The Inferno

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by Dante


  18

  And then I added: ‘Within that hole

  ‘where I had fixed my gaze, I do believe I saw

  someone of my own blood lament

  21

  the sin that costs so dear down there.’

  Then the master said: ‘Trouble your mind →

  no more because of him.

  24

  Turn it to other things and let him be,

  ‘for I saw him there below the bridge,

  pointing his finger at you, fierce with threats,

  27

  and I heard him called Geri del Bello.

  ‘Just then you were so thoroughly engrossed

  in him who once was lord of Hautefort

  30

  you did not glance that way before your kinsman left.’

  ‘O my leader, the violent death he died, →

  for which no vengeance has been taken yet,’

  33

  I said, ‘by any person partner to his shame,

  ‘made him indignant. That is why he went away

  without addressing me—or so I think—

  36

  and why he’s made me pity him the more.’

  Thus we continued talking till we reached →

  the first point on the ridge that could have shown

  39

  the next pit’s bottom, had there been more light.

  When we stood above the final cloister →

  of Malebolge and all of its lay brothers

  42

  became discernible to us,

  strange arrows of lament, their shafts,

  with pity at their tips, pierced me,

  45

  so that I pressed my hands against my ears.

  If the contagion of every hospital →

  in Valdichiana, from July until September,

  48

  and in the Maremma and Sardegna, were amassed

  in one malarial ditch, just such suffering

  was in that place. And from it rose

  51

  the stench of festering limbs.

  We came down, always to our left, and reached →

  the last bank of the lengthy crag.

  54

  And then my eyes could have a better view →

  into the pit, there where the minister

  of God on high, unerring justice, punishes

  57

  the counterfeiters whom she here records.

  I think it could have been no greater sorrow →

  to see the people of Aegina stricken,

  60

  with such corruption in the very air

  that every animal, even the smallest worm,

  perished, and, later, as the poets hold for certain,

  63

  these ancient people were restored to life,

  hatched from the eggs of ants—

  no greater sorrow, than in that somber valley

  66

  to see those spirits, heaped on one another, languishing.

  Some lay upon the bellies or the backs

  of others, still others dragged themselves

  69

  on hands and knees along that gloomy path.

  Step by step we went ahead in silence,

  looking and listening to the stricken spirits,

  72

  who could not raise their bodies from the ground.

  Two I saw seated, propped against each other →

  as pans are propped to warm before the fire,

  75

  each of them blotched with scabs from head to foot.

  And never did I see a stable-boy,

  with his master waiting, nor youth whose chore

  78

  keeps him from sleep, ply his curry-comb

  more hurriedly than each one clawed his nails

  across his skin because of that mad itch,

  81

  which knows no other remedy,

  and their nails tore off those scabs

  as a knife strips scales from bream

  84

  or other fish with even larger scales.

  ‘You there, stripping off your coat of mail,’ →

  began my leader, addressing one of them,

  87

  ‘and sometimes making pincers of your fingers,

  ‘tell us whether, among those gathered here,

  any are Italian, so may your nails

  90

  last you in this task for all eternity.’

  ‘We whom you see so blasted are Italian,’

  answered one of them, through his tears,

  93

  ‘but who are you, that you inquire of us?’

  And my leader: ‘I am one who makes his way

  down with this living man from ledge to ledge.

  96

  And my intention is to show him Hell.’

  They stopped propping one another up

  and each one, trembling, turned in my direction,

  99

  as others did who’d overheard those words.

  The good master drew up close to me,

  saying, ‘Ask them what you will.’

  102

  And I began, since this had been his wish:

  ‘So that your memory may not fade away

  from minds of men in the world above

  105

  but live on yet for many suns to come,

  ‘tell me who you are, and where you hail from.

  Do not let your foul and sickening torment

  108

  keep you from telling me your names.’

  And one of them replied: ‘I was of Arezzo. →

  Albero of Siena had me burned alive.

  111

  But what I died for does not bring me here.

  ‘It is true I said to him in jest:

  “I do know how to rise into the air and fly!”

  114

  And he, who had the will but not the wit,

  ‘asked me to show him how. And just because

  I failed to make him Daedalus, he had me set

  117

  on fire by one who took him as his son.

  ‘But Minos, incapable of error,

  damned me to the last of these ten ditches

  120

  for the alchemy I practiced in the world.’

  And I said to the poet: ‘Were people ever →

  quite so fatuous as are the Sienese?

  123

  Why, not even the French can match them!’

  Whereupon the other leper, hearing me, →

  replied: ‘Except, of course for Stricca—

  126

  he knew how to moderate his spending—

  ‘and for Niccolò—the first one to devise

  a costly use for cloves,

  129

  there in the garden where such seeds take root—

  ‘and for that band in whose company

  Caccia d’Asciano squandered his vineyards

  132

  and his fields, and Abbagliato showed his wit.

  ‘But, to let you know who’s in your camp

  against the Sienese, look close at me

  135

  so that my face itself may answer you.

  ‘You will see I am the shade of Capocchio, →

  who altered metal by means of alchemy.

  And, if you are the man I take you for,

  139

  you will recall how good an ape I was of nature.’

  OUTLINE: INFERNO XXX

  1–27

  opening double simile:

  1–12

  (Juno vs. Thebes): Athamas

  13–21

  (Fortuna vs. Troy): Hecuba

  22–27

  Gianni Schicchi and Myrrha

  28–33

  Griffolino identifies Gianni, attacking Capocchio

  34–36

  Dante asks Griffolino about the second shade

  37–45

  Griff
olino: Myrrha became another, as did Gianni

  46–57

  Dante observes a lute-shaped sinner

  58–75

  Master Adam: his dropsical thirst; his sin

  76–90

  Master Adam: his desires for revenge

  91–93

  Dante: who are those “wet hands in winter”?

  94–99

  Master Adam: Potiphar’s wife and Sinon

  100–129

  Sinon and Master Adam: battle of blows and words

  130–132

  Dante fixed upon their quarrel; Virgil’s rebuke

  133–135

  Dante’s shame

  136–141

  simile: dreamer dreaming he’s not dreaming

  142–148

  Virgil’s acceptance of Dante’s blush

  INFERNO XXX

  Once when Juno, furious with Semele, →

  vented her rage against the house of Thebes,

  3

  as she had done on more than one occasion,

  Athamas went so raving mad that when he saw

  his wife come near with both their children,

  6

  holding one on this arm, one on that,

  he shouted: “Let’s spread the nets so I can trap

  the lioness with her cubs as they go past!”

  9

  Then he reached out and with pitiless claws

  he seized the one who was called Learchus,

  whirled him round and dashed him on a rock.

  12

  At that she drowned herself with her other burden.

  And when Fortune had subdued the haughty, →

  all-daring spirit of the Trojans,

  15

  so that both king and kingdom were brought low,

  Hecuba—wretched, sorrowing, a captive—

  when she saw Polyxena slaughtered and,

  18

  grieving woman, when she saw

  Polydorus lying dead upon the shore,

  went mad and started barking like a dog,

  21

  so greatly had her grief deranged her mind.

  But no Theban crazed with rage— →

  or Trojan—did ever seem as cruel

  24

  in rending beasts, much less human parts,

  as did two pallid, naked shades I saw,

  snapping their jaws as they rushed up

  27

  like swine charging from an opened sty.

  The one came at Capocchio, set its tusks →

  into his neck, then dragged him

  30

  so his belly scraped the rock-hard ground.

  And the Aretine, who stood there, trembling,

  said to me: ‘That demon’s Gianni Schicchi,

  33

  and in his rabid rage he mauls the others.’

  ‘Oh,’ I said, ‘so may that other not fix

  its teeth in you, be kind enough to tell me

  36

  just who it is before it runs away.’

  And he answered: ‘That is the ancient soul →

  of wicked Myrrha, who became enamored

  39

  of her father with more than lawful love.

  ‘She contrived to sin with him

  by taking on another person’s shape,

  42

  as did that other, eager to decamp, →

  ‘to gain the queen mule of the herd,

  take on the shape of Buoso Donati,

  45

  drawing up a will and giving it due form.’

  When those two frenzied shades, on whom →

  I’d fixed my eyes, had hurried off,

  48

  I turned to look at others born for sorrow.

  One I saw, fashioned like a lute— →

  had he been sundered at the groin

  51

  from the joining where a man goes forked.

  The heavy dropsy, which afflicts the body →

  with its ill-digesting humor

  54

  so that the face and belly do not match,

  forced his lips to draw apart

  as a person parched with hectic fever curls

  57

  one lip to his chin and twists the other up.

  ‘O you who go unpunished here—I know not why— →

  through this world of misery,’

  60

  he said, ‘behold and then consider

  ‘the suffering of Master Adam.

  Alive, I had in plenty all I wanted.

  63

  And now I crave a single drop of water!

  ‘The streams that, in the Casentino, →

  run down along green hillsides to the Arno,

  66

  keeping their channels cool and moist,

  ‘flow before my eyes forever, and not in vain,

  because their image makes me thirst still more

  69

  than does the malady that wastes my features.

  ‘The rigid justice that torments me

  employs the landscape where I sinned

  72

  to make my sighs come faster.

  ‘In those parts lies Romena, where I forged

  the coinage stamped with John the Baptist.

  75

  For that I left my body burned above.

  ‘If I could only see down here the wretched souls →

  of Guido, Alessandro, or their brother,

  78

  I’d not give up that sight for Fonte Branda.

  ‘One of them is here with us already, →

  if the furious shades who move about don’t lie.

  81

  What good is that to me whose limbs are bound?

  ‘If I were only light enough to budge →

  a single inch each hundred years,

  84

  I would by now have started on my way

  ‘to seek him out in this pit’s bloated shapes,

  even though it runs eleven miles around

  87

  and spreads not less than half a mile across.

  ‘It is their fault that I have such companions, →

  for it was they who made me strike the florins

  90

  that held three carats’ worth of dross.’

  And I to him: ‘Who are these two wretches

  who steam as wet hands do in winter

  93

  and lie so very near you on your right?’

  ‘I found them when I rained into this trough,’

  he said, ‘and even then they did not move about,

  96

  nor do I think they will for all eternity.

  ‘One is the woman who lied accusing Joseph, →

  the other is false Sinon, the lying Greek from Troy.

  99

  Putrid fever makes them reek with such a stench.’

  And one of them, who took offense, perhaps →

  at being named so vilely, hit him

  102

  with a fist right on his rigid paunch.

  It boomed out like a drum. Then Master Adam,

  whose arm seemed just as sturdy,

  105

  used it, striking Sinon in the face,

  saying: ‘Although I cannot move about

  because my legs are heavy,

  108

  my arm is loose enough for such a task.’

  To which the other answered: ‘When they put you

  to the fire, your arm was not so nimble,

  111

  though it was quick enough when you were coining.’

  And the dropsied one: ‘Well, that is true,

  but you were hardly such a truthful witness

  114

  when you were asked to tell the truth at Troy.’

  ‘If I spoke falsely, you falsified the coin,’ →

  said Sinon, ‘and I am here for one offense alone,

  117

  but you for more than any other de
vil!’

  ‘You perjurer, keep the horse in mind,’ →

  replied the sinner with the swollen paunch,

  120

  ‘and may it pain you that the whole world knows.’

  ‘And may you suffer from the thirst,’ the Greek replied,

  ‘that cracks your tongue, and from the fetid humor

  123

  that turns your belly to a hedge before your eyes!’

  Then the forger: ‘And so, as usual,

  your mouth gapes open from your fever.

  126

  If I am thirsty, and swollen by this humor, →

  ‘you have your hot spells and your aching head.

  For you to lick the mirror of Narcissus

  129

  would not take much by way of invitation.’

  I was all intent in listening to them,

  when the master said: ‘Go right on looking →

  132

  and it is I who’ll quarrel with you.’

  When I heard him speak to me in anger

  I turned and faced him with a shame

  135

  that circles in my memory even now.

  As a man who dreams that he is being harmed →

  and, even as he dreams, hopes he is dreaming,

  138

  longing for what is, as though it weren’t—

  so it was with me, deprived of speech:

  I longed to seek his pardon—and all the while

  141

  I did so without knowing that I did.

  ‘Less shame would cleanse a greater fault than yours,’ →

  my master said, ‘and that is why

  144

  you may set down the load of such remorse.

  ‘Do not forget I’m always at your side

  should it fall out again that fortune take you

 

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