Book Name: The Divine Comedy
Writer: Dante Alighieri
Having a place in the everlasting organization of the incredible works of writing, Dante Alighieri’s wonderful artful culmination, The Divine Comedy, is a moving human dramatization, an exceptional visionary excursion through the boundless torment of Hell, up the challenging inclines of Purgatory, and on to the magnificent domain of Paradise — the circle of all inclusive concordance and interminable salvation.
Upon this excursion, whence thou givest him vaunt,
Things did he hear, which the event were
Both of his triumph and the ecclesiastical mantle.
Yonder went thereafter the Chosen Vessel,
To bring back solace thus unto that Faith,
Which of salvation’s way is the start.
Be that as it may, I, why yonder come, or who surrenders it?
I not Aenas am, I am not Paul,
Nor I, nor others, think me deserving of it.
Along these lines, on the off chance that I surrender to come,
I dread the coming might be stupid;
Thou’rt shrewd, and knowest better than I talk.”
Furthermore, as he may be, who unwills what he willed,
Also, by new musings doth his aim change,
So that from his plan he very pulls back,
Such I became, upon that dim slope,
Since, in intuition, I expended the emprise,
Which was so immediate at the outset. 28
“On the off chance that I have well thy language comprehended,”
Answered that shade of the Magnanimous,
“Thy soul attainted is with weakness,
Which commonly a man burdens in this way,
It diverts him once more from regarded endeavor,
As bogus sight doth a brute, when he is timid.
That thou mayst free thee from this dread,
I’ll explain to thee why I came, and what I heard
At the principal second when I lamented for thee.
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