Purgatorio (The Divine Comedy series Book 2)

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by Dante

to the east: Venus in Pisces

  22–27

  to the south: the four stars (apostrophe: “widowed hemisphere”)

  28–30

  to the north (direction of Ursa Major)

  II. Cato the Younger

  31–39

  a fatherly figure to be revered, bearded, his face aglow

  40–48

  the challenge of this old man (Cato) to their presence

  49–51

  Virgil: Dante must kneel and bow his head

  52–84

  Virgil’s responses to Cato:

  52–57

  I come, guiding this man, by agency of a lady

  58–66

  he is still alive, but was almost dead when I was sent to bring him through hell to here

  67–69

  my guidance is in turn guided from above

  70–75

  he seeks liberty, as you once did, dying for it in Utica on your way to heaven

  76–80

  we break no law, since he is still alive and I am not in hell proper but share your wife’s abode

  81–84

  for love of Marcia let us proceed; then I will report to her your kindness to us when I return

  85–108

  Cato’s rejoinder to Virgil:

  85–90

  I loved Marcia in the life below; now the new law that accompanied my release forbids further feeling

  91–93

  if a heavenly lady leads you there is no need for flattery

  94–99

  gird and bathe him so that he may approach the angel with his vision clear

  100–108

  descend to the edge of the sea to the rushes in the mud; then ascend by an easier path, guided by the sun

  109–111

  Cato’s departure and Dante’s acquiescence

  III. The shore again

  112–114

  Virgil urges Dante to descend the slope toward the sea

  115–117

  Dante makes out the waves of the sea

  118–121

  their going compared to that of a man who finds the path he had lost

  122–133

  in a place still moist with dew Virgil cleanses Dante’s face and, at the shore, girds Dante as he had been bidden

  134–136

  a wonder: the plant, once plucked, grows back again

  PURGATORIO I

  To run its course through smoother water →

  the small bark of my wit now hoists its sail,

  3

  leaving that cruel sea behind.

  Now I shall sing the second kingdom, →

  there where the soul of man is cleansed,

  6

  made worthy to ascend to Heaven.

  Here from the dead let poetry rise up, →

  O sacred Muses, since I am yours.

  9

  Here let Calliope arise

  to accompany my song with those same chords

  whose force so struck the miserable magpies

  12

  that, hearing them, they lost all hope of pardon.

  Sweet color of oriental sapphire, →

  hovering in the calm and peaceful aspect →

  15

  of intervening air, pure to the horizon,

  pleased my eyes once more

  as soon as I had left the morbid air

  18

  that had afflicted both my chest and eyes.

  The fair planet that emboldens love, →

  smiling, lit up the east,

  21

  veiling the Fishes in her train.

  I turned to the right and, fixing my attention →

  on the other pole, I saw four stars

  24

  not seen but by those first on earth.

  The very sky seemed to rejoice

  in their bright glittering. O widowed →

  27

  region of the north, denied that sight!

  Once I had drawn my gaze from them,

  barely turning toward the other pole →

  30

  where the constellation of the Wain had set,

  I saw beside me an old man, alone, →

  who by his looks was so deserving of respect →

  33

  that no son owes his father more.

  His beard was long and streaked with white, →

  as was his hair, which fell

  36

  in double strands down to his chest.

  The rays of those four holy stars →

  adorned his face with so much light

  39

  he seemed to shine with brightness of the sun.

  ‘What souls are you to have fled the eternal prison, →

  climbing against the dark and hidden stream?’

  42

  he asked, shaking those venerable locks.

  ‘Who was your guide or who your lantern

  to lead you forth from that deep night

  45

  which steeps the vale of hell in darkness?

  ‘Are the laws of the abyss thus broken, →

  or has a new decree been made in Heaven,

  48

  that, damned, you stand before my cliffs?’

  My leader then reached out to me →

  and by his words and signs and with his hands

  51

  made me show reverence with knee and brow,

  then answered him: ‘I came not on my own. →

  A lady descended from heaven and at her request

  54

  I lent this man companionship and aid.

  ‘But since it is your will that I make plain

  the true condition of our presence here,

  57

  it cannot be that I deny your wish.

  ‘This man has not yet seen his final sunset, →

  but through his folly was so close to it

  60

  his time was almost at an end.

  ‘I was sent to him, as I have said,

  for his deliverance. No other way

  63

  but this could he be saved.

  ‘I have shown him all the guilty race

  and now intend to let him see those spirits

  66

  who cleanse themselves within your charge. →

  ‘How I have led him would take long to tell.

  Descending from on high a power aids me →

  69

  to bring him here that he may see and hear you.

  ‘May it please you to welcome his arrival,

  since he’s in search of liberty, which is so dear, →

  72

  as he well knows who gives his life for it.

  ‘You know this well, since death in Utica

  did not seem bitter, there where you left

  75

  the garment that will shine on that great day. →

  ‘Not by us are the eternal edicts broken,

  for this man lives and Minos does not bind me, →

  78

  but I am of the circle where your Marcia →

  ‘implores with her chaste eyes, O holy breast,

  that you still think of her as yours.

  81

  For love of her, then, I beseech you,

  ‘allow us passage through your seven kingdoms.

  I will report to her your kindness—

  84

  if you deign to be mentioned there below.’

  ‘Marcia so pleased my eyes while I still lived,’ →

  he said, ‘that whatever favor

  87

  she sought of me, I granted.

  ‘Now that she dwells beyond the evil stream

  she cannot move me any longer,

  90

  according to the law laid down at my deliverance.

  ‘But if, as you say, a lady from Heaven

  moves and directs you, there is no need of flattery.

  93

  It is enough you ask it in he
r name.

  ‘Go then, make sure you gird him →

  with a straight reed and bathe his face,

  96

  to wipe all traces of defilement from it,

  ‘for it would not be fitting to appear,

  his eyes still dimmed by any mist,

  99

  before the minister, the first from paradise.

  ‘This little island, at its lowest point, →

  there where the waves beat down on it,

  102

  grows reeds in soft and pliant mud.

  ‘There no other plant can leaf,

  or harden to endure,

  105

  without succumbing to the battering waves.

  ‘After you are done, do not come back this way.

  The sun, now rising, will disclose →

  108

  an easier ascent to gain the peak.’

  With that he vanished, and I stood up, →

  speechless. Coming closer to my leader,

  111

  I turned my eyes to him.

  He began: ‘My son, follow my steps.

  Let us turn around, for this plain slopes

  114

  from here, down to its lowest edge.’

  Dawn was overtaking the darkness of the hour, →

  which fled before it, and I saw and knew

  117

  the distant trembling of the sea.

  We went along the lonely plain, →

  like someone who has lost the way

  120

  and thinks he strays until he finds the road.

  When we came to a place where the dew →

  can hold its own against the sun

  123

  because it is protected by a breeze,

  my master gently spread →

  his hands upon the grass.

  126

  And I, who understood what he intended,

  raised my tear-stained cheeks

  and he restored the color

  129

  hell had obscured in me.

  Now we came to the empty shore. →

  Upon those waters no man ever sailed

  132

  who then experienced his return.

  There he girded me as pleased Another. →

  What a wonder it was that the humble plant

  he chose to pick sprang up at once

  136

  in the very place where he had plucked it.

  OUTLINE: PURGATORIO II

  I. The arrival of a ship

  1–9

  the position of the sun, seen first from the northern hemisphere, then from where the travelers now are

  10–12

  they are, like reticent travelers, still near the ocean

  13–18

  simile: Mars red in dawn sky and light moving over sea

  19–24

  the light grows larger as it approaches: its whiteness

  25–30

  Virgil makes out the steersman and has Dante kneel

  31–36

  Virgil’s enthusiastic appreciation of this angelic being

  37–42

  Dante’s eyes cannot bear the brightness of the angel, but he apparently can see the ship, nearing shore

  43–48

  the angel stands at the stern, the seated “passengers” sing the entirety of the 113th Psalm

  49–51

  the angel signs them with the cross; they come ashore; he departs as swiftly as he had come

  II. Casella and his song

  52–54

  the crowd’s puzzled reaction to their new surroundings

  55–60

  as the sun rises, they ask for directions to the mount

  61–66

  Virgil: we are pilgrims, too, and came here a hard way

  67–69

  the souls realize, from his breathing, that Dante lives

  70–75

  simile: people crowding to a messenger of peace

  76–78

  one of them (Casella) is so eager to embrace Dante that he feels similarly moved

  79–81

  Dante fails three times to embrace this soul

  82–87

  the interplay between them and Dante’s recognition of him

  88–90

  Casella’s love for him and a question: why is Dante here?

  91–93

  Dante’s journey is prelude to a second; but why has Casella had to wait to come here after his death?

  94–105

  Casella: if God has often denied him this passage, there was no harm in that; but in the last three months all can choose to come from Tiber’s mouth, where the angel has returned

  106–111

  Dante: if no new law forbids it, sing a love song to soothe my soul, wearied with its bodily journey to this place

  112–117

  Casella begins his song, so sweet that Dante can still taste its sweetness; Virgil and the others are all completely rapt

  III. Cato’s rebuke

  118–123

  the rapt listeners are rebuked by Cato and told to climb

  124–132

  simile: doves at feeding, frightened, fly away; pilgrims, listening, chastised, run toward hillside

  133

  Dante and Virgil leave just as hastily

  PURGATORIO II

  The sun was nearly joined to that horizon →

  where the meridian circle at its zenith

  3

  stands straight above Jerusalem,

  and night, circling on the other side,

  was rising from the Ganges with the Scales

  6

  she drops when she is longer than the day,

  so that, where I was,

  the white and rosy cheeks of fair Aurora

  9

  were turning golden with time’s ripening.

  As yet we tarried by the seashore, like those →

  who think about the way and in their hearts go on—

  12

  while still their bodies linger.

  And now, as in the haze of morning, →

  Mars, low on the western stretch of ocean,

  15

  sheds reddish light through those thick vapors,

  there appeared to me—may I see it again!—

  a light advancing swiftly on the sea:

  18

  no flight can match its rapid motion.

  And in the moment I had turned away →

  to ask a question of my leader,

  21

  I saw it now enlarged and brighter.

  Then on either side of it appeared

  a whiteness—I knew not what—and just below,

  24

  little by little, another showed there too.

  Still my master did not say a word

  while the first whiteness took the shape of wings.

  27

  Then, once he saw the nature of the steersman,

  he cried: ‘Bend, bend your knees! Behold

  the angel of the Lord and fold your hands in prayer.

  30

  From now on you shall see such ministers as these.

  ‘Look how he scorns all human instruments →

  and wants no oar, nor other sail

  33

  beside his wings, between such distant shores.

  ‘Look how those wings are raised into the sky,

  fanning the air with his eternal pinions

  36

  which do not change like mortal plumage.’

  Then, as the heavenly bird approached,

  closer and closer, he appeared more radiant, →

  39

  so that my eyes could not sustain his splendor, →

  and I looked down as he came shoreward

  with a boat so swift and light

  42

  the water did not part to take it in. →

  At the stern stood the heavenly pilot—

  his mere description
would bring to bliss. →

  45

  And more than a hundred souls were with him. →

  ‘In exitu Isräel de Aegypto’ →

  they sang together with one voice,

  48

  and went on, singing the entire psalm.

  Then he blessed them with the sign of Holy Cross. →

  They flung themselves upon the beach,

  51

  and he went off as swiftly as he came.

  The crowd that stayed there had the look →

  of strangers to the place, gazing about

  54

  as though encountering new things.

  Having driven Capricorn down from mid-heaven, →

  the sun, darting his rays in all directions,

  57

  brought on the day with his unfailing arrows

  and the new people raised their faces

  toward us, saying: ‘If you know,

  60

  show us the road that leads up to the mountain.’ →

  Then Virgil answered: ‘Perhaps you think

  we are familiar with this place,

  63

  but we are strangers like yourselves. →

  ‘We came but now, a little while before you,

  by another road so rough and harsh →

  66

  that now the climb to us will seem a pastime.’ →

  The souls, who at my taking breath

  could see that I was still alive,

  69

  turned pale with wonder, →

  and as people crowd to hear the news →

  around a messenger who bears an olive-branch,

  72

  and no one minds the crush,

  so all these fortunate souls

  kept their eyes fastened on my face,

  75

  as though forgetful of the road to beauty.

  I saw one of them come forward →

  with such affection to embrace me

 

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