Project Gutenberg's The Vision of Paradise, Complete, by Dante Alighieri This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.net Title: The Vision of Paradise, Complete Author: Dante Alighieri Release Date: August 2, 2004 [EBook #8799] Last Updated: October 20, 2012 Language: English Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE VISION OF PARADISE, COMPLETE *** Produced by David Widger
Canto
1
Canto 2
Canto 3
Canto 4
Canto 5
Canto 6
Canto 7
Canto 8
Canto 9
Canto 10
Canto 11
Canto
12
Canto 13
Canto 14
Canto 15
Canto 16
Canto 17
Canto 18
Canto 19
Canto 20
Canto 21
Canto 22
Canto 23
Canto 24
Canto 25
Canto 26
Canto 27
Canto 28
Canto 29
Canto 30
Canto 31
Canto 32
Canto
33
His glory, by whose might all things are mov'd,
Pierces the universe,
and in one part
Sheds more resplendence, elsewhere less. In
heav'n,
That largeliest of his light partakes, was I,
Witness of things,
which to relate again
Surpasseth power of him who comes from thence;
For
that, so near approaching its desire
Our intellect is to such depth
absorb'd,
That memory cannot follow. Nathless all,
That in my
thoughts I of that sacred realm
Could store, shall now be matter of my
song.
Benign Apollo! this last labour
aid,
And make me such a vessel of thy worth,
As thy own laurel claims of
me belov'd.
Thus far hath one of steep Parnassus' brows
Suffic'd me;
henceforth there is need of both
For my remaining enterprise Do thou
Enter
into my bosom, and there breathe
So, as when Marsyas by thy hand was
dragg'd
Forth from his limbs unsheath'd. O power divine!
If thou to
me of shine impart so much,
That of that happy realm the shadow'd
form
Trac'd in my thoughts I may set forth to view,
Thou shalt behold me
of thy favour'd tree
Come to the foot, and crown myself with leaves;
For
to that honour thou, and my high theme
Will fit me. If but seldom,
mighty Sire!
To grace his triumph gathers thence a wreath
Caesar or bard
(more shame for human wills
Deprav'd) joy to the Delphic god must
spring
From the Pierian foliage, when one breast
Is with such thirst
inspir'd. From a small spark
Great flame hath risen: after me
perchance
Others with better voice may pray, and gain
From the Cirrhaean
city answer kind.
Through diver passages,
the world's bright lamp
Rises to mortals, but through that which
joins
Four circles with the threefold cross, in best
Course, and in
happiest constellation set
He comes, and to the worldly wax best gives
Its
temper and impression. Morning there,
Here eve was by almost such
passage made;
And whiteness had o'erspread that hemisphere,
Blackness the
other part; when to the left
I saw Beatrice turn'd, and on the sun
Gazing,
as never eagle fix'd his ken.
As from the first a second beam is wont
To
issue, and reflected upwards rise,
E'en as a pilgrim bent on his
return,
So of her act, that through the eyesight pass'd
Into my fancy,
mine was form'd; and straight,
Beyond our mortal wont, I fix'd mine
eyes
Upon the sun. Much is allowed us there,
That here exceeds our
pow'r; thanks to the place
Made for the dwelling of the human
kind
I suffer'd it not long, and yet so
long
That I beheld it bick'ring sparks around,
As iron that comes boiling
from the fire.
And suddenly upon the day appear'd
A day new-ris'n, as he,
who hath the power,
Had with another sun bedeck'd the
sky.
Her eyes fast fix'd on the eternal
wheels,
Beatrice stood unmov'd; and I with ken
Fix'd upon her, from upward
gaze remov'd
At her aspect, such inwardly became
As Glaucus, when he
tasted of the herb,
That made him peer among the ocean gods;
Words may not
tell of that transhuman change:
And therefore let the example serve, though
weak,
For those whom grace hath better proof in
store
If I were only what thou didst
create,
Then newly, Love! by whom the heav'n is rul'd,
Thou know'st, who
by thy light didst bear me up.
Whenas the wheel which thou dost ever
guide,
Desired Spirit! with its harmony
Temper'd of thee and measur'd,
charm'd mine ear,
Then seem'd to me so much of heav'n to blaze
With the
sun's flame, that rain or flood ne'er made
A lake so broad. The newness
of the sound,
And that great light, inflam'd me with desire,
Keener than
e'er was felt, to know their cause.
Whence
she who saw me, clearly as myself,
To calm my troubled mind, before I
ask'd,
Open'd her lips, and gracious thus began:
"With false imagination
thou thyself
Mak'st dull, so that thou seest not the thing,
Which thou
hadst seen, had that been shaken off.
Thou art not on the earth as thou
believ'st;
For light'ning scap'd from its own proper place
Ne'er ran, as
thou hast hither now return'd."
Although
divested of my first-rais'd doubt,
By those brief words, accompanied with
smiles,
Yet in new doubt was I entangled more,
And said: "Already
satisfied, I rest
From admiration deep, but now admire
How I above those
lighter bodies rise."
Whence, after
utt'rance of a piteous sigh,
She tow'rds me bent her eyes, with such a
look,
As on her frenzied child a mother casts;
Then thus began: "Among
themselves all things
Have order; and from hence the form, which makes
The
universe resemble God. In this
The higher creatures see the printed
steps
Of that eternal worth, which is the end
Whither the line is drawn.
All natures lean,
In this their order, diversely, some more,
Some
less approaching to their primal source.
Thus they to different havens are
mov'd on
Through the vast sea of being, and each one
With instinct giv'n,
that bears it in its course;
This to the lunar sphere directs the
fire,
This prompts the hearts of mortal animals,
This the brute earth
together knits, and binds.
Nor only creatures, void of intellect,
Are
aim'd at by this bow; but even those,
That have intelligence and love, are
pierc'd.
That Providence, who so well orders all,
With her own light makes
ever calm the heaven,
In which the substance, that hath greatest speed,
Is
turn'd: and thither now, as to our seat
Predestin'd, we are carried by the
force
Of that strong cord, that never looses dart,
But at fair aim and
glad. Yet is it true,
That as ofttimes but ill accords the form
To
the design of art, through sluggishness
Of unreplying matter, so this
course
Is sometimes quitted by the creature, who
Hath power, directed
thus, to bend elsewhere;
As from a cloud the fire is seen to fall,
From
its original impulse warp'd, to earth,
By vicious fondness. Thou no
more admire
Thy soaring, (if I rightly deem,) than lapse
Of torrent
downwards from a mountain's height.
There would in thee for wonder be more
cause,
If, free of hind'rance, thou hadst fix'd thyself
Below, like fire
unmoving on the earth."
So said, she turn'd
toward the heav'n her face.
All ye, who in small bark have following sail'd,
Eager to listen, on
the advent'rous track
Of my proud keel, that singing cuts its
way,
Backward return with speed, and your own shores
Revisit, nor put out
to open sea,
Where losing me, perchance ye may remain
Bewilder'd in deep
maze. The way I pass
Ne'er yet was run: Minerva breathes the
gale,
Apollo guides me, and another Nine
To my rapt sight the arctic beams
reveal.
Ye other few, who have outstretch'd the neck.
Timely for food of
angels, on which here
They live, yet never know satiety,
Through the deep
brine ye fearless may put out
Your vessel, marking, well the furrow
broad
Before you in the wave, that on both sides
Equal returns.
Those, glorious, who pass'd o'er
To Colchos, wonder'd not as ye will
do,
When they saw Jason following the
plough.
The increate perpetual thirst, that
draws
Toward the realm of God's own form, bore us
Swift almost as the
heaven ye behold.
Beatrice upward gaz'd,
and I on her,
And in such space as on the notch a dart
Is plac'd, then
loosen'd flies, I saw myself
Arriv'd, where wond'rous thing engag'd my
sight.
Whence she, to whom no work of mine was hid,
Turning to me, with
aspect glad as fair,
Bespake me: "Gratefully direct thy mind
To God,
through whom to this first star we
come."
Me seem'd as if a cloud had cover'd
us,
Translucent, solid, firm, and polish'd bright,
Like adamant, which the
sun's beam had smit
Within itself the ever-during pearl
Receiv'd us, as
the wave a ray of light
Receives, and rests unbroken. If I then
Was
of corporeal frame, and it transcend
Our weaker thought, how one dimension
thus
Another could endure, which needs must be
If body enter body, how
much more
Must the desire inflame us to behold
That essence, which
discovers by what means
God and our nature join'd! There will be
seen
That which we hold through faith, not shown by proof,
But in itself
intelligibly plain,
E'en as the truth that man at first
believes.
I answered: "Lady! I with
thoughts devout,
Such as I best can frame, give thanks to Him,
Who hath
remov'd me from the mortal world.
But tell, I pray thee, whence the gloomy
spots
Upon this body, which below on earth
Give rise to talk of Cain in
fabling quaint?"
She somewhat smil'd, then
spake: "If mortals err
In their opinion, when the key of sense
Unlocks
not, surely wonder's weapon keen
Ought not to pierce thee; since thou
find'st, the wings
Of reason to pursue the senses' flight
Are short.
But what thy own thought is,
declare."
Then I: "What various here above
appears,
Is caus'd, I deem, by bodies dense or
rare."
She then resum'd: "Thou certainly
wilt see
In falsehood thy belief o'erwhelm'd, if well
Thou listen to the
arguments, which I
Shall bring to face it. The eighth sphere
displays
Numberless lights, the which in kind and size
May be remark'd of
different aspects;
If rare or dense of that were cause alone,
One single
virtue then would be in all,
Alike distributed, or more, or
less.
Different virtues needs must be the fruits
Of formal principles, and
these, save one,
Will by thy reasoning be destroy'd. Beside,
If
rarity were of that dusk the cause,
Which thou inquirest, either in some
part
That planet must throughout be void, nor fed
With its own matter; or,
as bodies share
Their fat and leanness, in like manner this
Must in its
volume change the leaves. The first,
If it were true, had through the
sun's eclipse
Been manifested, by transparency
Of light, as through aught
rare beside effus'd.
But this is not. Therefore remains to see
The
other cause: and if the other fall,
Erroneous so must prove what seem'd to
thee.
If not from side to side this rarity
Pass through, there needs must
be a limit, whence
Its contrary no further lets it pass.
And hence the
beam, that from without proceeds,
Must be pour'd back, as colour comes,
through glass
Reflected, which behind it lead conceals.
Now wilt thou say,
that there of murkier hue
Than in the other part the ray is shown,
By
being thence refracted farther back.
From this perplexity will free thee
soon
Experience, if thereof thou trial make,
The fountain whence your arts
derive their streame.
Three mirrors shalt thou take, and two remove
From
thee alike, and more remote the third.
Betwixt the former pair, shall meet
thine eyes;
Then turn'd toward them, cause behind thy back
A light to
stand, that on the three shall shine,
And thus reflected come to thee from
all.
Though that beheld most distant do not stretch
A space so ample, yet
in brightness thou
Will own it equaling the rest. But now,
As under
snow the ground, if the warm ray
Smites it, remains dismantled of the
hue
And cold, that cover'd it before, so thee,
Dismantled in thy mind, I
will inform
With light so lively, that the tremulous beam
Shall quiver
where it falls. Within the heaven,
Where peace divine inhabits, circles
round
A body, in whose virtue dies the being
Of all that it contains.
The following heaven,
That hath so many lights, this being
divides,
Through different essences, from it distinct,
And yet
contain'd within it. The other orbs
Their separate distinctions
variously
Dispose, for their own seed and produce apt.
Thus do these
organs of the world proceed,
As thou beholdest now, from step to
step,
Their influences from above deriving,
And thence transmitting
downwards. Mark me well,
How through this passage to the truth I
ford,
The truth thou lov'st, that thou henceforth alone,
May'st know to
keep the shallows, safe, untold.
"The
virtue and motion of the sacred orbs,
As mallet by the workman's hand, must
needs
By blessed movers be inspir'd. This heaven,
Made beauteous by
so many luminaries,
From the deep spirit, that moves its circling
sphere,
Its image takes an impress as a seal:
And as the soul, that dwells
within your dust,
Through members different, yet together form'd,
In
different pow'rs resolves itself; e'en so
The intellectual efficacy
unfolds
Its goodness multiplied throughout the stars;
On its own unity
revolving still.
Different virtue compact different
Makes with the
precious body it enlivens,
With which it knits, as life in you is
knit.
From its original nature full of joy,
The virtue mingled through the
body shines,
As joy through pupil of the living eye.
From hence proceeds,
that which from light to light
Seems different, and not from dense or
rare.
This is the formal cause, that generates
Proportion'd to its power,
the dusk or clear."
That sun, which erst with love my bosom warm'd
Had of fair truth
unveil'd the sweet aspect,
By proof of right, and of the false
reproof;
And I, to own myself convinc'd and free
Of doubt, as much as
needed, rais'd my head
Erect for speech. But soon a sight
appear'd,
Which, so intent to mark it, held me fix'd,
That of confession I
no longer thought.
ENLARGE TO
FULL SIZE
As through translucent and
smooth glass, or wave
Clear and unmov'd, and flowing not so deep
As that
its bed is dark, the shape returns
So faint of our impictur'd
lineaments,
That on white forehead set a pearl as strong
Comes to the eye:
such saw I many a face,
All stretch'd to speak, from whence I straight
conceiv'd
Delusion opposite to that, which rais'd
Between the man and
fountain, amorous flame.
Sudden, as I
perceiv'd them, deeming these
Reflected semblances to see of whom
They
were, I turn'd mine eyes, and nothing saw;
Then turn'd them back, directed on
the light
Of my sweet guide, who smiling shot forth beams
From her
celestial eyes. "Wonder not thou,"
She cry'd, "at this my smiling, when
I see
Thy childish judgment; since not yet on truth
It rests the foot,
but, as it still is wont,
Makes thee fall back in unsound vacancy.
True
substances are these, which thou behold'st,
Hither through failure of their
vow exil'd.
But speak thou with them; listen, and believe,
That the true
light, which fills them with desire,
Permits not from its beams their feet to
stray."
Straight to the shadow which for
converse seem'd
Most earnest, I addressed me, and began,
As one by
over-eagerness perplex'd:
"O spirit, born for joy! who in the rays
Of life
eternal, of that sweetness know'st
The flavour, which, not tasted, passes
far
All apprehension, me it well would please,
If thou wouldst tell me of
thy name, and this
Your station here." Whence she, with kindness
prompt,
And eyes glist'ning with smiles: "Our charity,
To any wish by
justice introduc'd,
Bars not the door, no more than she above,
Who would
have all her court be like herself.
I was a virgin sister in the
earth;
And if thy mind observe me well, this form,
With such addition
grac'd of loveliness,
Will not conceal me long, but thou wilt
know
Piccarda, in the tardiest sphere thus plac'd,
Here 'mid these other
blessed also blest.
Our hearts, whose high affections burn alone
With
pleasure, from the Holy Spirit conceiv'd,
Admitted to his order dwell in
joy.
And this condition, which appears so low,
Is for this cause assign'd
us, that our vows
Were in some part neglected and made
void."
Whence I to her replied: "Something
divine
Beams in your countenance, wond'rous fair,
From former knowledge
quite transmuting you.
Therefore to recollect was I so slow.
But what thou
sayst hath to my memory
Given now such aid, that to retrace your forms
Is
easier. Yet inform me, ye, who here
Are happy, long ye for a higher
place
More to behold, and more in love to
dwell?"
She with those other spirits gently
smil'd,
Then answer'd with such gladness, that she seem'd
With love's
first flame to glow: "Brother! our will
Is in composure settled by the
power
Of charity, who makes us will alone
What we possess, and nought
beyond desire;
If we should wish to be exalted more,
Then must our wishes
jar with the high will
Of him, who sets us here, which in these orbs
Thou
wilt confess not possible, if here
To be in charity must needs befall,
And
if her nature well thou contemplate.
Rather it is inherent in this
state
Of blessedness, to keep ourselves within
The divine will, by which
our wills with his
Are one. So that as we from step to step
Are
plac'd throughout this kingdom, pleases all,
E'en as our King, who in us
plants his will;
And in his will is our tranquillity;
It is the mighty
ocean, whither tends
Whatever it creates and nature
makes."
Then saw I clearly how each spot in
heav'n
Is Paradise, though with like gracious dew
The supreme virtue
show'r not over all.
But as it chances, if
one sort of food
Hath satiated, and of another still
The appetite remains,
that this is ask'd,
And thanks for that return'd; e'en so did I
In word
and motion, bent from her to learn
What web it was, through which she had not
drawn
The shuttle to its point. She thus began:
"Exalted worth and
perfectness of life
The Lady higher up enshrine in heaven,
By whose pure
laws upon your nether earth
The robe and veil they wear, to that
intent,
That e'en till death they may keep watch or sleep
With their great
bridegroom, who accepts each vow,
Which to his gracious pleasure love
conforms.
from the world, to follow her, when young
Escap'd; and, in her
vesture mantling me,
Made promise of the way her sect enjoins.
Thereafter
men, for ill than good more apt,
Forth snatch'd me from the pleasant
cloister's pale.
God knows how after that my life was fram'd.
This other
splendid shape, which thou beholdst
At my right side, burning with all the
light
Of this our orb, what of myself I tell
May to herself apply.
From her, like me
A sister, with like violence were torn
The saintly
folds, that shaded her fair brows.
E'en when she to the world again was
brought
In spite of her own will and better wont,
Yet not for that the
bosom's inward veil
Did she renounce. This is the luminary
Of mighty
Constance, who from that loud blast,
Which blew the second over Suabia's
realm,
That power produc'd, which was the third and
last."
She ceas'd from further talk, and
then began
"Ave Maria" singing, and with that song
Vanish'd, as heavy
substance through deep wave.
Mine eye, that
far as it was capable,
Pursued her, when in dimness she was lost,
Turn'd
to the mark where greater want impell'd,
And bent on Beatrice all its
gaze.
But she as light'ning beam'd upon my looks:
So that the sight
sustain'd it not at first.
Whence I to question her became less prompt.
Between two kinds of food, both equally
Remote and tempting, first a
man might die
Of hunger, ere he one could freely choose.
E'en so would
stand a lamb between the maw
Of two fierce wolves, in dread of both
alike:
E'en so between two deer a dog would stand,
Wherefore, if I was
silent, fault nor praise
I to myself impute, by equal doubts
Held in
suspense, since of necessity
It happen'd. Silent was I, yet
desire
Was painted in my looks; and thus I spake
My wish more earnestly
than language could.
As Daniel, when the
haughty king he freed
From ire, that spurr'd him on to deeds unjust
And
violent; so look'd Beatrice then.
"Well I
discern," she thus her words address'd,
"How contrary desires each way
constrain thee,
So that thy anxious thought is in itself
Bound up and
stifled, nor breathes freely forth.
Thou arguest; if the good intent
remain;
What reason that another's violence
Should stint the measure of my
fair desert?
"Cause too thou findst for
doubt, in that it seems,
That spirits to the stars, as Plato
deem'd,
Return. These are the questions which thy will
Urge equally;
and therefore I the first
Of that will treat which hath the more of
gall.
Of seraphim he who is most ensky'd,
Moses and Samuel, and either
John,
Choose which thou wilt, nor even Mary's self,
Have not in any other
heav'n their seats,
Than have those spirits which so late thou saw'st;
Nor
more or fewer years exist; but all
Make the first circle beauteous,
diversely
Partaking of sweet life, as more or less
Afflation of eternal
bliss pervades them.
Here were they shown thee, not that fate assigns
This
for their sphere, but for a sign to thee
Of that celestial furthest from the
height.
Thus needs, that ye may apprehend, we speak:
Since from things
sensible alone ye learn
That, which digested rightly after turns
To
intellectual. For no other cause
The scripture, condescending
graciously
To your perception, hands and feet to God
Attributes, nor so
means: and holy church
Doth represent with human countenance
Gabriel, and
Michael, and him who made
Tobias whole. Unlike what here thou
seest,
The judgment of Timaeus, who affirms
Each soul restor'd to its
particular star,
Believing it to have been taken thence,
When nature gave
it to inform her mold:
Since to appearance his intention is
E'en what his
words declare: or else to shun
Derision, haply thus he hath disguis'd
His
true opinion. If his meaning be,
That to the influencing of these orbs
revert
The honour and the blame in human acts,
Perchance he doth not
wholly miss the truth.
This principle, not understood aright,
Erewhile
perverted well nigh all the world;
So that it fell to fabled names of
Jove,
And Mercury, and Mars. That other doubt,
Which moves thee, is
less harmful; for it brings
No peril of removing thee from
me.
"That, to the eye of man, our justice
seems
Unjust, is argument for faith, and not
For heretic declension.
To the end
This truth may stand more clearly in your view,
I will
content thee even to thy wish
"If violence
be, when that which suffers, nought
Consents to that which forceth, not for
this
These spirits stood exculpate. For the will,
That will not,
still survives unquench'd, and doth
As nature doth in fire, tho'
violence
Wrest it a thousand times; for, if it yield
Or more or less, so
far it follows force.
And thus did these, whom they had power to seek
The
hallow'd place again. In them, had will
Been perfect, such as once upon
the bars
Held Laurence firm, or wrought in Scaevola
To his own hand
remorseless, to the path,
Whence they were drawn, their steps had hasten'd
back,
When liberty return'd: but in too few
Resolve so steadfast dwells.
And by these words
If duly weigh'd, that argument is void,
Which oft
might have perplex'd thee still. But now
Another question thwarts thee,
which to solve
Might try thy patience without better aid.
I have, no
doubt, instill'd into thy mind,
That blessed spirit may not lie; since
near
The source of primal truth it dwells for aye:
And thou might'st after
of Piccarda learn
That Constance held affection to the veil;
So that she
seems to contradict me here.
Not seldom, brother, it hath chanc'd for
men
To do what they had gladly left undone,
Yet to shun peril they have
done amiss:
E'en as Alcmaeon, at his father's suit
Slew his own mother, so
made pitiless
Not to lose pity. On this point bethink thee,
That
force and will are blended in such wise
As not to make the' offence
excusable.
Absolute will agrees not to the wrong,
That inasmuch as there
is fear of woe
From non-compliance, it agrees. Of will
Thus absolute
Piccarda spake, and I
Of th' other; so that both have truly
said."
Such was the flow of that pure rill,
that well'd
From forth the fountain of all truth; and such
The rest, that
to my wond'ring thoughts I found.
"O
thou of primal love the prime delight!
Goddess!" I straight reply'd,
"whose lively words
Still shed new heat and vigour through my
soul!
Affection fails me to requite thy grace
With equal sum of gratitude:
be his
To recompense, who sees and can reward thee.
Well I discern, that
by that truth alone
Enlighten'd, beyond which no truth may roam,
Our mind
can satisfy her thirst to know:
Therein she resteth, e'en as in his
lair
The wild beast, soon as she hath reach'd that bound,
And she hath
power to reach it; else desire
Were given to no end. And thence doth
doubt
Spring, like a shoot, around the stock of truth;
And it is nature
which from height to height
On to the summit prompts us. This
invites,
This doth assure me, lady, rev'rently
To ask thee of other truth,
that yet
Is dark to me. I fain would know, if man
By other works
well done may so supply
The failure of his vows, that in your scale
They
lack not weight." I spake; and on me straight
Beatrice look'd with eyes
that shot forth sparks
Of love celestial in such copious stream,
That,
virtue sinking in me overpower'd,
I turn'd, and downward bent confus'd my
sight.
"If beyond earthly wont, the flame of love
Illume me, so that I
o'ercome thy power
Of vision, marvel not: but learn the cause
In that
perfection of the sight, which soon
As apprehending, hasteneth on to
reach
The good it apprehends. I well discern,
How in thine intellect
already shines
The light eternal, which to view alone
Ne'er fails to
kindle love; and if aught else
Your love seduces, 't is but that it
shows
Some ill-mark'd vestige of that primal
beam.
"This would'st thou know, if failure
of the vow
By other service may be so supplied,
As from self-question to
assure the soul."
Thus she her words, not
heedless of my wish,
Began; and thus, as one who breaks not off
Discourse,
continued in her saintly strain.
"Supreme of gifts, which God creating
gave
Of his free bounty, sign most evident
Of goodness, and in his account
most priz'd,
Was liberty of will, the boon wherewith
All intellectual
creatures, and them sole
He hath endow'd. Hence now thou mayst
infer
Of what high worth the vow, which so is fram'd
That when man offers,
God well-pleas'd accepts;
For in the compact between God and him,
This
treasure, such as I describe it to thee,
He makes the victim, and of his own
act.
What compensation therefore may he find?
If that, whereof thou hast
oblation made,
By using well thou think'st to consecrate,
Thou would'st of
theft do charitable deed.
Thus I resolve thee of the greater
point.
"But forasmuch as holy church,
herein
Dispensing, seems to contradict the truth
I have discover'd to
thee, yet behooves
Thou rest a little longer at the board,
Ere the crude
aliment, which thou hast taken,
Digested fitly to nutrition turn.
Open thy
mind to what I now unfold,
And give it inward keeping. Knowledge
comes
Of learning well retain'd, unfruitful
else.
"This sacrifice in essence of two
things
Consisteth; one is that, whereof 't is made,
The covenant the
other. For the last,
It ne'er is cancell'd if not kept: and hence
I
spake erewhile so strictly of its force.
For this it was enjoin'd the
Israelites,
Though leave were giv'n them, as thou know'st, to change
The
offering, still to offer. Th' other part,
The matter and the substance
of the vow,
May well be such, to that without offence
It may for other
substance be exchang'd.
But at his own discretion none may shift
The
burden on his shoulders, unreleas'd
By either key, the yellow and the
white.
Nor deem of any change, as less than vain,
If the last bond be not
within the new
Included, as the quatre in the six.
No satisfaction
therefore can be paid
For what so precious in the balance weighs,
That all
in counterpoise must kick the beam.
Take then no vow at random: ta'en, with
faith
Preserve it; yet not bent, as Jephthah once,
Blindly to execute a
rash resolve,
Whom better it had suited to exclaim,
'I have done ill,'
than to redeem his pledge
By doing worse or, not unlike to him
In folly,
that great leader of the Greeks:
Whence, on the alter, Iphigenia
mourn'd
Her virgin beauty, and hath since made mourn
Both wise and simple,
even all, who hear
Of so fell sacrifice. Be ye more staid,
O
Christians, not, like feather, by each wind
Removable: nor think to cleanse
ourselves
In every water. Either testament,
The old and new, is
yours: and for your guide
The shepherd of the church let this suffice
To
save you. When by evil lust entic'd,
Remember ye be men, not senseless
beasts;
Nor let the Jew, who dwelleth in your streets,
Hold you in
mock'ry. Be not, as the lamb,
That, fickle wanton, leaves its mother's
milk,
To dally with itself in idle
play."
Such were the words that Beatrice
spake:
These ended, to that region, where the world
Is liveliest, full of
fond desire she turn'd.
Though mainly
prompt new question to propose,
Her silence and chang'd look did keep me
dumb.
And as the arrow, ere the cord is still,
Leapeth unto its mark; so
on we sped
Into the second realm. There I beheld
The dame, so joyous
enter, that the orb
Grew brighter at her smiles; and, if the star
Were
mov'd to gladness, what then was my cheer,
Whom nature hath made apt for
every change!
ENLARGE TO
FULL SIZE
As in a quiet and clear
lake the fish,
If aught approach them from without, do draw
Towards it,
deeming it their food; so drew
Full more than thousand splendours towards
us,
And in each one was heard: "Lo! one arriv'd
To multiply our loves!"
and as each came
The shadow, streaming forth effulgence new,
Witness'd
augmented joy. Here, reader! think,
If thou didst miss the sequel of my
tale,
To know the rest how sorely thou wouldst crave;
And thou shalt see
what vehement desire
Possess'd me, as soon as these had met my view,
To
know their state. "O born in happy hour!
Thou to whom grace vouchsafes,
or ere thy close
Of fleshly warfare, to behold the thrones
Of that eternal
triumph, know to us
The light communicated, which through
heaven
Expatiates without bound. Therefore, if aught
Thou of our
beams wouldst borrow for thine aid,
Spare not; and of our radiance take thy
fill."
Thus of those piteous spirits one
bespake me;
And Beatrice next: "Say on; and trust
As unto gods!"—"How in
the light supreme
Thou harbour'st, and from thence the virtue
bring'st,
That, sparkling in thine eyes, denotes thy joy,
l mark; but, who
thou art, am still to seek;
Or wherefore, worthy spirit! for thy lot
This
sphere assign'd, that oft from mortal ken
Is veil'd by others' beams."
I said, and turn'd
Toward the lustre, that with greeting,
kind
Erewhile had hail'd me. Forthwith brighter far
Than erst, it
wax'd: and, as himself the sun
Hides through excess of light, when his warm
gaze
Hath on the mantle of thick vapours prey'd;
Within its proper ray the
saintly shape
Was, through increase of gladness, thus conceal'd;
And,
shrouded so in splendour answer'd me,
E'en as the tenour of my song declares.
"After that Constantine the eagle turn'd
Against the motions of the
heav'n, that roll'd
Consenting with its course, when he of yore,
Lavinia's
spouse, was leader of the flight,
A hundred years twice told and more, his
seat
At Europe's extreme point, the bird of Jove
Held, near the mountains,
whence he issued first.
There, under shadow of his sacred plumes
Swaying
the world, till through successive hands
To mine he came devolv'd.
Caesar I was,
And am Justinian; destin'd by the will
Of that prime
love, whose influence I feel,
From vain excess to clear th' encumber'd
laws.
Or ere that work engag'd me, I did hold
Christ's nature merely
human, with such faith
Contented. But the blessed Agapete,
Who was
chief shepherd, he with warning voice
To the true faith recall'd me. I
believ'd
His words: and what he taught, now plainly see,
As thou in every
contradiction seest
The true and false oppos'd. Soon as my feet
Were
to the church reclaim'd, to my great task,
By inspiration of God's grace
impell'd,
I gave me wholly, and consign'd mine arms
To Belisarius, with
whom heaven's right hand
Was link'd in such conjointment, 't was a
sign
That I should rest. To thy first question thus
I shape mine
answer, which were ended here,
But that its tendency doth prompt
perforce
To some addition; that thou well, mayst mark
What reason on each
side they have to plead,
By whom that holiest banner is withstood,
Both
who pretend its power and who oppose.
"Beginning from
that hour, when Pallas died
To give it rule, behold the valorous
deeds
Have made it worthy reverence. Not unknown
To thee, how for
three hundred years and more
It dwelt in Alba, up to those fell
lists
Where for its sake were met the rival three;
Nor aught unknown to
thee, which it achiev'd
Down to the Sabines' wrong to Lucrece' woe,
With
its sev'n kings conqu'ring the nation round;
Nor all it wrought, by Roman
worthies home
'Gainst Brennus and th' Epirot prince, and hosts
Of single
chiefs, or states in league combin'd
Of social warfare; hence Torquatus
stern,
And Quintius nam'd of his neglected locks,
The Decii, and the Fabii
hence acquir'd
Their fame, which I with duteous zeal embalm.
By it the
pride of Arab hordes was quell'd,
When they led on by Hannibal
o'erpass'd
The Alpine rocks, whence glide thy currents, Po!
Beneath its
guidance, in their prime of days
Scipio and Pompey triumph'd; and that
hill,
Under whose summit thou didst see the light,
Rued its stern bearing.
After, near the hour,
When heav'n was minded that o'er all the
world
His own deep calm should brood, to Caesar's hand
Did Rome consign
it; and what then it wrought
From Var unto the Rhine, saw Isere's
flood,
Saw Loire and Seine, and every vale, that fills
The torrent Rhone.
What after that it wrought,
When from Ravenna it came forth, and
leap'd
The Rubicon, was of so bold a flight,
That tongue nor pen may
follow it. Tow'rds Spain
It wheel'd its bands, then tow'rd Dyrrachium
smote,
And on Pharsalia with so fierce a plunge,
E'en the warm Nile was
conscious to the pang;
Its native shores Antandros, and the streams
Of
Simois revisited, and there
Where Hector lies; then ill for Ptolemy
His
pennons shook again; lightning thence fell
On Juba; and the next upon your
west,
At sound of the Pompeian trump,
return'd.
"What following and in its next
bearer's gripe
It wrought, is now by Cassius and Brutus
Bark'd off in
hell, and by Perugia's sons
And Modena's was mourn'd. Hence weepeth
still
Sad Cleopatra, who, pursued by it,
Took from the adder black and
sudden death.
With him it ran e'en to the Red Sea coast;
With him compos'd
the world to such a peace,
That of his temple Janus barr'd the
door.
"But all the mighty standard yet had
wrought,
And was appointed to perform thereafter,
Throughout the mortal
kingdom which it sway'd,
Falls in appearance dwindled and obscur'd,
If one
with steady eye and perfect thought
On the third Caesar look; for to his
hands,
The living Justice, in whose breath I move,
Committed glory, e'en
into his hands,
To execute the vengeance of its
wrath.
"Hear now and wonder at what next I
tell.
After with Titus it was sent to wreak
Vengeance for vengeance of the
ancient sin,
And, when the Lombard tooth, with fangs impure,
Did gore the
bosom of the holy church,
Under its wings victorious, Charlemagne
Sped to
her rescue. Judge then for thyself
Of those, whom I erewhile accus'd to
thee,
What they are, and how grievous their offending,
Who are the cause
of all your ills. The one
Against the universal ensign rears
The
yellow lilies, and with partial aim
That to himself the other
arrogates:
So that 't is hard to see which more offends.
Be yours, ye
Ghibellines, to veil your arts
Beneath another standard: ill is
this
Follow'd of him, who severs it and justice:
And let not with his
Guelphs the new-crown'd Charles
Assail it, but those talons hold in
dread,
Which from a lion of more lofty port
Have rent the easing.
Many a time ere now
The sons have for the sire's transgression
wail'd;
Nor let him trust the fond belief, that heav'n
Will truck its
armour for his lilied shield.
"This little
star is furnish'd with good spirits,
Whose mortal lives were busied to that
end,
That honour and renown might wait on them:
And, when desires thus err
in their intention,
True love must needs ascend with slacker beam.
But it
is part of our delight, to measure
Our wages with the merit; and
admire
The close proportion. Hence doth heav'nly justice
Temper so
evenly affection in us,
It ne'er can warp to any wrongfulness.
Of diverse
voices is sweet music made:
So in our life the different degrees
Render
sweet harmony among these wheels.
"Within
the pearl, that now encloseth us,
Shines Romeo's light, whose goodly deed and
fair
Met ill acceptance. But the Provencals,
That were his foes,
have little cause for mirth.
Ill shapes that man his course, who makes his
wrong
Of other's worth. Four daughters were there born
To Raymond
Berenger, and every one
Became a queen; and this for him did Romeo,
Though
of mean state and from a foreign land.
Yet envious tongues incited him to
ask
A reckoning of that just one, who return'd
Twelve fold to him for ten.
Aged and poor
He parted thence: and if the world did know
The heart
he had, begging his life by morsels,
'T would deem the praise, it yields him,
scantly dealt."
"Hosanna Sanctus Deus Sabaoth
Superillustrans claritate tua
Felices
ignes horum malahoth!"
Thus chanting saw I turn that substance bright
With
fourfold lustre to its orb again,
Revolving; and the rest unto their
dance
With it mov'd also; and like swiftest sparks,
In sudden distance
from my sight were veil'd.
Me doubt
possess'd, and "Speak," it whisper'd me,
"Speak, speak unto thy lady, that
she quench
Thy thirst with drops of sweetness." Yet blank awe,
Which
lords it o'er me, even at the sound
Of Beatrice's name, did bow me down
As
one in slumber held. Not long that mood
Beatrice suffer'd: she, with
such a smile,
As might have made one blest amid the flames,
Beaming upon
me, thus her words began:
"Thou in thy thought art pond'ring (as I
deem),
And what I deem is truth how just revenge
Could be with justice
punish'd: from which doubt
I soon will free thee; so thou mark my
words;
For they of weighty matter shall possess
thee.
"That man, who was unborn, himself
condemn'd,
And, in himself, all, who since him have liv'd,
His offspring:
whence, below, the human kind
Lay sick in grievous error many an
age;
Until it pleas'd the Word of God to come
Amongst them down, to his
own person joining
The nature, from its Maker far estrang'd,
By the mere
act of his eternal love.
Contemplate here the wonder I unfold.
The nature
with its Maker thus conjoin'd,
Created first was blameless, pure and
good;
But through itself alone was driven forth
From Paradise, because it
had eschew'd
The way of truth and life, to evil turn'd.
Ne'er then was
penalty so just as that
Inflicted by the cross, if thou regard
The nature
in assumption doom'd: ne'er wrong
So great, in reference to him, who
took
Such nature on him, and endur'd the doom.
God therefore and the Jews
one sentence pleased:
So different effects flow'd from one act,
And heav'n
was open'd, though the earth did quake.
Count it not hard henceforth, when
thou dost hear
That a just vengeance was by righteous court
Justly
reveng'd. But yet I see thy mind
By thought on thought arising sore
perplex'd,
And with how vehement desire it asks
Solution of the maze.
What I have heard,
Is plain, thou sayst: but wherefore God this
way
For our redemption chose, eludes my
search.
"Brother! no eye of man not
perfected,
Nor fully ripen'd in the flame of love,
May fathom this decree.
It is a mark,
In sooth, much aim'd at, and but little kenn'd:
And I
will therefore show thee why such way
Was worthiest. The celestial
love, that spume
All envying in its bounty, in itself
With such effulgence
blazeth, as sends forth
All beauteous things eternal. What
distils
Immediate thence, no end of being knows,
Bearing its seal
immutably impress'd.
Whatever thence immediate falls, is free,
Free
wholly, uncontrollable by power
Of each thing new: by such conformity
More
grateful to its author, whose bright beams,
Though all partake their shining,
yet in those
Are liveliest, which resemble him the most.
These tokens of
pre-eminence on man
Largely bestow'd, if any of them fail,
He needs must
forfeit his nobility,
No longer stainless. Sin alone is that,
Which
doth disfranchise him, and make unlike
To the chief good; for that its light
in him
Is darken'd. And to dignity thus lost
Is no return; unless,
where guilt makes void,
He for ill pleasure pay with equal pain.
Your
nature, which entirely in its seed
Trangress'd, from these distinctions fell,
no less
Than from its state in Paradise; nor means
Found of recovery
(search all methods out
As strickly as thou may) save one of these,
The
only fords were left through which to wade,
Either that God had of his
courtesy
Releas'd him merely, or else man himself
For his own folly by
himself aton'd.
"Fix now thine eye,
intently as thou canst,
On th' everlasting counsel, and
explore,
Instructed by my words, the dread
abyss.
"Man in himself had ever lack'd the
means
Of satisfaction, for he could not stoop
Obeying, in humility so
low,
As high he, disobeying, thought to soar:
And for this reason he had
vainly tried
Out of his own sufficiency to pay
The rigid satisfaction.
Then behooved
That God should by his own ways lead him back
Unto the
life, from whence he fell, restor'd:
By both his ways, I mean, or one
alone.
But since the deed is ever priz'd the more,
The more the doer's
good intent appears,
Goodness celestial, whose broad signature
Is on the
universe, of all its ways
To raise ye up, was fain to leave out none,
Nor
aught so vast or so magnificent,
Either for him who gave or who
receiv'd
Between the last night and the primal day,
Was or can be.
For God more bounty show'd.
Giving himself to make man capable
Of
his return to life, than had the terms
Been mere and unconditional
release.
And for his justice, every method else
Were all too scant, had
not the Son of God
Humbled himself to put on mortal
flesh.
"Now, to fulfil each wish of thine,
remains
I somewhat further to thy view unfold.
That thou mayst see as
clearly as myself.
"I see, thou sayst, the
air, the fire I see,
The earth and water, and all things of
them
Compounded, to corruption turn, and soon
Dissolve. Yet these
were also things create,
Because, if what were told me, had been true
They
from corruption had been therefore
free.
"The angels, O my brother! and this
clime
Wherein thou art, impassible and pure,
I call created, as indeed
they are
In their whole being. But the elements,
Which thou hast
nam'd, and what of them is made,
Are by created virtue' inform'd:
create
Their substance, and create the' informing virtue
In these bright
stars, that round them circling move
The soul of every brute and of each
plant,
The ray and motion of the sacred lights,
With complex potency
attract and turn.
But this our life the' eternal good inspires
Immediate,
and enamours of itself;
So that our wishes rest for ever
here.
"And hence thou mayst by inference
conclude
Our resurrection certain, if thy mind
Consider how the human
flesh was fram'd,
When both our parents at the first were made."
The world was in its day of peril dark
Wont to believe the dotage of
fond love
From the fair Cyprian deity, who rolls
In her third epicycle,
shed on men
By stream of potent radiance: therefore they
Of elder time, in
their old error blind,
Not her alone with sacrifice ador'd
And invocation,
but like honours paid
To Cupid and Dione, deem'd of them
Her mother, and
her son, him whom they feign'd
To sit in Dido's bosom: and from her,
Whom
I have sung preluding, borrow'd they
The appellation of that star, which
views,
Now obvious and now averse, the
sun.
I was not ware that I was wafted
up
Into its orb; but the new loveliness
That grac'd my lady, gave me
ample proof
That we had entered there. And as in flame
A sparkle is
distinct, or voice in voice
Discern'd, when one its even tenour keeps,
The
other comes and goes; so in that light
I other luminaries saw, that
cours'd
In circling motion rapid more or less,
As their eternal phases
each impels.
Never was blast from vapour
charged with cold,
Whether invisible to eye or no,
Descended with such
speed, it had not seem'd
To linger in dull tardiness, compar'd
To those
celestial lights, that tow'rds us came,
Leaving the circuit of their joyous
ring,
Conducted by the lofty seraphim.
And after them, who in the van
appear'd,
Such an hosanna sounded, as hath left
Desire, ne'er since
extinct in me, to hear
Renew'd the strain. Then parting from the
rest
One near us drew, and sole began: "We all
Are ready at thy pleasure,
well dispos'd
To do thee gentle service. We are they,
To whom thou
in the world erewhile didst Sing
'O ye! whose intellectual ministry
Moves
the third heaven!' and in one orb we roll,
One motion, one impulse, with
those who rule
Princedoms in heaven; yet are of love so full,
That to
please thee 't will be as sweet to
rest."
After mine eyes had with meek
reverence
Sought the celestial guide, and were by her
Assur'd, they turn'd
again unto the light
Who had so largely promis'd, and with voice
That bare
the lively pressure of my zeal,
"Tell who ye are," I cried. Forthwith
it grew
In size and splendour, through augmented joy;
And thus it
answer'd: "A short date below
The world possess'd me. Had the time been
more,
Much evil, that will come, had never chanc'd.
My gladness hides thee
from me, which doth shine
Around, and shroud me, as an animal
In its own
silk unswath'd. Thou lov'dst me well,
And had'st good cause; for had my
sojourning
Been longer on the earth, the love I bare thee
Had put forth
more than blossoms. The left bank,
That Rhone, when he hath mix'd with
Sorga, laves."
ENLARGE TO
FULL SIZE
"In me its lord expected, and that horn
Of fair Ausonia,
with its boroughs old,
Bari, and Croton, and Gaeta pil'd,
From where the
Trento disembogues his waves,
With Verde mingled, to the salt
sea-flood.
Already on my temples beam'd the crown,
Which gave me
sov'reignty over the land
By Danube wash'd, whenas he strays beyond
The
limits of his German shores. The realm,
Where, on the gulf by stormy
Eurus lash'd,
Betwixt Pelorus and Pachynian heights,
The beautiful
Trinacria lies in gloom
(Not through Typhaeus, but the vap'ry
cloud
Bituminous upsteam'd), THAT too did look
To have its scepter wielded
by a race
Of monarchs, sprung through me from Charles and Rodolph;
had not
ill lording which doth spirit up
The people ever, in Palermo rais'd
The
shout of 'death,' re-echo'd loud and long.
Had but my brother's foresight
kenn'd as much,
He had been warier that the greedy want
Of Catalonia might
not work his bale.
And truly need there is, that he forecast,
Or other for
him, lest more freight be laid
On his already over-laden bark.
Nature in
him, from bounty fall'n to thrift,
Would ask the guard of braver arms,
than such
As only care to have their coffers
fill'd."
"My liege, it doth enhance the joy
thy words
Infuse into me, mighty as it is,
To think my gladness manifest
to thee,
As to myself, who own it, when thou lookst
Into the source and
limit of all good,
There, where thou markest that which thou dost
speak,
Thence priz'd of me the more. Glad thou hast made me.
Now
make intelligent, clearing the doubt
Thy speech hath raised in me; for much I
muse,
How bitter can spring up, when sweet is
sown."
I thus inquiring; he forthwith
replied:
"If I have power to show one truth, soon that
Shall face thee,
which thy questioning declares
Behind thee now conceal'd. The Good,
that guides
And blessed makes this realm, which thou dost mount,
Ordains
its providence to be the virtue
In these great bodies: nor th' all perfect
Mind
Upholds their nature merely, but in them
Their energy to save: for
nought, that lies
Within the range of that unerring bow,
But is as level
with the destin'd aim,
As ever mark to arrow's point oppos'd.
Were it not
thus, these heavens, thou dost visit,
Would their effect so work, it would
not be
Art, but destruction; and this may not chance,
If th' intellectual
powers, that move these stars,
Fail not, or who, first faulty made them
fail.
Wilt thou this truth more clearly
evidenc'd?"
To whom I thus: "It is enough:
no fear,
I see, lest nature in her part should
tire."
He straight rejoin'd: "Say, were it
worse for man,
If he liv'd not in fellowship on
earth?"
"Yea," answer'd I; "nor here a
reason needs."
"And may that be, if
different estates
Grow not of different duties in your life?
Consult your
teacher, and he tells you 'no."'
Thus did
he come, deducing to this point,
And then concluded: "For this cause
behooves,
The roots, from whence your operations come,
Must differ.
Therefore one is Solon born;
Another, Xerxes; and Melchisidec
A
third; and he a fourth, whose airy voyage
Cost him his son. In her
circuitous course,
Nature, that is the seal to mortal wax,
Doth well her
art, but no distinctions owns
'Twixt one or other household. Hence
befalls
That Esau is so wide of Jacob: hence
Quirinus of so base a father
springs,
He dates from Mars his lineage. Were it not
That providence
celestial overrul'd,
Nature, in generation, must the path
Trac'd by the
generator, still pursue
Unswervingly. Thus place I in thy
sight
That, which was late behind thee. But, in sign
Of more
affection for thee, 't is my will
Thou wear this corollary. Nature
ever
Finding discordant fortune, like all seed
Out of its proper climate,
thrives but ill.
And were the world below content to mark
And work on the
foundation nature lays,
It would not lack supply of excellence.
But ye
perversely to religion strain
Him, who was born to gird on him the
sword,
And of the fluent phrasemen make your king;
Therefore your steps
have wander'd from the paths."
After solution of my doubt, thy Charles,
O fair Clemenza, of the
treachery spake
That must befall his seed: but, "Tell it not,"
Said he,
"and let the destin'd years come round."
Nor may I tell thee more, save that
the meed
Of sorrow well-deserv'd shall quit your
wrongs.
And now the visage of that saintly
light
Was to the sun, that fills it, turn'd again,
As to the good, whose
plenitude of bliss
Sufficeth all. O ye misguided souls!
Infatuate,
who from such a good estrange
Your hearts, and bend your gaze on
vanity,
Alas for you!—And lo! toward me, next,
Another of those splendent
forms approach'd,
That, by its outward bright'ning, testified
The will it
had to pleasure me. The eyes
Of Beatrice, resting, as before,
Firmly
upon me, manifested forth
Approval of my wish. "And O," I
cried,
"Blest spirit! quickly be my will perform'd;
And prove thou to me,
that my inmost thoughts
I can reflect on thee." Thereat the
light,
That yet was new to me, from the recess,
Where it before was
singing, thus began,
As one who joys in kindness: "In that part
Of the
deprav'd Italian land, which lies
Between Rialto, and the
fountain-springs
Of Brenta and of Piava, there doth rise,
But to no lofty
eminence, a hill,
From whence erewhile a firebrand did descend,
That
sorely sheet the region. From one root
I and it sprang; my name on
earth Cunizza:
And here I glitter, for that by its light
This star
o'ercame me. Yet I naught repine,
Nor grudge myself the cause of this
my lot,
Which haply vulgar hearts can scarce
conceive.
"This jewel, that is next me in
our heaven,
Lustrous and costly, great renown hath left,
And not to
perish, ere these hundred years
Five times absolve their round.
Consider thou,
If to excel be worthy man's endeavour,
When such life
may attend the first. Yet they
Care not for this, the crowd that now
are girt
By Adice and Tagliamento, still
Impenitent, tho' scourg'd.
The hour is near,
When for their stubbornness at Padua's marsh
The
water shall be chang'd, that laves Vicena
And where Cagnano meets with Sile,
one
Lords it, and bears his head aloft, for whom
The web is now a-warping.
Feltro too
Shall sorrow for its godless shepherd's fault,
Of so deep
stain, that never, for the like,
Was Malta's bar unclos'd. Too large
should be
The skillet, that would hold Ferrara's blood,
And wearied he,
who ounce by ounce would weight it,
The which this priest, in show of
party-zeal,
Courteous will give; nor will the gift ill suit
The country's
custom. We descry above,
Mirrors, ye call them thrones, from which to
us
Reflected shine the judgments of our God:
Whence these our sayings we
avouch for good."
She ended, and appear'd
on other thoughts
Intent, re-ent'ring on the wheel she late
Had left.
That other joyance meanwhile wax'd
A thing to marvel at, in splendour
glowing,
Like choicest ruby stricken by the sun,
For, in that upper clime,
effulgence comes
Of gladness, as here laughter: and below,
As the mind
saddens, murkier grows the shade.
"God
seeth all: and in him is thy sight,"
Said I, "blest Spirit! Therefore
will of his
Cannot to thee be dark. Why then delays
Thy voice to
satisfy my wish untold,
That voice which joins the inexpressive
song,
Pastime of heav'n, the which those ardours sing,
That cowl them with
six shadowing wings outspread?
I would not wait thy asking, wert thou
known
To me, as thoroughly I to thee am
known."
He forthwith answ'ring, thus his
words began:
"The valley' of waters, widest next to that
Which doth the
earth engarland, shapes its course,
Between discordant shores, against the
sun
Inward so far, it makes meridian there,
Where was before th' horizon.
Of that vale
Dwelt I upon the shore, 'twixt Ebro's stream
And
Macra's, that divides with passage brief
Genoan bounds from Tuscan.
East and west
Are nearly one to Begga and my land,
Whose haven erst
was with its own blood warm.
Who knew my name were wont to call me
Folco:
And I did bear impression of this heav'n,
That now bears mine: for
not with fiercer flame
Glow'd Belus' daughter, injuring alike
Sichaeus and
Creusa, than did I,
Long as it suited the unripen'd down
That fledg'd my
cheek: nor she of Rhodope,
That was beguiled of Demophoon;
Nor Jove's son,
when the charms of Iole
Were shrin'd within his heart. And yet there
hides
No sorrowful repentance here, but mirth,
Not for the fault (that
doth not come to mind),
But for the virtue, whose o'erruling sway
And
providence have wrought thus quaintly. Here
The skill is look'd into,
that fashioneth
With such effectual working, and the good
Discern'd,
accruing to this upper world
From that below. But fully to
content
Thy wishes, all that in this sphere have birth,
Demands my further
parle. Inquire thou wouldst,
Who of this light is denizen, that
here
Beside me sparkles, as the sun-beam doth
On the clear wave.
Know then, the soul of Rahab
Is in that gladsome harbour, to our
tribe
United, and the foremost rank assign'd.
He to that heav'n, at which
the shadow ends
Of your sublunar world, was taken up,
First, in Christ's
triumph, of all souls redeem'd:
For well behoov'd, that, in some part of
heav'n,
She should remain a trophy, to declare
The mighty contest won with
either palm;
For that she favour'd first the high exploit
Of Joshua on the
holy land, whereof
The Pope recks little now. Thy city, plant
Of
him, that on his Maker turn'd the back,
And of whose envying so much woe hath
sprung,
Engenders and expands the cursed flower,
That hath made wander
both the sheep and lambs,
Turning the shepherd to a wolf. For
this,
The gospel and great teachers laid aside,
The decretals, as their
stuft margins show,
Are the sole study. Pope and Cardinals,
Intent
on these, ne'er journey but in thought
To Nazareth, where Gabriel op'd his
wings.
Yet it may chance, erelong, the Vatican,
And other most selected
parts of Rome,
That were the grave of Peter's soldiery,
Shall be deliver'd
from the adult'rous bond."
Looking into his first-born with the love,
Which breathes from both
eternal, the first Might
Ineffable, whence eye or mind
Can roam, hath in
such order all dispos'd,
As none may see and fail to enjoy. Raise,
then,
O reader! to the lofty wheels, with me,
Thy ken directed to the
point, whereat
One motion strikes on th' other. There begin
Thy
wonder of the mighty Architect,
Who loves his work so inwardly, his
eye
Doth ever watch it. See, how thence oblique
Brancheth the
circle, where the planets roll
To pour their wished influence on the
world;
Whose path not bending thus, in heav'n above
Much virtue would be
lost, and here on earth,
All power well nigh extinct: or, from direct
Were
its departure distant more or less,
I' th' universal order, great
defect
Must, both in heav'n and here beneath,
ensue.
Now rest thee, reader! on thy bench,
and muse
Anticipative of the feast to come;
So shall delight make thee not
feel thy toil.
Lo! I have set before thee, for thyself
Feed now: the
matter I indite, henceforth
Demands entire my thought. Join'd with the
part,
Which late we told of, the great minister
Of nature, that upon the
world imprints
The virtue of the heaven, and doles out
Time for us with
his beam, went circling on
Along the spires, where each hour sooner
comes;
And I was with him, weetless of ascent,
As one, who till arriv'd,
weets not his coming.
For Beatrice, she who
passeth on
So suddenly from good to better, time
Counts not the act, oh
then how great must needs
Have been her brightness! What she was i' th'
sun
(Where I had enter'd), not through change of hue,
But light
transparent—did I summon up
Genius, art, practice—I might not so speak,
It
should be e'er imagin'd: yet believ'd
It may be, and the sight be justly
crav'd.
And if our fantasy fail of such height,
What marvel, since no eye
above the sun
Hath ever travel'd? Such are they dwell here,
Fourth
family of the Omnipotent Sire,
Who of his spirit and of his offspring
shows;
And holds them still enraptur'd with the view.
And thus to me
Beatrice: "Thank, oh thank,
The Sun of angels, him, who by his grace
To
this perceptible hath lifted thee."
Never
was heart in such devotion bound,
And with complacency so
absolute
Dispos'd to render up itself to God,
As mine was at those words:
and so entire
The love for Him, that held me, it eclips'd
Beatrice in
oblivion. Naught displeas'd
Was she, but smil'd thereat so
joyously,
That of her laughing eyes the radiance brake
And scatter'd my
collected mind abroad.
Then saw I a bright
band, in liveliness
Surpassing, who themselves did make the crown,
And us
their centre: yet more sweet in voice,
Than in their visage beaming.
Cinctur'd thus,
Sometime Latona's daughter we behold,
When the
impregnate air retains the thread,
That weaves her zone. In the
celestial court,
Whence I return, are many jewels found,
So dear and
beautiful, they cannot brook
Transporting from that realm: and of these
lights
Such was the song. Who doth not prune his wing
To soar up
thither, let him look from thence
For tidings from the dumb. When,
singing thus,
Those burning suns that circled round us thrice,
As nearest
stars around the fixed pole,
Then seem'd they like to ladies, from the
dance
Not ceasing, but suspense, in silent pause,
List'ning, till they
have caught the strain anew:
Suspended so they stood: and, from
within,
Thus heard I one, who spake: "Since with its beam
The grace,
whence true love lighteth first his flame,
That after doth increase by
loving, shines
So multiplied in thee, it leads thee up
Along this ladder,
down whose hallow'd steps
None e'er descend, and mount them not again,
Who
from his phial should refuse thee wine
To slake thy thirst, no less
constrained were,
Than water flowing not unto the sea.
Thou fain wouldst
hear, what plants are these, that bloom
In the bright garland, which,
admiring, girds
This fair dame round, who strengthens thee for heav'n.
I
then was of the lambs, that Dominic
Leads, for his saintly flock, along the
way,
Where well they thrive, not sworn with vanity.
He, nearest on my
right hand, brother was,
And master to me: Albert of Cologne
Is this: and
of Aquinum, Thomas I.
If thou of all the rest wouldst be assur'd,
Let
thine eye, waiting on the words I speak,
In circuit journey round the blessed
wreath.
That next resplendence issues from the smile
Of Gratian, who to
either forum lent
Such help, as favour wins in Paradise.
The other,
nearest, who adorns our quire,
Was Peter, he that with the widow gave
To
holy church his treasure. The fifth light,
Goodliest of all, is by such
love inspired,
That all your world craves tidings of its doom:
Within,
there is the lofty light, endow'd
With sapience so profound, if truth be
truth,
That with a ken of such wide amplitude
No second hath arisen.
Next behold
That taper's radiance, to whose view was
shown,
Clearliest, the nature and the ministry
Angelical, while yet in
flesh it dwelt.
In the other little light serenely smiles
That pleader for
the Christian temples, he
Who did provide Augustin of his lore.
Now, if
thy mind's eye pass from light to light,
Upon my praises following, of the
eighth
Thy thirst is next. The saintly soul, that shows
The world's
deceitfulness, to all who hear him,
Is, with the sight of all the good, that
is,
Blest there. The limbs, whence it was driven, lie
Down in
Cieldauro, and from martyrdom
And exile came it here. Lo! further
on,
Where flames the arduous Spirit of Isidore,
Of Bede, and Richard, more
than man, erewhile,
In deep discernment. Lastly this, from whom
Thy
look on me reverteth, was the beam
Of one, whose spirit, on high musings
bent,
Rebuk'd the ling'ring tardiness of death.
It is the eternal light of
Sigebert,
Who 'scap'd not envy, when of truth he argued,
Reading in the
straw-litter'd street." Forthwith,
As clock, that calleth up the spouse
of God
To win her bridegroom's love at matin's hour,
Each part of other
fitly drawn and urg'd,
Sends out a tinkling sound, of note so
sweet,
Affection springs in well-disposed breast;
Thus saw I move the
glorious wheel, thus heard
Voice answ'ring voice, so musical and soft,
It
can be known but where day endless shines.
O fond anxiety of mortal men!
How vain and inconclusive
arguments
Are those, which make thee beat thy wings below
For statues one,
and one for aphorisms
Was hunting; this the priesthood follow'd, that
By
force or sophistry aspir'd to rule;
To rob another, and another sought
By
civil business wealth; one moiling lay
Tangled in net of sensual
delight,
And one to witless indolence resign'd;
What time from all these
empty things escap'd,
With Beatrice, I thus gloriously
Was rais'd aloft,
and made the guest of heav'n.
They of the
circle to that point, each one.
Where erst it was, had turn'd; and steady
glow'd,
As candle in his socket. Then within
The lustre, that
erewhile bespake me, smiling
With merer gladness, heard I thus
begin:
"E'en as his beam illumes me, so I
look
Into the eternal light, and clearly mark
Thy thoughts, from whence
they rise. Thou art in doubt,
And wouldst, that I should bolt my words
afresh
In such plain open phrase, as may be smooth
To thy perception,
where I told thee late
That 'well they thrive;' and that 'no second
such
Hath risen,' which no small distinction
needs.
"The providence, that governeth the
world,
In depth of counsel by created ken
Unfathomable, to the end that
she,
Who with loud cries was 'spous'd in precious blood,
Might keep her
footing towards her well-belov'd,
Safe in herself and constant unto
him,
Hath two ordain'd, who should on either hand
In chief escort her: one
seraphic all
In fervency; for wisdom upon earth,
The other splendour of
cherubic light.
I but of one will tell: he tells of both,
Who one
commendeth which of them so'er
Be taken: for their deeds were to one
end.
"Between Tupino, and the wave, that
falls
From blest Ubaldo's chosen hill, there hangs
Rich slope of mountain
high, whence heat and cold
Are wafted through Perugia's eastern gate:
And
Norcera with Gualdo, in its rear
Mourn for their heavy yoke. Upon that
side,
Where it doth break its steepness most, arose
A sun upon the world,
as duly this
From Ganges doth: therefore let none, who speak
Of that
place, say Ascesi; for its name
Were lamely so deliver'd; but the East,
To
call things rightly, be it henceforth styl'd.
He was not yet much distant
from his rising,
When his good influence 'gan to bless the earth.
A dame
to whom none openeth pleasure's gate
More than to death, was, 'gainst his
father's will,
His stripling choice: and he did make her his,
Before the
Spiritual court, by nuptial bonds,
And in his father's sight: from day to
day,
Then lov'd her more devoutly. She, bereav'd
Of her first
husband, slighted and obscure,
Thousand and hundred years and more,
remain'd
Without a single suitor, till he came.
Nor aught avail'd, that,
with Amyclas, she
Was found unmov'd at rumour of his voice,
Who shook the
world: nor aught her constant boldness
Whereby with Christ she mounted on the
cross,
When Mary stay'd beneath. But not to deal
Thus closely with
thee longer, take at large
The rovers' titles—Poverty and Francis.
Their
concord and glad looks, wonder and love,
And sweet regard gave birth to holy
thoughts,
So much, that venerable Bernard first
Did bare his feet, and, in
pursuit of peace
So heavenly, ran, yet deem'd his footing slow.
O hidden
riches! O prolific good!
Egidius bares him next, and next
Sylvester,
And follow both the bridegroom; so the bride
Can please them.
Thenceforth goes he on his way,
The father and the master, with his
spouse,
And with that family, whom now the cord
Girt humbly: nor did
abjectness of heart
Weigh down his eyelids, for that he was son
Of Pietro
Bernardone, and by men
In wond'rous sort despis'd. But royally
His
hard intention he to Innocent
Set forth, and from him first receiv'd the
seal
On his religion. Then, when numerous flock'd
The tribe of lowly
ones, that trac'd HIS steps,
Whose marvellous life deservedly were sung
In
heights empyreal, through Honorius' hand
A second crown, to deck their
Guardian's virtues,
Was by the eternal Spirit inwreath'd: and when
He had,
through thirst of martyrdom, stood up
In the proud Soldan's presence, and
there preach'd
Christ and his followers; but found the race
Unripen'd for
conversion: back once more
He hasted (not to intermit his toil),
And
reap'd Ausonian lands. On the hard rock,
'Twixt Arno and the Tyber, he
from Christ
Took the last Signet, which his limbs two years
Did carry.
Then the season come, that he,
Who to such good had destin'd him, was
pleas'd
T' advance him to the meed, which he had earn'd
By his
self-humbling, to his brotherhood,
As their just heritage, he gave in
charge
His dearest lady, and enjoin'd their love
And faith to her: and,
from her bosom, will'd
His goodly spirit should move forth, returning
To
its appointed kingdom, nor would have
His body laid upon another
bier.
"Think now of one, who were a fit
colleague,
To keep the bark of Peter in deep sea
Helm'd to right point;
and such our Patriarch was.
Therefore who follow him, as he enjoins,
Thou
mayst be certain, take good lading in.
But hunger of new viands tempts his
flock,
So that they needs into strange pastures wide
Must spread them: and
the more remote from him
The stragglers wander, so much mole they
come
Home to the sheep-fold, destitute of milk.
There are of them, in
truth, who fear their harm,
And to the shepherd cleave; but these so
few,
A little stuff may furnish out their
cloaks.
"Now, if my words be clear, if thou
have ta'en
Good heed, if that, which I have told, recall
To mind, thy wish
may be in part fulfill'd:
For thou wilt see the point from whence they
split,
Nor miss of the reproof, which that implies,
'That well they thrive
not sworn with vanity."'
Soon as its final word the blessed flame
Had rais'd for utterance,
straight the holy mill
Began to wheel, nor yet had once revolv'd,
Or ere
another, circling, compass'd it,
Motion to motion, song to song,
conjoining,
Song, that as much our muses doth excel,
Our Sirens with their
tuneful pipes, as ray
Of primal splendour doth its faint
reflex.
ENLARGE TO
FULL SIZE
As when, if Juno bid her
handmaid forth,
Two arches parallel, and trick'd alike,
Span the thin
cloud, the outer taking birth
From that within (in manner of that
voice
Whom love did melt away, as sun the mist),
And they who gaze,
presageful call to mind
The compact, made with Noah, of the world
No more
to be o'erflow'd; about us thus
Of sempiternal roses, bending,
wreath'd
Those garlands twain, and to the innermost
E'en thus th' external
answered. When the footing,
And other great festivity, of song,
And
radiance, light with light accordant, each
Jocund and blythe, had at their
pleasure still'd
(E'en as the eyes by quick volition mov'd,
Are shut and
rais'd together), from the heart
Of one amongst the new lights mov'd a
voice,
That made me seem like needle to the star,
In turning to its
whereabout, and thus
Began: "The love, that makes me beautiful,
Prompts me
to tell of th' other guide, for whom
Such good of mine is spoken. Where
one is,
The other worthily should also be;
That as their warfare was
alike, alike
Should be their glory. Slow, and full of doubt,
And
with thin ranks, after its banner mov'd
The army of Christ (which it so
clearly cost
To reappoint), when its imperial Head,
Who reigneth ever, for
the drooping host
Did make provision, thorough grace alone,
And not
through its deserving. As thou heard'st,
Two champions to the succour
of his spouse
He sent, who by their deeds and words might join
Again his
scatter'd people. In that clime,
Where springs the pleasant west-wind
to unfold
The fresh leaves, with which Europe sees herself
New-garmented;
nor from those billows far,
Beyond whose chiding, after weary course,
The
sun doth sometimes hide him, safe abides
The happy Callaroga, under
guard
Of the great shield, wherein the lion lies
Subjected and supreme.
And there was born
The loving million of the Christian faith,
The
hollow'd wrestler, gentle to his own,
And to his enemies terrible. So
replete
His soul with lively virtue, that when first
Created, even in the
mother's womb,
It prophesied. When, at the sacred font,
The spousals
were complete 'twixt faith and him,
Where pledge of mutual safety was
exchang'd,
The dame, who was his surety, in her sleep
Beheld the wondrous
fruit, that was from him
And from his heirs to issue. And that
such
He might be construed, as indeed he was,
She was inspir'd to name him
of his owner,
Whose he was wholly, and so call'd him Dominic.
And I speak
of him, as the labourer,
Whom Christ in his own garden chose to be
His
help-mate. Messenger he seem'd, and friend
Fast-knit to Christ; and the
first love he show'd,
Was after the first counsel that Christ gave.
Many a
time his nurse, at entering found
That he had ris'n in silence, and was
prostrate,
As who should say, "My errand was for this."
O happy father!
Felix rightly nam'd!
O favour'd mother! rightly nam'd Joanna!
If
that do mean, as men interpret it.
Not for the world's sake, for which now
they pore
Upon Ostiense and Taddeo's page,
But for the real manna, soon he
grew
Mighty in learning, and did set himself
To go about the vineyard,
that soon turns
To wan and wither'd, if not tended well:
And from the see
(whose bounty to the just
And needy is gone by, not through its fault,
But
his who fills it basely, he besought,
No dispensation for commuted
wrong,
Nor the first vacant fortune, nor the tenth),
That to God's paupers
rightly appertain,
But, 'gainst an erring and degenerate world,
Licence to
fight, in favour of that seed,
From which the twice twelve cions gird thee
round.
Then, with sage doctrine and good will to help,
Forth on his great
apostleship he far'd,
Like torrent bursting from a lofty vein;
And,
dashing 'gainst the stocks of heresy,
Smote fiercest, where resistance was
most stout.
Thence many rivulets have since been turn'd,
Over the garden
Catholic to lead
Their living waters, and have fed its
plants.
"If such one wheel of that
two-yoked car,
Wherein the holy church defended her,
And rode triumphant
through the civil broil.
Thou canst not doubt its fellow's
excellence,
Which Thomas, ere my coming, hath declar'd
So courteously unto
thee. But the track,
Which its smooth fellies made, is now
deserted:
That mouldy mother is where late were lees.
His family, that
wont to trace his path,
Turn backward, and invert their steps; erelong
To
rue the gathering in of their ill crop,
When the rejected tares in vain shall
ask
Admittance to the barn. I question not
But he, who search'd our
volume, leaf by leaf,
Might still find page with this inscription on't,
'I
am as I was wont.' Yet such were not
From Acquasparta nor Casale,
whence
Of those, who come to meddle with the text,
One stretches and
another cramps its rule.
Bonaventura's life in me behold,
From
Bagnororegio, one, who in discharge
Of my great offices still laid
aside
All sinister aim. Illuminato here,
And Agostino join me: two
they were,
Among the first of those barefooted meek ones,
Who sought God's
friendship in the cord: with them
Hugues of Saint Victor, Pietro
Mangiadore,
And he of Spain in his twelve volumes shining,
Nathan the
prophet, Metropolitan
Chrysostom, and Anselmo, and, who deign'd
To put his
hand to the first art, Donatus.
Raban is here: and at my side there
shines
Calabria's abbot, Joachim, endow'd
With soul prophetic. The
bright courtesy
Of friar Thomas, and his goodly lore,
Have mov'd me to the
blazon of a peer
So worthy, and with me have mov'd this throng."
Let him, who would conceive what now I saw,
Imagine (and retain the
image firm,
As mountain rock, the whilst he hears me speak),
Of stars
fifteen, from midst the ethereal host
Selected, that, with lively ray
serene,
O'ercome the massiest air: thereto imagine
The wain, that, in the
bosom of our sky,
Spins ever on its axle night and day,
With the bright
summit of that horn which swells
Due from the pole, round which the first
wheel rolls,
T' have rang'd themselves in fashion of two signs
In heav'n,
such as Ariadne made,
When death's chill seized her; and that one of
them
Did compass in the other's beam; and both
In such sort whirl around,
that each should tend
With opposite motion and, conceiving thus,
Of that
true constellation, and the dance
Twofold, that circled me, he shall
attain
As 't were the shadow; for things there as much
Surpass our usage,
as the swiftest heav'n
Is swifter than the Chiana. There was sung
No
Bacchus, and no Io Paean, but
Three Persons in the Godhead, and in
one
Substance that nature and the human
join'd.
The song fulfill'd its measure; and
to us
Those saintly lights attended, happier made
At each new minist'ring.
Then silence brake,
Amid th' accordant sons of Deity,
That luminary,
in which the wondrous life
Of the meek man of God was told to me;
And thus
it spake: "One ear o' th' harvest thresh'd,
And its grain safely stor'd,
sweet charity
Invites me with the other to like
toil.
"Thou know'st, that in the bosom,
whence the rib
Was ta'en to fashion that fair cheek, whose taste
All the
world pays for, and in that, which pierc'd
By the keen lance, both after and
before
Such satisfaction offer'd, as outweighs
Each evil in the scale,
whate'er of light
To human nature is allow'd, must all
Have by his virtue
been infus'd, who form'd
Both one and other: and thou thence admir'st
In
that I told thee, of beatitudes
A second, there is none, to his
enclos'd
In the fifth radiance. Open now thine eyes
To what I answer
thee; and thou shalt see
Thy deeming and my saying meet in truth,
As
centre in the round. That which dies not,
And that which can die, are
but each the beam
Of that idea, which our Soverign Sire
Engendereth
loving; for that lively light,
Which passeth from his brightness; not
disjoin'd
From him, nor from his love triune with them,
Doth, through his
bounty, congregate itself,
Mirror'd, as 't were in new existences,
Itself
unalterable and ever one.
"Descending hence
unto the lowest powers,
Its energy so sinks, at last it makes
But brief
contingencies: for so I name
Things generated, which the heav'nly
orbs
Moving, with seed or without seed, produce.
Their wax, and that which
molds it, differ much:
And thence with lustre, more or less, it shows
Th'
ideal stamp impress: so that one tree
According to his kind, hath better
fruit,
And worse: and, at your birth, ye, mortal men,
Are in your talents
various. Were the wax
Molded with nice exactness, and the heav'n
In
its disposing influence supreme,
The lustre of the seal should be
complete:
But nature renders it imperfect ever,
Resembling thus the artist
in her work,
Whose faultering hand is faithless to his skill.
Howe'er, if
love itself dispose, and mark
The primal virtue, kindling with bright
view,
There all perfection is vouchsafed; and such
The clay was made,
accomplish'd with each gift,
That life can teem with; such the burden
fill'd
The virgin's bosom: so that I commend
Thy judgment, that the human
nature ne'er
Was or can be, such as in them it
was.
"Did I advance no further than this
point,
'How then had he no peer?' thou might'st reply.
But, that
what now appears not, may appear
Right plainly, ponder, who he was, and
what
(When he was bidden 'Ask' ), the motive sway'd
To his requesting.
I have spoken thus,
That thou mayst see, he was a king, who
ask'd
For wisdom, to the end he might be king
Sufficient: not the number
to search out
Of the celestial movers; or to know,
If necessary with
contingent e'er
Have made necessity; or whether that
Be granted, that
first motion is; or if
Of the mid circle can, by art, be made
Triangle
with each corner, blunt or sharp.
"Whence,
noting that, which I have said, and this,
Thou kingly prudence and that ken
mayst learn,
At which the dart of my intention aims.
And, marking clearly,
that I told thee, 'Risen,'
Thou shalt discern it only hath respect
To
kings, of whom are many, and the good
Are rare. With this distinction
take my words;
And they may well consist with that which thou
Of the first
human father dost believe,
And of our well-beloved. And let
this
Henceforth be led unto thy feet, to make
Thee slow in motion, as a
weary man,
Both to the 'yea' and to the 'nay' thou seest not.
For he among
the fools is down full low,
Whose affirmation, or denial, is
Without
distinction, in each case alike
Since it befalls, that in most
instances
Current opinion leads to false: and then
Affection bends the
judgment to her ply.
"Much more than vainly
doth he loose from shore,
Since he returns not such as he set forth,
Who
fishes for the truth and wanteth skill.
And open proofs of this unto the
world
Have been afforded in Parmenides,
Melissus, Bryso, and the crowd
beside,
Who journey'd on, and knew not whither: so did
Sabellius, Arius,
and the other fools,
Who, like to scymitars, reflected back
The
scripture-image, by distortion marr'd.
"Let
not the people be too swift to judge,
As one who reckons on the blades in
field,
Or ere the crop be ripe. For I have seen
The thorn frown
rudely all the winter long
And after bear the rose upon its top;
And bark,
that all the way across the sea
Ran straight and speedy, perish at the
last,
E'en in the haven's mouth seeing one steal,
Another brine, his
offering to the priest,
Let not Dame Birtha and Sir Martin thence
Into
heav'n's counsels deem that they can pry:
For one of these may rise, the
other fall."
From centre to the circle, and so back
From circle to the centre,
water moves
In the round chalice, even as the blow
Impels it, inwardly, or
from without.
Such was the image glanc'd into my mind,
As the great spirit
of Aquinum ceas'd;
And Beatrice after him her words
Resum'd alternate:
"Need there is (tho' yet
He tells it to you not in words, nor e'en
In
thought) that he should fathom to its depth
Another mystery. Tell him,
if the light,
Wherewith your substance blooms, shall stay with
you
Eternally, as now: and, if it doth,
How, when ye shall regain your
visible forms,
The sight may without harm endure the change,
That also
tell." As those, who in a ring
Tread the light measure, in their fitful
mirth
Raise loud the voice, and spring with gladder bound;
Thus, at the
hearing of that pious suit,
The saintly circles in their tourneying
And
wond'rous note attested new delight.
Whoso
laments, that we must doff this garb
Of frail mortality, thenceforth to
live
Immortally above, he hath not seen
The sweet refreshing, of that
heav'nly shower.
Him, who lives ever, and
for ever reigns
In mystic union of the Three in One,
Unbounded, bounding
all, each spirit thrice
Sang, with such melody, as but to hear
For highest
merit were an ample meed.
And from the lesser orb the goodliest
light,
With gentle voice and mild, such as perhaps
The angel's once to
Mary, thus replied:
"Long as the joy of Paradise shall last,
Our love
shall shine around that raiment, bright,
As fervent; fervent, as in vision
blest;
And that as far in blessedness exceeding,
As it hath grave beyond
its virtue great.
Our shape, regarmented with glorious weeds
Of saintly
flesh, must, being thus entire,
Show yet more gracious. Therefore shall
increase,
Whate'er of light, gratuitous, imparts
The Supreme Good; light,
ministering aid,
The better disclose his glory: whence
The vision needs
increasing, much increase
The fervour, which it kindles; and that too
The
ray, that comes from it. But as the greed
Which gives out flame, yet it
its whiteness shines
More lively than that, and so preserves
Its proper
semblance; thus this circling sphere
Of splendour, shall to view less radiant
seem,
Than shall our fleshly robe, which yonder earth
Now covers.
Nor will such excess of light
O'erpower us, in corporeal organs
made
Firm, and susceptible of all
delight."
So ready and so cordial an
"Amen,"
Followed from either choir, as plainly spoke
Desire of their dead
bodies; yet perchance
Not for themselves, but for their kindred
dear,
Mothers and sires, and those whom best they lov'd,
Ere they were
made imperishable flame.
And lo! forthwith
there rose up round about
A lustre over that already there,
Of equal
clearness, like the brightening up
Of the horizon. As at an evening
hour
Of twilight, new appearances through heav'n
Peer with faint glimmer,
doubtfully descried;
So there new substances, methought began
To rise in
view; and round the other twain
Enwheeling, sweep their ampler circuit
wide.
O gentle glitter of eternal
beam!
With what a such whiteness did it flow,
O'erpowering vision in me!
But so fair,
So passing lovely, Beatrice show'd,
Mind cannot follow
it, nor words express
Her infinite sweetness. Thence mine eyes
regain'd
Power to look up, and I beheld myself,
Sole with my lady, to more
lofty bliss
Translated: for the star, with warmer smile
Impurpled, well
denoted our ascent.
ENLARGE TO
FULL SIZE
With all the heart, and
with that tongue which speaks
The same in all, an holocaust I made
To God,
befitting the new grace vouchsaf'd.
And from my bosom had not yet
upsteam'd
The fuming of that incense, when I knew
The rite accepted.
With such mighty sheen
And mantling crimson, in two listed rays
The
splendours shot before me, that I cried,
"God of Sabaoth! that does prank
them thus!"
ENLARGE TO
FULL SIZE
As leads the galaxy from
pole to pole,
Distinguish'd into greater lights and less,
Its pathway,
which the wisest fail to spell;
So thickly studded, in the depth of
Mars,
Those rays describ'd the venerable sign,
That quadrants in the round
conjoining frame.
Here memory mocks the toil of genius.
Christ
Beam'd on that cross; and pattern fails me now.
But whoso
takes his cross, and follows Christ
Will pardon me for that I leave
untold,
When in the flecker'd dawning he shall spy
The glitterance of
Christ. From horn to horn,
And 'tween the summit and the base did
move
Lights, scintillating, as they met and pass'd.
Thus oft are seen,
with ever-changeful glance,
Straight or athwart, now rapid and now
slow,
The atomies of bodies, long or short,
To move along the sunbeam,
whose slant line
Checkers the shadow, interpos'd by art
Against the
noontide heat. And as the chime
Of minstrel music, dulcimer, and
help
With many strings, a pleasant dining makes
To him, who heareth not
distinct the note;
So from the lights, which there appear'd to
me,
Gather'd along the cross a melody,
That, indistinctly heard, with
ravishment
Possess'd me. Yet I mark'd it was a hymn
Of lofty
praises; for there came to me
"Arise and conquer," as to one who hears
And
comprehends not. Me such ecstasy
O'ercame, that never till that hour
was thing
That held me in so sweet
imprisonment.
Perhaps my saying over bold
appears,
Accounting less the pleasure of those eyes,
Whereon to look
fulfilleth all desire.
But he, who is aware those living seals
Of every
beauty work with quicker force,
The higher they are ris'n; and that
there
I had not turn'd me to them; he may well
Excuse me that, whereof in
my excuse
I do accuse me, and may own my truth;
That holy pleasure here
not yet reveal'd,
Which grows in transport as we mount aloof.
True love, that ever shows itself as clear
In kindness, as loose
appetite in wrong,
Silenced that lyre harmonious, and still'd
The sacred
chords, that are by heav'n's right hand
Unwound and tighten'd, flow to
righteous prayers
Should they not hearken, who, to give me will
For
praying, in accordance thus were mute?
He hath in sooth good cause for
endless grief,
Who, for the love of thing that lasteth not,
Despoils
himself forever of that love.
As oft along
the still and pure serene,
At nightfall, glides a sudden trail of
fire,
Attracting with involuntary heed
The eye to follow it, erewhile at
rest,
And seems some star that shifted place in heav'n,
Only that, whence
it kindles, none is lost,
And it is soon extinct; thus from the horn,
That
on the dexter of the cross extends,
Down to its foot, one luminary
ran
From mid the cluster shone there; yet no gem
Dropp'd from its foil;
and through the beamy list
Like flame in alabaster, glow'd its
course.
So forward stretch'd him (if of
credence aught
Our greater muse may claim) the pious ghost
Of old
Anchises, in the' Elysian bower,
When he perceiv'd his son. "O thou, my
blood!
O most exceeding grace divine! to whom,
As now to thee, hath twice
the heav'nly gate
Been e'er unclos'd?" so spake the light; whence I
Turn'd
me toward him; then unto my dame
My sight directed, and on either
side
Amazement waited me; for in her eyes
Was lighted such a smile, I
thought that mine
Had div'd unto the bottom of my grace
And of my bliss in
Paradise. Forthwith
To hearing and to sight grateful alike,
The
spirit to his proem added things
I understood not, so profound he
spake;
Yet not of choice but through necessity
Mysterious; for his high
conception scar'd
Beyond the mark of mortals. When the flight
Of
holy transport had so spent its rage,
That nearer to the level of our
thought
The speech descended, the first sounds I heard
Were, "Best he
thou, Triunal Deity!
That hast such favour in my seed vouchsaf'd!"
Then
follow'd: "No unpleasant thirst, tho' long,
Which took me reading in the
sacred book,
Whose leaves or white or dusky never change,
Thou hast
allay'd, my son, within this light,
From whence my voice thou hear'st; more
thanks to her.
Who for such lofty mounting has with plumes
Begirt thee.
Thou dost deem thy thoughts to me
From him transmitted, who is first of
all,
E'en as all numbers ray from unity;
And therefore dost not ask me who
I am,
Or why to thee more joyous I appear,
Than any other in this gladsome
throng.
The truth is as thou deem'st; for in this hue
Both less and
greater in that mirror look,
In which thy thoughts, or ere thou think'st, are
shown.
But, that the love, which keeps me wakeful ever,
Urging with sacred
thirst of sweet desire,
May be contended fully, let thy voice,
Fearless,
and frank and jocund, utter forth
Thy will distinctly, utter forth the
wish,
Whereto my ready answer stands
decreed."
I turn'd me to Beatrice; and she
heard
Ere I had spoken, smiling, an assent,
That to my will gave wings;
and I began
"To each among your tribe, what time ye kenn'd
The nature, in
whom naught unequal dwells,
Wisdom and love were in one measure dealt;
For
that they are so equal in the sun,
From whence ye drew your radiance and your
heat,
As makes all likeness scant. But will and means,
In mortals,
for the cause ye well discern,
With unlike wings are fledge. A mortal
I
Experience inequality like this,
And therefore give no thanks, but in
the heart,
For thy paternal greeting. This howe'er
I pray thee,
living topaz! that ingemm'st
This precious jewel, let me hear thy
name."
"I am thy root, O leaf! whom to
expect
Even, hath pleas'd me:" thus the prompt reply
Prefacing, next
it added: "he, of whom
Thy kindred appellation comes, and who,
These
hundred years and more, on its first ledge
Hath circuited the mountain, was
my son
And thy great grandsire. Well befits, his long
Endurance
should be shorten'd by thy
deeds.
"Florence, within her ancient
limit-mark,
Which calls her still to matin prayers and noon,
Was chaste
and sober, and abode in peace.
She had no armlets and no head-tires
then,
No purfled dames, no zone, that caught the eye
More than the person
did. Time was not yet,
When at his daughter's birth the sire grew
pale.
For fear the age and dowry should exceed
On each side just
proportion. House was none
Void of its family; nor yet had
come
Hardanapalus, to exhibit feats
Of chamber prowess. Montemalo
yet
O'er our suburban turret rose; as much
To be surpass in fall, as in
its rising.
I saw Bellincione Berti walk abroad
In leathern girdle and a
clasp of bone;
And, with no artful colouring on her cheeks,
His lady leave
the glass. The sons I saw
Of Nerli and of Vecchio well content
With
unrob'd jerkin; and their good dames handling
The spindle and the flax; O
happy they!
Each sure of burial in her native land,
And none left desolate
a-bed for France!
One wak'd to tend the cradle, hushing it
With sounds
that lull'd the parent's infancy:
Another, with her maidens, drawing
off
The tresses from the distaff, lectur'd them
Old tales of Troy and
Fesole and Rome.
A Salterello and Cianghella we
Had held as strange a
marvel, as ye would
A Cincinnatus or Cornelia
now.
"In such compos'd and seemly
fellowship,
Such faithful and such fair equality,
In so sweet household,
Mary at my birth
Bestow'd me, call'd on with loud cries; and there
In your
old baptistery, I was made
Christian at once and Cacciaguida; as were
My
brethren, Eliseo and Moronto.
"From
Valdipado came to me my spouse,
And hence thy surname grew. I follow'd
then
The Emperor Conrad; and his knighthood he
Did gird on me; in such
good part he took
My valiant service. After him I went
To testify
against that evil law,
Whose people, by the shepherd's fault, possess
Your
right, usurping. There, by that foul crew
Was I releas'd from the
deceitful world,
Whose base affection many a spirit soils,
And from the
martyrdom came to this peace."
O slight respect of man's nobility!
I never shall account it
marvelous,
That our infirm affection here below
Thou mov'st to boasting,
when I could not choose,
E'en in that region of unwarp'd desire,
In heav'n
itself, but make my vaunt in thee!
Yet cloak thou art soon shorten'd, for
that time,
Unless thou be eked out from day to day,
Goes round thee with
his shears. Resuming then
With greeting such, as Rome, was first to
bear,
But since hath disaccustom'd I began;
And Beatrice, that a little
space
Was sever'd, smil'd reminding me of her,
Whose cough embolden'd (as
the story holds)
To first offence the doubting
Guenever.
"You are my sire," said I, "you
give me heart
Freely to speak my thought: above myself
You raise me.
Through so many streams with joy
My soul is fill'd, that gladness wells
from it;
So that it bears the mighty tide, and bursts not
Say then, my
honour'd stem! what ancestors
Where those you sprang from, and what years
were mark'd
In your first childhood? Tell me of the fold,
That hath
Saint John for guardian, what was then
Its state, and who in it were highest
seated?"
As embers, at the breathing of the
wind,
Their flame enliven, so that light I saw
Shine at my blandishments;
and, as it grew
More fair to look on, so with voice more sweet,
Yet not in
this our modern phrase, forthwith
It answer'd: "From the day, when it was
said
'Hail Virgin!' to the throes, by which my mother,
Who now is sainted,
lighten'd her of me
Whom she was heavy with, this fire had come,
Five
hundred fifty times and thrice, its beams
To reilumine underneath the
foot
Of its own lion. They, of whom I sprang,
And I, had there our
birth-place, where the last
Partition of our city first is reach'd
By him,
that runs her annual game. Thus much
Suffice of my forefathers: who
they were,
And whence they hither came, more honourable
It is to pass in
silence than to tell.
All those, who in that time were there from
Mars
Until the Baptist, fit to carry arms,
Were but the fifth of them this
day alive.
But then the citizen's blood, that now is mix'd
From Campi and
Certaldo and Fighine,
Ran purely through the last mechanic's veins.
O how
much better were it, that these people
Were neighbours to you, and that at
Galluzzo
And at Trespiano, ye should have your bound'ry,
Than to have them
within, and bear the stench
Of Aguglione's hind, and Signa's, him,
That
hath his eye already keen for bart'ring!
Had not the people, which of all the
world
Degenerates most, been stepdame unto Caesar,
But, as a mother,
gracious to her son;
Such one, as hath become a Florentine,
And trades and
traffics, had been turn'd adrift
To Simifonte, where his grandsire
ply'd
The beggar's craft. The Conti were possess'd
Of Montemurlo
still: the Cerchi still
Were in Acone's parish; nor had haply
From
Valdigrieve past the Buondelmonte.
The city's malady hath ever source
In
the confusion of its persons, as
The body's, in variety of food:
And the
blind bull falls with a steeper plunge,
Than the blind lamb; and oftentimes
one sword
Doth more and better execution,
Than five. Mark Luni,
Urbisaglia mark,
How they are gone, and after them how go
Chiusi and
Sinigaglia; and 't will seem
No longer new or strange to thee to
hear,
That families fail, when cities have their end.
All things, that
appertain t' ye, like yourselves,
Are mortal: but mortality in some
Ye
mark not, they endure so long, and you
Pass by so suddenly. And as the
moon
Doth, by the rolling of her heav'nly sphere,
Hide and reveal the
strand unceasingly;
So fortune deals with Florence. Hence admire
not
At what of them I tell thee, whose renown
Time covers, the first
Florentines. I saw
The Ughi, Catilini and Filippi,
The Alberichi,
Greci and Ormanni,
Now in their wane, illustrious citizens:
And great as
ancient, of Sannella him,
With him of Arca saw, and Soldanieri
And
Ardinghi, and Bostichi. At the poop,
That now is laden with new
felony,
So cumb'rous it may speedily sink the bark,
The Ravignani sat, of
whom is sprung
The County Guido, and whoso hath since
His title from the
fam'd Bellincione ta'en.
Fair governance was yet an art well priz'd
By him
of Pressa: Galigaio show'd
The gilded hilt and pommel, in his house.
The
column, cloth'd with verrey, still was seen
Unshaken: the Sacchetti still
were great,
Giouchi, Sifanti, Galli and Barucci,
With them who blush to
hear the bushel nam'd.
Of the Calfucci still the branchy trunk
Was in its
strength: and to the curule chairs
Sizii and Arigucci yet were drawn.
How
mighty them I saw, whom since their pride
Hath undone! and in all her goodly
deeds
Florence was by the bullets of bright gold
O'erflourish'd.
Such the sires of those, who now,
As surely as your church is vacant,
flock
Into her consistory, and at leisure
There stall them and grow fat.
The o'erweening brood,
That plays the dragon after him that
flees,
But unto such, as turn and show the tooth,
Ay or the purse, is
gentle as a lamb,
Was on its rise, but yet so slight esteem'd,
That
Ubertino of Donati grudg'd
His father-in-law should yoke him to its
tribe.
Already Caponsacco had descended
Into the mart from Fesole: and
Giuda
And Infangato were good citizens.
A thing incredible I tell, tho'
true:
The gateway, named from those of Pera, led
Into the narrow circuit
of your walls.
Each one, who bears the sightly quarterings
Of the great
Baron (he whose name and worth
The festival of Thomas still revives)
His
knighthood and his privilege retain'd;
Albeit one, who borders them With
gold,
This day is mingled with the common herd.
In Borgo yet the
Gualterotti dwelt,
And Importuni: well for its repose
Had it still lack'd
of newer neighbourhood.
The house, from whence your tears have had their
spring,
Through the just anger that hath murder'd ye
And put a period to
your gladsome days,
Was honour'd, it, and those consorted with it.
O
Buondelmonte! what ill counseling
Prevail'd on thee to break the plighted
bond
Many, who now are weeping, would rejoice,
Had God to Ema giv'n thee,
the first time
Thou near our city cam'st. But so was doom'd:
On that
maim'd stone set up to guard the bridge,
At thy last peace, the victim,
Florence! fell.
With these and others like to them, I saw
Florence in such
assur'd tranquility,
She had no cause at which to grieve: with these
Saw
her so glorious and so just, that ne'er
The lily from the lance had hung
reverse,
Or through division been with vermeil dyed."
ENLARGE TO
FULL SIZE
Such as the youth, who came to Clymene
To certify himself of that
reproach,
Which had been fasten'd on him, (he whose end
Still makes the
fathers chary to their sons),
E'en such was I; nor unobserv'd was such
Of
Beatrice, and that saintly lamp,
Who had erewhile for me his station
mov'd;
When thus by lady: "Give thy wish free vent,
That it may issue,
bearing true report
Of the mind's impress; not that aught thy words
May to
our knowledge add, but to the end,
That thou mayst use thyself to own thy
thirst
And men may mingle for thee when they
hear."
"O plant! from whence I spring!
rever'd and lov'd!
Who soar'st so high a pitch, thou seest as clear,
As
earthly thought determines two obtuse
In one triangle not contain'd, so
clear
Dost see contingencies, ere in themselves
Existent, looking at the
point whereto
All times are present, I, the whilst I scal'd
With Virgil
the soul purifying mount,
And visited the nether world of woe,
Touching my
future destiny have heard
Words grievous, though I feel me on all
sides
Well squar'd to fortune's blows. Therefore my will
Were
satisfied to know the lot awaits me,
The arrow, seen beforehand, slacks its
flight."
So said I to the brightness, which
erewhile
To me had spoken, and my will declar'd,
As Beatrice will'd,
explicitly.
Nor with oracular response obscure,
Such, as or ere the Lamb
of God was slain,
Beguil'd the credulous nations; but, in terms
Precise
and unambiguous lore, replied
The spirit of paternal love, enshrin'd,
Yet
in his smile apparent; and thus spake:
"Contingency, unfolded not to
view
Upon the tablet of your mortal mold,
Is all depictur'd in the'
eternal sight;
But hence deriveth not necessity,
More then the tall ship,
hurried down the flood,
Doth from the vision, that reflects the
scene.
From thence, as to the ear sweet harmony
From organ comes, so comes
before mine eye
The time prepar'd for thee. Such as driv'n out
From
Athens, by his cruel stepdame's wiles,
Hippolytus departed, such must
thou
Depart from Florence. This they wish, and this
Contrive, and
will ere long effectuate, there,
Where gainful merchandize is made of
Christ,
Throughout the livelong day. The common cry,
Will, as 't is
ever wont, affix the blame
Unto the party injur'd: but the truth
Shall, in
the vengeance it dispenseth, find
A faithful witness. Thou shall leave
each thing
Belov'd most dearly: this is the first shaft
Shot from the bow
of exile. Thou shalt prove
How salt the savour is of other's
bread,
How hard the passage to descend and climb
By other's stairs, But
that shall gall thee most
Will be the worthless and vile company,
With
whom thou must be thrown into these straits.
For all ungrateful, impious all
and mad,
Shall turn 'gainst thee: but in a little while
Theirs and not
thine shall be the crimson'd brow
Their course shall so evince their
brutishness
T' have ta'en thy stand apart shall well become
thee.
"First refuge thou must find, first
place of rest,
In the great Lombard's courtesy, who bears
Upon the ladder
perch'd the sacred bird.
He shall behold thee with such kind regard,
That
'twixt ye two, the contrary to that
Which falls 'twixt other men, the
granting shall
Forerun the asking. With him shalt thou see
That
mortal, who was at his birth impress
So strongly from this star, that of his
deeds
The nations shall take note. His unripe age
Yet holds him from
observance; for these wheels
Only nine years have compass him about.
But,
ere the Gascon practice on great Harry,
Sparkles of virtue shall shoot forth
in him,
In equal scorn of labours and of gold.
His bounty shall be spread
abroad so widely,
As not to let the tongues e'en of his foes
Be idle in
its praise. Look thou to him
And his beneficence: for he shall
cause
Reversal of their lot to many people,
Rich men and beggars
interchanging fortunes.
And thou shalt bear this written in thy soul
Of
him, but tell it not;" and things he told
Incredible to those who witness
them;
Then added: "So interpret thou, my son,
What hath been told
thee.—Lo! the ambushment
That a few circling seasons hide for thee!
Yet
envy not thy neighbours: time extends
Thy span beyond their treason's
chastisement."
Soon, as the saintly spirit,
by his silence,
Had shown the web, which I had streteh'd for him
Upon the
warp, was woven, I began,
As one, who in perplexity desires
Counsel of
other, wise, benign and friendly:
"My father! well I mark how time spurs
on
Toward me, ready to inflict the blow,
Which falls most heavily on him,
who most
Abandoned himself. Therefore 't is good
I should forecast,
that driven from the place
Most dear to me, I may not lose myself
All
others by my song. Down through the world
Of infinite mourning, and
along the mount
From whose fair height my lady's eyes did lift me,
And
after through this heav'n from light to light,
Have I learnt that, which if I
tell again,
It may with many woefully disrelish;
And, if I am a timid
friend to truth,
I fear my life may perish among those,
To whom these days
shall be of ancient date."
The brightness,
where enclos'd the treasure smil'd,
Which I had found there, first shone
glisteningly,
Like to a golden mirror in the sun;
Next answer'd:
"Conscience, dimm'd or by its own
Or other's shame, will feel thy saying
sharp.
Thou, notwithstanding, all deceit remov'd,
See the whole vision be
made manifest.
And let them wince who have their withers wrung.
What
though, when tasted first, thy voice shall prove
Unwelcome, on digestion it
will turn
To vital nourishment. The cry thou raisest,
Shall, as the
wind doth, smite the proudest summits;
Which is of honour no light
argument,
For this there only have been shown to thee,
Throughout these
orbs, the mountain, and the deep,
Spirits, whom fame hath note of. For
the mind
Of him, who hears, is loth to acquiesce
And fix its faith, unless
the instance brought
Be palpable, and proof apparent urge."
CANTO XVIII Now in his word, sole, ruminating, joy'd
That blessed
spirit; and I fed on mine,
Tempting the sweet with bitter: she
meanwhile,
Who led me unto God, admonish'd: "Muse
On other thoughts:
bethink thee, that near Him
I dwell, who recompenseth every
wrong."
At the sweet sounds of comfort
straight I turn'd;
And, in the saintly eyes what love was seen,
I leave in
silence here: nor through distrust
Of my words only, but that to such
bliss
The mind remounts not without aid. Thus much
Yet may I speak;
that, as I gaz'd on her,
Affection found no room for other wish.
While the
everlasting pleasure, that did full
On Beatrice shine, with second
view
From her fair countenance my gladden'd soul
Contented; vanquishing me
with a beam
Of her soft smile, she spake: "Turn thee, and list.
These eyes
are not thy only Paradise."
As here we
sometimes in the looks may see
Th' affection mark'd, when that its sway hath
ta'en
The spirit wholly; thus the hallow'd light,
To whom I turn'd,
flashing, bewray'd its will
To talk yet further with me, and began:
"On
this fifth lodgment of the tree, whose life
Is from its top, whose fruit is
ever fair
And leaf unwith'ring, blessed spirits abide,
That were below,
ere they arriv'd in heav'n,
So mighty in renown, as every muse
Might grace
her triumph with them. On the horns
Look therefore of the cross: he,
whom I name,
Shall there enact, as doth in summer cloud
Its nimble fire."
Along the cross I saw,
At the repeated name of Joshua,
A splendour
gliding; nor, the word was said,
Ere it was done: then, at the naming
saw
Of the great Maccabee, another move
With whirling speed; and gladness
was the scourge
Unto that top. The next for Charlemagne
And for the
peer Orlando, two my gaze
Pursued, intently, as the eye pursues
A falcon
flying. Last, along the cross,
William, and Renard, and Duke Godfrey
drew
My ken, and Robert Guiscard. And the soul,
Who spake with me
among the other lights
Did move away, and mix; and with the choir
Of
heav'nly songsters prov'd his tuneful
skill.
To Beatrice on my right l
bent,
Looking for intimation or by word
Or act, what next behoov'd: and
did descry
Such mere effulgence in her eyes, such joy,
It past all former
wont. And, as by sense
Of new delight, the man, who perseveres
In
good deeds doth perceive from day to day
His virtue growing; I e'en thus
perceiv'd
Of my ascent, together with the heav'n
The circuit widen'd,
noting the increase
Of beauty in that wonder. Like the change
In a
brief moment on some maiden's cheek,
Which from its fairness doth discharge
the weight
Of pudency, that stain'd it; such in her,
And to mine eyes so
sudden was the change,
Through silvery whiteness of that temperate
star,
Whose sixth orb now enfolded us. I saw,
Within that Jovial
cresset, the clear sparks
Of love, that reign'd there, fashion to my
view
Our language. And as birds, from river banks
Arisen, now in
round, now lengthen'd troop,
Array them in their flight, greeting, as
seems,
Their new-found pastures; so, within the lights,
The saintly
creatures flying, sang, and made
Now D. now I. now L. figur'd I' th'
air.
ENLARGE TO
FULL SIZE
First, singing, to their notes they mov'd, then
one
Becoming of these signs, a little while
Did rest them, and were mute.
O nymph divine
Of Pegasean race! whose souls, which thou
Inspir'st,
mak'st glorious and long-liv'd, as they
Cities and realms by thee! thou with
thyself
Inform me; that I may set forth the shapes,
As fancy doth present
them. Be thy power
Display'd in this brief song. The
characters,
Vocal and consonant, were five-fold seven.
In order each, as
they appear'd, I mark'd.
Diligite Justitiam, the first,
Both verb and noun
all blazon'd; and the extreme
Qui judicatis terram. In the M.
Of the
fifth word they held their station,
Making the star seem silver streak'd with
gold.
And on the summit of the M. I saw
Descending other lights, that
rested there,
Singing, methinks, their bliss and primal good.
Then, as at
shaking of a lighted brand,
Sparkles innumerable on all sides
Rise
scatter'd, source of augury to th' unwise;
Thus more than thousand twinkling
lustres hence
Seem'd reascending, and a higher pitch
Some mounting, and
some less; e'en as the sun,
Which kindleth them, decreed. And when each
one
Had settled in his place, the head and neck
Then saw I of an eagle,
lively
Grav'd in that streaky fire. Who painteth there,
Hath none to
guide him; of himself he guides;
And every line and texture of the
nest
Doth own from him the virtue, fashions it.
The other bright
beatitude, that seem'd
Erewhile, with lilied crowning, well content
To
over-canopy the M. mov'd forth,
Following gently the impress of the
bird.
Sweet star! what glorious and
thick-studded gems
Declar'd to me our justice on the earth
To be the
effluence of that heav'n, which thou,
Thyself a costly jewel, dost
inlay!
Therefore I pray the Sovran Mind, from whom
Thy motion and thy
virtue are begun,
That he would look from whence the fog doth rise,
To
vitiate thy beam: so that once more
He may put forth his hand 'gainst such,
as drive
Their traffic in that sanctuary, whose walls
With miracles and
martyrdoms were built.
ENLARGE TO
FULL SIZE
Ye host of heaven! whose
glory I survey l
O beg ye grace for those, that are on earth
All after ill
example gone astray.
War once had for its instrument the sword:
But now 't
is made, taking the bread away
Which the good Father locks from none.
—And thou,
That writes but to cancel, think, that they,
Who for the
vineyard, which thou wastest, died,
Peter and Paul live yet, and mark thy
doings.
Thou hast good cause to cry, "My heart so cleaves
To him, that
liv'd in solitude remote,
And from the wilds was dragg'd to martyrdom,
I
wist not of the fisherman nor Paul."
Before my sight appear'd, with open wings,
The beauteous
image, in fruition sweet
Gladdening the thronged spirits. Each did
seem
A little ruby, whereon so intense
The sun-beam glow'd that to mine
eyes it came
In clear refraction. And that, which next
Befalls me to
portray, voice hath not utter'd,
Nor hath ink written, nor in fantasy
Was
e'er conceiv'd. For I beheld and heard
The beak discourse; and, what
intention form'd
Of many, singly as of one express,
Beginning: "For that I
was just and piteous,
l am exalted to this height of glory,
The which no
wish exceeds: and there on earth
Have I my memory left, e'en by the
bad
Commended, while they leave its course
untrod."
Thus is one heat from many embers
felt,
As in that image many were the loves,
And one the voice, that issued
from them all.
Whence I address them: "O perennial flowers
Of gladness
everlasting! that exhale
In single breath your odours manifold!
Breathe
now; and let the hunger be appeas'd,
That with great craving long hath held
my soul,
Finding no food on earth. This well I know,
That if there
be in heav'n a realm, that shows
In faithful mirror the celestial
Justice,
Yours without veil reflects it. Ye discern
The heed,
wherewith I do prepare myself
To hearken; ye the doubt that urges me
With
such inveterate craving." Straight I saw,
Like to a falcon issuing from
the hood,
That rears his head, and claps him with his wings,
His beauty
and his eagerness bewraying.
So saw I move that stately sign, with
praise
Of grace divine inwoven and high song
Of inexpressive joy.
"He," it began,
"Who turn'd his compass on the world's extreme,
And
in that space so variously hath wrought,
Both openly, and in secret, in such
wise
Could not through all the universe display
Impression of his glory,
that the Word
Of his omniscience should not still remain
In infinite
excess. In proof whereof,
He first through pride supplanted, who was
sum
Of each created being, waited not
For light celestial, and abortive
fell.
Whence needs each lesser nature is but scant
Receptacle unto that
Good, which knows
No limit, measur'd by itself alone.
Therefore your
sight, of th' omnipresent Mind
A single beam, its origin must
own
Surpassing far its utmost potency.
The ken, your world is gifted with,
descends
In th' everlasting Justice as low down,
As eye doth in the sea;
which though it mark
The bottom from the shore, in the wide main
Discerns
it not; and ne'ertheless it is,
But hidden through its deepness. Light
is none,
Save that which cometh from the pure serene
Of ne'er disturbed
ether: for the rest,
'Tis darkness all, or shadow of the flesh,
Or else
its poison. Here confess reveal'd
That covert, which hath hidden from
thy search
The living justice, of the which thou mad'st
Such frequent
question; for thou saidst—'A man
Is born on Indus' banks, and none is
there
Who speaks of Christ, nor who doth read nor write,
And all his
inclinations and his acts,
As far as human reason sees, are good,
And he
offendeth not in word or deed.
But unbaptiz'd he dies, and void of
faith.
Where is the justice that condemns him? where
His blame, if
he believeth not?'—What then,
And who art thou, that on the stool wouldst
sit
To judge at distance of a thousand miles
With the short-sighted vision
of a span?
To him, who subtilizes thus with me,
There would assuredly be
room for doubt
Even to wonder, did not the safe word
Of scripture hold
supreme authority.
"O animals of clay!
O spirits gross I
The primal will, that in itself is good,
Hath from
itself, the chief Good, ne'er been mov'd.
Justice consists in consonance with
it,
Derivable by no created good,
Whose very cause depends upon its
beam."
As on her nest the stork, that turns
about
Unto her young, whom lately she hath fed,
While they with upward
eyes do look on her;
So lifted I my gaze; and bending so
The ever-blessed
image wav'd its wings,
Lab'ring with such deep counsel. Wheeling
round
It warbled, and did say: "As are my notes
To thee, who understand'st
them not, such is
Th' eternal judgment unto mortal
ken."
Then still abiding in that ensign
rang'd,
Wherewith the Romans over-awed the world,
Those burning splendours
of the Holy Spirit
Took up the strain; and thus it spake again:
"None ever
hath ascended to this realm,
Who hath not a believer been in
Christ,
Either before or after the blest limbs
Were nail'd upon the wood.
But lo! of those
Who call 'Christ, Christ,' there shall be many
found,
In judgment, further off from him by far,
Than such, to whom
his name was never known.
Christians like these the Ethiop shall
condemn:
When that the two assemblages shall part;
One rich eternally, the
other poor.
"What may the Persians say unto
your kings,
When they shall see that volume, in the which
All their
dispraise is written, spread to view?
There amidst Albert's works shall that
be read,
Which will give speedy motion to the pen,
When Prague shall mourn
her desolated realm.
There shall be read the woe, that he doth work
With
his adulterate money on the Seine,
Who by the tusk will perish: there be
read
The thirsting pride, that maketh fool alike
The English and Scot,
impatient of their bound.
There shall be seen the Spaniard's luxury,
The
delicate living there of the Bohemian,
Who still to worth has been a willing
stranger.
The halter of Jerusalem shall see
A unit for his virtue, for his
vices
No less a mark than million. He, who guards
The isle of fire
by old Anchises honour'd
Shall find his avarice there and cowardice;
And
better to denote his littleness,
The writing must be letters maim'd, that
speak
Much in a narrow space. All there shall know
His uncle and his
brother's filthy doings,
Who so renown'd a nation and two crowns
Have
bastardized. And they, of Portugal
And Norway, there shall be expos'd
with him
Of Ratza, who hath counterfeited ill
The coin of Venice. O
blest Hungary!
If thou no longer patiently abid'st
Thy ill-entreating!
and, O blest Navarre!
If with thy mountainous girdle thou wouldst arm
thee
In earnest of that day, e'en now are heard
Wailings and groans in
Famagosta's streets
And Nicosia's, grudging at their beast,
Who keepeth
even footing with the rest."
When, disappearing, from our hemisphere,
The world's enlightener
vanishes, and day
On all sides wasteth, suddenly the sky,
Erewhile
irradiate only with his beam,
Is yet again unfolded, putting
forth
Innumerable lights wherein one shines.
Of such vicissitude in heaven
I thought,
As the great sign, that marshaleth the world
And the world's
leaders, in the blessed beak
Was silent; for that all those living
lights,
Waxing in splendour, burst forth into songs,
Such as from memory
glide and fall away.
ENLARGE TO
FULL SIZE
Sweet love! that dost
apparel thee in smiles,
How lustrous was thy semblance in those
sparkles,
Which merely are from holy thoughts
inspir'd!
After the precious and bright
beaming stones,
That did ingem the sixth light, ceas'd the chiming
Of
their angelic bells; methought I heard
The murmuring of a river, that doth
fall
From rock to rock transpicuous, making known
The richness of his
spring-head: and as sound
Of cistern, at the fret-board, or of pipe,
Is,
at the wind-hole, modulate and tun'd;
Thus up the neck, as it were hollow,
rose
That murmuring of the eagle, and forthwith
Voice there assum'd, and
thence along the beak
Issued in form of words, such as my heart
Did look
for, on whose tables I inscrib'd them.
"The
part in me, that sees, and bears the sun,,
In mortal eagles," it began, "must
now
Be noted steadfastly: for of the fires,
That figure me, those,
glittering in mine eye,
Are chief of all the greatest. This, that
shines
Midmost for pupil, was the same, who sang
The Holy Spirit's song,
and bare about
The ark from town to town; now doth he know
The merit of
his soul-impassion'd strains
By their well-fitted guerdon. Of the
five,
That make the circle of the vision, he
Who to the beak is nearest,
comforted
The widow for her son: now doth he know
How dear he costeth not
to follow Christ,
Both from experience of this pleasant life,
And of its
opposite. He next, who follows
In the circumference, for the over
arch,
By true repenting slack'd the pace of death:
Now knoweth he, that
the degrees of heav'n
Alter not, when through pious prayer below
Today's
is made tomorrow's destiny.
The other following, with the laws and me,
To
yield the shepherd room, pass'd o'er to Greece,
From good intent producing
evil fruit:
Now knoweth he, how all the ill, deriv'd
From his well doing,
doth not helm him aught,
Though it have brought destruction on the
world.
That, which thou seest in the under bow,
Was William, whom that
land bewails, which weeps
For Charles and Frederick living: now he
knows
How well is lov'd in heav'n the righteous king,
Which he betokens by
his radiant seeming.
Who in the erring world beneath would deem,
That
Trojan Ripheus in this round was set
Fifth of the saintly splendours?
now he knows
Enough of that, which the world cannot see,
The grace
divine, albeit e'en his sight
Reach not its utmost depth." Like to the
lark,
That warbling in the air expatiates long,
Then, trilling out his
last sweet melody,
Drops satiate with the sweetness; such appear'd
That
image stampt by the' everlasting pleasure,
Which fashions like itself all
lovely things.
I, though my doubting were
as manifest,
As is through glass the hue that mantles it,
In silence
waited not: for to my lips
"What things are these?" involuntary
rush'd,
And forc'd a passage out: whereat I mark'd
A sudden lightening and
new revelry.
The eye was kindled: and the blessed sign
No more to keep me
wond'ring and suspense,
Replied: "I see that thou believ'st these
things,
Because I tell them, but discern'st not how;
So that thy knowledge
waits not on thy faith:
As one who knows the name of thing by rote,
But is
a stranger to its properties,
Till other's tongue reveal them. Fervent
love
And lively hope with violence assail
The kingdom of the heavens, and
overcome
The will of the Most high; not in such sort
As man prevails o'er
man; but conquers it,
Because 't is willing to be conquer'd, still,
Though
conquer'd, by its mercy conquering.
"Those,
in the eye who live the first and fifth,
Cause thee to marvel, in that thou
behold'st
The region of the angels deck'd with them.
They quitted not
their bodies, as thou deem'st,
Gentiles but Christians, in firm rooted
faith,
This of the feet in future to be pierc'd,
That of feet nail'd
already to the cross.
One from the barrier of the dark abyss,
Where never
any with good will returns,
Came back unto his bones. Of lively
hope
Such was the meed; of lively hope, that wing'd
The prayers sent up to
God for his release,
And put power into them to bend his will.
The
glorious Spirit, of whom I speak to thee,
A little while returning to the
flesh,
Believ'd in him, who had the means to help,
And, in believing,
nourish'd such a flame
Of holy love, that at the second death
He was made
sharer in our gamesome mirth.
The other, through the riches of that
grace,
Which from so deep a fountain doth distil,
As never eye created saw
its rising,
Plac'd all his love below on just and right:
Wherefore of
grace God op'd in him the eye
To the redemption of mankind to
come;
Wherein believing, he endur'd no more
The filth of paganism, and for
their ways
Rebuk'd the stubborn nations. The three nymphs,
Whom at
the right wheel thou beheldst advancing,
Were sponsors for him more than
thousand years
Before baptizing. O how far remov'd,
Predestination!
is thy root from such
As see not the First cause entire: and ye,
O mortal
men! be wary how ye judge:
For we, who see our Maker, know not yet
The
number of the chosen: and esteem
Such scantiness of knowledge our
delight:
For all our good is in that primal good
Concentrate, and God's
will and ours are one."
So, by that form
divine, was giv'n to me
Sweet medicine to clear and strengthen sight,
And,
as one handling skillfully the harp,
Attendant on some skilful songster's
voice
Bids the chords vibrate, and therein the song
Acquires more
pleasure; so, the whilst it spake,
It doth remember me, that I beheld
The
pair of blessed luminaries move.
Like the accordant twinkling of two
eyes,
Their beamy circlets, dancing to the sounds.
Again mine eyes were fix'd on Beatrice,
And with mine eyes
my soul, that in her looks
Found all contentment. Yet no smile she
wore
And, "Did I smile," quoth she, "thou wouldst be straight
Like Semele
when into ashes turn'd:
For, mounting these eternal palace-stairs,
My
beauty, which the loftier it climbs,
As thou hast noted, still doth kindle
more,
So shines, that, were no temp'ring interpos'd,
Thy mortal puissance
would from its rays
Shrink, as the leaf doth from the thunderbolt.
Into
the seventh splendour are we wafted,
That underneath the burning lion's
breast
Beams, in this hour, commingled with his might,
Thy mind be with
thine eyes: and in them mirror'd
The shape, which in this mirror shall be
shown."
Whoso can deem, how fondly I had fed
My sight upon her blissful
countenance,
May know, when to new thoughts I chang'd, what joy
To do the
bidding of my heav'nly guide:
In equal balance poising either
weight.
Within the crystal, which records
the name,
(As its remoter circle girds the world)
Of that lov'd monarch,
in whose happy reign
No ill had power to harm, I saw rear'd up,
In colour
like to sun-illumin'd gold.
ENLARGE TO
FULL SIZE
A ladder, which my ken pursued in vain,
So lofty was the
summit; down whose steps
I saw the splendours in such
multitude
Descending, ev'ry light in heav'n, methought,
Was shed thence.
As the rooks, at dawn of day
Bestirring them to dry their feathers
chill,
Some speed their way a-field, and homeward some,
Returning, cross
their flight, while some abide
And wheel around their airy lodge; so
seem'd
That glitterance, wafted on alternate wing,
As upon certain stair
it met, and clash'd
Its shining. And one ling'ring near us, wax'd
So
bright, that in my thought: said: "The love,
Which this betokens me, admits
no doubt."
Unwillingly from question I
refrain,
To her, by whom my silence and my speech
Are order'd, looking for
a sign: whence she,
Who in the sight of Him, that seeth all,
Saw wherefore
I was silent, prompted me
T' indulge the fervent wish; and I began:
"I am
not worthy, of my own desert,
That thou shouldst answer me; but for her
sake,
Who hath vouchsaf'd my asking, spirit blest!
That in thy joy art
shrouded! say the cause,
Which bringeth thee so near: and wherefore,
say,
Doth the sweet symphony of Paradise
Keep silence here, pervading with
such sounds
Of rapt devotion ev'ry lower sphere?"
"Mortal art thou in
hearing as in sight;"
Was the reply: "and what forbade the smile
Of
Beatrice interrupts our song.
Only to yield thee gladness of my voice,
And
of the light that vests me, I thus far
Descend these hallow'd steps: not that
more love
Invites me; for lo! there aloft, as much
Or more of love is
witness'd in those flames:
But such my lot by charity assign'd,
That makes
us ready servants, as thou seest,
To execute the counsel of the
Highest.
"That in this court," said I, "O sacred lamp!
Love no compulsion
needs, but follows free
Th' eternal Providence, I well discern:
This
harder find to deem, why of thy peers
Thou only to this office wert
foredoom'd."
I had not ended, when, like rapid mill,
Upon its centre
whirl'd the light; and then
The love, that did inhabit there,
replied:
"Splendour eternal, piercing through these folds,
Its virtue to
my vision knits, and thus
Supported, lifts me so above myself,
That on the
sov'ran essence, which it wells from,
I have the power to gaze: and hence the
joy,
Wherewith I sparkle, equaling with my blaze
The keenness of my sight.
But not the soul,
That is in heav'n most lustrous, nor the
seraph
That hath his eyes most fix'd on God, shall solve
What thou hast
ask'd: for in th' abyss it lies
Of th' everlasting statute sunk so
low,
That no created ken may fathom it.
And, to the mortal world when thou
return'st,
Be this reported; that none henceforth dare
Direct his
footsteps to so dread a bourn.
The mind, that here is radiant, on the
earth
Is wrapt in mist. Look then if she may do,
Below, what passeth
her ability,
When she is ta'en to heav'n." By words like
these
Admonish'd, I the question urg'd no more;
And of the spirit humbly
sued alone
T' instruct me of its state. "'Twixt either shore
Of
Italy, nor distant from thy land,
A stony ridge ariseth, in such sort,
The
thunder doth not lift his voice so high,
They call it Catria: at whose foot a
cell
Is sacred to the lonely Eremite,
For worship set apart and holy
rites."
A third time thus it spake; then added: "There
So firmly to God's
service I adher'd,
That with no costlier viands than the juice
Of olives,
easily I pass'd the heats
Of summer and the winter frosts, content
In
heav'n-ward musings. Rich were the returns
And fertile, which that
cloister once was us'd
To render to these heavens: now 't is fall'n
Into a
waste so empty, that ere long
Detection must lay bare its vanity
Pietro
Damiano there was I yclept:
Pietro the sinner, when before I dwelt
Beside
the Adriatic, in the house
Of our blest Lady. Near upon my close
Of
mortal life, through much importuning
I was constrain'd to wear the hat that
still
From bad to worse it shifted.—Cephas came;
He came, who was the Holy
Spirit's vessel,
Barefoot and lean, eating their bread, as chanc'd,
At the
first table. Modern Shepherd's need
Those who on either hand may prop
and lead them,
So burly are they grown: and from behind
Others to hoist
them. Down the palfrey's sides
Spread their broad mantles, so as both
the beasts
Are cover'd with one skin. O patience! thou
That lookst
on this and doth endure so long."
I at those accents saw the splendours
down
From step to step alight, and wheel, and wax,
Each circuiting, more
beautiful. Round this
They came, and stay'd them; uttered them a
shout
So loud, it hath no likeness here: nor I
Wist what it spake, so
deaf'ning was the thunder."
Astounded, to the guardian of my steps
I turn'd me, like the chill,
who always runs
Thither for succour, where he trusteth most,
And she was
like the mother, who her son
Beholding pale and breathless, with her
voice
Soothes him, and he is cheer'd; for thus she spake,
Soothing me:
"Know'st not thou, thou art in heav'n?
And know'st not thou, whatever is in
heav'n,
Is holy, and that nothing there is done
But is done zealously and
well? Deem now,
What change in thee the song, and what my smile
had
wrought, since thus the shout had pow'r to move thee.
In which couldst thou
have understood their prayers,
The vengeance were already known to
thee,
Which thou must witness ere thy mortal hour,
The sword of heav'n is
not in haste to smite,
Nor yet doth linger, save unto his seeming,
Who in
desire or fear doth look for it.
But elsewhere now l bid thee turn thy
view;
So shalt thou many a famous spirit behold."
Mine eyes directing, as
she will'd, I saw
A hundred little spheres, that fairer grew
By
interchange of splendour. I remain'd,
As one, who fearful of o'er-much
presuming,
Abates in him the keenness of desire,
Nor dares to question,
when amid those pearls,
One largest and most lustrous onward drew,
That it
might yield contentment to my wish;
And from within it these the sounds I
heard.
"If thou, like me, beheldst the
charity
That burns amongst us, what thy mind conceives,
Were utter'd.
But that, ere the lofty bound
Thou reach, expectance may not weary
thee,
I will make answer even to the thought,
Which thou hast such respect
of. In old days,
That mountain, at whose side Cassino rests,
Was on
its height frequented by a race
Deceived and ill dispos'd: and I it
was,
Who thither carried first the name of Him,
Who brought the
soul-subliming truth to man.
And such a speeding grace shone over me,
That
from their impious worship I reclaim'd
The dwellers round about, who with the
world
Were in delusion lost. These other flames,
The spirits of men
contemplative, were all
Enliven'd by that warmth, whose kindly force
Gives
birth to flowers and fruits of holiness.
Here is Macarius; Romoaldo
here:
And here my brethren, who their steps refrain'd
Within the
cloisters, and held firm their heart."
I
answ'ring, thus; "Thy gentle words and kind,
And this the cheerful semblance,
I behold
Not unobservant, beaming in ye all,
Have rais'd assurance in me,
wakening it
Full-blossom'd in my bosom, as a rose
Before the sun, when the
consummate flower
Has spread to utmost amplitude. Of thee
Therefore
entreat I, father! to declare
If I may gain such favour, as to gaze
Upon
thine image, by no covering
veil'd."
"Brother!" he thus rejoin'd,
"in the last sphere
Expect completion of thy lofty aim,
For there on each
desire completion waits,
And there on mine: where every aim is
found
Perfect, entire, and for fulfillment ripe.
There all things are as
they have ever been:
For space is none to bound, nor pole divides,
Our
ladder reaches even to that clime,
And so at giddy distance mocks thy
view.
Thither the Patriarch Jacob saw it stretch
Its topmost round, when
it appear'd to him
With angels laden. But to mount it now
None lifts
his foot from earth: and hence my rule
Is left a profitless stain upon the
leaves;
The walls, for abbey rear'd, turned into dens,
The cowls to sacks
choak'd up with musty meal.
Foul usury doth not more lift itself
Against
God's pleasure, than that fruit which makes
The hearts of monks so wanton:
for whate'er
Is in the church's keeping, all pertains.
To such, as sue for
heav'n's sweet sake, and not
To those who in respect of kindred claim,
Or
on more vile allowance. Mortal flesh
Is grown so dainty, good
beginnings last not
From the oak's birth, unto the acorn's setting.
His
convent Peter founded without gold
Or silver; I with pray'rs and fasting
mine;
And Francis his in meek humility.
And if thou note the point, whence
each proceeds,
Then look what it hath err'd to, thou shalt find
The white
grown murky. Jordan was turn'd back;
And a less wonder, then the
refluent sea,
May at God's pleasure work amendment
here."
So saying, to his assembly back he
drew:
And they together cluster'd into one,
Then all roll'd upward like an
eddying wind.
The sweet dame beckon'd me to
follow them:
And, by that influence only, so prevail'd
Over my nature,
that no natural motion,
Ascending or descending here below,
Had, as I
mounted, with my pennon vied.
So, reader,
as my hope is to return
Unto the holy triumph, for the which
I ofttimes
wail my sins, and smite my breast,
Thou hadst been longer drawing out and
thrusting
Thy finger in the fire, than I was, ere
The sign, that followeth
Taurus, I beheld,
And enter'd its precinct. O glorious stars!
O
light impregnate with exceeding virtue!
To whom whate'er of genius lifteth
me
Above the vulgar, grateful I refer;
With ye the parent of all mortal
life
Arose and set, when I did first inhale
The Tuscan air; and afterward,
when grace
Vouchsaf'd me entrance to the lofty wheel
That in its orb
impels ye, fate decreed
My passage at your clime. To you my
soul
Devoutly sighs, for virtue even now
To meet the hard emprize that
draws me on.
"Thou art so near the sum of
blessedness,"
Said Beatrice, "that behooves thy ken
Be vigilant and clear.
And, to this end,
Or even thou advance thee further, hence
Look
downward, and contemplate, what a world
Already stretched under our feet
there lies:
So as thy heart may, in its blithest mood,
Present itself to
the triumphal throng,
Which through the' etherial concave comes
rejoicing."
I straight obey'd; and with
mine eye return'd
Through all the seven spheres, and saw this globe
So
pitiful of semblance, that perforce
It moved my smiles: and him in truth I
hold
For wisest, who esteems it least: whose thoughts
Elsewhere are fix'd,
him worthiest call and best.
I saw the daughter of Latona shine
Without
the shadow, whereof late I deem'd
That dense and rare were cause. Here
I sustain'd
The visage, Hyperion! of thy sun;
And mark'd, how near him
with their circle, round
Move Maia and Dione; here discern'd
Jove's
tempering 'twixt his sire and son; and hence
Their changes and their various
aspects
Distinctly scann'd. Nor might I not descry
Of all the seven,
how bulky each, how swift;
Nor of their several distances not learn.
This
petty area (o'er the which we stride
So fiercely), as along the eternal
twins
I wound my way, appear'd before me all,
Forth from the havens
stretch'd unto the hills.
Then to the beauteous eyes mine eyes return'd.
E'en as the bird, who midst the leafy bower
Has, in her nest, sat
darkling through the night,
With her sweet brood, impatient to
descry
Their wished looks, and to bring home their food,
In the fond quest
unconscious of her toil:
She, of the time prevenient, on the spray,
That
overhangs their couch, with wakeful gaze
Expects the sun; nor ever, till the
dawn,
Removeth from the east her eager ken;
So stood the dame erect, and
bent her glance
Wistfully on that region, where the sun
Abateth most his
speed; that, seeing her
Suspense and wand'ring, I became as one,
In whom
desire is waken'd, and the hope
Of somewhat new to come fills with
delight.
Short space ensued; I was not
held, I say,
Long in expectance, when I saw the heav'n
Wax more and more
resplendent; and, "Behold,"
Cried Beatrice, "the triumphal hosts
Of
Christ, and all the harvest reap'd at length
Of thy ascending up these
spheres." Meseem'd,
That, while she spake her image all did
burn,
And in her eyes such fullness was of joy,
And I am fain to pass
unconstrued by.
As in the calm full moon,
when Trivia smiles,
In peerless beauty, 'mid th' eternal nympus,
That
paint through all its gulfs the blue profound
In bright pre-eminence so saw I
there,
O'er million lamps a sun, from whom all drew
Their radiance as from
ours the starry train:
And through the living light so lustrous glow'd
The
substance, that my ken endur'd it not.
O
Beatrice! sweet and precious guide!
Who cheer'd me with her comfortable
words!
"Against the virtue, that o'erpow'reth thee,
Avails not to resist.
Here is the might,
And here the wisdom, which did open lay
The path,
that had been yearned for so long,
Betwixt the heav'n and earth." Like
to the fire,
That, in a cloud imprison'd doth break out
Expansive, so that
from its womb enlarg'd,
It falleth against nature to the ground;
Thus in
that heav'nly banqueting my soul
Outgrew herself; and, in the transport
lost.
Holds now remembrance none of what she
was.
"Ope thou thine eyes, and mark me:
thou hast seen
Things, that empower thee to sustain my
smile."
I was as one, when a forgotten
dream
Doth come across him, and he strives in vain
To shape it in his
fantasy again,
Whenas that gracious boon was proffer'd me,
Which never may
be cancel'd from the book,
Wherein the past is written. Now were
all
Those tongues to sound, that have on sweetest milk
Of Polyhymnia and
her sisters fed
And fatten'd, not with all their help to boot,
Unto the
thousandth parcel of the truth,
My song might shadow forth that saintly
smile,
flow merely in her saintly looks it wrought.
And with such figuring
of Paradise
The sacred strain must leap, like one, that meets
A sudden
interruption to his road.
But he, who thinks how ponderous the theme,
And
that 't is lain upon a mortal shoulder,
May pardon, if it tremble with the
burden.
The track, our ventrous keel must furrow, brooks
No unribb'd
pinnace, no self-sparing pilot.
"Why doth
my face," said Beatrice, "thus
Enamour thee, as that thou dost not
turn
Unto the beautiful garden, blossoming
Beneath the rays of Christ?
Here is the rose,
Wherein the word divine was made incarnate;
And
here the lilies, by whose odour known
The way of life was follow'd."
Prompt I heard
Her bidding, and encounter once again
The strife of
aching vision. As erewhile,
Through glance of sunlight, stream'd
through broken cloud,
Mine eyes a flower-besprinkled mead have
seen,
Though veil'd themselves in shade; so saw I there
Legions of
splendours, on whom burning rays
Shed lightnings from above, yet saw I
not
The fountain whence they flow'd. O gracious virtue!
Thou, whose
broad stamp is on them, higher up
Thou didst exalt thy glory to give
room
To my o'erlabour'd sight: when at the name
Of that fair flower, whom
duly I invoke
Both morn and eve, my soul, with all her might
Collected, on
the goodliest ardour fix'd.
And, as the bright dimensions of the star
In
heav'n excelling, as once here on earth
Were, in my eyeballs lively
portray'd,
Lo! from within the sky a cresset fell,
Circling in fashion of
a diadem,
And girt the star, and hov'ring round it
wheel'd.
Whatever melody sounds sweetest
here,
And draws the spirit most unto itself,
Might seem a rent cloud when
it grates the thunder,
Compar'd unto the sounding of that lyre,
Wherewith
the goodliest sapphire, that inlays
The floor of heav'n, was crown'd.
"Angelic Love,
I am, who thus with hov'ring flight enwheel
The lofty
rapture from that womb inspir'd,
Where our desire did dwell: and round thee
so,
Lady of Heav'n! will hover; long as thou
Thy Son shalt follow, and
diviner joy
Shall from thy presence gild the highest
sphere."
Such close was to the circling
melody:
And, as it ended, all the other lights
Took up the strain, and
echoed Mary's name.
The robe, that with its
regal folds enwraps
The world, and with the nearer breath of God
Doth burn
and quiver, held so far retir'd
Its inner hem and skirting over us,
That
yet no glimmer of its majesty
Had stream'd unto me: therefore were mine
eyes
Unequal to pursue the crowned flame,
That rose and sought its natal
seed of fire;
And like to babe, that stretches forth its arms
For very
eagerness towards the breast,
After the milk is taken; so
outstretch'd
Their wavy summits all the fervent band,
Through zealous love
to Mary: then in view
There halted, and "Regina Coeli" sang
So sweetly,
the delight hath left me never.
O what
o'erflowing plenty is up-pil'd
In those rich-laden coffers, which
below
Sow'd the good seed, whose harvest now they
keep.
Here are the treasures tasted, that
with tears
Were in the Babylonian exile won,
When gold had fail'd them.
Here in synod high
Of ancient council with the new conven'd,
Under
the Son of Mary and of God,
Victorious he his mighty triumph holds,
To
whom the keys of glory were assign'd.
"O ye! in chosen fellowship advanc'd
To the great supper of the
blessed Lamb,
Whereon who feeds hath every wish fulfill'd!
If to this man
through God's grace be vouchsaf'd
Foretaste of that, which from your table
falls,
Or ever death his fated term prescribe;
Be ye not heedless of his
urgent will;
But may some influence of your sacred dews
Sprinkle him.
Of the fount ye alway drink,
Whence flows what most he craves."
Beatrice spake,
And the rejoicing spirits, like to spheres
On
firm-set poles revolving, trail'd a blaze
Of comet splendour; and as wheels,
that wind
Their circles in the horologe, so work
The stated rounds, that
to th' observant eye
The first seems still, and, as it flew, the
last;
E'en thus their carols weaving variously,
They by the measure pac'd,
or swift, or slow,
Made me to rate the riches of their
joy.
From that, which I did note in beauty
most
Excelling, saw I issue forth a flame
So bright, as none was left more
goodly there.
Round Beatrice thrice it wheel'd about,
With so divine a
song, that fancy's ear
Records it not; and the pen passeth on
And leaves a
blank: for that our mortal speech,
Nor e'en the inward shaping of the
brain,
Hath colours fine enough to trace such
folds.
"O saintly sister mine! thy prayer
devout
Is with so vehement affection urg'd,
Thou dost unbind me from that
beauteous sphere."
Such were the accents
towards my lady breath'd
From that blest ardour, soon as it was stay'd:
To
whom she thus: "O everlasting light
Of him, within whose mighty grasp our
Lord
Did leave the keys, which of this wondrous bliss
He bare below! tent
this man, as thou wilt,
With lighter probe or deep, touching the faith,
By
the which thou didst on the billows walk.
If he in love, in hope, and in
belief,
Be steadfast, is not hid from thee: for thou
Hast there thy ken,
where all things are beheld
In liveliest portraiture. But since true
faith
Has peopled this fair realm with citizens,
Meet is, that to exalt
its glory more,
Thou in his audience shouldst thereof
discourse."
Like to the bachelor, who arms
himself,
And speaks not, till the master have propos'd
The question, to
approve, and not to end it;
So I, in silence, arm'd me, while she
spake,
Summoning up each argument to aid;
As was behooveful for such
questioner,
And such profession: "As good Christian ought,
Declare thee,
What is faith?" Whereat I rais'd
My forehead to the light, whence this
had breath'd,
Then turn'd to Beatrice, and in her looks
Approval met, that
from their inmost fount
I should unlock the waters. "May the
grace,
That giveth me the captain of the church
For confessor," said I,
"vouchsafe to me
Apt utterance for my thoughts!" then added: "Sire!
E'en
as set down by the unerring style
Of thy dear brother, who with thee
conspir'd
To bring Rome in unto the way of life,
Faith of things hop'd is
substance, and the proof
Of things not seen; and herein doth
consist
Methinks its essence,"—"Rightly hast thou deem'd,"
Was answer'd:
"if thou well discern, why first
He hath defin'd it, substance, and then
proof."
"The deep things," I replied,
"which here I scan
Distinctly, are below from mortal eye
So hidden, they
have in belief alone
Their being, on which credence hope sublime
Is built;
and therefore substance it intends.
And inasmuch as we must needs
infer
From such belief our reasoning, all respect
To other view excluded,
hence of proof
Th' intention is deriv'd." Forthwith I heard:
"If
thus, whate'er by learning men attain,
Were understood, the sophist would
want room
To exercise his wit." So breath'd the flame
Of love: then
added: "Current is the coin
Thou utter'st, both in weight and in
alloy.
But tell me, if thou hast it in thy
purse."
"Even so glittering and so round,"
said I,
"I not a whit misdoubt of its
assay."
Next issued from the deep imbosom'd
splendour:
"Say, whence the costly jewel, on the which
Is founded every
virtue, came to thee."
"The flood," I answer'd, "from the Spirit of
God
Rain'd down upon the ancient bond and new,—
Here is the reas'ning,
that convinceth me
So feelingly, each argument beside
Seems blunt and
forceless in comparison."
Then heard I: "Wherefore holdest thou that
each,
The elder proposition and the new,
Which so persuade thee, are the
voice of heav'n?"
"The works, that
follow'd, evidence their truth;"
I answer'd: "Nature did not make for
these
The iron hot, or on her anvil mould them."
"Who voucheth to thee of
the works themselves,"
Was the reply, "that they in very deed
Are that
they purport? None hath sworn so to
thee."
"That all the world," said I,
"should have been turn'd
To Christian, and no miracle been wrought,
Would
in itself be such a miracle,
The rest were not an hundredth part so
great.
E'en thou wentst forth in poverty and hunger
To set the goodly
plant, that from the vine,
It once was, now is grown unsightly
bramble."
That ended, through the high celestial court
Resounded all the
spheres. "Praise we one God!"
In song of most unearthly melody.
And
when that Worthy thus, from branch to branch,
Examining, had led me, that we
now
Approach'd the topmost bough, he straight resum'd;
"The grace, that
holds sweet dalliance with thy soul,
So far discreetly hath thy lips
unclos'd
That, whatsoe'er has past them, I commend.
Behooves thee to
express, what thou believ'st,
The next, and whereon thy belief hath
grown."
"O saintly sire and spirit!"
I began,
"Who seest that, which thou didst so believe,
As to
outstrip feet younger than thine own,
Toward the sepulchre? thy will is
here,
That I the tenour of my creed unfold;
And thou the cause of it hast
likewise ask'd.
And I reply: I in one God believe,
One sole eternal
Godhead, of whose love
All heav'n is mov'd, himself unmov'd the while.
Nor
demonstration physical alone,
Or more intelligential and
abstruse,
Persuades me to this faith; but from that truth
It cometh to me
rather, which is shed
Through Moses, the rapt Prophets, and the
Psalms.
The Gospel, and that ye yourselves did write,
When ye were gifted
of the Holy Ghost.
In three eternal Persons I believe,
Essence threefold
and one, mysterious league
Of union absolute, which, many a time,
The word
of gospel lore upon my mind
Imprints: and from this germ, this firstling
spark,
The lively flame dilates, and like heav'n's star
Doth glitter in
me." As the master hears,
Well pleas'd, and then enfoldeth in his
arms
The servant, who hath joyful tidings brought,
And having told the
errand keeps his peace;
Thus benediction uttering with song
Soon as my
peace I held, compass'd me thrice
The apostolic radiance, whose behest
Had
op'd lips; so well their answer pleas'd.
If e'er the sacred poem that hath made
Both heav'n and earth
copartners in its toil,
And with lean abstinence, through many a
year,
Faded my brow, be destin'd to prevail
Over the cruelty, which bars
me forth
Of the fair sheep-fold, where a sleeping lamb
The wolves set on
and fain had worried me,
With other voice and fleece of other grain
I
shall forthwith return, and, standing up
At my baptismal font, shall claim
the wreath
Due to the poet's temples: for I there
First enter'd on the
faith which maketh souls
Acceptable to God: and, for its sake,
Peter had
then circled my forehead thus.
Next from
the squadron, whence had issued forth
The first fruit of Christ's vicars on
the earth,
Toward us mov'd a light, at view whereof
My Lady, full of
gladness, spake to me:
"Lo! lo! behold the peer of mickle might,
That
makes Falicia throng'd with visitants!"
As
when the ring-dove by his mate alights,
In circles each about the other
wheels,
And murmuring cooes his fondness; thus saw I
One, of the other
great and glorious prince,
With kindly greeting hail'd, extolling
both
Their heavenly banqueting; but when an end
Was to their gratulation,
silent, each,
Before me sat they down, so burning bright,
I could not look
upon them. Smiling then,
Beatrice spake: "O life in glory
shrin'd!"
Who didst the largess of our kingly court
Set down with faithful
pen! let now thy voice
Of hope the praises in this height resound.
For
thou, who figur'st them in shapes, as clear,
As Jesus stood before thee, well
can'st speak them."
"Lift up thy head, and
be thou strong in trust:
For that, which hither from the mortal
world
Arriveth, must be ripen'd in our
beam."
Such cheering accents from the
second flame
Assur'd me; and mine eyes I lifted up
Unto the mountains that
had bow'd them late
With over-heavy burden. "Sith our Liege
Wills of
his grace that thou, or ere thy death,
In the most secret council, with his
lords
Shouldst be confronted, so that having view'd
The glories of our
court, thou mayst therewith
Thyself, and all who hear, invigorate
With
hope, that leads to blissful end; declare,
What is that hope, how it doth
flourish in thee,
And whence thou hadst it?" Thus proceeding
still,
The second light: and she, whose gentle love
My soaring pennons in
that lofty flight
Escorted, thus preventing me, rejoin'd:
Among her sons,
not one more full of hope,
Hath the church militant: so 't is of
him
Recorded in the sun, whose liberal orb
Enlighteneth all our tribe: and
ere his term
Of warfare, hence permitted he is come,
From Egypt to
Jerusalem, to see.
The other points, both which thou hast inquir'd,
Not
for more knowledge, but that he may tell
How dear thou holdst the virtue,
these to him
Leave I; for he may answer thee with ease,
And without
boasting, so God give him grace."
Like to the scholar, practis'd in his
task,
Who, willing to give proof of diligence,
Seconds his teacher gladly,
"Hope," said I,
"Is of the joy to come a sure expectance,
Th' effect of
grace divine and merit preceding.
This light from many a star visits my
heart,
But flow'd to me the first from him, who sang
The songs of the
Supreme, himself supreme
Among his tuneful brethren. 'Let all
hope
In thee,' so speak his anthem, 'who have known
Thy name;' and with my
faith who know not that?
From thee, the next, distilling from his
spring,
In thine epistle, fell on me the drops
So plenteously, that I on
others shower
The influence of their dew." Whileas I spake,
A
lamping, as of quick and vollied lightning,
Within the bosom of that mighty
sheen,
Play'd tremulous; then forth these accents breath'd:
"Love for the
virtue which attended me
E'en to the palm, and issuing from the
field,
Glows vigorous yet within me, and inspires
To ask of thee, whom
also it delights;
What promise thou from hope in chief dost
win."
"Both scriptures, new and ancient," I
reply'd;
"Propose the mark (which even now I view)
For souls belov'd of
God. Isaias saith,
'That, in their own
land, each one must be clad
In twofold vesture; and their proper lands this
delicious life.'
In terms more full,
And clearer far, thy brother hath set
forth
This revelation to us, where he tells
Of the white raiment destin'd
to the saints."
And, as the words were ending, from above,
"They hope in
thee," first heard we cried: whereto
Answer'd the carols all. Amidst
them next,
A light of so clear amplitude emerg'd,
That winter's month were
but a single day,
Were such a crystal in the Cancer's
sign.
Like as a virgin riseth up, and
goes,
And enters on the mazes of the dance,
Though gay, yet innocent of
worse intent,
Than to do fitting honour to the bride;
So I beheld the new
effulgence come
Unto the other two, who in a ring
Wheel'd, as became their
rapture. In the dance
And in the song it mingled. And the
dame
Held on them fix'd her looks: e'en as the spouse
Silent and moveless.
"This is he, who lay
Upon the bosom of our pelican:
This he, into
whose keeping from the cross
The mighty charge was given." Thus she
spake,
Yet therefore naught the more remov'd her Sight
From marking them,
or ere her words began,
Or when they clos'd. As he, who looks
intent,
And strives with searching ken, how he may see
The sun in his
eclipse, and, through desire
Of seeing, loseth power of sight: so I
Peer'd
on that last resplendence, while I heard:
"Why dazzlest thou thine eyes in
seeking that,
Which here abides not? Earth my body is,
In earth: and
shall be, with the rest, so long,
As till our number equal the decree
Of
the Most High. The two that have ascended,
In this our blessed
cloister, shine alone
With the two garments. So report
below."
As when, for ease of labour, or to
shun
Suspected peril at a whistle's breath,
The oars, erewhile dash'd
frequent in the wave,
All rest; the flamy circle at that voice
So rested,
and the mingling sound was still,
Which from the trinal band soft-breathing
rose.
I turn'd, but ah! how trembled in my thought,
When, looking at my
side again to see
Beatrice, I descried her not, although
Not distant, on
the happy coast she stood.
With dazzled eyes, whilst wond'ring I remain'd,
Forth of the beamy
flame which dazzled me,
Issued a breath, that in attention mute
Detain'd
me; and these words it spake: "'T were well,
That, long as till thy vision,
on my form
O'erspent, regain its virtue, with discourse
Thou compensate
the brief delay. Say then,
Beginning, to what point thy soul
aspires:"
ENLARGE TO
FULL SIZE
"And meanwhile rest assur'd, that sight in thee
Is but
o'erpowered a space, not wholly quench'd:
Since thy fair guide and lovely, in
her look
Hath potency, the like to that which dwelt
In Ananias' hand.'' I
answering thus:
"Be to mine eyes the remedy or late
Or early, at her
pleasure; for they were
The gates, at which she enter'd, and did light
Her
never dying fire. My wishes here
Are centered; in this palace is the
weal,
That Alpha and Omega, is to all
The lessons love can read me."
Yet again
The voice which had dispers'd my fear, when daz'd
With
that excess, to converse urg'd, and spake:
"Behooves thee sift more narrowly
thy terms,
And say, who level'd at this scope thy
bow."
"Philosophy," said I, ''hath
arguments,
And this place hath authority enough
'T' imprint in me such
love: for, of constraint,
Good, inasmuch as we perceive the good,
Kindles
our love, and in degree the more,
As it comprises more of goodness in
't.
The essence then, where such advantage is,
That each good, found
without it, is naught else
But of his light the beam, must needs
attract
The soul of each one, loving, who the truth
Discerns, on which
this proof is built. Such truth
Learn I from him, who shows me the
first love
Of all intelligential substances
Eternal: from his voice I
learn, whose word
Is truth, that of himself to Moses saith,
'I will make
all my good before thee pass.'
Lastly from thee I learn, who chief
proclaim'st,
E'en at the outset of thy heralding,
In mortal ears the
mystery of heav'n."
"Through human wisdom,
and th' authority
Therewith agreeing," heard I answer'd, "keep
The
choicest of thy love for God. But say,
If thou yet other cords within
thee feel'st
That draw thee towards him; so that thou report
How many are
the fangs, with which this love
Is grappled to thy soul." I did not
miss,
To what intent the eagle of our Lord
Had pointed his demand; yea
noted well
Th' avowal, which he led to; and resum'd:
"All grappling bonds,
that knit the heart to God,
Confederate to make fast our clarity.
The
being of the world, and mine own being,
The death which he endur'd that I
should live,
And that, which all the faithful hope, as I do,
To the
foremention'd lively knowledge join'd,
Have from the sea of ill love sav'd my
bark,
And on the coast secur'd it of the right.
As for the leaves, that in
the garden bloom,
My love for them is great, as is the good
Dealt by th'
eternal hand, that tends them all."
I
ended, and therewith a song most sweet
Rang through the spheres; and "Holy,
holy, holy,"
Accordant with the rest my lady sang.
And as a sleep is
broken and dispers'd
Through sharp encounter of the nimble light,
With the
eye's spirit running forth to meet
The ray, from membrane on to the membrane
urg'd;
And the upstartled wight loathes that he sees;
So, at his sudden
waking, he misdeems
Of all around him, till assurance waits
On better
judgment: thus the saintly came
Drove from before mine eyes the motes
away,
With the resplendence of her own, that cast
Their brightness
downward, thousand miles below.
Whence I my vision, clearer shall
before,
Recover'd; and, well nigh astounded, ask'd
Of a fourth light, that
now with us I saw.
And Beatrice: "The first
diving soul,
That ever the first virtue fram'd, admires
Within these rays
his Maker." Like the leaf,
That bows its lithe top till the blast is
blown;
By its own virtue rear'd then stands aloof;
So I, the whilst she
said, awe-stricken bow'd.
Then eagerness to speak embolden'd me;
And I
began: "O fruit! that wast alone
Mature, when first engender'd! Ancient
father!
That doubly seest in every wedded bride
Thy daughter by affinity
and blood!
Devoutly as I may, I pray thee hold
Converse with me: my will
thou seest; and I,
More speedily to hear thee, tell it
not."
It chanceth oft some animal
bewrays,
Through the sleek cov'ring of his furry coat.
The fondness, that
stirs in him and conforms
His outside seeming to the cheer within:
And in
like guise was Adam's spirit mov'd
To joyous mood, that through the covering
shone,
Transparent, when to pleasure me it spake:
"No need thy will be
told, which I untold
Better discern, than thou whatever thing
Thou holdst
most certain: for that will I see
In Him, who is truth's mirror, and
Himself
Parhelion unto all things, and naught else
To him. This
wouldst thou hear; how long since God
Plac'd me high garden, from whose
hounds
She led me up in this ladder, steep and long;
What space endur'd my
season of delight;
Whence truly sprang the wrath that banish'd me;
And
what the language, which I spake and fram'd
Not that I tasted of the tree, my
son,
Was in itself the cause of that exile,
But only my transgressing of
the mark
Assign'd me. There, whence at thy lady's hest
The Mantuan
mov'd him, still was I debarr'd
This council, till the sun had made
complete,
Four thousand and three hundred rounds and twice,
His annual
journey; and, through every light
In his broad pathway, saw I him
return,
Thousand save sev'nty times, the whilst I dwelt
Upon the earth.
The language I did use
Was worn away, or ever Nimrod's race
Their
unaccomplishable work began.
For naught, that man inclines to, ere was
lasting,
Left by his reason free, and variable,
As is the sky that sways
him. That he speaks,
Is nature's prompting: whether thus or
thus,
She leaves to you, as ye do most affect it.
Ere I descended into
hell's abyss,
El was the name on earth of the Chief Good,
Whose joy
enfolds me: Eli then 't was call'd
And so beseemeth: for, in mortals,
use
Is as the leaf upon the bough; that goes,
And other comes instead.
Upon the mount
Most high above the waters, all my life,
Both
innocent and guilty, did but reach
From the first hour, to that which cometh
next
(As the sun changes quarter), to the sixth."
Then "Glory to the Father, to the Son,
And to the
Holy Spirit," rang aloud
Throughout all Paradise, that with the song
My
spirit reel'd, so passing sweet the strain:
And what I saw was equal
ecstasy;
One universal smile it seem'd of all things,
Joy past compare,
gladness unutterable,
Imperishable life of peace and love,
Exhaustless
riches and unmeasur'd bliss.
Before mine
eyes stood the four torches lit;
And that, which first had come, began to
wax
In brightness, and in semblance such became,
As Jove might be, if he
and Mars were birds,
And interchang'd their plumes. Silence
ensued,
Through the blest quire, by Him, who here appoints
Vicissitude of
ministry, enjoin'd;
When thus I heard: "Wonder not, if my hue
Be chang'd;
for, while I speak, these shalt thou see
All in like manner change with me.
My place
He who usurps on earth (my place, ay, mine,
Which in the
presence of the Son of God
Is void), the same hath made my cemetery
A
common sewer of puddle and of blood:
The more below his triumph, who from
hence
Malignant fell." Such colour, as the sun,
At eve or morning,
paints an adverse cloud,
Then saw I sprinkled over all the sky.
And as th'
unblemish'd dame, who in herself
Secure of censure, yet at bare report
Of
other's failing, shrinks with maiden fear;
So Beatrice in her semblance
chang'd:
And such eclipse in heav'n methinks was seen,
When the Most Holy
suffer'd. Then the words
Proceeded, with voice, alter'd from
itself
So clean, the semblance did not alter more.
"Not to this end was
Christ's spouse with my blood,
With that of Linus, and of Cletus fed:
That
she might serve for purchase of base gold:
But for the purchase of this happy
life
Did Sextus, Pius, and Callixtus bleed,
And Urban, they, whose doom
was not without
Much weeping seal'd. No purpose was of our
That on
the right hand of our successors
Part of the Christian people should be
set,
And part upon their left; nor that the keys,
Which were vouchsaf'd
me, should for ensign serve
Unto the banners, that do levy war
On the
baptiz'd: nor I, for sigil-mark
Set upon sold and lying privileges;
Which
makes me oft to bicker and turn red.
In shepherd's clothing greedy wolves
below
Range wide o'er all the pastures. Arm of God!
Why longer
sleepst thou? Caorsines and Gascona
Prepare to quaff our blood. O
good beginning
To what a vile conclusion must thou stoop!
But the high
providence, which did defend
Through Scipio the world's glory unto
Rome,
Will not delay its succour: and thou, son,
Who through thy mortal
weight shall yet again
Return below, open thy lips, nor hide
What is by me
not hidden." As a Hood
Of frozen vapours streams adown the air,
What
time the she-goat with her skiey horn
Touches the sun; so saw I there stream
wide
The vapours, who with us had linger'd late
And with glad triumph deck
th' ethereal cope.
Onward my sight their semblances pursued;
So far
pursued, as till the space between
From its reach sever'd them: whereat the
guide
Celestial, marking me no more intent
On upward gazing, said, "Look
down and see
What circuit thou hast compass'd." From the hour
When I
before had cast my view beneath,
All the first region overpast I
saw,
Which from the midmost to the bound'ry winds;
That onward thence from
Gades I beheld
The unwise passage of Laertes' son,
And hitherward the
shore, where thou, Europa!
Mad'st thee a joyful burden: and yet more
Of
this dim spot had seen, but that the sun,
A constellation off and more, had
ta'en
His progress in the zodiac
underneath.
Then by the spirit, that doth
never leave
Its amorous dalliance with my lady's looks,
Back with
redoubled ardour were mine eyes
Led unto her: and from her radiant
smiles,
Whenas I turn'd me, pleasure so divine
Did lighten on me, that
whatever bait
Or art or nature in the human flesh,
Or in its limn'd
resemblance, can combine
Through greedy eyes to take the soul withal,
Were
to her beauty nothing. Its boon influence
From the fair nest of Leda
rapt me forth,
And wafted on into the swiftest
heav'n.
What place for entrance Beatrice
chose,
I may not say, so uniform was all,
Liveliest and loftiest.
She my secret wish
Divin'd; and with such gladness, that God's
love
Seem'd from her visage shining, thus began:
"Here is the goal, whence
motion on his race
Starts; motionless the centre, and the rest
All mov'd
around. Except the soul divine,
Place in this heav'n is none, the soul
divine,
Wherein the love, which ruleth o'er its orb,
Is kindled, and the
virtue that it sheds;
One circle, light and love, enclasping it,
As this
doth clasp the others; and to Him,
Who draws the bound, its limit only
known.
Measur'd itself by none, it doth divide
Motion to all, counted unto
them forth,
As by the fifth or half ye count forth ten.
The vase, wherein
time's roots are plung'd, thou seest,
Look elsewhere for the leaves. O
mortal lust!
That canst not lift thy head above the waves
Which whelm and
sink thee down! The will in man
Bears goodly blossoms; but its ruddy
promise
Is, by the dripping of perpetual rain,
Made mere abortion: faith
and innocence
Are met with but in babes, each taking leave
Ere cheeks with
down are sprinkled; he, that fasts,
While yet a stammerer, with his tongue
let loose
Gluts every food alike in every moon.
One yet a babbler, loves
and listens to
His mother; but no sooner hath free use
Of speech, than he
doth wish her in her grave.
So suddenly doth the fair child of him,
Whose
welcome is the morn and eve his parting,
To negro blackness change her virgin
white.
"Thou, to abate thy wonder, note
that none
Bears rule in earth, and its frail family
Are therefore
wand'rers. Yet before the date,
When through the hundredth in his
reck'ning drops
Pale January must be shor'd aside
From winter's calendar,
these heav'nly spheres
Shall roar so loud, that fortune shall be fain
To
turn the poop, where she hath now the prow;
So that the fleet run onward; and
true fruit,
Expected long, shall crown at last the bloom!"
So she who doth imparadise my soul,
Had drawn the veil from off our
pleasant life,
And bar'd the truth of poor mortality;
When lo! as one who,
in a mirror, spies
The shining of a flambeau at his back,
Lit sudden ore
he deem of its approach,
And turneth to resolve him, if the glass
Have
told him true, and sees the record faithful
As note is to its metre; even
thus,
I well remember, did befall to me,
Looking upon the beauteous eyes,
whence love
Had made the leash to take me. As I turn'd;
And that,
which, in their circles, none who spies,
Can miss of, in itself apparent,
struck
On mine; a point I saw, that darted light
So sharp, no lid,
unclosing, may bear up
Against its keenness. The least star we
view
From hence, had seem'd a moon, set by its side,
As star by side of
star. And so far off,
Perchance, as is the halo from the light
Which
paints it, when most dense the vapour spreads,
There wheel'd about the point
a circle of fire,
More rapid than the motion, which first girds
The world.
Then, circle after circle, round
Enring'd each other; till the seventh
reach'd
Circumference so ample, that its bow,
Within the span of Juno's
messenger,
lied scarce been held entire. Beyond the sev'nth,
Follow'd yet
other two. And every one,
As more in number distant from the
first,
Was tardier in motion; and that glow'd
With flame most pure, that
to the sparkle' of truth
Was nearest, as partaking most, methinks,
Of its
reality. The guide belov'd
Saw me in anxious thought suspense, and
spake:
"Heav'n, and all nature, hangs upon that point.
The circle thereto
most conjoin'd observe;
And know, that by intenser love its course
Is to
this swiftness wing'd." To whom I thus:
"It were enough; nor should I
further seek,
Had I but witness'd order, in the world
Appointed, such as
in these wheels is seen.
But in the sensible world such diff'rence
is,
That is each round shows more divinity,
As each is wider from the
centre. Hence,
If in this wondrous and angelic temple,
That hath for
confine only light and love,
My wish may have completion I must
know,
Wherefore such disagreement is between
Th' exemplar and its copy:
for myself,
Contemplating, I fail to pierce the
cause."
"It is no marvel, if thy fingers
foil'd
Do leave the knot untied: so hard 't is grown
For want of tenting."
Thus she said: "But take,"
She added, "if thou wish thy cure, my
words,
And entertain them subtly. Every orb
Corporeal, doth
proportion its extent
Unto the virtue through its parts diffus'd.
The
greater blessedness preserves the more.
The greater is the body (if all
parts
Share equally) the more is to preserve.
Therefore the circle, whose
swift course enwheels
The universal frame answers to that,
Which is
supreme in knowledge and in love
Thus by the virtue, not the seeming,
breadth
Of substance, measure, thou shalt see the heav'ns,
Each to the'
intelligence that ruleth it,
Greater to more, and smaller unto
less,
Suited in strict and wondrous
harmony."
As when the sturdy north blows
from his cheek
A blast, that scours the sky, forthwith our air,
Clear'd of
the rack, that hung on it before,
Glitters; and, With his beauties all
unveil'd,
The firmament looks forth serene, and smiles;
Such was my cheer,
when Beatrice drove
With clear reply the shadows back, and truth
Was
manifested, as a star in heaven.
And when the words were ended, not
unlike
To iron in the furnace, every cirque
Ebullient shot forth
scintillating fires:
And every sparkle shivering to new blaze,
In number
did outmillion the account
Reduplicate upon the chequer'd board.
Then
heard I echoing on from choir to choir,
"Hosanna," to the fixed point, that
holds,
And shall for ever hold them to their place,
From everlasting,
irremovable.
ENLARGE TO
FULL SIZE
Musing awhile I stood: and
she, who saw
by inward meditations, thus began:
"In the first circles,
they, whom thou beheldst,
Are seraphim and cherubim. Thus
swift
Follow their hoops, in likeness to the point,
Near as they can,
approaching; and they can
The more, the loftier their vision.
Those,
That round them fleet, gazing the Godhead next,
Are thrones;
in whom the first trine ends. And all
Are blessed, even as their sight
descends
Deeper into the truth, wherein rest is
For every mind. Thus
happiness hath root
In seeing, not in loving, which of sight
Is
aftergrowth. And of the seeing such
The meed, as unto each in due
degree
Grace and good-will their measure have assign'd.
The other trine,
that with still opening buds
In this eternal springtide blossom
fair,
Fearless of bruising from the nightly ram,
Breathe up in warbled
melodies threefold
Hosannas blending ever, from the three
Transmitted.
hierarchy of gods, for aye
Rejoicing, dominations first, next
then
Virtues, and powers the third. The next to whom
Are princedoms
and archangels, with glad round
To tread their festal ring; and last the
band
Angelical, disporting in their sphere.
All, as they circle in their
orders, look
Aloft, and downward with such sway prevail,
That all with
mutual impulse tend to God.
These once a mortal view beheld.
Desire
In Dionysius so intently wrought,
That he, as I have done
rang'd them; and nam'd
Their orders, marshal'd in his thought. From
him
Dissentient, one refus'd his sacred read.
But soon as in this heav'n
his doubting eyes
Were open'd, Gregory at his error smil'd
Nor marvel,
that a denizen of earth
Should scan such secret truth; for he had
learnt
Both this and much beside of these our orbs,
From an eye-witness to
heav'n's mysteries."
No longer than what time Latona's twins
Cover'd of Libra and the
fleecy star,
Together both, girding the' horizon hang,
In even balance
from the zenith pois'd,
Till from that verge, each, changing
hemisphere,
Part the nice level; e'en so brief a space
Did Beatrice's
silence hold. A smile
Bat painted on her cheek; and her fix'd
gaze
Bent on the point, at which my vision fail'd:
When thus her words
resuming she began:
"I speak, nor what thou wouldst inquire demand;
For I
have mark'd it, where all time and place
Are present. Not for increase
to himself
Of good, which may not be increas'd, but forth
To manifest his
glory by its beams,
Inhabiting his own eternity,
Beyond time's limit or
what bound soe'er
To circumscribe his being, as he will'd,
Into new
natures, like unto himself,
Eternal Love unfolded. Nor before,
As if
in dull inaction torpid lay.
For not in process of before or aft
Upon
these waters mov'd the Spirit of God.
Simple and mix'd, both form and
substance, forth
To perfect being started, like three darts
Shot from a
bow three-corded. And as ray
In crystal, glass, and amber, shines
entire,
E'en at the moment of its issuing; thus
Did, from th' eternal
Sovran, beam entire
His threefold operation, at one act
Produc'd coeval.
Yet in order each
Created his due station knew: those highest,
Who
pure intelligence were made: mere power
The lowest: in the midst, bound with
strict league,
Intelligence and power, unsever'd bond.
Long tract of ages
by the angels past,
Ere the creating of another world,
Describ'd on
Jerome's pages thou hast seen.
But that what I disclose to thee is
true,
Those penmen, whom the Holy Spirit mov'd
In many a passage of their
sacred book
Attest; as thou by diligent search shalt find
And reason in
some sort discerns the same,
Who scarce would grant the heav'nly
ministers
Of their perfection void, so long a space.
Thus when and where
these spirits of love were made,
Thou know'st, and how: and knowing hast
allay'd
Thy thirst, which from the triple question rose.
Ere one had
reckon'd twenty, e'en so soon
Part of the angels fell: and in their
fall
Confusion to your elements ensued.
The others kept their station: and
this task,
Whereon thou lookst, began with such delight,
That they
surcease not ever, day nor night,
Their circling. Of that fatal lapse
the cause
Was the curst pride of him, whom thou hast seen
Pent with the
world's incumbrance. Those, whom here
Thou seest, were lowly to confess
themselves
Of his free bounty, who had made them apt
For ministries so
high: therefore their views
Were by enlight'ning grace and their own
merit
Exalted; so that in their will confirm'd
They stand, nor feel to
fall. For do not doubt,
But to receive the grace, which heav'n
vouchsafes,
Is meritorious, even as the soul
With prompt affection
welcometh the guest.
Now, without further help, if with good heed
My words
thy mind have treasur'd, thou henceforth
This consistory round about mayst
scan,
And gaze thy fill. But since thou hast on earth
Heard vain
disputers, reasoners in the schools,
Canvas the' angelic nature, and
dispute
Its powers of apprehension, memory, choice;
Therefore, 't is well
thou take from me the truth,
Pure and without disguise, which they
below,
Equivocating, darken and
perplex.
"Know thou, that, from the first,
these substances,
Rejoicing in the countenance of God,
Have held
unceasingly their view, intent
Upon the glorious vision, from the
which
Naught absent is nor hid: where then no change
Of newness with
succession interrupts,
Remembrance there needs none to gather up
Divided
thought and images remote
"So that men,
thus at variance with the truth
Dream, though their eyes be open; reckless
some
Of error; others well aware they err,
To whom more guilt and shame
are justly due.
Each the known track of sage philosophy
Deserts, and has a
byway of his own:
So much the restless eagerness to shine
And love of
singularity prevail.
Yet this, offensive as it is, provokes
Heav'n's anger
less, than when the book of God
Is forc'd to yield to man's authority,
Or
from its straightness warp'd: no reck'ning made
What blood the sowing of it
in the world
Has cost; what favour for himself he wins,
Who meekly clings
to it. The aim of all
Is how to shine: e'en they, whose office is
To
preach the Gospel, let the gospel sleep,
And pass their own inventions off
instead.
One tells, how at Christ's suffering the wan moon
Bent back her
steps, and shadow'd o'er the sun
With intervenient disk, as she
withdrew:
Another, how the light shrouded itself
Within its tabernacle,
and left dark
The Spaniard and the Indian, with the Jew.
Such fables
Florence in her pulpit hears,
Bandied about more frequent, than the
names
Of Bindi and of Lapi in her streets.
The sheep, meanwhile, poor
witless ones, return
From pasture, fed with wind: and what avails
For
their excuse, they do not see their harm?
Christ said not to his first
conventicle,
'Go forth and preach impostures to the world,'
But gave them
truth to build on; and the sound
Was mighty on their lips; nor needed
they,
Beside the gospel, other spear or shield,
To aid them in their
warfare for the faith.
The preacher now provides himself with store
Of
jests and gibes; and, so there be no lack
Of laughter, while he vents them,
his big cowl
Distends, and he has won the meed he sought:
Could but the
vulgar catch a glimpse the while
Of that dark bird which nestles in his
hood,
They scarce would wait to hear the blessing said.
Which now the
dotards hold in such esteem,
That every counterfeit, who spreads
abroad
The hands of holy promise, finds a throng
Of credulous fools
beneath. Saint Anthony
Fattens with this his swine, and others
worse
Than swine, who diet at his lazy board,
Paying with unstamp'd metal
for their fare.
"But (for we far have
wander'd) let us seek
The forward path again; so as the way
Be shorten'd
with the time. No mortal tongue
Nor thought of man hath ever reach'd so
far,
That of these natures he might count the tribes.
What Daniel of their
thousands hath reveal'd
With finite number infinite conceals.
The fountain
at whose source these drink their beams,
With light supplies them in as many
modes,
As there are splendours, that it shines on: each
According to the
virtue it conceives,
Differing in love and sweet affection.
Look then how
lofty and how huge in breadth
The' eternal might, which, broken and
dispers'd
Over such countless mirrors, yet remains
Whole in itself and
one, as at the first."
Noon's fervid hour perchance six thousand miles
From hence is distant;
and the shadowy cone
Almost to level on our earth declines;
When from the
midmost of this blue abyss
By turns some star is to our vision lost.
And
straightway as the handmaid of the sun
Puts forth her radiant brow, all,
light by light,
Fade, and the spangled firmament shuts in,
E'en to the
loveliest of the glittering throng.
Thus vanish'd gradually from my
sight
The triumph, which plays ever round the point,
That overcame me,
seeming (for it did)
Engirt by that it girdeth. Wherefore love,
With
loss of other object, forc'd me bend
Mine eyes on Beatrice once
again.
If all, that hitherto is told of
her,
Were in one praise concluded, 't were too weak
To furnish out this
turn. Mine eyes did look
On beauty, such, as I believe in sooth,
Not
merely to exceed our human, but,
That save its Maker, none can to the
full
Enjoy it. At this point o'erpower'd I fail,
Unequal to my
theme, as never bard
Of buskin or of sock hath fail'd before.
For, as the
sun doth to the feeblest sight,
E'en so remembrance of that witching
smile
Hath dispossess my spirit of itself.
Not from that day, when on this
earth I first
Beheld her charms, up to that view of them,
Have I with song
applausive ever ceas'd
To follow, but not follow them no more;
My course
here bounded, as each artist's is,
When it doth touch the limit of his
skill.
She (such as I bequeath her to the
bruit
Of louder trump than mine, which hasteneth on,
Urging its arduous
matter to the close),
Her words resum'd, in gesture and in
voice
Resembling one accustom'd to command:
"Forth from the last corporeal
are we come
Into the heav'n, that is unbodied light,
Light intellectual
replete with love,
Love of true happiness replete with joy,
Joy, that
transcends all sweetness of delight.
Here shalt thou look on either mighty
host
Of Paradise; and one in that array,
Which in the final judgment thou
shalt see."
As when the lightning, in a
sudden spleen
Unfolded, dashes from the blinding eyes
The visive spirits
dazzled and bedimm'd;
So, round about me, fulminating streams
Of living
radiance play'd, and left me swath'd
And veil'd in dense impenetrable
blaze.
Such weal is in the love, that stills this heav'n;
For its own
flame the torch this fitting ever!
No
sooner to my list'ning ear had come
The brief assurance, than I
understood
New virtue into me infus'd, and sight
Kindled afresh, with
vigour to sustain
Excess of light, however pure. I look'd;
And in
the likeness of a river saw
Light flowing, from whose amber-seeming
waves
Flash'd up effulgence, as they glided on
'Twixt banks, on either
side, painted with spring,
Incredible how fair; and, from the tide,
There
ever and anon, outstarting, flew
Sparkles instinct with life; and in the
flow'rs
Did set them, like to rubies chas'd in gold;
Then, as if drunk
with odors, plung'd again
Into the wondrous flood; from which, as
one
Re'enter'd, still another rose. "The thirst
Of knowledge high,
whereby thou art inflam'd,
To search the meaning of what here thou
seest,
The more it warms thee, pleases me the more.
But first behooves
thee of this water drink,
Or ere that longing be allay'd." So
spake
The day-star of mine eyes; then thus subjoin'd:
"This stream, and
these, forth issuing from its gulf,
And diving back, a living topaz
each,
With all this laughter on its bloomy shores,
Are but a preface,
shadowy of the truth
They emblem: not that, in themselves, the things
Are
crude; but on thy part is the defect,
For that thy views not yet aspire so
high."
Never did babe, that had outslept his wont,
Rush, with such eager
straining, to the milk,
As I toward the water, bending me,
To make the
better mirrors of mine eyes
In the refining wave; and, as the eaves
Of
mine eyelids did drink of it, forthwith
Seem'd it unto me turn'd from length
to round,
Then as a troop of maskers, when they put
Their vizors off, look
other than before,
The counterfeited semblance thrown aside;
So into
greater jubilee were chang'd
Those flowers and sparkles, and distinct I
saw
Before me either court of heav'n
displac'd.
O prime enlightener! thou who
crav'st me strength
On the high triumph of thy realm to gaze!
Grant virtue
now to utter what I kenn'd,
There is in heav'n a
light, whose goodly shine
Makes the Creator visible to all
Created, that
in seeing him alone
Have peace; and in a circle spreads so far,
That the
circumference were too loose a zone
To girdle in the sun. All is one
beam,
Reflected from the summit of the first,
That moves, which being
hence and vigour takes,
And as some cliff, that from the bottom eyes
Its
image mirror'd in the crystal flood,
As if 't admire its brave
appareling
Of verdure and of flowers: so, round about,
Eyeing the light,
on more than million thrones,
Stood, eminent, whatever from our earth
Has
to the skies return'd. How wide the leaves
Extended to their utmost of
this rose,
Whose lowest step embosoms such a space
Of ample radiance!
Yet, nor amplitude
Nor height impeded, but my view with ease
Took in
the full dimensions of that joy.
Near or remote, what there avails, where
God
Immediate rules, and Nature, awed, suspends
Her sway? Into the
yellow of the rose
Perennial, which in bright expansiveness,
Lays forth
its gradual blooming, redolent
Of praises to the never-wint'ring sun,
As
one, who fain would speak yet holds his peace,
Beatrice led me; and,
"Behold," she said,
"This fair assemblage! stoles of snowy white
How
numberless! The city, where we dwell,
Behold how vast! and these our
seats so throng'd
Few now are wanting here! In that proud stall,
On
which, the crown, already o'er its state
Suspended, holds thine eyes—or ere
thyself
Mayst at the wedding sup,—shall rest the soul
Of the great Harry,
he who, by the world
Augustas hail'd, to Italy must come,
Before her day
be ripe. But ye are sick,
And in your tetchy wantonness as blind,
As
is the bantling, that of hunger dies,
And drives away the nurse. Nor
may it be,
That he, who in the sacred forum sways,
Openly or in secret,
shall with him
Accordant walk: Whom God will not endure
I' th' holy office
long; but thrust him down
To Simon Magus, where Magna's priest
Will sink
beneath him: such will be his meed."
In fashion, as a snow-white rose, lay then
Before my view
the saintly multitude,
Which in his own blood Christ espous'd.
Meanwhile
That other host, that soar aloft to gaze
And celebrate his
glory, whom they love,
Hover'd around; and, like a troop of bees,
Amid the
vernal sweets alighting now,
Now, clustering, where their fragrant labour
glows,
Flew downward to the mighty flow'r, or rose
From the redundant
petals, streaming back
Unto the steadfast dwelling of their joy.
Faces had
they of flame, and wings of gold;
The rest was whiter than the driven
snow.
And as they flitted down into the flower,
From range to range,
fanning their plumy loins,
Whisper'd the peace and ardour, which they
won
From that soft winnowing. Shadow none, the vast
Interposition of
such numerous flight
Cast, from above, upon the flower, or view
Obstructed
aught. For, through the universe,
Wherever merited, celestial
light
Glides freely, and no obstacle
prevents.
All there, who reign in safety
and in bliss,
Ages long past or new, on one sole mark
Their love and
vision fix'd. O trinal beam
Of individual star, that charmst them
thus,
Vouchsafe one glance to gild our storm
below!
If the grim brood, from Arctic
shores that roam'd,
(Where helice, forever, as she wheels,
Sparkles a
mother's fondness on her son)
Stood in mute wonder 'mid the works of
Rome,
When to their view the Lateran arose
In greatness more than earthly;
I, who then
From human to divine had past, from time
Unto eternity, and
out of Florence
To justice and to truth, how might I choose
But marvel
too? 'Twixt gladness and amaze,
In sooth no will had I to utter
aught,
Or hear. And, as a pilgrim, when he rests
Within the temple
of his vow, looks round
In breathless awe, and hopes some time to tell
Of
all its goodly state: e'en so mine eyes
Cours'd up and down along the living
light,
Now low, and now aloft, and now around,
Visiting every step.
Looks I beheld,
Where charity in soft persuasion sat,
Smiles from
within and radiance from above,
And in each gesture grace and honour
high.
So rov'd my ken, and its general
form
All Paradise survey'd: when round I turn'd
With purpose of my lady to
inquire
Once more of things, that held my thought suspense,
But answer
found from other than I ween'd;
For, Beatrice, when I thought to see,
I
saw instead a senior, at my side,
Rob'd, as the rest, in glory.
Joy benign
Glow'd in his eye, and o'er his cheek diffus'd,
With
gestures such as spake a father's love.
And, "Whither is she vanish'd?"
straight I ask'd.
"By Beatrice
summon'd," he replied,
"I come to aid thy wish. Looking aloft
To the
third circle from the highest, there
Behold her on the throne, wherein her
merit
Hath plac'd her." Answering not, mine eyes I rais'd,
And saw
her, where aloof she sat, her brow
A wreath reflecting of eternal
beams.
Not from the centre of the sea so far
Unto the region of the
highest thunder,
As was my ken from hers; and yet the form
Came through
that medium down, unmix'd and pure,
ENLARGE TO
FULL SIZE
"O Lady! thou in whom my
hopes have rest!
Who, for my safety, hast not scorn'd, in hell
To leave
the traces of thy footsteps mark'd!
For all mine eyes have seen, I, to thy
power
And goodness, virtue owe and grace. Of slave,
Thou hast to
freedom brought me; and no means,
For my deliverance apt, hast left
untried.
Thy liberal bounty still toward me keep.
That, when my spirit,
which thou madest whole,
Is loosen'd from this body, it may find
Favour
with thee." So I my suit preferr'd:
And she, so distant, as appear'd,
look'd down,
And smil'd; then tow'rds th' eternal fountain
turn'd.
And thus the senior, holy and
rever'd:
"That thou at length mayst happily conclude
Thy voyage (to which
end I was dispatch'd,
By supplication mov'd and holy love)
Let thy
upsoaring vision range, at large,
This garden through: for so, by ray
divine
Kindled, thy ken a higher flight shall mount;
And from heav'n's
queen, whom fervent I adore,
All gracious aid befriend us; for that I
Am
her own faithful Bernard." Like a wight,
Who haply from Croatia wends
to see
Our Veronica, and the while 't is shown,
Hangs over it with
never-sated gaze,
And, all that he hath heard revolving, saith
Unto
himself in thought: "And didst thou look
E'en thus, O Jesus, my true Lord and
God?
And was this semblance thine?" So gaz'd I then
Adoring; for the
charity of him,
Who musing, in the world that peace enjoy'd,
Stood lively
before me. "Child of grace!"
Thus he began: "thou shalt not knowledge
gain
Of this glad being, if thine eyes are held
Still in this depth below.
But search around
The circles, to the furthest, till thou spy
Seated
in state, the queen, that of this realm
Is sovran." Straight mine eyes
I rais'd; and bright,
As, at the birth of morn, the eastern clime
Above
th' horizon, where the sun declines;
To mine eyes, that upward, as from
vale
To mountain sped, at th' extreme bound, a part
Excell'd in lustre all
the front oppos'd.
And as the glow burns ruddiest o'er the wave,
That
waits the sloping beam, which Phaeton
Ill knew to guide, and on each part the
light
Diminish'd fades, intensest in the midst;
So burn'd the peaceful
oriflame, and slack'd
On every side the living flame decay'd.
And in that
midst their sportive pennons wav'd
Thousands of angels; in resplendence
each
Distinct, and quaint adornment. At their glee
And carol, smil'd the
Lovely One of heav'n,
That joy was in the eyes of all the
blest.
Had I a tongue in eloquence as
rich,
As is the colouring in fancy's loom,
'T were all too poor to utter
the least part
Of that enchantment. When he saw mine eyes
Intent on
her, that charm'd him, Bernard gaz'd
With so exceeding fondness, as
infus'd
Ardour into my breast, unfelt before.
Freely the sage, though wrapt in musings high,
Assum'd the teacher's
part, and mild began:
"The wound, that Mary clos'd, she open'd first,
Who
sits so beautiful at Mary's feet.
The third in order, underneath her,
lo!
Rachel with Beatrice. Sarah next,
Judith, Rebecca, and the gleaner
maid,
Meek ancestress of him, who sang the songs
Of sore repentance in his
sorrowful mood.
All, as I name them, down from deaf to leaf,
Are in
gradation throned on the rose.
And from the seventh step,
successively,
Adown the breathing tresses of the flow'r
Still doth the
file of Hebrew dames proceed.
For these are a partition wall, whereby
The
sacred stairs are sever'd, as the faith
In Christ divides them. On this
part, where blooms
Each leaf in full maturity, are set
Such as in Christ,
or ere he came, believ'd.
On th' other, where an intersected space
Yet
shows the semicircle void, abide
All they, who look'd to Christ already
come.
And as our Lady on her glorious stool,
And they who on their stools
beneath her sit,
This way distinction make: e'en so on his,
The mighty
Baptist that way marks the line
(He who endur'd the desert and the
pains
Of martyrdom, and for two years of hell,
Yet still continued holy),
and beneath,
Augustin, Francis, Benedict, and the rest,
Thus far from
round to round. So heav'n's decree
Forecasts, this garden equally to
fill.
With faith in either view, past or to come,
Learn too, that downward
from the step, which cleaves
Midway the twain compartments, none there
are
Who place obtain for merit of their own,
But have through others'
merit been advanc'd,
On set conditions: spirits all releas'd,
Ere for
themselves they had the power to choose.
And, if thou mark and listen to them
well,
Their childish looks and voice declare as
much.
"Here, silent as thou art, I know thy
doubt;
And gladly will I loose the knot, wherein
Thy subtle thoughts have
bound thee. From this realm
Excluded, chalice no entrance here may
find,
No more shall hunger, thirst, or sorrow can.
A law immutable hath
establish'd all;
Nor is there aught thou seest, that doth not
fit,
Exactly, as the finger to the ring.
It is not therefore without
cause, that these,
O'erspeedy comers to immortal life,
Are different in
their shares of excellence.
Our Sovran Lord—that settleth this estate
In
love and in delight so absolute,
That wish can dare no further—every
soul,
Created in his joyous sight to dwell,
With grace at pleasure
variously endows.
And for a proof th' effect may well suffice.
And 't is
moreover most expressly mark'd
In holy scripture, where the twins are
said
To, have struggled in the womb. Therefore, as grace
Inweaves
the coronet, so every brow
Weareth its proper hue of orient light.
And
merely in respect to his prime gift,
Not in reward of meritorious
deed,
Hath each his several degree assign'd.
In early times with their own
innocence
More was not wanting, than the parents' faith,
To save them:
those first ages past, behoov'd
That circumcision in the males should
imp
The flight of innocent wings: but since the day
Of grace hath come,
without baptismal rites
In Christ accomplish'd, innocence herself
Must
linger yet below. Now raise thy view
Unto the visage most resembling
Christ:
For, in her splendour only, shalt thou win
The pow'r to look on
him." Forthwith I saw
Such floods of gladness on her visage
shower'd,
From holy spirits, winging that profound;
That, whatsoever I had
yet beheld,
Had not so much suspended me with wonder,
Or shown me such
similitude of God.
And he, who had to her descended, once,
On earth, now
hail'd in heav'n; and on pois'd wing.
"Ave, Maria, Gratia Plena," sang:
To
whose sweet anthem all the blissful court,
From all parts answ'ring, rang:
that holier joy
Brooded the deep serene. "Father rever'd:
Who
deign'st, for me, to quit the pleasant place,
Wherein thou sittest, by
eternal lot!
Say, who that angel is, that with such glee
Beholds our
queen, and so enamour'd glows
Of her high beauty, that all fire he
seems."
So I again resorted to the lore
Of my wise teacher, he, whom
Mary's charms
Embellish'd, as the sun the morning star;
Who thus in answer
spake: "In him are summ'd,
Whatever of buxomness and free delight
May be
in Spirit, or in angel, met:
And so beseems: for that he bare the
palm
Down unto Mary, when the Son of God
Vouchsaf'd to clothe him in
terrestrial weeds.
Now let thine eyes wait heedful on my words,
And note
thou of this just and pious realm
The chiefest nobles. Those, highest
in bliss,
The twain, on each hand next our empress thron'd,
Are as it were
two roots unto this rose.
He to the left, the parent, whose rash
taste
Proves bitter to his seed; and, on the right,
That ancient father of
the holy church,
Into whose keeping Christ did give the keys
Of this sweet
flow'r: near whom behold the seer,
That, ere he died, saw all the grievous
times
Of the fair bride, who with the lance and nails
Was won. And,
near unto the other, rests
The leader, under whom on manna fed
Th'
ungrateful nation, fickle and perverse.
On th' other part, facing to Peter,
lo!
Where Anna sits, so well content to look
On her lov'd daughter, that
with moveless eye
She chants the loud hosanna: while, oppos'd
To the first
father of your mortal kind,
Is Lucia, at whose hest thy lady sped,
When on
the edge of ruin clos'd thine eye.
"But
(for the vision hasteneth so an end)
Here break we off, as the good workman
doth,
That shapes the cloak according to the cloth:
And to the primal love
our ken shall rise;
That thou mayst penetrate the brightness, far
As sight
can bear thee. Yet, alas! in sooth
Beating thy pennons, thinking to
advance,
Thou backward fall'st. Grace then must first be gain'd;
Her
grace, whose might can help thee. Thou in prayer
Seek her: and, with
affection, whilst I sue,
Attend, and yield me all thy heart." He
said,
And thus the saintly orison began.
"O virgin mother, daughter of thy Son,
Created beings all in
lowliness
Surpassing, as in height, above them all,
Term by th' eternal
counsel pre-ordain'd,
Ennobler of thy nature, so advanc'd
In thee, that
its great Maker did not scorn,
Himself, in his own work enclos'd to
dwell!
For in thy womb rekindling shone the love
Reveal'd, whose genial
influence makes now
This flower to germin in eternal peace!
Here thou to
us, of charity and love,
Art, as the noon-day torch: and art, beneath,
To
mortal men, of hope a living spring.
So mighty art thou, lady! and so
great,
That he who grace desireth, and comes not
To thee for aidance, fain
would have desire
Fly without wings. Nor only him who asks,
Thy
bounty succours, but doth freely oft
Forerun the asking. Whatsoe'er may
be
Of excellence in creature, pity mild,
Relenting mercy, large
munificence,
Are all combin'd in thee. Here kneeleth one,
Who of all
spirits hath review'd the state,
From the world's lowest gap unto this
height.
Suppliant to thee he kneels, imploring grace
For virtue, yet more
high to lift his ken
Toward the bliss supreme. And I, who
ne'er
Coveted sight, more fondly, for myself,
Than now for him, my prayers
to thee prefer,
(And pray they be not scant) that thou wouldst drive
Each
cloud of his mortality away;
That on the sovran pleasure he may gaze.
This
also I entreat of thee, O queen!
Who canst do what thou wilt! that in him
thou
Wouldst after all he hath beheld, preserve
Affection sound, and human
passions quell.
Lo! Where, with Beatrice, many a saint
Stretch their
clasp'd hands, in furtherance of my
suit!"
The eyes, that heav'n with love and
awe regards,
Fix'd on the suitor, witness'd, how benign
She looks on pious
pray'rs: then fasten'd they
On th' everlasting light, wherein no eye
Of
creature, as may well be thought, so far
Can travel inward. I,
meanwhile, who drew
Near to the limit, where all wishes end,
The ardour of
my wish (for so behooved),
Ended within me. Beck'ning smil'd the
sage,
That I should look aloft: but, ere he bade,
Already of myself aloft
I look'd;
For visual strength, refining more and more,
Bare me into the
ray authentical
Of sovran light. Thenceforward, what I saw,
Was not
for words to speak, nor memory's self
To stand against such outrage on her
skill.
As one, who from a dream awaken'd, straight,
All he hath seen
forgets; yet still retains
Impression of the feeling in his dream;
E'en
such am I: for all the vision dies,
As 't were, away; and yet the sense of
sweet,
That sprang from it, still trickles in my heart.
Thus in the
sun-thaw is the snow unseal'd;
Thus in the winds on flitting leaves was
lost
The Sybil's sentence. O eternal beam!
(Whose height what reach
of mortal thought may soar?)
Yield me again some little particle
Of what
thou then appearedst, give my tongue
Power, but to leave one sparkle of thy
glory,
Unto the race to come, that shall not lose
Thy triumph wholly, if
thou waken aught
Of memory in me, and endure to hear
The record sound in
this unequal strain.
Such keenness from the
living ray I met,
That, if mine eyes had turn'd away, methinks,
I had been
lost; but, so embolden'd, on
I pass'd, as I remember, till my view
Hover'd
the brink of dread infinitude.
O grace!
unenvying of thy boon! that gav'st
Boldness to fix so earnestly my ken
On
th' everlasting splendour, that I look'd,
While sight was unconsum'd, and, in
that depth,
Saw in one volume clasp'd of love, whatever
The universe
unfolds; all properties
Of substance and of accident, beheld,
Compounded,
yet one individual light
The whole. And of such bond methinks I
saw
The universal form: for that whenever
I do but speak of it, my soul
dilates
Beyond her proper self; and, till I speak,
One moment seems a
longer lethargy,
Than five-and-twenty ages had appear'd
To that emprize,
that first made Neptune wonder
At Argo's shadow darkening on his
flood.
With fixed heed, suspense and
motionless,
Wond'ring I gaz'd; and admiration still
Was kindled, as I
gaz'd. It may not be,
That one, who looks upon that light, can
turn
To other object, willingly, his view.
For all the good, that will may
covet, there
Is summ'd; and all, elsewhere defective found,
Complete.
My tongue shall utter now, no more
E'en what remembrance keeps, than
could the babe's
That yet is moisten'd at his mother's breast.
Not that
the semblance of the living light
Was chang'd (that ever as at first
remain'd)
But that my vision quickening, in that sole
Appearance, still
new miracles descry'd,
And toil'd me with the change. In that
abyss
Of radiance, clear and lofty, seem'd methought,
Three orbs of triple
hue clipt in one bound:
And, from another, one reflected seem'd,
As
rainbow is from rainbow: and the third
Seem'd fire, breath'd equally from
both. Oh speech
How feeble and how faint art thou, to
give
Conception birth! Yet this to what I saw
Is less than little.
Oh eternal light!
Sole in thyself that dwellst; and of thyself
Sole
understood, past, present, or to come!
Thou smiledst; on that circling, which
in thee
Seem'd as reflected splendour, while I mus'd;
For I therein,
methought, in its own hue
Beheld our image painted: steadfastly
I
therefore por'd upon the view. As one
Who vers'd in geometric lore,
would fain
Measure the circle; and, though pondering long
And deeply, that
beginning, which he needs,
Finds not; e'en such was I, intent to scan
The
novel wonder, and trace out the form,
How to the circle fitted, and
therein
How plac'd: but the flight was not for my wing;
Had not a flash
darted athwart my mind,
And in the spleen unfolded what it
sought.
Here vigour fail'd the tow'ring
fantasy:
But yet the will roll'd onward, like a wheel
In even motion, by
the Love impell'd,
That moves the sun in heav'n and all the stars.
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