<h2><SPAN name="CantoI.XI"></SPAN>Inferno: Canto XI</h2>
<p>
Upon the margin of a lofty bank<br/>
Which great rocks broken in a circle made,<br/>
We came upon a still more cruel throng;</p>
<p>
And there, by reason of the horrible<br/>
Excess of stench the deep abyss throws out,<br/>
We drew ourselves aside behind the cover</p>
<p>
Of a great tomb, whereon I saw a writing,<br/>
Which said: “Pope Anastasius I hold,<br/>
Whom out of the right way Photinus drew.”</p>
<p>
“Slow it behoveth our descent to be,<br/>
So that the sense be first a little used<br/>
To the sad blast, and then we shall not heed it.”</p>
<p>
The Master thus; and unto him I said,<br/>
“Some compensation find, that the time pass not<br/>
Idly;” and he: “Thou seest I think of that.</p>
<p>
My son, upon the inside of these rocks,”<br/>
Began he then to say, “are three small circles,<br/>
From grade to grade, like those which thou art leaving.</p>
<p>
They all are full of spirits maledict;<br/>
But that hereafter sight alone suffice thee,<br/>
Hear how and wherefore they are in constraint.</p>
<p>
Of every malice that wins hate in Heaven,<br/>
Injury is the end; and all such end<br/>
Either by force or fraud afflicteth others.</p>
<p>
But because fraud is man’s peculiar vice,<br/>
More it displeases God; and so stand lowest<br/>
The fraudulent, and greater dole assails them.</p>
<p>
All the first circle of the Violent is;<br/>
But since force may be used against three persons,<br/>
In three rounds ’tis divided and constructed.</p>
<p>
To God, to ourselves, and to our neighbour can we<br/>
Use force; I say on them and on their things,<br/>
As thou shalt hear with reason manifest.</p>
<p>
A death by violence, and painful wounds,<br/>
Are to our neighbour given; and in his substance<br/>
Ruin, and arson, and injurious levies;</p>
<p>
Whence homicides, and he who smites unjustly,<br/>
Marauders, and freebooters, the first round<br/>
Tormenteth all in companies diverse.</p>
<p>
Man may lay violent hands upon himself<br/>
And his own goods; and therefore in the second<br/>
Round must perforce without avail repent</p>
<p>
Whoever of your world deprives himself,<br/>
Who games, and dissipates his property,<br/>
And weepeth there, where he should jocund be.</p>
<p>
Violence can be done the Deity,<br/>
In heart denying and blaspheming Him,<br/>
And by disdaining Nature and her bounty.</p>
<p>
And for this reason doth the smallest round<br/>
Seal with its signet Sodom and Cahors,<br/>
And who, disdaining God, speaks from the heart.</p>
<p>
Fraud, wherewithal is every conscience stung,<br/>
A man may practise upon him who trusts,<br/>
And him who doth no confidence imburse.</p>
<p>
This latter mode, it would appear, dissevers<br/>
Only the bond of love which Nature makes;<br/>
Wherefore within the second circle nestle</p>
<p>
Hypocrisy, flattery, and who deals in magic,<br/>
Falsification, theft, and simony,<br/>
Panders, and barrators, and the like filth.</p>
<p>
By the other mode, forgotten is that love<br/>
Which Nature makes, and what is after added,<br/>
From which there is a special faith engendered.</p>
<p>
Hence in the smallest circle, where the point is<br/>
Of the Universe, upon which Dis is seated,<br/>
Whoe’er betrays for ever is consumed.”</p>
<p>
And I: “My Master, clear enough proceeds<br/>
Thy reasoning, and full well distinguishes<br/>
This cavern and the people who possess it.</p>
<p>
But tell me, those within the fat lagoon,<br/>
Whom the wind drives, and whom the rain doth beat,<br/>
And who encounter with such bitter tongues,</p>
<p>
Wherefore are they inside of the red city<br/>
Not punished, if God has them in his wrath,<br/>
And if he has not, wherefore in such fashion?”</p>
<p>
And unto me he said: “Why wanders so<br/>
Thine intellect from that which it is wont?<br/>
Or, sooth, thy mind where is it elsewhere looking?</p>
<p>
Hast thou no recollection of those words<br/>
With which thine Ethics thoroughly discusses<br/>
The dispositions three, that Heaven abides not,—</p>
<p>
Incontinence, and Malice, and insane<br/>
Bestiality? and how Incontinence<br/>
Less God offendeth, and less blame attracts?</p>
<p>
If thou regardest this conclusion well,<br/>
And to thy mind recallest who they are<br/>
That up outside are undergoing penance,</p>
<p>
Clearly wilt thou perceive why from these felons<br/>
They separated are, and why less wroth<br/>
Justice divine doth smite them with its hammer.”</p>
<p>
“O Sun, that healest all distempered vision,<br/>
Thou dost content me so, when thou resolvest,<br/>
That doubting pleases me no less than knowing!</p>
<p>
Once more a little backward turn thee,” said I,<br/>
“There where thou sayest that usury offends<br/>
Goodness divine, and disengage the knot.”</p>
<p>
“Philosophy,” he said, “to him who heeds it,<br/>
Noteth, not only in one place alone,<br/>
After what manner Nature takes her course</p>
<p>
From Intellect Divine, and from its art;<br/>
And if thy Physics carefully thou notest,<br/>
After not many pages shalt thou find,</p>
<p>
That this your art as far as possible<br/>
Follows, as the disciple doth the master;<br/>
So that your art is, as it were, God’s grandchild.</p>
<p>
From these two, if thou bringest to thy mind<br/>
Genesis at the beginning, it behoves<br/>
Mankind to gain their life and to advance;</p>
<p>
And since the usurer takes another way,<br/>
Nature herself and in her follower<br/>
Disdains he, for elsewhere he puts his hope.</p>
<p>
But follow, now, as I would fain go on,<br/>
For quivering are the Fishes on the horizon,<br/>
And the Wain wholly over Caurus lies,</p>
<p>
And far beyond there we descend the crag.”</p>
<h2><SPAN name="CantoI.XII"></SPAN>Inferno: Canto XII</h2>
<p>
The place where to descend the bank we came<br/>
Was alpine, and from what was there, moreover,<br/>
Of such a kind that every eye would shun it.</p>
<p>
Such as that ruin is which in the flank<br/>
Smote, on this side of Trent, the Adige,<br/>
Either by earthquake or by failing stay,</p>
<p>
For from the mountain’s top, from which it moved,<br/>
Unto the plain the cliff is shattered so,<br/>
Some path ’twould give to him who was above;</p>
<p>
Even such was the descent of that ravine,<br/>
And on the border of the broken chasm<br/>
The infamy of Crete was stretched along,</p>
<p>
Who was conceived in the fictitious cow;<br/>
And when he us beheld, he bit himself,<br/>
Even as one whom anger racks within.</p>
<p>
My Sage towards him shouted: “Peradventure<br/>
Thou think’st that here may be the Duke of Athens,<br/>
Who in the world above brought death to thee?</p>
<p>
Get thee gone, beast, for this one cometh not<br/>
Instructed by thy sister, but he comes<br/>
In order to behold your punishments.”</p>
<p>
As is that bull who breaks loose at the moment<br/>
In which he has received the mortal blow,<br/>
Who cannot walk, but staggers here and there,</p>
<p>
The Minotaur beheld I do the like;<br/>
And he, the wary, cried: “Run to the passage;<br/>
While he wroth, ’tis well thou shouldst descend.”</p>
<p>
Thus down we took our way o’er that discharge<br/>
Of stones, which oftentimes did move themselves<br/>
Beneath my feet, from the unwonted burden.</p>
<p>
Thoughtful I went; and he said: “Thou art thinking<br/>
Perhaps upon this ruin, which is guarded<br/>
By that brute anger which just now I quenched.</p>
<p>
Now will I have thee know, the other time<br/>
I here descended to the nether Hell,<br/>
This precipice had not yet fallen down.</p>
<p>
But truly, if I well discern, a little<br/>
Before His coming who the mighty spoil<br/>
Bore off from Dis, in the supernal circle,</p>
<p>
Upon all sides the deep and loathsome valley<br/>
Trembled so, that I thought the Universe<br/>
Was thrilled with love, by which there are who think</p>
<p>
The world ofttimes converted into chaos;<br/>
And at that moment this primeval crag<br/>
Both here and elsewhere made such overthrow.</p>
<p>
But fix thine eyes below; for draweth near<br/>
The river of blood, within which boiling is<br/>
Whoe’er by violence doth injure others.”</p>
<p>
O blind cupidity, O wrath insane,<br/>
That spurs us onward so in our short life,<br/>
And in the eternal then so badly steeps us!</p>
<p>
I saw an ample moat bent like a bow,<br/>
As one which all the plain encompasses,<br/>
Conformable to what my Guide had said.</p>
<p>
And between this and the embankment’s foot<br/>
Centaurs in file were running, armed with arrows,<br/>
As in the world they used the chase to follow.</p>
<p>
Beholding us descend, each one stood still,<br/>
And from the squadron three detached themselves,<br/>
With bows and arrows in advance selected;</p>
<p>
And from afar one cried: “Unto what torment<br/>
Come ye, who down the hillside are descending?<br/>
Tell us from there; if not, I draw the bow.”</p>
<p>
My Master said: “Our answer will we make<br/>
To Chiron, near you there; in evil hour,<br/>
That will of thine was evermore so hasty.”</p>
<p>
Then touched he me, and said: “This one is Nessus,<br/>
Who perished for the lovely Dejanira,<br/>
And for himself, himself did vengeance take.</p>
<p>
And he in the midst, who at his breast is gazing,<br/>
Is the great Chiron, who brought up Achilles;<br/>
That other Pholus is, who was so wrathful.</p>
<p>
Thousands and thousands go about the moat<br/>
Shooting with shafts whatever soul emerges<br/>
Out of the blood, more than his crime allots.”</p>
<p>
Near we approached unto those monsters fleet;<br/>
Chiron an arrow took, and with the notch<br/>
Backward upon his jaws he put his beard.</p>
<p>
After he had uncovered his great mouth,<br/>
He said to his companions: “Are you ware<br/>
That he behind moveth whate’er he touches?</p>
<p>
Thus are not wont to do the feet of dead men.”<br/>
And my good Guide, who now was at his breast,<br/>
Where the two natures are together joined,</p>
<p>
Replied: “Indeed he lives, and thus alone<br/>
Me it behoves to show him the dark valley;<br/>
Necessity, and not delight, impels us.</p>
<p>
Some one withdrew from singing Halleluja,<br/>
Who unto me committed this new office;<br/>
No thief is he, nor I a thievish spirit.</p>
<p>
But by that virtue through which I am moving<br/>
My steps along this savage thoroughfare,<br/>
Give us some one of thine, to be with us,</p>
<p>
And who may show us where to pass the ford,<br/>
And who may carry this one on his back;<br/>
For ’tis no spirit that can walk the air.”</p>
<p>
Upon his right breast Chiron wheeled about,<br/>
And said to Nessus: “Turn and do thou guide them,<br/>
And warn aside, if other band may meet you.”</p>
<p>
We with our faithful escort onward moved<br/>
Along the brink of the vermilion boiling,<br/>
Wherein the boiled were uttering loud laments.</p>
<p>
People I saw within up to the eyebrows,<br/>
And the great Centaur said: “Tyrants are these,<br/>
Who dealt in bloodshed and in pillaging.</p>
<p>
Here they lament their pitiless mischiefs; here<br/>
Is Alexander, and fierce Dionysius<br/>
Who upon Sicily brought dolorous years.</p>
<p>
That forehead there which has the hair so black<br/>
Is Azzolin; and the other who is blond,<br/>
Obizzo is of Esti, who, in truth,</p>
<p>
Up in the world was by his stepson slain.”<br/>
Then turned I to the Poet; and he said,<br/>
“Now he be first to thee, and second I.”</p>
<p>
A little farther on the Centaur stopped<br/>
Above a folk, who far down as the throat<br/>
Seemed from that boiling stream to issue forth.</p>
<p>
A shade he showed us on one side alone,<br/>
Saying: “He cleft asunder in God’s bosom<br/>
The heart that still upon the Thames is honoured.”</p>
<p>
Then people saw I, who from out the river<br/>
Lifted their heads and also all the chest;<br/>
And many among these I recognised.</p>
<p>
Thus ever more and more grew shallower<br/>
That blood, so that the feet alone it covered;<br/>
And there across the moat our passage was.</p>
<p>
“Even as thou here upon this side beholdest<br/>
The boiling stream, that aye diminishes,”<br/>
The Centaur said, “I wish thee to believe</p>
<p>
That on this other more and more declines<br/>
Its bed, until it reunites itself<br/>
Where it behoveth tyranny to groan.</p>
<p>
Justice divine, upon this side, is goading<br/>
That Attila, who was a scourge on earth,<br/>
And Pyrrhus, and Sextus; and for ever milks</p>
<p>
The tears which with the boiling it unseals<br/>
In Rinier da Corneto and Rinier Pazzo,<br/>
Who made upon the highways so much war.”</p>
<p>
Then back he turned, and passed again the ford.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="CantoI.XIII"></SPAN>Inferno: Canto XIII</h2>
<p>
Not yet had Nessus reached the other side,<br/>
When we had put ourselves within a wood,<br/>
That was not marked by any path whatever.</p>
<p>
Not foliage green, but of a dusky colour,<br/>
Not branches smooth, but gnarled and intertangled,<br/>
Not apple-trees were there, but thorns with poison.</p>
<p>
Such tangled thickets have not, nor so dense,<br/>
Those savage wild beasts, that in hatred hold<br/>
’Twixt Cecina and Corneto the tilled places.</p>
<p>
There do the hideous Harpies make their nests,<br/>
Who chased the Trojans from the Strophades,<br/>
With sad announcement of impending doom;</p>
<p>
Broad wings have they, and necks and faces human,<br/>
And feet with claws, and their great bellies fledged;<br/>
They make laments upon the wondrous trees.</p>
<p>
And the good Master: “Ere thou enter farther,<br/>
Know that thou art within the second round,”<br/>
Thus he began to say, “and shalt be, till</p>
<p>
Thou comest out upon the horrible sand;<br/>
Therefore look well around, and thou shalt see<br/>
Things that will credence give unto my speech.”</p>
<p>
I heard on all sides lamentations uttered,<br/>
And person none beheld I who might make them,<br/>
Whence, utterly bewildered, I stood still.</p>
<p>
I think he thought that I perhaps might think<br/>
So many voices issued through those trunks<br/>
From people who concealed themselves from us;</p>
<p>
Therefore the Master said: “If thou break off<br/>
Some little spray from any of these trees,<br/>
The thoughts thou hast will wholly be made vain.”</p>
<p>
Then stretched I forth my hand a little forward,<br/>
And plucked a branchlet off from a great thorn;<br/>
And the trunk cried, “Why dost thou mangle me?”</p>
<p>
After it had become embrowned with blood,<br/>
It recommenced its cry: “Why dost thou rend me?<br/>
Hast thou no spirit of pity whatsoever?</p>
<p>
Men once we were, and now are changed to trees;<br/>
Indeed, thy hand should be more pitiful,<br/>
Even if the souls of serpents we had been.”</p>
<p>
As out of a green brand, that is on fire<br/>
At one of the ends, and from the other drips<br/>
And hisses with the wind that is escaping;</p>
<p>
So from that splinter issued forth together<br/>
Both words and blood; whereat I let the tip<br/>
Fall, and stood like a man who is afraid.</p>
<p>
“Had he been able sooner to believe,”<br/>
My Sage made answer, “O thou wounded soul,<br/>
What only in my verses he has seen,</p>
<p>
Not upon thee had he stretched forth his hand;<br/>
Whereas the thing incredible has caused me<br/>
To put him to an act which grieveth me.</p>
<p>
But tell him who thou wast, so that by way<br/>
Of some amends thy fame he may refresh<br/>
Up in the world, to which he can return.”</p>
<p>
And the trunk said: “So thy sweet words allure me,<br/>
I cannot silent be; and you be vexed not,<br/>
That I a little to discourse am tempted.</p>
<p>
I am the one who both keys had in keeping<br/>
Of Frederick’s heart, and turned them to and fro<br/>
So softly in unlocking and in locking,</p>
<p>
That from his secrets most men I withheld;<br/>
Fidelity I bore the glorious office<br/>
So great, I lost thereby my sleep and pulses.</p>
<p>
The courtesan who never from the dwelling<br/>
Of Caesar turned aside her strumpet eyes,<br/>
Death universal and the vice of courts,</p>
<p>
Inflamed against me all the other minds,<br/>
And they, inflamed, did so inflame Augustus,<br/>
That my glad honours turned to dismal mournings.</p>
<p>
My spirit, in disdainful exultation,<br/>
Thinking by dying to escape disdain,<br/>
Made me unjust against myself, the just.</p>
<p>
I, by the roots unwonted of this wood,<br/>
Do swear to you that never broke I faith<br/>
Unto my lord, who was so worthy of honour;</p>
<p>
And to the world if one of you return,<br/>
Let him my memory comfort, which is lying<br/>
Still prostrate from the blow that envy dealt it.”</p>
<p>
Waited awhile, and then: “Since he is silent,”<br/>
The Poet said to me, “lose not the time,<br/>
But speak, and question him, if more may please thee.”</p>
<p>
Whence I to him: “Do thou again inquire<br/>
Concerning what thou thinks’t will satisfy me;<br/>
For I cannot, such pity is in my heart.”</p>
<p>
Therefore he recommenced: “So may the man<br/>
Do for thee freely what thy speech implores,<br/>
Spirit incarcerate, again be pleased</p>
<p>
To tell us in what way the soul is bound<br/>
Within these knots; and tell us, if thou canst,<br/>
If any from such members e’er is freed.”</p>
<p>
Then blew the trunk amain, and afterward<br/>
The wind was into such a voice converted:<br/>
“With brevity shall be replied to you.</p>
<p>
When the exasperated soul abandons<br/>
The body whence it rent itself away,<br/>
Minos consigns it to the seventh abyss.</p>
<p>
It falls into the forest, and no part<br/>
Is chosen for it; but where Fortune hurls it,<br/>
There like a grain of spelt it germinates.</p>
<p>
It springs a sapling, and a forest tree;<br/>
The Harpies, feeding then upon its leaves,<br/>
Do pain create, and for the pain an outlet.</p>
<p>
Like others for our spoils shall we return;<br/>
But not that any one may them revest,<br/>
For ’tis not just to have what one casts off.</p>
<p>
Here we shall drag them, and along the dismal<br/>
Forest our bodies shall suspended be,<br/>
Each to the thorn of his molested shade.”</p>
<p>
We were attentive still unto the trunk,<br/>
Thinking that more it yet might wish to tell us,<br/>
When by a tumult we were overtaken,</p>
<p>
In the same way as he is who perceives<br/>
The boar and chase approaching to his stand,<br/>
Who hears the crashing of the beasts and branches;</p>
<p>
And two behold! upon our left-hand side,<br/>
Naked and scratched, fleeing so furiously,<br/>
That of the forest, every fan they broke.</p>
<p>
He who was in advance: “Now help, Death, help!”<br/>
And the other one, who seemed to lag too much,<br/>
Was shouting: “Lano, were not so alert</p>
<p>
Those legs of thine at joustings of the Toppo!”<br/>
And then, perchance because his breath was failing,<br/>
He grouped himself together with a bush.</p>
<p>
Behind them was the forest full of black<br/>
She-mastiffs, ravenous, and swift of foot<br/>
As greyhounds, who are issuing from the chain.</p>
<p>
On him who had crouched down they set their teeth,<br/>
And him they lacerated piece by piece,<br/>
Thereafter bore away those aching members.</p>
<p>
Thereat my Escort took me by the hand,<br/>
And led me to the bush, that all in vain<br/>
Was weeping from its bloody lacerations.</p>
<p>
“O Jacopo,” it said, “of Sant’ Andrea,<br/>
What helped it thee of me to make a screen?<br/>
What blame have I in thy nefarious life?”</p>
<p>
When near him had the Master stayed his steps,<br/>
He said: “Who wast thou, that through wounds so many<br/>
Art blowing out with blood thy dolorous speech?”</p>
<p>
And he to us: “O souls, that hither come<br/>
To look upon the shameful massacre<br/>
That has so rent away from me my leaves,</p>
<p>
Gather them up beneath the dismal bush;<br/>
I of that city was which to the Baptist<br/>
Changed its first patron, wherefore he for this</p>
<p>
Forever with his art will make it sad.<br/>
And were it not that on the pass of Arno<br/>
Some glimpses of him are remaining still,</p>
<p>
Those citizens, who afterwards rebuilt it<br/>
Upon the ashes left by Attila,<br/>
In vain had caused their labour to be done.</p>
<p>
Of my own house I made myself a gibbet.”</p>
<h2><SPAN name="CantoI.XIV"></SPAN>Inferno: Canto XIV</h2>
<p>
Because the charity of my native place<br/>
Constrained me, gathered I the scattered leaves,<br/>
And gave them back to him, who now was hoarse.</p>
<p>
Then came we to the confine, where disparted<br/>
The second round is from the third, and where<br/>
A horrible form of Justice is beheld.</p>
<p>
Clearly to manifest these novel things,<br/>
I say that we arrived upon a plain,<br/>
Which from its bed rejecteth every plant;</p>
<p>
The dolorous forest is a garland to it<br/>
All round about, as the sad moat to that;<br/>
There close upon the edge we stayed our feet.</p>
<p>
The soil was of an arid and thick sand,<br/>
Not of another fashion made than that<br/>
Which by the feet of Cato once was pressed.</p>
<p>
Vengeance of God, O how much oughtest thou<br/>
By each one to be dreaded, who doth read<br/>
That which was manifest unto mine eyes!</p>
<p>
Of naked souls beheld I many herds,<br/>
Who all were weeping very miserably,<br/>
And over them seemed set a law diverse.</p>
<p>
Supine upon the ground some folk were lying;<br/>
And some were sitting all drawn up together,<br/>
And others went about continually.</p>
<p>
Those who were going round were far the more,<br/>
And those were less who lay down to their torment,<br/>
But had their tongues more loosed to lamentation.</p>
<p>
O’er all the sand-waste, with a gradual fall,<br/>
Were raining down dilated flakes of fire,<br/>
As of the snow on Alp without a wind.</p>
<p>
As Alexander, in those torrid parts<br/>
Of India, beheld upon his host<br/>
Flames fall unbroken till they reached the ground.</p>
<p>
Whence he provided with his phalanxes<br/>
To trample down the soil, because the vapour<br/>
Better extinguished was while it was single;</p>
<p>
Thus was descending the eternal heat,<br/>
Whereby the sand was set on fire, like tinder<br/>
Beneath the steel, for doubling of the dole.</p>
<p>
Without repose forever was the dance<br/>
Of miserable hands, now there, now here,<br/>
Shaking away from off them the fresh gleeds.</p>
<p>
“Master,” began I, “thou who overcomest<br/>
All things except the demons dire, that issued<br/>
Against us at the entrance of the gate,</p>
<p>
Who is that mighty one who seems to heed not<br/>
The fire, and lieth lowering and disdainful,<br/>
So that the rain seems not to ripen him?”</p>
<p>
And he himself, who had become aware<br/>
That I was questioning my Guide about him,<br/>
Cried: “Such as I was living, am I, dead.</p>
<p>
If Jove should weary out his smith, from whom<br/>
He seized in anger the sharp thunderbolt,<br/>
Wherewith upon the last day I was smitten,</p>
<p>
And if he wearied out by turns the others<br/>
In Mongibello at the swarthy forge,<br/>
Vociferating, ‘Help, good Vulcan, help!’</p>
<p>
Even as he did there at the fight of Phlegra,<br/>
And shot his bolts at me with all his might,<br/>
He would not have thereby a joyous vengeance.”</p>
<p>
Then did my Leader speak with such great force,<br/>
That I had never heard him speak so loud:<br/>
“O Capaneus, in that is not extinguished</p>
<p>
Thine arrogance, thou punished art the more;<br/>
Not any torment, saving thine own rage,<br/>
Would be unto thy fury pain complete.”</p>
<p>
Then he turned round to me with better lip,<br/>
Saying: “One of the Seven Kings was he<br/>
Who Thebes besieged, and held, and seems to hold</p>
<p>
God in disdain, and little seems to prize him;<br/>
But, as I said to him, his own despites<br/>
Are for his breast the fittest ornaments.</p>
<p>
Now follow me, and mind thou do not place<br/>
As yet thy feet upon the burning sand,<br/>
But always keep them close unto the wood.”</p>
<p>
Speaking no word, we came to where there gushes<br/>
Forth from the wood a little rivulet,<br/>
Whose redness makes my hair still stand on end.</p>
<p>
As from the Bulicame springs the brooklet,<br/>
The sinful women later share among them,<br/>
So downward through the sand it went its way.</p>
<p>
The bottom of it, and both sloping banks,<br/>
Were made of stone, and the margins at the side;<br/>
Whence I perceived that there the passage was.</p>
<p>
“In all the rest which I have shown to thee<br/>
Since we have entered in within the gate<br/>
Whose threshold unto no one is denied,</p>
<p>
Nothing has been discovered by thine eyes<br/>
So notable as is the present river,<br/>
Which all the little flames above it quenches.”</p>
<p>
These words were of my Leader; whence I prayed him<br/>
That he would give me largess of the food,<br/>
For which he had given me largess of desire.</p>
<p>
“In the mid-sea there sits a wasted land,”<br/>
Said he thereafterward, “whose name is Crete,<br/>
Under whose king the world of old was chaste.</p>
<p>
There is a mountain there, that once was glad<br/>
With waters and with leaves, which was called Ida;<br/>
Now ’tis deserted, as a thing worn out.</p>
<p>
Rhea once chose it for the faithful cradle<br/>
Of her own son; and to conceal him better,<br/>
Whene’er he cried, she there had clamours made.</p>
<p>
A grand old man stands in the mount erect,<br/>
Who holds his shoulders turned tow’rds Damietta,<br/>
And looks at Rome as if it were his mirror.</p>
<p>
His head is fashioned of refined gold,<br/>
And of pure silver are the arms and breast;<br/>
Then he is brass as far down as the fork.</p>
<p>
From that point downward all is chosen iron,<br/>
Save that the right foot is of kiln-baked clay,<br/>
And more he stands on that than on the other.</p>
<p>
Each part, except the gold, is by a fissure<br/>
Asunder cleft, that dripping is with tears,<br/>
Which gathered together perforate that cavern.</p>
<p>
From rock to rock they fall into this valley;<br/>
Acheron, Styx, and Phlegethon they form;<br/>
Then downward go along this narrow sluice</p>
<p>
Unto that point where is no more descending.<br/>
They form Cocytus; what that pool may be<br/>
Thou shalt behold, so here ’tis not narrated.”</p>
<p>
And I to him: “If so the present runnel<br/>
Doth take its rise in this way from our world,<br/>
Why only on this verge appears it to us?”</p>
<p>
And he to me: “Thou knowest the place is round,<br/>
And notwithstanding thou hast journeyed far,<br/>
Still to the left descending to the bottom,</p>
<p>
Thou hast not yet through all the circle turned.<br/>
Therefore if something new appear to us,<br/>
It should not bring amazement to thy face.”</p>
<p>
And I again: “Master, where shall be found<br/>
Lethe and Phlegethon, for of one thou’rt silent,<br/>
And sayest the other of this rain is made?”</p>
<p>
“In all thy questions truly thou dost please me,”<br/>
Replied he; “but the boiling of the red<br/>
Water might well solve one of them thou makest.</p>
<p>
Thou shalt see Lethe, but outside this moat,<br/>
There where the souls repair to lave themselves,<br/>
When sin repented of has been removed.”</p>
<p>
Then said he: “It is time now to abandon<br/>
The wood; take heed that thou come after me;<br/>
A way the margins make that are not burning,</p>
<p>
And over them all vapours are extinguished.”</p>
<h2><SPAN name="CantoI.XV"></SPAN>Inferno: Canto XV</h2>
<p>
Now bears us onward one of the hard margins,<br/>
And so the brooklet’s mist o’ershadows it,<br/>
From fire it saves the water and the dikes.</p>
<p>
Even as the Flemings, ’twixt Cadsand and Bruges,<br/>
Fearing the flood that tow’rds them hurls itself,<br/>
Their bulwarks build to put the sea to flight;</p>
<p>
And as the Paduans along the Brenta,<br/>
To guard their villas and their villages,<br/>
Or ever Chiarentana feel the heat;</p>
<p>
In such similitude had those been made,<br/>
Albeit not so lofty nor so thick,<br/>
Whoever he might be, the master made them.</p>
<p>
Now were we from the forest so remote,<br/>
I could not have discovered where it was,<br/>
Even if backward I had turned myself,</p>
<p>
When we a company of souls encountered,<br/>
Who came beside the dike, and every one<br/>
Gazed at us, as at evening we are wont</p>
<p>
To eye each other under a new moon,<br/>
And so towards us sharpened they their brows<br/>
As an old tailor at the needle’s eye.</p>
<p>
Thus scrutinised by such a family,<br/>
By some one I was recognised, who seized<br/>
My garment’s hem, and cried out, “What a marvel!”</p>
<p>
And I, when he stretched forth his arm to me,<br/>
On his baked aspect fastened so mine eyes,<br/>
That the scorched countenance prevented not</p>
<p>
His recognition by my intellect;<br/>
And bowing down my face unto his own,<br/>
I made reply, “Are you here, Ser Brunetto?”</p>
<p>
And he: “May’t not displease thee, O my son,<br/>
If a brief space with thee Brunetto Latini<br/>
Backward return and let the trail go on.”</p>
<p>
I said to him: “With all my power I ask it;<br/>
And if you wish me to sit down with you,<br/>
I will, if he please, for I go with him.”</p>
<p>
“O son,” he said, “whoever of this herd<br/>
A moment stops, lies then a hundred years,<br/>
Nor fans himself when smiteth him the fire.</p>
<p>
Therefore go on; I at thy skirts will come,<br/>
And afterward will I rejoin my band,<br/>
Which goes lamenting its eternal doom.”</p>
<p>
I did not dare to go down from the road<br/>
Level to walk with him; but my head bowed<br/>
I held as one who goeth reverently.</p>
<p>
And he began: “What fortune or what fate<br/>
Before the last day leadeth thee down here?<br/>
And who is this that showeth thee the way?”</p>
<p>
“Up there above us in the life serene,”<br/>
I answered him, “I lost me in a valley,<br/>
Or ever yet my age had been completed.</p>
<p>
But yestermorn I turned my back upon it;<br/>
This one appeared to me, returning thither,<br/>
And homeward leadeth me along this road.”</p>
<p>
And he to me: “If thou thy star do follow,<br/>
Thou canst not fail thee of a glorious port,<br/>
If well I judged in the life beautiful.</p>
<p>
And if I had not died so prematurely,<br/>
Seeing Heaven thus benignant unto thee,<br/>
I would have given thee comfort in the work.</p>
<p>
But that ungrateful and malignant people,<br/>
Which of old time from Fesole descended,<br/>
And smacks still of the mountain and the granite,</p>
<p>
Will make itself, for thy good deeds, thy foe;<br/>
And it is right; for among crabbed sorbs<br/>
It ill befits the sweet fig to bear fruit.</p>
<p>
Old rumour in the world proclaims them blind;<br/>
A people avaricious, envious, proud;<br/>
Take heed that of their customs thou do cleanse thee.</p>
<p>
Thy fortune so much honour doth reserve thee,<br/>
One party and the other shall be hungry<br/>
For thee; but far from goat shall be the grass.</p>
<p>
Their litter let the beasts of Fesole<br/>
Make of themselves, nor let them touch the plant,<br/>
If any still upon their dunghill rise,</p>
<p>
In which may yet revive the consecrated<br/>
Seed of those Romans, who remained there when<br/>
The nest of such great malice it became.”</p>
<p>
“If my entreaty wholly were fulfilled,”<br/>
Replied I to him, “not yet would you be<br/>
In banishment from human nature placed;</p>
<p>
For in my mind is fixed, and touches now<br/>
My heart the dear and good paternal image<br/>
Of you, when in the world from hour to hour</p>
<p>
You taught me how a man becomes eternal;<br/>
And how much I am grateful, while I live<br/>
Behoves that in my language be discerned.</p>
<p>
What you narrate of my career I write,<br/>
And keep it to be glossed with other text<br/>
By a Lady who can do it, if I reach her.</p>
<p>
This much will I have manifest to you;<br/>
Provided that my conscience do not chide me,<br/>
For whatsoever Fortune I am ready.</p>
<p>
Such handsel is not new unto mine ears;<br/>
Therefore let Fortune turn her wheel around<br/>
As it may please her, and the churl his mattock.”</p>
<p>
My Master thereupon on his right cheek<br/>
Did backward turn himself, and looked at me;<br/>
Then said: “He listeneth well who noteth it.”</p>
<p>
Nor speaking less on that account, I go<br/>
With Ser Brunetto, and I ask who are<br/>
His most known and most eminent companions.</p>
<p>
And he to me: “To know of some is well;<br/>
Of others it were laudable to be silent,<br/>
For short would be the time for so much speech.</p>
<p>
Know them in sum, that all of them were clerks,<br/>
And men of letters great and of great fame,<br/>
In the world tainted with the selfsame sin.</p>
<p>
Priscian goes yonder with that wretched crowd,<br/>
And Francis of Accorso; and thou hadst seen there<br/>
If thou hadst had a hankering for such scurf,</p>
<p>
That one, who by the Servant of the Servants<br/>
From Arno was transferred to Bacchiglione,<br/>
Where he has left his sin-excited nerves.</p>
<p>
More would I say, but coming and discoursing<br/>
Can be no longer; for that I behold<br/>
New smoke uprising yonder from the sand.</p>
<p>
A people comes with whom I may not be;<br/>
Commended unto thee be my Tesoro,<br/>
In which I still live, and no more I ask.”</p>
<p>
Then he turned round, and seemed to be of those<br/>
Who at Verona run for the Green Mantle<br/>
Across the plain; and seemed to be among them</p>
<p>
The one who wins, and not the one who loses.</p>
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