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    Canto XVI - Page 2

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    show it;
    For one in the heavens, and here below one puts it."
    A sigh profound, that grief forced into Ai!
    He first sent forth, and then began he: "Brother,
    The world is blind, and sooth thou comest from it!
    Ye who are living every cause refer
    Still upward to the heavens, as if all things
    They of necessity moved with themselves.
    If this were so, in you would be destroyed
    Free will, nor any justice would there be
    In having joy for good, or grief for evil.
    The heavens your movements do initiate,
    I say not all; but granting that I say it,
    Light has been given you for good and evil,
    And free volition; which, if some fatigue
    In the first battles with the heavens it suffers,
    Afterwards conquers all, if well 'tis nurtured.
    To greater force and to a better nature,
    Though free, ye subject are, and that creates
    The mind in you the heavens have not in charge.
    Hence, if the present world doth go astray,
    In you the cause is, be it sought in you;
    And I therein will now be thy true spy.
    Forth from the hand of Him, who fondles it
    Before it is, like to a little girl
    Weeping and laughing in her childish sport,
    Issues the simple soul, that nothing knows,
    Save that, proceeding from a joyous Maker,
    Gladly it turns to that which gives it pleasure.
    Of trivial good at first it tastes the savour;
    Is cheated by it, and runs after it,
    If guide or rein turn not aside its love.
    Hence it behoved laws for a rein to place,
    Behoved a king to have, who at the least
    Of the true city should discern the tower.
    The laws exist, but who sets hand to them?
    No one; because the shepherd who precedes
    Can ruminate, but cleaveth not the hoof;
    Wherefore the people that perceives its guide
    Strike only at the good for which it hankers,
    Feeds upon that, and farther seeketh not.
    Clearly canst thou perceive that evil guidance
    The cause is that has made the world depraved,
    And not that nature is corrupt in you.
    Rome, that reformed the world, accustomed was
    Two suns to have, which one road and the other,
    Of God and of the world, made manifest.
    One has the other quenched, and to the crosier
    The sword is joined, and ill beseemeth it
    That by main force one with the other go,
    Because, being joined, one feareth not the other;

    If thou believe not, think upon the grain,
    For by its seed each herb is recognized.
    In the land laved by Po and Adige,
    Valour and courtesy used to be found,
    Before that Frederick had his controversy;
    Now in security can pass that way
    Whoever will abstain, through sense of shame,
    From speaking with the good, or drawing near them.
    True, three old men are left, in whom upbraids
    The ancient age the new, and late they deem it
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