The Divine Comedy
Cantos XXIX-XXXIII
Purgatorio Canto XXIX:1-36 The Divine Pageant
Purgatorio Canto
XXIX:37-61 The Seven Branched Candlesticks
Purgatorio Canto
XXIX:61-81 The Seven Banners
Purgatorio
CantoXXIX:82-105 The Elders: The Four Beasts
Purgatorio Canto
XXIX:106-132 The Chariot: The Grifon: The Virtues
Purgatorio Canto
XXIX:133-154 Luke, Paul and others
Purgatorio Canto
XXX:1-48 Beatrice
Purgatorio Canto
XXX:49-81 Virgil has left: Dante is filled with Shame
Purgatorio Canto
XXX:82-145 Her Mission to help him
Purgatorio Canto
XXXI:1-42 Dante confesses his guilt
Purgatorio Canto
XXXI:43-69 Beatrice rebukes him.
Purgatorio Canto
XXXI:70-90 Dante’s remorse
Purgatorio Canto
XXXI:91-145 Lethe: Beatrice unveiled
Purgatorio Canto
XXXII:1-36 The Pageant moves eastward
Purgatorio Canto
XXXII:37-63 The Mystic Tree
Purgatorio Canto
XXXII:64-99 Dante sleeps: Beatrice guards the chariot
Purgatorio Canto
XXXII:100-160 The Church’s Past, Present and Future
Purgatorio Canto
XXXIII:1-57 Beatrice’s prophetic words
Purgatorio Canto
XXXIII:58-102 The Tree of Empire
Purgatorio Canto
XXXIII:103-145 Dante and Statius drink from Eunoë
She continued, from the end of her words,
singing, like a lady in love: ‘Beati,
quorum tecta sunt peccata: Blessed is he whose transgression is
forgiven.’ And, like the nymphs who used, alone, to wander through the woodland
shadows, one wishing to see the sun, another to flee it, she moved then,
walking along the bank, against the stream, and I across from her, one small step
answering the other.
Her steps, with mine, were not a hundred,
when both banks curved alike, so that I turned eastwards. And our journey was
not far yet, when the lady turned completely to me, saying: ‘My brother, look
and listen.’ And see a sudden brightness flooded, through the great forest, on
every side, so that I was unsure if it was lightning. But since lightning
vanishes, as it comes, and that shone brighter and brighter, lasting, I said,
in my mind: ‘What is this thing?’
And a sweet melody ran through the glowing
air, at which righteous zeal made me condemn Eve’s
boldness, who a woman, alone, and newly created, there, where Heaven and Earth
were obedient, could not bear to be under any veil, which if she had borne,
devoutly, I would have known these ineffable delights earlier, and for longer.
While I was moving among such first fruits
of the eternal bliss, enraptured and still longing for greater joys, the air
turned to blazing fire, under the green branches in front of us, and the sweet
sound was distinguished as a song.
O sacred, virgin Muses, if ever I endured hunger, cold or
vigil for you, the occasion spurs me on to ask my reward. Now I need Helicon to
stream out for me, and Urania to aid
me with her choir, to put into words, things that are hard to imagine.
A little further on, the illusion of seven
golden trees appeared, caused by the great space still between us and them: but
when I had come nearer, so that the common
object, that can deceive the senses, had not lost any of its details, the
power that creates matter for reasoning, realised that branched candlesticks were what they
were, and the content of the singing was: ‘Hosanna.’ The lovely pageant was
blazing out, above, far brighter than the mid-month moon, at midnight.
I turned full of wonder, towards the good
Virgil, and he replied with a face no less stunned. Then I turned my face back
towards the sublime things, which moved towards us, so slowly, that they would
be out-paced by a new bride.
The lady cried to me: ‘Why are you only so
ardent for the sight of the bright lights, and pay no attention to what comes
behind them?’
Then I saw people, dressed in white,
following as if behind their leader: and there was never such whiteness, here,
among us. The water shone brightly on my left, and reflected my left side, like
a mirror, if I gazed into it. When I was situated on the edge, so that the
river alone separated me from them, I stopped to see better, and I saw the
flames advance, leaving the air behind them tinted, and they had the appearance
of trailing banners, so that the
air above remained coloured in seven bands, of the hues in which the sun
creates his bow, and Diana, the Moon, her
halo.
These banners streamed to the rear, way
beyond my sight, and, as far as I could judge, the outermost ones were ten
paces apart.
Under as lovely a sky as I could describe,
came twenty -four Elders, two by
two, crowned with lilies. They were all singing: ‘Blessed art thou among the
daughters of Adam, and blessed to all eternity be thy beauties.’ When the
flowers, and the other fresh herbs, on the other bank opposite, were free of
all those chosen people, four
creatures came after them, each one crowned with green leaves, as star
follows star in the sky.
Each was plumed with six wings, the
feathers full of eyes, and the eyes of Argus,
if they were living, would be like them. Reader, I will scatter no more words,
to describe their form, since other duties constrain me, so that I cannot be
lavish here, but read Ezekiel, who
pictures them as he saw them, coming from the icy firmament in whirlwind, cloud
and fire, and as you will find them in his pages, so they were here, except
that John, the Divine, is with me as
to the wings, and differs from him.
The space within the four of them
contained a triumphal, two-wheeled, chariot drawn by a Grifon, harnessed at the neck. And
the Grifon stretched each wing upwards between the centre and three of the
banners, so that he did no harm by cutting across them. The wings rose so high
their tips could not be seen. Its members were golden, where he was birdlike,
and the rest white mixed with brilliant red. Neither Scipio Africanus nor, indeed, Augustus ever gladdened Rome with so
magnificent a chariot, and the Sun’s would be poor by comparison, the Sun’s,
that was consumed when Phaethon
strayed, at Earth’s devout request, when Jupiter
was darkly just.
Three
ladies came dancing, in a circle, by the right hand wheel: one was so red
she would scarcely be visible in the fire: the next was as if her flesh and
bones were made of emerald: the third seemed of newly fallen snow: and now they
seemed led by the white, and now by the red, and from her song the others took
their metre, slow or quick.
By the left hand wheel, four dressed in
purple, made festive, following the lead of the one who had three eyes in her
face.
Behind the group I have described, I saw two aged men, of similar bearing,
but dissimilar clothing, grave and venerable: one was Luke, showing himself to be of the school of
that supreme Hippocrates, whom
nature made physician to the creatures she most cares for: the other, Paul, displayed the opposite role, with a
sharp, gleaming sword, so that it made me afraid, even on this side of the
stream.
Then I saw four, of humble aspect: and behind
them all, a solitary old man, John the Divine,
coming by, with a visionary face, as if dreaming. And all these seven were costumed like
the first company, but had no garland of lilies round their heads, rather one
of roses and other crimson flowers, so that someone who saw them close to would
have said they were all on fire above their eyes.
And when the chariot was opposite me, a
clap of thunder was heard: and those noble people seemed to have their further
progress stopped, and halted there with the first banners.
When those Seven Lights of the first
Heaven had halted, that never knew setting or rising, or the veil of any other
mist but sin, and which made all aware of their duty, just as the lower seven,
Ursa Minor, guide the helmsman towards port, the people of truth, who had first
appeared, between them and the Grifon, turned towards the chariot, as if towards
their place of peace: and one of them, as if sent from Heaven, lifted his
voice, three times, singing: ‘Veni
sponsa de Libano: Come with me from Lebanon, my spouse,’ and all the
others sang after him.
As the Saints at the Last Judgment will
rise, ready, each one, from his tomb, singing Halleluiah, with renewed voice,
so a hundred rose, in the divine chariot, ad vocem tanti senis, at the
voice of so great an Elder, the ministers and messengers of eternal life. All
were saying: ‘Benedictus qui
venis: Blessed art thou that comest’ and, scattering flowers above and
around, ‘Manibus o date lilia plenis:
O give lilies with full hands.’
I have seen, before now, at dawn of day,
the eastern sky all rose-red, and the rest of the heavens serene and clear, and
seen the sun’s face rise, veiled, so that because of the moderating mists, the
eye, for a long while, endured him: and so, in a cloud of flowers, that lifted
from the angelic hands, and fell again, inside and beyond, a lady appeared to me, crowned
with olive-leaves, over a white veil, dressed in colours of living flame,
beneath a green cloak.
And my spirit, that had endured so great a
space of time, since it had been struck with awe, trembling, in her presence,
through the hidden virtue that issued from her, and without having greater knowledge
through my eyes, felt the intense power of former love.
As soon as that high virtue struck my
sight, which had already transfixed me, before I was out of my childhood, I
turned to the left, with that faith with which a little boy runs to his mother,
when he is afraid or troubled, saying to Virgil: ‘There is a barely a drop of
blood in me that does not tremble: I know the tokens of the ancient flame.’
But Virgil
had left us, bereft of himself, Virgil, sweetest father, Virgil to whose
guidance I gave myself: and all the beauties, that our ancient mother lost, did
not prevent my dew-washed cheeks from turning dark again with tears.
‘Dante,
do not weep, because Virgil goes, do not weep yet, not yet, since you must weep
soon for another reason.’ Like an admiral, who stands, at stern and prow, to
inspect the crews who man the other ships, and encourage them to brave action,
so I saw the lady who first appeared to me, veiled, beneath the angelic
festival, directing her gaze towards me on this side of the stream, from the
left of the chariot, when I turned at the sound of my own name, that I write
here, from necessity.
Although the veil which draped her head,
crowned with Minerva’s olive leaves, did
not allow her to appear clearly, she continued to speak, regally, and severely,
like someone who holds back the sharpest words till last.
‘Look at me, truly: I truly am, I truly am
Beatrice. How did you dare to approach the Mount? Did you not know that here
Man is happy?’ My eyes dropped to the clear water, but seeing myself there, I
looked back at the grass, so much shame bowed my forehead down. As the mother
seems severe to her child, so she seemed to me: since the savour of sharp pity
tastes of bitterness.
She fell silent, and immediately the Angels
sang: ‘In te, Domine, speravi:
In thee, O Lord, do I put my trust..’ but did not sing beyond the words: ‘pedes
meos: my feet.’
As the snow is frozen, among the living
rafters, along Italy’s back, under the blast and stress of Slavonic winds,
then, melting, trickles down inside its mass, if the ground, free of shadow,
breathes, so that the fire seems to melt the candle, so I was frozen, without
sighs or tears, before they, who always harmonise their notes with the melody
of the eternal spheres, sang: but when I heard the compassion for me in their
sweet harmony, greater than if they had said: ‘Lady, why do you shame him so?’
the ice that had closed around my heart became breath and water, and issued
from my chest, in anguish, through my mouth and eyes.
She, still standing on that side of the
chariot I spoke of, directed her words, then, to the pitying Angels: ‘You are
vigilant in the eternal day, so that night or sleep do not hide one measure of
the earth’s journey along its way, from you: therefore I answer with greater
care, so that he who weeps there can understand, so that his sorrow and his sin
can be measured together.
Not merely by the motion of the vast
spheres, that direct each seed to some objective, according to the stars’
attendance, but by the generosity of divine graces, that yield their rain from
such lofty vapours our eyes do not reach near them, this man, potentially, was
such in his vita nuova, his new
life, that every true skill would have grown miraculously in him. But the more
good qualities the earth’s soil has, the more wild and coarse it becomes with
evil seed, and lack of cultivation.
For a while I supported him with my face:
showing him my young eyes, I drew him with me, directed towards the right goal.
But, as soon as I was on the threshold of my second age, and changed
existences, he left me and gave himself to others. I was less dear to him, and
less pleasing, when I rose from flesh to spirit, and beauty and virtue
increased in me: and he turned his steps to an untrue road, chasing false
illusions of good, that never completely repay their promise.
Nor was it any use to me to gain
inspiration to call him back to himself, in dreams, or otherwise: he valued
them so little. He sank so low, that all means to save him were already
useless, except that of showing him the lost people. To achieve that, I visited
the gates of the dead, and, weeping, my prayers carried to him who guided him
upwards.
God’s highest law would be broken, if
Lethe were gone by, and such food was tasted, without some tax of penitence,
that sheds tears.’
She began again, continuing without delay,
directing her speech with its sharp point towards me, whose edge had seemed
keen to me: ‘O you, who are on that side of the sacred stream, say, say if it
is true: your confession must meet the charge.’
My powers were so confused, that the voice
sounded and was gone before it emerged from its agent. She suffered a pause,
then said: ‘What are you thinking of? Reply to me: the sad memories, you have,
are not yet erased by the water.’ Confusion and fear, joined together, drove a
‘Yes’ from my mouth, so quietly that eyes were needed to interpret it.
As a crossbow breaks, in string and bow,
when fired at too high a tension, and the bolt hits the mark with lessened
force, so I broke under this heavy charge, pouring out a flood of tears and
sighs, and my voice died away in transit. At which she said to me: ‘In your
desire for me, that led you to love that good, beyond which there is nothing to
aspire to, what pits did you find in your path, or chains to bind, that you had
to despoil your hope of passing upward? And what allurements, or attractions
were displayed in others’ faces, to make you stray towards them?’
After heaving a bitter sigh, I had hardly
voice to answer, and my lips gave it shape with effort. I said, weeping:
‘Present things with false delights turned my steps away, as soon as your face
had vanished.’ And she: ‘If you had stayed silent, or denied what you have
confessed, your fault would be no less noted, such is the judge who knows of
it. But when self-accusation of sin bursts from the mouth, in our Court, the
grindstone blunts the edge.’
‘However, in order that you might be
ashamed of your errors, and might be more steadfast, on hearing the Siren sing next time, stifle the source
of your weeping, and listen: then you will hear how my entombed flesh should
have led you towards the opposite goal.
Art and Nature never presented such
delight to you, as the lovely body I was enclosed by, now scattered into dust:
and if the greatest delight was lost to you, by my death, what mortal thing
should have led you to desire it? Truly, at the first sting of false things,
you should have risen after me, who was no longer such. Some young girl, or
other vanity, of such brief enjoyment, should not have weighted your wings, to
wait for more arrows. The young bird stays for two or three, but the net is
spread, and the shaft fired, in vain, in front of the eyes of the
fully-fledged.
As children stand, mute with shame, listening
with eyes on the ground, repentant, and self-confessing, so I stood, there. And
she said: ‘Since you are grieving at what you hear, lift your bearded head, and
you will have greater grief from what you see.’
A strong oak-tree is uprooted with less
resistance by our northern winds, or the southerlies from Iarbas’s Africa, than I lifted my face, at
her command. And when she spoke of my beard, as a man I knew the venom behind
her words.
And when my head was stretched forward, my
eyes saw those primal creatures resting from strewing flowers, and my eyes, not
yet quite in my control, saw Beatrice, turned towards the Grifon, which is Christ, one sole person in two natures.
Under her veil, and beyond the stream, she
seemed to me to exceed her former self, more than she exceeded others when she
was here. The nettle of repentance stung me so fiercely, that the thing that drew
me most to love of it, of all other things became most hateful to me. Such
great remorse gnawed at my heart, that I fell, stunned, and what I became then
she knows, who gave me cause.
Then, when my heart restored the power of
outward things, I saw Matilda bending over me, that lady whom I had found
alone, and she said: ‘Hold to me! Hold to me!’ She had drawn me into the river,
up to my neck, and she went along, over the water, light as a shuttle, pulling
me behind her.
When I was near to the shore of the
blessed, I heard: ‘Asperges
me: cleanse me’ sung so sweetly, I cannot remember it, nor can I
describe it. The lovely lady opened her arms, clasped my head, and submerged me
so that I had to swallow water, then pulled me out, and led me, cleansed, in
among the dance of the four lovely ones, and each took my arm, and singing,
they began: ‘Here we are nymphs, and in heaven we are stars: before Beatrice
descended to your world, we were ordained to be her helpers. We will take you
to her eyes: but the three on the other side, who look more deeply, will
sharpen your vision to the joyful inward light.’
Then they lead me, with them, up to the
Grifon’s breast, where Beatrice
stood, turned towards us. They said: ‘See that you do not spare your eyes: we
have set you in front of the bright emeralds, from which Love once shot his
arrows at you.’ A thousand desires, hotter than flame, kept my eyes fixed on
those shining eyes, that in turn stayed fixed on the Grifon. The dual-natured
creature was reflected in them, just like the sun in a mirror, with the
attributes now of the human, now of the divine. Reader, think how I marvelled,
in my mind, to see the thing itself remain unmoving, and yet its image
changing.
While my spirit, filled with delight and
wonder, was tasting that food, that satisfies and causes hunger, the other
three ladies, revealing themselves to be of highest nobility in their aspect,
came forward, dancing to their angelic measure. ‘Turn Beatrice, turn your sacred eyes,
to your faithful one,’ was their song, ‘he, who has trodden so many steps to
see you. By your grace, grace us, by unveiling your face to him, so that he may
see the second beauty that you conceal.’
O splendour of eternal living light, who
of us is there, grown pale in the shadow of Parnassus, a drinker from its well,
whose mind would not seem hampered, trying to render you as you appeared,
there, where Heaven in harmony outlines you, when you showed yourself in the
clear air?
My eyes were so fixed on satisfying their
ten-year thirst, that all my other senses were dulled, and there was a wall of
disinterest either side of them, so that her holy smile drew my vision in,
towards itself, into its ancient net: at which my face was turned of necessity
to my left to those goddesses, because I heard them say: ‘Too intensely.’
And the state of vision the eyes are in,
struck, just now, by the sun, left me sightless for a while: but once my sight
adjusted to lesser things (I mean lesser compared to the greater object of
perception, that I turned away from, of necessity) I saw the glorious pageant
had turned round on the right and was returning, with the sun and the seven
flames in its front.
As a detachment turns to retreat, behinds
its shields, and wheels, with the standard, before it can fully change fronts,
that militia of the heavenly region, that led, passed us all by, before the
chariot-pole had turned. Then the ladies returned near to the wheels, and the
Grifon moved the holy burden forwards, without ruffling a plume.
The lovely lady who drew me across the
ford, and Statius, and I, were following the right wheel that made its turn
following a tighter arc. So, an angelic melody accompanied our steps, passing
through the tall forest that was empty, because of her who believed the
serpent. We had gone as far, perhaps, as an arrow would travel in three
flights, when Beatrice descended from the chariot.
I heard them all mutter: ‘Adam!’ Then they
surrounded a tree, with every branch
stripped of blossom, and foliage. The height of its canopy, that stretches out
further the higher it reaches, would be marvelled at by the people of India, in
their forests.
‘Blessed, are you, Grifon, who tears
nothing sweet-tasting from this tree, with your beak, because the stomach is
wrenched by it.’ So the others shouted, round the solid tree; and the creature
of two natures said: ‘So the seed of righteousness is preserved.’ And turning
to the pole he had dragged, he pulled it to the foot of the denuded trunk, and
left, bound to it, the Cross, that came from it.
As our trees bud, when the great light
falls, mixed with the light that shines from Aries, following Pisces, the
heavenly Fish, and each is newly dressed with colour, before the sun yokes his
horses under the light of the following constellation, opening tinted more than
rose and less than violet, so that tree renewed itself, that had naked branches
before.
I did not understand the hymn the people
sang then, nor is it sung here, and I could not withstand its burden to the
end.
If I could depict how Argus’s pitiless eyes closed in sleep, hearing the tale of Syrinx, those eyes, whose greater power to watch, cost him so dear, I would paint how I fell asleep, as an artist does from a model: but who can truly show drowsiness? So, I move on, to when I woke, and say that a bright light tore the veil of sleep, and there was a cry: ‘Rise, what are you about?’
As, at the Transfiguration, Peter, John, and James were brought, to behold the blossom of Christ, the apple-tree, that makes the Angels eager for its fruit, and makes a perpetual marriage in Heaven, and came to themselves, having been overcome, at the word by which Lazarus’s deeper sleep had been broken, and saw that Moses and Elias had vanished, and their Master’s white raiment changed, even so I came to myself, and saw the compassionate one, who guided my steps, before, along the stream, bending over me.
And all bemused I said: ‘Where is Beatrice?’ and Matilda replied: ‘See her sitting under the new foliage, at its root. See, the company that surround her: the rest are rising after the Grifon, with sweeter and deeper song.’ And I do not know if her words went on, because now She was in front of my eyes, whose presence prevented me from attending to other things. She sat, alone, on the bare earth, left there as the guardian of the chariot, that I had seen the dual-natured creature anchor to the tree.
The seven nymphs made a ring, encircling her, carrying those lights, which are secure from the north and south winds, in their hands.
Beatrice spoke: ‘You will not be a
forester long, here, and will be with me, a citizen, eternally, of that Rome of
which Christ is a Roman. So, to help the world that lives wrongly, fix your gaze
on the chariot, and take care to
write what you see, when you return, over there.’ And I, completely obedient to
her commands, set my mind and eyes where she desired.
Fire never fell so swiftly from dense
cloud, falling from that region that is most remote, as I saw Jupiter’s eagle swoop down through the tree,
tearing its bark, its flowers, and its new leaves, and he struck the chariot
with all his power, at which it swayed like a ship in a storm, beaten by the
seas, now to larboard, then to starboard.
Then I saw a vixen that seemed starved, of all
decent food, leap into the body of the triumphal car. But my Lady put her to a
flight as swift as fleshless bones could sustain, rebuking her for her foul
sins.
Then I saw the eagle drop into the body of
the chariot from the place where he had first swooped, and leave it feathered
with his plumage. And a voice came from Heaven, as it comes from a sorrowing
heart, and it said: O my little boat, how badly you are freighted!’
Then it seemed to me that the ground
opened, between the two wheels, and a dragon
emerged pointing his tail upwards through the chariot, and drawing his spiteful
tail towards himself, like a wasp withdrawing her sting, he wrenched away part
of its base, and slid away.
What was left, covered itself, with those
feathers, just as fertile land is covered with grass, offered perhaps with true
and benign intent, and the chariot-pole and both wheels were covered by them,
in less time than a mouth is open for a sigh. The holy structure, transformed, grew
heads above its members, three above
the pole and one at each corner. The first three were horned like oxen, but the
other four had a single horn on the forehead: such a Monster was never seen before.
Seated on it, secure as a tower on a high
hill, a shameless Whore appeared,
looking eagerly round her. And I saw a Giant
standing by her side, so that she could not be snatched from him, and each
kissed the other, now and then: but because she turned her lustful, wandering
eye on me, her fierce lover scourged her from head to foot. Then full of
jealousy and vicious with anger, he loosed the Monster, and dragged it so far,
through the wood, that he made a screen between me, and the Whore and Monster.
Now as three, then four, alternately, and
weeping, the ladies began a sweet psalmody, singing: ‘Deus, venerunt genes: O
God, the heathen are come,’ and Beatrice. compassionate and sighing, was
listening to them, so altered in aspect, that Mary was no less altered at the foot of
the Cross. But when the virgins gave way for her to speak, standing upright she
replied, colouring like fire: ‘Modicum,
et non videbitis me, et iterum, my beloved sisters, modicum, et vos
videbitis me: a little while, and ye shall not see me, my beloved sisters,
and again, a little while, and ye shall see me.’
Then she set all seven of them in front of
her, and, merely with a nod of the head, motioned myself, the Lady and the Sage
who had stayed, behind her. So she went on, and I believe that hardly a tenth
step touched the ground, until her eyes struck my eyes, and she said to me,
quietly: ‘Come along, faster, so that, if I speak to you, you are well placed
to listen.’
As soon as I, dutifully, was next to her,
she said: ‘Brother, why when you come along with me, do you not venture to
question me?’ I was like those, who are too humble in speech in front of their
elders, who do not raise their voice fully to their lips, and short of full
volume, I began: ‘Madonna, you know my needs, and what is good for them.’ And
she to me: ‘I want you to free yourself, now, from fear and shame, so that you
no longer speak like one who dreams.
Learn that the chariot that the serpent
shattered was, and is not: and let him, whose fault it is, know that God’s
vengeance cannot be evaded. The eagle,
that left its feathers on the car, to make it a Monster, to be preyed on, shall not be
without heirs for ever, since I see, with certainty, and so I tell you, stars
are already nearing, safe from all barriers and impediments, that will bring us
times in which a five-hundred, a ten, and a five (DVX, a leader) sent by God,
will kill the Whore, and the Giant,
who sins with her.
And perhaps my prophecy, as obscure as Themis and the Sphinx, persuades you less, because it
darkens the mind, after their fashion, but the fact is that Oedipus, will solve this difficult
question, without damage to flocks or harvest.
Take note of it: and just as these words
carry from you to me, tell them to those who live the life that is a race
towards death, and remember when you write, not to hide that you have seen the
tree, now twice spoiled, here.’
‘Whoever robs it, and tears at it, in a blasphemous act, offends God, who
created it sacred to his sole use. Adam, the
first soul, longed for Him, in torment and desire, for more than five thousand
years: He who punished the bite of the apple in Himself. Your intelligence is
asleep if it does not judge that tree
to be so high, and widened towards its summit, from some special cause. And if
your idle thoughts had not been like the waters of the River Elsa round your
mind, petrifying it, and their delights had not stained it as Pyramus’s blood the mulberry, you would
have recognised in the tree, by these many circumstances alone, that, morally,
God’s justice is in the injunction.
But since I see your mind made of stone,
and like a stone, stained, so the light of my words dazes you, I want you to
carry my words away with you as well, if not written at least in symbolic form,
for the same reason that the pilgrim’s staff returns wreathed with palm-branches.
And I said: ‘My brain is now stamped by you, like wax by the seal, whose
imprint does not change. But why do your words, I longed for, soar so far
beyond my vision, that the more it strains after them, the more they vanish?
She said: ‘So you may know the School you
followed, and see whether its teachings follow my words, and may see that your
way is as far from the divine way, as the swiftest Heaven is from the earth.’
At which I replied: ‘I do not remember that I was ever estranged from you, nor
does conscience gnaw me, regarding it.’ She answered, smiling: ‘And, if you
cannot remember it, think, now, how you drank Lethe’s water today: and if fire
is deduced from smoke, this
forgetfulness clearly proves the guiltiness of your desire, intent on other things.
But now my words will be naked, as far as is needed to show them to your dull
vision.’
The sun was holding the noon circle, which
varies here and there, as location varies, shining more brightly, travelling
more slowly, when, like those who act as escorts for people, who stop if they
find strange things or their traces, those seven ladies stopped, at the edge of
a pale shadow, such as the Alps cast over their cool streams, under green
leaves and dark branches.
I seemed to see Euphrates and Tigris,
welling from one spring, in front of them, and parting, like lingering friends.
I said: ‘O light, O glory of human kind, what waters are these that pour from
one source, here, and separate themselves?’ At my prayer, she said: ‘Beg
Matilda, to explain,’ and that lovely Lady answered her, like one who absolves
herself from blame: ‘I have told him about this, and about other things, and I
am sure Lethe’s water does not hide them from him.’ And Beatrice said: ‘Perhaps
some greater care, that often robs us of memory, has dimmed the eyes of his
mind. But see, Eunoë, that flows from there: lead him to it, and as you are
used to do, revive his flagging virtue.’
Like a gentle spirit, that does not make
excuses, but forms her will from another’s will, as soon as it is revealed, by
outward sign, so that lovely Lady, set out, after taking charge of me, and said
to Statius, in a ladylike way: ‘Come, with him.’
Reader, if I had more space to write, I
would speak, partially at least, about that sweet drink, which would never have
sated me: but because all the pages determined for the second Canticle are
full, the curb of art lets me go no further.
I came back, from the most sacred waves,
remade, as fresh plants are, refreshed, with fresh leaves: pure, and ready to
climb to the stars.