Sometimes in a crowd of people one
sees a tall man, who stands head and shoulders higher
than any one else, and who can look far over the heads
of ordinary-sized mortals.
‘What a giant!’ we exclaim,
as we gaze up and see him towering above us.
So among the crowd of painters travelling
along the road to Fame we see above the rest a giant,
a greater and more powerful genius than any that came
before or after him. When we hear the name of
Michelangelo we picture to ourselves a great rugged,
powerful giant, a veritable son of thunder, who, like
the Titans of old, bent every force of Nature to his
will.
This Michelangelo was born at Caprese
among the mountains of Casentino. His father,
Lodovico Buonarroti, was podesta or mayor of Caprese,
and came of a very ancient and honourable family,
which had often distinguished itself in the service
of Florence.
Now the day on which the baby was
born happened to be not only a Sunday, but also a
morning when the stars were especially favourable.
So the wise men declared that some heavenly virtue
was sure to belong to a child born at that particular
time, and without hesitation Lodovico determined to
call his little son Michael Angelo, after the archangel
Michael. Surely that was a name splendid enough
to adorn any great career.
It happened just then that Lodovico’s
year of office ended, and so he returned with his
wife and child to Florence. He had a property
at Settignano, a little village just outside the city,
and there he settled down.
Most of the people of the village
were stone-cutters, and it was to the wife of one
of these labourers that little Michelangelo was sent
to be nursed. So in after years the great master
often said that if his mind was worth anything, he
owed it to the clear pure mountain air in which he
was born, just as he owed his love of carving stone
to the unconscious influence of his nurse, the stone-cutter’s
wife.
As the boy grew up he clearly showed
in what direction his interest lay. At school
he was something of a dunce at his lessons, but let
him but have a pencil and paper and his mind was wide
awake at once. Every spare moment he spent making
sketches on the walls of his father’s house.
But Lodovico would not hear of the
boy becoming an artist. There were many children
to provide for, and the family was not rich. It
would be much more fitting that Michelangelo should
go into the silk and woollen business and learn to
make money.
But it was all in vain to try to make
the boy see the wisdom of all this. Scold as
they might, he cared for nothing but his pencil, and
even after he was severely beaten he would creep back
to his beloved work. How he envied his friend
Francesco who worked in the shop of Master Ghirlandaio!
It was a joy even to sit and listen to the tales of
the studio, and it was a happy day when Francesco brought
some of the master’s drawings to show to his
eager friend.
Little by little Lodovico began to
see that there was nothing for it but to give way
to the boy’s wishes, and so at last, when he
was fourteen years old, Michelangelo was sent to study
as a pupil in the studio of Master Ghirlandaio.
It was just at the time when Ghirlandaio
was painting the frescoes of the chapel in Santa Maria
Novella, and Michelangelo learned many lessons as
he watched the master at work, or even helped with
the less important parts.
But it was like placing an eagle in
a hawk’s nest. The young eagle quickly
learned to soar far higher than the hawk could do,
and ere long began to ‘sweep the skies alone.’
It was not pleasant for the great
Florentine master, whose work all men admired, to
have his drawings corrected by a young lad, and perhaps
Michelangelo was not as humble as he should have been.
In the strength of his great knowledge he would sometimes
say sharp and scornful things, and perhaps he forgot
the respect due from pupil to master.
Be that as it may, he left Ghirlandaio’s
studio when he was sixteen years old, and never had
another master. Thenceforward he worked out his
own ideas in his giant strength, and was the pupil
of none.
The boy Francesco was still his friend,
and together they went to study in the gardens of
San Marco, where Lorenzo the Magnificent had collected
many statues and works of art. Here was a new
field for Michelangelo. Without needing a lesson
he began to copy the statues in terra-cotta,
and so clever was his work that Lorenzo was delighted
with it.
‘See, now, what thou canst do
with marble,’ he said. ’Terra-cotta
is but poor stuff to work in.’
Michelangelo had never handled a chisel
before, but he chipped and cut away the marble so
marvellously that life seemed to spring out of the
stone. There was a marble head of an old faun
in the garden, and this Michelangelo set himself to
copy. Such a wonderful copy did he make that
Lorenzo was amazed. It was even better than the
original, for the boy had introduced ideas of his
own and had made the laughing mouth a little open
to show the teeth and the tongue of the faun.
Lorenzo noticed this, and turned with a smile to the
young artist.
’Thou shouldst have remembered
that old folks never keep all their teeth, but that
some of them are always wanting,’ he said.
Of course Lorenzo meant this as a
joke, but Michelangelo immediately took his hammer
and struck out several of the teeth, and this too
pleased Lorenzo greatly.
There was nothing that the Magnificent
ruler loved so much as genius, so Michelangelo was
received into the palace and made the companion of
Lorenzo’s sons. Not only did good fortune
thus smile upon the young artist, but to his great
astonishment Lodovico too found that benefits were
showered upon him, all for the sake of his famous young
son.
These years of peace, and calm, steady
work had the greatest effect on Michelangelo’s
work, and he learned much from the clever, brilliant
men who thronged Lorenzo’s court. Then,
too, he first listened to that ringing voice which
strove to raise Florence to a sense of her sins, when
Savonarola preached his great sermons in the Duomo.
That teaching sank deep into the heart of Michelangelo,
and years afterwards he left on the walls of the Sistine
Chapel a living echo of those thundering words.
Like all the other artists, he would
often go to study Masaccio’s frescoes in the
little chapel of the Carmine. There was quite
a band of young artists working there, and very soon
they began to look with envious feelings at Michelangelo’s
drawings, and their jealousy grew as his fame increased.
At last, one day, a youth called Torriggiano could
bear it no longer, and began to make scornful remarks,
and worked himself up into such a rage that he aimed
a blow at Michelangelo with his fist, which not only
broke his nose but crushed it in such a way that he
was marked for life. He had had a rough, rugged
look before this, but now the crooked nose gave him
almost a savage expression which he never lost.
Changes followed fast after this time
of quiet. Lorenzo the Magnificent died, and his
son, the weak Piero de Medici, tried to take his place
as ruler of Florence. For a time Michelangelo
continued to live at the court of Piero, but it was
not encouraging to work for a master whose foolish
taste demanded statues to be made out of snow, which,
of course, melted at the first breath of spring.
Michelangelo never forgot all that
he owed to Lorenzo, and he loved the Medici family,
but his sense of justice made him unable to take their
part when trouble arose between them and the Florentine
people. So when the struggle began he left Florence
and went first to Venice and then to Bologna.
From afar he heard how the weak Piero had been driven
out of the city, but more bitter still was his grief
when the news came that the solemn warning voice of
the great preacher Savonarola was silenced for ever.
Then a great longing to see his beloved
city again filled his heart, and he returned to Florence.
Botticelli was a sad, broken-down
old man now, and Ghirlandaio was also growing old,
but Florence was still rich in great artists.
Leonardo da Vinci, Perugino, and Filippino
Lippi were all there, and men talked of the coming
of an even greater genius, the young Raphael of Urbino.
There happened just then to be at
the works of the Cathedral of St. Mary of the Flowers
a huge block of marble which no one knew how to use.
Leonardo da Vinci had been invited to
carve a statue out of it, but he had refused to try,
saying he could do nothing with it. But when
the marble was offered to Michelangelo his eye kindled
and he stood for a long time silent before the great
white block. Through the outer walls of stone
he seemed to see the figure imprisoned in the marble,
and his giant strength and giant mind longed to go
to work to set that figure free.
And when the last covering of marble
was chipped and cut away there stood out a magnificent
figure of the young David. Perhaps he is too
strong and powerful for our idea of the gentle shepherd-lad,
but he is a wonderful figure, and Goliath might well
have trembled to meet such a young giant.
People flocked to see the great statue,
and many were the discussions as to where it should
be placed. Artists were never tired of giving
their opinion, and even of criticising the work.
‘It seems to me,’ said one, ’that
the nose is surely much too large for the face.
Could you not alter that?’
Michelangelo said nothing, but he
mounted the scaffolding and pretended to chip away
at the nose with his chisel. Meanwhile he let
drop some marble chips and dust upon the head of the
critic beneath. Then he came down.
‘Is that better?’ he asked gravely.
‘Admirable!’ answered the artist.
‘You have given it life.’
Michelangelo smiled to himself.
How wise people thought themselves when they often
knew nothing about what they were talking! But
the critic was satisfied, and did not notice the smile.
It would fill a book to tell of all
the work which Michelangelo did; but although he began
so much, a great deal of it was left unfinished.
If he had lived in quieter times, his work would have
been more complete; but one after another his patrons
died, or changed their minds, and set him to work
at something else before he had finished what he was
doing.
The great tomb which Pope Julius had
ordered him to make was never finished, although Michelangelo
drew out all the designs for it, and for forty years
was constantly trying to complete it. The Pope
began to think it was an evil omen to build his own
tomb, so he made up his mind that Michelangelo should
instead set to work to fresco the ceiling of the Sistine
Chapel. In vain did the great sculptor repeat
that he knew but little of the art of painting.
’Didst thou not learn to mix
colours in the studio of Master Ghirlandaio?’
said Julius. ’Thou hast but to remember
the lessons he taught thee. And, besides, I have
heard of a great drawing of a battle-scene which thou
didst make for the Florentines, and have seen many
drawings of thine, one especially: a terrible
head of a furious old man, shrieking in his rage,
such as no other hand than thine could have drawn.
Is there aught that thou canst not do if thou hast
but the will?’
And the Pope was right; for as soon
as Michelangelo really made up his mind to do the
work, all difficulties seemed to vanish.
It was no easy task he had undertaken.
To stand upright and cover vast walls with painting
is difficult enough, but Michelangelo was obliged
to lie flat upon a scaffolding and paint the ceiling
above him. Even to look up at that ceiling for
ten minutes makes the head and neck ache with pain,
and we wonder how such a piece of work could ever have
been done.
No help would the master accept, and
he had no pupils. Alone he worked, and he could
not bear to have any one near him looking on.
In silence and solitude he lay there painting those
marvellous frescoes of the story of the Creation to
the time of Noah. Only Pope Julius himself dared
to disturb the master, and he alone climbed the scaffolding
and watched the work.
‘When wilt thou have finished?’
was his constant cry. ’I long to show thy
work to the world.’
‘Patience, patience,’
said Michelangelo. ‘Nothing is ready yet.’
‘But when wilt thou make an
end?’ asked the impatient old man.
‘When I can,’ answered the painter.
Then the Pope lost his temper, for
he was not accustomed to be answered like this.
‘Dost thou want to be thrown
head first from the scaffold?’ he asked angrily.
’I tell thee that will happen if the work is
not finished at once.’
So, incomplete as they were, Michelangelo
was obliged to uncover the frescoes that all Rome
might see them. It was many years before the
ceiling was finished or the final fresco of the Last
Judgment painted upon the end wall.
Michelangelo lived to be a very old
man, and his life was lonely and solitary to the end.
The one woman he loved, Vittoria Colonna, had
died, and with her death all brightness for him had
faded. Although he worked so much in Rome, it
was always Florence that he loved. There it was
that he began the statues for the Chapel of the Medici,
and there, too, he helped to build the defences of
San Miniato when the Medici family made war upon the
City of Flowers.
So when the great man died in Rome
it seemed but fit that his body should be carried
back to his beloved Florence. There it now rests
in the Church of Santa Croce, while his giant works,
his great and terrible thoughts breathed out into
marble or flashed upon the walls of the Sistine Chapel,
live on for ever, filling the minds of men with a
great awe and wonder as they gaze upon them.