Dante Alighieri

The Divine Comedy (Complete Annotated Edition)


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      “More than a thousand with me here are laid

      I speak not.” He, this said, from sight withdrew.

      But I my steps towards the ancient bard

      Reverting, ruminated on the words

      Betokening me such ill. Onward he mov’d,

      And thus in going question’d: “Whence the’ amaze

      That holds thy senses wrapt?” I satisfied

      The’ inquiry, and the sage enjoin’d me straight:

      “Let thy safe memory store what thou hast heard

      To thee importing harm; and note thou this,”

      With his rais’d finger bidding me take heed,

      Whose bright eye all surveys, she of thy life

      The future tenour will to thee unfold.”

      Forthwith he to the left hand turn’d his feet:

      We left the wall, and tow’rds the middle space

      Went by a path, that to a valley strikes;

      Which e’en thus high exhal’d its noisome steam.

      Footnotes

      Canto XI

       Table of Contents

      ARGUMENT.—Dante arrives at the verge of a rocky precipice which encloses the seventh circle, where he sees the sepulchre of Anastasius the Heretic; behind the lid of which pausing a little, to make himself capable by degrees of enduring the fetid smell that steamed upward from the abyss, he is instructed by Virgil concerning the manner in which the three following circles are disposed, and