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    Circles of Hell

    Page 5
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      And I am more a giant (to compare)

      than any giant measured to his arm.

      So now you’ll see how huge the whole must be,

      when viewed in fit proportion to that limb.

      If, once, he was as lovely as now vile,

      when first he raised his brow against his maker,

      then truly grief must all proceed from him.

      How great a wonder it now seemed to me

      to see three faces on a single head!

      The forward face was brilliant vermilion.

      The other two attached themselves to that

      along each shoulder on the central point,

      and joined together at the crest of hair.

      The rightward face was whitish, dirty yellow.

      The left in colour had the tint of those

      beyond the source from which the Nile first swells.

      Behind each face there issued two great vanes,

      all six proportioned to a fowl like this.

      I never saw such size in ocean sails.

      Not feathered as a bird’s wings are, bat-like

      and leathery, each fanned away the air,

      so three unchanging winds moved out from him,

      Cocytus being frozen hard by these.

      He wept from all six eyes. And down each chin

      both tears and bloody slobber slowly ran.

      In every mouth he mangled with his teeth

      (as flax combs do) a single sinning soul,

      but brought this agony to three at once.

      Such biting, though, affects the soul in front

      as nothing to the scratching he received.

      His spine at times showed starkly, bare of skin.

      ‘That one up there, condemned to greater pain,

      is Judas Iscariot,’ my teacher said,

      ‘his head inside, his feet out, wriggling hard.

      The other two, their heads hung down below,

      are Brutus, dangling from the jet black snout

      (look how he writhes there, uttering not a word!),

      the other Cassius with his burly look.

      But night ascends once more. And now it’s time

      for us to quit this hole. We’ve seen it all.’

      As he desired, I clung around his neck.

      With purpose, he selected time and place

      and, when the wings had opened to the full,

      he took a handhold on the furry sides,

      and then, from tuft to tuft, he travelled down

      between the shaggy pelt and frozen crust.

      But then, arriving where the thigh bone turns

      (the hips extended to their widest there),

      my leader, with the utmost stress and strain,

      swivelled his head to where his shanks had been

      and clutched the pelt like someone on a climb,

      so now I thought: ‘We’re heading back to Hell.’

      ‘Take care,’ my teacher said. ‘By steps like these,’

      breathless and panting, seemingly all-in,

      ‘we need to take our leave of so much ill.’

      Then through a fissure in that rock he passed

      and set me down to perch there on its rim.

      After, he stretched his careful stride towards me.

      Raising my eyes, I thought that I should see

      Lucifer where I, just now, had left him,

      but saw instead his legs held upwards there.

      If I was struggling then to understand,

      let other dimwits think how they’d have failed

      to see what point it was that I now passed.

      ‘Up on your feet!’ my teacher ordered me.

      ‘The way is long, the road is cruelly hard.

      The sun is at the morning bell already.’

      This was no stroll, where now we had arrived,

      through any palace but a natural cave.

      The ground beneath was rough, the light was weak.

      ‘Before my roots are torn from this abyss,

      sir,’ I said, upright, ‘to untangle me

      from error, say a little more of this.

      Where is the ice? And why is that one there

      fixed upside down? How is it that the sun

      progressed so rapidly from evening on to day?’

      And he in answer: ‘You suppose you’re still

      on that side of the centre where I gripped

      that wormrot’s coat that pierces all the world.

      While I was still descending, you were there.

      But once I turned, you crossed, with me, the point

      to which from every part all weight drags down.

      So you stand here beneath the hemisphere

      that now is covered wholly with dry land,

      under the highest point at which there died

      the one man sinless in his birth and life.

      Your feet are set upon a little sphere

      that forms the other aspect of Giudecca.

      It’s morning here. It’s evening over there.

      The thing that made a ladder of his hair

      is still as fixed as he has always been.

      Falling from Heaven, when he reached this side,

      the lands that then spread out to southern parts

      in fear of him took on a veil of sea.

      These reached our hemisphere. Whatever now

      is visible to us – in flight perhaps from him –

      took refuge here and left an empty space.’

      There is a place (as distant from Beelzebub

      as his own tomb extends in breadth)

      known not by sight but rather by the sound

      of waters falling in a rivulet

      eroding, by the winding course it takes (which is

      not very steep), an opening in that rock.

      So now we entered on that hidden path,

      my lord and I, to move once more towards

      a shining world. We did not care to rest.

      We climbed, he going first and I behind,

      until through some small aperture I saw

      the lovely things the skies above us bear.

      Now we came out, and once more saw the stars.

      BOCCACCIO · Mrs Rosie and the Priest

      GERARD MANLEY HOPKINS · As kingfishers catch fire

      The Saga of Gunnlaug Serpent-tongue

      THOMAS DE QUINCEY · On Murder Considered as One of the Fine Arts

      FRIEDRICH NIETZSCHE · Aphorisms on Love and Hate

      JOHN RUSKIN · Traffic

      PU SONGLING · Wailing Ghosts

      JONATHAN SWIFT · A Modest Proposal

      Three Tang Dynasty Poets

      WALT WHITMAN · On the Beach at Night Alone

      KENKŌ · A Cup of Sake Beneath the Cherry Trees

      BALTASAR GRACIÁN · How to Use Your Enemies

      JOHN KEATS · The Eve of St Agnes

      THOMAS HARDY · Woman much missed

      GUY DE MAUPASSANT · Femme Fatale

      MARCO POLO · Travels in the Land of Serpents and Pearls

      SUETONIUS · Caligula

      APOLLONIUS OF RHODES · Jason and Medea

      ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON · Olalla

      KARL MARX AND FRIEDRICH ENGELS · The Communist Manifesto

      PETRONIUS · Trimalchio’s Feast

      JOHANN PETER HEBEL · How a Ghastly Story Was Brought to Light by a Common or Garden Butcher’s Dog

      HANS CHRISTIAN ANDERSEN · The Tinder Box

      RUDYARD KIPLING · The Gate of the Hundred Sorrows

      DANTE · Circles of Hell

      HENRY MAYHEW · Of Street Piemen

      HAFEZ · The nightingales are drunk

      GEOFFREY CHAUCER · The Wife of Bath

      MICHEL DE MONTAIGNE · How We Weep and Laugh at the Same Thing

      THOMAS NASHE · The Terrors of the Night

      EDGAR ALLAN POE · The Tell-Tale Heart

      MARY KINGSLEY · A Hippo Banquet

      JANE AUSTEN · The Beautifull Cassandra

      ANTON CHEKHOV · Gooseberries


      SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE · Well, they are gone, and here must I remain

      JOHANN WOLFGANG VON GOETHE · Sketchy, Doubtful, Incomplete Jottings

      CHARLES DICKENS · The Great Winglebury Duel

      HERMAN MELVILLE · The Maldive Shark

      ELIZABETH GASKELL · The Old Nurse’s Story

      NIKOLAY LESKOV · The Steel Flea

      HONORÉ DE BALZAC · The Atheist’s Mass

      CHARLOTTE PERKINS GILMAN · The Yellow Wall-Paper

      C.P. CAVAFY · Remember, Body …

      FYODOR DOSTOEVSKY · The Meek One

      GUSTAVE FLAUBERT · A Simple Heart

      NIKOLAI GOGOL · The Nose

      SAMUEL PEPYS · The Great Fire of London

      EDITH WHARTON · The Reckoning

      HENRY JAMES · The Figure in the Carpet

      WILFRED OWEN · Anthem For Doomed Youth

      WOLFGANG AMADEUS MOZART · My Dearest Father

      PLATO · Socrates’ Defence

      CHRISTINA ROSSETTI · Goblin Market

      Sindbad the Sailor

      SOPHOCLES · Antigone

      RYŪNOSUKE AKUTAGAWA · The Life of a Stupid Man

      LEO TOLSTOY · How Much Land Does A Man Need?

      GIORGIO VASARI · Leonardo da Vinci

      OSCAR WILDE · Lord Arthur Savile’s Crime

      SHEN FU · The Old Man of the Moon

      AESOP · The Dolphins, the Whales and the Gudgeon

      MATSUO BASHŌ · Lips too Chilled

      EMILY BRONTË · The Night is Darkening Round Me

      JOSEPH CONRAD · To-morrow

      RICHARD HAKLUYT · The Voyage of Sir Francis Drake Around the Whole Globe

      KATE CHOPIN · A Pair of Silk Stockings

      CHARLES DARWIN · It was snowing butterflies

      BROTHERS GRIMM · The Robber Bridegroom

      CATULLUS · I Hate and I Love

      HOMER · Circe and the Cyclops

      D. H. LAWRENCE · Il Duro

      KATHERINE MANSFIELD · Miss Brill

      OVID · The Fall of Icarus

      SAPPHO · Come Close

      IVAN TURGENEV · Kasyan from the Beautiful Lands

      VIRGIL · O Cruel Alexis

      H. G. WELLS · A Slip under the Microscope

      HERODOTUS · The Madness of Cambyses

      Speaking of Siva

      The Dhammapada

      LITTLEBLACKCLASSICS.COM

      THE BEGINNING

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      PENGUIN CLASSICS

      Published by the Penguin Group

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      This selection published in Penguin Classics 2015

      Translation copyright © Robin Kirkpatrick, 2006

      The moral right of the translator has been asserted

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      ISBN: 978-0-141-98023-2

     

     

     



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