Authors: Dante
And so he said: ‘If the mirror that moves its light
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to either side of the equator
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were in the company of Castor and of Pollux,
‘the red part of the zodiac would show
still closer to the Bears
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unless it were to leave its ancient track.
‘If you would understand how this may be,
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with your mind focused, picture Zion
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and this mountain positioned so on earth
‘they share the same horizon
but are in different hemispheres.
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Then you shall see how, to his misfortune,
‘the highway Phaeton failed to drive
must pass this mountain on the one side,
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Zion on the other, if you consider it with care.’
‘Indeed, my master,’ I said,
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‘I did not understand what now is clear,
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the point for which my wit was lacking:
‘the mid-circle of that celestial motion,
which a certain science calls “Equator,”
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and which always lies between the sun and winter,
‘for the very reason you have given
is as far to the north from here
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as the Hebrews saw it toward the torrid parts.
‘But, please, tell me just how far
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we have to go, for the hill rises
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farther than my eyes can climb.’
And he to me: ‘This mountain is so fashioned
that the climb is harder at the outset
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and, as one ascends, becomes less toilsome.
‘When climbing uphill will seem pleasing—
as easy as the passage of a boat
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that lets the current float it down the stream—
‘at that point will this trail be done.
There look to rest your weariness.
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This I know for truth. I say no more.’
As soon as he had said these words
a voice close by called out: ‘Perhaps
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you’ll feel the need to sit before then.’
Hearing this, both of us turned around,
and saw to our left an enormous rock
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that neither he nor I at first had noticed.
When we approached, we saw some people
resting in the shade behind the boulder
and one of them, who seemed so very weary,
was sitting with his arms around his knees,
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his head pressed down between them.
‘O my dear lord,’ I said, ‘just look at him.
He shows himself more indolent
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than if sloth had been his very sister.’
Then he turned and fixed his eyes on us,
barely lifting his face above his haunch,
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and said: ‘Go on up then, you who are so spry.’
At that I realized who he was,
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and the exertion that still kept me short of breath
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now did not keep me from his side.
When I reached him he barely raised his head
to say: ‘Have you marked how the sun
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drives his car past your left shoulder?’
His lazy movements and curt speech
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slowly shaped my lips into a smile, and I began:
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‘Belacqua, no longer need I grieve for you.
‘But tell me, what keeps you sitting here?
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Are you waiting for an escort,
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or have you gone back to your old lazy ways?’
And he: ‘Brother, what’s the good of going up?
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The angel of God who sits in the gateway
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would not let me pass into the torments.
‘I must wait outside as long as in my lifetime
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the heavens wheeled around me
‘unless I’m helped by prayers that rise
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from a heart that lives in grace.
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What good are those that go unheard in Heaven?’
And now, not waiting for me, the poet began
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to climb the path, saying: ‘Come along.
Look, now the sun is touching the meridian,
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and on Morocco’s shore night sets her foot.’
I. Introductory retrospection
II. The late-repentant as a group
III. The late-repentant as individuals
I had already parted from those shades,
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following the footsteps of my guide,
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when one behind me, pointing with his finger,
cried: ‘Look how the sun’s rays on the ground
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are cut off to his left
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and how he moves and seems like one alive.’
Hearing these words, I turned to look at them
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and saw that they were staring in amazement
‘Is your mind so distracted,’ asked the master,
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‘that you have slowed your pace?
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Why do you care what they are whispering?
‘Just follow me and let the people talk.
Be more like a sturdy tower
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that does not tremble in the fiercest wind.
‘For any man who lets one thought—
and then another—take him over
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will soon lose track of his first goal.’
What could I answer but ‘I come’?
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I said it, blushing with such shame
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as might make one worthy of his pardon.
And all this time in front of us
a group of shades advanced across the slope,
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chanting
Miserere
line by line.
When they perceived my body stopped
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the rays of the sun from shining through,
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their voices faded to a hoarse and drawn-out ‘Oh!’
and two of them, as messengers,
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ran out to meet us and insisted:
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‘Tell us what you can of your condition.’
My master answered: ‘When you go back
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you may report to those who sent you:
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this man’s body is true flesh.
‘If they stopped because they saw his shadow,
as I suppose, they have their answer.
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It may profit them to do him honor.’