The Divine Comedy (tr. H.W. Longfellow)
by Dante
Hypertext Meanings and Commentaries
from the Encyclopedia of the Self
by Mark Zimmerman

THE DIVINE COMEDY  
  
OF DANTE ALIGHIERI  
(1265-1321)  
  
  
TRANSLATED BY  
HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW  
(1807-1882)

CONTENTS  
  
  
Inferno  
  
     I. The Dark Forest. The Hill of Difficulty. The Panther,  
        the Lion, and the Wolf. Virgil.
    II. The Descent. Dante's Protest and Virgil's Appeal.
        The Intercession of the Three Ladies Benedight.
   III. The Gate of Hell. The Inefficient or Indifferent.
        Pope Celestine V. The Shores of Acheron. Charon.
        The Earthquake and the Swoon.
    IV. The First Circle, Limbo: Virtuous Pagans and the Unbaptized.
        The Four Poets, Homer, Horace, Ovid, and Lucan. The Noble  
        Castle of Philosophy.
     V. The Second Circle: The Wanton. Minos. The Infernal Hurricane.
        Francesca da Rimini.
    VI. The Third Circle: The Gluttonous. Cerberus. The Eternal Rain.
        Ciacco. Florence.
   VII. The Fourth Circle: The Avaricious and the Prodigal.
        Plutus. Fortune and her Wheel. The Fifth Circle:
        The Irascible and the Sullen. Styx.
  VIII. Phlegyas. Philippo Argenti. The Gate of the City of Dis.
    IX. The Furies and Medusa. The Angel. The City of Dis.
        The Sixth Circle: Heresiarchs.
     X. Farinata and Cavalcante de' Cavalcanti. Discourse on the  
        Knowledge of the Damned.
    XI. The Broken Rocks. Pope Anastasius. General Description of  
        the Inferno and its Divisions.
   XII. The Minotaur. The Seventh Circle: The Violent.
        The River Phlegethon. The Violent against their Neighbours.
        The Centaurs. Tyrants.
  XIII. The Wood of Thorns. The Harpies. The Violent  
        against themselves. Suicides. Pier della Vigna.
        Lano and Jacopo da Sant' Andrea.
   XIV. The Sand Waste and the Rain of Fire. The Violent against God.
        Capaneus. The Statue of Time, and the Four Infernal Rivers.
    XV. The Violent against Nature. Brunetto Latini.
   XVI. Guidoguerra, Aldobrandi, and Rusticucci. Cataract of  
        the River of Blood.
  XVII. Geryon. The Violent against Art. Usurers. Descent into  
        the Abyss of Malebolge.
XVIII. The Eighth Circle, Malebolge: The Fraudulent and  
        the Malicious. The First Bolgia: Seducers and Panders.
        Venedico Caccianimico. Jason. The Second Bolgia:
        Flatterers. Allessio Interminelli. Thais.
   XIX. The Third Bolgia: Simoniacs. Pope Nicholas III.
        Dante's Reproof of corrupt Prelates.
    XX. The Fourth Bolgia: Soothsayers. Amphiaraus, Tiresias, Aruns,  
        Manto, Eryphylus, Michael Scott, Guido Bonatti, and Asdente.
        Virgil reproaches Dante's Pity. Mantua's Foundation.
   XXI. The Fifth Bolgia: Peculators. The Elder of Santa Zita.
        Malacoda and other Devils.
  XXII. Ciampolo, Friar Gomita, and Michael Zanche.
        The Malabranche quarrel.
XXIII. Escape from the Malabranche. The Sixth Bolgia: Hypocrites.
        Catalano and Loderingo. Caiaphas.
  XXIV. The Seventh Bolgia: Thieves. Vanni Fucci. Serpents.
   XXV. Vanni Fucci's Punishment. Agnello Brunelleschi,  
        Buoso degli Abati, Puccio Sciancato, Cianfa de' Donati,  
        and Guercio Cavalcanti.
  XXVI. The Eighth Bolgia: Evil Counsellors. Ulysses and Diomed.
        Ulysses' Last Voyage.
XXVII. Guido da Montefeltro. His deception by Pope Boniface VIII.
XXVIII. The Ninth Bolgia: Schismatics. Mahomet and Ali.
        Pier da Medicina, Curio, Mosca, and Bertrand de Born.
  XXIX. Geri del Bello. The Tenth Bolgia: Alchemists.
        Griffolino d' Arezzo and Capocchino.
   XXX. Other Falsifiers or Forgers. Gianni Schicchi, Myrrha,  
        Adam of Brescia, Potiphar's Wife, and Sinon of Troy.
  XXXI. The Giants, Nimrod, Ephialtes, and Antaeus.
        Descent to Cocytus.
XXXII. The Ninth Circle: Traitors. The Frozen Lake of Cocytus.
        First Division, Caina: Traitors to their Kindred.
        Camicion de' Pazzi. Second Division, Antenora:
        Traitors to their Country. Dante questions  
        Bocca degli Abati. Buoso da Duera.
XXXIII. Count Ugolino and the Archbishop Ruggieri. The Death  
        of Count Ugolino's Sons. Third Division of the Ninth Circle,  
        Ptolomaea: Traitors to their Friends. Friar Alberigo,  
        Branco d' Oria.
XXXIV. Fourth Division of the Ninth Circle, the Judecca:
        Traitors to their Lords and Benefactors. Lucifer,  
        Judas Iscariot, Brutus, and Cassius. The Chasm of Lethe.
        The Ascent.
  
  
Purgatorio  
  
     I. The Shores of Purgatory. The Four Stars. Cato of Utica.
        The Rush.
    II. The Celestial Pilot. Casella. The Departure.
   III. Discourse on the Limits of Reason. The Foot of the Mountain.
        Those who died in Contumacy of Holy Church. Manfredi.
    IV. Farther Ascent. Nature of the Mountain. The Negligent,  
        who postponed Repentance till the last Hour. Belacqua.
     V. Those who died by Violence, but repentant.
        Buonconte di Monfeltro. La Pia.
    VI. Dante's Inquiry on Prayers for the Dead. Sordello. Italy.
   VII. The Valley of Flowers. Negligent Princes.
  VIII. The Guardian Angels and the Serpent. Nino di Gallura.
        The Three Stars. Currado Malaspina.
    IX. Dante's Dream of the Eagle. The Gate of Purgatory and  
        the Angel. Seven P's. The Keys.
     X. The Needle's Eye. The First Circle: The Proud.
        The Sculptures on the Wall.
    XI. The Humble Prayer. Omberto di Santafiore.
        Oderisi d' Agobbio. Provenzan Salvani.
   XII. The Sculptures on the Pavement. Ascent to the Second Circle.
  XIII. The Second Circle: The Envious. Sapia of Siena.
   XIV. Guido del Duca and Renier da Calboli. Cities of  
        the Arno Valley. Denunciation of Stubbornness.
    XV. The Third Circle: The Irascible. Dante's Visions. The Smoke.
   XVI. Marco Lombardo. Lament over the State of the World.
  XVII. Dante's Dream of Anger. The Fourth Circle: The Slothful.
        Virgil's Discourse of Love.
XVIII. Virgil further discourses of Love and Free Will.
        The Abbot of San Zeno.
   XIX. Dante's Dream of the Siren. The Fifth Circle:
        The Avaricious and Prodigal. Pope Adrian V.
    XX. Hugh Capet. Corruption of the French Crown.
        Prophecy of the Abduction of Pope Boniface VIII and  
        the Sacrilege of Philip the Fair. The Earthquake.
   XXI. The Poet Statius. Praise of Virgil.
  XXII. Statius' Denunciation of Avarice. The Sixth Circle:
        The Gluttonous. The Mystic Tree.
XXIII. Forese. Reproof of immodest Florentine Women.
  XXIV. Buonagiunta da Lucca. Pope Martin IV, and others.
        Inquiry into the State of Poetry.
   XXV. Discourse of Statius on Generation. The Seventh Circle:
        The Wanton.
  XXVI. Sodomites. Guido Guinicelli and Arnaldo Daniello.
XXVII. The Wall of Fire and the Angel of God. Dante's Sleep  
        upon the Stairway, and his Dream of Leah and Rachel.
        Arrival at the Terrestrial Paradise.
XXVIII. The River Lethe. Matilda. The Nature of  
        the Terrestrial Paradise.
  XXIX. The Triumph of the Church.
   XXX. Virgil's Departure. Beatrice. Dante's Shame.
  XXXI. Reproaches of Beatrice and Confession of Dante.
        The Passage of Lethe. The Seven Virtues. The Griffon.
XXXII. The Tree of Knowledge. Allegory of the Chariot.
XXXIII. Lament over the State of the Church. Final Reproaches  
        of Beatrice. The River Eunoe.
  
  
Paradiso  
  
     I. The Ascent to the First Heaven. The Sphere of Fire.
    II. The First Heaven, the Moon: Spirits who, having taken  
        Sacred Vows, were forced to violate them. The Lunar Spots.
   III. Piccarda Donati and the Empress Constance.
    IV. Questionings of the Soul and of Broken Vows.
     V. Discourse of Beatrice on Vows and Compensations.
        Ascent to the Second Heaven, Mercury: Spirits who for  
        the Love of Fame achieved great Deeds.
    VI. Justinian. The Roman Eagle. The Empire. Romeo.
   VII. Beatrice's Discourse of the Crucifixion, the Incarnation,  
        the Immortality of the Soul, and the Resurrection of the Body.
  VIII. Ascent to the Third Heaven, Venus: Lovers. Charles Martel.
        Discourse on diverse Natures.
    IX. Cunizza da Romano, Folco of Marseilles, and Rahab.
        Neglect of the Holy Land.
     X. The Fourth Heaven, the Sun: Theologians and Fathers of  
        the Church. The First Circle. St. Thomas of Aquinas.
    XI. St. Thomas recounts the Life of St. Francis. Lament over  
        the State of the Dominican Order.
   XII. St. Buonaventura recounts the Life of St. Dominic. Lament  
        over the State of the Franciscan Order. The Second Circle.
  XIII. Of the Wisdom of Solomon. St. Thomas reproaches  
        Dante's Judgement.
   XIV. The Third Circle. Discourse on the Resurrection of the Flesh.
        The Fifth Heaven, Mars: Martyrs and Crusaders who died fighting  
        for the true Faith. The Celestial Cross.
    XV. Cacciaguida. Florence in the Olden Time.
   XVI. Dante's Noble Ancestry. Cacciaguida's Discourse of  
        the Great Florentines.
  XVII. Cacciaguida's Prophecy of Dante's Banishment.
XVIII. The Sixth Heaven, Jupiter: Righteous Kings and Rulers.
        The Celestial Eagle. Dante's Invectives against  
        ecclesiastical Avarice.
   XIX. The Eagle discourses of Salvation, Faith, and Virtue.
        Condemnation of the vile Kings of A.D. 1300.
    XX. The Eagle praises the Righteous Kings of old.
        Benevolence of the Divine Will.
   XXI. The Seventh Heaven, Saturn: The Contemplative.
        The Celestial Stairway. St. Peter Damiano. His Invectives  
        against the Luxury of the Prelates.
  XXII. St. Benedict. His Lamentation over the Corruption of Monks.
        The Eighth Heaven, the Fixed Stars.
XXIII. The Triumph of Christ. The Virgin Mary. The Apostles.
        Gabriel.
  XXIV. The Radiant Wheel. St. Peter examines Dante on Faith.
   XXV. The Laurel Crown. St. James examines Dante on Hope.
        Dante's Blindness.
  XXVI. St. John examines Dante on Charity. Dante's Sight. Adam.
XXVII. St. Peter's reproof of bad Popes. The Ascent to  
        the Ninth Heaven, the 'Primum Mobile.'  
XXVIII. God and the Angelic Hierarchies.
  XXIX. Beatrice's Discourse of the Creation of the Angels,  
        and of the Fall of Lucifer. Her Reproof of Foolish and  
        Avaricious Preachers.
   XXX. The Tenth Heaven, or Empyrean. The River of Light.
        The Two Courts of Heaven. The White Rose of Paradise.
        The great Throne.
  XXXI. The Glory of Paradise. Departure of Beatrice. St. Bernard.
XXXII. St. Bernard points out the Saints in the White Rose.
XXXIII. Prayer to the Virgin. The Threefold Circle of the Trinity.
        Mystery of the Divine and Human Nature.
  
  
  
  
Incipit Comoedia Dantis Alagherii,  
Florentini natione, non moribus.
  
  
The Divine Comedy  
translated by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow  
(e-text courtesy ILT's Digital Dante Project)  
  
INFERNO  
  
  
  
Inferno: Canto I  
  
  
Midway upon the journey of our life  
  I found myself within a forest dark,  
  For the straightforward pathway had been lost.
  
Ah me! how hard a thing it is to say  
  What was this forest savage, rough, and stern,  
  Which in the very thought renews the fear.
  
So bitter is it, death is little more;  
  But of the good to treat, which there I found,  
  Speak will I of the other things I saw there.
  
I cannot well repeat how there I entered,  
  So full was I of slumber at the moment  
  In which I had abandoned the true way.
  
But after I had reached a mountain's foot,  
  At that point where the valley terminated,  
  Which had with consternation pierced my heart,  
  
Upward I looked, and I beheld its shoulders,  
  Vested already with that planet's rays  
  Which leadeth others right by every road.
  
Then was the fear a little quieted  
  That in my heart's lake had endured throughout  
  The night, which I had passed so piteously.
  
And even as he, who, with distressful breath,  
  Forth issued from the sea upon the shore,  
  Turns to the water perilous and gazes;  
  
So did my soul, that still was fleeing onward,  
  Turn itself back to re-behold the pass  
  Which never yet a living person left.
  
After my weary body I had rested,  
  The way resumed I on the desert slope,  
  So that the firm foot ever was the lower.
  
And lo! almost where the ascent began,  
  A panther light and swift exceedingly,  
  Which with a spotted skin was covered o'er!
  
And never moved she from before my face,  
  Nay, rather did impede so much my way,  
  That many times I to return had turned.
  
The time was the beginning of the morning,  
  And up the sun was mounting with those stars  
  That with him were, what time the Love Divine  
  
At first in motion set those beauteous things;  
  So were to me occasion of good hope,  
  The variegated skin of that wild beast,  
  
The hour of time, and the delicious season;  
  But not so much, that did not give me fear  
  A lion's aspect which appeared to me.
  
He seemed as if against me he were coming  
  With head uplifted, and with ravenous hunger,  
  So that it seemed the air was afraid of him;  
  
And a she-wolf, that with all hungerings  
  Seemed to be laden in her meagreness,  
  And many folk has caused to live forlorn!
  
She brought upon me so much heaviness,  
  With the affright that from her aspect came,  
  That I the hope relinquished of the height.
  
And as he is who willingly acquires,  
  And the time comes that causes him to lose,  
  Who weeps in all his thoughts and is despondent,  
  
E'en such made me that beast withouten peace,  
  Which, coming on against me by degrees  
  Thrust me back thither where the sun is silent.
  
While I was rushing downward to the lowland,  
  Before mine eyes did one present himself,  
  Who seemed from long-continued silence hoarse.
  
When I beheld him in the desert vast,  
  "Have pity on me," unto him I cried,  
  "Whiche'er thou art, or shade or real man!"  
  
He answered me: "Not man; man once I was,  
  And both my parents were of Lombardy,  
  And Mantuans by country both of them.
  
'Sub Julio' was I born, though it was late,  
  And lived at Rome under the good Augustus,  
  During the time of false and lying gods.
  
A poet was I, and I sang that just  
  Son of Anchises, who came forth from Troy,  
  After that Ilion the superb was burned.
  
But thou, why goest thou back to such annoyance?
  Why climb'st thou not the Mount Delectable,  
  Which is the source and cause of every joy?"  
  
"Now, art thou that Virgilius and that fountain  
  Which spreads abroad so wide a river of speech?"  
  I made response to him with bashful forehead.
  
"O, of the other poets honour and light,  
  Avail me the long study and great love  
  That have impelled me to explore thy volume!
  
Thou art my master, and my author thou,  
  Thou art alone the one from whom I took  
  The beautiful style that has done honour to me.
  
Behold the beast, for which I have turned back;  
  Do thou protect me from her, famous Sage,  
  For she doth make my veins and pulses tremble."  
  
"Thee it behoves to take another road,"  
  Responded he, when he beheld me weeping,  
  "If from this savage place thou wouldst escape;  
  
Because this beast, at which thou criest out,  
  Suffers not any one to pass her way,  
  But so doth harass him, that she destroys him;  
  
And has a nature so malign and ruthless,  
  That never doth she glut her greedy will,  
  And after food is hungrier than before.
  
Many the animals with whom she weds,  
  And more they shall be still, until the Greyhound  
  Comes, who shall make her perish in her pain.
  
He shall not feed on either earth or pelf,  
  But upon wisdom, and on love and virtue;  
  'Twixt Feltro and Feltro shall his nation be;  
  
Of that low Italy shall he be the saviour,  
  On whose account the maid Camilla died,  
  Euryalus, Turnus, Nisus, of their wounds;  
  
Through every city shall he hunt her down,  
  Until he shall have driven her back to Hell,  
  There from whence envy first did let her loose.
  
Therefore I think and judge it for thy best  
  Thou follow me, and I will be thy guide,  
  And lead thee hence through the eternal place,  
  
Where thou shalt hear the desperate lamentations,  
  Shalt see the ancient spirits disconsolate,  
  Who cry out each one for the second death;  
  
And thou shalt see those who contented are  
  Within the fire, because they hope to come,  
  Whene'er it may be, to the blessed people;  
  
To whom, then, if thou wishest to ascend,  
  A soul shall be for that than I more worthy;  
  With her at my departure I will leave thee;  
  
Because that Emperor, who reigns above,  
  In that I was rebellious to his law,  
  Wills that through me none come into his city.
  
He governs everywhere, and there he reigns;  
  There is his city and his lofty throne;  
  O happy he whom thereto he elects!"  
  
And I to him: "Poet, I thee entreat,  
  By that same God whom thou didst never know,  
  So that I may escape this woe and worse,  
  
Thou wouldst conduct me there where thou hast said,  
  That I may see the portal of Saint Peter,  
  And those thou makest so disconsolate."  
  
Then he moved on, and I behind him followed.
  
  
  
Inferno: Canto II  
  
  
Day was departing, and the embrowned air  
  Released the animals that are on earth  
  From their fatigues; and I the only one  
  
Made myself ready to sustain the war,  
  Both of the way and likewise of the woe,  
  Which memory that errs not shall retrace.
  
O Muses, O high genius, now assist me!
  O memory, that didst write down what I saw,  
  Here thy nobility shall be manifest!
  
And I began: "Poet, who guidest me,  
  Regard my manhood, if it be sufficient,  
  Ere to the arduous pass thou dost confide me.
  
Thou sayest, that of Silvius the parent,  
  While yet corruptible, unto the world  
  Immortal went, and was there bodily.
  
But if the adversary of all evil  
  Was courteous, thinking of the high effect  
  That issue would from him, and who, and what,  
  
To men of intellect unmeet it seems not;  
  For he was of great Rome, and of her empire  
  In the empyreal heaven as father chosen;  
  
The which and what, wishing to speak the truth,  
  Were stablished as the holy place, wherein  
  Sits the successor of the greatest Peter.
  
Upon this journey, whence thou givest him vaunt,  
  Things did he hear, which the occasion were  
  Both of his victory and the papal mantle.
  
Thither went afterwards the Chosen Vessel,  
  To bring back comfort thence unto that Faith,  
  Which of salvation's way is the beginning.
  
But I, why thither come, or who concedes it?
  I not Aeneas am, I am not Paul,  
  Nor I, nor others, think me worthy of it.
  
Therefore, if I resign myself to come,  
  I fear the coming may be ill-advised;  
  Thou'rt wise, and knowest better than I speak."  
  
And as he is, who unwills what he willed,  
  And by new thoughts doth his intention change,  
  So that from his design he quite withdraws,  
  
Such I became, upon that dark hillside,  
  Because, in thinking, I consumed the emprise,  
  Which was so very prompt in the beginning.
  
"If I have well thy language understood,"  
  Replied that shade of the Magnanimous,  
  "Thy soul attainted is with cowardice,  
  
Which many times a man encumbers so,  
  It turns him back from honoured enterprise,  
  As false sight doth a beast, when he is shy.
  
That thou mayst free thee from this apprehension,  
  I'll tell thee why I came, and what I heard  
  At the first moment when I grieved for thee.
  
Among those was I who are in suspense,  
  And a fair, saintly Lady called to me  
  In such wise, I besought her to command me.
  
Her eyes where shining brighter than the Star;  
  And she began to say, gentle and low,  
  With voice angelical, in her own language:
  
'O spirit courteous of Mantua,  
  Of whom the fame still in the world endures,  
  And shall endure, long-lasting as the world;  
  
A friend of mine, and not the friend of fortune,  
  Upon the desert slope is so impeded  
  Upon his way, that he has turned through terror,  
  
And may, I fear, already be so lost,  
  That I too late have risen to his succour,  
  From that which I have heard of him in Heaven.
  
Bestir thee now, and with thy speech ornate,  
  And with what needful is for his release,  
  Assist him so, that I may be consoled.
  
Beatrice am I, who do bid thee go;  
  I come from there, where I would fain return;  
  Love moved me, which compelleth me to speak.
  
When I shall be in presence of my Lord,  
  Full often will I praise thee unto him.'  
  Then paused she, and thereafter I began:
  
'O Lady of virtue, thou alone through whom  
  The human race exceedeth all contained  
  Within the heaven that has the lesser circles,  
  
So grateful unto me is thy commandment,  
  To obey, if 'twere already done, were late;  
  No farther need'st thou ope to me thy wish.
  
But the cause tell me why thou dost not shun  
  The here descending down into this centre,  
  From the vast place thou burnest to return to.'  
  
'Since thou wouldst fain so inwardly discern,  
  Briefly will I relate,' she answered me,  
  'Why I am not afraid to enter here.
  
Of those things only should one be afraid  
  Which have the power of doing others harm;  
  Of the rest, no; because they are not fearful.
  
God in his mercy such created me  
  That misery of yours attains me not,  
  Nor any flame assails me of this burning.
  
A gentle Lady is in Heaven, who grieves  
  At this impediment, to which I send thee,  
  So that stern judgment there above is broken.
  
In her entreaty she besought Lucia,  
  And said, "Thy faithful one now stands in need  
  Of thee, and unto thee I recommend him."  
  
Lucia, foe of all that cruel is,  
  Hastened away, and came unto the place  
  Where I was sitting with the ancient Rachel.
  
"Beatrice" said she, "the true praise of God,  
  Why succourest thou not him, who loved thee so,  
  For thee he issued from the vulgar herd?
  
Dost thou not hear the pity of his plaint?
  Dost thou not see the death that combats him  
  Beside that flood, where ocean has no vaunt?"  
  
Never were persons in the world so swift  
  To work their weal and to escape their woe,  
  As I, after such words as these were uttered,  
  
Came hither downward from my blessed seat,  
  Confiding in thy dignified discourse,  
  Which honours thee, and those who've listened to it.'  
  
After she thus had spoken unto me,  
  Weeping, her shining eyes she turned away;  
  Whereby she made me swifter in my coming;  
  
And unto thee I came, as she desired;  
  I have delivered thee from that wild beast,  
  Which barred the beautiful mountain's short ascent.
  
What is it, then? Why, why dost thou delay?
  Why is such baseness bedded in thy heart?
  Daring and hardihood why hast thou not,  
  
Seeing that three such Ladies benedight  
  Are caring for thee in the court of Heaven,  
  And so much good my speech doth promise thee?"  
  
Even as the flowerets, by nocturnal chill,  
  Bowed down and closed, when the sun whitens them,  
  Uplift themselves all open on their stems;  
  
Such I became with my exhausted strength,  
  And such good courage to my heart there coursed,  
  That I began, like an intrepid person:
  
"O she compassionate, who succoured me,  
  And courteous thou, who hast obeyed so soon  
  The words of truth which she addressed to thee!
  
Thou hast my heart so with desire disposed  
  To the adventure, with these words of thine,  
  That to my first intent I have returned.
  
Now go, for one sole will is in us both,  
  Thou Leader, and thou Lord, and Master thou."  
  Thus said I to him; and when he had moved,  
  
I entered on the deep and savage way.
  
  
  
Inferno: Canto III  
  
  
"Through me the way is to the city dolent;  
  Through me the way is to eternal dole;  
  Through me the way among the people lost.
  
Justice incited my sublime Creator;  
  Created me divine Omnipotence,  
  The highest Wisdom and the primal Love.
  
Before me there were no created things,  
  Only eterne, and I eternal last.
  All hope abandon, ye who enter in!"  
  
These words in sombre colour I beheld  
  Written upon the summit of a gate;  
  Whence I: "Their sense is, Master, hard to me!"  
  
And he to me, as one experienced:
  "Here all suspicion needs must be abandoned,  
  All cowardice must needs be here extinct.
  
We to the place have come, where I have told thee  
  Thou shalt behold the people dolorous  
  Who have foregone the good of intellect."  
  
And after he had laid his hand on mine  
  With joyful mien, whence I was comforted,  
  He led me in among the secret things.
  
There sighs, complaints, and ululations loud  
  Resounded through the air without a star,  
  Whence I, at the beginning, wept thereat.
  
Languages diverse, horrible dialects,  
  Accents of anger, words of agony,  
  And voices high and hoarse, with sound of hands,  
  
Made up a tumult that goes whirling on  
  For ever in that air for ever black,  
  Even as the sand doth, when the whirlwind breathes.
  
And I, who had my head with horror bound,  
  Said: "Master, what is this which now I hear?
  What folk is this, which seems by pain so vanquished?"  
  
And he to me: "This miserable mode  
  Maintain the melancholy souls of those  
  Who lived withouten infamy or praise.
  
Commingled are they with that caitiff choir  
  Of Angels, who have not rebellious been,  
  Nor faithful were to God, but were for self.
  
The heavens expelled them, not to be less fair;  
  Nor them the nethermore abyss receives,  
  For glory none the damned would have from them."  
  
And I: "O Master, what so grievous is  
  To these, that maketh them lament so sore?"  
  He answered: "I will tell thee very briefly.
  
These have no longer any hope of death;  
  And this blind life of theirs is so debased,  
  They envious are of every other fate.
  
No fame of them the world permits to be;  
  Misericord and Justice both disdain them.
  Let us not speak of them, but look, and pass."  
  
And I, who looked again, beheld a banner,  
  Which, whirling round, ran on so rapidly,  
  That of all pause it seemed to me indignant;  
  
And after it there came so long a train  
  Of people, that I ne'er would have believed  
  That ever Death so many had undone.
  
When some among them I had recognised,  
  I looked, and I beheld the shade of him  
  Who made through cowardice the great refusal.
  
Forthwith I comprehended, and was certain,  
  That this the sect was of the caitiff wretches  
  Hateful to God and to his enemies.
  
These miscreants, who never were alive,  
  Were naked, and were stung exceedingly  
  By gadflies and by hornets that were there.
  
These did their faces irrigate with blood,  
  Which, with their tears commingled, at their feet  
  By the disgusting worms was gathered up.
  
And when to gazing farther I betook me.
  People I saw on a great river's bank;  
  Whence said I: "Master, now vouchsafe to me,  
  
That I may know who these are, and what law  
  Makes them appear so ready to pass over,  
  As I discern athwart the dusky light."  
  
And he to me: "These things shall all be known  
  To thee, as soon as we our footsteps stay  
  Upon the dismal shore of Acheron."  
  
Then with mine eyes ashamed and downward cast,  
  Fearing my words might irksome be to him,  
  From speech refrained I till we reached the river.
  
And lo! towards us coming in a boat  
  An old man, hoary with the hair of eld,  
  Crying: "Woe unto you, ye souls depraved!
  
Hope nevermore to look upon the heavens;  
  I come to lead you to the other shore,  
  To the eternal shades in heat and frost.
  
And thou, that yonder standest, living soul,  
  Withdraw thee from these people, who are dead!"  
  But when he saw that I did not withdraw,  
  
He said: "By other ways, by other ports  
  Thou to the shore shalt come, not here, for passage;  
  A lighter vessel needs must carry thee."  
  
And unto him the Guide: "Vex thee not, Charon;  
  It is so willed there where is power to do  
  That which is willed; and farther question not."  
  
Thereat were quieted the fleecy cheeks  
  Of him the ferryman of the livid fen,  
  Who round about his eyes had wheels of flame.
  
But all those souls who weary were and naked  
  Their colour changed and gnashed their teeth together,  
  As soon as they had heard those cruel words.
  
God they blasphemed and their progenitors,  
  The human race, the place, the time, the seed  
  Of their engendering and of their birth!
  
Thereafter all together they drew back,  
  Bitterly weeping, to the accursed shore,  
  Which waiteth every man who fears not God.
  
Charon the demon, with the eyes of glede,  
  Beckoning to them, collects them all together,  
  Beats with his oar whoever lags behind.
  
As in the autumn-time the leaves fall off,  
  First one and then another, till the branch  
  Unto the earth surrenders all its spoils;  
  
In similar wise the evil seed of Adam  
  Throw themselves from that margin one by one,  
  At signals, as a bird unto its lure.
  
So they depart across the dusky wave,  
  And ere upon the other side they land,  
  Again on this side a new troop assembles.
  
"My son," the courteous Master said to me,  
  "All those who perish in the wrath of God  
  Here meet together out of every land;  
  
And ready are they to pass o'er the river,  
  Because celestial Justice spurs them on,  
  So that their fear is turned into desire.
  
This way there never passes a good soul;  
  And hence if Charon doth complain of thee,  
  Well mayst thou know now what his speech imports."  
  
This being finished, all the dusk champaign  
  Trembled so violently, that of that terror  
  The recollection bathes me still with sweat.
  
The land of tears gave forth a blast of wind,  
  And fulminated a vermilion light,  
  Which overmastered in me every sense,  
  
And as a man whom sleep hath seized I fell.
  
  
  
Inferno: Canto IV  
  
  
Broke the deep lethargy within my head  
  A heavy thunder, so that I upstarted,  
  Like to a person who by force is wakened;  
  
And round about I moved my rested eyes,  
  Uprisen erect, and steadfastly I gazed,  
  To recognise the place wherein I was.
  
True is it, that upon the verge I found me  
  Of the abysmal valley dolorous,  
  That gathers thunder of infinite ululations.
  
Obscure, profound it was, and nebulous,  
  So that by fixing on its depths my sight  
  Nothing whatever I discerned therein.
  
"Let us descend now into the blind world,"  
  Began the Poet, pallid utterly;  
  "I will be first, and thou shalt second be."  
  
And I, who of his colour was aware,  
  Said: "How shall I come, if thou art afraid,  
  Who'rt wont to be a comfort to my fears?"  
  
And he to me: "The anguish of the people  
  Who are below here in my face depicts  
  That pity which for terror thou hast taken.
  
Let us go on, for the long way impels us."  
  Thus he went in, and thus he made me enter  
  The foremost circle that surrounds the abyss.
  
There, as it seemed to me from listening,  
  Were lamentations none, but only sighs,  
  That tremble made the everlasting air.
  
And this arose from sorrow without torment,  
  Which the crowds had, that many were and great,  
  Of infants and of women and of men.
  
To me the Master good: "Thou dost not ask  
  What spirits these, which thou beholdest, are?
  Now will I have thee know, ere thou go farther,  
  
That they sinned not; and if they merit had,  
  'Tis not enough, because they had not baptism  
  Which is the portal of the Faith thou holdest;  
  
And if they were before Christianity,  
  In the right manner they adored not God;  
  And among such as these am I myself.
  
For such defects, and not for other guilt,  
  Lost are we and are only so far punished,  
  That without hope we live on in desire."  
  
Great grief seized on my heart when this I heard,  
  Because some people of much worthiness  
  I knew, who in that Limbo were suspended.
  
"Tell me, my Master, tell me, thou my Lord,"  
  Began I, with desire of being certain  
  Of that Faith which o'ercometh every error,  
  
"Came any one by his own merit hence,  
  Or by another's, who was blessed thereafter?"  
  And he, who understood my covert speech,  
  
Replied: "I was a novice in this state,  
  When I saw hither come a Mighty One,  
  With sign of victory incoronate.
  
Hence he drew forth the shade of the First Parent,  
  And that of his son Abel, and of Noah,  
  Of Moses the lawgiver, and the obedient  
  
Abraham, patriarch, and David, king,  
  Israel with his father and his children,  
  And Rachel, for whose sake he did so much,  
  
And others many, and he made them blessed;  
  And thou must know, that earlier than these  
  Never were any human spirits saved."  
  
We ceased not to advance because he spake,  
  But still were passing onward through the forest,  
  The forest, say I, of thick-crowded ghosts.
  
Not very far as yet our way had gone  
  This side the summit, when I saw a fire  
  That overcame a hemisphere of darkness.
  
We were a little distant from it still,  
  But not so far that I in part discerned not  
  That honourable people held that place.
  
"O thou who honourest every art and science,  
  Who may these be, which such great honour have,  
  That from the fashion of the rest it parts them?"  
  
And he to me: "The honourable name,  
  That sounds of them above there in thy life,  
  Wins grace in Heaven, that so advances them."  
  
In the mean time a voice was heard by me:
  "All honour be to the pre-eminent Poet;  
  His shade returns again, that was departed."  
  
After the voice had ceased and quiet was,  
  Four mighty shades I saw approaching us;  
  Semblance had they nor sorrowful nor glad.
  
To say to me began my gracious Master:
  "Him with that falchion in his hand behold,  
  Who comes before the three, even as their lord.
  
That one is Homer, Poet sovereign;  
  He who comes next is Horace, the satirist;  
  The third is Ovid, and the last is Lucan.
  
Because to each of these with me applies  
  The name that solitary voice proclaimed,  
  They do me honour, and in that do well."  
  
Thus I beheld assemble the fair school  
  Of that lord of the song pre-eminent,  
  Who o'er the others like an eagle soars.
  
When they together had discoursed somewhat,  
  They turned to me with signs of salutation,  
  And on beholding this, my Master smiled;  
  
And more of honour still, much more, they did me,  
  In that they made me one of their own band;  
  So that the sixth was I, 'mid so much wit.
  
Thus we went on as far as to the light,  
  Things saying 'tis becoming to keep silent,  
  As was the saying of them where I was.
  
We came unto a noble castle's foot,  
  Seven times encompassed with lofty walls,  
  Defended round by a fair rivulet;  
  
This we passed over even as firm ground;  
  Through portals seven I entered with these Sages;  
  We came into a meadow of fresh verdure.
  
People were there with solemn eyes and slow,  
  Of great authority in their countenance;  
  They spake but seldom, and with gentle voices.
  
Thus we withdrew ourselves upon one side  
  Into an opening luminous and lofty,  
  So that they all of them were visible.
  
There opposite, upon the green enamel,  
  Were pointed out to me the mighty spirits,  
  Whom to have seen I feel myself exalted.
  
I saw Electra with companions many,  
  'Mongst whom I knew both Hector and Aeneas,  
  Caesar in armour with gerfalcon eyes;  
  
I saw Camilla and Penthesilea  
  On the other side, and saw the King Latinus,  
  Who with Lavinia his daughter sat;  
  
I saw that Brutus who drove Tarquin forth,  
  Lucretia, Julia, Marcia, and Cornelia,  
  And saw alone, apart, the Saladin.
  
When I had lifted up my brows a little,  
  The Master I beheld of those who know,  
  Sit with his philosophic family.
  
All gaze upon him, and all do him honour.
  There I beheld both Socrates and Plato,  
  Who nearer him before the others stand;  
  
Democritus, who puts the world on chance,  
  Diogenes, Anaxagoras, and Thales,  
  Zeno, Empedocles, and Heraclitus;  
  
Of qualities I saw the good collector,  
  Hight Dioscorides; and Orpheus saw I,  
  Tully and Livy, and moral Seneca,  
  
Euclid, geometrician, and Ptolemy,  
  Galen, Hippocrates, and Avicenna,  
  Averroes, who the great Comment made.
  
I cannot all of them pourtray in full,  
  Because so drives me onward the long theme,  
  That many times the word comes short of fact.
  
The sixfold company in two divides;  
  Another way my sapient Guide conducts me  
  Forth from the quiet to the air that trembles;  
  
And to a place I come where nothing shines.
  
  
  
Inferno: Canto V  
  
  
Thus I descended out of the first circle  
  Down to the second, that less space begirds,  
  And so much greater dole, that goads to wailing.
  
There standeth Minos horribly, and snarls;  
  Examines the transgressions at the entrance;  
  Judges, and sends according as he girds him.
  
I say, that when the spirit evil-born  
  Cometh before him, wholly it confesses;  
  And this discriminator of transgressions  
  
Seeth what place in Hell is meet for it;  
  Girds himself with his tail as many times  
  As grades he wishes it should be thrust down.
  
Always before him many of them stand;  
  They go by turns each one unto the judgment;  
  They speak, and hear, and then are downward hurled.
  
"O thou, that to this dolorous hostelry  
  Comest," said Minos to me, when he saw me,  
  Leaving the practice of so great an office,  
  
"Look how thou enterest, and in whom thou trustest;  
  Let not the portal's amplitude deceive thee."  
  And unto him my Guide: "Why criest thou too?
  
Do not impede his journey fate-ordained;  
  It is so willed there where is power to do  
  That which is willed; and ask no further question."  
  
And now begin the dolesome notes to grow  
  Audible unto me; now am I come  
  There where much lamentation strikes upon me.
  
I came into a place mute of all light,  
  Which bellows as the sea does in a tempest,  
  If by opposing winds 't is combated.
  
The infernal hurricane that never rests  
  Hurtles the spirits onward in its rapine;  
  Whirling them round, and smiting, it molests them.
  
When they arrive before the precipice,  
  There are the shrieks, the plaints, and the laments,  
  There they blaspheme the puissance divine.
  
I understood that unto such a torment  
  The carnal malefactors were condemned,  
  Who reason subjugate to appetite.
  
And as the wings of starlings bear them on  
  In the cold season in large band and full,  
  So doth that blast the spirits maledict;  
  
It hither, thither, downward, upward, drives them;  
  No hope doth comfort them for evermore,  
  Not of repose, but even of lesser pain.
  
And as the cranes go chanting forth their lays,  
  Making in air a long line of themselves,  
  So saw I coming, uttering lamentations,  
  
Shadows borne onward by the aforesaid stress.
  Whereupon said I: "Master, who are those  
  People, whom the black air so castigates?"  
  
"The first of those, of whom intelligence  
  Thou fain wouldst have," then said he unto me,  
  "The empress was of many languages.
  
To sensual vices she was so abandoned,  
  That lustful she made licit in her law,  
  To remove the blame to which she had been led.
  
She is Semiramis, of whom we read  
  That she succeeded Ninus, and was his spouse;  
  She held the land which now the Sultan rules.
  
The next is she who killed herself for love,  
  And broke faith with the ashes of Sichaeus;  
  Then Cleopatra the voluptuous."  
  
Helen I saw, for whom so many ruthless  
  Seasons revolved; and saw the great Achilles,  
  Who at the last hour combated with Love.
  
Paris I saw, Tristan; and more than a thousand  
  Shades did he name and point out with his finger,  
  Whom Love had separated from our life.
  
After that I had listened to my Teacher,  
  Naming the dames of eld and cavaliers,  
  Pity prevailed, and I was nigh bewildered.
  
And I began: "O Poet, willingly  
  Speak would I to those two, who go together,  
  And seem upon the wind to be so light."  
  
And, he to me: "Thou'lt mark, when they shall be  
  Nearer to us; and then do thou implore them  
  By love which leadeth them, and they will come."  
  
Soon as the wind in our direction sways them,  
  My voice uplift I: "O ye weary souls!
  Come speak to us, if no one interdicts it."  
  
As turtle-doves, called onward by desire,  
  With open and steady wings to the sweet nest  
  Fly through the air by their volition borne,  
  
So came they from the band where Dido is,  
  Approaching us athwart the air malign,  
  So strong was the affectionate appeal.
  
"O living creature gracious and benignant,  
  Who visiting goest through the purple air  
  Us, who have stained the world incarnadine,  
  
If were the King of the Universe our friend,  
  We would pray unto him to give thee peace,  
  Since thou hast pity on our woe perverse.
  
Of what it pleases thee to hear and speak,  
  That will we hear, and we will speak to you,  
  While silent is the wind, as it is now.
  
Sitteth the city, wherein I was born,  
  Upon the sea-shore where the Po descends  
  To rest in peace with all his retinue.
  
Love, that on gentle heart doth swiftly seize,  
  Seized this man for the person beautiful  
  That was ta'en from me, and still the mode offends me.
  
Love, that exempts no one beloved from loving,  
  Seized me with pleasure of this man so strongly,  
  That, as thou seest, it doth not yet desert me;  
  
Love has conducted us unto one death;  
  Caina waiteth him who quenched our life!"  
  These words were borne along from them to us.
  
As soon as I had heard those souls tormented,  
  I bowed my face, and so long held it down  
  Until the Poet said to me: "What thinkest?"  
  
When I made answer, I began: "Alas!
  How many pleasant thoughts, how much desire,  
  Conducted these unto the dolorous pass!"  
  
Then unto them I turned me, and I spake,  
  And I began: "Thine agonies, Francesca,  
  Sad and compassionate to weeping make me.
  
But tell me, at the time of those sweet sighs,  
  By what and in what manner Love conceded,  
  That you should know your dubious desires?"  
  
And she to me: "There is no greater sorrow  
  Than to be mindful of the happy time  
  In misery, and that thy Teacher knows.
  
But, if to recognise the earliest root  
  Of love in us thou hast so great desire,  
  I will do even as he who weeps and speaks.
  
One day we reading were for our delight  
  Of Launcelot, how Love did him enthral.
  Alone we were and without any fear.
  
Full many a time our eyes together drew  
  That reading, and drove the colour from our faces;  
  But one point only was it that o'ercame us.
  
When as we read of the much-longed-for smile  
  Being by such a noble lover kissed,  
  This one, who ne'er from me shall be divided,  
  
Kissed me upon the mouth all palpitating.
  Galeotto was the book and he who wrote it.
  That day no farther did we read therein."  
  
And all the while one spirit uttered this,  
  The other one did weep so, that, for pity,  
  I swooned away as if I had been dying,  
  
And fell, even as a dead body falls.
  
  
  
Inferno: Canto VI  
  
  
At the return of consciousness, that closed  
  Before the pity of those two relations,  
  Which utterly with sadness had confused me,  
  
New torments I behold, and new tormented  
  Around me, whichsoever way I move,  
  And whichsoever way I turn, and gaze.
  
In the third circle am I of the rain  
  Eternal, maledict, and cold, and heavy;  
  Its law and quality are never new.
  
Huge hail, and water sombre-hued, and snow,  
  Athwart the tenebrous air pour down amain;  
  Noisome the earth is, that receiveth this.
  
Cerberus, monster cruel and uncouth,  
  With his three gullets like a dog is barking  
  Over the people that are there submerged.
  
Red eyes he has, and unctuous beard and black,  
  And belly large, and armed with claws his hands;  
  He rends the spirits, flays, and quarters them.
  
Howl the rain maketh them like unto dogs;  
  One side they make a shelter for the other;  
  Oft turn themselves the wretched reprobates.
  
When Cerberus perceived us, the great worm!
   His mouths he opened, and displayed his tusks;  
   Not a limb had he that was motionless.
  
And my Conductor, with his spans extended,  
  Took of the earth, and with his fists well filled,  
  He threw it into those rapacious gullets.
  
Such as that dog is, who by barking craves,  
  And quiet grows soon as his food he gnaws,  
  For to devour it he but thinks and struggles,  
  
The like became those muzzles filth-begrimed  
  Of Cerberus the demon, who so thunders  
  Over the souls that they would fain be deaf.
  
We passed across the shadows, which subdues  
  The heavy rain-storm, and we placed our feet  
  Upon their vanity that person seems.
  
They all were lying prone upon the earth,  
  Excepting one, who sat upright as soon  
  As he beheld us passing on before him.
  
"O thou that art conducted through this Hell,"  
  He said to me, "recall me, if thou canst;  
  Thyself wast made before I was unmade."  
  
And I to him: "The anguish which thou hast  
  Perhaps doth draw thee out of my remembrance,  
  So that it seems not I have ever seen thee.
  
But tell me who thou art, that in so doleful  
  A place art put, and in such punishment,  
  If some are greater, none is so displeasing."  
  
And he to me: "Thy city, which is full  
  Of envy so that now the sack runs over,  
  Held me within it in the life serene.
  
You citizens were wont to call me Ciacco;  
  For the pernicious sin of gluttony  
  I, as thou seest, am battered by this rain.
  
And I, sad soul, am not the only one,  
  For all these suffer the like penalty  
  For the like sin;" and word no more spake he.
  
I answered him: "Ciacco, thy wretchedness  
  Weighs on me so that it to weep invites me;  
  But tell me, if thou knowest, to what shall come  
  
The citizens of the divided city;  
  If any there be just; and the occasion  
  Tell me why so much discord has assailed it."  
  
And he to me: "They, after long contention,  
  Will come to bloodshed; and the rustic party  
  Will drive the other out with much offence.
  
Then afterwards behoves it this one fall  
  Within three suns, and rise again the other  
  By force of him who now is on the coast.
  
High will it hold its forehead a long while,  
  Keeping the other under heavy burdens,  
  Howe'er it weeps thereat and is indignant.
  
The just are two, and are not understood there;  
  Envy and Arrogance and Avarice  
  Are the three sparks that have all hearts enkindled."  
  
Here ended he his tearful utterance;  
  And I to him: "I wish thee still to teach me,  
  And make a gift to me of further speech.
  
Farinata and Tegghiaio, once so worthy,  
  Jacopo Rusticucci, Arrigo, and Mosca,  
  And others who on good deeds set their thoughts,  
  
Say where they are, and cause that I may know them;  
  For great desire constraineth me to learn  
  If Heaven doth sweeten them, or Hell envenom."  
  
And he: "They are among the blacker souls;  
  A different sin downweighs them to the bottom;  
  If thou so far descendest, thou canst see them.
  
But when thou art again in the sweet world,  
  I pray thee to the mind of others bring me;  
  No more I tell thee and no more I answer."  
  
Then his straightforward eyes he turned askance,  
  Eyed me a little, and then bowed his head;  
  He fell therewith prone like the other blind.
  
And the Guide said to me: "He wakes no more  
  This side the sound of the angelic trumpet;  
  When shall approach the hostile Potentate,  
  
Each one shall find again his dismal tomb,  
  Shall reassume his flesh and his own figure,  
  Shall hear what through eternity re-echoes."  
  
So we passed onward o'er the filthy mixture  
  Of shadows and of rain with footsteps slow,  
  Touching a little on the future life.
  
Wherefore I said: "Master, these torments here,  
  Will they increase after the mighty sentence,  
  Or lesser be, or will they be as burning?"  
  
And he to me: "Return unto thy science,  
  Which wills, that as the thing more perfect is,  
  The more it feels of pleasure and of pain.
  
Albeit that this people maledict  
  To true perfection never can attain,  
  Hereafter more than now they look to be."  
  
Round in a circle by that road we went,  
  Speaking much more, which I do not repeat;  
  We came unto the point where the descent is;  
  
There we found Plutus the great enemy.
  
  
  
Inferno: Canto VII  
  
  
"Pape Satan, Pape Satan, Aleppe!"  
  Thus Plutus with his clucking voice began;  
  And that benignant Sage, who all things knew,  
  
Said, to encourage me: "Let not thy fear  
  Harm thee; for any power that he may have  
  Shall not prevent thy going down this crag."  
  
Then he turned round unto that bloated lip,  
  And said: "Be silent, thou accursed wolf;  
  Consume within thyself with thine own rage.
  
Not causeless is this journey to the abyss;  
  Thus is it willed on high, where Michael wrought  
  Vengeance upon the proud adultery."  
  
Even as the sails inflated by the wind  
  Involved together fall when snaps the mast,  
  So fell the cruel monster to the earth.
  
Thus we descended into the fourth chasm,  
  Gaining still farther on the dolesome shore  
  Which all the woe of the universe insacks.
  
Justice of God, ah! who heaps up so many  
  New toils and sufferings as I beheld?
  And why doth our transgression waste us so?
  
As doth the billow there upon Charybdis,  
  That breaks itself on that which it encounters,  
  So here the folk must dance their roundelay.
  
Here saw I people, more than elsewhere, many,  
  On one side and the other, with great howls,  
  Rolling weights forward by main force of chest.
  
They clashed together, and then at that point  
  Each one turned backward, rolling retrograde,  
  Crying, "Why keepest?" and, "Why squanderest thou?"  
  
Thus they returned along the lurid circle  
  On either hand unto the opposite point,  
  Shouting their shameful metre evermore.
  
Then each, when he arrived there, wheeled about  
  Through his half-circle to another joust;  
  And I, who had my heart pierced as it were,  
  
Exclaimed: "My Master, now declare to me  
  What people these are, and if all were clerks,  
  These shaven crowns upon the left of us."  
  
And he to me: "All of them were asquint  
  In intellect in the first life, so much  
  That there with measure they no spending made.
  
Clearly enough their voices bark it forth,  
  Whene'er they reach the two points of the circle,  
  Where sunders them the opposite defect.
  
Clerks those were who no hairy covering  
  Have on the head, and Popes and Cardinals,  
  In whom doth Avarice practise its excess."  
  
And I: "My Master, among such as these  
  I ought forsooth to recognise some few,  
  Who were infected with these maladies."  
  
And he to me: "Vain thought thou entertainest;  
  The undiscerning life which made them sordid  
  Now makes them unto all discernment dim.
  
Forever shall they come to these two buttings;  
  These from the sepulchre shall rise again  
  With the fist closed, and these with tresses shorn.
  
Ill giving and ill keeping the fair world  
  Have ta'en from them, and placed them in this scuffle;  
  Whate'er it be, no words adorn I for it.
  
Now canst thou, Son, behold the transient farce  
  Of goods that are committed unto Fortune,  
  For which the human race each other buffet;  
  
For all the gold that is beneath the moon,  
  Or ever has been, of these weary souls  
  Could never make a single one repose."  
  
"Master," I said to him, "now tell me also  
  What is this Fortune which thou speakest of,  
  That has the world's goods so within its clutches?"  
  
And he to me: "O creatures imbecile,  
  What ignorance is this which doth beset you?
  Now will I have thee learn my judgment of her.
  
He whose omniscience everything transcends  
  The heavens created, and gave who should guide them,  
  That every part to every part may shine,  
  
Distributing the light in equal measure;  
  He in like manner to the mundane splendours  
  Ordained a general ministress and guide,  
  
That she might change at times the empty treasures  
  From race to race, from one blood to another,  
  Beyond resistance of all human wisdom.
  
Therefore one people triumphs, and another  
  Languishes, in pursuance of her judgment,  
  Which hidden is, as in the grass a serpent.
  
Your knowledge has no counterstand against her;  
  She makes provision, judges, and pursues  
  Her governance, as theirs the other gods.
  
Her permutations have not any truce;  
  Necessity makes her precipitate,  
  So often cometh who his turn obtains.
  
And this is she who is so crucified  
  Even by those who ought to give her praise,  
  Giving her blame amiss, and bad repute.
  
But she is blissful, and she hears it not;  
  Among the other primal creatures gladsome  
  She turns her sphere, and blissful she rejoices.
  
Let us descend now unto greater woe;  
  Already sinks each star that was ascending  
  When I set out, and loitering is forbidden."  
  
We crossed the circle to the other bank,  
  Near to a fount that boils, and pours itself  
  Along a gully that runs out of it.
  
The water was more sombre far than perse;  
  And we, in company with the dusky waves,  
  Made entrance downward by a path uncouth.
  
A marsh it makes, which has the name of Styx,  
  This tristful brooklet, when it has descended  
  Down to the foot of the malign gray shores.
  
And I, who stood intent upon beholding,  
  Saw people mud-besprent in that lagoon,  
  All of them naked and with angry look.
  
They smote each other not alone with hands,  
  But with the head and with the breast and feet,  
  Tearing each other piecemeal with their teeth.
  
Said the good Master: "Son, thou now beholdest  
  The souls of those whom anger overcame;  
  And likewise I would have thee know for certain  
  
Beneath the water people are who sigh  
  And make this water bubble at the surface,  
  As the eye tells thee wheresoe'er it turns.
  
Fixed in the mire they say, 'We sullen were  
  In the sweet air, which by the sun is gladdened,  
  Bearing within ourselves the sluggish reek;  
  
Now we are sullen in this sable mire.'  
  This hymn do they keep gurgling in their throats,  
  For with unbroken words they cannot say it."  
  
Thus we went circling round the filthy fen  
  A great arc 'twixt the dry bank and the swamp,  
  With eyes turned unto those who gorge the mire;  
  
Unto the foot of a tower we came at last.
  
  
  
Inferno: Canto VIII  
  
  
I say, continuing, that long before  
  We to the foot of that high tower had come,  
  Our eyes went upward to the summit of it,  
  
By reason of two flamelets we saw placed there,  
  And from afar another answer them,  
  So far, that hardly could the eye attain it.
  
And, to the sea of all discernment turned,  
  I said: "What sayeth this, and what respondeth  
  That other fire? and who are they that made it?"  
  
And he to me: "Across the turbid waves  
  What is expected thou canst now discern,  
  If reek of the morass conceal it not."  
  
Cord never shot an arrow from itself  
  That sped away athwart the air so swift,  
  As I beheld a very little boat  
  
Come o'er the water tow'rds us at that moment,  
  Under the guidance of a single pilot,  
  Who shouted, "Now art thou arrived, fell soul?"  
  
"Phlegyas, Phlegyas, thou criest out in vain  
  For this once," said my Lord; "thou shalt not have us  
  Longer than in the passing of the slough."  
  
As he who listens to some great deceit  
  That has been done to him, and then resents it,  
  Such became Phlegyas, in his gathered wrath.
  
My Guide descended down into the boat,  
  And then he made me enter after him,  
  And only when I entered seemed it laden.
  
Soon as the Guide and I were in the boat,  
  The antique prow goes on its way, dividing  
  More of the water than 'tis wont with others.
  
While we were running through the dead canal,  
  Uprose in front of me one full of mire,  
  And said, "Who 'rt thou that comest ere the hour?"  
  
And I to him: "Although I come, I stay not;  
  But who art thou that hast become so squalid?"  
  "Thou seest that I am one who weeps," he answered.
  
And I to him: "With weeping and with wailing,  
  Thou spirit maledict, do thou remain;  
  For thee I know, though thou art all defiled."  
  
Then stretched he both his hands unto the boat;  
  Whereat my wary Master thrust him back,  
  Saying, "Away there with the other dogs!"  
  
Thereafter with his arms he clasped my neck;  
  He kissed my face, and said: "Disdainful soul,  
  Blessed be she who bore thee in her bosom.
  
That was an arrogant person in the world;  
  Goodness is none, that decks his memory;  
  So likewise here his shade is furious.
  
How many are esteemed great kings up there,  
  Who here shall be like unto swine in mire,  
  Leaving behind them horrible dispraises!"  
  
And I: "My Master, much should I be pleased,  
  If I could see him soused into this broth,  
  Before we issue forth out of the lake."  
  
And he to me: "Ere unto thee the shore  
  Reveal itself, thou shalt be satisfied;  
  Such a desire 'tis meet thou shouldst enjoy."  
  
A little after that, I saw such havoc  
  Made of him by the people of the mire,  
  That still I praise and thank my God for it.
  
They all were shouting, "At Philippo Argenti!"  
  And that exasperate spirit Florentine  
  Turned round upon himself with his own teeth.
  
We left him there, and more of him I tell not;  
  But on mine ears there smote a lamentation,  
  Whence forward I intent unbar mine eyes.
  
And the good Master said: "Even now, my Son,  
  The city draweth near whose name is Dis,  
  With the grave citizens, with the great throng."  
  
And I: "Its mosques already, Master, clearly  
  Within there in the valley I discern  
  Vermilion, as if issuing from the fire  
  
They were."  And he to me: "The fire eternal  
  That kindles them within makes them look red,  
  As thou beholdest in this nether Hell."  
  
Then we arrived within the moats profound,  
  That circumvallate that disconsolate city;  
  The walls appeared to me to be of iron.
  
Not without making first a circuit wide,  
  We came unto a place where loud the pilot  
  Cried out to us, "Debark, here is the entrance."  
  
More than a thousand at the gates I saw  
  Out of the Heavens rained down, who angrily  
  Were saying, "Who is this that without death  
  
Goes through the kingdom of the people dead?"  
  And my sagacious Master made a sign  
  Of wishing secretly to speak with them.
  
A little then they quelled their great disdain,  
  And said: "Come thou alone, and he begone  
  Who has so boldly entered these dominions.
  
Let him return alone by his mad road;  
  Try, if he can; for thou shalt here remain,  
  Who hast escorted him through such dark regions."  
  
Think, Reader, if I was discomforted  
  At utterance of the accursed words;  
  For never to return here I believed.
  
"O my dear Guide, who more than seven times  
  Hast rendered me security, and drawn me  
  From imminent peril that before me stood,  
  
Do not desert me," said I, "thus undone;  
  And if the going farther be denied us,  
  Let us retrace our steps together swiftly."  
  
And that Lord, who had led me thitherward,  
  Said unto me: "Fear not; because our passage  
  None can take from us, it by Such is given.
  
But here await me, and thy weary spirit  
  Comfort and nourish with a better hope;  
  For in this nether world I will not leave thee."  
  
So onward goes and there abandons me  
  My Father sweet, and I remain in doubt,  
  For No and Yes within my head contend.
  
I could not hear what he proposed to them;  
  But with them there he did not linger long,  
  Ere each within in rivalry ran back.
  
They closed the portals, those our adversaries,  
  On my Lord's breast, who had remained without  
  And turned to me with footsteps far between.
  
His eyes cast down, his forehead shorn had he  
  Of all its boldness, and he said, with sighs,  
  "Who has denied to me the dolesome houses?"  
  
And unto me: "Thou, because I am angry,  
  Fear not, for I will conquer in the trial,  
  Whatever for defence within be planned.
  
This arrogance of theirs is nothing new;  
  For once they used it at less secret gate,  
  Which finds itself without a fastening still.
  
O'er it didst thou behold the dead inscription;  
  And now this side of it descends the steep,  
  Passing across the circles without escort,  
  
One by whose means the city shall be opened."  
  
  
  
Inferno: Canto IX  
  
  
That hue which cowardice brought out on me,  
  Beholding my Conductor backward turn,  
  Sooner repressed within him his new colour.
  
He stopped attentive, like a man who listens,  
  Because the eye could not conduct him far  
  Through the black air, and through the heavy fog.
  
"Still it behoveth us to win the fight,"  
  Began he; "Else. . .Such offered us herself. . .
  O how I long that some one here arrive!"  
  
Well I perceived, as soon as the beginning  
  He covered up with what came afterward,  
  That they were words quite different from the first;  
  
But none the less his saying gave me fear,  
  Because I carried out the broken phrase,  
  Perhaps to a worse meaning than he had.
  
"Into this bottom of the doleful conch  
  Doth any e'er descend from the first grade,  
  Which for its pain has only hope cut off?"  
  
This question put I; and he answered me:
  "Seldom it comes to pass that one of us  
  Maketh the journey upon which I go.
  
True is it, once before I here below  
  Was conjured by that pitiless Erictho,  
  Who summoned back the shades unto their bodies.
  
Naked of me short while the flesh had been,  
  Before within that wall she made me enter,  
  To bring a spirit from the circle of Judas;  
  
That is the lowest region and the darkest,  
  And farthest from the heaven which circles all.
  Well know I the way; therefore be reassured.
  
This fen, which a prodigious stench exhales,  
  Encompasses about the city dolent,  
  Where now we cannot enter without anger."  
  
And more he said, but not in mind I have it;  
  Because mine eye had altogether drawn me  
  Tow'rds the high tower with the red-flaming summit,  
  
Where in a moment saw I swift uprisen  
  The three infernal Furies stained with blood,  
  Who had the limbs of women and their mien,  
  
And with the greenest hydras were begirt;  
  Small serpents and cerastes were their tresses,  
  Wherewith their horrid temples were entwined.
  
And he who well the handmaids of the Queen  
  Of everlasting lamentation knew,  
  Said unto me: "Behold the fierce Erinnys.
  
This is Megaera, on the left-hand side;  
  She who is weeping on the right, Alecto;  
  Tisiphone is between;" and then was silent.
  
Each one her breast was rending with her nails;  
  They beat them with their palms, and cried so loud,  
  That I for dread pressed close unto the Poet.
  
"Medusa come, so we to stone will change him!"  
  All shouted looking down; "in evil hour  
  Avenged we not on Theseus his assault!"  
  
"Turn thyself round, and keep thine eyes close shut,  
  For if the Gorgon appear, and thou shouldst see it,  
  No more returning upward would there be."  
  
Thus said the Master; and he turned me round  
  Himself, and trusted not unto my hands  
  So far as not to blind me with his own.
  
O ye who have undistempered intellects,  
  Observe the doctrine that conceals itself  
  Beneath the veil of the mysterious verses!
  
And now there came across the turbid waves  
  The clangour of a sound with terror fraught,  
  Because of which both of the margins trembled;  
  
Not otherwise it was than of a wind  
  Impetuous on account of adverse heats,  
  That smites the forest, and, without restraint,  
  
The branches rends, beats down, and bears away;  
  Right onward, laden with dust, it goes superb,  
  And puts to flight the wild beasts and the shepherds.
  
Mine eyes he loosed, and said: "Direct the nerve  
  Of vision now along that ancient foam,  
  There yonder where that smoke is most intense."  
  
Even as the frogs before the hostile serpent  
  Across the water scatter all abroad,  
  Until each one is huddled in the earth.
  
More than a thousand ruined souls I saw,  
  Thus fleeing from before one who on foot  
  Was passing o'er the Styx with soles unwet.
  
From off his face he fanned that unctuous air,  
  Waving his left hand oft in front of him,  
  And only with that anguish seemed he weary.
  
Well I perceived one sent from Heaven was he,  
  And to the Master turned; and he made sign  
  That I should quiet stand, and bow before him.
  
Ah! how disdainful he appeared to me!
  He reached the gate, and with a little rod  
  He opened it, for there was no resistance.
  
"O banished out of Heaven, people despised!"  
  Thus he began upon the horrid threshold;  
  "Whence is this arrogance within you couched?
  
Wherefore recalcitrate against that will,  
  From which the end can never be cut off,  
  And which has many times increased your pain?
  
What helpeth it to butt against the fates?
  Your Cerberus, if you remember well,  
  For that still bears his chin and gullet peeled."  
  
Then he returned along the miry road,  
  And spake no word to us, but had the look  
  Of one whom other care constrains and goads  
  
Than that of him who in his presence is;  
  And we our feet directed tow'rds the city,  
  After those holy words all confident.
  
Within we entered without any contest;  
  And I, who inclination had to see  
  What the condition such a fortress holds,  
  
Soon as I was within, cast round mine eye,  
  And see on every hand an ample plain,  
  Full of distress and torment terrible.
  
Even as at Arles, where stagnant