The Divine Comedy
Cantos
XV-XXI
Purgatorio Canto XV:1-36 The Angel of
Fraternal Love
Purgatorio Canto
XV:37-81 The Second Beatitude: Dante’s doubts
Purgatorio Canto
XV:82-145 The Third Terrace: Examples of Gentleness
Purgatorio Canto
XVI:1-24 The Wrathful and their Punishment
Purgatorio Canto
XVI:25-96 Marco Lombardo: Free Will
Purgatorio Canto
XVI:97-145 The Error of the Church’s temporal power
Purgatorio Canto
XVII:1-39 Examples of Anger
Purgatorio Canto
XVII:40-69 The Angel of Meekness: Third Beatitude
Purgatorio Canto
XVII:70-139 Virgil explains the structure of Purgatory
Purgatorio Canto
XVIII:1-48 Virgil on the Nature of Love
Purgatorio Canto
XVIII:49-75 Virgil on Freewill
Purgatorio Canto
XVIII:76-111 The Slothful and their Punishment
Purgatorio Canto
XVIII:112-145 The Slothful: Examples of Sloth
Purgatorio Canto
XIX:1-36 Dante’s Second Dream: The Siren
Purgatorio Canto
XIX:37-69 The Angel of Zeal: The Fourth Beatitude
Purgatorio Canto
XIX:70-114 The Avaricious: Pope Adrian V
Purgatorio Canto
XIX:115-145 The Avaricious: Their Punishment
Purgatorio Canto
XX:1-42 Examples of Poverty and Liberality
Purgatorio Canto
XX:43-96 Hugh Capet and the Capetian Dynasty
Purgatorio Canto
XX:97-151 Examples of Avarice: The Earthquake
Purgatorio Canto
XXI:1-33 The Poets meet Statius
Purgatorio Canto
XXI:34-75 The Cause of the Earthquake
Purgatorio Canto
XXI:76-136 Statius and Virgil
As
much of the sun’s course
seemed left before evening, as we see between dawn and the third hour of the
day, on the zodiacal circle that is always skipping up and down like a child:
it was Vespers, evening, there in Purgatory, and midnight here. And the sun’s
rays were striking us mid-face, since we had circled enough of the Mount, to be
travelling due west, when I felt my forehead far more burdened, by the splendour,
than before, and the unknown nature of it stunned me, so that I lifted my hands
above my eyes, and made that shade which dims the excess light.
Just as when a ray of light bounces from
the water’s surface towards the opposite direction, ascending at an equal angle
to that at which it falls, and travelling as far from the perpendicular line of
a falling stone, in an equal distance, as science and experiment show, so I
seemed struck by reflected light, in front of me, from which my eyes were quick
to hide.
I said: ‘Sweet father, what is that, from
which I cannot shade my sight enough to help me, that seems to be moving
towards us?’ He answered: ‘Do not be amazed if the heavenly family still
dazzles you: it is a messenger that comes to invite us to climb. Soon, seeing
these things will not be painful to you, but a joy as great as nature has
equipped you to feel.’
When we had reached the blessed Angel, it
said, in a pleasant voice: ‘Enter a stairway, here, much less steep than the
others.’
We were climbing, and already leaving,
and, behind us, ‘Beati misericordes:
blessed are the merciful,’ was sung, and, ‘Rejoice you who conquer.’
My master, and I, the two of us, alone,
were climbing, and I thought to derive profit from his words while we went, and
I addressed him, saying: ‘What did the spirit
from Romagna mean by mentioning division and partnership?’ At
which he said to me: ‘He knows the harm of his great defect, and therefore let
no one wonder if he condemns it, so that the harm, he mourns for, is lessened.
Inasmuch as your desires are
centred where things are diminished by partnership, it is Envy moving the
bellows, with your sighs. But if the love of the highest sphere drew your
desire upward, envious fear would not be core to your heart, since each
possesses that much more of the good by the measure of how many more say ours,
and so much more love burns in that cloister.’ I said: ‘I am hungrier by being
fed than if I had kept silent from the start, and I have added more confusion
to my mind.
How can it be that a shared good makes a greater number of possessors
richer by it than if it is owned by a few?’ And he to me: ‘Because you fix your
eyes, again, only on earthly things, you produce darkness from true light. That
infinite and ineffable good, that is up there, rushes towards love as a ray of
light rushes towards a bright body. The more ardour it finds, the more it gives
of itself, so that, however far love extends, eternal good causes its increase:
and the more people there are up there who understand each other, the more
there are to love truly, and the more love there is, and, like a mirror, the
one increase reflects the other.
And if my explanation does not satisfy your hunger, you will see
Beatrice, and she will free you completely from this and from every other
longing. Only work, so that the other five wounds that are healed by our pain
are soon erased, as two have been.’
As I was about to say: ‘You have satisfied
me,’ I saw I had arrived on the next terrace, so that my eager gaze made me
silent. There I seemed to be suddenly caught up in an ecstatic dream, and to
see many people in a temple, and a lady
about to enter, saying, with the tender attitude of a mother: ‘My son, why hast
thou thus dealt with us? behold thy father and I sought thee sorrowing,’ and as
she fell silent that which had appeared at first, now disappeared.
Then another woman appeared to me, with
those tears on her cheeks, that grief distils, and that well up in someone
because of great anger, saying: ‘O Pisistratus,
if you are lord of Athens, the city from which all knowledge shines, and whose
naming made such strife between the gods, take revenge on those audacious arms
that clasped our daughter.’ And her lord, kindly and gently, seemed to answer
her, with a placid look: ‘What shall we do to those who wish harm to us, if we
condemn him who loves us?’
Then I saw people, blazing with the fire
of wrath, killing a youth with
stones, and calling continually and loudly to each other: ‘Kill him, kill him!
And I saw him sinking to the ground in death, which already weighed him down,
but he made of his eyes, all the while, gateways to Heaven, praying to the Lord
on high, in such torment, with that look, that unlocks pity, of forgiveness
towards his persecutors.
When my spirit returned outwards, to find
the true things outside it, I understood my visions did not lie. My guide who
could see me acting like a man who frees himself from sleep, said: ‘What is
wrong with you, that you cannot control yourself, but have come almost two
miles, with your eyes covered, and your legs staggering, like someone overcome
by wine or sleep? I said: ‘O sweet my father, if you listen, I will tell you
what appeared to me, when my legs were pulled from under me.’
And he said: ‘If you had a hundred masks
on your face, your thoughts, however slight, would not be hidden from me. What
you saw was to prevent you having an excuse for not opening your heart, to the
waters of peace, that are poured from the eternal fountain. I did not ask “What
is wrong” for the reason one does, who only sees with the eye, that cannot see
when the body lies senseless, but I asked in order to give strength to your
feet: so the slothful, who are slow to employ the waking hour when it returns,
have to be goaded.’
We were travelling on, through the
evening, straining our eyes ahead, as far as we could, against the bright
sunset rays, and behold, little by little, a smoke, dark as night, moving
towards us, and there was no space to escape it. This stole away our sight, and
the clear air.
The gloom of Hell, and a night deprived of
every planet, under a scant sky, darkened by cloud, as far as it could be, did
not make as thick a veil for my sight, or as harsh a texture to the touch, as
the smoke that enveloped us there, since it did not even allow the eyes to
remain open, at which my wise and faithful escort came near, and offered me his
shoulder.
As a blind man goes behind his guide, in
order not to wander, and not to strike against anything that may harm him, or
perhaps kill him, so I went, through the foul and bitter air, listening to my
leader, who kept saying: ‘Be careful not to get cut off, from me.’
I heard voices, and each one seemed to
pray to the Lamb of God, who takes away sin, for peace and mercy. ‘Agnus Dei,’ was their only
commencement: one word and one measure came from them all: so that every
harmony seemed to be amongst them. I said: ‘Master, are those spirits, that I
hear?’ And he to me: ‘You understand rightly, and they are untying the knot of
anger.’
A voice said: ‘Now, who are you, who
divide our smoke, and talk of us, as if you still measured time by months?’ At
which my Master said to me: ‘You, answer, and ask if we should go upwards by
this path.’
And I said: ‘O creature, who purge
yourself to return to him who made you, beautified, you will hear a wonder if
you follow me.’ He answered: ‘I will follow you, as far as is allowed me, and
if the smoke prevents us seeing, hearing will allow contact between us,
instead.’ So I began: ‘I am travelling upwards, with those garments that death
dissolves, and came here through the pain of Hell, and if God has so far
admitted me to his grace, that he wills I should see his court, in a manner
wholly outside modern usage, do not conceal from me who you were before death,
but tell me, and tell me, also, if I am heading straight for the pass: and your
words will be our escort.’
He answered: ‘I was called Mark, and I was a Lombard: I knew the
world, and loved that worth, at the sight of which every one now unbends their
bow: you go the right way to ascend,’ and he added, ‘I pray you to pray for me,
when you are above.’
And I to him: ‘By my faith, I promise you,
to do what you ask of me, but I am wrung within by doubt if I cannot free
myself of it. First it was simple doubt, and now it is re-doubled by your
speech, strengthening it in me here, along with that
which I couple to it from elsewhere. The world is indeed so wholly
destitute of every virtue, even as you say, and covered and weighed down with
sin: but I beg you to show me the cause, so that I can see it, and tell others,
since some people place the cause in the sky, and others here below.’
He first gave a deep sigh, which grief
shortened to ‘Ah!’ and then began: ‘Brother the world is blind, and you come
from there, indeed. You, the living, refer every cause to the heavens, as
though they carried all along with them by necessity. If it were so, free will
would be destroyed in you, and there would be no justice in taking delight in
good, and lamenting evil. The heavens initiate your movements: I do not say
all, but even if I said it, you are given a light to know good from evil: and
you are given free will, which gains the victory, completely, in the end, if it
survives the stress of its first conflict with the heavens, and is well
nurtured.
Free, you are subject to a greater force,
and a better nature, and that creates Mind in you, that the sky does not
have control of. So if the world today goes awry, the cause is in yourselves,
search for it in yourselves, and I will be a true guide to you in this.
From His hands, who loves her dearly
before she exists, issues the soul, in simplicity, like a little child,
playing, in laughter and in tears, and she knows nothing, but that, sprung from
a joyful Maker, she willingly turns towards what delights her. She savours, at
the start, the taste of childish good, and is beguiled by it, and chases it, if
her love is not curbed or misguided. That is why it was necessary to create Law
as a curb, and necessary to have a ruler, who might at least make out the
towers of the true city.’
‘There are laws, but who sets their hand
to them? No one: because the Shepherd who leads his flock may chew the cud, may
meditate, but does not have a divided hoof, and confuses spiritual and
temporal. So the people, seeing their Guide only aiming at that benefit he is
eager for, feed on that, and do not question further. You can see clearly that
bad leadership is the cause of the world’s sinfulness, and not that nature,
corruptible within you.
Rome, that made the civilised world, used
to have two Suns, that made the two roads visible, that of the world, and that
of God. One has quenched the other: and the sword and the shepherd’s crook are
joined: and the one linked to the other must run to harm, since, being joined,
one will not fear the other. If you do not believe me, look closely at the
crop, since every plant is known by its seed.
Worth and courtesy used to be found, in
Lombardy, that land the rivers Po and Adige water, before Frederick faced opposition. Now it
can only be crossed, in safety, by those who, through shame, have ceased to
talk to good men, or live near them. True there are three elder statesmen, in
whom the ancient times reprove the new, and it feels a long time to them before
God takes them to a better life: Corrado da
Palazzo, and the good Gherardo da
Camino, and Guido da Castel, who is
better named in the French way, the honest Lombard. As of now, say that
the Church of Rome, confusing two powers in herself, falls in the mud, and
fouls herself and her charge.’
I said: ‘O my Mark you reason clearly, and
now I see why the priests, the sons of Levi,
were not allowed to inherit. But who is that Gerard, who you say remains as an
example of the vanished race, to reprove this barbarous age?’ He answered:
‘Your speech is either meant to deceive me or to test me, since, speaking in
Tuscan, you seem to know nothing of the good Gherard. I know him by no other
name, unless I were to take one from his daughter Gaia. God be with you, since I come, with
you, no further. See the light, whitening, shining through the smoke: the Angel
is there, and I must go before he sees me.’
So he turned back, and would no longer
listen.
Reader, if a mist has ever caught you in
the mountains, through which you saw as a mole does, through the skin, remember
how the sun’s sphere shone, feebly, through the dense, damp, vapours as it
began to melt away, and your imagination will easily understand how I saw the
sun again, which was now
setting. So, measuring my steps by my faithful Master’s, I issued from that
cloud to the sunlight, already dead on the low shore.
O imagination, that takes us out of
ourselves, sometimes, so that we are conscious of nothing, though a thousand
trumpets echo round us, what is it that stirs you, since the senses place
nothing in front of you? A light stirs you, which takes its form from heaven,
by itself, or by a will that sends it downwards.
The traces of Procne’s impiety appeared in my
imagination, she, who changed her form to a nightingale’s, the bird that most
delights in singing, and here my mind was so absorbed in itself, that nothing
from outside came to it, or was received in it.
Then in my high fantasy a crucified man,
scornful and haughty of aspect, appeared, and it was Haman, so dying. Round about him were the
great Ahasuerus, Esther, his wife, and the just Mordecai, who was so sincere in speech
and actions.
And, as this imagining burst like a bubble
does, when the water surface it is made of breaks, a girl, Lavinia, weeping pitfully, rose to my
vision, saying: ‘O Queen Amata, why have
you willed yourself to nothingness, through anger? You have killed yourself in
order not to lose me: now you have lost me. I am she, who mourns,
Mother, for your loss, rather than for his.’
As sleep is broken, when a new light
suddenly strikes on the closed eyelids, and hovers, brokenly, before it
completely vanishes, so my imaginings were destroyed, as soon as light struck
my face, light far greater than that which we are used to. I was turning about
to see where I was, when a voice which snatched me from any other intention,
said: ‘Here, you can climb’, and it made me want to see who it was who spoke,
with that eagerness that never rests till it confronts the other.
But my powers failed me there, as at the
sun that oppresses our vision, and veils his form, through excess of light. My
leader said: ‘This is a Divine Spirit, that points us towards the path to
climb, without our asking, and hides itself in its own light. It does towards
us what a man does towards himself: since he who sees the need, but waits for
the request, has set himself malignly towards denial. Now let our feet fit the
invitation: let us try to ascend before nightfall, since we cannot, then, until
day returns.’ I turned my steps, with him, towards a stairway, and as soon as I
was on the first step, I felt something like the touch of a wing, and my face
was fanned, and I heard someone say: ‘Beati pacifici: blessed are
the meek, who are without sinful anger.’
Now
the last rays, that night follows, were angled so high above us that the
stars were appearing, on every side. ‘Oh, my powers, why do you ebb away from
me like this?’ I said inside myself, since I felt the strength of my legs
vanish.
We stood where the stairway went no
further, and were aground, like a boat, that arrives at the shore: and I
listened for a while to see if I could hear anything in the new circle: then
turned to my Master, and said: ‘My sweet father, say what offence is purged in
this circle, where we are? Though our feet are stopped, do not stop your
speaking.’ And he to me: ‘The love of good, that fell short of its duties,
restores itself just here: here the sinfully lazy oar is plied again. But so
that you might understand more clearly, turn your mind on me, and you will
gather some good fruit from our delay.’
He began: ‘Son, neither creature nor
Creator, was ever devoid of love, natural or rational, and this you know. The
natural is always free of error: but the rational may err because of an evil
objective, or because of too much or too little energy.
While it is directed towards the primary
virtues, and moderates its aims in the secondary ones, it cannot be the cause
of sinful delight, but when it is turned awry, towards evil, or moves towards
the good with more or less attention than it should, the creature works against
its Creator. So you can understand, that love is the seed of each virtue in
you, and its errors the seeds of every action that deserves punishment. Now, in
that love can never turn its face away from the well being of its object,
everything is safe from self-hatred. And, because no being can be thought to
exist apart, standing separate in itself, from the First Cause, all affection
is prevented from hating Him.
It follows, if I judge well in my classification
that the evil we desire is due to the presence of our neighbours, and this
desire has three origins, in your clay.
There are those who hope to excel through
their neighbour’s downfall, and because of this alone want them toppled from
their greatness. This is Pride.
There are those who fear to lose, power,
influence, fame or honour because another is preferred, at which they are so
saddened they desire the contrary. This is Envy.
And there are those who seem so ashamed
because of injury, that they become eager for revenge, and so are forced to
wish another’s harm. This is Wrath.
This three-fold desire is lamented, below.
Now, I want you to understand the other desires which aim towards love in an
erroneous manner.
Everyone vaguely apprehends a good, where
the mind finds rest: and desires it: so everyone labours to attain it.
If inadequate love draws you on to sight
or attainment of that good, this terrace torments you for it, after just
repentance. This is Sloth.
There is another good, which does not make
men happy: it is not happiness: it is not the essential good, the root and
fruit of all goodness.
The love that abandons itself to it,
excessively, is lamented above us, on three terraces: but how it is separated
into three divisions, I will not say, in order that you search it out for
yourself.’
The high-minded teacher had ended his
discourse, and was looking at my face, attentively, to see if I was satisfied,
and I, who was tormented by a new thirst, was outwardly silent, but inwardly
said: ‘Perhaps the extent of my questions annoys him.’ But that true father,
who noticed the hesitant wish, that did not show itself, gave me courage to
speak, by speaking himself.
At which I said: ‘Master, my vision is so
invigorated, by your light, that I understand, clearly, what all your reasoning
means and describes. I beg you, therefore, sweet, dear father, to define Love
for me, to which you reduce every good action and its opposite.’ He said:
‘Direct the keen eyes of the intellect towards me, and the error of the blind
who make themselves their guides, will be apparent to you.
The spirit, that is created ready for
love, is moved by everything pleasing, as soon as it is stirred into action by
pleasure.
Your sensory faculties take an impression
from real objects, and unfold it inside you, so that the spirit turns towards
those objects. And if it is attracted to them, being turned, that attraction is
Love: that is Nature, newly confirmed in you by pleasure.
Then, as fire rises, because of its form,
whose nature is to climb to where it can live longest in its fuel, so the mind,
captured, enters into desire, which is a movement of the spirit, and never
rests until the object of its love gives it joy.
Now it may be apparent to you, how deeply
truth is concealed from those people, who say that every act of love is
praiseworthy in itself, since love’s material may always be good, perhaps, but
every seal is not good, even though the wax is good.’
I replied: ‘Your words, and my wits
following you, have made Love clear to me, but it has made me more pregnant
with doubts, since if Love is offered to us from outside ourselves, and the
spirit has no other foot of her own to walk on, it is no merit of hers whether
she walks straight or slantwise.’
And he said to me: ‘I can tell you merely
what Reason sees: beyond this point, wait only for Beatrice, since it is a question
of Faith.’
‘Every living form, which is distinct from
matter, but is united to it, has a specific virtue, contained in it, that is
not seen except in its operation, or manifest except by what it effects, as
life is manifest in a plant in the green leaves.
Therefore human beings do not know where
knowledge of primary sensations comes from, or attraction to the primary
objects of appetite: they are in you, as the drive in bees to make honey: and
this primary volition merits neither praise nor blame.
Now, in order that every other volition
may be related to this one, the virtue, which allows judgement, is innate in
you, and ought to guard the threshold of assent. This is the source from which
the cause of merit, in you, derives, according to how it gathers and sieves
good and evil desires.
Those who went to the foundations in their
reasoning, recognised this innate freedom, and so left their Ethics to the
world.
Therefore, even if you suppose that every
love, which burns in you, rises out of necessity, the power to control it is
within you. Beatrice takes
Freewill to be the noble virtue, so take care to have that in mind, if she sets
herself to speak of it, to you.
The moon, almost at midnight, shaped
like a burning pail, made the stars appear fainter to us, and her track across
the heavens, in the east, was on those paths, in Sagittarius, that the sun
inflames, when in Rome they watch its setting between Sardinia and Corsica. And
that noble shade, whose birthplace, Andes, is more renowned than any other
Mantuan town, had laid down the burden I had put on him, so that I who had
gathered clear, plain answers to my questions, stood like one who wanders,
drowsily.
But this drowsiness was suddenly snatched
from me, by people who had already come round on us, from behind our backs. And
just as the Rivers Ismenus and Asopus, saw, a furious rout, at night, along
their banks, when the Thebans called on the help of Bacchus, so, along that terrace, quickening
their steps, those were approaching, who, by what I saw of them, good will and
just desire rode. They were soon upon us, since all that vast crowd was moving
at a run, and two in front were shouting, tearfully: ‘Mary ran with haste to the hill
country,’ and: ‘Caesar lanced
Marseilles, and then raced to Spain, to subdue Lerida in Catalonia.’
The rest shouted, after that: ‘Hurry!
Hurry! Do not let time be wasted, through lack of love, so that labouring to do
well may renew grace.’
My guide said: ‘O people, in whom an eager
fervour now makes good, perhaps, the negligence and tardiness shown by you, in
being lukewarm at doing good, this one who lives wishes to climb, if the sun
only shines for us again, and indeed I do not lie to you, so tell us where the
ascent is nearest.’
One of the spirits said: ‘Come behind us,
and you will find the gully. We are so full of desire for speed, we cannot
stay: so forgive us if you take our penance as an offence. I was the Abbot of San Zeno in Verona, under
the rule of the good Barbarossa,
of whom Milan still speaks with sorrow. And one I know, Alberto della Scala, who already
has one foot in the grave, will soon mourn because of that monastery, and will
be saddened at having held power there, because he has appointed his son there,
Giuseppe, deformed in body,
and more so in mind, and born of shame, instead of a true shepherd.
I do not know if he said more, or was
silent, he had raced so far beyond us, already, but I heard that and was
pleased to remember it. And he who was my help when I needed it, said: ‘Turn
this way, and see two that come, showing remorse at Sloth.’
Last of them all, they cried: ‘The people
for whom the Red Sea opened, were dead before Jordan saw their heirs,’ and:
‘Those who did not endure the labour with Aeneas,
Anchises’s son, until the end, gave
themselves to an inglorious fate.’
Then a new thought rose in me, when those
shadows were distant from us, so far they could no longer be seen, from which
many other diverse thoughts sprang: and I wandered so much, from one to
another, that I closed my eyes in wandering, and transmuted thought to dream.’
In the hour, before dawn, when
the day’s heat, lost by Earth, or quenched by Saturn, no longer offsets the
moon’s coldness; when the geomancers see their Fortuna Major, formed of the
last stars of Aquarius, and the first of Pisces, rise in the east, on a path
which is only dark for a little while, a stuttering woman, came to me in a
dream, her eyes squinting, her feet crippled, with maimed hands, and sallow
aspect. I gazed at her, and my look readied her tongue, and straightened her
completely, in a few moments, as the sun comforts the cold limbs that night
weighs down, and her pale face coloured, as love wills.
When her tongue was freed, she began to
sing, so that I could hardly turn my attention away. ‘I am,’ she sang, ‘I am
the sweet Siren: I am so pleasing to
hear that I lead seamen astray, in mid-ocean. With my song, I turned Ulysses from his wandering path, and
whoever rests with me, rarely leaves, I satisfy him so completely.’ Her lips
had barely closed, when a lady appeared, near me, saintly and ready to put her
to confusion. She said, angrily: ‘O Virgil, Virgil what is this?’ And he came,
with his eyes fixed on that honest one.
He seized the Siren, and, ripping her
clothes, revealed her front, and showed me her belly, that woke me with the
stench that came from it. I turned my eyes away, and the good Virgil said: ‘I
have called you at least three times, rise and come with me, let us find the
opening by which you may climb.’
I rose, and all the circles of the holy
mountain were now filled with
the high day, and we went with the new sun at our backs. I was following
him, with my forehead wrinkled like someone burdened by thought, and who makes
half a bridge’s arch of his body, when I heard words, spoken, in so gentle and
kind a voice, as is not heard in this mortal world: ‘Come, here is the pass.’
He, who spoke to us, directed us upwards,
between two walls of solid stone, with his outspread wings, that seemed like a
swan’s. Then he stirred his feathers, and fanned us, affirming that they who
mourn, qui lugent,
are blessed, whose spirits shall be richly consoled.
My guide began to speak to me, both of us
having climbed a little higher than the Angel: ‘What is wrong with you, that
you are always staring at the ground?’ And I: ‘A strange dream, that draws me
towards it, so that I cannot stop thinking of it, makes me go in such dread.’
He said: ‘Did you see, that ancient witch, through whom alone those above us
now weep? Did you see how man escapes from her? Let that be enough for you, and
spurn the Earth with your heels, turn your eyes towards the lure, that the King
of Eternity spins, in the great spheres.’
I became like a falcon, that, at first, is
gazing at his feet, then turns at the call, and spreads his wings, with longing
for the food, that draws him towards it, and so I went, as far as the rock is
split, to allow passage, to him who climbs up, to where the terrace begins.
When I was in the open, in the fifth
circle, I saw people around it, lying on the ground, who wept, all turned face
downwards. I heard them say: ‘Adhaesit
pavimento anima mea, my soul cleaveth unto the dust’ with such deep
sighing the words were hardly understood. ‘O God’s elect, whose sufferings
justice and hope make easier, direct us towards the high ascents.’ So the poet
prayed, and so, a little in front of us, there was an answer: ‘If you come
longing to find the quickest way, and are safe from having to lie prostrate,
let your right hand be always towards the outer edge.’ At that I noted what was
hidden in the words, and turned my eyes towards my lord, at which he gave
assent, with a sign of pleasure, to what my look of longing desired.
When I was free to do what my mind wished, I went forward, standing over that creature whose previous words made me note them, saying: ‘Spirit, delay your greater business, a while, for me, you, in whom weeping ripens that without which one cannot turn towards God. If you would have me obtain anything for you, over there, where I come from, living, tell me, who you are, and why you have your backs turned upwards.’
And he to me: ‘You will know why Heaven
turns our backs towards it, but first scias quod ego fui successor Petri:
know that I was Pope Adrian V, a successor
of Peter. A fair river, the Lavagna, flows down to the Gulf of Genoa, between
Sestri and Chiaveri, and my people’s title takes its name from it.
For little more than a month, I learnt how the great mantle weighs on
him, who keeps it out of the mire, so much so, that all other burdens seem
light as feathers. Alas, my conversion was late, but when I was made Pastor of
Rome, then I discovered the false life. I saw that the heart was not at peace
there, nor could one climb higher in that life: so that love of this one was
kindled in me. Until that moment I was a wholly avaricious spirit, wretched,
and parted from God: now, as you see, here, I am punished for it.’
‘Here, what Avarice does is declared, in
the purgation of the down-turned spirits, and the Mount has no bitterer
penalty. Just as our eyes did not lift themselves up to the heights, but were
fixed on earthly things, so here justice has sunk them towards the earth. Just
as Avarice killed our love for all good, so that our efforts were lost, so here
justice holds us fast, taken and bound, by hands and feet, and as long as it is
the good Lord’s pleasure, we will lie here outstretched and unmoving.’
I had knelt, and was about to speak, but
he detected my reverence, merely by listening, and as I began, he said: ‘Why do
you bend your knees?’ And I to him: ‘My conscience pricked me, for standing,
knowing your high office.’ He answered: ‘Straighten your legs, and rise,
brother: do not err: I am a fellow servant, of the one Power, with you and the
others. If you ever understood the words of the holy gospel, neque nubent,
there ‘they neither marry nor are given in marriage’ you will understand,
clearly, why I say so.
Now go: I do not wish you to stay longer,
since your remaining disturbs my weeping, by means of which I ripen what you
spoke of. I have a niece, Alagia
by name, over there, who is good in herself, if only our house does not make
her evil by example, and she is the only one left to me, over there.’
The will fights ill against a finer will:
so, to please him, but against my pleasure, I drew the unsaturated sponge from
the water. I went on, and my leader went on, also, through the free space,
along the rock, as you go by the wall close to the battlements, because those
people, who distil, from their eyes, drop by drop, the evil that fills the
whole world, were too close to the edge for us to pass on the other side.
Accursed be you, Avarice,
ancient she-wolf, who, to satisfy your endless hunger, take more prey than any
other beast! O Heaven, by whose circling, it appears to be believed, conditions
down here are altered, when will one come by whose actions Avarice will vanish?
We journeyed on, with slow, meagre paces, and I paying attention to the
spirits, that I heard weeping piteously, and complaining: and, by chance, I
heard one calling, tearfully, in front of us: ‘Sweet Maria’, like a woman in labour, and
continuing to speak: ‘you were so poverty-stricken as can be seen by that inn
where you laid down your sacred burden.’
Following that I heard: ‘O good Caius
Fabricius, you wished to possess virtue in poverty, rather than great
riches with vice.’ These words were so pleasing to me that I moved forward, to
make contact with the spirit, from whom they seemed to emerge.
It went on to speak of the gifts, that Bishop Nicholas gave to the young
girls, to lead their youth towards honour.
I said: ‘O spirit, who speaks of good so much, tell me who you are, and
why you alone repeat this praise of worthiness? If I return, to complete the
short space of a life that flies to its end, you words will not be
un-rewarded.’ And he: ‘I will tell you, not because I expect any comfort from
over there, but because so much grace shines in you before your death.’
‘I was the root of the evil tree, that overshadows all Christian countries,
so that good fruit is rarely obtained there. But if Douay, Lille, Ghent and
Bruges can, they will soon take revenge on it, and I beg this of Him who judges
all. I was called Hugh Capet, over there:
from me the ‘Philip’s and ‘Louis’s derive by whom France is ruled of late.
I was the son of a Paris butcher. When the line of ancient kings was
ended, except for one who was clothed in the grey robe, I found the reins of
the kingdom’s government held tight in my hands, and had so much power in new
acquisitions, and was so rich in friends that the widowed crown was placed on my son’s head, he, with whom the
Capetian dynasty’s consecrated bones begin.
Before the dowry of Provence, took away all sense of shame from my race,
the line was worth little, but did little harm. Its rapaciousness began there
in force and fraud, and then to make amends, Ponthieu, Normandy and Gascony
were seized. Charles of Anjou came
to Italy, and to make amends, made a victim of Conradin: and then sent Thomas Aquinas back to heaven, to make
amends.
I see a time, not far distant from now, that will bring another Charles, of Valois, out of France,
rendering him and his people better known. He comes alone, without an army, and
with the lance of treachery Judas jousted
with, and couches it so as to make the guts of Florence spill. From that he
will gather sin and shame, not land, so much the more grave for him, because he
treats such wrongs so lightly.
I see the other Charles, the
Lame, who was once taken captive in his ship, selling his daughter Beatrice, and haggling over her, as
pirates do over other hostages. O Avarice, who more can you do to us, since you
have so attracted my tribe to you, that it does not care about its own flesh
and blood?
To make the ill that is past and to come, seem lesser, I see the
fleur-de-lys enter Anagni, and Christ taken captive in the person of Boniface, his Vicar. I see him mocked for a
second time: I see the gall and vinegar renewed, and see him killed, between
living thieves. I see the new Pilate, Philip the Fourth, acting so cruelly,
that even this does not satisfy him, but he must carry his sails of greed,
lawlessly, against the Temple. O my Lord, when will I rejoice to see the sweet
vengeance, which, hidden, your anger forms in secrecy?’
‘What I was saying, concerning the only Bride of the Holy Spirit, that
made you turn towards me for explanation, such is the burden of all our prayers
as long as daylight lasts, but when the night comes, we adopt a different
strain instead.
Then we rehearse the history of Dido’s brother Pygmalion, whose insatiable lust for
gold made him traitor, thief and parricide, and avaricious Midas’s misery, that followed on his greedy wish,
for which he must always be derided.
Then each remembers foolish Achan, who stole the consecrated treasure, so
that Joshua’s anger still seems here to
rend him.
Then we accuse Sapphira and Ananias her husband; we praise the kicks
from the hooves that struck Heliodorus:
and the whole Mount echoes with the infamy of Polymnestor who murdered Polydorus.
Last of all, here, we cry out: “Crassus,
tell us, since you know, what does gold taste like?”
Sometimes one speaks high and another low, now with greater or lesser
force, according to the impulse prompting us to speak: so I was not alone,
before, in speaking of the good, as we do, by day, but no one else was raising
his voice near here.’
We had already left him, and were labouring to conquer the path, as far
as it was in our power to do, when I felt the mountain tremble, like something
falling, at which a coldness seized me, as it seizes him who goes to death.
Surely Delos was not shaken as violently, before Latona, there, made her nest give birth to
the twin eyes of Heaven.
Then a shout went up on every side, so that the Master drew near me,
saying: ‘Have no fear, while I am your guide.’ All were saying: ‘Gloria in excelsis Deo:
Glory to God in the highest,’ from what I understood of those nearby, whose
words I could hear. We stood, immobile, still as those shepherds who first
heard that hymn, till it ceased when the quake ended. Then we took up our holy
path again, gazing at the spirits lying on the ground, already returned to
their usual laments.
If my memory makes no mistake in this, no lack of knowledge ever
assaulted me with such a desire to know, as I appeared to feel then, as I
reflected, and because of our haste, I was not keen to ask, nor could I see any
cause for it there, myself: so I went on, fearful, and thoughtful.
The natural thirst for knowledge that is
never quenched, except by that water’s grace the woman of Samaria asked for, troubled me,
and haste was driving me along the impeded path behind my leader, and I was
grieving at the spirits’ just punishment, and behold, just as Luke writes that Christ, already risen from the mouth of the
tomb, appeared to two who were on the road, so a shade appeared to us, and came
on behind gazing at the prostrate crowd at its feet, and we did not see it
until it spoke, saying: ‘My brothers, God give you peace.’ We turned quickly,
and Virgil gave the appropriate sign in reply, then said: ‘May the true Court,
that holds me in eternal exile, bring you in peace to the Council of the
Blessed.’
As we went forward, strongly, the spirit
said: ‘How is this: if you are shadows that God does not allow here above, who
has escorted you as far as this, by his stairways?’ And my teacher said: ‘If
you look at the marks this man carries on his forehead, and which the Angel
traced, you will see clearly that it is right for him to reign among the good.
But since Lachesis, she who spins,
night and day, had not yet drawn out the thread, fully, that Clotho places and winds on the distaff, for
each of us, his soul which is sister to yours and mine, coming up here, could
not come alone, since it does not understand as we do: so I was sent from the
wide jaws of Hell to guide him, and as far as my knowledge can lead, I will
guide him upwards.’
‘But, if you know, tell us why the Mount
shook so much before, and why everyone appeared to shout with one voice, right
down to its soft base.’ So by asking he threaded the true needle’s eye of my
wish, and my thirst was less fierce through hope alone.
That spirit began: The sacred rule of the
mountain allows nothing without purpose, or beyond what is customary. Here we
are free from earthly changes: Here, what Heaven accepts from its own self can
operate as a cause, nothing else: and rain, hail, snow, dew, and frost cannot
fall higher than the brief stair with three steps. Thin or dense cloud does not
appear, nor lightning, nor the rainbow, Iris,
Thaumas’s daughter, who over there often changes zone. Dry vapours rise no
higher than the top of the three steps I spoke of, where Peter’s vicar has his feet.
Perhaps it trembles lower down, more or
less, because of the winds hidden underground, I do not know, it never trembles
here. Here it quakes when some soul feels itself purged so that it can rise, or
set out to soar above, and such shouting follows it. The will alone gives
evidence of the purging, seizing the soul, completely free to change her
convent, and helping her in willing. True, she had will before, but the
eagerness that Divine Justice creates for the punishment, where before there
was eagerness for the sin, counters the will, inhibiting it.
And, only now, I, who have undergone this
torment for five hundred years and more, feel free will towards a better
threshold. So, you felt the earthquake, and heard the pious souls around the
mountain render praise to the Lord, that he might soon send them above.’
So he spoke to us, and since we enjoy the
drink more, the greater the thirst we have, I could not convey how much he
refreshed me.
And the wise leader said: ‘Now, I see the
net that traps you here, and how one breaks through it; why the mountain
quakes; and why you rejoice together at it. Now may it please you to tell me
who you are, and let me learn from your words, why you have been here so many
centuries.’
The spirit answered: ‘When the good Titus, with the help of Heaven’s King,
avenged the wounds, from which the blood, that Judas
sold, issued, I was famous, with the name of poet, that endures longest, and
gives most honour, but not yet of the faith. The music of my words was so
sweet, that Rome drew me, from Toulouse, to herself, where I merited a myrtle
crown for my forehead. The people, there, still call me Statius: I sang of Thebes, and then of
great Achilles: but I fell by the
wayside with the second burden.
The sparks that warmed me, from the divine
flame, which has kindled more than a thousand fires, were the seeds of my
poetic ardour: I talk of the Aeneid, that was a mother to me, and a
poetic nurse, without which I would not have been worth a drachm. And I would
agree to endure one sun more than I owe, before coming out of exile, to have
lived over there when Virgil was alive.’
These words made Virgil turn towards me
with a silent look that said: ‘Be silent.’ But the virtue that wills is not
all-powerful, since laughter and tears follow the passion, from which they
spring, so closely, that, in the most truthful, they obey the will least. I
merely smiled, like someone who signals, at which the shade fell silent, and
looked me in the eyes, where the soul is most present. And he said: ‘So that
great effort might achieve its aim, say why your face just now showed me a flash
of laughter?’
Now I am caught on both sides: one forces
me to stay silent, the other demands I speak: at which I sigh, and am
understood by my master, and he says to me: ‘Do not be afraid to speak, but
speak and tell him what he asks with such great desire.’ At which I said:
‘Ancient spirit, perhaps you wonder at the laugh I gave, but I wish a greater
wonder to seize you. He, who leads my vision on high, is that Virgil
from whom you derived the power to sing of men and gods. If you think there was
any other reason for my laughter, set it aside as untrue, and believe it was
the words you spoke about him.’
He was already stooping to embrace my
teacher’s ankles: but Virgil said: ‘Brother, do not, since you are a shadow,
and it is a shadow that you see.’ And Statius, rising, said: ‘Now you can
understand the depth of love that warms me towards you, when I forget our
nothingness, and treat shadows as solid things.’