<h2><SPAN name="CantoI.VI"></SPAN>Inferno: Canto VI</h2>
<p>
At the return of consciousness, that closed<br/>
Before the pity of those two relations,<br/>
Which utterly with sadness had confused me,</p>
<p>
New torments I behold, and new tormented<br/>
Around me, whichsoever way I move,<br/>
And whichsoever way I turn, and gaze.</p>
<p>
In the third circle am I of the rain<br/>
Eternal, maledict, and cold, and heavy;<br/>
Its law and quality are never new.</p>
<p>
Huge hail, and water sombre-hued, and snow,<br/>
Athwart the tenebrous air pour down amain;<br/>
Noisome the earth is, that receiveth this.</p>
<p>
Cerberus, monster cruel and uncouth,<br/>
With his three gullets like a dog is barking<br/>
Over the people that are there submerged.</p>
<p>
Red eyes he has, and unctuous beard and black,<br/>
And belly large, and armed with claws his hands;<br/>
He rends the spirits, flays, and quarters them.</p>
<p>
Howl the rain maketh them like unto dogs;<br/>
One side they make a shelter for the other;<br/>
Oft turn themselves the wretched reprobates.</p>
<p>
When Cerberus perceived us, the great worm!<br/>
His mouths he opened, and displayed his tusks;<br/>
Not a limb had he that was motionless.</p>
<p>
And my Conductor, with his spans extended,<br/>
Took of the earth, and with his fists well filled,<br/>
He threw it into those rapacious gullets.</p>
<p>
Such as that dog is, who by barking craves,<br/>
And quiet grows soon as his food he gnaws,<br/>
For to devour it he but thinks and struggles,</p>
<p>
The like became those muzzles filth-begrimed<br/>
Of Cerberus the demon, who so thunders<br/>
Over the souls that they would fain be deaf.</p>
<p>
We passed across the shadows, which subdues<br/>
The heavy rain-storm, and we placed our feet<br/>
Upon their vanity that person seems.</p>
<p>
They all were lying prone upon the earth,<br/>
Excepting one, who sat upright as soon<br/>
As he beheld us passing on before him.</p>
<p>
“O thou that art conducted through this Hell,”<br/>
He said to me, “recall me, if thou canst;<br/>
Thyself wast made before I was unmade.”</p>
<p>
And I to him: “The anguish which thou hast<br/>
Perhaps doth draw thee out of my remembrance,<br/>
So that it seems not I have ever seen thee.</p>
<p>
But tell me who thou art, that in so doleful<br/>
A place art put, and in such punishment,<br/>
If some are greater, none is so displeasing.”</p>
<p>
And he to me: “Thy city, which is full<br/>
Of envy so that now the sack runs over,<br/>
Held me within it in the life serene.</p>
<p>
You citizens were wont to call me Ciacco;<br/>
For the pernicious sin of gluttony<br/>
I, as thou seest, am battered by this rain.</p>
<p>
And I, sad soul, am not the only one,<br/>
For all these suffer the like penalty<br/>
For the like sin;” and word no more spake he.</p>
<p>
I answered him: “Ciacco, thy wretchedness<br/>
Weighs on me so that it to weep invites me;<br/>
But tell me, if thou knowest, to what shall come</p>
<p>
The citizens of the divided city;<br/>
If any there be just; and the occasion<br/>
Tell me why so much discord has assailed it.”</p>
<p>
And he to me: “They, after long contention,<br/>
Will come to bloodshed; and the rustic party<br/>
Will drive the other out with much offence.</p>
<p>
Then afterwards behoves it this one fall<br/>
Within three suns, and rise again the other<br/>
By force of him who now is on the coast.</p>
<p>
High will it hold its forehead a long while,<br/>
Keeping the other under heavy burdens,<br/>
Howe’er it weeps thereat and is indignant.</p>
<p>
The just are two, and are not understood there;<br/>
Envy and Arrogance and Avarice<br/>
Are the three sparks that have all hearts enkindled.”</p>
<p>
Here ended he his tearful utterance;<br/>
And I to him: “I wish thee still to teach me,<br/>
And make a gift to me of further speech.</p>
<p>
Farinata and Tegghiaio, once so worthy,<br/>
Jacopo Rusticucci, Arrigo, and Mosca,<br/>
And others who on good deeds set their thoughts,</p>
<p>
Say where they are, and cause that I may know them;<br/>
For great desire constraineth me to learn<br/>
If Heaven doth sweeten them, or Hell envenom.”</p>
<p>
And he: “They are among the blacker souls;<br/>
A different sin downweighs them to the bottom;<br/>
If thou so far descendest, thou canst see them.</p>
<p>
But when thou art again in the sweet world,<br/>
I pray thee to the mind of others bring me;<br/>
No more I tell thee and no more I answer.”</p>
<p>
Then his straightforward eyes he turned askance,<br/>
Eyed me a little, and then bowed his head;<br/>
He fell therewith prone like the other blind.</p>
<p>
And the Guide said to me: “He wakes no more<br/>
This side the sound of the angelic trumpet;<br/>
When shall approach the hostile Potentate,</p>
<p>
Each one shall find again his dismal tomb,<br/>
Shall reassume his flesh and his own figure,<br/>
Shall hear what through eternity re-echoes.”</p>
<p>
So we passed onward o’er the filthy mixture<br/>
Of shadows and of rain with footsteps slow,<br/>
Touching a little on the future life.</p>
<p>
Wherefore I said: “Master, these torments here,<br/>
Will they increase after the mighty sentence,<br/>
Or lesser be, or will they be as burning?”</p>
<p>
And he to me: “Return unto thy science,<br/>
Which wills, that as the thing more perfect is,<br/>
The more it feels of pleasure and of pain.</p>
<p>
Albeit that this people maledict<br/>
To true perfection never can attain,<br/>
Hereafter more than now they look to be.”</p>
<p>
Round in a circle by that road we went,<br/>
Speaking much more, which I do not repeat;<br/>
We came unto the point where the descent is;</p>
<p>
There we found Plutus the great enemy.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="CantoI.VII"></SPAN>Inferno: Canto VII</h2>
<p>
“Pape Satan, Pape Satan, Aleppe!”<br/>
Thus Plutus with his clucking voice began;<br/>
And that benignant Sage, who all things knew,</p>
<p>
Said, to encourage me: “Let not thy fear<br/>
Harm thee; for any power that he may have<br/>
Shall not prevent thy going down this crag.”</p>
<p>
Then he turned round unto that bloated lip,<br/>
And said: “Be silent, thou accursed wolf;<br/>
Consume within thyself with thine own rage.</p>
<p>
Not causeless is this journey to the abyss;<br/>
Thus is it willed on high, where Michael wrought<br/>
Vengeance upon the proud adultery.”</p>
<p>
Even as the sails inflated by the wind<br/>
Involved together fall when snaps the mast,<br/>
So fell the cruel monster to the earth.</p>
<p>
Thus we descended into the fourth chasm,<br/>
Gaining still farther on the dolesome shore<br/>
Which all the woe of the universe insacks.</p>
<p>
Justice of God, ah! who heaps up so many<br/>
New toils and sufferings as I beheld?<br/>
And why doth our transgression waste us so?</p>
<p>
As doth the billow there upon Charybdis,<br/>
That breaks itself on that which it encounters,<br/>
So here the folk must dance their roundelay.</p>
<p>
Here saw I people, more than elsewhere, many,<br/>
On one side and the other, with great howls,<br/>
Rolling weights forward by main force of chest.</p>
<p>
They clashed together, and then at that point<br/>
Each one turned backward, rolling retrograde,<br/>
Crying, “Why keepest?” and, “Why squanderest thou?”</p>
<p>
Thus they returned along the lurid circle<br/>
On either hand unto the opposite point,<br/>
Shouting their shameful metre evermore.</p>
<p>
Then each, when he arrived there, wheeled about<br/>
Through his half-circle to another joust;<br/>
And I, who had my heart pierced as it were,</p>
<p>
Exclaimed: “My Master, now declare to me<br/>
What people these are, and if all were clerks,<br/>
These shaven crowns upon the left of us.”</p>
<p>
And he to me: “All of them were asquint<br/>
In intellect in the first life, so much<br/>
That there with measure they no spending made.</p>
<p>
Clearly enough their voices bark it forth,<br/>
Whene’er they reach the two points of the circle,<br/>
Where sunders them the opposite defect.</p>
<p>
Clerks those were who no hairy covering<br/>
Have on the head, and Popes and Cardinals,<br/>
In whom doth Avarice practise its excess.”</p>
<p>
And I: “My Master, among such as these<br/>
I ought forsooth to recognise some few,<br/>
Who were infected with these maladies.”</p>
<p>
And he to me: “Vain thought thou entertainest;<br/>
The undiscerning life which made them sordid<br/>
Now makes them unto all discernment dim.</p>
<p>
Forever shall they come to these two buttings;<br/>
These from the sepulchre shall rise again<br/>
With the fist closed, and these with tresses shorn.</p>
<p>
Ill giving and ill keeping the fair world<br/>
Have ta’en from them, and placed them in this scuffle;<br/>
Whate’er it be, no words adorn I for it.</p>
<p>
Now canst thou, Son, behold the transient farce<br/>
Of goods that are committed unto Fortune,<br/>
For which the human race each other buffet;</p>
<p>
For all the gold that is beneath the moon,<br/>
Or ever has been, of these weary souls<br/>
Could never make a single one repose.”</p>
<p>
“Master,” I said to him, “now tell me also<br/>
What is this Fortune which thou speakest of,<br/>
That has the world’s goods so within its clutches?”</p>
<p>
And he to me: “O creatures imbecile,<br/>
What ignorance is this which doth beset you?<br/>
Now will I have thee learn my judgment of her.</p>
<p>
He whose omniscience everything transcends<br/>
The heavens created, and gave who should guide them,<br/>
That every part to every part may shine,</p>
<p>
Distributing the light in equal measure;<br/>
He in like manner to the mundane splendours<br/>
Ordained a general ministress and guide,</p>
<p>
That she might change at times the empty treasures<br/>
From race to race, from one blood to another,<br/>
Beyond resistance of all human wisdom.</p>
<p>
Therefore one people triumphs, and another<br/>
Languishes, in pursuance of her judgment,<br/>
Which hidden is, as in the grass a serpent.</p>
<p>
Your knowledge has no counterstand against her;<br/>
She makes provision, judges, and pursues<br/>
Her governance, as theirs the other gods.</p>
<p>
Her permutations have not any truce;<br/>
Necessity makes her precipitate,<br/>
So often cometh who his turn obtains.</p>
<p>
And this is she who is so crucified<br/>
Even by those who ought to give her praise,<br/>
Giving her blame amiss, and bad repute.</p>
<p>
But she is blissful, and she hears it not;<br/>
Among the other primal creatures gladsome<br/>
She turns her sphere, and blissful she rejoices.</p>
<p>
Let us descend now unto greater woe;<br/>
Already sinks each star that was ascending<br/>
When I set out, and loitering is forbidden.”</p>
<p>
We crossed the circle to the other bank,<br/>
Near to a fount that boils, and pours itself<br/>
Along a gully that runs out of it.</p>
<p>
The water was more sombre far than perse;<br/>
And we, in company with the dusky waves,<br/>
Made entrance downward by a path uncouth.</p>
<p>
A marsh it makes, which has the name of Styx,<br/>
This tristful brooklet, when it has descended<br/>
Down to the foot of the malign gray shores.</p>
<p>
And I, who stood intent upon beholding,<br/>
Saw people mud-besprent in that lagoon,<br/>
All of them naked and with angry look.</p>
<p>
They smote each other not alone with hands,<br/>
But with the head and with the breast and feet,<br/>
Tearing each other piecemeal with their teeth.</p>
<p>
Said the good Master: “Son, thou now beholdest<br/>
The souls of those whom anger overcame;<br/>
And likewise I would have thee know for certain</p>
<p>
Beneath the water people are who sigh<br/>
And make this water bubble at the surface,<br/>
As the eye tells thee wheresoe’er it turns.</p>
<p>
Fixed in the mire they say, ‘We sullen were<br/>
In the sweet air, which by the sun is gladdened,<br/>
Bearing within ourselves the sluggish reek;</p>
<p>
Now we are sullen in this sable mire.’<br/>
This hymn do they keep gurgling in their throats,<br/>
For with unbroken words they cannot say it.”</p>
<p>
Thus we went circling round the filthy fen<br/>
A great arc ’twixt the dry bank and the swamp,<br/>
With eyes turned unto those who gorge the mire;</p>
<p>
Unto the foot of a tower we came at last.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="CantoI.VIII"></SPAN>Inferno: Canto VIII</h2>
<p>
I say, continuing, that long before<br/>
We to the foot of that high tower had come,<br/>
Our eyes went upward to the summit of it,</p>
<p>
By reason of two flamelets we saw placed there,<br/>
And from afar another answer them,<br/>
So far, that hardly could the eye attain it.</p>
<p>
And, to the sea of all discernment turned,<br/>
I said: “What sayeth this, and what respondeth<br/>
That other fire? and who are they that made it?”</p>
<p>
And he to me: “Across the turbid waves<br/>
What is expected thou canst now discern,<br/>
If reek of the morass conceal it not.”</p>
<p>
Cord never shot an arrow from itself<br/>
That sped away athwart the air so swift,<br/>
As I beheld a very little boat</p>
<p>
Come o’er the water tow’rds us at that moment,<br/>
Under the guidance of a single pilot,<br/>
Who shouted, “Now art thou arrived, fell soul?”</p>
<p>
“Phlegyas, Phlegyas, thou criest out in vain<br/>
For this once,” said my Lord; “thou shalt not have us<br/>
Longer than in the passing of the slough.”</p>
<p>
As he who listens to some great deceit<br/>
That has been done to him, and then resents it,<br/>
Such became Phlegyas, in his gathered wrath.</p>
<p>
My Guide descended down into the boat,<br/>
And then he made me enter after him,<br/>
And only when I entered seemed it laden.</p>
<p>
Soon as the Guide and I were in the boat,<br/>
The antique prow goes on its way, dividing<br/>
More of the water than ’tis wont with others.</p>
<p>
While we were running through the dead canal,<br/>
Uprose in front of me one full of mire,<br/>
And said, “Who ’rt thou that comest ere the hour?”</p>
<p>
And I to him: “Although I come, I stay not;<br/>
But who art thou that hast become so squalid?”<br/>
“Thou seest that I am one who weeps,” he answered.</p>
<p>
And I to him: “With weeping and with wailing,<br/>
Thou spirit maledict, do thou remain;<br/>
For thee I know, though thou art all defiled.”</p>
<p>
Then stretched he both his hands unto the boat;<br/>
Whereat my wary Master thrust him back,<br/>
Saying, “Away there with the other dogs!”</p>
<p>
Thereafter with his arms he clasped my neck;<br/>
He kissed my face, and said: “Disdainful soul,<br/>
Blessed be she who bore thee in her bosom.</p>
<p>
That was an arrogant person in the world;<br/>
Goodness is none, that decks his memory;<br/>
So likewise here his shade is furious.</p>
<p>
How many are esteemed great kings up there,<br/>
Who here shall be like unto swine in mire,<br/>
Leaving behind them horrible dispraises!”</p>
<p>
And I: “My Master, much should I be pleased,<br/>
If I could see him soused into this broth,<br/>
Before we issue forth out of the lake.”</p>
<p>
And he to me: “Ere unto thee the shore<br/>
Reveal itself, thou shalt be satisfied;<br/>
Such a desire ’tis meet thou shouldst enjoy.”</p>
<p>
A little after that, I saw such havoc<br/>
Made of him by the people of the mire,<br/>
That still I praise and thank my God for it.</p>
<p>
They all were shouting, “At Philippo Argenti!”<br/>
And that exasperate spirit Florentine<br/>
Turned round upon himself with his own teeth.</p>
<p>
We left him there, and more of him I tell not;<br/>
But on mine ears there smote a lamentation,<br/>
Whence forward I intent unbar mine eyes.</p>
<p>
And the good Master said: “Even now, my Son,<br/>
The city draweth near whose name is Dis,<br/>
With the grave citizens, with the great throng.”</p>
<p>
And I: “Its mosques already, Master, clearly<br/>
Within there in the valley I discern<br/>
Vermilion, as if issuing from the fire</p>
<p>
They were.” And he to me: “The fire eternal<br/>
That kindles them within makes them look red,<br/>
As thou beholdest in this nether Hell.”</p>
<p>
Then we arrived within the moats profound,<br/>
That circumvallate that disconsolate city;<br/>
The walls appeared to me to be of iron.</p>
<p>
Not without making first a circuit wide,<br/>
We came unto a place where loud the pilot<br/>
Cried out to us, “Debark, here is the entrance.”</p>
<p>
More than a thousand at the gates I saw<br/>
Out of the Heavens rained down, who angrily<br/>
Were saying, “Who is this that without death</p>
<p>
Goes through the kingdom of the people dead?”<br/>
And my sagacious Master made a sign<br/>
Of wishing secretly to speak with them.</p>
<p>
A little then they quelled their great disdain,<br/>
And said: “Come thou alone, and he begone<br/>
Who has so boldly entered these dominions.</p>
<p>
Let him return alone by his mad road;<br/>
Try, if he can; for thou shalt here remain,<br/>
Who hast escorted him through such dark regions.”</p>
<p>
Think, Reader, if I was discomforted<br/>
At utterance of the accursed words;<br/>
For never to return here I believed.</p>
<p>
“O my dear Guide, who more than seven times<br/>
Hast rendered me security, and drawn me<br/>
From imminent peril that before me stood,</p>
<p>
Do not desert me,” said I, “thus undone;<br/>
And if the going farther be denied us,<br/>
Let us retrace our steps together swiftly.”</p>
<p>
And that Lord, who had led me thitherward,<br/>
Said unto me: “Fear not; because our passage<br/>
None can take from us, it by Such is given.</p>
<p>
But here await me, and thy weary spirit<br/>
Comfort and nourish with a better hope;<br/>
For in this nether world I will not leave thee.”</p>
<p>
So onward goes and there abandons me<br/>
My Father sweet, and I remain in doubt,<br/>
For No and Yes within my head contend.</p>
<p>
I could not hear what he proposed to them;<br/>
But with them there he did not linger long,<br/>
Ere each within in rivalry ran back.</p>
<p>
They closed the portals, those our adversaries,<br/>
On my Lord’s breast, who had remained without<br/>
And turned to me with footsteps far between.</p>
<p>
His eyes cast down, his forehead shorn had he<br/>
Of all its boldness, and he said, with sighs,<br/>
“Who has denied to me the dolesome houses?”</p>
<p>
And unto me: “Thou, because I am angry,<br/>
Fear not, for I will conquer in the trial,<br/>
Whatever for defence within be planned.</p>
<p>
This arrogance of theirs is nothing new;<br/>
For once they used it at less secret gate,<br/>
Which finds itself without a fastening still.</p>
<p>
O’er it didst thou behold the dead inscription;<br/>
And now this side of it descends the steep,<br/>
Passing across the circles without escort,</p>
<p>
One by whose means the city shall be opened.”</p>
<h2><SPAN name="CantoI.IX"></SPAN>Inferno: Canto IX</h2>
<p>
That hue which cowardice brought out on me,<br/>
Beholding my Conductor backward turn,<br/>
Sooner repressed within him his new colour.</p>
<p>
He stopped attentive, like a man who listens,<br/>
Because the eye could not conduct him far<br/>
Through the black air, and through the heavy fog.</p>
<p>
“Still it behoveth us to win the fight,”<br/>
Began he; “Else. . .Such offered us herself. . .<br/>
O how I long that some one here arrive!”</p>
<p>
Well I perceived, as soon as the beginning<br/>
He covered up with what came afterward,<br/>
That they were words quite different from the first;</p>
<p>
But none the less his saying gave me fear,<br/>
Because I carried out the broken phrase,<br/>
Perhaps to a worse meaning than he had.</p>
<p>
“Into this bottom of the doleful conch<br/>
Doth any e’er descend from the first grade,<br/>
Which for its pain has only hope cut off?”</p>
<p>
This question put I; and he answered me:<br/>
“Seldom it comes to pass that one of us<br/>
Maketh the journey upon which I go.</p>
<p>
True is it, once before I here below<br/>
Was conjured by that pitiless Erictho,<br/>
Who summoned back the shades unto their bodies.</p>
<p>
Naked of me short while the flesh had been,<br/>
Before within that wall she made me enter,<br/>
To bring a spirit from the circle of Judas;</p>
<p>
That is the lowest region and the darkest,<br/>
And farthest from the heaven which circles all.<br/>
Well know I the way; therefore be reassured.</p>
<p>
This fen, which a prodigious stench exhales,<br/>
Encompasses about the city dolent,<br/>
Where now we cannot enter without anger.”</p>
<p>
And more he said, but not in mind I have it;<br/>
Because mine eye had altogether drawn me<br/>
Tow’rds the high tower with the red-flaming summit,</p>
<p>
Where in a moment saw I swift uprisen<br/>
The three infernal Furies stained with blood,<br/>
Who had the limbs of women and their mien,</p>
<p>
And with the greenest hydras were begirt;<br/>
Small serpents and cerastes were their tresses,<br/>
Wherewith their horrid temples were entwined.</p>
<p>
And he who well the handmaids of the Queen<br/>
Of everlasting lamentation knew,<br/>
Said unto me: “Behold the fierce Erinnys.</p>
<p>
This is Megaera, on the left-hand side;<br/>
She who is weeping on the right, Alecto;<br/>
Tisiphone is between;” and then was silent.</p>
<p>
Each one her breast was rending with her nails;<br/>
They beat them with their palms, and cried so loud,<br/>
That I for dread pressed close unto the Poet.</p>
<p>
“Medusa come, so we to stone will change him!”<br/>
All shouted looking down; “in evil hour<br/>
Avenged we not on Theseus his assault!”</p>
<p>
“Turn thyself round, and keep thine eyes close shut,<br/>
For if the Gorgon appear, and thou shouldst see it,<br/>
No more returning upward would there be.”</p>
<p>
Thus said the Master; and he turned me round<br/>
Himself, and trusted not unto my hands<br/>
So far as not to blind me with his own.</p>
<p>
O ye who have undistempered intellects,<br/>
Observe the doctrine that conceals itself<br/>
Beneath the veil of the mysterious verses!</p>
<p>
And now there came across the turbid waves<br/>
The clangour of a sound with terror fraught,<br/>
Because of which both of the margins trembled;</p>
<p>
Not otherwise it was than of a wind<br/>
Impetuous on account of adverse heats,<br/>
That smites the forest, and, without restraint,</p>
<p>
The branches rends, beats down, and bears away;<br/>
Right onward, laden with dust, it goes superb,<br/>
And puts to flight the wild beasts and the shepherds.</p>
<p>
Mine eyes he loosed, and said: “Direct the nerve<br/>
Of vision now along that ancient foam,<br/>
There yonder where that smoke is most intense.”</p>
<p>
Even as the frogs before the hostile serpent<br/>
Across the water scatter all abroad,<br/>
Until each one is huddled in the earth.</p>
<p>
More than a thousand ruined souls I saw,<br/>
Thus fleeing from before one who on foot<br/>
Was passing o’er the Styx with soles unwet.</p>
<p>
From off his face he fanned that unctuous air,<br/>
Waving his left hand oft in front of him,<br/>
And only with that anguish seemed he weary.</p>
<p>
Well I perceived one sent from Heaven was he,<br/>
And to the Master turned; and he made sign<br/>
That I should quiet stand, and bow before him.</p>
<p>
Ah! how disdainful he appeared to me!<br/>
He reached the gate, and with a little rod<br/>
He opened it, for there was no resistance.</p>
<p>
“O banished out of Heaven, people despised!”<br/>
Thus he began upon the horrid threshold;<br/>
“Whence is this arrogance within you couched?</p>
<p>
Wherefore recalcitrate against that will,<br/>
From which the end can never be cut off,<br/>
And which has many times increased your pain?</p>
<p>
What helpeth it to butt against the fates?<br/>
Your Cerberus, if you remember well,<br/>
For that still bears his chin and gullet peeled.”</p>
<p>
Then he returned along the miry road,<br/>
And spake no word to us, but had the look<br/>
Of one whom other care constrains and goads</p>
<p>
Than that of him who in his presence is;<br/>
And we our feet directed tow’rds the city,<br/>
After those holy words all confident.</p>
<p>
Within we entered without any contest;<br/>
And I, who inclination had to see<br/>
What the condition such a fortress holds,</p>
<p>
Soon as I was within, cast round mine eye,<br/>
And see on every hand an ample plain,<br/>
Full of distress and torment terrible.</p>
<p>
Even as at Arles, where stagnant grows the Rhone,<br/>
Even as at Pola near to the Quarnaro,<br/>
That shuts in Italy and bathes its borders,</p>
<p>
The sepulchres make all the place uneven;<br/>
So likewise did they there on every side,<br/>
Saving that there the manner was more bitter;</p>
<p>
For flames between the sepulchres were scattered,<br/>
By which they so intensely heated were,<br/>
That iron more so asks not any art.</p>
<p>
All of their coverings uplifted were,<br/>
And from them issued forth such dire laments,<br/>
Sooth seemed they of the wretched and tormented.</p>
<p>
And I: “My Master, what are all those people<br/>
Who, having sepulture within those tombs,<br/>
Make themselves audible by doleful sighs?”</p>
<p>
And he to me: “Here are the Heresiarchs,<br/>
With their disciples of all sects, and much<br/>
More than thou thinkest laden are the tombs.</p>
<p>
Here like together with its like is buried;<br/>
And more and less the monuments are heated.”<br/>
And when he to the right had turned, we passed</p>
<p>
Between the torments and high parapets.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="CantoI.X"></SPAN>Inferno: Canto X</h2>
<p>
Now onward goes, along a narrow path<br/>
Between the torments and the city wall,<br/>
My Master, and I follow at his back.</p>
<p>
“O power supreme, that through these impious circles<br/>
Turnest me,” I began, “as pleases thee,<br/>
Speak to me, and my longings satisfy;</p>
<p>
The people who are lying in these tombs,<br/>
Might they be seen? already are uplifted<br/>
The covers all, and no one keepeth guard.”</p>
<p>
And he to me: “They all will be closed up<br/>
When from Jehoshaphat they shall return<br/>
Here with the bodies they have left above.</p>
<p>
Their cemetery have upon this side<br/>
With Epicurus all his followers,<br/>
Who with the body mortal make the soul;</p>
<p>
But in the question thou dost put to me,<br/>
Within here shalt thou soon be satisfied,<br/>
And likewise in the wish thou keepest silent.”</p>
<p>
And I: “Good Leader, I but keep concealed<br/>
From thee my heart, that I may speak the less,<br/>
Nor only now hast thou thereto disposed me.”</p>
<p>
“O Tuscan, thou who through the city of fire<br/>
Goest alive, thus speaking modestly,<br/>
Be pleased to stay thy footsteps in this place.</p>
<p>
Thy mode of speaking makes thee manifest<br/>
A native of that noble fatherland,<br/>
To which perhaps I too molestful was.”</p>
<p>
Upon a sudden issued forth this sound<br/>
From out one of the tombs; wherefore I pressed,<br/>
Fearing, a little nearer to my Leader.</p>
<p>
And unto me he said: “Turn thee; what dost thou?<br/>
Behold there Farinata who has risen;<br/>
From the waist upwards wholly shalt thou see him.”</p>
<p>
I had already fixed mine eyes on his,<br/>
And he uprose erect with breast and front<br/>
E’en as if Hell he had in great despite.</p>
<p>
And with courageous hands and prompt my Leader<br/>
Thrust me between the sepulchres towards him,<br/>
Exclaiming, “Let thy words explicit be.”</p>
<p>
As soon as I was at the foot of his tomb<br/>
Somewhat he eyed me, and, as if disdainful,<br/>
Then asked of me, “Who were thine ancestors?”</p>
<p>
I, who desirous of obeying was,<br/>
Concealed it not, but all revealed to him;<br/>
Whereat he raised his brows a little upward.</p>
<p>
Then said he: “Fiercely adverse have they been<br/>
To me, and to my fathers, and my party;<br/>
So that two several times I scattered them.”</p>
<p>
“If they were banished, they returned on all sides,”<br/>
I answered him, “the first time and the second;<br/>
But yours have not acquired that art aright.”</p>
<p>
Then there uprose upon the sight, uncovered<br/>
Down to the chin, a shadow at his side;<br/>
I think that he had risen on his knees.</p>
<p>
Round me he gazed, as if solicitude<br/>
He had to see if some one else were with me,<br/>
But after his suspicion was all spent,</p>
<p>
Weeping, he said to me: “If through this blind<br/>
Prison thou goest by loftiness of genius,<br/>
Where is my son? and why is he not with thee?”</p>
<p>
And I to him: “I come not of myself;<br/>
He who is waiting yonder leads me here,<br/>
Whom in disdain perhaps your Guido had.”</p>
<p>
His language and the mode of punishment<br/>
Already unto me had read his name;<br/>
On that account my answer was so full.</p>
<p>
Up starting suddenly, he cried out: “How<br/>
Saidst thou,—he had? Is he not still alive?<br/>
Does not the sweet light strike upon his eyes?”</p>
<p>
When he became aware of some delay,<br/>
Which I before my answer made, supine<br/>
He fell again, and forth appeared no more.</p>
<p>
But the other, magnanimous, at whose desire<br/>
I had remained, did not his aspect change,<br/>
Neither his neck he moved, nor bent his side.</p>
<p>
“And if,” continuing his first discourse,<br/>
“They have that art,” he said, “not learned aright,<br/>
That more tormenteth me, than doth this bed.</p>
<p>
But fifty times shall not rekindled be<br/>
The countenance of the Lady who reigns here,<br/>
Ere thou shalt know how heavy is that art;</p>
<p>
And as thou wouldst to the sweet world return,<br/>
Say why that people is so pitiless<br/>
Against my race in each one of its laws?”</p>
<p>
Whence I to him: “The slaughter and great carnage<br/>
Which have with crimson stained the Arbia, cause<br/>
Such orisons in our temple to be made.”</p>
<p>
After his head he with a sigh had shaken,<br/>
“There I was not alone,” he said, “nor surely<br/>
Without a cause had with the others moved.</p>
<p>
But there I was alone, where every one<br/>
Consented to the laying waste of Florence,<br/>
He who defended her with open face.”</p>
<p>
“Ah! so hereafter may your seed repose,”<br/>
I him entreated, “solve for me that knot,<br/>
Which has entangled my conceptions here.</p>
<p>
It seems that you can see, if I hear rightly,<br/>
Beforehand whatsoe’er time brings with it,<br/>
And in the present have another mode.”</p>
<p>
“We see, like those who have imperfect sight,<br/>
The things,” he said, “that distant are from us;<br/>
So much still shines on us the Sovereign Ruler.</p>
<p>
When they draw near, or are, is wholly vain<br/>
Our intellect, and if none brings it to us,<br/>
Not anything know we of your human state.</p>
<p>
Hence thou canst understand, that wholly dead<br/>
Will be our knowledge from the moment when<br/>
The portal of the future shall be closed.”</p>
<p>
Then I, as if compunctious for my fault,<br/>
Said: “Now, then, you will tell that fallen one,<br/>
That still his son is with the living joined.</p>
<p>
And if just now, in answering, I was dumb,<br/>
Tell him I did it because I was thinking<br/>
Already of the error you have solved me.”</p>
<p>
And now my Master was recalling me,<br/>
Wherefore more eagerly I prayed the spirit<br/>
That he would tell me who was with him there.</p>
<p>
He said: “With more than a thousand here I lie;<br/>
Within here is the second Frederick,<br/>
And the Cardinal, and of the rest I speak not.”</p>
<p>
Thereon he hid himself; and I towards<br/>
The ancient poet turned my steps, reflecting<br/>
Upon that saying, which seemed hostile to me.</p>
<p>
He moved along; and afterward thus going,<br/>
He said to me, “Why art thou so bewildered?”<br/>
And I in his inquiry satisfied him.</p>
<p>
“Let memory preserve what thou hast heard<br/>
Against thyself,” that Sage commanded me,<br/>
“And now attend here;” and he raised his finger.</p>
<p>
“When thou shalt be before the radiance sweet<br/>
Of her whose beauteous eyes all things behold,<br/>
From her thou’lt know the journey of thy life.”</p>
<p>
Unto the left hand then he turned his feet;<br/>
We left the wall, and went towards the middle,<br/>
Along a path that strikes into a valley,</p>
<p>
Which even up there unpleasant made its stench.</p>
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