The
Divine	Comedy
        	
       By
        	
 Dante	Alighieri
        	
        	
        	
                   INFERNO
                         	
                     Canto	I
                         	
     Midway	upon	the	journey	of	our	life
      I	found	myself	within	a	forest	dark,
For	the	straightforward	pathway	had	been	lost.
      Ah	me!	how	hard	a	thing	it	is	to	say
 What	was	this	forest	savage,	rough,	and	stern,
  Which	in	the	very	thought	renews	the	fear.
       So	bitter	is	it,	death	is	little	more;
 But	of	the	good	to	treat,	which	there	I	found,
  Speak	will	I	of	the	other	things	I	saw	there.
   I	cannot	well	repeat	how	there	I	entered,
    So	full	was	I	of	slumber	at	the	moment
    In	which	I	had	abandoned	the	true	way.
   But	after	I	had	reached	a	mountain's	foot,
   At	that	point	where	the	valley	terminated,
Which	had	with	consternation	pierced	my	heart,
 Upward	I	looked,	and	I	beheld	its	shoulders,
     Vested	already	with	that	planet's	rays
   Which	leadeth	others	right	by	every	road.
       Then	was	the	fear	a	little	quieted
That	in	my	heart's	lake	had	endured	throughout
  The	night,	which	I	had	passed	so	piteously.
 And	even	as	he,	who,	with	distressful	breath,
   Forth	issued	from	the	sea	upon	the	shore,
     Turns	to	the	water	perilous	and	gazes;
 So	did	my	soul,	that	still	was	fleeing	onward,
    Turn	itself	back	to	re-behold	the	pass
     Which	never	yet	a	living	person	left.
      After	my	weary	body	I	had	rested,
    The	way	resumed	I	on	the	desert	slope,
   So	that	the	firm	foot	ever	was	the	lower.
   And	lo!	almost	where	the	ascent	began,
    A	panther	light	and	swift	exceedingly,
 Which	with	a	spotted	skin	was	covered	o'er!
 And	never	moved	she	from	before	my	face,
   Nay,	rather	did	impede	so	much	my	way,
   That	many	times	I	to	return	had	turned.
 The	time	was	the	beginning	of	the	morning,
And	up	the	sun	was	mounting	with	those	stars
That	with	him	were,	what	time	the	Love	Divine
 At	first	in	motion	set	those	beauteous	things;
    So	were	to	me	occasion	of	good	hope,
    The	variegated	skin	of	that	wild	beast,
  The	hour	of	time,	and	the	delicious	season;
  But	not	so	much,	that	did	not	give	me	fear
    A	lion's	aspect	which	appeared	to	me.
 He	seemed	as	if	against	me	he	were	coming
With	head	uplifted,	and	with	ravenous	hunger,
  So	that	it	seemed	the	air	was	afraid	of	him;
   And	a	she-wolf,	that	with	all	hungerings
    Seemed	to	be	laden	in	her	meagreness,
  And	many	folk	has	caused	to	live	forlorn!
  She	brought	upon	me	so	much	heaviness,
 With	the	affright	that	from	her	aspect	came,
  That	I	the	hope	relinquished	of	the	height.
     And	as	he	is	who	willingly	acquires,
   And	the	time	comes	that	causes	him	to	lose,
Who	weeps	in	all	his	thoughts	and	is	despondent,
 E'en	such	made	me	that	beast	withouten	peace,
    Which,	coming	on	against	me	by	degrees
  Thrust	me	back	thither	where	the	sun	is	silent.
 While	I	was	rushing	downward	to	the	lowland,
    Before	mine	eyes	did	one	present	himself,
Who	seemed	from	long-continued	silence	hoarse.
      When	I	beheld	him	in	the	desert	vast,
      "Have	pity	on	me,"	unto	him	I	cried,
   "Whiche'er	thou	art,	or	shade	or	real	man!"
  He	answered	me:	"Not	man;	man	once	I	was,
    And	both	my	parents	were	of	Lombardy,
     And	Mantuans	by	country	both	of	them.
    'Sub	Julio'	was	I	born,	though	it	was	late,
  And	lived	at	Rome	under	the	good	Augustus,
     During	the	time	of	false	and	lying	gods.
        A	poet	was	I,	and	I	sang	that	just
  Son	of	Anchises,	who	came	forth	from	Troy,
     After	that	Ilion	the	superb	was	burned.
But	thou,	why	goest	thou	back	to	such	annoyance?
  Why	climb'st	thou	not	the	Mount	Delectable,
  Which	is	the	source	and	cause	of	every	joy?"
  "Now,	art	thou	that	Virgilius	and	that	fountain
Which	spreads	abroad	so	wide	a	river	of	speech?"
  I	made	response	to	him	with	bashful	forehead.
     "O,	of	the	other	poets	honour	and	light,
     Avail	me	the	long	study	and	great	love
  That	have	impelled	me	to	explore	thy	volume!
    Thou	art	my	master,	and	my	author	thou,
    Thou	art	alone	the	one	from	whom	I	took
 The	beautiful	style	that	has	done	honour	to	me.
 Behold	the	beast,	for	which	I	have	turned	back;
   Do	thou	protect	me	from	her,	famous	Sage,
For	she	doth	make	my	veins	and	pulses	tremble."
     "Thee	it	behoves	to	take	another	road,"
  Responded	he,	when	he	beheld	me	weeping,
 "If	from	this	savage	place	thou	wouldst	escape;
   Because	this	beast,	at	which	thou	criest	out,
      Suffers	not	any	one	to	pass	her	way,
 But	so	doth	harass	him,	that	she	destroys	him;
    And	has	a	nature	so	malign	and	ruthless,
    That	never	doth	she	glut	her	greedy	will,
     And	after	food	is	hungrier	than	before.
    Many	the	animals	with	whom	she	weds,
And	more	they	shall	be	still,	until	the	Greyhound
 Comes,	who	shall	make	her	perish	in	her	pain.
    He	shall	not	feed	on	either	earth	or	pelf,
   But	upon	wisdom,	and	on	love	and	virtue;
   'Twixt	Feltro	and	Feltro	shall	his	nation	be;
    Of	that	low	Italy	shall	he	be	the	saviour,
   On	whose	account	the	maid	Camilla	died,
    Euryalus,	Turnus,	Nisus,	of	their	wounds;
   Through	every	city	shall	he	hunt	her	down,
   Until	he	shall	have	driven	her	back	to	Hell,
 There	from	whence	envy	first	did	let	her	loose.
    Therefore	I	think	and	judge	it	for	thy	best
    Thou	follow	me,	and	I	will	be	thy	guide,
 And	lead	thee	hence	through	the	eternal	place,
Where	thou	shalt	hear	the	desperate	lamentations,
      Shalt	see	the	ancient	spirits	disconsolate,
    Who	cry	out	each	one	for	the	second	death;
    And	thou	shalt	see	those	who	contented	are
    Within	the	fire,	because	they	hope	to	come,
     Whene'er	it	may	be,	to	the	blessed	people;
     To	whom,	then,	if	thou	wishest	to	ascend,
    A	soul	shall	be	for	that	than	I	more	worthy;
     With	her	at	my	departure	I	will	leave	thee;
     Because	that	Emperor,	who	reigns	above,
         In	that	I	was	rebellious	to	his	law,
   Wills	that	through	me	none	come	into	his	city.
    He	governs	everywhere,	and	there	he	reigns;
        There	is	his	city	and	his	lofty	throne;
       O	happy	he	whom	thereto	he	elects!"
         And	I	to	him:	"Poet,	I	thee	entreat,
  By	that	same	God	whom	thou	didst	never	know,
     So	that	I	may	escape	this	woe	and	worse,
Thou	wouldst	conduct	me	there	where	thou	hast	said,
      That	I	may	see	the	portal	of	Saint	Peter,
      And	those	thou	makest	so	disconsolate."
   Then	he	moved	on,	and	I	behind	him	followed.                           	
                       Canto	II
                           	
    Day	was	departing,	and	the	embrowned	air
       Released	the	animals	that	are	on	earth
       From	their	fatigues;	and	I	the	only	one
       Made	myself	ready	to	sustain	the	war,
     Both	of	the	way	and	likewise	of	the	woe,
     Which	memory	that	errs	not	shall	retrace.
    O	Muses,	O	high	genius,	now	assist	me!
  O	memory,	that	didst	write	down	what	I	saw,
      Here	thy	nobility	shall	be	manifest!
      And	I	began:	"Poet,	who	guidest	me,
     Regard	my	manhood,	if	it	be	sufficient,
  Ere	to	the	arduous	pass	thou	dost	confide	me.
     Thou	sayest,	that	of	Silvius	the	parent,
      While	yet	corruptible,	unto	the	world
      Immortal	went,	and	was	there	bodily.
         But	if	the	adversary	of	all	evil
   Was	courteous,	thinking	of	the	high	effect
That	issue	would	from	him,	and	who,	and	what,
    To	men	of	intellect	unmeet	it	seems	not;
  For	he	was	of	great	Rome,	and	of	her	empire
    In	the	empyreal	heaven	as	father	chosen;
The	which	and	what,	wishing	to	speak	the	truth,
   Were	stablished	as	the	holy	place,	wherein
     Sits	the	successor	of	the	greatest	Peter.
Upon	this	journey,	whence	thou	givest	him	vaunt,
  Things	did	he	hear,	which	the	occasion	were
    Both	of	his	victory	and	the	papal	mantle.
   Thither	went	afterwards	the	Chosen	Vessel,
  To	bring	back	comfort	thence	unto	that	Faith,
   Which	of	salvation's	way	is	the	beginning.
  But	I,	why	thither	come,	or	who	concedes	it?
        I	not	Aeneas	am,	I	am	not	Paul,
    Nor	I,	nor	others,	think	me	worthy	of	it.
     Therefore,	if	I	resign	myself	to	come,
      I	fear	the	coming	may	be	ill-advised;
 Thou'rt	wise,	and	knowest	better	than	I	speak."
    And	as	he	is,	who	unwills	what	he	willed,
And	by	new	thoughts	doth	his	intention	change,
   So	that	from	his	design	he	quite	withdraws,
     Such	I	became,	upon	that	dark	hillside,
 Because,	in	thinking,	I	consumed	the	emprise,
  Which	was	so	very	prompt	in	the	beginning.
    "If	I	have	well	thy	language	understood,"
    Replied	that	shade	of	the	Magnanimous,
     "Thy	soul	attainted	is	with	cowardice,
    Which	many	times	a	man	encumbers	so,
   It	turns	him	back	from	honoured	enterprise,
   As	false	sight	doth	a	beast,	when	he	is	shy.
That	thou	mayst	free	thee	from	this	apprehension,
    I'll	tell	thee	why	I	came,	and	what	I	heard
  At	the	first	moment	when	I	grieved	for	thee.
    Among	those	was	I	who	are	in	suspense,
      And	a	fair,	saintly	Lady	called	to	me
  In	such	wise,	I	besought	her	to	command	me.
 Her	eyes	where	shining	brighter	than	the	Star;
      And	she	began	to	say,	gentle	and	low,
   With	voice	angelical,	in	her	own	language:
         'O	spirit	courteous	of	Mantua,
  Of	whom	the	fame	still	in	the	world	endures,
  And	shall	endure,	long-lasting	as	the	world;
 A	friend	of	mine,	and	not	the	friend	of	fortune,
      Upon	the	desert	slope	is	so	impeded
 Upon	his	way,	that	he	has	turned	through	terror,
       And	may,	I	fear,	already	be	so	lost,
    That	I	too	late	have	risen	to	his	succour,
From	that	which	I	have	heard	of	him	in	Heaven.
 Bestir	thee	now,	and	with	thy	speech	ornate,
   And	with	what	needful	is	for	his	release,
     Assist	him	so,	that	I	may	be	consoled.
      Beatrice	am	I,	who	do	bid	thee	go;
 I	come	from	there,	where	I	would	fain	return;
Love	moved	me,	which	compelleth	me	to	speak.
   When	I	shall	be	in	presence	of	my	Lord,
     Full	often	will	I	praise	thee	unto	him.'
   Then	paused	she,	and	thereafter	I	began:
 'O	Lady	of	virtue,	thou	alone	through	whom
   The	human	race	exceedeth	all	contained
 Within	the	heaven	that	has	the	lesser	circles,
  So	grateful	unto	me	is	thy	commandment,
   To	obey,	if	'twere	already	done,	were	late;
  No	farther	need'st	thou	ope	to	me	thy	wish.
 But	the	cause	tell	me	why	thou	dost	not	shun
  The	here	descending	down	into	this	centre,
 From	the	vast	place	thou	burnest	to	return	to.'
 'Since	thou	wouldst	fain	so	inwardly	discern,
    Briefly	will	I	relate,'	she	answered	me,
      'Why	I	am	not	afraid	to	enter	here.
   Of	those	things	only	should	one	be	afraid
 Which	have	the	power	of	doing	others	harm;
  Of	the	rest,	no;	because	they	are	not	fearful.
       God	in	his	mercy	such	created	me
      That	misery	of	yours	attains	me	not,
   Nor	any	flame	assails	me	of	this	burning.
   A	gentle	Lady	is	in	Heaven,	who	grieves
   At	this	impediment,	to	which	I	send	thee,
 So	that	stern	judgment	there	above	is	broken.
        In	her	entreaty	she	besought	Lucia,
  And	said,	"Thy	faithful	one	now	stands	in	need
     Of	thee,	and	unto	thee	I	recommend	him."
           Lucia,	foe	of	all	that	cruel	is,
      Hastened	away,	and	came	unto	the	place
    Where	I	was	sitting	with	the	ancient	Rachel.
    "Beatrice"	said	she,	"the	true	praise	of	God,
 Why	succourest	thou	not	him,	who	loved	thee	so,
      For	thee	he	issued	from	the	vulgar	herd?
      Dost	thou	not	hear	the	pity	of	his	plaint?
   Dost	thou	not	see	the	death	that	combats	him
   Beside	that	flood,	where	ocean	has	no	vaunt?"
     Never	were	persons	in	the	world	so	swift
    To	work	their	weal	and	to	escape	their	woe,
    As	I,	after	such	words	as	these	were	uttered,
   Came	hither	downward	from	my	blessed	seat,
       Confiding	in	thy	dignified	discourse,
Which	honours	thee,	and	those	who've	listened	to	it.'
        After	she	thus	had	spoken	unto	me,
    Weeping,	her	shining	eyes	she	turned	away;
   Whereby	she	made	me	swifter	in	my	coming;
       And	unto	thee	I	came,	as	she	desired;
     I	have	delivered	thee	from	that	wild	beast,
Which	barred	the	beautiful	mountain's	short	ascent.
    What	is	it,	then?	Why,	why	dost	thou	delay?
     Why	is	such	baseness	bedded	in	thy	heart?
     Daring	and	hardihood	why	hast	thou	not,
      Seeing	that	three	such	Ladies	benedight
     Are	caring	for	thee	in	the	court	of	Heaven,
And	so	much	good	my	speech	doth	promise	thee?"
     Even	as	the	flowerets,	by	nocturnal	chill,
Bowed	down	and	closed,	when	the	sun	whitens	them,
     Uplift	themselves	all	open	on	their	stems;
    Such	I	became	with	my	exhausted	strength,
 And	such	good	courage	to	my	heart	there	coursed,
       That	I	began,	like	an	intrepid	person:
    "O	she	compassionate,	who	succoured	me,
   And	courteous	thou,	who	hast	obeyed	so	soon
  The	words	of	truth	which	she	addressed	to	thee!
    Thou	hast	my	heart	so	with	desire	disposed
    To	the	adventure,	with	these	words	of	thine,
      That	to	my	first	intent	I	have	returned.
      Now	go,	for	one	sole	will	is	in	us	both,
  Thou	Leader,	and	thou	Lord,	and	Master	thou."
    Thus	said	I	to	him;	and	when	he	had	moved,
       I	entered	on	the	deep	and	savage	way.                         	
                     Canto	III
                         	
     "Through	me	the	way	is	to	the	city	dolent;
      Through	me	the	way	is	to	eternal	dole;
    Through	me	the	way	among	the	people	lost.
        Justice	incited	my	sublime	Creator;
         Created	me	divine	Omnipotence,
     The	highest	Wisdom	and	the	primal	Love.
      Before	me	there	were	no	created	things,
          Only	eterne,	and	I	eternal	last.
       All	hope	abandon,	ye	who	enter	in!"
      These	words	in	sombre	colour	I	beheld
        Written	upon	the	summit	of	a	gate;
   Whence	I:	"Their	sense	is,	Master,	hard	to	me!"
          And	he	to	me,	as	one	experienced:
    "Here	all	suspicion	needs	must	be	abandoned,
      All	cowardice	must	needs	be	here	extinct.
  We	to	the	place	have	come,	where	I	have	told	thee
        Thou	shalt	behold	the	people	dolorous
      Who	have	foregone	the	good	of	intellect."
        And	after	he	had	laid	his	hand	on	mine
     With	joyful	mien,	whence	I	was	comforted,
        He	led	me	in	among	the	secret	things.
     There	sighs,	complaints,	and	ululations	loud
       Resounded	through	the	air	without	a	star,
       Whence	I,	at	the	beginning,	wept	thereat.
         Languages	diverse,	horrible	dialects,
          Accents	of	anger,	words	of	agony,
  And	voices	high	and	hoarse,	with	sound	of	hands,
       Made	up	a	tumult	that	goes	whirling	on
          For	ever	in	that	air	for	ever	black,
 Even	as	the	sand	doth,	when	the	whirlwind	breathes.
     And	I,	who	had	my	head	with	horror	bound,
    Said:	"Master,	what	is	this	which	now	I	hear?
What	folk	is	this,	which	seems	by	pain	so	vanquished?"
         And	he	to	me:	"This	miserable	mode
       Maintain	the	melancholy	souls	of	those
        Who	lived	withouten	infamy	or	praise.
     Commingled	are	they	with	that	caitiff	choir
      Of	Angels,	who	have	not	rebellious	been,
      Nor	faithful	were	to	God,	but	were	for	self.
    The	heavens	expelled	them,	not	to	be	less	fair;
       Nor	them	the	nethermore	abyss	receives,
For	glory	none	the	damned	would	have	from	them."
      And	I:	"O	Master,	what	so	grievous	is
   To	these,	that	maketh	them	lament	so	sore?"
    He	answered:	"I	will	tell	thee	very	briefly.
     These	have	no	longer	any	hope	of	death;
    And	this	blind	life	of	theirs	is	so	debased,
       They	envious	are	of	every	other	fate.
    No	fame	of	them	the	world	permits	to	be;
    Misericord	and	Justice	both	disdain	them.
  Let	us	not	speak	of	them,	but	look,	and	pass."
    And	I,	who	looked	again,	beheld	a	banner,
    Which,	whirling	round,	ran	on	so	rapidly,
   That	of	all	pause	it	seemed	to	me	indignant;
      And	after	it	there	came	so	long	a	train
    Of	people,	that	I	ne'er	would	have	believed
      That	ever	Death	so	many	had	undone.
    When	some	among	them	I	had	recognised,
      I	looked,	and	I	beheld	the	shade	of	him
  Who	made	through	cowardice	the	great	refusal.
   Forthwith	I	comprehended,	and	was	certain,
   That	this	the	sect	was	of	the	caitiff	wretches
        Hateful	to	God	and	to	his	enemies.
     These	miscreants,	who	never	were	alive,
     Were	naked,	and	were	stung	exceedingly
    By	gadflies	and	by	hornets	that	were	there.
     These	did	their	faces	irrigate	with	blood,
 Which,	with	their	tears	commingled,	at	their	feet
    By	the	disgusting	worms	was	gathered	up.
     And	when	to	gazing	farther	I	betook	me.
       People	I	saw	on	a	great	river's	bank;
   Whence	said	I:	"Master,	now	vouchsafe	to	me,
    That	I	may	know	who	these	are,	and	what	law
      Makes	them	appear	so	ready	to	pass	over,
        As	I	discern	athwart	the	dusky	light."
   And	he	to	me:	"These	things	shall	all	be	known
      To	thee,	as	soon	as	we	our	footsteps	stay
         Upon	the	dismal	shore	of	Acheron."
 Then	with	mine	eyes	ashamed	and	downward	cast,
     Fearing	my	words	might	irksome	be	to	him,
  From	speech	refrained	I	till	we	reached	the	river.
        And	lo!	towards	us	coming	in	a	boat
       An	old	man,	hoary	with	the	hair	of	eld,
     Crying:	"Woe	unto	you,	ye	souls	depraved!
     Hope	nevermore	to	look	upon	the	heavens;
        I	come	to	lead	you	to	the	other	shore,
       To	the	eternal	shades	in	heat	and	frost.
     And	thou,	that	yonder	standest,	living	soul,
  Withdraw	thee	from	these	people,	who	are	dead!"
      But	when	he	saw	that	I	did	not	withdraw,
       He	said:	"By	other	ways,	by	other	ports
 Thou	to	the	shore	shalt	come,	not	here,	for	passage;
       A	lighter	vessel	needs	must	carry	thee."
  And	unto	him	the	Guide:	"Vex	thee	not,	Charon;
      It	is	so	willed	there	where	is	power	to	do
   That	which	is	willed;	and	farther	question	not."
       Thereat	were	quieted	the	fleecy	cheeks
        Of	him	the	ferryman	of	the	livid	fen,
   Who	round	about	his	eyes	had	wheels	of	flame.
    But	all	those	souls	who	weary	were	and	naked
Their	colour	changed	and	gnashed	their	teeth	together,
    As	soon	as	they	had	heard	those	cruel	words.
    God	they	blasphemed	and	their	progenitors,
    The	human	race,	the	place,	the	time,	the	seed
      Of	their	engendering	and	of	their	birth!
       Thereafter	all	together	they	drew	back,
      Bitterly	weeping,	to	the	accursed	shore,
   Which	waiteth	every	man	who	fears	not	God.
     Charon	the	demon,	with	the	eyes	of	glede,
   Beckoning	to	them,	collects	them	all	together,
      Beats	with	his	oar	whoever	lags	behind.
     As	in	the	autumn-time	the	leaves	fall	off,
     First	one	and	then	another,	till	the	branch
       Unto	the	earth	surrenders	all	its	spoils;
       In	similar	wise	the	evil	seed	of	Adam
  Throw	themselves	from	that	margin	one	by	one,
          At	signals,	as	a	bird	unto	its	lure.
       So	they	depart	across	the	dusky	wave,
       And	ere	upon	the	other	side	they	land,
     Again	on	this	side	a	new	troop	assembles.
    "My	son,"	the	courteous	Master	said	to	me,
     "All	those	who	perish	in	the	wrath	of	God
       Here	meet	together	out	of	every	land;
      And	ready	are	they	to	pass	o'er	the	river,
      Because	celestial	Justice	spurs	them	on,
       So	that	their	fear	is	turned	into	desire.
      This	way	there	never	passes	a	good	soul;
    And	hence	if	Charon	doth	complain	of	thee,
Well	mayst	thou	know	now	what	his	speech	imports."
    This	being	finished,	all	the	dusk	champaign
      Trembled	so	violently,	that	of	that	terror
The	recollection	bathes	me	still	with	sweat.
The	land	of	tears	gave	forth	a	blast	of	wind,
     And	fulminated	a	vermilion	light,
  Which	overmastered	in	me	every	sense,
And	as	a	man	whom	sleep	hath	seized	I	fell.                      	
                  Canto	IV
                      	
 Broke	the	deep	lethargy	within	my	head
   A	heavy	thunder,	so	that	I	upstarted,
Like	to	a	person	who	by	force	is	wakened;
 And	round	about	I	moved	my	rested	eyes,
  Uprisen	erect,	and	steadfastly	I	gazed,
   To	recognise	the	place	wherein	I	was.
 True	is	it,	that	upon	the	verge	I	found	me
      Of	the	abysmal	valley	dolorous,
That	gathers	thunder	of	infinite	ululations.
 Obscure,	profound	it	was,	and	nebulous,
  So	that	by	fixing	on	its	depths	my	sight
   Nothing	whatever	I	discerned	therein.
"Let	us	descend	now	into	the	blind	world,"
       Began	the	Poet,	pallid	utterly;
 "I	will	be	first,	and	thou	shalt	second	be."
   And	I,	who	of	his	colour	was	aware,
Said:	"How	shall	I	come,	if	thou	art	afraid,
Who'rt	wont	to	be	a	comfort	to	my	fears?"
 And	he	to	me:	"The	anguish	of	the	people
  Who	are	below	here	in	my	face	depicts
 That	pity	which	for	terror	thou	hast	taken.
 Let	us	go	on,	for	the	long	way	impels	us."
  Thus	he	went	in,	and	thus	he	made	me	enter
  The	foremost	circle	that	surrounds	the	abyss.
    There,	as	it	seemed	to	me	from	listening,
    Were	lamentations	none,	but	only	sighs,
     That	tremble	made	the	everlasting	air.
  And	this	arose	from	sorrow	without	torment,
Which	the	crowds	had,	that	many	were	and	great,
     Of	infants	and	of	women	and	of	men.
  To	me	the	Master	good:	"Thou	dost	not	ask
 What	spirits	these,	which	thou	beholdest,	are?
 Now	will	I	have	thee	know,	ere	thou	go	farther,
   That	they	sinned	not;	and	if	they	merit	had,
 'Tis	not	enough,	because	they	had	not	baptism
  Which	is	the	portal	of	the	Faith	thou	holdest;
      And	if	they	were	before	Christianity,
    In	the	right	manner	they	adored	not	God;
     And	among	such	as	these	am	I	myself.
    For	such	defects,	and	not	for	other	guilt,
    Lost	are	we	and	are	only	so	far	punished,
    That	without	hope	we	live	on	in	desire."
Great	grief	seized	on	my	heart	when	this	I	heard,
   Because	some	people	of	much	worthiness
  I	knew,	who	in	that	Limbo	were	suspended.
  "Tell	me,	my	Master,	tell	me,	thou	my	Lord,"
      Began	I,	with	desire	of	being	certain
  Of	that	Faith	which	o'ercometh	every	error,
    "Came	any	one	by	his	own	merit	hence,
 Or	by	another's,	who	was	blessed	thereafter?"
  And	he,	who	understood	my	covert	speech,
      Replied:	"I	was	a	novice	in	this	state,
     When	I	saw	hither	come	a	Mighty	One,
         With	sign	of	victory	incoronate.
Hence	he	drew	forth	the	shade	of	the	First	Parent,
     And	that	of	his	son	Abel,	and	of	Noah,
    Of	Moses	the	lawgiver,	and	the	obedient
      Abraham,	patriarch,	and	David,	king,
      Israel	with	his	father	and	his	children,
  And	Rachel,	for	whose	sake	he	did	so	much,
  And	others	many,	and	he	made	them	blessed;
   And	thou	must	know,	that	earlier	than	these
     Never	were	any	human	spirits	saved."
  We	ceased	not	to	advance	because	he	spake,
But	still	were	passing	onward	through	the	forest,
   The	forest,	say	I,	of	thick-crowded	ghosts.
      Not	very	far	as	yet	our	way	had	gone
     This	side	the	summit,	when	I	saw	a	fire
    That	overcame	a	hemisphere	of	darkness.
       We	were	a	little	distant	from	it	still,
    But	not	so	far	that	I	in	part	discerned	not
     That	honourable	people	held	that	place.
  "O	thou	who	honourest	every	art	and	science,
Who	may	these	be,	which	such	great	honour	have,
 That	from	the	fashion	of	the	rest	it	parts	them?"
     And	he	to	me:	"The	honourable	name,
   That	sounds	of	them	above	there	in	thy	life,
 Wins	grace	in	Heaven,	that	so	advances	them."
   In	the	mean	time	a	voice	was	heard	by	me:
     "All	honour	be	to	the	pre-eminent	Poet;
   His	shade	returns	again,	that	was	departed."
    After	the	voice	had	ceased	and	quiet	was,
    Four	mighty	shades	I	saw	approaching	us;
   Semblance	had	they	nor	sorrowful	nor	glad.
     To	say	to	me	began	my	gracious	Master:
   "Him	with	that	falchion	in	his	hand	behold,
 Who	comes	before	the	three,	even	as	their	lord.
       That	one	is	Homer,	Poet	sovereign;
    He	who	comes	next	is	Horace,	the	satirist;
     The	third	is	Ovid,	and	the	last	is	Lucan.
    Because	to	each	of	these	with	me	applies
    The	name	that	solitary	voice	proclaimed,
    They	do	me	honour,	and	in	that	do	well."
      Thus	I	beheld	assemble	the	fair	school
      Of	that	lord	of	the	song	pre-eminent,
     Who	o'er	the	others	like	an	eagle	soars.
  When	they	together	had	discoursed	somewhat,
   They	turned	to	me	with	signs	of	salutation,
    And	on	beholding	this,	my	Master	smiled;
And	more	of	honour	still,	much	more,	they	did	me,
   In	that	they	made	me	one	of	their	own	band;
    So	that	the	sixth	was	I,	'mid	so	much	wit.
      Thus	we	went	on	as	far	as	to	the	light,
    Things	saying	'tis	becoming	to	keep	silent,
     As	was	the	saying	of	them	where	I	was.
       We	came	unto	a	noble	castle's	foot,
   Seven	times	encompassed	with	lofty	walls,
        Defended	round	by	a	fair	rivulet;
    This	we	passed	over	even	as	firm	ground;
Through	portals	seven	I	entered	with	these	Sages;
    We	came	into	a	meadow	of	fresh	verdure.
  People	were	there	with	solemn	eyes	and	slow,
   Of	great	authority	in	their	countenance;
They	spake	but	seldom,	and	with	gentle	voices.
  Thus	we	withdrew	ourselves	upon	one	side
     Into	an	opening	luminous	and	lofty,
     So	that	they	all	of	them	were	visible.
   There	opposite,	upon	the	green	enamel,
  Were	pointed	out	to	me	the	mighty	spirits,
  Whom	to	have	seen	I	feel	myself	exalted.
    I	saw	Electra	with	companions	many,
'Mongst	whom	I	knew	both	Hector	and	Aeneas,
    Caesar	in	armour	with	gerfalcon	eyes;
        I	saw	Camilla	and	Penthesilea
 On	the	other	side,	and	saw	the	King	Latinus,
     Who	with	Lavinia	his	daughter	sat;
  I	saw	that	Brutus	who	drove	Tarquin	forth,
    Lucretia,	Julia,	Marcia,	and	Cornelia,
      And	saw	alone,	apart,	the	Saladin.
    When	I	had	lifted	up	my	brows	a	little,
   The	Master	I	beheld	of	those	who	know,
       Sit	with	his	philosophic	family.
  All	gaze	upon	him,	and	all	do	him	honour.
   There	I	beheld	both	Socrates	and	Plato,
   Who	nearer	him	before	the	others	stand;
 Democritus,	who	puts	the	world	on	chance,
     Diogenes,	Anaxagoras,	and	Thales,
     Zeno,	Empedocles,	and	Heraclitus;
     Of	qualities	I	saw	the	good	collector,
    Hight	Dioscorides;	and	Orpheus	saw	I,
      Tully	and	Livy,	and	moral	Seneca,
     Euclid,	geometrician,	and	Ptolemy,
        Galen,	Hippocrates,	and	Avicenna,
     Averroes,	who	the	great	Comment	made.
        I	cannot	all	of	them	pourtray	in	full,
   Because	so	drives	me	onward	the	long	theme,
   That	many	times	the	word	comes	short	of	fact.
       The	sixfold	company	in	two	divides;
    Another	way	my	sapient	Guide	conducts	me
    Forth	from	the	quiet	to	the	air	that	trembles;
    And	to	a	place	I	come	where	nothing	shines.                          	
                      Canto	V
                          	
       Thus	I	descended	out	of	the	first	circle
    Down	to	the	second,	that	less	space	begirds,
  And	so	much	greater	dole,	that	goads	to	wailing.
     There	standeth	Minos	horribly,	and	snarls;
    Examines	the	transgressions	at	the	entrance;
    Judges,	and	sends	according	as	he	girds	him.
        I	say,	that	when	the	spirit	evil-born
      Cometh	before	him,	wholly	it	confesses;
      And	this	discriminator	of	transgressions
       Seeth	what	place	in	Hell	is	meet	for	it;
     Girds	himself	with	his	tail	as	many	times
   As	grades	he	wishes	it	should	be	thrust	down.
      Always	before	him	many	of	them	stand;
   They	go	by	turns	each	one	unto	the	judgment;
They	speak,	and	hear,	and	then	are	downward	hurled.
       "O	thou,	that	to	this	dolorous	hostelry
   Comest,"	said	Minos	to	me,	when	he	saw	me,
     Leaving	the	practice	of	so	great	an	office,
"Look	how	thou	enterest,	and	in	whom	thou	trustest;
    Let	not	the	portal's	amplitude	deceive	thee."
  And	unto	him	my	Guide:	"Why	criest	thou	too?
     Do	not	impede	his	journey	fate-ordained;
     It	is	so	willed	there	where	is	power	to	do
That	which	is	willed;	and	ask	no	further	question."
    And	now	begin	the	dolesome	notes	to	grow
         Audible	unto	me;	now	am	I	come
  There	where	much	lamentation	strikes	upon	me.
        I	came	into	a	place	mute	of	all	light,
    Which	bellows	as	the	sea	does	in	a	tempest,
        If	by	opposing	winds	't	is	combated.
       The	infernal	hurricane	that	never	rests
      Hurtles	the	spirits	onward	in	its	rapine;
Whirling	them	round,	and	smiting,	it	molests	them.
       When	they	arrive	before	the	precipice,
 There	are	the	shrieks,	the	plaints,	and	the	laments,
    There	they	blaspheme	the	puissance	divine.
       I	understood	that	unto	such	a	torment
     The	carnal	malefactors	were	condemned,
         Who	reason	subjugate	to	appetite.
    And	as	the	wings	of	starlings	bear	them	on
     In	the	cold	season	in	large	band	and	full,
       So	doth	that	blast	the	spirits	maledict;
 It	hither,	thither,	downward,	upward,	drives	them;
     No	hope	doth	comfort	them	for	evermore,
       Not	of	repose,	but	even	of	lesser	pain.
   And	as	the	cranes	go	chanting	forth	their	lays,
      Making	in	air	a	long	line	of	themselves,
      So	saw	I	coming,	uttering	lamentations,
 Shadows	borne	onward	by	the	aforesaid	stress.
   Whereupon	said	I:	"Master,	who	are	those
   People,	whom	the	black	air	so	castigates?"
    "The	first	of	those,	of	whom	intelligence
 Thou	fain	wouldst	have,"	then	said	he	unto	me,
     "The	empress	was	of	many	languages.
    To	sensual	vices	she	was	so	abandoned,
      That	lustful	she	made	licit	in	her	law,
To	remove	the	blame	to	which	she	had	been	led.
      She	is	Semiramis,	of	whom	we	read
 That	she	succeeded	Ninus,	and	was	his	spouse;
  She	held	the	land	which	now	the	Sultan	rules.
   The	next	is	she	who	killed	herself	for	love,
   And	broke	faith	with	the	ashes	of	Sichaeus;
        Then	Cleopatra	the	voluptuous."
    Helen	I	saw,	for	whom	so	many	ruthless
  Seasons	revolved;	and	saw	the	great	Achilles,
   Who	at	the	last	hour	combated	with	Love.
 Paris	I	saw,	Tristan;	and	more	than	a	thousand
Shades	did	he	name	and	point	out	with	his	finger,
    Whom	Love	had	separated	from	our	life.
     After	that	I	had	listened	to	my	Teacher,
     Naming	the	dames	of	eld	and	cavaliers,
   Pity	prevailed,	and	I	was	nigh	bewildered.
        And	I	began:	"O	Poet,	willingly
  Speak	would	I	to	those	two,	who	go	together,
    And	seem	upon	the	wind	to	be	so	light."
And,	he	to	me:	"Thou'lt	mark,	when	they	shall	be
  Nearer	to	us;	and	then	do	thou	implore	them
By	love	which	leadeth	them,	and	they	will	come."
    Soon	as	the	wind	in	our	direction	sways	them,
        My	voice	uplift	I:	"O	ye	weary	souls!
      Come	speak	to	us,	if	no	one	interdicts	it."
      As	turtle-doves,	called	onward	by	desire,
    With	open	and	steady	wings	to	the	sweet	nest
      Fly	through	the	air	by	their	volition	borne,
     So	came	they	from	the	band	where	Dido	is,
       Approaching	us	athwart	the	air	malign,
        So	strong	was	the	affectionate	appeal.
      "O	living	creature	gracious	and	benignant,
      Who	visiting	goest	through	the	purple	air
     Us,	who	have	stained	the	world	incarnadine,
     If	were	the	King	of	the	Universe	our	friend,
     We	would	pray	unto	him	to	give	thee	peace,
      Since	thou	hast	pity	on	our	woe	perverse.
      Of	what	it	pleases	thee	to	hear	and	speak,
     That	will	we	hear,	and	we	will	speak	to	you,
         While	silent	is	the	wind,	as	it	is	now.
         Sitteth	the	city,	wherein	I	was	born,
      Upon	the	sea-shore	where	the	Po	descends
         To	rest	in	peace	with	all	his	retinue.
     Love,	that	on	gentle	heart	doth	swiftly	seize,
       Seized	this	man	for	the	person	beautiful
That	was	ta'en	from	me,	and	still	the	mode	offends	me.
   Love,	that	exempts	no	one	beloved	from	loving,
   Seized	me	with	pleasure	of	this	man	so	strongly,
     That,	as	thou	seest,	it	doth	not	yet	desert	me;
        Love	has	conducted	us	unto	one	death;
     Caina	waiteth	him	who	quenched	our	life!"
   These	words	were	borne	along	from	them	to	us.
  As	soon	as	I	had	heard	those	souls	tormented,
   I	bowed	my	face,	and	so	long	held	it	down
   Until	the	Poet	said	to	me:	"What	thinkest?"
      When	I	made	answer,	I	began:	"Alas!
 How	many	pleasant	thoughts,	how	much	desire,
    Conducted	these	unto	the	dolorous	pass!"
    Then	unto	them	I	turned	me,	and	I	spake,
    And	I	began:	"Thine	agonies,	Francesca,
  Sad	and	compassionate	to	weeping	make	me.
   But	tell	me,	at	the	time	of	those	sweet	sighs,
  By	what	and	in	what	manner	Love	conceded,
  That	you	should	know	your	dubious	desires?"
   And	she	to	me:	"There	is	no	greater	sorrow
      Than	to	be	mindful	of	the	happy	time
     In	misery,	and	that	thy	Teacher	knows.
       But,	if	to	recognise	the	earliest	root
      Of	love	in	us	thou	hast	so	great	desire,
   I	will	do	even	as	he	who	weeps	and	speaks.
    One	day	we	reading	were	for	our	delight
    Of	Launcelot,	how	Love	did	him	enthral.
      Alone	we	were	and	without	any	fear.
    Full	many	a	time	our	eyes	together	drew
That	reading,	and	drove	the	colour	from	our	faces;
   But	one	point	only	was	it	that	o'ercame	us.
 When	as	we	read	of	the	much-longed-for	smile
       Being	by	such	a	noble	lover	kissed,
  This	one,	who	ne'er	from	me	shall	be	divided,
    Kissed	me	upon	the	mouth	all	palpitating.
   Galeotto	was	the	book	and	he	who	wrote	it.
    That	day	no	farther	did	we	read	therein."
    And	all	the	while	one	spirit	uttered	this,
    The	other	one	did	weep	so,	that,	for	pity,
    I	swooned	away	as	if	I	had	been	dying,
      And	fell,	even	as	a	dead	body	falls.                        	
                    Canto	VI
                        	
   At	the	return	of	consciousness,	that	closed
     Before	the	pity	of	those	two	relations,
 Which	utterly	with	sadness	had	confused	me,
  New	torments	I	behold,	and	new	tormented
     Around	me,	whichsoever	way	I	move,
    And	whichsoever	way	I	turn,	and	gaze.
       In	the	third	circle	am	I	of	the	rain
     Eternal,	maledict,	and	cold,	and	heavy;
       Its	law	and	quality	are	never	new.
 Huge	hail,	and	water	sombre-hued,	and	snow,
  Athwart	the	tenebrous	air	pour	down	amain;
    Noisome	the	earth	is,	that	receiveth	this.
     Cerberus,	monster	cruel	and	uncouth,
   With	his	three	gullets	like	a	dog	is	barking
   Over	the	people	that	are	there	submerged.
Red	eyes	he	has,	and	unctuous	beard	and	black,
And	belly	large,	and	armed	with	claws	his	hands;
 He	rends	the	spirits,	flays,	and	quarters	them.
   Howl	the	rain	maketh	them	like	unto	dogs;
   One	side	they	make	a	shelter	for	the	other;
  Oft	turn	themselves	the	wretched	reprobates.
 When	Cerberus	perceived	us,	the	great	worm!
His	mouths	he	opened,	and	displayed	his	tusks;
    Not	a	limb	had	he	that	was	motionless.
 And	my	Conductor,	with	his	spans	extended,
Took	of	the	earth,	and	with	his	fists	well	filled,
    He	threw	it	into	those	rapacious	gullets.
  Such	as	that	dog	is,	who	by	barking	craves,
  And	quiet	grows	soon	as	his	food	he	gnaws,
  For	to	devour	it	he	but	thinks	and	struggles,
 The	like	became	those	muzzles	filth-begrimed
   Of	Cerberus	the	demon,	who	so	thunders
  Over	the	souls	that	they	would	fain	be	deaf.
 We	passed	across	the	shadows,	which	subdues
 The	heavy	rain-storm,	and	we	placed	our	feet
     Upon	their	vanity	that	person	seems.
   They	all	were	lying	prone	upon	the	earth,
    Excepting	one,	who	sat	upright	as	soon
    As	he	beheld	us	passing	on	before	him.
 "O	thou	that	art	conducted	through	this	Hell,"
    He	said	to	me,	"recall	me,	if	thou	canst;
   Thyself	wast	made	before	I	was	unmade."
  And	I	to	him:	"The	anguish	which	thou	hast
Perhaps	doth	draw	thee	out	of	my	remembrance,
   So	that	it	seems	not	I	have	ever	seen	thee.
  But	tell	me	who	thou	art,	that	in	so	doleful
   A	place	art	put,	and	in	such	punishment,
  If	some	are	greater,	none	is	so	displeasing."
     And	he	to	me:	"Thy	city,	which	is	full
    Of	envy	so	that	now	the	sack	runs	over,
      Held	me	within	it	in	the	life	serene.
  You	citizens	were	wont	to	call	me	Ciacco;
       For	the	pernicious	sin	of	gluttony
      I,	as	thou	seest,	am	battered	by	this	rain.
       And	I,	sad	soul,	am	not	the	only	one,
         For	all	these	suffer	the	like	penalty
   For	the	like	sin;"	and	word	no	more	spake	he.
    I	answered	him:	"Ciacco,	thy	wretchedness
    Weighs	on	me	so	that	it	to	weep	invites	me;
  But	tell	me,	if	thou	knowest,	to	what	shall	come
          The	citizens	of	the	divided	city;
        If	any	there	be	just;	and	the	occasion
   Tell	me	why	so	much	discord	has	assailed	it."
    And	he	to	me:	"They,	after	long	contention,
    Will	come	to	bloodshed;	and	the	rustic	party
    Will	drive	the	other	out	with	much	offence.
      Then	afterwards	behoves	it	this	one	fall
     Within	three	suns,	and	rise	again	the	other
     By	force	of	him	who	now	is	on	the	coast.
     High	will	it	hold	its	forehead	a	long	while,
      Keeping	the	other	under	heavy	burdens,
     Howe'er	it	weeps	thereat	and	is	indignant.
   The	just	are	two,	and	are	not	understood	there;
         Envy	and	Arrogance	and	Avarice
Are	the	three	sparks	that	have	all	hearts	enkindled."
        Here	ended	he	his	tearful	utterance;
    And	I	to	him:	"I	wish	thee	still	to	teach	me,
      And	make	a	gift	to	me	of	further	speech.
      Farinata	and	Tegghiaio,	once	so	worthy,
      Jacopo	Rusticucci,	Arrigo,	and	Mosca,
 And	others	who	on	good	deeds	set	their	thoughts,
Say	where	they	are,	and	cause	that	I	may	know	them;
      For	great	desire	constraineth	me	to	learn
If	Heaven	doth	sweeten	them,	or	Hell	envenom."
  And	he:	"They	are	among	the	blacker	souls;
A	different	sin	downweighs	them	to	the	bottom;
 If	thou	so	far	descendest,	thou	canst	see	them.
  But	when	thou	art	again	in	the	sweet	world,
   I	pray	thee	to	the	mind	of	others	bring	me;
   No	more	I	tell	thee	and	no	more	I	answer."
Then	his	straightforward	eyes	he	turned	askance,
   Eyed	me	a	little,	and	then	bowed	his	head;
  He	fell	therewith	prone	like	the	other	blind.
 And	the	Guide	said	to	me:	"He	wakes	no	more
   This	side	the	sound	of	the	angelic	trumpet;
   When	shall	approach	the	hostile	Potentate,
   Each	one	shall	find	again	his	dismal	tomb,
  Shall	reassume	his	flesh	and	his	own	figure,
  Shall	hear	what	through	eternity	re-echoes."
  So	we	passed	onward	o'er	the	filthy	mixture
  Of	shadows	and	of	rain	with	footsteps	slow,
       Touching	a	little	on	the	future	life.
Wherefore	I	said:	"Master,	these	torments	here,
  Will	they	increase	after	the	mighty	sentence,
   Or	lesser	be,	or	will	they	be	as	burning?"
    And	he	to	me:	"Return	unto	thy	science,
 Which	wills,	that	as	the	thing	more	perfect	is,
   The	more	it	feels	of	pleasure	and	of	pain.
        Albeit	that	this	people	maledict
      To	true	perfection	never	can	attain,
   Hereafter	more	than	now	they	look	to	be."
    Round	in	a	circle	by	that	road	we	went,
  Speaking	much	more,	which	I	do	not	repeat;
  We	came	unto	the	point	where	the	descent	is;
    There	we	found	Plutus	the	great	enemy.                         	
                    Canto	VII
                         	
       "Pape	Satan,	Pape	Satan,	Aleppe!"
   Thus	Plutus	with	his	clucking	voice	began;
 And	that	benignant	Sage,	who	all	things	knew,
    Said,	to	encourage	me:	"Let	not	thy	fear
  Harm	thee;	for	any	power	that	he	may	have
  Shall	not	prevent	thy	going	down	this	crag."
   Then	he	turned	round	unto	that	bloated	lip,
    And	said:	"Be	silent,	thou	accursed	wolf;
  Consume	within	thyself	with	thine	own	rage.
   Not	causeless	is	this	journey	to	the	abyss;
Thus	is	it	willed	on	high,	where	Michael	wrought
      Vengeance	upon	the	proud	adultery."
     Even	as	the	sails	inflated	by	the	wind
  Involved	together	fall	when	snaps	the	mast,
      So	fell	the	cruel	monster	to	the	earth.
   Thus	we	descended	into	the	fourth	chasm,
   Gaining	still	farther	on	the	dolesome	shore
   Which	all	the	woe	of	the	universe	insacks.
   Justice	of	God,	ah!	who	heaps	up	so	many
      New	toils	and	sufferings	as	I	beheld?
  And	why	doth	our	transgression	waste	us	so?
   As	doth	the	billow	there	upon	Charybdis,
 That	breaks	itself	on	that	which	it	encounters,
  So	here	the	folk	must	dance	their	roundelay.
 Here	saw	I	people,	more	than	elsewhere,	many,
     On	one	side	and	the	other,	with	great	howls,
   Rolling	weights	forward	by	main	force	of	chest.
     They	clashed	together,	and	then	at	that	point
    Each	one	turned	backward,	rolling	retrograde,
Crying,	"Why	keepest?"	and,	"Why	squanderest	thou?"
       Thus	they	returned	along	the	lurid	circle
       On	either	hand	unto	the	opposite	point,
      Shouting	their	shameful	metre	evermore.
  Then	each,	when	he	arrived	there,	wheeled	about
       Through	his	half-circle	to	another	joust;
     And	I,	who	had	my	heart	pierced	as	it	were,
     Exclaimed:	"My	Master,	now	declare	to	me
    What	people	these	are,	and	if	all	were	clerks,
      These	shaven	crowns	upon	the	left	of	us."
      And	he	to	me:	"All	of	them	were	asquint
         In	intellect	in	the	first	life,	so	much
   That	there	with	measure	they	no	spending	made.
      Clearly	enough	their	voices	bark	it	forth,
   Whene'er	they	reach	the	two	points	of	the	circle,
      Where	sunders	them	the	opposite	defect.
      Clerks	those	were	who	no	hairy	covering
     Have	on	the	head,	and	Popes	and	Cardinals,
      In	whom	doth	Avarice	practise	its	excess."
      And	I:	"My	Master,	among	such	as	these
       I	ought	forsooth	to	recognise	some	few,
      Who	were	infected	with	these	maladies."
    And	he	to	me:	"Vain	thought	thou	entertainest;
   The	undiscerning	life	which	made	them	sordid
     Now	makes	them	unto	all	discernment	dim.
    Forever	shall	they	come	to	these	two	buttings;
      These	from	the	sepulchre	shall	rise	again
  With	the	fist	closed,	and	these	with	tresses	shorn.
       Ill	giving	and	ill	keeping	the	fair	world
Have	ta'en	from	them,	and	placed	them	in	this	scuffle;
        Whate'er	it	be,	no	words	adorn	I	for	it.
   Now	canst	thou,	Son,	behold	the	transient	farce
     Of	goods	that	are	committed	unto	Fortune,
     For	which	the	human	race	each	other	buffet;
      For	all	the	gold	that	is	beneath	the	moon,
        Or	ever	has	been,	of	these	weary	souls
       Could	never	make	a	single	one	repose."
      "Master,"	I	said	to	him,	"now	tell	me	also
     What	is	this	Fortune	which	thou	speakest	of,
  That	has	the	world's	goods	so	within	its	clutches?"
        And	he	to	me:	"O	creatures	imbecile,
    What	ignorance	is	this	which	doth	beset	you?
   Now	will	I	have	thee	learn	my	judgment	of	her.
    He	whose	omniscience	everything	transcends
The	heavens	created,	and	gave	who	should	guide	them,
       That	every	part	to	every	part	may	shine,
       Distributing	the	light	in	equal	measure;
    He	in	like	manner	to	the	mundane	splendours
      Ordained	a	general	ministress	and	guide,
 That	she	might	change	at	times	the	empty	treasures
    From	race	to	race,	from	one	blood	to	another,
      Beyond	resistance	of	all	human	wisdom.
     Therefore	one	people	triumphs,	and	another
      Languishes,	in	pursuance	of	her	judgment,
      Which	hidden	is,	as	in	the	grass	a	serpent.
  Your	knowledge	has	no	counterstand	against	her;
   She	makes	provision,	judges,	and	pursues
   Her	governance,	as	theirs	the	other	gods.
     Her	permutations	have	not	any	truce;
        Necessity	makes	her	precipitate,
     So	often	cometh	who	his	turn	obtains.
       And	this	is	she	who	is	so	crucified
  Even	by	those	who	ought	to	give	her	praise,
   Giving	her	blame	amiss,	and	bad	repute.
    But	she	is	blissful,	and	she	hears	it	not;
  Among	the	other	primal	creatures	gladsome
 She	turns	her	sphere,	and	blissful	she	rejoices.
     Let	us	descend	now	unto	greater	woe;
  Already	sinks	each	star	that	was	ascending
  When	I	set	out,	and	loitering	is	forbidden."
    We	crossed	the	circle	to	the	other	bank,
   Near	to	a	fount	that	boils,	and	pours	itself
        Along	a	gully	that	runs	out	of	it.
  The	water	was	more	sombre	far	than	perse;
  And	we,	in	company	with	the	dusky	waves,
 Made	entrance	downward	by	a	path	uncouth.
A	marsh	it	makes,	which	has	the	name	of	Styx,
 This	tristful	brooklet,	when	it	has	descended
  Down	to	the	foot	of	the	malign	gray	shores.
   And	I,	who	stood	intent	upon	beholding,
   Saw	people	mud-besprent	in	that	lagoon,
    All	of	them	naked	and	with	angry	look.
 They	smote	each	other	not	alone	with	hands,
But	with	the	head	and	with	the	breast	and	feet,
 Tearing	each	other	piecemeal	with	their	teeth.
Said	the	good	Master:	"Son,	thou	now	beholdest
   The	souls	of	those	whom	anger	overcame;
And	likewise	I	would	have	thee	know	for	certain
     Beneath	the	water	people	are	who	sigh
   And	make	this	water	bubble	at	the	surface,
    As	the	eye	tells	thee	wheresoe'er	it	turns.
   Fixed	in	the	mire	they	say,	'We	sullen	were
In	the	sweet	air,	which	by	the	sun	is	gladdened,
  Bearing	within	ourselves	the	sluggish	reek;
     Now	we	are	sullen	in	this	sable	mire.'
This	hymn	do	they	keep	gurgling	in	their	throats,
 For	with	unbroken	words	they	cannot	say	it."
   Thus	we	went	circling	round	the	filthy	fen
 A	great	arc	'twixt	the	dry	bank	and	the	swamp,
With	eyes	turned	unto	those	who	gorge	the	mire;
    Unto	the	foot	of	a	tower	we	came	at	last.                         	
                    Canto	VIII
                         	
       I	say,	continuing,	that	long	before
  We	to	the	foot	of	that	high	tower	had	come,
   Our	eyes	went	upward	to	the	summit	of	it,
By	reason	of	two	flamelets	we	saw	placed	there,
      And	from	afar	another	answer	them,
    So	far,	that	hardly	could	the	eye	attain	it.
   And,	to	the	sea	of	all	discernment	turned,
 I	said:	"What	sayeth	this,	and	what	respondeth
That	other	fire?	and	who	are	they	that	made	it?"
    And	he	to	me:	"Across	the	turbid	waves
   What	is	expected	thou	canst	now	discern,
      If	reek	of	the	morass	conceal	it	not."
        Cord	never	shot	an	arrow	from	itself
      That	sped	away	athwart	the	air	so	swift,
            As	I	beheld	a	very	little	boat
  Come	o'er	the	water	tow'rds	us	at	that	moment,
        Under	the	guidance	of	a	single	pilot,
  Who	shouted,	"Now	art	thou	arrived,	fell	soul?"
    "Phlegyas,	Phlegyas,	thou	criest	out	in	vain
For	this	once,"	said	my	Lord;	"thou	shalt	not	have	us
     Longer	than	in	the	passing	of	the	slough."
       As	he	who	listens	to	some	great	deceit
   That	has	been	done	to	him,	and	then	resents	it,
   Such	became	Phlegyas,	in	his	gathered	wrath.
     My	Guide	descended	down	into	the	boat,
       And	then	he	made	me	enter	after	him,
     And	only	when	I	entered	seemed	it	laden.
     Soon	as	the	Guide	and	I	were	in	the	boat,
    The	antique	prow	goes	on	its	way,	dividing
    More	of	the	water	than	'tis	wont	with	others.
  While	we	were	running	through	the	dead	canal,
       Uprose	in	front	of	me	one	full	of	mire,
 And	said,	"Who	'rt	thou	that	comest	ere	the	hour?"
    And	I	to	him:	"Although	I	come,	I	stay	not;
  But	who	art	thou	that	hast	become	so	squalid?"
"Thou	seest	that	I	am	one	who	weeps,"	he	answered.
  And	I	to	him:	"With	weeping	and	with	wailing,
       Thou	spirit	maledict,	do	thou	remain;
    For	thee	I	know,	though	thou	art	all	defiled."
  Then	stretched	he	both	his	hands	unto	the	boat;
     Whereat	my	wary	Master	thrust	him	back,
     Saying,	"Away	there	with	the	other	dogs!"
 Thereafter	with	his	arms	he	clasped	my	neck;
He	kissed	my	face,	and	said:	"Disdainful	soul,
 Blessed	be	she	who	bore	thee	in	her	bosom.
  That	was	an	arrogant	person	in	the	world;
  Goodness	is	none,	that	decks	his	memory;
     So	likewise	here	his	shade	is	furious.
How	many	are	esteemed	great	kings	up	there,
  Who	here	shall	be	like	unto	swine	in	mire,
  Leaving	behind	them	horrible	dispraises!"
And	I:	"My	Master,	much	should	I	be	pleased,
   If	I	could	see	him	soused	into	this	broth,
    Before	we	issue	forth	out	of	the	lake."
    And	he	to	me:	"Ere	unto	thee	the	shore
     Reveal	itself,	thou	shalt	be	satisfied;
 Such	a	desire	'tis	meet	thou	shouldst	enjoy."
      A	little	after	that,	I	saw	such	havoc
    Made	of	him	by	the	people	of	the	mire,
  That	still	I	praise	and	thank	my	God	for	it.
They	all	were	shouting,	"At	Philippo	Argenti!"
     And	that	exasperate	spirit	Florentine
Turned	round	upon	himself	with	his	own	teeth.
 We	left	him	there,	and	more	of	him	I	tell	not;
 But	on	mine	ears	there	smote	a	lamentation,
  Whence	forward	I	intent	unbar	mine	eyes.
And	the	good	Master	said:	"Even	now,	my	Son,
  The	city	draweth	near	whose	name	is	Dis,
With	the	grave	citizens,	with	the	great	throng."
 And	I:	"Its	mosques	already,	Master,	clearly
      Within	there	in	the	valley	I	discern
     Vermilion,	as	if	issuing	from	the	fire
   They	were."	And	he	to	me:	"The	fire	eternal
 That	kindles	them	within	makes	them	look	red,
      As	thou	beholdest	in	this	nether	Hell."
   Then	we	arrived	within	the	moats	profound,
    That	circumvallate	that	disconsolate	city;
     The	walls	appeared	to	me	to	be	of	iron.
     Not	without	making	first	a	circuit	wide,
    We	came	unto	a	place	where	loud	the	pilot
  Cried	out	to	us,	"Debark,	here	is	the	entrance."
     More	than	a	thousand	at	the	gates	I	saw
  Out	of	the	Heavens	rained	down,	who	angrily
   Were	saying,	"Who	is	this	that	without	death
 Goes	through	the	kingdom	of	the	people	dead?"
      And	my	sagacious	Master	made	a	sign
     Of	wishing	secretly	to	speak	with	them.
   A	little	then	they	quelled	their	great	disdain,
   And	said:	"Come	thou	alone,	and	he	begone
   Who	has	so	boldly	entered	these	dominions.
      Let	him	return	alone	by	his	mad	road;
    Try,	if	he	can;	for	thou	shalt	here	remain,
Who	hast	escorted	him	through	such	dark	regions."
       Think,	Reader,	if	I	was	discomforted
       At	utterance	of	the	accursed	words;
        For	never	to	return	here	I	believed.
  "O	my	dear	Guide,	who	more	than	seven	times
    Hast	rendered	me	security,	and	drawn	me
    From	imminent	peril	that	before	me	stood,
     Do	not	desert	me,"	said	I,	"thus	undone;
      And	if	the	going	farther	be	denied	us,
    Let	us	retrace	our	steps	together	swiftly."
  And	that	Lord,	who	had	led	me	thitherward,
 Said	unto	me:	"Fear	not;	because	our	passage
  None	can	take	from	us,	it	by	Such	is	given.
    But	here	await	me,	and	thy	weary	spirit
   Comfort	and	nourish	with	a	better	hope;
 For	in	this	nether	world	I	will	not	leave	thee."
    So	onward	goes	and	there	abandons	me
   My	Father	sweet,	and	I	remain	in	doubt,
   For	No	and	Yes	within	my	head	contend.
  I	could	not	hear	what	he	proposed	to	them;
  But	with	them	there	he	did	not	linger	long,
      Ere	each	within	in	rivalry	ran	back.
They	closed	the	portals,	those	our	adversaries,
On	my	Lord's	breast,	who	had	remained	without
 And	turned	to	me	with	footsteps	far	between.
 His	eyes	cast	down,	his	forehead	shorn	had	he
  Of	all	its	boldness,	and	he	said,	with	sighs,
"Who	has	denied	to	me	the	dolesome	houses?"
   And	unto	me:	"Thou,	because	I	am	angry,
    Fear	not,	for	I	will	conquer	in	the	trial,
   Whatever	for	defence	within	be	planned.
    This	arrogance	of	theirs	is	nothing	new;
    For	once	they	used	it	at	less	secret	gate,
  Which	finds	itself	without	a	fastening	still.
 O'er	it	didst	thou	behold	the	dead	inscription;
  And	now	this	side	of	it	descends	the	steep,
   Passing	across	the	circles	without	escort,
One	by	whose	means	the	city	shall	be	opened."                        	
                    Canto	IX
                          	
  That	hue	which	cowardice	brought	out	on	me,
     Beholding	my	Conductor	backward	turn,
   Sooner	repressed	within	him	his	new	colour.
   He	stopped	attentive,	like	a	man	who	listens,
    Because	the	eye	could	not	conduct	him	far
Through	the	black	air,	and	through	the	heavy	fog.
      "Still	it	behoveth	us	to	win	the	fight,"
  Began	he;	"Else.	.	.Such	offered	us	herself.	.	.
     O	how	I	long	that	some	one	here	arrive!"
    Well	I	perceived,	as	soon	as	the	beginning
    He	covered	up	with	what	came	afterward,
That	they	were	words	quite	different	from	the	first;
    But	none	the	less	his	saying	gave	me	fear,
     Because	I	carried	out	the	broken	phrase,
     Perhaps	to	a	worse	meaning	than	he	had.
      "Into	this	bottom	of	the	doleful	conch
    Doth	any	e'er	descend	from	the	first	grade,
    Which	for	its	pain	has	only	hope	cut	off?"
     This	question	put	I;	and	he	answered	me:
     "Seldom	it	comes	to	pass	that	one	of	us
       Maketh	the	journey	upon	which	I	go.
        True	is	it,	once	before	I	here	below
      Was	conjured	by	that	pitiless	Erictho,
Who	summoned	back	the	shades	unto	their	bodies.
   Naked	of	me	short	while	the	flesh	had	been,
    Before	within	that	wall	she	made	me	enter,
     To	bring	a	spirit	from	the	circle	of	Judas;
     That	is	the	lowest	region	and	the	darkest,
  And	farthest	from	the	heaven	which	circles	all.
   Well	know	I	the	way;	therefore	be	reassured.
    This	fen,	which	a	prodigious	stench	exhales,
        Encompasses	about	the	city	dolent,
    Where	now	we	cannot	enter	without	anger."
    And	more	he	said,	but	not	in	mind	I	have	it;
    Because	mine	eye	had	altogether	drawn	me
Tow'rds	the	high	tower	with	the	red-flaming	summit,
      Where	in	a	moment	saw	I	swift	uprisen
    The	three	infernal	Furies	stained	with	blood,
   Who	had	the	limbs	of	women	and	their	mien,
     And	with	the	greenest	hydras	were	begirt;
   Small	serpents	and	cerastes	were	their	tresses,
  Wherewith	their	horrid	temples	were	entwined.
   And	he	who	well	the	handmaids	of	the	Queen
         Of	everlasting	lamentation	knew,
     Said	unto	me:	"Behold	the	fierce	Erinnys.
       This	is	Megaera,	on	the	left-hand	side;
     She	who	is	weeping	on	the	right,	Alecto;
    Tisiphone	is	between;"	and	then	was	silent.
  Each	one	her	breast	was	rending	with	her	nails;
They	beat	them	with	their	palms,	and	cried	so	loud,
    That	I	for	dread	pressed	close	unto	the	Poet.
 "Medusa	come,	so	we	to	stone	will	change	him!"
      All	shouted	looking	down;	"in	evil	hour
     Avenged	we	not	on	Theseus	his	assault!"
"Turn	thyself	round,	and	keep	thine	eyes	close	shut,
 For	if	the	Gorgon	appear,	and	thou	shouldst	see	it,
    No	more	returning	upward	would	there	be."
   Thus	said	the	Master;	and	he	turned	me	round
      Himself,	and	trusted	not	unto	my	hands
      So	far	as	not	to	blind	me	with	his	own.
     O	ye	who	have	undistempered	intellects,
      Observe	the	doctrine	that	conceals	itself
     Beneath	the	veil	of	the	mysterious	verses!
   And	now	there	came	across	the	turbid	waves
    The	clangour	of	a	sound	with	terror	fraught,
  Because	of	which	both	of	the	margins	trembled;
        Not	otherwise	it	was	than	of	a	wind
      Impetuous	on	account	of	adverse	heats,
   That	smites	the	forest,	and,	without	restraint,
 The	branches	rends,	beats	down,	and	bears	away;
   Right	onward,	laden	with	dust,	it	goes	superb,
And	puts	to	flight	the	wild	beasts	and	the	shepherds.
 Mine	eyes	he	loosed,	and	said:	"Direct	the	nerve
      Of	vision	now	along	that	ancient	foam,
 There	yonder	where	that	smoke	is	most	intense."
    Even	as	the	frogs	before	the	hostile	serpent
        Across	the	water	scatter	all	abroad,
       Until	each	one	is	huddled	in	the	earth.
     More	than	a	thousand	ruined	souls	I	saw,
     Thus	fleeing	from	before	one	who	on	foot
    Was	passing	o'er	the	Styx	with	soles	unwet.
   From	off	his	face	he	fanned	that	unctuous	air,
      Waving	his	left	hand	oft	in	front	of	him,
   And	only	with	that	anguish	seemed	he	weary.
  Well	I	perceived	one	sent	from	Heaven	was	he,
    And	to	the	Master	turned;	and	he	made	sign
  That	I	should	quiet	stand,	and	bow	before	him.
      Ah!	how	disdainful	he	appeared	to	me!
     He	reached	the	gate,	and	with	a	little	rod
    He	opened	it,	for	there	was	no	resistance.
  "O	banished	out	of	Heaven,	people	despised!"
    Thus	he	began	upon	the	horrid	threshold;
 "Whence	is	this	arrogance	within	you	couched?
     Wherefore	recalcitrate	against	that	will,
    From	which	the	end	can	never	be	cut	off,
 And	which	has	many	times	increased	your	pain?
     What	helpeth	it	to	butt	against	the	fates?
      Your	Cerberus,	if	you	remember	well,
  For	that	still	bears	his	chin	and	gullet	peeled."
      Then	he	returned	along	the	miry	road,
    And	spake	no	word	to	us,	but	had	the	look
  Of	one	whom	other	care	constrains	and	goads
     Than	that	of	him	who	in	his	presence	is;
    And	we	our	feet	directed	tow'rds	the	city,
      After	those	holy	words	all	confident.
     Within	we	entered	without	any	contest;
        And	I,	who	inclination	had	to	see
    What	the	condition	such	a	fortress	holds,
   Soon	as	I	was	within,	cast	round	mine	eye,
     And	see	on	every	hand	an	ample	plain,
       Full	of	distress	and	torment	terrible.
Even	as	at	Arles,	where	stagnant	grows	the	Rhone,
      Even	as	at	Pola	near	to	the	Quarnaro,
    That	shuts	in	Italy	and	bathes	its	borders,
    The	sepulchres	make	all	the	place	uneven;
    So	likewise	did	they	there	on	every	side,
  Saving	that	there	the	manner	was	more	bitter;
For	flames	between	the	sepulchres	were	scattered,
     By	which	they	so	intensely	heated	were,
         That	iron	more	so	asks	not	any	art.
        All	of	their	coverings	uplifted	were,
   And	from	them	issued	forth	such	dire	laments,
 Sooth	seemed	they	of	the	wretched	and	tormented.
    And	I:	"My	Master,	what	are	all	those	people
     Who,	having	sepulture	within	those	tombs,
    Make	themselves	audible	by	doleful	sighs?"
      And	he	to	me:	"Here	are	the	Heresiarchs,
     With	their	disciples	of	all	sects,	and	much
    More	than	thou	thinkest	laden	are	the	tombs.
      Here	like	together	with	its	like	is	buried;
   And	more	and	less	the	monuments	are	heated."
  And	when	he	to	the	right	had	turned,	we	passed
      Between	the	torments	and	high	parapets.                           	
                       Canto	X
                           	
      Now	onward	goes,	along	a	narrow	path
      Between	the	torments	and	the	city	wall,
        My	Master,	and	I	follow	at	his	back.
"O	power	supreme,	that	through	these	impious	circles
       Turnest	me,"	I	began,	"as	pleases	thee,
       Speak	to	me,	and	my	longings	satisfy;
      The	people	who	are	lying	in	these	tombs,
      Might	they	be	seen?	already	are	uplifted
     The	covers	all,	and	no	one	keepeth	guard."
     And	he	to	me:	"They	all	will	be	closed	up
      When	from	Jehoshaphat	they	shall	return
     Here	with	the	bodies	they	have	left	above.
         Their	cemetery	have	upon	this	side
          With	Epicurus	all	his	followers,
     Who	with	the	body	mortal	make	the	soul;
      But	in	the	question	thou	dost	put	to	me,
     Within	here	shalt	thou	soon	be	satisfied,
   And	likewise	in	the	wish	thou	keepest	silent."
    And	I:	"Good	Leader,	I	but	keep	concealed
  From	thee	my	heart,	that	I	may	speak	the	less,
  Nor	only	now	hast	thou	thereto	disposed	me."
   "O	Tuscan,	thou	who	through	the	city	of	fire
       Goest	alive,	thus	speaking	modestly,
   Be	pleased	to	stay	thy	footsteps	in	this	place.
    Thy	mode	of	speaking	makes	thee	manifest
         A	native	of	that	noble	fatherland,
      To	which	perhaps	I	too	molestful	was."
      Upon	a	sudden	issued	forth	this	sound
 From	out	one	of	the	tombs;	wherefore	I	pressed,
       Fearing,	a	little	nearer	to	my	Leader.
 And	unto	me	he	said:	"Turn	thee;	what	dost	thou?
       Behold	there	Farinata	who	has	risen;
From	the	waist	upwards	wholly	shalt	thou	see	him."
       I	had	already	fixed	mine	eyes	on	his,
     And	he	uprose	erect	with	breast	and	front
      E'en	as	if	Hell	he	had	in	great	despite.
And	with	courageous	hands	and	prompt	my	Leader
  Thrust	me	between	the	sepulchres	towards	him,
     Exclaiming,	"Let	thy	words	explicit	be."
      As	soon	as	I	was	at	the	foot	of	his	tomb
   Somewhat	he	eyed	me,	and,	as	if	disdainful,
 Then	asked	of	me,	"Who	were	thine	ancestors?"
         I,	who	desirous	of	obeying	was,
     Concealed	it	not,	but	all	revealed	to	him;
   Whereat	he	raised	his	brows	a	little	upward.
 Then	said	he:	"Fiercely	adverse	have	they	been
     To	me,	and	to	my	fathers,	and	my	party;
   So	that	two	several	times	I	scattered	them."
"If	they	were	banished,	they	returned	on	all	sides,"
  I	answered	him,	"the	first	time	and	the	second;
   But	yours	have	not	acquired	that	art	aright."
   Then	there	uprose	upon	the	sight,	uncovered
     Down	to	the	chin,	a	shadow	at	his	side;
      I	think	that	he	had	risen	on	his	knees.
       Round	me	he	gazed,	as	if	solicitude
  He	had	to	see	if	some	one	else	were	with	me,
       But	after	his	suspicion	was	all	spent,
  Weeping,	he	said	to	me:	"If	through	this	blind
     Prison	thou	goest	by	loftiness	of	genius,
 Where	is	my	son?	and	why	is	he	not	with	thee?"
       And	I	to	him:	"I	come	not	of	myself;
     He	who	is	waiting	yonder	leads	me	here,
   Whom	in	disdain	perhaps	your	Guido	had."
    His	language	and	the	mode	of	punishment
       Already	unto	me	had	read	his	name;
     On	that	account	my	answer	was	so	full.
    Up	starting	suddenly,	he	cried	out:	"How
    Saidst	thou,—he	had?	Is	he	not	still	alive?
  Does	not	the	sweet	light	strike	upon	his	eyes?"
      When	he	became	aware	of	some	delay,
     Which	I	before	my	answer	made,	supine
    He	fell	again,	and	forth	appeared	no	more.
  But	the	other,	magnanimous,	at	whose	desire
    I	had	remained,	did	not	his	aspect	change,
  Neither	his	neck	he	moved,	nor	bent	his	side.
     "And	if,"	continuing	his	first	discourse,
"They	have	that	art,"	he	said,	"not	learned	aright,
  That	more	tormenteth	me,	than	doth	this	bed.
      But	fifty	times	shall	not	rekindled	be
  The	countenance	of	the	Lady	who	reigns	here,
    Ere	thou	shalt	know	how	heavy	is	that	art;
 And	as	thou	wouldst	to	the	sweet	world	return,
        Say	why	that	people	is	so	pitiless
    Against	my	race	in	each	one	of	its	laws?"
Whence	I	to	him:	"The	slaughter	and	great	carnage
Which	have	with	crimson	stained	the	Arbia,	cause
     Such	orisons	in	our	temple	to	be	made."
    After	his	head	he	with	a	sigh	had	shaken,
   "There	I	was	not	alone,"	he	said,	"nor	surely
   Without	a	cause	had	with	the	others	moved.
     But	there	I	was	alone,	where	every	one
   Consented	to	the	laying	waste	of	Florence,
      He	who	defended	her	with	open	face."
    "Ah!	so	hereafter	may	your	seed	repose,"
     I	him	entreated,	"solve	for	me	that	knot,
   Which	has	entangled	my	conceptions	here.
    It	seems	that	you	can	see,	if	I	hear	rightly,
    Beforehand	whatsoe'er	time	brings	with	it,
     And	in	the	present	have	another	mode."
  "We	see,	like	those	who	have	imperfect	sight,
  The	things,"	he	said,	"that	distant	are	from	us;
 So	much	still	shines	on	us	the	Sovereign	Ruler.
   When	they	draw	near,	or	are,	is	wholly	vain
    Our	intellect,	and	if	none	brings	it	to	us,
  Not	anything	know	we	of	your	human	state.
Hence	thou	canst	understand,	that	wholly	dead
Will	be	our	knowledge	from	the	moment	when
   The	portal	of	the	future	shall	be	closed."
    Then	I,	as	if	compunctious	for	my	fault,
 Said:	"Now,	then,	you	will	tell	that	fallen	one,
   That	still	his	son	is	with	the	living	joined.
  And	if	just	now,	in	answering,	I	was	dumb,
    Tell	him	I	did	it	because	I	was	thinking
  Already	of	the	error	you	have	solved	me."
    And	now	my	Master	was	recalling	me,
  Wherefore	more	eagerly	I	prayed	the	spirit
That	he	would	tell	me	who	was	with	him	there.
He	said:	"With	more	than	a	thousand	here	I	lie;
      Within	here	is	the	second	Frederick,
 And	the	Cardinal,	and	of	the	rest	I	speak	not."
     Thereon	he	hid	himself;	and	I	towards
  The	ancient	poet	turned	my	steps,	reflecting
Upon	that	saying,	which	seemed	hostile	to	me.
  He	moved	along;	and	afterward	thus	going,
 He	said	to	me,	"Why	art	thou	so	bewildered?"
       And	I	in	his	inquiry	satisfied	him.
  "Let	memory	preserve	what	thou	hast	heard
  Against	thyself,"	that	Sage	commanded	me,
"And	now	attend	here;"	and	he	raised	his	finger.
"When	thou	shalt	be	before	the	radiance	sweet
Of	her	whose	beauteous	eyes	all	things	behold,
From	her	thou'lt	know	the	journey	of	thy	life."
   Unto	the	left	hand	then	he	turned	his	feet;
    We	left	the	wall,	and	went	towards	the	middle,
        Along	a	path	that	strikes	into	a	valley,
   Which	even	up	there	unpleasant	made	its	stench.                            	
                       Canto	XI
                            	
           Upon	the	margin	of	a	lofty	bank
     Which	great	rocks	broken	in	a	circle	made,
       We	came	upon	a	still	more	cruel	throng;
         And	there,	by	reason	of	the	horrible
     Excess	of	stench	the	deep	abyss	throws	out,
      We	drew	ourselves	aside	behind	the	cover
      Of	a	great	tomb,	whereon	I	saw	a	writing,
        Which	said:	"Pope	Anastasius	I	hold,
     Whom	out	of	the	right	way	Photinus	drew."
         "Slow	it	behoveth	our	descent	to	be,
         So	that	the	sense	be	first	a	little	used
   To	the	sad	blast,	and	then	we	shall	not	heed	it."
        The	Master	thus;	and	unto	him	I	said,
   "Some	compensation	find,	that	the	time	pass	not
      Idly;"	and	he:	"Thou	seest	I	think	of	that.
       My	son,	upon	the	inside	of	these	rocks,"
    Began	he	then	to	say,	"are	three	small	circles,
From	grade	to	grade,	like	those	which	thou	art	leaving.
         They	all	are	full	of	spirits	maledict;
      But	that	hereafter	sight	alone	suffice	thee,
   Hear	how	and	wherefore	they	are	in	constraint.
      Of	every	malice	that	wins	hate	in	Heaven,
          Injury	is	the	end;	and	all	such	end
       Either	by	force	or	fraud	afflicteth	others.
    But	because	fraud	is	man's	peculiar	vice,
   More	it	displeases	God;	and	so	stand	lowest
  The	fraudulent,	and	greater	dole	assails	them.
       All	the	first	circle	of	the	Violent	is;
But	since	force	may	be	used	against	three	persons,
   In	three	rounds	'tis	divided	and	constructed.
To	God,	to	ourselves,	and	to	our	neighbour	can	we
  Use	force;	I	say	on	them	and	on	their	things,
     As	thou	shalt	hear	with	reason	manifest.
    A	death	by	violence,	and	painful	wounds,
Are	to	our	neighbour	given;	and	in	his	substance
      Ruin,	and	arson,	and	injurious	levies;
 Whence	homicides,	and	he	who	smites	unjustly,
   Marauders,	and	freebooters,	the	first	round
      Tormenteth	all	in	companies	diverse.
    Man	may	lay	violent	hands	upon	himself
 And	his	own	goods;	and	therefore	in	the	second
    Round	must	perforce	without	avail	repent
    Whoever	of	your	world	deprives	himself,
     Who	games,	and	dissipates	his	property,
 And	weepeth	there,	where	he	should	jocund	be.
         Violence	can	be	done	the	Deity,
     In	heart	denying	and	blaspheming	Him,
    And	by	disdaining	Nature	and	her	bounty.
   And	for	this	reason	doth	the	smallest	round
     Seal	with	its	signet	Sodom	and	Cahors,
And	who,	disdaining	God,	speaks	from	the	heart.
  Fraud,	wherewithal	is	every	conscience	stung,
    A	man	may	practise	upon	him	who	trusts,
   And	him	who	doth	no	confidence	imburse.
    This	latter	mode,	it	would	appear,	dissevers
    Only	the	bond	of	love	which	Nature	makes;
     Wherefore	within	the	second	circle	nestle
    Hypocrisy,	flattery,	and	who	deals	in	magic,
          Falsification,	theft,	and	simony,
      Panders,	and	barrators,	and	the	like	filth.
      By	the	other	mode,	forgotten	is	that	love
   Which	Nature	makes,	and	what	is	after	added,
  From	which	there	is	a	special	faith	engendered.
   Hence	in	the	smallest	circle,	where	the	point	is
    Of	the	Universe,	upon	which	Dis	is	seated,
      Whoe'er	betrays	for	ever	is	consumed."
     And	I:	"My	Master,	clear	enough	proceeds
     Thy	reasoning,	and	full	well	distinguishes
     This	cavern	and	the	people	who	possess	it.
      But	tell	me,	those	within	the	fat	lagoon,
Whom	the	wind	drives,	and	whom	the	rain	doth	beat,
   And	who	encounter	with	such	bitter	tongues,
      Wherefore	are	they	inside	of	the	red	city
    Not	punished,	if	God	has	them	in	his	wrath,
   And	if	he	has	not,	wherefore	in	such	fashion?"
      And	unto	me	he	said:	"Why	wanders	so
     Thine	intellect	from	that	which	it	is	wont?
 Or,	sooth,	thy	mind	where	is	it	elsewhere	looking?
      Hast	thou	no	recollection	of	those	words
   With	which	thine	Ethics	thoroughly	discusses
 The	dispositions	three,	that	Heaven	abides	not,—
       Incontinence,	and	Malice,	and	insane
         Bestiality?	and	how	Incontinence
    Less	God	offendeth,	and	less	blame	attracts?
     If	thou	regardest	this	conclusion	well,
    And	to	thy	mind	recallest	who	they	are
    That	up	outside	are	undergoing	penance,
Clearly	wilt	thou	perceive	why	from	these	felons
    They	separated	are,	and	why	less	wroth
Justice	divine	doth	smite	them	with	its	hammer."
  "O	Sun,	that	healest	all	distempered	vision,
 Thou	dost	content	me	so,	when	thou	resolvest,
That	doubting	pleases	me	no	less	than	knowing!
 Once	more	a	little	backward	turn	thee,"	said	I,
  "There	where	thou	sayest	that	usury	offends
   Goodness	divine,	and	disengage	the	knot."
  "Philosophy,"	he	said,	"to	him	who	heeds	it,
      Noteth,	not	only	in	one	place	alone,
  After	what	manner	Nature	takes	her	course
    From	Intellect	Divine,	and	from	its	art;
    And	if	thy	Physics	carefully	thou	notest,
     After	not	many	pages	shalt	thou	find,
      That	this	your	art	as	far	as	possible
    Follows,	as	the	disciple	doth	the	master;
So	that	your	art	is,	as	it	were,	God's	grandchild.
  From	these	two,	if	thou	bringest	to	thy	mind
      Genesis	at	the	beginning,	it	behoves
   Mankind	to	gain	their	life	and	to	advance;
    And	since	the	usurer	takes	another	way,
       Nature	herself	and	in	her	follower
  Disdains	he,	for	elsewhere	he	puts	his	hope.
    But	follow,	now,	as	I	would	fain	go	on,
  For	quivering	are	the	Fishes	on	the	horizon,
    And	the	Wain	wholly	over	Caurus	lies,
   And	far	beyond	there	we	descend	the	crag."                          	
                     Canto	XII
                          	
  The	place	where	to	descend	the	bank	we	came
 Was	alpine,	and	from	what	was	there,	moreover,
   Of	such	a	kind	that	every	eye	would	shun	it.
      Such	as	that	ruin	is	which	in	the	flank
     Smote,	on	this	side	of	Trent,	the	Adige,
     Either	by	earthquake	or	by	failing	stay,
For	from	the	mountain's	top,	from	which	it	moved,
      Unto	the	plain	the	cliff	is	shattered	so,
 Some	path	'twould	give	to	him	who	was	above;
    Even	such	was	the	descent	of	that	ravine,
     And	on	the	border	of	the	broken	chasm
    The	infamy	of	Crete	was	stretched	along,
    Who	was	conceived	in	the	fictitious	cow;
     And	when	he	us	beheld,	he	bit	himself,
      Even	as	one	whom	anger	racks	within.
  My	Sage	towards	him	shouted:	"Peradventure
Thou	think'st	that	here	may	be	the	Duke	of	Athens,
 Who	in	the	world	above	brought	death	to	thee?
   Get	thee	gone,	beast,	for	this	one	cometh	not
      Instructed	by	thy	sister,	but	he	comes
      In	order	to	behold	your	punishments."
  As	is	that	bull	who	breaks	loose	at	the	moment
    In	which	he	has	received	the	mortal	blow,
  Who	cannot	walk,	but	staggers	here	and	there,
        The	Minotaur	beheld	I	do	the	like;
  And	he,	the	wary,	cried:	"Run	to	the	passage;
 While	he	wroth,	'tis	well	thou	shouldst	descend."
  Thus	down	we	took	our	way	o'er	that	discharge
 Of	stones,	which	oftentimes	did	move	themselves
   Beneath	my	feet,	from	the	unwonted	burden.
Thoughtful	I	went;	and	he	said:	"Thou	art	thinking
     Perhaps	upon	this	ruin,	which	is	guarded
  By	that	brute	anger	which	just	now	I	quenched.
     Now	will	I	have	thee	know,	the	other	time
        I	here	descended	to	the	nether	Hell,
      This	precipice	had	not	yet	fallen	down.
         But	truly,	if	I	well	discern,	a	little
     Before	His	coming	who	the	mighty	spoil
     Bore	off	from	Dis,	in	the	supernal	circle,
   Upon	all	sides	the	deep	and	loathsome	valley
     Trembled	so,	that	I	thought	the	Universe
Was	thrilled	with	love,	by	which	there	are	who	think
     The	world	ofttimes	converted	into	chaos;
      And	at	that	moment	this	primeval	crag
  Both	here	and	elsewhere	made	such	overthrow.
     But	fix	thine	eyes	below;	for	draweth	near
    The	river	of	blood,	within	which	boiling	is
     Whoe'er	by	violence	doth	injure	others."
         O	blind	cupidity,	O	wrath	insane,
     That	spurs	us	onward	so	in	our	short	life,
     And	in	the	eternal	then	so	badly	steeps	us!
       I	saw	an	ample	moat	bent	like	a	bow,
     As	one	which	all	the	plain	encompasses,
     Conformable	to	what	my	Guide	had	said.
   And	between	this	and	the	embankment's	foot
 Centaurs	in	file	were	running,	armed	with	arrows,
  As	in	the	world	they	used	the	chase	to	follow.
    Beholding	us	descend,	each	one	stood	still,
And	from	the	squadron	three	detached	themselves,
    With	bows	and	arrows	in	advance	selected;
  And	from	afar	one	cried:	"Unto	what	torment
 Come	ye,	who	down	the	hillside	are	descending?
    Tell	us	from	there;	if	not,	I	draw	the	bow."
   My	Master	said:	"Our	answer	will	we	make
      To	Chiron,	near	you	there;	in	evil	hour,
    That	will	of	thine	was	evermore	so	hasty."
Then	touched	he	me,	and	said:	"This	one	is	Nessus,
      Who	perished	for	the	lovely	Dejanira,
   And	for	himself,	himself	did	vengeance	take.
 And	he	in	the	midst,	who	at	his	breast	is	gazing,
  Is	the	great	Chiron,	who	brought	up	Achilles;
    That	other	Pholus	is,	who	was	so	wrathful.
   Thousands	and	thousands	go	about	the	moat
   Shooting	with	shafts	whatever	soul	emerges
   Out	of	the	blood,	more	than	his	crime	allots."
  Near	we	approached	unto	those	monsters	fleet;
     Chiron	an	arrow	took,	and	with	the	notch
    Backward	upon	his	jaws	he	put	his	beard.
     After	he	had	uncovered	his	great	mouth,
    He	said	to	his	companions:	"Are	you	ware
   That	he	behind	moveth	whate'er	he	touches?
  Thus	are	not	wont	to	do	the	feet	of	dead	men."
 And	my	good	Guide,	who	now	was	at	his	breast,
    Where	the	two	natures	are	together	joined,
     Replied:	"Indeed	he	lives,	and	thus	alone
    Me	it	behoves	to	show	him	the	dark	valley;
      Necessity,	and	not	delight,	impels	us.
   Some	one	withdrew	from	singing	Halleluja,
    Who	unto	me	committed	this	new	office;
       No	thief	is	he,	nor	I	a	thievish	spirit.
  But	by	that	virtue	through	which	I	am	moving
    My	steps	along	this	savage	thoroughfare,
    Give	us	some	one	of	thine,	to	be	with	us,
  And	who	may	show	us	where	to	pass	the	ford,
    And	who	may	carry	this	one	on	his	back;
      For	'tis	no	spirit	that	can	walk	the	air."
   Upon	his	right	breast	Chiron	wheeled	about,
And	said	to	Nessus:	"Turn	and	do	thou	guide	them,
  And	warn	aside,	if	other	band	may	meet	you."
    We	with	our	faithful	escort	onward	moved
    Along	the	brink	of	the	vermilion	boiling,
 Wherein	the	boiled	were	uttering	loud	laments.
     People	I	saw	within	up	to	the	eyebrows,
  And	the	great	Centaur	said:	"Tyrants	are	these,
     Who	dealt	in	bloodshed	and	in	pillaging.
  Here	they	lament	their	pitiless	mischiefs;	here
        Is	Alexander,	and	fierce	Dionysius
    Who	upon	Sicily	brought	dolorous	years.
 That	forehead	there	which	has	the	hair	so	black
     Is	Azzolin;	and	the	other	who	is	blond,
         Obizzo	is	of	Esti,	who,	in	truth,
    Up	in	the	world	was	by	his	stepson	slain."
      Then	turned	I	to	the	Poet;	and	he	said,
     "Now	he	be	first	to	thee,	and	second	I."
      A	little	farther	on	the	Centaur	stopped
    Above	a	folk,	who	far	down	as	the	throat
 Seemed	from	that	boiling	stream	to	issue	forth.
    A	shade	he	showed	us	on	one	side	alone,
    Saying:	"He	cleft	asunder	in	God's	bosom
The	heart	that	still	upon	the	Thames	is	honoured."
   Then	people	saw	I,	who	from	out	the	river
     Lifted	their	heads	and	also	all	the	chest;
      And	many	among	these	I	recognised.
    Thus	ever	more	and	more	grew	shallower
   That	blood,	so	that	the	feet	alone	it	covered;
   And	there	across	the	moat	our	passage	was.
   "Even	as	thou	here	upon	this	side	beholdest
    The	boiling	stream,	that	aye	diminishes,"
    The	Centaur	said,	"I	wish	thee	to	believe
   That	on	this	other	more	and	more	declines
           Its	bed,	until	it	reunites	itself
       Where	it	behoveth	tyranny	to	groan.
    Justice	divine,	upon	this	side,	is	goading
    That	Attila,	who	was	a	scourge	on	earth,
  And	Pyrrhus,	and	Sextus;	and	for	ever	milks
   The	tears	which	with	the	boiling	it	unseals
     In	Rinier	da	Corneto	and	Rinier	Pazzo,
  Who	made	upon	the	highways	so	much	war."
 Then	back	he	turned,	and	passed	again	the	ford.                           	
                     Canto	XIII
                           	
   Not	yet	had	Nessus	reached	the	other	side,
   When	we	had	put	ourselves	within	a	wood,
   That	was	not	marked	by	any	path	whatever.
    Not	foliage	green,	but	of	a	dusky	colour,
Not	branches	smooth,	but	gnarled	and	intertangled,
Not	apple-trees	were	there,	but	thorns	with	poison.
   Such	tangled	thickets	have	not,	nor	so	dense,
   Those	savage	wild	beasts,	that	in	hatred	hold
    'Twixt	Cecina	and	Corneto	the	tilled	places.
  There	do	the	hideous	Harpies	make	their	nests,
   Who	chased	the	Trojans	from	the	Strophades,
   With	sad	announcement	of	impending	doom;
Broad	wings	have	they,	and	necks	and	faces	human,
And	feet	with	claws,	and	their	great	bellies	fledged;
   They	make	laments	upon	the	wondrous	trees.
   And	the	good	Master:	"Ere	thou	enter	farther,
   Know	that	thou	art	within	the	second	round,"
      Thus	he	began	to	say,	"and	shalt	be,	till
     Thou	comest	out	upon	the	horrible	sand;
  Therefore	look	well	around,	and	thou	shalt	see
 Things	that	will	credence	give	unto	my	speech."
     I	heard	on	all	sides	lamentations	uttered,
 And	person	none	beheld	I	who	might	make	them,
     Whence,	utterly	bewildered,	I	stood	still.
   I	think	he	thought	that	I	perhaps	might	think
    So	many	voices	issued	through	those	trunks
 From	people	who	concealed	themselves	from	us;
   Therefore	the	Master	said:	"If	thou	break	off
     Some	little	spray	from	any	of	these	trees,
The	thoughts	thou	hast	will	wholly	be	made	vain."
  Then	stretched	I	forth	my	hand	a	little	forward,
  And	plucked	a	branchlet	off	from	a	great	thorn;
And	the	trunk	cried,	"Why	dost	thou	mangle	me?"
   After	it	had	become	embrowned	with	blood,
It	recommenced	its	cry:	"Why	dost	thou	rend	me?
     Hast	thou	no	spirit	of	pity	whatsoever?
Men	once	we	were,	and	now	are	changed	to	trees;
     Indeed,	thy	hand	should	be	more	pitiful,
   Even	if	the	souls	of	serpents	we	had	been."
      As	out	of	a	green	brand,	that	is	on	fire
   At	one	of	the	ends,	and	from	the	other	drips
    And	hisses	with	the	wind	that	is	escaping;
    So	from	that	splinter	issued	forth	together
   Both	words	and	blood;	whereat	I	let	the	tip
     Fall,	and	stood	like	a	man	who	is	afraid.
      "Had	he	been	able	sooner	to	believe,"
 My	Sage	made	answer,	"O	thou	wounded	soul,
       What	only	in	my	verses	he	has	seen,
  Not	upon	thee	had	he	stretched	forth	his	hand;
   Whereas	the	thing	incredible	has	caused	me
     To	put	him	to	an	act	which	grieveth	me.
   But	tell	him	who	thou	wast,	so	that	by	way
    Of	some	amends	thy	fame	he	may	refresh
    Up	in	the	world,	to	which	he	can	return."
And	the	trunk	said:	"So	thy	sweet	words	allure	me,
     I	cannot	silent	be;	and	you	be	vexed	not,
      That	I	a	little	to	discourse	am	tempted.
   I	am	the	one	who	both	keys	had	in	keeping
 Of	Frederick's	heart,	and	turned	them	to	and	fro
      So	softly	in	unlocking	and	in	locking,
   That	from	his	secrets	most	men	I	withheld;
        Fidelity	I	bore	the	glorious	office
   So	great,	I	lost	thereby	my	sleep	and	pulses.
   The	courtesan	who	never	from	the	dwelling
      Of	Caesar	turned	aside	her	strumpet	eyes,
        Death	universal	and	the	vice	of	courts,
       Inflamed	against	me	all	the	other	minds,
    And	they,	inflamed,	did	so	inflame	Augustus,
  That	my	glad	honours	turned	to	dismal	mournings.
          My	spirit,	in	disdainful	exultation,
         Thinking	by	dying	to	escape	disdain,
       Made	me	unjust	against	myself,	the	just.
        I,	by	the	roots	unwonted	of	this	wood,
       Do	swear	to	you	that	never	broke	I	faith
    Unto	my	lord,	who	was	so	worthy	of	honour;
        And	to	the	world	if	one	of	you	return,
     Let	him	my	memory	comfort,	which	is	lying
   Still	prostrate	from	the	blow	that	envy	dealt	it."
     Waited	awhile,	and	then:	"Since	he	is	silent,"
       The	Poet	said	to	me,	"lose	not	the	time,
But	speak,	and	question	him,	if	more	may	please	thee."
       Whence	I	to	him:	"Do	thou	again	inquire
    Concerning	what	thou	thinks't	will	satisfy	me;
        For	I	cannot,	such	pity	is	in	my	heart."
    Therefore	he	recommenced:	"So	may	the	man
     Do	for	thee	freely	what	thy	speech	implores,
          Spirit	incarcerate,	again	be	pleased
       To	tell	us	in	what	way	the	soul	is	bound
     Within	these	knots;	and	tell	us,	if	thou	canst,
       If	any	from	such	members	e'er	is	freed."
      Then	blew	the	trunk	amain,	and	afterward
      The	wind	was	into	such	a	voice	converted:
         "With	brevity	shall	be	replied	to	you.
         When	the	exasperated	soul	abandons
       The	body	whence	it	rent	itself	away,
      Minos	consigns	it	to	the	seventh	abyss.
         It	falls	into	the	forest,	and	no	part
    Is	chosen	for	it;	but	where	Fortune	hurls	it,
     There	like	a	grain	of	spelt	it	germinates.
       It	springs	a	sapling,	and	a	forest	tree;
    The	Harpies,	feeding	then	upon	its	leaves,
     Do	pain	create,	and	for	the	pain	an	outlet.
     Like	others	for	our	spoils	shall	we	return;
      But	not	that	any	one	may	them	revest,
    For	'tis	not	just	to	have	what	one	casts	off.
  Here	we	shall	drag	them,	and	along	the	dismal
       Forest	our	bodies	shall	suspended	be,
     Each	to	the	thorn	of	his	molested	shade."
       We	were	attentive	still	unto	the	trunk,
  Thinking	that	more	it	yet	might	wish	to	tell	us,
      When	by	a	tumult	we	were	overtaken,
      In	the	same	way	as	he	is	who	perceives
   The	boar	and	chase	approaching	to	his	stand,
Who	hears	the	crashing	of	the	beasts	and	branches;
     And	two	behold!	upon	our	left-hand	side,
    Naked	and	scratched,	fleeing	so	furiously,
     That	of	the	forest,	every	fan	they	broke.
He	who	was	in	advance:	"Now	help,	Death,	help!"
 And	the	other	one,	who	seemed	to	lag	too	much,
      Was	shouting:	"Lano,	were	not	so	alert
  Those	legs	of	thine	at	joustings	of	the	Toppo!"
And	then,	perchance	because	his	breath	was	failing,
     He	grouped	himself	together	with	a	bush.
     Behind	them	was	the	forest	full	of	black
       She-mastiffs,	ravenous,	and	swift	of	foot
   As	greyhounds,	who	are	issuing	from	the	chain.
 On	him	who	had	crouched	down	they	set	their	teeth,
       And	him	they	lacerated	piece	by	piece,
     Thereafter	bore	away	those	aching	members.
       Thereat	my	Escort	took	me	by	the	hand,
       And	led	me	to	the	bush,	that	all	in	vain
      Was	weeping	from	its	bloody	lacerations.
        "O	Jacopo,"	it	said,	"of	Sant'	Andrea,
     What	helped	it	thee	of	me	to	make	a	screen?
      What	blame	have	I	in	thy	nefarious	life?"
   When	near	him	had	the	Master	stayed	his	steps,
He	said:	"Who	wast	thou,	that	through	wounds	so	many
  Art	blowing	out	with	blood	thy	dolorous	speech?"
       And	he	to	us:	"O	souls,	that	hither	come
         To	look	upon	the	shameful	massacre
      That	has	so	rent	away	from	me	my	leaves,
      Gather	them	up	beneath	the	dismal	bush;
        I	of	that	city	was	which	to	the	Baptist
    Changed	its	first	patron,	wherefore	he	for	this
        Forever	with	his	art	will	make	it	sad.
       And	were	it	not	that	on	the	pass	of	Arno
      Some	glimpses	of	him	are	remaining	still,
       Those	citizens,	who	afterwards	rebuilt	it
            Upon	the	ashes	left	by	Attila,
      In	vain	had	caused	their	labour	to	be	done.
     Of	my	own	house	I	made	myself	a	gibbet."                           	
                     Canto	XIV
                           	
      Because	the	charity	of	my	native	place
 Constrained	me,	gathered	I	the	scattered	leaves,
And	gave	them	back	to	him,	who	now	was	hoarse.
  Then	came	we	to	the	confine,	where	disparted
  The	second	round	is	from	the	third,	and	where
       A	horrible	form	of	Justice	is	beheld.
      Clearly	to	manifest	these	novel	things,
        I	say	that	we	arrived	upon	a	plain,
     Which	from	its	bed	rejecteth	every	plant;
       The	dolorous	forest	is	a	garland	to	it
     All	round	about,	as	the	sad	moat	to	that;
  There	close	upon	the	edge	we	stayed	our	feet.
      The	soil	was	of	an	arid	and	thick	sand,
      Not	of	another	fashion	made	than	that
   Which	by	the	feet	of	Cato	once	was	pressed.
  Vengeance	of	God,	O	how	much	oughtest	thou
    By	each	one	to	be	dreaded,	who	doth	read
    That	which	was	manifest	unto	mine	eyes!
       Of	naked	souls	beheld	I	many	herds,
      Who	all	were	weeping	very	miserably,
     And	over	them	seemed	set	a	law	diverse.
  Supine	upon	the	ground	some	folk	were	lying;
   And	some	were	sitting	all	drawn	up	together,
        And	others	went	about	continually.
 Those	who	were	going	round	were	far	the	more,
And	those	were	less	who	lay	down	to	their	torment,
But	had	their	tongues	more	loosed	to	lamentation.
    O'er	all	the	sand-waste,	with	a	gradual	fall,
     Were	raining	down	dilated	flakes	of	fire,
      As	of	the	snow	on	Alp	without	a	wind.
       As	Alexander,	in	those	torrid	parts
         Of	India,	beheld	upon	his	host
Flames	fall	unbroken	till	they	reached	the	ground.
     Whence	he	provided	with	his	phalanxes
  To	trample	down	the	soil,	because	the	vapour
  Better	extinguished	was	while	it	was	single;
      Thus	was	descending	the	eternal	heat,
  Whereby	the	sand	was	set	on	fire,	like	tinder
   Beneath	the	steel,	for	doubling	of	the	dole.
      Without	repose	forever	was	the	dance
    Of	miserable	hands,	now	there,	now	here,
  Shaking	away	from	off	them	the	fresh	gleeds.
    "Master,"	began	I,	"thou	who	overcomest
  All	things	except	the	demons	dire,	that	issued
      Against	us	at	the	entrance	of	the	gate,
 Who	is	that	mighty	one	who	seems	to	heed	not
   The	fire,	and	lieth	lowering	and	disdainful,
    So	that	the	rain	seems	not	to	ripen	him?"
    And	he	himself,	who	had	become	aware
  That	I	was	questioning	my	Guide	about	him,
    Cried:	"Such	as	I	was	living,	am	I,	dead.
 If	Jove	should	weary	out	his	smith,	from	whom
    He	seized	in	anger	the	sharp	thunderbolt,
   Wherewith	upon	the	last	day	I	was	smitten,
    And	if	he	wearied	out	by	turns	the	others
       In	Mongibello	at	the	swarthy	forge,
     Vociferating,	'Help,	good	Vulcan,	help!'
   Even	as	he	did	there	at	the	fight	of	Phlegra,
   And	shot	his	bolts	at	me	with	all	his	might,
He	would	not	have	thereby	a	joyous	vengeance."
 Then	did	my	Leader	speak	with	such	great	force,
    That	I	had	never	heard	him	speak	so	loud:
     "O	Capaneus,	in	that	is	not	extinguished
  Thine	arrogance,	thou	punished	art	the	more;
     Not	any	torment,	saving	thine	own	rage,
     Would	be	unto	thy	fury	pain	complete."
   Then	he	turned	round	to	me	with	better	lip,
    Saying:	"One	of	the	Seven	Kings	was	he
Who	Thebes	besieged,	and	held,	and	seems	to	hold
  God	in	disdain,	and	little	seems	to	prize	him;
      But,	as	I	said	to	him,	his	own	despites
     Are	for	his	breast	the	fittest	ornaments.
   Now	follow	me,	and	mind	thou	do	not	place
      As	yet	thy	feet	upon	the	burning	sand,
   But	always	keep	them	close	unto	the	wood."
Speaking	no	word,	we	came	to	where	there	gushes
       Forth	from	the	wood	a	little	rivulet,
 Whose	redness	makes	my	hair	still	stand	on	end.
   As	from	the	Bulicame	springs	the	brooklet,
   The	sinful	women	later	share	among	them,
  So	downward	through	the	sand	it	went	its	way.
    The	bottom	of	it,	and	both	sloping	banks,
 Were	made	of	stone,	and	the	margins	at	the	side;
 Whence	I	perceived	that	there	the	passage	was.
    "In	all	the	rest	which	I	have	shown	to	thee
     Since	we	have	entered	in	within	the	gate
     Whose	threshold	unto	no	one	is	denied,
   Nothing	has	been	discovered	by	thine	eyes
        So	notable	as	is	the	present	river,
  Which	all	the	little	flames	above	it	quenches."
These	words	were	of	my	Leader;	whence	I	prayed	him
     That	he	would	give	me	largess	of	the	food,
    For	which	he	had	given	me	largess	of	desire.
      "In	the	mid-sea	there	sits	a	wasted	land,"
   Said	he	thereafterward,	"whose	name	is	Crete,
   Under	whose	king	the	world	of	old	was	chaste.
    There	is	a	mountain	there,	that	once	was	glad
 With	waters	and	with	leaves,	which	was	called	Ida;
       Now	'tis	deserted,	as	a	thing	worn	out.
      Rhea	once	chose	it	for	the	faithful	cradle
     Of	her	own	son;	and	to	conceal	him	better,
  Whene'er	he	cried,	she	there	had	clamours	made.
     A	grand	old	man	stands	in	the	mount	erect,
  Who	holds	his	shoulders	turned	tow'rds	Damietta,
     And	looks	at	Rome	as	if	it	were	his	mirror.
       His	head	is	fashioned	of	refined	gold,
     And	of	pure	silver	are	the	arms	and	breast;
      Then	he	is	brass	as	far	down	as	the	fork.
    From	that	point	downward	all	is	chosen	iron,
    Save	that	the	right	foot	is	of	kiln-baked	clay,
    And	more	he	stands	on	that	than	on	the	other.
      Each	part,	except	the	gold,	is	by	a	fissure
      Asunder	cleft,	that	dripping	is	with	tears,
   Which	gathered	together	perforate	that	cavern.
     From	rock	to	rock	they	fall	into	this	valley;
     Acheron,	Styx,	and	Phlegethon	they	form;
    Then	downward	go	along	this	narrow	sluice
    Unto	that	point	where	is	no	more	descending.
     They	form	Cocytus;	what	that	pool	may	be
    Thou	shalt	behold,	so	here	'tis	not	narrated."
     And	I	to	him:	"If	so	the	present	runnel
  Doth	take	its	rise	in	this	way	from	our	world,
    Why	only	on	this	verge	appears	it	to	us?"
And	he	to	me:	"Thou	knowest	the	place	is	round,
  And	notwithstanding	thou	hast	journeyed	far,
    Still	to	the	left	descending	to	the	bottom,
 Thou	hast	not	yet	through	all	the	circle	turned.
    Therefore	if	something	new	appear	to	us,
   It	should	not	bring	amazement	to	thy	face."
   And	I	again:	"Master,	where	shall	be	found
 Lethe	and	Phlegethon,	for	of	one	thou'rt	silent,
   And	sayest	the	other	of	this	rain	is	made?"
 "In	all	thy	questions	truly	thou	dost	please	me,"
     Replied	he;	"but	the	boiling	of	the	red
Water	might	well	solve	one	of	them	thou	makest.
   Thou	shalt	see	Lethe,	but	outside	this	moat,
There	where	the	souls	repair	to	lave	themselves,
   When	sin	repented	of	has	been	removed."
    Then	said	he:	"It	is	time	now	to	abandon
 The	wood;	take	heed	that	thou	come	after	me;
  A	way	the	margins	make	that	are	not	burning,
  And	over	them	all	vapours	are	extinguished."
                         	
                    Canto	XV
                         	
 Now	bears	us	onward	one	of	the	hard	margins,
    And	so	the	brooklet's	mist	o'ershadows	it,
   From	fire	it	saves	the	water	and	the	dikes.
Even	as	the	Flemings,	'twixt	Cadsand	and	Bruges,
 Fearing	the	flood	that	tow'rds	them	hurls	itself,
   Their	bulwarks	build	to	put	the	sea	to	flight;
      And	as	the	Paduans	along	the	Brenta,
      To	guard	their	villas	and	their	villages,
        Or	ever	Chiarentana	feel	the	heat;
     In	such	similitude	had	those	been	made,
         Albeit	not	so	lofty	nor	so	thick,
  Whoever	he	might	be,	the	master	made	them.
     Now	were	we	from	the	forest	so	remote,
    I	could	not	have	discovered	where	it	was,
      Even	if	backward	I	had	turned	myself,
    When	we	a	company	of	souls	encountered,
    Who	came	beside	the	dike,	and	every	one
      Gazed	at	us,	as	at	evening	we	are	wont
      To	eye	each	other	under	a	new	moon,
  And	so	towards	us	sharpened	they	their	brows
        As	an	old	tailor	at	the	needle's	eye.
        Thus	scrutinised	by	such	a	family,
    By	some	one	I	was	recognised,	who	seized
My	garment's	hem,	and	cried	out,	"What	a	marvel!"
  And	I,	when	he	stretched	forth	his	arm	to	me,
    On	his	baked	aspect	fastened	so	mine	eyes,
   That	the	scorched	countenance	prevented	not
         His	recognition	by	my	intellect;
    And	bowing	down	my	face	unto	his	own,
   I	made	reply,	"Are	you	here,	Ser	Brunetto?"
   And	he:	"May't	not	displease	thee,	O	my	son,
     If	a	brief	space	with	thee	Brunetto	Latini
     Backward	return	and	let	the	trail	go	on."
    I	said	to	him:	"With	all	my	power	I	ask	it;
    And	if	you	wish	me	to	sit	down	with	you,
     I	will,	if	he	please,	for	I	go	with	him."
     "O	son,"	he	said,	"whoever	of	this	herd
   A	moment	stops,	lies	then	a	hundred	years,
  Nor	fans	himself	when	smiteth	him	the	fire.
   Therefore	go	on;	I	at	thy	skirts	will	come,
      And	afterward	will	I	rejoin	my	band,
    Which	goes	lamenting	its	eternal	doom."
    I	did	not	dare	to	go	down	from	the	road
  Level	to	walk	with	him;	but	my	head	bowed
       I	held	as	one	who	goeth	reverently.
   And	he	began:	"What	fortune	or	what	fate
  Before	the	last	day	leadeth	thee	down	here?
  And	who	is	this	that	showeth	thee	the	way?"
     "Up	there	above	us	in	the	life	serene,"
     I	answered	him,	"I	lost	me	in	a	valley,
    Or	ever	yet	my	age	had	been	completed.
   But	yestermorn	I	turned	my	back	upon	it;
   This	one	appeared	to	me,	returning	thither,
  And	homeward	leadeth	me	along	this	road."
   And	he	to	me:	"If	thou	thy	star	do	follow,
   Thou	canst	not	fail	thee	of	a	glorious	port,
      If	well	I	judged	in	the	life	beautiful.
      And	if	I	had	not	died	so	prematurely,
    Seeing	Heaven	thus	benignant	unto	thee,
  I	would	have	given	thee	comfort	in	the	work.
   But	that	ungrateful	and	malignant	people,
   Which	of	old	time	from	Fesole	descended,
And	smacks	still	of	the	mountain	and	the	granite,
  Will	make	itself,	for	thy	good	deeds,	thy	foe;
    And	it	is	right;	for	among	crabbed	sorbs
        It	ill	befits	the	sweet	fig	to	bear	fruit.
  Old	rumour	in	the	world	proclaims	them	blind;
        A	people	avaricious,	envious,	proud;
Take	heed	that	of	their	customs	thou	do	cleanse	thee.
  Thy	fortune	so	much	honour	doth	reserve	thee,
      One	party	and	the	other	shall	be	hungry
   For	thee;	but	far	from	goat	shall	be	the	grass.
         Their	litter	let	the	beasts	of	Fesole
 Make	of	themselves,	nor	let	them	touch	the	plant,
         If	any	still	upon	their	dunghill	rise,
      In	which	may	yet	revive	the	consecrated
 Seed	of	those	Romans,	who	remained	there	when
     The	nest	of	such	great	malice	it	became."
       "If	my	entreaty	wholly	were	fulfilled,"
      Replied	I	to	him,	"not	yet	would	you	be
     In	banishment	from	human	nature	placed;
     For	in	my	mind	is	fixed,	and	touches	now
    My	heart	the	dear	and	good	paternal	image
    Of	you,	when	in	the	world	from	hour	to	hour
    You	taught	me	how	a	man	becomes	eternal;
     And	how	much	I	am	grateful,	while	I	live
     Behoves	that	in	my	language	be	discerned.
       What	you	narrate	of	my	career	I	write,
      And	keep	it	to	be	glossed	with	other	text
      By	a	Lady	who	can	do	it,	if	I	reach	her.
       This	much	will	I	have	manifest	to	you;
   Provided	that	my	conscience	do	not	chide	me,
        For	whatsoever	Fortune	I	am	ready.
      Such	handsel	is	not	new	unto	mine	ears;
    Therefore	let	Fortune	turn	her	wheel	around
 As	it	may	please	her,	and	the	churl	his	mattock."
     My	Master	thereupon	on	his	right	cheek
  Did	backward	turn	himself,	and	looked	at	me;
  Then	said:	"He	listeneth	well	who	noteth	it."
     Nor	speaking	less	on	that	account,	I	go
      With	Ser	Brunetto,	and	I	ask	who	are
 His	most	known	and	most	eminent	companions.
    And	he	to	me:	"To	know	of	some	is	well;
      Of	others	it	were	laudable	to	be	silent,
 For	short	would	be	the	time	for	so	much	speech.
 Know	them	in	sum,	that	all	of	them	were	clerks,
   And	men	of	letters	great	and	of	great	fame,
    In	the	world	tainted	with	the	selfsame	sin.
 Priscian	goes	yonder	with	that	wretched	crowd,
And	Francis	of	Accorso;	and	thou	hadst	seen	there
   If	thou	hadst	had	a	hankering	for	such	scurf,
  That	one,	who	by	the	Servant	of	the	Servants
   From	Arno	was	transferred	to	Bacchiglione,
     Where	he	has	left	his	sin-excited	nerves.
 More	would	I	say,	but	coming	and	discoursing
       Can	be	no	longer;	for	that	I	behold
   New	smoke	uprising	yonder	from	the	sand.
    A	people	comes	with	whom	I	may	not	be;
      Commended	unto	thee	be	my	Tesoro,
     In	which	I	still	live,	and	no	more	I	ask."
Then	he	turned	round,	and	seemed	to	be	of	those
    Who	at	Verona	run	for	the	Green	Mantle
 Across	the	plain;	and	seemed	to	be	among	them
  The	one	who	wins,	and	not	the	one	who	loses.                         	
                      Canto	XVI                           	
   Now	was	I	where	was	heard	the	reverberation
        Of	water	falling	into	the	next	round,
  Like	to	that	humming	which	the	beehives	make,
     When	shadows	three	together	started	forth,
     Running,	from	out	a	company	that	passed
     Beneath	the	rain	of	the	sharp	martyrdom.
   Towards	us	came	they,	and	each	one	cried	out:
   "Stop,	thou;	for	by	thy	garb	to	us	thou	seemest
       To	be	some	one	of	our	depraved	city."
    Ah	me!	what	wounds	I	saw	upon	their	limbs,
     Recent	and	ancient	by	the	flames	burnt	in!
        It	pains	me	still	but	to	remember	it.
   Unto	their	cries	my	Teacher	paused	attentive;
  He	turned	his	face	towards	me,	and	"Now	wait,"
     He	said;	"to	these	we	should	be	courteous.
       And	if	it	were	not	for	the	fire	that	darts
       The	nature	of	this	region,	I	should	say
  That	haste	were	more	becoming	thee	than	them."
    As	soon	as	we	stood	still,	they	recommenced
    The	old	refrain,	and	when	they	overtook	us,
  Formed	of	themselves	a	wheel,	all	three	of	them.
  As	champions	stripped	and	oiled	are	wont	to	do,
    Watching	for	their	advantage	and	their	hold,
Before	they	come	to	blows	and	thrusts	between	them,
   Thus,	wheeling	round,	did	every	one	his	visage
       Direct	to	me,	so	that	in	opposite	wise
     His	neck	and	feet	continual	journey	made.
        And,	"If	the	misery	of	this	soft	place
    Bring	in	disdain	ourselves	and	our	entreaties,"
   Began	one,	"and	our	aspect	black	and	blistered,
        Let	the	renown	of	us	thy	mind	incline
      To	tell	us	who	thou	art,	who	thus	securely
    Thy	living	feet	dost	move	along	through	Hell.
  He	in	whose	footprints	thou	dost	see	me	treading,
     Naked	and	skinless	though	he	now	may	go,
     Was	of	a	greater	rank	than	thou	dost	think;
    He	was	the	grandson	of	the	good	Gualdrada;
       His	name	was	Guidoguerra,	and	in	life
    Much	did	he	with	his	wisdom	and	his	sword.
     The	other,	who	close	by	me	treads	the	sand,
        Tegghiaio	Aldobrandi	is,	whose	fame
    Above	there	in	the	world	should	welcome	be.
    And	I,	who	with	them	on	the	cross	am	placed,
          Jacopo	Rusticucci	was;	and	truly
My	savage	wife,	more	than	aught	else,	doth	harm	me."
      Could	I	have	been	protected	from	the	fire,
  Below	I	should	have	thrown	myself	among	them,
    And	think	the	Teacher	would	have	suffered	it;
   But	as	I	should	have	burned	and	baked	myself,
        My	terror	overmastered	my	good	will,
     Which	made	me	greedy	of	embracing	them.
       Then	I	began:	"Sorrow	and	not	disdain
        Did	your	condition	fix	within	me	so,
        That	tardily	it	wholly	is	stripped	off,
        As	soon	as	this	my	Lord	said	unto	me
  Words,	on	account	of	which	I	thought	within	me
   That	people	such	as	you	are	were	approaching.
           I	of	your	city	am;	and	evermore
    Your	labours	and	your	honourable	names
    I	with	affection	have	retraced	and	heard.
   I	leave	the	gall,	and	go	for	the	sweet	fruits
    Promised	to	me	by	the	veracious	Leader;
   But	to	the	centre	first	I	needs	must	plunge."
   "So	may	the	soul	for	a	long	while	conduct
Those	limbs	of	thine,"	did	he	make	answer	then,
    "And	so	may	thy	renown	shine	after	thee,
      Valour	and	courtesy,	say	if	they	dwell
       Within	our	city,	as	they	used	to	do,
      Or	if	they	wholly	have	gone	out	of	it;
    For	Guglielmo	Borsier,	who	is	in	torment
With	us	of	late,	and	goes	there	with	his	comrades,
    Doth	greatly	mortify	us	with	his	words."
   "The	new	inhabitants	and	the	sudden	gains,
Pride	and	extravagance	have	in	thee	engendered,
 Florence,	so	that	thou	weep'st	thereat	already!"
   In	this	wise	I	exclaimed	with	face	uplifted;
     And	the	three,	taking	that	for	my	reply,
   Looked	at	each	other,	as	one	looks	at	truth.
    "If	other	times	so	little	it	doth	cost	thee,"
       Replied	they	all,	"to	satisfy	another,
    Happy	art	thou,	thus	speaking	at	thy	will!
Therefore,	if	thou	escape	from	these	dark	places,
   And	come	to	rebehold	the	beauteous	stars,
    When	it	shall	pleasure	thee	to	say,	'I	was,'
   See	that	thou	speak	of	us	unto	the	people."
Then	they	broke	up	the	wheel,	and	in	their	flight
   It	seemed	as	if	their	agile	legs	were	wings.
      Not	an	Amen	could	possibly	be	said
      So	rapidly	as	they	had	disappeared;
  Wherefore	the	Master	deemed	best	to	depart.
     I	followed	him,	and	little	had	we	gone,
   Before	the	sound	of	water	was	so	near	us,
That	speaking	we	should	hardly	have	been	heard.
Even	as	that	stream	which	holdeth	its	own	course
  The	first	from	Monte	Veso	tow'rds	the	East,
     Upon	the	left-hand	slope	of	Apennine,
     Which	is	above	called	Acquacheta,	ere
      It	down	descendeth	into	its	low	bed,
      And	at	Forli	is	vacant	of	that	name,
    Reverberates	there	above	San	Benedetto
     From	Alps,	by	falling	at	a	single	leap,
 Where	for	a	thousand	there	were	room	enough;
    Thus	downward	from	a	bank	precipitate,
  We	found	resounding	that	dark-tinted	water,
  So	that	it	soon	the	ear	would	have	offended.
       I	had	a	cord	around	about	me	girt,
    And	therewithal	I	whilom	had	designed
   To	take	the	panther	with	the	painted	skin.
     After	I	this	had	all	from	me	unloosed,
    As	my	Conductor	had	commanded	me,
   I	reached	it	to	him,	gathered	up	and	coiled,
  Whereat	he	turned	himself	to	the	right	side,
     And	at	a	little	distance	from	the	verge,
      He	cast	it	down	into	that	deep	abyss.
   "It	must	needs	be	some	novelty	respond,"
    I	said	within	myself,	"to	the	new	signal
   The	Master	with	his	eye	is	following	so."
   Ah	me!	how	very	cautious	men	should	be
       With	those	who	not	alone	behold	the	act,
    But	with	their	wisdom	look	into	the	thoughts!
    He	said	to	me:	"Soon	there	will	upward	come
   What	I	await;	and	what	thy	thought	is	dreaming
        Must	soon	reveal	itself	unto	thy	sight."
   Aye	to	that	truth	which	has	the	face	of	falsehood,
     A	man	should	close	his	lips	as	far	as	may	be,
      Because	without	his	fault	it	causes	shame;
     But	here	I	cannot;	and,	Reader,	by	the	notes
         Of	this	my	Comedy	to	thee	I	swear,
      So	may	they	not	be	void	of	lasting	favour,
    Athwart	that	dense	and	darksome	atmosphere
       I	saw	a	figure	swimming	upward	come,
        Marvellous	unto	every	steadfast	heart,
         Even	as	he	returns	who	goeth	down
  Sometimes	to	clear	an	anchor,	which	has	grappled
     Reef,	or	aught	else	that	in	the	sea	is	hidden,
     Who	upward	stretches,	and	draws	in	his	feet.                           	
                     Canto	XVII
                           	
      "Behold	the	monster	with	the	pointed	tail,
Who	cleaves	the	hills,	and	breaketh	walls	and	weapons,
       Behold	him	who	infecteth	all	the	world."
        Thus	unto	me	my	Guide	began	to	say,
   And	beckoned	him	that	he	should	come	to	shore,
      Near	to	the	confine	of	the	trodden	marble;
          And	that	uncleanly	image	of	deceit
     Came	up	and	thrust	ashore	its	head	and	bust,
        But	on	the	border	did	not	drag	its	tail.
    The	face	was	as	the	face	of	a	just	man,
   Its	semblance	outwardly	was	so	benign,
     And	of	a	serpent	all	the	trunk	beside.
   Two	paws	it	had,	hairy	unto	the	armpits;
The	back,	and	breast,	and	both	the	sides	it	had
 Depicted	o'er	with	nooses	and	with	shields.
 With	colours	more,	groundwork	or	broidery
  Never	in	cloth	did	Tartars	make	nor	Turks,
    Nor	were	such	tissues	by	Arachne	laid.
  As	sometimes	wherries	lie	upon	the	shore,
    That	part	are	in	the	water,	part	on	land;
 And	as	among	the	guzzling	Germans	there,
  The	beaver	plants	himself	to	wage	his	war;
   So	that	vile	monster	lay	upon	the	border,
  Which	is	of	stone,	and	shutteth	in	the	sand.
  His	tail	was	wholly	quivering	in	the	void,
  Contorting	upwards	the	envenomed	fork,
 That	in	the	guise	of	scorpion	armed	its	point.
The	Guide	said:	"Now	perforce	must	turn	aside
      Our	way	a	little,	even	to	that	beast
   Malevolent,	that	yonder	coucheth	him."
  We	therefore	on	the	right	side	descended,
  And	made	ten	steps	upon	the	outer	verge,
   Completely	to	avoid	the	sand	and	flame;
     And	after	we	are	come	to	him,	I	see
       A	little	farther	off	upon	the	sand
    A	people	sitting	near	the	hollow	place.
   Then	said	to	me	the	Master:	"So	that	full
   Experience	of	this	round	thou	bear	away,
   Now	go	and	see	what	their	condition	is.
       There	let	thy	conversation	be	concise;
      Till	thou	returnest	I	will	speak	with	him,
    That	he	concede	to	us	his	stalwart	shoulders."
        Thus	farther	still	upon	the	outermost
        Head	of	that	seventh	circle	all	alone
       I	went,	where	sat	the	melancholy	folk.
   Out	of	their	eyes	was	gushing	forth	their	woe;
This	way,	that	way,	they	helped	them	with	their	hands
  Now	from	the	flames	and	now	from	the	hot	soil.
       Not	otherwise	in	summer	do	the	dogs,
   Now	with	the	foot,	now	with	the	muzzle,	when
    By	fleas,	or	flies,	or	gadflies,	they	are	bitten.
    When	I	had	turned	mine	eyes	upon	the	faces
   Of	some,	on	whom	the	dolorous	fire	is	falling,
      Not	one	of	them	I	knew;	but	I	perceived
   That	from	the	neck	of	each	there	hung	a	pouch,
    Which	certain	colour	had,	and	certain	blazon;
   And	thereupon	it	seems	their	eyes	are	feeding.
    And	as	I	gazing	round	me	come	among	them,
          Upon	a	yellow	pouch	I	azure	saw
       That	had	the	face	and	posture	of	a	lion.
      Proceeding	then	the	current	of	my	sight,
        Another	of	them	saw	I,	red	as	blood,
     Display	a	goose	more	white	than	butter	is.
    And	one,	who	with	an	azure	sow	and	gravid
      Emblazoned	had	his	little	pouch	of	white,
    Said	unto	me:	"What	dost	thou	in	this	moat?
   Now	get	thee	gone;	and	since	thou'rt	still	alive,
     Know	that	a	neighbour	of	mine,	Vitaliano,
    Will	have	his	seat	here	on	my	left-hand	side.
     A	Paduan	am	I	with	these	Florentines;
  Full	many	a	time	they	thunder	in	mine	ears,
   Exclaiming,	'Come	the	sovereign	cavalier,
He	who	shall	bring	the	satchel	with	three	goats;'"
 Then	twisted	he	his	mouth,	and	forth	he	thrust
   His	tongue,	like	to	an	ox	that	licks	its	nose.
   And	fearing	lest	my	longer	stay	might	vex
   Him	who	had	warned	me	not	to	tarry	long,
 Backward	I	turned	me	from	those	weary	souls.
  I	found	my	Guide,	who	had	already	mounted
       Upon	the	back	of	that	wild	animal,
 And	said	to	me:	"Now	be	both	strong	and	bold.
  Now	we	descend	by	stairways	such	as	these;
   Mount	thou	in	front,	for	I	will	be	midway,
So	that	the	tail	may	have	no	power	to	harm	thee."
     Such	as	he	is	who	has	so	near	the	ague
    Of	quartan	that	his	nails	are	blue	already,
   And	trembles	all,	but	looking	at	the	shade;
 Even	such	became	I	at	those	proffered	words;
    But	shame	in	me	his	menaces	produced,
Which	maketh	servant	strong	before	good	master.
  I	seated	me	upon	those	monstrous	shoulders;
   I	wished	to	say,	and	yet	the	voice	came	not
As	I	believed,	"Take	heed	that	thou	embrace	me."
    But	he,	who	other	times	had	rescued	me
      In	other	peril,	soon	as	I	had	mounted,
  Within	his	arms	encircled	and	sustained	me,
    And	said:	"Now,	Geryon,	bestir	thyself;
   The	circles	large,	and	the	descent	be	little;
  Think	of	the	novel	burden	which	thou	hast."
     Even	as	the	little	vessel	shoves	from	shore,
  Backward,	still	backward,	so	he	thence	withdrew;
       And	when	he	wholly	felt	himself	afloat,
  There	where	his	breast	had	been	he	turned	his	tail,
       And	that	extended	like	an	eel	he	moved,
      And	with	his	paws	drew	to	himself	the	air.
        A	greater	fear	I	do	not	think	there	was
       What	time	abandoned	Phaeton	the	reins,
Whereby	the	heavens,	as	still	appears,	were	scorched;
       Nor	when	the	wretched	Icarus	his	flanks
     Felt	stripped	of	feathers	by	the	melting	wax,
     His	father	crying,	"An	ill	way	thou	takest!"
     Than	was	my	own,	when	I	perceived	myself
     On	all	sides	in	the	air,	and	saw	extinguished
     The	sight	of	everything	but	of	the	monster.
    Onward	he	goeth,	swimming	slowly,	slowly;
     Wheels	and	descends,	but	I	perceive	it	only
       By	wind	upon	my	face	and	from	below.
      I	heard	already	on	the	right	the	whirlpool
        Making	a	horrible	crashing	under	us;
Whence	I	thrust	out	my	head	with	eyes	cast	downward.
      Then	was	I	still	more	fearful	of	the	abyss;
      Because	I	fires	beheld,	and	heard	laments,
      Whereat	I,	trembling,	all	the	closer	cling.
       I	saw	then,	for	before	I	had	not	seen	it,
    The	turning	and	descending,	by	great	horrors
      That	were	approaching	upon	divers	sides.
      As	falcon	who	has	long	been	on	the	wing,
       Who,	without	seeing	either	lure	or	bird,
  Maketh	the	falconer	say,	"Ah	me,	thou	stoopest,"
  Descendeth	weary,	whence	he	started	swiftly,
    Thorough	a	hundred	circles,	and	alights
   Far	from	his	master,	sullen	and	disdainful;
 Even	thus	did	Geryon	place	us	on	the	bottom,
   Close	to	the	bases	of	the	rough-hewn	rock,
   And	being	disencumbered	of	our	persons,
     He	sped	away	as	arrow	from	the	string.                         	
                   Canto	XVIII
                         	
   There	is	a	place	in	Hell	called	Malebolge,
     Wholly	of	stone	and	of	an	iron	colour,
       As	is	the	circle	that	around	it	turns.
     Right	in	the	middle	of	the	field	malign
 There	yawns	a	well	exceeding	wide	and	deep,
  Of	which	its	place	the	structure	will	recount.
  Round,	then,	is	that	enclosure	which	remains
Between	the	well	and	foot	of	the	high,	hard	bank,
   And	has	distinct	in	valleys	ten	its	bottom.
    As	where	for	the	protection	of	the	walls
  Many	and	many	moats	surround	the	castles,
   The	part	in	which	they	are	a	figure	forms,
    Just	such	an	image	those	presented	there;
 And	as	about	such	strongholds	from	their	gates
     Unto	the	outer	bank	are	little	bridges,
     So	from	the	precipice's	base	did	crags
   Project,	which	intersected	dikes	and	moats,
 Unto	the	well	that	truncates	and	collects	them.
 Within	this	place,	down	shaken	from	the	back
     Of	Geryon,	we	found	us;	and	the	Poet
     Held	to	the	left,	and	I	moved	on	behind.
   Upon	my	right	hand	I	beheld	new	anguish,
   New	torments,	and	new	wielders	of	the	lash,
   Wherewith	the	foremost	Bolgia	was	replete.
   Down	at	the	bottom	were	the	sinners	naked;
    This	side	the	middle	came	they	facing	us,
    Beyond	it,	with	us,	but	with	greater	steps;
    Even	as	the	Romans,	for	the	mighty	host,
      The	year	of	Jubilee,	upon	the	bridge,
  Have	chosen	a	mode	to	pass	the	people	over;
     For	all	upon	one	side	towards	the	Castle
    Their	faces	have,	and	go	unto	St.	Peter's;
 On	the	other	side	they	go	towards	the	Mountain.
     This	side	and	that,	along	the	livid	stone
  Beheld	I	horned	demons	with	great	scourges,
     Who	cruelly	were	beating	them	behind.
  Ah	me!	how	they	did	make	them	lift	their	legs
    At	the	first	blows!	and	sooth	not	any	one
     The	second	waited	for,	nor	for	the	third.
     While	I	was	going	on,	mine	eyes	by	one
 Encountered	were;	and	straight	I	said:	"Already
     With	sight	of	this	one	I	am	not	unfed."
   Therefore	I	stayed	my	feet	to	make	him	out,
  And	with	me	the	sweet	Guide	came	to	a	stand,
   And	to	my	going	somewhat	back	assented;
And	he,	the	scourged	one,	thought	to	hide	himself,
   Lowering	his	face,	but	little	it	availed	him;
  For	said	I:	"Thou	that	castest	down	thine	eyes,
 If	false	are	not	the	features	which	thou	bearest,
        Thou	art	Venedico	Caccianimico;
But	what	doth	bring	thee	to	such	pungent	sauces?"
       And	he	to	me:	"Unwillingly	I	tell	it;
      But	forces	me	thine	utterance	distinct,
  Which	makes	me	recollect	the	ancient	world.
       I	was	the	one	who	the	fair	Ghisola
   Induced	to	grant	the	wishes	of	the	Marquis,
    Howe'er	the	shameless	story	may	be	told.
  Not	the	sole	Bolognese	am	I	who	weeps	here;
     Nay,	rather	is	this	place	so	full	of	them,
   That	not	so	many	tongues	to-day	are	taught
      'Twixt	Reno	and	Savena	to	say	'sipa;'
   And	if	thereof	thou	wishest	pledge	or	proof,
     Bring	to	thy	mind	our	avaricious	heart."
 While	speaking	in	this	manner,	with	his	scourge
  A	demon	smote	him,	and	said:	"Get	thee	gone
   Pander,	there	are	no	women	here	for	coin."
     I	joined	myself	again	unto	mine	Escort;
   Thereafterward	with	footsteps	few	we	came
    To	where	a	crag	projected	from	the	bank.
         This	very	easily	did	we	ascend,
     And	turning	to	the	right	along	its	ridge,
     From	those	eternal	circles	we	departed.
  When	we	were	there,	where	it	is	hollowed	out
   Beneath,	to	give	a	passage	to	the	scourged,
The	Guide	said:	"Wait,	and	see	that	on	thee	strike
      The	vision	of	those	others	evil-born,
   Of	whom	thou	hast	not	yet	beheld	the	faces,
   Because	together	with	us	they	have	gone."
  From	the	old	bridge	we	looked	upon	the	train
  Which	tow'rds	us	came	upon	the	other	border,
And	which	the	scourges	in	like	manner	smite.
 And	the	good	Master,	without	my	inquiring,
 Said	to	me:	"See	that	tall	one	who	is	coming,
  And	for	his	pain	seems	not	to	shed	a	tear;
      Still	what	a	royal	aspect	he	retains!
 That	Jason	is,	who	by	his	heart	and	cunning
  The	Colchians	of	the	Ram	made	destitute.
    He	by	the	isle	of	Lemnos	passed	along
       After	the	daring	women	pitiless
    Had	unto	death	devoted	all	their	males.
 There	with	his	tokens	and	with	ornate	words
    Did	he	deceive	Hypsipyle,	the	maiden
 Who	first,	herself,	had	all	the	rest	deceived.
 There	did	he	leave	her	pregnant	and	forlorn;
Such	sin	unto	such	punishment	condemns	him,
   And	also	for	Medea	is	vengeance	done.
 With	him	go	those	who	in	such	wise	deceive;
   And	this	sufficient	be	of	the	first	valley
 To	know,	and	those	that	in	its	jaws	it	holds."
   We	were	already	where	the	narrow	path
  Crosses	athwart	the	second	dike,	and	forms
      Of	that	a	buttress	for	another	arch.
Thence	we	heard	people,	who	are	making	moan
In	the	next	Bolgia,	snorting	with	their	muzzles,
And	with	their	palms	beating	upon	themselves
  The	margins	were	incrusted	with	a	mould
 By	exhalation	from	below,	that	sticks	there,
  And	with	the	eyes	and	nostrils	wages	war.
   The	bottom	is	so	deep,	no	place	suffices
   To	give	us	sight	of	it,	without	ascending
 The	arch's	back,	where	most	the	crag	impends.
 Thither	we	came,	and	thence	down	in	the	moat
       I	saw	a	people	smothered	in	a	filth
   That	out	of	human	privies	seemed	to	flow;
 And	whilst	below	there	with	mine	eye	I	search,
  I	saw	one	with	his	head	so	foul	with	ordure,
   It	was	not	clear	if	he	were	clerk	or	layman.
He	screamed	to	me:	"Wherefore	art	thou	so	eager
 To	look	at	me	more	than	the	other	foul	ones?"
     And	I	to	him:	"Because,	if	I	remember,
     I	have	already	seen	thee	with	dry	hair,
    And	thou'rt	Alessio	Interminei	of	Lucca;
 Therefore	I	eye	thee	more	than	all	the	others."
   And	he	thereon,	belabouring	his	pumpkin:
 "The	flatteries	have	submerged	me	here	below,
  Wherewith	my	tongue	was	never	surfeited."
Then	said	to	me	the	Guide:	"See	that	thou	thrust
    Thy	visage	somewhat	farther	in	advance,
  That	with	thine	eyes	thou	well	the	face	attain
    Of	that	uncleanly	and	dishevelled	drab,
Who	there	doth	scratch	herself	with	filthy	nails,
And	crouches	now,	and	now	on	foot	is	standing.
        Thais	the	harlot	is	it,	who	replied
   Unto	her	paramour,	when	he	said,	'Have	I
 Great	gratitude	from	thee?'—'Nay,	marvellous;'
    And	herewith	let	our	sight	be	satisfied."                         	
                   Canto	XIX
                         	
      O	Simon	Magus,	O	forlorn	disciples,
   Ye	who	the	things	of	God,	which	ought	to	be
        The	brides	of	holiness,	rapaciously
        For	silver	and	for	gold	do	prostitute,
    Now	it	behoves	for	you	the	trumpet	sound,
       Because	in	this	third	Bolgia	ye	abide.
       We	had	already	on	the	following	tomb
        Ascended	to	that	portion	of	the	crag
  Which	o'er	the	middle	of	the	moat	hangs	plumb.
  Wisdom	supreme,	O	how	great	art	thou	showest
     In	heaven,	in	earth,	and	in	the	evil	world,
  And	with	what	justice	doth	thy	power	distribute!
      I	saw	upon	the	sides	and	on	the	bottom
      The	livid	stone	with	perforations	filled,
     All	of	one	size,	and	every	one	was	round.
   To	me	less	ample	seemed	they	not,	nor	greater
     Than	those	that	in	my	beautiful	Saint	John
    Are	fashioned	for	the	place	of	the	baptisers,
      And	one	of	which,	not	many	years	ago,
   I	broke	for	some	one,	who	was	drowning	in	it;
        Be	this	a	seal	all	men	to	undeceive.
   Out	of	the	mouth	of	each	one	there	protruded
       The	feet	of	a	transgressor,	and	the	legs
      Up	to	the	calf,	the	rest	within	remained.
     In	all	of	them	the	soles	were	both	on	fire;
    Wherefore	the	joints	so	violently	quivered,
They	would	have	snapped	asunder	withes	and	bands.
   Even	as	the	flame	of	unctuous	things	is	wont
       To	move	upon	the	outer	surface	only,
    So	likewise	was	it	there	from	heel	to	point.
   "Master,	who	is	that	one	who	writhes	himself,
    More	than	his	other	comrades	quivering,"
  I	said,	"and	whom	a	redder	flame	is	sucking?"
  And	he	to	me:	"If	thou	wilt	have	me	bear	thee
  Down	there	along	that	bank	which	lowest	lies,
 From	him	thou'lt	know	his	errors	and	himself."
  And	I:	"What	pleases	thee,	to	me	is	pleasing;
 Thou	art	my	Lord,	and	knowest	that	I	depart	not
From	thy	desire,	and	knowest	what	is	not	spoken."
  Straightway	upon	the	fourth	dike	we	arrived;
 We	turned,	and	on	the	left-hand	side	descended
  Down	to	the	bottom	full	of	holes	and	narrow.
  And	the	good	Master	yet	from	off	his	haunch
 Deposed	me	not,	till	to	the	hole	he	brought	me
    Of	him	who	so	lamented	with	his	shanks.
  "Whoe'er	thou	art,	that	standest	upside	down,
     O	doleful	soul,	implanted	like	a	stake,"
    To	say	began	I,	"if	thou	canst,	speak	out."
    I	stood	even	as	the	friar	who	is	confessing
    The	false	assassin,	who,	when	he	is	fixed,
   Recalls	him,	so	that	death	may	be	delayed.
And	he	cried	out:	"Dost	thou	stand	there	already,
    Dost	thou	stand	there	already,	Boniface?
      By	many	years	the	record	lied	to	me.
    Art	thou	so	early	satiate	with	that	wealth,
  For	which	thou	didst	not	fear	to	take	by	fraud
  The	beautiful	Lady,	and	then	work	her	woe?"
    Such	I	became,	as	people	are	who	stand,
   Not	comprehending	what	is	answered	them,
  As	if	bemocked,	and	know	not	how	to	answer.
  Then	said	Virgilius:	"Say	to	him	straightway,
    'I	am	not	he,	I	am	not	he	thou	thinkest.'"
     And	I	replied	as	was	imposed	on	me.
 Whereat	the	spirit	writhed	with	both	his	feet,
  Then,	sighing,	with	a	voice	of	lamentation
 Said	to	me:	"Then	what	wantest	thou	of	me?
   If	who	I	am	thou	carest	so	much	to	know,
That	thou	on	that	account	hast	crossed	the	bank,
 Know	that	I	vested	was	with	the	great	mantle;
      And	truly	was	I	son	of	the	She-bear,
   So	eager	to	advance	the	cubs,	that	wealth
     Above,	and	here	myself,	I	pocketed.
Beneath	my	head	the	others	are	dragged	down
      Who	have	preceded	me	in	simony,
    Flattened	along	the	fissure	of	the	rock.
  Below	there	I	shall	likewise	fall,	whenever
That	one	shall	come	who	I	believed	thou	wast,
  What	time	the	sudden	question	I	proposed.
       But	longer	I	my	feet	already	toast,
 And	here	have	been	in	this	way	upside	down,
 Than	he	will	planted	stay	with	reddened	feet;
    For	after	him	shall	come	of	fouler	deed
  From	tow'rds	the	west	a	Pastor	without	law,
      Such	as	befits	to	cover	him	and	me.
    New	Jason	will	he	be,	of	whom	we	read
   In	Maccabees;	and	as	his	king	was	pliant,
So	he	who	governs	France	shall	be	to	this	one."
     I	do	not	know	if	I	were	here	too	bold,
    That	him	I	answered	only	in	this	metre:
 "I	pray	thee	tell	me	now	how	great	a	treasure
    Our	Lord	demanded	of	Saint	Peter	first,
      Before	he	put	the	keys	into	his	keeping?
      Truly	he	nothing	asked	but	'Follow	me.'
      Nor	Peter	nor	the	rest	asked	of	Matthias
     Silver	or	gold,	when	he	by	lot	was	chosen
       Unto	the	place	the	guilty	soul	had	lost.
  Therefore	stay	here,	for	thou	art	justly	punished,
   And	keep	safe	guard	o'er	the	ill-gotten	money,
  Which	caused	thee	to	be	valiant	against	Charles.
       And	were	it	not	that	still	forbids	it	me
       The	reverence	for	the	keys	superlative
    Thou	hadst	in	keeping	in	the	gladsome	life,
  I	would	make	use	of	words	more	grievous	still;
      Because	your	avarice	afflicts	the	world,
   Trampling	the	good	and	lifting	the	depraved.
      The	Evangelist	you	Pastors	had	in	mind,
      When	she	who	sitteth	upon	many	waters
     To	fornicate	with	kings	by	him	was	seen;
   The	same	who	with	the	seven	heads	was	born,
And	power	and	strength	from	the	ten	horns	received,
   So	long	as	virtue	to	her	spouse	was	pleasing.
 Ye	have	made	yourselves	a	god	of	gold	and	silver;
        And	from	the	idolater	how	differ	ye,
   Save	that	he	one,	and	ye	a	hundred	worship?
   Ah,	Constantine!	of	how	much	ill	was	mother,
    Not	thy	conversion,	but	that	marriage	dower
  Which	the	first	wealthy	Father	took	from	thee!"
    And	while	I	sang	to	him	such	notes	as	these,
   Either	that	anger	or	that	conscience	stung	him,
     He	struggled	violently	with	both	his	feet.
     I	think	in	sooth	that	it	my	Leader	pleased,
     With	such	contented	lip	he	listened	ever
   Unto	the	sound	of	the	true	words	expressed.
  Therefore	with	both	his	arms	he	took	me	up,
    And	when	he	had	me	all	upon	his	breast,
  Remounted	by	the	way	where	he	descended.
    Nor	did	he	tire	to	have	me	clasped	to	him;
      But	bore	me	to	the	summit	of	the	arch
Which	from	the	fourth	dike	to	the	fifth	is	passage.
     There	tenderly	he	laid	his	burden	down,
     Tenderly	on	the	crag	uneven	and	steep,
That	would	have	been	hard	passage	for	the	goats:
   Thence	was	unveiled	to	me	another	valley.                         	
                    Canto	XX
                         	
    Of	a	new	pain	behoves	me	to	make	verses
    And	give	material	to	the	twentieth	canto
  Of	the	first	song,	which	is	of	the	submerged.
        I	was	already	thoroughly	disposed
     To	peer	down	into	the	uncovered	depth,
     Which	bathed	itself	with	tears	of	agony;
  And	people	saw	I	through	the	circular	valley,
     Silent	and	weeping,	coming	at	the	pace
    Which	in	this	world	the	Litanies	assume.
  As	lower	down	my	sight	descended	on	them,
  Wondrously	each	one	seemed	to	be	distorted
     From	chin	to	the	beginning	of	the	chest;
For	tow'rds	the	reins	the	countenance	was	turned,
   And	backward	it	behoved	them	to	advance,
 As	to	look	forward	had	been	taken	from	them.
    Perchance	indeed	by	violence	of	palsy
 Some	one	has	been	thus	wholly	turned	awry;
    But	I	ne'er	saw	it,	nor	believe	it	can	be.
   As	God	may	let	thee,	Reader,	gather	fruit
 From	this	thy	reading,	think	now	for	thyself
 How	I	could	ever	keep	my	face	unmoistened,
    When	our	own	image	near	me	I	beheld
     Distorted	so,	the	weeping	of	the	eyes
   Along	the	fissure	bathed	the	hinder	parts.
       Truly	I	wept,	leaning	upon	a	peak
    Of	the	hard	crag,	so	that	my	Escort	said
   To	me:	"Art	thou,	too,	of	the	other	fools?
    Here	pity	lives	when	it	is	wholly	dead;
      Who	is	a	greater	reprobate	than	he
  Who	feels	compassion	at	the	doom	divine?
  Lift	up,	lift	up	thy	head,	and	see	for	whom
  Opened	the	earth	before	the	Thebans'	eyes;
Wherefore	they	all	cried:	'Whither	rushest	thou,
    Amphiaraus?	Why	dost	leave	the	war?'
  And	downward	ceased	he	not	to	fall	amain
    As	far	as	Minos,	who	lays	hold	on	all.
  See,	he	has	made	a	bosom	of	his	shoulders!
 Because	he	wished	to	see	too	far	before	him
 Behind	he	looks,	and	backward	goes	his	way:
 Behold	Tiresias,	who	his	semblance	changed,
    When	from	a	male	a	female	he	became,
 His	members	being	all	of	them	transformed;
And	afterwards	was	forced	to	strike	once	more
   The	two	entangled	serpents	with	his	rod,
  Ere	he	could	have	again	his	manly	plumes.
    That	Aruns	is,	who	backs	the	other's	belly,
    Who	in	the	hills	of	Luni,	there	where	grubs
      The	Carrarese	who	houses	underneath,
      Among	the	marbles	white	a	cavern	had
     For	his	abode;	whence	to	behold	the	stars
   And	sea,	the	view	was	not	cut	off	from	him.
  And	she	there,	who	is	covering	up	her	breasts,
 Which	thou	beholdest	not,	with	loosened	tresses,
      And	on	that	side	has	all	the	hairy	skin,
Was	Manto,	who	made	quest	through	many	lands,
    Afterwards	tarried	there	where	I	was	born;
     Whereof	I	would	thou	list	to	me	a	little.
      After	her	father	had	from	life	departed,
  And	the	city	of	Bacchus	had	become	enslaved,
  She	a	long	season	wandered	through	the	world.
       Above	in	beauteous	Italy	lies	a	lake
      At	the	Alp's	foot	that	shuts	in	Germany
      Over	Tyrol,	and	has	the	name	Benaco.
By	a	thousand	springs,	I	think,	and	more,	is	bathed,
    'Twixt	Garda	and	Val	Camonica,	Pennino,
    With	water	that	grows	stagnant	in	that	lake.
   Midway	a	place	is	where	the	Trentine	Pastor,
       And	he	of	Brescia,	and	the	Veronese
  Might	give	his	blessing,	if	he	passed	that	way.
     Sitteth	Peschiera,	fortress	fair	and	strong,
    To	front	the	Brescians	and	the	Bergamasks,
 Where	round	about	the	bank	descendeth	lowest.
       There	of	necessity	must	fall	whatever
         In	bosom	of	Benaco	cannot	stay,
And	grows	a	river	down	through	verdant	pastures.
      Soon	as	the	water	doth	begin	to	run,
   No	more	Benaco	is	it	called,	but	Mincio,
      Far	as	Governo,	where	it	falls	in	Po.
      Not	far	it	runs	before	it	finds	a	plain
In	which	it	spreads	itself,	and	makes	it	marshy,
   And	oft	'tis	wont	in	summer	to	be	sickly.
      Passing	that	way	the	virgin	pitiless
    Land	in	the	middle	of	the	fen	descried,
       Untilled	and	naked	of	inhabitants;
    There	to	escape	all	human	intercourse,
She	with	her	servants	stayed,	her	arts	to	practise
   And	lived,	and	left	her	empty	body	there.
The	men,	thereafter,	who	were	scattered	round,
Collected	in	that	place,	which	was	made	strong
      By	the	lagoon	it	had	on	every	side;
  They	built	their	city	over	those	dead	bones,
  And,	after	her	who	first	the	place	selected,
     Mantua	named	it,	without	other	omen.
  Its	people	once	within	more	crowded	were,
          Ere	the	stupidity	of	Casalodi
     From	Pinamonte	had	received	deceit.
  Therefore	I	caution	thee,	if	e'er	thou	hearest
          Originate	my	city	otherwise,
     No	falsehood	may	the	verity	defraud."
     And	I:	"My	Master,	thy	discourses	are
    To	me	so	certain,	and	so	take	my	faith,
  That	unto	me	the	rest	would	be	spent	coals.
   But	tell	me	of	the	people	who	are	passing,
    If	any	one	note-worthy	thou	beholdest,
     For	only	unto	that	my	mind	reverts."
    Then	said	he	to	me:	"He	who	from	the	cheek
  Thrusts	out	his	beard	upon	his	swarthy	shoulders
  Was,	at	the	time	when	Greece	was	void	of	males,
   So	that	there	scarce	remained	one	in	the	cradle,
   An	augur,	and	with	Calchas	gave	the	moment,
       In	Aulis,	when	to	sever	the	first	cable.
       Eryphylus	his	name	was,	and	so	sings
      My	lofty	Tragedy	in	some	part	or	other;
That	knowest	thou	well,	who	knowest	the	whole	of	it.
      The	next,	who	is	so	slender	in	the	flanks,
         Was	Michael	Scott,	who	of	a	verity
        Of	magical	illusions	knew	the	game.
      Behold	Guido	Bonatti,	behold	Asdente,
      Who	now	unto	his	leather	and	his	thread
   Would	fain	have	stuck,	but	he	too	late	repents.
   Behold	the	wretched	ones,	who	left	the	needle,
 The	spool	and	rock,	and	made	them	fortune-tellers;
They	wrought	their	magic	spells	with	herb	and	image.
    But	come	now,	for	already	holds	the	confines
     Of	both	the	hemispheres,	and	under	Seville
   Touches	the	ocean-wave,	Cain	and	the	thorns,
    And	yesternight	the	moon	was	round	already;
 Thou	shouldst	remember	well	it	did	not	harm	thee
     From	time	to	time	within	the	forest	deep."
   Thus	spake	he	to	me,	and	we	walked	the	while.                          	
                     Canto	XXI
                          	
  From	bridge	to	bridge	thus,	speaking	other	things
      Of	which	my	Comedy	cares	not	to	sing,
  We	came	along,	and	held	the	summit,	when
      We	halted	to	behold	another	fissure
     Of	Malebolge	and	other	vain	laments;
       And	I	beheld	it	marvellously	dark.
       As	in	the	Arsenal	of	the	Venetians
     Boils	in	the	winter	the	tenacious	pitch
   To	smear	their	unsound	vessels	o'er	again,
    For	sail	they	cannot;	and	instead	thereof
  One	makes	his	vessel	new,	and	one	recaulks
The	ribs	of	that	which	many	a	voyage	has	made;
   One	hammers	at	the	prow,	one	at	the	stern,
This	one	makes	oars,	and	that	one	cordage	twists,
  Another	mends	the	mainsail	and	the	mizzen;
     Thus,	not	by	fire,	but	by	the	art	divine,
  Was	boiling	down	below	there	a	dense	pitch
   Which	upon	every	side	the	bank	belimed.
       I	saw	it,	but	I	did	not	see	within	it
  Aught	but	the	bubbles	that	the	boiling	raised,
  And	all	swell	up	and	resubside	compressed.
     The	while	below	there	fixedly	I	gazed,
   My	Leader,	crying	out:	"Beware,	beware!"
   Drew	me	unto	himself	from	where	I	stood.
  Then	I	turned	round,	as	one	who	is	impatient
     To	see	what	it	behoves	him	to	escape,
    And	whom	a	sudden	terror	doth	unman,
 Who,	while	he	looks,	delays	not	his	departure;
      And	I	beheld	behind	us	a	black	devil,
    Running	along	upon	the	crag,	approach.
    Ah,	how	ferocious	was	he	in	his	aspect!
  And	how	he	seemed	to	me	in	action	ruthless,
      With	open	wings	and	light	upon	his	feet!
 His	shoulders,	which	sharp-pointed	were	and	high,
     A	sinner	did	encumber	with	both	haunches,
     And	he	held	clutched	the	sinews	of	the	feet.
   From	off	our	bridge,	he	said:	"O	Malebranche,
       Behold	one	of	the	elders	of	Saint	Zita;
     Plunge	him	beneath,	for	I	return	for	others
 Unto	that	town,	which	is	well	furnished	with	them.
       All	there	are	barrators,	except	Bonturo;
      No	into	Yes	for	money	there	is	changed."
    He	hurled	him	down,	and	over	the	hard	crag
   Turned	round,	and	never	was	a	mastiff	loosened
         In	so	much	hurry	to	pursue	a	thief.
   The	other	sank,	and	rose	again	face	downward;
     But	the	demons,	under	cover	of	the	bridge,
     Cried:	"Here	the	Santo	Volto	has	no	place!
   Here	swims	one	otherwise	than	in	the	Serchio;
     Therefore,	if	for	our	gaffs	thou	wishest	not,
        Do	not	uplift	thyself	above	the	pitch."
They	seized	him	then	with	more	than	a	hundred	rakes;
 They	said:	"It	here	behoves	thee	to	dance	covered,
   That,	if	thou	canst,	thou	secretly	mayest	pilfer."
    Not	otherwise	the	cooks	their	scullions	make
       Immerse	into	the	middle	of	the	caldron
    The	meat	with	hooks,	so	that	it	may	not	float.
     Said	the	good	Master	to	me:	"That	it	be	not
    Apparent	thou	art	here,	crouch	thyself	down
  Behind	a	jag,	that	thou	mayest	have	some	screen;
        And	for	no	outrage	that	is	done	to	me
    Be	thou	afraid,	because	these	things	I	know,
    For	once	before	was	I	in	such	a	scuffle."
  Then	he	passed	on	beyond	the	bridge's	head,
     And	as	upon	the	sixth	bank	he	arrived,
   Need	was	for	him	to	have	a	steadfast	front.
    With	the	same	fury,	and	the	same	uproar,
       As	dogs	leap	out	upon	a	mendicant,
    Who	on	a	sudden	begs,	where'er	he	stops,
   They	issued	from	beneath	the	little	bridge,
And	turned	against	him	all	their	grappling-irons;
  But	he	cried	out:	"Be	none	of	you	malignant!
   Before	those	hooks	of	yours	lay	hold	of	me,
 Let	one	of	you	step	forward,	who	may	hear	me,
   And	then	take	counsel	as	to	grappling	me."
     They	all	cried	out:	"Let	Malacoda	go;"
   Whereat	one	started,	and	the	rest	stood	still,
 And	he	came	to	him,	saying:	"What	avails	it?"
    "Thinkest	thou,	Malacoda,	to	behold	me
   Advanced	into	this	place,"	my	Master	said,
   "Safe	hitherto	from	all	your	skill	of	fence,
  Without	the	will	divine,	and	fate	auspicious?
     Let	me	go	on,	for	it	in	Heaven	is	willed
     That	I	another	show	this	savage	road."
   Then	was	his	arrogance	so	humbled	in	him,
      That	he	let	fall	his	grapnel	at	his	feet,
  And	to	the	others	said:	"Now	strike	him	not."
  And	unto	me	my	Guide:	"O	thou,	who	sittest
Among	the	splinters	of	the	bridge	crouched	down,
        Securely	now	return	to	me	again."
  Wherefore	I	started	and	came	swiftly	to	him;
  And	all	the	devils	forward	thrust	themselves,
   So	that	I	feared	they	would	not	keep	their	compact.
        And	thus	beheld	I	once	afraid	the	soldiers
       Who	issued	under	safeguard	from	Caprona,
         Seeing	themselves	among	so	many	foes.
       Close	did	I	press	myself	with	all	my	person
       Beside	my	Leader,	and	turned	not	mine	eyes
    From	off	their	countenance,	which	was	not	good.
They	lowered	their	rakes,	and	"Wilt	thou	have	me	hit	him,"
        They	said	to	one	another,	"on	the	rump?"
   And	answered:	"Yes;	see	that	thou	nick	him	with	it."
      But	the	same	demon	who	was	holding	parley
      With	my	Conductor	turned	him	very	quickly,
      And	said:	"Be	quiet,	be	quiet,	Scarmiglione;"
         Then	said	to	us:	"You	can	no	farther	go
         Forward	upon	this	crag,	because	is	lying
        All	shattered,	at	the	bottom,	the	sixth	arch.
       And	if	it	still	doth	please	you	to	go	onward,
          Pursue	your	way	along	upon	this	rock;
          Near	is	another	crag	that	yields	a	path.
        Yesterday,	five	hours	later	than	this	hour,
         One	thousand	and	two	hundred	sixty-six
   Years	were	complete,	that	here	the	way	was	broken.
           I	send	in	that	direction	some	of	mine
            To	see	if	any	one	doth	air	himself;
      Go	ye	with	them;	for	they	will	not	be	vicious.
         Step	forward,	Alichino	and	Calcabrina,"
        Began	he	to	cry	out,	"and	thou,	Cagnazzo;
         And	Barbariccia,	do	thou	guide	the	ten.
      Come	forward,	Libicocco	and	Draghignazzo,
          And	tusked	Ciriatto	and	Graffiacane,
        And	Farfarello	and	mad	Rubicante;
    Search	ye	all	round	about	the	boiling	pitch;
      Let	these	be	safe	as	far	as	the	next	crag,
      That	all	unbroken	passes	o'er	the	dens."
       "O	me!	what	is	it,	Master,	that	I	see?
     Pray	let	us	go,"	I	said,	"without	an	escort,
 If	thou	knowest	how,	since	for	myself	I	ask	none.
      If	thou	art	as	observant	as	thy	wont	is,
  Dost	thou	not	see	that	they	do	gnash	their	teeth,
 And	with	their	brows	are	threatening	woe	to	us?"
     And	he	to	me:	"I	will	not	have	thee	fear;
   Let	them	gnash	on,	according	to	their	fancy,
  Because	they	do	it	for	those	boiling	wretches."
   Along	the	left-hand	dike	they	wheeled	about;
 But	first	had	each	one	thrust	his	tongue	between
    His	teeth	towards	their	leader	for	a	signal;
     And	he	had	made	a	trumpet	of	his	rump.                          	
                    Canto	XXII
                          	
   I	have	erewhile	seen	horsemen	moving	camp,
    Begin	the	storming,	and	their	muster	make,
   And	sometimes	starting	off	for	their	escape;
    Vaunt-couriers	have	I	seen	upon	your	land,
         O	Aretines,	and	foragers	go	forth,
   Tournaments	stricken,	and	the	joustings	run,
Sometimes	with	trumpets	and	sometimes	with	bells,
   With	kettle-drums,	and	signals	of	the	castles,
  And	with	our	own,	and	with	outlandish	things,
      But	never	yet	with	bagpipe	so	uncouth
     Did	I	see	horsemen	move,	nor	infantry,
       Nor	ship	by	any	sign	of	land	or	star.
  We	went	upon	our	way	with	the	ten	demons;
     Ah,	savage	company!	but	in	the	church
 With	saints,	and	in	the	tavern	with	the	gluttons!
       Ever	upon	the	pitch	was	my	intent,
    To	see	the	whole	condition	of	that	Bolgia,
   And	of	the	people	who	therein	were	burned.
  Even	as	the	dolphins,	when	they	make	a	sign
       To	mariners	by	arching	of	the	back,
That	they	should	counsel	take	to	save	their	vessel,
      Thus	sometimes,	to	alleviate	his	pain,
   One	of	the	sinners	would	display	his	back,
   And	in	less	time	conceal	it	than	it	lightens.
        As	on	the	brink	of	water	in	a	ditch
   The	frogs	stand	only	with	their	muzzles	out,
    So	that	they	hide	their	feet	and	other	bulk,
      So	upon	every	side	the	sinners	stood;
    But	ever	as	Barbariccia	near	them	came,
   Thus	underneath	the	boiling	they	withdrew.
   I	saw,	and	still	my	heart	doth	shudder	at	it,
   One	waiting	thus,	even	as	it	comes	to	pass
   One	frog	remains,	and	down	another	dives;
   And	Graffiacan,	who	most	confronted	him,
 Grappled	him	by	his	tresses	smeared	with	pitch,
  And	drew	him	up,	so	that	he	seemed	an	otter.
    I	knew,	before,	the	names	of	all	of	them,
  So	had	I	noted	them	when	they	were	chosen,
 And	when	they	called	each	other,	listened	how.
        "O	Rubicante,	see	that	thou	do	lay
Thy	claws	upon	him,	so	that	thou	mayst	flay	him,"
       Cried	all	together	the	accursed	ones.
    And	I:	"My	Master,	see	to	it,	if	thou	canst,
That	thou	mayst	know	who	is	the	luckless	wight,
     Thus	come	into	his	adversaries'	hands."
    Near	to	the	side	of	him	my	Leader	drew,
  Asked	of	him	whence	he	was;	and	he	replied:
     "I	in	the	kingdom	of	Navarre	was	born;
     My	mother	placed	me	servant	to	a	lord,
     For	she	had	borne	me	to	a	ribald	knave,
     Destroyer	of	himself	and	of	his	things.
  Then	I	domestic	was	of	good	King	Thibault;
        I	set	me	there	to	practise	barratry,
   For	which	I	pay	the	reckoning	in	this	heat."
   And	Ciriatto,	from	whose	mouth	projected,
        On	either	side,	a	tusk,	as	in	a	boar,
  Caused	him	to	feel	how	one	of	them	could	rip.
   Among	malicious	cats	the	mouse	had	come;
    But	Barbariccia	clasped	him	in	his	arms,
 And	said:	"Stand	ye	aside,	while	I	enfork	him."
   And	to	my	Master	he	turned	round	his	head;
  "Ask	him	again,"	he	said,	"if	more	thou	wish
To	know	from	him,	before	some	one	destroy	him."
 The	Guide:	"Now	tell	then	of	the	other	culprits;
     Knowest	thou	any	one	who	is	a	Latian,
     Under	the	pitch?"	And	he:	"I	separated
   Lately	from	one	who	was	a	neighbour	to	it;
   Would	that	I	still	were	covered	up	with	him,
   For	I	should	fear	not	either	claw	nor	hook!"
   And	Libicocco:	"We	have	borne	too	much;"
  And	with	his	grapnel	seized	him	by	the	arm,
    So	that,	by	rending,	he	tore	off	a	tendon.
 Eke	Draghignazzo	wished	to	pounce	upon	him
    Down	at	the	legs;	whence	their	Decurion
  Turned	round	and	round	about	with	evil	look.
   When	they	again	somewhat	were	pacified,
  Of	him,	who	still	was	looking	at	his	wound,
     Demanded	my	Conductor	without	stay:
"Who	was	that	one,	from	whom	a	luckless	parting
 Thou	sayest	thou	hast	made,	to	come	ashore?"
    And	he	replied:	"It	was	the	Friar	Gomita,
       He	of	Gallura,	vessel	of	all	fraud,
   Who	had	the	enemies	of	his	Lord	in	hand,
   And	dealt	so	with	them	each	exults	thereat;
   Money	he	took,	and	let	them	smoothly	off,
        As	he	says;	and	in	other	offices
   A	barrator	was	he,	not	mean	but	sovereign.
 Foregathers	with	him	one	Don	Michael	Zanche
         Of	Logodoro;	and	of	Sardinia
   To	gossip	never	do	their	tongues	feel	tired.
  O	me!	see	that	one,	how	he	grinds	his	teeth;
    Still	farther	would	I	speak,	but	am	afraid
  Lest	he	to	scratch	my	itch	be	making	ready."
  And	the	grand	Provost,	turned	to	Farfarello,
    Who	rolled	his	eyes	about	as	if	to	strike,
 Said:	"Stand	aside	there,	thou	malicious	bird."
      "If	you	desire	either	to	see	or	hear,"
   The	terror-stricken	recommenced	thereon,
 "Tuscans	or	Lombards,	I	will	make	them	come.
     But	let	the	Malebranche	cease	a	little,
      So	that	these	may	not	their	revenges	fear,
       And	I,	down	sitting	in	this	very	place,
      For	one	that	I	am	will	make	seven	come,
       When	I	shall	whistle,	as	our	custom	is
       To	do	whenever	one	of	us	comes	out."
     Cagnazzo	at	these	words	his	muzzle	lifted,
   Shaking	his	head,	and	said:	"Just	hear	the	trick
 Which	he	has	thought	of,	down	to	throw	himself!"
  Whence	he,	who	snares	in	great	abundance	had,
       Responded:	"I	by	far	too	cunning	am,
    When	I	procure	for	mine	a	greater	sadness."
      Alichin	held	not	in,	but	running	counter
      Unto	the	rest,	said	to	him:	"If	thou	dive,
       I	will	not	follow	thee	upon	the	gallop,
      But	I	will	beat	my	wings	above	the	pitch;
     The	height	be	left,	and	be	the	bank	a	shield
      To	see	if	thou	alone	dost	countervail	us."
   O	thou	who	readest,	thou	shalt	hear	new	sport!
       Each	to	the	other	side	his	eyes	averted;
      He	first,	who	most	reluctant	was	to	do	it.
        The	Navarrese	selected	well	his	time;
      Planted	his	feet	on	land,	and	in	a	moment
   Leaped,	and	released	himself	from	their	design.
 Whereat	each	one	was	suddenly	stung	with	shame,
      But	he	most	who	was	cause	of	the	defeat;
Therefore	he	moved,	and	cried:	"Thou	art	o'ertakern."
       But	little	it	availed,	for	wings	could	not
     Outstrip	the	fear;	the	other	one	went	under,
     And,	flying,	upward	he	his	breast	directed;
       Not	otherwise	the	duck	upon	a	sudden
    Dives	under,	when	the	falcon	is	approaching,
      And	upward	he	returneth	cross	and	weary.
         Infuriate	at	the	mockery,	Calcabrina
     Flying	behind	him	followed	close,	desirous
     The	other	should	escape,	to	have	a	quarrel.
       And	when	the	barrator	had	disappeared,
      He	turned	his	talons	upon	his	companion,
    And	grappled	with	him	right	above	the	moat.
     But	sooth	the	other	was	a	doughty	sparhawk
     To	clapperclaw	him	well;	and	both	of	them
        Fell	in	the	middle	of	the	boiling	pond.
         A	sudden	intercessor	was	the	heat;
     But	ne'ertheless	of	rising	there	was	naught,
    To	such	degree	they	had	their	wings	belimed.
       Lamenting	with	the	others,	Barbariccia
       Made	four	of	them	fly	to	the	other	side
        With	all	their	gaffs,	and	very	speedily
   This	side	and	that	they	to	their	posts	descended;
They	stretched	their	hooks	towards	the	pitch-ensnared,
      Who	were	already	baked	within	the	crust,
    And	in	this	manner	busied	did	we	leave	them.                           	
                     Canto	XXIII
                           	
         Silent,	alone,	and	without	company
      We	went,	the	one	in	front,	the	other	after,
       As	go	the	Minor	Friars	along	their	way.
        Upon	the	fable	of	Aesop	was	directed
    My	thought,	by	reason	of	the	present	quarrel,
     Where	he	has	spoken	of	the	frog	and	mouse;
       For	'mo'	and	'issa'	are	not	more	alike
    Than	this	one	is	to	that,	if	well	we	couple
    End	and	beginning	with	a	steadfast	mind.
  And	even	as	one	thought	from	another	springs,
     So	afterward	from	that	was	born	another,
   Which	the	first	fear	within	me	double	made.
    Thus	did	I	ponder:	"These	on	our	account
    Are	laughed	to	scorn,	with	injury	and	scoff
  So	great,	that	much	I	think	it	must	annoy	them.
         If	anger	be	engrafted	on	ill-will,
     They	will	come	after	us	more	merciless
   Than	dog	upon	the	leveret	which	he	seizes,"
      I	felt	my	hair	stand	all	on	end	already
     With	terror,	and	stood	backwardly	intent,
     When	said	I:	"Master,	if	thou	hidest	not
    Thyself	and	me	forthwith,	of	Malebranche
   I	am	in	dread;	we	have	them	now	behind	us;
     I	so	imagine	them,	I	already	feel	them."
     And	he:	"If	I	were	made	of	leaded	glass,
     Thine	outward	image	I	should	not	attract
      Sooner	to	me	than	I	imprint	the	inner.
  Just	now	thy	thoughts	came	in	among	my	own,
      With	similar	attitude	and	similar	face,
     So	that	of	both	one	counsel	sole	I	made.
      If	peradventure	the	right	bank	so	slope
     That	we	to	the	next	Bolgia	can	descend,
    We	shall	escape	from	the	imagined	chase."
   Not	yet	he	finished	rendering	such	opinion,
When	I	beheld	them	come	with	outstretched	wings,
    Not	far	remote,	with	will	to	seize	upon	us.
       My	Leader	on	a	sudden	seized	me	up,
     Even	as	a	mother	who	by	noise	is	wakened,
   And	close	beside	her	sees	the	enkindled	flames,
   Who	takes	her	son,	and	flies,	and	does	not	stop,
      Having	more	care	of	him	than	of	herself,
      So	that	she	clothes	her	only	with	a	shift;
    And	downward	from	the	top	of	the	hard	bank
      Supine	he	gave	him	to	the	pendent	rock,
       That	one	side	of	the	other	Bolgia	walls.
     Ne'er	ran	so	swiftly	water	through	a	sluice
      To	turn	the	wheel	of	any	land-built	mill,
     When	nearest	to	the	paddles	it	approaches,
     As	did	my	Master	down	along	that	border,
      Bearing	me	with	him	on	his	breast	away,
      As	his	own	son,	and	not	as	a	companion.
         Hardly	the	bed	of	the	ravine	below
 His	feet	had	reached,	ere	they	had	reached	the	hill
        Right	over	us;	but	he	was	not	afraid;
    For	the	high	Providence,	which	had	ordained
      To	place	them	ministers	of	the	fifth	moat,
    The	power	of	thence	departing	took	from	all.
      A	painted	people	there	below	we	found,
     Who	went	about	with	footsteps	very	slow,
Weeping	and	in	their	semblance	tired	and	vanquished.
   They	had	on	mantles	with	the	hoods	low	down
     Before	their	eyes,	and	fashioned	of	the	cut
   That	in	Cologne	they	for	the	monks	are	made.
     Without,	they	gilded	are	so	that	it	dazzles;
        But	inwardly	all	leaden	and	so	heavy
    That	Frederick	used	to	put	them	on	of	straw.
         O	everlastingly	fatiguing	mantle!
     Again	we	turned	us,	still	to	the	left	hand
    Along	with	them,	intent	on	their	sad	plaint;
     But	owing	to	the	weight,	that	weary	folk
       Came	on	so	tardily,	that	we	were	new
     In	company	at	each	motion	of	the	haunch.
     Whence	I	unto	my	Leader:	"See	thou	find
  Some	one	who	may	by	deed	or	name	be	known,
     And	thus	in	going	move	thine	eye	about."
   And	one,	who	understood	the	Tuscan	speech,
    Cried	to	us	from	behind:	"Stay	ye	your	feet,
       Ye,	who	so	run	athwart	the	dusky	air!
Perhaps	thou'lt	have	from	me	what	thou	demandest."
  Whereat	the	Leader	turned	him,	and	said:	"Wait,
     And	then	according	to	his	pace	proceed."
   I	stopped,	and	two	beheld	I	show	great	haste
       Of	spirit,	in	their	faces,	to	be	with	me;
 But	the	burden	and	the	narrow	way	delayed	them.
   When	they	came	up,	long	with	an	eye	askance
    They	scanned	me	without	uttering	a	word.
   Then	to	each	other	turned,	and	said	together:
    "He	by	the	action	of	his	throat	seems	living;
      And	if	they	dead	are,	by	what	privilege
      Go	they	uncovered	by	the	heavy	stole?"
   Then	said	to	me:	"Tuscan,	who	to	the	college
         Of	miserable	hypocrites	art	come,
      Do	not	disdain	to	tell	us	who	thou	art."
     And	I	to	them:	"Born	was	I,	and	grew	up
    In	the	great	town	on	the	fair	river	of	Arno,
      And	with	the	body	am	I've	always	had.
  But	who	are	ye,	in	whom	there	trickles	down
    Along	your	cheeks	such	grief	as	I	behold?
  And	what	pain	is	upon	you,	that	so	sparkles?"
  And	one	replied	to	me:	"These	orange	cloaks
   Are	made	of	lead	so	heavy,	that	the	weights
    Cause	in	this	way	their	balances	to	creak.
     Frati	Gaudenti	were	we,	and	Bolognese;
           I	Catalano,	and	he	Loderingo
      Named,	and	together	taken	by	thy	city,
      As	the	wont	is	to	take	one	man	alone,
 For	maintenance	of	its	peace;	and	we	were	such
     That	still	it	is	apparent	round	Gardingo."
     "O	Friars,"	began	I,	"your	iniquitous.	.	."
 But	said	no	more;	for	to	mine	eyes	there	rushed
  One	crucified	with	three	stakes	on	the	ground.
  When	me	he	saw,	he	writhed	himself	all	over,
    Blowing	into	his	beard	with	suspirations;
     And	the	Friar	Catalan,	who	noticed	this,
Said	to	me:	"This	transfixed	one,	whom	thou	seest,
    Counselled	the	Pharisees	that	it	was	meet
     To	put	one	man	to	torture	for	the	people.
      Crosswise	and	naked	is	he	on	the	path,
   As	thou	perceivest;	and	he	needs	must	feel,
   Whoever	passes,	first	how	much	he	weighs;
  And	in	like	mode	his	father-in-law	is	punished
 Within	this	moat,	and	the	others	of	the	council,
   Which	for	the	Jews	was	a	malignant	seed."
      And	thereupon	I	saw	Virgilius	marvel
     O'er	him	who	was	extended	on	the	cross
         So	vilely	in	eternal	banishment.
     Then	he	directed	to	the	Friar	this	voice:
   "Be	not	displeased,	if	granted	thee,	to	tell	us
     If	to	the	right	hand	any	pass	slope	down
   By	which	we	two	may	issue	forth	from	here,
  Without	constraining	some	of	the	black	angels
    To	come	and	extricate	us	from	this	deep."
 Then	he	made	answer:	"Nearer	than	thou	hopest
  There	is	a	rock,	that	forth	from	the	great	circle
    Proceeds,	and	crosses	all	the	cruel	valleys,
Save	that	at	this	'tis	broken,	and	does	not	bridge	it;
      You	will	be	able	to	mount	up	the	ruin,
  That	sidelong	slopes	and	at	the	bottom	rises."
The	Leader	stood	awhile	with	head	bowed	down;
   Then	said:	"The	business	badly	he	recounted
Who	grapples	with	his	hook	the	sinners	yonder."
    And	the	Friar:	"Many	of	the	Devil's	vices
    Once	heard	I	at	Bologna,	and	among	them,
      That	he's	a	liar	and	the	father	of	lies."
  Thereat	my	Leader	with	great	strides	went	on,
   Somewhat	disturbed	with	anger	in	his	looks;
     Whence	from	the	heavy-laden	I	departed
        After	the	prints	of	his	beloved	feet.                          	
                    Canto	XXIV
                          	
     In	that	part	of	the	youthful	year	wherein
  The	Sun	his	locks	beneath	Aquarius	tempers,
  And	now	the	nights	draw	near	to	half	the	day,
  What	time	the	hoar-frost	copies	on	the	ground
   The	outward	semblance	of	her	sister	white,
     But	little	lasts	the	temper	of	her	pen,
 The	husbandman,	whose	forage	faileth	him,
  Rises,	and	looks,	and	seeth	the	champaign
All	gleaming	white,	whereat	he	beats	his	flank,
 Returns	in	doors,	and	up	and	down	laments,
Like	a	poor	wretch,	who	knows	not	what	to	do;
   Then	he	returns	and	hope	revives	again,
Seeing	the	world	has	changed	its	countenance
 In	little	time,	and	takes	his	shepherd's	crook,
  And	forth	the	little	lambs	to	pasture	drives.
    Thus	did	the	Master	fill	me	with	alarm,
   When	I	beheld	his	forehead	so	disturbed,
 And	to	the	ailment	came	as	soon	the	plaster.
    For	as	we	came	unto	the	ruined	bridge,
The	Leader	turned	to	me	with	that	sweet	look
  Which	at	the	mountain's	foot	I	first	beheld.
 His	arms	he	opened,	after	some	advisement
     Within	himself	elected,	looking	first
     Well	at	the	ruin,	and	laid	hold	of	me.
   And	even	as	he	who	acts	and	meditates,
For	aye	it	seems	that	he	provides	beforehand,
  So	upward	lifting	me	towards	the	summit
   Of	a	huge	rock,	he	scanned	another	crag,
   Saying:	"To	that	one	grapple	afterwards,
 But	try	first	if	'tis	such	that	it	will	hold	thee."
This	was	no	way	for	one	clothed	with	a	cloak;
For	hardly	we,	he	light,	and	I	pushed	upward,
      Were	able	to	ascend	from	jag	to	jag.
 And	had	it	not	been,	that	upon	that	precinct
   Shorter	was	the	ascent	than	on	the	other,
    He	I	know	not,	but	I	had	been	dead	beat.
   But	because	Malebolge	tow'rds	the	mouth
     Of	the	profoundest	well	is	all	inclining,
    The	structure	of	each	valley	doth	import
    That	one	bank	rises	and	the	other	sinks.
    Still	we	arrived	at	length	upon	the	point
 Wherefrom	the	last	stone	breaks	itself	asunder.
 The	breath	was	from	my	lungs	so	milked	away,
   When	I	was	up,	that	I	could	go	no	farther,
     Nay,	I	sat	down	upon	my	first	arrival.
   "Now	it	behoves	thee	thus	to	put	off	sloth,"
    My	Master	said;	"for	sitting	upon	down,
    Or	under	quilt,	one	cometh	not	to	fame,
   Withouten	which	whoso	his	life	consumes
    Such	vestige	leaveth	of	himself	on	earth,
      As	smoke	in	air	or	in	the	water	foam.
And	therefore	raise	thee	up,	o'ercome	the	anguish
    With	spirit	that	o'ercometh	every	battle,
        If	with	its	heavy	body	it	sink	not.
    A	longer	stairway	it	behoves	thee	mount;
  'Tis	not	enough	from	these	to	have	departed;
    Let	it	avail	thee,	if	thou	understand	me."
    Then	I	uprose,	showing	myself	provided
    Better	with	breath	than	I	did	feel	myself,
  And	said:	"Go	on,	for	I	am	strong	and	bold."
    Upward	we	took	our	way	along	the	crag,
  Which	jagged	was,	and	narrow,	and	difficult,
   And	more	precipitous	far	than	that	before.
   Speaking	I	went,	not	to	appear	exhausted;
Whereat	a	voice	from	the	next	moat	came	forth,
        Not	well	adapted	to	articulate	words.
     I	know	not	what	it	said,	though	o'er	the	back
       I	now	was	of	the	arch	that	passes	there;
  But	he	seemed	moved	to	anger	who	was	speaking.
      I	was	bent	downward,	but	my	living	eyes
      Could	not	attain	the	bottom,	for	the	dark;
      Wherefore	I:	"Master,	see	that	thou	arrive
    At	the	next	round,	and	let	us	descend	the	wall;
     For	as	from	hence	I	hear	and	understand	not,
      So	I	look	down	and	nothing	I	distinguish."
     "Other	response,"	he	said,	"I	make	thee	not,
       Except	the	doing;	for	the	modest	asking
    Ought	to	be	followed	by	the	deed	in	silence."
      We	from	the	bridge	descended	at	its	head,
    Where	it	connects	itself	with	the	eighth	bank,
      And	then	was	manifest	to	me	the	Bolgia;
        And	I	beheld	therein	a	terrible	throng
      Of	serpents,	and	of	such	a	monstrous	kind,
    That	the	remembrance	still	congeals	my	blood
       Let	Libya	boast	no	longer	with	her	sand;
         For	if	Chelydri,	Jaculi,	and	Phareae
  She	breeds,	with	Cenchri	and	with	Amphisbaena,
      Neither	so	many	plagues	nor	so	malignant
          E'er	showed	she	with	all	Ethiopia,
        Nor	with	whatever	on	the	Red	Sea	is!
      Among	this	cruel	and	most	dismal	throng
      People	were	running	naked	and	affrighted.
       Without	the	hope	of	hole	or	heliotrope.
They	had	their	hands	with	serpents	bound	behind	them;
        These	riveted	upon	their	reins	the	tail
 And	head,	and	were	in	front	of	them	entwined.
      And	lo!	at	one	who	was	upon	our	side
There	darted	forth	a	serpent,	which	transfixed	him
There	where	the	neck	is	knotted	to	the	shoulders.
    Nor	'O'	so	quickly	e'er,	nor	'I'	was	written,
  As	he	took	fire,	and	burned;	and	ashes	wholly
      Behoved	it	that	in	falling	he	became.
 And	when	he	on	the	ground	was	thus	destroyed,
   The	ashes	drew	together,	and	of	themselves
       Into	himself	they	instantly	returned.
   Even	thus	by	the	great	sages	'tis	confessed
    The	phoenix	dies,	and	then	is	born	again,
   When	it	approaches	its	five-hundredth	year;
     On	herb	or	grain	it	feeds	not	in	its	life,
   But	only	on	tears	of	incense	and	amomum,
 And	nard	and	myrrh	are	its	last	winding-sheet.
   And	as	he	is	who	falls,	and	knows	not	how,
By	force	of	demons	who	to	earth	down	drag	him,
       Or	other	oppilation	that	binds	man,
      When	he	arises	and	around	him	looks,
    Wholly	bewildered	by	the	mighty	anguish
  Which	he	has	suffered,	and	in	looking	sighs;
     Such	was	that	sinner	after	he	had	risen.
       Justice	of	God!	O	how	severe	it	is,
That	blows	like	these	in	vengeance	poureth	down!
  The	Guide	thereafter	asked	him	who	he	was;
   Whence	he	replied:	"I	rained	from	Tuscany
     A	short	time	since	into	this	cruel	gorge.
   A	bestial	life,	and	not	a	human,	pleased	me,
    Even	as	the	mule	I	was;	I'm	Vanni	Fucci,
       Beast,	and	Pistoia	was	my	worthy	den."
     And	I	unto	the	Guide:	"Tell	him	to	stir	not,
   And	ask	what	crime	has	thrust	him	here	below,
   For	once	a	man	of	blood	and	wrath	I	saw	him."
   And	the	sinner,	who	had	heard,	dissembled	not,
        But	unto	me	directed	mind	and	face,
     And	with	a	melancholy	shame	was	painted.
Then	said:	"It	pains	me	more	that	thou	hast	caught	me
       Amid	this	misery	where	thou	seest	me,
     Than	when	I	from	the	other	life	was	taken.
        What	thou	demandest	I	cannot	deny;
       So	low	am	I	put	down	because	I	robbed
         The	sacristy	of	the	fair	ornaments,
      And	falsely	once	'twas	laid	upon	another;
     But	that	thou	mayst	not	such	a	sight	enjoy,
     If	thou	shalt	e'er	be	out	of	the	dark	places,
   Thine	ears	to	my	announcement	ope	and	hear:
        Pistoia	first	of	Neri	groweth	meagre;
  Then	Florence	doth	renew	her	men	and	manners;
    Mars	draws	a	vapour	up	from	Val	di	Magra,
    Which	is	with	turbid	clouds	enveloped	round,
       And	with	impetuous	and	bitter	tempest
       Over	Campo	Picen	shall	be	the	battle;
    When	it	shall	suddenly	rend	the	mist	asunder,
    So	that	each	Bianco	shall	thereby	be	smitten.
    And	this	I've	said	that	it	may	give	thee	pain."                           	
                     Canto	XXV
                           	
      At	the	conclusion	of	his	words,	the	thief
     Lifted	his	hands	aloft	with	both	the	figs,
 Crying:	"Take	that,	God,	for	at	thee	I	aim	them."
From	that	time	forth	the	serpents	were	my	friends;
      For	one	entwined	itself	about	his	neck
    As	if	it	said:	"I	will	not	thou	speak	more;"
  And	round	his	arms	another,	and	rebound	him,
       Clinching	itself	together	so	in	front,
   That	with	them	he	could	not	a	motion	make.
       Pistoia,	ah,	Pistoia!	why	resolve	not
      To	burn	thyself	to	ashes	and	so	perish,
    Since	in	ill-doing	thou	thy	seed	excellest?
   Through	all	the	sombre	circles	of	this	Hell,
      Spirit	I	saw	not	against	God	so	proud,
 Not	he	who	fell	at	Thebes	down	from	the	walls!
    He	fled	away,	and	spake	no	further	word;
       And	I	beheld	a	Centaur	full	of	rage
Come	crying	out:	"Where	is,	where	is	the	scoffer?"
      I	do	not	think	Maremma	has	so	many
      Serpents	as	he	had	all	along	his	back,
     As	far	as	where	our	countenance	begins.
    Upon	the	shoulders,	just	behind	the	nape,
    With	wings	wide	open	was	a	dragon	lying,
    And	he	sets	fire	to	all	that	he	encounters.
    My	Master	said:	"That	one	is	Cacus,	who
     Beneath	the	rock	upon	Mount	Aventine
       Created	oftentimes	a	lake	of	blood.
 He	goes	not	on	the	same	road	with	his	brothers,
    By	reason	of	the	fraudulent	theft	he	made
   Of	the	great	herd,	which	he	had	near	to	him;
   Whereat	his	tortuous	actions	ceased	beneath
      The	mace	of	Hercules,	who	peradventure
      Gave	him	a	hundred,	and	he	felt	not	ten."
   While	he	was	speaking	thus,	he	had	passed	by,
     And	spirits	three	had	underneath	us	come,
     Of	which	nor	I	aware	was,	nor	my	Leader,
   Until	what	time	they	shouted:	"Who	are	you?"
      On	which	account	our	story	made	a	halt,
      And	then	we	were	intent	on	them	alone.
      I	did	not	know	them;	but	it	came	to	pass,
      As	it	is	wont	to	happen	by	some	chance,
     That	one	to	name	the	other	was	compelled,
  Exclaiming:	"Where	can	Cianfa	have	remained?"
     Whence	I,	so	that	the	Leader	might	attend,
     Upward	from	chin	to	nose	my	finger	laid.
       If	thou	art,	Reader,	slow	now	to	believe
        What	I	shall	say,	it	will	no	marvel	be,
        For	I	who	saw	it	hardly	can	admit	it.
    As	I	was	holding	raised	on	them	my	brows,
     Behold!	a	serpent	with	six	feet	darts	forth
     In	front	of	one,	and	fastens	wholly	on	him.
  With	middle	feet	it	bound	him	round	the	paunch,
    And	with	the	forward	ones	his	arms	it	seized;
Then	thrust	its	teeth	through	one	cheek	and	the	other;
    The	hindermost	it	stretched	upon	his	thighs,
    And	put	its	tail	through	in	between	the	two,
     And	up	behind	along	the	reins	outspread	it.
         Ivy	was	never	fastened	by	its	barbs
        Unto	a	tree	so,	as	this	horrible	reptile
      Upon	the	other's	limbs	entwined	its	own.
     Then	they	stuck	close,	as	if	of	heated	wax
They	had	been	made,	and	intermixed	their	colour;
  Nor	one	nor	other	seemed	now	what	he	was;
     E'en	as	proceedeth	on	before	the	flame
    Upward	along	the	paper	a	brown	colour,
  Which	is	not	black	as	yet,	and	the	white	dies.
   The	other	two	looked	on,	and	each	of	them
 Cried	out:	"O	me,	Agnello,	how	thou	changest!
   Behold,	thou	now	art	neither	two	nor	one."
     Already	the	two	heads	had	one	become,
 When	there	appeared	to	us	two	figures	mingled
    Into	one	face,	wherein	the	two	were	lost.
  Of	the	four	lists	were	fashioned	the	two	arms,
   The	thighs	and	legs,	the	belly	and	the	chest
   Members	became	that	never	yet	were	seen.
   Every	original	aspect	there	was	cancelled;
   Two	and	yet	none	did	the	perverted	image
   Appear,	and	such	departed	with	slow	pace.
    Even	as	a	lizard,	under	the	great	scourge
      Of	days	canicular,	exchanging	hedge,
     Lightning	appeareth	if	the	road	it	cross;
  Thus	did	appear,	coming	towards	the	bellies
     Of	the	two	others,	a	small	fiery	serpent,
       Livid	and	black	as	is	a	peppercorn.
    And	in	that	part	whereat	is	first	received
     Our	aliment,	it	one	of	them	transfixed;
  Then	downward	fell	in	front	of	him	extended.
 The	one	transfixed	looked	at	it,	but	said	naught;
  Nay,	rather	with	feet	motionless	he	yawned,
    Just	as	if	sleep	or	fever	had	assailed	him.
      He	at	the	serpent	gazed,	and	it	at	him;
One	through	the	wound,	the	other	through	the	mouth
  Smoked	violently,	and	the	smoke	commingled.
  Henceforth	be	silent	Lucan,	where	he	mentions
         Wretched	Sabellus	and	Nassidius,
   And	wait	to	hear	what	now	shall	be	shot	forth.
     Be	silent	Ovid,	of	Cadmus	and	Arethusa;
       For	if	him	to	a	snake,	her	to	fountain,
    Converts	he	fabling,	that	I	grudge	him	not;
      Because	two	natures	never	front	to	front
     Has	he	transmuted,	so	that	both	the	forms
      To	interchange	their	matter	ready	were.
       Together	they	responded	in	such	wise,
       That	to	a	fork	the	serpent	cleft	his	tail,
   And	eke	the	wounded	drew	his	feet	together.
   The	legs	together	with	the	thighs	themselves
     Adhered	so,	that	in	little	time	the	juncture
    No	sign	whatever	made	that	was	apparent.
     He	with	the	cloven	tail	assumed	the	figure
      The	other	one	was	losing,	and	his	skin
       Became	elastic,	and	the	other's	hard.
    I	saw	the	arms	draw	inward	at	the	armpits,
    And	both	feet	of	the	reptile,	that	were	short,
    Lengthen	as	much	as	those	contracted	were.
     Thereafter	the	hind	feet,	together	twisted,
     Became	the	member	that	a	man	conceals,
    And	of	his	own	the	wretch	had	two	created.
      While	both	of	them	the	exhalation	veils
      With	a	new	colour,	and	engenders	hair
      On	one	of	them	and	depilates	the	other,
      The	one	uprose	and	down	the	other	fell,
 Though	turning	not	away	their	impious	lamps,
Underneath	which	each	one	his	muzzle	changed.
He	who	was	standing	drew	it	tow'rds	the	temples,
 And	from	excess	of	matter,	which	came	thither,
   Issued	the	ears	from	out	the	hollow	cheeks;
  What	did	not	backward	run	and	was	retained
     Of	that	excess	made	to	the	face	a	nose,
   And	the	lips	thickened	far	as	was	befitting.
He	who	lay	prostrate	thrusts	his	muzzle	forward,
  And	backward	draws	the	ears	into	his	head,
    In	the	same	manner	as	the	snail	its	horns;
  And	so	the	tongue,	which	was	entire	and	apt
  For	speech	before,	is	cleft,	and	the	bi-forked
  In	the	other	closes	up,	and	the	smoke	ceases.
 The	soul,	which	to	a	reptile	had	been	changed,
    Along	the	valley	hissing	takes	to	flight,
   And	after	him	the	other	speaking	sputters.
 Then	did	he	turn	upon	him	his	new	shoulders,
   And	said	to	the	other:	"I'll	have	Buoso	run,
   Crawling	as	I	have	done,	along	this	road."
     In	this	way	I	beheld	the	seventh	ballast
    Shift	and	reshift,	and	here	be	my	excuse
    The	novelty,	if	aught	my	pen	transgress.
 And	notwithstanding	that	mine	eyes	might	be
 Somewhat	bewildered,	and	my	mind	dismayed,
      They	could	not	flee	away	so	secretly
    But	that	I	plainly	saw	Puccio	Sciancato;
  And	he	it	was	who	sole	of	three	companions,
Which	came	in	the	beginning,	was	not	changed;
The	other	was	he	whom	thou,	Gaville,	weepest.                         	
                  Canto	XXVI
                         	
   Rejoice,	O	Florence,	since	thou	art	so	great,
 That	over	sea	and	land	thou	beatest	thy	wings,
And	throughout	Hell	thy	name	is	spread	abroad!
    Among	the	thieves	five	citizens	of	thine
Like	these	I	found,	whence	shame	comes	unto	me,
   And	thou	thereby	to	no	great	honour	risest.
  But	if	when	morn	is	near	our	dreams	are	true,
     Feel	shalt	thou	in	a	little	time	from	now
    What	Prato,	if	none	other,	craves	for	thee.
    And	if	it	now	were,	it	were	not	too	soon;
   Would	that	it	were,	seeing	it	needs	must	be,
   For	'twill	aggrieve	me	more	the	more	I	age.
    We	went	our	way,	and	up	along	the	stairs
   The	bourns	had	made	us	to	descend	before,
    Remounted	my	Conductor	and	drew	me.
         And	following	the	solitary	path
    Among	the	rocks	and	ridges	of	the	crag,
    The	foot	without	the	hand	sped	not	at	all.
    Then	sorrowed	I,	and	sorrow	now	again,
      When	I	direct	my	mind	to	what	I	saw,
   And	more	my	genius	curb	than	I	am	wont,
    That	it	may	run	not	unless	virtue	guide	it;
    So	that	if	some	good	star,	or	better	thing,
Have	given	me	good,	I	may	myself	not	grudge	it.
      As	many	as	the	hind	(who	on	the	hill
 Rests	at	the	time	when	he	who	lights	the	world
 His	countenance	keeps	least	concealed	from	us,
       While	as	the	fly	gives	place	unto	the	gnat)
     Seeth	the	glow-worms	down	along	the	valley,
Perchance	there	where	he	ploughs	and	makes	his	vintage;
        With	flames	as	manifold	resplendent	all
        Was	the	eighth	Bolgia,	as	I	grew	aware
      As	soon	as	I	was	where	the	depth	appeared.
    And	such	as	he	who	with	the	bears	avenged	him
          Beheld	Elijah's	chariot	at	departing,
      What	time	the	steeds	to	heaven	erect	uprose,
         For	with	his	eye	he	could	not	follow	it
        So	as	to	see	aught	else	than	flame	alone,
        Even	as	a	little	cloud	ascending	upward,
     Thus	each	along	the	gorge	of	the	intrenchment
       Was	moving;	for	not	one	reveals	the	theft,
         And	every	flame	a	sinner	steals	away.
         I	stood	upon	the	bridge	uprisen	to	see,
          So	that,	if	I	had	seized	not	on	a	rock,
        Down	had	I	fallen	without	being	pushed.
       And	the	Leader,	who	beheld	me	so	attent,
      Exclaimed:	"Within	the	fires	the	spirits	are;
  Each	swathes	himself	with	that	wherewith	he	burns."
        "My	Master,"	I	replied,	"by	hearing	thee
         I	am	more	sure;	but	I	surmised	already
     It	might	be	so,	and	already	wished	to	ask	thee
      Who	is	within	that	fire,	which	comes	so	cleft
         At	top,	it	seems	uprising	from	the	pyre
     Where	was	Eteocles	with	his	brother	placed."
     He	answered	me:	"Within	there	are	tormented
        Ulysses	and	Diomed,	and	thus	together
        They	unto	vengeance	run	as	unto	wrath.
     And	there	within	their	flame	do	they	lament
    The	ambush	of	the	horse,	which	made	the	door
    Whence	issued	forth	the	Romans'	gentle	seed;
    Therein	is	wept	the	craft,	for	which	being	dead
           Deidamia	still	deplores	Achilles,
      And	pain	for	the	Palladium	there	is	borne."
    "If	they	within	those	sparks	possess	the	power
     To	speak,"	I	said,	"thee,	Master,	much	I	pray,
   And	re-pray,	that	the	prayer	be	worth	a	thousand,
         That	thou	make	no	denial	of	awaiting
       Until	the	horned	flame	shall	hither	come;
     Thou	seest	that	with	desire	I	lean	towards	it."
        And	he	to	me:	"Worthy	is	thy	entreaty
     Of	much	applause,	and	therefore	I	accept	it;
     But	take	heed	that	thy	tongue	restrain	itself.
    Leave	me	to	speak,	because	I	have	conceived
   That	which	thou	wishest;	for	they	might	disdain
Perchance,	since	they	were	Greeks,	discourse	of	thine."
    When	now	the	flame	had	come	unto	that	point,
    Where	to	my	Leader	it	seemed	time	and	place,
        After	this	fashion	did	I	hear	him	speak:
        "O	ye,	who	are	twofold	within	one	fire,
       If	I	deserved	of	you,	while	I	was	living,
         If	I	deserved	of	you	or	much	or	little
      When	in	the	world	I	wrote	the	lofty	verses,
       Do	not	move	on,	but	one	of	you	declare
      Whither,	being	lost,	he	went	away	to	die."
      Then	of	the	antique	flame	the	greater	horn,
        Murmuring,	began	to	wave	itself	about
    Even	as	a	flame	doth	which	the	wind	fatigues.
     Thereafterward,	the	summit	to	and	fro
   Moving	as	if	it	were	the	tongue	that	spake,
    It	uttered	forth	a	voice,	and	said:	"When	I
  From	Circe	had	departed,	who	concealed	me
     More	than	a	year	there	near	unto	Gaeta,
        Or	ever	yet	Aeneas	named	it	so,
    Nor	fondness	for	my	son,	nor	reverence
     For	my	old	father,	nor	the	due	affection
   Which	joyous	should	have	made	Penelope,
      Could	overcome	within	me	the	desire
      I	had	to	be	experienced	of	the	world,
     And	of	the	vice	and	virtue	of	mankind;
       But	I	put	forth	on	the	high	open	sea
   With	one	sole	ship,	and	that	small	company
      By	which	I	never	had	deserted	been.
    Both	of	the	shores	I	saw	as	far	as	Spain,
     Far	as	Morocco,	and	the	isle	of	Sardes,
And	the	others	which	that	sea	bathes	round	about.
      I	and	my	company	were	old	and	slow
    When	at	that	narrow	passage	we	arrived
  Where	Hercules	his	landmarks	set	as	signals,
 That	man	no	farther	onward	should	adventure.
   On	the	right	hand	behind	me	left	I	Seville,
    And	on	the	other	already	had	left	Ceuta.
   'O	brothers,	who	amid	a	hundred	thousand
    Perils,'	I	said,	'have	come	unto	the	West,
         To	this	so	inconsiderable	vigil
     Which	is	remaining	of	your	senses	still
    Be	ye	unwilling	to	deny	the	knowledge,
   Following	the	sun,	of	the	unpeopled	world.
  Consider	ye	the	seed	from	which	ye	sprang;
   Ye	were	not	made	to	live	like	unto	brutes,
  But	for	pursuit	of	virtue	and	of	knowledge.'
     So	eager	did	I	render	my	companions,
   With	this	brief	exhortation,	for	the	voyage,
 That	then	I	hardly	could	have	held	them	back.
 And	having	turned	our	stern	unto	the	morning,
 We	of	the	oars	made	wings	for	our	mad	flight,
     Evermore	gaining	on	the	larboard	side.
      Already	all	the	stars	of	the	other	pole
     The	night	beheld,	and	ours	so	very	low
      It	did	not	rise	above	the	ocean	floor.
  Five	times	rekindled	and	as	many	quenched
 Had	been	the	splendour	underneath	the	moon,
    Since	we	had	entered	into	the	deep	pass,
  When	there	appeared	to	us	a	mountain,	dim
  From	distance,	and	it	seemed	to	me	so	high
         As	I	had	never	any	one	beheld.
 Joyful	were	we,	and	soon	it	turned	to	weeping;
   For	out	of	the	new	land	a	whirlwind	rose,
    And	smote	upon	the	fore	part	of	the	ship.
Three	times	it	made	her	whirl	with	all	the	waters,
   At	the	fourth	time	it	made	the	stern	uplift,
And	the	prow	downward	go,	as	pleased	Another,
      Until	the	sea	above	us	closed	again."                         	
                  Canto	XXVII
                         	
     Already	was	the	flame	erect	and	quiet,
  To	speak	no	more,	and	now	departed	from	us
      With	the	permission	of	the	gentle	Poet;
     When	yet	another,	which	behind	it	came,
      Caused	us	to	turn	our	eyes	upon	its	top
     By	a	confused	sound	that	issued	from	it.
      As	the	Sicilian	bull	(that	bellowed	first
    With	the	lament	of	him,	and	that	was	right,
        Who	with	his	file	had	modulated	it)
    Bellowed	so	with	the	voice	of	the	afflicted,
    That,	notwithstanding	it	was	made	of	brass,
      Still	it	appeared	with	agony	transfixed;
       Thus,	by	not	having	any	way	or	issue
   At	first	from	out	the	fire,	to	its	own	language
      Converted	were	the	melancholy	words.
   But	afterwards,	when	they	had	gathered	way
   Up	through	the	point,	giving	it	that	vibration
  The	tongue	had	given	them	in	their	passage	out,
     We	heard	it	said:	"O	thou,	at	whom	I	aim
My	voice,	and	who	but	now	wast	speaking	Lombard,
  Saying,	'Now	go	thy	way,	no	more	I	urge	thee,'
      Because	I	come	perchance	a	little	late,
   To	stay	and	speak	with	me	let	it	not	irk	thee;
    Thou	seest	it	irks	not	me,	and	I	am	burning.
       If	thou	but	lately	into	this	blind	world
   Hast	fallen	down	from	that	sweet	Latian	land,
 Wherefrom	I	bring	the	whole	of	my	transgression,
    Say,	if	the	Romagnuols	have	peace	or	war,
    For	I	was	from	the	mountains	there	between
    Urbino	and	the	yoke	whence	Tiber	bursts."
      I	still	was	downward	bent	and	listening,
   When	my	Conductor	touched	me	on	the	side,
    Saying:	"Speak	thou:	this	one	a	Latian	is."
       And	I,	who	had	beforehand	my	reply
      In	readiness,	forthwith	began	to	speak:
  "O	soul,	that	down	below	there	art	concealed,
     Romagna	thine	is	not	and	never	has	been
     Without	war	in	the	bosom	of	its	tyrants;
     But	open	war	I	none	have	left	there	now.
    Ravenna	stands	as	it	long	years	has	stood;
     The	Eagle	of	Polenta	there	is	brooding,
     So	that	she	covers	Cervia	with	her	vans.
  The	city	which	once	made	the	long	resistance,
      And	of	the	French	a	sanguinary	heap,
    Beneath	the	Green	Paws	finds	itself	again;
    Verrucchio's	ancient	Mastiff	and	the	new,
   Who	made	such	bad	disposal	of	Montagna,
Where	they	are	wont	make	wimbles	of	their	teeth.
        The	cities	of	Lamone	and	Santerno
      Governs	the	Lioncel	of	the	white	lair,
Who	changes	sides	'twixt	summer-time	and	winter;
   And	that	of	which	the	Savio	bathes	the	flank,
  Even	as	it	lies	between	the	plain	and	mountain,
      Lives	between	tyranny	and	a	free	state.
      Now	I	entreat	thee	tell	us	who	thou	art;
  Be	not	more	stubborn	than	the	rest	have	been,
 So	may	thy	name	hold	front	there	in	the	world."
       After	the	fire	a	little	more	had	roared
   In	its	own	fashion,	the	sharp	point	it	moved
This	way	and	that,	and	then	gave	forth	such	breath:
      "If	I	believed	that	my	reply	were	made
    To	one	who	to	the	world	would	e'er	return,
This	flame	without	more	flickering	would	stand	still;
       But	inasmuch	as	never	from	this	depth
          Did	any	one	return,	if	I	hear	true,
         Without	the	fear	of	infamy	I	answer,
         I	was	a	man	of	arms,	then	Cordelier,
       Believing	thus	begirt	to	make	amends;
        And	truly	my	belief	had	been	fulfilled
    But	for	the	High	Priest,	whom	may	ill	betide,
       Who	put	me	back	into	my	former	sins;
    And	how	and	wherefore	I	will	have	thee	hear.
     While	I	was	still	the	form	of	bone	and	pulp
       My	mother	gave	to	me,	the	deeds	I	did
         Were	not	those	of	a	lion,	but	a	fox.
       The	machinations	and	the	covert	ways
     I	knew	them	all,	and	practised	so	their	craft,
    That	to	the	ends	of	earth	the	sound	went	forth.
      When	now	unto	that	portion	of	mine	age
     I	saw	myself	arrived,	when	each	one	ought
     To	lower	the	sails,	and	coil	away	the	ropes,
That	which	before	had	pleased	me	then	displeased	me;
     And	penitent	and	confessing	I	surrendered,
    Ah	woe	is	me!	and	it	would	have	bestead	me;
         The	Leader	of	the	modern	Pharisees
           Having	a	war	near	unto	Lateran,
      And	not	with	Saracens	nor	with	the	Jews,
     For	each	one	of	his	enemies	was	Christian,
    And	none	of	them	had	been	to	conquer	Acre,
       Nor	merchandising	in	the	Sultan's	land,
      Nor	the	high	office,	nor	the	sacred	orders,
         In	him	regarded,	nor	in	me	that	cord
Which	used	to	make	those	girt	with	it	more	meagre;
   But	even	as	Constantine	sought	out	Sylvester
        To	cure	his	leprosy,	within	Soracte,
      So	this	one	sought	me	out	as	an	adept
       To	cure	him	of	the	fever	of	his	pride.
     Counsel	he	asked	of	me,	and	I	was	silent,
      Because	his	words	appeared	inebriate.
    And	then	he	said:	'Be	not	thy	heart	afraid;
  Henceforth	I	thee	absolve;	and	thou	instruct	me
       How	to	raze	Palestrina	to	the	ground.
    Heaven	have	I	power	to	lock	and	to	unlock,
  As	thou	dost	know;	therefore	the	keys	are	two,
     The	which	my	predecessor	held	not	dear.'
     Then	urged	me	on	his	weighty	arguments
  There,	where	my	silence	was	the	worst	advice;
    And	said	I:	'Father,	since	thou	washest	me
      Of	that	sin	into	which	I	now	must	fall,
    The	promise	long	with	the	fulfilment	short
     Will	make	thee	triumph	in	thy	lofty	seat.'
    Francis	came	afterward,	when	I	was	dead,
      For	me;	but	one	of	the	black	Cherubim
   Said	to	him:	'Take	him	not;	do	me	no	wrong;
    He	must	come	down	among	my	servitors,
      Because	he	gave	the	fraudulent	advice
  From	which	time	forth	I	have	been	at	his	hair;
     For	who	repents	not	cannot	be	absolved,
     Nor	can	one	both	repent	and	will	at	once,
 Because	of	the	contradiction	which	consents	not.'
        O	miserable	me!	how	I	did	shudder
   When	he	seized	on	me,	saying:	'Peradventure
   Thou	didst	not	think	that	I	was	a	logician!'
    He	bore	me	unto	Minos,	who	entwined
  Eight	times	his	tail	about	his	stubborn	back,
    And	after	he	had	bitten	it	in	great	rage,
    Said:	'Of	the	thievish	fire	a	culprit	this;'
  Wherefore,	here	where	thou	seest,	am	I	lost,
    And	vested	thus	in	going	I	bemoan	me."
     When	it	had	thus	completed	its	recital,
   The	flame	departed	uttering	lamentations,
 Writhing	and	flapping	its	sharp-pointed	horn.
 Onward	we	passed,	both	I	and	my	Conductor,
      Up	o'er	the	crag	above	another	arch,
 Which	the	moat	covers,	where	is	paid	the	fee
By	those	who,	sowing	discord,	win	their	burden.                         	
                 Canto	XXVIII
                         	
Who	ever	could,	e'en	with	untrammelled	words,
   Tell	of	the	blood	and	of	the	wounds	in	full
  Which	now	I	saw,	by	many	times	narrating?
  Each	tongue	would	for	a	certainty	fall	short
     By	reason	of	our	speech	and	memory,
That	have	small	room	to	comprehend	so	much.
     If	were	again	assembled	all	the	people
     Which	formerly	upon	the	fateful	land
   Of	Puglia	were	lamenting	for	their	blood
  Shed	by	the	Romans	and	the	lingering	war
 That	of	the	rings	made	such	illustrious	spoils,
      As	Livy	has	recorded,	who	errs	not,
    With	those	who	felt	the	agony	of	blows
   By	making	counterstand	to	Robert	Guiscard,
 And	all	the	rest,	whose	bones	are	gathered	still
         At	Ceperano,	where	a	renegade
      Was	each	Apulian,	and	at	Tagliacozzo,
 Where	without	arms	the	old	Alardo	conquered,
And	one	his	limb	transpierced,	and	one	lopped	off,
  Should	show,	it	would	be	nothing	to	compare
  With	the	disgusting	mode	of	the	ninth	Bolgia.
       A	cask	by	losing	centre-piece	or	cant
       Was	never	shattered	so,	as	I	saw	one
 Rent	from	the	chin	to	where	one	breaketh	wind.
Between	his	legs	were	hanging	down	his	entrails;
    His	heart	was	visible,	and	the	dismal	sack
     That	maketh	excrement	of	what	is	eaten.
     While	I	was	all	absorbed	in	seeing	him,
   He	looked	at	me,	and	opened	with	his	hands
  His	bosom,	saying:	"See	now	how	I	rend	me;
        How	mutilated,	see,	is	Mahomet;
       In	front	of	me	doth	Ali	weeping	go,
    Cleft	in	the	face	from	forelock	unto	chin;
  And	all	the	others	whom	thou	here	beholdest,
     Disseminators	of	scandal	and	of	schism
  While	living	were,	and	therefore	are	cleft	thus.
    A	devil	is	behind	here,	who	doth	cleave	us
      Thus	cruelly,	unto	the	falchion's	edge
     Putting	again	each	one	of	all	this	ream,
  When	we	have	gone	around	the	doleful	road;
   By	reason	that	our	wounds	are	closed	again
        Ere	any	one	in	front	of	him	repass.
    But	who	art	thou,	that	musest	on	the	crag,
         Perchance	to	postpone	going	to	the	pain
        That	is	adjudged	upon	thine	accusations?"
"Nor	death	hath	reached	him	yet,	nor	guilt	doth	bring	him,"
        My	Master	made	reply,	"to	be	tormented;
            But	to	procure	him	full	experience,
       Me,	who	am	dead,	behoves	it	to	conduct	him
     Down	here	through	Hell,	from	circle	unto	circle;
          And	this	is	true	as	that	I	speak	to	thee."
  More	than	a	hundred	were	there	when	they	heard	him,
        Who	in	the	moat	stood	still	to	look	at	me,
     Through	wonderment	oblivious	of	their	torture.
       "Now	say	to	Fra	Dolcino,	then,	to	arm	him,
       Thou,	who	perhaps	wilt	shortly	see	the	sun,
          If	soon	he	wish	not	here	to	follow	me,
        So	with	provisions,	that	no	stress	of	snow
          May	give	the	victory	to	the	Novarese,
       Which	otherwise	to	gain	would	not	be	easy."
            After	one	foot	to	go	away	he	lifted,
          This	word	did	Mahomet	say	unto	me,
      Then	to	depart	upon	the	ground	he	stretched	it.
     Another	one,	who	had	his	throat	pierced	through,
       And	nose	cut	off	close	underneath	the	brows,
            And	had	no	longer	but	a	single	ear,
        Staying	to	look	in	wonder	with	the	others,
           Before	the	others	did	his	gullet	open,
         Which	outwardly	was	red	in	every	part,
    And	said:	"O	thou,	whom	guilt	doth	not	condemn,
         And	whom	I	once	saw	up	in	Latian	land,
         Unless	too	great	similitude	deceive	me,
         Call	to	remembrance	Pier	da	Medicina,
      If	e'er	thou	see	again	the	lovely	plain
     That	from	Vercelli	slopes	to	Marcabo,
  And	make	it	known	to	the	best	two	of	Fano,
   To	Messer	Guido	and	Angiolello	likewise,
     That	if	foreseeing	here	be	not	in	vain,
    Cast	over	from	their	vessel	shall	they	be,
     And	drowned	near	unto	the	Cattolica,
         By	the	betrayal	of	a	tyrant	fell.
    Between	the	isles	of	Cyprus	and	Majorca
   Neptune	ne'er	yet	beheld	so	great	a	crime,
     Neither	of	pirates	nor	Argolic	people.
    That	traitor,	who	sees	only	with	one	eye,
And	holds	the	land,	which	some	one	here	with	me
    Would	fain	be	fasting	from	the	vision	of,
 Will	make	them	come	unto	a	parley	with	him;
     Then	will	do	so,	that	to	Focara's	wind
 They	will	not	stand	in	need	of	vow	or	prayer."
    And	I	to	him:	"Show	to	me	and	declare,
 If	thou	wouldst	have	me	bear	up	news	of	thee,
     Who	is	this	person	of	the	bitter	vision."
     Then	did	he	lay	his	hand	upon	the	jaw
    Of	one	of	his	companions,	and	his	mouth
  Oped,	crying:	"This	is	he,	and	he	speaks	not.
This	one,	being	banished,	every	doubt	submerged
      In	Caesar	by	affirming	the	forearmed
     Always	with	detriment	allowed	delay."
     O	how	bewildered	unto	me	appeared,
    With	tongue	asunder	in	his	windpipe	slit,
      Curio,	who	in	speaking	was	so	bold!
  And	one,	who	both	his	hands	dissevered	had,
  The	stumps	uplifting	through	the	murky	air,
    So	that	the	blood	made	horrible	his	face,
 Cried	out:	"Thou	shalt	remember	Mosca	also,
   Who	said,	alas!	'A	thing	done	has	an	end!'
 Which	was	an	ill	seed	for	the	Tuscan	people."
  "And	death	unto	thy	race,"	thereto	I	added;
    Whence	he,	accumulating	woe	on	woe,
    Departed,	like	a	person	sad	and	crazed.
    But	I	remained	to	look	upon	the	crowd;
   And	saw	a	thing	which	I	should	be	afraid,
  Without	some	further	proof,	even	to	recount,
  If	it	were	not	that	conscience	reassures	me,
 That	good	companion	which	emboldens	man
    Beneath	the	hauberk	of	its	feeling	pure.
      I	truly	saw,	and	still	I	seem	to	see	it,
  A	trunk	without	a	head	walk	in	like	manner
  As	walked	the	others	of	the	mournful	herd.
  And	by	the	hair	it	held	the	head	dissevered,
  Hung	from	the	hand	in	fashion	of	a	lantern,
   And	that	upon	us	gazed	and	said:	"O	me!"
        It	of	itself	made	to	itself	a	lamp,
   And	they	were	two	in	one,	and	one	in	two;
 How	that	can	be,	He	knows	who	so	ordains	it.
  When	it	was	come	close	to	the	bridge's	foot,
     It	lifted	high	its	arm	with	all	the	head,
    To	bring	more	closely	unto	us	its	words,
  Which	were:	"Behold	now	the	sore	penalty,
Thou,	who	dost	breathing	go	the	dead	beholding;
        Behold	if	any	be	as	great	as	this.
    And	so	that	thou	may	carry	news	of	me,
    Know	that	Bertram	de	Born	am	I,	the	same
  Who	gave	to	the	Young	King	the	evil	comfort.
     I	made	the	father	and	the	son	rebellious;
        Achitophel	not	more	with	Absalom
    And	David	did	with	his	accursed	goadings.
        Because	I	parted	persons	so	united,
       Parted	do	I	now	bear	my	brain,	alas!
    From	its	beginning,	which	is	in	this	trunk.
    Thus	is	observed	in	me	the	counterpoise."                          	
                   Canto	XXIX
                          	
     The	many	people	and	the	divers	wounds
      These	eyes	of	mine	had	so	inebriated,
  That	they	were	wishful	to	stand	still	and	weep;
 But	said	Virgilius:	"What	dost	thou	still	gaze	at?
     Why	is	thy	sight	still	riveted	down	there
     Among	the	mournful,	mutilated	shades?
     Thou	hast	not	done	so	at	the	other	Bolge;
     Consider,	if	to	count	them	thou	believest,
   That	two-and-twenty	miles	the	valley	winds,
    And	now	the	moon	is	underneath	our	feet;
      Henceforth	the	time	allotted	us	is	brief,
   And	more	is	to	be	seen	than	what	thou	seest."
    "If	thou	hadst,"	I	made	answer	thereupon,
    "Attended	to	the	cause	for	which	I	looked,
Perhaps	a	longer	stay	thou	wouldst	have	pardoned."
 Meanwhile	my	Guide	departed,	and	behind	him
         I	went,	already	making	my	reply,
     And	superadding:	"In	that	cavern	where
    I	held	mine	eyes	with	such	attention	fixed,
       I	think	a	spirit	of	my	blood	laments
 The	sin	which	down	below	there	costs	so	much."
   Then	said	the	Master:	"Be	no	longer	broken
  Thy	thought	from	this	time	forward	upon	him;
   Attend	elsewhere,	and	there	let	him	remain;
      For	him	I	saw	below	the	little	bridge,
 Pointing	at	thee,	and	threatening	with	his	finger
  Fiercely,	and	heard	him	called	Geri	del	Bello.
    So	wholly	at	that	time	wast	thou	impeded
      By	him	who	formerly	held	Altaforte,
  Thou	didst	not	look	that	way;	so	he	departed."
     "O	my	Conductor,	his	own	violent	death,
    Which	is	not	yet	avenged	for	him,"	I	said,
       "By	any	who	is	sharer	in	the	shame,
   Made	him	disdainful;	whence	he	went	away,
      As	I	imagine,	without	speaking	to	me,
    And	thereby	made	me	pity	him	the	more."
    Thus	did	we	speak	as	far	as	the	first	place
   Upon	the	crag,	which	the	next	valley	shows
  Down	to	the	bottom,	if	there	were	more	light.
  When	we	were	now	right	over	the	last	cloister
      Of	Malebolge,	so	that	its	lay-brothers
    Could	manifest	themselves	unto	our	sight,
Divers	lamentings	pierced	me	through	and	through,
 Which	with	compassion	had	their	arrows	barbed,
   Whereat	mine	ears	I	covered	with	my	hands.
    What	pain	would	be,	if	from	the	hospitals
    Of	Valdichiana,	'twixt	July	and	September,
         And	of	Maremma	and	Sardinia
  All	the	diseases	in	one	moat	were	gathered,
Such	was	it	here,	and	such	a	stench	came	from	it
   As	from	putrescent	limbs	is	wont	to	issue.
    We	had	descended	on	the	furthest	bank
  From	the	long	crag,	upon	the	left	hand	still,
  And	then	more	vivid	was	my	power	of	sight
Down	tow'rds	the	bottom,	where	the	ministress
      Of	the	high	Lord,	Justice	infallible,
   Punishes	forgers,	which	she	here	records.
       I	do	not	think	a	sadder	sight	to	see
     Was	in	Aegina	the	whole	people	sick,
    (When	was	the	air	so	full	of	pestilence,
     The	animals,	down	to	the	little	worm,
   All	fell,	and	afterwards	the	ancient	people,
     According	as	the	poets	have	affirmed,
  Were	from	the	seed	of	ants	restored	again,)
 Than	was	it	to	behold	through	that	dark	valley
    The	spirits	languishing	in	divers	heaps.
      This	on	the	belly,	that	upon	the	back
   One	of	the	other	lay,	and	others	crawling
   Shifted	themselves	along	the	dismal	road.
 We	step	by	step	went	onward	without	speech,
     Gazing	upon	and	listening	to	the	sick
Who	had	not	strength	enough	to	lift	their	bodies.
  I	saw	two	sitting	leaned	against	each	other,
   As	leans	in	heating	platter	against	platter,
  From	head	to	foot	bespotted	o'er	with	scabs;
      And	never	saw	I	plied	a	currycomb
   By	stable-boy	for	whom	his	master	waits,
     Or	him	who	keeps	awake	unwillingly,
       As	every	one	was	plying	fast	the	bite
      Of	nails	upon	himself,	for	the	great	rage
      Of	itching	which	no	other	succour	had.
And	the	nails	downward	with	them	dragged	the	scab,
      In	fashion	as	a	knife	the	scales	of	bream,
       Or	any	other	fish	that	has	them	largest.
  "O	thou,	that	with	thy	fingers	dost	dismail	thee,"
        Began	my	Leader	unto	one	of	them,
    "And	makest	of	them	pincers	now	and	then,
         Tell	me	if	any	Latian	is	with	those
   Who	are	herein;	so	may	thy	nails	suffice	thee
           To	all	eternity	unto	this	work."
    "Latians	are	we,	whom	thou	so	wasted	seest,
    Both	of	us	here,"	one	weeping	made	reply;
   "But	who	art	thou,	that	questionest	about	us?"
   And	said	the	Guide:	"One	am	I	who	descends
   Down	with	this	living	man	from	cliff	to	cliff,
       And	I	intend	to	show	Hell	unto	him."
       Then	broken	was	their	mutual	support,
   And	trembling	each	one	turned	himself	to	me,
    With	others	who	had	heard	him	by	rebound.
     Wholly	to	me	did	the	good	Master	gather,
  Saying:	"Say	unto	them	whate'er	thou	wishest."
      And	I	began,	since	he	would	have	it	so:
       "So	may	your	memory	not	steal	away
   In	the	first	world	from	out	the	minds	of	men,
      But	so	may	it	survive	'neath	many	suns,
     Say	to	me	who	ye	are,	and	of	what	people;
    Let	not	your	foul	and	loathsome	punishment
    Make	you	afraid	to	show	yourselves	to	me."
       "I	of	Arezzo	was,"	one	made	reply,
      "And	Albert	of	Siena	had	me	burned;
   But	what	I	died	for	does	not	bring	me	here.
     'Tis	true	I	said	to	him,	speaking	in	jest,
      That	I	could	rise	by	flight	into	the	air,
     And	he	who	had	conceit,	but	little	wit,
  Would	have	me	show	to	him	the	art;	and	only
   Because	no	Daedalus	I	made	him,	made	me
   Be	burned	by	one	who	held	him	as	his	son.
       But	unto	the	last	Bolgia	of	the	ten,
   For	alchemy,	which	in	the	world	I	practised,
  Minos,	who	cannot	err,	has	me	condemned."
     And	to	the	Poet	said	I:	"Now	was	ever
        So	vain	a	people	as	the	Sienese?
      Not	for	a	certainty	the	French	by	far."
   Whereat	the	other	leper,	who	had	heard	me,
  Replied	unto	my	speech:	"Taking	out	Stricca,
    Who	knew	the	art	of	moderate	expenses,
       And	Niccolo,	who	the	luxurious	use
       Of	cloves	discovered	earliest	of	all
 Within	that	garden	where	such	seed	takes	root;
And	taking	out	the	band,	among	whom	squandered
  Caccia	d'Ascian	his	vineyards	and	vast	woods,
   And	where	his	wit	the	Abbagliato	proffered!
 But,	that	thou	know	who	thus	doth	second	thee
    Against	the	Sienese,	make	sharp	thine	eye
  Tow'rds	me,	so	that	my	face	well	answer	thee,
   And	thou	shalt	see	I	am	Capocchio's	shade,
        Who	metals	falsified	by	alchemy;
   Thou	must	remember,	if	I	well	descry	thee,
        How	I	a	skilful	ape	of	nature	was."                         	
                   Canto	XXX
                         	
    'Twas	at	the	time	when	Juno	was	enraged,
      For	Semele,	against	the	Theban	blood,
    As	she	already	more	than	once	had	shown,
        So	reft	of	reason	Athamas	became,
   That,	seeing	his	own	wife	with	children	twain
      Walking	encumbered	upon	either	hand,
  He	cried:	"Spread	out	the	nets,	that	I	may	take
  The	lioness	and	her	whelps	upon	the	passage;"
      And	then	extended	his	unpitying	claws,
   Seizing	the	first,	who	had	the	name	Learchus,
And	whirled	him	round,	and	dashed	him	on	a	rock;
And	she,	with	the	other	burthen,	drowned	herself;—
  And	at	the	time	when	fortune	downward	hurled
   The	Trojan's	arrogance,	that	all	things	dared,
  So	that	the	king	was	with	his	kingdom	crushed,
      Hecuba	sad,	disconsolate,	and	captive,
        When	lifeless	she	beheld	Polyxena,
        And	of	her	Polydorus	on	the	shore
      Of	ocean	was	the	dolorous	one	aware,
     Out	of	her	senses	like	a	dog	she	barked,
   So	much	the	anguish	had	her	mind	distorted;
    But	not	of	Thebes	the	furies	nor	the	Trojan
        Were	ever	seen	in	any	one	so	cruel
In	goading	beasts,	and	much	more	human	members,
     As	I	beheld	two	shadows	pale	and	naked,
       Who,	biting,	in	the	manner	ran	along
That	a	boar	does,	when	from	the	sty	turned	loose.
    One	to	Capocchio	came,	and	by	the	nape
Seized	with	its	teeth	his	neck,	so	that	in	dragging
    It	made	his	belly	grate	the	solid	bottom.
 And	the	Aretine,	who	trembling	had	remained,
Said	to	me:	"That	mad	sprite	is	Gianni	Schicchi,
  And	raving	goes	thus	harrying	other	people."
    "O,"	said	I	to	him,	"so	may	not	the	other
     Set	teeth	on	thee,	let	it	not	weary	thee
      To	tell	us	who	it	is,	ere	it	dart	hence."
    And	he	to	me:	"That	is	the	ancient	ghost
     Of	the	nefarious	Myrrha,	who	became
   Beyond	all	rightful	love	her	father's	lover.
   She	came	to	sin	with	him	after	this	manner,
      By	counterfeiting	of	another's	form;
      As	he	who	goeth	yonder	undertook,
    That	he	might	gain	the	lady	of	the	herd,
    To	counterfeit	in	himself	Buoso	Donati,
     Making	a	will	and	giving	it	due	form."
     And	after	the	two	maniacs	had	passed
   On	whom	I	held	mine	eye,	I	turned	it	back
        To	look	upon	the	other	evil-born.
      I	saw	one	made	in	fashion	of	a	lute,
       If	he	had	only	had	the	groin	cut	off
   Just	at	the	point	at	which	a	man	is	forked.
    The	heavy	dropsy,	that	so	disproportions
 The	limbs	with	humours,	which	it	ill	concocts,
   That	the	face	corresponds	not	to	the	belly,
     Compelled	him	so	to	hold	his	lips	apart
    As	does	the	hectic,	who	because	of	thirst
One	tow'rds	the	chin,	the	other	upward	turns.
     "O	ye,	who	without	any	torment	are,
 And	why	I	know	not,	in	the	world	of	woe,"
   He	said	to	us,	"behold,	and	be	attentive
      Unto	the	misery	of	Master	Adam;
  I	had	while	living	much	of	what	I	wished,
    And	now,	alas!	a	drop	of	water	crave.
   The	rivulets,	that	from	the	verdant	hills
    Of	Cassentin	descend	down	into	Arno,
 Making	their	channels	to	be	cold	and	moist,
    Ever	before	me	stand,	and	not	in	vain;
   For	far	more	doth	their	image	dry	me	up
Than	the	disease	which	strips	my	face	of	flesh.
      The	rigid	justice	that	chastises	me
  Draweth	occasion	from	the	place	in	which
 I	sinned,	to	put	the	more	my	sighs	in	flight.
   There	is	Romena,	where	I	counterfeited
   The	currency	imprinted	with	the	Baptist,
   For	which	I	left	my	body	burned	above.
    But	if	I	here	could	see	the	tristful	soul
  Of	Guido,	or	Alessandro,	or	their	brother,
For	Branda's	fount	I	would	not	give	the	sight.
      One	is	within	already,	if	the	raving
Shades	that	are	going	round	about	speak	truth;
 But	what	avails	it	me,	whose	limbs	are	tied?
      If	I	were	only	still	so	light,	that	in
  A	hundred	years	I	could	advance	one	inch,
       I	had	already	started	on	the	way,
  Seeking	him	out	among	this	squalid	folk,
    Although	the	circuit	be	eleven	miles,
     And	be	not	less	than	half	a	mile	across.
         For	them	am	I	in	such	a	family;
    They	did	induce	me	into	coining	florins,
      Which	had	three	carats	of	impurity."
 And	I	to	him:	"Who	are	the	two	poor	wretches
   That	smoke	like	unto	a	wet	hand	in	winter,
Lying	there	close	upon	thy	right-hand	confines?"
 "I	found	them	here,"	replied	he,	"when	I	rained
 Into	this	chasm,	and	since	they	have	not	turned,
      Nor	do	I	think	they	will	for	evermore.
  One	the	false	woman	is	who	accused	Joseph,
    The	other	the	false	Sinon,	Greek	of	Troy;
  From	acute	fever	they	send	forth	such	reek."
   And	one	of	them,	who	felt	himself	annoyed
    At	being,	peradventure,	named	so	darkly,
 Smote	with	the	fist	upon	his	hardened	paunch.
      It	gave	a	sound,	as	if	it	were	a	drum;
    And	Master	Adam	smote	him	in	the	face,
   With	arm	that	did	not	seem	to	be	less	hard,
   Saying	to	him:	"Although	be	taken	from	me
    All	motion,	for	my	limbs	that	heavy	are,
    I	have	an	arm	unfettered	for	such	need."
 Whereat	he	answer	made:	"When	thou	didst	go
     Unto	the	fire,	thou	hadst	it	not	so	ready:
But	hadst	it	so	and	more	when	thou	wast	coining."
    The	dropsical:	"Thou	sayest	true	in	that;
    But	thou	wast	not	so	true	a	witness	there,
Where	thou	wast	questioned	of	the	truth	at	Troy."
   "If	I	spake	false,	thou	falsifiedst	the	coin,"
    Said	Sinon;	"and	for	one	fault	I	am	here,
    And	thou	for	more	than	any	other	demon."
     "Remember,	perjurer,	about	the	horse,"
    He	made	reply	who	had	the	swollen	belly,
"And	rueful	be	it	thee	the	whole	world	knows	it."
  "Rueful	to	thee	the	thirst	be	wherewith	cracks
Thy	tongue,"	the	Greek	said,	"and	the	putrid	water
  That	hedges	so	thy	paunch	before	thine	eyes."
    Then	the	false-coiner:	"So	is	gaping	wide
    Thy	mouth	for	speaking	evil,	as	'tis	wont;
  Because	if	I	have	thirst,	and	humour	stuff	me
  Thou	hast	the	burning	and	the	head	that	aches,
      And	to	lick	up	the	mirror	of	Narcissus
Thou	wouldst	not	want	words	many	to	invite	thee."
     In	listening	to	them	was	I	wholly	fixed,
  When	said	the	Master	to	me:	"Now	just	look,
    For	little	wants	it	that	I	quarrel	with	thee."
     When	him	I	heard	in	anger	speak	to	me,
 I	turned	me	round	towards	him	with	such	shame
     That	still	it	eddies	through	my	memory.
    And	as	he	is	who	dreams	of	his	own	harm,
    Who	dreaming	wishes	it	may	be	a	dream,
    So	that	he	craves	what	is,	as	if	it	were	not;
   Such	I	became,	not	having	power	to	speak,
     For	to	excuse	myself	I	wished,	and	still
    Excused	myself,	and	did	not	think	I	did	it.
  "Less	shame	doth	wash	away	a	greater	fault,"
  The	Master	said,	"than	this	of	thine	has	been;
    Therefore	thyself	disburden	of	all	sadness,
   And	make	account	that	I	am	aye	beside	thee,
   If	e'er	it	come	to	pass	that	fortune	bring	thee
   Where	there	are	people	in	a	like	dispute;
    For	a	base	wish	it	is	to	wish	to	hear	it."                        	
                  Canto	XXXI
                        	
One	and	the	selfsame	tongue	first	wounded	me,
 So	that	it	tinged	the	one	cheek	and	the	other,
    And	then	held	out	to	me	the	medicine;
   Thus	do	I	hear	that	once	Achilles'	spear,
   His	and	his	father's,	used	to	be	the	cause
    First	of	a	sad	and	then	a	gracious	boon.
We	turned	our	backs	upon	the	wretched	valley,
   Upon	the	bank	that	girds	it	round	about,
     Going	across	it	without	any	speech.
There	it	was	less	than	night,	and	less	than	day,
    So	that	my	sight	went	little	in	advance;
   But	I	could	hear	the	blare	of	a	loud	horn,
So	loud	it	would	have	made	each	thunder	faint,
    Which,	counter	to	it	following	its	way,
   Mine	eyes	directed	wholly	to	one	place.
        After	the	dolorous	discomfiture
  When	Charlemagne	the	holy	emprise	lost,
       So	terribly	Orlando	sounded	not.
Short	while	my	head	turned	thitherward	I	held
  When	many	lofty	towers	I	seemed	to	see,
 Whereat	I:	"Master,	say,	what	town	is	this?"
  And	he	to	me:	"Because	thou	peerest	forth
 Athwart	the	darkness	at	too	great	a	distance,
    It	happens	that	thou	errest	in	thy	fancy.
   Well	shalt	thou	see,	if	thou	arrivest	there,
   How	much	the	sense	deceives	itself	by	distance;
         Therefore	a	little	faster	spur	thee	on."
        Then	tenderly	he	took	me	by	the	hand,
     And	said:	"Before	we	farther	have	advanced,
           That	the	reality	may	seem	to	thee
Less	strange,	know	that	these	are	not	towers,	but	giants,
       And	they	are	in	the	well,	around	the	bank,
     From	navel	downward,	one	and	all	of	them."
          As,	when	the	fog	is	vanishing	away,
         Little	by	little	doth	the	sight	refigure
    Whate'er	the	mist	that	crowds	the	air	conceals,
   So,	piercing	through	the	dense	and	darksome	air,
  More	and	more	near	approaching	tow'rd	the	verge,
         My	error	fled,	and	fear	came	over	me;
          Because	as	on	its	circular	parapets
       Montereggione	crowns	itself	with	towers,
    E'en	thus	the	margin	which	surrounds	the	well
         With	one	half	of	their	bodies	turreted
       The	horrible	giants,	whom	Jove	menaces
   E'en	now	from	out	the	heavens	when	he	thunders.
          And	I	of	one	already	saw	the	face,
   Shoulders,	and	breast,	and	great	part	of	the	belly,
      And	down	along	his	sides	both	of	the	arms.
      Certainly	Nature,	when	she	left	the	making
        Of	animals	like	these,	did	well	indeed,
         By	taking	such	executors	from	Mars;
      And	if	of	elephants	and	whales	she	doth	not
         Repent	her,	whosoever	looketh	subtly
    More	just	and	more	discreet	will	hold	her	for	it;
          For	where	the	argument	of	intellect
         Is	added	unto	evil	will	and	power,
    No	rampart	can	the	people	make	against	it.
     His	face	appeared	to	me	as	long	and	large
   As	is	at	Rome	the	pine-cone	of	Saint	Peter's,
      And	in	proportion	were	the	other	bones;
      So	that	the	margin,	which	an	apron	was
  Down	from	the	middle,	showed	so	much	of	him
        Above	it,	that	to	reach	up	to	his	hair
   Three	Frieslanders	in	vain	had	vaunted	them;
       For	I	beheld	thirty	great	palms	of	him
Down	from	the	place	where	man	his	mantle	buckles.
         "Raphael	mai	amech	izabi	almi,"
      Began	to	clamour	the	ferocious	mouth,
   To	which	were	not	befitting	sweeter	psalms.
      And	unto	him	my	Guide:	"Soul	idiotic,
   Keep	to	thy	horn,	and	vent	thyself	with	that,
    When	wrath	or	other	passion	touches	thee.
 Search	round	thy	neck,	and	thou	wilt	find	the	belt
   Which	keeps	it	fastened,	O	bewildered	soul,
    And	see	it,	where	it	bars	thy	mighty	breast."
    Then	said	to	me:	"He	doth	himself	accuse;
    This	one	is	Nimrod,	by	whose	evil	thought
    One	language	in	the	world	is	not	still	used.
    Here	let	us	leave	him	and	not	speak	in	vain;
      For	even	such	to	him	is	every	language
    As	his	to	others,	which	to	none	is	known."
     Therefore	a	longer	journey	did	we	make,
    Turned	to	the	left,	and	a	crossbow-shot	oft
    We	found	another	far	more	fierce	and	large.
     In	binding	him,	who	might	the	master	be
    I	cannot	say;	but	he	had	pinioned	close
  Behind	the	right	arm,	and	in	front	the	other,
   With	chains,	that	held	him	so	begirt	about
From	the	neck	down,	that	on	the	part	uncovered
     It	wound	itself	as	far	as	the	fifth	gyre.
  "This	proud	one	wished	to	make	experiment
 Of	his	own	power	against	the	Supreme	Jove,"
My	Leader	said,	"whence	he	has	such	a	guerdon.
Ephialtes	is	his	name;	he	showed	great	prowess.
    What	time	the	giants	terrified	the	gods;
  The	arms	he	wielded	never	more	he	moves."
    And	I	to	him:	"If	possible,	I	should	wish
       That	of	the	measureless	Briareus
  These	eyes	of	mine	might	have	experience."
Whence	he	replied:	"Thou	shalt	behold	Antaeus
 Close	by	here,	who	can	speak	and	is	unbound,
 Who	at	the	bottom	of	all	crime	shall	place	us.
Much	farther	yon	is	he	whom	thou	wouldst	see,
And	he	is	bound,	and	fashioned	like	to	this	one,
 Save	that	he	seems	in	aspect	more	ferocious."
 There	never	was	an	earthquake	of	such	might
    That	it	could	shake	a	tower	so	violently,
     As	Ephialtes	suddenly	shook	himself.
   Then	was	I	more	afraid	of	death	than	ever,
  For	nothing	more	was	needful	than	the	fear,
       If	I	had	not	beheld	the	manacles.
    Then	we	proceeded	farther	in	advance,
   And	to	Antaeus	came,	who,	full	five	ells
Without	the	head,	forth	issued	from	the	cavern.
     "O	thou,	who	in	the	valley	fortunate,
      Which	Scipio	the	heir	of	glory	made,
  When	Hannibal	turned	back	with	all	his	hosts,
  Once	brought'st	a	thousand	lions	for	thy	prey,
   And	who,	hadst	thou	been	at	the	mighty	war
  Among	thy	brothers,	some	it	seems	still	think
The	sons	of	Earth	the	victory	would	have	gained:
      Place	us	below,	nor	be	disdainful	of	it,
   There	where	the	cold	doth	lock	Cocytus	up.
     Make	us	not	go	to	Tityus	nor	Typhoeus;
This	one	can	give	of	that	which	here	is	longed	for;
  Therefore	stoop	down,	and	do	not	curl	thy	lip.
    Still	in	the	world	can	he	restore	thy	fame;
   Because	he	lives,	and	still	expects	long	life,
     If	to	itself	Grace	call	him	not	untimely."
    So	said	the	Master;	and	in	haste	the	other
  His	hands	extended	and	took	up	my	Guide,—
 Hands	whose	great	pressure	Hercules	once	felt.
    Virgilius,	when	he	felt	himself	embraced,
Said	unto	me:	"Draw	nigh,	that	I	may	take	thee;"
    Then	of	himself	and	me	one	bundle	made.
        As	seems	the	Carisenda,	to	behold
   Beneath	the	leaning	side,	when	goes	a	cloud
        Above	it	so	that	opposite	it	hangs;
    Such	did	Antaeus	seem	to	me,	who	stood
   Watching	to	see	him	stoop,	and	then	it	was
   I	could	have	wished	to	go	some	other	way.
   But	lightly	in	the	abyss,	which	swallows	up
       Judas	with	Lucifer,	he	put	us	down;
 Nor	thus	bowed	downward	made	he	there	delay,
      But,	as	a	mast	does	in	a	ship,	uprose.                        	
                Canto	XXXII
                        	
  If	I	had	rhymes	both	rough	and	stridulous,
    As	were	appropriate	to	the	dismal	hole
 Down	upon	which	thrust	all	the	other	rocks,
 I	would	press	out	the	juice	of	my	conception
   More	fully;	but	because	I	have	them	not,
   Not	without	fear	I	bring	myself	to	speak;
     For	'tis	no	enterprise	to	take	in	jest,
   To	sketch	the	bottom	of	all	the	universe,
Nor	for	a	tongue	that	cries	Mamma	and	Babbo.
But	may	those	Ladies	help	this	verse	of	mine,
 Who	helped	Amphion	in	enclosing	Thebes,
  That	from	the	fact	the	word	be	not	diverse.
       O	rabble	ill-begotten	above	all,
Who're	in	the	place	to	speak	of	which	is	hard,
'Twere	better	ye	had	here	been	sheep	or	goats!
When	we	were	down	within	the	darksome	well,
    Beneath	the	giant's	feet,	but	lower	far,
    And	I	was	scanning	still	the	lofty	wall,
I	heard	it	said	to	me:	"Look	how	thou	steppest!
 Take	heed	thou	do	not	trample	with	thy	feet
 The	heads	of	the	tired,	miserable	brothers!"
Whereat	I	turned	me	round,	and	saw	before	me
   And	underfoot	a	lake,	that	from	the	frost
The	semblance	had	of	glass,	and	not	of	water.
  So	thick	a	veil	ne'er	made	upon	its	current
      In	winter-time	Danube	in	Austria,
   Nor	there	beneath	the	frigid	sky	the	Don,
    As	there	was	here;	so	that	if	Tambernich
        Had	fallen	upon	it,	or	Pietrapana,
 E'en	at	the	edge	'twould	not	have	given	a	creak.
   And	as	to	croak	the	frog	doth	place	himself
 With	muzzle	out	of	water,—when	is	dreaming
   Of	gleaning	oftentimes	the	peasant-girl,—
   Livid,	as	far	down	as	where	shame	appears,
   Were	the	disconsolate	shades	within	the	ice,
    Setting	their	teeth	unto	the	note	of	storks.
 Each	one	his	countenance	held	downward	bent;
From	mouth	the	cold,	from	eyes	the	doleful	heart
     Among	them	witness	of	itself	procures.
 When	round	about	me	somewhat	I	had	looked,
  I	downward	turned	me,	and	saw	two	so	close,
   The	hair	upon	their	heads	together	mingled.
"Ye	who	so	strain	your	breasts	together,	tell	me,"
 I	said,	"who	are	you;"	and	they	bent	their	necks,
   And	when	to	me	their	faces	they	had	lifted,
 Their	eyes,	which	first	were	only	moist	within,
 Gushed	o'er	the	eyelids,	and	the	frost	congealed
  The	tears	between,	and	locked	them	up	again.
  Clamp	never	bound	together	wood	with	wood
  So	strongly;	whereat	they,	like	two	he-goats,
 Butted	together,	so	much	wrath	o'ercame	them.
     And	one,	who	had	by	reason	of	the	cold
Lost	both	his	ears,	still	with	his	visage	downward,
  Said:	"Why	dost	thou	so	mirror	thyself	in	us?
    If	thou	desire	to	know	who	these	two	are,
      The	valley	whence	Bisenzio	descends
   Belonged	to	them	and	to	their	father	Albert.
     They	from	one	body	came,	and	all	Caina
Thou	shalt	search	through,	and	shalt	not	find	a	shade
        More	worthy	to	be	fixed	in	gelatine;
  Not	he	in	whom	were	broken	breast	and	shadow
    At	one	and	the	same	blow	by	Arthur's	hand;
      Focaccia	not;	not	he	who	me	encumbers
     So	with	his	head	I	see	no	farther	forward,
     And	bore	the	name	of	Sassol	Mascheroni;
 Well	knowest	thou	who	he	was,	if	thou	art	Tuscan.
    And	that	thou	put	me	not	to	further	speech,
       Know	that	I	Camicion	de'	Pazzi	was,
        And	wait	Carlino	to	exonerate	me."
       Then	I	beheld	a	thousand	faces,	made
Purple	with	cold;	whence	o'er	me	comes	a	shudder,
     And	evermore	will	come,	at	frozen	ponds.
 And	while	we	were	advancing	tow'rds	the	middle,
    Where	everything	of	weight	unites	together,
     And	I	was	shivering	in	the	eternal	shade,
     Whether	'twere	will,	or	destiny,	or	chance,
    I	know	not;	but	in	walking	'mong	the	heads
      I	struck	my	foot	hard	in	the	face	of	one.
 Weeping	he	growled:	"Why	dost	thou	trample	me?
   Unless	thou	comest	to	increase	the	vengeance
     of	Montaperti,	why	dost	thou	molest	me?"
     And	I:	"My	Master,	now	wait	here	for	me,
    That	I	through	him	may	issue	from	a	doubt;
  Then	thou	mayst	hurry	me,	as	thou	shalt	wish."
     The	Leader	stopped;	and	to	that	one	I	said
      Who	was	blaspheming	vehemently	still:
   "Who	art	thou,	that	thus	reprehendest	others?"
"Now	who	art	thou,	that	goest	through	Antenora
  Smiting,"	replied	he,	"other	people's	cheeks,
  So	that,	if	thou	wert	living,	'twere	too	much?"
    "Living	I	am,	and	dear	to	thee	it	may	be,"
  Was	my	response,	"if	thou	demandest	fame,
   That	'mid	the	other	notes	thy	name	I	place."
     And	he	to	me:	"For	the	reverse	I	long;
Take	thyself	hence,	and	give	me	no	more	trouble;
  For	ill	thou	knowest	to	flatter	in	this	hollow."
  Then	by	the	scalp	behind	I	seized	upon	him,
 And	said:	"It	must	needs	be	thou	name	thyself,
      Or	not	a	hair	remain	upon	thee	here."
Whence	he	to	me:	"Though	thou	strip	off	my	hair,
   I	will	not	tell	thee	who	I	am,	nor	show	thee,
   If	on	my	head	a	thousand	times	thou	fall."
      I	had	his	hair	in	hand	already	twisted,
 And	more	than	one	shock	of	it	had	pulled	out,
  He	barking,	with	his	eyes	held	firmly	down,
When	cried	another:	"What	doth	ail	thee,	Bocca?
     Is't	not	enough	to	clatter	with	thy	jaws,
 But	thou	must	bark?	what	devil	touches	thee?"
  "Now,"	said	I,	"I	care	not	to	have	thee	speak,
      Accursed	traitor;	for	unto	thy	shame
      I	will	report	of	thee	veracious	news."
 "Begone,"	replied	he,	"and	tell	what	thou	wilt,
      But	be	not	silent,	if	thou	issue	hence,
 Of	him	who	had	just	now	his	tongue	so	prompt;
    He	weepeth	here	the	silver	of	the	French;
 'I	saw,'	thus	canst	thou	phrase	it,	'him	of	Duera
 There	where	the	sinners	stand	out	in	the	cold.'
If	thou	shouldst	questioned	be	who	else	was	there,
      Thou	hast	beside	thee	him	of	Beccaria,
    Of	whom	the	gorget	Florence	slit	asunder;
       Gianni	del	Soldanier,	I	think,	may	be
      Yonder	with	Ganellon,	and	Tebaldello
    Who	oped	Faenza	when	the	people	slep."
      Already	we	had	gone	away	from	him,
      When	I	beheld	two	frozen	in	one	hole,
     So	that	one	head	a	hood	was	to	the	other;
  And	even	as	bread	through	hunger	is	devoured,
     The	uppermost	on	the	other	set	his	teeth,
   There	where	the	brain	is	to	the	nape	united.
      Not	in	another	fashion	Tydeus	gnawed
      The	temples	of	Menalippus	in	disdain,
 Than	that	one	did	the	skull	and	the	other	things.
    "O	thou,	who	showest	by	such	bestial	sign
  Thy	hatred	against	him	whom	thou	art	eating,
Tell	me	the	wherefore,"	said	I,	"with	this	compact,
     That	if	thou	rightfully	of	him	complain,
  In	knowing	who	ye	are,	and	his	transgression,
      I	in	the	world	above	repay	thee	for	it,
    If	that	wherewith	I	speak	be	not	dried	up."                         	
                  Canto	XXXIII
                         	
     His	mouth	uplifted	from	his	grim	repast,
       That	sinner,	wiping	it	upon	the	hair
   Of	the	same	head	that	he	behind	had	wasted.
     Then	he	began:	"Thou	wilt	that	I	renew
The	desperate	grief,	which	wrings	my	heart	already
          To	think	of	only,	ere	I	speak	of	it;
     But	if	my	words	be	seed	that	may	bear	fruit
        Of	infamy	to	the	traitor	whom	I	gnaw,
    Speaking	and	weeping	shalt	thou	see	together.
     I	know	not	who	thou	art,	nor	by	what	mode
     Thou	hast	come	down	here;	but	a	Florentine
     Thou	seemest	to	me	truly,	when	I	hear	thee.
      Thou	hast	to	know	I	was	Count	Ugolino,
     And	this	one	was	Ruggieri	the	Archbishop;
   Now	I	will	tell	thee	why	I	am	such	a	neighbour.
      That,	by	effect	of	his	malicious	thoughts,
        Trusting	in	him	I	was	made	prisoner,
        And	after	put	to	death,	I	need	not	say;
   But	ne'ertheless	what	thou	canst	not	have	heard,
       That	is	to	say,	how	cruel	was	my	death,
Hear	shalt	thou,	and	shalt	know	if	he	has	wronged	me.
          A	narrow	perforation	in	the	mew,
   Which	bears	because	of	me	the	title	of	Famine,
     And	in	which	others	still	must	be	locked	up,
  Had	shown	me	through	its	opening	many	moons
       Already,	when	I	dreamed	the	evil	dream
       Which	of	the	future	rent	for	me	the	veil.
     This	one	appeared	to	me	as	lord	and	master,
   Hunting	the	wolf	and	whelps	upon	the	mountain
       For	which	the	Pisans	cannot	Lucca	see.
With	sleuth-hounds	gaunt,	and	eager,	and	well	trained,
       Gualandi	with	Sismondi	and	Lanfianchi
       He	had	sent	out	before	him	to	the	front.
    After	brief	course	seemed	unto	me	forespent
    The	father	and	the	sons,	and	with	sharp	tushes
   It	seemed	to	me	I	saw	their	flanks	ripped	open.
       When	I	before	the	morrow	was	awake,
     Moaning	amid	their	sleep	I	heard	my	sons
    Who	with	me	were,	and	asking	after	bread.
    Cruel	indeed	art	thou,	if	yet	thou	grieve	not,
     Thinking	of	what	my	heart	foreboded	me,
And	weep'st	thou	not,	what	art	thou	wont	to	weep	at?
   They	were	awake	now,	and	the	hour	drew	nigh
    At	which	our	food	used	to	be	brought	to	us,
And	through	his	dream	was	each	one	apprehensive;
       And	I	heard	locking	up	the	under	door
   Of	the	horrible	tower;	whereat	without	a	word
          I	gazed	into	the	faces	of	my	sons.
       I	wept	not,	I	within	so	turned	to	stone;
     They	wept;	and	darling	little	Anselm	mine
Said:	'Thou	dost	gaze	so,	father,	what	doth	ail	thee?'
      Still	not	a	tear	I	shed,	nor	answer	made
     All	of	that	day,	nor	yet	the	night	thereafter,
        Until	another	sun	rose	on	the	world.
       As	now	a	little	glimmer	made	its	way
         Into	the	dolorous	prison,	and	I	saw
       Upon	four	faces	my	own	very	aspect,
          Both	of	my	hands	in	agony	I	bit;
       And,	thinking	that	I	did	it	from	desire
        Of	eating,	on	a	sudden	they	uprose,
And	said	they:	'Father,	much	less	pain	'twill	give	us
     If	thou	do	eat	of	us;	thyself	didst	clothe	us
    With	this	poor	flesh,	and	do	thou	strip	it	off.'
   I	calmed	me	then,	not	to	make	them	more	sad.
     That	day	we	all	were	silent,	and	the	next.
Ah!	obdurate	earth,	wherefore	didst	thou	not	open?
 When	we	had	come	unto	the	fourth	day,	Gaddo
Threw	himself	down	outstretched	before	my	feet,
 Saying,	'My	father,	why	dost	thou	not	help	me?'
     And	there	he	died;	and,	as	thou	seest	me,
     I	saw	the	three	fall,	one	by	one,	between
 The	fifth	day	and	the	sixth;	whence	I	betook	me,
       Already	blind,	to	groping	over	each,
 And	three	days	called	them	after	they	were	dead;
   Then	hunger	did	what	sorrow	could	not	do."
  When	he	had	said	this,	with	his	eyes	distorted,
  The	wretched	skull	resumed	he	with	his	teeth,
  Which,	as	a	dog's,	upon	the	bone	were	strong.
     Ah!	Pisa,	thou	opprobrium	of	the	people
 Of	the	fair	land	there	where	the	'Si'	doth	sound,
  Since	slow	to	punish	thee	thy	neighbours	are,
       Let	the	Capraia	and	Gorgona	move,
   And	make	a	hedge	across	the	mouth	of	Arno
     That	every	person	in	thee	it	may	drown!
        For	if	Count	Ugolino	had	the	fame
      Of	having	in	thy	castles	thee	betrayed,
Thou	shouldst	not	on	such	cross	have	put	his	sons.
   Guiltless	of	any	crime,	thou	modern	Thebes!
    Their	youth	made	Uguccione	and	Brigata,
  And	the	other	two	my	song	doth	name	above!
   We	passed	still	farther	onward,	where	the	ice
       Another	people	ruggedly	enswathes,
 Not	downward	turned,	but	all	of	them	reversed.
   Weeping	itself	there	does	not	let	them	weep,
     And	grief	that	finds	a	barrier	in	the	eyes
    Turns	itself	inward	to	increase	the	anguish;
      Because	the	earliest	tears	a	cluster	form,
       And,	in	the	manner	of	a	crystal	visor,
      Fill	all	the	cup	beneath	the	eyebrow	full.
      And	notwithstanding	that,	as	in	a	callus,
           Because	of	cold	all	sensibility
       Its	station	had	abandoned	in	my	face,
      Still	it	appeared	to	me	I	felt	some	wind;
  Whence	I:	"My	Master,	who	sets	this	in	motion?
    Is	not	below	here	every	vapour	quenched?"
 Whence	he	to	me:	"Full	soon	shalt	thou	be	where
    Thine	eye	shall	answer	make	to	thee	of	this,
  Seeing	the	cause	which	raineth	down	the	blast."
    And	one	of	the	wretches	of	the	frozen	crust
       Cried	out	to	us:	"O	souls	so	merciless
        That	the	last	post	is	given	unto	you,
     Lift	from	mine	eyes	the	rigid	veils,	that	I
  May	vent	the	sorrow	which	impregns	my	heart
        A	little,	e'er	the	weeping	recongeal."
Whence	I	to	him:	"If	thou	wouldst	have	me	help	thee
     Say	who	thou	wast;	and	if	I	free	thee	not,
         May	I	go	to	the	bottom	of	the	ice."
       Then	he	replied:	"I	am	Friar	Alberigo;
       He	am	I	of	the	fruit	of	the	bad	garden,
      Who	here	a	date	am	getting	for	my	fig."
   "O,"	said	I	to	him,	"now	art	thou,	too,	dead?"
      And	he	to	me:	"How	may	my	body	fare
     Up	in	the	world,	no	knowledge	I	possess.
      Such	an	advantage	has	this	Ptolomaea,
     That	oftentimes	the	soul	descendeth	here
        Sooner	than	Atropos	in	motion	sets	it.
    And,	that	thou	mayest	more	willingly	remove
    From	off	my	countenance	these	glassy	tears,
        Know	that	as	soon	as	any	soul	betrays
        As	I	have	done,	his	body	by	a	demon
      Is	taken	from	him,	who	thereafter	rules	it,
      Until	his	time	has	wholly	been	revolved.
        Itself	down	rushes	into	such	a	cistern;
     And	still	perchance	above	appears	the	body
    Of	yonder	shade,	that	winters	here	behind	me.
This	thou	shouldst	know,	if	thou	hast	just	come	down;
       It	is	Ser	Branca	d'	Oria,	and	many	years
  Have	passed	away	since	he	was	thus	locked	up."
   "I	think,"	said	I	to	him,	"thou	dost	deceive	me;
        For	Branca	d'	Oria	is	not	dead	as	yet,
And	eats,	and	drinks,	and	sleeps,	and	puts	on	clothes."
     "In	moat	above,"	said	he,	"of	Malebranche,
     There	where	is	boiling	the	tenacious	pitch,
       As	yet	had	Michel	Zanche	not	arrived,
        When	this	one	left	a	devil	in	his	stead
        In	his	own	body	and	one	near	of	kin,
      Who	made	together	with	him	the	betrayal.
    But	hitherward	stretch	out	thy	hand	forthwith,
    Open	mine	eyes;"—and	open	them	I	did	not,
         And	to	be	rude	to	him	was	courtesy.
          Ah,	Genoese!	ye	men	at	variance
         With	every	virtue,	full	of	every	vice
   Wherefore	are	ye	not	scattered	from	the	world?
        For	with	the	vilest	spirit	of	Romagna
     I	found	of	you	one	such,	who	for	his	deeds
         In	soul	already	in	Cocytus	bathes,
       And	still	above	in	body	seems	alive!                           	
                   Canto	XXXIV
                           	
          "'Vexilla	Regis	prodeunt	Inferni'
    Towards	us;	therefore	look	in	front	of	thee,"
     My	Master	said,	"if	thou	discernest	him."
   As,	when	there	breathes	a	heavy	fog,	or	when
      Our	hemisphere	is	darkening	into	night,
     Appears	far	off	a	mill	the	wind	is	turning,
    Methought	that	such	a	building	then	I	saw;
      And,	for	the	wind,	I	drew	myself	behind
   My	Guide,	because	there	was	no	other	shelter.
     Now	was	I,	and	with	fear	in	verse	I	put	it,
  There	where	the	shades	were	wholly	covered	up,
 And	glimmered	through	like	unto	straws	in	glass.
     Some	prone	are	lying,	others	stand	erect,
  This	with	the	head,	and	that	one	with	the	soles;
      Another,	bow-like,	face	to	feet	inverts.
    When	in	advance	so	far	we	had	proceeded,
     That	it	my	Master	pleased	to	show	to	me
The	creature	who	once	had	the	beauteous	semblance,
   He	from	before	me	moved	and	made	me	stop,
     Saying:	"Behold	Dis,	and	behold	the	place
   Where	thou	with	fortitude	must	arm	thyself."
     How	frozen	I	became	and	powerless	then,
        Ask	it	not,	Reader,	for	I	write	it	not,
    Because	all	language	would	be	insufficient.
      I	did	not	die,	and	I	alive	remained	not;
     Think	for	thyself	now,	hast	thou	aught	of	wit,
       What	I	became,	being	of	both	deprived.
        The	Emperor	of	the	kingdom	dolorous
    From	his	mid-breast	forth	issued	from	the	ice;
          And	better	with	a	giant	I	compare
      Than	do	the	giants	with	those	arms	of	his;
     Consider	now	how	great	must	be	that	whole,
        Which	unto	such	a	part	conforms	itself.
        Were	he	as	fair	once,	as	he	now	is	foul,
       And	lifted	up	his	brow	against	his	Maker,
      Well	may	proceed	from	him	all	tribulation.
         O,	what	a	marvel	it	appeared	to	me,
        When	I	beheld	three	faces	on	his	head!
       The	one	in	front,	and	that	vermilion	was;
    Two	were	the	others,	that	were	joined	with	this
       Above	the	middle	part	of	either	shoulder,
      And	they	were	joined	together	at	the	crest;
And	the	right-hand	one	seemed	'twixt	white	and	yellow;
        The	left	was	such	to	look	upon	as	those
   Who	come	from	where	the	Nile	falls	valley-ward.
    Underneath	each	came	forth	two	mighty	wings,
        Such	as	befitting	were	so	great	a	bird;
         Sails	of	the	sea	I	never	saw	so	large.
         No	feathers	had	they,	but	as	of	a	bat
     Their	fashion	was;	and	he	was	waving	them,
    So	that	three	winds	proceeded	forth	therefrom.
       Thereby	Cocytus	wholly	was	congealed.
   With	six	eyes	did	he	weep,	and	down	three	chins
     Trickled	the	tear-drops	and	the	bloody	drivel.
   At	every	mouth	he	with	his	teeth	was	crunching
        A	sinner,	in	the	manner	of	a	brake,
      So	that	he	three	of	them	tormented	thus.
      To	him	in	front	the	biting	was	as	naught
    Unto	the	clawing,	for	sometimes	the	spine
     Utterly	stripped	of	all	the	skin	remained.
 "That	soul	up	there	which	has	the	greatest	pain,"
        The	Master	said,	"is	Judas	Iscariot;
    With	head	inside,	he	plies	his	legs	without.
    Of	the	two	others,	who	head	downward	are,
 The	one	who	hangs	from	the	black	jowl	is	Brutus;
 See	how	he	writhes	himself,	and	speaks	no	word.
 And	the	other,	who	so	stalwart	seems,	is	Cassius.
       But	night	is	reascending,	and	'tis	time
   That	we	depart,	for	we	have	seen	the	whole."
As	seemed	him	good,	I	clasped	him	round	the	neck,
   And	he	the	vantage	seized	of	time	and	place,
   And	when	the	wings	were	opened	wide	apart,
      He	laid	fast	hold	upon	the	shaggy	sides;
    From	fell	to	fell	descended	downward	then
    Between	the	thick	hair	and	the	frozen	crust.
 When	we	were	come	to	where	the	thigh	revolves
      Exactly	on	the	thickness	of	the	haunch,
The	Guide,	with	labour	and	with	hard-drawn	breath,
 Turned	round	his	head	where	he	had	had	his	legs,
   And	grappled	to	the	hair,	as	one	who	mounts,
    So	that	to	Hell	I	thought	we	were	returning.
  "Keep	fast	thy	hold,	for	by	such	stairs	as	these,"
     The	Master	said,	panting	as	one	fatigued,
  "Must	we	perforce	depart	from	so	much	evil."
   Then	through	the	opening	of	a	rock	he	issued,
     And	down	upon	the	margin	seated	me;
 Then	tow'rds	me	he	outstretched	his	wary	step.
     I	lifted	up	mine	eyes	and	thought	to	see
     Lucifer	in	the	same	way	I	had	left	him;
     And	I	beheld	him	upward	hold	his	legs.
        And	if	I	then	became	disquieted,
     Let	stolid	people	think	who	do	not	see
  What	the	point	is	beyond	which	I	had	passed.
   "Rise	up,"	the	Master	said,	"upon	thy	feet;
     The	way	is	long,	and	difficult	the	road,
   And	now	the	sun	to	middle-tierce	returns."
          It	was	not	any	palace	corridor
   There	where	we	were,	but	dungeon	natural,
     With	floor	uneven	and	unease	of	light.
     "Ere	from	the	abyss	I	tear	myself	away,
      My	Master,"	said	I	when	I	had	arisen,
    "To	draw	me	from	an	error	speak	a	little;
   Where	is	the	ice?	and	how	is	this	one	fixed
 Thus	upside	down?	and	how	in	such	short	time
From	eve	to	morn	has	the	sun	made	his	transit?"
       And	he	to	me:	"Thou	still	imaginest
  Thou	art	beyond	the	centre,	where	I	grasped
The	hair	of	the	fell	worm,	who	mines	the	world.
   That	side	thou	wast,	so	long	as	I	descended;
When	round	I	turned	me,	thou	didst	pass	the	point
  To	which	things	heavy	draw	from	every	side,
   And	now	beneath	the	hemisphere	art	come
     Opposite	that	which	overhangs	the	vast
Dry-land,	and	'neath	whose	cope	was	put	to	death
  The	Man	who	without	sin	was	born	and	lived.
      Thou	hast	thy	feet	upon	the	little	sphere
    Which	makes	the	other	face	of	the	Judecca.
      Here	it	is	morn	when	it	is	evening	there;
    And	he	who	with	his	hair	a	stairway	made	us
       Still	fixed	remaineth	as	he	was	before.
     Upon	this	side	he	fell	down	out	of	heaven;
    And	all	the	land,	that	whilom	here	emerged,
       For	fear	of	him	made	of	the	sea	a	veil,
   And	came	to	our	hemisphere;	and	peradventure
     To	flee	from	him,	what	on	this	side	appears
   Left	the	place	vacant	here,	and	back	recoiled."
      A	place	there	is	below,	from	Beelzebub
        As	far	receding	as	the	tomb	extends,
   Which	not	by	sight	is	known,	but	by	the	sound
      Of	a	small	rivulet,	that	there	descendeth
Through	chasm	within	the	stone,	which	it	has	gnawed
   With	course	that	winds	about	and	slightly	falls.
       The	Guide	and	I	into	that	hidden	road
     Now	entered,	to	return	to	the	bright	world;
        And	without	care	of	having	any	rest
     We	mounted	up,	he	first	and	I	the	second,
       Till	I	beheld	through	a	round	aperture
Some	of	the	beauteous	things	that	Heaven	doth	bear;
    Thence	we	came	forth	to	rebehold	the	stars.
                        ****                          	                          	
                  PURGATORIO
                          	
                       Canto	I
                           	
       To	run	o'er	better	waters	hoists	its	sail
        The	little	vessel	of	my	genius	now,
      That	leaves	behind	itself	a	sea	so	cruel;
      And	of	that	second	kingdom	will	I	sing
    Wherein	the	human	spirit	doth	purge	itself,
    And	to	ascend	to	heaven	becometh	worthy.
        But	let	dead	Poesy	here	rise	again,
       O	holy	Muses,	since	that	I	am	yours,
       And	here	Calliope	somewhat	ascend,
     My	song	accompanying	with	that	sound,
       Of	which	the	miserable	magpies	felt
 The	blow	so	great,	that	they	despaired	of	pardon.
       Sweet	colour	of	the	oriental	sapphire,
    That	was	upgathered	in	the	cloudless	aspect
      Of	the	pure	air,	as	far	as	the	first	circle,
     Unto	mine	eyes	did	recommence	delight
      Soon	as	I	issued	forth	from	the	dead	air,
Which	had	with	sadness	filled	mine	eyes	and	breast.
     The	beauteous	planet,	that	to	love	incites,
        Was	making	all	the	orient	to	laugh,
     Veiling	the	Fishes	that	were	in	her	escort.
   To	the	right	hand	I	turned,	and	fixed	my	mind
      Upon	the	other	pole,	and	saw	four	stars
   Ne'er	seen	before	save	by	the	primal	people.
  Rejoicing	in	their	flamelets	seemed	the	heaven.
      O	thou	septentrional	and	widowed	site,
    Because	thou	art	deprived	of	seeing	these!
   When	from	regarding	them	I	had	withdrawn,
         Turning	a	little	to	the	other	pole,
 There	where	the	Wain	had	disappeared	already,
       I	saw	beside	me	an	old	man	alone,
    Worthy	of	so	much	reverence	in	his	look,
      That	more	owes	not	to	father	any	son.
 A	long	beard	and	with	white	hair	intermingled
   He	wore,	in	semblance	like	unto	the	tresses,
    Of	which	a	double	list	fell	on	his	breast.
      The	rays	of	the	four	consecrated	stars
    Did	so	adorn	his	countenance	with	light,
   That	him	I	saw	as	were	the	sun	before	him.
 "Who	are	you?	ye	who,	counter	the	blind	river,
    Have	fled	away	from	the	eternal	prison?"
    Moving	those	venerable	plumes,	he	said:
 "Who	guided	you?	or	who	has	been	your	lamp
    In	issuing	forth	out	of	the	night	profound,
   That	ever	black	makes	the	infernal	valley?
  The	laws	of	the	abyss,	are	they	thus	broken?
Or	is	there	changed	in	heaven	some	council	new,
  That	being	damned	ye	come	unto	my	crags?"
   Then	did	my	Leader	lay	his	grasp	upon	me,
And	with	his	words,	and	with	his	hands	and	signs,
  Reverent	he	made	in	me	my	knees	and	brow;
   Then	answered	him:	"I	came	not	of	myself;
A	Lady	from	Heaven	descended,	at	whose	prayers
       I	aided	this	one	with	my	company.
    But	since	it	is	thy	will	more	be	unfolded
        Of	our	condition,	how	it	truly	is,
 Mine	cannot	be	that	this	should	be	denied	thee.
    This	one	has	never	his	last	evening	seen,
        But	by	his	folly	was	so	near	to	it
      That	very	little	time	was	there	to	turn.
        As	I	have	said,	I	unto	him	was	sent
     To	rescue	him,	and	other	way	was	none
    Than	this	to	which	I	have	myself	betaken.
    I've	shown	him	all	the	people	of	perdition,
      And	now	those	spirits	I	intend	to	show
 Who	purge	themselves	beneath	thy	guardianship.
How	I	have	brought	him	would	be	long	to	tell	thee.
   Virtue	descendeth	from	on	high	that	aids	me
   To	lead	him	to	behold	thee	and	to	hear	thee.
 Now	may	it	please	thee	to	vouchsafe	his	coming;
       He	seeketh	Liberty,	which	is	so	dear,
     As	knoweth	he	who	life	for	her	refuses.
 Thou	know'st	it;	since,	for	her,	to	thee	not	bitter
    Was	death	in	Utica,	where	thou	didst	leave
   The	vesture,	that	will	shine	so,	the	great	day.
      By	us	the	eternal	edicts	are	not	broken;
  Since	this	one	lives,	and	Minos	binds	not	me;
     But	of	that	circle	I,	where	are	the	chaste
 Eyes	of	thy	Marcia,	who	in	looks	still	prays	thee,
     O	holy	breast,	to	hold	her	as	thine	own;
     For	her	love,	then,	incline	thyself	to	us.
   Permit	us	through	thy	sevenfold	realm	to	go;
    I	will	take	back	this	grace	from	thee	to	her,
  If	to	be	mentioned	there	below	thou	deignest."
     "Marcia	so	pleasing	was	unto	mine	eyes
   While	I	was	on	the	other	side,"	then	said	he,
  "That	every	grace	she	wished	of	me	I	granted;
    Now	that	she	dwells	beyond	the	evil	river,
     She	can	no	longer	move	me,	by	that	law
Which,	when	I	issued	forth	from	there,	was	made.
 But	if	a	Lady	of	Heaven	do	move	and	rule	thee,
     As	thou	dost	say,	no	flattery	is	needful;
   Let	it	suffice	thee	that	for	her	thou	ask	me.
    Go,	then,	and	see	thou	gird	this	one	about
With	a	smooth	rush,	and	that	thou	wash	his	face,
  So	that	thou	cleanse	away	all	stain	therefrom,
    For	'twere	not	fitting	that	the	eye	o'ercast
     By	any	mist	should	go	before	the	first
       Angel,	who	is	of	those	of	Paradise.
      This	little	island	round	about	its	base
 Below	there,	yonder,	where	the	billow	beats	it,
     Doth	rushes	bear	upon	its	washy	ooze;
    No	other	plant	that	putteth	forth	the	leaf,
    Or	that	doth	indurate,	can	there	have	life,
     Because	it	yieldeth	not	unto	the	shocks.
     Thereafter	be	not	this	way	your	return;
  The	sun,	which	now	is	rising,	will	direct	you
      To	take	the	mount	by	easier	ascent."
    With	this	he	vanished;	and	I	raised	me	up
    Without	a	word,	and	wholly	drew	myself
  Unto	my	Guide,	and	turned	mine	eyes	to	him.
   And	he	began:	"Son,	follow	thou	my	steps;
    Let	us	turn	back,	for	on	this	side	declines
      The	plain	unto	its	lower	boundaries."
   The	dawn	was	vanquishing	the	matin	hour
     Which	fled	before	it,	so	that	from	afar
      I	recognised	the	trembling	of	the	sea.
        Along	the	solitary	plain	we	went
     As	one	who	unto	the	lost	road	returns,
    And	till	he	finds	it	seems	to	go	in	vain.
  As	soon	as	we	were	come	to	where	the	dew
    Fights	with	the	sun,	and,	being	in	a	part
     Where	shadow	falls,	little	evaporates,
  Both	of	his	hands	upon	the	grass	outspread
    In	gentle	manner	did	my	Master	place;
    Whence	I,	who	of	his	action	was	aware,
     Extended	unto	him	my	tearful	cheeks;
  There	did	he	make	in	me	uncovered	wholly
  That	hue	which	Hell	had	covered	up	in	me.
  Then	came	we	down	upon	the	desert	shore
   Which	never	yet	saw	navigate	its	waters
     Any	that	afterward	had	known	return.
    There	he	begirt	me	as	the	other	pleased;
      O	marvellous!	for	even	as	he	culled
   The	humble	plant,	such	it	sprang	up	again
     Suddenly	there	where	he	uprooted	it.                        	
                    Canto	II
                        	
   Already	had	the	sun	the	horizon	reached
     Whose	circle	of	meridian	covers	o'er
      Jerusalem	with	its	most	lofty	point,
    And	night	that	opposite	to	him	revolves
Was	issuing	forth	from	Ganges	with	the	Scales
That	fall	from	out	her	hand	when	she	exceedeth;
  So	that	the	white	and	the	vermilion	cheeks
       Of	beautiful	Aurora,	where	I	was,
  By	too	great	age	were	changing	into	orange.
     We	still	were	on	the	border	of	the	sea,
    Like	people	who	are	thinking	of	their	road,
     Who	go	in	heart	and	with	the	body	stay;
 And	lo!	as	when,	upon	the	approach	of	morning,
 Through	the	gross	vapours	Mars	grows	fiery	red
     Down	in	the	West	upon	the	ocean	floor,
    Appeared	to	me—may	I	again	behold	it!—
     A	light	along	the	sea	so	swiftly	coming,
    Its	motion	by	no	flight	of	wing	is	equalled;
    From	which	when	I	a	little	had	withdrawn
  Mine	eyes,	that	I	might	question	my	Conductor,
     Again	I	saw	it	brighter	grown	and	larger.
      Then	on	each	side	of	it	appeared	to	me
    I	knew	not	what	of	white,	and	underneath	it
      Little	by	little	there	came	forth	another.
      My	Master	yet	had	uttered	not	a	word
  While	the	first	whiteness	into	wings	unfolded;
     But	when	he	clearly	recognised	the	pilot,
He	cried:	"Make	haste,	make	haste	to	bow	the	knee!
  Behold	the	Angel	of	God!	fold	thou	thy	hands!
    Henceforward	shalt	thou	see	such	officers!
     See	how	he	scorneth	human	arguments,
      So	that	nor	oar	he	wants,	nor	other	sail
  Than	his	own	wings,	between	so	distant	shores.
   See	how	he	holds	them	pointed	up	to	heaven,
     Fanning	the	air	with	the	eternal	pinions,
  That	do	not	moult	themselves	like	mortal	hair!"
    Then	as	still	nearer	and	more	near	us	came
    The	Bird	Divine,	more	radiant	he	appeared,
   So	that	near	by	the	eye	could	not	endure	him,
     But	down	I	cast	it;	and	he	came	to	shore
     With	a	small	vessel,	very	swift	and	light,
    So	that	the	water	swallowed	naught	thereof.
      Upon	the	stern	stood	the	Celestial	Pilot;
       Beatitude	seemed	written	in	his	face,
    And	more	than	a	hundred	spirits	sat	within.
           "In	exitu	Israel	de	Aegypto!"
      They	chanted	all	together	in	one	voice,
     With	whatso	in	that	psalm	is	after	written.
    Then	made	he	sign	of	holy	rood	upon	them,
    Whereat	all	cast	themselves	upon	the	shore,
       And	he	departed	swiftly	as	he	came.
 The	throng	which	still	remained	there	unfamiliar
Seemed	with	the	place,	all	round	about	them	gazing,
     As	one	who	in	new	matters	makes	essay.
      On	every	side	was	darting	forth	the	day.
   The	sun,	who	had	with	his	resplendent	shafts
 From	the	mid-heaven	chased	forth	the	Capricorn,
     When	the	new	people	lifted	up	their	faces
      Towards	us,	saying	to	us:	"If	ye	know,
    Show	us	the	way	to	go	unto	the	mountain."
     And	answer	made	Virgilius:	"Ye	believe
 Perchance	that	we	have	knowledge	of	this	place,
     But	we	are	strangers	even	as	yourselves.
    Just	now	we	came,	a	little	while	before	you,
   Another	way,	which	was	so	rough	and	steep,
 That	mounting	will	henceforth	seem	sport	to	us."
 The	souls	who	had,	from	seeing	me	draw	breath,
        Become	aware	that	I	was	still	alive,
       Pallid	in	their	astonishment	became;
     And	as	to	messenger	who	bears	the	olive
    The	people	throng	to	listen	to	the	news,
 And	no	one	shows	himself	afraid	of	crowding,
     So	at	the	sight	of	me	stood	motionless
    Those	fortunate	spirits,	all	of	them,	as	if
      Oblivious	to	go	and	make	them	fair.
 One	from	among	them	saw	I	coming	forward,
  As	to	embrace	me,	with	such	great	affection,
        That	it	incited	me	to	do	the	like.
    O	empty	shadows,	save	in	aspect	only!
  Three	times	behind	it	did	I	clasp	my	hands,
  As	oft	returned	with	them	to	my	own	breast!
       I	think	with	wonder	I	depicted	me;
Whereat	the	shadow	smiled	and	backward	drew;
  And	I,	pursuing	it,	pressed	farther	forward.
   Gently	it	said	that	I	should	stay	my	steps;
    Then	knew	I	who	it	was,	and	I	entreated
  That	it	would	stop	awhile	to	speak	with	me.
   It	made	reply	to	me:	"Even	as	I	loved	thee
       In	mortal	body,	so	I	love	thee	free;
  Therefore	I	stop;	but	wherefore	goest	thou?"
     "My	own	Casella!	to	return	once	more
 There	where	I	am,	I	make	this	journey,"	said	I;
"But	how	from	thee	has	so	much	time	be	taken?"
 And	he	to	me:	"No	outrage	has	been	done	me,
If	he	who	takes	both	when	and	whom	he	pleases
  Has	many	times	denied	to	me	this	passage,
    For	of	a	righteous	will	his	own	is	made.
He,	sooth	to	say,	for	three	months	past	has	taken
    Whoever	wished	to	enter	with	all	peace;
 Whence	I,	who	now	had	turned	unto	that	shore
    Where	salt	the	waters	of	the	Tiber	grow,
    Benignantly	by	him	have	been	received.
    Unto	that	outlet	now	his	wing	is	pointed,
     Because	for	evermore	assemble	there
 Those	who	tow'rds	Acheron	do	not	descend."
  And	I:	"If	some	new	law	take	not	from	thee
    Memory	or	practice	of	the	song	of	love,
  Which	used	to	quiet	in	me	all	my	longings,
   Thee	may	it	please	to	comfort	therewithal
 Somewhat	this	soul	of	mine,	that	with	its	body
  Hitherward	coming	is	so	much	distressed."
"Love,	that	within	my	mind	discourses	with	me,"
      Forthwith	began	he	so	melodiously,
    The	melody	within	me	still	is	sounding.
   My	Master,	and	myself,	and	all	that	people
  Which	with	him	were,	appeared	as	satisfied
 As	if	naught	else	might	touch	the	mind	of	any.
    We	all	of	us	were	moveless	and	attentive
   Unto	his	notes;	and	lo!	the	grave	old	man,
 Exclaiming:	"What	is	this,	ye	laggard	spirits?
  What	negligence,	what	standing	still	is	this?
  Run	to	the	mountain	to	strip	off	the	slough,
     That	lets	not	God	be	manifest	to	you."
    Even	as	when,	collecting	grain	or	tares,
    The	doves,	together	at	their	pasture	met,
  Quiet,	nor	showing	their	accustomed	pride,
    If	aught	appear	of	which	they	are	afraid,
     Upon	a	sudden	leave	their	food	alone,
   Because	they	are	assailed	by	greater	care;
      So	that	fresh	company	did	I	behold
      The	song	relinquish,	and	go	tow'rds	the	hill,
    As	one	who	goes,	and	knows	not	whitherward;
        Nor	was	our	own	departure	less	in	haste.                             	
                         Canto	III
                             	
          Inasmuch	as	the	instantaneous	flight
       Had	scattered	them	asunder	o'er	the	plain,
    Turned	to	the	mountain	whither	reason	spurs	us,
     I	pressed	me	close	unto	my	faithful	comrade,
      And	how	without	him	had	I	kept	my	course?
    Who	would	have	led	me	up	along	the	mountain?
      He	seemed	to	me	within	himself	remorseful;
        O	noble	conscience,	and	without	a	stain,
        How	sharp	a	sting	is	trivial	fault	to	thee!
         After	his	feet	had	laid	aside	the	haste
          Which	mars	the	dignity	of	every	act,
      My	mind,	that	hitherto	had	been	restrained,
          Let	loose	its	faculties	as	if	delighted,
           And	I	my	sight	directed	to	the	hill
     That	highest	tow'rds	the	heaven	uplifts	itself.
       The	sun,	that	in	our	rear	was	flaming	red,
       Was	broken	in	front	of	me	into	the	figure
       Which	had	in	me	the	stoppage	of	its	rays;
        Unto	one	side	I	turned	me,	with	the	fear
           Of	being	left	alone,	when	I	beheld
       Only	in	front	of	me	the	ground	obscured.
     "Why	dost	thou	still	mistrust?"	my	Comforter
       Began	to	say	to	me	turned	wholly	round;
"Dost	thou	not	think	me	with	thee,	and	that	I	guide	thee?
     'Tis	evening	there	already	where	is	buried
      The	body	within	which	I	cast	a	shadow;
   'Tis	from	Brundusium	ta'en,	and	Naples	has	it.
       Now	if	in	front	of	me	no	shadow	fall,
     Marvel	not	at	it	more	than	at	the	heavens,
       Because	one	ray	impedeth	not	another
     To	suffer	torments,	both	of	cold	and	heat,
 Bodies	like	this	that	Power	provides,	which	wills
      That	how	it	works	be	not	unveiled	to	us.
      Insane	is	he	who	hopeth	that	our	reason
          Can	traverse	the	illimitable	way,
Which	the	one	Substance	in	three	Persons	follows!
      Mortals,	remain	contented	at	the	'Quia;'
         For	if	ye	had	been	able	to	see	all,
     No	need	there	were	for	Mary	to	give	birth;
      And	ye	have	seen	desiring	without	fruit,
   Those	whose	desire	would	have	been	quieted,
     Which	evermore	is	given	them	for	a	grief.
         I	speak	of	Aristotle	and	of	Plato,
  And	many	others;"—and	here	bowed	his	head,
  And	more	he	said	not,	and	remained	disturbed.
   We	came	meanwhile	unto	the	mountain's	foot;
      There	so	precipitate	we	found	the	rock,
  That	nimble	legs	would	there	have	been	in	vain.
     'Twixt	Lerici	and	Turbia,	the	most	desert,
       The	most	secluded	pathway	is	a	stair
       Easy	and	open,	if	compared	with	that.
   "Who	knoweth	now	upon	which	hand	the	hill
Slopes	down,"	my	Master	said,	his	footsteps	staying,
  "So	that	who	goeth	without	wings	may	mount?"
  And	while	he	held	his	eyes	upon	the	ground
        Examining	the	nature	of	the	path,
     And	I	was	looking	up	around	the	rock,
    On	the	left	hand	appeared	to	me	a	throng
 Of	souls,	that	moved	their	feet	in	our	direction,
And	did	not	seem	to	move,	they	came	so	slowly.
    "Lift	up	thine	eyes,"	I	to	the	Master	said;
 "Behold,	on	this	side,	who	will	give	us	counsel,
    If	thou	of	thine	own	self	can	have	it	not."
Then	he	looked	at	me,	and	with	frank	expression
Replied:	"Let	us	go	there,	for	they	come	slowly,
 And	thou	be	steadfast	in	thy	hope,	sweet	son."
     Still	was	that	people	as	far	off	from	us,
      After	a	thousand	steps	of	ours	I	say,
 As	a	good	thrower	with	his	hand	would	reach,
  When	they	all	crowded	unto	the	hard	masses
Of	the	high	bank,	and	motionless	stood	and	close,
  As	he	stands	still	to	look	who	goes	in	doubt.
    "O	happy	dead!	O	spirits	elect	already!"
    Virgilius	made	beginning,	"by	that	peace
     Which	I	believe	is	waiting	for	you	all,
   Tell	us	upon	what	side	the	mountain	slopes,
        So	that	the	going	up	be	possible,
For	to	lose	time	irks	him	most	who	most	knows."
 As	sheep	come	issuing	forth	from	out	the	fold
By	ones	and	twos	and	threes,	and	the	others	stand
 Timidly,	holding	down	their	eyes	and	nostrils,
   And	what	the	foremost	does	the	others	do,
  Huddling	themselves	against	her,	if	she	stop,
 Simple	and	quiet	and	the	wherefore	know	not;
         So	moving	to	approach	us	thereupon
        I	saw	the	leader	of	that	fortunate	flock,
          Modest	in	face	and	dignified	in	gait.
      As	soon	as	those	in	the	advance	saw	broken
      The	light	upon	the	ground	at	my	right	side,
     So	that	from	me	the	shadow	reached	the	rock,
They	stopped,	and	backward	drew	themselves	somewhat;
       And	all	the	others,	who	came	after	them,
    Not	knowing	why	nor	wherefore,	did	the	same.
        "Without	your	asking,	I	confess	to	you
         This	is	a	human	body	which	you	see,
     Whereby	the	sunshine	on	the	ground	is	cleft.
        Marvel	ye	not	thereat,	but	be	persuaded
  That	not	without	a	power	which	comes	from	Heaven
      Doth	he	endeavour	to	surmount	this	wall."
    The	Master	thus;	and	said	those	worthy	people:
        "Return	ye	then,	and	enter	in	before	us,"
       Making	a	signal	with	the	back	o'	the	hand
      And	one	of	them	began:	"Whoe'er	thou	art,
       Thus	going	turn	thine	eyes,	consider	well
        If	e'er	thou	saw	me	in	the	other	world."
  I	turned	me	tow'rds	him,	and	looked	at	him	closely;
     Blond	was	he,	beautiful,	and	of	noble	aspect,
     But	one	of	his	eyebrows	had	a	blow	divided.
         When	with	humility	I	had	disclaimed
     E'er	having	seen	him,	"Now	behold!"	he	said,
    And	showed	me	high	upon	his	breast	a	wound.
      Then	said	he	with	a	smile:	"I	am	Manfredi,
        The	grandson	of	the	Empress	Costanza;
     Therefore,	when	thou	returnest,	I	beseech	thee
    Go	to	my	daughter	beautiful,	the	mother
      Of	Sicily's	honour	and	of	Aragon's,
   And	the	truth	tell	her,	if	aught	else	be	told.
         After	I	had	my	body	lacerated
    By	these	two	mortal	stabs,	I	gave	myself
  Weeping	to	Him,	who	willingly	doth	pardon.
        Horrible	my	iniquities	had	been;
  But	Infinite	Goodness	hath	such	ample	arms,
      That	it	receives	whatever	turns	to	it.
    Had	but	Cosenza's	pastor,	who	in	chase
    Of	me	was	sent	by	Clement	at	that	time,
     In	God	read	understandingly	this	page,
   The	bones	of	my	dead	body	still	would	be
   At	the	bridge-head,	near	unto	Benevento,
    Under	the	safeguard	of	the	heavy	cairn.
Now	the	rain	bathes	and	moveth	them	the	wind,
  Beyond	the	realm,	almost	beside	the	Verde,
Where	he	transported	them	with	tapers	quenched.
       By	malison	of	theirs	is	not	so	lost
       Eternal	Love,	that	it	cannot	return,
     So	long	as	hope	has	anything	of	green.
       True	is	it,	who	in	contumacy	dies
    Of	Holy	Church,	though	penitent	at	last,
      Must	wait	upon	the	outside	this	bank
   Thirty	times	told	the	time	that	he	has	been
     In	his	presumption,	unless	such	decree
 Shorter	by	means	of	righteous	prayers	become.
 See	now	if	thou	hast	power	to	make	me	happy,
   By	making	known	unto	my	good	Costanza
  How	thou	hast	seen	me,	and	this	ban	beside,
  For	those	on	earth	can	much	advance	us	here."                          	
                     Canto	IV
                          	
      Whenever	by	delight	or	else	by	pain,
         That	seizes	any	faculty	of	ours,
      Wholly	to	that	the	soul	collects	itself,
     It	seemeth	that	no	other	power	it	heeds;
    And	this	against	that	error	is	which	thinks
      One	soul	above	another	kindles	in	us.
   And	hence,	whenever	aught	is	heard	or	seen
   Which	keeps	the	soul	intently	bent	upon	it,
     Time	passes	on,	and	we	perceive	it	not,
    Because	one	faculty	is	that	which	listens,
   And	other	that	which	the	soul	keeps	entire;
      This	is	as	if	in	bonds,	and	that	is	free.
        Of	this	I	had	experience	positive
      In	hearing	and	in	gazing	at	that	spirit;
        For	fifty	full	degrees	uprisen	was
    The	sun,	and	I	had	not	perceived	it,	when
  We	came	to	where	those	souls	with	one	accord
    Cried	out	unto	us:	"Here	is	what	you	ask."
      A	greater	opening	ofttimes	hedges	up
      With	but	a	little	forkful	of	his	thorns
   The	villager,	what	time	the	grape	imbrowns,
Than	was	the	passage-way	through	which	ascended
     Only	my	Leader	and	myself	behind	him,
      After	that	company	departed	from	us.
    One	climbs	Sanleo	and	descends	in	Noli,
     And	mounts	the	summit	of	Bismantova,
  With	feet	alone;	but	here	one	needs	must	fly;
  With	the	swift	pinions	and	the	plumes	I	say
      Of	great	desire,	conducted	after	him
  Who	gave	me	hope,	and	made	a	light	for	me.
  We	mounted	upward	through	the	rifted	rock,
 And	on	each	side	the	border	pressed	upon	us,
And	feet	and	hands	the	ground	beneath	required.
    When	we	were	come	upon	the	upper	rim
    Of	the	high	bank,	out	on	the	open	slope,
"My	Master,"	said	I,	"what	way	shall	we	take?"
   And	he	to	me:	"No	step	of	thine	descend;
   Still	up	the	mount	behind	me	win	thy	way,
    Till	some	sage	escort	shall	appear	to	us."
  The	summit	was	so	high	it	vanquished	sight,
      And	the	hillside	precipitous	far	more
 Than	line	from	middle	quadrant	to	the	centre.
    Spent	with	fatigue	was	I,	when	I	began:
   "O	my	sweet	Father!	turn	thee	and	behold
    How	I	remain	alone,	unless	thou	stay!"
   "O	son,"	he	said,	"up	yonder	drag	thyself,"
   Pointing	me	to	a	terrace	somewhat	higher,
    Which	on	that	side	encircles	all	the	hill.
  These	words	of	his	so	spurred	me	on,	that	I
Strained	every	nerve,	behind	him	scrambling	up,
      Until	the	circle	was	beneath	my	feet.
    Thereon	ourselves	we	seated	both	of	us
Turned	to	the	East,	from	which	we	had	ascended,
     For	all	men	are	delighted	to	look	back.
  To	the	low	shores	mine	eyes	I	first	directed,
  Then	to	the	sun	uplifted	them,	and	wondered
   That	on	the	left	hand	we	were	smitten	by	it.
    The	Poet	well	perceived	that	I	was	wholly
      Bewildered	at	the	chariot	of	the	light,
    Where	'twixt	us	and	the	Aquilon	it	entered.
  Whereon	he	said	to	me:	"If	Castor	and	Pollux
      Were	in	the	company	of	yonder	mirror,
   That	up	and	down	conducteth	with	its	light,
  Thou	wouldst	behold	the	zodiac's	jagged	wheel
     Revolving	still	more	near	unto	the	Bears,
    Unless	it	swerved	aside	from	its	old	track.
How	that	may	be	wouldst	thou	have	power	to	think,
        Collected	in	thyself,	imagine	Zion
    Together	with	this	mount	on	earth	to	stand,
     So	that	they	both	one	sole	horizon	have,
   And	hemispheres	diverse;	whereby	the	road
     Which	Phaeton,	alas!	knew	not	to	drive,
      Thou'lt	see	how	of	necessity	must	pass
    This	on	one	side,	when	that	upon	the	other,
     If	thine	intelligence	right	clearly	heed."
      "Truly,	my	Master,"	said	I,	"never	yet
         Saw	I	so	clearly	as	I	now	discern,
   There	where	my	wit	appeared	incompetent,
     That	the	mid-circle	of	supernal	motion,
     Which	in	some	art	is	the	Equator	called,
  And	aye	remains	between	the	Sun	and	Winter,
  For	reason	which	thou	sayest,	departeth	hence
 Tow'rds	the	Septentrion,	what	time	the	Hebrews
     Beheld	it	tow'rds	the	region	of	the	heat.
     But,	if	it	pleaseth	thee,	I	fain	would	learn
     How	far	we	have	to	go;	for	the	hill	rises
 Higher	than	eyes	of	mine	have	power	to	rise."
  And	he	to	me:	"This	mount	is	such,	that	ever
   At	the	beginning	down	below	'tis	tiresome,
 And	aye	the	more	one	climbs,	the	less	it	hurts.
Therefore,	when	it	shall	seem	so	pleasant	to	thee,
     That	going	up	shall	be	to	thee	as	easy
      As	going	down	the	current	in	a	boat,
   Then	at	this	pathway's	ending	thou	wilt	be;
   There	to	repose	thy	panting	breath	expect;
  No	more	I	answer;	and	this	I	know	for	true."
    And	as	he	finished	uttering	these	words,
  A	voice	close	by	us	sounded:	"Peradventure
 Thou	wilt	have	need	of	sitting	down	ere	that."
 At	sound	thereof	each	one	of	us	turned	round,
    And	saw	upon	the	left	hand	a	great	rock,
   Which	neither	I	nor	he	before	had	noticed.
 Thither	we	drew;	and	there	were	persons	there
   Who	in	the	shadow	stood	behind	the	rock,
   As	one	through	indolence	is	wont	to	stand.
 And	one	of	them,	who	seemed	to	me	fatigued,
Was	sitting	down,	and	both	his	knees	embraced,
Holding	his	face	low	down	between	them	bowed.
  "O	my	sweet	Lord,"	I	said,	"do	turn	thine	eye
   On	him	who	shows	himself	more	negligent
    Then	even	Sloth	herself	his	sister	were."
 Then	he	turned	round	to	us,	and	he	gave	heed,
     Just	lifting	up	his	eyes	above	his	thigh,
And	said:	"Now	go	thou	up,	for	thou	art	valiant."
   Then	knew	I	who	he	was;	and	the	distress,
   That	still	a	little	did	my	breathing	quicken,
    My	going	to	him	hindered	not;	and	after
    I	came	to	him	he	hardly	raised	his	head,
  Saying:	"Hast	thou	seen	clearly	how	the	sun
    O'er	thy	left	shoulder	drives	his	chariot?"
     His	sluggish	attitude	and	his	curt	words
      A	little	unto	laughter	moved	my	lips;
      Then	I	began:	"Belacqua,	I	grieve	not
For	thee	henceforth;	but	tell	me,	wherefore	seated
  In	this	place	art	thou?	Waitest	thou	an	escort?
    Or	has	thy	usual	habit	seized	upon	thee?"
 And	he:	"O	brother,	what's	the	use	of	climbing?
    Since	to	my	torment	would	not	let	me	go
   The	Angel	of	God,	who	sitteth	at	the	gate.
First	heaven	must	needs	so	long	revolve	me	round
       Outside	thereof,	as	in	my	life	it	did,
  Since	the	good	sighs	I	to	the	end	postponed,
 Unless,	e'er	that,	some	prayer	may	bring	me	aid
   Which	rises	from	a	heart	that	lives	in	grace;
What	profit	others	that	in	heaven	are	heard	not?"
  Meanwhile	the	Poet	was	before	me	mounting,
And	saying:	"Come	now;	see	the	sun	has	touched
     Meridian,	and	from	the	shore	the	night
    Covers	already	with	her	foot	Morocco."                         	
                     Canto	V
                         	
    I	had	already	from	those	shades	departed,
   And	followed	in	the	footsteps	of	my	Guide,
  When	from	behind,	pointing	his	finger	at	me,
   One	shouted:	"See,	it	seems	as	if	shone	not
      The	sunshine	on	the	left	of	him	below,
  And	like	one	living	seems	he	to	conduct	him."
  Mine	eyes	I	turned	at	utterance	of	these	words,
    And	saw	them	watching	with	astonishment
 But	me,	but	me,	and	the	light	which	was	broken!
      "Why	doth	thy	mind	so	occupy	itself,"
The	Master	said,	"that	thou	thy	pace	dost	slacken?
  What	matters	it	to	thee	what	here	is	whispered?
      Come	after	me,	and	let	the	people	talk;
   Stand	like	a	steadfast	tower,	that	never	wags
      Its	top	for	all	the	blowing	of	the	winds;
   For	evermore	the	man	in	whom	is	springing
Thought	upon	thought,	removes	from	him	the	mark,
   Because	the	force	of	one	the	other	weakens."
    What	could	I	say	in	answer	but	"I	come"?
    I	said	it	somewhat	with	that	colour	tinged
Which	makes	a	man	of	pardon	sometimes	worthy.
    Meanwhile	along	the	mountain-side	across
      Came	people	in	advance	of	us	a	little,
       Singing	the	Miserere	verse	by	verse.
    When	they	became	aware	I	gave	no	place
  For	passage	of	the	sunshine	through	my	body,
They	changed	their	song	into	a	long,	hoarse	"Oh!"
     And	two	of	them,	in	form	of	messengers,
    Ran	forth	to	meet	us,	and	demanded	of	us,
     "Of	your	condition	make	us	cognisant."
    And	said	my	Master:	"Ye	can	go	your	way
   And	carry	back	again	to	those	who	sent	you,
       That	this	one's	body	is	of	very	flesh.
  If	they	stood	still	because	they	saw	his	shadow,
     As	I	suppose,	enough	is	answered	them;
    Him	let	them	honour,	it	may	profit	them."
     Vapours	enkindled	saw	I	ne'er	so	swiftly
      At	early	nightfall	cleave	the	air	serene,
    Nor,	at	the	set	of	sun,	the	clouds	of	August,
     But	upward	they	returned	in	briefer	time,
    And,	on	arriving,	with	the	others	wheeled
  Tow'rds	us,	like	troops	that	run	without	a	rein.
      "This	folk	that	presses	unto	us	is	great,
   And	cometh	to	implore	thee,"	said	the	Poet;
     "So	still	go	onward,	and	in	going	listen."
          "O	soul	that	goest	to	beatitude
With	the	same	members	wherewith	thou	wast	born,"
    Shouting	they	came,	"a	little	stay	thy	steps,
       Look,	if	thou	e'er	hast	any	of	us	seen,
    So	that	o'er	yonder	thou	bear	news	of	him;
   Ah,	why	dost	thou	go	on?	Ah,	why	not	stay?
     Long	since	we	all	were	slain	by	violence,
        And	sinners	even	to	the	latest	hour;
    Then	did	a	light	from	heaven	admonish	us,
    So	that,	both	penitent	and	pardoning,	forth
      From	life	we	issued	reconciled	to	God,
   Who	with	desire	to	see	Him	stirs	our	hearts."
     And	I:	"Although	I	gaze	into	your	faces,
    No	one	I	recognize;	but	if	may	please	you
  Aught	I	have	power	to	do,	ye	well-born	spirits,
     Speak	ye,	and	I	will	do	it,	by	that	peace
    Which,	following	the	feet	of	such	a	Guide,
 From	world	to	world	makes	itself	sought	by	me."
    And	one	began:	"Each	one	has	confidence
         In	thy	good	offices	without	an	oath,
         Unless	the	I	cannot	cut	off	the	I	will;
     Whence	I,	who	speak	alone	before	the	others,
        Pray	thee,	if	ever	thou	dost	see	the	land
     That	'twixt	Romagna	lies	and	that	of	Charles,
      Thou	be	so	courteous	to	me	of	thy	prayers
       In	Fano,	that	they	pray	for	me	devoutly,
      That	I	may	purge	away	my	grave	offences.
From	thence	was	I;	but	the	deep	wounds,	through	which
       Issued	the	blood	wherein	I	had	my	seat,
       Were	dealt	me	in	bosom	of	the	Antenori,
     There	where	I	thought	to	be	the	most	secure;
      'Twas	he	of	Este	had	it	done,	who	held	me
       In	hatred	far	beyond	what	justice	willed.
          But	if	towards	the	Mira	I	had	fled,
           When	I	was	overtaken	at	Oriaco,
    I	still	should	be	o'er	yonder	where	men	breathe.
        I	ran	to	the	lagoon,	and	reeds	and	mire
       Did	so	entangle	me	I	fell,	and	saw	there
    A	lake	made	from	my	veins	upon	the	ground."
        Then	said	another:	"Ah,	be	that	desire
    Fulfilled	that	draws	thee	to	the	lofty	mountain,
         As	thou	with	pious	pity	aidest	mine.
       I	was	of	Montefeltro,	and	am	Buonconte;
        Giovanna,	nor	none	other	cares	for	me;
    Hence	among	these	I	go	with	downcast	front."
     And	I	to	him:	"What	violence	or	what	chance
       Led	thee	astray	so	far	from	Campaldino,
      That	never	has	thy	sepulture	been	known?"
         "Oh,"	he	replied,	"at	Casentino's	foot
        A	river	crosses	named	Archiano,	born
         Above	the	Hermitage	in	Apennine.
    There	where	the	name	thereof	becometh	void
 Did	I	arrive,	pierced	through	and	through	the	throat,
      Fleeing	on	foot,	and	bloodying	the	plain;
       There	my	sight	lost	I,	and	my	utterance
      Ceased	in	the	name	of	Mary,	and	thereat
       I	fell,	and	tenantless	my	flesh	remained.
      Truth	will	I	speak,	repeat	it	to	the	living;
       God's	Angel	took	me	up,	and	he	of	hell
Shouted:	'O	thou	from	heaven,	why	dost	thou	rob	me?
     Thou	bearest	away	the	eternal	part	of	him,
   For	one	poor	little	tear,	that	takes	him	from	me;
     But	with	the	rest	I'll	deal	in	other	fashion!'
    Well	knowest	thou	how	in	the	air	is	gathered
      That	humid	vapour	which	to	water	turns,
     Soon	as	it	rises	where	the	cold	doth	grasp	it.
    He	joined	that	evil	will,	which	aye	seeks	evil,
      To	intellect,	and	moved	the	mist	and	wind
  By	means	of	power,	which	his	own	nature	gave;
   Thereafter,	when	the	day	was	spent,	the	valley
     From	Pratomagno	to	the	great	yoke	covered
    With	fog,	and	made	the	heaven	above	intent,
      So	that	the	pregnant	air	to	water	changed;
     Down	fell	the	rain,	and	to	the	gullies	came
          Whate'er	of	it	earth	tolerated	not;
     And	as	it	mingled	with	the	mighty	torrents,
       Towards	the	royal	river	with	such	speed
    It	headlong	rushed,	that	nothing	held	it	back.
         My	frozen	body	near	unto	its	outlet
     The	robust	Archian	found,	and	into	Arno
 Thrust	it,	and	loosened	from	my	breast	the	cross
     I	made	of	me,	when	agony	o'ercame	me;
   It	rolled	me	on	the	banks	and	on	the	bottom,
   Then	with	its	booty	covered	and	begirt	me."
   "Ah,	when	thou	hast	returned	unto	the	world,
    And	rested	thee	from	thy	long	journeying,"
     After	the	second	followed	the	third	spirit,
     "Do	thou	remember	me	who	am	the	Pia;
     Siena	made	me,	unmade	me	Maremma;
      He	knoweth	it,	who	had	encircled	first,
     Espousing	me,	my	finger	with	his	gem."                          	
                     Canto	VI
                          	
     Whene'er	is	broken	up	the	game	of	Zara,
   He	who	has	lost	remains	behind	despondent,
   The	throws	repeating,	and	in	sadness	learns;
       The	people	with	the	other	all	depart;
One	goes	in	front,	and	one	behind	doth	pluck	him,
    And	at	his	side	one	brings	himself	to	mind;
    He	pauses	not,	and	this	and	that	one	hears;
They	crowd	no	more	to	whom	his	hand	he	stretches,
   And	from	the	throng	he	thus	defends	himself.
     Even	such	was	I	in	that	dense	multitude,
    Turning	to	them	this	way	and	that	my	face,
    And,	promising,	I	freed	myself	therefrom.
    There	was	the	Aretine,	who	from	the	arms
     Untamed	of	Ghin	di	Tacco	had	his	death,
  And	he	who	fleeing	from	pursuit	was	drowned.
There	was	imploring	with	his	hands	outstretched
    Frederick	Novello,	and	that	one	of	Pisa
Who	made	the	good	Marzucco	seem	so	strong.
    I	saw	Count	Orso;	and	the	soul	divided
     By	hatred	and	by	envy	from	its	body,
  As	it	declared,	and	not	for	crime	committed,
   Pierre	de	la	Brosse	I	say;	and	here	provide
   While	still	on	earth	the	Lady	of	Brabant,
   So	that	for	this	she	be	of	no	worse	flock!
  As	soon	as	I	was	free	from	all	those	shades
Who	only	prayed	that	some	one	else	may	pray,
      So	as	to	hasten	their	becoming	holy,
     Began	I:	"It	appears	that	thou	deniest,
    O	light	of	mine,	expressly	in	some	text,
    That	orison	can	bend	decree	of	Heaven;
  And	ne'ertheless	these	people	pray	for	this.
   Might	then	their	expectation	bootless	be?
    Or	is	to	me	thy	saying	not	quite	clear?"
     And	he	to	me:	"My	writing	is	explicit,
    And	not	fallacious	is	the	hope	of	these,
    If	with	sane	intellect	'tis	well	regarded;
    For	top	of	judgment	doth	not	vail	itself,
     Because	the	fire	of	love	fulfils	at	once
  What	he	must	satisfy	who	here	installs	him.
 And	there,	where	I	affirmed	that	proposition,
     Defect	was	not	amended	by	a	prayer,
  Because	the	prayer	from	God	was	separate.
        Verily,	in	so	deep	a	questioning
     Do	not	decide,	unless	she	tell	it	thee,
  Who	light	'twixt	truth	and	intellect	shall	be.
      I	know	not	if	thou	understand;	I	speak
      Of	Beatrice;	her	shalt	thou	see	above,
   Smiling	and	happy,	on	this	mountain's	top."
  And	I:	"Good	Leader,	let	us	make	more	haste,
         For	I	no	longer	tire	me	as	before;
    And	see,	e'en	now	the	hill	a	shadow	casts."
 "We	will	go	forward	with	this	day"	he	answered,
         "As	far	as	now	is	possible	for	us;
   But	otherwise	the	fact	is	than	thou	thinkest.
    Ere	thou	art	up	there,	thou	shalt	see	return
   Him,	who	now	hides	himself	behind	the	hill,
      So	that	thou	dost	not	interrupt	his	rays.
  But	yonder	there	behold!	a	soul	that	stationed
       All,	all	alone	is	looking	hitherward;
     It	will	point	out	to	us	the	quickest	way."
      We	came	up	unto	it;	O	Lombard	soul,
  How	lofty	and	disdainful	thou	didst	bear	thee,
  And	grand	and	slow	in	moving	of	thine	eyes!
        Nothing	whatever	did	it	say	to	us,
       But	let	us	go	our	way,	eying	us	only
       After	the	manner	of	a	couchant	lion;
     Still	near	to	it	Virgilius	drew,	entreating
    That	it	would	point	us	out	the	best	ascent;
       And	it	replied	not	unto	his	demand,
       But	of	our	native	land	and	of	our	life
   It	questioned	us;	and	the	sweet	Guide	began:
  "Mantua,"—and	the	shade,	all	in	itself	recluse,
Rose	tow'rds	him	from	the	place	where	first	it	was,
       Saying:	"O	Mantuan,	I	am	Sordello
 Of	thine	own	land!"	and	one	embraced	the	other.
       Ah!	servile	Italy,	grief's	hostelry!
    A	ship	without	a	pilot	in	great	tempest!
    No	Lady	thou	of	Provinces,	but	brothel!
    That	noble	soul	was	so	impatient,	only
  At	the	sweet	sound	of	his	own	native	land,
    To	make	its	citizen	glad	welcome	there;
   And	now	within	thee	are	not	without	war
 Thy	living	ones,	and	one	doth	gnaw	the	other
Of	those	whom	one	wall	and	one	fosse	shut	in!
Search,	wretched	one,	all	round	about	the	shores
Thy	seaboard,	and	then	look	within	thy	bosom,
       If	any	part	of	thee	enjoyeth	peace!
      What	boots	it,	that	for	thee	Justinian
   The	bridle	mend,	if	empty	be	the	saddle?
  Withouten	this	the	shame	would	be	the	less.
  Ah!	people,	thou	that	oughtest	to	be	devout,
     And	to	let	Caesar	sit	upon	the	saddle,
  If	well	thou	hearest	what	God	teacheth	thee,
  Behold	how	fell	this	wild	beast	has	become,
     Being	no	longer	by	the	spur	corrected,
 Since	thou	hast	laid	thy	hand	upon	the	bridle.
      O	German	Albert!	who	abandonest
  Her	that	has	grown	recalcitrant	and	savage,
   And	oughtest	to	bestride	her	saddle-bow,
 May	a	just	judgment	from	the	stars	down	fall
   Upon	thy	blood,	and	be	it	new	and	open,
   That	thy	successor	may	have	fear	thereof;
 Because	thy	father	and	thyself	have	suffered,
 By	greed	of	those	transalpine	lands	distrained,
     The	garden	of	the	empire	to	be	waste.
  Come	and	behold	Montecchi	and	Cappelletti,
    Monaldi	and	Fillippeschi,	careless	man!
 Those	sad	already,	and	these	doubt-depressed!
Come,	cruel	one!	come	and	behold	the	oppression
     Of	thy	nobility,	and	cure	their	wounds,
   And	thou	shalt	see	how	safe	is	Santafiore!
 Come	and	behold	thy	Rome,	that	is	lamenting,
  Widowed,	alone,	and	day	and	night	exclaims,
   "My	Caesar,	why	hast	thou	forsaken	me?"
  Come	and	behold	how	loving	are	the	people;
       And	if	for	us	no	pity	moveth	thee,
  Come	and	be	made	ashamed	of	thy	renown!
      And	if	it	lawful	be,	O	Jove	Supreme!
     Who	upon	earth	for	us	wast	crucified,
     Are	thy	just	eyes	averted	otherwhere?
      Or	preparation	is	't,	that,	in	the	abyss
Of	thine	own	counsel,	for	some	good	thou	makest
      From	our	perception	utterly	cut	off?
        For	all	the	towns	of	Italy	are	full
     Of	tyrants,	and	becometh	a	Marcellus
   Each	peasant	churl	who	plays	the	partisan!
   My	Florence!	well	mayst	thou	contented	be
 With	this	digression,	which	concerns	thee	not,
Thanks	to	thy	people	who	such	forethought	take!
  Many	at	heart	have	justice,	but	shoot	slowly,
   That	unadvised	they	come	not	to	the	bow,
    But	on	their	very	lips	thy	people	have	it!
    Many	refuse	to	bear	the	common	burden;
      But	thy	solicitous	people	answereth
  Without	being	asked,	and	crieth:	"I	submit."
 Now	be	thou	joyful,	for	thou	hast	good	reason;
Thou	affluent,	thou	in	peace,	thou	full	of	wisdom!
     If	I	speak	true,	the	event	conceals	it	not.
    Athens	and	Lacedaemon,	they	who	made
     The	ancient	laws,	and	were	so	civilized,
      Made	towards	living	well	a	little	sign
Compared	with	thee,	who	makest	such	fine-spun
     Provisions,	that	to	middle	of	November
   Reaches	not	what	thou	in	October	spinnest.
  How	oft,	within	the	time	of	thy	remembrance,
        Laws,	money,	offices,	and	usages
Hast	thou	remodelled,	and	renewed	thy	members?
  And	if	thou	mind	thee	well,	and	see	the	light,
  Thou	shalt	behold	thyself	like	a	sick	woman,
    Who	cannot	find	repose	upon	her	down,
     But	by	her	tossing	wardeth	off	her	pain.                          	
                     Canto	VII
                          	
     After	the	gracious	and	glad	salutations
    Had	three	and	four	times	been	reiterated,
Sordello	backward	drew	and	said,	"Who	are	you?"
     "Or	ever	to	this	mountain	were	directed
      The	souls	deserving	to	ascend	to	God,
       My	bones	were	buried	by	Octavian.
       I	am	Virgilius;	and	for	no	crime	else
  Did	I	lose	heaven,	than	for	not	having	faith;"
    In	this	wise	then	my	Leader	made	reply.
      As	one	who	suddenly	before	him	sees
  Something	whereat	he	marvels,	who	believes
      And	yet	does	not,	saying,	"It	is!	it	is	not!"
   So	he	appeared;	and	then	bowed	down	his	brow,
      And	with	humility	returned	towards	him,
    And,	where	inferiors	embrace,	embraced	him.
       "O	glory	of	the	Latians,	thou,"	he	said,
"Through	whom	our	language	showed	what	it	could	do
      O	pride	eternal	of	the	place	I	came	from,
    What	merit	or	what	grace	to	me	reveals	thee?
       If	I	to	hear	thy	words	be	worthy,	tell	me
If	thou	dost	come	from	Hell,	and	from	what	cloister."
    "Through	all	the	circles	of	the	doleful	realm,"
      Responded	he,	"have	I	come	hitherward;
 Heaven's	power	impelled	me,	and	with	that	I	come.
          I	by	not	doing,	not	by	doing,	lost
    The	sight	of	that	high	sun	which	thou	desirest,
     And	which	too	late	by	me	was	recognized.
    A	place	there	is	below	not	sad	with	torments,
      But	darkness	only,	where	the	lamentations
    Have	not	the	sound	of	wailing,	but	are	sighs.
        There	dwell	I	with	the	little	innocents
     Snatched	by	the	teeth	of	Death,	or	ever	they
      Were	from	our	human	sinfulness	exempt.
   There	dwell	I	among	those	who	the	three	saintly
       Virtues	did	not	put	on,	and	without	vice
     The	others	knew	and	followed	all	of	them.
     But	if	thou	know	and	can,	some	indication
     Give	us	by	which	we	may	the	sooner	come
      Where	Purgatory	has	its	right	beginning."
 He	answered:	"No	fixed	place	has	been	assigned	us;
        'Tis	lawful	for	me	to	go	up	and	round;
      So	far	as	I	can	go,	as	guide	I	join	thee.
      But	see	already	how	the	day	declines,
      And	to	go	up	by	night	we	are	not	able;
 Therefore	'tis	well	to	think	of	some	fair	sojourn.
Souls	are	there	on	the	right	hand	here	withdrawn;
    If	thou	permit	me	I	will	lead	thee	to	them,
 And	thou	shalt	know	them	not	without	delight."
 "How	is	this?"	was	the	answer;	"should	one	wish
    To	mount	by	night	would	he	prevented	be
  By	others?	or	mayhap	would	not	have	power?"
    And	on	the	ground	the	good	Sordello	drew
      His	finger,	saying,	"See,	this	line	alone
   Thou	couldst	not	pass	after	the	sun	is	gone;
Not	that	aught	else	would	hindrance	give,	however,
    To	going	up,	save	the	nocturnal	darkness;
  This	with	the	want	of	power	the	will	perplexes.
     We	might	indeed	therewith	return	below,
 And,	wandering,	walk	the	hill-side	round	about,
  While	the	horizon	holds	the	day	imprisoned."
     Thereon	my	Lord,	as	if	in	wonder,	said:
  "Do	thou	conduct	us	thither,	where	thou	sayest
      That	we	can	take	delight	in	tarrying."
   Little	had	we	withdrawn	us	from	that	place,
  When	I	perceived	the	mount	was	hollowed	out
   In	fashion	as	the	valleys	here	are	hollowed.
  "Thitherward,"	said	that	shade,	"will	we	repair,
     Where	of	itself	the	hill-side	makes	a	lap,
    And	there	for	the	new	day	will	we	await."
  'Twixt	hill	and	plain	there	was	a	winding	path
      Which	led	us	to	the	margin	of	that	dell,
  Where	dies	the	border	more	than	half	away.
Gold	and	fine	silver,	and	scarlet	and	pearl-white,
    The	Indian	wood	resplendent	and	serene,
     Fresh	emerald	the	moment	it	is	broken,
 By	herbage	and	by	flowers	within	that	hollow
Planted,	each	one	in	colour	would	be	vanquished,
    As	by	its	greater	vanquished	is	the	less.
    Nor	in	that	place	had	nature	painted	only,
   But	of	the	sweetness	of	a	thousand	odours
 Made	there	a	mingled	fragrance	and	unknown.
    "Salve	Regina,"	on	the	green	and	flowers
     There	seated,	singing,	spirits	I	beheld,
   Which	were	not	visible	outside	the	valley.
   "Before	the	scanty	sun	now	seeks	his	nest,"
   Began	the	Mantuan	who	had	led	us	thither,
 "Among	them	do	not	wish	me	to	conduct	you.
  Better	from	off	this	ledge	the	acts	and	faces
      Of	all	of	them	will	you	discriminate,
 Than	in	the	plain	below	received	among	them.
  He	who	sits	highest,	and	the	semblance	bears
 Of	having	what	he	should	have	done	neglected,
   And	to	the	others'	song	moves	not	his	lips,
 Rudolph	the	Emperor	was,	who	had	the	power
    To	heal	the	wounds	that	Italy	have	slain,
   So	that	through	others	slowly	she	revives.
   The	other,	who	in	look	doth	comfort	him,
 Governed	the	region	where	the	water	springs,
  The	Moldau	bears	the	Elbe,	and	Elbe	the	sea.
His	name	was	Ottocar;	and	in	swaddling-clothes
     Far	better	he	than	bearded	Winceslaus
       His	son,	who	feeds	in	luxury	and	ease.
  And	the	small-nosed,	who	close	in	council	seems
       With	him	that	has	an	aspect	so	benign,
        Died	fleeing	and	disflowering	the	lily;
     Look	there,	how	he	is	beating	at	his	breast!
       Behold	the	other	one,	who	for	his	cheek
      Sighing	has	made	of	his	own	palm	a	bed;
      Father	and	father-in-law	of	France's	Pest
    Are	they,	and	know	his	vicious	life	and	lewd,
And	hence	proceeds	the	grief	that	so	doth	pierce	them.
     He	who	appears	so	stalwart,	and	chimes	in,
      Singing,	with	that	one	of	the	manly	nose,
        The	cord	of	every	valour	wore	begirt;
       And	if	as	King	had	after	him	remained
      The	stripling	who	in	rear	of	him	is	sitting,
    Well	had	the	valour	passed	from	vase	to	vase,
       Which	cannot	of	the	other	heirs	be	said.
      Frederick	and	Jacomo	possess	the	realms,
       But	none	the	better	heritage	possesses.
    Not	oftentimes	upriseth	through	the	branches
        The	probity	of	man;	and	this	He	wills
      Who	gives	it,	so	that	we	may	ask	of	Him.
   Eke	to	the	large-nosed	reach	my	words,	no	less
     Than	to	the	other,	Pier,	who	with	him	sings;
    Whence	Provence	and	Apulia	grieve	already
          The	plant	is	as	inferior	to	its	seed,
        As	more	than	Beatrice	and	Margaret
       Costanza	boasteth	of	her	husband	still.
       Behold	the	monarch	of	the	simple	life,
        Harry	of	England,	sitting	there	alone;
       He	in	his	branches	has	a	better	issue.
  He	who	the	lowest	on	the	ground	among	them
   Sits	looking	upward,	is	the	Marquis	William,
     For	whose	sake	Alessandria	and	her	war
      Make	Monferrat	and	Canavese	weep."                          	
                    Canto	VIII
                          	
    'Twas	now	the	hour	that	turneth	back	desire
   In	those	who	sail	the	sea,	and	melts	the	heart,
The	day	they've	said	to	their	sweet	friends	farewell,
    And	the	new	pilgrim	penetrates	with	love,
        If	he	doth	hear	from	far	away	a	bell
      That	seemeth	to	deplore	the	dying	day,
         When	I	began	to	make	of	no	avail
    My	hearing,	and	to	watch	one	of	the	souls
   Uprisen,	that	begged	attention	with	its	hand.
    It	joined	and	lifted	upward	both	its	palms,
          Fixing	its	eyes	upon	the	orient,
   As	if	it	said	to	God,	"Naught	else	I	care	for."
         "Te	lucis	ante"	so	devoutly	issued
 Forth	from	its	mouth,	and	with	such	dulcet	notes,
    It	made	me	issue	forth	from	my	own	mind.
    And	then	the	others,	sweetly	and	devoutly,
   Accompanied	it	through	all	the	hymn	entire,
     Having	their	eyes	on	the	supernal	wheels.
   Here,	Reader,	fix	thine	eyes	well	on	the	truth,
       For	now	indeed	so	subtile	is	the	veil,
         Surely	to	penetrate	within	is	easy.
         I	saw	that	army	of	the	gentle-born
      Thereafterward	in	silence	upward	gaze,
       As	if	in	expectation,	pale	and	humble;
 And	from	on	high	come	forth	and	down	descend,
    I	saw	two	Angels	with	two	flaming	swords,
      Truncated	and	deprived	of	their	points.
      Green	as	the	little	leaflets	just	now	born
Their	garments	were,	which,	by	their	verdant	pinions
   Beaten	and	blown	abroad,	they	trailed	behind.
     One	just	above	us	came	to	take	his	station,
     And	one	descended	to	the	opposite	bank,
  So	that	the	people	were	contained	between	them.
    Clearly	in	them	discerned	I	the	blond	head;
     But	in	their	faces	was	the	eye	bewildered,
         As	faculty	confounded	by	excess.
  "From	Mary's	bosom	both	of	them	have	come,"
     Sordello	said,	"as	guardians	of	the	valley
     Against	the	serpent,	that	will	come	anon."
     Whereupon	I,	who	knew	not	by	what	road,
   Turned	round	about,	and	closely	drew	myself,
      Utterly	frozen,	to	the	faithful	shoulders.
    And	once	again	Sordello:	"Now	descend	we
 'Mid	the	grand	shades,	and	we	will	speak	to	them;
   Right	pleasant	will	it	be	for	them	to	see	you."
     Only	three	steps	I	think	that	I	descended,
   And	was	below,	and	saw	one	who	was	looking
     Only	at	me,	as	if	he	fain	would	know	me.
      Already	now	the	air	was	growing	dark,
     But	not	so	that	between	his	eyes	and	mine
      It	did	not	show	what	it	before	locked	up.
Tow'rds	me	he	moved,	and	I	tow'rds	him	did	move;
    Noble	Judge	Nino!	how	it	me	delighted,
  When	I	beheld	thee	not	among	the	damned!
  No	greeting	fair	was	left	unsaid	between	us;
Then	asked	he:	"How	long	is	it	since	thou	camest
   O'er	the	far	waters	to	the	mountain's	foot?"
 "Oh!"	said	I	to	him,	"through	the	dismal	places
    I	came	this	morn;	and	am	in	the	first	life,
      Albeit	the	other,	going	thus,	I	gain."
    And	on	the	instant	my	reply	was	heard,
  He	and	Sordello	both	shrank	back	from	me,
   Like	people	who	are	suddenly	bewildered.
     One	to	Virgilius,	and	the	other	turned
  To	one	who	sat	there,	crying,	"Up,	Currado!
Come	and	behold	what	God	in	grace	has	willed!"
  Then,	turned	to	me:	"By	that	especial	grace
    Thou	owest	unto	Him,	who	so	conceals
  His	own	first	wherefore,	that	it	has	no	ford,
  When	thou	shalt	be	beyond	the	waters	wide,
    Tell	my	Giovanna	that	she	pray	for	me,
     Where	answer	to	the	innocent	is	made.
    I	do	not	think	her	mother	loves	me	more,
   Since	she	has	laid	aside	her	wimple	white,
  Which	she,	unhappy,	needs	must	wish	again.
    Through	her	full	easily	is	comprehended
   How	long	in	woman	lasts	the	fire	of	love,
      If	eye	or	touch	do	not	relight	it	often.
   So	fair	a	hatchment	will	not	make	for	her
      The	Viper	marshalling	the	Milanese
 A-field,	as	would	have	made	Gallura's	Cock."
In	this	wise	spake	he,	with	the	stamp	impressed
      Upon	his	aspect	of	that	righteous	zeal
     Which	measurably	burneth	in	the	heart.
  My	greedy	eyes	still	wandered	up	to	heaven,
  Still	to	that	point	where	slowest	are	the	stars,
     Even	as	a	wheel	the	nearest	to	its	axle.
And	my	Conductor:	"Son,	what	dost	thou	gaze	at
Up	there?"	And	I	to	him:	"At	those	three	torches
    With	which	this	hither	pole	is	all	on	fire."
    And	he	to	me:	"The	four	resplendent	stars
 Thou	sawest	this	morning	are	down	yonder	low,
And	these	have	mounted	up	to	where	those	were."
     As	he	was	speaking,	to	himself	Sordello
 Drew	him,	and	said,	"Lo	there	our	Adversary!"
   And	pointed	with	his	finger	to	look	thither.
     Upon	the	side	on	which	the	little	valley
    No	barrier	hath,	a	serpent	was;	perchance
   The	same	which	gave	to	Eve	the	bitter	food.
'Twixt	grass	and	flowers	came	on	the	evil	streak,
   Turning	at	times	its	head	about,	and	licking
   Its	back	like	to	a	beast	that	smoothes	itself.
      I	did	not	see,	and	therefore	cannot	say
     How	the	celestial	falcons	'gan	to	move,
  But	well	I	saw	that	they	were	both	in	motion.
   Hearing	the	air	cleft	by	their	verdant	wings,
The	serpent	fled,	and	round	the	Angels	wheeled,
      Up	to	their	stations	flying	back	alike.
The	shade	that	to	the	Judge	had	near	approached
When	he	had	called,	throughout	that	whole	assault
    Had	not	a	moment	loosed	its	gaze	on	me.
   "So	may	the	light	that	leadeth	thee	on	high
    Find	in	thine	own	free-will	as	much	of	wax
      As	needful	is	up	to	the	highest	azure,"
        Began	it,	"if	some	true	intelligence
       Of	Valdimagra	or	its	neighbourhood
Thou	knowest,	tell	it	me,	who	once	was	great	there.
         Currado	Malaspina	was	I	called;
    I'm	not	the	elder,	but	from	him	descended;
   To	mine	I	bore	the	love	which	here	refineth."
   "O,"	said	I	unto	him,	"through	your	domains
   I	never	passed,	but	where	is	there	a	dwelling
Throughout	all	Europe,	where	they	are	not	known?
  That	fame,	which	doeth	honour	to	your	house,
   Proclaims	its	Signors	and	proclaims	its	land,
  So	that	he	knows	of	them	who	ne'er	was	there.
     And,	as	I	hope	for	heaven,	I	swear	to	you
      Your	honoured	family	in	naught	abates
     The	glory	of	the	purse	and	of	the	sword.
       It	is	so	privileged	by	use	and	nature,
  That	though	a	guilty	head	misguide	the	world,
    Sole	it	goes	right,	and	scorns	the	evil	way."
    And	he:	"Now	go;	for	the	sun	shall	not	lie
   Seven	times	upon	the	pillow	which	the	Ram
    With	all	his	four	feet	covers	and	bestrides,
       Before	that	such	a	courteous	opinion
     Shall	in	the	middle	of	thy	head	be	nailed
    With	greater	nails	than	of	another's	speech,
    Unless	the	course	of	justice	standeth	still."                          	
                     Canto	IX
                          	
        The	concubine	of	old	Tithonus	now
     Gleamed	white	upon	the	eastern	balcony,
    Forth	from	the	arms	of	her	sweet	paramour;
      With	gems	her	forehead	all	relucent	was,
        Set	in	the	shape	of	that	cold	animal
  Which	with	its	tail	doth	smite	amain	the	nations,
And	of	the	steps,	with	which	she	mounts,	the	Night
    Had	taken	two	in	that	place	where	we	were,
  And	now	the	third	was	bending	down	its	wings;
    When	I,	who	something	had	of	Adam	in	me,
   Vanquished	by	sleep,	upon	the	grass	reclined,
        There	were	all	five	of	us	already	sat.
      Just	at	the	hour	when	her	sad	lay	begins
     The	little	swallow,	near	unto	the	morning,
     Perchance	in	memory	of	her	former	woes,
      And	when	the	mind	of	man,	a	wanderer
More	from	the	flesh,	and	less	by	thought	imprisoned,
         Almost	prophetic	in	its	visions	is,
    In	dreams	it	seemed	to	me	I	saw	suspended
     An	eagle	in	the	sky,	with	plumes	of	gold,
     With	wings	wide	open,	and	intent	to	stoop,
   And	this,	it	seemed	to	me,	was	where	had	been
     By	Ganymede	his	kith	and	kin	abandoned,
      When	to	the	high	consistory	he	was	rapt.
   I	thought	within	myself,	perchance	he	strikes
     From	habit	only	here,	and	from	elsewhere
         Disdains	to	bear	up	any	in	his	feet.
  Then	wheeling	somewhat	more,	it	seemed	to	me,
       Terrible	as	the	lightning	he	descended,
     And	snatched	me	upward	even	to	the	fire.
  Therein	it	seemed	that	he	and	I	were	burning,
    And	the	imagined	fire	did	scorch	me	so,
     That	of	necessity	my	sleep	was	broken.
       Not	otherwise	Achilles	started	up,
    Around	him	turning	his	awakened	eyes,
  And	knowing	not	the	place	in	which	he	was,
  What	time	from	Chiron	stealthily	his	mother
   Carried	him	sleeping	in	her	arms	to	Scyros,
Wherefrom	the	Greeks	withdrew	him	afterwards,
    Than	I	upstarted,	when	from	off	my	face
      Sleep	fled	away;	and	pallid	I	became,
   As	doth	the	man	who	freezes	with	affright.
      Only	my	Comforter	was	at	my	side,
And	now	the	sun	was	more	than	two	hours	high,
 And	turned	towards	the	sea-shore	was	my	face.
      "Be	not	intimidated,"	said	my	Lord,
      "Be	reassured,	for	all	is	well	with	us;
  Do	not	restrain,	but	put	forth	all	thy	strength.
    Thou	hast	at	length	arrived	at	Purgatory;
     See	there	the	cliff	that	closes	it	around;
See	there	the	entrance,	where	it	seems	disjoined.
 Whilom	at	dawn,	which	doth	precede	the	day,
      When	inwardly	thy	spirit	was	asleep
   Upon	the	flowers	that	deck	the	land	below,
    There	came	a	Lady	and	said:	'I	am	Lucia;
     Let	me	take	this	one	up,	who	is	asleep;
   So	will	I	make	his	journey	easier	for	him.'
       Sordello	and	the	other	noble	shapes
Remained;	she	took	thee,	and,	as	day	grew	bright,
  Upward	she	came,	and	I	upon	her	footsteps.
 She	laid	thee	here;	and	first	her	beauteous	eyes
      That	open	entrance	pointed	out	to	me;
    Then	she	and	sleep	together	went	away."
   In	guise	of	one	whose	doubts	are	reassured,
  And	who	to	confidence	his	fear	doth	change,
   After	the	truth	has	been	discovered	to	him,
   So	did	I	change;	and	when	without	disquiet
      My	Leader	saw	me,	up	along	the	cliff
 He	moved,	and	I	behind	him,	tow'rd	the	height.
       Reader,	thou	seest	well	how	I	exalt
   My	theme,	and	therefore	if	with	greater	art
          I	fortify	it,	marvel	not	thereat.
 Nearer	approached	we,	and	were	in	such	place,
   That	there,	where	first	appeared	to	me	a	rift
      Like	to	a	crevice	that	disparts	a	wall,
     I	saw	a	portal,	and	three	stairs	beneath,
         Diverse	in	colour,	to	go	up	to	it,
   And	a	gate-keeper,	who	yet	spake	no	word.
   And	as	I	opened	more	and	more	mine	eyes,
      I	saw	him	seated	on	the	highest	stair,
      Such	in	the	face	that	I	endured	it	not.
     And	in	his	hand	he	had	a	naked	sword,
Which	so	reflected	back	the	sunbeams	tow'rds	us,
      That	oft	in	vain	I	lifted	up	mine	eyes.
 "Tell	it	from	where	you	are,	what	is't	you	wish?"
    Began	he	to	exclaim;	"where	is	the	escort?
  Take	heed	your	coming	hither	harm	you	not!"
"A	Lady	of	Heaven,	with	these	things	conversant,"
    My	Master	answered	him,	"but	even	now
   Said	to	us,	'Thither	go;	there	is	the	portal.'"
   "And	may	she	speed	your	footsteps	in	all	good,"
          Again	began	the	courteous	janitor;
    "Come	forward	then	unto	these	stairs	of	ours."
      Thither	did	we	approach;	and	the	first	stair
    Was	marble	white,	so	polished	and	so	smooth,
        I	mirrored	myself	therein	as	I	appear.
     The	second,	tinct	of	deeper	hue	than	perse,
         Was	of	a	calcined	and	uneven	stone,
     Cracked	all	asunder	lengthwise	and	across.
      The	third,	that	uppermost	rests	massively,
       Porphyry	seemed	to	me,	as	flaming	red
      As	blood	that	from	a	vein	is	spirting	forth.
        Both	of	his	feet	was	holding	upon	this
    The	Angel	of	God,	upon	the	threshold	seated,
      Which	seemed	to	me	a	stone	of	diamond.
     Along	the	three	stairs	upward	with	good	will
      Did	my	Conductor	draw	me,	saying:	"Ask
      Humbly	that	he	the	fastening	may	undo."
         Devoutly	at	the	holy	feet	I	cast	me,
    For	mercy's	sake	besought	that	he	would	open,
     But	first	upon	my	breast	three	times	I	smote.
      Seven	P's	upon	my	forehead	he	described
With	the	sword's	point,	and,	"Take	heed	that	thou	wash
 These	wounds,	when	thou	shalt	be	within,"	he	said.
        Ashes,	or	earth	that	dry	is	excavated,
       Of	the	same	colour	were	with	his	attire,
     And	from	beneath	it	he	drew	forth	two	keys.
    One	was	of	gold,	and	the	other	was	of	silver;
    First	with	the	white,	and	after	with	the	yellow,
       Plied	he	the	door,	so	that	I	was	content.
    "Whenever	faileth	either	of	these	keys
    So	that	it	turn	not	rightly	in	the	lock,"
  He	said	to	us,	"this	entrance	doth	not	open.
  More	precious	one	is,	but	the	other	needs
     More	art	and	intellect	ere	it	unlock,
  For	it	is	that	which	doth	the	knot	unloose.
 From	Peter	I	have	them;	and	he	bade	me	err
   Rather	in	opening	than	in	keeping	shut,
   If	people	but	fall	down	before	my	feet."
 Then	pushed	the	portals	of	the	sacred	door,
 Exclaiming:	"Enter;	but	I	give	you	warning
  That	forth	returns	whoever	looks	behind."
And	when	upon	their	hinges	were	turned	round
     The	swivels	of	that	consecrated	gate,
 Which	are	of	metal,	massive	and	sonorous,
Roared	not	so	loud,	nor	so	discordant	seemed
   Tarpeia,	when	was	ta'en	from	it	the	good
   Metellus,	wherefore	meagre	it	remained.
  At	the	first	thunder-peal	I	turned	attentive,
  And	"Te	Deum	laudamus"	seemed	to	hear
    In	voices	mingled	with	sweet	melody.
     Exactly	such	an	image	rendered	me
 That	which	I	heard,	as	we	are	wont	to	catch,
  When	people	singing	with	the	organ	stand;
For	now	we	hear,	and	now	hear	not,	the	words.
                        	
                    Canto	X
                        	
When	we	had	crossed	the	threshold	of	the	door
  Which	the	perverted	love	of	souls	disuses,
Because	it	makes	the	crooked	way	seem	straight,
      Re-echoing	I	heard	it	closed	again;
  And	if	I	had	turned	back	mine	eyes	upon	it,
   What	for	my	failing	had	been	fit	excuse?
   We	mounted	upward	through	a	rifted	rock,
     Which	undulated	to	this	side	and	that,
    Even	as	a	wave	receding	and	advancing.
      "Here	it	behoves	us	use	a	little	art,"
     Began	my	Leader,	"to	adapt	ourselves
  Now	here,	now	there,	to	the	receding	side."
   And	this	our	footsteps	so	infrequent	made,
  That	sooner	had	the	moon's	decreasing	disk
     Regained	its	bed	to	sink	again	to	rest,
 Than	we	were	forth	from	out	that	needle's	eye;
    But	when	we	free	and	in	the	open	were,
There	where	the	mountain	backward	piles	itself,
    I	wearied	out,	and	both	of	us	uncertain
    About	our	way,	we	stopped	upon	a	plain
  More	desolate	than	roads	across	the	deserts.
  From	where	its	margin	borders	on	the	void,
    To	foot	of	the	high	bank	that	ever	rises,
A	human	body	three	times	told	would	measure;
  And	far	as	eye	of	mine	could	wing	its	flight,
  Now	on	the	left,	and	on	the	right	flank	now,
    The	same	this	cornice	did	appear	to	me.
  Thereon	our	feet	had	not	been	moved	as	yet,
When	I	perceived	the	embankment	round	about,
   Which	all	right	of	ascent	had	interdicted,
     To	be	of	marble	white,	and	so	adorned
   With	sculptures,	that	not	only	Polycletus,
 But	Nature's	self,	had	there	been	put	to	shame.
The	Angel,	who	came	down	to	earth	with	tidings
 Of	peace,	that	had	been	wept	for	many	a	year,
   And	opened	Heaven	from	its	long	interdict,
      In	front	of	us	appeared	so	truthfully
     There	sculptured	in	a	gracious	attitude,
     He	did	not	seem	an	image	that	is	silent.
One	would	have	sworn	that	he	was	saying,	"Ave;"
      For	she	was	there	in	effigy	portrayed
   Who	turned	the	key	to	ope	the	exalted	love,
  And	in	her	mien	this	language	had	impressed,
        "Ecce	ancilla	Dei,"	as	distinctly
       As	any	figure	stamps	itself	in	wax.
   "Keep	not	thy	mind	upon	one	place	alone,"
  The	gentle	Master	said,	who	had	me	standing
 Upon	that	side	where	people	have	their	hearts;
   Whereat	I	moved	mine	eyes,	and	I	beheld
       In	rear	of	Mary,	and	upon	that	side
   Where	he	was	standing	who	conducted	me,
       Another	story	on	the	rock	imposed;
  Wherefore	I	passed	Virgilius	and	drew	near,
    So	that	before	mine	eyes	it	might	be	set.
 There	sculptured	in	the	self-same	marble	were
    The	cart	and	oxen,	drawing	the	holy	ark,
 Wherefore	one	dreads	an	office	not	appointed.
    People	appeared	in	front,	and	all	of	them
     In	seven	choirs	divided,	of	two	senses
 Made	one	say	"No,"	the	other,	"Yes,	they	sing."
  Likewise	unto	the	smoke	of	the	frankincense,
Which	there	was	imaged	forth,	the	eyes	and	nose
    Were	in	the	yes	and	no	discordant	made.
      Preceded	there	the	vessel	benedight,
 Dancing	with	girded	loins,	the	humble	Psalmist,
   And	more	and	less	than	King	was	he	in	this.
      Opposite,	represented	at	the	window
   Of	a	great	palace,	Michal	looked	upon	him,
    Even	as	a	woman	scornful	and	afflicted.
I	moved	my	feet	from	where	I	had	been	standing,
     To	examine	near	at	hand	another	story,
 Which	after	Michal	glimmered	white	upon	me.
    There	the	high	glory	of	the	Roman	Prince
    Was	chronicled,	whose	great	beneficence
      Moved	Gregory	to	his	great	victory;
    'Tis	of	the	Emperor	Trajan	I	am	speaking;
      And	a	poor	widow	at	his	bridle	stood,
       In	attitude	of	weeping	and	of	grief.
 Around	about	him	seemed	it	thronged	and	full
     Of	cavaliers,	and	the	eagles	in	the	gold
  Above	them	visibly	in	the	wind	were	moving.
   The	wretched	woman	in	the	midst	of	these
Seemed	to	be	saying:	"Give	me	vengeance,	Lord,
For	my	dead	son,	for	whom	my	heart	is	breaking."
     And	he	to	answer	her:	"Now	wait	until
  I	shall	return."	And	she:	"My	Lord,"	like	one
  In	whom	grief	is	impatient,	"shouldst	thou	not
  Return?"	And	he:	"Who	shall	be	where	I	am
Will	give	it	thee."	And	she:	"Good	deed	of	others
 What	boots	it	thee,	if	thou	neglect	thine	own?"
Whence	he:	"Now	comfort	thee,	for	it	behoves	me
      That	I	discharge	my	duty	ere	I	move;
    Justice	so	wills,	and	pity	doth	retain	me."
    He	who	on	no	new	thing	has	ever	looked
    Was	the	creator	of	this	visible	language,
      Novel	to	us,	for	here	it	is	not	found.
     While	I	delighted	me	in	contemplating
          The	images	of	such	humility,
   And	dear	to	look	on	for	their	Maker's	sake,
  "Behold,	upon	this	side,	but	rare	they	make
Their	steps,"	the	Poet	murmured,	"many	people;
     These	will	direct	us	to	the	lofty	stairs."
    Mine	eyes,	that	in	beholding	were	intent
  To	see	new	things,	of	which	they	curious	are,
  In	turning	round	towards	him	were	not	slow.
But	still	I	wish	not,	Reader,	thou	shouldst	swerve
 From	thy	good	purposes,	because	thou	hearest
   How	God	ordaineth	that	the	debt	be	paid;
    Attend	not	to	the	fashion	of	the	torment,
 Think	of	what	follows;	think	that	at	the	worst
  It	cannot	reach	beyond	the	mighty	sentence.
     "Master,"	began	I,	"that	which	I	behold
  Moving	towards	us	seems	to	me	not	persons,
   And	what	I	know	not,	so	in	sight	I	waver."
      And	he	to	me:	"The	grievous	quality
  Of	this	their	torment	bows	them	so	to	earth,
  That	my	own	eyes	at	first	contended	with	it;
     But	look	there	fixedly,	and	disentangle
 By	sight	what	cometh	underneath	those	stones;
 Already	canst	thou	see	how	each	is	stricken."
 O	ye	proud	Christians!	wretched,	weary	ones!
     Who,	in	the	vision	of	the	mind	infirm
 Confidence	have	in	your	backsliding	steps,
  Do	ye	not	comprehend	that	we	are	worms,
   Born	to	bring	forth	the	angelic	butterfly
  That	flieth	unto	judgment	without	screen?
   Why	floats	aloft	your	spirit	high	in	air?
    Like	are	ye	unto	insects	undeveloped,
 Even	as	the	worm	in	whom	formation	fails!
       As	to	sustain	a	ceiling	or	a	roof,
    In	place	of	corbel,	oftentimes	a	figure
    Is	seen	to	join	its	knees	unto	its	breast,
   Which	makes	of	the	unreal	real	anguish
   Arise	in	him	who	sees	it,	fashioned	thus
 Beheld	I	those,	when	I	had	ta'en	good	heed.
 True	is	it,	they	were	more	or	less	bent	down,
 According	as	they	more	or	less	were	laden;
 And	he	who	had	most	patience	in	his	looks
  Weeping	did	seem	to	say,	"I	can	no	more!"                        	
                   Canto	XI
                        	
"Our	Father,	thou	who	dwellest	in	the	heavens,
 Not	circumscribed,	but	from	the	greater	love
   Thou	bearest	to	the	first	effects	on	high,
 Praised	be	thy	name	and	thine	omnipotence
       By	every	creature,	as	befitting	is
   To	render	thanks	to	thy	sweet	effluence.
  Come	unto	us	the	peace	of	thy	dominion,
      For	unto	it	we	cannot	of	ourselves,
     If	it	come	not,	with	all	our	intellect.
    Even	as	thine	own	Angels	of	their	will
    Make	sacrifice	to	thee,	Hosanna	singing,
    So	may	all	men	make	sacrifice	of	theirs.
     Give	unto	us	this	day	our	daily	manna,
   Withouten	which	in	this	rough	wilderness
 Backward	goes	he	who	toils	most	to	advance.
 And	even	as	we	the	trespass	we	have	suffered
      Pardon	in	one	another,	pardon	thou
      Benignly,	and	regard	not	our	desert.
      Our	virtue,	which	is	easily	o'ercome,
    Put	not	to	proof	with	the	old	Adversary,
   But	thou	from	him	who	spurs	it	so,	deliver.
       This	last	petition	verily,	dear	Lord,
   Not	for	ourselves	is	made,	who	need	it	not,
But	for	their	sake	who	have	remained	behind	us."
  Thus	for	themselves	and	us	good	furtherance
Those	shades	imploring,	went	beneath	a	weight
 Like	unto	that	of	which	we	sometimes	dream,
     Unequally	in	anguish	round	and	round
   And	weary	all,	upon	that	foremost	cornice,
  Purging	away	the	smoke-stains	of	the	world.
   If	there	good	words	are	always	said	for	us,
 What	may	not	here	be	said	and	done	for	them,
  By	those	who	have	a	good	root	to	their	will?
 Well	may	we	help	them	wash	away	the	marks
 That	hence	they	carried,	so	that	clean	and	light
    They	may	ascend	unto	the	starry	wheels!
  "Ah!	so	may	pity	and	justice	you	disburden
Soon,	that	ye	may	have	power	to	move	the	wing,
     That	shall	uplift	you	after	your	desire,
Show	us	on	which	hand	tow'rd	the	stairs	the	way
  Is	shortest,	and	if	more	than	one	the	passes,
  Point	us	out	that	which	least	abruptly	falls;
For	he	who	cometh	with	me,	through	the	burden
   Of	Adam's	flesh	wherewith	he	is	invested,
   Against	his	will	is	chary	of	his	climbing."
The	words	of	theirs	which	they	returned	to	those
  That	he	whom	I	was	following	had	spoken,
  It	was	not	manifest	from	whom	they	came,
But	it	was	said:	"To	the	right	hand	come	with	us
    Along	the	bank,	and	ye	shall	find	a	pass
      Possible	for	living	person	to	ascend.
     And	were	I	not	impeded	by	the	stone,
Which	this	proud	neck	of	mine	doth	subjugate,
 Whence	I	am	forced	to	hold	my	visage	down,
Him,	who	still	lives	and	does	not	name	himself,
   Would	I	regard,	to	see	if	I	may	know	him
    And	make	him	piteous	unto	this	burden.
  A	Latian	was	I,	and	born	of	a	great	Tuscan;
  Guglielmo	Aldobrandeschi	was	my	father;
  I	know	not	if	his	name	were	ever	with	you.
   The	ancient	blood	and	deeds	of	gallantry
    Of	my	progenitors	so	arrogant	made	me
 That,	thinking	not	upon	the	common	mother,
     All	men	I	held	in	scorn	to	such	extent
      I	died	therefor,	as	know	the	Sienese,
       And	every	child	in	Campagnatico.
      I	am	Omberto;	and	not	to	me	alone
 Has	pride	done	harm,	but	all	my	kith	and	kin
       Has	with	it	dragged	into	adversity.
     And	here	must	I	this	burden	bear	for	it
        Till	God	be	satisfied,	since	I	did	not
     Among	the	living,	here	among	the	dead."
   Listening	I	downward	bent	my	countenance;
 And	one	of	them,	not	this	one	who	was	speaking,
Twisted	himself	beneath	the	weight	that	cramps	him,
  And	looked	at	me,	and	knew	me,	and	called	out,
        Keeping	his	eyes	laboriously	fixed
On	me,	who	all	bowed	down	was	going	with	them.
      "O,"	asked	I	him,	"art	thou	not	Oderisi,
     Agobbio's	honour,	and	honour	of	that	art
      Which	is	in	Paris	called	illuminating?"
 "Brother,"	said	he,	"more	laughing	are	the	leaves
    Touched	by	the	brush	of	Franco	Bolognese;
     All	his	the	honour	now,	and	mine	in	part.
        In	sooth	I	had	not	been	so	courteous
      While	I	was	living,	for	the	great	desire
    Of	excellence,	on	which	my	heart	was	bent.
      Here	of	such	pride	is	paid	the	forfeiture;
      And	yet	I	should	not	be	here,	were	it	not
    That,	having	power	to	sin,	I	turned	to	God.
      O	thou	vain	glory	of	the	human	powers,
     How	little	green	upon	thy	summit	lingers,
    If't	be	not	followed	by	an	age	of	grossness!
        In	painting	Cimabue	thought	that	he
   Should	hold	the	field,	now	Giotto	has	the	cry,
      So	that	the	other's	fame	is	growing	dim.
      So	has	one	Guido	from	the	other	taken
     The	glory	of	our	tongue,	and	he	perchance
 Is	born,	who	from	the	nest	shall	chase	them	both.
    Naught	is	this	mundane	rumour	but	a	breath
Of	wind,	that	comes	now	this	way	and	now	that,
  And	changes	name,	because	it	changes	side.
What	fame	shalt	thou	have	more,	if	old	peel	off
From	thee	thy	flesh,	than	if	thou	hadst	been	dead
   Before	thou	left	the	'pappo'	and	the	'dindi,'
 Ere	pass	a	thousand	years?	which	is	a	shorter
  Space	to	the	eterne,	than	twinkling	of	an	eye
 Unto	the	circle	that	in	heaven	wheels	slowest.
    With	him,	who	takes	so	little	of	the	road
     In	front	of	me,	all	Tuscany	resounded;
    And	now	he	scarce	is	lisped	of	in	Siena,
 Where	he	was	lord,	what	time	was	overthrown
      The	Florentine	delirium,	that	superb
     Was	at	that	day	as	now	'tis	prostitute.
     Your	reputation	is	the	colour	of	grass
 Which	comes	and	goes,	and	that	discolours	it
  By	which	it	issues	green	from	out	the	earth."
And	I:	"Thy	true	speech	fills	my	heart	with	good
  Humility,	and	great	tumour	thou	assuagest;
But	who	is	he,	of	whom	just	now	thou	spakest?"
   "That,"	he	replied,	"is	Provenzan	Salvani,
    And	he	is	here	because	he	had	presumed
       To	bring	Siena	all	into	his	hands.
    He	has	gone	thus,	and	goeth	without	rest
  E'er	since	he	died;	such	money	renders	back
   In	payment	he	who	is	on	earth	too	daring."
       And	I:	"If	every	spirit	who	awaits
     The	verge	of	life	before	that	he	repent,
  Remains	below	there	and	ascends	not	hither,
    (Unless	good	orison	shall	him	bestead,)
    Until	as	much	time	as	he	lived	be	passed,
  How	was	the	coming	granted	him	in	largess?"
 "When	he	in	greatest	splendour	lived,"	said	he,
        "Freely	upon	the	Campo	of	Siena,
  All	shame	being	laid	aside,	he	placed	himself;
   And	there	to	draw	his	friend	from	the	duress
Which	in	the	prison-house	of	Charles	he	suffered,
   He	brought	himself	to	tremble	in	each	vein.
   I	say	no	more,	and	know	that	I	speak	darkly;
  Yet	little	time	shall	pass	before	thy	neighbours
Will	so	demean	themselves	that	thou	canst	gloss	it.
This	action	has	released	him	from	those	confines."                          	
                     Canto	XII
                          	
       Abreast,	like	oxen	going	in	a	yoke,
      I	with	that	heavy-laden	soul	went	on,
    As	long	as	the	sweet	pedagogue	permitted;
 But	when	he	said,	"Leave	him,	and	onward	pass,
   For	here	'tis	good	that	with	the	sail	and	oars,
  As	much	as	may	be,	each	push	on	his	barque;"
     Upright,	as	walking	wills	it,	I	redressed
  My	person,	notwithstanding	that	my	thoughts
   Remained	within	me	downcast	and	abashed.
     I	had	moved	on,	and	followed	willingly
    The	footsteps	of	my	Master,	and	we	both
   Already	showed	how	light	of	foot	we	were,
  When	unto	me	he	said:	"Cast	down	thine	eyes;
    'Twere	well	for	thee,	to	alleviate	the	way,
     To	look	upon	the	bed	beneath	thy	feet."
   As,	that	some	memory	may	exist	of	them,
  Above	the	buried	dead	their	tombs	in	earth
Bear	sculptured	on	them	what	they	were	before;
 Whence	often	there	we	weep	for	them	afresh,
 From	pricking	of	remembrance,	which	alone
    To	the	compassionate	doth	set	its	spur;
   So	saw	I	there,	but	of	a	better	semblance
    In	point	of	artifice,	with	figures	covered
 Whate'er	as	pathway	from	the	mount	projects.
     I	saw	that	one	who	was	created	noble
More	than	all	other	creatures,	down	from	heaven
  Flaming	with	lightnings	fall	upon	one	side.
       I	saw	Briareus	smitten	by	the	dart
       Celestial,	lying	on	the	other	side,
     Heavy	upon	the	earth	by	mortal	frost.
   I	saw	Thymbraeus,	Pallas	saw,	and	Mars,
  Still	clad	in	armour	round	about	their	father,
  Gaze	at	the	scattered	members	of	the	giants.
   I	saw,	at	foot	of	his	great	labour,	Nimrod,
    As	if	bewildered,	looking	at	the	people
   Who	had	been	proud	with	him	in	Sennaar.
       O	Niobe!	with	what	afflicted	eyes
    Thee	I	beheld	upon	the	pathway	traced,
  Between	thy	seven	and	seven	children	slain!
   O	Saul!	how	fallen	upon	thy	proper	sword
   Didst	thou	appear	there	lifeless	in	Gilboa,
    That	felt	thereafter	neither	rain	nor	dew!
       O	mad	Arachne!	so	I	thee	beheld
   E'en	then	half	spider,	sad	upon	the	shreds
    Of	fabric	wrought	in	evil	hour	for	thee!
       O	Rehoboam!	no	more	seems	to	threaten
      Thine	image	there;	but	full	of	consternation
       A	chariot	bears	it	off,	when	none	pursues!
     Displayed	moreo'er	the	adamantine	pavement
      How	unto	his	own	mother	made	Alcmaeon
         Costly	appear	the	luckless	ornament;
  Displayed	how	his	own	sons	did	throw	themselves
         Upon	Sennacherib	within	the	temple,
     And	how,	he	being	dead,	they	left	him	there;
       Displayed	the	ruin	and	the	cruel	carnage
    That	Tomyris	wrought,	when	she	to	Cyrus	said,
"Blood	didst	thou	thirst	for,	and	with	blood	I	glut	thee!"
       Displayed	how	routed	fled	the	Assyrians
         After	that	Holofernes	had	been	slain,
     And	likewise	the	remainder	of	that	slaughter.
       I	saw	there	Troy	in	ashes	and	in	caverns;
        O	Ilion!	thee,	how	abject	and	debased,
      Displayed	the	image	that	is	there	discerned!
         Whoe'er	of	pencil	master	was	or	stile,
  That	could	portray	the	shades	and	traits	which	there
      Would	cause	each	subtile	genius	to	admire?
    Dead	seemed	the	dead,	the	living	seemed	alive;
        Better	than	I	saw	not	who	saw	the	truth,
        All	that	I	trod	upon	while	bowed	I	went.
    Now	wax	ye	proud,	and	on	with	looks	uplifted,
     Ye	sons	of	Eve,	and	bow	not	down	your	faces
        So	that	ye	may	behold	your	evil	ways!
   More	of	the	mount	by	us	was	now	encompassed,
       And	far	more	spent	the	circuit	of	the	sun,
       Than	had	the	mind	preoccupied	imagined,
    When	he,	who	ever	watchful	in	advance
    Was	going	on,	began:	"Lift	up	thy	head,
    'Tis	no	more	time	to	go	thus	meditating.
     Lo	there	an	Angel	who	is	making	haste
      To	come	towards	us;	lo,	returning	is
 From	service	of	the	day	the	sixth	handmaiden.
   With	reverence	thine	acts	and	looks	adorn,
   So	that	he	may	delight	to	speed	us	upward;
   Think	that	this	day	will	never	dawn	again."
       I	was	familiar	with	his	admonition
     Ever	to	lose	no	time;	so	on	this	theme
      He	could	not	unto	me	speak	covertly.
      Towards	us	came	the	being	beautiful
    Vested	in	white,	and	in	his	countenance
  Such	as	appears	the	tremulous	morning	star.
His	arms	he	opened,	and	opened	then	his	wings;
"Come,"	said	he,	"near	at	hand	here	are	the	steps,
    And	easy	from	henceforth	is	the	ascent."
 At	this	announcement	few	are	they	who	come!
     O	human	creatures,	born	to	soar	aloft,
      Why	fall	ye	thus	before	a	little	wind?
    He	led	us	on	to	where	the	rock	was	cleft;
 There	smote	upon	my	forehead	with	his	wings,
     Then	a	safe	passage	promised	unto	me.
   As	on	the	right	hand,	to	ascend	the	mount
    Where	seated	is	the	church	that	lordeth	it
    O'er	the	well-guided,	above	Rubaconte,
  The	bold	abruptness	of	the	ascent	is	broken
  By	stairways	that	were	made	there	in	the	age
  When	still	were	safe	the	ledger	and	the	stave,
  E'en	thus	attempered	is	the	bank	which	falls
 Sheer	downward	from	the	second	circle	there;
  But	on	this,	side	and	that	the	high	rock	graze.
  As	we	were	turning	thitherward	our	persons,
         "Beati	pauperes	spiritu,"	voices
 Sang	in	such	wise	that	speech	could	tell	it	not.
    Ah	me!	how	different	are	these	entrances
    From	the	Infernal!	for	with	anthems	here
    One	enters,	and	below	with	wild	laments.
   We	now	were	hunting	up	the	sacred	stairs,
     And	it	appeared	to	me	by	far	more	easy
    Than	on	the	plain	it	had	appeared	before.
  Whence	I:	"My	Master,	say,	what	heavy	thing
   Has	been	uplifted	from	me,	so	that	hardly
   Aught	of	fatigue	is	felt	by	me	in	walking?"
He	answered:	"When	the	P's	which	have	remained
        Still	on	thy	face	almost	obliterate
      Shall	wholly,	as	the	first	is,	be	erased,
  Thy	feet	will	be	so	vanquished	by	good	will,
    That	not	alone	they	shall	not	feel	fatigue,
     But	urging	up	will	be	to	them	delight."
    Then	did	I	even	as	they	do	who	are	going
 With	something	on	the	head	to	them	unknown,
  Unless	the	signs	of	others	make	them	doubt,
   Wherefore	the	hand	to	ascertain	is	helpful,
 And	seeks	and	finds,	and	doth	fulfill	the	office
  Which	cannot	be	accomplished	by	the	sight;
  And	with	the	fingers	of	the	right	hand	spread
    I	found	but	six	the	letters,	that	had	carved
    Upon	my	temples	he	who	bore	the	keys;
   Upon	beholding	which	my	Leader	smiled.                         	
                    Canto	XIII
                         	
     We	were	upon	the	summit	of	the	stairs,
     Where	for	the	second	time	is	cut	away
  The	mountain,	which	ascending	shriveth	all.
    There	in	like	manner	doth	a	cornice	bind
    The	hill	all	round	about,	as	does	the	first,
    Save	that	its	arc	more	suddenly	is	curved.
 Shade	is	there	none,	nor	sculpture	that	appears;
So	seems	the	bank,	and	so	the	road	seems	smooth,
      With	but	the	livid	colour	of	the	stone.
     "If	to	inquire	we	wait	for	people	here,"
     The	Poet	said,	"I	fear	that	peradventure
    Too	much	delay	will	our	election	have."
   Then	steadfast	on	the	sun	his	eyes	he	fixed,
  Made	his	right	side	the	centre	of	his	motion,
    And	turned	the	left	part	of	himself	about.
 "O	thou	sweet	light!	with	trust	in	whom	I	enter
   Upon	this	novel	journey,	do	thou	lead	us,"
   Said	he,	"as	one	within	here	should	be	led.
  Thou	warmest	the	world,	thou	shinest	over	it;
      If	other	reason	prompt	not	otherwise,
   Thy	rays	should	evermore	our	leaders	be!"
     As	much	as	here	is	counted	for	a	mile,
    So	much	already	there	had	we	advanced
       In	little	time,	by	dint	of	ready	will;
  And	tow'rds	us	there	were	heard	to	fly,	albeit
      They	were	not	visible,	spirits	uttering
     Unto	Love's	table	courteous	invitations,
  The	first	voice	that	passed	onward	in	its	flight,
    "Vinum	non	habent,"	said	in	accents	loud,
        And	went	reiterating	it	behind	us.
         And	ere	it	wholly	grew	inaudible
   Because	of	distance,	passed	another,	crying,
      "I	am	Orestes!"	and	it	also	stayed	not.
"O,"	said	I,	"Father,	these,	what	voices	are	they?"
      And	even	as	I	asked,	behold	the	third,
Saying:	"Love	those	from	whom	ye	have	had	evil!"
 And	the	good	Master	said:	"This	circle	scourges
       The	sin	of	envy,	and	on	that	account
  Are	drawn	from	love	the	lashes	of	the	scourge.
       The	bridle	of	another	sound	shall	be;
     I	think	that	thou	wilt	hear	it,	as	I	judge,
    Before	thou	comest	to	the	Pass	of	Pardon.
 But	fix	thine	eyes	athwart	the	air	right	steadfast,
    And	people	thou	wilt	see	before	us	sitting,
  And	each	one	close	against	the	cliff	is	seated."
   Then	wider	than	at	first	mine	eyes	I	opened;
 I	looked	before	me,	and	saw	shades	with	mantles
     Not	from	the	colour	of	the	stone	diverse.
    And	when	we	were	a	little	farther	onward,
       I	heard	a	cry	of,	"Mary,	pray	for	us!"
    A	cry	of,	"Michael,	Peter,	and	all	Saints!"
     I	do	not	think	there	walketh	still	on	earth
   A	man	so	hard,	that	he	would	not	be	pierced
        With	pity	at	what	afterward	I	saw.
   For	when	I	had	approached	so	near	to	them
      That	manifest	to	me	their	acts	became,
      Drained	was	I	at	the	eyes	by	heavy	grief.
  Covered	with	sackcloth	vile	they	seemed	to	me,
   And	one	sustained	the	other	with	his	shoulder,
    And	all	of	them	were	by	the	bank	sustained.
      Thus	do	the	blind,	in	want	of	livelihood,
     Stand	at	the	doors	of	churches	asking	alms,
        And	one	upon	another	leans	his	head,
        So	that	in	others	pity	soon	may	rise,
        Not	only	at	the	accent	of	their	words,
     But	at	their	aspect,	which	no	less	implores.
      And	as	unto	the	blind	the	sun	comes	not,
    So	to	the	shades,	of	whom	just	now	I	spake,
   Heaven's	light	will	not	be	bounteous	of	itself;
     For	all	their	lids	an	iron	wire	transpierces,
      And	sews	them	up,	as	to	a	sparhawk	wild
        Is	done,	because	it	will	not	quiet	stay.
     To	me	it	seemed,	in	passing,	to	do	outrage,
        Seeing	the	others	without	being	seen;
     Wherefore	I	turned	me	to	my	counsel	sage.
  Well	knew	he	what	the	mute	one	wished	to	say,
     And	therefore	waited	not	for	my	demand,
  But	said:	"Speak,	and	be	brief,	and	to	the	point."
            I	had	Virgilius	upon	that	side
   Of	the	embankment	from	which	one	may	fall,
        Since	by	no	border	'tis	engarlanded;
           Upon	the	other	side	of	me	I	had
 The	shades	devout,	who	through	the	horrible	seam
Pressed	out	the	tears	so	that	they	bathed	their	cheeks.
   To	them	I	turned	me,	and,	"O	people,	certain,"
        Began	I,	"of	beholding	the	high	light,
    Which	your	desire	has	solely	in	its	care,
    So	may	grace	speedily	dissolve	the	scum
      Upon	your	consciences,	that	limpidly
  Through	them	descend	the	river	of	the	mind,
  Tell	me,	for	dear	'twill	be	to	me	and	gracious,
      If	any	soul	among	you	here	is	Latian,
And	'twill	perchance	be	good	for	him	I	learn	it."
      "O	brother	mine,	each	one	is	citizen
      Of	one	true	city;	but	thy	meaning	is,
    Who	may	have	lived	in	Italy	a	pilgrim."
     By	way	of	answer	this	I	seemed	to	hear
      A	little	farther	on	than	where	I	stood,
    Whereat	I	made	myself	still	nearer	heard.
    Among	the	rest	I	saw	a	shade	that	waited
     In	aspect,	and	should	any	one	ask	how,
    Its	chin	it	lifted	upward	like	a	blind	man.
    "Spirit,"	I	said,	"who	stoopest	to	ascend,
       If	thou	art	he	who	did	reply	to	me,
 Make	thyself	known	to	me	by	place	or	name."
      "Sienese	was	I,"	it	replied,	"and	with
    The	others	here	recleanse	my	guilty	life,
     Weeping	to	Him	to	lend	himself	to	us.
       Sapient	I	was	not,	although	I	Sapia
     Was	called,	and	I	was	at	another's	harm
 More	happy	far	than	at	my	own	good	fortune.
And	that	thou	mayst	not	think	that	I	deceive	thee,
      Hear	if	I	was	as	foolish	as	I	tell	thee.
    The	arc	already	of	my	years	descending,
       My	fellow-citizens	near	unto	Colle
  Were	joined	in	battle	with	their	adversaries,
    And	I	was	praying	God	for	what	he	willed.
    Routed	were	they,	and	turned	into	the	bitter
    Passes	of	flight;	and	I,	the	chase	beholding,
      A	joy	received	unequalled	by	all	others;
        So	that	I	lifted	upward	my	bold	face
    Crying	to	God,	'Henceforth	I	fear	thee	not,'
     As	did	the	blackbird	at	the	little	sunshine.
      Peace	I	desired	with	God	at	the	extreme
      Of	my	existence,	and	as	yet	would	not
   My	debt	have	been	by	penitence	discharged,
   Had	it	not	been	that	in	remembrance	held	me
        Pier	Pettignano	in	his	holy	prayers,
      Who	out	of	charity	was	grieved	for	me.
     But	who	art	thou,	that	into	our	conditions
  Questioning	goest,	and	hast	thine	eyes	unbound
    As	I	believe,	and	breathing	dost	discourse?"
"Mine	eyes,"	I	said,	"will	yet	be	here	ta'en	from	me,
    But	for	short	space;	for	small	is	the	offence
    Committed	by	their	being	turned	with	envy.
     Far	greater	is	the	fear,	wherein	suspended
      My	soul	is,	of	the	torment	underneath,
For	even	now	the	load	down	there	weighs	on	me."
  And	she	to	me:	"Who	led	thee,	then,	among	us
    Up	here,	if	to	return	below	thou	thinkest?"
    And	I:	"He	who	is	with	me,	and	speaks	not;
       And	living	am	I;	therefore	ask	of	me,
    Spirit	elect,	if	thou	wouldst	have	me	move
     O'er	yonder	yet	my	mortal	feet	for	thee."
       "O,	this	is	such	a	novel	thing	to	hear,"
She	answered,	"that	great	sign	it	is	God	loves	thee;
Therefore	with	prayer	of	thine	sometimes	assist	me.
    And	I	implore,	by	what	thou	most	desirest,
      If	e'er	thou	treadest	the	soil	of	Tuscany,
     Well	with	my	kindred	reinstate	my	fame.
    Them	wilt	thou	see	among	that	people	vain
    Who	hope	in	Talamone,	and	will	lose	there
     More	hope	than	in	discovering	the	Diana;
    But	there	still	more	the	admirals	will	lose."                          	
                     Canto	XIV
                          	
  "Who	is	this	one	that	goes	about	our	mountain,
   Or	ever	Death	has	given	him	power	of	flight,
  And	opes	his	eyes	and	shuts	them	at	his	will?"
    "I	know	not	who,	but	know	he's	not	alone;
    Ask	him	thyself,	for	thou	art	nearer	to	him,
  And	gently,	so	that	he	may	speak,	accost	him."
  Thus	did	two	spirits,	leaning	tow'rds	each	other,
    Discourse	about	me	there	on	the	right	hand;
    Then	held	supine	their	faces	to	address	me.
   And	said	the	one:	"O	soul,	that,	fastened	still
   Within	the	body,	tow'rds	the	heaven	art	going,
        For	charity	console	us,	and	declare
Whence	comest	and	who	art	thou;	for	thou	mak'st	us
     As	much	to	marvel	at	this	grace	of	thine
     As	must	a	thing	that	never	yet	has	been."
 And	I:	"Through	midst	of	Tuscany	there	wanders
       A	streamlet	that	is	born	in	Falterona,
   And	not	a	hundred	miles	of	course	suffice	it;
       From	thereupon	do	I	this	body	bring.
    To	tell	you	who	I	am	were	speech	in	vain,
 Because	my	name	as	yet	makes	no	great	noise."
       "If	well	thy	meaning	I	can	penetrate
    With	intellect	of	mine,"	then	answered	me
 He	who	first	spake,	"thou	speakest	of	the	Arno."
   And	said	the	other	to	him:	"Why	concealed
      This	one	the	appellation	of	that	river,
     Even	as	a	man	doth	of	things	horrible?"
  And	thus	the	shade	that	questioned	was	of	this
    Himself	acquitted:	"I	know	not;	but	truly
     'Tis	fit	the	name	of	such	a	valley	perish;
 For	from	its	fountain-head	(where	is	so	pregnant
   The	Alpine	mountain	whence	is	cleft	Peloro
    That	in	few	places	it	that	mark	surpasses)
      To	where	it	yields	itself	in	restoration
    Of	what	the	heaven	doth	of	the	sea	dry	up,
Whence	have	the	rivers	that	which	goes	with	them,
         Virtue	is	like	an	enemy	avoided
    By	all,	as	is	a	serpent,	through	misfortune
 Of	place,	or	through	bad	habit	that	impels	them;
On	which	account	have	so	transformed	their	nature
      The	dwellers	in	that	miserable	valley,
   It	seems	that	Circe	had	them	in	her	pasture.
       'Mid	ugly	swine,	of	acorns	worthier
     Than	other	food	for	human	use	created,
      It	first	directeth	its	impoverished	way.
  Curs	findeth	it	thereafter,	coming	downward,
   More	snarling	than	their	puissance	demands,
  And	turns	from	them	disdainfully	its	muzzle.
     It	goes	on	falling,	and	the	more	it	grows,
 The	more	it	finds	the	dogs	becoming	wolves,
    This	maledict	and	misadventurous	ditch.
 Descended	then	through	many	a	hollow	gulf,
    It	finds	the	foxes	so	replete	with	fraud,
  They	fear	no	cunning	that	may	master	them.
   Nor	will	I	cease	because	another	hears	me;
 And	well	'twill	be	for	him,	if	still	he	mind	him
    Of	what	a	truthful	spirit	to	me	unravels.
   Thy	grandson	I	behold,	who	doth	become
    A	hunter	of	those	wolves	upon	the	bank
   Of	the	wild	stream,	and	terrifies	them	all.
     He	sells	their	flesh,	it	being	yet	alive;
Thereafter	slaughters	them	like	ancient	beeves;
   Many	of	life,	himself	of	praise,	deprives.
Blood-stained	he	issues	from	the	dismal	forest;
 He	leaves	it	such,	a	thousand	years	from	now
    In	its	primeval	state	'tis	not	re-wooded."
   As	at	the	announcement	of	impending	ills
    The	face	of	him	who	listens	is	disturbed,
  From	whate'er	side	the	peril	seize	upon	him;
    So	I	beheld	that	other	soul,	which	stood
Turned	round	to	listen,	grow	disturbed	and	sad,
    When	it	had	gathered	to	itself	the	word.
   The	speech	of	one	and	aspect	of	the	other
  Had	me	desirous	made	to	know	their	names,
And	question	mixed	with	prayers	I	made	thereof,
   Whereat	the	spirit	which	first	spake	to	me
 Began	again:	"Thou	wishest	I	should	bring	me
   To	do	for	thee	what	thou'lt	not	do	for	me;
 But	since	God	willeth	that	in	thee	shine	forth
    Such	grace	of	his,	I'll	not	be	chary	with	thee;
       Know,	then,	that	I	Guido	del	Duca	am.
       My	blood	was	so	with	envy	set	on	fire,
       That	if	I	had	beheld	a	man	make	merry,
Thou	wouldst	have	seen	me	sprinkled	o'er	with	pallor.
    From	my	own	sowing	such	the	straw	I	reap!
     O	human	race!	why	dost	thou	set	thy	heart
       Where	interdict	of	partnership	must	be?
     This	is	Renier;	this	is	the	boast	and	honour
    Of	the	house	of	Calboli,	where	no	one	since
       Has	made	himself	the	heir	of	his	desert.
      And	not	alone	his	blood	is	made	devoid,
 'Twixt	Po	and	mount,	and	sea-shore	and	the	Reno,
    Of	good	required	for	truth	and	for	diversion;
        For	all	within	these	boundaries	is	full
       Of	venomous	roots,	so	that	too	tardily
      By	cultivation	now	would	they	diminish.
     Where	is	good	Lizio,	and	Arrigo	Manardi,
      Pier	Traversaro,	and	Guido	di	Carpigna,
        O	Romagnuoli	into	bastards	turned?
        When	in	Bologna	will	a	Fabbro	rise?
       When	in	Faenza	a	Bernardin	di	Fosco,
          The	noble	scion	of	ignoble	seed?
        Be	not	astonished,	Tuscan,	if	I	weep,
      When	I	remember,	with	Guido	da	Prata,
      Ugolin	d'	Azzo,	who	was	living	with	us,
        Frederick	Tignoso	and	his	company,
     The	house	of	Traversara,	and	th'	Anastagi,
        And	one	race	and	the	other	is	extinct;
     The	dames	and	cavaliers,	the	toils	and	ease
  That	filled	our	souls	with	love	and	courtesy,
There	where	the	hearts	have	so	malicious	grown!
     O	Brettinoro!	why	dost	thou	not	flee,
       Seeing	that	all	thy	family	is	gone,
    And	many	people,	not	to	be	corrupted?
     Bagnacaval	does	well	in	not	begetting
   And	ill	does	Castrocaro,	and	Conio	worse,
    In	taking	trouble	to	beget	such	Counts.
   Will	do	well	the	Pagani,	when	their	Devil
   Shall	have	departed;	but	not	therefore	pure
      Will	testimony	of	them	e'er	remain.
          O	Ugolin	de'	Fantoli,	secure
    Thy	name	is,	since	no	longer	is	awaited
    One	who,	degenerating,	can	obscure	it!
  But	go	now,	Tuscan,	for	it	now	delights	me
    To	weep	far	better	than	it	does	to	speak,
So	much	has	our	discourse	my	mind	distressed."
    We	were	aware	that	those	beloved	souls
 Heard	us	depart;	therefore,	by	keeping	silent,
    They	made	us	of	our	pathway	confident.
   When	we	became	alone	by	going	onward,
 Thunder,	when	it	doth	cleave	the	air,	appeared
 A	voice,	that	counter	to	us	came,	exclaiming:
    "Shall	slay	me	whosoever	findeth	me!"
       And	fled	as	the	reverberation	dies
     If	suddenly	the	cloud	asunder	bursts.
   As	soon	as	hearing	had	a	truce	from	this,
     Behold	another,	with	so	great	a	crash,
 That	it	resembled	thunderings	following	fast:
     "I	am	Aglaurus,	who	became	a	stone!"
    And	then,	to	press	myself	close	to	the	Poet,
     I	backward,	and	not	forward,	took	a	step.
      Already	on	all	sides	the	air	was	quiet;
    And	said	he	to	me:	"That	was	the	hard	curb
   That	ought	to	hold	a	man	within	his	bounds;
     But	you	take	in	the	bait	so	that	the	hook
     Of	the	old	Adversary	draws	you	to	him,
       And	hence	availeth	little	curb	or	call.
The	heavens	are	calling	you,	and	wheel	around	you,
     Displaying	to	you	their	eternal	beauties,
   And	still	your	eye	is	looking	on	the	ground;
   Whence	He,	who	all	discerns,	chastises	you."                          	
                     Canto	XV
                          	
   As	much	as	'twixt	the	close	of	the	third	hour
    And	dawn	of	day	appeareth	of	that	sphere
    Which	aye	in	fashion	of	a	child	is	playing,
   So	much	it	now	appeared,	towards	the	night,
      Was	of	his	course	remaining	to	the	sun;
  There	it	was	evening,	and	'twas	midnight	here;
    And	the	rays	smote	the	middle	of	our	faces,
    Because	by	us	the	mount	was	so	encircled,
That	straight	towards	the	west	we	now	were	going
   When	I	perceived	my	forehead	overpowered
   Beneath	the	splendour	far	more	than	at	first,
   And	stupor	were	to	me	the	things	unknown,
     Whereat	towards	the	summit	of	my	brow
   I	raised	my	hands,	and	made	myself	the	visor
      Which	the	excessive	glare	diminishes.
    As	when	from	off	the	water,	or	a	mirror,
   The	sunbeam	leaps	unto	the	opposite	side,
  Ascending	upward	in	the	selfsame	measure
      That	it	descends,	and	deviates	as	far
     From	falling	of	a	stone	in	line	direct,
     (As	demonstrate	experiment	and	art,)
      So	it	appeared	to	me	that	by	a	light
   Refracted	there	before	me	I	was	smitten;
 On	which	account	my	sight	was	swift	to	flee.
"What	is	that,	Father	sweet,	from	which	I	cannot
   So	fully	screen	my	sight	that	it	avail	me,"
 Said	I,	"and	seems	towards	us	to	be	moving?"
     "Marvel	thou	not,	if	dazzle	thee	as	yet
    The	family	of	heaven,"	he	answered	me;
 "An	angel	'tis,	who	comes	to	invite	us	upward.
   Soon	will	it	be,	that	to	behold	these	things
  Shall	not	be	grievous,	but	delightful	to	thee
   As	much	as	nature	fashioned	thee	to	feel."
  When	we	had	reached	the	Angel	benedight,
   With	joyful	voice	he	said:	"Here	enter	in
 To	stairway	far	less	steep	than	are	the	others."
  We	mounting	were,	already	thence	departed,
         And	"Beati	misericordes"	was
Behind	us	sung,	"Rejoice,	thou	that	o'ercomest!"
     My	Master	and	myself,	we	two	alone
  Were	going	upward,	and	I	thought,	in	going,
   Some	profit	to	acquire	from	words	of	his;
     And	I	to	him	directed	me,	thus	asking:
    "What	did	the	spirit	of	Romagna	mean,
    Mentioning	interdict	and	partnership?"
   Whence	he	to	me:	"Of	his	own	greatest	failing
   He	knows	the	harm;	and	therefore	wonder	not
      If	he	reprove	us,	that	we	less	may	rue	it.
      Because	are	thither	pointed	your	desires
  Where	by	companionship	each	share	is	lessened,
      Envy	doth	ply	the	bellows	to	your	sighs.
        But	if	the	love	of	the	supernal	sphere
       Should	upwardly	direct	your	aspiration,
  There	would	not	be	that	fear	within	your	breast;
    For	there,	as	much	the	more	as	one	says	'Our,'
   So	much	the	more	of	good	each	one	possesses,
     And	more	of	charity	in	that	cloister	burns."
       "I	am	more	hungering	to	be	satisfied,"
       I	said,	"than	if	I	had	before	been	silent,
    And	more	of	doubt	within	my	mind	I	gather.
         How	can	it	be,	that	boon	distributed
    The	more	possessors	can	more	wealthy	make
      Therein,	than	if	by	few	it	be	possessed?"
       And	he	to	me:	"Because	thou	fixest	still
       Thy	mind	entirely	upon	earthly	things,
     Thou	pluckest	darkness	from	the	very	light.
        That	goodness	infinite	and	ineffable
      Which	is	above	there,	runneth	unto	love,
       As	to	a	lucid	body	comes	the	sunbeam.
      So	much	it	gives	itself	as	it	finds	ardour,
          So	that	as	far	as	charity	extends,
         O'er	it	increases	the	eternal	valour.
      And	the	more	people	thitherward	aspire,
More	are	there	to	love	well,	and	more	they	love	there,
       And,	as	a	mirror,	one	reflects	the	other.
     And	if	my	reasoning	appease	thee	not,
   Thou	shalt	see	Beatrice;	and	she	will	fully
  Take	from	thee	this	and	every	other	longing.
   Endeavour,	then,	that	soon	may	be	extinct,
    As	are	the	two	already,	the	five	wounds
 That	close	themselves	again	by	being	painful."
Even	as	I	wished	to	say,	"Thou	dost	appease	me,"
     I	saw	that	I	had	reached	another	circle,
  So	that	my	eager	eyes	made	me	keep	silence.
     There	it	appeared	to	me	that	in	a	vision
        Ecstatic	on	a	sudden	I	was	rapt,
      And	in	a	temple	many	persons	saw;
    And	at	the	door	a	woman,	with	the	sweet
      Behaviour	of	a	mother,	saying:	"Son,
  Why	in	this	manner	hast	thou	dealt	with	us?
      Lo,	sorrowing,	thy	father	and	myself
Were	seeking	for	thee;"—and	as	here	she	ceased,
 That	which	appeared	at	first	had	disappeared.
    Then	I	beheld	another	with	those	waters
Adown	her	cheeks	which	grief	distils	whenever
     From	great	disdain	of	others	it	is	born,
    And	saying:	"If	of	that	city	thou	art	lord,
For	whose	name	was	such	strife	among	the	gods,
   And	whence	doth	every	science	scintillate,
    Avenge	thyself	on	those	audacious	arms
   That	clasped	our	daughter,	O	Pisistratus;"
  And	the	lord	seemed	to	me	benign	and	mild
      To	answer	her	with	aspect	temperate:
   "What	shall	we	do	to	those	who	wish	us	ill,
   If	he	who	loves	us	be	by	us	condemned?"
       Then	saw	I	people	hot	in	fire	of	wrath,
   With	stones	a	young	man	slaying,	clamorously
   Still	crying	to	each	other,	"Kill	him!	kill	him!"
     And	him	I	saw	bow	down,	because	of	death
     That	weighed	already	on	him,	to	the	earth,
     But	of	his	eyes	made	ever	gates	to	heaven,
     Imploring	the	high	Lord,	in	so	great	strife,
    That	he	would	pardon	those	his	persecutors,
    With	such	an	aspect	as	unlocks	compassion.
      Soon	as	my	soul	had	outwardly	returned
       To	things	external	to	it	which	are	true,
         Did	I	my	not	false	errors	recognize.
     My	Leader,	who	could	see	me	bear	myself
      Like	to	a	man	that	rouses	him	from	sleep,
Exclaimed:	"What	ails	thee,	that	thou	canst	not	stand?
    But	hast	been	coming	more	than	half	a	league
   Veiling	thine	eyes,	and	with	thy	legs	entangled,
   In	guise	of	one	whom	wine	or	sleep	subdues?"
      "O	my	sweet	Father,	if	thou	listen	to	me,
     I'll	tell	thee,"	said	I,	"what	appeared	to	me,
   When	thus	from	me	my	legs	were	ta'en	away."
  And	he:	"If	thou	shouldst	have	a	hundred	masks
     Upon	thy	face,	from	me	would	not	be	shut
         Thy	cogitations,	howsoever	small.
  What	thou	hast	seen	was	that	thou	mayst	not	fail
      To	ope	thy	heart	unto	the	waters	of	peace,
    Which	from	the	eternal	fountain	are	diffused.
      I	did	not	ask,	'What	ails	thee?'	as	he	does
     Who	only	looketh	with	the	eyes	that	see	not
        When	of	the	soul	bereft	the	body	lies,
     But	asked	it	to	give	vigour	to	thy	feet;
Thus	must	we	needs	urge	on	the	sluggards,	slow
   To	use	their	wakefulness	when	it	returns."
 We	passed	along,	athwart	the	twilight	peering
    Forward	as	far	as	ever	eye	could	stretch
   Against	the	sunbeams	serotine	and	lucent;
 And	lo!	by	slow	degrees	a	smoke	approached
     In	our	direction,	sombre	as	the	night,
Nor	was	there	place	to	hide	one's	self	therefrom.
   This	of	our	eyes	and	the	pure	air	bereft	us.                        	
                   Canto	XVI
                        	
   Darkness	of	hell,	and	of	a	night	deprived
       Of	every	planet	under	a	poor	sky,
   As	much	as	may	be	tenebrous	with	cloud,
   Ne'er	made	unto	my	sight	so	thick	a	veil,
 As	did	that	smoke	which	there	enveloped	us,
    Nor	to	the	feeling	of	so	rough	a	texture;
    For	not	an	eye	it	suffered	to	stay	open;
 Whereat	mine	escort,	faithful	and	sagacious,
 Drew	near	to	me	and	offered	me	his	shoulder.
   E'en	as	a	blind	man	goes	behind	his	guide,
Lest	he	should	wander,	or	should	strike	against
Aught	that	may	harm	or	peradventure	kill	him,
    So	went	I	through	the	bitter	and	foul	air,
   Listening	unto	my	Leader,	who	said	only,
  "Look	that	from	me	thou	be	not	separated."
    Voices	I	heard,	and	every	one	appeared
    To	supplicate	for	peace	and	misericord
    The	Lamb	of	God	who	takes	away	our	sins.
      Still	"Agnus	Dei"	their	exordium	was;
     One	word	there	was	in	all,	and	metre	one,
    So	that	all	harmony	appeared	among	them.
    "Master,"	I	said,	"are	spirits	those	I	hear?"
     And	he	to	me:	"Thou	apprehendest	truly,
    And	they	the	knot	of	anger	go	unloosing."
"Now	who	art	thou,	that	cleavest	through	our	smoke
     And	art	discoursing	of	us	even	as	though
   Thou	didst	by	calends	still	divide	the	time?"
     After	this	manner	by	a	voice	was	spoken;
    Whereon	my	Master	said:	"Do	thou	reply,
    And	ask	if	on	this	side	the	way	go	upward."
    And	I:	"O	creature	that	dost	cleanse	thyself
    To	return	beautiful	to	Him	who	made	thee,
    Thou	shalt	hear	marvels	if	thou	follow	me."
     "Thee	will	I	follow	far	as	is	allowed	me,"
  He	answered;	"and	if	smoke	prevent	our	seeing,
   Hearing	shall	keep	us	joined	instead	thereof."
    Thereon	began	I:	"With	that	swathing	band
   Which	death	unwindeth	am	I	going	upward,
  And	hither	came	I	through	the	infernal	anguish.
     And	if	God	in	his	grace	has	me	infolded,
      So	that	he	wills	that	I	behold	his	court
     By	method	wholly	out	of	modern	usage,
  Conceal	not	from	me	who	ere	death	thou	wast,
         But	tell	it	me,	and	tell	me	if	I	go
 Right	for	the	pass,	and	be	thy	words	our	escort."
     "Lombard	was	I,	and	I	was	Marco	called;
   The	world	I	knew,	and	loved	that	excellence,
   At	which	has	each	one	now	unbent	his	bow.
   For	mounting	upward,	thou	art	going	right."
Thus	he	made	answer,	and	subjoined:	"I	pray	thee
    To	pray	for	me	when	thou	shalt	be	above."
     And	I	to	him:	"My	faith	I	pledge	to	thee
   To	do	what	thou	dost	ask	me;	but	am	bursting
       Inly	with	doubt,	unless	I	rid	me	of	it.
   First	it	was	simple,	and	is	now	made	double
    By	thy	opinion,	which	makes	certain	to	me,
 Here	and	elsewhere,	that	which	I	couple	with	it.
       The	world	forsooth	is	utterly	deserted
        By	every	virtue,	as	thou	tellest	me,
       And	with	iniquity	is	big	and	covered;
    But	I	beseech	thee	point	me	out	the	cause,
      That	I	may	see	it,	and	to	others	show	it;
For	one	in	the	heavens,	and	here	below	one	puts	it."
    A	sigh	profound,	that	grief	forced	into	Ai!
  He	first	sent	forth,	and	then	began	he:	"Brother,
The	world	is	blind,	and	sooth	thou	comest	from	it!
        Ye	who	are	living	every	cause	refer
    Still	upward	to	the	heavens,	as	if	all	things
    They	of	necessity	moved	with	themselves.
    If	this	were	so,	in	you	would	be	destroyed
     Free	will,	nor	any	justice	would	there	be
      In	having	joy	for	good,	or	grief	for	evil.
     The	heavens	your	movements	do	initiate,
       I	say	not	all;	but	granting	that	I	say	it,
    Light	has	been	given	you	for	good	and	evil,
     And	free	volition;	which,	if	some	fatigue
   In	the	first	battles	with	the	heavens	it	suffers,
 Afterwards	conquers	all,	if	well	'tis	nurtured.
    To	greater	force	and	to	a	better	nature,
  Though	free,	ye	subject	are,	and	that	creates
The	mind	in	you	the	heavens	have	not	in	charge.
  Hence,	if	the	present	world	doth	go	astray,
    In	you	the	cause	is,	be	it	sought	in	you;
    And	I	therein	will	now	be	thy	true	spy.
  Forth	from	the	hand	of	Him,	who	fondles	it
         Before	it	is,	like	to	a	little	girl
  Weeping	and	laughing	in	her	childish	sport,
  Issues	the	simple	soul,	that	nothing	knows,
  Save	that,	proceeding	from	a	joyous	Maker,
 Gladly	it	turns	to	that	which	gives	it	pleasure.
   Of	trivial	good	at	first	it	tastes	the	savour;
       Is	cheated	by	it,	and	runs	after	it,
     If	guide	or	rein	turn	not	aside	its	love.
   Hence	it	behoved	laws	for	a	rein	to	place,
   Behoved	a	king	to	have,	who	at	the	least
   Of	the	true	city	should	discern	the	tower.
  The	laws	exist,	but	who	sets	hand	to	them?
  No	one;	because	the	shepherd	who	precedes
   Can	ruminate,	but	cleaveth	not	the	hoof;
 Wherefore	the	people	that	perceives	its	guide
  Strike	only	at	the	good	for	which	it	hankers,
   Feeds	upon	that,	and	farther	seeketh	not.
 Clearly	canst	thou	perceive	that	evil	guidance
The	cause	is	that	has	made	the	world	depraved,
     And	not	that	nature	is	corrupt	in	you.
Rome,	that	reformed	the	world,	accustomed	was
Two	suns	to	have,	which	one	road	and	the	other,
     Of	God	and	of	the	world,	made	manifest.
   One	has	the	other	quenched,	and	to	the	crosier
     The	sword	is	joined,	and	ill	beseemeth	it
     That	by	main	force	one	with	the	other	go,
  Because,	being	joined,	one	feareth	not	the	other;
      If	thou	believe	not,	think	upon	the	grain,
      For	by	its	seed	each	herb	is	recognized.
        In	the	land	laved	by	Po	and	Adige,
       Valour	and	courtesy	used	to	be	found,
     Before	that	Frederick	had	his	controversy;
         Now	in	security	can	pass	that	way
  Whoever	will	abstain,	through	sense	of	shame,
From	speaking	with	the	good,	or	drawing	near	them.
  True,	three	old	men	are	left,	in	whom	upbraids
   The	ancient	age	the	new,	and	late	they	deem	it
      That	God	restore	them	to	the	better	life:
     Currado	da	Palazzo,	and	good	Gherardo,
    And	Guido	da	Castel,	who	better	named	is,
   In	fashion	of	the	French,	the	simple	Lombard:
 Say	thou	henceforward	that	the	Church	of	Rome,
      Confounding	in	itself	two	governments,
   Falls	in	the	mire,	and	soils	itself	and	burden."
   "O	Marco	mine,"	I	said,	"thou	reasonest	well;
      And	now	discern	I	why	the	sons	of	Levi
      Have	been	excluded	from	the	heritage.
      But	what	Gherardo	is	it,	who,	as	sample
      Of	a	lost	race,	thou	sayest	has	remained
       In	reprobation	of	the	barbarous	age?"
 "Either	thy	speech	deceives	me,	or	it	tempts	me,"
   He	answered	me;	"for	speaking	Tuscan	to	me,
 It	seems	of	good	Gherardo	naught	thou	knowest.
       By	other	surname	do	I	know	him	not,
      Unless	I	take	it	from	his	daughter	Gaia.
   May	God	be	with	you,	for	I	come	no	farther.
 Behold	the	dawn,	that	through	the	smoke	rays	out,
      Already	whitening;	and	I	must	depart—
       Yonder	the	Angel	is—ere	he	appear."
 Thus	did	he	speak,	and	would	no	farther	hear	me.                          	
                    Canto	XVII
                          	
       Remember,	Reader,	if	e'er	in	the	Alps
A	mist	o'ertook	thee,	through	which	thou	couldst	see
  Not	otherwise	than	through	its	membrane	mole,
   How,	when	the	vapours	humid	and	condensed
     Begin	to	dissipate	themselves,	the	sphere
      Of	the	sun	feebly	enters	in	among	them,
         And	thy	imagination	will	be	swift
        In	coming	to	perceive	how	I	re-saw
     The	sun	at	first,	that	was	already	setting.
    Thus,	to	the	faithful	footsteps	of	my	Master
    Mating	mine	own,	I	issued	from	that	cloud
      To	rays	already	dead	on	the	low	shores.
       O	thou,	Imagination,	that	dost	steal	us
So	from	without	sometimes,	that	man	perceives	not,
 Although	around	may	sound	a	thousand	trumpets,
    Who	moveth	thee,	if	sense	impel	thee	not?
Moves	thee	a	light,	which	in	the	heaven	takes	form,
   By	self,	or	by	a	will	that	downward	guides	it.
       Of	her	impiety,	who	changed	her	form
 Into	the	bird	that	most	delights	in	singing,
    In	my	imagining	appeared	the	trace;
 And	hereupon	my	mind	was	so	withdrawn
 Within	itself,	that	from	without	there	came
 Nothing	that	then	might	be	received	by	it.
    Then	reigned	within	my	lofty	fantasy
   One	crucified,	disdainful	and	ferocious
  In	countenance,	and	even	thus	was	dying.
   Around	him	were	the	great	Ahasuerus,
   Esther	his	wife,	and	the	just	Mordecai,
   Who	was	in	word	and	action	so	entire.
    And	even	as	this	image	burst	asunder
   Of	its	own	self,	in	fashion	of	a	bubble
   In	which	the	water	it	was	made	of	fails,
 There	rose	up	in	my	vision	a	young	maiden
  Bitterly	weeping,	and	she	said:	"O	queen,
Why	hast	thou	wished	in	anger	to	be	naught?
  Thou'st	slain	thyself,	Lavinia	not	to	lose;
Now	hast	thou	lost	me;	I	am	she	who	mourns,
   Mother,	at	thine	ere	at	another's	ruin."
  As	sleep	is	broken,	when	upon	a	sudden
New	light	strikes	in	upon	the	eyelids	closed,
   And	broken	quivers	ere	it	dieth	wholly,
    So	this	imagining	of	mine	fell	down
  As	soon	as	the	effulgence	smote	my	face,
   Greater	by	far	than	what	is	in	our	wont.
 I	turned	me	round	to	see	where	I	might	be,
When	said	a	voice,	"Here	is	the	passage	up;"
Which	from	all	other	purposes	removed	me,
   And	made	my	wish	so	full	of	eagerness
To	look	and	see	who	was	it	that	was	speaking,
    It	never	rests	till	meeting	face	to	face;
 But	as	before	the	sun,	which	quells	the	sight,
    And	in	its	own	excess	its	figure	veils,
   Even	so	my	power	was	insufficient	here.
    "This	is	a	spirit	divine,	who	in	the	way
    Of	going	up	directs	us	without	asking,
And	who	with	his	own	light	himself	conceals.
  He	does	with	us	as	man	doth	with	himself;
For	he	who	sees	the	need,	and	waits	the	asking,
    Malignly	leans	already	tow'rds	denial.
   Accord	we	now	our	feet	to	such	inviting,
 Let	us	make	haste	to	mount	ere	it	grow	dark;
  For	then	we	could	not	till	the	day	return."
    Thus	my	Conductor	said;	and	I	and	he
 Together	turned	our	footsteps	to	a	stairway;
   And	I,	as	soon	as	the	first	step	I	reached,
   Near	me	perceived	a	motion	as	of	wings,
 And	fanning	in	the	face,	and	saying,	"'Beati
     Pacifici,'	who	are	without	ill	anger."
       Already	over	us	were	so	uplifted
The	latest	sunbeams,	which	the	night	pursues,
   That	upon	many	sides	the	stars	appeared.
"O	manhood	mine,	why	dost	thou	vanish	so?"
     I	said	within	myself;	for	I	perceived
   The	vigour	of	my	legs	was	put	in	truce.
 We	at	the	point	were	where	no	more	ascends
 The	stairway	upward,	and	were	motionless,
  Even	as	a	ship,	which	at	the	shore	arrives;
    And	I	gave	heed	a	little,	if	I	might	hear
       Aught	whatsoever	in	the	circle	new;
   Then	to	my	Master	turned	me	round	and	said:
     "Say,	my	sweet	Father,	what	delinquency
     Is	purged	here	in	the	circle	where	we	are?
Although	our	feet	may	pause,	pause	not	thy	speech."
     And	he	to	me:	"The	love	of	good,	remiss
   In	what	it	should	have	done,	is	here	restored;
        Here	plied	again	the	ill-belated	oar;
        But	still	more	openly	to	understand,
   Turn	unto	me	thy	mind,	and	thou	shalt	gather
       Some	profitable	fruit	from	our	delay.
        Neither	Creator	nor	a	creature	ever,
       Son,"	he	began,	"was	destitute	of	love
     Natural	or	spiritual;	and	thou	knowest	it.
        The	natural	was	ever	without	error;
       But	err	the	other	may	by	evil	object,
      Or	by	too	much,	or	by	too	little	vigour.
        While	in	the	first	it	well	directed	is,
        And	in	the	second	moderates	itself,
     It	cannot	be	the	cause	of	sinful	pleasure;
    But	when	to	ill	it	turns,	and,	with	more	care
      Or	lesser	than	it	ought,	runs	after	good,
    'Gainst	the	Creator	works	his	own	creation.
 Hence	thou	mayst	comprehend	that	love	must	be
    The	seed	within	yourselves	of	every	virtue,
       And	every	act	that	merits	punishment.
     Now	inasmuch	as	never	from	the	welfare
     Of	its	own	subject	can	love	turn	its	sight,
    From	their	own	hatred	all	things	are	secure;
      And	since	we	cannot	think	of	any	being
   Standing	alone,	nor	from	the	First	divided,
       Of	hating	Him	is	all	desire	cut	off.
     Hence	if,	discriminating,	I	judge	well,
  The	evil	that	one	loves	is	of	one's	neighbour,
  And	this	is	born	in	three	modes	in	your	clay.
There	are,	who,	by	abasement	of	their	neighbour,
     Hope	to	excel,	and	therefore	only	long
  That	from	his	greatness	he	may	be	cast	down;
There	are,	who	power,	grace,	honour,	and	renown
    Fear	they	may	lose	because	another	rises,
  Thence	are	so	sad	that	the	reverse	they	love;
And	there	are	those	whom	injury	seems	to	chafe,
    So	that	it	makes	them	greedy	for	revenge,
 And	such	must	needs	shape	out	another's	harm.
   This	threefold	love	is	wept	for	down	below;
     Now	of	the	other	will	I	have	thee	hear,
  That	runneth	after	good	with	measure	faulty.
     Each	one	confusedly	a	good	conceives
 Wherein	the	mind	may	rest,	and	longeth	for	it;
    Therefore	to	overtake	it	each	one	strives.
    If	languid	love	to	look	on	this	attract	you,
       Or	in	attaining	unto	it,	this	cornice,
    After	just	penitence,	torments	you	for	it.
There's	other	good	that	does	not	make	man	happy;
         'Tis	not	felicity,	'tis	not	the	good
    Essence,	of	every	good	the	fruit	and	root.
   The	love	that	yields	itself	too	much	to	this
      Above	us	is	lamented	in	three	circles;
     But	how	tripartite	it	may	be	described,
     I	say	not,	that	thou	seek	it	for	thyself."                        	
                 Canto	XVIII
                        	
      An	end	had	put	unto	his	reasoning
  The	lofty	Teacher,	and	attent	was	looking
      Into	my	face,	if	I	appeared	content;
  And	I,	whom	a	new	thirst	still	goaded	on,
Without	was	mute,	and	said	within:	"Perchance
The	too	much	questioning	I	make	annoys	him."
 But	that	true	Father,	who	had	comprehended
    The	timid	wish,	that	opened	not	itself,
  By	speaking	gave	me	hardihood	to	speak.
   Whence	I:	"My	sight	is,	Master,	vivified
     So	in	thy	light,	that	clearly	I	discern
 Whate'er	thy	speech	importeth	or	describes.
  Therefore	I	thee	entreat,	sweet	Father	dear,
  To	teach	me	love,	to	which	thou	dost	refer
     Every	good	action	and	its	contrary."
 "Direct,"	he	said,	"towards	me	the	keen	eyes
     Of	intellect,	and	clear	will	be	to	thee
 The	error	of	the	blind,	who	would	be	leaders.
    The	soul,	which	is	created	apt	to	love,
    Is	mobile	unto	everything	that	pleases,
 Soon	as	by	pleasure	she	is	waked	to	action.
   Your	apprehension	from	some	real	thing
An	image	draws,	and	in	yourselves	displays	it
     So	that	it	makes	the	soul	turn	unto	it.
 And	if,	when	turned,	towards	it	she	incline,
     Love	is	that	inclination;	it	is	nature,
   Which	is	by	pleasure	bound	in	you	anew
    Then	even	as	the	fire	doth	upward	move
    By	its	own	form,	which	to	ascend	is	born,
     Where	longest	in	its	matter	it	endures,
      So	comes	the	captive	soul	into	desire,
   Which	is	a	motion	spiritual,	and	ne'er	rests
     Until	she	doth	enjoy	the	thing	beloved.
    Now	may	apparent	be	to	thee	how	hidden
    The	truth	is	from	those	people,	who	aver
      All	love	is	in	itself	a	laudable	thing;
    Because	its	matter	may	perchance	appear
   Aye	to	be	good;	but	yet	not	each	impression
     Is	good,	albeit	good	may	be	the	wax."
   "Thy	words,	and	my	sequacious	intellect,"
   I	answered	him,	"have	love	revealed	to	me;
But	that	has	made	me	more	impregned	with	doubt;
     For	if	love	from	without	be	offered	us,
     And	with	another	foot	the	soul	go	not,
   If	right	or	wrong	she	go,	'tis	not	her	merit."
     And	he	to	me:	"What	reason	seeth	here,
     Myself	can	tell	thee;	beyond	that	await
     For	Beatrice,	since	'tis	a	work	of	faith.
      Every	substantial	form,	that	segregate
      From	matter	is,	and	with	it	is	united,
      Specific	power	has	in	itself	collected,
      Which	without	act	is	not	perceptible,
      Nor	shows	itself	except	by	its	effect,
   As	life	does	in	a	plant	by	the	green	leaves.
    But	still,	whence	cometh	the	intelligence
      Of	the	first	notions,	man	is	ignorant,
   And	the	affection	for	the	first	allurements,
      Which	are	in	you	as	instinct	in	the	bee
      To	make	its	honey;	and	this	first	desire
     Merit	of	praise	or	blame	containeth	not.
   Now,	that	to	this	all	others	may	be	gathered,
   Innate	within	you	is	the	power	that	counsels,
    And	it	should	keep	the	threshold	of	assent.
     This	is	the	principle,	from	which	is	taken
       Occasion	of	desert	in	you,	according
 As	good	and	guilty	loves	it	takes	and	winnows.
  Those	who,	in	reasoning,	to	the	bottom	went,
        Were	of	this	innate	liberty	aware,
  Therefore	bequeathed	they	Ethics	to	the	world.
       Supposing,	then,	that	from	necessity
  Springs	every	love	that	is	within	you	kindled,
   Within	yourselves	the	power	is	to	restrain	it.
      The	noble	virtue	Beatrice	understands
   By	the	free	will;	and	therefore	see	that	thou
    Bear	it	in	mind,	if	she	should	speak	of	it."
    The	moon,	belated	almost	unto	midnight,
   Now	made	the	stars	appear	to	us	more	rare,
     Formed	like	a	bucket,	that	is	all	ablaze,
And	counter	to	the	heavens	ran	through	those	paths
   Which	the	sun	sets	aflame,	when	he	of	Rome
   Sees	it	'twixt	Sardes	and	Corsicans	go	down;
   And	that	patrician	shade,	for	whom	is	named
      Pietola	more	than	any	Mantuan	town,
     Had	laid	aside	the	burden	of	my	lading;
    Whence	I,	who	reason	manifest	and	plain
     In	answer	to	my	questions	had	received,
       Stood	like	a	man	in	drowsy	reverie.
    But	taken	from	me	was	this	drowsiness
       Suddenly	by	a	people,	that	behind
    Our	backs	already	had	come	round	to	us.
      And	as,	of	old,	Ismenus	and	Asopus
 Beside	them	saw	at	night	the	rush	and	throng,
  If	but	the	Thebans	were	in	need	of	Bacchus,
    So	they	along	that	circle	curve	their	step,
   From	what	I	saw	of	those	approaching	us,
Who	by	good-will	and	righteous	love	are	ridden.
 Full	soon	they	were	upon	us,	because	running
   Moved	onward	all	that	mighty	multitude,
  And	two	in	the	advance	cried	out,	lamenting,
     "Mary	in	haste	unto	the	mountain	ran,
    And	Caesar,	that	he	might	subdue	Ilerda,
 Thrust	at	Marseilles,	and	then	ran	into	Spain."
 "Quick!	quick!	so	that	the	time	may	not	be	lost
   By	little	love!"	forthwith	the	others	cried,
   "For	ardour	in	well-doing	freshens	grace!"
    "O	folk,	in	whom	an	eager	fervour	now
    Supplies	perhaps	delay	and	negligence,
Put	by	you	in	well-doing,	through	lukewarmness,
     This	one	who	lives,	and	truly	I	lie	not,
   Would	fain	go	up,	if	but	the	sun	relight	us;
    So	tell	us	where	the	passage	nearest	is."
These	were	the	words	of	him	who	was	my	Guide;
 And	some	one	of	those	spirits	said:	"Come	on
   Behind	us,	and	the	opening	shalt	thou	find;
   So	full	of	longing	are	we	to	move	onward,
   That	stay	we	cannot;	therefore	pardon	us,
    If	thou	for	churlishness	our	justice	take.
      I	was	San	Zeno's	Abbot	at	Verona,
     Under	the	empire	of	good	Barbarossa,
Of	whom	still	sorrowing	Milan	holds	discourse;
   And	he	has	one	foot	in	the	grave	already,
   Who	shall	erelong	lament	that	monastery,
   And	sorry	be	of	having	there	had	power,
   Because	his	son,	in	his	whole	body	sick,
  And	worse	in	mind,	and	who	was	evil-born,
    He	put	into	the	place	of	its	true	pastor."
   If	more	he	said,	or	silent	was,	I	know	not,
    He	had	already	passed	so	far	beyond	us;
  But	this	I	heard,	and	to	retain	it	pleased	me.
  And	he	who	was	in	every	need	my	succour
 Said:	"Turn	thee	hitherward;	see	two	of	them
 Come	fastening	upon	slothfulness	their	teeth."
   In	rear	of	all	they	shouted:	"Sooner	were
The	people	dead	to	whom	the	sea	was	opened,
     Than	their	inheritors	the	Jordan	saw;
   And	those	who	the	fatigue	did	not	endure
      Unto	the	issue,	with	Anchises'	son,
 Themselves	to	life	withouten	glory	offered."
     Then	when	from	us	so	separated	were
Those	shades,	that	they	no	longer	could	be	seen,
  Within	me	a	new	thought	did	entrance	find,
 Whence	others	many	and	diverse	were	born;
    And	so	I	lapsed	from	one	into	another,
     That	in	a	reverie	mine	eyes	I	closed,
    And	meditation	into	dream	transmuted.                        	
                   Canto	XIX
                         	
      It	was	the	hour	when	the	diurnal	heat
  No	more	can	warm	the	coldness	of	the	moon,
  Vanquished	by	earth,	or	peradventure	Saturn,
     When	geomancers	their	Fortuna	Major
        See	in	the	orient	before	the	dawn
    Rise	by	a	path	that	long	remains	not	dim,
There	came	to	me	in	dreams	a	stammering	woman,
   Squint	in	her	eyes,	and	in	her	feet	distorted,
    With	hands	dissevered	and	of	sallow	hue.
     I	looked	at	her;	and	as	the	sun	restores
  The	frigid	members	which	the	night	benumbs,
      Even	thus	my	gaze	did	render	voluble
  Her	tongue,	and	made	her	all	erect	thereafter
     In	little	while,	and	the	lost	countenance
      As	love	desires	it	so	in	her	did	colour.
 When	in	this	wise	she	had	her	speech	unloosed,
     She	'gan	to	sing	so,	that	with	difficulty
 Could	I	have	turned	my	thoughts	away	from	her.
     "I	am,"	she	sang,	"I	am	the	Siren	sweet
      Who	mariners	amid	the	main	unman,
       So	full	am	I	of	pleasantness	to	hear.
     I	drew	Ulysses	from	his	wandering	way
   Unto	my	song,	and	he	who	dwells	with	me
    Seldom	departs	so	wholly	I	content	him."
   Her	mouth	was	not	yet	closed	again,	before
        Appeared	a	Lady	saintly	and	alert
    Close	at	my	side	to	put	her	to	confusion.
      "Virgilius,	O	Virgilius!	who	is	this?"
    Sternly	she	said;	and	he	was	drawing	near
    With	eyes	still	fixed	upon	that	modest	one.
    She	seized	the	other	and	in	front	laid	open,
Rending	her	garments,	and	her	belly	showed	me;
This	waked	me	with	the	stench	that	issued	from	it.
   I	turned	mine	eyes,	and	good	Virgilius	said:
"At	least	thrice	have	I	called	thee;	rise	and	come;
Find	we	the	opening	by	which	thou	mayst	enter."
        I	rose;	and	full	already	of	high	day
   Were	all	the	circles	of	the	Sacred	Mountain,
   And	with	the	new	sun	at	our	back	we	went.
    Following	behind	him,	I	my	forehead	bore
   Like	unto	one	who	has	it	laden	with	thought,
  Who	makes	himself	the	half	arch	of	a	bridge,
 When	I	heard	say,	"Come,	here	the	passage	is,"
      Spoken	in	a	manner	gentle	and	benign,
    Such	as	we	hear	not	in	this	mortal	region.
   With	open	wings,	which	of	a	swan	appeared,
    Upward	he	turned	us	who	thus	spake	to	us,
    Between	the	two	walls	of	the	solid	granite.
 He	moved	his	pinions	afterwards	and	fanned	us,
    Affirming	those	'qui	lugent'	to	be	blessed,
For	they	shall	have	their	souls	with	comfort	filled.
 "What	aileth	thee,	that	aye	to	earth	thou	gazest?"
      To	me	my	Guide	began	to	say,	we	both
  Somewhat	beyond	the	Angel	having	mounted.
    And	I:	"With	such	misgiving	makes	me	go
     A	vision	new,	which	bends	me	to	itself,
 So	that	I	cannot	from	the	thought	withdraw	me."
"Didst	thou	behold,"	he	said,	"that	old	enchantress,
   Who	sole	above	us	henceforth	is	lamented?
    Didst	thou	behold	how	man	is	freed	from	her?
    Suffice	it	thee,	and	smite	earth	with	thy	heels,
    Thine	eyes	lift	upward	to	the	lure,	that	whirls
       The	Eternal	King	with	revolutions	vast."
     Even	as	the	hawk,	that	first	his	feet	surveys,
   Then	turns	him	to	the	call	and	stretches	forward,
  Through	the	desire	of	food	that	draws	him	thither,
      Such	I	became,	and	such,	as	far	as	cleaves
     The	rock	to	give	a	way	to	him	who	mounts,
      Went	on	to	where	the	circling	doth	begin.
      On	the	fifth	circle	when	I	had	come	forth,
       People	I	saw	upon	it	who	were	weeping,
Stretched	prone	upon	the	ground,	all	downward	turned.
          "Adhaesit	pavimento	anima	mea,"
     I	heard	them	say	with	sighings	so	profound,
     That	hardly	could	the	words	be	understood.
        "O	ye	elect	of	God,	whose	sufferings
      Justice	and	Hope	both	render	less	severe,
       Direct	ye	us	towards	the	high	ascents."
     "If	ye	are	come	secure	from	this	prostration,
       And	wish	to	find	the	way	most	speedily,
     Let	your	right	hands	be	evermore	outside."
    Thus	did	the	Poet	ask,	and	thus	was	answered
     By	them	somewhat	in	front	of	us;	whence	I
   In	what	was	spoken	divined	the	rest	concealed,
    And	unto	my	Lord's	eyes	mine	eyes	I	turned;
       Whence	he	assented	with	a	cheerful	sign
       To	what	the	sight	of	my	desire	implored.
       When	of	myself	I	could	dispose	at	will,
       Above	that	creature	did	I	draw	myself,
   Whose	words	before	had	caused	me	to	take	note,
      Saying:	"O	Spirit,	in	whom	weeping	ripens
      That	without	which	to	God	we	cannot	turn,
       Suspend	awhile	for	me	thy	greater	care.
Who	wast	thou,	and	why	are	your	backs	turned	upwards,
    Tell	me,	and	if	thou	wouldst	that	I	procure	thee
      Anything	there	whence	living	I	departed."
    And	he	to	me:	"Wherefore	our	backs	the	heaven
    Turns	to	itself,	know	shalt	thou;	but	beforehand
          'Scias	quod	ego	fui	successor	Petri.'
        Between	Siestri	and	Chiaveri	descends
           A	river	beautiful,	and	of	its	name
       The	title	of	my	blood	its	summit	makes.
        A	month	and	little	more	essayed	I	how
Weighs	the	great	cloak	on	him	from	mire	who	keeps	it,
       For	all	the	other	burdens	seem	a	feather.
       Tardy,	ah	woe	is	me!	was	my	conversion;
      But	when	the	Roman	Shepherd	I	was	made,
           Then	I	discovered	life	to	be	a	lie.
       I	saw	that	there	the	heart	was	not	at	rest,
       Nor	farther	in	that	life	could	one	ascend;
     Whereby	the	love	of	this	was	kindled	in	me.
      Until	that	time	a	wretched	soul	and	parted
       From	God	was	I,	and	wholly	avaricious;
     Now,	as	thou	seest,	I	here	am	punished	for	it.
       What	avarice	does	is	here	made	manifest
       In	the	purgation	of	these	souls	converted,
      And	no	more	bitter	pain	the	Mountain	has.
          Even	as	our	eye	did	not	uplift	itself
       Aloft,	being	fastened	upon	earthly	things,
      So	justice	here	has	merged	it	in	the	earth.
      As	avarice	had	extinguished	our	affection
      For	every	good,	whereby	was	action	lost,
       So	justice	here	doth	hold	us	in	restraint,
    Bound	and	imprisoned	by	the	feet	and	hands;
        And	so	long	as	it	pleases	the	just	Lord
     Shall	we	remain	immovable	and	prostrate."
    I	on	my	knees	had	fallen,	and	wished	to	speak;
        But	even	as	I	began,	and	he	was	'ware,
         Only	by	listening,	of	my	reverence,
"What	cause,"	he	said,	"has	downward	bent	thee	thus?"
         And	I	to	him:	"For	your	own	dignity,
  Standing,	my	conscience	stung	me	with	remorse."
 "Straighten	thy	legs,	and	upward	raise	thee,	brother,"
     He	answered:	"Err	not,	fellow-servant	am	I
     With	thee	and	with	the	others	to	one	power.
           If	e'er	that	holy,	evangelic	sound,
    Which	sayeth	'neque	nubent,'	thou	hast	heard,
     Well	canst	thou	see	why	in	this	wise	I	speak.
      Now	go;	no	longer	will	I	have	thee	linger,
   Because	thy	stay	doth	incommode	my	weeping,
     With	which	I	ripen	that	which	thou	hast	said.
     On	earth	I	have	a	grandchild	named	Alagia,
       Good	in	herself,	unless	indeed	our	house
        Malevolent	may	make	her	by	example,
       And	she	alone	remains	to	me	on	earth."                             	
                       Canto	XX
                             	
        Ill	strives	the	will	against	a	better	will;
  Therefore,	to	pleasure	him,	against	my	pleasure
  I	drew	the	sponge	not	saturate	from	the	water.
 Onward	I	moved,	and	onward	moved	my	Leader,
   Through	vacant	places,	skirting	still	the	rock,
       As	on	a	wall	close	to	the	battlements;
For	they	that	through	their	eyes	pour	drop	by	drop
    The	malady	which	all	the	world	pervades,
  On	the	other	side	too	near	the	verge	approach.
   Accursed	mayst	thou	be,	thou	old	she-wolf,
   That	more	than	all	the	other	beasts	hast	prey,
       Because	of	hunger	infinitely	hollow!
    O	heaven,	in	whose	gyrations	some	appear
   To	think	conditions	here	below	are	changed,
When	will	he	come	through	whom	she	shall	depart?
 Onward	we	went	with	footsteps	slow	and	scarce,
       And	I	attentive	to	the	shades	I	heard
     Piteously	weeping	and	bemoaning	them;
   And	I	by	peradventure	heard	"Sweet	Mary!"
     Uttered	in	front	of	us	amid	the	weeping
   Even	as	a	woman	does	who	is	in	child-birth;
    And	in	continuance:	"How	poor	thou	wast
           Is	manifested	by	that	hostelry
  Where	thou	didst	lay	thy	sacred	burden	down."
    Thereafterward	I	heard:	"O	good	Fabricius,
       Virtue	with	poverty	didst	thou	prefer
   To	the	possession	of	great	wealth	with	vice."
      So	pleasurable	were	these	words	to	me
  That	I	drew	farther	onward	to	have	knowledge
Touching	that	spirit	whence	they	seemed	to	come.
    He	furthermore	was	speaking	of	the	largess
    Which	Nicholas	unto	the	maidens	gave,
    In	order	to	conduct	their	youth	to	honour.
     "O	soul	that	dost	so	excellently	speak,
 Tell	me	who	wast	thou,"	said	I,	"and	why	only
  Thou	dost	renew	these	praises	well	deserved?
   Not	without	recompense	shall	be	thy	word,
      If	I	return	to	finish	the	short	journey
     Of	that	life	which	is	flying	to	its	end."
   And	he:	"I'll	tell	thee,	not	for	any	comfort
   I	may	expect	from	earth,	but	that	so	much
   Grace	shines	in	thee	or	ever	thou	art	dead.
      I	was	the	root	of	that	malignant	plant
  Which	overshadows	all	the	Christian	world,
  So	that	good	fruit	is	seldom	gathered	from	it;
 But	if	Douay	and	Ghent,	and	Lille	and	Bruges
Had	Power,	soon	vengeance	would	be	taken	on	it;
     And	this	I	pray	of	Him	who	judges	all.
    Hugh	Capet	was	I	called	upon	the	earth;
  From	me	were	born	the	Louises	and	Philips,
By	whom	in	later	days	has	France	been	governed.
       I	was	the	son	of	a	Parisian	butcher,
  What	time	the	ancient	kings	had	perished	all,
    Excepting	one,	contrite	in	cloth	of	gray.
    I	found	me	grasping	in	my	hands	the	rein
 Of	the	realm's	government,	and	so	great	power
 Of	new	acquest,	and	so	with	friends	abounding,
     That	to	the	widowed	diadem	promoted
The	head	of	mine	own	offspring	was,	from	whom
     The	consecrated	bones	of	these	began.
     So	long	as	the	great	dowry	of	Provence
  Out	of	my	blood	took	not	the	sense	of	shame,
    'Twas	little	worth,	but	still	it	did	no	harm.
   Then	it	began	with	falsehood	and	with	force
      Its	rapine;	and	thereafter,	for	amends,
    Took	Ponthieu,	Normandy,	and	Gascony.
      Charles	came	to	Italy,	and	for	amends
      A	victim	made	of	Conradin,	and	then
   Thrust	Thomas	back	to	heaven,	for	amends.
        A	time	I	see,	not	very	distant	now,
Which	draweth	forth	another	Charles	from	France,
   The	better	to	make	known	both	him	and	his.
    Unarmed	he	goes,	and	only	with	the	lance
   That	Judas	jousted	with;	and	that	he	thrusts
 So	that	he	makes	the	paunch	of	Florence	burst.
     He	thence	not	land,	but	sin	and	infamy,
  Shall	gain,	so	much	more	grievous	to	himself
   As	the	more	light	such	damage	he	accounts.
   The	other,	now	gone	forth,	ta'en	in	his	ship,
    See	I	his	daughter	sell,	and	chaffer	for	her
     As	corsairs	do	with	other	female	slaves.
   What	more,	O	Avarice,	canst	thou	do	to	us,
  Since	thou	my	blood	so	to	thyself	hast	drawn,
      It	careth	not	for	its	own	proper	flesh?
    That	less	may	seem	the	future	ill	and	past,
      I	see	the	flower-de-luce	Alagna	enter,
   And	Christ	in	his	own	Vicar	captive	made.
       I	see	him	yet	another	time	derided;
       I	see	renewed	the	vinegar	and	gall,
   And	between	living	thieves	I	see	him	slain.
      I	see	the	modern	Pilate	so	relentless,
 This	does	not	sate	him,	but	without	decretal
    He	to	the	temple	bears	his	sordid	sails!
   When,	O	my	Lord!	shall	I	be	joyful	made
By	looking	on	the	vengeance	which,	concealed,
   Makes	sweet	thine	anger	in	thy	secrecy?
     What	I	was	saying	of	that	only	bride
Of	the	Holy	Ghost,	and	which	occasioned	thee
  To	turn	towards	me	for	some	commentary,
 So	long	has	been	ordained	to	all	our	prayers
As	the	day	lasts;	but	when	the	night	comes	on,
   Contrary	sound	we	take	instead	thereof.
      At	that	time	we	repeat	Pygmalion,
    Of	whom	a	traitor,	thief,	and	parricide
      Made	his	insatiable	desire	of	gold;
     And	the	misery	of	avaricious	Midas,
     That	followed	his	inordinate	demand,
  At	which	forevermore	one	needs	but	laugh.
   The	foolish	Achan	each	one	then	records,
 And	how	he	stole	the	spoils;	so	that	the	wrath
   Of	Joshua	still	appears	to	sting	him	here.
 Then	we	accuse	Sapphira	with	her	husband,
    We	laud	the	hoof-beats	Heliodorus	had,
   And	the	whole	mount	in	infamy	encircles
    Polymnestor	who	murdered	Polydorus.
   Here	finally	is	cried:	'O	Crassus,	tell	us,
For	thou	dost	know,	what	is	the	taste	of	gold?'
 Sometimes	we	speak,	one	loud,	another	low,
  According	to	desire	of	speech,	that	spurs	us
    To	greater	now	and	now	to	lesser	pace.
 But	in	the	good	that	here	by	day	is	talked	of,
       Erewhile	alone	I	was	not;	yet	near	by
       No	other	person	lifted	up	his	voice."
       From	him	already	we	departed	were,
    And	made	endeavour	to	o'ercome	the	road
     As	much	as	was	permitted	to	our	power,
 When	I	perceived,	like	something	that	is	falling,
The	mountain	tremble,	whence	a	chill	seized	on	me,
     As	seizes	him	who	to	his	death	is	going.
       Certes	so	violently	shook	not	Delos,
       Before	Latona	made	her	nest	therein
    To	give	birth	to	the	two	eyes	of	the	heaven.
      Then	upon	all	sides	there	began	a	cry,
  Such	that	the	Master	drew	himself	towards	me,
   Saying,	"Fear	not,	while	I	am	guiding	thee."
           "Gloria	in	excelsis	Deo,"	all
  Were	saying,	from	what	near	I	comprehended,
       Where	it	was	possible	to	hear	the	cry.
      We	paused	immovable	and	in	suspense,
 Even	as	the	shepherds	who	first	heard	that	song,
  Until	the	trembling	ceased,	and	it	was	finished.
      Then	we	resumed	again	our	holy	path,
  Watching	the	shades	that	lay	upon	the	ground,
    Already	turned	to	their	accustomed	plaint.
      No	ignorance	ever	with	so	great	a	strife
      Had	rendered	me	importunate	to	know,
         If	erreth	not	in	this	my	memory,
       As	meditating	then	I	seemed	to	have;
      Nor	out	of	haste	to	question	did	I	dare,
    Nor	of	myself	I	there	could	aught	perceive;
    So	I	went	onward	timorous	and	thoughtful.                          	
                    Canto	XXI
                          	
     The	natural	thirst,	that	ne'er	is	satisfied
    Excepting	with	the	water	for	whose	grace
        The	woman	of	Samaria	besought,
     Put	me	in	travail,	and	haste	goaded	me
  Along	the	encumbered	path	behind	my	Leader
   And	I	was	pitying	that	righteous	vengeance;
   And	lo!	in	the	same	manner	as	Luke	writeth
    That	Christ	appeared	to	two	upon	the	way
     From	the	sepulchral	cave	already	risen,
  A	shade	appeared	to	us,	and	came	behind	us,
    Down	gazing	on	the	prostrate	multitude,
      Nor	were	we	ware	of	it,	until	it	spake,
Saying,	"My	brothers,	may	God	give	you	peace!"
  We	turned	us	suddenly,	and	Virgilius	rendered
   To	him	the	countersign	thereto	conforming.
   Thereon	began	he:	"In	the	blessed	council,
  Thee	may	the	court	veracious	place	in	peace,
      That	me	doth	banish	in	eternal	exile!"
"How,"	said	he,	and	the	while	we	went	with	speed,
 "If	ye	are	shades	whom	God	deigns	not	on	high,
    Who	up	his	stairs	so	far	has	guided	you?"
  And	said	my	Teacher:	"If	thou	note	the	marks
Which	this	one	bears,	and	which	the	Angel	traces
 Well	shalt	thou	see	he	with	the	good	must	reign.
   But	because	she	who	spinneth	day	and	night
    For	him	had	not	yet	drawn	the	distaff	off,
 Which	Clotho	lays	for	each	one	and	compacts,
   His	soul,	which	is	thy	sister	and	my	own,
   In	coming	upwards	could	not	come	alone,
   By	reason	that	it	sees	not	in	our	fashion.
Whence	I	was	drawn	from	out	the	ample	throat
 Of	Hell	to	be	his	guide,	and	I	shall	guide	him
   As	far	on	as	my	school	has	power	to	lead.
But	tell	us,	if	thou	knowest,	why	such	a	shudder
Erewhile	the	mountain	gave,	and	why	together
  All	seemed	to	cry,	as	far	as	its	moist	feet?"
        In	asking	he	so	hit	the	very	eye
    Of	my	desire,	that	merely	with	the	hope
     My	thirst	became	the	less	unsatisfied.
"Naught	is	there,"	he	began,	"that	without	order
     May	the	religion	of	the	mountain	feel,
 Nor	aught	that	may	be	foreign	to	its	custom.
    Free	is	it	here	from	every	permutation;
  What	from	itself	heaven	in	itself	receiveth
  Can	be	of	this	the	cause,	and	naught	beside;
 Because	that	neither	rain,	nor	hail,	nor	snow,
    Nor	dew,	nor	hoar-frost	any	higher	falls
  Than	the	short,	little	stairway	of	three	steps.
   Dense	clouds	do	not	appear,	nor	rarefied,
Nor	coruscation,	nor	the	daughter	of	Thaumas,
    That	often	upon	earth	her	region	shifts;
        No	arid	vapour	any	farther	rises
  Than	to	the	top	of	the	three	steps	I	spake	of,
    Whereon	the	Vicar	of	Peter	has	his	feet.
Lower	down	perchance	it	trembles	less	or	more,
  But,	for	the	wind	that	in	the	earth	is	hidden
  I	know	not	how,	up	here	it	never	trembled.
        It	trembles	here,	whenever	any	soul
     Feels	itself	pure,	so	that	it	soars,	or	moves
     To	mount	aloft,	and	such	a	cry	attends	it.
        Of	purity	the	will	alone	gives	proof,
  Which,	being	wholly	free	to	change	its	convent,
    Takes	by	surprise	the	soul,	and	helps	it	fly.
    First	it	wills	well;	but	the	desire	permits	not,
    Which	divine	justice	with	the	self-same	will
      There	was	to	sin,	upon	the	torment	sets.
      And	I,	who	have	been	lying	in	this	pain
  Five	hundred	years	and	more,	but	just	now	felt
           A	free	volition	for	a	better	seat.
Therefore	thou	heardst	the	earthquake,	and	the	pious
    Spirits	along	the	mountain	rendering	praise
 Unto	the	Lord,	that	soon	he	speed	them	upwards."
       So	said	he	to	him;	and	since	we	enjoy
     As	much	in	drinking	as	the	thirst	is	great,
     I	could	not	say	how	much	it	did	me	good.
      And	the	wise	Leader:	"Now	I	see	the	net
   That	snares	you	here,	and	how	ye	are	set	free,
  Why	the	earth	quakes,	and	wherefore	ye	rejoice.
 Now	who	thou	wast	be	pleased	that	I	may	know;
    And	why	so	many	centuries	thou	hast	here
    Been	lying,	let	me	gather	from	thy	words."
     "In	days	when	the	good	Titus,	with	the	aid
    Of	the	supremest	King,	avenged	the	wounds
   Whence	issued	forth	the	blood	by	Judas	sold,
  Under	the	name	that	most	endures	and	honours,
       Was	I	on	earth,"	that	spirit	made	reply,
   "Greatly	renowned,	but	not	with	faith	as	yet.
    My	vocal	spirit	was	so	sweet,	that	Rome
     Me,	a	Thoulousian,	drew	unto	herself,
Where	I	deserved	to	deck	my	brows	with	myrtle.
   Statius	the	people	name	me	still	on	earth;
  I	sang	of	Thebes,	and	then	of	great	Achilles;
  But	on	the	way	fell	with	my	second	burden.
   The	seeds	unto	my	ardour	were	the	sparks
    Of	that	celestial	flame	which	heated	me,
Whereby	more	than	a	thousand	have	been	fired;
      Of	the	Aeneid	speak	I,	which	to	me
   A	mother	was,	and	was	my	nurse	in	song;
Without	this	weighed	I	not	a	drachma's	weight.
  And	to	have	lived	upon	the	earth	what	time
     Virgilius	lived,	I	would	accept	one	sun
  More	than	I	must	ere	issuing	from	my	ban."
 These	words	towards	me	made	Virgilius	turn
With	looks	that	in	their	silence	said,	"Be	silent!"
But	yet	the	power	that	wills	cannot	do	all	things;
  For	tears	and	laughter	are	such	pursuivants
Unto	the	passion	from	which	each	springs	forth,
 In	the	most	truthful	least	the	will	they	follow.
   I	only	smiled,	as	one	who	gives	the	wink;
   Whereat	the	shade	was	silent,	and	it	gazed
 Into	mine	eyes,	where	most	expression	dwells;
And,	"As	thou	well	mayst	consummate	a	labour
  So	great,"	it	said,	"why	did	thy	face	just	now
    Display	to	me	the	lightning	of	a	smile?"
   Now	am	I	caught	on	this	side	and	on	that;
One	keeps	me	silent,	one	to	speak	conjures	me,
    Wherefore	I	sigh,	and	I	am	understood.
     "Speak,"	said	my	Master,	"and	be	not	afraid
     Of	speaking,	but	speak	out,	and	say	to	him
      What	he	demands	with	such	solicitude."
     Whence	I:	"Thou	peradventure	marvellest,
         O	antique	spirit,	at	the	smile	I	gave;
    But	I	will	have	more	wonder	seize	upon	thee.
  This	one,	who	guides	on	high	these	eyes	of	mine,
    Is	that	Virgilius,	from	whom	thou	didst	learn
       To	sing	aloud	of	men	and	of	the	Gods.
     If	other	cause	thou	to	my	smile	imputedst,
         Abandon	it	as	false,	and	trust	it	was
Those	words	which	thou	hast	spoken	concerning	him."
        Already	he	was	stooping	to	embrace
   My	Teacher's	feet;	but	he	said	to	him:	"Brother,
  Do	not;	for	shade	thou	art,	and	shade	beholdest."
     And	he	uprising:	"Now	canst	thou	the	sum
    Of	love	which	warms	me	to	thee	comprehend,
        When	this	our	vanity	I	disremember,
       Treating	a	shadow	as	substantial	thing."                           	
                     Canto	XXII
                           	
       Already	was	the	Angel	left	behind	us,
  The	Angel	who	to	the	sixth	round	had	turned	us,
     Having	erased	one	mark	from	off	my	face;
     And	those	who	have	in	justice	their	desire
       Had	said	to	us,	"Beati,"	in	their	voices,
      With	"sitio,"	and	without	more	ended	it.
   And	I,	more	light	than	through	the	other	passes,
      Went	onward	so,	that	without	any	labour
   I	followed	upward	the	swift-footed	spirits;
     When	thus	Virgilius	began:	"The	love
     Kindled	by	virtue	aye	another	kindles,
      Provided	outwardly	its	flame	appear.
  Hence	from	the	hour	that	Juvenal	descended
       Among	us	into	the	infernal	Limbo,
    Who	made	apparent	to	me	thy	affection,
    My	kindliness	towards	thee	was	as	great
    As	ever	bound	one	to	an	unseen	person,
 So	that	these	stairs	will	now	seem	short	to	me.
    But	tell	me,	and	forgive	me	as	a	friend,
    If	too	great	confidence	let	loose	the	rein,
  And	as	a	friend	now	hold	discourse	with	me;
     How	was	it	possible	within	thy	breast
For	avarice	to	find	place,	'mid	so	much	wisdom
   As	thou	wast	filled	with	by	thy	diligence?"
      These	words	excited	Statius	at	first
 Somewhat	to	laughter;	afterward	he	answered:
 "Each	word	of	thine	is	love's	dear	sign	to	me.
       Verily	oftentimes	do	things	appear
  Which	give	fallacious	matter	to	our	doubts,
  Instead	of	the	true	causes	which	are	hidden!
    Thy	question	shows	me	thy	belief	to	be
      That	I	was	niggard	in	the	other	life,
     It	may	be	from	the	circle	where	I	was;
Therefore	know	thou,	that	avarice	was	removed
    Too	far	from	me;	and	this	extravagance
   Thousands	of	lunar	periods	have	punished.
  And	were	it	not	that	I	my	thoughts	uplifted,
When	I	the	passage	heard	where	thou	exclaimest,
      As	if	indignant,	unto	human	nature,
  'To	what	impellest	thou	not,	O	cursed	hunger
      Of	gold,	the	appetite	of	mortal	men?'
  Revolving	I	should	feel	the	dismal	joustings.
Then	I	perceived	the	hands	could	spread	too	wide
   Their	wings	in	spending,	and	repented	me
       As	well	of	that	as	of	my	other	sins;
   How	many	with	shorn	hair	shall	rise	again
   Because	of	ignorance,	which	from	this	sin
    Cuts	off	repentance	living	and	in	death!
 And	know	that	the	transgression	which	rebuts
          By	direct	opposition	any	sin
     Together	with	it	here	its	verdure	dries.
    Therefore	if	I	have	been	among	that	folk
    Which	mourns	its	avarice,	to	purify	me,
     For	its	opposite	has	this	befallen	me."
"Now	when	thou	sangest	the	relentless	weapons
      Of	the	twofold	affliction	of	Jocasta,"
      The	singer	of	the	Songs	Bucolic	said,
"From	that	which	Clio	there	with	thee	preludes,
 It	does	not	seem	that	yet	had	made	thee	faithful
That	faith	without	which	no	good	works	suffice.
     If	this	be	so,	what	candles	or	what	sun
  Scattered	thy	darkness	so	that	thou	didst	trim
  Thy	sails	behind	the	Fisherman	thereafter?"
    And	he	to	him:	"Thou	first	directedst	me
    Towards	Parnassus,	in	its	grots	to	drink,
  And	first	concerning	God	didst	me	enlighten.
   Thou	didst	as	he	who	walketh	in	the	night,
Who	bears	his	light	behind,	which	helps	him	not,
      But	wary	makes	the	persons	after	him,
   When	thou	didst	say:	'The	age	renews	itself,
    Justice	returns,	and	man's	primeval	time,
   And	a	new	progeny	descends	from	heaven.'
Through	thee	I	Poet	was,	through	thee	a	Christian;
      But	that	thou	better	see	what	I	design,
       To	colour	it	will	I	extend	my	hand.
       Already	was	the	world	in	every	part
    Pregnant	with	the	true	creed,	disseminated
     By	messengers	of	the	eternal	kingdom;
       And	thy	assertion,	spoken	of	above,
     With	the	new	preachers	was	in	unison;
     Whence	I	to	visit	them	the	custom	took.
     Then	they	became	so	holy	in	my	sight,
     That,	when	Domitian	persecuted	them,
  Not	without	tears	of	mine	were	their	laments;
    And	all	the	while	that	I	on	earth	remained,
  Them	I	befriended,	and	their	upright	customs
      Made	me	disparage	all	the	other	sects.
     And	ere	I	led	the	Greeks	unto	the	rivers
      Of	Thebes,	in	poetry,	I	was	baptized,
     But	out	of	fear	was	covertly	a	Christian,
      For	a	long	time	professing	paganism;
And	this	lukewarmness	caused	me	the	fourth	circle
    To	circuit	round	more	than	four	centuries.
  Thou,	therefore,	who	hast	raised	the	covering
   That	hid	from	me	whatever	good	I	speak	of,
    While	in	ascending	we	have	time	to	spare,
  Tell	me,	in	what	place	is	our	friend	Terentius,
    Caecilius,	Plautus,	Varro,	if	thou	knowest;
  Tell	me	if	they	are	damned,	and	in	what	alley."
  "These,	Persius	and	myself,	and	others	many,"
    Replied	my	Leader,	"with	that	Grecian	are
 Whom	more	than	all	the	rest	the	Muses	suckled,
       In	the	first	circle	of	the	prison	blind;
   Ofttimes	we	of	the	mountain	hold	discourse
      Which	has	our	nurses	ever	with	itself.
         Euripides	is	with	us,	Antiphon,
       Simonides,	Agatho,	and	many	other
Greeks	who	of	old	their	brows	with	laurel	decked.
  There	some	of	thine	own	people	may	be	seen,
          Antigone,	Deiphile	and	Argia,
      And	there	Ismene	mournful	as	of	old.
    There	she	is	seen	who	pointed	out	Langia;
   There	is	Tiresias'	daughter,	and	there	Thetis,
      And	there	Deidamia	with	her	sisters."
        Silent	already	were	the	poets	both,
    Attent	once	more	in	looking	round	about,
   From	the	ascent	and	from	the	walls	released;
    And	four	handmaidens	of	the	day	already
    Were	left	behind,	and	at	the	pole	the	fifth
    Was	pointing	upward	still	its	burning	horn,
What	time	my	Guide:	"I	think	that	tow'rds	the	edge
     Our	dexter	shoulders	it	behoves	us	turn,
    Circling	the	mount	as	we	are	wont	to	do."
   Thus	in	that	region	custom	was	our	ensign;
  And	we	resumed	our	way	with	less	suspicion
       For	the	assenting	of	that	worthy	soul
      They	in	advance	went	on,	and	I	alone
   Behind	them,	and	I	listened	to	their	speech,
   Which	gave	me	lessons	in	the	art	of	song.
   But	soon	their	sweet	discourses	interrupted
   A	tree	which	midway	in	the	road	we	found,
  With	apples	sweet	and	grateful	to	the	smell.
      And	even	as	a	fir-tree	tapers	upward
 From	bough	to	bough,	so	downwardly	did	that;
   I	think	in	order	that	no	one	might	climb	it.
 On	that	side	where	our	pathway	was	enclosed
     Fell	from	the	lofty	rock	a	limpid	water,
   And	spread	itself	abroad	upon	the	leaves.
    The	Poets	twain	unto	the	tree	drew	near,
      And	from	among	the	foliage	a	voice
  Cried:	"Of	this	food	ye	shall	have	scarcity."
Then	said:	"More	thoughtful	Mary	was	of	making
  The	marriage	feast	complete	and	honourable,
Than	of	her	mouth	which	now	for	you	responds;
 And	for	their	drink	the	ancient	Roman	women
      With	water	were	content;	and	Daniel
   Disparaged	food,	and	understanding	won.
     The	primal	age	was	beautiful	as	gold;
     Acorns	it	made	with	hunger	savorous,
      And	nectar	every	rivulet	with	thirst.
      Honey	and	locusts	were	the	aliments
     That	fed	the	Baptist	in	the	wilderness;
    Whence	he	is	glorious,	and	so	magnified
     As	by	the	Evangel	is	revealed	to	you."                        	
                  Canto	XXIII
                        	
 The	while	among	the	verdant	leaves	mine	eyes
          I	riveted,	as	he	is	wont	to	do
   Who	wastes	his	life	pursuing	little	birds,
   My	more	than	Father	said	unto	me:	"Son,
Come	now;	because	the	time	that	is	ordained	us
  More	usefully	should	be	apportioned	out."
  I	turned	my	face	and	no	less	soon	my	steps
    Unto	the	Sages,	who	were	speaking	so
    They	made	the	going	of	no	cost	to	me;
   And	lo!	were	heard	a	song	and	a	lament,
       "Labia	mea,	Domine,"	in	fashion
 Such	that	delight	and	dolence	it	brought	forth.
   "O	my	sweet	Father,	what	is	this	I	hear?"
  Began	I;	and	he	answered:	"Shades	that	go
   Perhaps	the	knot	unloosing	of	their	debt."
 In	the	same	way	that	thoughtful	pilgrims	do,
 Who,	unknown	people	on	the	road	o'ertaking,
Turn	themselves	round	to	them,	and	do	not	stop,
  Even	thus,	behind	us	with	a	swifter	motion
  Coming	and	passing	onward,	gazed	upon	us
     A	crowd	of	spirits	silent	and	devout.
   Each	in	his	eyes	was	dark	and	cavernous,
        Pallid	in	face,	and	so	emaciate
 That	from	the	bones	the	skin	did	shape	itself.
      I	do	not	think	that	so	to	merest	rind
   Could	Erisichthon	have	been	withered	up
    By	famine,	when	most	fear	he	had	of	it.
    Thinking	within	myself	I	said:	"Behold,
      This	is	the	folk	who	lost	Jerusalem,
   When	Mary	made	a	prey	of	her	own	son."
Their	sockets	were	like	rings	without	the	gems;
     Whoever	in	the	face	of	men	reads	'omo'
   Might	well	in	these	have	recognised	the	'm.'
    Who	would	believe	the	odour	of	an	apple,
    Begetting	longing,	could	consume	them	so,
    And	that	of	water,	without	knowing	how?
   I	still	was	wondering	what	so	famished	them,
         For	the	occasion	not	yet	manifest
       Of	their	emaciation	and	sad	squalor;
     And	lo!	from	out	the	hollow	of	his	head
His	eyes	a	shade	turned	on	me,	and	looked	keenly;
   Then	cried	aloud:	"What	grace	to	me	is	this?"
   Never	should	I	have	known	him	by	his	look;
        But	in	his	voice	was	evident	to	me
  That	which	his	aspect	had	suppressed	within	it.
    This	spark	within	me	wholly	re-enkindled
        My	recognition	of	his	altered	face,
       And	I	recalled	the	features	of	Forese.
       "Ah,	do	not	look	at	this	dry	leprosy,"
   Entreated	he,	"which	doth	my	skin	discolour,
      Nor	at	default	of	flesh	that	I	may	have;
    But	tell	me	truth	of	thee,	and	who	are	those
  Two	souls,	that	yonder	make	for	thee	an	escort;
        Do	not	delay	in	speaking	unto	me."
  "That	face	of	thine,	which	dead	I	once	bewept,
    Gives	me	for	weeping	now	no	lesser	grief,"
    I	answered	him,	"beholding	it	so	changed!
But	tell	me,	for	God's	sake,	what	thus	denudes	you?
    Make	me	not	speak	while	I	am	marvelling,
  For	ill	speaks	he	who's	full	of	other	longings."
     And	he	to	me:	"From	the	eternal	council
         Falls	power	into	the	water	and	the	tree
         Behind	us	left,	whereby	I	grow	so	thin.
         All	of	this	people	who	lamenting	sing,
         For	following	beyond	measure	appetite
        In	hunger	and	thirst	are	here	re-sanctified.
         Desire	to	eat	and	drink	enkindles	in	us
        The	scent	that	issues	from	the	apple-tree,
   And	from	the	spray	that	sprinkles	o'er	the	verdure;
         And	not	a	single	time	alone,	this	ground
         Encompassing,	is	refreshed	our	pain,—
      I	say	our	pain,	and	ought	to	say	our	solace,—
        For	the	same	wish	doth	lead	us	to	the	tree
        Which	led	the	Christ	rejoicing	to	say	'Eli,'
          When	with	his	veins	he	liberated	us."
          And	I	to	him:	"Forese,	from	that	day
      When	for	a	better	life	thou	changedst	worlds,
     Up	to	this	time	five	years	have	not	rolled	round.
       If	sooner	were	the	power	exhausted	in	thee
      Of	sinning	more,	than	thee	the	hour	surprised
      Of	that	good	sorrow	which	to	God	reweds	us,
      How	hast	thou	come	up	hitherward	already?
      I	thought	to	find	thee	down	there	underneath,
       Where	time	for	time	doth	restitution	make."
        And	he	to	me:	"Thus	speedily	has	led	me
   To	drink	of	the	sweet	wormwood	of	these	torments,
          My	Nella	with	her	overflowing	tears;
     She	with	her	prayers	devout	and	with	her	sighs
Has	drawn	me	from	the	coast	where	one	where	one	awaits,
         And	from	the	other	circles	set	me	free.
       So	much	more	dear	and	pleasing	is	to	God
    My	little	widow,	whom	so	much	I	loved,
    As	in	good	works	she	is	the	more	alone;
          For	the	Barbagia	of	Sardinia
      By	far	more	modest	in	its	women	is
      Than	the	Barbagia	I	have	left	her	in.
  O	brother	sweet,	what	wilt	thou	have	me	say?
      A	future	time	is	in	my	sight	already,
     To	which	this	hour	will	not	be	very	old,
    When	from	the	pulpit	shall	be	interdicted
   To	the	unblushing	womankind	of	Florence
     To	go	about	displaying	breast	and	paps.
     What	savages	were	e'er,	what	Saracens,
 Who	stood	in	need,	to	make	them	covered	go,
         Of	spiritual	or	other	discipline?
   But	if	the	shameless	women	were	assured
Of	what	swift	Heaven	prepares	for	them,	already
Wide	open	would	they	have	their	mouths	to	howl;
    For	if	my	foresight	here	deceive	me	not,
  They	shall	be	sad	ere	he	has	bearded	cheeks
    Who	now	is	hushed	to	sleep	with	lullaby.
  O	brother,	now	no	longer	hide	thee	from	me;
     See	that	not	only	I,	but	all	these	people
 Are	gazing	there,	where	thou	dost	veil	the	sun."
  Whence	I	to	him:	"If	thou	bring	back	to	mind
  What	thou	with	me	hast	been	and	I	with	thee,
   The	present	memory	will	be	grievous	still.
  Out	of	that	life	he	turned	me	back	who	goes
   In	front	of	me,	two	days	agone	when	round
   The	sister	of	him	yonder	showed	herself,"
  And	to	the	sun	I	pointed.	"Through	the	deep
      Night	of	the	truly	dead	has	this	one	led	me,
       With	this	true	flesh,	that	follows	after	him.
      Thence	his	encouragements	have	led	me	up,
      Ascending	and	still	circling	round	the	mount
That	you	doth	straighten,	whom	the	world	made	crooked.
         He	says	that	he	will	bear	me	company,
         Till	I	shall	be	where	Beatrice	will	be;
      There	it	behoves	me	to	remain	without	him.
        This	is	Virgilius,	who	thus	says	to	me,"
           And	him	I	pointed	at;	"the	other	is
   That	shade	for	whom	just	now	shook	every	slope
      Your	realm,	that	from	itself	discharges	him."                             	
                      Canto	XXIV
                             	
        Nor	speech	the	going,	nor	the	going	that
      Slackened;	but	talking	we	went	bravely	on,
        Even	as	a	vessel	urged	by	a	good	wind.
    And	shadows,	that	appeared	things	doubly	dead,
     From	out	the	sepulchres	of	their	eyes	betrayed
         Wonder	at	me,	aware	that	I	was	living.
            And	I,	continuing	my	colloquy,
      Said:	"Peradventure	he	goes	up	more	slowly
       Than	he	would	do,	for	other	people's	sake.
    But	tell	me,	if	thou	knowest,	where	is	Piccarda;
             Tell	me	if	any	one	of	note	I	see
         Among	this	folk	that	gazes	at	me	so."
      "My	sister,	who,	'twixt	beautiful	and	good,
    I	know	not	which	was	more,	triumphs	rejoicing
       Already	in	her	crown	on	high	Olympus."
 So	said	he	first,	and	then:	"'Tis	not	forbidden
   To	name	each	other	here,	so	milked	away
       Is	our	resemblance	by	our	dieting.
This,"	pointing	with	his	finger,	"is	Buonagiunta,
     Buonagiunta,	of	Lucca;	and	that	face
Beyond	him	there,	more	peaked	than	the	others,
   Has	held	the	holy	Church	within	his	arms;
 From	Tours	was	he,	and	purges	by	his	fasting
    Bolsena's	eels	and	the	Vernaccia	wine."
    He	named	me	many	others	one	by	one;
   And	all	contented	seemed	at	being	named,
    So	that	for	this	I	saw	not	one	dark	look.
      I	saw	for	hunger	bite	the	empty	air
       Ubaldin	dalla	Pila,	and	Boniface,
Who	with	his	crook	had	pastured	many	people.
    I	saw	Messer	Marchese,	who	had	leisure
  Once	at	Forli	for	drinking	with	less	dryness,
    And	he	was	one	who	ne'er	felt	satisfied.
 But	as	he	does	who	scans,	and	then	doth	prize
   One	more	than	others,	did	I	him	of	Lucca,
 Who	seemed	to	take	most	cognizance	of	me.
 He	murmured,	and	I	know	not	what	Gentucca
From	that	place	heard	I,	where	he	felt	the	wound
     Of	justice,	that	doth	macerate	them	so.
   "O	soul,"	I	said,	"that	seemest	so	desirous
 To	speak	with	me,	do	so	that	I	may	hear	thee,
 And	with	thy	speech	appease	thyself	and	me."
  "A	maid	is	born,	and	wears	not	yet	the	veil,"
  Began	he,	"who	to	thee	shall	pleasant	make
    My	city,	howsoever	men	may	blame	it.
 Thou	shalt	go	on	thy	way	with	this	prevision;
If	by	my	murmuring	thou	hast	been	deceived,
  True	things	hereafter	will	declare	it	to	thee.
    But	say	if	him	I	here	behold,	who	forth
 Evoked	the	new-invented	rhymes,	beginning,
   'Ladies,	that	have	intelligence	of	love?'"
   And	I	to	him:	"One	am	I,	who,	whenever
Love	doth	inspire	me,	note,	and	in	that	measure
  Which	he	within	me	dictates,	singing	go."
   "O	brother,	now	I	see,"	he	said,	"the	knot
   Which	me,	the	Notary,	and	Guittone	held
 Short	of	the	sweet	new	style	that	now	I	hear.
   I	do	perceive	full	clearly	how	your	pens
 Go	closely	following	after	him	who	dictates,
Which	with	our	own	forsooth	came	not	to	pass;
    And	he	who	sets	himself	to	go	beyond,
No	difference	sees	from	one	style	to	another;"
     And	as	if	satisfied,	he	held	his	peace.
Even	as	the	birds,	that	winter	tow'rds	the	Nile,
 Sometimes	into	a	phalanx	form	themselves,
   Then	fly	in	greater	haste,	and	go	in	file;
  In	such	wise	all	the	people	who	were	there,
  Turning	their	faces,	hurried	on	their	steps,
 Both	by	their	leanness	and	their	wishes	light.
  And	as	a	man,	who	weary	is	with	trotting,
 Lets	his	companions	onward	go,	and	walks,
    Until	he	vents	the	panting	of	his	chest;
        So	did	Forese	let	the	holy	flock
 Pass	by,	and	came	with	me	behind	it,	saying,
 "When	will	it	be	that	I	again	shall	see	thee?"
"How	long,"	I	answered,	"I	may	live,	I	know	not;
      Yet	my	return	will	not	so	speedy	be,
       But	I	shall	sooner	in	desire	arrive;
    Because	the	place	where	I	was	set	to	live
   From	day	to	day	of	good	is	more	depleted,
     And	unto	dismal	ruin	seems	ordained."
  "Now	go,"	he	said,	"for	him	most	guilty	of	it
     At	a	beast's	tail	behold	I	dragged	along
   Towards	the	valley	where	is	no	repentance.
     Faster	at	every	step	the	beast	is	going,
    Increasing	evermore	until	it	smites	him,
      And	leaves	the	body	vilely	mutilated.
Not	long	those	wheels	shall	turn,"	and	he	uplifted
  His	eyes	to	heaven,	"ere	shall	be	clear	to	thee
  That	which	my	speech	no	farther	can	declare.
 Now	stay	behind;	because	the	time	so	precious
     Is	in	this	kingdom,	that	I	lose	too	much
   By	coming	onward	thus	abreast	with	thee."
    As	sometimes	issues	forth	upon	a	gallop
      A	cavalier	from	out	a	troop	that	ride,
  And	seeks	the	honour	of	the	first	encounter,
  So	he	with	greater	strides	departed	from	us;
   And	on	the	road	remained	I	with	those	two,
 Who	were	such	mighty	marshals	of	the	world.
     And	when	before	us	he	had	gone	so	far
   Mine	eyes	became	to	him	such	pursuivants
     As	was	my	understanding	to	his	words,
 Appeared	to	me	with	laden	and	living	boughs
     Another	apple-tree,	and	not	far	distant,
 From	having	but	just	then	turned	thitherward.
       People	I	saw	beneath	it	lift	their	hands,
    And	cry	I	know	not	what	towards	the	leaves,
       Like	little	children	eager	and	deluded,
   Who	pray,	and	he	they	pray	to	doth	not	answer,
       But,	to	make	very	keen	their	appetite,
      Holds	their	desire	aloft,	and	hides	it	not.
        Then	they	departed	as	if	undeceived;
      And	now	we	came	unto	the	mighty	tree
    Which	prayers	and	tears	so	manifold	refuses.
    "Pass	farther	onward	without	drawing	near;
       The	tree	of	which	Eve	ate	is	higher	up,
   And	out	of	that	one	has	this	tree	been	raised."
   Thus	said	I	know	not	who	among	the	branches;
       Whereat	Virgilius,	Statius,	and	myself
   Went	crowding	forward	on	the	side	that	rises.
    "Be	mindful,"	said	he,	"of	the	accursed	ones
      Formed	of	the	cloud-rack,	who	inebriate
    Combated	Theseus	with	their	double	breasts;
 And	of	the	Jews	who	showed	them	soft	in	drinking,
Whence	Gideon	would	not	have	them	for	companions
   When	he	tow'rds	Midian	the	hills	descended."
  Thus,	closely	pressed	to	one	of	the	two	borders,
      On	passed	we,	hearing	sins	of	gluttony,
       Followed	forsooth	by	miserable	gains;
       Then	set	at	large	upon	the	lonely	road,
    A	thousand	steps	and	more	we	onward	went,
      In	contemplation,	each	without	a	word.
    "What	go	ye	thinking	thus,	ye	three	alone?"
      Said	suddenly	a	voice,	whereat	I	started
       As	terrified	and	timid	beasts	are	wont.
     I	raised	my	head	to	see	who	this	might	be,
       And	never	in	a	furnace	was	there	seen
        Metals	or	glass	so	lucent	and	so	red
   As	one	I	saw	who	said:	"If	it	may	please	you
     To	mount	aloft,	here	it	behoves	you	turn;
     This	way	goes	he	who	goeth	after	peace."
       His	aspect	had	bereft	me	of	my	sight,
    So	that	I	turned	me	back	unto	my	Teachers,
   Like	one	who	goeth	as	his	hearing	guides	him.
       And	as,	the	harbinger	of	early	dawn,
The	air	of	May	doth	move	and	breathe	out	fragrance,
   Impregnate	all	with	herbage	and	with	flowers,
      So	did	I	feel	a	breeze	strike	in	the	midst
    My	front,	and	felt	the	moving	of	the	plumes
    That	breathed	around	an	odour	of	ambrosia;
  And	heard	it	said:	"Blessed	are	they	whom	grace
      So	much	illumines,	that	the	love	of	taste
    Excites	not	in	their	breasts	too	great	desire,
      Hungering	at	all	times	so	far	as	is	just."                          	
                    Canto	XXV
                          	
   Now	was	it	the	ascent	no	hindrance	brooked,
      Because	the	sun	had	his	meridian	circle
        To	Taurus	left,	and	night	to	Scorpio;
     Wherefore	as	doth	a	man	who	tarries	not,
     But	goes	his	way,	whate'er	to	him	appear,
       If	of	necessity	the	sting	transfix	him,
     In	this	wise	did	we	enter	through	the	gap,
     Taking	the	stairway,	one	before	the	other,
   Which	by	its	narrowness	divides	the	climbers.
       And	as	the	little	stork	that	lifts	its	wing
      With	a	desire	to	fly,	and	does	not	venture
   To	leave	the	nest,	and	lets	it	downward	droop,
     Even	such	was	I,	with	the	desire	of	asking
   Kindled	and	quenched,	unto	the	motion	coming
    He	makes	who	doth	address	himself	to	speak.
     Not	for	our	pace,	though	rapid	it	might	be,
     My	father	sweet	forbore,	but	said:	"Let	fly
  The	bow	of	speech	thou	to	the	barb	hast	drawn."
     With	confidence	I	opened	then	my	mouth,
      And	I	began:	"How	can	one	meagre	grow
  There	where	the	need	of	nutriment	applies	not?"
     "If	thou	wouldst	call	to	mind	how	Meleager
       Was	wasted	by	the	wasting	of	a	brand,
    This	would	not,"	said	he,	"be	to	thee	so	sour;
And	wouldst	thou	think	how	at	each	tremulous	motion
     Trembles	within	a	mirror	your	own	image;
 That	which	seems	hard	would	mellow	seem	to	thee.
    But	that	thou	mayst	content	thee	in	thy	wish
       Lo	Statius	here;	and	him	I	call	and	pray
     He	now	will	be	the	healer	of	thy	wounds."
     "If	I	unfold	to	him	the	eternal	vengeance,"
     Responded	Statius,	"where	thou	present	art,
     Be	my	excuse	that	I	can	naught	deny	thee."
    Then	he	began:	"Son,	if	these	words	of	mine
    Thy	mind	doth	contemplate	and	doth	receive,
    They'll	be	thy	light	unto	the	How	thou	sayest.
     The	perfect	blood,	which	never	is	drunk	up
     Into	the	thirsty	veins,	and	which	remaineth
   Like	food	that	from	the	table	thou	removest,
   Takes	in	the	heart	for	all	the	human	members
         Virtue	informative,	as	being	that
Which	to	be	changed	to	them	goes	through	the	veins
     Again	digest,	descends	it	where	'tis	better
    Silent	to	be	than	say;	and	then	drops	thence
       Upon	another's	blood	in	natural	vase.
    There	one	together	with	the	other	mingles,
     One	to	be	passive	meant,	the	other	active
   By	reason	of	the	perfect	place	it	springs	from;
      And	being	conjoined,	begins	to	operate,
          Coagulating	first,	then	vivifying
    What	for	its	matter	it	had	made	consistent.
       The	active	virtue,	being	made	a	soul
         As	of	a	plant,	(in	so	far	different,
     This	on	the	way	is,	that	arrived	already,)
 Then	works	so	much,	that	now	it	moves	and	feels
      Like	a	sea-fungus,	and	then	undertakes
     To	organize	the	powers	whose	seed	it	is.
     Now,	Son,	dilates	and	now	distends	itself
       The	virtue	from	the	generator's	heart,
    Where	nature	is	intent	on	all	the	members.
       But	how	from	animal	it	man	becomes
      Thou	dost	not	see	as	yet;	this	is	a	point
    Which	made	a	wiser	man	than	thou	once	err
        So	far,	that	in	his	doctrine	separate
     He	made	the	soul	from	possible	intellect,
       For	he	no	organ	saw	by	this	assumed.
   Open	thy	breast	unto	the	truth	that's	coming,
    And	know	that,	just	as	soon	as	in	the	foetus
   The	articulation	of	the	brain	is	perfect,
  The	primal	Motor	turns	to	it	well	pleased
    At	so	great	art	of	nature,	and	inspires
     A	spirit	new	with	virtue	all	replete,
 Which	what	it	finds	there	active	doth	attract
  Into	its	substance,	and	becomes	one	soul,
Which	lives,	and	feels,	and	on	itself	revolves.
 And	that	thou	less	may	wonder	at	my	word,
Behold	the	sun's	heat,	which	becometh	wine,
 Joined	to	the	juice	that	from	the	vine	distils.
   Whenever	Lachesis	has	no	more	thread,
   It	separates	from	the	flesh,	and	virtually
   Bears	with	itself	the	human	and	divine;
     The	other	faculties	are	voiceless	all;
 The	memory,	the	intelligence,	and	the	will
   In	action	far	more	vigorous	than	before.
      Without	a	pause	it	falleth	of	itself
In	marvellous	way	on	one	shore	or	the	other;
    There	of	its	roads	it	first	is	cognizant.
  Soon	as	the	place	there	circumscribeth	it,
  The	virtue	informative	rays	round	about,
 As,	and	as	much	as,	in	the	living	members.
    And	even	as	the	air,	when	full	of	rain,
   By	alien	rays	that	are	therein	reflected,
  With	divers	colours	shows	itself	adorned,
So	there	the	neighbouring	air	doth	shape	itself
  Into	that	form	which	doth	impress	upon	it
    Virtually	the	soul	that	has	stood	still.
   And	then	in	manner	of	the	little	flame,
 Which	followeth	the	fire	where'er	it	shifts,
     After	the	spirit	followeth	its	new	form.
Since	afterwards	it	takes	from	this	its	semblance,
    It	is	called	shade;	and	thence	it	organizes
    Thereafter	every	sense,	even	to	the	sight.
Thence	is	it	that	we	speak,	and	thence	we	laugh;
  Thence	is	it	that	we	form	the	tears	and	sighs,
 That	on	the	mountain	thou	mayhap	hast	heard.
       According	as	impress	us	our	desires
  And	other	affections,	so	the	shade	is	shaped,
  And	this	is	cause	of	what	thou	wonderest	at."
     And	now	unto	the	last	of	all	the	circles
  Had	we	arrived,	and	to	the	right	hand	turned,
       And	were	attentive	to	another	care.
There	the	embankment	shoots	forth	flames	of	fire,
  And	upward	doth	the	cornice	breathe	a	blast
That	drives	them	back,	and	from	itself	sequesters.
   Hence	we	must	needs	go	on	the	open	side,
     And	one	by	one;	and	I	did	fear	the	fire
    On	this	side,	and	on	that	the	falling	down.
  My	Leader	said:	"Along	this	place	one	ought
     To	keep	upon	the	eyes	a	tightened	rein,
       Seeing	that	one	so	easily	might	err."
   "Summae	Deus	clementiae,"	in	the	bosom
    Of	the	great	burning	chanted	then	I	heard,
  Which	made	me	no	less	eager	to	turn	round;
  And	spirits	saw	I	walking	through	the	flame;
 Wherefore	I	looked,	to	my	own	steps	and	theirs
    Apportioning	my	sight	from	time	to	time.
   After	the	close	which	to	that	hymn	is	made,
  Aloud	they	shouted,	"Virum	non	cognosco;"
 Then	recommenced	the	hymn	with	voices	low.
    This	also	ended,	cried	they:	"To	the	wood
        Diana	ran,	and	drove	forth	Helice
 Therefrom,	who	had	of	Venus	felt	the	poison."
 Then	to	their	song	returned	they;	then	the	wives
They	shouted,	and	the	husbands	who	were	chaste.
    As	virtue	and	the	marriage	vow	imposes.
   And	I	believe	that	them	this	mode	suffices,
     For	all	the	time	the	fire	is	burning	them;
   With	such	care	is	it	needful,	and	such	food,
 That	the	last	wound	of	all	should	be	closed	up.                         	
                   Canto	XXVI
                         	
   While	on	the	brink	thus	one	before	the	other
   We	went	upon	our	way,	oft	the	good	Master
Said:	"Take	thou	heed!	suffice	it	that	I	warn	thee."
  On	the	right	shoulder	smote	me	now	the	sun,
     That,	raying	out,	already	the	whole	west
    Changed	from	its	azure	aspect	into	white.
   And	with	my	shadow	did	I	make	the	flame
    Appear	more	red;	and	even	to	such	a	sign
   Shades	saw	I	many,	as	they	went,	give	heed.
 This	was	the	cause	that	gave	them	a	beginning
  To	speak	of	me;	and	to	themselves	began	they
   To	say:	"That	seems	not	a	factitious	body!"
  Then	towards	me,	as	far	as	they	could	come,
    Came	certain	of	them,	always	with	regard
Not	to	step	forth	where	they	would	not	be	burned.
    "O	thou	who	goest,	not	from	being	slower
    But	reverent	perhaps,	behind	the	others,
Answer	me,	who	in	thirst	and	fire	am	burning.
    Nor	to	me	only	is	thine	answer	needful;
    For	all	of	these	have	greater	thirst	for	it
     Than	for	cold	water	Ethiop	or	Indian.
   Tell	us	how	is	it	that	thou	makest	thyself
    A	wall	unto	the	sun,	as	if	thou	hadst	not
     Entered	as	yet	into	the	net	of	death."
 Thus	one	of	them	addressed	me,	and	I	straight
 Should	have	revealed	myself,	were	I	not	bent
     On	other	novelty	that	then	appeared.
  For	through	the	middle	of	the	burning	road
 There	came	a	people	face	to	face	with	these,
Which	held	me	in	suspense	with	gazing	at	them.
     There	see	I	hastening	upon	either	side
  Each	of	the	shades,	and	kissing	one	another
  Without	a	pause,	content	with	brief	salute.
  Thus	in	the	middle	of	their	brown	battalions
   Muzzle	to	muzzle	one	ant	meets	another
Perchance	to	spy	their	journey	or	their	fortune.
   No	sooner	is	the	friendly	greeting	ended,
   Or	ever	the	first	footstep	passes	onward,
   Each	one	endeavours	to	outcry	the	other;
The	new-come	people:	"Sodom	and	Gomorrah!"
    The	rest:	"Into	the	cow	Pasiphae	enters,
    So	that	the	bull	unto	her	lust	may	run!"
Then	as	the	cranes,	that	to	Riphaean	mountains
 Might	fly	in	part,	and	part	towards	the	sands,
 These	of	the	frost,	those	of	the	sun	avoidant,
   One	folk	is	going,	and	the	other	coming,
    And	weeping	they	return	to	their	first	songs,
      And	to	the	cry	that	most	befitteth	them;
    And	close	to	me	approached,	even	as	before,
       The	very	same	who	had	entreated	me,
        Attent	to	listen	in	their	countenance.
      I,	who	their	inclination	twice	had	seen,
     Began:	"O	souls	secure	in	the	possession,
      Whene'er	it	may	be,	of	a	state	of	peace,
     Neither	unripe	nor	ripened	have	remained
   My	members	upon	earth,	but	here	are	with	me
    With	their	own	blood	and	their	articulations.
         I	go	up	here	to	be	no	longer	blind;
       A	Lady	is	above,	who	wins	this	grace,
  Whereby	the	mortal	through	your	world	I	bring.
       But	as	your	greatest	longing	satisfied
May	soon	become,	so	that	the	Heaven	may	house	you
   Which	full	of	love	is,	and	most	amply	spreads,
     Tell	me,	that	I	again	in	books	may	write	it,
      Who	are	you,	and	what	is	that	multitude
   Which	goes	upon	its	way	behind	your	backs?"
     Not	otherwise	with	wonder	is	bewildered
    The	mountaineer,	and	staring	round	is	dumb,
    When	rough	and	rustic	to	the	town	he	goes,
    Than	every	shade	became	in	its	appearance;
  But	when	they	of	their	stupor	were	disburdened,
      Which	in	high	hearts	is	quickly	quieted,
    "Blessed	be	thou,	who	of	our	border-lands,"
   He	recommenced	who	first	had	questioned	us,
       "Experience	freightest	for	a	better	life.
   The	folk	that	comes	not	with	us	have	offended
     In	that	for	which	once	Caesar,	triumphing,
    Heard	himself	called	in	contumely,	'Queen.'
   Therefore	they	separate,	exclaiming,	'Sodom!'
  Themselves	reproving,	even	as	thou	hast	heard,
    And	add	unto	their	burning	by	their	shame.
    Our	own	transgression	was	hermaphrodite;
     But	because	we	observed	not	human	law,
      Following	like	unto	beasts	our	appetite,
          In	our	opprobrium	by	us	is	read,
      When	we	part	company,	the	name	of	her
      Who	bestialized	herself	in	bestial	wood.
Now	knowest	thou	our	acts,	and	what	our	crime	was;
Wouldst	thou	perchance	by	name	know	who	we	are,
     There	is	not	time	to	tell,	nor	could	I	do	it.
  Thy	wish	to	know	me	shall	in	sooth	be	granted;
     I'm	Guido	Guinicelli,	and	now	purge	me,
      Having	repented	ere	the	hour	extreme."
     The	same	that	in	the	sadness	of	Lycurgus
   Two	sons	became,	their	mother	re-beholding,
     Such	I	became,	but	rise	not	to	such	height,
    The	moment	I	heard	name	himself	the	father
      Of	me	and	of	my	betters,	who	had	ever
  Practised	the	sweet	and	gracious	rhymes	of	love;
   And	without	speech	and	hearing	thoughtfully
      For	a	long	time	I	went,	beholding	him,
     Nor	for	the	fire	did	I	approach	him	nearer.
       When	I	was	fed	with	looking,	utterly
       Myself	I	offered	ready	for	his	service,
       With	affirmation	that	compels	belief.
    And	he	to	me:	"Thou	leavest	footprints	such
    In	me,	from	what	I	hear,	and	so	distinct,
   Lethe	cannot	efface	them,	nor	make	dim.
But	if	thy	words	just	now	the	truth	have	sworn,
 Tell	me	what	is	the	cause	why	thou	displayest
 In	word	and	look	that	dear	thou	holdest	me?"
   And	I	to	him:	"Those	dulcet	lays	of	yours
Which,	long	as	shall	endure	our	modern	fashion,
    Shall	make	for	ever	dear	their	very	ink!"
  "O	brother,"	said	he,	"he	whom	I	point	out,"
    And	here	he	pointed	at	a	spirit	in	front,
   "Was	of	the	mother	tongue	a	better	smith.
     Verses	of	love	and	proses	of	romance,
     He	mastered	all;	and	let	the	idiots	talk,
    Who	think	the	Lemosin	surpasses	him.
To	clamour	more	than	truth	they	turn	their	faces,
    And	in	this	way	establish	their	opinion,
   Ere	art	or	reason	has	by	them	been	heard.
    Thus	many	ancients	with	Guittone	did,
   From	cry	to	cry	still	giving	him	applause,
Until	the	truth	has	conquered	with	most	persons.
     Now,	if	thou	hast	such	ample	privilege
    'Tis	granted	thee	to	go	unto	the	cloister
   Wherein	is	Christ	the	abbot	of	the	college,
      To	him	repeat	for	me	a	Paternoster,
      So	far	as	needful	to	us	of	this	world,
  Where	power	of	sinning	is	no	longer	ours."
 Then,	to	give	place	perchance	to	one	behind,
   Whom	he	had	near,	he	vanished	in	the	fire
     As	fish	in	water	going	to	the	bottom.
    I	moved	a	little	tow'rds	him	pointed	out,
    And	said	that	to	his	name	my	own	desire
    An	honourable	place	was	making	ready.
      He	of	his	own	free	will	began	to	say:
     So	pleases	me	your	courteous	demand,
   I	cannot	and	I	will	not	hide	me	from	you.
    I	am	Arnaut,	who	weep	and	singing	go;
       Contrite	I	see	the	folly	of	the	past,
  And	joyous	see	the	hoped-for	day	before	me.
   Therefore	do	I	implore	you,	by	that	power
 Which	guides	you	to	the	summit	of	the	stairs,
      Be	mindful	to	assuage	my	suffering!                          	
                   Canto	XXVII
                          	
   As	when	he	vibrates	forth	his	earliest	rays,
   In	regions	where	his	Maker	shed	his	blood,
      (The	Ebro	falling	under	lofty	Libra,
  And	waters	in	the	Ganges	burnt	with	noon,)
 So	stood	the	Sun;	hence	was	the	day	departing,
  When	the	glad	Angel	of	God	appeared	to	us.
   Outside	the	flame	he	stood	upon	the	verge,
    And	chanted	forth,	"Beati	mundo	corde,"
   In	voice	by	far	more	living	than	our	own.
  Then:	"No	one	farther	goes,	souls	sanctified,
     If	first	the	fire	bite	not;	within	it	enter,
    And	be	not	deaf	unto	the	song	beyond."
 When	we	were	close	beside	him	thus	he	said;
Wherefore	e'en	such	became	I,	when	I	heard	him,
       As	he	is	who	is	put	into	the	grave.
   Upon	my	clasped	hands	I	straightened	me,
      Scanning	the	fire,	and	vividly	recalling
    The	human	bodies	I	had	once	seen	burned.
Towards	me	turned	themselves	my	good	Conductors,
       And	unto	me	Virgilius	said:	"My	son,
    Here	may	indeed	be	torment,	but	not	death.
        Remember	thee,	remember!	and	if	I
        On	Geryon	have	safely	guided	thee,
       What	shall	I	do	now	I	am	nearer	God?
   Believe	for	certain,	shouldst	thou	stand	a	full
      Millennium	in	the	bosom	of	this	flame,
     It	could	not	make	thee	bald	a	single	hair.
  And	if	perchance	thou	think	that	I	deceive	thee,
       Draw	near	to	it,	and	put	it	to	the	proof
  With	thine	own	hands	upon	thy	garment's	hem.
       Now	lay	aside,	now	lay	aside	all	fear,
   Turn	hitherward,	and	onward	come	securely;"
 And	I	still	motionless,	and	'gainst	my	conscience!
   Seeing	me	stand	still	motionless	and	stubborn,
Somewhat	disturbed	he	said:	"Now	look	thou,	Son,
    'Twixt	Beatrice	and	thee	there	is	this	wall."
       As	at	the	name	of	Thisbe	oped	his	lids
     The	dying	Pyramus,	and	gazed	upon	her,
    What	time	the	mulberry	became	vermilion,
      Even	thus,	my	obduracy	being	softened,
   I	turned	to	my	wise	Guide,	hearing	the	name
     That	in	my	memory	evermore	is	welling.
Whereat	he	wagged	his	head,	and	said:	"How	now?
  Shall	we	stay	on	this	side?"	then	smiled	as	one
   Does	at	a	child	who's	vanquished	by	an	apple.
    Then	into	the	fire	in	front	of	me	he	entered,
       Beseeching	Statius	to	come	after	me,
        Who	a	long	way	before	divided	us.
        When	I	was	in	it,	into	molten	glass
      I	would	have	cast	me	to	refresh	myself,
    So	without	measure	was	the	burning	there!
      And	my	sweet	Father,	to	encourage	me,
       Discoursing	still	of	Beatrice	went	on,
     Saying:	"Her	eyes	I	seem	to	see	already!"
    A	voice,	that	on	the	other	side	was	singing,
         Directed	us,	and	we,	attent	alone
   On	that,	came	forth	where	the	ascent	began.
          "Venite,	benedicti	Patris	mei,"
   Sounded	within	a	splendour,	which	was	there
    Such	it	o'ercame	me,	and	I	could	not	look.
  "The	sun	departs,"	it	added,	"and	night	cometh;
     Tarry	ye	not,	but	onward	urge	your	steps,
    So	long	as	yet	the	west	becomes	not	dark."
Straight	forward	through	the	rock	the	path	ascended
        In	such	a	way	that	I	cut	off	the	rays
     Before	me	of	the	sun,	that	now	was	low.
     And	of	few	stairs	we	yet	had	made	assay,
   Ere	by	the	vanished	shadow	the	sun's	setting
     Behind	us	we	perceived,	I	and	my	Sages.
       And	ere	in	all	its	parts	immeasurable
      The	horizon	of	one	aspect	had	become,
    And	Night	her	boundless	dispensation	held,
      Each	of	us	of	a	stair	had	made	his	bed;
   Because	the	nature	of	the	mount	took	from	us
  The	power	of	climbing,	more	than	the	delight.
       Even	as	in	ruminating	passive	grow
The	goats,	who	have	been	swift	and	venturesome
   Upon	the	mountain-tops	ere	they	were	fed,
  Hushed	in	the	shadow,	while	the	sun	is	hot,
 Watched	by	the	herdsman,	who	upon	his	staff
    Is	leaning,	and	in	leaning	tendeth	them;
   And	as	the	shepherd,	lodging	out	of	doors,
     Passes	the	night	beside	his	quiet	flock,
   Watching	that	no	wild	beast	may	scatter	it,
   Such	at	that	hour	were	we,	all	three	of	us,
   I	like	the	goat,	and	like	the	herdsmen	they,
    Begirt	on	this	side	and	on	that	by	rocks.
  Little	could	there	be	seen	of	things	without;
    But	through	that	little	I	beheld	the	stars
   More	luminous	and	larger	than	their	wont.
     Thus	ruminating,	and	beholding	these,
 Sleep	seized	upon	me,—sleep,	that	oftentimes
     Before	a	deed	is	done	has	tidings	of	it.
  It	was	the	hour,	I	think,	when	from	the	East
    First	on	the	mountain	Citherea	beamed,
Who	with	the	fire	of	love	seems	always	burning;
  Youthful	and	beautiful	in	dreams	methought
       I	saw	a	lady	walking	in	a	meadow,
Gathering	flowers;	and	singing	she	was	saying:
   "Know	whosoever	may	my	name	demand
     That	I	am	Leah,	and	go	moving	round
 My	beauteous	hands	to	make	myself	a	garland.
   To	please	me	at	the	mirror,	here	I	deck	me,
     But	never	does	my	sister	Rachel	leave
   Her	looking-glass,	and	sitteth	all	day	long.
   To	see	her	beauteous	eyes	as	eager	is	she,
       As	I	am	to	adorn	me	with	my	hands;
       Her,	seeing,	and	me,	doing	satisfies."
     And	now	before	the	antelucan	splendours
     That	unto	pilgrims	the	more	grateful	rise,
   As,	home-returning,	less	remote	they	lodge,
      The	darkness	fled	away	on	every	side,
      And	slumber	with	it;	whereupon	I	rose,
      Seeing	already	the	great	Masters	risen.
"That	apple	sweet,	which	through	so	many	branches
      The	care	of	mortals	goeth	in	pursuit	of,
    To-day	shall	put	in	peace	thy	hungerings."
     Speaking	to	me,	Virgilius	of	such	words
As	these	made	use;	and	never	were	there	guerdons
  That	could	in	pleasantness	compare	with	these.
    Such	longing	upon	longing	came	upon	me
      To	be	above,	that	at	each	step	thereafter
    For	flight	I	felt	in	me	the	pinions	growing.
     When	underneath	us	was	the	stairway	all
    Run	o'er,	and	we	were	on	the	highest	step,
       Virgilius	fastened	upon	me	his	eyes,
   And	said:	"The	temporal	fire	and	the	eternal,
    Son,	thou	hast	seen,	and	to	a	place	art	come
       Where	of	myself	no	farther	I	discern.
   By	intellect	and	art	I	here	have	brought	thee;
 Take	thine	own	pleasure	for	thy	guide	henceforth;
  Beyond	the	steep	ways	and	the	narrow	art	thou.
  Behold	the	sun,	that	shines	upon	thy	forehead;
  Behold	the	grass,	the	flowerets,	and	the	shrubs
     Which	of	itself	alone	this	land	produces.
     Until	rejoicing	come	the	beauteous	eyes
    Which	weeping	caused	me	to	come	unto	thee,
Thou	canst	sit	down,	and	thou	canst	walk	among	them.
      Expect	no	more	or	word	or	sign	from	me;
     Free	and	upright	and	sound	is	thy	free-will,
       And	error	were	it	not	to	do	its	bidding;
   Thee	o'er	thyself	I	therefore	crown	and	mitre!"                           	
                    Canto	XXVIII
                           	
        Eager	already	to	search	in	and	round
    The	heavenly	forest,	dense	and	living-green,
    Which	tempered	to	the	eyes	the	new-born	day,
        Withouten	more	delay	I	left	the	bank,
       Taking	the	level	country	slowly,	slowly
  Over	the	soil	that	everywhere	breathes	fragrance.
       A	softly-breathing	air,	that	no	mutation
      Had	in	itself,	upon	the	forehead	smote	me
       No	heavier	blow	than	of	a	gentle	wind,
      Whereat	the	branches,	lightly	tremulous,
   Did	all	of	them	bow	downward	toward	that	side
   Where	its	first	shadow	casts	the	Holy	Mountain;
     Yet	not	from	their	upright	direction	swayed,
        So	that	the	little	birds	upon	their	tops
    Should	leave	the	practice	of	each	art	of	theirs;
     But	with	full	ravishment	the	hours	of	prime,
    Singing,	received	they	in	the	midst	of	leaves,
      That	ever	bore	a	burden	to	their	rhymes,
  Such	as	from	branch	to	branch	goes	gathering	on
   Through	the	pine	forest	on	the	shore	of	Chiassi,
          When	Eolus	unlooses	the	Sirocco.
       Already	my	slow	steps	had	carried	me
        Into	the	ancient	wood	so	far,	that	I
     Could	not	perceive	where	I	had	entered	it.
    And	lo!	my	further	course	a	stream	cut	off,
  Which	tow'rd	the	left	hand	with	its	little	waves
   Bent	down	the	grass	that	on	its	margin	sprang.
      All	waters	that	on	earth	most	limpid	are
Would	seem	to	have	within	themselves	some	mixture
  Compared	with	that	which	nothing	doth	conceal,
 Although	it	moves	on	with	a	brown,	brown	current
       Under	the	shade	perpetual,	that	never
      Ray	of	the	sun	lets	in,	nor	of	the	moon.
  With	feet	I	stayed,	and	with	mine	eyes	I	passed
         Beyond	the	rivulet,	to	look	upon
        The	great	variety	of	the	fresh	may.
    And	there	appeared	to	me	(even	as	appears
      Suddenly	something	that	doth	turn	aside
    Through	very	wonder	every	other	thought)
         A	lady	all	alone,	who	went	along
    Singing	and	culling	floweret	after	floweret,
   With	which	her	pathway	was	all	painted	over.
     "Ah,	beauteous	lady,	who	in	rays	of	love
     Dost	warm	thyself,	if	I	may	trust	to	looks,
    Which	the	heart's	witnesses	are	wont	to	be,
      May	the	desire	come	unto	thee	to	draw
      Near	to	this	river's	bank,"	I	said	to	her,
 "So	much	that	I	might	hear	what	thou	art	singing.
    Thou	makest	me	remember	where	and	what
      Proserpina	that	moment	was	when	lost
    Her	mother	her,	and	she	herself	the	Spring."
  As	turns	herself,	with	feet	together	pressed
  And	to	the	ground,	a	lady	who	is	dancing,
  And	hardly	puts	one	foot	before	the	other,
  On	the	vermilion	and	the	yellow	flowerets
  She	turned	towards	me,	not	in	other	wise
Than	maiden	who	her	modest	eyes	casts	down;
    And	my	entreaties	made	to	be	content,
  So	near	approaching,	that	the	dulcet	sound
   Came	unto	me	together	with	its	meaning
  As	soon	as	she	was	where	the	grasses	are.
 Bathed	by	the	waters	of	the	beauteous	river,
   To	lift	her	eyes	she	granted	me	the	boon.
  I	do	not	think	there	shone	so	great	a	light
   Under	the	lids	of	Venus,	when	transfixed
  By	her	own	son,	beyond	his	usual	custom!
    Erect	upon	the	other	bank	she	smiled,
   Bearing	full	many	colours	in	her	hands,
 Which	that	high	land	produces	without	seed.
   Apart	three	paces	did	the	river	make	us;
 But	Hellespont,	where	Xerxes	passed	across,
     (A	curb	still	to	all	human	arrogance,)
   More	hatred	from	Leander	did	not	suffer
   For	rolling	between	Sestos	and	Abydos,
 Than	that	from	me,	because	it	oped	not	then.
  "Ye	are	new-comers;	and	because	I	smile,"
   Began	she,	"peradventure,	in	this	place
      Elect	to	human	nature	for	its	nest,
  Some	apprehension	keeps	you	marvelling;
    But	the	psalm	'Delectasti'	giveth	light
Which	has	the	power	to	uncloud	your	intellect.
And	thou	who	foremost	art,	and	didst	entreat	me,
Speak,	if	thou	wouldst	hear	more;	for	I	came	ready
    To	all	thy	questionings,	as	far	as	needful."
   "The	water,"	said	I,	"and	the	forest's	sound,
     Are	combating	within	me	my	new	faith
  In	something	which	I	heard	opposed	to	this."
  Whence	she:	"I	will	relate	how	from	its	cause
  Proceedeth	that	which	maketh	thee	to	wonder,
 And	purge	away	the	cloud	that	smites	upon	thee.
   The	Good	Supreme,	sole	in	itself	delighting,
    Created	man	good,	and	this	goodly	place
       Gave	him	as	hansel	of	eternal	peace.
  By	his	default	short	while	he	sojourned	here;
       By	his	default	to	weeping	and	to	toil
He	changed	his	innocent	laughter	and	sweet	play.
    That	the	disturbance	which	below	is	made
      By	exhalations	of	the	land	and	water,
     (Which	far	as	may	be	follow	after	heat,)
     Might	not	upon	mankind	wage	any	war,
This	mount	ascended	tow'rds	the	heaven	so	high,
  And	is	exempt,	from	there	where	it	is	locked.
       Now	since	the	universal	atmosphere
     Turns	in	a	circuit	with	the	primal	motion
    Unless	the	circle	is	broken	on	some	side,
     Upon	this	height,	that	all	is	disengaged
      In	living	ether,	doth	this	motion	strike
    And	make	the	forest	sound,	for	it	is	dense;
 And	so	much	power	the	stricken	plant	possesses
      That	with	its	virtue	it	impregns	the	air,
      And	this,	revolving,	scatters	it	around;
   And	yonder	earth,	according	as	'tis	worthy
   In	self	or	in	its	clime,	conceives	and	bears
       Of	divers	qualities	the	divers	trees;
   It	should	not	seem	a	marvel	then	on	earth,
     This	being	heard,	whenever	any	plant
    Without	seed	manifest	there	taketh	root.
   And	thou	must	know,	this	holy	table-land
     In	which	thou	art	is	full	of	every	seed,
    And	fruit	has	in	it	never	gathered	there.
The	water	which	thou	seest	springs	not	from	vein
  Restored	by	vapour	that	the	cold	condenses,
   Like	to	a	stream	that	gains	or	loses	breath;
  But	issues	from	a	fountain	safe	and	certain,
   Which	by	the	will	of	God	as	much	regains
      As	it	discharges,	open	on	two	sides.
     Upon	this	side	with	virtue	it	descends,
     Which	takes	away	all	memory	of	sin;
  On	that,	of	every	good	deed	done	restores	it.
       Here	Lethe,	as	upon	the	other	side
      Eunoe,	it	is	called;	and	worketh	not
      If	first	on	either	side	it	be	not	tasted.
    This	every	other	savour	doth	transcend;
   And	notwithstanding	slaked	so	far	may	be
    Thy	thirst,	that	I	reveal	to	thee	no	more,
     I'll	give	thee	a	corollary	still	in	grace,
  Nor	think	my	speech	will	be	to	thee	less	dear
   If	it	spread	out	beyond	my	promise	to	thee.
Those	who	in	ancient	times	have	feigned	in	song
        The	Age	of	Gold	and	its	felicity,
 Dreamed	of	this	place	perhaps	upon	Parnassus.
     Here	was	the	human	race	in	innocence;
   Here	evermore	was	Spring,	and	every	fruit;
  This	is	the	nectar	of	which	each	one	speaks."
   Then	backward	did	I	turn	me	wholly	round
    Unto	my	Poets,	and	saw	that	with	a	smile
 They	had	been	listening	to	these	closing	words;
  Then	to	the	beautiful	lady	turned	mine	eyes.                          	
                   Canto	XXIX
                          	
      Singing	like	unto	an	enamoured	lady
 She,	with	the	ending	of	her	words,	continued:
       "Beati	quorum	tecta	sunt	peccata."
 And	even	as	Nymphs,	that	wandered	all	alone
     Among	the	sylvan	shadows,	sedulous
      One	to	avoid	and	one	to	see	the	sun,
She	then	against	the	stream	moved	onward,	going
      Along	the	bank,	and	I	abreast	of	her,
    Her	little	steps	with	little	steps	attending.
Between	her	steps	and	mine	were	not	a	hundred,
     When	equally	the	margins	gave	a	turn,
     In	such	a	way,	that	to	the	East	I	faced.
      Nor	even	thus	our	way	continued	far
      Before	the	lady	wholly	turned	herself
  Unto	me,	saying,	"Brother,	look	and	listen!"
       And	lo!	a	sudden	lustre	ran	across
   On	every	side	athwart	the	spacious	forest,
 Such	that	it	made	me	doubt	if	it	were	lightning.
   But	since	the	lightning	ceases	as	it	comes,
 And	that	continuing	brightened	more	and	more,
Within	my	thought	I	said,	"What	thing	is	this?"
       And	a	delicious	melody	there	ran
   Along	the	luminous	air,	whence	holy	zeal
    Made	me	rebuke	the	hardihood	of	Eve;
For	there	where	earth	and	heaven	obedient	were,
     The	woman	only,	and	but	just	created,
    Could	not	endure	to	stay	'neath	any	veil;
  Underneath	which	had	she	devoutly	stayed,
   I	sooner	should	have	tasted	those	delights
        Ineffable,	and	for	a	longer	time.
 While	'mid	such	manifold	first-fruits	I	walked
       Of	the	eternal	pleasure	all	enrapt,
      And	still	solicitous	of	more	delights,
      In	front	of	us	like	an	enkindled	fire
  Became	the	air	beneath	the	verdant	boughs,
And	the	sweet	sound	as	singing	now	was	heard.
     O	Virgins	sacrosanct!	if	ever	hunger,
     Vigils,	or	cold	for	you	I	have	endured,
 The	occasion	spurs	me	their	reward	to	claim!
  Now	Helicon	must	needs	pour	forth	for	me,
   And	with	her	choir	Urania	must	assist	me,
    To	put	in	verse	things	difficult	to	think.
     A	little	farther	on,	seven	trees	of	gold
  In	semblance	the	long	space	still	intervening
 Between	ourselves	and	them	did	counterfeit;
  But	when	I	had	approached	so	near	to	them
The	common	object,	which	the	sense	deceives,
     Lost	not	by	distance	any	of	its	marks,
   The	faculty	that	lends	discourse	to	reason
  Did	apprehend	that	they	were	candlesticks,
    And	in	the	voices	of	the	song	"Hosanna!"
    Above	them	flamed	the	harness	beautiful,
    Far	brighter	than	the	moon	in	the	serene
    Of	midnight,	at	the	middle	of	her	month.
    I	turned	me	round,	with	admiration	filled,
     To	good	Virgilius,	and	he	answered	me
    With	visage	no	less	full	of	wonderment.
Then	back	I	turned	my	face	to	those	high	things,
Which	moved	themselves	towards	us	so	sedately,
They	had	been	distanced	by	new-wedded	brides.
  The	lady	chid	me:	"Why	dost	thou	burn	only
      So	with	affection	for	the	living	lights,
  And	dost	not	look	at	what	comes	after	them?"
   Then	saw	I	people,	as	behind	their	leaders,
   Coming	behind	them,	garmented	in	white,
    And	such	a	whiteness	never	was	on	earth.
  The	water	on	my	left	flank	was	resplendent,
     And	back	to	me	reflected	my	left	side,
       E'en	as	a	mirror,	if	I	looked	therein.
     When	I	upon	my	margin	had	such	post
     That	nothing	but	the	stream	divided	us,
      Better	to	see	I	gave	my	steps	repose;
     And	I	beheld	the	flamelets	onward	go,
  Leaving	behind	themselves	the	air	depicted,
And	they	of	trailing	pennons	had	the	semblance,
      So	that	it	overhead	remained	distinct
 With	sevenfold	lists,	all	of	them	of	the	colours
Whence	the	sun's	bow	is	made,	and	Delia's	girdle.
  These	standards	to	the	rearward	longer	were
  Than	was	my	sight;	and,	as	it	seemed	to	me,
       Ten	paces	were	the	outermost	apart.
       Under	so	fair	a	heaven	as	I	describe
    The	four	and	twenty	Elders,	two	by	two,
    Came	on	incoronate	with	flower-de-luce.
  They	all	of	them	were	singing:	"Blessed	thou
 Among	the	daughters	of	Adam	art,	and	blessed
      For	evermore	shall	be	thy	loveliness."
    After	the	flowers	and	other	tender	grasses
      In	front	of	me	upon	the	other	margin
     Were	disencumbered	of	that	race	elect,
   Even	as	in	heaven	star	followeth	after	star,
    There	came	close	after	them	four	animals,
     Incoronate	each	one	with	verdant	leaf.
 Plumed	with	six	wings	was	every	one	of	them,
   The	plumage	full	of	eyes;	the	eyes	of	Argus
   If	they	were	living	would	be	such	as	these.
   Reader!	to	trace	their	forms	no	more	I	waste
  My	rhymes;	for	other	spendings	press	me	so,
        That	I	in	this	cannot	be	prodigal.
      But	read	Ezekiel,	who	depicteth	them
     As	he	beheld	them	from	the	region	cold
Coming	with	cloud,	with	whirlwind,	and	with	fire;
  And	such	as	thou	shalt	find	them	in	his	pages,
Such	were	they	here;	saving	that	in	their	plumage
    John	is	with	me,	and	differeth	from	him.
    The	interval	between	these	four	contained
       A	chariot	triumphal	on	two	wheels,
  Which	by	a	Griffin's	neck	came	drawn	along;
     And	upward	he	extended	both	his	wings
   Between	the	middle	list	and	three	and	three,
    So	that	he	injured	none	by	cleaving	it.
So	high	they	rose	that	they	were	lost	to	sight;
 His	limbs	were	gold,	so	far	as	he	was	bird,
And	white	the	others	with	vermilion	mingled.
  Not	only	Rome	with	no	such	splendid	car
   E'er	gladdened	Africanus,	or	Augustus,
  But	poor	to	it	that	of	the	Sun	would	be,—
That	of	the	Sun,	which	swerving	was	burnt	up
     At	the	importunate	orison	of	Earth,
    When	Jove	was	so	mysteriously	just.
 Three	maidens	at	the	right	wheel	in	a	circle
   Came	onward	dancing;	one	so	very	red
  That	in	the	fire	she	hardly	had	been	noted.
  The	second	was	as	if	her	flesh	and	bones
   Had	all	been	fashioned	out	of	emerald;
The	third	appeared	as	snow	but	newly	fallen.
And	now	they	seemed	conducted	by	the	white,
  Now	by	the	red,	and	from	the	song	of	her
 The	others	took	their	step,	or	slow	or	swift.
    Upon	the	left	hand	four	made	holiday
   Vested	in	purple,	following	the	measure
 Of	one	of	them	with	three	eyes	m	her	head.
    In	rear	of	all	the	group	here	treated	of
    Two	old	men	I	beheld,	unlike	in	habit,
  But	like	in	gait,	each	dignified	and	grave.
 One	showed	himself	as	one	of	the	disciples
 Of	that	supreme	Hippocrates,	whom	nature
  Made	for	the	animals	she	holds	most	dear;
     Contrary	care	the	other	manifested,
With	sword	so	shining	and	so	sharp,	it	caused
      Terror	to	me	on	this	side	of	the	river.
    Thereafter	four	I	saw	of	humble	aspect,
       And	behind	all	an	aged	man	alone
   Walking	in	sleep	with	countenance	acute.
  And	like	the	foremost	company	these	seven
    Were	habited;	yet	of	the	flower-de-luce
  No	garland	round	about	the	head	they	wore,
  But	of	the	rose,	and	other	flowers	vermilion;
  At	little	distance	would	the	sight	have	sworn
   That	all	were	in	a	flame	above	their	brows.
     And	when	the	car	was	opposite	to	me
  Thunder	was	heard;	and	all	that	folk	august
  Seemed	to	have	further	progress	interdicted,
 There	with	the	vanward	ensigns	standing	still.                         	
                   Canto	XXX
                         	
  When	the	Septentrion	of	the	highest	heaven
   (Which	never	either	setting	knew	or	rising,
    Nor	veil	of	other	cloud	than	that	of	sin,
   And	which	made	every	one	therein	aware
      Of	his	own	duty,	as	the	lower	makes
    Whoever	turns	the	helm	to	come	to	port)
    Motionless	halted,	the	veracious	people,
  That	came	at	first	between	it	and	the	Griffin,
 Turned	themselves	to	the	car,	as	to	their	peace.
And	one	of	them,	as	if	by	Heaven	commissioned,
       Singing,	"Veni,	sponsa,	de	Libano"
  Shouted	three	times,	and	all	the	others	after.
   Even	as	the	Blessed	at	the	final	summons
Shall	rise	up	quickened	each	one	from	his	cavern,
       Uplifting	light	the	reinvested	flesh,
          So	upon	that	celestial	chariot
     A	hundred	rose	'ad	vocem	tanti	senis,'
    Ministers	and	messengers	of	life	eternal.
  They	all	were	saying,	"Benedictus	qui	venis,"
 And,	scattering	flowers	above	and	round	about,
          "Manibus	o	date	lilia	plenis."
      Ere	now	have	I	beheld,	as	day	began,
  The	eastern	hemisphere	all	tinged	with	rose,
 And	the	other	heaven	with	fair	serene	adorned;
   And	the	sun's	face,	uprising,	overshadowed
   So	that	by	tempering	influence	of	vapours
     For	a	long	interval	the	eye	sustained	it;
    Thus	in	the	bosom	of	a	cloud	of	flowers
  Which	from	those	hands	angelical	ascended,
    And	downward	fell	again	inside	and	out,
    Over	her	snow-white	veil	with	olive	cinct
     Appeared	a	lady	under	a	green	mantle,
      Vested	in	colour	of	the	living	flame.
      And	my	own	spirit,	that	already	now
  So	long	a	time	had	been,	that	in	her	presence
  Trembling	with	awe	it	had	not	stood	abashed,
 Without	more	knowledge	having	by	mine	eyes,
 Through	occult	virtue	that	from	her	proceeded
    Of	ancient	love	the	mighty	influence	felt.
   As	soon	as	on	my	vision	smote	the	power
  Sublime,	that	had	already	pierced	me	through
   Ere	from	my	boyhood	I	had	yet	come	forth,
   To	the	left	hand	I	turned	with	that	reliance
 With	which	the	little	child	runs	to	his	mother,
   When	he	has	fear,	or	when	he	is	afflicted,
     To	say	unto	Virgilius:	"Not	a	drachm
 Of	blood	remains	in	me,	that	does	not	tremble;
    I	know	the	traces	of	the	ancient	flame."
      But	us	Virgilius	of	himself	deprived
   Had	left,	Virgilius,	sweetest	of	all	fathers,
    Virgilius,	to	whom	I	for	safety	gave	me:
    Nor	whatsoever	lost	the	ancient	mother
  Availed	my	cheeks	now	purified	from	dew,
That	weeping	they	should	not	again	be	darkened.
     "Dante,	because	Virgilius	has	departed
   Do	not	weep	yet,	do	not	weep	yet	awhile;
 For	by	another	sword	thou	need'st	must	weep."
   E'en	as	an	admiral,	who	on	poop	and	prow
  Comes	to	behold	the	people	that	are	working
 In	other	ships,	and	cheers	them	to	well-doing,
      Upon	the	left	hand	border	of	the	car,
 When	at	the	sound	I	turned	of	my	own	name,
      Which	of	necessity	is	here	recorded,
    I	saw	the	Lady,	who	erewhile	appeared
     Veiled	underneath	the	angelic	festival,
     Direct	her	eyes	to	me	across	the	river.
Although	the	veil,	that	from	her	head	descended,
     Encircled	with	the	foliage	of	Minerva,
    Did	not	permit	her	to	appear	distinctly,
        In	attitude	still	royally	majestic
   Continued	she,	like	unto	one	who	speaks,
  And	keeps	his	warmest	utterance	in	reserve:
    "Look	at	me	well;	in	sooth	I'm	Beatrice!
  How	didst	thou	deign	to	come	unto	the	Mountain?
    Didst	thou	not	know	that	man	is	happy	here?"
   Mine	eyes	fell	downward	into	the	clear	fountain,
    But,	seeing	myself	therein,	I	sought	the	grass,
   So	great	a	shame	did	weigh	my	forehead	down.
       As	to	the	son	the	mother	seems	superb,
     So	she	appeared	to	me;	for	somewhat	bitter
       Tasteth	the	savour	of	severe	compassion.
       Silent	became	she,	and	the	Angels	sang
         Suddenly,	"In	te,	Domine,	speravi:"
        But	beyond	'pedes	meos'	did	not	pass.
      Even	as	the	snow	among	the	living	rafters
           Upon	the	back	of	Italy	congeals,
     Blown	on	and	drifted	by	Sclavonian	winds,
     And	then,	dissolving,	trickles	through	itself
    Whene'er	the	land	that	loses	shadow	breathes,
       So	that	it	seems	a	fire	that	melts	a	taper;
        E'en	thus	was	I	without	a	tear	or	sigh,
      Before	the	song	of	those	who	sing	for	ever
        After	the	music	of	the	eternal	spheres.
      But	when	I	heard	in	their	sweet	melodies
    Compassion	for	me,	more	than	had	they	said,
   "O	wherefore,	lady,	dost	thou	thus	upbraid	him?"
     The	ice,	that	was	about	my	heart	congealed,
     To	air	and	water	changed,	and	in	my	anguish
Through	mouth	and	eyes	came	gushing	from	my	breast.
       She,	on	the	right-hand	border	of	the	car
      Still	firmly	standing,	to	those	holy	beings
       Thus	her	discourse	directed	afterwards:
       "Ye	keep	your	watch	in	the	eternal	day,
So	that	nor	night	nor	sleep	can	steal	from	you
  One	step	the	ages	make	upon	their	path;
  Therefore	my	answer	is	with	greater	care,
That	he	may	hear	me	who	is	weeping	yonder,
 So	that	the	sin	and	dole	be	of	one	measure.
 Not	only	by	the	work	of	those	great	wheels,
   That	destine	every	seed	unto	some	end,
  According	as	the	stars	are	in	conjunction,
    But	by	the	largess	of	celestial	graces,
Which	have	such	lofty	vapours	for	their	rain
 That	near	to	them	our	sight	approaches	not,
  Such	had	this	man	become	in	his	new	life
    Potentially,	that	every	righteous	habit
 Would	have	made	admirable	proof	in	him;
But	so	much	more	malignant	and	more	savage
Becomes	the	land	untilled	and	with	bad	seed,
 The	more	good	earthly	vigour	it	possesses.
 Some	time	did	I	sustain	him	with	my	look;
   Revealing	unto	him	my	youthful	eyes,
  I	led	him	with	me	turned	in	the	right	way.
     As	soon	as	ever	of	my	second	age
 I	was	upon	the	threshold	and	changed	life,
Himself	from	me	he	took	and	gave	to	others.
  When	from	the	flesh	to	spirit	I	ascended,
And	beauty	and	virtue	were	in	me	increased,
  I	was	to	him	less	dear	and	less	delightful;
  And	into	ways	untrue	he	turned	his	steps,
     Pursuing	the	false	images	of	good,
       That	never	any	promises	fulfil;
   Nor	prayer	for	inspiration	me	availed,
  By	means	of	which	in	dreams	and	otherwise
  I	called	him	back,	so	little	did	he	heed	them.
        So	low	he	fell,	that	all	appliances
      For	his	salvation	were	already	short,
   Save	showing	him	the	people	of	perdition.
       For	this	I	visited	the	gates	of	death,
    And	unto	him,	who	so	far	up	has	led	him,
   My	intercessions	were	with	weeping	borne.
       God's	lofty	fiat	would	be	violated,
  If	Lethe	should	be	passed,	and	if	such	viands
      Should	tasted	be,	withouten	any	scot
    Of	penitence,	that	gushes	forth	in	tears."                         	
                   Canto	XXXI
                         	
    "O	thou	who	art	beyond	the	sacred	river,"
    Turning	to	me	the	point	of	her	discourse,
 That	edgewise	even	had	seemed	to	me	so	keen,
  She	recommenced,	continuing	without	pause,
    "Say,	say	if	this	be	true;	to	such	a	charge,
 Thy	own	confession	needs	must	be	conjoined."
    My	faculties	were	in	so	great	confusion,
  That	the	voice	moved,	but	sooner	was	extinct
      Than	by	its	organs	it	was	set	at	large.
Awhile	she	waited;	then	she	said:	"What	thinkest?
     Answer	me;	for	the	mournful	memories
    In	thee	not	yet	are	by	the	waters	injured."
    Confusion	and	dismay	together	mingled
Forced	such	a	Yes!	from	out	my	mouth,	that	sight
     Was	needful	to	the	understanding	of	it.
  Even	as	a	cross-bow	breaks,	when	'tis	discharged
   Too	tensely	drawn	the	bowstring	and	the	bow,
    And	with	less	force	the	arrow	hits	the	mark,
     So	I	gave	way	beneath	that	heavy	burden,
       Outpouring	in	a	torrent	tears	and	sighs,
    And	the	voice	flagged	upon	its	passage	forth.
    Whence	she	to	me:	"In	those	desires	of	mine
     Which	led	thee	to	the	loving	of	that	good,
     Beyond	which	there	is	nothing	to	aspire	to,
    What	trenches	lying	traverse	or	what	chains
     Didst	thou	discover,	that	of	passing	onward
Thou	shouldst	have	thus	despoiled	thee	of	the	hope?
      And	what	allurements	or	what	vantages
      Upon	the	forehead	of	the	others	showed,
  That	thou	shouldst	turn	thy	footsteps	unto	them?"
          After	the	heaving	of	a	bitter	sigh,
      Hardly	had	I	the	voice	to	make	response,
       And	with	fatigue	my	lips	did	fashion	it.
    Weeping	I	said:	"The	things	that	present	were
   With	their	false	pleasure	turned	aside	my	steps,
    Soon	as	your	countenance	concealed	itself."
     And	she:	"Shouldst	thou	be	silent,	or	deny
       What	thou	confessest,	not	less	manifest
   Would	be	thy	fault,	by	such	a	Judge	'tis	known.
But	when	from	one's	own	cheeks	comes	bursting	forth
        The	accusal	of	the	sin,	in	our	tribunal
     Against	the	edge	the	wheel	doth	turn	itself.
    But	still,	that	thou	mayst	feel	a	greater	shame
       For	thy	transgression,	and	another	time
   Hearing	the	Sirens	thou	mayst	be	more	strong,
      Cast	down	the	seed	of	weeping	and	attend;
      So	shalt	thou	hear,	how	in	an	opposite	way
      My	buried	flesh	should	have	directed	thee.
          Never	to	thee	presented	art	or	nature
       Pleasure	so	great	as	the	fair	limbs	wherein
      I	was	enclosed,	which	scattered	are	in	earth.
      And	if	the	highest	pleasure	thus	did	fail	thee
       By	reason	of	my	death,	what	mortal	thing
      Should	then	have	drawn	thee	into	its	desire?
         Thou	oughtest	verily	at	the	first	shaft
          Of	things	fallacious	to	have	risen	up
        To	follow	me,	who	was	no	longer	such.
Thou	oughtest	not	to	have	stooped	thy	pinions	downward
         To	wait	for	further	blows,	or	little	girl,
           Or	other	vanity	of	such	brief	use.
       The	callow	birdlet	waits	for	two	or	three,
        But	to	the	eyes	of	those	already	fledged,
       In	vain	the	net	is	spread	or	shaft	is	shot."
         Even	as	children	silent	in	their	shame
    Stand	listening	with	their	eyes	upon	the	ground,
       And	conscious	of	their	fault,	and	penitent;
        So	was	I	standing;	and	she	said:	"If	thou
       In	hearing	sufferest	pain,	lift	up	thy	beard
      And	thou	shalt	feel	a	greater	pain	in	seeing."
          With	less	resistance	is	a	robust	holm
           Uprooted,	either	by	a	native	wind
         Or	else	by	that	from	regions	of	Iarbas,
       Than	I	upraised	at	her	command	my	chin;
    And	when	she	by	the	beard	the	face	demanded,
      Well	I	perceived	the	venom	of	her	meaning.
     And	as	my	countenance	was	lifted	up,
  Mine	eye	perceived	those	creatures	beautiful
  Had	rested	from	the	strewing	of	the	flowers;
    And,	still	but	little	reassured,	mine	eyes
Saw	Beatrice	turned	round	towards	the	monster,
     That	is	one	person	only	in	two	natures.
  Beneath	her	veil,	beyond	the	margent	green,
   She	seemed	to	me	far	more	her	ancient	self
 To	excel,	than	others	here,	when	she	was	here.
   So	pricked	me	then	the	thorn	of	penitence,
That	of	all	other	things	the	one	which	turned	me
   Most	to	its	love	became	the	most	my	foe.
   Such	self-conviction	stung	me	at	the	heart
  O'erpowered	I	fell,	and	what	I	then	became
 She	knoweth	who	had	furnished	me	the	cause.
Then,	when	the	heart	restored	my	outward	sense,
     The	lady	I	had	found	alone,	above	me
I	saw,	and	she	was	saying,	"Hold	me,	hold	me."
Up	to	my	throat	she	in	the	stream	had	drawn	me,
 And,	dragging	me	behind	her,	she	was	moving
       Upon	the	water	lightly	as	a	shuttle.
    When	I	was	near	unto	the	blessed	shore,
    "Asperges	me,"	I	heard	so	sweetly	sung,
   Remember	it	I	cannot,	much	less	write	it.
   The	beautiful	lady	opened	wide	her	arms,
Embraced	my	head,	and	plunged	me	underneath,
  Where	I	was	forced	to	swallow	of	the	water.
Then	forth	she	drew	me,	and	all	dripping	brought
      Into	the	dance	of	the	four	beautiful,
   And	each	one	with	her	arm	did	cover	me.
 'We	here	are	Nymphs,	and	in	the	Heaven	are	stars;
       Ere	Beatrice	descended	to	the	world,
     We	as	her	handmaids	were	appointed	her.
  We'll	lead	thee	to	her	eyes;	but	for	the	pleasant
   Light	that	within	them	is,	shall	sharpen	thine
  The	three	beyond,	who	more	profoundly	look.'
     Thus	singing	they	began;	and	afterwards
  Unto	the	Griffin's	breast	they	led	me	with	them,
 Where	Beatrice	was	standing,	turned	towards	us.
"See	that	thou	dost	not	spare	thine	eyes,"	they	said;
   "Before	the	emeralds	have	we	stationed	thee,
Whence	Love	aforetime	drew	for	thee	his	weapons."
    A	thousand	longings,	hotter	than	the	flame,
   Fastened	mine	eyes	upon	those	eyes	relucent,
    That	still	upon	the	Griffin	steadfast	stayed.
        As	in	a	glass	the	sun,	not	otherwise
  Within	them	was	the	twofold	monster	shining,
   Now	with	the	one,	now	with	the	other	nature.
    Think,	Reader,	if	within	myself	I	marvelled,
     When	I	beheld	the	thing	itself	stand	still,
       And	in	its	image	it	transformed	itself.
    While	with	amazement	filled	and	jubilant,
    My	soul	was	tasting	of	the	food,	that	while
       It	satisfies	us	makes	us	hunger	for	it,
     Themselves	revealing	of	the	highest	rank
      In	bearing,	did	the	other	three	advance,
         Singing	to	their	angelic	saraband.
      "Turn,	Beatrice,	O	turn	thy	holy	eyes,"
    Such	was	their	song,	"unto	thy	faithful	one,
     Who	has	to	see	thee	ta'en	so	many	steps.
    In	grace	do	us	the	grace	that	thou	unveil
    Thy	face	to	him,	so	that	he	may	discern
  The	second	beauty	which	thou	dost	conceal."
     O	splendour	of	the	living	light	eternal!
   Who	underneath	the	shadow	of	Parnassus
  Has	grown	so	pale,	or	drunk	so	at	its	cistern,
He	would	not	seem	to	have	his	mind	encumbered
   Striving	to	paint	thee	as	thou	didst	appear,
Where	the	harmonious	heaven	o'ershadowed	thee,
    When	in	the	open	air	thou	didst	unveil?                         	
                  Canto	XXXII
                         	
   So	steadfast	and	attentive	were	mine	eyes
       In	satisfying	their	decennial	thirst,
     That	all	my	other	senses	were	extinct,
    And	upon	this	side	and	on	that	they	had
    Walls	of	indifference,	so	the	holy	smile
     Drew	them	unto	itself	with	the	old	net
    When	forcibly	my	sight	was	turned	away
   Towards	my	left	hand	by	those	goddesses,
  Because	I	heard	from	them	a	"Too	intently!"
    And	that	condition	of	the	sight	which	is
      In	eyes	but	lately	smitten	by	the	sun
   Bereft	me	of	my	vision	some	short	while;
   But	to	the	less	when	sight	re-shaped	itself,
     I	say	the	less	in	reference	to	the	greater
Splendour	from	which	perforce	I	had	withdrawn,
    I	saw	upon	its	right	wing	wheeled	about
    The	glorious	host	returning	with	the	sun
  And	with	the	sevenfold	flames	upon	their	faces.
      As	underneath	its	shields,	to	save	itself,
   A	squadron	turns,	and	with	its	banner	wheels,
   Before	the	whole	thereof	can	change	its	front,
       That	soldiery	of	the	celestial	kingdom
Which	marched	in	the	advance	had	wholly	passed	us
       Before	the	chariot	had	turned	its	pole.
Then	to	the	wheels	the	maidens	turned	themselves,
   And	the	Griffin	moved	his	burden	benedight,
     But	so	that	not	a	feather	of	him	fluttered.
    The	lady	fair	who	drew	me	through	the	ford
    Followed	with	Statius	and	myself	the	wheel
     Which	made	its	orbit	with	the	lesser	arc.
    So	passing	through	the	lofty	forest,	vacant
     By	fault	of	her	who	in	the	serpent	trusted,
     Angelic	music	made	our	steps	keep	time.
   Perchance	as	great	a	space	had	in	three	flights
   An	arrow	loosened	from	the	string	o'erpassed,
   As	we	had	moved	when	Beatrice	descended.
     I	heard	them	murmur	altogether,	"Adam!"
      Then	circled	they	about	a	tree	despoiled
   Of	blooms	and	other	leafage	on	each	bough.
     Its	tresses,	which	so	much	the	more	dilate
    As	higher	they	ascend,	had	been	by	Indians
    Among	their	forests	marvelled	at	for	height.
     "Blessed	art	thou,	O	Griffin,	who	dost	not
 Pluck	with	thy	beak	these	branches	sweet	to	taste,
     Since	appetite	by	this	was	turned	to	evil."
      After	this	fashion	round	the	tree	robust
   The	others	shouted;	and	the	twofold	creature:
   "Thus	is	preserved	the	seed	of	all	the	just."
 And	turning	to	the	pole	which	he	had	dragged,
  He	drew	it	close	beneath	the	widowed	bough,
      And	what	was	of	it	unto	it	left	bound.
In	the	same	manner	as	our	trees	(when	downward
 Falls	the	great	light,	with	that	together	mingled
     Which	after	the	celestial	Lasca	shines)
   Begin	to	swell,	and	then	renew	themselves,
    Each	one	with	its	own	colour,	ere	the	Sun
     Harness	his	steeds	beneath	another	star:
     Less	than	of	rose	and	more	than	violet
     A	hue	disclosing,	was	renewed	the	tree
    That	had	erewhile	its	boughs	so	desolate.
      I	never	heard,	nor	here	below	is	sung,
  The	hymn	which	afterward	that	people	sang,
     Nor	did	I	bear	the	melody	throughout.
    Had	I	the	power	to	paint	how	fell	asleep
 Those	eyes	compassionless,	of	Syrinx	hearing,
Those	eyes	to	which	more	watching	cost	so	dear,
    Even	as	a	painter	who	from	model	paints
    I	would	portray	how	I	was	lulled	asleep;
   He	may,	who	well	can	picture	drowsihood.
     Therefore	I	pass	to	what	time	I	awoke,
   And	say	a	splendour	rent	from	me	the	veil
Of	slumber,	and	a	calling:	"Rise,	what	dost	thou?"
     As	to	behold	the	apple-tree	in	blossom
  Which	makes	the	Angels	greedy	for	its	fruit,
   And	keeps	perpetual	bridals	in	the	Heaven,
   Peter	and	John	and	James	conducted	were,
     And,	overcome,	recovered	at	the	word
By	which	still	greater	slumbers	have	been	broken,
   And	saw	their	school	diminished	by	the	loss
         Not	only	of	Elias,	but	of	Moses,
    And	the	apparel	of	their	Master	changed;
      So	I	revived,	and	saw	that	piteous	one
  Above	me	standing,	who	had	been	conductress
      Aforetime	of	my	steps	beside	the	river,
   And	all	in	doubt	I	said,	"Where's	Beatrice?"
     And	she:	"Behold	her	seated	underneath
       The	leafage	new,	upon	the	root	of	it.
       Behold	the	company	that	circles	her;
     The	rest	behind	the	Griffin	are	ascending
 With	more	melodious	song,	and	more	profound."
 And	if	her	speech	were	more	diffuse	I	know	not,
       Because	already	in	my	sight	was	she
 Who	from	the	hearing	of	aught	else	had	shut	me.
        Alone	she	sat	upon	the	very	earth,
       Left	there	as	guardian	of	the	chariot
   Which	I	had	seen	the	biform	monster	fasten.
    Encircling	her,	a	cloister	made	themselves
The	seven	Nymphs,	with	those	lights	in	their	hands
   Which	are	secure	from	Aquilon	and	Auster.
    "Short	while	shalt	thou	be	here	a	forester,
     And	thou	shalt	be	with	me	for	evermore
  A	citizen	of	that	Rome	where	Christ	is	Roman.
 Therefore,	for	that	world's	good	which	liveth	ill,
  Fix	on	the	car	thine	eyes,	and	what	thou	seest,
 Having	returned	to	earth,	take	heed	thou	write."
       Thus	Beatrice;	and	I,	who	at	the	feet
     Of	her	commandments	all	devoted	was,
    My	mind	and	eyes	directed	where	she	willed.
       Never	descended	with	so	swift	a	motion
     Fire	from	a	heavy	cloud,	when	it	is	raining
     From	out	the	region	which	is	most	remote,
         As	I	beheld	the	bird	of	Jove	descend
   Down	through	the	tree,	rending	away	the	bark,
      As	well	as	blossoms	and	the	foliage	new,
     And	he	with	all	his	might	the	chariot	smote,
      Whereat	it	reeled,	like	vessel	in	a	tempest
Tossed	by	the	waves,	now	starboard	and	now	larboard.
         Thereafter	saw	I	leap	into	the	body
           Of	the	triumphal	vehicle	a	Fox,
    That	seemed	unfed	with	any	wholesome	food.
       But	for	his	hideous	sins	upbraiding	him,
         My	Lady	put	him	to	as	swift	a	flight
       As	such	a	fleshless	skeleton	could	bear.
      Then	by	the	way	that	it	before	had	come,
        Into	the	chariot's	chest	I	saw	the	Eagle
   Descend,	and	leave	it	feathered	with	his	plumes.
    And	such	as	issues	from	a	heart	that	mourns,
    A	voice	from	Heaven	there	issued,	and	it	said:
    "My	little	bark,	how	badly	art	thou	freighted!"
  Methought,	then,	that	the	earth	did	yawn	between
    Both	wheels,	and	I	saw	rise	from	it	a	Dragon,
    Who	through	the	chariot	upward	fixed	his	tail,
      And	as	a	wasp	that	draweth	back	its	sting,
        Drawing	unto	himself	his	tail	malign,
   Drew	out	the	floor,	and	went	his	way	rejoicing.
   That	which	remained	behind,	even	as	with	grass
      A	fertile	region,	with	the	feathers,	offered
     Perhaps	with	pure	intention	and	benign,
  Reclothed	itself,	and	with	them	were	reclothed
    The	pole	and	both	the	wheels	so	speedily,
      A	sigh	doth	longer	keep	the	lips	apart.
        Transfigured	thus	the	holy	edifice
     Thrust	forward	heads	upon	the	parts	of	it,
    Three	on	the	pole	and	one	at	either	corner.
   The	first	were	horned	like	oxen;	but	the	four
     Had	but	a	single	horn	upon	the	forehead;
     A	monster	such	had	never	yet	been	seen!
       Firm	as	a	rock	upon	a	mountain	high,
       Seated	upon	it,	there	appeared	to	me
A	shameless	whore,	with	eyes	swift	glancing	round,
    And,	as	if	not	to	have	her	taken	from	him,
        Upright	beside	her	I	beheld	a	giant;
    And	ever	and	anon	they	kissed	each	other.
     But	because	she	her	wanton,	roving	eye
       Turned	upon	me,	her	angry	paramour
   Did	scourge	her	from	her	head	unto	her	feet.
   Then	full	of	jealousy,	and	fierce	with	wrath,
   He	loosed	the	monster,	and	across	the	forest
     Dragged	it	so	far,	he	made	of	that	alone
  A	shield	unto	the	whore	and	the	strange	beast.                         	
                  Canto	XXXIII
                         	
        "Deus	venerunt	gentes,"	alternating
    Now	three,	now	four,	melodious	psalmody
     The	maidens	in	the	midst	of	tears	began;
    And	Beatrice,	compassionate	and	sighing,
   Listened	to	them	with	such	a	countenance,
That	scarce	more	changed	was	Mary	at	the	cross.
   But	when	the	other	virgins	place	had	given
       For	her	to	speak,	uprisen	to	her	feet
   With	colour	as	of	fire,	she	made	response:
        "'Modicum,	et	non	videbitis	me;
         Et	iterum,'	my	sisters	predilect,
        'Modicum,	et	vos	videbitis	me.'"
  Then	all	the	seven	in	front	of	her	she	placed;
    And	after	her,	by	beckoning	only,	moved
   Me	and	the	lady	and	the	sage	who	stayed.
    So	she	moved	onward;	and	I	do	not	think
That	her	tenth	step	was	placed	upon	the	ground,
 When	with	her	eyes	upon	mine	eyes	she	smote,
And	with	a	tranquil	aspect,	"Come	more	quickly,"
   To	me	she	said,	"that,	if	I	speak	with	thee,
   To	listen	to	me	thou	mayst	be	well	placed."
    As	soon	as	I	was	with	her	as	I	should	be,
  She	said	to	me:	"Why,	brother,	dost	thou	not
 Venture	to	question	now,	in	coming	with	me?"
     As	unto	those	who	are	too	reverential,
       Speaking	in	presence	of	superiors,
   Who	drag	no	living	utterance	to	their	teeth,
     It	me	befell,	that	without	perfect	sound
       Began	I:	"My	necessity,	Madonna,
  You	know,	and	that	which	thereunto	is	good."
    And	she	to	me:	"Of	fear	and	bashfulness
   Henceforward	I	will	have	thee	strip	thyself,
 So	that	thou	speak	no	more	as	one	who	dreams.
  Know	that	the	vessel	which	the	serpent	broke
     Was,	and	is	not;	but	let	him	who	is	guilty
  Think	that	God's	vengeance	does	not	fear	a	sop.
        Without	an	heir	shall	not	for	ever	be
    The	Eagle	that	left	his	plumes	upon	the	car,
     Whence	it	became	a	monster,	then	a	prey;
        For	verily	I	see,	and	hence	narrate	it,
      The	stars	already	near	to	bring	the	time,
     From	every	hindrance	safe,	and	every	bar,
   Within	which	a	Five-hundred,	Ten,	and	Five,
 One	sent	from	God,	shall	slay	the	thievish	woman
    And	that	same	giant	who	is	sinning	with	her.
       And	peradventure	my	dark	utterance,
Like	Themis	and	the	Sphinx,	may	less	persuade	thee,
    Since,	in	their	mode,	it	clouds	the	intellect;
       But	soon	the	facts	shall	be	the	Naiades
       Who	shall	this	difficult	enigma	solve,
   Without	destruction	of	the	flocks	and	harvests.
     Note	thou;	and	even	as	by	me	are	uttered
  These	words,	so	teach	them	unto	those	who	live
      That	life	which	is	a	running	unto	death;
   And	bear	in	mind,	whene'er	thou	writest	them,
    Not	to	conceal	what	thou	hast	seen	the	plant,
     That	twice	already	has	been	pillaged	here.
          Whoever	pillages	or	shatters	it,
      With	blasphemy	of	deed	offendeth	God,
        Who	made	it	holy	for	his	use	alone.
        For	biting	that,	in	pain	and	in	desire
  Five	thousand	years	and	more	the	first-born	soul
   Craved	Him,	who	punished	in	himself	the	bite.
       Thy	genius	slumbers,	if	it	deem	it	not
        For	special	reason	so	pre-eminent
     In	height,	and	so	inverted	in	its	summit.
     And	if	thy	vain	imaginings	had	not	been
       Water	of	Elsa	round	about	thy	mind,
  And	Pyramus	to	the	mulberry,	their	pleasure,
      Thou	by	so	many	circumstances	only
        The	justice	of	the	interdict	of	God
      Morally	in	the	tree	wouldst	recognize.
       But	since	I	see	thee	in	thine	intellect
    Converted	into	stone	and	stained	with	sin,
 So	that	the	light	of	my	discourse	doth	daze	thee,
     I	will	too,	if	not	written,	at	least	painted,
   Thou	bear	it	back	within	thee,	for	the	reason
That	cinct	with	palm	the	pilgrim's	staff	is	borne."
         And	I:	"As	by	a	signet	is	the	wax
Which	does	not	change	the	figure	stamped	upon	it,
     My	brain	is	now	imprinted	by	yourself.
   But	wherefore	so	beyond	my	power	of	sight
     Soars	your	desirable	discourse,	that	aye
  The	more	I	strive,	so	much	the	more	I	lose	it?"
"That	thou	mayst	recognize,"	she	said,	"the	school
Which	thou	hast	followed,	and	mayst	see	how	far
     Its	doctrine	follows	after	my	discourse,
   And	mayst	behold	your	path	from	the	divine
           Distant	as	far	as	separated	is
 From	earth	the	heaven	that	highest	hastens	on."
   Whence	her	I	answered:	"I	do	not	remember
     That	ever	I	estranged	myself	from	you,
  Nor	have	I	conscience	of	it	that	reproves	me."
     "And	if	thou	art	not	able	to	remember,"
    Smiling	she	answered,	"recollect	thee	now
   That	thou	this	very	day	hast	drunk	of	Lethe;
    And	if	from	smoke	a	fire	may	be	inferred,
      Such	an	oblivion	clearly	demonstrates
     Some	error	in	thy	will	elsewhere	intent.
   Truly	from	this	time	forward	shall	my	words
         Be	naked,	so	far	as	it	is	befitting
      To	lay	them	open	unto	thy	rude	gaze."
    And	more	coruscant	and	with	slower	steps
     The	sun	was	holding	the	meridian	circle,
Which,	with	the	point	of	view,	shifts	here	and	there
       When	halted	(as	he	cometh	to	a	halt,
    Who	goes	before	a	squadron	as	its	escort,
     If	something	new	he	find	upon	his	way)
    The	ladies	seven	at	a	dark	shadow's	edge,
Such	as,	beneath	green	leaves	and	branches	black,
       The	Alp	upon	its	frigid	border	wears.
     In	front	of	them	the	Tigris	and	Euphrates
  Methought	I	saw	forth	issue	from	one	fountain,
 And	slowly	part,	like	friends,	from	one	another.
       "O	light,	O	glory	of	the	human	race!
   What	stream	is	this	which	here	unfolds	itself
From	out	one	source,	and	from	itself	withdraws?"
   For	such	a	prayer,	'twas	said	unto	me,	"Pray
  Matilda	that	she	tell	thee;"	and	here	answered,
 As	one	does	who	doth	free	himself	from	blame,
    The	beautiful	lady:	"This	and	other	things
      Were	told	to	him	by	me;	and	sure	I	am
 The	water	of	Lethe	has	not	hid	them	from	him."
      And	Beatrice:	"Perhaps	a	greater	care,
   Which	oftentimes	our	memory	takes	away,
   Has	made	the	vision	of	his	mind	obscure.
      But	Eunoe	behold,	that	yonder	rises;
  Lead	him	to	it,	and,	as	thou	art	accustomed,
   Revive	again	the	half-dead	virtue	in	him."
    Like	gentle	soul,	that	maketh	no	excuse,
    But	makes	its	own	will	of	another's	will
      As	soon	as	by	a	sign	it	is	disclosed,
   Even	so,	when	she	had	taken	hold	of	me,
  The	beautiful	lady	moved,	and	unto	Statius
Said,	in	her	womanly	manner,	"Come	with	him."
     If,	Reader,	I	possessed	a	longer	space
     For	writing	it,	I	yet	would	sing	in	part
Of	the	sweet	draught	that	ne'er	would	satiate	me;
     But	inasmuch	as	full	are	all	the	leaves
      Made	ready	for	this	second	canticle,
      The	curb	of	art	no	farther	lets	me	go.
      From	the	most	holy	water	I	returned
    Regenerate,	in	the	manner	of	new	trees
     That	are	renewed	with	a	new	foliage,
   Pure	and	disposed	to	mount	unto	the	stars.
                      ****                        	                        	
                  PARADISO
                        	
                     Canto	I
                        	
   The	glory	of	Him	who	moveth	everything
     Doth	penetrate	the	universe,	and	shine
       In	one	part	more	and	in	another	less.
 Within	that	heaven	which	most	his	light	receives
     Was	I,	and	things	beheld	which	to	repeat
  Nor	knows,	nor	can,	who	from	above	descends;
       Because	in	drawing	near	to	its	desire
        Our	intellect	ingulphs	itself	so	far,
       That	after	it	the	memory	cannot	go.
         Truly	whatever	of	the	holy	realm
      I	had	the	power	to	treasure	in	my	mind
    Shall	now	become	the	subject	of	my	song.
       O	good	Apollo,	for	this	last	emprise
      Make	of	me	such	a	vessel	of	thy	power
        As	giving	the	beloved	laurel	asks!
        One	summit	of	Parnassus	hitherto
   Has	been	enough	for	me,	but	now	with	both
         I	needs	must	enter	the	arena	left.
     Enter	into	my	bosom,	thou,	and	breathe
   As	at	the	time	when	Marsyas	thou	didst	draw
     Out	of	the	scabbard	of	those	limbs	of	his.
    O	power	divine,	lend'st	thou	thyself	to	me
     So	that	the	shadow	of	the	blessed	realm
    Stamped	in	my	brain	I	can	make	manifest,
    Thou'lt	see	me	come	unto	thy	darling	tree,
  And	crown	myself	thereafter	with	those	leaves
Of	which	the	theme	and	thou	shall	make	me	worthy.
      So	seldom,	Father,	do	we	gather	them
       For	triumph	or	of	Caesar	or	of	Poet,
   (The	fault	and	shame	of	human	inclinations,)
    That	the	Peneian	foliage	should	bring	forth
         Joy	to	the	joyous	Delphic	deity,
    When	any	one	it	makes	to	thirst	for	it.
   A	little	spark	is	followed	by	great	flame;
    Perchance	with	better	voices	after	me
Shall	prayer	be	made	that	Cyrrha	may	respond!
      To	mortal	men	by	passages	diverse
   Uprises	the	world's	lamp;	but	by	that	one
 Which	circles	four	uniteth	with	three	crosses,
   With	better	course	and	with	a	better	star
  Conjoined	it	issues,	and	the	mundane	wax
Tempers	and	stamps	more	after	its	own	fashion.
 Almost	that	passage	had	made	morning	there
And	evening	here,	and	there	was	wholly	white
  That	hemisphere,	and	black	the	other	part,
   When	Beatrice	towards	the	left-hand	side
  I	saw	turned	round,	and	gazing	at	the	sun;
      Never	did	eagle	fasten	so	upon	it!
       And	even	as	a	second	ray	is	wont
     To	issue	from	the	first	and	reascend,
   Like	to	a	pilgrim	who	would	fain	return,
 Thus	of	her	action,	through	the	eyes	infused
       In	my	imagination,	mine	I	made,
And	sunward	fixed	mine	eyes	beyond	our	wont.
 There	much	is	lawful	which	is	here	unlawful
    Unto	our	powers,	by	virtue	of	the	place
    Made	for	the	human	species	as	its	own.
     Not	long	I	bore	it,	nor	so	little	while
      But	I	beheld	it	sparkle	round	about
  Like	iron	that	comes	molten	from	the	fire;
    And	suddenly	it	seemed	that	day	to	day
    Was	added,	as	if	He	who	has	the	power
    Had	with	another	sun	the	heaven	adorned.
      With	eyes	upon	the	everlasting	wheels
      Stood	Beatrice	all	intent,	and	I,	on	her
      Fixing	my	vision	from	above	removed,
       Such	at	her	aspect	inwardly	became
  As	Glaucus,	tasting	of	the	herb	that	made	him
      Peer	of	the	other	gods	beneath	the	sea.
       To	represent	transhumanise	in	words
    Impossible	were;	the	example,	then,	suffice
  Him	for	whom	Grace	the	experience	reserves.
      If	I	was	merely	what	of	me	thou	newly
    Createdst,	Love	who	governest	the	heaven,
  Thou	knowest,	who	didst	lift	me	with	thy	light!
When	now	the	wheel,	which	thou	dost	make	eternal
       Desiring	thee,	made	me	attentive	to	it
  By	harmony	thou	dost	modulate	and	measure,
 Then	seemed	to	me	so	much	of	heaven	enkindled
   By	the	sun's	flame,	that	neither	rain	nor	river
    E'er	made	a	lake	so	widely	spread	abroad.
   The	newness	of	the	sound	and	the	great	light
     Kindled	in	me	a	longing	for	their	cause,
      Never	before	with	such	acuteness	felt;
    Whence	she,	who	saw	me	as	I	saw	myself,
        To	quiet	in	me	my	perturbed	mind,
     Opened	her	mouth,	ere	I	did	mine	to	ask,
   And	she	began:	"Thou	makest	thyself	so	dull
     With	false	imagining,	that	thou	seest	not
 What	thou	wouldst	see	if	thou	hadst	shaken	it	off.
    Thou	art	not	upon	earth,	as	thou	believest;
     But	lightning,	fleeing	its	appropriate	site,
   Ne'er	ran	as	thou,	who	thitherward	returnest."
       If	of	my	former	doubt	I	was	divested
By	these	brief	little	words	more	smiled	than	spoken,
      I	in	a	new	one	was	the	more	ensnared;
       And	said:	"Already	did	I	rest	content
   From	great	amazement;	but	am	now	amazed
    In	what	way	I	transcend	these	bodies	light."
        Whereupon	she,	after	a	pitying	sigh,
    Her	eyes	directed	tow'rds	me	with	that	look
        A	mother	casts	on	a	delirious	child;
    And	she	began:	"All	things	whate'er	they	be
  Have	order	among	themselves,	and	this	is	form,
      That	makes	the	universe	resemble	God.
   Here	do	the	higher	creatures	see	the	footprints
      Of	the	Eternal	Power,	which	is	the	end
   Whereto	is	made	the	law	already	mentioned.
      In	the	order	that	I	speak	of	are	inclined
       All	natures,	by	their	destinies	diverse,
        More	or	less	near	unto	their	origin;
    Hence	they	move	onward	unto	ports	diverse
     O'er	the	great	sea	of	being;	and	each	one
      With	instinct	given	it	which	bears	it	on.
    This	bears	away	the	fire	towards	the	moon;
     This	is	in	mortal	hearts	the	motive	power
      This	binds	together	and	unites	the	earth.
        Nor	only	the	created	things	that	are
    Without	intelligence	this	bow	shoots	forth,
    But	those	that	have	both	intellect	and	love.
       The	Providence	that	regulates	all	this
   Makes	with	its	light	the	heaven	forever	quiet,
 Wherein	that	turns	which	has	the	greatest	haste.
      And	thither	now,	as	to	a	site	decreed,
      Bears	us	away	the	virtue	of	that	cord
    Which	aims	its	arrows	at	a	joyous	mark.
      True	is	it,	that	as	oftentimes	the	form
    Accords	not	with	the	intention	of	the	art,
      Because	in	answering	is	matter	deaf,
    So	likewise	from	this	course	doth	deviate
Sometimes	the	creature,	who	the	power	possesses,
Though	thus	impelled,	to	swerve	some	other	way,
    (In	the	same	wise	as	one	may	see	the	fire
      Fall	from	a	cloud,)	if	the	first	impetus
   Earthward	is	wrested	by	some	false	delight.
 Thou	shouldst	not	wonder	more,	if	well	I	judge,
         At	thine	ascent,	than	at	a	rivulet
From	some	high	mount	descending	to	the	lowland.
     Marvel	it	would	be	in	thee,	if	deprived
   Of	hindrance,	thou	wert	seated	down	below,
    As	if	on	earth	the	living	fire	were	quiet."
 Thereat	she	heavenward	turned	again	her	face.                         	
                     Canto	II
                         	
      O	Ye,	who	in	some	pretty	little	boat,
      Eager	to	listen,	have	been	following
    Behind	my	ship,	that	singing	sails	along,
   Turn	back	to	look	again	upon	your	shores;
     Do	not	put	out	to	sea,	lest	peradventure,
   In	losing	me,	you	might	yourselves	be	lost.
    The	sea	I	sail	has	never	yet	been	passed;
   Minerva	breathes,	and	pilots	me	Apollo,
  And	Muses	nine	point	out	to	me	the	Bears.
   Ye	other	few	who	have	the	neck	uplifted
  Betimes	to	th'	bread	of	Angels	upon	which
   One	liveth	here	and	grows	not	sated	by	it,
  Well	may	you	launch	upon	the	deep	salt-sea
 Your	vessel,	keeping	still	my	wake	before	you
   Upon	the	water	that	grows	smooth	again.
 Those	glorious	ones	who	unto	Colchos	passed
  Were	not	so	wonder-struck	as	you	shall	be,
 When	Jason	they	beheld	a	ploughman	made!
      The	con-created	and	perpetual	thirst
     For	the	realm	deiform	did	bear	us	on,
   As	swift	almost	as	ye	the	heavens	behold.
     Upward	gazed	Beatrice,	and	I	at	her;
 And	in	such	space	perchance	as	strikes	a	bolt
  And	flies,	and	from	the	notch	unlocks	itself,
   Arrived	I	saw	me	where	a	wondrous	thing
   Drew	to	itself	my	sight;	and	therefore	she
From	whom	no	care	of	mine	could	be	concealed,
    Towards	me	turning,	blithe	as	beautiful,
    Said	unto	me:	"Fix	gratefully	thy	mind
On	God,	who	unto	the	first	star	has	brought	us."
   It	seemed	to	me	a	cloud	encompassed	us,
   Luminous,	dense,	consolidate	and	bright
   As	adamant	on	which	the	sun	is	striking.
         Into	itself	did	the	eternal	pearl
    Receive	us,	even	as	water	doth	receive
    A	ray	of	light,	remaining	still	unbroken.
   If	I	was	body,	(and	we	here	conceive	not
      How	one	dimension	tolerates	another,
    Which	needs	must	be	if	body	enter	body,)
    More	the	desire	should	be	enkindled	in	us
     That	essence	to	behold,	wherein	is	seen
   How	God	and	our	own	nature	were	united.
   There	will	be	seen	what	we	receive	by	faith,
        Not	demonstrated,	but	self-evident
   In	guise	of	the	first	truth	that	man	believes.
      I	made	reply:	"Madonna,	as	devoutly
      As	most	I	can	do	I	give	thanks	to	Him
  Who	has	removed	me	from	the	mortal	world.
     But	tell	me	what	the	dusky	spots	may	be
      Upon	this	body,	which	below	on	earth
  Make	people	tell	that	fabulous	tale	of	Cain?"
 Somewhat	she	smiled;	and	then,	"If	the	opinion
       Of	mortals	be	erroneous,"	she	said,
   "Where'er	the	key	of	sense	doth	not	unlock,
Certes,	the	shafts	of	wonder	should	not	pierce	thee
    Now,	forasmuch	as,	following	the	senses,
   Thou	seest	that	the	reason	has	short	wings.
   But	tell	me	what	thou	think'st	of	it	thyself."
    And	I:	"What	seems	to	us	up	here	diverse,
  Is	caused,	I	think,	by	bodies	rare	and	dense."
  And	she:	"Right	truly	shalt	thou	see	immersed
      In	error	thy	belief,	if	well	thou	hearest
    The	argument	that	I	shall	make	against	it.
  Lights	many	the	eighth	sphere	displays	to	you
       Which	in	their	quality	and	quantity
        May	noted	be	of	aspects	different.
   If	this	were	caused	by	rare	and	dense	alone,
      One	only	virtue	would	there	be	in	all
      Or	more	or	less	diffused,	or	equally.
   Virtues	diverse	must	be	perforce	the	fruits
    Of	formal	principles;	and	these,	save	one,
Of	course	would	by	thy	reasoning	be	destroyed.
     Besides,	if	rarity	were	of	this	dimness
The	cause	thou	askest,	either	through	and	through
    This	planet	thus	attenuate	were	of	matter,
       Or	else,	as	in	a	body	is	apportioned
     The	fat	and	lean,	so	in	like	manner	this
  Would	in	its	volume	interchange	the	leaves.
     Were	it	the	former,	in	the	sun's	eclipse
  It	would	be	manifest	by	the	shining	through
  Of	light,	as	through	aught	tenuous	interfused.
  This	is	not	so;	hence	we	must	scan	the	other,
      And	if	it	chance	the	other	I	demolish,
       Then	falsified	will	thy	opinion	be.
  But	if	this	rarity	go	not	through	and	through,
   There	needs	must	be	a	limit,	beyond	which
    Its	contrary	prevents	the	further	passing,
  And	thence	the	foreign	radiance	is	reflected,
    Even	as	a	colour	cometh	back	from	glass,
    The	which	behind	itself	concealeth	lead.
  Now	thou	wilt	say	the	sunbeam	shows	itself
    More	dimly	there	than	in	the	other	parts,
      By	being	there	reflected	farther	back.
    From	this	reply	experiment	will	free	thee
      If	e'er	thou	try	it,	which	is	wont	to	be
     The	fountain	to	the	rivers	of	your	arts.
 Three	mirrors	shalt	thou	take,	and	two	remove
    Alike	from	thee,	the	other	more	remote
 Between	the	former	two	shall	meet	thine	eyes.
Turned	towards	these,	cause	that	behind	thy	back
  Be	placed	a	light,	illuming	the	three	mirrors
   And	coming	back	to	thee	by	all	reflected.
     Though	in	its	quantity	be	not	so	ample
  The	image	most	remote,	there	shalt	thou	see
     How	it	perforce	is	equally	resplendent.
   Now,	as	beneath	the	touches	of	warm	rays
     Naked	the	subject	of	the	snow	remains
     Both	of	its	former	colour	and	its	cold,
      Thee	thus	remaining	in	thy	intellect,
     Will	I	inform	with	such	a	living	light,
    That	it	shall	tremble	in	its	aspect	to	thee.
     Within	the	heaven	of	the	divine	repose
     Revolves	a	body,	in	whose	virtue	lies
       The	being	of	whatever	it	contains.
 The	following	heaven,	that	has	so	many	eyes,
    Divides	this	being	by	essences	diverse,
   Distinguished	from	it,	and	by	it	contained.
   The	other	spheres,	by	various	differences,
All	the	distinctions	which	they	have	within	them
    Dispose	unto	their	ends	and	their	effects.
  Thus	do	these	organs	of	the	world	proceed,
  As	thou	perceivest	now,	from	grade	to	grade;
  Since	from	above	they	take,	and	act	beneath.
Observe	me	well,	how	through	this	place	I	come
   Unto	the	truth	thou	wishest,	that	hereafter
 Thou	mayst	alone	know	how	to	keep	the	ford
   The	power	and	motion	of	the	holy	spheres,
     As	from	the	artisan	the	hammer's	craft,
  Forth	from	the	blessed	motors	must	proceed.
 The	heaven,	which	lights	so	manifold	make	fair,
 From	the	Intelligence	profound,	which	turns	it,
     The	image	takes,	and	makes	of	it	a	seal.
      And	even	as	the	soul	within	your	dust
 Through	members	different	and	accommodated
        To	faculties	diverse	expands	itself,
      So	likewise	this	Intelligence	diffuses
      Its	virtue	multiplied	among	the	stars.
           Itself	revolving	on	its	unity.
      Virtue	diverse	doth	a	diverse	alloyage
  Make	with	the	precious	body	that	it	quickens,
     In	which,	as	life	in	you,	it	is	combined.
    From	the	glad	nature	whence	it	is	derived,
   The	mingled	virtue	through	the	body	shines,
    Even	as	gladness	through	the	living	pupil.
  From	this	proceeds	whate'er	from	light	to	light
  Appeareth	different,	not	from	dense	and	rare:
    This	is	the	formal	principle	that	produces,
   According	to	its	goodness,	dark	and	bright."                         	
                     Canto	III
                         	
That	Sun,	which	erst	with	love	my	bosom	warmed,
   Of	beauteous	truth	had	unto	me	discovered,
   By	proving	and	reproving,	the	sweet	aspect.
   And,	that	I	might	confess	myself	convinced
      And	confident,	so	far	as	was	befitting,
       I	lifted	more	erect	my	head	to	speak.
  But	there	appeared	a	vision,	which	withdrew	me
          So	close	to	it,	in	order	to	be	seen,
       That	my	confession	I	remembered	not.
   Such	as	through	polished	and	transparent	glass,
       Or	waters	crystalline	and	undisturbed,
      But	not	so	deep	as	that	their	bed	be	lost,
     Come	back	again	the	outlines	of	our	faces
      So	feeble,	that	a	pearl	on	forehead	white
       Comes	not	less	speedily	unto	our	eyes;
      Such	saw	I	many	faces	prompt	to	speak,
            So	that	I	ran	in	error	opposite
 To	that	which	kindled	love	'twixt	man	and	fountain.
         As	soon	as	I	became	aware	of	them,
      Esteeming	them	as	mirrored	semblances,
   To	see	of	whom	they	were,	mine	eyes	I	turned,
And	nothing	saw,	and	once	more	turned	them	forward
      Direct	into	the	light	of	my	sweet	Guide,
       Who	smiling	kindled	in	her	holy	eyes.
    "Marvel	thou	not,"	she	said	to	me,	"because
          I	smile	at	this	thy	puerile	conceit,
      Since	on	the	truth	it	trusts	not	yet	its	foot,
      But	turns	thee,	as	'tis	wont,	on	emptiness.
  True	substances	are	these	which	thou	beholdest,
      Here	relegate	for	breaking	of	some	vow.
   Therefore	speak	with	them,	listen	and	believe;
   For	the	true	light,	which	giveth	peace	to	them,
     Permits	them	not	to	turn	from	it	their	feet."
   And	I	unto	the	shade	that	seemed	most	wishful
         To	speak	directed	me,	and	I	began,
    As	one	whom	too	great	eagerness	bewilders:
       "O	well-created	spirit,	who	in	the	rays
       Of	life	eternal	dost	the	sweetness	taste
    Which	being	untasted	ne'er	is	comprehended,
     Grateful	'twill	be	to	me,	if	thou	content	me
    Both	with	thy	name	and	with	your	destiny."
   Whereat	she	promptly	and	with	laughing	eyes:
       "Our	charity	doth	never	shut	the	doors
         Against	a	just	desire,	except	as	one
     Who	wills	that	all	her	court	be	like	herself.
          I	was	a	virgin	sister	in	the	world;
     And	if	thy	mind	doth	contemplate	me	well,
 The	being	more	fair	will	not	conceal	me	from	thee,
       But	thou	shalt	recognise	I	am	Piccarda,
  Who,	stationed	here	among	these	other	blessed,
      Myself	am	blessed	in	the	slowest	sphere.
       All	our	affections,	that	alone	inflamed
       Are	in	the	pleasure	of	the	Holy	Ghost,
        Rejoice	at	being	of	his	order	formed;
     And	this	allotment,	which	appears	so	low,
      Therefore	is	given	us,	because	our	vows
    Have	been	neglected	and	in	some	part	void."
    Whence	I	to	her:	"In	your	miraculous	aspects
    There	shines	I	know	not	what	of	the	divine,
Which	doth	transform	you	from	our	first	conceptions.
   Therefore	I	was	not	swift	in	my	remembrance;
      But	what	thou	tellest	me	now	aids	me	so,
         That	the	refiguring	is	easier	to	me.
     But	tell	me,	ye	who	in	this	place	are	happy,
         Are	you	desirous	of	a	higher	place,
 To	see	more	or	to	make	yourselves	more	friends?"
  First	with	those	other	shades	she	smiled	a	little;
    Thereafter	answered	me	so	full	of	gladness,
    She	seemed	to	burn	in	the	first	fire	of	love:
       "Brother,	our	will	is	quieted	by	virtue
        Of	charity,	that	makes	us	wish	alone
  For	what	we	have,	nor	gives	us	thirst	for	more.
         If	to	be	more	exalted	we	aspired,
        Discordant	would	our	aspirations	be
    Unto	the	will	of	Him	who	here	secludes	us;
Which	thou	shalt	see	finds	no	place	in	these	circles,
         If	being	in	charity	is	needful	here,
      And	if	thou	lookest	well	into	its	nature;
      Nay,	'tis	essential	to	this	blest	existence
        To	keep	itself	within	the	will	divine,
     Whereby	our	very	wishes	are	made	one;
      So	that,	as	we	are	station	above	station
Throughout	this	realm,	to	all	the	realm	'tis	pleasing,
   As	to	the	King,	who	makes	his	will	our	will.
      And	his	will	is	our	peace;	this	is	the	sea
      To	which	is	moving	onward	whatsoever
     It	doth	create,	and	all	that	nature	makes."
     Then	it	was	clear	to	me	how	everywhere
     In	heaven	is	Paradise,	although	the	grace
  Of	good	supreme	there	rain	not	in	one	measure.
     But	as	it	comes	to	pass,	if	one	food	sates,
     And	for	another	still	remains	the	longing,
   We	ask	for	this,	and	that	decline	with	thanks,
    E'en	thus	did	I;	with	gesture	and	with	word,
   To	learn	from	her	what	was	the	web	wherein
       She	did	not	ply	the	shuttle	to	the	end.
     "A	perfect	life	and	merit	high	in-heaven
     A	lady	o'er	us,"	said	she,	"by	whose	rule
Down	in	your	world	they	vest	and	veil	themselves,
 That	until	death	they	may	both	watch	and	sleep
   Beside	that	Spouse	who	every	vow	accepts
    Which	charity	conformeth	to	his	pleasure.
    To	follow	her,	in	girlhood	from	the	world
       I	fled,	and	in	her	habit	shut	myself,
   And	pledged	me	to	the	pathway	of	her	sect.
      Then	men	accustomed	unto	evil	more
Than	unto	good,	from	the	sweet	cloister	tore	me;
   God	knows	what	afterward	my	life	became.
   This	other	splendour,	which	to	thee	reveals
     Itself	on	my	right	side,	and	is	enkindled
     With	all	the	illumination	of	our	sphere,
       What	of	myself	I	say	applies	to	her;
   A	nun	was	she,	and	likewise	from	her	head
   Was	ta'en	the	shadow	of	the	sacred	wimple.
   But	when	she	too	was	to	the	world	returned
   Against	her	wishes	and	against	good	usage,
    Of	the	heart's	veil	she	never	was	divested.
     Of	great	Costanza	this	is	the	effulgence,
      Who	from	the	second	wind	of	Suabia
  Brought	forth	the	third	and	latest	puissance."
     Thus	unto	me	she	spake,	and	then	began
       "Ave	Maria"	singing,	and	in	singing
Vanished,	as	through	deep	water	something	heavy.
    My	sight,	that	followed	her	as	long	a	time
     As	it	was	possible,	when	it	had	lost	her
   Turned	round	unto	the	mark	of	more	desire,
      And	wholly	unto	Beatrice	reverted;
 But	she	such	lightnings	flashed	into	mine	eyes,
    That	at	the	first	my	sight	endured	it	not;
And	this	in	questioning	more	backward	made	me.                         	
                    Canto	IV
                         	
     Between	two	viands,	equally	removed
 And	tempting,	a	free	man	would	die	of	hunger
    Ere	either	he	could	bring	unto	his	teeth.
    So	would	a	lamb	between	the	ravenings
 Of	two	fierce	wolves	stand	fearing	both	alike;
  And	so	would	stand	a	dog	between	two	does.
 Hence,	if	I	held	my	peace,	myself	I	blame	not,
   Impelled	in	equal	measure	by	my	doubts,
     Since	it	must	be	so,	nor	do	I	commend.
   I	held	my	peace;	but	my	desire	was	painted
    Upon	my	face,	and	questioning	with	that
   More	fervent	far	than	by	articulate	speech.
        Beatrice	did	as	Daniel	had	done
   Relieving	Nebuchadnezzar	from	the	wrath
    Which	rendered	him	unjustly	merciless,
    And	said:	"Well	see	I	how	attracteth	thee
    One	and	the	other	wish,	so	that	thy	care
  Binds	itself	so	that	forth	it	does	not	breathe.
    Thou	arguest,	if	good	will	be	permanent,
    The	violence	of	others,	for	what	reason
   Doth	it	decrease	the	measure	of	my	merit?
    Again	for	doubting	furnish	thee	occasion
     Souls	seeming	to	return	unto	the	stars,
       According	to	the	sentiment	of	Plato.
  These	are	the	questions	which	upon	thy	wish
     Are	thrusting	equally;	and	therefore	first
   Will	I	treat	that	which	hath	the	most	of	gall.
    He	of	the	Seraphim	most	absorbed	in	God,
     Moses,	and	Samuel,	and	whichever	John
     Thou	mayst	select,	I	say,	and	even	Mary,
     Have	not	in	any	other	heaven	their	seats,
Than	have	those	spirits	that	just	appeared	to	thee,
      Nor	of	existence	more	or	fewer	years;
     But	all	make	beautiful	the	primal	circle,
     And	have	sweet	life	in	different	degrees,
    By	feeling	more	or	less	the	eternal	breath.
They	showed	themselves	here,	not	because	allotted
  This	sphere	has	been	to	them,	but	to	give	sign
      Of	the	celestial	which	is	least	exalted.
      To	speak	thus	is	adapted	to	your	mind,
   Since	only	through	the	sense	it	apprehendeth
     What	then	it	worthy	makes	of	intellect.
    On	this	account	the	Scripture	condescends
     Unto	your	faculties,	and	feet	and	hands
  To	God	attributes,	and	means	something	else;
    And	Holy	Church	under	an	aspect	human
      Gabriel	and	Michael	represent	to	you,
     And	him	who	made	Tobias	whole	again.
      That	which	Timaeus	argues	of	the	soul
    Doth	not	resemble	that	which	here	is	seen,
   Because	it	seems	that	as	he	speaks	he	thinks.
       He	says	the	soul	unto	its	star	returns,
     Believing	it	to	have	been	severed	thence
      Whenever	nature	gave	it	as	a	form.
     Perhaps	his	doctrine	is	of	other	guise
  Than	the	words	sound,	and	possibly	may	be
    With	meaning	that	is	not	to	be	derided.
   If	he	doth	mean	that	to	these	wheels	return
  The	honour	of	their	influence	and	the	blame,
   Perhaps	his	bow	doth	hit	upon	some	truth.
   This	principle	ill	understood	once	warped
   The	whole	world	nearly,	till	it	went	astray
     Invoking	Jove	and	Mercury	and	Mars.
   The	other	doubt	which	doth	disquiet	thee
      Less	venom	has,	for	its	malevolence
  Could	never	lead	thee	otherwhere	from	me.
    That	as	unjust	our	justice	should	appear
       In	eyes	of	mortals,	is	an	argument
        Of	faith,	and	not	of	sin	heretical.
   But	still,	that	your	perception	may	be	able
      To	thoroughly	penetrate	this	verity,
      As	thou	desirest,	I	will	satisfy	thee.
     If	it	be	violence	when	he	who	suffers
   Co-operates	not	with	him	who	uses	force,
 These	souls	were	not	on	that	account	excused;
   For	will	is	never	quenched	unless	it	will,
       But	operates	as	nature	doth	in	fire
     If	violence	a	thousand	times	distort	it.
  Hence,	if	it	yieldeth	more	or	less,	it	seconds
The	force;	and	these	have	done	so,	having	power
      Of	turning	back	unto	the	holy	place.
    If	their	will	had	been	perfect,	like	to	that
 Which	Lawrence	fast	upon	his	gridiron	held,
     And	Mutius	made	severe	to	his	own	hand,
    It	would	have	urged	them	back	along	the	road
Whence	they	were	dragged,	as	soon	as	they	were	free;
         But	such	a	solid	will	is	all	too	rare.
   And	by	these	words,	if	thou	hast	gathered	them
    As	thou	shouldst	do,	the	argument	is	refuted
   That	would	have	still	annoyed	thee	many	times.
        But	now	another	passage	runs	across
     Before	thine	eyes,	and	such	that	by	thyself
Thou	couldst	not	thread	it	ere	thou	wouldst	be	weary.
         I	have	for	certain	put	into	thy	mind
         That	soul	beatified	could	never	lie,
           For	it	is	near	the	primal	Truth,
  And	then	thou	from	Piccarda	might'st	have	heard
        Costanza	kept	affection	for	the	veil,
     So	that	she	seemeth	here	to	contradict	me.
      Many	times,	brother,	has	it	come	to	pass,
     That,	to	escape	from	peril,	with	reluctance
      That	has	been	done	it	was	not	right	to	do,
     E'en	as	Alcmaeon	(who,	being	by	his	father
      Thereto	entreated,	his	own	mother	slew)
          Not	to	lose	pity	pitiless	became.
       At	this	point	I	desire	thee	to	remember
  That	force	with	will	commingles,	and	they	cause
        That	the	offences	cannot	be	excused.
        Will	absolute	consenteth	not	to	evil;
         But	in	so	far	consenteth	as	it	fears,
         If	it	refrain,	to	fall	into	more	harm.
     Hence	when	Piccarda	uses	this	expression,
        She	meaneth	the	will	absolute,	and	I
     The	other,	so	that	both	of	us	speak	truth."
      Such	was	the	flowing	of	the	holy	river
That	issued	from	the	fount	whence	springs	all	truth;
      This	put	to	rest	my	wishes	one	and	all.
       "O	love	of	the	first	lover,	O	divine,"
   Said	I	forthwith,	"whose	speech	inundates	me
 And	warms	me	so,	it	more	and	more	revives	me,
       My	own	affection	is	not	so	profound
     As	to	suffice	in	rendering	grace	for	grace;
   Let	Him,	who	sees	and	can,	thereto	respond.
         Well	I	perceive	that	never	sated	is
      Our	intellect	unless	the	Truth	illume	it,
    Beyond	which	nothing	true	expands	itself.
      It	rests	therein,	as	wild	beast	in	his	lair,
       When	it	attains	it;	and	it	can	attain	it;
    If	not,	then	each	desire	would	frustrate	be.
    Therefore	springs	up,	in	fashion	of	a	shoot,
   Doubt	at	the	foot	of	truth;	and	this	is	nature,
 Which	to	the	top	from	height	to	height	impels	us.
    This	doth	invite	me,	this	assurance	give	me
      With	reverence,	Lady,	to	inquire	of	you
      Another	truth,	which	is	obscure	to	me.
       I	wish	to	know	if	man	can	satisfy	you
    For	broken	vows	with	other	good	deeds,	so
    That	in	your	balance	they	will	not	be	light."
      Beatrice	gazed	upon	me	with	her	eyes
     Full	of	the	sparks	of	love,	and	so	divine,
   That,	overcome	my	power,	I	turned	my	back
   And	almost	lost	myself	with	eyes	downcast.                           	
                    Canto	V                         	
    "If	in	the	heat	of	love	I	flame	upon	thee
   Beyond	the	measure	that	on	earth	is	seen,
  So	that	the	valour	of	thine	eyes	I	vanquish,
   Marvel	thou	not	thereat;	for	this	proceeds
  From	perfect	sight,	which	as	it	apprehends
    To	the	good	apprehended	moves	its	feet.
     Well	I	perceive	how	is	already	shining
      Into	thine	intellect	the	eternal	light,
     That	only	seen	enkindles	always	love;
   And	if	some	other	thing	your	love	seduce,
     'Tis	nothing	but	a	vestige	of	the	same,
 Ill	understood,	which	there	is	shining	through.
Thou	fain	wouldst	know	if	with	another	service
   For	broken	vow	can	such	return	be	made
   As	to	secure	the	soul	from	further	claim."
      This	Canto	thus	did	Beatrice	begin;
 And,	as	a	man	who	breaks	not	off	his	speech,
      Continued	thus	her	holy	argument:
    "The	greatest	gift	that	in	his	largess	God
  Creating	made,	and	unto	his	own	goodness
Nearest	conformed,	and	that	which	he	doth	prize
    Most	highly,	is	the	freedom	of	the	will,
    Wherewith	the	creatures	of	intelligence
   Both	all	and	only	were	and	are	endowed.
  Now	wilt	thou	see,	if	thence	thou	reasonest,
    The	high	worth	of	a	vow,	if	it	he	made
  So	that	when	thou	consentest	God	consents:
For,	closing	between	God	and	man	the	compact,
          A	sacrifice	is	of	this	treasure	made,
        Such	as	I	say,	and	made	by	its	own	act.
     What	can	be	rendered	then	as	compensation?
Think'st	thou	to	make	good	use	of	what	thou'st	offered,
   With	gains	ill	gotten	thou	wouldst	do	good	deed.
       Now	art	thou	certain	of	the	greater	point;
      But	because	Holy	Church	in	this	dispenses,
Which	seems	against	the	truth	which	I	have	shown	thee,
        Behoves	thee	still	to	sit	awhile	at	table,
     Because	the	solid	food	which	thou	hast	taken
        Requireth	further	aid	for	thy	digestion.
         Open	thy	mind	to	that	which	I	reveal,
    And	fix	it	there	within;	for	'tis	not	knowledge,
        The	having	heard	without	retaining	it.
       In	the	essence	of	this	sacrifice	two	things
         Convene	together;	and	the	one	is	that
    Of	which	'tis	made,	the	other	is	the	agreement.
        This	last	for	evermore	is	cancelled	not
      Unless	complied	with,	and	concerning	this
     With	such	precision	has	above	been	spoken.
     Therefore	it	was	enjoined	upon	the	Hebrews
   To	offer	still,	though	sometimes	what	was	offered
    Might	be	commuted,	as	thou	ought'st	to	know.
     The	other,	which	is	known	to	thee	as	matter,
      May	well	indeed	be	such	that	one	errs	not
          If	it	for	other	matter	be	exchanged.
     But	let	none	shift	the	burden	on	his	shoulder
        At	his	arbitrament,	without	the	turning
       Both	of	the	white	and	of	the	yellow	key;
       And	every	permutation	deem	as	foolish,
    If	in	the	substitute	the	thing	relinquished,
      As	the	four	is	in	six,	be	not	contained.
  Therefore	whatever	thing	has	so	great	weight
    In	value	that	it	drags	down	every	balance,
     Cannot	be	satisfied	with	other	spending.
       Let	mortals	never	take	a	vow	in	jest;
      Be	faithful	and	not	blind	in	doing	that,
      As	Jephthah	was	in	his	first	offering,
Whom	more	beseemed	to	say,	'I	have	done	wrong,
   Than	to	do	worse	by	keeping;	and	as	foolish
  Thou	the	great	leader	of	the	Greeks	wilt	find,
      Whence	wept	Iphigenia	her	fair	face,
  And	made	for	her	both	wise	and	simple	weep,
   Who	heard	such	kind	of	worship	spoken	of.'
Christians,	be	ye	more	serious	in	your	movements;
      Be	ye	not	like	a	feather	at	each	wind,
     And	think	not	every	water	washes	you.
    Ye	have	the	Old	and	the	New	Testament,
  And	the	Pastor	of	the	Church	who	guideth	you
     Let	this	suffice	you	unto	your	salvation.
      If	evil	appetite	cry	aught	else	to	you,
      Be	ye	as	men,	and	not	as	silly	sheep,
 So	that	the	Jew	among	you	may	not	mock	you.
     Be	ye	not	as	the	lamb	that	doth	abandon
   Its	mother's	milk,	and	frolicsome	and	simple
    Combats	at	its	own	pleasure	with	itself."
      Thus	Beatrice	to	me	even	as	I	write	it;
      Then	all	desireful	turned	herself	again
    To	that	part	where	the	world	is	most	alive.
   Her	silence	and	her	change	of	countenance
       Silence	imposed	upon	my	eager	mind,
    That	had	already	in	advance	new	questions;
        And	as	an	arrow	that	upon	the	mark
    Strikes	ere	the	bowstring	quiet	hath	become,
       So	did	we	speed	into	the	second	realm.
         My	Lady	there	so	joyful	I	beheld,
 As	into	the	brightness	of	that	heaven	she	entered,
      More	luminous	thereat	the	planet	grew;
   And	if	the	star	itself	was	changed	and	smiled,
       What	became	I,	who	by	my	nature	am
         Exceeding	mutable	in	every	guise!
   As,	in	a	fish-pond	which	is	pure	and	tranquil,
    The	fishes	draw	to	that	which	from	without
Comes	in	such	fashion	that	their	food	they	deem	it;
    So	I	beheld	more	than	a	thousand	splendours
    Drawing	towards	us,	and	in	each	was	heard:
    "Lo,	this	is	she	who	shall	increase	our	love."
       And	as	each	one	was	coming	unto	us,
        Full	of	beatitude	the	shade	was	seen,
     By	the	effulgence	clear	that	issued	from	it.
    Think,	Reader,	if	what	here	is	just	beginning
 No	farther	should	proceed,	how	thou	wouldst	have
       An	agonizing	need	of	knowing	more;
     And	of	thyself	thou'lt	see	how	I	from	these
     Was	in	desire	of	hearing	their	conditions,
       As	they	unto	mine	eyes	were	manifest.
  "O	thou	well-born,	unto	whom	Grace	concedes
      To	see	the	thrones	of	the	eternal	triumph,
       Or	ever	yet	the	warfare	be	abandoned
With	light	that	through	the	whole	of	heaven	is	spread
     Kindled	are	we,	and	hence	if	thou	desirest
  To	know	of	us,	at	thine	own	pleasure	sate	thee."
    Thus	by	some	one	among	those	holy	spirits
   Was	spoken,	and	by	Beatrice:	"Speak,	speak
    Securely,	and	believe	them	even	as	Gods."
    "Well	I	perceive	how	thou	dost	nest	thyself
 In	thine	own	light,	and	drawest	it	from	thine	eyes,
   Because	they	coruscate	when	thou	dost	smile,
  But	know	not	who	thou	art,	nor	why	thou	hast,
       Spirit	august,	thy	station	in	the	sphere
       That	veils	itself	to	men	in	alien	rays."
         This	said	I	in	direction	of	the	light
 Which	first	had	spoken	to	me;	whence	it	became
       By	far	more	lucent	than	it	was	before.
     Even	as	the	sun,	that	doth	conceal	himself
   By	too	much	light,	when	heat	has	worn	away
  The	tempering	influence	of	the	vapours	dense,
      By	greater	rapture	thus	concealed	itself
       In	its	own	radiance	the	figure	saintly,
   And	thus	close,	close	enfolded	answered	me
      In	fashion	as	the	following	Canto	sings.                           	
                      Canto	VI
                           	
      "After	that	Constantine	the	eagle	turned
Against	the	course	of	heaven,	which	it	had	followed
       Behind	the	ancient	who	Lavinia	took,
   Two	hundred	years	and	more	the	bird	of	God
        In	the	extreme	of	Europe	held	itself,
   Near	to	the	mountains	whence	it	issued	first;
      And	under	shadow	of	the	sacred	plumes
   It	governed	there	the	world	from	hand	to	hand,
   And,	changing	thus,	upon	mine	own	alighted.
          Caesar	I	was,	and	am	Justinian,
       Who,	by	the	will	of	primal	Love	I	feel,
   Took	from	the	laws	the	useless	and	redundant;
        And	ere	unto	the	work	I	was	attent,
       One	nature	to	exist	in	Christ,	not	more,
   Believed,	and	with	such	faith	was	I	contented.
         But	blessed	Agapetus,	he	who	was
      The	supreme	pastor,	to	the	faith	sincere
      Pointed	me	out	the	way	by	words	of	his.
     Him	I	believed,	and	what	was	his	assertion
        I	now	see	clearly,	even	as	thou	seest
       Each	contradiction	to	be	false	and	true.
   As	soon	as	with	the	Church	I	moved	my	feet,
   God	in	his	grace	it	pleased	with	this	high	task
     To	inspire	me,	and	I	gave	me	wholly	to	it,
        And	to	my	Belisarius	I	commended
The	arms,	to	which	was	heaven's	right	hand	so	joined
        It	was	a	signal	that	I	should	repose.
      Now	here	to	the	first	question	terminates
        My	answer;	but	the	character	thereof
      Constrains	me	to	continue	with	a	sequel,
    In	order	that	thou	see	with	how	great	reason
     Men	move	against	the	standard	sacrosanct,
     Both	who	appropriate	and	who	oppose	it.
   Behold	how	great	a	power	has	made	it	worthy
       Of	reverence,	beginning	from	the	hour
      When	Pallas	died	to	give	it	sovereignty.
      Thou	knowest	it	made	in	Alba	its	abode
    Three	hundred	years	and	upward,	till	at	last
      The	three	to	three	fought	for	it	yet	again.
 Thou	knowest	what	it	achieved	from	Sabine	wrong
     Down	to	Lucretia's	sorrow,	in	seven	kings
  O'ercoming	round	about	the	neighboring	nations;
Thou	knowest	what	it	achieved,	borne	by	the	Romans
    Illustrious	against	Brennus,	against	Pyrrhus,
    Against	the	other	princes	and	confederates.
  Torquatus	thence	and	Quinctius,	who	from	locks
       Unkempt	was	named,	Decii	and	Fabii,
      Received	the	fame	I	willingly	embalm;
     It	struck	to	earth	the	pride	of	the	Arabians,
    Who,	following	Hannibal,	had	passed	across
  The	Alpine	ridges,	Po,	from	which	thou	glidest;
  Beneath	it	triumphed	while	they	yet	were	young
         Pompey	and	Scipio,	and	to	the	hill
   Beneath	which	thou	wast	born	it	bitter	seemed;
  Then,	near	unto	the	time	when	heaven	had	willed
    To	bring	the	whole	world	to	its	mood	serene,
     Did	Caesar	by	the	will	of	Rome	assume	it.
     What	it	achieved	from	Var	unto	the	Rhine,
     Isere	beheld	and	Saone,	beheld	the	Seine,
    And	every	valley	whence	the	Rhone	is	filled;
    What	it	achieved	when	it	had	left	Ravenna,
     And	leaped	the	Rubicon,	was	such	a	flight
    That	neither	tongue	nor	pen	could	follow	it.
  Round	towards	Spain	it	wheeled	its	legions;	then
       Towards	Durazzo,	and	Pharsalia	smote
       That	to	the	calid	Nile	was	felt	the	pain.
   Antandros	and	the	Simois,	whence	it	started,
    It	saw	again,	and	there	where	Hector	lies,
      And	ill	for	Ptolemy	then	roused	itself.
  From	thence	it	came	like	lightning	upon	Juba;
    Then	wheeled	itself	again	into	your	West,
      Where	the	Pompeian	clarion	it	heard.
From	what	it	wrought	with	the	next	standard-bearer
    Brutus	and	Cassius	howl	in	Hell	together,
      And	Modena	and	Perugia	dolent	were;
      Still	doth	the	mournful	Cleopatra	weep
   Because	thereof,	who,	fleeing	from	before	it,
   Took	from	the	adder	sudden	and	black	death.
    With	him	it	ran	even	to	the	Red	Sea	shore;
  With	him	it	placed	the	world	in	so	great	peace,
      That	unto	Janus	was	his	temple	closed.
  But	what	the	standard	that	has	made	me	speak
    Achieved	before,	and	after	should	achieve
 Throughout	the	mortal	realm	that	lies	beneath	it,
     Becometh	in	appearance	mean	and	dim,
      If	in	the	hand	of	the	third	Caesar	seen
     With	eye	unclouded	and	affection	pure,
    Because	the	living	Justice	that	inspires	me
     Granted	it,	in	the	hand	of	him	I	speak	of,
   The	glory	of	doing	vengeance	for	its	wrath.
      Now	here	attend	to	what	I	answer	thee;
      Later	it	ran	with	Titus	to	do	vengeance
      Upon	the	vengeance	of	the	ancient	sin.
   And	when	the	tooth	of	Lombardy	had	bitten
   The	Holy	Church,	then	underneath	its	wings
     Did	Charlemagne	victorious	succor	her.
 Now	hast	thou	power	to	judge	of	such	as	those
  Whom	I	accused	above,	and	of	their	crimes,
    Which	are	the	cause	of	all	your	miseries.
   To	the	public	standard	one	the	yellow	lilies
     Opposes,	the	other	claims	it	for	a	party,
   So	that	'tis	hard	to	see	which	sins	the	most.
   Let,	let	the	Ghibellines	ply	their	handicraft
   Beneath	some	other	standard;	for	this	ever
      Ill	follows	he	who	it	and	justice	parts.
 And	let	not	this	new	Charles	e'er	strike	it	down,
  He	and	his	Guelfs,	but	let	him	fear	the	talons
    That	from	a	nobler	lion	stripped	the	fell.
     Already	oftentimes	the	sons	have	wept
   The	father's	crime;	and	let	him	not	believe
That	God	will	change	His	scutcheon	for	the	lilies.
        This	little	planet	doth	adorn	itself
   With	the	good	spirits	that	have	active	been,
 That	fame	and	honour	might	come	after	them;
   And	whensoever	the	desires	mount	thither,
     Thus	deviating,	must	perforce	the	rays
   Of	the	true	love	less	vividly	mount	upward.
      But	in	commensuration	of	our	wages
      With	our	desert	is	portion	of	our	joy,
  Because	we	see	them	neither	less	nor	greater.
      Herein	doth	living	Justice	sweeten	so
        Affection	in	us,	that	for	evermore
          It	cannot	warp	to	any	iniquity.
    Voices	diverse	make	up	sweet	melodies;
     So	in	this	life	of	ours	the	seats	diverse
  Render	sweet	harmony	among	these	spheres;
     And	in	the	compass	of	this	present	pearl
      Shineth	the	sheen	of	Romeo,	of	whom
 The	grand	and	beauteous	work	was	ill	rewarded.
  But	the	Provencals	who	against	him	wrought,
 They	have	not	laughed,	and	therefore	ill	goes	he
 Who	makes	his	hurt	of	the	good	deeds	of	others.
  Four	daughters,	and	each	one	of	them	a	queen,
    Had	Raymond	Berenger,	and	this	for	him
      Did	Romeo,	a	poor	man	and	a	pilgrim;
      And	then	malicious	words	incited	him
     To	summon	to	a	reckoning	this	just	man,
   Who	rendered	to	him	seven	and	five	for	ten.
   Then	he	departed	poor	and	stricken	in	years,
  And	if	the	world	could	know	the	heart	he	had,
        In	begging	bit	by	bit	his	livelihood,
Though	much	it	laud	him,	it	would	laud	him	more."                          	
                     Canto	VII
                          	
          "Osanna	sanctus	Deus	Sabaoth,
            Superillustrans	claritate	tua
         Felices	ignes	horum	malahoth!"
       In	this	wise,	to	his	melody	returning,
    This	substance,	upon	which	a	double	light
      Doubles	itself,	was	seen	by	me	to	sing,
  And	to	their	dance	this	and	the	others	moved,
   And	in	the	manner	of	swift-hurrying	sparks
Veiled	themselves	from	me	with	a	sudden	distance.
  Doubting	was	I,	and	saying,	"Tell	her,	tell	her,"
   Within	me,	"tell	her,"	saying,	"tell	my	Lady,"
Who	slakes	my	thirst	with	her	sweet	effluences;
And	yet	that	reverence	which	doth	lord	it	over
     The	whole	of	me	only	by	B	and	ICE,
 Bowed	me	again	like	unto	one	who	drowses.
   Short	while	did	Beatrice	endure	me	thus;
   And	she	began,	lighting	me	with	a	smile
  Such	as	would	make	one	happy	in	the	fire:
     "According	to	infallible	advisement,
  After	what	manner	a	just	vengeance	justly
 Could	be	avenged	has	put	thee	upon	thinking,
     But	I	will	speedily	thy	mind	unloose;
  And	do	thou	listen,	for	these	words	of	mine
 Of	a	great	doctrine	will	a	present	make	thee.
    By	not	enduring	on	the	power	that	wills
Curb	for	his	good,	that	man	who	ne'er	was	born,
  Damning	himself	damned	all	his	progeny;
   Whereby	the	human	species	down	below
   Lay	sick	for	many	centuries	in	great	error,
  Till	to	descend	it	pleased	the	Word	of	God
To	where	the	nature,	which	from	its	own	Maker
  Estranged	itself,	he	joined	to	him	in	person
       By	the	sole	act	of	his	eternal	love.
    Now	unto	what	is	said	direct	thy	sight;
     This	nature	when	united	to	its	Maker,
    Such	as	created,	was	sincere	and	good;
     But	by	itself	alone	was	banished	forth
    From	Paradise,	because	it	turned	aside
     Out	of	the	way	of	truth	and	of	its	life.
   Therefore	the	penalty	the	cross	held	out,
   If	measured	by	the	nature	thus	assumed,
    None	ever	yet	with	so	great	justice	stung,
     And	none	was	ever	of	so	great	injustice,
  Considering	who	the	Person	was	that	suffered,
   Within	whom	such	a	nature	was	contracted.
  From	one	act	therefore	issued	things	diverse;
 To	God	and	to	the	Jews	one	death	was	pleasing;
 Earth	trembled	at	it	and	the	Heaven	was	opened.
      It	should	no	longer	now	seem	difficult
   To	thee,	when	it	is	said	that	a	just	vengeance
     By	a	just	court	was	afterward	avenged.
     But	now	do	I	behold	thy	mind	entangled
From	thought	to	thought	within	a	knot,	from	which
      With	great	desire	it	waits	to	free	itself.
     Thou	sayest,	'Well	discern	I	what	I	hear;
    But	it	is	hidden	from	me	why	God	willed
     For	our	redemption	only	this	one	mode.'
      Buried	remaineth,	brother,	this	decree
    Unto	the	eyes	of	every	one	whose	nature
       Is	in	the	flame	of	love	not	yet	adult.
         Verily,	inasmuch	as	at	this	mark
      One	gazes	long	and	little	is	discerned,
  Wherefore	this	mode	was	worthiest	will	I	say.
 Goodness	Divine,	which	from	itself	doth	spurn
      All	envy,	burning	in	itself	so	sparkles
       That	the	eternal	beauties	it	unfolds.
      Whate'er	from	this	immediately	distils
    Has	afterwards	no	end,	for	ne'er	removed
      Is	its	impression	when	it	sets	its	seal.
   Whate'er	from	this	immediately	rains	down
     Is	wholly	free,	because	it	is	not	subject
      Unto	the	influences	of	novel	things.
The	more	conformed	thereto,	the	more	it	pleases;
  For	the	blest	ardour	that	irradiates	all	things
    In	that	most	like	itself	is	most	vivacious.
  With	all	of	these	things	has	advantaged	been
  The	human	creature;	and	if	one	be	wanting,
      From	his	nobility	he	needs	must	fall.
   'Tis	sin	alone	which	doth	disfranchise	him,
   And	render	him	unlike	the	Good	Supreme,
    So	that	he	little	with	its	light	is	blanched,
       And	to	his	dignity	no	more	returns,
 Unless	he	fill	up	where	transgression	empties
   With	righteous	pains	for	criminal	delights.
      Your	nature	when	it	sinned	so	utterly
      In	its	own	seed,	out	of	these	dignities
      Even	as	out	of	Paradise	was	driven,
     Nor	could	itself	recover,	if	thou	notest
        With	nicest	subtilty,	by	any	way,
   Except	by	passing	one	of	these	two	fords:
    Either	that	God	through	clemency	alone
    Had	pardon	granted,	or	that	man	himself
       Had	satisfaction	for	his	folly	made.
     Fix	now	thine	eye	deep	into	the	abyss
      Of	the	eternal	counsel,	to	my	speech
     As	far	as	may	be	fastened	steadfastly!
      Man	in	his	limitations	had	not	power
      To	satisfy,	not	having	power	to	sink
          In	his	humility	obeying	then,
      Far	as	he	disobeying	thought	to	rise;
 And	for	this	reason	man	has	been	from	power
       Of	satisfying	by	himself	excluded.
   Therefore	it	God	behoved	in	his	own	ways
       Man	to	restore	unto	his	perfect	life,
      I	say	in	one,	or	else	in	both	of	them.
       But	since	the	action	of	the	doer	is
   So	much	more	grateful,	as	it	more	presents
 The	goodness	of	the	heart	from	which	it	issues,
 Goodness	Divine,	that	doth	imprint	the	world,
     Has	been	contented	to	proceed	by	each
      And	all	its	ways	to	lift	you	up	again;
   Nor	'twixt	the	first	day	and	the	final	night
  Such	high	and	such	magnificent	proceeding
     By	one	or	by	the	other	was	or	shall	be;
  For	God	more	bounteous	was	himself	to	give
      To	make	man	able	to	uplift	himself,
    Than	if	he	only	of	himself	had	pardoned;
   And	all	the	other	modes	were	insufficient
     For	justice,	were	it	not	the	Son	of	God
   Himself	had	humbled	to	become	incarnate.
     Now,	to	fill	fully	each	desire	of	thine,
         Return	I	to	elucidate	one	place,
   In	order	that	thou	there	mayst	see	as	I	do.
     Thou	sayst:	'I	see	the	air,	I	see	the	fire,
 The	water,	and	the	earth,	and	all	their	mixtures
  Come	to	corruption,	and	short	while	endure;
And	these	things	notwithstanding	were	created;'
  Therefore	if	that	which	I	have	said	were	true,
They	should	have	been	secure	against	corruption.
    The	Angels,	brother,	and	the	land	sincere
    In	which	thou	art,	created	may	be	called
    Just	as	they	are	in	their	entire	existence;
  But	all	the	elements	which	thou	hast	named,
And	all	those	things	which	out	of	them	are	made,
       By	a	created	virtue	are	informed.
    Created	was	the	matter	which	they	have;
      Created	was	the	informing	influence
  Within	these	stars	that	round	about	them	go.
    The	soul	of	every	brute	and	of	the	plants
      By	its	potential	temperament	attracts
     The	ray	and	motion	of	the	holy	lights;
    But	your	own	life	immediately	inspires
    Supreme	Beneficence,	and	enamours	it
    So	with	herself,	it	evermore	desires	her.
  And	thou	from	this	mayst	argue	furthermore
     Your	resurrection,	if	thou	think	again
  How	human	flesh	was	fashioned	at	that	time
When	the	first	parents	both	of	them	were	made."                         	
                   Canto	VIII
                         	
      The	world	used	in	its	peril	to	believe
       That	the	fair	Cypria	delirious	love
    Rayed	out,	in	the	third	epicycle	turning;
   Wherefore	not	only	unto	her	paid	honour
         Of	sacrifices	and	of	votive	cry
    The	ancient	nations	in	the	ancient	error,
   But	both	Dione	honoured	they	and	Cupid,
    That	as	her	mother,	this	one	as	her	son,
     And	said	that	he	had	sat	in	Dido's	lap;
  And	they	from	her,	whence	I	beginning	take,
        Took	the	denomination	of	the	star
That	woos	the	sun,	now	following,	now	in	front.
      I	was	not	ware	of	our	ascending	to	it;
       But	of	our	being	in	it	gave	full	faith
  My	Lady	whom	I	saw	more	beauteous	grow.
      And	as	within	a	flame	a	spark	is	seen,
    And	as	within	a	voice	a	voice	discerned,
When	one	is	steadfast,	and	one	comes	and	goes,
      Within	that	light	beheld	I	other	lamps
    Move	in	a	circle,	speeding	more	and	less,
   Methinks	in	measure	of	their	inward	vision.
   From	a	cold	cloud	descended	never	winds,
           Or	visible	or	not,	so	rapidly
   They	would	not	laggard	and	impeded	seem
     To	any	one	who	had	those	lights	divine
   Seen	come	towards	us,	leaving	the	gyration
       Begun	at	first	in	the	high	Seraphim.
  And	behind	those	that	most	in	front	appeared
     Sounded	"Osanna!"	so	that	never	since
       To	hear	again	was	I	without	desire.
   Then	unto	us	more	nearly	one	approached,
      And	it	alone	began:	"We	all	are	ready
      Unto	thy	pleasure,	that	thou	joy	in	us.
    We	turn	around	with	the	celestial	Princes,
    One	gyre	and	one	gyration	and	one	thirst,
   To	whom	thou	in	the	world	of	old	didst	say,
'Ye	who,	intelligent,	the	third	heaven	are	moving;'
     And	are	so	full	of	love,	to	pleasure	thee
       A	little	quiet	will	not	be	less	sweet."
After	these	eyes	of	mine	themselves	had	offered
          Unto	my	Lady	reverently,	and	she
   Content	and	certain	of	herself	had	made	them,
Back	to	the	light	they	turned,	which	so	great	promise
    Made	of	itself,	and	"Say,	who	art	thou?"	was
     My	voice,	imprinted	with	a	great	affection.
       O	how	and	how	much	I	beheld	it	grow
       With	the	new	joy	that	superadded	was
       Unto	its	joys,	as	soon	as	I	had	spoken!
Thus	changed,	it	said	to	me:	"The	world	possessed	me
     Short	time	below;	and,	if	it	had	been	more,
   Much	evil	will	be	which	would	not	have	been.
   My	gladness	keepeth	me	concealed	from	thee,
  Which	rayeth	round	about	me,	and	doth	hide	me
      Like	as	a	creature	swathed	in	its	own	silk.
Much	didst	thou	love	me,	and	thou	hadst	good	reason;
   For	had	I	been	below,	I	should	have	shown	thee
      Somewhat	beyond	the	foliage	of	my	love.
    That	left-hand	margin,	which	doth	bathe	itself
   In	Rhone,	when	it	is	mingled	with	the	Sorgue,
         Me	for	its	lord	awaited	in	due	time,
     And	that	horn	of	Ausonia,	which	is	towned
         With	Bari,	with	Gaeta	and	Catona,
   Whence	Tronto	and	Verde	in	the	sea	disgorge.
      Already	flashed	upon	my	brow	the	crown
     Of	that	dominion	which	the	Danube	waters
       After	the	German	borders	it	abandons;
        And	beautiful	Trinacria,	that	is	murky
       'Twixt	Pachino	and	Peloro,	(on	the	gulf
   Which	greatest	scath	from	Eurus	doth	receive,)
 Not	through	Typhoeus,	but	through	nascent	sulphur,
     Would	have	awaited	her	own	monarchs	still,
Through	me	from	Charles	descended	and	from	Rudolph,
         If	evil	lordship,	that	exasperates	ever
        The	subject	populations,	had	not	moved
        Palermo	to	the	outcry	of	'Death!	death!'
       And	if	my	brother	could	but	this	foresee,
           The	greedy	poverty	of	Catalonia
  Straight	would	he	flee,	that	it	might	not	molest	him;
           For	verily	'tis	needful	to	provide,
       Through	him	or	other,	so	that	on	his	bark
     Already	freighted	no	more	freight	be	placed.
        His	nature,	which	from	liberal	covetous
        Descended,	such	a	soldiery	would	need
      As	should	not	care	for	hoarding	in	a	chest."
          "Because	I	do	believe	the	lofty	joy
         Thy	speech	infuses	into	me,	my	Lord,
      Where	every	good	thing	doth	begin	and	end
        Thou	seest	as	I	see	it,	the	more	grateful
          Is	it	to	me;	and	this	too	hold	I	dear,
      That	gazing	upon	God	thou	dost	discern	it.
    Glad	hast	thou	made	me;	so	make	clear	to	me,
   Since	speaking	thou	hast	stirred	me	up	to	doubt,
     How	from	sweet	seed	can	bitter	issue	forth."
           This	I	to	him;	and	he	to	me:	"If	I
     Can	show	to	thee	a	truth,	to	what	thou	askest
   Thy	face	thou'lt	hold	as	thou	dost	hold	thy	back.
   The	Good	which	all	the	realm	thou	art	ascending
      Turns	and	contents,	maketh	its	providence
        To	be	a	power	within	these	bodies	vast;
        And	not	alone	the	natures	are	foreseen
       Within	the	mind	that	in	itself	is	perfect,
      But	they	together	with	their	preservation.
     For	whatsoever	thing	this	bow	shoots	forth
      Falls	foreordained	unto	an	end	foreseen,
        Even	as	a	shaft	directed	to	its	mark.
  If	that	were	not,	the	heaven	which	thou	dost	walk
     Would	in	such	manner	its	effects	produce,
    That	they	no	longer	would	be	arts,	but	ruins.
         This	cannot	be,	if	the	Intelligences
  That	keep	these	stars	in	motion	are	not	maimed,
And	maimed	the	First	that	has	not	made	them	perfect.
   Wilt	thou	this	truth	have	clearer	made	to	thee?"
         And	I:	"Not	so;	for	'tis	impossible
     That	nature	tire,	I	see,	in	what	is	needful."
   Whence	he	again:	"Now	say,	would	it	be	worse
     For	men	on	earth	were	they	not	citizens?"
    "Yes,"	I	replied;	"and	here	I	ask	no	reason."
     "And	can	they	be	so,	if	below	they	live	not
           Diversely	unto	offices	diverse?
      No,	if	your	master	writeth	well	for	you."
      So	came	he	with	deductions	to	this	point;
     Then	he	concluded:	"Therefore	it	behoves
       The	roots	of	your	effects	to	be	diverse.
     Hence	one	is	Solon	born,	another	Xerxes,
        Another	Melchisedec,	and	another	he
    Who,	flying	through	the	air,	his	son	did	lose.
        Revolving	Nature,	which	a	signet	is
      To	mortal	wax,	doth	practise	well	her	art,
      But	not	one	inn	distinguish	from	another;
        Thence	happens	it	that	Esau	differeth
    In	seed	from	Jacob;	and	Quirinus	comes
   From	sire	so	vile	that	he	is	given	to	Mars.
        A	generated	nature	its	own	way
    Would	always	make	like	its	progenitors,
   If	Providence	divine	were	not	triumphant.
Now	that	which	was	behind	thee	is	before	thee;
But	that	thou	know	that	I	with	thee	am	pleased,
      With	a	corollary	will	I	mantle	thee.
       Evermore	nature,	if	it	fortune	find
     Discordant	to	it,	like	each	other	seed
      Out	of	its	region,	maketh	evil	thrift;
   And	if	the	world	below	would	fix	its	mind
   On	the	foundation	which	is	laid	by	nature,
 Pursuing	that,	'twould	have	the	people	good.
      But	you	unto	religion	wrench	aside
Him	who	was	born	to	gird	him	with	the	sword,
 And	make	a	king	of	him	who	is	for	sermons;
Therefore	your	footsteps	wander	from	the	road."                        	
                    Canto	IX
                        	
   Beautiful	Clemence,	after	that	thy	Charles
    Had	me	enlightened,	he	narrated	to	me
   The	treacheries	his	seed	should	undergo;
But	said:	"Be	still	and	let	the	years	roll	round;"
      So	I	can	only	say,	that	lamentation
    Legitimate	shall	follow	on	your	wrongs.
     And	of	that	holy	light	the	life	already
   Had	to	the	Sun	which	fills	it	turned	again,
As	to	that	good	which	for	each	thing	sufficeth.
    Ah,	souls	deceived,	and	creatures	impious,
  Who	from	such	good	do	turn	away	your	hearts,
      Directing	upon	vanity	your	foreheads!
  And	now,	behold,	another	of	those	splendours
    Approached	me,	and	its	will	to	pleasure	me
       It	signified	by	brightening	outwardly.
     The	eyes	of	Beatrice,	that	fastened	were
        Upon	me,	as	before,	of	dear	assent
        To	my	desire	assurance	gave	to	me.
    "Ah,	bring	swift	compensation	to	my	wish,
  Thou	blessed	spirit,"	I	said,	"and	give	me	proof
      That	what	I	think	in	thee	I	can	reflect!"
    Whereat	the	light,	that	still	was	new	to	me,
  Out	of	its	depths,	whence	it	before	was	singing,
     As	one	delighted	to	do	good,	continued:
     "Within	that	region	of	the	land	depraved
         Of	Italy,	that	lies	between	Rialto
    And	fountain-heads	of	Brenta	and	of	Piava,
      Rises	a	hill,	and	mounts	not	very	high,
      Wherefrom	descended	formerly	a	torch
     That	made	upon	that	region	great	assault.
      Out	of	one	root	were	born	both	I	and	it;
      Cunizza	was	I	called,	and	here	I	shine
  Because	the	splendour	of	this	star	o'ercame	me.
      But	gladly	to	myself	the	cause	I	pardon
    Of	my	allotment,	and	it	does	not	grieve	me;
Which	would	perhaps	seem	strong	unto	your	vulgar.
      Of	this	so	luculent	and	precious	jewel,
     Which	of	our	heaven	is	nearest	unto	me,
     Great	fame	remained;	and	ere	it	die	away
   This	hundredth	year	shall	yet	quintupled	be.
     See	if	man	ought	to	make	him	excellent,
     So	that	another	life	the	first	may	leave!
    And	thus	thinks	not	the	present	multitude
       Shut	in	by	Adige	and	Tagliamento,
      Nor	yet	for	being	scourged	is	penitent.
    But	soon	'twill	be	that	Padua	in	the	marsh
    Will	change	the	water	that	Vicenza	bathes,
   Because	the	folk	are	stubborn	against	duty;
      And	where	the	Sile	and	Cagnano	join
     One	lordeth	it,	and	goes	with	lofty	head,
 For	catching	whom	e'en	now	the	net	is	making.
      Feltro	moreover	of	her	impious	pastor
Shall	weep	the	crime,	which	shall	so	monstrous	be
    That	for	the	like	none	ever	entered	Malta.
       Ample	exceedingly	would	be	the	vat
    That	of	the	Ferrarese	could	hold	the	blood,
 And	weary	who	should	weigh	it	ounce	by	ounce,
 Of	which	this	courteous	priest	shall	make	a	gift
    To	show	himself	a	partisan;	and	such	gifts
      Will	to	the	living	of	the	land	conform.
Above	us	there	are	mirrors,	Thrones	you	call	them,
   From	which	shines	out	on	us	God	Judicant,
     So	that	this	utterance	seems	good	to	us."
   Here	it	was	silent,	and	it	had	the	semblance
    Of	being	turned	elsewhither,	by	the	wheel
       On	which	it	entered	as	it	was	before.
       The	other	joy,	already	known	to	me,
    Became	a	thing	transplendent	in	my	sight,
        As	a	fine	ruby	smitten	by	the	sun.
    Through	joy	effulgence	is	acquired	above,
   As	here	a	smile;	but	down	below,	the	shade
      Outwardly	darkens,	as	the	mind	is	sad.
  "God	seeth	all	things,	and	in	Him,	blest	spirit,
     Thy	sight	is,"	said	I,	"so	that	never	will
     Of	his	can	possibly	from	thee	be	hidden;
 Thy	voice,	then,	that	for	ever	makes	the	heavens
    Glad,	with	the	singing	of	those	holy	fires
Which	of	their	six	wings	make	themselves	a	cowl,
   Wherefore	does	it	not	satisfy	my	longings?
     Indeed,	I	would	not	wait	thy	questioning
       If	I	in	thee	were	as	thou	art	in	me."
   "The	greatest	of	the	valleys	where	the	water
    Expands	itself,"	forthwith	its	words	began,
  "That	sea	excepted	which	the	earth	engarlands,
    Between	discordant	shores	against	the	sun
      Extends	so	far,	that	it	meridian	makes
  Where	it	was	wont	before	to	make	the	horizon.
      I	was	a	dweller	on	that	valley's	shore
  'Twixt	Ebro	and	Magra	that	with	journey	short
     Doth	from	the	Tuscan	part	the	Genoese.
  With	the	same	sunset	and	same	sunrise	nearly
      Sit	Buggia	and	the	city	whence	I	was,
  That	with	its	blood	once	made	the	harbour	hot.
     Folco	that	people	called	me	unto	whom
My	name	was	known;	and	now	with	me	this	heaven
       Imprints	itself,	as	I	did	once	with	it;
  For	more	the	daughter	of	Belus	never	burned,
      Offending	both	Sichaeus	and	Creusa,
      Than	I,	so	long	as	it	became	my	locks,
    Nor	yet	that	Rodophean,	who	deluded
     was	by	Demophoon,	nor	yet	Alcides,
     When	Iole	he	in	his	heart	had	locked.
    Yet	here	is	no	repenting,	but	we	smile,
Not	at	the	fault,	which	comes	not	back	to	mind,
 But	at	the	power	which	ordered	and	foresaw.
    Here	we	behold	the	art	that	doth	adorn
  With	such	affection,	and	the	good	discover
  Whereby	the	world	above	turns	that	below.
   But	that	thou	wholly	satisfied	mayst	bear
Thy	wishes	hence	which	in	this	sphere	are	born,
     Still	farther	to	proceed	behoveth	me.
Thou	fain	wouldst	know	who	is	within	this	light
   That	here	beside	me	thus	is	scintillating,
    Even	as	a	sunbeam	in	the	limpid	water.
  Then	know	thou,	that	within	there	is	at	rest
     Rahab,	and	being	to	our	order	joined,
  With	her	in	its	supremest	grade	'tis	sealed.
Into	this	heaven,	where	ends	the	shadowy	cone
   Cast	by	your	world,	before	all	other	souls
  First	of	Christ's	triumph	was	she	taken	up.
 Full	meet	it	was	to	leave	her	in	some	heaven,
      Even	as	a	palm	of	the	high	victory
Which	he	acquired	with	one	palm	and	the	other,
 Because	she	favoured	the	first	glorious	deed
        Of	Joshua	upon	the	Holy	Land,
    That	little	stirs	the	memory	of	the	Pope.
     Thy	city,	which	an	offshoot	is	of	him
  Who	first	upon	his	Maker	turned	his	back,
    And	whose	ambition	is	so	sorely	wept,
 Brings	forth	and	scatters	the	accursed	flower
Which	both	the	sheep	and	lambs	hath	led	astray
  Since	it	has	turned	the	shepherd	to	a	wolf.
 For	this	the	Evangel	and	the	mighty	Doctors
     Are	derelict,	and	only	the	Decretals
 So	studied	that	it	shows	upon	their	margins.
    On	this	are	Pope	and	Cardinals	intent;
    Their	meditations	reach	not	Nazareth,
  There	where	his	pinions	Gabriel	unfolded;
     But	Vatican	and	the	other	parts	elect
    Of	Rome,	which	have	a	cemetery	been
     Unto	the	soldiery	that	followed	Peter
    Shall	soon	be	free	from	this	adultery."                       	
                   Canto	X
                       	
    Looking	into	his	Son	with	all	the	Love
 Which	each	of	them	eternally	breathes	forth,
      The	Primal	and	unutterable	Power
   Whate'er	before	the	mind	or	eye	revolves
 With	so	much	order	made,	there	can	be	none
   Who	this	beholds	without	enjoying	Him.
   Lift	up	then,	Reader,	to	the	lofty	wheels
   With	me	thy	vision	straight	unto	that	part
  Where	the	one	motion	on	the	other	strikes,
   And	there	begin	to	contemplate	with	joy
 That	Master's	art,	who	in	himself	so	loves	it
   That	never	doth	his	eye	depart	therefrom.
Behold	how	from	that	point	goes	branching	off
The	oblique	circle,	which	conveys	the	planets,
    To	satisfy	the	world	that	calls	upon	them;
  And	if	their	pathway	were	not	thus	inflected,
  Much	virtue	in	the	heavens	would	be	in	vain,
   And	almost	every	power	below	here	dead.
   If	from	the	straight	line	distant	more	or	less
  Were	the	departure,	much	would	wanting	be
    Above	and	underneath	of	mundane	order.
   Remain	now,	Reader,	still	upon	thy	bench,
  In	thought	pursuing	that	which	is	foretasted,
   If	thou	wouldst	jocund	be	instead	of	weary.
  I've	set	before	thee;	henceforth	feed	thyself,
        For	to	itself	diverteth	all	my	care
That	theme	whereof	I	have	been	made	the	scribe.
     The	greatest	of	the	ministers	of	nature,
Who	with	the	power	of	heaven	the	world	imprints
  And	measures	with	his	light	the	time	for	us,
  With	that	part	which	above	is	called	to	mind
   Conjoined,	along	the	spirals	was	revolving,
  Where	each	time	earlier	he	presents	himself;
    And	I	was	with	him;	but	of	the	ascending
      I	was	not	conscious,	saving	as	a	man
   Of	a	first	thought	is	conscious	ere	it	come;
      And	Beatrice,	she	who	is	seen	to	pass
      From	good	to	better,	and	so	suddenly
    That	not	by	time	her	action	is	expressed,
   How	lucent	in	herself	must	she	have	been!
  And	what	was	in	the	sun,	wherein	I	entered,
      Apparent	not	by	colour	but	by	light,
   I,	though	I	call	on	genius,	art,	and	practice,
    Cannot	so	tell	that	it	could	be	imagined;
   Believe	one	can,	and	let	him	long	to	see	it.
       And	if	our	fantasies	too	lowly	are
      For	altitude	so	great,	it	is	no	marvel,
   Since	o'er	the	sun	was	never	eye	could	go.
    Such	in	this	place	was	the	fourth	family
    Of	the	high	Father,	who	forever	sates	it,
Showing	how	he	breathes	forth	and	how	begets.
 And	Beatrice	began:	"Give	thanks,	give	thanks
      Unto	the	Sun	of	Angels,	who	to	this
   Sensible	one	has	raised	thee	by	his	grace!"
     Never	was	heart	of	mortal	so	disposed
      To	worship,	nor	to	give	itself	to	God
      With	all	its	gratitude	was	it	so	ready,
    As	at	those	words	did	I	myself	become;
   And	all	my	love	was	so	absorbed	in	Him,
     That	in	oblivion	Beatrice	was	eclipsed.
  Nor	this	displeased	her;	but	she	smiled	at	it
   So	that	the	splendour	of	her	laughing	eyes
    My	single	mind	on	many	things	divided.
   Lights	many	saw	I,	vivid	and	triumphant,
   Make	us	a	centre	and	themselves	a	circle,
 More	sweet	in	voice	than	luminous	in	aspect.
     Thus	girt	about	the	daughter	of	Latona
  We	sometimes	see,	when	pregnant	is	the	air,
So	that	it	holds	the	thread	which	makes	her	zone.
  Within	the	court	of	Heaven,	whence	I	return,
  Are	many	jewels	found,	so	fair	and	precious
  They	cannot	be	transported	from	the	realm;
  And	of	them	was	the	singing	of	those	lights.
Who	takes	not	wings	that	he	may	fly	up	thither,
    The	tidings	thence	may	from	the	dumb	await!
      As	soon	as	singing	thus	those	burning	suns
 Had	round	about	us	whirled	themselves	three	times,
   Like	unto	stars	neighbouring	the	steadfast	poles,
   Ladies	they	seemed,	not	from	the	dance	released,
        But	who	stop	short,	in	silence	listening
       Till	they	have	gathered	the	new	melody.
      And	within	one	I	heard	beginning:	"When
      The	radiance	of	grace,	by	which	is	kindled
   True	love,	and	which	thereafter	grows	by	loving,
       Within	thee	multiplied	is	so	resplendent
      That	it	conducts	thee	upward	by	that	stair,
     Where	without	reascending	none	descends,
      Who	should	deny	the	wine	out	of	his	vial
          Unto	thy	thirst,	in	liberty	were	not
    Except	as	water	which	descends	not	seaward.
Fain	wouldst	thou	know	with	what	plants	is	enflowered
       This	garland	that	encircles	with	delight
   The	Lady	fair	who	makes	thee	strong	for	heaven.
         Of	the	lambs	was	I	of	the	holy	flock
        Which	Dominic	conducteth	by	a	road
      Where	well	one	fattens	if	he	strayeth	not.
         He	who	is	nearest	to	me	on	the	right
     My	brother	and	master	was;	and	he	Albertus
        Is	of	Cologne,	I	Thomas	of	Aquinum.
      If	thou	of	all	the	others	wouldst	be	certain,
      Follow	behind	my	speaking	with	thy	sight
      Upward	along	the	blessed	garland	turning.
      That	next	effulgence	issues	from	the	smile
       Of	Gratian,	who	assisted	both	the	courts
     In	such	wise	that	it	pleased	in	Paradise.
    The	other	which	near	by	adorns	our	choir
  That	Peter	was	who,	e'en	as	the	poor	widow,
     Offered	his	treasure	unto	Holy	Church.
   The	fifth	light,	that	among	us	is	the	fairest,
Breathes	forth	from	such	a	love,	that	all	the	world
      Below	is	greedy	to	learn	tidings	of	it.
  Within	it	is	the	lofty	mind,	where	knowledge
    So	deep	was	put,	that,	if	the	true	be	true,
    To	see	so	much	there	never	rose	a	second.
     Thou	seest	next	the	lustre	of	that	taper,
  Which	in	the	flesh	below	looked	most	within
       The	angelic	nature	and	its	ministry.
      Within	that	other	little	light	is	smiling
     The	advocate	of	the	Christian	centuries,
Out	of	whose	rhetoric	Augustine	was	furnished.
    Now	if	thou	trainest	thy	mind's	eye	along
    From	light	to	light	pursuant	of	my	praise,
  With	thirst	already	of	the	eighth	thou	waitest.
       By	seeing	every	good	therein	exults
  The	sainted	soul,	which	the	fallacious	world
   Makes	manifest	to	him	who	listeneth	well;
  The	body	whence	'twas	hunted	forth	is	lying
    Down	in	Cieldauro,	and	from	martyrdom
    And	banishment	it	came	unto	this	peace.
  See	farther	onward	flame	the	burning	breath
       Of	Isidore,	of	Beda,	and	of	Richard
   Who	was	in	contemplation	more	than	man.
    This,	whence	to	me	returneth	thy	regard,
        The	light	is	of	a	spirit	unto	whom
   In	his	grave	meditations	death	seemed	slow.
          It	is	the	light	eternal	of	Sigier,
   Who,	reading	lectures	in	the	Street	of	Straw,
         Did	syllogize	invidious	verities."
        Then,	as	a	horologe	that	calleth	us
     What	time	the	Bride	of	God	is	rising	up
 With	matins	to	her	Spouse	that	he	may	love	her,
   Wherein	one	part	the	other	draws	and	urges,
   Ting!	ting!	resounding	with	so	sweet	a	note,
  That	swells	with	love	the	spirit	well	disposed,
  Thus	I	beheld	the	glorious	wheel	move	round,
    And	render	voice	to	voice,	in	modulation
  And	sweetness	that	can	not	be	comprehended,
    Excepting	there	where	joy	is	made	eternal.                          	
                     Canto	XI
                          	
      O	Thou	insensate	care	of	mortal	men,
       How	inconclusive	are	the	syllogisms
That	make	thee	beat	thy	wings	in	downward	flight!
       One	after	laws	and	one	to	aphorisms
  Was	going,	and	one	following	the	priesthood,
      And	one	to	reign	by	force	or	sophistry,
     And	one	in	theft,	and	one	in	state	affairs,
    One	in	the	pleasures	of	the	flesh	involved
   Wearied	himself,	one	gave	himself	to	ease;
    When	I,	from	all	these	things	emancipate,
    With	Beatrice	above	there	in	the	Heavens
    With	such	exceeding	glory	was	received!
   When	each	one	had	returned	unto	that	point
      Within	the	circle	where	it	was	before,
      It	stood	as	in	a	candlestick	a	candle;
  And	from	within	the	effulgence	which	at	first
       Had	spoken	unto	me,	I	heard	begin
    Smiling	while	it	more	luminous	became:
        "Even	as	I	am	kindled	in	its	ray,
       So,	looking	into	the	Eternal	Light,
   The	occasion	of	thy	thoughts	I	apprehend.
  Thou	doubtest,	and	wouldst	have	me	to	resift
      In	language	so	extended	and	so	open
  My	speech,	that	to	thy	sense	it	may	be	plain,
Where	just	before	I	said,	'where	well	one	fattens,'
  And	where	I	said,	'there	never	rose	a	second;'
    And	here	'tis	needful	we	distinguish	well.
  The	Providence,	which	governeth	the	world
    With	counsel,	wherein	all	created	vision
   Is	vanquished	ere	it	reach	unto	the	bottom,
  (So	that	towards	her	own	Beloved	might	go
   The	bride	of	Him	who,	uttering	a	loud	cry,
    Espoused	her	with	his	consecrated	blood,
  Self-confident	and	unto	Him	more	faithful,)
     Two	Princes	did	ordain	in	her	behoof,
 Which	on	this	side	and	that	might	be	her	guide.
      The	one	was	all	seraphical	in	ardour;
      The	other	by	his	wisdom	upon	earth
      A	splendour	was	of	light	cherubical.
    One	will	I	speak	of,	for	of	both	is	spoken
    In	praising	one,	whichever	may	be	taken,
    Because	unto	one	end	their	labours	were.
    Between	Tupino	and	the	stream	that	falls
   Down	from	the	hill	elect	of	blessed	Ubald,
     A	fertile	slope	of	lofty	mountain	hangs,
   From	which	Perugia	feels	the	cold	and	heat
    Through	Porta	Sole,	and	behind	it	weep
    Gualdo	and	Nocera	their	grievous	yoke.
From	out	that	slope,	there	where	it	breaketh	most
    Its	steepness,	rose	upon	the	world	a	sun
As	this	one	does	sometimes	from	out	the	Ganges;
 Therefore	let	him	who	speaketh	of	that	place,
     Say	not	Ascesi,	for	he	would	say	little,
     But	Orient,	if	he	properly	would	speak.
    He	was	not	yet	far	distant	from	his	rising
     Before	he	had	begun	to	make	the	earth
   Some	comfort	from	his	mighty	virtue	feel.
   For	he	in	youth	his	father's	wrath	incurred
   For	certain	Dame,	to	whom,	as	unto	death,
    The	gate	of	pleasure	no	one	doth	unlock;
       And	was	before	his	spiritual	court
        'Et	coram	patre'	unto	her	united;
 Then	day	by	day	more	fervently	he	loved	her.
 She,	reft	of	her	first	husband,	scorned,	obscure,
One	thousand	and	one	hundred	years	and	more,
      Waited	without	a	suitor	till	he	came.
  Naught	it	availed	to	hear,	that	with	Amyclas
  Found	her	unmoved	at	sounding	of	his	voice
     He	who	struck	terror	into	all	the	world;
Naught	it	availed	being	constant	and	undaunted,
    So	that,	when	Mary	still	remained	below,
  She	mounted	up	with	Christ	upon	the	cross.
     But	that	too	darkly	I	may	not	proceed,
    Francis	and	Poverty	for	these	two	lovers
 Take	thou	henceforward	in	my	speech	diffuse.
  Their	concord	and	their	joyous	semblances,
  The	love,	the	wonder,	and	the	sweet	regard,
  They	made	to	be	the	cause	of	holy	thoughts;
    So	much	so	that	the	venerable	Bernard
  First	bared	his	feet,	and	after	so	great	peace
Ran,	and,	in	running,	thought	himself	too	slow.
     O	wealth	unknown!	O	veritable	good!
Giles	bares	his	feet,	and	bares	his	feet	Sylvester
Behind	the	bridegroom,	so	doth	please	the	bride!
 Then	goes	his	way	that	father	and	that	master,
        He	and	his	Lady	and	that	family
  Which	now	was	girding	on	the	humble	cord;
Nor	cowardice	of	heart	weighed	down	his	brow
       At	being	son	of	Peter	Bernardone,
    Nor	for	appearing	marvellously	scorned;
       But	regally	his	hard	determination
     To	Innocent	he	opened,	and	from	him
   Received	the	primal	seal	upon	his	Order.
     After	the	people	mendicant	increased
     Behind	this	man,	whose	admirable	life
   Better	in	glory	of	the	heavens	were	sung,
       Incoronated	with	a	second	crown
  Was	through	Honorius	by	the	Eternal	Spirit
    The	holy	purpose	of	this	Archimandrite.
And	when	he	had,	through	thirst	of	martyrdom,
  In	the	proud	presence	of	the	Sultan	preached
   Christ	and	the	others	who	came	after	him,
    And,	finding	for	conversion	too	unripe
     The	folk,	and	not	to	tarry	there	in	vain,
      Returned	to	fruit	of	the	Italic	grass,
   On	the	rude	rock	'twixt	Tiber	and	the	Arno
    From	Christ	did	he	receive	the	final	seal,
Which	during	two	whole	years	his	members	bore.
 When	He,	who	chose	him	unto	so	much	good,
   Was	pleased	to	draw	him	up	to	the	reward
      That	he	had	merited	by	being	lowly,
     Unto	his	friars,	as	to	the	rightful	heirs,
    His	most	dear	Lady	did	he	recommend,
 And	bade	that	they	should	love	her	faithfully;
    And	from	her	bosom	the	illustrious	soul
    Wished	to	depart,	returning	to	its	realm,
     And	for	its	body	wished	no	other	bier.
  Think	now	what	man	was	he,	who	was	a	fit
     Companion	over	the	high	seas	to	keep
    The	bark	of	Peter	to	its	proper	bearings.
And	this	man	was	our	Patriarch;	hence	whoever
   Doth	follow	him	as	he	commands	can	see
    That	he	is	laden	with	good	merchandise.
   But	for	new	pasturage	his	flock	has	grown
         So	greedy,	that	it	is	impossible
   They	be	not	scattered	over	fields	diverse;
     And	in	proportion	as	his	sheep	remote
    And	vagabond	go	farther	off	from	him,
   More	void	of	milk	return	they	to	the	fold.
     Verily	some	there	are	that	fear	a	hurt,
  And	keep	close	to	the	shepherd;	but	so	few,
 That	little	cloth	doth	furnish	forth	their	hoods.
     Now	if	my	utterance	be	not	indistinct,
     If	thine	own	hearing	hath	attentive	been,
     If	thou	recall	to	mind	what	I	have	said,
      In	part	contented	shall	thy	wishes	be;
 For	thou	shalt	see	the	plant	that's	chipped	away,
      And	the	rebuke	that	lieth	in	the	words,
   'Where	well	one	fattens,	if	he	strayeth	not.'"                         	
                    Canto	XII
                         	
     Soon	as	the	blessed	flame	had	taken	up
       The	final	word	to	give	it	utterance,
       Began	the	holy	millstone	to	revolve,
   And	in	its	gyre	had	not	turned	wholly	round,
       Before	another	in	a	ring	enclosed	it,
   And	motion	joined	to	motion,	song	to	song;
  Song	that	as	greatly	doth	transcend	our	Muses,
       Our	Sirens,	in	those	dulcet	clarions,
   As	primal	splendour	that	which	is	reflected.
    And	as	are	spanned	athwart	a	tender	cloud
    Two	rainbows	parallel	and	like	in	colour,
   When	Juno	to	her	handmaid	gives	command,
     (The	one	without	born	of	the	one	within,
     Like	to	the	speaking	of	that	vagrant	one
Whom	love	consumed	as	doth	the	sun	the	vapours,)
   And	make	the	people	here,	through	covenant
   God	set	with	Noah,	presageful	of	the	world
   That	shall	no	more	be	covered	with	a	flood,
     In	such	wise	of	those	sempiternal	roses
    The	garlands	twain	encompassed	us	about,
    And	thus	the	outer	to	the	inner	answered.
    After	the	dance,	and	other	grand	rejoicings,
     Both	of	the	singing,	and	the	flaming	forth
    Effulgence	with	effulgence	blithe	and	tender,
  Together,	at	once,	with	one	accord	had	stopped,
  (Even	as	the	eyes,	that,	as	volition	moves	them,
   Must	needs	together	shut	and	lift	themselves,)
      Out	of	the	heart	of	one	of	the	new	lights
     There	came	a	voice,	that	needle	to	the	star
      Made	me	appear	in	turning	thitherward.
    And	it	began:	"The	love	that	makes	me	fair
     Draws	me	to	speak	about	the	other	leader,
     By	whom	so	well	is	spoken	here	of	mine.
    'Tis	right,	where	one	is,	to	bring	in	the	other,
     That,	as	they	were	united	in	their	warfare,
      Together	likewise	may	their	glory	shine.
      The	soldiery	of	Christ,	which	it	had	cost
     So	dear	to	arm	again,	behind	the	standard
   Moved	slow	and	doubtful	and	in	numbers	few,
     When	the	Emperor	who	reigneth	evermore
       Provided	for	the	host	that	was	in	peril,
  Through	grace	alone	and	not	that	it	was	worthy;
 And,	as	was	said,	he	to	his	Bride	brought	succour
With	champions	twain,	at	whose	deed,	at	whose	word
    The	straggling	people	were	together	drawn.
   Within	that	region	where	the	sweet	west	wind
      Rises	to	open	the	new	leaves,	wherewith
       Europe	is	seen	to	clothe	herself	afresh,
     Not	far	off	from	the	beating	of	the	waves,
      Behind	which	in	his	long	career	the	sun
   Sometimes	conceals	himself	from	every	man,
        Is	situate	the	fortunate	Calahorra,
      Under	protection	of	the	mighty	shield
    In	which	the	Lion	subject	is	and	sovereign.
     Therein	was	born	the	amorous	paramour
    Of	Christian	Faith,	the	athlete	consecrate,
      Kind	to	his	own	and	cruel	to	his	foes;
      And	when	it	was	created	was	his	mind
        Replete	with	such	a	living	energy,
     That	in	his	mother	her	it	made	prophetic.
     As	soon	as	the	espousals	were	complete
     Between	him	and	the	Faith	at	holy	font,
Where	they	with	mutual	safety	dowered	each	other,
   The	woman,	who	for	him	had	given	assent,
        Saw	in	a	dream	the	admirable	fruit
  That	issue	would	from	him	and	from	his	heirs;
    And	that	he	might	be	construed	as	he	was,
  A	spirit	from	this	place	went	forth	to	name	him
    With	His	possessive	whose	he	wholly	was.
    Dominic	was	he	called;	and	him	I	speak	of
     Even	as	of	the	husbandman	whom	Christ
        Elected	to	his	garden	to	assist	him.
  Envoy	and	servant	sooth	he	seemed	of	Christ,
      For	the	first	love	made	manifest	in	him
  Was	the	first	counsel	that	was	given	by	Christ.
     Silent	and	wakeful	many	a	time	was	he
    Discovered	by	his	nurse	upon	the	ground,
    As	if	he	would	have	said,	'For	this	I	came.'
          O	thou	his	father,	Felix	verily!
        O	thou	his	mother,	verily	Joanna,
       If	this,	interpreted,	means	as	is	said!
    Not	for	the	world	which	people	toil	for	now
         In	following	Ostiense	and	Taddeo,
   But	through	his	longing	after	the	true	manna,
    He	in	short	time	became	so	great	a	teacher,
      That	he	began	to	go	about	the	vineyard,
   Which	fadeth	soon,	if	faithless	be	the	dresser;
   And	of	the	See,	(that	once	was	more	benignant
     Unto	the	righteous	poor,	not	through	itself,
      But	him	who	sits	there	and	degenerates,)
       Not	to	dispense	or	two	or	three	for	six,
          Not	any	fortune	of	first	vacancy,
      'Non	decimas	quae	sunt	pauperum	Dei,'
     He	asked	for,	but	against	the	errant	world
        Permission	to	do	battle	for	the	seed,
Of	which	these	four	and	twenty	plants	surround	thee.
    Then	with	the	doctrine	and	the	will	together,
         With	office	apostolical	he	moved,
  Like	torrent	which	some	lofty	vein	out-presses;
         And	in	among	the	shoots	heretical
        His	impetus	with	greater	fury	smote,
     Wherever	the	resistance	was	the	greatest.
    Of	him	were	made	thereafter	divers	runnels,
      Whereby	the	garden	catholic	is	watered,
      So	that	more	living	its	plantations	stand.
       If	such	the	one	wheel	of	the	Biga	was,
     In	which	the	Holy	Church	itself	defended
        And	in	the	field	its	civic	battle	won,
        Truly	full	manifest	should	be	to	thee
      The	excellence	of	the	other,	unto	whom
   Thomas	so	courteous	was	before	my	coming.
     But	still	the	orbit,	which	the	highest	part
      Of	its	circumference	made,	is	derelict,
  So	that	the	mould	is	where	was	once	the	crust.
    His	family,	that	had	straight	forward	moved
  With	feet	upon	his	footprints,	are	turned	round
      So	that	they	set	the	point	upon	the	heel.
    And	soon	aware	they	will	be	of	the	harvest
    Of	this	bad	husbandry,	when	shall	the	tares
     Complain	the	granary	is	taken	from	them.
      Yet	say	I,	he	who	searcheth	leaf	by	leaf
Our	volume	through,	would	still	some	page	discover
     Where	he	could	read,	'I	am	as	I	am	wont.'
     'Twill	not	be	from	Casal	nor	Acquasparta,
  From	whence	come	such	unto	the	written	word
     That	one	avoids	it,	and	the	other	narrows.
         Bonaventura	of	Bagnoregio's	life
        Am	I,	who	always	in	great	offices
         Postponed	considerations	sinister.
        Here	are	Illuminato	and	Agostino,
     Who	of	the	first	barefooted	beggars	were
   That	with	the	cord	the	friends	of	God	became.
     Hugh	of	Saint	Victor	is	among	them	here,
     And	Peter	Mangiador,	and	Peter	of	Spain,
  Who	down	below	in	volumes	twelve	is	shining;
         Nathan	the	seer,	and	metropolitan
     Chrysostom,	and	Anselmus,	and	Donatus
    Who	deigned	to	lay	his	hand	to	the	first	art;
       Here	is	Rabanus,	and	beside	me	here
       Shines	the	Calabrian	Abbot	Joachim,
     He	with	the	spirit	of	prophecy	endowed.
           To	celebrate	so	great	a	paladin
     Have	moved	me	the	impassioned	courtesy
    And	the	discreet	discourses	of	Friar	Thomas,
   And	with	me	they	have	moved	this	company."                           	
                     Canto	XIII
                           	
     Let	him	imagine,	who	would	well	conceive
     What	now	I	saw,	and	let	him	while	I	speak
        Retain	the	image	as	a	steadfast	rock,
    The	fifteen	stars,	that	in	their	divers	regions
        The	sky	enliven	with	a	light	so	great
      That	it	transcends	all	clusters	of	the	air;
       Let	him	the	Wain	imagine	unto	which
    Our	vault	of	heaven	sufficeth	night	and	day,
      So	that	in	turning	of	its	pole	it	fails	not;
       Let	him	the	mouth	imagine	of	the	horn
       That	in	the	point	beginneth	of	the	axis
  Round	about	which	the	primal	wheel	revolves,—
To	have	fashioned	of	themselves	two	signs	in	heaven,
    Like	unto	that	which	Minos'	daughter	made,
    The	moment	when	she	felt	the	frost	of	death;
      And	one	to	have	its	rays	within	the	other,
   And	both	to	whirl	themselves	in	such	a	manner
  That	one	should	forward	go,	the	other	backward;
   And	he	will	have	some	shadowing	forth	of	that
      True	constellation	and	the	double	dance
    That	circled	round	the	point	at	which	I	was;
      Because	it	is	as	much	beyond	our	wont,
      As	swifter	than	the	motion	of	the	Chiana
  Moveth	the	heaven	that	all	the	rest	outspeeds.
  There	sang	they	neither	Bacchus,	nor	Apollo,
     But	in	the	divine	nature	Persons	three,
    And	in	one	person	the	divine	and	human.
The	singing	and	the	dance	fulfilled	their	measure,
    And	unto	us	those	holy	lights	gave	need,
    Growing	in	happiness	from	care	to	care.
Then	broke	the	silence	of	those	saints	concordant
      The	light	in	which	the	admirable	life
    Of	God's	own	mendicant	was	told	to	me,
  And	said:	"Now	that	one	straw	is	trodden	out
    Now	that	its	seed	is	garnered	up	already,
  Sweet	love	invites	me	to	thresh	out	the	other.
    Into	that	bosom,	thou	believest,	whence
 Was	drawn	the	rib	to	form	the	beauteous	cheek
   Whose	taste	to	all	the	world	is	costing	dear,
  And	into	that	which,	by	the	lance	transfixed,
    Before	and	since,	such	satisfaction	made
   That	it	weighs	down	the	balance	of	all	sin,
     Whate'er	of	light	it	has	to	human	nature
     Been	lawful	to	possess	was	all	infused
  By	the	same	power	that	both	of	them	created;
  And	hence	at	what	I	said	above	dost	wonder,
       When	I	narrated	that	no	second	had
  The	good	which	in	the	fifth	light	is	enclosed.
   Now	ope	thine	eyes	to	what	I	answer	thee,
 And	thou	shalt	see	thy	creed	and	my	discourse
       Fit	in	the	truth	as	centre	in	a	circle.
  That	which	can	die,	and	that	which	dieth	not,
    Are	nothing	but	the	splendour	of	the	idea
Which	by	his	love	our	Lord	brings	into	being;
Because	that	living	Light,	which	from	its	fount
    Effulgent	flows,	so	that	it	disunites	not
From	Him	nor	from	the	Love	in	them	intrined,
  Through	its	own	goodness	reunites	its	rays
      In	nine	subsistences,	as	in	a	mirror,
        Itself	eternally	remaining	One.
   Thence	it	descends	to	the	last	potencies,
  Downward	from	act	to	act	becoming	such
    That	only	brief	contingencies	it	makes;
     And	these	contingencies	I	hold	to	be
Things	generated,	which	the	heaven	produces
  By	its	own	motion,	with	seed	and	without.
 Neither	their	wax,	nor	that	which	tempers	it,
   Remains	immutable,	and	hence	beneath
The	ideal	signet	more	and	less	shines	through;
  Therefore	it	happens,	that	the	selfsame	tree
  After	its	kind	bears	worse	and	better	fruit,
   And	ye	are	born	with	characters	diverse.
   If	in	perfection	tempered	were	the	wax,
 And	were	the	heaven	in	its	supremest	virtue,
  The	brilliance	of	the	seal	would	all	appear;
    But	nature	gives	it	evermore	deficient,
   In	the	like	manner	working	as	the	artist,
Who	has	the	skill	of	art	and	hand	that	trembles.
   If	then	the	fervent	Love,	the	Vision	clear,
     Of	primal	Virtue	do	dispose	and	seal,
     Perfection	absolute	is	there	acquired.
   Thus	was	of	old	the	earth	created	worthy
      Of	all	and	every	animal	perfection;
   And	thus	the	Virgin	was	impregnate	made;
     So	that	thine	own	opinion	I	commend,
     That	human	nature	never	yet	has	been,
 Nor	will	be,	what	it	was	in	those	two	persons.
    Now	if	no	farther	forth	I	should	proceed,
   'Then	in	what	way	was	he	without	a	peer?'
   Would	be	the	first	beginning	of	thy	words.
But,	that	may	well	appear	what	now	appears	not,
Think	who	he	was,	and	what	occasion	moved	him
  To	make	request,	when	it	was	told	him,	'Ask.'
    I've	not	so	spoken	that	thou	canst	not	see
  Clearly	he	was	a	king	who	asked	for	wisdom,
      That	he	might	be	sufficiently	a	king;
   'Twas	not	to	know	the	number	in	which	are
     The	motors	here	above,	or	if	'necesse'
     With	a	contingent	e'er	'necesse'	make,
     'Non	si	est	dare	primum	motum	esse,'
         Or	if	in	semicircle	can	be	made
     Triangle	so	that	it	have	no	right	angle.
   Whence,	if	thou	notest	this	and	what	I	said,
     A	regal	prudence	is	that	peerless	seeing
   In	which	the	shaft	of	my	intention	strikes.
   And	if	on	'rose'	thou	turnest	thy	clear	eyes,
      Thou'lt	see	that	it	has	reference	alone
  To	kings	who're	many,	and	the	good	are	rare.
   With	this	distinction	take	thou	what	I	said,
     And	thus	it	can	consist	with	thy	belief
      Of	the	first	father	and	of	our	Delight.
    And	lead	shall	this	be	always	to	thy	feet,
 To	make	thee,	like	a	weary	man,	move	slowly
     Both	to	the	Yes	and	No	thou	seest	not;
       For	very	low	among	the	fools	is	he
   Who	affirms	without	distinction,	or	denies,
       As	well	in	one	as	in	the	other	case;
     Because	it	happens	that	full	often	bends
      Current	opinion	in	the	false	direction,
     And	then	the	feelings	bind	the	intellect.
   Far	more	than	uselessly	he	leaves	the	shore,
    (Since	he	returneth	not	the	same	he	went,)
    Who	fishes	for	the	truth,	and	has	no	skill;
    And	in	the	world	proofs	manifest	thereof
       Parmenides,	Melissus,	Brissus	are,
 And	many	who	went	on	and	knew	not	whither;
    Thus	did	Sabellius,	Arius,	and	those	fools
Who	have	been	even	as	swords	unto	the	Scriptures
    In	rendering	distorted	their	straight	faces.
      Nor	yet	shall	people	be	too	confident
    In	judging,	even	as	he	is	who	doth	count
       The	corn	in	field	or	ever	it	be	ripe.
     For	I	have	seen	all	winter	long	the	thorn
     First	show	itself	intractable	and	fierce,
       And	after	bear	the	rose	upon	its	top;
     And	I	have	seen	a	ship	direct	and	swift
  Run	o'er	the	sea	throughout	its	course	entire,
     To	perish	at	the	harbour's	mouth	at	last.
   Let	not	Dame	Bertha	nor	Ser	Martin	think,
    Seeing	one	steal,	another	offering	make,
      To	see	them	in	the	arbitrament	divine;
    For	one	may	rise,	and	fall	the	other	may."                         	
                  Canto	XIV                        	
  From	centre	unto	rim,	from	rim	to	centre,
    In	a	round	vase	the	water	moves	itself,
  As	from	without	'tis	struck	or	from	within.
    Into	my	mind	upon	a	sudden	dropped
    What	I	am	saying,	at	the	moment	when
  Silent	became	the	glorious	life	of	Thomas,
  Because	of	the	resemblance	that	was	born
     Of	his	discourse	and	that	of	Beatrice,
  Whom,	after	him,	it	pleased	thus	to	begin:
 "This	man	has	need	(and	does	not	tell	you	so,
 Nor	with	the	voice,	nor	even	in	his	thought)
    Of	going	to	the	root	of	one	truth	more.
   Declare	unto	him	if	the	light	wherewith
Blossoms	your	substance	shall	remain	with	you
       Eternally	the	same	that	it	is	now;
   And	if	it	do	remain,	say	in	what	manner,
       After	ye	are	again	made	visible,
    It	can	be	that	it	injure	not	your	sight."
  As	by	a	greater	gladness	urged	and	drawn
  They	who	are	dancing	in	a	ring	sometimes
Uplift	their	voices	and	their	motions	quicken;
     So,	at	that	orison	devout	and	prompt,
     The	holy	circles	a	new	joy	displayed
  In	their	revolving	and	their	wondrous	song.
    Whoso	lamenteth	him	that	here	we	die
   That	we	may	live	above,	has	never	there
   Seen	the	refreshment	of	the	eternal	rain.
 The	One	and	Two	and	Three	who	ever	liveth,
 And	reigneth	ever	in	Three	and	Two	and	One,
Not	circumscribed	and	all	things	circumscribing,
 Three	several	times	was	chanted	by	each	one
    Among	those	spirits,	with	such	melody
     That	for	all	merit	it	were	just	reward;
      And,	in	the	lustre	most	divine	of	all
    The	lesser	ring,	I	heard	a	modest	voice,
   Such	as	perhaps	the	Angel's	was	to	Mary,
       Answer:	"As	long	as	the	festivity
     Of	Paradise	shall	be,	so	long	our	love
  Shall	radiate	round	about	us	such	a	vesture.
  Its	brightness	is	proportioned	to	the	ardour,
    The	ardour	to	the	vision;	and	the	vision
   Equals	what	grace	it	has	above	its	worth.
    When,	glorious	and	sanctified,	our	flesh
    Is	reassumed,	then	shall	our	persons	be
   More	pleasing	by	their	being	all	complete;
    For	will	increase	whate'er	bestows	on	us
     Of	light	gratuitous	the	Good	Supreme,
    Light	which	enables	us	to	look	on	Him;
  Therefore	the	vision	must	perforce	increase,
 Increase	the	ardour	which	from	that	is	kindled,
Increase	the	radiance	which	from	this	proceeds.
   But	even	as	a	coal	that	sends	forth	flame,
   And	by	its	vivid	whiteness	overpowers	it
    So	that	its	own	appearance	it	maintains,
   Thus	the	effulgence	that	surrounds	us	now
  Shall	be	o'erpowered	in	aspect	by	the	flesh,
   Which	still	to-day	the	earth	doth	cover	up;
    Nor	can	so	great	a	splendour	weary	us,
     For	strong	will	be	the	organs	of	the	body
To	everything	which	hath	the	power	to	please	us."
       So	sudden	and	alert	appeared	to	me
    Both	one	and	the	other	choir	to	say	Amen,
That	well	they	showed	desire	for	their	dead	bodies;
  Nor	sole	for	them	perhaps,	but	for	the	mothers,
   The	fathers,	and	the	rest	who	had	been	dear
       Or	ever	they	became	eternal	flames.
    And	lo!	all	round	about	of	equal	brightness
       Arose	a	lustre	over	what	was	there,
        Like	an	horizon	that	is	clearing	up.
         And	as	at	rise	of	early	eve	begin
       Along	the	welkin	new	appearances,
      So	that	the	sight	seems	real	and	unreal,
      It	seemed	to	me	that	new	subsistences
    Began	there	to	be	seen,	and	make	a	circle
      Outside	the	other	two	circumferences.
       O	very	sparkling	of	the	Holy	Spirit,
     How	sudden	and	incandescent	it	became
   Unto	mine	eyes,	that	vanquished	bore	it	not!
      But	Beatrice	so	beautiful	and	smiling
    Appeared	to	me,	that	with	the	other	sights
 That	followed	not	my	memory	I	must	leave	her.
  Then	to	uplift	themselves	mine	eyes	resumed
    The	power,	and	I	beheld	myself	translated
     To	higher	salvation	with	my	Lady	only.
     Well	was	I	ware	that	I	was	more	uplifted
       By	the	enkindled	smiling	of	the	star,
  That	seemed	to	me	more	ruddy	than	its	wont.
       With	all	my	heart,	and	in	that	dialect
    Which	is	the	same	in	all,	such	holocaust
   To	God	I	made	as	the	new	grace	beseemed;
   And	not	yet	from	my	bosom	was	exhausted
     The	ardour	of	sacrifice,	before	I	knew
   This	offering	was	accepted	and	auspicious;
       For	with	so	great	a	lustre	and	so	red
   Splendours	appeared	to	me	in	twofold	rays,
   I	said:	"O	Helios	who	dost	so	adorn	them!"
   Even	as	distinct	with	less	and	greater	lights
  Glimmers	between	the	two	poles	of	the	world
    The	Galaxy	that	maketh	wise	men	doubt,
    Thus	constellated	in	the	depths	of	Mars,
     Those	rays	described	the	venerable	sign
     That	quadrants	joining	in	a	circle	make.
  Here	doth	my	memory	overcome	my	genius;
 For	on	that	cross	as	levin	gleamed	forth	Christ,
     So	that	I	cannot	find	ensample	worthy;
  But	he	who	takes	his	cross	and	follows	Christ
       Again	will	pardon	me	what	I	omit,
       Seeing	in	that	aurora	lighten	Christ.
 From	horn	to	horn,	and	'twixt	the	top	and	base,
   Lights	were	in	motion,	brightly	scintillating
   As	they	together	met	and	passed	each	other;
    Thus	level	and	aslant	and	swift	and	slow
    We	here	behold,	renewing	still	the	sight,
     The	particles	of	bodies	long	and	short,
 Across	the	sunbeam	move,	wherewith	is	listed
Sometimes	the	shade,	which	for	their	own	defence
   People	with	cunning	and	with	art	contrive.
    And	as	a	lute	and	harp,	accordant	strung
   With	many	strings,	a	dulcet	tinkling	make
To	him	by	whom	the	notes	are	not	distinguished,
  So	from	the	lights	that	there	to	me	appeared
    Upgathered	through	the	cross	a	melody,
 Which	rapt	me,	not	distinguishing	the	hymn.
      Well	was	I	ware	it	was	of	lofty	laud,
Because	there	came	to	me,	"Arise	and	conquer!"
 As	unto	him	who	hears	and	comprehends	not.
   So	much	enamoured	I	became	therewith,
     That	until	then	there	was	not	anything
That	e'er	had	fettered	me	with	such	sweet	bonds.
 Perhaps	my	word	appears	somewhat	too	bold,
   Postponing	the	delight	of	those	fair	eyes,
     Into	which	gazing	my	desire	has	rest;
   But	who	bethinks	him	that	the	living	seals
   Of	every	beauty	grow	in	power	ascending,
 And	that	I	there	had	not	turned	round	to	those,
       Can	me	excuse,	if	I	myself	accuse
  To	excuse	myself,	and	see	that	I	speak	truly:
     For	here	the	holy	joy	is	not	disclosed,
   Because	ascending	it	becomes	more	pure.                        	
                   Canto	XV
                        	
     A	will	benign,	in	which	reveals	itself
    Ever	the	love	that	righteously	inspires,
         As	in	the	iniquitous,	cupidity,
     Silence	imposed	upon	that	dulcet	lyre,
      And	quieted	the	consecrated	chords,
That	Heaven's	right	hand	doth	tighten	and	relax.
       How	unto	just	entreaties	shall	be	deaf
    Those	substances,	which,	to	give	me	desire
  Of	praying	them,	with	one	accord	grew	silent?
    'Tis	well	that	without	end	he	should	lament,
    Who	for	the	love	of	thing	that	doth	not	last
        Eternally	despoils	him	of	that	love!
   As	through	the	pure	and	tranquil	evening	air
   There	shoots	from	time	to	time	a	sudden	fire,
    Moving	the	eyes	that	steadfast	were	before,
    And	seems	to	be	a	star	that	changeth	place,
     Except	that	in	the	part	where	it	is	kindled
    Nothing	is	missed,	and	this	endureth	little;
     So	from	the	horn	that	to	the	right	extends
       Unto	that	cross's	foot	there	ran	a	star
       Out	of	the	constellation	shining	there;
   Nor	was	the	gem	dissevered	from	its	ribbon,
       But	down	the	radiant	fillet	ran	along,
      So	that	fire	seemed	it	behind	alabaster.
  Thus	piteous	did	Anchises'	shade	reach	forward,
      If	any	faith	our	greatest	Muse	deserve,
      When	in	Elysium	he	his	son	perceived.
         "O	sanguis	meus,	O	superinfusa
             Gratia	Dei,	sicut	tibi,	cui
         Bis	unquam	Coeli	janua	reclusa?"
   Thus	that	effulgence;	whence	I	gave	it	heed;
    Then	round	unto	my	Lady	turned	my	sight,
      And	on	this	side	and	that	was	stupefied;
     For	in	her	eyes	was	burning	such	a	smile
That	with	mine	own	methought	I	touched	the	bottom
       Both	of	my	grace	and	of	my	Paradise!
      Then,	pleasant	to	the	hearing	and	the	sight,
        The	spirit	joined	to	its	beginning	things
        I	understood	not,	so	profound	it	spake;
       Nor	did	it	hide	itself	from	me	by	choice,
          But	by	necessity;	for	its	conception
         Above	the	mark	of	mortals	set	itself.
       And	when	the	bow	of	burning	sympathy
    Was	so	far	slackened,	that	its	speech	descended
         Towards	the	mark	of	our	intelligence,
       The	first	thing	that	was	understood	by	me
      Was	"Benedight	be	Thou,	O	Trine	and	One,
      Who	hast	unto	my	seed	so	courteous	been!"
     And	it	continued:	"Hunger	long	and	grateful,
    Drawn	from	the	reading	of	the	mighty	volume
     Wherein	is	never	changed	the	white	nor	dark,
     Thou	hast	appeased,	my	son,	within	this	light
       In	which	I	speak	to	thee,	by	grace	of	her
  Who	to	this	lofty	flight	with	plumage	clothed	thee.
    Thou	thinkest	that	to	me	thy	thought	doth	pass
      From	Him	who	is	the	first,	as	from	the	unit,
       If	that	be	known,	ray	out	the	five	and	six;
       And	therefore	who	I	am	thou	askest	not,
        And	why	I	seem	more	joyous	unto	thee
        Than	any	other	of	this	gladsome	crowd.
  Thou	think'st	the	truth;	because	the	small	and	great
         Of	this	existence	look	into	the	mirror
Wherein,	before	thou	think'st,	thy	thought	thou	showest.
       But	that	the	sacred	love,	in	which	I	watch
   With	sight	perpetual,	and	which	makes	me	thirst
       With	sweet	desire,	may	better	be	fulfilled,
   Now	let	thy	voice	secure	and	frank	and	glad
     Proclaim	the	wishes,	the	desire	proclaim,
     To	which	my	answer	is	decreed	already."
      To	Beatrice	I	turned	me,	and	she	heard
     Before	I	spake,	and	smiled	to	me	a	sign,
    That	made	the	wings	of	my	desire	increase;
 Then	in	this	wise	began	I:	"Love	and	knowledge,
     When	on	you	dawned	the	first	Equality,
   Of	the	same	weight	for	each	of	you	became;
   For	in	the	Sun,	which	lighted	you	and	burned
    With	heat	and	radiance,	they	so	equal	are,
       That	all	similitudes	are	insufficient.
      But	among	mortals	will	and	argument,
        For	reason	that	to	you	is	manifest,
     Diversely	feathered	in	their	pinions	are.
     Whence	I,	who	mortal	am,	feel	in	myself
        This	inequality;	so	give	not	thanks,
   Save	in	my	heart,	for	this	paternal	welcome.
       Truly	do	I	entreat	thee,	living	topaz!
        Set	in	this	precious	jewel	as	a	gem,
     That	thou	wilt	satisfy	me	with	thy	name."
     "O	leaf	of	mine,	in	whom	I	pleasure	took
    E'en	while	awaiting,	I	was	thine	own	root!"
     Such	a	beginning	he	in	answer	made	me.
 Then	said	to	me:	"That	one	from	whom	is	named
   Thy	race,	and	who	a	hundred	years	and	more
 Has	circled	round	the	mount	on	the	first	cornice,
    A	son	of	mine	and	thy	great-grandsire	was;
     Well	it	behoves	thee	that	the	long	fatigue
Thou	shouldst	for	him	make	shorter	with	thy	works.
     Florence,	within	the	ancient	boundary
From	which	she	taketh	still	her	tierce	and	nones,
     Abode	in	quiet,	temperate	and	chaste.
     No	golden	chain	she	had,	nor	coronal,
 Nor	ladies	shod	with	sandal	shoon,	nor	girdle
 That	caught	the	eye	more	than	the	person	did.
  Not	yet	the	daughter	at	her	birth	struck	fear
     Into	the	father,	for	the	time	and	dower
  Did	not	o'errun	this	side	or	that	the	measure.
      No	houses	had	she	void	of	families,
    Not	yet	had	thither	come	Sardanapalus
   To	show	what	in	a	chamber	can	be	done;
    Not	yet	surpassed	had	Montemalo	been
     By	your	Uccellatojo,	which	surpassed
      Shall	in	its	downfall	be	as	in	its	rise.
        Bellincion	Berti	saw	I	go	begirt
With	leather	and	with	bone,	and	from	the	mirror
    His	dame	depart	without	a	painted	face;
  And	him	of	Nerli	saw,	and	him	of	Vecchio,
    Contented	with	their	simple	suits	of	buff
 And	with	the	spindle	and	the	flax	their	dames.
 O	fortunate	women!	and	each	one	was	certain
   Of	her	own	burial-place,	and	none	as	yet
  For	sake	of	France	was	in	her	bed	deserted.
  One	o'er	the	cradle	kept	her	studious	watch,
     And	in	her	lullaby	the	language	used
 That	first	delights	the	fathers	and	the	mothers;
   Another,	drawing	tresses	from	her	distaff,
      Told	o'er	among	her	family	the	tales
      Of	Trojans	and	of	Fesole	and	Rome.
 As	great	a	marvel	then	would	have	been	held
        A	Lapo	Salterello,	a	Cianghella,
        As	Cincinnatus	or	Cornelia	now.
        To	such	a	quiet,	such	a	beautiful
        Life	of	the	citizen,	to	such	a	safe
      Community,	and	to	so	sweet	an	inn,
  Did	Mary	give	me,	with	loud	cries	invoked,
     And	in	your	ancient	Baptistery	at	once
      Christian	and	Cacciaguida	I	became.
     Moronto	was	my	brother,	and	Eliseo;
    From	Val	di	Pado	came	to	me	my	wife,
 And	from	that	place	thy	surname	was	derived.
   I	followed	afterward	the	Emperor	Conrad,
        And	he	begirt	me	of	his	chivalry,
 So	much	I	pleased	him	with	my	noble	deeds.
    I	followed	in	his	train	against	that	law's
       Iniquity,	whose	people	doth	usurp
Your	just	possession,	through	your	Pastor's	fault.
       There	by	that	execrable	race	was	I
 Released	from	bonds	of	the	fallacious	world,
    The	love	of	which	defileth	many	souls,
  And	came	from	martyrdom	unto	this	peace."                         	
                   Canto	XVI
                         	
       O	thou	our	poor	nobility	of	blood,
   If	thou	dost	make	the	people	glory	in	thee
  Down	here	where	our	affection	languishes,
    A	marvellous	thing	it	ne'er	will	be	to	me;
   For	there	where	appetite	is	not	perverted,
  I	say	in	Heaven,	of	thee	I	made	a	boast!
Truly	thou	art	a	cloak	that	quickly	shortens,
  So	that	unless	we	piece	thee	day	by	day
Time	goeth	round	about	thee	with	his	shears!
With	'You,'	which	Rome	was	first	to	tolerate,
   (Wherein	her	family	less	perseveres,)
 Yet	once	again	my	words	beginning	made;
Whence	Beatrice,	who	stood	somewhat	apart,
Smiling,	appeared	like	unto	her	who	coughed
    At	the	first	failing	writ	of	Guenever.
    And	I	began:	"You	are	my	ancestor,
   You	give	to	me	all	hardihood	to	speak,
    You	lift	me	so	that	I	am	more	than	I.
     So	many	rivulets	with	gladness	fill
    My	mind,	that	of	itself	it	makes	a	joy
  Because	it	can	endure	this	and	not	burst.
  Then	tell	me,	my	beloved	root	ancestral,
Who	were	your	ancestors,	and	what	the	years
That	in	your	boyhood	chronicled	themselves?
 Tell	me	about	the	sheepfold	of	Saint	John,
 How	large	it	was,	and	who	the	people	were
   Within	it	worthy	of	the	highest	seats."
    As	at	the	blowing	of	the	winds	a	coal
  Quickens	to	flame,	so	I	beheld	that	light
 Become	resplendent	at	my	blandishments.
  And	as	unto	mine	eyes	it	grew	more	fair,
With	voice	more	sweet	and	tender,	but	not	in
     This	modern	dialect,	it	said	to	me:
  "From	uttering	of	the	'Ave,'	till	the	birth
  In	which	my	mother,	who	is	now	a	saint,
  Of	me	was	lightened	who	had	been	her	burden,
        Unto	its	Lion	had	this	fire	returned
     Five	hundred	fifty	times	and	thirty	more,
        To	reinflame	itself	beneath	his	paw.
      My	ancestors	and	I	our	birthplace	had
   Where	first	is	found	the	last	ward	of	the	city
    By	him	who	runneth	in	your	annual	game.
        Suffice	it	of	my	elders	to	hear	this;
But	who	they	were,	and	whence	they	thither	came,
     Silence	is	more	considerate	than	speech.
  All	those	who	at	that	time	were	there	between
    Mars	and	the	Baptist,	fit	for	bearing	arms,
   Were	a	fifth	part	of	those	who	now	are	living;
      But	the	community,	that	now	is	mixed
     With	Campi	and	Certaldo	and	Figghine,
        Pure	in	the	lowest	artisan	was	seen.
 O	how	much	better	'twere	to	have	as	neighbours
    The	folk	of	whom	I	speak,	and	at	Galluzzo
      And	at	Trespiano	have	your	boundary,
 Than	have	them	in	the	town,	and	bear	the	stench
      Of	Aguglione's	churl,	and	him	of	Signa
     Who	has	sharp	eyes	for	trickery	already.
   Had	not	the	folk,	which	most	of	all	the	world
   Degenerates,	been	a	step-dame	unto	Caesar,
       But	as	a	mother	to	her	son	benignant,
Some	who	turn	Florentines,	and	trade	and	discount,
    Would	have	gone	back	again	to	Simifonte
There	where	their	grandsires	went	about	as	beggars.
    At	Montemurlo	still	would	be	the	Counts,
        The	Cerchi	in	the	parish	of	Acone,
   Perhaps	in	Valdigrieve	the	Buondelmonti.
      Ever	the	intermingling	of	the	people
    Has	been	the	source	of	malady	in	cities,
       As	in	the	body	food	it	surfeits	on;
 And	a	blind	bull	more	headlong	plunges	down
     Than	a	blind	lamb;	and	very	often	cuts
    Better	and	more	a	single	sword	than	five.
      If	Luni	thou	regard,	and	Urbisaglia,
How	they	have	passed	away,	and	how	are	passing
        Chiusi	and	Sinigaglia	after	them,
   To	hear	how	races	waste	themselves	away,
   Will	seem	to	thee	no	novel	thing	nor	hard,
      Seeing	that	even	cities	have	an	end.
    All	things	of	yours	have	their	mortality,
  Even	as	yourselves;	but	it	is	hidden	in	some
  That	a	long	while	endure,	and	lives	are	short;
     And	as	the	turning	of	the	lunar	heaven
  Covers	and	bares	the	shores	without	a	pause,
 In	the	like	manner	fortune	does	with	Florence.
 Therefore	should	not	appear	a	marvellous	thing
    What	I	shall	say	of	the	great	Florentines
    Of	whom	the	fame	is	hidden	in	the	Past.
        I	saw	the	Ughi,	saw	the	Catellini,
     Filippi,	Greci,	Ormanni,	and	Alberichi,
      Even	in	their	fall	illustrious	citizens;
    And	saw,	as	mighty	as	they	ancient	were,
     With	him	of	La	Sannella	him	of	Arca,
     And	Soldanier,	Ardinghi,	and	Bostichi.
     Near	to	the	gate	that	is	at	present	laden
     With	a	new	felony	of	so	much	weight
   That	soon	it	shall	be	jetsam	from	the	bark,
  The	Ravignani	were,	from	whom	descended
   The	County	Guido,	and	whoe'er	the	name
   Of	the	great	Bellincione	since	hath	taken.
     He	of	La	Pressa	knew	the	art	of	ruling
         Already,	and	already	Galigajo
   Had	hilt	and	pommel	gilded	in	his	house.
     Mighty	already	was	the	Column	Vair,
    Sacchetti,	Giuochi,	Fifant,	and	Barucci,
 And	Galli,	and	they	who	for	the	bushel	blush.
 The	stock	from	which	were	the	Calfucci	born
     Was	great	already,	and	already	chosen
    To	curule	chairs	the	Sizii	and	Arrigucci.
     O	how	beheld	I	those	who	are	undone
By	their	own	pride!	and	how	the	Balls	of	Gold
 Florence	enflowered	in	all	their	mighty	deeds!
     So	likewise	did	the	ancestors	of	those
  Who	evermore,	when	vacant	is	your	church,
        Fatten	by	staying	in	consistory.
  The	insolent	race,	that	like	a	dragon	follows
    Whoever	flees,	and	unto	him	that	shows
     His	teeth	or	purse	is	gentle	as	a	lamb,
   Already	rising	was,	but	from	low	people;
     So	that	it	pleased	not	Ubertin	Donato
That	his	wife's	father	should	make	him	their	kin.
    Already	had	Caponsacco	to	the	Market
      From	Fesole	descended,	and	already
   Giuda	and	Infangato	were	good	burghers.
       I'll	tell	a	thing	incredible,	but	true;
     One	entered	the	small	circuit	by	a	gate
      Which	from	the	Della	Pera	took	its	name!
    Each	one	that	bears	the	beautiful	escutcheon
     Of	the	great	baron	whose	renown	and	name
        The	festival	of	Thomas	keepeth	fresh,
    Knighthood	and	privilege	from	him	received;
      Though	with	the	populace	unites	himself
     To-day	the	man	who	binds	it	with	a	border.
      Already	were	Gualterotti	and	Importuni;
      And	still	more	quiet	would	the	Borgo	be
      If	with	new	neighbours	it	remained	unfed.
   The	house	from	which	is	born	your	lamentation,
 Through	just	disdain	that	death	among	you	brought
        And	put	an	end	unto	your	joyous	life,
     Was	honoured	in	itself	and	its	companions.
         O	Buondelmonte,	how	in	evil	hour
   Thou	fled'st	the	bridal	at	another's	promptings!
       Many	would	be	rejoicing	who	are	sad,
       If	God	had	thee	surrendered	to	the	Ema
      The	first	time	that	thou	camest	to	the	city.
         But	it	behoved	the	mutilated	stone
Which	guards	the	bridge,	that	Florence	should	provide
         A	victim	in	her	latest	hour	of	peace.
    With	all	these	families,	and	others	with	them,
        Florence	beheld	I	in	so	great	repose,
     That	no	occasion	had	she	whence	to	weep;
        With	all	these	families	beheld	so	just
        And	glorious	her	people,	that	the	lily
     Never	upon	the	spear	was	placed	reversed,
       Nor	by	division	was	vermilion	made."                           	
                  Canto	XVII                        	
   As	came	to	Clymene,	to	be	made	certain
  Of	that	which	he	had	heard	against	himself,
 He	who	makes	fathers	chary	still	to	children,
  Even	such	was	I,	and	such	was	I	perceived
       By	Beatrice	and	by	the	holy	light
That	first	on	my	account	had	changed	its	place.
  Therefore	my	Lady	said	to	me:	"Send	forth
    The	flame	of	thy	desire,	so	that	it	issue
    Imprinted	well	with	the	internal	stamp;
 Not	that	our	knowledge	may	be	greater	made
   By	speech	of	thine,	but	to	accustom	thee
To	tell	thy	thirst,	that	we	may	give	thee	drink."
   "O	my	beloved	tree,	(that	so	dost	lift	thee,
    That	even	as	minds	terrestrial	perceive
      No	triangle	containeth	two	obtuse,
    So	thou	beholdest	the	contingent	things
 Ere	in	themselves	they	are,	fixing	thine	eyes
Upon	the	point	in	which	all	times	are	present,)
     While	I	was	with	Virgilius	conjoined
  Upon	the	mountain	that	the	souls	doth	heal,
  And	when	descending	into	the	dead	world,
      Were	spoken	to	me	of	my	future	life
 Some	grievous	words;	although	I	feel	myself
In	sooth	foursquare	against	the	blows	of	chance.
  On	this	account	my	wish	would	be	content
   To	hear	what	fortune	is	approaching	me,
Because	foreseen	an	arrow	comes	more	slowly."
    Thus	did	I	say	unto	that	selfsame	light
  That	unto	me	had	spoken	before;	and	even
As	Beatrice	willed	was	my	own	will	confessed.
Not	in	vague	phrase,	in	which	the	foolish	folk
 Ensnared	themselves	of	old,	ere	yet	was	slain
   The	Lamb	of	God	who	taketh	sins	away,
    But	with	clear	words	and	unambiguous
    Language	responded	that	paternal	love,
  Hid	and	revealed	by	its	own	proper	smile:
   "Contingency,	that	outside	of	the	volume
       Of	your	materiality	extends	not,
      Is	all	depicted	in	the	eternal	aspect.
    Necessity	however	thence	it	takes	not,
Except	as	from	the	eye,	in	which	'tis	mirrored,
  A	ship	that	with	the	current	down	descends.
 From	thence,	e'en	as	there	cometh	to	the	ear
Sweet	harmony	from	an	organ,	comes	in	sight
   To	me	the	time	that	is	preparing	for	thee.
    As	forth	from	Athens	went	Hippolytus,
  By	reason	of	his	step-dame	false	and	cruel,
 So	thou	from	Florence	must	perforce	depart.
 Already	this	is	willed,	and	this	is	sought	for;
And	soon	it	shall	be	done	by	him	who	thinks	it,
Where	every	day	the	Christ	is	bought	and	sold.
  The	blame	shall	follow	the	offended	party
    In	outcry	as	is	usual;	but	the	vengeance
Shall	witness	to	the	truth	that	doth	dispense	it.
    Thou	shalt	abandon	everything	beloved
      Most	tenderly,	and	this	the	arrow	is
Which	first	the	bow	of	banishment	shoots	forth.
 Thou	shalt	have	proof	how	savoureth	of	salt
     The	bread	of	others,	and	how	hard	a	road
      The	going	down	and	up	another's	stairs.
And	that	which	most	shall	weigh	upon	thy	shoulders
       Will	be	the	bad	and	foolish	company
    With	which	into	this	valley	thou	shalt	fall;
        For	all	ingrate,	all	mad	and	impious
   Will	they	become	against	thee;	but	soon	after
They,	and	not	thou,	shall	have	the	forehead	scarlet.
     Of	their	bestiality	their	own	proceedings
   Shall	furnish	proof;	so	'twill	be	well	for	thee
       A	party	to	have	made	thee	by	thyself.
    Thine	earliest	refuge	and	thine	earliest	inn
     Shall	be	the	mighty	Lombard's	courtesy,
      Who	on	the	Ladder	bears	the	holy	bird,
    Who	such	benign	regard	shall	have	for	thee
   That	'twixt	you	twain,	in	doing	and	in	asking,
    That	shall	be	first	which	is	with	others	last.
    With	him	shalt	thou	see	one	who	at	his	birth
  Has	by	this	star	of	strength	been	so	impressed,
      That	notable	shall	his	achievements	be.
        Not	yet	the	people	are	aware	of	him
 Through	his	young	age,	since	only	nine	years	yet
  Around	about	him	have	these	wheels	revolved.
    But	ere	the	Gascon	cheat	the	noble	Henry,
      Some	sparkles	of	his	virtue	shall	appear
        In	caring	not	for	silver	nor	for	toil.
       So	recognized	shall	his	magnificence
        Become	hereafter,	that	his	enemies
Will	not	have	power	to	keep	mute	tongues	about	it.
         On	him	rely,	and	on	his	benefits;
     By	him	shall	many	people	be	transformed,
      Changing	condition	rich	and	mendicant;
   And	written	in	thy	mind	thou	hence	shalt	bear
  Of	him,	but	shalt	not	say	it"—and	things	said	he
      Incredible	to	those	who	shall	be	present.
   Then	added:	"Son,	these	are	the	commentaries
    On	what	was	said	to	thee;	behold	the	snares
     That	are	concealed	behind	few	revolutions;
 Yet	would	I	not	thy	neighbours	thou	shouldst	envy,
       Because	thy	life	into	the	future	reaches
     Beyond	the	punishment	of	their	perfidies."
    When	by	its	silence	showed	that	sainted	soul
       That	it	had	finished	putting	in	the	woof
     Into	that	web	which	I	had	given	it	warped,
       Began	I,	even	as	he	who	yearneth	after,
    Being	in	doubt,	some	counsel	from	a	person
     Who	seeth,	and	uprightly	wills,	and	loves:
      "Well	see	I,	father	mine,	how	spurreth	on
    The	time	towards	me	such	a	blow	to	deal	me
     As	heaviest	is	to	him	who	most	gives	way.
    Therefore	with	foresight	it	is	well	I	arm	me,
     That,	if	the	dearest	place	be	taken	from	me,
       I	may	not	lose	the	others	by	my	songs.
   Down	through	the	world	of	infinite	bitterness,
And	o'er	the	mountain,	from	whose	beauteous	summit
        The	eyes	of	my	own	Lady	lifted	me,
  And	afterward	through	heaven	from	light	to	light,
      I	have	learned	that	which,	if	I	tell	again,
      Will	be	a	savour	of	strong	herbs	to	many.
         And	if	I	am	a	timid	friend	to	truth,
    I	fear	lest	I	may	lose	my	life	with	those
  Who	will	hereafter	call	this	time	the	olden."
The	light	in	which	was	smiling	my	own	treasure
 Which	there	I	had	discovered,	flashed	at	first
    As	in	the	sunshine	doth	a	golden	mirror;
   Then	made	reply:	"A	conscience	overcast
    Or	with	its	own	or	with	another's	shame,
  Will	taste	forsooth	the	tartness	of	thy	word;
    But	ne'ertheless,	all	falsehood	laid	aside,
        Make	manifest	thy	vision	utterly,
   And	let	them	scratch	wherever	is	the	itch;
    For	if	thine	utterance	shall	offensive	be
       At	the	first	taste,	a	vital	nutriment
   'Twill	leave	thereafter,	when	it	is	digested.
   This	cry	of	thine	shall	do	as	doth	the	wind,
 Which	smiteth	most	the	most	exalted	summits,
   And	that	is	no	slight	argument	of	honour.
Therefore	are	shown	to	thee	within	these	wheels,
  Upon	the	mount	and	in	the	dolorous	valley,
   Only	the	souls	that	unto	fame	are	known;
    Because	the	spirit	of	the	hearer	rests	not,
   Nor	doth	confirm	its	faith	by	an	example
 Which	has	the	root	of	it	unknown	and	hidden,
      Or	other	reason	that	is	not	apparent."                         	
                  Canto	XVIII
                         	
      Now	was	alone	rejoicing	in	its	word
      That	soul	beatified,	and	I	was	tasting
 My	own,	the	bitter	tempering	with	the	sweet,
   And	the	Lady	who	to	God	was	leading	me
 Said:	"Change	thy	thought;	consider	that	I	am
 Near	unto	Him	who	every	wrong	disburdens."
     Unto	the	loving	accents	of	my	comfort
  I	turned	me	round,	and	then	what	love	I	saw
    Within	those	holy	eyes	I	here	relinquish;
      Not	only	that	my	language	I	distrust,
     But	that	my	mind	cannot	return	so	far
      Above	itself,	unless	another	guide	it.
    Thus	much	upon	that	point	can	I	repeat,
    That,	her	again	beholding,	my	affection
    From	every	other	longing	was	released.
    While	the	eternal	pleasure,	which	direct
    Rayed	upon	Beatrice,	from	her	fair	face
     Contented	me	with	its	reflected	aspect,
  Conquering	me	with	the	radiance	of	a	smile,
  She	said	to	me,	"Turn	thee	about	and	listen;
      Not	in	mine	eyes	alone	is	Paradise."
     Even	as	sometimes	here	do	we	behold
     The	affection	in	the	look,	if	it	be	such
      That	all	the	soul	is	wrapt	away	by	it,
   So,	by	the	flaming	of	the	effulgence	holy
    To	which	I	turned,	I	recognized	therein
 The	wish	of	speaking	to	me	somewhat	farther.
    And	it	began:	"In	this	fifth	resting-place
    Upon	the	tree	that	liveth	by	its	summit,
    And	aye	bears	fruit,	and	never	loses	leaf,
     Are	blessed	spirits	that	below,	ere	yet
They	came	to	Heaven,	were	of	such	great	renown
 That	every	Muse	therewith	would	affluent	be.
   Therefore	look	thou	upon	the	cross's	horns;
   He	whom	I	now	shall	name	will	there	enact
  What	doth	within	a	cloud	its	own	swift	fire."
   I	saw	athwart	the	Cross	a	splendour	drawn
     By	naming	Joshua,	(even	as	he	did	it,)
     Nor	noted	I	the	word	before	the	deed;
     And	at	the	name	of	the	great	Maccabee
      I	saw	another	move	itself	revolving,
    And	gladness	was	the	whip	unto	that	top.
  Likewise	for	Charlemagne	and	for	Orlando,
   Two	of	them	my	regard	attentive	followed
     As	followeth	the	eye	its	falcon	flying.
     William	thereafterward,	and	Renouard,
   And	the	Duke	Godfrey,	did	attract	my	sight
  Along	upon	that	Cross,	and	Robert	Guiscard.
 Then,	moved	and	mingled	with	the	other	lights,
The	soul	that	had	addressed	me	showed	how	great
   An	artist	'twas	among	the	heavenly	singers.
    To	my	right	side	I	turned	myself	around,
         My	duty	to	behold	in	Beatrice
      Either	by	words	or	gesture	signified;
      And	so	translucent	I	beheld	her	eyes,
    So	full	of	pleasure,	that	her	countenance
     Surpassed	its	other	and	its	latest	wont.
     And	as,	by	feeling	greater	delectation,
     A	man	in	doing	good	from	day	to	day
     Becomes	aware	his	virtue	is	increasing,
      So	I	became	aware	that	my	gyration
   With	heaven	together	had	increased	its	arc,
     That	miracle	beholding	more	adorned.
      And	such	as	is	the	change,	in	little	lapse
      Of	time,	in	a	pale	woman,	when	her	face
      Is	from	the	load	of	bashfulness	unladen,
    Such	was	it	in	mine	eyes,	when	I	had	turned,
   Caused	by	the	whiteness	of	the	temperate	star,
     The	sixth,	which	to	itself	had	gathered	me.
        Within	that	Jovial	torch	did	I	behold
    The	sparkling	of	the	love	which	was	therein
        Delineate	our	language	to	mine	eyes.
     And	even	as	birds	uprisen	from	the	shore,
        As	in	congratulation	o'er	their	food,
Make	squadrons	of	themselves,	now	round,	now	long,
   So	from	within	those	lights	the	holy	creatures
     Sang	flying	to	and	fro,	and	in	their	figures
     Made	of	themselves	now	D,	now	I,	now	L.
    First	singing	they	to	their	own	music	moved;
      Then	one	becoming	of	these	characters,
      A	little	while	they	rested	and	were	silent.
         O	divine	Pegasea,	thou	who	genius
    Dost	glorious	make,	and	render	it	long-lived,
 And	this	through	thee	the	cities	and	the	kingdoms,
      Illume	me	with	thyself,	that	I	may	bring
    Their	figures	out	as	I	have	them	conceived!
    Apparent	be	thy	power	in	these	brief	verses!
 Themselves	then	they	displayed	in	five	times	seven
      Vowels	and	consonants;	and	I	observed
     The	parts	as	they	seemed	spoken	unto	me.
           'Diligite	justitiam,'	these	were
    First	verb	and	noun	of	all	that	was	depicted;
         'Qui	judicatis	terram'	were	the	last.
       Thereafter	in	the	M	of	the	fifth	word
     Remained	they	so	arranged,	that	Jupiter
    Seemed	to	be	silver	there	with	gold	inlaid.
    And	other	lights	I	saw	descend	where	was
  The	summit	of	the	M,	and	pause	there	singing
    The	good,	I	think,	that	draws	them	to	itself.
      Then,	as	in	striking	upon	burning	logs
      Upward	there	fly	innumerable	sparks,
   Whence	fools	are	wont	to	look	for	auguries,
More	than	a	thousand	lights	seemed	thence	to	rise,
    And	to	ascend,	some	more,	and	others	less,
   Even	as	the	Sun	that	lights	them	had	allotted;
      And,	each	one	being	quiet	in	its	place,
      The	head	and	neck	beheld	I	of	an	eagle
           Delineated	by	that	inlaid	fire.
   He	who	there	paints	has	none	to	be	his	guide;
But	Himself	guides;	and	is	from	Him	remembered
     That	virtue	which	is	form	unto	the	nest.
    The	other	beatitude,	that	contented	seemed
         At	first	to	bloom	a	lily	on	the	M,
   By	a	slight	motion	followed	out	the	imprint.
     O	gentle	star!	what	and	how	many	gems
    Did	demonstrate	to	me,	that	all	our	justice
  Effect	is	of	that	heaven	which	thou	ingemmest!
    Wherefore	I	pray	the	Mind,	in	which	begin
       Thy	motion	and	thy	virtue,	to	regard
  Whence	comes	the	smoke	that	vitiates	thy	rays;
      So	that	a	second	time	it	now	be	wroth
    With	buying	and	with	selling	in	the	temple
Whose	walls	were	built	with	signs	and	martyrdoms!
  O	soldiery	of	heaven,	whom	I	contemplate,
   Implore	for	those	who	are	upon	the	earth
     All	gone	astray	after	the	bad	example!
Once	'twas	the	custom	to	make	war	with	swords;
  But	now	'tis	made	by	taking	here	and	there
 The	bread	the	pitying	Father	shuts	from	none.
   Yet	thou,	who	writest	but	to	cancel,	think
 That	Peter	and	that	Paul,	who	for	this	vineyard
  Which	thou	art	spoiling	died,	are	still	alive!
  Well	canst	thou	say:	"So	steadfast	my	desire
      Is	unto	him	who	willed	to	live	alone,
    And	for	a	dance	was	led	to	martyrdom,
   That	I	know	not	the	Fisherman	nor	Paul."                         	
                   Canto	XIX
                         	
 Appeared	before	me	with	its	wings	outspread
   The	beautiful	image	that	in	sweet	fruition
      Made	jubilant	the	interwoven	souls;
      Appeared	a	little	ruby	each,	wherein
   Ray	of	the	sun	was	burning	so	enkindled
     That	each	into	mine	eyes	refracted	it.
    And	what	it	now	behoves	me	to	retrace
  Nor	voice	has	e'er	reported,	nor	ink	written,
    Nor	was	by	fantasy	e'er	comprehended;
 For	speak	I	saw,	and	likewise	heard,	the	beak,
    And	utter	with	its	voice	both	'I'	and	'My,'
   When	in	conception	it	was	'We'	and	'Our.'
     And	it	began:	"Being	just	and	merciful
       Am	I	exalted	here	unto	that	glory
       Which	cannot	be	exceeded	by	desire;
         And	upon	earth	I	left	my	memory
      Such,	that	the	evil-minded	people	there
      Commend	it,	but	continue	not	the	story."
      So	doth	a	single	heat	from	many	embers
     Make	itself	felt,	even	as	from	many	loves
     Issued	a	single	sound	from	out	that	image.
     Whence	I	thereafter:	"O	perpetual	flowers
          Of	the	eternal	joy,	that	only	one
     Make	me	perceive	your	odours	manifold,
      Exhaling,	break	within	me	the	great	fast
    Which	a	long	season	has	in	hunger	held	me,
        Not	finding	for	it	any	food	on	earth.
     Well	do	I	know,	that	if	in	heaven	its	mirror
      Justice	Divine	another	realm	doth	make,
     Yours	apprehends	it	not	through	any	veil.
      You	know	how	I	attentively	address	me
     To	listen;	and	you	know	what	is	the	doubt
          That	is	in	me	so	very	old	a	fast."
      Even	as	a	falcon,	issuing	from	his	hood,
Doth	move	his	head,	and	with	his	wings	applaud	him,
     Showing	desire,	and	making	himself	fine,
    Saw	I	become	that	standard,	which	of	lauds
        Was	interwoven	of	the	grace	divine,
  With	such	songs	as	he	knows	who	there	rejoices.
     Then	it	began:	"He	who	a	compass	turned
    On	the	world's	outer	verge,	and	who	within	it
       Devised	so	much	occult	and	manifest,
    Could	not	the	impress	of	his	power	so	make
        On	all	the	universe,	as	that	his	Word
      Should	not	remain	in	infinite	excess.
And	this	makes	certain	that	the	first	proud	being,
    Who	was	the	paragon	of	every	creature,
      By	not	awaiting	light	fell	immature.
  And	hence	appears	it,	that	each	minor	nature
        Is	scant	receptacle	unto	that	good
  Which	has	no	end,	and	by	itself	is	measured.
   In	consequence	our	vision,	which	perforce
     Must	be	some	ray	of	that	intelligence
   With	which	all	things	whatever	are	replete,
     Cannot	in	its	own	nature	be	so	potent,
        That	it	shall	not	its	origin	discern
    Far	beyond	that	which	is	apparent	to	it.
     Therefore	into	the	justice	sempiternal
 The	power	of	vision	that	your	world	receives,
       As	eye	into	the	ocean,	penetrates;
Which,	though	it	see	the	bottom	near	the	shore,
     Upon	the	deep	perceives	it	not,	and	yet
     'Tis	there,	but	it	is	hidden	by	the	depth.
  There	is	no	light	but	comes	from	the	serene
    That	never	is	o'ercast,	nay,	it	is	darkness
   Or	shadow	of	the	flesh,	or	else	its	poison.
    Amply	to	thee	is	opened	now	the	cavern
Which	has	concealed	from	thee	the	living	justice
Of	which	thou	mad'st	such	frequent	questioning.
  For	saidst	thou:	'Born	a	man	is	on	the	shore
   Of	Indus,	and	is	none	who	there	can	speak
Of	Christ,	nor	who	can	read,	nor	who	can	write;
     And	all	his	inclinations	and	his	actions
     Are	good,	so	far	as	human	reason	sees,
      Without	a	sin	in	life	or	in	discourse:
     He	dieth	unbaptised	and	without	faith;
   Where	is	this	justice	that	condemneth	him?
    Where	is	his	fault,	if	he	do	not	believe?'
Now	who	art	thou,	that	on	the	bench	wouldst	sit
     In	judgment	at	a	thousand	miles	away,
     With	the	short	vision	of	a	single	span?
      Truly	to	him	who	with	me	subtilizes,
      If	so	the	Scripture	were	not	over	you,
  For	doubting	there	were	marvellous	occasion.
       O	animals	terrene,	O	stolid	minds,
      The	primal	will,	that	in	itself	is	good,
Ne'er	from	itself,	the	Good	Supreme,	has	moved.
     So	much	is	just	as	is	accordant	with	it;
       No	good	created	draws	it	to	itself,
     But	it,	by	raying	forth,	occasions	that."
   Even	as	above	her	nest	goes	circling	round
   The	stork	when	she	has	fed	her	little	ones,
    And	he	who	has	been	fed	looks	up	at	her,
      So	lifted	I	my	brows,	and	even	such
   Became	the	blessed	image,	which	its	wings
    Was	moving,	by	so	many	counsels	urged.
    Circling	around	it	sang,	and	said:	"As	are
My	notes	to	thee,	who	dost	not	comprehend	them,
  Such	is	the	eternal	judgment	to	you	mortals."
   Those	lucent	splendours	of	the	Holy	Spirit
  Grew	quiet	then,	but	still	within	the	standard
  That	made	the	Romans	reverend	to	the	world.
   It	recommenced:	"Unto	this	kingdom	never
   Ascended	one	who	had	not	faith	in	Christ,
   Before	or	since	he	to	the	tree	was	nailed.
But	look	thou,	many	crying	are,	'Christ,	Christ!'
   Who	at	the	judgment	shall	be	far	less	near
To	him	than	some	shall	be	who	knew	not	Christ.
  Such	Christians	shall	the	Ethiop	condemn,
  When	the	two	companies	shall	be	divided,
     The	one	for	ever	rich,	the	other	poor.
 What	to	your	kings	may	not	the	Persians	say,
  When	they	that	volume	opened	shall	behold
 In	which	are	written	down	all	their	dispraises?
There	shall	be	seen,	among	the	deeds	of	Albert,
That	which	ere	long	shall	set	the	pen	in	motion,
For	which	the	realm	of	Prague	shall	be	deserted.
 There	shall	be	seen	the	woe	that	on	the	Seine
      He	brings	by	falsifying	of	the	coin,
   Who	by	the	blow	of	a	wild	boar	shall	die.
There	shall	be	seen	the	pride	that	causes	thirst,
Which	makes	the	Scot	and	Englishman	so	mad
 That	they	within	their	boundaries	cannot	rest;
     Be	seen	the	luxury	and	effeminate	life
      Of	him	of	Spain,	and	the	Bohemian,
  Who	valour	never	knew	and	never	wished;
       Be	seen	the	Cripple	of	Jerusalem,
       His	goodness	represented	by	an	I,
    While	the	reverse	an	M	shall	represent;
      Be	seen	the	avarice	and	poltroonery
   Of	him	who	guards	the	Island	of	the	Fire,
    Wherein	Anchises	finished	his	long	life;
        And	to	declare	how	pitiful	he	is
    Shall	be	his	record	in	contracted	letters
Which	shall	make	note	of	much	in	little	space.
  And	shall	appear	to	each	one	the	foul	deeds
     Of	uncle	and	of	brother	who	a	nation
So	famous	have	dishonoured,	and	two	crowns.
     And	he	of	Portugal	and	he	of	Norway
  Shall	there	be	known,	and	he	of	Rascia	too,
   Who	saw	in	evil	hour	the	coin	of	Venice.
      O	happy	Hungary,	if	she	let	herself
Be	wronged	no	farther!	and	Navarre	the	happy,
  If	with	the	hills	that	gird	her	she	be	armed!
 And	each	one	may	believe	that	now,	as	hansel
      Thereof,	do	Nicosia	and	Famagosta
 Lament	and	rage	because	of	their	own	beast,
   Who	from	the	others'	flank	departeth	not."                        	
                   Canto	XX
                        	
    When	he	who	all	the	world	illuminates
     Out	of	our	hemisphere	so	far	descends
  That	on	all	sides	the	daylight	is	consumed,
The	heaven,	that	erst	by	him	alone	was	kindled,
       Doth	suddenly	reveal	itself	again
  By	many	lights,	wherein	is	one	resplendent.
  And	came	into	my	mind	this	act	of	heaven,
When	the	ensign	of	the	world	and	of	its	leaders
    Had	silent	in	the	blessed	beak	become;
      Because	those	living	luminaries	all,
    By	far	more	luminous,	did	songs	begin
     Lapsing	and	falling	from	my	memory.
O	gentle	Love,	that	with	a	smile	dost	cloak	thee,
How	ardent	in	those	sparks	didst	thou	appear,
 That	had	the	breath	alone	of	holy	thoughts!
   After	the	precious	and	pellucid	crystals,
With	which	begemmed	the	sixth	light	I	beheld,
    Silence	imposed	on	the	angelic	bells,
  I	seemed	to	hear	the	murmuring	of	a	river
That	clear	descendeth	down	from	rock	to	rock,
 Showing	the	affluence	of	its	mountain-top.
  And	as	the	sound	upon	the	cithern's	neck
    Taketh	its	form,	and	as	upon	the	vent
    Of	rustic	pipe	the	wind	that	enters	it,
Even	thus,	relieved	from	the	delay	of	waiting,
  That	murmuring	of	the	eagle	mounted	up
   Along	its	neck,	as	if	it	had	been	hollow.
  There	it	became	a	voice,	and	issued	thence
  From	out	its	beak,	in	such	a	form	of	words
As	the	heart	waited	for	wherein	I	wrote	them.
"The	part	in	me	which	sees	and	bears	the	sun
      In	mortal	eagles,"	it	began	to	me,
  "Now	fixedly	must	needs	be	looked	upon;
 For	of	the	fires	of	which	I	make	my	figure,
Those	whence	the	eye	doth	sparkle	in	my	head
     Of	all	their	orders	the	supremest	are.
   He	who	is	shining	in	the	midst	as	pupil
   Was	once	the	singer	of	the	Holy	Spirit,
    Who	bore	the	ark	from	city	unto	city;
   Now	knoweth	he	the	merit	of	his	song,
    In	so	far	as	effect	of	his	own	counsel,
   By	the	reward	which	is	commensurate.
   Of	five,	that	make	a	circle	for	my	brow,
    He	that	approacheth	nearest	to	my	beak
   Did	the	poor	widow	for	her	son	console;
   Now	knoweth	he	how	dearly	it	doth	cost
    Not	following	Christ,	by	the	experience
     Of	this	sweet	life	and	of	its	opposite.
   He	who	comes	next	in	the	circumference
    Of	which	I	speak,	upon	its	highest	arc,
   Did	death	postpone	by	penitence	sincere;
  Now	knoweth	he	that	the	eternal	judgment
    Suffers	no	change,	albeit	worthy	prayer
     Maketh	below	to-morrow	of	to-day.
 The	next	who	follows,	with	the	laws	and	me,
   Under	the	good	intent	that	bore	bad	fruit
   Became	a	Greek	by	ceding	to	the	pastor;
   Now	knoweth	he	how	all	the	ill	deduced
  From	his	good	action	is	not	harmful	to	him,
Although	the	world	thereby	may	be	destroyed.
And	he,	whom	in	the	downward	arc	thou	seest,
Guglielmo	was,	whom	the	same	land	deplores
That	weepeth	Charles	and	Frederick	yet	alive;
  Now	knoweth	he	how	heaven	enamoured	is
   With	a	just	king;	and	in	the	outward	show
      Of	his	effulgence	he	reveals	it	still.
Who	would	believe,	down	in	the	errant	world,
   That	e'er	the	Trojan	Ripheus	in	this	round
   Could	be	the	fifth	one	of	the	holy	lights?
  Now	knoweth	he	enough	of	what	the	world
   Has	not	the	power	to	see	of	grace	divine,
Although	his	sight	may	not	discern	the	bottom."
    Like	as	a	lark	that	in	the	air	expatiates,
      First	singing	and	then	silent	with	content
      Of	the	last	sweetness	that	doth	satisfy	her,
     Such	seemed	to	me	the	image	of	the	imprint
        Of	the	eternal	pleasure,	by	whose	will
       Doth	everything	become	the	thing	it	is.
       And	notwithstanding	to	my	doubt	I	was
        As	glass	is	to	the	colour	that	invests	it,
      To	wait	the	time	in	silence	it	endured	not,
But	forth	from	out	my	mouth,	"What	things	are	these?"
      Extorted	with	the	force	of	its	own	weight;
       Whereat	I	saw	great	joy	of	coruscation.
    Thereafterward	with	eye	still	more	enkindled
       The	blessed	standard	made	to	me	reply,
     To	keep	me	not	in	wonderment	suspended:
       "I	see	that	thou	believest	in	these	things
     Because	I	say	them,	but	thou	seest	not	how;
    So	that,	although	believed	in,	they	are	hidden.
     Thou	doest	as	he	doth	who	a	thing	by	name
         Well	apprehendeth,	but	its	quiddity
       Cannot	perceive,	unless	another	show	it.
        'Regnum	coelorum'	suffereth	violence
     From	fervent	love,	and	from	that	living	hope
        That	overcometh	the	Divine	volition;
      Not	in	the	guise	that	man	o'ercometh	man,
    But	conquers	it	because	it	will	be	conquered,
       And	conquered	conquers	by	benignity.
      The	first	life	of	the	eyebrow	and	the	fifth
     Cause	thee	astonishment,	because	with	them
     Thou	seest	the	region	of	the	angels	painted.
 They	passed	not	from	their	bodies,	as	thou	thinkest,
   Gentiles,	but	Christians	in	the	steadfast	faith
    Of	feet	that	were	to	suffer	and	had	suffered.
  For	one	from	Hell,	where	no	one	e'er	turns	back
     Unto	good	will,	returned	unto	his	bones,
    And	that	of	living	hope	was	the	reward,—
      Of	living	hope,	that	placed	its	efficacy
    In	prayers	to	God	made	to	resuscitate	him,
     So	that	'twere	possible	to	move	his	will.
   The	glorious	soul	concerning	which	I	speak,
    Returning	to	the	flesh,	where	brief	its	stay,
   Believed	in	Him	who	had	the	power	to	aid	it;
      And,	in	believing,	kindled	to	such	fire
     Of	genuine	love,	that	at	the	second	death
       Worthy	it	was	to	come	unto	this	joy.
  The	other	one,	through	grace,	that	from	so	deep
      A	fountain	wells	that	never	hath	the	eye
     Of	any	creature	reached	its	primal	wave,
      Set	all	his	love	below	on	righteousness;
  Wherefore	from	grace	to	grace	did	God	unclose
       His	eye	to	our	redemption	yet	to	be,
   Whence	he	believed	therein,	and	suffered	not
    From	that	day	forth	the	stench	of	paganism,
    And	he	reproved	therefor	the	folk	perverse.
Those	Maidens	three,	whom	at	the	right-hand	wheel
  Thou	didst	behold,	were	unto	him	for	baptism
   More	than	a	thousand	years	before	baptizing.
        O	thou	predestination,	how	remote
      Thy	root	is	from	the	aspect	of	all	those
    Who	the	First	Cause	do	not	behold	entire!
  And	you,	O	mortals!	hold	yourselves	restrained
 In	judging;	for	ourselves,	who	look	on	God,
     We	do	not	know	as	yet	all	the	elect;
    And	sweet	to	us	is	such	a	deprivation,
Because	our	good	in	this	good	is	made	perfect,
  That	whatsoe'er	God	wills,	we	also	will."
   After	this	manner	by	that	shape	divine,
  To	make	clear	in	me	my	short-sightedness,
    Was	given	to	me	a	pleasant	medicine;
      And	as	good	singer	a	good	lutanist
 Accompanies	with	vibrations	of	the	chords,
Whereby	more	pleasantness	the	song	acquires,
    So,	while	it	spake,	do	I	remember	me
  That	I	beheld	both	of	those	blessed	lights,
  Even	as	the	winking	of	the	eyes	concords,
  Moving	unto	the	words	their	little	flames.                       	
                 Canto	XXI
                       	
    Already	on	my	Lady's	face	mine	eyes
Again	were	fastened,	and	with	these	my	mind,
 And	from	all	other	purpose	was	withdrawn;
 And	she	smiled	not;	but	"If	I	were	to	smile,"
  She	unto	me	began,	"thou	wouldst	become
 Like	Semele,	when	she	was	turned	to	ashes.
   Because	my	beauty,	that	along	the	stairs
    Of	the	eternal	palace	more	enkindles,
   As	thou	hast	seen,	the	farther	we	ascend,
  If	it	were	tempered	not,	is	so	resplendent
  That	all	thy	mortal	power	in	its	effulgence
Would	seem	a	leaflet	that	the	thunder	crushes.
    We	are	uplifted	to	the	seventh	splendour,
    That	underneath	the	burning	Lion's	breast
Now	radiates	downward	mingled	with	his	power.
     Fix	in	direction	of	thine	eyes	the	mind,
    And	make	of	them	a	mirror	for	the	figure
     That	in	this	mirror	shall	appear	to	thee."
   He	who	could	know	what	was	the	pasturage
    My	sight	had	in	that	blessed	countenance,
     When	I	transferred	me	to	another	care,
    Would	recognize	how	grateful	was	to	me
       Obedience	unto	my	celestial	escort,
    By	counterpoising	one	side	with	the	other.
   Within	the	crystal	which,	around	the	world
  Revolving,	bears	the	name	of	its	dear	leader,
    Under	whom	every	wickedness	lay	dead,
Coloured	like	gold,	on	which	the	sunshine	gleams,
       A	stairway	I	beheld	to	such	a	height
      Uplifted,	that	mine	eye	pursued	it	not.
  Likewise	beheld	I	down	the	steps	descending
  So	many	splendours,	that	I	thought	each	light
  That	in	the	heaven	appears	was	there	diffused.
   And	as	accordant	with	their	natural	custom
      The	rooks	together	at	the	break	of	day
  Bestir	themselves	to	warm	their	feathers	cold;
    Then	some	of	them	fly	off	without	return,
  Others	come	back	to	where	they	started	from,
 And	others,	wheeling	round,	still	keep	at	home;
    Such	fashion	it	appeared	to	me	was	there
     Within	the	sparkling	that	together	came,
      As	soon	as	on	a	certain	step	it	struck,
   And	that	which	nearest	unto	us	remained
   Became	so	clear,	that	in	my	thought	I	said,
  "Well	I	perceive	the	love	thou	showest	me;
 But	she,	from	whom	I	wait	the	how	and	when
 Of	speech	and	silence,	standeth	still;	whence	I
      Against	desire	do	well	if	I	ask	not."
     She	thereupon,	who	saw	my	silentness
   In	the	sight	of	Him	who	seeth	everything,
  Said	unto	me,	"Let	loose	thy	warm	desire."
      And	I	began:	"No	merit	of	my	own
   Renders	me	worthy	of	response	from	thee;
 But	for	her	sake	who	granteth	me	the	asking,
  Thou	blessed	life	that	dost	remain	concealed
      In	thy	beatitude,	make	known	to	me
The	cause	which	draweth	thee	so	near	my	side;
     And	tell	me	why	is	silent	in	this	wheel
       The	dulcet	symphony	of	Paradise,
That	through	the	rest	below	sounds	so	devoutly."
  "Thou	hast	thy	hearing	mortal	as	thy	sight,"
   It	answer	made	to	me;	"they	sing	not	here,
For	the	same	cause	that	Beatrice	has	not	smiled.
    Thus	far	adown	the	holy	stairway's	steps
  Have	I	descended	but	to	give	thee	welcome
With	words,	and	with	the	light	that	mantles	me;
 Nor	did	more	love	cause	me	to	be	more	ready,
For	love	as	much	and	more	up	there	is	burning,
     As	doth	the	flaming	manifest	to	thee.
  But	the	high	charity,	that	makes	us	servants
Prompt	to	the	counsel	which	controls	the	world,
   Allotteth	here,	even	as	thou	dost	observe."
     "I	see	full	well,"	said	I,	"O	sacred	lamp!
    How	love	unfettered	in	this	court	sufficeth
         To	follow	the	eternal	Providence;
    But	this	is	what	seems	hard	for	me	to	see,
     Wherefore	predestinate	wast	thou	alone
    Unto	this	office	from	among	thy	consorts."
      No	sooner	had	I	come	to	the	last	word,
    Than	of	its	middle	made	the	light	a	centre,
    Whirling	itself	about	like	a	swift	millstone.
   When	answer	made	the	love	that	was	therein:
         "On	me	directed	is	a	light	divine,
 Piercing	through	this	in	which	I	am	embosomed,
   Of	which	the	virtue	with	my	sight	conjoined
        Lifts	me	above	myself	so	far,	I	see
  The	supreme	essence	from	which	this	is	drawn.
 Hence	comes	the	joyfulness	with	which	I	flame,
        For	to	my	sight,	as	far	as	it	is	clear,
     The	clearness	of	the	flame	I	equal	make.
  But	that	soul	in	the	heaven	which	is	most	pure,
  That	seraph	which	his	eye	on	God	most	fixes,
      Could	this	demand	of	thine	not	satisfy;
       Because	so	deeply	sinks	in	the	abyss
      Of	the	eternal	statute	what	thou	askest,
        From	all	created	sight	it	is	cut	off.
  And	to	the	mortal	world,	when	thou	returnest,
     This	carry	back,	that	it	may	not	presume
    Longer	tow'rd	such	a	goal	to	move	its	feet.
The	mind,	that	shineth	here,	on	earth	doth	smoke;
      From	this	observe	how	can	it	do	below
That	which	it	cannot	though	the	heaven	assume	it?"
     Such	limit	did	its	words	prescribe	to	me,
    The	question	I	relinquished,	and	restricted
       Myself	to	ask	it	humbly	who	it	was.
      "Between	two	shores	of	Italy	rise	cliffs,
     And	not	far	distant	from	thy	native	place,
   So	high,	the	thunders	far	below	them	sound,
      And	form	a	ridge	that	Catria	is	called,
      'Neath	which	is	consecrate	a	hermitage
       Wont	to	be	dedicate	to	worship	only."
   Thus	unto	me	the	third	speech	recommenced,
      And	then,	continuing,	it	said:	"Therein
     Unto	God's	service	I	became	so	steadfast,
      That	feeding	only	on	the	juice	of	olives
    Lightly	I	passed	away	the	heats	and	frosts,
     Contented	in	my	thoughts	contemplative.
   That	cloister	used	to	render	to	these	heavens
      Abundantly,	and	now	is	empty	grown,
     So	that	perforce	it	soon	must	be	revealed.
        I	in	that	place	was	Peter	Damiano;
      And	Peter	the	Sinner	was	I	in	the	house
        Of	Our	Lady	on	the	Adriatic	shore.
       Little	of	mortal	life	remained	to	me,
  When	I	was	called	and	dragged	forth	to	the	hat
   Which	shifteth	evermore	from	bad	to	worse.
    Came	Cephas,	and	the	mighty	Vessel	came
    Of	the	Holy	Spirit,	meagre	and	barefooted,
          Taking	the	food	of	any	hostelry.
   Now	some	one	to	support	them	on	each	side
The	modern	shepherds	need,	and	some	to	lead	them,
    So	heavy	are	they,	and	to	hold	their	trains.
   They	cover	up	their	palfreys	with	their	cloaks,
     So	that	two	beasts	go	underneath	one	skin;
      O	Patience,	that	dost	tolerate	so	much!"
       At	this	voice	saw	I	many	little	flames
    From	step	to	step	descending	and	revolving,
      And	every	revolution	made	them	fairer.
  Round	about	this	one	came	they	and	stood	still,
        And	a	cry	uttered	of	so	loud	a	sound,
         It	here	could	find	no	parallel,	nor	I
    Distinguished	it,	the	thunder	so	o'ercame	me.                           	
                     Canto	XXII
                           	
      Oppressed	with	stupor,	I	unto	my	guide
     Turned	like	a	little	child	who	always	runs
     For	refuge	there	where	he	confideth	most;
    And	she,	even	as	a	mother	who	straightway
    Gives	comfort	to	her	pale	and	breathless	boy
    With	voice	whose	wont	it	is	to	reassure	him,
 Said	to	me:	"Knowest	thou	not	thou	art	in	heaven,
    And	knowest	thou	not	that	heaven	is	holy	all
  And	what	is	done	here	cometh	from	good	zeal?
After	what	wise	the	singing	would	have	changed	thee
     And	I	by	smiling,	thou	canst	now	imagine,
    Since	that	the	cry	has	startled	thee	so	much,
    In	which	if	thou	hadst	understood	its	prayers
  Already	would	be	known	to	thee	the	vengeance
   Which	thou	shalt	look	upon	before	thou	diest.
     The	sword	above	here	smiteth	not	in	haste
         Nor	tardily,	howe'er	it	seem	to	him
      Who	fearing	or	desiring	waits	for	it.
   But	turn	thee	round	towards	the	others	now,
    For	very	illustrious	spirits	shalt	thou	see,
       If	thou	thy	sight	directest	as	I	say."
  As	it	seemed	good	to	her	mine	eyes	I	turned,
   And	saw	a	hundred	spherules	that	together
 With	mutual	rays	each	other	more	embellished.
     I	stood	as	one	who	in	himself	represses
    The	point	of	his	desire,	and	ventures	not
    To	question,	he	so	feareth	the	too	much.
     And	now	the	largest	and	most	luculent
 Among	those	pearls	came	forward,	that	it	might
     Make	my	desire	concerning	it	content.
   Within	it	then	I	heard:	"If	thou	couldst	see
      Even	as	myself	the	charity	that	burns
  Among	us,	thy	conceits	would	be	expressed;
  But,	that	by	waiting	thou	mayst	not	come	late
    To	the	high	end,	I	will	make	answer	even
  Unto	the	thought	of	which	thou	art	so	chary.
 That	mountain	on	whose	slope	Cassino	stands
     Was	frequented	of	old	upon	its	summit
       By	a	deluded	folk	and	ill-disposed;
      And	I	am	he	who	first	up	thither	bore
  The	name	of	Him	who	brought	upon	the	earth
     The	truth	that	so	much	sublimateth	us.
    And	such	abundant	grace	upon	me	shone
  That	all	the	neighbouring	towns	I	drew	away
From	the	impious	worship	that	seduced	the	world.
 These	other	fires,	each	one	of	them,	were	men
     Contemplative,	enkindled	by	that	heat
Which	maketh	holy	flowers	and	fruits	spring	up.
      Here	is	Macarius,	here	is	Romualdus,
 Here	are	my	brethren,	who	within	the	cloisters
Their	footsteps	stayed	and	kept	a	steadfast	heart."
And	I	to	him:	"The	affection	which	thou	showest
  Speaking	with	me,	and	the	good	countenance
  Which	I	behold	and	note	in	all	your	ardours,
      In	me	have	so	my	confidence	dilated
   As	the	sun	doth	the	rose,	when	it	becomes
      As	far	unfolded	as	it	hath	the	power.
  Therefore	I	pray,	and	thou	assure	me,	father,
      If	I	may	so	much	grace	receive,	that	I
 May	thee	behold	with	countenance	unveiled."
     He	thereupon:	"Brother,	thy	high	desire
     In	the	remotest	sphere	shall	be	fulfilled,
   Where	are	fulfilled	all	others	and	my	own.
  There	perfect	is,	and	ripened,	and	complete,
       Every	desire;	within	that	one	alone
     Is	every	part	where	it	has	always	been;
    For	it	is	not	in	space,	nor	turns	on	poles,
      And	unto	it	our	stairway	reaches	up,
 Whence	thus	from	out	thy	sight	it	steals	away.
   Up	to	that	height	the	Patriarch	Jacob	saw	it
     Extending	its	supernal	part,	what	time
   So	thronged	with	angels	it	appeared	to	him.
       But	to	ascend	it	now	no	one	uplifts
  His	feet	from	off	the	earth,	and	now	my	Rule
   Below	remaineth	for	mere	waste	of	paper.
    The	walls	that	used	of	old	to	be	an	Abbey
 Are	changed	to	dens	of	robbers,	and	the	cowls
     Are	sacks	filled	full	of	miserable	flour.
         But	heavy	usury	is	not	taken	up
   So	much	against	God's	pleasure	as	that	fruit
  Which	maketh	so	insane	the	heart	of	monks;
   For	whatsoever	hath	the	Church	in	keeping
     Is	for	the	folk	that	ask	it	in	God's	name,
  Not	for	one's	kindred	or	for	something	worse.
       The	flesh	of	mortals	is	so	very	soft,
  That	good	beginnings	down	below	suffice	not
  From	springing	of	the	oak	to	bearing	acorns.
    Peter	began	with	neither	gold	nor	silver,
        And	I	with	orison	and	abstinence,
     And	Francis	with	humility	his	convent.
   And	if	thou	lookest	at	each	one's	beginning,
     And	then	regardest	whither	he	has	run,
Thou	shalt	behold	the	white	changed	into	brown.
      In	verity	the	Jordan	backward	turned,
And	the	sea's	fleeing,	when	God	willed	were	more
    A	wonder	to	behold,	than	succour	here."
    Thus	unto	me	he	said;	and	then	withdrew
 To	his	own	band,	and	the	band	closed	together;
   Then	like	a	whirlwind	all	was	upward	rapt.
   The	gentle	Lady	urged	me	on	behind	them
      Up	o'er	that	stairway	by	a	single	sign,
     So	did	her	virtue	overcome	my	nature;
  Nor	here	below,	where	one	goes	up	and	down
    By	natural	law,	was	motion	e'er	so	swift
    That	it	could	be	compared	unto	my	wing.
        Reader,	as	I	may	unto	that	devout
    Triumph	return,	on	whose	account	I	often
For	my	transgressions	weep	and	beat	my	breast,—
   Thou	hadst	not	thrust	thy	finger	in	the	fire
      And	drawn	it	out	again,	before	I	saw
   The	sign	that	follows	Taurus,	and	was	in	it.
      O	glorious	stars,	O	light	impregnated
 With	mighty	virtue,	from	which	I	acknowledge
       All	of	my	genius,	whatsoe'er	it	be,
  With	you	was	born,	and	hid	himself	with	you,
       He	who	is	father	of	all	mortal	life,
      When	first	I	tasted	of	the	Tuscan	air;
  And	then	when	grace	was	freely	given	to	me
 To	enter	the	high	wheel	which	turns	you	round,
       Your	region	was	allotted	unto	me.
      To	you	devoutly	at	this	hour	my	soul
      Is	sighing,	that	it	virtue	may	acquire
     For	the	stern	pass	that	draws	it	to	itself.
    "Thou	art	so	near	unto	the	last	salvation,"
    Thus	Beatrice	began,	"thou	oughtest	now
    To	have	thine	eves	unclouded	and	acute;
     And	therefore,	ere	thou	enter	farther	in,
Look	down	once	more,	and	see	how	vast	a	world
     Thou	hast	already	put	beneath	thy	feet;
      So	that	thy	heart,	as	jocund	as	it	may,
     Present	itself	to	the	triumphant	throng
That	comes	rejoicing	through	this	rounded	ether."
  I	with	my	sight	returned	through	one	and	all
 The	sevenfold	spheres,	and	I	beheld	this	globe
   Such	that	I	smiled	at	its	ignoble	semblance;
       And	that	opinion	I	approve	as	best
 Which	doth	account	it	least;	and	he	who	thinks
    Of	something	else	may	truly	be	called	just.
       I	saw	the	daughter	of	Latona	shining
   Without	that	shadow,	which	to	me	was	cause
   That	once	I	had	believed	her	rare	and	dense.
         The	aspect	of	thy	son,	Hyperion,
 Here	I	sustained,	and	saw	how	move	themselves
      Around	and	near	him	Maia	and	Dione.
 Thence	there	appeared	the	temperateness	of	Jove
     'Twixt	son	and	father,	and	to	me	was	clear
  The	change	that	of	their	whereabout	they	make;
      And	all	the	seven	made	manifest	to	me
  How	great	they	are,	and	eke	how	swift	they	are,
      And	how	they	are	in	distant	habitations.
   The	threshing-floor	that	maketh	us	so	proud,
      To	me	revolving	with	the	eternal	Twins,
    Was	all	apparent	made	from	hill	to	harbour!
  Then	to	the	beauteous	eyes	mine	eyes	I	turned.                          	
                    Canto	XXIII
                          	
      Even	as	a	bird,	'mid	the	beloved	leaves,
      Quiet	upon	the	nest	of	her	sweet	brood
Throughout	the	night,	that	hideth	all	things	from	us,
 Who,	that	she	may	behold	their	longed-for	looks
   And	find	the	food	wherewith	to	nourish	them,
    In	which,	to	her,	grave	labours	grateful	are,
        Anticipates	the	time	on	open	spray
     And	with	an	ardent	longing	waits	the	sun,
     Gazing	intent	as	soon	as	breaks	the	dawn:
      Even	thus	my	Lady	standing	was,	erect
    And	vigilant,	turned	round	towards	the	zone
   Underneath	which	the	sun	displays	less	haste;
    So	that	beholding	her	distraught	and	wistful,
        Such	I	became	as	he	is	who	desiring
  For	something	yearns,	and	hoping	is	appeased.
  But	brief	the	space	from	one	When	to	the	other;
       Of	my	awaiting,	say	I,	and	the	seeing
   The	welkin	grow	resplendent	more	and	more.
    And	Beatrice	exclaimed:	"Behold	the	hosts
   Of	Christ's	triumphal	march,	and	all	the	fruit
    Harvested	by	the	rolling	of	these	spheres!"
      It	seemed	to	me	her	face	was	all	aflame;
        And	eyes	she	had	so	full	of	ecstasy
   That	I	must	needs	pass	on	without	describing.
     As	when	in	nights	serene	of	the	full	moon
      Smiles	Trivia	among	the	nymphs	eternal
   Who	paint	the	firmament	through	all	its	gulfs,
        Saw	I,	above	the	myriads	of	lamps,
     A	Sun	that	one	and	all	of	them	enkindled,
     E'en	as	our	own	doth	the	supernal	sights,
   And	through	the	living	light	transparent	shone
      The	lucent	substance	so	intensely	clear
        Into	my	sight,	that	I	sustained	it	not.
      O	Beatrice,	thou	gentle	guide	and	dear!
      To	me	she	said:	"What	overmasters	thee
    A	virtue	is	from	which	naught	shields	itself.
    There	are	the	wisdom	and	the	omnipotence
That	oped	the	thoroughfares	'twixt	heaven	and	earth,
 For	which	there	erst	had	been	so	long	a	yearning."
      As	fire	from	out	a	cloud	unlocks	itself,
      Dilating	so	it	finds	not	room	therein,
  And	down,	against	its	nature,	falls	to	earth,
    So	did	my	mind,	among	those	aliments
       Becoming	larger,	issue	from	itself,
  And	that	which	it	became	cannot	remember.
    "Open	thine	eyes,	and	look	at	what	I	am:
Thou	hast	beheld	such	things,	that	strong	enough
    Hast	thou	become	to	tolerate	my	smile."
    I	was	as	one	who	still	retains	the	feeling
     Of	a	forgotten	vision,	and	endeavours
     In	vain	to	bring	it	back	into	his	mind,
    When	I	this	invitation	heard,	deserving
      Of	so	much	gratitude,	it	never	fades
    Out	of	the	book	that	chronicles	the	past.
   If	at	this	moment	sounded	all	the	tongues
     That	Polyhymnia	and	her	sisters	made
    Most	lubrical	with	their	delicious	milk,
     To	aid	me,	to	a	thousandth	of	the	truth
   It	would	not	reach,	singing	the	holy	smile
      And	how	the	holy	aspect	it	illumed.
     And	therefore,	representing	Paradise,
   The	sacred	poem	must	perforce	leap	over,
   Even	as	a	man	who	finds	his	way	cut	off;
  But	whoso	thinketh	of	the	ponderous	theme,
    And	of	the	mortal	shoulder	laden	with	it,
  Should	blame	it	not,	if	under	this	it	tremble.
         It	is	no	passage	for	a	little	boat
 This	which	goes	cleaving	the	audacious	prow,
    Nor	for	a	pilot	who	would	spare	himself.
  "Why	doth	my	face	so	much	enamour	thee,
       That	to	the	garden	fair	thou	turnest	not,
    Which	under	the	rays	of	Christ	is	blossoming?
     There	is	the	Rose	in	which	the	Word	Divine
        Became	incarnate;	there	the	lilies	are
  By	whose	perfume	the	good	way	was	discovered."
      Thus	Beatrice;	and	I,	who	to	her	counsels
      Was	wholly	ready,	once	again	betook	me
         Unto	the	battle	of	the	feeble	brows.
      As	in	the	sunshine,	that	unsullied	streams
Through	fractured	cloud,	ere	now	a	meadow	of	flowers
   Mine	eyes	with	shadow	covered	o'er	have	seen,
       So	troops	of	splendours	manifold	I	saw
       Illumined	from	above	with	burning	rays,
     Beholding	not	the	source	of	the	effulgence.
    O	power	benignant	that	dost	so	imprint	them!
     Thou	didst	exalt	thyself	to	give	more	scope
   There	to	mine	eyes,	that	were	not	strong	enough.
      The	name	of	that	fair	flower	I	e'er	invoke
       Morning	and	evening	utterly	enthralled
        My	soul	to	gaze	upon	the	greater	fire.
     And	when	in	both	mine	eyes	depicted	were
      The	glory	and	greatness	of	the	living	star
      Which	there	excelleth,	as	it	here	excelled,
     Athwart	the	heavens	a	little	torch	descended
          Formed	in	a	circle	like	a	coronal,
     And	cinctured	it,	and	whirled	itself	about	it.
      Whatever	melody	most	sweetly	soundeth
     On	earth,	and	to	itself	most	draws	the	soul,
   Would	seem	a	cloud	that,	rent	asunder,	thunders,
       Compared	unto	the	sounding	of	that	lyre
 Wherewith	was	crowned	the	sapphire	beautiful,
 Which	gives	the	clearest	heaven	its	sapphire	hue.
      "I	am	Angelic	Love,	that	circle	round
The	joy	sublime	which	breathes	from	out	the	womb
       That	was	the	hostelry	of	our	Desire;
    And	I	shall	circle,	Lady	of	Heaven,	while
    Thou	followest	thy	Son,	and	mak'st	diviner
The	sphere	supreme,	because	thou	enterest	there."
          Thus	did	the	circulated	melody
       Seal	itself	up;	and	all	the	other	lights
   Were	making	to	resound	the	name	of	Mary.
       The	regal	mantle	of	the	volumes	all
  Of	that	world,	which	most	fervid	is	and	living
 With	breath	of	God	and	with	his	works	and	ways,
        Extended	over	us	its	inner	border,
     So	very	distant,	that	the	semblance	of	it
    There	where	I	was	not	yet	appeared	to	me.
  Therefore	mine	eyes	did	not	possess	the	power
       Of	following	the	incoronated	flame,
   Which	mounted	upward	near	to	its	own	seed.
   And	as	a	little	child,	that	towards	its	mother
  Stretches	its	arms,	when	it	the	milk	has	taken,
  Through	impulse	kindled	into	outward	flame,
Each	of	those	gleams	of	whiteness	upward	reached
    So	with	its	summit,	that	the	deep	affection
     They	had	for	Mary	was	revealed	to	me.
   Thereafter	they	remained	there	in	my	sight,
    'Regina	coeli'	singing	with	such	sweetness,
   That	ne'er	from	me	has	the	delight	departed.
        O,	what	exuberance	is	garnered	up
    Within	those	richest	coffers,	which	had	been
     Good	husbandmen	for	sowing	here	below!
     There	they	enjoy	and	live	upon	the	treasure
   Which	was	acquired	while	weeping	in	the	exile
       Of	Babylon,	wherein	the	gold	was	left.
     There	triumpheth,	beneath	the	exalted	Son
          Of	God	and	Mary,	in	his	victory,
     Both	with	the	ancient	council	and	the	new,
     He	who	doth	keep	the	keys	of	such	a	glory.                           	
                    Canto	XXIV
                           	
        "O	company	elect	to	the	great	supper
      Of	the	Lamb	benedight,	who	feedeth	you
         So	that	for	ever	full	is	your	desire,
      If	by	the	grace	of	God	this	man	foretaste
  Something	of	that	which	falleth	from	your	table,
       Or	ever	death	prescribe	to	him	the	time,
      Direct	your	mind	to	his	immense	desire,
     And	him	somewhat	bedew;	ye	drinking	are
  For	ever	at	the	fount	whence	comes	his	thought."
       Thus	Beatrice;	and	those	souls	beatified
Transformed	themselves	to	spheres	on	steadfast	poles,
      Flaming	intensely	in	the	guise	of	comets.
      And	as	the	wheels	in	works	of	horologes
       Revolve	so	that	the	first	to	the	beholder
      Motionless	seems,	and	the	last	one	to	fly,
     So	in	like	manner	did	those	carols,	dancing
       In	different	measure,	of	their	affluence
   Give	me	the	gauge,	as	they	were	swift	or	slow.
  From	that	one	which	I	noted	of	most	beauty
       Beheld	I	issue	forth	a	fire	so	happy
  That	none	it	left	there	of	a	greater	brightness;
    And	around	Beatrice	three	several	times
     It	whirled	itself	with	so	divine	a	song,
         My	fantasy	repeats	it	not	to	me;
   Therefore	the	pen	skips,	and	I	write	it	not,
      Since	our	imagination	for	such	folds,
 Much	more	our	speech,	is	of	a	tint	too	glaring.
     "O	holy	sister	mine,	who	us	implorest
    With	such	devotion,	by	thine	ardent	love
Thou	dost	unbind	me	from	that	beautiful	sphere!"
   Thereafter,	having	stopped,	the	blessed	fire
       Unto	my	Lady	did	direct	its	breath,
   Which	spake	in	fashion	as	I	here	have	said.
    And	she:	"O	light	eterne	of	the	great	man
    To	whom	our	Lord	delivered	up	the	keys
    He	carried	down	of	this	miraculous	joy,
  This	one	examine	on	points	light	and	grave,
    As	good	beseemeth	thee,	about	the	Faith
 By	means	of	which	thou	on	the	sea	didst	walk.
   If	he	love	well,	and	hope	well,	and	believe,
  From	thee	'tis	hid	not;	for	thou	hast	thy	sight
    There	where	depicted	everything	is	seen.
    But	since	this	kingdom	has	made	citizens
     By	means	of	the	true	Faith,	to	glorify	it
 'Tis	well	he	have	the	chance	to	speak	thereof."
 As	baccalaureate	arms	himself,	and	speaks	not
   Until	the	master	doth	propose	the	question,
       To	argue	it,	and	not	to	terminate	it,
     So	did	I	arm	myself	with	every	reason,
  While	she	was	speaking,	that	I	might	be	ready
   For	such	a	questioner	and	such	profession.
   "Say,	thou	good	Christian;	manifest	thyself;
  What	is	the	Faith?"	Whereat	I	raised	my	brow
Unto	that	light	wherefrom	was	this	breathed	forth.
    Then	turned	I	round	to	Beatrice,	and	she
  Prompt	signals	made	to	me	that	I	should	pour
   The	water	forth	from	my	internal	fountain.
"May	grace,	that	suffers	me	to	make	confession,"
         Began	I,	"to	the	great	centurion,
    Cause	my	conceptions	all	to	be	explicit!"
      And	I	continued:	"As	the	truthful	pen,
      Father,	of	thy	dear	brother	wrote	of	it,
   Who	put	with	thee	Rome	into	the	good	way,
 Faith	is	the	substance	of	the	things	we	hope	for,
     And	evidence	of	those	that	are	not	seen;
      And	this	appears	to	me	its	quiddity."
   Then	heard	I:	"Very	rightly	thou	perceivest,
   If	well	thou	understandest	why	he	placed	it
   With	substances	and	then	with	evidences."
  And	I	thereafterward:	"The	things	profound,
   That	here	vouchsafe	to	me	their	apparition,
      Unto	all	eyes	below	are	so	concealed,
       That	they	exist	there	only	in	belief,
    Upon	the	which	is	founded	the	high	hope,
  And	hence	it	takes	the	nature	of	a	substance.
       And	it	behoveth	us	from	this	belief
      To	reason	without	having	other	sight,
    And	hence	it	has	the	nature	of	evidence."
       Then	heard	I:	"If	whatever	is	acquired
     Below	by	doctrine	were	thus	understood,
   No	sophist's	subtlety	would	there	find	place."
 Thus	was	breathed	forth	from	that	enkindled	love;
    Then	added:	"Very	well	has	been	gone	over
     Already	of	this	coin	the	alloy	and	weight;
      But	tell	me	if	thou	hast	it	in	thy	purse?"
     And	I:	"Yes,	both	so	shining	and	so	round
    That	in	its	stamp	there	is	no	peradventure."
     Thereafter	issued	from	the	light	profound
 That	there	resplendent	was:	"This	precious	jewel,
      Upon	the	which	is	every	virtue	founded,
Whence	hadst	thou	it?"	And	I:	"The	large	outpouring
      Of	Holy	Spirit,	which	has	been	diffused
     Upon	the	ancient	parchments	and	the	new,
       A	syllogism	is,	which	proved	it	to	me
  With	such	acuteness,	that,	compared	therewith,
      All	demonstration	seems	to	me	obtuse."
    And	then	I	heard:	"The	ancient	and	the	new
     Postulates,	that	to	thee	are	so	conclusive,
  Why	dost	thou	take	them	for	the	word	divine?"
  And	I:	"The	proofs,	which	show	the	truth	to	me,
   Are	the	works	subsequent,	whereunto	Nature
       Ne'er	heated	iron	yet,	nor	anvil	beat."
    'Twas	answered	me:	"Say,	who	assureth	thee
    That	those	works	ever	were?	the	thing	itself
That	must	be	proved,	nought	else	to	thee	affirms	it."
    "Were	the	world	to	Christianity	converted,"
        I	said,	"withouten	miracles,	this	one
     Is	such,	the	rest	are	not	its	hundredth	part;
    Because	that	poor	and	fasting	thou	didst	enter
      Into	the	field	to	sow	there	the	good	plant,
     Which	was	a	vine	and	has	become	a	thorn!"
      This	being	finished,	the	high,	holy	Court
Resounded	through	the	spheres,	"One	God	we	praise!"
       In	melody	that	there	above	is	chanted.
  And	then	that	Baron,	who	from	branch	to	branch,
         Examining,	had	thus	conducted	me,
   Till	the	extremest	leaves	we	were	approaching,
       Again	began:	"The	Grace	that	dallying
   Plays	with	thine	intellect	thy	mouth	has	opened,
       Up	to	this	point,	as	it	should	opened	be,
      So	that	I	do	approve	what	forth	emerged;
   But	now	thou	must	express	what	thou	believest,
     And	whence	to	thy	belief	it	was	presented."
         "O	holy	father,	spirit	who	beholdest
    What	thou	believedst	so	that	thou	o'ercamest,
     Towards	the	sepulchre,	more	youthful	feet,"
      Began	I,	"thou	dost	wish	me	in	this	place
     The	form	to	manifest	of	my	prompt	belief,
   And	likewise	thou	the	cause	thereof	demandest.
        And	I	respond:	In	one	God	I	believe,
    Sole	and	eterne,	who	moveth	all	the	heavens
    With	love	and	with	desire,	himself	unmoved;
      And	of	such	faith	not	only	have	I	proofs
     Physical	and	metaphysical,	but	gives	them
  Likewise	the	truth	that	from	this	place	rains	down
Through	Moses,	through	the	Prophets	and	the	Psalms,
 Through	the	Evangel,	and	through	you,	who	wrote
         After	the	fiery	Spirit	sanctified	you;
     In	Persons	three	eterne	believe,	and	these
      One	essence	I	believe,	so	one	and	trine
  They	bear	conjunction	both	with	'sunt'	and	'est.'
      With	the	profound	condition	and	divine
  Which	now	I	touch	upon,	doth	stamp	my	mind
         Ofttimes	the	doctrine	evangelical.
      This	the	beginning	is,	this	is	the	spark
     Which	afterwards	dilates	to	vivid	flame,
  And,	like	a	star	in	heaven,	is	sparkling	in	me."
    Even	as	a	lord	who	hears	what	pleaseth	him
     His	servant	straight	embraces,	gratulating
     For	the	good	news	as	soon	as	he	is	silent;
      So,	giving	me	its	benediction,	singing,
   Three	times	encircled	me,	when	I	was	silent,
      The	apostolic	light,	at	whose	command
    I	spoken	had,	in	speaking	I	so	pleased	him.                          	
                    Canto	XXV
                          	
      If	e'er	it	happen	that	the	Poem	Sacred,
To	which	both	heaven	and	earth	have	set	their	hand,
    So	that	it	many	a	year	hath	made	me	lean,
       O'ercome	the	cruelty	that	bars	me	out
From	the	fair	sheepfold,	where	a	lamb	I	slumbered,
     An	enemy	to	the	wolves	that	war	upon	it,
   With	other	voice	forthwith,	with	other	fleece
         Poet	will	I	return,	and	at	my	font
      Baptismal	will	I	take	the	laurel	crown;
    Because	into	the	Faith	that	maketh	known
     All	souls	to	God	there	entered	I,	and	then
     Peter	for	her	sake	thus	my	brow	encircled.
      Thereafterward	towards	us	moved	a	light
    Out	of	that	band	whence	issued	the	first-fruits
     Which	of	his	vicars	Christ	behind	him	left,
         And	then	my	Lady,	full	of	ecstasy,
    Said	unto	me:	"Look,	look!	behold	the	Baron
      For	whom	below	Galicia	is	frequented."
      In	the	same	way	as,	when	a	dove	alights
    Near	his	companion,	both	of	them	pour	forth,
   Circling	about	and	murmuring,	their	affection,
         So	one	beheld	I	by	the	other	grand
    Prince	glorified	to	be	with	welcome	greeted,
     Lauding	the	food	that	there	above	is	eaten.
     But	when	their	gratulations	were	complete,
       Silently	'coram	me'	each	one	stood	still,
        So	incandescent	it	o'ercame	my	sight.
       Smiling	thereafterwards,	said	Beatrice:
     "Illustrious	life,	by	whom	the	benefactions
        Of	our	Basilica	have	been	described,
      Make	Hope	resound	within	this	altitude;
     Thou	knowest	as	oft	thou	dost	personify	it
   As	Jesus	to	the	three	gave	greater	clearness."—
    "Lift	up	thy	head,	and	make	thyself	assured;
    For	what	comes	hither	from	the	mortal	world
       Must	needs	be	ripened	in	our	radiance."
   This	comfort	came	to	me	from	the	second	fire;
      Wherefore	mine	eyes	I	lifted	to	the	hills,
Which	bent	them	down	before	with	too	great	weight.
"Since,	through	his	grace,	our	Emperor	wills	that	thou
  Shouldst	find	thee	face	to	face,	before	thy	death,
  In	the	most	secret	chamber,	with	his	Counts,
    So	that,	the	truth	beholden	of	this	court,
 Hope,	which	below	there	rightfully	enamours,
 Thereby	thou	strengthen	in	thyself	and	others,
   Say	what	it	is,	and	how	is	flowering	with	it
Thy	mind,	and	say	from	whence	it	came	to	thee."
    Thus	did	the	second	light	again	continue.
      And	the	Compassionate,	who	piloted
 The	plumage	of	my	wings	in	such	high	flight,
         Did	in	reply	anticipate	me	thus:
    "No	child	whatever	the	Church	Militant
     Of	greater	hope	possesses,	as	is	written
    In	that	Sun	which	irradiates	all	our	band;
    Therefore	it	is	conceded	him	from	Egypt
         To	come	into	Jerusalem	to	see,
     Or	ever	yet	his	warfare	be	completed.
The	two	remaining	points,	that	not	for	knowledge
    Have	been	demanded,	but	that	he	report
   How	much	this	virtue	unto	thee	is	pleasing,
 To	him	I	leave;	for	hard	he	will	not	find	them,
  Nor	of	self-praise;	and	let	him	answer	them;
 And	may	the	grace	of	God	in	this	assist	him!"
     As	a	disciple,	who	his	teacher	follows,
     Ready	and	willing,	where	he	is	expert,
     That	his	proficiency	may	be	displayed,
    "Hope,"	said	I,	"is	the	certain	expectation
       Of	future	glory,	which	is	the	effect
      Of	grace	divine	and	merit	precedent.
   From	many	stars	this	light	comes	unto	me;
      But	he	instilled	it	first	into	my	heart
   Who	was	chief	singer	unto	the	chief	captain.
        'Sperent	in	te,'	in	the	high	Theody
 He	sayeth,	'those	who	know	thy	name;'	and	who
     Knoweth	it	not,	if	he	my	faith	possess?
   Thou	didst	instil	me,	then,	with	his	instilling
          In	the	Epistle,	so	that	I	am	full,
      And	upon	others	rain	again	your	rain."
    While	I	was	speaking,	in	the	living	bosom
   Of	that	combustion	quivered	an	effulgence,
  Sudden	and	frequent,	in	the	guise	of	lightning;
Then	breathed:	"The	love	wherewith	I	am	inflamed
   Towards	the	virtue	still	which	followed	me
       Unto	the	palm	and	issue	of	the	field,
   Wills	that	I	breathe	to	thee	that	thou	delight
      In	her;	and	grateful	to	me	is	thy	telling
    Whatever	things	Hope	promises	to	thee."
   And	I:	"The	ancient	Scriptures	and	the	new
    The	mark	establish,	and	this	shows	it	me,
Of	all	the	souls	whom	God	hath	made	his	friends.
      Isaiah	saith,	that	each	one	garmented
 In	his	own	land	shall	be	with	twofold	garments,
     And	his	own	land	is	this	delightful	life.
       Thy	brother,	too,	far	more	explicitly,
  There	where	he	treateth	of	the	robes	of	white,
         This	revelation	manifests	to	us."
  And	first,	and	near	the	ending	of	these	words,
     "Sperent	in	te"	from	over	us	was	heard,
   To	which	responsive	answered	all	the	carols.
 Thereafterward	a	light	among	them	brightened,
     So	that,	if	Cancer	one	such	crystal	had,
 Winter	would	have	a	month	of	one	sole	day.
  And	as	uprises,	goes,	and	enters	the	dance
    A	winsome	maiden,	only	to	do	honour
  To	the	new	bride,	and	not	from	any	failing,
Even	thus	did	I	behold	the	brightened	splendour
  Approach	the	two,	who	in	a	wheel	revolved
    As	was	beseeming	to	their	ardent	love.
   Into	the	song	and	music	there	it	entered;
  And	fixed	on	them	my	Lady	kept	her	look,
     Even	as	a	bride	silent	and	motionless.
   "This	is	the	one	who	lay	upon	the	breast
       Of	him	our	Pelican;	and	this	is	he
  To	the	great	office	from	the	cross	elected."
  My	Lady	thus;	but	therefore	none	the	more
  Did	move	her	sight	from	its	attentive	gaze
   Before	or	afterward	these	words	of	hers.
  Even	as	a	man	who	gazes,	and	endeavours
     To	see	the	eclipsing	of	the	sun	a	little,
  And	who,	by	seeing,	sightless	doth	become,
      So	I	became	before	that	latest	fire,
While	it	was	said,	"Why	dost	thou	daze	thyself
 To	see	a	thing	which	here	hath	no	existence?
  Earth	in	the	earth	my	body	is,	and	shall	be
  With	all	the	others	there,	until	our	number
      With	the	eternal	proposition	tallies.
 With	the	two	garments	in	the	blessed	cloister
 Are	the	two	lights	alone	that	have	ascended:
And	this	shalt	thou	take	back	into	your	world."
    And	at	this	utterance	the	flaming	circle
   Grew	quiet,	with	the	dulcet	intermingling
   Of	sound	that	by	the	trinal	breath	was	made,
       As	to	escape	from	danger	or	fatigue
    The	oars	that	erst	were	in	the	water	beaten
      Are	all	suspended	at	a	whistle's	sound.
    Ah,	how	much	in	my	mind	was	I	disturbed,
     When	I	turned	round	to	look	on	Beatrice,
     That	her	I	could	not	see,	although	I	was
    Close	at	her	side	and	in	the	Happy	World!                          	
                   Canto	XXVI
                          	
  While	I	was	doubting	for	my	vision	quenched,
  Out	of	the	flame	refulgent	that	had	quenched	it
    Issued	a	breathing,	that	attentive	made	me,
     Saying:	"While	thou	recoverest	the	sense
   Of	seeing	which	in	me	thou	hast	consumed,
'Tis	well	that	speaking	thou	shouldst	compensate	it.
     Begin	then,	and	declare	to	what	thy	soul
       Is	aimed,	and	count	it	for	a	certainty,
     Sight	is	in	thee	bewildered	and	not	dead;
    Because	the	Lady,	who	through	this	divine
     Region	conducteth	thee,	has	in	her	look
       The	power	the	hand	of	Ananias	had."
      I	said:	"As	pleaseth	her,	or	soon	or	late
    Let	the	cure	come	to	eyes	that	portals	were
   When	she	with	fire	I	ever	burn	with	entered.
 The	Good,	that	gives	contentment	to	this	Court,
          The	Alpha	and	Omega	is	of	all
   The	writing	that	love	reads	me	low	or	loud."
   The	selfsame	voice,	that	taken	had	from	me
     The	terror	of	the	sudden	dazzlement,
   To	speak	still	farther	put	it	in	my	thought;
      And	said:	"In	verity	with	finer	sieve
     Behoveth	thee	to	sift;	thee	it	behoveth
  To	say	who	aimed	thy	bow	at	such	a	target."
      And	I:	"By	philosophic	arguments,
     And	by	authority	that	hence	descends,
   Such	love	must	needs	imprint	itself	in	me;
For	Good,	so	far	as	good,	when	comprehended
Doth	straight	enkindle	love,	and	so	much	greater
     As	more	of	goodness	in	itself	it	holds;
Then	to	that	Essence	(whose	is	such	advantage
    That	every	good	which	out	of	it	is	found
      Is	nothing	but	a	ray	of	its	own	light)
More	than	elsewhither	must	the	mind	be	moved
     Of	every	one,	in	loving,	who	discerns
  The	truth	in	which	this	evidence	is	founded.
      Such	truth	he	to	my	intellect	reveals
   Who	demonstrates	to	me	the	primal	love
       Of	all	the	sempiternal	substances.
   The	voice	reveals	it	of	the	truthful	Author,
   Who	says	to	Moses,	speaking	of	Himself,
 'I	will	make	all	my	goodness	pass	before	thee.'
     Thou	too	revealest	it	to	me,	beginning
  The	loud	Evangel,	that	proclaims	the	secret
   Of	heaven	to	earth	above	all	other	edict."
     And	I	heard	say:	"By	human	intellect
      And	by	authority	concordant	with	it,
  Of	all	thy	loves	reserve	for	God	the	highest.
    But	say	again	if	other	cords	thou	feelest,
Draw	thee	towards	Him,	that	thou	mayst	proclaim
  With	how	many	teeth	this	love	is	biting	thee."
     The	holy	purpose	of	the	Eagle	of	Christ
      Not	latent	was,	nay,	rather	I	perceived
    Whither	he	fain	would	my	profession	lead.
  Therefore	I	recommenced:	"All	of	those	bites
  Which	have	the	power	to	turn	the	heart	to	God
     Unto	my	charity	have	been	concurrent.
   The	being	of	the	world,	and	my	own	being,
   The	death	which	He	endured	that	I	may	live,
   And	that	which	all	the	faithful	hope,	as	I	do,
   With	the	forementioned	vivid	consciousness
  Have	drawn	me	from	the	sea	of	love	perverse,
  And	of	the	right	have	placed	me	on	the	shore.
The	leaves,	wherewith	embowered	is	all	the	garden
        Of	the	Eternal	Gardener,	do	I	love
    As	much	as	he	has	granted	them	of	good."
   As	soon	as	I	had	ceased,	a	song	most	sweet
 Throughout	the	heaven	resounded,	and	my	Lady
     Said	with	the	others,	"Holy,	holy,	holy!"
 And	as	at	some	keen	light	one	wakes	from	sleep
      By	reason	of	the	visual	spirit	that	runs
   Unto	the	splendour	passed	from	coat	to	coat,
   And	he	who	wakes	abhorreth	what	he	sees,
    So	all	unconscious	is	his	sudden	waking,
      Until	the	judgment	cometh	to	his	aid,
      So	from	before	mine	eyes	did	Beatrice
   Chase	every	mote	with	radiance	of	her	own,
  That	cast	its	light	a	thousand	miles	and	more.
      Whence	better	after	than	before	I	saw,
       And	in	a	kind	of	wonderment	I	asked
      About	a	fourth	light	that	I	saw	with	us.
    And	said	my	Lady:	"There	within	those	rays
        Gazes	upon	its	Maker	the	first	soul
       That	ever	the	first	virtue	did	create."
  Even	as	the	bough	that	downward	bends	its	top
      At	transit	of	the	wind,	and	then	is	lifted
    By	its	own	virtue,	which	inclines	it	upward,
  Likewise	did	I,	the	while	that	she	was	speaking,
     Being	amazed,	and	then	I	was	made	bold
     By	a	desire	to	speak	wherewith	I	burned.
        And	I	began:	"O	apple,	that	mature
    Alone	hast	been	produced,	O	ancient	father,
To	whom	each	wife	is	daughter	and	daughter-in-law,
        Devoutly	as	I	can	I	supplicate	thee
That	thou	wouldst	speak	to	me;	thou	seest	my	wish;
     And	I,	to	hear	thee	quickly,	speak	it	not."
  Sometimes	an	animal,	when	covered,	struggles
    So	that	his	impulse	needs	must	be	apparent,
      By	reason	of	the	wrappage	following	it;
       And	in	like	manner	the	primeval	soul
       Made	clear	to	me	athwart	its	covering
     How	jubilant	it	was	to	give	me	pleasure.
   Then	breathed:	"Without	thy	uttering	it	to	me,
         Thine	inclination	better	I	discern
    Than	thou	whatever	thing	is	surest	to	thee;
       For	I	behold	it	in	the	truthful	mirror,
    That	of	Himself	all	things	parhelion	makes,
     And	none	makes	Him	parhelion	of	itself.
Thou	fain	wouldst	hear	how	long	ago	God	placed	me
    Within	the	lofty	garden,	where	this	Lady
     Unto	so	long	a	stairway	thee	disposed.
  And	how	long	to	mine	eyes	it	was	a	pleasure,
    And	of	the	great	disdain	the	proper	cause,
  And	the	language	that	I	used	and	that	I	made.
     Now,	son	of	mine,	the	tasting	of	the	tree
     Not	in	itself	was	cause	of	so	great	exile,
    But	solely	the	o'erstepping	of	the	bounds.
    There,	whence	thy	Lady	moved	Virgilius,
Four	thousand	and	three	hundred	and	two	circuits
     Made	by	the	sun,	this	Council	I	desired;
      And	him	I	saw	return	to	all	the	lights
  Of	his	highway	nine	hundred	times	and	thirty,
      Whilst	I	upon	the	earth	was	tarrying.
   The	language	that	I	spake	was	quite	extinct
      Before	that	in	the	work	interminable
   The	people	under	Nimrod	were	employed;
        For	nevermore	result	of	reasoning
  (Because	of	human	pleasure	that	doth	change,
      Obedient	to	the	heavens)	was	durable.
      A	natural	action	is	it	that	man	speaks;
   But	whether	thus	or	thus,	doth	nature	leave
    To	your	own	art,	as	seemeth	best	to	you.
     Ere	I	descended	to	the	infernal	anguish,
  'El'	was	on	earth	the	name	of	the	Chief	Good,
From	whom	comes	all	the	joy	that	wraps	me	round
    'Eli'	he	then	was	called,	and	that	is	proper,
       Because	the	use	of	men	is	like	a	leaf
   On	bough,	which	goeth	and	another	cometh.
    Upon	the	mount	that	highest	o'er	the	wave
         Rises	was	I,	in	life	or	pure	or	sinful,
   From	the	first	hour	to	that	which	is	the	second,
      As	the	sun	changes	quadrant,	to	the	sixth."                            	
                     Canto	XXVII
                            	
         "Glory	be	to	the	Father,	to	the	Son,
        And	Holy	Ghost!"	all	Paradise	began,
        So	that	the	melody	inebriate	made	me.
       What	I	beheld	seemed	unto	me	a	smile
         Of	the	universe;	for	my	inebriation
  Found	entrance	through	the	hearing	and	the	sight.
          O	joy!	O	gladness	inexpressible!
       O	perfect	life	of	love	and	peacefulness!
         O	riches	without	hankering	secure!
   Before	mine	eyes	were	standing	the	four	torches
      Enkindled,	and	the	one	that	first	had	come
        Began	to	make	itself	more	luminous;
       And	even	such	in	semblance	it	became
      As	Jupiter	would	become,	if	he	and	Mars
Were	birds,	and	they	should	interchange	their	feathers.
      That	Providence,	which	here	distributeth
       Season	and	service,	in	the	blessed	choir
        Had	silence	upon	every	side	imposed.
      When	I	heard	say:	"If	I	my	colour	change,
       Marvel	not	at	it;	for	while	I	am	speaking
   Thou	shalt	behold	all	these	their	colour	change.
       He	who	usurps	upon	the	earth	my	place,
    My	place,	my	place,	which	vacant	has	become
       Before	the	presence	of	the	Son	of	God,
       Has	of	my	cemetery	made	a	sewer
Of	blood	and	stench,	whereby	the	Perverse	One,
 Who	fell	from	here,	below	there	is	appeased!"
With	the	same	colour	which,	through	sun	adverse,
    Painteth	the	clouds	at	evening	or	at	morn,
  Beheld	I	then	the	whole	of	heaven	suffused.
      And	as	a	modest	woman,	who	abides
     Sure	of	herself,	and	at	another's	failing,
    From	listening	only,	timorous	becomes,
  Even	thus	did	Beatrice	change	countenance;
   And	I	believe	in	heaven	was	such	eclipse,
   When	suffered	the	supreme	Omnipotence;
   Thereafterward	proceeded	forth	his	words
   With	voice	so	much	transmuted	from	itself,
  The	very	countenance	was	not	more	changed.
 "The	spouse	of	Christ	has	never	nurtured	been
   On	blood	of	mine,	of	Linus	and	of	Cletus,
      To	be	made	use	of	in	acquest	of	gold;
       But	in	acquest	of	this	delightful	life
      Sixtus	and	Pius,	Urban	and	Calixtus,
   After	much	lamentation,	shed	their	blood.
   Our	purpose	was	not,	that	on	the	right	hand
   Of	our	successors	should	in	part	be	seated
   The	Christian	folk,	in	part	upon	the	other;
  Nor	that	the	keys	which	were	to	me	confided
 Should	e'er	become	the	escutcheon	on	a	banner,
That	should	wage	war	on	those	who	are	baptized;
        Nor	I	be	made	the	figure	of	a	seal
      To	privileges	venal	and	mendacious,
   Whereat	I	often	redden	and	flash	with	fire.
   In	garb	of	shepherds	the	rapacious	wolves
 Are	seen	from	here	above	o'er	all	the	pastures!
  O	wrath	of	God,	why	dost	thou	slumber	still?
 To	drink	our	blood	the	Caorsines	and	Gascons
   Are	making	ready.	O	thou	good	beginning,
   Unto	how	vile	an	end	must	thou	needs	fall!
    But	the	high	Providence,	that	with	Scipio
    At	Rome	the	glory	of	the	world	defended,
      Will	speedily	bring	aid,	as	I	conceive;
  And	thou,	my	son,	who	by	thy	mortal	weight
    Shalt	down	return	again,	open	thy	mouth;
    What	I	conceal	not,	do	not	thou	conceal."
   As	with	its	frozen	vapours	downward	falls
  In	flakes	our	atmosphere,	what	time	the	horn
    Of	the	celestial	Goat	doth	touch	the	sun,
      Upward	in	such	array	saw	I	the	ether
Become,	and	flaked	with	the	triumphant	vapours,
   Which	there	together	with	us	had	remained.
  My	sight	was	following	up	their	semblances,
    And	followed	till	the	medium,	by	excess,
    The	passing	farther	onward	took	from	it;
    Whereat	the	Lady,	who	beheld	me	freed
  From	gazing	upward,	said	to	me:	"Cast	down
Thy	sight,	and	see	how	far	thou	art	turned	round."
Since	the	first	time	that	I	had	downward	looked,
  I	saw	that	I	had	moved	through	the	whole	arc
Which	the	first	climate	makes	from	midst	to	end;
     So	that	I	saw	the	mad	track	of	Ulysses
  Past	Gades,	and	this	side,	well	nigh	the	shore
    Whereon	became	Europa	a	sweet	burden.
   And	of	this	threshing-floor	the	site	to	me
Were	more	unveiled,	but	the	sun	was	proceeding
   Under	my	feet,	a	sign	and	more	removed.
    My	mind	enamoured,	which	is	dallying
    At	all	times	with	my	Lady,	to	bring	back
 To	her	mine	eyes	was	more	than	ever	ardent.
     And	if	or	Art	or	Nature	has	made	bait
  To	catch	the	eyes	and	so	possess	the	mind,
      In	human	flesh	or	in	its	portraiture,
  All	joined	together	would	appear	as	nought
  To	the	divine	delight	which	shone	upon	me
 When	to	her	smiling	face	I	turned	me	round.
   The	virtue	that	her	look	endowed	me	with
    From	the	fair	nest	of	Leda	tore	me	forth,
 And	up	into	the	swiftest	heaven	impelled	me.
    Its	parts	exceeding	full	of	life	and	lofty
        Are	all	so	uniform,	I	cannot	say
     Which	Beatrice	selected	for	my	place.
     But	she,	who	was	aware	of	my	desire,
    Began,	the	while	she	smiled	so	joyously
That	God	seemed	in	her	countenance	to	rejoice:
 "The	nature	of	that	motion,	which	keeps	quiet
   The	centre	and	all	the	rest	about	it	moves,
 From	hence	begins	as	from	its	starting	point.
  And	in	this	heaven	there	is	no	other	Where
 Than	in	the	Mind	Divine,	wherein	is	kindled
  The	love	that	turns	it,	and	the	power	it	rains.
   Within	a	circle	light	and	love	embrace	it,
 Even	as	this	doth	the	others,	and	that	precinct
       He	who	encircles	it	alone	controls.
         Its	motion	is	not	by	another	meted,
      But	all	the	others	measured	are	by	this,
        As	ten	is	by	the	half	and	by	the	fifth.
       And	in	what	manner	time	in	such	a	pot
    May	have	its	roots,	and	in	the	rest	its	leaves,
       Now	unto	thee	can	manifest	be	made.
      O	Covetousness,	that	mortals	dost	ingulf
    Beneath	thee	so,	that	no	one	hath	the	power
   Of	drawing	back	his	eyes	from	out	thy	waves!
      Full	fairly	blossoms	in	mankind	the	will;
        But	the	uninterrupted	rain	converts
       Into	abortive	wildings	the	true	plums.
          Fidelity	and	innocence	are	found
       Only	in	children;	afterwards	they	both
Take	flight	or	e'er	the	cheeks	with	down	are	covered.
   One,	while	he	prattles	still,	observes	the	fasts,
Who,	when	his	tongue	is	loosed,	forthwith	devours
       Whatever	food	under	whatever	moon;
    Another,	while	he	prattles,	loves	and	listens
   Unto	his	mother,	who	when	speech	is	perfect
      Forthwith	desires	to	see	her	in	her	grave.
    Even	thus	is	swarthy	made	the	skin	so	white
        In	its	first	aspect	of	the	daughter	fair
 Of	him	who	brings	the	morn,	and	leaves	the	night.
     Thou,	that	it	may	not	be	a	marvel	to	thee,
  Think	that	on	earth	there	is	no	one	who	governs;
       Whence	goes	astray	the	human	family.
         Ere	January	be	unwintered	wholly
       By	the	centesimal	on	earth	neglected,
      Shall	these	supernal	circles	roar	so	loud
   The	tempest	that	has	been	so	long	awaited
Shall	whirl	the	poops	about	where	are	the	prows;
   So	that	the	fleet	shall	run	its	course	direct,
  And	the	true	fruit	shall	follow	on	the	flower."                         	
                  Canto	XXVIII
                         	
      After	the	truth	against	the	present	life
       Of	miserable	mortals	was	unfolded
     By	her	who	doth	imparadise	my	mind,
      As	in	a	looking-glass	a	taper's	flame
    He	sees	who	from	behind	is	lighted	by	it,
     Before	he	has	it	in	his	sight	or	thought,
   And	turns	him	round	to	see	if	so	the	glass
   Tell	him	the	truth,	and	sees	that	it	accords
    Therewith	as	doth	a	music	with	its	metre,
    In	similar	wise	my	memory	recollecteth
     That	I	did,	looking	into	those	fair	eyes,
Of	which	Love	made	the	springes	to	ensnare	me.
And	as	I	turned	me	round,	and	mine	were	touched
    By	that	which	is	apparent	in	that	volume,
      Whenever	on	its	gyre	we	gaze	intent,
      A	point	beheld	I,	that	was	raying	out
   Light	so	acute,	the	sight	which	it	enkindles
Must	close	perforce	before	such	great	acuteness.
    And	whatsoever	star	seems	smallest	here
  Would	seem	to	be	a	moon,	if	placed	beside	it.
     As	one	star	with	another	star	is	placed.
      Perhaps	at	such	a	distance	as	appears
    A	halo	cincturing	the	light	that	paints	it,
   When	densest	is	the	vapour	that	sustains	it,
   Thus	distant	round	the	point	a	circle	of	fire
 So	swiftly	whirled,	that	it	would	have	surpassed
    Whatever	motion	soonest	girds	the	world;
      And	this	was	by	another	circumcinct,
    That	by	a	third,	the	third	then	by	a	fourth,
By	a	fifth	the	fourth,	and	then	by	a	sixth	the	fifth;
    The	seventh	followed	thereupon	in	width
      So	ample	now,	that	Juno's	messenger
    Entire	would	be	too	narrow	to	contain	it.
   Even	so	the	eighth	and	ninth;	and	every	one
    More	slowly	moved,	according	as	it	was
     In	number	distant	farther	from	the	first.
   And	that	one	had	its	flame	most	crystalline
 From	which	less	distant	was	the	stainless	spark,
   I	think	because	more	with	its	truth	imbued.
          My	Lady,	who	in	my	anxiety
Beheld	me	much	perplexed,	said:	"From	that	point
     Dependent	is	the	heaven	and	nature	all.
     Behold	that	circle	most	conjoined	to	it,
    And	know	thou,	that	its	motion	is	so	swift
 Through	burning	love	whereby	it	is	spurred	on."
    And	I	to	her:	"If	the	world	were	arranged
    In	the	order	which	I	see	in	yonder	wheels,
 What's	set	before	me	would	have	satisfied	me;
    But	in	the	world	of	sense	we	can	perceive
      That	evermore	the	circles	are	diviner
    As	they	are	from	the	centre	more	remote
      Wherefore	if	my	desire	is	to	be	ended
      In	this	miraculous	and	angelic	temple,
   That	has	for	confines	only	love	and	light,
  To	hear	behoves	me	still	how	the	example
   And	the	exemplar	go	not	in	one	fashion,
  Since	for	myself	in	vain	I	contemplate	it."
    "If	thine	own	fingers	unto	such	a	knot
     Be	insufficient,	it	is	no	great	wonder,
  So	hard	hath	it	become	for	want	of	trying."
  My	Lady	thus;	then	said	she:	"Do	thou	take
What	I	shall	tell	thee,	if	thou	wouldst	be	sated,
       And	exercise	on	that	thy	subtlety.
   The	circles	corporal	are	wide	and	narrow
    According	to	the	more	or	less	of	virtue
  Which	is	distributed	through	all	their	parts.
 The	greater	goodness	works	the	greater	weal,
   The	greater	weal	the	greater	body	holds,
       If	perfect	equally	are	all	its	parts.
Therefore	this	one	which	sweeps	along	with	it
    The	universe	sublime,	doth	correspond
 Unto	the	circle	which	most	loves	and	knows.
   On	which	account,	if	thou	unto	the	virtue
  Apply	thy	measure,	not	to	the	appearance
   Of	substances	that	unto	thee	seem	round,
  Thou	wilt	behold	a	marvellous	agreement,
   Of	more	to	greater,	and	of	less	to	smaller,
    In	every	heaven,	with	its	Intelligence."
    Even	as	remaineth	splendid	and	serene
     The	hemisphere	of	air,	when	Boreas
Is	blowing	from	that	cheek	where	he	is	mildest,
   Because	is	purified	and	resolved	the	rack
  That	erst	disturbed	it,	till	the	welkin	laughs
      With	all	the	beauties	of	its	pageantry;
     Thus	did	I	likewise,	after	that	my	Lady
    Had	me	provided	with	her	clear	response,
   And	like	a	star	in	heaven	the	truth	was	seen.
   And	soon	as	to	a	stop	her	words	had	come,
        Not	otherwise	does	iron	scintillate
   When	molten,	than	those	circles	scintillated.
    Their	coruscation	all	the	sparks	repeated,
  And	they	so	many	were,	their	number	makes
  More	millions	than	the	doubling	of	the	chess.
    I	heard	them	sing	hosanna	choir	by	choir
 To	the	fixed	point	which	holds	them	at	the	'Ubi,'
    And	ever	will,	where	they	have	ever	been.
   And	she,	who	saw	the	dubious	meditations
   Within	my	mind,	"The	primal	circles,"	said,
   "Have	shown	thee	Seraphim	and	Cherubim.
    Thus	rapidly	they	follow	their	own	bonds,
     To	be	as	like	the	point	as	most	they	can,
    And	can	as	far	as	they	are	high	in	vision.
  Those	other	Loves,	that	round	about	them	go,
  Thrones	of	the	countenance	divine	are	called,
    Because	they	terminate	the	primal	Triad.
And	thou	shouldst	know	that	they	all	have	delight
     As	much	as	their	own	vision	penetrates
    The	Truth,	in	which	all	intellect	finds	rest.
    From	this	it	may	be	seen	how	blessedness
      Is	founded	in	the	faculty	which	sees,
  And	not	in	that	which	loves,	and	follows	next;
     And	of	this	seeing	merit	is	the	measure,
Which	is	brought	forth	by	grace,	and	by	good	will;
  Thus	on	from	grade	to	grade	doth	it	proceed.
    The	second	Triad,	which	is	germinating
     In	such	wise	in	this	sempiternal	spring,
       That	no	nocturnal	Aries	despoils,
       Perpetually	hosanna	warbles	forth
   With	threefold	melody,	that	sounds	in	three
     Orders	of	joy,	with	which	it	is	intrined.
     The	three	Divine	are	in	this	hierarchy,
   First	the	Dominions,	and	the	Virtues	next;
    And	the	third	order	is	that	of	the	Powers.
     Then	in	the	dances	twain	penultimate
    The	Principalities	and	Archangels	wheel;
      The	last	is	wholly	of	angelic	sports.
  These	orders	upward	all	of	them	are	gazing,
    And	downward	so	prevail,	that	unto	God
      They	all	attracted	are	and	all	attract.
       And	Dionysius	with	so	great	desire
    To	contemplate	these	Orders	set	himself,
He	named	them	and	distinguished	them	as	I	do.
  But	Gregory	afterwards	dissented	from	him;
   Wherefore,	as	soon	as	he	unclosed	his	eyes
  Within	this	heaven,	he	at	himself	did	smile.
     And	if	so	much	of	secret	truth	a	mortal
Proffered	on	earth,	I	would	not	have	thee	marvel,
   For	he	who	saw	it	here	revealed	it	to	him,
With	much	more	of	the	truth	about	these	circles."                         	
                  Canto	XXIX
                         	
   At	what	time	both	the	children	of	Latona,
  Surmounted	by	the	Ram	and	by	the	Scales,
    Together	make	a	zone	of	the	horizon,
As	long	as	from	the	time	the	zenith	holds	them
    In	equipoise,	till	from	that	girdle	both
Changing	their	hemisphere	disturb	the	balance,
   So	long,	her	face	depicted	with	a	smile,
  Did	Beatrice	keep	silence	while	she	gazed
 Fixedly	at	the	point	which	had	o'ercome	me.
     Then	she	began:	"I	say,	and	I	ask	not
What	thou	dost	wish	to	hear,	for	I	have	seen	it
 Where	centres	every	When	and	every	'Ubi.'
   Not	to	acquire	some	good	unto	himself,
 Which	is	impossible,	but	that	his	splendour
    In	its	resplendency	may	say,	'Subsisto,'
        In	his	eternity	outside	of	time,
  Outside	all	other	limits,	as	it	pleased	him,
  Into	new	Loves	the	Eternal	Love	unfolded.
       Nor	as	if	torpid	did	he	lie	before;
    For	neither	after	nor	before	proceeded
  The	going	forth	of	God	upon	these	waters.
  Matter	and	Form	unmingled	and	conjoined
     Came	into	being	that	had	no	defect,
E'en	as	three	arrows	from	a	three-stringed	bow.
    And	as	in	glass,	in	amber,	or	in	crystal
  A	sunbeam	flashes	so,	that	from	its	coming
        To	its	full	being	is	no	interval,
    So	from	its	Lord	did	the	triform	effect
     Ray	forth	into	its	being	all	together,
     Without	discrimination	of	beginning.
    Order	was	con-created	and	constructed
       In	substances,	and	summit	of	the	world
   Were	those	wherein	the	pure	act	was	produced.
        Pure	potentiality	held	the	lowest	part;
         Midway	bound	potentiality	with	act
      Such	bond	that	it	shall	never	be	unbound.
        Jerome	has	written	unto	you	of	angels
          Created	a	long	lapse	of	centuries
       Or	ever	yet	the	other	world	was	made;
       But	written	is	this	truth	in	many	places
       By	writers	of	the	Holy	Ghost,	and	thou
       Shalt	see	it,	if	thou	lookest	well	thereat.
         And	even	reason	seeth	it	somewhat,
      For	it	would	not	concede	that	for	so	long
    Could	be	the	motors	without	their	perfection.
Now	dost	thou	know	both	where	and	when	these	Loves
       Created	were,	and	how;	so	that	extinct
         In	thy	desire	already	are	three	fires.
    Nor	could	one	reach,	in	counting,	unto	twenty
       So	swiftly,	as	a	portion	of	these	angels
       Disturbed	the	subject	of	your	elements.
      The	rest	remained,	and	they	began	this	art
     Which	thou	discernest,	with	so	great	delight
    That	never	from	their	circling	do	they	cease.
      The	occasion	of	the	fall	was	the	accursed
   Presumption	of	that	One,	whom	thou	hast	seen
     By	all	the	burden	of	the	world	constrained.
    Those	whom	thou	here	beholdest	modest	were
     To	recognise	themselves	as	of	that	goodness
  Which	made	them	apt	for	so	much	understanding;
     On	which	account	their	vision	was	exalted
 By	the	enlightening	grace	and	their	own	merit,
    So	that	they	have	a	full	and	steadfast	will.
   I	would	not	have	thee	doubt,	but	certain	be,
      'Tis	meritorious	to	receive	this	grace,
      According	as	the	affection	opens	to	it.
       Now	round	about	in	this	consistory
Much	mayst	thou	contemplate,	if	these	my	words
     Be	gathered	up,	without	all	further	aid.
But	since	upon	the	earth,	throughout	your	schools,
    They	teach	that	such	is	the	angelic	nature
    That	it	doth	hear,	and	recollect,	and	will,
  More	will	I	say,	that	thou	mayst	see	unmixed
    The	truth	that	is	confounded	there	below,
      Equivocating	in	such	like	prelections.
  These	substances,	since	in	God's	countenance
  They	jocund	were,	turned	not	away	their	sight
  From	that	wherefrom	not	anything	is	hidden;
   Hence	they	have	not	their	vision	intercepted
   By	object	new,	and	hence	they	do	not	need
    To	recollect,	through	interrupted	thought.
    So	that	below,	not	sleeping,	people	dream,
  Believing	they	speak	truth,	and	not	believing;
     And	in	the	last	is	greater	sin	and	shame.
     Below	you	do	not	journey	by	one	path
       Philosophising;	so	transporteth	you
   Love	of	appearance	and	the	thought	thereof.
      And	even	this	above	here	is	endured
     With	less	disdain,	than	when	is	set	aside
      The	Holy	Writ,	or	when	it	is	distorted.
 They	think	not	there	how	much	of	blood	it	costs
    To	sow	it	in	the	world,	and	how	he	pleases
        Who	in	humility	keeps	close	to	it.
   Each	striveth	for	appearance,	and	doth	make
    His	own	inventions;	and	these	treated	are
  By	preachers,	and	the	Evangel	holds	its	peace.
   One	sayeth	that	the	moon	did	backward	turn,
  In	the	Passion	of	Christ,	and	interpose	herself
  So	that	the	sunlight	reached	not	down	below;
     And	lies;	for	of	its	own	accord	the	light
  Hid	itself;	whence	to	Spaniards	and	to	Indians,
     As	to	the	Jews,	did	such	eclipse	respond.
    Florence	has	not	so	many	Lapi	and	Bindi
     As	fables	such	as	these,	that	every	year
   Are	shouted	from	the	pulpit	back	and	forth,
  In	such	wise	that	the	lambs,	who	do	not	know,
   Come	back	from	pasture	fed	upon	the	wind,
  And	not	to	see	the	harm	doth	not	excuse	them.
      Christ	did	not	to	his	first	disciples	say,
   'Go	forth,	and	to	the	world	preach	idle	tales,'
      But	unto	them	a	true	foundation	gave;
    And	this	so	loudly	sounded	from	their	lips,
      That,	in	the	warfare	to	enkindle	Faith,
  They	made	of	the	Evangel	shields	and	lances.
    Now	men	go	forth	with	jests	and	drolleries
   To	preach,	and	if	but	well	the	people	laugh,
  The	hood	puffs	out,	and	nothing	more	is	asked.
     But	in	the	cowl	there	nestles	such	a	bird,
    That,	if	the	common	people	were	to	see	it,
They	would	perceive	what	pardons	they	confide	in,
 For	which	so	great	on	earth	has	grown	the	folly,
     That,	without	proof	of	any	testimony,
To	each	indulgence	they	would	flock	together.
   By	this	Saint	Anthony	his	pig	doth	fatten,
  And	many	others,	who	are	worse	than	pigs,
  Paying	in	money	without	mark	of	coinage.
   But	since	we	have	digressed	abundantly,
Turn	back	thine	eyes	forthwith	to	the	right	path,
  So	that	the	way	be	shortened	with	the	time.
       This	nature	doth	so	multiply	itself
  In	numbers,	that	there	never	yet	was	speech
      Nor	mortal	fancy	that	can	go	so	far.
   And	if	thou	notest	that	which	is	revealed
 By	Daniel,	thou	wilt	see	that	in	his	thousands
    Number	determinate	is	kept	concealed.
     The	primal	light,	that	all	irradiates	it,
    By	modes	as	many	is	received	therein,
 As	are	the	splendours	wherewith	it	is	mated.
   Hence,	inasmuch	as	on	the	act	conceptive
The	affection	followeth,	of	love	the	sweetness
      Therein	diversely	fervid	is	or	tepid.
   The	height	behold	now	and	the	amplitude
    Of	the	eternal	power,	since	it	hath	made
   Itself	so	many	mirrors,	where	'tis	broken,
      One	in	itself	remaining	as	before."                         	
                  Canto	XXX
                         	
 Perchance	six	thousand	miles	remote	from	us
 Is	glowing	the	sixth	hour,	and	now	this	world
     Inclines	its	shadow	almost	to	a	level,
  When	the	mid-heaven	begins	to	make	itself
    So	deep	to	us,	that	here	and	there	a	star
   Ceases	to	shine	so	far	down	as	this	depth,
      And	as	advances	bright	exceedingly
 The	handmaid	of	the	sun,	the	heaven	is	closed
     Light	after	light	to	the	most	beautiful;
   Not	otherwise	the	Triumph,	which	for	ever
Plays	round	about	the	point	that	vanquished	me,
   Seeming	enclosed	by	what	itself	encloses,
      Little	by	little	from	my	vision	faded;
     Whereat	to	turn	mine	eyes	on	Beatrice
My	seeing	nothing	and	my	love	constrained	me.
      If	what	has	hitherto	been	said	of	her
     Were	all	concluded	in	a	single	praise,
   Scant	would	it	be	to	serve	the	present	turn.
       Not	only	does	the	beauty	I	beheld
    Transcend	ourselves,	but	truly	I	believe
        Its	Maker	only	may	enjoy	it	all.
  Vanquished	do	I	confess	me	by	this	passage
  More	than	by	problem	of	his	theme	was	ever
     O'ercome	the	comic	or	the	tragic	poet;
   For	as	the	sun	the	sight	that	trembles	most,
    Even	so	the	memory	of	that	sweet	smile
       My	mind	depriveth	of	its	very	self.
    From	the	first	day	that	I	beheld	her	face
     In	this	life,	to	the	moment	of	this	look,
The	sequence	of	my	song	has	ne'er	been	severed;
  But	now	perforce	this	sequence	must	desist
   From	following	her	beauty	with	my	verse,
        As	every	artist	at	his	uttermost.
     Such	as	I	leave	her	to	a	greater	fame
 Than	any	of	my	trumpet,	which	is	bringing
      Its	arduous	matter	to	a	final	close,
  With	voice	and	gesture	of	a	perfect	leader
She	recommenced:	"We	from	the	greatest	body
 Have	issued	to	the	heaven	that	is	pure	light;
     Light	intellectual	replete	with	love,
   Love	of	true	good	replete	with	ecstasy,
  Ecstasy	that	transcendeth	every	sweetness.
Here	shalt	thou	see	the	one	host	and	the	other
  Of	Paradise,	and	one	in	the	same	aspects
 Which	at	the	final	judgment	thou	shalt	see."
  Even	as	a	sudden	lightning	that	disperses
     The	visual	spirits,	so	that	it	deprives
The	eye	of	impress	from	the	strongest	objects,
 Thus	round	about	me	flashed	a	living	light,
 And	left	me	swathed	around	with	such	a	veil
     Of	its	effulgence,	that	I	nothing	saw.
  "Ever	the	Love	which	quieteth	this	heaven
    Welcomes	into	itself	with	such	salute,
   To	make	the	candle	ready	for	its	flame."
 No	sooner	had	within	me	these	brief	words
 An	entrance	found,	than	I	perceived	myself
     To	be	uplifted	over	my	own	power,
    And	I	with	vision	new	rekindled	me,
    Such	that	no	light	whatever	is	so	pure
 But	that	mine	eyes	were	fortified	against	it.
     And	light	I	saw	in	fashion	of	a	river
 Fulvid	with	its	effulgence,	'twixt	two	banks
     Depicted	with	an	admirable	Spring.
       Out	of	this	river	issued	living	sparks,
   And	on	all	sides	sank	down	into	the	flowers,
       Like	unto	rubies	that	are	set	in	gold;
     And	then,	as	if	inebriate	with	the	odours,
  They	plunged	again	into	the	wondrous	torrent,
     And	as	one	entered	issued	forth	another.
"The	high	desire,	that	now	inflames	and	moves	thee
     To	have	intelligence	of	what	thou	seest,
   Pleaseth	me	all	the	more,	the	more	it	swells.
      But	of	this	water	it	behoves	thee	drink
    Before	so	great	a	thirst	in	thee	be	slaked."
    Thus	said	to	me	the	sunshine	of	mine	eyes;
      And	added:	"The	river	and	the	topazes
Going	in	and	out,	and	the	laughing	of	the	herbage,
    Are	of	their	truth	foreshadowing	prefaces;
 Not	that	these	things	are	difficult	in	themselves,
         But	the	deficiency	is	on	thy	side,
     For	yet	thou	hast	not	vision	so	exalted."
      There	is	no	babe	that	leaps	so	suddenly
     With	face	towards	the	milk,	if	he	awake
       Much	later	than	his	usual	custom	is,
     As	I	did,	that	I	might	make	better	mirrors
  Still	of	mine	eyes,	down	stooping	to	the	wave
   Which	flows	that	we	therein	be	better	made.
    And	even	as	the	penthouse	of	mine	eyelids
      Drank	of	it,	it	forthwith	appeared	to	me
   Out	of	its	length	to	be	transformed	to	round.
    Then	as	a	folk	who	have	been	under	masks
      Seem	other	than	before,	if	they	divest
 The	semblance	not	their	own	they	disappeared	in,
Thus	into	greater	pomp	were	changed	for	me
  The	flowerets	and	the	sparks,	so	that	I	saw
Both	of	the	Courts	of	Heaven	made	manifest.
O	splendour	of	God!	by	means	of	which	I	saw
  The	lofty	triumph	of	the	realm	veracious,
   Give	me	the	power	to	say	how	it	I	saw!
     There	is	a	light	above,	which	visible
   Makes	the	Creator	unto	every	creature,
   Who	only	in	beholding	Him	has	peace,
    And	it	expands	itself	in	circular	form
    To	such	extent,	that	its	circumference
   Would	be	too	large	a	girdle	for	the	sun.
   The	semblance	of	it	is	all	made	of	rays
  Reflected	from	the	top	of	Primal	Motion,
  Which	takes	therefrom	vitality	and	power.
       And	as	a	hill	in	water	at	its	base
     Mirrors	itself,	as	if	to	see	its	beauty
When	affluent	most	in	verdure	and	in	flowers,
  So,	ranged	aloft	all	round	about	the	light,
Mirrored	I	saw	in	more	ranks	than	a	thousand
 All	who	above	there	have	from	us	returned.
    And	if	the	lowest	row	collect	within	it
   So	great	a	light,	how	vast	the	amplitude
    Is	of	this	Rose	in	its	extremest	leaves!
   My	vision	in	the	vastness	and	the	height
    Lost	not	itself,	but	comprehended	all
  The	quantity	and	quality	of	that	gladness.
  There	near	and	far	nor	add	nor	take	away;
For	there	where	God	immediately	doth	govern,
    The	natural	law	in	naught	is	relevant.
        Into	the	yellow	of	the	Rose	Eternal
That	spreads,	and	multiplies,	and	breathes	an	odour
        Of	praise	unto	the	ever-vernal	Sun,
    As	one	who	silent	is	and	fain	would	speak,
     Me	Beatrice	drew	on,	and	said:	"Behold
   Of	the	white	stoles	how	vast	the	convent	is!
     Behold	how	vast	the	circuit	of	our	city!
    Behold	our	seats	so	filled	to	overflowing,
 That	here	henceforward	are	few	people	wanting!
 On	that	great	throne	whereon	thine	eyes	are	fixed
   For	the	crown's	sake	already	placed	upon	it,
     Before	thou	suppest	at	this	wedding	feast
     Shall	sit	the	soul	(that	is	to	be	Augustus
    On	earth)	of	noble	Henry,	who	shall	come
         To	redress	Italy	ere	she	be	ready.
 Blind	covetousness,	that	casts	its	spell	upon	you,
      Has	made	you	like	unto	the	little	child,
   Who	dies	of	hunger	and	drives	off	the	nurse.
      And	in	the	sacred	forum	then	shall	be
       A	Prefect	such,	that	openly	or	covert
   On	the	same	road	he	will	not	walk	with	him.
      But	long	of	God	he	will	not	be	endured
      In	holy	office;	he	shall	be	thrust	down
      Where	Simon	Magus	is	for	his	deserts,
       And	make	him	of	Alagna	lower	go!"                         	
                   Canto	XXXI
                         	
      In	fashion	then	as	of	a	snow-white	rose
      Displayed	itself	to	me	the	saintly	host,
Whom	Christ	in	his	own	blood	had	made	his	bride,
   But	the	other	host,	that	flying	sees	and	sings
     The	glory	of	Him	who	doth	enamour	it,
    And	the	goodness	that	created	it	so	noble,
  Even	as	a	swarm	of	bees,	that	sinks	in	flowers
     One	moment,	and	the	next	returns	again
    To	where	its	labour	is	to	sweetness	turned,
    Sank	into	the	great	flower,	that	is	adorned
   With	leaves	so	many,	and	thence	reascended
       To	where	its	love	abideth	evermore.
     Their	faces	had	they	all	of	living	flame,
   And	wings	of	gold,	and	all	the	rest	so	white
       No	snow	unto	that	limit	doth	attain.
From	bench	to	bench,	into	the	flower	descending,
 They	carried	something	of	the	peace	and	ardour
 Which	by	the	fanning	of	their	flanks	they	won.
     Nor	did	the	interposing	'twixt	the	flower
      And	what	was	o'er	it	of	such	plenitude
Of	flying	shapes	impede	the	sight	and	splendour;
      Because	the	light	divine	so	penetrates
       The	universe,	according	to	its	merit,
    That	naught	can	be	an	obstacle	against	it.
   This	realm	secure	and	full	of	gladsomeness,
 Crowded	with	ancient	people	and	with	modern,
     Unto	one	mark	had	all	its	look	and	love.
        O	Trinal	Light,	that	in	a	single	star
   Sparkling	upon	their	sight	so	satisfies	them,
    Look	down	upon	our	tempest	here	below!
   If	the	barbarians,	coming	from	some	region
      That	every	day	by	Helice	is	covered,
Revolving	with	her	son	whom	she	delights	in,
  Beholding	Rome	and	all	her	noble	works,
 Were	wonder-struck,	what	time	the	Lateran
   Above	all	mortal	things	was	eminent,—
   I	who	to	the	divine	had	from	the	human,
     From	time	unto	eternity,	had	come,
  From	Florence	to	a	people	just	and	sane,
With	what	amazement	must	I	have	been	filled!
    Truly	between	this	and	the	joy,	it	was
   My	pleasure	not	to	hear,	and	to	be	mute.
    And	as	a	pilgrim	who	delighteth	him
   In	gazing	round	the	temple	of	his	vow,
  And	hopes	some	day	to	retell	how	it	was,
 So	through	the	living	light	my	way	pursuing
   Directed	I	mine	eyes	o'er	all	the	ranks,
Now	up,	now	down,	and	now	all	round	about.
      Faces	I	saw	of	charity	persuasive,
Embellished	by	His	light	and	their	own	smile,
   And	attitudes	adorned	with	every	grace.
    The	general	form	of	Paradise	already
  My	glance	had	comprehended	as	a	whole,
     In	no	part	hitherto	remaining	fixed,
 And	round	I	turned	me	with	rekindled	wish
      My	Lady	to	interrogate	of	things
Concerning	which	my	mind	was	in	suspense.
  One	thing	I	meant,	another	answered	me;
   I	thought	I	should	see	Beatrice,	and	saw
An	Old	Man	habited	like	the	glorious	people.
  O'erflowing	was	he	in	his	eyes	and	cheeks
     With	joy	benign,	in	attitude	of	pity
        As	to	a	tender	father	is	becoming.
    And	"She,	where	is	she?"	instantly	I	said;
    Whence	he:	"To	put	an	end	to	thy	desire,
   Me	Beatrice	hath	sent	from	mine	own	place.
    And	if	thou	lookest	up	to	the	third	round
   Of	the	first	rank,	again	shalt	thou	behold	her
 Upon	the	throne	her	merits	have	assigned	her."
       Without	reply	I	lifted	up	mine	eyes,
    And	saw	her,	as	she	made	herself	a	crown
     Reflecting	from	herself	the	eternal	rays.
 Not	from	that	region	which	the	highest	thunders
        Is	any	mortal	eye	so	far	removed,
        In	whatsoever	sea	it	deepest	sinks,
    As	there	from	Beatrice	my	sight;	but	this
    Was	nothing	unto	me;	because	her	image
    Descended	not	to	me	by	medium	blurred.
   "O	Lady,	thou	in	whom	my	hope	is	strong,
     And	who	for	my	salvation	didst	endure
     In	Hell	to	leave	the	imprint	of	thy	feet,
       Of	whatsoever	things	I	have	beheld,
As	coming	from	thy	power	and	from	thy	goodness
       I	recognise	the	virtue	and	the	grace.
Thou	from	a	slave	hast	brought	me	unto	freedom,
     By	all	those	ways,	by	all	the	expedients,
    Whereby	thou	hadst	the	power	of	doing	it.
     Preserve	towards	me	thy	magnificence,
So	that	this	soul	of	mine,	which	thou	hast	healed,
  Pleasing	to	thee	be	loosened	from	the	body."
      Thus	I	implored;	and	she,	so	far	away,
Smiled,	as	it	seemed,	and	looked	once	more	at	me;
    Then	unto	the	eternal	fountain	turned.
 And	said	the	Old	Man	holy:	"That	thou	mayst
     Accomplish	perfectly	thy	journeying,
Whereunto	prayer	and	holy	love	have	sent	me,
Fly	with	thine	eyes	all	round	about	this	garden;
     For	seeing	it	will	discipline	thy	sight
    Farther	to	mount	along	the	ray	divine.
And	she,	the	Queen	of	Heaven,	for	whom	I	burn
 Wholly	with	love,	will	grant	us	every	grace,
   Because	that	I	her	faithful	Bernard	am."
    As	he	who	peradventure	from	Croatia
       Cometh	to	gaze	at	our	Veronica,
 Who	through	its	ancient	fame	is	never	sated,
 But	says	in	thought,	the	while	it	is	displayed,
  "My	Lord,	Christ	Jesus,	God	of	very	God,
Now	was	your	semblance	made	like	unto	this?"
  Even	such	was	I	while	gazing	at	the	living
    Charity	of	the	man,	who	in	this	world
    By	contemplation	tasted	of	that	peace.
"Thou	son	of	grace,	this	jocund	life,"	began	he,
  "Will	not	be	known	to	thee	by	keeping	ever
  Thine	eyes	below	here	on	the	lowest	place;
   But	mark	the	circles	to	the	most	remote,
 Until	thou	shalt	behold	enthroned	the	Queen
 To	whom	this	realm	is	subject	and	devoted."
     I	lifted	up	mine	eyes,	and	as	at	morn
        The	oriental	part	of	the	horizon
  Surpasses	that	wherein	the	sun	goes	down,
  Thus,	as	if	going	with	mine	eyes	from	vale
   To	mount,	I	saw	a	part	in	the	remoteness
   Surpass	in	splendour	all	the	other	front.
 And	even	as	there	where	we	await	the	pole
   That	Phaeton	drove	badly,	blazes	more
  The	light,	and	is	on	either	side	diminished,
      So	likewise	that	pacific	oriflamme
Gleamed	brightest	in	the	centre,	and	each	side
    In	equal	measure	did	the	flame	abate.
And	at	that	centre,	with	their	wings	expanded,
 More	than	a	thousand	jubilant	Angels	saw	I,
   Each	differing	in	effulgence	and	in	kind.
 I	saw	there	at	their	sports	and	at	their	songs
  A	beauty	smiling,	which	the	gladness	was
    Within	the	eyes	of	all	the	other	saints;
   And	if	I	had	in	speaking	as	much	wealth
      As	in	imagining,	I	should	not	dare
  To	attempt	the	smallest	part	of	its	delight.
   Bernard,	as	soon	as	he	beheld	mine	eyes
   Fixed	and	intent	upon	its	fervid	fervour,
  His	own	with	such	affection	turned	to	her
  That	it	made	mine	more	ardent	to	behold.                       	
                Canto	XXXII
                       	
  Absorbed	in	his	delight,	that	contemplator
   Assumed	the	willing	office	of	a	teacher,
  And	gave	beginning	to	these	holy	words:
"The	wound	that	Mary	closed	up	and	anointed,
      She	at	her	feet	who	is	so	beautiful,
 She	is	the	one	who	opened	it	and	pierced	it.
 Within	that	order	which	the	third	seats	make
    Is	seated	Rachel,	lower	than	the	other,
    With	Beatrice,	in	manner	as	thou	seest.
   Sarah,	Rebecca,	Judith,	and	her	who	was
    Ancestress	of	the	Singer,	who	for	dole
     Of	the	misdeed	said,	'Miserere	mei,'
Canst	thou	behold	from	seat	to	seat	descending
 Down	in	gradation,	as	with	each	one's	name
 I	through	the	Rose	go	down	from	leaf	to	leaf.
 And	downward	from	the	seventh	row,	even	as
Above	the	same,	succeed	the	Hebrew	women,
     Dividing	all	the	tresses	of	the	flower;
  Because,	according	to	the	view	which	Faith
  In	Christ	had	taken,	these	are	the	partition
  By	which	the	sacred	stairways	are	divided.
  Upon	this	side,	where	perfect	is	the	flower
    With	each	one	of	its	petals,	seated	are
Those	who	believed	in	Christ	who	was	to	come.
    Upon	the	other	side,	where	intersected
    With	vacant	spaces	are	the	semicircles,
 Are	those	who	looked	to	Christ	already	come.
   And	as,	upon	this	side,	the	glorious	seat
  Of	the	Lady	of	Heaven,	and	the	other	seats
     Below	it,	such	a	great	division	make,
    So	opposite	doth	that	of	the	great	John,
    Who,	ever	holy,	desert	and	martyrdom
  Endured,	and	afterwards	two	years	in	Hell.
  And	under	him	thus	to	divide	were	chosen
    Francis,	and	Benedict,	and	Augustine,
 And	down	to	us	the	rest	from	round	to	round.
   Behold	now	the	high	providence	divine;
         For	one	and	other	aspect	of	the	Faith
        In	equal	measure	shall	this	garden	fill.
And	know	that	downward	from	that	rank	which	cleaves
     Midway	the	sequence	of	the	two	divisions,
      Not	by	their	proper	merit	are	they	seated;
       But	by	another's	under	fixed	conditions;
       For	these	are	spirits	one	and	all	assoiled
          Before	they	any	true	election	had.
      Well	canst	thou	recognise	it	in	their	faces,
           And	also	in	their	voices	puerile,
    If	thou	regard	them	well	and	hearken	to	them.
   Now	doubtest	thou,	and	doubting	thou	art	silent;
      But	I	will	loosen	for	thee	the	strong	bond
      In	which	thy	subtile	fancies	hold	thee	fast.
         Within	the	amplitude	of	this	domain
       No	casual	point	can	possibly	find	place,
    No	more	than	sadness	can,	or	thirst,	or	hunger;
       For	by	eternal	law	has	been	established
       Whatever	thou	beholdest,	so	that	closely
         The	ring	is	fitted	to	the	finger	here.
       And	therefore	are	these	people,	festinate
          Unto	true	life,	not	'sine	causa'	here
     More	and	less	excellent	among	themselves.
   The	King,	by	means	of	whom	this	realm	reposes
        In	so	great	love	and	in	so	great	delight
        That	no	will	ventureth	to	ask	for	more,
         In	his	own	joyous	aspect	every	mind
     Creating,	at	his	pleasure	dowers	with	grace
       Diversely;	and	let	here	the	effect	suffice.
        And	this	is	clearly	and	expressly	noted
  For	you	in	Holy	Scripture,	in	those	twins
 Who	in	their	mother	had	their	anger	roused.
     According	to	the	colour	of	the	hair,
Therefore,	with	such	a	grace	the	light	supreme
  Consenteth	that	they	worthily	be	crowned.
   Without,	then,	any	merit	of	their	deeds,
  Stationed	are	they	in	different	gradations,
    Differing	only	in	their	first	acuteness.
     'Tis	true	that	in	the	early	centuries,
 With	innocence,	to	work	out	their	salvation
   Sufficient	was	the	faith	of	parents	only.
    After	the	earlier	ages	were	completed,
  Behoved	it	that	the	males	by	circumcision
Unto	their	innocent	wings	should	virtue	add;
  But	after	that	the	time	of	grace	had	come
   Without	the	baptism	absolute	of	Christ,
  Such	innocence	below	there	was	retained.
   Look	now	into	the	face	that	unto	Christ
Hath	most	resemblance;	for	its	brightness	only
    Is	able	to	prepare	thee	to	see	Christ."
   On	her	did	I	behold	so	great	a	gladness
 Rain	down,	borne	onward	in	the	holy	minds
     Created	through	that	altitude	to	fly,
      That	whatsoever	I	had	seen	before
   Did	not	suspend	me	in	such	admiration,
    Nor	show	me	such	similitude	of	God.
And	the	same	Love	that	first	descended	there,
     "Ave	Maria,	gratia	plena,"	singing,
   In	front	of	her	his	wings	expanded	wide.
     Unto	the	canticle	divine	responded
     From	every	part	the	court	beatified,
   So	that	each	sight	became	serener	for	it.
     "O	holy	father,	who	for	me	endurest
  To	be	below	here,	leaving	the	sweet	place
      In	which	thou	sittest	by	eternal	lot,
   Who	is	the	Angel	that	with	so	much	joy
    Into	the	eyes	is	looking	of	our	Queen,
 Enamoured	so	that	he	seems	made	of	fire?"
   Thus	I	again	recourse	had	to	the	teaching
    Of	that	one	who	delighted	him	in	Mary
    As	doth	the	star	of	morning	in	the	sun.
   And	he	to	me:	"Such	gallantry	and	grace
     As	there	can	be	in	Angel	and	in	soul,
All	is	in	him;	and	thus	we	fain	would	have	it;
   Because	he	is	the	one	who	bore	the	palm
   Down	unto	Mary,	when	the	Son	of	God
    To	take	our	burden	on	himself	decreed.
  But	now	come	onward	with	thine	eyes,	as	I
Speaking	shall	go,	and	note	the	great	patricians
  Of	this	most	just	and	merciful	of	empires.
Those	two	that	sit	above	there	most	enrapture
      As	being	very	near	unto	Augusta,
   Are	as	it	were	the	two	roots	of	this	Rose.
    He	who	upon	the	left	is	near	her	placed
    The	father	is,	by	whose	audacious	taste
   The	human	species	so	much	bitter	tastes.
 Upon	the	right	thou	seest	that	ancient	father
 Of	Holy	Church,	into	whose	keeping	Christ
  The	keys	committed	of	this	lovely	flower.
     And	he	who	all	the	evil	days	beheld,
   Before	his	death,	of	her	the	beauteous	bride
 Who	with	the	spear	and	with	the	nails	was	won,
      Beside	him	sits,	and	by	the	other	rests
     That	leader	under	whom	on	manna	lived
   The	people	ingrate,	fickle,	and	stiff-necked.
      Opposite	Peter	seest	thou	Anna	seated,
    So	well	content	to	look	upon	her	daughter,
 Her	eyes	she	moves	not	while	she	sings	Hosanna.
     And	opposite	the	eldest	household	father
       Lucia	sits,	she	who	thy	Lady	moved
When	to	rush	downward	thou	didst	bend	thy	brows.
     But	since	the	moments	of	thy	vision	fly,
   Here	will	we	make	full	stop,	as	a	good	tailor
   Who	makes	the	gown	according	to	his	cloth,
    And	unto	the	first	Love	will	turn	our	eyes,
      That	looking	upon	Him	thou	penetrate
    As	far	as	possible	through	his	effulgence.
       Truly,	lest	peradventure	thou	recede,
     Moving	thy	wings	believing	to	advance,
   By	prayer	behoves	it	that	grace	be	obtained;
Grace	from	that	one	who	has	the	power	to	aid	thee;
   And	thou	shalt	follow	me	with	thy	affection
  That	from	my	words	thy	heart	turn	not	aside."
          And	he	began	this	holy	orison.                         	
                  Canto	XXXIII
                         	
    "Thou	Virgin	Mother,	daughter	of	thy	Son,
   Humble	and	high	beyond	all	other	creature,
      The	limit	fixed	of	the	eternal	counsel,
      Thou	art	the	one	who	such	nobility
     To	human	nature	gave,	that	its	Creator
  Did	not	disdain	to	make	himself	its	creature.
   Within	thy	womb	rekindled	was	the	love,
     By	heat	of	which	in	the	eternal	peace
  After	such	wise	this	flower	has	germinated.
     Here	unto	us	thou	art	a	noonday	torch
   Of	charity,	and	below	there	among	mortals
   Thou	art	the	living	fountain-head	of	hope.
   Lady,	thou	art	so	great,	and	so	prevailing,
  That	he	who	wishes	grace,	nor	runs	to	thee,
    His	aspirations	without	wings	would	fly.
     Not	only	thy	benignity	gives	succour
     To	him	who	asketh	it,	but	oftentimes
   Forerunneth	of	its	own	accord	the	asking.
     In	thee	compassion	is,	in	thee	is	pity,
      In	thee	magnificence;	in	thee	unites
    Whate'er	of	goodness	is	in	any	creature.
Now	doth	this	man,	who	from	the	lowest	depth
     Of	the	universe	as	far	as	here	has	seen
        One	after	one	the	spiritual	lives,
Supplicate	thee	through	grace	for	so	much	power
    That	with	his	eyes	he	may	uplift	himself
    Higher	towards	the	uttermost	salvation.
  And	I,	who	never	burned	for	my	own	seeing
    More	than	I	do	for	his,	all	of	my	prayers
 Proffer	to	thee,	and	pray	they	come	not	short,
That	thou	wouldst	scatter	from	him	every	cloud
      Of	his	mortality	so	with	thy	prayers,
  That	the	Chief	Pleasure	be	to	him	displayed.
  Still	farther	do	I	pray	thee,	Queen,	who	canst
Whate'er	thou	wilt,	that	sound	thou	mayst	preserve
      After	so	great	a	vision	his	affections.
 Let	thy	protection	conquer	human	movements;
      See	Beatrice	and	all	the	blessed	ones
 My	prayers	to	second	clasp	their	hands	to	thee!"
      The	eyes	beloved	and	revered	of	God,
     Fastened	upon	the	speaker,	showed	to	us
    How	grateful	unto	her	are	prayers	devout;
     Then	unto	the	Eternal	Light	they	turned,
       On	which	it	is	not	credible	could	be
      By	any	creature	bent	an	eye	so	clear.
       And	I,	who	to	the	end	of	all	desires
      Was	now	approaching,	even	as	I	ought
      The	ardour	of	desire	within	me	ended.
  Bernard	was	beckoning	unto	me,	and	smiling,
     That	I	should	upward	look;	but	I	already
    Was	of	my	own	accord	such	as	he	wished;
      Because	my	sight,	becoming	purified,
    Was	entering	more	and	more	into	the	ray
     Of	the	High	Light	which	of	itself	is	true.
 From	that	time	forward	what	I	saw	was	greater
  Than	our	discourse,	that	to	such	vision	yields,
    And	yields	the	memory	unto	such	excess.
       Even	as	he	is	who	seeth	in	a	dream,
    And	after	dreaming	the	imprinted	passion
  Remains,	and	to	his	mind	the	rest	returns	not,
        Even	such	am	I,	for	almost	utterly
       Ceases	my	vision,	and	distilleth	yet
    Within	my	heart	the	sweetness	born	of	it;
   Even	thus	the	snow	is	in	the	sun	unsealed,
  Even	thus	upon	the	wind	in	the	light	leaves
    Were	the	soothsayings	of	the	Sibyl	lost.
  O	Light	Supreme,	that	dost	so	far	uplift	thee
   From	the	conceits	of	mortals,	to	my	mind
   Of	what	thou	didst	appear	re-lend	a	little,
  And	make	my	tongue	of	so	great	puissance,
     That	but	a	single	sparkle	of	thy	glory
    It	may	bequeath	unto	the	future	people;
  For	by	returning	to	my	memory	somewhat,
    And	by	a	little	sounding	in	these	verses,
    More	of	thy	victory	shall	be	conceived!
      I	think	the	keenness	of	the	living	ray
 Which	I	endured	would	have	bewildered	me,
   If	but	mine	eyes	had	been	averted	from	it;
     And	I	remember	that	I	was	more	bold
    On	this	account	to	bear,	so	that	I	joined
       My	aspect	with	the	Glory	Infinite.
    O	grace	abundant,	by	which	I	presumed
    To	fix	my	sight	upon	the	Light	Eternal,
     So	that	the	seeing	I	consumed	therein!
    I	saw	that	in	its	depth	far	down	is	lying
  Bound	up	with	love	together	in	one	volume,
What	through	the	universe	in	leaves	is	scattered;
 Substance,	and	accident,	and	their	operations,
      All	interfused	together	in	such	wise
    That	what	I	speak	of	is	one	simple	light.
       The	universal	fashion	of	this	knot
    Methinks	I	saw,	since	more	abundantly
       In	saying	this	I	feel	that	I	rejoice.
      One	moment	is	more	lethargy	to	me,
 Than	five	and	twenty	centuries	to	the	emprise
 That	startled	Neptune	with	the	shade	of	Argo!
   My	mind	in	this	wise	wholly	in	suspense,
     Steadfast,	immovable,	attentive	gazed,
  And	evermore	with	gazing	grew	enkindled.
   In	presence	of	that	light	one	such	becomes,
 That	to	withdraw	therefrom	for	other	prospect
         It	is	impossible	he	e'er	consent;
   Because	the	good,	which	object	is	of	will,
       Is	gathered	all	in	this,	and	out	of	it
    That	is	defective	which	is	perfect	there.
  Shorter	henceforward	will	my	language	fall
    Of	what	I	yet	remember,	than	an	infant's
 Who	still	his	tongue	doth	moisten	at	the	breast.
Not	because	more	than	one	unmingled	semblance
   Was	in	the	living	light	on	which	I	looked,
       For	it	is	always	what	it	was	before;
    But	through	the	sight,	that	fortified	itself
     In	me	by	looking,	one	appearance	only
     To	me	was	ever	changing	as	I	changed.
   Within	the	deep	and	luminous	subsistence
 Of	the	High	Light	appeared	to	me	three	circles,
   Of	threefold	colour	and	of	one	dimension,
  And	by	the	second	seemed	the	first	reflected
         As	Iris	is	by	Iris,	and	the	third
 Seemed	fire	that	equally	from	both	is	breathed.
    O	how	all	speech	is	feeble	and	falls	short
     Of	my	conceit,	and	this	to	what	I	saw
     Is	such,	'tis	not	enough	to	call	it	little!
   O	Light	Eterne,	sole	in	thyself	that	dwellest,
  Sole	knowest	thyself,	and,	known	unto	thyself
   And	knowing,	lovest	and	smilest	on	thyself!
  That	circulation,	which	being	thus	conceived
       Appeared	in	thee	as	a	reflected	light,
  When	somewhat	contemplated	by	mine	eyes,
       Within	itself,	of	its	own	very	colour
      Seemed	to	me	painted	with	our	effigy,
  Wherefore	my	sight	was	all	absorbed	therein.
      As	the	geometrician,	who	endeavours
     To	square	the	circle,	and	discovers	not,
    By	taking	thought,	the	principle	he	wants,
     Even	such	was	I	at	that	new	apparition;
   I	wished	to	see	how	the	image	to	the	circle
  Conformed	itself,	and	how	it	there	finds	place;
   But	my	own	wings	were	not	enough	for	this,
  Had	it	not	been	that	then	my	mind	there	smote
   A	flash	of	lightning,	wherein	came	its	wish.
       Here	vigour	failed	the	lofty	fantasy:
    But	now	was	turning	my	desire	and	will,
     Even	as	a	wheel	that	equally	is	moved,
The	Love	which	moves	the	sun	and	the	other	stars.                           	                           	                           	
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