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    "The reasonable man adapts himself to the world; the unreasonable one persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the unreasonable man."
     

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    Canto XV - Page 2

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    Will make itself, for thy good deeds, thy foe;
    And it is right; for among crabbed sorbs
    It ill befits the sweet fig to bear fruit.
    Old rumour in the world proclaims them blind;
    A people avaricious, envious, proud;
    Take heed that of their customs thou do cleanse thee.
    Thy fortune so much honour doth reserve thee,
    One party and the other shall be hungry
    For thee; but far from goat shall be the grass.
    Their litter let the beasts of Fesole
    Make of themselves, nor let them touch the plant,
    If any still upon their dunghill rise,
    In which may yet revive the consecrated
    Seed of those Romans, who remained there when
    The nest of such great malice it became."
    "If my entreaty wholly were fulfilled,"
    Replied I to him, "not yet would you be
    In banishment from human nature placed;
    For in my mind is fixed, and touches now
    My heart the dear and good paternal image
    Of you, when in the world from hour to hour
    You taught me how a man becomes eternal;
    And how much I am grateful, while I live
    Behoves that in my language be discerned.
    What you narrate of my career I write,
    And keep it to be glossed with other text
    By a Lady who can do it, if I reach her.
    This much will I have manifest to you;
    Provided that my conscience do not chide me,
    For whatsoever Fortune I am ready.
    Such handsel is not new unto mine ears;
    Therefore let Fortune turn her wheel around
    As it may please her, and the churl his mattock."
    My Master thereupon on his right cheek
    Did backward turn himself, and looked at me;
    Then said: "He listeneth well who noteth it."
    Nor speaking less on that account, I go
    With Ser Brunetto, and I ask who are
    His most known and most eminent companions.
    And he to me: "To know of some is well;
    Of others it were laudable to be silent,
    For short would be the time for so much speech.
    Know them in sum, that all of them were clerks,
    And men of letters great and of great fame,
    In the world tainted with the selfsame sin.
    Priscian goes yonder with that wretched crowd,
    And Francis of Accorso; and thou hadst seen there
    If thou hadst had a hankering for such scurf,
    That one, who by the Servant of the Servants
    From Arno was transferred to Bacchiglione,

    Where he has left his sin-excited nerves.
    More would I say, but coming and discoursing
    Can be no longer; for that I behold
    New smoke uprising yonder from the sand.
    A people comes with whom I may not be;
    Commended unto thee be my Tesoro,
    In which I still live, and no more I ask."
    Then he turned round, and seemed to be of those
    Who at Verona run for the Green Mantle
    Across the plain; and seemed to be among them
    The one who wins, and not the one who
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