- Page 2 and 3: This publication of The Divine Come
- Page 6 and 7: Content in fire, for that they hope
- Page 8 and 9: Revisited with joy. Love brought me
- Page 10 and 11: Round through that air with solid d
- Page 12 and 13: CANTO IV Broke the deep slumber in
- Page 14 and 15: Speaking of matters, then befitting
- Page 16 and 17: Stretch’d out in long array: so I
- Page 18 and 19: Ceaseless, accursed, heavy, and col
- Page 20 and 21: Or mitigated, or as now severe?”
- Page 22 and 23: The serpent train. Against her noug
- Page 24 and 25: Here is his shadow furious. There a
- Page 26 and 27: His mutilated speech. “Doth ever
- Page 28 and 29: Excell’d: for ‘midst the graves
- Page 30 and 31: As thou shalt tell me, why in all t
- Page 32 and 33: In malice, plund’rers, and all ro
- Page 34 and 35: To him my guide exclaim’d: “Per
- Page 36 and 37: The Centaur paus’d, near some, wh
- Page 38 and 39: My soul, disdainful and disgusted,
- Page 40 and 41: Vengeance of Heav’n! Oh! how shou
- Page 42 and 43: Shall see it) I here give thee no a
- Page 44 and 45: From the goat’s tooth. The herd o
- Page 46 and 47: Who in this torment do partake with
- Page 48 and 49: Forthwith that image vile of fraud
- Page 50 and 51: The trusted pennons loosen’d from
- Page 52 and 53: From those eternal barriers. When a
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“If thou be willing,” he replie
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CANTO XX And now the verse proceeds
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The Divine Comedy of Dante - Hell T
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From whence he standeth makes his s
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Their threaten’d vessels; so, at
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Escaping disappointed their resolve
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Was chang’d at every movement of
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His troubled forehead, and so speed
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Such blows in stormy vengeance! Who
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Two arms were made: the belly and t
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And, more than I am wont, I rein an
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Our poop we turn’d, and for the w
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Not with the Saracens or Jews (his
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Conduct him. Trust my words, for th
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Thou hast not shewn in any chasm be
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Leads me not here. True is in sport
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Stand ever in my view; and not in v
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My head was rais’d, when many lof
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Therefore, nor scornfully distort t
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With violent blow against the face
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The Divine Comedy of Dante - Hell T
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But doth all natural functions of a
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With wary step my side. I rais’d
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Of my braine, now shall men see If
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v. 90. The Monarch of sublimest son
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The original perhaps was in Boetius
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v. 109. At war ‘twixt will and wi
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that he had endured so many hardshi
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too credulous sovereign to lose his
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v. 89. With another text.] He refer
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CANTO XIX Eun. a. iii. s. i. v. 18.
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CANTO XXI v. 7. In the Venetians’
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L’elitropia, per cui possa invola
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Ecce iterum fratris, &c. Statius, T
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v. 32. Ali.] The disciple of Mohamm
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annals of the republic; before whic
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The Divine Comedy of Dante - Hell v
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Ingentem vidi regem ingentique sede
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They know, who for her sake have li
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Except his wings, between such dist
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Drives us; I to my faithful company
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Think if me elsewhere thou hast eve
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“Were Leda’s offspring now in c
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Which ofttimes pardon meriteth for
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The Divine Comedy of Dante - Purgat
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Whom the same wall and the same moa
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Who by death’s fangs were bitten,
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Harry of England, sitting there alo
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“The four resplendent stars, thou
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Slept in thee, o’er the flowery v
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Flies and advances. “Here some li
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What underneath those stones approa
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List’ning I bent my visage down:
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With Mars, I saw, and Pallas, round
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Six only of the letters, which his
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“Who for thy rise are tutoring (i
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Created for man’s use, he shapeth
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He drags you eager to him. Hence no
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Appear’d before me, down whose vi
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The Divine Comedy of Dante - Purgat
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Another name to grace him. God be w
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If on ill object bent, or through e
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By the green leaf. From whence his
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When ‘fore me in my dream a woman
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Rome’s pastor, I discern’d at o
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Till the great dower of Provence ha
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Saying, “God give you peace, my b
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As one who winks; and thereupon the
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Times of primeval innocence restor
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A crowd of spirits, silent and devo
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Of his sure comfort drew me on to c
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A corse most vilely shatter’d. No
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The secrets of heaven’s vengeance
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To medicine the wound, that healeth
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As forces credence, I devoted me Un
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Of Beatrice talk’d. “Her eyes,
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Delicious odour breath’d. A pleas
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With its first impulse circles stil
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Flam’d with more ample lustre, th
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CANTO XXX Soon as the polar light,
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Congeal’d about my bosom, turn’
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The Divine Comedy of Dante - Purgat
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CANTO XXXII Mine eyes with such an
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“A little while thou shalt be for
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Which monster made it first and nex
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The Divine Comedy of Dante - Purgat
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v. 112. My fair daughter.] Costanza
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his first marriage. This calumny is
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Lo! in such manner rime is Dantes t
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—from the rock’s low base Thus
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v. 114. The merlin.] The story of t
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v. 103. Who.] He compares the Pope,
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v. 4. The geomancer.] The geomancer
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CANTO XXI v. 26. She.] Lachesis, on
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v. 56. The Notary.] Jucopo da Lenti
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est ad vulgare prosaicum suum est);
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CANTO XXXI v. 3. With lateral edge.
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CANTO I PARADISE His glory, by whos
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From admiration deep, but now admir
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Unlocks not, surely wonder’s weap
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And I, to own myself convinc’d an
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Which to his gracious pleasure love
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Unjust, is argument for faith, and
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This treasure, such as I describe i
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Erewhile had hail’d me. Forthwith
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The living Justice, in whose breath
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So different effects flow’d from
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CANTO VIII The world was in its day
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How bitter can spring up, when swee
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When such life may attend the first
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CANTO X Looking into his first-born
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In circuit journey round the blesse
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A dame to whom none openeth pleasur
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Jocund and blythe, had at their ple
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And Agostino join me: two they were
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But, that what now appears not, may
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The better disclose his glory: when
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Who, for the love of thing that las
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His lady leave the glass. The sons
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The city’s malady hath ever sourc
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That thou mayst use thyself to own
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Have I learnt that, which if I tell
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Becoming of these signs, a little w
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And in that space so variously hath
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If thou no longer patiently abid’
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Though conquer’d, by its mercy co
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Who hath vouchsaf’d my asking, sp
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In which couldst thou have understo
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Arose and set, when I did first inh
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And with such figuring of Paradise
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With so divine a song, that fancy
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As to outstrip feet younger than th
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This light from many a star visits
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Good, inasmuch as we perceive the g
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Left by his reason free, and variab
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Its amorous dalliance with my lady
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But in the sensible world such diff
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For I have mark’d it, where all t
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The sheep, meanwhile, poor witless
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Excess of light, however pure. I lo
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From the redundant petals, streamin
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The Divine Comedy of Dante - Paradi
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Must linger yet below. Now raise th
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Wouldst after all he hath beheld, p
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In even motion, by the Love impell
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CANTO III v. 16. Delusion.] “An e
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v. 75. In its next bearer’s gripe
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of his kingdom. v. 99. How bitter c
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v. 11. Oblique.] The zodiac. v. 25.
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v. 40. The wave.] Chiascio, a strea
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anches of sacred and profane erudit
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v. 98. When.] When the women were n
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compartment of the city called Borg
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which the French were defeated by t
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CANTO XXII v. 14. The vengeance.] B
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1486. Fol. v. 74. His anthem.] Psal
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CANTO XXVIII v. 36. Heav’n, and a
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v. 141. He.] Pope Clement V. See Ca
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1277. Pope John XXI. dies. Par. C.