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Gửi bởi demmuadong ngày 31/12/2006 22:01
Remember, reader, if ever you have been
Up in the mountains when the clouds close in
So that you saw as blindly as a mole,
How, when at last the dense and humid vapors
5 Begin to blow away, the circle of the sun
Pierces through the mists with feebleness,
Then your imagination will be quick
To come to see how I first saw the sun
Once more, right at the moment of its setting.
10 So, matching my steps with the trusted steps
Of my master, I broke out of the cloud
Into the rays now dead down on the shore.
O imagination, which sometimes steals us
So far from outward things we pay no heed
15 Although a thousand trumpets blast about us,
Who moves you if the senses yield you nothing?
Light formed in heaven moves you by itself
Or by the will of Him who guides it downward.
The impious act of her who changed her form
20 Into the bird that most delights in singing
Appeared to shape in my imagining.
And here my mind was so withdrawn within
Upon itself that nothing from the outside
Could have come then to be admitted in it.
25 Then there rained down within my heightened fancy
A figure crucified, scornful and fierce
In his look, exactly as he died.
Around him stood the great Ahasuerus,
Esther his wife, and the just Mordecai
30 Who showed integrity in word and deed.
And as this image burst all by itself,
Just like a bubble when the water runs
Out from under where the film has formed,
There rose into my vision a young girl
Bitterly weeping, and she said, "O Queen,
35 Why in your anger did you slay yourself?
"You took your life to keep Lavinia:
Now you have lost me! I am one who mourns,
Mother, more for your ruin than another’s."
As sleep is broken when all of a sudden
40 New light strikes upon unopened eyes
And, broken, flickers before it fully dies,
So my imagining fell straight away
As soon as light, more intense by far
45 Than what we are inured to, struck my eyes.
I turned about to survey where I was,
When a voice called out: "Here you can climb up,"
And this drew me from every other thought,
And it piqued my desire with such impatience
50 To gaze directly on the one who’d spoken
As never rests till it stands face to face.
But as before the sun which thwarts our sight
And, being overbright, blurs its own shape
So there my power of perception failed.
55 "This is a heavenly spirit who directs us,
Without our asking, on the upward way,
And with his own light he conceals himself.
"He deals with us as men do with themselves.
For he who sees the need but waits for asking
60 Already sets himself to turn it down.
"Now let our steps follow his invitation.
Let us press on to climb before night comes,
For then we cannot go till day returns."
So spoke my guide, and he and I together
65 Had turned our feet toward a stairway there
When, just as I arrived at the first step,
Near me I felt the brush as of a wing
Fanning my face, and I heard said, "Blessed are
The peacemakers, those free of wicked wrath."
70 By now the final sunbeams which night follows
Rose so high above us that the stars
Started to show themselves on every side.
"O strength of mine, why do you melt away?"
Within myself I said, since I perceived
75 The power of my legs had ceased to function.
We had arrived now where the stairs ascended
No higher, and we’d come to a full stop
Just like a ship that pulls up to the shore.
I listened for a while in hope of hearing
80 Any sound within this newest circle,
Then I turned to my master, and I said,
"My gentle father, tell me, what offense
Is purged here in the circle we are come to?
Although our steps halt, do not stop your speech."
85 And he told me, "The love of good which falls
Short of its duty is in this place restored.
Here the idle oar is dipped once more.
"But that you may understand more clearly,
Turn your mind to me and you will gather
90 Some goodly fruit from our delaying here.
"My son, neither Creator nor his creature,"
He then began, "was ever without love,
Natural or rational, as you know.
"The natural is always without error,
95 But the other love may err by evil ends,
Or by too much or by too little ardor.
"While it’s directed toward the primal good
And toward the secondary goods keeps measure,
It cannot be the cause of sinful pleasure,
100 "But when it’s bent on evil or runs after
The good with more or less zeal than it should,
Those whom he made then work against their Maker.
"From this you can conceive how love must be
The seed in you of every other virtue
105 And every deed deserving punishment.
"Now, in so far as love can never shift
Its sight from the well-being of its subject,
All things are free from hatred for themselves.
"And since no being can be thought as sundered
110 From primal Being and standing by itself,
Each creature is cut off from hating him.
"It follows, if I judge well by my critique,
This evil that is loved is for one’s neighbor,
And in three ways this love sprouts in your clay:
115 "There is the man who through his neighbor’s fall
Hopes to advance, and only for this reason
He longs to see him cast down from his greatness,
"There is the man who dreads the loss of power,
Favor, fame, and honor at another’s rise,
120 And pines so at it that he wants him ruined;
"And there is the man who grows so resentful
For injury, he’s greedy for revenge,
And such a man must seek another’s harm.
"This threefold love is purged down there below us.
125 Now I wish you to grasp the other kind:
The love that runs for good in wrongful measure.
"Each has a nebulous notion of the good
On which his mind may rest, and longs for it;
And so each struggles to achieve that end.
130 "If the love drawing you to view or gain
This goal is lukewarm, then this terrace here,
After true repentance, punishes for that.
"There is another good which gladdens no one:
It is not happiness, nor the true essence
135 Which is the fruit and root of every good.
"The love which yields itself too much to this
Is mourned in the three circles up above us;
But how it is divided in three parts,
"I will not say, that you may search it out."
Gửi bởi demmuadong ngày 31/12/2006 21:59
Darkness of hell and of a night devoid
Of all the planets, under a dingy sky
As overcast with clouds as it can be,
Never made for my eyes so thick a veil,
5 Nor yet a cloth so prickly to the touch,
As was the smoke that there wrapped us around,
For it would not let me keep my eyes open:
At sight of this my wise and trusted escort
Drew close to me and offered me his shoulder.
10 Just as a blind man goes behind his guide
So that he may not stray or strike against
Some thing that could cause hurt or maybe kill him,
So I walked through that vile and smarting air
Listening to my guide who kept repeating,
15 "Watch out that you are not cut off from me."
Voices I heard and each one seemed to pray
The Lamb of God who takes away our sins
To grant his mercy to us and his peace.
"Agnus Dei" their response began,
20 As if one word and measure were in all
So that full harmony appeared among them.
"Are those whom I am hearing, master, spirits?"
I asked. And he told me, "You grasp the truth,
And they go loosening the knot of anger."
25 "Now who are you who penetrate our smoke
And speak of us exactly as if you
Still counted time according to calendars?"
These words a voice called out. On hearing it,
My master said to me, "Reply to him
30 And ask if by this way we can climb upward."
And I: "O creature who cleanse yourself of sin
To return, beautiful, up to your Maker,
You shall hear wonders if you follow me."
"As far as I’m allowed I’ll follow you,
35 And if the smoke won’t let us see," he answered,
"Hearing instead will let us stay in touch."
Then I began, "Still with those fleshly bonds
Which death unbinds I make my upward journey,
And I have come here through the throes of hell.
40 "Since God has so enclosed me in his grace
That he had willed that I should see his court
In a way wholly strange to modern custom,
"Don’t hide from me who you were before death,
But tell me, and say if I’m headed straight
45 For the pass: your words shall be our guide."
"A Lombard was I and Marco I was called.
I knew the world and yet I loved the worth
At which the bows of men no longer aim.
"For mounting up you are on the right path."
50 This he replied — then added: "I pray you
To pray for me when you are up on high."
And I told him, "My faith I pledge to you
To do what you have asked me — but I burst
Inwardly with doubt I must be rid of:
55 "First my doubt was simple, now it’s doubled
By your statement which makes me certain here,
As elsewhere, by the words I couple with it.
"The world indeed is now completely void
Of every virtue, as you observed to me,
60 And burdened with iniquity, and buried.
"But I pray you to point me out the cause
That I may see it and then show it to others
For some place it in heaven, some below."
Deep sighs, which sorrow strained into an "Ah!"
65 He first heaved out, and then began, "Brother,
The world is blind and surely you come from it.
"You who are living refer every cause
Solely up to heaven, as if it moved
All things with it out of necessity.
70 "If this were so, the free will you possess
Would be destroyed, and there would be no justice
In having joy in good or grief in evil.
"The heavens set your impulses in motion —
I don’t say all of them, but suppose I did,
75 A light is dealt you to tell good from evil
"And know free will, which, though it be worn out
In its first struggles with the heavens, later
It shall yet conquer all, if nourished well.
"To a mightier power and a higher nature
80 You, though free, are subject, and that engenders
The mind in you the heavens do not sway.
"If, then, the world today has gone astray,
In you the cause lies, in you it’s to be sought!
And now I’ll prove a true informant for you.
85 "From out the hands of Him who fondly loves her
Before she comes to be, there issues forth,
Like a child at play in tears and laughter,
"The simple soul without a shred of knowledge,
Except that, springing from a joyous Maker,
90 Willingly she turns to what delights her.
"With trifles she first satisfies her taste:
She is beguiled and gambols after them
Unless a guide or bridle bend her love.
"Therefore, law was needed as a curb,
95 And needed also was a king who could
Discern at least the tower of the true city.
"The laws exist, but who sets hand to them?
No one! For the shepherd who heads the flock
Can chew the cud but has no cloven hooves.
100 "And so the people who behold their guide
Reaching for that good they’re greedy for
Feed themselves on that and seek no further.
"You now can clearly see that evil guidance
Has been the cause which made the world go wrong
105 And not that nature is corrupt in you.
"Rome, which made the world good, used to have
Two suns that made one and the other roadway
Visible, of God and of the world.
"One has eclipsed the other, and the sword
110 Has joined the crozier, but the two together
By force of their conjunction must go wrong
"Because, so joined, one need not fear the other.
If you do not believe me, regard the grain,
Since by the seed it bears the plant is known.
115 "In land the Adige and Po flow through,
Honor and courtesy once could be found
Before Frederick met with strong opposition.
"Now anyone can safely travel there
Who out of shame avoids conversing with
120 The upright or shuns having contact with them.
"True, three old men are still there, in whom
The old days rebuke the new, and long they pine
Until God calls them to a nobler life:
"Currado da Palazzo, good Gherardo,
125 And Guido da Castel who is better named,
In fashion of the French, ‘the simple Lombard.’
"From this time on, say that the Church of Rome,
Confounding in itself two sovereignties,
Falls in the filth, and fouls itself and office."
130 "O my Marco, you reason well," I said,
"And now I realize why the sons of Levi
Were not allowed to have inheritances.
"But what Gherardo is this who you say
Remains a sample of the race long-gone,
135 In strict reproach against this barbarous age?"
"Either your speech deceives me or would test m
Gửi bởi demmuadong ngày 31/12/2006 21:56
As much time as that sphere, which like a child
Plays endlessly, has left between the end
Of the third hour and the beginning day,
So much of the sun’s course toward evening
5 Appeared still to be left, for now it was
Vespers there and midnight over here.
The slant rays struck us fully in the face,
For we had circled so far round the mountain
That we were headed straight into the sunset.
10 Now when I felt my forehead weighted down
Wit
Gửi bởi demmuadong ngày 31/12/2006 21:54
"Who is this who winds around our mountain
Even before death gives him wings to fly,
And opens and shuts his eyes just as he wills?"
"I don’t know, but I know he is not alone:
5 You question him, since you are the closer,
And greet him gently so that he wi
Gửi bởi demmuadong ngày 31/12/2006 21:51
We now had reached the top step of the stairway
Where the mountain which cures sin by our climbing
Cuts away steeply for a second time.
The terrace here girdles the hill around
5 In the same way the first ledge did below,
Except that this curve makes a tighter loop.
No shapes here and no likenesses to see:
The cliff-face and the roadbed both are bare
From the livid discoloring of the stone.
10 "Were we to wait for people to give directions,"
The poet observed, "I am afraid our choice
Perhaps should have to be delayed too long."
Straight at the sun he riveted his eyes,
And turning on the pivot of his right side
15 He swung himself full forward on his left.
"O tender light, with trust in you I enter
On this new road: now lead us on," he said,
"For in this place we require to be led.
"You warm the world, you shed your light upon it:
20 Unless other reasons urge us differently,
Your own bright beams will always be our guide."
The distance measured down here is a mile,
That far we had already traveled there
In a short time because of our prompt will:
25 And flying toward us we heard but did not see
Spirits calling gracious invitations
To banquet at the table of love’s feast.
The first voice that flew past cried out aloud
"They have no wine!" and it sped on by us
30 Off to our rear, re-echoing the words.
And before it fully faded out of hearing
Distance, another voice passed with the cry,
"I am Orestes!" and also did not pause.
"Oh," I cried, "father, what are these voices?"
35 And just as I asked this, listen! a third
Exclaimed, "Love those who do you injury!"
And my kind master said, "This circle scourges
The sin of envy, and for this reason
The whip is fashioned with the cords of love.
40 "The rein must be composed of opposite sound:
I venture to say that you shall hear it soon
Before you reach the passageway of pardon.
"But fix your eyes steadily through the air
And you shall see folk seated in front of us
45 Where each one sits with back against the rock."
At that I more than ever opened my eyes:
I peered ahead and noticed shades in cloaks
Of the same discoloration as the stone.
And when we went straight forward a short space,
50 I heard cried out " Mary, pray for us!"
And cried out "Michael" and "Peter" and "All saints."
I do not think there walks on earth today
A man so hard of heart he’d not be stabbed
By keen compassion at what I witnessed there,
55 For, when I came up close enough to them
That their condition became clear to me,
Tears of deep grief drained slowly from my eyes.
Each one seemed to be covered in coarse haircloth,
And one propped up the other with his shoulder
60 As all of them leaned back along the cliff-side.
So, too, the blind in their impoverishment
Gather at indulgences to beg bread;
And one lets droop his head against another’s,
The more to make the people pity them,
65 Not merely by the sound of their sad pleading,
But by the sad looks that express their cravings.
And as the sun brings no help to the blind,
So for the shades in the place that I speak of
The light of heaven withholds its radiance.
70 An iron thread pierces and sews up
All of their eyelids, as is done to falcons
Still so wild they recoil at keeping quiet.
I thought that I did wrong to walk about
Seeing others who could not see me
75 And so I turned to my wise counselor.
He clearly knew what this mute wished to say
And had no need to wait for me to ask,
But said, "Speak, and be brief and to the point."
Virgil walked on with me along the side
80 Of the high terrace from which one could fall
Since there is no surrounding parapet.
And on the other side of me there sat
The devout shades who wet their cheeks with tears
Which seeped out through the terrible stitched seams.
85 I turned to them, "O people," I began,
"Assured of seeing the supernal light
Which alone is the object of your longing,
"So may grace soon clean out the clogged debris
Of conscience that the river of memory
90 May once more run down through it clear and pure,
"Tell me, as a favor I shall cherish,
Is any soul among you here Italian?
For me to know perhaps will do him good."
"O my brother, we each are citizens
95 Of one true city, but you intend someone
Who as a pilgrim lived in Italy."
I seemed to hear this answer come some distance
From up ahead of where I stood; so I moved
To make myself heard more in that direction.
100 Among them all I saw one shade that looked
Expectant — and if someone asks me how:
The chin was raised the way the blind lift theirs.
"Spirit," said I, "subduing yourself to climb:
If you are the one who responded to me,
105 Make yourself known by either place or name."
"I was a Sienese," the shade replied,
"And with the rest here I mend my sinful life,
Weeping to Him to show Himself to us.
"Sapient I was not, though named Sapia.
110 I found far more delight in other’s losses
Than ever I enjoyed my own good fortune.
"But that you may not fancy I deceive you,
Listen to the story of my folly
In the declining arc of my last years.
115 "My fellow citizens took to the field
Near Colle to join battle with their foes,
And I prayed God for what he’d willed already.
"There they were shattered and turned backward
With harsh steps of retreat, and seeing the rout,
120 I knew the deepest pleasure of my life:
"So deep, I turned my brazen face upward
To shout at God, ‘Now I no longer fear you!’
Like the blackbird at a hint of fair weather.
"I wanted peace with God just at the end
125 Of all my days, and my debit would not
As yet have been reduced by penitence,
"Had it not been that Piero Pettinaio,
Who in his charity felt sorry for me,
Remembered me in his own holy pray
Gửi bởi demmuadong ngày 31/12/2006 21:49
Side by side, as oxen go in yoke,
I trod along with that weight-burdened soul,
As long as my kind teacher would permit it.
But when he spoke up, "Leave him and push on,
5 For each one here does well with sail and oars
To urge his boat ahead with all his might,"
I raised myself up straight as one should walk
With body erect, although my thoughts remained
Bowed down low and shrunken in themselves.
10 I did move on, and willingly I followed
The footsteps of my master, and both of us
Now showed how light we could be on our feet
When he told me, "Lower your eyes: you will
Do well, in making your way easier,
15 To see the bed of rock beneath your feet."
Just as the tombs in the church floor above
The buried dead, to keep their memory fresh,
Bear carvings figuring what they were in real life,
And at the sight men often weep for them
20 Because of the sharp spur of memory
Which pierces only those faithful to the dead:
So I saw there, but in a truer likeness
By grace of the artist’s skill, sculptured stone
On the whole path that juts out round the mountain.
25 I saw on one side him who was created
Nobler than any other creature, falling
Like a streak of lightning out of heaven.
I saw Briareus on the other side
Transfixed by the celestial thunderbolt,
30 Heavy on the ground in his last death-chills.
I saw Thymbraeus, I saw Mars and Pallas,
Still in armor, standing around their father,
Staring at the giants’ scattered limbs.
I saw Nimrod at the foot of his tower,
35 Looking bewildered, and people gaping there
Who were so proud to join with him in Shinar.
O Niobe, with what tear-laden eyes
I saw you represented on the road
Between seven sons and seven daughters slain!
40 O Saul, how you appeared there fallen dead
Upon your own sword on Mount Gilboa
Which never afterward felt rain or dew!
O mad Arachne, so I saw you turned
Half-spider already, in sadness on the shreds
45 Of the work you wove to your own undoing!
O Rehoboam, your image there seems now
Menacing no more, but a chariot wafts it
Away in panic with no one in pursuit!
Shown as well upon that pavement stone
50 Was Alcmaeon making his mother pay
The full dear price for her ill-fated necklace.
Shown were the sons of King Sennacherib
Felling him at prayers in the temple
And then leaving him there slain on the floor.
55 Shown was the downfall and the cruel killing
Tomyris enacted when she said to Cyrus,
"For blood you thirsted and with blood I sate you!"
Shown were the Assyrians in full rout,
After Holofernes had been murdered,
60 And also his remains amid the slaughter.
I saw Troy in ashes, caved-in ruins:
O Ilion, how cast down low were you
Shown by the carving there exposed to view!
What master artist of brush or pen was he
65 Who so sketched out the shapes and shadings there
That they would strike the subtlest minds with awe?
The dead looked dead, the living looked alive!
Those who had seen the real scenes saw no better
Than I did all I trod on while bent down!
70 Now be proud, and go with haughty looks,
Children of Eve, and do not bend your faces
To see the trail of sin you leave behind!
By now we’d rounded far more of the mountain
And much more of the sun’s course had run up
75 Than my restricted mind had reckoned on,
When he who always looked ahead as he went
On walking called anew, "Lift up your head!
You’ve no more time to go on lost in thought!
"Look! an angel over there makes ready
80 To come toward us. Look at the sixth handmaid
Return from her noon service to the day.
"Let reverence beam in your face and bearing
That he may now be glad to send us upward.
Remember, this day will not dawn again."
85 I was well used to his admonitions
Not to waste time, so nothing that he said
In that regard could be unclear to me.
The beautiful creature now came closer to us,
All clothed in white and looking radiant
90 Like a trembling star in the morning sky.
Opening his arms wide, he spread his wings,
Saying, "Come! the steps are here at hand
And from now on the climbing will be easy."
To this same invitation few come forward.
95 O human race, born to fly aloft,
Why do you fall at a mere puff of wind?
He led us where the rock had split wide open:
There he struck my forehead with his wings,
And then he promised me a safe, sure journey.
100 As on the right hand, on climbing on the hill
Where rises the church, above the Rubaconte,
Which dominates my so-well-governed city,
The bold rise of the escarpment is broken
By the stone stairway hewed out in time
105 When ledgers and staves were still trustworthy,
Just so, steps make easier the embankment
That falls steeply from the upper circle,
But on both sides the high rock squeezes close.
When we turned ourselves to that direction,
110 "Blessed are the poor in spirit" voices sang
More sweetly than words ever could describe.
Ah, how different these inroads are from those
Of hell! For here the entrance is with hymns
And there below with savage clamorings.
115 Now as we mounted up the sacred stairs,
I seemed to be ever so much lighter
Than I had been before on level ground:
So I asked, "Master, tell me, what great weight
Has just been lifted from me that I feel
120 Almost no fatigue as I walk on?"
He answered, "When the P’s that still remain
Upon your brow, although now nearly faded,
Are totally erased, as this one is,
"Your feet shall be so guided by goodwill
125 That not only will they never feel exhausted,
They even will rejoice to be urged uphill."
Then I did what persons do when strolling
Unaware of something on their head,
Until the signs of others make them guess it,
130 Their hand goes up to help find out for certain,
And gropes and discovers and performs
The duty that the eyes can’t carry through:
So with the outstretched fingers of my right hand
135 I found only six of the letter P’s
The angel of the keys traced on my temples,
And, watching this reaction, my guide smiled.
Gửi bởi demmuadong ngày 31/12/2006 21:46
"Our Father, who art in heaven, not bound there,
But dwelling in it for the greater love
Thou bearest toward thy firstborn works on high,
"Hallowed be thy name and be thy worthiness
5 Through every creature, as it is most fitting
To thank thee for the sweet breath of thy wisdom.
"Thy kingdom come to us in peacefulness,
Because we cannot reach it by ourselves,
Unless it come, for all our striving effort.
10 "And as the angels do thy will in heaven
By sacrificing theirs, singing hosanna,
So let the men on earth do with their wills.
"Give us this day our daily manna, since
Without it, through this bitter wilderness
15 He retreats who tries hardest to advance.
"And as we pardon all for the trespasses
That we have suffered, so in loving kindness
Forgive us: do not judge by our deserving.
"Our strength so easily fails: lead us not
20 Into temptation through our ancient foe,
But deliver us from the evil he provokes.
"This last petition, dearest Lord, we make
Not for our sake, since now we have no need,
But for those people who remain behind us."
25 This way the souls, praying godspeed for both
Themselves and us, trudged on beneath a burden
Like that one pictures sometimes in a dream,
Unequal in their anguish, all of them
Plodding wearily around the first terrace,
30 Purging away the black dross of the world.
If there they always speak up for our good,
What for their good can here be said or done
By those whose prayers are rooted in goodwill?
Surely we should help them cleanse the stains
35 They brought from here, so that, buoyant and pure,
They may take flight up to the wheeling stars.
"Ah, so may justice and pity soon remove
Your load of guilt that you may spread out wings
Which will lift you to the limit of your longing,
40 "Show us on which side is the shortest way
To reach the stairs, and if there’s more than one,
Instruct us to the path that is least steep,
"Because this man who walks with me, weighed down
By Adam’s flesh, which he still wears about him,
45 Is slowed, against his will, in his climb up."
Words of theirs were then returned in answer
To those the guide I followed had addressed,
But one could not be sure from whom they came:
The words were: "Come with us along this bank
50 To the right, and you’ll find the passageway
Possible for a living person to ascend.
"And were I not encumbered by this stone
Which has so tamed my proud neck to submission
That I am forced to keep my face bent down,
55 "I would now gaze upon this man who lives
But remains nameless, to see if I know him
And to make him feel compassion for my load.
"I was Italian, son of a great Tuscan:
Guglielmo Aldobrandesco was my father;
60 I do not know if you ever heard his name.
"The age-old blood and the gallant exploits
Of my forebears made me so arrogant
That, not thinking of our common mother,
"I held all men in such complete contempt
65 It killed me, as the Sienese all know
And every child in Campagnatico.
"I am Omberto. And not only has pride
Damaged me but it has dragged down all
My kinsfolk with it into catastrophe.
70 "And for this sin I here must bear this weight
Until I give God satisfaction — since I
Gave none among the living — among the dead."
Listening to him I held my head down lower;
And one of them — not the one who’d spoken —
75 Shifted under the mass that pressed upon him
And noticed me and knew me and called out,
Struggling to keep his eyes fixed upon me
While I, stooped over, walked along with them.
"Oh," I cried out, "are you not Oderisi,
80 Honor of Gubbio, glory of that art
Which in Paris they call ‘illuminating’?"
"Brother," he said, "the pages painted by
Franco Bolognese smile more brightly:
All his the honor now — and partly mine.
85 "Certainly I would have been less courteous
While I was alive, through my vaulting zeal
For excellence to which my heart aspired.
"The price of pride like this is paid out here;
And still I’d not be here if it were not
90 That, capable of sin, I turned to God.
"Oh, the vainglory of our human powers!
How brief the time the green grows on the hilltop,
Unless the age that follows it is barren!
"Cimabue thought he held the field
95 In painting, but now the hue and cry is for
Giotto, and the other’s fame is dulled.
"So, one Guido has snatched from another
Poetic glory, and perhaps the man
Has been born who will chase both from the nest!
100 "Earthly fame is but a breath of wind,
No more; huffing here and puffing there,
It changes name when it changes quarter.
"What more renown will you have, if you lose
Your flesh through old age, than if you had died
105 Before you left your baby-talk behind you
"In, say, a thousand years? That is a shorter
Span to the eternal than the blink of an eye
Is to the turn of the slowest of the spheres.
"All Tuscany resounded with the name
110 Of him who creeps before me on this path:
Now’s scarce a whisper of him in Siena
"Where he was lord when they together crushed
The rage of Florence — who was then in wartime
As proud as she is prostituted now.
115 "Your reputation is like the shade of grass
Which comes and goes: the sun that makes it spring
Green from the ground soon causes it to fade."
And I told him, "Your words ring true to my heart
With fit humility and cure my puffed-up pride:
120 But who is he of whom you spoke just now?"
"That," he replied, "is Provenzan Salvani,
And he is here because in his presumption
He tried to get his hands on all Siena.
"So he goes on and has gone since he died,
125 Without rest: such is the coin which those
Who dare too much must pay in satisfaction."
And I: "If souls who postpone until the last
Moment of life before they show repentance
Stay there below and do not mount up here
130 "Until they wait as long as they once lived —
Unless propitious prayers come to their aid —
Then how was he allowed to hasten here?"
"When he lived at the height of his own glory,"
He said, "he in Siena’s marketplace,
135 Shunning all shame, freely took his stand:
"And there, to gain release for his good friend
From sufferings he endured in Charles’ dungeon,
He reduced himself to shivering in his veins.
"I say no more: I know that I speak darkly,
140 But after a short time has passed, your neighbors
Will so behave that you can gloss it out:
"This act delivered him from that confinement."
Gửi bởi demmuadong ngày 31/12/2006 21:43
When we were past the threshold of the gate
Which the soul’s wrongful love may never use
Since such love makes the crooked way seem straight,
I heard by its loud clanging the gate close:
5 And if I had turned my eyes back to it,
What fit excuse could I find for my fault?
We climbed the rockface through a zigzag cleft
Which pitches from one side to the other
Like a wave cresting in and rolling out.
10 "Here we must exercise some skill and care,"
My guide began, "to stay close, now this side
And now that, to the low receding edge."
And this task made our steps so slow that now
The waning moon had once again gone back
15 To bed, to sink into its morning rest,
Before we issued from that needle’s eye.
When we were free and out into the open,
Up where the mount surged back to form a ledge,
We halted — I worn out and the two of us
20 Unsure of our way — there on that level place
Lonelier than a trail through empty deserts.
From the edge which verges out on vacant space
To the base of the sheer cliff soaring upward
Measures three times the length of a man’s body;
25 And as far as my eyes could wing their way,
Now equally to the left, now to the right,
So wide the terrace seemed to stretch before me.
From that spot we had yet to take a step
When I discerned that all the inner cliff-ring,
30 Which rose so steep there was no way to scale it,
Was pure white marble, and so decorated
With carvings that they would have put to shame
Not only Polycletus but nature too.
The angel who came down to earth decreeing
35 The peace which, deeply mourned for many years,
Has opened heaven from its long interdict
Appeared before us there so faithfully
Chiseled out in his soft-spoken bearing
That he did not seem to be a silent image:
40 One would have sworn that he was saying "Ave,"
Since she who turned the key to open up
Love on high was also imaged there,
And her attitude appeared stamped with the words:
"Behold the handmaid of the Lord," as sharply
45 As a figure is engraved on sealing wax.
"You need not fix your mind on one place only,"
My gentle master stated, while he made me
Stand on the side where the heart within us beats.
At that I shifted my sight and gazed further
50 Past Mary, in the same right-hand direction
Where he stood who had urged me on to look,
To see another story cut in stone;
So I crossed in front of Virgil and approached
To have the scene disclosed before my eyes.
55 There carved upon the surface of the marble
Were cart and oxen pulling the holy ark,
To warn men not to overreach their charge.
At the lead, seven choirs in separate files
Appeared: one of my senses argued, "No,"
60 The other answered, "Yes, they really sing!"
In the same way, the smoking from the incense
Pictured there made my two eyes and nose
Disagree between a yes and no.
There in the vanguard of the sacred coffer,
65 Dancing with robes hitched up, the humble psalmist
So proved himself both more and less than king.
Opposite, depicted at the window
Of a stately palace, Michal watched him dance,
So like a woman filled with wrath and scorn.
70 I stirred my feet from the spot where I stood
To study close at hand another story
Which I saw shining white just past Michal.
There was told the tale of the high glory
Won by the Roman prince whose worthiness
75 Moved Gregory to make his mighty conquest:
I here speak of the Emperor Trajan.
And there was at his bridle a poor widow
Held in a pose of weeping and distress.
Surrounding him was shown a trampling press
80 Of horsemen, while eagles stitched in gold
Waved in full view above them on the wind.
Among them all the wretched woman seemed
To cry, "Oh lord, take vengeance for my son
Whose slaying has pierced my heart with sorrow."
85 And he appeared to answer her, "Now wait
Until I shall return." And she: "My lord,"
With urgent grief, "What if you don’t come back?"
And he: "Whoever takes my place will act
For me." And she: "What good shall someone else’s
90 Good deeds do you if you ignore your own?"
To this he said, "Take comfort, since I must
Fulfill my duty here before I leave:
Justice claims it and pity holds me back."
He in whose sight nothing is ever new
95 Created this art of visible speaking,
Foreign to us who do not find it here.
While I enjoyed myself with gazing on
These images of high humility,
Precious to look at for their Maker’s sake,
100 "Look over there," the poet murmured to me,
"That throng of people walking with slow steps:
They will direct us to the stairs on high."
My eyes, happy to be full of wonder
In seeing something new for which they yearn,
105 Surely were not slow to turn toward him.
I would not have you, reader, in alarm
Lose your good resolve when you now hear
How God has willed that we should pay our debts.
Pay no attention to the form of pain:
110 Think of the aftermath, think that the worst
Will be that it will last till judgment day.
"Master," I began, "what I make out
Moving toward us does not look like people,
But what I do not know — my sight’s so muddled!"
115 And he said to me, "The weighty condition
Of their torment so bows them to the ground
That my eyes first debated about them.
"But peer there firmly and sort out by sight
What approaches us beneath those boulders:
120 By now you see how each one beats his breast."
O haughty Christians, woebegone, careworn,
You, sickened in the insight of your minds,
Who misplace all your trust in backward steps,
Are you not aware that we are worms,
125 Born to become the angelic butterflies
Which soar defenseless up toward the judgment?
Why does your mind float proudly far aloft
When you are merely like imperfect insects,
Just as the larva lacks its final form?
130 Sometimes, in support of roof or ceiling,
One sees a corbel shaped in a man’s figure
With the knees hunched up against the chest,
Which, while unreal, gives birth to real discomfort
In someone seeing it: that’s how I saw,
135 When I took good care, how these souls were stooped.
True, some were more pressed down and some were less
If they had more or less weight on their backs,
Yet even one who suffered most patiently
Appeared to say through tears, "I can no more."
Gửi bởi demmuadong ngày 31/12/2006 21:39
The concubine of old Tithonus now
Grew pale above the eastern balcony,
Breaking away from her sweet lover’s arms;
Her white forehead glittered with bright gems
5 Set in the shape of that cold animal
Which stings and lashes people with its tail;
And night, there in the spot where we were come,
Had scaled two steps of the hours that she climbs,
And the third already lowered down its wings,
10 When I, who had a trace of Adam in me,
Overcome by sleep,
Gửi bởi demmuadong ngày 31/12/2006 21:36
Now was the hour when voyagers at sea
Pine to turn home and their hearts soften,
This first day out, for friends they bid good-bye,
The hour when outsetting pilgrims ache
5 With love to hear the far-off tolling bell
That seems to mourn the dying day with tears,
When I began to let my listening fade
And gazed instead at one of the souls there
Who had stood up and gestured to be heard.
10 He folded his hands in prayer and lifted them,
With his eyes fastened on the east, as if
Saying to God, "I care for nothing else!"
"To You before the light is done" — devoutly
Came from his lips with such melodious tones
15 That it ma
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