Authors: Dante
Now we came to the empty shore.
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Upon those waters no man ever sailed
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who then experienced his return.
There he girded me as pleased Another.
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What a wonder it was that the humble plant
he chose to pick sprang up at once
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in the very place where he had plucked it.
I. The arrival of a ship
II.
Casella
and his song
III. Cato’s rebuke
The sun was nearly joined to that horizon
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where the meridian circle at its zenith
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stands straight above Jerusalem,
and night, circling on the other side,
was rising from the Ganges with the Scales
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she drops when she is longer than the day,
so that, where I was,
the white and rosy cheeks of fair Aurora
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were turning golden with time’s ripening.
As yet we tarried by the seashore, like those
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who think about the way and in their hearts go on—
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while still their bodies linger.
And now, as in the haze of morning,
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Mars, low on the western stretch of ocean,
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sheds reddish light through those thick vapors,
there appeared to me—may I see it again!—
a light advancing swiftly on the sea:
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no flight can match its rapid motion.
And in the moment I had turned away
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to ask a question of my leader,
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I saw it now enlarged and brighter.
Then on either side of it appeared
a whiteness—I knew not what—and just below,
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little by little, another showed there too.
Still my master did not say a word
while the first whiteness took the shape of wings.
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Then, once he saw the nature of the steersman,
he cried: ‘Bend, bend your knees! Behold
the angel of the Lord and fold your hands in prayer.
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From now on you shall see such ministers as these.
‘Look how he scorns all human instruments
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and wants no oar, nor other sail
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beside his wings, between such distant shores.
‘Look how those wings are raised into the sky,
fanning the air with his eternal pinions
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which do not change like mortal plumage.’
Then, as the heavenly bird approached,
closer and closer, he appeared more radiant,
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and I looked down as he came shoreward
with a boat so swift and light
At the stern stood the heavenly pilot—
his mere description would bring to bliss.
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‘In exitu Isräel de Aegypto’
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they sang together with one voice,
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and went on, singing the entire psalm.
Then he blessed them with the sign of Holy Cross.
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They flung themselves upon the beach,
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and he went off as swiftly as he came.
The crowd that stayed there had the look
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of strangers to the place, gazing about
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as though encountering new things.
Having driven Capricorn down from mid-heaven,
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the sun, darting his rays in all directions,
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brought on the day with his unfailing arrows
and the new people raised their faces
toward us, saying: ‘If you know,
Then Virgil answered: ‘Perhaps you think
we are familiar with this place,
‘We came but now, a little while before you,
by another road so rough and harsh
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and as people crowd to hear the news
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around a messenger who bears an olive-branch,
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and no one minds the crush,
so all these fortunate souls
kept their eyes fastened on my face,
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as though forgetful of the road to beauty.
I saw one of them come forward
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with such affection to embrace me
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that I was moved to do the same.
Oh empty shades, except in seeming!
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Three times I clasped my hands behind him
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only to find them clasped to my own chest.
Surprise must have been painted on my face,
at which the shade smiled and drew back
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and I, pursuing him, moved forward.
Gently he requested that I stop.
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Then I knew him. And I asked him
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to stay a while and speak with me.
‘Even as I loved you in my mortal flesh,’ he said,
‘so do I love you freed from it—yes, I will stay.
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And you, what takes you on this journey?’
‘O Casella, I make this voyage to return
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another time,’ I said, ‘here where I’ve come.
To which he answered: ‘No wrong is done me
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if he, who takes up whom it pleases him and when,
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has many times denied me passage,
‘for righteous is the will that fashioned his.
It is three months now that he has taken,
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acquiescent, all who would embark.