Golden Deer Classics

Harvard Classics Volume 20


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pang. The violent occupy

      All the first circle; and because, to force,

      Three persons are obnoxious, in three rounds,

      Each within other separate, is it framed.

      To God, his neighbor, and himself, by man

      Force may be offer’d; to himself I say,

      And his possessions, as thou soon shalt hear

      At full. Death, violent death, and painful wounds

      Upon his neighbor he inflicts; and wastes,

      By devastation, pillage, and the flames,

      His substance. Slayers, and each one that smites

      In malice, plunderers, and all robbers, hence

      The torment undergo of the first round,

      In different herds. Man can do violence

      To himself and his own blessings: and for this,

      He, in the second round must aye deplore

      With unavailing penitence his crime,

      Whoe’er deprives himself of life and light,

      In reckless lavishment his talent wastes,

      And sorrows there where he should dwell in joy.

      To God may force be offer’d, in the heart

      Denying and blaspheming His high power,

      And Nature with her kindly law contemning.

      And thence the inmost round marks with its seal

      Sodom, and Cahors, and all such as speak

      Contemptuously of the Godhead in their hearts.

      “Fraud, that in every conscience leaves a sting,

      May be by man employ’d on one, whose trust

      He wins, or on another, who withholds

      Strict confidence. Seems as the latter way

      Broke but the bond of love which Nature makes.

      Whence in the second circle have their nest,

      Dissimulation, witchcraft, flatteries,

      Theft, falsehood, simony, all who seduce

      To lust, or set their honesty at pawn,

      With such vile scum as these. The other way

      Forgets both Nature’s general love, and that

      Which thereto added afterward gives birth

      To special faith. Whence in the lesser circle,

      Point of the universe, dread seat of Dis,

      The traitor is eternally consumed.”

      I thus: “Instructor, clearly thy discourse

      Proceeds, distinguishing the hideous chasm

      And its inhabitants with skill exact.

      But tell me this: they of the dull, fat pool,

      Whom the rain beats, or whom the tempest drives,

      Or who with tongues so fierce conflicting meet,

      Wherefore within the city fire-illumed

      Are not these punish’d, if God’s wrath be on them?

      And if it be not, wherefore in such guise

      Are they condemn’d?” He answer thus return’d:

      “Wherefore in dotage wanders thus thy mind,

      Not so accustom’d? or what other thoughts

      Possess it? Dwell not in thy memory

      The words, wherein thy ethic page[76] describes

      Three dispositions adverse to Heaven’s will,

      Incontinence, malice, and mad brutishness,

      And how incontinence the least offends

      God, and least guilt incurs? If well thou note

      This judgment, and remember who they are,

      Without these walls to vain repentance doom’d,

      Thou shalt discern why they apart are placed

      From these fell spirits, and less wreakful pours

      Justice divine on them its vengeance down.”

      “O sun! who healest all imperfect sight,

      Thou so content’st me, when thou solvest my doubt,

      That ignorance not less than knowledge charms.

      Yet somewhat turn thee back,” I in these words

      Continued,” where thou said’st, that usury

      Offends celestial Goodness; and this knot

      Perplex’d unravel.” He thus made reply:

      “Philosophy, to an attentive ear,

      Clearly points out, not in one part alone,

      How imitative Nature takes her course

      From the celestial mind, and from its art:

      And where her laws[77] the Stagirite unfolds,

      Not many leaves scann’d o’er, observing well

      Thou shalt discover, that your art on her

      Obsequious follows, as the learner treads

      In his instructor’s step; so that your art

      Deserves the name of second in descent

      From God. These two, if thou recall to mind

      Creation’s holy book,[78] from the beginning

      Were the right source of life and excellence

      To human-kind. But in another path

      The usurer walks; and Nature in herself

      And in her follower thus he sets at nought,

      Placing elsewhere his hope.[79] But follow now

      My steps on forward journey bent; for now

      The Pisces play with undulating glance

      Along the horizon, and the Wain[80] lies all

      O’er the northwest; and onward there a space

      Is our steep passage down the rocky height.”

      Argument.—Descending by a very rugged way into the seventh circle, where the violent are punished, Dante and his leader find it guarded by the Minotaur; whose fury being pacified by Virgil, they step downward from crag to crag; till, drawing near the bottom, they descry a river of blood, wherein are tormented such as have committed violence against their neighbor. At these, when they strive to emerge from the blood, a troop of Centaurs, running along the side of the river, aim their arrows; and three of their band opposing our travellers at the foot of the steep, Virgil prevails so far that one consents to carry them both across the stream; and on their passage, Dante is informed by him of the course of the river, and of those that are punished therein.

      The place, where to descend the precipice

      We came, was rough as Alp; and on its verge

      Such object lay, as every eye would shun.

      As is that ruin, which Adice’s stream[81]

      On this side Trento struck, shouldering the wave,

      Or loosed by earthquake or for lack of