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the civilization of the renaissance in italy-第8章

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influence of the stars; and offering prayers at one and the same time  to helpers of every sort; he was a student of the ancient authors; as  well as of French tales of chivalry。 And yet the same man; who would  never suffer death to be mentioned in his presence; and caused his  dying favorites to be removed from the castle; that no shadow might  fall on the abode of happiness; deliberately hastened his own death by  closing up a wound; and; refusing to be bled; died at last with dignity  and grace。 

His son…in…law and successor; the fortunate Condottiere Francesco  Sforza (1450… 1466); was perhaps of all the Italians of the fifteenth  century the man most after the heart of his age。 Never was the triumph  of genius and individual power more brilliantly displayed than in him;  and those who would P。et recognize his merit were at least forced to  wonder at him as the spoilt child of fortune。 The Milanese claimed it  openly as an honour to be governed by so distinguished a master; when  he entered the city the thronging populace bore him on horseback into  the cathedral; without giving him the chance to dismount。 Let us listen  t o the balance…sheet of his life; in the estimate of Pope Pius II; a  judge in such matters: 'In the year 1459; when the Duke came to the  congress at Mantua; he was 60 (really 58) years old; on horseback he  looked like a young man; of a lofty and imposing figure; with serious  features; calm and affable in conversation; princely in his whole  bearing; with a combination of bodily and intellectual gifts unrivalled  in our time; unconquered on the field of battle … such was the man who  raised himself from a humble position to the control of an empire。 His  wife was beautiful and virtuous; his children were like the angels of  heaven; he was seldom ill; and all his chief wishes were fulfilled。 And  yet he was not without misfortune。 His wife; out of jealousy; killed  his mistress; his old comrades and friends; Troilo and Brunoro;  abandoned him and went over to King Alfonso; another; Ciarpollone; he  was forced to hang for treason; he had to suffer it that his brother  Alessandro set the French upon him; one of his sons formed intrigues  against him; and was imprisoned; the March of Ancona; which he h ad won  in war; he lost again the same way。 No man enjoys so unclouded a  fortune that he has not somewhere to struggle with adversity。 He is  happy who has but few troubles。' With this negative definition of  happiness the learned Pope dismisses the reader。 Had he been able to  see into the future; or been willing to stop and discuss the  consequences of an uncontrolled despotism; one pervading fact would not  have escaped his notice the absence of all guarantee for the future。  Those children; beautiful as angels; carefully and thoroughly educated  as they were; fell victims; when they grew up; to the corruption of a  measureless egotism。 Galeazzo Maria (1466…1476); solicitous only of  outward effect; too k pride in the beauty of his hands; in the high  salaries he paid; in the financial credit he enjoyed; in his treasure  of two million pieces of gold; in the distinguished people who  surrounded him; and in the army and birds of chase which he maintained。  He was fond of the sound of his own voice; and spoke well; most  fluently; perhaps; when he had the chance of insulting a Venetian  ambassador。 He was subject to caprices; such as having a room painted  with figures in a single night; and; what was worse; to fits of  senseless debauchery and of revolting cruelty to his nearest friends。  To a handful of enthusiasts; he seemed a tyrant too bad to live; they  murdered him; and thereby delivered the State into the power of his  brothers; one of whom; Lodovico il Moro; threw his nephew into prison;  and took the government into his own hands。 From this usurpation  followed the French intervention; and the disasters which befell the  whole of Italy。 

Lodovico Sforza; called 'il Moro;' the Moor; is the most perfect type  of the despot of that age; and; as a kind of natural product; almost  disarms our moral judgement。 Notwithstanding the profound immorality of  the means he employed; he used them with perfect ingenuousness; no o ne  would probably have been more astonished than himself to learn that for  the choice of means as well as of ends a human being is  morally。responsible; he would rather have reckoned it as a singular  virtue that; so far as possible; he had abstained from too free a use  of the punishment of death。 He accepted as no more than his due the  almost fabulous respect of the Italians for his political genius。 In  1486 he boasted that the Pope Alexander was his chaplain; the Emperor  Maximilian his Condottiere; Venice his chamberlain; and the King of  France his courier; who must come and go at his bidding。 With marvelous  presence of mind he weighed; even in his last extremity (1499); a  possible means of escape; and at length he decided; to his honour; to  trust to the goodness of human nature; he rejected the proposal of his  brother; the Cardinal Ascanio; who wished to remain in the Citadel of  Milan; on the ground of a former quarrel: 'Monsignore; take it not ill;  but I trust you not; brother though you be'; and appointed to the  command of the castle; 'that pledge of his return ;' a man to whom he  had always done good; but who nevertheless betrayed him。 At home the  Moor was a good and useful ruler; and to the last he reckoned on his  popularity both in Milan and in Como。 In later years (after 1496) he  had overstrained the resources of his State; and at Cremona had  ordered; out of pure expediency; a respectable citizen; who had spoken  again st the new taxes; to be quietly strangled。 Since that time; in  holding audiences; he kept his visitors away from his person by means  of a bar; so that in conversing with him they were compelled to speak  at the top of their voices。 At his court; the most brilliant in Europe;  since that of Burgundy had ceased to exist; immorality of the worst  kind was prevalent; the daughter was sold by the father; the wife by  the husband; the sister by the brother。 The Prince himself was  incessantly active; and; as son of his own deeds; claimed relationship  with all who; like himself; stood on their personal merits with  scholars; poets; artists; and musicians。 The academy which he founded 6  served rather for his own purposes than for the instruction of  scholars; nor was it the fame of the distinguished men who surrounded  him which he heeded; so much as their society and their services。 It is  certain that Bramante was scantily paid at first; Leonardo; on the  other hand; was up to 1496 suitably remunerated and besides; what kept  him at the court; if not his own free will The world lay open to him;  as perhaps to no other mortal man of that day; and if proof were  wanting of the loftier element in the nature of Lodovico il Moro; it is  found in the long stay of the enigmatic master at his court。 That  afterwards Leonardo entered the service of Cesare Borgia and Francis I  was probably due to the interest he felt in the unusual and striking  character of the two men。 

After the fall of the Moor; his sons were badly brought up among  strangers。 The elder; Massimiliano; had no resemblance to him; the  younger; Francesco; was at all events not without spirit。 Milan; which  in those years changed its rulers so often; and suffered so unspeakably  in t he change; endeavored to secure itself against a reaction。 In the  year 1512 the French; retreating before the arms of Maximilian and the  Spaniards; were induced to make a declaration that the Milanese had  taken no part in their expulsion; and; without being guilty of  rebellion; might yield themselves to a new conqueror。 It is a f act of  some political importance that in such moments of transition the  unhappy city; like Naples at the flight of the Aragonese; was apt to  fall a prey to gangs of (often highly aristocratic) scoundrels。 

The house of Gonzaga at Mantua and that of Montefeltro of Urbino were  among the best ordered and richest in men of ability during the second  half of the fifteenth century。 The Gonzaga were a tolerably harmonious  family; for a long period no murder had been known among them; and  their dead could be shown to the world without fear。7 The Marquis  Francesco Gonzaga and his wife; Isabella of Este; in spite of some few  irregularities; were a united and respectable couple; and brought up  their sons to be successful and remarkable men at a time when their  small but most important State was exposed to incessant danger。 That  Francesco; either as statesman or as soldier; should adopt a policy of  exceptional honesty; was what neither the Emperor; nor Venice; nor the  King of France could have expected or desired; but certainly since the  battle of the Taro (1495); so far as military honour was concerned; he  felt and acted as an Italian patriot; and imparted the same spirit to  his wife。 Every deed of loyalty and heroism; such as the defence of  Faenza against Cesare Borgia; she felt as a vindication of the honour  of Italy。 Our judgement of her does not need to rest on the praises of  the artists and writers who made the fair princess a rich return for  her patronage; her ow
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