The quoted scene defines the upper mountain as a realm not governed by ordinary perturbations; its only true tremor comes when a soul has been cleansed enough to rise.
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Tremor
A transcript-matched topic anchored by excerpts such as "...his feet. Below that point, there may be small or ample tremors. But here above, I know not why. No one concealed in earth..."
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"...his feet. Below that point, there may be small or ample tremors. But here above, I know not why. No one concealed in earth..."
"For it only trembles here when some soul feels it's cleansed, so that it rises or stirs to climb on high, and that shall..."
Relevant Lectures And Readings
The lecture begins with Augustine's dusty human nature and ends with Virgil fleeing the proof that Dante's love is stronger than obedience.
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