<h2><SPAN name="CantoII.VI"></SPAN>Purgatorio: Canto VI</h2>
<p>
Whene’er is broken up the game of Zara,<br/>
He who has lost remains behind despondent,<br/>
The throws repeating, and in sadness learns;</p>
<p>
The people with the other all depart;<br/>
One goes in front, and one behind doth pluck him,<br/>
And at his side one brings himself to mind;</p>
<p>
He pauses not, and this and that one hears;<br/>
They crowd no more to whom his hand he stretches,<br/>
And from the throng he thus defends himself.</p>
<p>
Even such was I in that dense multitude,<br/>
Turning to them this way and that my face,<br/>
And, promising, I freed myself therefrom.</p>
<p>
There was the Aretine, who from the arms<br/>
Untamed of Ghin di Tacco had his death,<br/>
And he who fleeing from pursuit was drowned.</p>
<p>
There was imploring with his hands outstretched<br/>
Frederick Novello, and that one of Pisa<br/>
Who made the good Marzucco seem so strong.</p>
<p>
I saw Count Orso; and the soul divided<br/>
By hatred and by envy from its body,<br/>
As it declared, and not for crime committed,</p>
<p>
Pierre de la Brosse I say; and here provide<br/>
While still on earth the Lady of Brabant,<br/>
So that for this she be of no worse flock!</p>
<p>
As soon as I was free from all those shades<br/>
Who only prayed that some one else may pray,<br/>
So as to hasten their becoming holy,</p>
<p>
Began I: “It appears that thou deniest,<br/>
O light of mine, expressly in some text,<br/>
That orison can bend decree of Heaven;</p>
<p>
And ne’ertheless these people pray for this.<br/>
Might then their expectation bootless be?<br/>
Or is to me thy saying not quite clear?”</p>
<p>
And he to me: “My writing is explicit,<br/>
And not fallacious is the hope of these,<br/>
If with sane intellect ’tis well regarded;</p>
<p>
For top of judgment doth not vail itself,<br/>
Because the fire of love fulfils at once<br/>
What he must satisfy who here installs him.</p>
<p>
And there, where I affirmed that proposition,<br/>
Defect was not amended by a prayer,<br/>
Because the prayer from God was separate.</p>
<p>
Verily, in so deep a questioning<br/>
Do not decide, unless she tell it thee,<br/>
Who light ’twixt truth and intellect shall be.</p>
<p>
I know not if thou understand; I speak<br/>
Of Beatrice; her shalt thou see above,<br/>
Smiling and happy, on this mountain’s top.”</p>
<p>
And I: “Good Leader, let us make more haste,<br/>
For I no longer tire me as before;<br/>
And see, e’en now the hill a shadow casts.”</p>
<p>
“We will go forward with this day” he answered,<br/>
“As far as now is possible for us;<br/>
But otherwise the fact is than thou thinkest.</p>
<p>
Ere thou art up there, thou shalt see return<br/>
Him, who now hides himself behind the hill,<br/>
So that thou dost not interrupt his rays.</p>
<p>
But yonder there behold! a soul that stationed<br/>
All, all alone is looking hitherward;<br/>
It will point out to us the quickest way.”</p>
<p>
We came up unto it; O Lombard soul,<br/>
How lofty and disdainful thou didst bear thee,<br/>
And grand and slow in moving of thine eyes!</p>
<p>
Nothing whatever did it say to us,<br/>
But let us go our way, eying us only<br/>
After the manner of a couchant lion;</p>
<p>
Still near to it Virgilius drew, entreating<br/>
That it would point us out the best ascent;<br/>
And it replied not unto his demand,</p>
<p>
But of our native land and of our life<br/>
It questioned us; and the sweet Guide began:<br/>
“Mantua,”—and the shade, all in itself recluse,</p>
<p>
Rose tow’rds him from the place where first it was,<br/>
Saying: “O Mantuan, I am Sordello<br/>
Of thine own land!” and one embraced the other.</p>
<p>
Ah! servile Italy, grief’s hostelry!<br/>
A ship without a pilot in great tempest!<br/>
No Lady thou of Provinces, but brothel!</p>
<p>
That noble soul was so impatient, only<br/>
At the sweet sound of his own native land,<br/>
To make its citizen glad welcome there;</p>
<p>
And now within thee are not without war<br/>
Thy living ones, and one doth gnaw the other<br/>
Of those whom one wall and one fosse shut in!</p>
<p>
Search, wretched one, all round about the shores<br/>
Thy seaboard, and then look within thy bosom,<br/>
If any part of thee enjoyeth peace!</p>
<p>
What boots it, that for thee Justinian<br/>
The bridle mend, if empty be the saddle?<br/>
Withouten this the shame would be the less.</p>
<p>
Ah! people, thou that oughtest to be devout,<br/>
And to let Caesar sit upon the saddle,<br/>
If well thou hearest what God teacheth thee,</p>
<p>
Behold how fell this wild beast has become,<br/>
Being no longer by the spur corrected,<br/>
Since thou hast laid thy hand upon the bridle.</p>
<p>
O German Albert! who abandonest<br/>
Her that has grown recalcitrant and savage,<br/>
And oughtest to bestride her saddle-bow,</p>
<p>
May a just judgment from the stars down fall<br/>
Upon thy blood, and be it new and open,<br/>
That thy successor may have fear thereof;</p>
<p>
Because thy father and thyself have suffered,<br/>
By greed of those transalpine lands distrained,<br/>
The garden of the empire to be waste.</p>
<p>
Come and behold Montecchi and Cappelletti,<br/>
Monaldi and Fillippeschi, careless man!<br/>
Those sad already, and these doubt-depressed!</p>
<p>
Come, cruel one! come and behold the oppression<br/>
Of thy nobility, and cure their wounds,<br/>
And thou shalt see how safe is Santafiore!</p>
<p>
Come and behold thy Rome, that is lamenting,<br/>
Widowed, alone, and day and night exclaims,<br/>
“My Caesar, why hast thou forsaken me?”</p>
<p>
Come and behold how loving are the people;<br/>
And if for us no pity moveth thee,<br/>
Come and be made ashamed of thy renown!</p>
<p>
And if it lawful be, O Jove Supreme!<br/>
Who upon earth for us wast crucified,<br/>
Are thy just eyes averted otherwhere?</p>
<p>
Or preparation is ’t, that, in the abyss<br/>
Of thine own counsel, for some good thou makest<br/>
From our perception utterly cut off?</p>
<p>
For all the towns of Italy are full<br/>
Of tyrants, and becometh a Marcellus<br/>
Each peasant churl who plays the partisan!</p>
<p>
My Florence! well mayst thou contented be<br/>
With this digression, which concerns thee not,<br/>
Thanks to thy people who such forethought take!</p>
<p>
Many at heart have justice, but shoot slowly,<br/>
That unadvised they come not to the bow,<br/>
But on their very lips thy people have it!</p>
<p>
Many refuse to bear the common burden;<br/>
But thy solicitous people answereth<br/>
Without being asked, and crieth: “I submit.”</p>
<p>
Now be thou joyful, for thou hast good reason;<br/>
Thou affluent, thou in peace, thou full of wisdom!<br/>
If I speak true, the event conceals it not.</p>
<p>
Athens and Lacedaemon, they who made<br/>
The ancient laws, and were so civilized,<br/>
Made towards living well a little sign</p>
<p>
Compared with thee, who makest such fine-spun<br/>
Provisions, that to middle of November<br/>
Reaches not what thou in October spinnest.</p>
<p>
How oft, within the time of thy remembrance,<br/>
Laws, money, offices, and usages<br/>
Hast thou remodelled, and renewed thy members?</p>
<p>
And if thou mind thee well, and see the light,<br/>
Thou shalt behold thyself like a sick woman,<br/>
Who cannot find repose upon her down,</p>
<p>
But by her tossing wardeth off her pain.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="CantoII.VII"></SPAN>Purgatorio: Canto VII</h2>
<p>
After the gracious and glad salutations<br/>
Had three and four times been reiterated,<br/>
Sordello backward drew and said, “Who are you?”</p>
<p>
“Or ever to this mountain were directed<br/>
The souls deserving to ascend to God,<br/>
My bones were buried by Octavian.</p>
<p>
I am Virgilius; and for no crime else<br/>
Did I lose heaven, than for not having faith;”<br/>
In this wise then my Leader made reply.</p>
<p>
As one who suddenly before him sees<br/>
Something whereat he marvels, who believes<br/>
And yet does not, saying, “It is! it is not!”</p>
<p>
So he appeared; and then bowed down his brow,<br/>
And with humility returned towards him,<br/>
And, where inferiors embrace, embraced him.</p>
<p>
“O glory of the Latians, thou,” he said,<br/>
“Through whom our language showed what it could do<br/>
O pride eternal of the place I came from,</p>
<p>
What merit or what grace to me reveals thee?<br/>
If I to hear thy words be worthy, tell me<br/>
If thou dost come from Hell, and from what cloister.”</p>
<p>
“Through all the circles of the doleful realm,”<br/>
Responded he, “have I come hitherward;<br/>
Heaven’s power impelled me, and with that I come.</p>
<p>
I by not doing, not by doing, lost<br/>
The sight of that high sun which thou desirest,<br/>
And which too late by me was recognized.</p>
<p>
A place there is below not sad with torments,<br/>
But darkness only, where the lamentations<br/>
Have not the sound of wailing, but are sighs.</p>
<p>
There dwell I with the little innocents<br/>
Snatched by the teeth of Death, or ever they<br/>
Were from our human sinfulness exempt.</p>
<p>
There dwell I among those who the three saintly<br/>
Virtues did not put on, and without vice<br/>
The others knew and followed all of them.</p>
<p>
But if thou know and can, some indication<br/>
Give us by which we may the sooner come<br/>
Where Purgatory has its right beginning.”</p>
<p>
He answered: “No fixed place has been assigned us;<br/>
’Tis lawful for me to go up and round;<br/>
So far as I can go, as guide I join thee.</p>
<p>
But see already how the day declines,<br/>
And to go up by night we are not able;<br/>
Therefore ’tis well to think of some fair sojourn.</p>
<p>
Souls are there on the right hand here withdrawn;<br/>
If thou permit me I will lead thee to them,<br/>
And thou shalt know them not without delight.”</p>
<p>
“How is this?” was the answer; “should one wish<br/>
To mount by night would he prevented be<br/>
By others? or mayhap would not have power?”</p>
<p>
And on the ground the good Sordello drew<br/>
His finger, saying, “See, this line alone<br/>
Thou couldst not pass after the sun is gone;</p>
<p>
Not that aught else would hindrance give, however,<br/>
To going up, save the nocturnal darkness;<br/>
This with the want of power the will perplexes.</p>
<p>
We might indeed therewith return below,<br/>
And, wandering, walk the hill-side round about,<br/>
While the horizon holds the day imprisoned.”</p>
<p>
Thereon my Lord, as if in wonder, said:<br/>
“Do thou conduct us thither, where thou sayest<br/>
That we can take delight in tarrying.”</p>
<p>
Little had we withdrawn us from that place,<br/>
When I perceived the mount was hollowed out<br/>
In fashion as the valleys here are hollowed.</p>
<p>
“Thitherward,” said that shade, “will we repair,<br/>
Where of itself the hill-side makes a lap,<br/>
And there for the new day will we await.”</p>
<p>
’Twixt hill and plain there was a winding path<br/>
Which led us to the margin of that dell,<br/>
Where dies the border more than half away.</p>
<p>
Gold and fine silver, and scarlet and pearl-white,<br/>
The Indian wood resplendent and serene,<br/>
Fresh emerald the moment it is broken,</p>
<p>
By herbage and by flowers within that hollow<br/>
Planted, each one in colour would be vanquished,<br/>
As by its greater vanquished is the less.</p>
<p>
Nor in that place had nature painted only,<br/>
But of the sweetness of a thousand odours<br/>
Made there a mingled fragrance and unknown.</p>
<p>
“Salve Regina,” on the green and flowers<br/>
There seated, singing, spirits I beheld,<br/>
Which were not visible outside the valley.</p>
<p>
“Before the scanty sun now seeks his nest,”<br/>
Began the Mantuan who had led us thither,<br/>
“Among them do not wish me to conduct you.</p>
<p>
Better from off this ledge the acts and faces<br/>
Of all of them will you discriminate,<br/>
Than in the plain below received among them.</p>
<p>
He who sits highest, and the semblance bears<br/>
Of having what he should have done neglected,<br/>
And to the others’ song moves not his lips,</p>
<p>
Rudolph the Emperor was, who had the power<br/>
To heal the wounds that Italy have slain,<br/>
So that through others slowly she revives.</p>
<p>
The other, who in look doth comfort him,<br/>
Governed the region where the water springs,<br/>
The Moldau bears the Elbe, and Elbe the sea.</p>
<p>
His name was Ottocar; and in swaddling-clothes<br/>
Far better he than bearded Winceslaus<br/>
His son, who feeds in luxury and ease.</p>
<p>
And the small-nosed, who close in council seems<br/>
With him that has an aspect so benign,<br/>
Died fleeing and disflowering the lily;</p>
<p>
Look there, how he is beating at his breast!<br/>
Behold the other one, who for his cheek<br/>
Sighing has made of his own palm a bed;</p>
<p>
Father and father-in-law of France’s Pest<br/>
Are they, and know his vicious life and lewd,<br/>
And hence proceeds the grief that so doth pierce them.</p>
<p>
He who appears so stalwart, and chimes in,<br/>
Singing, with that one of the manly nose,<br/>
The cord of every valour wore begirt;</p>
<p>
And if as King had after him remained<br/>
The stripling who in rear of him is sitting,<br/>
Well had the valour passed from vase to vase,</p>
<p>
Which cannot of the other heirs be said.<br/>
Frederick and Jacomo possess the realms,<br/>
But none the better heritage possesses.</p>
<p>
Not oftentimes upriseth through the branches<br/>
The probity of man; and this He wills<br/>
Who gives it, so that we may ask of Him.</p>
<p>
Eke to the large-nosed reach my words, no less<br/>
Than to the other, Pier, who with him sings;<br/>
Whence Provence and Apulia grieve already</p>
<p>
The plant is as inferior to its seed,<br/>
As more than Beatrice and Margaret<br/>
Costanza boasteth of her husband still.</p>
<p>
Behold the monarch of the simple life,<br/>
Harry of England, sitting there alone;<br/>
He in his branches has a better issue.</p>
<p>
He who the lowest on the ground among them<br/>
Sits looking upward, is the Marquis William,<br/>
For whose sake Alessandria and her war</p>
<p>
Make Monferrat and Canavese weep.”</p>
<h2><SPAN name="CantoII.VIII"></SPAN>Purgatorio: Canto VIII</h2>
<p>
’Twas now the hour that turneth back desire<br/>
In those who sail the sea, and melts the heart,<br/>
The day they’ve said to their sweet friends farewell,</p>
<p>
And the new pilgrim penetrates with love,<br/>
If he doth hear from far away a bell<br/>
That seemeth to deplore the dying day,</p>
<p>
When I began to make of no avail<br/>
My hearing, and to watch one of the souls<br/>
Uprisen, that begged attention with its hand.</p>
<p>
It joined and lifted upward both its palms,<br/>
Fixing its eyes upon the orient,<br/>
As if it said to God, “Naught else I care for.”</p>
<p>
“Te lucis ante” so devoutly issued<br/>
Forth from its mouth, and with such dulcet notes,<br/>
It made me issue forth from my own mind.</p>
<p>
And then the others, sweetly and devoutly,<br/>
Accompanied it through all the hymn entire,<br/>
Having their eyes on the supernal wheels.</p>
<p>
Here, Reader, fix thine eyes well on the truth,<br/>
For now indeed so subtile is the veil,<br/>
Surely to penetrate within is easy.</p>
<p>
I saw that army of the gentle-born<br/>
Thereafterward in silence upward gaze,<br/>
As if in expectation, pale and humble;</p>
<p>
And from on high come forth and down descend,<br/>
I saw two Angels with two flaming swords,<br/>
Truncated and deprived of their points.</p>
<p>
Green as the little leaflets just now born<br/>
Their garments were, which, by their verdant pinions<br/>
Beaten and blown abroad, they trailed behind.</p>
<p>
One just above us came to take his station,<br/>
And one descended to the opposite bank,<br/>
So that the people were contained between them.</p>
<p>
Clearly in them discerned I the blond head;<br/>
But in their faces was the eye bewildered,<br/>
As faculty confounded by excess.</p>
<p>
“From Mary’s bosom both of them have come,”<br/>
Sordello said, “as guardians of the valley<br/>
Against the serpent, that will come anon.”</p>
<p>
Whereupon I, who knew not by what road,<br/>
Turned round about, and closely drew myself,<br/>
Utterly frozen, to the faithful shoulders.</p>
<p>
And once again Sordello: “Now descend we<br/>
’Mid the grand shades, and we will speak to them;<br/>
Right pleasant will it be for them to see you.”</p>
<p>
Only three steps I think that I descended,<br/>
And was below, and saw one who was looking<br/>
Only at me, as if he fain would know me.</p>
<p>
Already now the air was growing dark,<br/>
But not so that between his eyes and mine<br/>
It did not show what it before locked up.</p>
<p>
Tow’rds me he moved, and I tow’rds him did move;<br/>
Noble Judge Nino! how it me delighted,<br/>
When I beheld thee not among the damned!</p>
<p>
No greeting fair was left unsaid between us;<br/>
Then asked he: “How long is it since thou camest<br/>
O’er the far waters to the mountain’s foot?”</p>
<p>
“Oh!” said I to him, “through the dismal places<br/>
I came this morn; and am in the first life,<br/>
Albeit the other, going thus, I gain.”</p>
<p>
And on the instant my reply was heard,<br/>
He and Sordello both shrank back from me,<br/>
Like people who are suddenly bewildered.</p>
<p>
One to Virgilius, and the other turned<br/>
To one who sat there, crying, “Up, Currado!<br/>
Come and behold what God in grace has willed!”</p>
<p>
Then, turned to me: “By that especial grace<br/>
Thou owest unto Him, who so conceals<br/>
His own first wherefore, that it has no ford,</p>
<p>
When thou shalt be beyond the waters wide,<br/>
Tell my Giovanna that she pray for me,<br/>
Where answer to the innocent is made.</p>
<p>
I do not think her mother loves me more,<br/>
Since she has laid aside her wimple white,<br/>
Which she, unhappy, needs must wish again.</p>
<p>
Through her full easily is comprehended<br/>
How long in woman lasts the fire of love,<br/>
If eye or touch do not relight it often.</p>
<p>
So fair a hatchment will not make for her<br/>
The Viper marshalling the Milanese<br/>
A-field, as would have made Gallura’s Cock.”</p>
<p>
In this wise spake he, with the stamp impressed<br/>
Upon his aspect of that righteous zeal<br/>
Which measurably burneth in the heart.</p>
<p>
My greedy eyes still wandered up to heaven,<br/>
Still to that point where slowest are the stars,<br/>
Even as a wheel the nearest to its axle.</p>
<p>
And my Conductor: “Son, what dost thou gaze at<br/>
Up there?” And I to him: “At those three torches<br/>
With which this hither pole is all on fire.”</p>
<p>
And he to me: “The four resplendent stars<br/>
Thou sawest this morning are down yonder low,<br/>
And these have mounted up to where those were.”</p>
<p>
As he was speaking, to himself Sordello<br/>
Drew him, and said, “Lo there our Adversary!”<br/>
And pointed with his finger to look thither.</p>
<p>
Upon the side on which the little valley<br/>
No barrier hath, a serpent was; perchance<br/>
The same which gave to Eve the bitter food.</p>
<p>
’Twixt grass and flowers came on the evil streak,<br/>
Turning at times its head about, and licking<br/>
Its back like to a beast that smoothes itself.</p>
<p>
I did not see, and therefore cannot say<br/>
How the celestial falcons ’gan to move,<br/>
But well I saw that they were both in motion.</p>
<p>
Hearing the air cleft by their verdant wings,<br/>
The serpent fled, and round the Angels wheeled,<br/>
Up to their stations flying back alike.</p>
<p>
The shade that to the Judge had near approached<br/>
When he had called, throughout that whole assault<br/>
Had not a moment loosed its gaze on me.</p>
<p>
“So may the light that leadeth thee on high<br/>
Find in thine own free-will as much of wax<br/>
As needful is up to the highest azure,”</p>
<p>
Began it, “if some true intelligence<br/>
Of Valdimagra or its neighbourhood<br/>
Thou knowest, tell it me, who once was great there.</p>
<p>
Currado Malaspina was I called;<br/>
I’m not the elder, but from him descended;<br/>
To mine I bore the love which here refineth.”</p>
<p>
“O,” said I unto him, “through your domains<br/>
I never passed, but where is there a dwelling<br/>
Throughout all Europe, where they are not known?</p>
<p>
That fame, which doeth honour to your house,<br/>
Proclaims its Signors and proclaims its land,<br/>
So that he knows of them who ne’er was there.</p>
<p>
And, as I hope for heaven, I swear to you<br/>
Your honoured family in naught abates<br/>
The glory of the purse and of the sword.</p>
<p>
It is so privileged by use and nature,<br/>
That though a guilty head misguide the world,<br/>
Sole it goes right, and scorns the evil way.”</p>
<p>
And he: “Now go; for the sun shall not lie<br/>
Seven times upon the pillow which the Ram<br/>
With all his four feet covers and bestrides,</p>
<p>
Before that such a courteous opinion<br/>
Shall in the middle of thy head be nailed<br/>
With greater nails than of another’s speech,</p>
<p>
Unless the course of justice standeth still.”</p>
<h2><SPAN name="CantoII.IX"></SPAN>Purgatorio: Canto IX</h2>
<p>
The concubine of old Tithonus now<br/>
Gleamed white upon the eastern balcony,<br/>
Forth from the arms of her sweet paramour;</p>
<p>
With gems her forehead all relucent was,<br/>
Set in the shape of that cold animal<br/>
Which with its tail doth smite amain the nations,</p>
<p>
And of the steps, with which she mounts, the Night<br/>
Had taken two in that place where we were,<br/>
And now the third was bending down its wings;</p>
<p>
When I, who something had of Adam in me,<br/>
Vanquished by sleep, upon the grass reclined,<br/>
There were all five of us already sat.</p>
<p>
Just at the hour when her sad lay begins<br/>
The little swallow, near unto the morning,<br/>
Perchance in memory of her former woes,</p>
<p>
And when the mind of man, a wanderer<br/>
More from the flesh, and less by thought imprisoned,<br/>
Almost prophetic in its visions is,</p>
<p>
In dreams it seemed to me I saw suspended<br/>
An eagle in the sky, with plumes of gold,<br/>
With wings wide open, and intent to stoop,</p>
<p>
And this, it seemed to me, was where had been<br/>
By Ganymede his kith and kin abandoned,<br/>
When to the high consistory he was rapt.</p>
<p>
I thought within myself, perchance he strikes<br/>
From habit only here, and from elsewhere<br/>
Disdains to bear up any in his feet.</p>
<p>
Then wheeling somewhat more, it seemed to me,<br/>
Terrible as the lightning he descended,<br/>
And snatched me upward even to the fire.</p>
<p>
Therein it seemed that he and I were burning,<br/>
And the imagined fire did scorch me so,<br/>
That of necessity my sleep was broken.</p>
<p>
Not otherwise Achilles started up,<br/>
Around him turning his awakened eyes,<br/>
And knowing not the place in which he was,</p>
<p>
What time from Chiron stealthily his mother<br/>
Carried him sleeping in her arms to Scyros,<br/>
Wherefrom the Greeks withdrew him afterwards,</p>
<p>
Than I upstarted, when from off my face<br/>
Sleep fled away; and pallid I became,<br/>
As doth the man who freezes with affright.</p>
<p>
Only my Comforter was at my side,<br/>
And now the sun was more than two hours high,<br/>
And turned towards the sea-shore was my face.</p>
<p>
“Be not intimidated,” said my Lord,<br/>
“Be reassured, for all is well with us;<br/>
Do not restrain, but put forth all thy strength.</p>
<p>
Thou hast at length arrived at Purgatory;<br/>
See there the cliff that closes it around;<br/>
See there the entrance, where it seems disjoined.</p>
<p>
Whilom at dawn, which doth precede the day,<br/>
When inwardly thy spirit was asleep<br/>
Upon the flowers that deck the land below,</p>
<p>
There came a Lady and said: ‘I am Lucia;<br/>
Let me take this one up, who is asleep;<br/>
So will I make his journey easier for him.’</p>
<p>
Sordello and the other noble shapes<br/>
Remained; she took thee, and, as day grew bright,<br/>
Upward she came, and I upon her footsteps.</p>
<p>
She laid thee here; and first her beauteous eyes<br/>
That open entrance pointed out to me;<br/>
Then she and sleep together went away.”</p>
<p>
In guise of one whose doubts are reassured,<br/>
And who to confidence his fear doth change,<br/>
After the truth has been discovered to him,</p>
<p>
So did I change; and when without disquiet<br/>
My Leader saw me, up along the cliff<br/>
He moved, and I behind him, tow’rd the height.</p>
<p>
Reader, thou seest well how I exalt<br/>
My theme, and therefore if with greater art<br/>
I fortify it, marvel not thereat.</p>
<p>
Nearer approached we, and were in such place,<br/>
That there, where first appeared to me a rift<br/>
Like to a crevice that disparts a wall,</p>
<p>
I saw a portal, and three stairs beneath,<br/>
Diverse in colour, to go up to it,<br/>
And a gate-keeper, who yet spake no word.</p>
<p>
And as I opened more and more mine eyes,<br/>
I saw him seated on the highest stair,<br/>
Such in the face that I endured it not.</p>
<p>
And in his hand he had a naked sword,<br/>
Which so reflected back the sunbeams tow’rds us,<br/>
That oft in vain I lifted up mine eyes.</p>
<p>
“Tell it from where you are, what is’t you wish?”<br/>
Began he to exclaim; “where is the escort?<br/>
Take heed your coming hither harm you not!”</p>
<p>
“A Lady of Heaven, with these things conversant,”<br/>
My Master answered him, “but even now<br/>
Said to us, ‘Thither go; there is the portal.’”</p>
<p>
“And may she speed your footsteps in all good,”<br/>
Again began the courteous janitor;<br/>
“Come forward then unto these stairs of ours.”</p>
<p>
Thither did we approach; and the first stair<br/>
Was marble white, so polished and so smooth,<br/>
I mirrored myself therein as I appear.</p>
<p>
The second, tinct of deeper hue than perse,<br/>
Was of a calcined and uneven stone,<br/>
Cracked all asunder lengthwise and across.</p>
<p>
The third, that uppermost rests massively,<br/>
Porphyry seemed to me, as flaming red<br/>
As blood that from a vein is spirting forth.</p>
<p>
Both of his feet was holding upon this<br/>
The Angel of God, upon the threshold seated,<br/>
Which seemed to me a stone of diamond.</p>
<p>
Along the three stairs upward with good will<br/>
Did my Conductor draw me, saying: “Ask<br/>
Humbly that he the fastening may undo.”</p>
<p>
Devoutly at the holy feet I cast me,<br/>
For mercy’s sake besought that he would open,<br/>
But first upon my breast three times I smote.</p>
<p>
Seven P’s upon my forehead he described<br/>
With the sword’s point, and, “Take heed that thou wash<br/>
These wounds, when thou shalt be within,” he said.</p>
<p>
Ashes, or earth that dry is excavated,<br/>
Of the same colour were with his attire,<br/>
And from beneath it he drew forth two keys.</p>
<p>
One was of gold, and the other was of silver;<br/>
First with the white, and after with the yellow,<br/>
Plied he the door, so that I was content.</p>
<p>
“Whenever faileth either of these keys<br/>
So that it turn not rightly in the lock,”<br/>
He said to us, “this entrance doth not open.</p>
<p>
More precious one is, but the other needs<br/>
More art and intellect ere it unlock,<br/>
For it is that which doth the knot unloose.</p>
<p>
From Peter I have them; and he bade me err<br/>
Rather in opening than in keeping shut,<br/>
If people but fall down before my feet.”</p>
<p>
Then pushed the portals of the sacred door,<br/>
Exclaiming: “Enter; but I give you warning<br/>
That forth returns whoever looks behind.”</p>
<p>
And when upon their hinges were turned round<br/>
The swivels of that consecrated gate,<br/>
Which are of metal, massive and sonorous,</p>
<p>
Roared not so loud, nor so discordant seemed<br/>
Tarpeia, when was ta’en from it the good<br/>
Metellus, wherefore meagre it remained.</p>
<p>
At the first thunder-peal I turned attentive,<br/>
And “Te Deum laudamus” seemed to hear<br/>
In voices mingled with sweet melody.</p>
<p>
Exactly such an image rendered me<br/>
That which I heard, as we are wont to catch,<br/>
When people singing with the organ stand;</p>
<p>
For now we hear, and now hear not, the words.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="CantoII.X"></SPAN>Purgatorio: Canto X</h2>
<p>
When we had crossed the threshold of the door<br/>
Which the perverted love of souls disuses,<br/>
Because it makes the crooked way seem straight,</p>
<p>
Re-echoing I heard it closed again;<br/>
And if I had turned back mine eyes upon it,<br/>
What for my failing had been fit excuse?</p>
<p>
We mounted upward through a rifted rock,<br/>
Which undulated to this side and that,<br/>
Even as a wave receding and advancing.</p>
<p>
“Here it behoves us use a little art,”<br/>
Began my Leader, “to adapt ourselves<br/>
Now here, now there, to the receding side.”</p>
<p>
And this our footsteps so infrequent made,<br/>
That sooner had the moon’s decreasing disk<br/>
Regained its bed to sink again to rest,</p>
<p>
Than we were forth from out that needle’s eye;<br/>
But when we free and in the open were,<br/>
There where the mountain backward piles itself,</p>
<p>
I wearied out, and both of us uncertain<br/>
About our way, we stopped upon a plain<br/>
More desolate than roads across the deserts.</p>
<p>
From where its margin borders on the void,<br/>
To foot of the high bank that ever rises,<br/>
A human body three times told would measure;</p>
<p>
And far as eye of mine could wing its flight,<br/>
Now on the left, and on the right flank now,<br/>
The same this cornice did appear to me.</p>
<p>
Thereon our feet had not been moved as yet,<br/>
When I perceived the embankment round about,<br/>
Which all right of ascent had interdicted,</p>
<p>
To be of marble white, and so adorned<br/>
With sculptures, that not only Polycletus,<br/>
But Nature’s self, had there been put to shame.</p>
<p>
The Angel, who came down to earth with tidings<br/>
Of peace, that had been wept for many a year,<br/>
And opened Heaven from its long interdict,</p>
<p>
In front of us appeared so truthfully<br/>
There sculptured in a gracious attitude,<br/>
He did not seem an image that is silent.</p>
<p>
One would have sworn that he was saying, “Ave;”<br/>
For she was there in effigy portrayed<br/>
Who turned the key to ope the exalted love,</p>
<p>
And in her mien this language had impressed,<br/>
“Ecce ancilla Dei,” as distinctly<br/>
As any figure stamps itself in wax.</p>
<p>
“Keep not thy mind upon one place alone,”<br/>
The gentle Master said, who had me standing<br/>
Upon that side where people have their hearts;</p>
<p>
Whereat I moved mine eyes, and I beheld<br/>
In rear of Mary, and upon that side<br/>
Where he was standing who conducted me,</p>
<p>
Another story on the rock imposed;<br/>
Wherefore I passed Virgilius and drew near,<br/>
So that before mine eyes it might be set.</p>
<p>
There sculptured in the self-same marble were<br/>
The cart and oxen, drawing the holy ark,<br/>
Wherefore one dreads an office not appointed.</p>
<p>
People appeared in front, and all of them<br/>
In seven choirs divided, of two senses<br/>
Made one say “No,” the other, “Yes, they sing.”</p>
<p>
Likewise unto the smoke of the frankincense,<br/>
Which there was imaged forth, the eyes and nose<br/>
Were in the yes and no discordant made.</p>
<p>
Preceded there the vessel benedight,<br/>
Dancing with girded loins, the humble Psalmist,<br/>
And more and less than King was he in this.</p>
<p>
Opposite, represented at the window<br/>
Of a great palace, Michal looked upon him,<br/>
Even as a woman scornful and afflicted.</p>
<p>
I moved my feet from where I had been standing,<br/>
To examine near at hand another story,<br/>
Which after Michal glimmered white upon me.</p>
<p>
There the high glory of the Roman Prince<br/>
Was chronicled, whose great beneficence<br/>
Moved Gregory to his great victory;</p>
<p>
’Tis of the Emperor Trajan I am speaking;<br/>
And a poor widow at his bridle stood,<br/>
In attitude of weeping and of grief.</p>
<p>
Around about him seemed it thronged and full<br/>
Of cavaliers, and the eagles in the gold<br/>
Above them visibly in the wind were moving.</p>
<p>
The wretched woman in the midst of these<br/>
Seemed to be saying: “Give me vengeance, Lord,<br/>
For my dead son, for whom my heart is breaking.”</p>
<p>
And he to answer her: “Now wait until<br/>
I shall return.” And she: “My Lord,” like one<br/>
In whom grief is impatient, “shouldst thou not</p>
<p>
Return?” And he: “Who shall be where I am<br/>
Will give it thee.” And she: “Good deed of others<br/>
What boots it thee, if thou neglect thine own?”</p>
<p>
Whence he: “Now comfort thee, for it behoves me<br/>
That I discharge my duty ere I move;<br/>
Justice so wills, and pity doth retain me.”</p>
<p>
He who on no new thing has ever looked<br/>
Was the creator of this visible language,<br/>
Novel to us, for here it is not found.</p>
<p>
While I delighted me in contemplating<br/>
The images of such humility,<br/>
And dear to look on for their Maker’s sake,</p>
<p>
“Behold, upon this side, but rare they make<br/>
Their steps,” the Poet murmured, “many people;<br/>
These will direct us to the lofty stairs.”</p>
<p>
Mine eyes, that in beholding were intent<br/>
To see new things, of which they curious are,<br/>
In turning round towards him were not slow.</p>
<p>
But still I wish not, Reader, thou shouldst swerve<br/>
From thy good purposes, because thou hearest<br/>
How God ordaineth that the debt be paid;</p>
<p>
Attend not to the fashion of the torment,<br/>
Think of what follows; think that at the worst<br/>
It cannot reach beyond the mighty sentence.</p>
<p>
“Master,” began I, “that which I behold<br/>
Moving towards us seems to me not persons,<br/>
And what I know not, so in sight I waver.”</p>
<p>
And he to me: “The grievous quality<br/>
Of this their torment bows them so to earth,<br/>
That my own eyes at first contended with it;</p>
<p>
But look there fixedly, and disentangle<br/>
By sight what cometh underneath those stones;<br/>
Already canst thou see how each is stricken.”</p>
<p>
O ye proud Christians! wretched, weary ones!<br/>
Who, in the vision of the mind infirm<br/>
Confidence have in your backsliding steps,</p>
<p>
Do ye not comprehend that we are worms,<br/>
Born to bring forth the angelic butterfly<br/>
That flieth unto judgment without screen?</p>
<p>
Why floats aloft your spirit high in air?<br/>
Like are ye unto insects undeveloped,<br/>
Even as the worm in whom formation fails!</p>
<p>
As to sustain a ceiling or a roof,<br/>
In place of corbel, oftentimes a figure<br/>
Is seen to join its knees unto its breast,</p>
<p>
Which makes of the unreal real anguish<br/>
Arise in him who sees it, fashioned thus<br/>
Beheld I those, when I had ta’en good heed.</p>
<p>
True is it, they were more or less bent down,<br/>
According as they more or less were laden;<br/>
And he who had most patience in his looks</p>
<p>
Weeping did seem to say, “I can no more!”</p>
<h2><SPAN name="CantoII.XI"></SPAN>Purgatorio: Canto XI</h2>
<p>
“Our Father, thou who dwellest in the heavens,<br/>
Not circumscribed, but from the greater love<br/>
Thou bearest to the first effects on high,</p>
<p>
Praised be thy name and thine omnipotence<br/>
By every creature, as befitting is<br/>
To render thanks to thy sweet effluence.</p>
<p>
Come unto us the peace of thy dominion,<br/>
For unto it we cannot of ourselves,<br/>
If it come not, with all our intellect.</p>
<p>
Even as thine own Angels of their will<br/>
Make sacrifice to thee, Hosanna singing,<br/>
So may all men make sacrifice of theirs.</p>
<p>
Give unto us this day our daily manna,<br/>
Withouten which in this rough wilderness<br/>
Backward goes he who toils most to advance.</p>
<p>
And even as we the trespass we have suffered<br/>
Pardon in one another, pardon thou<br/>
Benignly, and regard not our desert.</p>
<p>
Our virtue, which is easily o’ercome,<br/>
Put not to proof with the old Adversary,<br/>
But thou from him who spurs it so, deliver.</p>
<p>
This last petition verily, dear Lord,<br/>
Not for ourselves is made, who need it not,<br/>
But for their sake who have remained behind us.”</p>
<p>
Thus for themselves and us good furtherance<br/>
Those shades imploring, went beneath a weight<br/>
Like unto that of which we sometimes dream,</p>
<p>
Unequally in anguish round and round<br/>
And weary all, upon that foremost cornice,<br/>
Purging away the smoke-stains of the world.</p>
<p>
If there good words are always said for us,<br/>
What may not here be said and done for them,<br/>
By those who have a good root to their will?</p>
<p>
Well may we help them wash away the marks<br/>
That hence they carried, so that clean and light<br/>
They may ascend unto the starry wheels!</p>
<p>
“Ah! so may pity and justice you disburden<br/>
Soon, that ye may have power to move the wing,<br/>
That shall uplift you after your desire,</p>
<p>
Show us on which hand tow’rd the stairs the way<br/>
Is shortest, and if more than one the passes,<br/>
Point us out that which least abruptly falls;</p>
<p>
For he who cometh with me, through the burden<br/>
Of Adam’s flesh wherewith he is invested,<br/>
Against his will is chary of his climbing.”</p>
<p>
The words of theirs which they returned to those<br/>
That he whom I was following had spoken,<br/>
It was not manifest from whom they came,</p>
<p>
But it was said: “To the right hand come with us<br/>
Along the bank, and ye shall find a pass<br/>
Possible for living person to ascend.</p>
<p>
And were I not impeded by the stone,<br/>
Which this proud neck of mine doth subjugate,<br/>
Whence I am forced to hold my visage down,</p>
<p>
Him, who still lives and does not name himself,<br/>
Would I regard, to see if I may know him<br/>
And make him piteous unto this burden.</p>
<p>
A Latian was I, and born of a great Tuscan;<br/>
Guglielmo Aldobrandeschi was my father;<br/>
I know not if his name were ever with you.</p>
<p>
The ancient blood and deeds of gallantry<br/>
Of my progenitors so arrogant made me<br/>
That, thinking not upon the common mother,</p>
<p>
All men I held in scorn to such extent<br/>
I died therefor, as know the Sienese,<br/>
And every child in Campagnatico.</p>
<p>
I am Omberto; and not to me alone<br/>
Has pride done harm, but all my kith and kin<br/>
Has with it dragged into adversity.</p>
<p>
And here must I this burden bear for it<br/>
Till God be satisfied, since I did not<br/>
Among the living, here among the dead.”</p>
<p>
Listening I downward bent my countenance;<br/>
And one of them, not this one who was speaking,<br/>
Twisted himself beneath the weight that cramps him,</p>
<p>
And looked at me, and knew me, and called out,<br/>
Keeping his eyes laboriously fixed<br/>
On me, who all bowed down was going with them.</p>
<p>
“O,” asked I him, “art thou not Oderisi,<br/>
Agobbio’s honour, and honour of that art<br/>
Which is in Paris called illuminating?”</p>
<p>
“Brother,” said he, “more laughing are the leaves<br/>
Touched by the brush of Franco Bolognese;<br/>
All his the honour now, and mine in part.</p>
<p>
In sooth I had not been so courteous<br/>
While I was living, for the great desire<br/>
Of excellence, on which my heart was bent.</p>
<p>
Here of such pride is paid the forfeiture;<br/>
And yet I should not be here, were it not<br/>
That, having power to sin, I turned to God.</p>
<p>
O thou vain glory of the human powers,<br/>
How little green upon thy summit lingers,<br/>
If’t be not followed by an age of grossness!</p>
<p>
In painting Cimabue thought that he<br/>
Should hold the field, now Giotto has the cry,<br/>
So that the other’s fame is growing dim.</p>
<p>
So has one Guido from the other taken<br/>
The glory of our tongue, and he perchance<br/>
Is born, who from the nest shall chase them both.</p>
<p>
Naught is this mundane rumour but a breath<br/>
Of wind, that comes now this way and now that,<br/>
And changes name, because it changes side.</p>
<p>
What fame shalt thou have more, if old peel off<br/>
From thee thy flesh, than if thou hadst been dead<br/>
Before thou left the ‘pappo’ and the ‘dindi,’</p>
<p>
Ere pass a thousand years? which is a shorter<br/>
Space to the eterne, than twinkling of an eye<br/>
Unto the circle that in heaven wheels slowest.</p>
<p>
With him, who takes so little of the road<br/>
In front of me, all Tuscany resounded;<br/>
And now he scarce is lisped of in Siena,</p>
<p>
Where he was lord, what time was overthrown<br/>
The Florentine delirium, that superb<br/>
Was at that day as now ’tis prostitute.</p>
<p>
Your reputation is the colour of grass<br/>
Which comes and goes, and that discolours it<br/>
By which it issues green from out the earth.”</p>
<p>
And I: “Thy true speech fills my heart with good<br/>
Humility, and great tumour thou assuagest;<br/>
But who is he, of whom just now thou spakest?”</p>
<p>
“That,” he replied, “is Provenzan Salvani,<br/>
And he is here because he had presumed<br/>
To bring Siena all into his hands.</p>
<p>
He has gone thus, and goeth without rest<br/>
E’er since he died; such money renders back<br/>
In payment he who is on earth too daring.”</p>
<p>
And I: “If every spirit who awaits<br/>
The verge of life before that he repent,<br/>
Remains below there and ascends not hither,</p>
<p>
(Unless good orison shall him bestead,)<br/>
Until as much time as he lived be passed,<br/>
How was the coming granted him in largess?”</p>
<p>
“When he in greatest splendour lived,” said he,<br/>
“Freely upon the Campo of Siena,<br/>
All shame being laid aside, he placed himself;</p>
<p>
And there to draw his friend from the duress<br/>
Which in the prison-house of Charles he suffered,<br/>
He brought himself to tremble in each vein.</p>
<p>
I say no more, and know that I speak darkly;<br/>
Yet little time shall pass before thy neighbours<br/>
Will so demean themselves that thou canst gloss it.</p>
<p>
This action has released him from those confines.”</p>
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