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9780812977264

Paradise From the Divine Comedy

Paradise From the Divine Comedy
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  • ISBN-13: 9780812977264
  • ISBN: 0812977262
  • Publication Date: 2007
  • Publisher: Random House Inc

AUTHOR

Dante Alighieri, Esolen, Anthony, Dore, Gustave

SUMMARY

Canto One Dante and Beatrice are at the threshold of Heaven. She explains to him that it is the nature of the human soul to rise. The glory of the One who moves all things penetrates the universe with light, more radiant in one part and elsewhere less: I have been in that heaven He makes most bright,4 and seen things neither mind can hold nor tongue utter, when one descends from such great height, For as we near the One for whom we long,7 our intellects so plunge into the deep, memory cannot follow where we go. Nevertheless what small part I can keep10 of that holy kingdom treasured in my heart will now become the matter of my song. O good Apollo, for this last work of art,13 make me as fit a vessel of your power as you demand when you bestow the crown Of the beloved laurel. Till this hour16 one peak of twin Parnassus has sufficed, but if I am to enter the lists now I shall need both. Then surge into my breast19 and breathe your song, as when you drew the vain Marsyas from the sheath of his own limbs. Father, virtue divine, should you but deign22 that I make manifest a shadow of the blessed kingdom sealed upon my brain, At the foot of that tree whose wood you love25 you'll see me stand and crown my brows with green, made worthy by the subject, and by you. Poets and Caesars now so rarely glean28 those leaves to celebrate a victory (man's fault and shame, for our desires are mean), the Peneian branches must give birth to joy31 when any man should thirst for their high fame, in the glad heart of the Delphic deity. A little spark gives birth to a great flame.34 Better voices perhaps will follow mine, praying to hear what Cyrrha shall proclaim! By various spills of light the sun will shine37 dawning upon the world of men that die, but at the three-cross intersection of Four rings it rises in the company40 of a more favorable time of year, happier stars, to stamp this worldly clay With its most perfect seal. One hemisphere43 lay brightening in that stream and one grew dim, as it made morning there and evening here, When I saw Beatrice turn upon her left46 and look to Heaven to gaze into the sun: no eagle ever held a gaze so firm. As a reflecting ray will follow upon49 the first and in a glance, an instant, rise just like a pilgrim longing to turn home, So she instilled her gazingthrough my eyes52 into my powers of fancy, and I too stared at the sun more than our sight can bear. With our weak powers on earth one may not do55 what there one maythanks to the special place created as the proper home for man. Not long could I sustain the brilliant rays58 before they seemed to flash like sparks that play round steel still white-hot from the forge's blaze, And suddenly it seemed that day and day61 were fused, as if the One who wields the might adorned the heavens with a second sun. Into the everlasting wheels of light64 Beatrice gazed with silent constancy; on her I gazed, far from that central sight. Her countenance had the same effect in me67 as did the plant that Glaucus tasted when it made him share the godhood of the sea. To signify man's soaring beyond man70 words will not do: let my comparison suffice for them for whom the grace of God Reserves the experience. If I bore alone73 that part of meDante Alighieri is the author of 'Paradise From the Divine Comedy', published 2007 under ISBN 9780812977264 and ISBN 0812977262.

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