Innocence Once Lost - Religious Classics Collection. Джон Мильтон

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Innocence Once Lost - Religious Classics Collection - Джон Мильтон

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For something yearns, and hoping is appeased.

      But brief the space from one When to the other;

       Of my awaiting, say I, and the seeing

       The welkin grow resplendent more and more.

      And Beatrice exclaimed: "Behold the hosts

       Of Christ's triumphal march, and all the fruit

       Harvested by the rolling of these spheres!"

      It seemed to me her face was all aflame;

       And eyes she had so full of ecstasy

       That I must needs pass on without describing.

      As when in nights serene of the full moon

       Smiles Trivia among the nymphs eternal

       Who paint the firmament through all its gulfs,

      Saw I, above the myriads of lamps,

       A Sun that one and all of them enkindled,

       E'en as our own doth the supernal sights,

      And through the living light transparent shone

       The lucent substance so intensely clear

       Into my sight, that I sustained it not.

      O Beatrice, thou gentle guide and dear!

       To me she said: "What overmasters thee

       A virtue is from which naught shields itself.

      There are the wisdom and the omnipotence

       That oped the thoroughfares 'twixt heaven and earth,

       For which there erst had been so long a yearning."

      As fire from out a cloud unlocks itself,

       Dilating so it finds not room therein,

       And down, against its nature, falls to earth,

      So did my mind, among those aliments

       Becoming larger, issue from itself,

       And that which it became cannot remember.

      "Open thine eyes, and look at what I am:

       Thou hast beheld such things, that strong enough

       Hast thou become to tolerate my smile."

      I was as one who still retains the feeling

       Of a forgotten vision, and endeavours

       In vain to bring it back into his mind,

      When I this invitation heard, deserving

       Of so much gratitude, it never fades

       Out of the book that chronicles the past.

      If at this moment sounded all the tongues

       That Polyhymnia and her sisters made

       Most lubrical with their delicious milk,

      To aid me, to a thousandth of the truth

       It would not reach, singing the holy smile

       And how the holy aspect it illumed.

      And therefore, representing Paradise,

       The sacred poem must perforce leap over,

       Even as a man who finds his way cut off;

      But whoso thinketh of the ponderous theme,

       And of the mortal shoulder laden with it,

       Should blame it not, if under this it tremble.

      It is no passage for a little boat

       This which goes cleaving the audacious prow,

       Nor for a pilot who would spare himself.

      "Why doth my face so much enamour thee,

       That to the garden fair thou turnest not,

       Which under the rays of Christ is blossoming?

      There is the Rose in which the Word Divine

       Became incarnate; there the lilies are

       By whose perfume the good way was discovered."

      Thus Beatrice; and I, who to her counsels

       Was wholly ready, once again betook me

       Unto the battle of the feeble brows.

      As in the sunshine, that unsullied streams

       Through fractured cloud, ere now a meadow of flowers

       Mine eyes with shadow covered o'er have seen,

      So troops of splendours manifold I saw

       Illumined from above with burning rays,

       Beholding not the source of the effulgence.

      O power benignant that dost so imprint them!

       Thou didst exalt thyself to give more scope

       There to mine eyes, that were not strong enough.

      The name of that fair flower I e'er invoke

       Morning and evening utterly enthralled

       My soul to gaze upon the greater fire.

      And when in both mine eyes depicted were

       The glory and greatness of the living star

       Which there excelleth, as it here excelled,

      Athwart the heavens a little torch descended

       Formed in a circle like a coronal,

       And cinctured it, and whirled itself about it.

      Whatever melody most sweetly soundeth

       On earth, and to itself most draws the soul,

       Would seem a cloud that, rent asunder, thunders,

      Compared unto the sounding of that lyre

       Wherewith was crowned the sapphire beautiful,

       Which gives the clearest heaven its sapphire hue.

      "I am Angelic Love, that circle round

       The joy sublime which breathes from out the womb

       That was the hostelry of our

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