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    Canto XXX - Page 2

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    rivulets, that from the verdant hills
    Of Cassentin descend down into Arno,
    Making their channels to be cold and moist,
    Ever before me stand, and not in vain;
    For far more doth their image dry me up
    Than the disease which strips my face of flesh.
    The rigid justice that chastises me
    Draweth occasion from the place in which
    I sinned, to put the more my sighs in flight.
    There is Romena, where I counterfeited
    The currency imprinted with the Baptist,
    For which I left my body burned above.
    But if I here could see the tristful soul
    Of Guido, or Alessandro, or their brother,
    For Branda's fount I would not give the sight.
    One is within already, if the raving
    Shades that are going round about speak truth;
    But what avails it me, whose limbs are tied?
    If I were only still so light, that in
    A hundred years I could advance one inch,
    I had already started on the way,
    Seeking him out among this squalid folk,
    Although the circuit be eleven miles,
    And be not less than half a mile across.
    For them am I in such a family;
    They did induce me into coining florins,
    Which had three carats of impurity."
    And I to him: "Who are the two poor wretches
    That smoke like unto a wet hand in winter,
    Lying there close upon thy right-hand confines?"
    "I found them here," replied he, "when I rained
    Into this chasm, and since they have not turned,
    Nor do I think they will for evermore.
    One the false woman is who accused Joseph,
    The other the false Sinon, Greek of Troy;
    From acute fever they send forth such reek."
    And one of them, who felt himself annoyed
    At being, peradventure, named so darkly,
    Smote with the fist upon his hardened paunch.
    It gave a sound, as if it were a drum;
    And Master Adam smote him in the face,
    With arm that did not seem to be less hard,
    Saying to him: "Although be taken from me
    All motion, for my limbs that heavy are,
    I have an arm unfettered for such need."
    Whereat he answer made: "When thou didst go
    Unto the fire, thou hadst it not so ready:
    But hadst it so and more when thou wast coining."
    The dropsical: "Thou sayest true in that;
    But thou wast not so true a witness there,
    Where thou wast questioned of the truth at Troy."

    "If I spake false, thou falsifiedst the coin,"
    Said Sinon; "and for one fault I am here,
    And thou for more than any other demon."
    "Remember, perjurer, about the horse,"
    He made reply who had the swollen belly,
    "And rueful be it thee the whole world knows it."
    "Rueful to thee the thirst be wherewith cracks
    Thy tongue," the Greek said, "and the putrid water
    That hedges so thy paunch before thine eyes."
    Then the false-coiner: "So is gaping wide
    Thy mouth for speaking evil, as 'tis wont;
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