Divine Comedy, Cary's Translation, Complete eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 602 pages of information about Divine Comedy, Cary's Translation, Complete.

Divine Comedy, Cary's Translation, Complete eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 602 pages of information about Divine Comedy, Cary's Translation, Complete.
     With the ten demons on our way we went;
Ah fearful company! but in the church
With saints, with gluttons at the tavern’s mess. 
     Still earnest on the pitch I gaz’d, to mark
All things whate’er the chasm contain’d, and those
Who burn’d within.  As dolphins, that, in sign
To mariners, heave high their arched backs,
That thence forewarn’d they may advise to save
Their threaten’d vessels; so, at intervals,
To ease the pain his back some sinner show’d,
Then hid more nimbly than the lightning glance. 
     E’en as the frogs, that of a wat’ry moat
Stand at the brink, with the jaws only out,
Their feet and of the trunk all else concealed,
Thus on each part the sinners stood, but soon
As Barbariccia was at hand, so they
Drew back under the wave.  I saw, and yet
My heart doth stagger, one, that waited thus,
As it befalls that oft one frog remains,
While the next springs away:  and Graffiacan,
Who of the fiends was nearest, grappling seiz’d
His clotted locks, and dragg’d him sprawling up,
That he appear’d to me an otter.  Each
Already by their names I knew, so well
When they were chosen, I observ’d, and mark’d
How one the other call’d.  “O Rubicant! 
See that his hide thou with thy talons flay,”
Shouted together all the cursed crew. 
     Then I:  “Inform thee, master! if thou may,
What wretched soul is this, on whom their hand
His foes have laid.”  My leader to his side
Approach’d, and whence he came inquir’d, to whom
Was answer’d thus:  “Born in Navarre’s domain
My mother plac’d me in a lord’s retinue,
For she had borne me to a losel vile,
A spendthrift of his substance and himself. 
The good king Thibault after that I serv’d,
To peculating here my thoughts were turn’d,
Whereof I give account in this dire heat.” 
     Straight Ciriatto, from whose mouth a tusk
Issued on either side, as from a boar,
Ript him with one of these.  ’Twixt evil claws
The mouse had fall’n:  but Barbariccia cried,
Seizing him with both arms:  “Stand thou apart,
While I do fix him on my prong transpierc’d.” 
Then added, turning to my guide his face,
“Inquire of him, if more thou wish to learn,
Ere he again be rent.”  My leader thus: 
“Then tell us of the partners in thy guilt;
Knowest thou any sprung of Latian land
Under the tar?”—­“I parted,” he replied,
“But now from one, who sojourn’d not far thence;
So were I under shelter now with him! 
Nor hook nor talon then should scare me more.”—. 
     “Too long we suffer,” Libicocco cried,
Then, darting forth a prong, seiz’d on his arm,
And mangled bore away the sinewy part. 
Him Draghinazzo by his thighs beneath
Would next have caught, whence angrily their chief,
Turning on all sides round, with threat’ning brow
Restrain’d them.  When their strife a little ceas’d,
Of him, who yet was gazing on his wound,
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Divine Comedy, Cary's Translation, Complete from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.