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Authors: Dante

BOOK: Paradiso
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‘But through the fault of its own doing

               
it was expelled from Eden

39
           
because it turned away from truth and life.   

               
‘If, then, the penalty exacted by the cross

               
is measured by the nature He assumed,

42
           
no other ever stung so justly.

               
‘Yet it is also true that there was never done

               
so great an outrage with regard to Him who suffered,

45
           
having taken on that nature.

               
‘From a single act, then, came diverse effects,   

               
for the same death delighted God as well as Jews.

48
           
Because of it earth quaked and Heaven opened.

               
‘No longer, from now on, should it seem puzzling   

               
when you hear it said that a just vengeance

51
           
was afterward avenged in a just court.

               
‘But now I see your mind entangled,   

   

               
by one thought and another in a knot

54
           
from which, eager, it waits to be untied:

               
‘You say, “I follow closely what I hear,

               
but why God wanted this to be the very way

57
           
for our redemption is obscure to me.”   

               
‘The reason for this decree, brother, lies buried,

               
hidden from the eyes of all

60
           
whose minds have not been ripened in the flame of love.

               
‘Nonetheless, since so many strive to hit this mark,

               
while so few can even see it, I shall explain

63
           
why this was the most fitting choice.

               
‘Spurning any kind of envy, Divine Goodness,   

   

               
burning within, so sparkles

66
           
that it unfolds Eternal Beauty.

               
‘That which, unmediated, derives from it   

               
is thus without an end, because its imprint,   

69
           
once stamped, can never wear away.

               
‘That which, unmediated, rains down from it

               
is wholly free, because it is not subject

72
           
to the influence of things more recent,   

               
‘is more like that Goodness and thus more pleases Him.

               
The holy ardor that irradiates all things

75
           
shines brightest in what most resembles it.

               
‘In all these gifts the human creature

               
is advantaged, but, if a single gift is lacking,

78
           
he must fall from his exalted state.

               
‘Sin alone is what enslaves him,

               
making him unlike the highest good

81
           
so that he is illumined by its light but little,

               
‘never returning to his privilege

               
unless he fills the void created by his fault

84
           
with penalties fit for his sinful pleasure.

               
‘Your nature, when it sinned
in toto
   

               
in its seed, was separated

87
           
from these privileges and from its Eden.

               
‘Nor could they be recovered—

               
if you consider closely—by any other recourse

90
           
except to ford one of these crossings:

               
‘either that God, in His own clemency,

               
had pardoned, or that man, of himself,

93
           
had given satisfaction for his foolish pride.

               
‘Now fix your eyes deep in the abyss

               
of the everlasting will of God

96
           
and give your strict attention to my words.

               
‘With his limitations, man could never offer   

               
satisfaction, for he could not descend as deep

99
           
into humility, by latter-day obedience,

               
‘as, by disobeying, he had thought to rise.

               
And this is the reason for which he was denied

102
         
the power of giving satisfaction on his own.

               
‘Thus it was necessary that God in His own ways   

               
restore man to the fullness of his life—

105
         
by the one way, that is, or by both of them.

               
‘But since the deed more gratifies the doer

               
the more it shows the goodness

108
         
of the heart from which it springs,

               
‘divine goodness, which puts its imprint

               
on the world, was pleased to proceed

111
         
in both its ways to raise you up again.

               
‘Nor between the last night and the first day   

               
was, or will there be, a deed performed—in the first way

114
         
or the second—so sublime or generous.

               
‘More bountiful was God when He gave Himself,

               
enabling man to rise again, than if,

117
         
in His sole clemency, he had simply pardoned.

               
‘All other means fell short of justice

               
save that the Son of God

120
         
should humble Himself by becoming flesh.

               
‘Now, to satisfy each of your desires,

               
I go back to clarify one point,

123
         
that you may understand it just as I do.

               
‘You say: “I see water, I see fire, air,   

   

               
and earth—and all their combinations—

126
         
become corrupted, lasting only briefly.

               
‘ “And yet these things were created,

               
so that, if what was said is true,

129
         
they should be proof against corruption.”

               
‘The angels, brother, and this pure country

               
where you are may be said to have been created

132
         
just as they are and in their entire being,

               
‘but those elements that have been named

               
and those other things made from them

135
         
take their form from a created power.

               
‘Created was the matter that is in them,

               
created, the informing power

138
         
in these stars that wheel about them.

               
‘The soul of every beast and every plant   

               
is drawn from a complex of potentials

141
         
by the shining and the motion of the holy lights.

               
‘But supreme goodness breathes life in you,

               
unmediated, and He so enamors your soul

144
         
of Himself that it desires Him forever after.

               
‘From this you may, in consequence, deduce   

               
your resurrection, if you but recall

               
how then your flesh was made

148
         
in the making of the first two parents.’

OUTLINE: PARADISO VIII

VENUS

1–12
   
Venereal preamble: what the ancient pagans used to believe about this planet
(“veneral trinity”)
;
Dido
13–15
   
the ascent to Venus accomplished without awareness
16–21
   
double simile: as a spark within a flame and as one voice is distinguished from another because it varies its note, so the lights of souls stood out from the light of Venus
22–27
   
pseudo-simile: lightning or windstorm, to one who had seen these movements, would seem slow compared to them;
28–30
   
those in front sing “Osanna” (the first song of the canto)
31–32
   
one of the saved
[Charles Martel]
approaches to speak:
33–39
   
“We revolve here with the order of angels known as
‘Principalities,’
to whom you once referred as
‘Thrones’
40–42
   
Dante looks reverently at Beatrice; with her permission
43–48
   
he turns his eyes back to Charles: “Who are you?”
49–84
   
Charles’s story:
49–51
   
I died young (twenty-four years old in 1295), and this will cause the world more woe than had I not
52–54
   
the joy that swathes me makes me like a silkworm
55–57
   
you (Dante) loved me much; had I lived, you would have enjoyed the rewards of that love
58–75
   
the realms deprived of his guidance by his death:
Provence
, the kingdom of
Naples
,
Hungary
76–84
   
Charles castigates his brother
Robert
’s future rule
85–90
   
Dante takes joy in seeing his joy seen by Charles in God
91–93
   
Dante continues by wondering, on the basis of vv. 82–83, how a good father can have a bad son
94–96
   
Charles agrees to deal with Dante’s quandary:
97–111
   
“God’s providence is present in the heavenly bodies”
112–114
   
Charles: “is that clear?” Dante: “Yes”
115–135
   
Charles continues: “humans have diverse dispositions, as
[Aristotle]
says (thus
Solon
,
Xerxes
,
Melchizedek
,
[Daedalus]
,
[Icarus]
); but Nature does not favor one family over another:
Esau, Jacob
;
Romulus
”;
136–138
   
Charles now offers a corollary as a “cloak”:
139–148
   
the world should not insist on forcing humans to take on roles that do not fit their natures.

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