<h2><SPAN name="CantoI.XXXI"></SPAN>Inferno: Canto XXXI</h2>
<p>
One and the selfsame tongue first wounded me,<br/>
So that it tinged the one cheek and the other,<br/>
And then held out to me the medicine;</p>
<p>
Thus do I hear that once Achilles’ spear,<br/>
His and his father’s, used to be the cause<br/>
First of a sad and then a gracious boon.</p>
<p>
We turned our backs upon the wretched valley,<br/>
Upon the bank that girds it round about,<br/>
Going across it without any speech.</p>
<p>
There it was less than night, and less than day,<br/>
So that my sight went little in advance;<br/>
But I could hear the blare of a loud horn,</p>
<p>
So loud it would have made each thunder faint,<br/>
Which, counter to it following its way,<br/>
Mine eyes directed wholly to one place.</p>
<p>
After the dolorous discomfiture<br/>
When Charlemagne the holy emprise lost,<br/>
So terribly Orlando sounded not.</p>
<p>
Short while my head turned thitherward I held<br/>
When many lofty towers I seemed to see,<br/>
Whereat I: “Master, say, what town is this?”</p>
<p>
And he to me: “Because thou peerest forth<br/>
Athwart the darkness at too great a distance,<br/>
It happens that thou errest in thy fancy.</p>
<p>
Well shalt thou see, if thou arrivest there,<br/>
How much the sense deceives itself by distance;<br/>
Therefore a little faster spur thee on.”</p>
<p>
Then tenderly he took me by the hand,<br/>
And said: “Before we farther have advanced,<br/>
That the reality may seem to thee</p>
<p>
Less strange, know that these are not towers, but giants,<br/>
And they are in the well, around the bank,<br/>
From navel downward, one and all of them.”</p>
<p>
As, when the fog is vanishing away,<br/>
Little by little doth the sight refigure<br/>
Whate’er the mist that crowds the air conceals,</p>
<p>
So, piercing through the dense and darksome air,<br/>
More and more near approaching tow’rd the verge,<br/>
My error fled, and fear came over me;</p>
<p>
Because as on its circular parapets<br/>
Montereggione crowns itself with towers,<br/>
E’en thus the margin which surrounds the well</p>
<p>
With one half of their bodies turreted<br/>
The horrible giants, whom Jove menaces<br/>
E’en now from out the heavens when he thunders.</p>
<p>
And I of one already saw the face,<br/>
Shoulders, and breast, and great part of the belly,<br/>
And down along his sides both of the arms.</p>
<p>
Certainly Nature, when she left the making<br/>
Of animals like these, did well indeed,<br/>
By taking such executors from Mars;</p>
<p>
And if of elephants and whales she doth not<br/>
Repent her, whosoever looketh subtly<br/>
More just and more discreet will hold her for it;</p>
<p>
For where the argument of intellect<br/>
Is added unto evil will and power,<br/>
No rampart can the people make against it.</p>
<p>
His face appeared to me as long and large<br/>
As is at Rome the pine-cone of Saint Peter’s,<br/>
And in proportion were the other bones;</p>
<p>
So that the margin, which an apron was<br/>
Down from the middle, showed so much of him<br/>
Above it, that to reach up to his hair</p>
<p>
Three Frieslanders in vain had vaunted them;<br/>
For I beheld thirty great palms of him<br/>
Down from the place where man his mantle buckles.</p>
<p>
“Raphael mai amech izabi almi,”<br/>
Began to clamour the ferocious mouth,<br/>
To which were not befitting sweeter psalms.</p>
<p>
And unto him my Guide: “Soul idiotic,<br/>
Keep to thy horn, and vent thyself with that,<br/>
When wrath or other passion touches thee.</p>
<p>
Search round thy neck, and thou wilt find the belt<br/>
Which keeps it fastened, O bewildered soul,<br/>
And see it, where it bars thy mighty breast.”</p>
<p>
Then said to me: “He doth himself accuse;<br/>
This one is Nimrod, by whose evil thought<br/>
One language in the world is not still used.</p>
<p>
Here let us leave him and not speak in vain;<br/>
For even such to him is every language<br/>
As his to others, which to none is known.”</p>
<p>
Therefore a longer journey did we make,<br/>
Turned to the left, and a crossbow-shot oft<br/>
We found another far more fierce and large.</p>
<p>
In binding him, who might the master be<br/>
I cannot say; but he had pinioned close<br/>
Behind the right arm, and in front the other,</p>
<p>
With chains, that held him so begirt about<br/>
From the neck down, that on the part uncovered<br/>
It wound itself as far as the fifth gyre.</p>
<p>
“This proud one wished to make experiment<br/>
Of his own power against the Supreme Jove,”<br/>
My Leader said, “whence he has such a guerdon.</p>
<p>
Ephialtes is his name; he showed great prowess.<br/>
What time the giants terrified the gods;<br/>
The arms he wielded never more he moves.”</p>
<p>
And I to him: “If possible, I should wish<br/>
That of the measureless Briareus<br/>
These eyes of mine might have experience.”</p>
<p>
Whence he replied: “Thou shalt behold Antaeus<br/>
Close by here, who can speak and is unbound,<br/>
Who at the bottom of all crime shall place us.</p>
<p>
Much farther yon is he whom thou wouldst see,<br/>
And he is bound, and fashioned like to this one,<br/>
Save that he seems in aspect more ferocious.”</p>
<p>
There never was an earthquake of such might<br/>
That it could shake a tower so violently,<br/>
As Ephialtes suddenly shook himself.</p>
<p>
Then was I more afraid of death than ever,<br/>
For nothing more was needful than the fear,<br/>
If I had not beheld the manacles.</p>
<p>
Then we proceeded farther in advance,<br/>
And to Antaeus came, who, full five ells<br/>
Without the head, forth issued from the cavern.</p>
<p>
“O thou, who in the valley fortunate,<br/>
Which Scipio the heir of glory made,<br/>
When Hannibal turned back with all his hosts,</p>
<p>
Once brought’st a thousand lions for thy prey,<br/>
And who, hadst thou been at the mighty war<br/>
Among thy brothers, some it seems still think</p>
<p>
The sons of Earth the victory would have gained:<br/>
Place us below, nor be disdainful of it,<br/>
There where the cold doth lock Cocytus up.</p>
<p>
Make us not go to Tityus nor Typhoeus;<br/>
This one can give of that which here is longed for;<br/>
Therefore stoop down, and do not curl thy lip.</p>
<p>
Still in the world can he restore thy fame;<br/>
Because he lives, and still expects long life,<br/>
If to itself Grace call him not untimely.”</p>
<p>
So said the Master; and in haste the other<br/>
His hands extended and took up my Guide,—<br/>
Hands whose great pressure Hercules once felt.</p>
<p>
Virgilius, when he felt himself embraced,<br/>
Said unto me: “Draw nigh, that I may take thee;”<br/>
Then of himself and me one bundle made.</p>
<p>
As seems the Carisenda, to behold<br/>
Beneath the leaning side, when goes a cloud<br/>
Above it so that opposite it hangs;</p>
<p>
Such did Antaeus seem to me, who stood<br/>
Watching to see him stoop, and then it was<br/>
I could have wished to go some other way.</p>
<p>
But lightly in the abyss, which swallows up<br/>
Judas with Lucifer, he put us down;<br/>
Nor thus bowed downward made he there delay,</p>
<p>
But, as a mast does in a ship, uprose.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="CantoI.XXXII"></SPAN>Inferno: Canto XXXII</h2>
<p>
If I had rhymes both rough and stridulous,<br/>
As were appropriate to the dismal hole<br/>
Down upon which thrust all the other rocks,</p>
<p>
I would press out the juice of my conception<br/>
More fully; but because I have them not,<br/>
Not without fear I bring myself to speak;</p>
<p>
For ’tis no enterprise to take in jest,<br/>
To sketch the bottom of all the universe,<br/>
Nor for a tongue that cries Mamma and Babbo.</p>
<p>
But may those Ladies help this verse of mine,<br/>
Who helped Amphion in enclosing Thebes,<br/>
That from the fact the word be not diverse.</p>
<p>
O rabble ill-begotten above all,<br/>
Who’re in the place to speak of which is hard,<br/>
’Twere better ye had here been sheep or goats!</p>
<p>
When we were down within the darksome well,<br/>
Beneath the giant’s feet, but lower far,<br/>
And I was scanning still the lofty wall,</p>
<p>
I heard it said to me: “Look how thou steppest!<br/>
Take heed thou do not trample with thy feet<br/>
The heads of the tired, miserable brothers!”</p>
<p>
Whereat I turned me round, and saw before me<br/>
And underfoot a lake, that from the frost<br/>
The semblance had of glass, and not of water.</p>
<p>
So thick a veil ne’er made upon its current<br/>
In winter-time Danube in Austria,<br/>
Nor there beneath the frigid sky the Don,</p>
<p>
As there was here; so that if Tambernich<br/>
Had fallen upon it, or Pietrapana,<br/>
E’en at the edge ’twould not have given a creak.</p>
<p>
And as to croak the frog doth place himself<br/>
With muzzle out of water,—when is dreaming<br/>
Of gleaning oftentimes the peasant-girl,—</p>
<p>
Livid, as far down as where shame appears,<br/>
Were the disconsolate shades within the ice,<br/>
Setting their teeth unto the note of storks.</p>
<p>
Each one his countenance held downward bent;<br/>
From mouth the cold, from eyes the doleful heart<br/>
Among them witness of itself procures.</p>
<p>
When round about me somewhat I had looked,<br/>
I downward turned me, and saw two so close,<br/>
The hair upon their heads together mingled.</p>
<p>
“Ye who so strain your breasts together, tell me,”<br/>
I said, “who are you;” and they bent their necks,<br/>
And when to me their faces they had lifted,</p>
<p>
Their eyes, which first were only moist within,<br/>
Gushed o’er the eyelids, and the frost congealed<br/>
The tears between, and locked them up again.</p>
<p>
Clamp never bound together wood with wood<br/>
So strongly; whereat they, like two he-goats,<br/>
Butted together, so much wrath o’ercame them.</p>
<p>
And one, who had by reason of the cold<br/>
Lost both his ears, still with his visage downward,<br/>
Said: “Why dost thou so mirror thyself in us?</p>
<p>
If thou desire to know who these two are,<br/>
The valley whence Bisenzio descends<br/>
Belonged to them and to their father Albert.</p>
<p>
They from one body came, and all Caina<br/>
Thou shalt search through, and shalt not find a shade<br/>
More worthy to be fixed in gelatine;</p>
<p>
Not he in whom were broken breast and shadow<br/>
At one and the same blow by Arthur’s hand;<br/>
Focaccia not; not he who me encumbers</p>
<p>
So with his head I see no farther forward,<br/>
And bore the name of Sassol Mascheroni;<br/>
Well knowest thou who he was, if thou art Tuscan.</p>
<p>
And that thou put me not to further speech,<br/>
Know that I Camicion de’ Pazzi was,<br/>
And wait Carlino to exonerate me.”</p>
<p>
Then I beheld a thousand faces, made<br/>
Purple with cold; whence o’er me comes a shudder,<br/>
And evermore will come, at frozen ponds.</p>
<p>
And while we were advancing tow’rds the middle,<br/>
Where everything of weight unites together,<br/>
And I was shivering in the eternal shade,</p>
<p>
Whether ’twere will, or destiny, or chance,<br/>
I know not; but in walking ’mong the heads<br/>
I struck my foot hard in the face of one.</p>
<p>
Weeping he growled: “Why dost thou trample me?<br/>
Unless thou comest to increase the vengeance<br/>
of Montaperti, why dost thou molest me?”</p>
<p>
And I: “My Master, now wait here for me,<br/>
That I through him may issue from a doubt;<br/>
Then thou mayst hurry me, as thou shalt wish.”</p>
<p>
The Leader stopped; and to that one I said<br/>
Who was blaspheming vehemently still:<br/>
“Who art thou, that thus reprehendest others?”</p>
<p>
“Now who art thou, that goest through Antenora<br/>
Smiting,” replied he, “other people’s cheeks,<br/>
So that, if thou wert living, ’twere too much?”</p>
<p>
“Living I am, and dear to thee it may be,”<br/>
Was my response, “if thou demandest fame,<br/>
That ’mid the other notes thy name I place.”</p>
<p>
And he to me: “For the reverse I long;<br/>
Take thyself hence, and give me no more trouble;<br/>
For ill thou knowest to flatter in this hollow.”</p>
<p>
Then by the scalp behind I seized upon him,<br/>
And said: “It must needs be thou name thyself,<br/>
Or not a hair remain upon thee here.”</p>
<p>
Whence he to me: “Though thou strip off my hair,<br/>
I will not tell thee who I am, nor show thee,<br/>
If on my head a thousand times thou fall.”</p>
<p>
I had his hair in hand already twisted,<br/>
And more than one shock of it had pulled out,<br/>
He barking, with his eyes held firmly down,</p>
<p>
When cried another: “What doth ail thee, Bocca?<br/>
Is’t not enough to clatter with thy jaws,<br/>
But thou must bark? what devil touches thee?”</p>
<p>
“Now,” said I, “I care not to have thee speak,<br/>
Accursed traitor; for unto thy shame<br/>
I will report of thee veracious news.”</p>
<p>
“Begone,” replied he, “and tell what thou wilt,<br/>
But be not silent, if thou issue hence,<br/>
Of him who had just now his tongue so prompt;</p>
<p>
He weepeth here the silver of the French;<br/>
‘I saw,’ thus canst thou phrase it, ‘him of Duera<br/>
There where the sinners stand out in the cold.’</p>
<p>
If thou shouldst questioned be who else was there,<br/>
Thou hast beside thee him of Beccaria,<br/>
Of whom the gorget Florence slit asunder;</p>
<p>
Gianni del Soldanier, I think, may be<br/>
Yonder with Ganellon, and Tebaldello<br/>
Who oped Faenza when the people slep.”</p>
<p>
Already we had gone away from him,<br/>
When I beheld two frozen in one hole,<br/>
So that one head a hood was to the other;</p>
<p>
And even as bread through hunger is devoured,<br/>
The uppermost on the other set his teeth,<br/>
There where the brain is to the nape united.</p>
<p>
Not in another fashion Tydeus gnawed<br/>
The temples of Menalippus in disdain,<br/>
Than that one did the skull and the other things.</p>
<p>
“O thou, who showest by such bestial sign<br/>
Thy hatred against him whom thou art eating,<br/>
Tell me the wherefore,” said I, “with this compact,</p>
<p>
That if thou rightfully of him complain,<br/>
In knowing who ye are, and his transgression,<br/>
I in the world above repay thee for it,</p>
<p>
If that wherewith I speak be not dried up.”</p>
<h2><SPAN name="CantoI.XXXIII"></SPAN>Inferno: Canto XXXIII</h2>
<p>
His mouth uplifted from his grim repast,<br/>
That sinner, wiping it upon the hair<br/>
Of the same head that he behind had wasted.</p>
<p>
Then he began: “Thou wilt that I renew<br/>
The desperate grief, which wrings my heart already<br/>
To think of only, ere I speak of it;</p>
<p>
But if my words be seed that may bear fruit<br/>
Of infamy to the traitor whom I gnaw,<br/>
Speaking and weeping shalt thou see together.</p>
<p>
I know not who thou art, nor by what mode<br/>
Thou hast come down here; but a Florentine<br/>
Thou seemest to me truly, when I hear thee.</p>
<p>
Thou hast to know I was Count Ugolino,<br/>
And this one was Ruggieri the Archbishop;<br/>
Now I will tell thee why I am such a neighbour.</p>
<p>
That, by effect of his malicious thoughts,<br/>
Trusting in him I was made prisoner,<br/>
And after put to death, I need not say;</p>
<p>
But ne’ertheless what thou canst not have heard,<br/>
That is to say, how cruel was my death,<br/>
Hear shalt thou, and shalt know if he has wronged me.</p>
<p>
A narrow perforation in the mew,<br/>
Which bears because of me the title of Famine,<br/>
And in which others still must be locked up,</p>
<p>
Had shown me through its opening many moons<br/>
Already, when I dreamed the evil dream<br/>
Which of the future rent for me the veil.</p>
<p>
This one appeared to me as lord and master,<br/>
Hunting the wolf and whelps upon the mountain<br/>
For which the Pisans cannot Lucca see.</p>
<p>
With sleuth-hounds gaunt, and eager, and well trained,<br/>
Gualandi with Sismondi and Lanfianchi<br/>
He had sent out before him to the front.</p>
<p>
After brief course seemed unto me forespent<br/>
The father and the sons, and with sharp tushes<br/>
It seemed to me I saw their flanks ripped open.</p>
<p>
When I before the morrow was awake,<br/>
Moaning amid their sleep I heard my sons<br/>
Who with me were, and asking after bread.</p>
<p>
Cruel indeed art thou, if yet thou grieve not,<br/>
Thinking of what my heart foreboded me,<br/>
And weep’st thou not, what art thou wont to weep at?</p>
<p>
They were awake now, and the hour drew nigh<br/>
At which our food used to be brought to us,<br/>
And through his dream was each one apprehensive;</p>
<p>
And I heard locking up the under door<br/>
Of the horrible tower; whereat without a word<br/>
I gazed into the faces of my sons.</p>
<p>
I wept not, I within so turned to stone;<br/>
They wept; and darling little Anselm mine<br/>
Said: ‘Thou dost gaze so, father, what doth ail thee?’</p>
<p>
Still not a tear I shed, nor answer made<br/>
All of that day, nor yet the night thereafter,<br/>
Until another sun rose on the world.</p>
<p>
As now a little glimmer made its way<br/>
Into the dolorous prison, and I saw<br/>
Upon four faces my own very aspect,</p>
<p>
Both of my hands in agony I bit;<br/>
And, thinking that I did it from desire<br/>
Of eating, on a sudden they uprose,</p>
<p>
And said they: ‘Father, much less pain ’twill give us<br/>
If thou do eat of us; thyself didst clothe us<br/>
With this poor flesh, and do thou strip it off.’</p>
<p>
I calmed me then, not to make them more sad.<br/>
That day we all were silent, and the next.<br/>
Ah! obdurate earth, wherefore didst thou not open?</p>
<p>
When we had come unto the fourth day, Gaddo<br/>
Threw himself down outstretched before my feet,<br/>
Saying, ‘My father, why dost thou not help me?’</p>
<p>
And there he died; and, as thou seest me,<br/>
I saw the three fall, one by one, between<br/>
The fifth day and the sixth; whence I betook me,</p>
<p>
Already blind, to groping over each,<br/>
And three days called them after they were dead;<br/>
Then hunger did what sorrow could not do.”</p>
<p>
When he had said this, with his eyes distorted,<br/>
The wretched skull resumed he with his teeth,<br/>
Which, as a dog’s, upon the bone were strong.</p>
<p>
Ah! Pisa, thou opprobrium of the people<br/>
Of the fair land there where the ‘Si’ doth sound,<br/>
Since slow to punish thee thy neighbours are,</p>
<p>
Let the Capraia and Gorgona move,<br/>
And make a hedge across the mouth of Arno<br/>
That every person in thee it may drown!</p>
<p>
For if Count Ugolino had the fame<br/>
Of having in thy castles thee betrayed,<br/>
Thou shouldst not on such cross have put his sons.</p>
<p>
Guiltless of any crime, thou modern Thebes!<br/>
Their youth made Uguccione and Brigata,<br/>
And the other two my song doth name above!</p>
<p>
We passed still farther onward, where the ice<br/>
Another people ruggedly enswathes,<br/>
Not downward turned, but all of them reversed.</p>
<p>
Weeping itself there does not let them weep,<br/>
And grief that finds a barrier in the eyes<br/>
Turns itself inward to increase the anguish;</p>
<p>
Because the earliest tears a cluster form,<br/>
And, in the manner of a crystal visor,<br/>
Fill all the cup beneath the eyebrow full.</p>
<p>
And notwithstanding that, as in a callus,<br/>
Because of cold all sensibility<br/>
Its station had abandoned in my face,</p>
<p>
Still it appeared to me I felt some wind;<br/>
Whence I: “My Master, who sets this in motion?<br/>
Is not below here every vapour quenched?”</p>
<p>
Whence he to me: “Full soon shalt thou be where<br/>
Thine eye shall answer make to thee of this,<br/>
Seeing the cause which raineth down the blast.”</p>
<p>
And one of the wretches of the frozen crust<br/>
Cried out to us: “O souls so merciless<br/>
That the last post is given unto you,</p>
<p>
Lift from mine eyes the rigid veils, that I<br/>
May vent the sorrow which impregns my heart<br/>
A little, e’er the weeping recongeal.”</p>
<p>
Whence I to him: “If thou wouldst have me help thee<br/>
Say who thou wast; and if I free thee not,<br/>
May I go to the bottom of the ice.”</p>
<p>
Then he replied: “I am Friar Alberigo;<br/>
He am I of the fruit of the bad garden,<br/>
Who here a date am getting for my fig.”</p>
<p>
“O,” said I to him, “now art thou, too, dead?”<br/>
And he to me: “How may my body fare<br/>
Up in the world, no knowledge I possess.</p>
<p>
Such an advantage has this Ptolomaea,<br/>
That oftentimes the soul descendeth here<br/>
Sooner than Atropos in motion sets it.</p>
<p>
And, that thou mayest more willingly remove<br/>
From off my countenance these glassy tears,<br/>
Know that as soon as any soul betrays</p>
<p>
As I have done, his body by a demon<br/>
Is taken from him, who thereafter rules it,<br/>
Until his time has wholly been revolved.</p>
<p>
Itself down rushes into such a cistern;<br/>
And still perchance above appears the body<br/>
Of yonder shade, that winters here behind me.</p>
<p>
This thou shouldst know, if thou hast just come down;<br/>
It is Ser Branca d’ Oria, and many years<br/>
Have passed away since he was thus locked up.”</p>
<p>
“I think,” said I to him, “thou dost deceive me;<br/>
For Branca d’ Oria is not dead as yet,<br/>
And eats, and drinks, and sleeps, and puts on clothes.”</p>
<p>
“In moat above,” said he, “of Malebranche,<br/>
There where is boiling the tenacious pitch,<br/>
As yet had Michel Zanche not arrived,</p>
<p>
When this one left a devil in his stead<br/>
In his own body and one near of kin,<br/>
Who made together with him the betrayal.</p>
<p>
But hitherward stretch out thy hand forthwith,<br/>
Open mine eyes;”—and open them I did not,<br/>
And to be rude to him was courtesy.</p>
<p>
Ah, Genoese! ye men at variance<br/>
With every virtue, full of every vice<br/>
Wherefore are ye not scattered from the world?</p>
<p>
For with the vilest spirit of Romagna<br/>
I found of you one such, who for his deeds<br/>
In soul already in Cocytus bathes,</p>
<p>
And still above in body seems alive!</p>
<h2><SPAN name="CantoI.XXXIV"></SPAN>Inferno: Canto XXXIV</h2>
<p>
“‘Vexilla Regis prodeunt Inferni’<br/>
Towards us; therefore look in front of thee,”<br/>
My Master said, “if thou discernest him.”</p>
<p>
As, when there breathes a heavy fog, or when<br/>
Our hemisphere is darkening into night,<br/>
Appears far off a mill the wind is turning,</p>
<p>
Methought that such a building then I saw;<br/>
And, for the wind, I drew myself behind<br/>
My Guide, because there was no other shelter.</p>
<p>
Now was I, and with fear in verse I put it,<br/>
There where the shades were wholly covered up,<br/>
And glimmered through like unto straws in glass.</p>
<p>
Some prone are lying, others stand erect,<br/>
This with the head, and that one with the soles;<br/>
Another, bow-like, face to feet inverts.</p>
<p>
When in advance so far we had proceeded,<br/>
That it my Master pleased to show to me<br/>
The creature who once had the beauteous semblance,</p>
<p>
He from before me moved and made me stop,<br/>
Saying: “Behold Dis, and behold the place<br/>
Where thou with fortitude must arm thyself.”</p>
<p>
How frozen I became and powerless then,<br/>
Ask it not, Reader, for I write it not,<br/>
Because all language would be insufficient.</p>
<p>
I did not die, and I alive remained not;<br/>
Think for thyself now, hast thou aught of wit,<br/>
What I became, being of both deprived.</p>
<p>
The Emperor of the kingdom dolorous<br/>
From his mid-breast forth issued from the ice;<br/>
And better with a giant I compare</p>
<p>
Than do the giants with those arms of his;<br/>
Consider now how great must be that whole,<br/>
Which unto such a part conforms itself.</p>
<p>
Were he as fair once, as he now is foul,<br/>
And lifted up his brow against his Maker,<br/>
Well may proceed from him all tribulation.</p>
<p>
O, what a marvel it appeared to me,<br/>
When I beheld three faces on his head!<br/>
The one in front, and that vermilion was;</p>
<p>
Two were the others, that were joined with this<br/>
Above the middle part of either shoulder,<br/>
And they were joined together at the crest;</p>
<p>
And the right-hand one seemed ’twixt white and yellow;<br/>
The left was such to look upon as those<br/>
Who come from where the Nile falls valley-ward.</p>
<p>
Underneath each came forth two mighty wings,<br/>
Such as befitting were so great a bird;<br/>
Sails of the sea I never saw so large.</p>
<p>
No feathers had they, but as of a bat<br/>
Their fashion was; and he was waving them,<br/>
So that three winds proceeded forth therefrom.</p>
<p>
Thereby Cocytus wholly was congealed.<br/>
With six eyes did he weep, and down three chins<br/>
Trickled the tear-drops and the bloody drivel.</p>
<p>
At every mouth he with his teeth was crunching<br/>
A sinner, in the manner of a brake,<br/>
So that he three of them tormented thus.</p>
<p>
To him in front the biting was as naught<br/>
Unto the clawing, for sometimes the spine<br/>
Utterly stripped of all the skin remained.</p>
<p>
“That soul up there which has the greatest pain,”<br/>
The Master said, “is Judas Iscariot;<br/>
With head inside, he plies his legs without.</p>
<p>
Of the two others, who head downward are,<br/>
The one who hangs from the black jowl is Brutus;<br/>
See how he writhes himself, and speaks no word.</p>
<p>
And the other, who so stalwart seems, is Cassius.<br/>
But night is reascending, and ’tis time<br/>
That we depart, for we have seen the whole.”</p>
<p>
As seemed him good, I clasped him round the neck,<br/>
And he the vantage seized of time and place,<br/>
And when the wings were opened wide apart,</p>
<p>
He laid fast hold upon the shaggy sides;<br/>
From fell to fell descended downward then<br/>
Between the thick hair and the frozen crust.</p>
<p>
When we were come to where the thigh revolves<br/>
Exactly on the thickness of the haunch,<br/>
The Guide, with labour and with hard-drawn breath,</p>
<p>
Turned round his head where he had had his legs,<br/>
And grappled to the hair, as one who mounts,<br/>
So that to Hell I thought we were returning.</p>
<p>
“Keep fast thy hold, for by such stairs as these,”<br/>
The Master said, panting as one fatigued,<br/>
“Must we perforce depart from so much evil.”</p>
<p>
Then through the opening of a rock he issued,<br/>
And down upon the margin seated me;<br/>
Then tow’rds me he outstretched his wary step.</p>
<p>
I lifted up mine eyes and thought to see<br/>
Lucifer in the same way I had left him;<br/>
And I beheld him upward hold his legs.</p>
<p>
And if I then became disquieted,<br/>
Let stolid people think who do not see<br/>
What the point is beyond which I had passed.</p>
<p>
“Rise up,” the Master said, “upon thy feet;<br/>
The way is long, and difficult the road,<br/>
And now the sun to middle-tierce returns.”</p>
<p>
It was not any palace corridor<br/>
There where we were, but dungeon natural,<br/>
With floor uneven and unease of light.</p>
<p>
“Ere from the abyss I tear myself away,<br/>
My Master,” said I when I had arisen,<br/>
“To draw me from an error speak a little;</p>
<p>
Where is the ice? and how is this one fixed<br/>
Thus upside down? and how in such short time<br/>
From eve to morn has the sun made his transit?”</p>
<p>
And he to me: “Thou still imaginest<br/>
Thou art beyond the centre, where I grasped<br/>
The hair of the fell worm, who mines the world.</p>
<p>
That side thou wast, so long as I descended;<br/>
When round I turned me, thou didst pass the point<br/>
To which things heavy draw from every side,</p>
<p>
And now beneath the hemisphere art come<br/>
Opposite that which overhangs the vast<br/>
Dry-land, and ’neath whose cope was put to death</p>
<p>
The Man who without sin was born and lived.<br/>
Thou hast thy feet upon the little sphere<br/>
Which makes the other face of the Judecca.</p>
<p>
Here it is morn when it is evening there;<br/>
And he who with his hair a stairway made us<br/>
Still fixed remaineth as he was before.</p>
<p>
Upon this side he fell down out of heaven;<br/>
And all the land, that whilom here emerged,<br/>
For fear of him made of the sea a veil,</p>
<p>
And came to our hemisphere; and peradventure<br/>
To flee from him, what on this side appears<br/>
Left the place vacant here, and back recoiled.”</p>
<p>
A place there is below, from Beelzebub<br/>
As far receding as the tomb extends,<br/>
Which not by sight is known, but by the sound</p>
<p>
Of a small rivulet, that there descendeth<br/>
Through chasm within the stone, which it has gnawed<br/>
With course that winds about and slightly falls.</p>
<p>
The Guide and I into that hidden road<br/>
Now entered, to return to the bright world;<br/>
And without care of having any rest</p>
<p>
We mounted up, he first and I the second,<br/>
Till I beheld through a round aperture<br/>
Some of the beauteous things that Heaven doth bear;</p>
<p>
Thence we came forth to rebehold the stars.</p>
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