<h2><SPAN name="CantoIII.XXII"></SPAN>Paradiso: Canto XXII</h2>
<p>
Oppressed with stupor, I unto my guide<br/>
Turned like a little child who always runs<br/>
For refuge there where he confideth most;</p>
<p>
And she, even as a mother who straightway<br/>
Gives comfort to her pale and breathless boy<br/>
With voice whose wont it is to reassure him,</p>
<p>
Said to me: “Knowest thou not thou art in heaven,<br/>
And knowest thou not that heaven is holy all<br/>
And what is done here cometh from good zeal?</p>
<p>
After what wise the singing would have changed thee<br/>
And I by smiling, thou canst now imagine,<br/>
Since that the cry has startled thee so much,</p>
<p>
In which if thou hadst understood its prayers<br/>
Already would be known to thee the vengeance<br/>
Which thou shalt look upon before thou diest.</p>
<p>
The sword above here smiteth not in haste<br/>
Nor tardily, howe’er it seem to him<br/>
Who fearing or desiring waits for it.</p>
<p>
But turn thee round towards the others now,<br/>
For very illustrious spirits shalt thou see,<br/>
If thou thy sight directest as I say.”</p>
<p>
As it seemed good to her mine eyes I turned,<br/>
And saw a hundred spherules that together<br/>
With mutual rays each other more embellished.</p>
<p>
I stood as one who in himself represses<br/>
The point of his desire, and ventures not<br/>
To question, he so feareth the too much.</p>
<p>
And now the largest and most luculent<br/>
Among those pearls came forward, that it might<br/>
Make my desire concerning it content.</p>
<p>
Within it then I heard: “If thou couldst see<br/>
Even as myself the charity that burns<br/>
Among us, thy conceits would be expressed;</p>
<p>
But, that by waiting thou mayst not come late<br/>
To the high end, I will make answer even<br/>
Unto the thought of which thou art so chary.</p>
<p>
That mountain on whose slope Cassino stands<br/>
Was frequented of old upon its summit<br/>
By a deluded folk and ill-disposed;</p>
<p>
And I am he who first up thither bore<br/>
The name of Him who brought upon the earth<br/>
The truth that so much sublimateth us.</p>
<p>
And such abundant grace upon me shone<br/>
That all the neighbouring towns I drew away<br/>
From the impious worship that seduced the world.</p>
<p>
These other fires, each one of them, were men<br/>
Contemplative, enkindled by that heat<br/>
Which maketh holy flowers and fruits spring up.</p>
<p>
Here is Macarius, here is Romualdus,<br/>
Here are my brethren, who within the cloisters<br/>
Their footsteps stayed and kept a steadfast heart.”</p>
<p>
And I to him: “The affection which thou showest<br/>
Speaking with me, and the good countenance<br/>
Which I behold and note in all your ardours,</p>
<p>
In me have so my confidence dilated<br/>
As the sun doth the rose, when it becomes<br/>
As far unfolded as it hath the power.</p>
<p>
Therefore I pray, and thou assure me, father,<br/>
If I may so much grace receive, that I<br/>
May thee behold with countenance unveiled.”</p>
<p>
He thereupon: “Brother, thy high desire<br/>
In the remotest sphere shall be fulfilled,<br/>
Where are fulfilled all others and my own.</p>
<p>
There perfect is, and ripened, and complete,<br/>
Every desire; within that one alone<br/>
Is every part where it has always been;</p>
<p>
For it is not in space, nor turns on poles,<br/>
And unto it our stairway reaches up,<br/>
Whence thus from out thy sight it steals away.</p>
<p>
Up to that height the Patriarch Jacob saw it<br/>
Extending its supernal part, what time<br/>
So thronged with angels it appeared to him.</p>
<p>
But to ascend it now no one uplifts<br/>
His feet from off the earth, and now my Rule<br/>
Below remaineth for mere waste of paper.</p>
<p>
The walls that used of old to be an Abbey<br/>
Are changed to dens of robbers, and the cowls<br/>
Are sacks filled full of miserable flour.</p>
<p>
But heavy usury is not taken up<br/>
So much against God’s pleasure as that fruit<br/>
Which maketh so insane the heart of monks;</p>
<p>
For whatsoever hath the Church in keeping<br/>
Is for the folk that ask it in God’s name,<br/>
Not for one’s kindred or for something worse.</p>
<p>
The flesh of mortals is so very soft,<br/>
That good beginnings down below suffice not<br/>
From springing of the oak to bearing acorns.</p>
<p>
Peter began with neither gold nor silver,<br/>
And I with orison and abstinence,<br/>
And Francis with humility his convent.</p>
<p>
And if thou lookest at each one’s beginning,<br/>
And then regardest whither he has run,<br/>
Thou shalt behold the white changed into brown.</p>
<p>
In verity the Jordan backward turned,<br/>
And the sea’s fleeing, when God willed were more<br/>
A wonder to behold, than succour here.”</p>
<p>
Thus unto me he said; and then withdrew<br/>
To his own band, and the band closed together;<br/>
Then like a whirlwind all was upward rapt.</p>
<p>
The gentle Lady urged me on behind them<br/>
Up o’er that stairway by a single sign,<br/>
So did her virtue overcome my nature;</p>
<p>
Nor here below, where one goes up and down<br/>
By natural law, was motion e’er so swift<br/>
That it could be compared unto my wing.</p>
<p>
Reader, as I may unto that devout<br/>
Triumph return, on whose account I often<br/>
For my transgressions weep and beat my breast,—</p>
<p>
Thou hadst not thrust thy finger in the fire<br/>
And drawn it out again, before I saw<br/>
The sign that follows Taurus, and was in it.</p>
<p>
O glorious stars, O light impregnated<br/>
With mighty virtue, from which I acknowledge<br/>
All of my genius, whatsoe’er it be,</p>
<p>
With you was born, and hid himself with you,<br/>
He who is father of all mortal life,<br/>
When first I tasted of the Tuscan air;</p>
<p>
And then when grace was freely given to me<br/>
To enter the high wheel which turns you round,<br/>
Your region was allotted unto me.</p>
<p>
To you devoutly at this hour my soul<br/>
Is sighing, that it virtue may acquire<br/>
For the stern pass that draws it to itself.</p>
<p>
“Thou art so near unto the last salvation,”<br/>
Thus Beatrice began, “thou oughtest now<br/>
To have thine eves unclouded and acute;</p>
<p>
And therefore, ere thou enter farther in,<br/>
Look down once more, and see how vast a world<br/>
Thou hast already put beneath thy feet;</p>
<p>
So that thy heart, as jocund as it may,<br/>
Present itself to the triumphant throng<br/>
That comes rejoicing through this rounded ether.”</p>
<p>
I with my sight returned through one and all<br/>
The sevenfold spheres, and I beheld this globe<br/>
Such that I smiled at its ignoble semblance;</p>
<p>
And that opinion I approve as best<br/>
Which doth account it least; and he who thinks<br/>
Of something else may truly be called just.</p>
<p>
I saw the daughter of Latona shining<br/>
Without that shadow, which to me was cause<br/>
That once I had believed her rare and dense.</p>
<p>
The aspect of thy son, Hyperion,<br/>
Here I sustained, and saw how move themselves<br/>
Around and near him Maia and Dione.</p>
<p>
Thence there appeared the temperateness of Jove<br/>
’Twixt son and father, and to me was clear<br/>
The change that of their whereabout they make;</p>
<p>
And all the seven made manifest to me<br/>
How great they are, and eke how swift they are,<br/>
And how they are in distant habitations.</p>
<p>
The threshing-floor that maketh us so proud,<br/>
To me revolving with the eternal Twins,<br/>
Was all apparent made from hill to harbour!</p>
<p>
Then to the beauteous eyes mine eyes I turned.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="CantoIII.XXIII"></SPAN>Paradiso: Canto XXIII</h2>
<p>
Even as a bird, ’mid the beloved leaves,<br/>
Quiet upon the nest of her sweet brood<br/>
Throughout the night, that hideth all things from us,</p>
<p>
Who, that she may behold their longed-for looks<br/>
And find the food wherewith to nourish them,<br/>
In which, to her, grave labours grateful are,</p>
<p>
Anticipates the time on open spray<br/>
And with an ardent longing waits the sun,<br/>
Gazing intent as soon as breaks the dawn:</p>
<p>
Even thus my Lady standing was, erect<br/>
And vigilant, turned round towards the zone<br/>
Underneath which the sun displays less haste;</p>
<p>
So that beholding her distraught and wistful,<br/>
Such I became as he is who desiring<br/>
For something yearns, and hoping is appeased.</p>
<p>
But brief the space from one When to the other;<br/>
Of my awaiting, say I, and the seeing<br/>
The welkin grow resplendent more and more.</p>
<p>
And Beatrice exclaimed: “Behold the hosts<br/>
Of Christ’s triumphal march, and all the fruit<br/>
Harvested by the rolling of these spheres!”</p>
<p>
It seemed to me her face was all aflame;<br/>
And eyes she had so full of ecstasy<br/>
That I must needs pass on without describing.</p>
<p>
As when in nights serene of the full moon<br/>
Smiles Trivia among the nymphs eternal<br/>
Who paint the firmament through all its gulfs,</p>
<p>
Saw I, above the myriads of lamps,<br/>
A Sun that one and all of them enkindled,<br/>
E’en as our own doth the supernal sights,</p>
<p>
And through the living light transparent shone<br/>
The lucent substance so intensely clear<br/>
Into my sight, that I sustained it not.</p>
<p>
O Beatrice, thou gentle guide and dear!<br/>
To me she said: “What overmasters thee<br/>
A virtue is from which naught shields itself.</p>
<p>
There are the wisdom and the omnipotence<br/>
That oped the thoroughfares ’twixt heaven and earth,<br/>
For which there erst had been so long a yearning.”</p>
<p>
As fire from out a cloud unlocks itself,<br/>
Dilating so it finds not room therein,<br/>
And down, against its nature, falls to earth,</p>
<p>
So did my mind, among those aliments<br/>
Becoming larger, issue from itself,<br/>
And that which it became cannot remember.</p>
<p>
“Open thine eyes, and look at what I am:<br/>
Thou hast beheld such things, that strong enough<br/>
Hast thou become to tolerate my smile.”</p>
<p>
I was as one who still retains the feeling<br/>
Of a forgotten vision, and endeavours<br/>
In vain to bring it back into his mind,</p>
<p>
When I this invitation heard, deserving<br/>
Of so much gratitude, it never fades<br/>
Out of the book that chronicles the past.</p>
<p>
If at this moment sounded all the tongues<br/>
That Polyhymnia and her sisters made<br/>
Most lubrical with their delicious milk,</p>
<p>
To aid me, to a thousandth of the truth<br/>
It would not reach, singing the holy smile<br/>
And how the holy aspect it illumed.</p>
<p>
And therefore, representing Paradise,<br/>
The sacred poem must perforce leap over,<br/>
Even as a man who finds his way cut off;</p>
<p>
But whoso thinketh of the ponderous theme,<br/>
And of the mortal shoulder laden with it,<br/>
Should blame it not, if under this it tremble.</p>
<p>
It is no passage for a little boat<br/>
This which goes cleaving the audacious prow,<br/>
Nor for a pilot who would spare himself.</p>
<p>
“Why doth my face so much enamour thee,<br/>
That to the garden fair thou turnest not,<br/>
Which under the rays of Christ is blossoming?</p>
<p>
There is the Rose in which the Word Divine<br/>
Became incarnate; there the lilies are<br/>
By whose perfume the good way was discovered.”</p>
<p>
Thus Beatrice; and I, who to her counsels<br/>
Was wholly ready, once again betook me<br/>
Unto the battle of the feeble brows.</p>
<p>
As in the sunshine, that unsullied streams<br/>
Through fractured cloud, ere now a meadow of flowers<br/>
Mine eyes with shadow covered o’er have seen,</p>
<p>
So troops of splendours manifold I saw<br/>
Illumined from above with burning rays,<br/>
Beholding not the source of the effulgence.</p>
<p>
O power benignant that dost so imprint them!<br/>
Thou didst exalt thyself to give more scope<br/>
There to mine eyes, that were not strong enough.</p>
<p>
The name of that fair flower I e’er invoke<br/>
Morning and evening utterly enthralled<br/>
My soul to gaze upon the greater fire.</p>
<p>
And when in both mine eyes depicted were<br/>
The glory and greatness of the living star<br/>
Which there excelleth, as it here excelled,</p>
<p>
Athwart the heavens a little torch descended<br/>
Formed in a circle like a coronal,<br/>
And cinctured it, and whirled itself about it.</p>
<p>
Whatever melody most sweetly soundeth<br/>
On earth, and to itself most draws the soul,<br/>
Would seem a cloud that, rent asunder, thunders,</p>
<p>
Compared unto the sounding of that lyre<br/>
Wherewith was crowned the sapphire beautiful,<br/>
Which gives the clearest heaven its sapphire hue.</p>
<p>
“I am Angelic Love, that circle round<br/>
The joy sublime which breathes from out the womb<br/>
That was the hostelry of our Desire;</p>
<p>
And I shall circle, Lady of Heaven, while<br/>
Thou followest thy Son, and mak’st diviner<br/>
The sphere supreme, because thou enterest there.”</p>
<p>
Thus did the circulated melody<br/>
Seal itself up; and all the other lights<br/>
Were making to resound the name of Mary.</p>
<p>
The regal mantle of the volumes all<br/>
Of that world, which most fervid is and living<br/>
With breath of God and with his works and ways,</p>
<p>
Extended over us its inner border,<br/>
So very distant, that the semblance of it<br/>
There where I was not yet appeared to me.</p>
<p>
Therefore mine eyes did not possess the power<br/>
Of following the incoronated flame,<br/>
Which mounted upward near to its own seed.</p>
<p>
And as a little child, that towards its mother<br/>
Stretches its arms, when it the milk has taken,<br/>
Through impulse kindled into outward flame,</p>
<p>
Each of those gleams of whiteness upward reached<br/>
So with its summit, that the deep affection<br/>
They had for Mary was revealed to me.</p>
<p>
Thereafter they remained there in my sight,<br/>
‘Regina coeli’ singing with such sweetness,<br/>
That ne’er from me has the delight departed.</p>
<p>
O, what exuberance is garnered up<br/>
Within those richest coffers, which had been<br/>
Good husbandmen for sowing here below!</p>
<p>
There they enjoy and live upon the treasure<br/>
Which was acquired while weeping in the exile<br/>
Of Babylon, wherein the gold was left.</p>
<p>
There triumpheth, beneath the exalted Son<br/>
Of God and Mary, in his victory,<br/>
Both with the ancient council and the new,</p>
<p>
He who doth keep the keys of such a glory.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="CantoIII.XXIV"></SPAN>Paradiso: Canto XXIV</h2>
<p>
“O company elect to the great supper<br/>
Of the Lamb benedight, who feedeth you<br/>
So that for ever full is your desire,</p>
<p>
If by the grace of God this man foretaste<br/>
Something of that which falleth from your table,<br/>
Or ever death prescribe to him the time,</p>
<p>
Direct your mind to his immense desire,<br/>
And him somewhat bedew; ye drinking are<br/>
For ever at the fount whence comes his thought.”</p>
<p>
Thus Beatrice; and those souls beatified<br/>
Transformed themselves to spheres on steadfast poles,<br/>
Flaming intensely in the guise of comets.</p>
<p>
And as the wheels in works of horologes<br/>
Revolve so that the first to the beholder<br/>
Motionless seems, and the last one to fly,</p>
<p>
So in like manner did those carols, dancing<br/>
In different measure, of their affluence<br/>
Give me the gauge, as they were swift or slow.</p>
<p>
From that one which I noted of most beauty<br/>
Beheld I issue forth a fire so happy<br/>
That none it left there of a greater brightness;</p>
<p>
And around Beatrice three several times<br/>
It whirled itself with so divine a song,<br/>
My fantasy repeats it not to me;</p>
<p>
Therefore the pen skips, and I write it not,<br/>
Since our imagination for such folds,<br/>
Much more our speech, is of a tint too glaring.</p>
<p>
“O holy sister mine, who us implorest<br/>
With such devotion, by thine ardent love<br/>
Thou dost unbind me from that beautiful sphere!”</p>
<p>
Thereafter, having stopped, the blessed fire<br/>
Unto my Lady did direct its breath,<br/>
Which spake in fashion as I here have said.</p>
<p>
And she: “O light eterne of the great man<br/>
To whom our Lord delivered up the keys<br/>
He carried down of this miraculous joy,</p>
<p>
This one examine on points light and grave,<br/>
As good beseemeth thee, about the Faith<br/>
By means of which thou on the sea didst walk.</p>
<p>
If he love well, and hope well, and believe,<br/>
From thee ’tis hid not; for thou hast thy sight<br/>
There where depicted everything is seen.</p>
<p>
But since this kingdom has made citizens<br/>
By means of the true Faith, to glorify it<br/>
’Tis well he have the chance to speak thereof.”</p>
<p>
As baccalaureate arms himself, and speaks not<br/>
Until the master doth propose the question,<br/>
To argue it, and not to terminate it,</p>
<p>
So did I arm myself with every reason,<br/>
While she was speaking, that I might be ready<br/>
For such a questioner and such profession.</p>
<p>
“Say, thou good Christian; manifest thyself;<br/>
What is the Faith?” Whereat I raised my brow<br/>
Unto that light wherefrom was this breathed forth.</p>
<p>
Then turned I round to Beatrice, and she<br/>
Prompt signals made to me that I should pour<br/>
The water forth from my internal fountain.</p>
<p>
“May grace, that suffers me to make confession,”<br/>
Began I, “to the great centurion,<br/>
Cause my conceptions all to be explicit!”</p>
<p>
And I continued: “As the truthful pen,<br/>
Father, of thy dear brother wrote of it,<br/>
Who put with thee Rome into the good way,</p>
<p>
Faith is the substance of the things we hope for,<br/>
And evidence of those that are not seen;<br/>
And this appears to me its quiddity.”</p>
<p>
Then heard I: “Very rightly thou perceivest,<br/>
If well thou understandest why he placed it<br/>
With substances and then with evidences.”</p>
<p>
And I thereafterward: “The things profound,<br/>
That here vouchsafe to me their apparition,<br/>
Unto all eyes below are so concealed,</p>
<p>
That they exist there only in belief,<br/>
Upon the which is founded the high hope,<br/>
And hence it takes the nature of a substance.</p>
<p>
And it behoveth us from this belief<br/>
To reason without having other sight,<br/>
And hence it has the nature of evidence.”</p>
<p>
Then heard I: “If whatever is acquired<br/>
Below by doctrine were thus understood,<br/>
No sophist’s subtlety would there find place.”</p>
<p>
Thus was breathed forth from that enkindled love;<br/>
Then added: “Very well has been gone over<br/>
Already of this coin the alloy and weight;</p>
<p>
But tell me if thou hast it in thy purse?”<br/>
And I: “Yes, both so shining and so round<br/>
That in its stamp there is no peradventure.”</p>
<p>
Thereafter issued from the light profound<br/>
That there resplendent was: “This precious jewel,<br/>
Upon the which is every virtue founded,</p>
<p>
Whence hadst thou it?” And I: “The large outpouring<br/>
Of Holy Spirit, which has been diffused<br/>
Upon the ancient parchments and the new,</p>
<p>
A syllogism is, which proved it to me<br/>
With such acuteness, that, compared therewith,<br/>
All demonstration seems to me obtuse.”</p>
<p>
And then I heard: “The ancient and the new<br/>
Postulates, that to thee are so conclusive,<br/>
Why dost thou take them for the word divine?”</p>
<p>
And I: “The proofs, which show the truth to me,<br/>
Are the works subsequent, whereunto Nature<br/>
Ne’er heated iron yet, nor anvil beat.”</p>
<p>
’Twas answered me: “Say, who assureth thee<br/>
That those works ever were? the thing itself<br/>
That must be proved, nought else to thee affirms it.”</p>
<p>
“Were the world to Christianity converted,”<br/>
I said, “withouten miracles, this one<br/>
Is such, the rest are not its hundredth part;</p>
<p>
Because that poor and fasting thou didst enter<br/>
Into the field to sow there the good plant,<br/>
Which was a vine and has become a thorn!”</p>
<p>
This being finished, the high, holy Court<br/>
Resounded through the spheres, “One God we praise!”<br/>
In melody that there above is chanted.</p>
<p>
And then that Baron, who from branch to branch,<br/>
Examining, had thus conducted me,<br/>
Till the extremest leaves we were approaching,</p>
<p>
Again began: “The Grace that dallying<br/>
Plays with thine intellect thy mouth has opened,<br/>
Up to this point, as it should opened be,</p>
<p>
So that I do approve what forth emerged;<br/>
But now thou must express what thou believest,<br/>
And whence to thy belief it was presented.”</p>
<p>
“O holy father, spirit who beholdest<br/>
What thou believedst so that thou o’ercamest,<br/>
Towards the sepulchre, more youthful feet,”</p>
<p>
Began I, “thou dost wish me in this place<br/>
The form to manifest of my prompt belief,<br/>
And likewise thou the cause thereof demandest.</p>
<p>
And I respond: In one God I believe,<br/>
Sole and eterne, who moveth all the heavens<br/>
With love and with desire, himself unmoved;</p>
<p>
And of such faith not only have I proofs<br/>
Physical and metaphysical, but gives them<br/>
Likewise the truth that from this place rains down</p>
<p>
Through Moses, through the Prophets and the Psalms,<br/>
Through the Evangel, and through you, who wrote<br/>
After the fiery Spirit sanctified you;</p>
<p>
In Persons three eterne believe, and these<br/>
One essence I believe, so one and trine<br/>
They bear conjunction both with ‘sunt’ and ‘est.’</p>
<p>
With the profound condition and divine<br/>
Which now I touch upon, doth stamp my mind<br/>
Ofttimes the doctrine evangelical.</p>
<p>
This the beginning is, this is the spark<br/>
Which afterwards dilates to vivid flame,<br/>
And, like a star in heaven, is sparkling in me.”</p>
<p>
Even as a lord who hears what pleaseth him<br/>
His servant straight embraces, gratulating<br/>
For the good news as soon as he is silent;</p>
<p>
So, giving me its benediction, singing,<br/>
Three times encircled me, when I was silent,<br/>
The apostolic light, at whose command</p>
<p>
I spoken had, in speaking I so pleased him.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="CantoIII.XXV"></SPAN>Paradiso: Canto XXV</h2>
<p>
If e’er it happen that the Poem Sacred,<br/>
To which both heaven and earth have set their hand,<br/>
So that it many a year hath made me lean,</p>
<p>
O’ercome the cruelty that bars me out<br/>
From the fair sheepfold, where a lamb I slumbered,<br/>
An enemy to the wolves that war upon it,</p>
<p>
With other voice forthwith, with other fleece<br/>
Poet will I return, and at my font<br/>
Baptismal will I take the laurel crown;</p>
<p>
Because into the Faith that maketh known<br/>
All souls to God there entered I, and then<br/>
Peter for her sake thus my brow encircled.</p>
<p>
Thereafterward towards us moved a light<br/>
Out of that band whence issued the first-fruits<br/>
Which of his vicars Christ behind him left,</p>
<p>
And then my Lady, full of ecstasy,<br/>
Said unto me: “Look, look! behold the Baron<br/>
For whom below Galicia is frequented.”</p>
<p>
In the same way as, when a dove alights<br/>
Near his companion, both of them pour forth,<br/>
Circling about and murmuring, their affection,</p>
<p>
So one beheld I by the other grand<br/>
Prince glorified to be with welcome greeted,<br/>
Lauding the food that there above is eaten.</p>
<p>
But when their gratulations were complete,<br/>
Silently ‘coram me’ each one stood still,<br/>
So incandescent it o’ercame my sight.</p>
<p>
Smiling thereafterwards, said Beatrice:<br/>
“Illustrious life, by whom the benefactions<br/>
Of our Basilica have been described,</p>
<p>
Make Hope resound within this altitude;<br/>
Thou knowest as oft thou dost personify it<br/>
As Jesus to the three gave greater clearness.”—</p>
<p>
“Lift up thy head, and make thyself assured;<br/>
For what comes hither from the mortal world<br/>
Must needs be ripened in our radiance.”</p>
<p>
This comfort came to me from the second fire;<br/>
Wherefore mine eyes I lifted to the hills,<br/>
Which bent them down before with too great weight.</p>
<p>
“Since, through his grace, our Emperor wills that thou<br/>
Shouldst find thee face to face, before thy death,<br/>
In the most secret chamber, with his Counts,</p>
<p>
So that, the truth beholden of this court,<br/>
Hope, which below there rightfully enamours,<br/>
Thereby thou strengthen in thyself and others,</p>
<p>
Say what it is, and how is flowering with it<br/>
Thy mind, and say from whence it came to thee.”<br/>
Thus did the second light again continue.</p>
<p>
And the Compassionate, who piloted<br/>
The plumage of my wings in such high flight,<br/>
Did in reply anticipate me thus:</p>
<p>
“No child whatever the Church Militant<br/>
Of greater hope possesses, as is written<br/>
In that Sun which irradiates all our band;</p>
<p>
Therefore it is conceded him from Egypt<br/>
To come into Jerusalem to see,<br/>
Or ever yet his warfare be completed.</p>
<p>
The two remaining points, that not for knowledge<br/>
Have been demanded, but that he report<br/>
How much this virtue unto thee is pleasing,</p>
<p>
To him I leave; for hard he will not find them,<br/>
Nor of self-praise; and let him answer them;<br/>
And may the grace of God in this assist him!”</p>
<p>
As a disciple, who his teacher follows,<br/>
Ready and willing, where he is expert,<br/>
That his proficiency may be displayed,</p>
<p>
“Hope,” said I, “is the certain expectation<br/>
Of future glory, which is the effect<br/>
Of grace divine and merit precedent.</p>
<p>
From many stars this light comes unto me;<br/>
But he instilled it first into my heart<br/>
Who was chief singer unto the chief captain.</p>
<p>
‘Sperent in te,’ in the high Theody<br/>
He sayeth, ‘those who know thy name;’ and who<br/>
Knoweth it not, if he my faith possess?</p>
<p>
Thou didst instil me, then, with his instilling<br/>
In the Epistle, so that I am full,<br/>
And upon others rain again your rain.”</p>
<p>
While I was speaking, in the living bosom<br/>
Of that combustion quivered an effulgence,<br/>
Sudden and frequent, in the guise of lightning;</p>
<p>
Then breathed: “The love wherewith I am inflamed<br/>
Towards the virtue still which followed me<br/>
Unto the palm and issue of the field,</p>
<p>
Wills that I breathe to thee that thou delight<br/>
In her; and grateful to me is thy telling<br/>
Whatever things Hope promises to thee.”</p>
<p>
And I: “The ancient Scriptures and the new<br/>
The mark establish, and this shows it me,<br/>
Of all the souls whom God hath made his friends.</p>
<p>
Isaiah saith, that each one garmented<br/>
In his own land shall be with twofold garments,<br/>
And his own land is this delightful life.</p>
<p>
Thy brother, too, far more explicitly,<br/>
There where he treateth of the robes of white,<br/>
This revelation manifests to us.”</p>
<p>
And first, and near the ending of these words,<br/>
“Sperent in te” from over us was heard,<br/>
To which responsive answered all the carols.</p>
<p>
Thereafterward a light among them brightened,<br/>
So that, if Cancer one such crystal had,<br/>
Winter would have a month of one sole day.</p>
<p>
And as uprises, goes, and enters the dance<br/>
A winsome maiden, only to do honour<br/>
To the new bride, and not from any failing,</p>
<p>
Even thus did I behold the brightened splendour<br/>
Approach the two, who in a wheel revolved<br/>
As was beseeming to their ardent love.</p>
<p>
Into the song and music there it entered;<br/>
And fixed on them my Lady kept her look,<br/>
Even as a bride silent and motionless.</p>
<p>
“This is the one who lay upon the breast<br/>
Of him our Pelican; and this is he<br/>
To the great office from the cross elected.”</p>
<p>
My Lady thus; but therefore none the more<br/>
Did move her sight from its attentive gaze<br/>
Before or afterward these words of hers.</p>
<p>
Even as a man who gazes, and endeavours<br/>
To see the eclipsing of the sun a little,<br/>
And who, by seeing, sightless doth become,</p>
<p>
So I became before that latest fire,<br/>
While it was said, “Why dost thou daze thyself<br/>
To see a thing which here hath no existence?</p>
<p>
Earth in the earth my body is, and shall be<br/>
With all the others there, until our number<br/>
With the eternal proposition tallies.</p>
<p>
With the two garments in the blessed cloister<br/>
Are the two lights alone that have ascended:<br/>
And this shalt thou take back into your world.”</p>
<p>
And at this utterance the flaming circle<br/>
Grew quiet, with the dulcet intermingling<br/>
Of sound that by the trinal breath was made,</p>
<p>
As to escape from danger or fatigue<br/>
The oars that erst were in the water beaten<br/>
Are all suspended at a whistle’s sound.</p>
<p>
Ah, how much in my mind was I disturbed,<br/>
When I turned round to look on Beatrice,<br/>
That her I could not see, although I was</p>
<p>
Close at her side and in the Happy World!</p>
<h2><SPAN name="CantoIII.XXVI"></SPAN>Paradiso: Canto XXVI</h2>
<p>
While I was doubting for my vision quenched,<br/>
Out of the flame refulgent that had quenched it<br/>
Issued a breathing, that attentive made me,</p>
<p>
Saying: “While thou recoverest the sense<br/>
Of seeing which in me thou hast consumed,<br/>
’Tis well that speaking thou shouldst compensate it.</p>
<p>
Begin then, and declare to what thy soul<br/>
Is aimed, and count it for a certainty,<br/>
Sight is in thee bewildered and not dead;</p>
<p>
Because the Lady, who through this divine<br/>
Region conducteth thee, has in her look<br/>
The power the hand of Ananias had.”</p>
<p>
I said: “As pleaseth her, or soon or late<br/>
Let the cure come to eyes that portals were<br/>
When she with fire I ever burn with entered.</p>
<p>
The Good, that gives contentment to this Court,<br/>
The Alpha and Omega is of all<br/>
The writing that love reads me low or loud.”</p>
<p>
The selfsame voice, that taken had from me<br/>
The terror of the sudden dazzlement,<br/>
To speak still farther put it in my thought;</p>
<p>
And said: “In verity with finer sieve<br/>
Behoveth thee to sift; thee it behoveth<br/>
To say who aimed thy bow at such a target.”</p>
<p>
And I: “By philosophic arguments,<br/>
And by authority that hence descends,<br/>
Such love must needs imprint itself in me;</p>
<p>
For Good, so far as good, when comprehended<br/>
Doth straight enkindle love, and so much greater<br/>
As more of goodness in itself it holds;</p>
<p>
Then to that Essence (whose is such advantage<br/>
That every good which out of it is found<br/>
Is nothing but a ray of its own light)</p>
<p>
More than elsewhither must the mind be moved<br/>
Of every one, in loving, who discerns<br/>
The truth in which this evidence is founded.</p>
<p>
Such truth he to my intellect reveals<br/>
Who demonstrates to me the primal love<br/>
Of all the sempiternal substances.</p>
<p>
The voice reveals it of the truthful Author,<br/>
Who says to Moses, speaking of Himself,<br/>
‘I will make all my goodness pass before thee.’</p>
<p>
Thou too revealest it to me, beginning<br/>
The loud Evangel, that proclaims the secret<br/>
Of heaven to earth above all other edict.”</p>
<p>
And I heard say: “By human intellect<br/>
And by authority concordant with it,<br/>
Of all thy loves reserve for God the highest.</p>
<p>
But say again if other cords thou feelest,<br/>
Draw thee towards Him, that thou mayst proclaim<br/>
With how many teeth this love is biting thee.”</p>
<p>
The holy purpose of the Eagle of Christ<br/>
Not latent was, nay, rather I perceived<br/>
Whither he fain would my profession lead.</p>
<p>
Therefore I recommenced: “All of those bites<br/>
Which have the power to turn the heart to God<br/>
Unto my charity have been concurrent.</p>
<p>
The being of the world, and my own being,<br/>
The death which He endured that I may live,<br/>
And that which all the faithful hope, as I do,</p>
<p>
With the forementioned vivid consciousness<br/>
Have drawn me from the sea of love perverse,<br/>
And of the right have placed me on the shore.</p>
<p>
The leaves, wherewith embowered is all the garden<br/>
Of the Eternal Gardener, do I love<br/>
As much as he has granted them of good.”</p>
<p>
As soon as I had ceased, a song most sweet<br/>
Throughout the heaven resounded, and my Lady<br/>
Said with the others, “Holy, holy, holy!”</p>
<p>
And as at some keen light one wakes from sleep<br/>
By reason of the visual spirit that runs<br/>
Unto the splendour passed from coat to coat,</p>
<p>
And he who wakes abhorreth what he sees,<br/>
So all unconscious is his sudden waking,<br/>
Until the judgment cometh to his aid,</p>
<p>
So from before mine eyes did Beatrice<br/>
Chase every mote with radiance of her own,<br/>
That cast its light a thousand miles and more.</p>
<p>
Whence better after than before I saw,<br/>
And in a kind of wonderment I asked<br/>
About a fourth light that I saw with us.</p>
<p>
And said my Lady: “There within those rays<br/>
Gazes upon its Maker the first soul<br/>
That ever the first virtue did create.”</p>
<p>
Even as the bough that downward bends its top<br/>
At transit of the wind, and then is lifted<br/>
By its own virtue, which inclines it upward,</p>
<p>
Likewise did I, the while that she was speaking,<br/>
Being amazed, and then I was made bold<br/>
By a desire to speak wherewith I burned.</p>
<p>
And I began: “O apple, that mature<br/>
Alone hast been produced, O ancient father,<br/>
To whom each wife is daughter and daughter-in-law,</p>
<p>
Devoutly as I can I supplicate thee<br/>
That thou wouldst speak to me; thou seest my wish;<br/>
And I, to hear thee quickly, speak it not.”</p>
<p>
Sometimes an animal, when covered, struggles<br/>
So that his impulse needs must be apparent,<br/>
By reason of the wrappage following it;</p>
<p>
And in like manner the primeval soul<br/>
Made clear to me athwart its covering<br/>
How jubilant it was to give me pleasure.</p>
<p>
Then breathed: “Without thy uttering it to me,<br/>
Thine inclination better I discern<br/>
Than thou whatever thing is surest to thee;</p>
<p>
For I behold it in the truthful mirror,<br/>
That of Himself all things parhelion makes,<br/>
And none makes Him parhelion of itself.</p>
<p>
Thou fain wouldst hear how long ago God placed me<br/>
Within the lofty garden, where this Lady<br/>
Unto so long a stairway thee disposed.</p>
<p>
And how long to mine eyes it was a pleasure,<br/>
And of the great disdain the proper cause,<br/>
And the language that I used and that I made.</p>
<p>
Now, son of mine, the tasting of the tree<br/>
Not in itself was cause of so great exile,<br/>
But solely the o’erstepping of the bounds.</p>
<p>
There, whence thy Lady moved Virgilius,<br/>
Four thousand and three hundred and two circuits<br/>
Made by the sun, this Council I desired;</p>
<p>
And him I saw return to all the lights<br/>
Of his highway nine hundred times and thirty,<br/>
Whilst I upon the earth was tarrying.</p>
<p>
The language that I spake was quite extinct<br/>
Before that in the work interminable<br/>
The people under Nimrod were employed;</p>
<p>
For nevermore result of reasoning<br/>
(Because of human pleasure that doth change,<br/>
Obedient to the heavens) was durable.</p>
<p>
A natural action is it that man speaks;<br/>
But whether thus or thus, doth nature leave<br/>
To your own art, as seemeth best to you.</p>
<p>
Ere I descended to the infernal anguish,<br/>
‘El’ was on earth the name of the Chief Good,<br/>
From whom comes all the joy that wraps me round</p>
<p>
‘Eli’ he then was called, and that is proper,<br/>
Because the use of men is like a leaf<br/>
On bough, which goeth and another cometh.</p>
<p>
Upon the mount that highest o’er the wave<br/>
Rises was I, in life or pure or sinful,<br/>
From the first hour to that which is the second,</p>
<p>
As the sun changes quadrant, to the sixth.”</p>
<h2><SPAN name="CantoIII.XXVII"></SPAN>Paradiso: Canto XXVII</h2>
<p>
“Glory be to the Father, to the Son,<br/>
And Holy Ghost!” all Paradise began,<br/>
So that the melody inebriate made me.</p>
<p>
What I beheld seemed unto me a smile<br/>
Of the universe; for my inebriation<br/>
Found entrance through the hearing and the sight.</p>
<p>
O joy! O gladness inexpressible!<br/>
O perfect life of love and peacefulness!<br/>
O riches without hankering secure!</p>
<p>
Before mine eyes were standing the four torches<br/>
Enkindled, and the one that first had come<br/>
Began to make itself more luminous;</p>
<p>
And even such in semblance it became<br/>
As Jupiter would become, if he and Mars<br/>
Were birds, and they should interchange their feathers.</p>
<p>
That Providence, which here distributeth<br/>
Season and service, in the blessed choir<br/>
Had silence upon every side imposed.</p>
<p>
When I heard say: “If I my colour change,<br/>
Marvel not at it; for while I am speaking<br/>
Thou shalt behold all these their colour change.</p>
<p>
He who usurps upon the earth my place,<br/>
My place, my place, which vacant has become<br/>
Before the presence of the Son of God,</p>
<p>
Has of my cemetery made a sewer<br/>
Of blood and stench, whereby the Perverse One,<br/>
Who fell from here, below there is appeased!”</p>
<p>
With the same colour which, through sun adverse,<br/>
Painteth the clouds at evening or at morn,<br/>
Beheld I then the whole of heaven suffused.</p>
<p>
And as a modest woman, who abides<br/>
Sure of herself, and at another’s failing,<br/>
From listening only, timorous becomes,</p>
<p>
Even thus did Beatrice change countenance;<br/>
And I believe in heaven was such eclipse,<br/>
When suffered the supreme Omnipotence;</p>
<p>
Thereafterward proceeded forth his words<br/>
With voice so much transmuted from itself,<br/>
The very countenance was not more changed.</p>
<p>
“The spouse of Christ has never nurtured been<br/>
On blood of mine, of Linus and of Cletus,<br/>
To be made use of in acquest of gold;</p>
<p>
But in acquest of this delightful life<br/>
Sixtus and Pius, Urban and Calixtus,<br/>
After much lamentation, shed their blood.</p>
<p>
Our purpose was not, that on the right hand<br/>
Of our successors should in part be seated<br/>
The Christian folk, in part upon the other;</p>
<p>
Nor that the keys which were to me confided<br/>
Should e’er become the escutcheon on a banner,<br/>
That should wage war on those who are baptized;</p>
<p>
Nor I be made the figure of a seal<br/>
To privileges venal and mendacious,<br/>
Whereat I often redden and flash with fire.</p>
<p>
In garb of shepherds the rapacious wolves<br/>
Are seen from here above o’er all the pastures!<br/>
O wrath of God, why dost thou slumber still?</p>
<p>
To drink our blood the Caorsines and Gascons<br/>
Are making ready. O thou good beginning,<br/>
Unto how vile an end must thou needs fall!</p>
<p>
But the high Providence, that with Scipio<br/>
At Rome the glory of the world defended,<br/>
Will speedily bring aid, as I conceive;</p>
<p>
And thou, my son, who by thy mortal weight<br/>
Shalt down return again, open thy mouth;<br/>
What I conceal not, do not thou conceal.”</p>
<p>
As with its frozen vapours downward falls<br/>
In flakes our atmosphere, what time the horn<br/>
Of the celestial Goat doth touch the sun,</p>
<p>
Upward in such array saw I the ether<br/>
Become, and flaked with the triumphant vapours,<br/>
Which there together with us had remained.</p>
<p>
My sight was following up their semblances,<br/>
And followed till the medium, by excess,<br/>
The passing farther onward took from it;</p>
<p>
Whereat the Lady, who beheld me freed<br/>
From gazing upward, said to me: “Cast down<br/>
Thy sight, and see how far thou art turned round.”</p>
<p>
Since the first time that I had downward looked,<br/>
I saw that I had moved through the whole arc<br/>
Which the first climate makes from midst to end;</p>
<p>
So that I saw the mad track of Ulysses<br/>
Past Gades, and this side, well nigh the shore<br/>
Whereon became Europa a sweet burden.</p>
<p>
And of this threshing-floor the site to me<br/>
Were more unveiled, but the sun was proceeding<br/>
Under my feet, a sign and more removed.</p>
<p>
My mind enamoured, which is dallying<br/>
At all times with my Lady, to bring back<br/>
To her mine eyes was more than ever ardent.</p>
<p>
And if or Art or Nature has made bait<br/>
To catch the eyes and so possess the mind,<br/>
In human flesh or in its portraiture,</p>
<p>
All joined together would appear as nought<br/>
To the divine delight which shone upon me<br/>
When to her smiling face I turned me round.</p>
<p>
The virtue that her look endowed me with<br/>
From the fair nest of Leda tore me forth,<br/>
And up into the swiftest heaven impelled me.</p>
<p>
Its parts exceeding full of life and lofty<br/>
Are all so uniform, I cannot say<br/>
Which Beatrice selected for my place.</p>
<p>
But she, who was aware of my desire,<br/>
Began, the while she smiled so joyously<br/>
That God seemed in her countenance to rejoice:</p>
<p>
“The nature of that motion, which keeps quiet<br/>
The centre and all the rest about it moves,<br/>
From hence begins as from its starting point.</p>
<p>
And in this heaven there is no other Where<br/>
Than in the Mind Divine, wherein is kindled<br/>
The love that turns it, and the power it rains.</p>
<p>
Within a circle light and love embrace it,<br/>
Even as this doth the others, and that precinct<br/>
He who encircles it alone controls.</p>
<p>
Its motion is not by another meted,<br/>
But all the others measured are by this,<br/>
As ten is by the half and by the fifth.</p>
<p>
And in what manner time in such a pot<br/>
May have its roots, and in the rest its leaves,<br/>
Now unto thee can manifest be made.</p>
<p>
O Covetousness, that mortals dost ingulf<br/>
Beneath thee so, that no one hath the power<br/>
Of drawing back his eyes from out thy waves!</p>
<p>
Full fairly blossoms in mankind the will;<br/>
But the uninterrupted rain converts<br/>
Into abortive wildings the true plums.</p>
<p>
Fidelity and innocence are found<br/>
Only in children; afterwards they both<br/>
Take flight or e’er the cheeks with down are covered.</p>
<p>
One, while he prattles still, observes the fasts,<br/>
Who, when his tongue is loosed, forthwith devours<br/>
Whatever food under whatever moon;</p>
<p>
Another, while he prattles, loves and listens<br/>
Unto his mother, who when speech is perfect<br/>
Forthwith desires to see her in her grave.</p>
<p>
Even thus is swarthy made the skin so white<br/>
In its first aspect of the daughter fair<br/>
Of him who brings the morn, and leaves the night.</p>
<p>
Thou, that it may not be a marvel to thee,<br/>
Think that on earth there is no one who governs;<br/>
Whence goes astray the human family.</p>
<p>
Ere January be unwintered wholly<br/>
By the centesimal on earth neglected,<br/>
Shall these supernal circles roar so loud</p>
<p>
The tempest that has been so long awaited<br/>
Shall whirl the poops about where are the prows;<br/>
So that the fleet shall run its course direct,</p>
<p>
And the true fruit shall follow on the flower.”</p>
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