Innocence Once Lost - Religious Classics Collection. Джон Мильтон

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Innocence Once Lost - Religious Classics Collection - Джон Мильтон

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Occasion of desert in you, according

       As good and guilty loves it takes and winnows.

      Those who, in reasoning, to the bottom went,

       Were of this innate liberty aware,

       Therefore bequeathed they Ethics to the world.

      Supposing, then, that from necessity

       Springs every love that is within you kindled,

       Within yourselves the power is to restrain it.

      The noble virtue Beatrice understands

       By the free will; and therefore see that thou

       Bear it in mind, if she should speak of it."

      The moon, belated almost unto midnight,

       Now made the stars appear to us more rare,

       Formed like a bucket, that is all ablaze,

      And counter to the heavens ran through those paths

       Which the sun sets aflame, when he of Rome

       Sees it 'twixt Sardes and Corsicans go down;

      And that patrician shade, for whom is named

       Pietola more than any Mantuan town,

       Had laid aside the burden of my lading;

      Whence I, who reason manifest and plain

       In answer to my questions had received,

       Stood like a man in drowsy reverie.

      But taken from me was this drowsiness

       Suddenly by a people, that behind

       Our backs already had come round to us.

      And as, of old, Ismenus and Asopus

       Beside them saw at night the rush and throng,

       If but the Thebans were in need of Bacchus,

      So they along that circle curve their step,

       From what I saw of those approaching us,

       Who by good-will and righteous love are ridden.

      Full soon they were upon us, because running

       Moved onward all that mighty multitude,

       And two in the advance cried out, lamenting,

      "Mary in haste unto the mountain ran,

       And Caesar, that he might subdue Ilerda,

       Thrust at Marseilles, and then ran into Spain."

      "Quick! quick! so that the time may not be lost

       By little love!" forthwith the others cried,

       "For ardour in well-doing freshens grace!"

      "O folk, in whom an eager fervour now

       Supplies perhaps delay and negligence,

       Put by you in well-doing, through lukewarmness,

      This one who lives, and truly I lie not,

       Would fain go up, if but the sun relight us;

       So tell us where the passage nearest is."

      These were the words of him who was my Guide;

       And some one of those spirits said: "Come on

       Behind us, and the opening shalt thou find;

      So full of longing are we to move onward,

       That stay we cannot; therefore pardon us,

       If thou for churlishness our justice take.

      I was San Zeno's Abbot at Verona,

       Under the empire of good Barbarossa,

       Of whom still sorrowing Milan holds discourse;

      And he has one foot in the grave already,

       Who shall erelong lament that monastery,

       And sorry be of having there had power,

      Because his son, in his whole body sick,

       And worse in mind, and who was evil-born,

       He put into the place of its true pastor."

      If more he said, or silent was, I know not,

       He had already passed so far beyond us;

       But this I heard, and to retain it pleased me.

      And he who was in every need my succour

       Said: "Turn thee hitherward; see two of them

       Come fastening upon slothfulness their teeth."

      In rear of all they shouted: "Sooner were

       The people dead to whom the sea was opened,

       Than their inheritors the Jordan saw;

      And those who the fatigue did not endure

       Unto the issue, with Anchises' son,

       Themselves to life withouten glory offered."

      Then when from us so separated were

       Those shades, that they no longer could be seen,

       Within me a new thought did entrance find,

      Whence others many and diverse were born;

       And so I lapsed from one into another,

       That in a reverie mine eyes I closed,

      And meditation into dream transmuted.

      XIX. Dante's Dream of the Siren. The Fifth Circle: The Avaricious and Prodigal. Pope Adrian V.

       Table of Contents

      It was the hour when the diurnal heat

       No more can warm the coldness of the moon,

       Vanquished by earth, or peradventure Saturn,

      When geomancers their Fortuna Major

       See in the orient before the dawn

       Rise by a path that long remains not dim,

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