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If who I am thou carest so much to know,

That thou on that account hast crossed the bank, Know that I vested was with the great mantle; And truly was I son of the She-bear,

So eager to advance the cubs, that wealth Above, and here myself, I pocketed. Beneath my head the others are dragged down Who have preceded me in simony, Flattened along the fissure of the rock. Below there I shall likewise fall, whenever

That one shall come who I belived thou wast, What time the sudden question I proposed. But longer I my feet already toast,

And here have been in this way upside down,
Than he will planted stay with reddened feet;
For after him shall come of fouler deed

From tow'rds the west a Pastor without law,
Such as befits to cover him and me.
New Jason will he be, of whom we read

In Maccabees; and as his king was pliant,
So he who governs France shall be to this one."

I do not know if I were here too bold,

That him I answered only in this metre: "I pray thee tell me now how great a treasure Our Lord demanded of Saint Peter first,

Before he put the keys into his keeping? Truly he nothing asked but 'Follow me.' Nor Peter nor the rest asked of Matthias

Silver or gold, when he by lot was chosen
Unto the place the guilty soul had lost.
Therefore stay here, for thou art justly punished,

And keep safe guard o'er the ill-gotten money,
Which caused thee to be valiant against Charles.

And were it not that still forbids it me

The reverence for the keys superlative
Thou hadst in keeping in the gladsome life,
I would make use of words more grievous still;
Because your avarice afflicts the world,
Trampling the good and lifting the depraved.
The Evangelist you Pastors had in mind,

When she who sitteth upon many waters
To fornicate with kings by him was seen;
The same who with the seven heads was born,

And power and strength from the ten horns received,
So long as virtue to her spouse was pleasing.

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Ye have made yourselves a god of gold and silver;
And from the idolater how differ ye,

Save that he one, and ye a hundred worship?
Ah, Constantine! of how much ill was mother,

Not thy conversion, but that marriage dowe:
Which the first wealthy Father took from thee!"
And while I sang to him such notes as these,

Either that anger or that conscience stung him,
He struggled violently with both his feet.
I think in sooth that it my Leader pleased,
With such contented lip he listened ever

Unto the sound of the true words expressed.
Therefore with both his arms he took me up,

And when he had me all upon his breast,
Remounted by the way where he descended.
Nor did he tire to have me clasped to him;

But bore me to the summit of the arch
Which from the fourth dike to the fifth is passage.

There tenderly he laid his burden down,

Tenderly on the crag uneven and steep,

That would have been hard passage for the goats: Thence was unveiled to me another valley.

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CANTO XX.

Or a new pain behoves me to make verses
And give material to the twentieth canto
Of the first song, which is of the submerged.

I was already thoroughly disposed

To peer down into the uncovered depth,
Which bathed itself with tears of agony;
And people saw I through the circular valley,
Silent and weeping, coming at the pace
Which in this world the Litanies assume.
As lower down my sight descended on them,
Wondrously each one seemed to be distorted
From chin to the beginning of the chest;
For tow rds the reins the countenance was turned,
And backward it behoved them to advance,
As to look forward had been taken from them.
Perchance indeed by violence of palsy

Some one has been thus wholly turned awry;
But I ne'er saw it, nor believe it can be.

As God may let thee, Reader, gather fruit
From this thy reading, think now for thyself
How I could ever keep my face unmoistened,
When our own image near me I beheld

Distorted so, the weeping of the eyes
Along the fissure bathed the hinder parts.
Truly I wept, leaning upon a peak

Of the hard crag, so that my Escort said
To me: "Art thou, too, of the other fools?
Here pity lives when it is wholly dead;

Who is a greater reprobate than he

Who feels compassion at the doom divine? Lift up, lift up thy head, and see for whom

Opened the earth before the Thebans' eyes;
Wherefore they all cried: 'Whither rushest thou,
Amphiaraus? Why dost leave the war?'

And downward ceased he not to fall amain
As far as Minos, who lays hold on all.
See, he has made a bosom of his shoulders!

Because he wished to see too far before him
Behind he looks, and backward goes his way:
Behold Tiresias, who his semblance changed,

When from a male a female he became,
His members being all of them transformed;
And afterwards was forced to strike once more
The two entangled serpents with his rod,
Ere he could have again his manly plumes.
That Aruns is, who backs the other's "elly,

Who in the hills of Luni, there where grubs
The Carrarese who houses underneath,

Among the marbles white a cavern had

For his abode; whence to behold the stars
And sea, the view was not cut off from him.
And she there, who is covering up her breasts,

Which thou beholdest not, with loosened tresses,
And on that side has all the hairy skin,

Was Manto, who made quest through many lands,
Afterwards tarried there where I was born;
Whereof I would thou list to me a little.

After her father had from life departed,

And the city of Bacchus had become enslaved,
She a long season wandered through the world.

Above in beauteous Italy lies a lake

At the Alp's foot that shuts in Germany
Over Tyrol, and has the name Benaco.

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By a thousand springs, I think, and more, is bathed,
'Twixt Garda and Val Camonica, Pennino,
With water that grows stagnant in that lake.
Midway a place is where the Trentine Pastor,
And he of Brescia, and the Veronese

Might give his blessing, if he passed that way,
Sitteth Peschiera, fortress fair and strong,

To front the Brescians and the Bergamasks, Where round about the bank descendeth lowest. There of necessity must fall whatever

In bosom of Benaco cannot stay,

Soon as the water doth begin to run,

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And grows a river down through verdant pastures.

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No more Benaco is it called, but Mincio,
Far as Governo, where it falls in Po.

In which it spreads itself, and makes it marshy,
And oft 'tis wont in summer to be sickly.

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Not far it runs before it finds a plain

Passing that way the virgin pitiless

Land in the middle of the fen descried,
Untilled and naked of inhabitants;

There to escape all human intercourse,

She with her servants stayed, her arts to practise,
And lived, and left her empty body there.
The men, thereafter, who were scattered round,
Collected in that place, which was made strong
By the lagoon it had on every side;
They built their city over those dead bones,

And, after her who first the place selected,
Mantua named it, without other omen.
Its people once within more crowded were,
Ere the stupidity of Casalodi

From Pinamonte had received deceit.
Therefore I caution thee, if e'er thou hearest
Originate my city otherwise,

No falsehood may the verity defraud.”
And I: "My Master, thy discourses are

To me so certain, and so take my faith,
That unto me the rest would be spent coals.

But tell me of the people who are passing,

If any one note-worthy thou beholdest,
For only unto that my mind reverts."
Then said he to me: "He who from the cheek

Thrusts out his beard upon his swarthy shoulders
Was, at the time when Greece was void of males,

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So that there scarce remained one in the cradle,
An augur, and with Calchas gave the moment,
In Aulis, when to sever the first cable.

Eryphylus his name was, and so sings

My lofty Tragedy in some part or other;

That knowest thou weli, who knowes the whole of it.

The next, who is so slender in the flanks,

Was Michael Scott, who of a verity
Of magical illusions knew the game.

Behold Guido Bonatti, behold Asdente,

Who now unto his leather and his thread
Would fain have stuck, but he too late repents.

Behold the wretched ones, who left the needle,

The spool and rock, and made them fortune-tellers ;
They wrought their magic spells with herb and image.

But come now, for already holds the confines

Of both the hemispheres, and under Seville
Touches the ocean-wave, Cain and the thorns,
And yesternight the moon was round already;

Thou shouldst remember well it did not harm thee
From time to time within the forest deep."
Thus spake he to me, and we walked the while.

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CANTO XXI.

FROM bridge to bridge thus, speaking other things
Of which my Comedy cares not to sing,

We came along, and held the summit, when

We halted to behold another fissure

Of Malebolge and other vain laments;

And I beheld it marvellously dark.

As in the Arsenal of the Venetians

Boils in the winter the tenacious pitch
To smear their unsound vessels o'er again,

For sail they cannot; and instead thereof

One makes his vessel new, and one recaulks
The ribs of that which many a voyage has made;

One hammers at the prow, one at the stern,

This one makes oars, and that one cordage twists,
Another mends the mainsail and the mizzen;

Thus, not by fire, but by the art divine,

Was boiling down below there a dense pitch
Which upon every side the bank belimed.

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