Terrace 3: Wrath
Through the smoke, one begins to hear the 'Agnus
Dei', "Oh, lamb of God, who takes all sins away" coming from all
sides. These are the voices of the penitent who are being purged of
their Wrath on the third terrace and who are hidden in the smoke.
They ask travellers to be mentioned in the prayers of those who
pass.
The way up out of the third terrace lies
opposite that up onto the third terrace.
Going onward through the smoke the sun
eventually becomes visible again.
Dante sees visions of examples of anger in the
clearing smoke. "Born of Light, by Heavenly Will, Its power
descends upon us. She who sings, Impious, in likeness of the bird
which most For sorrow in its song finds ecstasy, First my
imagination held: so still My mind was mirrored on itself that
naught Intruded inward to divert its thought. Next after Philomela
came a sight Of one who hung in torment crucified, Yet haughty and
dispiteous while he died, While round him grouped Ahasuerus stood,
Esther, and Mordicai called the Good, Who was of speech unbending.
As will burst A bubble, failing of its watery frame, So passed this
vision. In its place there came A maiden, weeping anguished tears,
who said: 'O Queen, why hast thou made this choice accurst,
Wrath-blinded? Not to lose Lavinia, Thy own life hast thou lost; so
losing me. Mine is the grief, the bitter grief for thee. Oh,
Mother, for thy ruin must I weep Much more than for
another's.'"
Some of the light which seems to come from the
sun in fact comes from an angel, who guards the stair upward, and
who will point it out to travellers. His glory makes it impossible
for mortals to look at him. The angel removed a third 'P' from
Dante's forehead, sweeping his wings over Dante's face to do so,
saying "Beati Pacifici who from evil wrath are free."
The stair upwards from the third terrace is wide
enough for two to walk abreast.