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Authors: Dante

BOOK: Paradiso
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PARADISO XXIII

               
As the bird among the leafy branches that she loves,   

   

               
perched on the nest with her sweet brood   

3
             
all through the night, which keeps things veiled from us,   

               
who in her longing to look upon their eyes and beaks   

               
and to find the food to nourish them—

6
             
a task, though difficult, that gives her joy—

               
now, on an open bough, anticipates that time   

               
and, in her ardent expectation of the sun,

9
             
watches intently for the dawn to break,   

               
so was my lady, erect and vigilant,   

               
seeking out the region of the sky   

12
           
in which the sun reveals less haste.   

               
I, therefore, seeing her suspended, wistful,   

               
became as one who, filled with longing,

15
           
finds satisfaction in his hope.

               
But time was short between one moment and the next,

               
I mean between my expectation and the sight

18
           
of the sky turned more and more resplendent.

               
And Beatrice said: ‘Behold the hosts   

               
of Christ in triumph and all the fruit   

21
           
gathered from the wheeling of these spheres!’

               
It seemed to me her face was all aflame,   

               
her eyes so full of gladness

24
           
that I must leave that moment undescribed.   

               
As, on clear nights when the moon is full,   

   

               
Trivia smiles among the eternal nymphs

27
           
that deck the sky through all its depths,

               
I saw, above the many thousand lamps,

               
a Sun that kindled each and every one

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as ours lights up the sights we see above us,

               
and through that living light poured down   

               
a shining substance. It blazed so bright

33
           
into my eyes that I could not sustain it.

               
O Beatrice, my sweet belovèd guide!   

               
To me she said: ‘What overwhelms you   

36
           
is a force against which there is no defense.

               
‘Here is the Wisdom and the Power that repaired   

               
the roads connecting Heaven and the earth

39
           
that had so long been yearned for and desired.’   

               
As fire breaks from a cloud,   

               
swelling till it finds no room there,

42
           
and, against its nature, falls to earth,

               
just so my mind, grown greater at that feast,   

               
burst forth, transported from itself,

45
           
and now cannot recall what it became.   

               
‘Open your eyes and see me as I am.   

               
The things that you have witnessed

48
           
have given you the strength to bear my smile.’

               
I was like a man who finds himself awakened   

               
from a dream that has faded and who strives   

51
           
in vain to bring it back to mind

               
when I heard this invitation, deserving   

               
of such gratitude as can never be erased

54
           
from the book that registers the past.   

               
If at this moment all the tongues   

   

               
that Polyhymnia and her sisters nurtured   

57
           
with their sweetest, richest milk

               
should sound to aid me now, their song could not attain

               
one-thousandth of the truth in singing of that holy smile

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and how it made her holy visage radiant.

               
And so, in representing Paradise,   

   

               
the sacred poem must make its leap across,

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as does a man who finds his path cut off.

               
But considering the heavy theme   

               
and the mortal shoulder it weighs down,

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no one would cast blame if it trembled with its load.

               
This is no easy voyage for a little bark,   

   

               
this stretch of sea the daring prow now cleaves,

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nor for a pilot who would spare himself.

               
‘Why does my face arouse you so to love   

               
you do not turn to see the lovely garden   

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now blossoming beneath the rays of Christ?

               
‘There is the rose in which the Word of God   

               
was turned to flesh. There are the lilies

75
           
for whose fragrance the right way was chosen.’

               
Beatrice said these words. And I, all eager

               
to follow her instruction, again resumed

78
           
the struggle, despite my feeble power of sight.   

               
As, lit by the sun’s rays streaming through broken clouds,   

               
my eyes, sheltered by the shade,

81
           
once saw a field of flowers,

               
so now I saw a many-splendored throng   

               
illuminated from above by blazing rays,

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but could not see the source of all that brightness.

               
O gracious Power, who did thus imprint them!   

               
You rose to more exalted heights to grant

87
           
their sight to eyes not ready to behold you.

               
The name of the fair flower I invoke   

               
each morning and at evening time, enthralled my mind

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as I gazed at the brightest of the flames.   

               
When the quality and magnitude of the living star,   

               
who surpasses up above as she surpassed below,

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were painted on my eyes,   

               
there descended through the sky a torch that,

               
circling, took on the likeness of a crown.   

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It encircled her and wheeled around her.

               
The sweetest melody, heard here below,   

               
that most attracts our souls

99
           
would seem a burst of cloud-torn thunder

               
compared with the reverberation of that lyre   

               
with which the lovely sapphire that so ensapphires

102
         
the brightest heaven was encrowned.

               
‘I am angelic love and I encircle   

               
the exalted joy breathed from the womb   

105
         
that was the dwelling place of our desire,

               
‘and I shall circle you, Lady of Heaven,

               
until you follow your Son to the highest sphere,   

108
         
making it the more divine because you enter.’

               
Thus that circling music, sealing itself,

               
came to its conclusion, while all the other lights   

111
         
made Mary’s name resound.

               
The royal mantle of the universal turning spheres,   

   

               
which most burns and is most quickened

114
         
in the breath of God and in His works,

               
was, at its inner boundary,   

               
so very far above us that as yet,

117
         
from where I was, it was well beyond my seeing,

               
so that my eyes had not the power

               
to fasten on the crown-tipped flame

120
         
that rose along the path left by her sowing.   

               
And, like a baby reaching out its arms   

               
to
mamma
after it has drunk her milk,

123
         
its inner impulse kindled into outward flame,

               
all these white splendors were reaching upward

               
with their fiery tips, so that their deep affection

126
         
for Mary was made clear to me.

               
Then they remained there in my sight,

               
singing
Regina celi
with such sweetness   

129
         
that my feeling of delight has never left me.

               
Oh, how great is the abundance   

   

               
that is stored in granaries so rich above,

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that down on earth were fields ripe for the sowing!   

               
There they live, rejoicing in the treasure   

   

               
they gained with tears of exile,

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in Babylon, where they spurned the gold.

               
Beneath the exalted Son of God and Mary,   

               
up there he triumphs in his victory,

               
with souls of the covenants old and new,

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the one who holds the keys to such great glory.

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