Authors: Dante
II. The Valley of the Princes
III. The princes
Once the courteous and joyful greetings
→
had been repeated a third time and a fourth,
3
Sordello drew back and asked: ‘Who then are You?’
‘Before souls worthy of ascent to God
→
could be directed to this mountain,
6
Octavian interred my bones.
Like one who of a sudden sees a thing before him
at which he wonders, who both believes and doesn’t,
12
saying to himself: ‘It is—but no, it cannot be,’
such seemed the other. He bowed his head,
humbly drew near again and, opening his arms,
‘O glory of the Latins,’ he exclaimed,
→
‘through whom our language showed what it could do,
18
O eternal honor of the town where I was born,
‘what merit or what grace brings you to me?
If I am worthy of your words, tell me
‘Through all the circles of the woeful kingdom
→
I have made my way,’ he answered. ‘Power
24
from Heaven moved me and with that power I come.
‘Not for what I did but what I did not do
→
I lost the vision of the lofty Sun you long for
27
and which I came to know too late.
‘There is a place down there, not sad with torments
→
but only darkness, where lamentations sound,
30
not loud as wailing but soft as sighs.
‘There I abide with the innocent little ones
seized in the fangs of death
33
before they could be cleansed of mortal guilt.
‘There I abide with those who were not clothed
in the three holy virtues, yet, blameless,
36
knew the others and followed every one.
‘But if you know the way and are permitted,
show us how to go, so that we may come sooner
39
where purgatory has its true beginning.’
He answered: ‘We are set in no fixed place.
→
I may ascend and move about, and I will walk
42
with you and be your guide as far as I’m allowed.
‘But see, already day is waning
and we may not ascend by night.
→
45
Now is the time to choose a resting place.
‘There, to the right, are spirits set apart.
→
I will lead you to them, if you wish.
48
And not without pleasure shall you know them.’
‘How is that?’ was the reply. ‘If a man should wish
→
to climb by night, would he be hindered,
51
or would he not ascend because he lacked the power?’
Good Sordello drew his finger through the dust
→
and said: ‘See, you would not cross
54
even this line once the sun goes down,
‘for nothing hinders the ascent
except the darkness of the night,
57
which binds the will with helplessness.
‘After nightfall one might head back down
and wander lost around the hill
60
as long as the horizon hides the day.’
At that my lord, as in amazement, said:
‘Lead us, then, to where you say
63
we may take pleasure in our rest.’
We had gone but a little way from there
→
when I observed the hill was hollowed out,
66
as valleys carve out hollows in our mountains.
‘Let us go there,’ said the shade,
‘to where the slope sinks to a bowl,
69
and there await the coming of the day.’
A slanting path, connecting steep and flat,
brought us to the border of the glade
72
just where the rim around it falls away.
Gold and fine silver, carmine and leaded white,
→
indigo, lignite bright and clear,
75
an emerald after it has just been split,
placed in that dell would see their brightness fade
against the colors of the grass and flowers,
78
as less is overcome by more.
Nature had not only painted there in all her hues
→
but there the sweetness of a thousand scents
81
was blended in one fragrance strange and new.
Seated in the grass and flowers, I saw
→
souls not visible from beyond the sunken valley.
84
‘Salve Regina’
was the song they sang.
‘Before the sun’s rim sinks into its nest,’
began the Mantuan soul who’d brought us there,
→
‘From this bank you will more easily discern
their gestures and their features
90
than if you went among them down below.
‘He who sits the highest—the one with the look
→
of a man who shirked his duty—not moving his lips
93
to match the singing of the rest,
‘was Emperor Rudolph. He might have healed
the wounds that have brought Italy to death,
→
96
so that, for another to restore her, it is late.
‘The next, who looks as if he gave him comfort,
→
ruled the land where the waters from the Moldau
99
flow into the Elbe, and from the Elbe to the sea.
‘His name was Ottocar, and in his swaddling clothes
he was of greater worth than Wenceslaus,
102
his bearded son, who feasts on lust and idleness.
‘And the one with the small nose, who seems in council
→
with the one who is so gracious in his looks,
105
died in flight, deflowering the lily.
‘Look how he beats upon his breast!
And see the other, who rests his cheek
108
upon his palm and sighs:
‘father and the father-in-law of the plague of France,
they know his foul and vicious life—
111
thus comes the grief that pierces them.
‘He who looks so tall and sturdy and who sings
→
in time with him who bears a manly nose
114
was girt with the cord of every virtue.
‘And if the youth who sits behind him
→
had come to power on his throne, then indeed
117
his virtue would have passed from vessel to vessel,
‘which none can say of the other heirs.
→
James and Frederick hold their kingdoms,
120
but neither has the better heritage.
‘Rarely does human worth rise through the branches.
→
And this He wills who gives it,
123
so that it shall be sought from Him.