<h2><SPAN name="CantoII.XXVIII"></SPAN>Purgatorio: Canto XXVIII</h2>
<p>
Eager already to search in and round<br/>
The heavenly forest, dense and living-green,<br/>
Which tempered to the eyes the new-born day,</p>
<p>
Withouten more delay I left the bank,<br/>
Taking the level country slowly, slowly<br/>
Over the soil that everywhere breathes fragrance.</p>
<p>
A softly-breathing air, that no mutation<br/>
Had in itself, upon the forehead smote me<br/>
No heavier blow than of a gentle wind,</p>
<p>
Whereat the branches, lightly tremulous,<br/>
Did all of them bow downward toward that side<br/>
Where its first shadow casts the Holy Mountain;</p>
<p>
Yet not from their upright direction swayed,<br/>
So that the little birds upon their tops<br/>
Should leave the practice of each art of theirs;</p>
<p>
But with full ravishment the hours of prime,<br/>
Singing, received they in the midst of leaves,<br/>
That ever bore a burden to their rhymes,</p>
<p>
Such as from branch to branch goes gathering on<br/>
Through the pine forest on the shore of Chiassi,<br/>
When Eolus unlooses the Sirocco.</p>
<p>
Already my slow steps had carried me<br/>
Into the ancient wood so far, that I<br/>
Could not perceive where I had entered it.</p>
<p>
And lo! my further course a stream cut off,<br/>
Which tow’rd the left hand with its little waves<br/>
Bent down the grass that on its margin sprang.</p>
<p>
All waters that on earth most limpid are<br/>
Would seem to have within themselves some mixture<br/>
Compared with that which nothing doth conceal,</p>
<p>
Although it moves on with a brown, brown current<br/>
Under the shade perpetual, that never<br/>
Ray of the sun lets in, nor of the moon.</p>
<p>
With feet I stayed, and with mine eyes I passed<br/>
Beyond the rivulet, to look upon<br/>
The great variety of the fresh may.</p>
<p>
And there appeared to me (even as appears<br/>
Suddenly something that doth turn aside<br/>
Through very wonder every other thought)</p>
<p>
A lady all alone, who went along<br/>
Singing and culling floweret after floweret,<br/>
With which her pathway was all painted over.</p>
<p>
“Ah, beauteous lady, who in rays of love<br/>
Dost warm thyself, if I may trust to looks,<br/>
Which the heart’s witnesses are wont to be,</p>
<p>
May the desire come unto thee to draw<br/>
Near to this river’s bank,” I said to her,<br/>
“So much that I might hear what thou art singing.</p>
<p>
Thou makest me remember where and what<br/>
Proserpina that moment was when lost<br/>
Her mother her, and she herself the Spring.”</p>
<p>
As turns herself, with feet together pressed<br/>
And to the ground, a lady who is dancing,<br/>
And hardly puts one foot before the other,</p>
<p>
On the vermilion and the yellow flowerets<br/>
She turned towards me, not in other wise<br/>
Than maiden who her modest eyes casts down;</p>
<p>
And my entreaties made to be content,<br/>
So near approaching, that the dulcet sound<br/>
Came unto me together with its meaning</p>
<p>
As soon as she was where the grasses are.<br/>
Bathed by the waters of the beauteous river,<br/>
To lift her eyes she granted me the boon.</p>
<p>
I do not think there shone so great a light<br/>
Under the lids of Venus, when transfixed<br/>
By her own son, beyond his usual custom!</p>
<p>
Erect upon the other bank she smiled,<br/>
Bearing full many colours in her hands,<br/>
Which that high land produces without seed.</p>
<p>
Apart three paces did the river make us;<br/>
But Hellespont, where Xerxes passed across,<br/>
(A curb still to all human arrogance,)</p>
<p>
More hatred from Leander did not suffer<br/>
For rolling between Sestos and Abydos,<br/>
Than that from me, because it oped not then.</p>
<p>
“Ye are new-comers; and because I smile,”<br/>
Began she, “peradventure, in this place<br/>
Elect to human nature for its nest,</p>
<p>
Some apprehension keeps you marvelling;<br/>
But the psalm ‘Delectasti’ giveth light<br/>
Which has the power to uncloud your intellect.</p>
<p>
And thou who foremost art, and didst entreat me,<br/>
Speak, if thou wouldst hear more; for I came ready<br/>
To all thy questionings, as far as needful.”</p>
<p>
“The water,” said I, “and the forest’s sound,<br/>
Are combating within me my new faith<br/>
In something which I heard opposed to this.”</p>
<p>
Whence she: “I will relate how from its cause<br/>
Proceedeth that which maketh thee to wonder,<br/>
And purge away the cloud that smites upon thee.</p>
<p>
The Good Supreme, sole in itself delighting,<br/>
Created man good, and this goodly place<br/>
Gave him as hansel of eternal peace.</p>
<p>
By his default short while he sojourned here;<br/>
By his default to weeping and to toil<br/>
He changed his innocent laughter and sweet play.</p>
<p>
That the disturbance which below is made<br/>
By exhalations of the land and water,<br/>
(Which far as may be follow after heat,)</p>
<p>
Might not upon mankind wage any war,<br/>
This mount ascended tow’rds the heaven so high,<br/>
And is exempt, from there where it is locked.</p>
<p>
Now since the universal atmosphere<br/>
Turns in a circuit with the primal motion<br/>
Unless the circle is broken on some side,</p>
<p>
Upon this height, that all is disengaged<br/>
In living ether, doth this motion strike<br/>
And make the forest sound, for it is dense;</p>
<p>
And so much power the stricken plant possesses<br/>
That with its virtue it impregns the air,<br/>
And this, revolving, scatters it around;</p>
<p>
And yonder earth, according as ’tis worthy<br/>
In self or in its clime, conceives and bears<br/>
Of divers qualities the divers trees;</p>
<p>
It should not seem a marvel then on earth,<br/>
This being heard, whenever any plant<br/>
Without seed manifest there taketh root.</p>
<p>
And thou must know, this holy table-land<br/>
In which thou art is full of every seed,<br/>
And fruit has in it never gathered there.</p>
<p>
The water which thou seest springs not from vein<br/>
Restored by vapour that the cold condenses,<br/>
Like to a stream that gains or loses breath;</p>
<p>
But issues from a fountain safe and certain,<br/>
Which by the will of God as much regains<br/>
As it discharges, open on two sides.</p>
<p>
Upon this side with virtue it descends,<br/>
Which takes away all memory of sin;<br/>
On that, of every good deed done restores it.</p>
<p>
Here Lethe, as upon the other side<br/>
Eunoe, it is called; and worketh not<br/>
If first on either side it be not tasted.</p>
<p>
This every other savour doth transcend;<br/>
And notwithstanding slaked so far may be<br/>
Thy thirst, that I reveal to thee no more,</p>
<p>
I’ll give thee a corollary still in grace,<br/>
Nor think my speech will be to thee less dear<br/>
If it spread out beyond my promise to thee.</p>
<p>
Those who in ancient times have feigned in song<br/>
The Age of Gold and its felicity,<br/>
Dreamed of this place perhaps upon Parnassus.</p>
<p>
Here was the human race in innocence;<br/>
Here evermore was Spring, and every fruit;<br/>
This is the nectar of which each one speaks.”</p>
<p>
Then backward did I turn me wholly round<br/>
Unto my Poets, and saw that with a smile<br/>
They had been listening to these closing words;</p>
<p>
Then to the beautiful lady turned mine eyes.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="CantoII.XXIX"></SPAN>Purgatorio: Canto XXIX</h2>
<p>
Singing like unto an enamoured lady<br/>
She, with the ending of her words, continued:<br/>
“Beati quorum tecta sunt peccata.”</p>
<p>
And even as Nymphs, that wandered all alone<br/>
Among the sylvan shadows, sedulous<br/>
One to avoid and one to see the sun,</p>
<p>
She then against the stream moved onward, going<br/>
Along the bank, and I abreast of her,<br/>
Her little steps with little steps attending.</p>
<p>
Between her steps and mine were not a hundred,<br/>
When equally the margins gave a turn,<br/>
In such a way, that to the East I faced.</p>
<p>
Nor even thus our way continued far<br/>
Before the lady wholly turned herself<br/>
Unto me, saying, “Brother, look and listen!”</p>
<p>
And lo! a sudden lustre ran across<br/>
On every side athwart the spacious forest,<br/>
Such that it made me doubt if it were lightning.</p>
<p>
But since the lightning ceases as it comes,<br/>
And that continuing brightened more and more,<br/>
Within my thought I said, “What thing is this?”</p>
<p>
And a delicious melody there ran<br/>
Along the luminous air, whence holy zeal<br/>
Made me rebuke the hardihood of Eve;</p>
<p>
For there where earth and heaven obedient were,<br/>
The woman only, and but just created,<br/>
Could not endure to stay ’neath any veil;</p>
<p>
Underneath which had she devoutly stayed,<br/>
I sooner should have tasted those delights<br/>
Ineffable, and for a longer time.</p>
<p>
While ’mid such manifold first-fruits I walked<br/>
Of the eternal pleasure all enrapt,<br/>
And still solicitous of more delights,</p>
<p>
In front of us like an enkindled fire<br/>
Became the air beneath the verdant boughs,<br/>
And the sweet sound as singing now was heard.</p>
<p>
O Virgins sacrosanct! if ever hunger,<br/>
Vigils, or cold for you I have endured,<br/>
The occasion spurs me their reward to claim!</p>
<p>
Now Helicon must needs pour forth for me,<br/>
And with her choir Urania must assist me,<br/>
To put in verse things difficult to think.</p>
<p>
A little farther on, seven trees of gold<br/>
In semblance the long space still intervening<br/>
Between ourselves and them did counterfeit;</p>
<p>
But when I had approached so near to them<br/>
The common object, which the sense deceives,<br/>
Lost not by distance any of its marks,</p>
<p>
The faculty that lends discourse to reason<br/>
Did apprehend that they were candlesticks,<br/>
And in the voices of the song “Hosanna!”</p>
<p>
Above them flamed the harness beautiful,<br/>
Far brighter than the moon in the serene<br/>
Of midnight, at the middle of her month.</p>
<p>
I turned me round, with admiration filled,<br/>
To good Virgilius, and he answered me<br/>
With visage no less full of wonderment.</p>
<p>
Then back I turned my face to those high things,<br/>
Which moved themselves towards us so sedately,<br/>
They had been distanced by new-wedded brides.</p>
<p>
The lady chid me: “Why dost thou burn only<br/>
So with affection for the living lights,<br/>
And dost not look at what comes after them?”</p>
<p>
Then saw I people, as behind their leaders,<br/>
Coming behind them, garmented in white,<br/>
And such a whiteness never was on earth.</p>
<p>
The water on my left flank was resplendent,<br/>
And back to me reflected my left side,<br/>
E’en as a mirror, if I looked therein.</p>
<p>
When I upon my margin had such post<br/>
That nothing but the stream divided us,<br/>
Better to see I gave my steps repose;</p>
<p>
And I beheld the flamelets onward go,<br/>
Leaving behind themselves the air depicted,<br/>
And they of trailing pennons had the semblance,</p>
<p>
So that it overhead remained distinct<br/>
With sevenfold lists, all of them of the colours<br/>
Whence the sun’s bow is made, and Delia’s girdle.</p>
<p>
These standards to the rearward longer were<br/>
Than was my sight; and, as it seemed to me,<br/>
Ten paces were the outermost apart.</p>
<p>
Under so fair a heaven as I describe<br/>
The four and twenty Elders, two by two,<br/>
Came on incoronate with flower-de-luce.</p>
<p>
They all of them were singing: “Blessed thou<br/>
Among the daughters of Adam art, and blessed<br/>
For evermore shall be thy loveliness.”</p>
<p>
After the flowers and other tender grasses<br/>
In front of me upon the other margin<br/>
Were disencumbered of that race elect,</p>
<p>
Even as in heaven star followeth after star,<br/>
There came close after them four animals,<br/>
Incoronate each one with verdant leaf.</p>
<p>
Plumed with six wings was every one of them,<br/>
The plumage full of eyes; the eyes of Argus<br/>
If they were living would be such as these.</p>
<p>
Reader! to trace their forms no more I waste<br/>
My rhymes; for other spendings press me so,<br/>
That I in this cannot be prodigal.</p>
<p>
But read Ezekiel, who depicteth them<br/>
As he beheld them from the region cold<br/>
Coming with cloud, with whirlwind, and with fire;</p>
<p>
And such as thou shalt find them in his pages,<br/>
Such were they here; saving that in their plumage<br/>
John is with me, and differeth from him.</p>
<p>
The interval between these four contained<br/>
A chariot triumphal on two wheels,<br/>
Which by a Griffin’s neck came drawn along;</p>
<p>
And upward he extended both his wings<br/>
Between the middle list and three and three,<br/>
So that he injured none by cleaving it.</p>
<p>
So high they rose that they were lost to sight;<br/>
His limbs were gold, so far as he was bird,<br/>
And white the others with vermilion mingled.</p>
<p>
Not only Rome with no such splendid car<br/>
E’er gladdened Africanus, or Augustus,<br/>
But poor to it that of the Sun would be,—</p>
<p>
That of the Sun, which swerving was burnt up<br/>
At the importunate orison of Earth,<br/>
When Jove was so mysteriously just.</p>
<p>
Three maidens at the right wheel in a circle<br/>
Came onward dancing; one so very red<br/>
That in the fire she hardly had been noted.</p>
<p>
The second was as if her flesh and bones<br/>
Had all been fashioned out of emerald;<br/>
The third appeared as snow but newly fallen.</p>
<p>
And now they seemed conducted by the white,<br/>
Now by the red, and from the song of her<br/>
The others took their step, or slow or swift.</p>
<p>
Upon the left hand four made holiday<br/>
Vested in purple, following the measure<br/>
Of one of them with three eyes m her head.</p>
<p>
In rear of all the group here treated of<br/>
Two old men I beheld, unlike in habit,<br/>
But like in gait, each dignified and grave.</p>
<p>
One showed himself as one of the disciples<br/>
Of that supreme Hippocrates, whom nature<br/>
Made for the animals she holds most dear;</p>
<p>
Contrary care the other manifested,<br/>
With sword so shining and so sharp, it caused<br/>
Terror to me on this side of the river.</p>
<p>
Thereafter four I saw of humble aspect,<br/>
And behind all an aged man alone<br/>
Walking in sleep with countenance acute.</p>
<p>
And like the foremost company these seven<br/>
Were habited; yet of the flower-de-luce<br/>
No garland round about the head they wore,</p>
<p>
But of the rose, and other flowers vermilion;<br/>
At little distance would the sight have sworn<br/>
That all were in a flame above their brows.</p>
<p>
And when the car was opposite to me<br/>
Thunder was heard; and all that folk august<br/>
Seemed to have further progress interdicted,</p>
<p>
There with the vanward ensigns standing still.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="CantoII.XXX"></SPAN>Purgatorio: Canto XXX</h2>
<p>
When the Septentrion of the highest heaven<br/>
(Which never either setting knew or rising,<br/>
Nor veil of other cloud than that of sin,</p>
<p>
And which made every one therein aware<br/>
Of his own duty, as the lower makes<br/>
Whoever turns the helm to come to port)</p>
<p>
Motionless halted, the veracious people,<br/>
That came at first between it and the Griffin,<br/>
Turned themselves to the car, as to their peace.</p>
<p>
And one of them, as if by Heaven commissioned,<br/>
Singing, “Veni, sponsa, de Libano”<br/>
Shouted three times, and all the others after.</p>
<p>
Even as the Blessed at the final summons<br/>
Shall rise up quickened each one from his cavern,<br/>
Uplifting light the reinvested flesh,</p>
<p>
So upon that celestial chariot<br/>
A hundred rose ‘ad vocem tanti senis,’<br/>
Ministers and messengers of life eternal.</p>
<p>
They all were saying, “Benedictus qui venis,”<br/>
And, scattering flowers above and round about,<br/>
“Manibus o date lilia plenis.”</p>
<p>
Ere now have I beheld, as day began,<br/>
The eastern hemisphere all tinged with rose,<br/>
And the other heaven with fair serene adorned;</p>
<p>
And the sun’s face, uprising, overshadowed<br/>
So that by tempering influence of vapours<br/>
For a long interval the eye sustained it;</p>
<p>
Thus in the bosom of a cloud of flowers<br/>
Which from those hands angelical ascended,<br/>
And downward fell again inside and out,</p>
<p>
Over her snow-white veil with olive cinct<br/>
Appeared a lady under a green mantle,<br/>
Vested in colour of the living flame.</p>
<p>
And my own spirit, that already now<br/>
So long a time had been, that in her presence<br/>
Trembling with awe it had not stood abashed,</p>
<p>
Without more knowledge having by mine eyes,<br/>
Through occult virtue that from her proceeded<br/>
Of ancient love the mighty influence felt.</p>
<p>
As soon as on my vision smote the power<br/>
Sublime, that had already pierced me through<br/>
Ere from my boyhood I had yet come forth,</p>
<p>
To the left hand I turned with that reliance<br/>
With which the little child runs to his mother,<br/>
When he has fear, or when he is afflicted,</p>
<p>
To say unto Virgilius: “Not a drachm<br/>
Of blood remains in me, that does not tremble;<br/>
I know the traces of the ancient flame.”</p>
<p>
But us Virgilius of himself deprived<br/>
Had left, Virgilius, sweetest of all fathers,<br/>
Virgilius, to whom I for safety gave me:</p>
<p>
Nor whatsoever lost the ancient mother<br/>
Availed my cheeks now purified from dew,<br/>
That weeping they should not again be darkened.</p>
<p>
“Dante, because Virgilius has departed<br/>
Do not weep yet, do not weep yet awhile;<br/>
For by another sword thou need’st must weep.”</p>
<p>
E’en as an admiral, who on poop and prow<br/>
Comes to behold the people that are working<br/>
In other ships, and cheers them to well-doing,</p>
<p>
Upon the left hand border of the car,<br/>
When at the sound I turned of my own name,<br/>
Which of necessity is here recorded,</p>
<p>
I saw the Lady, who erewhile appeared<br/>
Veiled underneath the angelic festival,<br/>
Direct her eyes to me across the river.</p>
<p>
Although the veil, that from her head descended,<br/>
Encircled with the foliage of Minerva,<br/>
Did not permit her to appear distinctly,</p>
<p>
In attitude still royally majestic<br/>
Continued she, like unto one who speaks,<br/>
And keeps his warmest utterance in reserve:</p>
<p>
“Look at me well; in sooth I’m Beatrice!<br/>
How didst thou deign to come unto the Mountain?<br/>
Didst thou not know that man is happy here?”</p>
<p>
Mine eyes fell downward into the clear fountain,<br/>
But, seeing myself therein, I sought the grass,<br/>
So great a shame did weigh my forehead down.</p>
<p>
As to the son the mother seems superb,<br/>
So she appeared to me; for somewhat bitter<br/>
Tasteth the savour of severe compassion.</p>
<p>
Silent became she, and the Angels sang<br/>
Suddenly, “In te, Domine, speravi:”<br/>
But beyond ‘pedes meos’ did not pass.</p>
<p>
Even as the snow among the living rafters<br/>
Upon the back of Italy congeals,<br/>
Blown on and drifted by Sclavonian winds,</p>
<p>
And then, dissolving, trickles through itself<br/>
Whene’er the land that loses shadow breathes,<br/>
So that it seems a fire that melts a taper;</p>
<p>
E’en thus was I without a tear or sigh,<br/>
Before the song of those who sing for ever<br/>
After the music of the eternal spheres.</p>
<p>
But when I heard in their sweet melodies<br/>
Compassion for me, more than had they said,<br/>
“O wherefore, lady, dost thou thus upbraid him?”</p>
<p>
The ice, that was about my heart congealed,<br/>
To air and water changed, and in my anguish<br/>
Through mouth and eyes came gushing from my breast.</p>
<p>
She, on the right-hand border of the car<br/>
Still firmly standing, to those holy beings<br/>
Thus her discourse directed afterwards:</p>
<p>
“Ye keep your watch in the eternal day,<br/>
So that nor night nor sleep can steal from you<br/>
One step the ages make upon their path;</p>
<p>
Therefore my answer is with greater care,<br/>
That he may hear me who is weeping yonder,<br/>
So that the sin and dole be of one measure.</p>
<p>
Not only by the work of those great wheels,<br/>
That destine every seed unto some end,<br/>
According as the stars are in conjunction,</p>
<p>
But by the largess of celestial graces,<br/>
Which have such lofty vapours for their rain<br/>
That near to them our sight approaches not,</p>
<p>
Such had this man become in his new life<br/>
Potentially, that every righteous habit<br/>
Would have made admirable proof in him;</p>
<p>
But so much more malignant and more savage<br/>
Becomes the land untilled and with bad seed,<br/>
The more good earthly vigour it possesses.</p>
<p>
Some time did I sustain him with my look;<br/>
Revealing unto him my youthful eyes,<br/>
I led him with me turned in the right way.</p>
<p>
As soon as ever of my second age<br/>
I was upon the threshold and changed life,<br/>
Himself from me he took and gave to others.</p>
<p>
When from the flesh to spirit I ascended,<br/>
And beauty and virtue were in me increased,<br/>
I was to him less dear and less delightful;</p>
<p>
And into ways untrue he turned his steps,<br/>
Pursuing the false images of good,<br/>
That never any promises fulfil;</p>
<p>
Nor prayer for inspiration me availed,<br/>
By means of which in dreams and otherwise<br/>
I called him back, so little did he heed them.</p>
<p>
So low he fell, that all appliances<br/>
For his salvation were already short,<br/>
Save showing him the people of perdition.</p>
<p>
For this I visited the gates of death,<br/>
And unto him, who so far up has led him,<br/>
My intercessions were with weeping borne.</p>
<p>
God’s lofty fiat would be violated,<br/>
If Lethe should be passed, and if such viands<br/>
Should tasted be, withouten any scot</p>
<p>
Of penitence, that gushes forth in tears.”</p>
<h2><SPAN name="CantoII.XXXI"></SPAN>Purgatorio: Canto XXXI</h2>
<p>
“O thou who art beyond the sacred river,”<br/>
Turning to me the point of her discourse,<br/>
That edgewise even had seemed to me so keen,</p>
<p>
She recommenced, continuing without pause,<br/>
“Say, say if this be true; to such a charge,<br/>
Thy own confession needs must be conjoined.”</p>
<p>
My faculties were in so great confusion,<br/>
That the voice moved, but sooner was extinct<br/>
Than by its organs it was set at large.</p>
<p>
Awhile she waited; then she said: “What thinkest?<br/>
Answer me; for the mournful memories<br/>
In thee not yet are by the waters injured.”</p>
<p>
Confusion and dismay together mingled<br/>
Forced such a Yes! from out my mouth, that sight<br/>
Was needful to the understanding of it.</p>
<p>
Even as a cross-bow breaks, when ’tis discharged<br/>
Too tensely drawn the bowstring and the bow,<br/>
And with less force the arrow hits the mark,</p>
<p>
So I gave way beneath that heavy burden,<br/>
Outpouring in a torrent tears and sighs,<br/>
And the voice flagged upon its passage forth.</p>
<p>
Whence she to me: “In those desires of mine<br/>
Which led thee to the loving of that good,<br/>
Beyond which there is nothing to aspire to,</p>
<p>
What trenches lying traverse or what chains<br/>
Didst thou discover, that of passing onward<br/>
Thou shouldst have thus despoiled thee of the hope?</p>
<p>
And what allurements or what vantages<br/>
Upon the forehead of the others showed,<br/>
That thou shouldst turn thy footsteps unto them?”</p>
<p>
After the heaving of a bitter sigh,<br/>
Hardly had I the voice to make response,<br/>
And with fatigue my lips did fashion it.</p>
<p>
Weeping I said: “The things that present were<br/>
With their false pleasure turned aside my steps,<br/>
Soon as your countenance concealed itself.”</p>
<p>
And she: “Shouldst thou be silent, or deny<br/>
What thou confessest, not less manifest<br/>
Would be thy fault, by such a Judge ’tis known.</p>
<p>
But when from one’s own cheeks comes bursting forth<br/>
The accusal of the sin, in our tribunal<br/>
Against the edge the wheel doth turn itself.</p>
<p>
But still, that thou mayst feel a greater shame<br/>
For thy transgression, and another time<br/>
Hearing the Sirens thou mayst be more strong,</p>
<p>
Cast down the seed of weeping and attend;<br/>
So shalt thou hear, how in an opposite way<br/>
My buried flesh should have directed thee.</p>
<p>
Never to thee presented art or nature<br/>
Pleasure so great as the fair limbs wherein<br/>
I was enclosed, which scattered are in earth.</p>
<p>
And if the highest pleasure thus did fail thee<br/>
By reason of my death, what mortal thing<br/>
Should then have drawn thee into its desire?</p>
<p>
Thou oughtest verily at the first shaft<br/>
Of things fallacious to have risen up<br/>
To follow me, who was no longer such.</p>
<p>
Thou oughtest not to have stooped thy pinions downward<br/>
To wait for further blows, or little girl,<br/>
Or other vanity of such brief use.</p>
<p>
The callow birdlet waits for two or three,<br/>
But to the eyes of those already fledged,<br/>
In vain the net is spread or shaft is shot.”</p>
<p>
Even as children silent in their shame<br/>
Stand listening with their eyes upon the ground,<br/>
And conscious of their fault, and penitent;</p>
<p>
So was I standing; and she said: “If thou<br/>
In hearing sufferest pain, lift up thy beard<br/>
And thou shalt feel a greater pain in seeing.”</p>
<p>
With less resistance is a robust holm<br/>
Uprooted, either by a native wind<br/>
Or else by that from regions of Iarbas,</p>
<p>
Than I upraised at her command my chin;<br/>
And when she by the beard the face demanded,<br/>
Well I perceived the venom of her meaning.</p>
<p>
And as my countenance was lifted up,<br/>
Mine eye perceived those creatures beautiful<br/>
Had rested from the strewing of the flowers;</p>
<p>
And, still but little reassured, mine eyes<br/>
Saw Beatrice turned round towards the monster,<br/>
That is one person only in two natures.</p>
<p>
Beneath her veil, beyond the margent green,<br/>
She seemed to me far more her ancient self<br/>
To excel, than others here, when she was here.</p>
<p>
So pricked me then the thorn of penitence,<br/>
That of all other things the one which turned me<br/>
Most to its love became the most my foe.</p>
<p>
Such self-conviction stung me at the heart<br/>
O’erpowered I fell, and what I then became<br/>
She knoweth who had furnished me the cause.</p>
<p>
Then, when the heart restored my outward sense,<br/>
The lady I had found alone, above me<br/>
I saw, and she was saying, “Hold me, hold me.”</p>
<p>
Up to my throat she in the stream had drawn me,<br/>
And, dragging me behind her, she was moving<br/>
Upon the water lightly as a shuttle.</p>
<p>
When I was near unto the blessed shore,<br/>
“Asperges me,” I heard so sweetly sung,<br/>
Remember it I cannot, much less write it.</p>
<p>
The beautiful lady opened wide her arms,<br/>
Embraced my head, and plunged me underneath,<br/>
Where I was forced to swallow of the water.</p>
<p>
Then forth she drew me, and all dripping brought<br/>
Into the dance of the four beautiful,<br/>
And each one with her arm did cover me.</p>
<p>
‘We here are Nymphs, and in the Heaven are stars;<br/>
Ere Beatrice descended to the world,<br/>
We as her handmaids were appointed her.</p>
<p>
We’ll lead thee to her eyes; but for the pleasant<br/>
Light that within them is, shall sharpen thine<br/>
The three beyond, who more profoundly look.’</p>
<p>
Thus singing they began; and afterwards<br/>
Unto the Griffin’s breast they led me with them,<br/>
Where Beatrice was standing, turned towards us.</p>
<p>
“See that thou dost not spare thine eyes,” they said;<br/>
“Before the emeralds have we stationed thee,<br/>
Whence Love aforetime drew for thee his weapons.”</p>
<p>
A thousand longings, hotter than the flame,<br/>
Fastened mine eyes upon those eyes relucent,<br/>
That still upon the Griffin steadfast stayed.</p>
<p>
As in a glass the sun, not otherwise<br/>
Within them was the twofold monster shining,<br/>
Now with the one, now with the other nature.</p>
<p>
Think, Reader, if within myself I marvelled,<br/>
When I beheld the thing itself stand still,<br/>
And in its image it transformed itself.</p>
<p>
While with amazement filled and jubilant,<br/>
My soul was tasting of the food, that while<br/>
It satisfies us makes us hunger for it,</p>
<p>
Themselves revealing of the highest rank<br/>
In bearing, did the other three advance,<br/>
Singing to their angelic saraband.</p>
<p>
“Turn, Beatrice, O turn thy holy eyes,”<br/>
Such was their song, “unto thy faithful one,<br/>
Who has to see thee ta’en so many steps.</p>
<p>
In grace do us the grace that thou unveil<br/>
Thy face to him, so that he may discern<br/>
The second beauty which thou dost conceal.”</p>
<p>
O splendour of the living light eternal!<br/>
Who underneath the shadow of Parnassus<br/>
Has grown so pale, or drunk so at its cistern,</p>
<p>
He would not seem to have his mind encumbered<br/>
Striving to paint thee as thou didst appear,<br/>
Where the harmonious heaven o’ershadowed thee,</p>
<p>
When in the open air thou didst unveil?</p>
<h2><SPAN name="CantoII.XXXII"></SPAN>Purgatorio: Canto XXXII</h2>
<p>
So steadfast and attentive were mine eyes<br/>
In satisfying their decennial thirst,<br/>
That all my other senses were extinct,</p>
<p>
And upon this side and on that they had<br/>
Walls of indifference, so the holy smile<br/>
Drew them unto itself with the old net</p>
<p>
When forcibly my sight was turned away<br/>
Towards my left hand by those goddesses,<br/>
Because I heard from them a “Too intently!”</p>
<p>
And that condition of the sight which is<br/>
In eyes but lately smitten by the sun<br/>
Bereft me of my vision some short while;</p>
<p>
But to the less when sight re-shaped itself,<br/>
I say the less in reference to the greater<br/>
Splendour from which perforce I had withdrawn,</p>
<p>
I saw upon its right wing wheeled about<br/>
The glorious host returning with the sun<br/>
And with the sevenfold flames upon their faces.</p>
<p>
As underneath its shields, to save itself,<br/>
A squadron turns, and with its banner wheels,<br/>
Before the whole thereof can change its front,</p>
<p>
That soldiery of the celestial kingdom<br/>
Which marched in the advance had wholly passed us<br/>
Before the chariot had turned its pole.</p>
<p>
Then to the wheels the maidens turned themselves,<br/>
And the Griffin moved his burden benedight,<br/>
But so that not a feather of him fluttered.</p>
<p>
The lady fair who drew me through the ford<br/>
Followed with Statius and myself the wheel<br/>
Which made its orbit with the lesser arc.</p>
<p>
So passing through the lofty forest, vacant<br/>
By fault of her who in the serpent trusted,<br/>
Angelic music made our steps keep time.</p>
<p>
Perchance as great a space had in three flights<br/>
An arrow loosened from the string o’erpassed,<br/>
As we had moved when Beatrice descended.</p>
<p>
I heard them murmur altogether, “Adam!”<br/>
Then circled they about a tree despoiled<br/>
Of blooms and other leafage on each bough.</p>
<p>
Its tresses, which so much the more dilate<br/>
As higher they ascend, had been by Indians<br/>
Among their forests marvelled at for height.</p>
<p>
“Blessed art thou, O Griffin, who dost not<br/>
Pluck with thy beak these branches sweet to taste,<br/>
Since appetite by this was turned to evil.”</p>
<p>
After this fashion round the tree robust<br/>
The others shouted; and the twofold creature:<br/>
“Thus is preserved the seed of all the just.”</p>
<p>
And turning to the pole which he had dragged,<br/>
He drew it close beneath the widowed bough,<br/>
And what was of it unto it left bound.</p>
<p>
In the same manner as our trees (when downward<br/>
Falls the great light, with that together mingled<br/>
Which after the celestial Lasca shines)</p>
<p>
Begin to swell, and then renew themselves,<br/>
Each one with its own colour, ere the Sun<br/>
Harness his steeds beneath another star:</p>
<p>
Less than of rose and more than violet<br/>
A hue disclosing, was renewed the tree<br/>
That had erewhile its boughs so desolate.</p>
<p>
I never heard, nor here below is sung,<br/>
The hymn which afterward that people sang,<br/>
Nor did I bear the melody throughout.</p>
<p>
Had I the power to paint how fell asleep<br/>
Those eyes compassionless, of Syrinx hearing,<br/>
Those eyes to which more watching cost so dear,</p>
<p>
Even as a painter who from model paints<br/>
I would portray how I was lulled asleep;<br/>
He may, who well can picture drowsihood.</p>
<p>
Therefore I pass to what time I awoke,<br/>
And say a splendour rent from me the veil<br/>
Of slumber, and a calling: “Rise, what dost thou?”</p>
<p>
As to behold the apple-tree in blossom<br/>
Which makes the Angels greedy for its fruit,<br/>
And keeps perpetual bridals in the Heaven,</p>
<p>
Peter and John and James conducted were,<br/>
And, overcome, recovered at the word<br/>
By which still greater slumbers have been broken,</p>
<p>
And saw their school diminished by the loss<br/>
Not only of Elias, but of Moses,<br/>
And the apparel of their Master changed;</p>
<p>
So I revived, and saw that piteous one<br/>
Above me standing, who had been conductress<br/>
Aforetime of my steps beside the river,</p>
<p>
And all in doubt I said, “Where’s Beatrice?”<br/>
And she: “Behold her seated underneath<br/>
The leafage new, upon the root of it.</p>
<p>
Behold the company that circles her;<br/>
The rest behind the Griffin are ascending<br/>
With more melodious song, and more profound.”</p>
<p>
And if her speech were more diffuse I know not,<br/>
Because already in my sight was she<br/>
Who from the hearing of aught else had shut me.</p>
<p>
Alone she sat upon the very earth,<br/>
Left there as guardian of the chariot<br/>
Which I had seen the biform monster fasten.</p>
<p>
Encircling her, a cloister made themselves<br/>
The seven Nymphs, with those lights in their hands<br/>
Which are secure from Aquilon and Auster.</p>
<p>
“Short while shalt thou be here a forester,<br/>
And thou shalt be with me for evermore<br/>
A citizen of that Rome where Christ is Roman.</p>
<p>
Therefore, for that world’s good which liveth ill,<br/>
Fix on the car thine eyes, and what thou seest,<br/>
Having returned to earth, take heed thou write.”</p>
<p>
Thus Beatrice; and I, who at the feet<br/>
Of her commandments all devoted was,<br/>
My mind and eyes directed where she willed.</p>
<p>
Never descended with so swift a motion<br/>
Fire from a heavy cloud, when it is raining<br/>
From out the region which is most remote,</p>
<p>
As I beheld the bird of Jove descend<br/>
Down through the tree, rending away the bark,<br/>
As well as blossoms and the foliage new,</p>
<p>
And he with all his might the chariot smote,<br/>
Whereat it reeled, like vessel in a tempest<br/>
Tossed by the waves, now starboard and now larboard.</p>
<p>
Thereafter saw I leap into the body<br/>
Of the triumphal vehicle a Fox,<br/>
That seemed unfed with any wholesome food.</p>
<p>
But for his hideous sins upbraiding him,<br/>
My Lady put him to as swift a flight<br/>
As such a fleshless skeleton could bear.</p>
<p>
Then by the way that it before had come,<br/>
Into the chariot’s chest I saw the Eagle<br/>
Descend, and leave it feathered with his plumes.</p>
<p>
And such as issues from a heart that mourns,<br/>
A voice from Heaven there issued, and it said:<br/>
“My little bark, how badly art thou freighted!”</p>
<p>
Methought, then, that the earth did yawn between<br/>
Both wheels, and I saw rise from it a Dragon,<br/>
Who through the chariot upward fixed his tail,</p>
<p>
And as a wasp that draweth back its sting,<br/>
Drawing unto himself his tail malign,<br/>
Drew out the floor, and went his way rejoicing.</p>
<p>
That which remained behind, even as with grass<br/>
A fertile region, with the feathers, offered<br/>
Perhaps with pure intention and benign,</p>
<p>
Reclothed itself, and with them were reclothed<br/>
The pole and both the wheels so speedily,<br/>
A sigh doth longer keep the lips apart.</p>
<p>
Transfigured thus the holy edifice<br/>
Thrust forward heads upon the parts of it,<br/>
Three on the pole and one at either corner.</p>
<p>
The first were horned like oxen; but the four<br/>
Had but a single horn upon the forehead;<br/>
A monster such had never yet been seen!</p>
<p>
Firm as a rock upon a mountain high,<br/>
Seated upon it, there appeared to me<br/>
A shameless whore, with eyes swift glancing round,</p>
<p>
And, as if not to have her taken from him,<br/>
Upright beside her I beheld a giant;<br/>
And ever and anon they kissed each other.</p>
<p>
But because she her wanton, roving eye<br/>
Turned upon me, her angry paramour<br/>
Did scourge her from her head unto her feet.</p>
<p>
Then full of jealousy, and fierce with wrath,<br/>
He loosed the monster, and across the forest<br/>
Dragged it so far, he made of that alone</p>
<p>
A shield unto the whore and the strange beast.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="CantoII.XXXIII"></SPAN>Purgatorio: Canto XXXIII</h2>
<p>
“Deus venerunt gentes,” alternating<br/>
Now three, now four, melodious psalmody<br/>
The maidens in the midst of tears began;</p>
<p>
And Beatrice, compassionate and sighing,<br/>
Listened to them with such a countenance,<br/>
That scarce more changed was Mary at the cross.</p>
<p>
But when the other virgins place had given<br/>
For her to speak, uprisen to her feet<br/>
With colour as of fire, she made response:</p>
<p>
“‘Modicum, et non videbitis me;<br/>
Et iterum,’ my sisters predilect,<br/>
‘Modicum, et vos videbitis me.’”</p>
<p>
Then all the seven in front of her she placed;<br/>
And after her, by beckoning only, moved<br/>
Me and the lady and the sage who stayed.</p>
<p>
So she moved onward; and I do not think<br/>
That her tenth step was placed upon the ground,<br/>
When with her eyes upon mine eyes she smote,</p>
<p>
And with a tranquil aspect, “Come more quickly,”<br/>
To me she said, “that, if I speak with thee,<br/>
To listen to me thou mayst be well placed.”</p>
<p>
As soon as I was with her as I should be,<br/>
She said to me: “Why, brother, dost thou not<br/>
Venture to question now, in coming with me?”</p>
<p>
As unto those who are too reverential,<br/>
Speaking in presence of superiors,<br/>
Who drag no living utterance to their teeth,</p>
<p>
It me befell, that without perfect sound<br/>
Began I: “My necessity, Madonna,<br/>
You know, and that which thereunto is good.”</p>
<p>
And she to me: “Of fear and bashfulness<br/>
Henceforward I will have thee strip thyself,<br/>
So that thou speak no more as one who dreams.</p>
<p>
Know that the vessel which the serpent broke<br/>
Was, and is not; but let him who is guilty<br/>
Think that God’s vengeance does not fear a sop.</p>
<p>
Without an heir shall not for ever be<br/>
The Eagle that left his plumes upon the car,<br/>
Whence it became a monster, then a prey;</p>
<p>
For verily I see, and hence narrate it,<br/>
The stars already near to bring the time,<br/>
From every hindrance safe, and every bar,</p>
<p>
Within which a Five-hundred, Ten, and Five,<br/>
One sent from God, shall slay the thievish woman<br/>
And that same giant who is sinning with her.</p>
<p>
And peradventure my dark utterance,<br/>
Like Themis and the Sphinx, may less persuade thee,<br/>
Since, in their mode, it clouds the intellect;</p>
<p>
But soon the facts shall be the Naiades<br/>
Who shall this difficult enigma solve,<br/>
Without destruction of the flocks and harvests.</p>
<p>
Note thou; and even as by me are uttered<br/>
These words, so teach them unto those who live<br/>
That life which is a running unto death;</p>
<p>
And bear in mind, whene’er thou writest them,<br/>
Not to conceal what thou hast seen the plant,<br/>
That twice already has been pillaged here.</p>
<p>
Whoever pillages or shatters it,<br/>
With blasphemy of deed offendeth God,<br/>
Who made it holy for his use alone.</p>
<p>
For biting that, in pain and in desire<br/>
Five thousand years and more the first-born soul<br/>
Craved Him, who punished in himself the bite.</p>
<p>
Thy genius slumbers, if it deem it not<br/>
For special reason so pre-eminent<br/>
In height, and so inverted in its summit.</p>
<p>
And if thy vain imaginings had not been<br/>
Water of Elsa round about thy mind,<br/>
And Pyramus to the mulberry, their pleasure,</p>
<p>
Thou by so many circumstances only<br/>
The justice of the interdict of God<br/>
Morally in the tree wouldst recognize.</p>
<p>
But since I see thee in thine intellect<br/>
Converted into stone and stained with sin,<br/>
So that the light of my discourse doth daze thee,</p>
<p>
I will too, if not written, at least painted,<br/>
Thou bear it back within thee, for the reason<br/>
That cinct with palm the pilgrim’s staff is borne.”</p>
<p>
And I: “As by a signet is the wax<br/>
Which does not change the figure stamped upon it,<br/>
My brain is now imprinted by yourself.</p>
<p>
But wherefore so beyond my power of sight<br/>
Soars your desirable discourse, that aye<br/>
The more I strive, so much the more I lose it?”</p>
<p>
“That thou mayst recognize,” she said, “the school<br/>
Which thou hast followed, and mayst see how far<br/>
Its doctrine follows after my discourse,</p>
<p>
And mayst behold your path from the divine<br/>
Distant as far as separated is<br/>
From earth the heaven that highest hastens on.”</p>
<p>
Whence her I answered: “I do not remember<br/>
That ever I estranged myself from you,<br/>
Nor have I conscience of it that reproves me.”</p>
<p>
“And if thou art not able to remember,”<br/>
Smiling she answered, “recollect thee now<br/>
That thou this very day hast drunk of Lethe;</p>
<p>
And if from smoke a fire may be inferred,<br/>
Such an oblivion clearly demonstrates<br/>
Some error in thy will elsewhere intent.</p>
<p>
Truly from this time forward shall my words<br/>
Be naked, so far as it is befitting<br/>
To lay them open unto thy rude gaze.”</p>
<p>
And more coruscant and with slower steps<br/>
The sun was holding the meridian circle,<br/>
Which, with the point of view, shifts here and there</p>
<p>
When halted (as he cometh to a halt,<br/>
Who goes before a squadron as its escort,<br/>
If something new he find upon his way)</p>
<p>
The ladies seven at a dark shadow’s edge,<br/>
Such as, beneath green leaves and branches black,<br/>
The Alp upon its frigid border wears.</p>
<p>
In front of them the Tigris and Euphrates<br/>
Methought I saw forth issue from one fountain,<br/>
And slowly part, like friends, from one another.</p>
<p>
“O light, O glory of the human race!<br/>
What stream is this which here unfolds itself<br/>
From out one source, and from itself withdraws?”</p>
<p>
For such a prayer, ’twas said unto me, “Pray<br/>
Matilda that she tell thee;” and here answered,<br/>
As one does who doth free himself from blame,</p>
<p>
The beautiful lady: “This and other things<br/>
Were told to him by me; and sure I am<br/>
The water of Lethe has not hid them from him.”</p>
<p>
And Beatrice: “Perhaps a greater care,<br/>
Which oftentimes our memory takes away,<br/>
Has made the vision of his mind obscure.</p>
<p>
But Eunoe behold, that yonder rises;<br/>
Lead him to it, and, as thou art accustomed,<br/>
Revive again the half-dead virtue in him.”</p>
<p>
Like gentle soul, that maketh no excuse,<br/>
But makes its own will of another’s will<br/>
As soon as by a sign it is disclosed,</p>
<p>
Even so, when she had taken hold of me,<br/>
The beautiful lady moved, and unto Statius<br/>
Said, in her womanly manner, “Come with him.”</p>
<p>
If, Reader, I possessed a longer space<br/>
For writing it, I yet would sing in part<br/>
Of the sweet draught that ne’er would satiate me;</p>
<p>
But inasmuch as full are all the leaves<br/>
Made ready for this second canticle,<br/>
The curb of art no farther lets me go.</p>
<p>
From the most holy water I returned<br/>
Regenerate, in the manner of new trees<br/>
That are renewed with a new foliage,</p>
<p>
Pure and disposed to mount unto the stars.</p>
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