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    Canto XXIII

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    The while among the verdant leaves mine eyes
    I riveted, as he is wont to do
    Who wastes his life pursuing little birds,
    My more than Father said unto me: "Son,
    Come now; because the time that is ordained us
    More usefully should be apportioned out."
    I turned my face and no less soon my steps
    Unto the Sages, who were speaking so
    They made the going of no cost to me;
    And lo! were heard a song and a lament,
    "Labia mea, Domine," in fashion
    Such that delight and dolence it brought forth.
    "O my sweet Father, what is this I hear?"
    Began I; and he answered: "Shades that go
    Perhaps the knot unloosing of their debt."
    In the same way that thoughtful pilgrims do,
    Who, unknown people on the road o'ertaking,
    Turn themselves round to them, and do not stop,
    Even thus, behind us with a swifter motion
    Coming and passing onward, gazed upon us
    A crowd of spirits silent and devout.
    Each in his eyes was dark and cavernous,
    Pallid in face, and so emaciate
    That from the bones the skin did shape itself.
    I do not think that so to merest rind
    Could Erisichthon have been withered up
    By famine, when most fear he had of it.
    Thinking within myself I said: "Behold,
    This is the folk who lost Jerusalem,
    When Mary made a prey of her own son."
    Their sockets were like rings without the gems;
    Whoever in the face of men reads 'omo'
    Might well in these have recognised the 'm.'
    Who would believe the odour of an apple,
    Begetting longing, could consume them so,
    And that of water, without knowing how?
    I still was wondering what so famished them,
    For the occasion not yet manifest
    Of their emaciation and sad squalor;
    And lo! from out the hollow of his head
    His eyes a shade turned on me, and looked keenly;
    Then cried aloud: "What grace to me is this?"
    Never should I have known him by his look;
    But in his voice was evident to me
    That which his aspect had suppressed within it.
    This spark within me wholly re-enkindled
    My recognition of his altered face,
    And I recalled the features of Forese.
    "Ah, do not look at this dry leprosy,"
    Entreated he, "which doth my skin discolour,
    Nor at default of flesh that I may have;
    But tell me truth of thee, and who are those
    Two souls, that yonder make for thee an escort;

    Do not delay in speaking unto me."
    "That face of thine, which dead I once bewept,
    Gives me for weeping now no lesser grief,"
    I answered him, "beholding it so changed!
    But tell me, for God's sake, what thus denudes you?
    Make me not speak while I am marvelling,
    For ill speaks he who's full of other longings."
    And he to me: "From the eternal council
    Falls power into the water and the tree
    Behind us left, whereby I grow so thin.
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