Inferno. Данте Алигьери

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they draw near, or are, is wholly vain

      Our intellect, and if none brings it to us,

      Not anything know we of your human state.

      Hence thou canst understand, that wholly dead

      Will be our knowledge from the moment when

      The portal of the future shall be closed.”

      Then I, as if compunctious for my fault,

      Said: “Now, then, you will tell that fallen one,

      That still his son is with the living joined.

      And if just now, in answering, I was dumb,

      Tell him I did it because I was thinking

      Already of the error you have solved me.”

      And now my Master was recalling me,

      Wherefore more eagerly I prayed the spirit

      That he would tell me who was with him there.

      He said: “With more than a thousand here I lie;

      Within here is the second Frederick,

      And the Cardinal, and of the rest I speak not.”

      Thereon he hid himself; and I towards

      The ancient poet turned my steps, reflecting

      Upon that saying, which seemed hostile to me.

      He moved along; and afterward thus going,

      He said to me, “Why art thou so bewildered?”

      And I in his inquiry satisfied him.

      “Let memory preserve what thou hast heard

      Against thyself,” that Sage commanded me,

      “And now attend here;” and he raised his finger.

      “When thou shalt be before the radiance sweet

      Of her whose beauteous eyes all things behold,

      From her thou’lt know the journey of thy life.”

      Unto the left hand then he turned his feet;

      We left the wall, and went towards the middle,

      Along a path that strikes into a valley,

      Which even up there unpleasant made its stench.

      Upon the margin of a lofty bank

      Which great rocks broken in a circle made,

      We came upon a still more cruel throng;

      And there, by reason of the horrible

      Excess of stench the deep abyss throws out,

      We drew ourselves aside behind the cover

      Of a great tomb, whereon I saw a writing,

      Which said: “Pope Anastasius I hold,

      Whom out of the right way Photinus drew.”

      “Slow it behoveth our descent to be,

      So that the sense be first a little used

      To the sad blast, and then we shall not heed it.”

      The Master thus; and unto him I said,

      “Some compensation find, that the time pass not

      Idly;” and he: “Thou seest I think of that.

      My son, upon the inside of these rocks,”

      Began he then to say, “are three small circles,

      From grade to grade, like those which thou art leaving.

      They all are full of spirits maledict;

      But that hereafter sight alone suffice thee,

      Hear how and wherefore they are in constraint.

      Of every malice that wins hate in Heaven,

      Injury is the end; and all such end

      Either by force or fraud afflicteth others.

      But because fraud is man’s peculiar vice,

      More it displeases God; and so stand lowest

      The fraudulent, and greater dole assails them.

      All the first circle of the Violent is;

      But since force may be used against three persons,

      In three rounds ’tis divided and constructed.

      To God, to ourselves, and to our neighbour can we

      Use force; I say on them and on their things,

      As thou shalt hear with reason manifest.

      A death by violence, and painful wounds,

      Are to our neighbour given; and in his substance

      Ruin, and arson, and injurious levies;

      Whence homicides, and he who smites unjustly,

      Marauders, and freebooters, the first round

      Tormenteth all in companies diverse.

      Man may lay violent hands upon himself

      And his own goods; and therefore in the second

      Round must perforce without avail repent

      Whoever of your world deprives himself,

      Who games, and dissipates his property,

      And weepeth there, where he should jocund be.

      Violence can be done the Deity,

      In heart denying and blaspheming Him,

      And by disdaining Nature and her bounty.

      And for this reason doth the smallest round

      Seal with its signet Sodom and Cahors,

      And who, disdaining God, speaks from the heart.

      Fraud,

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