The Divine Comedy by Dante Alighieri - HTML preview

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Paradiso: Canto X

 

 

Looking into his Son with all the Love

Which each of them eternally breathes forth,

The Primal and unutterable Power

 

Whate'er before the mind or eye revolves

With so much order made, there can be none

Who this beholds without enjoying Him.

 

Lift up then, Reader, to the lofty wheels

With me thy vision straight unto that part

Where the one motion on the other strikes,

 

And there begin to contemplate with joy

That Master's art, who in himself so loves it

That never doth his eye depart therefrom.

 

Behold how from that point goes branching off

The oblique circle, which conveys the planets,

To satisfy the world that calls upon them;

 

And if their pathway were not thus inflected,

Much virtue in the heavens would be in vain,

And almost every power below here dead.

 

If from the straight line distant more or less

Were the departure, much would wanting be

Above and underneath of mundane order.

 

Remain now, Reader, still upon thy bench,

In thought pursuing that which is foretasted,

If thou wouldst jocund be instead of weary.

 

I've set before thee; henceforth feed thyself,

For to itself diverteth all my care

That theme whereof I have been made the scribe.

 

The greatest of the ministers of nature,

Who with the power of heaven the world imprints

And measures with his light the time for us,

 

With that part which above is called to mind

Conjoined, along the spirals was revolving,

Where each time earlier he presents himself;

 

And I was with him; but of the ascending

I was not conscious, saving as a man

Of a first thought is conscious ere it come;

 

And Beatrice, she who is seen to pass

From good to better, and so suddenly

That not by time her action is expressed,

 

How lucent in herself must she have been!

And what was in the sun, wherein I entered,

Apparent not by colour but by light,

 

I, though I call on genius, art, and practice,

Cannot so tell that it could be imagined;

Believe one can, and let him long to see it.

 

And if our fantasies too lowly are

For altitude so great, it is no marvel,

Since o'er the sun was never eye could go.

 

Such in this place was the fourth family

Of the high Father, who forever sates it,

Showing how he breathes forth and how begets.

 

And Beatrice began: "Give thanks, give thanks

Unto the Sun of Angels, who to this

Sensible one has raised thee by his grace!"

 

Never was heart of mortal so disposed

To worship, nor to give itself to God

With all its gratitude was it so ready,

 

As at those words did I myself become;

And all my love was so absorbed in Him,

That in oblivion Beatrice was eclipsed.

 

Nor this displeased her; but she smiled at it

So that the splendour of her laughing eyes

My single mind on many things divided.

 

Lights many saw I, vivid and triumphant,

Make us a centre and themselves a circle,

More sweet in voice than luminous in aspect.

 

Thus girt about the daughter of Latona

We sometimes see, when pregnant is the air,

So that it holds the thread which makes her zone.

 

Within the court of Heaven, whence I return,

Are many jewels found, so fair and precious

They cannot be transported from the realm;

 

And of them was the singing of those lights.

Who takes not wings that he may fly up thither,

The tidings thence may from the dumb await!

 

As soon as singing thus those burning suns

Had round about us whirled themselves three times,

Like unto stars neighbouring the steadfast poles,

 

Ladies they seemed, not from the dance released,

But who stop short, in silence listening

Till they have gathered the new melody.

 

And within one I heard beginning: "When

The radiance of grace, by which is kindled

True love, and which thereafter grows by loving,

 

Within thee multiplied is so resplendent

That it conducts thee upward by that stair,

Where without reascending none descends,

 

Who should deny the wine out of his vial

Unto thy thirst, in liberty were not

Except as water which descends not seaward.

 

Fain wouldst thou know with what plants is enflowered

This garland that encircles with delight

The Lady fair who makes thee strong for heaven.

 

Of the lambs was I of the holy flock

Which Dominic conducteth by a road

Where well one fattens if he strayeth not.

 

He who is nearest to me on the right

My brother and master was; and he Albertus

Is of Cologne, I Thomas of Aquinum.

 

If thou of all the others wouldst be certain,

Follow behind my speaking with thy sight

Upward along the blessed garland turning.

 

That next effulgence issues from the smile

Of Gratian, who assisted both the courts

In such wise that it pleased in Paradise.

 

The other which near by adorns our choir

That Peter was who, e'en as the poor widow,

Offered his treasure unto Holy Church.

 

The fifth light, that among us is the fairest,

Breathes forth from such a love, that all the world

Below is greedy to learn tidings of it.

 

Within it is the lofty mind, where knowledge

So deep was put, that, if the true be true,

To see so much there never rose a second.

 

Thou seest next the lustre of that taper,

Which in the flesh below looked most within

The angelic nature and its ministry.

 

Within that other little light is smiling

The advocate of the Christian centuries,

Out of whose rhetoric Augustine was furnished.

 

Now if thou trainest thy mind's eye along

From light to light