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    Canto XXII - Page 2

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    thereafter?"
    And he to him: "Thou first directedst me
    Towards Parnassus, in its grots to drink,
    And first concerning God didst me enlighten.
    Thou didst as he who walketh in the night,
    Who bears his light behind, which helps him not,
    But wary makes the persons after him,
    When thou didst say: 'The age renews itself,
    Justice returns, and man's primeval time,
    And a new progeny descends from heaven.'
    Through thee I Poet was, through thee a Christian;
    But that thou better see what I design,
    To colour it will I extend my hand.
    Already was the world in every part
    Pregnant with the true creed, disseminated
    By messengers of the eternal kingdom;
    And thy assertion, spoken of above,
    With the new preachers was in unison;
    Whence I to visit them the custom took.
    Then they became so holy in my sight,
    That, when Domitian persecuted them,
    Not without tears of mine were their laments;
    And all the while that I on earth remained,
    Them I befriended, and their upright customs
    Made me disparage all the other sects.
    And ere I led the Greeks unto the rivers
    Of Thebes, in poetry, I was baptized,
    But out of fear was covertly a Christian,
    For a long time professing paganism;
    And this lukewarmness caused me the fourth circle
    To circuit round more than four centuries.
    Thou, therefore, who hast raised the covering
    That hid from me whatever good I speak of,
    While in ascending we have time to spare,
    Tell me, in what place is our friend Terentius,
    Caecilius, Plautus, Varro, if thou knowest;
    Tell me if they are damned, and in what alley."
    "These, Persius and myself, and others many,"
    Replied my Leader, "with that Grecian are
    Whom more than all the rest the Muses suckled,
    In the first circle of the prison blind;
    Ofttimes we of the mountain hold discourse
    Which has our nurses ever with itself.
    Euripides is with us, Antiphon,
    Simonides, Agatho, and many other
    Greeks who of old their brows with laurel decked.
    There some of thine own people may be seen,
    Antigone, Deiphile and Argia,
    And there Ismene mournful as of old.
    There she is seen who pointed out Langia;
    There is Tiresias' daughter, and there Thetis,
    And there Deidamia with her sisters."
    Silent already were the poets both,

    Attent once more in looking round about,
    From the ascent and from the walls released;
    And four handmaidens of the day already
    Were left behind, and at the pole the fifth
    Was pointing upward still its burning horn,
    What time my Guide: "I think that tow'rds the edge
    Our dexter shoulders it behoves us turn,
    Circling the mount as we are wont to do."
    Thus in that region custom was our ensign;
    And we resumed our way with less suspicion
    For the
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