The Inferno From the Divine Comedy of Dante Alighieri Translated by S. Fowler Wright Fowler Wright Ltd 1928 Only for personal, noncommercial and educative purposes. Please wait data loading. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ The Inferno CANTO I ONE night, when half my life behind me lay, I wandered from the straight lost path afar. Through the great dark was no releasing way; Above that dark was no relieving star. If yet that terrored night I think or say, As death's cold hands its fears resuming are. Gladly the dreads I felt, too dire to tell, The hopeless, pathless, lightless hours forgot, I turn my tale to that which next befell, When the dawn opened, and the night was not. The hollowed blackness of that waste, God wot, Shrank, thinned, and ceased. A blinding splendour hot Flushed the great height toward which my footsteps fell, And though it kindled from the nether hell, Or from the Star that all men leads, alike It showed me where the great dawn-glories strike The wide east, and the utmost peaks of snow. How first I entered on that path astray, Beset with sleep, I know not. This I know. When gained my feet the upward, lighted way, I backward gazed, as one the drowning sea, The deep strong tides, has baffled, and panting lies, On the shelved shore, and turns his eyes to see The league-wide wastes that held him. So mine eyes Surveyed that fear, the while my wearied frame Rested, and ever my heart's tossed lake became More quiet. Then from that pass released, which yet With living feet had no man left, I set My forward steps aslant the steep, that so, My right foot still the lower, I climbed. Below No more I gazed. Around, a slope of sand Was sterile of all growth on either hand, Or moving life, a spotted pard except, That yawning rose, and stretched, and purred and leapt So closely round my feet, that scarce I kept The course I would. That sleek and lovely thing, The broadening light, the breath of morn and spring, The sun, that with his stars in Aries lay, As when Divine Love on Creation's day First gave these fair things motion, all at one Made lightsome hope; but lightsome hope was none When down the slope there came with lifted head And back-blown mane and caverned mouth and red, A lion, roaring, all the air ashake That heard his hunger. Upward flight to take No heart was mine, for where the further way Mine anxious eyes explored, a she-wolf lay, That licked lean flanks, and waited. Such was she In aspect ruthless that I quaked to see, And where she lay among her bones had brought So many to grief before, that all my thought Aghast turned backward to the sunless night I left. But while I plunged in headlong flight To that most feared before, a shade, or man (Either he seemed), obstructing where I ran, Called to me with a voice that few should know, Faint from forgetful silence, "Where ye go, Take heed. Why turn ye from the upward way?" I cried, "Or come ye from warm earth, or they The grave hath taken, in my mortal need Have mercy thou!" He answered, "Shade am I, That once was man; beneath the Lombard sky, In the late years of Julius born, and bred In Mantua, till my youthful steps were led To Rome, where yet the false gods lied to man; And when the great Augustan age began, I wrote the tale of Ilium burnt, and how Anchises' son forth-pushed a venturous prow, Seeking unknown seas. But in what mood art thou To thus return to all the ills ye fled, The while the mountain of thy hope ahead Lifts into light, the source and cause of all Delectable things that may to man befall?" I answered, "Art thou then that Virgil, he From whom all grace of measured speech in me Derived? O glorious and far-guiding star! Now may the love-led studious hours and long In which I learnt how rich thy wonders are, Master and Author mine of Light and Song, Befriend me now, who knew thy voice, that few Yet hearken. All the name my work hath won Is thine of right, from whom I learned. To thee, Abashed, I grant it. . . Why the mounting sun No more I seek, ye scarce should ask, who see The beast that turned me, nor faint hope have I To force that passage if thine aid deny." He answered, "Would ye leave this wild and live, Strange road is ours, for where the she-wolf lies Shall no man pass, except the path he tries Her craft entangle. No way fugitive Avoids the seeking of her greeds, that give Insatiate hunger, and such vice perverse As makes her leaner while she feeds, and worse Her craving. And the beasts with which she breed The noisome numerous beasts her lusts require, Bare all the desirable lands in which she feeds; Nor shall lewd feasts and lewder matings tire Until she woos, in evil hour for her, The wolfhound that shall rend her. His desire Is not for rapine, as the promptings stir Of her base heart; but wisdoms, and devoirs Of manhood, and love's rule, his thoughts prefer. The Italian lowlands he shall reach and save, For which Camilla of old, the virgin brave, Turnus and Nisus died in strife. His chase He shall not cease, nor any cowering-place Her fear shall find her, till he drive her back, From city to city exiled, from wrack to wrack Slain out of life, to find the native hell Whence envy loosed her. For thyself were well To follow where I lead, and thou shalt see The spirits in pain, and hear the hopeless woe, The unending cries, of those whose only plea Is judgment, that the second death to be Fall quickly. Further shalt thou climb, and go To those who burn, but in their pain content With hope of pardon; still beyond, more high, Holier than opens to such souls as I, The Heavens uprear; but if thou wilt, is one Worthier, and she shall guide thee there, where none Who did the Lord of those fair realms deny May enter. There in his city He dwells, and there Rules and pervades in every part, and calls His chosen ever within the sacred walls. O happiest, they!" I answered, "By that Go Thou didst not know, I do thine aid entreat, And guidance, that beyond the ills I meet I safety find, within the Sacred Gate That Peter guards, and those sad souls to see Who look with longing for their end to be." Then he moved forward, and behind I trod. Canto II THE day was falling, and the darkening air Released earth's creatures from their toils, while I, I only, faced the bitter road and bare My Master led. I only, must defy The powers of pity, and the night to be. So thought I, but the things I came to see, Which memory holds, could never thought forecast. O Muses high! O Genius, first and last! Memories intense! Your utmost powers combine To meet this need. For never theme as mine Strained vainly, where your loftiest nobleness Must fail to be sufficient. First I said, Fearing, to him who through the darkness led, "O poet, ere the arduous path ye press Too far, look in me, if the worth there be To make this transit. Šneas once, I know, Went down in life, and crossed the infernal sea; And if the Lord of All Things Lost Below Allowed it, reason seems, to those who see The enduring greatness of his destiny, Who in the Empyrean Heaven elect was called Sire of the Eternal City, that throned and walled Made Empire of the world beyond, to be The Holy Place at last, by God's decree, Where the great Peter's follower rules. For he Learned there the causes of his victory. "And later to the third great Heaven was caught The last Apostle, and thence returning brought The proofs of our salvation. But, for me, I am not Šneas, nay, nor Paul, to see Unspeakable things that depths or heights can show, And if this road for no sure end I go What folly is mine? But any words are weak. Thy wisdom further than the things I speak Can search the event that would be." Here I stayed My steps amid the darkness, and the Shade That led me heard and turned, magnanimous, And saw me drained of purpose halting thus, And answered, "If thy coward-born thoughts be clear, And all thy once intent, infirmed of fear, Broken, then art thou as scared beasts that shy From shadows, surely that they know not why Nor wherefore. . . Hearken, to confound thy fear, The things which first I heard, and brought me here. One came where, in the Outer Place, I dwell, Suspense from hope of Heaven or fear of Hell, Radiant in light that native round her clung, And cast her eyes our hopeless Shades among (Eyes with no earthly like but heaven's own blue), And called me to her in such voice as few In that grim place had heard, so low, so clear, So toned and cadenced from the Utmost Sphere, The Unattainable Heaven from which she came. 'O Mantuan Spirit,' she said, 'whose lasting fame Continues on the earth ye left, and still With Time shall stand, an earthly friend to me, - My friend, not fortune's - climbs a path so ill That all the night-bred fears he hastes to flee Were kindly to the thing he nears. The tale Moved through the peace of I leaven, and swift I sped Downward, to aid my friend in love's avail, With scanty time therefor, that half I dread Too late I came. But thou shalt haste, and go With golden wisdom of thy speech, that so For me be consolation. Thou shalt say, "I come from BeatricÛ." Downward far, From Heaven to I leaven I sank, from star to star, To find thee, and to point his rescuing way. Fain would I to my place of light return; Love moved me from it, and gave me power to learn Thy speech. When next before my Lord I stand I very oft shall praise thee.' Here she ceased, And I gave answer to that dear command, 'Lady, alone through whom the whole race of those The smallest Heaven the moon's short orbits hold Excels in its creation, not thy least, Thy lightest wish in this dark realm were told Vainly. But show me why the Heavens unclose To loose thee from them, and thyself content Couldst thus continue in such strange descent From that most Spacious Place for which ye burn, And while ye further left, would fain return.' " 'That which thou wouldst,' she said, 'I briefly tell. There is no fear nor any hurt in Hell, Except that it be powerful. God in me Is gracious, that the piteous sights I see I share not, nor myself can shrink to feel The flame of all this burning. One there is In height among the Holiest placed, and she - Mercy her name - among God's mysteries Dwells in the midst, and hath the power to see His judgments, and to break them. This sharp I tell thee, when she saw, she called, that so Leaned Lucia toward her while she spake - and said, "One that is faithful to thy name is sped, Except that now ye aid him." She thereat, - Lucia, to all men's wrongs inimical - Left her High Place, and crossed to where I sat In speech with Rachel (of the first of all God saved). "O Beatrice, Praise of God," - So said she to me - "sitt'st thou here so slow To aid him, once on earth that loved thee so That all he left to serve thee? Hear'st thou not The anguish of his plaint? and dost not see, By that dark stream that never seeks a sea, The death that threats him?" None, as thus she said, None ever was swift on earth his good to chase, None ever on earth was swift to leave his dread, As came I downward from that sacred place To find thee and invoke thee, confident Not vainly for his need the gold were spent Of thy word-wisdom.' Here she turned away, Her bright eyes clouded with their tears, and I, Who saw them, therefore made more haste to reach The place she told, and found thee. Canst thou say I failed thy rescue? Is the beast anigh From which ye quailed? When such dear saints beseech - Three from the Highest - that Heaven thy course allow Why halt ye fearful? In such guards as thou The faintest-hearted might be bold." As flowers, Close-folded through the cold and lightless hours, Their bended stems erect, and opening fair Accept the white light and the warmer air Of morning, so my fainting heart anew Lifted, that heard his comfort. Swift I spake, "O courteous thou, and she compassionate! Thy haste that saved me, and her warning true, Beyond my worth exalt me. Thine I make My will. In concord of one mind from now, O Master and my Guide, where leadest thou I follow." And we, with no more words' delay, Went forward on that hard and dreadful way. Canto III THE gateway to the city of Doom. Through me The entrance to the Everlasting Pain. The Gateway of the Lost. The Eternal Three Justice impelled to build me. Here ye see Wisdom Supreme at work, and Primal Power, And Love Supernal in their dawnless day. Ere from their thought creation rose in flower Eternal first were all things fixed as they. Of Increate Power infinite formed am I That deathless as themselves I do not die. Justice divine has weighed: the doom is clear. All hope renounce, ye lost, who enter here. This scroll in gloom above the gate I read, And found it fearful. "Master, hard," I said, "This saying to me." And he, as one that long Was customed, answered, "No distrust must wrong Its Maker, nor thy cowarder mood resume If here ye enter. This the place of doom I told thee, where the lost in darkness dwell. Here, by themselves divorced from light, they fell, And are as ye shall see them." Here he lent A hand to draw me through the gate, and bent A glance upon my fear so confident That I, too nearly to my former dread Returned, through all my heart was comforted, And downward to the secret things we went. Downward to night, but not of moon and cloud, Not night with all its stars, as night we know, But burdened with an ocean-weight of woe The darkness closed us. Sighs, and wailings loud, Outcries perpetual of recruited pain, Sounds of strange tongues, and angers that remain Vengeless for ever, the thick and clamorous crowd Of discords pressed, that needs I wept to hear, First hearing. There, with reach of hands anear, And voices passion-hoarse, or shrilled with fright, The tumult of the everlasting night, As sand that dances in continual wind, Turns on itself for ever. And I, my head Begirt with movements, and my ears bedinned With outcries round me, to my leader said, "Master, what hear I? Who so overborne With woes are these?" He answered, "These be they That praiseless lived and blameless. Now the scorn Of Height and Depth alike, abortions drear; Cast with those abject angels whose delay To join rebellion, or their Lord defend, Waiting their proved advantage, flung them here. - Chased forth from Heaven, lest else its beauties end The pure perfection of their stainless claim, Out-herded from the shining gate they came, Where the deep hells refused them, lest the lost Boast something baser than themselves." And I, "Master, what grievance hath their failure cost, That through the lamentable dark they cry?" He answered, "Briefly at a thing not worth We glance, and pass forgetful. Hope in death They have not. Memory of them on the earth Where once they lived remains not. Nor the breath Of Justice shall condemn, nor Mercy plead, But all alike disdain them. That they know Themselves so mean beneath aught else constrains The envious outcries that too long ye heed. Move past, but speak not." Then I looked, and lo, Were souls in ceaseless and unnumbered trains That past me whirled unending, vainly led Nowhither, in useless and unpausing haste. A fluttering ensign all their guide, they chased Themselves for ever. I had not thought the dead, The whole world's dead, so many as these. I saw The shadow of him elect to Peter's seat Who made the great refusal, and the law, The unswerving law that left them this retreat To seal the abortion of their lives, became Illumined to me, and themselves I knew, To God and all his foes the futile crew How hateful in their everlasting shame. I saw these victims of continued death - For lived they never - were naked all, and loud Around them closed a never-ceasing cloud Of hornets and great wasps, that buzzed and clung, - Weak pain for weaklings meet, - and where they stung, Blood from their faces streamed, with sobbing breath, And all the ground beneath with tears and blood Was drenched, and crawling in that loathsome mud There were great worms that drank it. Gladly thence I gazed far forward. Dark and wide the flood That flowed before us. On the nearer shore Were people waiting. "Master, show me whence These came, and who they be, and passing hence Where go they? Wherefore wait they there content, - The faint light shows it, - for their transit o'er The unbridged abyss?" He answered, "When we stand Together, waiting on the joyless strand, In all it shall be told thee." If he meant Reproof I know not, but with shame I bent My downward eyes, and no more spake until The bank we reached, and on the stream beheld A bark ply toward us. Of exceeding eld, And hoary showed the steersman, screaming shrill, With horrid glee the while he neared us, "Woe To ye, depraved! - Is here no Heaven, but ill The place where I shall herd ye. Ice and fire And darkness are the wages of their hire Who serve unceasing here - But thou that there Dost wait though live, depart ye. Yea, forbear! A different passage and a lighter fare Is destined thine." But here my guide replied, "Nay, Charon, cease; or to thy grief ye chide. It There is willed, where that is willed shall be, That ye shall pass him to the further side, Nor question more." The fleecy cheeks thereat, Blown with fierce speech before, were drawn and flat, And his flame-circled eyes subdued, to hear That mandate given. But those of whom he spake In bitter glee, with naked limbs ashake, And chattering teeth received it. Seemed that then They first were conscious where they came, and fear Abject and frightful shook them; curses burst In clamorous discords forth; the race of men, Their parents, and their God, the place, the time, Of their conceptions and their births, accursed Alike they called, blaspheming Heaven. But yet Slow steps toward the waiting bark they set, With terrible wailing while they moved. And so They came reluctant to the shore of woe That waits for all who fear not God, and not Them only. Then the demon Charon rose To herd them in, with eyes that furnace-hot Glowed at the task, and lifted oar to smite Who lingered. As the leaves, when autumn shows, One after one descending, leave the bough, Or doves come downward to the call, so now The evil seed of Adam to endless night, As Charon signalled, from the shore's bleak height, Cast themselves downward to the bark. The brown And bitter flood received them, and while they passed Were others gathering, patient as the last, Not conscious of their nearing doom. "My son," - Replied my guide the unspoken thought - "is none Beneath God's wrath who dies in field or town, Or earth's wide space, or whom the waters drown, But here he cometh at last, and that so spurred By Justice, that his fear, as those ye heard, Impels him forward like desire. Is not One spirit of all to reach the fatal spot That God's love holdeth, and hence, if Char chide, Ye well may take it. - Raise thy heart, for now, Constrained of Heaven, he must thy course allow." Yet how I passed I know not. For the ground Trembled that heard him, and a fearful sound Of issuing wind arose, and blood-red light Broke from beneath our feet, and sense and sight Left me. The memory with cold sweat once more Reminds me of the sudden-crimsoned night, As sank I senseless by the dreadful shore. Canto IV ARISING thunder from the vast Abyss First roused me, not as he that rested wakes From slumbrous hours, but one rude fury shakes Untimely, and around I gazed to know The place of my confining. Deep, profound, Dark beyond sight, and choked with doleful sound, Sheer sank the Valley of the Lost Abyss, Beneath us. On the utmost brink we stood, And like the winds of some unresting wood The gathered murmur from those depths of woe Soughed upward into thunder. Out from this The unceasing sound comes ever. I might not tell How deep the Abyss down sank from hell to hell, It was so clouded and so dark no sight Could pierce it. "Downward through the worlds of night We will descend together. I first, and thou My footsteps taking," spake my guide, and I Gave answer, "Master, when thyself art pale, Fear-daunted, shall my weaker heart avail That on thy strength was rested?" "Nay," said he, "Not fear, but anguish at the issuing cry So pales me. Come ye, for the path we tread Is long, and time requires it." Here he led Through the first entrance of the ringed abyss, Inward, and I went after, and the woe Softened behind us, and around I heard Nor scream of torment, nor blaspheming word, But round us sighs so many and deep there came That all the air was motioned. I beheld Concourse of men and women and children there Countless. No pain was theirs of cold or flame, But sadness only. And my Master said, "Art silent here? Before ye further go Among them wondering, it is meet ye know They are not sinful, nor the depths below Shall claim them. But their lives of righteousness Sufficed not to redeem. The gate decreed, Being born too soon, we did not pass ( for I, Dying unbaptized, am of them). More nor less Our doom is weighed, - to feel of Heaven the need, To long, and to be hopeless." Grief was mine That heard him, thinking what great names must be In this suspense around me. "Master, tell," I questioned, "from this outer girth of Hell Pass any to the blessed spheres exalt, Through other's merits or their own the fault. Condoned?" And he, my covert speech that read, - For surance sought I of my faith, - replied, "Through the shrunk hells there came a Great One, crowned And garmented with conquest. Of the dead, He rescued from us him who earliest died, Abel, and our first parent. Here He found, Abraham, obedient to the Voice he heard; And Moses, first who wrote the Sacred Word; Isaac, and Israel and his sons, and she, Rachel, for whom he travailed; and David, king; And many beside unnumbered, whom he led Triumphant from the dark abodes, to be Among the blest for ever. Until this thing I witnessed, none, of all the countless dead, But hopeless through the somber gate he came." Now while he spake he paused not, but pursued, Through the dense woods of thronging spirits, his aim Straight onward, nor was long our path until Before us rose a widening light, to fill One half of all the darkness, and I knew While yet some distance, that such Shades were there As nobler moved than others, and questioned, "Who, Master, are those that in their aspect bear Such difference from the rest?" "All these," he said, "Were named so glorious in thy earth above That Heaven allows their larger claim to be Select, as thus ye see them." While he spake A voice rose near us: "Hail!" it cried, "for he Returns, who was departed." Scarce it ceased When four great spirits approached. They did not show Sadness nor joy, but tranquil-eyed as though Content in their dominion moved. My guide Before I questioned told, "That first ye see, With hand that fits the swordhilt, mark, for he Is Homer, sovereign of the craft we tried, Leader and lord of even the following three, - Horace, and Ovid, and Lucan. The voice ye heard, That hailed me, caused them by one impulse stirred Approach to do me honour, for these agree In that one name we boast, and so do well Owning it in me." There was I joyed to meet Those shades, who closest to his place belong, The eagle course of whose out-soaring song Is lonely in height. Some space apart (to tell, It may be, something of myself ), my guide Conversed, until they turned with grace to greet Me also, and my Master smiled to see They made me sixth and equal. Side by side We paced toward the widening light, and spake Such things as well were spoken there, and here Were something less than silence. Strong and wide Before us rose a castled height, beset With sevenfold-circling walls, unscalable, And girdled with a rivulet round, but yet We passed thereover, and the water clear As dry land bore me; and the walls ahead Their seven strong gates made open one by one, As each we neared, that where my Master led With ease I followed, although without were none But deep that stream beyond their wading spread, And closed those gates beyond their breach had been, Had they sought entry with us. Of coolest green Stretched the wide lawns we midmost found, for there, Intolerant of itself, was Hell made fair To accord with its containing. Grave, austere, Quiet-voiced and slow, of seldom words were they That walked that verdure. To a place aside Open, and light, and high, we passed, and here Looked downward on the lawns, in clear survey Of such great spirits as are my glory and pride That once I saw them. There, direct in view, Electra passed, among her sons. I knew Hector and Aeneas there; and Caesar too Was of them, armed and falcon-eyed; and there Camilla and Penthesilea. Near there sate Lavinia, with her sire the Latian king; Brutus, who drave the Tarquin; and Lucrece Julia, Cornelia, Marcia, and their kin; And, by himself apart, the Saladin. Somewhat beyond I looked. A place more high Than where these heroes moved I gazed, and knew The Master of reasoned thought, whose hand withdrew The curtain of the intellect, and bared The secret things of nature; while anigh, But lowlier, grouped the greatest names that shared His searchings. All regard and all revere They gave him. Plato there, and Socrates I marked, who closeliest reached his height; and near Democritus, who dreamed a world of chance Born blindly in the whirl of circumstance; And Anaxagoras, Diogenes, Thales, Heraclitus, Empedocles, Zeno, were there; and Dioscorides Who searched the healing powers of herbs and trees; And Orpheus, Tullius, Livius, Seneca, Euclid and PtolemŠus; Avicenna, Galen, Hippocrates; AverrhoÛs, The Master's great interpreter, - but these Are few to those I saw, an endless dream Of shades before whom Hell quietened and cowered. My theme, With thronging recollections of mighty names That there I marked impedes me. All too long They chase me, envious that my burdened song Forgets. - But onward moves my guide anew: The light behind us fades: the six are two: Again the shuddering air, the cries of Hell Compassed, and where we walked the darkness fell. Canto V MOST like the spirals of a pointed shell, But separate each, go downward, hell from hell, The ninefold circles of the damned; but each Smaller, concentrate in its greater pain, Than that which overhangs it. Those who reach The second whorl, on entering, learn their bane Where Minos, hideous, sits and snarls. He hears, Decides, and as he girds himself they go. Before his seat each ill-born spirit appear, And tells its tale of evil, loath or no, While he, their judge, of all sins cognizant, Hears, and around himself his circling tail Twists to the number of the depths below To which they doom themselves in telling. Alway The crowding sinners: their turn they wait: they show Their guilt: the circles of his tail convey Their doom: and downward they are whirled away. "O thou who callest at this doleful inn," Cried Minos to me, while the child of sin That stood confessing before him, trembling stayed, "Heed where thou enterest in thy trust, nor say, I walk in safety, for the width of way Suffices." But my guide the answer took, "Why dost thou cry? or leave thine ordered trade For that which nought belongs thee? Hinder not His destined path. For where he goeth is willed, Where that is willed prevaileth." Now was filled The darker air with wailing. Wailing shook My soul to hear it. Where we entered now No light attempted. Only sound arose, As ocean with the tortured air contends, What time intolerable tempest rends The darkness; so the shrieking winds oppose For ever, and bear they, as they swerve and sweep, The doomed disastrous spirits, and whirl aloft, Backward, and down, nor any rest allow, Nor pause of such contending wraths as oft Batter them against the precipitous sides, and there The shrieks and moanings quench the screaming air, The cries of their blaspheming. These are they That lust made sinful. As the starlings rise At autumn, darkening all the colder skies, In crowded troops their wings up-bear, so here These evil-doers on each contending blast Were lifted upward, whirled, and downward cast, And swept around unceasing. Striving airs Lift them, and hurl, nor ever hope is theirs Of rest or respite or decreasing pains, But like the long streaks of the calling cranes So came they wailing down the winds, to meet Upsweeping blasts that ever backward beat Or sideward flung them on their walls. And I - "Master who are they next that drive anigh So scourged amidst the blackness?" "These," he said, "So lashed and harried, by that queen are led, Empress of alien tongues, Semiramis, Who made her laws her lawless lusts to kiss, So was she broken by desire; and this Who comes behind, back-blown and beaten thus, Love's fool, who broke her faith to SichŠus, Dido; and bare of all her luxury, Nile's queen, who lost her realm for Antony." And after these, amidst that windy train, Helen, who soaked in blood the Trojan plain, And great Achilles I saw, at last whose feet The same net trammelled; and Tristram, Paris, he showed; And thousand other along the fated road Whom love led deathward through disastrous things He pointed as they passed, until my mind Was wildered in this heavy pass to find Ladies so many, and cavaliers and kings Fallen, and pitying past restraint, I said, "Poet, those next that on the wind appear So light, and constant as they drive or veer Are parted never, I fain would speak." And he, - "Conjure them by their love, and thou shalt see Their flight come hither." And when the swerving blast Most nearly bent, I called them as they passed, "O wearied souls, come downward, if the Power That drives allow ye, for one restful hour." As doves, desirous of their nest at night, Cleave through the dusk with swift and open flight Of level-lifting wings, that love makes light, Will-borne, so downward through the murky air Came those sad spirits, that not deep Hell's despair Could sunder, parting from the faithless band That Dido led, and with one voice, as though One soul controlled them, spake, "O Animate! Who comest through the black malignant air, Benign among us who this exile bear For earth ensanguined, if the King of All Heard those who from the outer darkness call Entreat him would we for thy peace, that thou Hast pitied us condemned, misfortunate. - Of that which please thee, if the winds allow, Gladly I tell. Ravenna, on that shore Where Po finds rest for all his streams, we knew; And there love conquered. Love, in gentle heart So quick to take dominion, overthrew Him with my own fair body, and overbore Me with delight to please him. Love, which gives No pardon to the loved, so strongly in me Was empired, that its rule, as here ye see, Endureth, nor the bitter blast contrives To part us. Love to one death led us. The mode Afflicts me, shrinking, still. The place of Cain Awaits our slayer." They ceased, and I my head Bowed down, and made no answer, till my guide Questioned, "What wouldst thou more?" and replied, "Alas my thought I what sweet keen longings led These spirits, woeful, to their dark abode!" And then to them, - "Francesca, all thy pain Is mine. With pity and grief I weep. But say How, in the time of sighing, and in what way, Love gave you of the dubious deeds to know." And she to me, "There is no greater woe In all Hell's depths than cometh when those who Look back to Eden. But if thou wouldst learn Our love's first root, I can but weep and tell. One day, and for delight in idleness, - Alone we were, without suspicion, - We read together, and chanced the page to turn Where Galahad tells the tale of Lancelot, How love constrained him. Oft our meeting eyes, Confessed the theme, and conscious cheeks were hot, Reading, but only when that instant came Where the surrendering lips were kissed, no less Desire beat in us, and whom, for all this pain, No hell shall sever (so great at least our gain), Trembling, he kissed my mouth, and all forgot, We read no more." As thus did one confess Their happier days, the other wept, and I Grew faint with pity, and sank as those who die. Canto VI THE misery of that sight of souls in Hell Condemned, and constant in their loss, prevailed So greatly in me, that I may not tell How passed I from them, sense and memory failed So far. But here new torments I discern, And new tormented, wheresoe'er I turn. For sodden around me was the place of bane, The third doomed circle, where the culprits know The cold, unceasing, and relentless rain Pour down without mutation. Heavy with hail, With turbid waters mixed, and cold with snow, It streams from out the darkness, and below The soil is putrid, where the impious lie Grovelling, and howl like dogs, beneath the flail That flattens to the foul soaked ground, and try Vainly for ease by turning. And the while Above them roams and ravens the loathsome hound Cerberus, and feeds upon them. The swampy ground He ranges; with his long clawed hands he grips The sinners, and the fierce and hairy lips (Thrice-headed is he) tear, and the red blood drips From all his jaws. He clutches, and flays, and rends, And treads them, growling: and the flood descends Straight downward. When he saw us, the loathly worm Showed all his fangs, and eager trembling frame Nerved for the leap. But undeterred my guide. Stooped down, and gathered in full hands the soil, And cast it in the gaping gullets, to foil Gluttonous blind greed, and those fierce mouths and wide Closed on the filth, and as the craving cur Quietens, that strained and howled to reach his food, Biting the bone, those squalid mouths subdued And silenced, wont above the empty dead To bark insatiate, while they tore unfed The writhing shadows. The straight persistent rain, That altered never, had pressed the miry plain With flattened shades that in their emptiness Still showed as bodies. We might not here progress Except we trod them. Of them all, but one Made motion as we passed. Against the rain Rising, and resting on one hand, he said, "O thou, who through the drenching murk art led, Recall me if thou canst. Thou wast begun Before I ended." I, who looked in vain For human semblance in that bestial shade, Made answer, "Misery here hath all unmade, It may be, that thou wast on earth, for nought Recalls thee to me. But thyself shalt tell The sins that scourged thee to this foul resort, That more displeasing not the scope of Hell Can likely yield, though greater pains may lie More deep." And he to me, "Thy city, so high With envious hates that swells, that now the sack Bursts, and pours out in ruin, and spreads its wrack Far outward, was mine alike, while clearer air Still breathed I. Citizens who knew me there Called me Ciacco. For the vice I fed At rich men's tables, in this filth I lie Drenched, beaten, hungered, cold, uncomforted, Mauled by that ravening greed; and these, as I, With gluttonous lives the like reward have won." I answered, "Piteous is thy state to one Who knew thee in thine old repute, but say, If yet persists thy previous mind, which way The feuds of our rent city shall end, and why These factions vex us, and if still there be One just man left among us." "Two," said he, "Are just, but none regards them. Yet more high The strife, till bloodshed from their long contend Shall issue at last: the barbarous Cerchi clan Cast the Donati exiled out, and they Within three years return, and more offend Than they were erst offended, helped by him So long who palters with both parts. The fire Three sparks have lighted - Avarice, Envy, Pride, - And there is none may quench it." Here he ceased His lamentable tale, and I replied, "Of one thing more I ask thee. Great desire Is mine to learn it. Where are those who sought Our welfare earlier? Those whose names at least Are fragrant for the public good they wrought, Arrigo, Mosca, and the Tegghiaio Worthiest, and Farinata, and with these Jacopo Rusticucci. I would know If soft in Heaven or bitter-hard in Hell Their lives continue." "Cast in hells more low Than yet thou hast invaded, deep they lie, For different crimes from ours, and shouldst thou go So far, thou well mayst see them. If thou tread Again the sweet light land, and overhead Converse with those I knew there, then recall, I pray, my memory to my friends of yore. But ask no further, for I speak no more." Thereon his eyes, that straight had gazed before Squinted and failed, and slowly sank his head, And blindly with his sodden mates he lay. And spake my guide, "He shall not lift nor stir, Until the trumpet shrills that wakens Hell; And these, who must inimical Power obey, Shall each return to his sad grave, and there In carnal form the sinful spirit shall dwell Once more, and that time only, from the tomb Rising to hear the irrevocable doom Which shall reverberate through eternity." So paced we slowly through the rain that fell Unchanging, over that foul ground, and trod The dismal spirits it held, and somewhat spake Of life beyond us, and the things of God; And asked I, "Master, shall these torments cease, Continue as they are, or more increase, When calls the trumpet, and the graves shall break, And the great Sentence sound?" And he to me, "Recall thy learning, as thou canst. We know With more perfection, greater pain or bliss Resolves, and though perfection may not be To these accurs'd, yet nearer then than this It may be they shall reach it." More to show He sought, as turned we to the fresh descent, But speaking all in such strange words as went Past me. - But ceased our downward path, and Plutus, of human weal the hateful foe. Canto VII HAH, strange! ho, Satan!" such the sounds half-heard The thick voice gobbled, the while the foul, inflamed, Distended visage toward us turned, and cast Invective from its bestial throat, that slurred Articulate speech. But here the gentle sage, Who knew beforehand that we faced, to me Spake first, "Regard not; for a threat misaimed Falls idle. Fear not to continue past. His power to us, however else it be, Is not to hinder." Then, that bulk inflate Confronting, - "Peace, thou greed! thy lusting rage Consume thee inward! Not thy word we wait The path to open. It is willed on high, - There, where the Angel of the Sword ye know Took ruin upon the proud adultery Of him thou callest as thy prince." Thereat As sails, wind-rounded, when the mast gives way, Sink tangled to the deck, deflated so Collapsed that bulk that heard him, shrunk and flat; And we went downward till before us lay The fourth sad circle. Ah! what woes contain, Justice of God! what woes those narrowing deeps Contain; for all the universe down-heaps In this pressed space its continent of pain, So voiding all that mars its peace. But why This guilt that so degrades us? As the surge Above Charybdis meets contending surge, Breaks and is broken, and rages and recoils For ever, so here the sinners. More numerous Than in the circles past are these. They urge Huge weights before them. On, with straining breasts, They roll them, howling in their ceaseless toils. And those that to the further side belong l)o likewise, meeting in the midst, and thus Crash vainly, and recoil, reverse, and cry, "Why dost thou hold?" "Why dost thou loose?" No rest Their doom permits them. Backward course they bend; Continual crescents trace, at either end Meeting again in fresh rebound, and high Above their travail reproachful howlings rise Incessant at those who thwart their round. And I, Who felt my heart stung through with anguish, said, "O Master, show me who these peoples be, And if those tonsured shades that left we see Held priestly office ere they joined the dead." He answered, "These, who with such squinting eyes Regarded God's providing, that they spent In waste immoderate, indicate their guilt In those loud barkings that ye hear. They spilt Their wealth distemperate; and those they meet Who cry 'Why loose ye?' avarice ruled: they bent Their minds on earth to seize and hoard. Of these Hairless, are priests, and popes, and cardinals, For greed makes empire in such hearts complete." And I, "Among them that these vices eat Are none that I have known on earth before?" He answered, "Vainly wouldst thou seek; a life So blind to bounties has obscured too far The souls once theirs, for that which once they wore Of mortal likeness in their shades to show. Waste was their choice, and this abortive strife And toil unmeaning is the end they are They butt for ever, until the last award Shall call them from their graves. Ill-holding those Ill-loosing these, alike have doomed to know This darkness, and the fairer world forgo. Behold what mockery doth their fate afford! It needs no fineness of spun words to tell. For this they did their subtle wits oppose, Contending for the gifts that Fortune straws So blindly, - for this blind contending hell. "Beneath the moon there is not gold so great In worth, it could one moment's grief abate, Or rest one only of these weary souls." "Master, this Fortune that ye speak, whose claws Grasp all desirable things of earth," I said, "What is she?" "O betrayed in foolishness I Blindness of creatures born of earth, whose goals Are folly and loss!" he answered, "I would make Thy mouth an opening for this truth I show. "Transcendent Wisdom, when the spheres He built Gave each a guide to rule it: more nor less Their light distributes. For the earth he gave Like guide to rule its splendours. As we know The heavenly lights move round us, and is spilt Light here, and darkness yonder, so doth she From man to man, from race and kindred take Alternate wealth, or yield it. None may save The spoil that she depriveth: none may flee The bounty that she wills. No human wits May hinder, nor may human lore reject Her choice, that like a hidden snake is set To reach the feet unheeding. Where she sits In judgment, she resolves, and whom she wills Is havened, chased by petulant storms, or wreck ' Remedeless. Races cease, and men forget They were. Slaves rise to rule their lords. She And empties, godlike in her mood. No pause Her changes leave, so many are those who call About her gates, so many she dowers, and all Revile her after, and would crucify If words could reach her, but she heeds nor hears, Who dwells beyond the noise of human laws In the blest silence of the Primal Spheres. - But let us to the greater woes descend. The stars from their meridian fall, that rose When first these hells we entered. Long to stay Our right of path allows not." While he spake We crossed the circle to the bank beyond, And found a hot spring boiling, and a way, Dark, narrow, and steep, that down beside it goes, By which we clambered. Purple-black the pond Beneath it, widening to a marsh that spreads Far out, and struggling in that slime malign Were muddied shades, that not with hands, heads, And teeth and feet besides, contending tore, And maimed each other in beast-like rage. My guide Expounded, "Those whom anger overbore On earth, behold ye. Mark the further sign Of bubbles countless on the slime that show. These from the sobs of those immersed arise; For buried in the choking filth they cry, We once were sullen in the rain-sweet air, When waked the light, and all the earth was fair, How sullen in the murky swamp we lie Forbidden from the blessed light on high. This song they gurgle in their throats, that so The bubbles rising from the depths below Break all the surface of the slime." Between The high bank and the putrid swamp was seen A narrow path, and this, a sweeping arc, We traversed; outward o'er the surface dark Still gazing, at the choking shades who took That diet for their wrath. Till livelier look Was forward drawn, for where at last we came A great tower fronted, and a beacon's flame. Canto VIII I SAY, while yet from that tower's base afar, We saw two flames of sudden signal rise, And further, like a small and distant star, A beacon answered. "What before us lies? Who signals our approach, and who replies?" I asked, and answered he who all things knew, "Already, if the swamp's dank fumes permit, The outcome of their beacon shows in view, Severing the liquid filth." No shaft can slit Impalpable air, from any corded bow, As came that craft towards us, cleaving so, And with incredible speed, the miry wave. To where we paused its meteor course it clave, A steersman rising in the stern, who cried, "Behold thy doom, lost spirit!" To whom my guide, "Nay, Phlegyas, Phlegyas, here thy cries are We need thine aid the further shore to gain; But power thou hast not." One amazed to meet With most unlooked and undeserved deceit So rages inly; yet no dared reply There came, as down my Leader stept, and I Deepened the skiff with earthly weight undue, Which while we seated swung its bows anew Outward, and onward once again it flew, Labouring more deep than wont, and slowlier now, So burdened. While that kennel of filth we clave, There rose among the bubbles a mud-soaked head. "Who art thou, here before thy time?" it said, And answer to the unfeatured mask I gave, "I come, but stay not. Who art thou, so blind And blackened from the likeness of thy kind?" "I have no name, but only tears," said he. I answered, "Nay, however caked thou be, I know thee through the muddied drench. For thee Be weeping ever, accursed spirit." At that, He reached his hands to grasp the boat, whereat My watchful Master thrust him down, and cried, "Away, among the dogs, thy fellows!" and then To me with approbation, "Blest art thou, Who wouldst not pity in thy heart allow For these, in arrogance of empty pride Who lived so vainly. In the minds of men Is no good thing of this one left to tell, And hence his rage. How many above that dwell, Now kinglike in their ways, at last shall lie Wallowing in these wide marshes, swine in sty, With all men's scorn to chase them down." And I, "Master, it were a seemly thing to see This boaster trampled in the putrid sea, Who dared approach us, knowing of all we know." He answered, "Well thy wish, and surely so It shall be, e'er the distant shore we view." And I looked outward through the gloom, and lo! The envious eaters of that dirt combined Against him, leapt upon him, before, behind, Dragged in their fury, and rent, and tore him through, Screaming derisive, "Philip! whose horse-hooves shine With silver," and the rageful Florentine Turned on himself his gnashing teeth and tore. But he deserveth, and I speak, no more. Now, as we neared the further beach, I heard The lamentable and unceasing wail By which the air of all the hells is stirred Increasing ever, which caused mine eyes unveil Their keenest vision to search what came, and he Who marked, indulgent, told. "Ahead we see The city of Dis, with all its dolorous crew, Numerous, and burdened with reliefless pain, And guilt intolerable to think." I said, "Master, already through the night I view The mosques of that sad city, that fiery red As heated metal extend, and crowd the plain." He answered, "These the eternal fire contain, That pulsing through them sets their domes aglow." At this we came those joyless walls below, - Of iron I thought them, - with a circling moat; But saw no entrance, and the burdened boat Traced the deep fosse for half its girth, before The steersman warned us. "Get ye forth. The shore Is here, - and there the Entrance." There, indeed, The entrance. On the barred and burning gate I gazed; a thousand of the fiends that rained From Heaven, to fill that place disconsolate, Looked downward, and derided. "Who," they said, "Before his time comes hither? As though the dead Arrive too slowly for the joys they would," And laughter rocked along their walls. My guide Their mockery with an equal mien withstood, Signalling their leaders he would speak aside, And somewhat closing their contempt they cried, "Then come thou hither, and let him backward go, Who came so rashly. Let him find his way Through the five hells ye traversed, the best he may. He can but try it awhile! - But thou shalt stay, And learn the welcome of these halls of woe." Ye well may think how I, discomforted By these accursed words, was moved. The dead, Nay, nor the living were ever placed as I, If this fiends' counsel triumphed. And who should try That backward path unaided? "Lord," I said, "Loved Master, who hast shared my steps so far, And rescued ever, if these our path would bar, Then lead me backward in most haste, nor let Their malice part us." He with cheerful mien, Gave answer. "Heed not that they boast. Forget The fear thou showest, and in good heart abide, While I go forward. Not these fiends obscene Shall thwart the mandate that the Power supplied By which we came, nor any force to do The things they threaten is theirs; nor think that I Should leave thee helpless here." The gentle Sage At this went forward. Feared I? Half I knew Despair, and half contentment. Yes and no Denied each other; and of so great a woe Small doubt is anguish. In their orgulous rage The fiends out-crowded from the gates to meet My Master; what he spake I could not hear; But nothing his words availed to cool their heat, For inward thronged they with a jostling rear That clanged the gates before he reached, and he Turned backward slowly, muttering, "Who to me Denies the woeful houses?" This he said Sighing, with downcast aspect and disturbed Beyond concealment; yet some length he curbed His anxious thought to cheer me. "Doubt ye nought Of power to hurt in these fiends insolent; For once the wider gate on which ye read The words of doom, with greater pride, they sought To close against the Highest. Already is bent A great One hereward, whose unhindered way Descends the steeps unaided. He shall say Such words as must the trembling hells obey." Canto IX I THINK the paleness of the fear I showed When he, rejected from that conference, Rejoined me, caused him speak more confident Than felt he inly. For the glance he sent Through the dense darkness of the backward road Denied the valour of his words' pretence; And pausing there with anxious listening mien, While came no sound, nor any help was seen, He muttered, "Yet we must this conflict win, For else - But whom her aid has pledged herein - How long before he cometh!" And plain I knew His words turned sideward from the ending due They first portended. Faster beat my fear, Methinks, than had he framed in words more clear The meaning that his care withheld. I said, "Do others of the hopeless, sinless, dead, Who with thee in the outmost circle dwell, Come ever downward to the narrowing hell That now we traverse?" "Once Erichtho fell," He answered, "conjured to such end that I, - Who then short time had passed to those who die, - Came here, controlled by her discerning spell, And entered through these hostile gates, and drew A spirit from the darkest, deepest pit, The place of Judas named, that centres Hell. The path I learnt, and all its dangers well. Content thine heart. This foul-stretched marsh surrounds The dolorous city to its furthest bounds. Without, the dense mirk, and the bubbling mire: Within, the white-hot pulse of eating fire, Whence this fiend-anger thwarts. . .," and more he said, To save me doubtless from my thoughts, but I Heeded no more, for by the beacons red That on the lofty tower before us glowed, Three bloodstained and infernal furies showed, Erect, of female form in guise and limb, But clothed in coils of hydras green and grim; And with cerastes bound was every head, And for its crown of hair was serpented; And he, who followed my diverted gaze, The handmaids of the Queen of Woeful Days Well knowing, told me, "These the Furies three. MegŠra leftward: on the right is she Alecto, wailing: and Tisiphone Midmost." These hateful, in their need of prey, Tore their own breasts with bloodied claws, and when They saw me, from the living world of men, Beneath them standing, with one purpose they Cried, and so loudly that I shrank for fear, "Medusa! let her from her place appear, To change him into stone! Our first default That venged no wrath on Theseus' deep assault, So brings him." "Turn thou from their sight," my guide Enjoined, nor wholly on my fear relied, But placed his hands across mine eyes the while He told me further "Risk no glance. The sight Of Gorgon, if she cometh, would bring thee night From which were no returning." Ye that read With wisdom to discern, ye well may heed The hidden meaning of the truth that lies Beneath the shadow-words of mysteries That here I show ye. While I turned away, Across the blackness of the putrid bay, There crashed a thunder of most fearful sound, At which the opposing shores, from bound to bound, Trembled. As when an entering tempest rends The brooding heat, and nought its course can stay, That through the forest its dividing way Tears open, and tramples down, and strips, and bends, And levels. The wild things in the woods that be Cower down. The herdsmen from its trumpets flee. With clouds of dust to trace its course it goes, Superb, and leaving ruin. Such sound arose. And he that held me loosened mine eyes, and said, "Look back, and see what foam the black waves bear." As frogs, the while the serpent picks his prey, In panic scatter through the stream, and there Flatten themselves upon its bouldered bed, I saw a thousand ruined spirits that fled Before the coming of One who held his way Dry-shod across the water. His left hand He waved before him, and the stagnant air Retreated. Simple it were to understand A Messenger of Heaven he came. My guide Signed me to silence, and to reverence due, While to one stroke of his indignant wand The gate swung open. "Outcast spawn!" he cried, His voice heard vibrant through the aperture grim, "Why spurn ye at the Will that, once defied, Here cast ye grovelling? Have ye felt from Him Aught ever for fresh revolt but harder pains? Has Cerberus' throat, skinned with the threefold chains, No meaning? Why, to fate most impotent, Contend ye vainly?" Then he turned and went, Nor one glance gave us, but he seemed as one Whom larger issue than the instant done Engages wholly. By that Power compelled, The gates stood open, and our course we held Unhindered. As the threshold dread we crossed, My eager glances swept the scene to know, In those doomed walls imprisoned, how lived the lost. On either hand a wide plain stretched, to show A sight of torment, and most dismal woe. At Arles, where the stagnant Rhone extends, Or Pola, where the gulf Quarnero bends, As with old tombs the plains are ridged, so here, All sides, did rows of countless tombs appear, But in more bitter a guise, for everywhere Shone flames, that moved among them. Every tomb Stood open, white with heat. No craft requires More heated metal than the crawling fires Made hot the sides of those sad sepulchres; And cries of torture and most dire despair Came from them, as the spirits wailed their doom. I said, "Who are they, in these chests that lie Confined, and join in this lamenting cry?" My Master answered, "These in life denied The faith that saves, and that resisting pride Here brought them. With their followers, like to like, Assorted are they, and the keen flames strike With differing anguish, to the same degree They reached in their rebellion." While he spake Rightward he turned, a narrow path to take Between them and that high-walled boundary. Canto X FIRST went my Master, for the space was small Between the torments and the lofty wall, And I behind him. "O controlling Will," I spake, "who leadest through such hates, and still Prevailest for me, wilt thou speak, that who Within these tombs are held mine eyes may see? For lifted are they, and unwatched." And he, - "The lids stand open till the time arrive When to the valley of Jehoshaphat They each must wend, and earthly flesh resume, And back returning, as the swarming hive, From condemnation, each the doleful tomb Re-enter wailing, and the lids thereat Be bolted. Here in fitting torment lie The Epicurean horde, who dared deny That soul outlasts its mortal home. Is here Their leader, and his followers round him. Soon Shall all thy wish be granted, - and the boon Ye hold in secret." "Kind my guide," I said, "I was not silent to conceal, but thou Didst teach, when in thy written words I read, That in brief speech is wisdom." Here a voice Behind me, "Tuscan, who canst walk at choice Untouched amidst the torments, wilt thou stay? For surely native of the noble land Where once I held my too-audacious way, Discreet of speech, thou comest." The sudden cry So close behind me from the chests that came, First drove me closer to my guide, but he, - "What dost thou? Turn thee!" - and a kindly hand Impelled me, fearful, where the crawling flame Was all around me, - "Lift thine eyes and see, For there is Farinata. Be thou short In speech, for time is failing." Scorn of hell Was in the eyes that met me. Hard he wrought To raise himself, till girdle-deep I knew The greatest of the fierce Uberti crew, Who asked me, with contempt near-waiting, "Tell Of whom thou art descended?" I replied, Concealing nothing. With lifted brows he eyed My face in silence some brief while, and then, - "Foes were they ever to my part, and me. It yet must linger in the minds of men How twice I broke them." "Twice ye learned them flee," - I answered boldly, - "but they twice returned; And others fled more late who have not learned The mode of that returning." Here a shade Arose beside him, only to the chin Revealed: I think it knelt. Beyond and round It rather looked than at me. Nought it found. Thereat it wept, and asked me, "Ye that go Unhindered through these homes of gateless woe, - Is my son with thee? Hast thou nought to tell?" I answered, "Single through the gates of hell I had no power to enter. Near my guide Awaits me yonder. - Whom in foolish pride, Thy Guido held so lightly." At the word He leapt erect from out the tomb, and cried, "How saidst thou? Held? Already he hath not died? Doth not the sweet light meet him? The clear air Breathes he not yet?" The imploring cries I heard But checked awhile to answer, and in despair He fell flat forward, and was seen no more. But he, magnanimous, who first delayed My steps, had heeded nought, nor turned his head, And now continued that he spake before. "If with the coin ye forged they have not paid, It more torments me than this flaming bed. Yet thou thyself, before the Queen of Night Shall fifty times revoke and raise her light, Shalt learn the hardship of that art. But tell, As thou wouldst feel the cool winds' pinions beat Once more upon thee, and the sweet light fall Around the feet of morning, for this heat And fetid air we writhe in, why were all Those exiles pardoned by thy laws, to dwell In their dear homes once more, and only mine, My kindred, find no mercy?" I to him, - "The rout and chase that dyed the Arbia red To thy descendants dealt this bitter bread; The memory of that slaughter doth not dim, But leaves thee to our prayers a name of hate In all our churches." Here he sighed, and said, "I was not single in that strife, nor lacked Good cause to strike; but when your remnant fled, And Florence, naked to her foes elate, Cowered, waiting, all with one consent agreed To tread her out to dust, and extirpate All life within her, I, and only I, Stood out against it, and refused the deed, And with my swords I saved them. Is this thing Less memoried than my wrath?" I answered, "Yea: But what I can I will, and that thy seed Have rest at my returning, solve, I pray, A doubt that disconcerts me. Ye that dwell In these abodes beneath us, each foretell - Or so ye claim - what distant times shall bring, Yet plead for knowledge of the passing day, - Or mock me, asking that yourselves could say." He answered, "As in age a man may see Far off, while nearer sights are blurred, so we See clearly times long passed, and times to be. Foresight is ours, and long remembering, In each an anguish, while the anxious mind Is void to all around it, foiled and blind Where most it longs for knowledge. Nought we know Thine earthly present, save as here below One after one descending bears his tale; And therefore, when the wings of Time shall fail, And sealed in these accursed tombs we lie, All knowledge from our vacant minds shall die, As well ye may perceive it." Here I said, Compunctious for a fault now seen, "Wilt tell That other, fallen, that I did not well Withholding answer? Guido is not dead. My silence from the earlier doubt was bred, From which thou hast resolved me." Now my guide Was calling, and in greater haste I said, "Thy comrades in thy grief I charge thee tell, Ere I go from thee." Shortly he replied, "The second Frederick, and the Cardinal, Are with me, and a thousand more beside Of whom I speak not." With the word he fell; And I went onward, turning in my thought The hostile presage of his words that taught Mine own near exile, till my guide at last Questioned, "What cloud thine eyes hath overcast? What thought hath wildered all thy mind?" and I Answered, and told. He said, "The things thou hear'st That threat thee, hold them in thy memory well. Yet know that soon, beneath a fairer sky, When she, whose sight hath no blank space, shall tell What cometh, then shalt thou read, ungapped and clear, The journey of thy life." The while he spake He turned him leftward from the wall, to take A path that to the midmost vale declined, A fetid rising odour first to find. Canto XI BUT boldly outward from the wall we went, Down sloping, till a sudden steep descent Before us yawned. The sides, extending far, Of broken rocks, a great pit circular Enclosed. Beneath our feet a fouler throng Than that we left, upcast a stench so vile We might not face, but left our course awhile To crouch behind a stone-built monument, Whereon I read, "Pope Anastasius Is here, who sold his faith for Photinus." Then spake my Master. "Till the fetid air By gradual use we take, we must not dare Continue downward." "Show me, while we stay, The meanings of this foul and dreadful way." "I meant it, surely," said my guide. "Behold The space beneath us. There three circlets lie, Alike to those we left behind, but why This deeper fate is theirs, I first will show; And when we pass them in the depths below Ye need not wait to question what ye see. "All malice of men's hearts in injury Results, and hence to Heaven is odious; And all the malice that aggrieveth thus Strikes in two ways, by either force or fraud; And fraud in man is vice peculiar, That from Hell's centre to the utmost star Is else unknown, and is to God therefore Most hateful Hence the violent-sinful lie Outward, and inmost are the fraudulent. And as the sinful-violent make their war On God, their neighbours, or themselves, so they Are portioned in the outer wards. I say, To them, or to the things they own, the wrong May aim. By violence, wounds or death may be, Extortions, burnings, wastes; and ye shall see That equal in the outmost round belong Reivers of life alike, and plunderers. And in the second round are those whose sin Is violence to themselves; they weep therein, Repenting when too late, whose hands destroy Their earthly bodies; and condemned alike Are those with profligate wasteful hands who strike At their own wealth, or having cause for joy Reject it, weeping with no need. The third And smallest of the outer circlets holds All those with violence of blaspheming words, Or in their hearts, the Lord of Life deny, The wealth of Nature that the world enfolds Contemning. Hence by lust or usury, Sodom or Cahors, the downward path may be That ends in this destruction. Fraud, that gnaws The universal conscience of mankind, Is also different in its guilt, because It either at the stranger strikes behind, Or makes the sacred bond of confidence The means of its prevailing; and the first Breaks but the kindly general bond, and hence More outward in the final depths are cast Deceivers, flatterers, cheats, and sorcerers, Thieves, panders, and such filth. The last and worst And smallest circle holds such souls as break Not only in their guilt the natural bond That all men own, but in some trust, beyond The usual course, are faithless. In this lake, The base and centre of Dis, the inmost hell, All traitors in relentless torments dwell." I answered, "Master, clearer words than these I could not ask, the ranks of guilt to show, That gather in the dreadful gulfs below; But tell me, - those that in so great dis-ease We earlier passed, wind-beaten, choked with slime, Or chilled and flattened with unending rain, If God's wrath reach them, why they yet remain Outside the hot walls of the Place of Pain? Or why they suffer through the night of Time So greatly, if they are not judged to Hell?" He answered, "Surely ye recall not well The Ethics that your schools have taught, or wide Your thoughts have wandered from their wont, to cause A doubt so simple. Are there not three laws By which the ways of Hell from Heaven divide - Beast-treason, malice, and incontinence, And of these three the third the least offence To God provoketh, and receives less blame? Bethink the faults of those where first ye came Through circles loftier than the heated wall That now surrounds us, and ye well shall see Why with less wrath the strokes of justice fall On those left outward by divine decree." "O Light!" I said, "whose cheering rays dispel The mists that blind me, wilt thou further tell Why stands the customed toll of usury Condemned in thy discourse as direst sin, Abhorrent to the bounty of God?" He said, "The teaching of thine own Philosophy Is pregnant with this truth unborn. Therein Thou learn'st of God himself, interpreted In Nature's ways; and as a child may tread Unsurely in its Master's steps, thine art Interprets Nature in its turn, and is God's grandchild therefore. Through these mysteries Look backward. When the Law of Eden came, How spake the Eternal Wisdom? Toil; It said, And in that labour find thy guerdon-bread: Be fruitful, and increase thy kind. His part God gave to man, so saying. The usurer Seeks not his profit in the path designed, But looks the fruit of others' toils to find, And pluck where nought he planted. More to say The time permits not; but the downward way We needs must venture. In the outer skies The Fishes from the pale horizon rise, And the Great Wain its shining course descends Where the night-lair of Caurus dark extends." Canto XII NOW came we to the steep cliff-side. As where The Adige at the mountain bored until Fell the huge ruin of half its bulk, and there Turned the swift stream a further course to fill Beneath the scarred precipitous side, so here The shattered ominous cliffs descended sheer; And sprawled across the verge, Crete's infamy, The fruit of that false cow, PasiphaÛ, Was fearsome, that the boldest heart should flee. To us he turned his red malignant eyes, Gnawing his own side, the while he strove to rise, As one made rageful past restraint, but loud My leader hailed him, "Think'st thou, overproud, That Theseus cometh, who gave thy death Not one that Ariadne taught is here, Nor destined victim for thy rage to gore, But one who walketh through the place of fear In safety, to behold the stripes ye bore." As some roped bull, whose throat is stretched to feel The knife's sharp doom, against the rending steel So madly wrenches that he breaks away, Already slaughtered, plunging while he may, But blindly and vainly, at this word I saw Heaving the huge bulk of the Minotaur, And cried my careful guide, "Descend with speed, The whilst he rages." Down with watchful heed, But swiftly, clomb we by the rocks' rough side, The jutting stones that lightly held my guide Trembling beneath my earthlier weight. He said, Who watched my silence, "Likely turns thy thought To this rent ruin the gross beast guards. Before, When downward came I, of this fall was nought, But nearly after came that Lord who bore Out from the horror of Dis its choicer prey. Hell, to its loathliest entrails, felt that day Love's coming, and trembled, and this mountain fell. The power of Love, that thus discomfits Hell, Oft in forgotten times, as sages tell, Hath changed our world to chaos. - But heed thy way. Before us is the gulf of blood wherein Murderers by violence purge their briefer sin. O blindness of their greed, or bestial rage! So short the war that on their kind they wage; So long is their repenting." I beheld A wide moat, curving either hand, as though Its sweep surrounded all the plain. Below On the near bank, were Centaurs, each who held A spear for casting, or a bended bow, The while they raced along the brink, as when Their game they hunted in the world of men. Seeing us, they stayed, and of the nearest, three Approached us, with the threats of shaft on string. One cried, "What torments do your guilts decree, Who cross Hell's gaps in such strange wandering? How came ye loosened from your dooming? - Say, Lest the cord teach ye." Unperturbed, my guide Gave answer. "Not for such vain threats we stay. To Chiron only will we speak. Thy will For rashness cost thee once thy life, and still Inciteth folly." And then to me, "Behold Nessus, who once for Deianira died; Beyond is Chiron, round whose mighty knees Played once the infant years of Achilles; The rageful Pholus is the last; they go With thousand others around the moat, that so If any spirits the boiling blood would quit Beyond the licence of their dooms, they know A different anguish from the shafts that slit The parts shown naked." These swift beasts and we Approached each other the while he spake, and he, Great Chiron, with a shaft's notched end put back The beard that hindered both his jaws, and said, To those his comrades, "Not as walk the dead Doth this one coming, but with the weight they lack Disturbs the stones he treadeth." My guide by now Stood where the human and the brute combined, Beneath his breast, and answered for me. "Yea, He lives indeed, and I, to lead his way, I race this dark valley. No sportive choice to find, But driven of need, he threads this night of flame; And She from singing Alleluias came Who bade me do it. No spirit condemned am I, Nor he deserving of thy doom. I pray, By virtue of the Name I will not say, l hat of thy comrades one thy care supply To guide us to the ford, and him to bear Across, who may not tread the yielding air As those discarnate." Chiron's bearded head Bent round to Nessus at his right, and said, "Turn, as they ask, and guide, and bear him through, And warn thy comrades that no wrong they do To these in passing." In this trusty ward We held the margin of the purple flood That seethed beneath us. In the boiling blood Were spirits to the brows immersed. "Ye see," Said Nessus, "tyrants who by weight of sword Spread death and rapine in their lands. Is here Fierce Dionysius, who the doleful year Made long to those he ruled in Sicily; And Alexander here repents; and he Whose brows o'erhung with night-black hair ye see Is Azzolino; and the head beyond Where on the stream the trailing mane is blonde, Obizzo, whom his stepson choked." We came Where other spirits in the boiling pond Showed from the neck, and in this place beheld That Guy who to avenge his father's name The English Henry at Viterbo felled, Even in the presence of God. The victim's heart Yet raised in reverence on the bank of Thame, Recalls it, and the assassin boils apart Placed separate for the deed's high blasphemy. And further passed we those whose guilt allowed Of freedom to the waist. Among the crowd, More numerous now, were more in clearer view, That by themselves or by their deeds I knew, As shallower yet the seething purple grew, Till all except the miscreants' feet was free. "Here must we cross the fosse," the Centaur said, And I, sole living in this world of dead, Climbed upward, and my earthly weight he bore, And while he waded to the further shore Continued, "As the boiling stream ye see Diminish, so its bottom sinks anew Rounding the circle, till it comes once more To those whose ruling choked their world in gore, In which they suffer. High Justice here torments The pirate Sextus, and fierce Pyrrhus here; Attila with eternal tears laments; And Rinier Pazzo, once a word of fear, With Rinier of Corneto boils, to pay For bandit-murders on the State's highway." Canto XIII WHILE Nessus yet recrossed the purple stream A wood we entered where no path appeared, No cool wind stirred, nor any sun came through, But all the foliage, as by winter seared, Was brittle and brown, and gnarled and twisted grew The branches, and if any fruit did seem They were but poisonous pods to closer view. No denser holts the lurking beasts have found Beneath Corneto, where the marshy ground, Uncoultered, to Cecina's stream declines. Foul harpies nest amidst the loathly vines, Who chased the Trojans from the Strophades, With their drear wail of some awaiting woe. Their wings are wide: and like gross birds below Their bellies feathered, and their feet are clawed. Strange cries come from them through the sickly trees. My Master told me, "Through this dismal land, The second circlet pass we, till we reach The place of that intolerable sand Which forms the third, and in its place completes The outer round. Recall my earlier speech That taught the order of these woes. Look well For confirmation of the things I tell " I looked, but saw not. Every side there rose A wailing burdened with unnumbered woes, While all the woods were vacant. From ground It came not - rather from the boughs around It beat upon us, as voiced by those who hid Before our coming, the tangled growth amid. My Master taught me. "If thou break away The nearest twig that meets thine hand, wilt see How far thy dreaming from the truth astray." Thereat I reached, and from a twisted thorn That rose before us, withered, gaunt, forlorn, Broke short a twig, and from the trunk a cry Came sharply, "Tear not!" and a blood-gout Dark on the wound, the while the trunk anew Entreated, "Rend not; does no mercy lie In those that still their human forms retain? Men were we, till we left on earth self-slain The bodies given of God. But had we been The souls of serpents, in this hopeless dole We had not thought that any mortal soul Would wound us, helpless to their hands." Hast seen Cast on the coals a living branch and green? One end already burns, and one projects Clear of the heat, but from the fire's effects Moisture exudes and hissing wind. So here Blood welled and words from out the wound. The fear Of this strange voice, and pity, so in me wrought I dropt the broken shoot, and fixed in thought Stood silent. On my side my leader spake, "O wounded spirit, had his heart believed The truth that earlier in my verse he read, He had not with unthinking violence grieved The most unhappy of the hapless dead. But mine the word that caused his hand to break, Who knew that truth's incredibility Would else confound him. It was grief to me To prompt him to it. But if thou speak and tell Of whom thou wast, he may requite thee well, Thy fame renewing in the world, for there He soon returneth." And the voice replied, "The sound of thy seducing words and fair Constrains me to forgive thee, and confide The bitter grief that in my trunk I hide, Which else were silent always. With me bear In patience somewhat, if I talk too long, Caught in this bait of words, when all my wrong Returneth to me. In this toil is he, The second Frederick's confident, who held His heart's two keys, and turned them. Here ye see The ruin of too great fidelity, That sleep and life gave forfeit. Yea, for she, That harlot who in CŠsar's court rebelled Against all virtue round his throne, the bane And vice of all high concourse, Envy, stirred And slandered, till my Master half believed. And I, who all things at his hands received, And all myself had rendered, in disdain Gave silence only to the accusing word, And in contempt of life I broke the chain That held me to it. Just to others, I wrought Injustice to myself. But here I swear, By these sad roots that hold me, word nor thought, Nor deed nor negligence was mine in aught Against him faithless. Ye that upward bear The news and burden of our griefs below, Rebuild my memory in the world, I pray, That my rash hand prostrated." Here his woe Found silence, and the things I sought to say I lacked the heart. Until, at last, my guide Enquired me, "Wouldst thou more?" and I replied, "Ask for me." To the prisoned grief he said, "That this man gladly when he leave the dead Uplift thy record, as thy words entreat, Inform us further how this fate ye meet, How the bent soul these twisted knots allows; Or ever any from these tortured boughs Erect himself to manhood." Then the tree Blew strongly, and the wind was words that said, "In brief thou shalt be answered. When the dead, Self-slaughtered, from the unready corse is torn, Then Minos, in the seventh gulf to mourn, Consigns it. Here on no set space it falls, But cast at random, and its roots it strikes In marsh or rock, and boughs and thorny spikes Grow upward. On its leaves the harpies feed, Tearing, and where the broken twiglets bleed Pain finds its outlet. When the trumpet calls, We all, with those who earthly flesh regain, Shall upward troop, but that our hand hath slain We may not enter, as is just. The Vale Of Judgment when we leave we each shall hale Our bodies slain behind us, till we reach The dismal thorns we left, and each on each Shall hang them. Every trunk of every shade Bent with the weight of that itself betrayed." We still were listening, lest more words should come From this sad spirit, when rose such noise anear That all the wailings of the woods were dumb Before it, and we paused, as those who hear The boar-hunt plunging through the brake, and nigh, Crashed boughs, and rush of beasts that chase and fly, Approaching where they stand; and forth there burst Two spirits torn and bare, and cried the first, "Befriend me, Death!" and cried the one behind, "Ah, Lano, swifter legs than mine ye show, But Toppo's tourney found thy limbs more slow." Thereat he made no further pace, but low Crawled 'neath the densest bush the woods contained, And the next instant, as the shade he gained, A rush of hell-hounds on his chase there came. Wild on the bush they leapt to trace and claim Their hiding victim, sinking fang and claw In him who squatted in its midst. They rent The writhing limbs, and diverse ways they went, Carrying the fragments that they tore. My guide Now led my steps the damaged bush beside, That loud lamented. Severed boughs we saw, And torn twigs bleeding. In its pain it made Protest, "Jacopo da Sant' Andrea! What gain was here to make my leaves thy shade? What condemnation for thy sins is mine?" My Master questioned it, "Who art thou, say, So bruised and injured in a strife not thine?" It answered, "Ye that some strange fate hath led To see me mangled and discomfited, I pray ye closely round my foot to lay The boughs and leaves their violence strawed away. In that fair city of the plain I dwelt Which once to Mars, its earliest patron, knelt, And then the Baptist in his place preferred, And earned thereby the war-god's enmity. So that, except on Arno's bridge there stands His statue yet, those men with useless hands Had toiled, from ashes of the Huns, again To build it in the years of Charlemagne. "I have no name: I have no tale to say. I made a gibbet of my house. Ye see The end in this, the doleful price I pay." Canto XIV LOVE in my heart for that dear home of mine Compelled me. To the nameless Florentine I did the service that he asked. I laid The gathered twigs against his trunk. We left That grove of men, of human form bereft By their own violence, and before us lay A space so hateful that I shrank afraid, For surely none might cross it. Here, I say, The third sad circlet wide before us spread, A desert, by the dark wood garlanded, As that is belted by the boiling fosse. A desert which the hardiest might not cross Was here. The Libyan waste where Cato led The remnant of the host of Pompey, shows Dry sand alike, but oh, what heavier woes, Vengeance of God! what woes were here! Who boast They fear not Heaven, before that dreadful coast Have come not, or they would not doubt their dread! Strewn on the sands the naked souls I saw Lamenting loudly. Some by diverse law Lay flat: some crouched: some madly raced, and these, More numerous far, by milder cries conveyed A lesser torment than the souls that stayed Fixed on one spot. Upon that concourse dire Slow flakes were falling of dilated fire, Straight downward, as the Alpine snows descend, When no wind stirs the stillness. As there came From burning skies the separate flakes of flame Upon the host that Alexander led Across the torrid Indian plains - and they Stamped the red ashes lest they join and spread, And all be conflagration - so the heat Flaked downward in a slow unceasing sheet, On sand re-kindled with recruited fire, Like tinder that the flint and steel ignite. Here was the dance of woven hands I in vain That brushed aside the settling points of pain. I said, "O thou, whom all these different hells Obey - save those gate-demons obdurate - Who yonder lies, whose fierce disdain repels The eternal doom, and with a heart as great As all his ruin, beneath the torturing rain Contorted, moves not, nor laments?" My guide I questioned, but the rebel shade replied, "Dead am I, but yet my living heart unslain Outequals Heaven. Though this relentless rain Fall ever; though Jove the toiling knave should tire From whom he snatched the bolt of previous fire That first transfixed me; though he tire alike All Etna's smiths, there is no power to strike Shall make me quail. Let all His force employ, He shall not taste the fierce exultant joy To break me, suppliant." I had yet to learn My guide's hard voice, that in slow words and stern Made answer. "Think'st thou then, O Capaneus, Thy wrath makes answer to the wrath of Zeus? Or God regards it? But thy rageful pride, Against thee with the outer fires allied, Makes heavier torment for thy bane, and so Is penal only to thyself - Behold," - With gentler voice again assumed, my guide Turned to me, as the sinner's tale he told - "That lord, who once with six like kings was foe To Thebes, and sieged it. Then his boast, as now, That God he equalled. But his words avow The justice of his doom, and impotent Against regardless Heaven, they ornament His breast most fitly - Follow where I tread - - Avoid the sand." With careful steps he led Along the margin of the mournful wood, And spake no more, until at length we stood Where-a thin river of most doleful red (I shudder, thinking), from the sighing trees Flowed outward. As the stream the harlots share Flows outward from beneath Bulicame, So this ran forward through the sand. Stone-bare Its bottom, stone its shelving sides, and grey The stony margins of its course. By these I judged that here we crossed the fiery plain Which else repelled us - But my guide again Was speaking. "Since the doleful gate ye passed, Which still for all creation, first and last, Stands wide, no sights of wonder seen compare With this slight stream, whose margins cold and bare No fires can vanquish, whose red waters quench Hell's heat, and burn not." "Master," I desired, "For hunger wakened, grant the food required." "Far out in ocean lies an island waste Whose King, when once the early world was chaste, Ruled all men. In the midst a mountain lies, Ida, that once was fair to stormless skies, Peace of still nights and languorous noons it had, With murmuring leaves and falling waters glad (Cybele there the Heavenly Child concealed); Now lies it barer than a salted field, Than some outdated use more desolate, Abandoned, naked, in the change of fate. "A giant of Eld within this mountain stands; From Damietta with rejecting hands He turns, and Romeward holds his eyes, as she Who in her mirror gazes fixedly. His head is all of purest gold: his breast And arms are silver of the finest test: Then all is brazen to the forking cleft: Iron is the right leg only, but the left Hath the foot also of the like: of clay The dexter foot, on which he leans alway. This giant throughout, except the golden head, Is cracked, and from the fissure tears are shed, And these sink downward through the rocks, until They reach Hell's levels, and form the springs that fill The sunless gulf we passed of Acheron, And, draining thence, the Styx, and Phlegethon, Till downward by this straitened conduit passed Where all descent is ended, form at last The lake I tell not, for thine eyes shall see." I asked him, "If this stream from hell to hell Descend continuous, I discern not well Why in the loftier circles nought I saw?" He said, "As downward, tier by tier, we draw Toward the narrowing centre, still the bound We circle leftward, yet the slanting round Is incompleted; hence new sights to meet Ye must not marvel " "Master," I replied, "One question more. Of Lethe nought ye say, Nor speak of Phlegethon. Across our way Comes either?" "Surely, in this scarlet tide The one flows past ye. But at Lethe's side Thy feet shall stand in other air than this, For Lethe flows not through the lost abyss, But those repentant, from their guilt made free, Shall find it. - Follow boldly where I tread The stone. Not here the burning sand can spread; Nor the red rain molest from overhead." Canto XV WE held the margin of the scarlet stream, The cold grey stones beneath our feet. A steam Arising from the water, overhead A canopy that roofed the causeway spread, Which quenched the fire descending. As the dyke From Bruges to Cadsand, where the burghers dread The arising tide, or as the bank alike The Paduans build in winter, to forbear The Brenta's floods, when Chiarentana knows The feet of summer on the mountain snows, Such were the bulwarks of the stream, though less In height and thickness. Far that wilderness Of wailing boughs we left, till backward glance Had failed to find it. Once a troop we met That racing past us in their mournful dance Reversed, and sharply were their glances set To read us, as a tailor frowns to thread The needle, when long years of toil have The needed sight, or as men meeting peer At twilight, when the rising moon is thin. Of these, one caught me by the skirt, and said, "O marvel!" and the face that heat had skimmed, I yet recalled, and answered, "Art thou here, My master?" He replied, "Brief words to win, I pray thee, O my son, consent that I Go backward somewhat with thee, while my kin Continue on the path we held." I said, "I do not grant it, but beseech: and more, For those old days, when all thy learning's store Was mine to pillage, if my guide permit, Sit will I with thee here some space." But he Made answer, "Nay, for if we pause or sit, There must we for a hundred years remain, Powerless to writhe beneath the falling rain. But I will walk beside thy skirts as now, No farther than these penal laws allow, And then my station in our band resume, Who race, and wail our everlasting doom." I dared not from my higher stand descend, Nor might he to the causeway climb, and so I walked as those in humble prayer who bend, The while he paced the burning sand below. He first enquired, "What chance or fate hath led Thy feet, before thy mortal loss, to tread A path so vacant?" "In mid-life," I said, "I wandered in a pathless waste, and there, Refused of exit, in my last despair, I was returning to its midst, when he Who guides me came, and by this dreadful way Will bring me home at last." And he to me, "I doubt it nought, for if thy destined star Perceived I rightly, when fair life and clear I with thee breathed, a different haven lay Before thee than this heat to which we steer, Who tempt High Heaven in all we speak and are. And but for death's too soon determining, Mine aid had cheered thee in thy later spring. "But those, the thankless and malign, who came To Florence from the rocks of Fiesole, Who mixed not with a nobler race than they, Still in their children hate thee, deed and name. Where the sour sorb-trees fruit, shall figs abound? Like are they even as our fathers found. Greed envy, hauteur, are the signs they show. Look that thou walk not in their ways. For though The path be stony for thy feet today, The time is near when in thy larger fame Both parties for thy potent aid shall pray. Then from the he-goat's teeth the grass be far! But those thy kind, if any yet there be Surviving of the sacred Roman seed, Amidst the dense growth of the ranker weed, Let the Fiesolan beasts, the where they lie, Make their own litter for their natural sty." I answered, "Master, had it lain with me To choose my boon from Heaven, not where we are, But in the clear air of the world above, Thy words had guided. All my heart in love Returns toward thee, as my thoughts recall Thine image, patient, kind, beneficent, That taught me, tireless, hour by hour, in all, How by the growth of that which Heaven hath lent, Man wins to life immortal. While I live, In nought but words - and grateful words I give- Is still my power to thank thee. All you tell, Mind-treasured, with a text remembered well, I keep for One on whom I hope, that she May comment further, as shall surely be If her I reach hereafter. This I say Meantime, let Fortune at her worst of will, So conscience chide not, wreck my days: and still The boor his mattock's baser laws obey." My leader heard me, and a backward glance Across his shoulder, to the right, he cast, To where we talked, and answered, "What ye say, Forget not in the days undawned." But yet I questioned Ser Brunetto, "Tell me they Most famed on earth, who pay the godless debt In torment of this fiery rain at last?" He answered, "Some there be ye well may know, But more that better should the world forget, And time for speech is shortened. Briefly, here Are clerks and scholars, all betrayed so low By one defiling. Priscian here must run. And of our city here Accorso's son, Francesco. If such scurf thy mind admits, That base one of the Arno howling sits, Who, to Bacchiglione's bank transferred, There left his sin-wrecked nerves. - But further word I may not. - Yonder in the distance see New smoke arising from the sandy waste. Fresh folk race on with whom I must not be. - Those writings mine by which on earth I live Remember. - More I ask not." Here in haste He loosed my skirts, and turned, and seemed as they Who at Verona's summer sports compete, Naked, across the fields with flying feet, To win the vesture green their speed to pay. Canto XVI THE sandy plain was almost past. There rose Such noise as murmurs through the hive. For near We came to where the tainted water sheer Falls to the level of the fraudulent, The next sad circle. Ever past us went The flying bands beneath the fiery rain, Scattering the sharp tormenting flakes. Of those, Three runners from a troop dividing came, Who called me with one impulse, "Stranger, stay, Who by the garb hast found this dreadful way From our perverted city." The searing flame Had baked their limbs, and in the hardened flesh New wounds were formed with every flake. Ah me Again in thought the piteous sight I see, And make their anguish mine. My guide the while Turned as they ran. "Wait here. For courtesy Deserve they from thyself, than theirs to thee More urgent. Only that the falling heat Forbids, thyself with greater haste should meet Their coming, than their own." At that we paused, And when they saw it their arresting cry They ceased, and recommenced the general wail. I might not reach them through the burning hail, Nor might they to the causeway climb, nor run Beside me, for the end was now so nigh, Nor might they, lest more grief the torture caused, Remain unmotioned in one place, and so They circled, as the nude, oiled champions go, Rotating, for the chance of grasp or blow Watchful, but these their eyes so held on me, That feet and neck perforce moved contrary, As round they wheeled. One hailed me first, "O thou, Whose living feet, as some strange powers allow, Resound among the shadows, if aught so base As we who bake in this unfertile place Thy mind regard, recall our earthly fame, And heed our plea to learn thy later name. He in whose footsteps I rotate, though now So peeled and bare, when in clear light, was he, Gualdrada's grandson, who so nobly wrought In field and counsel both; the one ye see Who treads the sand behind, in all men's thought Should still be fragrant, Aldobrandi he; And I, Jacopo Rusticucci. She, That savage wife an ill fate gave, has brought This misery on me." Had some shelter shown To guard me from the slow unceasing rain, I had not shrunk to cross the heated plain, To greet them in their grief, whose names are known So highly, nor I think my Master's voice Had chid me; but their aspects, baked and dried, Repelled and warned me. "Not contempt," I cried, "But sorrow in my heart since first my guide Prepared me to expect such names, has grown, And will not leave me soon. Alike we own The same fair city, where your deeds today Are told not seldom, and true men rejoice Who hear them. From the bitter gall I go The fruit to find, and yet descend more low To Hell's deep centre ere I climb." He said, "Thy spirit long within thy members dwell, And fame behind thee shine! But speak I pray If valour quite and noble grace have fled From our loved city. For one, whose place in Hell Was filled but late, - with yonder troop he burns, Torments us largelier than the pain he learns, With tales of its befalling. Is there now Such dearth of honour, lifted once so high?" And my heart failed me for direct reply, But with uplifted face I cried, "O thou, My Florence! Not thy fallen tears are dry For plebeian strangers in thy halls, and pride And riot extolled, and honour crucified." And these that heard, their glances from me drew, And at each other gazed, as men that knew My confirmation, and divined it true. At length they answered in one voice, "If there, As here, the truth unharmed thy lips may dare, Blest art thou! If from this unlighted air Again ye climb to where the stars are bare, When with rejoicing heart I once was there Thy thought looks backward, let thy words to men Exalt our names for that which late we were." At this they broke their giddy wheel, and then More swiftly than the heart could breathe Amen With legs like wings, across the sand they fled, And we went forward once again. So near The sound of waters now, I scarce could hear My leader's voice. As that first stream to head From Monte Viso's height a separate way Seaward, its quieter name and loftier bed Forgets at Forli, and in sheer descent Above San Benedetto's towers resounds (There where a thousand in its wealthy bounds Might refuge, hindered by the sheltered few), So here the red stream to the nether pit Fell headlong, echoing through the void. I wore A cord girt round me (once I thought to snare That painted pard of which I spoke before, So noosed), and this my guide commanded me To loose, and reached it from me coiled, and there Far outward flung it in the blank abyss. The blackness gulped it, while I thought, "From this, An act so strange, must spring new mystery, - How fixed he gazes where it sank, - and he, As though he heard me, answered. Ah, what care, What caution should we yield to Those who see Not the deed only, but the thought! He said, "I signalled That which rises while I speak, And makes thy question clear." A man may dread Truth more than falsehood to his friends to speak, When truth than falsehood shows more wild, and weak Of proof is that he inly knows, but I Am barred from silence. Reader, truth I swear, By all my hope of fame this work shall bear, That slowly through the gross and fetid air A Shape swam upward. As the mariners see Their comrade rising from the depths, who dived An anchor tangled in the rocks to free, Against the brink the wingless bulk arrived. Canto XVII BEHOLD the reptile with the stinging tail, That mountains hold not, nor strong walls avail To bar, nor any weapons wound. Behold Him who diseases all the world with guile." So spake my guide, and to the monster signed To join us where the causeway ceased, and he, That shape of loathsome fraud, swam warily Landward, and rested there his bust, the while The undulations of his tail unrolled Trailed outward in the hollow dark behind. His face was human, with a glance benign, Kindly, and just, and mild, but all beside Was reptile to the venomed fork. Two paws Were hairy to the armpits. Bright design And various colour patterned all his hide On breast and flank, in knots and circles drawn; Splendid as broidered cloths that mock the dawn, From Smyrna, or the looms of Tartary, Or those Arachne wove. As oft we see The wherries half afloat and half ashore, Or as the German beaver waits his prey, So on the brink the unclean monster lay, Which brims the desert with containing stone; The bust reposing, and the tail alone Still twisting, restless in the void: it bore A forked end, venomed as the scorpions are. Then spake my guide, "Along the dreadful beach Now must we for a little space, to reach This shape malignant where it rests." We went Down from the causeway on the right, and then Ten steps across the stony marge, that so Clear of the sand and fire our path should go Along the skirting of the void, and when We reached the monster, near at hand I knew Along the edge of sand and stone, a row Of sinners crouching. Here my Master said, "All kinds who suffer in this round to view, Before we leave it, mark their mien who sit Around the margin of the deeper pit. Go forward to them, but be brief. The while Converse I shortly with this beast of guile, That his broad shoulders bear us down." Thereat Approached I to the doleful folk who sat Thus on the torture's utmost bound. Their woe Was streaming from their eyes Above, below, With restless movements, like the dog that lies In summer, sleepless from the teasing flies, And turns, now here, now there, with snout and paw Smiting, so they with ceaseless hands and vain Brushed the hot sand, or flicked the burning rain. From face to face I looked, but nought I saw Familiar, only that a purse there hung From every neck, of various prints, and each, The while they baked along the dismal beach, Gazed down, as though his sure salvation lay The emblazoned pouch within. The shades among, One gilded pouch an azure lion bore, And one of gules a white goose showed, but more, I paused at one who on a silver ground A pregnant sow gave azure, and thereon He looked, and growled, "What dost thou? Get thee gone. Thou art not of us. But since thy live return My word may carry, let the Paduans learn The place at my left side, that's vacant now, Awaits Vitaliano." Like a cow He writhed his mouth, and licked his nose, and said, "Of Padua I; but these are Florentines Around me. Oft they din my ears and cry, We wait the sovereign cavalier, who shines In silver. He shall bear the he goats red Upon the pouch that decks his throat." But I Would wait no longer, lest my guide were wroth, And left these dolorous souls, pain-wearied now, Beneath their burden of eternity, While backward to the beast I went. His haunch My guide had climbed, and now to venture forth He called me likewise. "Here I mount, that thou Shalt ride before me; so the swinging tail, More distant from thy fears, when out we launch, Shall steer us downward. Here no steadier stair Avails, but through the empty dark we sail. Be bold, and fear not. For the fetid air Shall bear us safely." As the man that fears The nearing ague, pale and shivering stands, Already gazing on a bloodless nail, Not strengthful even to leave the harmful shade, Was I that heard. But yet with trembling hands (As some poor knave his craven heart conceals, Emboldened by his master's calm), I made My passage to the shoulders broad. I tried For words in which to beg my gentle guide To lend his arm, but no sound came, and he, Who knew my thoughts, and aided all, thereon Reached round me while he ordered, - "Geryon, Now start, and widely be thy circles spread, And slow thy sinking." As the wherries slide Downward and backward to the waiting tide, So slid the monster from the bank, until, Launched in free space, he outward turned his head To face the void, and like an eel his tail Was twisting, and his paws outreached to fill With gathered air. Did greater fears assail When PhaÛthon let the loose reins fall, that they Were trailed through heaven, and burnt the Milky Way? Or when Icarus felt the wax divide From feathered loins, the while his father cried, Far under, Evil road is thine? No sight Was left me, save the beast I rode. The night Was hollow where he swam. I might not know That sank we, saving that the wind below Beat upward, and against my face it blew As round we wheeled in gradual loops. I knew, Right-hand, the thunder of the whirlpool rise, And outward stretched my head, with downward eyes, And then shrank backward in more fear, for high Through the gross darkness pierced a wailing cry, And flickering lights were far beneath, whereby I learnt our height, and by these sights aware Of how we wheeled, and in what space of air, And how descending, colder fear I knew. But as the falcon, soaring long in vain, Wing-wearied, stoops to reach the empty plain, Though neither bird nor lure attract, the while The falconer cries Alas I and winging slow Disdainful, sullen, not for bait or guile Is lured, but from his master sulks, - below The ragged rocks at last, this Geryon, By us defeated of his customed freight, Alit, but lightened of my earthly weight Like arrow from the loosened string was gone. Canto XVIII Now stood we in the utter depth of Hell, For here ten trenches, with a central well, Contain all traitors in their kinds. The wall Is iron-grey stone that rings it round, and all Its floors and bastions are alike. Its name Is Malebolge. In this central shame There lie ten moats that like a tenfold chain Circle the wide and deep and dreadful well That midmost sinks, - but in its place I tell That horror. As succeeding moats begird A fortress, so, between the outer wall And central shaft, the ten great chasms extend In which the sin-divided traitors herd, And as such moats are bridged, so cliffs remain Connecting bank to bank, converging all Where, at the margin of the pit, they end. By the first fosse we stood, when Geryon shook His back in anger from my weight, and shot Upward again for his familiar prey. My guide, left-hand, beneath the rampart took narrow path the ditch that edged, to find The nearest crossing. In his steps behind I walked, nor spared upon my right to look Down on the crowd that filled the trench. Their lot Revealed new torments, and new griefs, for they Had live tormentors for their bane, unlike The circles past. Beneath the demons' ban All-naked here in two great crowds they ran, In opposite ways. For close beneath the dyke The advancing concourse faced us all, but those Lined in the further rank beside us moved, Though livelier-motioned. As at Rome were seen The pilgrims in the year of Jubilee Divided on the bridge, - one crowd was sent Toward St. Peter's, one reversed that went Toward Giordano, - so these shades I see Herded. Behind them demons, horned and hooved, With swinging scourges move. Their backs are grooved And whealed with beating where the thongs have been. Ah, how the first cut lifts their legs! Not one That waits a second stroke to make him run. As on we passed, a sinner stayed mine eye Whose face familiar seemed. With bended head He shunned my gaze, but to my guide I said, "One was there in the troop that passed us by Already that my sight had known." Thereat He paused not only, but in courtesy Some steps allowed me to return, that I Might question whom I sought; and when we found That hiding shade I cried aloud, "O thou! In vain that wouldst, with careful glance on ground, Avoid, except that features feigned ye wear, I know ye, Venedico. What curst prank Hath cast thee pickling in so foul a tank?" He answered, sullen, "Nought I seek to tell, But thy clear speech, that through the murk of Hell, With recollection of the former air, Resounds so strangely, all compels. I run For no gained greed or spoil my lust had won. Persuasions only brought my bane. I weep That fair Ghisola shared the Marquis' sleep By my contriving. That the truth, whate'er The aspect that a viler tale may wear In lips of gossip. Tell the Bolognese It is not only I that run with these From our false city. They crowd more numerous Than all the infant tongues on earth today That Sipa in their speech are taught to say, Between the Reno and the Savena. If witness wouldst thou seek, recall of us Our avarice, that thyself hast known." But here A chasing demon smote his haunch. "Away, Pander! no women here are coin." He leapt Wildly, and raced, and I returned, and kept Behind mine escort. In few steps a ridge We reached, that jutted from the wall. A bridge It made, outhollowed where the crowd below Went through it. Here we inward turned and left Forever all the loftier woes, wherein They weep who wrought direct inferior sin; And on the centre of the span my guide Paused, in his thought for my desire, to show Those shades who late, because they raced beside, And did not meet us, might have passed unseen. This train we faced, and watched the scourges plied As hard as on the nearer side had been. But one there came who shed no tears for pain, And spake my guide, "Behold, his looks retain Their regal right, as when his craft bereft The Colchians of the ram; or passed his way By Lemnos, where the women merciless Their males had slain. The young Hypsipyle (Who for her father's life had all misled) In turn he cheated. Words of meaning fair, And marriage gifts he gave, and left her there Alone and pregnant. For that guilt to pay He runs, and Medea weights his doom. All they Whose hidden lives the like deceit confess In this direction race. But longer stay Deserves not. Pass we to the further trench." The narrow path ran on, and somewhat sank, But arching where it bridged the chasms. A stench Assailed us as we neared the next, beyond The vapour cast from any stagnant pond Of earth's excretions, scent and sight alike Assailing. Moaning from the depth arose, And gasping, and the noise of beating hands. The banks were caked with filth the vapour left In rolling upward from the dismal cleft, Which sinks so deep that he alone who stands On the mid archway of the bridge can see Its hidden baseness. There, with useless blows, I saw the wallowing crowd of culprits strike The flowing filth from off their mouths. A head Was there so soiled, I looked in doubt if he Were priest or layman, till in wrath he bawled, "Why dost thou scan me in my filthiness? I am not soaking in a different mess From those around me." In return I called, "Because I knew thee when thy hair was dry. If rightly through thy present dirt I guess Thou art Alessio." Striving still to clear His head, that like a rotten pumpkin showed, He answered, "Yea, my flatteries brought me here. Fair words alone have filled this dismal road." Then spake my guide, "Look further out, for she, That fouled sprawled harlot, whom in vain you see Scrape off the filth with filthy nails, and try, Now crouching at the side, now straining high, To avoid the deluge of the dung, on earth Was Thais, whose sweet tongue her lovers' worth Exalted past her own. But longer stay This trench deserves not, nor a look's delay." Canto XIX O SIMON MAGUS! O ye pestilent! Followers and thieves of him; who prostitute For gold and silver things divine I Lament, For here is your abiding. Here for you The trumpet sounds damnation. Here I stand On the third arch, by which your trench is spanned, And what behold I? Heaven and earth unite With these dark horrors, O Wisdom infinite! To show the balance of thy scales is true. Smooth on each wall the livid stone was dressed, And pierced with holes, as where the martins nest, But larger, and the stony floor contained Round holes alike, in size and shape the same As in my beauteous San Giovanni The stands for the baptizers. Lately one I broke to save a drowning life: let none Revile me with an altered tale. There came From out each hole two legs: the rest remained Housed in the rock. The soles unceasingly Burned, and the legs, that to the calf were bare, So strained and kicked that any rope had burst That held them. On the soles of these accurst Bright flames that licked the outer surface were; As on things oiled, they moved from heel to toe, Flickering and dancing. "Master, show the name Of him whose legs from out the flood I see, That twist and writhe and strain more furiously Than all beside, and licked by livelier flame?" He answered, "Somewhat if we leave the bridge, And sideways follow the dividing ridge, This fosse that severs from the next below, There is a passage in the wall, too steep For any human feet or hands to go, But I will bear thee, if thou wilt, and so Himself shall tell thee why so strongly leap His fire-licked members." I replied, "Thy will Is mine, thou knowest. For if my voice were still, My mind were naked to thy thought." Left-hand We turned along the lower boundary, And here my Master bore me down, until Upon the perforated flood to stand He set me safely. Where he placed me down I saw the lamentable legs of him Who writhed so hardly. "Whosoe'er thou be, Who hast thy body thus reversed," I cried, "Save by thy doom the power of speech has died, Unhappy, answer!" As the friar must bend, Confessing him who in his grave is penned, For some perfidious murder judged to die Head downwards; who, to more his fate extend, Prolongs confession, while the spades delay, So to the entrance of the hole did I Stoop down, and upward rose a voice, "Art here Already, Boniface? Before the year The writ foretold me? Hast thou tired so soon Of that dear wealth which was the tempting boon For which thou didst the Bride of Christ betray? - Won by deceit, and cast in spoils away." And I stood wildered, till my Master said, "Delay not thy reply, I am not he Whom thou believest." This I called, whereon The spirit madly wrenched his feet, and cried With weeping voice, "Then what concern with me Thy steps to this unholy place has led? By that Great Mantle from my shoulders gone, The She-bear whelped me, and her cubs I tried To feed and foster, and exalt their pride. Much gold I pursed, and straitly pursed am I; And here I wait until the next shall die And take my place, and in that joyful hour I join the earlier of our kind, acower Beneath the fissures of the stones that lie. "But more already have I baked," he said, "And longer stood on my inverted head, Than he that follows in my place shall know. There comes a shepherd from the West. Bordeaux Shall give the Church a viler lord than he And I together in our deeds should be. For like that Jason of the Maccabees Who bought God's church, and bent his heathen knees To alien altars, shall he prove, and so, As to his guilt his king complaisant showed, The king of France shall take that impious road." I know not if I spoke too foolish-bold But in this strain I answered, "Say what gold Our Lord from Peter for His keys required? Or by Matthias next was Peter hired To yield that office that the guilty lost? But justly dost thou pay the penal cost Of thy betrayal. Keep that golden fee That made thee false to Charles of Sicily As best thou mayst. And but those Keys revered, Which in glad life thy hands have turned, repress Mine heart s indignant wrath, the nakedness Of all thou wast, my harder words should say. For avarice in thy Seat its guilt hath scared Upon the conscience of mankind. It treads The just man downward, and exalts the base. A wrath foreshown by that Evangelist Who saw the harlot with the seven heads And the ten horns, who kept her virtuous place, Pleasing her spouse, until the kings she kissed In acts of fornication. Gods to you Are gold and silver. In your eyes they shine Deities a hundred, while the idolater, That in your pride you excommunicate, To one false god bends only. Constantine! What countless evils through the years accrue, Not that thou lovedst God's spouse, but gave to her A wealth unseemly for her lowly state." As thus mine indignation spake, below If conscience waked or rage I may not know, But wild and furious sprawled his feet. My guide I glanced at, fearful lest his looks should chide, And faced assent. Again he lifted me, And by that path the boldest goat had shunned, He bore me to the crossway back. Beneath, The fifth great cleft gave other woes to see. Canto XX ANOTHER valley in its turn I tell. Another guilt, another depth of hell, Extends beneath. The great trench circular We gazed on from the crossing arch, and far I saw that silent weeping crowd and slow That moves around it, as the chanters go In earthly process of the Litanies. But other cause for shortened steps have these, For when my distant glance I dropped more low On those beneath, an unfamiliar woe They showed, neck-twisted where the body joins, Till each his own and not his neighbour's loins Could gaze on while he walked, and for this cause They needs went backwards. Some by Nature's laws Distorting palsies so may wrench, but I Have seen nought like it, nor believe the sky Looks down on such contortion. Ye who read - God give ye vintage of the words ye heed - Reflect how I, who watched our human seed So altered and debased, with visage dry Could watch them. They of heavenly form bereft So far, that where the hinder parts are cleft The tears rolled down them as they wept, and I, Whose eyes thereat with kindred tears were wet, Bowed down upon the cold stone parapet, And wept beyond controlling. But my guide Spake sharply. "Art thou of those fools," he said, "Whose pity liveth where it best were dead? For what more impious than the thought that dares Beyond man's province, and in fancy shares The mind of the Creator? Raise thine head. Look up! For near us is AmyhiaraØs For whom Hell gaped. The wondering Thebans cried, 'Why dost thou leave the war? Why hasten thus Thy chariot horses down the steep?' But he Nor paused, nor turned, till Minos' seat before He stayed and trembled. Not this guise he wore In that proud kinghood of his fame. Dost see How loth his shoulders form his breast? He thought To see far forward. Now his limbs are taught To bear him backward. Next Tiresias, Who smote too boldly with his sorcerous rod The entangled snakes, and found his limbs transform To woman's comelier contours, soft and warm; Which aspect lasted till he smote again The twisted dealers of the earlier bane. The next is Aruns who, in Luni's hills, Whereunder toil the Carrarese for bread, Cave-couched amidst the marble; all the ills That lay fore-fated in the thought of God, He sought to read from unobstructed seas, Or where the night her starry legions led. Now walks he backward for his wage. With these Observe that body with the wry-necked head That onward shuffles, while her hair is spread Upon the breasts we see not. Bear with me A little while I tell. For here is she, Manto, who after her long wandering Found roothold in my native place. Her sire Died, and the city of the Bacchic rites Groaned to the scourging of an alien king, And she went forth. In northern Italy Where the wild Tyrol bars the German mire, The hills are hollowed. Like an inland sea The lake of Garda lies. A thousand streams Flash foaming downward from the Alpine heights From Garda to the Val Camonica To feed it, till the basin brims, and then Flows over at a point where all the sees, Trentine and Brescian and Veronese, Unite, that all their passing priests it seems Might bless the men that dwell there. Builded strong, To tame the Brescian and the Bergamese, A fortress on the lower shore is seen, And pouring outward through the pastures green, The Garda's waters, now the Mincio, Flow downward to Governo. First they flow Clear, rapid, till, the level reached, they spread In marshes stagnant, where are fevers bred When summer heats them. Here that virgin came, And saw bare land amidst the reedy fen Where no man lived. The arts we may not name To practice, secret, with her acolytes, This barren place she chose, and dwelt, and here Left her vacated corse. The changing year Saw others, guiltless of her dreadful rites, Ingathering for the strength the marshes gave In troublous times. On those dead bones they built A city, and for that remembered grave They called it Mantua. Once a race it held More numerous, and of nobler race than now, Before the infatuate Casalodi spilt (Blindly by Pinamonte's craft impelled), The lives of those who served him. This believe; Nor other tales defrauding truth receive Of how my city from the marsh arose." I answered, "Master, other tale would be Quenched coal and lifeless, since thy grace allow That truth I hear. But wilt thou bear with me That backward turns my mind to these that move In that sad process underneath?" He said: "Regard thou him whose dusky shoulders spread His weight of beard. A Grecian augur he When Greece so empty of its males became That scarce the cradles held them. Aulis heard Eurypilus and Calchas speak the word That loosed the cables of their ships. The tale I told before in my great tragedy, As well thou knowest. And here Eurypilus Beneath thee moves. The next is Michael Scot, Lean-flanked, who could by magic artistry Against the demons' subtlest wiles prevail. Guido Bonatti comes behind, and next Asdente weeps that his vain mind forgot His bench and leather. Mark those crones unsexed That follow. Witchcraft with their waxen dolls And mystic herbs they wrought, and left therefor The seemly ordered life which Heaven extols, The loom and needle. But the time permits No more to tarry. Come! The western wave At Seville yields the moon her watery grave. Full was she two days since, that late ye saw So thinly crescent in the pathless wood." We left them, twisted in their sorcerous pits, Conversing as we onward walked, until We reached the shadow of a darker ill, When gazing down the fifth black chasm we stood. Canto XXI NOW looked we downward on a darker ditch Than those preceding. As the bubbling pitch Boils in the great Venetian arsenal, To caulk the wave-beat ships, when winter's call In-herds them from repulsing seas; and there One builds anew, and one with hard repair Plugs the cracked ribs that heat and cold have strained, And many friendless winds have buffeted In many wanderings on the ocean ways. One mends the injured stern, and one the head, One fashions oars, one joins the broken stays, One sews the jib, one lends his aid to spread New mainsail for the rotten sheet and stained That drew them inward. So they toil beside The pitchy cauldron - so the boiling here Filled, like a cauldron, all the trench entire, That art Divine, and never earthly fire, So heated. Breaking on the surface wide Were bubbles only. Nought beside I saw, Save that the blackness heaved, and then compressed, Unceasing. Sight of that retentive maw Drew my fixed gaze, until my leader's cry Alarmed me sharply, "Guard thee! Guard!" and I Stayed not to look, but toward him leapt, nor guessed Why called he, till within that safety pressed Of his sure arm I turned me round, and there, Across the bridge, a coal-black demon ran. How closer shrank I from that fierce aspect I How near the menace of the wings outspread And lightfoot speed! His shoulders sharp and high Sustained the haunches of a hanging man, Whose ankles in his claws were fast. He said: "Ho, Taloned of the Fifth Damnation! Here Is Santa Zita's Elder! Thrust him down! While I for others of the sinful town Go backward. Plenty there this goal shall win, For all men there contrive the barterer's sin, - Except, of course, Bonturo!" From the bridge He cast him, twirling. From that weight's relief Straightening, he mounted up the stony ridge So swift I thought that never hound on thief Was loosed so gladly. Plunging headlong in The sinner sank, and rose convulsed, and writhed, Arching his back as one who prays. There came A cackling laughter from beneath the bridge, And flying demons rose. "This Holy Place," They mocked, "befits a sanctimonious face, But nought it saves thee from thy bathing. Ho! Ye swim not here as in the Serchio. It is not willed a naked part to show, Except the knives shall slice it." As the cooks Around the boiler group with waiting prongs, To thrust the carcase if it rise too far Above the broth that stews it, so did they The twisting sinner with a score of hooks, Clamoring derisive. "Find thy place below, Where mayst thou pilfer in thy private way If aught attract thee there." My Master said, "Wait here, and fear not. Where the buttress swells Crouch down, and hide, and whatsoe'er to me Of outrage or repulse you hear or see You need not tremble. Through the deeper An earlier time I came, and proved their dread." I crouched - and trembled. Down the central bridge He went and left me. Ere he gained the ridge That barred it from the next succeeding woe The demons marked him. As the dogs outfly, White-fanged and deafening, if a varlet show A mood to linger at the gate, they came, A rush of wings and drags outreached. Stout heart He needed surely. But his voice outrang Steadfast. "No victim for your rage am I. Stand back! Ye know the heavy stripes that tame Revolt. What! Would ye drag me? Stand apart. Let one come forward. When he learns my name Then choose ye freely." Croaked the grisly crew, "Let Foultail test him," and the fiend advanced Malignly confident. "What power," he said, "Delays we bathe thee? Leap, or fork and fang Shall teach it!" Backward at the troop he glanced, That stirred impatient. But my leader knew The Power that cloaked him. "Thinkest thou thus, misled, I blundered downward for thy sport? I come Divinely messaged, where propitious fate Hath willed another through these depths to show. The greater demons at the outer gate Have learnt it. Scatheless past thy ward we go. To me the outrage of thy cries is dumb. Thy hooks are pointless." At these words the fiend, Sore daunted, drooped his ghastly tool, and cried, "We must not strike him," to the rest, and I, Who till this time the friending buttress screened, My guide called forward. At the word I ran Across the fearful space to reach his side, The demons crowding as I came. (I saw The footmen at Caprona once, who shrank As I did, when they looked, and rank on rank Their weaponed foes were round them, and they stood Protected only by the rules of war Against the crowd that yelled their deaths.) They would The thing they dared not, but their lust began To conquer prudence. Each the next would egg To nick me. "Score him on the rump." - "Do thou." - "Do thou then." - "Hook him, Hellbat, by the leg." But Foultail railed against them, "Cease thee now, Scarmiglione, lest the price we pay." And then to us, - "Ye seek a broken way. A thousand and two hundred years ago And sixty-six, it was but yesterday, And five hours later, Hell's foundations so Were wrenched and shaken, that the bridge beyond Was flung in fragments to the chasm below. Along the margin of the boiling pond Ye needs must go some distance. There I send A swift patrol, lest any crawling wretch Beyond the pitch his blackened limbs extend. Ye may go safely in their guard. They know Too well to trick ye. Alichino here, And Calcabrina, and Cagnazzo thou, With Ciriatto of the tusks, and those Who form the ten that Barbariccia leads, Fanged Draghignazzo, Graffiacane, Hellbat, and Libicocco next, and he That deepest-hued in peculation glows, Fierce Rubicante. Oft the boiling breeds Such boldness that the sinners seek relief Along the margin, to their greater grief. Search well. But guide these twain in safety through, Along the crags that edge the boiling glue, Until ye reach the nearest cliff that stands Unbroken, and bisects the trench." I said, "O Master, let us seek the path unled Than in such escort I Mark them glance and grin. They nudge, expectant that their sport begin When once from Foultail's sight we pass. For me, I would not further, on a path I see More dreadful hourly." "Fear thou nought for that," My Master answered; "thee they grin not at, But in the malice of their hope to fetch Clear of the pond and flay some crawling wretch That leaves the boiling." By the leftward bank We then went forward in that grisly rank. Canto XXII MUCH have I seen of camps and moving men, But not that escort of the demons ten My mind compares. Not Campaldino saw Such sight uncouth; nor any rout of war, Pageant or masque, grotesque or carnival, Mummery or tilt, can aught their like recall. Nought in Italian lands, or lands afar, Nor barque by landfall steered, or leading star, Nought moves, on earth or wave or heavens of air, Like those swart fiends, our chosen escort, were. "Who wills to church must there with saints consort: Who seeks the tavern must with guzzlers sport." So runs the proverb. With these demons we Paced the black verge that ringed the dreadful sea. Yet little heed my mind allowed to know Their various aspects vile. For seethed below That lake of pitch the where in burning heat The unclean of hand received their payment meet. Most was I bent to learn the dole they knew Whose sins their souls within that cauldron threw. As dolphins, restless of the storm to be, Arch their swift backs above the heaving sea, Whereby the seamen, peril-warned, prepare To meet fierce winds with decks and spars stripped bare, So seemed, one instant's snatched release to gain, Some sinner twisting in that boiling pain, A shorter moment than the lightnings take, Would arch his back from out the burning lake. As wary frogs that round the stagnant ditch Show noses only, so the bubbling pitch Showed eyes of sinners, wide in watchful fright, That instant as the taloned imps they sight Sank in the slime. And as one frog may stay, While all beside have dived and slipped away, I saw (and shudder still in thought to see), How one delayed, and Graffiacani Bared his great claws, and clutched the diving head By pitchy locks, and from that burning bed Forth hauled him. So perchance yourselves have seen A fresh-speared otter from the water green Dragged, writhing. Closing round their piteous prey, "O rend him, Rubicante, rend and flay!" Cried the obscene crew. But I to Virgil then, "O Master, couldst thou of the souls of men Learn whom they seize, ere yet, their work complete, They backward fling him to the liquid heat?" Close stepped my guide, at which the fiends controlled Parted and stilled, and half reluctant hold They loosed, the while he asked what sinful name Men spake on earth that there to torture came. And while the fiends their horrid trade delayed, The wretch, ere yet his quivering pelt was flayed, Gave answer. "Fathered by a waster wild, Born in Navarre, my mother sold her child, Constrained by hunger, to a lord's employ; Then to King Thibault (yet himself a boy), My fawning service passed. By bribe and cheat I bought the lease of this unending heat." As thus constrained his trembling lips allowed The sin that cast him to that grisly crowd, Side-thrust beneath his belly's rounded cup The tusk of Ciriatto ripped him up. As some caught mouse by wicked cats at play Is tossed and toyed, he fared; but "Stand away!" Snarled Barbariccia, while his limbs he twined The victim round, and held, before, behind, Joined in one piece. "If more thou wouldst," he said, "Ask, ere we cast him to the deathless dead!" And while the fiends forewent their labour sweet To fling his entrails to the bubbling heat, My Master asked him, "In the boiling flood What others meet ye of your country's blood?" He answered, "One not distant far from those, A wretch Sardinian born, beside me rose Last ere they snatched me from the lake away. I would with him in scalding heat I lay From slitting tusk secure, and plunging prong!" But Libicocco cried "We wait too long!" And ere his hook the chiefer fiend could stay, Mangling and tearing from the bone away The greater forepart of the arm, it fell. While Draghignazzo next, a thought more slow, Snatched downward, reaching for the legs below, And clamouring rose again those birds of Hell. But their Decurion wheeled, and loose thereat His tortured captive wrenched, and railed and spat, Cursing discordant till they stilled. Once more My Master asked him, "When they dragged ashore Your form reluctant from the burning slime Whom left ye happier?" He, some passing time, Gazed at his wound, with vacant eyes; but when Were restless motions from the demons ten, Made hurrying answer. "Friar Gomita he, That Pisa's lord, across Sardinia's sea, Sent, trustful, for Gallura's rule. He made His profit ever from his trust betrayed. His lord's worst foes the smoothing bribe could pay, And work his loss their quiet unhindered way: A pot was he where every fraud would stew; No theft was whispered but the worse he knew: No knave was he, but very king, of wrong. Michel, who sang on earth an equal song, And held the neighbouring rule, beside him lies" - But here he caught the Hell-bird's glittering eyes Fixed on him, lustful for the hindered prey, And all his cunning mind extreme of fear Made active - "surely, would ye seek to hear Tuscan or Lombard that on earth ye knew, I need but call to bring the tortured crew. For ever, if the demon chase be slack, And one from out the scald a scourgeless back Heaves from the clinging pitch, and crawls impune Out on the marsh, with cautious signal soon He whistles to his boiling mates to try The like relief; and in such note will I So call them. Only bid the demon band Some little backward in the shades to stand, To give them heart." His snout Cagnazzo raised, Contemptuous of the fraud, and sniffed, and gazed Derisive round. "The sinner thinks," he said, "To plunge once more in that infernal bed, When backward in the shades we hide." But he Whined with new guile. "I might not hope to flee Thy swifter wings. I only thought to know Those others rendered to a kindred woe, As malice moved me." Swift Alichino Gave answer. "If the steep descent ye try We shall not trace your steps, but stooping fly Straight for the pitch, and wait you there to rend. Call whom ye will, but if ye fraud intend Dear price ye pay. - We will the slope ascend Some space, and o'er the bank's reverse conceal Our waiting wings, the while the larger meal His malice brings us." Thus, their mood reversed, The cheat prevailed. Cagnazzo first, who first Derided, now the offered sport would try, To draw more victims from their steaming sty. The demons turned their eyes, the ridge to climb, A moment upward. Swift his chosen time The desperate sinner seized, and leapt. Aware Instant, while yet he cleft the yielding air, The broad-winged demon that had snapped the snare, Grouped his close vans, and like a falling kite Shot headlong lakeward, as a stone should smite. Yet deftly, as the sinner sank from sight, With wings outreached, and lifted breast aright Retrieved, and screaming in his rage of prey Skimmed the black gulf. But close behind his way Came Calcabrina, great of wing as he, And all his rage the baffled chase to see Against Alichino turned. New sport we saw. Demon on demon leapt, with tooth and claw Tearing. For while the prey they plunged to pluck Sank in the seething like a diving duck, The frustrate falcons flapped and clutched, and tore, Smote with wide wings, and closed and overbore Each other, turning in mid-air, and fell. Were laughter here, if any depth of Hell Could hold it. Happed they on that surface hot, Their victims' torments theirs, and all forgot Their mutual rage in screaming pain. They drew Separate: they strove with desperate strength anew Their wings to lift from out the holding glue, But vainly. Fast their fellow demons flew With shrill laments above the vaporous ditch, And while they sank within the boiling pitch, From either side at Barbariccia's call Lined banks, their mates with hooks and drags to haul To land. Still sinking as we turned away, Sprawled on the marsh, the nightmare demons lay. Canto XXIII WE did not wait that escort more, but trod A silent path in thoughtful guise, as go The Minor Friars through the streets arow, One after one, and those renounced of God, Demon and barterer, we left. I thought Of Aesop's fable of the frog that drew The mouse behind it to the drowning flood, And how that sinner in the boiling glue, Beyond design, the chasing demons brought To find a like disaster. Thought to thought As Yea to Ay were kindred. Then my blood Chilled through me as my mind advanced to see How rage might wake against us, as the cause Not only that the sinner missed their claws, But that their comrades in such snare were caught, And backward gazed I, and my guide besought, "O Master, save thou hide thyself and me Most swiftly, terror shakes my heart to see Those demons tear us, for their broken sport. Their malice, restive at our heels that ran, If rage recruit it, not their leader's ban Nor thought of later stripes shall hold. My fear So urges that meseems the empty rear Is dark with wings that chase us." He replied, "No leaded mirror moving at thy side More instant would return thy shape than I Receive thy thoughts unspoken. Rising nigh, The rampart is not too precipitous For careful scaling; if it falleth thus Upon the further side, we soon shall stand Beyond their peril." Ere the ruse he planned Was action, with a whirl of wings they came Outrageous, imminent, but my guide (as she Who wakens to the roar of nearing flame, And reaches for the babe with hasty hand That life outvalues, and no more delays, Even for the covering of her shift, but forth She flies incontinent), against their wrath Upcaught me in his arms, and raced to gain The rock's high ridge that was their boundary. And on the verge he loosed his feet, and slid The abrupt decline. As fast as down the spout The water gushes to the landmill's wheel, So shot he down the shelving bank. The rout Of chasing demons, e'er his feet could feel The level depth, had reached the wall, hut there He feared them nothing, while they raged in vain, For high controlling Providence provides No serving demon strays beyond the sides Of that sad hollow where his task is hid. Now in recovered safety looked we round. Beside us moved, with weeping eyes to ground, A people clad in golden cloaks, whereon To gaze was dazzling. Very tired and sad Their looks, and slow their steps to pass belief. And I, in doubt, who could not gauge their grief, Gazed wondering. Such depth of hoods they had, In shape as those the monks wear at Cologne; In golden brilliance like their cloaks they shone. O shining sepulchre of moldering bone I For all within was lead: - such weight that those In which the second Frederick burnt his foes Were light as straw contrasted. Oh, what weight In which to barter with eternal fate I Left-hand we moved along their file, but though They moved alike, they strained a pace so slow, Bent with the load they bore, that every stride A fresh face gave us that we moved beside: And still from all the gasping sobs arose. I asked my leader, "Will thy care provide When next we pass whose name or tale I know, That there we pause?" From out a backward hood There came a voice from one that understood My Tuscan speech. "If here thou list to stay, Whose feet so strangely dance the dismal way, Thy wish may wait thee." Then I turned and saw Two shades that struggled, but the dreadful law That held them, made their haste as nought. Desire Was in their looks to reach us, and my guide Commanded: "Pause, and keep some space beside With gradual motions like their own." We stayed Some moments patient, though three strides entire Had reached us. Noughlt they spake at first, but long With slanting eyes they summed us, and at last, Communing only to themselves, they said: "How moves his throat! Can mortal life belong To wanderers here? Or if their lives be past How walk they through this trench ungarmented?" And then to me: "O Tuscan, these sad pits Form the last college of the hypocrites, And more we tell thee if thou dost not scorn To teach us of what race thyself wast born." I answered: "I was born and nurtured nigh Where Arno finds the blue reflected sky A city's turrets pierce. By ways forbade, Clothed with the living flesh that first I had, A High Power leads me. But yourselves shall show Why from your eyes distils this dismal woe, And what the shining pain around you clad." The nearer answered: "Jovial Friars were we. I Catalano, Loderingo he: Bologna-born, and Florence chose us twain, From either faction, jointly to maintain Her peace internal. Still thine eyes may meet, In those charred ruins of Gardingo Street, The witness what we were." My tongue began, "O Friars, your evil - " when I marked a man Writhe on the ground. To feel their weight he lay Nailed down with three great stakes across the way. Friar Catalano caught my glance, and said: "That wretch, cross-fixed, on whom in turn we tread, Is he who counselled with the priests, 'For us It is expedient that one man should die -' Naked and staked to bear our burdens thus Annas alike, and all that council lie - A seed of evil for the Jews were they." I watched my Master gaze in wonder down On that prone shade, outpulled and crucified That from their weight he might not writhe aside, Who there in everlasting exile lay, But had not suffered when he passed that way Beforetime. Nothing of his thought he said; But later to the Friar he turned: "If nought Of retribution wait thy word, I pray, Thou wilt not here deny thine aid, but say If further to the right in vain were sought Some exit from this depth, or if we need A loth return to make, and intercede With those black angels that we left." The Friar Gave answer: "Nearer than ye think doth lie The next of those convergent cliffs that span, From the great barrier to the central pit, These depths of pain. This only arch of it Has fallen, but the slope a mortal man May clamber, for the ruins pile so high Toward the lower bank ye seek." My guide Pondered awhile: "If this be truth, he lied Who hooks the peculators." And the Friar Gave nimble answer: "At Bologna well We knew the devil, and all his works. A liar, And father of all lies from there to Hell, They called him." Then with longer steps my And somewhat angered in his looks that so The imp had dared him, forward went, and I In his loved footsteps left their laden woe. Canto XXIV IN that young month of the returning year When, in Aquarius placed, the mounting Shakes loose his hair a bolder course to run, The hoarfrost takes his sister's face of fear, A moment only. Then the husbandman, As wanes the night before the equal day, Looks forth, a world of winter-white to scan, And knows the frugal store of roots and hay Is ended, and laments, and smites his thigh, And through the house as one distraught he goes; But shortly forth again he looks, and knows The world has changed its face, and cheerily Takes crook, and chases out his flock to feed. So I, that did my Master's anger heed, Awhile was daunted, till we came to where That tumbled ruin through the somber air Rose darkly, when he turned with smile as sweet As on that mountain when he stayed my feet At our first meeting. Careful glance he cast Along the huge mound of the broken rock, And then as one who picks his point at last, And doubts no more, from block to tumbled He led me upward, with a reaching arm, And voice that warned my blinder steps. No way Was this for those of golden cloaks to flee, That scarcely for his lighter frame, or me His arm sustained, a trembling hold supplied; And but that to the lower bank we strained (For Malebolge to the central pit Inward and downward slopes from every side), I know not if my guide the crest had gained, But sure I had not. When my feet attained The last rent fissure, the projecting stone With failing strength I grasped, and reaching it, My breath drained from me by that toil, to sit Some space I thought, but while I sank he said: "Thou must not rest thee here, but here and now Make conquest of thy sloth, for while abed, Forgetful of the hours, warm-blanketed, Men rest, or sitting loose at ease, they find No fame, but life consumes, they watch not how; As foam on water, or as smoke in air, A moment passes, and it is not there. Arise! and with thy spirit's strength contend Against the flesh that drags thee. Thus shall end Revolt, except the ignoble soul allow The body's weight to sink it. Not enough Is wrought that thus the deeper trench we quit. Be thine to comprehend, and with the wit The will for action." Narrow, steep and rough, Yet rose the path across the ridge that led, But shamed to hear my leader's words I feigned A strength I had not. "In thy steps," I said, "I follow, confident," and further speech I made, the while the rampart's crest we gained, To hide my faintness from myself. Thereat A voice made answer from the further deep, Bestial, and formless of clear words to reach The hearer's mind, but not this loss forgat The notes of wrath. Above the further steep Now stood we, but my living sight was vain To pierce the blackness whence that awful cry Reproached me. "Master, while we here remain. I hear, but nought it means, and nought I see Down-gazing. Wilt thou that the further wall We gain, and climbing by the shorter fall, Perchance in safety our descents repeat?" He said: "For fit request a fit reply Is action only." Leading silently, He crossed the bridge, and on the eighth surround A vantage of sufficient sight I found That showed the seventh and more dreadful woe Than those behind. For serpents here I saw Hideous and frightful in their throngs, as though All Libya and the red Egyptian sea Had swarmed them. While I write my heart at war With recollection backward holds my blood, Shuddering. For not the Libyan sands shall be, Nor all the plagues of the Egyptian flood, Nor all that Ethiopia spawns, alike Prolific. Not the crested water-snake, The cobra, nor the leaping jaculus, The speckled death, the serpent formed to strike From either end, such horror holds. I saw A people naked, with no hole to take For refuge, blindly in their fear that ran Amidst this ruthless and appalling throng. O for the spotted heliotrope I that thus They might escape unseen. But not this law Could charms resist. To snakes their hands belong Snakes through their loins are pierced. I watched a man Against whose throat a sudden serpent bit, More swiftly than the shortest word is writ Take fire, and burn, and in his place there came A little heap of ashes. As the flame In cinders sank, a sight most marvellous Was mine - the calcined heap reversed the wrong, Arising to its human form. 'Tis said The Phoenix thus, on tears of incense fed, That eats no herb, or any coarser bread, With each five hundred years is purified, And rises thence as though it had not died, From its own ash again incarnated. But as some demon-haunted soul may fall Unconscious, writhing, nor the fit recall, But weak and pallid to his feet again He struggles dumbly in bewildered pain, So looked the sinner. What scale of Heaven was here To weight a doom so dreadful, so severe? "Who art thou?" asked my guide, and answered he: "A short while since I rained from Tuscany To this ferocious gutter. A life more beast Than human pleased me there. Pistoia well My savage carnal ways, till here I fell, Denned, native, Vanni Fucci, mule, am I." I answered: "Though thy bestial crimes to hell Have flung thee rightly, yet I rede not well Why to this lower depth thou cam'st?" And he Feigned not to hear, but in a dismal shame Gazed blankly upward, till constrained he said, "Not for those crimes of loud repute I came To this relentless doom. Reluctfully It wrenches all my heart with grief to say My guilt - more bitter than when first the dead I joined, and Minos cast me here. My sin Was this, that having robbed the sacristry I spake not, while Rampino tortured lay, And della Nona died, a guilt to pay Which was not theirs. For that false crime herein The serpents take me at their lust - but thou Shalt go not backward with light heart to tell My townsmen of this hidden infamy, Nor joy to watch me in this pass - I see A thing that cometh on earth. Short year from now Thy part shall from my native place expel The Neri, and their wealth shall confiscate. But then shall Florence cleanse her lawless state; Thy faction, outcast from her palaces, Shall suffer all they gave, till Mars shall bring A flaming vapour of such fierce disease From Val di Magra, that the trembling knees Of each Bianco on Piceno's plain Shall bleeding bow. I would not tell this thing Could any prescience on thy part restrain The sorrow for thee which my heart foresees." Canto XXV HIS words he ended, and his bestial mind Reverted to its impious use. He raised Both hands in gestures of obscenity Against the Eternal, till my heart inclined To bless the serpents. One, that leapt behind Just as he shouted, "Take it, God! at Thee I aim it," twisted round his throat, to bind His further utterance. One, his arms about, Its tightening knots o'er wrists and elbows twined To cease his antics. Ah, Pistoia! why Dost never, when thy bitter factions burn Their foemen's houses, and are sacked in turn, The whole send upward to the cleansing sky In one consuming? since thy sons exceed The first corruptions of the godless seed That built thee. All the infernal depths I trod Revealed no shade with such contempt for God. But while we looked, with sudden haste he fled, And past us raced a Centaur-shape who said, "Where hides the snarling thief I seek?" I know Maremma, nor believe its fens could show So numerous snakes as round his haunches hung And twisted in their wrath, and thereamong, Even to the human part, behind his head A fiery dragon broods with wings outspread, That burn, and render all they reach to flame. Then said my Master, "Cacus here we see, Who made of old beneath Mount Aventine Beneath his brethren, for the theft of shame A lake of blood. To this great depth he came, That there he wrought. He ceased his perfidy, Taught by the raining blows of Hercules, - A hundred mashed him, though he felt but ten." On rushed the Centaur in his haste to seize The fleeing shade, and while we gazed ahead We saw not that beneath there came three men That watched us, till they cried, "Who are ye there?" Whereat the Centaur left our thoughts, and these Possessed them. One man to his neighbour said, "Why tarries Cianfa?" By that word aware Of those that faced me, to my guide I signed Desire for silence. Reader, if this tale Thy mind reject, I blame thee nought, for I Look back, and memory here and credence find Dispute. A monster with a serpent's tail, And with six feet along the ground that ran, Made halt before the three, and picked a man, And leapt upon him. No clinging ivies twine So closely. In his face its teeth it set. Its forward feet behind his shoulders met. Its belly on his belly pressed. Its feet Strained to his sides and thighs, to backward meet. Its tail between his legs, along his spine Curled upwards. As a lighted paper burns And blackens, but at first to brown it turns Before the flames have reached it, so did they Transform and blend, until you might not say The serpent-hue was that, or this was man, And then, as melted wax, their forms began To merge and mingle. Cried his comrades, "Lo, Where art - what art - which art thou, Agnello? Art both or neither?" The two heads by now Were one. The bodies were a monstrous sight. A man was snake: a reptile walked upright. With dragging steps it left us. Hast thou seen The lizards changing hedge? From side to side They cross the sun-glare of the roadway wide A baffling streak. So fast a reptile shot Toward these two remaining. Smoking hot, And black as peppercorn it showed. It leapt And pierced the navel of the one. It stept Some paces back, and crouched, and watched. Its eyes Its victim held, and he with dull surprise Yawning, as one by sleep or fever dazed, No motion made to fly, but backward gazed Tranced. From the reptile's mouth, the navel's hole, There came two smokes that feeling through the air Were joined. The serpent and the human soul In this conjunction stayed. Let Lucan prate No more the horror of Nasidius' fate, Nor how Sabellus failed from sight. I bear No envy to the tales that Ovid made Of Cadmus to a serpent changed, or how Sad Arethusa is a fountain now. They did not dream the thing I saw. The shade That once was man his dreadful doom obeyed. He closed his feet. His legs and thighs as one Were blended. All that to his form was done The snake reversed. Its tail it cleft. The skin On the divided parts I saw begin To shed its scales and soften; while the man Acquiring that the snake had lost, began lo alter snakelike his retractile limb. Lengthened the worm's short arms: the arms of him Shortened and scaled. The man's fifth member then Lengthened and slit, the worm's hind legs to match. The worm's hind legs their shrinking claws attach, And blend to form the part concealed of men. The copulating smoke around them spread. The man grew bald. The needed hair was bred Upon the snake's transforming parts. His head The foul beast lifted, and arose upright. The man fell prostrate. But the thievish light Still kindled in their baleful eyes, the while Their faces altered, and the shape erect, - For which was human? - their completed guile In altered visage showed. Its jaws withdrew. A nose and lips it formed, and ears outgrew. The while that other on the ground that lay, Forked its thin tongue, and turned, and crawled away. And like a snail that hides its horns, I saw The ears receding in the serpent head. Loud hissing down the dismal trench it sped, And after ran the worm transformed, and tried A sputtering speech. But scarce my mind could think Clear thought, or eyes see clearly, while the law That ruled the refuse of this hateful sink Changed and rechanged them. Yet I marked the last Of those three shades, that slyly shrank aside, Desirous only from my glance to hide, - Puccio Sciancato. Him the serpents passed Without molesting while I stayed. The one I saw transformed was he for whom Gaville Yet wails the vengeance that it cowered to feel, Because his murder in its streets was done. Canto XXVI REJOICE, my Florence I that thy lifted wings Not only in the world's wide sunlight shine, Not only o'er the waves of ocean beat; In Hell's deep vaults an equal fame is thine. Five thieves, - and every thief a Florentine! So thought I grimly, as we turned to meet The cliff's ascent. But if the morning brings The mind God's counsel, if its dreams be true, Then that dark end desired of Prato's hate, And all thy sullen, greedful foes, for you Comes quickly. Not that were today the date It were too soon for those who love thee. Yea, I would that that which cometh came today. For grief that on my weaker age shall weigh Were now less dreadful. Rough the rising stair That hard we clomb with foot and hand and knee, And very silent all, and lonely there, The ridge we crossed a keener grief to see. Grief were it to gaze, and still that grief to me Comes sharply, as my thoughts reluctant draw Their wells of memory for the thing I saw. With pain I speak, for if the holier law Myself I hold, by any kindly star, Or Power supernal, guided safely through The world's stretched snares, I would not boast nor tell As one who triumphs, that these depths of Hell Contain such fruitage of our kind. The view Beneath us was an empty depth, wherethrough Lights moved, abundant as the fireflies are At even, when the gnats succeed the flies. A myriad gleams the labourer sees who lies Above them, resting, while the vale below Already darkens to the night, - he toiled From dawn to store the ripened grapes, or till The roots around, and on the shadowing hill Reclines and gazes down the vale. As he, Whose mockers felt the she-bears' teeth, beheld The chariot-horses rise erect to reach The heavens of air, with searching eyes could see At last, a little climbing flame afar, That faded, cloudlike, as the fiery car Ascended past his mortal sight, so here Along the gutter of the fosse there came, And passed, and left us, many a roving flame, That seemed flame only, yet a human soul Held each, but hid from sight the thief it stole. This marvel of the moving flames to see, I stretched from off the bridge so eagerly I slipped, and falling grasped a rocky spar, Alone that saved me from that depth. My guide The answer to my eager search supplied. "Within those moving flames the tortured are. Each in his garment wraps himself from sight." "Master, a truth already guessed aright Thy word makes surer. Much I long to know What spirit swathed in that wide fire doth go, That flickers upward in two flames, as though It rose combined from that reluctant pyre Where, with his brother, burnt Eteocles, To form two pillars of divided fire, Because no death could quench their enmities?" He answered, "Twain are in that flame; they run Together now because they sinned as one. Ulysses tortured there, and Diomed, Repent the treason of the horse, that led To Rome's foundation - through the fated door The exiles issuing; and the trick lament Through which still weeps in death Deidamia For her lost Achilles; and furthermore They suffer for the thieved Palladium." "Master," I answered, "if they be not dumb With so much anguish, let them speak, I pray, - A thousand prayers I pray thee! - Grant we stay Till that horned flame come hither! You see me bend Almost to falling with desire." He said: "Thy prayer is praise to him that prays it. Yea; I grant; but hearken. When they pass below Keep silent. Thee they might disdain, but I Will ask thy purpose." When they came more nigh, He hailed them. "Ye who from one fire ascend A twofold flame, I charge ye, if ye owe A quittance to me for the lofty lay Wherein I praised your earthly fames, I pray That here ye pause, the while that one shall say Of where at last he wandered forth to die." At this was shaking of the greater horn, And murmurs not at first articulate, - A flame that by the wind is trailed and torn To flickers, - till the end made animate Wagged like a tongue, and answered, - "When I turned Aside from Circe's later lure, and left The mount that Šneas named, my heart forgot My aged father, I regarded not My fondness for my child, my wife bereft Of her due rights of love, but through my heart Again the unconquerable ardour burned To search experience of the world, anew The vice and valour of mankind to view, And seek the events of lonely lands apart From known adventures of my race. I chose One ship, and with a little band of those With heart to follow, steered for open sea, And left behind the morning. Either shore, Spain and Morocco saw we, and between Sardinia and the isles. At length was seen That narrow passage of the meeting seas, Whereat the warning stands of Hercules That no man dare to pass it. Old were we, Myself and my companions, old and slow, When Ceuta lay behind us, and Seville Was fading on the right, and westward still We pointed. "Brothers," to the rest I said, "O brothers, following where my star hath led, That not a thousand shapes of pain could dread From this so great adventure. Hear me now. Deny not that we add to all our gains, While the brief vigil hour of life remains, Experience of the unpeopled world that lies Behind the lights of sunset. Think ye now, We are not fashioned as the brute that dies, But born for virtue and exploit." Thereat Such ardour waked that had I sought to stay I scarce had ruled them. Still the moving poop Looked back, and left the dawn. A southward loop We sailed, still bending to the left, the while We laboured weakly at the oars, and mile To foolish mile extended, till we moved Beneath strange stars in unacquainted skies. Five times the bright bowl of the moon had filled, Five times through heaven its silver light had spilled, When as we toiled that silent waste of way, A mountain, drear and vast, in distance lay. A mountain of such height and magnitude As all my wandering life I had not viewed: But short was our rejoicing. From the land A tempest smote us. Thrice the beaten prow Whirled round with all its waters: either hand The rising waves assailed our decks, and now The bows tossed upwards, now the poop, for He At last had spoken. Overwhelmed were we; And closed again the solitary sea." Canto XXVII THE flame was silent, and erect and still Moved from us with my leader's leave. There came Behind another and more restless flame That strove for speech, and found its thwarted will Gave only noise of whistling sounds, until The words worked upward through the fire, as erst The tyrant heard the brass Sicilian bull, - That justly for its roasting victim first He filled with its designer, - turn his cries To bull-like bellowing. So the cunning file Had tuned its throat. But now the call he tries, Vibrating upward to the tongue's intent, Sounds clearer. "Thou - O dear and wonderful! - Who bringest that loved speech of Lombardy, Thou whose familiar words to him that went, 'Go now, I urge no further,' called me on, Though late, to plead thy patience. Pause, I pray, Some longer space. Although so wrapt, to me It irks not if I hear thee. This blind way We burn, but may not lighted, if ye fell But lately from the Latian land, from where The endless burden of my guilt I bear, If peace is on Romagna, wilt thou tell? For I was native of the mountains there Between Urbino and the heights from whence The Tiber rises." Still I downward bent, And leant far outward in my eagerness, Whereat my Leader, from my fixed intent To call me, touched me on the side, and said, "Speak thou, - is here no Greek's impertinence To scorn thee." I thereat, who willed no less, Spake swiftly, "O sad spirit, so garmented In flame no glance can reach thee, still thy land Hath tyrants, in their hearts devising war, But nought of open strife I lately saw, And still within its ancient walls doth stand The strength of thy Ravenna. Still doth brood Polenta's eagle, and his pinions spread Above its roofs, and Cervia's. Forli now, Its siege and slaughter of its foes forgot, The Green Claws hold anew. Verrucchio Hath still its mastiff, and his young, who show The teeth that tore Montagna. Still doth plot The little lion in his lair of snow To friend both factions, and his rule admit Lamone's and Santerno's towns. That one Constricted in its narrow space that lies Between the mountains and the Savio, So between tyrant rule and freedom won Alternates. As I answer all, for it Requite me. Tell me, as I half surmise, Who wast thou? Tell me all thy tale, that so Thy name on earth shall stablish." Then the flame Roared without speech awhile, but in the end The flickering point gave utterance. "If ye came To count our tortures, and to earth ascend To tell them, nothing would ye hear from me, For all your pleading. But I know too well There is no issue from this depth of Hell For those who enter. With no fear of shame I tell thee. By the sword I lived. Amend To Heaven I schemed, and took St. Francis' cord Not vainly, and my hope had fruited well, But evil take the false Pope Boniface! Who led me to my earlier sins. The sword I lived by, but my deeds from infancy The fox's wiles and shifts and secret shame Had practised, till my cunning crafts became A byword through the earth for perfidy. When to the age I came at which mankind Should turn the haven of the soul to find From voyaging on life's alluring sea, Drop sails and wind their idle ropes, and so Pass inward on the tide with steerage slow, Then was I grieved for all my boast before, And with repentance wept, - alas, the woe! It might have saved me. Through this cord I wore I served the Chief Priest of the Pharisees, Who warred, - but not with Jews, and not with those Who conquered Acre. Nor his Christian foes Were merchants in the Soldan's land who dwelt, But in the precincts of the Lateran Christ's priest the Christian who beside him dwelt Distressed with violence. Not his vows, nor dread Of his high office as the Church's Head, Nor reverence for my cord, that used to make The wearers leaner, stayed him. Constantine So called Silvestro from Soracte's cave To cure him leprous, as this godless man Besought my counsel. As a fool may rave In drunken pride I thought him. Word of mine He got not to inspire his guilt. At last He urged me, 'Doubt not that thy choice be cast With wisdom, if thou do the thing I bid. I do absolve and bless thee even now Before the words have passed thy lips. Do thou Contrive that I shall gain Penestrino. Forget not I can open or forbid The Eternal Gate. The Keys that Celestine So lightly loosed are twain. Alike of Heaven and Hell.' He urged me thus Till speech than silence seemed less dangerous, Whereon I answered, 'Father, since my guilt Thou cleanest ere I tell thee. If thou wilt, In one way canst thou triumph - all they will In solemn treaty seal, - and nought fulfil.' "I died, and to St. Francis' care consigned My parting spirit, but there came behind A shape that seized me by the hair, and cried Against my Patron, 'Make no claim for him. 'Tis he who gave the counsel fraudulent. I have not left him since. Can man repent The while he sins? The contradiction here Defies thy rescue, and the guilt is clear.' "I turned, and one of Hell's Black Cherubim Leered back. 'Thou didst not think with all thy craft I studied logic in the schools?' he laughed. He bore me down to Minos' seat, and he Eight times his tail around his fearful back Entwined, and gnawed it in his rage, and said 'Is here a sinner for the depths,' and me He bade them fling to where I should not lack My like, 'Down-cast him to the thievish fire That hides its victims in its fold,' and so For ever in this robe of pain I go; My craft, that to my safe repentance led, - That craft betrayed me to a fate so dire." We left him wailing, and the writhing flame Tossed its sharp horn for further speech, but we No longer paused, but upward climbed, and came To that next arch which spans a baser woe. For suffering here were those who wrought to sow Dissension - guilt the fruit, and here the fee. Canto XXVIII WHO in free words, without restraint or bar Of formal beauty in their choice, could say The things I saw? Repeat a different way A hundred times, and what those tortures are It tells not. Words are lacked. The mind of man Such horror hates. It shrinks to comprehend Such slaughterous sights as here around us ran. If all who in Apulia's fatal land Bewailed the bloodshed of their violent end Beneath the merciless Roman sword, - if they Who died in that long Punic war, which gave Even of the rings they wore so vast a prey, - If those who felt the weight of Guiscard's glaive, - With those who perished in the fatal band The false Apulians to their fate betrayed, Whose bones at Ceperano heap, - with all Alardo's craft at Tagliacozzo made Without resort of weaponed strife to fall, - Were gathered in one place and each displayed The shredded limbs, the ghastly wounds of war, Nought were it to the dreadful mode I saw In this ninth chasm. A man beneath us stood Whose body like a cantless cask was split. The staves bulge outward. Through the bursting wood It pours its contents. So the open slit That cleft him, fore and hind, from neck to thigh, Poured out; between his legs his entrails hung. He thrust his hands his heart and lungs among, And cried against us, "See Mahomet's pride! Or see where Ali weeping walks beside, Cleft down the face in twain from hair to chin. Scandal or schism has each man sown as I. For discord are we sliced who walk herein. A devil waits us in our turn. For while We stumble in our wounds, with every mile The torment heals us, till again we reach The place we were, and with his sword to each He gives the slitting which we felt before. - But who are ye who with no falling gore So calmly view us? Do ye seek delay To shun the purpose of the guilty way?" My Master answered, "Death he hath not known, Nor guilt unpurged the downward path hath shown To whom I lead, but full experience To gain, he goeth through evil's last defence From cycle down to cycle: this is true As here I stand and speak, who like to you Have all my deeds behind me." At this word Such wonder stirred the trench, that those who heard A moment of their torment lost, and stayed Oblivious of their gaping wounds. I made The count of twice a hundred. "Thou canst tell Dolcino, if his waiting place in hell He hath no haste for, that the Novarese May win by starving whom they may not seize By any sword-craft. Let him arm him well With store of victuals ere the snow make blind The mountain ways." So spake Mahomet, the while He stood with one leg lifted, to beguile The demon that he moved. A shade behind, Noseless, with one ear only, and his throat Slit open, through the red gash spake, "O thou! Guiltless, who on the Latian ground ere now Hast met me, save resemblance lead astray, Remember Piero, if the backward way, To reach the sunlight of the world, thy fate Permit thee, if thy living feet regain Mine own dear country where the gentle plain Slopes downward to Vercelli, wilt thou tell The noblest two in Fano's walls that dwell, Cassero and Cagnano, that except Our foresight fail us here, that lord adept At violence and unfaith shall both betray, Cast from their barque in Cattolica bay, Sack-sewn and weighted? He that hath one eye, And holds that land that one who here doth lie Had better never in his life have seen, Will bring them there to treaty, and thereby So act that caution of Fecara's squalls Will aid them nought. Such deed there hath not been In Neptune's sight: he hath more hope who falls To Argives or to pirates." I replied, "Your speech resists me. Show me first aright Who with thee here laments that bitter sight, That I may bear thy tale aloft." He gripped A comrade by the jaw. "This shade dumb-lipped Was Curio once, with wagging tongue that lied To cease the doubt in César. 'All delay To men prepared is harmful!' urged he then. Now walks he round to reach the place again Where waits the slaughtering demon." Sick dismay Was on the face that once so glibly spake, And tongue slit backward to the throat I saw That once had gibed the dreadful cast of war. Now moved he on, his endless turn to take Prepared for that which did not grant delay. But one whose either hand was sliced away, Raised in the dusk the bleeding stumps until The blood fell backward on his face, and cried "Forget not Mosca! 'Ere ye counsel, kill; Death's logic brief will save long argument. The wrought deed prospers!' - So I urged. Ah me! It bore a bitter seed for Tuscany." I answered curtly, "And your race has died." Whereat as one distraught with pain he went Lamenting doubly. Still I watched beside The moving troops, and here a thing I saw Divorced from reason. All our natural law Denies it. Only mine integrity To write such proofless words gives confidence. But this I saw, and still in mind I see, - A headless trunk that walked. Beside his knee He swung his own head by the hair, as though He bore a lantern for his feet to go Unstumbling in the darkness. No pretence Of explanation mine. What God ordains The wise man marvels, and the fool explains. The sharp eyes marked us, and a startled O! Broke from the lips, and when the trunk below Came level where we paused, the arm on high Lifted the head to bring its words more nigh. "Thou living, who dost view the grievous dead, Is any doom so great as mine," it said, "In all Hell's circles? That De Born am I Who gave my prince the evil counselling Which caused him, rebel to the elder king, Against his sire to war. Ahithophel So worked with David and with Absalom. Because I parted father and child, in Hell My root of being finds the brain therefrom Disparted. So the Eternal Justice wills." Canto XXIX THE numerous people, and the diverse ills That slit them in a hundred forms, had made Mine eyes so salted, that awhile I stayed Content with weeping, till my wiser guide Reproached me. "Wherefore is thy sight delayed Amidst the dismal demon-hacked so long? Thou didst not linger at superior wrong In higher pits so fainly. Wouldst thou guess The numbers whom discordant wounds distress, Consider two and twenty miles complete The narrowing circuit that we cross. But now The moon has passed beneath us. Short allow Remains, before the time conceded ends, And far beyond this gloom the realm extends That waits thee." "Master," I replied, "if thou Hadst heeded that which drew my gaze, thy feet Had stayed beside me." But he pressed ahead The while I answered, that the words I said Were called behind him as we moved. "Within That cavern where I gazed so fixed, I saw A kinsman who bewailed the dreadful law That prices in such coin his earthly sin." My Master answered, "Waste no thought thereon, Mine eyes observed him whilst thine own were set Too firmly on De Born to heed. He made A gesture fierce with hate. They called him here Geri del Bello." "O my Guide! the debt He left of honour, which his partners yet, Who shared his shame, have venged not, so betrayed His heart to indignation. More for that My pity meets him." While we spake, he led Across the ridgeway to the final tier Of ordered suffering. Far beneath us spread, Hid only by the dimness, wide and Hat, The last sad cloister of the damned. If sight Came slowly in the gloom, it did not hide The sounds of their lamenting. Every cry Was like a shaft that pierced me, fledged for flight With pity. Thousand were the woes that cried In different accents, till my hands I pressed Against my ears to still them. If the ills Of Valdichiana, when the autumn fills Its lazars, with Maremma's sick should lie, And all Sardinia's in one ditch, so high, So foul, the putrid stench might reach. We left The last span of the bridge's long descent To take the intersecting wall. We went Left-hand, as always. As we climbed more low The thick malignant air sufficed to show How the infallible Justice of God contrives The doom of those who use their earthly lives To give the face of truth to falsity. I think not that Šgina's ancient woe More bitter evil in its course could show, Though groaning in an air so pestilent All creatures, even the fluttering insect, fell, Till all of human kind, as sages tell, Had perished, once again to multiply From seeds of ants. Along a trench we went Where spirits in disordered heaps were thrown And languished. This upon the belly lay, That on the back, of him beneath. Alone Another wriggled down the dismal way. We went in silence, watching men too sick To lift their bodies as we came, and heard Their plaints unceasing. Two there were that leant Against each other, as two pans are propt For warming, on the hearth; and each so thick Was scabbed, that horse-boy never yet so quick Plied comb the while his master called, as they Scraped with their nails the itching scales away, That like the scales of bream around them dropt, When the knife cleans it. To the first his word My guide addressed. "O thou whose nails so fast Now shred thy mail, and now as pincers work, If any Latians in this trench are cast I pray thee tell, and may thy fingers last Sufficient for thy needs eternally!" The leper answered, "Latians both are we Who weep this torment. Tell me whom I see That so can walk untortured?" He replied, "One am I that High Heaven hath sent to guide This other through the trenches ploughed in Hell. At that they raised themselves apart, and turned To gaze upon me. Others near, who learned The meaning of my Master's words, alike Their trembling bodies lifted up to see. My leader's kindness gave the speech to me, - "Ask that thou wilt," and by this leave I said, "So that thy memory may not steal away From our first world for many suns to be, Let not disgust at thy sin's penalty Restrain thee from the telling." He replied, "I was Arezzo-born, and burned alive (Albero da Siena's false contrive Condemned me); not for that for which I died Ye see me here. There is no doubt I said, Too lightly, man could raise himself in flight By arts I knew, and in his foolishness He willed that I should teach him. This I tried, And failed, whereon the woud-be DŠdalus Invoked his sire to burn me. None the less This depth I found, by Minos judged aright, Who errs not ever, and flung me downward thus To this tenth blackness, for the alchemy I practised." "Surely," to my guide I said, "There is no people of such vanity, Not even the French, as are the Sienese." Whereat the second of the leprous dead Made answer, "Save the Stricca, who contrived Such modest spending, or the youth who thrived On his new cookery of the clove; or they Who aided Caccia's haste to cast away Forest and vineyard: - but that thou mayst know Who thus gibes with thee at the Sienese, Look closely, that mine altered face may show. I am the shadow of Capocchio Who made false metals by mine alchemies. If whom I think thou art, thyself couldst tell If false I coined, I coined that falsehood well." Canto XXX WHEN Juno's hate, enwrathed for Semele, Repeated evils on the Theban blood, Athamas to such madness sank that he, Who saw his wife approach, each burdened arm Bearing a son, cried out, "The nets we spread. We take the lioness and her cubs!" and so With pitiless claws he dashed the elder dead, Whereat she leapt, still burdened, to the flood, And drowned that other, and herself. And when The Trojans' heavenward pride was cast so low That king and kingdom ceased, Hecuba then Saw Polyxena slain, and on the sand Lay Polydore, and all her misery Her mournful captive mind refused, and she Barked like a dog, to such forlorn degree Had sorrow moved her. But the Theban land Such furies held not, nor the Trojans met Such naked hate, as here I saw. There ran Two shades with rabid working jaws, that bit As snaps a sow thrust outward from the sty, The full trough waiting. One bent down, and set Its teeth behind Capocchio's neck, and so It dragged him, while his belly rubbed the grit. Whereat the trembling Arentine began, "That goblin is Gianni Schicchi. Thus He mangles - " "May that other's teeth forego Thy neck-joint ever! Grudge thou not to show Who is she, ere she passes hence." He said, "That female imp, the ancient shade is she Of Myrrha, who with love flagitious Approached her father in false garb, as he Who gnaws Capocchio, aped Donati's dead, The will by which the priceless mare he won Dictating in that guise." The furious two Passed onward, mangling as they went, and I The ill-born shadows more surveyed. Was one Shaped like a lute, had but his groin begun A forkless form. The heavy dropsy drew His lips apart, as those whom fevers burn. He said, "O ye, no penal fate who earn Amidst this grimness, turn your eyes to see, And hearken that which makes my misery Beyond the eyes' observing. Justice sets Before my sight the cool fresh rivulets That Casentino's verdant hills provide For Arno's fullness. Down the mountain side They fall for ever in my sight, and so Contain more torture than this swollen woe That from my visage wears the flesh. The sight That gives my frequent sighs a faster flight Is justly of the place that saw my sin, Mine own Romena, where the false alloy I mixed and printed with the Baptist's head, For which they burnt me. When on earth, I had All earth's delights my fraudful wealth could buy. A drop of water now would make me glad; But had I Branda's fount, to lave therein, It would not yield me such exceeding joy As would the sight of Alessandro dead, Or Guido in such misery here as I. One, if the ravening shadows do not lie, Is here already. Had I strength to move One inch of journey in a hundred years, I had been started on the road to prove So fair a rumour, and behold his tears. Yea, though eleven miles the circle bends, And half a mile its crowded breadth extends - For by their tempting in this sink I lie." I asked him, "Next thy swollen boundary, Right-hand, how name ye those unmoving two That steam like hands in winter bathed?" He said, "When first I tumbled in this pot to stew, So lay they both. They have not raised a head. I think they will not through eternity. The nearer is the wife of Potiphar The other Sinon, that false Greek of Troy. From burning fever reek they thus." Too far His scorn betrayed him. In a fierce annoy The Trojan smote him with a lifted arm, The rigid belly like a beaten drum Resounding. "Though my heavy limbs subtract The power of motion, for so foul an act My arm yet serves me." - So the Brescian said, And brought it down upon the fevered head. "It served thee little from a larger harm, Or wherefore in full manhood didst thou come Amongst us from the stake? It served, no doubt, The base alloy to mix, and stamp it out." The dropsied answered, "That on earth I burnt Is truth, but say how long thy tongue hath learnt Such custom? Falsehood was thine earthly skill." He answered, "If I lied, thy trade could still Outpace me. Would'st thou chide a lonely lie? A thousand times thy hand would falsify. There is no demon here could match the sum Of thine iniquities." "Such magnitude Had thy one falsehood, all the world has spewed Its indignation on thy name: be that The heaviest burden of thy guilt." "Be thine The thirst that cracks thee, and the putrid filth By which thou art distended." "Like a cat Thy jaw spits fury, as in life; if mine Be moisture-swollen thirst, no fairer tilth Ye garner for your gain," the Brescian said. "The burning fever and the aching head. I think Narcissus' mirror would not shine For long unlicked beneath thee." While they jarred I paused to hear them, till my Master said, "A little longer, and thy fixed regard Will end our friendship." When his anger showed So sharply, all with sudden shame I glowed, And might not answer. On I walked as one Who dreams and wishes that the dream were done, So evil turns it while he dreams, and so Desires and knows not his desire is true. So walked I in my shame and did not know My shame forgave me in his thought. I knew His anger, only in my thought alive, Until he told me, "Weaker shame than thine A greater fault would cancel; therefore cease A grief too weighty. When we next arrive At any kindred scene, thy mind release More quickly. Discord in such filth is nought. The thought to hear it is a vulgar thought." Canto XXXI So healed he with the tongue that hurt before, Like that charmed spear which could the wounds restore That first it made; and neither spake we more The while we climbed from out the final pit, To reach a hollow where nor dark nor day Was round us. Here a horn above me blew So loud that thunder to the noise of it Were weakness. Not so loud Orlando's horn Called vainly from the rout that cast away An empire's purpose. Up I looked, and knew A range of towers confronted, and thereat I questioned, "Master, say what town is that So near us?" "Through the veil of darkness drawn, The distance mocks thee. Let us haste, that so The truth be shown," he said, and then - "But no," And took me kindly by the hand, - "the worst Will seem less dreadful, if I show thee first. They are not towers in a circling wall, But giants planted round the pit, that all Show upwards from the navel." As the mist Thins slowly, by the morning sunlight kissed Till hidden forms show vaguely, and reshape Their gradual outlines as the vapour leaves The obstructed air, the gloom, as near we drew, Reformed my error with a closer view More frightful. For the nether pit receives Their legs and bellies, while the rest doth rise Like Montereggione's towers, that crown The wall's full circle. Upwards from the thighs One monster faced me. Nature found escape From such creation ere our time, and well She chose her condemnation. Still Jove's frown Against them thunders. If the monstrous whale Its breed continue, or the elephant, They do not vainly through their bulk rebel Against the rule of nature. Wits are scant, And weight is harmless. When they both unite What is there in mankind that might prevail To make defence against them? Like the pine That stands before St. Peter's, such the sight His visage showed me. All the rest alike Was monstrous. Aproned by the bank, he yet Such stature showed, that three tall Frisians One on the other, could not thus combine To reach his hair. The savage mouth began, Rafel mai amech zabi almi, To shout in rage toward us. Speech of man It might not nearer. In full scorn my guide The meaning of that barren noise supplied, "His own his accusation. Nimrod he, Who brought confusion on the tongues we speak; In vain for converse here your questions seek. He comprehends our speech no more than we The sounds he rumbles. Dullard! take thy horn. On thine own breast it hangs, and yet thy mind Confuses, that it may not always find And vent its passion with such blasts." We went Left-hand, and pacing thence a cross-bow shot, A fiercer and more monstrous monument Appalled me. Who the artist, once who got Those cords around him, daunts my mind, but so It had been. His right arm behind his back, Five times were girt the parts exposed. "Attack," My Master told, "against high Jove he planned, What time the giants with the gods at war Affrighted Heaven. Hence the equal law That binds the arms he lifted. This ye see Is Ephialtes." "Master, might there be Among these shapes the bulk of Briareus?" "Yea, but far off he stands, and bound is he Alike to this one, though of face more grim. But AntŠus, who did not war with Zeus, Is near, and as there are no bonds on him, He shall convey us down the sink of guilt." No earthquake sways a massive tower as then The bulk of Ephialtes, straining, shook To break that bondage. Dread, that made me look, So worked that fear alone my life had spilt, Had not the strong bands cheered me. On we went And AntŠus reached, five ells of height who showed Above the edge whereon we walked, although One half was in the dreadful cave below To which we journeyed. "Thou, who once abode," My guide addressed him, "in that vale of fate From which the broken Carthaginians fled, To Scipio's glory; thou, whose hands have caught A thousand lions for thine ancient prey; Thou, whose strong aid, it seems, had likely brought The strife Titanic to a different day From that which closed it, - set us down, I pray, Upon the frozen floor, and be not shy To help us. Surely, should we further go For aid to Typhon or to Tizeo, The hope of larger fame thy name shall miss, For this man's life resumes on earth, and he Can lift thy boast anew. I know for this All creatures long in Hell." My Master's plea So wrought, that hasteful were the monster's hands To lift us. In the grasp that Hercules Once felt to fearing was he raised, and I Caught to him, in one bundle held. As seems The Carisenda to a man that stands Beneath the leaning side, when overhead A low cloud darkens, till its bulk he deems To overweight it, so the Titan showed To me beneath. By some alternate road My choice had lain, but ere my doubt was said He placed us gently on the dreadful bed Where Judas is devoured with Lucifer, And having loosed us on the icy plain, Like a ship's mast he raised himself again. Canto XXXII IF words were mine unlike our mortal tongue In which the beauty of all heights is sung, I might attempt with greater confidence The core of my conception here. But whence Are words for things undreamed? What words are fit In harsh discordance for the utmost pit? I have no words, and fear to speak, but yet It must be. Muses, by whose art was set The Theban cincture of strong walls, lead on! Grant me thy power, as once to Amphion, That speech for truth interpret. Here converge The rocky causeways. In this pit submerge The vomits of creation. All its weight Is pressed upon them. Here the miscreate Lament their own existing. Oh, what curse Here in the bottom of the Universe Had lifted, had they been but goats! To me It seems for men too dreadful. Down the slope We started from the Titan's feet, and while I still gazed backward at the wall, I heard A cry beneath me, "Heed ye where ye tread Lest fall thy weight on some grief-weary head That here lamenteth." Then I looked, and lo! No ground I trod, but all the space below Was glass transparent. Not the underflow Of Austrian Danube from the weight of snow Such roof divides. Not Don, alone that lies Beneath the silence of the frozen skies, Such mantle wears. Sclavonia's lonely height Had fallen here, or Lucca's mountain white, And had not cracked it. As the frogs at night Sit croaking, with their heads above the stream, While on the bank the gleaner rests, adream Of fields she emptied, so the miscreants lay Frozen in firm ice, so deeply sunk that they Showed livid through the hard transparency That bound them, with their heads alone left free, And chattering jaws that rapped the ice, and made A noise of storks conversing. More betrayed Their ceaseless tears the bitter woes they knew, - Salt tears that froze in falling. Here were two So closely brothered in that frozen bed That face to face the hair of either head Was mingled, and their hidden features pressed Each other. "Tell me, ye that breast to breast So consort," asked I, "who on earth ye be?" Whereat they bent their backward necks to see Who called, and as their faces rose apart The tears that ever from their eyes would start The fierce cold hardened at their source, and held Their eyelids firm as any smith should weld, Or wood to wood with iron is clamped. Whereat, Like he-goats angered, both their heads began To butt the other in their rage. With that Another near, who did not lift his face, Whose ears the frost had taken, gave reply, "Why seek ye, gazing at our woeful case, To read us? If for aught ye list to know Those twain, the vale of the Bisenzio Was theirs, from Count Alberto. From one womb They came, and search ye all the dreadful doom Of this Caina where ye stand, not one Is here more worthy of the frozen pie In which they serve us. Not that wretch fordone By Arthur's hand, who pierced him, front and back And shadow at once; nor he that next doth lie Beyond me, Mascheroni, - if ye come From Tuscan hills, my words ye will not lack To place him; - nor Focaccia. Lest ye try To vex me with more words, de Pazzi I; I wait Carlino here, to justify My lighter guilt." Of doggish faces, numb With frozen torture, round our feet there lay A thousand. Still my shuddering thought recalls, And shivers ever as the frozen ford I strive to think not. Was it destiny, Or chance, or will? My doubt I own, but while We trod mid-distance of the final mile, My foot caught sharply one projecting head. Whereat it raised a weeping voice, and said, "Why dost thou trample thus the doomed, unless Thou come designed to deal more bitterness In hate for Montaperto?" "Master, stay One moment here, and any more delay I will not ask." My Master paused, and I To that reviling spirit gave reply, For still it cursed me, - "Tell me who thou art, Who thus reproachest?" "Nay, but be thy part To tell me first. Who art thou stumbling thus Through Antenora, on the cheeks of us Who suffer? Wert thou yet in life, it were Too much to pardon." "Nay, I live; but say The name thou hadst, and I will make thy day A longer on the earth than else thy share Of fame continue." "Nay, ye little know The words of flattery on this slope of woe. We lust oblivion only. Get ye gone! Nor vex me further." By the after-scalp I gripped him roughly. "Speak, or every hair That grows upon thee, from the root I tear, Before I leave thee on this icy alp." He answered, "Though the final hair ye pick, And though my face a thousand times ye kick, I will not tell you." In my hand his hair Was twisted, and an ample tuft was flung Loose on the ice, he barking out despair And rage together, when the song he sung Aroused his neighbour, "Bocca, what thy woe? Canst thou not chatter with thy jaws as we, And cease thy barking? What strange fiend supplies An extra pain?" I said, "Thy name I know, And would no more. Accursed, traitorous! Thy name a byword on the earth shall be; For I will tell thy treasons." "He who lies So near, and talks so glibly, thou canst tell, And not me only. Thou canst speak it thus, - 'Close-pinched with Bocca in the frozen hell I saw Duera. There his chattering jaws Bewail the Frenchman's silver bribe.' If more They ask, who shiver in the icy claws, Boccaria lies beyond, whose neck was slit At Florence: and Soldanire thou canst say Is not far distant; and Ganelone; And Tribaldello fails not to deplore The gates he opened in the night." We stayed To hear no further. In short space ahead We saw two frozen in one hole. As bread Is gnawed in hunger: as Menalippus Was chewed by Tydeus: so the upmost head Gripped with its teeth the neck beneath, and tore Just where the nape and brain unite. I said, "O thou, so hard whose bestial hatred gnaws Thy mate in condemnation, if good cause Thy rage explain, it were thy gain with us To share it. Upward I return once more, And surely as my speech remain, I then Will give thee justice in the mouths of men." Canto XXXIII THE sinner ceased his ghastly meal, and wiped His jaws upon the victim's hair, and said, "Thou willest that reluctant words recall A grief so dire it wrings my heart, before An utterance forms, but if my speech shall fall A seed that fruiting backward from the dead Shall make him whom I tear infamed the more Among our people, then I gladly weep To tell thee. How to this sad depth ye came, Where no man erst has been, nor what thy name I know, but that familiar speech of thine I heard, and hailed thee friend and Florentine, - For I was Ugolino. Him I keep In this remembrance of an earthly woe, The arch-priest Ubaldini. Now I tell Of that which brought us to this depth of Hell, And why high Justice thus permits that I Feed here, and shall not starve, and shall not die, Nor cease my feeding. All I need not say Of mutual fraud, nor how he snared away My life, a tale for other tongues, but this, The cruel fate I found, they well may miss, It was so secret. In that hole which now Is called the Dungeon of the Starved I lay, And watched the narrow slit by night and day, Until nine moons across its space of sky Had ended, when the evil dream I knew That did the curtain of my fate untie. "It seemed that on the Pisan hills was I, A gaunt wolf with his weary whelps that ran, And after came the hounds; and there a man That cheered them on; the lord of all was he, This Ubaldini, and before him rode Gualandi, and Sismondi, and thereby Lanfranchi; and the hounds, that closer drew, Were swift and lean and eager. I could see The wolf among his whelps, that was but I And my young sons, grow weary, and the hounds Were tearing at their flanks. I waked to find The night yet darkened, but the moaning sounds My sons were making in their sleep for bread Had roused me. Cruel were the hearer's heart Who would not weep for that their cries forebode. If not for this, for what should tears have part? It was the first day that we were not fed. The hour recurred. With anxious eyes, and Of any speech we waited. Now they come - The steps we know - we heard the echoing That locked and sealed us from the world: we heard The steps recede. I had not wept nor stirred. I watched them weeping till the youngest said, 'Father, what ails thee? Wilt thou speak?' But I Gazed and not moved, and could not find reply. And all that day not any word I said, And all that night, nor any tears I shed, Till through the bars the morning light anew Revealed our grief, and in my sons I knew The aspect of myself, and anguish wrought Within me, till I gnawed my hands. Whereat They answered (impulsed by a single thought That hunger urged me), 'Father, do not stay Thine hand against us. Shouldst thou take away The lives we owe thee, right it were, and less To us the pain, that from the flesh we give Thy life continue.' Then I strove subdue The anguish in me, lest I more distress The sons beyond myself I loved. That day, And all the next, in silent pain we lay On earth too hard to take us. After that Death came. For when the next sad dawn was dim Fell Gaddo at my feet, and with one cry, 'O father, wilt thou aid us nought?' he died. And two days more I watched, and after him, One after one, beheld them fall and die. Then, blind with famine, three days more I groped Around them, till my grief no more denied The pangs of fasting" - as these words he said, With hateful eyes upon his murderer's head, Again he seized it in strong teeth that bit Hard on the bone. Ah, Pisa! since thy state Thy neighbours leave, and all vituperate Who know thee, shall not those two isles, that lie So near, block Arno at its mouth, and throw Its waters on thee till the depth of it Hath drowned the last man in thy walls? For though Had Ugolino all thy towers betrayed, It were not right for one man traitorous His children in their youth to torture thus To innocent death, thou Thebes of Italy! And therefore shall their frustrate names remain In minds of all men where my tale is made. Uguccione and Bragata they, Anselm and Gaddo. On we went, to see A varied torment. Here the frozen pain That bowed those others, bends its victims back. They may not weep. The fount of tears they lack. For all the hollows of their eyes are filled With hardened ice. The tears that first they spilled Are crystal visors to their sight. To me, Though cold had calloused all my face by now, It seemed a wind was passing. To my guide I questioned, "Master, is not vital heat Extinguished here? Can utter cold allow This downward air?" He answered. "Soon we meet Its cause, and sight shall tell thee." Near us cried A wretch that marked us of the frozen host, "O souls so cruel that the latest post Is here assigned ye, will ye break away The blocks one moment from mine eyes, that stay The waiting tears?" We paused, and I replied. "Then tell us who thou art, and whence thy doom, And he should well deserve the frozen tomb Who did not aid thee." "Alberigo I, The Jovial Friar, whom Manfred brought to die! The evil fruit that in my orchard grew Returns. The figs I gave: the dates I pick." "Ha!" said I, "hast thou also left the quick So soon?" He said, "I know not. We that lie In PtolomŠa, oft this depth descend Before our bodies reach their natural end. For those that like myself to death betray Their friends, a waiting demon drags away, Casts to this cistern of our kind, and then His body takes, and in the ways of men Controls it, till his time be spent. Behind Is Brancha d'Oria. If his corse have died, Who here finds winter, better chance have ye Than I to tell, who earlier came, but he Long years has suffered in this ice." I said, "I think thou liest. Brancha is not dead. He lives on earth, and in our mortal way His body eats and sleeps and warms today." "Where boils the pitch, ere Michel Zanche came, Within the Malebranche's ditch," said he, "This man a demon in his place had left, And one beside who shared his perfidy Came likewise ere his time; but reach thy hand To do the service that my speech can claim." I heard, but different course my heart had planned Since horror learnt his name. The ice uncleft Still blinds him. Rudeness there was courtesy. Ah, men corrupt from God! Ye Genoese, Why do ye haste not on your path to these, And earth seem cleaner? With Romagna's worst, I found Ser Brancha, for his soul's disease Ere death who suffers in this place accurst. Canto XXXIV THE lifted banners of the King of Hell," - My leader roused me from my thought - "are nigh; Look therefore." I beheld, as in such sky As foul mist hides, or murk of night obscures, A turning windmill loom; and such the gale Its motions caused, that I, of strength too frail To meet it longer, shrank behind my guide. Beneath our feet - but memory fears to tell - The sinners here contained in Hell's last sewers Were frozen solid in firm ice, and shone Like straw in glass; and as we walked thereon We saw some flat, and some with heads below, And some pulled backward like a bended bow, And some were upright. When we got so near I needs must see, my leader stepped aside. He said, "Let fortitude reject thy fear, For Dis confronts thee." There I think I died, Though living. Not the icy blast I met A living man could face, a dead could feel. But here speech fails me. Reader, words are nought To help me further. To thy livelier thought I leave it. Breast-deep in the ice was set The Emperor of the dolorous realm; but yet So huge he towered that I should seem more fit With giants to consort, than a giant compare With one arm only. He, that once so fair Could walk assured in Heaven, the lordliest there Beneath his Maker, fills this glacial pit If by his woe we price his earlier weal, Or judge his glory by his aspect now, Well may he fount affliction. For one head I saw three faces. One was fiery red. The others slanting from each shoulder rose To form one crest that shapes creation's woes. One pallid yellow, one the sable hue Of those who wander from the tropic land Wherefrom the sources of the Nile expand. There were two wings the three foul heads below Such bird to suit. I never saw such spread Of ocean canvas to the wind: but these Were bat-like, plumeless, and the wind they bred, - They flapped unceasing - caused the glacier freeze Down which we traversed. With six eyes he wept, The while a sinner in each mouth he kept, And chewed, and loosed not. Tears and foam unite With dribbling blood, that spurts from every bite Down his three chins. The midmost was not bit So much as torn. At times his back was flayed All bare of skin. "That soul that most endures, Whose head Apollyon in his mouth hath got, Whose legs kick outward, is Iscariot:" My Master told, "of those whose heads may quit The teeth that chew them, down the swarthier chin Is Brutus dangling. Mark how silently He writhes. The comrade of his doom is he Who shared that treason, Cassius. - But the night Is rising in the world without, and we Must hasten. All is seen that lies herein, And hence depart we." At his word I put My arm around him. He with lifted foot His opening watched, and when the wings were wide Leapt from the glacier to the tangled side, And midst the shaggy tufts of frozen hair The scaly hide descended. When we came To pass the swelling of the haunch, my guide With arduous effort turned, till where his head Had been before, he placed his feet instead, And gripped the hair as one that mounts. I thought That backwards into Hell his path he sought. But he, hard-panting with that toil, replied, "Hold fast - be silent - by this only stair We find Hell's exit." Thus he climbed to where An opening gashed the rock, and reaching there He placed me on the ledge, and warily Himself stepped after. Here I looked to see Again the front of Lucifer, and lo! His legs stuck upward. Were a man too dense To understand the point we passed, he still Might judge the toil before me, to return To earth's far surface. "Gain thy feet, for ill The pathway climbs," my guide enjoined, "that hence Shall take us, as thy weary steps must learn, And in the outer skies the sun midway To noon is lifted." Round I looked, and saw No palace, but such cleft in earth's deep maw As likest to a natural dungeon showed, Ill-floored, ill-lighted. "Ere this evil road," I answered, rising, "leave the deep abyss, I pray thee tell me, lest my thought should err, Why upward rise the legs of Lucifer, And where the icy plain we crossed? and how The morning shines without, which was but now To night descending?" "Dost thou spare to think Its meaning? Downward through the central sink We passed. We have not backward climbed to where I leapt, but holding by the frozen hair We scaled this maggot of the evil core To which all weights conclude; and when, midway, We turned with effort, then beneath us lay That half the world from which we came, and we Look upward to that other world of sea Which those who sail beyond thine hemisphere Have found, and left uncharted. Standing here Beneath us is the great dry land that lies Within the cover of the northern skies, And centres round the Sacred Mount whereon The Holiest died. Above us reaches far The region where the pathless oceans are; For this side fell from Heaven the Worm of Hell And all the land drew backward where he fell, And hid beneath the waters. There is morn When nightfall closes on thy northern land; And there our issue, for a stream has worn A tortuous passage from the outer skies To this foul pit where Beelzebub lies, And through the darkness of the toilsome way Its sound must lead us." Nothing more we said, Nor paused for rest, however jagged and rough And dark the path we climbed, and long enough For mortal feet to weary. Fast he led: And I made tireless by that hope ahead Pursued him upward, till the rocks were rent With first a sight of Heaven's clear firmament, And then the earth's clean airs with learnt delight I breathed, and round me was the beauteous night, And overhead the stars. The End