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Dante's Inferno: The Divine Comedy, Book One


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answered, “Briefly at a thing not worth

      We glance, and pass forgetful. Hope in death

      They have not. Memory of them on the earth

      Where once they lived remains not. Nor the breath

      Of Justice shall condemn, nor Mercy plead,

      But all alike disdain them. That they know

      Themselves so mean beneath aught else constrains

      The envious outcries that too long ye heed.

      Move past, but speak not.”

      Then I looked, and lo,

      Were souls in ceaseless and unnumbered trains

      That past me whirled unending, vainly led

      Nowhither, in useless and unpausing haste.

      A fluttering ensign all their guide, they chased

      Themselves for ever. I had not thought the dead,

      The whole world’s dead, so many as these. I saw

      The shadow of him elect to Peter’s seat

      Who made the great refusal, and the law,

      The unswerving law that left them this retreat

      To seal the abortion of their lives, became

      Illumined to me, and themselves I knew,

      To God and all his foes the futile crew

      How hateful in their everlasting shame.

      I saw these victims of continued death

      —For lived they never—were naked all, and loud

      Around them closed a never-ceasing cloud

      Of hornets and great wasps, that buzzed and clung,

      —Weak pain for weaklings meet,—and where they stung,

      Blood from their faces streamed, with sobbing breath,

      And all the ground beneath with tears and blood

      Was drenched, and crawling in that loathsome mud

      There were great worms that drank it.

      Gladly thence

      I gazed far forward. Dark and wide the flood

      That flowed before us. On the nearer shore

      Were people waiting. “Master, show me whence

      These came, and who they be, and passing hence

      Where go they? Wherefore wait they there content,

      —The faint light shows it,—for their transit o’er

      The unbridged abyss?”

      He answered, “When we stand

      Together, waiting on the joyless strand,

      In all it shall be told thee.” If he meant

      Reproof I know not, but with shame I bent

      My downward eyes, and no more spake until

      The bank we reached, and on the stream beheld

      A bark ply toward us.

      Of exceeding eld,

      And hoary showed the steersman, screaming shrill,

      With horrid glee the while he neared us, “Woe

      To ye, depraved!—Is here no Heaven, but ill

      The place where I shall herd ye. Ice and fire

      And darkness are the wages of their hire

      Who serve unceasing here—But thou that there

      Dost wait though live, depart ye. Yea, forbear!

      A different passage and a lighter fare

      Is destined thine.”

      But here my guide replied,

      “Nay, Charon, cease; or to thy grief ye chide.

      It There is willed, where that is willed shall be,

      That ye shall pass him to the further side,

      Nor question more.”

      The fleecy cheeks thereat,

      Blown with fierce speech before, were drawn and flat,

      And his flame-circled eyes subdued, to hear

      That mandate given. But those of whom he spake

      In bitter glee, with naked limbs ashake,

      And chattering teeth received it. Seemed that then

      They first were conscious where they came, and fear

      Abject and frightful shook them; curses burst

      In clamorous discords forth; the race of men,

      Their parents, and their God, the place, the time,

      Of their conceptions and their births, accursed

      Alike they called, blaspheming Heaven. But yet

      Slow steps toward the waiting bark they set,

      With terrible wailing while they moved. And so

      They came reluctant to the shore of woe

      That waits for all who fear not God, and not

      Them only.

      Then the demon Charon rose

      To herd them in, with eyes that furnace-hot

      Glowed at the task, and lifted oar to smite

      Who lingered.

      As the leaves, when autumn shows,

      One after one descending, leave the bough,

      Or doves come downward to the call, so now

      The evil seed of Adam to endless night,

      As Charon signalled, from the shore’s bleak height,

      Cast themselves downward to the bark. The brown

      And bitter flood received them, and while they passed

      Were others gathering, patient as the last,

      Not conscious of their nearing doom.

      “My son,”

      —Replied my guide the unspoken thought—“is none

      Beneath God’s wrath who dies in field or town,

      Or earth’s wide space, or whom the waters drown,

      But here he cometh at last, and that so spurred

      By Justice, that his fear, as those ye heard,

      Impels him forward like desire. Is not

      One spirit of all to reach the fatal spot

      That God’s love holdeth, and hence, if Charon chide,

      Ye well may take it.—Raise thy heart, for now,

      Constrained of Heaven, he must thy course allow.”

      Yet how I passed I know not. For the ground

      Trembled that heard him, and a fearful sound

      Of issuing wind arose, and blood-red light

      Broke from beneath our feet, and sense and sight

      Left me. The memory with cold sweat once more

      Reminds me of the sudden-crimsoned night,

      As sank I senseless by the dreadful shore.

      CANTO IV

      ARISING thunder from