The Divine Comedy by Dante Alighieri - HTML preview

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Paradiso: Canto II

 

 

O Ye, who in some pretty little boat,

Eager to listen, have been following

Behind my ship, that singing sails along,

 

Turn back to look again upon your shores;

Do not put out to sea, lest peradventure,

In losing me, you might yourselves be lost.

 

The sea I sail has never yet been passed;

Minerva breathes, and pilots me Apollo,

And Muses nine point out to me the Bears.

 

Ye other few who have the neck uplifted

Betimes to th' bread of Angels upon which

One liveth here and grows not sated by it,

 

Well may you launch upon the deep salt-sea

Your vessel, keeping still my wake before you

Upon the water that grows smooth again.

 

Those glorious ones who unto Colchos passed

Were not so wonder-struck as you shall be,

When Jason they beheld a ploughman made!

 

The con-created and perpetual thirst

For the realm deiform did bear us on,

As swift almost as ye the heavens behold.

 

Upward gazed Beatrice, and I at her;

And in such space perchance as strikes a bolt

And flies, and from the notch unlocks itself,

 

Arrived I saw me where a wondrous thing

Drew to itself my sight; and therefore she

From whom no care of mine could be concealed,

 

Towards me turning, blithe as beautiful,

Said unto me: "Fix gratefully thy mind

On God, who unto the first star has brought us."

 

It seemed to me a cloud encompassed us,

Luminous, dense, consolidate and bright

As adamant on which the sun is striking.

 

Into itself did the eternal pearl

Receive us, even as water doth receive

A ray of light, remaining still unbroken.

 

If I was body, (and we here conceive not

How one dimension tolerates another,

Which needs must be if body enter body,)

 

More the desire should be enkindled in us

That essence to behold, wherein is seen

How God and our own nature were united.

 

There will be seen what we receive by faith,

Not demonstrated, but self-evident

In guise of the first truth that man believes.

 

I made reply: "Madonna, as devoutly

As most I can do I give thanks to Him

Who has removed me from the mortal world.

 

But tell me what the dusky spots may be

Upon this body, which below on earth

Make people tell that fabulous tale of Cain?"

 

Somewhat she smiled; and then, "If the opinion

Of mortals be erroneous," she said,

"Where'er the key of sense doth not unlock,

 

Certes, the shafts of wonder should not pierce thee

Now, forasmuch as, following the senses,

Thou seest that the reason has short wings.

 

But tell me what thou think'st of it thyself."

And I: "What seems to us up here diverse,

Is caused, I think, by bodies rare and dense."

 

And she: "Right truly shalt thou see immersed

In error thy belief, if well thou hearest

The argument that I shall make against it.

 

Lights many the eighth sphere displays to you

Which in their quality and quantity

May noted be of aspects different.

 

If this were caused by rare and dense alone,

One only virtue would there be in all

Or more or less diffused, or equally.

 

Virtues diverse must be perforce the fruits

Of formal principles; and these, save one,

Of course would by thy reasoning be destroyed.

 

Besides, if rarity were of this dimness

The cause thou askest, either through and through

This planet thus attenuate were of matter,

 

Or else, as in a body is apportioned

The fat and lean, so in like manner this

Would in its volume interchange the leaves.

 

Were it the former, in the sun's eclipse

It would be manifest by the shining through

Of light, as through aught tenuous interfused.

 

This is not so; hence we must scan the other,

And if it chance the other I demolish,

Then falsified will thy opinion be.

 

But if this rarity go not through and through,

There needs must be a limit, beyond which

Its contrary prevents the further passing,

 

And thence the foreign radiance is reflected,

Even as a colour cometh back from glass,

The which behind itself concealeth lead.

 

Now thou wilt say the sunbeam shows itself

More dimly there than in the other parts,

By being there reflected farther back.

 

From this reply experiment will free thee

If e'er thou try it, which is wont to be

The fountain to the rivers of your arts.

 

Three mirrors shalt thou take, and two remove

Alike from thee, the other more remote

Between the former two shall meet thine eyes.

 

Turned towards these, cause that behind thy back

Be placed a light, illuming the three mirrors

And coming back to thee by all reflected.

 

Though in its quantity be not so ample

The image most remote, there shalt thou see

How it perforce is equally resplendent.

 

Now, as beneath the touches of warm rays

Naked the subject of the snow remains

Both of its former colour and its cold,

 

Thee thus remaining in thy intellect,

Will I inform with such a living light,

That it shall tremble in its aspect to thee.

 

Within the heaven of the divine repose

Revolves a body, in whose virtue lies

The being of whatever it contains.

 

The following heaven, that has so many eyes,

Divides this being by essences diverse,

Distinguished from it, and by it contained.

 

The other spheres, by various differences,

All the distinctions which they have within them

Dispose unto their ends and their effects.

 

Thus do these organs of the world proceed,

As thou perceivest now, from grade to grade;

Since from above they take, and act beneath.

 

Observe me well, how through this place I come

Unto the truth