Dante Revisited

Dante Revisited

bookmark
Tue 24 Mar 2020 10:21 AM

 

Dante Alighieri (1265-1321)

 

 

 

I entered my old home like one entranced.

Quaresima was almost ticked away.

“What Lenten diet, how much have they renounced?”

 

I wondered, “they’ve even given up day-

light.” For the streets were bare of men and women,

save one who stood before me in the way.

 

“You don’t know me,” he said, “but I was in

your trade. Like you, I’m Florentine;

like you I made a living by the pen,

 

and interviewed the offspring of your clan

in order to write you a biography.

That was thirty years down the line

 

from when you walked, so you didn’t see

the Death of ‘48, when buboes

boiled necks and armpits at the slightest flea.

 

But time passes, we forget, and the world’s harbours

bring something new in. Yesterday it was SARS.

Diseases live off us like dried tubers.”

 

“I’ve seen epidemics leave their scars,”

I said, “but one of them must have been the last?

Not a soul I saw coming through the Field of Mars.”

 

“Can this judgement be final when you cast

no shadow?” he returned. “Your body isn’t reeled

back into the valley of its past.

 

Twelve years ago your exile was repealed,

and in Florence we’ve been waiting for a good

moment to show you how it’s swelled

 

and flourished against what you thought all the odds.”

He started garbling. “Now you can see what came after

you without losing it in the crowds.”

 

“Where are the people?” I shouted. “Where’s the craft, the

trade, the market stalls, the pageants?

Even in my bloody days you heard laughter.”

 

He shifted. “I was glad she had a chance

to breathe,” he said, “but I admit, this isn’t breathing,

more the fitful sleep of fever patients.”

 

His voice poured water on my anger, and my seething

gave way to sadness. I let myself lean

on my companion, and saw he too was grieving.

 

“Enough,” I said. “I’ve been

Virgilled round the kingdom of the dead,

and this is almost worse. The air smells clean

 

but I’ll come back when it isn’t smogged with dread.

I’ll pray for Florence from the world I’m walking.”

My guide inclined his laurel-girdled head

 

and vanished into the first days of spring.

Related articles

ART + CULTURE

Pre-Raphaelites: Modern Renaissance

Some pre-episode insights, in preparation for the live-streamed exhibition visit on April 8 with co-curator Peter Trippi

ART + CULTURE

Museo Novecento opens doors to young artists and curators

The WONDERFUL! Art Research Program is sponsored by philanthropist Maria Manetti Shrem.

ART + CULTURE

Anna Grigorievna Snitkina: the second Mrs Dostoevsky

The writerly couple lived in Florence in the 1860s on the run from creditors.

LIGHT MODE
DARK MODE