The Inferno (The Divine Comedy series Book 1)

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The Inferno (The Divine Comedy series Book 1) Page 10

by Dante


  ‘If you consider well this judgment

  and consider who they are

  87

  that suffer punishment above, outside the wall,

  ‘you’ll understand why they are set apart

  from these wicked spirits and why God’s vengeance

  90

  smites them with a lesser wrath.’

  ‘O sun, you who heal all troubled sight, →

  you so content me by resolving doubts

  93

  it pleases me no less to question than to know.

  ‘But go back a little way,’ I said,

  ‘to where you told me usury offends

  96

  God’s goodness, and untie that knot for me.’

  ‘Philosophy, for one who understands her, →

  observes,’ he said, ‘and not in one place only,

  99

  how nature takes her course

  ‘from heavenly intellect and its operation.

  And, if you study well your Physics,

  102

  you will find, after not too many pages,

  ‘that human toil, as far as it is able,

  follows nature, as the pupil does his master,

  105

  so that it is God’s grandchild, as it were.

  ‘By toil and nature, if you remember Genesis,

  near the beginning, it is man’s lot

  108

  to earn his bread and prosper.

  ‘The usurer, who takes another path,

  scorns nature in herself and in her follower,

  111

  and elsewhere sets his hopes.

  ‘But follow me now, for it is time to go. →

  The Fishes are flickering at the horizon

  and all the Wain lies over Caurus. And here,

  115

  a short way off, is the descent.’

  OUTLINE: INFERNO XII

  1–3

  retrospect (the edge of the precipice at XI.1) and monstrous prospect (the Minotaur)

  4–10

  simile: the fallen rock along the Adige near Trent

  11–15

  the wrath of the Minotaur

  16–21

  Virgil to the Minotaur: Dante is not Theseus

  22–25

  simile: bull’s movements after receiving mortal blow

  26–30

  the Minotaur’s fury allows a quick descent

  31–45

  Virgil’s remarks on the cause of the fallen rock

  46–48

  the river of blood (Phlegethon)

  49–51

  the poet’s apostrophe of covetousness and wrath

  52–75

  hellscape with centaurs: Nessus, Chiron, Pholus; Nessus threatens and Virgil parries

  76–82

  Chiron’s surprise that Dante moves what he touches

  83–96

  Virgil explains his mission and asks for help

  97–99

  Chiron assigns Nessus the task of protecting them

  100–112

  following Nessus, Dante and Virgil observe tyrants: Alexander, Dionysius, Ezzelino, Opizzo

  113–114

  Virgil’s order to Dante: let Nessus take you

  115–126

  Nessus stops; Dante sees Guy de Montfort and others less deeply immersed in the river; they cross

  127–138

  Nessus: in the shallower part of the river are Attila, Pyrrhus, Sextus, the two Riniers

  139

  coda: Nessus crosses back over the river

  INFERNO XII

  Steep was the cliff we had to clamber down,

  rocky and steep, but—even worse—it held

  3

  a sight that every eye would shun.

  As on the rockslide that still marks the flank →

  of the Àdige, this side of Trent,

  6

  whether by earthquake or erosion at the base,

  from the mountain-top they slid away from,

  the shattered boulders strew the precipice

  9

  and thus give footing to one coming down—

  just so was the descent down that ravine.

  And at the chasm’s jagged edge

  12

  was sprawled the infamy of Crete, →

  conceived in that false cow.

  When he caught sight of us, he gnawed himself

  15

  like someone ruled by wrath.

  My sage cried out to him: ‘You think, →

  perhaps, this is the Duke of Athens,

  18

  who in the world above put you to death.

  ‘Get away, you beast, for this man

  does not come tutored by your sister,

  21

  he comes to view your punishments.’

  Like the bull that breaks its tether →

  just as it receives the mortal blow

  24

  and cannot run, but lunges here and there,

  so raged the Minotaur. My artful guide

  called out: ‘Run to the passage:

  27

  hurry down while he is in his fury.’

  And so we made our way down the steep landslide →

  on scree that often shifted

  30

  under my feet with unexpected weight.

  I went on lost in thought. And he said:

  ‘Perhaps you’re wondering about this rockslide →

  33

  guarded by that bestial rage I quelled just now. →

  ‘I want you to know, the other time →

  I came down into nether Hell

  36

  this rock had not yet fallen.

  ‘But surely, if memory does not fail,

  it was just before He came who carried off

  39

  from Dis the great spoil of the highest circle →

  ‘when the deep and foul abyss shook on every side, →

  so that I thought the universe felt love,

  42

  by which, as some believe,

  ‘the world has many times been turned to chaos.

  And at that moment this ancient rock,

  45

  here and elsewhere, fell broken into pieces.

  ‘But fix your eyes below, for we draw near

  the river of blood that scalds

  48

  those who by violence do injury to others.’ →

  O blind covetousness, insensate wrath, →

  which in this brief life goad us on and then,

  51

  in the eternal, steep us in such misery!

  I saw a broad moat curving in its arc

  that seemed to circle all the plain,

  54

  just as my guide had said.

  Between the edge of moat and precipice

  ran centaurs in a file and armed with arrows, →

  57

  as when they went off hunting in our world.

  They saw us coming, stopped, and three →

  departed from the troop with bows

  60

  and shafts they had selected with great care.

  One cried from afar: ‘To what torment

  do you come, you two approaching down the slope?

  63

  Tell us from there. If not, I draw my bow.’

  My master said: ‘We will give our answer →

  to Chiron once we have come closer.

  66

  Your will was always hasty, to your hurt.’

  Then he nudged me, saying: ‘That is Nessus, →

  who died for lovely Deianira

  69

  and fashioned of himself his own revenge.

  ‘The middle one, his gaze fixed on his chest, →

  is the great Chiron, he who raised Achilles.

  72

  The other one is Pholus, who was so filled with wrath. →

  ‘Around the moat they go in thousands,

&nb
sp; shooting arrows at any soul that rises

  75

  higher from the blood than guilt allows.’ →

  As we drew near those swift wild beasts, →

  Chiron took an arrow and with its nock

  78

  pulled back his beard along his jaw.

  When he had uncovered his enormous mouth

  he said to his companions: ‘Have you observed

  81

  the one behind dislodges what he touches?

  ‘That is not what the feet of dead men do.’

  And my good leader, now at Chiron’s breast,

  84

  where his two natures join, replied:

  ‘He is indeed alive, and so alone,

  it is my task to show him this dark valley.

  87

  Necessity compels us, not delight.

  ‘One briefly left her song of hallelujah →

  and came to charge me with this novel task.

  90

  He is no robber, nor am I a thief.

  ‘But, by that power by which I move my steps

  on this wild road, lend us a guide,

  93

  one of your band to whom we may stay close, →

  ‘one who will show us to the ford

  and carry this man over on his back,

  96

  for he is not a spirit that can fly through air.’

  Chiron bent his torso to the right, then said →

  to Nessus: ‘Go back and guide them.

  99

  If you meet another troop, have it give way.’

  And with this trusty escort we went on,

  skirting the edge of the vermilion boil

  102

  from which the boiled cried out with piercing shrieks.

  There I saw some sunken to the eyebrows,

  and the great centaur said: ‘They are tyrants →

  105

  who took to blood and plunder.

  ‘Here they lament their ruthless crimes. →

  Here is Alexander, here cruel Dionysius,

  108

  who gave to Sicily its years of woe.

  ‘And that brow with such jet-black hair

  is Ezzelino, while the other blond one there

  111

  is Obizzo d’Este, who was indeed

  ‘slain by his stepson in the world above.’

  Then I turned to the poet, and he said:

  114

  ‘Now let Nessus be your guide and I will follow.’ →

  A little farther on the centaur stopped

  above a crowd whose heads, down to their necks, →

  117

  seemed to issue from that boiling stream.

  He pointed out a shade apart, alone:

  ‘In God’s bosom that one clove in two

  120

  the heart that on the Thames still drips with blood.’

  Then I saw some who had their heads, →

  even their whole chests, out of the river,

  123

  and of these I recognized a number,

  as the blood became even more shallow →

  until it cooked nothing but their feet.

  126

  And here was our place to cross the moat. →

  ‘Just as on this side you can see →

  the boiling stream always diminishing,’

  129

  said the centaur, ‘so, I’ll have you know,

  ‘on the other side the bottom falls away

  until it plumbs the depths

  132

  where tyranny must groan.

  ‘There divine justice stings Attila, →

  who was a scourge on earth, and Pyrrhus,

  135

  and Sextus, and eternally wrings

  ‘tears, loosed by the boiling, →

  from Rinier of Corneto and Rinier Pazzo,

  who on the highways made such strife.’

  139

  Then he turned back and crossed the ford again. →

  OUTLINE: INFERNO XIII

  1–3

  retrospect (Nessus) and prospect (the wood)

  4–9

  description of the wood

  10–15

  the Harpies

  16–21

  Virgil urges Dante to be closely attentive

  22–32

  Dante’s puzzlement and Virgil’s instruction

  33–39

  the complaint of Pier delle Vigne

  40–45

  simile: Pier’s bloody words; Dante’s reaction

  46–54

  Virgil’s apology and captatio, addressed to Pier

  55–78

  Pier’s “oration”:

  55–57

  capturing the goodwill of his audience

  58–72

  narrative of the events at issue

  73–75

  peroration, making his climactic point

  76–78

  petition, seeking the consent of his audience

  79–84

  Virgil urges Dante to question Pier further; he cannot, and, too moved, asks Virgil to do so instead

  85–90

  Virgil’s two questions concern the suicides’ condition

  91–108

  Pier’s responses:

  94–102

  (1) how a dead soul becomes a thornbush

  103–108

  (2) how it will bring back its body after Judgment

  109–110

  the two poets continue to regard Pier

  111–114

  simile: concealed hunter hearing prey approaching

  115–129

  the spendthrifts (Arcolano, Jacomo) pursued by dogs

  130–135

  the nameless Florentine suicide

  136–138

  Virgil’s question to him

  139–151

  the suicide’s answering “oration”

  INFERNO XIII

  Nessus had not yet reached the other side →

  when we made our way into a forest

  3

  not marked by any path.

  No green leaves, but those of dusky hue— →

  not a straight branch, but knotted and contorted—

  6

  no fruit of any kind, but poisonous thorns.

  No rougher, denser thickets make a refuge

  for the wild beasts that hate tilled lands

  9

  between the Cècina and Corneto.

  Here the filthy Harpies nest, →

  who drove the Trojans from the Strophades

  12

  with doleful prophecies of woe to come.

  They have broad wings, human necks and faces,

  taloned feet, and feathers on their bulging bellies.

  15

  Their wailing fills the eerie trees.

  And my good master then began to speak:

  ‘Before you go in deeper you should know,

  18

  you are, and will be, in the second ring

  ‘until you reach the dreadful sand. Look well—

  you will see things that, in my telling, →

  21

  would seem to strip my words of truth.’

  Lamentations I heard on every side

  but I saw no one who might be crying out

  24

  so that, confused, I stopped. →

  I think he thought that I thought →

  all these voices in among the branches

  27

  came from people hiding there.

  And so the master said: ‘If you break off

  a twig among these brambles,

  30

  your present thoughts will be cut short.’

  Then I stretched out my hand →

  and plucked a twig from a tall thorn-bush,

  33

  and its stem cried out: ‘Why do you break me?’

  When it ran dark with blood

  it cried again: �
�Why do you tear me?

  36

  Are you completely without pity?

  ‘We once were men and now are turned to thorns.

  Your hand might well have been more merciful

  39

  had we been souls of snakes.’

  As from a green log, burning at one end, →

  that blisters and hisses at the other

  42

  with the rush of sap and air,

  so from the broken splinter oozed

  blood and words together, and I let drop

  45

  the twig and stood like one afraid.

  ‘Could he have believed it otherwise, →

  O wounded soul,’ my sage spoke up,

  48

  ‘what he has seen only in my verses,

  ‘he would not have raised his hand against you.

  But your plight, being incredible, made me

  51

  goad him to this deed that weighs on me.

  ‘Now tell him who you were, so that, by way →

  of recompense, he may revive your fame

  54

  up in the world, where he’s permitted to return.’

  And the stem said: ‘With your pleasing words →

  you so allure me I cannot keep silent.

  57

  May it not offend if I am now enticed to speak.

  ‘I am the one who held both keys →

  to Frederick’s heart, and I could turn them,

  60

  locking and unlocking, so discreetly

  ‘I kept his secrets safe from almost everyone.

  So faithful was I to that glorious office

  63

  that first I lost my sleep and then my life.

  ‘The slut who never took her whoring eyes →

  from Caesar’s household, the common bane

  66

  and special vice of courts,

  ‘inflamed all minds against me.

 

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