PROLOGUE
On the 8th of April, 1492, in a bedroom
of the Carneggi Palace, about three miles from Florence,
were three men grouped about a bed whereon a fourth
lay dying.
The first of these three men, sitting
at the foot of the bed, and half hidden, that he might
conceal his tears, in the gold-brocaded curtains,
was Ermolao Barbaro, author of the treatise ‘On
Celibacy’, and of ‘Studies in Pliny’:
the year before, when he was at Rome in the capacity
of ambassador of the Florentine Republic, he had been
appointed Patriarch of Aquileia by Innocent viii.
The second, who was kneeling and holding
one hand of the dying man between his own, was Angelo
Poliziano, the Catullus of the fifteenth century,
a classic of the lighter sort, who in his Latin verses
might have been mistaken for a poet of the Augustan
age.
The third, who was standing up and
leaning against one of the twisted columns of the
bed-head, following with profound sadness the progress
of the malady which he read in the face of his departing
friend, was the famous Pico della Mirandola,
who at the age of twenty could speak twenty-two languages,
and who had offered to reply in each of these languages
to any seven hundred questions that might be put to
him by the twenty most learned men in the whole world,
if they could be assembled at Florence.
The man on the bed was Lorenzo the
Magnificent, who at the beginning of the year had
been attacked by a severe and deep-seated fever, to
which was added the gout, a hereditary ailment in
his family. He had found at last that the draughts
containing dissolved pearls which the quack doctor,
Leoni di Spoleto, prescribed for him (as
if he desired to adapt his remedies rather to the
riches of his patient than to his necessities) were
useless and unavailing, and so he had come to understand
that he must part from those gentle-tongued women
of his, those sweet-voiced poets, his palaces and
their rich hangings; therefore he had summoned to
give him absolution for his sins in a man
of less high place they might perhaps have been called
crimes the Dominican, Giralamo Francesco
Savonarola.
It was not, however, without an inward
fear, against which the praises of his friends availed
nothing, that the pleasure-seeker and usurper awaited
that severe and gloomy preacher by whose word’s
all Florence was stirred, and on whose pardon henceforth
depended all his hope far another world.
Indeed, Savonarola was one of those
men of stone, coming, like the statue of the Commandante,
to knock at the door of a Don Giovanni, and in the
midst of feast and orgy to announce that it is even
now the moment to begin to think of Heaven.
He had been barn at Ferrara, whither his family, one
of the most illustrious of Padua, had been called by
Niccolo, Marchese d’Este, and at the age of
twenty-three, summoned by an irresistible vocation,
had fled from his father’s house, and had taken
the vows in the cloister of Dominican monks at Florence.
There, where he was appointed by his superiors to
give lessons in philosophy, the young novice had from
the first to battle against the defects of a voice
that was both harsh and weak, a defective pronunciation,
and above all, the depression of his physical powers,
exhausted as they were by too severe abstinence.
Savonarala from that time condemned
himself to the most absolute seclusion, and disappeared
in the depths of his convent, as if the slab of his
tomb had already fallen over him. There, kneeling
on the flags, praying unceasingly before a wooden
crucifix, fevered by vigils and penances, he soon
passed out of contemplation into ecstasy, and began
to feel in himself that inward prophetic impulse which
summoned him to preach the reformation of the Church.
Nevertheless, the reformation of Savonarola,
more reverential than Luther’s, which followed
about five-and-twenty years later, respected the thing
while attacking the man, and had as its aim the altering
of teaching that was human, not faith that was of
God. He did not work, like the German monk,
by reasoning, but by enthusiasm. With him logic
always gave way before inspiration: he was not
a theologian, but a prophet. Yet, although hitherto
he had bowed his head before the authority of the
Church, he had already raised it against the temporal
power. To him religion and liberty appeared as
two virgins equally sacred; so that, in his view,
Lorenzo in subjugating the one was as culpable as
Pope Innocent viii in dishonouring the other.
The result of this was that, so long as Lorenzo lived
in riches, happiness, and magnificence, Savonarola
had never been willing, whatever entreaties were made,
to sanction by his presence a power which he considered
illegitimate. But Lorenzo on his deathbed sent
for him, and that was another matter. The austere
preacher set forth at once, bareheaded and barefoot,
hoping to save not only the soul of the dying man but
also the liberty of the republic.
Lorenzo, as we have said, was awaiting
the arrival of Savonarola with an impatience mixed
with uneasiness; so that, when he heard the sound of
his steps, his pale face took a yet more deathlike
tinge, while at the same time he raised himself on
his elbow and ordered his three friends to go away.
They obeyed at once, and scarcely had they left by
one door than the curtain of the other was raised,
and the monk, pale, immovable, solemn, appeared on
the threshold. When he perceived him, Lorenzo
dei Medici, reading in his marble brow the inflexibility
of a statue, fell back on his bed, breathing a sigh
so profound that one might have supposed it was his
last.
The monk glanced round the room as
though to assure himself that he was really alone
with the dying man; then he advanced with a slow and
solemn step towards the bed. Lorenzo watched
his approach with terror; then, when he was close
beside him, he cried:
“O my father, I have been a very great sinner!”
“The mercy of God is infinite,”
replied the monk; “and I come into your presence
laden with the divine mercy.”
“You believe, then, that God
will forgive my sins?” cried the dying man,
renewing his hope as he heard from the lips of the
monk such unexpected words.
“Your sins and also your crimes,
God will forgive them all,” replied Savonarola.
“God will forgive your vanities, your adulterous
pleasures, your obscene festivals; so much for your
sins. God will forgive you for promising two
thousand florins reward to the man who should
bring you the head of Dietisalvi, Nerone Nigi,
Angelo Antinori, Niccalo Soderini, and twice the money
if they were handed over alive; God will forgive you
for dooming to the scaffold or the gibbet the son
of Papi Orlandi, Francesco di Brisighella,
Bernardo Nardi, Jacopo Frescobaldi, Amoretto
Baldovinetti, Pietro Balducci, Bernardo di
Banding, Francesco Frescobaldi, and more than three
hundred others whose names were none the less dear
to Florence because they were less renowned; so much
far your crimes.” And at each of these
names which Savonarala pronounced slowly, his eyes
fixed on the dying man, he replied with a groan which
proved the monk’s memory to be only too true.
Then at last, when he had finished, Lorenzo asked
in a doubtful tone:
“Then do you believe, my father,
that God will forgive me everything, both my sins
and my crimes?”
“Everything,” said Savonarola, “but
on three conditions.”
“What are they?” asked the dying man.
“The first,” said Savonarola,
“is that you feel a complete faith in the power
and the mercy of God.”
“My father,” replied Lorenzo
eagerly, “I feel this faith in the very depths
of my heart.”
“The second,” said Savonarola,
“is that you give back the property of others
which you have unjustly confiscated and kept.”
“My father, shall I have time?” asked
the dying man.
“God will give it to you,” replied the
monk.
Lorenzo shut his eyes, as though to
reflect more at his ease; then, after a moment’s
silence, he replied:
“Yes, my father, I will do it.”
“The third,” resumed Savonarola,
“is that you restore to the republic her ancient
independence end her farmer liberty.”
Lorenzo sat up on his bed, shaken
by a convulsive movement, and questioned with his
eyes the eyes of the Dominican, as though he would
find out if he had deceived himself and not heard aright.
Savonarola repeated the same words.
“Never! never!” exclaimed
Lorenzo, falling back on his bed and shaking his head, “never!”
The monk, without replying a single
word, made a step to withdraw.
“My father, my father,”
said the dying man, “do not leave me thus:
have pity on me!”
“Have pity on Florence,” said the monk.
“But, my father,” cried Lorenzo, “Florence
is free, Florence is happy.”
“Florence is a slave, Florence
is poor,” cried Savonarola, “poor in genius,
poor in money, and poor in courage; poor in genius,
because after you, Lorenzo, will come your son Piero;
poor in money, because from the funds of the republic
you have kept up the magnificence of your family and
the credit of your business houses; poor in courage,
because you have robbed the rightful magistrates of
the authority which was constitutionally theirs, and
diverted the citizens from the double path of military
and civil life, wherein, before they were enervated
by your luxuries, they had displayed the virtues of
the ancients; and therefore, when the day shall dawn
which is not far distant,” continued the mark,
his eyes fixed and glowing as if he were reading in
the future, “whereon the barbarians shall descend
from the mountains, the walls of our towns, like those
of Jericho, shall fall at the blast of their trumpets.”
“And do you desire that I should
yield up on my deathbed the power that has made the
glory of my whole life?” cried Lorenzo dei
Medici.
“It is not I who desire it;
it is the Lord,” replied Savonarola coldly.
“Impossible, impossible!” murmured Lorenzo.
“Very well; then die as you
have lived!” cried the monk, “in the midst
of your courtiers and flatterers; let them ruin your
soul as they have ruined your body!” And at
these words, the austere Dominican, without listening
to the cries of the dying man, left the room as he
had entered it, with face and step unaltered; far
above human things he seemed to soar, a spirit already
detached from the earth.
At the cry which broke from Lorenzo
dei Medici when he saw him disappear, Ermolao,
Poliziano, and Pico delta Mirandola, who had heard
all, returned into the room, and found their friend
convulsively clutching in his arms a magnificent crucifix
which he had just taken dawn from the bed-head.
In vain did they try to reassure him with friendly
words. Lorenzo the Magnificent only replied
with sobs; and one hour after the scene which we have
just related, his lips clinging to the feet of the
Christ, he breathed his last in the arms of these
three men, of whom the most fortunate though
all three were young was not destined to
survive him more than two years. “Since
his death was to bring about many calamities,”
says Niccolo Macchiavelli, “it was the will of
Heaven to show this by omens only too certain:
the dome of the church of Santa Regarata was struck
by lightning, and Roderigo Borgia was elected pope.”
CHAPTER I
Towards the end of the fifteenth century that
is to say, at the epoch when our history opens the
Piazza of St. Peter’s at Rome was far from presenting
so noble an aspect as that which is offered in our
own day to anyone who approaches it by the Piazza
dei Rusticucci.
In fact, the Basilica of Constantine
existed no longer, while that of Michael Angelo, the
masterpiece of thirty popes, which cost the labour
of three centuries and the expense of two hundred
and sixty millions, existed not yet. The ancient
edifice, which had lasted for eleven hundred and forty-five
years, had been threatening to fall in about 1440,
and Nicholas V, artistic forerunner of Julius ii
and Leo X, had had it pulled down, together with the
temple of Probus Anicius which adjoined it.
In their place he had had the foundations of a new
temple laid by the architects Rossellini and Battista
Alberti; but some years later, after the death of
Nicholas V, Paul ii, the Venetian, had not been
able to give more than five thousand crowns to continue
the project of his predecessor, and thus the building
was arrested when it had scarcely risen above the
ground, and presented the appearance of a still-born
edifice, even sadder than that of a ruin.
As to the piazza itself, it had not
yet, as the reader will understand from the foregoing
explanation, either the fine colonnade of Bernini,
or the dancing fountains, or that Egyptian obelisk
which, according to Pliny, was set up by the Pharaoh
at Heliopolis, and transferred to Rome by Caligula,
who set it up in Nero’s Circus, where it remained
till 1586. Now, as Nero’s Circus was situate
on the very ground where St. Peter’s now stands,
and the base of this obelisk covered the actual site
where the vestry now is, it looked like a gigantic
needle shooting up from the middle of truncated columns,
walls of unequal height, and half-carved stones.
On the right of this building, a ruin
from its cradle, arose the Vatican, a splendid Tower
of Babel, to which all the celebrated architects of
the Roman school contributed their work for a thousand
years: at this epoch the two magnificent chapels
did not exist, nor the twelve great halls, the two-and-twenty
courts, the thirty staircases, and the two thousand
bedchambers; for Pope Sixtus V, the sublime swineherd,
who did so many things in a five years’ reign,
had not yet been able to add the immense building
which on the eastern side towers above the court of
St. Damasius; still, it was truly the old sacred edifice,
with its venerable associations, in which Charlemagne
received hospitality when he was crowned emperor by
Pope Leo iii.
All the same, on the 9th of August,
1492, the whole of Rome, from the People’s Gate
to the Coliseum and from the Baths of Diocletian to
the castle of Sant’ Angelo, seemed to have made
an appointment on this piazza: the multitude
thronging it was so great as to overflow into all
the neighbouring streets, which started from this centre
like the rays of a star. The crowds of people,
looking like a motley moving carpet, were climbing
up into the basilica, grouping themselves upon the
stones, hanging on the columns, standing up against
the walls; they entered by the doors of houses and
reappeared at the windows, so numerous and so densely
packed that one might have said each window was walled
up with heads. Now all this multitude had its
eyes fixed on one single point in the Vatican; for
in the Vatican was the Conclave, and as Innocent viii
had been dead for sixteen days, the Conclave was in
the act of electing a pope.
Rome is the town of elections:
since her foundation down to our own day that
is to say, in the course of nearly twenty-six centuries she
has constantly elected her kings, consuls, tribunes,
emperors, and popes: thus Rome during the days
of Conclave appears to be attacked by a strange fever
which drives everyone to the Vatican or to Monte Cavallo,
according as the scarlet-robed assembly is held in
one or the other of these two palaces: it is,
in fact, because the raising up of a new pontiff is
a great event far everybody; for, according to the
average established in the period between St. Peter
and Gregory XVI, every pope lasts about eight years,
and these eight years, according to the character of
the man who is elected, are a period either of tranquillity
or of disorder, of justice or of venality, of peace
or of war.
Never perhaps since the day when the
first successor of St. Peter took his seat on the,
pontifical throne until the interregnum which now
occurred, had so great an agitation been shown as there
was at this moment, when, as we have shown, all these
people were thronging on the Piazza of St. Peter and
in the streets which led to it. It is true that
this was not without reason; for Innocent viii who
was called the father of his people because he had
added to his subjects eight sons and the same number
of daughters had, as we have said, after
living a life of self-indulgence, just died, after
a death-struggle during which, if the journal of Stefano
Infessura may be believed, two hundred and twenty
murders were committed in the streets of Rome.
The authority had then devolved in the customary
way upon the Cardinal Camerlengo, who during the interregnum
had sovereign powers; but as he had been obliged to
fulfil all the duties of his office that
is, to get money coined in his name and bearing his
arms, to take the fisherman’s ring from the finger
of the dead pope, to dress, shave and paint him, to
have the corpse embalmed, to lower the coffin after
nine days’ obsequies into the provisional niche
where the last deceased pope has to remain until his
successor comes to take his place and consign him to
his final tomb; lastly, as he had been obliged to
wall up the door of the Conclave and the window of
the balcony from which the pontifical election is
proclaimed, he had not had a single moment for busying
himself with the police; so that the assassinations
had continued in goodly fashion, and there were loud
cries for an energetic hand which should make all these
swords and all these daggers retire into their sheaths.
Now the eyes of this multitude were
fixed, as we have said, upon the Vatican, and particularly
upon one chimney, from which would come the first
signal, when suddenly, at the moment of the ’Ave
Maria’ that is to say, at the hour
when the day begins to decline great cries
went up from all the crowd mixed with bursts of laughter,
a discordant murmur of threats and raillery, the cause
being that they had just perceived at the top of the
chimney a thin smoke, which seemed like a light cloud
to go up perpendicularly into the sky. This smoke
announced that Rome was still without a master, and
that the world still had no pope; for this was the
smoke of the voting tickets which were being burned,
a proof that the cardinals had not yet come to an
agreement.
Scarcely had this smoke appeared,
to vanish almost immediately, when all the innumerable
crowd, knowing well that there was nothing else to
wait for, and that all was said and done until ten
o’clock the next morning, the time when the
cardinals had their first voting, went off in a tumult
of noisy joking, just as they would after the last
rocket of a firework display; so that at the end of
one minute nobody was there where a quarter of an
hour before there had been an excited crowd, except
a few curious laggards, who, living in the neighbourhood
or on the very piazza itself; were less in a hurry
than the rest to get back to their homes; again, little
by little, these last groups insensibly diminished;
for half-past nine had just struck, and at this hour
the streets of Rome began already to be far from safe;
then after these groups followed some solitary passer-by,
hurrying his steps; one after another the doors were
closed, one after another the windows were darkened;
at last, when ten o’clock struck, with the single
exception of one window in the Vatican where a lamp
might be seen keeping obstinate vigil, all the houses,
piazzas, and streets were plunged in the deepest obscurity.
At this moment a man wrapped in a
cloak stood up like a ghost against one of the columns
of the uncompleted basilica, and gliding slowly and
carefully among the stones which were lying about round
the foundations of the new church, advanced as far
as the fountain which, formed the centre of the piazza,
erected in the very place where the obelisk is now
set up of which we have spoken already; when he reached
this spot he stopped, doubly concealed by the darkness
of the night and by the shade of the monument, and
after looking around him to see if he were really
alone, drew his sword, and with its point rapping three
times on the pavement of the piazza, each time made
the sparks fly. This signal, for signal it was,
was not lost: the last lamp which still kept vigil
in the Vatican went out, and at the same instant an
object thrown out of the window fell a few paces off
from the young man in the cloak: he, guided by
the silvery sound it had made in touching the flags,
lost no time in laying his hands upon it in spite
of the darkness, and when he had it in his possession
hurried quickly away.
Thus the unknown walked without turning
round half-way along the Borgo Vecchio; but there
he turned to the right and took a street at the other
end of which was set up a Madonna with a lamp:
he approached the light, and drew from his pocket
the object he had picked up, which was nothing else
than a Roman crown piece; but this crown unscrewed,
and in a cavity hollowed in its thickness enclosed
a letter, which the man to whom it was addressed began
to read at the risk of being recognised, so great was
his haste to know what it contained.
We say at the risk of being recognised,
for in his eagerness the recipient of this nocturnal
missive had thrown back the hood of his cloak; and
as his head was wholly within the luminous circle cast
by the lamp, it was easy to distinguish in the light
the head of a handsome young man of about five or
six and twenty, dressed in a purple doublet slashed
at the shoulder and elbow to let the shirt come through,
and wearing on his head a cap of the same colour with
a long black feather falling to his shoulder.
It is true that he did not stand there long; for
scarcely had he finished the letter, or rather the
note, which he had just received in so strange and
mysterious a manner, when he replaced it in its silver
receptacle, and readjusting his cloak so as to hide
all the lower part of his face, resumed his walk with
a rapid step, crossed Borgo San Spirito, and
took the street of the Longara, which he followed as
far as the church of Regina Coeli.
When he arrived at this place, he gave three rapid
knocks on the door of a house of good appearance, which
immediately opened; then slowly mounting the stairs
he entered a room where two women were awaiting him
with an impatience so unconcealed that both as they
saw him exclaimed together:
“Well, Francesco, what news?”
“Good news, my mother; good,
my sister,” replied the young man, kissing the
one and giving his hand to the other. “Our
father has gained three votes to-day, but he still
needs six to have the majority.”
“Then is there no means of buying
them?” cried the elder of the two women, while
the younger, instead of speaking, asked him with a
look.
“Certainly, my mother, certainly,”
replied the young man; “and it is just about
that that my father has been thinking. He is
giving Cardinal Orsini his palace at Rome and his
two castles of Monticello and Soriano; to Cardinal
Colanna his abbey of Subiaca; he gives Cardinal Sant’
Angelo the bishopric of Porto, with the furniture
and cellar; to the Cardinal of Parma the town of Nepi;
to the Cardinal of Genoa the church of Santa Maria-in-Via-Lata;
and lastly, to Cardinal Savelli the church of Santa
Maria Maggiore and the town of Civita Castellana;
as to Cardinal Ascanio-Sforza, he knows already that
the day before yesterday we sent to his house four
mules laden with silver and plate, and out of this
treasure he has engaged to give five thousand ducats
to the Cardinal Patriarch of Venice.”
“But how shall we get the others
to know the intentions of Roderigo?” asked the
elder of the two women.
“My father has provided for
everything, and proposes an easy method; you know,
my mother, with what sort of ceremonial the cardinals’
dinner is carried in.”
“Yes, on a litter, in a large
basket with the arms of the cardinal far whom the
meal is prepared.”
“My father has bribed the bishop
who examines it: to-morrow is a feast-day; to
the Cardinals Orsini, Colonna, Savelli, Sant’
Angelo, and the Cardinals of Parma and of Genoa, chickens
will be sent for hot meat, and each chicken will contain
a deed of gift duly drawn up, made by me in my father’s
name, of the houses, palaces, or churches which are
destined for each.”
“Capital!” said the elder
of the two women; “now, I am certain, all will
go well.”
“And by the grace of God,”
added the younger, with a strangely mocking smile,
“our father will be pope.”
“Oh, it will be a fine day for us!” cried
Francesco.
“And for Christendom,”
replied his sister, with a still more ironical expression.
“Lucrezia, Lucrezia,”
said the mother, “you do not deserve the happiness
which is coming to us.”
“What does that matter, if it
comes all the same? Besides, you know the proverb;
mother: ‘Large families are blessed of the
Lord’; and still more so our family, which is
so patriarchal.”
At the same time she cast on her brother
a look so wanton that the young man blushed under
it: but as at the moment he had to think of other
things than his illicit loves, he ordered that four
servants should be awakened; and while they were getting
armed to accompany him, he drew up and signed the
six deeds of gift which were to be carried the next
day to the cardinals; for, not wishing to be seen
at their houses, he thought he would profit by the
night-time to carry them himself to certain persons
in his confidence who would have them passed in, as
had been arranged, at the dinner-hour. Then,
when the deeds were quite ready and the servants also,
Francesco went out with them, leaving the two women
to dream golden dreams of their future greatness.
From the first dawn of day the people
hurried anew, as ardent and interested as on the evening
before, to the Piazza of the Vatican, where; at the
ordinary time, that is, at ten o’clock in the
morning, the smoke rose again as usual,
evoking laughter and murmuring, as it announced that
none of the cardinals had secured the majority.
A report, however, began to be spread about that
the chances were divided between three candidates,
who were Roderigo Borgia, Giuliano delta Rovera, and
Ascanio Sforza; for the people as yet knew nothing
of the four mules laden with plate and silver which
had been led to Sforza’s house, by reason of
which he had given up his own votes to his rival.
In the midst of the agitation excited in the crowd
by this new report a solemn chanting was heard; it
proceeded from a procession, led by the Cardinal Camerlengo,
with the object of obtaining from Heaven the speedy
election of a pope: this procession, starting
from the church of Ara Coeli at the Capitol,
was to make stations before the principal Madannas
and the most frequented churches. As soon as
the silver crucifix was perceived which went in front,
the most profound silence prevailed, and everyone fell
on his knees; thus a supreme calm followed the tumult
and uproar which had been heard a few minutes before,
and which at each appearance of the smoke had assumed
a more threatening character: there was a shrewd
suspicion that the procession, as well as having a
religious end in view, had a political object also,
and that its influence was intended to be as great
on earth as in heaven. In any case, if such had
been the design of the Cardinal Camerlengo, he had
not deceived himself, and the effect was what he desired:
when the procession had gone past, the laughing and
joking continued, but the cries and threats had completely
ceased.
The whole day passed thus; for in
Rome nobody works. You are either a cardinal
or a lacquey, and you live, nobody knows how.
The crowd was still extremely numerous, when, towards
two o’clock in the afternoon, another procession,
which had quite as much power of provoking noise as
the first of imposing silence, traversed in its turn
the Piazza of St. Peter’s: this was the
dinner procession. The people received it with
the usual bursts of laughter, without suspecting,
for all their irreverence, that this procession, more
efficacious than the former, had just settled the
election of the new pope.
The hour of the Ave Maria came as
on the evening before; but, as on the evening before,
the waiting of the whole day was lost; for, as half-past
eight struck, the daily smoke reappeared at the top
of the chimney. But when at the same moment
rumours which came from the inside of the Vatican
were spread abroad, announcing that, in all probability,
the election would take place the next day, the good
people preserved their patience. Besides, it
had been very hot that day, and they were so broken
with fatigue and roasted by the sun, these dwellers
in shade and idleness, that they had no strength left
to complain.
The morning of the next day, which
was the 11th of August, 1492, arose stormy and dark;
this did not hinder the multitude from thronging the
piazzas, streets, doors, houses, churches. Moreover,
this disposition of the weather was a real blessing
from Heaven; for if there were heat, at least there
would be no sun. Towards nine o’clock threatening
storm-clouds were heaped up over all the Trastevere;
but to this crowd what mattered rain, lightning, or
thunder? They were preoccupied with a concern
of a very different nature; they were waiting for their
pope: a promise had been made them for to-day,
and it could be seen by the manner of all, that if
the day should pass without any election taking place,
the end of it might very well be a riot; therefore,
in proportion as the time advanced, the agitation
grew greater. Nine o’clock, half-past nine,
a quarter to ten struck, without anything happening
to confirm or destroy their hopes. At last the
first stroke of ten was heard; all eyes turned towards
the chimney: ten o’clock struck slowly,
each stroke vibrating in the heart of the multitude.
At last the tenth stroke trembled, then vanished
shuddering into space, and, a great cry breaking simultaneously
frog a hundred thousand breasts followed the silence
“Non v’è fumo! There
is no smoke!” In other words, “We have
a pope.”
At this moment the rain began to fall;
but no one paid any attention to it, so great were
the transports of joy and impatience among all the
people. At last a little stone was detached from
the walled window which gave on the balcony and upon
which all eyes were fixed: a general shout saluted
its fall; little by little the aperture grew larger,
and in a few minutes it was large enough to allow
a man to come out on the balcony.
The Cardinal Ascanio Sforza appeared;
but at the moment when he was on the point of coming
out, frightened by the rain and the lightning, he
hesitated an instant, and finally drew back: immediately
the multitude in their turn broke out like a tempest
into cries, curses, howls, threatening to tear down
the Vatican and to go and seek their pope themselves.
At this noise Cardinal Sforza, more terrified by the
popular storm than by the storm in the heavens, advanced
on the balcony, and between two thunderclaps, in a
moment of silence astonishing to anyone who had just
heard the clamour that went before, made the following
proclamation:
“I announce to you a great joy:
the most Eminent and most Reverend Signor Roderigo
Lenzuolo Borgia, Archbishop of Valencia, Cardinal-Deacon
of San Nicolao-in-Carcere, Vice-Chancellor
of the Church, has now been elected Page, and has
assumed the name of Alexander vi.”
The news of this nomination was received
with strange joy. Roderigo Borgia had the reputation
of a dissolute man, it is true, but libertinism had
mounted the throne with Sixtus iv and Innocent
viii, so that for the Romans there was nothing
new in the singular situation of a pope with a mistress
and five children. The great thing for the moment
was that the power fell into strong hands; and it
was more important for the tranquillity of Rome that
the new pope inherited the sword of St. Paul than
that he inherited the keys of St. Peter.
And so, in the feasts that were given
on this occasion, the dominant character was much
more warlike than religious, and would have appeared
rather to suit with the election of some young conqueror
than the exaltation of an old pontiff: there
was no limit to the pleasantries and prophetic epigrams
on the name of Alexander, which for the second time
seemed to promise the Romans the empire of the world;
and the same evening, in the midst of brilliant illuminations
and bonfires, which seemed to turn the town into a
lake of flame, the following epigram was read, amid
the acclamation of the people:
“Rome under Caesar’s
rule in ancient story
At home and o’er
the world victorious trod;
But Alexander still
extends his glory:
Caesar was man, but
Alexander God.”
As to the new pope, scarcely had he
completed the formalities of etiquette which his exaltation
imposed upon him, and paid to each man the price of
his simony, when from the height of the Vatican he
cast his eyes upon Europe, a vast political game of
chess, which he cherished the hope of directing at
the will of his own genius.
CHAPTER II
The world had now arrived at one of
those supreme moments of history when every thing
is transformed between the end of one period and the
beginning of another: in the East Turkey, in the
South Spain, in the West France, and in the North
German, all were going to assume, together with the
title of great Powers, that influence which they were
destined to exert in the future over the secondary
States. Accordingly we too, with Alexander vi,
will cast a rapid glance over them, and see what were
their respective situations in regard to Italy, which
they all coveted as a prize.
Constantine, Palaeologos Dragozes,
besieged by three hundred thousand Turks, after having
appealed in vain for aid to the whole of Christendom,
had not been willing to survive the loss of his empire,
and had been found in the midst of the dead, close
to the Tophana Gate; and on the 30th of May, 1453,
Mahomet ii had made his entry into Constantinople,
where, after a reign which had earned for him the surname
of ‘Fatile’, or the Conqueror, he had
died leaving two sons, the elder of whom had ascended
the throne under the name of Bajazet ii.
The accession of the new sultan, however,
had not taken place with the tranquillity which his
right as elder brother and his father’s choice
of him should have promised. His younger brother,
D’jem, better known under the name of Zizimeh,
had argued that whereas he was born in the purple that
is, born during the reign of Mahomet Bajazet
was born prior to his epoch, and was therefore the
son of a private individual. This was rather
a poor trick; but where force is all and right is naught,
it was good enough to stir up a war. The two
brothers, each at the head of an army, met accordingly
in Asia in 1482. D’jem was defeated after
a seven hours’ fight, and pursued by his brother,
who gave him no time to rally his army: he was
obliged to embark from Cilicia, and took refuge in
Rhodes, where he implored the protection of the Knights
of St. John. They, not daring to give him an
asylum in their island so near to Asia, sent him to
France, where they had him carefully guarded in one
of their commanderies, in spite of the urgency
of Cait Bey, Sultan of Egypt, who, having revolted
against Bajazet, desired to have the young prince in
his army to give his rebellion the appearance of legitimate
warfare. The same demand, moreover, with the
same political object, had been made successively
by Mathias Corvinus, King of Hungary, by Ferdinand,
King of Aragon and Sicily, and by Ferdinand, King
of Naples.
On his side Bajazet, who knew all
the importance of such a rival, if he once allied
himself with any one of the princes with whom he was
at war, had sent ambassadors to Charles viii,
offering, if he would consent to keep D’jem
with him, to give him a considerable pension, and to
give to France the sovereignty of the Holy Land, so
soon as Jerusalem should be conquered by the Sultan
of Egypt. The King of France had accepted these
terms.
But then Innocent viii had intervened,
and in his turn had claimed D’jem, ostensibly
to give support by the claims of the refugee to a crusade
which he was preaching against the Turks, but in reality
to appropriate the pension of 40,000 ducats to
be given by Bajazet to any one of the Christian princes
who would undertake to be his brother’s gaoler.
Charles viii had not dared to refuse to the spiritual
head of Christendom a request supported by such holy
reasons; and therefore D’jem had quitted France,
accompanied by the Grand Master d’Aubusson, under
whose direct charge he was; but his guardian had consented,
for the sake of a cardinal’s hat, to yield up
his prisoner. Thus, on the 13th of March, 1489,
the unhappy young man, cynosure of so many interested
eyes, made his solemn entry into Rome, mounted on
a superb horse, clothed in a magnificent oriental
costume, between the Prior of Auvergne, nephew of
the Grand Master d’Aubusson, and Francesco
Cibo, the son of the pope.
After this he had remained there,
and Bajazet, faithful to promises which it was so
much his interest to fulfil, had punctually paid to
the sovereign pontiff a pension of 40,000 ducats.
So much for Turkey.
Ferdinand and Isabella were reigning
in Spain, and were laying the foundations of that
vast power which was destined, five-and-twenty years
later, to make Charles V declare that the sun never
set on his dominions. In fact, these two sovereigns,
on whom history has bestowed the name of Catholic,
had reconquered in succession nearly all Spain, and
driven the Moors out of Granada, their last entrenchment;
while two men of genius, Bartolome Diaz and Christopher
Columbus, had succeeded, much to the profit of Spain,
the one in recovering a lost world, the other in conquering
a world yet unknown. They had accordingly, thanks
to their victories in the ancient world and their
discoveries in the new, acquired an influence at the
court of Rome which had never been enjoyed by any of
their predecessors.
So much for Spain.
In France, Charles viii had succeeded
his father, Louis XI, on the 30th of August, 1483.
Louis by dint of executions, had tranquillised his
kingdom and smoothed the way for a child who ascended
the throne under the regency of a woman. And
the regency had been a glorious one, and had put down
the pretensions of princes of the blood, put an end
to civil wars, and united to the crown all that yet
remained of the great independent fiefs.
The result was that at the epoch where we now are,
here was Charles viii, about twenty-two years
of age, a prince (if we are to believe La Tremouille)
little of body but great of heart; a child (if we
are to believe Commines) only now making his first
flight from the nest, destitute of both sense and
money, feeble in person, full of self-will, and consorting
rather with fools than with the wise; lastly, if we
are to believe Guicciardini, who was an Italian, might
well have brought a somewhat partial judgment to bear
upon the subject, a young man of little wit concerning
the actions of men, but carried away by an ardent
desire for rule and the acquisition of glory, a desire
based far more on his shallow character and impetuosity
than on any consciousness of genius: he was an
enemy to all fatigue and all business, and when he
tried to give his attention to it he showed himself
always totally wanting in prudence and judgment.
If anything in him appeared at first sight to be
worthy of praise, on a closer inspection it was found
to be something nearer akin to vice than to virtue.
He was liberal, it is true, but without thought,
with no measure and no discrimination. He was
sometimes inflexible in will; but this was through
obstinacy rather than a constant mind; and what his
flatterers called goodness deserved far more the name
of insensibility to injuries or poverty of spirit.
As to his physical appearance, if
we are to believe the same author, it was still less
admirable, and answered marvellously to his weakness
of mind and character. He was small, with a
large head, a short thick neck, broad chest, and high
shoulders; his thighs and legs were long and thin;
and as his face also was ugly and was only
redeemed by the dignity and force of his glance and
all his limbs were disproportionate with one another,
he had rather the appearance of a monster than a man.
Such was he whom Fortune was destined to make a conqueror,
for whom Heaven was reserving more glory than he had
power to carry.
So much for France.
The Imperial throne was occupied by
Frederic iii, who had been rightly named the
Peaceful, not for the reason that he had always maintained
peace, but because, having constantly been beaten,
he had always been forced to make it. The first
proof he had given of this very philosophical forbearance
was during his journey to Rome, whither he betook
himself to be consecrated. In crossing the Apennines
he was attacked by brigands. They robbed him,
but he made no pursuit. And so, encouraged by
example and by the impunity of lesser thieves, the
greater ones soon took part in the robberies.
Amurath seized part of Hungary. Mathias Corvinus
took Lower Austria, and Frederic consoled himself for
these usurpations by repeating the maxim, Forgetfulness
is the best cure for the losses we suffer. At
the time we have now reached, he had just, after a
reign of fifty-three years, affianced his son Maximilian
to Marie of Burgundy and had put under the ban of
the Empire his son-in-law, Albert of Bavaria, who
laid claim to the ownership of the Tyrol. He
was therefore too full of his family affairs to be
troubled about Italy. Besides, he was busy looking
for a motto for the house of Austria, an occupation
of the highest importance for a man of the character
of Frederic iii. This motto, which Charles
V was destined almost to render true, was at last
discovered, to the great joy of the old emperor, who,
judging that he had nothing more to do on earth after
he had given this last proof of sagacity, died on
the 19th of August, 1493; leaving the empire to his
son Maximilian.
This motto was simply founded on the
five vowels, a, e, i, o, u, the initial letters of
these five words
“AUSTRIAE
est imperare ORBI universo.”
This means
“It is the destiny of Austria to rule over the
whole world.”
So much for Germany.
Now that we have cast a glance over
the four nations which were on the way, as we said
before, to become European Powers, let us turn our
attention to those secondary States which formed a
circle more contiguous to Rome, and whose business
it was to serve as armour, so to speak, to the spiritual
queen of the world, should it please any of these political
giants whom we have described to make encroachments
with a view to an attack, on the seas or the mountains,
the Adriatic Gulf or the Alps, the Mediterranean or
the Apennines.
These were the kingdom of Naples,
the duchy of Milan, the magnificent republic of Florence,
and the most serene republic of Venice.
The kingdom of Naples was in the hands
of the old Ferdinand, whose birth was not only illegitimate,
but probably also well within the prohibited degrees.
His father, Alfonso of Aragon, received his crown
from Giovanna of Naples, who had adopted him as her
successor. But since, in the fear of having no
heir, the queen on her deathbed had named two instead
of one, Alfonso had to sustain his rights against
René. The two aspirants for some time disputed
the crown. At last the house of Aragon carried
the day over the house of Anjou, and in the course
of the year 1442, Alfonso definitely secured his seat
on the throne. Of this sort were the claims
of the defeated rival which we shall see Charles viii
maintaining later on. Ferdinand had neither the
courage nor the genius of his father, and yet he triumphed
over his enemies, one after another he had two rivals,
both far superior in merit to him self. The one
was his nephew, the Count of Viana, who, basing his
claim on his uncle’s shameful birth, commanded
the whole Aragonese party; the other was Duke John
of Calabria, who commanded the whole Angevin party.
Still he managed to hold the two apart, and to keep
himself on the throne by dint of his prudence, which
often verged upon duplicity. He had a cultivated
mind, and had studied the sciences above
all, law. He was of middle height, with a large
handsome head, his brow open and admirably framed in
beautiful white hair, which fell nearly down to his
shoulders. Moreover, though he had rarely exercised
his physical strength in arms, this strength was so
great that one day, when he happened to be on the square
of the Mercato Nuovo at Naples, he seized by
the horns a bull that had escaped and stopped him
short, in spite of all the efforts the animal made
to escape from his hands. Now the election of
Alexander had caused him great uneasiness, and in
spite of his usual prudence he had not been able to
restrain himself from saying before the bearer of the
news that not only did he fail to rejoice in this
election, but also that he did not think that any
Christian could rejoice in it, seeing that Borgia,
having always been a bad man, would certainly make
a bad pope. To this he added that, even were
the choice an excellent one and such as would please
everybody else, it would be none the less fatal to
the house of Aragon, although Roderigo was born her
subject and owed to her the origin and progress of
his fortunes; for wherever reasons of state come in,
the ties of blood and parentage are soon forgotten,
and, ‘a fortiori’, relations arising from
the obligations of nationality.
Thus, one may see that Ferdinand judged
Alexander vi with his usual perspicacity; this,
however, did not hinder him, as we shall soon perceive,
from being the first to contract an alliance with him.
The duchy of Milan belonged nominally
to John Galeazzo, grandson of Francesco Sforza, who
had seized it by violence on the 26th of February,
1450, and bequeathed it to his son, Galeazzo Maria,
father of the young prince now reigning; we say nominally,
because the real master of the Milanese was at this
period not the legitimate heir who was supposed to
possess it, but his uncle Ludovico, surnamed ‘il
Moro’, because of the mulberry tree which
he bore in his arms. After being exiled with his
two brothers, Philip who died of poison in 1479, and
Ascanio who became the cardinal, he returned to Milan
some days after the assassination of Galeazzo Maria,
which took place on the 26th of December 1476, in St.
Stephen’s Church, and assumed the regency for
the young duke, who at that time was only eight years
old. From now onward, even after his nephew
had reached the age of two-and-twenty, Ludovico continued
to rule, and according to all probabilities was destined
to rule a long time yet; for, some days after the
poor young man had shown a desire to take the reins
himself, he had fallen sick, and it was said, and not
in a whisper, that he had taken one of those slow
but mortal poisons of which princes made so frequent
a use at this period, that, even when a malady was
natural, a cause was always sought connected with
some great man’s interests. However it
may have been, Ludovico had relegated his nephew, now
too weak to busy himself henceforward with the affairs
of his duchy, to the castle of Pavia, where he lay
and languished under the eyes of his wife Isabella,
daughter of King Ferdinand of Naples.
As to Ludovico, he was an ambitious
man, full of courage and astuteness, familiar with
the sword and with poison, which he used alternately,
according to the occasion, without feeling any repugnance
or any predilection for either of them; but quite
decided to be his nephew’s heir whether he died
or lived.
Florence, although she had preserved
the name of a republic, had little by little lost
all her liberties, and belonged in fact, if not by
right, to Piero dei Medici, to whom she
had been bequeathed as a paternal legacy by Lorenzo,
as we have seen, at the risk of his soul’s salvation.
The son, unfortunately, was far from
having the genius of his father: he was handsome,
it is true, whereas Lorenzo, on the contrary, was
remarkably ugly; he had an agreeable, musical voice,
whereas Lorenzo had always spoken through his nose;
he was instructed in Latin and Greek, his conversation
was pleasant and easy, and he improvised verses almost
as well as the so-called Magnificent; but he was both
ignorant of political affairs and haughtily insolent
in his behaviour to those who had made them their
study. Added to this, he was an ardent lover
of pleasure, passionately addicted to women, incessantly
occupied with bodily exercises that should make him
shine in their eyes, above all with tennis, a game
at which he very highly excelled: he promised
himself that, when the period of mourning was fast,
he would occupy the attention not only of Florence
but of the whole of Italy, by the splendour of his
courts and the renown of his fêtes. Piero
dei Medici had at any rate formed this plan;
but Heaven decreed otherwise.
As to the most serene republic of
Venice, whose doge was Agostino Barbarigo, she had
attained, at the time we have reached, to her highest
degree of power and splendour. From Cadiz to
the Palus Maeotis, there was no port that was
not open to her thousand ships; she possessed in Italy,
beyond the coastline of the canals and the ancient
duchy of Venice, the provinces of Bergamo, Brescia,
Crema, Verona, Vicenza, and Padua;
she owned the marches of Treviso, which comprehend
the districts of Feltre, Belluno, Cadore,
Polesella of Rovigo, and the principality of
Ravenna; she also owned the Friuli, except Aquileia;
Istria, except Trieste; she owned, on the east side
of the Gulf, Zara, Spalatra, and the shore of Albania;
in the Ionian Sea, the islands of Zante and Corfu;
in Greece, Lepanto and Patras; in the Morea, Morone,
Corone, Neapolis, and Argos; lastly, in the Archipelago,
besides several little towns and stations on the coast,
she owned Candia and the kingdom of Cyprus.
Thus from the mouth of the Po to the
eastern extremity of the Mediterranean, the most serene
republic was mistress of the whole coastline, and
Italy and Greece seemed to be mere suburbs of Venice.
In the intervals of space left free
between Naples, Milan, Florence, and Venice, petty
tyrants had arisen who exercised an absolute sovereignty
over their territories: thus the Colonnas were
at Ostia and at Nettuna, the Montefeltri at Urbino,
the Manfredi at Faenza, the Bentivogli at Bologna,
the Malatesta family at Rimini, the Vitelli at Città
di Castello, the Baglioni at Perugia, the Orsini
at Vicovaro, and the princes of Este at Ferrara.
Finally, in the centre of this immense
circle, composed of great Powers, of secondary States,
and of little tyrannies, Rome was set on high,
the most exalted, yet the weakest of all, without
influence, without lands, without an army, without
gold. It was the concern of the new pope to
secure all this: let us see, therefore, what manner
of man was this Alexander vi, for undertaking
and accomplishing such a project.
CHAPTER III
Roderigo lenzuolo was barn
at Valencia, in Spain, in 1430 or 1431, and on his
mother’s side was descended, as some writers
declare, of a family of royal blood, which had cast
its eyes on the tiara only after cherishing hopes
of the crowns of Aragon and Valencia. Roderigo
from his infancy had shown signs of a marvellous quickness
of mind, and as he grew older he exhibited an intelligence
extremely apt far the study of sciences, especially
law and jurisprudence: the result was that his
first distinctions were gained in the law, a profession
wherein he soon made a great reputation by his ability
in the discussion of the most thorny cases.
All the same, he was not slow to leave this career,
and abandoned it quite suddenly far the military profession,
which his father had followed; but after various actions
which served to display his presence of mind and courage,
he was as much disgusted with this profession as with
the other; and since it happened that at the very time
he began to feel this disgust his father died, leaving
a considerable fortune, he resolved to do no more
work, but to live according to his own fancies and
caprices. About this time he became the lover
of a widow who had two daughters. The widow dying,
Roderigo took the girls under his protection, put
one into a convent, and as the other was one of the
loveliest women imaginable, made her his mistress.
This was the notorious Rosa Vanozza, by whom he had
five children Francesco, Caesar, Lucrezia,
and Goffredo; the name of the fifth is unknown.
Roderigo, retired from public affairs,
was given up entirely to the affections of a lover
and a father, when he heard that his uncle, who loved
him like a son, had been elected pope under the name
of Calixtus iii. But the young man was
at this time so much a lover that love imposed silence
on ambition; and indeed he was almost terrified at
the exaltation of his uncle, which was no doubt destined
to force him once more into public life. Consequently,
instead of hurrying to Rome, as anyone else in his
place would have done, he was content to indite to
His Holiness a letter in which he begged for the continuation
of his favours, and wished him a long and happy reign.
This reserve on the part of one of
his relatives, contrasted with the ambitious schemes
which beset the new pope at every step, struck Calixtus
iii in a singular way: he knew the stuff
that was in young Roderigo, and at a time when he
was besieged on all sides by mediocrities, this powerful
nature holding modestly aside gained new grandeur in
his eyes so he replied instantly to Roderigo that
on the receipt of his letter he must quit Spain for
Italy, Valencia for Rome.
This letter uprooted Roderigo from
the centre of happiness he had created for himself,
and where he might perhaps have slumbered on like an
ordinary man, if fortune had not thus interposed to
drag him forcibly away. Roderigo was happy,
Roderigo was rich; the evil passions which were natural
to him had been, if not extinguished, at
least lulled; he was frightened himself at the idea
of changing the quiet life he was leading for the
ambitious, agitated career that was promised him; and
instead of obeying his uncle, he delayed the preparations
for departure, hoping that Calixtus would forget him.
It was not so: two months after he received the
letter from the pope, there arrived at Valencia a prelate
from Rome, the bearer of Roderigo’s nomination
to a benefice worth 20,000 ducats a year, and
also a positive order to the holder of the post to
come and take possession of his charge as soon as possible.
Holding back was no longer feasible:
so Roderigo obeyed; but as he did not wish to be separated
from the source whence had sprung eight years of happiness,
Rosa Vanozza also left Spain, and while he was going
to Rome, she betook herself to Venice, accompanied
by two confidential servants, and under the protection
of a Spanish gentleman named Manuel Melchior.
Fortune kept the promises she had
made to Roderigo: the pope received him as a
son, and made him successively Archbishop of Valencia,
Cardinal-Deacon, and Vice-Chancellor. To all
these favours Calixtus added a revenue of 20,000 ducats,
so that at the age of scarcely thirty-five Roderigo
found himself the equal of a prince in riches and
power.
Roderigo had had some reluctance about
accepting the cardinalship, which kept him fast at
Rome, and would have preferred to be General of the
Church, a position which would have allowed him more
liberty for seeing his mistress and his family; but
his uncle Calixtus made him reckon with the possibility
of being his successor some day, and from that moment
the idea of being the supreme head of kings and nations
took such hold of Roderigo, that he no longer had
any end in view but that which his uncle had made
him entertain.
From that day forward, there began
to grow up in the young cardinal that talent for hypocrisy
which made of him the most perfect incarnation of
the devil that has perhaps ever existed; and Roderigo
was no longer the same man: with words of repentance
and humility on his lips, his head bowed as though
he were bearing the weight of his past sins, disparaging
the riches which he had acquired and which, according
to him, were the wealth of the poor and ought to return
to the poor, he passed his life in churches, monasteries,
and hospitals, acquiring, his historian tells us,
even in the eyes of his enemies, the reputation of
a Solomon for wisdom, of a Job for patience, and of
a very Moses for his promulgation of the word of God:
Rosa Vanozza was the only person in the world who could
appreciate the value of this pious cardinal’s
conversion.
It proved a lucky thing for Roderiga
that he had assumed this pious attitude, for his protector
died after a reign of three years three months and
nineteen days, and he was now sustained by his own
merit alone against the numerous enemies he had made
by his rapid rise to fortune: so during the whole
of the reign of Pius ii he lived always apart
from public affairs, and only reappeared in the days
of Sixtus iv, who made him the gift of the abbacy
of Subiaco, and sent him in the capacity of ambassador
to the kings of Aragon and Portugal. On his return,
which took place during the pontificate of Innocent
viii, he decided to fetch his family at last
to Rome: thither they came, escorted by Don Manuel
Melchior, who from that moment passed as the husband
of Rosa Vanozza, and took the name of Count Ferdinand
of Castile. The Cardinal Roderigo received the
noble Spaniard as a countryman and a friend; and he,
who expected to lead a most retired life, engaged
a house in the street of the Lungara, near the church
of Regina Coeli, on the banks of the Tiber.
There it was that, after passing the day in prayers
and pious works, Cardinal Roderigo used to repair
each evening and lay aside his mask. And it was
said, though nobody could prove it, that in this house
infamous scenes passed: Report said the dissipations
were of so dissolute a character that their equals
had never been seen in Rome. With a view to
checking the rumours that began to spread abroad, Roderigo
sent Caesar to study at Pisa, and married Lucrezia
to a young gentleman of Aragon; thus there only remained
at home Rosa Vanozza and her two sons: such was
the state of things when Innocent viii died and
Roderigo Borgia was proclaimed pope.
We have seen by what means the nomination
was effected; and so the five cardinals who had taken
no part in this simony namely, the Cardinals
of Naples, Sierra, Portugal, Santa Maria-in-Porticu,
and St. Peter-in-Vinculis protested loudly
against this election, which they treated as a piece
of jobbery; but Roderigo had none the less, however
it was done, secured his majority; Roderigo was none
the less the two hundred and sixtieth successor of
St. Peter.
Alexander vi, however, though
he had arrived at his object, did not dare throw off
at first the mask which the Cardinal Bargia had worn
so long, although when he was apprised of his election
he could not dissimulate his joy; indeed, on hearing
the favourable result of the scrutiny, he lifted his
hands to heaven and cried, in the accents of satisfied
ambition, “Am I then pope? Am I then Christ’s
vicar? Am I then the keystone of the Christian
world?”
“Yes, holy father,” replied
Cardinal Ascanio Sforza, the same who had sold to
Roderigo the nine votes that were at his disposal at
the Conclave for four mules laden with silver; “and
we hope by your election to give glory to God, repose
to the Church, and joy to Christendom, seeing that
you have been chosen by the Almighty Himself as the
most worthy among all your brethren.”
But in the short interval occupied
by this reply, the new pope had already assumed the
papal authority, and in a humble voice and with hands
crossed upon his breast, he spoke:
“We hope that God will grant
us His powerful aid, in spite of our weakness, and
that He will do for us that which He did for the apostle
when aforetime He put into his hands the keys of heaven
and entrusted to him the government of the Church,
a government which without the aid of God would prove
too heavy a burden for mortal man; but God promised
that His Spirit should direct him; God will do the
same, I trust, for us; and for your part we fear not
lest any of you fail in that holy obedience which
is due unto the head of the Church, even as the flock
of Christ was bidden to follow the prince of the apostles.”
Having spoken these words, Alexander
donned the pontifical robes, and through the windows
of the Vatican had strips of paper thrown out on which
his name was written in Latin. These, blown by
the wind, seemed to convey to the whole world the
news of the great event which was about to change
the face of Italy. The same day couriers started
far all the courts of Europe.
Caesar Borgia learned the news of
his father’s election at the University of Pisa,
where he was a student. His ambition had sometimes
dreamed of such good fortune, yet his joy was little
short of madness. He was then a young man, about
twenty-two or twenty-four years of age, skilful in
all bodily exercises, and especially in fencing; he
could ride barebacked the most fiery steeds, could
cut off the head of a bull at a single sword-stroke;
moreover, he was arrogant, jealous, and insincere.
According to Tammasi, he was great among the godless,
as his brother Francesco was good among the great.
As to his face, even contemporary authors have left
utterly different descriptions; for same have painted
him as a monster of ugliness, while others, on the
contrary, extol his beauty. This contradiction
is due to the fact that at certain times of the year,
and especially in the spring, his face was covered
with an eruption which, so long as it lasted, made
him an object of horror and disgust, while all the
rest of the year he was the sombre, black-haired cavalier
with pale skin and tawny beard whom Raphael shows us
in the fine portrait he made of him. And historians,
both chroniclers and painters, agree as to his fixed
and powerful gaze, behind which burned a ceaseless
flame, giving to his face something infernal and superhuman.
Such was the man whose fortune was to fulfil all
his desires. He had taken for his motto,
‘Aut Caesar, aut nihil’:
Caesar or nothing.
Caesar posted to Rome with certain
of his friends, and scarcely was he recognised at
the gates of the city when the deference shown to him
gave instant proof of the change in his fortunes:
at the Vatican the respect was twice as great; mighty
men bowed down before him as before one mightier than
themselves. And so, in his impatience, he stayed
not to visit his mother or any other member of his
family, but went straight to the pope to kiss his
feet; and as the pope had been forewarned of his coming,
he awaited him in the midst of a brilliant and numerous
assemblage of cardinals, with the three other brothers
standing behind him. His Holiness received Caesar
with a gracious countenance; still, he did not allow
himself any demonstration of his paternal love, but,
bending towards him, kissed him an the forehead, and
inquired how he was and how he had fared on his journey.
Caesar replied that he was wonderfully well, and
altogether at the service of His Holiness: that,
as to the journey, the trifling inconveniences and
short fatigue had been compensated, and far mare than
compensated, by the joy which he felt in being able
to adore upon the papal throne a pope who was so worthy.
At these words, leaving Caesar still on his knees,
and reseating himself for he had risen
from his seat to embrace him the pope assumed
a grave and composed expression of face, and spoke
as follows, loud enough to be heard by all, and slowly
enough far everyone present to be able to ponder and
retain in his memory even the least of his words:
“We are convinced, Caesar, that
you are peculiarly rejoiced in beholding us on this
sublime height, so far above our deserts, whereto it
has pleased the Divine goodness to exalt us.
This joy of yours is first of all our due because
of the love we have always borne you and which we
bear you still, and in the second place is prompted
by your own personal interest, since henceforth you
may feel sure of receiving from our pontifical hand
those benefits which your own good works shall deserve.
But if your joy and this we say to you as
we have even now said to your brothers if
your joy is founded on ought else than this, you are
very greatly mistaken, Caesar, and you will find yourself
sadly deceived. Perhaps we have been ambitious we
confess this humbly before the face of all men passionately
and immoderately ambitious to attain to the dignity
of sovereign pontiff, and to reach this end we have
followed every path that is open to human industry;
but we have acted thus, vowing an inward vow that
when once we had reached our goal, we would follow
no other path but that which conduces best to the
service of God and to the advancement of the Holy
See, so that the glorious memory of the deeds that
we shall do may efface the shameful recollection of
the deeds we have already done. Thus shall we,
let us hope, leave to those who follow us a track
where upon if they find not the footsteps of a saint,
they may at least tread in the path of a true pontiff.
God, who has furthered the means, claims at our hands
the fruits, and we desire to discharge to the full
this mighty debt that we have incurred to Him; and
accordingly we refuse to arouse by any deceit the
stern rigour of His judgments. One sole hindrance
could have power to shake our good intentions, and
that might happen should we feel too keen an interest
in your fortunes. Therefore are we armed beforehand
against our love, and therefore have we prayed to
God beforehand that we stumble not because of you;
for in the path of favouritism a pope cannot slip
without a fall, and cannot fall without injury and
dishonour to the Holy See. Even to the end of
our life we shall deplore the faults which have brought
this experience home to us; and may it please Gad
that our uncle Calixtus of blessed memory bear not
this day in purgatory the burden of our sins, more
heavy, alas, than his own! Ah, he was rich in
every virtue, he was full of good intentions; but
he loved too much his own people, and among them he
loved me chief. And so he suffered this love
to lead him blindly astray, all this love that he
bore to his kindred, who to him were too truly flesh
of his flesh, so that he heaped upon the heads of
a few persons only, and those perhaps the least worthy,
benefits which would more fittingly have rewarded
the deserts of many. In truth, he bestowed upon
our house treasures that should never have been amassed
at the expense of the poor, or else should have been
turned to a better purpose. He severed from the
ecclesiastical State, already weak and poor, the duchy
of Spoleto and other wealthy properties, that
he might make them fiefs to us; he confided to
our weak hands the vice-chancellorship, the vice-prefecture
of Rome, the generalship of the Church, and all the
other most important offices, which, instead of being
monopolised by us, should have been conferred on those
who were most meritorious. Moreover, there were
persons who were raised on our recommendation to posts
of great dignity, although they had no claims but
such as our undue partiality accorded them; others
were left out with no reason for their failure except
the jealousy excited in us by their virtues.
To rob Ferdinand of Aragon of the kingdom of Naples,
Calixtus kindled a terrible war, which by a happy
issue only served to increase our fortune, and by an
unfortunate issue must have brought shame and disaster
upon the Holy See. Lastly, by allowing himself
to be governed by men who sacrificed public good to
their private interests, he inflicted an injury, not
only upon the pontifical throne and his own reputation,
but what is far worse, far more deadly, upon his own
conscience. And yet, O wise judgments of God!
hard and incessantly though he toiled to establish
our fortunes, scarcely had he left empty that supreme
seat which we occupy to-day, when we were cast down
from the pinnacle whereon we had climbed, abandoned
to the fury of the rabble and the vindictive hatred
of the Roman barons, who chose to feel offended by
our goodness to their enemies. Thus, not only,
we tell you, Caesar, not only did we plunge headlong
from the summit of our grandeur, losing the worldly
goods and dignities which our uncle had heaped at
our feet, but for very peril of our life we were condemned
to a voluntary exile, we and our friends, and in this
way only did we contrive to escape the storm which
our too good fortune had stirred up against us.
Now this is a plain proof that God mocks at men’s
designs when they are bad ones. How great an
error is it for any pope to devote more care to the
welfare of a house, which cannot last more than a few
years, than to the glory of the Church, which will
last for ever! What utter folly for any public
man whose position is not inherited and cannot be bequeathed
to his posterity, to support the edifice of his grandeur
on any other basis than the noblest virtue practised
for the general good, and to suppose that he can ensure
the continuance of his own fortune otherwise than
by taking all precautions against sudden whirlwinds
which are want to arise in the midst of a calm, and
to blow up the storm-clouds I mean the host of enemies.
Now any one of these enemies who does his worst can
cause injuries far more powerful than any help that
is at all likely to come from a hundred friends and
their lying promises. If you and your brothers
walk in the path of virtue which we shall now open
for you, every wish of your heart shall be instantly
accomplished; but if you take the other path, if you
have ever hoped that our affection will wink at disorderly
life, then you will very soon find out that we are
truly pope, Father of the Church, not father of the
family; that, vicar of Christ as we are, we shall
act as we deem best for Christendom, and not as you
deem best for your own private good. And now
that we have come to a thorough understanding, Caesar,
receive our pontifical blessing.” And with
these words, Alexander vi rose up, laid his hands
upon his son’s head, for Caesar was still kneeling,
and then retired into his apartments, without inviting
him to follow.
The young man remained awhile stupefied
at this discourse, so utterly unexpected, so utterly
destructive at one fell blow to his most cherished
hopes. He rose giddy and staggering like a drunken
man, and at once leaving the Vatican, hurried to his
mother, whom he had forgotten before, but sought now
in his despair. Rosa Vanozza possessed all the
vices and all the virtues of a Spanish courtesan;
her devotion to the Virgin amounted to superstition,
her fondness for her children to weakness, and her
love for Roderigo to sensuality. In the depth
of her heart she relied on the influence she had been
able to exercise over him for nearly thirty years;
and like a snake, she knew haw to envelop him in her
coils when the fascination of her glance had lost
its power. Rosa knew of old the profound hypocrisy
of her lover, and thus she was in no difficulty about
reassuring Caesar.
Lucrezia was with her mother when
Caesar arrived; the two young people exchanged a lover-like
kiss beneath her very eyes: and before he left
Caesar had made an appointment for the same evening
with Lucrezia, who was now living apart from her husband,
to whom Roderigo paid a pension in her palace of the
Via del Pelegrino, opposite the Campo
dei Fiori, and there enjoying perfect liberty.
In the evening, at the hour fixed,
Caesar appeared at Lucrezia’s; but he found
there his brother Francesco. The two young men
had never been friends. Still, as their tastes
were very different, hatred with Francesco was only
the fear of the deer for the hunter; but with Caesar
it was the desire for vengeance and that lust for blood
which lurks perpetually in the heart of a tiger.
The two brothers none the less embraced, one from
general kindly feeling, the other from hypocrisy; but
at first sight of one another the sentiment of a double
rivalry, first in their father’s and then in
their sister’s good graces, had sent the blood
mantling to the cheek of Francesco, and called a deadly
pallor into Caesar’s. So the two young
men sat on, each resolved not to be the first to leave,
when all at once there was a knock at the door, and
a rival was announced before whom both of them were
bound to give way: it was their father.
Rosa Vanazza was quite right in comforting
Caesar. Indeed, although Alexander vi had
repudiated the abuses of nepotism, he understood very
well the part that was to be played for his benefit
by his sons and his daughter; for he knew he could
always count on Lucrezia and Caesar, if not on Francesco
and Goffredo. In these matters the sister was
quite worthy of her brother. Lucrezia was wanton
in imagination, godless by nature, ambitious and designing:
she had a craving for pleasure, admiration, honours,
money, jewels, gorgeous stuffs, and magnificent mansions.
A true Spaniard beneath her golden tresses, a courtesan
beneath her frank looks, she carried the head of a
Raphael Madonna, and concealed the heart of a Messalina.
She was dear to Roderigo both as daughter and as
mistress, and he saw himself reflected in her as in
a magic mirror, every passion and every vice.
Lucrezia and Caesar were accordingly the best beloved
of his heart, and the three composed that diabolical
trio which for eleven years occupied the pontifical
throne, like a mocking parody of the heavenly Trinity.
Nothing occurred at first to give
the lie to Alexander’s professions of principle
in the discourse he addressed to Caesar, and the first
year of his pontificate exceeded all the hopes of
Rome at the time of his election. He arranged
for the provision of stores in the public granaries
with such liberality, that within the memory of man
there had never been such astonishing abundance; and
with a view to extending the general prosperity to
the lowest class, he organised numerous doles to be
paid out of his private fortune, which made it possible
for the very poor to participate in the general banquet
from which they had been excluded for long enough.
The safety of the city was secured, from the very
first days of his accession, by the establishment
of a strong and vigilant police force, and a tribunal
consisting of four magistrates of irreproachable character,
empowered to prosecute all nocturnal crimes, which
during the last pontificate had been so common that
their very numbers made impunity certain: these
judges from the first showed a severity which neither
the rank nor the purse of the culprit could modify.
This presented such a great contrast to the corruption
of the last reign, in the course of which
the vice-chamberlain one day remarked in public, when
certain people were complaining of the venality of
justice, “God wills not that a sinner die, but
that he live and pay,” that the capital
of the Christian world felt for one brief moment restored
to the happy days of the papacy. So, at the end
of a year, Alexander vi had reconquered that
spiritual credit, so to speak, which his predecessors
lost. His political credit was still to be established,
if he was to carry out the first part of his gigantic
scheme. To arrive at this, he must employ two
agencies alliances and conquests. His
plan was to begin with alliances. The gentleman
of Aragon who had married Lucrezia when she was only
the daughter of Cardinal Roderigo Borgia was not a
man powerful enough, either by birth and fortune or
by intellect, to enter with any sort of effect into
the plots and plans of Alexander vi; the separation
was therefore changed into a divorce, and Lucrezia
Borgia was now free to remarry. Alexander opened
up two negotiations at the same time: he needed
an ally to keep a watch on the policy of the neighbouring
States. John Sforza, grandson of Alexander Sforza,
brother of the great Francis I, Duke of Milan, was
lord of Pesaro; the geographical situation of this
place, an the coast, on the way between Florence and
Venice, was wonderfully convenient for his purpose;
so Alexander first cast an eye upon him, and as the
interest of both parties was evidently the same, it
came about that John Sforza was very soon Lucrezia’s
second husband.
At the same time overtures had been
made to Alfonso of Aragon, heir presumptive to the
crown of Naples, to arrange a marriage between Dana
Sancia, his illegitimate daughter, and Goffreda, the
pope’s third son; but as the old Ferdinand wanted
to make the best bargain he could out of it; he dragged
on the negotiations as long as possible, urging that
the two children were not of marriageable age, and
so, highly honoured as he felt in such a prospective
alliance, there was no hurry about the engagement.
Matters stopped at this point, to the great annoyance
of Alexander vi, who saw through this excuse,
and understood that the postponement was nothing more
or less than a refusal. Accordingly Alexander
and Ferdinand remained in statu quo, equals in the
political game, both on the watch till events should
declare for one or other. The turn of fortune
was for Alexander.
Italy, though tranquil, was instinctively
conscious that her calm was nothing but the lull which
goes before a storm. She was too rich and too
happy to escape the envy of other nations. As
yet the plains of Pisa had not been reduced to marsh-lands
by the combined negligence and jealousy of the Florentine
Republic, neither had the rich country that lay around
Rome been converted into a barren desert by the wars
of the Colonna and Orsini families; not yet had the
Marquis of Marignan razed to the ground a hundred
and twenty villages in the republic of Siena alone;
and though the Maremma was unhealthy, it was not yet
a poisonous marsh: it is a fact that Flavio Blando,
writing in 1450, describes Ostia as being merely less
flourishing than in the days of the Romans, when she
had numbered 50,000 inhabitants, whereas now in our
own day there are barely 30 in all.
The Italian peasants were perhaps
the most blest on the face of the earth: instead
of living scattered about the country in solitary fashion,
they lived in villages that were enclosed by walls
as a protection for their harvests, animals, and farm
implements; their houses at any rate those
that yet stand prove that they lived in
much more comfortable and beautiful surroundings than
the ordinary townsman of our day. Further, there
was a community of interests, and many people collected
together in the fortified villages, with the result
that little by little they attained to an importance
never acquired by the boorish French peasants or the
German serfs; they bore arms, they had a common treasury,
they elected their own magistrates, and whenever they
went out to fight, it was to save their common country.
Also commerce was no less flourishing
than agriculture; Italy at this period was rich in
industries silk, wool, hemp, fur, alum,
sulphur, bitumen; those products which the Italian
soil could not bring forth were imported, from the
Black Sea, from Egypt, from Spain, from France, and
often returned whence they came, their worth doubled
by labour and fine workmanship. The rich man
brought his merchandise, the poor his industry:
the one was sure of finding workmen, the other was
sure of finding work.
Art also was by no means behindhand:
Dante, Giotto, Brunelleschi, and Donatello were dead,
but Ariosto, Raphael, Bramante, and Michael Angelo
were now living. Rome, Florence, and Naples had
inherited the masterpieces of antiquity; and the manuscripts
of AEschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides had come (thanks
to the conquest of Mahomet ii) to rejoin the
statue of Xanthippus and the works of Phidias and Praxiteles.
The principal sovereigns of Italy had come to understand,
when they let their eyes dwell upon the fat harvests,
the wealthy villages, the flourishing manufactories,
and the marvellous churches, and then compared with
them the poor and rude nations of fighting men who
surrounded them on all sides, that some day or other
they were destined to become for other countries what
America was for Spain, a vast gold-mine for them to
work. In consequence of this, a league offensive
and defensive had been signed, about 1480, by Naples,
Milan, Florence, and Ferrara, prepared to take a stand
against enemies within or without, in Italy or outside.
Ludovico Sforza, who was more than anyone else interested
in maintaining this league, because he was nearest
to France, whence the storm seemed to threaten, saw
in the new pope’s election means not only of
strengthening the league, but of making its power
and unity conspicuous in the sight of Europe.
CHAPTER IV
On the occasion of each new election
to the papacy, it is the custom for all the Christian
States to send a solemn embassy to Rome, to renew their
oath of allegiance to the Holy Father. Ludovico
Sforza conceived the idea that the ambassadors of
the four Powers should unite and make their entry
into Rome on the same day, appointing one of their
envoy, viz. the representative of the King of
Naples, to be spokesman for all four. Unluckily,
this plan did not agree with the magnificent projects
of Piero dei Medici. That proud youth,
who had been appointed ambassador of the Florentine
Republic, had seen in the mission entrusted to him
by his fellow-citizens the means of making a brilliant
display of his own wealth. From the day of his
nomination onwards, his palace was constantly filled
with tailors, jewellers, and merchants of priceless
stuffs; magnificent clothes had been made for him,
embroidered with precious stones which he had selected
from the family treasures. All his jewels, perhaps
the richest in Italy, were distributed about the liveries
of his pages, and one of them, his favourite, was to
wear a collar of pearls valued by itself at 100,000
ducats, or almost, a million of our francs.
In his party the Bishop of Arezzo, Gentile, who had
once been Lorenzo dei Medici’s tutor,
was elected as second ambassador, and it was his duty
to speak. Now Gentile, who had prepared his speech,
counted on his eloquence to charm the ear quite as
much as Piero counted on his riches to dazzle the
eye. But the eloquence of Gentile would be lost
completely if nobody was to speak but the ambassador
of the King of Naples; and the magnificence of Piero
dei Medici would never be noticed at all if he
went to Rome mixed up with all the other ambassadors.
These two important interests, compromised by the
Duke of Milan’s proposition, changed the whole
face of Italy.
Ludovico Sforza had already made sure
of Ferdinand’s promise to conform to the plan
he had invented, when the old king, at the solicitation
of Piero, suddenly drew back. Sforza found out
how this change had come about, and learned that it
was Piero’s influence that had overmastered
his own. He could not disentangle the real motives
that had promised the change, and imagined there was
some secret league against himself: he attributed
the changed political programme to the death of Lorenzo
dei Medici. But whatever its cause might
be, it was evidently prejudicial to his own interests:
Florence, Milan’s old ally, was abandoning her
for Naples. He resolved to throw a counter weight
into the scales; so, betraying to Alexander the policy
of Piero and Ferdinand, he proposed to form a defensive
and offensive alliance with him and admit the republic
of Venice; Duke Hercules iii of Ferrara was also
to be summoned to pronounce for one or other of the
two leagues. Alexander vi, wounded by Ferdinand’s
treatment of himself, accepted Ludovico Sforza’s
proposition, and an Act of Confederation was signed
on the 22nd of April, 1493, by which the new allies
pledged themselves to set on foot for the maintenance
of the public peace an army of 20,000 horse and 6,000
infantry.
Ferdinand was frightened when he beheld
the formation of this league; but he thought he could
neutralise its effects by depriving Ludovico Sforza
of his regency, which he had already kept beyond the
proper time, though as yet he was not strictly an
usurper. Although the young Galeazzo, his nephew,
had reached the age of two-and-twenty, Ludovico Sforza
none the less continued regent. Now Ferdinand
definitely proposed to the Duke of Milan that he should
resign the sovereign power into the hands of his nephew,
on pain of being declared an usurper.
This was a bold stroke; but there
was a risk of inciting Ludovico Sforza to start one
of those political plots that he was so familiar with,
never recoiling from any situation, however dangerous
it might be. This was exactly what happened:
Sforza, uneasy about his duchy, resolved to threaten
Ferdinand’s kingdom.
Nothing could be easier: he knew
the warlike nations of Charles viii, and the
pretensions of the house of France to the kingdom of
Naples. He sent two ambassadors to invite the
young king to claim the rights of Anjou usurped by
Aragon; and with a view to reconciling Charles to so
distant and hazardous an expedition, offered him a
free and friendly passage through his own States.
Such a proposition was welcome to
Charles viii, as we might suppose from our knowledge
of his character; a magnificent prospect was opened
to him as by an enchanter: what Ludovica Sforza
was offering him was virtually the command of the
Mediterranean, the protectorship of the whole of Italy;
it was an open road, through Naples and Venice, that
well might lead to the conquest of Turkey or the Holy
Land, if he ever had the fancy to avenge the disasters
of Nicapolis and Mansourah. So the proposition
was accepted, and a secret alliance was signed, with
Count Charles di Belgiojasa and the Count of
Cajazza acting for Ludovica Sforza, and the Bishop
of St. Malo and Seneschal de Beaucaire far Charles
viii. By this treaty it was agreed:
That the King of France should attempt
the conquest of the kingdom of Naples;
That the Duke of Milan should grant
a passage to the King of France through his territories,
and accompany him with five hundred lances;
That the Duke of Milan should permit
the King of France to send out as many ships of war
as he pleased from Genoa;
Lastly, that the Duke of Milan should
lend the King of France 200,000 ducats,
payable when he started.
On his side, Charles viii agreed:
To defend the personal authority of Ludowico Sforza
over the duchy of
Milan against anyone who might attempt to turn him
out;
To keep two hundred French lances
always in readiness to help the house of Sforza, at
Asti, a town belonging to the Duke of Orleans by the
inheritance of his mother, Valentina Visconti;
Lastly, to hand over to his ally the
principality of Tarentum immediately after the conquest
of Naples was effected.
This treaty was scarcely concluded
when Charles viii, who exaggerated its advantages,
began to dream of freeing himself from every let or
hindrance to the expedition. Precautions were
necessary; for his relations with the great Powers
were far from being what he could have wished.
Indeed, Henry VII had disembarked
at Calais with a formidable army, and was threatening
France with another invasion.
Ferdinand and Isabella of Spain, if
they had not assisted at the fall of the house of
Anjou, had at any rate helped the Aragon party with
men and money.
Lastly, the war with the emperor acquired
a fresh impetus when Charles viii sent back Margaret
of Burgundy to her father Maximilian, and contracted
a marriage with Anne of Brittany.
By the treaty of Etaples, on the 3rd
of November, 1492, Henry VII cancelled the alliance
with the King of the Romans, and pledged himself not
to follow his conquests.
This cost Charles viii 745,000
gold crowns and the expenses of the war with England.
By the treaty of Barcelona, dated
the 19th of January, 1493, Ferdinand the Catholic
and Isabella agreed never to grant aid to their cousin,
Ferdinand of Naples, and never to put obstacles in
the way of the French king in Italy.
This cost Charles viii Perpignan,
Roussillon, and the Cerdagne, which had all been given
to Louis XI as a hostage for the sum of 300,000 ducats
by John of Aragon; but at the time agreed upon, Louis
XI would not give them up for the money, for the old
fox knew very well how important were these doors
to the Pyrénées, and proposed in case of war to keep
them shut.
Lastly, by the treaty of Senlis, dated
the 23rd of May, 1493, Maximilian granted a gracious
pardon to France for the insult her king had offered
him.
It cost Charles viii the counties
of Burgundy, Artois, Charalais, and the seigniory
of Noyers, which had come to him as Margaret’s
dowry, and also the towns of Aire, Hesdin, and Bethune,
which he promised to deliver up to Philip of Austria
on the day he came of age.
By dint of all these sacrifices the
young king made peace with his neighbours, and could
set on foot the enterprise that Ludavico Sforza had
proposed. We have already explained that the
project came into Sforza’s mind when his plan
about the deputation was refused, and that the refusal
was due to Piero dei Medici’s desire
to make an exhibition of his magnificent jewels, and
Gentile’s desire to make his speech.
Thus the vanity of a tutor and the
pride of his scholar together combined to agitate
the civilized world from the Gulf of Tarentum to the
Pyrénées.
Alexander vi was in the very
centre of the impending earthquake, and before Italy
had any idea that the earliest shocks were at hand
he had profited by the perturbed preoccupation of
other people to give the lie to that famous speech
we have reported. He created cardinal John Borgia,
a nephew, who during the last pontificate had been
elected Archbishop of Montreal and Governor of Rome.
This promotion caused no discontent, because of John’s
antecedents; and Alexander, encouraged by the success
of this, promised to Caesar Borgia the archbishopric
of Valencia, a benefice he had himself enjoyed before
his elevation to the papacy. But here the difficulty
arose an the side of the recipient. The young
man, full-blooded, with all the vices and natural
instincts of a captain of condottieri, had very great
trouble in assuming even the appearance of a Churchman’s
virtue; but as he knew from his own father’s
mouth that the highest secular dignities were reserved
far his elder brother, he decided to take what he
could get, for fear of getting nothing; but his hatred
for Francesco grew stronger, for from henceforth he
was doubly his rival, both in love and ambition.
Suddenly Alexander beheld the old
King Ferdinand returning to his side, and at the very
moment when he least expected it. The pope was
too clever a politician to accept a reconciliation
without finding out the cause of it; he soon learned
what plots were hatching at the French court against
the kingdom of Naples, and the whole situation was
explained.
Now it was his turn to impose conditions.
He demanded the completion of a marriage
between Goffreda, his third son, and Dada Sancia,
Alfonso’s illegitimate daughter.
He demanded that she should bring
her husband as dowry the principality of Squillace
and the county of Cariati, with an income of 10,000
ducats and the office of protonotary, one of
the seven great crown offices which are independent
of royal control.
He demanded for his eldest son, whom
Ferdinand the Catholic had just made Duke of Gandia,
the principality of Tricarico, the counties of Chiaramonte,
Lauria, and Carinola, an income of 12,000 ducats,
and the first of the seven great offices which should
fall vacant.
He demanded that Virginio Orsini,
his ambassador at the Neapolitan court, should be
given a third great office, viz. that of Constable,
the most important of them all.
Lastly, he demanded that Giuliano
delta Rovere, one of the five cardinals who had opposed
his election and was now taking refuge at Ostia, where
the oak whence he took his name and bearings is still
to be seen carved on all the walls, should be driven
out of that town, and the town itself given over to
him.
In exchange, he merely pledged himself
never to withdraw from the house of Aragon the investiture
of the kingdom of Naples accorded by his predecessors.
Ferdinand was paying somewhat dearly for a simple
promise; but on the keeping of this promise the legitimacy
of his power wholly depended. For the kingdom
of Naples was a fief of the Holy See; and to the pope
alone belonged the right of pronouncing on the justice
of each competitor’s pretensions; the continuance
of this investiture was therefore of the highest conceivable
importance to Aragon just at the time when Anjou was
rising up with an army at her back to dispossess her.
For a year after he mounted the papal
throne, Alexander vi had made great strides,
as we see, in the extension of his temporal power.
In his own hands he held, to be sure, only the least
in size of the Italian territories; but by the marriage
of his daughter Lucrezia with the lord of Pesaro he
was stretching out one hand as far as Venice, while
by the marriage of the Prince of Squillace with Dona
Sancia, and the territories conceded to the Duke of
Sandia, he was touching with the other hand the boundary
of Calabria.
When this treaty, so advantageous
for himself, was duly signed, he made Caesar Cardinal
of Santa Maria Novella, for Caesar was always complaining
of being left out in the distribution of his father’s
favours.
Only, as there was as yet no precedent
in Church history for a bastard’s donning the
scarlet, the pope hunted up four false witnesses who
declared that Caesar was the son of Count Ferdinand
of Castile; who was, as we know, that valuable person
Don Manuel Melchior, and who played the father’s
part with just as much solemnity as he had played the
husband’s.
The wedding of the two bastards was
most splendid, rich with the double pomp of Church
and King. As the pope had settled that the young
bridal pair should live near him, Caesar Borgia, the
new cardinal, undertook to manage the ceremony of
their entry into Rome and the reception, and Lucrezia,
who enjoyed at her father’s side an amount of
favour hitherto unheard of at the papal court, desired
on her part to contribute all the splendour she had
it in her power to add. He therefore went to
receive the young people with a stately and magnificent
escort of lords and cardinals, while she awaited them
attended by the loveliest and noblest ladies of Rome,
in one of the halls of the Vatican. A throne
was there prepared for the pope, and at his feet were
cushions far Lucrezia and Dona Sancia. “Thus,”
writes Tommaso Tommasi, “by the look of the
assembly and the sort of conversation that went on
for hours, you would suppose you were present at some
magnificent and voluptuous royal audience of ancient
Assyria, rather than at the severe consistory of a
Roman pontiff, whose solemn duty it is to exhibit in
every act the sanctity of the name he bears.
But,” continues the same historian, “if
the Eve of Pentecost was spent in such worthy functions,
the celebrations of the coming of the Holy Ghost on
the following day were no less decorous and becoming
to the spirit of the Church; for thus writes the master
of the ceremonies in his journal:
“’The pope made his entry
into the Church of the Holy Apostles, and beside him
on the marble steps of the pulpit where the canons
of St. Peter are wont to chant the Epistle and Gospel,
sat Lucrezia his daughter and Sancia his son’s
wife: round about them, a disgrace to the Church
and a public scandal, were grouped a number of other
Roman ladies far more fit to dwell in Messalina’s
city than in St. Peter’s.’”
So at Rome and Naples did men slumber
while ruin was at hand; so did they waste their time
and squander their money in a vain display of pride;
and this was going on while the French, thoroughly
alive, were busy laying hands upon the torches with
which they would presently set Italy on fire.
Indeed, the designs of Charles viii
for conquest were no longer for anybody a matter of
doubt. The young king had sent an embassy to
the various Italian States, composed of Perrone dei
Baschi, Brigonnet, d’Aubigny, and the president
of the Provencal Parliament. The mission of
this embassy was to demand from the Italian princes
their co-operation in recovering the rights of the
crown of Naples for the house of Anjou.
The embassy first approached the Venetians,
demanding aid and counsel for the king their master.
But the Venetians, faithful to their political tradition,
which had gained for them the sobriquet of “the
Jews of Christendom,” replied that they were
not in a position to give any aid to the young king,
so long as they had to keep ceaselessly on guard against
the Turks; that, as to advice, it would be too great
a presumption in them to give advice to a prince who
was surrounded by such experienced generals and such
able ministers.
Perrone dei Baschi, when
he found he could get no other answer, next made for
Florence. Piero dei Medici received
him at a grand council, for he summoned on this occasion
not only the seventy, but also the gonfalonieri who
had sat for the last thirty-four years in the Signoria.
The French ambassador put forward his proposal, that
the republic should permit their army to pass through
her States, and pledge herself in that case to supply
for ready money all the necessary victual and fodder.
The magnificent republic replied that if Charles
viii had been marching against the Turks instead
of against Ferdinand, she would be only too ready
to grant everything he wished; but being bound to the
house of Aragon by a treaty, she could not betray
her ally by yielding to the demands of the King of
France.
The ambassadors next turned their
steps to Siena. The poor little republic, terrified
by the honour of being considered at all, replied
that it was her desire to preserve a strict neutrality,
that she was too weak to declare beforehand either
for or against such mighty rivals, for she would naturally
be obliged to join the stronger party. Furnished
with this reply, which had at least the merit of frankness,
the French envoys proceeded to Rome, and were conducted
into the pope’s presence, where they demanded
the investiture of the kingdom of Naples for their
king.
Alexander vi replied that, as
his predecessors had granted this investiture to the
house of Aragon, he could not take it away, unless
it were first established that the house of Anjou
had a better claim than the house that was to be dispossessed.
Then he represented to Perrone dei Baschi
that, as Naples was a fief of the Holy See, to the
pope alone the choice of her sovereign properly belonged,
and that in consequence to attack the reigning sovereign
was to attack the Church itself.
The result of the embassy, we see,
was not very promising for Charles viii; so he
resolved to rely on his ally Ludovico Sforza alone,
and to relegate all other questions to the fortunes
of war.
A piece of news that reached him about
this time strengthened him in this resolution:
this was the death of Ferdinand. The old king
had caught a severe cold and cough on his return from
the hunting field, and in two days he was at his last
gasp. On the 25th of January, 1494, he passed
away, at the age of seventy, after a thirty-six years’
reign, leaving the throne to his elder son, Alfonso,
who was immediately chosen as his successor.
Ferdinand never belied his title of
“the happy ruler.” His death occurred
at the very moment when the fortune of his family was
changing.
The new king, Alfonso, was not a novice
in arms: he had already fought successfully against
Florence and Venice, and had driven the Turks out of
Otranto; besides, he had the name of being as cunning
as his father in the tortuous game of politics so
much in vogue at the Italian courts. He did
not despair of counting among his allies the very enemy
he was at war with when Charles viii first put
forward his pretensions, we mean Bajazet ii.
So he despatched to Bajazet one of his confidential
ministers, Camillo Pandone, to give the Turkish emperor
to understand that the expedition to Italy was to
the King of France nothing but a blind for approaching
the scene of Mahomedan conquests, and that if Charles
viii were once at the Adriatic it would only
take him a day or two to get across and attack Macedonia;
from there he could easily go by land to Constantinople.
Consequently he suggested that Bajazet for the maintenance
of their common interests should supply six thousand
horse and six thousand infantry; he himself would
furnish their pay so long as they were in Italy.
It was settled that Pandone should be joined at Tarentum
by Giorgia Bucciarda, Alexander VI’s envoy,
who was commissioned by the pope to engage the Turks
to help him against the Christians. But while
he was waiting for Bajazet’s reply, which might
involve a delay of several months, Alfonso requested
that a meeting might take place between Piero
dei Medici, the pope, and himself, to take counsel
together about important affairs. This meeting
was arranged at Vicovaro, near Tivoli, and the three
interested parties duly met on the appointed day.
The intention of Alfonso, who before
leaving Naples had settled the disposition of his
naval forces, and given his brother Frederic the command
of a fleet that consisted of thirty-six galleys, eighteen
large and twelve small vessels, with injunctions to
wait at Livorno and keep a watch on the fleet Charles
viii was getting ready at the port of Genoa,
was above all things to check with the aid of his allies
the progress of operations on land. Without
counting the contingent he expected his allies to
furnish, he had at his immediate disposal a hundred
squadrons of heavy cavalry, twenty men in each, and
three thousand bowmen and light horse. He proposed,
therefore, to advance at once into Lombardy, to get
up a revolution in favour of his nephew Galeazzo, and
to drive Ludovico Sforza out of Milan before he could
get help from France; so that Charles viii, at
the very time of crossing the Alps, would find an enemy
to fight instead of a friend who had promised him
a safe passage, men, and money.
This was the scheme of a great politician
and a bold commander; but as everybody had came in
pursuit of his own interests, regardless of the common
this plan was very coldly received by Piero dei
Medici, who was afraid lest in the war he should play
only the same poor part he had been threatened with
in the affair of the embassy; by Alexander vi
it was rejected, because he reckoned on employing
the troops of Alfonso an his own account. He
reminded the King of Naples of one of the conditions
of the investiture he had promised him, viz.
that he should drive out the Cardinal Giuliano delta
Rovere from the town of Ostia, and give up the town
to him, according to the stipulation already agreed
upon. Besides, the advantages that had accrued
to Virginio Orsini, Alexander’s favourite, from
his embassy to Naples had brought upon him the ill-will
of Prospero and Fabrizio Colonna, who owned nearly
all the villages round about Rome. Now the pope
could not endure to live in the midst of such powerful
enemies, and the most important matter was to deliver
him from all of them, seeing that it was really of
moment that he should be at peace who was the head
and soul of the league whereof the others were only
the body and limbs.
Although Alfonso had clearly seen
through the motives of Piero’s coldness, and
Alexander had not even given him the trouble of seeking
his, he was none the less obliged to bow to the will
of his allies, leaving the one to defend the Apennines
against the French, and helping the other to shake
himself free of his neighbours in the Romagna.
Consequently he, pressed on the siege of Ostia, and
added to Virginio’s forces, which already amounted
to two hundred men of the papal army, a body of his
own light horse; this little army was to be stationed
round about Rome, and was to enforce obedience from
the Colonnas. The rest of his troops Alfonso
divided into two parties: one he left in the hands
of his son Ferdinand, with orders to scour the Romagna
and worry, the petty princes into levying and supporting
the contingent they had promised, while with the other
he himself defended the defiles of the Abruzzi.
On the 23rd of April, at three o’clock
in the morning, Alexander vi was freed from the
first and fiercest of his foes; Giuliano delta Rovere,
seeing the impossibility of holding out any longer
against Alfonso’s troops, embarked on a brigantine
which was to carry him to Savona.
From that day forward Virginio Orsini
began that famous partisan warfare which reduced the
country about Rome to the most pathetic desolation
the world has ever seen. During all this time
Charles viii was at Lyons, not only uncertain
as to the route he ought to take for getting into Italy,
but even beginning to reflect a little on the chances
and risks of such an expedition. He had found
no sympathy anywhere except with Ludovico Sforza;
so it appeared not unlikely that he would have to fight
not the kingdom of Naples alone, but the whole of
Italy to boot. In his preparations for war he
had spent almost all the money at his disposal; the
Lady of Beaujeu and the Duke of Bourbon both condemned
his enterprise; Briconnet, who had advised it, did
not venture to support it now; at last Charles, more
irresolute than ever, had recalled several regiments
that had actually started, when Cardinal Giuliano delta
Rovere, driven out of Italy by the pope, arrived at
Lyons, and presented himself before the king.
The cardinal, full of hatred, full
of hope, hastened to Charles, and found him on the
point of abandoning that enterprise on which, as Alexander’s
enemy, delta Rovere rested his whole expectation of
vengeance. He informed Charles of the quarrelling
among his enemies; he showed him that each of them
was seeking his own ends Piero dei
Medici the gratification of his pride, the pope the
aggrandisement of his house. He pointed out that
armed fleets were in the ports of Villefranche, Marseilles,
and Genoa, and that these armaments would be lost;
he reminded him that he had sent Pierre d’Urfe,
his grand equerry, on in advance, to have splendid
accommodation prepared in the Spinola and Doria palaces.
Lastly, he urged that ridicule and disgrace would
fall on him from every side if he renounced an enterprise
so loudly vaunted beforehand, for whose successful
execution, moreover, he had been obliged to sign three
treaties of peace that were all vexatious enough, viz.
with Henry VII, with Maximilian, and with Ferdinand
the Catholic. Giuliano della Rovere
had exercised true insight in probing the vanity of
the young king, and Charles did not hesitate for a
single moment. He ordered his cousin, the Duke
of Orleans (who later on became Louis XII) to take
command of the French fleet and bring it to Genoa;
he despatched a courier to Antoine de Bessay, Baron
de Tricastel, bidding him take to Asti the 2000 Swiss
foot-soldiers he had levied in the cantons; lastly,
he started himself from Vienne, in Dauphiné, on the
23rd of August, 1494, crossed the Alps by Mont Genevre,
without encountering a single body of troops to dispute
his passage, descended into Piedmont and Monferrato,
both just then governed by women regents, the sovereigns
of both principalities being children, Charles John
Aimé and William John, aged respectively six and eight.
The two regents appeared before Charles
viii, one at Turin, one at Casale, each at the
head of a numerous and brilliant court, and both glittering
with jewels and precious stones. Charles, although
he quite well knew that for all these friendly demonstrations
they were both bound by treaty to his enemy, Alfonso
of Naples, treated them all the same with the greatest
politeness, and when they made protestations of friendship,
asked them to let him have a proof of it, suggesting
that they should lend him the diamonds they were covered
with. The two regents could do no less than
obey the invitation which was really a command.
They took off necklaces, rings, and earrings.
Charles viii gave them a receipt accurately
drawn up, and pledged the jewels for 20,000 ducats.
Then, enriched by this money, he resumed his journey
and made his way towards Asti. The Duke of Orleans
held the sovereignty of Asti, as we said before, and
hither came to meet Charles both Ludovico Sforza and
his father-in-law, Hercules d’Este, Duke of
Ferrara. They brought with them not only the
promised troops and money, but also a court composed
of the loveliest women in Italy.
The balls, fêtes, and tourneys began
with a magnificence surpassing anything that Italy
had ever seen before. But suddenly they were
interrupted by the king’s illness. This
was the first example in Italy of the disease brought
by Christopher Columbus from the New World, and was
called by Italians the French, by Frenchmen the Italian
disease. The probability is that some of Columbus’s
crew who were at Genoa or thereabouts had already
brought over this strange and cruel complaint that
counter balanced the gains of the American gold-mines.
The king’s indisposition, however,
did not prove so grave as was at first supposed.
He was cured by the end of a few weeks, and proceeded
on his way towards Pavia, where the young Duke John
Galeazzo lay dying. He and the King of France
were first cousins, sons of two sisters of the house
of Savoy. So Charles viii was obliged to
see him, and went to visit him in the castle where
he lived more like prisoner than lord. He found
him half reclining on a couch, pale and emaciated,
some said in consequence of luxurious living, others
from the effects of a slow but deadly poison.
But whether or not the poor young man was desirous
of pouring out a complaint to Charles, he did not
dare say a word; for his uncle, Ludovico Sforza, never
left the King of France for an instant. But at
the very moment when Charles viii was getting
up to go, the door opened, and a young woman appeared
and threw herself at the king’s feet; she was
the wife of the unlucky John Galeazzo, and came to
entreat his cousin to do nothing against her father
Alfonso, nor against her brother Ferdinand. At
sight of her; Sforza scowled with an anxious and threatening
aspect, far he knew not what impression might be produced
on his ally by this scene. But he was soon reassured;
far Charles replied that he had advanced too far to
draw back now, and that the glory of his name was at
stake as well as the interests of his kingdom, and
that these two motives were far too important to be
sacrificed to any sentiment of pity he might feel,
however real and deep it might be and was. The
poor young woman, who had based her last hope an this
appeal, then rose from her knees and threw herself
sobbing into her husband’s arms. Charles
viii and Ludavico Sforza, took their leave:
John Galeazzo was doomed.
Two days after, Charles viii
left for Florence, accompanied by his ally; but scarcely
had they reached Parma when a messenger caught them
up, and announced to Ludovico that his nephew was
just dead: Ludovico at once begged Charles to
excuse his leaving him to finish the journey alone;
the interests which called him back to Milan were
so important, he said, that he could not under the
circumstances stay away a single day longer.
As a fact he had to make sure of succeeding the man
he had assassinated.
But Charles viii continued his
road not without some uneasiness. The sight
of the young prince on his deathbed had moved him deeply,
for at the bottom of his heart he was convinced that
Ludovico Sforza was his murderer; and a murderer might
very well be a traitor. He was going forward
into an unfamiliar country, with a declared enemy in
front of him and a doubtful friend behind: he
was now at the entrance to the mountains, and as his
army had no store of provisions and only lived from
hand to mouth, a forced delay, however short, would
mean famine. In front of him was Fivizzano,
nothing, it is true, but a village surrounded by walls,
but beyond Fivizzano lay Sarzano and Pietra Santa,
both of them considered impregnable fortresses; worse
than this, they were coming into a part of the country
that was especially unhealthy in October, had no natural
product except oil, and even procured its own corn
from neighbouring provinces; it was plain that a whole
army might perish there in a few days either from
scarcity of food or from the unwholesome air, both
of which were more disastrous than the impediments
offered at every step by the nature of the ground.
The situation was grave; but the pride of Piero
dei Medici came once more to the rescue of the
fortunes of Charles viii.
CHAPTER V
Piero dei Medici had,
as we may remember, undertaken to hold the entrance
to Tuscany against the French; when, however, he saw
his enemy coming dawn from the Alps, he felt less
confident about his own strength, and demanded help
from the pope; but scarcely had the rumour of foreign
invasion began to spread in the Romagna, than the Colonna
family declared themselves the French king’s
men, and collecting all their forces seized Ostia,
and there awaited the coming of the French fleet to
offer a passage through Rome. The pope, therefore,
instead of sending troops to Florence, was obliged
to recall all his soldiers to be near the capital;
the only promise he made to Piero was that if Bajazet
should send him the troops that he had been asking
for, he would despatch that army for him to make use
of. Piero dei Medici had not yet taken
any resolution or formed any plan, when he suddenly
heard two startling pieces of news. A jealous
neighbour of his, the Marquis of Torderiovo, had betrayed
to the French the weak side of Fivizzano, so that
they had taken it by storm, and had put its soldiers
and inhabitants to the edge of the sword; on another
side, Gilbert of Montpensier, who had been lighting
up the sea-coast so as to keep open the communications
between the French army and their fleet, had met with
a detachment sent by Paolo Orsini to Sarzano,
to reinforce the garrison there, and after an hour’s
fighting had cut it to pieces. No quarter had
been granted to any of the prisoners; every man the
French could get hold of they had massacred.
This was the first occasion on which
the Italians, accustomed as they were to the chivalrous
contests of the fifteenth century, found themselves
in contact with savage foreigners who, less advanced
in civilisation, had not yet come to consider war
as a clever game, but looked upon it as simply a mortal
conflict. So the news of these two butcheries
produced a tremendous sensation at Florence, the richest
city in Italy, and the most prosperous in commerce
and in art. Every Florentine imagined the French
to be like an army of those ancient barbarians who
were wont to extinguish fire with blood. The
prophecies of Savonarola, who had predicted the foreign
invasion and the destruction that should follow it,
were recalled to the minds of all; and so much perturbation
was evinced that Piero dei Medici, bent on
getting peace at any price, forced a decree upon the
republic whereby she was to send an embassy to the
conqueror; and obtained leave, resolved as he was to
deliver himself in person into the hands of the French
monarch, to act as one of the ambassadors. He
accordingly quitted Florence, accompanied by four
other messengers, and an his arrival at Pietra
Santa, sent to ask from Charles viii a safe-conduct
for himself alone. The day after he made this
request, Brigonnet and de Piennes came to fetch him,
and led him into the presence of Charles viii.
Piero dei Medici, in spite
of his name and influence, was in the eyes of the
French nobility, who considered it a dishonourable
thing to concern oneself with art or industry, nothing
more than a rich merchant, with whom it would be absurd
to stand upon any very strict ceremony. So Charles
viii received him on horseback, and addressing
him with a haughty air, as a master might address
a servant, demanded whence came this pride of his
that made him dispute his entrance into Tuscany.
Piero dei Medici replied, that, with the
actual consent of Louis XI, his father Lorenzo had
concluded a treaty of alliance with Ferdinand of Naples;
that accordingly he had acted in obedience to prior
obligations, but as he did, not wish to push too far
his devotion to the house of Aragon or his opposition
to France, he was ready to do whatever Charles viii
might demand of him. The king, who had never
looked for such humility in his enemy, demanded that
Sarzano should be given up to him: to this Piero
dei Medici at once consented. Then the
conqueror, wishing to see how far the ambassador of
the magnificent republic would extend his politeness,
replied that this concession was far from satisfying
him, and that he still must have the keys of Pietra
Santa, Pisa, Librafatta, and Livorno. Piero saw
no more difficulty about these than about Sarzano,
and consented on Charles’s mere promise by word
of mouth to restore the town when he had achieved
the conquest of Naples. At last Charles viii,
seeing that this man who had been sent out to negotiate
with him was very easy to manage, exacted as a final
condition, a ‘sine qua non’, however,
of his royal protection, that the magnificent republic
should lend him the sum of 200,000 florins.
Piero found it no harder to dispose of money than
of fortresses, and replied that his fellow-citizens
would be happy to render this service to their new
ally. Then Charles viii set him on horseback,
and ordered him to go on in front, so as to begin to
carry out his promises by yielding up the four fortresses
he had insisted on having. Piero obeyed, and
the French army, led by the grandson of Cosimo the
Great and the son of Lorenzo the Magnificent, continued
its triumphal march through Tuscany.
On his arrival at Lucca, Piero
dei Medici learnt that his concessions to the
King of France were making a terrible commotion at
Florence. The magnificent republic had supposed
that what Charles viii wanted was simply a passage
through her territory, so when the news came there
was a general feeling of discontent, which was augmented
by the return of the other ambassadors, whom Piero
had not even consulted when he took action as he did.
Piero considered it necessary that he should return,
so he asked Charles’s permission to precede
him to the capital. As he had fulfilled all
his promises, except the matter of the loan, which
could not be settled anywhere but at Florence, the
king saw no objection, and the very evening after
he quitted the French army Piero returned incognito
to his palace in the Via Largo.
The next day he proposed to present
himself before the Signoria, but when he arrived
at the Piazza del Palazzo Vecchio,
he perceived the gonfaloniere Jacopo de
Nerli coming towards him, signalling to him that it
was useless to attempt to go farther, and pointing
out to him the figure of Luca Corsini standing at
the gate, sword in hand: behind him stood guards,
ordered, if need-were, to dispute his passage.
Piero dei Medici, amazed by an opposition
that he was experiencing for the first time in his
life, did not attempt resistance. He went home,
and wrote to his brother-in-law, Paolo Orsini,
to come and help him with his gendarmes.
Unluckily for him, his letter was intercepted.
The Signoria considered that it was an attempt
at rebellion. They summoned the citizens to
their aid; they armed hastily, sallied forth in crowds,
and thronged about the piazza of the palace.
Meanwhile Cardinal Gian dei Medici had mounted
on horseback, and under the impression that the Orsini
were coming to the rescue, was riding about the streets
of Florence, accompanied by his servants and uttering
his battle cry, “Palle, Palle.”
But times had changed: there was no echo to the
cry, and when the cardinal reached the Via dei
Calizaioli, a threatening murmur was the only response,
and he understood that instead of trying to arouse
Florence he had much better get away before the excitement
ran too high. He promptly retired to his own
palace, expecting to find there his two brothers,
Piero and Giuliano. But they, under the protection
of Orsini and his gendarmes, had made their escape
by the Porto San Gallo. The peril was imminent,
and Gian dei Medici wished to follow their
example; but wherever he went he was met by a clamour
that grew more and more threatening. At last,
as he saw that the danger was constantly increasing,
he dismounted from his horse and ran into a house that
he found standing open. This house by a lucky
chance communicated with a convent of Franciscans;
one of the friars lent the fugitive his dress, and
the cardinal, under the protection of this humble incognito,
contrived at last to get outside Florence, and joined
his two brothers in the Apennines.
The same day the Medici were declared
traitors and rebels, and ambassadors were sent to
the King of France. They found him at Pisa,
where he was granting independence to the town which
eighty-seven years ago had fallen under the rule of
the Florentines. Charles viii made no reply
to the envoys, but merely announced that he was going
to march on Florence.
Such a reply, one may easily understand,
terrified the republic. Florence, had no time
to prepare a defence, and no strength in her present
state to make one. But all the powerful houses
assembled and armed their own servants and retainers,
and awaited the issue, intending not to begin hostilities,
but to defend themselves should the French make an
attack. It was agreed that if any necessity should
arise for taking up arms, the bells of the various
churches in the town should ring a peal and so serve
as a general signal. Such a resolution was perhaps
of more significant moment in Florence than it could
have been in any other town. For the palaces
that still remain from that period are virtually fortresses
and the eternal fights between Guelphs and Ghibellines
had familiarised the Tuscan people with street warfare.
The king appeared, an the 17th of
November, in the evening, at the gate of San Friano.
He found there the nobles of Florence clad in their
most magnificent apparel, accompanied by priests chanting
hymns, and by a mob who were full of joy at any prospect
of change, and hoped for a return of liberty after
the fall of the Medici. Charles viii stopped
for a moment under a sort of gilded canopy that had
been prepared for him, and replied in a few evasive
words to the welcoming speeches which were addressed
to him by the Signoria; then he asked for his
lance, he set it in rest, and gave the order to enter
the town, the whole of which he paraded with his army
following him with arms erect, and then went down to
the palace of the Medici, which had been prepared
for him.
The next day negotiations commenced;
but everyone was out of his reckoning. The Florentines
had received Charles viii as a guest, but he
had entered the city as a conqueror. So when
the deputies of the Signoria spoke of ratifying
the treaty of Piero dei Medici, the king
replied that such a treaty no longer existed, as they
had banished the man who made it; that he had conquered
Florence, as he proved the night before, when he entered
lance in hand; that he should retain the sovereignty,
and would make any further decision whenever it pleased
him to do so; further, he would let them know later
on whether he would reinstate the Medici or whether
he would delegate his authority to the Signoria:
all they had to do was to come back the next day, and
he would give them his ultimatum in writing.
This reply threw Florence into a great
state of consternation; but the Florentines were confirmed
in their resolution of making a stand. Charles,
for his part, had been astonished by the great number
of the inhabitants; not only was every street he had
passed through thickly lined with people, but every
house from garret to basement seemed overflowing with
human beings. Florence indeed, thanks to her
rapid increase in population, could muster nearly
150,000 souls.
The next day, at the appointed hour,
the deputies made their appearance to meet the king.
They were again introduced into his presence, and
the discussion was reopened. At last, as they
were coming to no sort of understanding, the royal
secretary, standing at the foot of the throne upon
which Charles viii sat with covered head, unfolded
a paper and began to read, article by article, the
conditions imposed by the King of France. But
scarcely had he read a third of the document when the
discussion began more hotly than ever before.
Then Charles viii said that thus it should be,
or he would order his trumpets to be sounded.
Hereupon Piero Capponi, secretary to the republic,
commonly called the Scipio of Florence, snatched from
the royal secretary’s hand the shameful proposal
of capitulation, and tearing it to pieces, exclaimed:
“Very good, sire; blow your
trumpets, and we will ring our bells.”
He threw the pieces in the face of
the amazed reader, and dashed out of the room to give
the terrible order that would convert the street of
Florence into a battlefield.
Still, against all probabilities,
this bold answer saved the town. The French supposed,
from such audacious words, addressed as they were to
men who so far had encountered no single obstacle,
that the Florentines were possessed of sure resources,
to them unknown: the few prudent men who retained
any influence over the king advised him accordingly
to abate his pretensions; the result was that Charles
viii offered new and more reasonable conditions,
which were accepted, signed by both parties, and proclaimed
on the 26th of November during mass in the cathedral
of Santa Maria Del Fiore.
These were the conditions:
The Signoria were to pay to Charles
viii, as subsidy, the sum of 120,000 florins,
in three instalments;
The Signoria were to remove the
sequestration imposed upon the property of the Medici,
and to recall the decree that set a price on their
heads;
The Signoria were to engage to
pardon the Pisans, on condition of their again submitting
to the rule of Florence;
Lastly, the Signoria were to
recognise the claims of the Duke of Milan over Sarzano
and Pietra Santa, and these claims thus recognised,
were to be settled by arbitration.
In exchange for this, the King of
France pledged himself to restore the fortresses that
had been given up to him, either after he had made
himself master of the town of Naples, or when this
war should be ended by a peace or a two years’
truce, or else when, for any reason whatsoever, he
should have quitted Italy.
Two days after this proclamation,
Charles viii, much to the joy of the Signoria,
left Florence, and advanced towards Rome by the route
of Poggibondi and Siena.
The pope began to be affected by the
general terror: he had heard of the massacres
of Fivizzano, of Lunigiane, and of Imola; he knew that
Piero dei Medici had handed over the Tuscan
fortresses, that Florence had succumbed, and that
Catherine Sforza had made terms with the conqueror;
he saw the broken remnants of the Neapolitan troops
pass disheartened through Rome, to rally their strength
in the Abruzzi, and thus he found himself exposed
to an enemy who was advancing upon him with the whole
of the Romagna under his control from one sea to the
other, in a line of march extending from Piombina
to Ancona.
It was at this juncture that Alexander
vi received his answer from Bajazet ii:
the reason of so long a delay was that the pope’s
envoy and the Neapolitan ambassador had been stopped
by Gian della Rovere, the Cardinal
Giuliano’s brother, just as they were disembarking
at Sinigaglia. They were charged with a verbal
answer, which was that the sultan at this moment was
busied with a triple war, first with the Sultan of
Egypt, secondly with the King of Hungary, and thirdly
with the Greeks of Macedonia and Epirus; and therefore
he could not, with all the will in the world, help
His Holiness with armed men. But the envoys were
accompanied by a favourite of the sultan’s bearing
a private letter to Alexander vi, in which Bajazet
offered on certain conditions to help him with money.
Although, as we see, the messengers had been stopped
on the way, the Turkish envoy had all the same found
a means of getting his despatch sent to the pope:
we give it here in all its naïveté.
“Bajazet the Sultan, son of
the Sultan Mahomet ii, by the grace of God Emperor
of Asia and Europe, to the Father and Lord of all the
Christians, Alexander vi, Roman pontiff and pope
by the will of heavenly Providence, first, greetings
that we owe him and bestow with all our heart.
We make known to your Highness, by the envoy of your
Mightiness, Giorgio Bucciarda, that we have been apprised
of your convalescence, and received the news thereof
with great joy and comfort. Among other matters,
the said Bucciarda has brought us word that the King
of France, now marching against your Highness, has
shown a desire to take under his protection our brother
D’jem, who is now under yours a thing
which is not only against our will, but which would
also be the cause of great injury to your Highness
and to all Christendom. In turning the matter
over with your envoy Giorgio we have devised a scheme
most conducive to peace and most advantageous and
honourable for your Highness; at the same time satisfactory
to ourselves personally; it would be well if our aforesaid
brother D’jem, who being a man is liable to death,
and who is now in the hands of your Highness, should
quit this world as soon as possible, seeing that his
departure, a real good to him in his position, would
be of great use to your Highness, and very conducive
to your peace, while at the same time it would be
very agreeable to us, your friend. If this proposition
is favourably received, as we hope, by your Highness,
in your desire to be friendly towards us, it would
be advisable both in the interests of your Highness
and for our own satisfaction that it should occur
rather sooner than later, and by the surest means you
might be pleased to employ; so that our said brother
D’jem might pass from the pains of this world
into a better and more peaceful life, where at last
he may find repose. If your Highness should adapt
this plan and send us the body of our brother, We,
the above-named Sultan Bajazet, pledge ourselves to
send to your Highness, wheresoever and by whatsoever
hands you please, the sum of 300,000 ducats,
With which sum you could purchase some fair domain
for your children. In order to facilitate this
purchase, we would be willing, while awaiting the issue,
to place the 300,000 ducats in the hands of a
third party, so that your Highness might be quite
certain of receiving the money on an appointed day,
in return for the despatch of our brother’s
body. Moreover, we promise your Highness herewith,
for your greater satisfaction, that never, so long
as you shall remain on the pontifical throne, shall
there be any hurt done to the Christians, neither
by us, nor by our servants, nor by any of our compatriots,
of whatsoever kind or condition they may be, neither
on sea nor on land. And for the still further
satisfaction of your Highness, and in order that no
doubt whatever may remain concerning the fulfilment
of our promises, we have sworn and affirmed in the
presence of Bucciarda, your envoy, by the true God
whom we adore and by our holy Gospels, that they shall
be faithfully kept from the first point unto the last.
And now for the final and complete assurance of your
Highness, in order that no doubt may still remain
in your heart, and that you may be once again and
profoundly convinced of our good faith, we the aforesaid
Sultan Bajazet do swear by the true God, who has created
the heavens and the earth and all that therein is,
that we will religiously observe all that has been
above said and declared, and in the future will do
nothing and undertake nothing that may be contrary
to the interests of your Highness.
“Given at Constantinople, in
our palace, on the 12th of September A.D. 1494.”
This letter was the cause of great
joy to the Holy Father: the aid of four or five
thousand Turks would be insufficient under the present
circumstances, and would only serve to compromise the
head of Christendom, while the sum of 300,000 ducats that
is, nearly a million francs was good to
get in any sort of circumstances. It is true
that, so long as D’jem lived, Alexander was
drawing an income of 180,000 livres, which as a life
annuity represented a capital of nearly two millions;
but when one needs ready mangy, one ought to be able
to make a sacrifice in the way of discount.
All the same, Alexander formed no definite plan, resolved
on acting as circumstances should indicate.
But it was a more pressing business
to decide how he should behave to the King of France:
he had never anticipated the success of the French
in Italy, and we have seen that he laid all the foundations
of his family’s future grandeur upon his alliance
with the house of Aragon. But here was this
house tattering, and a volcano more terrible than her
own Vesuvius was threatening to swallow up Naples.
He must therefore change his policy, and attach himself
to the victor, no easy matter, for Charles
viii was bitterly annoyed with the pope for having
refused him the investiture and given it to Aragon.
In consequence, he sent Cardinal Francesco
Piccolomini as an envoy to the king. This choice
looked like a mistake at first, seeing that the ambassador
was a nephew of Pius ii, who had vigorously opposed
the house of Anjou; but Alexander in acting thus had
a second design, which could not be discerned by those
around him. In fact, he had divined that Charles
would not be quick to receive his envoy, and that,
in the parleyings to which his unwillingness must
give rise, Piccolomini would necessarily be brought
into contact with the young king’s advisers.
Now, besides his ostensible mission to the king,
Piccalamini had also secret instructions for the more
influential among his counsellors. These were
Briconnet and Philippe de Luxembourg; and Piccolomini
was authorised to promise a cardinal’s hat to
each of them. The result was just what Alexander
had foreseen: his envoy could not gain admission
to Charles, and was obliged to confer with the people
about him. This was what the pope wished.
Piccolomini returned to Rome with the king’s
refusal, but with a promise from Briconnet and Philippe
de Luxembourg that they would use all their influence
with Charles in favour of the Holy Father, and prepare
him to receive a fresh embassy.
But the French all this time were
advancing, and never stopped more than forty-eight
hours in any town, so that it became more and more
urgent to get something settled with Charles.
The king had entered Siena and Viterbo without striking
a blow; Yves d’ Alegre and Louis de Ligny had
taken over Ostia from the hands of the Colonnas; Civita
Vecchia and Corneto had opened their gates; the Orsini
had submitted; even Gian Sforza, the pope’s
son-in-law, had retired from the alliance with Aragon.
Alexander accordingly judged that the moment had came
to abandon his ally, and sent to Charles the Bishops
of Concordia and Terni, and his confessor, Mansignore
Graziano. They were charged to renew to Briconnet
and Philippe de Luxembourg the promise of the cardinalship,
and had full powers of negotiation in the name of
their master, both in case Charles should wish to
include Alfonso ii in the treaty, and in case
he should refuse to sign an agreement with any other
but the pope alone. They found the mind of Charles
influenced now by the insinuation of Giuliano
della Ravere, who, himself a witness of the pope’s
simony, pressed the king to summon a council and depose
the head of the Church, and now by the secret support
given him by the Bishops of Mans and St. Malo.
The end of it was that the king decided to form his
own opinion about the matter and settle nothing beforehand,
and continued this route, sending the ambassadors
back to the pope, with the addition of the Marechal
de Gie, the Seneschal de Beaucaire, and Jean de Gannay,
first president of the Paris Parliament. They
were ordered to say to the pope
(1) That the king wished above all
things to be admitted into Rome without resistance;
that, an condition of a voluntary, frank, and loyal
admission, he would respect the authority of the Holy
Father and the privileges of the Church;
(2) That the king desired that D’jem
should be given up to him, in order that he might
make use of him against the sultan when he should carry
the war into Macedonia or Turkey or the Holy Land;
(3) That the remaining conditions
were so unimportant that they could be brought forward
at the first conference.
The ambassadors added that the French
army was now only two days distant from Rome, and
that in the evening of the day after next Charles would
probably arrive in person to demand an answer from
His Holiness.
It was useless to think of parleying
with a prince who acted in such expeditious fashion
as this. Alexander accordingly warned Ferdinand
to quit Rome as soon as possible, in the interests
of his own personal safety. But Ferdinand refused
to listen to a word, and declared that he would not
go out at one gate while Charles viii came in
at another. His sojourn was not long.
Two days later, about eleven o’clock in the
morning, a sentinel placed on a watch-tower at the
top of the Castle S. Angelo, whither the pope had
retired, cried out that the vanguard of the enemy
was visible on the horizon. At once Alexander
and the Duke of Calabria went up an the terrace which
tops the fortress, and assured themselves with their
own eyes that what the soldier said was true.
Then, and not till then, did the duke of Calabria mount
an horseback, and, to use his own words, went out
at the gate of San Sebastiana, at the same moment
that the French vanguard halted five hundred feet from
the Gate of the People. This was on the 31st
of December 1494.
At three in the afternoon the whole
army had arrived, and the vanguard began their march,
drums beating, ensigns unfurled. It was composed,
says Paolo Giove, an eye-witness (book ii,
of his History), of Swiss and German soldiers,
with short tight coats of various colours: they
were armed with short swords, with steel edges like
those of the ancient Romans, and carried ashen lances
ten feet long, with straight and sharp iron spikes:
only one-fourth of their number bore halberts instead
of lances, the spikes cut into the form of an axe and
surmounted by a four-cornered spike, to be used both
for cutting like an axe and piercing like a bayonet:
the first row of each battalion wore helmets and cuirasses
which protected the head and chest, and when the men
were drawn up for battle they presented to the enemy
a triple array of iron spikes, which they could raise
or lower like the spines of a porcupine. To each
thousand of the soldiery were attached a hundred fusiliers:
their officers, to distinguish them from the men,
wore lofty plumes on their helmets.
After the Swiss infantry came the
archers of Gascony: there were five thousand
of them, wearing a very simple dress, that contrasted
with the rich costume of the Swiss soldiers, the shortest
of whom would have been a head higher than the tallest
of the Gascons. But they were excellent soldiers,
full of courage, very light, and with a special reputation
for quickness in stringing and drawing their iron
bows.
Behind them rode the cavalry, the
flower of the French nobility, with their gilded helmets
and neck bands, their velvet and silk surcoats, their
swords each of which had its own name, their shields
each telling of territorial estates, and their colours
each telling of a lady-love. Besides defensive
arms, each man bore a lance in his hand, like an Italian
gendarme, with a solid grooved end, and on his saddle
bow a quantity of weapons, some for cutting and same
for thrusting. Their horses were large and strong,
but they had their tails and ears cropped according
to the French custom. These horses, unlike those
of the Italian gendarmes, wore no caparisons
of dressed leather, which made them more exposed to
attack. Every knight was followed by three horses the
first ridden by a page in armour like his own, the
two others by equerries who were called lateral auxiliaries,
because in a fray they fought to right and left of
their chief. This troop was not only the most
magnificent, but the most considerable in the whole
army; for as there were 2500 knights, they formed
each with their three followers a total of 10,000
men. Five thousand light horse rode next, who
carried huge wooden bows, and shot long arrows from
a distance like English archers. They were a
great help in battle, for moving rapidly wherever
aid was required, they could fly in a moment from one
wing to another, from the rear to the van, then when
their quivers were empty could go off at so swift
a gallop that neither infantry or heavy cavalry could
pursue them. Their defensive armour consisted
of a helmet and half-cuirass; some of them carried
a short lance as well, with which to pin their stricken
foe to the ground; they all wore long cloaks adorned
with shoulder-knots, and plates of silver whereon
the arms of their chief were emblazoned.
At last came the young king’s
escort; there were four hundred archers, among whom
a hundred Scots formed a line on each side, while two
hundred of the most illustrious knights marched on
foot beside the prince, carrying heavy arms on their
shoulders. In the midst of this magnificent
escort advanced Charles viii, both he and his
horse covered with splendid armour; an his right and
left marched Cardinal Ascanio Sforza, the Duke of
Milan’s brother, and Cardinal Giuliano della
Rovere, of whom we have spoken so often, who
was afterwards Pope Julius ii. The Cardinals
Colonna and Savelli followed immediately after, and
behind them came Prospero and Fabrizia Colonna, and
all the Italian princes and generals who had thrown
in their lot with the conqueror, and were marching
intermingled with the great French lords.
For a long time the crowd that had
collected to see all these foreign soldiers go by,
a sight so new and strange, listened uneasily to a
dull sound which got nearer and nearer. The
earth visibly trembled, the glass shook in the windows,
and behind the king’s escort thirty-six bronze
cannons were seen to advance, bumping along as they
lay on their gun-carriages. These cannons were
eight feet in length; and as their mouths were large
enough to hold a man’s head, it was supposed
that each of these terrible machines, scarcely known
as yet to the Italians, weighed nearly six thousand
pounds. After the cannons came culverins sixteen
feet long, and then falconets, the smallest of which
shot balls the size of a grenade. This formidable
artillery brought up the rear of the procession, and
formed the hindmost guard of the French army.
It was six hours since the front guard
entered the town; and as it was now night and for
every six artillery-men there was a torch-bearer, this
illumination gave to the objects around a more gloomy
character than they would have shown in the sunlight.
The young king was to take up his quarters in the
Palazzo di Venezia, and all the artillery
was directed towards the plaza and the neighbouring
streets. The remainder of the army was dispersed
about the town. The same evening, they brought
to the king, less to do honour to him than to assure
him of his safety, the keys of Rome and the keys of
the Belvedere Garden just the same thing had been
done for the Duke of Calabria.
The pope, as we said, had retired
to the Castle S. Angelo with only six cardinals, so
from the day after his arrival the young king had around
him a court of very different brilliance from that
of the head of the Church. Then arose anew the
question of a convocation to prove Alexander’s
simony and proceed to depose him; but the king’s
chief counsellors, gained over, as we know, pointed
out that this was a bad moment to excite a new schism
in the Church, just when preparations were being made
for war against the infidels. As this was also
the king’s private opinion, there was not much
trouble in persuading him, and he made up his mind
to treat with His Holiness.
But the negotiations had scarcely
begun when they had to be broken off; for the first
thing Charles viii demanded was the surrender
of the Castle S. Angelo, and as the pope saw in this
castle his only refuge, it was the last thing he chose
to give up. Twice, in his youthful impatience,
Charles wanted to take by force what he could not get
by goodwill, and had his cannons directed towards
the Holy Father’s dwelling-place; but the pope
was unmoved by these demonstrations; and obstinate
as he was, this time it was the French king who gave
way.
This article, therefore, was set aside,
and the following conditions were agreed upon:
That there should be from this day
forward between His Majesty the King of France and
the Holy Father a sincere friendship and a firm alliance;
Before the completion of the conquest
of the kingdom of Naples, the King of France should
occupy, for the advantage and accommodation of his
army, the fortresses of Civita Vecchia, Terracina,
and Spoleto;
Lastly, the Cardinal Valentino (this
was now the name of Caesar Borgia, after his archbishopric
of Valencia) should accompany the king in the capacity
of apostolic ambassador, really as a hostage.
These conditions fixed, the ceremonial
of an interview was arranged. The king left the
Palazzo di Venezia and went to live
in the Vatican. At the appointed time he entered
by the door of a garden that adjoined the palace,
while the pope, who had not had to quit the Castle
S. Angelo, thanks to a corridor communicating between
the two palaces, came down into the same garden by
another gate. The result of this arrangement
was that the king the next moment perceived the pope,
and knelt down, but the pope pretended not to see
him, and the king advancing a few paces, knelt a second
time; as His Holiness was at that moment screened by
some masonry, this supplied him with another excuse,
and the king went on with the performance, got up
again, once mare advanced several steps, and was on
the point of kneeling down the third time face to face,
when the Holy Father at last perceived him, and, walking
towards him as though he would prevent him from kneeling,
took off his own hat, and pressing him to his heart,
raised him up and tenderly kissed his forehead, refusing
to cover until the king had put his cap upon his head,
with the aid of the pope’s own hands.
Then, after they had stood for a moment, exchanging
polite and friendly speeches, the king lost no time
in praying His Holiness to be so good as to receive
into the Sacred College William Bricannet, the Bishop
of St. Malo. As this matter had been agreed upon
beforehand by that prelate and His Holiness, though
the king was not aware of it, Alexander was pleased
to get credit by promptly granting the request; and
he instantly ordered one of his attendants to go to
the house of his son, Cardinal Valentino, and fetch
a cape and hat. Then taking the king by the
hand, he conducted him into the hall of Papagalli,
where the ceremony was to take place of the admission
of the new cardinal. The solemn oath of obedience
which was to be taken by Charles to His Holiness as
supreme head of the Christian Church was postponed
till the following day.
When that solemn day arrived, every
person important in Rome, noble, cleric, or soldier,
assembled around His Holiness. Charles, on his
side, made his approach to the Vatican with a splendid
following of princes, prelates, and captains.
At the threshold of the palace he found four cardinals
who had arrived before him: two of them placed.
themselves one on each side of him, the two others
behind him, and all his retinue following, they traversed
a long line of apartments full of guards and servants,
and at last arrived in the reception-room, where the
pope was seated on his throne, with his son, Caesar
Borgia; behind him. On his arrival at the door,
the King of France began the usual ceremonial, and
when he had gone on from génuflexions to kissing
the feet, the hand, and the forehead, he stood up,
while the first president of the Parliament of Paris,
in his turn stepping forward, said in a loud voice:
“Very Holy Father, behold my
king ready to offer to your Holiness that oath of
obedience that he owes to you; but in France it is
customary that he who offers himself as vassal to
his lord shall receive in exchange therefor such boons
as he may demand. His Majesty, therefore, while
he pledges himself for his own part to behave unto
your Holiness with a munificence even greater than
that wherewith your Holiness shall behave unto him,
is here to beg urgently that you accord him three favours.
These favours are: first, the confirmation of
priveleges already granted to the king, to the queen
his wife, and to the dauphin his son; secondly, the
investiture, for himself and his successors, of the
kingdom of Naples; lastly, the surrender to him of
the person of the sultan D’jem, brother of the
Turkish emperor.”
At this address the pope was for a
moment stupefied, for he did not expect these three
demands, which were moreover made so publicly by Charles
that no manner of refusal was possible. But quickly
recovering his presence of mind, he replied to the
king that he would willingly confirm the privileges
that had been accorded to the house of France by his
predecessors; that he might therefore consider his
first demand granted; that the investiture of the
kingdom was an affair that required deliberation in
a council of cardinals, but he would do all he possibly
could to induce them to accede to the king’s
desire; lastly, he must defer the affair of the sultan’s
brother till a time more opportune for discussing
it with the Sacred College, but would venture to say
that, as this surrender could not fail to be for the
good of Christendom, as it was demanded for the purpose
of assuring further the success of a crusade, it would
not be his fault if on this point also the king should
not be satisfied.
At this reply, Charles bowed his head
in sign of satisfaction, and the first president stood
up, uncovered, and resumed his discourse as follows.
“Very Holy Father, it is an
ancient custom among Christian kings, especially the
Most Christian kings of France, to signify, through
their ambassadors, the respect they feel for the Holy
See and the sovereign pontiffs whom Divine Providence
places thereon; but the Most Christian king, having
felt a desire to visit the tombs of the holy apostles,
has been pleased to pay this religious debt, which
he regards as a sacred duty, not by ambassadors or
by delegates, but in his own person. This is
why, Very Holy Father, His Majesty the King of France
is here to acknowledge you as the true vicar of Christ,
the legitimate successor of the apostles St. Peter
and St. Paul, and with promise and vow renders you
that filial and respectful devotion which the kings
his predecessors have been accustomed to promise and
vow, devoting himself and all his strength to the
service of your Holiness and the interests of the Holy
See.”
The pope arose with a joyful heart;
for this oath, so publicly made, removed all his fears
about a council; so inclined from this moment to yield
to the King of France anything he might choose to ask,
he took him by his left hand and made him a short
and friendly reply, dubbing him the Church’s
eldest son. The ceremony over, they left the
hall, the pope always holding the king’s hand
in his, and in this way they walked as far as the
room where the sacred vestments are put off; the pope
feigned a wish to conduct the king to his own apartments,
but the king would not suffer this, and, embracing
once more, they separated, each to retire to his own
domicile.
The king remained eight days longer
at the Vatican, then returned to the Palazzo San Marco.
During these eight days all his demands were debated
and settled to his satisfaction. The Bishop of
Mans was made cardinal; the investiture of the kingdom
of Naples was promised to the conqueror; lastly, it
was agreed that on his departure the King of France
should receive from the pope’s hand the brother
of the Emperor of Constantinople, for a sum of 120,000
livres. But the pope, desiring to
extend to the utmost the hospitality he had been bestowing,
invited D’jem to dinner on the very day that
he was to leave Rome with his new protector.
When the moment of departure arrived,
Charles mounted his horse in full armour, and with
a numerous and brilliant following made his way to
the Vatican; arrived at the door, he dismounted, and
leaving his escort at the Piazza of St. Peter, went
up with a few gentlemen only. He found His Holiness
waiting for him, with Cardinal Valentino on his right,
and on his left D’jem, who, as we said before,
was dining with him, and round the table thirteen
cardinals. The king at once, bending on his knee,
demanded the pope’s benediction, and stooped
to kiss his feet. But this Alexander would not
suffer; he took him in his arms, and with the lips
of a father and heart of an enemy, kissed him tenderly
on his forehead. Then the pope introduced the
son of Mahomet ii, who was a fine young man,
with something noble and regal in his air, presenting
in his magnificent oriental costume a great contrast
in its fashion and amplitude to the narrow, severe
cut of the Christian apparel. D’jem advanced
to Charles without humility and without pride, and,
like an emperor’s son treating with a king,
kissed his hand and then his shoulder; then, turning
towards the Holy Father, he said in Italian, which
he spoke very well, that he entreated he would recommend
him to the young king, who was prepared to take him
under his protection, assuring the pontiff that he
should never have to repent giving him his liberty,
and telling Charles that he hoped he might some day
be proud of him, if after taking Naples he carried
out his intention of going on to Greece. These
words were spoken with so much dignity and at the
same time with such gentleness, that the King of France
loyally and frankly grasped the young sultan’s
hand, as though he were his companion-in-arms.
Then Charles took a final farewell of the pope, and
went down to the piazza. There he was awaited
by Cardinal Valentino, who was about to accompany
him, as we know, as a hostage, and who had remained
behind to exchange a few words with his father.
In a moment Caesar Borgia appeared, riding on a splendidly
harnessed mule, and behind him were led six magnificent
horses, a present from the Holy Father to the King
of France. Charles at once mounted one of these,
to do honour to the gift. The pope had just
conferred on him, and leaving Rome with the rest of
his troops, pursued his way towards Marino, where
he arrived the same evening.
He learned there that Alfonso, belying
his reputation as a clever politician and great general,
had just embarked with all his treasures in a flotilla
of four galleys, leaving the care of the war and the
management of his kingdom to his son Ferdinand.
Thus everything went well for the triumphant march
of Charles: the gates of towns opened of themselves
at his approach, his enemies fled without waiting for
his coming, and before he had fought a single battle
he had won for himself the surname of Conqueror.
The day after at dawn the army started
once more, and after marching the whole day, stopped
in the evening at Velletri. There the king, who
had been on horseback since the morning, with Cardinal
Valentine and D’jem, left the former at his
lodging, and taking D’jem with him, went on to
his own. Then Caesar Borgia, who among the army
baggage had twenty very heavy waggons of his own,
had one of these opened, took out a splendid cabinet
with the silver necessary for his table, and gave orders
for his supper to be prepared, as he had done the
night before. Meanwhile, night had come on,
and he shut himself up in a private chamber, where,
stripping off his cardinal’s costume, he put
on a groom’s dress. Thanks to this disguise,
he issued from the house that had been assigned for
his accommodation without being recognised, traversed
the streets, passed through the gates, and gained
the open country. Nearly half a league outside
the town, a servant awaited him with two swift horses.
Caesar, who was an excellent rider, sprang to the
saddle, and he and his companion at full gallop retraced
the road to Rome, where they arrived at break of day.
Caesar got down at the house of one Flores, auditor
of the rota, where he procured a fresh horse and suitable
clothes; then he flew at once to his mother, who gave
a cry of joy when she saw him; for so silent and mysterious
was the cardinal for all the world beside, and even
for her, that he had not said a word of his early return
to Rome. The cry of joy uttered by Rosa Vanozza
when she beheld her son was far mare a cry of vengeance
than of love. One evening, while everybody was
at the rejoicings in the Vatican, when Charles viii
and Alexander vi were swearing a friendship which
neither of them felt, and exchanging oaths that were
broken beforehand, a messenger from Rosa Vanozza had
arrived with a letter to Caesar, in which she begged
him to come at once to her house in the Via delta
Longara. Caesar questioned the messenger, but
he only replied that he could tell him nothing, that
he would learn all he cared to know from his mother’s
own lips. So, as soon as he was at liberty,
Caesar, in layman’s dress and wrapped in a large
cloak, quitted the Vatican and made his way towards
the church of Regina Coeli, in the neighbourhood
of which, it will be remembered, was the house where
the pope’s mistress lived.
As he approached his mother’s
house, Caesar began to observe the signs of strange
devastation. The street was scattered with the
wreck of furniture and strips of precious stuffs.
As he arrived at the foot of the little flight of
steps that led to the entrance gate, he saw that the
windows were broken and the remains of torn curtains
were fluttering in front of them. Not understanding
what this disorder could mean, he rushed into the
house and through several deserted and wrecked apartments.
At last, seeing light in one of the rooms, he went
in, and there found his mother sitting on the remains
of a chest made of ebony all inlaid with ivory and
silver. When she saw Caesar, she rose, pale
and dishevelled, and pointing to the desolation around
her, exclaimed:
“Look, Caesar; behold the work of your new friends.”
“But what does it mean, mother?”
asked the cardinal. “Whence comes all
this disorder?”
“From the serpent,” replied
Rosa Vanozza, gnashing her teeth, “from
the serpent you have warmed in your bosom. He
has bitten me, fearing no doubt that his teeth would
be broken on you.”
“Who has done this?” cried
Caesar. “Tell me, and, by Heaven, mother,
he shall pay, and pay indeed!”
“Who?” replied Rosa.
“King Charles viii has done it, by the
hands of his faithful allies, the Swiss. It
was well known that Melchior was away, and that I
was living alone with a few wretched servants; so they
came and broke in the doors, as though they were taking
Rome by storm, and while Cardinal Valentino was making
holiday with their master, they pillaged his mother’s
house, loading her with insults and outrages which
no Turks or Saracens could possibly have improved upon.”
“Very good, very good, mother,”
said Caesar; “be calm; blood shall wash out
disgrace. Consider a moment; what we have lost
is nothing compared with what we might lose; and my
father and I, you may be quite sure, will give you
back more than they have stolen from you.”
“I ask for no promises,” cried Rosa; “I
ask for revenge.”
“My mother,” said the
cardinal, “you shall be avenged, or I will lose
the name of son.”
Having by these words reassured his
mother, he took her to Lucrezia’s palace, which
in consequence of her marriage with Pesaro was unoccupied,
and himself returned to the Vatican, giving orders
that his mother’s house should be refurnished
more magnificently than before the disaster.
These orders were punctually executed, and it was among
her new luxurious surroundings, but with the same
hatred in her heart, that Caesar on this occasion
found his mother. This feeling prompted her cry
of joy when she saw him once more.
The mother and son exchanged a very
few words; then Caesar, mounting on horseback, went
to the Vatican, whence as a hostage he had departed
two days before. Alexander, who knew of the
flight beforehand, and not only approved, but as sovereign
pontiff had previously absolved his son of the perjury
he was about to commit, received him joyfully, but
all the same advised him to lie concealed, as Charles
in all probability would not be slow to reclaim his
hostage:
Indeed, the next day, when the king
got up, the absence of Cardinal Valentino was observed,
and as Charles was uneasy at not seeing him, he sent
to inquire what had prevented his appearance.
When the messenger arrived at the house that Caesar
had left the evening before, he learned that he had
gone out at nine o’clock in the evening and not
returned since. He went back with this news
to the king, who at once suspected that he had fled,
and in the first flush of his anger let the whole army
know of his perjury. The soldiers then remembered
the twenty waggons, so heavily laden, from one of
which the cardinal, in the sight of all, had produced
such magnificent gold and silver plate; and never doubting
that the cargo of the others was equally precious,
they fetched them down and broke them to pieces; but
inside they found nothing but stones and sand, which
proved to the king that the flight had been planned
a long time back, and incensed him doubly against
the pope. So without loss of time he despatched
to Rome Philippe de Bresse, afterwards Duke of Savoy,
with orders to intimate to the Holy Father his displeasure
at this conduct. But the pope replied that he
knew nothing whatever about his son’s flight,
and expressed the sincerest regret to His Majesty,
declaring that he knew nothing of his whereabouts,
but was certain that he was not in Rome. As
a fact, the pope was speaking the truth this time,
for Caesar had gone with Cardinal Orsino to one of
his estates, and was temporarily in hiding there.
This reply was conveyed to Charles by two messengers
from the pope, the Bishops of Nepi and of Sutri, and
the people also sent an ambassador in their own behalf.
He was Monsignore Porcari, dean of the rota,
who was charged to communicate to the king the displeasure
of the Romans when they learned of the cardinal’s
breach of faith. Little as Charles was disposed
to content himself with empty words, he had to turn
his attention to mare serious affairs; so he continued
his march to Naples without stopping, arriving there
on Sunday, the 22nd of February, 1495.
Four days later, the unlucky D’jem,
who had fallen sick at Capua died at Castel Nuovo.
When he was leaving, at the farewell banquet, Alexander
had tried on his guest the poison he intended to use
so often later on upon his cardinals, and whose effects
he was destined to feel himself, such is
poetical justice. In this way the pope had secured
a double haul; for, in his twofold speculation in
this wretched young man, he had sold him alive to
Charles for 120,000 livres and sold him dead to Bajazet
for 300,00 ducats....
But there was a certain delay about
the second payment; for the Turkish emperor, as we
remember, was not bound to pay the price of fratricide
till he received the corpse, and by Charles’s
order the corpse had been buried at Gaeta.
When Caesar Borgia learned the news,
he rightly supposed that the king would be so busy
settling himself in his new capital that he would have
too much to think of to be worrying about him; so he
went to Rome again, and, anxious to keep his promise
to his mother, he signalised his return by a terrible
vengeance.
Cardinal Valentino had in his service
a certain Spaniard whom he had made the chief of his
bravoes; he was a man of five-and-thirty or forty,
whose whole life had been one long rebellion against
society’s laws; he recoiled from no action,
provided only he could get his price. This Don
Michele Correglia, who earned his celebrity for bloody
deeds under the name of Michelotto, was just the man
Caesar wanted; and whereas Michelotto felt an unbounded
admiration for Caesar, Caesar had unlimited confidence
in Michelotto. It was to him the cardinal entrusted
the execution of one part of his vengeance; the other
he kept for himself.
Don Michele received orders to scour
the Campagna and cut every French throat he could
find. He began his work at once; and very few
days elapsed before he had obtained most satisfactory
results: more than a hundred persons were robbed
or assassinated, and among the last the son of Cardinal
de St. Malo, who was en his way back to France, and
on whom Michelotto found a sum of 3000 crowns.
For himself, Caesar reserved the Swiss;
for it was the Swiss in particular who had despoiled
his mother’s house. The pope had in his
service about a hundred and fifty soldiers belonging
to their nation, who had settled their families in
Rome, and had grown rich partly by their pay and partly
in the exercise of various industries. The cardinal
had every one of them dismissed, with orders to quit
Rome within twenty-four hours and the Roman territories
within three days. The poor wretches had all
collected together to obey the order, with their wives
and children and baggage, on the Piazza of St. Peter,
when suddenly, by Cardinal Valentino’s orders,
they were hemmed in on all sides by two thousand Spaniards,
who began to fire on them with their guns and charge
them with their sabres, while Caesar and his mother
looked down upon the carnage from a window.
In this way they killed fifty or perhaps sixty; but
the rest coming up, made a charge at the assassins,
and then, without suffering any loss, managed to beat
a retreat to a house, where they stood a siege, and
made so valiant a defense that they gave the pope
time he knew nothing of the author of this
butchery to send the captain of his guard
to the rescue, who, with a strong detachment, succeeded
in getting nearly forty of them safely out of the
town: the rest had been massacred on the piazza
or killed in the house.
But this was no real and adequate
revenge; for it did not touch Charles himself, the
sole author of all the troubles that the pope and his
family had experienced during the last year.
So Caesar soon abandoned vulgar schemes of this kind
and busied himself with loftier concerns, bending
all the force of his genius to restore the league of
Italian princes that had been broken by the defection
of Sforza, the exile of Piero dei Medici,
and the defeat of Alfonso. The enterprise was
more easily accomplished than the pope could have
anticipated. The Venetians were very uneasy
when Charles passed so near, and they trembled lest,
when he was once master of Naples, he might conceive
the idea of conquering the rest of Italy. Ludovico
Sforza, on his side, was beginning to tremble, seeing
the rapidity with which the King of France had dethroned
the house of Aragon, lest he might not make much difference
between his allies and his enemies. Maximilian,
for his part, was only seeking an occasion to break
the temporary peace which he had granted for the sake
of the concession made to him. Lastly, Ferdinand
and Isabella were allies of the dethroned house.
And so it came about that all of them, for different
reasons, felt a common fear, and were soon in agreement
as to the necessity of driving out Charles viii,
not only from Naples, but from Italy, and pledged
themselves to work together to this end, by every
means in their power, by negotiations, by trickery,
or by actual force. The Florentines alone refused
to take part in this general levy of arms, and remained
faithful to their promises.
According to the articles of the treaty
agreed upon by the confederates, the alliance was
to last for five-and-twenty years, and had for ostensible
object the upholding of the majority of the pope, and
the interests of Christendom; and these preparations
might well have been taken for such as would precede
a crusade against the Turks, if Bajazet’s ambassador
had not always been present at the deliberations, although
the Christian princes could not have dared for very
shame to admit the, sultan by name into their league.
Now the confederates had to set on foot an army of
30,000 horse and 20,000 infantry, and each of them
was taxed for a contingent; thus the pope was to furnish
4000 horse, Maximilian 6000, the King of Spain, the
Duke of Milan, and the republic of Venice, 8000 each.
Every confederate was, in addition to this, to levy
and equip 4000 infantry in the six weeks following
the signature of the treaty. The fleets were
to be equipped by the Maritime States; but any expenses
they should incur later on were to be defrayed by all
in equal shares.
The formation of this league was made
public on the 12th of April, 1495, Palm Sunday, and
in all the Italian States, especially at Rome, was
made the occasion of fêtes and immense rejoicings.
Almost as soon as the publicly known articles were
announced the secret ones were put into execution.
These obliged Ferdinand and Isabella to send a fleet
of sixty galleys to Ischia, where Alfonso’s
son had retired, with six hundred horsemen on board
and five thousand infantry, to help him to ascend the
throne once more. Those troops were to be put
under the command of Gonzalvo of Cordova, who had
gained the reputation of the greatest general in Europe
after the taking of Granada. The Venetians with
a fleet of forty galleys under the command of Antonio
Grimani, were to attack all the French stations on
the coast of Calabria and Naples. The Duke of
Milan promised for his part to check all reinforcements
as they should arrive from France, and to drive the
Duke of Orleans out of Asti.
Lastly, there was Maximilian, who
had promised to make invasions on the frontiers, and
Bajazet, who was to help with money, ships, and soldiers
either the Venetians or the Spaniards, according as
he might be appealed to by Barberigo or by Ferdinand
the Catholic.
This league was all the more disconcerting
for Charles, because of the speedy abatement of the
enthusiasm that had hailed his first appearance.
What had happened to him was what generally happens
to a conqueror who has more good luck than talent;
instead of making himself a party among the great
Neapolitan and Calabrian vassals, whose roots would
be embedded in the very soil, by confirming their
privileges and augmenting their power, he had wounded
their feelings by bestowing all the titles, offices,
and fiefs on those alone who had followed him
from France, so that all the important positions in
the kingdom were filled by strangers.
The result was that just when the
league was made known, Tropea and Amantea, which had
been presented by Charles to the Seigneur de Precy,
rose in revolt and hoisted the banner of Aragon; and
the Spanish fleet had only to present itself at Reggio,
in Calabria, for the town to throw open its gates,
being more discontented with the new rule than the
old; and Don Federiga, Alfonso’s brother and
Ferdinand’s uncle, who had hitherto never quitted
Brindisi, had only to appear at Tarentum to be received
there as a liberator.
CHAPTER VI
Charles learned all this news at Naples,
and, tired of his late conquests, which necessitated
a labour in organisation for which he was quite unfitted,
turned his eyes towards France, where victorious fêtes
and rejoicings were awaiting the victor’s return.
So he yielded at the first breath of his advisers,
and retraced his road to his kingdom, threatened,
as was said, by the Germans on the north and the Spaniards
on the south. Consequently, he appointed Gilbert
de Montpensier, of the house of Bourbon, viceroy;
d’Aubigny, of the Scotch Stuart family, lieutenant
in Calabria; Etienne de Vese, commander at Gaeta; and
Don Juliano, Gabriel de Montfaucon, Guillaume de Villeneuve,
George de Lilly, the bailiff of Vitry, and Graziano
Guerra respectively governors of Sant’ Angelo,
Manfredonia, Trani, Catanzaro, Aquila, and Sulmone;
then leaving behind in evidence of his claims the
half of his Swiss, a party of his Gascons, eight hundred
French lances, and about five hundred Italian men-at-arms,
the last under the command of the prefect of Rome,
Prospero and Fabrizio Colonna, and Antonio Savelli,
he left Naples on the 20th of May at two o’clock
in the afternoon, to traverse the whole of the Italian
peninsula with the rest of his army, consisting of
eight hundred French lances, two hundred gentlemen
of his guard, one hundred Italian men-at-arms, three
thousand Swiss infantry, one thousand French and one
thousand Gascon. He also expected to be joined
by Camillo Vitelli and his brothers in Tuscany, who
were to contribute two hundred and fifty men-at-arms.
A week before he left Naples, Charles
had sent to Rome Monseigneur de Saint-Paul, brother
of Cardinal de Luxembourg; and just as he was starting
he despatched thither the new Archbishop of Lyons.
They both were commissioned to assure Alexander that
the King of France had the most sincere desire and
the very best intention of remaining his friend.
In truth, Charles wished for nothing so much as to
separate the pope from the league, so as to secure
him as a spiritual and temporal support; but a young
king, full of fire, ambition, and courage, was not
the neighbour to suit Alexander; so the latter would
listen to nothing, and as the troops he had demanded
from the doge and Ludavico Sforza had not been sent
in sufficient number for the defense of Rome, he was
content with provisioning the castle of S. Angelo,
putting in a formidable garrison, and leaving Cardinal
Sant’ Anastasio to receive Charles while he himself
withdrew with Caesar to Orvieto. Charles only
stayed in Rome three days, utterly depressed because
the pope had refused to receive him in spite of his
entreaties. And in these three days, instead
of listening to Giuliano delta Rovere, who was advising
him once more to call a council and depose the pope,
he rather hoped to bring the pope round to his side
by the virtuous act of restoring the citadels of Terracina
and Civita Vecchia to the authorities of the
Romagna, only keeping for himself Ostia, which he
had promised Giuliano to give back to him. At
last, when the three days had elapsed, he left Rome,
and resumed his march in three columns towards Tuscany,
crossed the States of the Church, and on the 13th
reached Siena, where he was joined by Philippe de Commines,
who had gone as ambassador extraordinary to the Venetian
Republic, and now announced that the enemy had forty
thousand men under arms and were preparing for battle.
This news produced no other effect an the king and
the gentlemen of his army than to excite their amusement
beyond measure; for they had conceived such a contempt
for their enemy by their easy conquest, that they
could not believe that any army, however numerous,
would venture to oppose their passage.
Charles, however, was forced to give
way in the face of facts, when he heard at San Teranza
that his vanguard, commanded by Marechal de Gie, and
composed of six hundred lances and fifteen hundred
Swiss, when it arrived at Fornova had come face to
face with the confederates, who had encamped at Guiarole.
The marechal had ordered an instant halt, and he too
had pitched his tents, utilising for his defence the
natural advantages of the hilly ground. When
these first measures had been taken, he sent out,
first, a herald to the enemy’s camp to ask from
Francesco di Gonzaga, Marquis of Mantua,
generalissimo of the confederate troops, a passage
for his king’s army and provisions at a reasonable
price; and secondly, he despatched a courier to Charles
viii, pressing him to hurry on his march with
the artillery and rearguard. The confederates
had given an evasive answer, for they were pondering
whether they ought to jeopardise the whole Italian
force in a single combat, and, putting all to the hazard,
attempt to annihilate the King of France and his army
together, so overwhelming the conqueror in the ruins
of his ambition. The messenger found Charles
busy superintending the passage of the last of his
cannon over the mountain of Pontremoli. This
was no easy matter, seeing that there was no sort
of track, and the guns had to be lifted up and lowered
by main farce, and each piece needed the arms of as
many as two hundred men. At last, when all the
artillery had arrived without accident on the other
side of the Apennines, Charles started in hot haste
for Fornovd, where he arrived with all his following
on the morning of the next day.
From the top of the mountain where
the Marechai de Gie had pitched his tents, the king
beheld both his own camp and the enemy’s.
Both were on the right bank of the Taro, and were
at either end of a semicircular chain of hills resembling
an amphitheatre; and the space between the two camps,
a vast basin filled during the winter floods by the
torrent which now only marked its boundary, was nothing
but a plain covered with gravel, where all manoeuvres
must be equally difficult for horse and infantry.
Besides, on the western slope of the hills there was
a little wood which extended from the enemy’s
army to the French, and was in the possession of the
Stradiotes, who, by help of its cover, had already
engaged in several skirmishes with the French troops
during the two days of halt while they were waiting
for the king.
The situation was not reassuring.
From the top of the mountain which overlooked Fornovo,
one could get a view, as we said before, of the two
camps, and could easily calculate the numerical difference
between them. The French army, weakened by the
establishment of garrisons in the various towns and
fortresses they had won in Italy, were scarcely eight
thousand strong, while the combined forces of Milan
and Venice exceeded a total of thirty-five thousand.
So Charles decided to try once more the methods of
conciliation, and sent Commines, who, as we know, had
joined him in Tuscany, to the Venetian ‘proveditori’,
whose acquaintance he had made when on his embassy;
he having made a great impression on these men, thanks
to a general high opinion of his merits. He was
commissioned to tell the enemy’s generals, in
the name of the King of France, that his master only
desired to continue his road without doing or receiving
any harm; that therefore he asked to be allowed a
free passage across the fair plains of Lombardy, which
he could see from the heights where he now stood,
stretching as far as the eye could reach, away to the
foot of the Alps. Commines found the confederate
army deep in discussion: the wish of the Milanese
and Venetian party being to let the king go by, and
not attack him; they said they were only too happy
that he should leave Italy in this way, without causing
any further harm; but the ambassadors of Spain and
Germany took quite another view. As their masters
had no troops in the army, and as all the money they
had promised was already paid, they must be the gainer
in either case from a battle, whichever way it went:
if they won the day they would gather the fruits of
victory, and if they lost they would experience nothing
of the evils of defeat. This want of unanimity
was the reason why the answer to Commines was deferred
until the following day, and why it was settled that
on the next day he should hold another conference
with a plenipotentiary to be appointed in the course
of that night. The place of this conference was
to be between the two armies.
The king passed the night in great
uneasiness. All day the weather had threatened
to turn to rain, and we have already said how rapidly
the Taro could swell; the river, fordable to-day,
might from tomorrow onwards prove an insurmountable
obstacle; and possibly the delay had only been asked
for with a view to putting the French army in a worse
position. As a fact the night had scarcely come
when a terrible storm arose, and so long as darkness
lasted, great rumblings were heard in the Apennines,
and the sky was brilliant with lightning. At
break of day, however, it seemed to be getting a little
calmer, though the Taro, only a streamlet the day
before, had become a torrent by this time, and was
rapidly rising. So at six in the morning, the
king, ready armed and on horseback, summoned Commines
and bade him make his way to the rendezvous that the
Venetian ‘proveditori’ had assigned.
But scarcely had he contrived to give the order when
loud cries were heard coming from the extreme right
of the French army. The Stradiotes, under cover
of the wood stretching between the two camps, had
surprised an outpost, and first cutting the soldiers’
throats, were carrying off their heads in their usual
way at the saddle-bow. A detachment of cavalry
was sent in pursuit; but, like wild animals, they
had retreated to their lair in the woods, and there
disappeared.
This unexpected engagement, in all
probability arranged beforehand by the Spanish and
German envoys, produced on the whole army the effect
of a spark applied to a train of gunpowder.
Commines and the Venetian ‘proveditori’
each tried in vain to arrest the combat an either side.
Light troops, eager for a skirmish, and, in the usual
fashion of those days, prompted only by that personal
courage which led them on to danger, had already come
to blows, rushing down into the plain as though it
were an amphitheatre where they might make a fine
display of arms. Far a moment the young king,
drawn on by example, was an the point of forgetting
the responsibility of a general in his zeal as a soldier;
but this first impulse was checked by Marechal de
Gie, Messire Claude de la Châtre de
Guise, and M. de la Trimauille, who persuaded Charles
to adopt the wiser plan, and to cross the Taro without
seeking a battle, at the same time without
trying to avoid it, should the enemy cross the river
from their camp and attempt to block his passage.
The king accordingly, following the advice of his
wisest and bravest captains, thus arranged his divisions.
The first comprised the van and a
body of troops whose duty it was to support them.
The van consisted of three hundred and fifty men-at-arms,
the best and bravest of the army, under the command
of Marechal de Gie and Jacques Trivulce; the corps
following them consisted of three thousand Swiss,
under the command of Engelbert der Cleves and
de Larnay, the queen’s grand equerry; next came
three hundred archers of the guard, whom the king
had sent to help the cavalry by fighting in the spaces
between them.
The second division, commanded by
the king in person and forming the middle of the army,
was composed of the artillery, under Jean de Lagrange,
a hundred gentlemen of the guard with Gilles Carrone
far standard-bearer, pensioners of the king’s
household under Aymar de Prie, some Scots, and
two hundred cross-bowmen an horseback, with French
archers besides, led by M. de Crussol.
Lastly, the third division, i.e.
the rear, preceded by six thousand beasts of burden
bearing the baggage, was composed of only three hundred
men-at-arms, commanded by de Guise and by de la Trimouille:
this was the weakest part of the army.
When this arrangement was settled,
Charles ordered the van to cross the river, just at
the little town of Fornovo. This was done at
once, the riders getting wet up to their knees, and
the footmen holding to the horses’ tails.
As soon as he saw the last soldiers of his first division
on the opposite bank, he started himself to follow
the same road and cross at the same ford, giving orders
to de Guise and de la Trimouille to regulate the march
of the rear guard by that of the centre, just as he
had regulated their march by that of the van.
His orders were punctually carried out; and about
ten o’clock in the morning the whole French army
was on the left bank of the Taro: at the same
time, when it seemed certain from the enemy’s
arrangements that battle was imminent, the baggage,
led by the captain, Odet de Reberac, was separated
from the rear guard, and retired to the extreme left.
Now, Francisco de Gonzaga, general-in-chief
of the confederate troops, had modelled his plans
on those of the King of France; by his orders, Count
de Cajazzo, with four hundred men-at-arms and two thousand
infantry, had crossed the Taro where the Venetian camp
lay, and was to attack the French van; while Gonzaga
himself, following the right bank as far as Fornovo,
would go over the river by the same ford that Charles
had used, with a view to attacking his rear.
Lastly, he had placed the Stradiotes between these
two fords, with orders to cross the river in their
turn, so soon as they saw the French army attacked
both in van and in the rear, and to fall upon its
flank. Not content with offensive measures,
Gonzaga had also made provision for retreat by leaving
three reserve corps on the right bank, one to guard
the camp under the instruction of the Venetian ‘provveditori’,
and the other two arranged in echelon to support each
other, the first commanded by Antonio di
Montefeltro, the second by Annibale Bentivoglio.
Charles had observed all these arrangements,
and had recognised the cunning Italian strategy which
made his opponents the finest generals in the world;
but as there was no means of avoiding the danger, he
had decided to take a sideway course, and had given
orders to continue the match; but in a minute the
French army was caught between Count di Cajazzo,
barring the way with his four hundred men-at-arms and
his two thousand infantry, and Gonzaga in pursuit
of the rear, as we said before; leading six hundred
men-at-arms, the flower of his army, a squadron of
Stradiotes, and more than five thousand infantry:
this division alone was stronger than the whole of
the French army.
When, however, M. de Guise and M.
de la Trimouille found themselves pressed in this
way, they ordered their two hundred men-at-arms to
turn right about face, while at the opposite end that
is, at the head of the army-Marechal de Gie and Trivulce
ordered a halt and lances in rest. Meanwhile,
according to custom, the king, who, as we said, was
in the centre, was conferring knighthood on those
gentlemen who had earned the favour either by virtue
of their personal powers or the king’s special
friendship.
Suddenly there was heard a terrible
clash behind it was the French rearguard coming to
blows with the Marquis of Mantua. In this encounter,
where each man had singled out his own foe as though
it were a tournament, very many lances were broken,
especially those of the Italian knights; for their
lances were hollowed so as to be less heavy, and in
consequence had less solidity. Those who were
thus disarmed at once seized their swords. As
they were far more numerous than the French, the king
saw them suddenly outflanking his right wing and apparently
prepared to surround it; at the same moment loud cries
were heard from a direction facing the centre:
this meant that the Stradiotes were crossing the river
to make their attack.
The king at once ordered his division
into two detachments, and giving one to Bourbon the
bastard, to make head against the Stradiotes, he hurried
with the second to the rescue of the van, flinging
himself into the very midst of the melee, striking
out like a king, and doing as steady work as the lowest
in rank of his captains. Aided by the reinforcement,
the rearguard made a good stand, though the enemy were
five against one, and the combat in this part continued
to rage with wonderful fury.
Obeying his orders, Bourbon had thrown
himself upon the Stradiotes; but unfortunately, carried
off by his horse, he had penetrated so far into the
enemy’s ranks that he was lost to sight:
the disappearance of their chief, the strange dress
of their new antagonists, and the peculiar method
of their fighting produced a considerable effect on
those who were to attack them; and for the moment
disorder was the consequence in the centre, and the
horse men scattered instead of serrying their ranks
and fighting in a body. This false move would
have done them serious harm, had not most of the Stradiotes,
seeing the baggage alone and undefended, rushed after
that in hope of booty, instead of following up their
advantage. A great part of the troop nevertheless
stayed behind to fight, pressing on the French cavalry
and smashing their lances with their fearful scimitars.
Happily the king, who had just repulsed the Marquis
of Mantua’s attack, perceived what was going
on behind him, and riding back at all possible speed
to the succour of the centre, together with the gentlemen
of his household fell upon the Stradiotes, no longer
armed with a lance, for that he had just broken, but
brandishing his long sword, which blazed about him
like lightning, and either because he was
whirled away like Bourbon by his own horse, or because
he had allowed his courage to take him too far he
suddenly found himself in the thickest ranks of the
Stradiotes, accompanied only by eight of the knights
he had just now created, one equerry called Antoine
des Ambus, and his standard-bearer. “France,
France!” he cried aloud, to rally round him
all the others who had scattered; they, seeing at last
that the danger was less than they had supposed, began
to take their revenge and to pay back with interest
the blows they had received from the Stradiotes.
Things were going still better, for the van, which
the Marquis de Cajazzo was to attack; for although
he had at first appeared to be animated with a terrible
purpose, he stopped short about ten or twelve feet
from the French line and turned right about face without
breaking a single lance. The French wanted to
pursue, but the Marechal de Gie, fearing that this
flight might be only a trick to draw off the vanguard
from the centre, ordered every man to stay in his
place. But the Swiss, who were German, and did
not understand the order, or thought it was not meant
for them, followed upon their heels, and although
on foot caught them up and killed a hundred of them.
This was quite enough to throw them into disorder,
so that some were scattered about the plain, and others
made a rush for the water, so as to cross the river
and rejoin their camp.
When the Marechal de Gie saw this,
he detached a hundred of his own men to go to the
aid of the king, who was continuing to fight with unheard-of
courage and running the greatest risks, constantly
separated as he was from his gentlemen, who could
not follow him; for wherever there was danger, thither
he rushed, with his cry of “France,” little
troubling himself as to whether he was followed or
not. And it was no longer with his sword that
he fought; that he had long ago broken, like his lance,
but with a heavy battle-axe, whose every blow was mortal
whether cut or pierced. Thus the Stradiotes,
already hard pressed by the king’s household
and his pensioners, soon changed attack for defence
and defence for flight. It was at this moment
that the king was really in the greatest danger; for
he had let himself be carried away in pursuit of the
fugitives, and presently found himself all alone, surrounded
by these men, who, had they not been struck with a
mighty terror, would have had nothing to do but unite
and crush him and his horse together; but, as Commines
remarks, “He whom God guards is well guarded,
and God was guarding the King of France.”
All the same, at this moment the French
were sorely pressed in the rear; and although de Guise
and de la Trimouille held out as firmly as it was
possible to hold, they would probably have been compelled
to yield to superior numbers had not a double aid
arrived in time: first the indefatigable Charles,
who, having nothing more to do among the fugitives,
once again dashed into the midst of the fight, next
the servants of the army, who, now that they were
set free from the Stradiotes and saw their enemies
put to flight, ran up armed with the axes they habitually
used to cut down wood for building their huts:
they burst into the middle of the fray, slashing at
the horses’ legs and dealing heavy blows that
smashed in the visors of the dismounted horsemen.
The Italians could not hold out against
this double attack; the ’furia francese’
rendered all their strategy and all their calculations
useless, especially as for more than a century they
had abandoned their fights of blood and fury for a
kind of tournament they chose to regard as warfare;
so, in spite of all Gonzaga’s efforts, they turned
their backs upon the French rear and took to flight;
in the greatest haste and with much difficulty they
recrossed the torrent, which was swollen even more
now by the rain that had been falling during the whole
time of the battle.
Some thought fit to pursue the vanquished,
for there was now such disorder in their ranks that
they were fleeing in all directions from the battlefield
where the French had gained so glorious a victory,
blocking up the roads to Parma and Bercetto.
But Marechal de Gie and de Guise and de la Trimouille,
who had done quite enough to save them from the suspicion
of quailing before imaginary dangers, put a stop to
this enthusiasm, by pointing out that it would only
be risking the loss of their present advantage if
they tried to push it farther with men and horses
so worn out. This view was adopted in spite of
the opinion of Trivulce, Camillo Vitelli, and Francesco
Secco, who were all eager to follow up the victory.
The king retired to a little village
an the left bank of the Taro, and took shelter in
a poor house. There he disarmed, being perhaps
among all the captains and all the soldiers the man
who had fought best.
During the night the torrent swelled
so high that the Italian army could not have pursued,
even if they had laid aside their fears. The
king did not propose to give the appearance of flight
after a victory, and therefore kept his army drawn
up all day, and at night went on to sleep at Medesano,
a little village only a mile lower down than the hamlet
where he rested after the fight. But in the course
of the night he reflected that he had done enough
for the honour of his arms in fighting an army four
times as great as his own and killing three thousand
men, and then waiting a day and a half to give them
time to take their revenge; so two hours before daybreak
he had the fires lighted, that the enemy might suppose
he was remaining in camp; and every man mounting noiselessly,
the whole French army, almost out of danger by this
time, proceeded on their march to Borgo San
Donnino.
While this was going on, the pope
returned to Rome, where news highly favourable to
his schemes was not slow to reach his ears. He
learned that Ferdinand had crossed from Sicily into
Calabria with six thousand volunteers and a considerable
number of Spanish horse and foot, led, at the command
of Ferdinand and Isabella, by the famous Gonzalva de
Cordova, who arrived in Italy with a great reputation,
destined to suffer somewhat from the defeat at Seminara.
At almost the same time the French fleet had been
beaten by the Aragonese; moreover, the battle of the
Taro, though a complete defeat for the confederates,
was another victory for the pope, because its result
was to open a return to France for that man whom he
regarded as his deadliest foe. So, feeling that
he had nothing more to fear from Charles, he sent
him a brief at Turin, where he had stopped for a short
time to give aid to Novara, therein commanding him,
by virtue of his pontifical authority, to depart out
of Italy with his army, and to recall within ten days
those of his troops that still remained in the kingdom
of Naples, on pain of excommunication, and a summons
to appear before him in person.
Charles viii replied:
(1) That he did not understand how
the pope, the chief of the league, ordered him to
leave Italy, whereas the confederates had not only
refused him a passage, but had even attempted, though
unsuccessfully, as perhaps His Holiness knew, to cut
off his return into France;
(2) That, as to recalling his troops
from Naples, he was not so irreligious as to do that,
since they had not entered the kingdom without the
consent and blessing of His Holiness;
(3) That he was exceedingly surprised
that the pope should require his presence in person
at the capital of the Christian world just at the
present time, when six weeks previously, at the time
of his return from Naples, although he ardently desired
an interview with His Holiness, that he might offer
proofs of his respect and obedience, His Holiness,
instead of according this favour, had quitted Rome
so hastily on his approach that he had not been able
to come up with him by any efforts whatsoever.
On this point, however, he promised to give His Holiness
the satisfaction he desired, if he would engage this
time to wait for him: he would therefore return
to Rome so soon as the affairs that brought him back
to his own kingdom had been satisfactorily, settled.
Although in this reply there was a
touch of mockery and defiance, Charles was none the
less compelled by the circumstances of the case to
obey the pope’s strange brief. His presence
was so much needed in France that, in spite of the
arrival of a Swiss reinforcement, he was compelled
to conclude a peace with Ludovico Sforza, whereby
he yielded Novara to him; while Gilbert de Montpensier
and d’Aubigny, after defending, inch by inch,
Calabria, the Basilicate, and Naples, were obliged
to sign the capitulation of Atella, after a siege
of thirty-two days, on the 20th of July, 1496.
This involved giving back to Ferdinand ii, King
of Naples, all the palaces and fortresses of his kingdom;
which indeed he did but enjoy for three months, dying
of exhaustion on the 7th of September following, at
the Castello della Somma, at the foot
of Vesuvius; all the attentions lavished upon him
by his young wife could not repair the evil that her
beauty had wrought.
His uncle Frederic succeeded; and
so, in the three years of his papacy, Alexander vi
had seen five kings upon the throne of Naples, while
he was establishing himself more firmly upon his own
pontifical seat Ferdinand I, Alfonso I,
Charles viii, Ferdinand ii, and Frederic.
All this agitation about his throne, this rapid succession
of sovereigns, was the best thing possible for Alexander;
for each new monarch became actually king only on
condition of his receiving the pontifical investiture.
The consequence was that Alexander was the only gainer
in power and credit by these changes; for the Duke
of Milan and the republics of Florence and Venice
had successively recognised him as supreme head of
the Church, in spite of his simony; moreover, the
five kings of Naples had in turn paid him homage.
So he thought the time had now come for founding a
mighty family; and for this he relied upon the Duke
of Gandia, who was to hold all the highest temporal
dignities; and upon Caesar Borgia, who was to be appointed
to all the great ecclesiastical offices. The
pope made sure of the success of these new projects
by electing four Spanish cardinals, who brought up
the number of his compatriots in the Sacred College
to twenty-two, thus assuring him a constant and certain
majority.
The first requirement of the pope’s
policy was to clear away from the neighbourhood of
Rome all those petty lords whom most people call vicars
of the Church, but whom Alexander called the shackles
of the papacy. We saw that he had already begun
this work by rousing the Orsini against the Colonna
family, when Charles VIII’s enterprise compelled
him to concentrate all his mental resources, and also
the forces of his States, so as to secure his own
personal safety.
It had come about through their own
imprudent action that the Orsini, the pope’s
old friends, were now in the pay of the French, and
had entered the kingdom of Naples with them, where
one of them, Virginio, a very important member of
their powerful house, had been taken prisoner during
the war, and was Ferdinand II’s captive.
Alexander could not let this opportunity escape him;
so, first ordering the King of Naples not to release
a man who, ever since the 1st of June, 1496, had been
a declared rebel, he pronounced a sentence of confiscation
against Virginio Orsini and his whole family in a
secret consistory, which sat on the 26th of October
following that is to say, in the early days
of the reign of Frederic, whom he knew to be entirely
at his command, owing to the King’s great desire
of getting the investiture from him; then, as it was
not enough to declare the goods confiscated, without
also dispossessing the owners, he made overtures to
the Colonna family, saying he would commission them,
in proof of their new bond of friendship, to execute
the order given against their old enemies under the
direction of his son Francesco, Duke of Gandia.
In this fashion he contrived to weaken his neighbours
each by means of the other, till such time as he could
safely attack and put an end to conquered and conqueror
alike.
The Colonna family accepted this proposition,
and the Duke of Gandia was named General of the Church:
his father in his pontifical robes bestowed on him
the insignia of this office in the church of St. Peter’s
at Rome.
CHAPTER VII
Matters went forward as Alexander
had wished, and before the end of the year the pontifical
army had, seized a great number of castles and fortresses
that belonged to the Orsini, who thought themselves
already lost when Charles viii came to the rescue.
They had addressed themselves to him without much
hope that he could be of real use to there, with his
want of armed troops and his preoccupation with his
own affairs. He, however, sent Carlo Orsini,
son of Virginio, the prisoner, and Vitellozzo Vitelli,
brother of Camillo Vitelli, one of the three valiant
Italian condottieri who had joined him and fought
for him at the crossing of the Taro: These two
captains, whose courage and skill were well known,
brought with them a considerable sum of money from
the liberal coffers of Charles viii. Now,
scarcely had they arrived at Città di Castello,
the centre of their little sovereignty, and expressed
their intention of raising a band of soldiers, when
men presented themselves from all sides to fight under
their banner; so they very soon assembled a small army,
and as they had been able during their stay among the
French to study those matters of military organisation
in which France excelled, they now applied the result
of their learning to their own troops: the improvements
were mainly certain changes in the artillery which
made their manoeuvres easier, and the substitution
for their ordinary weapons of pikes similar in form
to the Swiss pikes, but two feet longer. These
changes effected, Vitellozzo Vitelli spent three or
four months in exercising his men in the management
of their new weapons; then, when he thought them fit
to make good use of these, and when he had collected
more or less help from the towns of Perugia, Todi,
and Narni, where the inhabitants trembled lest their
turn should come after the Orsini’s, as the
Orsini’s had followed on the Colonnas’,
he marched towards Braccianno, which was being besieged
by the Duke of Urbino, who had been lent to the pope
by the Venetians, in virtue of the treaty quoted above.
The Venetian general, when he heard
of Vitelli’s approach, thought he might as well
spare him half his journey, and marched out to confront
him: the two armies met in the Soriano road, and
the battle straightway began. The pontifical
army had a body of eight hundred Germans, on which
the Dukes of Urbino and Gandia chiefly relied, as well
they might, for they were the best troops in the world;
but Vitelli attacked these picked men with his infantry,
who, armed with their formidable pikes, ran them through,
while they with arms four feet shorter had no chance
even of returning the blows they received; at the
same time Vitelli’s light troops wheeled upon
the flank, following their most rapid movements, and
silencing the enemy’s artillery by the swiftness
and accuracy of their attack. The pontifical
troops were put to flight, though after a longer resistance
than might have been expected when they had to sustain
the attack of an army so much better equipped than
their own; with them they bore to Ronciglione the
Duke of Gandia, wounded in the face by a pike-thrust,
Fabrizia Calonna, and the envoy; the Duke of Urbino,
who was fighting in the rear to aid the retreat, was
taken prisoner with all his artillery and the baggage
of the conquered army. But this success, great
as it was, did not so swell the pride of Vitellozza
Vitelli as to make him oblivious of his position.
He knew that he and the Orsini together were too
weak to sustain a war of such magnitude; that the little
store of money to which he owed the existence of his
army would very soon be expended and his army would
disappear with it. So he hastened to get pardoned
far the victory by making propositions which he would
very likely have refused had he been the vanquished
party; and the pope accepted his conditions without
demur; during the interval having heard that Trivulce
had just recrossed the Alps and re-entered Italy with
three thousand Swiss, and fearing lest the Italian
general might only be the advance guard of the King
of France. So it was settled that the Orsini
should pay 70,000 florins for the expenses of
the war, and that all the prisoners on both sides
should be exchanged without ransom with the single
exception of the Duke of Urbino. As a pledge
for the future payment of the 70,000 florins,
the Orsini handed over to the Cardinals Sforza and
San Severino the fortresses of Anguillara and Cervetri;
then, when the day came and they had not the necessary
money, they gave up their prisoner, the Duke of Urbino,
estimating his worth at 40,000 ducats nearly
all the sum required and handed him over
to Alexander on account; he, a rigid observer of engagements,
made his own general, taken prisoner in his service,
pay, to himself the ransom he owed to the enemy.
Then the pope had the corpse of Virginio
sent to Carlo Orsini and Vitellozzo Vitelli, as he
could not send him alive. By a strange fatality
the prisoner had died, eight days before the treaty
was signed, of the same malady at least,
if we may judge by analogy that had carried
off Bajazet’s brother.
As soon as the peace was signed, Prospero
Calonna and Gonzalvo de Cordova, whom the Pope had
demanded from Frederic, arrived at Rome with an army
of Spanish and Neapolitan troops. Alexander,
as he could not utilise these against the Orsini,
set them the work of recapturing Ostia, not desiring
to incur the reproach of bringing them to Rome far
nothing. Gonzalvo was rewarded for this feat
by receiving the Rose of Gold from the pope’s
hand that being the highest honour His Holiness
can grant. He shared this distinction with the
Emperor Maximilian, the King of France, the Doge of
Venice, and the Marquis of Mantua.
In the midst of all this occurred
the solemn festival of the Assumption; in which Ganzalvo
was invited to take part. He accordingly left
his palace, proceeded in great pomp in the front of
the pontifical cavalry, and took his place on the
Duke of Gandia’s left hand. The duke attracted
all eyes by his personal beauty, set off as it was
by all the luxury he thought fit to display at this
festival. He had a retinue of pages and servants,
clad in sumptuous liveries, incomparable for richness
with anything heretofore seen in Rome, that city of
religious pomp. All these pages and servants
rode magnificent horses, caparisoned in velvet trimmed
with silver fringe, and bells of silver hanging down
every here and there. He himself was in a robe
of gold brocade, and wore at his neck a string of
Eastern pearls, perhaps the finest and largest that
ever belonged to a Christian prince, while on his
cap was a gold chain studded with diamonds of which
the smallest was worth more than 20,000 ducats.
This magnificence was all the more conspicuous by the
contrast it presented to Caesar’s dress, whose
scarlet robe admitted of no ornaments. The result
was that Caesar, doubly jealous of his brother, felt
a new hatred rise up within him when he heard all
along the way the praises of his fine appearance and
noble equipment. From this moment Cardinal Valentino
decided in his own mind the fate of this man, this
constant obstacle in the path of his pride, his love,
and his ambition. Very good reason, says Tommaso,
the historian, had the Duke of Gandia to leave behind
him an impression on the public mind of his beauty
and his grandeur at this fête, for this last display
was soon to be followed by the obsequies of the unhappy
young man.
Lucrezia also had come to Rome, on
the pretext of taking part in the solemnity, but really,
as we shall see later, with the view of serving as
a new instrument for her father’s ambition.
As the pope was not satisfied with an empty triumph
of vanity and display for his son, and as his war
with the Orsini had failed to produce the anticipated
results, he decided to increase the fortune of his
firstborn by doing the very thing which he had accused
Calixtus in his speech of doing for him, viz.,
alienating from the States of the Church the cities
of Benevento, Terracino, and Pontecorvo to form, a
duchy as an appanage to his son’s house.
Accordingly this proposition was put forward in a
full consistory, and as the college of cardinals was
entirely Alexander’s, there was no difficulty
about carrying his point. This new favour to
his elder brother exasperated Caesar, although he
was himself getting a share of the paternal gifts;
for he had just been named envoy ‘a latere’
at Frederic’s court, and was appointed to crown
him with his own hands as the papal representative.
But Lucrezia, when she had spent a few days of pleasure
with her father and brothers, had gone into retreat
at the convent of San Sisto. No one knew the
real motive of her seclusion, and no entreaties of
Caesar, whose love for her was strange and unnatural,
had induced her to defer this departure from the world
even until the day after he left for Naples.
His sister’s obstinacy wounded him deeply, for
ever since the day when the Duke of Gandia had appeared
in the procession so magnificently attired, he fancied
he had observed a coldness in the mistress of his
illicit affection, and so far did this increase his
hatred of his rival that he resolved to be rid of him
at all costs. So he ordered the chief of his
sbirri to come and see him the same night.
Michelotto was accustomed to these
mysterious messages, which almost always meant his
help was wanted in some love affair or some act of
revenge. As in either case his reward was generally
a large one, he was careful to keep his engagement,
and at the appointed hour was brought into the presence
of his patron.
Caesar received him leaning against
a tall chimney-piece, no longer wearing his cardinal’s
robe and hat, but a doublet of black velvet slashed
with satin of the same colour. One hand toyed
mechanically with his gloves, while the other rested
an the handle of a poisoned dagger which never left
his side. This was the dress he kept for his
nocturnal expeditions, so Michelotto felt no surprise
at that; but his eyes burned with a flame more gloomy
than their want, and his cheeks, generally pale, were
now livid. Michelotto had but to cast one look
upon his master to see that Caesar and he were about
to share some terrible enterprise.
He signed to him to shut the door.
Michelotto obeyed. Then, after a moment’s
silence, during which the eyes of Borgia seemed to
burn into the soul of the bravo, who with a careless
air stood bareheaded before ham, he said, in a voice
whose slightly mocking tone gave the only sign of his
emotion.
“Michelotto, how do you think this dress suits
me?”
Accustomed as he was to his master’s
tricks of circumlocution, the bravo was so far from
expecting this question, that at first he stood mute,
and only after a few moments’ pause was able
to say:
“Admirably, monsignore;
thanks to the dress, your Excellency has the appearance
as well as the true spirit of a captain.”
“I am glad you think so,”
replied Caesar. “And now let me ask you,
do you know who is the cause that, instead of wearing
this dress, which I can only put an at night, I am
forced to disguise myself in the daytime in a cardinal’s
robe and hat, and pass my time trotting about from
church to church, from consistory to consistory, when
I ought properly to be leading a magnificent army
in the battlefield, where you would enjoy a captain’s
rank, instead of being the chief of a few miserable
sbirri?”
“Yes, monsignore,”
replied Michelotto, who had divined Caesar’s
meaning at his first word; “the man who is the
cause of this is Francesco, Duke of Gandia, and Benevento,
your elder brother.”
“Do you know,” Caesar
resumed, giving no sign of assent but a nod and a
bitter smile, “do you know who has
all the money and none of the genius, who has the
helmet and none of the brains, who has the sword and
no hand to wield it?”
“That too is the Duke of Gandia,” said
Michelotto.
“Do you know;” continued
Caesar, “who is the man whom I find continually
blocking the path of my ambition, my fortune, and my
love?”
“It is the same, the Duke of Gandia,”
said Michelotto.
“And what do you think of it?” asked Caesar.
“I think he must die,” replied the man
coldly.
“That is my opinion also, Michelotto,”
said Caesar, stepping towards him and grasping his
hand; “and my only regret is that I did not think
of it sooner; for if I had carried a sword at my side
in stead of a crosier in my hand when the King of
France was marching through Italy, I should now have
been master of a fine domain. The pope is obviously
anxious to aggrandise his family, but he is mistaken
in the means he adopts: it is I who ought to
have been made duke, and my brother a cardinal.
There is no doubt at all that, had he made me duke,
I should have contributed a daring and courage to
his service that would have made his power far weightier
than it is. The man who would make his way to
vast dominions and a kingdom ought to trample under
foot all the obstacles in his path, and boldly grasp
the very sharpest thorns, whatever reluctance his weak
flesh may feel; such a man, if he would open out his
path to fortune, should seize his dagger or his sword
and strike out with his eyes shut; he should not shrink
from bathing his hands in the blood of his kindred;
he should follow the example offered him by every founder
of empire from Romulus to Bajazet, both of whom climbed
to the throne by the ladder of fratracide. Yes,
Michelotto, as you say, such is my condition, and I
am resolved I will not shrink. Now you know
why I sent for you: am I wrong in counting upon
you?”
As might have been expected, Michelotto,
seeing his own fortune in this crime, replied that
he was entirely at Caesar’s service, and that
he had nothing to do but to give his orders as to
time, place, and manner of execution. Caesar
replied that the time must needs be very soon, since
he was on the point of leaving Rome for Naples; as
to the place and the mode of execution, they would
depend on circumstances, and each of them must look
out for an opportunity, and seize the first that seemed
favourable.
Two days after this resolution had
been taken, Caesar learned that the day of his departure
was fixed for Thursday the 15th of June: at the
same time he received an invitation from his mother
to come to supper with her on the 14th. This
was a farewell repast given in his honour. Michelotto
received orders to be in readiness at eleven o’clock
at night.
The table was set in the open air
in a magnificent vineyard, a property of Rosa Vanozza’s
in the neighbourhood of San Piero-in-Vinculis:
the guests were Caesar Borgia, the hero of the occasion;
the Duke of Gandia; Prince of Squillace; Dona Sancha,
his wife; the Cardinal of Monte Reale, Francesco Borgia,
son of Calixtus iii; Don Roderigo Borgia, captain
of the apostolic palace; Don Goffredo, brother of
the cardinal; Gian Borgia, at that time ambassador
at Perugia; and lastly, Don Alfonso Borgia, the pope’s
nephew: the whole family therefore was present,
except Lucrezia, who was still in retreat, and would
not come.
The repast was magnificent: Caesar
was quite as cheerful as usual, and the Duke of Gandia
seemed more joyous than he had ever been before.
In the middle of supper a man in a
mask brought him a letter. The duke unfastened
it, colouring up with pleasure; and when he had read
it answered in these words, “I will come”:
then he quickly hid the letter in the pocket of his
doublet; but quick as he was to conceal it from every
eye, Caesar had had time to cast a glance that way,
and he fancied he recognised the handwriting of his
sister Lucrezia. Meanwhile the messenger had
gone off with his answer, no one but Caesar paying
the slightest attention to him, for at that period
it was the custom for have messages to be conveyed
by men in domino or by women whose faces were concealed
by a veil.
At ten o’clock they rose from
the table, and as the air was sweet and mild they
walked about a while under the magnificent pine trees
that shaded the house of Rosa Vanozza, while Caesar
never for an instant let his brother out of his sight.
At eleven o’clock the Duke of Gandia bade good-night
to his mother. Caesar at once followed suit,
alleging his desire to go to the Vatican to bid farewell
to the pope, as he would not be able to fulfil this
duty an the morrow, his departure being fixed at daybreak.
This pretext was all the more plausible since the
pope was in the habit of sitting up every night till
two or three o’clock in the morning.
The two brothers went out together,
mounted their horses, which were waiting for them
at the door, and rode side by side as far as the Palazzo
Borgia, the present home of Cardinal Ascanio Sforza,
who had taken it as a gift from Alexander the night
before his election to the papacy. There the
Duke of Gandia separated from his brother, saying with
a smile that he was not intending to go home, as he
had several hours to spend first with a fair lady
who was expecting him. Caesar replied that he
was no doubt free to make any use he liked best of
his opportunities, and wished him a very good night.
The duke turned to the right, and Caesar to the left;
but Caesar observed that the street the duke had taken
led in the direction of the convent of San Sisto,
where, as we said, Lucrezia was in retreat; his suspicions
were confirmed by this observation, and he directed
his horse’s steps to the Vatican, found the pope,
took his leave of him, and received his benediction.
From this moment all is wrapped in
mystery and darkness, like that in which the terrible
deed was done that we are now to relate.
This, however, is what is believed.
The Duke of Gandia, when he quitted
Caesar, sent away his servants, and in the company
of one confidential valet alone pursued his course
towards the Piazza della Giudecca.
There he found the same man in a mask who had come
to speak to him at supper, and forbidding his valet
to follow any farther, he bade him wait on the piazza
where they then stood, promising to be on his way
back in two hours’ time at latest, and to take
him up as he passed. And at the appointed hour
the duke reappeared, took leave this time of the man
in the mask, and retraced his steps towards his palace.
But scarcely had he turned the corner of the Jewish
Ghetto, when four men on foot, led by a fifth who
was on horseback, flung themselves upon him.
Thinking they were thieves, or else that he was the
victim of some mistake, the Duke of Gandia mentioned
his name; but instead of the name checking the murderers’
daggers, their strokes were redoubled, and the duke
very soon fell dead, his valet dying beside him.
Then the man on horseback, who had
watched the assassination with no sign of emotion,
backed his horse towards the dead body: the four
murderers lifted the corpse across the crupper, and
walking by the side to support it, then made their
way down the lane that leads to the Church of Santa
Maria-in-Monticelli. The wretched valet they
left for dead upon the pavement. But he, after
the lapse of a few seconds, regained some small strength,
and his groans were heard by the inhabitants of a poor
little house hard by; they came and picked him up,
and laid him upon a bed, where he died almost at once,
unable to give any evidence as to the assassins or
any details of the murder.
All night the duke was expected home,
and all the next morning; then expectation was turned
into fear, and fear at last into deadly terror.
The pope was approached, and told that the Duke of
Gandia had never come back to his palace since he
left his mother’s house. But Alexander tried
to deceive himself all through the rest of the day,
hoping that his son might have been surprised by the
coming of daylight in the midst of an amorous adventure,
and was waiting till the next night to get away in
that darkness which had aided his coming thither.
But the night, like the day, passed and brought no
news. On the morrow, the pope, tormented by
the gloomiest presentiments and by the raven’s
croak of the ’vox populi’, let
himself fall into the depths of despair: amid
sighs and sobs of grief, all he could say to any one
who came to him was but these words, repeated a thousand
times: “Search, search; let us know how
my unhappy son has died.”
Then everybody joined in the search;
for, as we have said, the Duke of Gandia was beloved
by all; but nothing could be discovered from scouring
the town, except the body of the murdered man, who
was recognised as the duke’s valet; of his master
there was no trace whatever: it was then thought,
not without reason, that he had probably been thrown
into the Tiber, and they began to follow along its
banks, beginning from the Via della Ripetta,
questioning every boatman and fisherman who might possibly
have seen, either from their houses or from their boats,
what had happened on the river banks during the two
preceding nights. At first all inquiries were
in vain; but when they had gone up as high as the Via
del Fantanone, they found a man at last who said
he had seen something happen on the night of the 14th
which might very possibly have some bearing on the
subject of inquiry. He was a Slav named George,
who was taking up the river a boat laden with wood
to Ripetta. The following are his own words:
“Gentlemen,” he said,
“last Wednesday evening, when I had set down
my load of wood on the bank, I remained in my boat,
resting in the cool night air, and watching lest other
men should come and take away what I had just unloaded,
when, about two o’clock in the morning, I saw
coming out of the lane on the left of San Girolamo’s
Church two men on foot, who came forward into the
middle of the street, and looked so carefully all
around that they seemed to have come to find out if
anybody was going along the street. When they
felt sure that it was deserted, they went back along
the same lane, whence issued presently two other men,
who used similar precautions to make sure that there
was nothing fresh; they, when they found all as they
wished, gave a sign to their companions to come and
join them; next appeared one man on a dapple-grey horse,
which was carrying on the crupper the body of a dead
man, his head and arms hanging over on one side and
his feet on the other. The two fellows I had
first seen exploring were holding him up by the arms
and legs. The other three at once went up to
the river, while the first two kept a watch on the
street, and advancing to the part of the bank where
the sewers of the town are discharged into the Tiber,
the horseman turned his horse, backing on the river;
then the two who were at either side taking the corpse,
one by the hands, the other by the feet, swung it three
times, and the third time threw it out into the river
with all their strength; then at the noise made when
the body splashed into the water, the horseman asked,
‘Is it done?’ and the others answered,
‘Yes, sir,’ and he at once turned right
about face; but seeing the dead man’s cloak
floating, he asked what was that black thing swimming
about. ‘Sir,’ said one of the men,
‘it is his cloak’; and then another man
picked up some stones, and running to the place where
it was still floating, threw them so as to make it
sink under; as soon, as it had quite disappeared, they
went off, and after walking a little way along the
main road, they went into the lane that leads to San
Giacomo. That was all I saw, gentlemen, and
so it is all I can answer to the questions you have
asked me.”
At these words, which robbed of all
hope any who might yet entertain it, one of the pope’s
servants asked the Slav why, when he was witness of
such a deed, he had not gone to denounce it to the
governor. But the Slav replied that, since he
had exercised his present trade on the riverside,
he had seen dead men thrown into the Tiber in the same
way a hundred times, and had never heard that anybody
had been troubled about them; so he supposed it would
be the same with this corpse as the others, and had
never imagined it was his duty to speak of it, not
thinking it would be any more important than it had
been before.
Acting on this intelligence, the servants
of His Holiness summoned at once all the boatmen and
fishermen who were accustomed to go up and down the
river, and as a large reward was promised to anyone
who should find the duke’s body, there were
soon mare than a hundred ready for the job; so that
before the evening of the same day, which was Friday,
two men were drawn out of the water, of whom one was
instantly recognised as the hapless duke. At
the very first glance at the body there could be no
doubt as to the cause of death. It was pierced
with nine wounds, the chief one in the throat, whose
artery was cut. The clothing had not been touched:
his doublet and cloak were there, his gloves in his
waistband, gold in his purse; the duke then must have
been assassinated not for gain but for revenge.
The ship which carried the corpse
went up the Tiber to the Castello Sant’ Angelo,
where it was set down. At once the magnificent
dress was fetched from the duke’s palace which
he had worn on the day of the procession, and he was
clothed in it once more: beside him were placed
the insignia of the generalship of the Church.
Thus he lay in state all day, but his father in his
despair had not the courage to came and look at him.
At last, when night had fallen, his most trusty and
honoured servants carried the body to the church of
the Madonna del Papala, with all the pomp
and ceremony that Church and State combined could devise
for the funeral of the son of the pope.
Meantime the bloodstained hands of
Caesar Borgia were placing a royal crown upon the
head of Frederic of Aragon.
This blow had pierced Alexander’s
heart very deeply. As at first he did not know
on whom his suspicions should fall, he gave the strictest
orders for the pursuit of the murderers; but little
by little the infamous truth was forced upon him.
He saw that the blow which struck at his house came
from that very house itself and then his despair was
changed to madness: he ran through the rooms
of the Vatican like a maniac, and entering the consistory
with torn garments and ashes on his head, he sobbingly
avowed all the errors of his past life, owning that
the disaster that struck his offspring through his
offspring was a just chastisement from God; then he
retired to a secret dark chamber of the palace, and
there shut himself up, declaring his resolve to die
of starvation. And indeed for more than sixty
hours he took no nourishment by day nor rest by night,
making no answer to those who knocked at his door
to bring him food except with the wailings of a woman
or a roar as of a wounded lion; even the beautiful
Giulia Farnese, his new mistress, could not move
him at all, and was obliged to go and seek Lucrezia,
that daughter doubly loved to conquer his deadly resolve.
Lucrezia came out from the retreat were she was weeping
for the Duke of Gandia, that she might console her
father. At her voice the door did really open,
and it was only then that the Duke of Segovia, who
had been kneeling almost a whole day at the threshold,
begging His Holiness to take heart, could enter with
servants bearing wine and food.
The pope remained alone with Lucrezia
for three days and nights; then he reappeared in public,
outwardly calm, if not resigned; for Guicciardini
assures us that his daughter had made him understand
how dangerous it would be to himself to show too openly
before the assassin, who was coming home, the immoderate
love he felt for his victim.
CHAPTER VIII
Caesar remained at Naples, partly
to give time to the paternal grief to cool down, and
partly to get on with another business he had lately
been charged with, nothing else than a proposition
of marriage between Lucrezia and Don Alfonso of Aragon,
Duke of Bicelli and Prince of Salerno, natural son
of Alfonso ii and brother of Dona Sancha.
It was true that Lucrezia was already married to
the lord of Pesaro, but she was the daughter of an
father who had received from heaven the right of uniting
and disuniting. There was no need to trouble
about so trifling a matter: when the two were
ready to marry, the divorce would be effected.
Alexander was too good a tactician to leave his daughter
married to a son-in-law who was becoming useless to
him.
Towards the end of August it was announced
that the ambassador was coming back to Rome, having
accomplished his mission to the new king to his great
satisfaction. And thither he returned an the
5th of September, that is, nearly three
months after the Duke of Gandia’s death, and
on the next day, the 6th, from the church of Santa
Maria Novella, where, according to custom, the cardinals
and the Spanish and Venetian ambassadors were awaiting
him on horseback at the door, he proceeded to the
Vatican, where His Holiness was sitting; there he
entered the consistory, was admitted by the pope, and
in accordance with the usual ceremonial received his
benediction and kiss; then, accompanied once more
in the same fashion by the ambassadors and cardinals,
he was escorted to his own apartments. Thence
he proceeded to, the pope’s, as soon as he was
left alone; for at the consistory they had had no speech
with one another, and the father and son had a hundred
things to talk about, but of these the Duke of Gandia
was not one, as might have been expected. His
name was not once spoken, and neither on that day nor
afterwards was there ever again any mention of the
unhappy young man: it was as though he had never
existed.
It was the fact that Caesar brought
good news, King Frederic gave his consent to the proposed
union; so the marriage of Sforza and Lucrezia was
dissolved on a pretext of nullity. Then Frederic
authorised the exhumation of D’jem’s body,
which, it will be remembered, was worth 300,000 ducats.
After this, all came about as Caesar
had desired; he became the man who was all-powerful
after the pope; but when he was second in command it
was soon evident to the Roman people that their city
was making a new stride in the direction of ruin.
There was nothing but balls, fêtes, masquerades;
there were magnificent hunting parties, when Caesar who
had begun to cast off is cardinal’s robe, weary
perhaps of the colour, appeared in a French dress,
followed, like a king by cardinals, envoys and bodyguard.
The whole pontifical town, given up like a courtesan
to orgies and debauchery, had never been more the
home of sedition, luxury, and carnage, according to
the Cardinal of Viterba, not even in the days of Nero
and Heliogabalus. Never had she fallen upon days
more evil; never had more traitors done her dishonour
or sbirri stained her streets with blood. The
number of thieves was so great, and their audacity
such, that no one could with safety pass the gates
of the town; soon it was not even safe within them.
No house, no castle, availed for defence. Right
and justice no longer existed. Money, farce,
pleasure, ruled supreme.
Still, the gold was melting as in
a furnace at these Fêtes; and, by Heaven’s just
punishment, Alexander and Caesar were beginning to
covet the fortunes of those very men who had risen
through their simony to their present elevation.
The first attempt at a new method of coining money
was tried upon the Cardinal Cosenza. The occasion
was as follows. A certain dispensation had been
granted some time before to a nun who had taken the
vows: she was the only surviving heir to the throne
of Portugal, and by means of the dispensation she
had been wedded to the natural son of the last king.
This marriage was more prejudicial than can easily
be imagined to the interests of Ferdinand and Isabella
of Spain; so they sent ambassadors to Alexander to
lodge a complaint against a proceeding of this nature,
especially as it happened at the very moment when
an alliance was to be formed between the house of Aragon
and the Holy See. Alexander understood the complaint,
and resolved that all should be set right. So
he denied all knowledge of the papal brief though
he had as a fact received 60,000 ducats for signing
it and accused the Archbishop of Cosenza,
secretary for apostolic briefs, of having granted
a false dispensation. By reason of this accusation,
the archbishop was taken to the castle of Sant’
Angelo, and a suit was begun.
But as it was no easy task to prove
an accusation of this nature, especially if the archbishop
should persist in maintaining that the dispensation
was really granted by the pope, it was resolved to
employ a trick with him which could not fail to succeed.
One evening the Archbishop of Cosenza saw Cardinal
Valentino come into his prison; with that frank air
of affability which he knew well how to assume when
it could serve his purpose, he explained to the prisoner
the embarrassing situation in which the pope was placed,
from which the archbishop alone, whom His Holiness
looked upon as his best friend, could save him.
The archbishop replied that he was
entirely at the service of His Holiness.
Caesar, on his entrance, found the
captive seated, leaning his elbows on a table, and
he took a seat opposite him and explained the pope’s
position: it was an embarrassing one. At
the very time of contracting so important an alliance
with the house of Aragon as that of Lucrezia and Alfonso,
His Holiness could not avow to Ferdinand and Isabella
that, for the sake of a few miserable ducats,
he had signed a dispensation which would unite in
the husband and wife together all the legitimate claims
to a throne to which Ferdinand and Isabella had no
right at all but that of conquest. This avowal
would necessarily put an end to all negotiations,
and the pontifical house would fall by the overthrow
of that very pedestal which was to have heightened
its grandeur. Accordingly the archbishop would
understand what the pope expected of his devotion and
friendship: it was a simple and straight avowal
that he had supposed he might take it upon himself
to accord the dispensation. Then, as the sentence
to be passed on such an error would be the business
of Alexander, the accused could easily imagine beforehand
how truly paternal such a sentence would be.
Besides, the reward was in the same hands, and if
the sentence was that of a father, the recompense would
be that of a king. In fact, this recompense
would be no less than the honour of assisting as envoy,
with the title of cardinal, at the marriage of Lucrezia
and Alfonso a favour which would be very
appropriate, since it would be thanks to his devotion
that the marriage could take place.
The Archbishop of Cosenza knew the
men he was dealing with; he knew that to save their
own ends they would hesitate at nothing; he knew they
had a poison like sugar to the taste and to the smell,
impossible to discover in food a poison
that would kill slowly or quickly as the poisoner
willed and would leave no trace behind; he knew the
secret of the poisoned key that lay always on the
pope’s mantelpiece, so that when His Holiness
wished to destroy some one of his intimates, he bade
him open a certain cupboard: on the handle of
the key there was a little spike, and as the lock
of the cupboard turned stiffly the hand would naturally
press, the lock would yield, and nothing would have
come of it but a trifling scratch: the scratch
was mortal. He knew, too, that Caesar wore a
ring made like two lions’ heads, and that he
would turn the stone on the inside when he was shaking
hands with a friend. Then the lions’ teeth
became the teeth of a viper, and the friend died cursing
Borgia. So he yielded, partly through fear, partly
blinded by the thought of the reward; and Caesar returned
to the Vatican armed with a precious paper, in which
the Archbishop of Cosenza admitted that he was the
only person responsible for the dispensation granted
to the royal nun.
Two days later, by means of the proofs
kindly furnished by the archbishop, the pope; in the
presence of the governor of Rome, the auditor of the
apostolic chamber, the advocate, and the fiscal attorney,
pronounced sentence, condemning the archbishop to the
loss of all his bénéfices and ecclesiastical
offices, degradation from his orders, and confiscation
of his goods; his person was to be handed over to the
civil arm. Two days later the civil magistrate
entered the prison to fulfil his office as received
from the pope, and appeared before the archbishop,
accompanied by a clerk, two servants, and four guards.
The clerk unrolled the paper he carried and read
out the sentence; the two servants untied a packet,
and, stripping the prisoner of his ecclesiastical
garments, they reclothed him in a dress of coarse white
cloth which only reached down to his knees, breeches
of the same, and a pair of clumsy shoes. Lastly,
the guards took him, and led him into one of the deepest
dungeons of the castle of Sant’ Angelo, where
for furniture he found nothing but a wooden crucifix,
a table, a chair, and a bed; for occupation, a Bible
and a breviary, with a lamp to read by; for nourishment,
two pounds of bread and a little cask of water, which
were to be renewed every three days, together with
a bottle of oil for burning in his lamp.
At the end of a year the poor archbishop
died of despair, not before he had gnawed his own
arms in his agony.
The very same day that he was taken
into the dungeon, Caesar Borgia, who had managed the
affair so ably, was presented by the pope with all
the belongings of the condemned prisoner.
But the hunting parties, balls, and
masquerades were not the only pleasures enjoyed by
the pope and his family: from time to time strange
spectacles were exhibited. We will only describe
two one of them a case of punishment, the
other no more nor less than a matter of the stud farm.
But as both of these give details with which we would
not have our readers credit our imagination, we will
first say that they are literally translated from
Burchard’s Latin journal.
“About the same time that
is, about the beginning of 1499 a certain
courtesan named La Corsetta was in prison, and had
a lover who came to visit her in woman’s clothes,
a Spanish Moor, called from his disguise ‘the
Spanish lady from Barbary!’ As a punishment,
both of them were led through the town, the woman
without petticoat or skirt, but wearing only the Moor’s
dress unbuttoned in front; the man wore his woman’s
garb; his hands were tied behind his back, and the
skirt fastened up to his middle, with a view to complete
exposure before the eyes of all. When in this
attire they had made the circuit of the town, the Corsetta
was sent back to the prison with the Moor. But
on the 7th of April following, the Moor was again
taken out and escorted in the company of two thieves
towards the Campo dei Fiori. The three
condemned men were preceded by a constable, who rode
backwards on an ass, and held in his hand a long pole,
on the end of which were hung, still bleeding, the
amputated limbs of a poor Jew who had suffered torture
and death for some trifling crime. When the procession
reached the place of execution, the thieves were hanged,
and the unfortunate Moor was tied to a stake piled
round with wood, where he was to have been burnt to
death, had not rain fallen in such torrents that the
fire would not burn, in spite of all the efforts of
the executioner.”
This unlooked for accident, taken
as a miracle by the people, robbed Lucrezia of the
most exciting part of the execution; but her father
was holding in reserve another kind of spectacle to
console her with later. We inform the reader
once more that a few lines we are about to set before
him are a translation from the journal of the worthy
German Burchard, who saw nothing in the bloodiest
or most wanton performances but facts for his journal,
which he duly registered with the impassibility of
a scribe, appending no remark or moral reflection.
“On the 11th of November a certain
peasant was entering Rome with two stallions laden
with wood, when the servants of His Holiness, just
as he passed the Piazza of St. Peter’s, cut
their girths, so that their loads fell on the ground
with the pack-saddles, and led off the horses to a
court between the palace and the gate; then the stable
doors were opened, and four stallions, quite free
and unbridled, rushed out and in an instant all six
animals began kicking, biting and fighting each other
until several were killed. Roderigo and Madame
Lucrezia, who sat at the window just over the palace
gate, took the greatest delight in the struggle and
called their courtiers to witness the gallant battle
that was being fought below them.”
Now Caesar’s trick in the matter
of the Archbishop of Cosenza had had the desired result,
and Isabella and Ferdinand could no longer impute to
Alexander the signature of the brief they had complained
of: so nothing was now in the way of the marriage
of Lucrezia and Alfonso; this certainty gave the pope
great joy, for he attached all the more importance
to this marriage because he was already cogitating
a second, between Caesar and Dona Carlota, Frederic’s
daughter.
Caesar had shown in all his actions
since his brother’s death his want of vocation
for the ecclesiastical life; so no one was astonished
when, a consistory having been summoned one morning
by Alexander, Caesar entered, and addressing the pope,
began by saying that from his earliest years he had
been drawn towards secular pursuits both by natural
inclination and ability, and it had only been in obedience
to the absolute commands of His Holiness that he entered
the Church, accepted the cardinal’s scarlet,
other dignities, and finally the sacred order of the
diaconate; but feeling that in his situation it was
improper to follow his passions, and at his age impossible
to resist them, he humbly entreated His Holiness graciously
to yield to the desire he had failed to overcome, and
to permit him to lay aside the dress and dignities
of the Church, and enter once more into the world,
thereto contract a lawful marriage; also he entreated
the lord cardinals to intercede for him with His Holiness,
to whom he would freely resign all his churches, abbeys,
and bénéfices, as well as every other ecclesiastical
dignity and preferment that had been accorded him.
The cardinals, deferring to Caesar’s wishes,
gave a unanimous vote, and the pope, as we may suppose,
like a good father, not wishing to force his son’s
inclinations, accepted his resignation, and yielded
to the petition; thus Caesar put off the scarlet robe,
which was suited to him, says his historian Tommaso
Tommasi, in one particular only that it
was the colour of blood.
In truth, the resignation was a pressing
necessity, and there was no time to lose. Charles
viii one day after he had came home late and tired
from the hunting-field, had bathed his head in cold
water; and going straight to table, had been struck
dawn by an apoplectic seizure directly after his supper;
and was dead, leaving the throne to the good Louis
XII, a man of two conspicuous weaknesses, one as deplorable
as the other: the first was the wish to make
conquests; the second was the desire to have children.
Alexander, who was on the watch far all political
changes, had seen in a moment what he could get from
Louis XII’s accession to the throne, and was
prepared to profit by the fact that the new king of
France needed his help for the accomplishment of his
twofold desire. Louis needed, first, his temporal
aid in an expedition against the duchy of Milan, on
which, as we explained before, he had inherited claims
from Valentina Visconti, his grandmother; and, secondly,
his spiritual aid to dissolve his marriage with Jeanne,
the daughter of Louis XI; a childless and hideously
deformed woman, whom he had only married by reason
of the great fear he entertained far her father.
Now Alexander was willing to do all this far Louis
XII and to give in addition a cardinal’s hat
to his friend George d’Amboise, provided only
that the King of France would use his influence in
persuading the young Dona Carlota, who was at his court,
to marry his son Caesar.
So, as this business was already far
advanced on the day when Caesar doffed his scarlet
and donned a secular garb, thus fulfilling the ambition
so long cherished, when the lord of Villeneuve, sent
by Louis and commissioned to bring Caesar to France,
presented himself before the ex-cardinal on his arrival
at Rome, the latter, with his usual extravagance of
luxury and the kindness he knew well how to bestow
on those he needed, entertained his guest for a month,
and did all the honours of Rome. After that,
they departed, preceded by one of the pope’s
couriers, who gave orders that every town they passed
through was to receive them with marks of honour and
respect. The same order had been sent throughout
the whole of France, where the illustrious visitors
received so numerous a guard, and were welcomed by
a populace so eager to behold them, that after they
passed through Paris, Caesar’s gentlemen-in-waiting
wrote to Rome that they had not seen any trees in
France, or houses, or walls, but only men, women and
sunshine.
The king, on the pretext of going
out hunting, went to meet his guest two leagues outside
the town. As he knew Caesar was very fond of
the name of Valentine, which he had used as cardinal,
and still continued to employ with the title of Count,
although he had resigned the archbishopric which gave
him the name, he there and then bestowed an him the
investiture of Valence, in Dauphiné, with the title
of Duke and a pension of 20,000 francs; then, when
he had made this magnificent gift and talked with him
for nearly a couple of hours, he took his leave, to
enable him to prepare the splendid entry he was proposing
to make.
It was Wednesday, the 18th of December
1498, when Caesar Borgia entered the town of Chinon,
with pomp worthy of the son of a pope who is about
to marry the daughter of a king. The procession
began with four-and-twenty mules, caparisoned in red,
adorned with escutcheons bearing the duke’s
arms, laden with carved trunks and chests inlaid with
ivory and silver; after them came four-and-twenty
mare, also caparisoned, this time in the livery of
the King of France, yellow and red; next after these
came ten other mules, covered in yellow satin with
red crossbars; and lastly another ten, covered with
striped cloth of gold, the stripes alternately raised
and flat gold.
Behind the seventy mules which led
the procession there pranced sixteen handsome battle-horses,
led by equerries who marched alongside; these were
followed by eighteen hunters ridden by eighteen pages,
who were about fourteen or fifteen years of age; sixteen
of them were dressed in crimson velvet, and two in
raised gold cloth; so elegantly dressed were these
two children, who were also the best looking of the
little band, that the sight of them gave rise to strange
suspicions as to the reason for this preference, if
one may believe what Brantome says. Finally,
behind these eighteen horses came six beautiful mules,
all harnessed with red velvet, and led by six valets,
also in velvet to match.
The third group consisted of, first,
two mules quite covered with cloth of gold, each carrying
two chests in which it was said that the duke’s
treasure was stored, the precious stones he was bringing
to his fiancee, and the relics and papal bulls that
his father had charged him to convey for him to Louis
XII. These were followed by twenty gentlemen
dressed in cloth of gold and silver, among whom rode
Paul Giordano Orsino and several barons and knights
among the chiefs of the state ecclesiastic.
Next came two drums, one rebeck, and
four soldiers blowing trumpets and silver clarions;
then, in the midst of a party of four-and-twenty lacqueys,
dressed half in crimson velvet and half in yellow silk,
rode Messire George d’Amboise and
Monseigneur the Duke of Valentinois. Caesar
was mounted on a handsome tall courser, very richly
harnessed, in a robe half red satin and half cloth
of gold, embroidered all over with pearls and precious
stones; in his cap were two rows of rubies, the size
of beans, which reflected so brilliant a light that
one might have fancied they were the famous carbuncles
of the Arabian Nights; he also wore on his neck a
collar worth at least 200,000 livres; indeed, there
was no part of him, even down to his boots, that was
not laced with gold and edged with pearls. His
horse was covered with a cuirass in a pattern of golden
foliage of wonderful workmanship, among which there
appeared to grow, like flowers, nosegays of pearls
and clusters of rubies.
Lastly, bringing up the rear of the
magnificent cortege, behind the duke came twenty-four
mules with red caparisons bearing his arms, carrying
his silver plate, tents, and baggage.
What gave to all the cavalcade an
air of most wonderful luxury and extravagance was
that the horses and mules were shod with golden shoes,
and these were so badly nailed on that more than three-quarters
of their number, were lost on the road For this extravagance
Caesar was greatly blamed, for it was thought an audacious
thing to put on his horses’ feet a metal of
which king’s crowns are made.
But all this pomp had no effect on
the lady for whose sake it had been displayed; for
when Dona Carlota was told that Caesar Bargia had come
to France in the hope of becoming her husband, she
replied simply that she would never take a priest
far her husband, and, moreover, the son of a priest;
a man who was not only an assassin, but a fratricide;
not only a man of infamous birth, but still more infamous
in his morals and his actions.
But, in default of the haughty lady
of Aragon, Caesar soon found another princess of noble
blood who consented to be his wife: this was
Mademoiselle d’Albret, daughter of the King of
Navarre. The marriage, arranged on condition
that the pope should pay 200,000 ducats dowry
to the bride, and should make her brother cardinal,
was celebrated on the 10th of May; and on the Whitsunday
following the Duke of Valentois received the order
of St. Michael, an order founded by Louis XI, and
esteemed at this period as the highest in the gift
of the kings of France. The news of this marriage,
which made an alliance with Louis XII certain, was
received with great joy by the pope, who at once gave
orders far bonfires and illuminations all over the
town.
Louis XII was not only grateful to
the pope for dissolving his marriage with Jeanne of
France and authorizing his union with Anne of Brittany,
but he considered it indispensable to his designs in
Italy to have the pope as his ally. So he promised
the Duke of Valentinois to put three hundred lances
at his disposal, as soon as he had made an entry into
Milan, to be used to further his own private interests,
and against whomsoever he pleased except only the
allies of France. The conquest of Milan should
be undertaken so soon as Louis felt assured of the
support of the Venetians, or at least of their neutrality,
and he had sent them ambassadors authorised to promise
in his name the restoration of Cremona and Ghiera
d’Adda when he had completed the conquest of
Lombardy.
CHAPTER IX
Everything from without was favouring
Alexander’s encroaching policy, when he was
compelled to turn his eyes from France towards the
centre of Italy: in Florence dwelt a man, neither
duke, nor king, nor soldier, a man whose power was
in his genius, whose armour was his purity, who owned
no offensive weapon but his tongue, and who yet began
to grow more dangerous for him than all the kings,
dukes, princes, in the whole world could ever be;
this man was the poor Dominican monk Girolamo Savonarola,
the same who had refused absolution to Lorenzo
dei Medici because he would not restore the liberty
of Florence.
Girolamo Savonarola had prophesied
the invasion of a force from beyond the Alps, and
Charles viii had conquered Naples; Girolamo Savonarola
had prophesied to Charles viii that because he
had failed to fulfil the mission of liberator entrusted
to him by God, he was threatened with a great misfortune
as a punishment, and Charles was dead; lastly, Savonarola
had prophesied his own fall like the man who paced
around the holy city for eight days, crying, “Woe
to Jerusalem!” and on the ninth day, “Woe
be on my own head!” None the less, the Florentine
reformer, who could not recoil from any danger, was
determined to attack the colossal abomination that
was seated on St. Peter’s holy throne; each
debauch, each fresh crime that lifted up its brazen
face to the light of day or tried to hide its shameful
head beneath the veil of night, he had never failed
to paint out to the people, denouncing it as the off
spring of the pope’s luxurious living and lust
of power. Thus had he stigmatised Alexander’s
new amour with the beautiful Giulia Farnese, who
in the preceding April a added another son to the pope’s
family; thus had he cursed the Duke of Gandia’s
murderer, the lustful, jealous fratricide; lastly,
he had pointed out to the Florentines, who were excluded
from the league then forming, what sort of future
was in store far them when the Borgias should have
made themselves masters of the small principalities
and should come to attack the duchies and republics.
It was clear that in Savonarola, the pope had an enemy
at once temporal and spiritual, whose importunate
and threatening voice must be silenced at any cost.
But mighty as the pope’s power
was, to accomplish a design like this was no easy
matter. Savonarola, preaching the stern principles
of liberty, had united to his cause, even in the midst
of rich, pleasure-loving Florence, a party of some
size, known as the ‘Piagnoni’, or the
Penitents: this band was composed of citizens
who were anxious for reform in Church and State, who
accused the Medici of enslaving the fatherland and
the Borgias of upsetting the faith, who demanded two
things, that the republic should return to her democratic
principles, and religion to a primitive simplicity.
Towards the first of these projects considerable progress
had been made, since they had successively obtained,
first, an amnesty for all crimes and delinquencies
committed under other governments; secondly, the abolition
of the ‘balia’, which was an aristocratic
magistracy; thirdly, the establishment of a sovereign
council, composed of 1800 citizens; and lastly, the
substitution of popular elections for drawing by lot
and for oligarchical nominations: these changes
had been effected in spite of two other factions, the
‘Arrabiati’, or Madmen, who, consisting
of the richest and noblest youths of the Florentine
patrician families, desired to have an oligarchical
government; and the ‘Bigi’, or Greys, so
called because they always held their meetings in
the shade, who desired the return of the Medici.
The first measure Alexander used against
the growing power of Savonarola was to declare him
heretic, and as such banished from the pulpit; but
Savonarola had eluded this prohibition by making his
pupil and friend, Domenico Bonvicini di Pescia,
preach in his stead. The result was that the
master’s teachings were issued from other lips,
and that was all; the seed, though scattered by another
hand, fell none the less on fertile soil, where it
would soon burst into flower. Moreover, Savonarola
now set an example that was followed to good purpose
by Luther, when, twenty-two years later, he burned
Leo X’s bull of excommunication at Wittenberg;
he was weary of silence, so he declared, on the authority
of Pope Pelagius, that an unjust excommunication had
no efficacy, and that the person excommunicated unjustly
did not even need to get absolution. So on Christmas
Day, 1497, he declared that by the inspiration of God
he renounced his obedience to a corrupt master; and
he began to preach once more in the cathedral, with
a success that was all the greater for the interruption,
and an influence far more formidable than before, because
it was strengthened by that sympathy of the masses
which an unjust persecution always inspires.
Then Alexander made overtures to Leonardo
dei Medici, vicar of the archbishopric of Florence,
to obtain the punishment of the rebel: Leonardo,
in obedience to the orders he received, from Rome,
issued a mandate forbidding the faithful to attend
at Savonarola’s sermons. After this mandate,
any who should hear the discourses of the excommunicated
monk would be refused communion and confession; and
as when they died they would be contaminated with
heresy, in consequence of their spiritual intercourse
with a heretic, their dead bodies would be dragged
on a hurdle and deprived of the rights of sepulture.
Savonarola appealed from the mandate of his superior
both to the people and to the Signoria, and the
two together gave orders to the episcopal vicar to
leave Florence within two hours: this happened
at the beginning of the year 1498.
The expulsion of Leonard’s dei
Medici was a new triumph for Savonarola, so, wishing
to turn to good moral account his growing influence,
he resolved to convert the last day of the carnival,
hitherto given up to worldly pleasures, into a day
of religious sacrifice. So actually on Shrove
Tuesday a considerable number of boys were collected
in front of the cathedral, and there divided into
bands, which traversed the whole town, making a house-to-house
visitation, claiming all profane books, licentious
paintings, lutes, harps, cards and dice, cosmetics
and perfumes in a word, all the hundreds
of products of a corrupt society and civilisation,
by the aid of which Satan at times makes victorious
war on God. The inhabitants of Florence obeyed,
and came forth to the Piazza of the Duoma, bringing
these works of perdition, which were soon piled up
in a huge stack, which the youthful reformers set on
fire, singing religious psalms and hymns the while.
On this pile were burned many copies of Boccaccio
and of Margante Maggiore, and pictures by Fro Bartalommeo,
who from that day forward renounced the art of this
world to consecrate his brush utterly and entirely
to the reproduction of religious scenes.
A reform such as this was terrifying
to Alexander; so he resolved on fighting Savonarola
with his own weapons that is, by the force
of eloquence. He chose as the Dominican’s
opponent a preacher of recognised talent, called Fra
Francesco di Paglia; and he sent him
to Florence, where he began to preach in Santa Croce,
accusing Savonarola of heresy and impiety. At
the same time the pope, in a new brief, announced to
the Signaria that unless they forbade the arch-heretic
to preach, all the goods of Florentine merchants who
lived on the papal territory would be confiscated,
and the republic laid under an interdict and declared
the spiritual and temporal enemy of the Church.
The Signoria, abandoned by France, and aware
that the material power of Rome was increasing in a
frightful manner, was forced this time to yield, and
to issue to Savonarola an order to leave off preaching.
He obeyed, and bade farewell to his congregation
in a sermon full of strength and eloquence.
But the withdrawal of Savonarola,
so far from calming the ferment, had increased it:
there was talk about his prophecies being fulfilled;
and some zealots, more ardent than their mastery added
miracle to inspiration, and loudly proclaimed that
Savonarola had offered to go down into the vaults
of the cathedral with his antagonist, and there bring
a dead man to life again, to prove that his doctrine
was true, promising to declare himself vanquished
if the miracle were performed by his adversary.
These rumours reached the ears of Fra Francesco,
and as he was a man of warm blood, who counted his
own life as nothing if it might be spent to help his
cause, he declared in all humility that he felt he
was too great a sinner for God to work a miracle in
his behalf; but he proposed another challenge:
he would try with Savonarola the ordeal of fire.
He knew, he said, that he must perish, but at least
he should perish avenging the cause of religion, since
he was certain to involve in his destruction the tempter
who plunged so many souls beside his own into eternal
damnation.
The proposition made by Fra Francesco
was taken to Savanarola; but as he had never proposed
the earlier challenge, he hesitated to accept the
second; hereupon his disciple, Fra Domenico Bonvicini,
more confident than his master in his own power, declared
himself ready to accept the trial by fire in his stead;
so certain was he that God would perform a miracle
by the intercession of Savonarola, His prophet.
Instantly the report spread through
Florence that the mortal challenge was accepted; Savonarola’s
partisans, all men of the strongest convictions, felt
no doubt as to the success of their cause. His
enemies were enchanted at the thought of the heretic
giving himself to the flames; and the indifferent
saw in the ordeal a spectacle of real and terrible
interest.
But the devotion of Fra Bonvicini
of Pescia was not what Fra Francesco was reckoning
with. He was willing, no doubt, to die a terrible
death, but on condition that Savanarola died with
him. What mattered to him the death of an obscure
disciple like Fra Bonvicini? It was the master
he would strike, the great teacher who must be involved
in his own ruin. So he refused to enter the
fire except with Savonarola himself, and, playing
this terrible game in his own person, would not allow
his adversary to play it by proxy.
Then a thing happened which certainly
no one could have anticipated. In the place of
Fra Francesco, who would not tilt with any but
the master, two Franciscan monks appeared to tilt
with the disciple. These were Fra Nicholas
de Pilly and Fra Andrea Rondinelli.
Immediately the partisans of Savonarala, seeing this
arrival of reinforcements for their antagonist, came
forward in a crowd to try the ordeal. The Franciscans
were unwilling to be behindhand, and everybody took
sides with equal ardour for one or other party.
All Florence was like a den of madmen; everyone wanted
the ordeal, everyone wanted to go into the fire; not
only did men challenge one another, but women and
even children were clamouring to be allowed to try.
At last the Signoria, reserving this privilege
for the first applicants, ordered that the strange
duel should take place only between Fra Domenico
Bonvicini and Fra Andrea Rondinelli; ten
of the citizens were to arrange all details; the day
was fixed for the 7th of April, 1498, and the place
the Piazza del Palazzo.
The judges of the field made their
arrangements conscientiously. By their orders
scaffolding was erected at the appointed place, five
feet in height, ten in width, and eighty feet long.
This scaffolding was covered with faggots and heath,
supported by cross-bars of the very driest wood that
could be found. Two narrow paths were made, two
feet wide at most, their entrance giving an the Loggia
dei Lanzi, their exit exactly opposite.
The loggia was itself divided into two by a partition,
so that each champion had a kind of room to make his
preparations in, just as in the theatre every actor
has his dressing-room; but in this instance the tragedy
that was about to be played was not a fictitious one.
The Franciscans arrived on the piazza
and entered the compartment reserved for them without
making any religious demonstration; while Savonarola,
on the contrary, advanced to his own place in the procession,
wearing the sacerdotal robes in which he had just celebrated
the Holy Eucharist, and holding in his hand the sacred
host for all the world to see, as it was enclosed
in a crystal tabernacle. Fra Domenico di
Pescia, the hero of the occasion, followed, bearing
a crucifix, and all the Dominican monks, their red
crosses in their hands, marched behind singing a psalm;
while behind them again followed the most considerable
of the citizens of their party, bearing torches, for,
sure as they were of the triumph of their cause, they
wished to fire the faggots themselves. The piazza
was so crowded that the people overflowed into all
the streets around. In every door and window
there was nothing to be seen but heads ranged one
above the other; the terraces were covered with people,
and curious spectators were observed an the roof of
the Duomo and on the tap of the Campanile.
But, brought face to face with the
ordeal, the Franciscans raised such difficulties that
it was very plain the heart of their champion was
failing him. The first fear they expressed was
that Fra Bonvicini was an enchanter, and so carried
about him some talisman or charm which would save
him from the fire. So they insisted that he should
be stripped of all has clothes and put on others to
be inspected by witnesses. Fra Bonvicini
made no objection, though the suspicion was humiliating;
he changed shirt, dress, and cowl. Then, when
the Franciscans observed that Savanarola was placing
the tabernacle in his hands, they protested that it
was profanation to expose the sacred host to the risk
of burning, that this was not in the bond, and if
Bonvicini would not give up this supernatural aid,
they far their part would give up the trial altogether.
Savonarola replied that it was not astonishing that
the champion of religion who put his faith in God
should bear in his hands that very God to whom he
entrusted his salvation. But this reply did not
satisfy the Franciscans, who were unwilling to let
go their contention. Savonarola remained inflexible,
supporting his own right, and thus nearly four hours
passed in the discussion of points which neither party
would give up, and affairs remained in ‘statu
quo’. Meanwhile the people, jammed together
in the streets, on the terraces, on the roofs, since
break of day, were suffering from hunger and thirst
and beginning to get impatient: their impatience
soon developed into loud murmurs, which reached even
the champions’ ears, so that the partisans of
Savonarala, who felt such faith in him that they were
confident of a miracle, entreated him to yield to
all the conditions suggested. To this Savonarola
replied that if it were himself making the trial he
would be less inexorable; but since another man was
incurring the danger; he could not take too many precautions.
Two more hours passed, while his partisans tried in
vain to combat his refusals. At last, as night
was coming on and the people grew ever more and more
impatient and their murmurs began to assume a threatening
tone, Bonvicini declared that he was ready to walk
through the fire, holding nothing in his hand but
a crucifix. No one could refuse him this; so
Fra Rondinelli was compelled to accept his proposition.
The announcement was made to the populace that the
champions had come to terms and the trial was about
to take place. At this news the people calmed
down, in the hope of being compensated at last for
their long wait; but at that very moment a storm which
had long been threatening brake over Florence with
such fury that the faggots which had just been lighted
were extinguished by the rain, leaving no possibility
of their rekindling. From the moment when the
people suspected that they had been fooled, their enthusiasm
was changed into derision. They were ignorant
from which side the difficulties had arisen that had
hindered the trial, so they laid the responsibility
on both champions without distinction. The Signoria,
foreseeing the disorder that was now imminent, ordered
the assembly to retire; but the assembly thought otherwise,
and stayed on the piazza, waiting for the departure
of the two champions, in spite of the fearful rain
that still fell in torrents. Rondinelli was taken
back amid shouts and hootings, and pursued with showers
of stones. Savonarola, thanks to his sacred garments
and the host which he still carried, passed calmly
enough through the midst of the mob a miracle
quite as remarkable as if he had passed through the
fire unscathed.
But it was only the sacred majesty
of the host that had protected this man, who was indeed
from this moment regarded as a false prophet:
the crowd allowed Savonarola to return to his convent,
but they regretted the necessity, so excited were
they by the Arrabbiati party, who had always denounced
him as a liar and a hypocrite. So when the next
morning, Palm Sunday, he stood up in the pulpit to
explain his conduct, he could not obtain a moment’s
silence for insults, hooting, and loud laughter.
Then the outcry, at first derisive, became menacing:
Savonarola, whose voice was too weak to subdue the
tumult, descended from his pulpit, retired into the
sacristy, and thence to his convent, where he shut
himself up in his cell. At that moment a cry
was heard, and was repeated by everybody present:
“To San Marco, to San Marco!”
The rioters, few at first, were recruited by all
the populace as they swept along the streets, and at
last reached the convent, dashing like an angry sea
against the wall.
The doors, closed on Savonarala’s
entrance, soon crashed before the vehement onset of
the powerful multitude, which struck down on the instant
every obstacle it met: the whole convent was quickly
flooded with people, and Savonarola, with his two
confederates, Domenico Bonvicini and Silvestro Maruffi,
was arrested in his cell, and conducted to prison amid
the insults of the crowd, who, always in extremes,
whether of enthusiasm or hatred, would have liked
to tear them to pieces, and would not be quieted till
they had exacted a promise that the prisoners should
be forcibly compelled to make the trial of fire which
they had refused to make of their own free will.
Alexander vi, as we may suppose,
had not been without influence in bringing about this
sudden and astonishing reaction, although he was not
present in person; and had scarcely learned the news
of Savonarola’s fall and arrest when he claimed
him as subject to ecclesiastical jurisdiction.
But in spite of the grant of indulgences wherewith
this demand was accompanied, the Signoria insisted
that Savonarola’s trial should take place at
Florence, adding a request so as not to appear to withdraw
the accused completely from the pontifical authority that
the pope would send two ecclesiastical judges to sit
in the Florentine tribunal. Alexander, seeing
that he would get nothing better from the magnificent
republic, sent as deputies Gioacchino Turriano of Venice,
General of the Dominicans, and Francesco Ramolini,
doctor in law: they practically brought the sentence
with them, declaring Savonarola and his accomplices
heretics, schismatics, persecutors of the Church and
seducers of the people.
The firmness shown by the Florentines
in claiming their rights of jurisdiction were nothing
but an empty show to save appearances; the tribunal,
as a fact, was composed of eight members, all known
to be fervent haters of Savonarola, whose trial began
with the torture. The result was that, feeble
in body constitutionally nervous and irritable, he
had not been able to endure the rack, and, overcome
by agony just at the moment when the executioner had
lifted him up by the wrists and then dropped him a
distance of two feet to the ground, he had confessed,
in order to get some respite, that his prophecies
were nothing mare than conjectures. If is true
that, so soon as he went back to prison, he protested
against the confession, saying that it was the weakness
of his bodily organs and his want of firmness that
had wrested the lie from him, but that the truth really
was that the Lord had several times appeared to him
in his ecstasies and revealed the things that he had
spoken. This protestation led to a new application
of the torture, during which Savonarola succumbed
once more to the dreadful pain, and once more retracted.
But scarcely was he unbound, and was still lying on
the bed of torture, when he declared that his confessions
were the fault of his torturers, and the vengeance
would recoil upon their heads; and he protested yet
once mare against all he had confessed and might confess
again. A third time the torture produced the
same avowals, and the relief that followed it the
same retractions. The judges therefore, when
they condemned him and his two disciples to the flames,
decided that his confession should not be read aloud
at the stake, according to custom, feeling certain
that an this occasion also he would give it the lie,
and that publicly, which, as anyone must see who knew
the versatile spirit of the public, would be a most
dangerous proceeding.
On the 23rd of May, the fire which
had been promised to the people before was a second
time prepared on the Piazza del Palazzo,
and this time the crowd assembled quite certain that
they would not be disappointed of a spectacle so long
anticipated. And towards eleven o’clock
in the morning, Girolamo Savonarola, Domenico Bonvicini,
and Silvestro Maruffi were led to the place of execution,
degraded of their orders by the ecclesiastical judges,
and bound all three to the same stake in the centre
of an immense pile of wood. Then the bishop Pagnanoli
told the condemned men that he cut them off from the
Church. “Ay, from the Church militant,”
said Savonarola, who from that very hour, thanks to
his martyrdom, was entering into the Church triumphant.
No other words were spoken by the condemned men,
for at this moment one of the Arrabbiati, a personal
enemy of Savonarola, breaking through the hedge of
guards around the scaffold, snatched the torch from
the executioner’s hand and himself set fire
to the four corners of the pile. Savonarola and
his disciples, from the moment when they saw the smoke
arise, began to sing a psalm, and the flames enwrapped
them on all sides with a glowing veil, while their
religious song was yet heard mounting upward to the
gates of heaven.
Pope Alexander vi was thus set
free from perhaps the most formidable enemy who had
ever risen against him, and the pontifical vengeance
pursued the victims even after their death: the
Signoria, yielding to his wishes, gave orders
that the ashes of the prophet and his disciples should
be thrown into the Arno. But certain half-burned
fragments were picked up by the very soldiers whose
business it was to keep the people back from approaching
the fire, and the holy relics are even now shown,
blackened by the flames, to the faithful, who if they
no longer regard Savonarola as a prophet, revere him
none the less as a martyr.
CHAPTER X
The French army was now preparing
to cross the Alps a second time, under the command
of Trivulce. Louis XII had come as far as Lyons
in the company of Caesar Borgia and Giuliano
della Rovere, on whom he had forced a reconciliation,
and towards the beginning of the month of May had sent
his vanguard before him, soon to be followed by the
main body of the army. The forces he was employing
in this second campaign of conquest were 1600, lances,
5000 Swiss, 9000 Gascons, and 3500 infantry, raised
from all parts of France. On the 13th of August
this whole body, amounting to nearly 15,000 men, who
were to combine their forces with the Venetians, arrived
beneath the walls of Arezzo, and immediately laid
siege to the town.
Ludovico Sforza’s position was
a terrible one: he was now suffering from his
imprudence in calling the French into Italy; all the
allies he had thought he might count upon were abandoning
him at the same moment, either because they were busy
about their own affairs, or because they were afraid
of the powerful enemy that the Duke of Milan had made
for himself. Maximilian, who had promised him
a contribution of 400 lances, to make up for not renewing
the hostilities with Louis XII that had been interrupted,
had just made a league with the circle of Swabia to
war against the Swiss, whom he had declared rebels
against the Empire. The Florentines, who had
engaged to furnish him with 300 men-at-arms and 2000
infantry, if he would help them to retake Pisa, had
just retracted their promise because of Louis XII’s
threats, and had undertaken to remain neutral.
Frederic, who was holding back his troops for the defence
of his own States, because he supposed, not without
reason, that, Milan once conquered, he would again
have to defend Naples, sent him no help, no men, no
money, in spite of his promises. Ludovico Sforza
was therefore reduced to his own proper forces.
But as he was a man powerful in arms
and clever in artifice, he did not allow himself to
succumb at the first blow, and in all haste fortified
Annona, Novarro, and Alessandria, sent off Cajazzo
with troops to that part of the Milanese territory
which borders on the states of Venice, and collected
on the Po as many troops as he could. But these
precautions availed him nothing against the impetuous
onslaught of the French, who in a few days had taken
Annona, Arezzo, Novarro, Voghiera, Castelnuovo, Ponte
Corona, Tartone, and Alessandria, while Trivulce was
on the march to Milan.
Seeing the rapidity of this conquest
and their numerous victories, Ludovico Sforza, despairing
of holding out in his capital, resolved to retire
to Germany, with his children, his brother, Cardinal
Ascanio Sforza, and his treasure, which had been reduced
in the course of eight years from 1,500,000 to 200,000
ducats. But before he went he left Bernardino
da Carte in charge of the castle of Milan.
In vain did his friends warn him to distrust this
man, in vain did his brother Ascanio offer to hold
the fortress himself, and offer to hold it to the very
last; Ludovico refused to make any change in his arrangements,
and started on the 2nd of September, leaving in the
citadel three thousand foot and enough provisions,
ammunition, and money to sustain a siege of several
months.
Two days after Ludovico’s departure,
the French entered Milan. Ten days later Bernardino
da Come gave up the castle before a single gun
had been fired. Twenty-one days had sufficed
for the French to get possession of the various towns,
the capital, and all the territories of their enemy.
Louis XII received the news of this
success while he was at Lyons, and he at once started
for Milan, where he was received with demonstrations
of joy that were really sincere. Citizens of
every rank had come out three miles’ distance
from the gates to receive him, and forty boys, dressed
in cloth of gold and silk, marched before him singing
hymns of victory composed by poets of the period,
in which the king was styled their liberator and the
envoy of freedom. The great joy of the Milanese
people was due to the fact that friends of Louis had
been spreading reports beforehand that the King of
France was rich enough to abolish all taxes.
And so soon as the second day from his arrival at Milan
the conqueror made some slight reduction, granted
important favours to certain Milanese gentlemen, and
bestowed the town of Vigavano on Trivulce as a reward
for his swift and glorious campaign. But Caesar
Borgia, who had followed Louis XII with a view to
playing his part in the great hunting-ground of Italy,
scarcely waited for him to attain his end when he claimed
the fulfilment of his promise, which the king with
his accustomed loyalty hastened to perform.
He instantly put at the disposal of Caesar three hundred
lances under the command of Yves d’Alegre, and
four thousand Swiss under the command of the bailiff
of Dijon, as a help in his work of reducing the Vicars
of the Church.
We must now explain to our readers
who these new personages were whom we introduce upon
the scene by the above name.
During the eternal wars of Guelphs
and Ghibelines and the long exile of the popes at
Avignon, most of the towns and fortresses of the Romagna
had been usurped by petty tyrants, who for the most
part hard received from the Empire the investiture
of their new possessions; but ever since German influence
had retired beyond the Alps, and the popes had again
made Rome the centre of the Christian world, all the
small princes, robbed of their original protector,
had rallied round the papal see, and received at the
hands of the pope a new investiture, and now they paid
annual dues, for which they received the particular
title of duke, count, or lord, and the general name
of Vicar of the Church.
It had been no difficult matter for
Alexander, scrupulously examining the actions and
behaviour of these gentlemen during the seven years
that had elapsed since he was exalted to St. Peter’s
throne, to find in the conduct of each one of them
something that could be called an infraction of the
treaty made between vassals and suzerain; accordingly
he brought forward his complaints at a tribunal established
for the purpose, and obtained sentence from the judges
to the effect that the vicars of the Church, having
failed to fulfil the conditions of their investiture,
were despoiled of their domains, which would again
become the property of the Holy See. As the
pope was now dealing with men against whom it was
easier to pass a sentence than to get it carried out,
he had nominated as captain-general the new Duke of
Valentinois, who was commissioned to recover the territories
for his own benefit. The lords in question were
the Malatesti of Rimini, the Sforza of Pesaro, the
Manfredi of Faenza, the Riarii of Imola and Farli,
the Variani of Camerina, the Montefeltri of Urbino,
and the Caetani of Sermoneta.
But the Duke of Valentinois, eager
to keep as warm as possible his great friendship with
his ally and relative Louis XII, was, as we know, staying
with him at Milan so long as he remained there, where,
after a month’s occupation, the king retraced
his steps to his own capital, the Duke of Valentinois
ordered his men-at-arms and his Swiss to await him
between Parma and Modena, and departed posthaste for
Rome, to explain his plans to his father viva
voce and to receive his final instructions.
When he arrived, he found that the fortune of his
sister Lucrezia had been greatly augmented in his
absence, not from the side of her husband Alfonso,
whose future was very uncertain now in consequence
of Louis’s successes, which had caused some
coolness between Alfonso and the pope, but from her
father’s side, upon whom at this time she exercised
an influence mare astonishing than ever. The
pope had declared Lucrezia Borgia of Aragon life-governor
of Spoleto and its duchy, with all emoluments,
rights, and revenues accruing thereunto. This
had so greatly increased her power and improved her
position, that in these days she never showed herself
in public without a company of two hundred horses
ridden by the most illustrious ladies and noblest knights
of Rome. Moreover, as the twofold affection of
her father was a secret to nobody, the first prelates
in the Church, the frequenters of the Vatican, the
friends of His Holiness, were all her most humble servants;
cardinals gave her their hands when she stepped from
her litter or her horse, archbishops disputed the
honour of celebrating mass in her private apartments.
But Lucrezia had been obliged to quit
Rome in order to take possession of her new estates;
and as her father could not spend much time away from
his beloved daughter, he resolved to take into his
hands the town of Nepi, which on a former occasion,
as the reader will doubtless remember, he had bestowed
on Ascanio Sforza in exchange for his suffrage.
Ascanio had naturally lost this town when he attached
himself to the fortunes of the Duke of Milan, his
brother; and when the pope was about to take it again,
he invited his daughter Lucrezia to join him there
and be present at the rejoicings held in honour of
his resuming its possession.
Lucrezia’s readiness in giving
way to her father’s wishes brought her a new
gift from him: this was the town and territory
of Sermoneta, which belonged to the Caetani.
Of course the gift was as yet a secret, because the
two owners of the seigneury, had first to be disposed
of, one being Monsignore Giacomo Caetano,
apostolic protonotary, the other Prospero Caetano,
a young cavalier of great promise; but as both lived
at Rome, and entertained no suspicion, but indeed
supposed themselves to be in high favour with His
Holiness, the one by virtue of his position, the other
of his courage, the matter seemed to present no great
difficulty. So directly after the return of Alexander
to Rome, Giacomo Caetano was arrested, on what pretext
we know not, was taken to the castle of Sant’
Angelo, and there died shortly after, of poison:
Prospero Caetano was strangled in his own house.
After these two deaths, which both occurred so suddenly
as to give no time for either to make a will, the pope
declared that Sermoneta and all of her property appertaining
to the Caetani devolved upon the apostolic chamber;
and they were sold to Lucrezia for the cum of 80,000
crowns, which her father refunded to her the day after.
Though Caesar hurried to Rome, he found when he arrived
that his father had been beforehand with him, and had
made a beginning of his conquests.
Another fortune also had been making
prodigious strides during Caesar’s stay in France,
viz. the fortune of Gian Borgia, the pope’s
nephew, who had been one of the most devoted friends
of the Duke of Gandia up to the time of his death.
It was said in Rome, and not in a whisper, that the
young cardinal owed the favours heaped upon him by
His Holiness less to the memory of the brother than
to the protection of the sister. Both these
reasons made Gian Borgia a special object of suspicion
to Caesar, and it was with an inward vow that he should
not enjoy his new dignities very long that the Duke
of Valentinois heard that his cousin Gian had just
been nominated cardinal ‘a latere’
of all the Christian world, and had quitted Rome to
make a circuit through all the pontifical states with
a suite of archbishops, bishops, prelates, and gentlemen,
such as would have done honour to the pope himself.
Caesar had only come to Rome to get
news; so he only stayed three days, and then, with
all the troops His Holiness could supply, rejoined
his forces on the borders of the Euza, and marched
at once to Imola. This town, abandoned by its
chiefs, who had retired to Forlì, was forced to
capitulate. Imola taken, Caesar marched straight
upon Forlì. There he met with a serious
check; a check, moreover, which came from a woman.
Caterina Sforza, widow of Girolamo and mother of Ottaviano
Riario, had retired to this town, and stirred up the
courage of the garrison by putting herself, her goods
and her person, under their protection. Caesar
saw that it was no longer a question of a sudden capture,
but of a regular siege; so he began to make all his
arrangements with a view to it, and placing a battery
of cannon in front of the place where the walls seemed
to him weakest, he ordered an uninterrupted fire, to
be continued until the breach was practicable.
When he returned to the camp after
giving this order, he found there Gian Borgia, who
had gone to Rome from Ferrara and was unwilling to
be so near Caesar without paying him a visit:
he was received with effusion and apparently the greatest
joy, and stayed three days; on the fourth day all
the officers and members of the court were invited
to a grand farewell supper, and Caesar bade farewell
to his cousin, charging him with despatches for the
pope, and lavishing upon him all the tokens of affection
he had shown on his arrival.
Cardinal Gian Bargia posted off as
soon as he left the supper-table, but on arriving
at Urbino he was seized with such a sudden and strange
indisposition that he was forced to stop; but after
a few minutes, feeling rather better, he went an;
scarcely, however, had he entered Rocca Cantrada when
he again felt so extremely ill that he resolved to
go no farther, and stayed a couple of days in the
town. Then, as he thought he was a little better
again, and as he had heard the news of the taking
of Forlì and also that Caterina Sforza had been
taken prisoner while she was making an attempt to
retire into the castle, he resolved to go back to
Caesar and congratulate him on his victory; but at
Fassambrane he was forced to stop a third time, although
he had given up his carriage for a litter. This
was his last halt: the same day he sought his
bed, never to rise from it again; three days later
he was dead.
His body was taken to Rome and buried
without any ceremony in the church of Santa Maria
del Populo, where lay awaiting him the corpse
of his friend the Duke of Gandia; and there was now
no more talk of the young cardinal, high as his rank
had been, than if he had never existed. Thus
in gloom and silence passed away all those who were
swept to destruction by the ambition of that terrible
trio, Alexander, Lucrezia, and Caesar.
Almost at the same time Rome was terrified
by another murder. Don Giovanni Cerviglione,
a gentleman by birth and a brave soldier, captain
of the pope’s men-at-arms, was attacked one evening
by the sbirri, as he was on his way home from supping
with Dan Elisio Pignatelli. One of
the men asked his name, and as he pronounced it, seeing
that there was no mistake, plunged a dagger into his
breast, while a second man with a back stroke of his
sword cut off his head, which lay actually at his feet
before his body had time to fall.
The governor of Rome lodged a complaint
against this assassination with the pope; but quickly
perceiving, by the way his intimation was received,
that he would have done better to say nothing, he stopped
the inquiries he had started, so that neither of the
murderers was ever arrested. But the rumour
was circulated that Caesar, in the short stay he had
made at Rome, had had a rendezvous with Cerviglione’s
wife, who was a Borgia by birth, and that her husband
when he heard of this infringement of conjugal duty
had been angry enough to threaten her and her lover,
too: the threat had reached Caesar’s ears,
who, making a long arm of Michelotto, had, himself
at Forlì, struck down Cerviglione in the streets
of Rome.
Another unexpected death followed
so quickly on that of Don Giovanni Cerviglione that
it could not but be attributed to the same originator,
if not to the same cause. Monsignore Agnelli
of Mantua, archbishop of Cosenza, clerk of the chamber
and vice-legate of Viterbo, having fallen into disgrace
with His Holiness, how it is not known, was poisoned
at his own table, at which he had passed a good part
of the night in cheerful conversation with three or
four guests, the poison gliding meanwhile through
his veins; then going to bed in perfect health, he
was found dead in the morning. His possessions
were at once divided into three portions: the
land and houses were given to the Duke of Valentinois;
the bishopric went to Francesco Borgia, son of Calixtus
iii; and the office of clerk of the chamber was
sold for 5000 ducats to Ventura Bonnassai, a
merchant of Siena, who produced this sum for Alexander,
and settled down the very same day in the Vatican.
This last death served the purpose
of determining a point of law hitherto uncertain:
as Monsignore Agnelli’s natural heirs had
made some difficulty about being disinherited, Alexander
issued a brief; whereby he took from every cardinal
and every priest the right of making a will, and declared
that all their property should henceforth devolve upon
him.
But Caesar was stopped short in the
midst of his victories. Thanks to the 200,000
ducats that yet remained in his treasury, Ludovico
Sforza had levied 500 men-at-arms from Burgundy and
8000 Swiss infantry, with whom he had entered Lombardy.
So Trivulce, to face this enemy, had been compelled
to call back Yves d’Alegre and the troops that
Louis XII had lent to Caesar; consequently Caesar,
leaving behind a body of pontifical soldiery as garrison
at Forlì and Imola, betook himself with the rest
of his force to Rome.
It was Alexander’s wish that
his entry should be a triumph; so when he learned
that the quartermasters of the army were only a few
leagues from the town, he sent out runners to invite
the royal ambassadors, the cardinals, the prelates,
the Roman barons, and municipal dignitaries to make
procession with all their suite to meet the Duke of
Valentinois; and as it always happens that the pride
of those who command is surpassed by the baseness
of those who obey, the orders were not only fulfilled
to the letter, but beyond it.
The entry of Caesar took place on
the 26th of February, 1500. Although this was
the great Jubilee year, the festivals of the carnival
began none the less for that, and were conducted in
a manner even more extravagant and licentious than
usual; and the conqueror after the first day prepared
a new display of ostentation, which he concealed under
the veil of a masquerade. As he was pleased
to identify himself with the glory, genius, and fortune
of the great man whose name he bore, he resolved on
a representation of the triumph of Julius Caesar,
to be given on the Piazzi di Navona, the ordinary
place for holding the carnival fêtes. The next
day, therefore, he and his retinue started from that
square, and traversed all the streets of Rome, wearing
classical costumes and riding in antique cars, on
one of which Caesar stood, clad in the robe of an
emperor of old, his brow crowned with a golden laurel
wreath, surrounded by lictors, soldiers, and ensign-bearers,
who carried banners whereon was inscribed the motto,
‘Aut Caesar aut nihil’.
Finally, an the fourth Sunday, in
Lent, the pope conferred upon Caesar the dignity he
had so long coveted, and appointed him general and
gonfaloniere of the Holy Church.
In the meanwhile Sforza had crossed
the Alps and passed the Lake of Como, amid acclamations
of joy from his former subjects, who had quickly lost
the enthusiasm that the French army and Louis’s
promises had inspired. These demonstrations were
so noisy at Milan, that Trivulce, judging that there
was no safety for a French garrison in remaining there,
made his way to Navarra. Experience proved that
he was not deceived; for scarcely had the Milanese
observed his preparations for departure when a suppressed
excitement began to spread through the town, and soon
the streets were filled with armed men. This
murmuring crowd had to be passed through, sword in
hand and lance in rest; and scarcely had the French
got outside the gates when the mob rushed out after
the army into the country, pursuing them with shouts
and hooting as far as the banks of the Tesino.
Trivulce left 400 lances at Novarra as well as the
3000 Swiss that Yves d’Alegre had brought from
the Romagna, and directed his course with the rest
of the army towards Mortara, where he stopped at last
to await the help he had demanded from the King of
France. Behind him Cardinal Ascanio and Ludovico
entered Milan amid the acclamations of the whole
town.
Neither of them lost any time, and
wishing to profit by this enthusiasm, Ascanio undertook
to besiege the castle of Milan while Ludovico should
cross the Tesino and attack Novarra.
There besiegers and besieged were
sons of the same nation; for Yves d’Alegre had
scarcely as many as 300 French with him, and Ludovico
500 Italians. In fact, for the last sixteen
years the Swiss had been practically the only infantry
in Europe, and all the Powers came, purse in hand,
to draw from the mighty reservoir of their mountains.
The consequence was that these rude children of William
Tell, put up to auction by the nations, and carried
away from the humble, hardy life of a mountain people
into cities of wealth and pleasure, had lost, not their
ancient courage, but that rigidity of principle for
which they had been distinguished before their intercourse
with other nations. From being models of honour
and good faith they had become a kind of marketable
ware, always ready for sale to the highest bidder.
The French were the first to experience this venality,
which later-on proved so fatal to Ludovico Sforza.
Now the Swiss in the garrison at Novarra
had been in communication with their compatriots in
the vanguard of the ducal army, and when they found
that they, who as a fact were unaware that Ludavico’s
treasure was nearly exhausted, were better fed as
well as better paid than themselves, they offered
to give up the town and go over to the Milanese, if
they could be certain of the same pay. Ludovico,
as we may well suppose, closed with this bargain.
The whole of Novarra was given up to him except the
citadel, which was defended by Frenchmen: thus
the enemy’s army was recruited by 3000 men.
Then Ludovico made the mistake of stopping to besiege
the castle instead of marching on to Mortara with the
new reinforcement. The result of this was that
Louis XII, to whom runners had been sent by Trivulce,
understanding his perilous position, hastened the
departure of the French gendarmerie who were already
collected to cross into Italy, sent off the bailiff
of Dijon to levy new Swiss forces, and ordered Cardinal
Amboise, his prime minister, to cross the Alps and
take up a position at Asti, to hurry on the work of
collecting the troops. There the cardinal found
a nest-egg of 3000 men. La Trimouille added
1500 lances and 6000 French infantry; finally, the
bailiff of Dijon arrived with 10,000 Swiss; so that,
counting the troops which Trivulce had at Mortara,
Louis XII found himself master on the other side of
the Alps of the first army any French king had ever
led out to battle. Soon, by good marching, and
before Ludovico knew the strength or even the existence
of this army, it took up a position between Novarra
and Milan, cutting off all communication between the
duke and his capital. He was therefore compelled,
in spite of his inferior numbers, to prepare for a
pitched battle.
But it so happened that just when
the preparations for a decisive engagement were being
made on both sides, the Swiss Diet, learning that
the sons of Helvetia were on the paint of cutting one
another’s throats, sent orders to all the Swiss
serving in either army to break their engagements
and return to the fatherland. But during the
two months that had passed between the surrender of
Novarra and the arrival of the French army before
the town, there had been a very great change in the
face of things, because Ludovico Sforza’s treasure
was now exhausted. New confabulations had gone
on between the outposts, and this time, thanks to
the money sent by Louis XII, it was the Swiss in the
service of France who were found to be the better
fed and better paid. The worthy Helvetians,
since they no longer fought far their own liberty,
knew the value of their blood too well to allow a
single drop of it to be spilled for less than its
weight in gold: the result was that, as they had,
betrayed Yves d’Alegre, they resolved to betray
Ludovico Sforza too; and while the recruits brought
in by the bailiff of Dijon were standing firmly by
the French flag, careless of the order of the Diet,
Ludovico’s auxiliaries declared that in fighting
against their Swiss brethren they would be acting
in disobedience to the Diet, and would risk capital
punishment in the end a danger that nothing
would induce them to incur unless they immediately
received the arrears of their pay. The duke,
who a spent the last ducat he had with him, and was
entirely cut off from his capital, knew that he could
not get money till he had fought his way through to
it, and therefore invited the Swiss to make one last
effort, promising them not only the pay that was in
arrears but a double hire. But unluckily the
fulfilment of this promise was dependent on the doubtful
issue of a battle, and the Swiss replied that they
had far too much respect for their country to disobey
its decree, and that they loved their brothers far
too well to consent to shed their blood without reward;
and therefore Sforza would do well not to count upon
them, since indeed the very next day they proposed
to return to their homes. The duke then saw
that all was lost, but he made a last appeal to their
honour, adjuring them at least to ensure his personal
safety by making it a condition of capitulation.
But they replied that even if a condition of such
a kind, would not make capitulation impossible, it
would certainly deprive them of advantages which they
had aright to expect, and on which they counted as
indemnification for the arrears of their pay.
They pretended, however, at last that they were touched
by the prayers of the man whose orders they had obeyed
so long, and offered to conceal him dressed in their
clothes among their ranks. This proposition was
barely plausible; far Sforza was short and, by this
time an old man, and he could not possibly escape
recognition in the midst of an army where the oldest
was not past thirty and the shortest not less than
five foot six. Still, this was his last chance,
and he did not reject it at once, but tried to modify
it so that it might help him in his straits.
His plan was to disguise himself as a Franciscan monk,
so that mounted an a shabby horse he might pass for
their chaplain; the others, Galeazzo di San
Severing, who commanded under him, and his two brothers,
were all tall men, so, adopting the dress of common
soldiers, they hoped they might escape detection in
the Swiss ranks.
Scarcely were these plans settled
when the duke heard that the capitulation was signed
between Trivulce and the Swiss, who had made no stipulation
in favour of him and his generals. They were
to go over the next day with arms and baggage right
into the French army; so the last hope of the wretched
Ludovico and his generals must needs be in their disguise.
And so it was. San Severino and his brothers
took their place in the ranks of the infantry, and
Sforza took his among the baggage, clad in a monk’s
frock, with the hood pulled over his eyes.
The army marched off; but the Swiss,
who had first trafficked in their blood, now trafficked
in their honour. The French were warned of the
disguise of Sforza and his generals, and thus they
were all four recognised, and Sforza was arrested
by Trimouille himself. It is said that the price
paid for this treason was the town of Bellinzona; far
it then belonged to the French, and when the Swiss
returned to their mountains and took possession of
it, Louis XII took no steps to get it back again.
When Ascanio Sforza, who, as we know,
had stayed at Milan, learned the news of this cowardly
desertion, he supposed that his cause was lost and
that it would be the best plan for him to fly, before
he found himself a prisoner in the hand’s of
his brother’s old subjects: such a change
of face on the people’s part would be very natural,
and they might propose perhaps to purchase their own
pardon at the price of his liberty; so he fled by
night with the chief nobles of the Ghibelline party,
taking the road to Piacenza, an his way to the kingdom
of Naples. But when he arrived at Rivolta, he
remembered that there was living in that town an old
friend of his childhood, by name Conrad Lando, whom
he had helped to much wealth in his days of power;
and as Ascanio and his companions were extremely;
tired, he resolved to beg his hospitality for a single
night. Conrad received them with every sign of
joy, putting all his house and servants at their disposal.
But scarcely had they retired to bed when he sent
a runner to Piacenza, to inform Carlo Orsini, at that
time commanding the Venetian garrison, that he was
prepared to deliver up Cardinal Ascanio and the chief
men of the Milanese army. Carlo Orsini did not
care to resign to another so important an expedition,
and mounting hurriedly with twenty-five men, he first
surrounded Conrads house, and then entered sword in
hand the chamber wherein Ascanio and his companions
lay, and being surprised in the middle of their sleep,
they yielded without resistance. The prisoners
were taken to Venice, but Louis XII claimed them,
and they were given up. Thus the King of France
found himself master of Ludovico Sforza and of Ascania,
of a legitimate nephew of the great Francesco Sforza
named Hermes, of two bastards named Alessandro and
Cortino, and of Francesco, son of the unhappy
Gian Galeazza who had been poisoned by his uncle.
Louis XII, wishing to make an end
of the whole family at a blow, forced Francesco to
enter a cloister, shut up Cardinal Ascanio in the tower
of Baurges, threw into prison Alessandro, Cartino,
and Hermes, and finally, after transferring the wretched
Ludovico from the fortress of Pierre-Eucise to Lys-Saint-George
he relegated him for good and all to the castle of
Loches, where he lived for ten years in solitude and
utter destitution, and there died, cursing the day
when the idea first came into his head of enticing
the French into Italy.
The news of the catastrophe of Ludovica
and his family caused the greatest joy at Rome, for,
while the French were consolidating their power in
Milanese territory, the Holy See was gaining ground
in the Romagna, where no further opposition was offered
to Caesar’s conquest. So the runners who
brought the news were rewarded with valuable presents,
and it was published throughout the whole town of Rome
to the sound of the trumpet and drum. The war-cry
of Louis, France, France, and that of the Orsini,
Orso, Orso, rang through all the streets, which in
the evening were illuminated, as though Constantinople
or Jerusalem had been taken. And the pope gave
the people fêtes and fireworks, without troubling
his head the least in the world either about its being
Holy Week, or because the Jubilee had attracted more
than 200,000 people to Rome; the temporal interests
of his family seeming to him far more important than
the spiritual interests of his subjects.
CHAPTER XI
One thing alone was wanting to assure
the success of the vast projects that the pope and
his son were founding upon the friendship of Louis
and an alliance with him that is, money.
But Alexander was not the man to be troubled about
a paltry worry of that kind; true, the sale of bénéfices
was by now exhausted, the ordinary and extraordinary
taxes had already been collected for the whole year,
and the prospect of inheritance from cardinals and
priests was a poor thing now that the richest of them
had been poisoned; but Alexander had other means at
his disposal, which were none the less efficacious
because they were less often used.
The first he employed was to spread
a, report that the Turks were threatening an invasion
of Christendom, and that he knew for a positive fact
that before the end of the summer Bajazet would land
two considerable armies, one in Romagna, the other
in Calabria; he therefore published two bulls, one
to levy tithes of all ecclesiastical revenues in Europe
of whatever nature they might be, the other to force
the Jews into paying an equivalent sum: both
bulls contained the severest sentences of excommunication
against those who refused to submit, or attempted
opposition.
The second plan was the selling of
indulgences, a thing which had never been done before:
these indulgences affected the people who had been
prevented by reasons of health or business from coming
to Rome for the Jubilee; the journey by this expedient
was rendered unnecessary, and sins were pardoned for
a third of what it would have cost, and just as completely
as if the faithful had fulfilled every condition of
the pilgrimage. For gathering in this tax a
veritable army of collectors was instituted, a certain
Ludovico delta Torre at their head. The sum that
Alexander brought into the pontifical treasury is incalculable,
and same idea of it may be gathered from the fact
that 799,000 livres in gold was paid in from the territory
of Venice alone.
But as the Turks did as a fact make
some sort of demonstration from the Hungarian side,
and the Venetians began to fear that they might be
coming in their direction, they asked for help from
the pope, who gave orders that at twelve o’clock
in the day in all his States an Ave Maria should be
said, to pray God to avert the danger which was threatening
the most serene republic. This was the only
help the Venetians got from His Holiness in exchange
for the 799,000 livres in gold that he had got from
them.
But it seemed as though God wished
to show His strange vicar on earth that He was angered
by the mockery of sacred things, and on the Eve of
St. Peter’s Day, just as the pope was passing
the Capanile on his way to the tribune of benedictions,
a enormous piece of iron broke off and fell at his
feet; and then, as though one warning had not been
enough, on the next day, St. Peter’s, when the
pope happened to be in one of the rooms of his ordinary
dwelling with Cardinal Capuano and Monsignare Poto,
his private chamberlain, he saw through the open windows
that a very black cloud was coming up. Foreseeing
a thunderstorm, he ordered the cardinal and the chamberlain
to shut the windows. He had not been mistaken;
for even as they were obeying his command, there came
up such a furious gust of wind that the highest chimney
of the Vatican was overturned, just as a tree is rooted
up, and was dashed upon the roof, breaking it in; smashing
the upper flooring, it fell into the very room where
they were. Terrified by the noise of this catastrophe,
which made the whole palace tremble, the cardinal
and Monsignore Poto turned round, and seeing
the room full of dust and debris, sprang out upon
the parapet and shouted to the guards at the gate,
“The pope is dead, the pope is dead!”
At this cry, the guards ran up and discovered three
persons lying in the rubbish on the floor, one dead
and the other two dying. The dead man was a
gentleman of Siena ailed Lorenzo Chigi, and the dying
were two resident officials of the Vatican.
They had been walking across the floor above, and
had been flung down with the debris. But Alexander
was not to be found; and as he gave no answer, though
they kept on calling to him, the belief that he had
perished was confirmed, and very soon spread about
the town. But he had only fainted, and at the
end of a certain time he began to come to himself,
and moaned, whereupon he was discovered, dazed with
the blow, and injured, though not seriously, in several
parts of his body. He had been saved by little
short of a miracle: a beam had broken in half
and had left each of its two ends in the side walls;
and one of these had formed a sort of roof aver the
pontifical throne; the pope, who was sitting there
at the time, was protected by this overarching beam,
and had received only a few contusions.
The two contradictory reports of the
sudden death and the miraculous preservation of the
pope spread rapidly through Rome; and the Duke of
Valentinois, terrified at the thought of what a change
might be wrought in his own fortunes by any slight
accident to the Holy Father, hurried to the Vatican,
unable to assure himself by anything less than the
evidence of his own eyes. Alexander desired
to render public thanks to Heaven for the protection
that had been granted him; and on the very same day
was carried to the church of Santa Maria del
Popalo, escorted by a numerous procession of prelates
and men-at arms, his pontifical seat borne by two
valets, two equerries, and two grooms. In this
church were buried the Duke of Gandia and Gian Borgia,
and perhaps Alexander was drawn thither by same relics
of devotion, or may be by the recollection of his love
for his former mistress, Rosa Vanazza, whose image,
in the guise of the Madonna, was exposed for the veneration
of the faithful in a chapel on the left of the high
altar. Stopping before this altar, the pope offered
to the church the gift of a magnificent chalice in
which were three hundred gold crowns, which the Cardinal
of Siena poured out into a silver paten before the
eyes of all, much to the gratification of the pontifical
vanity.
But before he left Rome to complete
the conquest of the Romagna, the Duke of Valentinois
had been reflecting that the marriage, once so ardently
desired, between Lucrezia and Alfonso had been quite
useless to himself and his father. There was
more than this to be considered: Louis XII’s
rest in Lombardy was only a halt, and Milan was evidently
but the stage before Naples. It was very possible
that Louis was annoyed about the marriage which converted
his enemy’s nephew into the son-in-law of his
ally. Whereas, if Alfonso were dead, Lucrezia
would be the position to marry some powerful lord
of Ferrara or Brescia, who would be able to help his
brother-in-law in the conquest of Romagna. Alfonso
was now not only useless but dangerous, which to anyone
with the character of the Borgias perhaps seemed worse,
the death of Alfonso was resolved upon. But
Lucrezia’s husband, who had understand for a
long time past what danger he incurred by living near
his terrible father-in-law, had retired to Naples.
Since, however, neither Alexander nor Caesar had changed
in their perpetual dissimulation towards him, he was
beginning to lose his fear, when he received an invitation
from the pope and his son to take part in a bull-fight
which was to be held in the Spanish fashion in honour
of the duke before his departure: In the present
precarious position of Naples it would not have been
good policy far Alfonso to afford Alexander any sort
of pretext for a rupture, so he could not refuse without
a motive, and betook himself to Rome. It was
thought of no use to consult Lucrezia in this affair,
for she had two or three times displayed an absurd
attachment for her husband, and they left her undisturbed
in her government of Spoleto.
Alfonso was received by the pope and
the duke with every demonstration of sincere friendship,
and rooms in the Vatican were assigned to him that
he had inhabited before with Lucrezia, in that part
of the building which is known as the Torre Nuova.
Great lists were prepared on the Piazza
of St. Peter’s; the streets about it were barricaded,
and the windows of the surrounding houses served as
boxes for the spectators. The pope and his court
took their places on the balconies of the Vatican.
The fête was started by professional
toréadors: after they had exhibited their
strength and skill, Alfonso and Caesar in their turn
descended to the arena, and to offer a proof of their
mutual kindness, settled that the bull which pursued
Caesar should be killed by Alfonso, and the bull that
pursued Alfonso by Caesar.
Then Caesar remained alone an horseback
within the lists, Alfonso going out by an improvised
door which was kept ajar, in order that he might go
back on the instant if he judged that his presence
was necessary. At the same time, from the opposite
side of the lists the bull was introduced, and was
at the same moment pierced all over with darts and
arrows, some of them containing explosives, which
took fire, and irritated the bull to such a paint
that he rolled about with pain, and then got up in
a fury, and perceiving a man on horseback, rushed
instantly upon him. It was now, in this narrow
arena, pursued by his swift enemy, that Caesar displayed
all that skill which made him one of the finest horsemen
of the period. Still, clever as he was, he could
not have remained safe long in that restricted area
from an adversary against whom he had no other resource
than flight, had not Alfonso appeared suddenly, just
when the bull was beginning to gain upon him, waving
a red cloak in his left hand, and holding in his right
a long delicate Aragon sword. It was high time:
the bull was only a few paces distant from Caesar,
and the risk he was running appeared so imminent that
a woman’s scream was heard from one of the windows.
But at the sight of a man on foot the bull stopped
short, and judging that he would do better business
with the new enemy than the old one, he turned upon
him instead. For a moment he stood motionless,
roaring, kicking up the dust with his hind feet, and
lashing his sides with his tail. Then he rushed
upon Alfonso, his eyes all bloodshot, his horns tearing
up the ground. Alfonso awaited him with a tranquil
air; then, when he was only three paces away, he made
a bound to one sides and presented instead of his
body his sword, which disappeared at once to the hilt;
the bull, checked in the middle of his onslaught, stopped
one instant motionless and trembling, then fell upon
his knees, uttered one dull roar, and lying down on
the very spot where his course had been checked, breathed
his last without moving a single step forward.
Applause resounded an all sides, so
rapid and clever had been the blow. Caesar had
remained on horseback, seeking to discover the fair
spectator who had given so lively a proof of her interest
in him, without troubling himself about what was going
on: his search had not been unrewarded, far he
had recognized one of the maids of honour to Elizabeth,
Duchess of Urbino, who was betrothed to Gian Battista
Carraciualo, captain-general of the republic of Venice.
It was now Alfonso’s turn to
run from the bull, Caesar’s to fight him:
the young men changed parts, and when four mules had
reluctantly dragged the dead bull from the arena,
and the valets and other servants of His Holiness
had scattered sand over the places that were stained
with blood, Alfonso mounted a magnificent Andalusian
steed of Arab origin, light as the wind of Sahara
that had wedded with his mother, while Caesar, dismounting,
retired in his turn, to reappear at the moment when
Alfonso should be meeting the same danger from which
he had just now rescued him.
Then a second bull was introduced
upon the scene, excited in the same manner with steeled
darts and flaming arrows. Like his predecessor,
when he perceived a man on horseback he rushed upon
him, and then began a marvellous race, in which it
was impossible to see, so quickly did they fly over
the ground, whether the horse was pursuing the bull
or the bull the horse. But after five or six
rounds, the bull began to gain upon the son of Araby,
for all his speed, and it was plain to see who fled
and who pursued; in another moment there was only
the length of two lances between them, and then suddenly
Caesar appeared, armed with one of those long two
handed swords which the French are accustomed to use,
and just when the bull, almost close upon Don Alfonso,
came in front of Caesar he brandished the sword, which
flashed like lightning, and cut off his head, while
his body, impelled by the speed of the run, fell to
the ground ten paces farther on. This blow was
so unexpected, and had been performed with such dexterity,
that it was received not with mere clapping but with
wild enthusiasm and frantic outcry. Caesar, apparently
remembering nothing else in his hour of triumph but
the scream that had been caused by his former danger,
picked up the bull’s head, and, giving it to
one of his equerries, ordered him to lay it as an
act of homage at the feet of the fair Venetian who
had bestowed upon him so lively a sign of interest.
This fête, besides affording a triumph to each of the
young men, had another end as well; it was meant to
prove to the populace that perfect goodwill existed
between the two, since each had saved the life of the
other. The result was that, if any accident should
happen to Caesar, nobody would dream of accusing Alfanso;
and also if any accident should happen to Alfonso,
nobody would dream, of accusing Caesar.
There was a supper at the Vatican.
Alfonso made an elegant toilet, and about ten o’clock
at night prepared to go from the quarters he inhabited
into those where the pope lived; but the door which
separated the two courts of the building was shut,
and knock as he would, no one came to open it.
Alfonso then thought that it was a simple matter for
him to go round by the Piazza of St. Peter’s;
so he went out unaccompanied through one of the garden
gates of the Vatican and made his way across the gloomy
streets which led to the stairway which gave on the
piazza. But scarcely had he set his foot on
the first step when he was attacked by a band of armed
men. Alfonso would have drawn his sword; but
before it was out of the scabbard he had received
two blows from a halberd, one on his head, the other
on his shoulder; he was stabbed in the side, and wounded
both in the leg and in the temple. Struck down
by these five blows, he lost his footing and fell
to the ground unconscious; his assassins, supposing
he was dead, at once remounted the stairway, and found
on the piazza forty horsemen waiting for them:
by them they were calmly escorted from the city by
the Porta Portesa. Alfonso was found at the point
of death, but not actually dead, by some passers-by,
some of whom recognised him, and instantly conveyed
the news of his assassination to the Vatican, while
the others, lifting the wounded man in their arms,
carried him to his quarters in the Torre Nuova.
The pope and Caesar, who learned this news just as
they were sitting down to table, showed great distress,
and leaving their companions, at once went to see
Alfonso, to be quite certain whether his wounds were
fatal or not; and an the next morning, to divert any
suspicion that might be turned towards themselves,
they arrested Alfonso’s maternal uncle, Francesco
Gazella, who had come to Rome in his nephew’s
company. Gazella was found guilty on the evidence
of false witnesses, and was consequently beheaded.
But they had only accomplished half
of what they wanted. By some means, fair or
foul, suspicion had been sufficiently diverted from
the true assassins; but Alfonso was not dead, and,
thanks to the strength of his constitution and the
skill of his doctors, who had taken the lamentations
of the pope and Caesar quite seriously, and thought
to please them by curing Alexander’s son-in-law,
the wounded man was making progress towards convalescence:
news arrived at the same time that Lucrezia had heard
of her husband’s accident, and was starting to
come and nurse him herself. There was no time
to lose, and Caesar summoned Michelotto.
“The same night,” says
Burcardus, “Don Alfonso, who would not die of
his wounds, was found strangled in his bed.”
The funeral took place the next day
with a ceremony not unbecoming in itself, though,
unsuited to his high rank. Dan Francesca Bargia,
Archbishop of Cosenza, acted as chief mourner at St.
Peter’s, where the body was buried in the chapel
of Santa Maria delle Febbre.
Lucrezia arrived the same evening:
she knew her father and brother too well to be put
on the wrong scent; and although, immediately after
Alfonso’s death, the Duke of Valentinois had
arrested the doctors, the surgeons, and a poor deformed
wretch who had been acting as valet, she knew perfectly
well from what quarter the blow had proceeded.
In fear, therefore, that the manifestation of a grief
she felt this time too well might alienate the confidence
of her father and brother, she retired to Nepi with
her whole household, her whole court, and more than
six hundred cavaliers, there to spend the period of
her mourning.
This important family business was
now settled, and Lucrezia was again a widow, and in
consequence ready to be utilized in the pope’s
new political machinations. Caesar only stayed
at Rome to receive the ambassadors from France and
Venice; but as their arrival was somewhat delayed,
and consider able inroads had been made upon the pope’s
treasury by the recent festivities, the creation of
twelve new cardinals was arranged: this scheme
was to have two effects, viz., to bring 600,000
ducats into the pontifical chest, each hat having
been priced at 50,000 ducats, and to assure the
pope of a constant majority in the sacred council.
The ambassadors at last arrived:
the first was M. de Villeneuve, the same who had come
before to see the Duke of Valentinois in the name of
France. Just as he entered Rome, he met on the
road a masked man, who, without removing his domino,
expressed the joy he felt at his arrival. This
man was Caesar himself, who did not wish to be recognised,
and who took his departure after a short conference
without uncovering his face. M. de Villeneuve
then entered the city after him, and at the Porta
del Populo found the ambassadors of the
various Powers, and among them those of Spain and
Naples, whose sovereigns were not yet, it is true,
in declared hostility to France, though there was
already some coolness. The last-named, fearing
to compromise themselves, merely said to their colleague
of France, by way of complimentary address, “Sir,
you are welcome”; whereupon the master of the
ceremonies, surprised at the brevity of the greeting,
asked if they had nothing else to say. When
they replied that they had not, M. de Villeneuve turned
his back upon them, remarking that those who had nothing
to say required no answer; he then took his place
between the Archbishop of Reggia, governor of
Rome, and the Archbishop of Ragusa, and made his way
to the palace of the Holy Apostles, which had been,
got ready far his reception.
Same days later, Maria Giorgi, ambassador
extraordinary of Venice, made his arrival. He
was commissioned not only to arrange the business on
hand with the pope, but also to convey to Alexander
and Caesar the title of Venetian nobles, and to inform
them that their names were inscribed in the Golden
Book a favour that both of them had long
coveted, less far the empty honour’s sake than
for the new influence that this title might confer.
Then the pope went on to bestow the twelve cardinals’
hats that had been sold. The new princes of
the Church were Don Diego de Mendoza, archbishop of
Seville; Jacques, archbishop of Oristagny, the Pope’s
vicar-general; Thomas, archbishop of Strigania; Piero,
archbishop of Reggio, governor of Rome; Francesco
Bargia, archbishop of Cosenza, treasurer-general;
Gian, archbishop of Salerno, vice-chamberlain; Luigi
Bargia, archbishop of Valencia, secretary to His Holiness,
and brother of the Gian Borgia whom Caesar had poisoned;
Antonio, bishop of Coma; Gian Battista Ferraro, bishop
of Modem; Amedee d’Albret, son of the King of
Navarre, brother-in-law of the Duke of Valentinois;
and Marco Cornaro, a Venetian noble, in whose person
His Holiness rendered back to the most serene republic
the favour he had just received.
Then, as there was nothing further
to detain the Duke of Valentinois at Rome, he only
waited to effect a loan from a rich banker named Agostino
Chigi, brother of the Lorenzo Chigi who had perished
on the day when the pope had been nearly killed by
the fall of a chimney, and departed far the Romagna,
accompanied by Vitellozzo Vitelli, Gian Paolo
Baglione, and Jacopo di Santa Croce, at
that time his friends, but later on his victims.
His first enterprise was against Pesaro:
this was the polite attention of a brother-in-law,
and Gian Sforza very well knew what would be its consequences;
for instead of attempting to defend his possessions
by taking up arms, or to venture an negotiations,
unwilling moreover to expose the fair lands he had
ruled so long to the vengeance of an irritated foe,
he begged his subjects, to preserve their former affection
towards himself, in the hope of better days to come;
and he fled into Dalmatia. Malatesta, lord of
Rimini, followed his example; thus the Duke of Valentinois
entered both these towns without striking a single
blow. Caesar left a sufficient garrison behind
him, and marched on to Faenza.
But there the face of things was changed:
Faenza at that time was under the rule of Astor Manfredi,
a brave and handsome young man of eighteen, who, relying
on the love of his subjects towards his family, had
resolved on defending himself to the uttermost, although
he had been forsaken by the Bentivagli, his near relatives,
and by his allies, the Venetian and Florentines, who
had not dared to send him any aid because of the affection
felt towards Caesar by the King of France. Accordingly,
when he perceived that the Duke of Valentinois was
marching against him, he assembled in hot haste all
those of his vassals who were capable of bearing arms,
together with the few foreign soldiers who were willing
to come into his pay, and collecting victual and ammunition,
he took up his position with them inside the town.
By these defensive preparations Caesar
was not greatly, disconcerted; he commanded a magnificent
army, composed of the finest troops of France and
Italy; led by such men as Paolo and Giulio Orsini,
Vitellozzo Vitelli and Paolo Baglione, not to
steak of himself that is to say, by the
first captains of the period. So, after he had
reconnoitred, he at once began the siege, pitching
his camp between the two rivers, Amana and Marziano,
placing his artillery on the side which faces on Forlì,
at which point the besieged party had erected a powerful
bastion.
At the end of a few days busy with
entrenchments, the breach became practicable, and
the Duke of Valentinois ordered an assault, and gave
the example to his soldiers by being the first to
march against the enemy. But in spite of his
courage and that of his captains beside him, Astor
Manfredi made so good a defence that the besiegers
were repulsed with great loss of men, while one of
their bravest leaders, Honario Savella; was left behind
in the trenches.
But Faenza, in spite of the courage
and devotion of her defenders, could not have held
out long against so formidable an army, had not winter
come to her aid. Surprised by the rigour of
the season, with no houses for protection and no trees
for fuel, as the peasants had destroyed both beforehand,
the Duke of Valentinois was forced to raise the siege
and take up his winter quarters in the neighbouring
towns, in order to be quite ready for a return next
spring; for Caesar could not forgive the insult of
being held in check by a little town which had enjoyed
a long time of peace, was governed by a mere boy,
and deprived of all outside aid, and had sworn to
take his revenge. He therefore broke up his army
into three sections, sent one-third to Imola, the second
to Forlì, and himself took the third to Cesena,
a third-rate town, which was thus suddenly transformed
into a city of pleasure and luxury.
Indeed, for Caesar’s active
spirit there must needs be no cessation of warfare
or festivities. So, when war was interrupted,
fêtes began, as magnificent and as exciting as he
knew how to make them: the days were passed in
games and displays of horsemanship, the nights in dancing
and gallantry; for the loveliest women of the Romagna and
that is to say of the whole world had come hither
to make a seraglio for the victor which might have
been envied by the Sultan of Egypt or the Emperor of
Constantinople.
While the Duke of Valentinois was
making one of his excursions in the neighbourhood
of the town with his retinue of flattering nobles and
titled courtesans, who were always about him, he noticed
a cortege an the Rimini road so numerous that it must
surely indicate the approach of someone of importance.
Caesar, soon perceiving that the principal person
was a woman, approached, and recognised the very same
lady-in-waiting to the Duchess of Urbino who, on the
day of the bull-fight, had screamed when Caesar was
all but touched by the infuriated beast. At this
time she was betrothed, as we mentioned, to Gian Carracciuola,
general of the Venetians. Elizabeth of Gonzaga,
her protectress and godmother, was now sending her
with a suitable retinue to Venice, where the marriage
was to take place.
Caesar had already been struck by
the beauty of this young girl, when at Rome; but when
he saw her again she appeared more lovely than on the
first occasion, so he resolved on the instant that
he would keep this fair flower of love for himself:
having often before reproached himself for his indifference
in passing her by. Therefore he saluted her as
an old acquaintance, inquired whether she were staying
any time at Cesena, and ascertained that she was only
passing through, travelling by long stages, as she
was awaited with much impatience, and that she would
spend the coming night at Forlì. This was
all that Caesar cared to knew; he summoned Michelotto,
and in a low voice said a few wards to him, which
were heard by no one else.
The cortege only made a halt at the
neighbouring town, as the fair bride had said, and
started at once for Forlì, although the day was
already far advanced; but scarcely had a league been
revered when a troop of horsemen from Cesena overtook
and surrounded them. Although the soldiers in
the escort were far from being in sufficient force,
they were eager to defend their general’s bride;
but soon same fell dead, and ethers, terrified, took
to flight; and when the lady came dawn from her litter
to try to escape, the chief seized her in his arms
and set her in front of him on his horse; then, ordering
his men to return to Cesena without him, he put his
horse to the gallop in a cross direction, and as the
shades of evening were now beginning to fall, he soon
disappeared into the darkness.
Carracciuolo learned the news through
one of the fugitives, who declared that he had recognised
among the ravishers the Duke of Valentinois’
soldiers. At first he thought his ears had deceived
him, so hard was it to believe this terrible intelligence;
but it was repeated, and he stood for one instant
motionless, and, as it were, thunderstruck; then suddenly,
with a cry of vengeance, he threw off his stupor and
dashed away to the ducal palace, where sat the Doge
Barberigo and the Council of Ten; unannounced, he
rushed into their midst, the very moment after they
had heard of Caesar’s outrage.
“Most serene lords,” he
cried, “I am come to bid you farewell, for I
am resolved to sacrifice my life to my private vengeance,
though indeed I had hoped to devote it to the service
of the republic. I have been wounded in the soul’s
noblest part in my honour. The dearest
thing I possessed, my wife, has been stolen from me,
and the thief is the most treacherous, the most impious,
the most infamous of men, it is Valentinois!
My lords, I beg you will not be offended if I speak
thus of a man whose boast it is to be a member of
your noble ranks and to enjoy your protection:
it is not so; he lies, and his loose and criminal life
has made him unworthy of such honours, even as he is
unworthy of the life whereof my sword shall deprive
him. In truth, his very birth was a sacrilege;
he is a fratricide, an usurper of the goods of other
men, an oppressor of the innocent, and a highway assassin;
he is a man who will violate every law, even, the
law of hospitality respected by the veriest barbarian,
a man who will do violence to a virgin who is passing
through his own country, where she had every right
to expect from him not only the consideration due
to her sex and condition, but also that which is due
to the most serene republic, whose condottiere I am,
and which is insulted in my person and in the dishonouring
of my bride; this man, I say, merits indeed to die
by another hand than mine. Yet, since he who
ought to punish him is not for him a prince and judge,
but only a father quite as guilty as the son, I myself
will seek him out, and I will sacrifice my own life,
not only in avenging my own injury and the blood of
so many innocent beings, but also in promoting the
welfare of the most serene republic, on which it is
his ambition to trample when he has accomplished the
ruin of the other princes of Italy.”
The doge and the senators, who, as
we said, were already apprised of the event that had
brought Carracciuolo before them, listened with great
interest and profound indignation; for they, as he
told them, were themselves insulted in the person
of their general: they all swore, on their honour,
that if he would put the matter in their hands, and
not yield to his rage, which could only work his own
undoing, either his bride should be rendered up to
him without a smirch upon her bridal veil, or else
a punishment should be dealt out proportioned to the
affront. And without delay, as a proof of the
energy wherewith the noble tribunal would take action
in the affair, Luigi Manenti, secretary to the Ten,
was sent to Imola, where the duke was reported to
be, that he might explain to him the great displeasure
with which the most serene republic viewed the outrage
perpetrated upon their candottiere. At the same
time the Council of Ten and the doge sought out the
French ambassador, entreating him to join with them
and repair in person with Manenti to the Duke of Valentinois,
and summon him, in the name of King Louis XII, immediately
to send back to Venice the lady he had carried off.
The two messengers arrived at Imola,
where they found Caesar, who listened to their complaint
with every mark of utter astonishment, denying that
he had been in any way connected with the crime, nay,
authorising Manenti and the French ambassador to pursue
the culprits and promising that he would himself have
the most active search carried on. The duke appeared
to act in such complete good faith that the envoys
were for the moment hoodwinked, and themselves undertook
a search of the most careful nature. They accordingly
repaired to the exact spot and began to procure information.
On the highroad there had been found dead and wounded.
A man had been seen going by at a gallop, carrying
a woman in distress on his saddle; he had soon left
the beaten track and plunged across country.
A peasant coming home from working in the fields had
seen him appear and vanish again like a shadow, taking
the direction of a lonely house. An old woman
declared that she had seen him go into this house.
But the next night the house was gone, as though by
enchantment, and the ploughshare had passed over where
it stood; so that none could say, what had become
of her whom they sought, far those who had dwelt in
the house, and even the house itself, were there no
longer.
Manenti and the French ambassador
returned to Venice, and related what the duke had
said, what they had done, and how all search had been
in vain. No one doubted that Caesar was the
culprit, but no one could prove it. So the most
serene republic, which could not, considering their
war with the Turks, be embroiled with the pope, forbade
Caracciuala to take any sort of private vengeance,
and so the talk grew gradually less, and at last the
occurrence was no more mentioned.
But the pleasures of the winter had
not diverted Caesar’s mind from his plans about
Faenza. Scarcely did the spring season allow
him to go into the country than he marched anew upon
the town, camped opposite the castle, and making a
new breach, ordered a general assault, himself going
up first of all; but in spite of the courage he personally
displayed, and the able seconding of his soldiers,
they were repulsed by Astor, who, at the head of his
men, defended the breach, while even the women, at
the top of the rampart, rolled down stones and trunks
of trees upon the besiegers. After an hour’s
struggle man to man, Caesar was forced to retire,
leaving two thousand men in the trenches about the
town, and among the two thousand one of his bravest
condottieri, Valentino Farnese.
Then, seeing that neither excommunications
nor assaults could help him, Caesar converted the
siege into a blockade: all the roads leading to
Faenza were cut off, all communications stopped; and
further, as various signs of revolt had been remarked
at Cesena, a governor was installed there whose powerful
will was well known to Caesar, Ramiro d’Orco,
with powers of life and death over the inhabitants;
he then waited quietly before Faenza, till hunger
should drive out the citizens from those walls they
defended with such vehement enthusiasm. At the
end of a month, during which the people of Faenza
had suffered all the horrors of famine, delegates
came out to parley with Caesar with a view to capitulation.
Caesar, who still had plenty to do in the Romagna,
was less hard to satisfy than might have been expected,
and the town yielded an condition that he should not
touch either the persons or the belongings of the
inhabitants, that Astor Manfredi, the youthful ruler,
should have the privilege of retiring whenever he
pleased, and should enjoy the revenue of his patrimony
wherever he might be.
The conditions were faithfully kept
so far as the inhabitants were concerned; but Caesar,
when he had seen Astor, whom he did not know before,
was seized by a strange passion for this beautiful
youth, who was like a woman: he kept him by his
side in his own army, showing him honours befitting
a young prince, and evincing before the eyes of all
the strongest affection for him: one day Astor
disappeared, just as Caracciuolo’s bride had
disappeared, and no one knew what had become of him;
Caesar himself appeared very uneasy, saying that he
had no doubt made his escape somewhere, and in order
to give credence to this story, he sent out couriers
to seek him in all directions.
A year after this double disappearance,
there was picked up in the Tiber, a little below the
Castle Sant’ Angelo, the body of a beautiful
young woman, her hands bound together behind her back,
and also the corpse of a handsome youth with the bowstring
he had been strangled with tied round his neck.
The girl was Caracciuolo’s bride, the young
man was Astor.
During the last year both had been
the slaves of Caesar’s pleasures; now, tired
of them, he had had them thrown into the Tiber.
The capture of Faenza had brought
Caesar the title of Duke of Romagna, which was first
bestowed on him by the pope in full consistory, and
afterwards ratified by the King of Hungary, the republic
of Venice, and the Kings of Castile and Portugal.
The news of the ratification arrived at Rome on the
eve of the day on which the people are accustomed to
keep the anniversary of the foundation of the Eternal
City; this fête, which went back to the days of Pomponius
Laetus, acquired a new splendour in their eyes
from the joyful events that had just happened to their
sovereign: as a sign of joy cannon were fired
all day long; in the evening there were illuminations
and bonfires, and during part of the night the Prince
of Squillace, with the chief lords of the Roman nobility,
marched about the streets, bearing torches, and exclaiming,
“Long live Alexander! Long live Caesar!
Long live the Borgias! Long live the Orsini!
Long live the Duke of Romagna!”
CHAPTER XII
Caesar’s ambition was only fed
by victories: scarcely was he master of Faenza
before, excited by the Mariscotti, old enemies of the
Bentivoglio family, he cast his eyes upon Bologna;
but Gian di Bentivoglio, whose ancestors
had possessed this town from time immemorial, had not
only made all preparations necessary for a long resistance,
but he had also put himself under the protection of
France; so, scarcely had he learned that Caesar was
crossing the frontier of the Bolognese territory with
his army, than he sent a courier to Louis XII to claim
the fulfilment of his promise. Louis kept it
with his accustomed good faith; and when Caesar arrived
before Bologna, he received an intimation from the
King of France that he was not to enter on any undertaking
against his ally Bentivoglio; Caesar, not being the
man to have his plans upset for nothing, made conditions
for his retreat, to which Bentivoglio consented, only
too happy to be quit of him at this price: the
conditions were the cession of Castello Bolognese,
a fortress between Imola and Faenza, the payment of
a tribute of 9000 ducats, and the keeping for
his service of a hundred men-at-arms and two thousand
infantry. In exchange for these favours, Caesar
confided to Bentivoglio that his visit had been due
to the counsels of the Mariscotti; then, reinforced
by his new ally’s contingent, he took the road
for Tuscany. But he was scarcely out of sight
when Bentivoglio shut the gates of Bologna, and commanded
his son Hermes to assassinate with his own hand Agamemnon
Mariscotti, the head of the family, and ordered the
massacre of four-and-thirty of his near relatives,
brothers, sons, daughters, and nephews, and two hundred
other of his kindred and friends. The butchery
was carried out by the noblest youths of Bologna;
whom Bentivoglio forced to bathe their hands in this
blood, so that he might attach them to himself through
their fear of reprisals.
Caesar’s plans with regard to
Florence were now no longer a mystery: since
the month of January he had sent to Pisa ten or twelve
hundred men under the Command of Regniero della
Sassetta and Piero di Gamba Corti, and as
soon as the conquest of the Romagna was complete, he
had further despatched Oliverotto di Fermo
with new detachments. His own army he had reinforced,
as we have seen, by a hundred men-at-arms and two thousand
infantry; he had just been joined by Vitellozzo Vitelli,
lord of Città, di Castello, and by
the Orsini, who had brought him another two or three
thousand men; so, without counting the troops sent
to Pisa, he had under his control seven hundred men-at-arms
and five thousand infantry.
Still, in spite of this formidable
company, he entered Tuscany declaring that his intentions
were only pacific, protesting that he only desired
to pass through the territories of the republic on
his way to Rome, and offering to pay in ready money
for any victual his army might require. But when
he had passed the defiles of the mountains and arrived
at Barberino, feeling that the town was in his power
and nothing could now hinder his approach, he began
to put a price on the friendship he had at first offered
freely, and to impose his own conditions instead of
accepting those of others. These were that Piero
dei Medici, kinsman and ally of the Orsini, should
be reinstated in his ancient power; that six Florentine
citizens, to be chosen by Vitellozzo, should be put
into his hands that they might by their death expiate
that of Paolo Vitelli, unjustly executed
by the Florentines; that the Signoria should engage
to give no aid to the lord of Piombino, whom Caesar
intended to dispossess of his estates without delay;
and further, that he himself should be taken into
the service of the republic, for a pay proportionate
to his deserts. But just as Caesar had reached
this point in his negotiations with Florence, he received
orders from Louis XII to get ready, so soon as he
conveniently could, to follow him with his army and
help in the conquest of Naples, which he was at last
in a position to undertake. Caesar dared not
break his word to so powerful an ally; he therefore
replied that he was at the king’s orders, and
as the Florentines were not aware that he was quitting
them on compulsion, he sold his retreat for the sum
of 36,000 ducats per annum, in exchange for which
sum he was to hold three hundred men-at-arms always
in readiness to go to the aid of the republic at her
earliest call and in any circumstances of need.
But, hurried as he was, Caesar still
hoped that he might find time to conquer the territory
of Piombino as he went by, and take the capital by
a single vigorous stroke; so he made his entry into
the lands of Jacopo iv of Appiano.
The latter, he found, however, had been beforehand
with him, and, to rob him of all resource, had laid
waste his own country, burned his fodder, felled his
trees, torn down his vines, and destroyed a few fountains
that produced salubrious waters. This did not
hinder Caesar from seizing in the space of a few days
Severeto, Scarlino, the isle of Elba, and La Pianosa;
but he was obliged to stop short at the castle, which
opposed a serious resistance. As Louis XII’s
army was continuing its way towards Rome, and he received
a fresh order to join it, he took his departure the
next day, leaving behind him, Vitellozzo and Gian
Paolo Bagliani to prosecute the siege in his
absence.
Louis XII was this time advancing
upon Naples, not with the incautious ardour of Charles
viii, but, on the contrary, with that prudence
and circumspection which characterised him.
Besides his alliance with Florence and Rome, he had
also signed a secret treaty with Ferdinand the Catholic,
who had similar pretensions, through the house of Duras,
to the throne of Naples to those Louis himself had
through the house of Anjou. By this treaty the
two kings were sharing their conquests beforehand:
Louis would be master of Naples, of the town of Lavore
and the Abruzzi, and would bear the title of King
of Naples and Jerusalem; Ferdinand reserved for his
own share Apulia and Calabria, with the title of Duke
of these provinces; both were to receive the investiture
from the pope and to hold them of him. This
partition was all the more likely to be made, in fact,
because Frederic, supposing all the time that Ferdinand
was his good and faithful friend, would open the gates
of his towns, only to receive into his fortresses
conquerors and masters instead of allies. All
this perhaps was not very loyal conduct on the part
of a king who had so long desired and had just now
received the surname of Catholic, but it mattered
little to Louis, who profited by treasonable acts he
did not have to share.
The French army, which the Duke of
Valentinois had just joined, consisted of 1000 lances,
4000 Swiss, and 6000 Gascons and adventurers; further,
Philip of Rabenstein was bringing by sea six Breton
and Provencal vessels, and three Genoese caracks,
carrying 6500 invaders.
Against this mighty host the King
of Naples had only 700 men-at-arms, 600 light horse,
and 6000 infantry under the command of the Colonna,
whom he had taken into his pay after they were exiled
by the pope from the States of the Church; but he
was counting on Gonsalvo of Cordova, who was to join
him at Gaeta, and to whom he had confidingly opened
all his fortresses in Calabria.
But the feeling of safety inspired
by Frederic’s faithless ally was not destined
to endure long: on their arrival at Rome, the
French and Spanish ambassadors presented to the pope
the treaty signed at Grenada on the 11th of November,
1500, between Louis XII and Ferdinand the Catholic,
a treaty which up, to that time had been secret.
Alexander, foreseeing the probable future, had, by
the death of Alfonso, loosened all the bonds that
attached him to the house of Aragon, and then began
by making some difficulty about it. It was demonstrated
that the arrangement had only been undertaken to provide
the Christian princes with another weapon for attacking
the Ottoman Empire, and before this consideration,
one may readily suppose, all the pope’s scruples
vanished; on the 25th of June, therefore, it was decided
to call a consistory which was to declare Frederic
deposed from the throne of Naples. When Frederic
heard all at once that the French army had arrived
at Rome, that his ally Ferdinand had deceived him,
and that Alexander had pronounced the sentence of his
downfall, he understood that all was lost; but he did
not wish it to be said that he had abandoned his kingdom
without even attempting to save it. So he charged
his two new condottieri, Fabrizio Calonna and Ranuzia
di Marciano, to check the French before Capua
with 300 men-at-arms, some light horse, and 3000 infantry;
in person he occupied Aversa with another division
of his army, while Prospero Colonna was sent to defend
Naples with the rest, and make a stand against the
Spaniards on the side of Calabria.
These dispositions were scarcely made
when d’Aubigny, having passed the Volturno,
approached to lay siege to Capua, and invested the
town on both sides of the river. Scarcely were
the French encamped before the ramparts than they
began to set up their batteries, which were soon in
play, much to the terror of the besieged, who, poor
creatures, were almost all strangers to the town,
and had fled thither from every side, expecting to
find protection beneath the walls. So, although
bravely repulsed by Fabrizio Colonna, the French,
from the moment of their first assault, inspired so
great and blind a terror that everyone began to talk
of opening the gates, and it was only with great difficulty
that Calonna made this multitude understand that at
least they ought to reap some benefit from the check
the besiegers had received and obtain good terms of
capitulation. When he had brought them round
to his view, he sent out to demand a parley with d’Aubigny,
and a conference was fixed for the next day but one,
in which they were to treat of the surrender of the
town.
But this was not Caesar Borgia’s
idea at all: he had stayed behind to confer with
the pope, and had joined the French army with some
of his troops on the very day on which the conference
had been arranged for two days later: and a capitulation
of any nature would rob him of his share of the booty
and the promise of such pleasure as would come from
the capture of a city so rich and populous as Capua.
So he opened up negotiations on his own account with
a captain who was on guard at one of the gates such
negotiations, made with cunning supported by bribery,
proved as usual more prompt and efficacious than any
others. At the very moment when Fabrizio Colonna
in a fortified outpost was discussing the conditions
of capitulation with the French captains, suddenly
great cries of distress were heard. These were
caused by Borgia, who without a word to anyone had
entered the town with his faithful army from Romagna,
and was beginning to cut the throats of the garrison,
which had naturally somewhat relaxed their vigilance
in the belief that the capitulation was all but signed.
The French, when they saw that the town was half taken,
rushed on the gates with such impetuosity that the
besieged did not even attempt to defend themselves
any longer, and forced their way into Capua by three
separate sides: nothing more could be done then
to stop the issue. Butchery and pillage had
begun, and the work of destruction must needs be completed:
in vain did Fabrizio Colonna, Ranuzio di Marciano,
and Don Ugo di Cardona attempt
to make head against the French and Spaniards with
such men as they could get together. Fabrizia
Calonna and Don Ugo were made prisoners;
Ranuzia, wounded by an arrow, fell into the hands
of the Duke of Valentinois; seven thousand inhabitants
were massacred in the streets among them the traitor
who had given up the gate; the churches were pillaged,
the convents of nuns forced open; and then might be
seen the spectacle of some of these holy virgins casting
themselves into pits or into the river to escape the
soldiers. Three hundred of the noblest ladies
of the town took refuge in a tower. The Duke
of Valentinois broke in the doors, chased out for himself
forty of the most beautiful, and handed over the rest
to his army.
The pillage continued for three days.
Capua once taken, Frederic saw that
it was useless any longer to attempt defence.
So he shut himself up in Castel Nuovo and gave permission
to Gaeta and to Naples to treat with the conqueror.
Gaeta bought immunity from pillage with 60,000 ducats;
and Naples with the surrender of the castle.
This surrender was made to d’Aubigny by Frederic
himself, an condition that he should be allowed to
take to the island of Ischia his money, jewels, and
furniture, and there remain with his family for six
months secure from all hostile attack. The terms
of this capitulation were faithfully adhered to on
both sides: d’Aubigny entered Naples, and
Frederic retired to Ischia.
Thus, by a last terrible blow, never
to rise again, fell this branch of the house of Aragon,
which had now reigned for sixty-five years. Frederic,
its head, demanded and obtained a safe-conduct to pass
into France, where Louis XII gave him the duchy of
Anjou and 30,000 ducats a year, an condition
that he should never quit the kingdom; and there, in
fact, he died, an the 9th of September 1504.
His eldest son, Dan Ferdinand, Duke of Calabria, retired
to Spain, where he was permitted to marry twice, but
each time with a woman who was known to be barren;
and there he died in 1550. Alfonso, the second
son, who had followed his father to France, died,
it is said, of poison, at Grenoble, at the age of
twenty-two; lastly Caesar, the third son, died at Ferrara,
before he had attained his eighteenth birthday.
Frederic’s daughter Charlotte
married in France Nicholas, Count of Laval, governor
and admiral of Brittany; a daughter was born of this
marriage, Anne de Laval, who married Francois de la
Trimauille. Through her those rights were transmitted
to the house of La Trimouille which were used later
on as a claim upon the kingdom of the Two Sicilies.
The capture of Naples gave the Duke
of Valentinois his liberty again; so he left the French
army, after he had received fresh assurances on his
own account of the king’s friendliness, and returned
to the siege of Piombino, which he had been forced
to interrupt. During this interval Alexander
had been visiting the scenes of his son’s conquests,
and traversing all the Romagna with Lucrezia, who
was now consoled for her husband’s death, and
had never before enjoyed quite so much favour with
His Holiness; so, when she returned to Rome.
She no longer had separate rooms from him. The
result of this recrudescence of affection was the
appearance of two pontifical bulls, converting the
towns of Nepi and Sermoneta into duchies: one
was bestowed on Gian Bargia, an illegitimate child
of the pope, who was not the son of either of his mistresses,
Rosa Vanozza or Giulia Farnese, the other an
Don Roderigo of Aragon, son of Lucrezia and Alfonso:
the lands of the Colonna were in appanage to the two
duchies.
But Alexander was dreaming of yet
another addition to his fortune; this was to came
from a marriage between Lucrezia and Don Alfonso d’Este,
son of Duke Hercules of Ferrara, in favour of which
alliance Louis XII had negotiated.
His Holiness was now having a run
of good fortune, and he learned on the same day that
Piombino was taken and that Duke Hercules had given
the King of France his assent to the marriage.
Both of these pieces of news were good for Alexander,
but the one could not compare in importance with the
other; and the intimation that Lucrezia was to marry
the heir presumptive to the duchy of Ferrara was received
with a joy so great that it smacked of the humble
beginnings of the Borgian house. The Duke of
Valentinois was invited to return to Rome, to take
his share in the family rejoicing, and on the day
when the news was made public the governor of St.
Angelo received orders that cannon should be fired
every quarter of an hour from noon to midnight.
At two o’clock, Lucrezia, attired as a fiancee,
and accompanied by her two brothers, the Dukes of
Valentinois and Squillace, issued from the Vatican,
followed by all the nobility of Rome, and proceeded
to the church of the Madonna del Papalo,
where the Duke of Gandia and Cardinal Gian Borgia were
buried, to render thanks for this new favour accorded
to her house by God; and in the evening, accompanied
by the same cavalcade, which shone the more brightly
under the torchlight and brilliant illuminations, she
made procession through the whale town, greeted by
cries of “Long live Pope Alexander vi!
Lang live the Duchess of Ferrara!” which were
shouted aloud by heralds clad in cloth of gold.
The next day an announcement was made
in the town that a racecourse for women was opened
between the castle of Sant’ Angelo and the Piazza
of St. Peter’s; that on every third day there
would be a bull-fight in the Spanish fashion; and
that from the end of the present month, which was
October, until the first day of Lent, masquerades would
be permitted in the streets of Rome.
Such was the nature of the fêtes outside;
the programme of those going on within the Vatican
was not presented to the people; for by the account
of Bucciardo, an eye-witness, this is what happened
“On the last Sunday of the month
of October, fifty courtesans supped in the apostolic
palace in the Duke of Valentinois’ rooms, and
after supper danced with the equerries and servants,
first wearing their usual garments, afterwards in
dazzling draperies; when supper was over, the table
was removed, candlesticks were set on the floor in
a symmetrical pattern, and a great quantity of chestnuts
was scattered on the ground: these the fifty
women skilfully picked up, running about gracefully,
in and out between the burning lights; the pope, the
Duke of Valentinois, and his sister Lucrezia, who
were looking on at this spectacle from a gallery,
encouraged the most agile and industrious with their
applause, and they received prizes of embroidered
garters, velvet boots, golden caps, and laces; then
new diversions took the place of these.”
We humbly ask forgiveness of our readers,
and especially of our lady readers; but though we
have found words to describe the first part of the
spectacle, we have sought them in vain for the second;
suffice it to say that just as there had been prizes
for feats of adroitness, others were given now to
the dancers who were most daring and brazen.
Some days after this strange night,
which calls to mind the Roman evenings in the days
of Tiberius, Nero, and Heliogabalus, Lucrezia, clad
in a robe of golden brocade, her train carried by young
girls dressed in white and crowned with roses, issued
from her palace to the sound of trumpets and clarions,
and made her way over carpets that were laid down
in the streets through which she had to pass.
Accompanied by the noblest cavaliers and the loveliest
women in Rome, she betook herself to the Vatican,
where in the Pauline hall the pope awaited her, with
the Duke of Valentinois, Don Ferdinand, acting as
proxy for Duke Alfonso, and his cousin, Cardinal d’Este.
The pope sat on one side of the table, while the
envoys from Ferrara stood on the other: into their
midst came Lucrezia, and Don Ferdinand placed on her
finger the nuptial ring; this ceremony over, Cardinal
d’Este approached and presented to the bride
four magnificent rings set with precious stones; then
a casket was placed on the table, richly inlaid with
ivory, whence the cardinal drew forth a great many
trinkets, chains, necklaces of pearls and diamonds,
of workmanship as costly as their material; these
he also begged Lucrezia to accept, before she received
those the bridegroom was hoping to offer himself,
which would be more worthy of her. Lucrezia showed
the utmost delight in accepting these gifts; then
she retired into the next room, leaning on the pope’s
arm, and followed by the ladies of her suite, leaving
the Duke of Valentinois to do the honours of the Vatican
to the men. That evening the guests met again,
and spent half the night in dancing, while a magnificent
display of fireworks lighted up the Piazza of San
Paolo.
The ceremony of betrothal over, the
pope and the Duke busied themselves with making preparations
for the departure. The pope, who wished the
journey to be made with a great degree of splendour,
sent in his daughter’s company, in addition
to the two brothers-in-law and the gentlemen in their
suite, the Senate of Rome and all the lords who, by
virtue of their wealth, could display most magnificence
in their costumes and liveries. Among this brilliant
throng might be seen Olivero and Ramiro Mattei, sons
of Piero Mattel, chancellor of the town, and a daughter
of the pope whose mother was not Rosa Vanozza; besides
these, the pope nominated in consistory Francesco
Borgia, Cardinal of Sosenza, legate a latere,
to accompany his daughter to the frontiers of the
Ecclesiastical States.
Also the Duke of Valentinois sent
out messengers into all the cities of Romagna to order
that Lucrezia should be received as sovereign lady
and mistress: grand preparations were at once
set on foot for the fulfilment of his orders.
But the messengers reported that they greatly feared
that there would be some grumbling at Cesena, where
it will be remembered that Caesar had left Ramiro
d’Orco as governor with plenary powers, to calm
the agitation of the town. Now Ramiro d’Orco
had accomplished his task so well that there was nothing
more to fear in the way of rebellion; for one-sixth
of the inhabitants had perished on the scaffold, and
the result of this situation was that it was improbable
that the same demonstrations of joy could be expected
from a town plunged in mourning that were looked for
from Imala, Faenza, and Pesaro. The Duke of Valentinais
averted this inconvenience in the prompt and efficacious
fashion characteristic of him alone. One morning
the inhabitants of Cesena awoke to find a scaffold
set up in the square, and upon it the four quarters
of a man, his head, severed from the trunk, stuck
up on the end of a pike.
This man was Ramiro d’Orco.
No one ever knew by whose hands the
scaffold had been raised by night, nor by what executioners
the terrible deed had been carried out; but when the
Florentine Republic sent to ask Macchiavelli, their
ambassador at Cesena, what he thought of it, he replied:
“Magnificent lords,-I
can tell you nothing concerning the execution of Ramiro
d’Orco, except that Caesar Borgia is the prince
who best knows how to make and unmake men according
to their deserts. Niccolo Macchiavelli”
The Duke of Valentinois was not disappointed,
and the future Duchess of Ferrara was admirably received
in every town along her route, and particularly at
Cesena.
While Lucrezia was on her way to Ferrara
to meet her fourth husband, Alexander and the Duke
of Valentinois resolved to make a progress in the
region of their last conquest, the duchy of Piombino.
The apparent object of this journey was that the
new subjects might take their oath to Caesar, and
the real object was to form an arsenal in Jacopo
d’Appiano’s capital within reach of Tuscany,
a plan which neither the pope nor his son had ever
seriously abandoned. The two accordingly started
from the port of Corneto with six ships, accompanied
by a great number of cardinals and prelates, and arrived
the same evening at Piombina. The pontifical
court made a stay there of several days, partly with
a view of making the duke known to the inhabitants,
and also in order to be present at certain ecclesiastical
functions, of which the most important was a service
held on the third Sunday in Lent, in which the Cardinal
of Cosenza sang a mass and the pope officiated in
state with the duke and the cardinals. After
these solemn functions the customary pleasures followed,
and the pope summoned the prettiest girls of the country
and ordered them to dance their national dances before
him.
Following on these dances came feasts
of unheard of magnificence, during which the pope
in the sight of all men completely ignored Lent and
did not fast. The abject of all these fêtes
was to scatter abroad a great deal of money, and so
to make the Duke of Valentinois popular, while poor
Jacopo d’Appiano was forgotten.
When they left Piombino, the pope
and his son visited the island of Elba, where they
only stayed long enough to visit the old fortifications
and issue orders for the building of new ones.
Then the illustrious travellers embarked
on their return journey to Rome; but scarcely had
they put out to sea when the weather became adverse,
and the pope not wishing to put in at Porto Ferrajo,
they remained five days on board, though they had
only two days’ provisions. During the last
three days the pope lived on fried fish that were caught
under great difficulties because of the heavy weather.
At last they arrived in sight of Corneto, and there
the duke, who was not on the same vessel as the pope,
seeing that his ship could not get in, had a boat put
out, and so was taken ashore. The pope was obliged
to continue on his way towards Pontercole, where at
last he arrived, after encountering so violent a tempest
that all who were with him were utterly subdued either
by sickness or by the terror of death. The pope
alone did not show one instant’s fear, but remained
on the bridge during the storm, sitting on his arm-chair,
invoking the name of Jesus and making the sign of the
cross. At last his ship entered the roads of
Pontercole, where he landed, and after sending to
Corneto to fetch horses, he rejoined the duke, who
was there awaiting him. They then returned by
slow stages, by way of Civita Vecchia and Palo,
and reached Rome after an absence of a month.
Almost at the same time d’Albret arrived in
quest of his cardinal’s hat. He was accompanied
by two princes of the house of Navarre, who were received
with not only those honours which beseemed their rank,
but also as brothers-in-law to whom the, duke was eager
to show in what spirit he was contracting this alliance.
CHAPTER XIII
The time had now come for the Duke
of Valentinois to continue the pursuit of his conquests.
So, since on the 1st of May in the preceding year
the pope had pronounced sentence of forfeiture in
full consistory against Julius Caesar of Varano, as
punishment for the murder of his brother Rudolph and
for the harbouring of the pope’s enemies, and
he had accordingly been mulcted of his fief of Camerino,
which was to be handed over to the apostolic chamber,
Caesar left Rome to put the sentence in execution.
Consequently, when he arrived on the frontiers of
Perugia, which belonged to his lieutenant, Gian Paolo
Baglioni, he sent Oliverotta da Fermo and
Orsini of Gravina to lay waste the March of Camerino,
at the same time petitioning Guido d’Ubaldo
di Montefeltro, Duke of Urbino, to lend his soldiers
and artillery to help him in this enterprise.
This the unlucky Duke of Urbino, who enjoyed the
best possible relations with the pope, and who had
no reason for distrusting Caesar, did not dare refuse.
But on the very same day that the Duke of Urbina’s
troops started for Camerino, Caesar’s troops
entered the duchy of Urbino, and took possession of
Cagli, one of the four towns of the little State.
The Duke of Urbino knew what awaited him if he tried
to resist, and fled incontinently, disguised as a
peasant; thus in less than eight days Caesar was master
of his whole duchy, except the fortresses of Maiolo
and San Leone.
The Duke of Valentinois forthwith
returned to Camerino, where the inhabitants still
held out, encouraged by the presence of Julius Caesar
di Varano, their lord, and his two sons,
Venantio and Hannibal; the eldest son, Gian Maria,
had been sent by his father to Venice.
The presence of Caesar was the occasion
of parleying between the besiegers and besieged.
A capitulation was arranged whereby Varano engaged
to give up the town, on condition that he and his sons
were allowed to retire safe and sound, taking with
them their furniture, treasure, and carriages.
But this was by no means Caesar’s intention;
so, profiting by the relaxation in vigilance that had
naturally come about in the garrison when the news
of the capitulation had been announced, he surprised
the town in the night preceding the surrender, and
seized Caesar di Varano and his two sons,
who were strangled a short time after, the father
at La Pergola and the sons at Pesaro, by Don Michele
Correglio, who, though he had left the position of
sbirro for that of a captain, every now and then
returned to his first business.
Meanwhile Vitellozzo Vitelli, who
had assumed the title of General of the Church, and
had under him 800 men-at-arms and 3,000 infantry, was
following the secret instructions that he had received
from Caesar by word of mouth, and was carrying forward
that system of invasion which was to encircle Florence
in a network of iron, and in the end make her defence
an impossibility. A worthy pupil of his master,
in whose school he had learned to use in turn the
cunning of a fox and the strength of a lion, he had
established an understanding between himself and certain
young gentlemen of Arezzo to get that town delivered
into his hands. But the plot had been discovered
by Guglielma dei Pazzi, commissary of the Florentine
Republic, and he had arrested two of the conspirators,
whereupon the others, who were much more numerous than
was supposed; had instantly dispersed about the town
summoning the citizens to arms. All the republican
faction, who saw in any sort of revolution the means
of subjugating Florence, joined their party, set the
captives at liberty, and seized Guglielmo; then proclaiming
the establishment of the ancient constitution, they
besieged the citadel, whither Cosimo dei Pazzi,
Bishop of Arezzo, the son of Guglielmo, had fled for
refuge; he, finding himself invested on every side,
sent a messenger in hot haste to Florence to ask for
help.
Unfortunately for the cardinal, Vitellozzo’s
troops were nearer to the besiegers than were the
soldiers of the most serene republic to the besieged,
and instead of help the whole army of the
enemy came down upon him. This army was under
the command of Vitellozzo, of Gian Paolo
Baglioni, and of Fabio Orsino, and with them were the
two Medici, ever ready to go wherever there was a
league against Florence, and ever ready at the command
of Borgia, on any conditions whatever, to re-enter
the town whence they had been banished. The
next day more help in the form of money and artillery
arrived, sent by Pandolfo Petrucci, and on the 18th
of June the citadel of Arezzo, which had received no
news from Florence, was obliged to surrender.
Vitellozzo left the men of Arezzo
to look after their town themselves, leaving also
Fabio Orsina to garrison the citadel with a thousand
men. Then, profiting by the terror that had been
spread throughout all this part of Italy by the successive
captures of the duchy of Urbino, of Camerino, and
of Arezzo, he marched upon Monte San Severino, Castiglione,
Aretino, Cortone, and the other towns of the valley
of Chiana, which submitted one after the other almost
without a struggle. When he was only ten or
twelve leagues from Florence, and dared not an his
own account attempt anything against her, he made
known the state of affairs to the Duke of Valentinois.
He, fancying the hour had came at last far striking
the blow so long delayed, started off at once to deliver
his answer in person to his faithful lieutenants.
But the Florentines, though they had
sent no help to Guglielmo dei Pazzi, had
demanded aid from Chaumont dumbest, governor of the
Milanese, an behalf of Louis XII, not only explaining
the danger they themselves were in but also Caesar’s
ambitious projects, namely that after first overcoming
the small principalities and then the states of the
second order, he had now, it seemed, reached such
a height of pride that he would attack the King of
France himself. The news from Naples was disquieting;
serious differences had already occurred between the
Count of Armagnac and Gonzalva di Cordova, and
Louis might any day need Florence, whom he had always
found loyal and faithful. He therefore resolved
to check Caesar’s progress, and not only sent
him orders to advance no further step forwards, but
also sent off, to give effect to his injunction, the
captain Imbaut with 400 lances. The Duke of
Valentinais on the frontier of Tuscany received a copy
of the treaty signed between the republic and the
King of France, a treaty in which the king engaged
to help his ally against any enemy whatsoever, and
at the same moment the formal prohibition from Louis
to advance any further. Caesar also learned that
beside the 400 lances with the captain Imbaut, which
were on the road to Florence, Louis XII had as soon
as he reached Asti sent off to Parma Louis de la Trimouille
and 200 men-at-arms, 3000 Swiss, and a considerable
train of artillery. In these two movements combined
he saw hostile intentions towards himself, and turning
right about face with his usual agility, he profited
by the fact that he had given nothing but verbal instructions
to all his lieutenants, and wrote a furious letter
to Vitellozzo, reproaching him for compromising his
master with a view to his own private interest, and
ordering the instant surrender to the Florentines
of the towns and fortresses he had taken, threatening
to march down with his own troops and take them if
he hesitated for a moment.
As soon as this letter was written,
Caesar departed for Milan, where Louis XII had just
arrived, bringing with him proof positive that he had
been calumniated in the evacuation of the conquered
towns. He also was entrusted with the pope’s
mission to renew for another eighteen months the title
of legate ‘a latere’ in France to
Cardinal dumbest, the friend rather than the minister
of Louis XII. Thus, thanks to the public proof
of his innocence and the private use of his influence,
Caesar soon made his peace with the King of France.
But this was not all. It was
in the nature of Caesar’s genius to divert an
impending calamity that threatened his destruction
so as to come out of it better than before, and he
suddenly saw the advantage he might take from the
pretended disobedience of his lieutenants. Already
he had been disturbed now and again by their growing
power, and coveted their towns, now he thought the
hour had perhaps came for suppressing them also, and
in the usurpation of their private possessions striking
a blow at Florence, who always escaped him at the
very moment when he thought to take her. It
was indeed an annoying thing to have these fortresses
and towns displaying another banner than his own in
the midst of the beautiful Romagna which he desired
far his own kingdom. For Vitellozzo possessed
Città di Castello, Bentivoglio Bologna,
Gian Paolo Baglioni was in command of Perugia,
Oliverotto had just taken Fermo, and Pandolfo Petrucci
was lord of Siena; it was high time that all these
returned: into his own hands. The lieutenants
of the Duke of Valentinois, like Alexander’s,
were becoming too powerful, and Borgia must inherit
from them, unless he were willing to let them become
his own heirs. He obtained from Louis XII three
hundred lances wherewith to march against them.
As soon as Vitellozzo Vitelli received Caesar’s
letter he perceived that he was being sacrificed to
the fear that the King of France inspired; but he
was not one of those victims who suffer their throats
to be cut in the expiation of a mistake: he was
a buffalo of Romagna who opposed his horns to the
knife of the butcher; besides, he had the example
of Varano and the Manfredi before him, and, death for
death, he preferred to perish in arms.
So Vitellozzo convoked at Maggione
all whose lives or lands were threatened by this new
reversal of Caesar’s policy. These were
Paolo Orsino, Gian Paolo Baglioni,
Hermes Bentivoglio, representing his father Gian,
Antonio di Venafro, the envoy of Pandolfo
Petrucci, Olivertoxo da Fermo, and the Duke of
Urbino: the first six had everything to lose,
and the last had already lost everything.
A treaty of alliance was signed between
the confederates: they engaged to resist whether
he attacked them severally or all together.
Caesar learned the existence of this
league by its first effects: the Duke of Urbino,
who was adored by his subjects, had come with a handful
of soldiers to the fortress of San Leone, and it had
yielded at once. In less than a week towns and
fortresses followed this example, and all the duchy
was once more in the hands of the Duke of Urbino.
At the same time, each member of the
confederacy openly proclaimed his revolt against the
common enemy, and took up a hostile attitude.
Caesar was at Imola, awaiting the
French troops, but with scarcely any men; so that
Bentivoglio, who held part of the country, and the
Duke of Urbino, who had just reconquered the rest
of it, could probably have either taken him or forced
him to fly and quit the Romagna, had they marched
against him; all the more since the two men on whom
he counted, viz., Don Ugo di Cardona,
who had entered his service after Capua was taken,
and Michelotto had mistaken his intention, and were
all at once separated from him. He had really
ordered them to fall back upon Rimini, and bring 200
light horse and 500 infantry of which they had the
command; but, unaware of the urgency of his situation,
at the very moment when they were attempting to surprise
La Pergola and Fossombrone, they were surrounded by
Orsino of Gravina and Vitellozzo. Ugo di
Cardona and Michelotto defended themselves like
lions; but in spite of their utmost efforts their
little band was cut to pieces, and Ugo di
Cardona taken prisoner, while Michelotto only
escaped the same fate by lying down among the dead;
when night came on, he escaped to Fano.
But even alone as he was, almost without
troops at Imola, the confederates dared attempt nothing
against Caesar, whether because of the personal fear
he inspired, or because in him they respected the ally
of the King of France; they contented themselves with
taking the towns and fortresses in the neighbourhood.
Vitellozzo had retaken the fortresses of Fossombrone,
Urbino, Cagli, and Aggobbio; Orsino of Gravina had
reconquered Fano and the whole province; while Gian
Maria de Varano, the same who by his absence had escaped
being massacred with the rest of his family, had re-entered
Camerino, borne in triumph by his people. Not
even all this could destroy Caesar’s confidence
in his own good fortune, and while he was on the one
hand urging on the arrival of the French troops and
calling into his pay all those gentlemen known as “broken
lances,” because they went about the country
in parties of five or six only, and attached themselves
to anyone who wanted them, he had opened up negotiations
with his enemies, certain that from that very day when
he should persuade them to a conference they were
undone. Indeed, Caesar had the power of persuasion
as a gift from heaven; and though they perfectly well
knew his duplicity, they had no power of resisting,
not so much his actual eloquence as that air of frank
good-nature which Macchiavelli so greatly admired,
and which indeed more than once deceived even him,
wily politician as he was. In order to get Paolo
Orsino to treat with him at Imola, Caesar sent Cardinal
Borgia to the confederates as a hostage; and on this
Paolo Orsino hesitated no longer, and on the
25th of October, 1502, arrived at Imola.
Caesar received him as an old friend
from whom one might have been estranged a few days
because of some slight passing differences; he frankly
avowed that all the fault was no doubt on his side,
since he had contrived to alienate men who were such
loyal lords and also such brave captains; but with
men of their nature, he added, an honest, honourable
explanation such as he would give must put everything
once more in statu quo. To prove that it was
goodwill, not fear, that brought him back to them,
he showed Orsino the letters from Cardinal Amboise
which announced the speedy arrival of French troops;
he showed him those he had collected about him, in
the wish, he declared, that they might be thoroughly
convinced that what he chiefly regretted in the whole
matter was not so much the loss of the distinguished
captains who were the very soul of his vast enterprise,
as that he had led the world to believe, in a way so
fatal to his own interest, that he could for a single
instant fail to recognise their merit; adding that
he consequently relied upon him, Paolo Orsino,
whom he had always cared for most, to bring back the
confederates by a peace which would be as much for
the profit of all as a war was hurtful to all, and
that he was ready to sign a treaty in consonance with
their wishes so long as it should not prejudice his
own honour.
Orsino was the man Caesar wanted:
full of pride and confidence in himself, he was convinced
of the truth of the old proverb that says, “A
pope cannot reign eight days, if he has hath the Colonnas
and the Orsini against him.” He believed,
therefore, if not in Caesar’s good faith, at
any rate in the necessity he must feel for making peace;
accordingly he signed with him the following conventions which
only needed ratification on the 18th of
October, 1502, which we reproduce here as Macchiavelli
sent them to the magnificent republic of Florence.
“Agreement between the Duke
of Valentinois and the Confederates.
“Let it be known to the parties
mentioned below, and to all who shall see these presents,
that His Excellency the Duke of Romagna of the one
part and the Orsini of the other part, together with
their confederates, desiring to put an end to differences,
enmities, misunderstandings, and suspicions which
have arisen between them, have resolved as follows:
“There shall be between them
peace and alliance true and perpetual, with a complete
obliteration of wrongs and injuries which may have
taken place up to this day, both parties engaging
to preserve no resentment of the same; and in conformity
with the aforesaid peace and union, His Excellency
the Duke of Romagna shall receive into perpetual confederation,
league, and alliance all the lords aforesaid; and each
of them shall promise to defend the estates of all
in general and of each in particular against any power
that may annoy or attack them for any cause whatsoever,
excepting always nevertheless the Pope Alexander vi
and his Very Christian Majesty Louis XII, King of
France: the lords above named promising on the
other part to unite in the defence of the person and
estates of His Excellency, as also those of the most
illustrious lards, Don Gaffredo Bargia, Prince of
Squillace, Don Roderigo Bargia, Duke of Sermaneta
and Biselli, and Don Gian Borgia, Duke of Camerino
and Negi, all brothers or nephews of the Duke
of Romagna.
“Moreover, since the rebellion
and usurpation of Urbino have occurred during the
above-mentioned misunderstandings, all the confederates
aforesaid and each of them shall bind themselves to
unite all their forces for the recovery of the estates
aforesaid and of such other places as have revolted
and been usurped.
“His Excellency the Duke of
Romagna shall undertake to continue to the Orsini
and Vitelli their ancient engagements in the way of
military service and an the same conditions.
“His Excellency promises further
not to insist on the service in person of more than
one of them, as they may choose: the service that
the others may render shall be voluntary.
“He also promises that the second
treaty shall be ratified by the sovereign pontiff,
who shall not compel Cardinal Orsino to reside in Rome
longer than shall seem convenient to this prelate.
“Furthermore, since there are
certain differences between the Pope and the lord
Gian Bentivoglio, the confederates aforesaid agree
that they shall be put to the arbitration of Cardinal
Orsino, of His Excellency the Duke of Romagna, and
of the lord Pandolfo Petrucci, without appeal.
“Thus the confederates engage,
each and all, so soon as they may be required by the
Duke of Romagna, to put into his hands as a hostage
one of the legitimate sons of each of them, in that
place and at that time which he may be pleased to
indicate.
“The same confederates promising
moreover, all and each, that if any project directed
against any one of them come to their knowledge, to
give warning thereof, and all to prevent such project
reciprocally.
“It is agreed, over and above,
between the Duke of Romagna and the confederates aforesaid,
to regard as a common enemy any who shall fail to
keep the present stipulations, and to unite in the
destruction of any States not conforming thereto.
“(Signed)
Cæsar, Paolo Orsino.
“AGAPIT,
Secretary.”
At the same time, while Orsino was
carrying to the confederates the treaty drawn up between
him and the duke, Bentivoglio, not willing to submit
to the arbitration indicated, made an offer to Caesar
of settling their differences by a private treaty,
and sent his son to arrange the conditions: after
some parleying, they were settled as follows:
Bentivaglio should separate his fortunes
from the Vitelli and Orsini;
He should furnish the Duke of Valentinois
with a hundred men-at-arms and a hundred mounted archers
for eight years;
He should pay 12,000 ducats per
annum to Caesar, for the support of a hundred lances;
In return for this, his son Hannibal
was to marry the sister of the Archbishop of Enna,
who was Caesar’s niece, and the pope was to recognise
his sovereignty in Bologna;
The King of France, the Duke of Ferrara,
and the republic of Florence were to be the guarantors
of this treaty.
But the convention brought to the
confederates by Orsino was the cause of great difficulties
on their part. Vitellozza Vitelli in particular,
who knew Caesar the best, never ceased to tell the
other condottieri that so prompt and easy a peace
must needs be the cover to some trap; but since Caesar
had meanwhile collected a considerable army at Imala,
and the four hundred lances lent him by Louis XII
had arrived at last, Vitellozzo and Oliverotto decided
to sign the treaty that Orsino brought, and to let
the Duke of Urbino and the lord of Camerino know of
it; they, seeing plainly that it was henceforth impassible
to make a defence unaided, had retired, the one to
Città di Castello and the other into
the kingdom of Naples.
But Caesar, saying nothing of his
intentions, started on the 10th of December, and made
his way to Cesena with a powerful army once more under
his command. Fear began to spread on all sides,
not only in Romagna but in the whole of Northern Italy;
Florence, seeing him move away from her, only thought
it a blind to conceal his intentions; while Venice,
seeing him approach her frontiers, despatched all
her troops to the banks of the Po. Caesar perceived
their fear, and lest harm should be done to himself
by the mistrust it might inspire, he sent away all
French troops in his service as soon as he reached
Cesena, except a hundred men with M. de Candale, his
brother-in-law; it was then seen that he only had 2000
cavalry and 2000 infantry with him. Several days
were spent in parleying, for at Cesena Caesar found
the envoys of the Vitelli and Orsini, who themselves
were with their army in the duchy of Urbino; but after
the preliminary discussions as to the right course
to follow in carrying on the plan of conquest, there
arose such difficulties between the general-in-chief
and these agents, that they could not but see the
impossibility of getting anything settled by intermediaries,
and the urgent necessity of a conference between Caesar
and one of the chiefs. So Oliverotto ran the
risk of joining the duke in order to make proposals
to him, either to march an Tuscany or to take Sinigaglia,
which was the only place in the duchy of Urbino that
had not again fallen into Caesar’s power.
Caesar’s reply was that he did not desire to
war upon Tuscany, because the Tuscans were his friends;
but that he approved of the lieutenants’ plan
with regard to Sinigaglia, and therefore was marching
towards Fano.
But the daughter of Frederic, the
former Duke of Urbino, who held the town of Sinigaglia,
and who was called the lady-prefect, because she had
married Gian delta Rovere, whom his uncle, Sixtus iv,
had made prefect of Rome, judging that it would be
impossible to defend herself against the forces the
Duke of Valentinais was bringing, left the citadel
in the hands of a captain, recommending him to get
the best terms he could for the town, and took boat
for Venice.
Caesar learned this news at Rimini,
through a messenger from Vitelli and the Orsini, who
said that the governor of the citadel, though refusing
to yield to them, was quite ready to make terms with
him, and consequently they would engage to go to the
town and finish the business there. Caesar’s
reply was that in consequence of this information he
was sending some of his troops to Cesena and Imola,
for they would be useless to him, as he should now
have theirs, which together with the escort he retained
would be sufficient, since his only object was the
complete pacification of the duchy of Urbino.
He added that this pacification would not be possible
if his old friends continued to distrust him, and to
discuss through intermediaries alone plans in which
their own fortunes were interested as well as his.
The messenger returned with this answer, and the
confederates, though feeling, it is true, the justice
of Caesar’s remarks, none the less hesitated
to comply with his demand. Vitellozzo Vitelli
in particular showed a want of confidence in him which
nothing seemed able to subdue; but, pressed by Oliverotto,
Gravina, and Orsino, he consented at last to await
the duke’s coming; making concession rather
because he could not bear to appear more timid than
his companions, than because of any confidence he
felt in the return of friendship that Borgia was displaying.
The duke learned the news of this
decision, so much desired, when he arrived at Fano
on the 20th of December 1502. At once he summoned
eight of his most faithful friends, among whom were
d’Enna, his nephew, Michelotto, and Ugo
di Cardona, and ordered them, as soon as
they arrived at Sinigaglia, and had seen Vitellozzo,
Gravina, Oliveratta, and Orsino come out to meet them,
on a pretext of doing them honour, to place themselves
on the right and left hand of the four generals, two
beside each, so that at a given signal they might
either stab or arrest them; next he assigned to each
of them his particular man, bidding them not quit
his side until he had reentered Sinigaglia and arrived
at the quarters prepared far him; then he sent orders
to such of the soldiers as were in cantonments in
the neighbourhood to assemble to the number of 8000
on the banks of the Metaurus, a little river of Umbria
which runs into the Adriatic and has been made famous
by the defeat of Hannibal.
The duke arrived at the rendezvous
given to his army on the 31st of December, and instantly
sent out in front two hundred horse, and immediately
behind them his infantry; following close in the midst
of his men-at-arms, following the coast of the Adriatic,
with the mountains on his right and the sea on his
left, which in part of the way left only space for
the army to march ten abreast.
After four hours’ march, the
duke at a turn of the path perceived Sinigaglia, nearly
a mile distant from the sea, and a bowshot from the
mountains; between the army and the town ran a little
river, whose banks he had to follow far some distance.
At last he found a bridge opposite a suburb of the
town, and here Caesar ordered his cavalry to stop:
it was drawn up in two lines, one between the road
and the river, the other on the side of the country,
leaving the whole width of the road to the infantry:
which latter defiled, crossed the bridge, and entering
the town, drew themselves up in battle array in the
great square.
On their side, Vitellazzo, Gravina,
Orsino, and Oliverotto, to make room for the duke’s
army, had quartered their soldiers in little towns
or villages in the neighbourhood of Sinigaglia; Oliverotto
alone had kept nearly 1000 infantry and 150 horse,
who were in barracks in the suburb through which the
duke entered.
Caesar had made only a few steps towards
the town when he perceived Vitellozzo at the gate,
with the Duke of Gravina and Orsina, who all came
out to meet him; the last two quite gay and confident,
but the first so gloomy and dejected that you would
have thought he foresaw the fate that was in store
for him; and doubtless he had not been without same
presentiments; for when he left his army to came to
Sinigaglia, he had bidden them farewell as though
never to meet again, had commended the care of his
family to the captains, and embraced his children with
tears a weakness which appeared strange
to all who knew him as a brave condottiere.
The duke marched up to them holding
out his hand, as a sign that all was over and forgotten,
and did it with an air at once so loyal and so smiling
that Gravina and Orsina could no longer doubt the genuine
return of his friendship, and it was only Vitellozza
still appeared sad. At the same moment, exactly
as they had been commanded, the duke’s accomplices
took their pasts on the right and left of those they
were to watch, who were all there except Oliverotto,
whom the duke could not see, and began to seek with
uneasy looks; but as he crossed the suburb he perceived
him exercising his troops on the square. Caesar
at once despatched Michelotto and d’Enna, with
a message that it was a rash thing to have his troops
out, when they might easily start some quarrel with
the duke’s men and bring about an affray:
it would be much better to settle them in barracks
and then come to join his companions, who were with
Caesar. Oliverotto, drawn by the same fate as
his friends, made no abjection, ordered his soldiers
indoors, and put his horse to the gallop to join the
duke, escorted on either side by d’Enna and Michelotto.
Caesar, on seeing him, called him, took him by the
hand, and continued his march to the palace that had
been prepared for him, his four victims following
after.
Arrived on the threshold, Caesar dismounted,
and signing to the leader of the men-at-arms to, await
his orders, he went in first, followed by Oliverotto,
Gravina, Vitellozzo Vitelli, and Orsino, each accompanied
by his two satellites; but scarcely had they gone
upstairs and into the first room when the door was
shut behind them, and Caesar turned round, saying,
“The hour has come!” This was the signal
agreed upon. Instantly the former confederates
were seized, thrown down, and forced to surrender
with a dagger at their throat. Then, while they
were being carried to a dungeon, Caesar opened the
window, went out on the balcony and cried out to the
leader of his men-at-arms, “Go forward!”
The man was in the secret, he rushed on with his
band towards the barracks where Oliverotto’s
soldiers had just been consigned, and they, suddenly
surprised and off their guard, were at once made prisoners;
then the duke’s troops began to pillage the
town, and he summoned Macchiavelli.
Caesar and the Florentine envoy were
nearly two hours shut up together, and since Macchiavelli
himself recounts the history of this interview, we
will give his own words.
“He summoned me,” says
the Florentine ambassador, “and in the calmest
manner showed me his joy at the success of this enterprise,
which he assured me he had spoken of to me the evening
before; I remember that he did, but I did not at that
time understand what he meant; next he explained,
in terms of much feeling and lively affection for our
city, the different motives which had made him desire
your alliance, a desire to which he hopes you will
respond. He ended with charging me to lay three
proposals before your lordships: first, that you
rejoice with him in the destruction at a single blow
of the mortal enemies of the king, himself, and you,
and the consequent disappearance of all seeds of trouble
and dissension likely to waste Italy: this service
of his, together with his refusal to allow the prisoners
to march against you, ought, he thinks, to excite
your gratitude towards him; secondly, he begs that
you will at this juncture give him a striking proof
of your friendliness, by urging your cavalry’s
advance towards Borgo, and there assembling some
infantry also, in order that they may march with him,
should need arise, on Castello or on Perugia.
Lastly, he desires and this is his third
condition that you arrest the Duke of Urbino,
if he should flee from Castello into your territories,
when he learns that Vitellozzo is a prisoner.
“When I objected that to give
him up would not beseem the dignity of the republic,
and that you would never consent, he approved of my
words, and said that it would be enough for you to
keep the duke, and not give him his liberty without
His Excellency’s permission. I have promised
to give you all this information, to which he awaits
your reply.”
The same night eight masked men descended
to the dungeon where the prisoners lay: they
believed at that moment that the fatal hour had arrived
for all. But this time the executioners had to
do with Vitellozzo and Oliverotto alone. When
these two captains heard that they were condemned,
Oliverotto burst forth into reproaches against Vitellozzo,
saying that it was all his fault that they had taken
up arms against the duke: not a word Vitellozzo
answered except a prayer that the pope might grant
him plenary indulgence for all his sins. Then
the masked men took them away, leaving Orsino and
Gravina to await a similar fate, and led away the
two chosen out to die to a secluded spot outside the
ramparts of the town, where they were strangled and
buried at once in two trenches that had been dug beforehand.
The two others were kept alive until
it should be known if the pope had arrested Cardinal
Orsino, archbishop of Florence and lord of Santa Croce;
and when the answer was received in the affirmative
from His Holiness, Gravina and Orsina, who had been
transferred to a castle, were likewise strangled.
The duke, leaving instructions with
Michelotto, set off for Sinigaglia as soon as the
first execution was over, assuring Macchiavelli that
he had never had any other thought than that of giving
tranquillity to the Romagna and to Tuscany, and also
that he thought he had succeeded by taking and putting
to death the men who had been the cause of all the
trouble; also that any other revolt that might take
place in the future would be nothing but sparks that
a drop of water could extinguish.
The pope had barely learned that Caesar
had his enemies in his power, when, eager to play
the same winning game himself, he announced to Cardinal
Orsino, though it was then midnight, that his son had
taken Sinigaglia, and gave him an invitation to come
the next morning and talk over the good news.
The cardinal, delighted at this increase of favour,
did not miss his appointment. So, in the morning,
he started an horseback for the Vatican; but at a
turn of the first street he met the governor of Rome
with a detachment of cavalry, who congratulated himself
on the happy chance that they were taking the same
road, and accompanied him to the threshold of the
Vatican. There the cardinal dismounted, and began
to ascend the stairs; scarcely, however, had he reached
the first landing before his mules and carriages were
seized and shut in the palace stables. When
he entered the hall of the Perropont, he found that
he and all his suite were surrounded by armed men,
who led him into another apartment, called the Vicar’s
Hall, where he found the Abbate Alviano, the protonotary
Orsino, Jacopo Santa Croce, and Rinaldo Orsino,
who were all prisoners like himself; at the same time
the governor received orders to seize the castle of
Monte Giardino, which belonged to the Orsini, and
take away all the jewels, all the hangings, all the
furniture, and all the silver that he might find.
The governor carried out his orders
conscientiously, and brought to the Vatican everything
he seized, down to the cardinal’s account-book.
On consulting this book, the pope found out two things:
first, that a sum of 2000 ducats was due to the
cardinal, no debtor’s name being mentioned;
secondly, that the cardinal had bought three months
before, for 1500 Roman crowns, a magnificent pearl
which could not be found among the objects belonging
to him: on which Alexander ordered that from that
very moment until the negligence in the cardinal’s
accounts was repaired, the men who were in the habit
of bringing him food twice a day on behalf of his
mother should not be admitted into the Castle Sant’
Angelo. The same day, the cardinal’s mother
sent the pope the 2000 ducats, and the next day
his mistress, in man’s attire, came in person
to bring the missing pearl. His Holiness, however,
was so struck with her beauty in this costume, that,
we are told, he let her keep the pearl for the same
price she had paid for it.
Then the pope allowed the cardinal
to have his food brought as before, and he died of
poison on the 22nd of February that is,
two days after his accounts had been set right.
That same night the Prince of Squillace
set off to take possession, in the pope’s name,
of the lands of the deceased.
CHAPTER XIV
The Duke of Valentinois had continued,
his road towards Città di Castello
and Perugia, and had seized these two towns without
striking a blow; for the Vitelli had fled from the
former, and the latter had been abandoned by Gian
Paolo Baglione with no attempt whatever at resistance.
There still remained Siena, where Pandolfo Petrucci
was shut up, the only man remaining of all who had
joined the league against Caesar.
But Siena was under the protection
of the French. Besides, Siena was not one of
the States of the Church, and Caesar had no rights
there. Therefore he was content with insisting
upon Pandolfo Petrucci’s leaving the town and
retiring to Lucca, which he accordingly did.
Then all on this side being peaceful
and the whole of Romagna in subjection, Caesar resolved
to return to Rome and help the pope to destroy all
that was left of the Orsini.
This was all the easier because Louis
XII, having suffered reverses in the kingdom of Naples,
had since then been much concerned with his own affairs
to disturb himself about his allies. So Caesar,
doing for the neighbourhood of the Holy See the same
thing that he had done far the Romagna, seized in
succession Vicovaro, Cera, Palombera, Lanzano, and
Cervetti; when these conquests were achieved, having
nothing else to do now that he had brought the pontifical
States into subjection from the frontiers of Naples
to those of Venice, he returned to Rome to concert
with his father as to the means of converting his duchy
into a kingdom.
Caesar arrived at the right moment
to share with Alexander the property of Cardinal Gian
Michele, who had just died, having received a poisoned
cup from the hands of the pope.
The future King of Italy found his
father preoccupied with a grand project: he had
resolved, for the Feast of St. Peter’s, to create
nine cardinals. What he had to gain from these
nominations is as follows:
First, the cardinals elected would
leave all their offices vacant; these offices would
fall into the hands of the pope, and he would sell
them;
Secondly, each of them would buy his
election, more or less dear according to his fortune;
the price, left to be settled at the pope’s
fancy, would vary from 10,000 to 40,000 ducats;
Lastly, since as cardinals they would
by law lose the right of making a will, the pope,
in order to inherit from them, had only to poison them:
this put him in the position of a butcher who, if he
needs money, has only to cut the throat of the fattest
sheep in the flock.
The nomination came to pass:
the new cardinals were Giovanni Castellaro Valentine,
archbishop of Trani; Francesco Remolini, ambassador
from the King of Aragon; Francesco Soderini, bishop
of Volterra; Melchiore Copis, bishop of Brissina;
Nicolas Fiesque, bishop of Frejus; Francesco di
Sprate, bishop of Leome; Adriano Castellense, clerk
of the chamber, treasurer-general, and secretary of
the briefs; Francesco Boris, bishop of Elva, patriarch
of Constantinople, and secretary to the pope; and
Giacomo Casanova, protonotary and private chamberlain
to His Holiness.
The price of their simony paid and
their vacated offices sold, the pope made his choice
of those he was to poison: the number was fixed
at three, one old and two new; the old one was Cardinal
Casanova, and the new ones Melchiore Copis and
Adriano Castellense, who had taken the name of Adrian
of Carneta from that town where he had been born, and
where, in the capacity of clerk of the chamber, treasurer-general,
and secretary of briefs, he had amassed an immense
fortune.
So, when all was settled between Caesar
and the pope, they invited their chosen guests to
supper in a vineyard situated near the Vatican, belonging
to the Cardinal of Corneto. In the morning of
this day, the 2nd of August, they sent their servants
and the steward to make all preparations, and Caesar
himself gave the pope’s butler two bottles of
wine prepared with the white powder resembling sugar
whose mortal properties he had so often proved, and
gave orders that he was to serve this wine only when
he was told, and only to persons specially indicated;
the butler accordingly put the wine an a sideboard
apart, bidding the waiters on no account to touch
it, as it was reserved for the pope’s drinking.
[The poison of the Borgias, say contemporary
writers, was of two kinds, powder and liquid.
The poison in the form of powder was a sort of white
flour, almost impalpable, with the taste of sugar,
and called Contarella. Its composition is unknown.
The liquid poison was prepared, we
are told in so strange a fashion that we cannot pass
it by in silence. We repeat here what we read,
and vouch for nothing ourselves, lest science should
give us the lie.
A strong dose of arsenic was administered
to a boar; as soon as the poison began to take effect,
he was hung up by his heels; convulsions supervened,
and a froth deadly and abundant ran out from his jaws;
it was this froth, collected into a silver vessel
and transferred into a bottle hermetically sealed,
that made the liquid poison.]
Towards evening Alexander vi
walked from the Vatican leaning on Caesar’s
arm, and turned his steps towards the vineyard, accompanied
by Cardinal Caraffa; but as the heat was great
and the climb rather steep, the pope, when he reached
the top, stopped to take breath; then putting his hand
on his breast, he found that he had left in his bedroom
a chain that he always wore round his neck, which
suspended a gold medallion that enclosed the sacred
host. He owed this habit to a prophecy that an
astrologer had made, that so long as he carried about
a consecrated wafer, neither steel nor poison could
take hold upon him. Now, finding himself without
his talisman, he ordered Monsignors Caraffa to
hurry back at once to the Vatican, and told him in
which part of his room he had left it, so that he
might get it and bring it him without delay.
Then, as the walk had made him thirsty, he turned
to a valet, giving signs with his hand as he did so
that his messenger should make haste, and asked for
something to drink. Caesar, who was also thirsty,
ordered the man to bring two glasses. By a curious
coincidence, the butler had just gone back to the
Vatican to fetch some magnificent peaches that had
been sent that very day to the pope, but which had
been forgotten when he came here; so the valet went
to the under butler, saying that His Holiness and
Monsignors the Duke of Romagna were thirsty and asking
for a drink. The under butler, seeing two bottles
of wine set apart, and having heard that this wine
was reserved for the pope, took one, and telling the
valet to bring two glasses on a tray, poured out this
wine, which both drank, little thinking that it was
what they had themselves prepared to poison their
guests.
Meanwhile Caraffa hurried to
the Vatican, and, as he knew the palace well, went
up to the pope’s bedroom, a light in his hand
and attended by no servant. As he turned round
a corridor a puff of wind blew out his lamp; still,
as he knew the way, he went on, thinking there was
no need of seeing to find the object he was in search
of; but as he entered the room he recoiled a step,
with a cry of terror: he beheld a ghastly apparition;
it seemed that there before his eyes, in the middle
of the room, between the door and the cabinet which
held the medallion, Alexander vi, motionless
and livid, was lying on a bier at whose four corners
there burned four torches. The cardinal stood
still for a moment, his eyes fixed, and his hair standing
on end, without strength to move either backward or
forward; then thinking it was all a trick of fancy
or an apparition of the devil’s making, he made
the sign of the cross, invoking God’s holy name;
all instantly vanished, torches, bier, and corpse,
and the seeming mortuary, chamber was once more in
darkness.
Then Cardinal Caraffa, who has
himself recorded this strange event, and who was afterwards
Pope Paul iv, entered baldly, and though an icy
sweat ran dawn his brow, he went straight to the cabinet,
and in the drawer indicated found the gold chain and
the medallion, took them, and hastily went out to
give them to the pope. He found supper served,
the guests arrived, and His Holiness ready to take
his place at table; as soon as the cardinal was in
sight, His Holiness, who was very pale, made one step
towards him; Caraffa doubled his pace, and handed
the medallion to him; but as the pope stretched forth
his arm to take it, he fell back with a cry, instantly
followed by violent convulsions: an instant later,
as he advanced to render his father assistance, Caesar
was similarly seized; the effect of the poison had
been more rapid than usual, for Caesar had doubled
the dose, and there is little doubt that their heated
condition increased its activity.
The two stricken men were carried
side by side to the Vatican, where each was taken
to his own rooms: from that moment they never
met again.
As soon as he reached his bed, the
pope was seized with a violent fever, which did not
give way to emetics or to bleeding; almost immediately
it became necessary to administer the last sacraments
of the Church; but his admirable bodily constitution,
which seemed to have defied old age, was strong enough
to fight eight days with death; at last, after a week
of mortal agony, he died, without once uttering the
name of Caesar or Lucrezia, who were the two poles
around which had turned all his affections and all
his crimes. His age was seventy-two, and he had
reigned eleven years.
Caesar, perhaps because he had taken
less of the fatal beverage, perhaps because the strength
of his youth overcame the strength of the poison, or
maybe, as some say, because when he reached his own
rooms he had swallowed an antidote known only to himself,
was not so prostrated as to lose sight for a moment
of the terrible position he was in: he summoned
his faithful Michelotto, with those he could best count
on among his men, and disposed this band in the various
rooms that led to his own, ordering the chief never
to leave the foot of his bed, but to sleep lying on
a rug, his hand upon the handle of his sward.
The treatment had been the same for
Caesar as for the pope, but in addition to bleeding
and emetics strange baths were added, which Caesar
had himself asked for, having heard that in a similar
case they had once cured Ladislaus, King of Naples.
Four posts, strongly welded to the floor and ceiling,
were set up in his room, like the machines at which
farriers shoe horses; every day a bull was brought
in, turned over on his back and tied by his four legs
to the four posts; then, when he was thus fixed, a
cut was made in his belly a foot and a half long, through
which the intestines were drawn out; then Caesar slipped
into this living bath of blood: when the bull
was dead, Caesar was taken out and rolled up in burning
hot blankets, where, after copious perspirations, he
almost always felt some sort of relief.
Every two hours Caesar sent to ask
news of his father: he hardly waited to hear
that he was dead before, though still at death’s
door himself, he summoned up all the force of character
and presence of mind that naturally belonged to him.
He ordered Michelotto to shut the doors of the Vatican
before the report of Alexander’s decease could
spread about the town, and forbade anyone whatsoever
to enter the pope’s apartments until the money
and papers had been removed. Michelotto obeyed
at once, went to find Cardinal Casanova, held a dagger
at his throat, and made him deliver up the keys of
the pope’s rooms and cabinets; then, under his
guidance, took away two chests full of gold, which
perhaps contained 100,000 Roman crowns in specie,
several boxes full of jewels, much silver and many
precious vases; all these were carried to Caesar’s
chamber; the guards of the room were doubled; then
the doors of the Vatican were once more thrown open,
and the death of the pope was proclaimed.
Although the news was expected, it
produced none the less a terrible effect in Rome;
for although Caesar was still alive, his condition
left everyone in suspense: had the mighty Duke
of Romagna, the powerful condottiere who had taken
thirty towns and fifteen fortresses in five years,
been seated, sword in hand, upon his charger, nothing
would have been uncertain of fluctuating even for
a moment; far, as Caesar afterwards told Macchiavelli,
his ambitious soul had provided for all things that
could occur on the day of the pope’s death, except
the one that he should be dying himself; but being
nailed down to his bed, sweating off the effects the
poison had wrought; so, though he had kept his power
of thinking he could no longer act, but must needs
wait and suffer the course of events, instead of marching
on in front and controlling them.
Thus he was forced to regulate his
actions no longer by his own plans but according to
circumstances. His most bitter enemies, who could
press him hardest, were the Orsini and the Colonnas:
from the one family he had taken their blood, from
the other their goods.
So he addressed himself to those to
whom he could return what he had taken, and opened
negotiations with the Colonnas.
Meanwhile the obsequies of the pope
were going forward: the vice-chancellor had sent
out orders to the highest among the clergy, the superiors
of convents, and the secular orders, not to fail to
appear, according to regular custom, on pain of being
despoiled of their office and dignities, each bringing
his own company to the Vatican, to be present at the
pope’s funeral; each therefore appeared on the
day and at the hour appointed at the pontifical palace,
whence the body was to be conveyed to the church of
St. Peter’s, and there buried. The corpse
was found to be abandoned and alone in the mortuary
chamber; for everyone of the name of Borgia, except
Caesar, lay hidden, not knowing what might come to
pass. This was indeed well justified; for Fabio
Orsino, meeting one member of the family, stabbed
him, and as a sign of the hatred they had sworn to
one another, bathed his mouth and hands in the blood.
The agitation in Rome was so great,
that when the corpse of Alexander vi was about
to enter the church there occurred a kind of panic,
such as will suddenly arise in times of popular agitation,
instantly causing so great a disturbance in the funeral
cortege that the guards drew up in battle array, the
clergy fled into the sacristy, and the bearers dropped
the bier.
The people, tearing off the pall which
covered it, disclosed the corpse, and everyone could
see with impunity and close at hand the man who, fifteen
days before, had made princes, kings and emperors tremble,
from one end of the world to the other.
But in accordance with that religious
feeling towards death which all men instinctively
feel, and which alone survives every other, even in
the heart of the atheist, the bier was taken up again
and carried to the foot of the great altar in St.
Peter’s, where, set on trestles, it was exposed
to public view; but the body had become so black, so
deformed and swollen, that it was horrible to behold;
from its nose a bloody matter escaped, the mouth gaped
hideously, and the tongue was so monstrously enlarged
that it filled the whole cavity; to this frightful
appearance was added a decomposition so great that,
although at the pope’s funeral it is customary
to kiss the hand which bore the Fisherman’s ring,
not one approached to offer this mark of respect and
religious reverence to the representative of God on
earth.
Towards seven o’clock in the
evening, when the declining day adds so deep a melancholy
to the silence of a church, four porters and two working
carpenters carried the corpse into the chapel where
it was to be interred, and, lifting it off the catafalque,
where it lay in state, put it in the coffin which
was to be its last abode; but it was found that the
coffin was too short, and the body could not be got
in till the legs were bent and thrust in with violent
blows; then the carpenters put on the lid, and while
one of them sat on the top to force the knees to bend,
the others hammered in the nails: amid those Shakespearian
pleasantries that sound as the last orison in the
ear of the mighty; then, says Tommaso Tommasi, he
was placed on the right of the great altar of St.
Peter’s, beneath a very ugly tomb.
The next morning this epitaph was
found inscribed upon the tomb:
“VENDIT Alexander
claves, ALTARIA, CHRISTUM:
EMERAT Ille prius,
vendere juke POTEST”;
that is,
“Pope Alexander sold
the Christ, the altars, and the keys:
But anyone who buys
a thing may sell it if he please.”
CHAPTER XV
From the effect produced at Rome by
Alexander’s death, one may imagine what happened
not only in the whole of Italy but also in the rest
of the world: for a moment Europe swayed, for
the column which supported the vault of the political
edifice had given way, and the star with eyes of flame
and rays of blood, round which all things had revolved
for the last eleven years, was now extinguished, and
for a moment the world, on a sudden struck motionless,
remained in silence and darkness.
After the first moment of stupefaction,
all who had an injury to avenge arose and hurried
to the chase. Sforza retook Pesaro, Bagloine
Perugia, Guido and Ubaldo Urbino, and La Rovere Sinigaglia;
the Vitelli entered Città di Castello,
the Appiani Piombino, the Orsini Monte Giordano
and their other territories; Romagna alone remained
impassive and loyal, for the people, who have no concern
with the quarrels of the great, provided they do not
affect themselves, had never been so happy as under
the government of Caesar.
The Colonnas were pledged to maintain
a neutrality, and had been consequently restored to
the possession of their castles and the cities of
Chiuzano, Capo d’Anno, Frascati, Rocca di
Papa, and Nettuno, which they found in a
better condition than when they had left them, as the
pope had had them embellished and fortified.
Caesar was still in the Vatican with
his troops, who, loyal to him in his misfortune, kept
watch about the palace, where he was writhing on his
bed of pain and roaring like a wounded lion.
The cardinals, who had in their first terror fled,
each his own way, instead of attending the pope’s
obsequies, began to assemble once more, some at the
Minerva, others around Cardinal Caraffa.
Frightened by the troops that Caesar still had, especially
since the command was entrusted to Michelotto, they
collected all the money they could to levy an army
of 2000 soldiers with. Charles Taneo at their
head, with the title of Captain of the Sacred College.
It was then hoped that peace was re-established,
when it was heard that Prospero Colonna was coming
with 3000 men from the side of Naples, and Fabio Orsino
from the side of Viterbo with 200 horse and more than
1000 infantry. Indeed, they entered Rome at
only one day’s interval one from another, by
so similar an ardour were they inspired.
Thus there were five armies in Rome:
Caesar’s army, holding the Vatican and the Borgo;
the army of the Bishop of Nicastro, who had received
from Alexander the guardianship of the Castle Sant’
Angelo and had shut himself up there, refusing to
yield; the army of the Sacred College, which was stationed
round about the Minerva; the army of Prospero Colonna,
which was encamped at the Capitol; and the army of
Fabio Orsino, in barracks at the Ripetta.
On their side, the Spaniards had advanced
to Terracino, and the French to Nepi. The cardinals
saw that Rome now stood upon a mine which the least
spark might cause to explode: they summoned the
ambassadors of the Emperor of Germany, the Kings of
France and Spain, and the republic of Venice to raise
their voice in the name of their masters. The
ambassadors, impressed with the urgency of the situation,
began by declaring the Sacred College inviolable:
they then ordered the Orsini, the Colonnas, and the
Duke of Valentinois to leave Rome and go each his
own, way.
The Orsini were the first to submit:
the next morning their example was followed by the
Colonnas. No one was left but Caesar, who said
he was willing to go, but desired to make his conditions
beforehand: the Vatican was undermined, he declared,
and if his demands were refused he and those who came
to take him should be blown up together.
It was known that his were never empty
threats they came to terms with him.
[Caesar promised to remain ten miles
away from Rome the whole time the Conclave lasted,
and not to take any action against the town or any
other of the Ecclesiastical States: Fabio Orsino
and. Prospero Colonna had made the same promises.]
[It was agreed that Caesar should
quit Rome with his army, artillery, and baggage; and
to ensure his not being attacked or molested in the
streets, the Sacred College should add to his numbers
400 infantry, who, in case of attack or insult, would
fight for him. The Venetian ambassador answered
for the Orsini, the Spanish ambassador for the Colonnas,
the ambassador of France for Caesar.]
At the day and hour appointed Caesar
sent out his artillery, which consisted of eighteen
pieces of cannon, and 400 infantry of the Sacred College,
on each of whom he bestowed a ducat: behind the
artillery came a hundred chariots escorted by his
advance guard.
The duke was carried out of the gate
of the Vatican: he lay on a bed covered with
a scarlet canopy, supported by twelve halberdiers,
leaning forward on his cushions so that no one might
see his face with its purple lips and bloodshot eyes:
beside him was his naked sword, to show that, feeble
as he was, he could use it at need: his finest
charger, caparisoned in black velvet embroidered with
his arms, walked beside the bed, led by a page, so
that Caesar could mount in case of surprise or attack:
before him and behind, both right and left, marched
his army, their arms in rest, but without beating
of drums or blowing of trumpets: this gave a
sombre, funereal air to the whole procession, which
at the gate of the city met Prospero Colonna awaiting
it with a considerable band of men.
Caesar thought at first that, breaking
his word as he had so often done himself, Prospero
Colonna was going to attack him. He ordered a
halt, and prepared to mount his horse; but Prospera
Colonna, seeing the state he was in, advanced
to his bedside alone: he came, against expectation,
to offer him an escort, fearing an ambuscade on the
part of Fabio Orsino, who had loudly sworn that he
would lose his honour or avenge the death of Paolo
Orsina, his father. Caesar thanked Colanna, and
replied that from the moment that Orsini stood alone
he ceased to fear him. Then Colonna saluted
the duke, and rejoined his men, directing them towards
Albano, while Caesar took the road to Città Castellana,
which had remained loyal.
When there, Caesar found himself not
only master of his own fate but of others as well:
of the twenty-two votes he owned in the Sacred College
twelve had remained faithful, and as the Conclave was
composed in all of thirty-seven cardinals, he with
his twelve votes could make the majority incline to
whichever side he chose. Accordingly he was courted
both by the Spanish and the French party, each desiring
the election of a pope of their own nation.
Caesar listened, promising nothing and refusing nothing:
he gave his twelve votes to Francesco Piccolomini,
Cardinal of Siena, one of his father’s creatures
who had remained his friend, and the latter was elected
on the 8th of October and took the name of Pius iii.
Caesar’s hopes did not deceive
him: Pius iii was hardly elected before he
sent him a safe-conduct to Rome: the duke came
back with 250 men-at-arms, 250 light horse, and 800
infantry, and lodged in his palace, the soldiers camping
round about.
Meanwhile the Orsini, pursuing their
projects of vengeance against Caesar, had been levying
many troops at Perugia and the neighbourhood to bring
against him to Rome, and as they fancied that France,
in whose service they were engaged, was humouring
the duke for the sake of the twelve votes which were
wanted to secure the election of Cardinal Amboise
at the next Conclave, they went over to the service
of Spain.
Meanwhile Caesar was signing a new
treaty with Louis XII, by which he engaged to support
him with all his forces, and even with his person,
so soon as he could ride, in maintaining his conquest
of Naples: Louis, on his side, guaranteed that
he should retain possession of the States he still
held, and promised his help in recovering those he
had lost.
The day when this treaty was made
known, Gonzalvo di Cordovo proclaimed to the
sound of a trumpet in all the streets of Rome that
every Spanish subject serving in a foreign army was
at once to break his engagement on pain of being found
guilty of high treason.
This measure robbed Caesar of ten
or twelve of his best officers and of nearly 300 men.
Then the Orsini, seeing his army thus
reduced, entered Rome, supported by the Spanish ambassador,
and summoned Caesar to appear before the pope and
the Sacred College and give an account of his crimes.
Faithful to his engagements, Pius
iii replied that in his quality of sovereign
prince the duke in his temporal administration was
quite independent and was answerable for his actions
to God alone.
But as the pope felt he could not
much longer support Caesar against his enemies for
all his goodwill, he advised him to try to join the
French army, which was still advancing on Naples,
in the midst of which he would alone find safety.
Caesar resolved to retire to Bracciano, where Gian
Giordano Orsino, who had once gone with him to France,
and who was the only member of the family who had
not declared against him, offered him an asylum in
the name of Cardinal dumbest: so one morning he
ordered his troops to march for this town, and, taking
his place in their midst, he left Rome.
But though Caesar had kept his intentions
quiet, the Orsini had been forewarned, and, taking
out all the troops they had by the gate of San
Pancracio, they had made along detour and blocked
Caesar’s way; so, when the latter arrived at
Storta, he found the Orsini’s army drawn up
awaiting him in numbers exceeding his own by at least
one-half.
Caesar saw that to come to blows in
his then feeble state was to rush on certain destruction;
so he ordered his troops to retire, and, being a first-rate
strategist, echelonned his retreat so skilfully that
his enemies, though they followed, dared not attack
him, and he re-entered the pontifical town without
the loss of a single man.
This time Caesar went straight to
the Vatican, to put himself more directly under the
pope’s protection; he distributed his soldiers
about the palace, so as to guard all its exits.
Now the Orsini, resolved to make an end of Caesar,
had determined to attack him wheresoever he might
be, with no regard to the sanctity of the place:
this they attempted, but without success, as Caesar’s
men kept a good guard on every side, and offered a
strong defence.
Then the Orsini, not being able to
force the guard of the Castle Sant’ Angelo,
hoped to succeed better with the duke by leaving Rome
and then returning by the Torione gate; but Caesar
anticipated this move, and they found the gate guarded
and barricaded. None the less, they pursued their
design, seeking by open violence the vengeance that
they had hoped to obtain by craft; and, having surprised
the approaches to the gate, set fire to it: a
passage gained, they made their way into the gardens
of the castle, where they found Caesar awaiting them
at the head of his cavalry.
Face to face with danger, the duke
had found his old strength: and he was the first
to rush upon his enemies, loudly challenging Orsino
in the hope of killing him should they meet; but either
Orsino did not hear him or dared not fight; and after
an exciting contest, Caesar, who was numerically two-thirds
weaker than his enemy, saw his cavalry cut to pieces;
and after performing miracles of personal strength
and courage, was obliged to return to the Vatican.
There he found the pope in mortal agony: the
Orsini, tired of contending against the old man’s
word of honour pledged to the duke, had by the interposition
of Pandolfo Petrucci, gained the ear of the pope’s
surgeon, who placed a poisoned plaster upon a wound
in his leg.
The pope then was actually dying when
Caesar, covered with dust and blood, entered his room,
pursued by his enemies, who knew no check till they
reached the palace walls, behind which the remnant
of his army still held their ground.
Pius iii, who knew he was about
to die, sat up in his bed, gave Caesar the key of
the corridor which led to the Castle of Sant’
Angelo, and an order addressed to the governor to
admit him and his family, to defend him to the last
extremity, and to let him go wherever he thought fit;
and then fell fainting on his bed.
Caesar took his two daughters by the
hand, and, followed by the little dukes of Sermaneta
and Nepi, took refuge in the last asylum open to him.
The same night the pope died:
he had reigned only twenty-six days.
After his death, Caesar, who had cast
himself fully dressed upon his bed, heard his door
open at two o’clock in the morning: not
knowing what anyone might want of him at such an hour,
he raised himself on one elbow and felt for the handle
of his sword with his other hand; but at the first
glance he recognised in his nocturnal visitor Giuliano
della Rovere.
Utterly exhausted by the poison, abandoned
by his troops, fallen as he was from the height of
his power, Caesar, who could now do nothing for himself,
could yet make a pope: Giuliano delta Rovere had
come to buy the votes of his twelve cardinals.
Caesar imposed his conditions, which were accepted.
If elected, Giuliano delta Ravere
was to help Caesar to recover his territories in Romagna;
Caesar was to remain general of the Church; and Francesco
Maria delta Rovere, prefect of Rome, was to marry one
of Caesar’s daughters.
On these conditions Caesar sold his
twelve cardinals to Giuliano.
The next day, at Giuliano’s
request, the Sacred College ordered the Orsini to
leave Rome for the whole time occupied by the Conclave.
On the 31st of October 1503, at the
first scrutiny, Giuliano delta Rovere was elected
pope, and took the name of Julius ii.
He was scarcely installed in the Vatican
when he made it his first care to summon Caesar and
give him his former rooms there; then, since the duke
was fully restored to health, he began to busy himself
with the re-establishment of his affairs, which had
suffered sadly of late.
The defeat of his army and his own
escape to Sant’ Angelo, where he was supposed
to be a prisoner, had brought about great changes in
Romagna. Sesena was once more in the power
of the Church, as formerly it had been; Gian Sforza
had again entered Pesaro; Ordelafi had seized Forlì;
Malatesta was laying claim to Rimini; the inhabitants
of Imola had assassinated their governor, and the
town was divided between two opinions, one that it
should be put into the hands of the Riani, the other,
into the hands of the Church; Faenza had remained loyal
longer than any other place; but at last, losing hope
of seeing Caesar recover his power, it had summoned
Francesco, a natural son of Galeotto Manfredi,
the last surviving heir of this unhappy family, all
whose legitimate descendants had been massacred by
Borgia.
It is true that the fortresses of
these different places had taken no part in these
revolutions, and had remained immutably faithful to
the Duke of Valentinois.
So it was not precisely the defection
of these towns, which, thanks to their fortresses,
might be reconquered, that was the cause of uneasiness
to Caesar and Julius ii, it was the difficult
situation that Venice had thrust upon them.
Venice, in the spring of the same year, had signed
a treaty of peace with the Turks: thus set free
from her eternal enemy, she had just led her forces
to the Romagna, which she had always coveted:
these troops had been led towards Ravenna, the farthermost
limit of the Papal estates, and put under the command
of Giacopo Venieri, who had failed to capture Cesena,
and had only failed through the courage of its inhabitants;
but this check had been amply compensated by the surrender
of the fortresses of Val di Lamane and Faenza,
by the capture of Farlimpopoli, and the surrender
of Rimini, which Pandolfo Malatesta, its lard, exchanged
for the seigniory of Cittadella, in the State
of Padua, and far the rank of gentleman of Venice.
Then Caesar made a proposition to
Julius ii: this was to make a momentary
cession to the Church of his own estates in Romagna,
so that the respect felt by the Venetians for the
Church might save these towns from their aggressors;
but, says Guicciardini, Julius ii, whose ambition,
so natural in sovereign rulers, had not yet extinguished
the remains of rectitude, refused to accept the places,
afraid of exposing himself to the temptation of keeping
them later on, against his promises.
But as the case was urgent, he proposed
to Caesar that he should leave Rome, embark at Ostia,
and cross over to Spezia, where Michelotto was
to meet him at the head of 100 men-at-arms and 100
light horse, the only remnant of his magnificent army,
thence by land to Ferrara, and from Ferrara to Imala,
where, once arrived, he could utter his war-cry so
loud that it would be heard through the length and
breadth of Romagna.
This advice being after Caesar’s
own heart, he accepted it at once.
The resolution submitted to the Sacred
College was approved, and Caesar left for Ostia, accompanied
by Bartolommeo della Rovere, nephew of His
Holiness.
Caesar at last felt he was free, and
fancied himself already on his good charger, a second
time carrying war into all the places where he had
formerly fought. When he reached Ostia, he was
met by the cardinals of Sorrento and Volterra, who
came in the name of Julius ii to ask him to give
up the very same citadels which he had refused three
days before: the fact was that the pope had learned
in the interim that the Venetians had made fresh aggressions,
and recognised that the method proposed by Caesar
was the only one that would check them. But this
time it was Caesar’s turn, to refuse, for he
was weary of these tergiversations, and feared
a trap; so he said that the surrender asked for would
be useless, since by God’s help he should be
in Romagna before eight days were past. So the
cardinals of Sorrento and Volterra returned to Rome
with a refusal.
The next morning, just as Caesar was
setting foot on his vessel, he was arrested in the
name of Julius ii.
He thought at first that this was
the end; he was used to this mode of action, and knew
how short was the space between a prison and a tomb;
the matter was all the easier in his case, because
the pope, if he chose, would have plenty of pretext
for making a case against him. But the heart
of Julius was of another kind from his; swift to anger,
but open to clemency; so, when the duke came back
to Rome guarded, the momentary irritation his refusal
had caused was already calmed, and the pope received
him in his usual fashion at his palace, and with his
ordinary courtesy, although from the beginning it
was easy for the duke to see that he was being watched.
In return for this kind reception, Caesar consented
to yield the fortress of Cesena to the pope, as being
a town which had once belonged to the Church, and
now should return; giving the deed, signed by Caesar,
to one of his captains, called Pietro d’Oviedo,
he ordered him to take possession of the fortress in
the name of the Holy See. Pietro obeyed, and
starting at once for Cesena, presented himself armed
with his warrant before Don Diego Chinon; a noble condottiere
of Spain, who was holding the fortress in Caesar’s
name. But when he had read over the paper that
Pietro d’Oviedo brought, Don Diego replied that
as he knew his lord and master was a prisoner, it would
be disgraceful in him to obey an order that had probably
been wrested from him by violence, and that the bearer
deserved to die for undertaking such a cowardly office.
He therefore bade his soldiers seize d’Oviedo
and fling him down from the top of the walls:
this sentence was promptly executed.
This mark of fidelity might have proved
fatal to Caesar: when the pope heard how his
messenger had been treated, he flew into such a rage
that the prisoner thought a second time that his hour
was come; and in order to receive his liberty, he
made the first of those new propositions to Julius
ii, which were drawn up in the form of a treaty
and sanctioned by a bull. By these arrangements,
the Duke of Valentinois was bound to hand over to
His Holiness, within the space of forty days, the fortresses
of Cesena and Bertinoro, and authorise the surrender
of Forlì. This arrangement was guaranteed
by two bankers in Rome who were to be responsible
for 15,000 ducats, the sum total of the expenses
which the governor pretended he had incurred in the
place on the duke’s account. The pope on
his part engaged to send Caesar to Ostia under the
sole guard of the Cardinal of Santa Croce and two
officers, who were to give him his full liberty on
the very day when his engagements were fulfilled:
should this not happen, Caesar was to be taken to
Rome and imprisoned in the Castle of Sant’ Angelo.
In fulfilment of this treaty, Caesar went down the
Tiber as far as Ostia, accompanied by the pope’s
treasurer and many of his servants. The Cardinal
of Santa Croce followed, and the next day joined him
there.
But as Caesar feared that Julius ii
might keep him a prisoner, in spite of his pledged
word, after he had yielded up the fortresses, he asked,
through the mediation of Cardinals Borgia and Remolina,
who, not feeling safe at Rome, had retired to Naples,
for a safe-conduct to Gonzalva of Cordova, and for
two ships to take him there; with the return of the
courier the safe-conduct arrived, announcing that the
ships would shortly follow.
In the midst of all this, the Cardinal
of Santa Croce, learning that by the duke’s
orders the governors of Cesena and Bertinoro had surrendered
their fortresses to the captains of His Holiness, relaxed
his rigour, and knowing that his prisoner would some
day or other be free, began to let him go out without
a guard. Then Caesar, feeling some fear lest
when he started with Gonzalvo’s ships the same
thing might happen as on the occasion of his embarking
on the pope’s vessel that is, that
he might be arrested a second time concealed
himself in a house outside the town; and when night
came on, mounting a wretched horse that belonged to
a peasant, rode as far as Nettuno, and there
hired a little boat, in which he embarked for Monte
Dragone, and thence gained Naples. Gonzalvo
received him with such joy that Caesar was deceived
as to his intention, and this time believed that he
was really saved. His confidence was redoubled
when, opening his designs to Gonzalvo, and telling
him that he counted upon gaining Pisa and thence going
on into Romagna, Ganzalva allowed him to recruit as
many soldiers at Naples as he pleased, promising him
two ships to embark with. Caesar, deceived by
these appearances, stopped nearly six weeks at Naples,
every day seeing the Spanish governor and discussing
his plans. But Gonzalvo was only waiting to
gain time to tell the King of Spain that his enemy
was in his hands; and Caesar actually went to the
castle to bid Gonzalvo good-bye, thinking he was just
about to start after he had embarked his men on the
two ships. The Spanish governor received him
with his accustomed courtesy, wished him every kind
of prosperity, and embraced him as he left; but at
the door of the castle Caesar found one of Gonzalvo’s
captains, Nuno Campeja by name, who arrested him as
a prisoner of Ferdinand the Catholic. Caesar
at these words heaved a deep sigh, cursing the ill
luck that had made him trust the word of an enemy
when he had so often broken his own.
He was at once taken to the castle,
where the prison gate closed behind him, and he felt
no hope that anyone would come to his aid; for the
only being who was devoted to him in this world was
Michelotto, and he had heard that Michelotto had been
arrested near Pisa by order of Julius ii.
While Caesar was being taken to prison an officer came
to him to deprive him of the safe-conduct given him
by Gonzalvo.
The day after his arrest, which occurred
on the 27th of May, 1504, Caesar was taken on board
a ship, which at once weighed anchor and set sail for
Spain: during the whole voyage he had but one
page to serve him, and as soon as he disembarked he
was taken to the castle of Medina del Campo.
Ten years later, Gonzalvo, who at
that time was himself proscribed, owned to Loxa on
his dying bed that now, when he was to appear in the
presence of God, two things weighed cruelly on his
conscience: one was his treason to Ferdinand,
the other his breach of faith towards Caesar.
CHAPTER XVI
Caesar was in prison for two years,
always hoping that Louis XII would reclaim him as
peer of the kingdom of France; but Louis, much disturbed
by the loss of the battle of Garigliano, which robbed
him of the kingdom of Naples, had enough to do with
his own affairs without busying himself with his cousin’s.
So the prisoner was beginning to despair, when one
day as he broke his bread at breakfast he found a file
and a little bottle containing a narcotic, with a
letter from Michelotto, saying that he was out of
prison and had left Italy for Spain, and now lay in
hiding with the Count of Benevento in the neighbouring
village: he added that from the next day forward
he and the count would wait every night on the road
between the fortress and the village with three excellent
horses; it was now Caesar’s part to do the best
he could with his bottle and file. When the whole
world had abandoned the Duke of Romagna he had been
remembered by a sbirro.
The prison where he had been shut
up for two years was so hateful to Caesar that he
lost not a single moment: the same day he attacked
one of the bars of a window that looked out upon an
inner court, and soon contrived so to manipulate it
that it would need only a final push to come out.
But not only was the window nearly seventy feet from
the ground, but one could only get out of the court
by using an exit reserved for the governor, of which
he alone had the key; also this key never left him;
by day it hung at his waist, by night it was under
his pillow: this then was the chief difficulty.
But prisoner though he was, Caesar
had always been treated with the respect due to his
name and rank: every day at the dinner-hour he
was conducted from the room that served as his prison
to the governor, who did the honours of the table
in a grand and courteous fashion. The fact was
that Dan Manuel had served with honour under King Ferdinand,
and therefore, while he guarded Caesar rigorously,
according to orders, he had a great respect for so
brave a general, and took pleasure in listening to
the accounts of his battles. So he had often
insisted that Caesar should not only dine but also
breakfast with him; happily the prisoner, yielding
perhaps to some presentiment, had till now refused
this favour. This was of great advantage to him,
since, thanks to his solitude, he had been able to
receive the instruments of escape sent by Michelotto.
The same day he received them, Caesar, on going back
to his room, made a false step and sprained his foot;
at the dinner-hour he tried to go down, but he pretended
to be suffering so cruelly that he gave it up.
The governor came to see him in his room, and found
him stretched upon the bed.
The day after, he was no better; the
governor had his dinner sent in, and came to see him,
as on the night before; he found his prisoner so dejected
and gloomy in his solitude that he offered to come
and sup with him: Caesar gratefully accepted.
This time it was the prisoner who
did the honours: Caesar was charmingly courteous;
the governor thought he would profit by this lack of
restraint to put to him certain questions as to the
manner of his arrest, and asked him as an Old Castilian,
for whom honour is still of some account, what the
truth really was as to Gonzalvo’s and Ferdinand’s
breach of faith, with him. Caesar appeared extremely
inclined to give him his entire confidence, but showed
by a sign that the attendants were in the way.
This precaution appeared quite natural, and the governor
took no offense, but hastened to send them all away,
so as to be sooner alone with his companion.
When the door was shut, Caesar filled his glass and
the governor’s, proposing the king’s health:
the governor honoured the toast: Caesar at once
began his tale; but he had scarcely uttered a third
part of it when, interesting as it was, the eyes of
his host shut as though by magic, and he slid under
the table in a profound sleep.
After half a hour had passed, the
servants, hearing no noise, entered and found the
two, one on the table, the other under it: this
event was not so extraordinary that they paid any
great attention to it: all they did was to carry
Don Manuel to his room and lift Caesar on the bed;
then they put away the remnant of the meal for the
next day’s supper, shut the door very carefully,
and left their prisoner alone.
Caesar stayed for a minute motionless
and apparently plunged in the deepest sleep; but when
he had heard the steps retreating, he quietly raised
his head, opened his eyes, slipped off the bed, walked
to the door, slowly indeed, but not to all appearance
feeling the accident of the night before, and applied
his ear for some minutes to the keyhole; then lifting
his head with an expression of indescribable pride,
he wiped his brow with his hand, and for the first
time since his guards went out, breathed freely with
full-drawn breaths.
There was no time to lose: his
first care was to shut the door as securely on the
inside as it was already shut on the outside, to blow
out the lamp, to open the window, and to finish sawing
through the bar. When this was done, he undid
the bandages on his leg, took down the window and
bed curtains, tore them into strips, joined the sheets,
table napkins and cloth, and with all these things
tied together end to end, formed a rope fifty or sixty
feet long, with knots every here and there. This
rope he fixed securely to the bar next to the one
he had just cut through; then he climbed up to the
window and began what was really the hardest part of
his perilous enterprise, clinging with hands and feet
to this fragile support. Luckily he was both
strong and skilful, and he went down the whole length
of the rope without accident; but when he reached the
end and was hanging on the last knot, he sought in
vain to touch the ground with his feet; his rope was
too short.
The situation was a terrible one:
the darkness of the night prevented the fugitive from
seeing how far off he was from the ground, and his
fatigue prevented him from even attempting to climb
up again. Caesar put up a brief prayer, whether
to Gad or Satan he alone could say; then letting go
the rope, he dropped from a height of twelve or fifteen
feet.
The danger was too great for the fugitive
to trouble about a few trifling contusions: he
at once rose, and guiding himself by the direction
of his window, he went straight to the little door
of exit; he then put his hand into the pocket of his
doublet, and a cold sweat damped his brow; either
he had forgotten and left it in his room or had lost
it in his fall; anyhow, he had not the key.
But summoning his recollections, he
quite gave up the first idea for the second, which
was the only likely one: again he crossed the
court, looking for the place where the key might have
fallen, by the aid of the wall round a tank on which
he had laid his hand when he got up; but the object
of search was so small and the night so dark that there
was little chance of getting any result; still Caesar
sought for it, for in this key was his last hope:
suddenly a door was opened, and a night watch appeared,
preceded by two torches. Caesar far the moment
thought he was lost, but remembering the tank behind
him, he dropped into it, and with nothing but his
head above water anxiously watched the movements of
the soldiers, as they advanced beside him, passed
only a few feet away, crossed the court, and then
disappeared by an opposite door. But short as
their luminous apparition had been, it had lighted
up the ground, and Caesar by the glare of the torches
had caught the glitter of the long-sought key, and
as soon as the door was shut behind the men, was again
master of his liberty.
Half-way between the castle and the
village two cavaliers and a led horse were waiting
for him: the two men were Michelotto and the Count
of Benevento. Caesar sprang upon the riderless
horse, pressed with fervour the hand of the count
and the sbirro; then all three galloped to the
frontier of Navarre, where they arrived three days
later, and were honourably received by the king, Jean
d’Albret, the brother of Caesar’s wife.
From Navarre he thought to pass into
France, and from France to make an attempt upon Italy,
with the aid of Louis XII; but during Caesar’s
detention in the castle of Medina del Campo, Louis
had made peace with the King of Spain; and when he
heard of Caesar’s flight; instead of helping
him, as there was some reason to expect he would, since
he was a relative by marriage, he took away the duchy
of Valentinois and also his pension. Still,
Caesar had nearly 200,000 ducats in the charge
of bankers at Genoa; he wrote asking for this sum,
with which he hoped to levy troops in Spain and in
Navarre, and make an attempt upon Pisa: 500 men,
200,000 ducats, his name and his word were more
than enough to save him from despair.
The bankers denied the deposit.
Caesar was at the mercy of his brother-in-law.
One of the vassals of the King of
Navarre, named Prince Alarino, had just then revolted:
Caesar then took command of the army which Jean d’Albret
was sending out against him, followed by Michelotto,
who was as faithful in adversity as ever before.
Thanks to Caesar’s courage and skilful tactics,
Prince Alarino was beaten in a first encounter; but
the day after his defeat he rallied his army, and
offered battle about three o’clock in the afternoon.
Caesar accepted it.
For nearly four hours they fought
obstinately on both sides; but at length, as the day
was going down, Caesar proposed to decide the issue
by making a charge himself, at the head of a hundred
men-at-arms, upon a body of cavalry which made his
adversary’s chief force. To his great astonishment,
this cavalry at the first shock gave way and took flight
in the direction of a little wood, where they seemed
to be seeking refuge. Caesar followed close on
their heels up to the edge of the forest; then suddenly
the pursued turned right about face, three or four
hundred archers came out of the wood to help them,
and Caesar’s men, seeing that they had fallen
into an ambush, took to their heels like cowards, and
abandoned their leader.
Left alone, Caesar would not budge
one step; possibly he had had enough of life, and
his heroism was rather the result of satiety than courage:
however that may be, he defended himself like a lion;
but, riddled with arrows and bolts, his horse at last
fell, with Caesar’s leg under him. His
adversaries rushed upon him, and one of them thrusting
a sharp and slender iron pike through a weak place
in his armour, pierced his breast; Caesar cursed God
and died.
But the rest of the enemy’s
army was defeated, thanks to the courage of Michelotto,
who fought like a valiant condottiere, but learned,
on returning to the camp in the evening, from those
who had fled; that they had abandoned Caesar and that
he had never reappeared. Then only too certain,
from his master’s well-known courage, that disaster
had occurred, he desired to give one last proof of
his devotion by not leaving his body to the wolves
and birds of prey. Torches were lighted, for
it was dark, and with ten or twelve of those who had
gone with Caesar as far as the little wood, he went
to seek his master. On reaching the spot they
pointed out, he beheld five men stretched side by side;
four of them were dressed, but the fifth had been
stripped of his clothing and lay completely naked.
Michelotto dismounted, lifted the head upon his knees,
and by the light of the torches recognised Caesar.
Thus fell, on the 10th of March, 1507,
on an unknown field, near an obscure village called
Viane, in a wretched skirmish with the vassal of a
petty king, the man whom Macchiavelli presents to all
princes as the model of ability, diplomacy, and courage.
As to Lucrezia, the fair Duchess of
Ferrara, she died full of years, and honours, adored
as a queen by her subjects, and sung as a goddess by
Ariosto and by Bembo.
EPILOGUE
There was once in Paris, says Boccaccio,
a brave and good merchant named Jean de Civigny, who
did a great trade in drapery, and was connected in
business with a neighbour and fellow-merchant, a very
rich man called Abraham, who, though a Jew, enjoyed
a good reputation. Jean de Civigny, appreciating
the qualities of the worthy Israelite; feared lest,
good man as he was, his false religion would bring
his soul straight to eternal perdition; so he began
to urge him gently as a friend to renounce his errors
and open his eyes to the Christian faith, which he
could see for himself was prospering and spreading
day by day, being the only true and good religion;
whereas his own creed, it was very plain, was so quickly
diminishing that it would soon disappear from the face
of the earth. The Jew replied that except in
his own religion there was no salvation, that he was
born in it, proposed to live and die in it, and that
he knew nothing in the world that could change his
opinion. Still, in his proselytising fervour
Jean would not think himself beaten, and never a day
passed but he demonstrated with those fair words the
merchant uses to seduce a customer, the superiority
of the Christian religion above the Jewish; and although
Abraham was a great master of Mosaic law, he began
to enjoy his friend’s preaching, either because
of the friendship he felt for him or because the Holy
Ghost descended upon the tongue of the new apostle;
still obstinate in his own belief, he would not change.
The more he persisted in his error, the more excited
was Jean about converting him, so that at last, by
God’s help, being somewhat shaken by his friend’s
urgency, Abraham one day said
“Listen, Jean: since you
have it so much at heart that I should be converted,
behold me disposed to satisfy you; but before I go
to Rome to see him whom you call God’s vicar
on earth, I must study his manner of life and his
morals, as also those of his brethren the cardinals;
and if, as I doubt not, they are in harmony with what
you preach, I will admit that, as you have taken such
pains to show me, your faith is better than mine,
and I will do as you desire; but if it should prove
otherwise, I shall remain a Jew, as I was before;
for it is not worth while, at my age, to change my
belief for a worse one.”
Jean was very sad when he heard these
words; and he said mournfully to himself, “Now
I have lost my time and pains, which I thought I had
spent so well when I was hoping to convert this unhappy
Abraham; for if he unfortunately goes, as he says
he will, to the court of Rome, and there sees the
shameful life led by the servants of the Church, instead
of becoming a Christian the Jew will be more of a
Jew than ever.” Then turning to Abraham,
he said, “Ah, friend, why do you wish to incur
such fatigue and expense by going to Rome, besides
the fact that travelling by sea or by land must be
very dangerous for so rich a man as you are?
Do you suppose there is no one here to baptize you?
If you have any doubts concerning the faith I have
expounded, where better than here will you find theologians
capable of contending with them and allaying them?
So, you see, this voyage seems to me quite unnecessary:
just imagine that the priests there are such as you
see here, and all the better in that they are nearer
to the supreme pastor. If you are guided by my
advice, you will postpone this toil till you have
committed some grave sin and need absolution; then
you and I will go together.”
But the Jew replied
“I believe, dear Jean, that
everything is as you tell me; but you know how obstinate
I am. I will go to Rome, or I will never be a
Christian.”
Then Jean, seeing his great wish,
resolved that it was no use trying to thwart him,
and wished him good luck; but in his heart he gave
up all hope; for it was certain that his friend would
come back from his pilgrimage more of a Jew than ever,
if the court of Rome was still as he had seen it.
But Abraham mounted his horse, and
at his best speed took the road to Rome, where on
his arrival he was wonderfully well received by his
coreligionists; and after staying there a good long
time, he began to study the behaviour of the pope,
the cardinals and other prelates, and of the whole
court. But much to his surprise he found out,
partly by what passed under his eyes and partly by
what he was told, that all from the pope downward
to the lowest sacristan of St. Peter’s were committing
the sins of luxurious living in a most disgraceful
and unbridled manner, with no remorse and no shame,
so that pretty women and handsome youths could obtain
any favours they pleased. In addition to this
sensuality which they exhibited in public, he saw
that they were gluttons and drunkards, so much so
that they were more the slaves of the belly than are
the greediest of animals. When he looked a little
further, he found them so avaricious and fond of money
that they sold for hard cash both human bodies and
divine offices, and with less conscience than a man
in Paris would sell cloth or any other merchandise.
Seeing this and much more that it would not be proper
to set down here, it seemed to Abraham, himself a
chaste, sober, and upright man, that he had seen enough.
So he resolved to return to Paris, and carried out
the resolution with his usual promptitude. Jean
de Civigny held a great fête in honour of his return,
although he had lost hope of his coming back converted.
But he left time for him to settle down before he
spoke of anything, thinking there would be plenty
of time to hear the bad news he expected. But,
after a few days of rest, Abraham himself came to see
his friend, and Jean ventured to ask what he thought
of the Holy Father, the cardinals, and the other persons
at the pontifical court. At these words the Jew
exclaimed, “God damn them all! I never
once succeeded in finding among them any holiness,
any devotion, any good works; but, on the contrary,
luxurious living, avarice, greed, fraud, envy, pride,
and even worse, if there is worse; all the machine
seemed to be set in motion by an impulse less divine
than diabolical. After what I saw, it is my firm
conviction that your pope, and of course the others
as well, are using all their talents, art, endeavours,
to banish the Christian religion from the face of
the earth, though they ought to be its foundation and
support; and since, in spite of all the care and trouble
they expend to arrive at this end, I see that your
religion is spreading every day and becoming more
brilliant and more pure, it is borne in upon me that
the Holy Spirit Himself protects it as the only true
and the most holy religion; this is why, deaf as you
found me to your counsel and rebellious to your wish,
I am now, ever since I returned from this Sodom, firmly
resolved on becoming a Christian. So let us
go at once to the church, for I am quite ready to
be baptized.”
There is no need to say if Jean de
Civigny, who expected a refusal, was pleased at this
consent. Without delay he went with his godson
to Notre Dame de Paris, where he prayed the first
priest he met to administer baptism to his friend,
and this was speedily done; and the new convert changed
his Jewish name of Abraham into the Christian name
of Jean; and as the neophyte, thanks to his journey
to Rome, had gained a profound belief, his natural
good qualities increased so greatly in the practice
of our holy religion, that after leading an exemplary
life he died in the full odour of sanctity.
This tale of Boccaccio’s gives
so admirable an answer to the charge of irreligion
which some might make against us if they mistook our
intentions, that as we shall not offer any other reply,
we have not hesitated to present it entire as it stands
to the eyes of our readers.
And let us never forget that if the
papacy has had an Innocent viii and an Alexander
vi who are its shame, it has also had a Pius VII
and a Gregory XVI who are its honour and glory.