Inferno Canto 19
Translated by Robert Hollander
1 O Simon Magus! O wretches of his band,
2 greedy for gold and silver,
3 who prostitute the things of God
4 that should be brides of goodness!
5 Now must the trumpet sound for you,
6 because your place is there in that third ditch.
7 We had come to where the next tomb lay,
8 having climbed to the point upon the ridge
9 that overlooks the middle of the trench.
10 O Supreme Wisdom, what great art you show
11 in Heaven, on earth, and in the evil world,
12 and what true justice does your power dispense!
13 Along the sides and bottom I could see
14 the livid stone was pierced with holes,
15 all round and of a single size.
16 They seemed to me as wide and deep
17 as those in my beautiful Saint John
18 made for the priests to baptize in,
19 one of which, not many years ago,
20 I broke to save one nearly drowned in it --
21 and let this be my seal, to undeceive all men.
22 From the mouth of each stuck out
23 a sinner's feet and legs up to the thighs
24 while all the rest stayed in the hole.
25 They all had both their soles on fire.
26 It made their knee-joints writhe so hard
27 they would have severed twisted vines or ropes.
28 As flames move only on the surface
29 of oily matter caught on fire,
30 so these flames flickered heel to toe.
31 'Who is that, master, who in his torment
32 wriggles more than any of his fellows
33 and is licked by redder flames?'
34 And he: 'If you like, I'll take you down
35 along the lower bank and you will learn,
36 from him, his life and his misdeeds.'
37 And I: 'Whatever pleases you is my desire.
38 You are my lord and know I do your will.
39 You know, too, what I leave unsaid.'
40 Then we came to the fourth embankment,
41 turned and descended on our left
42 into a narrow bottom pierced with holes.
43 The good master clasped me to his side
44 and did not set me down until we came
45 to the pit of one lamenting with his shanks.
46 'Whatever you are, with your upper parts below,
47 planted like a post, you wretched soul,'
48 said I, 'come out with something, if you can.'
49 I stood there like a friar who confesses
50 a treacherous assassin. Once fixed in place,
51 he calls the friar back to stay his death.
52 And he cried out: 'Is that you already,
53 are you here already, Boniface?
54 By several years the writing lied to me.
55 'Are you so swiftly sated with those profits
56 for which you did not fear to take by guile
57 the beautiful Lady and to do her outrage?'
58 I became like those who stand there mocked,
59 not comprehending what is said to them,
60 and thus not knowing what to say in turn.
61 Then Virgil said: 'Tell him right away,
62 "I'm not the one, I'm not the one you think."'
63 I gave the answer I was told to give.
64 At that the spirit's feet began to writhe.
65 Then, sighing, with a plaintive voice, he said:
66 'What is it then you want from me?
67 'If you are so keen to learn my name
68 that you descended from the bank for it,
69 know that I was cloaked in the great mantle.
70 'But in truth I was a son of the she-bear
71 and so avid was I to advance my cubs
72 I filled my purse as now I fill this hole.
73 'Beneath my head are crushed the others
74 who practiced simony before me,
75 now flattened into fissures in the rock.
76 'In turn I, too, shall be thrust lower down
77 as soon as he arrives whom I mistook you for
78 when I called out my hasty question.
79 'But the time I've already roasted my feet,
80 upside down here, is already longer
81 than he'll be planted with his feet on fire.
82 'For after him shall come a lawless shepherd
83 from the west, one even fouler in his deeds,
84 fit to be the cover over him and me.
85 'A new Jason shall he be, the one of whom
86 we read in Maccabees, and even as the king indulged
87 Jason, so the king of France shall deal with him.'
88 I do not know if then I was too bold
89 when I answered him in just this strain:
90 'Please tell me, how much treasure
91 'did our Lord insist on from Saint Peter
92 before He gave the keys into his keeping?
93 Surely He asked no more than "Follow me,"
94 'nor did Peter, or the others, take gold or silver
95 from Matthias when he was picked by lot
96 to fill the place lost by the guilty soul.
97 'Stay there then, for you are justly punished,
98 guarding well those gains, ill-gotten,
99 that made you boldly take your stand against King Charles.
100 'And were it not that I am still restrained
101 by the reverence I owe the keys supreme,
102 which once you held in the happy life above,
103 'I would resort to even harsher words
104 because your avarice afflicts the world,
105 trampling down the good and raising up the wicked.
106 'Shepherds like you the Evangelist had in mind
107 when he saw the one that sits upon the waters
108 committing fornication with the kings,
109 'she that was born with seven heads
110 and from ten horns derived her strength
111 so long as virtue pleased her bridegroom.
112 'You have wrought yourselves a god of gold and silver.
113 How then do you differ from those who worship idols
114 except they worship one and you a hundred?
115 'Ah, Constantine, to what evil you gave birth,
116 not by your conversion, but by the dowry
117 that the first rich Father had from you!'
118 And while I sang such notes to him,
119 whether gnawed by anger or by conscience,
120 he kicked out hard with both his feet.
121 Truly I believe this pleased my leader,
122 he listened with a look of such contentment
123 to the sound of the truthful words I spoke.
124 Therefore, he caught me in his arms
125 and, when he had me all upon his breast,
126 remounted by the path he had descended,
127 nor did he tire of holding me so close
128 but bore me to the summit of the arch
129 that crosses from the fourth dike to the fifth.
130 Here gently he set down his burden,
131 gently on account of the steep, rough ridge
132 that would have made hard going for a goat.
133 And there, before me, another valley opened.