Forth on his great apostleship he far&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Like torrent bursting from a lofty vein;<br/>
+And, dashing &rsquo;gainst the stocks of heresy,<br/>
+Smote fiercest, where resistance was most stout.<br/>
+Thence many rivulets have since been turn&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Over the garden Catholic to lead<br/>
+Their living waters, and have fed its plants.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If such one wheel of that two-yoked car,<br/>
+Wherein the holy church defended her,<br/>
+And rode triumphant through the civil broil.<br/>
+Thou canst not doubt its fellow&rsquo;s excellence,<br/>
+Which Thomas, ere my coming, hath declar&rsquo;d<br/>
+So courteously unto thee. But the track,<br/>
+Which its smooth fellies made, is now deserted:<br/>
+That mouldy mother is where late were lees.<br/>
+His family, that wont to trace his path,<br/>
+Turn backward, and invert their steps; erelong<br/>
+To rue the gathering in of their ill crop,<br/>
+When the rejected tares in vain shall ask<br/>
+Admittance to the barn. I question not<br/>
+But he, who search&rsquo;d our volume, leaf by leaf,<br/>
+Might still find page with this inscription on&rsquo;t,<br/>
+&lsquo;I am as I was wont.&rsquo; Yet such were not<br/>
+From Acquasparta nor Casale, whence<br/>
+Of those, who come to meddle with the text,<br/>
+One stretches and another cramps its rule.<br/>
+Bonaventura&rsquo;s life in me behold,<br/>
+From Bagnororegio, one, who in discharge<br/>
+Of my great offices still laid aside<br/>
+All sinister aim. Illuminato here,<br/>
+And Agostino join me: two they were,<br/>
+Among the first of those barefooted meek ones,<br/>
+Who sought God&rsquo;s friendship in the cord: with them<br/>
+Hugues of Saint Victor, Pietro Mangiadore,<br/>
+And he of Spain in his twelve volumes shining,<br/>
+Nathan the prophet, Metropolitan<br/>
+Chrysostom, and Anselmo, and, who deign&rsquo;d<br/>
+To put his hand to the first art, Donatus.<br/>
+Raban is here: and at my side there shines<br/>
+Calabria&rsquo;s abbot, Joachim , endow&rsquo;d<br/>
+With soul prophetic. The bright courtesy<br/>
+Of friar Thomas, and his goodly lore,<br/>
+Have mov&rsquo;d me to the blazon of a peer<br/>
+So worthy, and with me have mov&rsquo;d this throng.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoIII.XIII"></a>CANTO XIII</h2>
+
+<p>
+Let him, who would conceive what now I saw,<br/>
+Imagine (and retain the image firm,<br/>
+As mountain rock, the whilst he hears me speak),<br/>
+Of stars fifteen, from midst the ethereal host<br/>
+Selected, that, with lively ray serene,<br/>
+O&rsquo;ercome the massiest air: thereto imagine<br/>
+The wain, that, in the bosom of our sky,<br/>
+Spins ever on its axle night and day,<br/>
+With the bright summit of that horn which swells<br/>
+Due from the pole, round which the first wheel rolls,<br/>
+T&rsquo; have rang&rsquo;d themselves in fashion of two signs<br/>
+In heav&rsquo;n, such as Ariadne made,<br/>
+When death&rsquo;s chill seized her; and that one of them<br/>
+Did compass in the other&rsquo;s beam; and both<br/>
+In such sort whirl around, that each should tend<br/>
+With opposite motion and, conceiving thus,<br/>
+Of that true constellation, and the dance<br/>
+Twofold, that circled me, he shall attain<br/>
+As &rsquo;twere the shadow; for things there as much<br/>
+Surpass our usage, as the swiftest heav&rsquo;n<br/>
+Is swifter than the Chiana. There was sung<br/>
+No Bacchus, and no Io Paean, but<br/>
+Three Persons in the Godhead, and in one<br/>
+Substance that nature and the human join&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The song fulfill&rsquo;d its measure; and to us<br/>
+Those saintly lights attended, happier made<br/>
+At each new minist&rsquo;ring. Then silence brake,<br/>
+Amid th&rsquo; accordant sons of Deity,<br/>
+That luminary, in which the wondrous life<br/>
+Of the meek man of God was told to me;<br/>
+And thus it spake: &ldquo;One ear o&rsquo; th&rsquo; harvest
+thresh&rsquo;d,<br/>
+And its grain safely stor&rsquo;d, sweet charity<br/>
+Invites me with the other to like toil.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou know&rsquo;st, that in the bosom, whence the rib<br/>
+Was ta&rsquo;en to fashion that fair cheek, whose taste<br/>
+All the world pays for, and in that, which pierc&rsquo;d<br/>
+By the keen lance, both after and before<br/>
+Such satisfaction offer&rsquo;d, as outweighs<br/>
+Each evil in the scale, whate&rsquo;er of light<br/>
+To human nature is allow&rsquo;d, must all<br/>
+Have by his virtue been infus&rsquo;d, who form&rsquo;d<br/>
+Both one and other: and thou thence admir&rsquo;st<br/>
+In that I told thee, of beatitudes<br/>
+A second, there is none, to his enclos&rsquo;d<br/>
+In the fifth radiance. Open now thine eyes<br/>
+To what I answer thee; and thou shalt see<br/>
+Thy deeming and my saying meet in truth,<br/>
+As centre in the round. That which dies not,<br/>
+And that which can die, are but each the beam<br/>
+Of that idea, which our Soverign Sire<br/>
+Engendereth loving; for that lively light,<br/>
+Which passeth from his brightness; not disjoin&rsquo;d<br/>
+From him, nor from his love triune with them,<br/>
+Doth, through his bounty, congregate itself,<br/>
+Mirror&rsquo;d, as &rsquo;twere in new existences,<br/>
+Itself unalterable and ever one.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Descending hence unto the lowest powers,<br/>
+Its energy so sinks, at last it makes<br/>
+But brief contingencies: for so I name<br/>
+Things generated, which the heav&rsquo;nly orbs<br/>
+Moving, with seed or without seed, produce.<br/>
+Their wax, and that which molds it, differ much:<br/>
+And thence with lustre, more or less, it shows<br/>
+Th&rsquo; ideal stamp impress: so that one tree<br/>
+According to his kind, hath better fruit,<br/>
+And worse: and, at your birth, ye, mortal men,<br/>
+Are in your talents various. Were the wax<br/>
+Molded with nice exactness, and the heav&rsquo;n<br/>
+In its disposing influence supreme,<br/>
+The lustre of the seal should be complete:<br/>
+But nature renders it imperfect ever,<br/>
+Resembling thus the artist in her work,<br/>
+Whose faultering hand is faithless to his skill.<br/>
+Howe&rsquo;er, if love itself dispose, and mark<br/>
+The primal virtue, kindling with bright view,<br/>
+There all perfection is vouchsafed; and such<br/>
+The clay was made, accomplish&rsquo;d with each gift,<br/>
+That life can teem with; such the burden fill&rsquo;d<br/>
+The virgin&rsquo;s bosom: so that I commend<br/>
+Thy judgment, that the human nature ne&rsquo;er<br/>
+Was or can be, such as in them it was.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Did I advance no further than this point,<br/>
+&lsquo;How then had he no peer?&rsquo; thou might&rsquo;st reply.<br/>
+But, that what now appears not, may appear<br/>
+Right plainly, ponder, who he was, and what<br/>
+(When he was bidden &lsquo;Ask&rsquo;), the motive sway&rsquo;d<br/>
+To his requesting. I have spoken thus,<br/>
+That thou mayst see, he was a king, who ask&rsquo;d<br/>
+For wisdom, to the end he might be king<br/>
+Sufficient: not the number to search out<br/>
+Of the celestial movers; or to know,<br/>
+If necessary with contingent e&rsquo;er<br/>
+Have made necessity; or whether that<br/>
+Be granted, that first motion is; or if<br/>
+Of the mid circle can, by art, be made<br/>
+Triangle with each corner, blunt or sharp.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Whence, noting that, which I have said, and this,<br/>
+Thou kingly prudence and that ken mayst learn,<br/>
+At which the dart of my intention aims.<br/>
+And, marking clearly, that I told thee, &lsquo;Risen,&rsquo;<br/>
+Thou shalt discern it only hath respect<br/>
+To kings, of whom are many, and the good<br/>
+Are rare. With this distinction take my words;<br/>
+And they may well consist with that which thou<br/>
+Of the first human father dost believe,<br/>
+And of our well-beloved. And let this<br/>
+Henceforth be led unto thy feet, to make<br/>
+Thee slow in motion, as a weary man,<br/>
+Both to the &lsquo;yea&rsquo; and to the &lsquo;nay&rsquo; thou seest not.<br/>
+For he among the fools is down full low,<br/>
+Whose affirmation, or denial, is<br/>
+Without distinction, in each case alike<br/>
+Since it befalls, that in most instances<br/>
+Current opinion leads to false: and then<br/>
+Affection bends the judgment to her ply.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Much more than vainly doth he loose from shore,<br/>
+Since he returns not such as he set forth,<br/>
+Who fishes for the truth and wanteth skill.<br/>
+And open proofs of this unto the world<br/>
+Have been afforded in Parmenides,<br/>
+Melissus, Bryso, and the crowd beside,<br/>
+Who journey&rsquo;d on, and knew not whither: so did<br/>
+Sabellius, Arius, and the other fools,<br/>
+Who, like to scymitars, reflected back<br/>
+The scripture-image, by distortion marr&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Let not the people be too swift to judge,<br/>
+As one who reckons on the blades in field,<br/>
+Or ere the crop be ripe. For I have seen<br/>
+The thorn frown rudely all the winter long<br/>
+And after bear the rose upon its top;<br/>
+And bark, that all the way across the sea<br/>
+Ran straight and speedy, perish at the last,<br/>
+E&rsquo;en in the haven&rsquo;s mouth seeing one steal,<br/>
+Another brine, his offering to the priest,<br/>
+Let not Dame Birtha and Sir Martin thence<br/>
+Into heav&rsquo;n&rsquo;s counsels deem that they can pry:<br/>
+For one of these may rise, the other fall.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoIII.XIV"></a>CANTO XIV</h2>
+
+<p>
+From centre to the circle, and so back<br/>
+From circle to the centre, water moves<br/>
+In the round chalice, even as the blow<br/>
+Impels it, inwardly, or from without.<br/>
+Such was the image glanc&rsquo;d into my mind,<br/>
+As the great spirit of Aquinum ceas&rsquo;d;<br/>
+And Beatrice after him her words<br/>
+Resum&rsquo;d alternate: &ldquo;Need there is (tho&rsquo; yet<br/>
+He tells it to you not in words, nor e&rsquo;en<br/>
+In thought) that he should fathom to its depth<br/>
+Another mystery. Tell him, if the light,<br/>
+Wherewith your substance blooms, shall stay with you<br/>
+Eternally, as now: and, if it doth,<br/>
+How, when ye shall regain your visible forms,<br/>
+The sight may without harm endure the change,<br/>
+That also tell.&rdquo; As those, who in a ring<br/>
+Tread the light measure, in their fitful mirth<br/>
+Raise loud the voice, and spring with gladder bound;<br/>
+Thus, at the hearing of that pious suit,<br/>
+The saintly circles in their tourneying<br/>
+And wond&rsquo;rous note attested new delight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whoso laments, that we must doff this garb<br/>
+Of frail mortality, thenceforth to live<br/>
+Immortally above, he hath not seen<br/>
+The sweet refreshing, of that heav&rsquo;nly shower.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Him, who lives ever, and for ever reigns<br/>
+In mystic union of the Three in One,<br/>
+Unbounded, bounding all, each spirit thrice<br/>
+Sang, with such melody, as but to hear<br/>
+For highest merit were an ample meed.<br/>
+And from the lesser orb the goodliest light,<br/>
+With gentle voice and mild, such as perhaps<br/>
+The angel&rsquo;s once to Mary, thus replied:<br/>
+&ldquo;Long as the joy of Paradise shall last,<br/>
+Our love shall shine around that raiment, bright,<br/>
+As fervent; fervent, as in vision blest;<br/>
+And that as far in blessedness exceeding,<br/>
+As it hath grave beyond its virtue great.<br/>
+Our shape, regarmented with glorious weeds<br/>
+Of saintly flesh, must, being thus entire,<br/>
+Show yet more gracious. Therefore shall increase,<br/>
+Whate&rsquo;er of light, gratuitous, imparts<br/>
+The Supreme Good; light, ministering aid,<br/>
+The better disclose his glory: whence<br/>
+The vision needs increasing, much increase<br/>
+The fervour, which it kindles; and that too<br/>
+The ray, that comes from it. But as the greed<br/>
+Which gives out flame, yet it its whiteness shines<br/>
+More lively than that, and so preserves<br/>
+Its proper semblance; thus this circling sphere<br/>
+Of splendour, shall to view less radiant seem,<br/>
+Than shall our fleshly robe, which yonder earth<br/>
+Now covers. Nor will such excess of light<br/>
+O&rsquo;erpower us, in corporeal organs made<br/>
+Firm, and susceptible of all delight.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So ready and so cordial an &ldquo;Amen,&rdquo;<br/>
+Followed from either choir, as plainly spoke<br/>
+Desire of their dead bodies; yet perchance<br/>
+Not for themselves, but for their kindred dear,<br/>
+Mothers and sires, and those whom best they lov&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Ere they were made imperishable flame.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And lo! forthwith there rose up round about<br/>
+A lustre over that already there,<br/>
+Of equal clearness, like the brightening up<br/>
+Of the horizon. As at an evening hour<br/>
+Of twilight, new appearances through heav&rsquo;n<br/>
+Peer with faint glimmer, doubtfully descried;<br/>
+So there new substances, methought began<br/>
+To rise in view; and round the other twain<br/>
+Enwheeling, sweep their ampler circuit wide.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+O gentle glitter of eternal beam!<br/>
+With what a such whiteness did it flow,<br/>
+O&rsquo;erpowering vision in me! But so fair,<br/>
+So passing lovely, Beatrice show&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Mind cannot follow it, nor words express<br/>
+Her infinite sweetness. Thence mine eyes regain&rsquo;d<br/>
+Power to look up, and I beheld myself,<br/>
+Sole with my lady, to more lofty bliss<br/>
+Translated: for the star, with warmer smile<br/>
+Impurpled, well denoted our ascent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With all the heart, and with that tongue which speaks<br/>
+The same in all, an holocaust I made<br/>
+To God, befitting the new grace vouchsaf&rsquo;d.<br/>
+And from my bosom had not yet upsteam&rsquo;d<br/>
+The fuming of that incense, when I knew<br/>
+The rite accepted. With such mighty sheen<br/>
+And mantling crimson, in two listed rays<br/>
+The splendours shot before me, that I cried,<br/>
+&ldquo;God of Sabaoth! that does prank them thus!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As leads the galaxy from pole to pole,<br/>
+Distinguish&rsquo;d into greater lights and less,<br/>
+Its pathway, which the wisest fail to spell;<br/>
+So thickly studded, in the depth of Mars,<br/>
+Those rays describ&rsquo;d the venerable sign,<br/>
+That quadrants in the round conjoining frame.<br/>
+Here memory mocks the toil of genius. Christ<br/>
+Beam&rsquo;d on that cross; and pattern fails me now.<br/>
+But whoso takes his cross, and follows Christ<br/>
+Will pardon me for that I leave untold,<br/>
+When in the flecker&rsquo;d dawning he shall spy<br/>
+The glitterance of Christ. From horn to horn,<br/>
+And &rsquo;tween the summit and the base did move<br/>
+Lights, scintillating, as they met and pass&rsquo;d.<br/>
+Thus oft are seen, with ever-changeful glance,<br/>
+Straight or athwart, now rapid and now slow,<br/>
+The atomies of bodies, long or short,<br/>
+To move along the sunbeam, whose slant line<br/>
+Checkers the shadow, interpos&rsquo;d by art<br/>
+Against the noontide heat. And as the chime<br/>
+Of minstrel music, dulcimer, and help<br/>
+With many strings, a pleasant dining makes<br/>
+To him, who heareth not distinct the note;<br/>
+So from the lights, which there appear&rsquo;d to me,<br/>
+Gather&rsquo;d along the cross a melody,<br/>
+That, indistinctly heard, with ravishment<br/>
+Possess&rsquo;d me. Yet I mark&rsquo;d it was a hymn<br/>
+Of lofty praises; for there came to me<br/>
+&ldquo;Arise and conquer,&rdquo; as to one who hears<br/>
+And comprehends not. Me such ecstasy<br/>
+O&rsquo;ercame, that never till that hour was thing<br/>
+That held me in so sweet imprisonment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Perhaps my saying over bold appears,<br/>
+Accounting less the pleasure of those eyes,<br/>
+Whereon to look fulfilleth all desire.<br/>
+But he, who is aware those living seals<br/>
+Of every beauty work with quicker force,<br/>
+The higher they are ris&rsquo;n; and that there<br/>
+I had not turn&rsquo;d me to them; he may well<br/>
+Excuse me that, whereof in my excuse<br/>
+I do accuse me, and may own my truth;<br/>
+That holy pleasure here not yet reveal&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Which grows in transport as we mount aloof.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoIII.XV"></a>CANTO XV</h2>
+
+<p>
+True love, that ever shows itself as clear<br/>
+In kindness, as loose appetite in wrong,<br/>
+Silenced that lyre harmonious, and still&rsquo;d<br/>
+The sacred chords, that are by heav&rsquo;n&rsquo;s right hand<br/>
+Unwound and tighten&rsquo;d, flow to righteous prayers<br/>
+Should they not hearken, who, to give me will<br/>
+For praying, in accordance thus were mute?<br/>
+He hath in sooth good cause for endless grief,<br/>
+Who, for the love of thing that lasteth not,<br/>
+Despoils himself forever of that love.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As oft along the still and pure serene,<br/>
+At nightfall, glides a sudden trail of fire,<br/>
+Attracting with involuntary heed<br/>
+The eye to follow it, erewhile at rest,<br/>
+And seems some star that shifted place in heav&rsquo;n,<br/>
+Only that, whence it kindles, none is lost,<br/>
+And it is soon extinct; thus from the horn,<br/>
+That on the dexter of the cross extends,<br/>
+Down to its foot, one luminary ran<br/>
+From mid the cluster shone there; yet no gem<br/>
+Dropp&rsquo;d from its foil; and through the beamy list<br/>
+Like flame in alabaster, glow&rsquo;d its course.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So forward stretch&rsquo;d him (if of credence aught<br/>
+Our greater muse may claim) the pious ghost<br/>
+Of old Anchises, in the&rsquo; Elysian bower,<br/>
+When he perceiv&rsquo;d his son. &ldquo;O thou, my blood!<br/>
+O most exceeding grace divine! to whom,<br/>
+As now to thee, hath twice the heav&rsquo;nly gate<br/>
+Been e&rsquo;er unclos&rsquo;d?&rdquo; so spake the light; whence I<br/>
+Turn&rsquo;d me toward him; then unto my dame<br/>
+My sight directed, and on either side<br/>
+Amazement waited me; for in her eyes<br/>
+Was lighted such a smile, I thought that mine<br/>
+Had div&rsquo;d unto the bottom of my grace<br/>
+And of my bliss in Paradise. Forthwith<br/>
+To hearing and to sight grateful alike,<br/>
+The spirit to his proem added things<br/>
+I understood not, so profound he spake;<br/>
+Yet not of choice but through necessity<br/>
+Mysterious; for his high conception scar&rsquo;d<br/>
+Beyond the mark of mortals. When the flight<br/>
+Of holy transport had so spent its rage,<br/>
+That nearer to the level of our thought<br/>
+The speech descended, the first sounds I heard<br/>
+Were, &ldquo;Best he thou, Triunal Deity!<br/>
+That hast such favour in my seed vouchsaf&rsquo;d!&rdquo;<br/>
+Then follow&rsquo;d: &ldquo;No unpleasant thirst, tho&rsquo; long,<br/>
+Which took me reading in the sacred book,<br/>
+Whose leaves or white or dusky never change,<br/>
+Thou hast allay&rsquo;d, my son, within this light,<br/>
+From whence my voice thou hear&rsquo;st; more thanks to her.<br/>
+Who for such lofty mounting has with plumes<br/>
+Begirt thee. Thou dost deem thy thoughts to me<br/>
+From him transmitted, who is first of all,<br/>
+E&rsquo;en as all numbers ray from unity;<br/>
+And therefore dost not ask me who I am,<br/>
+Or why to thee more joyous I appear,<br/>
+Than any other in this gladsome throng.<br/>
+The truth is as thou deem&rsquo;st; for in this hue<br/>
+Both less and greater in that mirror look,<br/>
+In which thy thoughts, or ere thou think&rsquo;st, are shown.<br/>
+But, that the love, which keeps me wakeful ever,<br/>
+Urging with sacred thirst of sweet desire,<br/>
+May be contended fully, let thy voice,<br/>
+Fearless, and frank and jocund, utter forth<br/>
+Thy will distinctly, utter forth the wish,<br/>
+Whereto my ready answer stands decreed.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I turn&rsquo;d me to Beatrice; and she heard<br/>
+Ere I had spoken, smiling, an assent,<br/>
+That to my will gave wings; and I began<br/>
+&ldquo;To each among your tribe, what time ye kenn&rsquo;d<br/>
+The nature, in whom naught unequal dwells,<br/>
+Wisdom and love were in one measure dealt;<br/>
+For that they are so equal in the sun,<br/>
+From whence ye drew your radiance and your heat,<br/>
+As makes all likeness scant. But will and means,<br/>
+In mortals, for the cause ye well discern,<br/>
+With unlike wings are fledge. A mortal I<br/>
+Experience inequality like this,<br/>
+And therefore give no thanks, but in the heart,<br/>
+For thy paternal greeting. This howe&rsquo;er<br/>
+I pray thee, living topaz! that ingemm&rsquo;st<br/>
+This precious jewel, let me hear thy name.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am thy root, O leaf! whom to expect<br/>
+Even, hath pleas&rsquo;d me: &ldquo;thus the prompt reply<br/>
+Prefacing, next it added; &ldquo;he, of whom<br/>
+Thy kindred appellation comes, and who,<br/>
+These hundred years and more, on its first ledge<br/>
+Hath circuited the mountain, was my son<br/>
+And thy great grandsire. Well befits, his long<br/>
+Endurance should he shorten&rsquo;d by thy deeds.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Florence, within her ancient limit-mark,<br/>
+Which calls her still to matin prayers and noon,<br/>
+Was chaste and sober, and abode in peace.<br/>
+She had no armlets and no head-tires then,<br/>
+No purfled dames, no zone, that caught the eye<br/>
+More than the person did. Time was not yet,<br/>
+When at his daughter&rsquo;s birth the sire grew pale.<br/>
+For fear the age and dowry should exceed<br/>
+On each side just proportion. House was none<br/>
+Void of its family; nor yet had come<br/>
+Hardanapalus, to exhibit feats<br/>
+Of chamber prowess. Montemalo yet<br/>
+O&rsquo;er our suburban turret rose; as much<br/>
+To be surpass in fall, as in its rising.<br/>
+I saw Bellincione Berti walk abroad<br/>
+In leathern girdle and a clasp of bone;<br/>
+And, with no artful colouring on her cheeks,<br/>
+His lady leave the glass. The sons I saw<br/>
+Of Nerli and of Vecchio well content<br/>
+With unrob&rsquo;d jerkin; and their good dames handling<br/>
+The spindle and the flax; O happy they!<br/>
+Each sure of burial in her native land,<br/>
+And none left desolate a-bed for France!<br/>
+One wak&rsquo;d to tend the cradle, hushing it<br/>
+With sounds that lull&rsquo;d the parent&rsquo;s infancy:<br/>
+Another, with her maidens, drawing off<br/>
+The tresses from the distaff, lectur&rsquo;d them<br/>
+Old tales of Troy and Fesole and Rome.<br/>
+A Salterello and Cianghella we<br/>
+Had held as strange a marvel, as ye would<br/>
+A Cincinnatus or Cornelia now.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;In such compos&rsquo;d and seemly fellowship,<br/>
+Such faithful and such fair equality,<br/>
+In so sweet household, Mary at my birth<br/>
+Bestow&rsquo;d me, call&rsquo;d on with loud cries; and there<br/>
+In your old baptistery, I was made<br/>
+Christian at once and Cacciaguida; as were<br/>
+My brethren, Eliseo and Moronto.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;From Valdipado came to me my spouse,<br/>
+And hence thy surname grew. I follow&rsquo;d then<br/>
+The Emperor Conrad; and his knighthood he<br/>
+Did gird on me; in such good part he took<br/>
+My valiant service. After him I went<br/>
+To testify against that evil law,<br/>
+Whose people, by the shepherd&rsquo;s fault, possess<br/>
+Your right, usurping. There, by that foul crew<br/>
+Was I releas&rsquo;d from the deceitful world,<br/>
+Whose base affection many a spirit soils,<br/>
+And from the martyrdom came to this peace.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoIII.XVI"></a>CANTO XVI</h2>
+
+<p>
+O slight respect of man&rsquo;s nobility!<br/>
+I never shall account it marvelous,<br/>
+That our infirm affection here below<br/>
+Thou mov&rsquo;st to boasting, when I could not choose,<br/>
+E&rsquo;en in that region of unwarp&rsquo;d desire,<br/>
+In heav&rsquo;n itself, but make my vaunt in thee!<br/>
+Yet cloak thou art soon shorten&rsquo;d, for that time,<br/>
+Unless thou be eked out from day to day,<br/>
+Goes round thee with his shears. Resuming then<br/>
+With greeting such, as Rome, was first to bear,<br/>
+But since hath disaccustom&rsquo;d I began;<br/>
+And Beatrice, that a little space<br/>
+Was sever&rsquo;d, smil&rsquo;d reminding me of her,<br/>
+Whose cough embolden&rsquo;d (as the story holds)<br/>
+To first offence the doubting Guenever.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You are my sire,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;you give me heart<br/>
+Freely to speak my thought: above myself<br/>
+You raise me. Through so many streams with joy<br/>
+My soul is fill&rsquo;d, that gladness wells from it;<br/>
+So that it bears the mighty tide, and bursts not<br/>
+Say then, my honour&rsquo;d stem! what ancestors<br/>
+Where those you sprang from, and what years were mark&rsquo;d<br/>
+In your first childhood? Tell me of the fold,<br/>
+That hath Saint John for guardian, what was then<br/>
+Its state, and who in it were highest seated?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As embers, at the breathing of the wind,<br/>
+Their flame enliven, so that light I saw<br/>
+Shine at my blandishments; and, as it grew<br/>
+More fair to look on, so with voice more sweet,<br/>
+Yet not in this our modern phrase, forthwith<br/>
+It answer&rsquo;d: &ldquo;From the day, when it was said<br/>
+&lsquo;Hail Virgin!&rsquo; to the throes, by which my mother,<br/>
+Who now is sainted, lighten&rsquo;d her of me<br/>
+Whom she was heavy with, this fire had come,<br/>
+Five hundred fifty times and thrice, its beams<br/>
+To reilumine underneath the foot<br/>
+Of its own lion. They, of whom I sprang,<br/>
+And I, had there our birth-place, where the last<br/>
+Partition of our city first is reach&rsquo;d<br/>
+By him, that runs her annual game. Thus much<br/>
+Suffice of my forefathers: who they were,<br/>
+And whence they hither came, more honourable<br/>
+It is to pass in silence than to tell.<br/>
+All those, who in that time were there from Mars<br/>
+Until the Baptist, fit to carry arms,<br/>
+Were but the fifth of them this day alive.<br/>
+But then the citizen&rsquo;s blood, that now is mix&rsquo;d<br/>
+From Campi and Certaldo and Fighine,<br/>
+Ran purely through the last mechanic&rsquo;s veins.<br/>
+O how much better were it, that these people<br/>
+Were neighbours to you, and that at Galluzzo<br/>
+And at Trespiano, ye should have your bound&rsquo;ry,<br/>
+Than to have them within, and bear the stench<br/>
+Of Aguglione&rsquo;s hind, and Signa&rsquo;s, him,<br/>
+That hath his eye already keen for bart&rsquo;ring!<br/>
+Had not the people, which of all the world<br/>
+Degenerates most, been stepdame unto Caesar,<br/>
+But, as a mother, gracious to her son;<br/>
+Such one, as hath become a Florentine,<br/>
+And trades and traffics, had been turn&rsquo;d adrift<br/>
+To Simifonte, where his grandsire ply&rsquo;d<br/>
+The beggar&rsquo;s craft. The Conti were possess&rsquo;d<br/>
+Of Montemurlo still: the Cerchi still<br/>
+Were in Acone&rsquo;s parish; nor had haply<br/>
+From Valdigrieve past the Buondelmonte.<br/>
+The city&rsquo;s malady hath ever source<br/>
+In the confusion of its persons, as<br/>
+The body&rsquo;s, in variety of food:<br/>
+And the blind bull falls with a steeper plunge,<br/>
+Than the blind lamb; and oftentimes one sword<br/>
+Doth more and better execution,<br/>
+Than five. Mark Luni, Urbisaglia mark,<br/>
+How they are gone, and after them how go<br/>
+Chiusi and Sinigaglia; and &rsquo;twill seem<br/>
+No longer new or strange to thee to hear,<br/>
+That families fail, when cities have their end.<br/>
+All things, that appertain t&rsquo; ye, like yourselves,<br/>
+Are mortal: but mortality in some<br/>
+Ye mark not, they endure so long, and you<br/>
+Pass by so suddenly. And as the moon<br/>
+Doth, by the rolling of her heav&rsquo;nly sphere,<br/>
+Hide and reveal the strand unceasingly;<br/>
+So fortune deals with Florence. Hence admire not<br/>
+At what of them I tell thee, whose renown<br/>
+Time covers, the first Florentines. I saw<br/>
+The Ughi, Catilini and Filippi,<br/>
+The Alberichi, Greci and Ormanni,<br/>
+Now in their wane, illustrious citizens:<br/>
+And great as ancient, of Sannella him,<br/>
+With him of Arca saw, and Soldanieri<br/>
+And Ardinghi, and Bostichi. At the poop,<br/>
+That now is laden with new felony,<br/>
+So cumb&rsquo;rous it may speedily sink the bark,<br/>
+The Ravignani sat, of whom is sprung<br/>
+The County Guido, and whoso hath since<br/>
+His title from the fam&rsquo;d Bellincione ta&rsquo;en.<br/>
+Fair governance was yet an art well priz&rsquo;d<br/>
+By him of Pressa: Galigaio show&rsquo;d<br/>
+The gilded hilt and pommel, in his house.<br/>
+The column, cloth&rsquo;d with verrey, still was seen<br/>
+Unshaken: the Sacchetti still were great,<br/>
+Giouchi, Sifanti, Galli and Barucci,<br/>
+With them who blush to hear the bushel nam&rsquo;d.<br/>
+Of the Calfucci still the branchy trunk<br/>
+Was in its strength: and to the curule chairs<br/>
+Sizii and Arigucci yet were drawn.<br/>
+How mighty them I saw, whom since their pride<br/>
+Hath undone! and in all her goodly deeds<br/>
+Florence was by the bullets of bright gold<br/>
+O&rsquo;erflourish&rsquo;d. Such the sires of those, who now,<br/>
+As surely as your church is vacant, flock<br/>
+Into her consistory, and at leisure<br/>
+There stall them and grow fat. The o&rsquo;erweening brood,<br/>
+That plays the dragon after him that flees,<br/>
+But unto such, as turn and show the tooth,<br/>
+Ay or the purse, is gentle as a lamb,<br/>
+Was on its rise, but yet so slight esteem&rsquo;d,<br/>
+That Ubertino of Donati grudg&rsquo;d<br/>
+His father-in-law should yoke him to its tribe.<br/>
+Already Caponsacco had descended<br/>
+Into the mart from Fesole: and Giuda<br/>
+And Infangato were good citizens.<br/>
+A thing incredible I tell, tho&rsquo; true:<br/>
+The gateway, named from those of Pera, led<br/>
+Into the narrow circuit of your walls.<br/>
+Each one, who bears the sightly quarterings<br/>
+Of the great Baron (he whose name and worth<br/>
+The festival of Thomas still revives)<br/>
+His knighthood and his privilege retain&rsquo;d;<br/>
+Albeit one, who borders them With gold,<br/>
+This day is mingled with the common herd.<br/>
+In Borgo yet the Gualterotti dwelt,<br/>
+And Importuni: well for its repose<br/>
+Had it still lack&rsquo;d of newer neighbourhood.<br/>
+The house, from whence your tears have had their spring,<br/>
+Through the just anger that hath murder&rsquo;d ye<br/>
+And put a period to your gladsome days,<br/>
+Was honour&rsquo;d, it, and those consorted with it.<br/>
+O Buondelmonte! what ill counseling<br/>
+Prevail&rsquo;d on thee to break the plighted bond<br/>
+Many, who now are weeping, would rejoice,<br/>
+Had God to Ema giv&rsquo;n thee, the first time<br/>
+Thou near our city cam&rsquo;st. But so was doom&rsquo;d:<br/>
+On that maim&rsquo;d stone set up to guard the bridge,<br/>
+At thy last peace, the victim, Florence! fell.<br/>
+With these and others like to them, I saw<br/>
+Florence in such assur&rsquo;d tranquility,<br/>
+She had no cause at which to grieve: with these<br/>
+Saw her so glorious and so just, that ne&rsquo;er<br/>
+The lily from the lance had hung reverse,<br/>
+Or through division been with vermeil dyed.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoIII.XVII"></a>CANTO XVII</h2>
+
+<p>
+Such as the youth, who came to Clymene<br/>
+To certify himself of that reproach,<br/>
+Which had been fasten&rsquo;d on him, (he whose end<br/>
+Still makes the fathers chary to their sons,<br/>
+E&rsquo;en such was I; nor unobserv&rsquo;d was such<br/>
+Of Beatrice, and that saintly lamp,<br/>
+Who had erewhile for me his station mov&rsquo;d;<br/>
+When thus by lady: &ldquo;Give thy wish free vent,<br/>
+That it may issue, bearing true report<br/>
+Of the mind&rsquo;s impress; not that aught thy words<br/>
+May to our knowledge add, but to the end,<br/>
+That thou mayst use thyself to own thy thirst<br/>
+And men may mingle for thee when they hear.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;O plant! from whence I spring! rever&rsquo;d and lov&rsquo;d!<br/>
+Who soar&rsquo;st so high a pitch, thou seest as clear,<br/>
+As earthly thought determines two obtuse<br/>
+In one triangle not contain&rsquo;d, so clear<br/>
+Dost see contingencies, ere in themselves<br/>
+Existent, looking at the point whereto<br/>
+All times are present, I, the whilst I scal&rsquo;d<br/>
+With Virgil the soul purifying mount,<br/>
+And visited the nether world of woe,<br/>
+Touching my future destiny have heard<br/>
+Words grievous, though I feel me on all sides<br/>
+Well squar&rsquo;d to fortune&rsquo;s blows. Therefore my will<br/>
+Were satisfied to know the lot awaits me,<br/>
+The arrow, seen beforehand, slacks its flight.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So said I to the brightness, which erewhile<br/>
+To me had spoken, and my will declar&rsquo;d,<br/>
+As Beatrice will&rsquo;d, explicitly.<br/>
+Nor with oracular response obscure,<br/>
+Such, as or ere the Lamb of God was slain,<br/>
+Beguil&rsquo;d the credulous nations; but, in terms<br/>
+Precise and unambiguous lore, replied<br/>
+The spirit of paternal love, enshrin&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Yet in his smile apparent; and thus spake:<br/>
+&ldquo;Contingency, unfolded not to view<br/>
+Upon the tablet of your mortal mold,<br/>
+Is all depictur&rsquo;d in the&rsquo; eternal sight;<br/>
+But hence deriveth not necessity,<br/>
+More then the tall ship, hurried down the flood,<br/>
+Doth from the vision, that reflects the scene.<br/>
+From thence, as to the ear sweet harmony<br/>
+From organ comes, so comes before mine eye<br/>
+The time prepar&rsquo;d for thee. Such as driv&rsquo;n out<br/>
+From Athens, by his cruel stepdame&rsquo;s wiles,<br/>
+Hippolytus departed, such must thou<br/>
+Depart from Florence. This they wish, and this<br/>
+Contrive, and will ere long effectuate, there,<br/>
+Where gainful merchandize is made of Christ,<br/>
+Throughout the livelong day. The common cry,<br/>
+Will, as &rsquo;tis ever wont, affix the blame<br/>
+Unto the party injur&rsquo;d: but the truth<br/>
+Shall, in the vengeance it dispenseth, find<br/>
+A faithful witness. Thou shall leave each thing<br/>
+Belov&rsquo;d most dearly: this is the first shaft<br/>
+Shot from the bow of exile. Thou shalt prove<br/>
+How salt the savour is of other&rsquo;s bread,<br/>
+How hard the passage to descend and climb<br/>
+By other&rsquo;s stairs, But that shall gall thee most<br/>
+Will he the worthless and vile company,<br/>
+With whom thou must be thrown into these straits.<br/>
+For all ungrateful, impious all and mad,<br/>
+Shall turn &rsquo;gainst thee: but in a little while<br/>
+Theirs and not thine shall be the crimson&rsquo;d brow<br/>
+Their course shall so evince their brutishness<br/>
+T&rsquo; have ta&rsquo;en thy stand apart shall well become thee.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;First refuge thou must find, first place of rest,<br/>
+In the great Lombard&rsquo;s courtesy, who bears<br/>
+Upon the ladder perch&rsquo;d the sacred bird.<br/>
+He shall behold thee with such kind regard,<br/>
+That &rsquo;twixt ye two, the contrary to that<br/>
+Which falls &rsquo;twixt other men, the granting shall<br/>
+Forerun the asking. With him shalt thou see<br/>
+That mortal, who was at his birth impress<br/>
+So strongly from this star, that of his deeds<br/>
+The nations shall take note. His unripe age<br/>
+Yet holds him from observance; for these wheels<br/>
+Only nine years have compass him about.<br/>
+But, ere the Gascon practice on great Harry,<br/>
+Sparkles of virtue shall shoot forth in him,<br/>
+In equal scorn of labours and of gold.<br/>
+His bounty shall be spread abroad so widely,<br/>
+As not to let the tongues e&rsquo;en of his foes<br/>
+Be idle in its praise. Look thou to him<br/>
+And his beneficence: for he shall cause<br/>
+Reversal of their lot to many people,<br/>
+Rich men and beggars interchanging fortunes.<br/>
+And thou shalt bear this written in thy soul<br/>
+Of him, but tell it not; &ldquo;and things he told<br/>
+Incredible to those who witness them;<br/>
+Then added: &ldquo;So interpret thou, my son,<br/>
+What hath been told thee.&mdash;Lo! the ambushment<br/>
+That a few circling seasons hide for thee!<br/>
+Yet envy not thy neighbours: time extends<br/>
+Thy span beyond their treason&rsquo;s chastisement.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Soon, as the saintly spirit, by his silence,<br/>
+Had shown the web, which I had streteh&rsquo;d for him<br/>
+Upon the warp, was woven, I began,<br/>
+As one, who in perplexity desires<br/>
+Counsel of other, wise, benign and friendly:<br/>
+&ldquo;My father! well I mark how time spurs on<br/>
+Toward me, ready to inflict the blow,<br/>
+Which falls most heavily on him, who most<br/>
+Abandoned himself. Therefore &rsquo;tis good<br/>
+I should forecast, that driven from the place<br/>
+Most dear to me, I may not lose myself<br/>
+All others by my song. Down through the world<br/>
+Of infinite mourning, and along the mount<br/>
+From whose fair height my lady&rsquo;s eyes did lift me,<br/>
+And after through this heav&rsquo;n from light to light,<br/>
+Have I learnt that, which if I tell again,<br/>
+It may with many woefully disrelish;<br/>
+And, if I am a timid friend to truth,<br/>
+I fear my life may perish among those,<br/>
+To whom these days shall be of ancient date.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The brightness, where enclos&rsquo;d the treasure smil&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Which I had found there, first shone glisteningly,<br/>
+Like to a golden mirror in the sun;<br/>
+Next answer&rsquo;d: &ldquo;Conscience, dimm&rsquo;d or by its own<br/>
+Or other&rsquo;s shame, will feel thy saying sharp.<br/>
+Thou, notwithstanding, all deceit remov&rsquo;d,<br/>
+See the whole vision be made manifest.<br/>
+And let them wince who have their withers wrung.<br/>
+What though, when tasted first, thy voice shall prove<br/>
+Unwelcome, on digestion it will turn<br/>
+To vital nourishment. The cry thou raisest,<br/>
+Shall, as the wind doth, smite the proudest summits;<br/>
+Which is of honour no light argument,<br/>
+For this there only have been shown to thee,<br/>
+Throughout these orbs, the mountain, and the deep,<br/>
+Spirits, whom fame hath note of. For the mind<br/>
+Of him, who hears, is loth to acquiesce<br/>
+And fix its faith, unless the instance brought<br/>
+Be palpable, and proof apparent urge.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoIII.XVIII"></a>CANTO XVIII</h2>
+
+<p>
+Now in his word, sole, ruminating, joy&rsquo;d<br/>
+That blessed spirit; and I fed on mine,<br/>
+Tempting the sweet with bitter: she meanwhile,<br/>
+Who led me unto God, admonish&rsquo;d: &ldquo;Muse<br/>
+On other thoughts: bethink thee, that near Him<br/>
+I dwell, who recompenseth every wrong.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the sweet sounds of comfort straight I turn&rsquo;d;<br/>
+And, in the saintly eyes what love was seen,<br/>
+I leave in silence here: nor through distrust<br/>
+Of my words only, but that to such bliss<br/>
+The mind remounts not without aid. Thus much<br/>
+Yet may I speak; that, as I gaz&rsquo;d on her,<br/>
+Affection found no room for other wish.<br/>
+While the everlasting pleasure, that did full<br/>
+On Beatrice shine, with second view<br/>
+From her fair countenance my gladden&rsquo;d soul<br/>
+Contented; vanquishing me with a beam<br/>
+Of her soft smile, she spake: &ldquo;Turn thee, and list.<br/>
+These eyes are not thy only Paradise.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As here we sometimes in the looks may see<br/>
+Th&rsquo; affection mark&rsquo;d, when that its sway hath ta&rsquo;en<br/>
+The spirit wholly; thus the hallow&rsquo;d light,<br/>
+To whom I turn&rsquo;d, flashing, bewray&rsquo;d its will<br/>
+To talk yet further with me, and began:<br/>
+&ldquo;On this fifth lodgment of the tree, whose life<br/>
+Is from its top, whose fruit is ever fair<br/>
+And leaf unwith&rsquo;ring, blessed spirits abide,<br/>
+That were below, ere they arriv&rsquo;d in heav&rsquo;n,<br/>
+So mighty in renown, as every muse<br/>
+Might grace her triumph with them. On the horns<br/>
+Look therefore of the cross: he, whom I name,<br/>
+Shall there enact, as doth 1n summer cloud<br/>
+Its nimble fire.&rdquo; Along the cross I saw,<br/>
+At the repeated name of Joshua,<br/>
+A splendour gliding; nor, the word was said,<br/>
+Ere it was done: then, at the naming saw<br/>
+Of the great Maccabee, another move<br/>
+With whirling speed; and gladness was the scourge<br/>
+Unto that top. The next for Charlemagne<br/>
+And for the peer Orlando, two my gaze<br/>
+Pursued, intently, as the eye pursues<br/>
+A falcon flying. Last, along the cross,<br/>
+William, and Renard, and Duke Godfrey drew<br/>
+My ken, and Robert Guiscard. And the soul,<br/>
+Who spake with me among the other lights<br/>
+Did move away, and mix; and with the choir<br/>
+Of heav&rsquo;nly songsters prov&rsquo;d his tuneful skill.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To Beatrice on my right l bent,<br/>
+Looking for intimation or by word<br/>
+Or act, what next behoov&rsquo;d; and did descry<br/>
+Such mere effulgence in her eyes, such joy,<br/>
+It past all former wont. And, as by sense<br/>
+Of new delight, the man, who perseveres<br/>
+In good deeds doth perceive from day to day<br/>
+His virtue growing; I e&rsquo;en thus perceiv&rsquo;d<br/>
+Of my ascent, together with the heav&rsquo;n<br/>
+The circuit widen&rsquo;d, noting the increase<br/>
+Of beauty in that wonder. Like the change<br/>
+In a brief moment on some maiden&rsquo;s cheek,<br/>
+Which from its fairness doth discharge the weight<br/>
+Of pudency, that stain&rsquo;d it; such in her,<br/>
+And to mine eyes so sudden was the change,<br/>
+Through silvery whiteness of that temperate star,<br/>
+Whose sixth orb now enfolded us. I saw,<br/>
+Within that Jovial cresset, the clear sparks<br/>
+Of love, that reign&rsquo;d there, fashion to my view<br/>
+Our language. And as birds, from river banks<br/>
+Arisen, now in round, now lengthen&rsquo;d troop,<br/>
+Array them in their flight, greeting, as seems,<br/>
+Their new-found pastures; so, within the lights,<br/>
+The saintly creatures flying, sang, and made<br/>
+Now D. now I. now L. figur&rsquo;d I&rsquo; th&rsquo; air.<br/>
+First, singing, to their notes they mov&rsquo;d, then one<br/>
+Becoming of these signs, a little while<br/>
+Did rest them, and were mute. O nymph divine<br/>
+Of Pegasean race! whose souls, which thou<br/>
+Inspir&rsquo;st, mak&rsquo;st glorious and long-liv&rsquo;d, as they<br/>
+Cities and realms by thee! thou with thyself<br/>
+Inform me; that I may set forth the shapes,<br/>
+As fancy doth present them. Be thy power<br/>
+Display&rsquo;d in this brief song. The characters,<br/>
+Vocal and consonant, were five-fold seven.<br/>
+In order each, as they appear&rsquo;d, I mark&rsquo;d.<br/>
+Diligite Justitiam, the first,<br/>
+Both verb and noun all blazon&rsquo;d; and the extreme<br/>
+Qui judicatis terram. In the M.<br/>
+Of the fifth word they held their station,<br/>
+Making the star seem silver streak&rsquo;d with gold.<br/>
+And on the summit of the M. I saw<br/>
+Descending other lights, that rested there,<br/>
+Singing, methinks, their bliss and primal good.<br/>
+Then, as at shaking of a lighted brand,<br/>
+Sparkles innumerable on all sides<br/>
+Rise scatter&rsquo;d, source of augury to th&rsquo; unwise;<br/>
+Thus more than thousand twinkling lustres hence<br/>
+Seem&rsquo;d reascending, and a higher pitch<br/>
+Some mounting, and some less; e&rsquo;en as the sun,<br/>
+Which kindleth them, decreed. And when each one<br/>
+Had settled in his place, the head and neck<br/>
+Then saw I of an eagle, lively<br/>
+Grav&rsquo;d in that streaky fire. Who painteth there,<br/>
+Hath none to guide him; of himself he guides;<br/>
+And every line and texture of the nest<br/>
+Doth own from him the virtue, fashions it.<br/>
+The other bright beatitude, that seem&rsquo;d<br/>
+Erewhile, with lilied crowning, well content<br/>
+To over-canopy the M. mov&rsquo;d forth,<br/>
+Following gently the impress of the bird.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+ Sweet star! what glorious and thick-studded gems<br/>
+Declar&rsquo;d to me our justice on the earth<br/>
+To be the effluence of that heav&rsquo;n, which thou,<br/>
+Thyself a costly jewel, dost inlay!<br/>
+Therefore I pray the Sovran Mind, from whom<br/>
+Thy motion and thy virtue are begun,<br/>
+That he would look from whence the fog doth rise,<br/>
+To vitiate thy beam: so that once more<br/>
+He may put forth his hand &rsquo;gainst such, as drive<br/>
+Their traffic in that sanctuary, whose walls<br/>
+With miracles and martyrdoms were built.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ye host of heaven! whose glory I survey l<br/>
+O beg ye grace for those, that are on earth<br/>
+All after ill example gone astray.<br/>
+War once had for its instrument the sword:<br/>
+But now &rsquo;tis made, taking the bread away<br/>
+Which the good Father locks from none.&mdash;And thou,<br/>
+That writes but to cancel, think, that they,<br/>
+Who for the vineyard, which thou wastest, died,<br/>
+Peter and Paul live yet, and mark thy doings.<br/>
+Thou hast good cause to cry, &ldquo;My heart so cleaves<br/>
+To him, that liv&rsquo;d in solitude remote,<br/>
+And from the wilds was dragg&rsquo;d to martyrdom,<br/>
+I wist not of the fisherman nor Paul.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoIII.XIX"></a>CANTO XIX</h2>
+
+<p>
+Before my sight appear&rsquo;d, with open wings,<br/>
+The beauteous image, in fruition sweet<br/>
+Gladdening the thronged spirits. Each did seem<br/>
+A little ruby, whereon so intense<br/>
+The sun-beam glow&rsquo;d that to mine eyes it came<br/>
+In clear refraction. And that, which next<br/>
+Befalls me to portray, voice hath not utter&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Nor hath ink written, nor in fantasy<br/>
+Was e&rsquo;er conceiv&rsquo;d. For I beheld and heard<br/>
+The beak discourse; and, what intention form&rsquo;d<br/>
+Of many, singly as of one express,<br/>
+Beginning: &ldquo;For that I was just and piteous,<br/>
+l am exalted to this height of glory,<br/>
+The which no wish exceeds: and there on earth<br/>
+Have I my memory left, e&rsquo;en by the bad<br/>
+Commended, while they leave its course untrod.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus is one heat from many embers felt,<br/>
+As in that image many were the loves,<br/>
+And one the voice, that issued from them all.<br/>
+Whence I address them: &ldquo;O perennial flowers<br/>
+Of gladness everlasting! that exhale<br/>
+In single breath your odours manifold!<br/>
+Breathe now; and let the hunger be appeas&rsquo;d,<br/>
+That with great craving long hath held my soul,<br/>
+Finding no food on earth. This well I know,<br/>
+That if there be in heav&rsquo;n a realm, that shows<br/>
+In faithful mirror the celestial Justice,<br/>
+Yours without veil reflects it. Ye discern<br/>
+The heed, wherewith I do prepare myself<br/>
+To hearken; ye the doubt that urges me<br/>
+With such inveterate craving.&rdquo; Straight I saw,<br/>
+Like to a falcon issuing from the hood,<br/>
+That rears his head, and claps him with his wings,<br/>
+His beauty and his eagerness bewraying.<br/>
+So saw I move that stately sign, with praise<br/>
+Of grace divine inwoven and high song<br/>
+Of inexpressive joy. &ldquo;He,&rdquo; it began,<br/>
+&ldquo;Who turn&rsquo;d his compass on the world&rsquo;s extreme,<br/>
+And in that space so variously hath wrought,<br/>
+Both openly, and in secret, in such wise<br/>
+Could not through all the universe display<br/>
+Impression of his glory, that the Word<br/>
+Of his omniscience should not still remain<br/>
+In infinite excess. In proof whereof,<br/>
+He first through pride supplanted, who was sum<br/>
+Of each created being, waited not<br/>
+For light celestial, and abortive fell.<br/>
+Whence needs each lesser nature is but scant<br/>
+Receptacle unto that Good, which knows<br/>
+No limit, measur&rsquo;d by itself alone.<br/>
+Therefore your sight, of th&rsquo; omnipresent Mind<br/>
+A single beam, its origin must own<br/>
+Surpassing far its utmost potency.<br/>
+The ken, your world is gifted with, descends<br/>
+In th&rsquo; everlasting Justice as low down,<br/>
+As eye doth in the sea; which though it mark<br/>
+The bottom from the shore, in the wide main<br/>
+Discerns it not; and ne&rsquo;ertheless it is,<br/>
+But hidden through its deepness. Light is none,<br/>
+Save that which cometh from the pure serene<br/>
+Of ne&rsquo;er disturbed ether: for the rest,<br/>
+&rsquo;Tis darkness all, or shadow of the flesh,<br/>
+Or else its poison. Here confess reveal&rsquo;d<br/>
+That covert, which hath hidden from thy search<br/>
+The living justice, of the which thou mad&rsquo;st<br/>
+Such frequent question; for thou saidst&mdash;&lsquo;A man<br/>
+Is born on Indus&rsquo; banks, and none is there<br/>
+Who speaks of Christ, nor who doth read nor write,<br/>
+And all his inclinations and his acts,<br/>
+As far as human reason sees, are good,<br/>
+And he offendeth not in word or deed.<br/>
+But unbaptiz&rsquo;d he dies, and void of faith.<br/>
+Where is the justice that condemns him? where<br/>
+His blame, if he believeth not?&rsquo;&mdash;What then,<br/>
+And who art thou, that on the stool wouldst sit<br/>
+To judge at distance of a thousand miles<br/>
+With the short-sighted vision of a span?<br/>
+To him, who subtilizes thus with me,<br/>
+There would assuredly be room for doubt<br/>
+Even to wonder, did not the safe word<br/>
+Of scripture hold supreme authority.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;O animals of clay! O spirits gross I<br/>
+The primal will, that in itself is good,<br/>
+Hath from itself, the chief Good, ne&rsquo;er been mov&rsquo;d.<br/>
+Justice consists in consonance with it,<br/>
+Derivable by no created good,<br/>
+Whose very cause depends upon its beam.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As on her nest the stork, that turns about<br/>
+Unto her young, whom lately she hath fed,<br/>
+While they with upward eyes do look on her;<br/>
+So lifted I my gaze; and bending so<br/>
+The ever-blessed image wav&rsquo;d its wings,<br/>
+Lab&rsquo;ring with such deep counsel. Wheeling round<br/>
+It warbled, and did say: &ldquo;As are my notes<br/>
+To thee, who understand&rsquo;st them not, such is<br/>
+Th&rsquo; eternal judgment unto mortal ken.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then still abiding in that ensign rang&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Wherewith the Romans over-awed the world,<br/>
+Those burning splendours of the Holy Spirit<br/>
+Took up the strain; and thus it spake again:<br/>
+&ldquo;None ever hath ascended to this realm,<br/>
+Who hath not a believer been in Christ,<br/>
+Either before or after the blest limbs<br/>
+Were nail&rsquo;d upon the wood. But lo! of those<br/>
+Who call &lsquo;Christ, Christ,&rsquo; there shall be many found,<br/>
+ In judgment, further off from him by far,<br/>
+Than such, to whom his name was never known.<br/>
+Christians like these the Ethiop shall condemn:<br/>
+When that the two assemblages shall part;<br/>
+One rich eternally, the other poor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What may the Persians say unto your kings,<br/>
+When they shall see that volume, in the which<br/>
+All their dispraise is written, spread to view?<br/>
+There amidst Albert&rsquo;s works shall that be read,<br/>
+Which will give speedy motion to the pen,<br/>
+When Prague shall mourn her desolated realm.<br/>
+There shall be read the woe, that he doth work<br/>
+With his adulterate money on the Seine,<br/>
+Who by the tusk will perish: there be read<br/>
+The thirsting pride, that maketh fool alike<br/>
+The English and Scot, impatient of their bound.<br/>
+There shall be seen the Spaniard&rsquo;s luxury,<br/>
+The delicate living there of the Bohemian,<br/>
+Who still to worth has been a willing stranger.<br/>
+The halter of Jerusalem shall see<br/>
+A unit for his virtue, for his vices<br/>
+No less a mark than million. He, who guards<br/>
+The isle of fire by old Anchises honour&rsquo;d<br/>
+Shall find his avarice there and cowardice;<br/>
+And better to denote his littleness,<br/>
+The writing must be letters maim&rsquo;d, that speak<br/>
+Much in a narrow space. All there shall know<br/>
+His uncle and his brother&rsquo;s filthy doings,<br/>
+Who so renown&rsquo;d a nation and two crowns<br/>
+Have bastardized. And they, of Portugal<br/>
+And Norway, there shall be expos&rsquo;d with him<br/>
+Of Ratza, who hath counterfeited ill<br/>
+The coin of Venice. O blest Hungary!<br/>
+If thou no longer patiently abid&rsquo;st<br/>
+Thy ill-entreating! and, O blest Navarre!<br/>
+If with thy mountainous girdle thou wouldst arm thee<br/>
+In earnest of that day, e&rsquo;en now are heard<br/>
+Wailings and groans in Famagosta&rsquo;s streets<br/>
+And Nicosia&rsquo;s, grudging at their beast,<br/>
+Who keepeth even footing with the rest.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoIII.XX"></a>CANTO XX</h2>
+
+<p>
+When, disappearing, from our hemisphere,<br/>
+The world&rsquo;s enlightener vanishes, and day<br/>
+On all sides wasteth, suddenly the sky,<br/>
+Erewhile irradiate only with his beam,<br/>
+Is yet again unfolded, putting forth<br/>
+Innumerable lights wherein one shines.<br/>
+Of such vicissitude in heaven I thought,<br/>
+As the great sign, that marshaleth the world<br/>
+And the world&rsquo;s leaders, in the blessed beak<br/>
+Was silent; for that all those living lights,<br/>
+Waxing in splendour, burst forth into songs,<br/>
+Such as from memory glide and fall away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sweet love! that dost apparel thee in smiles,<br/>
+How lustrous was thy semblance in those sparkles,<br/>
+Which merely are from holy thoughts inspir&rsquo;d!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After the precious and bright beaming stones,<br/>
+That did ingem the sixth light, ceas&rsquo;d the chiming<br/>
+Of their angelic bells; methought I heard<br/>
+The murmuring of a river, that doth fall<br/>
+From rock to rock transpicuous, making known<br/>
+The richness of his spring-head: and as sound<br/>
+Of cistern, at the fret-board, or of pipe,<br/>
+Is, at the wind-hole, modulate and tun&rsquo;d;<br/>
+Thus up the neck, as it were hollow, rose<br/>
+That murmuring of the eagle, and forthwith<br/>
+Voice there assum&rsquo;d, and thence along the beak<br/>
+Issued in form of words, such as my heart<br/>
+Did look for, on whose tables I inscrib&rsquo;d them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The part in me, that sees, and bears the sun,,<br/>
+In mortal eagles,&rdquo; it began, &ldquo;must now<br/>
+Be noted steadfastly: for of the fires,<br/>
+That figure me, those, glittering in mine eye,<br/>
+Are chief of all the greatest. This, that shines<br/>
+Midmost for pupil, was the same, who sang<br/>
+The Holy Spirit&rsquo;s song, and bare about<br/>
+The ark from town to town; now doth he know<br/>
+The merit of his soul-impassion&rsquo;d strains<br/>
+By their well-fitted guerdon. Of the five,<br/>
+That make the circle of the vision, he<br/>
+Who to the beak is nearest, comforted<br/>
+The widow for her son: now doth he know<br/>
+How dear he costeth not to follow Christ,<br/>
+Both from experience of this pleasant life,<br/>
+And of its opposite. He next, who follows<br/>
+In the circumference, for the over arch,<br/>
+By true repenting slack&rsquo;d the pace of death:<br/>
+Now knoweth he, that the degrees of heav&rsquo;n<br/>
+Alter not, when through pious prayer below<br/>
+Today&rsquo;s is made tomorrow&rsquo;s destiny.<br/>
+The other following, with the laws and me,<br/>
+To yield the shepherd room, pass&rsquo;d o&rsquo;er to Greece,<br/>
+From good intent producing evil fruit:<br/>
+Now knoweth he, how all the ill, deriv&rsquo;d<br/>
+From his well doing, doth not helm him aught,<br/>
+Though it have brought destruction on the world.<br/>
+That, which thou seest in the under bow,<br/>
+Was William, whom that land bewails, which weeps<br/>
+For Charles and Frederick living: now he knows<br/>
+How well is lov&rsquo;d in heav&rsquo;n the righteous king,<br/>
+Which he betokens by his radiant seeming.<br/>
+Who in the erring world beneath would deem,<br/>
+That Trojan Ripheus in this round was set<br/>
+Fifth of the saintly splendours? now he knows<br/>
+Enough of that, which the world cannot see,<br/>
+The grace divine, albeit e&rsquo;en his sight<br/>
+Reach not its utmost depth.&rdquo; Like to the lark,<br/>
+That warbling in the air expatiates long,<br/>
+Then, trilling out his last sweet melody,<br/>
+Drops satiate with the sweetness; such appear&rsquo;d<br/>
+That image stampt by the&rsquo; everlasting pleasure,<br/>
+Which fashions like itself all lovely things.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I, though my doubting were as manifest,<br/>
+As is through glass the hue that mantles it,<br/>
+In silence waited not: for to my lips<br/>
+&ldquo;What things are these?&rdquo; involuntary rush&rsquo;d,<br/>
+And forc&rsquo;d a passage out: whereat I mark&rsquo;d<br/>
+A sudden lightening and new revelry.<br/>
+The eye was kindled: and the blessed sign<br/>
+No more to keep me wond&rsquo;ring and suspense,<br/>
+Replied: &ldquo;I see that thou believ&rsquo;st these things,<br/>
+Because I tell them, but discern&rsquo;st not how;<br/>
+So that thy knowledge waits not on thy faith:<br/>
+As one who knows the name of thing by rote,<br/>
+But is a stranger to its properties,<br/>
+Till other&rsquo;s tongue reveal them. Fervent love<br/>
+And lively hope with violence assail<br/>
+The kingdom of the heavens, and overcome<br/>
+The will of the Most high; not in such sort<br/>
+As man prevails o&rsquo;er man; but conquers it,<br/>
+Because &rsquo;tis willing to be conquer&rsquo;d, still,<br/>
+Though conquer&rsquo;d, by its mercy conquering.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Those, in the eye who live the first and fifth,<br/>
+Cause thee to marvel, in that thou behold&rsquo;st<br/>
+The region of the angels deck&rsquo;d with them.<br/>
+They quitted not their bodies, as thou deem&rsquo;st,<br/>
+Gentiles but Christians, in firm rooted faith,<br/>
+This of the feet in future to be pierc&rsquo;d,<br/>
+That of feet nail&rsquo;d already to the cross.<br/>
+One from the barrier of the dark abyss,<br/>
+Where never any with good will returns,<br/>
+Came back unto his bones. Of lively hope<br/>
+Such was the meed; of lively hope, that wing&rsquo;d<br/>
+The prayers sent up to God for his release,<br/>
+And put power into them to bend his will.<br/>
+The glorious Spirit, of whom I speak to thee,<br/>
+A little while returning to the flesh,<br/>
+Believ&rsquo;d in him, who had the means to help,<br/>
+And, in believing, nourish&rsquo;d such a flame<br/>
+Of holy love, that at the second death<br/>
+He was made sharer in our gamesome mirth.<br/>
+The other, through the riches of that grace,<br/>
+Which from so deep a fountain doth distil,<br/>
+As never eye created saw its rising,<br/>
+Plac&rsquo;d all his love below on just and right:<br/>
+Wherefore of grace God op&rsquo;d in him the eye<br/>
+To the redemption of mankind to come;<br/>
+Wherein believing, he endur&rsquo;d no more<br/>
+The filth of paganism, and for their ways<br/>
+Rebuk&rsquo;d the stubborn nations. The three nymphs,<br/>
+Whom at the right wheel thou beheldst advancing,<br/>
+Were sponsors for him more than thousand years<br/>
+Before baptizing. O how far remov&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Predestination! is thy root from such<br/>
+As see not the First cause entire: and ye,<br/>
+O mortal men! be wary how ye judge:<br/>
+For we, who see our Maker, know not yet<br/>
+The number of the chosen: and esteem<br/>
+Such scantiness of knowledge our delight:<br/>
+For all our good is in that primal good<br/>
+Concentrate, and God&rsquo;s will and ours are one.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So, by that form divine, was giv&rsquo;n to me<br/>
+Sweet medicine to clear and strengthen sight,<br/>
+And, as one handling skillfully the harp,<br/>
+Attendant on some skilful songster&rsquo;s voice<br/>
+Bids the chords vibrate, and therein the song<br/>
+Acquires more pleasure; so, the whilst it spake,<br/>
+It doth remember me, that I beheld<br/>
+The pair of blessed luminaries move.<br/>
+Like the accordant twinkling of two eyes,<br/>
+Their beamy circlets, dancing to the sounds.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoIII.XXI"></a>CANTO XXI</h2>
+
+<p>
+Again mine eyes were fix&rsquo;d on Beatrice,<br/>
+And with mine eyes my soul, that in her looks<br/>
+Found all contentment. Yet no smile she wore<br/>
+And, &ldquo;Did I smile,&rdquo; quoth she, &ldquo;thou wouldst be straight<br/>
+Like Semele when into ashes turn&rsquo;d:<br/>
+For, mounting these eternal palace-stairs,<br/>
+My beauty, which the loftier it climbs,<br/>
+As thou hast noted, still doth kindle more,<br/>
+So shines, that, were no temp&rsquo;ring interpos&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Thy mortal puissance would from its rays<br/>
+Shrink, as the leaf doth from the thunderbolt.<br/>
+Into the seventh splendour are we wafted,<br/>
+That underneath the burning lion&rsquo;s breast<br/>
+Beams, in this hour, commingled with his might,<br/>
+Thy mind be with thine eyes: and in them mirror&rsquo;d<br/>
+The shape, which in this mirror shall be shown.&rdquo;<br/>
+Whoso can deem, how fondly I had fed<br/>
+My sight upon her blissful countenance,<br/>
+May know, when to new thoughts I chang&rsquo;d, what joy<br/>
+To do the bidding of my heav&rsquo;nly guide:<br/>
+In equal balance poising either weight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Within the crystal, which records the name,<br/>
+(As its remoter circle girds the world)<br/>
+Of that lov&rsquo;d monarch, in whose happy reign<br/>
+No ill had power to harm, I saw rear&rsquo;d up,<br/>
+In colour like to sun-illumin&rsquo;d gold.<br/>
+A ladder, which my ken pursued in vain,<br/>
+So lofty was the summit; down whose steps<br/>
+I saw the splendours in such multitude<br/>
+Descending, ev&rsquo;ry light in heav&rsquo;n, methought,<br/>
+Was shed thence. As the rooks, at dawn of day<br/>
+Bestirring them to dry their feathers chill,<br/>
+Some speed their way a-field, and homeward some,<br/>
+Returning, cross their flight, while some abide<br/>
+And wheel around their airy lodge; so seem&rsquo;d<br/>
+That glitterance, wafted on alternate wing,<br/>
+As upon certain stair it met, and clash&rsquo;d<br/>
+Its shining. And one ling&rsquo;ring near us, wax&rsquo;d<br/>
+So bright, that in my thought: said: &ldquo;The love,<br/>
+Which this betokens me, admits no doubt.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Unwillingly from question I refrain,<br/>
+To her, by whom my silence and my speech<br/>
+Are order&rsquo;d, looking for a sign: whence she,<br/>
+Who in the sight of Him, that seeth all,<br/>
+Saw wherefore I was silent, prompted me<br/>
+T&rsquo; indulge the fervent wish; and I began:<br/>
+&ldquo;I am not worthy, of my own desert,<br/>
+That thou shouldst answer me; but for her sake,<br/>
+Who hath vouchsaf&rsquo;d my asking, spirit blest!<br/>
+That in thy joy art shrouded! say the cause,<br/>
+Which bringeth thee so near: and wherefore, say,<br/>
+Doth the sweet symphony of Paradise<br/>
+Keep silence here, pervading with such sounds<br/>
+Of rapt devotion ev&rsquo;ry lower sphere?&rdquo;<br/>
+&ldquo;Mortal art thou in hearing as in sight;&rdquo;<br/>
+Was the reply: &ldquo;and what forbade the smile<br/>
+Of Beatrice interrupts our song.<br/>
+Only to yield thee gladness of my voice,<br/>
+And of the light that vests me, I thus far<br/>
+Descend these hallow&rsquo;d steps: not that more love<br/>
+Invites me; for lo! there aloft, as much<br/>
+Or more of love is witness&rsquo;d in those flames:<br/>
+But such my lot by charity assign&rsquo;d,<br/>
+That makes us ready servants, as thou seest,<br/>
+To execute the counsel of the Highest.<br/>
+&ldquo;That in this court,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;O sacred lamp!<br/>
+Love no compulsion needs, but follows free<br/>
+Th&rsquo; eternal Providence, I well discern:<br/>
+This harder find to deem, why of thy peers<br/>
+Thou only to this office wert foredoom&rsquo;d.&rdquo;<br/>
+I had not ended, when, like rapid mill,<br/>
+Upon its centre whirl&rsquo;d the light; and then<br/>
+The love, that did inhabit there, replied:<br/>
+&ldquo;Splendour eternal, piercing through these folds,<br/>
+Its virtue to my vision knits, and thus<br/>
+Supported, lifts me so above myself,<br/>
+That on the sov&rsquo;ran essence, which it wells from,<br/>
+I have the power to gaze: and hence the joy,<br/>
+Wherewith I sparkle, equaling with my blaze<br/>
+The keenness of my sight. But not the soul,<br/>
+That is in heav&rsquo;n most lustrous, nor the seraph<br/>
+That hath his eyes most fix&rsquo;d on God, shall solve<br/>
+What thou hast ask&rsquo;d: for in th&rsquo; abyss it lies<br/>
+Of th&rsquo; everlasting statute sunk so low,<br/>
+That no created ken may fathom it.<br/>
+And, to the mortal world when thou return&rsquo;st,<br/>
+Be this reported; that none henceforth dare<br/>
+Direct his footsteps to so dread a bourn.<br/>
+The mind, that here is radiant, on the earth<br/>
+Is wrapt in mist. Look then if she may do,<br/>
+Below, what passeth her ability,<br/>
+When she is ta&rsquo;en to heav&rsquo;n.&rdquo; By words like these<br/>
+Admonish&rsquo;d, I the question urg&rsquo;d no more;<br/>
+And of the spirit humbly sued alone<br/>
+T&rsquo; instruct me of its state. &ldquo;&rsquo;Twixt either shore<br/>
+Of Italy, nor distant from thy land,<br/>
+A stony ridge ariseth, in such sort,<br/>
+The thunder doth not lift his voice so high,<br/>
+They call it Catria: at whose foot a cell<br/>
+Is sacred to the lonely Eremite,<br/>
+For worship set apart and holy rites.&rdquo;<br/>
+A third time thus it spake; then added: &ldquo;There<br/>
+So firmly to God&rsquo;s service I adher&rsquo;d,<br/>
+That with no costlier viands than the juice<br/>
+Of olives, easily I pass&rsquo;d the heats<br/>
+Of summer and the winter frosts, content<br/>
+In heav&rsquo;n-ward musings. Rich were the returns<br/>
+And fertile, which that cloister once was us&rsquo;d<br/>
+To render to these heavens: now &rsquo;tis fall&rsquo;n<br/>
+Into a waste so empty, that ere long<br/>
+Detection must lay bare its vanity<br/>
+Pietro Damiano there was I y-clept:<br/>
+Pietro the sinner, when before I dwelt<br/>
+Beside the Adriatic, in the house<br/>
+Of our blest Lady. Near upon my close<br/>
+Of mortal life, through much importuning<br/>
+I was constrain&rsquo;d to wear the hat that still<br/>
+From bad to worse it shifted.&mdash;Cephas came;<br/>
+He came, who was the Holy Spirit&rsquo;s vessel,<br/>
+Barefoot and lean, eating their bread, as chanc&rsquo;d,<br/>
+At the first table. Modern Shepherd&rsquo;s need<br/>
+Those who on either hand may prop and lead them,<br/>
+So burly are they grown: and from behind<br/>
+Others to hoist them. Down the palfrey&rsquo;s sides<br/>
+Spread their broad mantles, so as both the beasts<br/>
+Are cover&rsquo;d with one skin. O patience! thou<br/>
+That lookst on this and doth endure so long.&rdquo;<br/>
+I at those accents saw the splendours down<br/>
+From step to step alight, and wheel, and wax,<br/>
+Each circuiting, more beautiful. Round this<br/>
+They came, and stay&rsquo;d them; uttered them a shout<br/>
+So loud, it hath no likeness here: nor I<br/>
+Wist what it spake, so deaf&rsquo;ning was the thunder.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoIII.XXII"></a>CANTO XXII</h2>
+
+<p>
+Astounded, to the guardian of my steps<br/>
+I turn&rsquo;d me, like the chill, who always runs<br/>
+Thither for succour, where he trusteth most,<br/>
+And she was like the mother, who her son<br/>
+Beholding pale and breathless, with her voice<br/>
+Soothes him, and he is cheer&rsquo;d; for thus she spake,<br/>
+Soothing me: &ldquo;Know&rsquo;st not thou, thou art in heav&rsquo;n?<br/>
+And know&rsquo;st not thou, whatever is in heav&rsquo;n,<br/>
+Is holy, and that nothing there is done<br/>
+But is done zealously and well? Deem now,<br/>
+What change in thee the song, and what my smile<br/>
+had wrought, since thus the shout had pow&rsquo;r to move thee.<br/>
+In which couldst thou have understood their prayers,<br/>
+The vengeance were already known to thee,<br/>
+Which thou must witness ere thy mortal hour,<br/>
+The sword of heav&rsquo;n is not in haste to smite,<br/>
+Nor yet doth linger, save unto his seeming,<br/>
+Who in desire or fear doth look for it.<br/>
+But elsewhere now l bid thee turn thy view;<br/>
+So shalt thou many a famous spirit behold.&rdquo;<br/>
+Mine eyes directing, as she will&rsquo;d, I saw<br/>
+A hundred little spheres, that fairer grew<br/>
+By interchange of splendour. I remain&rsquo;d,<br/>
+As one, who fearful of o&rsquo;er-much presuming,<br/>
+Abates in him the keenness of desire,<br/>
+Nor dares to question, when amid those pearls,<br/>
+One largest and most lustrous onward drew,<br/>
+That it might yield contentment to my wish;<br/>
+And from within it these the sounds I heard.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If thou, like me, beheldst the charity<br/>
+That burns amongst us, what thy mind conceives,<br/>
+Were utter&rsquo;d. But that, ere the lofty bound<br/>
+Thou reach, expectance may not weary thee,<br/>
+I will make answer even to the thought,<br/>
+Which thou hast such respect of. In old days,<br/>
+That mountain, at whose side Cassino rests,<br/>
+Was on its height frequented by a race<br/>
+Deceived and ill dispos&rsquo;d: and I it was,<br/>
+Who thither carried first the name of Him,<br/>
+Who brought the soul-subliming truth to man.<br/>
+And such a speeding grace shone over me,<br/>
+That from their impious worship I reclaim&rsquo;d<br/>
+The dwellers round about, who with the world<br/>
+Were in delusion lost. These other flames,<br/>
+The spirits of men contemplative, were all<br/>
+Enliven&rsquo;d by that warmth, whose kindly force<br/>
+Gives birth to flowers and fruits of holiness.<br/>
+Here is Macarius; Romoaldo here:<br/>
+And here my brethren, who their steps refrain&rsquo;d<br/>
+Within the cloisters, and held firm their heart.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I answ&rsquo;ring, thus; &ldquo;Thy gentle words and kind,<br/>
+And this the cheerful semblance, I behold<br/>
+Not unobservant, beaming in ye all,<br/>
+Have rais&rsquo;d assurance in me, wakening it<br/>
+Full-blossom&rsquo;d in my bosom, as a rose<br/>
+Before the sun, when the consummate flower<br/>
+Has spread to utmost amplitude. Of thee<br/>
+Therefore entreat I, father! to declare<br/>
+If I may gain such favour, as to gaze<br/>
+Upon thine image, by no covering veil&rsquo;d.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Brother!&rdquo; he thus rejoin&rsquo;d, &ldquo;in the last sphere<br/>
+Expect completion of thy lofty aim,<br/>
+For there on each desire completion waits,<br/>
+And there on mine: where every aim is found<br/>
+Perfect, entire, and for fulfillment ripe.<br/>
+There all things are as they have ever been:<br/>
+For space is none to bound, nor pole divides,<br/>
+Our ladder reaches even to that clime,<br/>
+And so at giddy distance mocks thy view.<br/>
+Thither the Patriarch Jacob saw it stretch<br/>
+Its topmost round, when it appear&rsquo;d to him<br/>
+With angels laden. But to mount it now<br/>
+None lifts his foot from earth: and hence my rule<br/>
+Is left a profitless stain upon the leaves;<br/>
+The walls, for abbey rear&rsquo;d, turned into dens,<br/>
+The cowls to sacks choak&rsquo;d up with musty meal.<br/>
+Foul usury doth not more lift itself<br/>
+Against God&rsquo;s pleasure, than that fruit which makes<br/>
+The hearts of monks so wanton: for whate&rsquo;er<br/>
+Is in the church&rsquo;s keeping, all pertains.<br/>
+To such, as sue for heav&rsquo;n&rsquo;s sweet sake, and not<br/>
+To those who in respect of kindred claim,<br/>
+Or on more vile allowance. Mortal flesh<br/>
+Is grown so dainty, good beginnings last not<br/>
+From the oak&rsquo;s birth, unto the acorn&rsquo;s setting.<br/>
+His convent Peter founded without gold<br/>
+Or silver; I with pray&rsquo;rs and fasting mine;<br/>
+And Francis his in meek humility.<br/>
+And if thou note the point, whence each proceeds,<br/>
+Then look what it hath err&rsquo;d to, thou shalt find<br/>
+The white grown murky. Jordan was turn&rsquo;d back;<br/>
+And a less wonder, then the refluent sea,<br/>
+May at God&rsquo;s pleasure work amendment here.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So saying, to his assembly back he drew:<br/>
+And they together cluster&rsquo;d into one,<br/>
+Then all roll&rsquo;d upward like an eddying wind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sweet dame beckon&rsquo;d me to follow them:<br/>
+And, by that influence only, so prevail&rsquo;d<br/>
+Over my nature, that no natural motion,<br/>
+Ascending or descending here below,<br/>
+Had, as I mounted, with my pennon vied.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So, reader, as my hope is to return<br/>
+Unto the holy triumph, for the which<br/>
+I ofttimes wail my sins, and smite my breast,<br/>
+Thou hadst been longer drawing out and thrusting<br/>
+Thy finger in the fire, than I was, ere<br/>
+The sign, that followeth Taurus, I beheld,<br/>
+And enter&rsquo;d its precinct. O glorious stars!<br/>
+O light impregnate with exceeding virtue!<br/>
+To whom whate&rsquo;er of genius lifteth me<br/>
+Above the vulgar, grateful I refer;<br/>
+With ye the parent of all mortal life<br/>
+Arose and set, when I did first inhale<br/>
+The Tuscan air; and afterward, when grace<br/>
+Vouchsaf&rsquo;d me entrance to the lofty wheel<br/>
+That in its orb impels ye, fate decreed<br/>
+My passage at your clime. To you my soul<br/>
+Devoutly sighs, for virtue even now<br/>
+To meet the hard emprize that draws me on.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou art so near the sum of blessedness,&rdquo;<br/>
+Said Beatrice, &ldquo;that behooves thy ken<br/>
+Be vigilant and clear. And, to this end,<br/>
+Or even thou advance thee further, hence<br/>
+Look downward, and contemplate, what a world<br/>
+Already stretched under our feet there lies:<br/>
+So as thy heart may, in its blithest mood,<br/>
+Present itself to the triumphal throng,<br/>
+Which through the&rsquo; etherial concave comes rejoicing.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I straight obey&rsquo;d; and with mine eye return&rsquo;d<br/>
+Through all the seven spheres, and saw this globe<br/>
+So pitiful of semblance, that perforce<br/>
+It moved my smiles: and him in truth I hold<br/>
+For wisest, who esteems it least: whose thoughts<br/>
+Elsewhere are fix&rsquo;d, him worthiest call and best.<br/>
+I saw the daughter of Latona shine<br/>
+Without the shadow, whereof late I deem&rsquo;d<br/>
+That dense and rare were cause. Here I sustain&rsquo;d<br/>
+The visage, Hyperion! of thy sun;<br/>
+And mark&rsquo;d, how near him with their circle, round<br/>
+Move Maia and Dione; here discern&rsquo;d<br/>
+Jove&rsquo;s tempering &rsquo;twixt his sire and son; and hence<br/>
+Their changes and their various aspects<br/>
+Distinctly scann&rsquo;d. Nor might I not descry<br/>
+Of all the seven, how bulky each, how swift;<br/>
+Nor of their several distances not learn.<br/>
+This petty area (o&rsquo;er the which we stride<br/>
+So fiercely), as along the eternal twins<br/>
+I wound my way, appear&rsquo;d before me all,<br/>
+Forth from the havens stretch&rsquo;d unto the hills.<br/>
+Then to the beauteous eyes mine eyes return&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoIII.XXIII"></a>CANTO XXIII</h2>
+
+<p>
+E&rsquo;en as the bird, who midst the leafy bower<br/>
+Has, in her nest, sat darkling through the night,<br/>
+With her sweet brood, impatient to descry<br/>
+Their wished looks, and to bring home their food,<br/>
+In the fond quest unconscious of her toil:<br/>
+She, of the time prevenient, on the spray,<br/>
+That overhangs their couch, with wakeful gaze<br/>
+Expects the sun; nor ever, till the dawn,<br/>
+Removeth from the east her eager ken;<br/>
+So stood the dame erect, and bent her glance<br/>
+Wistfully on that region, where the sun<br/>
+Abateth most his speed; that, seeing her<br/>
+Suspense and wand&rsquo;ring, I became as one,<br/>
+In whom desire is waken&rsquo;d, and the hope<br/>
+Of somewhat new to come fills with delight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Short space ensued; I was not held, I say,<br/>
+Long in expectance, when I saw the heav&rsquo;n<br/>
+Wax more and more resplendent; and, &ldquo;Behold,&rdquo;<br/>
+Cried Beatrice, &ldquo;the triumphal hosts<br/>
+Of Christ, and all the harvest reap&rsquo;d at length<br/>
+Of thy ascending up these spheres.&rdquo; Meseem&rsquo;d,<br/>
+That, while she spake her image all did burn,<br/>
+And in her eyes such fullness was of joy,<br/>
+And I am fain to pass unconstrued by.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As in the calm full moon, when Trivia smiles,<br/>
+In peerless beauty, &rsquo;mid th&rsquo; eternal nympus,<br/>
+That paint through all its gulfs the blue profound<br/>
+In bright pre-eminence so saw I there,<br/>
+O&rsquo;er million lamps a sun, from whom all drew<br/>
+Their radiance as from ours the starry train:<br/>
+And through the living light so lustrous glow&rsquo;d<br/>
+The substance, that my ken endur&rsquo;d it not.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+O Beatrice! sweet and precious guide!<br/>
+Who cheer&rsquo;d me with her comfortable words!<br/>
+&ldquo;Against the virtue, that o&rsquo;erpow&rsquo;reth thee,<br/>
+Avails not to resist. Here is the might,<br/>
+And here the wisdom, which did open lay<br/>
+The path, that had been yearned for so long,<br/>
+Betwixt the heav&rsquo;n and earth.&rdquo; Like to the fire,<br/>
+That, in a cloud imprison&rsquo;d doth break out<br/>
+Expansive, so that from its womb enlarg&rsquo;d,<br/>
+It falleth against nature to the ground;<br/>
+Thus in that heav&rsquo;nly banqueting my soul<br/>
+Outgrew herself; and, in the transport lost.<br/>
+Holds now remembrance none of what she was.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ope thou thine eyes, and mark me: thou hast seen<br/>
+Things, that empower thee to sustain my smile.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I was as one, when a forgotten dream<br/>
+Doth come across him, and he strives in vain<br/>
+To shape it in his fantasy again,<br/>
+Whenas that gracious boon was proffer&rsquo;d me,<br/>
+Which never may be cancel&rsquo;d from the book,<br/>
+Wherein the past is written. Now were all<br/>
+Those tongues to sound, that have on sweetest milk<br/>
+Of Polyhymnia and her sisters fed<br/>
+And fatten&rsquo;d, not with all their help to boot,<br/>
+Unto the thousandth parcel of the truth,<br/>
+My song might shadow forth that saintly smile,<br/>
+flow merely in her saintly looks it wrought.<br/>
+And with such figuring of Paradise<br/>
+The sacred strain must leap, like one, that meets<br/>
+A sudden interruption to his road.<br/>
+But he, who thinks how ponderous the theme,<br/>
+And that &rsquo;tis lain upon a mortal shoulder,<br/>
+May pardon, if it tremble with the burden.<br/>
+The track, our ventrous keel must furrow, brooks<br/>
+No unribb&rsquo;d pinnace, no self-sparing pilot.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why doth my face,&rdquo; said Beatrice, &ldquo;thus<br/>
+Enamour thee, as that thou dost not turn<br/>
+Unto the beautiful garden, blossoming<br/>
+Beneath the rays of Christ? Here is the rose,<br/>
+Wherein the word divine was made incarnate;<br/>
+And here the lilies, by whose odour known<br/>
+The way of life was follow&rsquo;d.&rdquo; Prompt I heard<br/>
+Her bidding, and encounter once again<br/>
+The strife of aching vision. As erewhile,<br/>
+Through glance of sunlight, stream&rsquo;d through broken cloud,<br/>
+Mine eyes a flower-besprinkled mead have seen,<br/>
+Though veil&rsquo;d themselves in shade; so saw I there<br/>
+Legions of splendours, on whom burning rays<br/>
+Shed lightnings from above, yet saw I not<br/>
+The fountain whence they flow&rsquo;d. O gracious virtue!<br/>
+Thou, whose broad stamp is on them, higher up<br/>
+Thou didst exalt thy glory to give room<br/>
+To my o&rsquo;erlabour&rsquo;d sight: when at the name<br/>
+Of that fair flower, whom duly I invoke<br/>
+Both morn and eve, my soul, with all her might<br/>
+Collected, on the goodliest ardour fix&rsquo;d.<br/>
+And, as the bright dimensions of the star<br/>
+In heav&rsquo;n excelling, as once here on earth<br/>
+Were, in my eyeballs lively portray&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Lo! from within the sky a cresset fell,<br/>
+Circling in fashion of a diadem,<br/>
+And girt the star, and hov&rsquo;ring round it wheel&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whatever melody sounds sweetest here,<br/>
+And draws the spirit most unto itself,<br/>
+Might seem a rent cloud when it grates the thunder,<br/>
+Compar&rsquo;d unto the sounding of that lyre,<br/>
+Wherewith the goodliest sapphire, that inlays<br/>
+The floor of heav&rsquo;n, was crown&rsquo;d. &ldquo; Angelic Love<br/>
+I am, who thus with hov&rsquo;ring flight enwheel<br/>
+The lofty rapture from that womb inspir&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Where our desire did dwell: and round thee so,<br/>
+Lady of Heav&rsquo;n! will hover; long as thou<br/>
+Thy Son shalt follow, and diviner joy<br/>
+Shall from thy presence gild the highest sphere.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Such close was to the circling melody:<br/>
+And, as it ended, all the other lights<br/>
+Took up the strain, and echoed Mary&rsquo;s name.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The robe, that with its regal folds enwraps<br/>
+The world, and with the nearer breath of God<br/>
+Doth burn and quiver, held so far retir&rsquo;d<br/>
+Its inner hem and skirting over us,<br/>
+That yet no glimmer of its majesty<br/>
+Had stream&rsquo;d unto me: therefore were mine eyes<br/>
+Unequal to pursue the crowned flame,<br/>
+That rose and sought its natal seed of fire;<br/>
+And like to babe, that stretches forth its arms<br/>
+For very eagerness towards the breast,<br/>
+After the milk is taken; so outstretch&rsquo;d<br/>
+Their wavy summits all the fervent band,<br/>
+Through zealous love to Mary: then in view<br/>
+There halted, and &ldquo;Regina Coeli &ldquo; sang<br/>
+So sweetly, the delight hath left me never.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+O what o&rsquo;erflowing plenty is up-pil&rsquo;d<br/>
+In those rich-laden coffers, which below<br/>
+Sow&rsquo;d the good seed, whose harvest now they keep.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Here are the treasures tasted, that with tears<br/>
+Were in the Babylonian exile won,<br/>
+When gold had fail&rsquo;d them. Here in synod high<br/>
+Of ancient council with the new conven&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Under the Son of Mary and of God,<br/>
+Victorious he his mighty triumph holds,<br/>
+To whom the keys of glory were assign&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoIII.XXIV"></a>CANTO XXIV</h2>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;O ye! in chosen fellowship advanc&rsquo;d<br/>
+To the great supper of the blessed Lamb,<br/>
+Whereon who feeds hath every wish fulfill&rsquo;d!<br/>
+If to this man through God&rsquo;s grace be vouchsaf&rsquo;d<br/>
+Foretaste of that, which from your table falls,<br/>
+Or ever death his fated term prescribe;<br/>
+Be ye not heedless of his urgent will;<br/>
+But may some influence of your sacred dews<br/>
+Sprinkle him. Of the fount ye alway drink,<br/>
+Whence flows what most he craves.&rdquo; Beatrice spake,<br/>
+And the rejoicing spirits, like to spheres<br/>
+On firm-set poles revolving, trail&rsquo;d a blaze<br/>
+Of comet splendour; and as wheels, that wind<br/>
+Their circles in the horologe, so work<br/>
+The stated rounds, that to th&rsquo; observant eye<br/>
+The first seems still, and, as it flew, the last;<br/>
+E&rsquo;en thus their carols weaving variously,<br/>
+They by the measure pac&rsquo;d, or swift, or slow,<br/>
+Made me to rate the riches of their joy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From that, which I did note in beauty most<br/>
+Excelling, saw I issue forth a flame<br/>
+So bright, as none was left more goodly there.<br/>
+Round Beatrice thrice it wheel&rsquo;d about,<br/>
+With so divine a song, that fancy&rsquo;s ear<br/>
+Records it not; and the pen passeth on<br/>
+And leaves a blank: for that our mortal speech,<br/>
+Nor e&rsquo;en the inward shaping of the brain,<br/>
+Hath colours fine enough to trace such folds.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;O saintly sister mine! thy prayer devout<br/>
+Is with so vehement affection urg&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Thou dost unbind me from that beauteous sphere.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Such were the accents towards my lady breath&rsquo;d<br/>
+From that blest ardour, soon as it was stay&rsquo;d:<br/>
+To whom she thus: &ldquo;O everlasting light<br/>
+Of him, within whose mighty grasp our Lord<br/>
+Did leave the keys, which of this wondrous bliss<br/>
+He bare below! tent this man, as thou wilt,<br/>
+With lighter probe or deep, touching the faith,<br/>
+By the which thou didst on the billows walk.<br/>
+If he in love, in hope, and in belief,<br/>
+Be steadfast, is not hid from thee: for thou<br/>
+Hast there thy ken, where all things are beheld<br/>
+In liveliest portraiture. But since true faith<br/>
+Has peopled this fair realm with citizens,<br/>
+Meet is, that to exalt its glory more,<br/>
+Thou in his audience shouldst thereof discourse.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Like to the bachelor, who arms himself,<br/>
+And speaks not, till the master have propos&rsquo;d<br/>
+The question, to approve, and not to end it;<br/>
+So I, in silence, arm&rsquo;d me, while she spake,<br/>
+Summoning up each argument to aid;<br/>
+As was behooveful for such questioner,<br/>
+And such profession: &ldquo;As good Christian ought,<br/>
+Declare thee, What is faith?&rdquo; Whereat I rais&rsquo;d<br/>
+My forehead to the light, whence this had breath&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Then turn&rsquo;d to Beatrice, and in her looks<br/>
+Approval met, that from their inmost fount<br/>
+I should unlock the waters. &ldquo;May the grace,<br/>
+That giveth me the captain of the church<br/>
+For confessor,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;vouchsafe to me<br/>
+Apt utterance for my thoughts!&rdquo; then added: &ldquo;Sire!<br/>
+E&rsquo;en as set down by the unerring style<br/>
+Of thy dear brother, who with thee conspir&rsquo;d<br/>
+To bring Rome in unto the way of life,<br/>
+Faith of things hop&rsquo;d is substance, and the proof<br/>
+Of things not seen; and herein doth consist<br/>
+Methinks its essence,&rdquo;&mdash;&rdquo; Rightly hast thou
+deem&rsquo;d,&rdquo;<br/>
+Was answer&rsquo;d: &ldquo;if thou well discern, why first<br/>
+He hath defin&rsquo;d it, substance, and then proof.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The deep things,&rdquo; I replied, &ldquo;which here I scan<br/>
+Distinctly, are below from mortal eye<br/>
+So hidden, they have in belief alone<br/>
+Their being, on which credence hope sublime<br/>
+Is built; and therefore substance it intends.<br/>
+And inasmuch as we must needs infer<br/>
+From such belief our reasoning, all respect<br/>
+To other view excluded, hence of proof<br/>
+Th&rsquo; intention is deriv&rsquo;d.&rdquo; Forthwith I heard:<br/>
+&ldquo;If thus, whate&rsquo;er by learning men attain,<br/>
+Were understood, the sophist would want room<br/>
+To exercise his wit.&rdquo; So breath&rsquo;d the flame<br/>
+Of love: then added: &ldquo;Current is the coin<br/>
+Thou utter&rsquo;st, both in weight and in alloy.<br/>
+But tell me, if thou hast it in thy purse.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Even so glittering and so round,&rdquo; said I,<br/>
+&ldquo;I not a whit misdoubt of its assay.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Next issued from the deep imbosom&rsquo;d splendour:<br/>
+&ldquo;Say, whence the costly jewel, on the which<br/>
+Is founded every virtue, came to thee.&rdquo;<br/>
+&ldquo;The flood,&rdquo; I answer&rsquo;d, &ldquo;from the Spirit of God<br/>
+Rain&rsquo;d down upon the ancient bond and new,&mdash;<br/>
+Here is the reas&rsquo;ning, that convinceth me<br/>
+So feelingly, each argument beside<br/>
+Seems blunt and forceless in comparison.&rdquo;<br/>
+Then heard I: &ldquo;Wherefore holdest thou that each,<br/>
+The elder proposition and the new,<br/>
+Which so persuade thee, are the voice of heav&rsquo;n?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The works, that follow&rsquo;d, evidence their truth; &ldquo;<br/>
+I answer&rsquo;d: &ldquo;Nature did not make for these<br/>
+The iron hot, or on her anvil mould them.&rdquo;<br/>
+&ldquo;Who voucheth to thee of the works themselves,<br/>
+Was the reply, &ldquo;that they in very deed<br/>
+Are that they purport? None hath sworn so to thee.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That all the world,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;should have bee
+turn&rsquo;d<br/>
+To Christian, and no miracle been wrought,<br/>
+Would in itself be such a miracle,<br/>
+The rest were not an hundredth part so great.<br/>
+E&rsquo;en thou wentst forth in poverty and hunger<br/>
+To set the goodly plant, that from the vine,<br/>
+It once was, now is grown unsightly bramble.&rdquo;<br/>
+That ended, through the high celestial court<br/>
+Resounded all the spheres. &ldquo;Praise we one God!&rdquo;<br/>
+In song of most unearthly melody.<br/>
+And when that Worthy thus, from branch to branch,<br/>
+Examining, had led me, that we now<br/>
+Approach&rsquo;d the topmost bough, he straight resum&rsquo;d;<br/>
+&ldquo;The grace, that holds sweet dalliance with thy soul,<br/>
+So far discreetly hath thy lips unclos&rsquo;d<br/>
+That, whatsoe&rsquo;er has past them, I commend.<br/>
+Behooves thee to express, what thou believ&rsquo;st,<br/>
+The next, and whereon thy belief hath grown.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;O saintly sire and spirit!&rdquo; I began,<br/>
+&ldquo;Who seest that, which thou didst so believe,<br/>
+As to outstrip feet younger than thine own,<br/>
+Toward the sepulchre? thy will is here,<br/>
+That I the tenour of my creed unfold;<br/>
+And thou the cause of it hast likewise ask&rsquo;d.<br/>
+And I reply: I in one God believe,<br/>
+One sole eternal Godhead, of whose love<br/>
+All heav&rsquo;n is mov&rsquo;d, himself unmov&rsquo;d the while.<br/>
+Nor demonstration physical alone,<br/>
+Or more intelligential and abstruse,<br/>
+Persuades me to this faith; but from that truth<br/>
+It cometh to me rather, which is shed<br/>
+Through Moses, the rapt Prophets, and the Psalms.<br/>
+The Gospel, and that ye yourselves did write,<br/>
+When ye were gifted of the Holy Ghost.<br/>
+In three eternal Persons I believe,<br/>
+Essence threefold and one, mysterious league<br/>
+Of union absolute, which, many a time,<br/>
+The word of gospel lore upon my mind<br/>
+Imprints: and from this germ, this firstling spark,<br/>
+The lively flame dilates, and like heav&rsquo;n&rsquo;s star<br/>
+Doth glitter in me.&rdquo; As the master hears,<br/>
+Well pleas&rsquo;d, and then enfoldeth in his arms<br/>
+The servant, who hath joyful tidings brought,<br/>
+And having told the errand keeps his peace;<br/>
+Thus benediction uttering with song<br/>
+Soon as my peace I held, compass&rsquo;d me thrice<br/>
+The apostolic radiance, whose behest<br/>
+Had op&rsquo;d lips; so well their answer pleas&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoIII.XXV"></a>CANTO XXV</h2>
+
+<p>
+If e&rsquo;er the sacred poem that hath made<br/>
+Both heav&rsquo;n and earth copartners in its toil,<br/>
+And with lean abstinence, through many a year,<br/>
+Faded my brow, be destin&rsquo;d to prevail<br/>
+Over the cruelty, which bars me forth<br/>
+Of the fair sheep-fold, where a sleeping lamb<br/>
+The wolves set on and fain had worried me,<br/>
+With other voice and fleece of other grain<br/>
+I shall forthwith return, and, standing up<br/>
+At my baptismal font, shall claim the wreath<br/>
+Due to the poet&rsquo;s temples: for I there<br/>
+First enter&rsquo;d on the faith which maketh souls<br/>
+Acceptable to God: and, for its sake,<br/>
+Peter had then circled my forehead thus.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Next from the squadron, whence had issued forth<br/>
+The first fruit of Christ&rsquo;s vicars on the earth,<br/>
+Toward us mov&rsquo;d a light, at view whereof<br/>
+My Lady, full of gladness, spake to me:<br/>
+&ldquo;Lo! lo! behold the peer of mickle might,<br/>
+That makes Falicia throng&rsquo;d with visitants!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As when the ring-dove by his mate alights,<br/>
+In circles each about the other wheels,<br/>
+And murmuring cooes his fondness; thus saw I<br/>
+One, of the other great and glorious prince,<br/>
+With kindly greeting hail&rsquo;d, extolling both<br/>
+Their heavenly banqueting; but when an end<br/>
+Was to their gratulation, silent, each,<br/>
+Before me sat they down, so burning bright,<br/>
+I could not look upon them. Smiling then,<br/>
+Beatrice spake: &ldquo;O life in glory shrin&rsquo;d!&rdquo;<br/>
+Who didst the largess of our kingly court<br/>
+Set down with faithful pen! let now thy voice<br/>
+Of hope the praises in this height resound.<br/>
+For thou, who figur&rsquo;st them in shapes, as clear,<br/>
+As Jesus stood before thee, well can&rsquo;st speak them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Lift up thy head, and be thou strong in trust:<br/>
+For that, which hither from the mortal world<br/>
+Arriveth, must be ripen&rsquo;d in our beam.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Such cheering accents from the second flame<br/>
+Assur&rsquo;d me; and mine eyes I lifted up<br/>
+Unto the mountains that had bow&rsquo;d them late<br/>
+With over-heavy burden. &ldquo;Sith our Liege<br/>
+Wills of his grace that thou, or ere thy death,<br/>
+In the most secret council, with his lords<br/>
+Shouldst be confronted, so that having view&rsquo;d<br/>
+The glories of our court, thou mayst therewith<br/>
+Thyself, and all who hear, invigorate<br/>
+With hope, that leads to blissful end; declare,<br/>
+What is that hope, how it doth flourish in thee,<br/>
+And whence thou hadst it?&rdquo; Thus proceeding still,<br/>
+The second light: and she, whose gentle love<br/>
+My soaring pennons in that lofty flight<br/>
+Escorted, thus preventing me, rejoin&rsquo;d:<br/>
+Among her sons, not one more full of hope,<br/>
+Hath the church militant: so &rsquo;tis of him<br/>
+Recorded in the sun, whose liberal orb<br/>
+Enlighteneth all our tribe: and ere his term<br/>
+Of warfare, hence permitted he is come,<br/>
+From Egypt to Jerusalem, to see.<br/>
+The other points, both which thou hast inquir&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Not for more knowledge, but that he may tell<br/>
+How dear thou holdst the virtue, these to him<br/>
+Leave I; for he may answer thee with ease,<br/>
+And without boasting, so God give him grace.&rdquo;<br/>
+Like to the scholar, practis&rsquo;d in his task,<br/>
+Who, willing to give proof of diligence,<br/>
+Seconds his teacher gladly, &ldquo;Hope,&rdquo; said I,<br/>
+&ldquo;Is of the joy to come a sure expectance,<br/>
+Th&rsquo; effect of grace divine and merit preceding.<br/>
+This light from many a star visits my heart,<br/>
+But flow&rsquo;d to me the first from him, who sang<br/>
+The songs of the Supreme, himself supreme<br/>
+Among his tuneful brethren. &lsquo;Let all hope<br/>
+In thee,&rsquo; so speak his anthem, &lsquo;who have known<br/>
+Thy name;&rsquo; and with my faith who know not that?<br/>
+From thee, the next, distilling from his spring,<br/>
+In thine epistle, fell on me the drops<br/>
+So plenteously, that I on others shower<br/>
+The influence of their dew.&rdquo; Whileas I spake,<br/>
+A lamping, as of quick and vollied lightning,<br/>
+Within the bosom of that mighty sheen,<br/>
+Play&rsquo;d tremulous; then forth these accents breath&rsquo;d:<br/>
+&ldquo;Love for the virtue which attended me<br/>
+E&rsquo;en to the palm, and issuing from the field,<br/>
+Glows vigorous yet within me, and inspires<br/>
+To ask of thee, whom also it delights;<br/>
+What promise thou from hope in chief dost win.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Both scriptures, new and ancient,&rdquo; I reply&rsquo;d;<br/>
+&ldquo;Propose the mark (which even now I view)<br/>
+For souls belov&rsquo;d of God. Isaias saith,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That, in their own land, each one must be clad<br/>
+In twofold vesture; and their proper lands this delicious life.<br/>
+In terms more full,<br/>
+And clearer far, thy brother hath set forth<br/>
+This revelation to us, where he tells<br/>
+Of the white raiment destin&rsquo;d to the saints.&rdquo;<br/>
+And, as the words were ending, from above,<br/>
+&ldquo;They hope in thee,&rdquo; first heard we cried: whereto<br/>
+Answer&rsquo;d the carols all. Amidst them next,<br/>
+A light of so clear amplitude emerg&rsquo;d,<br/>
+That winter&rsquo;s month were but a single day,<br/>
+Were such a crystal in the Cancer&rsquo;s sign.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Like as a virgin riseth up, and goes,<br/>
+And enters on the mazes of the dance,<br/>
+Though gay, yet innocent of worse intent,<br/>
+Than to do fitting honour to the bride;<br/>
+So I beheld the new effulgence come<br/>
+Unto the other two, who in a ring<br/>
+Wheel&rsquo;d, as became their rapture. In the dance<br/>
+And in the song it mingled. And the dame<br/>
+Held on them fix&rsquo;d her looks: e&rsquo;en as the spouse<br/>
+Silent and moveless. &ldquo;This is he, who lay<br/>
+Upon the bosom of our pelican:<br/>
+This he, into whose keeping from the cross<br/>
+The mighty charge was given.&rdquo; Thus she spake,<br/>
+Yet therefore naught the more remov&rsquo;d her Sight<br/>
+From marking them, or ere her words began,<br/>
+Or when they clos&rsquo;d. As he, who looks intent,<br/>
+And strives with searching ken, how he may see<br/>
+The sun in his eclipse, and, through desire<br/>
+Of seeing, loseth power of sight: so I<br/>
+Peer&rsquo;d on that last resplendence, while I heard:<br/>
+&ldquo;Why dazzlest thou thine eyes in seeking that,<br/>
+Which here abides not? Earth my body is,<br/>
+In earth: and shall be, with the rest, so long,<br/>
+As till our number equal the decree<br/>
+Of the Most High. The two that have ascended,<br/>
+In this our blessed cloister, shine alone<br/>
+With the two garments. So report below.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As when, for ease of labour, or to shun<br/>
+Suspected peril at a whistle&rsquo;s breath,<br/>
+The oars, erewhile dash&rsquo;d frequent in the wave,<br/>
+All rest; the flamy circle at that voice<br/>
+So rested, and the mingling sound was still,<br/>
+Which from the trinal band soft-breathing rose.<br/>
+I turn&rsquo;d, but ah! how trembled in my thought,<br/>
+When, looking at my side again to see<br/>
+Beatrice, I descried her not, although<br/>
+Not distant, on the happy coast she stood.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoIII.XXVI"></a>CANTO XXVI</h2>
+
+<p>
+With dazzled eyes, whilst wond&rsquo;ring I remain&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Forth of the beamy flame which dazzled me,<br/>
+Issued a breath, that in attention mute<br/>
+Detain&rsquo;d me; and these words it spake: &ldquo;&rsquo;Twere well,<br/>
+That, long as till thy vision, on my form<br/>
+O&rsquo;erspent, regain its virtue, with discourse<br/>
+Thou compensate the brief delay. Say then,<br/>
+Beginning, to what point thy soul aspires:<br/>
+And meanwhile rest assur&rsquo;d, that sight in thee<br/>
+Is but o&rsquo;erpowered a space, not wholly quench&rsquo;d:<br/>
+Since thy fair guide and lovely, in her look<br/>
+Hath potency, the like to that which dwelt<br/>
+In Ananias&rsquo; hand.&rdquo; I answering thus:<br/>
+&ldquo;Be to mine eyes the remedy or late<br/>
+Or early, at her pleasure; for they were<br/>
+The gates, at which she enter&rsquo;d, and did light<br/>
+Her never dying fire. My wishes here<br/>
+Are centered; in this palace is the weal,<br/>
+That Alpha and Omega, is to all<br/>
+The lessons love can read me.&rdquo; Yet again<br/>
+The voice which had dispers&rsquo;d my fear, when daz&rsquo;d<br/>
+With that excess, to converse urg&rsquo;d, and spake:<br/>
+&ldquo;Behooves thee sift more narrowly thy terms,<br/>
+And say, who level&rsquo;d at this scope thy bow.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Philosophy,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;hath arguments,<br/>
+And this place hath authority enough<br/>
+&rsquo;T&rsquo; imprint in me such love: for, of constraint,<br/>
+Good, inasmuch as we perceive the good,<br/>
+Kindles our love, and in degree the more,<br/>
+As it comprises more of goodness in &rsquo;t.<br/>
+The essence then, where such advantage is,<br/>
+That each good, found without it, is naught else<br/>
+But of his light the beam, must needs attract<br/>
+The soul of each one, loving, who the truth<br/>
+Discerns, on which this proof is built. Such truth<br/>
+Learn I from him, who shows me the first love<br/>
+Of all intelligential substances<br/>
+Eternal: from his voice I learn, whose word<br/>
+Is truth, that of himself to Moses saith,<br/>
+&lsquo;I will make all my good before thee pass.&rsquo;<br/>
+Lastly from thee I learn, who chief proclaim&rsquo;st,<br/>
+E&rsquo;en at the outset of thy heralding,<br/>
+In mortal ears the mystery of heav&rsquo;n.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Through human wisdom, and th&rsquo; authority<br/>
+Therewith agreeing,&rdquo; heard I answer&rsquo;d, &ldquo;keep<br/>
+The choicest of thy love for God. But say,<br/>
+If thou yet other cords within thee feel&rsquo;st<br/>
+That draw thee towards him; so that thou report<br/>
+How many are the fangs, with which this love<br/>
+Is grappled to thy soul.&rdquo; I did not miss,<br/>
+To what intent the eagle of our Lord<br/>
+Had pointed his demand; yea noted well<br/>
+Th&rsquo; avowal, which he led to; and resum&rsquo;d:<br/>
+&ldquo;All grappling bonds, that knit the heart to God,<br/>
+Confederate to make fast our clarity.<br/>
+The being of the world, and mine own being,<br/>
+The death which he endur&rsquo;d that I should live,<br/>
+And that, which all the faithful hope, as I do,<br/>
+To the foremention&rsquo;d lively knowledge join&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Have from the sea of ill love sav&rsquo;d my bark,<br/>
+And on the coast secur&rsquo;d it of the right.<br/>
+As for the leaves, that in the garden bloom,<br/>
+My love for them is great, as is the good<br/>
+Dealt by th&rsquo; eternal hand, that tends them all.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I ended, and therewith a song most sweet<br/>
+Rang through the spheres; and &ldquo;Holy, holy, holy,&rdquo;<br/>
+Accordant with the rest my lady sang.<br/>
+And as a sleep is broken and dispers&rsquo;d<br/>
+Through sharp encounter of the nimble light,<br/>
+With the eye&rsquo;s spirit running forth to meet<br/>
+The ray, from membrane on to the membrane urg&rsquo;d;<br/>
+And the upstartled wight loathes that be sees;<br/>
+So, at his sudden waking, he misdeems<br/>
+Of all around him, till assurance waits<br/>
+On better judgment: thus the saintly came<br/>
+Drove from before mine eyes the motes away,<br/>
+With the resplendence of her own, that cast<br/>
+Their brightness downward, thousand miles below.<br/>
+Whence I my vision, clearer shall before,<br/>
+Recover&rsquo;d; and, well nigh astounded, ask&rsquo;d<br/>
+Of a fourth light, that now with us I saw.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And Beatrice: &ldquo;The first diving soul,<br/>
+That ever the first virtue fram&rsquo;d, admires<br/>
+Within these rays his Maker.&rdquo; Like the leaf,<br/>
+That bows its lithe top till the blast is blown;<br/>
+By its own virtue rear&rsquo;d then stands aloof;<br/>
+So I, the whilst she said, awe-stricken bow&rsquo;d.<br/>
+Then eagerness to speak embolden&rsquo;d me;<br/>
+And I began: &ldquo;O fruit! that wast alone<br/>
+Mature, when first engender&rsquo;d! Ancient father!<br/>
+That doubly seest in every wedded bride<br/>
+Thy daughter by affinity and blood!<br/>
+Devoutly as I may, I pray thee hold<br/>
+Converse with me: my will thou seest; and I,<br/>
+More speedily to hear thee, tell it not &ldquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It chanceth oft some animal bewrays,<br/>
+Through the sleek cov&rsquo;ring of his furry coat.<br/>
+The fondness, that stirs in him and conforms<br/>
+His outside seeming to the cheer within:<br/>
+And in like guise was Adam&rsquo;s spirit mov&rsquo;d<br/>
+To joyous mood, that through the covering shone,<br/>
+Transparent, when to pleasure me it spake:<br/>
+&ldquo;No need thy will be told, which I untold<br/>
+Better discern, than thou whatever thing<br/>
+Thou holdst most certain: for that will I see<br/>
+In Him, who is truth&rsquo;s mirror, and Himself<br/>
+Parhelion unto all things, and naught else<br/>
+To him. This wouldst thou hear; how long since God<br/>
+Plac&rsquo;d me high garden, from whose hounds<br/>
+She led me up in this ladder, steep and long;<br/>
+What space endur&rsquo;d my season of delight;<br/>
+Whence truly sprang the wrath that banish&rsquo;d me;<br/>
+And what the language, which I spake and fram&rsquo;d<br/>
+Not that I tasted of the tree, my son,<br/>
+Was in itself the cause of that exile,<br/>
+But only my transgressing of the mark<br/>
+Assign&rsquo;d me. There, whence at thy lady&rsquo;s hest<br/>
+The Mantuan mov&rsquo;d him, still was I debarr&rsquo;d<br/>
+This council, till the sun had made complete,<br/>
+Four thousand and three hundred rounds and twice,<br/>
+His annual journey; and, through every light<br/>
+In his broad pathway, saw I him return,<br/>
+Thousand save sev&rsquo;nty times, the whilst I dwelt<br/>
+Upon the earth. The language I did use<br/>
+Was worn away, or ever Nimrod&rsquo;s race<br/>
+Their unaccomplishable work began.<br/>
+For naught, that man inclines to, ere was lasting,<br/>
+Left by his reason free, and variable,<br/>
+As is the sky that sways him. That he speaks,<br/>
+Is nature&rsquo;s prompting: whether thus or thus,<br/>
+She leaves to you, as ye do most affect it.<br/>
+Ere I descended into hell&rsquo;s abyss,<br/>
+El was the name on earth of the Chief Good,<br/>
+Whose joy enfolds me: Eli then &rsquo;twas call&rsquo;d<br/>
+And so beseemeth: for, in mortals, use<br/>
+Is as the leaf upon the bough; that goes,<br/>
+And other comes instead. Upon the mount<br/>
+Most high above the waters, all my life,<br/>
+Both innocent and guilty, did but reach<br/>
+From the first hour, to that which cometh next<br/>
+(As the sun changes quarter), to the sixth.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoIII.XXVII"></a>CANTO XXVII</h2>
+
+<p>
+Then &ldquo;Glory to the Father, to the Son,<br/>
+And to the Holy Spirit,&rdquo; rang aloud<br/>
+Throughout all Paradise, that with the song<br/>
+My spirit reel&rsquo;d, so passing sweet the strain:<br/>
+And what I saw was equal ecstasy;<br/>
+One universal smile it seem&rsquo;d of all things,<br/>
+Joy past compare, gladness unutterable,<br/>
+Imperishable life of peace and love,<br/>
+Exhaustless riches and unmeasur&rsquo;d bliss.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Before mine eyes stood the four torches lit;<br/>
+And that, which first had come, began to wax<br/>
+In brightness, and in semblance such became,<br/>
+As Jove might be, if he and Mars were birds,<br/>
+And interchang&rsquo;d their plumes. Silence ensued,<br/>
+Through the blest quire, by Him, who here appoints<br/>
+Vicissitude of ministry, enjoin&rsquo;d;<br/>
+When thus I heard: &ldquo;Wonder not, if my hue<br/>
+Be chang&rsquo;d; for, while I speak, these shalt thou see<br/>
+All in like manner change with me. My place<br/>
+He who usurps on earth (my place, ay, mine,<br/>
+Which in the presence of the Son of God<br/>
+Is void), the same hath made my cemetery<br/>
+A common sewer of puddle and of blood:<br/>
+The more below his triumph, who from hence<br/>
+Malignant fell.&rdquo; Such colour, as the sun,<br/>
+At eve or morning, paints and adverse cloud,<br/>
+Then saw I sprinkled over all the sky.<br/>
+And as th&rsquo; unblemish&rsquo;d dame, who in herself<br/>
+Secure of censure, yet at bare report<br/>
+Of other&rsquo;s failing, shrinks with maiden fear;<br/>
+So Beatrice in her semblance chang&rsquo;d:<br/>
+And such eclipse in heav&rsquo;n methinks was seen,<br/>
+When the Most Holy suffer&rsquo;d. Then the words<br/>
+Proceeded, with voice, alter&rsquo;d from itself<br/>
+So clean, the semblance did not alter more.<br/>
+&ldquo;Not to this end was Christ&rsquo;s spouse with my blood,<br/>
+With that of Linus, and of Cletus fed:<br/>
+That she might serve for purchase of base gold:<br/>
+But for the purchase of this happy life<br/>
+Did Sextus, Pius, and Callixtus bleed,<br/>
+And Urban, they, whose doom was not without<br/>
+Much weeping seal&rsquo;d. No purpose was of our<br/>
+That on the right hand of our successors<br/>
+Part of the Christian people should be set,<br/>
+And part upon their left; nor that the keys,<br/>
+Which were vouchsaf&rsquo;d me, should for ensign serve<br/>
+Unto the banners, that do levy war<br/>
+On the baptiz&rsquo;d: nor I, for sigil-mark<br/>
+Set upon sold and lying privileges;<br/>
+Which makes me oft to bicker and turn red.<br/>
+In shepherd&rsquo;s clothing greedy wolves below<br/>
+Range wide o&rsquo;er all the pastures. Arm of God!<br/>
+Why longer sleepst thou? Caorsines and Gascona<br/>
+Prepare to quaff our blood. O good beginning<br/>
+To what a vile conclusion must thou stoop!<br/>
+But the high providence, which did defend<br/>
+Through Scipio the world&rsquo;s glory unto Rome,<br/>
+Will not delay its succour: and thou, son,<br/>
+Who through thy mortal weight shall yet again<br/>
+Return below, open thy lips, nor hide<br/>
+What is by me not hidden.&rdquo; As a Hood<br/>
+Of frozen vapours streams adown the air,<br/>
+What time the she-goat with her skiey horn<br/>
+Touches the sun; so saw I there stream wide<br/>
+The vapours, who with us had linger&rsquo;d late<br/>
+And with glad triumph deck th&rsquo; ethereal cope.<br/>
+Onward my sight their semblances pursued;<br/>
+So far pursued, as till the space between<br/>
+From its reach sever&rsquo;d them: whereat the guide<br/>
+Celestial, marking me no more intent<br/>
+On upward gazing, said, &ldquo;Look down and see<br/>
+What circuit thou hast compass&rsquo;d.&rdquo; From the hour<br/>
+When I before had cast my view beneath,<br/>
+All the first region overpast I saw,<br/>
+Which from the midmost to the bound&rsquo;ry winds;<br/>
+That onward thence from Gades I beheld<br/>
+The unwise passage of Laertes&rsquo; son,<br/>
+And hitherward the shore, where thou, Europa!<br/>
+Mad&rsquo;st thee a joyful burden: and yet more<br/>
+Of this dim spot had seen, but that the sun,<br/>
+A constellation off and more, had ta&rsquo;en<br/>
+His progress in the zodiac underneath.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then by the spirit, that doth never leave<br/>
+Its amorous dalliance with my lady&rsquo;s looks,<br/>
+Back with redoubled ardour were mine eyes<br/>
+Led unto her: and from her radiant smiles,<br/>
+Whenas I turn&rsquo;d me, pleasure so divine<br/>
+Did lighten on me, that whatever bait<br/>
+Or art or nature in the human flesh,<br/>
+Or in its limn&rsquo;d resemblance, can combine<br/>
+Through greedy eyes to take the soul withal,<br/>
+Were to her beauty nothing. Its boon influence<br/>
+From the fair nest of Leda rapt me forth,<br/>
+And wafted on into the swiftest heav&rsquo;n.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What place for entrance Beatrice chose,<br/>
+I may not say, so uniform was all,<br/>
+Liveliest and loftiest. She my secret wish<br/>
+Divin&rsquo;d; and with such gladness, that God&rsquo;s love<br/>
+Seem&rsquo;d from her visage shining, thus began:<br/>
+&ldquo;Here is the goal, whence motion on his race<br/>
+Starts; motionless the centre, and the rest<br/>
+All mov&rsquo;d around. Except the soul divine,<br/>
+Place in this heav&rsquo;n is none, the soul divine,<br/>
+Wherein the love, which ruleth o&rsquo;er its orb,<br/>
+Is kindled, and the virtue that it sheds;<br/>
+One circle, light and love, enclasping it,<br/>
+As this doth clasp the others; and to Him,<br/>
+Who draws the bound, its limit only known.<br/>
+Measur&rsquo;d itself by none, it doth divide<br/>
+Motion to all, counted unto them forth,<br/>
+As by the fifth or half ye count forth ten.<br/>
+The vase, wherein time&rsquo;s roots are plung&rsquo;d, thou seest,<br/>
+Look elsewhere for the leaves. O mortal lust!<br/>
+That canst not lift thy head above the waves<br/>
+Which whelm and sink thee down! The will in man<br/>
+Bears goodly blossoms; but its ruddy promise<br/>
+Is, by the dripping of perpetual rain,<br/>
+Made mere abortion: faith and innocence<br/>
+Are met with but in babes, each taking leave<br/>
+Ere cheeks with down are sprinkled; he, that fasts,<br/>
+While yet a stammerer, with his tongue let loose<br/>
+Gluts every food alike in every moon.<br/>
+One yet a babbler, loves and listens to<br/>
+His mother; but no sooner hath free use<br/>
+Of speech, than he doth wish her in her grave.<br/>
+So suddenly doth the fair child of him,<br/>
+Whose welcome is the morn and eve his parting,<br/>
+To negro blackness change her virgin white.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thou, to abate thy wonder, note that none<br/>
+Bears rule in earth, and its frail family<br/>
+Are therefore wand&rsquo;rers. Yet before the date,<br/>
+When through the hundredth in his reck&rsquo;ning drops<br/>
+Pale January must be shor&rsquo;d aside<br/>
+From winter&rsquo;s calendar, these heav&rsquo;nly spheres<br/>
+Shall roar so loud, that fortune shall be fain<br/>
+To turn the poop, where she hath now the prow;<br/>
+So that the fleet run onward; and true fruit,<br/>
+Expected long, shall crown at last the bloom!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoIII.XXVIII"></a>CANTO XXVIII</h2>
+
+<p>
+So she who doth imparadise my soul,<br/>
+Had drawn the veil from off our pleasant life,<br/>
+And bar&rsquo;d the truth of poor mortality;<br/>
+When lo! as one who, in a mirror, spies<br/>
+The shining of a flambeau at his back,<br/>
+Lit sudden ore he deem of its approach,<br/>
+And turneth to resolve him, if the glass<br/>
+Have told him true, and sees the record faithful<br/>
+As note is to its metre; even thus,<br/>
+I well remember, did befall to me,<br/>
+Looking upon the beauteous eyes, whence love<br/>
+Had made the leash to take me. As I turn&rsquo;d;<br/>
+And that, which, in their circles, none who spies,<br/>
+Can miss of, in itself apparent, struck<br/>
+On mine; a point I saw, that darted light<br/>
+So sharp, no lid, unclosing, may bear up<br/>
+Against its keenness. The least star we view<br/>
+From hence, had seem&rsquo;d a moon, set by its side,<br/>
+As star by side of star. And so far off,<br/>
+Perchance, as is the halo from the light<br/>
+Which paints it, when most dense the vapour spreads,<br/>
+There wheel&rsquo;d about the point a circle of fire,<br/>
+More rapid than the motion, which first girds<br/>
+The world. Then, circle after circle, round<br/>
+Enring&rsquo;d each other; till the seventh reach&rsquo;d<br/>
+Circumference so ample, that its bow,<br/>
+Within the span of Juno&rsquo;s messenger,<br/>
+lied scarce been held entire. Beyond the sev&rsquo;nth,<br/>
+Follow&rsquo;d yet other two. And every one,<br/>
+As more in number distant from the first,<br/>
+Was tardier in motion; and that glow&rsquo;d<br/>
+With flame most pure, that to the sparkle&rsquo; of truth<br/>
+Was nearest, as partaking most, methinks,<br/>
+Of its reality. The guide belov&rsquo;d<br/>
+Saw me in anxious thought suspense, and spake:<br/>
+&ldquo;Heav&rsquo;n, and all nature, hangs upon that point.<br/>
+The circle thereto most conjoin&rsquo;d observe;<br/>
+And know, that by intenser love its course<br/>
+Is to this swiftness wing&rsquo;d. &ldquo;To whom I thus:<br/>
+&ldquo;It were enough; nor should I further seek,<br/>
+Had I but witness&rsquo;d order, in the world<br/>
+Appointed, such as in these wheels is seen.<br/>
+But in the sensible world such diff&rsquo;rence is,<br/>
+That is each round shows more divinity,<br/>
+As each is wider from the centre. Hence,<br/>
+If in this wondrous and angelic temple,<br/>
+That hath for confine only light and love,<br/>
+My wish may have completion I must know,<br/>
+Wherefore such disagreement is between<br/>
+Th&rsquo; exemplar and its copy: for myself,<br/>
+Contemplating, I fail to pierce the cause.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is no marvel, if thy fingers foil&rsquo;d<br/>
+Do leave the knot untied: so hard &rsquo;tis grown<br/>
+For want of tenting.&rdquo; Thus she said: &ldquo;But take,&rdquo;<br/>
+She added, &ldquo;if thou wish thy cure, my words,<br/>
+And entertain them subtly. Every orb<br/>
+Corporeal, doth proportion its extent<br/>
+Unto the virtue through its parts diffus&rsquo;d.<br/>
+The greater blessedness preserves the more.<br/>
+The greater is the body (if all parts<br/>
+Share equally) the more is to preserve.<br/>
+Therefore the circle, whose swift course enwheels<br/>
+The universal frame answers to that,<br/>
+Which is supreme in knowledge and in love<br/>
+Thus by the virtue, not the seeming, breadth<br/>
+Of substance, measure, thou shalt see the heav&rsquo;ns,<br/>
+Each to the&rsquo; intelligence that ruleth it,<br/>
+Greater to more, and smaller unto less,<br/>
+Suited in strict and wondrous harmony.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As when the sturdy north blows from his cheek<br/>
+A blast, that scours the sky, forthwith our air,<br/>
+Clear&rsquo;d of the rack, that hung on it before,<br/>
+Glitters; and, With his beauties all unveil&rsquo;d,<br/>
+The firmament looks forth serene, and smiles;<br/>
+Such was my cheer, when Beatrice drove<br/>
+With clear reply the shadows back, and truth<br/>
+Was manifested, as a star in heaven.<br/>
+And when the words were ended, not unlike<br/>
+To iron in the furnace, every cirque<br/>
+Ebullient shot forth scintillating fires:<br/>
+And every sparkle shivering to new blaze,<br/>
+In number did outmillion the account<br/>
+Reduplicate upon the chequer&rsquo;d board.<br/>
+Then heard I echoing on from choir to choir,<br/>
+&ldquo;Hosanna,&rdquo; to the fixed point, that holds,<br/>
+And shall for ever hold them to their place,<br/>
+From everlasting, irremovable.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Musing awhile I stood: and she, who saw<br/>
+by inward meditations, thus began:<br/>
+&ldquo;In the first circles, they, whom thou beheldst,<br/>
+Are seraphim and cherubim. Thus swift<br/>
+Follow their hoops, in likeness to the point,<br/>
+Near as they can, approaching; and they can<br/>
+The more, the loftier their vision. Those,<br/>
+That round them fleet, gazing the Godhead next,<br/>
+Are thrones; in whom the first trine ends. And all<br/>
+Are blessed, even as their sight descends<br/>
+Deeper into the truth, wherein rest is<br/>
+For every mind. Thus happiness hath root<br/>
+In seeing, not in loving, which of sight<br/>
+Is aftergrowth. And of the seeing such<br/>
+The meed, as unto each in due degree<br/>
+Grace and good-will their measure have assign&rsquo;d.<br/>
+The other trine, that with still opening buds<br/>
+In this eternal springtide blossom fair,<br/>
+Fearless of bruising from the nightly ram,<br/>
+Breathe up in warbled melodies threefold<br/>
+Hosannas blending ever, from the three<br/>
+Transmitted. hierarchy of gods, for aye<br/>
+Rejoicing, dominations first, next then<br/>
+Virtues, and powers the third. The next to whom<br/>
+Are princedoms and archangels, with glad round<br/>
+To tread their festal ring; and last the band<br/>
+Angelical, disporting in their sphere.<br/>
+All, as they circle in their orders, look<br/>
+Aloft, and downward with such sway prevail,<br/>
+That all with mutual impulse tend to God.<br/>
+These once a mortal view beheld. Desire<br/>
+In Dionysius so intently wrought,<br/>
+That he, as I have done rang&rsquo;d them; and nam&rsquo;d<br/>
+Their orders, marshal&rsquo;d in his thought. From him<br/>
+Dissentient, one refus&rsquo;d his sacred read.<br/>
+But soon as in this heav&rsquo;n his doubting eyes<br/>
+Were open&rsquo;d, Gregory at his error smil&rsquo;d<br/>
+Nor marvel, that a denizen of earth<br/>
+Should scan such secret truth; for he had learnt<br/>
+Both this and much beside of these our orbs,<br/>
+From an eye-witness to heav&rsquo;n&rsquo;s mysteries.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoIII.XXIX"></a>CANTO XXIX</h2>
+
+<p>
+No longer than what time Latona&rsquo;s twins<br/>
+Cover&rsquo;d of Libra and the fleecy star,<br/>
+Together both, girding the&rsquo; horizon hang,<br/>
+In even balance from the zenith pois&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Till from that verge, each, changing hemisphere,<br/>
+Part the nice level; e&rsquo;en so brief a space<br/>
+Did Beatrice&rsquo;s silence hold. A smile<br/>
+Bat painted on her cheek; and her fix&rsquo;d gaze<br/>
+Bent on the point, at which my vision fail&rsquo;d:<br/>
+When thus her words resuming she began:<br/>
+&ldquo;I speak, nor what thou wouldst inquire demand;<br/>
+For I have mark&rsquo;d it, where all time and place<br/>
+Are present. Not for increase to himself<br/>
+Of good, which may not be increas&rsquo;d, but forth<br/>
+To manifest his glory by its beams,<br/>
+Inhabiting his own eternity,<br/>
+Beyond time&rsquo;s limit or what bound soe&rsquo;er<br/>
+To circumscribe his being, as he will&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Into new natures, like unto himself,<br/>
+Eternal Love unfolded. Nor before,<br/>
+As if in dull inaction torpid lay.<br/>
+For not in process of before or aft<br/>
+Upon these waters mov&rsquo;d the Spirit of God.<br/>
+Simple and mix&rsquo;d, both form and substance, forth<br/>
+To perfect being started, like three darts<br/>
+Shot from a bow three-corded. And as ray<br/>
+In crystal, glass, and amber, shines entire,<br/>
+E&rsquo;en at the moment of its issuing; thus<br/>
+Did, from th&rsquo; eternal Sovran, beam entire<br/>
+His threefold operation, at one act<br/>
+Produc&rsquo;d coeval. Yet in order each<br/>
+Created his due station knew: those highest,<br/>
+Who pure intelligence were made: mere power<br/>
+The lowest: in the midst, bound with strict league,<br/>
+Intelligence and power, unsever&rsquo;d bond.<br/>
+Long tract of ages by the angels past,<br/>
+Ere the creating of another world,<br/>
+Describ&rsquo;d on Jerome&rsquo;s pages thou hast seen.<br/>
+But that what I disclose to thee is true,<br/>
+Those penmen, whom the Holy Spirit mov&rsquo;d<br/>
+In many a passage of their sacred book<br/>
+Attest; as thou by diligent search shalt find<br/>
+And reason in some sort discerns the same,<br/>
+Who scarce would grant the heav&rsquo;nly ministers<br/>
+Of their perfection void, so long a space.<br/>
+Thus when and where these spirits of love were made,<br/>
+Thou know&rsquo;st, and how: and knowing hast allay&rsquo;d<br/>
+Thy thirst, which from the triple question rose.<br/>
+Ere one had reckon&rsquo;d twenty, e&rsquo;en so soon<br/>
+Part of the angels fell: and in their fall<br/>
+Confusion to your elements ensued.<br/>
+The others kept their station: and this task,<br/>
+Whereon thou lookst, began with such delight,<br/>
+That they surcease not ever, day nor night,<br/>
+Their circling. Of that fatal lapse the cause<br/>
+Was the curst pride of him, whom thou hast seen<br/>
+Pent with the world&rsquo;s incumbrance. Those, whom here<br/>
+Thou seest, were lowly to confess themselves<br/>
+Of his free bounty, who had made them apt<br/>
+For ministries so high: therefore their views<br/>
+Were by enlight&rsquo;ning grace and their own merit<br/>
+Exalted; so that in their will confirm&rsquo;d<br/>
+They stand, nor feel to fall. For do not doubt,<br/>
+But to receive the grace, which heav&rsquo;n vouchsafes,<br/>
+Is meritorious, even as the soul<br/>
+With prompt affection welcometh the guest.<br/>
+Now, without further help, if with good heed<br/>
+My words thy mind have treasur&rsquo;d, thou henceforth<br/>
+This consistory round about mayst scan,<br/>
+And gaze thy fill. But since thou hast on earth<br/>
+Heard vain disputers, reasoners in the schools,<br/>
+Canvas the&rsquo; angelic nature, and dispute<br/>
+Its powers of apprehension, memory, choice;<br/>
+Therefore, &rsquo;tis well thou take from me the truth,<br/>
+Pure and without disguise, which they below,<br/>
+Equivocating, darken and perplex.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Know thou, that, from the first, these substances,<br/>
+Rejoicing in the countenance of God,<br/>
+Have held unceasingly their view, intent<br/>
+Upon the glorious vision, from the which<br/>
+Naught absent is nor hid: where then no change<br/>
+Of newness with succession interrupts,<br/>
+Remembrance there needs none to gather up<br/>
+Divided thought and images remote
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;So that men, thus at variance with the truth<br/>
+Dream, though their eyes be open; reckless some<br/>
+Of error; others well aware they err,<br/>
+To whom more guilt and shame are justly due.<br/>
+Each the known track of sage philosophy<br/>
+Deserts, and has a byway of his own:<br/>
+So much the restless eagerness to shine<br/>
+And love of singularity prevail.<br/>
+Yet this, offensive as it is, provokes<br/>
+Heav&rsquo;n&rsquo;s anger less, than when the book of God<br/>
+Is forc&rsquo;d to yield to man&rsquo;s authority,<br/>
+Or from its straightness warp&rsquo;d: no reck&rsquo;ning made<br/>
+What blood the sowing of it in the world<br/>
+Has cost; what favour for himself he wins,<br/>
+Who meekly clings to it. The aim of all<br/>
+Is how to shine: e&rsquo;en they, whose office is<br/>
+To preach the Gospel, let the gospel sleep,<br/>
+And pass their own inventions off instead.<br/>
+One tells, how at Christ&rsquo;s suffering the wan moon<br/>
+Bent back her steps, and shadow&rsquo;d o&rsquo;er the sun<br/>
+With intervenient disk, as she withdrew:<br/>
+Another, how the light shrouded itself<br/>
+Within its tabernacle, and left dark<br/>
+The Spaniard and the Indian, with the Jew.<br/>
+Such fables Florence in her pulpit hears,<br/>
+Bandied about more frequent, than the names<br/>
+Of Bindi and of Lapi in her streets.<br/>
+The sheep, meanwhile, poor witless ones, return<br/>
+From pasture, fed with wind: and what avails<br/>
+For their excuse, they do not see their harm?<br/>
+Christ said not to his first conventicle,<br/>
+&lsquo;Go forth and preach impostures to the world,&rsquo;<br/>
+But gave them truth to build on; and the sound<br/>
+Was mighty on their lips; nor needed they,<br/>
+Beside the gospel, other spear or shield,<br/>
+To aid them in their warfare for the faith.<br/>
+The preacher now provides himself with store<br/>
+Of jests and gibes; and, so there be no lack<br/>
+Of laughter, while he vents them, his big cowl<br/>
+Distends, and he has won the meed he sought:<br/>
+Could but the vulgar catch a glimpse the while<br/>
+Of that dark bird which nestles in his hood,<br/>
+They scarce would wait to hear the blessing said.<br/>
+Which now the dotards hold in such esteem,<br/>
+That every counterfeit, who spreads abroad<br/>
+The hands of holy promise, finds a throng<br/>
+Of credulous fools beneath. Saint Anthony<br/>
+Fattens with this his swine, and others worse<br/>
+Than swine, who diet at his lazy board,<br/>
+Paying with unstamp&rsquo;d metal for their fare.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But (for we far have wander&rsquo;d) let us seek<br/>
+The forward path again; so as the way<br/>
+Be shorten&rsquo;d with the time. No mortal tongue<br/>
+Nor thought of man hath ever reach&rsquo;d so far,<br/>
+That of these natures he might count the tribes.<br/>
+What Daniel of their thousands hath reveal&rsquo;d<br/>
+With finite number infinite conceals.<br/>
+The fountain at whose source these drink their beams,<br/>
+With light supplies them in as many modes,<br/>
+As there are splendours, that it shines on: each<br/>
+According to the virtue it conceives,<br/>
+Differing in love and sweet affection.<br/>
+Look then how lofty and how huge in breadth<br/>
+The&rsquo; eternal might, which, broken and dispers&rsquo;d<br/>
+Over such countless mirrors, yet remains<br/>
+Whole in itself and one, as at the first.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoIII.XXX"></a>CANTO XXX</h2>
+
+<p>
+Noon&rsquo;s fervid hour perchance six thousand miles<br/>
+From hence is distant; and the shadowy cone<br/>
+Almost to level on our earth declines;<br/>
+When from the midmost of this blue abyss<br/>
+By turns some star is to our vision lost.<br/>
+And straightway as the handmaid of the sun<br/>
+Puts forth her radiant brow, all, light by light,<br/>
+Fade, and the spangled firmament shuts in,<br/>
+E&rsquo;en to the loveliest of the glittering throng.<br/>
+Thus vanish&rsquo;d gradually from my sight<br/>
+The triumph, which plays ever round the point,<br/>
+That overcame me, seeming (for it did)<br/>
+Engirt by that it girdeth. Wherefore love,<br/>
+With loss of other object, forc&rsquo;d me bend<br/>
+Mine eyes on Beatrice once again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+If all, that hitherto is told of her,<br/>
+Were in one praise concluded, &rsquo;twere too weak<br/>
+To furnish out this turn. Mine eyes did look<br/>
+On beauty, such, as I believe in sooth,<br/>
+Not merely to exceed our human, but,<br/>
+That save its Maker, none can to the full<br/>
+Enjoy it. At this point o&rsquo;erpower&rsquo;d I fail,<br/>
+Unequal to my theme, as never bard<br/>
+Of buskin or of sock hath fail&rsquo;d before.<br/>
+For, as the sun doth to the feeblest sight,<br/>
+E&rsquo;en so remembrance of that witching smile<br/>
+Hath dispossess my spirit of itself.<br/>
+Not from that day, when on this earth I first<br/>
+Beheld her charms, up to that view of them,<br/>
+Have I with song applausive ever ceas&rsquo;d<br/>
+To follow, but not follow them no more;<br/>
+My course here bounded, as each artist&rsquo;s is,<br/>
+When it doth touch the limit of his skill.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She (such as I bequeath her to the bruit<br/>
+Of louder trump than mine, which hasteneth on,<br/>
+Urging its arduous matter to the close),<br/>
+Her words resum&rsquo;d, in gesture and in voice<br/>
+Resembling one accustom&rsquo;d to command:<br/>
+&ldquo;Forth from the last corporeal are we come<br/>
+Into the heav&rsquo;n, that is unbodied light,<br/>
+Light intellectual replete with love,<br/>
+Love of true happiness replete with joy,<br/>
+Joy, that transcends all sweetness of delight.<br/>
+Here shalt thou look on either mighty host<br/>
+Of Paradise; and one in that array,<br/>
+Which in the final judgment thou shalt see.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As when the lightning, in a sudden spleen<br/>
+Unfolded, dashes from the blinding eyes<br/>
+The visive spirits dazzled and bedimm&rsquo;d;<br/>
+So, round about me, fulminating streams<br/>
+Of living radiance play&rsquo;d, and left me swath&rsquo;d<br/>
+And veil&rsquo;d in dense impenetrable blaze.<br/>
+Such weal is in the love, that stills this heav&rsquo;n;<br/>
+For its own flame the torch this fitting ever!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No sooner to my list&rsquo;ning ear had come<br/>
+The brief assurance, than I understood<br/>
+New virtue into me infus&rsquo;d, and sight<br/>
+Kindled afresh, with vigour to sustain<br/>
+Excess of light, however pure. I look&rsquo;d;<br/>
+And in the likeness of a river saw<br/>
+Light flowing, from whose amber-seeming waves<br/>
+Flash&rsquo;d up effulgence, as they glided on<br/>
+&rsquo;Twixt banks, on either side, painted with spring,<br/>
+Incredible how fair; and, from the tide,<br/>
+There ever and anon, outstarting, flew<br/>
+Sparkles instinct with life; and in the flow&rsquo;rs<br/>
+Did set them, like to rubies chas&rsquo;d in gold;<br/>
+Then, as if drunk with odors, plung&rsquo;d again<br/>
+Into the wondrous flood; from which, as one<br/>
+Re&rsquo;enter&rsquo;d, still another rose. &ldquo;The thirst<br/>
+Of knowledge high, whereby thou art inflam&rsquo;d,<br/>
+To search the meaning of what here thou seest,<br/>
+The more it warms thee, pleases me the more.<br/>
+But first behooves thee of this water drink,<br/>
+Or ere that longing be allay&rsquo;d.&rdquo; So spake<br/>
+The day-star of mine eyes; then thus subjoin&rsquo;d:<br/>
+&ldquo;This stream, and these, forth issuing from its gulf,<br/>
+And diving back, a living topaz each,<br/>
+With all this laughter on its bloomy shores,<br/>
+Are but a preface, shadowy of the truth<br/>
+They emblem: not that, in themselves, the things<br/>
+Are crude; but on thy part is the defect,<br/>
+For that thy views not yet aspire so high.&rdquo;<br/>
+Never did babe, that had outslept his wont,<br/>
+Rush, with such eager straining, to the milk,<br/>
+As I toward the water, bending me,<br/>
+To make the better mirrors of mine eyes<br/>
+In the refining wave; and, as the eaves<br/>
+Of mine eyelids did drink of it, forthwith<br/>
+Seem&rsquo;d it unto me turn&rsquo;d from length to round,<br/>
+Then as a troop of maskers, when they put<br/>
+Their vizors off, look other than before,<br/>
+The counterfeited semblance thrown aside;<br/>
+So into greater jubilee were chang&rsquo;d<br/>
+Those flowers and sparkles, and distinct I saw<br/>
+Before me either court of heav&rsquo;n displac&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+O prime enlightener! thou who crav&rsquo;st me strength<br/>
+On the high triumph of thy realm to gaze!<br/>
+Grant virtue now to utter what I kenn&rsquo;d,<br/>
+    There is in heav&rsquo;n a light, whose goodly shine<br/>
+Makes the Creator visible to all<br/>
+Created, that in seeing him alone<br/>
+Have peace; and in a circle spreads so far,<br/>
+That the circumference were too loose a zone<br/>
+To girdle in the sun. All is one beam,<br/>
+Reflected from the summit of the first,<br/>
+That moves, which being hence and vigour takes,<br/>
+And as some cliff, that from the bottom eyes<br/>
+Its image mirror&rsquo;d in the crystal flood,<br/>
+As if &rsquo;t admire its brave appareling<br/>
+Of verdure and of flowers: so, round about,<br/>
+Eyeing the light, on more than million thrones,<br/>
+Stood, eminent, whatever from our earth<br/>
+Has to the skies return&rsquo;d. How wide the leaves<br/>
+Extended to their utmost of this rose,<br/>
+Whose lowest step embosoms such a space<br/>
+Of ample radiance! Yet, nor amplitude<br/>
+Nor height impeded, but my view with ease<br/>
+Took in the full dimensions of that joy.<br/>
+Near or remote, what there avails, where God<br/>
+Immediate rules, and Nature, awed, suspends<br/>
+Her sway? Into the yellow of the rose<br/>
+Perennial, which in bright expansiveness,<br/>
+Lays forth its gradual blooming, redolent<br/>
+Of praises to the never-wint&rsquo;ring sun,<br/>
+As one, who fain would speak yet holds his peace,<br/>
+Beatrice led me; and, &ldquo;Behold,&rdquo; she said,<br/>
+&ldquo;This fair assemblage! stoles of snowy white<br/>
+How numberless! The city, where we dwell,<br/>
+Behold how vast! and these our seats so throng&rsquo;d<br/>
+Few now are wanting here! In that proud stall,<br/>
+On which, the crown, already o&rsquo;er its state<br/>
+Suspended, holds thine eyes&mdash;or ere thyself<br/>
+Mayst at the wedding sup,&mdash;shall rest the soul<br/>
+Of the great Harry, he who, by the world<br/>
+Augustas hail&rsquo;d, to Italy must come,<br/>
+Before her day be ripe. But ye are sick,<br/>
+And in your tetchy wantonness as blind,<br/>
+As is the bantling, that of hunger dies,<br/>
+And drives away the nurse. Nor may it be,<br/>
+That he, who in the sacred forum sways,<br/>
+Openly or in secret, shall with him<br/>
+Accordant walk: Whom God will not endure<br/>
+I&rsquo; th&rsquo; holy office long; but thrust him down<br/>
+To Simon Magus, where Magna&rsquo;s priest<br/>
+Will sink beneath him: such will be his meed.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoIII.XXXI"></a>CANTO XXXI</h2>
+
+<p>
+In fashion, as a snow-white rose, lay then<br/>
+Before my view the saintly multitude,<br/>
+Which in his own blood Christ espous&rsquo;d. Meanwhile<br/>
+That other host, that soar aloft to gaze<br/>
+And celebrate his glory, whom they love,<br/>
+Hover&rsquo;d around; and, like a troop of bees,<br/>
+Amid the vernal sweets alighting now,<br/>
+Now, clustering, where their fragrant labour glows,<br/>
+Flew downward to the mighty flow&rsquo;r, or rose<br/>
+From the redundant petals, streaming back<br/>
+Unto the steadfast dwelling of their joy.<br/>
+Faces had they of flame, and wings of gold;<br/>
+The rest was whiter than the driven snow.<br/>
+And as they flitted down into the flower,<br/>
+From range to range, fanning their plumy loins,<br/>
+Whisper&rsquo;d the peace and ardour, which they won<br/>
+From that soft winnowing. Shadow none, the vast<br/>
+Interposition of such numerous flight<br/>
+Cast, from above, upon the flower, or view<br/>
+Obstructed aught. For, through the universe,<br/>
+Wherever merited, celestial light<br/>
+Glides freely, and no obstacle prevents.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All there, who reign in safety and in bliss,<br/>
+Ages long past or new, on one sole mark<br/>
+Their love and vision fix&rsquo;d. O trinal beam<br/>
+Of individual star, that charmst them thus,<br/>
+Vouchsafe one glance to gild our storm below!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+If the grim brood, from Arctic shores that roam&rsquo;d,<br/>
+(Where helice, forever, as she wheels,<br/>
+Sparkles a mother&rsquo;s fondness on her son)<br/>
+Stood in mute wonder &rsquo;mid the works of Rome,<br/>
+When to their view the Lateran arose<br/>
+In greatness more than earthly; I, who then<br/>
+From human to divine had past, from time<br/>
+Unto eternity, and out of Florence<br/>
+To justice and to truth, how might I choose<br/>
+But marvel too? &rsquo;Twixt gladness and amaze,<br/>
+In sooth no will had I to utter aught,<br/>
+Or hear. And, as a pilgrim, when he rests<br/>
+Within the temple of his vow, looks round<br/>
+In breathless awe, and hopes some time to tell<br/>
+Of all its goodly state: e&rsquo;en so mine eyes<br/>
+Cours&rsquo;d up and down along the living light,<br/>
+Now low, and now aloft, and now around,<br/>
+Visiting every step. Looks I beheld,<br/>
+Where charity in soft persuasion sat,<br/>
+Smiles from within and radiance from above,<br/>
+And in each gesture grace and honour high.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So rov&rsquo;d my ken, and its general form<br/>
+All Paradise survey&rsquo;d: when round I turn&rsquo;d<br/>
+With purpose of my lady to inquire<br/>
+Once more of things, that held my thought suspense,<br/>
+But answer found from other than I ween&rsquo;d;<br/>
+For, Beatrice, when I thought to see,<br/>
+I saw instead a senior, at my side,<br/>
+ Rob&rsquo;d, as the rest, in glory. Joy benign<br/>
+Glow&rsquo;d in his eye, and o&rsquo;er his cheek diffus&rsquo;d,<br/>
+With gestures such as spake a father&rsquo;s love.<br/>
+And, &ldquo;Whither is she vanish&rsquo;d?&rdquo; straight I ask&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;By Beatrice summon&rsquo;d,&rdquo; he replied,<br/>
+&ldquo;I come to aid thy wish. Looking aloft<br/>
+To the third circle from the highest, there<br/>
+Behold her on the throne, wherein her merit<br/>
+Hath plac&rsquo;d her.&rdquo; Answering not, mine eyes I rais&rsquo;d,<br/>
+And saw her, where aloof she sat, her brow<br/>
+A wreath reflecting of eternal beams.<br/>
+Not from the centre of the sea so far<br/>
+Unto the region of the highest thunder,<br/>
+As was my ken from hers; and yet the form<br/>
+Came through that medium down, unmix&rsquo;d and pure,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;O Lady! thou in whom my hopes have rest!<br/>
+Who, for my safety, hast not scorn&rsquo;d, in hell<br/>
+To leave the traces of thy footsteps mark&rsquo;d!<br/>
+For all mine eyes have seen, I, to thy power<br/>
+And goodness, virtue owe and grace. Of slave,<br/>
+Thou hast to freedom brought me; and no means,<br/>
+For my deliverance apt, hast left untried.<br/>
+Thy liberal bounty still toward me keep.<br/>
+That, when my spirit, which thou madest whole,<br/>
+Is loosen&rsquo;d from this body, it may find<br/>
+Favour with thee.&rdquo; So I my suit preferr&rsquo;d:<br/>
+And she, so distant, as appear&rsquo;d, look&rsquo;d down,<br/>
+And smil&rsquo;d; then tow&rsquo;rds th&rsquo; eternal fountain turn&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And thus the senior, holy and rever&rsquo;d:<br/>
+&ldquo;That thou at length mayst happily conclude<br/>
+Thy voyage (to which end I was dispatch&rsquo;d,<br/>
+By supplication mov&rsquo;d and holy love)<br/>
+Let thy upsoaring vision range, at large,<br/>
+This garden through: for so, by ray divine<br/>
+Kindled, thy ken a higher flight shall mount;<br/>
+And from heav&rsquo;n&rsquo;s queen, whom fervent I adore,<br/>
+All gracious aid befriend us; for that I<br/>
+Am her own faithful Bernard.&rdquo; Like a wight,<br/>
+Who haply from Croatia wends to see<br/>
+Our Veronica, and the while &rsquo;tis shown,<br/>
+Hangs over it with never-sated gaze,<br/>
+And, all that he hath heard revolving, saith<br/>
+Unto himself in thought: &ldquo;And didst thou look<br/>
+E&rsquo;en thus, O Jesus, my true Lord and God?<br/>
+And was this semblance thine?&rdquo; So gaz&rsquo;d I then<br/>
+Adoring; for the charity of him,<br/>
+Who musing, in the world that peace enjoy&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Stood lively before me. &ldquo;Child of grace!&rdquo;<br/>
+Thus he began: &ldquo;thou shalt not knowledge gain<br/>
+Of this glad being, if thine eyes are held<br/>
+Still in this depth below. But search around<br/>
+The circles, to the furthest, till thou spy<br/>
+Seated in state, the queen, that of this realm<br/>
+Is sovran.&rdquo; Straight mine eyes I rais&rsquo;d; and bright,<br/>
+As, at the birth of morn, the eastern clime<br/>
+Above th&rsquo; horizon, where the sun declines;<br/>
+To mine eyes, that upward, as from vale<br/>
+To mountain sped, at th&rsquo; extreme bound, a part<br/>
+Excell&rsquo;d in lustre all the front oppos&rsquo;d.<br/>
+And as the glow burns ruddiest o&rsquo;er the wave,<br/>
+That waits the sloping beam, which Phaeton<br/>
+Ill knew to guide, and on each part the light<br/>
+Diminish&rsquo;d fades, intensest in the midst;<br/>
+So burn&rsquo;d the peaceful oriflamb, and slack&rsquo;d<br/>
+On every side the living flame decay&rsquo;d.<br/>
+And in that midst their sportive pennons wav&rsquo;d<br/>
+Thousands of angels; in resplendence each<br/>
+Distinct, and quaint adornment. At their glee<br/>
+And carol, smil&rsquo;d the Lovely One of heav&rsquo;n,<br/>
+That joy was in the eyes of all the blest.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Had I a tongue in eloquence as rich,<br/>
+As is the colouring in fancy&rsquo;s loom,<br/>
+&rsquo;Twere all too poor to utter the least part<br/>
+Of that enchantment. When he saw mine eyes<br/>
+Intent on her, that charm&rsquo;d him, Bernard gaz&rsquo;d<br/>
+With so exceeding fondness, as infus&rsquo;d<br/>
+Ardour into my breast, unfelt before.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoIII.XXXII"></a>CANTO XXXII</h2>
+
+<p>
+Freely the sage, though wrapt in musings high,<br/>
+Assum&rsquo;d the teacher&rsquo;s part, and mild began:<br/>
+&ldquo;The wound, that Mary clos&rsquo;d, she open&rsquo;d first,<br/>
+Who sits so beautiful at Mary&rsquo;s feet.<br/>
+The third in order, underneath her, lo!<br/>
+Rachel with Beatrice. Sarah next,<br/>
+Judith, Rebecca, and the gleaner maid,<br/>
+Meek ancestress of him, who sang the songs<br/>
+Of sore repentance in his sorrowful mood.<br/>
+All, as I name them, down from deaf to leaf,<br/>
+Are in gradation throned on the rose.<br/>
+And from the seventh step, successively,<br/>
+Adown the breathing tresses of the flow&rsquo;r<br/>
+Still doth the file of Hebrew dames proceed.<br/>
+For these are a partition wall, whereby<br/>
+The sacred stairs are sever&rsquo;d, as the faith<br/>
+In Christ divides them. On this part, where blooms<br/>
+Each leaf in full maturity, are set<br/>
+Such as in Christ, or ere he came, believ&rsquo;d.<br/>
+On th&rsquo; other, where an intersected space<br/>
+Yet shows the semicircle void, abide<br/>
+All they, who look&rsquo;d to Christ already come.<br/>
+And as our Lady on her glorious stool,<br/>
+And they who on their stools beneath her sit,<br/>
+This way distinction make: e&rsquo;en so on his,<br/>
+The mighty Baptist that way marks the line<br/>
+(He who endur&rsquo;d the desert and the pains<br/>
+Of martyrdom, and for two years of hell,<br/>
+Yet still continued holy), and beneath,<br/>
+Augustin, Francis, Benedict, and the rest,<br/>
+Thus far from round to round. So heav&rsquo;n&rsquo;s decree<br/>
+Forecasts, this garden equally to fill.<br/>
+With faith in either view, past or to come,<br/>
+Learn too, that downward from the step, which cleaves<br/>
+Midway the twain compartments, none there are<br/>
+Who place obtain for merit of their own,<br/>
+But have through others&rsquo; merit been advanc&rsquo;d,<br/>
+On set conditions: spirits all releas&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Ere for themselves they had the power to choose.<br/>
+And, if thou mark and listen to them well,<br/>
+Their childish looks and voice declare as much.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Here, silent as thou art, I know thy doubt;<br/>
+And gladly will I loose the knot, wherein<br/>
+Thy subtle thoughts have bound thee. From this realm<br/>
+Excluded, chalice no entrance here may find,<br/>
+No more shall hunger, thirst, or sorrow can.<br/>
+A law immutable hath establish&rsquo;d all;<br/>
+Nor is there aught thou seest, that doth not fit,<br/>
+Exactly, as the finger to the ring.<br/>
+It is not therefore without cause, that these,<br/>
+O&rsquo;erspeedy comers to immortal life,<br/>
+Are different in their shares of excellence.<br/>
+Our Sovran Lord&mdash;that settleth this estate<br/>
+In love and in delight so absolute,<br/>
+That wish can dare no further&mdash;every soul,<br/>
+Created in his joyous sight to dwell,<br/>
+With grace at pleasure variously endows.<br/>
+And for a proof th&rsquo; effect may well suffice.<br/>
+And &rsquo;tis moreover most expressly mark&rsquo;d<br/>
+In holy scripture, where the twins are said<br/>
+To, have struggled in the womb. Therefore, as grace<br/>
+Inweaves the coronet, so every brow<br/>
+Weareth its proper hue of orient light.<br/>
+And merely in respect to his prime gift,<br/>
+Not in reward of meritorious deed,<br/>
+Hath each his several degree assign&rsquo;d.<br/>
+In early times with their own innocence<br/>
+More was not wanting, than the parents&rsquo; faith,<br/>
+To save them: those first ages past, behoov&rsquo;d<br/>
+That circumcision in the males should imp<br/>
+The flight of innocent wings: but since the day<br/>
+Of grace hath come, without baptismal rites<br/>
+In Christ accomplish&rsquo;d, innocence herself<br/>
+Must linger yet below. Now raise thy view<br/>
+Unto the visage most resembling Christ:<br/>
+For, in her splendour only, shalt thou win<br/>
+The pow&rsquo;r to look on him.&rdquo; Forthwith I saw<br/>
+Such floods of gladness on her visage shower&rsquo;d,<br/>
+From holy spirits, winging that profound;<br/>
+That, whatsoever I had yet beheld,<br/>
+Had not so much suspended me with wonder,<br/>
+Or shown me such similitude of God.<br/>
+And he, who had to her descended, once,<br/>
+On earth, now hail&rsquo;d in heav&rsquo;n; and on pois&rsquo;d wing.<br/>
+&ldquo;Ave, Maria, Gratia Plena,&rdquo; sang:<br/>
+To whose sweet anthem all the blissful court,<br/>
+From all parts answ&rsquo;ring, rang: that holier joy<br/>
+Brooded the deep serene. &ldquo;Father rever&rsquo;d:<br/>
+Who deign&rsquo;st, for me, to quit the pleasant place,<br/>
+Wherein thou sittest, by eternal lot!<br/>
+Say, who that angel is, that with such glee<br/>
+Beholds our queen, and so enamour&rsquo;d glows<br/>
+Of her high beauty, that all fire he seems.&rdquo;<br/>
+So I again resorted to the lore<br/>
+Of my wise teacher, he, whom Mary&rsquo;s charms<br/>
+Embellish&rsquo;d, as the sun the morning star;<br/>
+Who thus in answer spake: &ldquo;In him are summ&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Whatever of buxomness and free delight<br/>
+May be in Spirit, or in angel, met:<br/>
+And so beseems: for that he bare the palm<br/>
+Down unto Mary, when the Son of God<br/>
+Vouchsaf&rsquo;d to clothe him in terrestrial weeds.<br/>
+Now let thine eyes wait heedful on my words,<br/>
+And note thou of this just and pious realm<br/>
+The chiefest nobles. Those, highest in bliss,<br/>
+The twain, on each hand next our empress thron&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Are as it were two roots unto this rose.<br/>
+He to the left, the parent, whose rash taste<br/>
+Proves bitter to his seed; and, on the right,<br/>
+That ancient father of the holy church,<br/>
+Into whose keeping Christ did give the keys<br/>
+Of this sweet flow&rsquo;r: near whom behold the seer,<br/>
+That, ere he died, saw all the grievous times<br/>
+Of the fair bride, who with the lance and nails<br/>
+Was won. And, near unto the other, rests<br/>
+The leader, under whom on manna fed<br/>
+Th&rsquo; ungrateful nation, fickle and perverse.<br/>
+On th&rsquo; other part, facing to Peter, lo!<br/>
+Where Anna sits, so well content to look<br/>
+On her lov&rsquo;d daughter, that with moveless eye<br/>
+She chants the loud hosanna: while, oppos&rsquo;d<br/>
+To the first father of your mortal kind,<br/>
+Is Lucia, at whose hest thy lady sped,<br/>
+When on the edge of ruin clos&rsquo;d thine eye.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But (for the vision hasteneth so an end)<br/>
+Here break we off, as the good workman doth,<br/>
+That shapes the cloak according to the cloth:<br/>
+And to the primal love our ken shall rise;<br/>
+That thou mayst penetrate the brightness, far<br/>
+As sight can bear thee. Yet, alas! in sooth<br/>
+Beating thy pennons, thinking to advance,<br/>
+Thou backward fall&rsquo;st. Grace then must first be gain&rsquo;d;<br/>
+Her grace, whose might can help thee. Thou in prayer<br/>
+Seek her: and, with affection, whilst I sue,<br/>
+Attend, and yield me all thy heart.&rdquo; He said,<br/>
+And thus the saintly orison began.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="cantoIII.XXXIII"></a>CANTO XXXIII</h2>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;O virgin mother, daughter of thy Son,<br/>
+Created beings all in lowliness<br/>
+Surpassing, as in height, above them all,<br/>
+Term by th&rsquo; eternal counsel pre-ordain&rsquo;d,<br/>
+Ennobler of thy nature, so advanc&rsquo;d<br/>
+In thee, that its great Maker did not scorn,<br/>
+Himself, in his own work enclos&rsquo;d to dwell!<br/>
+For in thy womb rekindling shone the love<br/>
+Reveal&rsquo;d, whose genial influence makes now<br/>
+This flower to germin in eternal peace!<br/>
+Here thou to us, of charity and love,<br/>
+Art, as the noon-day torch: and art, beneath,<br/>
+To mortal men, of hope a living spring.<br/>
+So mighty art thou, lady! and so great,<br/>
+That he who grace desireth, and comes not<br/>
+To thee for aidance, fain would have desire<br/>
+Fly without wings. Nor only him who asks,<br/>
+Thy bounty succours, but doth freely oft<br/>
+Forerun the asking. Whatsoe&rsquo;er may be<br/>
+Of excellence in creature, pity mild,<br/>
+Relenting mercy, large munificence,<br/>
+Are all combin&rsquo;d in thee. Here kneeleth one,<br/>
+Who of all spirits hath review&rsquo;d the state,<br/>
+From the world&rsquo;s lowest gap unto this height.<br/>
+Suppliant to thee he kneels, imploring grace<br/>
+For virtue, yet more high to lift his ken<br/>
+Toward the bliss supreme. And I, who ne&rsquo;er<br/>
+Coveted sight, more fondly, for myself,<br/>
+Than now for him, my prayers to thee prefer,<br/>
+(And pray they be not scant) that thou wouldst drive<br/>
+Each cloud of his mortality away;<br/>
+That on the sovran pleasure he may gaze.<br/>
+This also I entreat of thee, O queen!<br/>
+Who canst do what thou wilt! that in him thou<br/>
+Wouldst after all he hath beheld, preserve<br/>
+Affection sound, and human passions quell.<br/>
+Lo! Where, with Beatrice, many a saint<br/>
+Stretch their clasp&rsquo;d hands, in furtherance of my suit!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The eyes, that heav&rsquo;n with love and awe regards,<br/>
+Fix&rsquo;d on the suitor, witness&rsquo;d, how benign<br/>
+She looks on pious pray&rsquo;rs: then fasten&rsquo;d they<br/>
+On th&rsquo; everlasting light, wherein no eye<br/>
+Of creature, as may well be thought, so far<br/>
+Can travel inward. I, meanwhile, who drew<br/>
+Near to the limit, where all wishes end,<br/>
+The ardour of my wish (for so behooved),<br/>
+Ended within me. Beck&rsquo;ning smil&rsquo;d the sage,<br/>
+That I should look aloft: but, ere he bade,<br/>
+Already of myself aloft I look&rsquo;d;<br/>
+For visual strength, refining more and more,<br/>
+Bare me into the ray authentical<br/>
+Of sovran light. Thenceforward, what I saw,<br/>
+Was not for words to speak, nor memory&rsquo;s self<br/>
+To stand against such outrage on her skill.<br/>
+As one, who from a dream awaken&rsquo;d, straight,<br/>
+All he hath seen forgets; yet still retains<br/>
+Impression of the feeling in his dream;<br/>
+E&rsquo;en such am I: for all the vision dies,<br/>
+As &rsquo;twere, away; and yet the sense of sweet,<br/>
+That sprang from it, still trickles in my heart.<br/>
+Thus in the sun-thaw is the snow unseal&rsquo;d;<br/>
+Thus in the winds on flitting leaves was lost<br/>
+The Sybil&rsquo;s sentence. O eternal beam!<br/>
+(Whose height what reach of mortal thought may soar?)<br/>
+Yield me again some little particle<br/>
+Of what thou then appearedst, give my tongue<br/>
+Power, but to leave one sparkle of thy glory,<br/>
+Unto the race to come, that shall not lose<br/>
+Thy triumph wholly, if thou waken aught<br/>
+Of memory in me, and endure to hear<br/>
+The record sound in this unequal strain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Such keenness from the living ray I met,<br/>
+That, if mine eyes had turn&rsquo;d away, methinks,<br/>
+I had been lost; but, so embolden&rsquo;d, on<br/>
+I pass&rsquo;d, as I remember, till my view<br/>
+Hover&rsquo;d the brink of dread infinitude.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+O grace! unenvying of thy boon! that gav&rsquo;st<br/>
+Boldness to fix so earnestly my ken<br/>
+On th&rsquo; everlasting splendour, that I look&rsquo;d,<br/>
+While sight was unconsum&rsquo;d, and, in that depth,<br/>
+Saw in one volume clasp&rsquo;d of love, whatever<br/>
+The universe unfolds; all properties<br/>
+Of substance and of accident, beheld,<br/>
+Compounded, yet one individual light<br/>
+The whole. And of such bond methinks I saw<br/>
+The universal form: for that whenever<br/>
+I do but speak of it, my soul dilates<br/>
+Beyond her proper self; and, till I speak,<br/>
+One moment seems a longer lethargy,<br/>
+Than five-and-twenty ages had appear&rsquo;d<br/>
+To that emprize, that first made Neptune wonder<br/>
+At Argo&rsquo;s shadow darkening on his flood.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With fixed heed, suspense and motionless,<br/>
+Wond&rsquo;ring I gaz&rsquo;d; and admiration still<br/>
+Was kindled, as I gaz&rsquo;d. It may not be,<br/>
+That one, who looks upon that light, can turn<br/>
+To other object, willingly, his view.<br/>
+For all the good, that will may covet, there<br/>
+Is summ&rsquo;d; and all, elsewhere defective found,<br/>
+Complete. My tongue shall utter now, no more<br/>
+E&rsquo;en what remembrance keeps, than could the babe&rsquo;s<br/>
+That yet is moisten&rsquo;d at his mother&rsquo;s breast.<br/>
+Not that the semblance of the living light<br/>
+Was chang&rsquo;d (that ever as at first remain&rsquo;d)<br/>
+But that my vision quickening, in that sole<br/>
+Appearance, still new miracles descry&rsquo;d,<br/>
+And toil&rsquo;d me with the change. In that abyss<br/>
+Of radiance, clear and lofty, seem&rsquo;d methought,<br/>
+Three orbs of triple hue clipt in one bound:<br/>
+And, from another, one reflected seem&rsquo;d,<br/>
+As rainbow is from rainbow: and the third<br/>
+Seem&rsquo;d fire, breath&rsquo;d equally from both. Oh speech<br/>
+How feeble and how faint art thou, to give<br/>
+Conception birth! Yet this to what I saw<br/>
+Is less than little. Oh eternal light!<br/>
+Sole in thyself that dwellst; and of thyself<br/>
+Sole understood, past, present, or to come!<br/>
+Thou smiledst; on that circling, which in thee<br/>
+Seem&rsquo;d as reflected splendour, while I mus&rsquo;d;<br/>
+For I therein, methought, in its own hue<br/>
+Beheld our image painted: steadfastly<br/>
+I therefore por&rsquo;d upon the view. As one<br/>
+Who vers&rsquo;d in geometric lore, would fain<br/>
+Measure the circle; and, though pondering long<br/>
+And deeply, that beginning, which he needs,<br/>
+Finds not; e&rsquo;en such was I, intent to scan<br/>
+The novel wonder, and trace out the form,<br/>
+How to the circle fitted, and therein<br/>
+How plac&rsquo;d: but the flight was not for my wing;<br/>
+Had not a flash darted athwart my mind,<br/>
+And in the spleen unfolded what it sought.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Here vigour fail&rsquo;d the tow&rsquo;ring fantasy:<br/>
+But yet the will roll&rsquo;d onward, like a wheel<br/>
+In even motion, by the Love impell&rsquo;d,<br/>
+That moves the sun in heav&rsquo;n and all the stars.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="notes03"></a>NOTES TO PARADISE</h2>
+
+<h5>CANTO 1</h5>
+
+<p>
+Verse 12. Benign Apollo.] Chaucer has imitated this invention very closely at
+the beginning of the Third Booke of Fame.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+If, divine vertue, thou<br/>
+Wilt helpe me to shewe now<br/>
+That in my head ymarked is,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+* * * * *<br/>
+Thou shalt see me go as blive<br/>
+Unto the next laurer I see,<br/>
+And kisse it for it is thy tree<br/>
+Now entre thou my breast anone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 15. Thus for.] He appears to mean nothing more than that this part of his
+poem will require a greater exertion of his powers than the former.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 19. Marsyas.] Ovid, Met. 1. vi. fab. 7. Compare Boccaccio, II Filocopo, 1.
+5. p. 25. v. ii. Ediz. Fir. 1723. &ldquo;Egli nel mio petto entri,&rdquo;
+&amp;c. - &ldquo;May he enter my bosom, and let my voice sound like his own,
+when he made that daring mortal deserve to come forth unsheathed from his
+limbs. &ldquo; v. 29. Caesar, or bard.] So Petrarch, Son. Par. Prima.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Arbor vittoriosa e trionfale,<br/>
+Onor d&rsquo;imperadori e di poeti.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And Spenser, F. Q. b. i. c. 1. st. 9,<br/>
+The laurel, meed of mighty conquerours<br/>
+And poets sage.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 37. Through that.] &ldquo;Where the four circles, the horizon, the zodiac,
+the equator, and the equinoctial colure, join; the last threeintersecting each
+other so as to form three crosses, as may be seen in the armillary
+sphere.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 39. In happiest constellation.] Aries. Some understand the planetVenus by
+the &ldquo;miglior stella &ldquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 44. To the left.] Being in the opposite hemisphere to ours, Beatrice that
+she may behold the rising sun, turns herself to the left.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 47. As from the first a second beam.] &ldquo;Like a reflected
+sunbeam,&rdquo; which he compares to a pilgrim hastening homewards.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ne simil tanto mal raggio secondo<br/>
+Dal primo usci.<br/>
+Filicaja, canz. 15. st. 4.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 58. As iron that comes boiling from the fire.] So Milton, P. L. b. iii. 594.
+&mdash;As glowing iron with fire.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 69. Upon the day appear&rsquo;d.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&mdash;If the heaven had ywonne,<br/>
+All new of God another sunne.<br/>
+Chaucer, First Booke of Fame
+</p>
+
+<p>
+E par ch&rsquo; agginuga un altro sole al cielo.<br/>
+Ariosto, O F. c. x. st. 109.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ed ecco un lustro lampeggiar d&rsquo; intorno<br/>
+Che sole a sole aggiunse e giorno a giorno.<br/>
+Manno, Adone. c. xi. st. 27.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Quando a paro col sol ma piu lucente<br/>
+L&rsquo;angelo gli appari sull; oriente<br/>
+Tasso, G. L. c. i.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+-Seems another morn<br/>
+Ris&rsquo;n on mid-noon.<br/>
+Milton, P. L. b. v. 311.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Compare Euripides, Ion. 1550. [GREEK HERE] 66. as Glaucus. ] Ovid, Met. 1.
+Xiii. Fab. 9
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 71. If.] &ldquo;Thou O divine Spirit, knowest whether 1 had not risen above
+my human nature, and were not merely such as thou hadst then, formed me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 125. Through sluggishness.] Perch&rsquo; a risponder la materia e sorda.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So Filicaja, canz. vi. st 9.<br/>
+Perche a risponder la discordia e sorda
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The workman hath in his heart a purpose, he carrieth in mind the whole
+form which his work should have; there wanteth not him skill and desire to
+bring his labour to the best effect, only the matter, which he hath to work on
+is unframeable.&rdquo; Hooker&rsquo;s Eccl. Polity, b. 5. 9.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO II</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 1. In small bark.]
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Con la barchetta mia cantando in rima<br/>
+Pulci, Morg. Magg. c. xxviii.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Io me n&rsquo;andro con la barchetta mia,<br/>
+Quanto l&rsquo;acqua comporta un picciol legno<br/>
+Ibid.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 30. This first star.] the moon
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 46. E&rsquo;en as the truth.] Like a truth that does not need demonstration,
+but is self-evident.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 52. Cain.] Compare Hell, Canto XX. 123. And Note
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 65. Number1ess lights.] The fixed stars, which differ both in bulk and
+splendor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 71. Save one.] &ldquo;Except that principle of rarity and denseness which
+thou hast assigned.&rdquo; By &ldquo;formal principles, &ldquo;principj
+formali, are meant constituent or essential causes.&rdquo; Milton, in imitation
+of this passage, introduces the angel arguing with Adam respecting the causes
+of the spots on the moon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But, as a late French translator of the Paradise well remarks, his reasoning is
+physical; that of Dante partly metaphysical and partly theologic.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 111. Within the heaven.] According to our Poet&rsquo;s system, there are ten
+heavens; the seven planets, the eighth spheres containing the fixed stars, the
+primum mobile, and the empyrean.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 143. The virtue mingled.] Virg. Aen. 1. vi 724. Principio coelum, &amp;c.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO III</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 16. Delusion.] &ldquo;An error the contrary to that of Narcissus, because he
+mistook a shadow for a substance, I a substance for a shadow.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 50. Piccarda.] The sister of Forese whom we have seen in the Purgatory,
+Canto XXIII.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 90. The Lady.] St. Clare, the foundress of the order called after her She
+was born of opulent and noble parents at Assisi, in 1193, and died in 1253. See
+Biogr. Univ. t. 1. p. 598. 8vo. Paris, 1813.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 121. Constance.] Daughter of Ruggieri, king of Sicily, who, being taken by
+force out of a monastery where she had professed, was married to the Emperor
+Henry Vl. and by him was mother to Frederick 11. She was fifty years old or
+more at the time, and &ldquo;because it was not credited that she could have a
+child at that age, she was delivered in a pavilion and it was given out, that
+any lady, who pleased, was at liberty to see her. Many came, and saw her, and
+the suspicion ceased.&rdquo; Ricordano Malaspina in Muratori, Rer. It. Script.
+t. viii. p. 939; and G. Villani, in the same words, Hist. I v. c. 16
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The French translator above mentored speaks of her having poisoned her husband.
+The death of Henry Vl. is recorded in the Chronicon Siciliae, by an anonymous
+writer, (Muratori, t. x.) but not a word of his having been poisoned by
+Constance, and Ricordano Malaspina even mentions her decease as happening
+before that of her husband, Henry V., for so this author, with some others,
+terms him. v. 122. The second.] Henry Vl. son of Frederick I was the second
+emperor of the house of Saab; and his son Frederick II &ldquo;the third and
+last.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO IV</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 6. Between two deer]
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Tigris ut auditis, diversa valle duorum<br/>
+Extimulata fame, mugitibus armentorum<br/>
+Neseit utro potius ruat, et ruere ardet utroque.<br/>
+Ovid, Metam. 1. v. 166
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 13. Daniel.] See Daniel, c. ii.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 24. Plato.] [GREEK HERE] Plato Timaeus v. ix. p. 326. Edit. Bip. &ldquo;The
+Creator, when he had framed the universe, distributed to the stars an equal
+number of souls, appointing to each soul its several star.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 27. Of that.] Plato&rsquo;s opinion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 34. The first circle.] The empyrean.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 48. Him who made Tobias whole.]
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Raphael, the sociable spirit, that deign&rsquo;d<br/>
+To travel with Tobias, and secur&rsquo;d<br/>
+His marriage with the sev&rsquo;n times wedded maid,<br/>
+Milton, P. L. b. v. 223.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 67. That to the eye of man.] &ldquo;That the ways of divine justice are
+often inscrutable to man, ought rather to be a motive to faith than an
+inducement to heresy.&rdquo; Such appears to me the most satisfactory
+explanation of the passage.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 82. Laurence.] Who suffered martyrdom in the third century.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 82. Scaevola.] See Liv. Hist. D. 1. 1. ii. 12.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 100. Alcmaeon.] Ovid, Met. 1. ix. f. 10.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&mdash;Ultusque parente parentem<br/>
+Natus, erit facto pius et sceleratus eodem.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 107. Of will.] &ldquo;What Piccarda asserts of Constance, that she retained
+her affection to the monastic life, is said absolutely and without relation to
+circumstances; and that which I affirm is spoken of the will conditionally and
+respectively: so that our apparent difference is without any
+disagreement.&rdquo; v. 119. That truth.] The light of divine truth.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO V</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 43. Two things.] The one, the substance of the vow; the other, the compact,
+or form of it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 48. It was enjoin&rsquo;d the Israelites.] See Lev. e. xii, and xxvii.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 56. Either key.] Purgatory, Canto IX. 108.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 86. That region.] As some explain it, the east, according to others the
+equinoctial line.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 124. This sphere.] The planet Mercury, which, being nearest to the sun, is
+oftenest hidden by that luminary
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO VI</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 1. After that Constantine the eagle turn&rsquo;d.] Constantine, in
+transferring the seat of empire from Rome to Byzantium, carried the eagle, the
+Imperial ensign, from the west to the east. Aeneas, on the contrary had moved
+along with the sun&rsquo;s course, when he passed from Troy to Italy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 5. A hundred years twice told and more.] The Emperor Constantine entered
+Byzantium in 324, and Justinian began his reign in 527.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 6. At Europe&rsquo;s extreme point.] Constantinople being situated at the
+extreme of Europe, and on the borders of Asia, near those mountains in the
+neighbourhood of Troy, from whence the first founders of Rome had emigrated.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 13. To clear th&rsquo; incumber&rsquo;d laws.] The code of laws was abridged
+and reformed by Justinian.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 15. Christ&rsquo;s nature merely human.] Justinian is said to have been a
+follower of the heretical Opinions held by Eutyches,&rdquo; who taught that in
+Christ there was but one nature, viz. that of the incarnate word.&rdquo;
+Maclaine&rsquo;s Mosheim, t. ii. Cent. v. p. ii. c. v. 13.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 16. Agapete.] Agapetus, Bishop of Rome, whose Scheda Regia, addressed to the
+Emperor Justinian, procured him a place among the wisest and most judicious
+writers of this century.&rdquo; Ibid. Cent. vi. p. ii c. ii. 8.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 33. Who pretend its power.] The Ghibellines.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 33. And who oppose ] The Guelphs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 34. Pallas died.] See Virgil, Aen. 1. X.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 39. The rival three.] The Horatii and Curiatii.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 41. Down.] &ldquo;From the rape of the Sabine women to the violation of
+Lucretia.&rdquo; v. 47. Quintius.] Quintius Cincinnatus.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+E Cincinnato dall&rsquo; inculta chioma.<br/>
+Petrarca.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 50. Arab hordes.] The Arabians seem to be put for the barbarians in general.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 54. That hill.] The city of Fesulae, which was sacked by the Romans after
+the defeat of Cataline.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 56. Near the hour.] Near the time of our Saviour&rsquo;s birth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 59. What then it wrought.] In the following fifteen lines the Poet has
+comprised the exploits of Julius Caesar.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 75. In its next bearer&rsquo;s gripe.] With Augustus Caesar.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 89. The third Caesar.] &ldquo;Tiberius the third of the Caesars, had it in
+his power to surpass the glory of all who either preceded or came after him, by
+destroying the city of .Jerusalem, as Titus afterwards did, and thus revenging
+the cause of God himself on the Jews.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 95. Vengeance for vengeance ] This will be afterwards explained by the Poet
+himself. v. 98. Charlemagne.] Dante could not be ignorant that the reign of
+Justinian was long prior to that of Charlemagne; but the spirit of the former
+emperor is represented, both in this instance and in what follows, as conscious
+of the events that had taken place after his own time.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 104. The yellow lilies.] The French ensign.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 110. Charles.] The commentators explain this to mean Charles II, king of
+Naples and Sicily. Is it not more likely to allude to Charles of Valois, son of
+Philip III of France, who was sent for, about this time, into Italy by Pope
+Boniface, with the promise of being made emperor? See G. Villani, 1. viii. c.
+42.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 131. Romeo&rsquo;s light.] The story of Romeo is involved in some
+uncertainty. The French writers assert the continuance of his ministerial
+office even after the decease of his soverign Raymond Berenger, count of
+Provence: and they rest this assertion chiefly on the fact of a certain Romieu
+de Villeneuve, who was the contemporary of that prince, having left large
+possessions behind him, as appears by his will, preserved in the archives of
+the bishopric of Venice. There might however have been more than one person of
+the name of Romieu, or Romeo which answers to that of Palmer in our language.
+Nor is it probable that the Italians, who lived so near the time, were
+misinformed in an occurrence of such notoriety. According to them, after he had
+long been a faithful steward to Raymond, when an account was required from him
+of the revenues whichhe had carefully husbanded, and his master as lavishly
+disbursed, &ldquo;He demanded the little mule, the staff, and the scrip, with
+which he had first entered into the count&rsquo;s service, a stranger pilgrim
+from the shrine of St. James in Galicia, and parted as he came; nor was it ever
+known whence he was or wither he went.&rdquo; G. Villani, 1. vi. c. 92.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 135. Four daughters.] Of the four daughters of Raymond Berenger, Margaret,
+the eldest, was married to Louis IX of France; Eleanor; the next, to Henry III,
+of England; Sancha, the third, to Richard, Henry&rsquo;s brother, and King of
+the Romans; and the youngest, Beatrice, to Charles I, King of Naples and
+Sicily, and brother to Louis.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 136. Raymond Berenger.] This prince, the last of the house of Barcelona, who
+was count of Provence, died in 1245. He is in the list of Provencal poets. See
+Millot, Hist, Litt des Troubadours, t. ii. P. 112.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO VII</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 3. Malahoth.] A Hebrew word, signifying &ldquo;kingdoms.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 4. That substance bright.] Justinian.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 17. As might have made one blest amid the flames.] So Giusto de&rsquo;
+Conti, Bella Mano. &ldquo;Qual salamandra.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Che puommi nelle fiammi far beato.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 23. That man who was unborn.] Adam.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 61. What distils.] &ldquo;That which proceeds immediately from God, and
+without intervention of secondary causes, in immortal.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 140. Our resurrection certain.] &ldquo;Venturi appears to mistake the
+Poet&rsquo;s reasoning, when he observes: &ldquo;Wretched for us, if we had not
+arguments more convincing, and of a higher kind, to assure us of the truth of
+our resurrection.&rdquo; It is here intended, I think, that the whole of
+God&rsquo;s dispensations to man should be considered as a proof of our
+resurrection. The conclusion is that as before sin man was immortal, so being
+restored to the favor of heaven by the expiation made for sin, he necessarily
+recovers his claim to immortality.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There is much in this poem to justify the encomium which the learned Salvini
+has passed on it, when, in an epistle to Redi, imitating what Horace had said
+of Homer, that the duties of life might be better learnt from the Grecian bard
+than from the teachers of the porch or the academy, he says&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And dost thou ask, what themes my mind engage?<br/>
+The lonely hours I give to Dante&rsquo;s page;<br/>
+And meet more sacred learning in his lines<br/>
+Than I had gain&rsquo;d from all the school divines.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Se volete saper la vita mia,<br/>
+Studiando io sto lungi da tutti gli nomini<br/>
+Ed ho irnparato piu teologia<br/>
+In questi giorni, che ho riletto Dante,<br/>
+Che nelle scuole fattto io non avria.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO VIII</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 4. Epicycle,] &ldquo;In sul dosso di questo cerchio,&rdquo; &amp;c. Convito
+di Dante, Opere, t. i. p. 48, ed. Ven. 1793. &ldquo;Upon the back of this
+circle, in the heaven of Venus, whereof we are now treating, is a little
+sphere, which has in that heaven a revolution of its own: whose circle the
+astronomers term epicycle.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 11. To sit in Dido&rsquo;s bosom.] Virgil. Aen. 1. i. 718,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 40. &lsquo;O ye whose intellectual ministry.] Voi ch&rsquo; intendendo il
+terzo ciel movete. The first line in our Poet&rdquo; first canzone. See his
+Convito, Ibid. p. 40.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 53. had the time been more.] The spirit now speaking is Charles Martel
+crowned king of Hungary, and son of Charles 11 king of Naples and Sicily, to
+which dominions dying in his father&rsquo;s lifetime, he did not succeed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 57. Thou lov&rsquo;dst me well.] Charles Martel might have been known to our
+poet at Florence whither he came to meet his father in 1295, the year of his
+death. The retinue and the habiliments of the young monarch are minutely
+described by G. Villani, who adds, that &ldquo;he remained more than twenty
+days in Florence, waiting for his father King Charles and his brothers during
+which time great honour was done him by the, Florentines and he showed no less
+love towards them, and he was much in favour with all.&rdquo; 1. viii. c. 13.
+His brother Robert, king of Naples, was the friend of Petrarch.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 60. The left bank.] Provence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 62. That horn Of fair Ausonia.] The kingdom of Naples.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 68. The land.] Hungary.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 73. The beautiful Trinaeria.] Sicily, so called from its three promontories,
+of which Pachynus and Pelorus, here mentioned, are two.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 14 Typhaeus.] The giant whom Jupiter is fabled to have overwhelmed under the
+mountain Aetna from whence he vomits forth smoke and flame.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 77. Sprang through me from Charles and Rodolph.] &ldquo;Sicily would be
+still ruled by a race of monarchs, descended through me from Charles I and
+Rodolph I the former my grandfather king of Naples and Sicily; the latter
+emperor of Germany, my father-in-law; &ldquo;both celebrated in the Purgatory
+Canto, Vll.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 78. Had not ill lording.] &ldquo;If the ill conduct of our governors in
+Sicily had not excited the resentment and hatred of the people and stimulated
+them to that dreadful massacre at the Sicilian vespers;&rdquo; in consequence
+of which the kingdom fell into the hands of Peter III of Arragon, in 1282
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 81. My brother&rsquo;s foresight.] He seems to tax his brother Robert with
+employing necessitous and greedy Catalonians to administer the affairs of his
+kingdom.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 99. How bitter can spring up.] &ldquo;How a covetous son can spring from a
+liberal father.&rdquo; Yet that father has himself been accused of avarice in
+the Purgatory Canto XX. v. 78; though his general character was that of a
+bounteous prince.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 125. Consult your teacher.] Aristole. [GREEK HERE] De Rep. 1. iii. c. 4.
+&ldquo;Since a state is made up of members differing from one another, (for
+even as an animal, in the first instance, consists of soul and body, and the
+soul, of reason and desire; and a family, of man and woman, and property of
+master and slave; in like manner a state consists both of all these and besides
+these of other dissimilar kinds,) it necessarily follows that the excellence of
+all the members of the state cannot be one and the same.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 136. Esau.] Genesis c. xxv. 22.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 137. Quirinus.] Romulus, born of so obscure a father, that his parentage was
+attributed to Mars.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO IX</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 2. O fair Clemenza.] Daughter of Charles Martel, and second wife of Louis X.
+of France.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 2. The treachery.] He alludes to the occupation of the kingdom of Sicily by
+Robert, in exclusion of his brother s son Carobert, or Charles. Robert, the
+rightful heir. See G. Villani, 1. viii. c. 112.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 7. That saintly light.] Charles Martel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 25. In that part.] Between Rialto and the Venetian territory, and the
+sources of the rivers Brenta and Piava is situated a castle called Romano, the
+birth-place of the famous tyrant Ezzolino or Azzolino, the brother of Cunizza,
+who is now speaking. The tyrant we have seen in &ldquo;the river of
+blood.&rdquo; Hell, Canto XII. v. 110.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 32. Cunizza.] The adventures of Cunizza, overcome by the influence of her
+star, are related by the chronicler Rolandino of Padua, 1. i. c. 3, in Muratori
+Rer. It. Script. t. viii. p. 173.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She eloped from her first husband, Richard of St. Boniface, in the company of
+Sordello, (see Purgatory, Canto VI. and VII. ) with whom she is supposed to
+have cohabited before her marriage: then lived with a soldier of Trevigi, whose
+wife was living at the same time in the same city, and on his being murdered by
+her brother the tyrant, was by her brother married to a nobleman of Braganzo,
+lastly when he also had fallen by the same hand she, after her brother&rsquo;s
+death, was again wedded in Verona.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 37. This.] Folco of Genoa, a celebrated Provencal poet, commonly termed
+Folques of Marseilles, of which place he was perhaps bishop. Many errors of
+Nostradamus, regarding him, which have been followed by Crescimbeni, Quadrio,
+and Millot, are detected by the diligence of Tiraboschi. Mr. Matthias&rsquo;s
+ed. v. 1. P. 18. All that appears certain, is what we are told in this Canto,
+that he was of Genoa, and by Petrarch in the Triumph of Love, c. iv. that he
+was better known by the appellation he derived from Marseilles, and at last
+resumed the religious habit. One of his verses is cited by Dante, De Vulg.
+Eloq. 1. ii. c. 6.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 40. Five times.] The five hundred years are elapsed: and unless the
+Provencal MSS. should be brought to light the poetical reputation of Folco must
+rest on the mention made of him by the more fortunate Italians.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 43 The crowd.] The people who inhabited the tract of country bounded by the
+river Tagliamento to the east, and Adice to the west.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 45. The hour is near.] Cunizza foretells the defeat of Giacopo da Carrara,
+Lord of Padua by Can Grande, at Vicenza, on the 18th September 1314. See G.
+Villani, 1. ix. c. 62. v. 48. One.] She predicts also the fate of Ricciardo da
+Camino, who is said to have been murdered at Trevigi, where the rivers (Sile
+and Cagnano meet) while he was engaged in playing at chess.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 50. The web.] The net or snare into, which he is destined to fall.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 50. Feltro.] The Bishop of Felto having received a number of fugitives from
+Ferrara, who were in opposition to the Pope, under a promise of protection,
+afterwards gave them up, so that they were reconducted to that city, and the
+greater part of them there put to death.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 53. Malta&rsquo;s.] A tower, either in the citadel of Padua, which under the
+tyranny of Ezzolino, had been &ldquo;with many a foul and midnight murder
+fed,&rdquo; or (as some say) near a river of the same name, that falls into the
+lake of Bolsena, in which the Pope was accustomed to imprison such as had been
+guilty of an irremissible sin.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 56 This priest.] The bishop, who, to show himself a zealous partisan of the
+Pope, had committed the above-mentioned act of treachery.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 58. We descry.] &ldquo;We behold the things that we predict, in the mirrors
+of eternal truth.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 64. That other joyance.] Folco.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 76. Six shadowing wings.] &ldquo;Above it stood the seraphims: each one had
+six wings.&rdquo; Isaiah, c. vi. 2.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 80. The valley of waters.] The Mediterranean sea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 80. That.] The great ocean.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 82. Discordant shores.] Europe and Africa.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 83. Meridian.] Extending to the east, the Mediterranean at last reaches the
+coast of Palestine, which is on its horizon when it enters the straits of
+Gibraltar. &ldquo;Wherever a man is,&rdquo; says Vellutello, &ldquo;there he
+has, above his head, his own particular meridian circle.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 85. &mdash;&rsquo;Twixt Ebro&rsquo;s stream<br/>
+And Macra&rsquo;s.]<br/>
+Eora, a river to the west, and Macra, to the east of Genoa, where<br/>
+Folco was born.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 88. Begga.] A place in Africa, nearly opposite to Genoa.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 89. Whose haven.] Alluding to the terrible slaughter of the Genoese made by
+the Saracens in 936, for which event Vellutello refers to the history of
+Augustino Giustiniani.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 91. This heav&rsquo;n.] The planet Venus.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 93. Belus&rsquo; daughter.] Dido.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 96. She of Rhodope.] Phyllis.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 98. Jove&rsquo;s son.] Hercules.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 112. Rahab.] Heb. c. xi. 31.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 120. With either palm.] &ldquo;By the crucifixion of Christ&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 126. The cursed flower.] The coin of Florence, called the florin.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 130. The decretals.] The canon law.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 134. The Vatican.] He alludes either to the death of Pope Boniface VIII. or,
+as Venturi supposes, to the coming of the Emperor Henry VII. into Italy, or
+else, according to the yet more probable conjecture of Lombardi, to the
+transfer of the holy see from Rome to Avignon, which took place in the
+pontificate of Clement V.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO X</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 7. The point.] &ldquo;To that part of heaven,&rdquo; as Venturi explains it,
+&ldquo;in which the equinoctial circle and the Zodiac intersect each other,
+where the common motion of the heavens from east to west may be said to strike
+with greatest force against the motion proper to the planets; and this
+repercussion, as it were, is here the strongest, because the velocity of each
+is increased to the utmost by their respective distance from the poles. Such at
+least is the system of Dante.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 11. Oblique.] The zodiac.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 25. The part.] The above-mentioned intersection of the equinoctial circle
+and the zodiac.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 26. Minister.] The sun.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 30. Where.] In which the sun rises every day earlier after the vernal
+equinox.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 45. Fourth family.] The inhabitants of the sun, the fourth planet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 46. Of his spirit and of his offspring.] The procession of the third, and
+the generation of the second person in the Trinity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 70. Such was the song.] &ldquo;The song of these spirits was ineffable.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 86. No less constrained.] &ldquo;The rivers might as easily cease to flow
+towards the sea, as we could deny thee thy request.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 91. I then.] &ldquo;I was of the Dominican order.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 95. Albert of Cologne.] Albertus Magnus was born at Laugingen, in Thuringia,
+in 1193, and studied at Paris and at Padua, at the latter of which places he
+entered into the Dominican order. He then taught theology in various parts of
+Germany, and particularly at Cologne. Thomas Aquinas was his favourite pupil.
+In 1260, he reluctantly accepted the bishopric of Ratisbon, and in two years
+after resigned it, and returned to his cell in Cologne, where the remainder of
+his life was passed in superintending the school, and in composing his
+voluminous works on divinity and natural science. He died in 1280. The absurd
+imputation of his having dealt in the magical art is well known; and his
+biographers take some pains to clear him of it. Scriptores Ordinis
+Praedicatorum, by Quetif and Echard, Lut. Par. 1719. fol. t. 1. p. 162.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 96. Of Aquinum, Thomas.] Thomas Aquinas, of whom Bucer is reported to have
+said, &ldquo;Take but Thomas away, and I will overturn the church of
+Rome,&rdquo; and whom Hooker terms &ldquo;the greatest among the school
+divines,&rdquo; (Eccl. Pol. b. 3. 9), was born of noble parents, who anxiously,
+but vainly, endeavoured to divert him from a life of celibacy and study; and
+died in 1274, at the age of fourty-seven. Echard and Quetif, ibid. p. 271. See
+also Purgatory Canto XX. v. 67.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 101. Gratian.] &ldquo;Gratian, a Benedictine monk belonging to the convent
+of St. Felix and Nabor, at Bologna, and by birth a Tuscan, composed, about the
+year 1130, for the use of the schools, an abridgment or epitome of canon law,
+drawn from the letters of the pontiffs, the decrees of councils, and the
+writings of the ancient doctors.&rdquo; Maclaine&rsquo;s Mosheim, v. iii. cent.
+12. part 2. c. i. 6.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 101. To either forum.] &ldquo;By reconciling,&rdquo; as Venturi explains it
+&ldquo;the civil with the canon law.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 104. Peter.] &ldquo;Pietro Lombardo was of obscure origin, nor is the place
+of his birth in Lombardy ascertained. With a recommendation from the bishop of
+Lucca to St. Bernard, he went into France to continue his studies, and for that
+purpose remained some time at Rheims, whence he afterwards proceeded to Paris.
+Here his reputation was so great that Philip, brother of Louis VII., being
+chosen bishop of Paris, resigned that dignity to Pietro, whose pupil he had
+been. He held his bishopric only one year, and died in 1160. His Liber
+Sententiarum is highly esteemed. It contains a system of scholastic theology,
+so much more complete than any which had been yet seen, that it may be deemed
+an original work.&rdquo; Tiraboschi, Storia della Lett. Ital. t. iii. 1. 4. c.
+2.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 104. Who with the widow gave.] This alludes to the beginning of the Liber
+Sententiarum, where Peter says: &ldquo;Cupiens aliquid de penuria ac tenuitate
+nostra cum paupercula in gazophylacium domini mittere,&rdquo; v. 105. The fifth
+light.] Solomon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 112. That taper&rsquo;s radiance.] St. Dionysius the Areopagite. &ldquo;The
+famous Grecian fanatic, who gave himself out for Dionysius the Areopagite,
+disciple of St. Paul, and who, under the protection of this venerable name,
+gave laws and instructions to those that were desirous of raising their souls
+above all human things in order to unite them to their great source by sublime
+contemplation, lived most probably in this century (the fourth), though some
+place him before, others after, the present period.&rdquo; Maclaine&rsquo;s
+Mosheim, v. i. cent. iv. p. 2. c. 3. 12.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 116. That pleader.] 1n the fifth century, Paulus Orosius, &ldquo;acquired a
+considerable degree of reputation by the History he wrote to refute the cavils
+of the Pagans against Christianity, and by his books against the Pelagians and
+Priscillianists.&rdquo; Ibid. v. ii. cent. v. p. 2. c. 2. 11. A similar train
+of argument was pursued by Augustine, in his book De Civitate Dei. Orosius is
+classed by Dante, in his treatise De Vulg. Eloq. I ii c. 6. as one of his
+favourite authors, among those &ldquo;qui usi sunt altissimas
+prosas,&rdquo;&mdash;&rdquo; who have written prose with the greatest loftiness
+of style.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 119. The eighth.] Boetius, whose book De Consolatione Philosophiae excited
+so much attention during the middle ages, was born, as Tiraboschi conjectures,
+about 470. &ldquo;In 524 he was cruelly put to death by command of Theodoric,
+either on real or pretended suspicion of his being engaged in a
+conspiracy.&rdquo; Della Lett. Ital. t. iii. 1. i. c. 4.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 124. Cieldauro.] Boetius was buried at Pavia, in the monastery of St. Pietro
+in Ciel d&rsquo;oro.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 126. Isidore.] He was Archbishop of Seville during forty years, and died in
+635. See Mariana, Hist. 1. vi. c. 7. Mosheim, whose critical opinions in
+general must be taken with some allowance, observes that &ldquo;his grammatical
+theological, and historical productions, discover more learning and pedantry,
+than judgment and taste.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 127. Bede.] Bede, whose virtues obtained him the appellation of the
+Venerable, was born in 672 at Wearmouth and Jarrow, in the bishopric of Durham,
+and died in 735. Invited to Rome by Pope Sergius I., he preferred passing
+almost the whole of his life in the seclusion of a monastery. A catalogue of
+his numerous writings may be seen in Kippis&rsquo;s Biographia Britannica, v.
+ii.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 127. Richard.] Richard of St. Victor, a native either of Scotland or
+Ireland, was canon and prior of the monastery of that name at Paris and died in
+1173. &ldquo;He was at the head of the Mystics in this century and his
+treatise, entitled the Mystical Ark, which contains as it were the marrow of
+this kind of theology, was received with the greatest avidity.&rdquo;
+Maclaine&rsquo;s Mosheim, v. iii. cent. xii. p. 2. c. 2. 23.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 132. Sigebert.] &ldquo;A monk of the abbey of Gemblours who was in high
+repute at the end of the eleventh, and beginning of the twelfth century.&rdquo;
+Dict. de Moreri.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 131. The straw-litter&rsquo;d street.] The name of a street in Paris: the
+&ldquo;Rue du Fouarre.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 136. The spouse of God.] The church.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XI</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 1. O fond anxiety of mortal men.] Lucretius, 1. ii. 14
+</p>
+
+<p>
+O miseras hominum mentes ! O pectora caeca<br/>
+Qualibus in tenebris vitae quantisque periclis<br/>
+Degitur hoc aevi quodcunque est!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 4. Aphorisms,] The study of medicine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 17. The lustre.] The spirit of Thomas Aquinas
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 29. She.] The church.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 34. One.] Saint Francis.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 36. The other.] Saint Dominic.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 40. Tupino.] A rivulet near Assisi, or Ascesi where Francis was born in
+1182.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 40. The wave.] Chiascio, a stream that rises in a mountain near Agobbio,
+chosen by St. Ubaldo for the place of his retirement.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 42. Heat and cold.] Cold from the snow, and heat from the reflection of the
+sun.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 45. Yoke.] Vellutello understands this of the vicinity of the mountain to
+Nocera and Gualdo; and Venturi (as I have taken it) of the heavy impositions
+laid on those places by the Perugians. For GIOGO, like the Latin JUGUM, will
+admit of either sense.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 50. The east.]
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This is the east, and Juliet is the sun.<br/>
+Shakespeare.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 55. Gainst his father&rsquo;s will.] In opposition to the wishes of his
+natural father
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 58. In his father&rsquo;s sight.] The spiritual father, or bishop, in whose
+presence he made a profession of poverty.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 60. Her first husband.] Christ.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 63. Amyclas.] Lucan makes Caesar exclaim, on witnessing the secure poverty
+of the fisherman Amyclas:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&mdash;O vite tuta facultas<br/>
+Pauperis, angustique lares! O munera nondum<br/>
+Intellecta deum! quibus hoc contingere templis,<br/>
+Aut potuit muris, nullo trepidare tumultu,<br/>
+Caesarea pulsante manu?<br/>
+Lucan Phars. 1. v. 531.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 72. Bernard.] One of the first followers of the saint.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 76. Egidius.] The third of his disciples, who died in 1262. His work,
+entitled Verba Aurea, was published in 1534, at Antwerp See Lucas Waddingus,
+Annales Ordinis Minoris, p. 5.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 76. Sylvester.] Another of his earliest associates.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 83. Pietro Bernardone.] A man in an humble station of life at Assisi.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 86. Innocent.] Pope Innocent III.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 90. Honorius.] His successor Honorius III who granted certain privileges to
+the Franciscans.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 93. On the hard rock.] The mountain Alverna in the Apennine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 100. The last signet.] Alluding to the stigmata, or marks resembling the
+wounds of Christ, said to have been found on the saint&rsquo;s body.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 106. His dearest lady.] Poverty.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 113. Our Patriarch ] Saint Dominic.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 316. His flock ] The Dominicans.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 127. The planet from whence they split.] &ldquo;The rule of their order,
+which the Dominicans neglect to observe.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XII</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 1. The blessed flame.] Thomas Aquinas
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 12. That voice.] The nymph Echo, transformed into the repercussion of the
+voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 25. One.] Saint Buonaventura, general of the Franciscan order, in which he
+effected some reformation, and one of the most profound divines of his age.
+&ldquo;He refused the archbishopric of York, which was offered him by Clement
+IV, but afterwards was prevailed on to accept the bishopric of Albano and a
+cardinal&rsquo;s hat. He was born at Bagnoregio or Bagnorea, in Tuscany, A.D.
+1221, and died in 1274.&rdquo; Dict. Histor. par Chaudon et Delandine. Ed.
+Lyon. 1804.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 28. The love.] By an act of mutual courtesy, Buonaventura, a Franciscan, is
+made to proclaim the praises of St. Dominic, as Thomas Aquinas, a Dominican,
+has celebrated those of St. Francis.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 42. In that clime.] Spain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 48. Callaroga.] Between Osma and Aranda, in Old Castile, designated by the
+royal coat of arms.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 51. The loving minion of the Christian faith.] Dominic was born April 5,
+1170, and died August 6, 1221. His birthplace, Callaroga; his father and
+mother&rsquo;s names, Felix and Joanna, his mother&rsquo;s dream; his name of
+Dominic, given him in consequence of a vision by a noble matron, who stood
+sponsor to him, are all told in an anonymous life of the saint, said to be
+written in the thirteenth century, and published by Quetif and Echard,
+Scriptores Ordinis Praedicatorum. Par. 1719. fol. t 1. p. 25. These writers
+deny his having been an inquisitor, and indeed the establishment of the
+inquisition itself before the fourth Lateran council. Ibid. p. 88.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 55. In the mother&rsquo;s womb.] His mother, when pregnant with him, is said
+to have dreamt that she should bring forth a white and black dog, with a
+lighted torch in its mouth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 59. The dame.] His godmother&rsquo;s dream was, that he had one star in his
+forehead, and another in the nape of his neck, from which he communicated light
+to the east and the west.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 73. Felix.] Felix Gusman.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 75. As men interpret it.] Grace or gift of the Lord.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 77. Ostiense.] A cardinal, who explained the decretals.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 77. Taddeo.] A physician, of Florence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 82. The see.] &ldquo;The apostolic see, which no longer continues its wonted
+liberality towards the indigent and deserving; not indeed through its own
+fault, as its doctrines are still the same, but through the fault of the
+pontiff, who is seated in it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 85. No dispensation.] Dominic did not ask license to compound for the use of
+unjust acquisitions, by dedicating a part of them to pious purposes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 89. In favour of that seed.] &ldquo;For that seed of the divine word, from
+which have sprung up these four-and-twenty plants, that now environ
+thee.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 101. But the track.] &ldquo;But the rule of St. Francis is already deserted
+and the lees of the wine are turned into mouldiness.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 110. Tares.] He adverts to the parable of the taxes and the wheat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 111. I question not.] &ldquo;Some indeed might be found, who still observe
+the rule of the order, but such would come neither from Casale nor
+Acquasparta:&rdquo; of the former of which places was Uberto, one master
+general, by whom the discipline had been relaxed; and of the latter, Matteo,
+another, who had enforced it with unnecessary rigour.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 121. -Illuminato here, And Agostino.] Two among the earliest followers of
+St. Francis.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 125. Hugues of St. Victor.] A Saxon of the monastery of Saint Victor at
+Paris, who fed ill 1142 at the age of forty-four. &ldquo;A man distinguished by
+the fecundity of his genius, who treated in his writings of all the branches of
+sacred and profane erudition that were known in his time, and who composed
+several dissertations that are not destitute of merit.&rdquo; Maclaine&rsquo;s
+Mosheim, Eccl. Hist. v. iii . cent. xii. p. 2. 2. 23. I have looked into his
+writings, and found some reason for this high eulogium.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 125. Piatro Mangiadore.] &ldquo;Petrus Comestor, or the Eater, born at
+Troyes, was canon and dean of that church, and afterwards chancellor of the
+church of Paris. He relinquished these benefices to become a regular canon of
+St. Victor at Paris, where he died in 1198. Chaudon et Delandine Dict. Hist.
+Ed. Lyon. 1804. The work by which he is best known, is his Historia Scolastica,
+which I shall have occasion to cite in the Notes to Canto XXVI.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 126. He of Spain.] &ldquo;To Pope Adrian V succeeded John XXI a native of
+Lisbon a man of great genius and extraordinary acquirements, especially in
+logic and in medicine, as his books, written in the name of Peter of Spain (by
+which he was known before he became Pope), may testify. His life was not much
+longer than that of his predecessors, for he was killed at Viterbo, by the
+falling in of the roof of his chamber, after he had been pontiff only eight
+months and as many days. A.D. 1277. Mariana, Hist. de Esp. l. xiv. c. 2.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 128. Chrysostom.] The eloquent patriarch of Constantinople.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 128. Anselmo.] &ldquo;Anselm, Archbishop of Canterbury, was born at Aosta,
+about 1034, and studied under Lanfrane at the monastery of Bec, in Normandy,
+where he afterwards devoted himself to a religious life, in his twenty-seventh
+year. In three years he was made prior, and then abbot of that monastery! from
+whence he was taken, in 1093, to succeed to the archbishopric, vacant by the
+death of Lanfrane. He enjoyed this dignity till his death, in 1109, though it
+was disturbed by many dissentions with William II and Henry I respecting the
+immunities and investitures. There is much depth and precisian in his
+theological works.&rdquo; Tiraboschi, Stor. della Lett. Ital. t. iii.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+1. iv. c. 2. Ibid. c. v. &ldquo;It is an observation made by many modern
+writers, that the demonstration of the existence of God, taken from the idea of
+a Supreme Being, of which Des Cartes is thought to be the author, was so many
+ages back discovered and brought to light by Anselm. Leibnitz himself makes the
+remark, vol. v. Oper. p. 570. Edit. Genev. 1768.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 129. Donatus.] Aelius Donatus, the grammarian, in the fourth century, one of
+the preceptors of St. Jerome.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 130. Raban.] &ldquo;Rabanus Maurus, Archbishop of Mentz, is deservedly
+placed at the head of the Latin writers of this age.&rdquo; Mosheim, v. ii.
+cent. ix. p. 2 c. 2. 14.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 131. Joachim.] Abbot of Flora in Calabria; &ldquo;whom the multitude revered
+as a person divinely inspired and equal to the most illustrious prophets of
+ancient times.&rdquo; Ibid. v. iii. cent. xiii. p. 2. c. 2. 33.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 134. A peer.] St. Dominic.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XIII</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 1. Let him.] &ldquo;Whoever would conceive the sight that now presented
+itself to me, must imagine to himself fifteen of the brightest stars in heaven,
+together with seven stars of Arcturus Major and two of Arcturus Minor, ranged
+in two circles, one within the other, each resembling the crown of Ariadne, and
+moving round m opposite directions.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 21. The Chiava.] See Hell, Canto XXIX. 45.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 29. That luminary.] Thomas Aquinas.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 31. One ear.] &ldquo;Having solved one of thy questions, I proceed to answer
+the other. Thou thinkest, then, that Adam and Christ were both endued with all
+the perfection of which the human nature is capable and therefore wonderest at
+what has been said concerning Solomon&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 48. That.] &ldquo;Things corruptible and incorruptible, are only emanations
+from the archetypal idea residing in the Divine mind.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 52. His brightness.] The Word: the Son of God.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 53. His love triune with them.] The Holy Ghost.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 55. New existences.] Angels and human souls.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 57. The lowest powers.] Irrational life and brute matter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 62. Their wax and that which moulds it.] Matter, and the virtue or energy
+that acts on it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 68. The heav&rsquo;n.] The influence of the planetary bodies.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 77. The clay.] Adam.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 88. Who ask&rsquo;d.] &ldquo;He did not desire to know the number of the
+stars, or to pry into the subtleties of metaphysical and mathematical science:
+but asked for that wisdom which might fit him for his kingly office.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 120. &mdash;Parmenides Melissus Bryso.] For the singular opinions
+entertained by the two former of these heathen philosophers, see Diogenes
+Laertius, 1. ix. and Aristot. de Caelo, 1. iii. c. 1 and Phys. l. i. c. 2. The
+last is also twice adduced by 2. Aristotle (Anal Post. 1. i. c. 9. and Rhet. 1.
+iii. c. 2.) as 3. affording instances of false reasoning.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 123. Sabellius, Arius.] Well-known heretics.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 124. Scymitars.] A passage in the travels of Bertradon de la Brocquiere,
+translated by Mr. Johnes, will explain this allusion, which has given some
+trouble to the commentators. That traveler, who wrote before Dante, informs us,
+p. 138, that the wandering Arabs used their scymitars as mirrors.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 126. Let not.] &ldquo;Let not short-sighted mortals presume to decide on the
+future doom of any man, from a consideration of his present character and
+actions.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XIV</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 5. Such was the image.] The voice of Thomas Aquinas proceeding, from the
+circle to the centre and that of Beatrice from the centre to the circle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 26. Him.] Literally translated by Chaucer, Troilus and Cresseide.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thou one two, and three eterne on live<br/>
+That raignest aie in three, two and one<br/>
+Uncircumscript, and all maist circonscrive,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 81. The goodliest light.] Solomon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 78. To more lofty bliss.] To the planet Mars.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 94. The venerable sign.] The cross.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 125. He.] &ldquo;He who considers that the eyes of Beatrice became more
+radiant the higher we ascended, must not wonder that I do not except even them
+as I had not yet beheld them since our entrance into this planet.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XV</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 24. Our greater Muse.] Virgil Aen. 1. vi. 684. v. 84. I am thy root.]
+Cacciaguida, father to Alighieri, of whom our Poet was the great-grandson.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 89. The mountain.] Purgatory.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 92. Florence.] See G. Villani, l. iii. c. 2.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 93. Which calls her still.] The public clock being still within the circuit
+of the ancient walls.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 98. When.] When the women were not married at too early an age, and did not
+expect too large a portion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 101. Void.] Through the civil wars.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 102 Sardanapalus.] The luxurious monarch of Assyria Juvenal is here
+imitated, who uses his name for an instance of effeminacy. Sat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 103. Montemalo ] Either an elevated spot between Rome and Viterbo, or Monte
+Mario, the site of the villa Mellini, commanding a view of Rome.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 101. Our suburban turret.] Uccellatojo, near Florence, from whence that city
+was discovered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 103. Bellincion Berti.] Hell, Canto XVI. 38. nd Notes. There is a curious
+description of the simple manner in which the earlier Florentines dressed
+themselves in G. Villani, 1 vi. c. 71.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 110. Of Nerli and of Vecchio.] Two of the most opulent families in Florence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 113. Each.] &ldquo;None fearful either of dying in banishment, or of being
+deserted by her husband on a scheme of battle in France.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 120. A Salterello and Cianghella.] The latter a shameless woman of the
+family of Tosa, married to Lito degli Alidosi of Imola: the former Lapo
+Salterello, a lawyer, with whom Dante was at variance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 125. Mary.] The Virgin was involved in the pains of child-birth Purgatory,
+Canto XX. 21.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 130 Valdipado.] Cacciaguida&rsquo;s wife, whose family name was Aldighieri;
+came from Ferrara, called Val di Pado, from its being watered by the Po.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 131. Conrad.] The Emperor Conrad III who died in 1152. See G. Villani, 1.
+iv. 34.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 136. Whose people.] The Mahometans, who were left in possession of the Holy
+Land, through the supineness of the Pope.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XVI</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 10. With greeting.] The Poet, who had addressed the spirit, not knowing him
+to be his ancestor, with a plain &ldquo;Thou,&rdquo; now uses more ceremony,
+and calls him &ldquo;You,&rdquo; according to a custom introduced among the
+Romans in the latter times of the empire.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 15. Guinever.] Beatrice&rsquo;s smile encouraged him to proceed just as the
+cough of Ginevra&rsquo;s female servant gave her mistress assurance to admit
+the freedoms of Lancelot. See Hell, Canto V. 124.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 23. The fold.] Florence, of which John the Baptist was the patron saint.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 31. From the day.] From the Incarnation to the birth of Cacciaguida, the
+planet Mars had returned five hundred and fifty-three times to the
+constellation of Leo, with which it is supposed to have a congenial influence.
+His birth may, therefore, be placed about 1106.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 38. The last.] The city was divided into four compartments. The Elisei, the
+ancestors of Dante, resided near the entrance of that named from the Porta S.
+Piero, which was the last reached by the competitor in the annual race at
+Florence. See G. Villani, 1. iv. c. 10.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 44. From Mars.] &ldquo;Both in the times of heathenish and of
+Christianity.&rdquo; Hell, Canto XIII. 144.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 48. Campi and Certaldo and Fighine.] Country places near Florence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 50. That these people.] That the inhabitants of the above- mentioned places
+had not been mixed with the citizens: nor the limits of Florence extended
+beyond Galluzzo and Trespiano.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 54. Aguglione&rsquo;s hind and Signa&rsquo;s.] Baldo of Aguglione, and
+Bonifazio of Signa.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 56. Had not the people.] If Rome had continued in her allegiance to the
+emperor, and the Guelph and Ghibelline factions had thus been prevented,
+Florence would not have been polluted by a race of upstarts, nor lost the most
+respectable of her ancient families.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 61. Simifonte.] A castle dismantled by the Florentines. G. Villani, 1. v. c.
+30. The individual here alluded to is no longer known.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 69. The blind bull.] So Chaucer, Troilus and Cresseide. b. 2.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For swifter course cometh thing that is of wight<br/>
+When it descendeth than done things light.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Compare Aristotle, Ethic. Nic. l. vi. c. 13. [GREEK HERE]
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 72. Luni, Urbisaglia.] Cities formerly of importance, but then fallen to
+decay.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 74. Chiusi and Sinigaglia.] The same.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 80. As the moon.] &ldquo;The fortune of us, that are the moon&rsquo;s men
+doth ebb and flow like the sea.&rdquo; Shakespeare, 1 Henry IV. a. i. s. 2.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 86. The Ughi.] Whoever is curious to know the habitations of these and the
+other ancient Florentines, may consult G. Villani, l. iv.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 91. At the poop.] Many editions read porta, &ldquo;gate.&rdquo; -The same
+metaphor is found in Aeschylus, Supp. 356, and is there also scarce understood
+by the critics. [GREEK HERE] Respect these wreaths, that crown your
+city&rsquo;s poop.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 99. The gilded hilt and pommel.] The symbols of knighthood
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 100. The column cloth&rsquo;d with verrey.] The arms of the Pigli.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 103. With them.] Either the Chiaramontesi, or the Tosinghi one of which had
+committed a fraud in measuring out the wheat from the public granary. See
+Purgatory, Canto XII. 99
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 109. The bullets of bright gold.] The arms of the Abbati, as it is
+conjectured.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 110. The sires of those.] &ldquo;Of the Visdomini, the Tosinghi and the
+Cortigiani, who, being sprung from the founders of the bishopric of Florence
+are the curators of its revenues, which they do not spare, whenever it becomes
+vacant.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 113. Th&rsquo; o&rsquo;erweening brood.] The Adimari. This family was so
+little esteemed, that Ubertino Donato, who had married a daughter of Bellincion
+Berti, himself indeed derived from the same stock (see Note to Hell Canto XVI.
+38.) was offended with his father-in-law, for giving another of his daughters
+in marriage to one of them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 124. The gateway.] Landino refers this to the smallness of the city:
+Vellutello, with less probability, to the simplicity of the people in naming
+one of the gates after a private family.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 127. The great baron.] The Marchese Ugo, who resided at Florence as
+lieutenant of the Emperor Otho III, gave many of the chief families license to
+bear his arms. See G. Villani, 1. iv. c. 2., where the vision is related, in
+consequence of which he sold all his possessions in Germany, and founded seven
+abbeys, in one whereof his memory was celebrated at Florence on St.
+Thomas&rsquo;s day. v. 130. One.] Giano della Bella, belonging to one of the
+families thus distinguished, who no longer retained his place among the
+nobility, and had yet added to his arms a bordure or. See Macchiavelli, 1st.
+Fior. 1. ii. p. 86. Ediz. Giolito.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 132. -Gualterotti dwelt And Importuni.] Two families in the compartment of
+the city called Borgo.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 135. The house.] Of Amidei. See Notes to Canto XXVIII. of Hell. v. 102.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 142. To Ema.] &ldquo;It had been well for the city, if thy ancestor had been
+drowned in the Ema, when he crossed that stream on his way from Montebuono to
+Florence.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 144. On that maim&rsquo;d stone.] See Hell, Canto XIII. 144. Near the
+remains of the statue of Mars. Buondelmonti was slain, as if he had been a
+victim to the god; and Florence had not since known the blessing of peace.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 150. The lily.] &ldquo;The arms of Florence had never hung reversed on the
+spear of her enemies, in token of her defeat; nor been changed from argent to
+gules;&rdquo; as they afterwards were, when the Guelfi gained the predominance.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XVII</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 1. The youth.] Phaeton, who came to his mother Clymene, to inquire of her if
+he were indeed the son of Apollo. See Ovid, Met. 1. i. ad finem.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 6. That saintly lamp.] Cacciaguida.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 12. To own thy thirst.] &ldquo;That thou mayst obtain from others a solution
+of any doubt that may occur to thee.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 15. Thou seest as clear.] &ldquo;Thou beholdest future events, with the same
+clearness of evidence, that we discern the simplest mathematical
+demonstrations.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 19. The point.] The divine nature.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 27. The arrow.] Nam praevisa minus laedere tela solent. Ovid.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Che piaga antiveduta assai men duole.<br/>
+Petrarca, Trionfo del Tempo
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 38. Contingency.] &ldquo;The evidence with which we see the future portrayed
+in the source of all truth, no more necessitates that future than does the
+image, reflected in the sight by a ship sailing down a stream, necessitate the
+motion of the vessel.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 43. From thence.] &ldquo;From the eternal sight; the view of the Deity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 49. There.] At Rome, where the expulsion of Dante&rsquo;s party from
+Florence was then plotting, in 1300.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 65. Theirs.] &ldquo;They shall be ashamed of the part they have taken
+aga&rsquo;nst thee.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 69. The great Lombard.] Either Alberto della Scala, or Bartolommeo his
+eldest son. Their coat of arms was a ladder and an eagle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 75. That mortal.] Can Grande della Scala, born under the influence of Mars,
+but at this time only nine years old
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 80. The Gascon.] Pope Clement V.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 80. Great Harry.] The Emperor Henry VII.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 127. The cry thou raisest.] &ldquo;Thou shalt stigmatize the faults of those
+who are most eminent and powerful.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XVIII</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 3. Temp&rsquo;ring the sweet with bitter.] Chewing the end of sweet and
+bitter fancy. Shakespeare, As you Like it, a. 3. s. 3.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 26. On this fifth lodgment of the tree.] Mars, the fifth ot the @
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 37. The great Maccabee.] Judas Maccabeus.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 39. Charlemagne.] L. Pulci commends Dante for placing<br/>
+Charlemagne and Orlando here:<br/>
+Io mi confido ancor molto qui a Dante<br/>
+Che non sanza cagion nel ciel su misse<br/>
+Carlo ed Orlando in quelle croci sante,<br/>
+Che come diligente intese e scrisse.<br/>
+Morg. Magg. c. 28.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 43. William and Renard.] Probably not, as the commentators have imagined,
+William II of Orange, and his kinsman Raimbaud, two of the crusaders under
+Godfrey of Bouillon, (Maimbourg, Hist. des Croisades, ed. Par. 1682. 12mo. t.
+i. p. 96.) but rather the two more celebrated heroes in the age of Charlemagne.
+The former, William l. of Orange, supposed to have been the founder of the
+present illustrious family of that name, died about 808, according to Joseph de
+la Piser, Tableau de l&rsquo;Hist. des Princes et Principante d&rsquo;Orange.
+Our countryman, Ordericus Vitalis, professes to give his true life, which had
+been misrepresented in the songs of the itinerant bards.&rdquo; Vulgo canitur a
+joculatoribus de illo, cantilena; sed jure praeferenda est relatio
+authentica.&rdquo; Eccl. Hist. in Duchesne, Hist. Normann Script. p. 508. The
+latter is better known by having been celebrated by Ariosto, under the name of
+Rinaldo.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 43. Duke Godfey.] Godfrey of Bouillon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 46. Robert Guiscard.] See Hell, Canto XXVIII. v. 12.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 81. The characters.] Diligite justitiam qui judicatis terrarm. &ldquo;Love
+righteousness, ye that be judges of the earth &ldquo; Wisdom of Solomon, c. i.
+1.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 116. That once more.] &ldquo;That he may again drive out those who buy and
+sell in the temple.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 124. Taking the bread away.] &ldquo;Excommunication, or the interdiction of
+the Eucharist, is now employed as a weapon of warfare.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 126. That writest but to cancel.] &ldquo;And thou, Pope Boniface, who
+writest thy ecclesiastical censures for no other purpose than to be paid for
+revoking them.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 130. To him.] The coin of Florence was stamped with the impression of John
+the Baptist.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XIX</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 38. Who turn&rsquo;d his compass.] Compare Proverbs, c. viii. 27. And
+Milton, P. L. b. vii 224.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 42. The Word] &ldquo;The divine nature still remained incomprehensible. Of
+this Lucifer was a proof; for had he thoroughly comprehended it, he would not
+have fallen.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 108. The Ethiop.] Matt. c. xii. 41.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 112. That volume.] Rev. c. xx. 12.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 114. Albert.] Purgatory, Canto VI. v. 98.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 116. Prague.] The eagle predicts the devastation of Bohemia by Albert, which
+happened soon after this time, when that Emperor obtained the kingdom for his
+eldest son Rodolph. See Coxe&rsquo;s House of Austria, 4to. ed. v. i. part 1.
+p. 87
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 117. He.] Philip IV of France, after the battle of Courtrai, 1302, in which
+the French were defeated by the Flemings, raised the nominal value of the coin.
+This king died in consequence of his horse being thrown to the ground by a wild
+boar, in 1314
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 121. The English and Scot.] He adverts to the disputes between John Baliol
+and Edward I, the latter of whom is commended in the Purgatory, Canto VII. v.
+130.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 122. The Spaniard&rsquo;s luxury.] The commentators refer this to Alonzo X
+of Spain. It seems probable that the allusion is to Ferdinand IV who came to
+the crown in 1295, and died in 1312, at the age of twenty four, in consequence,
+as it was supposed, of his extreme intemperance. See Mariana, Hist I. xv. c.
+11.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 123. The Bohemian.] Winceslaus II. Purgatory, Canto VII. v.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 125. The halter of Jerusalem.] Charles II of Naples and Jerusalem who was
+lame. See note to Purgatory, Canto VII. v. 122, and XX. v. 78.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 127. He.] Frederick of Sicily son of Peter III of Arragon. Purgatory, Canto
+VII. v. 117. The isle of fire is Sicily, where was the tomb of Anchises.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 133. His uncle.] James, king of Majorca and Minorca, brother to Peter III.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 133. His brother.] James II of Arragon, who died in 1327. See Purgatory,
+Canto VII. v. 117.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 135. Of Portugal.] In the time of Dante, Dionysius was king of Portugal. He
+died in 1328, after a reign of near forty-six years, and does not seem to have
+deserved the stigma here fastened on him. See Mariana. and 1. xv. c. 18.
+Perhaps the rebellious son of Dionysius may be alluded to.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 136. Norway.] Haquin, king of Norway, is probably meant; who, having given
+refuge to the murderers of Eric VII king of Denmark, A D. 1288, commenced a war
+against his successor, Erie VIII, &ldquo;which continued for nine years, almost
+to the utter ruin and destruction of both kingdoms.&rdquo; Modern Univ. Hist.
+v. xxxii p. 215.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 136. -Him Of Ratza.] One of the dynasty of the house of Nemagna, which ruled
+the kingdom of Rassia, or Ratza, in Sclavonia, from 1161 to 1371, and whose
+history may be found in Mauro Orbino, Regno degli Slavi, Ediz. Pesaro. 1601.
+Uladislaus appears to have been the sovereign in Dante&rsquo;s time, but the
+disgraceful forgery adverted to in the text, is not recorded by the historian
+v. 138. Hungary.] The kingdom of Hungary was about this time disputed by
+Carobert, son of Charles Martel, and Winceslaus, prince of Bohemia, son of
+Winceslaus II. See Coxe&rsquo;s House of Austria, vol. i. p. 1. p. 86.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+4to edit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 140. Navarre.] Navarre was now under the yoke of France. It soon after (in
+1328) followed the advice of Dante and had a monarch of its own. Mariana, 1.
+xv. c. 19.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 141. Mountainous girdle.] The Pyrenees.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 143. -Famagosta&rsquo;s streets And Nicosia&rsquo;s.]
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cities in the kingdom of Cyprus, at that time ruled by Henry II a pusillanimous
+prince. Vertot. Hist. des Chev. de Malte, 1. iii. iv. The meaning appears to
+be, that the complaints made by those cities of their weak and worthless
+governor, may be regarded as an earnest of his condemnation at the last doom.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XX</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 6. Wherein one shines.] The light of the sun, whence he supposes the other
+celestial bodies to derive their light
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 8. The great sign.] The eagle, the Imperial ensign.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 34. Who.] David.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 39. He.] Trajan. See Purgatory, Canto X. 68.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 44. He next.] Hezekiah.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 50. The other following.] Constantine. There is no passage in which
+Dante&rsquo;s opinion of the evil; that had arisen from the mixture of the
+civil with the ecclesiastical power, is more unequivocally declared.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 57. William.] William II, king of Sicily, at the latter part of the twelfth
+century He was of the Norman line of sovereigns, and obtained the appellation
+of &ldquo;the Good&rdquo; and, as the poet says his loss was as much the
+subject of regret in his dominions, as the presence of Charles I of Anjou and
+Frederick of Arragon, was of sorrow and complaint.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 62. Trojan Ripheus.]<br/>
+Ripheus, justissimus unus<br/>
+Qui fuit in Teneris, et servantissimus aequi.<br/>
+Virg. Aen. 1. ii. 4&mdash;.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 97. This.] Ripheus.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 98. That.] Trajan.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 103. The prayers,] The prayers of St. Gregory
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 119. The three nymphs.] Faith, Hope, and Charity. Purgatory, Canto XXIX.
+116. v. 138. The pair.] Ripheus and Trajan.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XXI</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 12. The seventh splendour.] The planet Saturn
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 13. The burning lion&rsquo;s breast.] The constellation Leo.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 21. In equal balance.] &ldquo;My pleasure was as great in complying with her
+will as in beholding her countenance.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 24. Of that lov&rsquo;d monarch.] Saturn. Compare Hell, Canto XIV. 91.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 56. What forbade the smile.] &ldquo;Because it would have overcome
+thee.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 61. There aloft.] Where the other souls were.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 97. A stony ridge.] The Apennine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 112. Pietro Damiano.] &ldquo;S. Pietro Damiano obtained a great and
+well-merited reputation, by the pains he took to correct the abuses among the
+clergy. Ravenna is supposed to have been the place of his birth, about 1007. He
+was employed in several important missions, and rewarded by Stephen IX with the
+dignity of cardinal, and the bishopric of Ostia, to which, however, he
+preferred his former retreat in the monastery of Fonte Aveliana, and prevailed
+on Alexander II to permit him to retire thither. Yet he did not long continue
+in this seclusion, before he was sent on other embassies. He died at Faenza in
+1072. His letters throw much light on the obscure history of these times.
+Besides them, he has left several treatises on sacred and ecclesiastical
+subjects. His eloquence is worthy of a better age.&rdquo; Tiraboschi, Storia
+della Lett Ital. t. iii. 1. iv. c. 2.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 114. Beside the Adriatic.] At Ravenna. Some editions have FU instead of FUI,
+according to which reading, Pietro distinguishes himself from another Pietro,
+who was termed &ldquo;Peccator,&rdquo; the sinner.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 117. The hat.] The cardinal&rsquo;s hat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 118. Cephas.] St. Peter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 119 The Holy Spirit&rsquo;s vessel.] St. Paul. See Hell, Canto II. 30.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 130. Round this.] Round the spirit of Pietro Damiano.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XXII</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 14. The vengeance.] Beatrice, it is supposed, intimates the approaching fate
+of Boniface VIII. See Purgatory, Canto XX. 86.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 36. Cassino.] A castle in the Terra di Lavoro.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 38. I it was.] &ldquo;A new order of monks, which in a manner absorbed all
+the others that were established in the west, was instituted, A.D. 529, by
+Benedict of Nursis, a man of piety and reputation for the age he lived
+in.&rdquo; Maclaine&rsquo;s Mosheim, Eccles. Hist. v. ii. cent. vi. p. 2. ch. 2
+- 6.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 48. Macarius.] There are two of this name enumerated by Mosheim among the
+Greek theologians of the fourth century, v. i. cent. iv p. 11 ch. 2 - 9. In the
+following chapter, 10, it is said, &ldquo;Macarius, an Egyptian monk,
+undoubtedly deserves the first rank among the practical matters of this time,
+as his works displayed, some few things excepted, the brightest and most lovely
+portraiture of sanctity and virtue.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 48. Romoaldo.] S. Romoaldo, a native of Ravenna, and the founder of the
+order of Camaldoli, died in 1027. He was the author of a commentary on the
+Psalms.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 70. The patriarch Jacob.] So Milton, P. L. b. iii. 510:<br/>
+The stairs were such, as whereon Jacob saw<br/>
+Angels ascending and descending, bands<br/>
+Of guardians bright.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 107. The sign.] The constellation of Gemini.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 130. This globe.] So Chaucer, Troilus and Cresseide, b. v,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And down from thence fast he gan avise<br/>
+This little spot of earth, that with the sea<br/>
+Embraced is, and fully gan despite<br/>
+This wretched world.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Compare Cicero, Somn. Scip. &ldquo;Jam ipsa terra ita mihi parva visa
+est.&rdquo; &amp;c. Lucan, Phar 1. ix. 11; and Tasso, G. L. c. xiv. st, 9, 10,
+11.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 140. Maia and Dione.] The planets Mercury and Venus.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XXIII</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 11. That region.] Towards the south, where the course of the sun appears
+less rapid, than, when he is in the east or the west.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 26. Trivia.] A name of Diana.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 26. Th&rsquo; eternal nymphs.] The stars.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 36. The Might.] Our Saviour
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 71. The rose.] The Virgin Mary.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 73. The lilies.] The apostles.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 84. Thou didst exalt thy glory.] The diving light retired upwards, to render
+the eyes of Dante more capable of enduring the spectacle which now presented
+itself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 86. The name of that fair flower.] The name of the Virgin.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 92. A cresset.] The angel Gabriel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 98. That lyre.] By synecdoche, the lyre is put for the angel
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 99. The goodliest sapphire.] The Virgin
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 126. Those rich-laden coffers.] Those spirits who, having sown the seed of
+good works on earth, now contain the fruit of their pious endeavours.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 129. In the Babylonian exile.] During their abode in this world.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 133. He.] St. Peter, with the other holy men of the Old and New testament.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XXIV</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 28. Such folds.] Pindar has the same bold image: [GREEK HERE?] On which
+Hayne strangely remarks: Ad ambitus stropharum vldetur
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 65. Faith.] Hebrews, c. xi. 1. So Marino, in one of his sonnets, which calls
+Divozioni:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fede e sustanza di sperate cose,<br/>
+E delle non visioili argomento.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 82. Current.] &ldquo;The answer thou hast made is right; but let me know if
+thy inward persuasion is conformable to thy profession.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 91. The ancient bond and new.] The Old and New Testament.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 114. That Worthy.] Quel Baron. In the next Canto, St. James is called
+&ldquo;Barone.&rdquo; So in Boccaccio, G. vi. N. 10, we find &ldquo;Baron
+Messer Santo Antonio.&rdquo; v. 124. As to outstrip.] Venturi insists that the
+Poet has here, &ldquo;made a slip;&rdquo; for that John came first to the
+sepulchre, though Peter was the first to enter it. But let Dante have leave to
+explain his own meaning, in a passage from his third book De Monarchia:
+&ldquo;Dicit etiam Johannes ipsum (scilicet Petrum) introiisse SUBITO, cum
+venit in monumentum, videns allum discipulum cunctantem ad ostium.&rdquo; Opere
+de Dante, Ven. 1793. T. ii. P. 146.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XXV</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 6. The fair sheep-fold.] Florence, whence he was banished.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 13. For its sake.] For the sake of that faith.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 20. Galicia throng&rsquo;d with visitants.] See Mariana, Hist. 1. xi.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 13. &ldquo;En el tiempo,&rdquo; &amp;c. &ldquo;At the time that the
+sepulchre of the apostle St. James was discovered, the devotion for that place
+extended itself not only over all Spain, but even round about to foreign
+nations. Multitudes from all parts of the world came to visit it. Many others
+were deterred by the difficulty for the journey, by the roughness and
+barrenness of those parts, and by the incursions of the Moors, who made
+captives many of the pilgrims. The canons of St. Eloy afterwards (the precise
+time is not known), with a desire of remedying these evils, built, in many
+places, along the whole read, which reached as far as to France, hospitals for
+the reception of the pilgrims.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 31. Who.] The Epistle of St. James is here attributed to the elder apostle
+of that name, whose shrine was at Compostella, in Galicia. Which of the two was
+the author of it is yet doubtful. The learned and candid Michaelis contends
+very forcibly for its having been written by James the Elder. Lardner rejects
+that opinion as absurd; while Benson argues against it, but is well answered by
+Michaelis, who after all, is obliged to leave the question undecided. See his
+Introduction to the New Testament, translated by Dr. Marsh, ed. Cambridge,
+1793. V. iv. c. 26. - 1, 2, 3.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 35. As Jesus.] In the transfiguration on Mount Tabor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 39. The second flame.] St. James.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 40. I lifted up.] &ldquo;I will lift up mine eyes unto the hills, from
+whence cometh my help.&rdquo; Ps. Cxxi. 1.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 59. From Egypt to Jerusalem.] From the lower world to heaven.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 67. Hope.] This is from the Sentences of Petrus Lombardus. &ldquo;Est autem
+spes virtus, qua spiritualia et aeterna bona speratam, id est, beatitudinem
+aeternam. Sine meritis enim aliquid sperare non spes, sed praesumptio, dici
+potest.&rdquo; Pet. Lomb. Sent. 1. Iii. Dist. 26. Ed. Bas. 1486. Fol.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 74. His anthem.] Psalm ix. 10.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 90. Isaias ] Chap. lxi. 10.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 94. Thy brother.] St. John in the Revelation, c. vii. 9.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 101. Winter&rsquo;s month.] &ldquo;If a luminary, like that which now
+appeared, were to shine throughout the month following the winter solstice
+during which the constellation Cancer appears in the east at the setting of the
+sun, there would be no interruption to the light, but the whole month would be
+as a single day.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 112. This.] St. John, who reclined on the bosom of our Saviour, and to whose
+charge Jesus recommended his mother.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 121. So I.] He looked so earnestly, to descry whether St. John were present
+there in body, or in spirit only, having had his doubts raised by that saying
+of our Saviour&rsquo;s: &ldquo;If I will, that he tarry till I come what is
+that to thee.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 127. The two.] Christ and Mary, whom he has described, in the last Canto but
+one, as rising above his sight
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XXVI</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 2. The beamy flame.] St. John.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 13. Ananias&rsquo; hand.] Who, by putting his hand on St. Paul, restored his
+sight. Acts, c. ix. 17.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 36. From him.] Some suppose that Plato is here meant, who, in his Banquet,
+makes Phaedrus say: &ldquo;Love is confessedly amongst the eldest of beings,
+and, being the eldest, is the cause to us of the greatest goods &ldquo; Plat.
+Op. t. x. p. 177. Bip. ed. Others have understood it of Aristotle, and others,
+of the writer who goes by the name of Dionysius the Areopagite, referred to in
+the twenty-eighth Canto.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 40. I will make.] Exodus, c. xxxiii. 19.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 42. At the outset.] John, c. i. 1. &amp;c.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 51. The eagle of our Lord.] St. John
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 62. The leaves.] Created beings.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 82. The first living soul.] Adam.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 107. Parhelion.] Who enlightens and comprehends all things; but is himself
+enlightened and comprehended by none.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 117. Whence.] That is, from Limbo. See Hell, Canto II. 53. Adam says that
+5232 years elapsed from his creation to the time of his deliverance, which
+followed the death of Christ.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 133. EL] Some read UN, &ldquo;One,&rdquo; instead of EL: but the latter of
+these readings is confirmed by a passage from Dante&rsquo;s Treatise De Vulg.
+Eloq. 1. i. cap. 4. &ldquo;Quod prius vox primi loquentis sonaverit, viro sanae
+mentis in promptu esse non dubito ipsum fuisse quod Deus est, videlicet
+El.&rdquo; St. Isidore in the Origines, 1. vii. c. 1. had said, &ldquo;Primum
+apud Hebraeos Dei nomen El dicitur.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 135. Use.] From Horace, Ars. Poet. 62.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 138. All my life.] &ldquo;I remained in the terrestrial Paradise only tothe
+seventh hour.&rdquo; In the Historia Scolastica of Petrus Comestor, it is said
+of our first parents: Quidam tradunt eos fuisse in Paradiso septem
+horae.&rdquo; I. 9. ed. Par. 1513. 4to.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XXVII</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 1. Four torches.] St. Peter, St. James, St. John, and Adam.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 11. That.] St. Peter&rsquo; who looked as the planet Jupiter would, if it
+assumed the sanguine appearance of liars.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 20. He.] Boniface VIII.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 26. such colour.]<br/>
+Qui color infectis adversi solis ab ietu<br/>
+Nubibus esse solet; aut purpureae Aurorae.<br/>
+Ovid, Met. 1. iii. 184.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 37. Of Linus and of Cletus.] Bishops of Rome in the first century.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 40. Did Sextus, Pius, and Callixtus bleed And Urban.] The former two,
+bishops of the same see, in the second; and the others, in the fourth century.
+v. 42. No purpose was of ours.] &ldquo;We did not intend that our successors
+should take any part in the political divisions among Christians, or that my
+figure (the seal of St. Peter) should serve as a mark to authorize iniquitous
+grants and privileges.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 51. Wolves.] Compare Milton, P. L. b. xii. 508, &amp;c.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 53. Cahorsines and Gascons.] He alludes to Jacques d&rsquo;Ossa, a native of
+Cahors, who filled the papal chair in 1316, after it had been two years vacant,
+and assumed the name of John XXII., and to Clement V, a Gascon, of whom see
+Hell, Canto XIX. 86, and Note.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 63. The she-goat.] When the sun is in Capricorn.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 72. From the hour.] Since he had last looked (see Canto XXII.) he perceived
+that he had passed from the meridian circle to the eastern horizon, the half of
+our hemisphere, and a quarter of the heaven.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 76. From Gades.] See Hell, Canto XXVI. 106
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 78. The shore.] Phoenicia, where Europa, the daughter of Agenor mounted on
+the back of Jupiter, in his shape of a bull.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 80. The sun.] Dante was in the constellation Gemini, and the sun in Aries.
+There was, therefore, part of those two constellations, and the whole of
+Taurus, between them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 93. The fair nest of Leda.] &ldquo;From the Gemini;&rdquo; thus called,
+because Leda was the mother of the twins, Castor and Pollux
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 112. Time&rsquo;s roots.] &ldquo;Here,&rdquo; says Beatrice, &ldquo;are the
+roots, from whence time springs: for the parts, into which it is divided, the
+other heavens must be considered.&rdquo; And she then breaks out into an
+exclamation on the degeneracy of human nature, which does not lift itself to
+the contemplation of divine things.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 126. The fair child of him.] So she calls human nature. Pindar by a more
+easy figure, terms the day, &ldquo;child of the sun.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 129. None.] Because, as has been before said, the shepherds are become
+wolves.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 131. Before the date.] &ldquo;Before many ages are past, before those
+fractions, which are drops in the reckoning of every year, shall amount to so
+large a portion of time, that January shall be no more a winter month.&rdquo;
+By this periphrasis is meant &ldquo; in a short time,&rdquo; as we say
+familiarly, such a thing will happen before a thousand years are over when we
+mean, it will happen soon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 135. Fortune shall be fain.] The commentators in general suppose that our
+Poet here augurs that great reform, which he vainly hoped would follow on the
+arrival of the Emperor Henry VII. in Italy. Lombardi refers the prognostication
+to Can Grande della Scala: and, when we consider that this Canto was not
+finished till after the death of Henry, as appears from the mention that is
+made of John XXII, it cannot be denied but the conjecture is probable.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XXVIII</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 36. Heav&rsquo;n, and all nature, hangs upon that point.] [GREEK HERE]
+Aristot. Metaph. 1. xii. c. 7. &ldquo;From that beginning depend heaven and
+nature.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 43. Such diff&rsquo;rence.] The material world and the intelligential (the
+copy and the pattern) appear to Dante to differ in this respect, that the
+orbits of the latter are more swift, the nearer they are to the centre, whereas
+the contrary is the case with the orbits of the former. The seeming
+contradiction is thus accounted for by Beatrice. In the material world, the
+more ample the body is, the greater is the good of which itis capable supposing
+all the parts to be equally perfect. But in the intelligential world, the
+circles are more excellent and powerful, the more they approximate to the
+central point, which is God. Thus the first circle, that of the seraphim,
+corresponds to the ninth sphere, or primum mobile, the second, that of the
+cherubim, to the eighth sphere, or heaven of fixed stars; the third, or circle
+of thrones, to the seventh sphere, or planet of Saturn; and in like manner
+throughout the two other trines of circles and spheres.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In orbs<br/>
+Of circuit inexpressible they stood,<br/>
+Orb within orb<br/>
+Milton, P. L. b. v. 596.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 70. The sturdy north.] Compare Homer, II. b. v. 524.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 82. In number.] The sparkles exceeded the number which would be produced by
+the sixty-four squares of a chess-board, if for the first we reckoned one, for
+the next, two; for the third, four; and so went on doubling to the end of the
+account.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 106. Fearless of bruising from the nightly ram.] Not injured, like the
+productions of our spring, by the influence of autumn, when the constellation
+Aries rises at sunset.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 110. Dominations.]<br/>
+Hear all ye angels, progeny of light,<br/>
+Thrones, domination&rsquo;s, princedoms, virtues, powers.<br/>
+Milton, P. L. b. v. 601.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 119. Dionysius.] The Areopagite, in his book De Caelesti Hierarchia.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 124. Gregory.] Gregory the Great. &ldquo;Novem vero angelorum ordines
+diximus, quia videlicet esse, testante sacro eloquio, scimus: Angelos,
+archangelos, virtutes, potestates, principatus, dominationae, thronos, cherubin
+atque seraphin.&rdquo; Divi Gregorii, Hom. xxxiv. f. 125. ed. Par. 1518. fol.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 126. He had learnt.] Dionysius, he says, had learnt from St. Paul. It is
+almost unnecessary to add, that the book, above referred to, which goes under
+his name, was the production of a later age.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XXIX</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 1. No longer.] As short a space, as the sun and moon are in changing
+hemispheres, when they are opposite to one another, the one under the sign of
+Aries, and the other under that of Libra, and both hang for a moment, noised as
+it were in the hand of the zenith.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 22. For, not in process of before or aft.] There was neither &ldquo;before
+nor after,&rdquo; no distinction, that is, of time, till the creation of the
+world.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 30. His threefold operation.] He seems to mean that spiritual beings, brute
+matter, and the intermediate part of the creation, which participates both of
+spirit and matter, were produced at once.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 38. On Jerome&rsquo;s pages.] St. Jerome had described the angels as created
+before the rest of the universe: an opinion which Thomas Aquinas controverted;
+and the latter, as Dante thinks, had Scripture on his side.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 51. Pent.] See Hell, Canto XXXIV. 105.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 111. Of Bindi and of Lapi.] Common names of men at Florence
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 112. The sheep.] So Milton, Lycidas.<br/>
+The hungry sheep look up and are not fed,<br/>
+But, swoln with wind and the rank mist they draw,<br/>
+Rot inwardly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 121. The preacher.] Thus Cowper, Task, b. ii.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&rsquo;Tis pitiful<br/>
+To court a grin, when you should woo a soul, &amp;c.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 131. Saint Anthony. Fattens with this his swine.] On the sale of these
+blessings, the brothers of St. Anthony supported themselves and their
+paramours. From behind the swine of St. Anthony, our Poet levels a blow at the
+object of his inveterate enmity, Boniface VIII, from whom, &ldquo;in 1297, they
+obtained the dignity and privileges of an independent congregation.&rdquo; See
+Mosheim&rsquo;s Eccles. History in Dr. Maclaine&rsquo;s Translation, v. ii.
+cent. xi. p. 2. c. 2. - 28.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 140. Daniel.] &ldquo;Thousand thousands ministered unto him, and ten
+thousand times ten thousand stood before him.&rdquo; Dan. c. vii. 10.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XXX</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 1. Six thousand miles.] He compares the vanishing of the vision to the
+fading away of the stars at dawn, when it is noon-day six thousand miles off,
+and the shadow, formed by the earth over the part of it inhabited by the Poet,
+is about to disappear.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 13. Engirt.] &ldquo; ppearing to be encompassed by these angelic bands,
+which are in reality encompassed by it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 18. This turn.] Questa vice. Hence perhaps Milton, P. L. b. viii. 491. This
+turn hath made amends.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 39. Forth.] From the ninth sphere to the empyrean, which is more light.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 44. Either mighty host.] Of angels, that remained faithful, and of beatified
+souls, the latter in that form which they will have at the last day. v. 61.
+Light flowing.] &ldquo;And he showed me a pure river of water of life, clear as
+crystal, proceeding out of the throne of God and of the Lamb.&rdquo; Rev.
+cxxii. I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&mdash;underneath a bright sea flow&rsquo;d Of jasper, or of liquid pearl.
+Milton, P. L. b. iii. 518.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 80. Shadowy of the truth.]<br/>
+Son di lor vero ombriferi prefazii.<br/>
+So Mr. Coleridge, in his Religious Musings, v. 406.<br/>
+Life is a vision shadowy of truth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 88. &mdash;the eves Of mine eyelids.] Thus Shakespeare calls the eyelids
+&ldquo;penthouse lids.&rdquo; Macbeth, a, 1. s, 3.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 108. As some cliff.]<br/>
+A lake<br/>
+That to the fringed bank with myrtle crown&rsquo;d<br/>
+Her crystal mirror holds.<br/>
+Milton, P. L. b. iv. 263.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 118. My view with ease.]<br/>
+Far and wide his eye commands<br/>
+For sight no obstacle found here, nor shade, But all sunshine.<br/>
+Milton, P. l. b. iii. 616.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 135. Of the great Harry.] The Emperor Henry VII, who died in 1313.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 141. He.] Pope Clement V. See Canto XXVII. 53.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 145. Alagna&rsquo;s priest.] Pope Boniface VIII. Hell, Canto XIX.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+79.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XXXI</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 6. Bees.] Compare Homer, Iliad, ii. 87. Virg. Aen. I. 430, and Milton, P. L.
+b. 1. 768.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 29. Helice.] Callisto, and her son Arcas, changed into the constellations of
+the Greater Bear and Arctophylax, or Bootes. See Ovid, Met. l. ii. fab. v. vi.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 93. Bernard.] St. Bernard, the venerable abbot of Clairvaux, and the great
+promoter of the second crusade, who died A.D. 1153, in his sixty-third year.
+His sermons are called by Henault, &ldquo;chefs~d&rsquo;oeuvres de sentiment et
+de force.&rdquo; Abrege Chron. de l&rsquo;Hist. de Fr. 1145. They have even
+been preferred to al1 the productions of the ancients, and the author has been
+termed the last of the fathers of the church. It is uncertain whether they were
+not delivered originally in the French tongue.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That the part he acts in the present Poem should be assigned to him. appears
+somewhat remarkable, when we consider that he severely censured the new
+festival established in honour of the Immaculate Conception of the virgin, and
+opposed the doctrine itself with the greatest vigour, as it supposed her being
+honoured with a privilegewhich belonged to Christ Alone Dr. Maclaine&rsquo;s
+Mosheim, v. iii. cent. xii. p. ii. c. 3 - 19.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 95. Our Veronica ] The holy handkerchief, then preserved at Rome, on which
+the countenance of our Saviour was supposed to have been imprest.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 101. Him.] St. Bernard.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 108. The queen.] The Virgin Mary.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 119. Oriflamb.] Menage on this word quotes the Roman des<br/>
+Royau<br/>
+-Iignages of Guillaume Ghyart.<br/>
+Oriflamme est une banniere<br/>
+De cendal roujoyant et simple<br/>
+Sans portraiture d&rsquo;autre affaire,
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XXXII</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 3. She.] Eve.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 8. Ancestress.] Ruth, the ancestress of David.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 60. In holy scripture.] Gen. c. xxv. 22. v. 123. Lucia.] See Hell, Canto II.
+97.
+</p>
+
+<h5>CANTO XXXIII</h5>
+
+<p>
+v. 63. The Sybil&rsquo;s sentence.] Virg. Aen. iii. 445.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 89. One moment.] &ldquo;A moment seems to me more tedious, than
+five-and-twenty ages would have appeared to the Argonauts, when they had
+resolved on their expedition.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 92. Argo&rsquo;s shadow]<br/>
+Quae simul ac rostro ventosnm proscidit aequor,<br/>
+Tortaque remigio spumis incanduit unda,<br/>
+Emersere feri candenti e gurgite vultus<br/>
+Aequoreae monstrum Nereides admirantes.<br/>
+Catullus, De Nupt. Pel. et Thet. 15.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 109. Three orbs of triple hue, clipt in one bound.] The Trinity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+v. 118. That circling.] The second of the circles, &ldquo;Light of
+Light,&rdquo; in which he dimly beheld the mystery of the incarnation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+End Paradise.
+</p>
+
+<h2><a name="pref01"></a>PREFACE</h2>
+
+<p>
+In the years 1805 and 1806, I published the first part of the following
+translation, with the text of the original. Since that period, two impressions
+of the whole of the Divina Commedia, in Italian, have made their appearance in
+this country. It is not necessary that I should add a third: and I am induced
+to hope that the Poem, even in the present version of it, may not be without
+interest for the mere English reader.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The translation of the second and third parts, &ldquo;The Purgatory&rdquo; and
+&ldquo;The Paradise,&rdquo; was begun long before the first, and as early as
+the year 1797; but, owing to many interruptions, not concluded till the summer
+before last. On a retrospect of the time and exertions that have been thus
+employed, I do not regard those hours as the least happy of my life, during
+which (to use the eloquent language of Mr. Coleridge) &ldquo;my individual
+recollections have been suspended, and lulled to sleep amid the music of nobler
+thoughts;&rdquo; nor that study as misapplied, which has familiarized me with
+one of the sublimest efforts of the human invention.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To those, who shall be at the trouble of examining into the degree of accuracy
+with which the task has been executed, I may be allowed to suggest, that their
+judgment should not be formed on a comparison with any single text of my
+Author; since, in more instances than I have noticed, I have had to make my
+choice out of a variety of readings and interpretations, presented by different
+editions and commentators.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In one or two of those editions is to be found the title of &ldquo;The
+Vision,&rdquo; which I have adopted, as more conformable to the genius of our
+language than that of &ldquo;The Divine Comedy.&rdquo; Dante himself, I
+believe, termed it simply &ldquo;The Comedy;&rdquo; in the first place, because
+the style was of the middle kind: and in the next, because the story (if story
+it may be called) ends happily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Instead of a Life of my Author, I have subjoined, in chronological order, a
+view not only of the principal events which befell him, but of the chief public
+occurrences that happened in his time: concerning both of which the reader may
+obtain further information, by turning to the passages referred to in the Poem
+and Notes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+January, 1814
+</p>
+
+<h2><a name="pref02"></a>A CHRONOLOGICAL VIEW</h2>
+
+<h5>OF</h5>
+
+<h5>THE AGE OF DANTE</h5>
+
+<h3>A. D.</h3>
+
+<p>
+1265. Dante, son of Alighieri degli Alighieri and Bella, is born at Florence.
+Of his own ancestry he speaks in the Paradise, Canto XV. and XVI.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the same year, Manfredi, king of Naples and Sicily, is defeated and slain by
+Charles of Anjou. Hell, C. XXVIII. 13. And Purgatory, C. III. 110.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Guido Novello of Polenta obtains the sovereignty of Ravenna.<br/>
+H. C. XXVII. 38.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+1266. Two of the Frati Godenti chosen arbitrators of the differences at
+Florence. H. C. XXIII. 104. Gianni de&rsquo; Soldanieri heads the populace in
+that city. H. C. XXXII. 118.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+1268. Charles of Anjou puts Conradine to death, and becomes King of Naples. H.
+C. XXVIII. 16 and Purg C. XX. 66.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+1272. Henry III. of England is succeeded by Edward I. Purg. C. VII. 129.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+1274. Our Poet first sees Beatrice, daughter of Folco Portinari.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fra.<br/>
+Guittone d&rsquo;Arezzo, the poet, dies. Purg. C. XXIV. 56.<br/>
+Thomas Aquinas dies. Purg. C. XX. 67. and Par. C. X. 96.<br/>
+Buonaventura dies. Par. C. XII. 25.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+1275. Pierre de la Brosse, secretary to Philip III. of France, executed. Purg.
+C. VI. 23.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+1276. Giotto, the painter, is born. Purg. C. XI. 95. Pope Adrian V. dies. Purg.
+C. XIX. 97. Guido Guinicelli, the poet, dies. Purg. C. XI. 96. and C. XXVI. 83.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+1277. Pope John XXI. dies. Par. C. XII. 126.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+1278. Ottocar, king of Bohemia, dies. Purg. C. VII. 97.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+1279. Dionysius succeeds to the throne of Portugal. Par. C. XIX. 135.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+1280. Albertus Magnus dies. Par. C. X. 95.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+1281. Pope Nicholas III. dies. H. C. XIX 71. Dante studies at the universities
+of Bologna and Padua.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+1282. The Sicilian vespers. Par. C. VIII. 80.<br/>
+The French defeated by the people of Forli. H. C. XXVII. 41.<br/>
+Tribaldello de&rsquo; Manfredi betrays the city of Faenza. H. C.<br/>
+XXXII. 119.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+1284. Prince Charles of Anjou is defeated and made prisoner by Rugiez de
+Lauria, admiral to Peter III. of Arragon. Purg. C. XX. 78. Charles I. king of
+Naples, dies. Purg. C. VII. 111.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+1285. Pope Martin IV. dies. Purg. C. XXIV. 23.<br/>
+Philip III. of France, and Peter III. of Arragon, die. Purg. C.<br/>
+VII. 101 and<br/>
+110.<br/>
+Henry II. king of Cyprus, comes to the throne. Par. C. XIX. 144.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+1287. Guido dalle Colonne (mentioned by Dante in his De Vulgari Eloquio) writes
+&ldquo;The War of Troy.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+1288. Haquin, king of Norway, makes war on Denmark. Par. C. XIX. 135. Count
+Ugolino de&rsquo; Gherardeschi dies of famine. H. C. XXXIII. 14.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+1289. Dante is in the battle of Campaldino, where the Florentines defeat the
+people of Arezzo, June 11. Purg. C. V. 90.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+1290. Beatrice dies. Purg. C. XXXII. 2. He serves in the war waged by the
+Florentines upon the Pisans, and is present at the surrender of Caprona in the
+autumn. H. C. XXI. 92.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+1291. He marries Gemma de&rsquo; Donati, with whom he lives unhappily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+By this marriage he had five sons and a daughter.<br/>
+Can Grande della Scala is born, March 9. H. C. I. 98. Purg. C.<br/>
+XX. 16. Par. C. XVII. 75. and XXVII. 135.<br/>
+The renegade Christians assist the Saracens to recover St. John<br/>
+D&rsquo;Acre. H. C. XXVII. 84.<br/>
+The Emperor Rodolph dies. Purg. C. VI. 104. and VII. 91.<br/>
+Alonzo III. of Arragon dies, and is succeeded by James II.<br/>
+Purg. C. VII. 113. and Par. C. XIX. 133.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+1294. Clement V. abdicates the papal chair. H. C. III. 56. Dante writes his
+Vita Nuova.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+1295. His preceptor, Brunetto Latini, dies. H. C. XV. 28. Charles Martel, king
+of Hungary, visits Florence, Par. C. VIII. 57. and dies in the same year.
+Frederick, son of Peter III. of Arragon, becomes king of Sicily. Purg. C. VII.
+117. and Par. C. XIX. 127.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+1296. Forese, the companion of Dante, dies. Purg. C. XXXIII. 44.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+1300. The Bianca and Nera parties take their rise in Pistoia.<br/>
+H. C. XXXII. 60.<br/>
+This is the year in which he supposes himself to see his Vision.<br/>
+H. C. I. 1. and XXI. 109.<br/>
+He is chosen chief magistrate, or first of the Priors of<br/>
+Florence; and continues in office from June 15 to August 15.<br/>
+Cimabue, the painter, dies. Purg. C. XI. 93.<br/>
+Guido Cavalcanti, the most beloved of our Poet&rsquo;s friends, dies.<br/>
+H. C. X. 59. and Purg C. XI. 96.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+1301. The Bianca party expels the Nera from Pistoia. H. C. XXIV. 142.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+1302. January 27. During his absence at Rome, Dante is mulcted<br/>
+by his fellow-citizens in the sum of 8000 lire, and condemned to<br/>
+two years&rsquo; banishment.<br/>
+March 10. He is sentenced, if taken, to be burned.<br/>
+Fulcieri de&rsquo; Calboli commits great atrocities on certain of the<br/>
+Ghibelline party. Purg. C. XIV. 61.<br/>
+Carlino de&rsquo; Pazzi betrays the castle di Piano Travigne, in<br/>
+Valdarno, to the Florentines. H. C. XXXII. 67.<br/>
+The French vanquished in the battle of Courtrai. Purg. C. XX. 47.<br/>
+James, king of Majorca and Minorca, dies. Par. C. XIX. 133.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+1303. Pope Boniface VIII. dies. H. C. XIX. 55. Purg. C. XX. 86. XXXII. 146. and
+Par. C. XXVII. 20. The other exiles appoint Dante one of a council of twelve,
+under Alessandro da Romena. He appears to have been much dissatisfied with his
+colleagues. Par. C. XVII. 61.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+1304. He joins with the exiles in an unsuccessful attack on the city of
+Florence. May. The bridge over the Arno breaks down during a representation of
+the infernal torments exhibited on that river. H. C. XXVI. 9. July 20.
+Petrarch, whose father had been banished two years before from Florence, is
+born at Arezzo.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+1305. Winceslaus II. king of Bohemia, dies. Purg. C. VII. 99. and Par. C. XIX
+123. A conflagration happens at Florence. H. C. XXVI. 9.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+1306. Dante visits Padua.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+1307. He is in Lunigiana with the Marchese Marcello Malaspina. Purg. C. VIII.
+133. and C. XIX. 140. Dolcino, the fanatic, is burned. H. C. XXVIII. 53.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+1308. The Emperor Albert I. murdered. Purg. C. VI. 98. and<br/>
+Par. C. XIX. 114.<br/>
+Corso Donati, Dante&rsquo;s political enemy, slain. Purg. C. XXIV. 81.<br/>
+He seeks an asylum at Verona, under the roof of the Signori della
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Scala. Par. C. XVII. 69. He wanders, about this time, over various parts of
+Italy. See his Convito. He is at Paris twice; and, as one of the early
+commentators reports, at Oxford.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+1309. Charles II. king of Naples, dies. Par. C. XIX. 125.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+1310. The Order of the Templars abolished. Purg. C. XX. 94.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+1313. The Emperor Henry of Luxemburg, by whom he had hoped to be restored to
+Florence, dies. Par. C. XVII. 80. and XXX. 135. He takes refuge at Ravenna with
+Guido Novello da Polenta.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+1314. Pope Clement V. dies. H. C. XIX. 86. and<br/>
+Par. C. XXVII. 53. and XXX. 141.<br/>
+Philip IV. of France dies. Purg. C. VII. 108. and Par. C. XIX.<br/>
+117.<br/>
+Ferdinand IV. of Spain, dies. Par. C. XIX. 122.<br/>
+Giacopo da Carrara defeated by Can Grande. Par. C. IX. 45.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+1316. John XXII. elected Pope. Par. C. XXVII. 53.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+1321. July. Dante dies at Ravenna, of a complaint brought on by disappointment
+at his failure in a negotiation which he had been conducting with the
+Venetians, for his patron Guido Novello da Polenta. His obsequies are
+sumptuously performed at Ravenna by Guido, who himself died in the ensuing
+year.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
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diff --git a/old/old/1008.txt b/old/old/1008.txt
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+***The Project Gutenberg Etext of The Divine Comedy of Dante***
+Translanted by H. F. Cary [Preface and Chronlogy end this file]
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+The Divine Comedy of Dante
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+Translanted by H. F. Cary
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+August, 1997 [Etext #1008]
+[Date last updated: November 21. 2005]
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+
+THE VISION
+OR,
+HELL, PURGATORY, AND PARADISE
+OF
+DANTE ALIGHIERI
+
+TRANSLATED BY
+THE REV. H. F. CARY, A.M.
+
+
+
+
+
+HELL
+
+CANTO I
+
+IN the midway of this our mortal life,
+I found me in a gloomy wood, astray
+Gone from the path direct: and e'en to tell
+It were no easy task, how savage wild
+That forest, how robust and rough its growth,
+Which to remember only, my dismay
+Renews, in bitterness not far from death.
+Yet to discourse of what there good befell,
+All else will I relate discover'd there.
+How first I enter'd it I scarce can say,
+Such sleepy dullness in that instant weigh'd
+My senses down, when the true path I left,
+But when a mountain's foot I reach'd, where clos'd
+The valley, that had pierc'd my heart with dread,
+I look'd aloft, and saw his shoulders broad
+Already vested with that planet's beam,
+Who leads all wanderers safe through every way.
+ Then was a little respite to the fear,
+That in my heart's recesses deep had lain,
+All of that night, so pitifully pass'd:
+And as a man, with difficult short breath,
+Forespent with toiling, 'scap'd from sea to shore,
+Turns to the perilous wide waste, and stands
+At gaze; e'en so my spirit, that yet fail'd
+Struggling with terror, turn'd to view the straits,
+That none hath pass'd and liv'd. My weary frame
+After short pause recomforted, again
+I journey'd on over that lonely steep,
+The hinder foot still firmer. Scarce the ascent
+Began, when, lo! a panther, nimble, light,
+And cover'd with a speckled skin, appear'd,
+Nor, when it saw me, vanish'd, rather strove
+To check my onward going; that ofttimes
+With purpose to retrace my steps I turn'd.
+ The hour was morning's prime, and on his way
+Aloft the sun ascended with those stars,
+That with him rose, when Love divine first mov'd
+Those its fair works: so that with joyous hope
+All things conspir'd to fill me, the gay skin
+Of that swift animal, the matin dawn
+And the sweet season. Soon that joy was chas'd,
+And by new dread succeeded, when in view
+A lion came, 'gainst me, as it appear'd,
+With his head held aloft and hunger-mad,
+That e'en the air was fear-struck. A she-wolf
+Was at his heels, who in her leanness seem'd
+Full of all wants, and many a land hath made
+Disconsolate ere now. She with such fear
+O'erwhelmed me, at the sight of her appall'd,
+That of the height all hope I lost. As one,
+Who with his gain elated, sees the time
+When all unwares is gone, he inwardly
+Mourns with heart-griping anguish; such was I,
+Haunted by that fell beast, never at peace,
+Who coming o'er against me, by degrees
+Impell'd me where the sun in silence rests.
+ While to the lower space with backward step
+I fell, my ken discern'd the form one of one,
+Whose voice seem'd faint through long disuse of speech.
+When him in that great desert I espied,
+"Have mercy on me!" cried I out aloud,
+"Spirit! or living man! what e'er thou be!"
+ He answer'd: "Now not man, man once I was,
+And born of Lombard parents, Mantuana both
+By country, when the power of Julius yet
+Was scarcely firm. At Rome my life was past
+Beneath the mild Augustus, in the time
+Of fabled deities and false. A bard
+Was I, and made Anchises' upright son
+The subject of my song, who came from Troy,
+When the flames prey'd on Ilium's haughty towers.
+But thou, say wherefore to such perils past
+Return'st thou? wherefore not this pleasant mount
+Ascendest, cause and source of all delight?"
+"And art thou then that Virgil, that well-spring,
+From which such copious floods of eloquence
+Have issued?" I with front abash'd replied.
+"Glory and light of all the tuneful train!
+May it avail me that I long with zeal
+Have sought thy volume, and with love immense
+Have conn'd it o'er. My master thou and guide!
+Thou he from whom alone I have deriv'd
+That style, which for its beauty into fame
+Exalts me. See the beast, from whom I fled.
+O save me from her, thou illustrious sage!
+For every vein and pulse throughout my frame
+She hath made tremble." He, soon as he saw
+That I was weeping, answer'd, "Thou must needs
+Another way pursue, if thou wouldst 'scape
+From out that savage wilderness. This beast,
+At whom thou criest, her way will suffer none
+To pass, and no less hindrance makes than death:
+So bad and so accursed in her kind,
+That never sated is her ravenous will,
+Still after food more craving than before.
+To many an animal in wedlock vile
+She fastens, and shall yet to many more,
+Until that greyhound come, who shall destroy
+Her with sharp pain. He will not life support
+By earth nor its base metals, but by love,
+Wisdom, and virtue, and his land shall be
+The land 'twixt either Feltro. In his might
+Shall safety to Italia's plains arise,
+For whose fair realm, Camilla, virgin pure,
+Nisus, Euryalus, and Turnus fell.
+He with incessant chase through every town
+Shall worry, until he to hell at length
+Restore her, thence by envy first let loose.
+I for thy profit pond'ring now devise,
+That thou mayst follow me, and I thy guide
+Will lead thee hence through an eternal space,
+Where thou shalt hear despairing shrieks, and see
+Spirits of old tormented, who invoke
+A second death; and those next view, who dwell
+Content in fire, for that they hope to come,
+Whene'er the time may be, among the blest,
+Into whose regions if thou then desire
+T' ascend, a spirit worthier then I
+Must lead thee, in whose charge, when I depart,
+Thou shalt be left: for that Almighty King,
+Who reigns above, a rebel to his law,
+Adjudges me, and therefore hath decreed,
+That to his city none through me should come.
+He in all parts hath sway; there rules, there holds
+His citadel and throne. O happy those,
+Whom there he chooses!" I to him in few:
+"Bard! by that God, whom thou didst not adore,
+I do beseech thee (that this ill and worse
+I may escape) to lead me, where thou saidst,
+That I Saint Peter's gate may view, and those
+Who as thou tell'st, are in such dismal plight."
+ Onward he mov'd, I close his steps pursu'd.
+
+
+
+CANTO II
+
+NOW was the day departing, and the air,
+Imbrown'd with shadows, from their toils releas'd
+All animals on earth; and I alone
+Prepar'd myself the conflict to sustain,
+Both of sad pity, and that perilous road,
+Which my unerring memory shall retrace.
+ O Muses! O high genius! now vouchsafe
+Your aid! O mind! that all I saw hast kept
+Safe in a written record, here thy worth
+And eminent endowments come to proof.
+ I thus began: "Bard! thou who art my guide,
+Consider well, if virtue be in me
+Sufficient, ere to this high enterprise
+Thou trust me. Thou hast told that Silvius' sire,
+Yet cloth'd in corruptible flesh, among
+Th' immortal tribes had entrance, and was there
+Sensible present. Yet if heaven's great Lord,
+Almighty foe to ill, such favour shew'd,
+In contemplation of the high effect,
+Both what and who from him should issue forth,
+It seems in reason's judgment well deserv'd:
+Sith he of Rome, and of Rome's empire wide,
+In heaven's empyreal height was chosen sire:
+Both which, if truth be spoken, were ordain'd
+And 'stablish'd for the holy place, where sits
+Who to great Peter's sacred chair succeeds.
+He from this journey, in thy song renown'd,
+Learn'd things, that to his victory gave rise
+And to the papal robe. In after-times
+The chosen vessel also travel'd there,
+To bring us back assurance in that faith,
+Which is the entrance to salvation's way.
+But I, why should I there presume? or who
+Permits it? not, Aeneas I nor Paul.
+Myself I deem not worthy, and none else
+Will deem me. I, if on this voyage then
+I venture, fear it will in folly end.
+Thou, who art wise, better my meaning know'st,
+Than I can speak." As one, who unresolves
+What he hath late resolv'd, and with new thoughts
+Changes his purpose, from his first intent
+Remov'd; e'en such was I on that dun coast,
+Wasting in thought my enterprise, at first
+So eagerly embrac'd. "If right thy words
+I scan," replied that shade magnanimous,
+"Thy soul is by vile fear assail'd, which oft
+So overcasts a man, that he recoils
+From noblest resolution, like a beast
+At some false semblance in the twilight gloom.
+That from this terror thou mayst free thyself,
+I will instruct thee why I came, and what
+I heard in that same instant, when for thee
+Grief touch'd me first. I was among the tribe,
+Who rest suspended, when a dame, so blest
+And lovely, I besought her to command,
+Call'd me; her eyes were brighter than the star
+Of day; and she with gentle voice and soft
+Angelically tun'd her speech address'd:
+"O courteous shade of Mantua! thou whose fame
+Yet lives, and shall live long as nature lasts!
+A friend, not of my fortune but myself,
+On the wide desert in his road has met
+Hindrance so great, that he through fear has turn'd.
+Now much I dread lest he past help have stray'd,
+And I be ris'n too late for his relief,
+From what in heaven of him I heard. Speed now,
+And by thy eloquent persuasive tongue,
+And by all means for his deliverance meet,
+Assist him. So to me will comfort spring.
+I who now bid thee on this errand forth
+Am Beatrice; from a place I come
+
+(Note: Beatrice. I use this word, as it is
+pronounced in the Italian, as consisting of four
+syllables, of which the third is a long one.)
+
+Revisited with joy. Love brought me thence,
+Who prompts my speech. When in my Master's sight
+I stand, thy praise to him I oft will tell."
+ She then was silent, and I thus began:
+"O Lady! by whose influence alone,
+Mankind excels whatever is contain'd
+Within that heaven which hath the smallest orb,
+So thy command delights me, that to obey,
+If it were done already, would seem late.
+No need hast thou farther to speak thy will;
+Yet tell the reason, why thou art not loth
+To leave that ample space, where to return
+Thou burnest, for this centre here beneath."
+ She then: "Since thou so deeply wouldst inquire,
+I will instruct thee briefly, why no dread
+Hinders my entrance here. Those things alone
+Are to be fear'd, whence evil may proceed,
+None else, for none are terrible beside.
+I am so fram'd by God, thanks to his grace!
+That any suff'rance of your misery
+Touches me not, nor flame of that fierce fire
+Assails me. In high heaven a blessed dame
+Besides, who mourns with such effectual grief
+That hindrance, which I send thee to remove,
+That God's stern judgment to her will inclines.
+To Lucia calling, her she thus bespake:
+"Now doth thy faithful servant need thy aid
+And I commend him to thee." At her word
+Sped Lucia, of all cruelty the foe,
+And coming to the place, where I abode
+Seated with Rachel, her of ancient days,
+She thus address'd me: "Thou true praise of God!
+Beatrice! why is not thy succour lent
+To him, who so much lov'd thee, as to leave
+For thy sake all the multitude admires?
+Dost thou not hear how pitiful his wail,
+Nor mark the death, which in the torrent flood,
+Swoln mightier than a sea, him struggling holds?"
+Ne'er among men did any with such speed
+Haste to their profit, flee from their annoy,
+As when these words were spoken, I came here,
+Down from my blessed seat, trusting the force
+Of thy pure eloquence, which thee, and all
+Who well have mark'd it, into honour brings."
+ "When she had ended, her bright beaming eyes
+Tearful she turn'd aside; whereat I felt
+Redoubled zeal to serve thee. As she will'd,
+Thus am I come: I sav'd thee from the beast,
+Who thy near way across the goodly mount
+Prevented. What is this comes o'er thee then?
+Why, why dost thou hang back? why in thy breast
+Harbour vile fear? why hast not courage there
+And noble daring? Since three maids so blest
+Thy safety plan, e'en in the court of heaven;
+And so much certain good my words forebode."
+ As florets, by the frosty air of night
+Bent down and clos'd, when day has blanch'd their leaves,
+Rise all unfolded on their spiry stems;
+So was my fainting vigour new restor'd,
+And to my heart such kindly courage ran,
+That I as one undaunted soon replied:
+"O full of pity she, who undertook
+My succour! and thou kind who didst perform
+So soon her true behest! With such desire
+Thou hast dispos'd me to renew my voyage,
+That my first purpose fully is resum'd.
+Lead on: one only will is in us both.
+Thou art my guide, my master thou, and lord."
+ So spake I; and when he had onward mov'd,
+I enter'd on the deep and woody way.
+
+
+
+CANTO III
+
+"THROUGH me you pass into the city of woe:
+Through me you pass into eternal pain:
+Through me among the people lost for aye.
+Justice the founder of my fabric mov'd:
+To rear me was the task of power divine,
+Supremest wisdom, and primeval love.
+Before me things create were none, save things
+Eternal, and eternal I endure.
+All hope abandon ye who enter here."
+ Such characters in colour dim I mark'd
+Over a portal's lofty arch inscrib'd:
+Whereat I thus: "Master, these words import
+Hard meaning." He as one prepar'd replied:
+"Here thou must all distrust behind thee leave;
+Here be vile fear extinguish'd. We are come
+Where I have told thee we shall see the souls
+To misery doom'd, who intellectual good
+Have lost." And when his hand he had stretch'd forth
+To mine, with pleasant looks, whence I was cheer'd,
+Into that secret place he led me on.
+ Here sighs with lamentations and loud moans
+Resounded through the air pierc'd by no star,
+That e'en I wept at entering. Various tongues,
+Horrible languages, outcries of woe,
+Accents of anger, voices deep and hoarse,
+With hands together smote that swell'd the sounds,
+Made up a tumult, that for ever whirls
+Round through that air with solid darkness stain'd,
+Like to the sand that in the whirlwind flies.
+ I then, with error yet encompass'd, cried:
+"O master! What is this I hear? What race
+Are these, who seem so overcome with woe?"
+ He thus to me: "This miserable fate
+Suffer the wretched souls of those, who liv'd
+Without or praise or blame, with that ill band
+Of angels mix'd, who nor rebellious prov'd
+Nor yet were true to God, but for themselves
+Were only. From his bounds Heaven drove them forth,
+Not to impair his lustre, nor the depth
+Of Hell receives them, lest th' accursed tribe
+Should glory thence with exultation vain."
+ I then: "Master! what doth aggrieve them thus,
+That they lament so loud?" He straight replied:
+"That will I tell thee briefly. These of death
+No hope may entertain: and their blind life
+So meanly passes, that all other lots
+They envy. Fame of them the world hath none,
+Nor suffers; mercy and justice scorn them both.
+Speak not of them, but look, and pass them by."
+ And I, who straightway look'd, beheld a flag,
+Which whirling ran around so rapidly,
+That it no pause obtain'd: and following came
+Such a long train of spirits, I should ne'er
+Have thought, that death so many had despoil'd.
+ When some of these I recogniz'd, I saw
+And knew the shade of him, who to base fear
+Yielding, abjur'd his high estate. Forthwith
+I understood for certain this the tribe
+Of those ill spirits both to God displeasing
+And to his foes. These wretches, who ne'er lived,
+Went on in nakedness, and sorely stung
+By wasps and hornets, which bedew'd their cheeks
+With blood, that mix'd with tears dropp'd to their feet,
+And by disgustful worms was gather'd there.
+ Then looking farther onwards I beheld
+A throng upon the shore of a great stream:
+Whereat I thus: "Sir! grant me now to know
+Whom here we view, and whence impell'd they seem
+So eager to pass o'er, as I discern
+Through the blear light?" He thus to me in few:
+"This shalt thou know, soon as our steps arrive
+Beside the woeful tide of Acheron."
+ Then with eyes downward cast and fill'd with shame,
+Fearing my words offensive to his ear,
+Till we had reach'd the river, I from speech
+Abstain'd. And lo! toward us in a bark
+Comes on an old man hoary white with eld,
+Crying, "Woe to you wicked spirits! hope not
+Ever to see the sky again. I come
+To take you to the other shore across,
+Into eternal darkness, there to dwell
+In fierce heat and in ice. And thou, who there
+Standest, live spirit! get thee hence, and leave
+These who are dead." But soon as he beheld
+I left them not, "By other way," said he,
+"By other haven shalt thou come to shore,
+Not by this passage; thee a nimbler boat
+Must carry." Then to him thus spake my guide:
+"Charon! thyself torment not: so 't is will'd,
+Where will and power are one: ask thou no more."
+ Straightway in silence fell the shaggy cheeks
+Of him the boatman o'er the livid lake,
+Around whose eyes glar'd wheeling flames. Meanwhile
+Those spirits, faint and naked, color chang'd,
+And gnash'd their teeth, soon as the cruel words
+They heard. God and their parents they blasphem'd,
+The human kind, the place, the time, and seed
+That did engender them and give them birth.
+ Then all together sorely wailing drew
+To the curs'd strand, that every man must pass
+Who fears not God. Charon, demoniac form,
+With eyes of burning coal, collects them all,
+Beck'ning, and each, that lingers, with his oar
+Strikes. As fall off the light autumnal leaves,
+One still another following, till the bough
+Strews all its honours on the earth beneath;
+E'en in like manner Adam's evil brood
+Cast themselves one by one down from the shore,
+Each at a beck, as falcon at his call.
+ Thus go they over through the umber'd wave,
+And ever they on the opposing bank
+Be landed, on this side another throng
+Still gathers. "Son," thus spake the courteous guide,
+"Those, who die subject to the wrath of God,
+All here together come from every clime,
+And to o'erpass the river are not loth:
+For so heaven's justice goads them on, that fear
+Is turn'd into desire. Hence ne'er hath past
+Good spirit. If of thee Charon complain,
+Now mayst thou know the import of his words."
+ This said, the gloomy region trembling shook
+So terribly, that yet with clammy dews
+Fear chills my brow. The sad earth gave a blast,
+That, lightening, shot forth a vermilion flame,
+Which all my senses conquer'd quite, and I
+Down dropp'd, as one with sudden slumber seiz'd.
+
+
+
+CANTO IV
+
+BROKE the deep slumber in my brain a crash
+Of heavy thunder, that I shook myself,
+As one by main force rous'd. Risen upright,
+My rested eyes I mov'd around, and search'd
+With fixed ken to know what place it was,
+Wherein I stood. For certain on the brink
+I found me of the lamentable vale,
+The dread abyss, that joins a thund'rous sound
+Of plaints innumerable. Dark and deep,
+And thick with clouds o'erspread, mine eye in vain
+Explor'd its bottom, nor could aught discern.
+ "Now let us to the blind world there beneath
+Descend;" the bard began all pale of look:
+"I go the first, and thou shalt follow next."
+ Then I his alter'd hue perceiving, thus:
+"How may I speed, if thou yieldest to dread,
+Who still art wont to comfort me in doubt?"
+ He then: "The anguish of that race below
+With pity stains my cheek, which thou for fear
+Mistakest. Let us on. Our length of way
+Urges to haste." Onward, this said, he mov'd;
+And ent'ring led me with him on the bounds
+Of the first circle, that surrounds th' abyss.
+Here, as mine ear could note, no plaint was heard
+Except of sighs, that made th' eternal air
+Tremble, not caus'd by tortures, but from grief
+Felt by those multitudes, many and vast,
+Of men, women, and infants. Then to me
+The gentle guide: "Inquir'st thou not what spirits
+Are these, which thou beholdest? Ere thou pass
+Farther, I would thou know, that these of sin
+Were blameless; and if aught they merited,
+It profits not, since baptism was not theirs,
+The portal to thy faith. If they before
+The Gospel liv'd, they serv'd not God aright;
+And among such am I. For these defects,
+And for no other evil, we are lost;
+Only so far afflicted, that we live
+Desiring without hope." So grief assail'd
+My heart at hearing this, for well I knew
+Suspended in that Limbo many a soul
+Of mighty worth. "O tell me, sire rever'd!
+Tell me, my master!" I began through wish
+Of full assurance in that holy faith,
+Which vanquishes all error; "say, did e'er
+Any, or through his own or other's merit,
+Come forth from thence, whom afterward was blest?"
+ Piercing the secret purport of my speech,
+He answer'd: "I was new to that estate,
+When I beheld a puissant one arrive
+Amongst us, with victorious trophy crown'd.
+He forth the shade of our first parent drew,
+Abel his child, and Noah righteous man,
+Of Moses lawgiver for faith approv'd,
+Of patriarch Abraham, and David king,
+Israel with his sire and with his sons,
+Nor without Rachel whom so hard he won,
+And others many more, whom he to bliss
+Exalted. Before these, be thou assur'd,
+No spirit of human kind was ever sav'd."
+ We, while he spake, ceas'd not our onward road,
+Still passing through the wood; for so I name
+Those spirits thick beset. We were not far
+On this side from the summit, when I kenn'd
+A flame, that o'er the darken'd hemisphere
+Prevailing shin'd. Yet we a little space
+Were distant, not so far but I in part
+Discover'd, that a tribe in honour high
+That place possess'd. "O thou, who every art
+And science valu'st! who are these, that boast
+Such honour, separate from all the rest?"
+ He answer'd: "The renown of their great names
+That echoes through your world above, acquires
+Favour in heaven, which holds them thus advanc'd."
+Meantime a voice I heard: "Honour the bard
+Sublime! his shade returns that left us late!"
+No sooner ceas'd the sound, than I beheld
+Four mighty spirits toward us bend their steps,
+Of semblance neither sorrowful nor glad.
+ When thus my master kind began: "Mark him,
+Who in his right hand bears that falchion keen,
+The other three preceding, as their lord.
+This is that Homer, of all bards supreme:
+Flaccus the next in satire's vein excelling;
+The third is Naso; Lucan is the last.
+Because they all that appellation own,
+With which the voice singly accosted me,
+Honouring they greet me thus, and well they judge."
+ So I beheld united the bright school
+Of him the monarch of sublimest song,
+That o'er the others like an eagle soars.
+When they together short discourse had held,
+They turn'd to me, with salutation kind
+Beck'ning me; at the which my master smil'd:
+Nor was this all; but greater honour still
+They gave me, for they made me of their tribe;
+And I was sixth amid so learn'd a band.
+ Far as the luminous beacon on we pass'd
+Speaking of matters, then befitting well
+To speak, now fitter left untold. At foot
+Of a magnificent castle we arriv'd,
+Seven times with lofty walls begirt, and round
+Defended by a pleasant stream. O'er this
+As o'er dry land we pass'd. Next through seven gates
+I with those sages enter'd, and we came
+Into a mead with lively verdure fresh.
+ There dwelt a race, who slow their eyes around
+Majestically mov'd, and in their port
+Bore eminent authority; they spake
+Seldom, but all their words were tuneful sweet.
+ We to one side retir'd, into a place
+Open and bright and lofty, whence each one
+Stood manifest to view. Incontinent
+There on the green enamel of the plain
+Were shown me the great spirits, by whose sight
+I am exalted in my own esteem.
+ Electra there I saw accompanied
+By many, among whom Hector I knew,
+Anchises' pious son, and with hawk's eye
+Caesar all arm'd, and by Camilla there
+Penthesilea. On the other side
+Old King Latinus, seated by his child
+Lavinia, and that Brutus I beheld,
+Who Tarquin chas'd, Lucretia, Cato's wife
+Marcia, with Julia and Cornelia there;
+And sole apart retir'd, the Soldan fierce.
+ Then when a little more I rais'd my brow,
+I spied the master of the sapient throng,
+Seated amid the philosophic train.
+Him all admire, all pay him rev'rence due.
+There Socrates and Plato both I mark'd,
+Nearest to him in rank; Democritus,
+Who sets the world at chance, Diogenes,
+With Heraclitus, and Empedocles,
+And Anaxagoras, and Thales sage,
+Zeno, and Dioscorides well read
+In nature's secret lore. Orpheus I mark'd
+And Linus, Tully and moral Seneca,
+Euclid and Ptolemy, Hippocrates,
+Galenus, Avicen, and him who made
+That commentary vast, Averroes.
+ Of all to speak at full were vain attempt;
+For my wide theme so urges, that ofttimes
+My words fall short of what bechanc'd. In two
+The six associates part. Another way
+My sage guide leads me, from that air serene,
+Into a climate ever vex'd with storms:
+And to a part I come where no light shines.
+
+
+
+CANTO V
+
+FROM the first circle I descended thus
+Down to the second, which, a lesser space
+Embracing, so much more of grief contains
+Provoking bitter moans. There, Minos stands
+Grinning with ghastly feature: he, of all
+Who enter, strict examining the crimes,
+Gives sentence, and dismisses them beneath,
+According as he foldeth him around:
+For when before him comes th' ill fated soul,
+It all confesses; and that judge severe
+Of sins, considering what place in hell
+Suits the transgression, with his tail so oft
+Himself encircles, as degrees beneath
+He dooms it to descend. Before him stand
+Always a num'rous throng; and in his turn
+Each one to judgment passing, speaks, and hears
+His fate, thence downward to his dwelling hurl'd.
+ "O thou! who to this residence of woe
+Approachest?" when he saw me coming, cried
+Minos, relinquishing his dread employ,
+"Look how thou enter here; beware in whom
+Thou place thy trust; let not the entrance broad
+Deceive thee to thy harm." To him my guide:
+"Wherefore exclaimest? Hinder not his way
+By destiny appointed; so 'tis will'd
+Where will and power are one. Ask thou no more."
+ Now 'gin the rueful wailings to be heard.
+Now am I come where many a plaining voice
+Smites on mine ear. Into a place I came
+Where light was silent all. Bellowing there groan'd
+A noise as of a sea in tempest torn
+By warring winds. The stormy blast of hell
+With restless fury drives the spirits on
+Whirl'd round and dash'd amain with sore annoy.
+When they arrive before the ruinous sweep,
+There shrieks are heard, there lamentations, moans,
+And blasphemies 'gainst the good Power in heaven.
+ I understood that to this torment sad
+The carnal sinners are condemn'd, in whom
+Reason by lust is sway'd. As in large troops
+And multitudinous, when winter reigns,
+The starlings on their wings are borne abroad;
+So bears the tyrannous gust those evil souls.
+On this side and on that, above, below,
+It drives them: hope of rest to solace them
+Is none, nor e'en of milder pang. As cranes,
+Chanting their dol'rous notes, traverse the sky,
+Stretch'd out in long array: so I beheld
+Spirits, who came loud wailing, hurried on
+By their dire doom. Then I: "Instructor! who
+Are these, by the black air so scourg'd?"--" The first
+'Mong those, of whom thou question'st," he replied,
+"O'er many tongues was empress. She in vice
+Of luxury was so shameless, that she made
+Liking be lawful by promulg'd decree,
+To clear the blame she had herself incurr'd.
+This is Semiramis, of whom 'tis writ,
+That she succeeded Ninus her espous'd;
+And held the land, which now the Soldan rules.
+The next in amorous fury slew herself,
+And to Sicheus' ashes broke her faith:
+Then follows Cleopatra, lustful queen."
+ There mark'd I Helen, for whose sake so long
+The time was fraught with evil; there the great
+Achilles, who with love fought to the end.
+Paris I saw, and Tristan; and beside
+A thousand more he show'd me, and by name
+Pointed them out, whom love bereav'd of life.
+ When I had heard my sage instructor name
+Those dames and knights of antique days, o'erpower'd
+By pity, well-nigh in amaze my mind
+Was lost; and I began: "Bard! willingly
+I would address those two together coming,
+Which seem so light before the wind." He thus:
+"Note thou, when nearer they to us approach.
+Then by that love which carries them along,
+Entreat; and they will come." Soon as the wind
+Sway'd them toward us, I thus fram'd my speech:
+"O wearied spirits! come, and hold discourse
+With us, if by none else restrain'd." As doves
+By fond desire invited, on wide wings
+And firm, to their sweet nest returning home,
+Cleave the air, wafted by their will along;
+Thus issu'd from that troop, where Dido ranks,
+They through the ill air speeding; with such force
+My cry prevail'd by strong affection urg'd.
+ "O gracious creature and benign! who go'st
+Visiting, through this element obscure,
+Us, who the world with bloody stain imbru'd;
+If for a friend the King of all we own'd,
+Our pray'r to him should for thy peace arise,
+Since thou hast pity on our evil plight.
+()f whatsoe'er to hear or to discourse
+It pleases thee, that will we hear, of that
+Freely with thee discourse, while e'er the wind,
+As now, is mute. The land, that gave me birth,
+Is situate on the coast, where Po descends
+To rest in ocean with his sequent streams.
+ "Love, that in gentle heart is quickly learnt,
+Entangled him by that fair form, from me
+Ta'en in such cruel sort, as grieves me still:
+Love, that denial takes from none belov'd,
+Caught me with pleasing him so passing well,
+That, as thou see'st, he yet deserts me not.
+Love brought us to one death: Caina waits
+The soul, who spilt our life." Such were their words;
+At hearing which downward I bent my looks,
+And held them there so long, that the bard cried:
+"What art thou pond'ring?" I in answer thus:
+"Alas! by what sweet thoughts, what fond desire
+Must they at length to that ill pass have reach'd!"
+ Then turning, I to them my speech address'd.
+And thus began: "Francesca! your sad fate
+Even to tears my grief and pity moves.
+But tell me; in the time of your sweet sighs,
+By what, and how love granted, that ye knew
+Your yet uncertain wishes?" She replied:
+"No greater grief than to remember days
+Of joy, when mis'ry is at hand! That kens
+Thy learn'd instructor. Yet so eagerly
+If thou art bent to know the primal root,
+From whence our love gat being, I will do,
+As one, who weeps and tells his tale. One day
+For our delight we read of Lancelot,
+How him love thrall'd. Alone we were, and no
+Suspicion near us. Ofttimes by that reading
+Our eyes were drawn together, and the hue
+Fled from our alter'd cheek. But at one point
+Alone we fell. When of that smile we read,
+The wished smile, rapturously kiss'd
+By one so deep in love, then he, who ne'er
+From me shall separate, at once my lips
+All trembling kiss'd. The book and writer both
+Were love's purveyors. In its leaves that day
+We read no more." While thus one spirit spake,
+The other wail'd so sorely, that heartstruck
+I through compassion fainting, seem'd not far
+From death, and like a corpse fell to the ground.
+
+
+
+CANTO VI
+
+MY sense reviving, that erewhile had droop'd
+With pity for the kindred shades, whence grief
+O'ercame me wholly, straight around I see
+New torments, new tormented souls, which way
+Soe'er I move, or turn, or bend my sight.
+In the third circle I arrive, of show'rs
+Ceaseless, accursed, heavy, and cold, unchang'd
+For ever, both in kind and in degree.
+Large hail, discolour'd water, sleety flaw
+Through the dun midnight air stream'd down amain:
+Stank all the land whereon that tempest fell.
+ Cerberus, cruel monster, fierce and strange,
+Through his wide threefold throat barks as a dog
+Over the multitude immers'd beneath.
+His eyes glare crimson, black his unctuous beard,
+His belly large, and claw'd the hands, with which
+He tears the spirits, flays them, and their limbs
+Piecemeal disparts. Howling there spread, as curs,
+Under the rainy deluge, with one side
+The other screening, oft they roll them round,
+A wretched, godless crew. When that great worm
+Descried us, savage Cerberus, he op'd
+His jaws, and the fangs show'd us; not a limb
+Of him but trembled. Then my guide, his palms
+Expanding on the ground, thence filled with earth
+Rais'd them, and cast it in his ravenous maw.
+E'en as a dog, that yelling bays for food
+His keeper, when the morsel comes, lets fall
+His fury, bent alone with eager haste
+To swallow it; so dropp'd the loathsome cheeks
+Of demon Cerberus, who thund'ring stuns
+The spirits, that they for deafness wish in vain.
+ We, o'er the shades thrown prostrate by the brunt
+Of the heavy tempest passing, set our feet
+Upon their emptiness, that substance seem'd.
+ They all along the earth extended lay
+Save one, that sudden rais'd himself to sit,
+Soon as that way he saw us pass. "O thou!"
+He cried, "who through the infernal shades art led,
+Own, if again thou know'st me. Thou wast fram'd
+Or ere my frame was broken." I replied:
+"The anguish thou endur'st perchance so takes
+Thy form from my remembrance, that it seems
+As if I saw thee never. But inform
+Me who thou art, that in a place so sad
+Art set, and in such torment, that although
+Other be greater, more disgustful none
+Can be imagin'd." He in answer thus:
+"Thy city heap'd with envy to the brim,
+Ay that the measure overflows its bounds,
+Held me in brighter days. Ye citizens
+Were wont to name me Ciacco. For the sin
+Of glutt'ny, damned vice, beneath this rain,
+E'en as thou see'st, I with fatigue am worn;
+Nor I sole spirit in this woe: all these
+Have by like crime incurr'd like punishment."
+ No more he said, and I my speech resum'd:
+"Ciacco! thy dire affliction grieves me much,
+Even to tears. But tell me, if thou know'st,
+What shall at length befall the citizens
+Of the divided city; whether any just one
+Inhabit there: and tell me of the cause,
+Whence jarring discord hath assail'd it thus?"
+ He then: "After long striving they will come
+To blood; and the wild party from the woods
+Will chase the other with much injury forth.
+Then it behoves, that this must fall, within
+Three solar circles; and the other rise
+By borrow'd force of one, who under shore
+Now rests. It shall a long space hold aloof
+Its forehead, keeping under heavy weight
+The other oppress'd, indignant at the load,
+And grieving sore. The just are two in number,
+But they neglected. Av'rice, envy, pride,
+Three fatal sparks, have set the hearts of all
+On fire." Here ceas'd the lamentable sound;
+And I continu'd thus: "Still would I learn
+More from thee, farther parley still entreat.
+Of Farinata and Tegghiaio say,
+They who so well deserv'd, of Giacopo,
+Arrigo, Mosca, and the rest, who bent
+Their minds on working good. Oh! tell me where
+They bide, and to their knowledge let me come.
+For I am press'd with keen desire to hear,
+If heaven's sweet cup or poisonous drug of hell
+Be to their lip assign'd." He answer'd straight:
+"These are yet blacker spirits. Various crimes
+Have sunk them deeper in the dark abyss.
+If thou so far descendest, thou mayst see them.
+But to the pleasant world when thou return'st,
+Of me make mention, I entreat thee, there.
+No more I tell thee, answer thee no more."
+ This said, his fixed eyes he turn'd askance,
+A little ey'd me, then bent down his head,
+And 'midst his blind companions with it fell.
+ When thus my guide: "No more his bed he leaves,
+Ere the last angel-trumpet blow. The Power
+Adverse to these shall then in glory come,
+Each one forthwith to his sad tomb repair,
+Resume his fleshly vesture and his form,
+And hear the eternal doom re-echoing rend
+The vault." So pass'd we through that mixture foul
+Of spirits and rain, with tardy steps; meanwhile
+Touching, though slightly, on the life to come.
+For thus I question'd: "Shall these tortures, Sir!
+When the great sentence passes, be increas'd,
+Or mitigated, or as now severe?"
+ He then: "Consult thy knowledge; that decides
+That as each thing to more perfection grows,
+It feels more sensibly both good and pain.
+Though ne'er to true perfection may arrive
+This race accurs'd, yet nearer then than now
+They shall approach it." Compassing that path
+Circuitous we journeyed, and discourse
+Much more than I relate between us pass'd:
+Till at the point, where the steps led below,
+Arriv'd, there Plutus, the great foe, we found.
+
+
+
+CANTO VII
+
+"AH me! O Satan! Satan!" loud exclaim'd
+Plutus, in accent hoarse of wild alarm:
+And the kind sage, whom no event surpris'd,
+To comfort me thus spake: "Let not thy fear
+Harm thee, for power in him, be sure, is none
+To hinder down this rock thy safe descent."
+Then to that sworn lip turning, " Peace!" he cried,
+"Curs'd wolf! thy fury inward on thyself
+Prey, and consume thee! Through the dark profound
+Not without cause he passes. So 't is will'd
+On high, there where the great Archangel pour'd
+Heav'n's vengeance on the first adulterer proud."
+ As sails full spread and bellying with the wind
+Drop suddenly collaps'd, if the mast split;
+So to the ground down dropp'd the cruel fiend.
+ Thus we, descending to the fourth steep ledge,
+Gain'd on the dismal shore, that all the woe
+Hems in of all the universe. Ah me!
+Almighty Justice! in what store thou heap'st
+New pains, new troubles, as I here beheld!
+Wherefore doth fault of ours bring us to this?
+ E'en as a billow, on Charybdis rising,
+Against encounter'd billow dashing breaks;
+Such is the dance this wretched race must lead,
+Whom more than elsewhere numerous here I found,
+From one side and the other, with loud voice,
+Both roll'd on weights by main forge of their breasts,
+Then smote together, and each one forthwith
+Roll'd them back voluble, turning again,
+Exclaiming these, "Why holdest thou so fast?"
+Those answering, "And why castest thou away?"
+So still repeating their despiteful song,
+They to the opposite point on either hand
+Travers'd the horrid circle: then arriv'd,
+Both turn'd them round, and through the middle space
+Conflicting met again. At sight whereof
+I, stung with grief, thus spake: "O say, my guide!
+What race is this? Were these, whose heads are shorn,
+On our left hand, all sep'rate to the church?"
+ He straight replied: "In their first life these all
+In mind were so distorted, that they made,
+According to due measure, of their wealth,
+No use. This clearly from their words collect,
+Which they howl forth, at each extremity
+Arriving of the circle, where their crime
+Contrary' in kind disparts them. To the church
+Were separate those, that with no hairy cowls
+Are crown'd, both Popes and Cardinals, o'er whom
+Av'rice dominion absolute maintains."
+ I then: "Mid such as these some needs must be,
+Whom I shall recognize, that with the blot
+Of these foul sins were stain'd." He answering thus:
+"Vain thought conceiv'st thou. That ignoble life,
+Which made them vile before, now makes them dark,
+And to all knowledge indiscernible.
+Forever they shall meet in this rude shock:
+These from the tomb with clenched grasp shall rise,
+Those with close-shaven locks. That ill they gave,
+And ill they kept, hath of the beauteous world
+Depriv'd, and set them at this strife, which needs
+No labour'd phrase of mine to set if off.
+Now may'st thou see, my son! how brief, how vain,
+The goods committed into fortune's hands,
+For which the human race keep such a coil!
+Not all the gold, that is beneath the moon,
+Or ever hath been, of these toil-worn souls
+Might purchase rest for one." I thus rejoin'd:
+ "My guide! of thee this also would I learn;
+This fortune, that thou speak'st of, what it is,
+Whose talons grasp the blessings of the world?"
+ He thus: "O beings blind! what ignorance
+Besets you? Now my judgment hear and mark.
+He, whose transcendent wisdom passes all,
+The heavens creating, gave them ruling powers
+To guide them, so that each part shines to each,
+Their light in equal distribution pour'd.
+By similar appointment he ordain'd
+Over the world's bright images to rule.
+Superintendence of a guiding hand
+And general minister, which at due time
+May change the empty vantages of life
+From race to race, from one to other's blood,
+Beyond prevention of man's wisest care:
+Wherefore one nation rises into sway,
+Another languishes, e'en as her will
+Decrees, from us conceal'd, as in the grass
+The serpent train. Against her nought avails
+Your utmost wisdom. She with foresight plans,
+Judges, and carries on her reign, as theirs
+The other powers divine. Her changes know
+Nore intermission: by necessity
+She is made swift, so frequent come who claim
+Succession in her favours. This is she,
+So execrated e'en by those, whose debt
+To her is rather praise; they wrongfully
+With blame requite her, and with evil word;
+But she is blessed, and for that recks not:
+Amidst the other primal beings glad
+Rolls on her sphere, and in her bliss exults.
+Now on our way pass we, to heavier woe
+Descending: for each star is falling now,
+That mounted at our entrance, and forbids
+Too long our tarrying." We the circle cross'd
+To the next steep, arriving at a well,
+That boiling pours itself down to a foss
+Sluic'd from its source. Far murkier was the wave
+Than sablest grain: and we in company
+Of the' inky waters, journeying by their side,
+Enter'd, though by a different track, beneath.
+Into a lake, the Stygian nam'd, expands
+The dismal stream, when it hath reach'd the foot
+Of the grey wither'd cliffs. Intent I stood
+To gaze, and in the marish sunk descried
+A miry tribe, all naked, and with looks
+Betok'ning rage. They with their hands alone
+Struck not, but with the head, the breast, the feet,
+Cutting each other piecemeal with their fangs.
+ The good instructor spake; "Now seest thou, son!
+The souls of those, whom anger overcame.
+This too for certain know, that underneath
+The water dwells a multitude, whose sighs
+Into these bubbles make the surface heave,
+As thine eye tells thee wheresoe'er it turn.
+Fix'd in the slime they say: "Sad once were we
+In the sweet air made gladsome by the sun,
+Carrying a foul and lazy mist within:
+Now in these murky settlings are we sad."
+Such dolorous strain they gurgle in their throats.
+But word distinct can utter none." Our route
+Thus compass'd we, a segment widely stretch'd
+Between the dry embankment, and the core
+Of the loath'd pool, turning meanwhile our eyes
+Downward on those who gulp'd its muddy lees;
+Nor stopp'd, till to a tower's low base we came.
+
+
+
+CANTO VIII
+
+MY theme pursuing, I relate that ere
+We reach'd the lofty turret's base, our eyes
+Its height ascended, where two cressets hung
+We mark'd, and from afar another light
+Return the signal, so remote, that scarce
+The eye could catch its beam. I turning round
+To the deep source of knowledge, thus inquir'd:
+"Say what this means? and what that other light
+In answer set? what agency doth this?"
+ "There on the filthy waters," he replied,
+"E'en now what next awaits us mayst thou see,
+If the marsh-gender'd fog conceal it not."
+ Never was arrow from the cord dismiss'd,
+That ran its way so nimbly through the air,
+As a small bark, that through the waves I spied
+Toward us coming, under the sole sway
+Of one that ferried it, who cried aloud:
+"Art thou arriv'd, fell spirit?"--"Phlegyas, Phlegyas,
+This time thou criest in vain," my lord replied;
+"No longer shalt thou have us, but while o'er
+The slimy pool we pass." As one who hears
+Of some great wrong he hath sustain'd, whereat
+Inly he pines; so Phlegyas inly pin'd
+In his fierce ire. My guide descending stepp'd
+Into the skiff, and bade me enter next
+Close at his side; nor till my entrance seem'd
+The vessel freighted. Soon as both embark'd,
+Cutting the waves, goes on the ancient prow,
+More deeply than with others it is wont.
+ While we our course o'er the dead channel held.
+One drench'd in mire before me came, and said;
+"Who art thou, that thou comest ere thine hour?"
+ I answer'd: "Though I come, I tarry not;
+But who art thou, that art become so foul?"
+ "One, as thou seest, who mourn: " he straight replied.
+ To which I thus: " In mourning and in woe,
+Curs'd spirit! tarry thou. I know thee well,
+E'en thus in filth disguis'd." Then stretch'd he forth
+Hands to the bark; whereof my teacher sage
+Aware, thrusting him back: "Away! down there
+To the' other dogs!" then, with his arms my neck
+Encircling, kiss'd my cheek, and spake: "O soul
+Justly disdainful! blest was she in whom
+Thou was conceiv'd! He in the world was one
+For arrogance noted; to his memory
+No virtue lends its lustre; even so
+Here is his shadow furious. There above
+How many now hold themselves mighty kings
+Who here like swine shall wallow in the mire,
+Leaving behind them horrible dispraise!"
+ I then: "Master! him fain would I behold
+Whelm'd in these dregs, before we quit the lake."
+ He thus: "Or ever to thy view the shore
+Be offer'd, satisfied shall be that wish,
+Which well deserves completion." Scarce his words
+Were ended, when I saw the miry tribes
+Set on him with such violence, that yet
+For that render I thanks to God and praise
+"To Filippo Argenti:" cried they all:
+And on himself the moody Florentine
+Turn'd his avenging fangs. Him here we left,
+Nor speak I of him more. But on mine ear
+Sudden a sound of lamentation smote,
+Whereat mine eye unbarr'd I sent abroad.
+ And thus the good instructor: "Now, my son!
+Draws near the city, that of Dis is nam'd,
+With its grave denizens, a mighty throng."
+ I thus: "The minarets already, Sir!
+There certes in the valley I descry,
+Gleaming vermilion, as if they from fire
+Had issu'd." He replied: "Eternal fire,
+That inward burns, shows them with ruddy flame
+Illum'd; as in this nether hell thou seest."
+ We came within the fosses deep, that moat
+This region comfortless. The walls appear'd
+As they were fram'd of iron. We had made
+Wide circuit, ere a place we reach'd, where loud
+The mariner cried vehement: "Go forth!
+The' entrance is here!" Upon the gates I spied
+More than a thousand, who of old from heaven
+Were hurl'd. With ireful gestures, "Who is this,"
+They cried, "that without death first felt, goes through
+The regions of the dead?" My sapient guide
+Made sign that he for secret parley wish'd;
+Whereat their angry scorn abating, thus
+They spake: "Come thou alone; and let him go
+Who hath so hardily enter'd this realm.
+Alone return he by his witless way;
+If well he know it, let him prove. For thee,
+Here shalt thou tarry, who through clime so dark
+Hast been his escort." Now bethink thee, reader!
+What cheer was mine at sound of those curs'd words.
+I did believe I never should return.
+ "O my lov'd guide! who more than seven times
+Security hast render'd me, and drawn
+From peril deep, whereto I stood expos'd,
+Desert me not," I cried, "in this extreme.
+And if our onward going be denied,
+Together trace we back our steps with speed."
+ My liege, who thither had conducted me,
+Replied: "Fear not: for of our passage none
+Hath power to disappoint us, by such high
+Authority permitted. But do thou
+Expect me here; meanwhile thy wearied spirit
+Comfort, and feed with kindly hope, assur'd
+I will not leave thee in this lower world."
+ This said, departs the sire benevolent,
+And quits me. Hesitating I remain
+At war 'twixt will and will not in my thoughts.
+ I could not hear what terms he offer'd them,
+But they conferr'd not long, for all at once
+To trial fled within. Clos'd were the gates
+By those our adversaries on the breast
+Of my liege lord: excluded he return'd
+To me with tardy steps. Upon the ground
+His eyes were bent, and from his brow eras'd
+All confidence, while thus with sighs he spake:
+"Who hath denied me these abodes of woe?"
+Then thus to me: "That I am anger'd, think
+No ground of terror: in this trial I
+Shall vanquish, use what arts they may within
+For hindrance. This their insolence, not new,
+Erewhile at gate less secret they display'd,
+Which still is without bolt; upon its arch
+Thou saw'st the deadly scroll: and even now
+On this side of its entrance, down the steep,
+Passing the circles, unescorted, comes
+One whose strong might can open us this land."
+
+
+
+CANTO IX
+
+THE hue, which coward dread on my pale cheeks
+Imprinted, when I saw my guide turn back,
+Chas'd that from his which newly they had worn,
+And inwardly restrain'd it. He, as one
+Who listens, stood attentive: for his eye
+Not far could lead him through the sable air,
+And the thick-gath'ring cloud. "It yet behooves
+We win this fight"--thus he began--" if not--
+Such aid to us is offer'd. --Oh, how long
+Me seems it, ere the promis'd help arrive!"
+ I noted, how the sequel of his words
+Clok'd their beginning; for the last he spake
+Agreed not with the first. But not the less
+My fear was at his saying; sith I drew
+To import worse perchance, than that he held,
+His mutilated speech. "Doth ever any
+Into this rueful concave's extreme depth
+Descend, out of the first degree, whose pain
+Is deprivation merely of sweet hope?"
+ Thus I inquiring. "Rarely," he replied,
+"It chances, that among us any makes
+This journey, which I wend. Erewhile 'tis true
+Once came I here beneath, conjur'd by fell
+Erictho, sorceress, who compell'd the shades
+Back to their bodies. No long space my flesh
+Was naked of me, when within these walls
+She made me enter, to draw forth a spirit
+From out of Judas' circle. Lowest place
+Is that of all, obscurest, and remov'd
+Farthest from heav'n's all-circling orb. The road
+Full well I know: thou therefore rest secure.
+That lake, the noisome stench exhaling, round
+The city' of grief encompasses, which now
+We may not enter without rage." Yet more
+He added: but I hold it not in mind,
+For that mine eye toward the lofty tower
+Had drawn me wholly, to its burning top.
+Where in an instant I beheld uprisen
+At once three hellish furies stain'd with blood:
+In limb and motion feminine they seem'd;
+Around them greenest hydras twisting roll'd
+Their volumes; adders and cerastes crept
+Instead of hair, and their fierce temples bound.
+ He knowing well the miserable hags
+Who tend the queen of endless woe, thus spake:
+"Mark thou each dire Erinnys. To the left
+This is Megaera; on the right hand she,
+Who wails, Alecto; and Tisiphone
+I' th' midst." This said, in silence he remain'd
+Their breast they each one clawing tore; themselves
+Smote with their palms, and such shrill clamour rais'd,
+That to the bard I clung, suspicion-bound.
+"Hasten Medusa: so to adamant
+Him shall we change;" all looking down exclaim'd.
+"E'en when by Theseus' might assail'd, we took
+No ill revenge." "Turn thyself round, and keep
+Thy count'nance hid; for if the Gorgon dire
+Be shown, and thou shouldst view it, thy return
+Upwards would be for ever lost." This said,
+Himself my gentle master turn'd me round,
+Nor trusted he my hands, but with his own
+He also hid me. Ye of intellect
+Sound and entire, mark well the lore conceal'd
+Under close texture of the mystic strain!
+ And now there came o'er the perturbed waves
+Loud-crashing, terrible, a sound that made
+Either shore tremble, as if of a wind
+Impetuous, from conflicting vapours sprung,
+That 'gainst some forest driving all its might,
+Plucks off the branches, beats them down and hurls
+Afar; then onward passing proudly sweeps
+Its whirlwind rage, while beasts and shepherds fly.
+ Mine eyes he loos'd, and spake: "And now direct
+Thy visual nerve along that ancient foam,
+There, thickest where the smoke ascends." As frogs
+Before their foe the serpent, through the wave
+Ply swiftly all, till at the ground each one
+Lies on a heap; more than a thousand spirits
+Destroy'd, so saw I fleeing before one
+Who pass'd with unwet feet the Stygian sound.
+He, from his face removing the gross air,
+Oft his left hand forth stretch'd, and seem'd alone
+By that annoyance wearied. I perceiv'd
+That he was sent from heav'n, and to my guide
+Turn'd me, who signal made that I should stand
+Quiet, and bend to him. Ah me! how full
+Of noble anger seem'd he! To the gate
+He came, and with his wand touch'd it, whereat
+Open without impediment it flew.
+ "Outcasts of heav'n! O abject race and scorn'd!"
+Began he on the horrid grunsel standing,
+"Whence doth this wild excess of insolence
+Lodge in you? wherefore kick you 'gainst that will
+Ne'er frustrate of its end, and which so oft
+Hath laid on you enforcement of your pangs?
+What profits at the fays to but the horn?
+Your Cerberus, if ye remember, hence
+Bears still, peel'd of their hair, his throat and maw."
+ This said, he turn'd back o'er the filthy way,
+And syllable to us spake none, but wore
+The semblance of a man by other care
+Beset, and keenly press'd, than thought of him
+Who in his presence stands. Then we our steps
+Toward that territory mov'd, secure
+After the hallow'd words. We unoppos'd
+There enter'd; and my mind eager to learn
+What state a fortress like to that might hold,
+I soon as enter'd throw mine eye around,
+And see on every part wide-stretching space
+Replete with bitter pain and torment ill.
+ As where Rhone stagnates on the plains of Arles,
+Or as at Pola, near Quarnaro's gulf,
+That closes Italy and laves her bounds,
+The place is all thick spread with sepulchres;
+So was it here, save what in horror here
+Excell'd: for 'midst the graves were scattered flames,
+Wherewith intensely all throughout they burn'd,
+That iron for no craft there hotter needs.
+ Their lids all hung suspended, and beneath
+From them forth issu'd lamentable moans,
+Such as the sad and tortur'd well might raise.
+ I thus: "Master! say who are these, interr'd
+Within these vaults, of whom distinct we hear
+The dolorous sighs?" He answer thus return'd:
+ "The arch-heretics are here, accompanied
+By every sect their followers; and much more,
+Than thou believest, tombs are freighted: like
+With like is buried; and the monuments
+Are different in degrees of heat. "This said,
+He to the right hand turning, on we pass'd
+Betwixt the afflicted and the ramparts high.
+
+
+
+CANTO X
+
+NOW by a secret pathway we proceed,
+Between the walls, that hem the region round,
+And the tormented souls: my master first,
+I close behind his steps. "Virtue supreme!"
+I thus began; "who through these ample orbs
+In circuit lead'st me, even as thou will'st,
+Speak thou, and satisfy my wish. May those,
+Who lie within these sepulchres, be seen?
+Already all the lids are rais'd, and none
+O'er them keeps watch." He thus in answer spake
+"They shall be closed all, what-time they here
+From Josaphat return'd shall come, and bring
+Their bodies, which above they now have left.
+The cemetery on this part obtain
+With Epicurus all his followers,
+Who with the body make the spirit die.
+Here therefore satisfaction shall be soon
+Both to the question ask'd, and to the wish,
+Which thou conceal'st in silence." I replied:
+"I keep not, guide belov'd! from thee my heart
+Secreted, but to shun vain length of words,
+A lesson erewhile taught me by thyself."
+ "O Tuscan! thou who through the city of fire
+Alive art passing, so discreet of speech!
+Here please thee stay awhile. Thy utterance
+Declares the place of thy nativity
+To be that noble land, with which perchance
+I too severely dealt." Sudden that sound
+Forth issu'd from a vault, whereat in fear
+I somewhat closer to my leader's side
+Approaching, he thus spake: "What dost thou? Turn.
+Lo, Farinata, there! who hath himself
+Uplifted: from his girdle upwards all
+Expos'd behold him." On his face was mine
+Already fix'd; his breast and forehead there
+Erecting, seem'd as in high scorn he held
+E'en hell. Between the sepulchres to him
+My guide thrust me with fearless hands and prompt,
+This warning added: "See thy words be clear!"
+ He, soon as there I stood at the tomb's foot,
+Ey'd me a space, then in disdainful mood
+Address'd me: "Say, what ancestors were thine?"
+ I, willing to obey him, straight reveal'd
+The whole, nor kept back aught: whence he, his brow
+Somewhat uplifting, cried: "Fiercely were they
+Adverse to me, my party, and the blood
+From whence I sprang: twice therefore I abroad
+Scatter'd them." "Though driv'n out, yet they each time
+From all parts," answer'd I, "return'd; an art
+Which yours have shown, they are not skill'd to learn."
+ Then, peering forth from the unclosed jaw,
+Rose from his side a shade, high as the chin,
+Leaning, methought, upon its knees uprais'd.
+It look'd around, as eager to explore
+If there were other with me; but perceiving
+That fond imagination quench'd, with tears
+Thus spake: "If thou through this blind prison go'st.
+Led by thy lofty genius and profound,
+Where is my son? and wherefore not with thee?"
+ I straight replied: "Not of myself I come,
+By him, who there expects me, through this clime
+Conducted, whom perchance Guido thy son
+Had in contempt." Already had his words
+And mode of punishment read me his name,
+Whence I so fully answer'd. He at once
+Exclaim'd, up starting, "How! said'st thou he HAD?
+No longer lives he? Strikes not on his eye
+The blessed daylight?" Then of some delay
+I made ere my reply aware, down fell
+Supine, not after forth appear'd he more.
+ Meanwhile the other, great of soul, near whom
+I yet was station'd, chang'd not count'nance stern,
+Nor mov'd the neck, nor bent his ribbed side.
+"And if," continuing the first discourse,
+"They in this art," he cried, "small skill have shown,
+That doth torment me more e'en than this bed.
+But not yet fifty times shall be relum'd
+Her aspect, who reigns here Queen of this realm,
+Ere thou shalt know the full weight of that art.
+So to the pleasant world mayst thou return,
+As thou shalt tell me, why in all their laws,
+Against my kin this people is so fell?"
+ "The slaughter and great havoc," I replied,
+"That colour'd Arbia's flood with crimson stain--
+To these impute, that in our hallow'd dome
+Such orisons ascend." Sighing he shook
+The head, then thus resum'd: "In that affray
+I stood not singly, nor without just cause
+Assuredly should with the rest have stirr'd;
+But singly there I stood, when by consent
+Of all, Florence had to the ground been raz'd,
+The one who openly forbad the deed."
+ "So may thy lineage find at last repose,"
+I thus adjur'd him, "as thou solve this knot,
+Which now involves my mind. If right I hear,
+Ye seem to view beforehand, that which time
+Leads with him, of the present uninform'd."
+ "We view, as one who hath an evil sight,"
+He answer'd, "plainly, objects far remote:
+So much of his large spendour yet imparts
+The' Almighty Ruler; but when they approach
+Or actually exist, our intellect
+Then wholly fails, nor of your human state
+Except what others bring us know we aught.
+Hence therefore mayst thou understand, that all
+Our knowledge in that instant shall expire,
+When on futurity the portals close."
+ Then conscious of my fault, and by remorse
+Smitten, I added thus: "Now shalt thou say
+To him there fallen, that his offspring still
+Is to the living join'd; and bid him know,
+That if from answer silent I abstain'd,
+'Twas that my thought was occupied intent
+Upon that error, which thy help hath solv'd."
+ But now my master summoning me back
+I heard, and with more eager haste besought
+The spirit to inform me, who with him
+Partook his lot. He answer thus return'd:
+ "More than a thousand with me here are laid
+Within is Frederick, second of that name,
+And the Lord Cardinal, and of the rest
+I speak not." He, this said, from sight withdrew.
+But I my steps towards the ancient bard
+Reverting, ruminated on the words
+Betokening me such ill. Onward he mov'd,
+And thus in going question'd: "Whence the' amaze
+That holds thy senses wrapt?" I satisfied
+The' inquiry, and the sage enjoin'd me straight:
+"Let thy safe memory store what thou hast heard
+To thee importing harm; and note thou this,"
+With his rais'd finger bidding me take heed,
+ "When thou shalt stand before her gracious beam,
+Whose bright eye all surveys, she of thy life
+The future tenour will to thee unfold."
+ Forthwith he to the left hand turn'd his feet:
+We left the wall, and tow'rds the middle space
+Went by a path, that to a valley strikes;
+Which e'en thus high exhal'd its noisome steam.
+
+
+
+CANTO XI
+
+UPON the utmost verge of a high bank,
+By craggy rocks environ'd round, we came,
+Where woes beneath more cruel yet were stow'd:
+And here to shun the horrible excess
+Of fetid exhalation, upward cast
+From the profound abyss, behind the lid
+Of a great monument we stood retir'd,
+Whereon this scroll I mark'd: "I have in charge
+Pope Anastasius, whom Photinus drew
+From the right path.--Ere our descent behooves
+We make delay, that somewhat first the sense,
+To the dire breath accustom'd, afterward
+Regard it not." My master thus; to whom
+Answering I spake: "Some compensation find
+That the time past not wholly lost." He then:
+"Lo! how my thoughts e'en to thy wishes tend!
+My son! within these rocks," he thus began,
+"Are three close circles in gradation plac'd,
+As these which now thou leav'st. Each one is full
+Of spirits accurs'd; but that the sight alone
+Hereafter may suffice thee, listen how
+And for what cause in durance they abide.
+ "Of all malicious act abhorr'd in heaven,
+The end is injury; and all such end
+Either by force or fraud works other's woe
+But fraud, because of man peculiar evil,
+To God is more displeasing; and beneath
+The fraudulent are therefore doom'd to' endure
+Severer pang. The violent occupy
+All the first circle; and because to force
+Three persons are obnoxious, in three rounds
+Hach within other sep'rate is it fram'd.
+To God, his neighbour, and himself, by man
+Force may be offer'd; to himself I say
+And his possessions, as thou soon shalt hear
+At full. Death, violent death, and painful wounds
+Upon his neighbour he inflicts; and wastes
+By devastation, pillage, and the flames,
+His substance. Slayers, and each one that smites
+In malice, plund'rers, and all robbers, hence
+The torment undergo of the first round
+In different herds. Man can do violence
+To himself and his own blessings: and for this
+He in the second round must aye deplore
+With unavailing penitence his crime,
+Whoe'er deprives himself of life and light,
+In reckless lavishment his talent wastes,
+And sorrows there where he should dwell in joy.
+To God may force be offer'd, in the heart
+Denying and blaspheming his high power,
+And nature with her kindly law contemning.
+And thence the inmost round marks with its seal
+Sodom and Cahors, and all such as speak
+Contemptuously' of the Godhead in their hearts.
+ "Fraud, that in every conscience leaves a sting,
+May be by man employ'd on one, whose trust
+He wins, or on another who withholds
+Strict confidence. Seems as the latter way
+Broke but the bond of love which Nature makes.
+Whence in the second circle have their nest
+Dissimulation, witchcraft, flatteries,
+Theft, falsehood, simony, all who seduce
+To lust, or set their honesty at pawn,
+With such vile scum as these. The other way
+Forgets both Nature's general love, and that
+Which thereto added afterwards gives birth
+To special faith. Whence in the lesser circle,
+Point of the universe, dread seat of Dis,
+The traitor is eternally consum'd."
+ I thus: "Instructor, clearly thy discourse
+Proceeds, distinguishing the hideous chasm
+And its inhabitants with skill exact.
+But tell me this: they of the dull, fat pool,
+Whom the rain beats, or whom the tempest drives,
+Or who with tongues so fierce conflicting meet,
+Wherefore within the city fire-illum'd
+Are not these punish'd, if God's wrath be on them?
+And if it be not, wherefore in such guise
+Are they condemned?" He answer thus return'd:
+"Wherefore in dotage wanders thus thy mind,
+Not so accustom'd? or what other thoughts
+Possess it? Dwell not in thy memory
+The words, wherein thy ethic page describes
+Three dispositions adverse to Heav'n's will,
+Incont'nence, malice, and mad brutishness,
+And how incontinence the least offends
+God, and least guilt incurs? If well thou note
+This judgment, and remember who they are,
+Without these walls to vain repentance doom'd,
+Thou shalt discern why they apart are plac'd
+From these fell spirits, and less wreakful pours
+Justice divine on them its vengeance down."
+ "O Sun! who healest all imperfect sight,
+Thou so content'st me, when thou solv'st my doubt,
+That ignorance not less than knowledge charms.
+Yet somewhat turn thee back," I in these words
+Continu'd, "where thou saidst, that usury
+Offends celestial Goodness; and this knot
+Perplex'd unravel." He thus made reply:
+"Philosophy, to an attentive ear,
+Clearly points out, not in one part alone,
+How imitative nature takes her course
+From the celestial mind and from its art:
+And where her laws the Stagyrite unfolds,
+Not many leaves scann'd o'er, observing well
+Thou shalt discover, that your art on her
+Obsequious follows, as the learner treads
+In his instructor's step, so that your art
+Deserves the name of second in descent
+From God. These two, if thou recall to mind
+Creation's holy book, from the beginning
+Were the right source of life and excellence
+To human kind. But in another path
+The usurer walks; and Nature in herself
+And in her follower thus he sets at nought,
+Placing elsewhere his hope. But follow now
+My steps on forward journey bent; for now
+The Pisces play with undulating glance
+Along the' horizon, and the Wain lies all
+O'er the north-west; and onward there a space
+Is our steep passage down the rocky height."
+
+
+
+CANTO XII
+
+THE place where to descend the precipice
+We came, was rough as Alp, and on its verge
+Such object lay, as every eye would shun.
+ As is that ruin, which Adice's stream
+On this side Trento struck, should'ring the wave,
+Or loos'd by earthquake or for lack of prop;
+For from the mountain's summit, whence it mov'd
+To the low level, so the headlong rock
+Is shiver'd, that some passage it might give
+To him who from above would pass; e'en such
+Into the chasm was that descent: and there
+At point of the disparted ridge lay stretch'd
+The infamy of Crete, detested brood
+Of the feign'd heifer: and at sight of us
+It gnaw'd itself, as one with rage distract.
+To him my guide exclaim'd: "Perchance thou deem'st
+The King of Athens here, who, in the world
+Above, thy death contriv'd. Monster! avaunt!
+He comes not tutor'd by thy sister's art,
+But to behold your torments is he come."
+ Like to a bull, that with impetuous spring
+Darts, at the moment when the fatal blow
+Hath struck him, but unable to proceed
+Plunges on either side; so saw I plunge
+The Minotaur; whereat the sage exclaim'd:
+"Run to the passage! while he storms, 't is well
+That thou descend." Thus down our road we took
+Through those dilapidated crags, that oft
+Mov'd underneath my feet, to weight like theirs
+Unus'd. I pond'ring went, and thus he spake:
+ "Perhaps thy thoughts are of this ruin'd steep,
+Guarded by the brute violence, which I
+Have vanquish'd now. Know then, that when I erst
+Hither descended to the nether hell,
+This rock was not yet fallen. But past doubt
+(If well I mark) not long ere He arrived,
+Who carried off from Dis the mighty spoil
+Of the highest circle, then through all its bounds
+Such trembling seiz'd the deep concave and foul,
+I thought the universe was thrill'd with love,
+Whereby, there are who deem, the world hath oft
+Been into chaos turn'd: and in that point,
+Here, and elsewhere, that old rock toppled down.
+But fix thine eyes beneath: the river of blood
+Approaches, in the which all those are steep'd,
+Who have by violence injur'd." O blind lust!
+O foolish wrath! who so dost goad us on
+In the brief life, and in the eternal then
+Thus miserably o'erwhelm us. I beheld
+An ample foss, that in a bow was bent,
+As circling all the plain; for so my guide
+Had told. Between it and the rampart's base
+On trail ran Centaurs, with keen arrows arm'd,
+As to the chase they on the earth were wont.
+ At seeing us descend they each one stood;
+And issuing from the troop, three sped with bows
+And missile weapons chosen first; of whom
+One cried from far: "Say to what pain ye come
+Condemn'd, who down this steep have journied? Speak
+From whence ye stand, or else the bow I draw."
+ To whom my guide: "Our answer shall be made
+To Chiron, there, when nearer him we come.
+Ill was thy mind, thus ever quick and rash."
+ Then me he touch'd, and spake: "Nessus is this,
+Who for the fair Deianira died,
+And wrought himself revenge for his own fate.
+He in the midst, that on his breast looks down,
+Is the great Chiron who Achilles nurs'd;
+That other Pholus, prone to wrath." Around
+The foss these go by thousands, aiming shafts
+At whatsoever spirit dares emerge
+From out the blood, more than his guilt allows.
+ We to those beasts, that rapid strode along,
+Drew near, when Chiron took an arrow forth,
+And with the notch push'd back his shaggy beard
+To the cheek-bone, then his great mouth to view
+Exposing, to his fellows thus exclaim'd:
+"Are ye aware, that he who comes behind
+Moves what he touches? The feet of the dead
+Are not so wont." My trusty guide, who now
+Stood near his breast, where the two natures join,
+Thus made reply: "He is indeed alive,
+And solitary so must needs by me
+Be shown the gloomy vale, thereto induc'd
+By strict necessity, not by delight.
+She left her joyful harpings in the sky,
+Who this new office to my care consign'd.
+He is no robber, no dark spirit I.
+But by that virtue, which empowers my step
+To treat so wild a path, grant us, I pray,
+One of thy band, whom we may trust secure,
+Who to the ford may lead us, and convey
+Across, him mounted on his back; for he
+Is not a spirit that may walk the air."
+ Then on his right breast turning, Chiron thus
+To Nessus spake: "Return, and be their guide.
+And if ye chance to cross another troop,
+Command them keep aloof." Onward we mov'd,
+The faithful escort by our side, along
+The border of the crimson-seething flood,
+Whence from those steep'd within loud shrieks arose.
+ Some there I mark'd, as high as to their brow
+Immers'd, of whom the mighty Centaur thus:
+"These are the souls of tyrants, who were given
+To blood and rapine. Here they wail aloud
+Their merciless wrongs. Here Alexander dwells,
+And Dionysius fell, who many a year
+Of woe wrought for fair Sicily. That brow
+Whereon the hair so jetty clust'ring hangs,
+Is Azzolino; that with flaxen locks
+Obizzo' of Este, in the world destroy'd
+By his foul step-son." To the bard rever'd
+I turned me round, and thus he spake; "Let him
+Be to thee now first leader, me but next
+To him in rank." Then farther on a space
+The Centaur paus'd, near some, who at the throat
+Were extant from the wave; and showing us
+A spirit by itself apart retir'd,
+Exclaim'd: "He in God's bosom smote the heart,
+Which yet is honour'd on the bank of Thames."
+ A race I next espied, who held the head,
+And even all the bust above the stream.
+'Midst these I many a face remember'd well.
+Thus shallow more and more the blood became,
+So that at last it but imbru'd the feet;
+And there our passage lay athwart the foss.
+ "As ever on this side the boiling wave
+Thou seest diminishing," the Centaur said,
+"So on the other, be thou well assur'd,
+It lower still and lower sinks its bed,
+Till in that part it reuniting join,
+Where 't is the lot of tyranny to mourn.
+There Heav'n's stern justice lays chastising hand
+On Attila, who was the scourge of earth,
+On Sextus, and on Pyrrhus, and extracts
+Tears ever by the seething flood unlock'd
+From the Rinieri, of Corneto this,
+Pazzo the other nam'd, who fill'd the ways
+With violence and war." This said, he turn'd,
+And quitting us, alone repass'd the ford.
+
+
+
+CANTO XIII
+
+ERE Nessus yet had reach'd the other bank,
+We enter'd on a forest, where no track
+Of steps had worn a way. Not verdant there
+The foliage, but of dusky hue; not light
+The boughs and tapering, but with knares deform'd
+And matted thick: fruits there were none, but thorns
+Instead, with venom fill'd. Less sharp than these,
+Less intricate the brakes, wherein abide
+Those animals, that hate the cultur'd fields,
+Betwixt Corneto and Cecina's stream.
+ Here the brute Harpies make their nest, the same
+Who from the Strophades the Trojan band
+Drove with dire boding of their future woe.
+Broad are their pennons, of the human form
+Their neck and count'nance, arm'd with talons keen
+The feet, and the huge belly fledge with wings
+These sit and wail on the drear mystic wood.
+ The kind instructor in these words began:
+"Ere farther thou proceed, know thou art now
+I' th' second round, and shalt be, till thou come
+Upon the horrid sand: look therefore well
+Around thee, and such things thou shalt behold,
+As would my speech discredit." On all sides
+I heard sad plainings breathe, and none could see
+From whom they might have issu'd. In amaze
+Fast bound I stood. He, as it seem'd, believ'd,
+That I had thought so many voices came
+From some amid those thickets close conceal'd,
+And thus his speech resum'd: "If thou lop off
+A single twig from one of those ill plants,
+The thought thou hast conceiv'd shall vanish quite."
+ Thereat a little stretching forth my hand,
+From a great wilding gather'd I a branch,
+And straight the trunk exclaim'd: "Why pluck'st thou me?"
+Then as the dark blood trickled down its side,
+These words it added: "Wherefore tear'st me thus?
+Is there no touch of mercy in thy breast?
+Men once were we, that now are rooted here.
+Thy hand might well have spar'd us, had we been
+The souls of serpents." As a brand yet green,
+That burning at one end from the' other sends
+A groaning sound, and hisses with the wind
+That forces out its way, so burst at once,
+Forth from the broken splinter words and blood.
+ I, letting fall the bough, remain'd as one
+Assail'd by terror, and the sage replied:
+"If he, O injur'd spirit! could have believ'd
+What he hath seen but in my verse describ'd,
+He never against thee had stretch'd his hand.
+But I, because the thing surpass'd belief,
+Prompted him to this deed, which even now
+Myself I rue. But tell me, who thou wast;
+That, for this wrong to do thee some amends,
+In the upper world (for thither to return
+Is granted him) thy fame he may revive."
+ "That pleasant word of thine," the trunk replied
+"Hath so inveigled me, that I from speech
+Cannot refrain, wherein if I indulge
+A little longer, in the snare detain'd,
+Count it not grievous. I it was, who held
+Both keys to Frederick's heart, and turn'd the wards,
+Opening and shutting, with a skill so sweet,
+That besides me, into his inmost breast
+Scarce any other could admittance find.
+The faith I bore to my high charge was such,
+It cost me the life-blood that warm'd my veins.
+The harlot, who ne'er turn'd her gloating eyes
+From Caesar's household, common vice and pest
+Of courts, 'gainst me inflam'd the minds of all;
+And to Augustus they so spread the flame,
+That my glad honours chang'd to bitter woes.
+My soul, disdainful and disgusted, sought
+Refuge in death from scorn, and I became,
+Just as I was, unjust toward myself.
+By the new roots, which fix this stem, I swear,
+That never faith I broke to my liege lord,
+Who merited such honour; and of you,
+If any to the world indeed return,
+Clear he from wrong my memory, that lies
+Yet prostrate under envy's cruel blow."
+ First somewhat pausing, till the mournful words
+Were ended, then to me the bard began:
+"Lose not the time; but speak and of him ask,
+If more thou wish to learn." Whence I replied:
+"Question thou him again of whatsoe'er
+Will, as thou think'st, content me; for no power
+Have I to ask, such pity' is at my heart."
+ He thus resum'd; "So may he do for thee
+Freely what thou entreatest, as thou yet
+Be pleas'd, imprison'd Spirit! to declare,
+How in these gnarled joints the soul is tied;
+And whether any ever from such frame
+Be loosen'd, if thou canst, that also tell."
+ Thereat the trunk breath'd hard, and the wind soon
+Chang'd into sounds articulate like these;
+ Briefly ye shall be answer'd. When departs
+The fierce soul from the body, by itself
+Thence torn asunder, to the seventh gulf
+By Minos doom'd, into the wood it falls,
+No place assign'd, but wheresoever chance
+Hurls it, there sprouting, as a grain of spelt,
+It rises to a sapling, growing thence
+A savage plant. The Harpies, on its leaves
+Then feeding, cause both pain and for the pain
+A vent to grief. We, as the rest, shall come
+For our own spoils, yet not so that with them
+We may again be clad; for what a man
+Takes from himself it is not just he have.
+Here we perforce shall drag them; and throughout
+The dismal glade our bodies shall be hung,
+Each on the wild thorn of his wretched shade."
+ Attentive yet to listen to the trunk
+We stood, expecting farther speech, when us
+A noise surpris'd, as when a man perceives
+The wild boar and the hunt approach his place
+Of station'd watch, who of the beasts and boughs
+Loud rustling round him hears. And lo! there came
+Two naked, torn with briers, in headlong flight,
+That they before them broke each fan o' th' wood.
+"Haste now," the foremost cried, "now haste thee death!"
+The' other, as seem'd, impatient of delay
+Exclaiming, "Lano! not so bent for speed
+Thy sinews, in the lists of Toppo's field."
+And then, for that perchance no longer breath
+Suffic'd him, of himself and of a bush
+One group he made. Behind them was the wood
+Full of black female mastiffs, gaunt and fleet,
+As greyhounds that have newly slipp'd the leash.
+On him, who squatted down, they stuck their fangs,
+And having rent him piecemeal bore away
+The tortur'd limbs. My guide then seiz'd my hand,
+And led me to the thicket, which in vain
+Mourn'd through its bleeding wounds: "O Giacomo
+Of Sant' Andrea! what avails it thee,"
+It cried, "that of me thou hast made thy screen?
+For thy ill life what blame on me recoils?"
+ When o'er it he had paus'd, my master spake:
+"Say who wast thou, that at so many points
+Breath'st out with blood thy lamentable speech?"
+ He answer'd: "Oh, ye spirits: arriv'd in time
+To spy the shameful havoc, that from me
+My leaves hath sever'd thus, gather them up,
+And at the foot of their sad parent-tree
+Carefully lay them. In that city' I dwelt,
+Who for the Baptist her first patron chang'd,
+Whence he for this shall cease not with his art
+To work her woe: and if there still remain'd not
+On Arno's passage some faint glimpse of him,
+Those citizens, who rear'd once more her walls
+Upon the ashes left by Attila,
+Had labour'd without profit of their toil.
+I slung the fatal noose from my own roof."
+
+
+
+CANTO XIV
+
+SOON as the charity of native land
+Wrought in my bosom, I the scatter'd leaves
+Collected, and to him restor'd, who now
+Was hoarse with utt'rance. To the limit thence
+We came, which from the third the second round
+Divides, and where of justice is display'd
+Contrivance horrible. Things then first seen
+Clearlier to manifest, I tell how next
+A plain we reach'd, that from its sterile bed
+Each plant repell'd. The mournful wood waves round
+Its garland on all sides, as round the wood
+Spreads the sad foss. There, on the very edge,
+Our steps we stay'd. It was an area wide
+Of arid sand and thick, resembling most
+The soil that erst by Cato's foot was trod.
+ Vengeance of Heav'n! Oh ! how shouldst thou be fear'd
+By all, who read what here my eyes beheld!
+ Of naked spirits many a flock I saw,
+All weeping piteously, to different laws
+Subjected: for on the' earth some lay supine,
+Some crouching close were seated, others pac'd
+Incessantly around; the latter tribe,
+More numerous, those fewer who beneath
+The torment lay, but louder in their grief.
+ O'er all the sand fell slowly wafting down
+Dilated flakes of fire, as flakes of snow
+On Alpine summit, when the wind is hush'd.
+As in the torrid Indian clime, the son
+Of Ammon saw upon his warrior band
+Descending, solid flames, that to the ground
+Came down: whence he bethought him with his troop
+To trample on the soil; for easier thus
+The vapour was extinguish'd, while alone;
+So fell the eternal fiery flood, wherewith
+The marble glow'd underneath, as under stove
+The viands, doubly to augment the pain.
+Unceasing was the play of wretched hands,
+Now this, now that way glancing, to shake off
+The heat, still falling fresh. I thus began:
+"Instructor! thou who all things overcom'st,
+Except the hardy demons, that rush'd forth
+To stop our entrance at the gate, say who
+Is yon huge spirit, that, as seems, heeds not
+The burning, but lies writhen in proud scorn,
+As by the sultry tempest immatur'd?"
+ Straight he himself, who was aware I ask'd
+My guide of him, exclaim'd: "Such as I was
+When living, dead such now I am. If Jove
+Weary his workman out, from whom in ire
+He snatch'd the lightnings, that at my last day
+Transfix'd me, if the rest be weary out
+At their black smithy labouring by turns
+In Mongibello, while he cries aloud;
+"Help, help, good Mulciber!" as erst he cried
+In the Phlegraean warfare, and the bolts
+Launch he full aim'd at me with all his might,
+He never should enjoy a sweet revenge."
+ Then thus my guide, in accent higher rais'd
+Than I before had heard him: "Capaneus!
+Thou art more punish'd, in that this thy pride
+Lives yet unquench'd: no torrent, save thy rage,
+Were to thy fury pain proportion'd full."
+ Next turning round to me with milder lip
+He spake: "This of the seven kings was one,
+Who girt the Theban walls with siege, and held,
+As still he seems to hold, God in disdain,
+And sets his high omnipotence at nought.
+But, as I told him, his despiteful mood
+Is ornament well suits the breast that wears it.
+Follow me now; and look thou set not yet
+Thy foot in the hot sand, but to the wood
+Keep ever close." Silently on we pass'd
+To where there gushes from the forest's bound
+A little brook, whose crimson'd wave yet lifts
+My hair with horror. As the rill, that runs
+From Bulicame, to be portion'd out
+Among the sinful women; so ran this
+Down through the sand, its bottom and each bank
+Stone-built, and either margin at its side,
+Whereon I straight perceiv'd our passage lay.
+ "Of all that I have shown thee, since that gate
+We enter'd first, whose threshold is to none
+Denied, nought else so worthy of regard,
+As is this river, has thine eye discern'd,
+O'er which the flaming volley all is quench'd."
+ So spake my guide; and I him thence besought,
+That having giv'n me appetite to know,
+The food he too would give, that hunger crav'd.
+ "In midst of ocean," forthwith he began,
+"A desolate country lies, which Crete is nam'd,
+Under whose monarch in old times the world
+Liv'd pure and chaste. A mountain rises there,
+Call'd Ida, joyous once with leaves and streams,
+Deserted now like a forbidden thing.
+It was the spot which Rhea, Saturn's spouse,
+Chose for the secret cradle of her son;
+And better to conceal him, drown'd in shouts
+His infant cries. Within the mount, upright
+An ancient form there stands and huge, that turns
+His shoulders towards Damiata, and at Rome
+As in his mirror looks. Of finest gold
+His head is shap'd, pure silver are the breast
+And arms; thence to the middle is of brass.
+And downward all beneath well-temper'd steel,
+Save the right foot of potter's clay, on which
+Than on the other more erect he stands,
+Each part except the gold, is rent throughout;
+And from the fissure tears distil, which join'd
+Penetrate to that cave. They in their course
+Thus far precipitated down the rock
+Form Acheron, and Styx, and Phlegethon;
+Then by this straiten'd channel passing hence
+Beneath, e'en to the lowest depth of all,
+Form there Cocytus, of whose lake (thyself
+Shall see it) I here give thee no account."
+ Then I to him: "If from our world this sluice
+Be thus deriv'd; wherefore to us but now
+Appears it at this edge?" He straight replied:
+"The place, thou know'st, is round; and though great part
+Thou have already pass'd, still to the left
+Descending to the nethermost, not yet
+Hast thou the circuit made of the whole orb.
+Wherefore if aught of new to us appear,
+It needs not bring up wonder in thy looks."
+ Then I again inquir'd: "Where flow the streams
+Of Phlegethon and Lethe? for of one
+Thou tell'st not, and the other of that shower,
+Thou say'st, is form'd." He answer thus return'd:
+"Doubtless thy questions all well pleas'd I hear.
+Yet the red seething wave might have resolv'd
+One thou proposest. Lethe thou shalt see,
+But not within this hollow, in the place,
+Whither to lave themselves the spirits go,
+Whose blame hath been by penitence remov'd."
+He added: "Time is now we quit the wood.
+Look thou my steps pursue: the margins give
+Safe passage, unimpeded by the flames;
+For over them all vapour is extinct."
+
+
+
+CANTO XV
+
+One of the solid margins bears us now
+Envelop'd in the mist, that from the stream
+Arising, hovers o'er, and saves from fire
+Both piers and water. As the Flemings rear
+Their mound, 'twixt Ghent and Bruges, to chase back
+The ocean, fearing his tumultuous tide
+That drives toward them, or the Paduans theirs
+Along the Brenta, to defend their towns
+And castles, ere the genial warmth be felt
+On Chiarentana's top; such were the mounds,
+So fram'd, though not in height or bulk to these
+Made equal, by the master, whosoe'er
+He was, that rais'd them here. We from the wood
+Were not so far remov'd, that turning round
+I might not have discern'd it, when we met
+A troop of spirits, who came beside the pier.
+ They each one ey'd us, as at eventide
+One eyes another under a new moon,
+And toward us sharpen'd their sight as keen,
+As an old tailor at his needle's eye.
+ Thus narrowly explor'd by all the tribe,
+I was agniz'd of one, who by the skirt
+Caught me, and cried, "What wonder have we here!"
+ And I, when he to me outstretch'd his arm,
+Intently fix'd my ken on his parch'd looks,
+That although smirch'd with fire, they hinder'd not
+But I remember'd him; and towards his face
+My hand inclining, answer'd: "Sir! Brunetto!
+And art thou here?" He thus to me: "My son!
+Oh let it not displease thee, if Brunetto
+Latini but a little space with thee
+Turn back, and leave his fellows to proceed."
+ I thus to him replied: "Much as I can,
+I thereto pray thee; and if thou be willing,
+That I here seat me with thee, I consent;
+His leave, with whom I journey, first obtain'd."
+ "O son!" said he, " whoever of this throng
+One instant stops, lies then a hundred years,
+No fan to ventilate him, when the fire
+Smites sorest. Pass thou therefore on. I close
+Will at thy garments walk, and then rejoin
+My troop, who go mourning their endless doom."
+ I dar'd not from the path descend to tread
+On equal ground with him, but held my head
+Bent down, as one who walks in reverent guise.
+ "What chance or destiny," thus be began,
+"Ere the last day conducts thee here below?
+And who is this, that shows to thee the way?"
+ "There up aloft," I answer'd, "in the life
+Serene, I wander'd in a valley lost,
+Before mine age had to its fullness reach'd.
+But yester-morn I left it: then once more
+Into that vale returning, him I met;
+And by this path homeward he leads me back."
+ "If thou," he answer'd, "follow but thy star,
+Thou canst not miss at last a glorious haven:
+Unless in fairer days my judgment err'd.
+And if my fate so early had not chanc'd,
+Seeing the heav'ns thus bounteous to thee, I
+Had gladly giv'n thee comfort in thy work.
+But that ungrateful and malignant race,
+Who in old times came down from Fesole,
+Ay and still smack of their rough mountain-flint,
+Will for thy good deeds shew thee enmity.
+Nor wonder; for amongst ill-savour'd crabs
+It suits not the sweet fig-tree lay her fruit.
+Old fame reports them in the world for blind,
+Covetous, envious, proud. Look to it well:
+Take heed thou cleanse thee of their ways. For thee
+Thy fortune hath such honour in reserve,
+That thou by either party shalt be crav'd
+With hunger keen: but be the fresh herb far
+From the goat's tooth. The herd of Fesole
+May of themselves make litter, not touch the plant,
+If any such yet spring on their rank bed,
+In which the holy seed revives, transmitted
+From those true Romans, who still there remain'd,
+When it was made the nest of so much ill."
+ "Were all my wish fulfill'd," I straight replied,
+"Thou from the confines of man's nature yet
+Hadst not been driven forth; for in my mind
+Is fix'd, and now strikes full upon my heart
+The dear, benign, paternal image, such
+As thine was, when so lately thou didst teach me
+The way for man to win eternity;
+And how I priz'd the lesson, it behooves,
+That, long as life endures, my tongue should speak,
+What of my fate thou tell'st, that write I down:
+And with another text to comment on
+For her I keep it, the celestial dame,
+Who will know all, if I to her arrive.
+This only would I have thee clearly note:
+That so my conscience have no plea against me;
+Do fortune as she list, I stand prepar'd.
+Not new or strange such earnest to mine ear.
+Speed fortune then her wheel, as likes her best,
+The clown his mattock; all things have their course."
+ Thereat my sapient guide upon his right
+Turn'd himself back, then look'd at me and spake:
+"He listens to good purpose who takes note."
+ I not the less still on my way proceed,
+Discoursing with Brunetto, and inquire
+Who are most known and chief among his tribe.
+ "To know of some is well;" thus he replied,
+"But of the rest silence may best beseem.
+Time would not serve us for report so long.
+In brief I tell thee, that all these were clerks,
+Men of great learning and no less renown,
+By one same sin polluted in the world.
+With them is Priscian, and Accorso's son
+Francesco herds among that wretched throng:
+And, if the wish of so impure a blotch
+Possess'd thee, him thou also might'st have seen,
+Who by the servants' servant was transferr'd
+From Arno's seat to Bacchiglione, where
+His ill-strain'd nerves he left. I more would add,
+But must from farther speech and onward way
+Alike desist, for yonder I behold
+A mist new-risen on the sandy plain.
+A company, with whom I may not sort,
+Approaches. I commend my TREASURE to thee,
+Wherein I yet survive; my sole request."
+ This said he turn'd, and seem'd as one of those,
+Who o'er Verona's champain try their speed
+For the green mantle, and of them he seem'd,
+Not he who loses but who gains the prize.
+
+
+
+CANTO XVI
+
+NOW came I where the water's din was heard,
+As down it fell into the other round,
+Resounding like the hum of swarming bees:
+When forth together issu'd from a troop,
+That pass'd beneath the fierce tormenting storm,
+Three spirits, running swift. They towards us came,
+And each one cried aloud, "Oh do thou stay!
+Whom by the fashion of thy garb we deem
+To be some inmate of our evil land."
+ Ah me! what wounds I mark'd upon their limbs,
+Recent and old, inflicted by the flames!
+E'en the remembrance of them grieves me yet.
+ Attentive to their cry my teacher paus'd,
+And turn'd to me his visage, and then spake;
+"Wait now! our courtesy these merit well:
+And were 't not for the nature of the place,
+Whence glide the fiery darts, I should have said,
+That haste had better suited thee than them.''
+ They, when we stopp'd, resum'd their ancient wail,
+And soon as they had reach'd us, all the three
+Whirl'd round together in one restless wheel.
+As naked champions, smear'd with slippery oil,
+Are wont intent to watch their place of hold
+And vantage, ere in closer strife they meet;
+Thus each one, as he wheel'd, his countenance
+At me directed, so that opposite
+The neck mov'd ever to the twinkling feet.
+ "If misery of this drear wilderness,"
+Thus one began, "added to our sad cheer
+And destitute, do call forth scorn on us
+And our entreaties, let our great renown
+Incline thee to inform us who thou art,
+That dost imprint with living feet unharm'd
+The soil of Hell. He, in whose track thou see'st
+My steps pursuing, naked though he be
+And reft of all, was of more high estate
+Than thou believest; grandchild of the chaste
+Gualdrada, him they Guidoguerra call'd,
+Who in his lifetime many a noble act
+Achiev'd, both by his wisdom and his sword.
+The other, next to me that beats the sand,
+Is Aldobrandi, name deserving well,
+In the' upper world, of honour; and myself
+Who in this torment do partake with them,
+Am Rusticucci, whom, past doubt, my wife
+Of savage temper, more than aught beside
+Hath to this evil brought." If from the fire
+I had been shelter'd, down amidst them straight
+I then had cast me, nor my guide, I deem,
+Would have restrain'd my going; but that fear
+Of the dire burning vanquish'd the desire,
+Which made me eager of their wish'd embrace.
+ I then began: "Not scorn, but grief much more,
+Such as long time alone can cure, your doom
+Fix'd deep within me, soon as this my lord
+Spake words, whose tenour taught me to expect
+That such a race, as ye are, was at hand.
+I am a countryman of yours, who still
+Affectionate have utter'd, and have heard
+Your deeds and names renown'd. Leaving the gall
+For the sweet fruit I go, that a sure guide
+Hath promis'd to me. But behooves, that far
+As to the centre first I downward tend."
+ "So may long space thy spirit guide thy limbs,"
+He answer straight return'd; "and so thy fame
+Shine bright, when thou art gone; as thou shalt tell,
+If courtesy and valour, as they wont,
+Dwell in our city, or have vanish'd clean?
+For one amidst us late condemn'd to wail,
+Borsiere, yonder walking with his peers,
+Grieves us no little by the news he brings."
+ "An upstart multitude and sudden gains,
+Pride and excess, O Florence! have in thee
+Engender'd, so that now in tears thou mourn'st!"
+Thus cried I with my face uprais'd, and they
+All three, who for an answer took my words,
+Look'd at each other, as men look when truth
+Comes to their ear. "If thou at other times,"
+They all at once rejoin'd, "so easily
+Satisfy those, who question, happy thou,
+Gifted with words, so apt to speak thy thought!
+Wherefore if thou escape this darksome clime,
+Returning to behold the radiant stars,
+When thou with pleasure shalt retrace the past,
+See that of us thou speak among mankind."
+ This said, they broke the circle, and so swift
+Fled, that as pinions seem'd their nimble feet.
+ Not in so short a time might one have said
+"Amen," as they had vanish'd. Straight my guide
+Pursu'd his track. I follow'd; and small space
+Had we pass'd onward, when the water's sound
+Was now so near at hand, that we had scarce
+Heard one another's speech for the loud din.
+ E'en as the river, that holds on its course
+Unmingled, from the mount of Vesulo,
+On the left side of Apennine, toward
+The east, which Acquacheta higher up
+They call, ere it descend into the vale,
+At Forli by that name no longer known,
+Rebellows o'er Saint Benedict, roll'd on
+From the' Alpine summit down a precipice,
+Where space enough to lodge a thousand spreads;
+Thus downward from a craggy steep we found,
+That this dark wave resounded, roaring loud,
+So that the ear its clamour soon had stunn'd.
+ I had a cord that brac'd my girdle round,
+Wherewith I erst had thought fast bound to take
+The painted leopard. This when I had all
+Unloosen'd from me (so my master bade)
+I gather'd up, and stretch'd it forth to him.
+Then to the right he turn'd, and from the brink
+Standing few paces distant, cast it down
+Into the deep abyss. "And somewhat strange,"
+Thus to myself I spake, "signal so strange
+Betokens, which my guide with earnest eye
+Thus follows." Ah! what caution must men use
+With those who look not at the deed alone,
+But spy into the thoughts with subtle skill!
+ "Quickly shall come," he said, "what I expect,
+Thine eye discover quickly, that whereof
+Thy thought is dreaming." Ever to that truth,
+Which but the semblance of a falsehood wears,
+A man, if possible, should bar his lip;
+Since, although blameless, he incurs reproach.
+But silence here were vain; and by these notes
+Which now I sing, reader! I swear to thee,
+So may they favour find to latest times!
+That through the gross and murky air I spied
+A shape come swimming up, that might have quell'd
+The stoutest heart with wonder, in such guise
+As one returns, who hath been down to loose
+An anchor grappled fast against some rock,
+Or to aught else that in the salt wave lies,
+Who upward springing close draws in his feet.
+
+
+
+CANTO XVII
+
+"LO! the fell monster with the deadly sting!
+Who passes mountains, breaks through fenced walls
+And firm embattled spears, and with his filth
+Taints all the world!" Thus me my guide address'd,
+And beckon'd him, that he should come to shore,
+Near to the stony causeway's utmost edge.
+ Forthwith that image vile of fraud appear'd,
+His head and upper part expos'd on land,
+But laid not on the shore his bestial train.
+His face the semblance of a just man's wore,
+So kind and gracious was its outward cheer;
+The rest was serpent all: two shaggy claws
+Reach'd to the armpits, and the back and breast,
+And either side, were painted o'er with nodes
+And orbits. Colours variegated more
+Nor Turks nor Tartars e'er on cloth of state
+With interchangeable embroidery wove,
+Nor spread Arachne o'er her curious loom.
+As ofttimes a light skiff, moor'd to the shore,
+Stands part in water, part upon the land;
+Or, as where dwells the greedy German boor,
+The beaver settles watching for his prey;
+So on the rim, that fenc'd the sand with rock,
+Sat perch'd the fiend of evil. In the void
+Glancing, his tail upturn'd its venomous fork,
+With sting like scorpion's arm'd. Then thus my guide:
+"Now need our way must turn few steps apart,
+Far as to that ill beast, who couches there."
+ Thereat toward the right our downward course
+We shap'd, and, better to escape the flame
+And burning marle, ten paces on the verge
+Proceeded. Soon as we to him arrive,
+A little further on mine eye beholds
+A tribe of spirits, seated on the sand
+Near the wide chasm. Forthwith my master spake:
+"That to the full thy knowledge may extend
+Of all this round contains, go now, and mark
+The mien these wear: but hold not long discourse.
+Till thou returnest, I with him meantime
+Will parley, that to us he may vouchsafe
+The aid of his strong shoulders." Thus alone
+Yet forward on the' extremity I pac'd
+Of that seventh circle, where the mournful tribe
+Were seated. At the eyes forth gush'd their pangs.
+Against the vapours and the torrid soil
+Alternately their shifting hands they plied.
+Thus use the dogs in summer still to ply
+Their jaws and feet by turns, when bitten sore
+By gnats, or flies, or gadflies swarming round.
+ Noting the visages of some, who lay
+Beneath the pelting of that dolorous fire,
+One of them all I knew not; but perceiv'd,
+That pendent from his neck each bore a pouch
+With colours and with emblems various mark'd,
+On which it seem'd as if their eye did feed.
+ And when amongst them looking round I came,
+A yellow purse I saw with azure wrought,
+That wore a lion's countenance and port.
+Then still my sight pursuing its career,
+Another I beheld, than blood more red.
+A goose display of whiter wing than curd.
+And one, who bore a fat and azure swine
+Pictur'd on his white scrip, addressed me thus:
+"What dost thou in this deep? Go now and know,
+Since yet thou livest, that my neighbour here
+Vitaliano on my left shall sit.
+A Paduan with these Florentines am I.
+Ofttimes they thunder in mine ears, exclaiming
+"O haste that noble knight! he who the pouch
+With the three beaks will bring!" This said, he writh'd
+The mouth, and loll'd the tongue out, like an ox
+That licks his nostrils. I, lest longer stay
+He ill might brook, who bade me stay not long,
+Backward my steps from those sad spirits turn'd.
+ My guide already seated on the haunch
+Of the fierce animal I found; and thus
+He me encourag'd. "Be thou stout; be bold.
+Down such a steep flight must we now descend!
+Mount thou before: for that no power the tail
+May have to harm thee, I will be i' th' midst."
+ As one, who hath an ague fit so near,
+His nails already are turn'd blue, and he
+Quivers all o'er, if he but eye the shade;
+Such was my cheer at hearing of his words.
+But shame soon interpos'd her threat, who makes
+The servant bold in presence of his lord.
+ I settled me upon those shoulders huge,
+And would have said, but that the words to aid
+My purpose came not, "Look thou clasp me firm!"
+ But he whose succour then not first I prov'd,
+Soon as I mounted, in his arms aloft,
+Embracing, held me up, and thus he spake:
+"Geryon! now move thee! be thy wheeling gyres
+Of ample circuit, easy thy descent.
+Think on th' unusual burden thou sustain'st."
+ As a small vessel, back'ning out from land,
+Her station quits; so thence the monster loos'd,
+And when he felt himself at large, turn'd round
+There where the breast had been, his forked tail.
+Thus, like an eel, outstretch'd at length he steer'd,
+Gath'ring the air up with retractile claws.
+ Not greater was the dread when Phaeton
+The reins let drop at random, whence high heaven,
+Whereof signs yet appear, was wrapt in flames;
+Nor when ill-fated Icarus perceiv'd,
+By liquefaction of the scalded wax,
+The trusted pennons loosen'd from his loins,
+His sire exclaiming loud, "Ill way thou keep'st!"
+Than was my dread, when round me on each part
+The air I view'd, and other object none
+Save the fell beast. He slowly sailing, wheels
+His downward motion, unobserv'd of me,
+But that the wind, arising to my face,
+Breathes on me from below. Now on our right
+I heard the cataract beneath us leap
+With hideous crash; whence bending down to' explore,
+New terror I conceiv'd at the steep plunge:
+For flames I saw, and wailings smote mine ear:
+So that all trembling close I crouch'd my limbs,
+And then distinguish'd, unperceiv'd before,
+By the dread torments that on every side
+Drew nearer, how our downward course we wound.
+ As falcon, that hath long been on the wing,
+But lure nor bird hath seen, while in despair
+The falconer cries, "Ah me! thou stoop'st to earth!"
+Wearied descends, and swiftly down the sky
+In many an orbit wheels, then lighting sits
+At distance from his lord in angry mood;
+So Geryon lighting places us on foot
+Low down at base of the deep-furrow'd rock,
+And, of his burden there discharg'd, forthwith
+Sprang forward, like an arrow from the string.
+
+
+
+CANTO XVIII
+
+THERE is a place within the depths of hell
+Call'd Malebolge, all of rock dark-stain'd
+With hue ferruginous, e'en as the steep
+That round it circling winds. Right in the midst
+Of that abominable region, yawns
+A spacious gulf profound, whereof the frame
+Due time shall tell. The circle, that remains,
+Throughout its round, between the gulf and base
+Of the high craggy banks, successive forms
+Ten trenches, in its hollow bottom sunk.
+ As where to guard the walls, full many a foss
+Begirds some stately castle, sure defence
+Affording to the space within, so here
+Were model'd these; and as like fortresses
+E'en from their threshold to the brink without,
+Are flank'd with bridges; from the rock's low base
+Thus flinty paths advanc'd, that 'cross the moles
+And dikes, struck onward far as to the gulf,
+That in one bound collected cuts them off.
+Such was the place, wherein we found ourselves
+From Geryon's back dislodg'd. The bard to left
+Held on his way, and I behind him mov'd.
+ On our right hand new misery I saw,
+New pains, new executioners of wrath,
+That swarming peopled the first chasm. Below
+Were naked sinners. Hitherward they came,
+Meeting our faces from the middle point,
+With us beyond but with a larger stride.
+E'en thus the Romans, when the year returns
+Of Jubilee, with better speed to rid
+The thronging multitudes, their means devise
+For such as pass the bridge; that on one side
+All front toward the castle, and approach
+Saint Peter's fane, on th' other towards the mount.
+ Each divers way along the grisly rock,
+Horn'd demons I beheld, with lashes huge,
+That on their back unmercifully smote.
+Ah! how they made them bound at the first stripe!
+None for the second waited nor the third.
+ Meantime as on I pass'd, one met my sight
+Whom soon as view'd; "Of him," cried I, "not yet
+Mine eye hath had his fill." With fixed gaze
+I therefore scann'd him. Straight the teacher kind
+Paus'd with me, and consented I should walk
+Backward a space, and the tormented spirit,
+Who thought to hide him, bent his visage down.
+But it avail'd him nought; for I exclaim'd:
+"Thou who dost cast thy eye upon the ground,
+Unless thy features do belie thee much,
+Venedico art thou. But what brings thee
+Into this bitter seas'ning? " He replied:
+"Unwillingly I answer to thy words.
+But thy clear speech, that to my mind recalls
+The world I once inhabited, constrains me.
+Know then 'twas I who led fair Ghisola
+To do the Marquis' will, however fame
+The shameful tale have bruited. Nor alone
+Bologna hither sendeth me to mourn
+Rather with us the place is so o'erthrong'd
+That not so many tongues this day are taught,
+Betwixt the Reno and Savena's stream,
+To answer SIPA in their country's phrase.
+And if of that securer proof thou need,
+Remember but our craving thirst for gold."
+ Him speaking thus, a demon with his thong
+Struck, and exclaim'd, "Away! corrupter! here
+Women are none for sale." Forthwith I join'd
+My escort, and few paces thence we came
+To where a rock forth issued from the bank.
+That easily ascended, to the right
+Upon its splinter turning, we depart
+From those eternal barriers. When arriv'd,
+Where underneath the gaping arch lets pass
+The scourged souls: "Pause here," the teacher said,
+"And let these others miserable, now
+Strike on thy ken, faces not yet beheld,
+For that together they with us have walk'd."
+ From the old bridge we ey'd the pack, who came
+From th' other side towards us, like the rest,
+Excoriate from the lash. My gentle guide,
+By me unquestion'd, thus his speech resum'd:
+"Behold that lofty shade, who this way tends,
+And seems too woe-begone to drop a tear.
+How yet the regal aspect he retains!
+Jason is he, whose skill and prowess won
+The ram from Colchos. To the Lemnian isle
+His passage thither led him, when those bold
+And pitiless women had slain all their males.
+There he with tokens and fair witching words
+Hypsipyle beguil'd, a virgin young,
+Who first had all the rest herself beguil'd.
+Impregnated he left her there forlorn.
+Such is the guilt condemns him to this pain.
+Here too Medea's inj'ries are avenged.
+All bear him company, who like deceit
+To his have practis'd. And thus much to know
+Of the first vale suffice thee, and of those
+Whom its keen torments urge." Now had we come
+Where, crossing the next pier, the straighten'd path
+Bestrides its shoulders to another arch.
+ Hence in the second chasm we heard the ghosts,
+Who jibber in low melancholy sounds,
+With wide-stretch'd nostrils snort, and on themselves
+Smite with their palms. Upon the banks a scurf
+From the foul steam condens'd, encrusting hung,
+That held sharp combat with the sight and smell.
+ So hollow is the depth, that from no part,
+Save on the summit of the rocky span,
+Could I distinguish aught. Thus far we came;
+And thence I saw, within the foss below,
+A crowd immers'd in ordure, that appear'd
+Draff of the human body. There beneath
+Searching with eye inquisitive, I mark'd
+One with his head so grim'd, 't were hard to deem,
+If he were clerk or layman. Loud he cried:
+"Why greedily thus bendest more on me,
+Than on these other filthy ones, thy ken?"
+ "Because if true my mem'ry," I replied,
+"I heretofore have seen thee with dry locks,
+And thou Alessio art of Lucca sprung.
+Therefore than all the rest I scan thee more."
+ Then beating on his brain these words he spake:
+"Me thus low down my flatteries have sunk,
+Wherewith I ne'er enough could glut my tongue."
+ My leader thus: "A little further stretch
+Thy face, that thou the visage well mayst note
+Of that besotted, sluttish courtezan,
+Who there doth rend her with defiled nails,
+Now crouching down, now risen on her feet.
+Thais is this, the harlot, whose false lip
+Answer'd her doting paramour that ask'd,
+'Thankest me much!'--'Say rather wondrously,'
+And seeing this here satiate be our view."
+
+
+
+CANTO XIX
+
+WOE to thee, Simon Magus! woe to you,
+His wretched followers! who the things of God,
+Which should be wedded unto goodness, them,
+Rapacious as ye are, do prostitute
+For gold and silver in adultery!
+Now must the trumpet sound for you, since yours
+Is the third chasm. Upon the following vault
+We now had mounted, where the rock impends
+Directly o'er the centre of the foss.
+ Wisdom Supreme! how wonderful the art,
+Which thou dost manifest in heaven, in earth,
+And in the evil world, how just a meed
+Allotting by thy virtue unto all!
+ I saw the livid stone, throughout the sides
+And in its bottom full of apertures,
+All equal in their width, and circular each,
+Nor ample less nor larger they appear'd
+Than in Saint John's fair dome of me belov'd
+Those fram'd to hold the pure baptismal streams,
+One of the which I brake, some few years past,
+To save a whelming infant; and be this
+A seal to undeceive whoever doubts
+The motive of my deed. From out the mouth
+Of every one, emerg'd a sinner's feet
+And of the legs high upward as the calf
+The rest beneath was hid. On either foot
+The soles were burning, whence the flexile joints
+Glanc'd with such violent motion, as had snapt
+Asunder cords or twisted withs. As flame,
+Feeding on unctuous matter, glides along
+The surface, scarcely touching where it moves;
+So here, from heel to point, glided the flames.
+ "Master! say who is he, than all the rest
+Glancing in fiercer agony, on whom
+A ruddier flame doth prey?" I thus inquir'd.
+ "If thou be willing," he replied, "that I
+Carry thee down, where least the slope bank falls,
+He of himself shall tell thee and his wrongs."
+ I then: "As pleases thee to me is best.
+Thou art my lord; and know'st that ne'er I quit
+Thy will: what silence hides that knowest thou."
+Thereat on the fourth pier we came, we turn'd,
+And on our left descended to the depth,
+A narrow strait and perforated close.
+Nor from his side my leader set me down,
+Till to his orifice he brought, whose limb
+Quiv'ring express'd his pang. "Whoe'er thou art,
+Sad spirit! thus revers'd, and as a stake
+Driv'n in the soil!" I in these words began,
+"If thou be able, utter forth thy voice."
+ There stood I like the friar, that doth shrive
+A wretch for murder doom'd, who e'en when fix'd,
+Calleth him back, whence death awhile delays.
+ He shouted: "Ha! already standest there?
+Already standest there, O Boniface!
+By many a year the writing play'd me false.
+So early dost thou surfeit with the wealth,
+For which thou fearedst not in guile to take
+The lovely lady, and then mangle her?"
+ I felt as those who, piercing not the drift
+Of answer made them, stand as if expos'd
+In mockery, nor know what to reply,
+When Virgil thus admonish'd: "Tell him quick,
+I am not he, not he, whom thou believ'st."
+ And I, as was enjoin'd me, straight replied.
+ That heard, the spirit all did wrench his feet,
+And sighing next in woeful accent spake:
+"What then of me requirest?" If to know
+So much imports thee, who I am, that thou
+Hast therefore down the bank descended, learn
+That in the mighty mantle I was rob'd,
+And of a she-bear was indeed the son,
+So eager to advance my whelps, that there
+My having in my purse above I stow'd,
+And here myself. Under my head are dragg'd
+The rest, my predecessors in the guilt
+Of simony. Stretch'd at their length they lie
+Along an opening in the rock. 'Midst them
+I also low shall fall, soon as he comes,
+For whom I took thee, when so hastily
+I question'd. But already longer time
+Hath pass'd, since my souls kindled, and I thus
+Upturn'd have stood, than is his doom to stand
+Planted with fiery feet. For after him,
+One yet of deeds more ugly shall arrive,
+From forth the west, a shepherd without law,
+Fated to cover both his form and mine.
+He a new Jason shall be call'd, of whom
+In Maccabees we read; and favour such
+As to that priest his king indulgent show'd,
+Shall be of France's monarch shown to him."
+ I know not if I here too far presum'd,
+But in this strain I answer'd: "Tell me now,
+What treasures from St. Peter at the first
+Our Lord demanded, when he put the keys
+Into his charge? Surely he ask'd no more
+But, Follow me! Nor Peter nor the rest
+Or gold or silver of Matthias took,
+When lots were cast upon the forfeit place
+Of the condemned soul. Abide thou then;
+Thy punishment of right is merited:
+And look thou well to that ill-gotten coin,
+Which against Charles thy hardihood inspir'd.
+If reverence of the keys restrain'd me not,
+Which thou in happier time didst hold, I yet
+Severer speech might use. Your avarice
+O'ercasts the world with mourning, under foot
+Treading the good, and raising bad men up.
+Of shepherds, like to you, th' Evangelist
+Was ware, when her, who sits upon the waves,
+With kings in filthy whoredom he beheld,
+She who with seven heads tower'd at her birth,
+And from ten horns her proof of glory drew,
+Long as her spouse in virtue took delight.
+Of gold and silver ye have made your god,
+Diff'ring wherein from the idolater,
+But he that worships one, a hundred ye?
+Ah, Constantine! to how much ill gave birth,
+Not thy conversion, but that plenteous dower,
+Which the first wealthy Father gain'd from thee!"
+ Meanwhile, as thus I sung, he, whether wrath
+Or conscience smote him, violent upsprang
+Spinning on either sole. I do believe
+My teacher well was pleas'd, with so compos'd
+A lip, he listen'd ever to the sound
+Of the true words I utter'd. In both arms
+He caught, and to his bosom lifting me
+Upward retrac'd the way of his descent.
+ Nor weary of his weight he press'd me close,
+Till to the summit of the rock we came,
+Our passage from the fourth to the fifth pier.
+His cherish'd burden there gently he plac'd
+Upon the rugged rock and steep, a path
+Not easy for the clamb'ring goat to mount.
+ Thence to my view another vale appear'd
+
+
+
+CANTO XX
+
+AND now the verse proceeds to torments new,
+Fit argument of this the twentieth strain
+Of the first song, whose awful theme records
+The spirits whelm'd in woe. Earnest I look'd
+Into the depth, that open'd to my view,
+Moisten'd with tears of anguish, and beheld
+A tribe, that came along the hollow vale,
+In silence weeping: such their step as walk
+Quires chanting solemn litanies on earth.
+ As on them more direct mine eye descends,
+Each wondrously seem'd to be revers'd
+At the neck-bone, so that the countenance
+Was from the reins averted: and because
+None might before him look, they were compell'd
+To' advance with backward gait. Thus one perhaps
+Hath been by force of palsy clean transpos'd,
+But I ne'er saw it nor believe it so.
+ Now, reader! think within thyself, so God
+Fruit of thy reading give thee! how I long
+Could keep my visage dry, when I beheld
+Near me our form distorted in such guise,
+That on the hinder parts fall'n from the face
+The tears down-streaming roll'd. Against a rock
+I leant and wept, so that my guide exclaim'd:
+"What, and art thou too witless as the rest?
+Here pity most doth show herself alive,
+When she is dead. What guilt exceedeth his,
+Who with Heaven's judgment in his passion strives?
+Raise up thy head, raise up, and see the man,
+Before whose eyes earth gap'd in Thebes, when all
+Cried out, 'Amphiaraus, whither rushest?
+'Why leavest thou the war?' He not the less
+Fell ruining far as to Minos down,
+Whose grapple none eludes. Lo! how he makes
+The breast his shoulders, and who once too far
+Before him wish'd to see, now backward looks,
+And treads reverse his path. Tiresias note,
+Who semblance chang'd, when woman he became
+Of male, through every limb transform'd, and then
+Once more behov'd him with his rod to strike
+The two entwining serpents, ere the plumes,
+That mark'd the better sex, might shoot again.
+ "Aruns, with rere his belly facing, comes.
+On Luni's mountains 'midst the marbles white,
+Where delves Carrara's hind, who wons beneath,
+A cavern was his dwelling, whence the stars
+And main-sea wide in boundless view he held.
+ "The next, whose loosen'd tresses overspread
+Her bosom, which thou seest not (for each hair
+On that side grows) was Manto, she who search'd
+Through many regions, and at length her seat
+Fix'd in my native land, whence a short space
+My words detain thy audience. When her sire
+From life departed, and in servitude
+The city dedicate to Bacchus mourn'd,
+Long time she went a wand'rer through the world.
+Aloft in Italy's delightful land
+A lake there lies, at foot of that proud Alp,
+That o'er the Tyrol locks Germania in,
+Its name Benacus, which a thousand rills,
+Methinks, and more, water between the vale
+Camonica and Garda and the height
+Of Apennine remote. There is a spot
+At midway of that lake, where he who bears
+Of Trento's flock the past'ral staff, with him
+Of Brescia, and the Veronese, might each
+Passing that way his benediction give.
+A garrison of goodly site and strong
+Peschiera stands, to awe with front oppos'd
+The Bergamese and Brescian, whence the shore
+More slope each way descends. There, whatsoev'er
+Benacus' bosom holds not, tumbling o'er
+Down falls, and winds a river flood beneath
+Through the green pastures. Soon as in his course
+The steam makes head, Benacus then no more
+They call the name, but Mincius, till at last
+Reaching Governo into Po he falls.
+Not far his course hath run, when a wide flat
+It finds, which overstretchmg as a marsh
+It covers, pestilent in summer oft.
+Hence journeying, the savage maiden saw
+'Midst of the fen a territory waste
+And naked of inhabitants. To shun
+All human converse, here she with her slaves
+Plying her arts remain'd, and liv'd, and left
+Her body tenantless. Thenceforth the tribes,
+Who round were scatter'd, gath'ring to that place
+Assembled; for its strength was great, enclos'd
+On all parts by the fen. On those dead bones
+They rear'd themselves a city, for her sake,
+Calling it Mantua, who first chose the spot,
+Nor ask'd another omen for the name,
+Wherein more numerous the people dwelt,
+Ere Casalodi's madness by deceit
+Was wrong'd of Pinamonte. If thou hear
+Henceforth another origin assign'd
+Of that my country, I forewarn thee now,
+That falsehood none beguile thee of the truth."
+ I answer'd: "Teacher, I conclude thy words
+So certain, that all else shall be to me
+As embers lacking life. But now of these,
+Who here proceed, instruct me, if thou see
+Any that merit more especial note.
+For thereon is my mind alone intent."
+ He straight replied: "That spirit, from whose cheek
+The beard sweeps o'er his shoulders brown, what time
+Graecia was emptied of her males, that scarce
+The cradles were supplied, the seer was he
+In Aulis, who with Calchas gave the sign
+When first to cut the cable. Him they nam'd
+Eurypilus: so sings my tragic strain,
+In which majestic measure well thou know'st,
+Who know'st it all. That other, round the loins
+So slender of his shape, was Michael Scot,
+Practis'd in ev'ry slight of magic wile.
+ "Guido Bonatti see: Asdente mark,
+Who now were willing, he had tended still
+The thread and cordwain; and too late repents.
+ "See next the wretches, who the needle left,
+The shuttle and the spindle, and became
+Diviners: baneful witcheries they wrought
+With images and herbs. But onward now:
+For now doth Cain with fork of thorns confine
+On either hemisphere, touching the wave
+Beneath the towers of Seville. Yesternight
+The moon was round. Thou mayst remember well:
+For she good service did thee in the gloom
+Of the deep wood." This said, both onward mov'd.
+
+
+
+CANTO XXI
+
+THUS we from bridge to bridge, with other talk,
+The which my drama cares not to rehearse,
+Pass'd on; and to the summit reaching, stood
+To view another gap, within the round
+Of Malebolge, other bootless pangs.
+ Marvelous darkness shadow'd o'er the place.
+ In the Venetians' arsenal as boils
+Through wintry months tenacious pitch, to smear
+Their unsound vessels; for th' inclement time
+Sea-faring men restrains, and in that while
+His bark one builds anew, another stops
+The ribs of his, that hath made many a voyage;
+One hammers at the prow, one at the poop;
+This shapeth oars, that other cables twirls,
+The mizen one repairs and main-sail rent
+So not by force of fire but art divine
+Boil'd here a glutinous thick mass, that round
+Lim'd all the shore beneath. I that beheld,
+But therein nought distinguish'd, save the surge,
+Rais'd by the boiling, in one mighty swell
+Heave, and by turns subsiding and fall. While there
+I fix'd my ken below, "Mark! mark!" my guide
+Exclaiming, drew me towards him from the place,
+Wherein I stood. I turn'd myself as one,
+Impatient to behold that which beheld
+He needs must shun, whom sudden fear unmans,
+That he his flight delays not for the view.
+Behind me I discern'd a devil black,
+That running, up advanc'd along the rock.
+Ah! what fierce cruelty his look bespake!
+In act how bitter did he seem, with wings
+Buoyant outstretch'd and feet of nimblest tread!
+His shoulder proudly eminent and sharp
+Was with a sinner charg'd; by either haunch
+He held him, the foot's sinew griping fast.
+ "Ye of our bridge!" he cried, "keen-talon'd fiends!
+Lo! one of Santa Zita's elders! Him
+Whelm ye beneath, while I return for more.
+That land hath store of such. All men are there,
+Except Bonturo, barterers: of 'no'
+For lucre there an 'aye' is quickly made."
+ Him dashing down, o'er the rough rock he turn'd,
+Nor ever after thief a mastiff loos'd
+Sped with like eager haste. That other sank
+And forthwith writing to the surface rose.
+But those dark demons, shrouded by the bridge,
+Cried "Here the hallow'd visage saves not: here
+Is other swimming than in Serchio's wave.
+Wherefore if thou desire we rend thee not,
+Take heed thou mount not o'er the pitch." This said,
+They grappled him with more than hundred hooks,
+And shouted: "Cover'd thou must sport thee here;
+So, if thou canst, in secret mayst thou filch."
+E'en thus the cook bestirs him, with his grooms,
+To thrust the flesh into the caldron down
+With flesh-hooks, that it float not on the top.
+ Me then my guide bespake: "Lest they descry,
+That thou art here, behind a craggy rock
+Bend low and screen thee; and whate'er of force
+Be offer'd me, or insult, fear thou not:
+For I am well advis'd, who have been erst
+In the like fray." Beyond the bridge's head
+Therewith he pass'd, and reaching the sixth pier,
+Behov'd him then a forehead terror-proof.
+ With storm and fury, as when dogs rush forth
+Upon the poor man's back, who suddenly
+From whence he standeth makes his suit; so rush'd
+Those from beneath the arch, and against him
+Their weapons all they pointed. He aloud:
+"Be none of you outrageous: ere your time
+Dare seize me, come forth from amongst you one,
+Who having heard my words, decide he then
+If he shall tear these limbs." They shouted loud,
+"Go, Malacoda!" Whereat one advanc'd,
+The others standing firm, and as he came,
+"What may this turn avail him?" he exclaim'd.
+ "Believ'st thou, Malacoda! I had come
+Thus far from all your skirmishing secure,"
+My teacher answered, "without will divine
+And destiny propitious? Pass we then
+For so Heaven's pleasure is, that I should lead
+Another through this savage wilderness."
+ Forthwith so fell his pride, that he let drop
+The instrument of torture at his feet,
+And to the rest exclaim'd: "We have no power
+To strike him." Then to me my guide: "O thou!
+Who on the bridge among the crags dost sit
+Low crouching, safely now to me return."
+ I rose, and towards him moved with speed: the fiends
+Meantime all forward drew: me terror seiz'd
+Lest they should break the compact they had made.
+Thus issuing from Caprona, once I saw
+Th' infantry dreading, lest his covenant
+The foe should break; so close he hemm'd them round.
+ I to my leader's side adher'd, mine eyes
+With fixt and motionless observance bent
+On their unkindly visage. They their hooks
+Protruding, one the other thus bespake:
+"Wilt thou I touch him on the hip?" To whom
+Was answer'd: "Even so; nor miss thy aim."
+ But he, who was in conf'rence with my guide,
+Turn'd rapid round, and thus the demon spake:
+"Stay, stay thee, Scarmiglione!" Then to us
+He added: "Further footing to your step
+This rock affords not, shiver'd to the base
+Of the sixth arch. But would you still proceed,
+Up by this cavern go: not distant far,
+Another rock will yield you passage safe.
+Yesterday, later by five hours than now,
+Twelve hundred threescore years and six had fill'd
+The circuit of their course, since here the way
+Was broken. Thitherward I straight dispatch
+Certain of these my scouts, who shall espy
+If any on the surface bask. With them
+Go ye: for ye shall find them nothing fell.
+Come Alichino forth," with that he cried,
+"And Calcabrina, and Cagnazzo thou!
+The troop of ten let Barbariccia lead.
+With Libicocco Draghinazzo haste,
+Fang'd Ciriatto, Grafflacane fierce,
+And Farfarello, and mad Rubicant.
+Search ye around the bubbling tar. For these,
+In safety lead them, where the other crag
+Uninterrupted traverses the dens."
+ I then: "O master! what a sight is there!
+Ah! without escort, journey we alone,
+Which, if thou know the way, I covet not.
+Unless thy prudence fail thee, dost not mark
+How they do gnarl upon us, and their scowl
+Threatens us present tortures?" He replied:
+"I charge thee fear not: let them, as they will,
+Gnarl on: 't is but in token of their spite
+Against the souls, who mourn in torment steep'd."
+ To leftward o'er the pier they turn'd; but each
+Had first between his teeth prest close the tongue,
+Toward their leader for a signal looking,
+Which he with sound obscene triumphant gave.
+
+
+
+CANTO XXII
+
+IT hath been heretofore my chance to see
+Horsemen with martial order shifting camp,
+To onset sallying, or in muster rang'd,
+Or in retreat sometimes outstretch'd for flight;
+Light-armed squadrons and fleet foragers
+Scouring thy plains, Arezzo! have I seen,
+And clashing tournaments, and tilting jousts,
+Now with the sound of trumpets, now of bells,
+Tabors, or signals made from castled heights,
+And with inventions multiform, our own,
+Or introduc'd from foreign land; but ne'er
+To such a strange recorder I beheld,
+In evolution moving, horse nor foot,
+Nor ship, that tack'd by sign from land or star.
+ With the ten demons on our way we went;
+Ah fearful company! but in the church
+With saints, with gluttons at the tavern's mess.
+ Still earnest on the pitch I gaz'd, to mark
+All things whate'er the chasm contain'd, and those
+Who burn'd within. As dolphins, that, in sign
+To mariners, heave high their arched backs,
+That thence forewarn'd they may advise to save
+Their threaten'd vessels; so, at intervals,
+To ease the pain his back some sinner show'd,
+Then hid more nimbly than the lightning glance.
+ E'en as the frogs, that of a wat'ry moat
+Stand at the brink, with the jaws only out,
+Their feet and of the trunk all else concealed,
+Thus on each part the sinners stood, but soon
+As Barbariccia was at hand, so they
+Drew back under the wave. I saw, and yet
+My heart doth stagger, one, that waited thus,
+As it befalls that oft one frog remains,
+While the next springs away: and Graffiacan,
+Who of the fiends was nearest, grappling seiz'd
+His clotted locks, and dragg'd him sprawling up,
+That he appear'd to me an otter. Each
+Already by their names I knew, so well
+When they were chosen, I observ'd, and mark'd
+How one the other call'd. "O Rubicant!
+See that his hide thou with thy talons flay,"
+Shouted together all the cursed crew.
+ Then I: "Inform thee, master! if thou may,
+What wretched soul is this, on whom their hand
+His foes have laid." My leader to his side
+Approach'd, and whence he came inquir'd, to whom
+Was answer'd thus: "Born in Navarre's domain
+My mother plac'd me in a lord's retinue,
+For she had borne me to a losel vile,
+A spendthrift of his substance and himself.
+The good king Thibault after that I serv'd,
+To peculating here my thoughts were turn'd,
+Whereof I give account in this dire heat."
+ Straight Ciriatto, from whose mouth a tusk
+Issued on either side, as from a boar,
+Ript him with one of these. 'Twixt evil claws
+The mouse had fall'n: but Barbariccia cried,
+Seizing him with both arms: "Stand thou apart,
+While I do fix him on my prong transpierc'd."
+Then added, turning to my guide his face,
+"Inquire of him, if more thou wish to learn,
+Ere he again be rent." My leader thus:
+"Then tell us of the partners in thy guilt;
+Knowest thou any sprung of Latian land
+Under the tar?"--"I parted," he replied,
+"But now from one, who sojourn'd not far thence;
+So were I under shelter now with him!
+Nor hook nor talon then should scare me more."--.
+ "Too long we suffer," Libicocco cried,
+Then, darting forth a prong, seiz'd on his arm,
+And mangled bore away the sinewy part.
+Him Draghinazzo by his thighs beneath
+Would next have caught, whence angrily their chief,
+Turning on all sides round, with threat'ning brow
+Restrain'd them. When their strife a little ceas'd,
+Of him, who yet was gazing on his wound,
+My teacher thus without delay inquir'd:
+"Who was the spirit, from whom by evil hap
+Parting, as thou has told, thou cam'st to shore?"--
+ "It was the friar Gomita," he rejoin'd,
+"He of Gallura, vessel of all guile,
+Who had his master's enemies in hand,
+And us'd them so that they commend him well.
+Money he took, and them at large dismiss'd.
+So he reports: and in each other charge
+Committed to his keeping, play'd the part
+Of barterer to the height: with him doth herd
+The chief of Logodoro, Michel Zanche.
+Sardinia is a theme, whereof their tongue
+Is never weary. Out! alas! behold
+That other, how he grins! More would I say,
+But tremble lest he mean to maul me sore."
+ Their captain then to Farfarello turning,
+Who roll'd his moony eyes in act to strike,
+Rebuk'd him thus: "Off! cursed bird! Avaunt!"--
+ "If ye desire to see or hear," he thus
+Quaking with dread resum'd, "or Tuscan spirits
+Or Lombard, I will cause them to appear.
+Meantime let these ill talons bate their fury,
+So that no vengeance they may fear from them,
+And I, remaining in this self-same place,
+Will for myself but one, make sev'n appear,
+When my shrill whistle shall be heard; for so
+Our custom is to call each other up."
+ Cagnazzo at that word deriding grinn'd,
+Then wagg'd the head and spake: "Hear his device,
+Mischievous as he is, to plunge him down."
+ Whereto he thus, who fail'd not in rich store
+Of nice-wove toils; " Mischief forsooth extreme,
+Meant only to procure myself more woe!"
+ No longer Alichino then refrain'd,
+But thus, the rest gainsaying, him bespake:
+"If thou do cast thee down, I not on foot
+Will chase thee, but above the pitch will beat
+My plumes. Quit we the vantage ground, and let
+The bank be as a shield, that we may see
+If singly thou prevail against us all."
+ Now, reader, of new sport expect to hear!
+ They each one turn'd his eyes to the' other shore,
+He first, who was the hardest to persuade.
+The spirit of Navarre chose well his time,
+Planted his feet on land, and at one leap
+Escaping disappointed their resolve.
+ Them quick resentment stung, but him the most,
+Who was the cause of failure; in pursuit
+He therefore sped, exclaiming; "Thou art caught."
+ But little it avail'd: terror outstripp'd
+His following flight: the other plung'd beneath,
+And he with upward pinion rais'd his breast:
+E'en thus the water-fowl, when she perceives
+The falcon near, dives instant down, while he
+Enrag'd and spent retires. That mockery
+In Calcabrina fury stirr'd, who flew
+After him, with desire of strife inflam'd;
+And, for the barterer had 'scap'd, so turn'd
+His talons on his comrade. O'er the dyke
+In grapple close they join'd; but the' other prov'd
+A goshawk able to rend well his foe;
+And in the boiling lake both fell. The heat
+Was umpire soon between them, but in vain
+To lift themselves they strove, so fast were glued
+Their pennons. Barbariccia, as the rest,
+That chance lamenting, four in flight dispatch'd
+From the' other coast, with all their weapons arm'd.
+They, to their post on each side speedily
+Descending, stretch'd their hooks toward the fiends,
+Who flounder'd, inly burning from their scars:
+And we departing left them to that broil.
+
+
+
+CANTO XXIII
+
+IN silence and in solitude we went,
+One first, the other following his steps,
+As minor friars journeying on their road.
+ The present fray had turn'd my thoughts to muse
+Upon old Aesop's fable, where he told
+What fate unto the mouse and frog befell.
+For language hath not sounds more like in sense,
+Than are these chances, if the origin
+And end of each be heedfully compar'd.
+And as one thought bursts from another forth,
+So afterward from that another sprang,
+Which added doubly to my former fear.
+For thus I reason'd: "These through us have been
+So foil'd, with loss and mock'ry so complete,
+As needs must sting them sore. If anger then
+Be to their evil will conjoin'd, more fell
+They shall pursue us, than the savage hound
+Snatches the leveret, panting 'twixt his jaws."
+ Already I perceiv'd my hair stand all
+On end with terror, and look'd eager back.
+ "Teacher," I thus began, "if speedily
+Thyself and me thou hide not, much I dread
+Those evil talons. Even now behind
+They urge us: quick imagination works
+So forcibly, that I already feel them.''
+ He answer'd: "Were I form'd of leaded glass,
+I should not sooner draw unto myself
+Thy outward image, than I now imprint
+That from within. This moment came thy thoughts
+Presented before mine, with similar act
+And count'nance similar, so that from both
+I one design have fram'd. If the right coast
+Incline so much, that we may thence descend
+Into the other chasm, we shall escape
+Secure from this imagined pursuit."
+ He had not spoke his purpose to the end,
+When I from far beheld them with spread wings
+Approach to take us. Suddenly my guide
+Caught me, ev'n as a mother that from sleep
+Is by the noise arous'd, and near her sees
+The climbing fires, who snatches up her babe
+And flies ne'er pausing, careful more of him
+Than of herself, that but a single vest
+Clings round her limbs. Down from the jutting beach
+Supine he cast him, to that pendent rock,
+Which closes on one part the other chasm.
+ Never ran water with such hurrying pace
+Adown the tube to turn a landmill's wheel,
+When nearest it approaches to the spokes,
+As then along that edge my master ran,
+Carrying me in his bosom, as a child,
+Not a companion. Scarcely had his feet
+Reach'd to the lowest of the bed beneath,
+When over us the steep they reach'd; but fear
+In him was none; for that high Providence,
+Which plac'd them ministers of the fifth foss,
+Power of departing thence took from them all.
+ There in the depth we saw a painted tribe,
+Who pac'd with tardy steps around, and wept,
+Faint in appearance and o'ercome with toil.
+Caps had they on, with hoods, that fell low down
+Before their eyes, in fashion like to those
+Worn by the monks in Cologne. Their outside
+Was overlaid with gold, dazzling to view,
+But leaden all within, and of such weight,
+That Frederick's compar'd to these were straw.
+Oh, everlasting wearisome attire!
+ We yet once more with them together turn'd
+To leftward, on their dismal moan intent.
+But by the weight oppress'd, so slowly came
+The fainting people, that our company
+Was chang'd at every movement of the step.
+ Whence I my guide address'd: "See that thou find
+Some spirit, whose name may by his deeds be known,
+And to that end look round thee as thou go'st."
+ Then one, who understood the Tuscan voice,
+Cried after us aloud: "Hold in your feet,
+Ye who so swiftly speed through the dusk air.
+Perchance from me thou shalt obtain thy wish."
+ Whereat my leader, turning, me bespake:
+"Pause, and then onward at their pace proceed."
+ I staid, and saw two Spirits in whose look
+Impatient eagerness of mind was mark'd
+To overtake me; but the load they bare
+And narrow path retarded their approach.
+ Soon as arriv'd, they with an eye askance
+Perus'd me, but spake not: then turning each
+To other thus conferring said: "This one
+Seems, by the action of his throat, alive.
+And, be they dead, what privilege allows
+They walk unmantled by the cumbrous stole?"
+ Then thus to me: "Tuscan, who visitest
+The college of the mourning hypocrites,
+Disdain not to instruct us who thou art."
+ "By Arno's pleasant stream," I thus replied,
+"In the great city I was bred and grew,
+And wear the body I have ever worn.
+but who are ye, from whom such mighty grief,
+As now I witness, courseth down your cheeks?
+What torment breaks forth in this bitter woe?"
+"Our bonnets gleaming bright with orange hue,"
+One of them answer'd, "are so leaden gross,
+That with their weight they make the balances
+To crack beneath them. Joyous friars we were,
+Bologna's natives, Catalano I,
+He Loderingo nam'd, and by thy land
+Together taken, as men used to take
+A single and indifferent arbiter,
+To reconcile their strifes. How there we sped,
+Gardingo's vicinage can best declare."
+ "O friars!" I began, "your miseries--"
+But there brake off, for one had caught my eye,
+Fix'd to a cross with three stakes on the ground:
+He, when he saw me, writh'd himself, throughout
+Distorted, ruffling with deep sighs his beard.
+And Catalano, who thereof was 'ware,
+Thus spake: "That pierced spirit, whom intent
+Thou view'st, was he who gave the Pharisees
+Counsel, that it were fitting for one man
+To suffer for the people. He doth lie
+Transverse; nor any passes, but him first
+Behoves make feeling trial how each weighs.
+In straits like this along the foss are plac'd
+The father of his consort, and the rest
+Partakers in that council, seed of ill
+And sorrow to the Jews." I noted then,
+How Virgil gaz'd with wonder upon him,
+Thus abjectly extended on the cross
+In banishment eternal. To the friar
+He next his words address'd: "We pray ye tell,
+If so be lawful, whether on our right
+Lies any opening in the rock, whereby
+We both may issue hence, without constraint
+On the dark angels, that compell'd they come
+To lead us from this depth." He thus replied:
+"Nearer than thou dost hope, there is a rock
+From the next circle moving, which o'ersteps
+Each vale of horror, save that here his cope
+Is shatter'd. By the ruin ye may mount:
+For on the side it slants, and most the height
+Rises below." With head bent down awhile
+My leader stood, then spake: "He warn'd us ill,
+Who yonder hangs the sinners on his hook."
+ To whom the friar: At Bologna erst
+I many vices of the devil heard,
+Among the rest was said, 'He is a liar,
+And the father of lies!'" When he had spoke,
+My leader with large strides proceeded on,
+Somewhat disturb'd with anger in his look.
+ I therefore left the spirits heavy laden,
+And following, his beloved footsteps mark'd.
+
+
+
+CANTO XXIV
+
+IN the year's early nonage, when the sun
+Tempers his tresses in Aquarius' urn,
+And now towards equal day the nights recede,
+When as the rime upon the earth puts on
+Her dazzling sister's image, but not long
+Her milder sway endures, then riseth up
+The village hind, whom fails his wintry store,
+And looking out beholds the plain around
+All whiten'd, whence impatiently he smites
+His thighs, and to his hut returning in,
+There paces to and fro, wailing his lot,
+As a discomfited and helpless man;
+Then comes he forth again, and feels new hope
+Spring in his bosom, finding e'en thus soon
+The world hath chang'd its count'nance, grasps his crook,
+And forth to pasture drives his little flock:
+So me my guide dishearten'd when I saw
+His troubled forehead, and so speedily
+That ill was cur'd; for at the fallen bridge
+Arriving, towards me with a look as sweet,
+He turn'd him back, as that I first beheld
+At the steep mountain's foot. Regarding well
+The ruin, and some counsel first maintain'd
+With his own thought, he open'd wide his arm
+And took me up. As one, who, while he works,
+Computes his labour's issue, that he seems
+Still to foresee the' effect, so lifting me
+Up to the summit of one peak, he fix'd
+His eye upon another. "Grapple that,"
+Said he, "but first make proof, if it be such
+As will sustain thee." For one capp'd with lead
+This were no journey. Scarcely he, though light,
+And I, though onward push'd from crag to crag,
+Could mount. And if the precinct of this coast
+Were not less ample than the last, for him
+I know not, but my strength had surely fail'd.
+But Malebolge all toward the mouth
+Inclining of the nethermost abyss,
+The site of every valley hence requires,
+That one side upward slope, the other fall.
+ At length the point of our descent we reach'd
+From the last flag: soon as to that arriv'd,
+So was the breath exhausted from my lungs,
+I could no further, but did seat me there.
+ "Now needs thy best of man;" so spake my guide:
+"For not on downy plumes, nor under shade
+Of canopy reposing, fame is won,
+Without which whosoe'er consumes his days
+Leaveth such vestige of himself on earth,
+As smoke in air or foam upon the wave.
+Thou therefore rise: vanish thy weariness
+By the mind's effort, in each struggle form'd
+To vanquish, if she suffer not the weight
+Of her corporeal frame to crush her down.
+A longer ladder yet remains to scale.
+From these to have escap'd sufficeth not.
+If well thou note me, profit by my words."
+ I straightway rose, and show'd myself less spent
+Than I in truth did feel me. "On," I cried,
+"For I am stout and fearless." Up the rock
+Our way we held, more rugged than before,
+Narrower and steeper far to climb. From talk
+I ceas'd not, as we journey'd, so to seem
+Least faint; whereat a voice from the other foss
+Did issue forth, for utt'rance suited ill.
+Though on the arch that crosses there I stood,
+What were the words I knew not, but who spake
+Seem'd mov'd in anger. Down I stoop'd to look,
+But my quick eye might reach not to the depth
+For shrouding darkness; wherefore thus I spake:
+"To the next circle, Teacher, bend thy steps,
+And from the wall dismount we; for as hence
+I hear and understand not, so I see
+Beneath, and naught discern."--"I answer not,"
+Said he, "but by the deed. To fair request
+Silent performance maketh best return."
+ We from the bridge's head descended, where
+To the eighth mound it joins, and then the chasm
+Opening to view, I saw a crowd within
+Of serpents terrible, so strange of shape
+And hideous, that remembrance in my veins
+Yet shrinks the vital current. Of her sands
+Let Lybia vaunt no more: if Jaculus,
+Pareas and Chelyder be her brood,
+Cenchris and Amphisboena, plagues so dire
+Or in such numbers swarming ne'er she shew'd,
+Not with all Ethiopia, and whate'er
+Above the Erythraean sea is spawn'd.
+ Amid this dread exuberance of woe
+Ran naked spirits wing'd with horrid fear,
+Nor hope had they of crevice where to hide,
+Or heliotrope to charm them out of view.
+With serpents were their hands behind them bound,
+Which through their reins infix'd the tail and head
+Twisted in folds before. And lo! on one
+Near to our side, darted an adder up,
+And, where the neck is on the shoulders tied,
+Transpierc'd him. Far more quickly than e'er pen
+Wrote O or I, he kindled, burn'd, and chang'd
+To ashes, all pour'd out upon the earth.
+When there dissolv'd he lay, the dust again
+Uproll'd spontaneous, and the self-same form
+Instant resumed. So mighty sages tell,
+The' Arabian Phoenix, when five hundred years
+Have well nigh circled, dies, and springs forthwith
+Renascent. Blade nor herb throughout his life
+He tastes, but tears of frankincense alone
+And odorous amomum: swaths of nard
+And myrrh his funeral shroud. As one that falls,
+He knows not how, by force demoniac dragg'd
+To earth, or through obstruction fettering up
+In chains invisible the powers of man,
+Who, risen from his trance, gazeth around,
+Bewilder'd with the monstrous agony
+He hath endur'd, and wildly staring sighs;
+So stood aghast the sinner when he rose.
+ Oh! how severe God's judgment, that deals out
+Such blows in stormy vengeance! Who he was
+My teacher next inquir'd, and thus in few
+He answer'd: "Vanni Fucci am I call'd,
+Not long since rained down from Tuscany
+To this dire gullet. Me the beastial life
+And not the human pleas'd, mule that I was,
+Who in Pistoia found my worthy den."
+ I then to Virgil: "Bid him stir not hence,
+And ask what crime did thrust him hither: once
+A man I knew him choleric and bloody."
+ The sinner heard and feign'd not, but towards me
+His mind directing and his face, wherein
+Was dismal shame depictur'd, thus he spake:
+"It grieves me more to have been caught by thee
+In this sad plight, which thou beholdest, than
+When I was taken from the other life.
+I have no power permitted to deny
+What thou inquirest." I am doom'd thus low
+To dwell, for that the sacristy by me
+Was rifled of its goodly ornaments,
+And with the guilt another falsely charged.
+But that thou mayst not joy to see me thus,
+So as thou e'er shalt 'scape this darksome realm
+Open thine ears and hear what I forebode.
+Reft of the Neri first Pistoia pines,
+Then Florence changeth citizens and laws.
+From Valdimagra, drawn by wrathful Mars,
+A vapour rises, wrapt in turbid mists,
+And sharp and eager driveth on the storm
+With arrowy hurtling o'er Piceno's field,
+Whence suddenly the cloud shall burst, and strike
+Each helpless Bianco prostrate to the ground.
+This have I told, that grief may rend thy heart."
+
+
+
+CANTO XXV
+
+WHEN he had spoke, the sinner rais'd his hands
+Pointed in mockery, and cried: "Take them, God!
+I level them at thee!" From that day forth
+The serpents were my friends; for round his neck
+One of then rolling twisted, as it said,
+"Be silent, tongue!" Another to his arms
+Upgliding, tied them, riveting itself
+So close, it took from them the power to move.
+ Pistoia! Ah Pistoia! why dost doubt
+To turn thee into ashes, cumb'ring earth
+No longer, since in evil act so far
+Thou hast outdone thy seed? I did not mark,
+Through all the gloomy circles of the' abyss,
+Spirit, that swell'd so proudly 'gainst his God,
+Not him, who headlong fell from Thebes. He fled,
+Nor utter'd more; and after him there came
+A centaur full of fury, shouting, "Where
+Where is the caitiff?" On Maremma's marsh
+Swarm not the serpent tribe, as on his haunch
+They swarm'd, to where the human face begins.
+Behind his head upon the shoulders lay,
+With open wings, a dragon breathing fire
+On whomsoe'er he met. To me my guide:
+"Cacus is this, who underneath the rock
+Of Aventine spread oft a lake of blood.
+He, from his brethren parted, here must tread
+A different journey, for his fraudful theft
+Of the great herd, that near him stall'd; whence found
+His felon deeds their end, beneath the mace
+Of stout Alcides, that perchance laid on
+A hundred blows, and not the tenth was felt."
+ While yet he spake, the centaur sped away:
+And under us three spirits came, of whom
+Nor I nor he was ware, till they exclaim'd;
+"Say who are ye?" We then brake off discourse,
+Intent on these alone. I knew them not;
+But, as it chanceth oft, befell, that one
+Had need to name another. "Where," said he,
+"Doth Cianfa lurk?" I, for a sign my guide
+Should stand attentive, plac'd against my lips
+The finger lifted. If, O reader! now
+Thou be not apt to credit what I tell,
+No marvel; for myself do scarce allow
+The witness of mine eyes. But as I looked
+Toward them, lo! a serpent with six feet
+Springs forth on one, and fastens full upon him:
+His midmost grasp'd the belly, a forefoot
+Seiz'd on each arm (while deep in either cheek
+He flesh'd his fangs); the hinder on the thighs
+Were spread, 'twixt which the tail inserted curl'd
+Upon the reins behind. Ivy ne'er clasp'd
+A dodder'd oak, as round the other's limbs
+The hideous monster intertwin'd his own.
+Then, as they both had been of burning wax,
+Each melted into other, mingling hues,
+That which was either now was seen no more.
+Thus up the shrinking paper, ere it burns,
+A brown tint glides, not turning yet to black,
+And the clean white expires. The other two
+Look'd on exclaiming: "Ah, how dost thou change,
+Agnello! See! Thou art nor double now,
+Nor only one." The two heads now became
+One, and two figures blended in one form
+Appear'd, where both were lost. Of the four lengths
+Two arms were made: the belly and the chest
+The thighs and legs into such members chang'd,
+As never eye hath seen. Of former shape
+All trace was vanish'd. Two yet neither seem'd
+That image miscreate, and so pass'd on
+With tardy steps. As underneath the scourge
+Of the fierce dog-star, that lays bare the fields,
+Shifting from brake to brake, the lizard seems
+A flash of lightning, if he thwart the road,
+So toward th' entrails of the other two
+Approaching seem'd, an adder all on fire,
+As the dark pepper-grain, livid and swart.
+In that part, whence our life is nourish'd first,
+One he transpierc'd; then down before him fell
+Stretch'd out. The pierced spirit look'd on him
+But spake not; yea stood motionless and yawn'd,
+As if by sleep or fev'rous fit assail'd.
+He ey'd the serpent, and the serpent him.
+One from the wound, the other from the mouth
+Breath'd a thick smoke, whose vap'ry columns join'd.
+ Lucan in mute attention now may hear,
+Nor thy disastrous fate, Sabellus! tell,
+Nor shine, Nasidius! Ovid now be mute.
+What if in warbling fiction he record
+Cadmus and Arethusa, to a snake
+Him chang'd, and her into a fountain clear,
+I envy not; for never face to face
+Two natures thus transmuted did he sing,
+Wherein both shapes were ready to assume
+The other's substance. They in mutual guise
+So answer'd, that the serpent split his train
+Divided to a fork, and the pierc'd spirit
+Drew close his steps together, legs and thighs
+Compacted, that no sign of juncture soon
+Was visible: the tail disparted took
+The figure which the spirit lost, its skin
+Soft'ning, his indurated to a rind.
+The shoulders next I mark'd, that ent'ring join'd
+The monster's arm-pits, whose two shorter feet
+So lengthen'd, as the other's dwindling shrunk.
+The feet behind then twisting up became
+That part that man conceals, which in the wretch
+Was cleft in twain. While both the shadowy smoke
+With a new colour veils, and generates
+Th' excrescent pile on one, peeling it off
+From th' other body, lo! upon his feet
+One upright rose, and prone the other fell.
+Not yet their glaring and malignant lamps
+Were shifted, though each feature chang'd beneath.
+Of him who stood erect, the mounting face
+Retreated towards the temples, and what there
+Superfluous matter came, shot out in ears
+From the smooth cheeks, the rest, not backward dragg'd,
+Of its excess did shape the nose; and swell'd
+Into due size protuberant the lips.
+He, on the earth who lay, meanwhile extends
+His sharpen'd visage, and draws down the ears
+Into the head, as doth the slug his horns.
+His tongue continuous before and apt
+For utt'rance, severs; and the other's fork
+Closing unites. That done the smoke was laid.
+The soul, transform'd into the brute, glides off,
+Hissing along the vale, and after him
+The other talking sputters; but soon turn'd
+His new-grown shoulders on him, and in few
+Thus to another spake: "Along this path
+Crawling, as I have done, speed Buoso now!"
+ So saw I fluctuate in successive change
+Th' unsteady ballast of the seventh hold:
+And here if aught my tongue have swerv'd, events
+So strange may be its warrant. O'er mine eyes
+Confusion hung, and on my thoughts amaze.
+ Yet 'scap'd they not so covertly, but well
+I mark'd Sciancato: he alone it was
+Of the three first that came, who chang'd not: thou,
+The other's fate, Gaville, still dost rue.
+
+
+
+CANTO XXVI
+
+FLORENCE exult! for thou so mightily
+Hast thriven, that o'er land and sea thy wings
+Thou beatest, and thy name spreads over hell!
+Among the plund'rers such the three I found
+Thy citizens, whence shame to me thy son,
+And no proud honour to thyself redounds.
+ But if our minds, when dreaming near the dawn,
+Are of the truth presageful, thou ere long
+Shalt feel what Prato, (not to say the rest)
+Would fain might come upon thee; and that chance
+Were in good time, if it befell thee now.
+Would so it were, since it must needs befall!
+For as time wears me, I shall grieve the more.
+ We from the depth departed; and my guide
+Remounting scal'd the flinty steps, which late
+We downward trac'd, and drew me up the steep.
+Pursuing thus our solitary way
+Among the crags and splinters of the rock,
+Sped not our feet without the help of hands.
+ Then sorrow seiz'd me, which e'en now revives,
+As my thought turns again to what I saw,
+And, more than I am wont, I rein and curb
+The powers of nature in me, lest they run
+Where Virtue guides not; that if aught of good
+My gentle star, or something better gave me,
+I envy not myself the precious boon.
+ As in that season, when the sun least veils
+His face that lightens all, what time the fly
+Gives way to the shrill gnat, the peasant then
+Upon some cliff reclin'd, beneath him sees
+Fire-flies innumerous spangling o'er the vale,
+Vineyard or tilth, where his day-labour lies:
+With flames so numberless throughout its space
+Shone the eighth chasm, apparent, when the depth
+Was to my view expos'd. As he, whose wrongs
+The bears aveng'd, at its departure saw
+Elijah's chariot, when the steeds erect
+Rais'd their steep flight for heav'n; his eyes meanwhile,
+Straining pursu'd them, till the flame alone
+Upsoaring like a misty speck he kenn'd;
+E'en thus along the gulf moves every flame,
+A sinner so enfolded close in each,
+That none exhibits token of the theft.
+ Upon the bridge I forward bent to look,
+And grasp'd a flinty mass, or else had fall'n,
+Though push'd not from the height. The guide, who mark d
+How I did gaze attentive, thus began:
+"Within these ardours are the spirits, each
+Swath'd in confining fire."--"Master, thy word,"
+I answer'd, "hath assur'd me; yet I deem'd
+Already of the truth, already wish'd
+To ask thee, who is in yon fire, that comes
+So parted at the summit, as it seem'd
+Ascending from that funeral pile, where lay
+The Theban brothers?" He replied: "Within
+Ulysses there and Diomede endure
+Their penal tortures, thus to vengeance now
+Together hasting, as erewhile to wrath.
+These in the flame with ceaseless groans deplore
+The ambush of the horse, that open'd wide
+A portal for that goodly seed to pass,
+Which sow'd imperial Rome; nor less the guile
+Lament they, whence of her Achilles 'reft
+Deidamia yet in death complains.
+And there is rued the stratagem, that Troy
+Of her Palladium spoil'd."--"If they have power
+Of utt'rance from within these sparks," said I,
+"O master! think my prayer a thousand fold
+In repetition urg'd, that thou vouchsafe
+To pause, till here the horned flame arrive.
+See, how toward it with desire I bend."
+ He thus: "Thy prayer is worthy of much praise,
+And I accept it therefore: but do thou
+Thy tongue refrain: to question them be mine,
+For I divine thy wish: and they perchance,
+For they were Greeks, might shun discourse with thee."
+ When there the flame had come, where time and place
+Seem'd fitting to my guide, he thus began:
+"O ye, who dwell two spirits in one fire!
+If living I of you did merit aught,
+Whate'er the measure were of that desert,
+When in the world my lofty strain I pour'd,
+Move ye not on, till one of you unfold
+In what clime death o'ertook him self-destroy'd."
+ Of the old flame forthwith the greater horn
+Began to roll, murmuring, as a fire
+That labours with the wind, then to and fro
+Wagging the top, as a tongue uttering sounds,
+Threw out its voice, and spake: "When I escap'd
+From Circe, who beyond a circling year
+Had held me near Caieta, by her charms,
+Ere thus Aeneas yet had nam'd the shore,
+Nor fondness for my son, nor reverence
+Of my old father, nor return of love,
+That should have crown'd Penelope with joy,
+Could overcome in me the zeal I had
+T' explore the world, and search the ways of life,
+Man's evil and his virtue. Forth I sail'd
+Into the deep illimitable main,
+With but one bark, and the small faithful band
+That yet cleav'd to me. As Iberia far,
+Far as Morocco either shore I saw,
+And the Sardinian and each isle beside
+Which round that ocean bathes. Tardy with age
+Were I and my companions, when we came
+To the strait pass, where Hercules ordain'd
+The bound'ries not to be o'erstepp'd by man.
+The walls of Seville to my right I left,
+On the' other hand already Ceuta past.
+"O brothers!" I began, "who to the west
+Through perils without number now have reach'd,
+To this the short remaining watch, that yet
+Our senses have to wake, refuse not proof
+Of the unpeopled world, following the track
+Of Phoebus. Call to mind from whence we sprang:
+Ye were not form'd to live the life of brutes
+But virtue to pursue and knowledge high.
+With these few words I sharpen'd for the voyage
+The mind of my associates, that I then
+Could scarcely have withheld them. To the dawn
+Our poop we turn'd, and for the witless flight
+Made our oars wings, still gaining on the left.
+Each star of the' other pole night now beheld,
+And ours so low, that from the ocean-floor
+It rose not. Five times re-illum'd, as oft
+Vanish'd the light from underneath the moon
+Since the deep way we enter'd, when from far
+Appear'd a mountain dim, loftiest methought
+Of all I e'er beheld. Joy seiz'd us straight,
+But soon to mourning changed. From the new land
+A whirlwind sprung, and at her foremost side
+Did strike the vessel. Thrice it whirl'd her round
+With all the waves, the fourth time lifted up
+The poop, and sank the prow: so fate decreed:
+And over us the booming billow clos'd."
+
+
+
+CANTO XXVII
+
+NOW upward rose the flame, and still'd its light
+To speak no more, and now pass'd on with leave
+From the mild poet gain'd, when following came
+Another, from whose top a sound confus'd,
+Forth issuing, drew our eyes that way to look.
+ As the Sicilian bull, that rightfully
+His cries first echoed, who had shap'd its mould,
+Did so rebellow, with the voice of him
+Tormented, that the brazen monster seem'd
+Pierc'd through with pain; thus while no way they found
+Nor avenue immediate through the flame,
+Into its language turn'd the dismal words:
+But soon as they had won their passage forth,
+Up from the point, which vibrating obey'd
+Their motion at the tongue, these sounds we heard:
+"O thou! to whom I now direct my voice!
+That lately didst exclaim in Lombard phrase,
+ Depart thou, I solicit thee no more,'
+Though somewhat tardy I perchance arrive
+Let it not irk thee here to pause awhile,
+And with me parley: lo! it irks not me
+And yet I burn. If but e'en now thou fall
+into this blind world, from that pleasant land
+Of Latium, whence I draw my sum of guilt,
+Tell me if those, who in Romagna dwell,
+Have peace or war. For of the mountains there
+Was I, betwixt Urbino and the height,
+Whence Tyber first unlocks his mighty flood."
+ Leaning I listen'd yet with heedful ear,
+When, as he touch'd my side, the leader thus:
+"Speak thou: he is a Latian." My reply
+Was ready, and I spake without delay:
+ "O spirit! who art hidden here below!
+Never was thy Romagna without war
+In her proud tyrants' bosoms, nor is now:
+But open war there left I none. The state,
+Ravenna hath maintain'd this many a year,
+Is steadfast. There Polenta's eagle broods,
+And in his broad circumference of plume
+O'ershadows Cervia. The green talons grasp
+The land, that stood erewhile the proof so long,
+And pil'd in bloody heap the host of France.
+ "The' old mastiff of Verruchio and the young,
+That tore Montagna in their wrath, still make,
+Where they are wont, an augre of their fangs.
+ "Lamone's city and Santerno's range
+Under the lion of the snowy lair.
+Inconstant partisan! that changeth sides,
+Or ever summer yields to winter's frost.
+And she, whose flank is wash'd of Savio's wave,
+As 'twixt the level and the steep she lies,
+Lives so 'twixt tyrant power and liberty.
+ "Now tell us, I entreat thee, who art thou?
+Be not more hard than others. In the world,
+So may thy name still rear its forehead high."
+ Then roar'd awhile the fire, its sharpen'd point
+On either side wav'd, and thus breath'd at last:
+"If I did think, my answer were to one,
+Who ever could return unto the world,
+This flame should rest unshaken. But since ne'er,
+If true be told me, any from this depth
+Has found his upward way, I answer thee,
+Nor fear lest infamy record the words.
+ "A man of arms at first, I cloth'd me then
+In good Saint Francis' girdle, hoping so
+T' have made amends. And certainly my hope
+Had fail'd not, but that he, whom curses light on,
+The' high priest again seduc'd me into sin.
+And how and wherefore listen while I tell.
+Long as this spirit mov'd the bones and pulp
+My mother gave me, less my deeds bespake
+The nature of the lion than the fox.
+All ways of winding subtlety I knew,
+And with such art conducted, that the sound
+Reach'd the world's limit. Soon as to that part
+Of life I found me come, when each behoves
+To lower sails and gather in the lines;
+That which before had pleased me then I rued,
+And to repentance and confession turn'd;
+Wretch that I was! and well it had bested me!
+The chief of the new Pharisees meantime,
+Waging his warfare near the Lateran,
+Not with the Saracens or Jews (his foes
+All Christians were, nor against Acre one
+Had fought, nor traffic'd in the Soldan's land),
+He his great charge nor sacred ministry
+In himself, rev'renc'd, nor in me that cord,
+Which us'd to mark with leanness whom it girded.
+As in Socrate, Constantine besought
+To cure his leprosy Sylvester's aid,
+So me to cure the fever of his pride
+This man besought: my counsel to that end
+He ask'd: and I was silent: for his words
+Seem'd drunken: but forthwith he thus resum'd:
+"From thy heart banish fear: of all offence
+I hitherto absolve thee. In return,
+Teach me my purpose so to execute,
+That Penestrino cumber earth no more.
+Heav'n, as thou knowest, I have power to shut
+And open: and the keys are therefore twain,
+The which my predecessor meanly priz'd."
+ Then, yielding to the forceful arguments,
+Of silence as more perilous I deem'd,
+And answer'd: "Father! since thou washest me
+Clear of that guilt wherein I now must fall,
+Large promise with performance scant, be sure,
+Shall make thee triumph in thy lofty seat."
+ "When I was number'd with the dead, then came
+Saint Francis for me; but a cherub dark
+He met, who cried: "'Wrong me not; he is mine,
+And must below to join the wretched crew,
+For the deceitful counsel which he gave.
+E'er since I watch'd him, hov'ring at his hair,
+No power can the impenitent absolve;
+Nor to repent and will at once consist,
+By contradiction absolute forbid."
+Oh mis'ry! how I shook myself, when he
+Seiz'd me, and cried, "Thou haply thought'st me not
+A disputant in logic so exact."
+To Minos down he bore me, and the judge
+Twin'd eight times round his callous back the tail,
+Which biting with excess of rage, he spake:
+"This is a guilty soul, that in the fire
+Must vanish.' Hence perdition-doom'd I rove
+A prey to rankling sorrow in this garb."
+ When he had thus fulfill'd his words, the flame
+In dolour parted, beating to and fro,
+And writhing its sharp horn. We onward went,
+I and my leader, up along the rock,
+Far as another arch, that overhangs
+The foss, wherein the penalty is paid
+Of those, who load them with committed sin.
+
+
+
+CANTO XXVIII
+
+WHO, e'en in words unfetter'd, might at full
+Tell of the wounds and blood that now I saw,
+Though he repeated oft the tale? No tongue
+So vast a theme could equal, speech and thought
+Both impotent alike. If in one band
+Collected, stood the people all, who e'er
+Pour'd on Apulia's happy soil their blood,
+Slain by the Trojans, and in that long war
+When of the rings the measur'd booty made
+A pile so high, as Rome's historian writes
+Who errs not, with the multitude, that felt
+The grinding force of Guiscard's Norman steel,
+And those the rest, whose bones are gather'd yet
+At Ceperano, there where treachery
+Branded th' Apulian name, or where beyond
+Thy walls, O Tagliacozzo, without arms
+The old Alardo conquer'd; and his limbs
+One were to show transpierc'd, another his
+Clean lopt away; a spectacle like this
+Were but a thing of nought, to the' hideous sight
+Of the ninth chasm. A rundlet, that hath lost
+Its middle or side stave, gapes not so wide,
+As one I mark'd, torn from the chin throughout
+Down to the hinder passage: 'twixt the legs
+Dangling his entrails hung, the midriff lay
+Open to view, and wretched ventricle,
+That turns th' englutted aliment to dross.
+ Whilst eagerly I fix on him my gaze,
+He ey'd me, with his hands laid his breast bare,
+And cried; "Now mark how I do rip me! lo!
+How is Mohammed mangled! before me
+Walks Ali weeping, from the chin his face
+Cleft to the forelock; and the others all
+Whom here thou seest, while they liv'd, did sow
+Scandal and schism, and therefore thus are rent.
+A fiend is here behind, who with his sword
+Hacks us thus cruelly, slivering again
+Each of this ream, when we have compast round
+The dismal way, for first our gashes close
+Ere we repass before him. But say who
+Art thou, that standest musing on the rock,
+Haply so lingering to delay the pain
+Sentenc'd upon thy crimes?"--"Him death not yet,"
+My guide rejoin'd, "hath overta'en, nor sin
+Conducts to torment; but, that he may make
+Full trial of your state, I who am dead
+Must through the depths of hell, from orb to orb,
+Conduct him. Trust my words, for they are true."
+ More than a hundred spirits, when that they heard,
+Stood in the foss to mark me, through amazed,
+Forgetful of their pangs. "Thou, who perchance
+Shalt shortly view the sun, this warning thou
+Bear to Dolcino: bid him, if he wish not
+Here soon to follow me, that with good store
+Of food he arm him, lest impris'ning snows
+Yield him a victim to Novara's power,
+No easy conquest else." With foot uprais'd
+For stepping, spake Mohammed, on the ground
+Then fix'd it to depart. Another shade,
+Pierc'd in the throat, his nostrils mutilate
+E'en from beneath the eyebrows, and one ear
+Lopt off, who with the rest through wonder stood
+Gazing, before the rest advanc'd, and bar'd
+His wind-pipe, that without was all o'ersmear'd
+With crimson stain. "O thou!" said 'he, "whom sin
+Condemns not, and whom erst (unless too near
+Resemblance do deceive me) I aloft
+Have seen on Latian ground, call thou to mind
+Piero of Medicina, if again
+Returning, thou behold'st the pleasant land
+That from Vercelli slopes to Mercabo;
+And there instruct the twain, whom Fano boasts
+Her worthiest sons, Guido and Angelo,
+That if 't is giv'n us here to scan aright
+The future, they out of life's tenement
+Shall be cast forth, and whelm'd under the waves
+Near to Cattolica, through perfidy
+Of a fell tyrant. 'Twixt the Cyprian isle
+And Balearic, ne'er hath Neptune seen
+An injury so foul, by pirates done
+Or Argive crew of old. That one-ey'd traitor
+(Whose realm there is a spirit here were fain
+His eye had still lack'd sight of) them shall bring
+To conf'rence with him, then so shape his end,
+That they shall need not 'gainst Focara's wind
+Offer up vow nor pray'r." I answering thus:
+ "Declare, as thou dost wish that I above
+May carry tidings of thee, who is he,
+In whom that sight doth wake such sad remembrance?"
+ Forthwith he laid his hand on the cheek-bone
+Of one, his fellow-spirit, and his jaws
+Expanding, cried: "Lo! this is he I wot of;
+He speaks not for himself: the outcast this
+Who overwhelm'd the doubt in Caesar's mind,
+Affirming that delay to men prepar'd
+Was ever harmful. "Oh how terrified
+Methought was Curio, from whose throat was cut
+The tongue, which spake that hardy word. Then one
+Maim'd of each hand, uplifted in the gloom
+The bleeding stumps, that they with gory spots
+Sullied his face, and cried: "'Remember thee
+Of Mosca, too, I who, alas! exclaim'd,
+'The deed once done there is an end,' that prov'd
+A seed of sorrow to the Tuscan race."
+ I added: "Ay, and death to thine own tribe."
+ Whence heaping woe on woe he hurried off,
+As one grief stung to madness. But I there
+Still linger'd to behold the troop, and saw
+Things, such as I may fear without more proof
+To tell of, but that conscience makes me firm,
+The boon companion, who her strong breast-plate
+Buckles on him, that feels no guilt within
+And bids him on and fear not. Without doubt
+I saw, and yet it seems to pass before me,
+A headless trunk, that even as the rest
+Of the sad flock pac'd onward. By the hair
+It bore the sever'd member, lantern-wise
+Pendent in hand, which look'd at us and said,
+"Woe's me!" The spirit lighted thus himself,
+And two there were in one, and one in two.
+How that may be he knows who ordereth so.
+ When at the bridge's foot direct he stood,
+His arm aloft he rear'd, thrusting the head
+Full in our view, that nearer we might hear
+The words, which thus it utter'd: "Now behold
+This grievous torment, thou, who breathing go'st
+To spy the dead; behold if any else
+Be terrible as this. And that on earth
+Thou mayst bear tidings of me, know that I
+Am Bertrand, he of Born, who gave King John
+The counsel mischievous. Father and son
+I set at mutual war. For Absalom
+And David more did not Ahitophel,
+Spurring them on maliciously to strife.
+For parting those so closely knit, my brain
+Parted, alas! I carry from its source,
+That in this trunk inhabits. Thus the law
+Of retribution fiercely works in me."
+
+
+
+CANTO XXIX
+
+SO were mine eyes inebriate with view
+Of the vast multitude, whom various wounds
+Disfigur'd, that they long'd to stay and weep.
+ But Virgil rous'd me: "What yet gazest on?
+Wherefore doth fasten yet thy sight below
+Among the maim'd and miserable shades?
+Thou hast not shewn in any chasm beside
+This weakness. Know, if thou wouldst number them
+That two and twenty miles the valley winds
+Its circuit, and already is the moon
+Beneath our feet: the time permitted now
+Is short, and more not seen remains to see."
+ "If thou," I straight replied, "hadst weigh'd the cause
+For which I look'd, thou hadst perchance excus'd
+The tarrying still." My leader part pursu'd
+His way, the while I follow'd, answering him,
+And adding thus: "Within that cave I deem,
+Whereon so fixedly I held my ken,
+There is a spirit dwells, one of my blood,
+Wailing the crime that costs him now so dear."
+ Then spake my master: "Let thy soul no more
+Afflict itself for him. Direct elsewhere
+Its thought, and leave him. At the bridge's foot
+I mark'd how he did point with menacing look
+At thee, and heard him by the others nam'd
+Geri of Bello. Thou so wholly then
+Wert busied with his spirit, who once rul'd
+The towers of Hautefort, that thou lookedst not
+That way, ere he was gone."--"O guide belov'd!
+His violent death yet unaveng'd," said I,
+"By any, who are partners in his shame,
+Made him contemptuous: therefore, as I think,
+He pass'd me speechless by; and doing so
+Hath made me more compassionate his fate."
+ So we discours'd to where the rock first show'd
+The other valley, had more light been there,
+E'en to the lowest depth. Soon as we came
+O'er the last cloister in the dismal rounds
+Of Malebolge, and the brotherhood
+Were to our view expos'd, then many a dart
+Of sore lament assail'd me, headed all
+With points of thrilling pity, that I clos'd
+Both ears against the volley with mine hands.
+ As were the torment, if each lazar-house
+Of Valdichiana, in the sultry time
+'Twixt July and September, with the isle
+Sardinia and Maremma's pestilent fen,
+Had heap'd their maladies all in one foss
+Together; such was here the torment: dire
+The stench, as issuing steams from fester'd limbs.
+ We on the utmost shore of the long rock
+Descended still to leftward. Then my sight
+Was livelier to explore the depth, wherein
+The minister of the most mighty Lord,
+All-searching Justice, dooms to punishment
+The forgers noted on her dread record.
+ More rueful was it not methinks to see
+The nation in Aegina droop, what time
+Each living thing, e'en to the little worm,
+All fell, so full of malice was the air
+(And afterward, as bards of yore have told,
+The ancient people were restor'd anew
+From seed of emmets) than was here to see
+The spirits, that languish'd through the murky vale
+Up-pil'd on many a stack. Confus'd they lay,
+One o'er the belly, o'er the shoulders one
+Roll'd of another; sideling crawl'd a third
+Along the dismal pathway. Step by step
+We journey'd on, in silence looking round
+And list'ning those diseas'd, who strove in vain
+To lift their forms. Then two I mark'd, that sat
+Propp'd 'gainst each other, as two brazen pans
+Set to retain the heat. From head to foot,
+A tetter bark'd them round. Nor saw I e'er
+Groom currying so fast, for whom his lord
+Impatient waited, or himself perchance
+Tir'd with long watching, as of these each one
+Plied quickly his keen nails, through furiousness
+Of ne'er abated pruriency. The crust
+Came drawn from underneath in flakes, like scales
+Scrap'd from the bream or fish of broader mail.
+ "O thou, who with thy fingers rendest off
+Thy coat of proof," thus spake my guide to one,
+"And sometimes makest tearing pincers of them,
+Tell me if any born of Latian land
+Be among these within: so may thy nails
+Serve thee for everlasting to this toil."
+ "Both are of Latium," weeping he replied,
+"Whom tortur'd thus thou seest: but who art thou
+That hast inquir'd of us?" To whom my guide:
+"One that descend with this man, who yet lives,
+From rock to rock, and show him hell's abyss."
+ Then started they asunder, and each turn'd
+Trembling toward us, with the rest, whose ear
+Those words redounding struck. To me my liege
+Address'd him: "Speak to them whate'er thou list."
+ And I therewith began: "So may no time
+Filch your remembrance from the thoughts of men
+In th' upper world, but after many suns
+Survive it, as ye tell me, who ye are,
+And of what race ye come. Your punishment,
+Unseemly and disgustful in its kind,
+Deter you not from opening thus much to me."
+ "Arezzo was my dwelling," answer'd one,
+"And me Albero of Sienna brought
+To die by fire; but that, for which I died,
+Leads me not here. True is in sport I told him,
+That I had learn'd to wing my flight in air.
+And he admiring much, as he was void
+Of wisdom, will'd me to declare to him
+The secret of mine art: and only hence,
+Because I made him not a Daedalus,
+Prevail'd on one suppos'd his sire to burn me.
+But Minos to this chasm last of the ten,
+For that I practis'd alchemy on earth,
+Has doom'd me. Him no subterfuge eludes."
+ Then to the bard I spake: "Was ever race
+Light as Sienna's? Sure not France herself
+Can show a tribe so frivolous and vain."
+ The other leprous spirit heard my words,
+And thus return'd: "Be Stricca from this charge
+Exempted, he who knew so temp'rately
+To lay out fortune's gifts; and Niccolo
+Who first the spice's costly luxury
+Discover'd in that garden, where such seed
+Roots deepest in the soil: and be that troop
+Exempted, with whom Caccia of Asciano
+Lavish'd his vineyards and wide-spreading woods,
+And his rare wisdom Abbagliato show'd
+A spectacle for all. That thou mayst know
+Who seconds thee against the Siennese
+Thus gladly, bend this way thy sharpen'd sight,
+That well my face may answer to thy ken;
+So shalt thou see I am Capocchio's ghost,
+Who forg'd transmuted metals by the power
+Of alchemy; and if I scan thee right,
+Thus needs must well remember how I aped
+Creative nature by my subtle art."
+
+
+
+CANTO XXX
+
+WHAT time resentment burn'd in Juno's breast
+For Semele against the Theban blood,
+As more than once in dire mischance was rued,
+Such fatal frenzy seiz'd on Athamas,
+That he his spouse beholding with a babe
+Laden on either arm, "Spread out," he cried,
+"The meshes, that I take the lioness
+And the young lions at the pass: "then forth
+Stretch'd he his merciless talons, grasping one,
+One helpless innocent, Learchus nam'd,
+Whom swinging down he dash'd upon a rock,
+And with her other burden self-destroy'd
+The hapless mother plung'd: and when the pride
+Of all-presuming Troy fell from its height,
+By fortune overwhelm'd, and the old king
+With his realm perish'd, then did Hecuba,
+A wretch forlorn and captive, when she saw
+Polyxena first slaughter'd, and her son,
+Her Polydorus, on the wild sea-beach
+Next met the mourner's view, then reft of sense
+Did she run barking even as a dog;
+Such mighty power had grief to wrench her soul.
+Bet ne'er the Furies or of Thebes or Troy
+With such fell cruelty were seen, their goads
+Infixing in the limbs of man or beast,
+As now two pale and naked ghost I saw
+That gnarling wildly scamper'd, like the swine
+Excluded from his stye. One reach'd Capocchio,
+And in the neck-joint sticking deep his fangs,
+Dragg'd him, that o'er the solid pavement rubb'd
+His belly stretch'd out prone. The other shape,
+He of Arezzo, there left trembling, spake;
+"That sprite of air is Schicchi; in like mood
+Of random mischief vent he still his spite."
+ To whom I answ'ring: "Oh! as thou dost hope,
+The other may not flesh its jaws on thee,
+Be patient to inform us, who it is,
+Ere it speed hence."--" That is the ancient soul
+Of wretched Myrrha," he replied, "who burn'd
+With most unholy flame for her own sire,
+And a false shape assuming, so perform'd
+The deed of sin; e'en as the other there,
+That onward passes, dar'd to counterfeit
+Donati's features, to feign'd testament
+The seal affixing, that himself might gain,
+For his own share, the lady of the herd."
+ When vanish'd the two furious shades, on whom
+Mine eye was held, I turn'd it back to view
+The other cursed spirits. One I saw
+In fashion like a lute, had but the groin
+Been sever'd, where it meets the forked part.
+Swoln dropsy, disproportioning the limbs
+With ill-converted moisture, that the paunch
+Suits not the visage, open'd wide his lips
+Gasping as in the hectic man for drought,
+One towards the chin, the other upward curl'd.
+ "O ye, who in this world of misery,
+Wherefore I know not, are exempt from pain,"
+Thus he began, "attentively regard
+Adamo's woe. When living, full supply
+Ne'er lack'd me of what most I coveted;
+One drop of water now, alas! I crave.
+The rills, that glitter down the grassy slopes
+Of Casentino, making fresh and soft
+The banks whereby they glide to Arno's stream,
+Stand ever in my view; and not in vain;
+For more the pictur'd semblance dries me up,
+Much more than the disease, which makes the flesh
+Desert these shrivel'd cheeks. So from the place,
+Where I transgress'd, stern justice urging me,
+Takes means to quicken more my lab'ring sighs.
+There is Romena, where I falsified
+The metal with the Baptist's form imprest,
+For which on earth I left my body burnt.
+But if I here might see the sorrowing soul
+Of Guido, Alessandro, or their brother,
+For Branda's limpid spring I would not change
+The welcome sight. One is e'en now within,
+If truly the mad spirits tell, that round
+Are wand'ring. But wherein besteads me that?
+My limbs are fetter'd. Were I but so light,
+That I each hundred years might move one inch,
+I had set forth already on this path,
+Seeking him out amidst the shapeless crew,
+Although eleven miles it wind, not more
+Than half of one across. They brought me down
+Among this tribe; induc'd by them I stamp'd
+The florens with three carats of alloy."
+ "Who are that abject pair," I next inquir'd,
+"That closely bounding thee upon thy right
+Lie smoking, like a band in winter steep'd
+In the chill stream?"--"When to this gulf I dropt,"
+He answer'd, "here I found them; since that hour
+They have not turn'd, nor ever shall, I ween,
+Till time hath run his course. One is that dame
+The false accuser of the Hebrew youth;
+Sinon the other, that false Greek from Troy.
+Sharp fever drains the reeky moistness out,
+In such a cloud upsteam'd." When that he heard,
+One, gall'd perchance to be so darkly nam'd,
+With clench'd hand smote him on the braced paunch,
+That like a drum resounded: but forthwith
+Adamo smote him on the face, the blow
+Returning with his arm, that seem'd as hard.
+ "Though my o'erweighty limbs have ta'en from me
+The power to move," said he, "I have an arm
+At liberty for such employ." To whom
+Was answer'd: "When thou wentest to the fire,
+Thou hadst it not so ready at command,
+Then readier when it coin'd th' impostor gold."
+ And thus the dropsied: "Ay, now speak'st thou true.
+But there thou gav'st not such true testimony,
+When thou wast question'd of the truth, at Troy."
+ "If I spake false, thou falsely stamp'dst the coin,"
+Said Sinon; "I am here but for one fault,
+And thou for more than any imp beside."
+ "Remember," he replied, "O perjur'd one,
+The horse remember, that did teem with death,
+And all the world be witness to thy guilt."
+ "To thine," return'd the Greek, "witness the thirst
+Whence thy tongue cracks, witness the fluid mound,
+Rear'd by thy belly up before thine eyes,
+A mass corrupt." To whom the coiner thus:
+"Thy mouth gapes wide as ever to let pass
+Its evil saying. Me if thirst assails,
+Yet I am stuff'd with moisture. Thou art parch'd,
+Pains rack thy head, no urging would'st thou need
+To make thee lap Narcissus' mirror up."
+ I was all fix'd to listen, when my guide
+Admonish'd: "Now beware: a little more.
+And I do quarrel with thee." I perceiv'd
+How angrily he spake, and towards him turn'd
+With shame so poignant, as remember'd yet
+Confounds me. As a man that dreams of harm
+Befall'n him, dreaming wishes it a dream,
+And that which is, desires as if it were not,
+Such then was I, who wanting power to speak
+Wish'd to excuse myself, and all the while
+Excus'd me, though unweeting that I did.
+ "More grievous fault than thine has been, less shame,"
+My master cried, "might expiate. Therefore cast
+All sorrow from thy soul; and if again
+Chance bring thee, where like conference is held,
+Think I am ever at thy side. To hear
+Such wrangling is a joy for vulgar minds."
+
+
+
+CANTO XXXI
+
+THE very tongue, whose keen reproof before
+Had wounded me, that either cheek was stain'd,
+Now minister'd my cure. So have I heard,
+Achilles and his father's javelin caus'd
+Pain first, and then the boon of health restor'd.
+ Turning our back upon the vale of woe,
+W cross'd th' encircled mound in silence. There
+Was twilight dim, that far long the gloom
+Mine eye advanc'd not: but I heard a horn
+Sounded aloud. The peal it blew had made
+The thunder feeble. Following its course
+The adverse way, my strained eyes were bent
+On that one spot. So terrible a blast
+Orlando blew not, when that dismal rout
+O'erthrew the host of Charlemagne, and quench'd
+His saintly warfare. Thitherward not long
+My head was rais'd, when many lofty towers
+Methought I spied. "Master," said I, "what land
+Is this?" He answer'd straight: "Too long a space
+Of intervening darkness has thine eye
+To traverse: thou hast therefore widely err'd
+In thy imagining. Thither arriv'd
+Thou well shalt see, how distance can delude
+The sense. A little therefore urge thee on."
+ Then tenderly he caught me by the hand;
+"Yet know," said he, "ere farther we advance,
+That it less strange may seem, these are not towers,
+But giants. In the pit they stand immers'd,
+Each from his navel downward, round the bank."
+ As when a fog disperseth gradually,
+Our vision traces what the mist involves
+Condens'd in air; so piercing through the gross
+And gloomy atmosphere, as more and more
+We near'd toward the brink, mine error fled,
+And fear came o'er me. As with circling round
+Of turrets, Montereggion crowns his walls,
+E'en thus the shore, encompassing th' abyss,
+Was turreted with giants, half their length
+Uprearing, horrible, whom Jove from heav'n
+Yet threatens, when his mutt'ring thunder rolls.
+ Of one already I descried the face,
+Shoulders, and breast, and of the belly huge
+Great part, and both arms down along his ribs.
+ All-teeming nature, when her plastic hand
+Left framing of these monsters, did display
+Past doubt her wisdom, taking from mad War
+Such slaves to do his bidding; and if she
+Repent her not of th' elephant and whale,
+Who ponders well confesses her therein
+Wiser and more discreet; for when brute force
+And evil will are back'd with subtlety,
+Resistance none avails. His visage seem'd
+In length and bulk, as doth the pine, that tops
+Saint Peter's Roman fane; and th' other bones
+Of like proportion, so that from above
+The bank, which girdled him below, such height
+Arose his stature, that three Friezelanders
+Had striv'n in vain to reach but to his hair.
+Full thirty ample palms was he expos'd
+Downward from whence a man his garments loops.
+"Raphel bai ameth sabi almi,"
+So shouted his fierce lips, which sweeter hymns
+Became not; and my guide address'd him thus:
+"O senseless spirit! let thy horn for thee
+Interpret: therewith vent thy rage, if rage
+Or other passion wring thee. Search thy neck,
+There shalt thou find the belt that binds it on.
+Wild spirit! lo, upon thy mighty breast
+Where hangs the baldrick!" Then to me he spake:
+"He doth accuse himself. Nimrod is this,
+Through whose ill counsel in the world no more
+One tongue prevails. But pass we on, nor waste
+Our words; for so each language is to him,
+As his to others, understood by none."
+ Then to the leftward turning sped we forth,
+And at a sling's throw found another shade
+Far fiercer and more huge. I cannot say
+What master hand had girt him; but he held
+Behind the right arm fetter'd, and before
+The other with a chain, that fasten'd him
+From the neck down, and five times round his form
+Apparent met the wreathed links. "This proud one
+Would of his strength against almighty Jove
+Make trial," said my guide; "whence he is thus
+Requited: Ephialtes him they call.
+Great was his prowess, when the giants brought
+Fear on the gods: those arms, which then he piled,
+Now moves he never." Forthwith I return'd:
+"Fain would I, if 't were possible, mine eyes
+Of Briareus immeasurable gain'd
+Experience next." He answer'd: "Thou shalt see
+Not far from hence Antaeus, who both speaks
+And is unfetter'd, who shall place us there
+Where guilt is at its depth. Far onward stands
+Whom thou wouldst fain behold, in chains, and made
+Like to this spirit, save that in his looks
+More fell he seems." By violent earthquake rock'd
+Ne'er shook a tow'r, so reeling to its base,
+As Ephialtes. More than ever then
+I dreaded death, nor than the terror more
+Had needed, if I had not seen the cords
+That held him fast. We, straightway journeying on,
+Came to Antaeus, who five ells complete
+Without the head, forth issued from the cave.
+ "O thou, who in the fortunate vale, that made
+Great Scipio heir of glory, when his sword
+Drove back the troop of Hannibal in flight,
+Who thence of old didst carry for thy spoil
+An hundred lions; and if thou hadst fought
+In the high conflict on thy brethren's side,
+Seems as men yet believ'd, that through thine arm
+The sons of earth had conquer'd, now vouchsafe
+To place us down beneath, where numbing cold
+Locks up Cocytus. Force not that we crave
+Or Tityus' help or Typhon's. Here is one
+Can give what in this realm ye covet. Stoop
+Therefore, nor scornfully distort thy lip.
+He in the upper world can yet bestow
+Renown on thee, for he doth live, and looks
+For life yet longer, if before the time
+Grace call him not unto herself." Thus spake
+The teacher. He in haste forth stretch'd his hands,
+And caught my guide. Alcides whilom felt
+That grapple straighten'd score. Soon as my guide
+Had felt it, he bespake me thus: "This way
+That I may clasp thee;" then so caught me up,
+That we were both one burden. As appears
+The tower of Carisenda, from beneath
+Where it doth lean, if chance a passing cloud
+So sail across, that opposite it hangs,
+Such then Antaeus seem'd, as at mine ease
+I mark'd him stooping. I were fain at times
+T' have pass'd another way. Yet in th' abyss,
+That Lucifer with Judas low ingulfs,
+I,ightly he plac'd us; nor there leaning stay'd,
+But rose as in a bark the stately mast.
+
+
+
+CANTO XXXII
+
+COULD I command rough rhimes and hoarse, to suit
+That hole of sorrow, o'er which ev'ry rock
+His firm abutment rears, then might the vein
+Of fancy rise full springing: but not mine
+Such measures, and with falt'ring awe I touch
+The mighty theme; for to describe the depth
+Of all the universe, is no emprize
+To jest with, and demands a tongue not us'd
+To infant babbling. But let them assist
+My song, the tuneful maidens, by whose aid
+Amphion wall'd in Thebes, so with the truth
+My speech shall best accord. Oh ill-starr'd folk,
+Beyond all others wretched! who abide
+In such a mansion, as scarce thought finds words
+To speak of, better had ye here on earth
+Been flocks or mountain goats. As down we stood
+In the dark pit beneath the giants' feet,
+But lower far than they, and I did gaze
+Still on the lofty battlement, a voice
+Bespoke me thus: "Look how thou walkest. Take
+Good heed, thy soles do tread not on the heads
+Of thy poor brethren." Thereupon I turn'd,
+And saw before and underneath my feet
+A lake, whose frozen surface liker seem'd
+To glass than water. Not so thick a veil
+In winter e'er hath Austrian Danube spread
+O'er his still course, nor Tanais far remote
+Under the chilling sky. Roll'd o'er that mass
+Had Tabernich or Pietrapana fall'n,
+Not e'en its rim had creak'd. As peeps the frog
+Croaking above the wave, what time in dreams
+The village gleaner oft pursues her toil,
+So, to where modest shame appears, thus low
+Blue pinch'd and shrin'd in ice the spirits stood,
+Moving their teeth in shrill note like the stork.
+His face each downward held; their mouth the cold,
+Their eyes express'd the dolour of their heart.
+ A space I look'd around, then at my feet
+Saw two so strictly join'd, that of their head
+The very hairs were mingled. "Tell me ye,
+Whose bosoms thus together press," said I,
+"Who are ye?" At that sound their necks they bent,
+And when their looks were lifted up to me,
+Straightway their eyes, before all moist within,
+Distill'd upon their lips, and the frost bound
+The tears betwixt those orbs and held them there.
+Plank unto plank hath never cramp clos'd up
+So stoutly. Whence like two enraged goats
+They clash'd together; them such fury seiz'd.
+ And one, from whom the cold both ears had reft,
+Exclaim'd, still looking downward: "Why on us
+Dost speculate so long? If thou wouldst know
+Who are these two, the valley, whence his wave
+Bisenzio slopes, did for its master own
+Their sire Alberto, and next him themselves.
+They from one body issued; and throughout
+Caina thou mayst search, nor find a shade
+More worthy in congealment to be fix'd,
+Not him, whose breast and shadow Arthur's land
+At that one blow dissever'd, not Focaccia,
+No not this spirit, whose o'erjutting head
+Obstructs my onward view: he bore the name
+Of Mascheroni: Tuscan if thou be,
+Well knowest who he was: and to cut short
+All further question, in my form behold
+What once was Camiccione. I await
+Carlino here my kinsman, whose deep guilt
+Shall wash out mine." A thousand visages
+Then mark'd I, which the keen and eager cold
+Had shap'd into a doggish grin; whence creeps
+A shiv'ring horror o'er me, at the thought
+Of those frore shallows. While we journey'd on
+Toward the middle, at whose point unites
+All heavy substance, and I trembling went
+Through that eternal chillness, I know not
+If will it were or destiny, or chance,
+But, passing 'midst the heads, my foot did strike
+With violent blow against the face of one.
+ "Wherefore dost bruise me?" weeping, he exclaim'd,
+"Unless thy errand be some fresh revenge
+For Montaperto, wherefore troublest me?"
+ I thus: "Instructor, now await me here,
+That I through him may rid me of my doubt.
+Thenceforth what haste thou wilt." The teacher paus'd,
+And to that shade I spake, who bitterly
+Still curs'd me in his wrath. "What art thou, speak,
+That railest thus on others?" He replied:
+"Now who art thou, that smiting others' cheeks
+Through Antenora roamest, with such force
+As were past suff'rance, wert thou living still?"
+ "And I am living, to thy joy perchance,"
+Was my reply, "if fame be dear to thee,
+That with the rest I may thy name enrol."
+ "The contrary of what I covet most,"
+Said he, "thou tender'st: hence; nor vex me more.
+Ill knowest thou to flatter in this vale."
+ Then seizing on his hinder scalp, I cried:
+"Name thee, or not a hair shall tarry here."
+ "Rend all away," he answer'd, "yet for that
+I will not tell nor show thee who I am,
+Though at my head thou pluck a thousand times."
+ Now I had grasp'd his tresses, and stript off
+More than one tuft, he barking, with his eyes
+Drawn in and downward, when another cried,
+"What ails thee, Bocca? Sound not loud enough
+Thy chatt'ring teeth, but thou must bark outright?
+What devil wrings thee?"--" Now," said I, "be dumb,
+Accursed traitor! to thy shame of thee
+True tidings will I bear."--" Off," he replied,
+"Tell what thou list; but as thou escape from hence
+To speak of him whose tongue hath been so glib,
+Forget not: here he wails the Frenchman's gold.
+'Him of Duera,' thou canst say, 'I mark'd,
+Where the starv'd sinners pine.' If thou be ask'd
+What other shade was with them, at thy side
+Is Beccaria, whose red gorge distain'd
+The biting axe of Florence. Farther on,
+If I misdeem not, Soldanieri bides,
+With Ganellon, and Tribaldello, him
+Who op'd Faenza when the people slept."
+ We now had left him, passing on our way,
+When I beheld two spirits by the ice
+Pent in one hollow, that the head of one
+Was cowl unto the other; and as bread
+Is raven'd up through hunger, th' uppermost
+Did so apply his fangs to th' other's brain,
+Where the spine joins it. Not more furiously
+On Menalippus' temples Tydeus gnaw'd,
+Than on that skull and on its garbage he.
+ "O thou who show'st so beastly sign of hate
+'Gainst him thou prey'st on, let me hear," said I
+"The cause, on such condition, that if right
+Warrant thy grievance, knowing who ye are,
+And what the colour of his sinning was,
+I may repay thee in the world above,
+If that, wherewith I speak be moist so long."
+
+
+
+CANTO XXXIII
+
+HIS jaws uplifting from their fell repast,
+That sinner wip'd them on the hairs o' th' head,
+Which he behind had mangled, then began:
+"Thy will obeying, I call up afresh
+Sorrow past cure, which but to think of wrings
+My heart, or ere I tell on't. But if words,
+That I may utter, shall prove seed to bear
+Fruit of eternal infamy to him,
+The traitor whom I gnaw at, thou at once
+Shalt see me speak and weep. Who thou mayst be
+I know not, nor how here below art come:
+But Florentine thou seemest of a truth,
+When I do hear thee. Know I was on earth
+Count Ugolino, and th' Archbishop he
+Ruggieri. Why I neighbour him so close,
+Now list. That through effect of his ill thoughts
+In him my trust reposing, I was ta'en
+And after murder'd, need is not I tell.
+What therefore thou canst not have heard, that is,
+How cruel was the murder, shalt thou hear,
+And know if he have wrong'd me. A small grate
+Within that mew, which for my sake the name
+Of famine bears, where others yet must pine,
+Already through its opening sev'ral moons
+Had shown me, when I slept the evil sleep,
+That from the future tore the curtain off.
+This one, methought, as master of the sport,
+Rode forth to chase the gaunt wolf and his whelps
+Unto the mountain, which forbids the sight
+Of Lucca to the Pisan. With lean brachs
+Inquisitive and keen, before him rang'd
+Lanfranchi with Sismondi and Gualandi.
+After short course the father and the sons
+Seem'd tir'd and lagging, and methought I saw
+The sharp tusks gore their sides. When I awoke
+Before the dawn, amid their sleep I heard
+My sons (for they were with me) weep and ask
+For bread. Right cruel art thou, if no pang
+Thou feel at thinking what my heart foretold;
+And if not now, why use thy tears to flow?
+Now had they waken'd; and the hour drew near
+When they were wont to bring us food; the mind
+Of each misgave him through his dream, and I
+Heard, at its outlet underneath lock'd up
+The' horrible tower: whence uttering not a word
+I look'd upon the visage of my sons.
+I wept not: so all stone I felt within.
+They wept: and one, my little Anslem, cried:
+"Thou lookest so! Father what ails thee?" Yet
+I shed no tear, nor answer'd all that day
+Nor the next night, until another sun
+Came out upon the world. When a faint beam
+Had to our doleful prison made its way,
+And in four countenances I descry'd
+The image of my own, on either hand
+Through agony I bit, and they who thought
+I did it through desire of feeding, rose
+O' th' sudden, and cried, 'Father, we should grieve
+Far less, if thou wouldst eat of us: thou gav'st
+These weeds of miserable flesh we wear,
+And do thou strip them off from us again.'
+Then, not to make them sadder, I kept down
+My spirit in stillness. That day and the next
+We all were silent. Ah, obdurate earth!
+Why open'dst not upon us? When we came
+To the fourth day, then Geddo at my feet
+Outstretch'd did fling him, crying, 'Hast no help
+For me, my father!' "There he died, and e'en
+Plainly as thou seest me, saw I the three
+Fall one by one 'twixt the fifth day and sixth:
+Whence I betook me now grown blind to grope
+Over them all, and for three days aloud
+Call'd on them who were dead. Then fasting got
+The mastery of grief." Thus having spoke,
+Once more upon the wretched skull his teeth
+He fasten'd, like a mastiff's 'gainst the bone
+Firm and unyielding. Oh thou Pisa! shame
+Of all the people, who their dwelling make
+In that fair region, where th' Italian voice
+Is heard, since that thy neighbours are so slack
+To punish, from their deep foundations rise
+Capraia and Gorgona, and dam up
+The mouth of Arno, that each soul in thee
+May perish in the waters! What if fame
+Reported that thy castles were betray'd
+By Ugolino, yet no right hadst thou
+To stretch his children on the rack. For them,
+Brigata, Ugaccione, and the pair
+Of gentle ones, of whom my song hath told,
+Their tender years, thou modern Thebes! did make
+Uncapable of guilt. Onward we pass'd,
+Where others skarf'd in rugged folds of ice
+Not on their feet were turn'd, but each revers'd
+ There very weeping suffers not to weep;
+For at their eyes grief seeking passage finds
+Impediment, and rolling inward turns
+For increase of sharp anguish: the first tears
+Hang cluster'd, and like crystal vizors show,
+Under the socket brimming all the cup.
+ Now though the cold had from my face dislodg'd
+Each feeling, as 't were callous, yet me seem'd
+Some breath of wind I felt. "Whence cometh this,"
+Said I, "my master? Is not here below
+All vapour quench'd?"--"'Thou shalt be speedily,"
+He answer'd, "where thine eye shall tell thee whence
+The cause descrying of this airy shower."
+ Then cried out one in the chill crust who mourn'd:
+"O souls so cruel! that the farthest post
+Hath been assign'd you, from this face remove
+The harden'd veil, that I may vent the grief
+Impregnate at my heart, some little space
+Ere it congeal again!" I thus replied:
+"Say who thou wast, if thou wouldst have mine aid;
+And if I extricate thee not, far down
+As to the lowest ice may I descend!"
+ "The friar Alberigo," answered he,
+"Am I, who from the evil garden pluck'd
+Its fruitage, and am here repaid, the date
+More luscious for my fig."--"Hah!" I exclaim'd,
+"Art thou too dead!"--"How in the world aloft
+It fareth with my body," answer'd he,
+"I am right ignorant. Such privilege
+Hath Ptolomea, that ofttimes the soul
+Drops hither, ere by Atropos divorc'd.
+And that thou mayst wipe out more willingly
+The glazed tear-drops that o'erlay mine eyes,
+Know that the soul, that moment she betrays,
+As I did, yields her body to a fiend
+Who after moves and governs it at will,
+Till all its time be rounded; headlong she
+Falls to this cistern. And perchance above
+Doth yet appear the body of a ghost,
+Who here behind me winters. Him thou know'st,
+If thou but newly art arriv'd below.
+The years are many that have pass'd away,
+Since to this fastness Branca Doria came."
+ "Now," answer'd I, "methinks thou mockest me,
+For Branca Doria never yet hath died,
+But doth all natural functions of a man,
+Eats, drinks, and sleeps, and putteth raiment on."
+ He thus: "Not yet unto that upper foss
+By th' evil talons guarded, where the pitch
+Tenacious boils, had Michael Zanche reach'd,
+When this one left a demon in his stead
+In his own body, and of one his kin,
+Who with him treachery wrought. But now put forth
+Thy hand, and ope mine eyes." I op'd them not.
+Ill manners were best courtesy to him.
+ Ah Genoese! men perverse in every way,
+With every foulness stain'd, why from the earth
+Are ye not cancel'd? Such an one of yours
+I with Romagna's darkest spirit found,
+As for his doings even now in soul
+Is in Cocytus plung'd, and yet doth seem
+In body still alive upon the earth.
+
+
+
+CANTO XXXIV
+
+"THE banners of Hell's Monarch do come forth
+Towards us; therefore look," so spake my guide,
+"If thou discern him." As, when breathes a cloud
+Heavy and dense, or when the shades of night
+Fall on our hemisphere, seems view'd from far
+A windmill, which the blast stirs briskly round,
+Such was the fabric then methought I saw,
+ To shield me from the wind, forthwith I drew
+Behind my guide: no covert else was there.
+ Now came I (and with fear I bid my strain
+Record the marvel) where the souls were all
+Whelm'd underneath, transparent, as through glass
+Pellucid the frail stem. Some prone were laid,
+Others stood upright, this upon the soles,
+That on his head, a third with face to feet
+Arch'd like a bow. When to the point we came,
+Whereat my guide was pleas'd that I should see
+The creature eminent in beauty once,
+He from before me stepp'd and made me pause.
+ "Lo!" he exclaim'd, "lo Dis! and lo the place,
+Where thou hast need to arm thy heart with strength."
+ How frozen and how faint I then became,
+Ask me not, reader! for I write it not,
+Since words would fail to tell thee of my state.
+I was not dead nor living. Think thyself
+If quick conception work in thee at all,
+How I did feel. That emperor, who sways
+The realm of sorrow, at mid breast from th' ice
+Stood forth; and I in stature am more like
+A giant, than the giants are in his arms.
+Mark now how great that whole must be, which suits
+With such a part. If he were beautiful
+As he is hideous now, and yet did dare
+To scowl upon his Maker, well from him
+May all our mis'ry flow. Oh what a sight!
+How passing strange it seem'd, when I did spy
+Upon his head three faces: one in front
+Of hue vermilion, th' other two with this
+Midway each shoulder join'd and at the crest;
+The right 'twixt wan and yellow seem'd: the left
+To look on, such as come from whence old Nile
+Stoops to the lowlands. Under each shot forth
+Two mighty wings, enormous as became
+A bird so vast. Sails never such I saw
+Outstretch'd on the wide sea. No plumes had they,
+But were in texture like a bat, and these
+He flapp'd i' th' air, that from him issued still
+Three winds, wherewith Cocytus to its depth
+Was frozen. At six eyes he wept: the tears
+Adown three chins distill'd with bloody foam.
+At every mouth his teeth a sinner champ'd
+Bruis'd as with pond'rous engine, so that three
+Were in this guise tormented. But far more
+Than from that gnawing, was the foremost pang'd
+By the fierce rending, whence ofttimes the back
+Was stript of all its skin. "That upper spirit,
+Who hath worse punishment," so spake my guide,
+"Is Judas, he that hath his head within
+And plies the feet without. Of th' other two,
+Whose heads are under, from the murky jaw
+Who hangs, is Brutus: lo! how he doth writhe
+And speaks not! Th' other Cassius, that appears
+So large of limb. But night now re-ascends,
+And it is time for parting. All is seen."
+ I clipp'd him round the neck, for so he bade;
+And noting time and place, he, when the wings
+Enough were op'd, caught fast the shaggy sides,
+And down from pile to pile descending stepp'd
+Between the thick fell and the jagged ice.
+ Soon as he reach'd the point, whereat the thigh
+Upon the swelling of the haunches turns,
+My leader there with pain and struggling hard
+Turn'd round his head, where his feet stood before,
+And grappled at the fell, as one who mounts,
+That into hell methought we turn'd again.
+ "Expect that by such stairs as these," thus spake
+The teacher, panting like a man forespent,
+"We must depart from evil so extreme."
+Then at a rocky opening issued forth,
+And plac'd me on a brink to sit, next join'd
+With wary step my side. I rais'd mine eyes,
+Believing that I Lucifer should see
+Where he was lately left, but saw him now
+With legs held upward. Let the grosser sort,
+Who see not what the point was I had pass'd,
+Bethink them if sore toil oppress'd me then.
+ "Arise," my master cried, "upon thy feet.
+"The way is long, and much uncouth the road;
+And now within one hour and half of noon
+The sun returns." It was no palace-hall
+Lofty and luminous wherein we stood,
+But natural dungeon where ill footing was
+And scant supply of light. "Ere from th' abyss
+I sep'rate," thus when risen I began,
+"My guide! vouchsafe few words to set me free
+From error's thralldom. Where is now the ice?
+How standeth he in posture thus revers'd?
+And how from eve to morn in space so brief
+Hath the sun made his transit?" He in few
+Thus answering spake: "Thou deemest thou art still
+On th' other side the centre, where I grasp'd
+Th' abhorred worm, that boreth through the world.
+Thou wast on th' other side, so long as I
+Descended; when I turn'd, thou didst o'erpass
+That point, to which from ev'ry part is dragg'd
+All heavy substance. Thou art now arriv'd
+Under the hemisphere opposed to that,
+Which the great continent doth overspread,
+And underneath whose canopy expir'd
+The Man, that was born sinless, and so liv'd.
+Thy feet are planted on the smallest sphere,
+Whose other aspect is Judecca. Morn
+Here rises, when there evening sets: and he,
+Whose shaggy pile was scal'd, yet standeth fix'd,
+As at the first. On this part he fell down
+From heav'n; and th' earth, here prominent before,
+Through fear of him did veil her with the sea,
+And to our hemisphere retir'd. Perchance
+To shun him was the vacant space left here
+By what of firm land on this side appears,
+That sprang aloof." There is a place beneath,
+From Belzebub as distant, as extends
+The vaulted tomb, discover'd not by sight,
+But by the sound of brooklet, that descends
+This way along the hollow of a rock,
+Which, as it winds with no precipitous course,
+The wave hath eaten. By that hidden way
+My guide and I did enter, to return
+To the fair world: and heedless of repose
+We climbed, he first, I following his steps,
+Till on our view the beautiful lights of heav'n
+Dawn, through a circular opening in the cave:
+Thus issuing we again beheld the stars.
+
+
+
+NOTES TO HELL
+
+CANTO I
+
+Verse 1. In the midway.] That the era of the Poem is intended
+by these words to be fixed to the thirty fifth year of the poet's
+age, A.D. 1300, will appear more plainly in Canto XXI. where that
+date is explicitly marked.
+
+v. 16. That planet's beam.] The sun.
+
+v. 29. The hinder foot.] It is to be remembered, that in
+ascending a hill the weight of the body rests on the hinder foot.
+
+v. 30. A panther.] Pleasure or luxury.
+
+v. 36. With those stars.] The sun was in Aries, in which sign
+he supposes it to have begun its course at the creation.
+
+v. 43. A lion.] Pride or ambition.
+
+v. 45. A she wolf.] Avarice.
+
+v. 56. Where the sun in silence rests.] Hence Milton appears to
+have taken his idea in the Samson Agonistes:
+
+ The sun to me is dark
+ And silent as the moon, &c
+The same metaphor will recur, Canto V. v. 29.
+ Into a place I came
+ Where light was silent all.
+
+v. 65. When the power of Julius.] This is explained by the
+commentators to mean "Although it was rather late with respect to
+my birth before Julius Caesar assumed the supreme authority, and
+made himself perpetual dictator."
+
+v. 98. That greyhound.] This passage is intended as an eulogium
+on the liberal spirit of his Veronese patron Can Grande della
+Scala.
+
+v. 102. 'Twizt either Feltro.] Verona, the country of Can della
+Scala, is situated between Feltro, a city in the Marca
+Trivigiana, and Monte Feltro, a city in the territory of Urbino.
+
+v. 103. Italia's plains.] "Umile Italia," from Virgil, Aen lib.
+iii. 522.
+ Humilemque videmus
+ Italiam.
+
+v. 115. Content in fire.] The spirits in Purgatory.
+
+v. 118. A spirit worthier.] Beatrice, who conducts the Poet
+through Paradise.
+
+v. 130. Saint Peter's gate.] The gate of Purgatory, which the
+Poet feigns to be guarded by an angel placed on that station by
+St. Peter.
+
+CANTO II
+
+v. 1. Now was the day.] A compendium of Virgil's description
+Aen. lib. iv 522. Nox erat, &c. Compare Apollonius Rhodius, lib
+iii. 744, and lib. iv. 1058
+
+v. 8. O mind.]
+ O thought that write all that I met,
+ And in the tresorie it set
+ Of my braine, now shall men see
+ If any virtue in thee be.
+ Chaucer. Temple of Fame, b. ii. v.18
+
+v. 14. Silvius'sire.] Aeneas.
+
+v. 30. The chosen vessel.] St.Paul, Acts, c. ix. v. 15. "But
+the Lord said unto him, Go thy way; for he is a chosen vessel
+unto me."
+
+v. 46. Thy soul.] L'anima tua e da viltate offesa. So in Berni,
+Orl Inn.lib. iii. c. i. st. 53.
+ Se l'alma avete offesa da viltate.
+
+v. 64. Who rest suspended.] The spirits in Limbo, neither
+admitted to a state of glory nor doomed to punishment.
+
+v. 61. A friend not of my fortune, but myself.] Se non fortunae
+sed hominibus solere esse amicum. Cornelii Nepotis Attici Vitae,
+c. ix.
+
+v. 78. Whatever is contain'd.] Every other thing comprised
+within the lunar heaven, which, being the lowest of all, has the
+smallest circle.
+
+v. 93. A blessed dame.] The divine mercy.
+
+v. 97. Lucia.] The enlightening grace of heaven.
+
+v. 124. Three maids.] The divine mercy, Lucia, and Beatrice.
+
+v. 127. As florets.] This simile is well translated by
+Chaucer--
+ But right as floures through the cold of night
+ Iclosed, stoupen in her stalkes lowe,
+ Redressen hem agen the sunne bright,
+ And speden in her kinde course by rowe, &c.
+ Troilus and Creseide, b.ii.
+It has been imitated by many others, among whom see Berni,
+Orl.Inn. Iib. 1. c. xii. st. 86. Marino, Adone, c. xvii. st. 63.
+and Sor. "Donna vestita di nero." and Spenser's Faery Queen, b.4.
+c. xii. st. 34. and b. 6 c. ii. st. 35.
+
+CANTO III
+
+v. 5. Power divine
+ Supremest wisdom, and primeval love.] The three
+persons of the blessed Trinity.
+v. 9. all hope abandoned.] Lasciate ogni speranza voi
+ch'entrate.
+So Berni, Orl. Inn. lib. i. c. 8. st. 53.
+ Lascia pur della vita ogni speranza.
+
+v. 29. Like to the sand.]
+ Unnumber'd as the sands
+ Of Barca or Cyrene's torrid soil
+ Levied to side with warring winds, and poise
+ Their lighter wings.
+ Milton, P. L. ii. 908.
+
+v. 40. Lest th' accursed tribe.] Lest the rebellious angels
+should exult at seeing those who were neutral and therefore less
+guilty, condemned to the same punishment with themselves.
+
+v. 50. A flag.]
+ All the grisly legions that troop
+ Under the sooty flag of Acheron
+ Milton. Comus.
+
+v. 56. Who to base fear
+ Yielding, abjur'd his high estate.] This is
+commonly understood of Celestine the Fifth, who abdicated the
+papal power in 1294. Venturi mentions a work written by
+Innocenzio Barcellini, of the Celestine order, and printed in
+Milan in 1701, In which an attempt is made to put a different
+interpretation on this passage.
+
+v. 70. through the blear light.]
+ Lo fioco lume
+So Filicaja, canz. vi. st. 12.
+ Qual fioco lume.
+
+v. 77. An old man.]
+ Portitor has horrendus aquas et flumina servat
+ Terribili squalore Charon, cui plurima mento
+ Canities inculta jacet; stant lumina flamma.
+ Virg. 7. Aen. Iib. vi. 2.
+
+v. 82. In fierce heat and in ice.]
+ The delighted spirit
+ To bathe in fiery floods or to reside
+ In thrilling regions of thick ribbed ice.
+ Shakesp. Measure for Measure, a. iii.s.1.
+Compare Milton, P. L. b. ii. 600.
+
+v. 92. The livid lake.] Vada livida.
+ Virg. Aen. Iib. vi. 320
+ Totius ut Lacus putidaeque paludis
+ Lividissima, maximeque est profunda vorago.
+ Catullus. xviii. 10.
+
+v. 102. With eyes of burning coal.]
+ His looks were dreadful, and his fiery eyes
+ Like two great beacons glared bright and wide.
+ Spenser. F.Q. b. vi. c. vii.st. 42
+
+v. 104. As fall off the light of autumnal leaves.]
+ Quam multa in silvis autumul frigore primo
+ Lapsa cadunt folia.
+ Virg. Aen. lib. vi. 309
+Compare Apoll. Rhod. lib. iv. 214.
+
+CANTO IV
+
+v. 8. A thund'rous sound.] Imitated, as Mr. Thyer has remarked,
+by Milton, P. L. b. viii. 242.
+ But long ere our approaching heard
+ Noise, other, than the sound of dance or song
+ Torment, and loud lament, and furious rage.
+
+v. 50. a puissant one.] Our Saviour.
+
+v. 75. Honour the bard
+ Sublime.]
+
+ Onorate l'altissimo poeta.
+So Chiabrera, Canz. Eroiche. 32.
+ Onorando l'altissimo poeta.
+
+v. 79. Of semblance neither sorrowful nor glad.]
+ She nas to sober ne to glad.
+ Chaucer's Dream.
+
+v. 90. The Monarch of sublimest song.] Homer.
+
+v. 100. Fitter left untold.]
+ Che'l tacere e bello,
+So our Poet, in Canzone 14.
+ La vide in parte che'l tacere e bello,
+Ruccellai, Le Api, 789.
+ Ch'a dire e brutto ed a tacerlo e bello
+And Bembo,
+ "Vie pui bello e il tacerle, che il favellarne."
+ Gli. Asol. lib. 1.
+
+v. 117. Electra.] The daughter of Atlas, and mother of Dardanus
+the founder of Troy. See Virg. Aen. b. viii. 134. as referred to
+by Dante in treatise "De Monarchia," lib. ii. "Electra, scilicet,
+nata magni nombris regis Atlantis, ut de ambobus testimonium
+reddit poeta noster in octavo ubi Aeneas ad Avandrum sic ait
+ "Dardanus Iliacae," &c.
+
+v. 125. Julia.] The daughter of Julius Caesar, and wife of
+Pompey.
+
+v. 126. The Soldan fierce.] Saladin or Salaheddin, the rival
+of Richard coeur de lion. See D'Herbelot, Bibl. Orient. and
+Knolles's Hist. of the Turks p. 57 to 73 and the Life of Saladin,
+by Bohao'edin Ebn Shedad, published by Albert Schultens, with a
+Latin translation. He is introduced by Petrarch in the Triumph of
+Fame, c. ii
+
+v. 128. The master of the sapient throng.]
+ Maestro di color che sanno.
+Aristotle--Petrarch assigns the first place to Plato. See Triumph
+of Fame, c. iii.
+Pulci, in his Morgante Maggiore, c. xviii. says,
+ Tu se'il maestro di color che sanno.
+
+v. 132. Democritus
+ Who sets the world at chance.]
+Democritus,who maintained the world to have been formed by the
+fortuitous concourse of atoms.
+
+v. 140. Avicen.] See D'Herbelot Bibl. Orient. article Sina. He
+died in 1050. Pulci here again imitates our poet:
+
+ Avicenna quel che il sentimento
+ Intese di Aristotile e i segreti,
+ Averrois che fece il gran comento.
+ Morg. Mag. c. xxv.
+
+v. 140. Him who made
+ That commentary vast, Averroes.]
+Averroes, called by the Arabians Roschd, translated and commented
+the works of Aristotle. According to Tiraboschi (storia della
+Lett. Ital. t. v. 1. ii. c. ii. sect. 4.) he was the source of
+modern philosophical impiety. The critic quotes some passages
+from Petrarch (Senil. 1. v. ep. iii. et. Oper. v. ii. p. 1143) to
+show how strongly such sentiments prevailed in the time of that
+poet, by whom they were held in horror and detestation He adds,
+that this fanatic admirer of Aristotle translated his writings
+with that felicity, which might be expected from one who did not
+know a syllable of Greek, and who was therefore compelled to
+avail himself of the unfaithful Arabic versions. D'Herbelot, on
+the other hand, informs us, that "Averroes was the first who
+translated Aristotle from Greek into Arabic, before the Jews had
+made their translation: and that we had for a long time no other
+text of Aristotle, except that of the Latin translation, which
+was made from this Arabic version of this great philosopher
+(Averroes), who afterwards added to it a very ample commentary,
+of which Thomas Aquinas, and the other scholastic writers,
+availed themselves, before the Greek originals of Aristotle and
+his commentators were known to us in Europe." According to
+D'Herbelot, he died in 1198: but Tiraboschi places that event
+about 1206.
+
+CANTO V
+
+v. 5. Grinning with ghastly feature.] Hence Milton:
+ Death
+ Grinn'd horrible a ghastly smile.
+ P. L. b. ii. 845.
+
+v. 46. As cranes.] This simile is imitated by Lorenzo de
+Medici, in his Ambra, a poem, first published by Mr. Roscoe, in
+the Appendix to his Life of Lorenzo.
+ Marking the tracts of air, the clamorous cranes
+ Wheel their due flight in varied ranks descried:
+ And each with outstretch'd neck his rank maintains
+ In marshal'd order through th' ethereal void.
+ Roscoe, v. i. c. v. p. 257. 4to edit.
+Compare Homer. Il. iii. 3. Virgil. Aeneid. 1 x. 264, and
+Ruccellai, Le Api, 942, and Dante's Purgatory, Canto XXIV. 63.
+
+v. 96. The land.] Ravenna.
+
+v. 99 Love, that in gentle heart is quickly learnt.]
+ Amor, Ch' al cor gentil ratto s'apprende.
+A line taken by Marino, Adone, c. cxli. st. 251.
+
+v. 102. Love, that denial takes from none belov'd.]
+ Amor, ch' a null' amato amar perdona.
+So Boccacio, in his Filocopo. l.1.
+ Amore mal non perdono l'amore a nullo amato.
+And Pulci, in the Morgante Maggiore, c. iv.
+ E perche amor mal volontier perdona,
+ Che non sia al fin sempre amato chi ama.
+Indeed many of the Italian poets have repeated this verse.
+
+v. 105. Caina.] The place to which murderers are doomed.
+
+v. 113. Francesca.] Francesca, daughter of Guido da Polenta,
+lord of Ravenna, was given by her father in marriage to
+Lanciotto, son of Malatesta, lord of Rimini, a man of
+extraordinary courage, but deformed in his person. His brother
+Paolo, who unhappily possessed those graces which the husband of
+Francesca wanted, engaged her affections; and being taken in
+adultery, they were both put to death by the enraged Lanciotto.
+See Notes to Canto XXVII. v. 43
+The whole of this passage is alluded to by Petrarch, in his
+Triumph of Love c. iii.
+
+v. 118.
+ No greater grief than to remember days
+ Of joy,xwhen mis'ry is at hand!]
+Imitated by Marino:
+ Che non ha doglia il misero maggiore
+ Che ricordar la giola entro il dolore.
+ Adone, c. xiv. st. 100
+And by Fortiguerra:
+ Rimembrare il ben perduto
+ Fa piu meschino lo presente stato.
+ Ricciardetto, c. xi. st. 83.
+The original perhaps was in Boetius de Consol. Philosoph. "In
+omni adversitate fortunae infelicissimum genus est infortunii
+fuisse felicem et non esse." 1. 2. pr. 4
+
+v. 124. Lancelot.] One of the Knights of the Round Table, and
+the lover of Ginevra, or Guinever, celebrated in romance. The
+incident alluded to seems to have made a strong impression on the
+imagination of Dante, who introduces it again, less happily, in
+the Paradise, Canto XVI.
+
+v. 128. At one point.]
+ Questo quel punto fu, che sol mi vinse.
+ Tasso, Il Torrismondo, a. i. s. 3.
+
+v. 136. And like a corpse fell to the ground ]
+ E caddi, come corpo morto cade.
+So Pulci:
+ E cadde come morto in terra cade.
+Morgante Maggoire, c. xxii
+
+CANTO VI
+
+v. 1. My sense reviving.]
+ Al tornar della mente, che si chiuse
+ Dinanzi alla pieta de' duo cognati.
+Berni has made a sportive application of these lines, in his Orl.
+Inn. l. iii. c. viii. st. 1.
+
+v. 21. That great worm.] So in Canto XXXIV Lucifer is called
+ Th' abhorred worm, that boreth through the world.
+Ariosto has imitated Dante:
+ Ch' al gran verme infernal mette la briglia,
+ E che di lui come a lei par dispone.
+ Orl. Fur. c. xlvi. st. 76.
+
+v. 52. Ciacco.] So called from his inordinate appetite: Ciacco,
+in Italian, signifying a pig. The real name of this glutton has
+not been transmitted to us. He is introduced in Boccaccio's
+Decameron, Giorn. ix. Nov. 8.
+
+v. 61. The divided city.] The city of Florence, divided into
+the Bianchi and Neri factions.
+
+v. 65. The wild party from the woods.] So called, because it
+was headed by Veri de' Cerchi, whose family had lately come into
+the city from Acone, and the woody country of the Val di Nievole.
+
+v. 66. The other.] The opposite parts of the Neri, at the head
+of which was Corso Donati.
+
+v. 67. This must fall.] The Bianchi.
+
+v. 69. Of one, who under shore
+ Now rests.]
+Charles of Valois, by whose means the Neri were replaced.
+
+v. 73. The just are two in number.] Who these two were, the
+commentators are not agreed.
+
+v. 79. Of Farinata and Tegghiaio.] See Canto X. and Notes, and
+Canto XVI, and Notes.
+
+v. 80. Giacopo.] Giacopo Rusticucci. See Canto XVI, and Notes.
+
+v. 81. Arrigo, Mosca.] Of Arrigo, who is said by the
+commentators to have been of the noble family of the Fifanti, no
+mention afterwards occurs. Mosca degli Uberti is introduced in
+Canto XXVIII. v.
+
+108. Consult thy knowledge.] We are referred to the following
+passage in St. Augustin:--"Cum fiet resurrectio carnis, et
+bonorum gaudia et malorum tormenta majora erunt. "--At the
+resurrection of the flesh, both the happiness of the good and the
+torments of the wicked will be increased."
+
+CANTO VII
+
+v. 1. Ah me! O Satan! Satan!] Pape Satan, Pape Satan, aleppe.
+Pape is said by the commentators to be the same as the Latin word
+papae! "strange!" Of aleppe they do not give a more
+satisfactory account.
+See the Life of Benvenuto Cellini, translated by Dr. Nugent, v.
+ii. b. iii c. vii. p 113, where he mentions "having heard the
+words Paix, paix, Satan! allez, paix! in the court of justice
+at Paris. I recollected what Dante said, when he with his master
+Virgil entered the gates of hell: for Dante, and Giotto the
+painter, were together in France, and visited Paris with
+particular attention, where the court of justice may be
+considered as hell. Hence it is that Dante, who was likewise
+perfect master of the French, made use of that expression, and I
+have often been surprised that it was never understood in that
+sense."
+
+v. 12. The first adulterer proud.] Satan.
+
+v. 22. E'en as a billow.]
+ As when two billows in the Irish sowndes
+ Forcibly driven with contrarie tides
+ Do meet together, each aback rebounds
+ With roaring rage, and dashing on all sides,
+ That filleth all the sea with foam, divides
+ The doubtful current into divers waves.
+ Spenser, F.Q. b. iv. c. 1. st. 42.
+
+v. 48. Popes and cardinals.] Ariosto, having personified
+Avarice as a strange and hideous monster, says of her--
+ Peggio facea nella Romana corte
+ Che v'avea uccisi Cardinali e Papi.
+ Orl. Fur. c. xxvi. st. 32.
+ Worse did she in the court of Rome, for there
+ She had slain Popes and Cardinals.
+
+v. 91. By necessity.] This sentiment called forth the
+reprehension of Cecco d'Ascoli, in his Acerba, l. 1. c. i.
+
+ In cio peccasti, O Fiorentin poeta, &c.
+ Herein, O bard of Florence, didst thou err
+ Laying it down that fortune's largesses
+ Are fated to their goal. Fortune is none,
+ That reason cannot conquer. Mark thou, Dante,
+ If any argument may gainsay this.
+
+CANTO VIII
+
+v. 18. Phlegyas.] Phlegyas, who was so incensed against Apollo
+for having violated his daughter Coronis, that he set fire to the
+temple of that deity, by whose vengeance he was cast into
+Tartarus. See Virg. Aen. l. vi. 618.
+
+v. 59. Filippo Argenti.] Boccaccio tells us, "he was a man
+remarkable for the large proportions and extraordinary vigor of
+his bodily frame, and the extreme waywardness and irascibility of
+his temper." Decam. g. ix. n. 8.
+
+v. 66. The city, that of Dis is nam'd.] So Ariosto. Orl. Fur.
+c. xl. st. 32
+
+v. 94. Seven times.] The commentators, says Venturi, perplex
+themselves with the inquiry what seven perils these were from
+which Dante had been delivered by Virgil. Reckoning the beasts
+in the first Canto as one of them, and adding Charon, Minos,
+Cerberus, Plutus, Phlegyas and Filippo Argenti, as so many
+others, we shall have the number, and if this be not
+satisfactory, we may suppose a determinate to have been put for
+an indeterminate number.
+
+v. 109. At war 'twixt will and will not.]
+ Che si, e no nel capo mi tenzona.
+So Boccaccio, Ninf. Fiesol. st. 233.
+
+ Il si e il no nel capo gli contende.
+The words I have adopted as a translation, are Shakespeare's,
+Measure for Measure. a. ii. s. 1.
+
+v. 122. This their insolence, not new.] Virgil assures our
+poet, that these evil spirits had formerly shown the same
+insolence when our Savior descended into hell. They attempted to
+prevent him from entering at the gate, over which Dante had read
+the fatal inscription. "That gate which," says the Roman poet,
+"an angel has just passed, by whose aid we shall overcome this
+opposition, and gain admittance into the city."
+
+CANTO IX
+
+v. 1. The hue.] Virgil, perceiving that Dante was pale with
+fear, restrained those outward tokens of displeasure which his
+own countenance had betrayed.
+
+v. 23. Erictho.] Erictho, a Thessalian sorceress, according to
+Lucan, Pharsal. l. vi. was employed by Sextus, son of Pompey the
+Great, to conjure up a spirit, who should inform him of the issue
+of the civil wars between his father and Caesar.
+
+v. 25. No long space my flesh
+ Was naked of me.]
+ Quae corpus complexa animae tam fortis inane.
+ Ovid. Met. l. xiii f. 2
+Dante appears to have fallen into a strange anachronism. Virgil's
+death did not happen till long after this period.
+
+v. 42. Adders and cerastes.]
+ Vipereum crinem vittis innexa cruentis.
+ Virg. Aen. l. vi. 281.
+ --spinaque vagi torquente cerastae
+ . . . et torrida dipsas
+ Et gravis in geminum vergens eaput amphisbaena.
+ Lucan. Pharsal. l. ix. 719.
+So Milton:
+ Scorpion and asp, and amphisbaena dire,
+ Cerastes horn'd, hydrus and elops drear,
+ And dipsas.
+ P. L. b. x. 524.
+
+v. 67. A wind.] Imitated by Berni, Orl. Inn. l. 1. e. ii. st.
+6.
+
+v. 83. With his wand.]
+ She with her rod did softly smite the raile
+ Which straight flew ope.
+ Spenser. F. Q. b. iv. c. iii. st. 46.
+
+v. 96. What profits at the fays to but the horn.] "Of what
+avail can it be to offer violence to impassive beings?"
+
+v. 97. Your Cerberus.] Cerberus is feigned to have been dragged
+by Hercules, bound with a three fold chain, of which, says the
+angel, he still bears the marks.
+
+v. 111. The plains of Arles.] In Provence. See Ariosto, Orl.
+Fur. c. xxxix. st. 72
+
+v. 112. At Pola.] A city of Istria, situated near the gulf of
+Quarnaro, in the Adriatic sea.
+
+CANTO X
+
+v. 12. Josaphat.] It seems to have been a common opinion among
+the Jews, as well as among many Christians, that the general
+judgment will be held in the valley of Josaphat, or Jehoshaphat:
+"I will also gather all nations, and will bring them down into
+the valley of Jehoshaphat, and will plead with them there for my
+people, and for my heritage Israel, whom they have scattered
+among the nations, and parted my land." Joel, iii. 2.
+
+v. 32. Farinata.] Farinata degli Uberti, a noble Florentine,
+was the leader of the Ghibelline faction, when they obtained a
+signal victory over the Guelfi at Montaperto, near the river
+Arbia. Macchiavelli calls him "a man of exalted soul, and great
+military talents." Hist. of Flor. b. ii.
+
+v. 52. A shade.] The spirit of Cavalcante Cavalcanti, a noble
+Florentine, of the Guelph party.
+
+v. 59. My son.] Guido, the son of Cavalcante Cavalcanti; "he
+whom I call the first of my friends," says Dante in his Vita
+Nuova, where the commencement of their friendship is related.
+>From the character given of him by contemporary writers his
+temper was well formed to assimilate with that of our poet. "He
+was," according to G. Villani, l. viii. c. 41. "of a
+philosophical and elegant mind, if he had not been too delicate
+and fastidious." And Dino Compagni terms him "a young and noble
+knight, brave and courteous, but of a lofty scornful spirit, much
+addicted to solitude and study." Muratori. Rer. Ital. Script t. 9
+l. 1. p. 481. He died, either in exile at Serrazana, or soon
+after his return to Florence, December 1300, during the spring of
+which year the action of this poem is supposed to be passing.
+v. 62. Guido thy son
+ Had in contempt.]
+Guido Cavalcanti, being more given to philosophy than poetry, was
+perhaps no great admirer of Virgil. Some poetical compositions by
+Guido are, however, still extant; and his reputation for skill in
+the art was such as to eclipse that of his predecessor and
+namesake Guido Guinicelli, as we shall see in the Purgatory,
+Canto XI. His "Canzone sopra il Terreno Amore" was thought
+worthy of being illustrated by numerous and ample commentaries.
+Crescimbeni Ist. della Volg. Poes. l. v.
+For a playful sonnet which Dante addressed to him, and a spirited
+translation of it, see Hayley's Essay on Epic Poetry, Notes to
+Ep. iii.
+
+v. 66. Saidst thou he had?] In Aeschylus, the shade of Darius
+is represented as inquiring with similar anxiety after the fate
+of his son Xerxes.
+
+[GREEK HERE]
+
+Atossa: Xerxes astonish'd, desolate, alone--
+Ghost of Dar: How will this end? Nay, pause not. Is he safe?
+ The Persians. Potter's Translation.
+
+v. 77. Not yet fifty times.] "Not fifty months shall be passed,
+before thou shalt learn, by woeful experience, the difficulty of
+returning from banishment to thy native city"
+
+v.83. The slaughter.] "By means of Farinata degli Uberti, the
+Guelfi were conquered by the army of King Manfredi, near the
+river Arbia, with so great a slaughter, that those who escaped
+from that defeat took refuge not in Florence, which city they
+considered as lost to them, but in Lucca." Macchiavelli. Hist.
+of Flor. b 2.
+
+v. 86. Such orisons.] This appears to allude to certain prayers
+which were offered up in the churches of Florence, for
+deliverance from the hostile attempts of the Uberti.
+
+v. 90. Singly there I stood.] Guido Novello assembled a council
+of the Ghibellini at Empoli where it was agreed by all, that, in
+order to maintain the ascendancy of the Ghibelline party in
+Tuscany, it was necessary to destroy Florence, which could serve
+only (the people of that city beingvGuelfi) to enable the party
+attached to the church to recover its strength. This cruel
+sentence, passed upon so noble a city, met with no opposition
+from any of its citizens or friends, except Farinata degli
+Uberti, who openly and without reserve forbade the measure,
+affirming that he had endured so many hardships, and encountered
+so many dangers, with no other view than that of being able to
+pass his days in his own country. Macchiavelli. Hist. of Flor. b.
+2.
+
+v. 103. My fault.] Dante felt remorse for not having returned
+an immediate answer to the inquiry of Cavalcante, from which
+delay he was led to believe that his son Guido was no longer
+living.
+
+v. 120. Frederick.] The Emperor Frederick the Second, who died
+in 1250. See Notes to Canto XIII.
+
+v. 121. The Lord Cardinal.] Ottaviano Ubaldini, a Florentine,
+made Cardinal in 1245, and deceased about 1273. On account of
+his great influence, he was generally known by the appellation of
+"the Cardinal." It is reported of him that he declared, if there
+were any such thing as a human soul, he had lost his for the
+Ghibellini.
+
+v. 132. Her gracious beam.] Beatrice.
+
+CANTO XI
+
+v. 9. Pope Anastasius.] The commentators are not agreed
+concerning the identity of the person, who is here mentioned as a
+follower of the heretical Photinus. By some he is supposed to
+have been Anastasius the Second, by others, the Fourth of that
+name; while a third set, jealous of the integrity of the papal
+faith, contend that our poet has confounded him with Anastasius
+1. Emperor of the East.
+
+v. 17. My son.] The remainder of the present Canto may be
+considered as a syllabus of the whole of this part of the poem.
+
+v. 48. And sorrows.] This fine moral, that not to enjoy our
+being is to be ungrateful to the Author of it, is well expressed
+in Spenser, F. Q. b. iv. c. viii. st. 15.
+ For he whose daies in wilful woe are worne
+ The grace of his Creator doth despise,
+ That will not use his gifts for thankless
+nigardise.
+
+v. 53. Cahors.] A city in Guienne, much frequented by usurers
+
+v. 83. Thy ethic page.] He refers to Aristotle's Ethics.
+
+[GREEK HERE]
+
+"In the next place, entering, on another division of the subject,
+let it be defined. that respecting morals there are three sorts
+of things to be avoided, malice, incontinence, and brutishness."
+
+v. 104. Her laws.] Aristotle's Physics. [GREEK
+HERE] "Art imitates nature." --See the Coltivazione of Alamanni,
+l. i.
+
+ -I'arte umana, &c.
+
+v. 111. Creation's holy book.] Genesis, c. iii. v. 19. "In the
+sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread."
+
+v. 119. The wain.] The constellation Bootes, or Charles's wain.
+
+CANTO XII
+
+v. 17. The king of Athens.] Theseus, who was enabled, by the
+instructions of Ariadne, the sister of the Minotaur, to destroy
+that monster.
+
+v. 21. Like to a bull.] [GREEK HERE] Homer Il. xvii 522
+ As when some vig'rous youth with sharpen'd axe
+ A pastur'd bullock smites behind the horns
+ And hews the muscle through; he, at the stroke
+ Springs forth and falls.
+ Cowper's Translation.
+
+v. 36. He arriv'd.] Our Saviour, who, according to Dante, when
+he ascended from hell, carried with him the souls of the
+patriarchs, and other just men, out of the first circle. See
+Canto IV.
+
+v. 96. Nessus.] Our poet was probably induced, by the following
+line in Ovid, to assign to Nessus the task of conducting them
+over the ford:
+ Nessus edit membrisque valens scitusque vadorum.
+ Metam, l. ix.
+And Ovid's authority was Sophocles, who says of this Centaur--
+[GREEK HERE] Trach.570
+ He in his arms, Evenus' stream
+ Deep flowing, bore the passenger for hire
+ Without or sail or billow cleaving oar.
+
+v. 110. Ezzolino.] Ezzolino, or Azzolino di Romano, a most
+cruel tyrant in the Marca Trivigiana, Lord of Padua, Vicenza,
+Verona, and Brescia, who died in 1260. His atrocities form the
+subject of a Latin tragedy, called Eccerinis, by Albertino
+Mussato, of Padua, the contemporary of Dante, and the most
+elegant writer of Latin verse of that age. See also the
+Paradise, Canto IX. Berni Orl. Inn. l ii c. xxv. st. 50. Ariosto.
+Orl. Fur. c. iii. st. 33. and Tassoni Secchia Rapita, c. viii.
+st 11.
+
+v. 111. Obizzo' of Este.] Marquis of Ferrara and of the Marca
+d'Ancona, was murdered by his own son (whom, for the most
+unnatural act Dante calls his step-son), for the sake of the
+treasures which his rapacity had amassed. See Ariosto. Orl. Fur.
+c. iii. st 32. He died in 1293 according to Gibbon. Ant. of the
+House of Brunswick. Posth. Works, v. ii. 4to.
+
+v. 119. He.] "Henrie, the brother of this Edmund, and son to
+the foresaid king of Almaine (Richard, brother of Henry III. of
+England) as he returned from Affrike, where he had been with
+Prince Edward, was slain at Viterbo in Italy (whither he was come
+about business which he had to do with the Pope) by the hand of
+Guy de Montfort, the son of Simon de Montfort, Earl of Leicester,
+in revenge of the same Simon's death. The murther was committed
+afore the high altar, as the same Henrie kneeled there to hear
+divine service." A.D. 1272, Holinshed's chronicles p 275. See
+also Giov. Villani Hist. I. vii. c. 40.
+
+v. 135. On Sextus and on Pyrrhus.] Sextus either the son of
+Tarquin the Proud, or of Pompey the Great: or as Vellutelli
+conjectures, Sextus Claudius Nero, and Pyrrhus king of Epirus.
+
+v. 137.
+ The Rinieri, of Corneto this,
+ Pazzo the other named.]
+Two noted marauders, by whose depredations the public ways in
+Italy were infested. The latter was of the noble family of Pazzi
+in Florence.
+
+CANTO XIII
+
+v. 10. Betwixt Corneto and Cecina's stream.] A wild and woody
+tract of country, abounding in deer, goats, and wild boars.
+Cecina is a river not far to the south of Leghorn, Corneto, a
+small city on the same coast in the patrimony of the church.
+
+v. 12. The Strophades.] See Virg. Aen. l. iii. 210.
+
+v. 14. Broad are their pennons.] From Virg. Aen. l. iii. 216.
+
+v. 48. In my verse described.] The commentators explain this,
+"If he could have believed, in consequence of my assurances
+alone, that of which he hath now had ocular proof, he would not
+have stretched forth his hand against thee." But I am of opinion
+that Dante makes Virgil allude to his own story of Polydorus in
+the third book of the Aeneid.
+
+v. 56. That pleasant word of thine.] "Since you have inveigled
+me to speak my holding forth so gratifying an expectation, let it
+not displease you if I am as it were detained in the snare you
+have spread for me, so as to be somewhat prolix in my answer."
+
+v. 60. I it was.] Pietro delle Vigne, a native of Capua, who,
+from a low condition, raised himself by his eloquence and legal
+knowledge to the office of Chancellor to the Emperor Frederick
+II. whose confidence in him was such, that his influence in the
+empire became unbounded. The courtiers, envious of his exalted
+situation, contrived, by means of forged letters, to make
+Frederick believe that he held a secret and traitorous
+intercourse with the Pope, who was then at enmity with the
+Emperor. In consequence of this supposed crime he was cruelly
+condemned by his too credulous sovereign to lose his eyes, and,
+being driven to despair by his unmerited calamity and disgrace,
+he put an end to his life by dashing out his brains against the
+walls of a church, in the year 1245. Both Frederick and Pietro
+delle Vigne composed verses in the Sicilian dialect which are yet
+extant.
+
+v. 67. The harlot.] Envy. Chaucer alludes to this in the
+Prologue to the Legende of Good women.
+ Envie is lavender to the court alway,
+ For she ne parteth neither night ne day
+ Out of the house of Cesar; thus saith Dant.
+
+v. 119. Each fan o' th' wood.] Hence perhaps Milton:
+ Leaves and fuming rills, Aurora's fan.
+ P. L. b. v. 6.
+
+v. 122. Lano.] Lano, a Siennese, who, being reduced by
+prodigality to a state of extreme want, found his existence no
+longer supportable; and, having been sent by his countrymen on a
+military expedition, to assist the Florentine against the
+Aretini, took that opportunity of exposing himself to certain
+death, in the engagement which took place at Toppo near Arezzo.
+See G. Villani, Hist. l. 7. c. cxix.
+
+v. 133. O Giocomo
+ Of Sant' Andrea!]
+Jacopo da Sant' Andrea, a Paduan, who, having wasted his property
+in the most wanton acts of profusion, killed himself in despair.
+v. 144. In that City.] "I was an inhabitant of Florence, that
+city which changed her first patron Mars for St. John the
+Baptist, for which reason the vengeance of the deity thus
+slighted will never be appeased: and, if some remains of his
+status were not still visible on the bridge over the Arno, she
+would have been already leveled to the ground; and thus the
+citizens, who raised her again from the ashes to which Attila had
+reduced her, would have laboured in vain." See Paradise, Canto
+XVI. 44.
+The relic of antiquity to which the superstition of Florence
+attached so high an importance, was carried away by a flood, that
+destroyed the bridge on which it stood, in the year 1337, but
+without the ill effects that were apprehended from the loss of
+their fancied Palladium.
+
+v. 152. I slung the fatal noose.] We are not informed who this
+suicide was.
+
+
+CANTO XIV
+
+v. 15. By Cato's foot.] See Lucan, Phars, l. 9.
+
+v. 26. Dilated flakes of fire.] Compare Tasso. G. L. c. x. st.
+61.
+
+v. 28. As, in the torrid Indian clime.] Landino refers to
+Albertus Magnus for the circumstance here alluded to.
+
+v. 53. In Mongibello.]
+ More hot than Aetn' or flaming Mongibell.
+ Spenser, F. Q. b. ii. c. ix. st. 29.
+See Virg. Aen. 1. viii. 416. and Berni. Orl. Inn 1. i. c. xvi.
+st. 21. It would be endless to refer to parallel passages in the
+Greek writers.
+
+v. 64. This of the seven kings was one.] Compare Aesch. Seven
+Chiefs, 425. Euripides, Phoen. 1179 and Statius. Theb. l. x.
+821.
+
+v. 76. Bulicame.] A warm medicinal spring near Viterbo, the
+waters of which, as Landino and Vellutelli affirm, passed by a
+place of ill fame. Venturi, with less probability, conjectures
+that Dante would imply, that it was the scene of much licentious
+merriment among those who frequented its baths.
+
+v. 91. Under whose monarch.]
+ Credo pudicitiam Saturno rege moratam
+ In terris.
+ Juv. Satir. vi.
+
+v. 102. His head.] Daniel, ch. ii. 32, 33.
+
+v. 133. Whither.] On the other side of Purgatory.
+
+CANTO XV
+
+ v. 10. Chiarentana.] A part of the Alps where the Brenta
+rises, which river is much swoln as soon as the snow begins to
+dissolve on the mountains.
+
+v. 28. Brunetto.] "Ser Brunetto, a Florentine, the secretary or
+chancellor of the city, and Dante's preceptor, hath left us a
+work so little read, that both the subject of it and the language
+of it have been mistaken. It is in the French spoken in the
+reign of St. Louis,under the title of Tresor, and contains a
+species of philosophical course of lectures divided into theory
+and practice, or, as he expresses it, "un enchaussement des
+choses divines et humaines," &c. Sir R. Clayton's Translation of
+Tenhove's Memoirs of the Medici, vol. i. ch. ii. p. 104. The
+Tresor has never been printed in the original language. There is
+a fine manuscript of it in the British Museum, with an
+illuminated portrait of Brunetto in his study prefixed. Mus.
+Brit. MSS. 17, E. 1. Tesor. It is divided into four books, the
+first, on Cosmogony and Theology, the second, a translation of
+Aristotle's Ethics; the third on Virtues and Vices; the fourth,
+on Rhetoric. For an interesting memoir relating to this work,
+see Hist. de l'Acad. des Inscriptions, tom. vii. 296. His
+Tesoretto, one of the earliest productions of Italian poetry, is
+a curious work, not unlike the writings of Chaucer in style and
+numbers, though Bembo remarks, that his pupil, however largely he
+had stolen from it, could not have much enriched himself. As it
+is perhaps but little known, I will here add a slight sketch of
+it.
+
+Brunetto describes himself as returning from an embassy to the
+King of Spain, on which he had been sent by the Guelph party from
+Florence. On the plain of Roncesvalles he meets a scholar on a
+bay mule, who tells him that the Guelfi are driven out of the
+city with great loss.
+
+Struck with grief at these mournful tidings, and musing with his
+head bent downwards, he loses his road, and wanders into a wood.
+Here Nature, whose figure is described with sublimity, appears,
+and discloses to him the secrets of her operations. After this
+he wanders into a desert; but at length proceeds on his way,
+under the protection of a banner, with which Nature had furnished
+him, till on the third day he finds himself in a large pleasant
+champaign, where are assembled many emperors, kings, and sages.
+It is the habitation of Virtue and her daughters, the four
+Cardinal Virtues. Here Brunetto sees also Courtesy, Bounty,
+Loyalty, and Prowess, and hears the instructions they give to a
+knight, which occupy about a fourth part of the poem. Leaving
+this territory, he passes over valleys, mountains, woods,
+forests, and bridges, till he arrives in a beautiful valley
+covered with flowers on all sides, and the richest in the world;
+but which was continually shifting its appearance from a round
+figure to a square, from obscurity to light, and from
+populousness to solitude. This is the region of Pleasure, or
+Cupid, who is accompanied by four ladies, Love, Hope, Fear, and
+Desire. In one part of it he meets with Ovid, and is instructed
+by him how to conquer the passion of love, and to escape from
+that place. After his escape he makes his confession to a friar,
+and then returns to the forest of visions: and ascending a
+mountain, he meets with Ptolemy, a venerable old man. Here the
+narrative breaks off. The poem ends, as it began, with an
+address to Rustico di Filippo, on whom he lavishes every sort of
+praise.
+
+It has been observed, that Dante derived the idea of opening his
+poem by describing himself as lost in a wood, from the Tesoretto
+of his master. I know not whether it has been remarked, that the
+crime of usury is branded by both these poets as offensive to God
+and Nature: or that the sin for which Brunetto is condemned by
+his pupil, is mentioned in the Tesoretto with great horror.
+Dante's twenty-fifth sonnet is a jocose one, addressed to
+Brunetto. He died in 1295.
+
+v. 62. Who in old times came down from Fesole.] See G. Villani
+Hist. l. iv. c. 5. and Macchiavelli Hist. of Flor. b. ii.
+
+v. 89. With another text.] He refers to the prediction of
+Farinata, in Canto X.
+
+v. 110. Priscian.] There is no reason to believe, as the
+commentators observe that the grammarian of this name was stained
+with the vice imputed to him; and we must therefore suppose that
+Dante puts the individual for the species, and implies the
+frequency of the crime among those who abused the opportunities
+which the education of youth afforded them, to so abominable a
+purpose.
+
+v. 111. Francesco.] Son of Accorso, a Florentine, celebrated
+for his skill in jurisprudence, and commonly known by the name of
+Accursius.
+
+v. 113. Him.] Andrea de' Mozzi, who, that his scandalous life
+might be less exposed to observation, was translated either by
+Nicholas III, or Boniface VIII from the see of Florence to that
+of Vicenza, through which passes the river Baccchiglione. At the
+latter of these places he died.
+
+v. 114. The servants' servant.] Servo de' servi. So Ariosto,
+Sat. 3.
+ Degli servi
+ Io sia il gran servo.
+
+v. 124. I commend my Treasure to thee.] Brunetto's great work,
+the Tresor.
+Sieti raccomandato 'l mio Tesoro.
+So Giusto de' Conti, in his Bella Mano, Son. "Occhi:"
+ Siavi raccommandato il mio Tesoro.
+
+CANTO XVI
+
+v. 38. Gualdrada.] Gualdrada was the daughter of Bellincione
+Berti, of whom mention is made in the Paradise, Canto XV, and
+XVI. He was of the family of Ravignani, a branch of the Adimari.
+
+The Emperor Otho IV. being at a festival in Florence, where
+Gualdrada was present, was struck with her beauty; and inquiring
+who she was, was answered by Bellincione, that she was the
+daughter of one who, if it was his Majesty's pleasure, would make
+her admit the honour of his salute. On overhearing this, she
+arose from her seat, and blushing, in an animated tone of voice,
+desired her father that he would not be so liberal in his offers,
+for that no man should ever be allowed that freedom, except him
+who should be her lawful husband. The Emperor was not less
+delighted by her resolute modesty than he had before been by the
+loveliness of her person, and calling to him Guido, one of his
+barons, gave her to him in marriage, at the same time raising him
+
+to the rank of a count, and bestowing on her the whole of
+Casentino, and a part of the territory of Romagna, as her
+portion. Two sons were the offspring of this union, Guglielmo
+and Ruggieri, the latter of whom was father of Guidoguerra, a man
+of great military skill and prowess who, at the head of four
+hundred Florentines of the Guelph party, was signally
+instrumental to the victory obtained at Benevento by Charles of
+Anjou, over Manfredi, King of Naples, in 1265. One of the
+consequences of this victory was the expulsion of the Ghibellini,
+and the re-establishment of the Guelfi at Florence.
+
+v. 39. Many a noble act.] Compare Tasso, G. L. c. i. st. 1.
+
+v. 42. Aldobrandiu] Tegghiaio Aldobrandi was of the noble
+family of Adimari, and much esteemed for his military talents.
+He endeavored to dissuade the Florentines from the attack, which
+they meditated against the Siennese, and the rejection of his
+counsel occasioned the memorable defeat, which the former
+sustained at Montaperto, and the consequent banishment of the
+Guelfi from Florence.
+
+v. 45. Rusticucci.] Giacopo Rusticucci, a Florentine,
+remarkable for his opulence and the generosity of his spirit.
+
+v. 70. Borsiere.] Guglielmo Borsiere, another Florentine, whom
+Boccaccio, in a story which he relates of him, terms "a man of
+courteous and elegant manners, and of great readiness in
+conversation." Dec. Giorn. i. Nov. 8.
+
+v. 84. When thou with pleasure shalt retrace the past.]
+ Quando ti giovera dicere io fui.
+So Tasso, G. L. c. xv. st. 38.
+ Quando mi giovera narrar altrui
+ Le novita vedute, e dire; io fui.
+
+v. 121. Ever to that truth.] This memorable apophthegm is
+repeated by Luigi Pulci and Trissino.
+
+ Sempre a quel ver, ch' ha faccia di menzogna
+ E piu senno tacer la lingua cheta
+ Che spesso senza colpa fa vergogna.
+ Morgante. Magg. c. xxiv.
+
+ La verita, che par mensogna
+ Si dovrebbe tacer dall' uom ch'e saggio.
+ Italia. Lib. C. xvi.
+
+CANTO XVII
+
+v. 1. The fell monster.] Fraud.
+
+v. 53. A pouch.] A purse, whereon the armorial bearings of each
+were emblazoned. According to Landino, our poet implies that the
+usurer can pretend to no other honour, than such as he derives
+from his purse and his family.
+
+v. 57. A yellow purse.] The arms of the Gianfigliazzi of
+Florence.
+
+v. 60. Another.] Those of the Ubbriachi, another Florentine
+family of high distinction.
+
+v. 62. A fat and azure swine.] The arms of the Scrovigni a
+noble family of Padua.
+
+v. 66. Vitaliano.] Vitaliano del Dente, a Paduan.
+
+v. 69. That noble knight.] Giovanni Bujamonti, a Florentine
+usurer, the most infamous of his time.
+
+CANTO XVIII
+
+v. 28. With us beyond.] Beyond the middle point they tended the
+same way with us, but their pace was quicker than ours.
+
+v. 29. E'en thus the Romans.] In the year 1300, Pope Boniface
+VIII., to remedy the inconvenience occasioned by the press of
+people who were passing over the bridge of St. Angelo during the
+time of the Jubilee, caused it to be divided length wise by a
+partition, and ordered, that all those who were going to St.
+Peter's should keep one side, and those returning the other.
+
+v. 50. Venedico.] Venedico Caccianimico, a Bolognese, who
+prevailed on his sister Ghisola to prostitute herself to Obizzo
+da Este, Marquis of Ferrara, whom we have seen among the
+tyrants, Canto XII.
+
+v. 62. To answer Sipa.] He denotes Bologna by its situation
+between the rivers Savena to the east, and Reno to the west of
+that city; and by a peculiarity of dialect, the use of the
+affirmative sipa instead of si.
+
+v. 90. Hypsipyle.] See Appolonius Rhodius, l. i. and Valerius
+Flaccus l.ii. Hypsipyle deceived the other women by concealing
+her father Thoas, when they had agreed to put all their males to
+death.
+
+v. 120. Alessio.] Alessio, of an ancient and considerable
+family in Lucca, called the Interminei.
+
+v. 130. Thais.] He alludes to that passage in the Eunuchus of
+Terence where Thraso asks if Thais was obliged to him for the
+present he had sent her, and Gnatho replies, that she had
+expressed her obligation in the most forcible terms.
+ T. Magnas vero agere gratias Thais mihi?
+ G. Ingentes.
+ Eun. a. iii. s. i.
+
+CANTO XIX
+
+v. 18. Saint John's fair dome.] The apertures in the rock were
+of the same dimensions as the fonts of St. John the Baptist at
+Florence, one of which, Dante says he had broken, to rescue a
+child that was playing near and fell in. He intimates that the
+motive of his breaking the font had been maliciously represented
+by his enemies.
+
+v. 55. O Boniface!] The spirit mistakes Dante for Boniface
+VIII. who was then alive, and who he did not expect would have
+arrived so soon, in consequence, as it should seem, of a
+prophecy, which predicted the death of that Pope at a later
+period. Boniface died in 1303.
+
+v. 58. In guile.] "Thou didst presume to arrive by fraudulent
+means at the papal power, and afterwards to abuse it."
+
+v. 71. In the mighty mantle I was rob'd.] Nicholas III, of the
+Orsini family, whom the poet therefore calls "figliuol dell'
+orsa," "son of the she-bear." He died in 1281.
+
+v. 86. From forth the west, a shepherd without law.] Bertrand
+de Got Archbishop of Bordeaux, who succeeded to the pontificate
+in 1305, and assumed the title of Clement V. He transferred the
+holy see to Avignon in 1308 (where it remained till 1376), and
+died in 1314.
+
+v. 88. A new Jason.] See Maccabees, b. ii. c. iv. 7,8.
+
+v. 97. Nor Peter.] Acts of the Apostles, c.i. 26.
+
+v. 100. The condemned soul.] Judas.
+
+v. 103. Against Charles.] Nicholas III. was enraged against
+Charles I, King of Sicily, because he rejected with scorn a
+proposition made by that Pope for an alliance between their
+families. See G. Villani, Hist. l. vii. c. liv.
+
+v. 109. Th' Evangelist.] Rev. c. xvii. 1, 2, 3. Compare
+Petrarch. Opera fol. ed. Basil. 1551. Epist. sine titulo liber.
+ep. xvi. p. 729.
+
+v. 118. Ah, Constantine.] He alludes to the pretended gift of
+the Lateran by Constantine to Silvester, of which Dante himself
+seems to imply a doubt, in his treatise "De Monarchia." - "Ergo
+scindere Imperium, Imperatori non licet. Si ergo aliquae,
+dignitates per Constantinum essent alienatae, (ut dicunt) ab
+Imperio," &c. l. iii.
+The gift is by Ariosto very humorously placed in the moon, among
+the things lost or abused on earth.
+ Di varj fiori, &c.
+ O. F. c. xxxiv. st. 80.
+
+Milton has translated both this passage and that in the text.
+Prose works, vol. i. p. 11. ed. 1753.
+
+CANTO XX
+
+v. 11. Revers'd.] Compare Spenser, F. Q. b. i. c. viii. st. 31
+
+v. 30. Before whose eyes.] Amphiaraus, one of the seven kings
+who besieged Thebes. He is said to have been swallowed up by an
+opening of the earth. See Lidgate's Storie of Thebes, Part III
+where it is told how the "Bishop Amphiaraus" fell down to hell.
+ And thus the devill for his outrages,
+ Like his desert payed him his wages.
+A different reason for his being doomed thus to perish is
+assigned by Pindar.
+[GREEK HERE]
+ Nem ix.
+
+ For thee, Amphiaraus, earth,
+ By Jove's all-riving thunder cleft
+ Her mighty bosom open'd wide,
+ Thee and thy plunging steeds to hide,
+ Or ever on thy back the spear
+ Of Periclymenus impress'd
+ A wound to shame thy warlike breast
+ For struck with panic fear
+ The gods' own children flee.
+
+v. 37. Tiresias.]
+ Duo magnorum viridi coeuntia sylva
+ Corpora serpentum baculi violaverat ictu, &c.
+ Ovid. Met. iii.
+
+v. 43. Aruns.] Aruns is said to have dwelt in the mountains of
+Luni (from whence that territory is still called Lunigiana),
+above Carrara, celebrated for its marble. Lucan. Phars. l. i.
+575. So Boccaccio in the Fiammetta, l. iii. "Quale Arunte," &c.
+
+"Like Aruns, who amidst the white marbles of Luni, contemplated
+the celestial bodies and their motions."
+
+v. 50. Manto.] The daughter of Tiresias of Thebes, a city
+dedicated to Bacchus. From Manto Mantua, the country of Virgil
+derives its name. The Poet proceeds to describe the situation of
+that place.
+
+v. 61. Between the vale.] The lake Benacus, now called the
+Lago di Garda, though here said to lie between Garda, Val
+Camonica, and the Apennine, is, however, very distant from the
+latter two
+
+v. 63. There is a spot.] Prato di Fame, where the dioceses of
+Trento, Verona, and Brescia met.
+
+v. 69. Peschiera.] A garrison situated to the south of the
+lake, where it empties itself and forms the Mincius.
+
+v. 94. Casalodi's madness.] Alberto da Casalodi, who had got
+possession of Mantua, was persuaded by Pinamonte Buonacossi, that
+he might ingratiate himself with the people by banishing to their
+
+own castles the nobles, who were obnoxious to them. No sooner
+was this done, than Pinamonte put himself at the head of the
+populace, drove out Casalodi and his adherents, and obtained the
+sovereignty for himself.
+
+v. 111. So sings my tragic strain.]
+ Suspensi Eurypilum scitatum oracula Phoebi
+ Mittimus.
+ Virg. Aeneid. ii. 14.
+
+v. 115. Michael Scot.] Sir Michael Scott, of Balwearie,
+astrologer to the Emperor Frederick II. lived in the thirteenth
+century. For further particulars relating to this singular man,
+see Warton's History of English Poetry, vol. i. diss. ii. and
+sect. ix. p 292, and the Notes to Mr. Scott's "Lay of the Last
+Minstrel," a poem in which a happy use is made of the traditions
+that are still current in North Britain concerning him. He is
+mentioned by G. Villani. Hist. l. x. c. cv. and cxli. and l. xii.
+c. xviii. and by Boccaccio, Dec. Giorn. viii. Nov. 9.
+
+v. 116. Guido Bonatti.] An astrologer of Forli, on whose skill
+Guido da Montefeltro, lord of that place, so much relied, that he
+is reported never to have gone into battle, except in the hour
+recommended to him as fortunate by Bonatti.
+
+Landino and Vellutello, speak of a book, which he composed on the
+subject of his art.
+
+v. 116. Asdente.] A shoemaker at Parma, who deserted his
+business to practice the arts of divination.
+
+v. 123. Cain with fork of thorns.] By Cain and the thorns, or
+what is still vulgarly called the Man in the Moon, the Poet
+denotes that luminary. The same superstition is alluded to in
+the Paradise, Canto II. 52. The curious reader may consult Brand
+on Popular Antiquities, 4to. 1813. vol. ii. p. 476.
+
+CANTO XXI
+
+v. 7. In the Venetians' arsenal.] Compare Ruccellai, Le Api,
+165, and Dryden's Annus Mirabilis, st. 146, &c.
+
+v. 37. One of Santa Zita's elders.] The elders or chief
+magistrates of Lucca, where Santa Zita was held in especial
+veneration. The name of this sinner is supposed to have been
+Martino Botaio.
+
+v. 40. Except Bonturo, barterers.] This is said ironically of
+Bonturo de' Dati. By barterers are meant peculators, of every
+description; all who traffic the interests of the public for
+their own private advantage.
+
+v. 48. Is other swimming than in Serchio's wave.]
+ Qui si nuota altrimenti che nel Serchio.
+Serchio is the river that flows by Lucca. So Pulci, Morg. Mag.
+c. xxiv.
+ Qui si nuota nel sangue, e non nel Serchio.
+
+v. 92. From Caprona.] The surrender of the castle of Caprona to
+the combined forces of Florence and Lucca, on condition that the
+garrison should march out in safety, to which event Dante was a
+witness, took place in 1290. See G. Villani, Hist. l. vii. c.
+136.
+
+v. 109. Yesterday.] This passage fixes the era of Dante's
+descent at Good Friday, in the year 1300 (34 years from our
+blessed Lord's incarnation being added to 1266), and at the
+thirty-fifth year of our poet's age. See Canto I. v. 1.
+
+The awful event alluded to, the Evangelists inform us, happened
+"at the ninth hour," that is, our sixth, when "the rocks were
+rent," and the convulsion, according to Dante, was felt even in
+the depths in Hell. See Canto XII. 38.
+
+CANTO XXII
+
+v. 16. In the church.] This proverb is repeated by Pulci, Morg.
+Magg. c. xvii.
+
+v. 47. Born in Navarre's domain.] The name of this peculator is
+said to have been Ciampolo.
+
+v. 51. The good king Thibault.] "Thibault I. king of Navarre,
+died on the 8th of June, 1233, as much to be commended for the
+desire he showed of aiding the war in the Holy Land, as
+reprehensible and faulty for his design of oppressing the rights
+and privileges of the church, on which account it is said that
+the whole kingdom was under an interdict for the space of three
+entire years. Thibault undoubtedly merits praise, as for his
+other endowments, so especially for his cultivation of the
+liberal arts, his exercise and knowledge of music and poetry in
+which he much excelled, that he was accustomed to compose verses
+and sing them to the viol, and to exhibit his poetical
+compositions publicly in his palace, that they might be
+criticized by all." Mariana, History of Spain, b. xiii. c. 9.
+
+An account of Thibault, and two of his songs, with what were
+probably the original melodies, may be seen in Dr. Burney's
+History of Music, v. ii. c. iv. His poems, which are in the
+French language, were edited by M. l'Eveque de la Ravalliere.
+Paris. 1742. 2 vol. 12mo. Dante twice quotes one of his verses
+in the Treatise de Vulg. Eloq. l. i. c. ix. and l. ii. c. v. and
+refers to him again, l. ii. c. vi.
+
+From "the good king Thibault" are descended the good, but more
+unfortunate monarch, Louis XVI. of France, and consequently the
+present legitimate sovereign of that realm. See Henault, Abrege
+Chron. 1252, 2, 4.
+
+v. 80. The friar Gomita.] He was entrusted by Nino de' Visconti
+with the government of Gallura, one of the four jurisdictions
+into which Sardinia was divided. Having his master's enemies in
+his power, he took a bribe from them, and allowed them to escape.
+Mention of Nino will recur in the Notes to Canto XXXIII. and in
+the Purgatory, Canto VIII.
+
+v. 88. Michel Zanche.] The president of Logodoro, another of
+the four Sardinian jurisdictions. See Canto XXXIII.
+
+CANTO XXIII
+
+v. 5. Aesop's fable.] The fable of the frog, who offered to
+carry the mouse across a ditch, with the intention of drowning
+him when both were carried off by a kite. It is not among those
+Greek Fables which go under the name of Aesop.
+
+v. 63. Monks in Cologne.] They wore their cowls unusually
+large.
+v. 66. Frederick's.] The Emperor Frederick II. is said to have
+punished those who were guilty of high treason, by wrapping them
+up in lead, and casting them into a furnace.
+
+v. 101. Our bonnets gleaming bright with orange hue.] It is
+observed by Venturi, that the word "rance" does not here signify
+"rancid or disgustful," as it is explained by the old
+commentators, but "orange-coloured," in which sense it occurs in
+the Purgatory, Canto II. 9.
+
+v. 104. Joyous friars.] "Those who ruled the city of Florence
+on the part of the Ghibillines, perceiving this discontent and
+murmuring, which they were fearful might produce a rebellion
+against themselves, in order to satisfy the people, made choice
+of two knights, Frati Godenti (joyous friars) of Bologna, on whom
+they conferred the chief power in Florence. One named M.
+Catalano de' Malavolti, the other M. Loderingo di Liandolo; one
+an adherent of the Guelph, the other of the Ghibelline party. It
+is to be remarked, that the Joyous Friars were called Knights of
+St. Mary, and became knights on taking that habit: their robes
+were white, the mantle sable, and the arms a white field and red
+cross with two stars. Their office was to defend widows and
+orphans; they were to act as mediators; they had internal
+regulations like other religious bodies. The above-mentioned M.
+Loderingo was the founder of that order. But it was not long
+before they too well deserved the appellation given them, and
+were found to be more bent on enjoying themselves than on any
+other subject. These two friars were called in by the
+Florentines, and had a residence assigned them in the palace
+belonging to the people over against the Abbey. Such was the
+dependence placed on the character of their order that it was
+expected they would be impartial, and would save the commonwealth
+any unnecessary expense; instead of which, though inclined to
+opposite parties, they secretly and hypocritically concurred in
+promoting their own advantage rather than the public good." G.
+Villani, b. vii. c.13. This happened in 1266.
+
+v. 110. Gardingo's vicinage.] The name of that part of the city
+which was inhabited by the powerful Ghibelline family of Uberti,
+and destroyed under the partial and iniquitous administration of
+Catalano and Loderingo.
+
+v. 117. That pierced spirit.] Caiaphas.
+
+v. 124. The father of his consort.] Annas, father-in-law to
+Caiaphas.
+
+v. 146. He is a liar.] John, c. viii. 44. Dante had perhaps
+heard this text from one of the pulpits in Bologna.
+
+CANTO XXIV
+
+ v. 1. In the year's early nonage.] "At the latter part of
+January, when the sun enters into Aquarius, and the equinox is
+drawing near, when the hoar-frosts in the morning often wear the
+appearance of snow but are melted by the rising sun."
+
+v. 51. Vanquish thy weariness.]
+ Quin corpus onustum
+ Hesternis vitiis animum quoque praegravat una,
+ Atque affigit humi divinae particulam aurae.
+ Hor. Sat. ii. l. ii. 78.
+
+v. 82. Of her sands.] Compare Lucan, Phars. l. ix. 703.
+
+v. 92. Heliotrope.] The occult properties of this stone are
+described by Solinus, c. xl, and by Boccaccio, in his humorous
+tale of Calandrino. Decam. G. viii. N. 3.
+
+In Chiabrera's Ruggiero, Scaltrimento begs of Sofia, who is
+sending him on a perilous errand, to lend him the heliotrope.
+ In mia man fida
+ L'elitropia, per cui possa involarmi
+ Secondo il mio talento agli occhi altrui.
+ c. vi.
+ Trust to my hand the heliotrope, by which
+ I may at will from others' eyes conceal me
+Compare Ariosto, II Negromante, a. 3. s. 3. Pulci, Morg. Magg.
+c xxv. and Fortiguerra, Ricciardetto, c. x. st. 17.
+Gower in his Confessio Amantis, lib. vii, enumerates it among the
+jewels in the diadem of the sun.
+ Jaspis and helitropius.
+
+v. 104. The Arabian phoenix.] This is translated from Ovid,
+Metam. l. xv.
+ Una est quae reparat, seque ipsa reseminat ales,
+&c.
+See also Petrarch, Canzone:
+
+ "Qual piu," &c.
+
+v. 120. Vanni Fucci.] He is said to have been an illegitimate
+offspring of the family of Lazari in Pistoia, and, having robbed
+the sacristy of the church of St. James in that city, to have
+charged Vanni della Nona with the sacrilege, in consequence of
+which accusation the latter suffered death.
+
+v. 142. Pistoia.] "In May 1301, the Bianchi party, of Pistoia,
+with the assistance and favor of the Bianchi who ruled Florence,
+drove out the Neri party from the former place, destroying their
+houses, Palaces and farms." Giov. Villani, Hist. l. viii. e
+xliv.
+
+v. 144. From Valdimagra.] The commentators explain this
+prophetical threat to allude to the victory obtained by the
+Marquis Marcello Malaspina of Valdimagra (a tract of country now
+called the Lunigiana) who put himself at the head of the Neri and
+defeated their opponents the Bianchi, in the Campo Piceno near
+Pistoia, soon after the occurrence related in the preceding note.
+
+Of this engagement I find no mention in Villani. Currado
+Malaspina is introduced in the eighth Canto of Purgatory; where
+it appears that, although on the present occaision they espoused
+contrary sides, some important favours were nevertheless
+conferred by that family on our poet at a subsequent perid of his
+exile in 1307.
+
+
+
+Canto XXV
+
+v.1. The sinner ] So Trissino
+ Poi facea con le man le fiche al cielo
+ Dicendo: Togli, Iddio; che puoi piu farmi?
+ L'ital. Lib. c. xii
+
+v. 12. Thy seed] Thy ancestry.
+
+v. 15. Not him] Capanaeus. Canto XIV.
+
+v. 18. On Marenna's marsh.] An extensive tract near the
+sea-shore in Tuscany.
+
+v. 24. Cacus.] Virgil, Aen. l. viii. 193.
+
+v. 31. A hundred blows.] Less than ten blows, out of the
+hundred Hercules gave him, deprived him of feeling.
+
+v. 39. Cianfa] He is said to have been of the family of Donati
+at Florence.
+
+v. 57. Thus up the shrinking paper.]
+ --All my bowels crumble up to dust.
+ I am a scribbled form, drawn up with a pen
+ Upon a parchment; and against this fire
+ Do I shrink up.
+ Shakespeare, K. John, a. v. s. 7.
+
+v. 61. Agnello.] Agnello Brunelleschi
+
+v. 77. In that part.] The navel.
+
+v. 81. As if by sleep or fev'rous fit assail'd.]
+ O Rome! thy head
+ Is drown'd in sleep, and all thy body fev'ry.
+ Ben Jonson's Catiline.
+
+v. 85. Lucan.] Phars. l. ix. 766 and 793.
+
+v. 87. Ovid.] Metam. l. iv. and v.
+
+v. 121. His sharpen'd visage.] Compare Milton, P. L. b. x. 511
+&c.
+
+v. 131. Buoso.] He is said to have been of the Donati family.
+
+v. 138. Sciancato.] Puccio Sciancato, a noted robber, whose
+familly, Venturi says, he has not been able to discover.
+
+v. 140. Gaville.] Francesco Guercio Cavalcante was killed at
+Gaville, near Florence; and in revenge of his death several
+inhabitants of that district were put to death.
+
+CANTO XXVI
+
+v. 7. But if our minds.]
+
+ Namque sub Auroram, jam dormitante lucerna,
+ Somnia quo cerni tempore vera solent.
+ Ovid, Epist. xix
+
+The same poetical superstition is alluded to in the Purgatory,
+Cant. IX. and XXVII.
+
+v. 9. Shall feel what Prato.] The poet prognosticates the
+calamities which were soon to befal his native city, and which he
+says, even her nearest neighbor, Prato, would wish her. The
+calamities more particularly pointed at, are said to be the fall
+of a wooden bridge over the Arno, in May, 1304, where a large
+multitude were assembled to witness a representation of hell nnd
+the infernal torments, in consequence of which accident many
+lives were lost; and a conflagration that in the following month
+destroyed more than seventeen hundred houses, many ofthem
+sumptuous buildings. See G. Villani, Hist. l. viii. c. 70 and
+71.
+
+v. 22. More than I am wont.] "When I reflect on the punishment
+allotted to those who do not give sincere and upright advice to
+others I am more anxious than ever not to abuse to so bad a
+purpose those talents, whatever they may be, which Nature, or
+rather Providence, has conferred on me." It is probable that
+this declaration was the result of real feeling Textd have
+given great weight to
+any opinion or party he had espoused, and to whom indigence and
+exile might have offerred strong temptations to deviate from that
+line of conduct which a strict sense of duty prescribed.
+
+v. 35. as he, whose wrongs.] Kings, b. ii. c. ii.
+
+v. 54. ascending from that funeral pile.] The flame is said to
+have divided on the funeral pile which consumed tile bodies of
+Eteocles and Polynices, as if conscious of the enmity that
+actuated them while living.
+ Ecce iterum fratris, &c.
+ Statius, Theb. l. xii.
+ Ostendens confectas flamma, &c.
+ Lucan, Pharsal. l. 1. 145.
+
+v. 60. The ambush of the horse.] "The ambush of the wooden
+horse, that caused Aeneas to quit the city of Troy and seek his
+fortune in Italy, where his descendants founded the Roman
+empire."
+
+v. 91. Caieta.] Virgil, Aeneid. l. vii. 1.
+
+v. 93. Nor fondness for my son] Imitated hp Tasso, G. L. c.
+viii.
+ Ne timor di fatica o di periglio,
+ Ne vaghezza del regno, ne pietade
+ Del vecchio genitor, si degno affetto
+ Intiepedir nel generoso petto.
+This imagined voyage of Ulysses into the Atlantic is alluded to
+by Pulci.
+ E sopratutto commendava Ulisse,
+ Che per veder nell' altro mondo gisse.
+ Morg. Magg. c. xxv
+And by Tasso, G. L. c. xv. 25.
+
+v. 106. The strait pass.] The straits of Gibraltar.
+
+v. 122. Made our oars wings.l So Chiabrera, Cant. Eroiche. xiii
+ Faro de'remi un volo.
+And Tasso Ibid. 26.
+
+v. 128. A mountain dim.] The mountain of Purgatorg
+
+CANTO XXVII.
+
+v. 6. The Sicilian Bull.] The engine of torture invented by
+Perillus, for the tyrant Phalaris.
+
+v. 26. Of the mountains there.] Montefeltro.
+
+v. 38. Polenta's eagle.] Guido Novello da Polenta, who bore an
+eagle for his coat of arms. The name of Polenta was derived from
+a castle so called in the neighbourhood of Brittonoro. Cervia is
+a small maritime city, about fifteen miles to the south of
+Ravenna. Guido was the son of Ostasio da Polenta, and made
+himself master of Ravenna, in 1265. In 1322 he was deprived of
+his sovereignty, and died at Bologna in the year following. This
+last and most munificent patron of Dante is himself enumerated,
+by the historian of Italian literature, among the poets of his
+time. Tiraboschi, Storia della Lett. Ital. t. v. 1. iii. c. ii.
+13. The passnge in the text might have removed the uncertainty
+wwhich Tiraboschi expressed, respecting the duration of Guido's
+absence from Ravenna, when he was driven from that city in 1295,
+by the arms of Pietro, archbishop of Monreale. It must evidently
+have been very short, since his government is here represented
+(in 1300) as not having suffered any material disturbance for
+many years.
+
+v. 41. The land.l The territory of Forli, the inhabitants of
+which, in 1282, mere enabled, hy the strategem of Guido da
+Montefeltro, who then governed it, to defeat with great
+slaughter the French army by which it had been besieged. See G.
+Villani, l. vii. c. 81. The poet informs Guido, its former
+ruler, that it is now in the possession of Sinibaldo Ordolaffi,
+or Ardelaffi, whom he designates by his coat of arms, a lion
+vert.
+
+v. 43. The old mastiff of Verucchio and the young.] Malatesta
+and Malatestino his son, lords of Rimini, called, from their
+ferocity, the mastiffs of Verruchio, which was the name of their
+castle.
+
+v. 44. Montagna.] Montagna de'Parcitati, a noble knight, and
+leader of the Ghibelline party at Rimini, murdered by
+Malatestino.
+
+v. 46. Lamone's city and Santerno's.] Lamone is the river at
+Faenza, and Santerno at Imola.
+
+v. 47. The lion of the snowy lair.] Machinardo Pagano, whose
+arms were a lion azure on a field argent; mentioned again in the
+Purgatory, Canto XIV. 122. See G. Villani passim, where he is
+called Machinardo da Susinana.
+
+v. 50. Whose flank is wash'd of SSavio's wave.] Cesena,
+situated at the foot of a mountain, and washed by the river
+Savio, that often descends with a swoln and rapid stream from the
+Appenine.
+
+v. 64. A man of arms.] Guido da Montefeltro.
+
+v. 68. The high priest.] Boniface VIII.
+
+v. 72. The nature of the lion than the fox.]
+ Non furon leonine ma di volpe.
+So Pulci, Morg. Magg. c. xix.
+
+ E furon le sua opre e le sue colpe
+ Non creder leonine ma di volpe.
+
+v. 81. The chief of the new Pharisee.] Boniface VIII. whose
+enmity to the family of Colonna prompted him to destroy their
+houses near the Lateran. Wishing to obtain possession of their
+other seat, Penestrino, he consulted with Guido da Montefeltro
+how he might accomplish his purpose, offering him at the same
+time absolution for his past sins, as well as for that which he
+was then tempting him to commit. Guido's advice was, that kind
+words and fair promises nonld put his enemies into his power; and
+they accordingly soon aftermards fell into the snare laid for
+them, A.D. 1298. See G. Villani, l. viii. c. 23.
+
+v. 84. Nor against Acre one
+ Had fought.]
+He alludes to the renegade Christians, by whom the Saracens, in
+Apri., 1291, were assisted to recover St.John d'Acre, the last
+possession of the Christians in the Iloly Land. The regret
+expressed by the Florentine annalist G. Villani, for the loss of
+this valuable fortress, is well worthy of observation, l. vii. c.
+144.
+
+v. 89. As in Soracte Constantine besought.] So in Dante's
+treatise De Monarchia: "Dicunt quidam adhue, quod Constantinus
+Imperator, mundatus a lepra intercessione Syvestri, tunc summni
+pontificis imperii sedem, scilicet Romam, donavit ecclesiae, cum
+multis allis imperii dignitatibus." Lib.iii.
+
+v. 101. My predecessor.] Celestine V. See Notes to Canto III.
+
+CANTO XXVIII.
+
+v.8. In that long war.] The war of Hannibal in Italy. "When
+Mago brought news of his victories to Carthage, in order to make
+his successes more easily credited, he commanded the golden rings
+to be poured out in the senate house, which made so large a heap,
+that, as some relate, they filled three modii and a half. A more
+probable account represents them not to have exceeded one
+modius." Livy, Hist.
+
+v. 12. Guiscard's Norman steel.] Robert Guiscard, who conquered
+the kingdom of Naples, and died in 1110. G. Villani, l. iv. c.
+18. He is introduced in the Paradise, Canto XVIII.
+
+v. 13. And those the rest.] The army of Manfredi, which, through
+the treachery of the Apulian troops, wns overcome by Charles of
+Anjou in 1205, and fell in such numbers that the bones of the
+slain were still gathered near Ceperano. G. Villani, l. vii. c.
+9. See the Purgatory, Canto III.
+
+v. 10. O Tagliocozzo.] He alludes to tile victory which Charles
+gained over Conradino, by the sage advice of the Sieur de Valeri,
+in 1208. G. Villani, l. vii. c. 27.
+
+v. 32. Ali.] The disciple of Mohammed.
+
+v. 53. Dolcino.] "In 1305, a friar, called Dolcino, who
+belonged to no regular order, contrived to raise in Novarra, in
+Lombardy, a large company of the meaner sort of people, declaring
+himself to be a true apostle of Christ, and promulgating a
+community of property and of wives, with many other such
+heretical doctrines. He blamed the pope, cardinals, and other
+prelates of the holy church, for not observing their duty, nor
+leading the angelic life, and affirmed that he ought to be pope.
+He was followed by more than three thousand men and women, who
+lived promiscuously on the mountains together, like beasts, and,
+when they wanted provisions, supplied themselves by depredation
+and rapine. This lasted for two years till, many being struck
+with compunction at the dissolute life they led, his sect was
+much diminished; and through failure of food, and the severity of
+the snows, he was taken by the people of Novarra, and burnt, with
+Margarita his companion and many other men and women whom his
+errors had seduced." G. Villanni, l. viii. c. 84.
+
+Landino observes, that he was possessed of singular eloquence,
+and that both he and Margarita endored their fate with a firmness
+worthy of a better cause. For a further account of him, see
+Muratori Rer. Ital. Script. t. ix. p. 427.
+
+v. 69. Medicina.] A place in the territory of Bologna. Piero
+fomented dissensions among the inhabitants of that city, and
+among the leaders of the neighbouring states.
+
+v. 70. The pleasant land.] Lombardy.
+
+v. 72. The twain.] Guido dal Cassero and Angiolello da Cagnano,
+two of the worthiest and most distinguished citizens of Fano,
+were invited by Malatestino da Rimini to an entertainment on
+pretence that he had some important business to transact with
+them: and, according to instructions given by him, they mere
+drowned in their passage near Catolica, between Rimini and Fano.
+
+v. 85. Focara's wind.] Focara is a mountain, from which a wind
+blows that is peculiarly dangerous to the navigators of that
+coast.
+
+v. 94. The doubt in Caesar's mind.] Curio, whose speech
+(according to Lucan) determined Julius Caesar to proceed when he
+had arrived at Rimini (the ancient Ariminum), and doubted whether
+he should prosecute the civil war.
+ Tolle moras: semper nocuit differre paratis
+ Pharsal, l. i. 281.
+
+v. 102. Mosca.] Buondelmonte was engaged to marry a lady of the
+Amidei family, but broke his promise and united himself to one of
+the Donati. This was so much resented by the former, that a
+meeting of themselves and their kinsmen was held, to consider of
+the best means of revenging the insult. Mosca degli Uberti
+persuaded them to resolve on the assassination of Buondelmonte,
+exclaiming to them "the thing once done, there is an end." The
+counsel and its effects were the source of many terrible
+calamities to the state of Florence. "This murder," says G.
+Villani, l. v. c. 38, "was the cause and beginning of the
+accursed Guelph and Ghibelline parties in Florence." It happened
+in 1215. See the Paradise, Canto XVI. 139.
+
+v. 111. The boon companion.]
+ What stronger breastplate than a heart untainted?
+Shakespeare, 2 Hen. VI. a. iii. s. 2.
+
+v. 160. Bertrand.] Bertrand de Born, Vicomte de Hautefort, near
+Perigueux in Guienne, who incited John to rebel against his
+father, Henry II. of England. Bertrand holds a distinguished
+place among the Provencal poets. He is quoted in Dante, "De
+Vulg. Eloq." l. ii. c. 2. For the translation of some extracts
+from his poems, see Millot, Hist. Litteraire des Troubadors t. i.
+p. 210; but the historical parts of that work are, I believe, not
+to be relied on.
+
+CANTO XXIX.
+
+v. 26. Geri of Bello.] A kinsman of the Poet's, who was
+murdered by one of the Sacchetti family. His being placed here,
+may be considered as a proof that Dante was more impartial in the
+allotment of his punishments than has generally been supposed.
+
+v. 44. As were the torment.] It is very probable that these
+lines gave Milton the idea of his celebrated description:
+ Immediately a place
+ Before their eyes appear'd, sad, noisome, dark,
+ A lasar-house it seem'd, wherein were laid
+ Numbers of all diseas'd, all maladies, &c.
+ P. L. b. xi. 477.
+
+v. 45. Valdichiana.] The valley through which passes the river
+Chiana, bounded by Arezzo, Cortona, Montepulciano, and Chiusi. In
+the heat of autumn it was formerly rendered unwholesome by the
+stagnation of the water, but has since been drained by the
+Emperor Leopold II. The Chiana is mentioned as a remarkably
+sluggish stream, in the Paradise, Canto XIII. 21.
+
+v. 47. Maremma's pestilent fen.] See Note to Canto XXV. v. 18.
+
+v. 58. In Aegina.] He alludes to the fable of the ants changed
+into Myrmidons. Ovid, Met. 1. vii.
+
+v. 104. Arezzo was my dwelling.] Grifolino of Arezzo, who
+promised Albero, son of the Bishop of Sienna, that he would teach
+him the art of flying; and because be did not keep his promise,
+Albero prevailed on his father to have him burnt for a
+necromancer.
+
+v. 117.
+ Was ever race
+ Light as Sienna's?]
+The same imputation is again cast on the Siennese, Purg. Canto
+XIII. 141.
+
+v. 121. Stricca.] This is said ironically. Stricca, Niccolo
+Salimbeni, Caccia of Asciano, and Abbagliato, or Meo de
+Folcacchieri, belonged to a company of prodigal and luxurious
+young men in Sienna, called the "brigata godereccia." Niccolo
+was the inventor of a new manner of using cloves in cookery, not
+very well understood by the commentators, and which was termed
+the "costuma ricca."
+
+v. 125. In that garden.] Sienna.
+
+v. 134. Cappocchio's ghost.] Capocchio of Sienna, who is said to
+have been a fellow-student of Dante's in natural philosophy.
+
+CANTO XXX.
+
+v. 4. Athamas.] From Ovid, Metam. 1. iv.
+ Protinos Aelides, &c.
+
+v. 16. Hecuba. See Euripedes, Hecuba; and Ovid, Metnm. l. xiii.
+
+v. 33. Schicchi.] Gianni Schicci, who was of the family of
+Cavalcanti, possessed such a faculty of moulding his features to
+the resemblance of others, that he was employed by Simon Donati
+to personate Buoso Donati, then recently deceased, and to make a
+will, leaving Simon his heir; for which service he was
+renumerated with a mare of extraordinary value, here called "the
+lady of the herd."
+
+v. 39. Myrrha.] See Ovid, Metam. l. x.
+
+v. 60. Adamo's woe.] Adamo of Breschia, at the instigation of
+Cuido Alessandro, and their brother Aghinulfo, lords of Romena,
+coonterfeited the coin of Florence; for which crime he was burnt.
+Landino says, that in his time the peasants still pointed out a
+pile of stones near Romena as the place of his execution.
+
+v. 64. Casentino.] Romena is a part of Casentino.
+
+v. 77. Branda's limpid spring.] A fountain in Sienna.
+
+v. 88. The florens with three carats of alloy.] The floren was
+a coin that ought to have had tmenty-four carats of pure gold.
+Villani relates, that it was first used at Florence in 1253, an
+aera of great prosperity in the annals of the republic; before
+which time their most valuable coinage was of silver. Hist. l.
+vi. c. 54.
+
+v. 98. The false accuser.] Potiphar's wife.
+
+CANTO XXXI.
+
+v. 1. The very tongue.]
+ Vulnus in Herculeo quae quondam fecerat hoste
+ Vulneris auxilium Pellas hasta fuit.
+ Ovid, Rem. Amor. 47.
+The same allusion was made by Bernard de Ventadour, a Provencal
+poet in the middle of the twelfth century: and Millot observes,
+that it was a singular instance of erudition in a Troubadour.
+But it is not impossible, as Warton remarks, (Hist. of Engl.
+Poetry, vol. ii. sec. x. p 215.) but that he might have been
+indebted for it to some of the early romances.
+
+In Chaucer's Squier's Tale, a sword of similar quality is
+introduced:
+ And other folk have wondred on the sweard,
+ That could so piercen through every thing;
+ And fell in speech of Telephus the king,
+ And of Achillcs for his queint spere,
+ For he couth with it both heale and dere.
+So Shakspeare, Henry VI. p. ii. a. 5. s. 1.
+ Whose smile and frown like to Achilles' spear
+ Is able with the change to kill and cure.
+
+v. 14. Orlando.l
+ When Charlemain with all his peerage fell
+ At Fontarabia
+ Milton, P. L. b. i. 586.
+See Warton's Hist. of Eng. Poetrg, v. i. sect. iii. p. 132.
+"This is the horn which Orlando won from the giant Jatmund, and
+which as Turpin and the Islandic bards report, was endued with
+magical power, and might be heard at the distance of twenty
+miles." Charlemain and Orlando are introduced in the Paradise,
+Canto XVIII.
+
+v. 36. Montereggnon.] A castle near Sienna.
+
+v. 105. The fortunate vale.] The country near Carthage. See
+Liv. Hist. l. xxx. and Lucan, Phars. l. iv. 590. Dante has kept
+the latter of these writers in his eye throughout all this
+passage.
+
+v. 123. Alcides.] The combat between Hercules Antaeus is
+adduced by the Poet in his treatise "De Monarchia," l. ii. as a
+proof of the judgment of God displayed in the duel, according to
+the singular superstition of those times.
+
+v. 128. The tower of Carisenda.] The leaning tower at Bologna
+
+CANTO XXXII.
+
+v. 8. A tongue not us'd
+ To infant babbling.]
+ Ne da lingua, che chiami mamma, o babbo.
+Dante in his treatise " De Vulg. Eloq." speaking of words not
+admissble in the loftier, or as he calls it, tragic style of
+poetry, says- "In quorum numero nec puerilia propter suam
+simplicitatem ut Mamma et Babbo," l. ii. c. vii.
+
+v. 29. Tabernich or Pietrapana.] The one a mountain in
+Sclavonia, the other in that tract of country called the
+Garfagnana, not far from Lucca.
+
+v. 33. To where modest shame appears.] "As high as to the
+face."
+
+v. 35. Moving their teeth in shrill note like the stork.]
+ Mettendo i denti in nota di cicogna.
+So Boccaccio, G. viii. n. 7. "Lo scolar cattivello quasi cicogna
+divenuto si forte batteva i denti."
+
+v. 53. Who are these two.] Alessandro and Napoleone, sons of
+Alberto Alberti, who murdered each other. They were proprietors
+of the valley of Falterona, where the Bisenzio has its source, a
+river that falls into the Arno about six miles from Florence.
+
+v. 59. Not him,] Mordrec, son of King Arthur.
+
+v. 60. Foccaccia.] Focaccia of Cancellieri, (the Pistoian
+family) whose atrocious act of revenge against his uncle is said
+to have given rise to the parties of the Bianchi and Neri, in the
+year 1300. See G. Villani, Hist. l, viii. c. 37. and
+Macchiavelli, Hist. l. ii. The account of the latter writer
+differs much from that given by Landino in his Commentary.
+
+v. 63. Mascheroni.] Sassol Mascheroni, a Florentiue, who also
+murdered his uncle.
+
+v. 66. Camiccione.] Camiccione de' Pazzi of Valdarno, by whom
+his kinsman Ubertino was treacherously pnt to death.
+
+v. 67. Carlino.] One of the same family. He betrayed the
+Castel di Piano Travigne, in Valdarno, to the Florentines, after
+the refugees of the Bianca and Ghibelline party had defended it
+against a siege for twenty-nine days, in the summer of 1302. See
+G. Villani, l. viii. c. 52 and Dino Compagni, l. ii.
+
+v. 81. Montaperto.] The defeat of the Guelfi at Montaperto,
+occasioned by the treachery of Bocca degli Abbati, who, during
+the engagement, cut off the hand of Giacopo del Vacca de'Pazzi,
+bearer of the Florentine standard. G. Villani, l. vi. c. 80, and
+Notes to Canto X. This event happened in 1260.
+
+v. 113. Him of Duera.] Buoso of Cremona, of the family of
+Duera, who was bribed by Guy de Montfort, to leave a pass between
+Piedmont and Parma, with the defence of which he had been
+entrusted by the Ghibellines, open to the army of Charles of
+Anjou, A.D. 1265, at which the people of Cremona were so enraged,
+that they extirpated the whole family. G. Villani, l. vii. c. 4.
+
+v. 118. Beccaria.] Abbot of Vallombrosa, who was the Pope's
+Legate at Florence, where his intrigues in favour of the
+Ghibellines being discovered, he was beheaded. I do not find the
+occurrence in Vallini, nor do the commentators say to what pope
+he was legate. By Landino he is reported to have been from Parma,
+by Vellutello from Pavia.
+
+v. 118. Soldanieri.] "Gianni Soldanieri," says Villani, Hist.
+l. vii. c14, "put himself at the head of the people, in the hopes
+of rising into power, not aware that the result would be mischief
+to the Ghibelline party, and his own ruin; an event which seems
+ever to have befallen him, who has headed the populace in
+Florence." A.D. 1266.
+
+v. 119. Ganellon.] The betrayer of Charlemain, mentioned by
+Archbishop Turpin. He is a common instance of treachery with the
+poets of the middle ages.
+ Trop son fol e mal pensant,
+ Pis valent que Guenelon.
+ Thibaut, roi de Navarre
+ O new Scariot, and new Ganilion,
+ O false dissembler, &c.
+ Chaucer, Nonne's Prieste's Tale
+And in the Monke's Tale, Peter of Spaine.
+v. 119. Tribaldello.] Tribaldello de'Manfredi, who was bribed
+to betray the city of Faonza, A. D. 1282. G. Villani, l. vii. c.
+80
+
+v. 128. Tydeus.] See Statius, Theb. l. viii. ad finem.
+
+CANTO XXXIII.
+
+v. 14. Count Ugolino.] "In the year 1288, in the month of July,
+Pisa was much divided by competitors for the sovereignty; one
+party, composed of certain of the Guelphi, being headed by the
+Judge Nino di Gallura de'Visconti; another, consisting of others
+of the same faction, by the Count Ugolino de' Gherardeschi; and
+the third by the Archbishop Ruggieri degli Ubaldini, with the
+Lanfranchi, Sismondi, Gualandi, and other Ghibelline houses. The
+Count Ugolino,to effect his purpose, united with the Archbishop
+and his party, and having betrayed Nino, his sister's son, they
+contrived that he and his followers should either be driven out
+of Pisa, or their persons seized. Nino hearing this, and not
+seeing any means of defending himself, retired to Calci, his
+castle, and formed an alliance with the Florentines and people of
+Lucca, against the Pisans. The Count, before Nino was gone, in
+order to cover his treachery, when everything was settled for his
+expulsion, quitted Pisa, and repaired to a manor of his called
+Settimo; whence, as soon as he was informed of Nino's departure,
+he returned to Pisa with great rejoicing and festivity, and was
+elevated to the supreme power with every demonstration of triumph
+and honour. But his greatness was not of long continuauce. It
+pleased the Almighty that a total reverse of fortune should
+ensue, as a punishment for his acts of treachery and guilt: for
+he was said to have poisoned the Count Anselmo da Capraia, his
+sister's son, on account of the envy and fear excited in his mind
+by the high esteem in which the gracious manners of Anselmo were
+held by the Pisans. The power of the Guelphi being so much
+diminished, the Archbishop devised means to betray the Count
+Uglino and caused him to be suddenly attacked in his palace by
+the fury of the people, whom he had exasperated, by telling them
+that Ugolino had betrayed Pisa, and given up their castles to the
+citizens of Florence and of Lucca. He was immediately compelled
+to surrender; his bastard son and his grandson fell in the
+assault; and two of his sons, with their two sons also, were
+conveyed to prison." G. Villani l. vii. c. 120.
+
+"In the following march, the Pisans, who had imprisoned the Count
+Uglino, with two of his sons and two of his grandchildren, the
+offspring of his son the Count Guelfo, in a tower on the Piazza
+of the Anzania, caused the tower to be locked, the key thrown
+into the Arno, and all food to be withheld from them. In a few
+days they died of hunger; but the Count first with loud cries
+declared his penitence, and yet neither priest nor friar was
+allowed to shrive him. All the five, when dead, were dragged out
+of the prison, and meanly interred; and from thence forward the
+tower was called the tower of famine, and so shall ever be."
+Ibid. c. 127.
+
+Chancer has briefly told Ugolino's story. See Monke's Tale,
+Hugeline of Pise.
+
+v. 29. Unto the mountain.] The mountain S. Giuliano, between
+Pisa and Lucca.
+
+v. 59. Thou gav'st.]
+ Tu ne vestisti
+ Queste misere carni, e tu le spoglia.
+Imitated by Filicaja, Canz. iii.
+ Di questa imperial caduca spoglia
+ Tu, Signor, me vestisti e tu mi spoglia:
+ Ben puoi'l Regno me tor tu che me'l desti.
+And by Maffei, in the Merope:
+ Tu disciogleste
+ Queste misere membra e tu le annodi.
+
+v. 79. In that fair region.]
+ Del bel paese la, dove'l si suona.
+Italy as explained by Dante himself, in his treatise De Vulg.
+Eloq. l. i. c. 8. "Qui autem Si dicunt a praedictis finibus.
+(Januensiem) Oreintalem (Meridionalis Europae partem) tenent;
+videlicet usque ad promontorium illud Italiae, qua sinus
+Adriatici maris incipit et Siciliam."
+
+v. 82. Capraia and Gorgona.] Small islands near the mouth of
+the Arno.
+
+v. 94. There very weeping suffers not to weep,]
+ Lo pianto stesso li pianger non lascia.
+So Giusto de'Conti, Bella Mano. Son. "Quanto il ciel."
+ Che il troppo pianto a me pianger non lassa.
+v. 116. The friar Albigero.] Alberigo de'Manfredi, of Faenza,
+one of the Frati Godenti, Joyons Friars who having quarrelled
+with some of his brotherhood, under pretence of wishing to be
+reconciled, invited them to a banquet, at the conclusion of which
+he called for the fruit, a signal for the assassins to rush in
+and dispatch those whom he had marked for destruction. Hence,
+adds Landino, it is said proverbially of one who has been
+stabbed, that he has had some of the friar Alberigo's fruit.
+Thus Pulci, Morg. Magg. c. xxv.
+ Le frutte amare di frate Alberico.
+
+v. 123. Ptolomea.] This circle is named Ptolomea from Ptolemy,
+the son of Abubus, by whom Simon and his sons were murdered, at a
+great banquet he had made for them. See Maccabees, ch xvi.
+
+v. 126. The glazed tear-drops.]
+
+ -sorrow's eye, glazed with blinding tears.
+ Shakspeare, Rich. II. a. 2. s. 2.
+
+v. 136. Branca Doria.] The family of Doria was possessed of
+great influence in Genoa. Branca is said to have murdered his
+father-in-law, Michel Zanche, introduced in Canto XXII.
+
+v. 162 Romagna's darkest spirit.] The friar Alberigo.
+
+
+
+Canto XXXIV.
+
+v. 6. A wind-mill.] The author of the Caliph Vathek, in the
+notes to that tale, justly observes, that it is more than
+probable that Don Quixote's mistake of the wind-mills for giants
+was suggested to Cervantes by this simile.
+
+v. 37. Three faces.] It can scarcely be doubted but that Milton
+derived his description of Satan in those lines,
+
+ Each passion dimm'd his face
+ Thrice chang'd with pale, ire, envy, and despair.
+ P. L. b. iv. 114.
+from this passage, coupled with the remark of Vellutello upon it:
+
+"The first of these sins is anger which he signifies by the red
+face; the second, represented by that between pale and yellow is
+envy and not, as others have said, avarice; and the third,
+denoted by the black, is a melancholy humour that causes a man's
+thoughts to be dark and evil, and averse from all joy and
+tranquillity."
+
+v. 44. Sails.]
+ --His sail-broad vans
+ He spreads for flight.
+ Milton, P. L. b. ii. 927.
+Compare Spenser, F. Q. b. i. c. xi. st. 10; Ben Jonson's Every
+Man out of his humour, v. 7; and Fletcher's Prophetess, a. 2. s.
+3.
+
+v. 46. Like a bat.] The description of an imaginary being, who
+is called Typhurgo, in the Zodiacus Vitae, has some touches very
+like this of Dante's Lucifer.
+
+ Ingentem vidi regem ingentique sedentem
+ In solio, crines flammanti stemmate cinctum
+ ---utrinque patentes
+ Alae humeris magnae, quales vespertilionum
+ Membranis contextae amplis--
+ Nudus erat longis sed opertus corpora villis.
+ M. Palingenii, Zod. Vit. l. ix.
+ A mighty king I might discerne,
+ Plac'd hie on lofty chaire,
+ His haire with fyry garland deckt
+ Puft up in fiendish wise.
+ x x x x x x
+ Large wings on him did grow
+ Framde like the wings of flinder mice, &c.
+ Googe's Translation
+
+v. 61. Brutus.] Landino struggles, but I fear in vain, to
+extricate Brutus from the unworthy lot which is here assigned
+him. He maintains, that by Brutus and Cassius are not meant the
+individuals known by those names, but any who put a lawful
+monarch to death. Yet if Caesar was such, the conspirators might
+be regarded as deserving of their doom.
+
+v. 89. Within one hour and half of noon.] The poet uses the
+Hebrew manner of computing the day, according to which the third
+hour answers to our twelve o'clock at noon.
+
+v. 120. By what of firm land on this side appears.] The
+mountain of Purgatory.
+
+v.123. The vaulted tomb.] "La tomba." This word is used to
+express the whole depth of the infernal region.
+
+
+
+PURGATORY
+
+
+CANTO I
+
+
+O'er better waves to speed her rapid course
+The light bark of my genius lifts the sail,
+Well pleas'd to leave so cruel sea behind;
+And of that second region will I sing,
+In which the human spirit from sinful blot
+Is purg'd, and for ascent to Heaven prepares.
+ Here, O ye hallow'd Nine! for in your train
+I follow, here the deadened strain revive;
+Nor let Calliope refuse to sound
+A somewhat higher song, of that loud tone,
+Which when the wretched birds of chattering note
+Had heard, they of forgiveness lost all hope.
+ Sweet hue of eastern sapphire, that was spread
+O'er the serene aspect of the pure air,
+High up as the first circle, to mine eyes
+Unwonted joy renew'd, soon as I 'scap'd
+Forth from the atmosphere of deadly gloom,
+That had mine eyes and bosom fill'd with grief.
+The radiant planet, that to love invites,
+Made all the orient laugh, and veil'd beneath
+The Pisces' light, that in his escort came.
+ To the right hand I turn'd, and fix'd my mind
+On the' other pole attentive, where I saw
+Four stars ne'er seen before save by the ken
+Of our first parents. Heaven of their rays
+Seem'd joyous. O thou northern site, bereft
+Indeed, and widow'd, since of these depriv'd!
+ As from this view I had desisted, straight
+Turning a little tow'rds the other pole,
+There from whence now the wain had disappear'd,
+I saw an old man standing by my side
+Alone, so worthy of rev'rence in his look,
+That ne'er from son to father more was ow'd.
+Low down his beard and mix'd with hoary white
+Descended, like his locks, which parting fell
+Upon his breast in double fold. The beams
+Of those four luminaries on his face
+So brightly shone, and with such radiance clear
+Deck'd it, that I beheld him as the sun.
+ "Say who are ye, that stemming the blind stream,
+Forth from th' eternal prison-house have fled?"
+He spoke and moved those venerable plumes.
+"Who hath conducted, or with lantern sure
+Lights you emerging from the depth of night,
+That makes the infernal valley ever black?
+Are the firm statutes of the dread abyss
+Broken, or in high heaven new laws ordain'd,
+That thus, condemn'd, ye to my caves approach?"
+ My guide, then laying hold on me, by words
+And intimations given with hand and head,
+Made my bent knees and eye submissive pay
+Due reverence; then thus to him replied.
+ "Not of myself I come; a Dame from heaven
+Descending, had besought me in my charge
+To bring. But since thy will implies, that more
+Our true condition I unfold at large,
+Mine is not to deny thee thy request.
+This mortal ne'er hath seen the farthest gloom.
+But erring by his folly had approach'd
+So near, that little space was left to turn.
+Then, as before I told, I was dispatch'd
+To work his rescue, and no way remain'd
+Save this which I have ta'en. I have display'd
+Before him all the regions of the bad;
+And purpose now those spirits to display,
+That under thy command are purg'd from sin.
+How I have brought him would be long to say.
+From high descends the virtue, by whose aid
+I to thy sight and hearing him have led.
+Now may our coming please thee. In the search
+Of liberty he journeys: that how dear
+They know, who for her sake have life refus'd.
+Thou knowest, to whom death for her was sweet
+In Utica, where thou didst leave those weeds,
+That in the last great day will shine so bright.
+For us the' eternal edicts are unmov'd:
+He breathes, and I am free of Minos' power,
+Abiding in that circle where the eyes
+Of thy chaste Marcia beam, who still in look
+Prays thee, O hallow'd spirit! to own her shine.
+Then by her love we' implore thee, let us pass
+Through thy sev'n regions; for which best thanks
+I for thy favour will to her return,
+If mention there below thou not disdain."
+ "Marcia so pleasing in my sight was found,"
+He then to him rejoin'd, "while I was there,
+That all she ask'd me I was fain to grant.
+Now that beyond the' accursed stream she dwells,
+She may no longer move me, by that law,
+Which was ordain'd me, when I issued thence.
+Not so, if Dame from heaven, as thou sayst,
+Moves and directs thee; then no flattery needs.
+Enough for me that in her name thou ask.
+Go therefore now: and with a slender reed
+See that thou duly gird him, and his face
+Lave, till all sordid stain thou wipe from thence.
+For not with eye, by any cloud obscur'd,
+Would it be seemly before him to come,
+Who stands the foremost minister in heaven.
+This islet all around, there far beneath,
+Where the wave beats it, on the oozy bed
+Produces store of reeds. No other plant,
+Cover'd with leaves, or harden'd in its stalk,
+There lives, not bending to the water's sway.
+After, this way return not; but the sun
+Will show you, that now rises, where to take
+The mountain in its easiest ascent."
+ He disappear'd; and I myself uprais'd
+Speechless, and to my guide retiring close,
+Toward him turn'd mine eyes. He thus began;
+"My son! observant thou my steps pursue.
+We must retreat to rearward, for that way
+The champain to its low extreme declines."
+ The dawn had chas'd the matin hour of prime,
+Which deaf before it, so that from afar
+I spy'd the trembling of the ocean stream.
+ We travers'd the deserted plain, as one
+Who, wander'd from his track, thinks every step
+Trodden in vain till he regain the path.
+ When we had come, where yet the tender dew
+Strove with the sun, and in a place, where fresh
+The wind breath'd o'er it, while it slowly dried;
+Both hands extended on the watery grass
+My master plac'd, in graceful act and kind.
+Whence I of his intent before appriz'd,
+Stretch'd out to him my cheeks suffus'd with tears.
+There to my visage he anew restor'd
+That hue, which the dun shades of hell conceal'd.
+ Then on the solitary shore arriv'd,
+That never sailing on its waters saw
+Man, that could after measure back his course,
+He girt me in such manner as had pleas'd
+Him who instructed, and O, strange to tell!
+As he selected every humble plant,
+Wherever one was pluck'd, another there
+Resembling, straightway in its place arose.
+
+
+
+CANTO II
+
+Now had the sun to that horizon reach'd,
+That covers, with the most exalted point
+Of its meridian circle, Salem's walls,
+And night, that opposite to him her orb
+Sounds, from the stream of Ganges issued forth,
+Holding the scales, that from her hands are dropp'd
+When she reigns highest: so that where I was,
+Aurora's white and vermeil-tinctur'd cheek
+To orange turn'd as she in age increas'd.
+ Meanwhile we linger'd by the water's brink,
+Like men, who, musing on their road, in thought
+Journey, while motionless the body rests.
+When lo! as near upon the hour of dawn,
+Through the thick vapours Mars with fiery beam
+Glares down in west, over the ocean floor;
+So seem'd, what once again I hope to view,
+A light so swiftly coming through the sea,
+No winged course might equal its career.
+From which when for a space I had withdrawn
+Thine eyes, to make inquiry of my guide,
+Again I look'd and saw it grown in size
+And brightness: thou on either side appear'd
+Something, but what I knew not of bright hue,
+And by degrees from underneath it came
+Another. My preceptor silent yet
+Stood, while the brightness, that we first discern'd,
+Open'd the form of wings: then when he knew
+The pilot, cried aloud, "Down, down; bend low
+Thy knees; behold God's angel: fold thy hands:
+Now shalt thou see true Ministers indeed.
+Lo how all human means he sets at naught!
+So that nor oar he needs, nor other sail
+Except his wings, between such distant shores.
+Lo how straight up to heaven he holds them rear'd,
+Winnowing the air with those eternal plumes,
+That not like mortal hairs fall off or change!"
+ As more and more toward us came, more bright
+Appear'd the bird of God, nor could the eye
+Endure his splendor near: I mine bent down.
+He drove ashore in a small bark so swift
+And light, that in its course no wave it drank.
+The heav'nly steersman at the prow was seen,
+Visibly written blessed in his looks.
+Within a hundred spirits and more there sat.
+"In Exitu Israel de Aegypto;"
+All with one voice together sang, with what
+In the remainder of that hymn is writ.
+Then soon as with the sign of holy cross
+He bless'd them, they at once leap'd out on land,
+The swiftly as he came return'd. The crew,
+There left, appear'd astounded with the place,
+Gazing around as one who sees new sights.
+ From every side the sun darted his beams,
+And with his arrowy radiance from mid heav'n
+Had chas'd the Capricorn, when that strange tribe
+Lifting their eyes towards us: If ye know,
+Declare what path will Lead us to the mount."
+ Them Virgil answer'd. "Ye suppose perchance
+Us well acquainted with this place: but here,
+We, as yourselves, are strangers. Not long erst
+We came, before you but a little space,
+By other road so rough and hard, that now
+The' ascent will seem to us as play." The spirits,
+Who from my breathing had perceiv'd I liv'd,
+Grew pale with wonder. As the multitude
+Flock round a herald, sent with olive branch,
+To hear what news he brings, and in their haste
+Tread one another down, e'en so at sight
+Of me those happy spirits were fix'd, each one
+Forgetful of its errand, to depart,
+Where cleans'd from sin, it might be made all fair.
+ Then one I saw darting before the rest
+With such fond ardour to embrace me, I
+To do the like was mov'd. O shadows vain
+Except in outward semblance! thrice my hands
+I clasp'd behind it, they as oft return'd
+Empty into my breast again. Surprise
+I needs must think was painted in my looks,
+For that the shadow smil'd and backward drew.
+To follow it I hasten'd, but with voice
+Of sweetness it enjoin'd me to desist.
+Then who it was I knew, and pray'd of it,
+To talk with me, it would a little pause.
+It answered: "Thee as in my mortal frame
+I lov'd, so loos'd forth it I love thee still,
+And therefore pause; but why walkest thou here?"
+ "Not without purpose once more to return,
+Thou find'st me, my Casella, where I am
+Journeying this way;" I said, "but how of thee
+Hath so much time been lost?" He answer'd straight:
+"No outrage hath been done to me, if he
+Who when and whom he chooses takes, me oft
+This passage hath denied, since of just will
+His will he makes. These three months past indeed,
+He, whose chose to enter, with free leave
+Hath taken; whence I wand'ring by the shore
+Where Tyber's wave grows salt, of him gain'd kind
+Admittance, at that river's mouth, tow'rd which
+His wings are pointed, for there always throng
+All such as not to Archeron descend."
+ Then I: "If new laws have not quite destroy'd
+Memory and use of that sweet song of love,
+That while all my cares had power to 'swage;
+Please thee with it a little to console
+My spirit, that incumber'd with its frame,
+Travelling so far, of pain is overcome."
+ "Love that discourses in my thoughts." He then
+Began in such soft accents, that within
+The sweetness thrills me yet. My gentle guide
+And all who came with him, so well were pleas'd,
+That seem'd naught else might in their thoughts have room.
+ Fast fix'd in mute attention to his notes
+We stood, when lo! that old man venerable
+Exclaiming, "How is this, ye tardy spirits?
+What negligence detains you loit'ring here?
+Run to the mountain to cast off those scales,
+That from your eyes the sight of God conceal."
+ As a wild flock of pigeons, to their food
+Collected, blade or tares, without their pride
+Accustom'd, and in still and quiet sort,
+If aught alarm them, suddenly desert
+Their meal, assail'd by more important care;
+So I that new-come troop beheld, the song
+Deserting, hasten to the mountain's side,
+As one who goes yet where he tends knows not.
+ Nor with less hurried step did we depart.
+
+
+
+CANTO III
+
+Them sudden flight had scatter'd over the plain,
+Turn'd tow'rds the mountain, whither reason's voice
+Drives us; I to my faithful company
+Adhering, left it not. For how of him
+Depriv'd, might I have sped, or who beside
+Would o'er the mountainous tract have led my steps
+He with the bitter pang of self-remorse
+Seem'd smitten. O clear conscience and upright
+How doth a little fling wound thee sore!
+ Soon as his feet desisted (slack'ning pace),
+From haste, that mars all decency of act,
+My mind, that in itself before was wrapt,
+Its thoughts expanded, as with joy restor'd:
+And full against the steep ascent I set
+My face, where highest to heav'n its top o'erflows.
+ The sun, that flar'd behind, with ruddy beam
+Before my form was broken; for in me
+His rays resistance met. I turn'd aside
+With fear of being left, when I beheld
+Only before myself the ground obscur'd.
+When thus my solace, turning him around,
+Bespake me kindly: "Why distrustest thou?
+Believ'st not I am with thee, thy sure guide?
+It now is evening there, where buried lies
+The body, in which I cast a shade, remov'd
+To Naples from Brundusium's wall. Nor thou
+Marvel, if before me no shadow fall,
+More than that in the sky element
+One ray obstructs not other. To endure
+Torments of heat and cold extreme, like frames
+That virtue hath dispos'd, which how it works
+Wills not to us should be reveal'd. Insane
+Who hopes, our reason may that space explore,
+Which holds three persons in one substance knit.
+Seek not the wherefore, race of human kind;
+Could ye have seen the whole, no need had been
+For Mary to bring forth. Moreover ye
+Have seen such men desiring fruitlessly;
+To whose desires repose would have been giv'n,
+That now but serve them for eternal grief.
+I speak of Plato, and the Stagyrite,
+And others many more." And then he bent
+Downwards his forehead, and in troubled mood
+Broke off his speech. Meanwhile we had arriv'd
+Far as the mountain's foot, and there the rock
+Found of so steep ascent, that nimblest steps
+To climb it had been vain. The most remote
+Most wild untrodden path, in all the tract
+'Twixt Lerice and Turbia were to this
+A ladder easy' and open of access.
+ "Who knows on which hand now the steep declines?"
+My master said and paus'd, "so that he may
+Ascend, who journeys without aid of wine,?"
+And while with looks directed to the ground
+The meaning of the pathway he explor'd,
+And I gaz'd upward round the stony height,
+Of spirits, that toward us mov'd their steps,
+Yet moving seem'd not, they so slow approach'd.
+ I thus my guide address'd: "Upraise thine eyes,
+Lo that way some, of whom thou may'st obtain
+Counsel, if of thyself thou find'st it not!"
+ Straightway he look'd, and with free speech replied:
+"Let us tend thither: they but softly come.
+And thou be firm in hope, my son belov'd."
+ Now was that people distant far in space
+A thousand paces behind ours, as much
+As at a throw the nervous arm could fling,
+When all drew backward on the messy crags
+Of the steep bank, and firmly stood unmov'd
+As one who walks in doubt might stand to look.
+ "O spirits perfect! O already chosen!"
+Virgil to them began, "by that blest peace,
+Which, as I deem, is for you all prepar'd,
+Instruct us where the mountain low declines,
+So that attempt to mount it be not vain.
+For who knows most, him loss of time most grieves."
+ As sheep, that step from forth their fold, by one,
+Or pairs, or three at once; meanwhile the rest
+Stand fearfully, bending the eye and nose
+To ground, and what the foremost does, that do
+The others, gath'ring round her, if she stops,
+Simple and quiet, nor the cause discern;
+So saw I moving to advance the first,
+Who of that fortunate crew were at the head,
+Of modest mien and graceful in their gait.
+When they before me had beheld the light
+From my right side fall broken on the ground,
+So that the shadow reach'd the cave, they stopp'd
+And somewhat back retir'd: the same did all,
+Who follow'd, though unweeting of the cause
+ "Unask'd of you, yet freely I confess,
+This is a human body which ye see.
+That the sun's light is broken on the ground,
+Marvel not: but believe, that not without
+Virtue deriv'd from Heaven, we to climb
+Over this wall aspire." So them bespake
+My master; and that virtuous tribe rejoin'd;
+" Turn, and before you there the entrance lies,"
+Making a signal to us with bent hands.
+ Then of them one began. "Whoe'er thou art,
+Who journey'st thus this way, thy visage turn,
+Think if me elsewhere thou hast ever seen."
+ I tow'rds him turn'd, and with fix'd eye beheld.
+Comely, and fair, and gentle of aspect,
+He seem'd, but on one brow a gash was mark'd.
+ When humbly I disclaim'd to have beheld
+Him ever: "Now behold!" he said, and show'd
+High on his breast a wound: then smiling spake.
+ "I am Manfredi, grandson to the Queen
+Costanza: whence I pray thee, when return'd,
+To my fair daughter go, the parent glad
+Of Aragonia and Sicilia's pride;
+And of the truth inform her, if of me
+Aught else be told. When by two mortal blows
+My frame was shatter'd, I betook myself
+Weeping to him, who of free will forgives.
+My sins were horrible; but so wide arms
+Hath goodness infinite, that it receives
+All who turn to it. Had this text divine
+Been of Cosenza's shepherd better scann'd,
+Who then by Clement on my hunt was set,
+Yet at the bridge's head my bones had lain,
+Near Benevento, by the heavy mole
+Protected; but the rain now drenches them,
+And the wind drives, out of the kingdom's bounds,
+Far as the stream of Verde, where, with lights
+Extinguish'd, he remov'd them from their bed.
+Yet by their curse we are not so destroy'd,
+But that the eternal love may turn, while hope
+Retains her verdant blossoms. True it is,
+That such one as in contumacy dies
+Against the holy church, though he repent,
+Must wander thirty-fold for all the time
+In his presumption past; if such decree
+Be not by prayers of good men shorter made
+Look therefore if thou canst advance my bliss;
+Revealing to my good Costanza, how
+Thou hast beheld me, and beside the terms
+Laid on me of that interdict; for here
+By means of those below much profit comes."
+
+
+CANTO IV
+
+When by sensations of delight or pain,
+That any of our faculties hath seiz'd,
+Entire the soul collects herself, it seems
+She is intent upon that power alone,
+And thus the error is disprov'd which holds
+The soul not singly lighted in the breast.
+And therefore when as aught is heard or seen,
+That firmly keeps the soul toward it turn'd,
+Time passes, and a man perceives it not.
+For that, whereby he hearken, is one power,
+Another that, which the whole spirit hash;
+This is as it were bound, while that is free.
+ This found I true by proof, hearing that spirit
+And wond'ring; for full fifty steps aloft
+The sun had measur'd unobserv'd of me,
+When we arriv'd where all with one accord
+The spirits shouted, "Here is what ye ask."
+ A larger aperture ofttimes is stopp'd
+With forked stake of thorn by villager,
+When the ripe grape imbrowns, than was the path,
+By which my guide, and I behind him close,
+Ascended solitary, when that troop
+Departing left us. On Sanleo's road
+Who journeys, or to Noli low descends,
+Or mounts Bismantua's height, must use his feet;
+But here a man had need to fly, I mean
+With the swift wing and plumes of high desire,
+Conducted by his aid, who gave me hope,
+And with light furnish'd to direct my way.
+ We through the broken rock ascended, close
+Pent on each side, while underneath the ground
+Ask'd help of hands and feet. When we arriv'd
+Near on the highest ridge of the steep bank,
+Where the plain level open'd I exclaim'd,
+"O master! say which way can we proceed?"
+ He answer'd, "Let no step of thine recede.
+Behind me gain the mountain, till to us
+Some practis'd guide appear." That eminence
+Was lofty that no eye might reach its point,
+And the side proudly rising, more than line
+From the mid quadrant to the centre drawn.
+I wearied thus began: "Parent belov'd!
+Turn, and behold how I remain alone,
+If thou stay not." --" My son!" He straight reply'd,
+"Thus far put forth thy strength; "and to a track
+Pointed, that, on this side projecting, round
+Circles the hill. His words so spurr'd me on,
+That I behind him clamb'ring, forc'd myself,
+Till my feet press'd the circuit plain beneath.
+There both together seated, turn'd we round
+To eastward, whence was our ascent: and oft
+Many beside have with delight look'd back.
+ First on the nether shores I turn'd my eyes,
+Then rais'd them to the sun, and wond'ring mark'd
+That from the left it smote us. Soon perceiv'd
+That Poet sage how at the car of light
+Amaz'd I stood, where 'twixt us and the north
+Its course it enter'd. Whence he thus to me:
+"Were Leda's offspring now in company
+Of that broad mirror, that high up and low
+Imparts his light beneath, thou might'st behold
+The ruddy zodiac nearer to the bears
+Wheel, if its ancient course it not forsook.
+How that may be if thou would'st think; within
+Pond'ring, imagine Sion with this mount
+Plac'd on the earth, so that to both be one
+Horizon, and two hemispheres apart,
+Where lies the path that Phaeton ill knew
+To guide his erring chariot: thou wilt see
+How of necessity by this on one
+He passes, while by that on the' other side,
+If with clear view shine intellect attend."
+ "Of truth, kind teacher!" I exclaim'd, "so clear
+Aught saw I never, as I now discern
+Where seem'd my ken to fail, that the mid orb
+Of the supernal motion (which in terms
+Of art is called the Equator, and remains
+Ever between the sun and winter) for the cause
+Thou hast assign'd, from hence toward the north
+Departs, when those who in the Hebrew land
+Inhabit, see it tow'rds the warmer part.
+But if it please thee, I would gladly know,
+How far we have to journey: for the hill
+Mounts higher, than this sight of mine can mount."
+ He thus to me: "Such is this steep ascent,
+That it is ever difficult at first,
+But, more a man proceeds, less evil grows.
+When pleasant it shall seem to thee, so much
+That upward going shall be easy to thee.
+As in a vessel to go down the tide,
+Then of this path thou wilt have reach'd the end.
+There hope to rest thee from thy toil. No more
+I answer, and thus far for certain know."
+As he his words had spoken, near to us
+A voice there sounded: "Yet ye first perchance
+May to repose you by constraint be led."
+At sound thereof each turn'd, and on the left
+A huge stone we beheld, of which nor I
+Nor he before was ware. Thither we drew,
+find there were some, who in the shady place
+Behind the rock were standing, as a man
+Thru' idleness might stand. Among them one,
+Who seem'd to me much wearied, sat him down,
+And with his arms did fold his knees about,
+Holding his face between them downward bent.
+ "Sweet Sir!" I cry'd, "behold that man, who shows
+Himself more idle, than if laziness
+Were sister to him." Straight he turn'd to us,
+And, o'er the thigh lifting his face, observ'd,
+Then in these accents spake: "Up then, proceed
+Thou valiant one." Straight who it was I knew;
+Nor could the pain I felt (for want of breath
+Still somewhat urg'd me) hinder my approach.
+And when I came to him, he scarce his head
+Uplifted, saying "Well hast thou discern'd,
+How from the left the sun his chariot leads."
+ His lazy acts and broken words my lips
+To laughter somewhat mov'd; when I began:
+"Belacqua, now for thee I grieve no more.
+But tell, why thou art seated upright there?
+Waitest thou escort to conduct thee hence?
+Or blame I only shine accustom'd ways?"
+Then he: "My brother, of what use to mount,
+When to my suffering would not let me pass
+The bird of God, who at the portal sits?
+Behooves so long that heav'n first bear me round
+Without its limits, as in life it bore,
+Because I to the end repentant Sighs
+Delay'd, if prayer do not aid me first,
+That riseth up from heart which lives in grace.
+What other kind avails, not heard in heaven?"'
+ Before me now the Poet up the mount
+Ascending, cried: "Haste thee, for see the sun
+Has touch'd the point meridian, and the night
+Now covers with her foot Marocco's shore."
+
+
+
+CANTO V
+
+Now had I left those spirits, and pursued
+The steps of my Conductor, when beheld
+Pointing the finger at me one exclaim'd:
+"See how it seems as if the light not shone
+From the left hand of him beneath, and he,
+As living, seems to be led on." Mine eyes
+I at that sound reverting, saw them gaze
+Through wonder first at me, and then at me
+And the light broken underneath, by turns.
+"Why are thy thoughts thus riveted?" my guide
+Exclaim'd, "that thou hast slack'd thy pace? or how
+Imports it thee, what thing is whisper'd here?
+Come after me, and to their babblings leave
+The crowd. Be as a tower, that, firmly set,
+Shakes not its top for any blast that blows!
+He, in whose bosom thought on thought shoots out,
+Still of his aim is wide, in that the one
+Sicklies and wastes to nought the other's strength."
+ What other could I answer save "I come?"
+I said it, somewhat with that colour ting'd
+Which ofttimes pardon meriteth for man.
+ Meanwhile traverse along the hill there came,
+A little way before us, some who sang
+The "Miserere" in responsive Strains.
+When they perceiv'd that through my body I
+Gave way not for the rays to pass, their song
+Straight to a long and hoarse exclaim they chang'd;
+And two of them, in guise of messengers,
+Ran on to meet us, and inquiring ask'd:
+Of your condition we would gladly learn."
+ To them my guide. "Ye may return, and bear
+Tidings to them who sent you, that his frame
+Is real flesh. If, as I deem, to view
+His shade they paus'd, enough is answer'd them.
+Him let them honour, they may prize him well."
+ Ne'er saw I fiery vapours with such speed
+Cut through the serene air at fall of night,
+Nor August's clouds athwart the setting sun,
+That upward these did not in shorter space
+Return; and, there arriving, with the rest
+Wheel back on us, as with loose rein a troop.
+ "Many," exclaim'd the bard, "are these, who throng
+Around us: to petition thee they come.
+Go therefore on, and listen as thou go'st."
+ "O spirit! who go'st on to blessedness
+With the same limbs, that clad thee at thy birth."
+Shouting they came, "a little rest thy step.
+Look if thou any one amongst our tribe
+Hast e'er beheld, that tidings of him there
+Thou mayst report. Ah, wherefore go'st thou on?
+Ah wherefore tarriest thou not? We all
+By violence died, and to our latest hour
+Were sinners, but then warn'd by light from heav'n,
+So that, repenting and forgiving, we
+Did issue out of life at peace with God,
+Who with desire to see him fills our heart."
+ Then I: "The visages of all I scan
+Yet none of ye remember. But if aught,
+That I can do, may please you, gentle spirits!
+Speak; and I will perform it, by that peace,
+Which on the steps of guide so excellent
+Following from world to world intent I seek."
+ In answer he began: "None here distrusts
+Thy kindness, though not promis'd with an oath;
+So as the will fail not for want of power.
+Whence I, who sole before the others speak,
+Entreat thee, if thou ever see that land,
+Which lies between Romagna and the realm
+Of Charles, that of thy courtesy thou pray
+Those who inhabit Fano, that for me
+Their adorations duly be put up,
+By which I may purge off my grievous sins.
+From thence I came. But the deep passages,
+Whence issued out the blood wherein I dwelt,
+Upon my bosom in Antenor's land
+Were made, where to be more secure I thought.
+The author of the deed was Este's prince,
+Who, more than right could warrant, with his wrath
+Pursued me. Had I towards Mira fled,
+When overta'en at Oriaco, still
+Might I have breath'd. But to the marsh I sped,
+And in the mire and rushes tangled there
+Fell, and beheld my life-blood float the plain."
+ Then said another: "Ah! so may the wish,
+That takes thee o'er the mountain, be fulfill'd,
+As thou shalt graciously give aid to mine.
+Of Montefeltro I; Buonconte I:
+Giovanna nor none else have care for me,
+Sorrowing with these I therefore go." I thus:
+"From Campaldino's field what force or chance
+Drew thee, that ne'er thy sepulture was known?"
+ "Oh!" answer'd he, "at Casentino's foot
+A stream there courseth, nam'd Archiano, sprung
+In Apennine above the Hermit's seat.
+E'en where its name is cancel'd, there came I,
+Pierc'd in the heart, fleeing away on foot,
+And bloodying the plain. Here sight and speech
+Fail'd me, and finishing with Mary's name
+I fell, and tenantless my flesh remain'd.
+I will report the truth; which thou again0
+Tell to the living. Me God's angel took,
+Whilst he of hell exclaim'd: "O thou from heav'n!
+Say wherefore hast thou robb'd me? Thou of him
+Th' eternal portion bear'st with thee away
+For one poor tear that he deprives me of.
+But of the other, other rule I make."
+ "Thou knowest how in the atmosphere collects
+That vapour dank, returning into water,
+Soon as it mounts where cold condenses it.
+That evil will, which in his intellect
+Still follows evil, came, and rais'd the wind
+And smoky mist, by virtue of the power
+Given by his nature. Thence the valley, soon
+As day was spent, he cover'd o'er with cloud
+From Pratomagno to the mountain range,
+And stretch'd the sky above, so that the air
+Impregnate chang'd to water. Fell the rain,
+And to the fosses came all that the land
+Contain'd not; and, as mightiest streams are wont,
+To the great river with such headlong sweep
+Rush'd, that nought stay'd its course. My stiffen'd frame
+Laid at his mouth the fell Archiano found,
+And dash'd it into Arno, from my breast
+Loos'ning the cross, that of myself I made
+When overcome with pain. He hurl'd me on,
+Along the banks and bottom of his course;
+Then in his muddy spoils encircling wrapt."
+ "Ah! when thou to the world shalt be return'd,
+And rested after thy long road," so spake
+Next the third spirit; "then remember me.
+I once was Pia. Sienna gave me life,
+Maremma took it from me. That he knows,
+Who me with jewell'd ring had first espous'd."
+
+
+
+CANTO VI
+
+When from their game of dice men separate,
+He, who hath lost, remains in sadness fix'd,
+Revolving in his mind, what luckless throws
+He cast: but meanwhile all the company
+Go with the other; one before him runs,
+And one behind his mantle twitches, one
+Fast by his side bids him remember him.
+He stops not; and each one, to whom his hand
+Is stretch'd, well knows he bids him stand aside;
+And thus he from the press defends himself.
+E'en such was I in that close-crowding throng;
+And turning so my face around to all,
+And promising, I 'scap'd from it with pains.
+ Here of Arezzo him I saw, who fell
+By Ghino's cruel arm; and him beside,
+Who in his chase was swallow'd by the stream.
+Here Frederic Novello, with his hand
+Stretch'd forth, entreated; and of Pisa he,
+Who put the good Marzuco to such proof
+Of constancy. Count Orso I beheld;
+And from its frame a soul dismiss'd for spite
+And envy, as it said, but for no crime:
+I speak of Peter de la Brosse; and here,
+While she yet lives, that Lady of Brabant
+Let her beware; lest for so false a deed
+She herd with worse than these. When I was freed
+From all those spirits, who pray'd for others' prayers
+To hasten on their state of blessedness;
+Straight I began: "O thou, my luminary!
+It seems expressly in thy text denied,
+That heaven's supreme decree can never bend
+To supplication; yet with this design
+Do these entreat. Can then their hope be vain,
+Or is thy saying not to me reveal'd?"
+ He thus to me: "Both what I write is plain,
+And these deceiv'd not in their hope, if well
+Thy mind consider, that the sacred height
+Of judgment doth not stoop, because love's flame
+In a short moment all fulfils, which he
+Who sojourns here, in right should satisfy.
+Besides, when I this point concluded thus,
+By praying no defect could be supplied;
+Because the pray'r had none access to God.
+Yet in this deep suspicion rest thou not
+Contented unless she assure thee so,
+Who betwixt truth and mind infuses light.
+I know not if thou take me right; I mean
+Beatrice. Her thou shalt behold above,
+Upon this mountain's crown, fair seat of joy."
+ Then I: "Sir! let us mend our speed; for now
+I tire not as before; and lo! the hill
+Stretches its shadow far." He answer'd thus:
+"Our progress with this day shall be as much
+As we may now dispatch; but otherwise
+Than thou supposest is the truth. For there
+Thou canst not be, ere thou once more behold
+Him back returning, who behind the steep
+Is now so hidden, that as erst his beam
+Thou dost not break. But lo! a spirit there
+Stands solitary, and toward us looks:
+It will instruct us in the speediest way."
+ We soon approach'd it. O thou Lombard spirit!
+How didst thou stand, in high abstracted mood,
+Scarce moving with slow dignity thine eyes!
+It spoke not aught, but let us onward pass,
+Eyeing us as a lion on his watch.
+I3ut Virgil with entreaty mild advanc'd,
+Requesting it to show the best ascent.
+It answer to his question none return'd,
+But of our country and our kind of life
+Demanded. When my courteous guide began,
+"Mantua," the solitary shadow quick
+Rose towards us from the place in which it stood,
+And cry'd, "Mantuan! I am thy countryman
+Sordello." Each the other then embrac'd.
+ Ah slavish Italy! thou inn of grief,
+Vessel without a pilot in loud storm,
+Lady no longer of fair provinces,
+But brothel-house impure! this gentle spirit,
+Ev'n from the Pleasant sound of his dear land
+Was prompt to greet a fellow citizen
+With such glad cheer; while now thy living ones
+In thee abide not without war; and one
+Malicious gnaws another, ay of those
+Whom the same wall and the same moat contains,
+Seek, wretched one! around thy sea-coasts wide;
+Then homeward to thy bosom turn, and mark
+If any part of the sweet peace enjoy.
+What boots it, that thy reins Justinian's hand
+Befitted, if thy saddle be unpress'd?
+Nought doth he now but aggravate thy shame.
+Ah people! thou obedient still shouldst live,
+And in the saddle let thy Caesar sit,
+If well thou marked'st that which God commands
+ Look how that beast to felness hath relaps'd
+From having lost correction of the spur,
+Since to the bridle thou hast set thine hand,
+O German Albert! who abandon'st her,
+That is grown savage and unmanageable,
+When thou should'st clasp her flanks with forked heels.
+Just judgment from the stars fall on thy blood!
+And be it strange and manifest to all!
+Such as may strike thy successor with dread!
+For that thy sire and thou have suffer'd thus,
+Through greediness of yonder realms detain'd,
+The garden of the empire to run waste.
+Come see the Capulets and Montagues,
+The Philippeschi and Monaldi! man
+Who car'st for nought! those sunk in grief, and these
+With dire suspicion rack'd. Come, cruel one!
+Come and behold the' oppression of the nobles,
+And mark their injuries: and thou mayst see.
+What safety Santafiore can supply.
+Come and behold thy Rome, who calls on thee,
+Desolate widow! day and night with moans:
+"My Caesar, why dost thou desert my side?"
+Come and behold what love among thy people:
+And if no pity touches thee for us,
+Come and blush for thine own report. For me,
+If it be lawful, O Almighty Power,
+Who wast in earth for our sakes crucified!
+Are thy just eyes turn'd elsewhere? or is this
+A preparation in the wond'rous depth
+Of thy sage counsel made, for some good end,
+Entirely from our reach of thought cut off?
+So are the' Italian cities all o'erthrong'd
+With tyrants, and a great Marcellus made
+Of every petty factious villager.
+ My Florence! thou mayst well remain unmov'd
+At this digression, which affects not thee:
+Thanks to thy people, who so wisely speed.
+Many have justice in their heart, that long
+Waiteth for counsel to direct the bow,
+Or ere it dart unto its aim: but shine
+Have it on their lip's edge. Many refuse
+To bear the common burdens: readier thine
+Answer uneall'd, and cry, "Behold I stoop!"
+ Make thyself glad, for thou hast reason now,
+Thou wealthy! thou at peace! thou wisdom-fraught!
+Facts best witness if I speak the truth.
+Athens and Lacedaemon, who of old
+Enacted laws, for civil arts renown'd,
+Made little progress in improving life
+Tow'rds thee, who usest such nice subtlety,
+That to the middle of November scarce
+Reaches the thread thou in October weav'st.
+How many times, within thy memory,
+Customs, and laws, and coins, and offices
+Have been by thee renew'd, and people chang'd!
+ If thou remember'st well and can'st see clear,
+Thou wilt perceive thyself like a sick wretch,
+Who finds no rest upon her down, hut oft
+Shifting her side, short respite seeks from pain.
+
+
+
+
+CANTO VII
+
+After their courteous greetings joyfully
+Sev'n times exchang'd, Sordello backward drew
+Exclaiming, "Who are ye?" "Before this mount
+By spirits worthy of ascent to God
+Was sought, my bones had by Octavius' care
+Been buried. I am Virgil, for no sin
+Depriv'd of heav'n, except for lack of faith."
+ So answer'd him in few my gentle guide.
+ As one, who aught before him suddenly
+Beholding, whence his wonder riseth, cries
+"It is yet is not," wav'ring in belief;
+Such he appear'd; then downward bent his eyes,
+And drawing near with reverential step,
+Caught him, where of mean estate might clasp
+His lord. "Glory of Latium!" he exclaim'd,
+"In whom our tongue its utmost power display'd!
+Boast of my honor'd birth-place! what desert
+Of mine, what favour rather undeserv'd,
+Shows thee to me? If I to hear that voice
+Am worthy, say if from below thou com'st
+And from what cloister's pale?"--"Through every orb
+Of that sad region," he reply'd, "thus far
+Am I arriv'd, by heav'nly influence led
+And with such aid I come. There is a place
+There underneath, not made by torments sad,
+But by dun shades alone; where mourning's voice
+Sounds not of anguish sharp, but breathes in sighs.
+There I with little innocents abide,
+Who by death's fangs were bitten, ere exempt
+From human taint. There I with those abide,
+Who the three holy virtues put not on,
+But understood the rest, and without blame
+Follow'd them all. But if thou know'st and canst,
+Direct us, how we soonest may arrive,
+Where Purgatory its true beginning takes."
+ He answer'd thus: "We have no certain place
+Assign'd us: upwards I may go or round,
+Far as I can, I join thee for thy guide.
+But thou beholdest now how day declines:
+And upwards to proceed by night, our power
+Excels: therefore it may be well to choose
+A place of pleasant sojourn. To the right
+Some spirits sit apart retir'd. If thou
+Consentest, I to these will lead thy steps:
+And thou wilt know them, not without delight."
+ "How chances this?" was answer'd; "who so wish'd
+To ascend by night, would he be thence debarr'd
+By other, or through his own weakness fail?"
+ The good Sordello then, along the ground
+Trailing his finger, spoke: "Only this line
+Thou shalt not overpass, soon as the sun
+Hath disappear'd; not that aught else impedes
+Thy going upwards, save the shades of night.
+These with the wont of power perplex the will.
+With them thou haply mightst return beneath,
+Or to and fro around the mountain's side
+Wander, while day is in the horizon shut."
+ My master straight, as wond'ring at his speech,
+Exclaim'd: "Then lead us quickly, where thou sayst,
+That, while we stay, we may enjoy delight."
+ A little space we were remov'd from thence,
+When I perceiv'd the mountain hollow'd out.
+Ev'n as large valleys hollow'd out on earth,
+ "That way," the' escorting spirit cried, "we go,
+Where in a bosom the high bank recedes:
+And thou await renewal of the day."
+ Betwixt the steep and plain a crooked path
+Led us traverse into the ridge's side,
+Where more than half the sloping edge expires.
+Refulgent gold, and silver thrice refin'd,
+And scarlet grain and ceruse, Indian wood
+Of lucid dye serene, fresh emeralds
+But newly broken, by the herbs and flowers
+Plac'd in that fair recess, in color all
+Had been surpass'd, as great surpasses less.
+Nor nature only there lavish'd her hues,
+But of the sweetness of a thousand smells
+A rare and undistinguish'd fragrance made.
+ "Salve Regina," on the grass and flowers
+Here chanting I beheld those spirits sit
+Who not beyond the valley could be seen.
+ "Before the west'ring sun sink to his bed,"
+Began the Mantuan, who our steps had turn'd,
+ "'Mid those desires not that I lead ye on.
+For from this eminence ye shall discern
+Better the acts and visages of all,
+Than in the nether vale among them mix'd.
+He, who sits high above the rest, and seems
+To have neglected that he should have done,
+And to the others' song moves not his lip,
+The Emperor Rodolph call, who might have heal'd
+The wounds whereof fair Italy hath died,
+So that by others she revives but slowly,
+He, who with kindly visage comforts him,
+Sway'd in that country, where the water springs,
+That Moldaw's river to the Elbe, and Elbe
+Rolls to the ocean: Ottocar his name:
+Who in his swaddling clothes was of more worth
+Than Winceslaus his son, a bearded man,
+Pamper'd with rank luxuriousness and ease.
+And that one with the nose depress, who close
+In counsel seems with him of gentle look,
+Flying expir'd, with'ring the lily's flower.
+Look there how he doth knock against his breast!
+The other ye behold, who for his cheek
+Makes of one hand a couch, with frequent sighs.
+They are the father and the father-in-law
+Of Gallia's bane: his vicious life they know
+And foul; thence comes the grief that rends them thus.
+ "He, so robust of limb, who measure keeps
+In song, with him of feature prominent,
+With ev'ry virtue bore his girdle brac'd.
+And if that stripling who behinds him sits,
+King after him had liv'd, his virtue then
+From vessel to like vessel had been pour'd;
+Which may not of the other heirs be said.
+By James and Frederick his realms are held;
+Neither the better heritage obtains.
+Rarely into the branches of the tree
+Doth human worth mount up; and so ordains
+He who bestows it, that as his free gift
+It may be call'd. To Charles my words apply
+No less than to his brother in the song;
+Which Pouille and Provence now with grief confess.
+So much that plant degenerates from its seed,
+As more than Beatrice and Margaret
+Costanza still boasts of her valorous spouse.
+ "Behold the king of simple life and plain,
+Harry of England, sitting there alone:
+He through his branches better issue spreads.
+ "That one, who on the ground beneath the rest
+Sits lowest, yet his gaze directs aloft,
+Us William, that brave Marquis, for whose cause
+The deed of Alexandria and his war
+Makes Conferrat and Canavese weep."
+
+
+
+CANTO VIII
+
+Now was the hour that wakens fond desire
+In men at sea, and melts their thoughtful heart,
+Who in the morn have bid sweet friends farewell,
+And pilgrim newly on his road with love
+Thrills, if he hear the vesper bell from far,
+That seems to mourn for the expiring day:
+When I, no longer taking heed to hear
+Began, with wonder, from those spirits to mark
+One risen from its seat, which with its hand
+Audience implor'd. Both palms it join'd and rais'd,
+Fixing its steadfast gaze towards the east,
+As telling God, "I care for naught beside."
+ "Te Lucis Ante," so devoutly then
+Came from its lip, and in so soft a strain,
+That all my sense in ravishment was lost.
+And the rest after, softly and devout,
+Follow'd through all the hymn, with upward gaze
+Directed to the bright supernal wheels.
+ Here, reader! for the truth makes thine eyes keen:
+For of so subtle texture is this veil,
+That thou with ease mayst pass it through unmark'd.
+ I saw that gentle band silently next
+Look up, as if in expectation held,
+Pale and in lowly guise; and from on high
+I saw forth issuing descend beneath
+Two angels with two flame-illumin'd swords,
+Broken and mutilated at their points.
+Green as the tender leaves but newly born,
+Their vesture was, the which by wings as green
+Beaten, they drew behind them, fann'd in air.
+A little over us one took his stand,
+The other lighted on the' Opposing hill,
+So that the troop were in the midst contain'd.
+ Well I descried the whiteness on their heads;
+But in their visages the dazzled eye
+Was lost, as faculty that by too much
+Is overpower'd. "From Mary's bosom both
+Are come," exclaim'd Sordello, "as a guard
+Over the vale, ganst him, who hither tends,
+The serpent." Whence, not knowing by which path
+He came, I turn'd me round, and closely press'd,
+All frozen, to my leader's trusted side.
+ Sordello paus'd not: "To the valley now
+(For it is time) let us descend; and hold
+Converse with those great shadows: haply much
+Their sight may please ye." Only three steps down
+Methinks I measur'd, ere I was beneath,
+And noted one who look'd as with desire
+To know me. Time was now that air arrow dim;
+Yet not so dim, that 'twixt his eyes and mine
+It clear'd not up what was conceal'd before.
+Mutually tow'rds each other we advanc'd.
+Nino, thou courteous judge! what joy I felt,
+When I perceiv'd thou wert not with the bad!
+ No salutation kind on either part
+Was left unsaid. He then inquir'd: "How long
+Since thou arrived'st at the mountain's foot,
+Over the distant waves?" --"O!" answer'd I,
+"Through the sad seats of woe this morn I came,
+And still in my first life, thus journeying on,
+The other strive to gain." Soon as they heard
+My words, he and Sordello backward drew,
+As suddenly amaz'd. To Virgil one,
+The other to a spirit turn'd, who near
+Was seated, crying: "Conrad! up with speed:
+Come, see what of his grace high God hath will'd."
+Then turning round to me: "By that rare mark
+Of honour which thou ow'st to him, who hides
+So deeply his first cause, it hath no ford,
+When thou shalt he beyond the vast of waves.
+Tell my Giovanna, that for me she call
+There, where reply to innocence is made.
+Her mother, I believe, loves me no more;
+Since she has chang'd the white and wimpled folds,
+Which she is doom'd once more with grief to wish.
+By her it easily may be perceiv'd,
+How long in women lasts the flame of love,
+If sight and touch do not relume it oft.
+For her so fair a burial will not make
+The viper which calls Milan to the field,
+As had been made by shrill Gallura's bird."
+ He spoke, and in his visage took the stamp
+Of that right seal, which with due temperature
+Glows in the bosom. My insatiate eyes
+Meanwhile to heav'n had travel'd, even there
+Where the bright stars are slowest, as a wheel
+Nearest the axle; when my guide inquir'd:
+"What there aloft, my son, has caught thy gaze?"
+ I answer'd: "The three torches, with which here
+The pole is all on fire. "He then to me:
+"The four resplendent stars, thou saw'st this morn
+Are there beneath, and these ris'n in their stead."
+ While yet he spoke. Sordello to himself
+Drew him, and cry'd: "Lo there our enemy!"
+And with his hand pointed that way to look.
+ Along the side, where barrier none arose
+Around the little vale, a serpent lay,
+Such haply as gave Eve the bitter food.
+Between the grass and flowers, the evil snake
+Came on, reverting oft his lifted head;
+And, as a beast that smoothes its polish'd coat,
+Licking his hack. I saw not, nor can tell,
+How those celestial falcons from their seat
+Mov'd, but in motion each one well descried,
+Hearing the air cut by their verdant plumes.
+The serpent fled; and to their stations back
+The angels up return'd with equal flight.
+ The Spirit (who to Nino, when he call'd,
+Had come), from viewing me with fixed ken,
+Through all that conflict, loosen'd not his sight.
+ "So may the lamp, which leads thee up on high,
+Find, in thy destin'd lot, of wax so much,
+As may suffice thee to the enamel's height."
+It thus began: "If any certain news
+Of Valdimagra and the neighbour part
+Thou know'st, tell me, who once was mighty there
+They call'd me Conrad Malaspina, not
+That old one, but from him I sprang. The love
+I bore my people is now here refin'd."
+ "In your dominions," I answer'd, "ne'er was I.
+But through all Europe where do those men dwell,
+To whom their glory is not manifest?
+The fame, that honours your illustrious house,
+Proclaims the nobles and proclaims the land;
+So that he knows it who was never there.
+I swear to you, so may my upward route
+Prosper! your honour'd nation not impairs
+The value of her coffer and her sword.
+Nature and use give her such privilege,
+That while the world is twisted from his course
+By a bad head, she only walks aright,
+And has the evil way in scorn." He then:
+"Now pass thee on: sev'n times the tired sun
+Revisits not the couch, which with four feet
+The forked Aries covers, ere that kind
+Opinion shall be nail'd into thy brain
+With stronger nails than other's speech can drive,
+If the sure course of judgment be not stay'd."
+
+
+
+CANTO IX
+
+Now the fair consort of Tithonus old,
+Arisen from her mate's beloved arms,
+Look'd palely o'er the eastern cliff: her brow,
+Lucent with jewels, glitter'd, set in sign
+Of that chill animal, who with his train
+Smites fearful nations: and where then we were,
+Two steps of her ascent the night had past,
+And now the third was closing up its wing,
+When I, who had so much of Adam with me,
+Sank down upon the grass, o'ercome with sleep,
+There where all five were seated. In that hour,
+When near the dawn the swallow her sad lay,
+Rememb'ring haply ancient grief, renews,
+And with our minds more wand'rers from the flesh,
+And less by thought restrain'd are, as 't were, full
+Of holy divination in their dreams,
+Then in a vision did I seem to view
+A golden-feather'd eagle in the sky,
+With open wings, and hov'ring for descent,
+And I was in that place, methought, from whence
+Young Ganymede, from his associates 'reft,
+Was snatch'd aloft to the high consistory.
+"Perhaps," thought I within me, "here alone
+He strikes his quarry, and elsewhere disdains
+To pounce upon the prey." Therewith, it seem'd,
+A little wheeling in his airy tour
+Terrible as the lightning rush'd he down,
+And snatch'd me upward even to the fire.
+There both, I thought, the eagle and myself
+Did burn; and so intense th' imagin'd flames,
+That needs my sleep was broken off. As erst
+Achilles shook himself, and round him roll'd
+His waken'd eyeballs wond'ring where he was,
+Whenas his mother had from Chiron fled
+To Scyros, with him sleeping in her arms;
+E'en thus I shook me, soon as from my face
+The slumber parted, turning deadly pale,
+Like one ice-struck with dread. Solo at my side
+My comfort stood: and the bright sun was now
+More than two hours aloft: and to the sea
+My looks were turn'd. "Fear not," my master cried,
+"Assur'd we are at happy point. Thy strength
+Shrink not, but rise dilated. Thou art come
+To Purgatory now. Lo! there the cliff
+That circling bounds it! Lo! the entrance there,
+Where it doth seem disparted! Ere the dawn
+Usher'd the daylight, when thy wearied soul
+Slept in thee, o'er the flowery vale beneath
+A lady came, and thus bespake me: "I
+Am Lucia. Suffer me to take this man,
+Who slumbers. Easier so his way shall speed."
+Sordello and the other gentle shapes
+Tarrying, she bare thee up: and, as day shone,
+This summit reach'd: and I pursued her steps.
+Here did she place thee. First her lovely eyes
+That open entrance show'd me; then at once
+She vanish'd with thy sleep." Like one, whose doubts
+Are chas'd by certainty, and terror turn'd
+To comfort on discovery of the truth,
+Such was the change in me: and as my guide
+Beheld me fearless, up along the cliff
+He mov'd, and I behind him, towards the height.
+ Reader! thou markest how my theme doth rise,
+Nor wonder therefore, if more artfully
+I prop the structure! Nearer now we drew,
+Arriv'd' whence in that part, where first a breach
+As of a wall appear'd, I could descry
+A portal, and three steps beneath, that led
+For inlet there, of different colour each,
+And one who watch'd, but spake not yet a word.
+As more and more mine eye did stretch its view,
+I mark'd him seated on the highest step,
+In visage such, as past my power to bear.
+Grasp'd in his hand a naked sword, glanc'd back
+The rays so toward me, that I oft in vain
+My sight directed. "Speak from whence ye stand:"
+He cried: "What would ye? Where is your escort?
+Take heed your coming upward harm ye not."
+ "A heavenly dame, not skilless of these things,"
+Replied the' instructor, "told us, even now,
+'Pass that way: here the gate is." --"And may she
+Befriending prosper your ascent," resum'd
+The courteous keeper of the gate: "Come then
+Before our steps." We straightway thither came.
+ The lowest stair was marble white so smooth
+And polish'd, that therein my mirror'd form
+Distinct I saw. The next of hue more dark
+Than sablest grain, a rough and singed block,
+Crack'd lengthwise and across. The third, that lay
+Massy above, seem'd porphyry, that flam'd
+Red as the life-blood spouting from a vein.
+On this God's angel either foot sustain'd,
+Upon the threshold seated, which appear'd
+A rock of diamond. Up the trinal steps
+My leader cheerily drew me. "Ask," said he,
+ "With humble heart, that he unbar the bolt."
+ Piously at his holy feet devolv'd
+I cast me, praying him for pity's sake
+That he would open to me: but first fell
+Thrice on my bosom prostrate. Seven times0
+The letter, that denotes the inward stain,
+He on my forehead with the blunted point
+Of his drawn sword inscrib'd. And "Look," he cried,
+"When enter'd, that thou wash these scars away."
+ Ashes, or earth ta'en dry out of the ground,
+Were of one colour with the robe he wore.
+From underneath that vestment forth he drew
+Two keys of metal twain: the one was gold,
+Its fellow silver. With the pallid first,
+And next the burnish'd, he so ply'd the gate,
+As to content me well. "Whenever one
+Faileth of these, that in the keyhole straight
+It turn not, to this alley then expect
+Access in vain." Such were the words he spake.
+"One is more precious: but the other needs
+Skill and sagacity, large share of each,
+Ere its good task to disengage the knot
+Be worthily perform'd. From Peter these
+I hold, of him instructed, that I err
+Rather in opening than in keeping fast;
+So but the suppliant at my feet implore."
+ Then of that hallow'd gate he thrust the door,
+Exclaiming, "Enter, but this warning hear:
+He forth again departs who looks behind."
+ As in the hinges of that sacred ward
+The swivels turn'd, sonorous metal strong,
+Harsh was the grating; nor so surlily
+Roar'd the Tarpeian, when by force bereft
+Of good Metellus, thenceforth from his loss
+To leanness doom'd. Attentively I turn'd,
+List'ning the thunder, that first issued forth;
+And "We praise thee, O God," methought I heard
+In accents blended with sweet melody.
+The strains came o'er mine ear, e'en as the sound
+Of choral voices, that in solemn chant
+With organ mingle, and, now high and clear,
+Come swelling, now float indistinct away.
+
+
+
+CANTO X
+
+When we had passed the threshold of the gate
+(Which the soul's ill affection doth disuse,
+Making the crooked seem the straighter path),
+I heard its closing sound. Had mine eyes turn'd,
+For that offence what plea might have avail'd?
+ We mounted up the riven rock, that wound
+On either side alternate, as the wave
+Flies and advances. "Here some little art
+Behooves us," said my leader, "that our steps
+Observe the varying flexure of the path."
+ Thus we so slowly sped, that with cleft orb
+The moon once more o'erhangs her wat'ry couch,
+Ere we that strait have threaded. But when free
+We came and open, where the mount above
+One solid mass retires, I spent, with toil,
+And both, uncertain of the way, we stood,
+Upon a plain more lonesome, than the roads
+That traverse desert wilds. From whence the brink
+Borders upon vacuity, to foot
+Of the steep bank, that rises still, the space
+Had measur'd thrice the stature of a man:
+And, distant as mine eye could wing its flight,
+To leftward now and now to right dispatch'd,
+That cornice equal in extent appear'd.
+ Not yet our feet had on that summit mov'd,
+When I discover'd that the bank around,
+Whose proud uprising all ascent denied,
+Was marble white, and so exactly wrought
+With quaintest sculpture, that not there alone
+Had Polycletus, but e'en nature's self
+Been sham'd. The angel who came down to earth
+With tidings of the peace so many years
+Wept for in vain, that op'd the heavenly gates
+From their long interdict) before us seem'd,
+In a sweet act, so sculptur'd to the life,
+He look'd no silent image. One had sworn
+He had said, "Hail!" for she was imag'd there,
+By whom the key did open to God's love,
+And in her act as sensibly impress
+That word, "Behold the handmaid of the Lord,"
+As figure seal'd on wax. "Fix not thy mind
+On one place only," said the guide belov'd,
+Who had me near him on that part where lies
+The heart of man. My sight forthwith I turn'd
+And mark'd, behind the virgin mother's form,
+Upon that side, where he, that mov'd me, stood,
+Another story graven on the rock.
+ I passed athwart the bard, and drew me near,
+That it might stand more aptly for my view.
+There in the self-same marble were engrav'd
+The cart and kine, drawing the sacred ark,
+That from unbidden office awes mankind.
+Before it came much people; and the whole
+Parted in seven quires. One sense cried, "Nay,"
+Another, "Yes, they sing." Like doubt arose
+Betwixt the eye and smell, from the curl'd fume
+Of incense breathing up the well-wrought toil.
+Preceding the blest vessel, onward came
+With light dance leaping, girt in humble guise,
+Sweet Israel's harper: in that hap he seem'd
+Less and yet more than kingly. Opposite,
+At a great palace, from the lattice forth
+Look'd Michol, like a lady full of scorn
+And sorrow. To behold the tablet next,
+Which at the hack of Michol whitely shone,
+I mov'd me. There was storied on the rock
+The' exalted glory of the Roman prince,
+Whose mighty worth mov'd Gregory to earn
+His mighty conquest, Trajan th' Emperor.
+A widow at his bridle stood, attir'd
+In tears and mourning. Round about them troop'd
+Full throng of knights, and overhead in gold
+The eagles floated, struggling with the wind.
+The wretch appear'd amid all these to say:
+"Grant vengeance, sire! for, woe beshrew this heart
+My son is murder'd." He replying seem'd;
+ "Wait now till I return." And she, as one
+Made hasty by her grief; "O sire, if thou
+Dost not return?"--"Where I am, who then is,
+May right thee."--" What to thee is other's good,
+If thou neglect thy own?"--"Now comfort thee,"
+At length he answers. "It beseemeth well
+My duty be perform'd, ere I move hence:
+So justice wills; and pity bids me stay."
+ He, whose ken nothing new surveys, produc'd
+That visible speaking, new to us and strange
+The like not found on earth. Fondly I gaz'd
+Upon those patterns of meek humbleness,
+Shapes yet more precious for their artist's sake,
+When "Lo," the poet whisper'd, "where this way
+(But slack their pace), a multitude advance.
+These to the lofty steps shall guide us on."
+ Mine eyes, though bent on view of novel sights
+Their lov'd allurement, were not slow to turn.
+ Reader! I would not that amaz'd thou miss
+Of thy good purpose, hearing how just God
+Decrees our debts be cancel'd. Ponder not
+The form of suff'ring. Think on what succeeds,
+Think that at worst beyond the mighty doom
+It cannot pass. "Instructor," I began,
+"What I see hither tending, bears no trace
+Of human semblance, nor of aught beside
+That my foil'd sight can guess." He answering thus:
+"So courb'd to earth, beneath their heavy teems
+Of torment stoop they, that mine eye at first
+Struggled as thine. But look intently thither,
+An disentangle with thy lab'ring view,
+What underneath those stones approacheth: now,
+E'en now, mayst thou discern the pangs of each."
+ Christians and proud! O poor and wretched ones!
+That feeble in the mind's eye, lean your trust
+Upon unstaid perverseness! Know ye not
+That we are worms, yet made at last to form
+The winged insect, imp'd with angel plumes
+That to heaven's justice unobstructed soars?
+Why buoy ye up aloft your unfleg'd souls?
+Abortive then and shapeless ye remain,
+Like the untimely embryon of a worm!
+ As, to support incumbent floor or roof,
+For corbel is a figure sometimes seen,
+That crumples up its knees unto its breast,
+With the feign'd posture stirring ruth unfeign'd
+In the beholder's fancy; so I saw
+These fashion'd, when I noted well their guise.
+ Each, as his back was laden, came indeed
+Or more or less contract; but it appear'd
+As he, who show'd most patience in his look,
+Wailing exclaim'd: "I can endure no more."
+
+
+
+CANTO XI
+
+O thou Almighty Father, who dost make
+The heavens thy dwelling, not in bounds confin'd,
+But that with love intenser there thou view'st
+Thy primal effluence, hallow'd be thy name:
+Join each created being to extol
+Thy might, for worthy humblest thanks and praise
+Is thy blest Spirit. May thy kingdom's peace
+Come unto us; for we, unless it come,
+With all our striving thither tend in vain.
+As of their will the angels unto thee
+Tender meet sacrifice, circling thy throne
+With loud hosannas, so of theirs be done
+By saintly men on earth. Grant us this day
+Our daily manna, without which he roams
+Through this rough desert retrograde, who most
+Toils to advance his steps. As we to each
+Pardon the evil done us, pardon thou
+Benign, and of our merit take no count.
+'Gainst the old adversary prove thou not
+Our virtue easily subdu'd; but free
+From his incitements and defeat his wiles.
+This last petition, dearest Lord! is made
+Not for ourselves, since that were needless now,
+But for their sakes who after us remain."
+ Thus for themselves and us good speed imploring,
+Those spirits went beneath a weight like that
+We sometimes feel in dreams, all, sore beset,
+But with unequal anguish, wearied all,
+Round the first circuit, purging as they go,
+The world's gross darkness off: In our behalf
+If there vows still be offer'd, what can here
+For them be vow'd and done by such, whose wills
+Have root of goodness in them? Well beseems
+That we should help them wash away the stains
+They carried hence, that so made pure and light,
+They may spring upward to the starry spheres.
+ "Ah! so may mercy-temper'd justice rid
+Your burdens speedily, that ye have power
+To stretch your wing, which e'en to your desire
+Shall lift you, as ye show us on which hand
+Toward the ladder leads the shortest way.
+And if there be more passages than one,
+Instruct us of that easiest to ascend;
+For this man who comes with me, and bears yet
+The charge of fleshly raiment Adam left him,
+Despite his better will but slowly mounts."
+From whom the answer came unto these words,
+Which my guide spake, appear'd not; but 'twas said
+ "Along the bank to rightward come with us,
+And ye shall find a pass that mocks not toil
+Of living man to climb: and were it not
+That I am hinder'd by the rock, wherewith
+This arrogant neck is tam'd, whence needs I stoop
+My visage to the ground, him, who yet lives,
+Whose name thou speak'st not him I fain would view.
+To mark if e'er I knew him? and to crave
+His pity for the fardel that I bear.
+I was of Latiun, of a Tuscan horn
+A mighty one: Aldobranlesco's name
+My sire's, I know not if ye e'er have heard.
+My old blood and forefathers' gallant deeds
+Made me so haughty, that I clean forgot
+The common mother, and to such excess,
+Wax'd in my scorn of all men, that I fell,
+Fell therefore; by what fate Sienna's sons,
+Each child in Campagnatico, can tell.
+I am Omberto; not me only pride
+Hath injur'd, but my kindred all involv'd
+In mischief with her. Here my lot ordains
+Under this weight to groan, till I appease
+God's angry justice, since I did it not
+Amongst the living, here amongst the dead."
+ List'ning I bent my visage down: and one
+(Not he who spake) twisted beneath the weight
+That urg'd him, saw me, knew me straight, and call'd,
+Holding his eyes With difficulty fix'd
+Intent upon me, stooping as I went
+Companion of their way. "O!" I exclaim'd,
+ "Art thou not Oderigi, art not thou
+Agobbio's glory, glory of that art
+Which they of Paris call the limmer's skill?"
+ "Brother!" said he, "with tints that gayer smile,
+Bolognian Franco's pencil lines the leaves.
+His all the honour now; mine borrow'd light.
+In truth I had not been thus courteous to him,
+The whilst I liv'd, through eagerness of zeal
+For that pre-eminence my heart was bent on.
+Here of such pride the forfeiture is paid.
+Nor were I even here; if, able still
+To sin, I had not turn'd me unto God.
+O powers of man! how vain your glory, nipp'd
+E'en in its height of verdure, if an age
+Less bright succeed not! Cimabue thought
+To lord it over painting's field; and now
+The cry is Giotto's, and his name eclips'd.
+Thus hath one Guido from the other snatch'd
+The letter'd prize: and he perhaps is born,
+Who shall drive either from their nest. The noise
+Of worldly fame is but a blast of wind,
+That blows from divers points, and shifts its name
+Shifting the point it blows from. Shalt thou more
+Live in the mouths of mankind, if thy flesh
+Part shrivel'd from thee, than if thou hadst died,
+Before the coral and the pap were left,
+Or ere some thousand years have passed? and that
+Is, to eternity compar'd, a space,
+Briefer than is the twinkling of an eye
+To the heaven's slowest orb. He there who treads
+So leisurely before me, far and wide
+Through Tuscany resounded once; and now
+Is in Sienna scarce with whispers nam'd:
+There was he sov'reign, when destruction caught
+The madd'ning rage of Florence, in that day
+Proud as she now is loathsome. Your renown
+Is as the herb, whose hue doth come and go,
+And his might withers it, by whom it sprang
+Crude from the lap of earth." I thus to him:
+"True are thy sayings: to my heart they breathe
+The kindly spirit of meekness, and allay
+What tumours rankle there. But who is he
+Of whom thou spak'st but now?" --"This," he replied,
+"Is Provenzano. He is here, because
+He reach'd, with grasp presumptuous, at the sway
+Of all Sienna. Thus he still hath gone,
+Thus goeth never-resting, since he died.
+Such is th' acquittance render'd back of him,
+Who, beyond measure, dar'd on earth." I then:
+"If soul that to the verge of life delays
+Repentance, linger in that lower space,
+Nor hither mount, unless good prayers befriend,
+How chanc'd admittance was vouchsaf'd to him?"
+ "When at his glory's topmost height," said he,
+"Respect of dignity all cast aside,
+Freely He fix'd him on Sienna's plain,
+A suitor to redeem his suff'ring friend,
+Who languish'd in the prison-house of Charles,
+Nor for his sake refus'd through every vein
+To tremble. More I will not say; and dark,
+I know, my words are, but thy neighbours soon
+Shall help thee to a comment on the text.
+This is the work, that from these limits freed him."
+
+
+
+CANTO XII
+
+With equal pace as oxen in the yoke,
+I with that laden spirit journey'd on
+Long as the mild instructor suffer'd me;
+But when he bade me quit him, and proceed
+(For "here," said he, "behooves with sail and oars
+Each man, as best he may, push on his bark"),
+Upright, as one dispos'd for speed, I rais'd
+My body, still in thought submissive bow'd.
+ I now my leader's track not loth pursued;
+And each had shown how light we far'd along
+When thus he warn'd me: "Bend thine eyesight down:
+For thou to ease the way shall find it good
+To ruminate the bed beneath thy feet."
+ As in memorial of the buried, drawn
+Upon earth-level tombs, the sculptur'd form
+Of what was once, appears (at sight whereof
+Tears often stream forth by remembrance wak'd,
+Whose sacred stings the piteous only feel),
+So saw I there, but with more curious skill
+Of portraiture o'erwrought, whate'er of space
+From forth the mountain stretches. On one part
+Him I beheld, above all creatures erst
+Created noblest, light'ning fall from heaven:
+On th' other side with bolt celestial pierc'd
+Briareus: cumb'ring earth he lay through dint
+Of mortal ice-stroke. The Thymbraean god
+With Mars, I saw, and Pallas, round their sire,
+Arm'd still, and gazing on the giant's limbs
+Strewn o'er th' ethereal field. Nimrod I saw:
+At foot of the stupendous work he stood,
+As if bewilder'd, looking on the crowd
+Leagued in his proud attempt on Sennaar's plain.
+ O Niobe! in what a trance of woe
+Thee I beheld, upon that highway drawn,
+Sev'n sons on either side thee slain! O Saul!
+How ghastly didst thou look! on thine own sword
+Expiring in Gilboa, from that hour
+Ne'er visited with rain from heav'n or dew!
+ O fond Arachne! thee I also saw
+Half spider now in anguish crawling up
+Th' unfinish'd web thou weaved'st to thy bane!
+ O Rehoboam! here thy shape doth seem
+Louring no more defiance! but fear-smote
+With none to chase him in his chariot whirl'd.
+ Was shown beside upon the solid floor
+How dear Alcmaeon forc'd his mother rate
+That ornament in evil hour receiv'd:
+How in the temple on Sennacherib fell
+His sons, and how a corpse they left him there.
+Was shown the scath and cruel mangling made
+By Tomyris on Cyrus, when she cried:
+"Blood thou didst thirst for, take thy fill of blood!"
+Was shown how routed in the battle fled
+Th' Assyrians, Holofernes slain, and e'en
+The relics of the carnage. Troy I mark'd
+In ashes and in caverns. Oh! how fall'n,
+How abject, Ilion, was thy semblance there!
+ What master of the pencil or the style
+Had trac'd the shades and lines, that might have made
+The subtlest workman wonder? Dead the dead,
+The living seem'd alive; with clearer view
+His eye beheld not who beheld the truth,
+Than mine what I did tread on, while I went
+Low bending. Now swell out; and with stiff necks
+Pass on, ye sons of Eve! veil not your looks,
+Lest they descry the evil of your path!
+ I noted not (so busied was my thought)
+How much we now had circled of the mount,
+And of his course yet more the sun had spent,
+When he, who with still wakeful caution went,
+Admonish'd: "Raise thou up thy head: for know
+Time is not now for slow suspense. Behold
+That way an angel hasting towards us! Lo
+Where duly the sixth handmaid doth return
+From service on the day. Wear thou in look
+And gesture seemly grace of reverent awe,
+That gladly he may forward us aloft.
+Consider that this day ne'er dawns again."
+ Time's loss he had so often warn'd me 'gainst,
+I could not miss the scope at which he aim'd.
+ The goodly shape approach'd us, snowy white
+In vesture, and with visage casting streams
+Of tremulous lustre like the matin star.
+His arms he open'd, then his wings; and spake:
+"Onward: the steps, behold! are near; and now
+Th' ascent is without difficulty gain'd."
+ A scanty few are they, who when they hear
+Such tidings, hasten. O ye race of men
+Though born to soar, why suffer ye a wind
+So slight to baffle ye? He led us on
+Where the rock parted; here against my front
+Did beat his wings, then promis'd I should fare
+In safety on my way. As to ascend
+That steep, upon whose brow the chapel stands
+(O'er Rubaconte, looking lordly down
+On the well-guided city,) up the right
+Th' impetuous rise is broken by the steps
+Carv'd in that old and simple age, when still
+The registry and label rested safe;
+Thus is th' acclivity reliev'd, which here
+Precipitous from the other circuit falls:
+But on each hand the tall cliff presses close.
+ As ent'ring there we turn'd, voices, in strain
+Ineffable, sang: "Blessed are the poor
+In spirit." Ah how far unlike to these
+The straits of hell; here songs to usher us,
+There shrieks of woe! We climb the holy stairs:
+And lighter to myself by far I seem'd
+Than on the plain before, whence thus I spake:
+"Say, master, of what heavy thing have I
+Been lighten'd, that scarce aught the sense of toil
+Affects me journeying?" He in few replied:
+"When sin's broad characters, that yet remain
+Upon thy temples, though well nigh effac'd,
+Shall be, as one is, all clean razed out,
+Then shall thy feet by heartiness of will
+Be so o'ercome, they not alone shall feel
+No sense of labour, but delight much more
+Shall wait them urg'd along their upward way."
+ Then like to one, upon whose head is plac'd
+Somewhat he deems not of but from the becks
+Of others as they pass him by; his hand
+Lends therefore help to' assure him, searches, finds,
+And well performs such office as the eye
+Wants power to execute: so stretching forth
+The fingers of my right hand, did I find
+Six only of the letters, which his sword
+Who bare the keys had trac'd upon my brow.
+The leader, as he mark'd mine action, smil'd.
+
+
+
+CANTO XIII
+
+We reach'd the summit of the scale, and stood
+Upon the second buttress of that mount
+Which healeth him who climbs. A cornice there,
+Like to the former, girdles round the hill;
+Save that its arch with sweep less ample bends.
+ Shadow nor image there is seen; all smooth
+The rampart and the path, reflecting nought
+But the rock's sullen hue. "If here we wait
+For some to question," said the bard, "I fear
+Our choice may haply meet too long delay."
+ Then fixedly upon the sun his eyes
+He fastn'd, made his right the central point
+From whence to move, and turn'd the left aside.
+"O pleasant light, my confidence and hope,
+Conduct us thou," he cried, "on this new way,
+Where now I venture, leading to the bourn
+We seek. The universal world to thee
+Owes warmth and lustre. If no other cause
+Forbid, thy beams should ever be our guide."
+ Far, as is measur'd for a mile on earth,
+In brief space had we journey'd; such prompt will
+Impell'd; and towards us flying, now were heard
+Spirits invisible, who courteously
+Unto love's table bade the welcome guest.
+The voice, that first? flew by, call'd forth aloud,
+"They have no wine; " so on behind us past,
+Those sounds reiterating, nor yet lost
+In the faint distance, when another came
+Crying, "I am Orestes," and alike
+Wing'd its fleet way. "Oh father!" I exclaim'd,
+"What tongues are these?" and as I question'd, lo!
+A third exclaiming, "Love ye those have wrong'd you."
+ "This circuit," said my teacher, "knots the scourge
+For envy, and the cords are therefore drawn
+By charity's correcting hand. The curb
+Is of a harsher sound, as thou shalt hear
+(If I deem rightly), ere thou reach the pass,
+Where pardon sets them free. But fix thine eyes
+Intently through the air, and thou shalt see
+A multitude before thee seated, each
+Along the shelving grot." Then more than erst
+I op'd my eyes, before me view'd, and saw
+Shadows with garments dark as was the rock;
+And when we pass'd a little forth, I heard
+A crying, "Blessed Mary! pray for us,
+Michael and Peter! all ye saintly host!"
+ I do not think there walks on earth this day
+Man so remorseless, that he hath not yearn'd
+With pity at the sight that next I saw.
+Mine eyes a load of sorrow teemed, when now
+I stood so near them, that their semblances
+Came clearly to my view. Of sackcloth vile
+Their cov'ring seem'd; and on his shoulder one
+Did stay another, leaning, and all lean'd
+Against the cliff. E'en thus the blind and poor,
+Near the confessionals, to crave an alms,
+Stand, each his head upon his fellow's sunk,
+So most to stir compassion, not by sound
+Of words alone, but that, which moves not less,
+The sight of mis'ry. And as never beam
+Of noonday visiteth the eyeless man,
+E'en so was heav'n a niggard unto these
+Of his fair light; for, through the orbs of all,
+A thread of wire, impiercing, knits them up,
+As for the taming of a haggard hawk.
+ It were a wrong, methought, to pass and look
+On others, yet myself the while unseen.
+To my sage counsel therefore did I turn.
+He knew the meaning of the mute appeal,
+Nor waited for my questioning, but said:
+"Speak; and be brief, be subtle in thy words."
+ On that part of the cornice, whence no rim
+Engarlands its steep fall, did Virgil come;
+On the' other side me were the spirits, their cheeks
+Bathing devout with penitential tears,
+That through the dread impalement forc'd a way.
+ I turn'd me to them, and "O shades!" said I,
+ "Assur'd that to your eyes unveil'd shall shine
+The lofty light, sole object of your wish,
+So may heaven's grace clear whatsoe'er of foam
+Floats turbid on the conscience, that thenceforth
+The stream of mind roll limpid from its source,
+As ye declare (for so shall ye impart
+A boon I dearly prize) if any soul
+Of Latium dwell among ye; and perchance
+That soul may profit, if I learn so much."
+ "My brother, we are each one citizens
+Of one true city. Any thou wouldst say,
+Who lived a stranger in Italia's land."
+ So heard I answering, as appeal'd, a voice
+That onward came some space from whence I stood.
+ A spirit I noted, in whose look was mark'd
+Expectance. Ask ye how? The chin was rais'd
+As in one reft of sight. "Spirit," said I,
+"Who for thy rise are tutoring (if thou be
+That which didst answer to me,) or by place
+Or name, disclose thyself, that I may know thee."
+ "I was," it answer'd, "of Sienna: here
+I cleanse away with these the evil life,
+Soliciting with tears that He, who is,
+Vouchsafe him to us. Though Sapia nam'd
+In sapience I excell'd not, gladder far
+Of others' hurt, than of the good befell me.
+That thou mayst own I now deceive thee not,
+Hear, if my folly were not as I speak it.
+When now my years slop'd waning down the arch,
+It so bechanc'd, my fellow citizens
+Near Colle met their enemies in the field,
+And I pray'd God to grant what He had will'd.
+There were they vanquish'd, and betook themselves
+Unto the bitter passages of flight.
+I mark'd the hunt, and waxing out of bounds
+In gladness, lifted up my shameless brow,
+And like the merlin cheated by a gleam,
+Cried, "It is over. Heav'n! I fear thee not."
+Upon my verge of life I wish'd for peace
+With God; nor repentance had supplied
+What I did lack of duty, were it not
+The hermit Piero, touch'd with charity,
+In his devout orisons thought on me.
+But who art thou that question'st of our state,
+Who go'st to my belief, with lids unclos'd,
+And breathest in thy talk?" --"Mine eyes," said I,
+"May yet be here ta'en from me; but not long;
+For they have not offended grievously
+With envious glances. But the woe beneath
+Urges my soul with more exceeding dread.
+That nether load already weighs me down."
+ She thus: "Who then amongst us here aloft
+Hath brought thee, if thou weenest to return?"
+ "He," answer'd I, "who standeth mute beside me.
+I live: of me ask therefore, chosen spirit,
+If thou desire I yonder yet should move
+For thee my mortal feet." --"Oh!" she replied,
+"This is so strange a thing, it is great sign
+That God doth love thee. Therefore with thy prayer
+Sometime assist me: and by that I crave,
+Which most thou covetest, that if thy feet
+E'er tread on Tuscan soil, thou save my fame
+Amongst my kindred. Them shalt thou behold
+With that vain multitude, who set their hope
+On Telamone's haven, there to fail
+Confounded, more shall when the fancied stream
+They sought of Dian call'd: but they who lead
+Their navies, more than ruin'd hopes shall mourn."
+
+
+CANTO XIV
+
+"Say who is he around our mountain winds,
+Or ever death has prun'd his wing for flight,
+That opes his eyes and covers them at will?"
+ "I know not who he is, but know thus much
+He comes not singly. Do thou ask of him,
+For thou art nearer to him, and take heed
+Accost him gently, so that he may speak."
+ Thus on the right two Spirits bending each
+Toward the other, talk'd of me, then both
+Addressing me, their faces backward lean'd,
+And thus the one began: "O soul, who yet
+Pent in the body, tendest towards the sky!
+For charity, we pray thee' comfort us,
+Recounting whence thou com'st, and who thou art:
+For thou dost make us at the favour shown thee
+Marvel, as at a thing that ne'er hath been."
+ "There stretches through the midst of Tuscany,
+I straight began: "a brooklet, whose well-head
+Springs up in Falterona, with his race
+Not satisfied, when he some hundred miles
+Hath measur'd. From his banks bring, I this frame.
+To tell you who I am were words misspent:
+For yet my name scarce sounds on rumour's lip."
+ "If well I do incorp'rate with my thought
+The meaning of thy speech," said he, who first
+Addrest me, "thou dost speak of Arno's wave."
+ To whom the other: "Why hath he conceal'd
+The title of that river, as a man
+Doth of some horrible thing?" The spirit, who
+Thereof was question'd, did acquit him thus:
+"I know not: but 'tis fitting well the name
+Should perish of that vale; for from the source
+Where teems so plenteously the Alpine steep
+Maim'd of Pelorus, (that doth scarcely pass
+Beyond that limit,) even to the point
+Whereunto ocean is restor'd, what heaven
+Drains from th' exhaustless store for all earth's streams,
+Throughout the space is virtue worried down,
+As 'twere a snake, by all, for mortal foe,
+Or through disastrous influence on the place,
+Or else distortion of misguided wills,
+That custom goads to evil: whence in those,
+The dwellers in that miserable vale,
+Nature is so transform'd, it seems as they
+Had shar'd of Circe's feeding. 'Midst brute swine,
+Worthier of acorns than of other food
+Created for man's use, he shapeth first
+His obscure way; then, sloping onward, finds
+Curs, snarlers more in spite than power, from whom
+He turns with scorn aside: still journeying down,
+By how much more the curst and luckless foss
+Swells out to largeness, e'en so much it finds
+Dogs turning into wolves. Descending still
+Through yet more hollow eddies, next he meets
+A race of foxes, so replete with craft,
+They do not fear that skill can master it.
+Nor will I cease because my words are heard
+By other ears than thine. It shall be well
+For this man, if he keep in memory
+What from no erring Spirit I reveal.
+Lo! I behold thy grandson, that becomes
+A hunter of those wolves, upon the shore
+Of the fierce stream, and cows them all with dread:
+Their flesh yet living sets he up to sale,
+Then like an aged beast to slaughter dooms.
+Many of life he reaves, himself of worth
+And goodly estimation. Smear'd with gore
+Mark how he issues from the rueful wood,
+Leaving such havoc, that in thousand years
+It spreads not to prime lustihood again."
+ As one, who tidings hears of woe to come,
+Changes his looks perturb'd, from whate'er part
+The peril grasp him, so beheld I change
+That spirit, who had turn'd to listen, struck
+With sadness, soon as he had caught the word.
+ His visage and the other's speech did raise
+Desire in me to know the names of both,
+whereof with meek entreaty I inquir'd.
+ The shade, who late addrest me, thus resum'd:
+"Thy wish imports that I vouchsafe to do
+For thy sake what thou wilt not do for mine.
+But since God's will is that so largely shine
+His grace in thee, I will be liberal too.
+Guido of Duca know then that I am.
+Envy so parch'd my blood, that had I seen
+A fellow man made joyous, thou hadst mark'd
+A livid paleness overspread my cheek.
+Such harvest reap I of the seed I sow'd.
+O man, why place thy heart where there doth need
+Exclusion of participants in good?
+This is Rinieri's spirit, this the boast
+And honour of the house of Calboli,
+Where of his worth no heritage remains.
+Nor his the only blood, that hath been stript
+('twixt Po, the mount, the Reno, and the shore,)
+Of all that truth or fancy asks for bliss;
+But in those limits such a growth has sprung
+Of rank and venom'd roots, as long would mock
+Slow culture's toil. Where is good Lizio? where
+Manardi, Traversalo, and Carpigna?
+O bastard slips of old Romagna's line!
+When in Bologna the low artisan,
+And in Faenza yon Bernardin sprouts,
+A gentle cyon from ignoble stem.
+Wonder not, Tuscan, if thou see me weep,
+When I recall to mind those once lov'd names,
+Guido of Prata, and of Azzo him
+That dwelt with you; Tignoso and his troop,
+With Traversaro's house and Anastagio s,
+(Each race disherited) and beside these,
+The ladies and the knights, the toils and ease,
+That witch'd us into love and courtesy;
+Where now such malice reigns in recreant hearts.
+O Brettinoro! wherefore tarriest still,
+Since forth of thee thy family hath gone,
+And many, hating evil, join'd their steps?
+Well doeth he, that bids his lineage cease,
+Bagnacavallo; Castracaro ill,
+And Conio worse, who care to propagate
+A race of Counties from such blood as theirs.
+Well shall ye also do, Pagani, then
+When from amongst you tries your demon child.
+Not so, howe'er, that henceforth there remain
+True proof of what ye were. O Hugolin!
+Thou sprung of Fantolini's line! thy name
+Is safe, since none is look'd for after thee
+To cloud its lustre, warping from thy stock.
+But, Tuscan, go thy ways; for now I take
+Far more delight in weeping than in words.
+Such pity for your sakes hath wrung my heart."
+ We knew those gentle spirits at parting heard
+Our steps. Their silence therefore of our way
+Assur'd us. Soon as we had quitted them,
+Advancing onward, lo! a voice that seem'd
+Like vollied light'ning, when it rives the air,
+Met us, and shouted, "Whosoever finds
+Will slay me," then fled from us, as the bolt
+Lanc'd sudden from a downward-rushing cloud.
+When it had giv'n short truce unto our hearing,
+Behold the other with a crash as loud
+As the quick-following thunder: "Mark in me
+Aglauros turn'd to rock." I at the sound
+Retreating drew more closely to my guide.
+ Now in mute stillness rested all the air:
+And thus he spake: "There was the galling bit.
+But your old enemy so baits his hook,
+He drags you eager to him. Hence nor curb
+Avails you, nor reclaiming call. Heav'n calls
+And round about you wheeling courts your gaze
+With everlasting beauties. Yet your eye
+Turns with fond doting still upon the earth.
+Therefore He smites you who discerneth all."
+
+
+
+CANTO XV
+
+As much as 'twixt the third hour's close and dawn,
+Appeareth of heav'n's sphere, that ever whirls
+As restless as an infant in his play,
+So much appear'd remaining to the sun
+Of his slope journey towards the western goal.
+ Evening was there, and here the noon of night;
+and full upon our forehead smote the beams.
+For round the mountain, circling, so our path
+Had led us, that toward the sun-set now
+Direct we journey'd: when I felt a weight
+Of more exceeding splendour, than before,
+Press on my front. The cause unknown, amaze
+Possess'd me, and both hands against my brow
+Lifting, I interpos'd them, as a screen,
+That of its gorgeous superflux of light
+Clipp'd the diminish'd orb. As when the ray,
+Striking On water or the surface clear
+Of mirror, leaps unto the opposite part,
+Ascending at a glance, e'en as it fell,
+(And so much differs from the stone, that falls
+Through equal space, as practice skill hath shown;
+Thus with refracted light before me seemed
+The ground there smitten; whence in sudden haste
+My sight recoil'd. "What is this, sire belov'd!
+'Gainst which I strive to shield the sight in vain?"
+Cried I, "and which towards us moving seems?"
+ "Marvel not, if the family of heav'n,"
+He answer'd, "yet with dazzling radiance dim
+Thy sense it is a messenger who comes,
+Inviting man's ascent. Such sights ere long,
+Not grievous, shall impart to thee delight,
+As thy perception is by nature wrought
+Up to their pitch." The blessed angel, soon
+As we had reach'd him, hail'd us with glad voice:
+"Here enter on a ladder far less steep
+Than ye have yet encounter'd." We forthwith
+Ascending, heard behind us chanted sweet,
+"Blessed the merciful," and "happy thou!
+That conquer'st." Lonely each, my guide and I
+Pursued our upward way; and as we went,
+Some profit from his words I hop'd to win,
+And thus of him inquiring, fram'd my speech:
+ "What meant Romagna's spirit, when he spake
+Of bliss exclusive with no partner shar'd?"
+ He straight replied: "No wonder, since he knows,
+What sorrow waits on his own worst defect,
+If he chide others, that they less may mourn.
+Because ye point your wishes at a mark,
+Where, by communion of possessors, part
+Is lessen'd, envy bloweth up the sighs of men.
+No fear of that might touch ye, if the love
+Of higher sphere exalted your desire.
+For there, by how much more they call it ours,
+So much propriety of each in good
+Increases more, and heighten'd charity
+Wraps that fair cloister in a brighter flame."
+ "Now lack I satisfaction more," said I,
+"Than if thou hadst been silent at the first,
+And doubt more gathers on my lab'ring thought.
+How can it chance, that good distributed,
+The many, that possess it, makes more rich,
+Than if 't were shar'd by few?" He answering thus:
+"Thy mind, reverting still to things of earth,
+Strikes darkness from true light. The highest good
+Unlimited, ineffable, doth so speed
+To love, as beam to lucid body darts,
+Giving as much of ardour as it finds.
+The sempiternal effluence streams abroad
+Spreading, wherever charity extends.
+So that the more aspirants to that bliss
+Are multiplied, more good is there to love,
+And more is lov'd; as mirrors, that reflect,
+Each unto other, propagated light.
+If these my words avail not to allay
+Thy thirsting, Beatrice thou shalt see,
+Who of this want, and of all else thou hast,
+Shall rid thee to the full. Provide but thou
+That from thy temples may be soon eras'd,
+E'en as the two already, those five scars,
+That when they pain thee worst, then kindliest heal,"
+ "Thou," I had said, "content'st me," when I saw
+The other round was gain'd, and wond'ring eyes
+Did keep me mute. There suddenly I seem'd
+By an ecstatic vision wrapt away;
+And in a temple saw, methought, a crowd
+Of many persons; and at th' entrance stood
+A dame, whose sweet demeanour did express
+A mother's love, who said, "Child! why hast thou
+Dealt with us thus? Behold thy sire and I
+Sorrowing have sought thee;" and so held her peace,
+And straight the vision fled. A female next
+Appear'd before me, down whose visage cours'd
+Those waters, that grief forces out from one
+By deep resentment stung, who seem'd to say:
+"If thou, Pisistratus, be lord indeed
+Over this city, nam'd with such debate
+Of adverse gods, and whence each science sparkles,
+Avenge thee of those arms, whose bold embrace
+Hath clasp'd our daughter; "and to fuel, meseem'd,
+Benign and meek, with visage undisturb'd,
+Her sovran spake: "How shall we those requite,
+Who wish us evil, if we thus condemn
+The man that loves us?" After that I saw
+A multitude, in fury burning, slay
+With stones a stripling youth, and shout amain
+"Destroy, destroy: "and him I saw, who bow'd
+Heavy with death unto the ground, yet made
+His eyes, unfolded upward, gates to heav'n,
+Praying forgiveness of th' Almighty Sire,
+Amidst that cruel conflict, on his foes,
+With looks, that With compassion to their aim.
+ Soon as my spirit, from her airy flight
+Returning, sought again the things, whose truth
+Depends not on her shaping, I observ'd
+How she had rov'd to no unreal scenes
+ Meanwhile the leader, who might see I mov'd,
+As one, who struggles to shake off his sleep,
+Exclaim'd: "What ails thee, that thou canst not hold
+Thy footing firm, but more than half a league
+Hast travel'd with clos'd eyes and tott'ring gait,
+Like to a man by wine or sleep o'ercharg'd?"
+ "Beloved father! so thou deign," said I,
+"To listen, I will tell thee what appear'd
+Before me, when so fail'd my sinking steps."
+ He thus: "Not if thy Countenance were mask'd
+With hundred vizards, could a thought of thine
+How small soe'er, elude me. What thou saw'st
+Was shown, that freely thou mightst ope thy heart
+To the waters of peace, that flow diffus'd
+From their eternal fountain. I not ask'd,
+What ails thee? for such cause as he doth, who
+Looks only with that eye which sees no more,
+When spiritless the body lies; but ask'd,
+To give fresh vigour to thy foot. Such goads
+The slow and loit'ring need; that they be found
+Not wanting, when their hour of watch returns."
+ So on we journey'd through the evening sky
+Gazing intent, far onward, as our eyes
+With level view could stretch against the bright
+Vespertine ray: and lo! by slow degrees
+Gath'ring, a fog made tow'rds us, dark as night.
+There was no room for 'scaping; and that mist
+Bereft us, both of sight and the pure air.
+
+
+
+CANTO XVI
+
+Hell's dunnest gloom, or night unlustrous, dark,
+Of every planes 'reft, and pall'd in clouds,
+Did never spread before the sight a veil
+In thickness like that fog, nor to the sense
+So palpable and gross. Ent'ring its shade,
+Mine eye endured not with unclosed lids;
+Which marking, near me drew the faithful guide,
+Offering me his shoulder for a stay.
+ As the blind man behind his leader walks,
+Lest he should err, or stumble unawares
+On what might harm him, or perhaps destroy,
+I journey'd through that bitter air and foul,
+Still list'ning to my escort's warning voice,
+"Look that from me thou part not." Straight I heard
+Voices, and each one seem'd to pray for peace,
+And for compassion, to the Lamb of God
+That taketh sins away. Their prelude still
+Was "Agnus Dei," and through all the choir,
+One voice, one measure ran, that perfect seem'd
+The concord of their song. "Are these I hear
+Spirits, O master?" I exclaim'd; and he:
+"Thou aim'st aright: these loose the bonds of wrath."
+ "Now who art thou, that through our smoke dost cleave?
+And speak'st of us, as thou thyself e'en yet
+Dividest time by calends?" So one voice
+Bespake me; whence my master said: "Reply;
+And ask, if upward hence the passage lead."
+ "O being! who dost make thee pure, to stand
+Beautiful once more in thy Maker's sight!
+Along with me: and thou shalt hear and wonder."
+Thus I, whereto the spirit answering spake:
+"Long as 't is lawful for me, shall my steps
+Follow on thine; and since the cloudy smoke
+Forbids the seeing, hearing in its stead
+Shall keep us join'd." I then forthwith began
+"Yet in my mortal swathing, I ascend
+To higher regions, and am hither come
+Through the fearful agony of hell.
+And, if so largely God hath doled his grace,
+That, clean beside all modern precedent,
+He wills me to behold his kingly state,
+From me conceal not who thou wast, ere death
+Had loos'd thee; but instruct me: and instruct
+If rightly to the pass I tend; thy words
+The way directing as a safe escort."
+ "I was of Lombardy, and Marco call'd:
+Not inexperienc'd of the world, that worth
+I still affected, from which all have turn'd
+The nerveless bow aside. Thy course tends right
+Unto the summit:" and, replying thus,
+He added, "I beseech thee pray for me,
+When thou shalt come aloft." And I to him:
+"Accept my faith for pledge I will perform
+What thou requirest. Yet one doubt remains,
+That wrings me sorely, if I solve it not,
+Singly before it urg'd me, doubled now
+By thine opinion, when I couple that
+With one elsewhere declar'd, each strength'ning other.
+The world indeed is even so forlorn
+Of all good as thou speak'st it and so swarms
+With every evil. Yet, beseech thee, point
+The cause out to me, that myself may see,
+And unto others show it: for in heaven
+One places it, and one on earth below."
+ Then heaving forth a deep and audible sigh,
+"Brother!" he thus began, "the world is blind;
+And thou in truth com'st from it. Ye, who live,
+Do so each cause refer to heav'n above,
+E'en as its motion of necessity
+Drew with it all that moves. If this were so,
+Free choice in you were none; nor justice would
+There should be joy for virtue, woe for ill.
+Your movements have their primal bent from heaven;
+Not all; yet said I all; what then ensues?
+Light have ye still to follow evil or good,
+And of the will free power, which, if it stand
+Firm and unwearied in Heav'n's first assay,
+Conquers at last, so it be cherish'd well,
+Triumphant over all. To mightier force,
+To better nature subject, ye abide
+Free, not constrain'd by that, which forms in you
+The reasoning mind uninfluenc'd of the stars.
+If then the present race of mankind err,
+Seek in yourselves the cause, and find it there.
+Herein thou shalt confess me no false spy.
+ "Forth from his plastic hand, who charm'd beholds
+Her image ere she yet exist, the soul
+Comes like a babe, that wantons sportively
+Weeping and laughing in its wayward moods,
+As artless and as ignorant of aught,
+Save that her Maker being one who dwells
+With gladness ever, willingly she turns
+To whate'er yields her joy. Of some slight good
+The flavour soon she tastes; and, snar'd by that,
+With fondness she pursues it, if no guide
+Recall, no rein direct her wand'ring course.
+Hence it behov'd, the law should be a curb;
+A sovereign hence behov'd, whose piercing view
+Might mark at least the fortress and main tower
+Of the true city. Laws indeed there are:
+But who is he observes them? None; not he,
+Who goes before, the shepherd of the flock,
+Who chews the cud but doth not cleave the hoof.
+Therefore the multitude, who see their guide
+Strike at the very good they covet most,
+Feed there and look no further. Thus the cause
+Is not corrupted nature in yourselves,
+But ill-conducting, that hath turn'd the world
+To evil. Rome, that turn'd it unto good,
+Was wont to boast two suns, whose several beams
+Cast light on either way, the world's and God's.
+One since hath quench'd the other; and the sword
+Is grafted on the crook; and so conjoin'd
+Each must perforce decline to worse, unaw'd
+By fear of other. If thou doubt me, mark
+The blade: each herb is judg'd of by its seed.
+That land, through which Adice and the Po
+Their waters roll, was once the residence
+Of courtesy and velour, ere the day,
+That frown'd on Frederick; now secure may pass
+Those limits, whosoe'er hath left, for shame,
+To talk with good men, or come near their haunts.
+Three aged ones are still found there, in whom
+The old time chides the new: these deem it long
+Ere God restore them to a better world:
+The good Gherardo, of Palazzo he
+Conrad, and Guido of Castello, nam'd
+In Gallic phrase more fitly the plain Lombard.
+On this at last conclude. The church of Rome,
+Mixing two governments that ill assort,
+Hath miss'd her footing, fall'n into the mire,
+And there herself and burden much defil'd."
+ "O Marco!" I replied, shine arguments
+Convince me: and the cause I now discern
+Why of the heritage no portion came
+To Levi's offspring. But resolve me this
+Who that Gherardo is, that as thou sayst
+Is left a sample of the perish'd race,
+And for rebuke to this untoward age?"
+ "Either thy words," said he, "deceive; or else
+Are meant to try me; that thou, speaking Tuscan,
+Appear'st not to have heard of good Gherado;
+The sole addition that, by which I know him;
+Unless I borrow'd from his daughter Gaia
+Another name to grace him. God be with you.
+I bear you company no more. Behold
+The dawn with white ray glimm'ring through the mist.
+I must away--the angel comes--ere he
+Appear." He said, and would not hear me more.
+
+
+
+CANTO XVII
+
+Call to remembrance, reader, if thou e'er
+Hast, on a mountain top, been ta'en by cloud,
+Through which thou saw'st no better, than the mole
+Doth through opacous membrane; then, whene'er
+The wat'ry vapours dense began to melt
+Into thin air, how faintly the sun's sphere
+Seem'd wading through them; so thy nimble thought
+May image, how at first I re-beheld
+The sun, that bedward now his couch o'erhung.
+ Thus with my leader's feet still equaling pace
+From forth that cloud I came, when now expir'd
+The parting beams from off the nether shores.
+ O quick and forgetive power! that sometimes dost
+So rob us of ourselves, we take no mark
+Though round about us thousand trumpets clang!
+What moves thee, if the senses stir not? Light
+Kindled in heav'n, spontaneous, self-inform'd,
+Or likelier gliding down with swift illapse
+By will divine. Portray'd before me came
+The traces of her dire impiety,
+Whose form was chang'd into the bird, that most
+Delights itself in song: and here my mind
+Was inwardly so wrapt, it gave no place
+To aught that ask'd admittance from without.
+ Next shower'd into my fantasy a shape
+As of one crucified, whose visage spake
+Fell rancour, malice deep, wherein he died;
+And round him Ahasuerus the great king,
+Esther his bride, and Mordecai the just,
+Blameless in word and deed. As of itself
+That unsubstantial coinage of the brain
+Burst, like a bubble, Which the water fails
+That fed it; in my vision straight uprose
+A damsel weeping loud, and cried, "O queen!
+O mother! wherefore has intemperate ire
+Driv'n thee to loath thy being? Not to lose
+Lavinia, desp'rate thou hast slain thyself.
+Now hast thou lost me. I am she, whose tears
+Mourn, ere I fall, a mother's timeless end."
+ E'en as a sleep breaks off, if suddenly
+New radiance strike upon the closed lids,
+The broken slumber quivering ere it dies;
+Thus from before me sunk that imagery
+Vanishing, soon as on my face there struck
+The light, outshining far our earthly beam.
+As round I turn'd me to survey what place
+I had arriv'd at, "Here ye mount," exclaim'd
+A voice, that other purpose left me none,
+Save will so eager to behold who spake,
+I could not choose but gaze. As 'fore the sun,
+That weighs our vision down, and veils his form
+In light transcendent, thus my virtue fail'd
+Unequal. "This is Spirit from above,
+Who marshals us our upward way, unsought;
+And in his own light shrouds him;. As a man
+Doth for himself, so now is done for us.
+For whoso waits imploring, yet sees need
+Of his prompt aidance, sets himself prepar'd
+For blunt denial, ere the suit be made.
+Refuse we not to lend a ready foot
+At such inviting: haste we to ascend,
+Before it darken: for we may not then,
+Till morn again return." So spake my guide;
+And to one ladder both address'd our steps;
+And the first stair approaching, I perceiv'd
+Near me as 'twere the waving of a wing,
+That fann'd my face and whisper'd: "Blessed they
+The peacemakers: they know not evil wrath."
+ Now to such height above our heads were rais'd
+The last beams, follow'd close by hooded night,
+That many a star on all sides through the gloom
+Shone out. "Why partest from me, O my strength?"
+So with myself I commun'd; for I felt
+My o'ertoil'd sinews slacken. We had reach'd
+The summit, and were fix'd like to a bark
+Arriv'd at land. And waiting a short space,
+If aught should meet mine ear in that new round,
+Then to my guide I turn'd, and said: "Lov'd sire!
+Declare what guilt is on this circle purg'd.
+If our feet rest, no need thy speech should pause."
+ He thus to me: "The love of good, whate'er
+Wanted of just proportion, here fulfils.
+Here plies afresh the oar, that loiter'd ill.
+But that thou mayst yet clearlier understand,
+Give ear unto my words, and thou shalt cull
+Some fruit may please thee well, from this delay.
+ "Creator, nor created being, ne'er,
+My son," he thus began, "was without love,
+Or natural, or the free spirit's growth.
+Thou hast not that to learn. The natural still
+Is without error; but the other swerves,
+If on ill object bent, or through excess
+Of vigour, or defect. While e'er it seeks
+The primal blessings, or with measure due
+Th' inferior, no delight, that flows from it,
+Partakes of ill. But let it warp to evil,
+Or with more ardour than behooves, or less.
+Pursue the good, the thing created then
+Works 'gainst its Maker. Hence thou must infer
+That love is germin of each virtue in ye,
+And of each act no less, that merits pain.
+Now since it may not be, but love intend
+The welfare mainly of the thing it loves,
+All from self-hatred are secure; and since
+No being can be thought t' exist apart
+And independent of the first, a bar
+Of equal force restrains from hating that.
+ "Grant the distinction just; and it remains
+The' evil must be another's, which is lov'd.
+Three ways such love is gender'd in your clay.
+There is who hopes (his neighbour's worth deprest,)
+Preeminence himself, and coverts hence
+For his own greatness that another fall.
+There is who so much fears the loss of power,
+Fame, favour, glory (should his fellow mount
+Above him), and so sickens at the thought,
+He loves their opposite: and there is he,
+Whom wrong or insult seems to gall and shame
+That he doth thirst for vengeance, and such needs
+Must doat on other's evil. Here beneath
+This threefold love is mourn'd. Of th' other sort
+Be now instructed, that which follows good
+But with disorder'd and irregular course.
+ "All indistinctly apprehend a bliss
+On which the soul may rest, the hearts of all
+Yearn after it, and to that wished bourn
+All therefore strive to tend. If ye behold
+Or seek it with a love remiss and lax,
+This cornice after just repenting lays
+Its penal torment on ye. Other good
+There is, where man finds not his happiness:
+It is not true fruition, not that blest
+Essence, of every good the branch and root.
+The love too lavishly bestow'd on this,
+Along three circles over us, is mourn'd.
+Account of that division tripartite
+Expect not, fitter for thine own research.
+
+
+
+CANTO XVIII
+
+The teacher ended, and his high discourse
+Concluding, earnest in my looks inquir'd
+If I appear'd content; and I, whom still
+Unsated thirst to hear him urg'd, was mute,
+Mute outwardly, yet inwardly I said:
+"Perchance my too much questioning offends
+But he, true father, mark'd the secret wish
+By diffidence restrain'd, and speaking, gave
+Me boldness thus to speak: "Master, my Sight
+Gathers so lively virtue from thy beams,
+That all, thy words convey, distinct is seen.
+Wherefore I pray thee, father, whom this heart
+Holds dearest! thou wouldst deign by proof t' unfold
+That love, from which as from their source thou bring'st
+All good deeds and their opposite." He then:
+"To what I now disclose be thy clear ken
+Directed, and thou plainly shalt behold
+How much those blind have err'd, who make themselves
+The guides of men. The soul, created apt
+To love, moves versatile which way soe'er
+Aught pleasing prompts her, soon as she is wak'd
+By pleasure into act. Of substance true
+Your apprehension forms its counterfeit,
+And in you the ideal shape presenting
+Attracts the soul's regard. If she, thus drawn,
+incline toward it, love is that inclining,
+And a new nature knit by pleasure in ye.
+Then as the fire points up, and mounting seeks
+His birth-place and his lasting seat, e'en thus
+Enters the captive soul into desire,
+Which is a spiritual motion, that ne'er rests
+Before enjoyment of the thing it loves.
+Enough to show thee, how the truth from those
+Is hidden, who aver all love a thing
+Praise-worthy in itself: although perhaps
+Its substance seem still good. Yet if the wax
+Be good, it follows not th' impression must."
+"What love is," I return'd, "thy words, O guide!
+And my own docile mind, reveal. Yet thence
+New doubts have sprung. For from without if love
+Be offer'd to us, and the spirit knows
+No other footing, tend she right or wrong,
+Is no desert of hers." He answering thus:
+"What reason here discovers I have power
+To show thee: that which lies beyond, expect
+From Beatrice, faith not reason's task.
+Spirit, substantial form, with matter join'd
+Not in confusion mix'd, hath in itself
+Specific virtue of that union born,
+Which is not felt except it work, nor prov'd
+But through effect, as vegetable life
+By the green leaf. From whence his intellect
+Deduced its primal notices of things,
+Man therefore knows not, or his appetites
+Their first affections; such in you, as zeal
+In bees to gather honey; at the first,
+Volition, meriting nor blame nor praise.
+But o'er each lower faculty supreme,
+That as she list are summon'd to her bar,
+Ye have that virtue in you, whose just voice
+Uttereth counsel, and whose word should keep
+The threshold of assent. Here is the source,
+Whence cause of merit in you is deriv'd,
+E'en as the affections good or ill she takes,
+Or severs, winnow'd as the chaff. Those men
+Who reas'ning went to depth profoundest, mark'd
+That innate freedom, and were thence induc'd
+To leave their moral teaching to the world.
+Grant then, that from necessity arise
+All love that glows within you; to dismiss
+Or harbour it, the pow'r is in yourselves.
+Remember, Beatrice, in her style,
+Denominates free choice by eminence
+The noble virtue, if in talk with thee
+She touch upon that theme." The moon, well nigh
+To midnight hour belated, made the stars
+Appear to wink and fade; and her broad disk
+Seem'd like a crag on fire, as up the vault
+That course she journey'd, which the sun then warms,
+When they of Rome behold him at his set.
+Betwixt Sardinia and the Corsic isle.
+And now the weight, that hung upon my thought,
+Was lighten'd by the aid of that clear spirit,
+Who raiseth Andes above Mantua's name.
+I therefore, when my questions had obtain'd
+Solution plain and ample, stood as one
+Musing in dreary slumber; but not long
+Slumber'd; for suddenly a multitude,
+The steep already turning, from behind,
+Rush'd on. With fury and like random rout,
+As echoing on their shores at midnight heard
+Ismenus and Asopus, for his Thebes
+If Bacchus' help were needed; so came these
+Tumultuous, curving each his rapid step,
+By eagerness impell'd of holy love.
+ Soon they o'ertook us; with such swiftness mov'd
+The mighty crowd. Two spirits at their head
+Cried weeping; "Blessed Mary sought with haste
+The hilly region. Caesar to subdue
+Ilerda, darted in Marseilles his sting,
+And flew to Spain."--"Oh tarry not: away;"
+The others shouted; "let not time be lost
+Through slackness of affection. Hearty zeal
+To serve reanimates celestial grace."
+ "O ye, in whom intenser fervency
+Haply supplies, where lukewarm erst ye fail'd,
+Slow or neglectful, to absolve your part
+Of good and virtuous, this man, who yet lives,
+(Credit my tale, though strange) desires t' ascend,
+So morning rise to light us. Therefore say
+Which hand leads nearest to the rifted rock?"
+ So spake my guide, to whom a shade return'd:
+"Come after us, and thou shalt find the cleft.
+We may not linger: such resistless will
+Speeds our unwearied course. Vouchsafe us then
+Thy pardon, if our duty seem to thee
+Discourteous rudeness. In Verona I
+Was abbot of San Zeno, when the hand
+Of Barbarossa grasp'd Imperial sway,
+That name, ne'er utter'd without tears in Milan.
+And there is he, hath one foot in his grave,
+Who for that monastery ere long shall weep,
+Ruing his power misus'd: for that his son,
+Of body ill compact, and worse in mind,
+And born in evil, he hath set in place
+Of its true pastor." Whether more he spake,
+Or here was mute, I know not: he had sped
+E'en now so far beyond us. Yet thus much
+I heard, and in rememb'rance treasur'd it.
+ He then, who never fail'd me at my need,
+Cried, "Hither turn. Lo! two with sharp remorse
+Chiding their sin!" In rear of all the troop
+These shouted: "First they died, to whom the sea
+Open'd, or ever Jordan saw his heirs:
+And they, who with Aeneas to the end
+Endur'd not suffering, for their portion chose
+Life without glory." Soon as they had fled
+Past reach of sight, new thought within me rose
+By others follow'd fast, and each unlike
+Its fellow: till led on from thought to thought,
+And pleasur'd with the fleeting train, mine eye
+Was clos'd, and meditation chang'd to dream.
+
+
+CANTO XIX
+
+It was the hour, when of diurnal heat
+No reliques chafe the cold beams of the moon,
+O'erpower'd by earth, or planetary sway
+Of Saturn; and the geomancer sees
+His Greater Fortune up the east ascend,
+Where gray dawn checkers first the shadowy cone;
+When 'fore me in my dream a woman's shape
+There came, with lips that stammer'd, eyes aslant,
+Distorted feet, hands maim'd, and colour pale.
+ I look'd upon her; and as sunshine cheers
+Limbs numb'd by nightly cold, e'en thus my look
+Unloos'd her tongue, next in brief space her form
+Decrepit rais'd erect, and faded face
+With love's own hue illum'd. Recov'ring speech
+She forthwith warbling such a strain began,
+That I, how loth soe'er, could scarce have held
+Attention from the song. "I," thus she sang,
+"I am the Siren, she, whom mariners
+On the wide sea are wilder'd when they hear:
+Such fulness of delight the list'ner feels.
+I from his course Ulysses by my lay
+Enchanted drew. Whoe'er frequents me once
+Parts seldom; so I charm him, and his heart
+Contented knows no void." Or ere her mouth
+Was clos'd, to shame her at her side appear'd
+A dame of semblance holy. With stern voice
+She utter'd; "Say, O Virgil, who is this?"
+Which hearing, he approach'd, with eyes still bent
+Toward that goodly presence: th' other seiz'd her,
+And, her robes tearing, open'd her before,
+And show'd the belly to me, whence a smell,
+Exhaling loathsome, wak'd me. Round I turn'd
+Mine eyes, and thus the teacher: "At the least
+Three times my voice hath call'd thee. Rise, begone.
+Let us the opening find where thou mayst pass."
+ I straightway rose. Now day, pour'd down from high,
+Fill'd all the circuits of the sacred mount;
+And, as we journey'd, on our shoulder smote
+The early ray. I follow'd, stooping low
+My forehead, as a man, o'ercharg'd with thought,
+Who bends him to the likeness of an arch,
+That midway spans the flood; when thus I heard,
+"Come, enter here," in tone so soft and mild,
+As never met the ear on mortal strand.
+ With swan-like wings dispread and pointing up,
+Who thus had spoken marshal'd us along,
+Where each side of the solid masonry
+The sloping, walls retir'd; then mov'd his plumes,
+And fanning us, affirm'd that those, who mourn,
+Are blessed, for that comfort shall be theirs.
+ "What aileth thee, that still thou look'st to earth?"
+Began my leader; while th' angelic shape
+A little over us his station took.
+ "New vision," I replied, "hath rais'd in me
+8urmisings strange and anxious doubts, whereon
+My soul intent allows no other thought
+Or room or entrance.--"Hast thou seen," said he,
+"That old enchantress, her, whose wiles alone
+The spirits o'er us weep for? Hast thou seen
+How man may free him of her bonds? Enough.
+Let thy heels spurn the earth, and thy rais'd ken
+Fix on the lure, which heav'n's eternal King
+Whirls in the rolling spheres." As on his feet
+The falcon first looks down, then to the sky
+Turns, and forth stretches eager for the food,
+That woos him thither; so the call I heard,
+So onward, far as the dividing rock
+Gave way, I journey'd, till the plain was reach'd.
+ On the fifth circle when I stood at large,
+A race appear'd before me, on the ground
+All downward lying prone and weeping sore.
+"My soul hath cleaved to the dust," I heard
+With sighs so deep, they well nigh choak'd the words.
+"O ye elect of God, whose penal woes
+Both hope and justice mitigate, direct
+Tow'rds the steep rising our uncertain way."
+ "If ye approach secure from this our doom,
+Prostration--and would urge your course with speed,
+See that ye still to rightward keep the brink."
+ So them the bard besought; and such the words,
+Beyond us some short space, in answer came.
+ I noted what remain'd yet hidden from them:
+Thence to my liege's eyes mine eyes I bent,
+And he, forthwith interpreting their suit,
+Beckon'd his glad assent. Free then to act,
+As pleas'd me, I drew near, and took my stand
+O`er that shade, whose words I late had mark'd.
+And, "Spirit!" I said, "in whom repentant tears
+Mature that blessed hour, when thou with God
+Shalt find acceptance, for a while suspend
+For me that mightier care. Say who thou wast,
+Why thus ye grovel on your bellies prone,
+And if in aught ye wish my service there,
+Whence living I am come." He answering spake
+"The cause why Heav'n our back toward his cope
+Reverses, shalt thou know: but me know first
+The successor of Peter, and the name
+And title of my lineage from that stream,
+That' twixt Chiaveri and Siestri draws
+His limpid waters through the lowly glen.
+A month and little more by proof I learnt,
+With what a weight that robe of sov'reignty
+Upon his shoulder rests, who from the mire
+Would guard it: that each other fardel seems
+But feathers in the balance. Late, alas!
+Was my conversion: but when I became
+Rome's pastor, I discern'd at once the dream
+And cozenage of life, saw that the heart
+Rested not there, and yet no prouder height
+Lur'd on the climber: wherefore, of that life
+No more enamour'd, in my bosom love
+Of purer being kindled. For till then
+I was a soul in misery, alienate
+From God, and covetous of all earthly things;
+Now, as thou seest, here punish'd for my doting.
+Such cleansing from the taint of avarice
+Do spirits converted need. This mount inflicts
+No direr penalty. E'en as our eyes
+Fasten'd below, nor e'er to loftier clime
+Were lifted, thus hath justice level'd us
+Here on the earth. As avarice quench'd our love
+Of good, without which is no working, thus
+Here justice holds us prison'd, hand and foot
+Chain'd down and bound, while heaven's just Lord shall please.
+So long to tarry motionless outstretch'd."
+ My knees I stoop'd, and would have spoke; but he,
+Ere my beginning, by his ear perceiv'd
+I did him reverence; and "What cause," said he,
+"Hath bow'd thee thus!"--" Compunction," I rejoin'd.
+"And inward awe of your high dignity."
+ "Up," he exclaim'd, "brother! upon thy feet
+Arise: err not: thy fellow servant I,
+(Thine and all others') of one Sovran Power.
+If thou hast ever mark'd those holy sounds
+Of gospel truth, 'nor shall be given ill marriage,'
+Thou mayst discern the reasons of my speech.
+Go thy ways now; and linger here no more.
+Thy tarrying is a let unto the tears,
+With which I hasten that whereof thou spak'st.
+I have on earth a kinswoman; her name
+Alagia, worthy in herself, so ill
+Example of our house corrupt her not:
+And she is all remaineth of me there."
+
+
+
+CANTO XX
+
+Ill strives the will, 'gainst will more wise that strives
+His pleasure therefore to mine own preferr'd,
+I drew the sponge yet thirsty from the wave.
+ Onward I mov'd: he also onward mov'd,
+Who led me, coasting still, wherever place
+Along the rock was vacant, as a man
+Walks near the battlements on narrow wall.
+For those on th' other part, who drop by drop
+Wring out their all-infecting malady,
+Too closely press the verge. Accurst be thou!
+Inveterate wolf! whose gorge ingluts more prey,
+Than every beast beside, yet is not fill'd!
+So bottomless thy maw! --Ye spheres of heaven!
+To whom there are, as seems, who attribute
+All change in mortal state, when is the day
+Of his appearing, for whom fate reserves
+To chase her hence? --With wary steps and slow
+We pass'd; and I attentive to the shades,
+Whom piteously I heard lament and wail;
+And, 'midst the wailing, one before us heard
+Cry out "O blessed Virgin!" as a dame
+In the sharp pangs of childbed; and "How poor
+Thou wast," it added, "witness that low roof
+Where thou didst lay thy sacred burden down.
+O good Fabricius! thou didst virtue choose
+With poverty, before great wealth with vice."
+ The words so pleas'd me, that desire to know
+The spirit, from whose lip they seem'd to come,
+Did draw me onward. Yet it spake the gift
+Of Nicholas, which on the maidens he
+Bounteous bestow'd, to save their youthful prime
+Unblemish'd. "Spirit! who dost speak of deeds
+So worthy, tell me who thou was," I said,
+"And why thou dost with single voice renew
+Memorial of such praise. That boon vouchsaf'd
+Haply shall meet reward; if I return
+To finish the Short pilgrimage of life,
+Still speeding to its close on restless wing."
+ "I," answer'd he, "will tell thee, not for hell,
+Which thence I look for; but that in thyself
+Grace so exceeding shines, before thy time
+Of mortal dissolution. I was root
+Of that ill plant, whose shade such poison sheds
+O'er all the Christian land, that seldom thence
+Good fruit is gather'd. Vengeance soon should come,
+Had Ghent and Douay, Lille and Bruges power;
+And vengeance I of heav'n's great Judge implore.
+Hugh Capet was I high: from me descend
+The Philips and the Louis, of whom France
+Newly is govern'd; born of one, who ply'd
+The slaughterer's trade at Paris. When the race
+Of ancient kings had vanish'd (all save one
+Wrapt up in sable weeds) within my gripe
+I found the reins of empire, and such powers
+Of new acquirement, with full store of friends,
+That soon the widow'd circlet of the crown
+Was girt upon the temples of my son,
+He, from whose bones th' anointed race begins.
+Till the great dower of Provence had remov'd
+The stains, that yet obscur'd our lowly blood,
+Its sway indeed was narrow, but howe'er
+It wrought no evil: there, with force and lies,
+Began its rapine; after, for amends,
+Poitou it seiz'd, Navarre and Gascony.
+To Italy came Charles, and for amends
+Young Conradine an innocent victim slew,
+And sent th' angelic teacher back to heav'n,
+Still for amends. I see the time at hand,
+That forth from France invites another Charles
+To make himself and kindred better known.
+Unarm'd he issues, saving with that lance,
+Which the arch-traitor tilted with; and that
+He carries with so home a thrust, as rives
+The bowels of poor Florence. No increase
+Of territory hence, but sin and shame
+Shall be his guerdon, and so much the more
+As he more lightly deems of such foul wrong.
+I see the other, who a prisoner late
+Had steps on shore, exposing to the mart
+His daughter, whom he bargains for, as do
+The Corsairs for their slaves. O avarice!
+What canst thou more, who hast subdued our blood
+So wholly to thyself, they feel no care
+Of their own flesh? To hide with direr guilt
+Past ill and future, lo! the flower-de-luce
+Enters Alagna! in his Vicar Christ
+Himself a captive, and his mockery
+Acted again! Lo! to his holy lip
+The vinegar and gall once more applied!
+And he 'twixt living robbers doom'd to bleed!
+Lo! the new Pilate, of whose cruelty
+Such violence cannot fill the measure up,
+With no degree to sanction, pushes on
+Into the temple his yet eager sails!
+ "O sovran Master! when shall I rejoice
+To see the vengeance, which thy wrath well-pleas'd
+In secret silence broods?--While daylight lasts,
+So long what thou didst hear of her, sole spouse
+Of the Great Spirit, and on which thou turn'dst
+To me for comment, is the general theme
+Of all our prayers: but when it darkens, then
+A different strain we utter, then record
+Pygmalion, whom his gluttonous thirst of gold
+Made traitor, robber, parricide: the woes
+Of Midas, which his greedy wish ensued,
+Mark'd for derision to all future times:
+And the fond Achan, how he stole the prey,
+That yet he seems by Joshua's ire pursued.
+Sapphira with her husband next, we blame;
+And praise the forefeet, that with furious ramp
+Spurn'd Heliodorus. All the mountain round
+Rings with the infamy of Thracia's king,
+Who slew his Phrygian charge: and last a shout
+Ascends: "Declare, O Crassus! for thou know'st,
+The flavour of thy gold." The voice of each
+Now high now low, as each his impulse prompts,
+Is led through many a pitch, acute or grave.
+Therefore, not singly, I erewhile rehears'd
+That blessedness we tell of in the day:
+But near me none beside his accent rais'd."
+ From him we now had parted, and essay'd
+With utmost efforts to surmount the way,
+When I did feel, as nodding to its fall,
+The mountain tremble; whence an icy chill
+Seiz'd on me, as on one to death convey'd.
+So shook not Delos, when Latona there
+Couch'd to bring forth the twin-born eyes of heaven.
+ Forthwith from every side a shout arose
+So vehement, that suddenly my guide
+Drew near, and cried: "Doubt not, while I conduct thee."
+"Glory!" all shouted (such the sounds mine ear
+Gather'd from those, who near me swell'd the sounds)
+"Glory in the highest be to God." We stood
+Immovably suspended, like to those,
+The shepherds, who first heard in Bethlehem's field
+That song: till ceas'd the trembling, and the song
+Was ended: then our hallow'd path resum'd,
+Eying the prostrate shadows, who renew'd
+Their custom'd mourning. Never in my breast
+Did ignorance so struggle with desire
+Of knowledge, if my memory do not err,
+As in that moment; nor through haste dar'd I
+To question, nor myself could aught discern,
+So on I far'd in thoughtfulness and dread.
+
+
+
+CANTO XXI
+
+The natural thirst, ne'er quench'd but from the well,
+Whereof the woman of Samaria crav'd,
+Excited: haste along the cumber'd path,
+After my guide, impell'd; and pity mov'd
+My bosom for the 'vengeful deed, though just.
+When lo! even as Luke relates, that Christ
+Appear'd unto the two upon their way,
+New-risen from his vaulted grave; to us
+A shade appear'd, and after us approach'd,
+Contemplating the crowd beneath its feet.
+We were not ware of it; so first it spake,
+Saying, "God give you peace, my brethren!" then
+Sudden we turn'd: and Virgil such salute,
+As fitted that kind greeting, gave, and cried:
+"Peace in the blessed council be thy lot
+Awarded by that righteous court, which me
+To everlasting banishment exiles!"
+ "How!" he exclaim'd, nor from his speed meanwhile
+Desisting, "If that ye be spirits, whom God
+Vouchsafes not room above, who up the height
+Has been thus far your guide?" To whom the bard:
+"If thou observe the tokens, which this man
+Trac'd by the finger of the angel bears,
+'Tis plain that in the kingdom of the just
+He needs must share. But sithence she, whose wheel
+Spins day and night, for him not yet had drawn
+That yarn, which, on the fatal distaff pil'd,
+Clotho apportions to each wight that breathes,
+His soul, that sister is to mine and thine,
+Not of herself could mount, for not like ours
+Her ken: whence I, from forth the ample gulf
+Of hell was ta'en, to lead him, and will lead
+Far as my lore avails. But, if thou know,
+Instruct us for what cause, the mount erewhile
+Thus shook and trembled: wherefore all at once
+Seem'd shouting, even from his wave-wash'd foot."
+ That questioning so tallied with my wish,
+The thirst did feel abatement of its edge
+E'en from expectance. He forthwith replied,
+"In its devotion nought irregular
+This mount can witness, or by punctual rule
+Unsanction'd; here from every change exempt.
+Other than that, which heaven in itself
+Doth of itself receive, no influence
+Can reach us. Tempest none, shower, hail or snow,
+Hoar frost or dewy moistness, higher falls
+Than that brief scale of threefold steps: thick clouds
+Nor scudding rack are ever seen: swift glance
+Ne'er lightens, nor Thaumantian Iris gleams,
+That yonder often shift on each side heav'n.
+Vapour adust doth never mount above
+The highest of the trinal stairs, whereon
+Peter's vicegerent stands. Lower perchance,
+With various motion rock'd, trembles the soil:
+But here, through wind in earth's deep hollow pent,
+I know not how, yet never trembled: then
+Trembles, when any spirit feels itself
+So purified, that it may rise, or move
+For rising, and such loud acclaim ensues.
+Purification by the will alone
+Is prov'd, that free to change society
+Seizes the soul rejoicing in her will.
+Desire of bliss is present from the first;
+But strong propension hinders, to that wish
+By the just ordinance of heav'n oppos'd;
+Propension now as eager to fulfil
+Th' allotted torment, as erewhile to sin.
+And I who in this punishment had lain
+Five hundred years and more, but now have felt
+Free wish for happier clime. Therefore thou felt'st
+The mountain tremble, and the spirits devout
+Heard'st, over all his limits, utter praise
+To that liege Lord, whom I entreat their joy
+To hasten." Thus he spake: and since the draught
+Is grateful ever as the thirst is keen,
+No words may speak my fullness of content.
+ "Now," said the instructor sage, "I see the net
+That takes ye here, and how the toils are loos'd,
+Why rocks the mountain and why ye rejoice.
+Vouchsafe, that from thy lips I next may learn,
+Who on the earth thou wast, and wherefore here
+So many an age wert prostrate." --"In that time,
+When the good Titus, with Heav'n's King to help,
+Aveng'd those piteous gashes, whence the blood
+By Judas sold did issue, with the name
+Most lasting and most honour'd there was I
+Abundantly renown'd," the shade reply'd,
+"Not yet with faith endued. So passing sweet
+My vocal Spirit, from Tolosa, Rome
+To herself drew me, where I merited
+A myrtle garland to inwreathe my brow.
+Statius they name me still. Of Thebes I sang,
+And next of great Achilles: but i' th' way
+Fell with the second burthen. Of my flame
+Those sparkles were the seeds, which I deriv'd
+From the bright fountain of celestial fire
+That feeds unnumber'd lamps, the song I mean
+Which sounds Aeneas' wand'rings: that the breast
+I hung at, that the nurse, from whom my veins
+Drank inspiration: whose authority
+Was ever sacred with me. To have liv'd
+Coeval with the Mantuan, I would bide
+The revolution of another sun
+Beyond my stated years in banishment."
+ The Mantuan, when he heard him, turn'd to me,
+And holding silence: by his countenance
+Enjoin'd me silence but the power which wills,
+Bears not supreme control: laughter and tears
+Follow so closely on the passion prompts them,
+They wait not for the motions of the will
+In natures most sincere. I did but smile,
+As one who winks; and thereupon the shade
+Broke off, and peer'd into mine eyes, where best
+Our looks interpret. "So to good event
+Mayst thou conduct such great emprize," he cried,
+"Say, why across thy visage beam'd, but now,
+The lightning of a smile!" On either part
+Now am I straiten'd; one conjures me speak,
+Th' other to silence binds me: whence a sigh
+I utter, and the sigh is heard. "Speak on; "
+The teacher cried; "and do not fear to speak,
+But tell him what so earnestly he asks."
+Whereon I thus: "Perchance, O ancient spirit!
+Thou marvel'st at my smiling. There is room
+For yet more wonder. He who guides my ken
+On high, he is that Mantuan, led by whom
+Thou didst presume of men arid gods to sing.
+If other cause thou deem'dst for which I smil'd,
+Leave it as not the true one; and believe
+Those words, thou spak'st of him, indeed the cause."
+ Now down he bent t' embrace my teacher's feet;
+But he forbade him: "Brother! do it not:
+Thou art a shadow, and behold'st a shade."
+He rising answer'd thus: "Now hast thou prov'd
+The force and ardour of the love I bear thee,
+When I forget we are but things of air,
+And as a substance treat an empty shade."
+
+
+
+CANTO XXII
+
+Now we had left the angel, who had turn'd
+To the sixth circle our ascending step,
+One gash from off my forehead raz'd: while they,
+Whose wishes tend to justice, shouted forth:
+"Blessed!" and ended with, "I thirst:" and I,
+More nimble than along the other straits,
+So journey'd, that, without the sense of toil,
+I follow'd upward the swift-footed shades;
+When Virgil thus began: "Let its pure flame
+From virtue flow, and love can never fail
+To warm another's bosom' so the light
+Shine manifestly forth. Hence from that hour,
+When 'mongst us in the purlieus of the deep,
+Came down the spirit of Aquinum's hard,
+Who told of thine affection, my good will
+Hath been for thee of quality as strong
+As ever link'd itself to one not seen.
+Therefore these stairs will now seem short to me.
+But tell me: and if too secure I loose
+The rein with a friend's license, as a friend
+Forgive me, and speak now as with a friend:
+How chanc'd it covetous desire could find
+Place in that bosom, 'midst such ample store
+Of wisdom, as thy zeal had treasur'd there?"
+ First somewhat mov'd to laughter by his words,
+Statius replied: "Each syllable of thine
+Is a dear pledge of love. Things oft appear
+That minister false matters to our doubts,
+When their true causes are remov'd from sight.
+Thy question doth assure me, thou believ'st
+I was on earth a covetous man, perhaps
+Because thou found'st me in that circle plac'd.
+Know then I was too wide of avarice:
+And e'en for that excess, thousands of moons
+Have wax'd and wan'd upon my sufferings.
+And were it not that I with heedful care
+Noted where thou exclaim'st as if in ire
+With human nature, 'Why, thou cursed thirst
+Of gold! dost not with juster measure guide
+The appetite of mortals?' I had met
+The fierce encounter of the voluble rock.
+Then was I ware that with too ample wing
+The hands may haste to lavishment, and turn'd,
+As from my other evil, so from this
+In penitence. How many from their grave
+Shall with shorn locks arise, who living, aye
+And at life's last extreme, of this offence,
+Through ignorance, did not repent. And know,
+The fault which lies direct from any sin
+In level opposition, here With that
+Wastes its green rankness on one common heap.
+Therefore if I have been with those, who wail
+Their avarice, to cleanse me, through reverse
+Of their transgression, such hath been my lot."
+ To whom the sovran of the pastoral song:
+"While thou didst sing that cruel warfare wag'd
+By the twin sorrow of Jocasta's womb,
+From thy discourse with Clio there, it seems
+As faith had not been shine: without the which
+Good deeds suffice not. And if so, what sun
+Rose on thee, or what candle pierc'd the dark
+That thou didst after see to hoist the sail,
+And follow, where the fisherman had led?"
+ He answering thus: "By thee conducted first,
+I enter'd the Parnassian grots, and quaff'd
+Of the clear spring; illumin'd first by thee
+Open'd mine eyes to God. Thou didst, as one,
+Who, journeying through the darkness, hears a light
+Behind, that profits not himself, but makes
+His followers wise, when thou exclaimedst, 'Lo!
+A renovated world! Justice return'd!
+Times of primeval innocence restor'd!
+And a new race descended from above!'
+Poet and Christian both to thee I owed.
+That thou mayst mark more clearly what I trace,
+My hand shall stretch forth to inform the lines
+With livelier colouring. Soon o'er all the world,
+By messengers from heav'n, the true belief
+Teem'd now prolific, and that word of thine
+Accordant, to the new instructors chim'd.
+Induc'd by which agreement, I was wont
+Resort to them; and soon their sanctity
+So won upon me, that, Domitian's rage
+Pursuing them, I mix'd my tears with theirs,
+And, while on earth I stay'd, still succour'd them;
+And their most righteous customs made me scorn
+All sects besides. Before I led the Greeks
+In tuneful fiction, to the streams of Thebes,
+I was baptiz'd; but secretly, through fear,
+Remain'd a Christian, and conform'd long time
+To Pagan rites. Five centuries and more,
+T for that lukewarmness was fain to pace
+Round the fourth circle. Thou then, who hast rais'd
+The covering, which did hide such blessing from me,
+Whilst much of this ascent is yet to climb,
+Say, if thou know, where our old Terence bides,
+Caecilius, Plautus, Varro: if condemn'd
+They dwell, and in what province of the deep."
+"These," said my guide, "with Persius and myself,
+And others many more, are with that Greek,
+Of mortals, the most cherish'd by the Nine,
+In the first ward of darkness. There ofttimes
+We of that mount hold converse, on whose top
+For aye our nurses live. We have the bard
+Of Pella, and the Teian, Agatho,
+Simonides, and many a Grecian else
+Ingarlanded with laurel. Of thy train
+Antigone is there, Deiphile,
+Argia, and as sorrowful as erst
+Ismene, and who show'd Langia's wave:
+Deidamia with her sisters there,
+And blind Tiresias' daughter, and the bride
+Sea-born of Peleus." Either poet now
+Was silent, and no longer by th' ascent
+Or the steep walls obstructed, round them cast
+Inquiring eyes. Four handmaids of the day
+Had finish'd now their office, and the fifth
+Was at the chariot-beam, directing still
+Its balmy point aloof, when thus my guide:
+"Methinks, it well behooves us to the brink
+Bend the right shoulder' circuiting the mount,
+As we have ever us'd." So custom there
+Was usher to the road, the which we chose
+Less doubtful, as that worthy shade complied.
+ They on before me went; I sole pursued,
+List'ning their speech, that to my thoughts convey'd
+Mysterious lessons of sweet poesy.
+But soon they ceas'd; for midway of the road
+A tree we found, with goodly fruitage hung,
+And pleasant to the smell: and as a fir
+Upward from bough to bough less ample spreads,
+So downward this less ample spread, that none.
+Methinks, aloft may climb. Upon the side,
+That clos'd our path, a liquid crystal fell
+From the steep rock, and through the sprays above
+Stream'd showering. With associate step the bards
+Drew near the plant; and from amidst the leaves
+A voice was heard: "Ye shall be chary of me;"
+And after added: "Mary took more thought
+For joy and honour of the nuptial feast,
+Than for herself who answers now for you.
+The women of old Rome were satisfied
+With water for their beverage. Daniel fed
+On pulse, and wisdom gain'd. The primal age
+Was beautiful as gold; and hunger then
+Made acorns tasteful, thirst each rivulet
+Run nectar. Honey and locusts were the food,
+Whereon the Baptist in the wilderness
+Fed, and that eminence of glory reach'd
+And greatness, which the' Evangelist records."
+
+
+
+CANTO XXIII
+
+On the green leaf mine eyes were fix'd, like his
+Who throws away his days in idle chase
+Of the diminutive, when thus I heard
+The more than father warn me: "Son! our time
+Asks thriftier using. Linger not: away."
+ Thereat my face and steps at once I turn'd
+Toward the sages, by whose converse cheer'd
+I journey'd on, and felt no toil: and lo!
+A sound of weeping and a song: "My lips,
+O Lord!" and these so mingled, it gave birth
+To pleasure and to pain. "O Sire, belov'd!
+Say what is this I hear?" Thus I inquir'd.
+ "Spirits," said he, "who as they go, perchance,
+Their debt of duty pay." As on their road
+The thoughtful pilgrims, overtaking some
+Not known unto them, turn to them, and look,
+But stay not; thus, approaching from behind
+With speedier motion, eyed us, as they pass'd,
+A crowd of spirits, silent and devout.
+The eyes of each were dark and hollow: pale
+Their visage, and so lean withal, the bones
+Stood staring thro' the skin. I do not think
+Thus dry and meagre Erisicthon show'd,
+When pinc'ed by sharp-set famine to the quick.
+ "Lo!" to myself I mus'd, "the race, who lost
+Jerusalem, when Mary with dire beak
+Prey'd on her child." The sockets seem'd as rings,
+From which the gems were drops. Who reads the name
+Of man upon his forehead, there the M
+Had trac'd most plainly. Who would deem, that scent
+Of water and an apple, could have prov'd
+Powerful to generate such pining want,
+Not knowing how it wrought? While now I stood
+Wond'ring what thus could waste them (for the cause
+Of their gaunt hollowness and scaly rind
+Appear'd not) lo! a spirit turn'd his eyes
+In their deep-sunken cell, and fasten'd then
+On me, then cried with vehemence aloud:
+"What grace is this vouchsaf'd me?" By his looks
+I ne'er had recogniz'd him: but the voice
+Brought to my knowledge what his cheer conceal'd.
+Remembrance of his alter'd lineaments
+Was kindled from that spark; and I agniz'd
+The visage of Forese. "Ah! respect
+This wan and leprous wither'd skin," thus he
+Suppliant implor'd, "this macerated flesh.
+Speak to me truly of thyself. And who
+Are those twain spirits, that escort thee there?
+Be it not said thou Scorn'st to talk with me."
+ "That face of thine," I answer'd him, "which dead
+I once bewail'd, disposes me not less
+For weeping, when I see It thus transform'd.
+Say then, by Heav'n, what blasts ye thus? The whilst
+I wonder, ask not Speech from me: unapt
+Is he to speak, whom other will employs.
+ He thus: "The water and tee plant we pass'd,
+Virtue possesses, by th' eternal will
+Infus'd, the which so pines me. Every spirit,
+Whose song bewails his gluttony indulg'd
+Too grossly, here in hunger and in thirst
+Is purified. The odour, which the fruit,
+And spray, that showers upon the verdure, breathe,
+Inflames us with desire to feed and drink.
+Nor once alone encompassing our route
+We come to add fresh fuel to the pain:
+Pain, said I? solace rather: for that will
+To the tree leads us, by which Christ was led
+To call Elias, joyful when he paid
+Our ransom from his vein." I answering thus:
+"Forese! from that day, in which the world
+For better life thou changedst, not five years
+Have circled. If the power of sinning more
+Were first concluded in thee, ere thou knew'st
+That kindly grief, which re-espouses us
+To God, how hither art thou come so soon?
+I thought to find thee lower, there, where time
+Is recompense for time." He straight replied:
+"To drink up the sweet wormwood of affliction
+I have been brought thus early by the tears
+Stream'd down my Nella's cheeks. Her prayers devout,
+Her sighs have drawn me from the coast, where oft
+Expectance lingers, and have set me free
+From th' other circles. In the sight of God
+So much the dearer is my widow priz'd,
+She whom I lov'd so fondly, as she ranks
+More singly eminent for virtuous deeds.
+The tract most barb'rous of Sardinia's isle,
+Hath dames more chaste and modester by far
+Than that wherein I left her. O sweet brother!
+What wouldst thou have me say? A time to come
+Stands full within my view, to which this hour
+Shall not be counted of an ancient date,
+When from the pulpit shall be loudly warn'd
+Th' unblushing dames of Florence, lest they bare
+Unkerchief'd bosoms to the common gaze.
+What savage women hath the world e'er seen,
+What Saracens, for whom there needed scourge
+Of spiritual or other discipline,
+To force them walk with cov'ring on their limbs!
+But did they see, the shameless ones, that Heav'n
+Wafts on swift wing toward them, while I speak,
+Their mouths were op'd for howling: they shall taste
+Of Borrow (unless foresight cheat me here)
+Or ere the cheek of him be cloth'd with down
+Who is now rock'd with lullaby asleep.
+Ah! now, my brother, hide thyself no more,
+Thou seest how not I alone but all
+Gaze, where thou veil'st the intercepted sun."
+ Whence I replied: "If thou recall to mind
+What we were once together, even yet
+Remembrance of those days may grieve thee sore.
+That I forsook that life, was due to him
+Who there precedes me, some few evenings past,
+When she was round, who shines with sister lamp
+To his, that glisters yonder," and I show'd
+The sun. "Tis he, who through profoundest night
+Of he true dead has brought me, with this flesh
+As true, that follows. From that gloom the aid
+Of his sure comfort drew me on to climb,
+And climbing wind along this mountain-steep,
+Which rectifies in you whate'er the world
+Made crooked and deprav'd I have his word,
+That he will bear me company as far
+As till I come where Beatrice dwells:
+But there must leave me. Virgil is that spirit,
+Who thus hath promis'd," and I pointed to him;
+"The other is that shade, for whom so late
+Your realm, as he arose, exulting shook
+Through every pendent cliff and rocky bound."
+
+
+
+CANTO XXIV
+
+Our journey was not slacken'd by our talk,
+Nor yet our talk by journeying. Still we spake,
+And urg'd our travel stoutly, like a ship
+When the wind sits astern. The shadowy forms,
+That seem'd things dead and dead again, drew in
+At their deep-delved orbs rare wonder of me,
+Perceiving I had life; and I my words
+Continued, and thus spake; "He journeys up
+Perhaps more tardily then else he would,
+For others' sake. But tell me, if thou know'st,
+Where is Piccarda? Tell me, if I see
+Any of mark, among this multitude,
+Who eye me thus."--"My sister (she for whom,
+'Twixt beautiful and good I cannot say
+Which name was fitter ) wears e'en now her crown,
+And triumphs in Olympus." Saying this,
+He added: "Since spare diet hath so worn
+Our semblance out, 't is lawful here to name
+Each one . This," and his finger then he rais'd,
+"Is Buonaggiuna,--Buonaggiuna, he
+Of Lucca: and that face beyond him, pierc'd
+Unto a leaner fineness than the rest,
+Had keeping of the church: he was of Tours,
+And purges by wan abstinence away
+Bolsena's eels and cups of muscadel."
+ He show'd me many others, one by one,
+And all, as they were nam'd, seem'd well content;
+For no dark gesture I discern'd in any.
+I saw through hunger Ubaldino grind
+His teeth on emptiness; and Boniface,
+That wav'd the crozier o'er a num'rous flock.
+I saw the Marquis, who tad time erewhile
+To swill at Forli with less drought, yet so
+Was one ne'er sated. I howe'er, like him,
+That gazing 'midst a crowd, singles out one,
+So singled him of Lucca; for methought
+Was none amongst them took such note of me.
+Somewhat I heard him whisper of Gentucca:
+The sound was indistinct, and murmur'd there,
+Where justice, that so strips them, fix'd her sting.
+ "Spirit!" said I, "it seems as thou wouldst fain
+Speak with me. Let me hear thee. Mutual wish
+To converse prompts, which let us both indulge."
+ He, answ'ring, straight began: "Woman is born,
+Whose brow no wimple shades yet, that shall make
+My city please thee, blame it as they may.
+Go then with this forewarning. If aught false
+My whisper too implied, th' event shall tell
+But say, if of a truth I see the man
+Of that new lay th' inventor, which begins
+With 'Ladies, ye that con the lore of love'."
+ To whom I thus: "Count of me but as one
+Who am the scribe of love; that, when he breathes,
+Take up my pen, and, as he dictates, write."
+ "Brother!" said he, "the hind'rance which once held
+The notary with Guittone and myself,
+Short of that new and sweeter style I hear,
+Is now disclos'd. I see how ye your plumes
+Stretch, as th' inditer guides them; which, no question,
+Ours did not. He that seeks a grace beyond,
+Sees not the distance parts one style from other."
+And, as contented, here he held his peace.
+ Like as the bird, that winter near the Nile,
+In squared regiment direct their course,
+Then stretch themselves in file for speedier flight;
+Thus all the tribe of spirits, as they turn'd
+Their visage, faster deaf, nimble alike
+Through leanness and desire. And as a man,
+Tir'd With the motion of a trotting steed,
+Slacks pace, and stays behind his company,
+Till his o'erbreathed lungs keep temperate time;
+E'en so Forese let that holy crew
+Proceed, behind them lingering at my side,
+And saying: "When shall I again behold thee?"
+ "How long my life may last," said I, "I know not;
+This know, how soon soever I return,
+My wishes will before me have arriv'd.
+Sithence the place, where I am set to live,
+Is, day by day, more scoop'd of all its good,
+And dismal ruin seems to threaten it."
+ "Go now," he cried: "lo! he, whose guilt is most,
+Passes before my vision, dragg'd at heels
+Of an infuriate beast. Toward the vale,
+Where guilt hath no redemption, on it speeds,
+Each step increasing swiftness on the last;
+Until a blow it strikes, that leaveth him
+A corse most vilely shatter'd. No long space
+Those wheels have yet to roll" (therewith his eyes
+Look'd up to heav'n) "ere thou shalt plainly see
+That which my words may not more plainly tell.
+I quit thee: time is precious here: I lose
+Too much, thus measuring my pace with shine."
+ As from a troop of well-rank'd chivalry
+One knight, more enterprising than the rest,
+Pricks forth at gallop, eager to display
+His prowess in the first encounter prov'd
+So parted he from us with lengthen'd strides,
+And left me on the way with those twain spirits,
+Who were such mighty marshals of the world.
+ When he beyond us had so fled mine eyes
+No nearer reach'd him, than my thought his words,
+The branches of another fruit, thick hung,
+And blooming fresh, appear'd. E'en as our steps
+Turn'd thither, not far off it rose to view.
+Beneath it were a multitude, that rais'd
+Their hands, and shouted forth I know not What
+Unto the boughs; like greedy and fond brats,
+That beg, and answer none obtain from him,
+Of whom they beg; but more to draw them on,
+He at arm's length the object of their wish
+Above them holds aloft, and hides it not.
+ At length, as undeceiv'd they went their way:
+And we approach the tree, who vows and tears
+Sue to in vain, the mighty tree. "Pass on,
+And come not near. Stands higher up the wood,
+Whereof Eve tasted, and from it was ta'en
+'this plant." Such sounds from midst the thickets came.
+Whence I, with either bard, close to the side
+That rose, pass'd forth beyond. "Remember," next
+We heard, "those noblest creatures of the clouds,
+How they their twofold bosoms overgorg'd
+Oppos'd in fight to Theseus: call to mind
+The Hebrews, how effeminate they stoop'd
+To ease their thirst; whence Gideon's ranks were thinn'd,
+As he to Midian march'd adown the hills."
+ Thus near one border coasting, still we heard
+The sins of gluttony, with woe erewhile
+Reguerdon'd. Then along the lonely path,
+Once more at large, full thousand paces on
+We travel'd, each contemplative and mute.
+ "Why pensive journey thus ye three alone?"
+Thus suddenly a voice exclaim'd: whereat
+I shook, as doth a scar'd and paltry beast;
+Then rais'd my head to look from whence it came.
+ Was ne'er, in furnace, glass, or metal seen
+So bright and glowing red, as was the shape
+I now beheld. "If ye desire to mount,"
+He cried, "here must ye turn. This way he goes,
+Who goes in quest of peace." His countenance
+Had dazzled me; and to my guides I fac'd
+Backward, like one who walks, as sound directs.
+ As when, to harbinger the dawn, springs up
+On freshen'd wing the air of May, and breathes
+Of fragrance, all impregn'd with herb and flowers,
+E'en such a wind I felt upon my front
+Blow gently, and the moving of a wing
+Perceiv'd, that moving shed ambrosial smell;
+And then a voice: "Blessed are they, whom grace
+Doth so illume, that appetite in them
+Exhaleth no inordinate desire,
+Still hung'ring as the rule of temperance wills."
+
+
+
+CANTO XXV
+
+It was an hour, when he who climbs, had need
+To walk uncrippled: for the sun had now
+To Taurus the meridian circle left,
+And to the Scorpion left the night. As one
+That makes no pause, but presses on his road,
+Whate'er betide him, if some urgent need
+Impel: so enter'd we upon our way,
+One before other; for, but singly, none
+That steep and narrow scale admits to climb.
+ E'en as the young stork lifteth up his wing
+Through wish to fly, yet ventures not to quit
+The nest, and drops it; so in me desire
+Of questioning my guide arose, and fell,
+Arriving even to the act, that marks
+A man prepar'd for speech. Him all our haste
+Restrain'd not, but thus spake the sire belov'd:
+Fear not to speed the shaft, that on thy lip
+Stands trembling for its flight." Encourag'd thus
+I straight began: "How there can leanness come,
+Where is no want of nourishment to feed?"
+ "If thou," he answer'd, "hadst remember'd thee,
+How Meleager with the wasting brand
+Wasted alike, by equal fires consm'd,
+This would not trouble thee: and hadst thou thought,
+How in the mirror your reflected form
+With mimic motion vibrates, what now seems
+Hard, had appear'd no harder than the pulp
+Of summer fruit mature. But that thy will
+In certainty may find its full repose,
+Lo Statius here! on him I call, and pray
+That he would now be healer of thy wound."
+ "If in thy presence I unfold to him
+The secrets of heaven's vengeance, let me plead
+Thine own injunction, to exculpate me."
+So Statius answer'd, and forthwith began:
+"Attend my words, O son, and in thy mind
+Receive them: so shall they be light to clear
+The doubt thou offer'st. Blood, concocted well,
+Which by the thirsty veins is ne'er imbib'd,
+And rests as food superfluous, to be ta'en
+From the replenish'd table, in the heart
+Derives effectual virtue, that informs
+The several human limbs, as being that,
+Which passes through the veins itself to make them.
+Yet more concocted it descends, where shame
+Forbids to mention: and from thence distils
+In natural vessel on another's blood.
+Then each unite together, one dispos'd
+T' endure, to act the other, through meet frame
+Of its recipient mould: that being reach'd,
+It 'gins to work, coagulating first;
+Then vivifies what its own substance caus'd
+To bear. With animation now indued,
+The active virtue (differing from a plant
+No further, than that this is on the way
+And at its limit that) continues yet
+To operate, that now it moves, and feels,
+As sea sponge clinging to the rock: and there
+Assumes th' organic powers its seed convey'd.
+'This is the period, son! at which the virtue,
+That from the generating heart proceeds,
+Is pliant and expansive; for each limb
+Is in the heart by forgeful nature plann'd.
+How babe of animal becomes, remains
+For thy consid'ring. At this point, more wise,
+Than thou hast err'd, making the soul disjoin'd
+From passive intellect, because he saw
+No organ for the latter's use assign'd.
+ "Open thy bosom to the truth that comes.
+Know soon as in the embryo, to the brain,
+Articulation is complete, then turns
+The primal Mover with a smile of joy
+On such great work of nature, and imbreathes
+New spirit replete with virtue, that what here
+Active it finds, to its own substance draws,
+And forms an individual soul, that lives,
+And feels, and bends reflective on itself.
+And that thou less mayst marvel at the word,
+Mark the sun's heat, how that to wine doth change,
+Mix'd with the moisture filter'd through the vine.
+ "When Lachesis hath spun the thread, the soul
+Takes with her both the human and divine,
+Memory, intelligence, and will, in act
+Far keener than before, the other powers
+Inactive all and mute. No pause allow'd,
+In wond'rous sort self-moving, to one strand
+Of those, where the departed roam, she falls,
+Here learns her destin'd path. Soon as the place
+Receives her, round the plastic virtue beams,
+Distinct as in the living limbs before:
+And as the air, when saturate with showers,
+The casual beam refracting, decks itself
+With many a hue; so here the ambient air
+Weareth that form, which influence of the soul
+Imprints on it; and like the flame, that where
+The fire moves, thither follows, so henceforth
+The new form on the spirit follows still:
+Hence hath it semblance, and is shadow call'd,
+With each sense even to the sight endued:
+Hence speech is ours, hence laughter, tears, and sighs
+Which thou mayst oft have witness'd on the mount
+Th' obedient shadow fails not to present
+Whatever varying passion moves within us.
+And this the cause of what thou marvel'st at."
+ Now the last flexure of our way we reach'd,
+And to the right hand turning, other care
+Awaits us. Here the rocky precipice
+Hurls forth redundant flames, and from the rim
+A blast upblown, with forcible rebuff
+Driveth them back, sequester'd from its bound.
+ Behoov'd us, one by one, along the side,
+That border'd on the void, to pass; and I
+Fear'd on one hand the fire, on th' other fear'd
+Headlong to fall: when thus th' instructor warn'd:
+"Strict rein must in this place direct the eyes.
+A little swerving and the way is lost."
+ Then from the bosom of the burning mass,
+"O God of mercy!" heard I sung; and felt
+No less desire to turn. And when I saw
+Spirits along the flame proceeding, I
+Between their footsteps and mine own was fain
+To share by turns my view. At the hymn's close
+They shouted loud, "I do not know a man;"
+Then in low voice again took up the strain,
+Which once more ended, "To the wood," they cried,
+"Ran Dian, and drave forth Callisto, stung
+With Cytherea's poison:" then return'd
+Unto their song; then marry a pair extoll'd,
+Who liv'd in virtue chastely, and the bands
+Of wedded love. Nor from that task, I ween,
+Surcease they; whilesoe'er the scorching fire
+Enclasps them. Of such skill appliance needs
+To medicine the wound, that healeth last.
+
+
+
+CANTO XXVI
+
+While singly thus along the rim we walk'd,
+Oft the good master warn'd me: "Look thou well.
+Avail it that I caution thee." The sun
+Now all the western clime irradiate chang'd
+From azure tinct to white; and, as I pass'd,
+My passing shadow made the umber'd flame
+Burn ruddier. At so strange a sight I mark'd
+That many a spirit marvel'd on his way.
+ This bred occasion first to speak of me,
+"He seems," said they, "no insubstantial frame:"
+Then to obtain what certainty they might,
+Stretch'd towards me, careful not to overpass
+The burning pale. "O thou, who followest
+The others, haply not more slow than they,
+But mov'd by rev'rence, answer me, who burn
+In thirst and fire: nor I alone, but these
+All for thine answer do more thirst, than doth
+Indian or Aethiop for the cooling stream.
+Tell us, how is it that thou mak'st thyself
+A wall against the sun, as thou not yet
+Into th' inextricable toils of death
+Hadst enter'd?" Thus spake one, and I had straight
+Declar'd me, if attention had not turn'd
+To new appearance. Meeting these, there came,
+Midway the burning path, a crowd, on whom
+Earnestly gazing, from each part I view
+The shadows all press forward, sev'rally
+Each snatch a hasty kiss, and then away.
+E'en so the emmets, 'mid their dusky troops,
+Peer closely one at other, to spy out
+Their mutual road perchance, and how they thrive.
+ That friendly greeting parted, ere dispatch
+Of the first onward step, from either tribe
+Loud clamour rises: those, who newly come,
+Shout Sodom and Gomorrah!" these, "The cow
+Pasiphae enter'd, that the beast she woo'd
+Might rush unto her luxury." Then as cranes,
+That part towards the Riphaean mountains fly,
+Part towards the Lybic sands, these to avoid
+The ice, and those the sun; so hasteth off
+One crowd, advances th' other; and resume
+Their first song weeping, and their several shout.
+ Again drew near my side the very same,
+Who had erewhile besought me, and their looks
+Mark'd eagerness to listen. I, who twice
+Their will had noted, spake: "O spirits secure,
+Whene'er the time may be, of peaceful end!
+My limbs, nor crude, nor in mature old age,
+Have I left yonder: here they bear me, fed
+With blood, and sinew-strung. That I no more
+May live in blindness, hence I tend aloft.
+There is a dame on high, who wind for us
+This grace, by which my mortal through your realm
+I bear. But may your utmost wish soon meet
+Such full fruition, that the orb of heaven,
+Fullest of love, and of most ample space,
+Receive you, as ye tell (upon my page
+Henceforth to stand recorded) who ye are,
+And what this multitude, that at your backs
+Have past behind us." As one, mountain-bred,
+Rugged and clownish, if some city's walls
+He chance to enter, round him stares agape,
+Confounded and struck dumb; e'en such appear'd
+Each spirit. But when rid of that amaze,
+(Not long the inmate of a noble heart)
+He, who before had question'd, thus resum'd:
+"O blessed, who, for death preparing, tak'st
+Experience of our limits, in thy bark!
+Their crime, who not with us proceed, was that,
+For which, as he did triumph, Caesar heard
+The snout of 'queen,' to taunt him. Hence their cry
+Of 'Sodom,' as they parted, to rebuke
+Themselves, and aid the burning by their shame.
+Our sinning was Hermaphrodite: but we,
+Because the law of human kind we broke,
+Following like beasts our vile concupiscence,
+Hence parting from them, to our own disgrace
+Record the name of her, by whom the beast
+In bestial tire was acted. Now our deeds
+Thou know'st, and how we sinn'd. If thou by name
+Wouldst haply know us, time permits not now
+To tell so much, nor can I. Of myself
+Learn what thou wishest. Guinicelli I,
+Who having truly sorrow'd ere my last,
+Already cleanse me." With such pious joy,
+As the two sons upon their mother gaz'd
+From sad Lycurgus rescu'd, such my joy
+(Save that I more represt it) when I heard
+From his own lips the name of him pronounc'd,
+Who was a father to me, and to those
+My betters, who have ever us'd the sweet
+And pleasant rhymes of love. So nought I heard
+Nor spake, but long time thoughtfully I went,
+Gazing on him; and, only for the fire,
+Approach'd not nearer. When my eyes were fed
+By looking on him, with such solemn pledge,
+As forces credence, I devoted me
+Unto his service wholly. In reply
+He thus bespake me: "What from thee I hear
+Is grav'd so deeply on my mind, the waves
+Of Lethe shall not wash it off, nor make
+A whit less lively. But as now thy oath
+Has seal'd the truth, declare what cause impels
+That love, which both thy looks and speech bewray."
+ "Those dulcet lays," I answer'd, "which, as long
+As of our tongue the beauty does not fade,
+Shall make us love the very ink that trac'd them."
+ "Brother!" he cried, and pointed at a shade
+Before him, "there is one, whose mother speech
+Doth owe to him a fairer ornament.
+He in love ditties and the tales of prose
+Without a rival stands, and lets the fools
+Talk on, who think the songster of Limoges
+O'ertops him. Rumour and the popular voice
+They look to more than truth, and so confirm
+Opinion, ere by art or reason taught.
+Thus many of the elder time cried up
+Guittone, giving him the prize, till truth
+By strength of numbers vanquish'd. If thou own
+So ample privilege, as to have gain'd
+Free entrance to the cloister, whereof Christ
+Is Abbot of the college, say to him
+One paternoster for me, far as needs
+For dwellers in this world, where power to sin
+No longer tempts us." Haply to make way
+For one, that follow'd next, when that was said,
+He vanish'd through the fire, as through the wave
+A fish, that glances diving to the deep.
+ I, to the spirit he had shown me, drew
+A little onward, and besought his name,
+For which my heart, I said, kept gracious room.
+He frankly thus began: "Thy courtesy
+So wins on me, I have nor power nor will
+To hide me. I am Arnault; and with songs,
+Sorely lamenting for my folly past,
+Thorough this ford of fire I wade, and see
+The day, I hope for, smiling in my view.
+I pray ye by the worth that guides ye up
+Unto the summit of the scale, in time
+Remember ye my suff'rings." With such words
+He disappear'd in the refining flame.
+
+
+
+CANTO XXVII
+
+Now was the sun so station'd, as when first
+His early radiance quivers on the heights,
+Where stream'd his Maker's blood, while Libra hangs
+Above Hesperian Ebro, and new fires
+Meridian flash on Ganges' yellow tide.
+ So day was sinking, when the' angel of God
+Appear'd before us. Joy was in his mien.
+Forth of the flame he stood upon the brink,
+And with a voice, whose lively clearness far
+Surpass'd our human, "Blessed are the pure
+In heart," he Sang: then near him as we came,
+"Go ye not further, holy spirits!" he cried,
+"Ere the fire pierce you: enter in; and list
+Attentive to the song ye hear from thence."
+ I, when I heard his saying, was as one
+Laid in the grave. My hands together clasp'd,
+And upward stretching, on the fire I look'd,
+And busy fancy conjur'd up the forms
+Erewhile beheld alive consum'd in flames.
+ Th' escorting spirits turn'd with gentle looks
+Toward me, and the Mantuan spake: "My son,
+Here torment thou mayst feel, but canst not death.
+Remember thee, remember thee, if I
+Safe e'en on Geryon brought thee: now I come
+More near to God, wilt thou not trust me now?
+Of this be sure: though in its womb that flame
+A thousand years contain'd thee, from thy head
+No hair should perish. If thou doubt my truth,
+Approach, and with thy hands thy vesture's hem
+Stretch forth, and for thyself confirm belief.
+Lay now all fear, O lay all fear aside.
+Turn hither, and come onward undismay'd."
+I still, though conscience urg'd' no step advanc'd.
+ When still he saw me fix'd and obstinate,
+Somewhat disturb'd he cried: "Mark now, my son,
+From Beatrice thou art by this wall
+Divided." As at Thisbe's name the eye
+Of Pyramus was open'd (when life ebb'd
+Fast from his veins), and took one parting glance,
+While vermeil dyed the mulberry; thus I turn'd
+To my sage guide, relenting, when I heard
+The name, that springs forever in my breast.
+ He shook his forehead; and, "How long," he said,
+"Linger we now?" then smil'd, as one would smile
+Upon a child, that eyes the fruit and yields.
+Into the fire before me then he walk'd;
+And Statius, who erewhile no little space
+Had parted us, he pray'd to come behind.
+ I would have cast me into molten glass
+To cool me, when I enter'd; so intense
+Rag'd the conflagrant mass. The sire belov'd,
+To comfort me, as he proceeded, still
+Of Beatrice talk'd. "Her eyes," saith he,
+"E'en now I seem to view." From the other side
+A voice, that sang, did guide us, and the voice
+Following, with heedful ear, we issued forth,
+There where the path led upward. "Come," we heard,
+"Come, blessed of my Father." Such the sounds,
+That hail'd us from within a light, which shone
+So radiant, I could not endure the view.
+"The sun," it added, "hastes: and evening comes.
+Delay not: ere the western sky is hung
+With blackness, strive ye for the pass." Our way
+Upright within the rock arose, and fac'd
+Such part of heav'n, that from before my steps
+The beams were shrouded of the sinking sun.
+ Nor many stairs were overpass, when now
+By fading of the shadow we perceiv'd
+The sun behind us couch'd: and ere one face
+Of darkness o'er its measureless expanse
+Involv'd th' horizon, and the night her lot
+Held individual, each of us had made
+A stair his pallet: not that will, but power,
+Had fail'd us, by the nature of that mount
+Forbidden further travel. As the goats,
+That late have skipp'd and wanton'd rapidly
+Upon the craggy cliffs, ere they had ta'en
+Their supper on the herb, now silent lie
+And ruminate beneath the umbrage brown,
+While noonday rages; and the goatherd leans
+Upon his staff, and leaning watches them:
+And as the swain, that lodges out all night
+In quiet by his flock, lest beast of prey
+Disperse them; even so all three abode,
+I as a goat and as the shepherds they,
+Close pent on either side by shelving rock.
+ A little glimpse of sky was seen above;
+Yet by that little I beheld the stars
+In magnitude and rustle shining forth
+With more than wonted glory. As I lay,
+Gazing on them, and in that fit of musing,
+Sleep overcame me, sleep, that bringeth oft
+Tidings of future hap. About the hour,
+As I believe, when Venus from the east
+First lighten'd on the mountain, she whose orb
+Seems always glowing with the fire of love,
+A lady young and beautiful, I dream'd,
+Was passing o'er a lea; and, as she came,
+Methought I saw her ever and anon
+Bending to cull the flowers; and thus she sang:
+"Know ye, whoever of my name would ask,
+That I am Leah: for my brow to weave
+A garland, these fair hands unwearied ply.
+To please me at the crystal mirror, here
+I deck me. But my sister Rachel, she
+Before her glass abides the livelong day,
+Her radiant eyes beholding, charm'd no less,
+Than I with this delightful task. Her joy
+In contemplation, as in labour mine."
+ And now as glimm'ring dawn appear'd, that breaks
+More welcome to the pilgrim still, as he
+Sojourns less distant on his homeward way,
+Darkness from all sides fled, and with it fled
+My slumber; whence I rose and saw my guide
+Already risen. "That delicious fruit,
+Which through so many a branch the zealous care
+Of mortals roams in quest of, shall this day
+Appease thy hunger." Such the words I heard
+From Virgil's lip; and never greeting heard
+So pleasant as the sounds. Within me straight
+Desire so grew upon desire to mount,
+Thenceforward at each step I felt the wings
+Increasing for my flight. When we had run
+O'er all the ladder to its topmost round,
+As there we stood, on me the Mantuan fix'd
+His eyes, and thus he spake: "Both fires, my son,
+The temporal and eternal, thou hast seen,
+And art arriv'd, where of itself my ken
+No further reaches. I with skill and art
+Thus far have drawn thee. Now thy pleasure take
+For guide. Thou hast o'ercome the steeper way,
+O'ercome the straighter. Lo! the sun, that darts
+His beam upon thy forehead! lo! the herb,
+The arboreta and flowers, which of itself
+This land pours forth profuse! Till those bright eyes
+With gladness come, which, weeping, made me haste
+To succour thee, thou mayst or seat thee down,
+Or wander where thou wilt. Expect no more
+Sanction of warning voice or sign from me,
+Free of thy own arbitrement to choose,
+Discreet, judicious. To distrust thy sense
+Were henceforth error. I invest thee then
+With crown and mitre, sovereign o'er thyself."
+
+
+
+CANTO XXVIII
+
+Through that celestial forest, whose thick shade
+With lively greenness the new-springing day
+Attemper'd, eager now to roam, and search
+Its limits round, forthwith I left the bank,
+Along the champain leisurely my way
+Pursuing, o'er the ground, that on all sides
+Delicious odour breath'd. A pleasant air,
+That intermitted never, never veer'd,
+Smote on my temples, gently, as a wind
+Of softest influence: at which the sprays,
+Obedient all, lean'd trembling to that part
+Where first the holy mountain casts his shade,
+Yet were not so disorder'd, but that still
+Upon their top the feather'd quiristers
+Applied their wonted art, and with full joy
+Welcom'd those hours of prime, and warbled shrill
+Amid the leaves, that to their jocund lays
+inept tenor; even as from branch to branch,
+Along the piney forests on the shore
+Of Chiassi, rolls the gath'ring melody,
+When Eolus hath from his cavern loos'd
+The dripping south. Already had my steps,
+Though slow, so far into that ancient wood
+Transported me, I could not ken the place
+Where I had enter'd, when behold! my path
+Was bounded by a rill, which to the left
+With little rippling waters bent the grass,
+That issued from its brink. On earth no wave
+How clean soe'er, that would not seem to have
+Some mixture in itself, compar'd with this,
+Transpicuous, clear; yet darkly on it roll'd,
+Darkly beneath perpetual gloom, which ne'er
+Admits or sun or moon light there to shine.
+ My feet advanc'd not; but my wond'ring eyes
+Pass'd onward, o'er the streamlet, to survey
+The tender May-bloom, flush'd through many a hue,
+In prodigal variety: and there,
+As object, rising suddenly to view,
+That from our bosom every thought beside
+With the rare marvel chases, I beheld
+A lady all alone, who, singing, went,
+And culling flower from flower, wherewith her way
+Was all o'er painted. "Lady beautiful!
+Thou, who (if looks, that use to speak the heart,
+Are worthy of our trust), with love's own beam
+Dost warm thee," thus to her my speech I fram'd:
+"Ah! please thee hither towards the streamlet bend
+Thy steps so near, that I may list thy song.
+Beholding thee and this fair place, methinks,
+I call to mind where wander'd and how look'd
+Proserpine, in that season, when her child
+The mother lost, and she the bloomy spring."
+ As when a lady, turning in the dance,
+Doth foot it featly, and advances scarce
+One step before the other to the ground;
+Over the yellow and vermilion flowers
+Thus turn'd she at my suit, most maiden-like,
+Valing her sober eyes, and came so near,
+That I distinctly caught the dulcet sound.
+Arriving where the limped waters now
+Lav'd the green sward, her eyes she deign'd to raise,
+That shot such splendour on me, as I ween
+Ne'er glanced from Cytherea's, when her son
+Had sped his keenest weapon to her heart.
+Upon the opposite bank she stood and smil'd
+through her graceful fingers shifted still
+The intermingling dyes, which without seed
+That lofty land unbosoms. By the stream
+Three paces only were we sunder'd: yet
+The Hellespont, where Xerxes pass'd it o'er,
+(A curb for ever to the pride of man)
+Was by Leander not more hateful held
+For floating, with inhospitable wave
+'Twixt Sestus and Abydos, than by me
+That flood, because it gave no passage thence.
+ "Strangers ye come, and haply in this place,
+That cradled human nature in its birth,
+Wond'ring, ye not without suspicion view
+My smiles: but that sweet strain of psalmody,
+'Thou, Lord! hast made me glad,' will give ye light,
+Which may uncloud your minds. And thou, who stand'st
+The foremost, and didst make thy suit to me,
+Say if aught else thou wish to hear: for I
+Came prompt to answer every doubt of thine."
+ She spake; and I replied: "l know not how
+To reconcile this wave and rustling sound
+Of forest leaves, with what I late have heard
+Of opposite report." She answering thus:
+"I will unfold the cause, whence that proceeds,
+Which makes thee wonder; and so purge the cloud
+That hath enwraps thee. The First Good, whose joy
+Is only in himself, created man
+For happiness, and gave this goodly place,
+His pledge and earnest of eternal peace.
+Favour'd thus highly, through his own defect
+He fell, and here made short sojourn; he fell,
+And, for the bitterness of sorrow, chang'd
+Laughter unblam'd and ever-new delight.
+That vapours none, exhal'd from earth beneath,
+Or from the waters (which, wherever heat
+Attracts them, follow), might ascend thus far
+To vex man's peaceful state, this mountain rose
+So high toward the heav'n, nor fears the rage
+0f elements contending, from that part
+Exempted, where the gate his limit bars.
+Because the circumambient air throughout
+With its first impulse circles still, unless
+Aught interpose to cheek or thwart its course;
+Upon the summit, which on every side
+To visitation of th' impassive air
+Is open, doth that motion strike, and makes
+Beneath its sway th' umbrageous wood resound:
+And in the shaken plant such power resides,
+That it impregnates with its efficacy
+The voyaging breeze, upon whose subtle plume
+That wafted flies abroad; and th' other land
+Receiving (as 't is worthy in itself,
+Or in the clime, that warms it), doth conceive,
+And from its womb produces many a tree
+Of various virtue. This when thou hast heard,
+The marvel ceases, if in yonder earth
+Some plant without apparent seed be found
+To fix its fibrous stem. And further learn,
+That with prolific foison of all seeds,
+This holy plain is fill'd, and in itself
+Bears fruit that ne'er was pluck'd on other soil.
+ "The water, thou behold'st, springs not from vein,
+As stream, that intermittently repairs
+And spends his pulse of life, but issues forth
+From fountain, solid, undecaying, sure;
+And by the will omnific, full supply
+Feeds whatsoe'er On either side it pours;
+On this devolv'd with power to take away
+Remembrance of offence, on that to bring
+Remembrance back of every good deed done.
+From whence its name of Lethe on this part;
+On th' other Eunoe: both of which must first
+Be tasted ere it work; the last exceeding
+All flavours else. Albeit thy thirst may now
+Be well contented, if I here break off,
+No more revealing: yet a corollary
+I freely give beside: nor deem my words
+Less grateful to thee, if they somewhat pass
+The stretch of promise. They, whose verse of yore
+The golden age recorded and its bliss,
+On the Parnassian mountain, of this place
+Perhaps had dream'd. Here was man guiltless, here
+Perpetual spring and every fruit, and this
+The far-fam'd nectar." Turning to the bards,
+When she had ceas'd, I noted in their looks
+A smile at her conclusion; then my face
+Again directed to the lovely dame.
+
+
+
+CANTO XXIX
+
+Singing, as if enamour'd, she resum'd
+And clos'd the song, with "Blessed they whose sins
+Are cover'd." Like the wood-nymphs then, that tripp'd
+Singly across the sylvan shadows, one
+Eager to view and one to 'scape the sun,
+So mov'd she on, against the current, up
+The verdant rivage. I, her mincing step
+Observing, with as tardy step pursued.
+ Between us not an hundred paces trod,
+The bank, on each side bending equally,
+Gave me to face the orient. Nor our way
+Far onward brought us, when to me at once
+She turn'd, and cried: "My brother! look and hearken."
+And lo! a sudden lustre ran across
+Through the great forest on all parts, so bright
+I doubted whether lightning were abroad;
+But that expiring ever in the spleen,
+That doth unfold it, and this during still
+And waxing still in splendor, made me question
+What it might be: and a sweet melody
+Ran through the luminous air. Then did I chide
+With warrantable zeal the hardihood
+Of our first parent, for that there were earth
+Stood in obedience to the heav'ns, she only,
+Woman, the creature of an hour, endur'd not
+Restraint of any veil: which had she borne
+Devoutly, joys, ineffable as these,
+Had from the first, and long time since, been mine.
+ While through that wilderness of primy sweets
+That never fade, suspense I walk'd, and yet
+Expectant of beatitude more high,
+Before us, like a blazing fire, the air
+Under the green boughs glow'd; and, for a song,
+Distinct the sound of melody was heard.
+ O ye thrice holy virgins! for your sakes
+If e'er I suffer'd hunger, cold and watching,
+Occasion calls on me to crave your bounty.
+Now through my breast let Helicon his stream
+Pour copious; and Urania with her choir
+Arise to aid me: while the verse unfolds
+Things that do almost mock the grasp of thought.
+ Onward a space, what seem'd seven trees of gold,
+The intervening distance to mine eye
+Falsely presented; but when I was come
+So near them, that no lineament was lost
+Of those, with which a doubtful object, seen
+Remotely, plays on the misdeeming sense,
+Then did the faculty, that ministers
+Discourse to reason, these for tapers of gold
+Distinguish, and it th' singing trace the sound
+"Hosanna." Above, their beauteous garniture
+Flam'd with more ample lustre, than the moon
+Through cloudless sky at midnight in her full.
+ I turn'd me full of wonder to my guide;
+And he did answer with a countenance
+Charg'd with no less amazement: whence my view
+Reverted to those lofty things, which came
+So slowly moving towards us, that the bride
+Would have outstript them on her bridal day.
+ The lady called aloud: "Why thus yet burns
+Affection in thee for these living, lights,
+And dost not look on that which follows them?"
+ I straightway mark'd a tribe behind them walk,
+As if attendant on their leaders, cloth'd
+With raiment of such whiteness, as on earth
+Was never. On my left, the wat'ry gleam
+Borrow'd, and gave me back, when there I look'd.
+As in a mirror, my left side portray'd.
+ When I had chosen on the river's edge
+Such station, that the distance of the stream
+Alone did separate me; there I stay'd
+My steps for clearer prospect, and beheld
+The flames go onward, leaving, as they went,
+The air behind them painted as with trail
+Of liveliest pencils! so distinct were mark'd
+All those sev'n listed colours, whence the sun
+Maketh his bow, and Cynthia her zone.
+These streaming gonfalons did flow beyond
+My vision; and ten paces, as I guess,
+Parted the outermost. Beneath a sky
+So beautiful, came foul and-twenty elders,
+By two and two, with flower-de-luces crown'd.
+All sang one song: "Blessed be thou among
+The daughters of Adam! and thy loveliness
+Blessed for ever!" After that the flowers,
+And the fresh herblets, on the opposite brink,
+Were free from that elected race; as light
+In heav'n doth second light, came after them
+Four animals, each crown'd with verdurous leaf.
+With six wings each was plum'd, the plumage full
+Of eyes, and th' eyes of Argus would be such,
+Were they endued with life. Reader, more rhymes
+Will not waste in shadowing forth their form:
+For other need no straitens, that in this
+I may not give my bounty room. But read
+Ezekiel; for he paints them, from the north
+How he beheld them come by Chebar's flood,
+In whirlwind, cloud and fire; and even such
+As thou shalt find them character'd by him,
+Here were they; save as to the pennons; there,
+From him departing, John accords with me.
+ The space, surrounded by the four, enclos'd
+A car triumphal: on two wheels it came
+Drawn at a Gryphon's neck; and he above
+Stretch'd either wing uplifted, 'tween the midst
+And the three listed hues, on each side three;
+So that the wings did cleave or injure none;
+And out of sight they rose. The members, far
+As he was bird, were golden; white the rest
+With vermeil intervein'd. So beautiful
+A car in Rome ne'er grac'd Augustus pomp,
+Or Africanus': e'en the sun's itself
+Were poor to this, that chariot of the sun
+Erroneous, which in blazing ruin fell
+At Tellus' pray'r devout, by the just doom
+Mysterious of all-seeing Jove. Three nymphs
+,k the right wheel, came circling in smooth dance;
+The one so ruddy, that her form had scarce
+Been known within a furnace of clear flame:
+The next did look, as if the flesh and bones
+Were emerald: snow new-fallen seem'd the third.
+Now seem'd the white to lead, the ruddy now;
+And from her song who led, the others took
+Their treasure, swift or slow. At th' other wheel,
+A band quaternion, each in purple clad,
+Advanc'd with festal step, as of them one
+The rest conducted, one, upon whose front
+Three eyes were seen. In rear of all this group,
+Two old men I beheld, dissimilar
+In raiment, but in port and gesture like,
+Solid and mainly grave; of whom the one
+Did show himself some favour'd counsellor
+Of the great Coan, him, whom nature made
+To serve the costliest creature of her tribe.
+His fellow mark'd an opposite intent,
+Bearing a sword, whose glitterance and keen edge,
+E'en as I view'd it with the flood between,
+Appall'd me. Next four others I beheld,
+Of humble seeming: and, behind them all,
+One single old man, sleeping, as he came,
+With a shrewd visage. And these seven, each
+Like the first troop were habited, hut wore
+No braid of lilies on their temples wreath'd.
+Rather with roses and each vermeil flower,
+A sight, but little distant, might have sworn,
+That they were all on fire above their brow.
+ Whenas the car was o'er against me, straight.
+Was heard a thund'ring, at whose voice it seem'd
+The chosen multitude were stay'd; for there,
+With the first ensigns, made they solemn halt.
+
+
+
+CANTO XXX
+
+Soon as the polar light, which never knows
+Setting nor rising, nor the shadowy veil
+Of other cloud than sin, fair ornament
+Of the first heav'n, to duty each one there
+Safely convoying, as that lower doth
+The steersman to his port, stood firmly fix'd;
+Forthwith the saintly tribe, who in the van
+Between the Gryphon and its radiance came,
+Did turn them to the car, as to their rest:
+And one, as if commission'd from above,
+In holy chant thrice shorted forth aloud:
+"Come, spouse, from Libanus!" and all the rest
+Took up the song--At the last audit so
+The blest shall rise, from forth his cavern each
+Uplifting lightly his new-vested flesh,
+As, on the sacred litter, at the voice
+Authoritative of that elder, sprang
+A hundred ministers and messengers
+Of life eternal. "Blessed thou! who com'st!"
+And, "O," they cried, "from full hands scatter ye
+Unwith'ring lilies;" and, so saying, cast
+Flowers over head and round them on all sides.
+ I have beheld, ere now, at break of day,
+The eastern clime all roseate, and the sky
+Oppos'd, one deep and beautiful serene,
+And the sun's face so shaded, and with mists
+Attemper'd at lids rising, that the eye
+Long while endur'd the sight: thus in a cloud
+Of flowers, that from those hands angelic rose,
+And down, within and outside of the car,
+Fell showering, in white veil with olive wreath'd,
+A virgin in my view appear'd, beneath
+Green mantle, rob'd in hue of living flame:
+And o'er my Spirit, that in former days
+Within her presence had abode so long,
+No shudd'ring terror crept. Mine eyes no more
+Had knowledge of her; yet there mov'd from her
+A hidden virtue, at whose touch awak'd,
+The power of ancient love was strong within me.
+ No sooner on my vision streaming, smote
+The heav'nly influence, which years past, and e'en
+In childhood, thrill'd me, than towards Virgil I
+Turn'd me to leftward, panting, like a babe,
+That flees for refuge to his mother's breast,
+If aught have terrified or work'd him woe:
+And would have cried: "There is no dram of blood,
+That doth not quiver in me. The old flame
+Throws out clear tokens of reviving fire:"
+But Virgil had bereav'd us of himself,
+Virgil, my best-lov'd father; Virgil, he
+To whom I gave me up for safety: nor,
+All, our prime mother lost, avail'd to save
+My undew'd cheeks from blur of soiling tears.
+ "Dante, weep not, that Virgil leaves thee: nay,
+Weep thou not yet: behooves thee feel the edge
+Of other sword, and thou shalt weep for that."
+ As to the prow or stern, some admiral
+Paces the deck, inspiriting his crew,
+When 'mid the sail-yards all hands ply aloof;
+Thus on the left side of the car I saw,
+(Turning me at the sound of mine own name,
+Which here I am compell'd to register)
+The virgin station'd, who before appeared
+Veil'd in that festive shower angelical.
+ Towards me, across the stream, she bent her eyes;
+Though from her brow the veil descending, bound
+With foliage of Minerva, suffer'd not
+That I beheld her clearly; then with act
+Full royal, still insulting o'er her thrall,
+Added, as one, who speaking keepeth back
+The bitterest saying, to conclude the speech:
+"Observe me well. I am, in sooth, I am
+Beatrice. What! and hast thou deign'd at last
+Approach the mountain? knewest not, O man!
+Thy happiness is whole?" Down fell mine eyes
+On the clear fount, but there, myself espying,
+Recoil'd, and sought the greensward: such a weight
+Of shame was on my forehead. With a mien
+Of that stern majesty, which doth surround
+mother's presence to her awe-struck child,
+She look'd; a flavour of such bitterness
+Was mingled in her pity. There her words
+Brake off, and suddenly the angels sang:
+"In thee, O gracious Lord, my hope hath been:"
+But went no farther than, "Thou Lord, hast set
+My feet in ample room." As snow, that lies
+Amidst the living rafters on the back
+Of Italy congeal'd when drifted high
+And closely pil'd by rough Sclavonian blasts,
+Breathe but the land whereon no shadow falls,
+And straightway melting it distils away,
+Like a fire-wasted taper: thus was I,
+Without a sigh or tear, or ever these
+Did sing, that with the chiming of heav'n's sphere,
+Still in their warbling chime: but when the strain
+Of dulcet symphony, express'd for me
+Their soft compassion, more than could the words
+"Virgin, why so consum'st him?" then the ice,
+Congeal'd about my bosom, turn'd itself
+To spirit and water, and with anguish forth
+Gush'd through the lips and eyelids from the heart.
+ Upon the chariot's right edge still she stood,
+Immovable, and thus address'd her words
+To those bright semblances with pity touch'd:
+"Ye in th' eternal day your vigils keep,
+So that nor night nor slumber, with close stealth,
+Conveys from you a single step in all
+The goings on of life: thence with more heed
+I shape mine answer, for his ear intended,
+Who there stands weeping, that the sorrow now
+May equal the transgression. Not alone
+Through operation of the mighty orbs,
+That mark each seed to some predestin'd aim,
+As with aspect or fortunate or ill
+The constellations meet, but through benign
+Largess of heav'nly graces, which rain down
+From such a height, as mocks our vision, this man
+Was in the freshness of his being, such,
+So gifted virtually, that in him
+All better habits wond'rously had thriv'd.
+The more of kindly strength is in the soil,
+So much doth evil seed and lack of culture
+Mar it the more, and make it run to wildness.
+These looks sometime upheld him; for I show'd
+My youthful eyes, and led him by their light
+In upright walking. Soon as I had reach'd
+The threshold of my second age, and chang'd
+My mortal for immortal, then he left me,
+And gave himself to others. When from flesh
+To spirit I had risen, and increase
+Of beauty and of virtue circled me,
+I was less dear to him, and valued less.
+His steps were turn'd into deceitful ways,
+Following false images of good, that make
+No promise perfect. Nor avail'd me aught
+To sue for inspirations, with the which,
+I, both in dreams of night, and otherwise,
+Did call him back; of them so little reck'd him,
+Such depth he fell, that all device was short
+Of his preserving, save that he should view
+The children of perdition. To this end
+I visited the purlieus of the dead:
+And one, who hath conducted him thus high,
+Receiv'd my supplications urg'd with weeping.
+It were a breaking of God's high decree,
+If Lethe should be past, and such food tasted
+Without the cost of some repentant tear."
+
+
+
+CANTO XXXI
+
+"O Thou!" her words she thus without delay
+Resuming, turn'd their point on me, to whom
+They but with lateral edge seem'd harsh before,
+'Say thou, who stand'st beyond the holy stream,
+If this be true. A charge so grievous needs
+Thine own avowal." On my faculty
+Such strange amazement hung, the voice expir'd
+Imperfect, ere its organs gave it birth.
+ A little space refraining, then she spake:
+"What dost thou muse on? Answer me. The wave
+On thy remembrances of evil yet
+Hath done no injury." A mingled sense
+Of fear and of confusion, from my lips
+Did such a "Yea " produce, as needed help
+Of vision to interpret. As when breaks
+In act to be discharg'd, a cross-bow bent
+Beyond its pitch, both nerve and bow o'erstretch'd,
+The flagging weapon feebly hits the mark;
+Thus, tears and sighs forth gushing, did I burst
+Beneath the heavy load, and thus my voice
+Was slacken'd on its way. She straight began:
+"When my desire invited thee to love
+The good, which sets a bound to our aspirings,
+What bar of thwarting foss or linked chain
+Did meet thee, that thou so should'st quit the hope
+Of further progress, or what bait of ease
+Or promise of allurement led thee on
+Elsewhere, that thou elsewhere should'st rather wait?"
+ A bitter sigh I drew, then scarce found voice
+To answer, hardly to these sounds my lips
+Gave utterance, wailing: "Thy fair looks withdrawn,
+Things present, with deceitful pleasures, turn'd
+My steps aside." She answering spake: "Hadst thou
+Been silent, or denied what thou avow'st,
+Thou hadst not hid thy sin the more: such eye
+Observes it. But whene'er the sinner's cheek
+Breaks forth into the precious-streaming tears
+Of self-accusing, in our court the wheel
+Of justice doth run counter to the edge.
+Howe'er that thou may'st profit by thy shame
+For errors past, and that henceforth more strength
+May arm thee, when thou hear'st the Siren-voice,
+Lay thou aside the motive to this grief,
+And lend attentive ear, while I unfold
+How opposite a way my buried flesh
+Should have impell'd thee. Never didst thou spy
+In art or nature aught so passing sweet,
+As were the limbs, that in their beauteous frame
+Enclos'd me, and are scatter'd now in dust.
+If sweetest thing thus fail'd thee with my death,
+What, afterward, of mortal should thy wish
+Have tempted? When thou first hadst felt the dart
+Of perishable things, in my departing
+For better realms, thy wing thou should'st have prun'd
+To follow me, and never stoop'd again
+To 'bide a second blow for a slight girl,
+Or other gaud as transient and as vain.
+The new and inexperienc'd bird awaits,
+Twice it may be, or thrice, the fowler's aim;
+But in the sight of one, whose plumes are full,
+In vain the net is spread, the arrow wing'd."
+ I stood, as children silent and asham'd
+Stand, list'ning, with their eyes upon the earth,
+Acknowledging their fault and self-condemn'd.
+And she resum'd: "If, but to hear thus pains thee,
+Raise thou thy beard, and lo! what sight shall do!"
+ With less reluctance yields a sturdy holm,
+Rent from its fibers by a blast, that blows
+From off the pole, or from Iarbas' land,
+Than I at her behest my visage rais'd:
+And thus the face denoting by the beard,
+I mark'd the secret sting her words convey'd.
+ No sooner lifted I mine aspect up,
+Than downward sunk that vision I beheld
+Of goodly creatures vanish; and mine eyes
+Yet unassur'd and wavering, bent their light
+On Beatrice. Towards the animal,
+Who joins two natures in one form, she turn'd,
+And, even under shadow of her veil,
+And parted by the verdant rill, that flow'd
+Between, in loveliness appear'd as much
+Her former self surpassing, as on earth
+All others she surpass'd. Remorseful goads
+Shot sudden through me. Each thing else, the more
+Its love had late beguil'd me, now the more
+I Was loathsome. On my heart so keenly smote
+The bitter consciousness, that on the ground
+O'erpower'd I fell: and what my state was then,
+She knows who was the cause. When now my strength
+Flow'd back, returning outward from the heart,
+The lady, whom alone I first had seen,
+I found above me. "Loose me not," she cried:
+"Loose not thy hold;" and lo! had dragg'd me high
+As to my neck into the stream, while she,
+Still as she drew me after, swept along,
+Swift as a shuttle, bounding o'er the wave.
+ The blessed shore approaching then was heard
+So sweetly, "Tu asperges me," that I
+May not remember, much less tell the sound.
+The beauteous dame, her arms expanding, clasp'd
+My temples, and immerg'd me, where 't was fit
+The wave should drench me: and thence raising up,
+Within the fourfold dance of lovely nymphs
+Presented me so lav'd, and with their arm
+They each did cover me. "Here are we nymphs,
+And in the heav'n are stars. Or ever earth
+Was visited of Beatrice, we
+Appointed for her handmaids, tended on her.
+We to her eyes will lead thee; but the light
+Of gladness that is in them, well to scan,
+Those yonder three, of deeper ken than ours,
+Thy sight shall quicken." Thus began their song;
+And then they led me to the Gryphon's breast,
+While, turn'd toward us, Beatrice stood.
+"Spare not thy vision. We have stationed thee
+Before the emeralds, whence love erewhile
+Hath drawn his weapons on thee. "As they spake,
+A thousand fervent wishes riveted
+Mine eyes upon her beaming eyes, that stood
+Still fix'd toward the Gryphon motionless.
+As the sun strikes a mirror, even thus
+Within those orbs the twofold being, shone,
+For ever varying, in one figure now
+Reflected, now in other. Reader! muse
+How wond'rous in my sight it seem'd to mark
+A thing, albeit steadfast in itself,
+Yet in its imag'd semblance mutable.
+ Full of amaze, and joyous, while my soul
+Fed on the viand, whereof still desire
+Grows with satiety, the other three
+With gesture, that declar'd a loftier line,
+Advanc'd: to their own carol on they came
+Dancing in festive ring angelical.
+ "Turn, Beatrice!" was their song: "O turn
+Thy saintly sight on this thy faithful one,
+Who to behold thee many a wearisome pace
+Hath measur'd. Gracious at our pray'r vouchsafe
+Unveil to him thy cheeks: that he may mark
+Thy second beauty, now conceal'd." O splendour!
+O sacred light eternal! who is he
+So pale with musing in Pierian shades,
+Or with that fount so lavishly imbued,
+Whose spirit should not fail him in th' essay
+To represent thee such as thou didst seem,
+When under cope of the still-chiming heaven
+Thou gav'st to open air thy charms reveal'd.
+
+
+
+CANTO XXXII
+
+Mine eyes with such an eager coveting,
+Were bent to rid them of their ten years' thirst,
+No other sense was waking: and e'en they
+Were fenc'd on either side from heed of aught;
+So tangled in its custom'd toils that smile
+Of saintly brightness drew me to itself,
+When forcibly toward the left my sight
+The sacred virgins turn'd; for from their lips
+I heard the warning sounds: "Too fix'd a gaze!"
+ Awhile my vision labor'd; as when late
+Upon the' o'erstrained eyes the sun hath smote:
+But soon to lesser object, as the view
+Was now recover'd (lesser in respect
+To that excess of sensible, whence late
+I had perforce been sunder'd) on their right
+I mark'd that glorious army wheel, and turn,
+Against the sun and sev'nfold lights, their front.
+As when, their bucklers for protection rais'd,
+A well-rang'd troop, with portly banners curl'd,
+Wheel circling, ere the whole can change their ground:
+E'en thus the goodly regiment of heav'n
+Proceeding, all did pass us, ere the car
+Had slop'd his beam. Attendant at the wheels
+The damsels turn'd; and on the Gryphon mov'd
+The sacred burden, with a pace so smooth,
+No feather on him trembled. The fair dame
+Who through the wave had drawn me, companied
+By Statius and myself, pursued the wheel,
+Whose orbit, rolling, mark'd a lesser arch.
+ Through the high wood, now void (the more her blame,
+Who by the serpent was beguil'd) I past
+With step in cadence to the harmony
+Angelic. Onward had we mov'd, as far
+Perchance as arrow at three several flights
+Full wing'd had sped, when from her station down
+Descended Beatrice. With one voice
+All murmur'd "Adam," circling next a plant
+Despoil'd of flowers and leaf on every bough.
+Its tresses, spreading more as more they rose,
+Were such, as 'midst their forest wilds for height
+The Indians might have gaz'd at. "Blessed thou!
+Gryphon, whose beak hath never pluck'd that tree
+Pleasant to taste: for hence the appetite
+Was warp'd to evil." Round the stately trunk
+Thus shouted forth the rest, to whom return'd
+The animal twice-gender'd: "Yea: for so
+The generation of the just are sav'd."
+And turning to the chariot-pole, to foot
+He drew it of the widow'd branch, and bound
+There left unto the stock whereon it grew.
+ As when large floods of radiance from above
+Stream, with that radiance mingled, which ascends
+Next after setting of the scaly sign,
+Our plants then burgeon, and each wears anew
+His wonted colours, ere the sun have yok'd
+Beneath another star his flamy steeds;
+Thus putting forth a hue, more faint than rose,
+And deeper than the violet, was renew'd
+The plant, erewhile in all its branches bare.
+ Unearthly was the hymn, which then arose.
+I understood it not, nor to the end
+Endur'd the harmony. Had I the skill
+To pencil forth, how clos'd th' unpitying eyes
+Slumb'ring, when Syrinx warbled, (eyes that paid
+So dearly for their watching,) then like painter,
+That with a model paints, I might design
+The manner of my falling into sleep.
+But feign who will the slumber cunningly;
+I pass it by to when I wak'd, and tell
+How suddenly a flash of splendour rent
+The curtain of my sleep, and one cries out:
+"Arise, what dost thou?" As the chosen three,
+On Tabor's mount, admitted to behold
+The blossoming of that fair tree, whose fruit
+Is coveted of angels, and doth make
+Perpetual feast in heaven, to themselves
+Returning at the word, whence deeper sleeps
+Were broken, that they their tribe diminish'd saw,
+Both Moses and Elias gone, and chang'd
+The stole their master wore: thus to myself
+Returning, over me beheld I stand
+The piteous one, who cross the stream had brought
+My steps. "And where," all doubting, I exclaim'd,
+"Is Beatrice?"--"See her," she replied,
+"Beneath the fresh leaf seated on its root.
+Behold th' associate choir that circles her.
+The others, with a melody more sweet
+And more profound, journeying to higher realms,
+Upon the Gryphon tend." If there her words
+Were clos'd, I know not; but mine eyes had now
+Ta'en view of her, by whom all other thoughts
+Were barr'd admittance. On the very ground
+Alone she sat, as she had there been left
+A guard upon the wain, which I beheld
+Bound to the twyform beast. The seven nymphs
+Did make themselves a cloister round about her,
+And in their hands upheld those lights secure
+From blast septentrion and the gusty south.
+ "A little while thou shalt be forester here:
+And citizen shalt be forever with me,
+Of that true Rome, wherein Christ dwells a Roman
+To profit the misguided world, keep now
+Thine eyes upon the car; and what thou seest,
+Take heed thou write, returning to that place."
+ Thus Beatrice: at whose feet inclin'd
+Devout, at her behest, my thought and eyes,
+I, as she bade, directed. Never fire,
+With so swift motion, forth a stormy cloud
+Leap'd downward from the welkin's farthest bound,
+As I beheld the bird of Jove descending
+Pounce on the tree, and, as he rush'd, the rind,
+Disparting crush beneath him, buds much more
+And leaflets. On the car with all his might
+He struck, whence, staggering like a ship, it reel'd,
+At random driv'n, to starboard now, o'ercome,
+And now to larboard, by the vaulting waves.
+ Next springing up into the chariot's womb
+A fox I saw, with hunger seeming pin'd
+Of all good food. But, for his ugly sins
+The saintly maid rebuking him, away
+Scamp'ring he turn'd, fast as his hide-bound corpse
+Would bear him. Next, from whence before he came,
+I saw the eagle dart into the hull
+O' th' car, and leave it with his feathers lin'd;
+And then a voice, like that which issues forth
+From heart with sorrow riv'd, did issue forth
+From heav'n, and, "O poor bark of mine!" it cried,
+"How badly art thou freighted!" Then, it seem'd,
+That the earth open'd between either wheel,
+And I beheld a dragon issue thence,
+That through the chariot fix'd his forked train;
+And like a wasp that draggeth back the sting,
+So drawing forth his baleful train, he dragg'd
+Part of the bottom forth, and went his way
+Exulting. What remain'd, as lively turf
+With green herb, so did clothe itself with plumes,
+Which haply had with purpose chaste and kind
+Been offer'd; and therewith were cloth'd the wheels,
+Both one and other, and the beam, so quickly
+A sigh were not breath'd sooner. Thus transform'd,
+The holy structure, through its several parts,
+Did put forth heads, three on the beam, and one
+On every side; the first like oxen horn'd,
+But with a single horn upon their front
+The four. Like monster sight hath never seen.
+O'er it methought there sat, secure as rock
+On mountain's lofty top, a shameless whore,
+Whose ken rov'd loosely round her. At her side,
+As 't were that none might bear her off, I saw
+A giant stand; and ever, and anon
+They mingled kisses. But, her lustful eyes
+Chancing on me to wander, that fell minion
+Scourg'd her from head to foot all o'er; then full
+Of jealousy, and fierce with rage, unloos'd
+The monster, and dragg'd on, so far across
+The forest, that from me its shades alone
+Shielded the harlot and the new-form'd brute.
+
+
+
+CANTO XXXIII
+
+"The heathen, Lord! are come!" responsive thus,
+The trinal now, and now the virgin band
+Quaternion, their sweet psalmody began,
+Weeping; and Beatrice listen'd, sad
+And sighing, to the song', in such a mood,
+That Mary, as she stood beside the cross,
+Was scarce more chang'd. But when they gave her place
+To speak, then, risen upright on her feet,
+She, with a colour glowing bright as fire,
+Did answer: "Yet a little while, and ye
+Shall see me not; and, my beloved sisters,
+Again a little while, and ye shall see me."
+ Before her then she marshall'd all the seven,
+And, beck'ning only motion'd me, the dame,
+And that remaining sage, to follow her.
+ So on she pass'd; and had not set, I ween,
+Her tenth step to the ground, when with mine eyes
+Her eyes encounter'd; and, with visage mild,
+"So mend thy pace," she cried, "that if my words
+Address thee, thou mayst still be aptly plac'd
+To hear them." Soon as duly to her side
+I now had hasten'd: "Brother!" she began,
+"Why mak'st thou no attempt at questioning,
+As thus we walk together?" Like to those
+Who, speaking with too reverent an awe
+Before their betters, draw not forth the voice
+Alive unto their lips, befell me shell
+That I in sounds imperfect thus began:
+"Lady! what I have need of, that thou know'st,
+And what will suit my need." She answering thus:
+"Of fearfulness and shame, I will, that thou
+Henceforth do rid thee: that thou speak no more,
+As one who dreams. Thus far be taught of me:
+The vessel, which thou saw'st the serpent break,
+Was and is not: let him, who hath the blame,
+Hope not to scare God's vengeance with a sop.
+Without an heir for ever shall not be
+That eagle, he, who left the chariot plum'd,
+Which monster made it first and next a prey.
+Plainly I view, and therefore speak, the stars
+E'en now approaching, whose conjunction, free
+From all impediment and bar, brings on
+A season, in the which, one sent from God,
+(Five hundred, five, and ten, do mark him out)
+That foul one, and th' accomplice of her guilt,
+The giant, both shall slay. And if perchance
+My saying, dark as Themis or as Sphinx,
+Fail to persuade thee, (since like them it foils
+The intellect with blindness) yet ere long
+Events shall be the Naiads, that will solve
+This knotty riddle, and no damage light
+On flock or field. Take heed; and as these words
+By me are utter'd, teach them even so
+To those who live that life, which is a race
+To death: and when thou writ'st them, keep in mind
+Not to conceal how thou hast seen the plant,
+That twice hath now been spoil'd. This whoso robs,
+This whoso plucks, with blasphemy of deed
+Sins against God, who for his use alone
+Creating hallow'd it. For taste of this,
+In pain and in desire, five thousand years
+And upward, the first soul did yearn for him,
+Who punish'd in himself the fatal gust.
+ "Thy reason slumbers, if it deem this height
+And summit thus inverted of the plant,
+Without due cause: and were not vainer thoughts,
+As Elsa's numbing waters, to thy soul,
+And their fond pleasures had not dyed it dark
+As Pyramus the mulberry, thou hadst seen,
+In such momentous circumstance alone,
+God's equal justice morally implied
+In the forbidden tree. But since I mark thee
+In understanding harden'd into stone,
+And, to that hardness, spotted too and stain'd,
+So that thine eye is dazzled at my word,
+I will, that, if not written, yet at least
+Painted thou take it in thee, for the cause,
+That one brings home his staff inwreath'd with palm.
+ "I thus: "As wax by seal, that changeth not
+Its impress, now is stamp'd my brain by thee.
+But wherefore soars thy wish'd-for speech so high
+Beyond my sight, that loses it the more,
+The more it strains to reach it?" --"To the end
+That thou mayst know," she answer'd straight, "the school,
+That thou hast follow'd; and how far behind,
+When following my discourse, its learning halts:
+And mayst behold your art, from the divine
+As distant, as the disagreement is
+'Twixt earth and heaven's most high and rapturous orb."
+ "I not remember," I replied, "that e'er
+I was estrang'd from thee, nor for such fault
+Doth conscience chide me." Smiling she return'd:
+"If thou canst, not remember, call to mind
+How lately thou hast drunk of Lethe's wave;
+And, sure as smoke doth indicate a flame,
+In that forgetfulness itself conclude
+Blame from thy alienated will incurr'd.
+From henceforth verily my words shall be
+As naked as will suit them to appear
+In thy unpractis'd view." More sparkling now,
+And with retarded course the sun possess'd
+The circle of mid-day, that varies still
+As th' aspect varies of each several clime,
+When, as one, sent in vaward of a troop
+For escort, pauses, if perchance he spy
+Vestige of somewhat strange and rare: so paus'd
+The sev'nfold band, arriving at the verge
+Of a dun umbrage hoar, such as is seen,
+Beneath green leaves and gloomy branches, oft
+To overbrow a bleak and alpine cliff.
+And, where they stood, before them, as it seem'd,
+Tigris and Euphrates both beheld,
+Forth from one fountain issue; and, like friends,
+Linger at parting. "O enlight'ning beam!
+O glory of our kind! beseech thee say
+What water this, which from one source deriv'd
+Itself removes to distance from itself?"
+ To such entreaty answer thus was made:
+"Entreat Matilda, that she teach thee this."
+ And here, as one, who clears himself of blame
+Imputed, the fair dame return'd: "Of me
+He this and more hath learnt; and I am safe
+That Lethe's water hath not hid it from him."
+ And Beatrice: "Some more pressing care
+That oft the memory 'reeves, perchance hath made
+His mind's eye dark. But lo! where Eunoe cows!
+Lead thither; and, as thou art wont, revive
+His fainting virtue." As a courteous spirit,
+That proffers no excuses, but as soon
+As he hath token of another's will,
+Makes it his own; when she had ta'en me, thus
+The lovely maiden mov'd her on, and call'd
+To Statius with an air most lady-like:
+"Come thou with him." Were further space allow'd,
+Then, Reader, might I sing, though but in part,
+That beverage, with whose sweetness I had ne'er
+Been sated. But, since all the leaves are full,
+Appointed for this second strain, mine art
+With warning bridle checks me. I return'd
+From the most holy wave, regenerate,
+If 'en as new plants renew'd with foliage new,
+Pure and made apt for mounting to the stars.
+
+
+
+NOTES TO PURGATORY
+
+CANTO I
+
+Verse 1. O'er better waves.] Berni, Orl. Inn. L 2. c. i.
+Per correr maggior acqua alza le vele,
+O debil navicella del mio ingegno.
+
+v. 11. Birds of chattering note.] For the fable of the
+daughters of Pierus, who challenged the muses to sing, and were
+by them
+changed into magpies, see Ovid, Met. 1. v. fab. 5.
+
+v. 19. Planet.] Venus.
+
+v. 20. Made all the orient laugh.] Hence Chaucer, Knight's
+Tale: And all the orisont laugheth of the sight.
+
+It is sometimes read "orient."
+
+v. 24. Four stars.] Symbolical of the four cardinal virtues,
+Prudence Justice, Fortitude, and Temperance. See Canto XXXI v.
+105.
+
+v. 30. The wain.] Charles's wain, or Bootes.
+
+v. 31. An old man.] Cato.
+
+v. 92. Venerable plumes.] The same metaphor has occurred in
+Hell Canto XX. v. 41:
+
+--the plumes,
+That mark'd the better sex.
+
+It is used by Ford in the Lady's Trial, a. 4. s. 2.
+
+Now the down
+Of softness is exchang'd for plumes of age.
+
+v. 58. The farthest gloom.] L'ultima sera. Ariosto, Oroando
+Furioso c. xxxiv st. 59:
+Che non hen visto ancor l'ultima sera.
+
+And Filicaja, c. ix. Al Sonno.
+L'ultima sera.
+
+v. 79. Marcia.]
+Da fredera prisci
+Illibata tori: da tantum nomen inane
+Connubil: liceat tumulo scripsisse, Catonis
+Martia
+Lucan, Phars. 1. ii. 344.
+
+v. 110. I spy'd the trembling of the ocean stream.]
+Connubil il tremolar della marina.
+
+Trissino, in the Sofonisba.]
+E resta in tremolar l'onda marina
+
+And Fortiguerra, Rleelardetto, c. ix. st. 17.
+--visto il tremolar della marine.
+
+v. 135. another.] From Virg, Aen. 1. vi. 143.
+Primo avulso non deficit alter
+
+CANTO II
+
+v. 1. Now had the sun.] Dante was now antipodal to Jerusalem,
+so that while the sun was setting with respect to that place
+which he supposes to be the middle of the inhabited earth, to him
+it was rising.
+
+v. 6. The scales.] The constellation Libra.
+
+v. 35. Winnowing the air.]
+Trattando l'acre con l'eterne penne.
+
+80 Filicaja, canz. viii. st. 11.
+Ma trattar l'acre coll' eterne plume
+
+v. 45. In exitu.] "When Israel came out of Egypt." Ps. cxiv.
+
+v. 75. Thrice my hands.]
+Ter conatus ibi eollo dare brachia eircum,
+Ter frustra eomprensa manus effugit imago,
+Par levibus ventis voluerique simillima sommo.
+Virg. Aen. ii. 794.
+
+Compare Homer, Od. xl. 205.
+
+v. 88. My Casella.] A Florentine, celebrated for his skill in
+music, "in whose company," says Landine, "Dante often recreated
+his spirits wearied by severe studies." See Dr. Burney's History
+of Music, vol. ii. c. iv. p. 322. Milton has a fine allusion to
+this meeting in his sonnet to Henry Lawes.
+
+v. 90. Hath so much time been lost.] Casella had been dead some
+years but was only just arrived.
+
+v. 91. He.] The eonducting angel.
+
+v. 94. These three months past.] Since the time of the Jubilee,
+during which all spirits not condemned to eternal punishment,
+were supposed to pass over to Purgatory as soon as they pleased.
+
+v. 96. The shore.] Ostia.
+
+v. 170. "Love that discourses in my thoughts."]
+"Amor che nella mente mi ragiona."
+The first verse of a eanzone or song in the Convito of Dante,
+which he again cites in his Treatise de Vulg. Eloq. 1. ii. c.
+vi.
+
+CANTO III
+
+v. 9. How doth a little failing wound thee sore.]
+(Ch'era al cor picciol fallo amaro morso.
+Tasso, G. L. c. x. st. 59.
+
+v. 11. Haste, that mars all decency of act. Aristotle in his
+Physiog iii. reekons it among the "the signs of an impudent
+man," that he is "quick in his motions." Compare Sophoeles,
+Electra, 878.
+
+v. 26. To Naples.]
+Virgil died at Brundusium, from whence his body is said to have
+been removed to Naples.
+
+v. 38. Desiring fruitlessly.] See H. Canto IV, 39.
+
+v. 49. 'Twixt Lerice and Turbia.] At that time the two
+extremities of the Genoese republic, the former on the east, the
+latter on the west. A very ingenious writer has had occasion,
+for a different purpose, to mention one of these places as
+remarkably secluded by its mountainous situation "On an eminence
+among the mountains, between the two little cities, Nice and
+Manoca, is the village of Torbia, a name formed from the Greek
+[GREEK HERE] Mitford on the Harmony of Language, sect. x. p. 351.
+2d edit.
+
+v. 78. As sheep.] The imitative nature of these animals
+supplies our Poet with another comparison in his Convito Opere,
+t. i. p 34. Ediz. Ven. 1793.
+
+v. 110. Manfredi. King of Naples and Sicily, and the natural
+son of Frederick II. He was lively end agreeable in his manners,
+and delighted in poetry, music, and dancing. But he was luxurious
+and ambitious. Void of religion, and in his philosophy an
+Epicurean. See G. Villani l. vi. c. xlvii. and Mr. Matthias's
+Tiraboschi, v. I. p. 38. He fell in the battle with Charles of
+Anjou in 1265, alluded to in Canto XXVIII, of Hell, v. 13,
+"Dying, excommunicated, King Charles did allow of his being
+buried in sacred ground, but he was interred near the bridge of
+Benevento, and on his grave there was cast a stone by every one
+of the army whence there was formed a great mound of stones. But
+some ave said, that afterwards, by command of the Pope. the
+Bishop of Cosenza took up his body and sent it out of the
+kingdom, because it was the land of the church, and that it was
+buried by the river Verde, on the borders of the kingdom and of
+Carapagna. this, however, we do not affirm." G. Villani, Hist.
+l. vii. c. 9.
+
+v. 111. Costanza.] See Paradise Canto III. v. 121.
+
+v. 112. My fair daughter.] Costanza, the daughter of Manfredi,
+and wife of Peter III. King of Arragon, by whom she was mother
+to Frederick, King of Sicily and James, King of Arragon With the
+latter of these she was at Rome 1296. See G. Villani, 1. viii. c.
+18. and notes to Canto VII.
+
+v. 122. Clement.] Pope Clement IV.
+
+v. 127. The stream of Verde.] A river near Ascoli, that falls
+into he Toronto. The "xtinguished lights " formed part of the
+ceremony t the interment of one excommunicated.
+
+v. 130. Hope.]
+Mentre che la speranza ha fior del verde.
+Tasso, G. L. c. xix. st. 53.
+--infin che verde e fior di speme.
+
+CANTO IV
+
+v. 1. When.] It must be owned the beginning of this Canto is
+somewhat obscure. Bellutello refers, for an elucidation of it, to
+the reasoning of Statius in the twenty-fifth canto. Perhaps some
+illustration may be derived from the following, passage in
+South's Sermons, in which I have ventured to supply the words
+between crotchets that seemed to be wanting to complete
+the sense. Now whether these three, judgement memory, and
+invention, are three distinct things, both in being distinguished
+from one another, and likewise from the substance of the soul
+itself, considered without any such faculties, (or whether the
+soul be one individual substance) but only receiving these
+several denominations rom the several respects arising from the
+several actions exerted immediately by itself upon several
+objects, or several qualities of the same object, I say whether
+of these it is, is not easy to decide, and it is well that it is
+not necessary Aquinas, and most with him, affirm the former, and
+Scotus with his followers the latter." Vol. iv. Serm. 1.
+
+v. 23. Sanleo.] A fortress on the summit of Montefeltro.
+
+v. 24. Noli.] In the Genoese territory, between Finale and
+Savona.
+
+v. 25. Bismantua.] A steep mountain in the territory of Reggio.
+
+v. 55. From the left.] Vellutello observes an imitation of
+Lucan in this passage:
+
+Ignotum vobis, Arabes, venistis in orbem,
+Umbras mirati nemornm non ire sinistras.
+Phars. s. 1. iii. 248
+
+v. 69 Thou wilt see.] "If you consider that this mountain of
+Purgatory and that of Sion are antipodal to each other, you will
+perceive that the sun must rise on opposite sides of the
+respective eminences."
+
+v. 119. Belacqua.] Concerning this man, the commentators afford
+no information.
+
+CANTO V
+
+v. 14. Be as a tower.] Sta ome torre ferma
+
+Berni, Orl. Inn. 1. 1. c. xvi. st. 48:
+In quei due piedi sta fermo il gigante
+Com' una torre in mezzo d'un castello.
+
+And Milton, P. L. b. i. 591.
+Stood like a tower.
+
+v. 36. Ne'er saw I fiery vapours.] Imitated by Tasso, G. L, c.
+xix t. 62:
+Tal suol fendendo liquido sereno
+Stella cader della gran madre in seno.
+
+And by Milton, P. L. b. iv. 558:
+Swift as a shooting star
+In autumn thwarts the night, when vapours fir'd
+Impress the air.
+
+v. 67. That land.] The Marca d'Ancona, between Romagna and
+Apulia, the kingdom of Charles of Anjou.
+
+v. 76. From thence I came.] Giacopo del Cassero, a citizen of
+Fano who having spoken ill of Azzo da Este, Marquis of Ferrara,
+was by his orders put to death. Giacopo, was overtaken by the
+assassins at Oriaco a place near the Brenta, from whence, if he
+had fled towards Mira, higher up on that river, instead of making
+for the marsh on the sea shore, he might have escaped.
+
+v. 75. Antenor's land.] The city of Padua, said to be founded
+by Antenor.
+
+v. 87. Of Montefeltro I.] Buonconte (son of Guido da
+Montefeltro, whom we have had in the twenty-seventh Canto of
+Hell) fell in the battle of Campaldino (1289), fighting on the
+side of the Aretini.
+
+v. 88. Giovanna.] Either the wife, or kinswoman, of Buonconte.
+
+v. 91. The hermit's seat.] The hermitage of Camaldoli.
+
+v. 95. Where its name is cancel'd.] That is, between Bibbiena
+and Poppi, where the Archiano falls into the Arno.
+
+v. 115. From Pratomagno to the mountain range.] From Pratomagno
+now called Prato Vecchio (which divides the Valdarno from
+Casentino) as far as to the Apennine.
+
+v. 131. Pia.] She is said to have been a Siennese lady, of the
+family of Tolommei, secretly made away with by her husband, Nello
+della Pietra, of the same city, in Maremma, where he had some
+possessions.
+
+CANTO VI
+
+v. 14. Of Arezzo him.] Benincasa of Arezzo, eminent for his
+skill in jurisprudence, who, having condemned to death Turrino da
+Turrita brother of Ghino di Tacco, for his robberies in Maremma,
+was murdered by Ghino, in an apartment of his own house, in the
+presence of many witnesses. Ghino was not only suffered to escape
+in safety, but (as the commentators inform us) obtained so high a
+reputation by the liberality with which he was accustomed to
+dispense the fruits of his plunder, and treated those who fell
+into his hands with so much courtesy, that he was afterwards
+invited to Rome, and knighted by Boniface VIII. A story is told
+of him by Boccaccio, G. x. N. 2.
+
+v. 15. Him beside.] Ciacco de' Tariatti of Arezzo. He is said
+to have been carried by his horse into the Arno, and there
+drowned, while he was in pursuit of certain of his enemies.
+
+v. 17. Frederic Novello.] Son of the Conte Guido da Battifolle,
+and slain by one of the family of Bostoli.
+
+v. 18. Of Pisa he.] Farinata de' Scornigiani of Pisa. His
+father Marzuco, who had entered the order of the Frati Minori, so
+entirely overcame the feelings of resentment, that he even kissed
+the hands of the slayer of his son, and, as he was following the
+funeral, exhorted his kinsmen to reconciliation.
+
+v. 20. Count 0rso.] Son of Napoleone da Cerbaia, slain by
+Alberto da Mangona, his uncle.
+
+v. 23. Peter de la Brosse.] Secretary of Philip III of France.
+The courtiers, envying the high place which he held in the king's
+favour, prevailed on Mary of Brabant to charge him falsely with
+an attempt upon her person for which supposed crime he suffered
+death. So say the Italian commentators. Henault represents the
+matter very differently: "Pierre de la Brosse, formerly barber to
+St. Louis, afterwards the favorite of Philip, fearing the too
+great attachment of the king for his wife Mary, accuses this
+princess of having poisoned Louis, eldest son of Philip, by his
+first marriage. This calumny is discovered by a nun of Nivelle in
+Flanders. La Brosse is hung." Abrege Chron. t. 275, &c.
+
+v. 30. In thy text.] He refers to Virgil, Aen. 1, vi. 376.
+Desine fata deum flecti sperare precando, 37. The sacred height
+Of judgment. Shakespeare, Measure for Measure, a. ii. s. 2.
+If he, which is the top of judgment
+
+v. 66. Eyeing us as a lion on his watch.]
+A guisa di Leon quando si posa.
+A line taken by Tasso, G. L. c. x. st. 56.
+
+v. 76. Sordello.] The history of Sordello's life is wrapt in
+the obscurity of romance. That he distinguished himself by his
+skill in Provencal poetry is certain. It is probable that he was
+born towards the end of the twelfth, and died about the middle of
+the succeeding century. Tiraboschi has taken much pains to sift
+all the notices he could collect relating to him. Honourable
+mention of his name is made by our Poet in the Treatise de Vulg.
+Eloq. 1. i. c. 15.
+
+v. 76. Thou inn of grief.]
+Thou most beauteous inn
+Why should hard-favour'd grief be lodg'd in thee?
+Shakespeare, Richard II a. 5. s. 1.
+
+v. 89. Justinian's hand.] "What avails it that Justinian
+delivered thee from the Goths, and reformed thy laws, if thou art
+no longer under the control of his successors in the empire?"
+
+v. 94. That which God commands.] He alludes to the precept-
+"Render unto Caesar the things which are Caesar's."
+
+v. 98. O German Albert!] The Emperor Albert I. succeeded
+Adolphus in 1298, and was murdered in 1308. See Par Canto XIX
+114 v. 103. Thy successor.] The successor of Albert was Henry
+of Luxembourg, by whose interposition in the affairs of Italy our
+Poet hoped to have been reinstated in his native city.
+
+v. 101. Thy sire.] The Emperor Rodolph, too intent on
+increasing his power in Germany to give much of his thoughts to
+Italy, "the garden of the empire."
+
+v. 107. Capulets and Montagues.] Our ears are so familiarized
+to the names of these rival families in the language of
+Shakespeare, that I have used them instead of the "Montecchi" and
+"Cappelletti."
+
+v. 108. Philippeschi and Monaldi.] Two other rival families in
+Orvieto.
+
+v. 113. What safety, Santafiore can supply.] A place between
+Pisa and Sienna. What he alludes to is so doubtful, that it is
+not certain whether we should not read "come si cura"--" How
+Santafiore is governed." Perhaps the event related in the note to
+v. 58, Canto XI. may be pointed at.
+
+v. 127. Marcellus.]
+Un Marcel diventa
+Ogni villan che parteggiando viene.
+Repeated by Alamanni in his Coltivazione, 1. i.
+
+v. 51. I sick wretch.] Imitated by the Cardinal de Polignac in
+his Anti-Lucretius, 1. i. 1052.
+
+Ceu lectum peragrat membris languentibus aeger
+In latus alterne faevum dextrumque recumbens
+Nec javat: inde oculos tollit resupinus in altum:
+Nusquam inventa quies; semper quaesita: quod illi
+Primum in deliciis fuerat, mox torquet et angit:
+Nec morburm sanat, nec fallit taedia morbi.
+
+CANTO VII
+
+v. 14. Where one of mean estate might clasp his lord.]
+Ariosto Orl. F. c. xxiv. st. 19
+
+E l'abbracciaro, ove il maggior s'abbraccia
+Col capo nudo e col ginocchio chino.
+
+v. 31. The three holy virtues.] Faith, Hope and Charity.
+
+v. 32. The red.] Prudence, Justice, Fortitude, and Temperance.
+
+v. 72. Fresh emeralds.]
+Under foot the violet,
+Crocus, and hyacinth with rich inlay
+Broider'd the ground, more colour'd than with stone
+Of costliest emblem.
+Milton, P. L. b. iv. 793
+
+Compare Ariosto, Orl. F. c. xxxiv. st. 49.
+
+v. 79. Salve Regina.] The beginning of a prayer to the Virgin.
+It is sufficient here to observe, that in similar instances I
+shall either preserve the original Latin words or translate them,
+as it may seem best to suit the purpose of the verse.
+
+v. 91. The Emperor Rodolph.] See the last Canto, v. 104. He
+died in 1291.
+
+v. 95. That country.] Bohemia.
+
+v. 97. Ottocar.] King of Bohemia, was killed in the battle of
+Marchfield, fought with Rodolph, August 26, 1278. Winceslaus II.
+His son,who succeeded him in the kingdom of Bohemia. died in
+1305. He is again taxed with luxury in the Paradise Canto XIX.
+123.
+
+v. 101. That one with the nose deprest. ] Philip III of France,
+who died in 1285, at Perpignan, in his retreat from Arragon.
+
+v. 102. Him of gentle look.] Henry of Naverre, father of Jane
+married to Philip IV of France, whom Dante calls "mal di Francia"
+-" Gallia's bane."
+
+v. 110. He so robust of limb.] Peter III called the Great,
+King of Arragon, who died in 1285, leaving four sons, Alonzo,
+James, Frederick and Peter. The two former succeeded him in the
+kingdom of Arragon, and Frederick in that of Sicily.
+See G. Villani, 1. vii. c. 102. and Mariana, I. xiv. c. 9.
+He is enumerated among the Provencal poets by Millot, Hist. Litt.
+Des Troubadours, t. iii. p. 150.
+
+v. 111. Him of feature prominent.] "Dal maschio naso"-with the
+masculine nose." Charles I. King of Naples, Count of Anjou, and
+brother of St. Lonis. He died in 1284. The annalist of Florence
+remarks, that "there had been no sovereign of the house of
+France, since the time of Charlemagne, by whom Charles
+was surpassed either in military renown, and prowess, or in the
+loftiness of his understanding." G. Villani, 1. vii. c. 94.
+We shall, however, find many of his actions severely reprobated
+in the twentieth Canto.
+
+v. 113. That stripling.] Either (as the old commentators
+suppose) Alonzo III King of Arragon, the eldest son of Peter III
+who died in 1291, at the age of 27, or, according to Venturi,
+Peter the youngest son. The former was a young prince of virtue
+sufficient to have justified the eulogium and the hopes of Dante.
+
+See Mariana, 1. xiv. c. 14.
+
+v. 119. Rarely.]
+Full well can the wise poet of Florence
+That hight Dante, speaken in this sentence
+Lo! in such manner rime is Dantes tale.
+Full selde upriseth by his branches smale
+Prowesse of man for God of his goodnesse
+Woll that we claim of him our gentlenesse:
+For of our elders may we nothing claime
+But temporal thing, that men may hurt and maime.
+Chaucer, Wife of Bathe's Tale.
+
+Compare Homer, Od. b. ii. v. 276; Pindar, Nem. xi. 48 and
+Euripides, Electra, 369.
+
+v. 122. To Charles.] "Al Nasuto." -"Charles II King of Naples,
+is no less inferior to his father Charles I. than James and
+Frederick to theirs, Peter III."
+
+v. 127. Costanza.] Widow of Peter III She has been already
+mentioned in the third Canto, v. 112. By Beatrice and Margaret
+are probably meant two of the daughters of Raymond Berenger,
+Count of Provence; the former married to St. Louis of France, the
+latter to his brother Charles of Anjou.
+See Paradise, Canto Vl. 135. Dante therefore considers Peter as
+the most illustrious of the three monarchs.
+
+v. 129. Harry of England.] Henry III.
+
+v. 130. Better issue.] Edward l. of whose glory our Poet was
+perhaps a witness, in his visit to England.
+
+v. 133. William, that brave Marquis.] William, Marquis of
+Monferrat, was treacherously seized by his own subjects, at
+Alessandria, in Lombardy, A.D. 1290, and ended his life in
+prison. See G. Villani, 1. vii. c. 135. A war ensued between the
+people of Alessandria and those of Monferrat and the Canavese.
+
+CANTO VIII
+
+v. 6. That seems to mourn for the expiring day.]
+The curfew tolls the knell of parting day. Gray's Elegy.
+
+v. 13. Te Lucis Ante.] The beginning of one of the evening
+hymns.
+
+v. 36. As faculty.]
+
+My earthly by his heav'nly overpower'd
+ * * * *
+As with an object, that excels the sense,
+Dazzled and spent.
+Milton, P. L. b. viii. 457.
+
+v. 53. Nino, thou courteous judge.] Nino di Gallura de'
+Visconti nephew to Count Ugolino de' Gherardeschi, and betrayed
+by him. See Notes to Hell Canto XXXIII.
+
+v. 65. Conrad.] Currado Malaspina.
+
+v. 71 My Giovanna.] The daughter of Nino, and wife of
+Riccardo da Cammino of Trevigi.
+
+v. 73. Her mother.] Beatrice, marchioness of Este wife of Nino,
+and after his death married to Galeazzo de' Visconti of Milan.
+
+v. 74. The white and wimpled folds.] The weeds of widowhood.
+
+v. 80. The viper.] The arms of Galeazzo and the ensign of the
+Milanese.
+
+v. 81. Shrill Gallura's bird.] The cock was the ensign of
+Gallura, Nino's province in Sardinia. Hell, Canto XXII. 80. and
+Notes.
+
+v. 115. Valdimagra.] See Hell, Canto XXIV. 144. and Notes.
+
+v. 133. Sev'n times the tired sun.] "The sun shall not enter
+into the constellation of Aries seven times more, before thou
+shalt have still better cause for the good opinion thou
+expresses" of Valdimagra, in the kind reception thou shalt there
+meet with." Dante was hospitably received by the Marchese
+Marcello Malaspina, during his banishment. A.D. 1307.
+
+CANTO IX
+
+v. 1. Now the fair consort of Tithonus old.]
+La concubina di Titone antico.
+So Tassoni, Secchia Rapita, c. viii. st. 15.
+La puttanella del canuto amante.
+
+v. 5. Of that chill animal.] The scorpion.
+
+v. 14. Our minds.] Compare Hell, Canto XXVI. 7.
+
+v. 18. A golden-feathered eagle. ] Chaucer, in the house of
+Fame at the conclusion of the first book and beginning of the
+second, represents himself carried up by the "grim pawes" of a
+golden eagle. Much of his description is closely imitated from
+Dante.
+
+v. 50. Lucia.] The enIightening, grace of heaven Hell, Canto
+II. 97.
+
+v. 85. The lowest stair.] By the white step is meant the
+distinctness with which the conscience of the penitent reflects
+his offences, by the burnt and cracked one, his contrition on,
+their account; and by that of porphyry, the fervour with which he
+resolves on the future pursuit of piety and virtue. Hence, no
+doubt, Milton describing "the gate of heaven," P. L. b.
+iii. 516.
+
+Each stair mysteriously was meant.
+
+v. 100. Seven times.] Seven P's, to denote the seven sins
+(Peccata) of which he was to be cleansed in his passage through
+purgatory.
+
+v. 115. One is more precious.] The golden key denotes the
+divine authority by which the priest absolves the sinners the
+silver expresses the learning and
+judgment requisite for the due discharge of that office.
+
+v. 127. Harsh was the grating.]
+On a sudden open fly
+With impetuous recoil and jarring, sound
+Th' infernal doors, and on their hinges grate
+Harsh thunder
+Milton, P. L. b. ii 882
+
+v. 128. The Turpeian.]
+Protinus, abducto patuerunt temple Metello.
+Tunc rupes Tarpeia sonat: magnoque reclusas
+Testatur stridore fores: tune conditus imo
+Eruitur tempo multis intactus ab annnis
+Romani census populi, &c.
+Lucan. Ph. 1. iii. 157.
+
+CANTO X
+
+v. 6. That Wound.] Venturi justly observes, that the Padre
+d'Aquino has misrepresented the sense of this passage in his
+translation.
+
+--dabat ascensum tendentibus ultra
+Scissa tremensque silex, tenuique erratica motu.
+
+The verb "muover"' is used in the same signification in the
+Inferno, Canto XVIII. 21.
+
+Cosi da imo della roccia scogli
+Moven.
+
+--from the rock's low base
+Thus flinty paths advanc'd.
+
+In neither place is actual motion intended to be expressed.
+
+v. 52. That from unbidden. office awes mankind.] Seo 2 Sam. G.
+
+v 58. Preceding.] Ibid. 14, &c.
+
+v. 68. Gregory.] St. Gregory's prayers are said to have
+delivered Trajan from hell. See Paradise, Canto XX. 40.
+
+v. 69. Trajan the Emperor. For this story, Landino refers to
+two writers, whom he calls "Heunando," of France, by whom he
+means Elinand, a monk and chronicler, in the reign of Philip
+Augustus, and "Polycrato," of England, by whom is meant John of
+Salisbury, author of the Polycraticus de Curialium Nugis, in the
+twelfth century. The passage in the text I find to be
+nearly a translation from that work, 1. v. c. 8. The original
+appears to be in Dio Cassius, where it is told of the Emperor
+Hadrian, lib. I xix. [GREEK HERE]
+When a woman appeared to him with a suit, as he was on a journey,
+at first he answered her, 'I have no leisure,' but she crying
+out to him, 'then reign no longer' he turned about, and heard her
+cause."
+
+v. 119. As to support.] Chillingworth, ch.vi. 54. speaks of
+"those crouching anticks, which seem in great buildings to labour
+under the weight they bear." And Lord Shaftesbury has a similar
+illustration in his Essay on Wit and Humour, p. 4. s. 3.
+
+CANTO XI
+
+v. 1. 0 thou Mighty Father.] The first four lines are borrowed
+by Pulci, Morg. Magg. c. vi.
+Dante, in his 'Credo,' has again versified the Lord's prayer.
+
+v. 58. I was of Latinum.] Omberto, the son of Guglielino
+Aldobrandeseo, Count of Santafiore, in the territory of Sienna
+His arrogance provoked his countrymen to such a pitch of fury
+against him, that he was murdered by them at Campagnatico.
+
+v. 79. Oderigi.] The illuminator, or miniature painter, a
+friend of Giotto and Dante
+
+v. 83. Bolognian Franco.] Franco of Bologna, who is said to
+have been a pupil of Oderigi's.
+
+v. 93. Cimabue.] Giovanni Cimabue, the restorer of painting,
+was born at Florence, of a noble family, in 1240, and died in
+1300. The passage in the text is an illusion to his epitaph:
+
+Credidit ut Cimabos picturae castra tenere,
+Sic tenuit vivens: nunc tenet astra poli.
+
+v. 95. The cry is Giotto's.] In Giotto we have a proof at how
+early a period the fine arts were encouraged in Italy. His
+talents were discovered by Cimabue, while he was tending sheep
+for his father in the neighbourhood of Florence, and he was
+afterwards patronized by Pope Benedict XI and Robert King of
+Naples, and enjoyed the society and friendship of Dante, whose
+likeness he has transmitted to posterity. He died in 1336, at
+the age of 60.
+
+v. 96. One Guido from the other.] Guido Cavalcanti, the friend
+of our Poet, (see Hell, Canto X. 59.) had eclipsed the literary
+fame of Guido Guinicelli, of a noble family in Bologna, whom we
+shall meet with in the twenty-sixth Canto and of whom frequent
+mention is made by our Poet in his Treatise de Vulg. Eloq.
+Guinicelli died in 1276. Many of Cavalcanti's writings, hitherto
+in MS. are now publishing at Florence" Esprit des Journaux, Jan.
+1813.
+
+v. 97. He perhaps is born.] Some imagine, with much
+probability, that Dante here augurs the greatness of his own
+poetical reputation. Others have fancied that he prophesies the
+glory of Petrarch. But Petrarch was not yet born.
+
+v. 136. suitor.] Provenzano salvani humbled himself so far for
+the sake of one of his friends, who was detained in captivity by
+Charles I of Sicily, as personally to supplicate the people of
+Sienna to contribute the sum required by the king for his ransom:
+
+and this act of self-abasement atoned for his general ambition
+and pride.
+
+v. 140. Thy neighbours soon.] "Thou wilt know in the time of
+thy banishment, which is near at hand, what it is to solicit
+favours of others and 'tremble through every vein,' lest they
+should be refused thee."
+
+CANTO XII
+
+v. 26. The Thymbraen god.] Apollo
+
+Si modo, quem perhibes, pater est Thymbraeus Apollo. Virg. Georg.
+iv. 323.
+
+v. 37. Mars.]
+
+With such a grace,
+The giants that attempted to scale heaven
+When they lay dead on the Phlegren plain
+Mars did appear to Jove.
+Beaumont and Fletcher, The Prophetess, a. 2. s. 3.
+
+v. 42. O Rehoboam.] 1 Kings, c. xii. 18.
+
+v. 46. A1cmaeon.] Virg. Aen. l. vi. 445, and Homer, Od. xi. 325.
+
+v. 48. Sennacherib.] 2 Kings, c. xix. 37.
+
+v. 58. What master of the pencil or the style.]
+--inimitable on earth
+By model, or by shading pencil drawn.
+Milton, P. L. b. iii. 509.
+
+v. 94. The chapel stands.] The church of San Miniato in
+Florence situated on a height that overlooks the Arno, where it
+is crossed by the bridge Rubaconte, so called from Messer
+Rubaconte da Mandelia, of Milan chief magistrate of Florence, by
+whom the bridge was founded in 1237. See G. Villani, 1. vi. c.
+27.
+
+v. 96. The well-guided city] This is said ironically of
+Florence.
+
+v. 99. The registry.] In allusion to certain instances of fraud
+committed with respect to the public accounts and measures See
+Paradise Canto XVI. 103.
+
+CANTO XIII
+
+v. 26. They have no wine.] John, ii. 3. These words of the
+Virgin are referred to as an instance of charity.
+
+v. 29. Orestes] Alluding to his friendship with Pylades
+
+v. 32. Love ye those have wrong'd you.] Matt. c. v. 44.
+
+v. 33. The scourge.] "The chastisement of envy consists in
+hearing examples of the opposite virtue, charity. As a curb and
+restraint on this vice, you will presently hear very different
+sounds, those of threatening and punishment."
+
+v. 87. Citizens Of one true city.]
+"For here we have no continuing city, but we seek to come." Heb.
+C. xiii. 14.
+
+v. 101. Sapia.] A lady of Sienna, who, living in exile at
+Colle, was so overjoyed at a defeat which her countrymen
+sustained near that place that she declared nothing more was
+wanting to make her die contented.
+
+v. 114. The merlin.] The story of the merlin is that having
+been induced by a gleam of fine weather in the winter to escape
+from his master, he was soon oppressed by the rigour of the
+season.
+
+v. 119. The hermit Piero.] Piero Pettinagno, a holy hermit of
+Florence.
+
+v. 141. That vain multitude.] The Siennese. See Hell, Canto
+XXIX. 117. "Their acquisition of Telamone, a seaport on the
+confines of the Maremma, has led them to conceive hopes of
+becoming a naval power: but this scheme will prove as chimerical
+as their former plan for the discovery of a subterraneous stream
+under their city." Why they gave the appellation of Diana to the
+imagined stream, Venturi says he leaves it to the antiquaries of
+Sienna to conjecture.
+
+CANTO XIV
+
+v. 34. Maim'd of Pelorus.] Virg. Aen. 1. iii. 414.
+
+--a hill
+Torn from Pelorus
+Milton P. L. b. i. 232
+
+v. 45. 'Midst brute swine.] The people of Casentino.
+
+v. 49. Curs.] The Arno leaves Arezzo about four miles to the
+left.
+
+v. 53. Wolves.] The Florentines.
+
+v. 55. Foxes.] The Pisans
+
+v. 61. Thy grandson.] Fulcieri de' Calboli, grandson of
+Rinieri de' Calboli, who is here spoken to. The atrocities
+predicted came to pass in 1302. See G. Villani, 1. viii c. 59
+
+v. 95. 'Twixt Po, the mount, the Reno, and the shore.] The
+boundaries of Romagna.
+
+v. 99. Lizio.] Lizio da Valbona, introduced into Boccaccio's
+Decameron, G. v. N, 4.
+
+v. 100. Manardi, Traversaro, and Carpigna.1 Arrigo Manardi of
+Faenza, or as some say, of Brettinoro, Pier Traversaro, lord of
+Ravenna, and Guido di Carpigna of Montefeltro.
+
+v. 102. In Bologna the low artisan.] One who had been a
+mechanic named Lambertaccio, arrived at almost supreme power in
+Bologna.
+
+v. 103. Yon Bernardin.] Bernardin di Fosco, a man of low
+origin but great talents, who governed at Faenza.
+
+v. 107. Prata.] A place between Faenza and Ravenna
+
+v. 107. Of Azzo him.] Ugolino of the Ubaldini family in Tuscany
+He is recounted among the poets by Crescimbeni and Tiraboschi.
+
+v. 108. Tignoso.] Federigo Tignoso of Rimini.
+
+v. 109. Traversaro's house and Anastagio's.] Two noble families
+of Ravenna. She to whom Dryden has given the name of Honoria, in
+the fable so admirably paraphrased from Boccaccio, was of the
+former: her lover and the specter were of the Anastagi family.
+
+v. 111. The ladies, &c.] These two lines express the true
+spirit of chivalry. "Agi" is understood by the commentators whom
+I have consulted,to mean "the ease procured for others by the
+exertions of knight-errantry." But surely it signifies the
+alternation of ease with labour.
+
+v. 114. O Brettinoro.] A beautifully situated castle in
+Romagna, the hospitable residence of Guido del Duca, who is here
+speaking.
+
+v. 118. Baynacavallo.] A castle between Imola and Ravenna
+
+v. 118. Castracaro ill
+And Conio worse.] Both in Romagna.
+
+v. 121. Pagani.] The Pagani were lords of Faenza and Imola. One
+of them Machinardo, was named the Demon, from his treachery.
+See Hell, Canto XXVII. 47, and Note.
+
+v. 124. Hugolin.] Ugolino Ubaldini, a noble and virtuous person
+in Faenza, who, on account of his age probably, was not likely to
+leave any offspring behind him. He is enumerated among the poets
+by Crescimbeni, and Tiraboschi. Mr. Matthias's edit. vol. i. 143
+
+v. 136. Whosoever finds Will slay me.] The words of Cain, Gen.
+e. iv. 14.
+
+v. 142. Aglauros.] Ovid, Met. I, ii. fate. 12.
+
+v. 145. There was the galling bit.] Referring to what had been
+before said, Canto XIII. 35.
+
+CANTO XV
+
+v. 1. As much.] It wanted three hours of sunset.
+
+v. 16. As when the ray.] Compare Virg. Aen. 1.viii. 22, and
+Apol. Rhod. 1. iii. 755.
+
+v. 19. Ascending at a glance.] Lucretius, 1. iv. 215.
+
+v. 20. Differs from the stone.] The motion of light being
+quicker than that of a stone through an equal space.
+
+v. 38. Blessed the merciful. Matt. c. v. 7.
+
+v. 43. Romagna's spirit.] Guido del Duea, of Brettinoro whom we
+have seen in the preceding Canto.
+
+v. 87. A dame.] Luke, c. ii. 18
+
+v. 101. How shall we those requite.] The answer of Pisistratus
+the tyrant to his wife, when she urged him to inflict the
+punishment of death on a young man, who, inflamed with love for
+his daughter, had snatched from her a kiss in public. The story
+is told by Valerius Maximus, 1.v. 1.
+
+v. 105. A stripling youth.] The protomartyr Stephen.
+
+CANTO XVI
+
+v. 94. As thou.] "If thou wert still living."
+
+v. 46. I was of Lombardy, and Marco call'd.] A Venetian
+gentleman. "Lombardo" both was his surname and denoted the
+country to which he belonged. G. Villani, 1. vii. c. 120, terms
+him "a wise and worthy courtier."
+
+v. 58. Elsewhere.] He refers to what Guido del Duca had said in
+the thirteenth Canto, concerning the degeneracy of his
+countrymen.
+
+v. 70. If this were so.] Mr. Crowe in his Lewesdon Hill has
+expressed similar sentiments with much energy.
+
+Of this be sure,
+Where freedom is not, there no virtue is, &c.
+
+Compare Origen in Genesim, Patrum Graecorum, vol. xi. p. 14.
+Wirer burgi,
+1783. 8vo.
+
+v. 79. To mightier force.] "Though ye are subject to a higher
+power than that of the heavenly constellations, e`en to the power
+of the great Creator himself, yet ye are still left in the
+possession of liberty."
+
+v. 88. Like a babe that wantons sportively.] This reminds one
+of the Emperor Hadrian's verses to his departing soul:
+
+Animula vagula blandula, &c
+
+v. 99. The fortress.] Justice, the most necessary virtue in the
+chief magistrate, as the commentators explain it.
+
+v. 103. Who.] He compares the Pope, on account of the union of
+the temporal with the spiritual power in his person, to an
+unclean beast in the levitical law. "The camel, because he
+cheweth the cud, but divideth not the hoof, he is unclean unto
+you." Levit. c. xi. 4.
+
+v. 110. Two sons.] The Emperor and the Bishop of Rome.
+
+v. 117. That land.] Lombardy.
+
+v. 119. Ere the day.] Before the Emperor Frederick II was
+defeated before Parma, in 1248. G. Villani, 1. vi. c. 35.
+
+v. 126. The good Gherardo.] Gherardo di Camino of Trevigi.
+He is honourably mentioned in our Poet's "Convito." Opere di
+Dante, t. i. p. 173 Venez. 8vo. 1793. And Tiraboschi supposes
+him to have been the same Gherardo with whom the Provencal poets
+were used to meet with hospitable reception. See Mr. Matthias's
+edition, t. i. p. 137, v. 127.
+Conrad.] Currado da Palazzo, a gentleman of Brescia.
+
+v. 127. Guido of Castello.] Of Reggio. All the Italians were
+called Lombards by the French.
+
+v. 144. His daughter Gaia.] A lady equally admired for her
+modesty, the beauty of her person, and the excellency of her
+talents. Gaia, says Tiraboschi, may perhaps lay claim to the
+praise of having been the first among the Italian ladies, by whom
+the vernacular poetry was cultivated. Ibid. p. 137.
+
+CANTO XVII
+
+v. 21. The bird, that most Delights itself in song.]
+I cannot think with Vellutello, that the swallow is here meant.
+Dante probably alludes to the story of Philomela, as it is found
+in Homer's Odyssey, b. xix. 518 rather than as later poets have
+told it. "She intended to slay the son of her husband's brother
+Amphion, incited to it, by the envy of his wife, who had six
+children, while herself had only two, but through mistake slew
+her own son Itylus, and for her punishment was transformed by
+Jupiter into a nightingale."
+Cowper's note on the passage.
+In speaking of the nightingale, let me observe, that while some
+have considered its song as a melancholy, and others as a
+cheerful one, Chiabrera appears to have come nearest the truth,
+when he says, in the Alcippo, a. l. s. 1,
+Non mal si stanca d' iterar le note
+O gioconde o dogliose,
+Al sentir dilettose.
+
+Unwearied still reiterates her lays,
+Jocund or sad, delightful to the ear.
+
+v. 26. One crucified.] Haman. See the book of Esther, c. vii.
+v. 34. A damsel.] Lavinia, mourning for her mother Amata, who,
+impelled by grief and indignation for the supposed death of
+Turnus, destroyed herself. Aen. 1. xii. 595.
+
+v. 43. The broken slumber quivering ere it dies.] Venturi
+suggests that this bold and unusual metaphor may have been formed
+on that in Virgil.
+
+Tempus erat quo prima quies mortalibus aegris
+Incipit, et dono divun gratissima serpit.
+Aen. 1. ii. 268.
+
+v. 68. The peace-makers.] Matt. c. v. 9.
+
+v. 81. The love.] "A defect in our love towards God, or
+lukewarmness in piety, is here removed."
+
+v. 94. The primal blessings.] Spiritual good.
+
+v. 95. Th' inferior.] Temporal good.
+
+v. 102. Now.] "It is impossible for any being, either to hate
+itself, or to hate the First Cause of all, by which it exists.
+We can therefore only rejoice in the evil which befalls others."
+
+v. 111. There is.] The proud.
+
+v. 114. There is.] The envious.
+
+v. 117. There is he.] The resentful.
+
+v. 135. Along Three circles.] According to the allegorical
+commentators, as Venturi has observed, Reason is represented
+under the person of Virgil, and Sense under that of Dante. The
+former leaves to the latter to discover for itself the three
+carnal sins, avarice, gluttony and libidinousness; having already
+declared the nature of the spiritual sins, pride, envy, anger,
+and indifference, or lukewarmness in piety, which the Italians
+call accidia, from the Greek word.
+[GREEK HERE]
+
+CANTO XVIII
+
+v. 1. The teacher ended.] Compare Plato, Protagoras, v. iii.
+p. 123. Bip. edit. [GREEK HERE] Apoll. Rhod. 1. i. 513,
+and Milton, P. L. b. viii. 1.
+The angel ended, &c.
+
+v. 23. Your apprehension.] It is literally, "Your apprehensive
+faculty derives intention from a thing really existing, and
+displays the intention within you, so that it makes the soul turn
+to it." The commentators labour in explaining this; and whatever
+sense they have elicited may, I think, be resolved into the words
+of the translation in the text.
+
+v. 47. Spirit.] The human soul, which differs from that of
+brutes, inasmuch as, though united with the body, it has a
+separate existence of its own.
+v. 65. Three men.] The great moral philosophers among the
+heathens.
+
+v. 78. A crag.] I have preferred the reading of Landino,
+scheggion, "crag," conceiving it to be more poetical than
+secchion, "bucket," which is the common reading. The same cause,
+the vapours, which the commentators say might give the appearance
+of increased magnitude to the moon, might also make her seem
+broken at her rise.
+
+v. 78. Up the vault.] The moon passed with a motion opposite to
+that of the heavens, through the constellation of the scorpion,
+in which the sun is, when to those who are in Rome he appears to
+set between the isles of Corsica and Sardinia.
+
+v. 84. Andes.] Andes, now Pietola, made more famous than Mantua
+near which it is situated, by having been the birthplace of
+Virgil.
+
+v. 92. Ismenus and Asopus.] Rivers near Thebes
+
+v. 98. Mary.] Luke, c i. 39, 40
+
+v. 99. Caesar.] See Lucan, Phars. I. iii. and iv, and
+Caesar de Bello Civiii, I. i. Caesar left Brutus to complete
+the siege of Marseilles, and hastened on to the attack of
+Afranius and Petreius, the generals of Pompey, at Ilerda (Lerida)
+in Spain.
+
+v. 118. abbot.] Alberto, abbot of San Zeno in Verona, when
+Frederick I was emperor, by whom Milan was besieged and reduced
+to ashes.
+
+v. 121. There is he.] Alberto della Scala, lord of Verona, who
+had made his natural son abbot of San Zeno.
+
+v. 133. First they died.] The Israelites, who, on account of
+their disobedience, died before reaching the promised land.
+
+v. 135. And they.] Virg Aen. 1. v.
+
+CANTO XIX
+
+v. 1. The hour.] Near the dawn.
+
+v. 4. The geomancer.] The geomancers, says Landino, when they
+divined, drew a figure consisting of sixteen marks, named from so
+many stars which constitute the end of Aquarius and the beginning
+of Pisces. One of these they called "the greater fortune."
+
+v. 7. A woman's shape.] Worldly happiness. This allegory
+reminds us of the "Choice of Hercules."
+
+v. 14. Love's own hue.]
+A smile that glow'd
+Celestial rosy red, love's proper hue.
+Milton, P. L. b. viii. 619
+
+--facies pulcherrima tune est
+Quum porphyriaco variatur candida rubro
+Quid color hic roseus sibi vult? designat amorem:
+Quippe amor est igni similis; flammasque rubentes
+Ignus habere solet.
+Palingenii Zodiacus Vitae, 1. xii.
+
+v. 26. A dame.] Philosophy.
+
+v. 49. Who mourn.] Matt. c. v. 4.
+
+v. 72. My soul.] Psalm cxix. 5
+
+v. 97. The successor of Peter Ottobuono, of the family of
+Fieschi Counts of Lavagna, died thirty-nine days after he became
+Pope, with the title of Adrian V, in 1276.
+
+v. 98. That stream.] The river Lavagna, in the Genoese
+territory.
+
+v. 135. nor shall be giv'n in marriage.] Matt. c. xxii. 30.
+"Since in this state we neither marry nor are given in marriage,
+I am no longer the spouse of the church, and therefore no longer
+retain my former dignity.
+
+v. 140. A kinswoman.] Alagia is said to have been the wife of
+the Marchese Marcello Malaspina, one of the poet's protectors
+during his exile. See Canto VIII. 133.
+
+CANTO XX
+
+v. 3. I drew the sponge.] "I did not persevere in my inquiries
+from the spirit though still anxious to learn more."
+v. 11. Wolf.] Avarice.
+
+v. 16. Of his appearing.] He is thought to allude to
+Can Grande della Scala. See Hell, Canto I. 98.
+
+v. 25. Fabricius.] Compare Petrarch, Tr. della Fama, c. 1.
+
+Un Curio ed un Fabricio, &c.
+
+v. 30. Nicholas.] The story of Nicholas is, that an angel
+having revealed to him that the father of a family was so
+impoverished as to resolve on exposing the chastity of his three
+daughters to sale, he threw in at the window of their house three
+bags of money, containing a sufficient portion for each of them.
+v. 42. Root.] Hugh Capet, ancestor of Philip IV.
+v. 46. Had Ghent and Douay, Lille and Bruges power.] These
+cities had lately been seized by Philip IV. The spirit is made
+to imitate the approaching defeat of the French army by the
+Flemings, in the battle of Courtrai, which happened in 1302.
+v. 51. The slaughter's trade.] This reflection on the birth of
+his ancestor induced Francis I to forbid the reading of Dante in
+his dominions Hugh Capet, who came to the throne of France in
+987, was however the grandson of Robert, who was the brother of
+Eudes, King of France in 888.
+
+v. 52. All save one.] The posterity of Charlemagne, the second
+race of French monarchs, had failed, with the exception of
+Charles of Lorraine who is said, on account of the melancholy
+temper of his mind, to have always clothed himself in black.
+Venturi suggest that Dante may have confounded him with Childeric
+III the last of the Merosvingian, or first, race, who was
+deposed and made a monk in 751.
+
+v. 57. My son.] Hugh Capet caused his son Robert to be crowned
+at Orleans.
+
+v. 59. The Great dower of Provence.] Louis IX, and his brother
+Charles of Anjou, married two of the four daughters of Raymond
+Berenger Count of Provence. See Par. Canto VI. 135.
+
+v. 63. For amends.] This is ironical
+
+v. 64. Poitou it seiz'd, Navarre and Gascony.] I venture to
+read-
+Potti e Navarra prese e Guascogna,
+
+instead of
+
+Ponti e Normandia prese e Guascogna
+Seiz'd Ponthieu, Normandy and Gascogny.
+
+Landino has "Potti," and he is probably right for Poitou was
+annexed to the French crown by Philip IV. See Henault, Abrege
+Chron. A.D. l283, &c. Normandy had been united to it long before
+by Philip Augustus, a circumstance of which it is difficult to
+imagine that Dante should have been ignorant, but Philip IV, says
+Henault, ibid., took the title of King of Navarre: and the
+subjugation of Navarre is also alluded to in the
+Paradise, Canto XIX. 140. In 1293, Philip IV summoned Edward I.
+to do him homage for the duchy of Gascogny, which he had
+conceived the design of seizing. See G. Villani, l. viii. c. 4.
+
+v. 66. Young Conradine.] Charles of Anjou put Conradine to death
+in 1268; and became King of Naples. See Hell, Canto XXVIII, 16,
+and Note.
+
+v. 67. Th' angelic teacher.] Thomas Aquinas. He was reported
+to have been poisoned by a physician, who wished to ingratiate
+himself with Charles of Anjou. G. Villani, I. ix. c. 218. We
+shall find him in the Paradise, Canto X.
+
+v. 69. Another Charles.] Charles of Valois, brother of Philip
+IV, was sent by Pope Boniface VIII to settle the disturbed state
+of Florence. In consequence of the measures he adopted for that
+purpose, our poet and his friend, were condemned to exile and
+death.
+
+v. 71. -with that lance
+Which the arch-traitor tilted with.]
+
+con la lancia
+Con la qual giostro Guida.
+
+If I remember right, in one of the old romances, Judas is
+represented tilting with our Saviour.
+
+v. 78. The other.] Charles, King of Naples, the eldest son of
+Charles of Anjou, having, contrary to the directions of his
+father, engaged with Ruggier de Lauria, the admiral of Peter of
+Arragon, was made prisoner and carried into Sicily, June, 1284.
+He afterwards, in consideration of a large sum of money, married
+his daughter to Azzo VI11, Marquis of Ferrara.
+
+v. 85. The flower-de-luce.] Boniface VIII was seized at Alagna
+in Campagna, by order of Philip IV., in the year 1303, and soon
+after died of grief. G. Villani, 1. viii. c. 63.
+
+v. 94. Into the temple.] It is uncertain whether our Poet
+alludes still to the event mentioned in the preceding Note, or to
+the destruction of the order of the Templars in 1310, but the
+latter appears more probable.
+
+v. 103. Pygmalion.] Virg. Aen. 1. i. 348.
+
+v. 107. Achan.] Joshua, c. vii.
+
+v. 111. Heliodorus.] 2 Maccabees, c. iii. 25. "For there
+appeared unto them a horse, with a terrible rider upon him, and
+adorned with a very fair covering, and he ran fiercely and smote
+at Heliodorus with his forefeet."
+
+v. 112. Thracia's king.] Polymnestor, the murderer of
+Polydorus. Hell, Canto XXX, 19.
+
+v. 114. Crassus.] Marcus Crassus, who fell miserably in the
+Parthian war. See Appian, Parthica.
+
+CANTO XXI
+
+v. 26. She.] Lachesis, one of the three fates.
+
+v. 43. --that, which heaven in itself
+Doth of itself receive.]
+Venturi, I think rightly interprets this to be light.
+
+v. 49. Thaumantian.] Figlia di Taumante
+[GREEK HERE]
+
+Compare Plato, Theaet. v. ii. p. 76. Bip. edit., Virg; Aen.
+ix. 5, and Spenser, Faery Queen, b. v. c. 3. st. 25.
+
+v. 85. The name.] The name of Poet.
+
+v. 89. From Tolosa.] Dante, as many others have done, confounds
+Statius the poet, who was a Neapolitan, with a rhetorician of the
+same name, who was of Tolosa, or Thoulouse. Thus Chaucer, Temple
+of Fame, b. iii. The Tholason, that height Stace.
+
+v. 94. Fell.] Statius lived to write only a small part of the
+Achilleid.
+
+CANTO XXII
+
+v. 5. Blessed.] Matt. v. 6.
+
+v. 14. Aquinum's bard.] Juvenal had celebrated his contemporary
+Statius, Sat. vii. 82; though some critics imagine that there is
+a secret derision couched under his praise.
+
+v. 28. Why.] Quid non mortalia pecaora cogis
+Anri sacra fames?
+Virg. Aen. 1. iii. 57
+
+Venturi supposes that Dante might have mistaken the meaning of
+the word sacra, and construed it "holy," instead of "cursed."
+But I see no necessity for having recourse to so improbable a
+conjecture.
+
+v. 41. The fierce encounter.] See Hell, Canto VII. 26.
+
+v. 46. With shorn locks.] Ibid. 58.
+
+v. 57. The twin sorrow of Jocasta's womb.] Eteocles and
+Polynices
+
+v. 71. A renovated world.] Virg. Ecl. iv. 5
+
+v. 100. That Greek.] Homer
+
+v. 107. Of thy train. ] Of those celebrated in thy Poem."
+
+v. 112. Tiresias' daughter.] Dante appears to have forgotten
+that he had placed Manto, the daughter of Tiresias, among the
+sorcerers. See Hell Canto XX. Vellutello endeavours, rather
+awkwardly, to reconcile the inconsistency, by observing, that
+although she was placed there as a sinner, yet, as one of famous
+memory, she had also a place among the worthies in Limbo.
+
+Lombardi excuses our author better, by observing that Tiresias
+had a daughter named Daphne. See Diodorus Siculus, 1. iv. 66.
+
+v. 139. Mary took more thought.] "The blessed virgin, who
+answers for yon now in heaven, when she said to Jesus, at the
+marriage in Cana of Galilee, 'they have no wine,' regarded not
+the gratification of her own taste, but the honour of the nuptial
+banquet."
+
+v. 142 The women of old Rome.] See Valerius Maximus, 1. ii. c.
+i.
+
+CANTO XXIII
+
+v. 9. My lips.] Psalm ii. 15.
+
+v. 20. The eyes.] Compare Ovid, Metam. 1. viii. 801
+
+v. 26. When Mary.] Josephus, De Bello Jud. 1. vii. c. xxi. p.
+954 Ed Genev. fol. 1611. The shocking story is well told
+
+v. 27. Rings.]
+In this habit
+Met I my father with his bleeding rings
+Their precious stones new lost.
+Shakespeare, Lear, a. 5. s. 3
+
+v. 28. Who reads the name.] "He, who pretends to distinguish
+the letters which form OMO in the features of the human face,
+"might easily have traced out the M on their emaciated
+countenances." The temples, nose, and forehead are supposed to
+represent this letter; and the eyes the two O's
+placed within each side of it.
+
+v. 44. Forese.] One of the brothers of Piccarda, she who is
+again spoken of in the next Canto, and introduced in the
+Paradise, Canto III.
+
+V. 72. If the power.] "If thou didst delay thy repentance to
+the last, when thou hadst lost the power of sinning, how happens
+it thou art arrived here so early?"
+
+v. 76. Lower.] In the Ante-Purgatory. See Canto II.
+
+v. 80. My Nella.] The wife of Forese.
+
+v. 87. The tract most barb'rous of Sardinia's isle.] The
+Barbagia is part of Sardinia, to which that name was given, on
+account of the uncivilized state of its inhabitants, who are said
+to have gone nearly naked.
+
+v. 91. The' unblushing domes of Florence.] Landino's note
+exhibits a curious instance of the changeableness of his
+countrywomen. He even goes beyond the acrimony of the original.
+"In those days," says the commentator, "no less than in ours, the
+Florentine ladies exposed the neck and bosom, a dress, no doubt,
+more suitable to a harlot than a matron. But, as
+they changed soon after, insomuch that they wore collars up to
+the chin, covering the whole of the neck and throat, so have I
+hopes they will change again; not indeed so much from motives of
+decency, as through that fickleness, which pervades every action
+of their lives."
+
+v. 97. Saracens.] "This word, during the middle ages, was
+indiscriminately applied to Pagans and Mahometans; in short, to
+all nations (except the Jew's) who did not profess Christianity."
+Mr. Ellis's specimens of Early English Metrical Romances, vol. i.
+page 196, a note. Lond. 8vo. 1805.
+
+CANTO XXIV
+
+v. 20. Buonaggiunta.] Buonaggiunta Urbiciani, of Lucca.
+"There is a canzone by this poet, printed in the collection made
+by the Giunti, (p. 209,).land a sonnet to Guido Guinicelli in
+that made by Corbinelli, (p 169,) from which we collect that he
+lived not about 1230, as Quadrio supposes, (t. ii. p. 159,) but
+towards the end of the thirteenth century. Concerning, other
+poems by Buonaggiunta, that are preserved in MS. in some
+libraries, Crescimbeni may be consulted." Tiraboschi, Mr.
+Matthias's ed. v. i. p. 115.
+
+v. 23. He was of Tours.] Simon of Tours became Pope, with the
+title of Martin IV in 1281 and died in 1285.
+
+v. 29. Ubaldino.] Ubaldino degli Ubaldini, of Pila, in the
+Florentine territory.
+
+v. 30. Boniface.] Archbishop of Ravenna. By Venturi he is
+called Bonifazio de Fieschi, a Genoese, by Vellutello, the son of
+the above, mentioned Ubaldini and by Laudino Francioso, a
+Frenchman.
+
+v. 32. The Marquis.] The Marchese de' Rigogliosi, of Forli.
+
+v. 38. gentucca.] Of this lady it is thought that our Poet
+became enamoured during his exile.
+v. 45. Whose brow no wimple shades yet.] "Who has not yet
+assumed the dress of a woman."
+
+v. 46. Blame it as they may.] See Hell, Canto XXI. 39.
+
+v. 51. Ladies, ye that con the lore of love.]Donne ch' avete
+intelletto d'amore.The first verse of a canzone in our author's
+Vita Nuova.
+
+v. 56. The Notary.] Jucopo da Lentino, called the Notary, a
+poet of these times. He was probably an Apulian: for Dante, (De
+Vulg. Eloq. I. i. c 12.) quoting a verse which belongs to a
+canzone of his published by the Giunti, without mentioning the
+writer's name, terms him one of "the illustrious Apulians,"
+praefulgentes Apuli. See Tiraboschi, Mr. Matthias's
+edit. vol. i. p. 137. Crescimbeni (1. i. Della Volg. Poes p.
+72. 4to. ed. 1698) gives an extract from one of his poems,
+printed in Allacci's Collection, to show that the whimsical
+compositions called "Ariette " are not of modern
+invention.
+
+v. 56. Guittone.] Fra Guittone, of Arezzo, holds a
+distinguished place in Italian literature, as besides his poems
+printed in the collection of the Giunti, he has left a collection
+of letters, forty in number, which afford the earliest specimen
+of that kind of writing in the language. They were
+published at Rome in 1743, with learned illustrations by Giovanni
+Bottari. He was also the first who gave to the sonnet its
+regular and legitimate form, a species of composition in which
+not only his own countrymen, but many of the best poets in all
+the cultivated languages of modern Europe, have since so much
+delighted.
+
+Guittone, a native of Arezzo, was the son of Viva di Michele.
+He was of the order of the " Frati Godenti," of which an account
+may be seen in the Notes to Hell, Canto XXIII. In the year 1293,
+he founded a monastery of the order of Camaldoli, in Florence,
+and died in the following year. Tiraboschi, Ibid. p. 119.
+Dante, in the Treatise de Vulg. Eloq. 1. i. c. 13, and 1. ii. c.
+6., blames him for preferring the plebeian to the mor
+courtly style; and Petrarch twice places him in the company of
+our Poet. Triumph of Love, cap. iv. and Son. Par. See "Sennuccio
+mio"
+
+v. 63. The birds.] Hell, Canto V. 46, Euripides, Helena, 1495,
+and Statius; Theb. 1. V. 12.
+v. 81. He.] Corso Donati was suspected of aiming at the
+sovereignty of Florence. To escape the fury of his fellow
+citizens, he fled away on horseback, but failing, was overtaken
+and slain, A.D. 1308. The contemporary annalist, after relating
+at length the circumstances of his fate, adds, "that he was one
+of the wisest and most valorous knights the best speaker, the
+most expert statesman, the most renowned and enterprising, man of
+his age in Italy, a comely knight and of graceful carriage, but
+very worldly, and in his time had formed many conspiracies in
+Florence and entered into many scandalous practices, for the sake
+of attaining state and lordship." G. Villani, 1. viii. c. 96.
+The character of Corso is forcibly drawn by another
+of his contemporaries Dino Compagni. 1. iii., Muratori, Rer.
+Ital. Script. t. ix. p. 523.
+
+v. 129. Creatures of the clouds.] The Centaurs. Ovid. Met. 1.
+fab. 4 v. 123. The Hebrews.] Judges, c. vii.
+
+CANTO XXV
+
+v. 58. As sea-sponge.] The fetus is in this stage is zoophyte.
+
+v. 66. -More wise
+Than thou, has erred.]
+Averroes is said to be here meant. Venturi refers to his
+commentary on Aristotle, De Anim 1. iii. c. 5. for the opinion
+that there is only one universal intellect or mind pervading
+every individual of the human race. Much of the knowledge
+displayed by our Poet in the present Canto appears to have been
+derived from the medical work o+ Averroes, called the Colliget.
+Lib. ii. f. 10. Ven. 1400. fol.
+
+v. 79. Mark the sun's heat.] Redi and Tiraboschi (Mr.
+Matthias's ed. v. ii. p. 36.) have considered this an
+anticipation of a profound discovery of Galileo's in natural
+philosophy, but it is in reality taken from a passage in Cicero
+"de Senectute," where, speaking of the grape, he says, " quae, et
+succo terrae et calore solis augescens, primo
+est peracerba gustatu, deinde maturata dulcescit."
+
+v. 123. I do, not know a man.] Luke, c. i. 34.
+
+v. 126. Callisto.] See Ovid, Met. 1. ii. fab. 5.
+
+CANTO XXVI
+
+v. 70. Caesar.] For the opprobrium east on Caesar's effeminacy,
+see Suetonius, Julius Caesar, c. 49.
+
+v. 83. Guinicelli.] See Note to Canto XI. 96.
+
+v. 87. lycurgus.] Statius, Theb. 1. iv. and v. Hypsipile had
+left her infant charge, the son of Lycurgus, on a bank, where it
+was destroyed by a serpent, when she went to show the Argive army
+the river of Langia: and, on her escaping the effects of
+Lycurgus's resentment, the joy her own children felt at the sight
+of her was such as our Poet felt on beholding his
+predecessor Guinicelli.
+
+The incidents are beautifully described in Statius, and seem to
+have made an impression on Dante, for he again (Canto XXII. 110.)
+characterizes Hypsipile, as her-
+Who show'd Langia's wave.
+
+v. 111. He.] The united testimony of Dante, and of Petrarch,
+in his Triumph of Love, e. iv. places Arnault Daniel at the head
+of the Provencal poets. That he was born of poor but noble
+parents, at the castle of Ribeyrae in Perigord, and that he was
+at the English court, is the amount of Millot's information
+concerning him (t. ii. p. 479).
+
+The account there given of his writings is not much more
+satisfactory, and the criticism on them must go for little better
+than nothing.
+
+It is to be regretted that we have not an opportunity of judging
+for ourselves of his "love ditties and his tales of prose "
+
+Versi d'amore e prose di romanzi.
+
+Our Poet frequently cities him in the work De Vulgari Eloquentia.
+According to Crescimbeni, (Della Volg. Poes. 1. 1. p. 7. ed.
+1698.) He died in 1189.
+
+v. 113. The songster of Limoges.] Giraud de Borneil, of
+Sideuil, a castle in Limoges. He was a troubadour, much admired
+and caressed in his day, and appears to have been in favour with
+the monarchs of Castile, Leon, Navarre, and Arragon He is quoted
+by Dante, De Vulg. Eloq., and many of his poems are still
+remaining in MS. According to Nostradamus he died in 1278.
+Millot, Hist. Litt. des Troub. t. ii. p. 1 and 23. But I suspect
+that there is some error in this date, and that he did not live
+to see so late a period.
+
+v. 118. Guittone.] See Cano XXIV. 56.
+
+v. 123. Far as needs.] See Canto XI. 23.
+
+v. 132. Thy courtesy.] Arnault is here made to speak in his own
+tongue, the Provencal. According to Dante, (De Vulg. Eloq. 1. 1.
+c. 8.) the Provencal was one language with the Spanish. What he
+says on this subject is so curious, that the reader will perhaps
+not be displeased it I give an abstract of it.
+
+He first makes three great divisions of the European languages.
+"One of these extends from the mouths of the Danube, or the lake
+of Maeotis, to the western limits of England, and is bounded by
+the limits of the French and Italians, and by the ocean. One
+idiom obtained over the whole of this space: but was
+afterwards subdivided into, the Sclavonian, Hungarian, Teutonic,
+Saxon, English, and the vernacular tongues of several other
+people, one sign remaining to all, that they use the affirmative
+io, (our English ay.) The whole of Europe, beginning from the
+Hungarian limits and stretching towards the east, has a second
+idiom which reaches still further than the end of Europe into
+Asia. This is the Greek. In all that remains of Europe, there is
+a third idiom subdivided into three dialects, which may be
+severally distinguished by the use of the affirmatives, oc, oil,
+and si; the first spoken by the Spaniards, the next by the
+French, and the third by the Latins (or Italians). The first
+occupy the western part of southern Europe, beginning from the
+limits of the Genoese. The third occupy the eastern part
+from the said limits, as far, that is, as the promontory of
+Italy, where the Adriatic sea begins, and to Sicily. The second
+are in a manner northern with respect to these for they have the
+Germans to the east and north, on the west they are bounded by
+the English sea, and the mountains of Arragon, and on the
+south by the people of Provence and the declivity of the
+Apennine." Ibid. c. x. "Each of these three," he observes, "has
+its own claims to distinction The excellency of the French
+language consists in its being best adapted, on account of its
+facility and agreeableness, to prose narration, (quicquid
+redactum, sive inventum est ad vulgare prosaicum suum
+est); and he instances the books compiled on the gests of the
+Trojans and Romans and the delightful adventures of King Arthur,
+with many other histories and works of instruction. The Spanish
+(or Provencal) may boast of its having produced such
+as first cultivated in this as in a more perfect and sweet
+language, the vernacular poetry: among whom are Pierre
+d'Auvergne, and others more ancient.
+The privileges of the Latin, or Italian are two: first that it
+may reckon for its own those writers who have adopted a more
+sweet and subtle style of poetry, in the number of whom are Cino,
+da Pistoia and his friend, and the next, that its writers seem to
+adhere to, certain general rules of grammar, and in so doing give
+it, in the opinion of the intelligent, a very weighty pretension
+to preference."
+
+CANTO XXVII
+
+v. 1. The sun.] At Jerusalem it was dawn, in Spain midnight,
+and in India noonday, while it was sunset in Purgatory
+
+v. 10. Blessed.] Matt. c. v. 8.
+
+v. 57. Come.] Matt. c. xxv. 34.
+
+v. 102. I am Leah.] By Leah is understood the active life, as
+Rachel figures the contemplative. The divinity is the mirror in
+which the latter looks. Michel Angelo has made these allegorical
+personages the subject of two statues on the monument of Julius
+II. in the church of S. Pietro in Vincolo. See Mr. Duppa's Life
+of Michel Angelo, Sculpture viii. And x. and p 247.
+
+v. 135. Those bright eyes.] The eyes of Beatrice.
+
+CANTO XXVIII
+
+v. 11. To that part.] The west.
+
+v. 14. The feather'd quiristers] Imitated by Boccaccio,
+Fiammetta, 1. iv. "Odi i queruli uccelli," &c. --"Hear the
+querulous birds plaining with sweet songs, and the boughs
+trembling, and, moved by a gentle wind, as it were keeping tenor
+to their notes."
+
+v. 7. A pleasant air.] Compare Ariosto, O. F. c. xxxiv. st. 50.
+
+v. Chiassi.] This is the wood where the scene of Boccaccio's
+sublimest story is laid. See Dec. g. 5. n. 8. and Dryden's
+Theodore and Honoria Our Poet perhaps wandered in it daring his
+abode with Guido Novello da Polenta.
+
+v. 41. A lady.] Most of the commentators suppose, that by this
+lady, who in the last Canto is called Matilda, is to be
+understood the Countess Matilda, who endowed the holy see with
+the estates called the Patrimony of St. Peter,
+and died in 1115. See G. Villani, 1. iv. e. 20 But it seems more
+probable that she should be intended for an allegorical
+personage.
+
+v. 80. Thou, Lord hast made me glad.] Psalm xcii. 4
+
+v. 146. On the Parnassian mountain.]
+In bicipiti somniasse Parnasso.
+Persius Prol.
+
+CANTO XXIX
+
+v. 76. Listed colours.]
+Di sette liste tutte in quel colori, &c.
+--a bow
+Conspicuous with three listed colours gay.
+Milton, P. L. b. xi. 865.
+
+v. 79. Ten paces.] For an explanation of the allegorical
+meaning of this mysterious procession, Venturi refers those "who
+would see in the dark" to the commentaries of Landino,
+Vellutello, and others: and adds that it is evident the Poet has
+accommodated to his own fancy many sacred images in the
+Apocalypse. In Vasari's Life of Giotto, we learn that Dante
+recommended that book to his friend, as affording fit
+subjects for his pencil.
+
+v. 89. Four.] The four evangelists.
+
+v. 96. Ezekiel.] Chap. 1. 4.
+
+v. 101. John.] Rev. c. iv. 8.
+
+v. 104. Gryphon.] Under the Gryphon, an imaginary creature, the
+forepart of which is an eagle, and the hinder a lion, is shadowed
+forth the union of the divine and human nature in Jesus Christ.
+The car is the church.
+
+v. 115. Tellus' prayer.] Ovid, Met. 1. ii. v. 279.
+
+v. 116. 'Three nymphs.] The three evangelical virtues: the
+first Charity, the next Hope, and the third Faith. Faith may be
+produced by charity, or charity by faith, but the inducements to
+hope must arise either from one or other of these.
+
+v. 125. A band quaternion.] The four moral or cardinal virtues,
+of whom Prudence directs the others.
+
+v. 129. Two old men.] Saint Luke, characterized as the writer
+of the Arts of the Apostles and Saint Paul.
+
+v. 133. Of the great Coan.] Hippocrates, "whom nature made for
+the benefit of her favourite creature, man."
+
+v. 138. Four others.] "The commentators," says Venturi;
+"suppose these four to be the four evangelists, but I should
+rather take them to be four principal doctors of the church."
+Yet both Landino and Vellutello expressly call them the authors
+of the epistles, James, Peter, John and Jude.
+
+v. 140. One single old man.] As some say, St. John, under his
+character of the author of the Apocalypse. But in the poem
+attributed to Giacopo, the son of our Poet, which in some MSS,
+accompanies the original of this work, and is descriptive of its
+plan, this old man is said to be Moses.
+
+E'l vecchio, ch' era dietro a tutti loro
+Fu Moyse.
+
+And the old man, who was behind them all,
+Was Moses.
+See No. 3459 of the Harl. MSS. in the British Museum.
+
+CANTO XXX
+
+v. 1. The polar light.] The seven candlesticks.
+
+v. 12. Come.] Song of Solomon, c. iv. 8.
+
+v. 19. Blessed.] Matt. c. xxi. 9.
+
+v. 20. From full hands.] Virg. Aen 1. vi. 884.
+
+v. 97. The old flame.]
+Agnosco veteris vestigia flammae
+Virg. Aen. I. I. 23.
+
+Conosco i segni dell' antico fuoco.
+Giusto de' Conti, La Bella Mano.
+
+v. 61. Nor.] "Not all the beauties of the terrestrial Paradise;
+in which I was, were sufficient to allay my grief."
+
+v. 85. But.] They sang the thirty-first Psalm, to the end of
+the eighth verse.
+
+v. 87. The living rafters.] The leafless woods on the Apennine.
+
+v. 90. The land whereon no shadow falls.] "When the wind blows,
+from off Africa, where, at the time of the equinox, bodies being
+under the equator cast little or no shadow; or, in other words,
+when the wind is south."
+
+v. 98. The ice.] Milton has transferred this conceit, though
+scarcely worth the pains of removing, into one of his Italian
+poems, son.
+
+CANTO XXXI
+
+v. 3. With lateral edge.] The words of Beatrice, when not
+addressed directly to himself, but speaking to the angel of hell,
+Dante had thought sufficiently harsh.
+
+v. 39. Counter to the edge.] "The weapons of divine justice are
+blunted by the confession and sorrow of the offender."
+
+v. 58. Bird.] Prov. c. i. 17
+
+v. 69. From Iarbas' land.] The south.
+
+v. 71. The beard.] "I perceived, that when she desired me to
+raise my beard, instead of telling me to lift up my head, a
+severe reflection was implied on my want of that wisdom which
+should accompany the age of manhood."
+
+v. 98. Tu asperges me.] A prayer repeated by the priest at
+sprinkling the holy water.
+
+v. 106. And in the heaven are stars.] See Canto I. 24.
+
+v. 116. The emeralds.] The eyes of Beatrice.
+
+CANTO XXXII
+
+v. 2. Their ten years' thirst.] Beatrice had been dead ten
+years.
+
+v. 9. Two fix'd a gaze.] The allegorical interpretation of
+Vellutello whether it be considered as justly terrible from the
+text or not, conveys so useful a lesson, that it deserves our
+notice. "The understanding is sometimes so intently engaged in
+contemplating the light of divine truth in the scriptures, that
+it becomes dazzled, and is made less capable of attaining
+such knowledge, than if it had sought after it with greater
+moderation"
+
+v. 39. Its tresses.] Daniel, c. iv. 10, &c.
+
+v. 41. The Indians.]
+Quos oceano proprior gerit India lucos.
+Virg. Georg. 1. ii. 122,
+Such as at this day to Indians known.
+Milton, P. L. b. ix. 1102.
+
+v. 51. When large floods of radiance.] When the sun enters into
+Aries, the constellation next to that of the Fish.
+
+v. 63. Th' unpitying eyes.] See Ovid, Met. 1. i. 689.
+
+v. 74. The blossoming of that fair tree.] Our Saviour's
+transfiguration.
+
+v. 97. Those lights.] The tapers of gold.
+
+v. 101. That true Rome.] Heaven.
+
+v. 110. The bird of Jove.] This, which is imitated from
+Ezekiel, c. xvii. 3, 4. appears to be typical of the
+persecutions which the church sustained from the Roman Emperors.
+
+v. 118. A fox.] By the fox perhaps is represented the treachery
+of the heretics.
+
+v. 124. With his feathers lin'd.]. An allusion to the donations
+made by the Roman Emperors to the church.
+
+v. 130. A dragon.] Probably Mahomet.
+
+v. 136. With plumes.] The donations before mentioned.
+
+v. 142. Heads.] By the seven heads, it is supposed with
+sufficient probability, are meant the seven capital sins, by the
+three with two horns, pride, anger, and avarice, injurious both
+to man himself and to his neighbor: by the four with one horn,
+gluttony, lukewarmness, concupiscence, and envy, hurtful, at
+least in their primary effects, chiefly to him who is
+guilty of them.
+
+v. 146. O'er it.] The harlot is thought to represent the state
+of the church under Boniface VIII and the giant to figure Philip
+IV of France.
+
+v. 155. Dragg'd on.] The removal of the Pope's residence from
+Rome to Avignon is pointed at.
+
+
+CANTO XXXIII
+
+v. 1. The Heathen.] Psalm lxxix. 1.
+
+v. 36. Hope not to scare God's vengeance with a sop.] "Let not
+him who hath occasioned the destruction of the church, that
+vessel which the serpent brake, hope to appease the anger of the
+Deity by any outward acts of religious, or rather superstitious,
+ceremony, such as was that, in our poet's time, performed by a
+murderer at Florence, who imagined himself secure from vengeance,
+if he ate a sop of bread in wine, upon the grave of the person
+murdered, within the space of nine days."
+
+v. 38. That eagle.] He prognosticates that the Emperor of
+Germany will not always continue to submit to the usurpations of
+the Pope, and foretells the coming of Henry VII Duke of
+Luxembourg signified by the numerical figures DVX; or, as
+Lombardi supposes, of Can Grande della Scala, appointed the
+leader of the Ghibelline forces. It is unnecessary to point out
+the imitation of the Apocalypse in the manner of this prophecy.
+
+v. 50. The Naiads.] Dante, it is observed, has been led into a
+mistake by a corruption in the text of Ovid's Metam. I. vii.
+75, where he found-
+Carmina Naiades non intellecta priorum;
+
+instead of Carmina Laiades, &c. as it has been since corrected.
+Lombardi refers to Pansanias, where "the Nymphs" are spoken of as
+expounders of oracles for a vindication of the poet's accuracy.
+Should the reader blame me for not departing from the error of
+the original (if error it be), he may substitute
+
+Events shall be the Oedipus will solve, &c.
+
+v. 67. Elsa's numbing waters.] The Elsa, a little stream, which
+flows into the Arno about twenty miles below Florence, is said to
+possess a petrifying quality.
+
+v. 78. That one brings home his staff inwreath'd with palm.]
+"For the same cause that the pilgrim, returning from Palestine,
+brings home his staff, or bourdon, bound with palm," that is, to
+show where he has been.
+
+Che si reca 'I bordon di palma cinto.
+
+"In regard to the word bourdon, why it has been applied to a
+pilgrim's staff, it is not easy to guess. I believe, however
+that this name has been given to such sort of staves, because
+pilgrims usually travel and perform their pilgrimages on foot,
+their staves serving them instead of horses or mules, then called
+bourdons and burdones, by writers in the middle ages."
+Mr. Johnes's Translation of Joinville's Memoirs.
+Dissertation xv, by M. du Cange p. 152. 4to. edit.
+The word is thrice used by Chaucer in the Romaunt of the Rose.
+
+
+
+
+PARADISE
+
+
+
+CANTO I
+
+His glory, by whose might all things are mov'd,
+Pierces the universe, and in one part
+Sheds more resplendence, elsewhere less. In heav'n,
+That largeliest of his light partakes, was I,
+Witness of things, which to relate again
+Surpasseth power of him who comes from thence;
+For that, so near approaching its desire
+Our intellect is to such depth absorb'd,
+That memory cannot follow. Nathless all,
+That in my thoughts I of that sacred realm
+Could store, shall now be matter of my song.
+ Benign Apollo! this last labour aid,
+And make me such a vessel of thy worth,
+As thy own laurel claims of me belov'd.
+Thus far hath one of steep Parnassus' brows
+Suffic'd me; henceforth there is need of both
+For my remaining enterprise Do thou
+Enter into my bosom, and there breathe
+So, as when Marsyas by thy hand was dragg'd
+Forth from his limbs unsheath'd. O power divine!
+If thou to me of shine impart so much,
+That of that happy realm the shadow'd form
+Trac'd in my thoughts I may set forth to view,
+Thou shalt behold me of thy favour'd tree
+Come to the foot, and crown myself with leaves;
+For to that honour thou, and my high theme
+Will fit me. If but seldom, mighty Sire!
+To grace his triumph gathers thence a wreath
+Caesar or bard (more shame for human wills
+Deprav'd) joy to the Delphic god must spring
+From the Pierian foliage, when one breast
+Is with such thirst inspir'd. From a small spark
+Great flame hath risen: after me perchance
+Others with better voice may pray, and gain
+From the Cirrhaean city answer kind.
+ Through diver passages, the world's bright lamp
+Rises to mortals, but through that which joins
+Four circles with the threefold cross, in best
+Course, and in happiest constellation set
+He comes, and to the worldly wax best gives
+Its temper and impression. Morning there,
+Here eve was by almost such passage made;
+And whiteness had o'erspread that hemisphere,
+Blackness the other part; when to the left
+I saw Beatrice turn'd, and on the sun
+Gazing, as never eagle fix'd his ken.
+As from the first a second beam is wont
+To issue, and reflected upwards rise,
+E'en as a pilgrim bent on his return,
+So of her act, that through the eyesight pass'd
+Into my fancy, mine was form'd; and straight,
+Beyond our mortal wont, I fix'd mine eyes
+Upon the sun. Much is allowed us there,
+That here exceeds our pow'r; thanks to the place
+Made for the dwelling of the human kind
+ I suffer'd it not long, and yet so long
+That I beheld it bick'ring sparks around,
+As iron that comes boiling from the fire.
+And suddenly upon the day appear'd
+A day new-ris'n, as he, who hath the power,
+Had with another sun bedeck'd the sky.
+ Her eyes fast fix'd on the eternal wheels,
+Beatrice stood unmov'd; and I with ken
+Fix'd upon her, from upward gaze remov'd
+At her aspect, such inwardly became
+As Glaucus, when he tasted of the herb,
+That made him peer among the ocean gods;
+Words may not tell of that transhuman change:
+And therefore let the example serve, though weak,
+For those whom grace hath better proof in store
+ If I were only what thou didst create,
+Then newly, Love! by whom the heav'n is rul'd,
+Thou know'st, who by thy light didst bear me up.
+Whenas the wheel which thou dost ever guide,
+Desired Spirit! with its harmony
+Temper'd of thee and measur'd, charm'd mine ear,
+Then seem'd to me so much of heav'n to blaze
+With the sun's flame, that rain or flood ne'er made
+A lake so broad. The newness of the sound,
+And that great light, inflam'd me with desire,
+Keener than e'er was felt, to know their cause.
+ Whence she who saw me, clearly as myself,
+To calm my troubled mind, before I ask'd,
+Open'd her lips, and gracious thus began:
+"With false imagination thou thyself
+Mak'st dull, so that thou seest not the thing,
+Which thou hadst seen, had that been shaken off.
+Thou art not on the earth as thou believ'st;
+For light'ning scap'd from its own proper place
+Ne'er ran, as thou hast hither now return'd."
+ Although divested of my first-rais'd doubt,
+By those brief words, accompanied with smiles,
+Yet in new doubt was I entangled more,
+And said: "Already satisfied, I rest
+From admiration deep, but now admire
+How I above those lighter bodies rise."
+ Whence, after utt'rance of a piteous sigh,
+She tow'rds me bent her eyes, with such a look,
+As on her frenzied child a mother casts;
+Then thus began: "Among themselves all things
+Have order; and from hence the form, which makes
+The universe resemble God. In this
+The higher creatures see the printed steps
+Of that eternal worth, which is the end
+Whither the line is drawn. All natures lean,
+In this their order, diversely, some more,
+Some less approaching to their primal source.
+Thus they to different havens are mov'd on
+Through the vast sea of being, and each one
+With instinct giv'n, that bears it in its course;
+This to the lunar sphere directs the fire,
+This prompts the hearts of mortal animals,
+This the brute earth together knits, and binds.
+Nor only creatures, void of intellect,
+Are aim'd at by this bow; hut even those,
+That have intelligence and love, are pierc'd.
+That Providence, who so well orders all,
+With her own light makes ever calm the heaven,
+In which the substance, that hath greatest speed,
+Is turn'd: and thither now, as to our seat
+Predestin'd, we are carried by the force
+Of that strong cord, that never looses dart,
+But at fair aim and glad. Yet is it true,
+That as ofttimes but ill accords the form
+To the design of art, through sluggishness
+Of unreplying matter, so this course
+Is sometimes quitted by the creature, who
+Hath power, directed thus, to bend elsewhere;
+As from a cloud the fire is seen to fall,
+From its original impulse warp'd, to earth,
+By vicious fondness. Thou no more admire
+Thy soaring, (if I rightly deem,) than lapse
+Of torrent downwards from a mountain's height.
+There would in thee for wonder be more cause,
+If, free of hind'rance, thou hadst fix'd thyself
+Below, like fire unmoving on the earth."
+ So said, she turn'd toward the heav'n her face.
+
+
+
+CANTO II
+
+All ye, who in small bark have following sail'd,
+Eager to listen, on the advent'rous track
+Of my proud keel, that singing cuts its way,
+Backward return with speed, and your own shores
+Revisit, nor put out to open sea,
+Where losing me, perchance ye may remain
+Bewilder'd in deep maze. The way I pass
+Ne'er yet was run: Minerva breathes the gale,
+Apollo guides me, and another Nine
+To my rapt sight the arctic beams reveal.
+Ye other few, who have outstretch'd the neck.
+Timely for food of angels, on which here
+They live, yet never know satiety,
+Through the deep brine ye fearless may put out
+Your vessel, marking, well the furrow broad
+Before you in the wave, that on both sides
+Equal returns. Those, glorious, who pass'd o'er
+To Colchos, wonder'd not as ye will do,
+When they saw Jason following the plough.
+ The increate perpetual thirst, that draws
+Toward the realm of God's own form, bore us
+Swift almost as the heaven ye behold.
+ Beatrice upward gaz'd, and I on her,
+And in such space as on the notch a dart
+Is plac'd, then loosen'd flies, I saw myself
+Arriv'd, where wond'rous thing engag'd my sight.
+Whence she, to whom no work of mine was hid,
+Turning to me, with aspect glad as fair,
+Bespake me: "Gratefully direct thy mind
+To God, through whom to this first star we come."
+ Me seem'd as if a cloud had cover'd us,
+Translucent, solid, firm, and polish'd bright,
+Like adamant, which the sun's beam had smit
+Within itself the ever-during pearl
+Receiv'd us, as the wave a ray of light
+Receives, and rests unbroken. If I then
+Was of corporeal frame, and it transcend
+Our weaker thought, how one dimension thus
+Another could endure, which needs must be
+If body enter body, how much more
+Must the desire inflame us to behold
+That essence, which discovers by what means
+God and our nature join'd! There will be seen
+That which we hold through faith, not shown by proof,
+But in itself intelligibly plain,
+E'en as the truth that man at first believes.
+ I answered: "Lady! I with thoughts devout,
+Such as I best can frame, give thanks to Him,
+Who hath remov'd me from the mortal world.
+But tell, I pray thee, whence the gloomy spots
+Upon this body, which below on earth
+Give rise to talk of Cain in fabling quaint?"
+ She somewhat smil'd, then spake: "If mortals err
+In their opinion, when the key of sense
+Unlocks not, surely wonder's weapon keen
+Ought not to pierce thee; since thou find'st, the wings
+Of reason to pursue the senses' flight
+Are short. But what thy own thought is, declare."
+ Then I: "What various here above appears,
+Is caus'd, I deem, by bodies dense or rare."
+ She then resum'd: "Thou certainly wilt see
+In falsehood thy belief o'erwhelm'd, if well
+Thou listen to the arguments, which I
+Shall bring to face it. The eighth sphere displays
+Numberless lights, the which in kind and size
+May be remark'd of different aspects;
+If rare or dense of that were cause alone,
+One single virtue then would be in all,
+Alike distributed, or more, or less.
+Different virtues needs must be the fruits
+Of formal principles, and these, save one,
+Will by thy reasoning be destroy'd. Beside,
+If rarity were of that dusk the cause,
+Which thou inquirest, either in some part
+That planet must throughout be void, nor fed
+With its own matter; or, as bodies share
+Their fat and leanness, in like manner this
+Must in its volume change the leaves. The first,
+If it were true, had through the sun's eclipse
+Been manifested, by transparency
+Of light, as through aught rare beside effus'd.
+But this is not. Therefore remains to see
+The other cause: and if the other fall,
+Erroneous so must prove what seem'd to thee.
+If not from side to side this rarity
+Pass through, there needs must be a limit, whence
+Its contrary no further lets it pass.
+And hence the beam, that from without proceeds,
+Must be pour'd back, as colour comes, through glass
+Reflected, which behind it lead conceals.
+Now wilt thou say, that there of murkier hue
+Than in the other part the ray is shown,
+By being thence refracted farther back.
+From this perplexity will free thee soon
+Experience, if thereof thou trial make,
+The fountain whence your arts derive their streame.
+Three mirrors shalt thou take, and two remove
+From thee alike, and more remote the third.
+Betwixt the former pair, shall meet thine eyes;
+Then turn'd toward them, cause behind thy back
+A light to stand, that on the three shall shine,
+And thus reflected come to thee from all.
+Though that beheld most distant do not stretch
+A space so ample, yet in brightness thou
+Will own it equaling the rest. But now,
+As under snow the ground, if the warm ray
+Smites it, remains dismantled of the hue
+And cold, that cover'd it before, so thee,
+Dismantled in thy mind, I will inform
+With light so lively, that the tremulous beam
+Shall quiver where it falls. Within the heaven,
+Where peace divine inhabits, circles round
+A body, in whose virtue dies the being
+Of all that it contains. The following heaven,
+That hath so many lights, this being divides,
+Through different essences, from it distinct,
+And yet contain'd within it. The other orbs
+Their separate distinctions variously
+Dispose, for their own seed and produce apt.
+Thus do these organs of the world proceed,
+As thou beholdest now, from step to step,
+Their influences from above deriving,
+And thence transmitting downwards. Mark me well,
+How through this passage to the truth I ford,
+The truth thou lov'st, that thou henceforth alone,
+May'st know to keep the shallows, safe, untold.
+ "The virtue and motion of the sacred orbs,
+As mallet by the workman's hand, must needs
+By blessed movers be inspir'd. This heaven,
+Made beauteous by so many luminaries,
+From the deep spirit, that moves its circling sphere,
+Its image takes an impress as a seal:
+And as the soul, that dwells within your dust,
+Through members different, yet together form'd,
+In different pow'rs resolves itself; e'en so
+The intellectual efficacy unfolds
+Its goodness multiplied throughout the stars;
+On its own unity revolving still.
+Different virtue compact different
+Makes with the precious body it enlivens,
+With which it knits, as life in you is knit.
+From its original nature full of joy,
+The virtue mingled through the body shines,
+As joy through pupil of the living eye.
+From hence proceeds, that which from light to light
+Seems different, and not from dense or rare.
+This is the formal cause, that generates
+Proportion'd to its power, the dusk or clear."
+
+
+CANTO III
+
+That sun, which erst with love my bosom warm'd
+Had of fair truth unveil'd the sweet aspect,
+By proof of right, and of the false reproof;
+And I, to own myself convinc'd and free
+Of doubt, as much as needed, rais'd my head
+Erect for speech. But soon a sight appear'd,
+Which, so intent to mark it, held me fix'd,
+That of confession I no longer thought.
+ As through translucent and smooth glass, or wave
+Clear and unmov'd, and flowing not so deep
+As that its bed is dark, the shape returns
+So faint of our impictur'd lineaments,
+That on white forehead set a pearl as strong
+Comes to the eye: such saw I many a face,
+All stretch'd to speak, from whence I straight conceiv'd
+Delusion opposite to that, which rais'd
+Between the man and fountain, amorous flame.
+ Sudden, as I perceiv'd them, deeming these
+Reflected semblances to see of whom
+They were, I turn'd mine eyes, and nothing saw;
+Then turn'd them back, directed on the light
+Of my sweet guide, who smiling shot forth beams
+From her celestial eyes. "Wonder not thou,"
+She cry'd, "at this my smiling, when I see
+Thy childish judgment; since not yet on truth
+It rests the foot, but, as it still is wont,
+Makes thee fall back in unsound vacancy.
+True substances are these, which thou behold'st,
+Hither through failure of their vow exil'd.
+But speak thou with them; listen, and believe,
+That the true light, which fills them with desire,
+Permits not from its beams their feet to stray."
+ Straight to the shadow which for converse seem'd
+Most earnest, I addressed me, and began,
+As one by over-eagerness perplex'd:
+"O spirit, born for joy! who in the rays
+Of life eternal, of that sweetness know'st
+The flavour, which, not tasted, passes far
+All apprehension, me it well would please,
+If thou wouldst tell me of thy name, and this
+Your station here." Whence she, with kindness prompt,
+And eyes glist'ning with smiles: "Our charity,
+To any wish by justice introduc'd,
+Bars not the door, no more than she above,
+Who would have all her court be like herself.
+I was a virgin sister in the earth;
+And if thy mind observe me well, this form,
+With such addition grac'd of loveliness,
+Will not conceal me long, but thou wilt know
+Piccarda, in the tardiest sphere thus plac'd,
+Here 'mid these other blessed also blest.
+Our hearts, whose high affections burn alone
+With pleasure, from the Holy Spirit conceiv'd,
+Admitted to his order dwell in joy.
+And this condition, which appears so low,
+Is for this cause assign'd us, that our vows
+Were in some part neglected and made void."
+ Whence I to her replied: "Something divine
+Beams in your countenance, wond'rous fair,
+From former knowledge quite transmuting you.
+Therefore to recollect was I so slow.
+But what thou sayst hath to my memory
+Given now such aid, that to retrace your forms
+Is easier. Yet inform me, ye, who here
+Are happy, long ye for a higher place
+More to behold, and more in love to dwell?"
+ She with those other spirits gently smil'd,
+Then answer'd with such gladness, that she seem'd
+With love's first flame to glow: "Brother! our will
+Is in composure settled by the power
+Of charity, who makes us will alone
+What we possess, and nought beyond desire;
+If we should wish to be exalted more,
+Then must our wishes jar with the high will
+Of him, who sets us here, which in these orbs
+Thou wilt confess not possible, if here
+To be in charity must needs befall,
+And if her nature well thou contemplate.
+Rather it is inherent in this state
+Of blessedness, to keep ourselves within
+The divine will, by which our wills with his
+Are one. So that as we from step to step
+Are plac'd throughout this kingdom, pleases all,
+E'en as our King, who in us plants his will;
+And in his will is our tranquillity;
+It is the mighty ocean, whither tends
+Whatever it creates and nature makes."
+ Then saw I clearly how each spot in heav'n
+Is Paradise, though with like gracious dew
+The supreme virtue show'r not over all.
+ But as it chances, if one sort of food
+Hath satiated, and of another still
+The appetite remains, that this is ask'd,
+And thanks for that return'd; e'en so did I
+In word and motion, bent from her to learn
+What web it was, through which she had not drawn
+The shuttle to its point. She thus began:
+"Exalted worth and perfectness of life
+The Lady higher up enshrine in heaven,
+By whose pure laws upon your nether earth
+The robe and veil they wear, to that intent,
+That e'en till death they may keep watch or sleep
+With their great bridegroom, who accepts each vow,
+Which to his gracious pleasure love conforms.
+from the world, to follow her, when young
+Escap'd; and, in her vesture mantling me,
+Made promise of the way her sect enjoins.
+Thereafter men, for ill than good more apt,
+Forth snatch'd me from the pleasant cloister's pale.
+God knows how after that my life was fram'd.
+This other splendid shape, which thou beholdst
+At my right side, burning with all the light
+Of this our orb, what of myself I tell
+May to herself apply. From her, like me
+A sister, with like violence were torn
+The saintly folds, that shaded her fair brows.
+E'en when she to the world again was brought
+In spite of her own will and better wont,
+Yet not for that the bosom's inward veil
+Did she renounce. This is the luminary
+Of mighty Constance, who from that loud blast,
+Which blew the second over Suabia's realm,
+That power produc'd, which was the third and last."
+ She ceas'd from further talk, and then began
+"Ave Maria" singing, and with that song
+Vanish'd, as heavy substance through deep wave.
+ Mine eye, that far as it was capable,
+Pursued her, when in dimness she was lost,
+Turn'd to the mark where greater want impell'd,
+And bent on Beatrice all its gaze.
+But she as light'ning beam'd upon my looks:
+So that the sight sustain'd it not at first.
+Whence I to question her became less prompt.
+
+
+
+CANTO IV
+
+Between two kinds of food, both equally
+Remote and tempting, first a man might die
+Of hunger, ere he one could freely choose.
+E'en so would stand a lamb between the maw
+Of two fierce wolves, in dread of both alike:
+E'en so between two deer a dog would stand,
+Wherefore, if I was silent, fault nor praise
+I to myself impute, by equal doubts
+Held in suspense, since of necessity
+It happen'd. Silent was I, yet desire
+Was painted in my looks; and thus I spake
+My wish more earnestly than language could.
+ As Daniel, when the haughty king he freed
+From ire, that spurr'd him on to deeds unjust
+And violent; so look'd Beatrice then.
+ "Well I discern," she thus her words address'd,
+"How contrary desires each way constrain thee,
+So that thy anxious thought is in itself
+Bound up and stifled, nor breathes freely forth.
+Thou arguest; if the good intent remain;
+What reason that another's violence
+Should stint the measure of my fair desert?
+ "Cause too thou findst for doubt, in that it seems,
+That spirits to the stars, as Plato deem'd,
+Return. These are the questions which thy will
+Urge equally; and therefore I the first
+Of that will treat which hath the more of gall.
+Of seraphim he who is most ensky'd,
+Moses and Samuel, and either John,
+Choose which thou wilt, nor even Mary's self,
+Have not in any other heav'n their seats,
+Than have those spirits which so late thou saw'st;
+Nor more or fewer years exist; but all
+Make the first circle beauteous, diversely
+Partaking of sweet life, as more or less
+Afflation of eternal bliss pervades them.
+Here were they shown thee, not that fate assigns
+This for their sphere, but for a sign to thee
+Of that celestial furthest from the height.
+Thus needs, that ye may apprehend, we speak:
+Since from things sensible alone ye learn
+That, which digested rightly after turns
+To intellectual. For no other cause
+The scripture, condescending graciously
+To your perception, hands and feet to God
+Attributes, nor so means: and holy church
+Doth represent with human countenance
+Gabriel, and Michael, and him who made
+Tobias whole. Unlike what here thou seest,
+The judgment of Timaeus, who affirms
+Each soul restor'd to its particular star,
+Believing it to have been taken thence,
+When nature gave it to inform her mold:
+Since to appearance his intention is
+E'en what his words declare: or else to shun
+Derision, haply thus he hath disguis'd
+His true opinion. If his meaning be,
+That to the influencing of these orbs revert
+The honour and the blame in human acts,
+Perchance he doth not wholly miss the truth.
+This principle, not understood aright,
+Erewhile perverted well nigh all the world;
+So that it fell to fabled names of Jove,
+And Mercury, and Mars. That other doubt,
+Which moves thee, is less harmful; for it brings
+No peril of removing thee from me.
+ "That, to the eye of man, our justice seems
+Unjust, is argument for faith, and not
+For heretic declension. To the end
+This truth may stand more clearly in your view,
+I will content thee even to thy wish
+ "If violence be, when that which suffers, nought
+Consents to that which forceth, not for this
+These spirits stood exculpate. For the will,
+That will not, still survives unquench'd, and doth
+As nature doth in fire, tho' violence
+Wrest it a thousand times; for, if it yield
+Or more or less, so far it follows force.
+And thus did these, whom they had power to seek
+The hallow'd place again. In them, had will
+Been perfect, such as once upon the bars
+Held Laurence firm, or wrought in Scaevola
+To his own hand remorseless, to the path,
+Whence they were drawn, their steps had hasten'd back,
+When liberty return'd: but in too few
+Resolve so steadfast dwells. And by these words
+If duly weigh'd, that argument is void,
+Which oft might have perplex'd thee still. But now
+Another question thwarts thee, which to solve
+Might try thy patience without better aid.
+I have, no doubt, instill'd into thy mind,
+That blessed spirit may not lie; since near
+The source of primal truth it dwells for aye:
+And thou might'st after of Piccarda learn
+That Constance held affection to the veil;
+So that she seems to contradict me here.
+Not seldom, brother, it hath chanc'd for men
+To do what they had gladly left undone,
+Yet to shun peril they have done amiss:
+E'en as Alcmaeon, at his father's suit
+Slew his own mother, so made pitiless
+Not to lose pity. On this point bethink thee,
+That force and will are blended in such wise
+As not to make the' offence excusable.
+Absolute will agrees not to the wrong,
+That inasmuch as there is fear of woe
+From non-compliance, it agrees. Of will
+Thus absolute Piccarda spake, and I
+Of th' other; so that both have truly said."
+ Such was the flow of that pure rill, that well'd
+From forth the fountain of all truth; and such
+The rest, that to my wond'ring thoughts l found.
+ "O thou of primal love the prime delight!
+Goddess! "I straight reply'd, "whose lively words
+Still shed new heat and vigour through my soul!
+Affection fails me to requite thy grace
+With equal sum of gratitude: be his
+To recompense, who sees and can reward thee.
+Well I discern, that by that truth alone
+Enlighten'd, beyond which no truth may roam,
+Our mind can satisfy her thirst to know:
+Therein she resteth, e'en as in his lair
+The wild beast, soon as she hath reach'd that bound,
+And she hath power to reach it; else desire
+Were given to no end. And thence doth doubt
+Spring, like a shoot, around the stock of truth;
+And it is nature which from height to height
+On to the summit prompts us. This invites,
+This doth assure me, lady, rev'rently
+To ask thee of other truth, that yet
+Is dark to me. I fain would know, if man
+By other works well done may so supply
+The failure of his vows, that in your scale
+They lack not weight." I spake; and on me straight
+Beatrice look'd with eyes that shot forth sparks
+Of love celestial in such copious stream,
+That, virtue sinking in me overpower'd,
+I turn'd, and downward bent confus'd my sight.
+
+
+
+CANTO V
+
+"If beyond earthly wont, the flame of love
+Illume me, so that I o'ercome thy power
+Of vision, marvel not: but learn the cause
+In that perfection of the sight, which soon
+As apprehending, hasteneth on to reach
+The good it apprehends. I well discern,
+How in thine intellect already shines
+The light eternal, which to view alone
+Ne'er fails to kindle love; and if aught else
+Your love seduces, 't is but that it shows
+Some ill-mark'd vestige of that primal beam.
+ "This would'st thou know, if failure of the vow
+By other service may be so supplied,
+As from self-question to assure the soul."
+ Thus she her words, not heedless of my wish,
+Began; and thus, as one who breaks not off
+Discourse, continued in her saintly strain.
+"Supreme of gifts, which God creating gave
+Of his free bounty, sign most evident
+Of goodness, and in his account most priz'd,
+Was liberty of will, the boon wherewith
+All intellectual creatures, and them sole
+He hath endow'd. Hence now thou mayst infer
+Of what high worth the vow, which so is fram'd
+That when man offers, God well-pleas'd accepts;
+For in the compact between God and him,
+This treasure, such as I describe it to thee,
+He makes the victim, and of his own act.
+What compensation therefore may he find?
+If that, whereof thou hast oblation made,
+By using well thou think'st to consecrate,
+Thou would'st of theft do charitable deed.
+Thus I resolve thee of the greater point.
+ "But forasmuch as holy church, herein
+Dispensing, seems to contradict the truth
+I have discover'd to thee, yet behooves
+Thou rest a little longer at the board,
+Ere the crude aliment, which thou hast taken,
+Digested fitly to nutrition turn.
+Open thy mind to what I now unfold,
+And give it inward keeping. Knowledge comes
+Of learning well retain'd, unfruitful else.
+ "This sacrifice in essence of two things
+Consisteth; one is that, whereof 't is made,
+The covenant the other. For the last,
+It ne'er is cancell'd if not kept: and hence
+I spake erewhile so strictly of its force.
+For this it was enjoin'd the Israelites,
+Though leave were giv'n them, as thou know'st, to change
+The offering, still to offer. Th' other part,
+The matter and the substance of the vow,
+May well be such, to that without offence
+It may for other substance be exchang'd.
+But at his own discretion none may shift
+The burden on his shoulders, unreleas'd
+By either key, the yellow and the white.
+Nor deem of any change, as less than vain,
+If the last bond be not within the new
+Included, as the quatre in the six.
+No satisfaction therefore can be paid
+For what so precious in the balance weighs,
+That all in counterpoise must kick the beam.
+Take then no vow at random: ta'en, with faith
+Preserve it; yet not bent, as Jephthah once,
+Blindly to execute a rash resolve,
+Whom better it had suited to exclaim,
+'1 have done ill,' than to redeem his pledge
+By doing worse or, not unlike to him
+In folly, that great leader of the Greeks:
+Whence, on the alter, Iphigenia mourn'd
+Her virgin beauty, and hath since made mourn
+Both wise and simple, even all, who hear
+Of so fell sacrifice. Be ye more staid,
+O Christians, not, like feather, by each wind
+Removable: nor think to cleanse ourselves
+In every water. Either testament,
+The old and new, is yours: and for your guide
+The shepherd of the church let this suffice
+To save you. When by evil lust entic'd,
+Remember ye be men, not senseless beasts;
+Nor let the Jew, who dwelleth in your streets,
+Hold you in mock'ry. Be not, as the lamb,
+That, fickle wanton, leaves its mother's milk,
+To dally with itself in idle play."
+ Such were the words that Beatrice spake:
+These ended, to that region, where the world
+Is liveliest, full of fond desire she turn'd.
+ Though mainly prompt new question to propose,
+Her silence and chang'd look did keep me dumb.
+And as the arrow, ere the cord is still,
+Leapeth unto its mark; so on we sped
+Into the second realm. There I beheld
+The dame, so joyous enter, that the orb
+Grew brighter at her smiles; and, if the star
+Were mov'd to gladness, what then was my cheer,
+Whom nature hath made apt for every change!
+ As in a quiet and clear lake the fish,
+If aught approach them from without, do draw
+Towards it, deeming it their food; so drew
+Full more than thousand splendours towards us,
+And in each one was heard: "Lo! one arriv'd
+To multiply our loves!" and as each came
+The shadow, streaming forth effulgence new,
+Witness'd augmented joy. Here, reader! think,
+If thou didst miss the sequel of my tale,
+To know the rest how sorely thou wouldst crave;
+And thou shalt see what vehement desire
+Possess'd me, as soon as these had met my view,
+To know their state. "O born in happy hour!
+Thou to whom grace vouchsafes, or ere thy close
+Of fleshly warfare, to behold the thrones
+Of that eternal triumph, know to us
+The light communicated, which through heaven
+Expatiates without bound. Therefore, if aught
+Thou of our beams wouldst borrow for thine aid,
+Spare not; and of our radiance take thy fill."
+ Thus of those piteous spirits one bespake me;
+And Beatrice next: "Say on; and trust
+As unto gods!" --"How in the light supreme
+Thou harbour'st, and from thence the virtue bring'st,
+That, sparkling in thine eyes, denotes thy joy,
+l mark; but, who thou art, am still to seek;
+Or wherefore, worthy spirit! for thy lot
+This sphere assign'd, that oft from mortal ken
+Is veil'd by others' beams." I said, and turn'd
+Toward the lustre, that with greeting, kind
+Erewhile had hail'd me. Forthwith brighter far
+Than erst, it wax'd: and, as himself the sun
+Hides through excess of light, when his warm gaze
+Hath on the mantle of thick vapours prey'd;
+Within its proper ray the saintly shape
+Was, through increase of gladness, thus conceal'd;
+And, shrouded so in splendour answer'd me,
+E'en as the tenour of my song declares.
+
+
+
+CANTO VI
+
+"After that Constantine the eagle turn'd
+Against the motions of the heav'n, that roll'd
+Consenting with its course, when he of yore,
+Lavinia's spouse, was leader of the flight,
+A hundred years twice told and more, his seat
+At Europe's extreme point, the bird of Jove
+Held, near the mountains, whence he issued first.
+There, under shadow of his sacred plumes
+Swaying the world, till through successive hands
+To mine he came devolv'd. Caesar I was,
+And am Justinian; destin'd by the will
+Of that prime love, whose influence I feel,
+From vain excess to clear th' encumber'd laws.
+Or ere that work engag'd me, I did hold
+Christ's nature merely human, with such faith
+Contented. But the blessed Agapete,
+Who was chief shepherd, he with warning voice
+To the true faith recall'd me. I believ'd
+His words: and what he taught, now plainly see,
+As thou in every contradiction seest
+The true and false oppos'd. Soon as my feet
+Were to the church reclaim'd, to my great task,
+By inspiration of God's grace impell'd,
+I gave me wholly, and consign'd mine arms
+To Belisarius, with whom heaven's right hand
+Was link'd in such conjointment, 't was a sign
+That I should rest. To thy first question thus
+I shape mine answer, which were ended here,
+But that its tendency doth prompt perforce
+To some addition; that thou well, mayst mark
+What reason on each side they have to plead,
+By whom that holiest banner is withstood,
+Both who pretend its power and who oppose.
+ "Beginning from that hour, when Pallas died
+To give it rule, behold the valorous deeds
+Have made it worthy reverence. Not unknown
+To thee, how for three hundred years and more
+It dwelt in Alba, up to those fell lists
+Where for its sake were met the rival three;
+Nor aught unknown to thee, which it achiev'd
+Down to the Sabines' wrong to Lucrece' woe,
+With its sev'n kings conqu'ring the nation round;
+Nor all it wrought, by Roman worthies home
+'Gainst Brennus and th' Epirot prince, and hosts
+Of single chiefs, or states in league combin'd
+Of social warfare; hence Torquatus stern,
+And Quintius nam'd of his neglected locks,
+The Decii, and the Fabii hence acquir'd
+Their fame, which I with duteous zeal embalm.
+By it the pride of Arab hordes was quell'd,
+When they led on by Hannibal o'erpass'd
+The Alpine rocks, whence glide thy currents, Po!
+Beneath its guidance, in their prime of days
+Scipio and Pompey triumph'd; and that hill,
+Under whose summit thou didst see the light,
+Rued its stern bearing. After, near the hour,
+When heav'n was minded that o'er all the world
+His own deep calm should brood, to Caesar's hand
+Did Rome consign it; and what then it wrought
+From Var unto the Rhine, saw Isere's flood,
+Saw Loire and Seine, and every vale, that fills
+The torrent Rhone. What after that it wrought,
+When from Ravenna it came forth, and leap'd
+The Rubicon, was of so bold a flight,
+That tongue nor pen may follow it. Tow'rds Spain
+It wheel'd its bands, then tow'rd Dyrrachium smote,
+And on Pharsalia with so fierce a plunge,
+E'en the warm Nile was conscious to the pang;
+Its native shores Antandros, and the streams
+Of Simois revisited, and there
+Where Hector lies; then ill for Ptolemy
+His pennons shook again; lightning thence fell
+On Juba; and the next upon your west,
+At sound of the Pompeian trump, return'd.
+ "What following and in its next bearer's gripe
+It wrought, is now by Cassius and Brutus
+Bark'd off in hell, and by Perugia's sons
+And Modena's was mourn'd. Hence weepeth still
+Sad Cleopatra, who, pursued by it,
+Took from the adder black and sudden death.
+With him it ran e'en to the Red Sea coast;
+With him compos'd the world to such a peace,
+That of his temple Janus barr'd the door.
+ "But all the mighty standard yet had wrought,
+And was appointed to perform thereafter,
+Throughout the mortal kingdom which it sway'd,
+Falls in appearance dwindled and obscur'd,
+If one with steady eye and perfect thought
+On the third Caesar look; for to his hands,
+The living Justice, in whose breath I move,
+Committed glory, e'en into his hands,
+To execute the vengeance of its wrath.
+ "Hear now and wonder at what next I tell.
+After with Titus it was sent to wreak
+Vengeance for vengeance of the ancient sin,
+And, when the Lombard tooth, with fangs impure,
+Did gore the bosom of the holy church,
+Under its wings victorious, Charlemagne
+Sped to her rescue. Judge then for thyself
+Of those, whom I erewhile accus'd to thee,
+What they are, and how grievous their offending,
+Who are the cause of all your ills. The one
+Against the universal ensign rears
+The yellow lilies, and with partial aim
+That to himself the other arrogates:
+So that 't is hard to see which more offends.
+Be yours, ye Ghibellines, to veil your arts
+Beneath another standard: ill is this
+Follow'd of him, who severs it and justice:
+And let not with his Guelphs the new-crown'd Charles
+Assail it, but those talons hold in dread,
+Which from a lion of more lofty port
+Have rent the easing. Many a time ere now
+The sons have for the sire's transgression wail'd;
+Nor let him trust the fond belief, that heav'n
+Will truck its armour for his lilied shield.
+ "This little star is furnish'd with good spirits,
+Whose mortal lives were busied to that end,
+That honour and renown might wait on them:
+And, when desires thus err in their intention,
+True love must needs ascend with slacker beam.
+But it is part of our delight, to measure
+Our wages with the merit; and admire
+The close proportion. Hence doth heav'nly justice
+Temper so evenly affection in us,
+It ne'er can warp to any wrongfulness.
+Of diverse voices is sweet music made:
+So in our life the different degrees
+Render sweet harmony among these wheels.
+ "Within the pearl, that now encloseth us,
+Shines Romeo's light, whose goodly deed and fair
+Met ill acceptance. But the Provencals,
+That were his foes, have little cause for mirth.
+Ill shapes that man his course, who makes his wrong
+Of other's worth. Four daughters were there born
+To Raymond Berenger, and every one
+Became a queen; and this for him did Romeo,
+Though of mean state and from a foreign land.
+Yet envious tongues incited him to ask
+A reckoning of that just one, who return'd
+Twelve fold to him for ten. Aged and poor
+He parted thence: and if the world did know
+The heart he had, begging his life by morsels,
+'T would deem the praise, it yields him, scantly dealt."
+
+
+
+CANTO VII
+
+"Hosanna Sanctus Deus Sabaoth
+Superillustrans claritate tua
+Felices ignes horum malahoth!"
+Thus chanting saw I turn that substance bright
+With fourfold lustre to its orb again,
+Revolving; and the rest unto their dance
+With it mov'd also; and like swiftest sparks,
+In sudden distance from my sight were veil'd.
+ Me doubt possess'd, and "Speak," it whisper'd me,
+"Speak, speak unto thy lady, that she quench
+Thy thirst with drops of sweetness." Yet blank awe,
+Which lords it o'er me, even at the sound
+Of Beatrice's name, did bow me down
+As one in slumber held. Not long that mood
+Beatrice suffer'd: she, with such a smile,
+As might have made one blest amid the flames,
+Beaming upon me, thus her words began:
+"Thou in thy thought art pond'ring (as I deem,
+And what I deem is truth how just revenge
+Could be with justice punish'd: from which doubt
+I soon will free thee; so thou mark my words;
+For they of weighty matter shall possess thee.
+ "That man, who was unborn, himself condemn'd,
+And, in himself, all, who since him have liv'd,
+His offspring: whence, below, the human kind
+Lay sick in grievous error many an age;
+Until it pleas'd the Word of God to come
+Amongst them down, to his own person joining
+The nature, from its Maker far estrang'd,
+By the mere act of his eternal love.
+Contemplate here the wonder I unfold.
+The nature with its Maker thus conjoin'd,
+Created first was blameless, pure and good;
+But through itself alone was driven forth
+From Paradise, because it had eschew'd
+The way of truth and life, to evil turn'd.
+Ne'er then was penalty so just as that
+Inflicted by the cross, if thou regard
+The nature in assumption doom'd: ne'er wrong
+So great, in reference to him, who took
+Such nature on him, and endur'd the doom.
+God therefore and the Jews one sentence pleased:
+So different effects flow'd from one act,
+And heav'n was open'd, though the earth did quake.
+Count it not hard henceforth, when thou dost hear
+That a just vengeance was by righteous court
+Justly reveng'd. But yet I see thy mind
+By thought on thought arising sore perplex'd,
+And with how vehement desire it asks
+Solution of the maze. What I have heard,
+Is plain, thou sayst: but wherefore God this way
+For our redemption chose, eludes my search.
+ "Brother! no eye of man not perfected,
+Nor fully ripen'd in the flame of love,
+May fathom this decree. It is a mark,
+In sooth, much aim'd at, and but little kenn'd:
+And I will therefore show thee why such way
+Was worthiest. The celestial love, that spume
+All envying in its bounty, in itself
+With such effulgence blazeth, as sends forth
+All beauteous things eternal. What distils
+Immediate thence, no end of being knows,
+Bearing its seal immutably impress'd.
+Whatever thence immediate falls, is free,
+Free wholly, uncontrollable by power
+Of each thing new: by such conformity
+More grateful to its author, whose bright beams,
+Though all partake their shining, yet in those
+Are liveliest, which resemble him the most.
+These tokens of pre-eminence on man
+Largely bestow'd, if any of them fail,
+He needs must forfeit his nobility,
+No longer stainless. Sin alone is that,
+Which doth disfranchise him, and make unlike
+To the chief good; for that its light in him
+Is darken'd. And to dignity thus lost
+Is no return; unless, where guilt makes void,
+He for ill pleasure pay with equal pain.
+Your nature, which entirely in its seed
+Trangress'd, from these distinctions fell, no less
+Than from its state in Paradise; nor means
+Found of recovery (search all methods out
+As strickly as thou may) save one of these,
+The only fords were left through which to wade,
+Either that God had of his courtesy
+Releas'd him merely, or else man himself
+For his own folly by himself aton'd.
+ "Fix now thine eye, intently as thou canst,
+On th' everlasting counsel, and explore,
+Instructed by my words, the dread abyss.
+ "Man in himself had ever lack'd the means
+Of satisfaction, for he could not stoop
+Obeying, in humility so low,
+As high he, disobeying, thought to soar:
+And for this reason he had vainly tried
+Out of his own sufficiency to pay
+The rigid satisfaction. Then behooved
+That God should by his own ways lead him back
+Unto the life, from whence he fell, restor'd:
+By both his ways, I mean, or one alone.
+But since the deed is ever priz'd the more,
+The more the doer's good intent appears,
+Goodness celestial, whose broad signature
+Is on the universe, of all its ways
+To raise ye up, was fain to leave out none,
+Nor aught so vast or so magnificent,
+Either for him who gave or who receiv'd
+Between the last night and the primal day,
+Was or can be. For God more bounty show'd.
+Giving himself to make man capable
+Of his return to life, than had the terms
+Been mere and unconditional release.
+And for his justice, every method else
+Were all too scant, had not the Son of God
+Humbled himself to put on mortal flesh.
+ "Now, to fulfil each wish of thine, remains
+I somewhat further to thy view unfold.
+That thou mayst see as clearly as myself.
+ "I see, thou sayst, the air, the fire I see,
+The earth and water, and all things of them
+Compounded, to corruption turn, and soon
+Dissolve. Yet these were also things create,
+Because, if what were told me, had been true
+They from corruption had been therefore free.
+ "The angels, O my brother! and this clime
+Wherein thou art, impassible and pure,
+I call created, as indeed they are
+In their whole being. But the elements,
+Which thou hast nam'd, and what of them is made,
+Are by created virtue' inform'd: create
+Their substance, and create the' informing virtue
+In these bright stars, that round them circling move
+The soul of every brute and of each plant,
+The ray and motion of the sacred lights,
+With complex potency attract and turn.
+But this our life the' eternal good inspires
+Immediate, and enamours of itself;
+So that our wishes rest for ever here.
+ "And hence thou mayst by inference conclude
+Our resurrection certain, if thy mind
+Consider how the human flesh was fram'd,
+When both our parents at the first were made."
+
+
+
+CANTO VIII
+
+The world was in its day of peril dark
+Wont to believe the dotage of fond love
+From the fair Cyprian deity, who rolls
+In her third epicycle, shed on men
+By stream of potent radiance: therefore they
+Of elder time, in their old error blind,
+Not her alone with sacrifice ador'd
+And invocation, but like honours paid
+To Cupid and Dione, deem'd of them
+Her mother, and her son, him whom they feign'd
+To sit in Dido's bosom: and from her,
+Whom I have sung preluding, borrow'd they
+The appellation of that star, which views,
+Now obvious and now averse, the sun.
+ I was not ware that I was wafted up
+Into its orb; but the new loveliness
+That grac'd my lady, gave me ample proof
+That we had entered there. And as in flame
+A sparkle is distinct, or voice in voice
+Discern'd, when one its even tenour keeps,
+The other comes and goes; so in that light
+I other luminaries saw, that cours'd
+In circling motion. rapid more or less,
+As their eternal phases each impels.
+ Never was blast from vapour charged with cold,
+Whether invisible to eye or no,
+Descended with such speed, it had not seem'd
+To linger in dull tardiness, compar'd
+To those celestial lights, that tow'rds us came,
+Leaving the circuit of their joyous ring,
+Conducted by the lofty seraphim.
+And after them, who in the van appear'd,
+Such an hosanna sounded, as hath left
+Desire, ne'er since extinct in me, to hear
+Renew'd the strain. Then parting from the rest
+One near us drew, and sole began: "We all
+Are ready at thy pleasure, well dispos'd
+To do thee gentle service. We are they,
+To whom thou in the world erewhile didst Sing
+'O ye! whose intellectual ministry
+Moves the third heaven!' and in one orb we roll,
+One motion, one impulse, with those who rule
+Princedoms in heaven; yet are of love so full,
+That to please thee 't will be as sweet to rest."
+ After mine eyes had with meek reverence
+Sought the celestial guide, and were by her
+Assur'd, they turn'd again unto the light
+Who had so largely promis'd, and with voice
+That bare the lively pressure of my zeal,
+"Tell who ye are," I cried. Forthwith it grew
+In size and splendour, through augmented joy;
+And thus it answer'd: "A short date below
+The world possess'd me. Had the time been more,
+Much evil, that will come, had never chanc'd.
+My gladness hides thee from me, which doth shine .
+Around, and shroud me, as an animal
+In its own silk enswath'd. Thou lov'dst me well,
+And had'st good cause; for had my sojourning
+Been longer on the earth, the love I bare thee
+Had put forth more than blossoms. The left bank,
+That Rhone, when he hath mix'd with Sorga, laves.
+In me its lord expected, and that horn
+Of fair Ausonia, with its boroughs old,
+Bari, and Croton, and Gaeta pil'd,
+From where the Trento disembogues his waves,
+With Verde mingled, to the salt sea-flood.
+Already on my temples beam'd the crown,
+Which gave me sov'reignty over the land
+By Danube wash'd, whenas he strays beyond
+The limits of his German shores. The realm,
+Where, on the gulf by stormy Eurus lash'd,
+Betwixt Pelorus and Pachynian heights,
+The beautiful Trinacria lies in gloom
+(Not through Typhaeus, but the vap'ry cloud
+Bituminous upsteam'd), THAT too did look
+To have its scepter wielded by a race
+Of monarchs, sprung through me from Charles and Rodolph;
+had not ill lording which doth spirit up
+The people ever, in Palermo rais'd
+The shout of 'death,' re-echo'd loud and long.
+Had but my brother's foresight kenn'd as much,
+He had been warier that the greedy want
+Of Catalonia might not work his bale.
+And truly need there is, that he forecast,
+Or other for him, lest more freight be laid
+On his already over-laden bark.
+Nature in him, from bounty fall'n to thrift,
+Would ask the guard of braver arms, than such
+As only care to have their coffers fill'd."
+ "My liege, it doth enhance the joy thy words
+Infuse into me, mighty as it is,
+To think my gladness manifest to thee,
+As to myself, who own it, when thou lookst
+Into the source and limit of all good,
+There, where thou markest that which thou dost speak,
+Thence priz'd of me the more. Glad thou hast made me.
+Now make intelligent, clearing the doubt
+Thy speech hath raised in me; for much I muse,
+How bitter can spring up, when sweet is sown."
+ I thus inquiring; he forthwith replied:
+"If I have power to show one truth, soon that
+Shall face thee, which thy questioning declares
+Behind thee now conceal'd. The Good, that guides
+And blessed makes this realm, which thou dost mount,
+Ordains its providence to be the virtue
+In these great bodies: nor th' all perfect Mind
+Upholds their nature merely, but in them
+Their energy to save: for nought, that lies
+Within the range of that unerring bow,
+But is as level with the destin'd aim,
+As ever mark to arrow's point oppos'd.
+Were it not thus, these heavens, thou dost visit,
+Would their effect so work, it would not be
+Art, but destruction; and this may not chance,
+If th' intellectual powers, that move these stars,
+Fail not, or who, first faulty made them fail.
+Wilt thou this truth more clearly evidenc'd?"
+ To whom I thus: "It is enough: no fear,
+I see, lest nature in her part should tire."
+ He straight rejoin'd: "Say, were it worse for man,
+If he liv'd not in fellowship on earth?"
+ "Yea," answer'd I; "nor here a reason needs."
+ "And may that be, if different estates
+Grow not of different duties in your life?
+Consult your teacher, and he tells you 'no."'
+ Thus did he come, deducing to this point,
+And then concluded: "For this cause behooves,
+The roots, from whence your operations come,
+Must differ. Therefore one is Solon born;
+Another, Xerxes; and Melchisidec
+A third; and he a fourth, whose airy voyage
+Cost him his son. In her circuitous course,
+Nature, that is the seal to mortal wax,
+Doth well her art, but no distinctions owns
+'Twixt one or other household. Hence befalls
+That Esau is so wide of Jacob: hence
+Quirinus of so base a father springs,
+He dates from Mars his lineage. Were it not
+That providence celestial overrul'd,
+Nature, in generation, must the path
+Trac'd by the generator, still pursue
+Unswervingly. Thus place I in thy sight
+That, which was late behind thee. But, in sign
+Of more affection for thee, 't is my will
+Thou wear this corollary. Nature ever
+Finding discordant fortune, like all seed
+Out of its proper climate, thrives but ill.
+And were the world below content to mark
+And work on the foundation nature lays,
+It would not lack supply of excellence.
+But ye perversely to religion strain
+Him, who was born to gird on him the sword,
+And of the fluent phrasemen make your king;
+Therefore your steps have wander'd from the paths."
+
+
+
+CANTO IX
+
+After solution of my doubt, thy Charles,
+O fair Clemenza, of the treachery spake
+That must befall his seed: but, "Tell it not,"
+Said he, "and let the destin'd years come round."
+Nor may I tell thee more, save that the meed
+Of sorrow well-deserv'd shall quit your wrongs.
+ And now the visage of that saintly light
+Was to the sun, that fills it, turn'd again,
+As to the good, whose plenitude of bliss
+Sufficeth all. O ye misguided souls!
+Infatuate, who from such a good estrange
+Your hearts, and bend your gaze on vanity,
+Alas for you!--And lo! toward me, next,
+Another of those splendent forms approach'd,
+That, by its outward bright'ning, testified
+The will it had to pleasure me. The eyes
+Of Beatrice, resting, as before,
+Firmly upon me, manifested forth
+Approva1 of my wish. "And O," I cried,
+Blest spirit! quickly be my will perform'd;
+And prove thou to me, that my inmost thoughts
+I can reflect on thee." Thereat the light,
+That yet was new to me, from the recess,
+Where it before was singing, thus began,
+As one who joys in kindness: "In that part
+Of the deprav'd Italian land, which lies
+Between Rialto, and the fountain-springs
+Of Brenta and of Piava, there doth rise,
+But to no lofty eminence, a hill,
+From whence erewhile a firebrand did descend,
+That sorely sheet the region. From one root
+I and it sprang; my name on earth Cunizza:
+And here I glitter, for that by its light
+This star o'ercame me. Yet I naught repine,
+Nor grudge myself the cause of this my lot,
+Which haply vulgar hearts can scarce conceive.
+ "This jewel, that is next me in our heaven,
+Lustrous and costly, great renown hath left,
+And not to perish, ere these hundred years
+Five times absolve their round. Consider thou,
+If to excel be worthy man's endeavour,
+When such life may attend the first. Yet they
+Care not for this, the crowd that now are girt
+By Adice and Tagliamento, still
+Impenitent, tho' scourg'd. The hour is near,
+When for their stubbornness at Padua's marsh
+The water shall be chang'd, that laves Vicena
+And where Cagnano meets with Sile, one
+Lords it, and bears his head aloft, for whom
+The web is now a-warping. Feltro too
+Shall sorrow for its godless shepherd's fault,
+Of so deep stain, that never, for the like,
+Was Malta's bar unclos'd. Too large should be
+The skillet, that would hold Ferrara's blood,
+And wearied he, who ounce by ounce would weight it,
+The which this priest, in show of party-zeal,
+Courteous will give; nor will the gift ill suit
+The country's custom. We descry above,
+Mirrors, ye call them thrones, from which to us
+Reflected shine the judgments of our God:
+Whence these our sayings we avouch for good."
+ She ended, and appear'd on other thoughts
+Intent, re-ent'ring on the wheel she late
+Had left. That other joyance meanwhile wax'd
+A thing to marvel at, in splendour glowing,
+Like choicest ruby stricken by the sun,
+For, in that upper clime, effulgence comes
+Of gladness, as here laughter: and below,
+As the mind saddens, murkier grows the shade.
+ "God seeth all: and in him is thy sight,"
+Said I, "blest Spirit! Therefore will of his
+Cannot to thee be dark. Why then delays
+Thy voice to satisfy my wish untold,
+That voice which joins the inexpressive song,
+Pastime of heav'n, the which those ardours sing,
+That cowl them with six shadowing wings outspread?
+I would not wait thy asking, wert thou known
+To me, as thoroughly I to thee am known.''
+ He forthwith answ'ring, thus his words began:
+"The valley' of waters, widest next to that
+Which doth the earth engarland, shapes its course,
+Between discordant shores, against the sun
+Inward so far, it makes meridian there,
+Where was before th' horizon. Of that vale
+Dwelt I upon the shore, 'twixt Ebro's stream
+And Macra's, that divides with passage brief
+Genoan bounds from Tuscan. East and west
+Are nearly one to Begga and my land,
+Whose haven erst was with its own blood warm.
+Who knew my name were wont to call me Folco:
+And I did bear impression of this heav'n,
+That now bears mine: for not with fiercer flame
+Glow'd Belus' daughter, injuring alike
+Sichaeus and Creusa, than did I,
+Long as it suited the unripen'd down
+That fledg'd my cheek: nor she of Rhodope,
+That was beguiled of Demophoon;
+Nor Jove's son, when the charms of Iole
+Were shrin'd within his heart. And yet there hides
+No sorrowful repentance here, but mirth,
+Not for the fault (that doth not come to mind),
+But for the virtue, whose o'erruling sway
+And providence have wrought thus quaintly. Here
+The skill is look'd into, that fashioneth
+With such effectual working, and the good
+Discern'd, accruing to this upper world
+From that below. But fully to content
+Thy wishes, all that in this sphere have birth,
+Demands my further parle. Inquire thou wouldst,
+Who of this light is denizen, that here
+Beside me sparkles, as the sun-beam doth
+On the clear wave. Know then, the soul of Rahab
+Is in that gladsome harbour, to our tribe
+United, and the foremost rank assign'd.
+He to that heav'n, at which the shadow ends
+Of your sublunar world, was taken up,
+First, in Christ's triumph, of all souls redeem'd:
+For well behoov'd, that, in some part of heav'n,
+She should remain a trophy, to declare
+The mighty contest won with either palm;
+For that she favour'd first the high exploit
+Of Joshua on the holy land, whereof
+The Pope recks little now. Thy city, plant
+Of him, that on his Maker turn'd the back,
+And of whose envying so much woe hath sprung,
+Engenders and expands the cursed flower,
+That hath made wander both the sheep and lambs,
+Turning the shepherd to a wolf. For this,
+The gospel and great teachers laid aside,
+The decretals, as their stuft margins show,
+Are the sole study. Pope and Cardinals,
+Intent on these, ne'er journey but in thought
+To Nazareth, where Gabriel op'd his wings.
+Yet it may chance, erelong, the Vatican,
+And other most selected parts of Rome,
+That were the grave of Peter's soldiery,
+Shall be deliver'd from the adult'rous bond."
+
+
+
+CANTO X
+
+Looking into his first-born with the love,
+Which breathes from both eternal, the first Might
+Ineffable, whence eye or mind
+Can roam, hath in such order all dispos'd,
+As none may see and fail to' enjoy. Raise, then,
+O reader! to the lofty wheels, with me,
+Thy ken directed to the point, whereat
+One motion strikes on th' other. There begin
+Thy wonder of the mighty Architect,
+Who loves his work so inwardly, his eye
+Doth ever watch it. See, how thence oblique
+Brancheth the circle, where the planets roll
+To pour their wished influence on the world;
+Whose path not bending thus, in heav'n above
+Much virtue would be lost, and here on earth,
+All power well nigh extinct: or, from direct
+Were its departure distant more or less,
+I' th' universal order, great defect
+Must, both in heav'n and here beneath, ensue.
+ Now rest thee, reader! on thy bench, and muse
+Anticipative of the feast to come;
+So shall delight make thee not feel thy toil.
+Lo! I have set before thee, for thyself
+Feed now: the matter I indite, henceforth
+Demands entire my thought. Join'd with the part,
+Which late we told of, the great minister
+Of nature, that upon the world imprints
+The virtue of the heaven, and doles out
+Time for us with his beam, went circling on
+Along the spires, where each hour sooner comes;
+And I was with him, weetless of ascent,
+As one, who till arriv'd, weets not his coming.
+ For Beatrice, she who passeth on
+So suddenly from good to better, time
+Counts not the act, oh then how great must needs
+Have been her brightness! What she was i' th' sun
+(Where I had enter'd), not through change of hue,
+But light transparent--did I summon up
+Genius, art, practice--I might not so speak,
+It should be e'er imagin'd: yet believ'd
+It may be, and the sight be justly crav'd.
+And if our fantasy fail of such height,
+What marvel, since no eye above the sun
+Hath ever travel'd? Such are they dwell here,
+Fourth family of the Omnipotent Sire,
+Who of his spirit and of his offspring shows;
+And holds them still enraptur'd with the view.
+And thus to me Beatrice: "Thank, oh thank,
+The Sun of angels, him, who by his grace
+To this perceptible hath lifted thee."
+ Never was heart in such devotion bound,
+And with complacency so absolute
+Dispos'd to render up itself to God,
+As mine was at those words: and so entire
+The love for Him, that held me, it eclips'd
+Beatrice in oblivion. Naught displeas'd
+Was she, but smil'd thereat so joyously,
+That of her laughing eyes the radiance brake
+And scatter'd my collected mind abroad.
+ Then saw I a bright band, in liveliness
+Surpassing, who themselves did make the crown,
+And us their centre: yet more sweet in voice,
+Than in their visage beaming. Cinctur'd thus,
+Sometime Latona's daughter we behold,
+When the impregnate air retains the thread,
+That weaves her zone. In the celestial court,
+Whence I return, are many jewels found,
+So dear and beautiful, they cannot brook
+Transporting from that realm: and of these lights
+Such was the song. Who doth not prune his wing
+To soar up thither, let him look from thence
+For tidings from the dumb. When, singing thus,
+Those burning suns that circled round us thrice,
+As nearest stars around the fixed pole,
+Then seem'd they like to ladies, from the dance
+Not ceasing, but suspense, in silent pause,
+List'ning, till they have caught the strain anew:
+Suspended so they stood: and, from within,
+Thus heard I one, who spake: "Since with its beam
+The grace, whence true love lighteth first his flame,
+That after doth increase by loving, shines
+So multiplied in thee, it leads thee up
+Along this ladder, down whose hallow'd steps
+None e'er descend, and mount them not again,
+Who from his phial should refuse thee wine
+To slake thy thirst, no less constrained were,
+Than water flowing not unto the sea.
+Thou fain wouldst hear, what plants are these, that bloom
+In the bright garland, which, admiring, girds
+This fair dame round, who strengthens thee for heav'n.
+I then was of the lambs, that Dominic
+Leads, for his saintly flock, along the way,
+Where well they thrive, not sworn with vanity.
+He, nearest on my right hand, brother was,
+And master to me: Albert of Cologne
+Is this: and of Aquinum, Thomas I.
+If thou of all the rest wouldst be assur'd,
+Let thine eye, waiting on the words I speak,
+In circuit journey round the blessed wreath.
+That next resplendence issues from the smile
+Of Gratian, who to either forum lent
+Such help, as favour wins in Paradise.
+The other, nearest, who adorns our quire,
+Was Peter, he that with the widow gave
+To holy church his treasure. The fifth light,
+Goodliest of all, is by such love inspired,
+That all your world craves tidings of its doom:
+Within, there is the lofty light, endow'd
+With sapience so profound, if truth be truth,
+That with a ken of such wide amplitude
+No second hath arisen. Next behold
+That taper's radiance, to whose view was shown,
+Clearliest, the nature and the ministry
+Angelical, while yet in flesh it dwelt.
+In the other little light serenely smiles
+That pleader for the Christian temples, he
+Who did provide Augustin of his lore.
+Now, if thy mind's eye pass from light to light,
+Upon my praises following, of the eighth
+Thy thirst is next. The saintly soul, that shows
+The world's deceitfulness, to all who hear him,
+Is, with the sight of all the good, that is,
+Blest there. The limbs, whence it was driven, lie
+Down in Cieldauro, and from martyrdom
+And exile came it here. Lo! further on,
+Where flames the arduous Spirit of Isidore,
+Of Bede, and Richard, more than man, erewhile,
+In deep discernment. Lastly this, from whom
+Thy look on me reverteth, was the beam
+Of one, whose spirit, on high musings bent,
+Rebuk'd the ling'ring tardiness of death.
+It is the eternal light of Sigebert,
+Who 'scap'd not envy, when of truth he argued,
+Reading in the straw-litter'd street." Forthwith,
+As clock, that calleth up the spouse of God
+To win her bridegroom's love at matin's hour,
+Each part of other fitly drawn and urg'd,
+Sends out a tinkling sound, of note so sweet,
+Affection springs in well-disposed breast;
+Thus saw I move the glorious wheel, thus heard
+Voice answ'ring voice, so musical and soft,
+It can be known but where day endless shines.
+
+
+
+CANTO XI
+
+O fond anxiety of mortal men!
+How vain and inconclusive arguments
+Are those, which make thee beat thy wings below
+For statues one, and one for aphorisms
+Was hunting; this the priesthood follow'd, that
+By force or sophistry aspir'd to rule;
+To rob another, and another sought
+By civil business wealth; one moiling lay
+Tangled in net of sensual delight,
+And one to witless indolence resign'd;
+What time from all these empty things escap'd,
+With Beatrice, I thus gloriously
+Was rais'd aloft, and made the guest of heav'n.
+ They of the circle to that point, each one.
+Where erst it was, had turn'd; and steady glow'd,
+As candle in his socket. Then within
+The lustre, that erewhile bespake me, smiling
+With merer gladness, heard I thus begin:
+ "E'en as his beam illumes me, so I look
+Into the eternal light, and clearly mark
+Thy thoughts, from whence they rise. Thou art in doubt,
+And wouldst, that I should bolt my words afresh
+In such plain open phrase, as may be smooth
+To thy perception, where I told thee late
+That 'well they thrive;' and that 'no second such
+Hath risen,' which no small distinction needs.
+ "The providence, that governeth the world,
+In depth of counsel by created ken
+Unfathomable, to the end that she,
+Who with loud cries was 'spous'd in precious blood,
+Might keep her footing towards her well-belov'd,
+Safe in herself and constant unto him,
+Hath two ordain'd, who should on either hand
+In chief escort her: one seraphic all
+In fervency; for wisdom upon earth,
+The other splendour of cherubic light.
+I but of one will tell: he tells of both,
+Who one commendeth. which of them so'er
+Be taken: for their deeds were to one end.
+ "Between Tupino, and the wave, that falls
+From blest Ubaldo's chosen hill, there hangs
+Rich slope of mountain high, whence heat and cold
+Are wafted through Perugia's eastern gate:
+And Norcera with Gualdo, in its rear
+Mourn for their heavy yoke. Upon that side,
+Where it doth break its steepness most, arose
+A sun upon the world, as duly this
+From Ganges doth: therefore let none, who speak
+Of that place, say Ascesi; for its name
+Were lamely so deliver'd; but the East,
+To call things rightly, be it henceforth styl'd.
+He was not yet much distant from his rising,
+When his good influence 'gan to bless the earth.
+A dame to whom none openeth pleasure's gate
+More than to death, was, 'gainst his father's will,
+His stripling choice: and he did make her his,
+Before the Spiritual court, by nuptial bonds,
+And in his father's sight: from day to day,
+Then lov'd her more devoutly. She, bereav'd
+Of her first husband, slighted and obscure,
+Thousand and hundred years and more, remain'd
+Without a single suitor, till he came.
+Nor aught avail'd, that, with Amyclas, she
+Was found unmov'd at rumour of his voice,
+Who shook the world: nor aught her constant boldness
+Whereby with Christ she mounted on the cross,
+When Mary stay'd beneath. But not to deal
+Thus closely with thee longer, take at large
+The rovers' titles--Poverty and Francis.
+Their concord and glad looks, wonder and love,
+And sweet regard gave birth to holy thoughts,
+So much, that venerable Bernard first
+Did bare his feet, and, in pursuit of peace
+So heavenly, ran, yet deem'd his footing slow.
+O hidden riches! O prolific good!
+Egidius bares him next, and next Sylvester,
+And follow both the bridegroom; so the bride
+Can please them. Thenceforth goes he on his way,
+The father and the master, with his spouse,
+And with that family, whom now the cord
+Girt humbly: nor did abjectness of heart
+Weigh down his eyelids, for that he was son
+Of Pietro Bernardone, and by men
+In wond'rous sort despis'd. But royally
+His hard intention he to Innocent
+Set forth, and from him first receiv'd the seal
+On his religion. Then, when numerous flock'd
+The tribe of lowly ones, that trac'd HIS steps,
+Whose marvellous life deservedly were sung
+In heights empyreal, through Honorius' hand
+A second crown, to deck their Guardian's virtues,
+Was by the eternal Spirit inwreath'd: and when
+He had, through thirst of martyrdom, stood up
+In the proud Soldan's presence, and there preach'd
+Christ and his followers; but found the race
+Unripen'd for conversion: back once more
+He hasted (not to intermit his toil),
+And reap'd Ausonian lands. On the hard rock,
+'Twixt Arno and the Tyber, he from Christ
+Took the last Signet, which his limbs two years
+Did carry. Then the season come, that he,
+Who to such good had destin'd him, was pleas'd
+T' advance him to the meed, which he had earn'd
+By his self-humbling, to his brotherhood,
+As their just heritage, he gave in charge
+His dearest lady, and enjoin'd their love
+And faith to her: and, from her bosom, will'd
+His goodly spirit should move forth, returning
+To its appointed kingdom, nor would have
+His body laid upon another bier.
+ "Think now of one, who were a fit colleague,
+To keep the bark of Peter in deep sea
+Helm'd to right point; and such our Patriarch was.
+Therefore who follow him, as he enjoins,
+Thou mayst be certain, take good lading in.
+But hunger of new viands tempts his flock,
+So that they needs into strange pastures wide
+Must spread them: and the more remote from him
+The stragglers wander, so much mole they come
+Home to the sheep-fold, destitute of milk.
+There are of them, in truth, who fear their harm,
+And to the shepherd cleave; but these so few,
+A little stuff may furnish out their cloaks.
+ "Now, if my words be clear, if thou have ta'en
+Good heed, if that, which I have told, recall
+To mind, thy wish may be in part fulfill'd:
+For thou wilt see the point from whence they split,
+Nor miss of the reproof, which that implies,
+'That well they thrive not sworn with vanity."'
+
+
+
+CANTO XII
+
+Soon as its final word the blessed flame
+Had rais'd for utterance, straight the holy mill
+Began to wheel, nor yet had once revolv'd,
+Or ere another, circling, compass'd it,
+Motion to motion, song to song, conjoining,
+Song, that as much our muses doth excel,
+Our Sirens with their tuneful pipes, as ray
+Of primal splendour doth its faint reflex.
+ As when, if Juno bid her handmaid forth,
+Two arches parallel, and trick'd alike,
+Span the thin cloud, the outer taking birth
+From that within (in manner of that voice
+Whom love did melt away, as sun the mist),
+And they who gaze, presageful call to mind
+The compact, made with Noah, of the world
+No more to be o'erflow'd; about us thus
+Of sempiternal roses, bending, wreath'd
+Those garlands twain, and to the innermost
+E'en thus th' external answered. When the footing,
+And other great festivity, of song,
+And radiance, light with light accordant, each
+Jocund and blythe, had at their pleasure still'd
+(E'en as the eyes by quick volition mov'd,
+Are shut and rais'd together), from the heart
+Of one amongst the new lights mov'd a voice,
+That made me seem like needle to the star,
+In turning to its whereabout, and thus
+Began: "The love, that makes me beautiful,
+Prompts me to tell of th' other guide, for whom
+Such good of mine is spoken. Where one is,
+The other worthily should also be;
+That as their warfare was alike, alike
+Should be their glory. Slow, and full of doubt,
+And with thin ranks, after its banner mov'd
+The army of Christ (which it so clearly cost
+To reappoint), when its imperial Head,
+Who reigneth ever, for the drooping host
+Did make provision, thorough grace alone,
+And not through its deserving. As thou heard'st,
+Two champions to the succour of his spouse
+He sent, who by their deeds and words might join
+Again his scatter'd people. In that clime,
+Where springs the pleasant west-wind to unfold
+The fresh leaves, with which Europe sees herself
+New-garmented; nor from those billows far,
+Beyond whose chiding, after weary course,
+The sun doth sometimes hide him, safe abides
+The happy Callaroga, under guard
+Of the great shield, wherein the lion lies
+Subjected and supreme. And there was born
+The loving million of the Christian faith,
+The hollow'd wrestler, gentle to his own,
+And to his enemies terrible. So replete
+His soul with lively virtue, that when first
+Created, even in the mother's womb,
+It prophesied. When, at the sacred font,
+The spousals were complete 'twixt faith and him,
+Where pledge of mutual safety was exchang'd,
+The dame, who was his surety, in her sleep
+Beheld the wondrous fruit, that was from him
+And from his heirs to issue. And that such
+He might be construed, as indeed he was,
+She was inspir'd to name him of his owner,
+Whose he was wholly, and so call'd him Dominic.
+And I speak of him, as the labourer,
+Whom Christ in his own garden chose to be
+His help-mate. Messenger he seem'd, and friend
+Fast-knit to Christ; and the first love he show'd,
+Was after the first counsel that Christ gave.
+Many a time his nurse, at entering found
+That he had ris'n in silence, and was prostrate,
+As who should say, "My errand was for this."
+O happy father! Felix rightly nam'd!
+O favour'd mother! rightly nam'd Joanna!
+If that do mean, as men interpret it.
+Not for the world's sake, for which now they pore
+Upon Ostiense and Taddeo's page,
+But for the real manna, soon he grew
+Mighty in learning, and did set himself
+To go about the vineyard, that soon turns
+To wan and wither'd, if not tended well:
+And from the see (whose bounty to the just
+And needy is gone by, not through its fault,
+But his who fills it basely), he besought,
+No dispensation for commuted wrong,
+Nor the first vacant fortune, nor the tenth),
+That to God's paupers rightly appertain,
+But, 'gainst an erring and degenerate world,
+Licence to fight, in favour of that seed,
+From which the twice twelve cions gird thee round.
+Then, with sage doctrine and good will to help,
+Forth on his great apostleship he far'd,
+Like torrent bursting from a lofty vein;
+And, dashing 'gainst the stocks of heresy,
+Smote fiercest, where resistance was most stout.
+Thence many rivulets have since been turn'd,
+Over the garden Catholic to lead
+Their living waters, and have fed its plants.
+ "If such one wheel of that two-yoked car,
+Wherein the holy church defended her,
+And rode triumphant through the civil broil.
+Thou canst not doubt its fellow's excellence,
+Which Thomas, ere my coming, hath declar'd
+So courteously unto thee. But the track,
+Which its smooth fellies made, is now deserted:
+That mouldy mother is where late were lees.
+His family, that wont to trace his path,
+Turn backward, and invert their steps; erelong
+To rue the gathering in of their ill crop,
+When the rejected tares in vain shall ask
+Admittance to the barn. I question not
+But he, who search'd our volume, leaf by leaf,
+Might still find page with this inscription on't,
+'I am as I was wont.' Yet such were not
+From Acquasparta nor Casale, whence
+Of those, who come to meddle with the text,
+One stretches and another cramps its rule.
+Bonaventura's life in me behold,
+From Bagnororegio, one, who in discharge
+Of my great offices still laid aside
+All sinister aim. Illuminato here,
+And Agostino join me: two they were,
+Among the first of those barefooted meek ones,
+Who sought God's friendship in the cord: with them
+Hugues of Saint Victor, Pietro Mangiadore,
+And he of Spain in his twelve volumes shining,
+Nathan the prophet, Metropolitan
+Chrysostom, and Anselmo, and, who deign'd
+To put his hand to the first art, Donatus.
+Raban is here: and at my side there shines
+Calabria's abbot, Joachim , endow'd
+With soul prophetic. The bright courtesy
+Of friar Thomas, and his goodly lore,
+Have mov'd me to the blazon of a peer
+So worthy, and with me have mov'd this throng."
+
+
+
+CANTO XIII
+
+Let him, who would conceive what now I saw,
+Imagine (and retain the image firm,
+As mountain rock, the whilst he hears me speak),
+Of stars fifteen, from midst the ethereal host
+Selected, that, with lively ray serene,
+O'ercome the massiest air: thereto imagine
+The wain, that, in the bosom of our sky,
+Spins ever on its axle night and day,
+With the bright summit of that horn which swells
+Due from the pole, round which the first wheel rolls,
+T' have rang'd themselves in fashion of two signs
+In heav'n, such as Ariadne made,
+When death's chill seized her; and that one of them
+Did compass in the other's beam; and both
+In such sort whirl around, that each should tend
+With opposite motion and, conceiving thus,
+Of that true constellation, and the dance
+Twofold, that circled me, he shall attain
+As 't were the shadow; for things there as much
+Surpass our usage, as the swiftest heav'n
+Is swifter than the Chiana. There was sung
+No Bacchus, and no Io Paean, but
+Three Persons in the Godhead, and in one
+Substance that nature and the human join'd.
+ The song fulfill'd its measure; and to us
+Those saintly lights attended, happier made
+At each new minist'ring. Then silence brake,
+Amid th' accordant sons of Deity,
+That luminary, in which the wondrous life
+Of the meek man of God was told to me;
+And thus it spake: "One ear o' th' harvest thresh'd,
+And its grain safely stor'd, sweet charity
+Invites me with the other to like toil.
+ "Thou know'st, that in the bosom, whence the rib
+Was ta'en to fashion that fair cheek, whose taste
+All the world pays for, and in that, which pierc'd
+By the keen lance, both after and before
+Such satisfaction offer'd, as outweighs
+Each evil in the scale, whate'er of light
+To human nature is allow'd, must all
+Have by his virtue been infus'd, who form'd
+Both one and other: and thou thence admir'st
+In that I told thee, of beatitudes
+A second, there is none, to his enclos'd
+In the fifth radiance. Open now thine eyes
+To what I answer thee; and thou shalt see
+Thy deeming and my saying meet in truth,
+As centre in the round. That which dies not,
+And that which can die, are but each the beam
+Of that idea, which our Soverign Sire
+Engendereth loving; for that lively light,
+Which passeth from his brightness; not disjoin'd
+From him, nor from his love triune with them,
+Doth, through his bounty, congregate itself,
+Mirror'd, as 't were in new existences,
+Itself unalterable and ever one.
+ "Descending hence unto the lowest powers,
+Its energy so sinks, at last it makes
+But brief contingencies: for so I name
+Things generated, which the heav'nly orbs
+Moving, with seed or without seed, produce.
+Their wax, and that which molds it, differ much:
+And thence with lustre, more or less, it shows
+Th' ideal stamp impress: so that one tree
+According to his kind, hath better fruit,
+And worse: and, at your birth, ye, mortal men,
+Are in your talents various. Were the wax
+Molded with nice exactness, and the heav'n
+In its disposing influence supreme,
+The lustre of the seal should be complete:
+But nature renders it imperfect ever,
+Resembling thus the artist in her work,
+Whose faultering hand is faithless to his skill.
+Howe'er, if love itself dispose, and mark
+The primal virtue, kindling with bright view,
+There all perfection is vouchsafed; and such
+The clay was made, accomplish'd with each gift,
+That life can teem with; such the burden fill'd
+The virgin's bosom: so that I commend
+Thy judgment, that the human nature ne'er
+Was or can be, such as in them it was.
+ "Did I advance no further than this point,
+'How then had he no peer?' thou might'st reply.
+But, that what now appears not, may appear
+Right plainly, ponder, who he was, and what
+(When he was bidden 'Ask' ), the motive sway'd
+To his requesting. I have spoken thus,
+That thou mayst see, he was a king, who ask'd
+For wisdom, to the end he might be king
+Sufficient: not the number to search out
+Of the celestial movers; or to know,
+If necessary with contingent e'er
+Have made necessity; or whether that
+Be granted, that first motion is; or if
+Of the mid circle can, by art, be made
+Triangle with each corner, blunt or sharp.
+ "Whence, noting that, which I have said, and this,
+Thou kingly prudence and that ken mayst learn,
+At which the dart of my intention aims.
+And, marking clearly, that I told thee, 'Risen,'
+Thou shalt discern it only hath respect
+To kings, of whom are many, and the good
+Are rare. With this distinction take my words;
+And they may well consist with that which thou
+Of the first human father dost believe,
+And of our well-beloved. And let this
+Henceforth be led unto thy feet, to make
+Thee slow in motion, as a weary man,
+Both to the 'yea' and to the 'nay' thou seest not.
+For he among the fools is down full low,
+Whose affirmation, or denial, is
+Without distinction, in each case alike
+Since it befalls, that in most instances
+Current opinion leads to false: and then
+Affection bends the judgment to her ply.
+ "Much more than vainly doth he loose from shore,
+Since he returns not such as he set forth,
+Who fishes for the truth and wanteth skill.
+And open proofs of this unto the world
+Have been afforded in Parmenides,
+Melissus, Bryso, and the crowd beside,
+Who journey'd on, and knew not whither: so did
+Sabellius, Arius, and the other fools,
+Who, like to scymitars, reflected back
+The scripture-image, by distortion marr'd.
+ "Let not the people be too swift to judge,
+As one who reckons on the blades in field,
+Or ere the crop be ripe. For I have seen
+The thorn frown rudely all the winter long
+And after bear the rose upon its top;
+And bark, that all the way across the sea
+Ran straight and speedy, perish at the last,
+E'en in the haven's mouth seeing one steal,
+Another brine, his offering to the priest,
+Let not Dame Birtha and Sir Martin thence
+Into heav'n's counsels deem that they can pry:
+For one of these may rise, the other fall."
+
+
+
+CANTO XIV
+
+From centre to the circle, and so back
+From circle to the centre, water moves
+In the round chalice, even as the blow
+Impels it, inwardly, or from without.
+Such was the image glanc'd into my mind,
+As the great spirit of Aquinum ceas'd;
+And Beatrice after him her words
+Resum'd alternate: "Need there is (tho' yet
+He tells it to you not in words, nor e'en
+In thought) that he should fathom to its depth
+Another mystery. Tell him, if the light,
+Wherewith your substance blooms, shall stay with you
+Eternally, as now: and, if it doth,
+How, when ye shall regain your visible forms,
+The sight may without harm endure the change,
+That also tell." As those, who in a ring
+Tread the light measure, in their fitful mirth
+Raise loud the voice, and spring with gladder bound;
+Thus, at the hearing of that pious suit,
+The saintly circles in their tourneying
+And wond'rous note attested new delight.
+ Whoso laments, that we must doff this garb
+Of frail mortality, thenceforth to live
+Immortally above, he hath not seen
+The sweet refreshing, of that heav'nly shower.
+ Him, who lives ever, and for ever reigns
+In mystic union of the Three in One,
+Unbounded, bounding all, each spirit thrice
+Sang, with such melody, as but to hear
+For highest merit were an ample meed.
+And from the lesser orb the goodliest light,
+With gentle voice and mild, such as perhaps
+The angel's once to Mary, thus replied:
+"Long as the joy of Paradise shall last,
+Our love shall shine around that raiment, bright,
+As fervent; fervent, as in vision blest;
+And that as far in blessedness exceeding,
+As it hath grave beyond its virtue great.
+Our shape, regarmented with glorious weeds
+Of saintly flesh, must, being thus entire,
+Show yet more gracious. Therefore shall increase,
+Whate'er of light, gratuitous, imparts
+The Supreme Good; light, ministering aid,
+The better disclose his glory: whence
+The vision needs increasing, much increase
+The fervour, which it kindles; and that too
+The ray, that comes from it. But as the greed
+Which gives out flame, yet it its whiteness shines
+More lively than that, and so preserves
+Its proper semblance; thus this circling sphere
+Of splendour, shall to view less radiant seem,
+Than shall our fleshly robe, which yonder earth
+Now covers. Nor will such excess of light
+O'erpower us, in corporeal organs made
+Firm, and susceptible of all delight."
+ So ready and so cordial an "Amen,"
+Followed from either choir, as plainly spoke
+Desire of their dead bodies; yet perchance
+Not for themselves, but for their kindred dear,
+Mothers and sires, and those whom best they lov'd,
+Ere they were made imperishable flame.
+ And lo! forthwith there rose up round about
+A lustre over that already there,
+Of equal clearness, like the brightening up
+Of the horizon. As at an evening hour
+Of twilight, new appearances through heav'n
+Peer with faint glimmer, doubtfully descried;
+So there new substances, methought began
+To rise in view; and round the other twain
+Enwheeling, sweep their ampler circuit wide.
+ O gentle glitter of eternal beam!
+With what a such whiteness did it flow,
+O'erpowering vision in me! But so fair,
+So passing lovely, Beatrice show'd,
+Mind cannot follow it, nor words express
+Her infinite sweetness. Thence mine eyes regain'd
+Power to look up, and I beheld myself,
+Sole with my lady, to more lofty bliss
+Translated: for the star, with warmer smile
+Impurpled, well denoted our ascent.
+ With all the heart, and with that tongue which speaks
+The same in all, an holocaust I made
+To God, befitting the new grace vouchsaf'd.
+And from my bosom had not yet upsteam'd
+The fuming of that incense, when I knew
+The rite accepted. With such mighty sheen
+And mantling crimson, in two listed rays
+The splendours shot before me, that I cried,
+"God of Sabaoth! that does prank them thus!"
+ As leads the galaxy from pole to pole,
+Distinguish'd into greater lights and less,
+Its pathway, which the wisest fail to spell;
+So thickly studded, in the depth of Mars,
+Those rays describ'd the venerable sign,
+That quadrants in the round conjoining frame.
+Here memory mocks the toil of genius. Christ
+Beam'd on that cross; and pattern fails me now.
+But whoso takes his cross, and follows Christ
+Will pardon me for that I leave untold,
+When in the flecker'd dawning he shall spy
+The glitterance of Christ. From horn to horn,
+And 'tween the summit and the base did move
+Lights, scintillating, as they met and pass'd.
+Thus oft are seen, with ever-changeful glance,
+Straight or athwart, now rapid and now slow,
+The atomies of bodies, long or short,
+To move along the sunbeam, whose slant line
+Checkers the shadow, interpos'd by art
+Against the noontide heat. And as the chime
+Of minstrel music, dulcimer, and help
+With many strings, a pleasant dining makes
+To him, who heareth not distinct the note;
+So from the lights, which there appear'd to me,
+Gather'd along the cross a melody,
+That, indistinctly heard, with ravishment
+Possess'd me. Yet I mark'd it was a hymn
+Of lofty praises; for there came to me
+"Arise and conquer," as to one who hears
+And comprehends not. Me such ecstasy
+O'ercame, that never till that hour was thing
+That held me in so sweet imprisonment.
+ Perhaps my saying over bold appears,
+Accounting less the pleasure of those eyes,
+Whereon to look fulfilleth all desire.
+But he, who is aware those living seals
+Of every beauty work with quicker force,
+The higher they are ris'n; and that there
+I had not turn'd me to them; he may well
+Excuse me that, whereof in my excuse
+I do accuse me, and may own my truth;
+That holy pleasure here not yet reveal'd,
+Which grows in transport as we mount aloof.
+
+
+
+CANTO XV
+
+True love, that ever shows itself as clear
+In kindness, as loose appetite in wrong,
+Silenced that lyre harmonious, and still'd
+The sacred chords, that are by heav'n's right hand
+Unwound and tighten'd, flow to righteous prayers
+Should they not hearken, who, to give me will
+For praying, in accordance thus were mute?
+He hath in sooth good cause for endless grief,
+Who, for the love of thing that lasteth not,
+Despoils himself forever of that love.
+ As oft along the still and pure serene,
+At nightfall, glides a sudden trail of fire,
+Attracting with involuntary heed
+The eye to follow it, erewhile at rest,
+And seems some star that shifted place in heav'n,
+Only that, whence it kindles, none is lost,
+And it is soon extinct; thus from the horn,
+That on the dexter of the cross extends,
+Down to its foot, one luminary ran
+From mid the cluster shone there; yet no gem
+Dropp'd from its foil; and through the beamy list
+Like flame in alabaster, glow'd its course.
+ So forward stretch'd him (if of credence aught
+Our greater muse may claim) the pious ghost
+Of old Anchises, in the' Elysian bower,
+When he perceiv'd his son. "O thou, my blood!
+O most exceeding grace divine! to whom,
+As now to thee, hath twice the heav'nly gate
+Been e'er unclos'd?" so spake the light; whence I
+Turn'd me toward him; then unto my dame
+My sight directed, and on either side
+Amazement waited me; for in her eyes
+Was lighted such a smile, I thought that mine
+Had div'd unto the bottom of my grace
+And of my bliss in Paradise. Forthwith
+To hearing and to sight grateful alike,
+The spirit to his proem added things
+I understood not, so profound he spake;
+Yet not of choice but through necessity
+Mysterious; for his high conception scar'd
+Beyond the mark of mortals. When the flight
+Of holy transport had so spent its rage,
+That nearer to the level of our thought
+The speech descended, the first sounds I heard
+Were, "Best he thou, Triunal Deity!
+That hast such favour in my seed vouchsaf'd!"
+Then follow'd: "No unpleasant thirst, tho' long,
+Which took me reading in the sacred book,
+Whose leaves or white or dusky never change,
+Thou hast allay'd, my son, within this light,
+From whence my voice thou hear'st; more thanks to her.
+Who for such lofty mounting has with plumes
+Begirt thee. Thou dost deem thy thoughts to me
+From him transmitted, who is first of all,
+E'en as all numbers ray from unity;
+And therefore dost not ask me who I am,
+Or why to thee more joyous I appear,
+Than any other in this gladsome throng.
+The truth is as thou deem'st; for in this hue
+Both less and greater in that mirror look,
+In which thy thoughts, or ere thou think'st, are shown.
+But, that the love, which keeps me wakeful ever,
+Urging with sacred thirst of sweet desire,
+May be contended fully, let thy voice,
+Fearless, and frank and jocund, utter forth
+Thy will distinctly, utter forth the wish,
+Whereto my ready answer stands decreed."
+ I turn'd me to Beatrice; and she heard
+Ere I had spoken, smiling, an assent,
+That to my will gave wings; and I began
+"To each among your tribe, what time ye kenn'd
+The nature, in whom naught unequal dwells,
+Wisdom and love were in one measure dealt;
+For that they are so equal in the sun,
+From whence ye drew your radiance and your heat,
+As makes all likeness scant. But will and means,
+In mortals, for the cause ye well discern,
+With unlike wings are fledge. A mortal I
+Experience inequality like this,
+And therefore give no thanks, but in the heart,
+For thy paternal greeting. This howe'er
+I pray thee, living topaz! that ingemm'st
+This precious jewel, let me hear thy name."
+ "I am thy root, O leaf! whom to expect
+Even, hath pleas'd me: "thus the prompt reply
+Prefacing, next it added; "he, of whom
+Thy kindred appellation comes, and who,
+These hundred years and more, on its first ledge
+Hath circuited the mountain, was my son
+And thy great grandsire. Well befits, his long
+Endurance should he shorten'd by thy deeds.
+ "Florence, within her ancient limit-mark,
+Which calls her still to matin prayers and noon,
+Was chaste and sober, and abode in peace.
+She had no armlets and no head-tires then,
+No purfled dames, no zone, that caught the eye
+More than the person did. Time was not yet,
+When at his daughter's birth the sire grew pale.
+For fear the age and dowry should exceed
+On each side just proportion. House was none
+Void of its family; nor yet had come
+Hardanapalus, to exhibit feats
+Of chamber prowess. Montemalo yet
+O'er our suburban turret rose; as much
+To be surpass in fall, as in its rising.
+I saw Bellincione Berti walk abroad
+In leathern girdle and a clasp of bone;
+And, with no artful colouring on her cheeks,
+His lady leave the glass. The sons I saw
+Of Nerli and of Vecchio well content
+With unrob'd jerkin; and their good dames handling
+The spindle and the flax; O happy they!
+Each sure of burial in her native land,
+And none left desolate a-bed for France!
+One wak'd to tend the cradle, hushing it
+With sounds that lull'd the parent's infancy:
+Another, with her maidens, drawing off
+The tresses from the distaff, lectur'd them
+Old tales of Troy and Fesole and Rome.
+A Salterello and Cianghella we
+Had held as strange a marvel, as ye would
+A Cincinnatus or Cornelia now.
+ "In such compos'd and seemly fellowship,
+Such faithful and such fair equality,
+In so sweet household, Mary at my birth
+Bestow'd me, call'd on with loud cries; and there
+In your old baptistery, I was made
+Christian at once and Cacciaguida; as were
+My brethren, Eliseo and Moronto.
+ "From Valdipado came to me my spouse,
+And hence thy surname grew. I follow'd then
+The Emperor Conrad; and his knighthood he
+Did gird on me; in such good part he took
+My valiant service. After him I went
+To testify against that evil law,
+Whose people, by the shepherd's fault, possess
+Your right, usurping. There, by that foul crew
+Was I releas'd from the deceitful world,
+Whose base affection many a spirit soils,
+And from the martyrdom came to this peace."
+
+
+
+CANTO XVI
+
+O slight respect of man's nobility!
+I never shall account it marvelous,
+That our infirm affection here below
+Thou mov'st to boasting, when I could not choose,
+E'en in that region of unwarp'd desire,
+In heav'n itself, but make my vaunt in thee!
+Yet cloak thou art soon shorten'd, for that time,
+Unless thou be eked out from day to day,
+Goes round thee with his shears. Resuming then
+With greeting such, as Rome, was first to bear,
+But since hath disaccustom'd I began;
+And Beatrice, that a little space
+Was sever'd, smil'd reminding me of her,
+Whose cough embolden'd (as the story holds)
+To first offence the doubting Guenever.
+ "You are my sire," said I, "you give me heart
+Freely to speak my thought: above myself
+You raise me. Through so many streams with joy
+My soul is fill'd, that gladness wells from it;
+So that it bears the mighty tide, and bursts not
+Say then, my honour'd stem! what ancestors
+Where those you sprang from, and what years were mark'd
+In your first childhood? Tell me of the fold,
+That hath Saint John for guardian, what was then
+Its state, and who in it were highest seated?"
+ As embers, at the breathing of the wind,
+Their flame enliven, so that light I saw
+Shine at my blandishments; and, as it grew
+More fair to look on, so with voice more sweet,
+Yet not in this our modern phrase, forthwith
+It answer'd: "From the day, when it was said
+' Hail Virgin!' to the throes, by which my mother,
+Who now is sainted, lighten'd her of me
+Whom she was heavy with, this fire had come,
+Five hundred fifty times and thrice, its beams
+To reilumine underneath the foot
+Of its own lion. They, of whom I sprang,
+And I, had there our birth-place, where the last
+Partition of our city first is reach'd
+By him, that runs her annual game. Thus much
+Suffice of my forefathers: who they were,
+And whence they hither came, more honourable
+It is to pass in silence than to tell.
+All those, who in that time were there from Mars
+Until the Baptist, fit to carry arms,
+Were but the fifth of them this day alive.
+But then the citizen's blood, that now is mix'd
+From Campi and Certaldo and Fighine,
+Ran purely through the last mechanic's veins.
+O how much better were it, that these people
+Were neighbours to you, and that at Galluzzo
+And at Trespiano, ye should have your bound'ry,
+Than to have them within, and bear the stench
+Of Aguglione's hind, and Signa's, him,
+That hath his eye already keen for bart'ring!
+Had not the people, which of all the world
+Degenerates most, been stepdame unto Caesar,
+But, as a mother, gracious to her son;
+Such one, as hath become a Florentine,
+And trades and traffics, had been turn'd adrift
+To Simifonte, where his grandsire ply'd
+The beggar's craft. The Conti were possess'd
+Of Montemurlo still: the Cerchi still
+Were in Acone's parish; nor had haply
+From Valdigrieve past the Buondelmonte.
+The city's malady hath ever source
+In the confusion of its persons, as
+The body's, in variety of food:
+And the blind bull falls with a steeper plunge,
+Than the blind lamb; and oftentimes one sword
+Doth more and better execution,
+Than five. Mark Luni, Urbisaglia mark,
+How they are gone, and after them how go
+Chiusi and Sinigaglia; and 't will seem
+No longer new or strange to thee to hear,
+That families fail, when cities have their end.
+All things, that appertain t' ye, like yourselves,
+Are mortal: but mortality in some
+Ye mark not, they endure so long, and you
+Pass by so suddenly. And as the moon
+Doth, by the rolling of her heav'nly sphere,
+Hide and reveal the strand unceasingly;
+So fortune deals with Florence. Hence admire not
+At what of them I tell thee, whose renown
+Time covers, the first Florentines. I saw
+The Ughi, Catilini and Filippi,
+The Alberichi, Greci and Ormanni,
+Now in their wane, illustrious citizens:
+And great as ancient, of Sannella him,
+With him of Arca saw, and Soldanieri
+And Ardinghi, and Bostichi. At the poop,
+That now is laden with new felony,
+So cumb'rous it may speedily sink the bark,
+The Ravignani sat, of whom is sprung
+The County Guido, and whoso hath since
+His title from the fam'd Bellincione ta'en.
+Fair governance was yet an art well priz'd
+By him of Pressa: Galigaio show'd
+The gilded hilt and pommel, in his house.
+The column, cloth'd with verrey, still was seen
+Unshaken: the Sacchetti still were great,
+Giouchi, Sifanti, Galli and Barucci,
+With them who blush to hear the bushel nam'd.
+Of the Calfucci still the branchy trunk
+Was in its strength: and to the curule chairs
+Sizii and Arigucci yet were drawn.
+How mighty them I saw, whom since their pride
+Hath undone! and in all her goodly deeds
+Florence was by the bullets of bright gold
+O'erflourish'd. Such the sires of those, who now,
+As surely as your church is vacant, flock
+Into her consistory, and at leisure
+There stall them and grow fat. The o'erweening brood,
+That plays the dragon after him that flees,
+But unto such, as turn and show the tooth,
+Ay or the purse, is gentle as a lamb,
+Was on its rise, but yet so slight esteem'd,
+That Ubertino of Donati grudg'd
+His father-in-law should yoke him to its tribe.
+Already Caponsacco had descended
+Into the mart from Fesole: and Giuda
+And Infangato were good citizens.
+A thing incredible I tell, tho' true:
+The gateway, named from those of Pera, led
+Into the narrow circuit of your walls.
+Each one, who bears the sightly quarterings
+Of the great Baron (he whose name and worth
+The festival of Thomas still revives)
+His knighthood and his privilege retain'd;
+Albeit one, who borders them With gold,
+This day is mingled with the common herd.
+In Borgo yet the Gualterotti dwelt,
+And Importuni: well for its repose
+Had it still lack'd of newer neighbourhood.
+The house, from whence your tears have had their spring,
+Through the just anger that hath murder'd ye
+And put a period to your gladsome days,
+Was honour'd, it, and those consorted with it.
+O Buondelmonte! what ill counseling
+Prevail'd on thee to break the plighted bond
+Many, who now are weeping, would rejoice,
+Had God to Ema giv'n thee, the first time
+Thou near our city cam'st. But so was doom'd:
+On that maim'd stone set up to guard the bridge,
+At thy last peace, the victim, Florence! fell.
+With these and others like to them, I saw
+Florence in such assur'd tranquility,
+She had no cause at which to grieve: with these
+Saw her so glorious and so just, that ne'er
+The lily from the lance had hung reverse,
+Or through division been with vermeil dyed."
+
+
+
+CANTO XVII
+
+Such as the youth, who came to Clymene
+To certify himself of that reproach,
+Which had been fasten'd on him, (he whose end
+Still makes the fathers chary to their sons,
+E'en such was I; nor unobserv'd was such
+Of Beatrice, and that saintly lamp,
+Who had erewhile for me his station mov'd;
+When thus by lady: "Give thy wish free vent,
+That it may issue, bearing true report
+Of the mind's impress; not that aught thy words
+May to our knowledge add, but to the end,
+That thou mayst use thyself to own thy thirst
+And men may mingle for thee when they hear."
+ "O plant! from whence I spring! rever'd and lov'd!
+Who soar'st so high a pitch, thou seest as clear,
+As earthly thought determines two obtuse
+In one triangle not contain'd, so clear
+Dost see contingencies, ere in themselves
+Existent, looking at the point whereto
+All times are present, I, the whilst I scal'd
+With Virgil the soul purifying mount,
+And visited the nether world of woe,
+Touching my future destiny have heard
+Words grievous, though I feel me on all sides
+Well squar'd to fortune's blows. Therefore my will
+Were satisfied to know the lot awaits me,
+The arrow, seen beforehand, slacks its flight."
+ So said I to the brightness, which erewhile
+To me had spoken, and my will declar'd,
+As Beatrice will'd, explicitly.
+Nor with oracular response obscure,
+Such, as or ere the Lamb of God was slain,
+Beguil'd the credulous nations; but, in terms
+Precise and unambiguous lore, replied
+The spirit of paternal love, enshrin'd,
+Yet in his smile apparent; and thus spake:
+"Contingency, unfolded not to view
+Upon the tablet of your mortal mold,
+Is all depictur'd in the' eternal sight;
+But hence deriveth not necessity,
+More then the tall ship, hurried down the flood,
+Doth from the vision, that reflects the scene.
+From thence, as to the ear sweet harmony
+From organ comes, so comes before mine eye
+The time prepar'd for thee. Such as driv'n out
+From Athens, by his cruel stepdame's wiles,
+Hippolytus departed, such must thou
+Depart from Florence. This they wish, and this
+Contrive, and will ere long effectuate, there,
+Where gainful merchandize is made of Christ,
+Throughout the livelong day. The common cry,
+Will, as 't is ever wont, affix the blame
+Unto the party injur'd: but the truth
+Shall, in the vengeance it dispenseth, find
+A faithful witness. Thou shall leave each thing
+Belov'd most dearly: this is the first shaft
+Shot from the bow of exile. Thou shalt prove
+How salt the savour is of other's bread,
+How hard the passage to descend and climb
+By other's stairs, But that shall gall thee most
+Will he the worthless and vile company,
+With whom thou must be thrown into these straits.
+For all ungrateful, impious all and mad,
+Shall turn 'gainst thee: but in a little while
+Theirs and not thine shall be the crimson'd brow
+Their course shall so evince their brutishness
+T' have ta'en thy stand apart shall well become thee.
+ "First refuge thou must find, first place of rest,
+In the great Lombard's courtesy, who bears
+Upon the ladder perch'd the sacred bird.
+He shall behold thee with such kind regard,
+That 'twixt ye two, the contrary to that
+Which falls 'twixt other men, the granting shall
+Forerun the asking. With him shalt thou see
+That mortal, who was at his birth impress
+So strongly from this star, that of his deeds
+The nations shall take note. His unripe age
+Yet holds him from observance; for these wheels
+Only nine years have compass him about.
+But, ere the Gascon practice on great Harry,
+Sparkles of virtue shall shoot forth in him,
+In equal scorn of labours and of gold.
+His bounty shall be spread abroad so widely,
+As not to let the tongues e'en of his foes
+Be idle in its praise. Look thou to him
+And his beneficence: for he shall cause
+Reversal of their lot to many people,
+Rich men and beggars interchanging fortunes.
+And thou shalt bear this written in thy soul
+Of him, but tell it not; "and things he told
+Incredible to those who witness them;
+Then added: "So interpret thou, my son,
+What hath been told thee.--Lo! the ambushment
+That a few circling seasons hide for thee!
+Yet envy not thy neighbours: time extends
+Thy span beyond their treason's chastisement."
+ Soon, as the saintly spirit, by his silence,
+Had shown the web, which I had streteh'd for him
+Upon the warp, was woven, I began,
+As one, who in perplexity desires
+Counsel of other, wise, benign and friendly:
+"My father! well I mark how time spurs on
+Toward me, ready to inflict the blow,
+Which falls most heavily on him, who most
+Abandoned himself. Therefore 't is good
+I should forecast, that driven from the place
+Most dear to me, I may not lose myself
+All others by my song. Down through the world
+Of infinite mourning, and along the mount
+From whose fair height my lady's eyes did lift me,
+And after through this heav'n from light to light,
+Have I learnt that, which if I tell again,
+It may with many woefully disrelish;
+And, if I am a timid friend to truth,
+I fear my life may perish among those,
+To whom these days shall be of ancient date."
+ The brightness, where enclos'd the treasure smil'd,
+Which I had found there, first shone glisteningly,
+Like to a golden mirror in the sun;
+Next answer'd: "Conscience, dimm'd or by its own
+Or other's shame, will feel thy saying sharp.
+Thou, notwithstanding, all deceit remov'd,
+See the whole vision be made manifest.
+And let them wince who have their withers wrung.
+What though, when tasted first, thy voice shall prove
+Unwelcome, on digestion it will turn
+To vital nourishment. The cry thou raisest,
+Shall, as the wind doth, smite the proudest summits;
+Which is of honour no light argument,
+For this there only have been shown to thee,
+Throughout these orbs, the mountain, and the deep,
+Spirits, whom fame hath note of. For the mind
+Of him, who hears, is loth to acquiesce
+And fix its faith, unless the instance brought
+Be palpable, and proof apparent urge."
+
+
+
+CANTO XVIII
+
+Now in his word, sole, ruminating, joy'd
+That blessed spirit; and I fed on mine,
+Tempting the sweet with bitter: she meanwhile,
+Who led me unto God, admonish'd: "Muse
+On other thoughts: bethink thee, that near Him
+I dwell, who recompenseth every wrong."
+ At the sweet sounds of comfort straight I turn'd;
+And, in the saintly eyes what love was seen,
+I leave in silence here: nor through distrust
+Of my words only, but that to such bliss
+The mind remounts not without aid. Thus much
+Yet may I speak; that, as I gaz'd on her,
+Affection found no room for other wish.
+While the everlasting pleasure, that did full
+On Beatrice shine, with second view
+From her fair countenance my gladden'd soul
+Contented; vanquishing me with a beam
+Of her soft smile, she spake: "Turn thee, and list.
+These eyes are not thy only Paradise."
+ As here we sometimes in the looks may see
+Th' affection mark'd, when that its sway hath ta'en
+The spirit wholly; thus the hallow'd light,
+To whom I turn'd, flashing, bewray'd its will
+To talk yet further with me, and began:
+"On this fifth lodgment of the tree, whose life
+Is from its top, whose fruit is ever fair
+And leaf unwith'ring, blessed spirits abide,
+That were below, ere they arriv'd in heav'n,
+So mighty in renown, as every muse
+Might grace her triumph with them. On the horns
+Look therefore of the cross: he, whom I name,
+Shall there enact, as doth 1n summer cloud
+Its nimble fire." Along the cross I saw,
+At the repeated name of Joshua,
+A splendour gliding; nor, the word was said,
+Ere it was done: then, at the naming saw
+Of the great Maccabee, another move
+With whirling speed; and gladness was the scourge
+Unto that top. The next for Charlemagne
+And for the peer Orlando, two my gaze
+Pursued, intently, as the eye pursues
+A falcon flying. Last, along the cross,
+William, and Renard, and Duke Godfrey drew
+My ken, and Robert Guiscard. And the soul,
+Who spake with me among the other lights
+Did move away, and mix; and with the choir
+Of heav'nly songsters prov'd his tuneful skill.
+ To Beatrice on my right l bent,
+Looking for intimation or by word
+Or act, what next behoov'd; and did descry
+Such mere effulgence in her eyes, such joy,
+It past all former wont. And, as by sense
+Of new delight, the man, who perseveres
+In good deeds doth perceive from day to day
+His virtue growing; I e'en thus perceiv'd
+Of my ascent, together with the heav'n
+The circuit widen'd, noting the increase
+Of beauty in that wonder. Like the change
+In a brief moment on some maiden's cheek,
+Which from its fairness doth discharge the weight
+Of pudency, that stain'd it; such in her,
+And to mine eyes so sudden was the change,
+Through silvery whiteness of that temperate star,
+Whose sixth orb now enfolded us. I saw,
+Within that Jovial cresset, the clear sparks
+Of love, that reign'd there, fashion to my view
+Our language. And as birds, from river banks
+Arisen, now in round, now lengthen'd troop,
+Array them in their flight, greeting, as seems,
+Their new-found pastures; so, within the lights,
+The saintly creatures flying, sang, and made
+Now D. now I. now L. figur'd I' th' air.
+First, singing, to their notes they mov'd, then one
+Becoming of these signs, a little while
+Did rest them, and were mute. O nymph divine
+Of Pegasean race! whose souls, which thou
+Inspir'st, mak'st glorious and long-liv'd, as they
+Cities and realms by thee! thou with thyself
+Inform me; that I may set forth the shapes,
+As fancy doth present them. Be thy power
+Display'd in this brief song. The characters,
+Vocal and consonant, were five-fold seven.
+In order each, as they appear'd, I mark'd.
+Diligite Justitiam, the first,
+Both verb and noun all blazon'd; and the extreme
+Qui judicatis terram. In the M.
+Of the fifth word they held their station,
+Making the star seem silver streak'd with gold.
+And on the summit of the M. I saw
+Descending other lights, that rested there,
+Singing, methinks, their bliss and primal good.
+Then, as at shaking of a lighted brand,
+Sparkles innumerable on all sides
+Rise scatter'd, source of augury to th' unwise;
+Thus more than thousand twinkling lustres hence
+Seem'd reascending, and a higher pitch
+Some mounting, and some less; e'en as the sun,
+Which kindleth them, decreed. And when each one
+Had settled in his place, the head and neck
+Then saw I of an eagle, lively
+Grav'd in that streaky fire. Who painteth there,
+Hath none to guide him; of himself he guides;
+And every line and texture of the nest
+Doth own from him the virtue, fashions it.
+The other bright beatitude, that seem'd
+Erewhile, with lilied crowning, well content
+To over-canopy the M. mov'd forth,
+Following gently the impress of the bird.
+ Sweet star! what glorious and thick-studded gems
+Declar'd to me our justice on the earth
+To be the effluence of that heav'n, which thou,
+Thyself a costly jewel, dost inlay!
+Therefore I pray the Sovran Mind, from whom
+Thy motion and thy virtue are begun,
+That he would look from whence the fog doth rise,
+To vitiate thy beam: so that once more
+He may put forth his hand 'gainst such, as drive
+Their traffic in that sanctuary, whose walls
+With miracles and martyrdoms were built.
+ Ye host of heaven! whose glory I survey l
+O beg ye grace for those, that are on earth
+All after ill example gone astray.
+War once had for its instrument the sword:
+But now 't is made, taking the bread away
+Which the good Father locks from none. --And thou,
+That writes but to cancel, think, that they,
+Who for the vineyard, which thou wastest, died,
+Peter and Paul live yet, and mark thy doings.
+Thou hast good cause to cry, "My heart so cleaves
+To him, that liv'd in solitude remote,
+And from the wilds was dragg'd to martyrdom,
+I wist not of the fisherman nor Paul."
+
+
+
+CANTO XIX
+
+Before my sight appear'd, with open wings,
+The beauteous image, in fruition sweet
+Gladdening the thronged spirits. Each did seem
+A little ruby, whereon so intense
+The sun-beam glow'd that to mine eyes it came
+In clear refraction. And that, which next
+Befalls me to portray, voice hath not utter'd,
+Nor hath ink written, nor in fantasy
+Was e'er conceiv'd. For I beheld and heard
+The beak discourse; and, what intention form'd
+Of many, singly as of one express,
+Beginning: "For that I was just and piteous,
+l am exalted to this height of glory,
+The which no wish exceeds: and there on earth
+Have I my memory left, e'en by the bad
+Commended, while they leave its course untrod."
+ Thus is one heat from many embers felt,
+As in that image many were the loves,
+And one the voice, that issued from them all.
+Whence I address them: "O perennial flowers
+Of gladness everlasting! that exhale
+In single breath your odours manifold!
+Breathe now; and let the hunger be appeas'd,
+That with great craving long hath held my soul,
+Finding no food on earth. This well I know,
+That if there be in heav'n a realm, that shows
+In faithful mirror the celestial Justice,
+Yours without veil reflects it. Ye discern
+The heed, wherewith I do prepare myself
+To hearken; ye the doubt that urges me
+With such inveterate craving." Straight I saw,
+Like to a falcon issuing from the hood,
+That rears his head, and claps him with his wings,
+His beauty and his eagerness bewraying.
+So saw I move that stately sign, with praise
+Of grace divine inwoven and high song
+Of inexpressive joy. "He," it began,
+"Who turn'd his compass on the world's extreme,
+And in that space so variously hath wrought,
+Both openly, and in secret, in such wise
+Could not through all the universe display
+Impression of his glory, that the Word
+Of his omniscience should not still remain
+In infinite excess. In proof whereof,
+He first through pride supplanted, who was sum
+Of each created being, waited not
+For light celestial, and abortive fell.
+Whence needs each lesser nature is but scant
+Receptacle unto that Good, which knows
+No limit, measur'd by itself alone.
+Therefore your sight, of th' omnipresent Mind
+A single beam, its origin must own
+Surpassing far its utmost potency.
+The ken, your world is gifted with, descends
+In th' everlasting Justice as low down,
+As eye doth in the sea; which though it mark
+The bottom from the shore, in the wide main
+Discerns it not; and ne'ertheless it is,
+But hidden through its deepness. Light is none,
+Save that which cometh from the pure serene
+Of ne'er disturbed ether: for the rest,
+'Tis darkness all, or shadow of the flesh,
+Or else its poison. Here confess reveal'd
+That covert, which hath hidden from thy search
+The living justice, of the which thou mad'st
+Such frequent question; for thou saidst--'A man
+Is born on Indus' banks, and none is there
+Who speaks of Christ, nor who doth read nor write,
+And all his inclinations and his acts,
+As far as human reason sees, are good,
+And he offendeth not in word or deed.
+But unbaptiz'd he dies, and void of faith.
+Where is the justice that condemns him? where
+His blame, if he believeth not?'--What then,
+And who art thou, that on the stool wouldst sit
+To judge at distance of a thousand miles
+With the short-sighted vision of a span?
+To him, who subtilizes thus with me,
+There would assuredly be room for doubt
+Even to wonder, did not the safe word
+Of scripture hold supreme authority.
+ "O animals of clay! O spirits gross I
+The primal will, that in itself is good,
+Hath from itself, the chief Good, ne'er been mov'd.
+Justice consists in consonance with it,
+Derivable by no created good,
+Whose very cause depends upon its beam."
+ As on her nest the stork, that turns about
+Unto her young, whom lately she hath fed,
+While they with upward eyes do look on her;
+So lifted I my gaze; and bending so
+The ever-blessed image wav'd its wings,
+Lab'ring with such deep counsel. Wheeling round
+It warbled, and did say: "As are my notes
+To thee, who understand'st them not, such is
+Th' eternal judgment unto mortal ken."
+ Then still abiding in that ensign rang'd,
+Wherewith the Romans over-awed the world,
+Those burning splendours of the Holy Spirit
+Took up the strain; and thus it spake again:
+"None ever hath ascended to this realm,
+Who hath not a believer been in Christ,
+Either before or after the blest limbs
+Were nail'd upon the wood. But lo! of those
+Who call 'Christ, Christ,' there shall be many found,
+ In judgment, further off from him by far,
+Than such, to whom his name was never known.
+Christians like these the Ethiop shall condemn:
+When that the two assemblages shall part;
+One rich eternally, the other poor.
+ "What may the Persians say unto your kings,
+When they shall see that volume, in the which
+All their dispraise is written, spread to view?
+There amidst Albert's works shall that be read,
+Which will give speedy motion to the pen,
+When Prague shall mourn her desolated realm.
+There shall be read the woe, that he doth work
+With his adulterate money on the Seine,
+Who by the tusk will perish: there be read
+The thirsting pride, that maketh fool alike
+The English and Scot, impatient of their bound.
+There shall be seen the Spaniard's luxury,
+The delicate living there of the Bohemian,
+Who still to worth has been a willing stranger.
+The halter of Jerusalem shall see
+A unit for his virtue, for his vices
+No less a mark than million. He, who guards
+The isle of fire by old Anchises honour'd
+Shall find his avarice there and cowardice;
+And better to denote his littleness,
+The writing must be letters maim'd, that speak
+Much in a narrow space. All there shall know
+His uncle and his brother's filthy doings,
+Who so renown'd a nation and two crowns
+Have bastardized. And they, of Portugal
+And Norway, there shall be expos'd with him
+Of Ratza, who hath counterfeited ill
+The coin of Venice. O blest Hungary!
+If thou no longer patiently abid'st
+Thy ill-entreating! and, O blest Navarre!
+If with thy mountainous girdle thou wouldst arm thee
+In earnest of that day, e'en now are heard
+Wailings and groans in Famagosta's streets
+And Nicosia's, grudging at their beast,
+Who keepeth even footing with the rest."
+
+
+
+CANTO XX
+
+When, disappearing, from our hemisphere,
+The world's enlightener vanishes, and day
+On all sides wasteth, suddenly the sky,
+Erewhile irradiate only with his beam,
+Is yet again unfolded, putting forth
+Innumerable lights wherein one shines.
+Of such vicissitude in heaven I thought,
+As the great sign, that marshaleth the world
+And the world's leaders, in the blessed beak
+Was silent; for that all those living lights,
+Waxing in splendour, burst forth into songs,
+Such as from memory glide and fall away.
+ Sweet love! that dost apparel thee in smiles,
+How lustrous was thy semblance in those sparkles,
+Which merely are from holy thoughts inspir'd!
+ After the precious and bright beaming stones,
+That did ingem the sixth light, ceas'd the chiming
+Of their angelic bells; methought I heard
+The murmuring of a river, that doth fall
+From rock to rock transpicuous, making known
+The richness of his spring-head: and as sound
+Of cistern, at the fret-board, or of pipe,
+Is, at the wind-hole, modulate and tun'd;
+Thus up the neck, as it were hollow, rose
+That murmuring of the eagle, and forthwith
+Voice there assum'd, and thence along the beak
+Issued in form of words, such as my heart
+Did look for, on whose tables I inscrib'd them.
+ "The part in me, that sees, and bears the sun,,
+In mortal eagles," it began, "must now
+Be noted steadfastly: for of the fires,
+That figure me, those, glittering in mine eye,
+Are chief of all the greatest. This, that shines
+Midmost for pupil, was the same, who sang
+The Holy Spirit's song, and bare about
+The ark from town to town; now doth he know
+The merit of his soul-impassion'd strains
+By their well-fitted guerdon. Of the five,
+That make the circle of the vision, he
+Who to the beak is nearest, comforted
+The widow for her son: now doth he know
+How dear he costeth not to follow Christ,
+Both from experience of this pleasant life,
+And of its opposite. He next, who follows
+In the circumference, for the over arch,
+By true repenting slack'd the pace of death:
+Now knoweth he, that the degrees of heav'n
+Alter not, when through pious prayer below
+Today's is made tomorrow's destiny.
+The other following, with the laws and me,
+To yield the shepherd room, pass'd o'er to Greece,
+From good intent producing evil fruit:
+Now knoweth he, how all the ill, deriv'd
+From his well doing, doth not helm him aught,
+Though it have brought destruction on the world.
+That, which thou seest in the under bow,
+Was William, whom that land bewails, which weeps
+For Charles and Frederick living: now he knows
+How well is lov'd in heav'n the righteous king,
+Which he betokens by his radiant seeming.
+Who in the erring world beneath would deem,
+That Trojan Ripheus in this round was set
+Fifth of the saintly splendours? now he knows
+Enough of that, which the world cannot see,
+The grace divine, albeit e'en his sight
+Reach not its utmost depth." Like to the lark,
+That warbling in the air expatiates long,
+Then, trilling out his last sweet melody,
+Drops satiate with the sweetness; such appear'd
+That image stampt by the' everlasting pleasure,
+Which fashions like itself all lovely things.
+ I, though my doubting were as manifest,
+As is through glass the hue that mantles it,
+In silence waited not: for to my lips
+"What things are these?" involuntary rush'd,
+And forc'd a passage out: whereat I mark'd
+A sudden lightening and new revelry.
+The eye was kindled: and the blessed sign
+No more to keep me wond'ring and suspense,
+Replied: "I see that thou believ'st these things,
+Because I tell them, but discern'st not how;
+So that thy knowledge waits not on thy faith:
+As one who knows the name of thing by rote,
+But is a stranger to its properties,
+Till other's tongue reveal them. Fervent love
+And lively hope with violence assail
+The kingdom of the heavens, and overcome
+The will of the Most high; not in such sort
+As man prevails o'er man; but conquers it,
+Because 't is willing to be conquer'd, still,
+Though conquer'd, by its mercy conquering.
+ "Those, in the eye who live the first and fifth,
+Cause thee to marvel, in that thou behold'st
+The region of the angels deck'd with them.
+They quitted not their bodies, as thou deem'st,
+Gentiles but Christians, in firm rooted faith,
+This of the feet in future to be pierc'd,
+That of feet nail'd already to the cross.
+One from the barrier of the dark abyss,
+Where never any with good will returns,
+Came back unto his bones. Of lively hope
+Such was the meed; of lively hope, that wing'd
+The prayers sent up to God for his release,
+And put power into them to bend his will.
+The glorious Spirit, of whom I speak to thee,
+A little while returning to the flesh,
+Believ'd in him, who had the means to help,
+And, in believing, nourish'd such a flame
+Of holy love, that at the second death
+He was made sharer in our gamesome mirth.
+The other, through the riches of that grace,
+Which from so deep a fountain doth distil,
+As never eye created saw its rising,
+Plac'd all his love below on just and right:
+Wherefore of grace God op'd in him the eye
+To the redemption of mankind to come;
+Wherein believing, he endur'd no more
+The filth of paganism, and for their ways
+Rebuk'd the stubborn nations. The three nymphs,
+Whom at the right wheel thou beheldst advancing,
+Were sponsors for him more than thousand years
+Before baptizing. O how far remov'd,
+Predestination! is thy root from such
+As see not the First cause entire: and ye,
+O mortal men! be wary how ye judge:
+For we, who see our Maker, know not yet
+The number of the chosen: and esteem
+Such scantiness of knowledge our delight:
+For all our good is in that primal good
+Concentrate, and God's will and ours are one."
+ So, by that form divine, was giv'n to me
+Sweet medicine to clear and strengthen sight,
+And, as one handling skillfully the harp,
+Attendant on some skilful songster's voice
+Bids the chords vibrate, and therein the song
+Acquires more pleasure; so, the whilst it spake,
+It doth remember me, that I beheld
+The pair of blessed luminaries move.
+Like the accordant twinkling of two eyes,
+Their beamy circlets, dancing to the sounds.
+
+
+
+CANTO XXI
+
+Again mine eyes were fix'd on Beatrice,
+And with mine eyes my soul, that in her looks
+Found all contentment. Yet no smile she wore
+And, "Did I smile," quoth she, "thou wouldst be straight
+Like Semele when into ashes turn'd:
+For, mounting these eternal palace-stairs,
+My beauty, which the loftier it climbs,
+As thou hast noted, still doth kindle more,
+So shines, that, were no temp'ring interpos'd,
+Thy mortal puissance would from its rays
+Shrink, as the leaf doth from the thunderbolt.
+Into the seventh splendour are we wafted,
+That underneath the burning lion's breast
+Beams, in this hour, commingled with his might,
+Thy mind be with thine eyes: and in them mirror'd
+The shape, which in this mirror shall be shown."
+Whoso can deem, how fondly I had fed
+My sight upon her blissful countenance,
+May know, when to new thoughts I chang'd, what joy
+To do the bidding of my heav'nly guide:
+In equal balance poising either weight.
+ Within the crystal, which records the name,
+(As its remoter circle girds the world)
+Of that lov'd monarch, in whose happy reign
+No ill had power to harm, I saw rear'd up,
+In colour like to sun-illumin'd gold.
+A ladder, which my ken pursued in vain,
+So lofty was the summit; down whose steps
+I saw the splendours in such multitude
+Descending, ev'ry light in heav'n, methought,
+Was shed thence. As the rooks, at dawn of day
+Bestirring them to dry their feathers chill,
+Some speed their way a-field, and homeward some,
+Returning, cross their flight, while some abide
+And wheel around their airy lodge; so seem'd
+That glitterance, wafted on alternate wing,
+As upon certain stair it met, and clash'd
+Its shining. And one ling'ring near us, wax'd
+So bright, that in my thought: said: "The love,
+Which this betokens me, admits no doubt."
+ Unwillingly from question I refrain,
+To her, by whom my silence and my speech
+Are order'd, looking for a sign: whence she,
+Who in the sight of Him, that seeth all,
+Saw wherefore I was silent, prompted me
+T' indulge the fervent wish; and I began:
+"I am not worthy, of my own desert,
+That thou shouldst answer me; but for her sake,
+Who hath vouchsaf'd my asking, spirit blest!
+That in thy joy art shrouded! say the cause,
+Which bringeth thee so near: and wherefore, say,
+Doth the sweet symphony of Paradise
+Keep silence here, pervading with such sounds
+Of rapt devotion ev'ry lower sphere?"
+"Mortal art thou in hearing as in sight;"
+Was the reply: "and what forbade the smile
+Of Beatrice interrupts our song.
+Only to yield thee gladness of my voice,
+And of the light that vests me, I thus far
+Descend these hallow'd steps: not that more love
+Invites me; for lo! there aloft, as much
+Or more of love is witness'd in those flames:
+But such my lot by charity assign'd,
+That makes us ready servants, as thou seest,
+To execute the counsel of the Highest.
+"That in this court," said I, "O sacred lamp!
+Love no compulsion needs, but follows free
+Th' eternal Providence, I well discern:
+This harder find to deem, why of thy peers
+Thou only to this office wert foredoom'd."
+I had not ended, when, like rapid mill,
+Upon its centre whirl'd the light; and then
+The love, that did inhabit there, replied:
+"Splendour eternal, piercing through these folds,
+Its virtue to my vision knits, and thus
+Supported, lifts me so above myself,
+That on the sov'ran essence, which it wells from,
+I have the power to gaze: and hence the joy,
+Wherewith I sparkle, equaling with my blaze
+The keenness of my sight. But not the soul,
+That is in heav'n most lustrous, nor the seraph
+That hath his eyes most fix'd on God, shall solve
+What thou hast ask'd: for in th' abyss it lies
+Of th' everlasting statute sunk so low,
+That no created ken may fathom it.
+And, to the mortal world when thou return'st,
+Be this reported; that none henceforth dare
+Direct his footsteps to so dread a bourn.
+The mind, that here is radiant, on the earth
+Is wrapt in mist. Look then if she may do,
+Below, what passeth her ability,
+When she is ta'en to heav'n." By words like these
+Admonish'd, I the question urg'd no more;
+And of the spirit humbly sued alone
+T' instruct me of its state. "'Twixt either shore
+Of Italy, nor distant from thy land,
+A stony ridge ariseth, in such sort,
+The thunder doth not lift his voice so high,
+They call it Catria: at whose foot a cell
+Is sacred to the lonely Eremite,
+For worship set apart and holy rites."
+A third time thus it spake; then added: "There
+So firmly to God's service I adher'd,
+That with no costlier viands than the juice
+Of olives, easily I pass'd the heats
+Of summer and the winter frosts, content
+In heav'n-ward musings. Rich were the returns
+And fertile, which that cloister once was us'd
+To render to these heavens: now 't is fall'n
+Into a waste so empty, that ere long
+Detection must lay bare its vanity
+Pietro Damiano there was I y-clept:
+Pietro the sinner, when before I dwelt
+Beside the Adriatic, in the house
+Of our blest Lady. Near upon my close
+Of mortal life, through much importuning
+I was constrain'd to wear the hat that still
+From bad to worse it shifted.--Cephas came;
+He came, who was the Holy Spirit's vessel,
+Barefoot and lean, eating their bread, as chanc'd,
+At the first table. Modern Shepherd's need
+Those who on either hand may prop and lead them,
+So burly are they grown: and from behind
+Others to hoist them. Down the palfrey's sides
+Spread their broad mantles, so as both the beasts
+Are cover'd with one skin. O patience! thou
+That lookst on this and doth endure so long."
+I at those accents saw the splendours down
+From step to step alight, and wheel, and wax,
+Each circuiting, more beautiful. Round this
+They came, and stay'd them; uttered them a shout
+So loud, it hath no likeness here: nor I
+Wist what it spake, so deaf'ning was the thunder.
+
+
+
+CANTO XXII
+
+Astounded, to the guardian of my steps
+I turn'd me, like the chill, who always runs
+Thither for succour, where he trusteth most,
+And she was like the mother, who her son
+Beholding pale and breathless, with her voice
+Soothes him, and he is cheer'd; for thus she spake,
+Soothing me: "Know'st not thou, thou art in heav'n?
+And know'st not thou, whatever is in heav'n,
+Is holy, and that nothing there is done
+But is done zealously and well? Deem now,
+What change in thee the song, and what my smile
+had wrought, since thus the shout had pow'r to move thee.
+In which couldst thou have understood their prayers,
+The vengeance were already known to thee,
+Which thou must witness ere thy mortal hour,
+The sword of heav'n is not in haste to smite,
+Nor yet doth linger, save unto his seeming,
+Who in desire or fear doth look for it.
+But elsewhere now l bid thee turn thy view;
+So shalt thou many a famous spirit behold."
+Mine eyes directing, as she will'd, I saw
+A hundred little spheres, that fairer grew
+By interchange of splendour. I remain'd,
+As one, who fearful of o'er-much presuming,
+Abates in him the keenness of desire,
+Nor dares to question, when amid those pearls,
+One largest and most lustrous onward drew,
+That it might yield contentment to my wish;
+And from within it these the sounds I heard.
+ "If thou, like me, beheldst the charity
+That burns amongst us, what thy mind conceives,
+Were utter'd. But that, ere the lofty bound
+Thou reach, expectance may not weary thee,
+I will make answer even to the thought,
+Which thou hast such respect of. In old days,
+That mountain, at whose side Cassino rests,
+Was on its height frequented by a race
+Deceived and ill dispos'd: and I it was,
+Who thither carried first the name of Him,
+Who brought the soul-subliming truth to man.
+And such a speeding grace shone over me,
+That from their impious worship I reclaim'd
+The dwellers round about, who with the world
+Were in delusion lost. These other flames,
+The spirits of men contemplative, were all
+Enliven'd by that warmth, whose kindly force
+Gives birth to flowers and fruits of holiness.
+Here is Macarius; Romoaldo here:
+And here my brethren, who their steps refrain'd
+Within the cloisters, and held firm their heart."
+ I answ'ring, thus; "Thy gentle words and kind,
+And this the cheerful semblance, I behold
+Not unobservant, beaming in ye all,
+Have rais'd assurance in me, wakening it
+Full-blossom'd in my bosom, as a rose
+Before the sun, when the consummate flower
+Has spread to utmost amplitude. Of thee
+Therefore entreat I, father! to declare
+If I may gain such favour, as to gaze
+Upon thine image, by no covering veil'd."
+ "Brother!" he thus rejoin'd, "in the last sphere
+Expect completion of thy lofty aim,
+For there on each desire completion waits,
+And there on mine: where every aim is found
+Perfect, entire, and for fulfillment ripe.
+There all things are as they have ever been:
+For space is none to bound, nor pole divides,
+Our ladder reaches even to that clime,
+And so at giddy distance mocks thy view.
+Thither the Patriarch Jacob saw it stretch
+Its topmost round, when it appear'd to him
+With angels laden. But to mount it now
+None lifts his foot from earth: and hence my rule
+Is left a profitless stain upon the leaves;
+The walls, for abbey rear'd, turned into dens,
+The cowls to sacks choak'd up with musty meal.
+Foul usury doth not more lift itself
+Against God's pleasure, than that fruit which makes
+The hearts of monks so wanton: for whate'er
+Is in the church's keeping, all pertains.
+To such, as sue for heav'n's sweet sake, and not
+To those who in respect of kindred claim,
+Or on more vile allowance. Mortal flesh
+Is grown so dainty, good beginnings last not
+From the oak's birth, unto the acorn's setting.
+His convent Peter founded without gold
+Or silver; I with pray'rs and fasting mine;
+And Francis his in meek humility.
+And if thou note the point, whence each proceeds,
+Then look what it hath err'd to, thou shalt find
+The white grown murky. Jordan was turn'd back;
+And a less wonder, then the refluent sea,
+May at God's pleasure work amendment here."
+ So saying, to his assembly back he drew:
+And they together cluster'd into one,
+Then all roll'd upward like an eddying wind.
+ The sweet dame beckon'd me to follow them:
+And, by that influence only, so prevail'd
+Over my nature, that no natural motion,
+Ascending or descending here below,
+Had, as I mounted, with my pennon vied.
+ So, reader, as my hope is to return
+Unto the holy triumph, for the which
+I ofttimes wail my sins, and smite my breast,
+Thou hadst been longer drawing out and thrusting
+Thy finger in the fire, than I was, ere
+The sign, that followeth Taurus, I beheld,
+And enter'd its precinct. O glorious stars!
+O light impregnate with exceeding virtue!
+To whom whate'er of genius lifteth me
+Above the vulgar, grateful I refer;
+With ye the parent of all mortal life
+Arose and set, when I did first inhale
+The Tuscan air; and afterward, when grace
+Vouchsaf'd me entrance to the lofty wheel
+That in its orb impels ye, fate decreed
+My passage at your clime. To you my soul
+Devoutly sighs, for virtue even now
+To meet the hard emprize that draws me on.
+ "Thou art so near the sum of blessedness,"
+Said Beatrice, "that behooves thy ken
+Be vigilant and clear. And, to this end,
+Or even thou advance thee further, hence
+Look downward, and contemplate, what a world
+Already stretched under our feet there lies:
+So as thy heart may, in its blithest mood,
+Present itself to the triumphal throng,
+Which through the' etherial concave comes rejoicing."
+ I straight obey'd; and with mine eye return'd
+Through all the seven spheres, and saw this globe
+So pitiful of semblance, that perforce
+It moved my smiles: and him in truth I hold
+For wisest, who esteems it least: whose thoughts
+Elsewhere are fix'd, him worthiest call and best.
+I saw the daughter of Latona shine
+Without the shadow, whereof late I deem'd
+That dense and rare were cause. Here I sustain'd
+The visage, Hyperion! of thy sun;
+And mark'd, how near him with their circle, round
+Move Maia and Dione; here discern'd
+Jove's tempering 'twixt his sire and son; and hence
+Their changes and their various aspects
+Distinctly scann'd. Nor might I not descry
+Of all the seven, how bulky each, how swift;
+Nor of their several distances not learn.
+This petty area (o'er the which we stride
+So fiercely), as along the eternal twins
+I wound my way, appear'd before me all,
+Forth from the havens stretch'd unto the hills.
+Then to the beauteous eyes mine eyes return'd.
+
+
+
+CANTO XXIII
+
+E'en as the bird, who midst the leafy bower
+Has, in her nest, sat darkling through the night,
+With her sweet brood, impatient to descry
+Their wished looks, and to bring home their food,
+In the fond quest unconscious of her toil:
+She, of the time prevenient, on the spray,
+That overhangs their couch, with wakeful gaze
+Expects the sun; nor ever, till the dawn,
+Removeth from the east her eager ken;
+So stood the dame erect, and bent her glance
+Wistfully on that region, where the sun
+Abateth most his speed; that, seeing her
+Suspense and wand'ring, I became as one,
+In whom desire is waken'd, and the hope
+Of somewhat new to come fills with delight.
+ Short space ensued; I was not held, I say,
+Long in expectance, when I saw the heav'n
+Wax more and more resplendent; and, "Behold,"
+Cried Beatrice, "the triumphal hosts
+Of Christ, and all the harvest reap'd at length
+Of thy ascending up these spheres." Meseem'd,
+That, while she spake her image all did burn,
+And in her eyes such fullness was of joy,
+And I am fain to pass unconstrued by.
+ As in the calm full moon, when Trivia smiles,
+In peerless beauty, 'mid th' eternal nympus,
+That paint through all its gulfs the blue profound
+In bright pre-eminence so saw I there,
+O'er million lamps a sun, from whom all drew
+Their radiance as from ours the starry train:
+And through the living light so lustrous glow'd
+The substance, that my ken endur'd it not.
+ O Beatrice! sweet and precious guide!
+Who cheer'd me with her comfortable words!
+"Against the virtue, that o'erpow'reth thee,
+Avails not to resist. Here is the might,
+And here the wisdom, which did open lay
+The path, that had been yearned for so long,
+Betwixt the heav'n and earth." Like to the fire,
+That, in a cloud imprison'd doth break out
+Expansive, so that from its womb enlarg'd,
+It falleth against nature to the ground;
+Thus in that heav'nly banqueting my soul
+Outgrew herself; and, in the transport lost.
+Holds now remembrance none of what she was.
+ "Ope thou thine eyes, and mark me: thou hast seen
+Things, that empower thee to sustain my smile."
+ I was as one, when a forgotten dream
+Doth come across him, and he strives in vain
+To shape it in his fantasy again,
+Whenas that gracious boon was proffer'd me,
+Which never may be cancel'd from the book,
+Wherein the past is written. Now were all
+Those tongues to sound, that have on sweetest milk
+Of Polyhymnia and her sisters fed
+And fatten'd, not with all their help to boot,
+Unto the thousandth parcel of the truth,
+My song might shadow forth that saintly smile,
+flow merely in her saintly looks it wrought.
+And with such figuring of Paradise
+The sacred strain must leap, like one, that meets
+A sudden interruption to his road.
+But he, who thinks how ponderous the theme,
+And that 't is lain upon a mortal shoulder,
+May pardon, if it tremble with the burden.
+The track, our ventrous keel must furrow, brooks
+No unribb'd pinnace, no self-sparing pilot.
+ "Why doth my face," said Beatrice, "thus
+Enamour thee, as that thou dost not turn
+Unto the beautiful garden, blossoming
+Beneath the rays of Christ? Here is the rose,
+Wherein the word divine was made incarnate;
+And here the lilies, by whose odour known
+The way of life was follow'd." Prompt I heard
+Her bidding, and encounter once again
+The strife of aching vision. As erewhile,
+Through glance of sunlight, stream'd through broken cloud,
+Mine eyes a flower-besprinkled mead have seen,
+Though veil'd themselves in shade; so saw I there
+Legions of splendours, on whom burning rays
+Shed lightnings from above, yet saw I not
+The fountain whence they flow'd. O gracious virtue!
+Thou, whose broad stamp is on them, higher up
+Thou didst exalt thy glory to give room
+To my o'erlabour'd sight: when at the name
+Of that fair flower, whom duly I invoke
+Both morn and eve, my soul, with all her might
+Collected, on the goodliest ardour fix'd.
+And, as the bright dimensions of the star
+In heav'n excelling, as once here on earth
+Were, in my eyeballs lively portray'd,
+Lo! from within the sky a cresset fell,
+Circling in fashion of a diadem,
+And girt the star, and hov'ring round it wheel'd.
+ Whatever melody sounds sweetest here,
+And draws the spirit most unto itself,
+Might seem a rent cloud when it grates the thunder,
+Compar'd unto the sounding of that lyre,
+Wherewith the goodliest sapphire, that inlays
+The floor of heav'n, was crown'd. " Angelic Love
+I am, who thus with hov'ring flight enwheel
+The lofty rapture from that womb inspir'd,
+Where our desire did dwell: and round thee so,
+Lady of Heav'n! will hover; long as thou
+Thy Son shalt follow, and diviner joy
+Shall from thy presence gild the highest sphere."
+ Such close was to the circling melody:
+And, as it ended, all the other lights
+Took up the strain, and echoed Mary's name.
+ The robe, that with its regal folds enwraps
+The world, and with the nearer breath of God
+Doth burn and quiver, held so far retir'd
+Its inner hem and skirting over us,
+That yet no glimmer of its majesty
+Had stream'd unto me: therefore were mine eyes
+Unequal to pursue the crowned flame,
+That rose and sought its natal seed of fire;
+And like to babe, that stretches forth its arms
+For very eagerness towards the breast,
+After the milk is taken; so outstretch'd
+Their wavy summits all the fervent band,
+Through zealous love to Mary: then in view
+There halted, and "Regina Coeli " sang
+So sweetly, the delight hath left me never.
+ O what o'erflowing plenty is up-pil'd
+In those rich-laden coffers, which below
+Sow'd the good seed, whose harvest now they keep.
+ Here are the treasures tasted, that with tears
+Were in the Babylonian exile won,
+When gold had fail'd them. Here in synod high
+Of ancient council with the new conven'd,
+Under the Son of Mary and of God,
+Victorious he his mighty triumph holds,
+To whom the keys of glory were assign'd.
+
+
+
+CANTO XXIV
+
+"O ye! in chosen fellowship advanc'd
+To the great supper of the blessed Lamb,
+Whereon who feeds hath every wish fulfill'd!
+If to this man through God's grace be vouchsaf'd
+Foretaste of that, which from your table falls,
+Or ever death his fated term prescribe;
+Be ye not heedless of his urgent will;
+But may some influence of your sacred dews
+Sprinkle him. Of the fount ye alway drink,
+Whence flows what most he craves." Beatrice spake,
+And the rejoicing spirits, like to spheres
+On firm-set poles revolving, trail'd a blaze
+Of comet splendour; and as wheels, that wind
+Their circles in the horologe, so work
+The stated rounds, that to th' observant eye
+The first seems still, and, as it flew, the last;
+E'en thus their carols weaving variously,
+They by the measure pac'd, or swift, or slow,
+Made me to rate the riches of their joy.
+ From that, which I did note in beauty most
+Excelling, saw I issue forth a flame
+So bright, as none was left more goodly there.
+Round Beatrice thrice it wheel'd about,
+With so divine a song, that fancy's ear
+Records it not; and the pen passeth on
+And leaves a blank: for that our mortal speech,
+Nor e'en the inward shaping of the brain,
+Hath colours fine enough to trace such folds.
+ "O saintly sister mine! thy prayer devout
+Is with so vehement affection urg'd,
+Thou dost unbind me from that beauteous sphere."
+ Such were the accents towards my lady breath'd
+From that blest ardour, soon as it was stay'd:
+To whom she thus: "O everlasting light
+Of him, within whose mighty grasp our Lord
+Did leave the keys, which of this wondrous bliss
+He bare below! tent this man, as thou wilt,
+With lighter probe or deep, touching the faith,
+By the which thou didst on the billows walk.
+If he in love, in hope, and in belief,
+Be steadfast, is not hid from thee: for thou
+Hast there thy ken, where all things are beheld
+In liveliest portraiture. But since true faith
+Has peopled this fair realm with citizens,
+Meet is, that to exalt its glory more,
+Thou in his audience shouldst thereof discourse."
+ Like to the bachelor, who arms himself,
+And speaks not, till the master have propos'd
+The question, to approve, and not to end it;
+So I, in silence, arm'd me, while she spake,
+Summoning up each argument to aid;
+As was behooveful for such questioner,
+And such profession: "As good Christian ought,
+Declare thee, What is faith?" Whereat I rais'd
+My forehead to the light, whence this had breath'd,
+Then turn'd to Beatrice, and in her looks
+Approval met, that from their inmost fount
+I should unlock the waters. "May the grace,
+That giveth me the captain of the church
+For confessor," said I, "vouchsafe to me
+Apt utterance for my thoughts!" then added: "Sire!
+E'en as set down by the unerring style
+Of thy dear brother, who with thee conspir'd
+To bring Rome in unto the way of life,
+Faith of things hop'd is substance, and the proof
+Of things not seen; and herein doth consist
+Methinks its essence,"--" Rightly hast thou deem'd,"
+Was answer'd: "if thou well discern, why first
+He hath defin'd it, substance, and then proof."
+ "The deep things," I replied, "which here I scan
+Distinctly, are below from mortal eye
+So hidden, they have in belief alone
+Their being, on which credence hope sublime
+Is built; and therefore substance it intends.
+And inasmuch as we must needs infer
+From such belief our reasoning, all respect
+To other view excluded, hence of proof
+Th' intention is deriv'd." Forthwith I heard:
+"If thus, whate'er by learning men attain,
+Were understood, the sophist would want room
+To exercise his wit." So breath'd the flame
+Of love: then added: "Current is the coin
+Thou utter'st, both in weight and in alloy.
+But tell me, if thou hast it in thy purse."
+ "Even so glittering and so round," said I,
+"I not a whit misdoubt of its assay."
+ Next issued from the deep imbosom'd splendour:
+"Say, whence the costly jewel, on the which
+Is founded every virtue, came to thee."
+"The flood," I answer'd, "from the Spirit of God
+Rain'd down upon the ancient bond and new,--
+Here is the reas'ning, that convinceth me
+So feelingly, each argument beside
+Seems blunt and forceless in comparison."
+Then heard I: "Wherefore holdest thou that each,
+The elder proposition and the new,
+Which so persuade thee, are the voice of heav'n?"
+ "The works, that follow'd, evidence their truth; "
+I answer'd: "Nature did not make for these
+The iron hot, or on her anvil mould them."
+"Who voucheth to thee of the works themselves,
+Was the reply, "that they in very deed
+Are that they purport? None hath sworn so to thee."
+ "That all the world," said I, "should have bee turn'd
+To Christian, and no miracle been wrought,
+Would in itself be such a miracle,
+The rest were not an hundredth part so great.
+E'en thou wentst forth in poverty and hunger
+To set the goodly plant, that from the vine,
+It once was, now is grown unsightly bramble."
+That ended, through the high celestial court
+Resounded all the spheres. "Praise we one God!"
+In song of most unearthly melody.
+And when that Worthy thus, from branch to branch,
+Examining, had led me, that we now
+Approach'd the topmost bough, he straight resum'd;
+"The grace, that holds sweet dalliance with thy soul,
+So far discreetly hath thy lips unclos'd
+That, whatsoe'er has past them, I commend.
+Behooves thee to express, what thou believ'st,
+The next, and whereon thy belief hath grown."
+ "O saintly sire and spirit!" I began,
+"Who seest that, which thou didst so believe,
+As to outstrip feet younger than thine own,
+Toward the sepulchre? thy will is here,
+That I the tenour of my creed unfold;
+And thou the cause of it hast likewise ask'd.
+And I reply: I in one God believe,
+One sole eternal Godhead, of whose love
+All heav'n is mov'd, himself unmov'd the while.
+Nor demonstration physical alone,
+Or more intelligential and abstruse,
+Persuades me to this faith; but from that truth
+It cometh to me rather, which is shed
+Through Moses, the rapt Prophets, and the Psalms.
+The Gospel, and that ye yourselves did write,
+When ye were gifted of the Holy Ghost.
+In three eternal Persons I believe,
+Essence threefold and one, mysterious league
+Of union absolute, which, many a time,
+The word of gospel lore upon my mind
+Imprints: and from this germ, this firstling spark,
+The lively flame dilates, and like heav'n's star
+Doth glitter in me.'' As the master hears,
+Well pleas'd, and then enfoldeth in his arms
+The servant, who hath joyful tidings brought,
+And having told the errand keeps his peace;
+Thus benediction uttering with song
+Soon as my peace I held, compass'd me thrice
+The apostolic radiance, whose behest
+Had op'd lips; so well their answer pleas'd.
+
+
+
+CANTO XXV
+
+If e'er the sacred poem that hath made
+Both heav'n and earth copartners in its toil,
+And with lean abstinence, through many a year,
+Faded my brow, be destin'd to prevail
+Over the cruelty, which bars me forth
+Of the fair sheep-fold, where a sleeping lamb
+The wolves set on and fain had worried me,
+With other voice and fleece of other grain
+I shall forthwith return, and, standing up
+At my baptismal font, shall claim the wreath
+Due to the poet's temples: for I there
+First enter'd on the faith which maketh souls
+Acceptable to God: and, for its sake,
+Peter had then circled my forehead thus.
+ Next from the squadron, whence had issued forth
+The first fruit of Christ's vicars on the earth,
+Toward us mov'd a light, at view whereof
+My Lady, full of gladness, spake to me:
+"Lo! lo! behold the peer of mickle might,
+That makes Falicia throng'd with visitants!"
+ As when the ring-dove by his mate alights,
+In circles each about the other wheels,
+And murmuring cooes his fondness; thus saw I
+One, of the other great and glorious prince,
+With kindly greeting hail'd, extolling both
+Their heavenly banqueting; but when an end
+Was to their gratulation, silent, each,
+Before me sat they down, so burning bright,
+I could not look upon them. Smiling then,
+Beatrice spake: "O life in glory shrin'd!"
+Who didst the largess of our kingly court
+Set down with faithful pen! let now thy voice
+Of hope the praises in this height resound.
+For thou, who figur'st them in shapes, as clear,
+As Jesus stood before thee, well can'st speak them."
+ "Lift up thy head, and be thou strong in trust:
+For that, which hither from the mortal world
+Arriveth, must be ripen'd in our beam."
+ Such cheering accents from the second flame
+Assur'd me; and mine eyes I lifted up
+Unto the mountains that had bow'd them late
+With over-heavy burden. "Sith our Liege
+Wills of his grace that thou, or ere thy death,
+In the most secret council, with his lords
+Shouldst be confronted, so that having view'd
+The glories of our court, thou mayst therewith
+Thyself, and all who hear, invigorate
+With hope, that leads to blissful end; declare,
+What is that hope, how it doth flourish in thee,
+And whence thou hadst it?" Thus proceeding still,
+The second light: and she, whose gentle love
+My soaring pennons in that lofty flight
+Escorted, thus preventing me, rejoin'd:
+Among her sons, not one more full of hope,
+Hath the church militant: so 't is of him
+Recorded in the sun, whose liberal orb
+Enlighteneth all our tribe: and ere his term
+Of warfare, hence permitted he is come,
+From Egypt to Jerusalem, to see.
+The other points, both which thou hast inquir'd,
+Not for more knowledge, but that he may tell
+How dear thou holdst the virtue, these to him
+Leave I; for he may answer thee with ease,
+And without boasting, so God give him grace."
+Like to the scholar, practis'd in his task,
+Who, willing to give proof of diligence,
+Seconds his teacher gladly, "Hope," said I,
+"Is of the joy to come a sure expectance,
+Th' effect of grace divine and merit preceding.
+This light from many a star visits my heart,
+But flow'd to me the first from him, who sang
+The songs of the Supreme, himself supreme
+Among his tuneful brethren. 'Let all hope
+In thee,' so speak his anthem, 'who have known
+Thy name;' and with my faith who know not that?
+From thee, the next, distilling from his spring,
+In thine epistle, fell on me the drops
+So plenteously, that I on others shower
+The influence of their dew." Whileas I spake,
+A lamping, as of quick and vollied lightning,
+Within the bosom of that mighty sheen,
+Play'd tremulous; then forth these accents breath'd:
+"Love for the virtue which attended me
+E'en to the palm, and issuing from the field,
+Glows vigorous yet within me, and inspires
+To ask of thee, whom also it delights;
+What promise thou from hope in chief dost win."
+ "Both scriptures, new and ancient," I reply'd;
+"Propose the mark (which even now I view)
+For souls belov'd of God. Isaias saith,
+ That, in their own land, each one must be clad
+In twofold vesture; and their proper lands this delicious life.
+In terms more full,
+And clearer far, thy brother hath set forth
+This revelation to us, where he tells
+Of the white raiment destin'd to the saints."
+And, as the words were ending, from above,
+"They hope in thee," first heard we cried: whereto
+Answer'd the carols all. Amidst them next,
+A light of so clear amplitude emerg'd,
+That winter's month were but a single day,
+Were such a crystal in the Cancer's sign.
+ Like as a virgin riseth up, and goes,
+And enters on the mazes of the dance,
+Though gay, yet innocent of worse intent,
+Than to do fitting honour to the bride;
+So I beheld the new effulgence come
+Unto the other two, who in a ring
+Wheel'd, as became their rapture. In the dance
+And in the song it mingled. And the dame
+Held on them fix'd her looks: e'en as the spouse
+Silent and moveless. "This is he, who lay
+Upon the bosom of our pelican:
+This he, into whose keeping from the cross
+The mighty charge was given." Thus she spake,
+Yet therefore naught the more remov'd her Sight
+From marking them, or ere her words began,
+Or when they clos'd. As he, who looks intent,
+And strives with searching ken, how he may see
+The sun in his eclipse, and, through desire
+Of seeing, loseth power of sight: so I
+Peer'd on that last resplendence, while I heard:
+"Why dazzlest thou thine eyes in seeking that,
+Which here abides not? Earth my body is,
+In earth: and shall be, with the rest, so long,
+As till our number equal the decree
+Of the Most High. The two that have ascended,
+In this our blessed cloister, shine alone
+With the two garments. So report below."
+ As when, for ease of labour, or to shun
+Suspected peril at a whistle's breath,
+The oars, erewhile dash'd frequent in the wave,
+All rest; the flamy circle at that voice
+So rested, and the mingling sound was still,
+Which from the trinal band soft-breathing rose.
+I turn'd, but ah! how trembled in my thought,
+When, looking at my side again to see
+Beatrice, I descried her not, although
+Not distant, on the happy coast she stood.
+
+
+
+CANTO XXVI
+
+With dazzled eyes, whilst wond'ring I remain'd,
+Forth of the beamy flame which dazzled me,
+Issued a breath, that in attention mute
+Detain'd me; and these words it spake: "'T were well,
+That, long as till thy vision, on my form
+O'erspent, regain its virtue, with discourse
+Thou compensate the brief delay. Say then,
+Beginning, to what point thy soul aspires:
+And meanwhile rest assur'd, that sight in thee
+Is but o'erpowered a space, not wholly quench'd:
+Since thy fair guide and lovely, in her look
+Hath potency, the like to that which dwelt
+In Ananias' hand.'' I answering thus:
+"Be to mine eyes the remedy or late
+Or early, at her pleasure; for they were
+The gates, at which she enter'd, and did light
+Her never dying fire. My wishes here
+Are centered; in this palace is the weal,
+That Alpha and Omega, is to all
+The lessons love can read me." Yet again
+The voice which had dispers'd my fear, when daz'd
+With that excess, to converse urg'd, and spake:
+"Behooves thee sift more narrowly thy terms,
+And say, who level'd at this scope thy bow."
+ "Philosophy," said I, ''hath arguments,
+And this place hath authority enough
+'T' imprint in me such love: for, of constraint,
+Good, inasmuch as we perceive the good,
+Kindles our love, and in degree the more,
+As it comprises more of goodness in 't.
+The essence then, where such advantage is,
+That each good, found without it, is naught else
+But of his light the beam, must needs attract
+The soul of each one, loving, who the truth
+Discerns, on which this proof is built. Such truth
+Learn I from him, who shows me the first love
+Of all intelligential substances
+Eternal: from his voice I learn, whose word
+Is truth, that of himself to Moses saith,
+'I will make all my good before thee pass.'
+Lastly from thee I learn, who chief proclaim'st,
+E'en at the outset of thy heralding,
+In mortal ears the mystery of heav'n."
+ "Through human wisdom, and th' authority
+Therewith agreeing," heard I answer'd, "keep
+The choicest of thy love for God. But say,
+If thou yet other cords within thee feel'st
+That draw thee towards him; so that thou report
+How many are the fangs, with which this love
+Is grappled to thy soul." I did not miss,
+To what intent the eagle of our Lord
+Had pointed his demand; yea noted well
+Th' avowal, which he led to; and resum'd:
+"All grappling bonds, that knit the heart to God,
+Confederate to make fast our clarity.
+The being of the world, and mine own being,
+The death which he endur'd that I should live,
+And that, which all the faithful hope, as I do,
+To the foremention'd lively knowledge join'd,
+Have from the sea of ill love sav'd my bark,
+And on the coast secur'd it of the right.
+As for the leaves, that in the garden bloom,
+My love for them is great, as is the good
+Dealt by th' eternal hand, that tends them all."
+ I ended, and therewith a song most sweet
+Rang through the spheres; and "Holy, holy, holy,"
+Accordant with the rest my lady sang.
+And as a sleep is broken and dispers'd
+Through sharp encounter of the nimble light,
+With the eye's spirit running forth to meet
+The ray, from membrane on to the membrane urg'd;
+And the upstartled wight loathes that be sees;
+So, at his sudden waking, he misdeems
+Of all around him, till assurance waits
+On better judgment: thus the saintly came
+Drove from before mine eyes the motes away,
+With the resplendence of her own, that cast
+Their brightness downward, thousand miles below.
+Whence I my vision, clearer shall before,
+Recover'd; and, well nigh astounded, ask'd
+Of a fourth light, that now with us I saw.
+ And Beatrice: "The first diving soul,
+That ever the first virtue fram'd, admires
+Within these rays his Maker." Like the leaf,
+That bows its lithe top till the blast is blown;
+By its own virtue rear'd then stands aloof;
+So I, the whilst she said, awe-stricken bow'd.
+Then eagerness to speak embolden'd me;
+And I began: "O fruit! that wast alone
+Mature, when first engender'd! Ancient father!
+That doubly seest in every wedded bride
+Thy daughter by affinity and blood!
+Devoutly as I may, I pray thee hold
+Converse with me: my will thou seest; and I,
+More speedily to hear thee, tell it not "
+ It chanceth oft some animal bewrays,
+Through the sleek cov'ring of his furry coat.
+The fondness, that stirs in him and conforms
+His outside seeming to the cheer within:
+And in like guise was Adam's spirit mov'd
+To joyous mood, that through the covering shone,
+Transparent, when to pleasure me it spake:
+"No need thy will be told, which I untold
+Better discern, than thou whatever thing
+Thou holdst most certain: for that will I see
+In Him, who is truth's mirror, and Himself
+Parhelion unto all things, and naught else
+To him. This wouldst thou hear; how long since God
+Plac'd me high garden, from whose hounds
+She led me up in this ladder, steep and long;
+What space endur'd my season of delight;
+Whence truly sprang the wrath that banish'd me;
+And what the language, which I spake and fram'd
+Not that I tasted of the tree, my son,
+Was in itself the cause of that exile,
+But only my transgressing of the mark
+Assign'd me. There, whence at thy lady's hest
+The Mantuan mov'd him, still was I debarr'd
+This council, till the sun had made complete,
+Four thousand and three hundred rounds and twice,
+His annual journey; and, through every light
+In his broad pathway, saw I him return,
+Thousand save sev'nty times, the whilst I dwelt
+Upon the earth. The language I did use
+Was worn away, or ever Nimrod's race
+Their unaccomplishable work began.
+For naught, that man inclines to, ere was lasting,
+Left by his reason free, and variable,
+As is the sky that sways him. That he speaks,
+Is nature's prompting: whether thus or thus,
+She leaves to you, as ye do most affect it.
+Ere I descended into hell's abyss,
+El was the name on earth of the Chief Good,
+Whose joy enfolds me: Eli then 't was call'd
+And so beseemeth: for, in mortals, use
+Is as the leaf upon the bough; that goes,
+And other comes instead. Upon the mount
+Most high above the waters, all my life,
+Both innocent and guilty, did but reach
+From the first hour, to that which cometh next
+(As the sun changes quarter), to the sixth.
+
+
+
+CANTO XXVII
+
+Then "Glory to the Father, to the Son,
+And to the Holy Spirit," rang aloud
+Throughout all Paradise, that with the song
+My spirit reel'd, so passing sweet the strain:
+And what I saw was equal ecstasy;
+One universal smile it seem'd of all things,
+Joy past compare, gladness unutterable,
+Imperishable life of peace and love,
+Exhaustless riches and unmeasur'd bliss.
+ Before mine eyes stood the four torches lit;
+And that, which first had come, began to wax
+In brightness, and in semblance such became,
+As Jove might be, if he and Mars were birds,
+And interchang'd their plumes. Silence ensued,
+Through the blest quire, by Him, who here appoints
+Vicissitude of ministry, enjoin'd;
+When thus I heard: "Wonder not, if my hue
+Be chang'd; for, while I speak, these shalt thou see
+All in like manner change with me. My place
+He who usurps on earth (my place, ay, mine,
+Which in the presence of the Son of God
+Is void), the same hath made my cemetery
+A common sewer of puddle and of blood:
+The more below his triumph, who from hence
+Malignant fell." Such colour, as the sun,
+At eve or morning, paints and adverse cloud,
+Then saw I sprinkled over all the sky.
+And as th' unblemish'd dame, who in herself
+Secure of censure, yet at bare report
+Of other's failing, shrinks with maiden fear;
+So Beatrice in her semblance chang'd:
+And such eclipse in heav'n methinks was seen,
+When the Most Holy suffer'd. Then the words
+Proceeded, with voice, alter'd from itself
+So clean, the semblance did not alter more.
+"Not to this end was Christ's spouse with my blood,
+With that of Linus, and of Cletus fed:
+That she might serve for purchase of base gold:
+But for the purchase of this happy life
+Did Sextus, Pius, and Callixtus bleed,
+And Urban, they, whose doom was not without
+Much weeping seal'd. No purpose was of our
+That on the right hand of our successors
+Part of the Christian people should be set,
+And part upon their left; nor that the keys,
+Which were vouchsaf'd me, should for ensign serve
+Unto the banners, that do levy war
+On the baptiz'd: nor I, for sigil-mark
+Set upon sold and lying privileges;
+Which makes me oft to bicker and turn red.
+In shepherd's clothing greedy wolves below
+Range wide o'er all the pastures. Arm of God!
+Why longer sleepst thou? Caorsines and Gascona
+Prepare to quaff our blood. O good beginning
+To what a vile conclusion must thou stoop!
+But the high providence, which did defend
+Through Scipio the world's glory unto Rome,
+Will not delay its succour: and thou, son,
+Who through thy mortal weight shall yet again
+Return below, open thy lips, nor hide
+What is by me not hidden." As a Hood
+Of frozen vapours streams adown the air,
+What time the she-goat with her skiey horn
+Touches the sun; so saw I there stream wide
+The vapours, who with us had linger'd late
+And with glad triumph deck th' ethereal cope.
+Onward my sight their semblances pursued;
+So far pursued, as till the space between
+From its reach sever'd them: whereat the guide
+Celestial, marking me no more intent
+On upward gazing, said, "Look down and see
+What circuit thou hast compass'd." From the hour
+When I before had cast my view beneath,
+All the first region overpast I saw,
+Which from the midmost to the bound'ry winds;
+That onward thence from Gades I beheld
+The unwise passage of Laertes' son,
+And hitherward the shore, where thou, Europa!
+Mad'st thee a joyful burden: and yet more
+Of this dim spot had seen, but that the sun,
+A constellation off and more, had ta'en
+His progress in the zodiac underneath.
+ Then by the spirit, that doth never leave
+Its amorous dalliance with my lady's looks,
+Back with redoubled ardour were mine eyes
+Led unto her: and from her radiant smiles,
+Whenas I turn'd me, pleasure so divine
+Did lighten on me, that whatever bait
+Or art or nature in the human flesh,
+Or in its limn'd resemblance, can combine
+Through greedy eyes to take the soul withal,
+Were to her beauty nothing. Its boon influence
+From the fair nest of Leda rapt me forth,
+And wafted on into the swiftest heav'n.
+ What place for entrance Beatrice chose,
+I may not say, so uniform was all,
+Liveliest and loftiest. She my secret wish
+Divin'd; and with such gladness, that God's love
+Seem'd from her visage shining, thus began:
+"Here is the goal, whence motion on his race
+Starts; motionless the centre, and the rest
+All mov'd around. Except the soul divine,
+Place in this heav'n is none, the soul divine,
+Wherein the love, which ruleth o'er its orb,
+Is kindled, and the virtue that it sheds;
+One circle, light and love, enclasping it,
+As this doth clasp the others; and to Him,
+Who draws the bound, its limit only known.
+Measur'd itself by none, it doth divide
+Motion to all, counted unto them forth,
+As by the fifth or half ye count forth ten.
+The vase, wherein time's roots are plung'd, thou seest,
+Look elsewhere for the leaves. O mortal lust!
+That canst not lift thy head above the waves
+Which whelm and sink thee down! The will in man
+Bears goodly blossoms; but its ruddy promise
+Is, by the dripping of perpetual rain,
+Made mere abortion: faith and innocence
+Are met with but in babes, each taking leave
+Ere cheeks with down are sprinkled; he, that fasts,
+While yet a stammerer, with his tongue let loose
+Gluts every food alike in every moon.
+One yet a babbler, loves and listens to
+His mother; but no sooner hath free use
+Of speech, than he doth wish her in her grave.
+So suddenly doth the fair child of him,
+Whose welcome is the morn and eve his parting,
+To negro blackness change her virgin white.
+ "Thou, to abate thy wonder, note that none
+Bears rule in earth, and its frail family
+Are therefore wand'rers. Yet before the date,
+When through the hundredth in his reck'ning drops
+Pale January must be shor'd aside
+From winter's calendar, these heav'nly spheres
+Shall roar so loud, that fortune shall be fain
+To turn the poop, where she hath now the prow;
+So that the fleet run onward; and true fruit,
+Expected long, shall crown at last the bloom!"
+
+
+
+CANTO XXVIII
+
+So she who doth imparadise my soul,
+Had drawn the veil from off our pleasant life,
+And bar'd the truth of poor mortality;
+When lo! as one who, in a mirror, spies
+The shining of a flambeau at his back,
+Lit sudden ore he deem of its approach,
+And turneth to resolve him, if the glass
+Have told him true, and sees the record faithful
+As note is to its metre; even thus,
+I well remember, did befall to me,
+Looking upon the beauteous eyes, whence love
+Had made the leash to take me. As I turn'd;
+And that, which, in their circles, none who spies,
+Can miss of, in itself apparent, struck
+On mine; a point I saw, that darted light
+So sharp, no lid, unclosing, may bear up
+Against its keenness. The least star we view
+From hence, had seem'd a moon, set by its side,
+As star by side of star. And so far off,
+Perchance, as is the halo from the light
+Which paints it, when most dense the vapour spreads,
+There wheel'd about the point a circle of fire,
+More rapid than the motion, which first girds
+The world. Then, circle after circle, round
+Enring'd each other; till the seventh reach'd
+Circumference so ample, that its bow,
+Within the span of Juno's messenger,
+lied scarce been held entire. Beyond the sev'nth,
+Follow'd yet other two. And every one,
+As more in number distant from the first,
+Was tardier in motion; and that glow'd
+With flame most pure, that to the sparkle' of truth
+Was nearest, as partaking most, methinks,
+Of its reality. The guide belov'd
+Saw me in anxious thought suspense, and spake:
+"Heav'n, and all nature, hangs upon that point.
+The circle thereto most conjoin'd observe;
+And know, that by intenser love its course
+Is to this swiftness wing'd. "To whom I thus:
+"It were enough; nor should I further seek,
+Had I but witness'd order, in the world
+Appointed, such as in these wheels is seen.
+But in the sensible world such diff'rence is,
+That is each round shows more divinity,
+As each is wider from the centre. Hence,
+If in this wondrous and angelic temple,
+That hath for confine only light and love,
+My wish may have completion I must know,
+Wherefore such disagreement is between
+Th' exemplar and its copy: for myself,
+Contemplating, I fail to pierce the cause."
+ "It is no marvel, if thy fingers foil'd
+Do leave the knot untied: so hard 't is grown
+For want of tenting." Thus she said: "But take,"
+She added, "if thou wish thy cure, my words,
+And entertain them subtly. Every orb
+Corporeal, doth proportion its extent
+Unto the virtue through its parts diffus'd.
+The greater blessedness preserves the more.
+The greater is the body (if all parts
+Share equally) the more is to preserve.
+Therefore the circle, whose swift course enwheels
+The universal frame answers to that,
+Which is supreme in knowledge and in love
+Thus by the virtue, not the seeming, breadth
+Of substance, measure, thou shalt see the heav'ns,
+Each to the' intelligence that ruleth it,
+Greater to more, and smaller unto less,
+Suited in strict and wondrous harmony."
+ As when the sturdy north blows from his cheek
+A blast, that scours the sky, forthwith our air,
+Clear'd of the rack, that hung on it before,
+Glitters; and, With his beauties all unveil'd,
+The firmament looks forth serene, and smiles;
+Such was my cheer, when Beatrice drove
+With clear reply the shadows back, and truth
+Was manifested, as a star in heaven.
+And when the words were ended, not unlike
+To iron in the furnace, every cirque
+Ebullient shot forth scintillating fires:
+And every sparkle shivering to new blaze,
+In number did outmillion the account
+Reduplicate upon the chequer'd board.
+Then heard I echoing on from choir to choir,
+"Hosanna," to the fixed point, that holds,
+And shall for ever hold them to their place,
+From everlasting, irremovable.
+ Musing awhile I stood: and she, who saw
+by inward meditations, thus began:
+"In the first circles, they, whom thou beheldst,
+Are seraphim and cherubim. Thus swift
+Follow their hoops, in likeness to the point,
+Near as they can, approaching; and they can
+The more, the loftier their vision. Those,
+That round them fleet, gazing the Godhead next,
+Are thrones; in whom the first trine ends. And all
+Are blessed, even as their sight descends
+Deeper into the truth, wherein rest is
+For every mind. Thus happiness hath root
+In seeing, not in loving, which of sight
+Is aftergrowth. And of the seeing such
+The meed, as unto each in due degree
+Grace and good-will their measure have assign'd.
+The other trine, that with still opening buds
+In this eternal springtide blossom fair,
+Fearless of bruising from the nightly ram,
+Breathe up in warbled melodies threefold
+Hosannas blending ever, from the three
+Transmitted. hierarchy of gods, for aye
+Rejoicing, dominations first, next then
+Virtues, and powers the third. The next to whom
+Are princedoms and archangels, with glad round
+To tread their festal ring; and last the band
+Angelical, disporting in their sphere.
+All, as they circle in their orders, look
+Aloft, and downward with such sway prevail,
+That all with mutual impulse tend to God.
+These once a mortal view beheld. Desire
+In Dionysius so intently wrought,
+That he, as I have done rang'd them; and nam'd
+Their orders, marshal'd in his thought. From him
+Dissentient, one refus'd his sacred read.
+But soon as in this heav'n his doubting eyes
+Were open'd, Gregory at his error smil'd
+Nor marvel, that a denizen of earth
+Should scan such secret truth; for he had learnt
+Both this and much beside of these our orbs,
+From an eye-witness to heav'n's mysteries."
+
+
+
+CANTO XXIX
+
+No longer than what time Latona's twins
+Cover'd of Libra and the fleecy star,
+Together both, girding the' horizon hang,
+In even balance from the zenith pois'd,
+Till from that verge, each, changing hemisphere,
+Part the nice level; e'en so brief a space
+Did Beatrice's silence hold. A smile
+Bat painted on her cheek; and her fix'd gaze
+Bent on the point, at which my vision fail'd:
+When thus her words resuming she began:
+"I speak, nor what thou wouldst inquire demand;
+For I have mark'd it, where all time and place
+Are present. Not for increase to himself
+Of good, which may not be increas'd, but forth
+To manifest his glory by its beams,
+Inhabiting his own eternity,
+Beyond time's limit or what bound soe'er
+To circumscribe his being, as he will'd,
+Into new natures, like unto himself,
+Eternal Love unfolded. Nor before,
+As if in dull inaction torpid lay.
+For not in process of before or aft
+Upon these waters mov'd the Spirit of God.
+Simple and mix'd, both form and substance, forth
+To perfect being started, like three darts
+Shot from a bow three-corded. And as ray
+In crystal, glass, and amber, shines entire,
+E'en at the moment of its issuing; thus
+Did, from th' eternal Sovran, beam entire
+His threefold operation, at one act
+Produc'd coeval. Yet in order each
+Created his due station knew: those highest,
+Who pure intelligence were made: mere power
+The lowest: in the midst, bound with strict league,
+Intelligence and power, unsever'd bond.
+Long tract of ages by the angels past,
+Ere the creating of another world,
+Describ'd on Jerome's pages thou hast seen.
+But that what I disclose to thee is true,
+Those penmen, whom the Holy Spirit mov'd
+In many a passage of their sacred book
+Attest; as thou by diligent search shalt find
+And reason in some sort discerns the same,
+Who scarce would grant the heav'nly ministers
+Of their perfection void, so long a space.
+Thus when and where these spirits of love were made,
+Thou know'st, and how: and knowing hast allay'd
+Thy thirst, which from the triple question rose.
+Ere one had reckon'd twenty, e'en so soon
+Part of the angels fell: and in their fall
+Confusion to your elements ensued.
+The others kept their station: and this task,
+Whereon thou lookst, began with such delight,
+That they surcease not ever, day nor night,
+Their circling. Of that fatal lapse the cause
+Was the curst pride of him, whom thou hast seen
+Pent with the world's incumbrance. Those, whom here
+Thou seest, were lowly to confess themselves
+Of his free bounty, who had made them apt
+For ministries so high: therefore their views
+Were by enlight'ning grace and their own merit
+Exalted; so that in their will confirm'd
+They stand, nor feel to fall. For do not doubt,
+But to receive the grace, which heav'n vouchsafes,
+Is meritorious, even as the soul
+With prompt affection welcometh the guest.
+Now, without further help, if with good heed
+My words thy mind have treasur'd, thou henceforth
+This consistory round about mayst scan,
+And gaze thy fill. But since thou hast on earth
+Heard vain disputers, reasoners in the schools,
+Canvas the' angelic nature, and dispute
+Its powers of apprehension, memory, choice;
+Therefore, 't is well thou take from me the truth,
+Pure and without disguise, which they below,
+Equivocating, darken and perplex.
+ "Know thou, that, from the first, these substances,
+Rejoicing in the countenance of God,
+Have held unceasingly their view, intent
+Upon the glorious vision, from the which
+Naught absent is nor hid: where then no change
+Of newness with succession interrupts,
+Remembrance there needs none to gather up
+Divided thought and images remote
+ "So that men, thus at variance with the truth
+Dream, though their eyes be open; reckless some
+Of error; others well aware they err,
+To whom more guilt and shame are justly due.
+Each the known track of sage philosophy
+Deserts, and has a byway of his own:
+So much the restless eagerness to shine
+And love of singularity prevail.
+Yet this, offensive as it is, provokes
+Heav'n's anger less, than when the book of God
+Is forc'd to yield to man's authority,
+Or from its straightness warp'd: no reck'ning made
+What blood the sowing of it in the world
+Has cost; what favour for himself he wins,
+Who meekly clings to it. The aim of all
+Is how to shine: e'en they, whose office is
+To preach the Gospel, let the gospel sleep,
+And pass their own inventions off instead.
+One tells, how at Christ's suffering the wan moon
+Bent back her steps, and shadow'd o'er the sun
+With intervenient disk, as she withdrew:
+Another, how the light shrouded itself
+Within its tabernacle, and left dark
+The Spaniard and the Indian, with the Jew.
+Such fables Florence in her pulpit hears,
+Bandied about more frequent, than the names
+Of Bindi and of Lapi in her streets.
+The sheep, meanwhile, poor witless ones, return
+From pasture, fed with wind: and what avails
+For their excuse, they do not see their harm?
+Christ said not to his first conventicle,
+'Go forth and preach impostures to the world,'
+But gave them truth to build on; and the sound
+Was mighty on their lips; nor needed they,
+Beside the gospel, other spear or shield,
+To aid them in their warfare for the faith.
+The preacher now provides himself with store
+Of jests and gibes; and, so there be no lack
+Of laughter, while he vents them, his big cowl
+Distends, and he has won the meed he sought:
+Could but the vulgar catch a glimpse the while
+Of that dark bird which nestles in his hood,
+They scarce would wait to hear the blessing said.
+Which now the dotards hold in such esteem,
+That every counterfeit, who spreads abroad
+The hands of holy promise, finds a throng
+Of credulous fools beneath. Saint Anthony
+Fattens with this his swine, and others worse
+Than swine, who diet at his lazy board,
+Paying with unstamp'd metal for their fare.
+ "But (for we far have wander'd) let us seek
+The forward path again; so as the way
+Be shorten'd with the time. No mortal tongue
+Nor thought of man hath ever reach'd so far,
+That of these natures he might count the tribes.
+What Daniel of their thousands hath reveal'd
+With finite number infinite conceals.
+The fountain at whose source these drink their beams,
+With light supplies them in as many modes,
+As there are splendours, that it shines on: each
+According to the virtue it conceives,
+Differing in love and sweet affection.
+Look then how lofty and how huge in breadth
+The' eternal might, which, broken and dispers'd
+Over such countless mirrors, yet remains
+Whole in itself and one, as at the first."
+
+
+
+CANTO XXX
+
+Noon's fervid hour perchance six thousand miles
+From hence is distant; and the shadowy cone
+Almost to level on our earth declines;
+When from the midmost of this blue abyss
+By turns some star is to our vision lost.
+And straightway as the handmaid of the sun
+Puts forth her radiant brow, all, light by light,
+Fade, and the spangled firmament shuts in,
+E'en to the loveliest of the glittering throng.
+Thus vanish'd gradually from my sight
+The triumph, which plays ever round the point,
+That overcame me, seeming (for it did)
+Engirt by that it girdeth. Wherefore love,
+With loss of other object, forc'd me bend
+Mine eyes on Beatrice once again.
+ If all, that hitherto is told of her,
+Were in one praise concluded, 't were too weak
+To furnish out this turn. Mine eyes did look
+On beauty, such, as I believe in sooth,
+Not merely to exceed our human, but,
+That save its Maker, none can to the full
+Enjoy it. At this point o'erpower'd I fail,
+Unequal to my theme, as never bard
+Of buskin or of sock hath fail'd before.
+For, as the sun doth to the feeblest sight,
+E'en so remembrance of that witching smile
+Hath dispossess my spirit of itself.
+Not from that day, when on this earth I first
+Beheld her charms, up to that view of them,
+Have I with song applausive ever ceas'd
+To follow, but not follow them no more;
+My course here bounded, as each artist's is,
+When it doth touch the limit of his skill.
+ She (such as I bequeath her to the bruit
+Of louder trump than mine, which hasteneth on,
+Urging its arduous matter to the close),
+Her words resum'd, in gesture and in voice
+Resembling one accustom'd to command:
+"Forth from the last corporeal are we come
+Into the heav'n, that is unbodied light,
+Light intellectual replete with love,
+Love of true happiness replete with joy,
+Joy, that transcends all sweetness of delight.
+Here shalt thou look on either mighty host
+Of Paradise; and one in that array,
+Which in the final judgment thou shalt see."
+ As when the lightning, in a sudden spleen
+Unfolded, dashes from the blinding eyes
+The visive spirits dazzled and bedimm'd;
+So, round about me, fulminating streams
+Of living radiance play'd, and left me swath'd
+And veil'd in dense impenetrable blaze.
+Such weal is in the love, that stills this heav'n;
+For its own flame the torch this fitting ever!
+ No sooner to my list'ning ear had come
+The brief assurance, than I understood
+New virtue into me infus'd, and sight
+Kindled afresh, with vigour to sustain
+Excess of light, however pure. I look'd;
+And in the likeness of a river saw
+Light flowing, from whose amber-seeming waves
+Flash'd up effulgence, as they glided on
+'Twixt banks, on either side, painted with spring,
+Incredible how fair; and, from the tide,
+There ever and anon, outstarting, flew
+Sparkles instinct with life; and in the flow'rs
+Did set them, like to rubies chas'd in gold;
+Then, as if drunk with odors, plung'd again
+Into the wondrous flood; from which, as one
+Re'enter'd, still another rose. "The thirst
+Of knowledge high, whereby thou art inflam'd,
+To search the meaning of what here thou seest,
+The more it warms thee, pleases me the more.
+But first behooves thee of this water drink,
+Or ere that longing be allay'd." So spake
+The day-star of mine eyes; then thus subjoin'd:
+"This stream, and these, forth issuing from its gulf,
+And diving back, a living topaz each,
+With all this laughter on its bloomy shores,
+Are but a preface, shadowy of the truth
+They emblem: not that, in themselves, the things
+Are crude; but on thy part is the defect,
+For that thy views not yet aspire so high."
+Never did babe, that had outslept his wont,
+Rush, with such eager straining, to the milk,
+As I toward the water, bending me,
+To make the better mirrors of mine eyes
+In the refining wave; and, as the eaves
+Of mine eyelids did drink of it, forthwith
+Seem'd it unto me turn'd from length to round,
+Then as a troop of maskers, when they put
+Their vizors off, look other than before,
+The counterfeited semblance thrown aside;
+So into greater jubilee were chang'd
+Those flowers and sparkles, and distinct I saw
+Before me either court of heav'n displac'd.
+ O prime enlightener! thou who crav'st me strength
+On the high triumph of thy realm to gaze!
+Grant virtue now to utter what I kenn'd,
+ There is in heav'n a light, whose goodly shine
+Makes the Creator visible to all
+Created, that in seeing him alone
+Have peace; and in a circle spreads so far,
+That the circumference were too loose a zone
+To girdle in the sun. All is one beam,
+Reflected from the summit of the first,
+That moves, which being hence and vigour takes,
+And as some cliff, that from the bottom eyes
+Its image mirror'd in the crystal flood,
+As if 't admire its brave appareling
+Of verdure and of flowers: so, round about,
+Eyeing the light, on more than million thrones,
+Stood, eminent, whatever from our earth
+Has to the skies return'd. How wide the leaves
+Extended to their utmost of this rose,
+Whose lowest step embosoms such a space
+Of ample radiance! Yet, nor amplitude
+Nor height impeded, but my view with ease
+Took in the full dimensions of that joy.
+Near or remote, what there avails, where God
+Immediate rules, and Nature, awed, suspends
+Her sway? Into the yellow of the rose
+Perennial, which in bright expansiveness,
+Lays forth its gradual blooming, redolent
+Of praises to the never-wint'ring sun,
+As one, who fain would speak yet holds his peace,
+Beatrice led me; and, "Behold," she said,
+"This fair assemblage! stoles of snowy white
+How numberless! The city, where we dwell,
+Behold how vast! and these our seats so throng'd
+Few now are wanting here! In that proud stall,
+On which, the crown, already o'er its state
+Suspended, holds thine eyes--or ere thyself
+Mayst at the wedding sup,--shall rest the soul
+Of the great Harry, he who, by the world
+Augustas hail'd, to Italy must come,
+Before her day be ripe. But ye are sick,
+And in your tetchy wantonness as blind,
+As is the bantling, that of hunger dies,
+And drives away the nurse. Nor may it be,
+That he, who in the sacred forum sways,
+Openly or in secret, shall with him
+Accordant walk: Whom God will not endure
+I' th' holy office long; but thrust him down
+To Simon Magus, where Magna's priest
+Will sink beneath him: such will be his meed."
+
+
+
+CANTO XXXI
+
+In fashion, as a snow-white rose, lay then
+Before my view the saintly multitude,
+Which in his own blood Christ espous'd. Meanwhile
+That other host, that soar aloft to gaze
+And celebrate his glory, whom they love,
+Hover'd around; and, like a troop of bees,
+Amid the vernal sweets alighting now,
+Now, clustering, where their fragrant labour glows,
+Flew downward to the mighty flow'r, or rose
+From the redundant petals, streaming back
+Unto the steadfast dwelling of their joy.
+Faces had they of flame, and wings of gold;
+The rest was whiter than the driven snow.
+And as they flitted down into the flower,
+From range to range, fanning their plumy loins,
+Whisper'd the peace and ardour, which they won
+From that soft winnowing. Shadow none, the vast
+Interposition of such numerous flight
+Cast, from above, upon the flower, or view
+Obstructed aught. For, through the universe,
+Wherever merited, celestial light
+Glides freely, and no obstacle prevents.
+ All there, who reign in safety and in bliss,
+Ages long past or new, on one sole mark
+Their love and vision fix'd. O trinal beam
+Of individual star, that charmst them thus,
+Vouchsafe one glance to gild our storm below!
+ If the grim brood, from Arctic shores that roam'd,
+(Where helice, forever, as she wheels,
+Sparkles a mother's fondness on her son)
+Stood in mute wonder 'mid the works of Rome,
+When to their view the Lateran arose
+In greatness more than earthly; I, who then
+From human to divine had past, from time
+Unto eternity, and out of Florence
+To justice and to truth, how might I choose
+But marvel too? 'Twixt gladness and amaze,
+In sooth no will had I to utter aught,
+Or hear. And, as a pilgrim, when he rests
+Within the temple of his vow, looks round
+In breathless awe, and hopes some time to tell
+Of all its goodly state: e'en so mine eyes
+Cours'd up and down along the living light,
+Now low, and now aloft, and now around,
+Visiting every step. Looks I beheld,
+Where charity in soft persuasion sat,
+Smiles from within and radiance from above,
+And in each gesture grace and honour high.
+ So rov'd my ken, and its general form
+All Paradise survey'd: when round I turn'd
+With purpose of my lady to inquire
+Once more of things, that held my thought suspense,
+But answer found from other than I ween'd;
+For, Beatrice, when I thought to see,
+I saw instead a senior, at my side,
+ Rob'd, as the rest, in glory. Joy benign
+Glow'd in his eye, and o'er his cheek diffus'd,
+With gestures such as spake a father's love.
+And, "Whither is she vanish'd?" straight I ask'd.
+ "By Beatrice summon'd," he replied,
+"I come to aid thy wish. Looking aloft
+To the third circle from the highest, there
+Behold her on the throne, wherein her merit
+Hath plac'd her." Answering not, mine eyes I rais'd,
+And saw her, where aloof she sat, her brow
+A wreath reflecting of eternal beams.
+Not from the centre of the sea so far
+Unto the region of the highest thunder,
+As was my ken from hers; and yet the form
+Came through that medium down, unmix'd and pure,
+ "O Lady! thou in whom my hopes have rest!
+Who, for my safety, hast not scorn'd, in hell
+To leave the traces of thy footsteps mark'd!
+For all mine eyes have seen, I, to thy power
+And goodness, virtue owe and grace. Of slave,
+Thou hast to freedom brought me; and no means,
+For my deliverance apt, hast left untried.
+Thy liberal bounty still toward me keep.
+That, when my spirit, which thou madest whole,
+Is loosen'd from this body, it may find
+Favour with thee." So I my suit preferr'd:
+And she, so distant, as appear'd, look'd down,
+And smil'd; then tow'rds th' eternal fountain turn'd.
+ And thus the senior, holy and rever'd:
+"That thou at length mayst happily conclude
+Thy voyage (to which end I was dispatch'd,
+By supplication mov'd and holy love)
+Let thy upsoaring vision range, at large,
+This garden through: for so, by ray divine
+Kindled, thy ken a higher flight shall mount;
+And from heav'n's queen, whom fervent I adore,
+All gracious aid befriend us; for that I
+Am her own faithful Bernard." Like a wight,
+Who haply from Croatia wends to see
+Our Veronica, and the while 't is shown,
+Hangs over it with never-sated gaze,
+And, all that he hath heard revolving, saith
+Unto himself in thought: "And didst thou look
+E'en thus, O Jesus, my true Lord and God?
+And was this semblance thine?" So gaz'd I then
+Adoring; for the charity of him,
+Who musing, in the world that peace enjoy'd,
+Stood lively before me. "Child of grace!"
+Thus he began: "thou shalt not knowledge gain
+Of this glad being, if thine eyes are held
+Still in this depth below. But search around
+The circles, to the furthest, till thou spy
+Seated in state, the queen, that of this realm
+Is sovran." Straight mine eyes I rais'd; and bright,
+As, at the birth of morn, the eastern clime
+Above th' horizon, where the sun declines;
+To mine eyes, that upward, as from vale
+To mountain sped, at th' extreme bound, a part
+Excell'd in lustre all the front oppos'd.
+And as the glow burns ruddiest o'er the wave,
+That waits the sloping beam, which Phaeton
+Ill knew to guide, and on each part the light
+Diminish'd fades, intensest in the midst;
+So burn'd the peaceful oriflamb, and slack'd
+On every side the living flame decay'd.
+And in that midst their sportive pennons wav'd
+Thousands of angels; in resplendence each
+Distinct, and quaint adornment. At their glee
+And carol, smil'd the Lovely One of heav'n,
+That joy was in the eyes of all the blest.
+ Had I a tongue in eloquence as rich,
+As is the colouring in fancy's loom,
+'T were all too poor to utter the least part
+Of that enchantment. When he saw mine eyes
+Intent on her, that charm'd him, Bernard gaz'd
+With so exceeding fondness, as infus'd
+Ardour into my breast, unfelt before.
+
+
+
+CANTO XXXII
+
+Freely the sage, though wrapt in musings high,
+Assum'd the teacher's part, and mild began:
+"The wound, that Mary clos'd, she open'd first,
+Who sits so beautiful at Mary's feet.
+The third in order, underneath her, lo!
+Rachel with Beatrice. Sarah next,
+Judith, Rebecca, and the gleaner maid,
+Meek ancestress of him, who sang the songs
+Of sore repentance in his sorrowful mood.
+All, as I name them, down from deaf to leaf,
+Are in gradation throned on the rose.
+And from the seventh step, successively,
+Adown the breathing tresses of the flow'r
+Still doth the file of Hebrew dames proceed.
+For these are a partition wall, whereby
+The sacred stairs are sever'd, as the faith
+In Christ divides them. On this part, where blooms
+Each leaf in full maturity, are set
+Such as in Christ, or ere he came, believ'd.
+On th' other, where an intersected space
+Yet shows the semicircle void, abide
+All they, who look'd to Christ already come.
+And as our Lady on her glorious stool,
+And they who on their stools beneath her sit,
+This way distinction make: e'en so on his,
+The mighty Baptist that way marks the line
+(He who endur'd the desert and the pains
+Of martyrdom, and for two years of hell,
+Yet still continued holy), and beneath,
+Augustin, Francis, Benedict, and the rest,
+Thus far from round to round. So heav'n's decree
+Forecasts, this garden equally to fill.
+With faith in either view, past or to come,
+Learn too, that downward from the step, which cleaves
+Midway the twain compartments, none there are
+Who place obtain for merit of their own,
+But have through others' merit been advanc'd,
+On set conditions: spirits all releas'd,
+Ere for themselves they had the power to choose.
+And, if thou mark and listen to them well,
+Their childish looks and voice declare as much.
+ "Here, silent as thou art, I know thy doubt;
+And gladly will I loose the knot, wherein
+Thy subtle thoughts have bound thee. From this realm
+Excluded, chalice no entrance here may find,
+No more shall hunger, thirst, or sorrow can.
+A law immutable hath establish'd all;
+Nor is there aught thou seest, that doth not fit,
+Exactly, as the finger to the ring.
+It is not therefore without cause, that these,
+O'erspeedy comers to immortal life,
+Are different in their shares of excellence.
+Our Sovran Lord--that settleth this estate
+In love and in delight so absolute,
+That wish can dare no further--every soul,
+Created in his joyous sight to dwell,
+With grace at pleasure variously endows.
+And for a proof th' effect may well suffice.
+And 't is moreover most expressly mark'd
+In holy scripture, where the twins are said
+To, have struggled in the womb. Therefore, as grace
+Inweaves the coronet, so every brow
+Weareth its proper hue of orient light.
+And merely in respect to his prime gift,
+Not in reward of meritorious deed,
+Hath each his several degree assign'd.
+In early times with their own innocence
+More was not wanting, than the parents' faith,
+To save them: those first ages past, behoov'd
+That circumcision in the males should imp
+The flight of innocent wings: but since the day
+Of grace hath come, without baptismal rites
+In Christ accomplish'd, innocence herself
+Must linger yet below. Now raise thy view
+Unto the visage most resembling Christ:
+For, in her splendour only, shalt thou win
+The pow'r to look on him." Forthwith I saw
+Such floods of gladness on her visage shower'd,
+From holy spirits, winging that profound;
+That, whatsoever I had yet beheld,
+Had not so much suspended me with wonder,
+Or shown me such similitude of God.
+And he, who had to her descended, once,
+On earth, now hail'd in heav'n; and on pois'd wing.
+"Ave, Maria, Gratia Plena," sang:
+To whose sweet anthem all the blissful court,
+From all parts answ'ring, rang: that holier joy
+Brooded the deep serene. "Father rever'd:
+Who deign'st, for me, to quit the pleasant place,
+Wherein thou sittest, by eternal lot!
+Say, who that angel is, that with such glee
+Beholds our queen, and so enamour'd glows
+Of her high beauty, that all fire he seems."
+So I again resorted to the lore
+Of my wise teacher, he, whom Mary's charms
+Embellish'd, as the sun the morning star;
+Who thus in answer spake: "In him are summ'd,
+Whatever of buxomness and free delight
+May be in Spirit, or in angel, met:
+And so beseems: for that he bare the palm
+Down unto Mary, when the Son of God
+Vouchsaf'd to clothe him in terrestrial weeds.
+Now let thine eyes wait heedful on my words,
+And note thou of this just and pious realm
+The chiefest nobles. Those, highest in bliss,
+The twain, on each hand next our empress thron'd,
+Are as it were two roots unto this rose.
+He to the left, the parent, whose rash taste
+Proves bitter to his seed; and, on the right,
+That ancient father of the holy church,
+Into whose keeping Christ did give the keys
+Of this sweet flow'r: near whom behold the seer,
+That, ere he died, saw all the grievous times
+Of the fair bride, who with the lance and nails
+Was won. And, near unto the other, rests
+The leader, under whom on manna fed
+Th' ungrateful nation, fickle and perverse.
+On th' other part, facing to Peter, lo!
+Where Anna sits, so well content to look
+On her lov'd daughter, that with moveless eye
+She chants the loud hosanna: while, oppos'd
+To the first father of your mortal kind,
+Is Lucia, at whose hest thy lady sped,
+When on the edge of ruin clos'd thine eye.
+ "But (for the vision hasteneth so an end)
+Here break we off, as the good workman doth,
+That shapes the cloak according to the cloth:
+And to the primal love our ken shall rise;
+That thou mayst penetrate the brightness, far
+As sight can bear thee. Yet, alas! in sooth
+Beating thy pennons, thinking to advance,
+Thou backward fall'st. Grace then must first be gain'd;
+Her grace, whose might can help thee. Thou in prayer
+Seek her: and, with affection, whilst I sue,
+Attend, and yield me all thy heart." He said,
+And thus the saintly orison began.
+
+
+
+CANTO XXXIII
+
+"O virgin mother, daughter of thy Son,
+Created beings all in lowliness
+Surpassing, as in height, above them all,
+Term by th' eternal counsel pre-ordain'd,
+Ennobler of thy nature, so advanc'd
+In thee, that its great Maker did not scorn,
+Himself, in his own work enclos'd to dwell!
+For in thy womb rekindling shone the love
+Reveal'd, whose genial influence makes now
+This flower to germin in eternal peace!
+Here thou to us, of charity and love,
+Art, as the noon-day torch: and art, beneath,
+To mortal men, of hope a living spring.
+So mighty art thou, lady! and so great,
+That he who grace desireth, and comes not
+To thee for aidance, fain would have desire
+Fly without wings. Nor only him who asks,
+Thy bounty succours, but doth freely oft
+Forerun the asking. Whatsoe'er may be
+Of excellence in creature, pity mild,
+Relenting mercy, large munificence,
+Are all combin'd in thee. Here kneeleth one,
+Who of all spirits hath review'd the state,
+From the world's lowest gap unto this height.
+Suppliant to thee he kneels, imploring grace
+For virtue, yet more high to lift his ken
+Toward the bliss supreme. And I, who ne'er
+Coveted sight, more fondly, for myself,
+Than now for him, my prayers to thee prefer,
+(And pray they be not scant) that thou wouldst drive
+Each cloud of his mortality away;
+That on the sovran pleasure he may gaze.
+This also I entreat of thee, O queen!
+Who canst do what thou wilt! that in him thou
+Wouldst after all he hath beheld, preserve
+Affection sound, and human passions quell.
+Lo! Where, with Beatrice, many a saint
+Stretch their clasp'd hands, in furtherance of my suit!"
+ The eyes, that heav'n with love and awe regards,
+Fix'd on the suitor, witness'd, how benign
+She looks on pious pray'rs: then fasten'd they
+On th' everlasting light, wherein no eye
+Of creature, as may well be thought, so far
+Can travel inward. I, meanwhile, who drew
+Near to the limit, where all wishes end,
+The ardour of my wish (for so behooved),
+Ended within me. Beck'ning smil'd the sage,
+That I should look aloft: but, ere he bade,
+Already of myself aloft I look'd;
+For visual strength, refining more and more,
+Bare me into the ray authentical
+Of sovran light. Thenceforward, what I saw,
+Was not for words to speak, nor memory's self
+To stand against such outrage on her skill.
+As one, who from a dream awaken'd, straight,
+All he hath seen forgets; yet still retains
+Impression of the feeling in his dream;
+E'en such am I: for all the vision dies,
+As 't were, away; and yet the sense of sweet,
+That sprang from it, still trickles in my heart.
+Thus in the sun-thaw is the snow unseal'd;
+Thus in the winds on flitting leaves was lost
+The Sybil's sentence. O eternal beam!
+(Whose height what reach of mortal thought may soar?)
+Yield me again some little particle
+Of what thou then appearedst, give my tongue
+Power, but to leave one sparkle of thy glory,
+Unto the race to come, that shall not lose
+Thy triumph wholly, if thou waken aught
+Of memory in me, and endure to hear
+The record sound in this unequal strain.
+ Such keenness from the living ray I met,
+That, if mine eyes had turn'd away, methinks,
+I had been lost; but, so embolden'd, on
+I pass'd, as I remember, till my view
+Hover'd the brink of dread infinitude.
+ O grace! unenvying of thy boon! that gav'st
+Boldness to fix so earnestly my ken
+On th' everlasting splendour, that I look'd,
+While sight was unconsum'd, and, in that depth,
+Saw in one volume clasp'd of love, whatever
+The universe unfolds; all properties
+Of substance and of accident, beheld,
+Compounded, yet one individual light
+The whole. And of such bond methinks I saw
+The universal form: for that whenever
+I do but speak of it, my soul dilates
+Beyond her proper self; and, till I speak,
+One moment seems a longer lethargy,
+Than five-and-twenty ages had appear'd
+To that emprize, that first made Neptune wonder
+At Argo's shadow darkening on his flood.
+ With fixed heed, suspense and motionless,
+Wond'ring I gaz'd; and admiration still
+Was kindled, as I gaz'd. It may not be,
+That one, who looks upon that light, can turn
+To other object, willingly, his view.
+For all the good, that will may covet, there
+Is summ'd; and all, elsewhere defective found,
+Complete. My tongue shall utter now, no more
+E'en what remembrance keeps, than could the babe's
+That yet is moisten'd at his mother's breast.
+Not that the semblance of the living light
+Was chang'd (that ever as at first remain'd)
+But that my vision quickening, in that sole
+Appearance, still new miracles descry'd,
+And toil'd me with the change. In that abyss
+Of radiance, clear and lofty, seem'd methought,
+Three orbs of triple hue clipt in one bound:
+And, from another, one reflected seem'd,
+As rainbow is from rainbow: and the third
+Seem'd fire, breath'd equally from both. Oh speech
+How feeble and how faint art thou, to give
+Conception birth! Yet this to what I saw
+Is less than little. Oh eternal light!
+Sole in thyself that dwellst; and of thyself
+Sole understood, past, present, or to come!
+Thou smiledst; on that circling, which in thee
+Seem'd as reflected splendour, while I mus'd;
+For I therein, methought, in its own hue
+Beheld our image painted: steadfastly
+I therefore por'd upon the view. As one
+Who vers'd in geometric lore, would fain
+Measure the circle; and, though pondering long
+And deeply, that beginning, which he needs,
+Finds not; e'en such was I, intent to scan
+The novel wonder, and trace out the form,
+How to the circle fitted, and therein
+How plac'd: but the flight was not for my wing;
+Had not a flash darted athwart my mind,
+And in the spleen unfolded what it sought.
+ Here vigour fail'd the tow'ring fantasy:
+But yet the will roll'd onward, like a wheel
+In even motion, by the Love impell'd,
+That moves the sun in heav'n and all the stars.
+
+
+NOTES TO PARADISE
+
+
+CANTO 1
+
+Verse 12. Benign Apollo.] Chaucer has imitated this invention
+very closely at the beginning of the Third Booke of Fame.
+
+If, divine vertue, thou
+Wilt helpe me to shewe now
+That in my head ymarked is,
+ * * * * *
+Thou shalt see me go as blive
+Unto the next laurer I see,
+And kisse it for it is thy tree
+Now entre thou my breast anone.
+
+v. 15. Thus for.] He appears to mean nothing more than that
+this part of his poem will require a greater exertion of his
+powers than the former.
+
+v. 19. Marsyas.] Ovid, Met. 1. vi. fab. 7. Compare Boccaccio,
+II Filocopo, 1. 5. p. 25. v. ii. Ediz. Fir. 1723. "Egli nel
+mio petto entri," &c. - "May he enter my bosom, and let my voice
+sound like his own, when he made that daring mortal deserve to
+come forth unsheathed from his limbs. "
+v. 29. Caesar, or bard.] So Petrarch, Son. Par. Prima.
+
+Arbor vittoriosa e trionfale,
+Onor d'imperadori e di poeti.
+
+And Spenser, F. Q. b. i. c. 1. st. 9,
+The laurel, meed of mighty conquerours
+And poets sage.
+
+v. 37. Through that.] "Where the four circles, the horizon, the
+zodiac, the equator, and the equinoctial colure, join; the last
+threeintersecting each other so as to form three crosses, as may
+be seen in the armillary sphere."
+
+v. 39. In happiest constellation.] Aries. Some understand the
+planetVenus by the "miglior stella "
+
+v. 44. To the left.] Being in the opposite hemisphere to ours,
+Beatrice that she may behold the rising sun, turns herself to the
+left.
+
+v. 47. As from the first a second beam.] "Like a reflected
+sunbeam," which he compares to a pilgrim hastening homewards.
+
+Ne simil tanto mal raggio secondo
+Dal primo usci.
+Filicaja, canz. 15. st. 4.
+
+v. 58. As iron that comes boiling from the fire.] So Milton,
+P. L. b. iii. 594.
+--As glowing iron with fire.
+
+v. 69. Upon the day appear'd.
+
+--If the heaven had ywonne,
+All new of God another sunne.
+Chaucer, First Booke of Fame
+
+E par ch' agginuga un altro sole al cielo.
+Ariosto, O F. c. x. st. 109.
+
+Ed ecco un lustro lampeggiar d' intorno
+Che sole a sole aggiunse e giorno a giorno.
+Manno, Adone. c. xi. st. 27.
+
+Quando a paro col sol ma piu lucente
+L'angelo gli appari sull; oriente
+Tasso, G. L. c. i.
+
+-Seems another morn
+Ris'n on mid-noon.
+Milton, P. L. b. v. 311.
+
+Compare Euripides, Ion. 1550. [GREEK HERE]
+66. as Glaucus. ] Ovid, Met. 1. Xiii. Fab. 9
+
+v. 71. If.] "Thou O divine Spirit, knowest whether 1 had not
+risen above my human nature, and were not merely such as thou
+hadst then, formed me."
+
+v. 125. Through sluggishness.]
+Perch' a risponder la materia e sorda.
+
+So Filicaja, canz. vi. st 9.
+Perche a risponder la discordia e sorda
+
+"The workman hath in his heart a purpose, he carrieth in mind the
+whole form which his work should have; there wanteth not him
+skill and desire to bring his labour to the best effect, only the
+matter, which he hath to work on is unframeable." Hooker's Eccl.
+Polity, b. 5. 9.
+
+CANTO II
+
+v. 1. In small bark.]
+
+Con la barchetta mia cantando in rima
+Pulci, Morg. Magg. c. xxviii.
+
+Io me n'andro con la barchetta mia,
+Quanto l'acqua comporta un picciol legno
+Ibid.
+
+v. 30. This first star.] the moon
+
+v. 46. E'en as the truth.] Like a truth that does not need
+demonstration, but is self-evident."
+
+v. 52. Cain.] Compare Hell, Canto XX. 123. And Note
+
+v. 65. Number1ess lights.] The fixed stars, which differ both
+in bulk and splendor.
+
+v. 71. Save one.] "Except that principle of rarity and
+denseness which thou hast assigned." By "formal principles,
+"principj formali, are meant constituent or essential causes."
+Milton, in imitation of this passage, introduces the angel
+arguing with Adam respecting the causes of the spots on the moon.
+
+But, as a late French translator of the Paradise well remarks,
+his reasoning is physical; that of Dante partly metaphysical and
+partly theologic.
+
+v. 111. Within the heaven.] According to our Poet's system,
+there are ten heavens; the seven planets, the eighth spheres
+containing the fixed stars, the primum mobile, and the empyrean.
+
+v. 143. The virtue mingled.] Virg. Aen. 1. vi 724.
+Principio coelum, &c.
+
+CANTO III
+
+v. 16. Delusion.] "An error the contrary to that of Narcissus,
+because he mistook a shadow for a substance, I a substance for a
+shadow."
+
+v. 50. Piccarda.] The sister of Forese whom we have seen in the
+Purgatory, Canto XXIII.
+
+v. 90. The Lady.] St. Clare, the foundress of the order called
+after her She was born of opulent and noble parents at Assisi, in
+1193, and died in 1253. See Biogr. Univ. t. 1. p. 598. 8vo.
+Paris, 1813.
+
+v. 121. Constance.] Daughter of Ruggieri, king of Sicily, who,
+being taken by force out of a monastery where she had professed,
+was married to the Emperor Henry Vl. and by him was mother to
+Frederick 11. She was fifty years old or more at the time, and
+"because it was not credited that she could have a child at that
+age, she was delivered in a pavilion and it was given out, that
+any lady, who pleased, was at liberty to see her. Many came, and
+saw her, and the suspicion ceased." Ricordano Malaspina in
+Muratori, Rer. It. Script. t. viii. p. 939; and G. Villani, in
+the same words, Hist. I v. c. 16
+
+The French translator above mentored speaks of her having
+poisoned her husband. The death of Henry Vl. is recorded in the
+Chronicon Siciliae, by an anonymous writer, (Muratori, t. x.) but
+not a word of his having been poisoned by Constance, and
+Ricordano Malaspina even mentions her decease as happening before
+that of her husband, Henry V., for so this author, with some
+others, terms him. v. 122. The second.] Henry Vl. son of
+Frederick I was the second emperor of the house of Saab; and his
+son Frederick II "the third and last."
+
+CANTO IV
+
+v. 6. Between two deer]
+
+Tigris ut auditis, diversa valle duorum
+Extimulata fame, mugitibus armentorum
+Neseit utro potius ruat, et ruere ardet utroque.
+Ovid, Metam. 1. v. 166
+
+v. 13. Daniel.] See Daniel, c. ii.
+
+v. 24. Plato.] [GREEK HERE] Plato Timaeus v. ix. p. 326.
+Edit. Bip. "The Creator, when he had framed the universe,
+distributed to the stars an equal number of souls, appointing to
+each soul its several star."
+
+v. 27. Of that.] Plato's opinion.
+
+v. 34. The first circle.] The empyrean.
+
+v. 48. Him who made Tobias whole.]
+
+Raphael, the sociable spirit, that deign'd
+To travel with Tobias, and secur'd
+His marriage with the sev'n times wedded maid,
+Milton, P. L. b. v. 223.
+
+v. 67. That to the eye of man.] "That the ways of divine
+justice are often inscrutable to man, ought rather to be a motive
+to faith than an inducement to heresy." Such appears to me the
+most satisfactory explanation of the passage.
+
+v. 82. Laurence.] Who suffered martyrdom in the third century.
+
+v. 82. Scaevola.] See Liv. Hist. D. 1. 1. ii. 12.
+
+v. 100. Alcmaeon.] Ovid, Met. 1. ix. f. 10.
+
+--Ultusque parente parentem
+Natus, erit facto pius et sceleratus eodem.
+
+v. 107. Of will.] "What Piccarda asserts of Constance, that she
+retained her affection to the monastic life, is said absolutely
+and without relation to circumstances; and that which I affirm is
+spoken of the will conditionally and respectively: so that our
+apparent difference is without any disagreement."
+v. 119. That truth.] The light of divine truth.
+
+CANTO V
+
+v. 43. Two things.] The one, the substance of the vow; the
+other, the compact, or form of it.
+
+v. 48. It was enjoin'd the Israelites.] See Lev. e. xii, and
+xxvii.
+
+v. 56. Either key.] Purgatory, Canto IX. 108.
+
+v. 86. That region.] As some explain it, the east, according to
+others the equinoctial line.
+
+v. 124. This sphere.] The planet Mercury, which, being nearest
+to the sun, is oftenest hidden by that luminary
+
+CANTO VI
+
+v. 1. After that Constantine the eagle turn'd.] Constantine,
+in transferring the seat of empire from Rome to Byzantium,
+carried the eagle, the Imperial ensign, from the west to the
+east. Aeneas, on the contrary had moved along with the sun's
+course, when he passed from Troy to Italy.
+
+v. 5. A hundred years twice told and more.] The Emperor
+Constantine entered Byzantium in 324, and Justinian began his
+reign in 527.
+
+v. 6. At Europe's extreme point.] Constantinople being situated
+at the extreme of Europe, and on the borders of Asia, near those
+mountains
+in the neighbourhood of Troy, from whence the first founders of
+Rome had emigrated.
+
+v. 13. To clear th' incumber'd laws.] The code of laws was
+abridged and reformed by Justinian.
+
+v. 15. Christ's nature merely human.] Justinian is said to have
+been a follower of the heretical Opinions held by Eutyches," who
+taught that in Christ there was but one nature, viz. that of the
+incarnate word."
+Maclaine's Mosheim, t. ii. Cent. v. p. ii. c. v. 13.
+
+v. 16. Agapete.] Agapetus, Bishop of Rome, whose Scheda Regia,
+addressed to the Emperor Justinian, procured him a place among
+the wisest and most judicious writers of this century."
+Ibid. Cent. vi. p. ii c. ii. 8.
+
+v. 33. Who pretend its power.] The Ghibellines.
+
+v. 33. And who oppose ] The Guelphs.
+
+v. 34. Pallas died.] See Virgil, Aen. 1. X.
+
+v. 39. The rival three.] The Horatii and Curiatii.
+
+v. 41. Down.] "From the rape of the Sabine women to the
+violation of Lucretia."
+v. 47. Quintius.] Quintius Cincinnatus.
+
+E Cincinnato dall' inculta chioma.
+Petrarca.
+
+v. 50. Arab hordes.] The Arabians seem to be put for the
+barbarians in general.
+
+v. 54. That hill.] The city of Fesulae, which was sacked by the
+Romans after the defeat of Cataline.
+
+v. 56. Near the hour.] Near the time of our Saviour's birth.
+
+v. 59. What then it wrought.] In the following fifteen lines
+the Poet has comprised the exploits of Julius Caesar.
+
+v. 75. In its next bearer's gripe.] With Augustus Caesar.
+
+v. 89. The third Caesar.] "Tiberius the third of the Caesars,
+had it in his power to surpass the glory of all who either
+preceded or came after him, by destroying the city of .Jerusalem,
+as Titus afterwards did, and thus revenging the cause of God
+himself on the Jews."
+
+v. 95. Vengeance for vengeance ] This will be afterwards
+explained by the Poet himself.
+v. 98. Charlemagne.] Dante could not be ignorant that the reign
+of Justinian was long prior to that of Charlemagne; but the
+spirit of the former emperor is represented, both in this
+instance and in what follows, as conscious of the events that had
+taken place after his own time.
+
+v. 104. The yellow lilies.] The French ensign.
+
+v. 110. Charles.] The commentators explain this to mean Charles
+II, king of Naples and Sicily. Is it not more likely to allude to
+Charles of Valois, son of Philip III of France, who was sent for,
+about this time, into Italy by Pope Boniface, with the promise of
+being made emperor? See G. Villani, 1. viii. c. 42.
+
+v. 131. Romeo's light.] The story of Romeo is involved in some
+uncertainty. The French writers assert the continuance of his
+ministerial office even after the decease of his soverign
+Raymond Berenger, count of Provence: and they rest this assertion
+chiefly on the fact of a certain Romieu de Villeneuve, who was
+the contemporary of that prince, having left large possessions
+behind him, as appears by his will, preserved in the archives of
+the bishopric of Venice. There might however have been more than
+one person of the name of Romieu, or Romeo which answers to that
+of Palmer in our language. Nor is it probable that the Italians,
+who lived so near the time, were misinformed in an occurrence of
+such notoriety. According to them, after he had long been a
+faithful steward to Raymond, when an account was required from
+him of the revenues whichhe had carefully husbanded, and his
+master as lavishly disbursed, "He demanded the little mule, the
+staff, and the scrip, with which he had first entered into the
+count's service, a stranger pilgrim from the shrine of St. James
+in Galicia, and parted as he came; nor was it ever known whence
+he was or wither he went." G. Villani, 1. vi. c. 92.
+
+v. 135. Four daughters.] Of the four daughters of Raymond
+Berenger, Margaret, the eldest, was married to Louis IX of
+France; Eleanor; the next, to Henry III, of England; Sancha, the
+third, to Richard, Henry's brother, and King of the Romans; and
+the youngest, Beatrice, to Charles I, King of Naples and Sicily,
+and brother to Louis.
+
+v. 136. Raymond Berenger.] This prince, the last of the house
+of Barcelona, who was count of Provence, died in 1245. He is in
+the list of Provencal poets. See Millot, Hist, Litt des
+Troubadours, t. ii. P. 112.
+
+CANTO VII
+
+v. 3. Malahoth.] A Hebrew word, signifying "kingdoms."
+
+v. 4. That substance bright.] Justinian.
+
+v. 17. As might have made one blest amid the flames.]
+So Giusto de' Conti, Bella Mano. "Qual salamandra."
+
+Che puommi nelle fiammi far beato.
+
+v. 23. That man who was unborn.] Adam.
+
+v. 61. What distils.] "That which proceeds immediately from
+God, and without intervention of secondary causes, in immortal."
+
+v. 140. Our resurrection certain.] "Venturi appears to mistake
+the Poet's reasoning, when he observes: "Wretched for us, if we
+had not arguments more convincing, and of a higher kind, to
+assure us of the truth of our resurrection." It is here
+intended, I think, that the whole of God's dispensations to man
+should be considered as a proof of our resurrection. The
+conclusion is that as before sin man was immortal,
+so being restored to the favor of heaven by the expiation made
+for sin, he necessarily recovers his claim to immortality.
+
+There is much in this poem to justify the encomium which the
+learned Salvini has passed on it, when, in an epistle to Redi,
+imitating what Horace had said of Homer, that the duties of life
+might be better learnt from the Grecian bard than from the
+teachers of the porch or the academy, he says--
+
+And dost thou ask, what themes my mind engage?
+The lonely hours I give to Dante's page;
+And meet more sacred learning in his lines
+Than I had gain'd from all the school divines.
+
+Se volete saper la vita mia,
+Studiando io sto lungi da tutti gli nomini
+Ed ho irnparato piu teologia
+In questi giorni, che ho riletto Dante,
+Che nelle scuole fattto io non avria.
+
+CANTO VIII
+
+v. 4. Epicycle,] "In sul dosso di questo cerchio," &c.
+Convito di Dante, Opere, t. i. p. 48, ed. Ven. 1793.
+"Upon the back of this circle, in the heaven of Venus, whereof we
+are now treating, is a little sphere, which has in that heaven a
+revolution of its own: whose circle the astronomers term
+epicycle."
+
+v. 11. To sit in Dido's bosom.] Virgil. Aen. 1. i. 718,
+
+v. 40. 'O ye whose intellectual ministry.]
+Voi ch' intendendo il terzo ciel movete. The first line in our
+Poet" first canzone. See his Convito, Ibid. p. 40.
+
+v. 53. had the time been more.] The spirit now speaking is
+Charles Martel crowned king of Hungary, and son of Charles 11
+king of Naples and Sicily, to which
+dominions dying in his father's lifetime, he did not succeed.
+
+v. 57. Thou lov'dst me well.] Charles Martel might have been
+known to our poet at Florence whither he came to meet his father
+in 1295, the year of his death. The retinue and the habiliments
+of the young monarch are minutely described by G. Villani, who
+adds, that "he remained more than twenty days in Florence,
+waiting for his father King Charles and his brothers during which
+time great honour was done him by the, Florentines and he showed
+no less love towards them, and he was much in favour with all."
+1. viii. c. 13. His brother Robert, king of Naples, was the
+friend of Petrarch.
+
+v. 60. The left bank.] Provence.
+
+v. 62. That horn
+Of fair Ausonia.]
+The kingdom of Naples.
+
+v. 68. The land.] Hungary.
+
+v. 73. The beautiful Trinaeria.] Sicily, so called from its
+three promontories, of which Pachynus and Pelorus, here
+mentioned, are two.
+
+v. 14 'Typhaeus.] The giant whom Jupiter is fabled to have
+overwhelmed
+under the mountain Aetna from whence he vomits forth smoke and
+flame.
+
+v. 77. Sprang through me from Charles and Rodolph.] "Sicily
+would be still ruled by a race of monarchs, descended through me
+from Charles I and Rodolph I the former my grandfather king of
+Naples and Sicily; the latter emperor of Germany, my
+father-in-law; "both celebrated in the Purgatory Canto, Vll.
+
+v. 78. Had not ill lording.] "If the ill conduct of our
+governors in Sicily had not excited the resentment and hatred of
+the people and stimulated them to that dreadful massacre at the
+Sicilian vespers;" in consequence of which the kingdom fell into
+the hands of Peter III of Arragon, in 1282
+
+v. 81. My brother's foresight.] He seems to tax his brother
+Robert with employing necessitous and greedy Catalonians to
+administer the affairs of his kingdom.
+
+v. 99. How bitter can spring up.] "How a covetous son can
+spring from a liberal father." Yet that father has himself been
+accused of avarice in the Purgatory Canto XX. v. 78; though his
+general character was that of a bounteous prince.
+
+v. 125. Consult your teacher.] Aristole. [GREEK HERE]
+De Rep. 1. iii. c. 4. "Since a state is made up of members
+differing from one another, (for even as an animal, in the first
+instance, consists of soul and body, and the soul, of reason and
+desire; and a family, of man and woman, and property of master
+and slave; in like manner a state consists both of all these and
+besides these of other dissimilar kinds,) it necessarily follows
+that the excellence of all the members of the state cannot be one
+and the same."
+
+v. 136. Esau.] Genesis c. xxv. 22.
+
+v. 137. Quirinus.] Romulus, born of so obscure a father, that
+his parentage was attributed to Mars.
+
+CANTO IX
+
+v. 2. O fair Clemenza.] Daughter of Charles Martel, and second
+wife of Louis X. of France.
+
+v. 2. The treachery.] He alludes to the occupation of the
+kingdom of Sicily by Robert, in exclusion of his brother s son
+Carobert, or Charles. Robert, the rightful heir. See G. Villani,
+1. viii. c. 112.
+
+v. 7. That saintly light.] Charles Martel.
+
+v. 25. In that part.] Between Rialto and the Venetian
+territory, and the sources of the rivers Brenta and Piava is
+situated a castle called Romano, the birth-place of the famous
+tyrant Ezzolino or Azzolino, the brother of Cunizza, who is now
+speaking. The tyrant we have seen in "the river of blood." Hell,
+Canto XII. v. 110.
+
+v. 32. Cunizza.] The adventures of Cunizza, overcome by the
+influence of her star, are related by the chronicler Rolandino of
+Padua, 1. i. c. 3, in Muratori Rer. It. Script. t. viii. p. 173.
+
+She eloped from her first husband, Richard of St. Boniface, in
+the company of Sordello, (see Purgatory, Canto VI. and VII. )
+with whom she is supposed to have cohabited before her marriage:
+then lived with a soldier of Trevigi, whose wife was living at
+the same time in the same city, and on his being murdered by her
+brother the tyrant, was by her brother married to a nobleman of
+Braganzo, lastly when he also had fallen by the same hand she,
+after her brother's death, was again wedded in Verona.
+
+v. 37. This.] Folco of Genoa, a celebrated Provencal poet,
+commonly termed Folques of Marseilles, of which place he was
+perhaps bishop. Many errors of Nostradamus, regarding him, which
+have been followed by Crescimbeni, Quadrio, and Millot, are
+detected by the diligence of Tiraboschi. Mr. Matthias's ed. v.
+1. P. 18. All that appears certain, is what we are told in this
+Canto, that he was of Genoa, and by Petrarch in the Triumph of
+Love, c. iv. that he was better known by the appellation he
+derived from Marseilles, and at last resumed the religious habit.
+One of his verses is cited by Dante, De Vulg. Eloq. 1. ii. c. 6.
+
+v. 40. Five times.] The five hundred years are elapsed: and
+unless the Provencal MSS. should be brought to light the poetical
+reputation of Folco must rest on the mention made of him by the
+more fortunate Italians.
+
+v. 43 The crowd.] The people who inhabited the tract of country
+bounded by the river Tagliamento to the east, and Adice to the
+west.
+
+v. 45. The hour is near.] Cunizza foretells the defeat of
+Giacopo da Carrara, Lord of Padua by Can Grande, at Vicenza, on
+the 18th September 1314. See G. Villani, 1. ix. c. 62.
+v. 48. One.] She predicts also the fate of Ricciardo da Camino,
+who is said to have been murdered at Trevigi, where the rivers
+(Sile and Cagnano meet) while he was engaged in playing at chess.
+
+v. 50. The web.] The net or snare into, which he is destined to
+fall.
+
+v. 50. Feltro.] The Bishop of Felto having received a number of
+fugitives from Ferrara, who were in opposition to the Pope, under
+a promise of protection, afterwards gave them up, so that they
+were reconducted to that city, and the greater part of them there
+put to death.
+
+v. 53. Malta's.] A tower, either in the citadel of Padua, which
+under the tyranny of Ezzolino, had been "with many a foul and
+midnight murder fed," or (as some say) near a river of the same
+name, that falls into the lake of Bolsena, in which the Pope was
+accustomed to imprison such as had been guilty of an irremissible
+sin.
+
+v. 56 This priest.] The bishop, who, to show himself a zealous
+partisan of the Pope, had committed the above-mentioned act of
+treachery.
+
+v. 58. We descry.] "We behold the things that we predict, in
+the mirrors of eternal truth."
+
+v. 64. That other joyance.] Folco.
+
+v. 76. Six shadowing wings.] "Above it stood the seraphims:
+each one had six wings." Isaiah, c. vi. 2.
+
+v. 80. The valley of waters.] The Mediterranean sea.
+
+v. 80. That.] The great ocean.
+
+v. 82. Discordant shores.] Europe and Africa.
+
+v. 83. Meridian.] Extending to the east, the Mediterranean at
+last reaches the coast of Palestine, which is on its horizon when
+it enters the straits of Gibraltar. "Wherever a man is," says
+Vellutello, "there he has, above his head, his own particular
+meridian circle."
+
+v. 85. --'Twixt Ebro's stream
+And Macra's.]
+Eora, a river to the west, and Macra, to the east of Genoa, where
+Folco was born.
+
+v. 88. Begga.] A place in Africa, nearly opposite to Genoa.
+
+v. 89. Whose haven.] Alluding to the terrible slaughter of the
+Genoese made by the Saracens in 936, for which event Vellutello
+refers to the history of Augustino Giustiniani.
+
+v. 91. This heav'n.] The planet Venus.
+
+v. 93. Belus' daughter.] Dido.
+
+v. 96. She of Rhodope.] Phyllis.
+
+v. 98. Jove's son.] Hercules.
+
+v. 112. Rahab.] Heb. c. xi. 31.
+
+v. 120. With either palm.] "By the crucifixion of Christ"
+
+v. 126. The cursed flower.] The coin of Florence, called the
+florin.
+
+v. 130. The decretals.] The canon law.
+
+v. 134. The Vatican.] He alludes either to the death of Pope
+Boniface VIII. or, as Venturi supposes, to the coming of the
+Emperor Henry VII. into Italy, or else, according to the yet more
+probable conjecture of Lombardi, to the transfer of the holy see
+from Rome to Avignon, which took place in the pontificate of
+Clement V.
+
+CANTO X
+
+v. 7. The point.] "To that part of heaven," as Venturi explains
+it, "in which the equinoctial circle and the Zodiac intersect
+each other, where the common motion of the heavens from east to
+west may be said to strike with greatest force against the motion
+proper to the planets; and this repercussion, as it were, is here
+the strongest, because the velocity of each is increased to the
+utmost by their respective distance from the poles. Such at least
+is the system of Dante."
+
+v. 11. Oblique.] The zodiac.
+
+v. 25. The part.] The above-mentioned intersection of the
+equinoctial
+circle and the zodiac.
+
+v. 26. Minister.] The sun.
+
+v. 30. Where.] In which the sun rises every day earlier after
+the vernal equinox.
+
+v. 45. Fourth family.] The inhabitants of the sun, the fourth
+planet.
+
+v. 46. Of his spirit and of his offspring.] The procession of
+the third, and the generation of the second person in the
+Trinity.
+
+v. 70. Such was the song.] "The song of these spirits was
+ineffable.
+
+v. 86. No less constrained.] "The rivers might as easily cease
+to flow towards the sea, as we could deny thee thy request."
+
+v. 91. I then.] "I was of the Dominican order."
+
+v. 95. Albert of Cologne.] Albertus Magnus was born at
+Laugingen, in Thuringia, in 1193, and studied at Paris and at
+Padua, at the latter of which places he entered into the
+Dominican order. He then taught theology in various parts of
+Germany, and particularly at Cologne. Thomas Aquinas was his
+favourite pupil. In 1260, he reluctantly accepted
+the bishopric of Ratisbon, and in two years after resigned it,
+and returned to his cell in Cologne, where the remainder of his
+life was passed in superintending the school, and in composing
+his voluminous works on divinity and natural science. He died in
+1280. The absurd imputation of his having dealt in the magical
+art is well known; and his biographers take some pains to clear
+him of it. Scriptores Ordinis Praedicatorum, by Quetif and
+Echard, Lut. Par. 1719. fol. t. 1. p. 162.
+
+v. 96. Of Aquinum, Thomas.] Thomas Aquinas, of whom Bucer is
+reported to have said, "Take but Thomas away, and I will overturn
+the church of Rome," and whom Hooker terms "the greatest among
+the school divines," (Eccl. Pol. b. 3. 9), was born of noble
+parents, who anxiously, but vainly, endeavoured to divert him
+from a life of celibacy and study; and died in 1274, at the age
+of fourty-seven. Echard and Quetif, ibid. p. 271. See also
+Purgatory Canto XX. v. 67.
+
+v. 101. Gratian.] "Gratian, a Benedictine monk belonging to the
+convent of St. Felix and Nabor, at Bologna, and by birth a
+Tuscan, composed, about the year 1130, for the use of the
+schools, an abridgment or epitome of canon law, drawn from the
+letters of the pontiffs, the decrees of councils, and the
+writings of the ancient doctors."
+Maclaine's Mosheim, v. iii. cent. 12. part 2. c. i. 6.
+
+v. 101. To either forum.] "By reconciling," as Venturi explains
+it "the civil with the canon law."
+
+v. 104. Peter.] "Pietro Lombardo was of obscure origin, nor is
+the place of his birth in Lombardy ascertained. With a
+recommendation from the bishop of Lucca to St. Bernard, he went
+into France to continue his studies, and for that purpose
+remained some time at Rheims, whence he afterwards proceeded to
+Paris. Here his reputation was so great that Philip, brother of
+Louis VII., being chosen bishop of Paris, resigned that dignity
+to Pietro, whose pupil he had been. He held his bishopric
+only one year, and died in 1160. His Liber Sententiarum is
+highly esteemed. It contains a system of scholastic theology, so
+much more complete than any which had been yet seen, that it may
+be deemed an original work." Tiraboschi, Storia della Lett.
+Ital. t. iii. 1. 4. c. 2.
+
+v. 104. Who with the widow gave.] This alludes to the beginning
+of the Liber Sententiarum, where Peter says: "Cupiens aliquid de
+penuria ac tenuitate nostra cum paupercula in gazophylacium
+domini mittere,"
+v. 105. The fifth light.] Solomon.
+
+v. 112. That taper's radiance.] St. Dionysius the Areopagite.
+"The famous Grecian fanatic, who gave himself out for Dionysius
+the Areopagite, disciple of St. Paul, and who, under the
+protection of this venerable name, gave laws and instructions to
+those that were desirous of raising their souls above all human
+things in order to unite them to their great source by sublime
+contemplation, lived most probably in this century (the fourth),
+though some place him before, others after, the present period."
+Maclaine's Mosheim, v. i. cent. iv. p. 2. c. 3. 12.
+
+v. 116. That pleader.] 1n the fifth century, Paulus Orosius,
+"acquired a considerable degree of reputation by the History he
+wrote to refute the cavils of the Pagans against Christianity,
+and by his books against the Pelagians and Priscillianists."
+Ibid. v. ii. cent. v. p. 2. c. 2. 11. A similar train of
+argument was pursued by Augustine, in his book De Civitate Dei.
+Orosius is classed by Dante, in his treatise De Vulg. Eloq. I ii
+c. 6. as one of his favourite authors, among those "qui usi sunt
+altissimas prosas,"--" who have written prose with the greatest
+loftiness of style."
+
+v. 119. The eighth.] Boetius, whose book De Consolatione
+Philosophiae excited so much attention during the middle ages,
+was born, as Tiraboschi conjectures, about 470. "In 524 he was
+cruelly put to death by command of Theodoric, either on real or
+pretended suspicion of his being engaged in a conspiracy." Della
+Lett. Ital. t. iii. 1. i. c. 4.
+
+v. 124. Cieldauro.] Boetius was buried at Pavia, in the
+monastery of St. Pietro in Ciel d'oro.
+
+v. 126. Isidore.] He was Archbishop of Seville during forty
+years, and died in 635. See Mariana, Hist. 1. vi. c. 7.
+Mosheim, whose critical opinions in general must be taken with
+some allowance, observes that "his grammatical theological, and
+historical productions, discover more learning and pedantry, than
+judgment and taste."
+
+v. 127. Bede.] Bede, whose virtues obtained him the appellation
+of the Venerable, was born in 672 at Wearmouth and Jarrow, in the
+bishopric of Durham, and died in 735. Invited to Rome by Pope
+Sergius I., he preferred passing almost the whole of his life in
+the seclusion of a monastery. A catalogue of his numerous
+writings may be seen in Kippis's Biographia Britannica, v. ii.
+
+v. 127. Richard.] Richard of St. Victor, a native either of
+Scotland or Ireland, was canon and prior of the monastery of that
+name at Paris and died in 1173. "He was at the head of the
+Mystics in this century and his treatise, entitled the Mystical
+Ark, which contains as it were the marrow of this kind of
+theology, was received with the greatest avidity." Maclaine's
+Mosheim, v. iii. cent. xii. p. 2. c. 2. 23.
+
+v. 132. Sigebert.] "A monk of the abbey of Gemblours who was in
+high repute at the end of the eleventh, and beginning of the
+twelfth century." Dict. de Moreri.
+
+v. 131. The straw-litter'd street.] The name of a street in
+Paris: the "Rue du Fouarre."
+
+v. 136. The spouse of God.] The church.
+
+CANTO XI
+
+v. 1. O fond anxiety of mortal men.] Lucretius, 1. ii. 14
+
+O miseras hominum mentes ! O pectora caeca
+Qualibus in tenebris vitae quantisque periclis
+Degitur hoc aevi quodcunque est!
+
+v. 4. Aphorisms,] The study of medicine.
+
+v. 17. 'The lustre.] The spirit of Thomas Aquinas
+
+v. 29. She.] The church.
+
+v. 34. One.] Saint Francis.
+
+v. 36. The other.] Saint Dominic.
+
+v. 40. Tupino.] A rivulet near Assisi, or Ascesi where Francis
+was born in 1182.
+
+v. 40. The wave.] Chiascio, a stream that rises in a mountain
+near Agobbio, chosen by St. Ubaldo for the place of his
+retirement.
+
+v. 42. Heat and cold.] Cold from the snow, and heat from the
+reflection of the sun.
+
+v. 45. Yoke.] Vellutello understands this of the vicinity of
+the mountain to Nocera and Gualdo; and Venturi (as I have taken
+it) of the heavy impositions laid on those places by the
+Perugians. For GIOGO, like the Latin JUGUM, will admit of either
+sense.
+
+v. 50. The east.]
+
+This is the east, and Juliet is the sun.
+Shakespeare.
+
+v. 55. Gainst his father's will.] In opposition to the wishes
+of his natural father
+
+v. 58. In his father's sight.] The spiritual father, or bishop,
+in whose presence he made a profession of poverty.
+
+v. 60. Her first husband.] Christ.
+
+v. 63. Amyclas.] Lucan makes Caesar exclaim, on witnessing the
+secure poverty of the fisherman Amyclas:
+
+--O vite tuta facultas
+Pauperis, angustique lares! O munera nondum
+Intellecta deum! quibus hoc contingere templis,
+Aut potuit muris, nullo trepidare tumultu,
+Caesarea pulsante manu?
+Lucan Phars. 1. v. 531.
+
+v. 72. Bernard.] One of the first followers of the saint.
+
+v. 76. Egidius.] The third of his disciples, who died in 1262.
+His work, entitled Verba Aurea, was published in 1534, at Antwerp
+See Lucas Waddingus, Annales Ordinis Minoris, p. 5.
+
+v. 76. Sylvester.] Another of his earliest associates.
+
+v. 83. Pietro Bernardone.] A man in an humble station of life
+at Assisi.
+
+v. 86. Innocent.] Pope Innocent III.
+
+v. 90. Honorius.] His successor Honorius III who granted
+certain privileges to the Franciscans.
+
+v. 93. On the hard rock.] The mountain Alverna in the Apennine.
+
+v. 100. The last signet.] Alluding to the stigmata, or marks
+resembling the wounds of Christ, said to have been found on the
+saint's body.
+
+v. 106. His dearest lady.] Poverty.
+
+v. 113. Our Patriarch ] Saint Dominic.
+
+v. 316. His flock ] The Dominicans.
+
+v. 127. The planet from whence they split.] "The rule of their
+order, which the Dominicans neglect to observe."
+
+CANTO XII
+
+v. 1. The blessed flame.] Thomas Aquinas
+
+v. 12. That voice.] The nymph Echo, transformed into the
+repercussion of the voice.
+
+v. 25. One.] Saint Buonaventura, general of the Franciscan
+order, in which he effected some reformation, and one of the most
+profound divines of his age. "He refused the archbishopric of
+York, which was offered him by Clement IV, but afterwards was
+prevailed on to accept the bishopric of Albano and a cardinal's
+hat. He was born at Bagnoregio or Bagnorea, in Tuscany, A.D.
+1221, and died in 1274." Dict. Histor. par Chaudon et Delandine.
+Ed. Lyon. 1804.
+
+v. 28. The love.] By an act of mutual courtesy, Buonaventura,
+a Franciscan, is made to proclaim the praises of St. Dominic,
+as Thomas Aquinas, a Dominican, has celebrated those of St.
+Francis.
+
+v. 42. In that clime.] Spain.
+
+v. 48. Callaroga.] Between Osma and Aranda, in Old Castile,
+designated by the royal coat of arms.
+
+v. 51. The loving minion of the Christian faith.] Dominic was
+born April 5, 1170, and died August 6, 1221. His birthplace,
+Callaroga; his father and mother's names, Felix and Joanna, his
+mother's dream; his name of Dominic, given him in consequence of
+a vision by a noble matron, who stood sponsor to him, are all
+told in an anonymous life of the saint, said to be written in the
+thirteenth century, and published by Quetif and Echard,
+Scriptores Ordinis Praedicatorum. Par. 1719. fol. t 1. p. 25.
+These writers deny his having been an inquisitor, and indeed the
+establishment of the inquisition itself before the fourth Lateran
+council. Ibid. p. 88.
+
+v. 55. In the mother's womb.] His mother, when pregnant with
+him, is said to have dreamt that she should bring forth a white
+and black dog, with a lighted torch in its mouth.
+
+v. 59. The dame.] His godmother's dream was, that he had one
+star in his forehead, and another in the nape of his neck, from
+which he communicated light to the east and the west.
+
+v. 73. Felix.] Felix Gusman.
+
+v. 75. As men interpret it.] Grace or gift of the Lord.
+
+v. 77. Ostiense.] A cardinal, who explained the decretals.
+
+v. 77. Taddeo.] A physician, of Florence.
+
+v. 82. The see.] "The apostolic see, which no longer continues
+its wonted liberality towards the indigent and deserving; not
+indeed through its own fault, as its doctrines are still the
+same, but through the fault of the pontiff, who is seated in it."
+
+v. 85. No dispensation.] Dominic did not ask license to
+compound for the use of unjust acquisitions, by dedicating a part
+of them to pious purposes.
+
+v. 89. In favour of that seed.] "For that seed of the divine
+word, from which have sprung up these four-and-twenty plants,
+that now environ thee."
+
+v. 101. But the track.] "But the rule of St. Francis is already
+deserted and the lees of the wine are turned into mouldiness."
+
+v. 110. Tares.] He adverts to the parable of the taxes and the
+wheat.
+
+v. 111. I question not.] "Some indeed might be found, who still
+observe the rule of the order, but such would come neither from
+Casale nor Acquasparta:" of the former of which places was
+Uberto, one master general, by whom the discipline had been
+relaxed; and of the latter, Matteo, another, who had enforced it
+with unnecessary rigour.
+
+v. 121. -Illuminato here,
+And Agostino.]
+Two among the earliest followers of St. Francis.
+
+v. 125. Hugues of St. Victor.] A Saxon of the monastery of
+Saint Victor at Paris, who fed ill 1142 at the age of
+forty-four. "A man distinguished by the fecundity of his genius,
+who treated in his writings of all the branches of sacred and
+profane erudition that were known in his time, and who composed
+several dissertations that are not destitute of merit."
+Maclaine's Mosheim, Eccl. Hist. v. iii . cent. xii. p. 2. 2. 23.
+I have looked into his writings, and found some reason for
+this high eulogium.
+
+v. 125. Piatro Mangiadore.] "Petrus Comestor, or the Eater,
+born at Troyes, was canon and dean of that church, and afterwards
+chancellor of the church of Paris. He relinquished these
+benefices to become a regular canon of St. Victor at Paris, where
+he died in 1198. Chaudon et Delandine Dict. Hist. Ed. Lyon.
+1804. The work by which he is best known, is his Historia
+Scolastica, which I shall have occasion to cite in the Notes to
+Canto XXVI.
+
+v. 126. He of Spain.] "To Pope Adrian V succeeded John XXI a
+native of Lisbon a man of great genius and extraordinary
+acquirements, especially in logic and in medicine, as his books,
+written in the name of Peter of Spain (by which he was known
+before he became Pope), may testify. His life was not much
+longer than that of his predecessors, for he was killed at
+Viterbo, by the falling in of the roof of his chamber, after he
+had been pontiff only eight months and as many days.
+A.D. 1277. Mariana, Hist. de Esp. l. xiv. c. 2.
+
+v. 128. Chrysostom.] The eloquent patriarch of Constantinople.
+
+v. 128. Anselmo.] "Anselm, Archbishop of Canterbury, was born
+at Aosta, about 1034, and studied under Lanfrane at the monastery
+of Bec, in Normandy, where he afterwards devoted himself to a
+religious life, in his twenty-seventh year. In three years he
+was made prior, and then abbot of that monastery! from whence he
+was taken, in 1093, to succeed to the archbishopric, vacant by
+the death of Lanfrane. He enjoyed this dignity till his death, in
+1109, though it was disturbed by many
+dissentions with William II and Henry I respecting the immunities
+and investitures. There is much depth and precisian in his
+theological works." Tiraboschi, Stor. della Lett. Ital. t. iii.
+
+1. iv. c. 2. Ibid. c. v. "It is an observation made by many
+modern writers, that the demonstration of the existence of God,
+taken from the idea of a Supreme Being, of which Des Cartes is
+thought to be the author, was so many ages back discovered and
+brought to light by Anselm. Leibnitz himself makes
+the remark, vol. v. Oper. p. 570. Edit. Genev. 1768."
+
+v. 129. Donatus.] Aelius Donatus, the grammarian, in the fourth
+century, one of the preceptors of St. Jerome.
+
+v. 130. Raban.] "Rabanus Maurus, Archbishop of Mentz, is
+deservedly placed at the head of the Latin writers of this age."
+Mosheim, v. ii. cent. ix. p. 2 c. 2. 14.
+
+v. 131. Joachim.] Abbot of Flora in Calabria; "whom the
+multitude revered as a person divinely inspired and equal to the
+most illustrious prophets of ancient times." Ibid. v. iii.
+cent. xiii. p. 2. c. 2. 33.
+
+v. 134. A peer.] St. Dominic.
+
+CANTO XIII
+
+v. 1. Let him.] "Whoever would conceive the sight that now
+presented itself to me, must imagine to himself fifteen of the
+brightest stars in heaven, together with seven stars of Arcturus
+Major and two of Arcturus Minor, ranged in two circles, one
+within the other, each resembling the crown of Ariadne, and
+moving round m opposite directions."
+
+v. 21. The Chiava.] See Hell, Canto XXIX. 45.
+
+v. 29. That luminary.] Thomas Aquinas.
+
+v. 31. One ear.] "Having solved one of thy questions, I proceed
+to answer the other. Thou thinkest, then, that Adam and Christ
+were both endued with all the perfection of which the human
+nature is capable and therefore wonderest at what has been said
+concerning Solomon"
+
+v. 48. That.] "Things corruptible and incorruptible, are only
+emanations from the archetypal idea residing in the Divine mind."
+
+v. 52. His brightness.] The Word: the Son of God.
+
+v. 53. His love triune with them.] The Holy Ghost.
+
+v. 55. New existences.] Angels and human souls.
+
+v. 57. The lowest powers.] Irrational life and brute matter.
+
+v. 62. Their wax and that which moulds it.] Matter, and the
+virtue or energy that acts on it.
+
+v. 68. The heav'n.] The influence of the planetary bodies.
+
+v. 77. The clay.] Adam.
+
+v. 88. Who ask'd.] "He did not desire to know the number of the
+stars, or to pry into the subtleties of metaphysical and
+mathematical science: but asked for that wisdom which might fit
+him for his kingly office."
+
+v. 120. --Parmenides Melissus Bryso.]
+For the singular opinions entertained by the two former of these
+heathen philosophers, see Diogenes Laertius, 1. ix. and Aristot.
+de Caelo, 1. iii. c. 1 and Phys. l. i. c. 2. The last is also
+twice adduced by 2. Aristotle (Anal Post. 1. i. c. 9. and Rhet.
+1. iii. c. 2.) as 3. affording instances of false reasoning.
+
+v. 123. Sabellius, Arius.] Well-known heretics.
+
+v. 124. Scymitars.] A passage in the travels of
+Bertradon de la Brocquiere, translated by Mr. Johnes, will
+explain this
+allusion, which has given some trouble to the commentators. That
+traveler, who wrote before Dante, informs us, p. 138, that the
+wandering Arabs used their scymitars as mirrors.
+
+v. 126. Let not.] "Let not short-sighted mortals presume to
+decide on the future doom of any man, from a consideration of his
+present character and actions."
+
+CANTO XIV
+
+v. 5. Such was the image.] The voice of Thomas Aquinas
+proceeding, from the circle to the centre and that of Beatrice
+from the centre to the circle.
+
+v. 26. Him.] Literally translated by Chaucer, Troilus and
+Cresseide.
+
+Thou one two, and three eterne on live
+That raignest aie in three, two and one
+Uncircumscript, and all maist circonscrive,
+
+v. 81. The goodliest light.] Solomon.
+
+v. 78. To more lofty bliss.] To the planet Mars.
+
+v. 94. The venerable sign.] The cross.
+
+v. 125. He.] "He who considers that the eyes of Beatrice became
+more radiant the higher we ascended, must not wonder that I do
+not except even them as I had not yet beheld them since our
+entrance into this planet."
+
+CANTO XV
+
+v. 24. Our greater Muse.] Virgil Aen. 1. vi. 684.
+v. 84. I am thy root.] Cacciaguida, father to Alighieri, of
+whom our Poet was the great-grandson.
+
+v. 89. The mountain.] Purgatory.
+
+v. 92. Florence.] See G. Villani, l. iii. c. 2.
+
+v. 93. Which calls her still.] The public clock being still
+within the circuit of the ancient walls.
+
+v. 98. When.] When the women were not married at too early an
+age, and did not expect too large a portion.
+
+v. 101. Void.] Through the civil wars.
+
+v. 102 Sardanapalus.] The luxurious monarch of Assyria Juvenal
+is here imitated, who uses his name for an instance of
+effeminacy. Sat.
+
+v. 103. Montemalo ] Either an elevated spot between Rome and
+Viterbo, or Monte Mario, the site of the villa Mellini,
+commanding a view of Rome.
+
+v. 101. Our suburban turret.] Uccellatojo, near Florence, from
+whence that city was discovered.
+
+v. 103. Bellincion Berti.] Hell, Canto XVI. 38. nd Notes.
+There is a curious description of the simple manner in which the
+earlier Florentines dressed themselves in G. Villani, 1 vi. c.
+71.
+
+v. 110. Of Nerli and of Vecchio.] Two of the most opulent
+families in Florence.
+
+v. 113. Each.] "None fearful either of dying in banishment, or
+of being deserted by her husband on a scheme of battle in France.
+
+v. 120. A Salterello and Cianghella.] The latter a shameless
+woman of the family of Tosa, married to Lito degli Alidosi of
+Imola: the former Lapo Salterello, a lawyer, with whom Dante was
+at variance.
+
+v. 125. Mary.] The Virgin was involved in the pains of
+child-birth Purgatory, Canto XX. 21.
+
+v. 130 Valdipado.] Cacciaguida's wife, whose family name was
+Aldighieri; came from Ferrara, called Val di Pado, from its being
+watered by the Po.
+
+v. 131. Conrad.] The Emperor Conrad III who died in 1152.
+See G. Villani, 1. iv. 34.
+
+v. 136. Whose people.] The Mahometans, who were left in
+possession of the Holy Land, through the supineness of the Pope.
+
+CANTO XVI
+
+v. 10. With greeting.] The Poet, who had addressed the spirit,
+not knowing him to be his ancestor, with a plain "Thou," now uses
+more ceremony, and calls him "You," according to a custom
+introduced among the Romans in the latter times of the empire.
+
+v. 15. Guinever.] Beatrice's smile encouraged him to proceed
+just as the cough of Ginevra's female servant gave her mistress
+assurance to admit the freedoms of Lancelot. See Hell, Canto V.
+124.
+
+v. 23. The fold.] Florence, of which John the Baptist was the
+patron saint.
+
+v. 31. From the day.] From the Incarnation to the birth of
+Cacciaguida, the planet Mars had returned five hundred and
+fifty-three times to the constellation of Leo, with which it is
+supposed to have a congenial influence. His birth may,
+therefore, be placed about 1106.
+
+v. 38. The last.] The city was divided into four compartments.
+The Elisei, the ancestors of Dante, resided near the entrance of
+that named from the Porta S. Piero, which was the last reached by
+the competitor in the annual race at Florence. See G. Villani,
+1. iv. c. 10.
+
+v. 44. From Mars.] "Both in the times of heathenish and of
+Christianity." Hell, Canto XIII. 144.
+
+v. 48. Campi and Certaldo and Fighine.] Country places near
+Florence.
+
+v. 50. That these people.] That the inhabitants of the above-
+mentioned places had not been mixed with the citizens: nor the
+limits of Florence extended beyond Galluzzo and Trespiano."
+
+v. 54. Aguglione's hind and Signa's.] Baldo of Aguglione, and
+Bonifazio of Signa.
+
+v. 56. Had not the people.] If Rome had continued in her
+allegiance to the emperor, and the Guelph and Ghibelline factions
+had thus been prevented, Florence would not have been polluted by
+a race of upstarts, nor lost the most respectable of her ancient
+families.
+
+v. 61. Simifonte.] A castle dismantled by the Florentines. G.
+Villani, 1. v. c. 30. The individual here alluded to is no
+longer known.
+
+v. 69. The blind bull.] So Chaucer, Troilus and Cresseide. b.
+2.
+
+For swifter course cometh thing that is of wight
+When it descendeth than done things light.
+
+Compare Aristotle, Ethic. Nic. l. vi. c. 13. [GREEK HERE]
+
+v. 72. Luni, Urbisaglia.] Cities formerly of importance, but
+then fallen to decay.
+
+v. 74. Chiusi and Sinigaglia.] The same.
+
+v. 80. As the moon.] "The fortune of us, that are the moon's
+men doth ebb and flow like the sea." Shakespeare, 1 Henry IV.
+a. i. s. 2.
+
+v. 86. The Ughi.] Whoever is curious to know the habitations of
+these and the other ancient Florentines, may consult G. Villani,
+l. iv.
+
+v. 91. At the poop.] Many editions read porta, "gate." -The
+same metaphor is found in Aeschylus, Supp. 356, and is there also
+scarce understood by the critics. [GREEK HERE] Respect these
+wreaths, that crown your city's poop.
+
+v. 99. The gilded hilt and pommel.] The symbols of knighthood
+
+v. 100. The column cloth'd with verrey.] The arms of the Pigli.
+
+v. 103. With them.] Either the Chiaramontesi, or the Tosinghi
+one of which had committed a fraud in measuring out the wheat
+from the public granary. See Purgatory, Canto XII. 99
+
+v. 109. The bullets of bright gold.] The arms of the Abbati, as
+it is conjectured.
+
+v. 110. The sires of those.] "Of the Visdomini, the Tosinghi
+and the Cortigiani, who, being sprung from the founders of the
+bishopric of Florence are the curators of its revenues, which
+they do not spare, whenever it becomes vacant."
+
+v. 113. Th' o'erweening brood.] The Adimari. This family was
+so little esteemed, that Ubertino Donato, who had married a
+daughter of Bellincion Berti, himself indeed derived from the
+same stock (see Note to Hell Canto XVI. 38.) was offended with
+his father-in-law, for giving another of his daughters in
+marriage to one of them.
+
+v. 124. The gateway.] Landino refers this to the smallness of
+the city: Vellutello, with less probability, to the simplicity of
+the people in naming one of the gates after a private family.
+
+v. 127. The great baron.] The Marchese Ugo, who resided at
+Florence as lieutenant of the Emperor Otho III, gave many of the
+chief families license to bear his arms. See G. Villani, 1. iv.
+c. 2., where the vision is related, in consequence of which he
+sold all his possessions in Germany, and founded seven abbeys, in
+one whereof his memory was celebrated at Florence on St. Thomas's
+day.
+v. 130. One.] Giano della Bella, belonging to one of the
+families thus distinguished, who no longer retained his place
+among the nobility, and had yet added to his arms a bordure or.
+See Macchiavelli, 1st. Fior. 1. ii. p. 86. Ediz. Giolito.
+
+v. 132. -Gualterotti dwelt
+And Importuni.]
+Two families in the compartment of the city called Borgo.
+
+v. 135. The house.] Of Amidei. See Notes to Canto XXVIII. of
+Hell. v. 102.
+
+v. 142. To Ema.] "It had been well for the city, if thy
+ancestor had been drowned in the Ema, when he crossed that stream
+on his way from Montebuono to Florence."
+
+v. 144. On that maim'd stone.] See Hell, Canto XIII. 144. Near
+the remains of the statue of Mars. Buondelmonti was slain, as if
+he had been a victim to the god; and Florence had not since known
+the blessing of peace.
+
+v. 150. The lily.] "The arms of Florence had never hung
+reversed on the spear of her enemies, in token of her defeat; nor
+been changed from argent to gules;" as they afterwards were, when
+the Guelfi gained the predominance.
+
+CANTO XVII
+
+v. 1. The youth.] Phaeton, who came to his mother Clymene, to
+inquire of her if he were indeed the son of Apollo. See Ovid,
+Met. 1. i. ad finem.
+
+v. 6. That saintly lamp.] Cacciaguida.
+
+v. 12. To own thy thirst.] "That thou mayst obtain from others
+a solution of any doubt that may occur to thee."
+
+v. 15. Thou seest as clear.] "Thou beholdest future events,
+with the same clearness of evidence, that we discern the simplest
+mathematical demonstrations."
+
+v. 19. The point.] The divine nature.
+
+v. 27. The arrow.]
+Nam praevisa minus laedere tela solent.
+Ovid.
+
+Che piaga antiveduta assai men duole.
+Petrarca, Trionfo del Tempo
+
+v. 38. Contingency.] "The evidence with which we see the future
+portrayed in the source of all truth, no more necessitates that
+future than does the image, reflected in the sight by a ship
+sailing down a stream, necessitate the motion of the vessel."
+
+
+v. 43. From thence.] "From the eternal sight; the view of the
+Deity.
+
+v. 49. There.] At Rome, where the expulsion of Dante's party
+from Florence was then plotting, in 1300.
+
+v. 65. Theirs.] "They shall be ashamed of the part they have
+taken aga'nst thee."
+
+v. 69. The great Lombard.] Either Alberto della Scala, or
+Bartolommeo his eldest son. Their coat of arms was a ladder and
+an eagle.
+
+v. 75. That mortal.] Can Grande della Scala, born under the
+influence of Mars, but at this time only nine years old
+
+v. 80. The Gascon.] Pope Clement V.
+
+v. 80. Great Harry.] The Emperor Henry VII.
+
+v. 127. The cry thou raisest.] "Thou shalt stigmatize the
+faults of those who are most eminent and powerful."
+
+CANTO XVIII
+
+v. 3. Temp'ring the sweet with bitter.]
+Chewing the end of sweet and bitter fancy.
+Shakespeare, As you Like it, a. 3. s. 3.
+
+v. 26. On this fifth lodgment of the tree.] Mars, the fifth ot
+the @
+
+v. 37. The great Maccabee.] Judas Maccabeus.
+
+v. 39. Charlemagne.] L. Pulci commends Dante for placing
+Charlemagne and Orlando here:
+Io mi confido ancor molto qui a Dante
+Che non sanza cagion nel ciel su misse
+Carlo ed Orlando in quelle croci sante,
+Che come diligente intese e scrisse.
+Morg. Magg. c. 28.
+
+v. 43. William and Renard.] Probably not, as the commentators
+have imagined, William II of Orange, and his kinsman Raimbaud,
+two of the crusaders under Godfrey of Bouillon, (Maimbourg, Hist.
+des Croisades, ed. Par. 1682. 12mo. t. i. p. 96.) but rather the
+two more celebrated heroes in the age of Charlemagne. The
+former, William l. of Orange, supposed to have been the founder
+of the present illustrious family of that name, died about 808,
+according to Joseph de la Piser, Tableau de l'Hist. des Princes
+et Principante d'Orange. Our countryman, Ordericus Vitalis,
+professes to give his true life, which had been misrepresented in
+the songs of the itinerant bards." Vulgo canitur a joculatoribus
+de illo, cantilena; sed jure praeferenda est relatio
+authentica." Eccl. Hist. in Duchesne, Hist. Normann Script.
+p. 508. The latter is better known by having been celebrated by
+Ariosto, under the name of Rinaldo.
+
+v. 43. Duke Godfey.] Godfrey of Bouillon.
+
+v. 46. Robert Guiscard.] See Hell, Canto XXVIII. v. 12.
+
+v. 81. The characters.] Diligite justitiam qui judicatis
+terrarm. "Love righteousness, ye that be judges of the earth "
+Wisdom of Solomon, c. i. 1.
+
+v. 116. That once more.] "That he may again drive out those who
+buy and sell in the temple."
+
+v. 124. Taking the bread away.] "Excommunication, or the
+interdiction of the Eucharist, is now employed as a weapon of
+warfare."
+
+v. 126. That writest but to cancel.] "And thou, Pope Boniface,
+who writest thy ecclesiastical censures for no other purpose than
+to be paid for revoking them."
+
+v. 130. To him.] The coin of Florence was stamped with the
+impression of John the Baptist.
+
+CANTO XIX
+
+v. 38. Who turn'd his compass.] Compare Proverbs, c. viii. 27.
+And Milton, P. L. b. vii 224.
+
+v. 42. The Word] "The divine nature still remained
+incomprehensible. Of this Lucifer was a proof; for had he
+thoroughly comprehended it, he would not have fallen."
+
+v. 108. The Ethiop.] Matt. c. xii. 41.
+
+v. 112. That volume.] Rev. c. xx. 12.
+
+v. 114. Albert.] Purgatory, Canto VI. v. 98.
+
+v. 116. Prague.] The eagle predicts the devastation of Bohemia
+by Albert, which happened soon after this time, when that Emperor
+obtained the kingdom for his eldest son Rodolph. See Coxe's
+House of Austria, 4to. ed. v. i. part 1. p. 87
+
+v. 117. He.] Philip IV of France, after the battle of Courtrai,
+1302, in which the French were defeated by the Flemings, raised
+the nominal value of the coin. This king died in consequence of
+his horse being thrown to the ground by a wild boar, in 1314
+
+v. 121. The English and Scot.] He adverts to the disputes
+between John Baliol and Edward I, the latter of whom is commended
+in the Purgatory, Canto VII. v. 130.
+
+v. 122. The Spaniard's luxury.] The commentators refer this to
+Alonzo X of Spain. It seems probable that the allusion is to
+Ferdinand IV who came to the crown in 1295, and died in 1312, at
+the age of twenty four, in consequence, as it was supposed, of
+his extreme intemperance.
+See Mariana, Hist I. xv. c. 11.
+
+v. 123. The Bohemian.] Winceslaus II. Purgatory, Canto VII. v.
+
+v. 125. The halter of Jerusalem.] Charles II of Naples and
+Jerusalem who was lame. See note to Purgatory, Canto VII. v.
+122, and XX. v. 78.
+
+v. 127. He.] Frederick of Sicily son of Peter III of Arragon.
+Purgatory, Canto VII. v. 117. The isle of fire is Sicily, where
+was the tomb of Anchises.
+
+v. 133. His uncle.] James, king of Majorca and Minorca, brother
+to Peter III.
+
+v. 133. His brother.] James II of Arragon, who died in 1327.
+See Purgatory, Canto VII. v. 117.
+
+v. 135. Of Portugal.] In the time of Dante, Dionysius was king
+of Portugal. He died in 1328, after a reign of near forty-six
+years, and does not seem to have deserved the stigma here
+fastened on him. See Mariana. and 1. xv. c. 18. Perhaps the
+rebellious son of Dionysius may be alluded to.
+
+v. 136. Norway.] Haquin, king of Norway, is probably meant;
+who, having given refuge to the murderers of Eric VII king of
+Denmark, A D. 1288, commenced a war against his successor, Erie
+VIII, "which continued for nine years, almost to the utter ruin
+and destruction of both kingdoms." Modern Univ. Hist. v. xxxii
+p. 215.
+
+v. 136. -Him
+Of Ratza.]
+One of the dynasty of the house of Nemagna, which ruled the
+kingdom of Rassia, or Ratza, in Sclavonia, from 1161 to 1371, and
+whose history may be found in Mauro Orbino, Regno degli Slavi,
+Ediz. Pesaro. 1601. Uladislaus appears to have been the sovereign
+in Dante's time, but the disgraceful forgery adverted to in the
+text, is not recorded by the historian v. 138. Hungary.] The
+kingdom of Hungary was about this time disputed by Carobert, son
+of Charles Martel, and Winceslaus, prince of Bohemia, son of
+Winceslaus II. See Coxe's House of Austria, vol. i. p. 1. p. 86.
+
+4to edit.
+
+v. 140. Navarre.] Navarre was now under the yoke of France.
+ It soon after (in 1328) followed the advice of Dante and had a
+monarch of its own. Mariana, 1. xv. c. 19.
+
+v. 141. Mountainous girdle.] The Pyrenees.
+
+v. 143. -Famagosta's streets
+And Nicosia's.]
+
+Cities in the kingdom of Cyprus, at that time ruled by Henry II a
+pusillanimous prince. Vertot. Hist. des Chev. de Malte, 1. iii.
+iv. The meaning appears to be, that the complaints made by those
+cities of their weak and worthless governor, may be regarded as
+an earnest of his condemnation at the last doom.
+
+CANTO XX
+
+v. 6. Wherein one shines.] The light of the sun, whence he
+supposes the other celestial bodies to derive their light
+
+v. 8. The great sign.] The eagle, the Imperial ensign.
+
+v. 34. Who.] David.
+
+v. 39. He.] Trajan. See Purgatory, Canto X. 68.
+
+v. 44. He next.] Hezekiah.
+
+v. 50. 'The other following.] Constantine. There is no passage
+in which Dante's opinion of the evil; that had arisen from the
+mixture of the civil with the ecclesiastical power, is more
+unequivocally declared.
+
+v. 57. William.] William II, king of Sicily, at the latter part
+of the twelfth century He was of the Norman line of sovereigns,
+and obtained the appellation of "the Good" and, as the poet says
+his loss was as much the subject of regret in his dominions, as
+the presence of Charles I of Anjou and Frederick of Arragon, was
+of sorrow and complaint.
+
+v. 62. Trojan Ripheus.]
+Ripheus, justissimus unus
+Qui fuit in Teneris, et servantissimus aequi.
+Virg. Aen. 1. ii. 4--.
+
+v. 97. This.] Ripheus.
+
+v. 98. That.] Trajan.
+
+v. 103. The prayers,] The prayers of St. Gregory
+
+v. 119. The three nymphs.] Faith, Hope, and Charity. Purgatory,
+Canto XXIX. 116.
+v. 138. The pair.] Ripheus and Trajan.
+
+CANTO XXI
+
+v. 12. The seventh splendour.] The planet Saturn
+
+v. 13. The burning lion's breast.] The constellation Leo.
+
+v. 21. In equal balance.] "My pleasure was as great in
+complying
+with her will as in beholding her countenance."
+
+v. 24. Of that lov'd monarch.] Saturn. Compare Hell, Canto
+XIV. 91.
+
+v. 56. What forbade the smile.] "Because it would have overcome
+thee."
+
+v. 61. There aloft.] Where the other souls were.
+
+v. 97. A stony ridge.] The Apennine.
+
+v. 112. Pietro Damiano.] "S. Pietro Damiano obtained a great
+and well-merited reputation, by the pains he took to correct the
+abuses among the clergy. Ravenna is supposed to have been the
+place of his birth, about 1007. He was employed in several
+important missions, and rewarded by Stephen IX with the dignity
+of cardinal, and the bishopric of Ostia, to which, however, he
+preferred his former retreat in the monastery of Fonte Aveliana,
+and prevailed on Alexander II to permit him to retire thither.
+Yet he did not long continue in this seclusion, before he was
+sent on other embassies. He died at Faenza in 1072. His
+letters throw much light on the obscure history of these times.
+Besides them, he has left several treatises on sacred and
+ecclesiastical subjects. His eloquence is worthy of a better
+age." Tiraboschi, Storia della Lett Ital. t. iii. 1. iv. c. 2.
+
+v. 114. Beside the Adriatic.] At Ravenna. Some editions have
+FU instead of FUI, according to which reading, Pietro
+distinguishes himself from another Pietro, who was termed
+"Peccator," the sinner.
+
+v. 117. The hat.] The cardinal's hat.
+
+v. 118. Cephas.] St. Peter.
+
+v. 119 The Holy Spirit's vessel.] St. Paul. See Hell, Canto II.
+30.
+
+v. 130. Round this.] Round the spirit of Pietro Damiano.
+
+CANTO XXII
+
+v. 14. The vengeance.] Beatrice, it is supposed, intimates the
+approaching fate of Boniface VIII. See Purgatory, Canto XX. 86.
+
+v. 36. Cassino.] A castle in the Terra di Lavoro.
+
+v. 38. I it was.] "A new order of monks, which in a manner
+absorbed all the others that were established in the west, was
+instituted, A.D. 529, by Benedict of Nursis, a man of piety and
+reputation for the age he lived in." Maclaine's Mosheim,
+Eccles. Hist. v. ii. cent. vi. p. 2. ch. 2 - 6.
+
+v. 48. Macarius.] There are two of this name enumerated by
+Mosheim among the Greek theologians of the fourth century, v. i.
+cent. iv p. 11 ch. 2 - 9. In the following chapter, 10, it is
+said, "Macarius, an Egyptian monk, undoubtedly deserves the first
+rank among the practical matters of this time, as his works
+displayed, some few things excepted, the brightest and most
+lovely portraiture of sanctity and virtue."
+
+v. 48. Romoaldo.] S. Romoaldo, a native of Ravenna, and the
+founder of the order of Camaldoli, died in 1027. He was the
+author of a commentary on the Psalms.
+
+v. 70. The patriarch Jacob.] So Milton, P. L. b. iii. 510:
+The stairs were such, as whereon Jacob saw
+Angels ascending and descending, bands
+Of guardians bright.
+
+v. 107. The sign.] The constellation of Gemini.
+
+v. 130. This globe.] So Chaucer, Troilus and Cresseide, b. v,
+
+And down from thence fast he gan avise
+This little spot of earth, that with the sea
+Embraced is, and fully gan despite
+This wretched world.
+
+Compare Cicero, Somn. Scip. "Jam ipsa terra ita mihi parva visa
+est." &c. Lucan, Phar 1. ix. 11; and Tasso, G. L. c. xiv.
+st, 9, 10, 11.
+
+v. 140. Maia and Dione.] The planets Mercury and Venus.
+
+CANTO XXIII
+
+v. 11. That region.] Towards the south, where the course of the
+sun appears less rapid, than, when he is in the east or the west.
+
+v. 26. Trivia.] A name of Diana.
+
+v. 26. Th' eternal nymphs.] The stars.
+
+v. 36. The Might.] Our Saviour
+
+v. 71. The rose.] The Virgin Mary.
+
+v. 73. The lilies.] The apostles.
+
+v. 84. Thou didst exalt thy glory.] The diving light retired
+upwards, to render the eyes of Dante more capable of enduring the
+spectacle which now presented itself.
+
+v. 86. The name of that fair flower.] The name of the Virgin.
+
+v. 92. A cresset.] The angel Gabriel.
+
+v. 98. That lyre.] By synecdoche, the lyre is put for the angel
+
+v. 99. The goodliest sapphire.] The Virgin
+
+v. 126. Those rich-laden coffers.] Those spirits who, having
+sown the seed of good works on earth, now contain the fruit of
+their pious endeavours.
+
+v. 129. In the Babylonian exile.] During their abode in this
+world.
+
+v. 133. He.] St. Peter, with the other holy men of the Old and
+New testament.
+
+CANTO XXIV
+
+v. 28. Such folds.] Pindar has the same bold image:
+[GREEK HERE?]
+On which Hayne strangely remarks: Ad ambitus stropharum vldetur
+
+v. 65. Faith.] Hebrews, c. xi. 1. So Marino, in one of his
+sonnets, which calls Divozioni:
+
+Fede e sustanza di sperate cose,
+E delle non visioili argomento.
+
+v. 82. Current.] "The answer thou hast made is right; but let
+me know if thy inward persuasion is conformable to thy
+profession."
+
+v. 91. The ancient bond and new.] The Old and New Testament.
+
+v. 114. That Worthy.] Quel Baron.
+In the next Canto, St. James is called "Barone." So in
+Boccaccio, G. vi. N. 10, we find "Baron Messer Santo Antonio."
+v. 124. As to outstrip.] Venturi insists that the Poet has
+here, "made a slip;" for that John came first to the sepulchre,
+though Peter was the first to enter it. But let Dante have leave
+to explain his own meaning, in a passage from his third book De
+Monarchia: "Dicit etiam Johannes ipsum (scilicet Petrum)
+introiisse SUBITO, cum venit in monumentum, videns allum
+discipulum cunctantem ad ostium." Opere de Dante, Ven. 1793. T.
+ii. P. 146.
+
+CANTO XXV
+
+v. 6. The fair sheep-fold.] Florence, whence he was banished.
+
+v. 13. For its sake.] For the sake of that faith.
+
+v. 20. Galicia throng'd with visitants.] See Mariana, Hist. 1.
+xi.
+
+v. 13. "En el tiempo," &c. "At the time that the sepulchre of
+the apostle St. James was discovered, the devotion for that place
+extended itself not only over all Spain, but even round about to
+foreign nations. Multitudes from all parts of the world came to
+visit it. Many others were deterred by the difficulty for the
+journey, by the roughness and barrenness of those parts, and by
+the incursions of the Moors, who made captives many of the
+pilgrims. The canons of St. Eloy afterwards (the precise time is
+not known), with a desire of remedying these evils, built, in
+many places, along the whole read, which reached as far as to
+France, hospitals for the reception of the pilgrims."
+
+v. 31. Who.] The Epistle of St. James is here attributed to the
+elder apostle of that name, whose shrine was at Compostella, in
+Galicia. Which of the two was the author of it is yet doubtful.
+The learned and candid Michaelis contends very forcibly for its
+having been written by James the Elder. Lardner rejects that
+opinion as absurd; while Benson argues against it, but is well
+answered by Michaelis, who after all, is obliged to leave the
+question undecided. See his Introduction to the New Testament,
+translated by Dr. Marsh, ed. Cambridge, 1793. V. iv. c. 26. -
+1, 2, 3.
+
+v. 35. As Jesus.] In the transfiguration on Mount Tabor.
+
+v. 39. The second flame.] St. James.
+
+v. 40. I lifted up.] "I will lift up mine eyes unto the hills,
+from whence cometh my help." Ps. Cxxi. 1.
+
+v. 59. From Egypt to Jerusalem.] From the lower world to
+heaven.
+
+v. 67. Hope.] This is from the Sentences of Petrus Lombardus.
+"Est autem spes virtus, qua spiritualia et aeterna bona speratam,
+id est, beatitudinem aeternam. Sine meritis enim aliquid
+sperare non spes, sed praesumptio, dici potest." Pet. Lomb.
+Sent. 1. Iii. Dist. 26. Ed. Bas. 1486. Fol.
+
+v. 74. His anthem.] Psalm ix. 10.
+
+v. 90. Isaias ] Chap. lxi. 10.
+
+v. 94. Thy brother.] St. John in the Revelation, c. vii. 9.
+
+v. 101. Winter's month.] "If a luminary, like that which now
+appeared, were to shine throughout the month following the winter
+solstice during which the constellation Cancer appears in the
+east at the setting of the sun, there would be no interruption to
+the light, but the whole month would be as a single day."
+
+v. 112. This.] St. John, who reclined on the bosom of our
+Saviour, and to whose charge Jesus recommended his mother.
+
+v. 121. So I.] He looked so earnestly, to descry whether St.
+John were present there in body, or in spirit only, having had
+his doubts raised by that saying of our Saviour's: "If I will,
+that he tarry till I come what is that to thee."
+
+v. 127. The two.] Christ and Mary, whom he has described, in
+the last Canto but one, as rising above his sight
+
+CANTO XXVI
+
+v. 2. The beamy flame.] St. John.
+
+v. 13. Ananias' hand.] Who, by putting his hand on St. Paul,
+restored his sight. Acts, c. ix. 17.
+
+v. 36. From him.] Some suppose that Plato is here meant, who,
+in his Banquet, makes Phaedrus say: "Love is confessedly amongst
+the eldest of beings, and, being the eldest, is the cause to us
+of the greatest goods " Plat. Op. t. x. p. 177. Bip. ed. Others
+have understood it of Aristotle, and others, of the writer who
+goes by the name of Dionysius the Areopagite, referred to in the
+twenty-eighth Canto.
+
+v. 40. I will make.] Exodus, c. xxxiii. 19.
+
+v. 42. At the outset.] John, c. i. 1. &c.
+
+v. 51. The eagle of our Lord.] St. John
+
+v. 62. The leaves.] Created beings.
+
+v. 82. The first living soul.] Adam.
+
+v. 107. Parhelion.] Who enlightens and comprehends all things;
+but is himself enlightened and comprehended by none.
+
+v. 117. Whence.] That is, from Limbo. See Hell, Canto II. 53.
+Adam says that 5232 years elapsed from his creation to the time
+of his deliverance, which followed the death of Christ.
+
+v. 133. EL] Some read UN, "One," instead of EL: but the latter
+of these readings is confirmed by a passage from Dante's Treatise
+De Vulg. Eloq. 1. i. cap. 4. "Quod prius vox primi loquentis
+sonaverit, viro sanae mentis in promptu esse non dubito ipsum
+fuisse quod Deus est, videlicet El." St. Isidore in the
+Origines, 1. vii. c. 1. had said, "Primum apud Hebraeos Dei
+nomen El dicitur."
+
+v. 135. Use.] From Horace, Ars. Poet. 62.
+
+v. 138. All my life.] "I remained in the terrestrial Paradise
+only tothe seventh hour." In the Historia Scolastica of Petrus
+Comestor, it is said of our first parents: Quidam tradunt eos
+fuisse in Paradiso septem horae." I. 9. ed. Par. 1513. 4to.
+
+CANTO XXVII
+
+v. 1. Four torches.] St. Peter, St. James, St. John, and Adam.
+
+v. 11. That.] St. Peter' who looked as the planet Jupiter
+would, if it assumed the sanguine appearance of liars.
+
+v. 20. He.] Boniface VIII.
+
+v. 26. such colour.]
+Qui color infectis adversi solis ab ietu
+Nubibus esse solet; aut purpureae Aurorae.
+Ovid, Met. 1. iii. 184.
+
+v. 37. Of Linus and of Cletus.] Bishops of Rome in the first
+century.
+
+v. 40. Did Sextus, Pius, and Callixtus bleed
+And Urban.]
+The former two, bishops of the same see, in the second; and the
+others, in the fourth century.
+v. 42. No purpose was of ours.] "We did not intend that our
+successors should take any part in the political divisions among
+Christians, or that my figure (the seal of St. Peter) should
+serve as a mark to authorize iniquitous grants and privileges."
+
+v. 51. Wolves.] Compare Milton, P. L. b. xii. 508, &c.
+
+v. 53. Cahorsines and Gascons.] He alludes to Jacques d'Ossa, a
+native of Cahors, who filled the papal chair in 1316, after it
+had been two years vacant, and assumed the name of John XXII.,
+and to Clement V, a Gascon, of whom see Hell, Canto XIX. 86, and
+Note.
+
+v. 63. The she-goat.] When the sun is in Capricorn.
+
+v. 72. From the hour.] Since he had last looked (see Canto
+XXII.) he perceived that he had passed from the meridian circle
+to the eastern horizon, the half of our hemisphere, and a quarter
+of the heaven.
+
+v. 76. From Gades.] See Hell, Canto XXVI. 106
+
+v. 78. The shore.] Phoenicia, where Europa, the daughter of
+Agenor mounted on the back of Jupiter, in his shape of a bull.
+
+v. 80. The sun.] Dante was in the constellation Gemini, and the
+sun in Aries. There was, therefore, part of those two
+constellations, and the whole of Taurus, between them.
+
+v. 93. The fair nest of Leda.] "From the Gemini;" thus called,
+because Leda was the mother of the twins, Castor and Pollux
+
+v. 112. Time's roots.] "Here," says Beatrice, "are the roots,
+from whence time springs: for the parts, into which it is
+divided, the other heavens must be considered." And she then
+breaks out into an exclamation on the degeneracy of human nature,
+which does not lift itself to the contemplation of divine things.
+
+v. 126. The fair child of him.] So she calls human nature.
+Pindar by a more easy figure, terms the day, "child of the sun."
+
+v. 129. None.] Because, as has been before said, the shepherds
+are become wolves.
+
+v. 131. Before the date.] "Before many ages are past, before
+those fractions, which are drops in the reckoning of every year,
+shall amount to so large a portion of time, that January shall be
+no more a winter month." By this periphrasis is meant " in a
+short time," as we say familiarly, such a thing will happen
+before a thousand years are over when we mean, it will happen
+soon.
+
+v. 135. Fortune shall be fain.] The commentators in general
+suppose that our Poet here augurs that great reform, which he
+vainly hoped would follow on the arrival of the Emperor Henry
+VII. in Italy. Lombardi refers the prognostication to Can Grande
+della Scala: and, when we consider that this Canto was not
+finished till after the death of Henry, as appears from the
+mention that is made of John XXII, it cannot be denied but the
+conjecture is probable.
+
+CANTO XXVIII
+
+v. 36. Heav'n, and all nature, hangs upon that point.] [GREEK
+HERE]
+Aristot. Metaph. 1. xii. c. 7. "From that beginning depend
+heaven and nature."
+
+v. 43. Such diff'rence.] The material world and the
+intelligential (the copy and the pattern) appear to Dante to
+differ in this respect, that the orbits of the latter are more
+swift, the nearer they are to the centre, whereas the contrary is
+the case with the orbits of the former. The seeming contradiction
+is thus accounted for by Beatrice. In the material world, the
+more ample the body is, the greater is the good of which itis
+capable supposing all the parts to be equally perfect. But in the
+intelligential world, the circles are more excellent and
+powerful, the more they approximate to the central point, which
+is God. Thus the first circle, that of the seraphim, corresponds
+to the ninth sphere, or primum mobile, the second, that of the
+cherubim, to the eighth sphere, or heaven of fixed stars; the
+third, or circle of thrones, to the seventh sphere, or planet of
+Saturn; and in like manner throughout the two other trines of
+circles and spheres.
+
+In orbs
+Of circuit inexpressible they stood,
+Orb within orb
+Milton, P. L. b. v. 596.
+
+v. 70. The sturdy north.] Compare Homer, II. b. v. 524.
+
+v. 82. In number.] The sparkles exceeded the number which would
+be produced by the sixty-four squares of a chess-board, if for
+the first we reckoned one, for the next, two; for the third,
+four; and so went on doubling to the end of the account.
+
+v. 106. Fearless of bruising from the nightly ram.] Not
+injured, like the productions of our spring, by the influence of
+autumn, when the constellation Aries rises at sunset.
+
+v. 110. Dominations.]
+Hear all ye angels, progeny of light,
+Thrones, domination's, princedoms, virtues, powers.
+Milton, P. L. b. v. 601.
+
+v. 119. Dionysius.] The Areopagite, in his book De Caelesti
+Hierarchia.
+
+v. 124. Gregory.] Gregory the Great. "Novem vero angelorum
+ordines diximus, quia videlicet esse, testante sacro eloquio,
+scimus: Angelos, archangelos, virtutes, potestates, principatus,
+dominationae, thronos, cherubin atque seraphin." Divi Gregorii,
+Hom. xxxiv. f. 125. ed. Par. 1518. fol.
+
+v. 126. He had learnt.] Dionysius, he says, had learnt from St.
+Paul. It is almost unnecessary to add, that the book, above
+referred to, which goes under his name, was the production of a
+later age.
+
+CANTO XXIX
+
+v. 1. No longer.] As short a space, as the sun and moon are in
+changing hemispheres, when they are opposite to one another, the
+one under the sign of Aries, and the other under that of Libra,
+and both hang for a moment, noised as it were in the hand of the
+zenith.
+
+v. 22. For, not in process of before or aft.] There was neither
+"before nor after," no distinction, that is, of time, till the
+creation of the world.
+
+v. 30. His threefold operation.] He seems to mean that
+spiritual beings, brute matter, and the intermediate part of the
+creation, which participates both of spirit and matter, were
+produced at once.
+
+v. 38. On Jerome's pages.] St. Jerome had described the angels
+as created before the rest of the universe: an opinion which
+Thomas Aquinas controverted; and the latter, as Dante thinks,
+had Scripture on his side.
+
+v. 51. Pent.] See Hell, Canto XXXIV. 105.
+
+v. 111. Of Bindi and of Lapi.] Common names of men at Florence
+
+v. 112. The sheep.] So Milton, Lycidas.
+The hungry sheep look up and are not fed,
+But, swoln with wind and the rank mist they draw,
+Rot inwardly.
+
+v. 121. The preacher.] Thus Cowper, Task, b. ii.
+
+'Tis pitiful
+To court a grin, when you should woo a soul, &c.
+
+v. 131. Saint Anthony.
+Fattens with this his swine.]
+On the sale of these blessings, the brothers of St. Anthony
+supported themselves and their paramours. From behind the swine
+of St. Anthony, our Poet levels a blow at the object of his
+inveterate enmity, Boniface VIII, from whom, "in 1297, they
+obtained the dignity and privileges of an independent
+congregation." See Mosheim's Eccles. History in Dr. Maclaine's
+Translation, v. ii. cent. xi. p. 2. c. 2. - 28.
+
+v. 140. Daniel.] "Thousand thousands ministered unto him, and
+ten thousand times ten thousand stood before him." Dan. c. vii.
+10.
+
+CANTO XXX
+
+v. 1. Six thousand miles.] He compares the vanishing of the
+vision to the fading away of the stars at dawn, when it is
+noon-day six thousand miles off, and the shadow, formed by the
+earth over the part of it inhabited by the Poet, is about to
+disappear.
+
+v. 13. Engirt.] " ppearing to be encompassed by these angelic
+bands, which are in reality encompassed by it."
+
+v. 18. This turn.] Questa vice.
+Hence perhaps Milton, P. L. b. viii. 491.
+This turn hath made amends.
+
+v. 39. Forth.] From the ninth sphere to the empyrean, which is
+more light.
+
+v. 44. Either mighty host.] Of angels, that remained faithful,
+and of beatified souls, the latter in that form which they will
+have at the last day.
+v. 61. Light flowing.] "And he showed me a pure river of water
+of life, clear as crystal, proceeding out of the throne of God
+and of the Lamb." Rev. cxxii. I.
+
+--underneath a bright sea flow'd
+Of jasper, or of liquid pearl.
+Milton, P. L. b. iii. 518.
+
+v. 80. Shadowy of the truth.]
+Son di lor vero ombriferi prefazii.
+So Mr. Coleridge, in his Religious Musings, v. 406.
+Life is a vision shadowy of truth.
+
+v. 88. --the eves
+Of mine eyelids.]
+Thus Shakespeare calls the eyelids "penthouse lids." Macbeth, a,
+1. s, 3.
+
+v. 108. As some cliff.]
+A lake
+That to the fringed bank with myrtle crown'd
+Her crystal mirror holds.
+Milton, P. L. b. iv. 263.
+
+v. 118. My view with ease.]
+Far and wide his eye commands
+For sight no obstacle found here, nor shade, But all sunshine.
+Milton, P. l. b. iii. 616.
+
+v. 135. Of the great Harry.] The Emperor Henry VII, who died in
+1313.
+
+v. 141. He.] Pope Clement V. See Canto XXVII. 53.
+
+v. 145. Alagna's priest.] Pope Boniface VIII. Hell, Canto XIX.
+
+79.
+
+CANTO XXXI
+
+v. 6. Bees.] Compare Homer, Iliad, ii. 87. Virg. Aen. I. 430,
+and Milton, P. L. b. 1. 768.
+
+v. 29. Helice.] Callisto, and her son Arcas, changed into the
+constellations of the Greater Bear and Arctophylax, or Bootes.
+See Ovid, Met. l. ii. fab. v. vi.
+
+v. 93. Bernard.] St. Bernard, the venerable abbot of Clairvaux,
+and the great promoter of the second crusade, who died A.D. 1153,
+in his sixty-third year. His sermons are called by Henault,
+"chefs~d'oeuvres de sentiment et de force." Abrege Chron. de
+l'Hist. de Fr. 1145. They have even been preferred to al1 the
+productions of the ancients, and the author has been termed the
+last of the fathers of the church. It is uncertain whether they
+were not delivered originally in the French tongue.
+
+That the part he acts in the present Poem should be assigned to
+him. appears somewhat remarkable, when we consider that he
+severely censured the new festival established in honour of the
+Immaculate Conception of the virgin, and opposed the doctrine
+itself with the greatest vigour, as it supposed her being
+honoured with a privilegewhich belonged to Christ Alone Dr.
+Maclaine's Mosheim, v. iii. cent. xii. p. ii. c. 3 - 19.
+
+v. 95. Our Veronica ] The holy handkerchief, then preserved at
+Rome, on which the countenance of our Saviour was supposed to
+have been imprest.
+
+v. 101. Him.] St. Bernard.
+
+v. 108. The queen.] The Virgin Mary.
+
+v. 119. Oriflamb.] Menage on this word quotes the Roman des
+Royau
+-Iignages of Guillaume Ghyart.
+Oriflamme est une banniere
+De cendal roujoyant et simple
+Sans portraiture d'autre affaire,
+
+CANTO XXXII
+
+v. 3. She.] Eve.
+
+v. 8. Ancestress.] Ruth, the ancestress of David.
+
+v. 60. In holy scripture.] Gen. c. xxv. 22.
+v. 123. Lucia.] See Hell, Canto II. 97.
+
+CANTO XXXIII
+
+v. 63. The Sybil's sentence.] Virg. Aen. iii. 445.
+
+v. 89. One moment.] "A moment seems to me more tedious, than
+five-and-twenty ages would have appeared to the Argonauts, when
+they had resolved on their expedition.
+
+v. 92. Argo's shadow]
+Quae simul ac rostro ventosnm proscidit aequor,
+Tortaque remigio spumis incanduit unda,
+Emersere feri candenti e gurgite vultus
+Aequoreae monstrum Nereides admirantes.
+Catullus, De Nupt. Pel. et Thet. 15.
+
+v. 109. Three orbs of triple hue, clipt in one bound.] The
+Trinity.
+
+v. 118. That circling.] The second of the circles, "Light of
+Light," in which he dimly beheld the mystery of the incarnation.
+
+
+
+
+
+End Paradise.
+
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+In the years 1805 and 1806, I published the first part of the
+following translation, with the text of the original. Since that
+period, two impressions of the whole of the Divina Commedia, in
+Italian, have made their appearance in this country. It is not
+necessary that I should add a third: and I am induced to hope
+that the Poem, even in the present version of it, may not be
+without interest for the mere English reader.
+
+The translation of the second and third parts, "The Purgatory"
+and "The Paradise," was begun long before the first, and as early
+as the year 1797; but, owing to many interruptions, not concluded
+till the summer before last. On a retrospect of the time and
+exertions that have been thus employed, I do not regard those
+hours as the least happy of my life, during which (to use the
+eloquent language of Mr. Coleridge) "my individual recollections
+have been suspended, and lulled to sleep amid the music of nobler
+thoughts;" nor that study as misapplied, which has familiarized
+me with one of the sublimest efforts of the human invention.
+
+To those, who shall be at the trouble of examining into the
+degree of accuracy with which the task has been executed, I may
+be allowed to suggest, that their judgment should not be formed
+on a comparison with any single text of my Author; since, in more
+instances than I have noticed, I have had to make my choice out
+of a variety of readings and interpretations, presented by
+different editions and commentators.
+
+In one or two of those editions is to be found the title of "The
+Vision," which I have adopted, as more conformable to the genius
+of our language than that of "The Divine Comedy." Dante himself,
+I believe, termed it simply "The Comedy;" in the first place,
+because the style was of the middle kind: and in the next,
+because the story (if story it may be called) ends happily.
+
+Instead of a Life of my Author, I have subjoined, in
+chronological order, a view not only of the principal events
+which befell him, but of the chief public occurrences that
+happened in his time: concerning both of which the reader may
+obtain further information, by turning to the passages referred
+to in the Poem and Notes.
+
+January, 1814
+
+
+
+ A CHRONOLOGICAL VIEW
+
+ OF
+
+ THE AGE OF DANTE
+
+
+
+A. D.
+
+1265. Dante, son of Alighieri degli Alighieri and Bella, is born
+at Florence.
+Of his own ancestry he speaks in the Paradise, Canto XV. and XVI.
+
+In the same year, Manfredi, king of Naples and Sicily, is
+defeated and slain by Charles of Anjou. Hell, C. XXVIII. 13.
+And Purgatory, C. III. 110.
+
+Guido Novello of Polenta obtains the sovereignty of Ravenna.
+H. C. XXVII. 38.
+
+1266. Two of the Frati Godenti chosen arbitrators of the
+differences at Florence. H. C. XXIII. 104.
+Gianni de' Soldanieri heads the populace in that city. H. C.
+XXXII. 118.
+
+1268. Charles of Anjou puts Conradine to death, and becomes King
+of Naples. H. C. XXVIII. 16 and Purg C. XX. 66.
+
+1272. Henry III. of England is succeeded by Edward I. Purg. C.
+VII. 129.
+
+1274. Our Poet first sees Beatrice, daughter of Folco Portinari.
+
+Fra.
+Guittone d'Arezzo, the poet, dies. Purg. C. XXIV. 56.
+Thomas Aquinas dies. Purg. C. XX. 67. and Par. C. X. 96.
+Buonaventura dies. Par. C. XII. 25.
+
+1275. Pierre de la Brosse, secretary to Philip III. of France,
+executed. Purg. C. VI. 23.
+
+1276. Giotto, the painter, is born. Purg. C. XI. 95. Pope
+Adrian V. dies. Purg. C. XIX. 97.
+Guido Guinicelli, the poet, dies. Purg. C. XI. 96. and C. XXVI.
+83.
+
+1277. Pope John XXI. dies. Par. C. XII. 126.
+
+1278. Ottocar, king of Bohemia, dies. Purg. C. VII. 97.
+
+1279. Dionysius succeeds to the throne of Portugal. Par. C.
+XIX. 135.
+
+1280. Albertus Magnus dies. Par. C. X. 95.
+
+1281. Pope Nicholas III. dies. H. C. XIX 71.
+Dante studies at the universities of Bologna and Padua.
+
+1282. The Sicilian vespers. Par. C. VIII. 80.
+The French defeated by the people of Forli. H. C. XXVII. 41.
+Tribaldello de' Manfredi betrays the city of Faenza. H. C.
+XXXII. 119.
+
+1284. Prince Charles of Anjou is defeated and made prisoner by
+Rugiez
+de Lauria, admiral to Peter III. of Arragon. Purg. C. XX. 78.
+Charles I. king of Naples, dies. Purg. C. VII. 111.
+
+1285. Pope Martin IV. dies. Purg. C. XXIV. 23.
+Philip III. of France, and Peter III. of Arragon, die. Purg. C.
+VII. 101 and
+110.
+Henry II. king of Cyprus, comes to the throne. Par. C. XIX. 144.
+
+1287. Guido dalle Colonne (mentioned by Dante in his De Vulgari
+Eloquio) writes "The War of Troy."
+
+1288. Haquin, king of Norway, makes war on Denmark. Par. C.
+XIX. 135.
+Count Ugolino de' Gherardeschi dies of famine. H. C. XXXIII. 14.
+
+1289. Dante is in the battle of Campaldino, where the
+Florentines defeat the people of Arezzo, June 11. Purg. C. V. 90.
+
+1290. Beatrice dies. Purg. C. XXXII. 2.
+He serves in the war waged by the Florentines upon the Pisans,
+and is present at the surrender of Caprona in the autumn. H. C.
+XXI. 92.
+
+1291. He marries Gemma de' Donati, with whom he lives unhappily.
+
+By this marriage he had five sons and a daughter.
+Can Grande della Scala is born, March 9. H. C. I. 98. Purg. C.
+XX. 16. Par. C. XVII. 75. and XXVII. 135.
+The renegade Christians assist the Saracens to recover St. John
+D'Acre. H. C. XXVII. 84.
+The Emperor Rodolph dies. Purg. C. VI. 104. and VII. 91.
+Alonzo III. of Arragon dies, and is succeeded by James II.
+Purg. C. VII. 113. and Par. C. XIX. 133.
+
+1294. Clement V. abdicates the papal chair. H. C. III. 56.
+Dante writes his Vita Nuova.
+
+1295. His preceptor, Brunetto Latini, dies. H. C. XV. 28.
+Charles Martel, king of Hungary, visits Florence, Par. C. VIII.
+57. and dies in the same year.
+Frederick, son of Peter III. of Arragon, becomes king of Sicily.
+Purg. C. VII. 117. and Par. C. XIX. 127.
+
+1296. Forese, the companion of Dante, dies. Purg. C. XXXIII. 44.
+
+1300. The Bianca and Nera parties take their rise in Pistoia.
+H. C. XXXII. 60.
+This is the year in which he supposes himself to see his Vision.
+H. C. I. 1. and XXI. 109.
+He is chosen chief magistrate, or first of the Priors of
+Florence; and continues in office from June 15 to August 15.
+Cimabue, the painter, dies. Purg. C. XI. 93.
+Guido Cavalcanti, the most beloved of our Poet's friends, dies.
+H. C. X. 59. and Purg C. XI. 96.
+
+1301. The Bianca party expels the Nera from Pistoia. H. C.
+XXIV. 142.
+
+1302. January 27. During his absence at Rome, Dante is mulcted
+by his fellow-citizens in the sum of 8000 lire, and condemned to
+two years' banishment.
+March 10. He is sentenced, if taken, to be burned.
+Fulcieri de' Calboli commits great atrocities on certain of the
+Ghibelline party. Purg. C. XIV. 61.
+Carlino de' Pazzi betrays the castle di Piano Travigne, in
+Valdarno, to the Florentines. H. C. XXXII. 67.
+The French vanquished in the battle of Courtrai. Purg. C. XX. 47.
+James, king of Majorca and Minorca, dies. Par. C. XIX. 133.
+
+1303. Pope Boniface VIII. dies. H. C. XIX. 55. Purg. C. XX.
+86. XXXII.
+146. and Par. C. XXVII. 20.
+The other exiles appoint Dante one of a council of twelve, under
+Alessandro da Romena.
+He appears to have been much dissatisfied with his colleagues.
+Par. C. XVII. 61.
+
+1304. He joins with the exiles in an unsuccessful attack on the
+city of Florence.
+May. The bridge over the Arno breaks down during a
+representation of the infernal torments exhibited on that river.
+H. C. XXVI. 9.
+July 20. Petrarch, whose father had been banished two years
+before from Florence, is born at Arezzo.
+
+1305. Winceslaus II. king of Bohemia, dies. Purg. C. VII. 99.
+and Par. C. XIX 123.
+A conflagration happens at Florence. H. C. XXVI. 9.
+
+1306. Dante visits Padua.
+
+1307. He is in Lunigiana with the Marchese Marcello Malaspina.
+Purg. C. VIII. 133. and C. XIX. 140.
+Dolcino, the fanatic, is burned. H. C. XXVIII. 53.
+
+1308. The Emperor Albert I. murdered. Purg. C. VI. 98. and
+Par. C. XIX. 114.
+Corso Donati, Dante's political enemy, slain. Purg. C. XXIV. 81.
+He seeks an asylum at Verona, under the roof of the Signori della
+
+Scala. Par. C. XVII. 69. He wanders, about this time, over
+various parts of Italy. See his Convito. He is at Paris twice;
+and, as one of the early commentators reports, at Oxford.
+
+1309. Charles II. king of Naples, dies. Par. C. XIX. 125.
+
+1310. The Order of the Templars abolished. Purg. C. XX. 94.
+
+1313. The Emperor Henry of Luxemburg, by whom he had hoped to be
+restored to Florence, dies. Par. C. XVII. 80. and XXX. 135.
+He takes refuge at Ravenna with Guido Novello da Polenta.
+
+1314. Pope Clement V. dies. H. C. XIX. 86. and
+Par. C. XXVII. 53. and XXX. 141.
+Philip IV. of France dies. Purg. C. VII. 108. and Par. C. XIX.
+117.
+Ferdinand IV. of Spain, dies. Par. C. XIX. 122.
+Giacopo da Carrara defeated by Can Grande. Par. C. IX. 45.
+
+1316. John XXII. elected Pope. Par. C. XXVII. 53.
+
+1321. July. Dante dies at Ravenna, of a complaint brought on by
+disappointment at his failure in a negotiation which he had been
+conducting with the Venetians, for his patron Guido Novello da
+Polenta.
+His obsequies are sumptuously performed at Ravenna by Guido, who
+himself died in the ensuing year.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of The Project Gutenberg Etext of The Divine Comedy of Dante
+as translanted by H. F. Cary
+
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