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    Canto XXIX

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    The many people and the divers wounds
    These eyes of mine had so inebriated,
    That they were wishful to stand still and weep;
    But said Virgilius: "What dost thou still gaze at?
    Why is thy sight still riveted down there
    Among the mournful, mutilated shades?
    Thou hast not done so at the other Bolge;
    Consider, if to count them thou believest,
    That two-and-twenty miles the valley winds,
    And now the moon is underneath our feet;
    Henceforth the time allotted us is brief,
    And more is to be seen than what thou seest."
    "If thou hadst," I made answer thereupon,
    "Attended to the cause for which I looked,
    Perhaps a longer stay thou wouldst have pardoned."
    Meanwhile my Guide departed, and behind him
    I went, already making my reply,
    And superadding: "In that cavern where
    I held mine eyes with such attention fixed,
    I think a spirit of my blood laments
    The sin which down below there costs so much."
    Then said the Master: "Be no longer broken
    Thy thought from this time forward upon him;
    Attend elsewhere, and there let him remain;
    For him I saw below the little bridge,
    Pointing at thee, and threatening with his finger
    Fiercely, and heard him called Geri del Bello.
    So wholly at that time wast thou impeded
    By him who formerly held Altaforte,
    Thou didst not look that way; so he departed."
    "O my Conductor, his own violent death,
    Which is not yet avenged for him," I said,
    "By any who is sharer in the shame,
    Made him disdainful; whence he went away,
    As I imagine, without speaking to me,
    And thereby made me pity him the more."
    Thus did we speak as far as the first place
    Upon the crag, which the next valley shows
    Down to the bottom, if there were more light.
    When we were now right over the last cloister
    Of Malebolge, so that its lay-brothers
    Could manifest themselves unto our sight,
    Divers lamentings pierced me through and through,
    Which with compassion had their arrows barbed,
    Whereat mine ears I covered with my hands.
    What pain would be, if from the hospitals
    Of Valdichiana, 'twixt July and September,
    And of Maremma and Sardinia
    All the diseases in one moat were gathered,
    Such was it here, and such a stench came from it
    As from putrescent limbs is wont to issue.
    We had descended on the furthest bank

    From the long crag, upon the left hand still,
    And then more vivid was my power of sight
    Down tow'rds the bottom, where the ministress
    Of the high Lord, Justice infallible,
    Punishes forgers, which she here records.
    I do not think a sadder sight to see
    Was in Aegina the whole people sick,
    (When was the air so full of pestilence,
    The animals, down to the little worm,
    All fell, and afterwards the ancient people,
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