Dante Alighieri

The Divine Comedy (Illustrated Edition)


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through this element obscure,

      Us, who the world with bloody stain imbru’d;

      If for a friend the King of all we own’d,

      Our pray’r to him should for thy peace arise,

      Since thou hast pity on our evil plight.

      If whatsoe’er to hear or to discourse

      It pleases thee, that will we hear, of that

      Freely with thee discourse, while e’er the wind,

      Is situate on the coast, where Po descends

      To rest in ocean with his sequent streams.

      “Love, that in gentle heart is quickly learnt,

      Entangled him by that fair form, from me

      Ta’en in such cruel sort, as grieves me still:

      Love, that denial takes from none belov’d,

      Caught me with pleasing him so passing well,

      That, as thou see’st, he yet deserts me not.

      The soul, who spilt our life.” Such were their words;

      At hearing which downward I bent my looks,

      And held them there so long, that the bard cried:

      “What art thou pond’ring?” I in answer thus:

      “Alas! by what sweet thoughts, what fond desire

      Must they at length to that ill pass have reach’d!”

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      Then turning, I to them my speech address’d.

      Even to tears my grief and pity moves.

      But tell me; in the time of your sweet sighs,

      By what, and how love granted, that ye knew

      Your yet uncertain wishes?” She replied:

      “No greater grief than to remember days

      Of joy, when mis’ry is at hand! That kens

      Thy learn’d instructor. Yet so eagerly

      If thou art bent to know the primal root,

      From whence our love gat being, I will do,

      As one, who weeps and tells his tale. One day

      How him love thrall’d. Alone we were, and no

      Suspicion near us. Ofttimes by that reading

      Our eyes were drawn together, and the hue

      Fled from our alter’d cheek. But at one point

      Alone we fell. When of that smile we read,

      The wished smile, rapturously kiss’d

      By one so deep in love, then he, who ne’er

      From me shall separate, at once my lips

      All trembling kiss’d. The book and writer both

      Were love’s purveyors. In its leaves that day

      We read no more.” While thus one spirit spake,

      The other wail’d so sorely, that heartstruck

      I through compassion fainting, seem’d not far

      From death, and like a corpse fell to the ground.

      Footnotes

      Canto VI

       Table of Contents

      ARGUMENT.—On his recovery, the Poet finds himself in the third circle, where the gluttonous are punished. Their torment is, to lie in the mire, under a continual and heavy storm of hail, snow, and discolored water; Cerberus, meanwhile barking over them with his threefold throat, and rending them piecemeal. One of these, who on earth was named Ciacco, foretells the divisions with which Florence is about to be distracted. Dante proposes a question to his guide, who solves it; and they proceed toward the fourth circle.

      MY sense reviving, that erewhile had droop’d

      With pity for the kindred shades, whence grief

      O’ercame me wholly, straight around I see

      New torments, new tormented souls, which way

      Soe’er I move, or turn, or bend my sight.

      In the third circle I arrive, of show’rs

      Ceaseless, accursed, heavy, and cold, unchang’d

      For ever, both in kind and in degree.

      Large hail, discolour’d water, sleety flaw

      Through the dun midnight air stream’d down amain:

      Stank all the land whereon that tempest fell.

      Cerberus, cruel monster, fierce and strange,

      Through his wide threefold throat barks as a dog

      Over the multitude immers’d beneath.

      His eyes glare crimson, black his unctuous beard,

      His belly large, and claw’d the hands, with which

      He tears the spirits, flays them, and their limbs

      Piecemeal disparts. Howling there spread, as curs,

      Under the rainy deluge, with one side

      The other