Canto XXVI
St. John examines Dante on Charity. Dante’s Sight. Adam.
4 mins to read
1114 words

While I was doubting for my vision quenched,     Out of the flame refulgent that had quenched it     Issued a breathing, that attentive made me,

Saying: “While thou recoverest the sense     Of seeing which in me thou hast consumed,     ’Tis well that speaking thou shouldst compensate it.

Begin then, and declare to what thy soul     Is aimed, and count it for a certainty,     Sight is in thee bewildered and not dead;

Because the Lady, who through this divine     Region conducteth thee, has in her look     The power the hand of Ananias had.”

I said: “As pleaseth her, or soon or late     Let the cure come to eyes that portals were     When she with fire I ever burn with entered.

The Good, that gives contentment to this Court,     The Alpha and Omega is of all     The writing that love reads me low or loud.”

The selfsame voice, that taken had from me     The terror of the sudden dazzlement,     To speak still farther put it in my thought;

And said: “In verity with finer sieve     Behoveth thee to sift; thee it behoveth     To say who aimed thy bow at such a target.”

And I: “By philosophic arguments,     And by authority that hence descends,     Such love must needs imprint itself in me;

For Good, so far as good, when comprehended     Doth straight enkindle love, and so much greater     As more of goodness in itself it holds;

Then to that Essence (whose is such advantage     That every good which out of it is found     Is nothing but a ray of its own light)

More than elsewhither must the mind be moved     Of every one, in loving, who discerns     The truth in which this evidence is founded.

Such truth he to my intellect reveals     Who demonstrates to me the primal love     Of all the sempiternal substances.

The voice reveals it of the truthful Author,     Who says to Moses, speaking of Himself,     ‘I will make all my goodness pass before thee.’

Thou too revealest it to me, beginning     The loud Evangel, that proclaims the secret     Of heaven to earth above all other edict.”

And I heard say: “By human intellect     And by authority concordant with it,     Of all thy loves reserve for God the highest.

But say again if other cords thou feelest,     Draw thee towards Him, that thou mayst proclaim     With how many teeth this love is biting thee.”

The holy purpose of the Eagle of Christ     Not latent was, nay, rather I perceived     Whither he fain would my profession lead.

Therefore I recommenced: “All of those bites     Which have the power to turn the heart to God     Unto my charity have been concurrent.

The being of the world, and my own being,     The death which He endured that I may live,     And that which all the faithful hope, as I do,

With the forementioned vivid consciousness     Have drawn me from the sea of love perverse,     And of the right have placed me on the shore.

The leaves, wherewith embowered is all the garden     Of the Eternal Gardener, do I love     As much as he has granted them of good.”

As soon as I had ceased, a song most sweet     Throughout the heaven resounded, and my Lady     Said with the others, “Holy, holy, holy!”

And as at some keen light one wakes from sleep     By reason of the visual spirit that runs     Unto the splendour passed from coat to coat,

And he who wakes abhorreth what he sees,     So all unconscious is his sudden waking,     Until the judgment cometh to his aid,

So from before mine eyes did Beatrice     Chase every mote with radiance of her own,     That cast its light a thousand miles and more.

Whence better after than before I saw,     And in a kind of wonderment I asked     About a fourth light that I saw with us.

And said my Lady: “There within those rays     Gazes upon its Maker the first soul     That ever the first virtue did create.”

Even as the bough that downward bends its top     At transit of the wind, and then is lifted     By its own virtue, which inclines it upward,

Likewise did I, the while that she was speaking,     Being amazed, and then I was made bold     By a desire to speak wherewith I burned.

And I began: “O apple, that mature     Alone hast been produced, O ancient father,     To whom each wife is daughter and daughter-in-law,

Devoutly as I can I supplicate thee     That thou wouldst speak to me; thou seest my wish;     And I, to hear thee quickly, speak it not.”

Sometimes an animal, when covered, struggles     So that his impulse needs must be apparent,     By reason of the wrappage following it;

And in like manner the primeval soul     Made clear to me athwart its covering     How jubilant it was to give me pleasure.

Then breathed: “Without thy uttering it to me,     Thine inclination better I discern     Than thou whatever thing is surest to thee;

For I behold it in the truthful mirror,     That of Himself all things parhelion makes,     And none makes Him parhelion of itself.

Thou fain wouldst hear how long ago God placed me     Within the lofty garden, where this Lady     Unto so long a stairway thee disposed.

And how long to mine eyes it was a pleasure,     And of the great disdain the proper cause,     And the language that I used and that I made.

Now, son of mine, the tasting of the tree     Not in itself was cause of so great exile,     But solely the o’erstepping of the bounds.

There, whence thy Lady moved Virgilius,     Four thousand and three hundred and two circuits     Made by the sun, this Council I desired;

And him I saw return to all the lights     Of his highway nine hundred times and thirty,     Whilst I upon the earth was tarrying.

The language that I spake was quite extinct     Before that in the work interminable     The people under Nimrod were employed;

For nevermore result of reasoning     (Because of human pleasure that doth change,     Obedient to the heavens) was durable.

A natural action is it that man speaks;     But whether thus or thus, doth nature leave     To your own art, as seemeth best to you.

Ere I descended to the infernal anguish,     ‘El’ was on earth the name of the Chief Good,     From whom comes all the joy that wraps me round

‘Eli’ he then was called, and that is proper,     Because the use of men is like a leaf     On bough, which goeth and another cometh.

Upon the mount that highest o’er the wave     Rises was I, in life or pure or sinful,     From the first hour to that which is the second,

As the sun changes quadrant, to the sixth.”

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Canto XXVII
St. Peter’s reproof of bad Popes. The Ascent to the Ninth Heaven, the ‘Primum Mobile.’
4 mins to read
1138 words
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