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    Canto VII - Page 2

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    Goodness Divine, which from itself doth spurn
    All envy, burning in itself so sparkles
    That the eternal beauties it unfolds.
    Whate'er from this immediately distils
    Has afterwards no end, for ne'er removed
    Is its impression when it sets its seal.
    Whate'er from this immediately rains down
    Is wholly free, because it is not subject
    Unto the influences of novel things.
    The more conformed thereto, the more it pleases;
    For the blest ardour that irradiates all things
    In that most like itself is most vivacious.
    With all of these things has advantaged been
    The human creature; and if one be wanting,
    From his nobility he needs must fall.
    'Tis sin alone which doth disfranchise him,
    And render him unlike the Good Supreme,
    So that he little with its light is blanched,
    And to his dignity no more returns,
    Unless he fill up where transgression empties
    With righteous pains for criminal delights.
    Your nature when it sinned so utterly
    In its own seed, out of these dignities
    Even as out of Paradise was driven,
    Nor could itself recover, if thou notest
    With nicest subtilty, by any way,
    Except by passing one of these two fords:
    Either that God through clemency alone
    Had pardon granted, or that man himself
    Had satisfaction for his folly made.
    Fix now thine eye deep into the abyss
    Of the eternal counsel, to my speech
    As far as may be fastened steadfastly!
    Man in his limitations had not power
    To satisfy, not having power to sink
    In his humility obeying then,
    Far as he disobeying thought to rise;
    And for this reason man has been from power
    Of satisfying by himself excluded.
    Therefore it God behoved in his own ways
    Man to restore unto his perfect life,
    I say in one, or else in both of them.
    But since the action of the doer is
    So much more grateful, as it more presents
    The goodness of the heart from which it issues,
    Goodness Divine, that doth imprint the world,
    Has been contented to proceed by each
    And all its ways to lift you up again;
    Nor 'twixt the first day and the final night
    Such high and such magnificent proceeding
    By one or by the other was or shall be;
    For God more bounteous was himself to give
    To make man able to uplift himself,

    Than if he only of himself had pardoned;
    And all the other modes were insufficient
    For justice, were it not the Son of God
    Himself had humbled to become incarnate.
    Now, to fill fully each desire of thine,
    Return I to elucidate one place,
    In order that thou there mayst see as I do.
    Thou sayst: 'I see the air, I see the fire,
    The water, and the earth, and all their mixtures
    Come to corruption, and short while endure;
    And these things notwithstanding were created;'
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