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    Canto XXIV - Page 2

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    difficult,
    And more precipitous far than that before.
    Speaking I went, not to appear exhausted;
    Whereat a voice from the next moat came forth,
    Not well adapted to articulate words.
    I know not what it said, though o'er the back
    I now was of the arch that passes there;
    But he seemed moved to anger who was speaking.
    I was bent downward, but my living eyes
    Could not attain the bottom, for the dark;
    Wherefore I: "Master, see that thou arrive
    At the next round, and let us descend the wall;
    For as from hence I hear and understand not,
    So I look down and nothing I distinguish."
    "Other response," he said, "I make thee not,
    Except the doing; for the modest asking
    Ought to be followed by the deed in silence."
    We from the bridge descended at its head,
    Where it connects itself with the eighth bank,
    And then was manifest to me the Bolgia;
    And I beheld therein a terrible throng
    Of serpents, and of such a monstrous kind,
    That the remembrance still congeals my blood
    Let Libya boast no longer with her sand;
    For if Chelydri, Jaculi, and Phareae
    She breeds, with Cenchri and with Amphisbaena,
    Neither so many plagues nor so malignant
    E'er showed she with all Ethiopia,
    Nor with whatever on the Red Sea is!
    Among this cruel and most dismal throng
    People were running naked and affrighted.
    Without the hope of hole or heliotrope.
    They had their hands with serpents bound behind them;
    These riveted upon their reins the tail
    And head, and were in front of them entwined.
    And lo! at one who was upon our side
    There darted forth a serpent, which transfixed him
    There where the neck is knotted to the shoulders.
    Nor 'O' so quickly e'er, nor 'I' was written,
    As he took fire, and burned; and ashes wholly
    Behoved it that in falling he became.
    And when he on the ground was thus destroyed,
    The ashes drew together, and of themselves
    Into himself they instantly returned.
    Even thus by the great sages 'tis confessed
    The phoenix dies, and then is born again,
    When it approaches its five-hundredth year;
    On herb or grain it feeds not in its life,
    But only on tears of incense and amomum,
    And nard and myrrh are its last winding-sheet.
    And as he is who falls, and knows not how,
    By force of demons who to earth down drag him,

    Or other oppilation that binds man,
    When he arises and around him looks,
    Wholly bewildered by the mighty anguish
    Which he has suffered, and in looking sighs;
    Such was that sinner after he had risen.
    Justice of God! O how severe it is,
    That blows like these in vengeance poureth down!
    The Guide thereafter asked him who he was;
    Whence he replied: "I rained from Tuscany
    A short time since into this cruel gorge.
    A
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