Stories from the Italian Poets: with Lives of the Writers, Volume 1 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 338 pages of information about Stories from the Italian Poets.

Stories from the Italian Poets: with Lives of the Writers, Volume 1 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 338 pages of information about Stories from the Italian Poets.

“I am the sweet Syren,” she said, “who made the mariners turn pale for pleasure in the sea.  I drew Ulysses out of his course with my song; and he that harbours with me once, rarely departs ever, so well I pay him for what he abandons.”

Her lips were not yet closed, when a lady of holy and earliest countenance came up to shame her.  “O Virgil!” she cried angrily, “who is this?” Virgil approached, with his eyes fixed on the lady; and the lady tore away the garments of the woman, and spewed her to be a creature so loathly, that the sleeper awoke with the horror.[36]

Virgil said, “I have called thee three times to no purpose.  Let us move, and find the place at which we are to go higher.”

It was broad day, with a sun that came warm on the shoulders; and Dante was proceeding with his companion, when the softest voice they ever heard directed them where to ascend, and they found an angel with them, who pointed his swan-like wings upward, and then flapped them against the pilgrims, taking away the fourth letter from the forehead of Dante.  “Blessed are they that mourn,” said the angel, “for they shall be comforted.”

The pilgrims ascended into the fifth circle, and beheld the expiators of Avarice grovelling on the ground, and exclaiming, as loud as they could for the tears that choked them, “My soul hath cleaved to the dust.”  Dante spoke to one, who turned out to be Pope Adrian the Fifth.  The poet fell on his knees; but Adrian bade him arise and err not.  “I am no longer,” said he, “spouse of the Church, here; but fellow-servant with thee and with all others.  Go thy ways, and delay not the time of my deliverance.”

The pilgrims moving onward, Dante heard a spirit exclaim, in the struggling tones of a woman in child-bed, “O blessed Virgin!  That was a poor roof thou hadst when thou wast delivered of thy sacred burden.  O good Fabricius!  Virtue with poverty was thy choice, and not vice with riches.”  And then it told the story of Nicholas, who, hearing that a father was about to sacrifice the honour of his three daughters for want of money, threw bags of it in at his window, containing portions for them all.

Dante earnestly addressed this spirit to know who he was; and the spirit said it would tell him, not for the sake of help, for which it looked elsewhere, but because of the shining grace that was in his questioner, though yet alive.

“I was root,” said the spirit, “of that evil plant which overshadows all Christendom to such little profit.  Hugh Capet was I, ancestor of the Philips and Louises of France, offspring of a butcher of Paris, when the old race of kings was worn out.[37] We began by seizing the government in Paris; then plundered in Provence; then, to make amends, laid hold of Poitou, Normandy, and Gascony; then, still to make amends, put Conradin to death and seized Naples; then, always to make amends, gave Saint Aquinas his dismissal to Heaven by poison.  I see the time

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Stories from the Italian Poets: with Lives of the Writers, Volume 1 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.