THE CIVILIZATION OF THE RENAISSANCE IN ITALY
Jacob Christoph Burckhard
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Jacob Christoph Burckhard was born as the
son of a pastor in Basel 25.5.1818 in Basel;
and died 8.8.1897. His family was one of
the most distinguished in the city - eleven
ancestors had served its Bürgermeister. Also
the family of Burckhardt's mother, Susanne
Maria (née Schorendorf), had lived in Basel
for generations. Following the wishes of
his father, in 1836 Burckhardt started to
study theology the University of Basel. After
becoming under the influence of the German
theologian and biblical critic, W. M. L.
de Wette, Burckhardt abandoned his theological
studies, and entered University of Berlin
in the early 1840s. He studied history and
the history of art under Leopold von Ranke
(1795-1886), whose methods of historical
study he adopted. Before publishing his first
major work, DIE ZEIT CONSTANTINS DES GROSSEN (1853), Burckhardt revised and edited the
Handbuch der Geschichte der Malerei (1847)
and the Handbuch der Kunstgeschichte by his
teacher Franz Kugler (1848).
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Page Eight THE STATE AS A WORK OF ART MORALITY
AND RELIGION
Translated by S. G. C. Middlemore, 1878
MORALITY AND RELIGION
Morality and Judgement The relation of the
various peoples of the earth to the supreme
interests of life, to God, virtue, and immortality,
may be investigated up to a certain point,
but can never be compared to one another
with absolute strictness and certainty. The
more plainly in these matters our evidence
seems to speak, the more carefully must we
refrain from unqualified assumptions and
rash generalizations. This remark is especially
true with regard to our judgement on questions
of morality. It may be possible to indicate
many contrasts and shades of difference among
different nations, but to strike the balance
of the whole is not given to human insight.
The ultimate truth with respect to the character,
the conscience, and the guilt of a people
remains for ever a secret; if only for the
reason that its defects have another side,
where they reappear as peculiarities or even
as virtues. We must leave those who find
pleasure in passing sweeping censures on
whole nations, to do so as they like. The
people of Europe can maltreat, but happily
not judge one another. A great nation, interwoven
by its civilization, its achievements, and
its fortunes with the whole life of the modern
world, can afford to ignore both its advocates
and its accusers. It lives on with or without
the approval of theorists.
Accordingly, what here follows is no judgement,
but rather a string of marginal notes, suggested
by a study of the Italian Renaissance extending
over some years. The value to be attached
to them is all the more qualified as they
mostly touch on the life of the upper classes,
with respect to which we are far better informed
in Italy than in any other country in Europe
at that period. But though both fame and
infamy sound louder here than elsewhere,
we are not helped thereby in forming an adequate
moral estimate of the people.
What eye can pierce the depths in which the
character and fate of nations are determined?--in
which that which is inborn and that which
has been experienced combine to form a new
whole and a fresh nature?--in which even
those intellectual capacities which at first
sight we should take to be most original
are in fact evolved late and slowly? Who
can tell if the Italian before the thirteenth
century possessed that flexible activity
and certainty in his whole being--that play
of power in shaping whatever subject he dealt
with in word or in form, which was peculiar
to him later? And if no answer can be found
to these questions, how can we possibly judge
of the infinite and infinitely intricate
channels through which character and intellect
are incessantly pouring their influence one
upon the other. A tribunal there is for each
one of us, whose voice is our conscience;
but let us have done with these generalities
about nations. For the people that seems
to be most sick the cure may be at hand;
and one that appears to be healthy may bear
within it the ripening germs of death, which
the hour of danger will bring forth from
their hiding-place.
Part Six MORALITY AND RELIGION Morality and
Immorality At the beginning of the sixteenth
century, when the civilization of the Renaissance
had reached its highest pitch, and at the
same time the political ruin of the nation
seemed inevitable, there were not wanting
serious thinkers who saw a connexion between
this ruin and the prevalent immorality. It
was not one .of those methodistical moralists
who in every age think themselves called
to declaim against the wickedness of the
time, but it was Machiavelli, who, in one
of his best-considered works, said openly:
'We Italians are irreligious and corrupt
above others.' Another man would perhaps
have said, 'We are individually highly developed;
we have outgrown the limits of morality and
religion which were natural to us in our
undeveloped state, and we despise outward
law, because our rulers are illegitimate,
and their judges and officers wicked men.'
Machiavelli adds, 'because the Church and
her representatives set us the worst example.'
Shall we add also, 'because the influence
exercised by antiquity was in this respect
unfavorable'? The statement can only be received
with many qualifications. It may possibly
be true of the humanists, especially as regards
the profligacy of their lives. Of the rest
it may perhaps be said with some approach
to accuracy that, after they became familiar
with antiquity, they substituted for holiness--the
Christian ideal of life--the cult of historical
greatness. We can understand, therefore,
how easily they would be tempted to consider
those faults and vices to be matters of indifference,
in spite of which their heroes were great.
They were probably scarcely conscious of
this themselves, for if we are summoned to
quote any statement of doctrine on this subject,
we are again forced to appeal to humanists
like Paolo Giovio, who excuses the perjury
of Giangaleazzo Visconti, through which he
was enabled to found an empire, by the example
of Julius Caesar. The great Florentine historians
and statesmen never stoop to these slavish
quotations, and what seems antique in their
deeds and their judge- ments is so because
the nature of their political life necessarily
fostered in them a mode of thought which
has some analogy with that of antiquity.
Nevertheless, it cannot be denied that Italy
at the beginning of the sixteenth century
found itself in the midst of a grave moral
crisis, out of which the best men saw hardly
any escape.
Let us begin by saying a few words about
that moral force which was then the strongest
bulwark against evil. The highly gifted man
of that day thought to find it in the sentiment
of honour. This is that enigmatic mixture
of conscience and egotism which often survives
in the modern man after he has lost, whether
by his own fault or not, faith, love, and
hope. This sense of honour is compatible
with much selfishness and great vices, and
may be the victim of astonishing illusions;
yet, nevertheless, all the noble elements
that are left in the wreck of a character
may gather around it, and from this fountain
may draw new strength. It has become, in
a far wider sense than is commonly believed,
a decisive test of conduct in the minds of
the cultivated Europeans of our own day,
and many of those who yet hold faithfully
by religion and morality are unconsciously
guided by this feeling in the gravest decisions
of their lives.
It lies without the limits of our task to
show how the men of antiquity also experienced
this feeling in a peculiar form, and how,
afterwards, in the Middle Ages, a special
sense of honour became the mark of a particular
class. Nor can we here dispute with those
who hold that conscience, rather than honour,
is the motive power. It would indeed be better
and nobler if it were so; but since it must
be granted that even our worthier resolutions
result from 'a conscience more or less dimmed
by selfishness,' it is better to call the
mixture by its right name. It is certainly
not always easy, in treating of the Italian
of this period, to distinguish this sense
of honour from the passion for fame, into
which, indeed, it easily passes. Yet the
two sentiments are essentially different.
There is no lack of witnesses on this subject.
One who speaks plainly may here be quoted
as a representative of the rest. We read
in the recently published 'Aphorisms' of
Guicciardini: 'who esteems honour highly
succeeds in all that he undertakes, since
he fears neither trouble, danger, nor expense;
I have found it so in my own case, and may
say it and write it; vain and dead are the
deeds of men which have not this as their
motive.' It is necessary to add that, from
what is known of the life of the writer,
he can here be only speaking of honour and
not of fame. Rabelais has put the matter
more clearly than perhaps any Italian. We
quote him, indeed, unwillingly in these pages.
What the great, baroque Frenchman gives us
is a picture of what the Renaissance would
be without form and without beauty. But his
description of an ideal state of things in
the Thelemite monastery is decisive as historical
evidence. In speaking of his gentlemen and
ladies of the Order of Free Will, he tells
us as follows:
'En leur reigle n'estoit que ceste clause:
Fay ce que vouldras. Parce que gens liberes,
bien nayz, bien instruictz, conversans en
compaignies honnestes, ont par nature ung
instinct et aguillon qui tousjours les poulse
a faictz tueux, et retire de vice: lequel
ilz nommoyent honneur.'
This is that same faith in the goodness of
human nature which inspired the men of the
second half of the eighteenth century, and
helped to prepare the way for the French
Revolution. Among the Italians, too, each
man appeals to this noble instinct within
him, and though with regard to the people
as a whole--chiefly in consequence of the
national disasters-- judgements of a more
pessimistic sort became prevalent, the importance
of this sense of honour must still be rated
highly. If the boundless development of individuality,
stronger than the will of the individual,
be the work of a historical providence, not
less so is the opposing force which then
manifested itself in Italy. How often, and
against what passionate attacks of selfishness
it won the day, we cannot tell, and therefore
no human judgement can estimate with certainty
the absolute moral value of the nation.
A force which we must constantly take into
account in judging of the morality of the
more highly developed Italian of this period,
is that of the imagination. It gives to his
virtues and vices a peculiar color, and under
its influence his unbridled egotism shows
itself in its most terrible shape.
The force of his imagination explains, for
example, the fact that he was the first gambler
on a large scale in modern times. Pictures
of future wealth and enjoyment rose in such
lifelike colors before his eyes, that he
was ready to hazard everything to reach them.
The Mohammedan nations would doubtless have
anticipated him in this respect, had not
the Koran, from the beginning, set up the
prohibition against gambling as a chief safeguard
of public morals, and directed the imagination
of its followers to the search after buried
treasures. In Italy, the passion for play
reached an intensity which often threatened
or altogether broke up the existence of the
gambler. Florence had already, at the end
of the fourteenth century, its Casanova --a
certain Buonaccorso Pitti, who, in the course
of his incessant journeys as merchant, political
agent, diplomatist and professional gambler,
won and lost sums so enormous that none but
princes like the Dukes of Brabant, Bavaria,
and Savoy, were able to compete with him.
That great lottery-bank, which was called
the Court of Rome, accustomed people to a
need of excitement, which found its satisfaction
in games of hazard during the intervals between
one intrigue and another. We read, for example,
how Franceschetto Cibo, in two games with
the Cardinal Raffaello Riario, lost no less
than 14,000 ducats, and afterwards complained
to the Pope that his opponent has cheated
him. Italy has since that time been the home
of the lottery.
It was to the imagination of the Italians
that the peculiar character of their vengeance
was due. The sense of justice was, indeed,
one and the same throughout Europe, and any
violation of it, so long as no punishment
was inflicted, must have been felt in the
same manner. But other nations, though they
found it no easier to forgive, nevertheless
forgot more easily, while the Italian imagination
kept the picture of the wrong alive with
frightful vividness. The fact that, according
to the popular morality, the avenging of
blood is a duty--a duty often performed in
a way to make us shudder--gives to this passion
a peculiar and still firmer basis. The government
and the tribunals recognize its existence
and justification, and only attempt to keep
it within certain limits. Even among the
peasantry, we read of Thyestean banquets
and mutual assassination on the widest scale.
Let us look at an instance.
In the district of Acquapendente three boys
were watching cattle, and one of them said:
'Let us find out the way how people are hanged.'
While one was sitting on the shoulders of
the other, and the third, after fastening
the rope round the neck of the first, was
tying it to an oak, a wolf came, and the
two who were free ran away and left the other
hanging. Afterwards they found him dead,
and buried him. On the Sunday his father
came to bring him bread, and one of the two
confessed what had happened, and showed him
the grave. The old man then killed him with
a knife, cut him up, brought away the liver,
and entertained the boy's father with it
at home. After dinner, he told him whose
liver it was. Hereupon began a series of
reciprocal murders between the two families,
and within a month thirty-six persons were
killed, women as well as men.
And such 'vendette,' handed down from father
to son, and extending to friends and distant
relations, were not limited to the lower
classes, but reached to the highest. The
chronicles and novels of the period are full
of such instances, especially of vengeance
taken for the violation of women. The classic
land for these feuds was Romagna, where the
'vendetta' was interwoven with intrigues
and party divisions of every conceivable
sort. The popular legends present an awful
picture of the savagery into which this brave
and energetic people had relapsed. We are
told, for instance, of a nobleman at Ravenna
who had got all his enemies together in a
tower, and might have burned them; instead
of which he let them out, embraced them,
and entertained them sumptuously; whereupon
shame drove them mad, and they conspired
against him. Pious and saintly monks exhorted
unceasingly to reconciliation, but they can
scarcely have done more than restrain to
a certain extent the feuds already established;
their influence hardly prevents the growth
of new ones. The novelists sometimes describe
to this effect of religion--how sentiments
of generosity and forgiveness were suddenly
awakened, and then again paralysed by the
force of what had once been done and could
never be un. done. The Pope himself was not
always lucky as a peacemaker. Pope Paul II
desired that the quarrel between Antonio
Caffarello and the family of Alberino should
cease, and ordered Giovanni Alberino and
Antonio Caffarello to come before him bade
them kiss one another, and threatened them
with a fine of 2,000 ducats if they renewed
this strife, and two days after Antonio was
stabbed by the same Giacomo Alberino, son
of Giovanni, who had wounded him once before;
and the Pope was full of anger, and confiscated
the goods of Alberino, and destroyed his
houses, and banished father and son from
Rome. The oaths and ceremonies by which reconciled
enemies attempted to guard themselves against
a relapse, are sometimes utterly horrible.
When the parties of the 'Nove' and the 'Popolari'
met and kissed one another by twos in the
cathedral at Siena on New Year's Eve, 1494,
an oath was read by which all salvation in
time and eternity was denied to the future
violator of the treaty--'an oath more astonishing
and dreadful than had ever yet been heard.'
The last consolations of religion in the
hour of death were to turn to the damnation
of the man who should break it. It is clear,
however, that such a ceremony rather represents
the despairing mood of the mediators than
offers any real guarantee of peace, inasmuch
as the truest reconciliation is just that
one which has least need of it.
This personal need of vengeance felt by the
cultivated and highly placed Italian, resting
on the solid basis of an analogous popular
custom, naturally displays itself under a
thousand different aspects, and receives
the unqualified approval of public opinion,
as reflected in the works of the novelists.
All are at one on the point that, in the
case of those injuries and insults for which
Italian justice offered no redress, and all
the more in the case of those against which
no human law can ever adequately provide,
each man is free to take the law into his
own hands. Only there must be art in the
vengeance, and the satisfaction must be compounded
of the material injury and moral humiliation
of the offender. A mere brutal, clumsy triumph
of force was held by public opinion to be
no satisfaction. The whole man with his sense
of fame and of scorn, not only his fist,
must be victorious.
The Italian of that time shrank, it is true,
from no dissimulation in order to attain
his ends, but was wholly free from hypocrisy
in matters of principle. In these he attempted
to deceive neither himself nor others. Accordingly,
revenge was declared with perfect frankness
to be a necessity of human nature. Cool-headed
people declared that it was then most worthy
of praise when it was disengaged from passion,
and worked simply from motives of expedience,
'in order that other men may learn to leave
us unharmed.' Yet such instances must have
formed only a small minority in comparison
with those in which passion sought an outlet.
This sort of revenge differs clearly from
the avenging of blood, which has already
been spoken of; while the latter keeps more
or less within the limits of retaliation--the
'ius talionis'-- the former necessarily goes
much further, not only requiring the sanction
of the sense of justice, but craving admiration,
and even striving to get the laugh on its
own side.
Here lies the reason why men were willing
to wait so long for their revenge. A 'bella
vendetta' demanded as a rule a combination
of circumstances for which it was necessary
to wait patiently. The gradual ripening of
such opportunities is described by the novelists
with heartfelt delight.
There is no need to discuss the morality
of actions in which plaintiff and judge are
one and the same person. If this Italian
thirst for vengeance is to be palliated at
all, it must be by proving the existence
of a corresponding national virtue, namely
gratitude. The same force of imagination
which retains and mag- nifies wrong once
suffered, might be expected also to keep
alive the memory of kindness received. It
is not possible, however, to prove this with
regard to the nation as a whole, though traces
of it may be seen in the Italian character
of today. The gratitude shown by the inferior
classes for kind treatment, and the good
memory of the upper for politeness in social
life, are instances of this.
This connexion between the imagination and
the moral qualities of the Italian repeats
itself continually. If, nevertheless, we
find more cold calculation in cases where
the Northerner rather follows his impulses,
the reason is that individual development
in Italy was not only more marked and earlier
in point of time, but also far more frequent.
Where this is the case in other countries,
the results are also analogous. We find,
for example, that the early emancipation
of the young from domestic and paternal authority
is common to North America with Italy. Later
on, in the more generous natures, a tie of
freer affection grows up between parents
and children.
It is, in fact, a matter of extreme difficulty
to judge fairly of other nations in the sphere
of character and feeling. In these respects
a people may be developed highly, and yet
in a manner so strange that a foreigner is
utterly unable to understand it. Perhaps
all the nations of the West are in this point
equally favored.
But where the imagination has exercised the
most powerful and despotic influence on morals
is in the illicit intercourse of the two
sexes. It is well known that prostitution
was freely practiced in the Middle Ages,
before the appearance of syphilis. A discussion,
however, on these questions does not belong
to our present work. What seems characteristic
of Italy at this time, is that here marriage
and its rights were more often and more deliberately
trampled underfoot than anywhere else. The
girls of the higher classes were carefully
secluded, and of them we do not speak. All
passion was directed to the married women.
Under these circumstances it is remarkable
that, so far as we know, there was no diminution
in the number of marriages, and that family
life by no means underwent that disorganization
which a similar state of things would have
produced in the North. Men wished to live
as they pleased, but by no means to renounce
the family, even when they were not sure
that it was all their own. Nor did the race
sink, either physically or mentally, on this
account; for that apparent intellectual decline
which showed itself towards the middle of
the sixteenth century may be certainly accounted
for by political and ecclesiastical causes,
even if we are not to assume that the circle
of achievements possible to the Renaissance
had been completed. Notwithstanding their
profligacy, the Italians continued to be,
physically and mentally, one of the healthiest
and best-born populations in Europe, and
have retained this position, with improved
morals, down to our own time.
When we come to look more closely at the
ethics of love at the time of the Renaissance,
we are struck by a remarkable Contrast. The
novelists and comic poets give us to understand
that love consists only in sensual enjoyment,
and that to win this, all means, tragic or
comic, are not only permitted, but are interesting
in proportion to their audacity and unscrupulousness.
But if we turn to the best of the lyric poets
and writers of dialogues, we find in them
a deep and spiritual passion of the noblest
kind, whose last and highest expression is
a revival of the ancient belief in an original
unity of souls in the Divine Being. And both
modes of feeling were then genuine, and could
co-exist in the same individual. It is not
exactly a matter of glory, but it is a fact,
that, in the cultivated man of modern times,
this sentiment can be not merely unconsciously
present in both its highest and lowest stages,
but may also manifest itself openly, and
even artistically. The modern man, like the
man of antiquity, is in this respect too
a microcosm, which the medieval man was not
and could not be.
To begin with the morality of the novelists.
They treat chiefly, as we have said, of married
women, and consequently of adultery.
The opinion mentioned above of the equality
of the two sexes is of great importance in
relation to this subject. The highly developed
and cultivated woman disposes of herself
with a freedom unknown in Northern countries;
and her unfaithfulness does not break up
her life in the same terrible manner, so
long as no outward consequences follow from
it. The husband's claim on her fidelity has
not that firm foundation which it acquires
in the North through the poetry and passion
of courtship and betrothal. After the briefest
acquaintance with her future husband, the
young wife quits the convent or the paternal
roof to enter upon a world in which her character
begins rapidly to develop. The rights of
the husband are for this reason conditional,
and even the man who regards them in the
light of a 'ius quaesitum' thinks only of
the outward conditions of the contract, not
of the affections. The beautiful young wife
of an old man sends back the presents and
letters of a youthful lover, in the firm
resolve to keep her honour
(onesta). 'But she rejoiced in the love of
the youth for his great excellence; and she
perceived that a noble woman may love a man
of merit without loss to her honour.' But
the way is short from such a distinction
to a complete surrender.
The latter seems indeed as good as justified
when there is unfaithfulness on the part
of the husband. The woman, conscious of her
own dignity, feels this not only as a pain,
but also as a humiliation and deceit, and
sets to work, often with the calmest consciousness
of what she is about, to devise the vengeance
which the husband deserves. Her tact must
decide as to the measure of punishment which
is suited to the particular case. The deepest
wound, for example, may prepare the way for
a reconciliation and a peaceful life in the
future, if only it remain secret. The novelists,
who themselves undergo such experiences or
invent them according to the spirit of the
age, are full of admiration when the vengeance
is skillfully adapted to the particular case,
in fact, when it is a work of art. As a matter
of course, the husband never at bottom recognizes
this right of retaliation, and only submits
to it from fear or prudence. Where these
motives are absent, where his wife's unfaithfulness
exposes him or may expose him to the derision
of outsiders, the affair becomes tragical,
and not seldom ends in murder or other vengeance
of a violent sort. It is characteristic of
the real motive from which these deeds arise,
that not only the husbands, but the brothers
and the father of the woman feel themselves
not only justified in taking vengeance, but
bound to take it. Jealousy, therefore, has
nothing to do with the matter, moral reprobation
but little; the real reason is the wish to
spoil the triumph of others. 'Nowadays,'
says Bandello, 'we see a woman poison her
husband to gratify her lusts, thinking that
a widow may do whatever she desires. Another,
fearing the discovery of an illicit amour,
has her husband murdered by her lover. And
though fathers, brothers, and husbands arise
to extirpate the shame with poison, with
the sword, and by every other means, women
still continue to follow their passions,
careless of their honour and their lives.'
Another time, in milder strain, he exclaims:
'Would that we were not daily forced to hear
that one man has murdered his wife because
he suspected her of infidelity; that another
has killed his daughter, on account of a
secret marriage; that a third has caused
his sister to be murdered, because she would
not marry as he wished! It is great cruelty
that we claim the right to do whatever we
list, and will not suffer women to do the
same. If they do anything which does not
please us, there we are at once with cords
and daggers and poison. What folly it is
of men to suppose their own and their house's
honour depend on the appetite of a woman.
The tragedy in which such affairs commonly
ended was so well known that the novelist
looked on the threatened gallant as a dead
man, even while he went about alive and merry.
The physician and lute- player Antonio Bologna
had made a secret marriage with the widowed
Duchess of Amalfi, of the house of Aragon.
Soon afterwards her brother succeeded in
securing both her and her children, and murdered
them in a castle. Antonio, ignorant of their
fate, and still cherishing the hope of seeing
them again, was staying at Milan, closely
watched by hired assassins, and one day in
the society of Ippolita Sforza sang to the
lute the story of his misfortunes. A friend
of the house, Delio, 'told the story up to
this point to Scipione Atellano, and added
that he would make it the subject of a novel,
as he was sure that Antonio would be murdered.'
The manner in which this took place, almost
under the eyes of both Delio and Atellano,
is movingly described by Bandello.
Nevertheless, the novelists habitually show
a sympathy for all the ingenious, comic,
and cunning features which may happen to
attend adultery. They describe with delight
how the lover manages to hide himself in
the house, all the means and devices by which
he communicates with his mistress, the boxes
with cushions and sweetmeats in which he
can be hidden and carried out of danger.
The deceived husband is described sometimes
as a fool to be laughed at, sometimes as
a bloodthirsty avenger of his honour; there
is no third situation except when the woman
is painted as wicked and cruel, and the husband
or lover is the innocent victim. It may be
remarked, however, that narratives of the
latter kind are not strictly speaking novels,
but rather warning examples taken from real
life.
When in the course of the sixteenth century
Italian life fell more and more under Spanish
influence, the violence of the means to which
jealousy had recourse perhaps increased.
But this new phase must be distinguished
from the punishment of infidelity which existed
before, and which was founded in the spirit
of the Italian Renaissance itself. As the
influence of Spain declined, these excesses
of jealousy declined also, till towards the
close of the seventeenth century they had
wholly disappeared, and their place was taken
by that indifference which regarded the 'Cicisbeo'
as an indispensable figure in every household,
and took no offence at one or two contemporary
lovers
('Patiti').
But who can undertake to compare the vast
sum of wickedness which all these facts imply,
with what happened in other countries? Was
the marriage-tie, for instance, really more
sacred in France during the fifteenth century
than in Italy? The 'fabliaux' and farces
would lead us to doubt it, and rather incline
us to think that unfaithfulness was equally
common, though its tragic consequences were
less frequent, because the individual was
less developed and his claims were less consciously
felt than in Italy. More evidence, however,
in favour of the Germanic peoples lies in
the fact of the social freedom enjoyed among
them by girls and women, which impressed
Italian travellers so pleasantly in England
and in the Netherlands. And yet we must not
attach too much importance to this fact.
Unfaithfulness was doubtless very frequent,
and in certain cases led to a sanguinary
vengeance. We have only to remember how the
northern princes of that time dealt with
their wives on the first suspicion of infidelity.
But it was not merely the sensual desire,
not merely the vulgar appetite of the ordinary
man, which trespassed upon forbidden ground
among the Italians of that day, but also
the passion of the best and noblest; and
this, not only because the unmarried girl
did not appear in society, but also because
the man, in proportion to the completeness
of his own nature, felt himself most strongly
attracted by the woman whom marriage had
developed. These are the men who struck the
loftiest notes of lyrical poetry, and who
have attempted in their treatises and dialogues
to give us an idealized image of the devouring
passion--'l'amor divino.' When they complain
of the cruelty of the winged god, they are
not only thinking of the coyness or hard-heartedness
of the beloved one, but also of the unlawfulness
of the passion itself. They seek to raise
themselves above this painful consciousness
by that spiritualization of love which found
a support in the Platonic doctrine of the
soul, and of which Pietro Bembo is the most
famous representative. His thoughts on this
subject are set forth by himself in the third
book of the 'Asolani,' and indirectly by
Castiglione, who puts in his mouth the splendid
speech with which the fourth book of the
'Cortigiano' concludes. Neither of these
writers was a stoic in his conduct, but at
that time it meant something to be at once
a famous and a good man, and this praise
must be accorded to both of them; their contemporaries
took what these men said to be a true expression
of their feeling, and we have not the right
to despise it as affectation. Those who take
the trouble to study the speech in the 'Cortigiano'
will see how poor an idea of it can be given
by an extract. There were then living in
Italy several distinguished women, who owed
their celebrity chiefly to relations of this
kind, such as Giulia Gonzaga, Veronica da
Correggio, and, above all, Vittoria Colonna.
The land of profligates and scoffers respected
these women and this sort of love--and what
more can be said in their favour? We cannot
tell how far vanity had to do with the matter,
how far Vittoria was flattered to hear around
her the sublimated utterances of hopeless
love from the most famous men in Italy. If
the thing was here and there a fashion, it
was still no trifling praise for Vittoria
that she, as least, never went out of fashion,
and in her latest years produced the most
profound impressions. It was long before
other countries had anything similar to show.
In the imagination then, which governed this
people more than any other, lies one general
reason why the course of every passion was
violent, and why the means used for the gratification
of passion were often criminal. There is
a violence which cannot control itself because
it is born of weakness; but in Italy we find
what is the corruption of powerful natures.
Sometimes this corruption assumes a colossal
shape, and crime seems to acquire almost
a personal existence of its own.
The restraints of which men were conscious
were but few. Each individual, even among
the lowest of the people, felt himself inwardly
emancipated from the control of the State
and its police, whose title to respect was
illegitimate, and itself founded on violence;
and no man believed any longer in the justice
of the law. When a murder was committed,
the sympathies of the people, before the
circumstances of the case were known, ranged
themselves instinctively on the side of the
murderer. A proud, manly bearing before and
at the execution excited such admiration
that the narrator often forgets to tell us
for what offence the criminal was put to
death. But when we add to this inward contempt
of law and to the countless grudges and enmities
which called for satisfaction, the impunity
which crime enjoyed during times of political
dis- turbance, we can only wonder that the
State and society were not utterly dissolved.
Crises of this kind occurred at Naples, during
the transition from the Aragonese to the
French and Spanish rule, and at Milan, on
the repeated expulsions and returns of the
Sforzas; at such times those men who have
never in their hearts recognized the bonds
of law and society, come forward and give
free play to their instincts of murder and
rapine. Let us take, by way of example, a
picture drawn from a humbler sphere.
When the Duchy of Milan was suffering from
the disorders which followed the death of
Galeazzo Maria Sforza, about the year 1480,
all safety came to an end in the provincial
cities. This was the case in Parma, where
the Milanese Governor, terrified by threats
of murder, consented to throw open the gaols
and let loose the most abandoned criminals.
Burglary, the demolition of houses, public
assassination and murders, were events of
everyday occurrence. At first the authors
of these deeds prowled about singly, and
masked; soon large gangs of armed men went
to work every night without disguise. Threatening
letters, satires, and scandalous jests circulated
freely; and a sonnet in ridicule of the Government
seems to have roused its indignation far
more than the frightful condition of the
city. In many churches the sacred vessels
with the host were stolen, and this fact
is characteristic of the temper which prompted
these outrages. It is impossible to say what
would happen now in any country of the world,
if the government and police ceased to act,
and yet hindered by their presence the establishment
of a provisional authority; but what then
occurred in Italy wears a character of its
own, through the great share which the personal
hatred and revenge had in it. The impression,
indeed, which Italy at this period makes
on us is, that even in quiet times great
crimes were commoner than in other countries.
We may, it is true, be misled by the fact
that we have far fuller details on such matters
here than elsewhere, and that the same force
of imagination, which gives a special character
to crimes actually committed, causes much
to be invented which never really happened.
The amount of violence was perhaps as great
elsewhere. It is hard to say for certain,
whether in the year 1500 men were any safer,
whether human life was any better protected,
in powerful, wealthy Germany, with its robber
knights, extortionate beggars, and daring
highwaymen. But one thing is certain, that
premeditated crimes, committed professionally
and for hire by third parties, occurred in
Italy with great and appalling frequency.
So far as regards brigandage, Italy, especially
in the more fortunate provinces, such as
Tuscany, was certainly not more, and probably
less, troubled than the countries of the
North. But the figures which do meet us are
characteristic of the country. It would be
hard, for instance, to find elsewhere the
case of a priest, gradually driven by passion
from one excess to another, till at last
he came to head a band of robbers. That age
offers us this example among others. On August
12, 1495, the priest Don Niccolo de' Pelagati
of Figarolo was shut up in an iron cage outside
the tower of San Giuliano at Ferrara. He
had twice celebrated his first mass; the
first time he had the same day committed
murder, but afterwards received absolution
at Rome; he then killed four people and married
two wives, with whom he travelled about.
He afterwards took part in many assassinations,
violated women, carried others away by force,
plundered far and wide, and infested the
territory of Ferrara with a band of followers
in uniform, extorting food and shelter by
every sort of violence. When we think of
what all this implies, the mass of guilt
on the head of this one man is something
tremendous. The clergy and monks had many
privileges and little supervision, and among
them were doubtless plenty of murderers and
other malefactors--but hardly a second Pelagati.
It is another matter, though by no means
creditable, when ruined characters sheltered
themselves in the cowl in order to escape
the arm of the law, like the corsair whom
Masuccio knew in a convent at Naples. What
the real truth was with regard to Pope John
XXIII in this respect, is not known with
certainty.
The age of the famous brigand chief did not
begin till later, in the seventeenth century,
when the political strife of Guelph and Ghibelline,
of Frenchman and Spaniard, no longer agitated
the country. The robber then took the place
of the partisan.
In certain districts of Italy, where civilization
had made little progress, the country people
were disposed to murder any stranger who
fell into their hands. This was especially
the case in the more remote parts of the
Kingdom of Naples, where the barbarism dated
probably from the days of the Roman 'latifundia,'
and when the stranger and the enemy ('hospes'
and 'hostis') were in all good faith held
to be one and the same. These people were
far from being irreligious. A herdsman once
appeared in great trouble at the confessional,
avowing that, while making cheese during
Lent, a few drops of milk had found their
way into his mouth. The confessor, skilled
in the customs of the country, discovered
in the course of his examination that the
penitent and his friends were in the practice
of robbing and murdering travellers, but
that, through the force of habit, this usage
gave rise to no twinges of conscience within
them. We have already mentioned to what a
degree of barbar- ism the peasants elsewhere
could sink in times of political con- fusion.
A worse symptom than brigandage of the morality
of that time was the frequency of paid assassination.
In that respect Naples was admitted to stand
at the head of all the cities of Italy. 'Nothing,'
says Pontano, 'is cheaper here than human
life.' But other districts could also show
a terrible list of these crimes. It is hard,
of course, to classify them according to
the motives by which they were prompted,
since political expediency, personal hatred,
party hostility, fear, and revenge, all play
into one another. It is no small honour to
the Florentines, the most highly developed
people of Italy, that offenses of this kind
occurred more rarely among them than anywhere
else, perhaps because there was a justice
at hand for legitimate grievances which was
recognized by all, or because the higher
culture of the individual gave him different
views as to the right of men to interfere
with the decrees of fate. In Florence, if
anywhere, men were able to feel the incalculable
consequences of a deed of blood, and to understand
how uncertain the author of a so-called profitable
crime is of any true and lasting gain. After
the fall of Florentine liberty, assassination,
especially by hired agents, seems to have
rapidly increased, and continued till the
government of Grand Duke Cosimo I de' Medici
had attained such strength that the police
were at last able to repress it.
Elsewhere in Italy paid crimes were probably
more or less frequent in proportion to the
number of powerful and solvent buyers. Impossible
as it is to make any statistical estimate
of their amount, yet if only a fraction of
the deaths which public report attributed
to violence were really murders, the crime
must have been terribly frequent. The worst
example of all was set by princes and governments,
who without the faintest scruple reckoned
murder as one of the instruments of their
power. And this, without being in the same
category with Cesare Borgia. The Sforzas,
the Aragonese monarchs, and, later on, the
agents of Charles V resorted to it whenever
it suited their purpose. The imagination
of the people at last became so accustomed
to facts of this kind that the death of any
powerful man was seldom or never attributed
to natural causes. There were certainly absurd
notions current with regard to the effect
of various poisons. There may be some truth
in the story of that terrible white powder
used by the Borgias, which did its work at
the end of a definite period, and it is possible
that it was really a 'venenum atterminatum'
which the Prince of Salerno handed to the
Cardinal of Aragon, with the words: 'In a
few days you will die, because your father,
King Ferrante, wished to trample upon us
all.' But the poisoned letter which Caterina
Riario sent to Pope Alexander VI would hardly
have caused his death even if he had read
it; and when Alfonso the Great was warned
by his physicians not to read in the Livy
which Cosimo de' Medici had presented to
him, he told them with justice not to talk
like fools. Nor can that poison with which
the secretary of Piccinino wished to anoint
the sedan-chair of Pius II have affected
any other organ than the imagination. The
proportion which mineral and vegetable poisons
bore to one another, cannot be ascertained
precisely. The poison with which the painter
Rosso Fiorentino destroyed himself (1541)
was evidently a powerful acid, which it would
have been impossible to administer to another
person without his knowledge. The secret
use of weapons, especially of the dagger,
in the service of powerful individuals, was
habitual in Milan, Naples, and other cities.
Indeed, among the crowds of armed retainers
who were necessary for the personal safety
of the great, and who lived in idleness,
it was natural that outbreaks of this mania
for blood should from time to time occur.
Many a deed of horror would never have been
committed, had not the master known that
he needed but to give a sign to one or other
of his followers.
Among the means used for the secret destruction
of others-- so far, that is, as the intention
goes--we find magic, practiced, however,
sparingly. Where 'maleficii,' 'malie,' and
so forth, are mentioned, they appear rather
as a means of heaping up additional terror
on the head of some hated enemy. At the courts
of France and England in the fourteenth and
fifteenth centuries, magic, practiced with
a view to the death of an opponent, plays
a far more important part than in Italy.
In this country, finally, where individuality
of every sort attained its highest development,
we find instances of that ideal and absolute
wickedness which delights in crimes for their
own sake, and not as means to an end, or
at any rate as means to ends for which our
psychology has no measure.
Among these appalling figures we may first
notice certain of the 'Condottieri,' such
as Braccio da Montone, Tiberto Brandolino,
and that Werner von Urslingen whose silver
hauberk bore the inscription: 'The enemy
of God, of pity and of mercy.' This class
of men offers us some of the earliest instances
of criminals deliberately repudiating every
moral restraint. Yet we shall be more reserved
in our judgement of them when we remember
that the worst part of their guilt--in the
estimate of those who record it-- lay in
their defiance of spiritual threats and penalties,
and that to this fact is due that air of
horror with which they are represented as
surrounded. In the case of Braccio, the hatred
of the Church went so far that he was infuriated
at the sight of monks at their psalms, and
had them thrown down from the top of a tower;
but at the same time 'he was loyal to his
soldiers and a great general.' As a rule,
the crimes of the 'Condottieri' were committed
for the sake of some definite advantage,
and must be attributed to a position in which
men could not fail to be demoralized. Even
their apparently gratuitous cruelty had commonly
a purpose, if it were only to strike terror.
The barbarities of the House of Aragon, as
we have seen, were mainly due to fear and
to the desire for vengeance. The thirst for
blood on its own account, the devilish delight
in destruction, is most clearly exemplified
in the case of the Spaniard Cesare Borgia,
whose cruelties were certainly out of all
proportion to the end which he had in view.
In Sigismondo Malatesta, tyrant of Rimini,
the same disinterested love of evil may also
be detected. It is not only the Court of
Rome, but the verdict of history, which convicts
him of murder, rape, adultery, incest, sacrilege,
perjury and treason, committed not once but
often. The most shocking crime of all--the
unnatural attempt on his own son Roberto,
who frustrated it with his drawn dagger--may
have been the result not merely of moral
corruption, but perhaps of some magical or
astrological superstition. The same conjecture
has been made to account for the rape of
the Bishop of Fano by Pierluigi Farnese of
Parma, son of Paul III.
If we now attempt to sum up the principal
features in the Italian character of that
time, as we know it from a study of the life
of the upper classes, we shall obtain something
like the following result. The fundamental
vice of this character was at the same time
a condition of its greatness, namely, excessive
individualism. The individual first inwardly
casts off the authority of a State which,
as a fact, is in most cases tyrannical and
illegitimate, and what he thinks and does
is, rightly or wrongly, now called treason.
The sight of victorious egotism in others
drives him to defend his own right by his
own arm. And, while thinking to restore his
inward equilibrium, he falls, through the
vengeance which he executes, into the hands
of the powers of darkness. His love, too,
turns mostly for satisfaction to another
individuality equally developed, namely,
to his neighbor's wife. In face of all objective
facts, of laws and restraints of whatever
kind, he retains the feeling of his own sovereignty,
and in each single instance forms his decision
independently, according as honour or interest,
passion or calculation, revenge or renunciation,
gain the upper hand in his own mind.
If therefore egotism in its wider as well
as narrower sense is the root and fountain
of all evil, the more highly developed Italian
was for this reason more inclined to wickedness
than the members of other nations of that
time.
But this individual development did not through
any fault of his own, but rather through
necessity. It did not come upon him alone,
but also, and chiefly, by means of Italian
culture, upon the other nations of Europe,
and has constituted since then the higher
atmosphere which they breathe. In itself
it is neither good nor bad, but necessary;
within it has grown up a modern standard
of good and evil-- a sense of moral responsibility--
which is essentially different from that
which was familiar to the Middle Ages.
But the Italian of the Renaissance had to
bear the first mighty surging of a new age.
Through his gifts and his passions, he has
become the most characteristic representative
of all the heights and all the depths of
his time. By the side of profound corruption
appeared human personalities of the noblest
harmony, and an artistic splendor which shed
upon the life of man a lustre which neither
antiquity nor medievalism could or would
bestow upon it.
Part Six MORALITY AND RELIGION Religion in
Daily Life The morality of a people stands
in the closest connection with its consciousness
of God, that is to say, with its firmer or
weaker faith in the divine government of
the world, whether this faith looks on the
world as destined to happiness or to misery
and speedy destruction. The infidelity then
prevalent in Italy is notorious, and whoever
takes the trouble to look about for proofs,
will find them by the hundred. Our present
task, here as elsewhere, is to separate and
discriminate; refraining from an absolute
and final verdict.
The belief in God at earlier times had its
source and chief support in Christianity
and the outward symbol of Christianity, the
Church. When the Church became corrupt, men
ought to have drawn a distinction, and kept
their religion in spite of all. But this
is more easily said than done. It is not
every people which is calm enough, or dull
enough, to tolerate a lasting contradiction
between a principle and its outward expression.
But history does not record a heavier responsibility
than that which rests upon the decaying Church.
She set up as absolute truth, and by the
most violent means, a doctrine which she
had distorted to serve her own aggrandizement.
Safe in the sense of her inviolability, she
abandoned herself to the most scandalous
profligacy, and, in order to maintain herself
in this state, she levelled mortal blows
against the conscience and the intellect
of nations, and drove multitudes of the noblest
spirits, whom she had inwardly estranged,
into the arms of unbelief and despair.
Here we are met by the question: Why did
not Italy, intellectually so great, react
more energetically against the hierarchy;
why did she not accomplish a reformation
like that which occurred in Germany, and
accomplish it at an earlier date?
A plausible answer has been Italian mind,
we are told, never of the hierarchy, while
the origin given to this question. The went
further than the denial and the vigor of
the German Reformation was due to its positive
religious doctrines, most of all to the doctrines
of justification by faith and of the inefficacy
of good works.
It is certain that these doctrines only worked
upon Italy through Germany, and this not
till the power of Spain was sufficiently
great to root them out without difficulty,
partly by itself and partly by means of the
Papacy, and its instruments. 105 Nevertheless,
in the earlier religious movements of Italy,
from the Mystics of the thirteenth century
down to Savonarola, there was a large amount
of positive religious doctrine which, like
the very definite Christianity of the Huguenots,
failed to achieve success only because circumstances
were against it. Mighty events like the Reformation
elude, as respects their details, their outbreak
and their development, the deductions of
the philosophers, however clearly the necessity
of them as a whole may be demonstrated. The
movements of the human spirit, its sudden
flashes, its expansions and its pauses, must
for ever remain a mystery to our eyes, since
we can but know this or that of the forces
at work in it, never all of them together.
The feeling of the upper and middle classes
in Italy with regard to the Church at the
time when the Renaissance culminated, was
compounded of deep and contemptuous aversion,
of acquiescence in the outward ecclesiastical
customs which entered into daily life, and
of a sense of dependence on sacraments and
ceremonies. The great personal influence
of religious preachers may be added as a
fact characteristic of Italy.
That hostility to the hierarchy, which displays
itself more especially from the time of Dante
onwards in Italian literature and history,
has been fully treated by several writers.
We have already said something of the attitude
of public opinion with regard to the Papacy.
Those who wish for the strongest evidence
which the best authorities offer us, can
find it in the famous passages of Machiavelli's
'Discorsi,' and in the unmutilated edition
of Guicciardini. Outside the Roman Curia,
some respect seems to have been felt for
the best men among the bishops, and for many
of the parochial clergy. On the other hand,
the mere holders of benefices, the canons
and the monks were held in almost universal
suspicion, and were often the objects of
the most scandalous aspersions, extending
to the whole of their order.
It has been said that the monks were made
the scapegoats for the whole clergy, for
the reason that none but they could be ridiculed
without danger. But this is certainly incorrect.
They are introduced so frequently in the
novels and comedies, because these forms
of literature need fixed and well-known types
where the imagination of the reader can easily
fill up an outline. Besides which, the novelists
do not as a fact spare the secular clergy.
In the third place, we have abundant proof
in the rest of Italian literature that men
could speak boldly enough about the Papacy
and the Court of Rome. In works of imagination
we cannot expect to find criticism of this
kind. Fourthly, the monks, when attacked,
were sometimes able to take a terrible vengeance.
It is nevertheless true that the monks were
the most unpopular class of all, and that
they were reckoned a living proof of the
worthlessness of conventual life, of the
whole ecclesiastical organization, of the
system of dogma, and of religion altogether,
according as men pleased, rightly or wrongly,
to draw their conclusions. We may also assume
that Italy retained a clearer recollection
of the origin of the two great mendicant
orders than other countries, and had not
forgotten that they were the chief agents
in the reaction against what is called the
heresy of the thirteenth century, that is
to say, against an unruly and vigorous movement
of the modern Italian spirit. And that spiritual
police which was permanently entrusted to
the Dominicans certainly never excited any
other feeling than secret hatred and contempt.
After reading the 'Decameron' and the novels
of Franco Sacchetti, we might imagine that
the vocabulary of abuse directed at the monks
and nuns was exhausted. But towards the time
of the Reformation this abuse became still
fiercer. To say nothing of Aretino, who in
the 'Ragionamenti' uses conventual life merely
as a pretext for giving free play to his
own poisonous nature, we may quote one author
as typical of the rest-- Masuccio, in the
first ten of his fifty novels. They are written
in a tone of the deepest indignation, and
with the purpose to make this indignation
general; and are dedicated to men in the
highest position, such as King Ferrante and
Prince Alfonso of Naples. The stories are
many of them old, and some of them familiar
to readers of Boccaccio. But others reject,
with a frightful realism, the actual state
of things at Naples. The way in which the
priests befool and plunder the people by
means of spurious miracles, added to their
own scandalous lives, is enough to drive
any thoughtful observer to despair. We read
of the Minorite friars who travelled to collect
alms: 'They cheat, steal, and fornicate,
and when they are at the end of their resources,
they set up as saints and work miracles,
one displaying the cloak of St. Vincent,
another the handwriting of St. Bernardino,
a third the bridle of Capistrano's donkey.'
Others 'bring with them confederates who
pretend to be blind or afflicted with some
mortal disease, and after touching the hem
of the monk's cowl, or the relics which he
carries, are healed before the eyes of the
multitude. All then shout "Misericordia,"
the bells are rung, and the miracle is recorded
in a solemn protocol.' Or else the monk in
the pulpit is denounced as a liar by another
who stands below among the audience; the
accuser is immediately possessed by the devil,
and then healed by the preacher. The whole
thing was a prearranged comedy, in which,
however, the principal with his assistant
made so much money that he was able to buy
a bishopric from a Cardinal, on which the
two confederates lived comfortably to the
end of their days. Masuccio makes no great
distinction between Franciscans and Dominicans,
finding the one worth as much as the other.
'And yet the foolish people lets itself be
drawn into their hatreds and divisions, and
quarrels about them in public places, and
calls itself "franceschino" or
"domenichino." ' The nuns are the
exclusive property of the monks. Those of
the former who have anything to do with the
laity, are prosecuted and put in prison,
while others are wedded in due form to the
monks, with the accompaniments of mass, a
marriage-contract, and a liberal indulgence
in food and wine. 'I myself,' says the author,
'have been there not once, but several times,
and seen it all with my own eyes. The nuns
afterwards bring forth pretty little monks
or else use means to hinder that result.
And if anyone charges me with falsehood,
let him search the nunneries well, and he
will find there as many little bores as in
Bethlehem at Herod's time.' These things,
and the like, are among the secrets of monastic
life. The monks are by no means too strict
with one another in the confessional, and
impose a Paternoster in cases where they
would refuse all absolution to a layman as
if he were a heretic. 'Therefore may the
earth open and swallow up the wretches alive,
with those who protect them.' In another
place Masuccio, speaking of the fact that
the influence of the monks depends chiefly
on the dread of another world, utters the
following remarkable wish: 'The best punishment
for them would be for God to abolish Purgatory;
they would then receive no more alms, and
would be forced to go back to their spades.'
If men were free to write, in the time of
Ferrante, and to him, in this strain, the
reason is perhaps to be found in the fact
that the king himself had been incensed by
a false miracle which had been palmed off
on him. An attempt had been made to urge
him to a persecution of the Jews, like that
carried out in Spain and imitated by the
Popes, by producing a tablet with an inscription
bearing the name of St. Cataldus, said to
have been buried at Taranto, and afterwards
dug up again. When he discovered the fraud,
the monks defied him. He had also managed
to detect and expose a pretended instance
of fasting, as his father, Alfonso, had done
before him. The Court, certainly, was no
accomplice in maintaining these blind superstitions.
We have been quoting from an author who wrote
in earnest, and who by no means stands alone
in his judgement. All the Italian literature
of that time is full of ridicule and invective
aimed at the begging friars. It can hardly
be doubted that the Renaissance would soon
have destroyed these two Orders, had it not
been for the German Reformation and the Counter-Reformation
which intervened. Their saints and popular
preachers could hardly have saved them. It
would only have been necessary to come to
an understanding at a favourable moment with
a Pope like Leo X, who despised the Mendicant
Orders. If the spirit of the age found them
ridiculous or repulsive? they could no longer
be anything but an embarrassment to the Church.
And who can say what fate was in store for
the Papacy itself, if the Reformation had
not saved it?
The influence which the Father Inquisitor
of a Dominican monastery was able habitually
to exercise in the city where it was situated,
was in the latter part of the fifteenth century
just considerable enough to hamper and irritate
cultivated people, but not strong enough
to extort any lasting fear or obedience.
It was no longer possible to punish men for
their thoughts, as it once was, and those
whose tongues wagged most impudently against
the clergy could easily keep clear of heretical
doctrine. Except when some powerful party
had an end to serve, as in the case of Savonarola,
or when there was a question of the use of
magical arts, as was often the case in the
cities of North Italy, we seldom read at
this time of men being burnt at the stake.
The Inquisitors were in some instances satisfied
with the most superficial retraction, in
others it even happened that the victim was
saved out of their hands on the way to the
place of execution. In Bologna (1452) the
priest Niccolo da Verona had been publicly
degraded on a wooden scaffold in front of
San Domenico as a wizard and profaner of
the sacraments, and was about to be led away
to the stake, when he was set free by a gang
of armed men, sent by Achille Malvezzi, a
noted friend of heretics and violator of
nuns. The legate, Cardinal Bessarion, was
only able to catch and hang one of the party;
Malvezzi lived on in peace.
It deserves to be noticed that the higher
monastic orders-- e. g. Benedictines, with
their many branches--were, notwithstanding
their great wealth and easy lives, far less
disliked than the mendicant friars. For ten
novels which treat of 'frati' hardly one
can be found in which a 'monaco' is the subject
and the victim. It was no small advantage
to these orders that they were founded earlier,
and not as an instrument of police, and that
they did not interfere with private life.
They contained men of learning, wit, and
piety, but the average has been described
by a member of it, Firenzuola, who says:
'These well-fed gentlemen with the capacious
cowls do not pass their time in barefooted
journeys and in sermons, but sit in elegant
slippers with their hands crossed over their
paunches, in charming cells wainscoted with
cyprus-wood. And when they are obliged to
quit the house, they ride comfortably, as
if for their amusement, on mules and sleek,
quiet horses. They do not overstrain their
minds with the study of many books, for fear
lest knowledge might put the pride of Lucifer
in the place of monkish simplicity.'
Those who are familiar with the literature
of the time, will see that we have only brought
forward what is absolutely necessary for
the understanding of the subject. That the
reputation attaching to the monks and the
secular clergy must have shattered the faith
of multitudes in all that is sacred is, of
course, obvious.
And some of the judgements which we read
are terrible; we will quote one of them in
conclusion, which has been published only
lately and is but little known. The historian
Guicciardini who was for many years in the
service of the Medicean Popes, says (1529)
in his 'Aphorisms': 'No man is more disgusted
than I am with the ambition, the avarice
and the profligacy of the priests, not only
because each of these vices is hateful in
itself, but because each and all of them
are most unbecoming in those who declare
themselves to be men in special relations
with God, and also because they are vices
so opposed to one another, that they can
only co-exist in very singular natures. Nevertheless,
my position at the Court of several Popes
forced me to desire their greatness for the
sake of my own interest. But, had it not
been for this, I should have loved Martin
Luther as myself, not in order to free myself
from the laws which Christianity, as generally
understood and explained, lays upon us, but
in order to see this swarm of scoundrels
(questa caterva di scelerati) put back into
their proper place, so that they may be forced
to live either without vices or without power.'
The same Guicciardini is of opinion that
we are in the dark as to all that is supernatural,
that philosophers and theologians have nothing
but nonsense to tell us about it, that miracles
occur in every religion and prove the truth
of none in particular, and that all of them
may be explained as unknown phenomena of
nature. The faith which moves mountains,
then common among the followers of Savonarola,
is mentioned by Guicciardini as a curious
fact, but without any bitter remark.
Notwithstanding this hostile public opinion,
the clergy and the monks had the great advantage
that the people were used to them, and that
their existence was interwoven with the everyday
existence of all. This is the advantage which
every old and powerful institution possesses.
Everybody had some cowled or frocked relative,
some prospect of assistance or future gain
from the treasure of the Church; and in the
centre of Italy stood the Court of Rome,
where men sometimes became rich in a moment.
Yet it must never be forgotten that all this
did not hinder people from writing and speaking
freely. The authors of the most scandalous
satires were themselves mostly monks or beneficed
priests. Poggio, who wrote the Facetiae,
was a clergyman; Francesco Berni, the satirist,
held a canonry; Teofilo Folengo, the author
of the Orlandino, was a Benedictine, certainly
by no means a faithful one; Matteo Bandello,
who held up his own order to ridicule, was
a Dominican, and nephew of a general of this
order. Were they encouraged to write by the
sense that they ran no risks. Or did they
feel an inward need to clear themselves personally
from the infamy which attached to their order?
Or were they moved by that selfish pessimism
which takes for its maxim, 'it will last
our time'. Perhaps all of these motives were
more or less at work. In the case of Folengo,
the unmistakable influence of Lutheranism
must be added.
The sense of dependence on rites and sacraments,
which we have already touched upon in speaking
of the Papacy, is not surprising among that
part of the people which still believed in
the Church. Among those who were more emancipated,
it testifies to the strength of youthful
impressions, and to the magical force of
traditional symbols. The universal desire
of dying men for priestly absolution shows
that the last remnant of the dread of hell
had not, even in the case of one like Vitellozzo,
been altogether extinguished. It would hardly
be possible to find a more instructive instance
than this. The doctrine taught by the Church
of the 'character indelibilis' of the priesthood,
independently of the personality of the priest,
had so far borne fruit that it was possible
to loathe the individual and still desire
his spiritual gifts. It is true, nevertheless,
that there were defiant natures like Galeotto
of Mirandola, who died unabsolved in 1499)
after living for sixteen years under the
ban of the Church. All this time the city
lay under an interdict on his account, so
that no mass was celebrated and no Christian
burial took place.
A splendid contrast to all this is offered
by the power exercised over the nation by
its great Preachers of Repentance. Other
countries of Europe were from time to time
moved by the words of saintly monks, but
only superficially, in comparison with the
periodical upheaval of the Italian conscience.
The only man, in fact, who produced a similar
effect in Germany during the fifteenth century,
was an Italian, born in the Abruzzi, named
Giovanni Capistrano. Those natures which
bear within them this religious vocation
and this commanding earnestness, wore then
in Northern countries an intuitive and mystical
aspect. In the South they were practical
and expansive, and shared in the national
gift of oratorical skill. The North produced
an 'Imitation of Christ,' which worked silently,
at first only within the walls of the monastery,
but worked for the ages; the South produced
men who made on their fellows an immediate
and mighty but passing impression.
This impression consisted chiefly in the
awakening of the conscience. The sermons
were moral exhortations free from abstract
notions and full of practical application,
rendered more impressive by the saintly and
ascetic character of the preacher, and by
the miracles which, even against his will,
the inflamed imagination of the people attributed
to him. The most powerful argument used was
not the threat of Hell and Purgatory, but
rather the living results of the 'maledizione,'
the temporal ruin wrought on the individual
by the curse which clings to wrong-doing.
The grieving of Christ and the Saints has
its consequences in this life. And only thus
could men, sunk in passion and guilt, be
brought to repentance and amendment--which
was the chief object of these sermons.
Among these preachers were Bernardino da
Siena, Alberto da Sarzana, Jacopo della Marca,
Giovanni Capistrano, Roberto da Lecce and
others j and finally, Girolamo Savonarola.
No prejudice of the day was stronger than
that against the mendicant friar, and this
they overcame. They were criticized and ridiculed
by a scornful humanism; but when they raised
their voices, no one gave heed to the humanists.
The thing was no novelty, and the scoffing
Florentines had already in the fourteenth
century learned to caricature it whenever
it appeared in the pulpit. But no sooner
did Savonarola come forward than he carried
the people so triumphantly with him, that
soon all their beloved art and culture melted
away ill the furnace which he lighted. Even
the grossest profanation done to the cause
by hypocritical monks, who got up an effect
in the audience by means of confederates,
could not bring the thing itself into discredit.
Men kept on laughing at the ordinary monkish
sermons, with their spurious miracles and
manufactured relics; but did not cease to
honour the great and genuine preachers. These
are a true speciality of the fifteenth century.
The Order--generally that of St. Francis,
and more particularly the so-called Observantines--sent
them out according as they were wanted. This
was commonly the case when there was some
important public or private feud in a city,
or some alarming outbreak of violence, immorality,
or disease. When once the reputation of a
preacher was made, the cities were all anxious
to hear him even without any special occasion.
He went wherever his superiors sent him.
A special form of this work was the preaching
of a Crusade against the Turks; but here
we have to speak more particularly of the
exhortations to repentance.
The order of these, when they were treated
methodically, seems to have followed the
customary list of the deadly sins. The more
pressing, however, the occasion is, the more
directly does the preacher make for his main
point. He begins perhaps in one of the great
churches of the Order, or in the cathedral.
Soon the largest piazza is too small for
the crowds which throng from every side to
hear him, and he himself can hardly move
without risking his life. The sermon is commonly
followed by a great procession; but the first
magistrates of the city, who take him in
their midst, can hardly save him from the
multitude of women who throng to kiss his
hands and feet, and cut off fragments from
his cowl.
The most immediate consequences which follow
from the preacher's denunciations of usury,
luxury, and scandalous fashions, are the
opening of the gaols--which meant no more
than the discharge of the poorest debtors--and
the burning of various instruments of luxury
and amusement, whether innocent or not. Among
these are dice, cards, games of all kinds,
written incantations, masks, musical instruments,
song-books, false hair, and so forth. All
these would then be gracefully arranged on
a scaffold
('talamo'), a figure of the devil fastened
to the top, and then the whole set on fire.
Then came the turn of the more hardened consciences.
Men who had long never been near the confessional,
now acknowledged their sins. Ill-gotten gains
were restored, and insults which might have
borne fruit in blood retracted. Orators like
Bernardino of Siena entered diligently into
all the details of the daily life of men,
and the moral laws which are involved in
it. Few theologians nowadays would feel tempted
to give a morning sermon 'on contracts, restitutions,
the public debt (monte), and the portioning
of daughters,' like that which he once delivered
in the Cathedral at Florence. Imprudent speakers
easily fell into the mistake of attacking
particular classes, professions, or offices,
with such energy that the enraged hearers
proceeded to violence against those whom
the preacher had denounced. A sermon which
Bernardino once preached in Rome (1424) had
another consequence besides a bonfire of
vanities on the Capitol: 'After this,' we
read, 'the witch Finicella was burnt, because
by her diabolical arts she had killed many
children and bewitched many other persons;
and all Rome went to see the sight.'
But the most important aim of the preacher
was, as has been already said, to reconcile
enemies and persuade them to give up thoughts
of vengeance. Probably this end was seldom
attained till towards the close of a course
of sermons, when the tide of penitence flooded
the city, and when the air resounded with
the cry of the whole people: 'Misericordia!
' Then followed those solemn embracings and
treaties of peace, which even previous bloodshed
on both sides could not hinder. Banished
men were recalled to the city to take part
in these sacred transactions. It appears
that these 'Paci' were on the whole faithfully
observed, even after the mood which prompted
them was over; and then the memory of the
monk was blessed from generation to generation.
But there were sometimes terrible crises
like those in the families Della Valle and
Croce in Rome (1482) where even the great
Roberto da Lecce raised his voice in vain.
Shortly before Holy Week he had preached
to immense crowds in the square before the
Minerva. But on the night before Maundy Thursday
a terrible combat took place in front of
the Palazzo della Valle, near the Ghetto.
In the morning Pope Sixtus gave orders for
its destruction, and then performed the customary
ceremonies of the day. On Good Friday Roberto
preached again with a crucifix in his hand;
but he and his hearers could do nothing but
weep.
Violent natures, which had fallen into contradictions
with themselves, often resolved to enter
a convent, under the impression made by these
men. Among such were not only brigands and
criminals of every sort, but soldiers without
employment. This resolve was stimulated by
their admiration of the holy man, and by
the desire to copy at least his outward position.
The concluding sermon is a general benediction,
summed up in the words: 'la pace sia con
voi!' Throngs of hearers accompany the preacher
to the next city, and there listen for a
second time to the whole course of sermons.
The enormous influence exercised by these
preachers made it important, both for the
clergy and for the government, at least not
to have them as opponents; one means to this
end was to permit only monks or priests who
had received at all events the lesser consecration,
to enter the pulpit, so that the Order or
Corporation to which they belonged was, to
some extent, responsible for them. But it
was not easy to make the rule absolute, since
the Church and pulpit had long been used
as a means of publicity in many ways, judicial,
educational, and others, and since even sermons
were sometimes delivered by humanists and
other laymen. There existed, too, in Italy,
a dubious class of persons who were neither
monks nor priests, and who yet had renounced
the world--that is to say, the numerous class
of hermits who appeared from time to time
in the pulpit on their own authority, and
often carried the people with them. A case
of this kind occurred at Milan in 1516 after
the second French conquest, certainly at
a time when public order was much disturbed.
A Tuscan hermit, Hieronymus of Siena, possibly
an adherent of Savonarola, maintained his
place for months together in the pulpit of
the Cathedral, denounced the hierarchy with
great violence, caused a new chandelier and
a new altar to be set up in the church, worked
miracles, and only abandoned the field after
a long and desperate struggle. During the
decades in which the fate of Italy was decided,
the spirit of prophecy was unusually active,
and nowhere where it displayed itself was
it confined to any one particular class.
We know with what a tone of true prophetic
defiance the hermits came forward before
the sack of Rome. In default of any eloquence
of their own, these men made use of messengers
with symbols of one kind or another, like
the ascetic near Siena (1496) who sent a
'little hermit,' that is a pupil, into the
terrified city with a skull upon a pole to
which was attached a paper with a threatening
text from the Bible.
Nor did the monks themselves scruple to attack
princes, governments, the clergy, or even
their own order. A direct exhortation to
overthrow a despotic house, like that uttered
by Jacopo Bussolaro at Pavia in the fourteenth
century, hardly occurs again in the following
period: but there is no want of courageous
reproofs, addressed even to the Pope in his
own chapel, and of naive political advice
given in the presence of rulers who by no
means held themselves in need of it. In the
Piazza del Castello at Milan, a blind preacher
from the Incoronata--consequently an Augustinian--ventured
in 1494 to exhort Lodovico il Moro from the
pulpit: 'My lord, beware of showing the French
the way, else you will repent it.' There
were further prophetic monks who, without
exactly preaching political sermons, drew
such appalling pictures of the future that
the hearers almost lost their senses. After
the election of Leo X, in the year 1513 a
whole association of these men, twelve Franciscan
monks in all, journeyed through the various
districts of Italy, of which one or other
was assigned to each preacher. The one who
appeared in Florence, fra Francesco da Montepulcian,
struck terror into the whole people. The
alarm was not diminished by the exaggerated
reports of his prophecies which reached those
who were too far off to hear him. After one
of his sermons he suddenly died 'of pain
in the chest.' The people thronged in such
numbers to kiss the feet of the corpse that
it had to be secretly buried in the night.
But the newly awakened spirit of prophecy,
which seized upon even women and peasants,
could not be controlled without great difficulty.
'In order to restore to the people their
cheerful humour, the Medici-- Giuliano, Leo's
brother, and Lorenzo--gave on St. John's
Day, 1514, those splendid festivals, tournaments,
processions, and hunting-parties, which were
attended by many distinguished persons from
Rome, and among them, though disguised, no
less than six cardinals.'
But the greatest of the prophets and apostles
had already been burnt in Florence in the
year 1498--Fra Girolamo Savonarola of Ferrara.
We must content ourselves with saying a few
words respecting him.
The instrument by means of which he transformed
and ruled the city of Florence (1494-8) was
his eloquence. Of this the meagre reports
that are left to us, which were taken down
mostly on the spot, give us evidently a very
imperfect notion. It was not that he possessed
any striking outward advantages, for voice,
accent, and rhetorical skill constituted
precisely his weakest side; and those who
required the preacher to be a stylist, went
to his rival Fra Mariano da Genazzano. The
eloquence of Savonarola was the expression
of a lofty and commanding personality, the
like of which was not seen again till the
time of Luther. He himself held his own influence
to be the result of a divine illumination,
and could therefore, without presumption,
assign a very high place to the office of
the preacher, who, in the great hierarchy
of spirits, occupies, according to him, the
next place below the angels.
This man, whose nature seemed made of fire,
worked another and greater miracle than any
of his oratorical triumphs. His own Dominican
monastery of San Marco, and then all the
Dominican monasteries of Tuscany, became
like-minded with himself, and undertook voluntarily
the work of inward reform. When we reflect
what the monasteries then were, and what
measureless difficulty attends the least
change where monks are concerned, we are
doubly astonished at so complete a revolution.
While the reform was still in progress large
numbers of Savonarola's followers entered
the Order, and thereby greatly facilitated
his plans. Sons of the first houses in Florence
entered San Marco as novices.
This reform of the Order in a particular
province was the first step to a national
Church, in which, had the reformer himself
lived longer, it must infallibly have ended.
Savonarola, indeed, desired the regeneration
of the whole Church) and near the end of
his career sent pressing exhortations to
the great potentates urging them to call
together a Council. But in Tuscany his Order
and party were the only organs of his spirit--the
salt of the earth--while the neighbouring
provinces remained in their old condition.
Fancy and asceticism tended more and more
to produce in him a state of mind to which
Florence appeared as the scene of the kingdom
of God upon earth.
The prophecies, whose partial fulfilment
conferred on Savonarola a supernatural credit,
were the means by which the ever active Italian
imagination seized control of the soundest
and most cautious natures. At first the Franciscans
of the Osservanza, trusting in the reputation
which had been bequeathed to them by St.
Bernardino of Siena, fancied that they could
compete with the great Dominican. They put
one of their own men into the Cathedral pulpit,
and outbid the Jeremiads of Savonarola by
still more terrible warnings, till Piero
de' Medici, who then still ruled over Florence,
forced them both to be silent. Soon after,
when Charles XII came to Italy and the Medici
were expelled, as Savonarola had clearly
foretold, he alone was believed in.
It must be frankly confessed that he never
judged his own premonitions and visions critically,
as he did those of others. In the funeral
oration on Pico della Mirandola, he deals
somewhat harshly with his dead friend. Since
Pico, notwithstanding an inner voice which
came from God, would not enter the Order,
he had himself prayed to God to chasten him
for his disobedience. He certainly had not
desired his death, and alms and prayers had
obtained the favour that Pico's soul was
safe in Purgatory. With regard to a comforting
vision which Pico had upon his sickbed, in
which the Virgin appeared and promised him
that he should not die, Savonarola confessed
that he had long regarded it as a deceit
of the I)evil, till it was revealed to him
that the Madonna meant the second and eternal
death. If these things and the like are proofs
of presumption, it must be admitted that
this great soul at all events paid a bitter
penalty for his fault. In his last days Savonarola
seems to have recognized the vanity of his
visions and prophecies. And yet enough inward
peace was left to him to enable him to meet
death like a Christian. His partisans held
to his doctrine and predictions for thirty
years longer.
He only undertook the reorganization of the
State for the reason that otherwise his enemies
would have got the government into their
own hands. It is unfair to judge him by the
semi-democratic constitution of the beginning
of the year 1495, which was neither better
nor worse than other Florentine constitutions.
He was at bottom the most unsuitable man
who could be found for such a work. His idea
was a theocracy, in which all men were to
bow in blessed humility before the Unseen,
and all conflicts of passion wert not even
to be able to arise. His whole mind is written
in that inscription on the Palazzo della
Signoria, the substance of which was his
maxim as early as 1495, and which was solemnly
renewed by his partisans in 1527: 'Jesus
Christus Rex populi Florentini S. P. Q. decreto
creatus.' He stood in no more relation to
mundane affairs and their actual conditions
than any other inhabitant of a monastery.
Man, according to him, has only to attend
to those things which make directly for his
salvation.
This temper comes out clearly in his opinions
on ancient literature: 'The only good thing
which we owe to Plato and Aristotle, is that
they brought forward many arguments which
we can use against the heretics. Yet they
and other philosophers are now in Hell. An
old woman knows more about the Faith than
Plato. It would be good for religion if many
books that seem useful were destroyed. When
there were not so many books and not so many
arguments ("ragioni naturali")
and disputes, religion grew more quickly
than it has done since.' He wished to limit
the classical instruction of the schools
to Homer, Virgil and Cicero, and to supply
the rest from Jerome and Augustine. Not only
Ovid and Catullus, but Terence and Tibullus,
were to be banished. This may be no more
than the expressions of a nervous morality,
but elsewhere in a special work he admits
that science as a whole is harmful. He holds
that only a few people should have to do
with it, in order that the tradition of human
knowledge may not perish, and particularly
that there may be no want of intellectual
athletes to confute the sophisms of the heretics.
For all others, grammar, morals, and religious
teaching ('litterae sacrae') suffice. Culture
and education would thus return wholly into
the charge of the monks, and as, in his opinion,
the 'most learned and the most pious' are
to rule over the States and empires, these
rulers would also be monks. Whether he really
foresaw this conclusion, we need not inquire.
A more childish method of reasoning cannot
be imagined. The simple reflection that the
newborn antiquity and the boundless enlargement
of human thought and knowledge which was
due to it, might give splendid confirmation
to a religion able to adapt itself thereto,
seems never even to have occurred to the
good man. He wanted to forbid what he could
not deal with by any other means. In fact,
he was anything but liberal, and was ready,
for example, to send the astrologers to the
same stake at which he afterwards himself
died.
How mighty must have been the soul which
dwelt side by side with this narrow intellect!
And what a flame must have glowed within
him before he could constrain the Florentines,
possessed as they were by the passion for
knowledge and culture, to surrender themselves
to a man who could thus reason!
How much of their heart and their worldliness
they were ready to sacrifice for his sake
is shown by those famous bonfires by the
side of which all the 'talami' of Bernardino
da Siena and others were certainly of small
account.
All this could not, however, be effected
without the agency of a tyrannical police.
He did not shrink from the most vexatious
interferences with the much-prized freedom
of Italian private life, using the espionage
of servants on their masters as a means of
carrying out his moral reforms. That transformation
of public and private life which the Iron
Calvin was but just able to effect at Geneva
with the aid of a permanent state of siege
necessarily proved impossible at Florence,
and the attempt only served to drive the
enemies of Savonarola into a more implacable
hostility. Among his most unpopular measures
may be mentioned those organized parties
of boys, who forced their way into the houses
and laid violent hands on any objects which
seemed suitable for the bonfire. As it happened
that they were sometimes sent away with a
beating, they were afterwards attended, in
order to keep up the figment of a pious 'rising
generation,' by a bodyguard of grown-up persons.
On the last day of the Carnival in the year
1497, and on the same day the year after,
the great 'Auto da Fe' took place on the
Piazza della Signoria. In the center of it
rose a high pyramid of several tiers, like
the 'rogus' on which the Roman Emperors were
commonly burned. On the lowest tier were
arranged false beards, masks, and carnival
disguises; above came volumes of the Latin
and Italian poets, among others Boccaccio,
the 'Morgante' of Pulci, and Petrarch, partly
in the form of valuable printed parchments
and illuminated manuscripts; then women's
ornaments and toilet articles, scents, mirrors,
veils and false hair; higher up, lutes, harps,
chessboards, playing-cards; and finally,
on the two uppermost tiers, paintings only,
especially of female beauties, partly fancy
pictures, bearing the classical names of
Lucretia, Cleopatra, or Faustina, partly
portraits of the beautiful Bencina, Lena
Morella, Bina and Maria de' Lenzi. On the
first occasion a Venetian merchant who happened
to be present offered the Signoria 22,000
gold florins for the objects on the pyramid;
but the only answer he received was that
his portrait, too, was painted, and burned
along with the rest. When the pile was lighted,
the Signoria appeared on the balcony, and
the air echoed with song, the sound of trumpets,
and the pealing of bells. The people then
adjourned to the Piazza di San Marco, where
they danced round in three concentric circles.
The innermost was composed of monks of the
monastery, alternating with boys, dressed
as angels; then came young laymen and ecclesiastics;
and on the outside, old men, citizens, and
priests, the latter crowned with wreaths
of olive.
All the ridicule of his victorious enemies,
who in truth bad no lack of justification
or of talent for ridicule, was unable to
dis- credit the memory of Savonarola. The
more tragic the fortunes of Italy became,
the brighter grew the halo which in the recollection
of the survivors surrounded the figure of
the great monk and prophet. Though his predictions
may not have been confirmed in detail, the
great and general calamity which he foretold
was fulfilled with appalling truth.
Great, however, as the influence of all these
preachers may have been, and brilliantly
as Savonarola justified the claim of the
monks to this office, nevertheless the order
as a while could not escape the contempt
and condemnation of the people. Italy^ showed
that she could give her enthusiasm only to
individuals.
Part Six MORALITY AND RELIGION Strength of
the Old Faith If, apart from all that concerns
the priests and the monks, we - attempt to
measure the strength of the old faith, it
will be found great or small according to
the light in which it is considered. We have
spoken already of the need felt for the Sacraments
as something indispensable. Let us now glance
for a moment at the position of faith and
worship in daily life. Both were determined
partly by the habits of the people and partly
by the policy and example of the rulers.
All that has to do with penitence and the
attainment of salvation by means of good
works was in much the one stage of development
or corruption as in the North of Europe,
both among the peasantry and among the poorer
inhabitants of the cities. The instructed
classes were sometimes influenced by the
same motives. Those sides of popular Catholicism
which had their origin in the old pagan ways
of invoking, rewarding, and propitiating
the gods have fixed themselves ineradicably
in the consciousness of the people. The eighth
eclogue of Battista Mantovano, which has
already been quoted elsewhere, contains the
prayer of a peasant to the Madonna, in which
she is called upon as the special patroness
of all rustic and agricultural interests.
And what conceptions they were which the
people formed of their protectress in heaven.
What was in the mind of the Florentine woman
who gave 'ex voto' a keg of wax to the Annunziata,
because her lover, a monk, had gradually
emptied a barrel of wine without her absent
husband finding it out. Then, too, as still
in our own days, different departments of
human life were presided over by their respective
patrons.
The attempt has often been made to explain
a number of the commonest rites of the Catholic
Church as remnants of pagan ceremonies, and
no one doubts that many local and popular
usages, which are associated with religious
festivals, are forgotten fragments of the
old pre-Christian faiths of Europe. In Italy,
on the contrary, we find instances in which
the affiliation of the new faith to the old
seems consciously recognized. So, for example,
the custom of setting out food for the dead
four days before the feast of the Chair of
St. Peter, that is to say, on February 18,
the date of the ancient Feralia. Many other
practices of this kind may then have prevailed
and have since then been extirpated. Perhaps
the paradox is only apparent if we say that
the popular faith in Italy had a solid foundation
just in proportion as it was pagan.
The extent to which this form of belief prevailed
in the upper classes can to a certain point
be shown in detail. It had, as we have said
in speaking of the influence of the clergy,
the power of custom and early impressions
on its side. The love for ecclesiastical
pomp and display helped to confirm it, and
now and then there came one of those epidemics
of revivalism, which few even among the scoffers
and the sceptics were able to withstand.
But in questions of this kind it is perilous
to grasp too hastily at absolute results.
We might fancy, for example, that the feeling
of educated men towards the relics of the
saints would be a key by which some chambers
of their religious consciousness might be
opened. And in fact, some difference of degree
may be demonstrable, though by no means as
clearly as might be wished. The Government
of Venice in the fifteenth century seems
to have fully shared in the reverence felt
throughout the rest of Europe for the remains
of the bodies of the saints. Even strangers
who lived in Venice found it well to adapt
themselves to this superstition. If we can
judge of scholarly Padua from the testimony
of its topographer Michele Savonarola, things
must have been much the same there. With
a mixture of pride and pious awe, Michele
tells us how in times of great danger the
saints were heard to sigh at night along
the streets of the city, how the hair and
nails on the corpse of a holy nun in Santa
Chiara kept continually growing, and how
the same corpse. when any disaster was impending,
used to make a noise and lift up the arms.
When he sets to work to describe the chapel
of St. Anthony in the Santo, the writer loses
himself in ejaculations and fantastic dreams.
In Milan the people at least showed a fanatical
devotion to relics; and when once, in the
year 1517, the monks of San Simpliciano were
careless enough to expose six holy corpses
during certain alterations of the high altar,
which event was followed by heavy floods
of rain, the people attributed the visitation
to this sacrilege, and gave the monks a sound
beating whenever they met them in the street.
In other parts of Italy, and even in the
case of the Popes themselves, the sincerity
of this feeling is much more dubious, though
here, too, a positive conclusion is hardly
attainable. It is well known amid what general
enthusiasm Pius II solemnly deposited the
head of the Apostle Andrew, which had been
brought from Greece, and then from San
Maura, in the Church of St. Peter (1462);
but we gather from his own narrative that
he only did it from a kind of shame, as so
many princes were competing for the relic.
It was not till afterwards that the idea
struck him of making Rome the common refuge
for all the remains of the saints which had
been driven from their own churches. Under
Sixtus IV, the population of the city was
still more zealous in this cause than the
Pope himself, and the magistracy (1483) complained
bitterly that Sixtus had sent to Louis XI,
the dying King of France, some specimens
of the Lateran relics. A courageous voice
was raised about thin time at Bologna, advising
the sale of the skull of St. Dominic to the
King of Spain, and the application of the
money to some useful public object. But those
who had the least reverence of all for the
relics were the Florentines. Between the
decision to honour their saint, St. Zanobi,
with a new sarcophagus and the final execution
of the project by Ghiberti, ten years elapsed
(1432-42) and then it only happened by chance,
because the master had executed a smaller
order of the same kind with great skill (1428).
Perhaps through being tricked by a cunning
Neapolitan abbess (1352), who sent them a
spurious arm of the patroness of the Cathedral,
Santa Reparata, made of wood and plaster,
they began to get tired of relics. Or perhaps
it would be truer to say that their aesthetic
sense turned them away in disgust from dismembered
corpses and mouldy clothes. Or perhaps their
feeling was rather due to that sense of glory
which thought Dante and Petrarch worthier
of a splendid grave than all the twelve apostles
put together. It is probable that throughout
Italy, apart from Venice and from Rome, the
condition of which latter city was exceptional,
the worship of relics had long been giving
way to the adoration of the Madonna, at all
events to a greater extent than elsewhere
in Europe; and in this fact lies indirect
evidence of an early development of the aesthetic
sense.
It may be questioned whether in the North,
where the vastest cathedrals are clearly
all dedicated to Our Lady, and where an extensive
branch of Latin and indigenous poetry sang
the praises of the Mother of God, a greater
devotion to her was impossible. In Italy,
however, the number of miraculous pictures
of the Virgin was far greater, and the part
they played in the daily life of the people
much more important. Every town of any size
contained a quantity of them, from the ancient,
or ostensibly ancient, paintings by St. Luke,
down to the works of contemporaries, who
not seldom lived to see the miracles wrought
by their own handiwork. The work of art was
in these cases by no means as harmless as
Battista Mantovano thinks; sometimes it suddenly
acquired a magical virtue. The popular craving
for the miraculous, especially strong in
women, may have been fully satisfied by these
pictures, and for this reason the relics
been less regarded. It cannot be said with
certainty how far the respect for genuine
relics suffered from the ridicule which the
novelist aimed at the spurious. The attitude
of the educated classes in Italy towards
Mariolatry, or the worship of the Virgin,
is more clearly recognizable than towards
the worship of images. One cannot but be
struck with the fact that in Italian literature
Dante's 'Paradise' is the last poem in honour
of the Virgin, while among the people hymns
in her praise have been constantly produced
down to our own day. The names of Sannazaro
and Sabellico and other writers of Latin
poems prove little on the other side, since
the object with which they wrote was chiefly
literary. The poems written in Italian in
the fifteenth and at the beginning of the
sixteenth centuries, in which we meet with
genuine religious feeling, such as the hymns
of Lorenzo the Magnificent, and the sonnets
of Vittoria Colonna and of Michelangelo might
have been just as well composed by Protestants.
Besides the lyrical expression of faith in
God, we chiefly notice in them the sense
of sin, the consciousness of deliverance
through the death of Christ, the longing
for a better world. The intercessiOn of the
Mother of God is only mentioned by the way.
The same phenomenon is repeated in the classical
literature of the French at the time of Louis
XIV. Not till the time of the Counter-Reformation
did Mariolatry reappear in the higher Italian
poetry. Meanwhile the visual arts had certainly
done their utmost to glorify the Madonna.
It may be added that the worship of the saints
among the educated classes often took an
essentially pagan form.
We might thus critically examine the various
sides of Italian Catholicism at this period,
and so establish with a certain degree of
probability the attitude of the instructed
classes towards popular faith. Yet an absolute
and positive result cannot be reached. We
meet with contrasts hard to explain. While
architects, painters, and sculptors were
working with restless activity in and for
the churches, we hear at the beginning of
the sixteenth century the bitterest complaints
of the neglect of public worship and of these
churches themselves.
It is well known how Luther was scandalized
by the irreverence with which the priests
in Rome said Mass. And at the same time the
feasts of the Church were celebrated with
a taste and magnificence of which Northern
countries had no conception. It looks as
if this most imaginative of nations was easily
tempted to neglect everyday things, and as
easily captivated by anything extraordinary.
It is to this excess of imagination that
we must attribute the epidemic of religious
revivals upon which we shall again say a
few words. They must be clearly distinguished
from the excitement called forth by the great
preachers. They were rather due to general
public calamities, or to the dread of such.
In the Middle Ages all Europe was from time
to time flooded by these great tides, which
carried away whole peoples in their waves.
The Crusades and the Flagellant revival are
instances. Italy took part in both of these
movements. The first great companies of flagellants
appeared, immediately after the fall of Ezzelino
and his house, in the neighbourhood of the
same Perugia which has been already spoken
of as the headquarters of the revivalist
preachers. Then followed the flagellants
of 1310 and 1334, and then the great pilgrimage
without encouraging in the year 1349, which
Corio has recorded. It is not impossible
that the Jubilees were founded partly in
order to regulate and render harmless this
sinister passion for vagabondage which seized
on the whole populations at times of religious
excitement. The great sanctuaries of Italy,
such as Loreto and others, had meantime become
famous, and no doubt diverted a certain part
of this enthusiasm.
But terrible crises had still at a much later
time the power to reawaken the glow of mediaeval
penitence, and the conscience - stricken
people, often still further appalled by signs
and wonders, sought to move the pity of Heaven
by wailings and scourgings. So it was at
Bologna when the plague came in 1457, and
so in 1496 at a time of internal discord
at Siena) to mention two only out of countless
instances. No more moving scene can be imagined
than that which we read of at Milan in 1529)
when famine, plague, and war conspired with
Spanish extortion to reduce the city to the
lowest depths of despair. It chanced that
the monk who had the ear of the people, Fra
Tomasso Nieto, was himself a Spaniard. The
Host was borne along in a novel fashion,
amid barefooted crowds of old and young.
It was placed on a decorated bier, which
rested on the shoulders of four priests in
linen garments--an imitation of the Ark of
the Covenant which the children of Israel
once carried round the walls of Jericho.
Thus did the afflicted people of Milan remind
their ancient God of His old covenant with
man; and when the procession again entered
the cathedral, and it seemed as if the vast
building must fall in with the agonized cry
of 'Misericordia!', many who stood there
may have believed that the Almighty would
indeed subvert the laws of nature and of
history, and send a miraculous deliverance.
There was one government in Italy, that of
Duke Ercole I of Ferrara, which assumed the
direction of public feeling, and compelled
the popular revivals to move in regular channels.
At the time when Savonarola was powerful
in Florence, and the movement which he began
spread far and wide among the population
of Central Italy, the people of Ferrara voluntarily
entered on a general fast (at the beginning
of 1496). A Lazarist announced from the pulpit
the approach of a season of war and famine
such as the world had never seen; but the
Madonna had assured some pious people that
these evils might be avoided by fasting.
Upon this, the court itself had no choice
but to fast, but it took the conduct of the
public devotions into its own hands. On Easter
Day, the 3rd of April, a proclamation on
morals and religion was published, forbidding
blasphemy, prohibiting games, sodomy, concubinage,
the letting of houses to prostitutes or panders,
and the opening of all shops on feast days,
excepting those of the bakers and greengrocers.
The Jews and Moors, who had taken refuge
from the Spaniards at Ferrara, were now again
compelled to wear the yellow O upon the breast.
Contraveners were threatened, not only with
the punishments already provided by law,
but also 'with such severer penalties as
the Duke might think good to inflict.' After
this, the Duke and the court went several
days in succession to hear sermons in church,
and on the 10th of April all the Jews in
Ferrara were compelled to do the same. On
the 3rd of May, the director of police, Zampante,
sent the crier to announce that whoever had
given money to the police-officers in order
not to be denounced as a blasphemer, might,
if he came forward, have it back with a further
indemnification. These wicked officers, he
said, had extorted as much as two or three
ducats from innocent persons by threatening
to lodge an information against them. They
had then mutually informed against one another,
and so had all found their way into prison.
But as the money had been paid precisely
in order not to have to do with Zampante,
it is probable that his proclamation induced
few people to come forward. In the year 1500,
after the fall of Lodovico il Moro, when
a similar outbreak of popular feeling took
place, Ercole ordered a series of nine processions,
in which there were 4,000 children dressed
in white, bearing the standard of Jesus.
He himself rode on horseback, as he could
not walk without difficulty. An edict was
afterwards published of the same kind as
that of 1496. It is well known how many churches
and monasteries were built by this ruler.
He even sent for a live saint, the Suor Colomba,
shortly before he married his son Alfonso
to Lucrezia Borgia (1502). A special messenger
fetched the saint with fifteen other nuns
from Viterbo, and the Duke himself conducted
her on her arrival at Ferrara into a convent
prepared for her reception. We shall probably
do him no injustice if we attribute all these
measures very largely to political calculation.
To the conception of government formed by
the House of Este, this employment of religion
for the ends of statecraft belongs by a kind
of logical necessity.
Part Six MORALITY AND RELIGION Religion and
the Spirit of the Renaissance But in order
to reach a definite conclusion with regard
to the religious sense of the men of this
period, we must adopt a different method.
From their intellectual attitude in general,
we can infer their relation both to the divine
idea and to the existing religion of their
age.
These modern men, the representatives of
the culture of Italy, were born with the
same religious instincts as other mediaeval
Europeans. But their powerful individuality
made them in religion, as in other matters,
altogether subjective, and the intense charm
which the discovery of the inner and outer
universe exercised upon them rendered them
markedly worldly. In the rest of Europe religion
remained, till a much later period. something
given from without, and in practical life
egotism and sensuality alternated with devotion
and repentance. The latter had no spiritual
competitors) as in Italy, or only to a far
smaller extent.
Further, the close and frequent relations
of Italy with Byzantium and the Mohammedan
peoples had produced a dispassionate tolerance
which weakened the ethnographical conception
of a privileged Christendom. And when classical
antiquity with its men and institutions became
an ideal of life) as well as the greatest
of historical memories, ancient speculation
and skepticism obtained in many cases a complete
mastery over the minds of Italians. Since,
again, the Italians were the first modern
people of Europe who gave themselves boldly
to speculations on freedom and necessity,
and since they did so under violent and lawless
political circumstances, in which evil seemed
often to win a splendid and lasting victory,
their belief in God began to waver, and their
view of the government of the world became
fatalistic. And when their passionate natures
refused to rest in the sense of uncertainty,
they made a shift to help themselves out
with ancient, Oriental, or medieval superstition.
They took to astrology and magic.
Finally, these intellectual giants, these
representatives of the Renaissance, show,
in respect to religion, a quality which is
common in youthful natures. Distinguishing
keenly between good and evil, they yet are
conscious of no sin. Every disturbance of
their inward harmony they feel themselves
able to make good out of the plastic resources
of their own nature, and therefore they feel
no repentance. The need of salvation thus
becomes felt more and more dimly, while the
ambitions and the intellectual activity of
the present either shut out altogether every
thought of a world to come, or else caused
it to assume a poetic instead of a dogmatic
form.
When we look on all this as pervaded and
often perverted by the all-powerful Italian
imagination, we obtain a picture of that
time which is certainly more in accordance
with truth than are vague declarations against
modern paganism. And closer investigation
often reveals to us that underneath this
outward shell much genuine religion could
still survive.
The fuller discussion of these points must
be limited to a few of the more essential
explanations.
That religion should again become an affair
of the individual and of his own personal
feeling was inevitable when the Church became
corrupt in doctrine and tyrannous in practice,
and is a proof that the European mind was
still alive. It is true that this showed
itself in many different ways. While the
mystical and ascetical sects of the North
lost no time in creating new outward forms
for their new modes of thought and feeling,
each individual in Italy went his own way,
and thousands wandered on the sea of life
without any religious guidance whatever.
All the more must we admire those who attained
and held fast to a personal religion. They
were not to blame for being unable to have
any part or lot in the old Church, as she
then was; nor would it be reasonable to expect
that they should all of them go through that
mighty spiritual labor which was appointed
to the German reformers. The form and aim
of this personal faith, as it showed itself
in the better minds, will bc set forth at
the close of our work.
The worldliness, through which the Renaissance
seems to offer so striking a contrast to
the Middle Ages, owed its first origin to
the flood of new thoughts, purposes, and
views, which transformed the mediaeval conception
of nature and man. The spirit is not in itself
more hostile to religion than that 'culture'
which now holds its place, but which can
give us only a feeble notion of the universal
ferment which the discovery of a new world
of greatness then called forth. This worldliness
was not frivolous, but earnest, and was ennobled
by art and poetry. It is a lofty necessity
of the modern spirit that this attitude,
once gained, can never again be lost, that
an irresistible impulse forces us to the
investigation of men and things, and that
we must hold this inquiry to be our proper
end and work. How soon and by what paths
this search will lead us back to God, and
in what ways the religious temper of the
individual will be affected by it, are questions
which cannot be met by any general answer.
The Middle Ages, which spared themselves
the trouble of induction and free inquiry,
can have no right to impose upon us their
dogmatical verdict in a matter of such vast
importance.
To the study of man, among many other causes,
was due the tolerance and indifference with
which the Mohammedan religion was regarded.
The knowledge and admiration of the remarkable
civilization which Islam, particularly before
the Mongol inundation, had attained, was
peculiar to Italy from the time of the Crusades.
This sympathy was fostered by the half-Mohammedan
government of some Italian princes, by dislike
and even contempt for the existing Church,
and by constant commercial intercourse with
the harbors of the Eastern and Southern Mediterranean.
It can be shown that in the thirteenth century
the Italians recognized a Mohammedan ideal
of nobleness, dignity, and pride, which they
loved to connect with the person of a Sultan.
A Mameluke Sultan is commonly meant; if any
name is mentioned, it is the name of Saladin.
Even the Osmanli Turks, whose destructive
tendencies were no secret, gave the Italians
only half a fright, and a peaceable accord
with them was looked upon as no impossibility.
The truest and most characteristic expression
of this religious indifference is the famous
story of the Three Rings, which Lessing has
put into the mouth of his Nathan, after it
had been already told centuries earlier,
though with some reserve, in the 'Hundred
Old Novels' (nov. 12 or 73), and more boldly
in Boccaccio (Decamerone, i, nov. 3). In
what language and in what corner of the Mediterranean
it was first told can never be known; most
likely the original was much more plain-spoken
than the two Italian adaptations. The religious
postulate on which it rests, namely Deism,
will be discussed later on in its wider significance
for this period. The same idea is repeated,
though in a clumsy caricature, in the famous
proverb of the 'three who have deceived the
world, that is, Moses, Christ, and Mohammed.'
If the Emperor Frederick II, in whom this
saying is said to have originated, really
thought so, he probably expressed himself
with more wit.
Ideas of the same kind were also current
in Islam. At the height of the Renaissance,
towards the close of the fifteenth century,
Luigi Pulci offers us an example of the same
mode of thought in the 'Morgante Maggiore.'
The imaginary world of which his story treats
is divided, as in all heroic poems of romance,
into a Christian and a Mohammedan camp. In
accordance with the medieval temper, the
victory of the Christian and the final reconciliation
among the combatants was attended by the
baptism of the defeated Islamites, and the
Improvisatori, who preceded Pulci in the
treatment of these subjects, must have made
free use of this stock incident. It was Pulci's
object to parody his predecessors, particularly
the worst among them, and this he does by
the invocations of God, Christ, and the Madonna,
with which each canto begins; and still more
clearly by the sudden conversions and baptisms,
the utter senselessness of which must have
struck every reader or hearer. This ridicule
leads him further to the confession of his
faith in the relative goodness of all religions,
which faith, notwithstanding his profession
of orthodoxy, rests on an essentially theistic
basis. In another point, too, he departs
widely from mediaeval conceptions. The alternatives
in past centuries were: Christian, or else
Pagan and Mohammedan; orthodox believer or
heretic. Pulci draws a picture of the Giant
Margutte who, disregarding each and every
religion, jovially confesses to every form
of vice and sensuality, and only reserves
to himself the merit of having never broken
faith. Perhaps the poet intended to make
something of this--in his way--honest monster,
possibly to have led him into virtuous paths
by Morgante, but he soon got tired of his
own creation, and in the next canto brought
him to a comic end. Margutte has been brought
forward as a proof of Pulci's frivolity;
but he is needed to complete the picture
of the poetry of the fifteenth century. It
was natural that it should somewhere present
in grotesque proportions the figure of an
untamed egotism, insensible to all established
rule, and yet with a remnant of honorable
feeling left. In other poems sentiments are
put into the mouths of giants, fiends, infidels,
and Mohammedans which no Christian knight
would venture to utter.
Antiquity exercised an influence of another
kind than that of Islam, and this not through
its religion, which was but too much like
the Catholicism of this period, but through
its philosophy. Ancient literature, now respected
as something incomparable, is full of the
victory of philosophy over religious tradition.
An endless number of systems and fragments
of systems were suddenly presented to the
Italian mind, not as curiosities or even
as heresies, but almost with the authority
of dogmas, which had now to be reconciled
rather than discriminated. In nearly all
these various opinions and doctrines a certain
kind of belief in God was implied; but taken
altogether they formed a marked contrast
to the Christian faith in a Divine government
of the world. And there was one central question,
which mediaeval theology had striven in vain
to solve, and which now urgently demanded
an answer from the wisdom of the ancients,
namely, the relation of Providence to the
freedom or necessity of the human will. To
write the history of this question even superficially
from the fourteenth century onwards, would
require a whole volume. A few hints must
here suffice.
If we take Dante and his contemporaries as
evidence, we shall find that ancient philosophy
first came into contact with Italian life
in the form which offered the most marked
contrast to Christianity, that is to say,
Epicureanism. The writings of Epicurus were
no longer preserved, and even at the close
of the classical age a more or less one-sided
conception had been formed of his philosophy.
Nevertheless, that phase of Epicureanism
which can be studied in Lucretius, and especially
in Cicero, is quite sufficient to make men
familiar with a godless universe. To what
extent his teaching was actually understood,
and whether the name of the problematic Greek
sage was not rather a catchword for the multitude,
it is hard to say. It is probable that the
Dominican Inquisition used it against men
who could not be reached by a more definite
accusation. In the case of sceptics born
before the time was ripe, whom it was yet
hard to convict of positive heretical utterances,
a moderate degree of luxurious living may
have sufficed to provoke the charge. The
word is used in this conventional sense by
Giovanni Villani, when he explains the Florentine
fires of 1115 and 1117 as a Divine judgement
on heresies, among others, 'on the luxurious
and gluttonous sect of Epicureans.' The same
writer says of Manfred, 'His life was Epicurean,
since he believed neither in God, nor in
the Saints, but only in bodily pleasure.'
Dante speaks still more clearly in the ninth
and tenth cantos of the 'Inferno.' That terrible
fiery field covered with half-opened tombs,
from which issued cries of hopeless agony,
was peopled by the two great classes of those
whom the Church had vanquished or expelled
in the thirteenth century. The one were heretics
who opposed the Church by deliberately spreading
false doctrine; the other were Epicureans,
and their sin against the Church lay in their
general disposition, which was summed up
in the belief that the soul dies with the
body. The Church was well aware that this
one doctrine, if it gained ground, must be
more ruinous to her authority than all the
teachings of the Manichaeans and Paterines,
since it took away all reason for her interference
in the affairs of men after death. That the
means which she used in her struggles were
precisely what had driven the most gifted
natures to unbelief and despair was what
she naturally would not herself admit.
Dante's loathing of Epicurus, or of what
he took to be his doctrine, was certainly
sincere. The poet of the life to come could
not but detest the denier of immortality;
and a world neither made nor ruled by God,
no less than the vulgar objects of earthly
life which the system appeared to countenance,
could not but be intensely repugnant to a
nature like his. But if we look closer, we
find that certain doctrines of the ancients
made even on him an impression which forced
the biblical doctrine of the Divine government
into the background unless, indeed, it was
his own reflection, the influence of opinions
then prevalent, or loathing for the injustice
that seemed to rule this world, which made
him give up the belief in a special Providence
His God leaves all the details of the world's
government to a deputy, Fortune, whose sole
work it is to change and change again all
earthly things, and who can disregard the
wailings of men in unalterable beatitude.
Nevertheless, Dante does not for a moment
fail to insist on the moral responsibility
of man; he believes in free will. The belief
in the freedom of the will, in the popular
sense of the words, has always prevailed
in Western countries. At all times men have
been held responsible for their actions,
as though this freedom were a matter of course.
The case is otherwise with the religious
and philosophical doctrine, which labors
under the difficulty of harmonizing the nature
of the will with the laws of the universe
at large. We have here to do with a question
of more or less, which every moral estimate
must take into account. Dante is not wholly
free from those astrological superstitions
which illumined the horizon of his time with
deceptive light, but they do not hinder him
from rising to a worthy conception of human
nature. 'The stars,' he makes his Marco Lambert
say ('Purgatorio,' xvi, 73), 'the stars give
the first impulse to your actions, but a
light is given you to know good and evil,
and free will, which, if it endure the strain
in its first battlings with the heavens,
at length gains the whole victory, if it
be well nurtured.'
Others might seek the necessity which annulled
human freedom in another power than the stars,
but the question was henceforth an open and
inevitable one. So far as it was a question
for the schools or the pursuit of isolated
thinkers, its treatment belongs to the historian
of philosophy. But inasmuch as it entered
into the consciousness of a wider public,
it is necessary for us to say a few words
respecting it.
The fourteenth century was chiefly stimulated
by the writings of Cicero, who, though in
fact an eclectic, yet, by his habit of setting
forth the opinions of different schools,
without coming to a decision between them,
exercised the influence of a skeptic. Next
in importance came Seneca, and the few works
of Aristotle which had been translated into
Latin. The immediate fruit of these studies
was the capacity to reflect on great subjects,
if not in direct opposition to the authority
of the Church, at all events independently
of it.
In the course of the fifteenth century the
works of antiquity were discovered and diffused
with extraordinary rapidity. All the writings
of the Greek philosophers which we ourselves
possess were now, at least in the form of
Latin translations, in everybody's hands.
It is a curious fact that some of the most
zealous apostles of this new culture were
men of the strictest piety, or even ascetics.
Fra Ambrogio Camaldolese, as a spiritual
dignitary chiefly occupied with ecclesiastical
affairs, and as a literary man with the translation
of the Greek Fathers of the Church, could
not repress the humanistic impulse, and at
the request of Cosimo de' Medici, undertook
to translate Diogenes Laertius into Latin.
His contemporaries, Niccolo Niccoli, Giannozzo
Manetti, Donato Acciaiuoli, and Pope Nicholas
V, united to a many-sided humanism profound
biblical scholarship and deep piety. In Vittorino
da Feltre the same temper has been already
noticed. The same Maffeo Vegio, who added
a thirteenth book to the Aeneid, had an enthusiasm
for the memory of St. Augustine and his mother,
Monica, which cannot have been without a
deeper influence upon him. The result of
all these tendencies was that the Platonic
Academy at Florence deliberately chose for
its object the reconciliation of the spirit
of antiquity with that of Christianity. It
was a remarkable oasis in the humanism of
the period.
This humanism was in fact pagan, and became
more and more so as its sphere widened in
the fifteenth century. Its representatives,
whom we have already described as the advance
guard of an unbridled individualism, display
as a rule such a character that even their
religion, which is sometimes professed very
definitely, becomes a matter of indifference
to us. They easily got the name of atheists,
if they showed themselves indifferent to
religion and spoke freely against the Church;
but not one of them ever professed, or dared
to profess, a formal, philosophical atheism.
If they sought for any leading principle,
it must have been a kind of superficial rationalism--a
careless inference from the many and contradictory
opinions of antiquity with which they busied
themselves, and from the discredit into which
the Church and her doctrines had fallen This
was the sort of reasoning which was near
bringing Galeotto Martio to the stake, had
not his former pupil, Pope Sixtus IV, perhaps
at the request of Lorenzo de' Medici, saved
him from the hands of the Inquisition. Galeotto
had ventured to write that the man who lived
uprightly, and acted according to the natural
law born within him, would go to heaven,
whatever nation he belonged to.
Let us take, by way of example, the religious
attitude of one of the smaller men in the
great army. Codrus Urceus was first the tutor
of the last Ordelaffo, Prince of Forli, and
afterwards for many years professor at Bologna.
Against the Church and the monks his language
is as abusive as that of the rest. His tone
in general is reckless to the last degree,
and he constantly introduces himself in all
his local history and gossip. But he knows
how to speak to the edification of the true
God-Man, Jesus Christ, and to commend himself
by letter to the prayers of a saintly priest.
On one occasion, after enumerating the follies
of the pagan religions, he thus goes on:
'Our theologians, too, quarrel about "the
guinea-pig's tail," about the Immaculate
Conception, Antichrist, Sacraments, Predestination,
and other things, which were better let alone
than talked of publicly.' Once, when he was
not at home, his room and manuscripts were
burnt. When he heard the news he stood opposite
a figure of the Madonna in the street, and
cried to it: 'Listen to what I tell you;
I am not mad, I am saying what I mean. If
I ever call upon you in the hour of my death,
you need not hear me or take me among your
own, for I will go and spend eternity with
the devil.' After which speech he found it
desirable to spend six months in retirement
at the home of a woodcutter. With all this,
he was so superstitious that prodigies and
omens gave him incessant frights, leaving
him no belief to spare for the immortality
of the soul. When his hearers questioned
him on the matter, he answered that no one
knew what became of a man, of his soul or
his spirit, after death, and the talk about
another life was only fit to frighten old
women. But when he came to die, he commended
in his will his soul or his spirit to Almighty
God, exhorted his weeping pupils to fear
the Lord, and especially to believe in immortality
and future retribution, and received the
Sacrament with much fervor. We have no guarantee
that more famous men in the same calling,
however significant their opinions may be,
were in practical life any more consistent.
It is probable that most of them wavered
inwardly between incredulity and a remnant
of the faith in which they were brought up,
and outwardly held for prudential reasons
to the Church.
Through the connexion of rationalism with
the newly born science of historical investigation,
some timid attempts at biblical criticism
may here and there have been made. A saying
of Pius II has been recorded, which seems
intended to prepare the way for such criticism:
'Even if Christianity were not confirmed
by miracles, it ought still to be accepted
on account of its morality.' The legends
of the Church, in so far as they contained
arbitrary versions of the biblical miracles,
were freely ridiculed, and this reacted on
the religious sense of the people. Where
Judaizing heretics are mentioned, we must
understand chiefly those who denied the Divinity
of Christ, which was probably the offence
for which Giorgio da Novara was burnt at
Bologna about the year 1500. But again at
Bologna in the year 1497 the Dominican Inquisitor
was forced to let the physician Gabriele
da Salo, who had powerful patrons, escape
with a simple expression of penitence, although
he was in the habit of maintaining that Jesus
was not God, but son of Joseph and Mary,
and conceived in the usual way; that by his
cunning he had deceived the world to its
ruin; that he may have died on the cross
on account of crimes which he had committed;
that his religion would soon come to an end;
that his body was not really contained in
the sacrament, and that he performed his
miracles, not through any divine power, but
through the influence of the heavenly bodies.
This latter statement is most characteristic
of the time: Faith is gone, but magic still
holds its ground.
With respect to the moral government of the
world, the humanists seldom get beyond a
cold and resigned consideration of the prevalent
violence and misrule. In this mood the main
works 'On Fate,' or whatever name they bear,
are written. They tell of the turning of
the wheel of Fortune, and of the instability
of earthly, especially political, things.
Providence is only brought in because the
writers would still be ashamed of undisguised
fatalism, of the avowal of their ignorance,
or of useless complaints. Gioviano Pontano
ingeniously illustrates the nature of that
mysterious something which men call Fortune
by a hundred incidents, most of which belonged
to his own experience. The subject is treated
more humorously by Aeneas Sylvius, in the
form of a vision seen in a dream. The aim
of Poggio, on the other hand, in a work written
in his old age, is to represent the world
as a vale of tears, and to fix the happiness
of various classes as low as possible. This
tone became in future the prevalent one.
Distinguished men drew up a debit and credit
of the happiness and unhappiness of their
lives, and generally found that the latter
outweighed the former. The fate of Italy
and the Italians, so far as it could be told
in the year 1510, has been described with
dignity and almost elegiac pathos by Tristan
Caracciolo. Applying this general tone of
feeling to the humanists themselves, Pierio
Valeriano afterwards composed his famous
treatise. Some of these themes, such as the
fortunes of Leo X, were most suggestive.
All the good that can be said of him politically
has been briefly and admirably summed up
by Francesco Vettori; the picture of Leo's
pleasures is given by Paolo Giovio and in
the anonymous biography; and the shadows
which attended his prosperity are drawn with
inexorable truth by the same Pierio Valeriano.
We cannot, on the other hand, read without
a kind of awe how men sometimes boasted of
their fortune in public inscriptions. Giovanni
II Bentivoglio, ruler of Bologna, ventured
to carve in stone on the newly built tower
by his palace that his merit and his fortune
had given him richly of all that could be
desired--and this a few years before his
expulsion. The ancients, when they spoke
in this tone, had nevertheless a sense of
the envy of the gods. In Italy it was probably
the Condottieri who first ventured to boast
so loudly of their fortune. But the way in
which resuscitated antiquity affected religion
most powerfully, was not through any doctrines
or philosophical system, but through a general
tendency which it fostered. The men, and
in some respects the institutions, of antiquity
were preferred to those of the Middle Ages,
and in the eager attempt to imitate and reproduce
them, religion was left to take care of itself.
All was absorbed in the admiration for historical
greatness. To this the philologians added
many special follies of their own, by which
they became the mark for general attention.
How far Paul II was justified in calling
his Abbreviators and their friends to account
for their paganism, is certainly a matter
of great doubt, as his biographer and chief
victim, Platina, has shown a masterly skill
in explaining his vindictiveness on other
grounds, and especially in making him play
a ludicrous figure. The charges of infidelity,
paganism, denial of immortality, and so forth,
were not made against the accused till the
charge of high treason had broken down. Paul,
indeed, if we are correctly informed about
him, was by no means the man to judge of
intellectual things. It was he who exhorted
the Romans to teach their children nothing
beyond reading and writing. His priestly
narrowness of views reminds us of Savonarola,
with the difference that Paul might fairly
have been told that he and his like were
in great part to blame if culture made men
hostile to religion. It cannot, nevertheless,
be doubted that he felt a real anxiety about
the pagan tendencies which surrounded him.
And what, in truth, may not the humanists
have allowed themselves at the court of the
profligate pagan, Sigismondo Malatesta, How
far these men, destitute for the most part
of fixed principle, ventured to go, depended
assuredly on the sort of influences they
were exposed to. Nor could they treat of
Christianity without paganizing it. It is
curious, for instance, to notice how far
Gioviano Pontano carried this confusion.
He speaks of a saint not only as 'divus,'
but as 'deus'; the angels he holds to be
identical with the genii of antiquity; and
his notion of immortality reminds us of the
old kingdom of the shades. This spirit occasionally
appears in the most extravagant shapes. In
1526, when Siena was attacked by the exiled
party, the worthy Canon Tizio, who tells
us the story himself, rose from his bed on
the 22nd of July, called to mind what is
written in the third book of Macrobius, celebrated
Mass, and then pronounced against the enemy
the curse with which his author had supplied
him, only altering 'Tellus mater teque Jupiter
obtestor' into 'Tellus teque Christe Deus
obtestor.' After he had done this for three
days, the enemy retreated. On the one side,
these things strike us as an affair of mere
style and fashion j on the other, as a symptom
of religious decadence.
Part Six MORALITY AND RELIGION Influence
of Ancient Superstition But in another way,
and that dogmatically, antiquity exercised
perilous influence. It imparted to the Renaissance
its own forms of superstition. Some fragments
of this had survived in Italy all through
the Middle Ages, and the resuscitation of
the whole was thereby made so much the more
easy. The part played by the imagination
in the process need not be dwelt upon. This
only could have silenced the critical intellect
of the Italians.
The belief in a Divine government of the
world was in many minds destroyed by the
spectacle of so much injustice and misery.
Others, like Dante, surrendered at all events
this life to the caprices of chance, and
if they nevertheless retained a sturdy faith,
it was because they held that the higher
destiny of man would be accomplished in the
life to come. But when the belief in immortality
began to waver, then Fatalism got the upper
hand, or sometimes the latter came first
and had the former as its consequence.
The gap thus opened was in the first place
filled by the astrology of antiquity, or
even of the Arabs. From the relation of the
planets among themselves and to the signs
of the zodiac. future events and the course
of whole lives were inferred, and the most
weighty decisions were taken in consequence.
In many cases the line of action thus adopted
at the suggestion of the stars may not have
been more immoral than that which would otherwise
have been followed. But too often the decision
must have been made at the cost of honour
and conscience. It is profoundly instructive
to observe how powerless culture and enlightenment
were against this delusion; since the latter
had its support in the ardent imagination
of the people, in the passionate wish to
penetrate and determine the future. Antiquity,
too, was on the side of astrology.
At the beginning of the thirteenth century
this superstition suddenly appeared in the
foreground of Italian life. The Emperor Frederick
II always travelled with his astrologer Theodorus;
and Ezzelino da Romano with a large, well-paid
court of such people, among them the famous
Guido Bonatto and the long-bearded Saracen,
Paul of Baghdad. In all important undertakings
they fixed for him the day and the hour,
and the gigantic atrocities of which he was
guilty may have been in part practical inferences
from their prophecies. Soon all scruples
about consulting the stars ceased. Not only
princes, but free cities, had their regular
astrologers, and at the universities, from
the fourteenth to the sixteenth century,
professors of this pseudo-science were appointed,
and lectured side by side with the astronomers.
The Popes commonly made no secret of their
stargazing, though Pius II, who also despised
magic, omens, and the interpretation of dreams,
is an honorable exception. Even Leo X seems
to have thought the flourishing condition
of astrology a credit to his pontificate,
and Paul III never held a Consistory till
the stargazers had fixed the hour.
It may fairly be assumed that the better
natures did not allow their actions to be
determined by the stars beyond a certain
point, and that there was a limit where conscience
and religion made them pause. In fact, not
only did pious and excellent people share
the delusion, but they actually came forward
to profess it publicly. One of these was
Maestro Pagolo of Florence, in whom we can
detect the same desire to bring astrology
to moral account which meets us in the late
Roman Firmicus Maternus. His life was that
of a saintly ascetic. He ate almost nothing,
despised all temporal goods, and only collected
books. A skilled physician, he only practiced
among his friends, and made it a condition
of his treatment that they should confess
their sins. He frequented the small but famous
circle which assembled in the Monastery of
the Angeli around Fra Ambrogio Camaldolese.
He also saw much of Cosimo the Elder, especially
in his last years; for Cosimo accepted and
used astrology, though probably only for
objects of lesser importance. As a rule,
however, Pagolo only interpreted the stars
to his most confidential friends. But even
without this severity of morals, the astrologers
might be highly respected and show themselves
everywhere. There were also far more of them
in Italy than in other European countries,
where they only appeared at the great courts,
and there not always. All the great householders
in Italy, when the fashion was once established,
kept an astrologer, who, it must be added,
was not always sure of his dinner. Through
the literature of this science, which was
widely diffused even before the invention
of printing, a dilettantism also grew up
which as far as possible followed in the
steps of the masters. The worst class of
astrologers were those who used the stars
either as an aid or a cloak to magical arts.
Yet apart from the latter, astrology is a
miserable feature in the life of that time.
What a figure do all these highly gifted,
many-sided, original characters play, when
the blind passion for knowing and determining
the future dethrones their powerful will
and resolution! Now and then, when the stars
send them too cruel a message, they manage
to brace themselves up, act for themselves,
and say boldly: 'Vir sapiens dominabitus
lustris', the wise man is master of the stars--and
then again relapse into the old delusion.
In all the better families the horoscope
of the children was drawn as a matter of
course, and it sometimes happened that for
half a lifetime men were haunted by the idle
expectation of events which never occurred!
The stars were questioned whenever a great
man had to come to any important decision,
and even consulted as to the hour at which
any undertaking was to be begun. The journeys
of princes, the reception of foreign ambassadors,
the laying of the foundation-stones of public
buildings, depended on the answer. A striking
instance of the latter occurs in the life
of the aforenamed Guido Bonatto, who by his
personal activity and by his great systematic
work on the subject deserves to be called
the restorer of astrology in the thirteenth
century. In order to put an end to the struggle
of the Guelphs and Ghibellines at Forli,
he persuaded the inhabitants to rebuild the
city walls and to begin the works under a
constellation indicated by himself. If then
two men, one from each party, at the same
moment put a stone into the foundation, there
would henceforth and for ever be no more
party divisions in Forli. A Guelph and a
Ghibelline were selected for this office;
the solemn moment arrived, each held the
stone in his hands, the workmen stood ready
with their implements. Bonatto gave the signal,
and the Ghibelline threw down his stone on
to the foundation. But the Guelph hesitated,
and at last refused to do anything at all,
on the ground that Bonatto himself had the
reputation of a Ghibelline and might be devising
some mysterious mischief against the Guelphs.
Upon which the astrologer addressed him:
'God damn thee and the Guelph party with
your distrustful malice! This constellation
will not appear above our city for 500 years
to come.' In fact God soon afterwards did
destroy the Guelphs of Forli, but now, writes
the chronicler about 1480, the two parties
are thoroughly reconciled, and their very
names are heard no longer.
Nothing that depended upon the stars was
more important than decisions in time of
war. The same Bonatto procured for the great
Ghibelline leader Guido da Montefeltro a
series of victories, by telling him the propitious
hour for marching. When Montefeltro was no
longer accompanied by him he lost the courage
to maintain his despotism, and entered a
Minorite monastery, where he lived as a monk
for many years till his death. In the war
with Pisa in 1362, the Florentines commissioned
their astrologer to fix the hour for the
march, and almost came too late through suddenly
receiving orders to take a circuitous route
through the city. On former occasions they
had marched out by the Via di Borgo Santi
Apostoli, and the campaign had been unsuccessful.
It was clear that there was some bad omen
connected with the exit through this street
against Pisa, and consequently the army was
now led out by the Porta Rossa. But as the
tents stretched out there to dry had not
been taken away, the flags--another bad omen--had
to be lowered. The influence of astrology
in war was confirmed by the fact that nearly
all the Condottieri believed in it. Jacopo
Caldora was cheerful in the most serious
illness, knowing that he was fated to fall
in battle, which in fact happened. Bartolommeo
Alviano was convinced that his wounds in
the head were as much a gift of the stars
as his military command. Niccolo Orsini-Pitigliano
asked the physicist and astrologer Alessandro
Benedetto to fix a favourable hour for the
conclusion of his bargain with Venice. When
the Florentines on June 1, 1498, solemnly
invested their new Condottiere Paolo Vitelli
with his office, the Marshal's staff which
they handed him was, at his own wish, decorated
with pictures of the constellations.
Sometimes it is not easy to make out whether
}n important political events the stars were
questioned beforehand, or whether the astrologers
were simply impelled afterwards by curiosity
to find out the constellation which decided
the result. When Giangaleazzo Visconti by
a master-stroke of policy took prisoner his
uncle Bernabo, with the latter's family (1385),
we are told by a contemporary that Jupiter,
Saturn and Mars stood in the house of the
Twins, but we cannot say if the deed was
resolved on in consequence. It is also probable
that the advice of the astrologers was often
determined by political calculation not less
than by the course of the planets.
All Europe, through the latter part of the
Middle Ages, had allowed itself to be terrified
by predictions of plagues, wars, floods,
and earthquakes, and in this respect Italy
was by no means behind other countries. The
unlucky year 1494, which for ever opened
the gates of Italy to the stranger, was undeniably
ushered in by many prophecies of misfortune--only
we cannot say whether such prophecies were
not ready for each and every year.
This mode of thought was extended with thorough
consistency into regions where we should
hardly expect to meet with it. If the whole
outward and spiritual life of the individual
is determined by the facts of his birth,
the same law also governs groups of individuals
and historical products --that is to say,
nations and religions; and as the constellation
of these things changes, so do the things
themselves. The idea that each religion has
its day, first came into Italian culture
in connection with these astrological beliefs.
The conjunction of Jupiter with Saturn brought
forth, we are told, the faith of Israel;
that of Jupiter and Mars, the Chaldean; with
the Sun, the Egyptian; with Venus, the Mohammedan;
with Mercury, the Christian; and the conjunction
of Jupiter with the Moon will one day bring
forth the religion of Antichrist. Cecco d'Ascoli
had already blasphemously calculated the
nativity of Christ, and deduced from it his
death upon the Cross. For this he was burnt
at the stake in 1327, at Florence. Doctrines
of this sort ended by simply darkening men's
whole perceptions of spiritual things.
So much more worthy then of recognition is
the warfare which the clear Italian spirit
waged against this army of delusions. Notwithstanding
the great monumental glorification of astrology,
as in the frescoes in the Salone at Padua,
and those in Borso's summer palace (Schifanoia)
at Ferrara, notwithstanding the shameless
praises of even such a man as the elder Beroaldus,
there was no want of thoughtful and independent
minds to protest against it. Here, too, the
way had been prepared by antiquity, but it
was their own common sense and observation
which taught them what to say. Petrarch's
attitude towards the astrologers, whom he
knew by personal intercourse, is one of bitter
contempt; and no one saw through their system
of lies more clearly than he. The novels,
from the time when they first began to appear
from the time of the 'Cento novelle antiche,'
are almost always hostile to the astrologers.
The Florentine chroniclers bravely keep themselves
free from the delusions which, as part of
historical tradition, they are compelled
to record. Giovanni Villani says more than
once, 'No constellation can subjugate either
the free will of man, or the counsels of
God.' Matteo Villani declares astrology to
be a vice which the Florentines had inherited,
along with other superstitions, from their
pagan ancestors, the Romans. The question,
however, did not remain one for mere literary
discussion, but the parties for and against
disputed publicly. After the terrible floods
of 1333, and again in 1345, astrologers and
theologians discussed with great minuteness
the influence of the stars, the will of God,
and the justice of his punishments. These
struggles never ceased throughout the whole
time of the Renaissance, and we may conclude
that the protestors were ill earnest, since
it was easier for them to recommend themselves
to the great by defending, than by opposing
astrology.
In the circle of Lorenzo the Magnificent,
among his most distinguished Platonists,
opinions were divided on this question. Marsilio
Ficino defended astrology, and drew the horoscope
of the children of the house, promising the
little Giovanni, afterwards Leo X, that he
would one day be Pope. Pico della Mirandola,
on the other hand, made an epoch in the subject
by his famous refutation. He detects in this
belief the root of all impiety and immorality.
If the astrologer, he maintains, believes
in anything at all, he must worship not God,
but the planets, from which all good and
evil are derived. All other superstitions
find a ready instrument in astrology, which
serves as handmaid to geomancy, chiromancy,
and magic of every kind. As to morality,
he maintains that nothing can more foster
evil than the opinion that heaven itself
is the cause of it, in which case the faith
in eternal happiness and punishment must
also disappear. Pico even took the trouble
to check off the astrologers inductively,
and found that in the course of a month three-fourths
of their weather prophecies turned out false.
But his main achievement was to set forth,
in the Fourth Book, a positive Christian
doctrine of the freedom of the will and the
government of the universe, which seems to
have made a greater impression on the educated
classes throughout Italy than all the revivalist
preachers put together. The latter, in fact,
often failed to reach these classes.
The first result of his book was that the
astrologers ceased to publish their doctrines,
and those who had already printed them were
more or less ashamed of what they had done.
Gioviano Pontano, for example, in his book
on Fate, had recognized the science, and
in a great work of his had expounded the
whole theory of it in the style of the old
Firmicus, ascribing to the stars the growth
of every bodily and spiritual quality. He
now in his dialogue 'Aegidius' surrendered,
if not astrology, at least certain astrologers)
and sounded the praises of free will, by
which man is enabled to know God. Astrology
remained more or less in fashion, but seems
not to have governed human life in the way
it formerly had done. The art of painting,
which in the fifteenth century had done its
best to foster the delusion now expressed
the altered tone of thought. Raphael, in
the cupola of the Capella Chigi, represents
the gods of the different planets and the
starry firmament, watched, however, and guided
by beautiful angel-figures, and receiving
from above the blessing of the eternal Father.
There was also another cause which now began
to tell against astrology in Italy. The Spaniards
took no interest in it, not even the generals,
and those who wished to gain their favour
declared open war against the half-heretical,
half-Mohammedan science. It is true that
Guic- ciardini writes in the year 1529: 'How
happy are the astrologers, who are believed
if they tell one truth to a hundred lies,
while other people lose all credit if they
tell one lie to a hundred truths.' But the
contempt for astrology did not necessarily
lead to a return to the belief in Providence.
It could as easily lead to an indefinite
fatalism.
In this respect, as in others, Italy was
unable to make its own way healthily through
the ferment of the Renaissance, because the
foreign invasion and the Counter-Reformation
came upon it in the middle. Without such
interfering causes its own strength would
have enabled it thoroughly to get rid of
these fantastic illusions. Those who hold
that the onslaught of the strangers and the
Catholic reactions were necessities for which
the Italian people was itself solely responsible,
will look on the spiritual bankruptcy which
they produced as a just retribution. But
it is a pity that the rest of Europe had
indirectly to pay so large a part of the
penalty.
The belief in omens seems a much more innocent
matter than astrology. The Middle Ages had
everywhere inherited them in abundance from
the various pagan religions; and Italy did
not differ in this respect from other countries.
What is characteristic of Italy is the support
lent by humanism to the popular superstition.
The pagan inheritance was here backed up
by a pagan literary development.
The popular superstition of the Italians
rested largely on premonitions and inferences
drawn from ominous occurrences. with which
a good deal of magic, mostly of an innocent
sort, was connected. There was, however.
no lack of learned humanists who boldly ridiculed
these delusions, and to whose attacks we
partly owe the knowledge of them. Gioviano
Pontano, the author of the great astrological
work already mentioned above, enumerates
with pity in his 'Charon' a long string of
Neapolitan superstitions--the grief of the
women when a fowl or goose caught the pip;
the deep anxiety of the nobility if a hunting
falcon did not come home, or if a horse sprained
its foot; the magical formulae of the Apulian
peasants, recited on three Saturday evenings,
when mad dogs were at large. The animal kingdom,
as in antiquity, was regarded as specially
significant in this respect, and the behavior
of the lions, leopards, and other beasts
kept by the State gave the people all the
more food for reflection, because they had
come to be considered as living symbols of
the State. During the siege of Florence,
in 1597 an eagle which had been shot at fled
into the city, and the Signoria gave the
bearer four ducats because the omen was good.
Certain times and places were favourable
or unfavorable, or even decisive one way
or the other, for certain actions. The Florentines,
so Varchi tells us, held Saturday to be the
fateful day on which all important events,
good as well as bad, commonly happened. Their
prejudice against marching out to war through
a particular street has been already mentioned.
At Perugia one of the gates, the 'Porta Eburnea,'
was thought lucky, and the Baglioni always
went out to fight through it. Meteors and
the appearance of the heavens were as significant
in Italy as elsewhere in the Middle Ages,
and the popular imagination saw warring armies
in an unusual formation of clouds, and heard
the clash of their collision high in the
air. The superstition became a more serious
matter when it attached itself to sacred
things, when figures of the Virgin wept or
moved the eyes, or when public calamities
were associated with some alleged act of
impiety, for which the people demanded expia-
tion. In 1478, when Piacenza was visited
with a violent and prolonged rainfall, it
was said that there would be no dry weather
till a certain usurer, who had been lately
buried in San Francesco, had ceased to rest
in consecrated earth. As the bishop was not
obliging enough to have the corpse dug up
the young fellows of the town took it by
force, dragged it down the streets amid frightful
confusion, and at last threw it into the
Po. Even Politian accepted this point of
view in speaking of Giacomo Pazzi, one of
the chiefs of the conspiracy of 1478, In
Florence, which is called after his family.
When he was put to death, he devoted his
soul to Satan with fearful words; here, too,
rain followed and threatened to ruin the
harvest; here, too, a party of men, mostly
peasants, dug up the body in the church,
and immediately the clouds departed and the
sun shone--'so gracious was fortune to the
opinion of the people,' adds the great scholar.
The corpse was first cast into unhallowed
ground, the next day dug up, and after a
horrible procession through the city thrown
into the Arno.
These facts and the like bear a popular character,
and might have occurred in the tenth, just
as well as in the sixteenth century. But
now comes the literary influence of antiquity.
We know positively that the humanists were
peculiarly accessible to prodigies and auguries,
and instances of this have been already quoted.
If further evidence were needed, it would
be found in Poggio. The same radical thinker
who denied the rights of noble birth and
the inequality of men, not only believed
in all the mediaeval stories of ghosts and
devils, but also in prodigies after the ancient
pattern, like those said to have occurred
on the last visit of Pope Eugenius IV to
Florence. 'Near Como there were seen one
evening four thousand dogs, who took the
road to Germany; these were followed by a
great herd of cattle, and these by an army
on foot and horseback, some with no heads
and some with almost invisible heads, and
then a gigantic horseman with another herd
of cattle behind him.' Poggio also believes
in a battle of magpies and jackdaws. He even
relates, perhaps without being aware of it,
a well-preserved piece of ancient mythology.
On the Dalmatian coast a Triton had appeared,
bearded and horned, a genuine sea-satyr,
ending in fins and a tail; he carried away
women and children from the shore, till five
stout-hearted washerwomen killed him with
sticks and stones. A wooden model of the
monster, which was exhibited at Ferrara,
makes the whole story credible to Poggio.
Though there were no more oracles, and it
was no longer possible to take counsel of
the gods, yet it became again the fashion
to open Virgil at hazard, and take the passage
hit upon as an omen
('Sorted Virgilianae'). Nor can the belief
in daemons current in the later period of
antiquity have been without influence on
the Renaissance. The work of Iamblichus or
Abarnmon on the Mysteries of the Egyptians,
which may have contributed to this result,
was printed in a Latin translation at the
end of the fifteenth century. The Platonic
Academy at Florence was not free from these
and other neoplatonic delusions of the Roman
decadence. A 'few words must here be given
to the belief in demons and to the magic
which was connected with this belief.
The popular faith in what is called the spirit-world
was nearly the same in Italy as elsewhere
in Europe. In Italy as elsewhere there were
ghosts, that is, reappearances of deceased
persons; and if the view taken of them differed
in any respect from that which prevailed
in the North, the difference betrayed itself
only in the ancient name 'ombra.' Even nowadays
if such a shade presents itself, a couple
of Masses are said for its repose. That the
spirits of bad men appear in a dreadful shape,
is a matter of course, but along with this
we find the notion that the ghosts of the
departed are universally malicious. The dead,
says the priest in a novel of Bandello, kill
the little children. It seems as if a certain
shade was here thought of as separate from
the soul, since the latter suffers in Purgatory,
and when it appears, does nothing but wail
and pray. At other times what appears is
not the ghost of a man, but of an event -
-of a past condition of things. So the neighbors
explained the diabolical appearances in the
old palace of the Visconti near San Giovanni
in Conca, at Milan, since here it was that
Bernab Visconti had caused countless victims
of his tyranny to be tortured and strangled,
and no wonder if there were strange things
to be seen. One evening a swarm of poor people
with candles in their hands appeared to a
dishonest guardian of the poor at Perugia,
and danced round about him; a great figure
spoke in threatening tones on their behalf,
it was St. Alo, the patron saint of the poorhouse.
These modes of belief were so much a matter
of course that the poets could make use of
them as something which every reader would
understand. The appearance of the slain Lodovico
Pico under the walls of the besieged Mirandola
is finely represented by Castiglione. It
is true that poetry made the freest use of
these conceptions when the poet himself had
outgrown them.
Italy, too, shared the belief in demons with
the other nations of the Middle Ages. Men
were convinced that God sometimes allowed
bad spirits of every class to exercise a
destructive influence on parts of the world
and of human life. The only reservation made
was that the man to whom the Evil One came
as tempter, could use his free will to resist.
In Italy the demonic influence, especially
as shown in natural events, easily assumed
a character of poetical greatness. In the
night before the great inundation of the
Val d'Arno in 1333, a pious hermit above
Vallombrosa heard a diabolical tumult in
his cell, crossed himself, stepped to the
door, and saw a crowd of black and terrible
knights gallop by in amour. When conjured
to stand, one of them said: 'We go to drown
the city of Florence on account of its sins,
if God will let us.' With this, the nearly
contemporary vision at Venice (1340) may
be compared, out of which a great master
of the Venetian school, probably Giorgione,
made the marvelous picture of a galley full
of daemons, which speeds with the swiftness
of a bird over the stormy lagoon to destroy
the sinful island-city, till the three saintS,
who have stepped unobserved into a poor boatman's
skiff, exorcised the fiends and sent them
and their vessel to the bottom of the waters.
To this belief the illusion was now added
that by means of magical arts it was possible
to enter into relations with the evil ones,
and use their help to further the purposes
of greed, ambition, and sensuality. Many
persons were probably accused of doing so
before the time when it was actually attempted
by many; but when the so-called magicians
and witches began to be burned, the deliberate
practice of the black art became more frequent.
With the smoke of the fires in which the
suspected victims were sacrificed, were spread
the narcotic fumes by which numbers of ruined
characters were drugged into magic; and with
them many calculating impostors became associated.
The primitive and popular form in which the
superstition had probably lived on uninterruptedly
from the time of the Romans, was the art
of the witch (strege). The witch, so long
as she limited herself to mere divination,
might be innocent enough. were it not that
the transition from prophecy to active help
could easily, though often imperceptibly,
be a fatal downward step. She was credited
in such a case not only with the power of
exciting love or hatred between man and woman,
but also with purely destructive and malignant
arts, and was especially charged with the
sickness of little children, even when the
malady obviously came from the neglect and
stupidity of the parents. It is still questionable
how far she was supposed to act by mere magical
ceremonies and formula, or by a conscious
alliance with the fiends, apart from the
poisons and drugs which she administered
with a full knowledge of their effect.
The more innocent form of the superstition,
in which the mendicant friar could venture
to appear as the competitor of the witch,
is shown in the case of the witch of Gaeta
whom we read of in Pontano. His traveller
Suppatius reaches her dwelling while she
is giving audience to a girl and a servingmaid,
who come to her with a black hen, nine eggs
laid on a Friday, a duck, and some white
thread, for it is the third day since the
new moon. They are then sent away, and bidden
to come again at twilight. It is to be hoped
that nothing worse than divination is intended.
The mistress of the servant-maid is pregnant
by a monk; the girl's lover has proved untrue
and has gone into a monastery. The witch
complains: 'Since my husband's death I support
myself in this way, and should make a good
thing of it, since the Gaetan women have
plenty of faith, were it not that the monks
balk me of my gains by explaining dreams,
appeasing the anger of the saints for money,
promising husbands to the girls, men-children
to the pregnant women, offspring to the barren,
and besides all this visiting the women at
night when their husbands are away fishing,
in accordance with the assignations made
in daytime at church.' Suppatius warns her
against the envy of the monastery, but she
has no fear, since the guardian of it is
an old acquaintance of hers.
But the superstition further gave rise to
a worse sort of witches, namely those who
deprived men of their health and life. In
these cases the mischief, when not sufficiently
accounted for by the evil eye and the like,
was naturally attributed to the aid of powerful
spirits. The punishment, as we have seen
in the case of Finicella, was the stake;
and yet a compromise with fanaticism was
sometimes practicable. According to the laws
of Perugia, for example, a witch could settle
the affair by paying down 400 pounds. The
matter was not then treated with the seriousness
and consistency of later times. In the territories
of the Church? at Norcia (Nursia), the home
of St. Benedict in the upper Apennines, there
was a perfect nest of witches and sorcerers,
and no secret was made of it. It is spoken
of in one of the most remarkable letters
of Aeneas Sylvius, belonging to his earlier
period. He writes to his brother: 'The bearer
of this came to me to ask if I knew of a
Mount of Venus in Italy, for in such a place
magical arts were taught, and his master,
a Saxon and a great astronomer, was anxious
to learn them. I told him that I knew of
a Porto Venere not far from Carrara, on the
rocky coast of Liguria, where I spent three
nights on the way to Basle; I also found
that there was a mountain called Eryx, in
Sicily, which was dedicated to Venus, but
I did not know whether magic was taught here.
But it came into my mind while talking, that
in Umbria, in the old Duchy (Spoleto)? near
the town of Nursia, there is a cave beneath
a steep rock, in which water flows. There,
as I remember to have heard, are witches
(striges), demons, and nightly shades, and
he that has the courage can see and speak
to ghosts
(spiritus), and learn magical arts. I have
not seen it, nor taken any trouble about
it, for that which is learned with sin is
better not learned at all.' He nevertheless
names his informant, and begs his brother
to take the bearer of the letter to him,
should he be still alive. Aeneas goes far
enough here in his politeness to a man of
position, but personally he was not only
freer from superstition than his contemporaries,
but he also stood a test on the subject which
not every educated man of our own day could
endure. At the time of the Council of Basle,
when he lay sick of the fever for seventy-five
days at Milan, he could never be persuaded
to listen to the magic doctors, though a
man was brought to his bedside who a short
time before had marvelously cured 2,000 soldiers
of fever in the camp of Piccinino. While
still an invalid, Aeneas rode over the mountains
to Basle, and got well on the journey.
We learn something more about the neighborhood
of Norcia through the necromancer who tried
to get Benvenuto Cellini into his power.
A new book of magic was to be consecrated,
and the best place for the ceremony was among
the mountains in that district. The master
of the magician had once, it is true, done
the same thing near the abbey of Farfa, but
had there found difficulties which did not
present themselves at Norcia; further, the
peasants in the latter neighborhood were
trustworthy people who had had practice in
the matter, and who could afford considerable
help in case of need. The expedition did
not take place, else Benvenuto would probably
have been able to tell us something of the
impostor's assistants. The whole neighborhood
was then proverbial. Aretino says somewhere
of an enchanted well, 'there dwell the sisters
of the sibyl of Norcia and the aunt of the
Fata Gloriana.' And about the same time Trissino
could still celebrate the place in his great
epic with all the resources of poetry and
allegory as the home of authentic prophecy.
After the notorious Bull of Innocent VIII
(1484), witchcraft and the persecution of
witches grew into a great and revolting system.
The chief representatives of this system
of persecution were German Dominicans; and
Germany and, curiously enough, those parts
of Italy nearest Germany were the countries
most afflicted by this plague. The bulls
and injunctions of the Popes themselves refer,
for example, to the Dominican Province of
Lombardy, to Cremona, to the dioceses of
Brescia and Bergamo. We learn from Sprenger's
famous theoretico-practical guide, the 'Malleus
Maleficarum,' that forty-one witches were
burnt at Como in the first year after the
publication of the bull; crowds of Italian
women took refuge in the territory of the
Archduke Sigismund, where they believed themselves
to be still safe. Witchcraft ended by taking
firm root in a few unlucky Alpine valleys,
especially in the Val Camonica; the system
of persecution had succeeded in permanently
infecting with the delusion those populations
which were in any way predisposed for it.
This essentially German form of witchcraft
is what we should think of when reading the
stories and novels of Milan or Bologna. That
it did not make further progress in Italy
is probably due to the fact that here a highly
developed 'stregheria' was already in existence,
resting on a different set of ideas. The
Italian witch practiced a trade, and needed
for it money and, above all, sense. We find
nothing about her of the hysterical dreams
of the Northern witch, of marvelous journeys
through the air, of Incubus and Succubus;
the business of the 'strega' was to provide
for other people's pleasures. If she was
credited with the power of assuming different
shapes, or of transporting herself suddenly
to distant places, she was so far content
to accept this reputation, as her influence
was thereby increased; on the other hand,
it was perilous for her when the fear of
her malice and vengeance, and especially
of her power for enchanting children, cattle,
and crops, became general. Inquisitors and
magistrates were then most thoroughly in
accord with popular wishes if they burnt
her.
By far the most important field for the activity
of the 'strega' lay, as has been said, in
love-affairs, and included the stirring up
of love and of hatred, the producing of abortion,
the pretended murder of the unfaithful man
or woman by magical arts, and even the manufacture
of poisons. Owing to the unwillingness of
many persons to have to do with these women,
class of occasional practitioners arose who
secretly learned from them some one or other
of their arts, and then used this knowledge
on their own account. The Roman prostitutes,
for example, tried to enhance their personal
attractions by charms of another description
in the style of the Horatian Canidia. Aretino
may not only have known, but have also told
the truth about them in this particular.
He gives a list of the loathsome messes which
were to be found in their boxes--hair, skulls,
ribs, teeth, dead men's eyes, human skin,
the navels of little children, the soles
of shoes and pieces of clothing from tombs.
They even went themselves to the graveyard
and fetched bits of rotten flesh, which they
slyly gave their lovers to eat--with more
that is still worse. Pieces of the hair and
nails of the lover were boiled in oil stolen
from the ever-burning lamps in the church.
The most innocuous of their charms was to
make a heart of glowing ashes, and then to
pierce it while singing:
'Prima che'l fuoco spenghi,
Fa ch'a mia porta venghi;
Tal ti punga mio amore
Quale io fo questo cuore.'
There were other charms practiced by moonshine,
with drawings on the ground, and figures
of wax or bronze, which doubtless represented
the lover, and were treated according to
circumstances.
These things were so customary that a woman
who, without youth and beauty, nevertheless
exercised a powerful charm on men, naturally
became suspected of witchcraft. The mother
of Sanga, secretary to Clement VII, poisoned
her son's mistress, who was a woman of this
kind. Unfortunately the son died too, as
well as a party of friends who had eaten
of the poisoned salad.
Next comes, not as helper, but as competitor
to the witch, the magician or enchanter--'incantatore'--who
was still more familiar with the most perilous
business of the craft. Sometimes he was as
much or more of an astrologer than of a magician;
he probably often gave himself out as an
astrologer in order not to be prosecuted
as a magician, and a certain astrology was
essential in order to find out the favourable
hour for a magical process. But since many
spirits are good or indifferent, the magician
could sometimes maintain a very tolerable
reputation, and Sixtus IV, in the year 1474,
had to proceed expressly against some Bolognese
Carmelites, who asserted in the pulpit that
there was no harm in seeking information
from the demons. Very many people believed
in the possibility of the thing itself; an
indirect proof of this lies in the fact that
the most pious men believed that by prayer
they could obtain visions of good spirits.
Savonarola's mind was filled with these things;
the Florentine Platonists speak of a mystic
union with God; and Marcellus Palingenius
gives us to understand clearly enough that
he had to do with consecrated spirits. The
same writer is convinced of the existence
of a whole hierarchy of bad demons, who have
their seat from the moon downwards, and are
ever on the watch to do some mischief to
nature and human life. He even tells of his
own personal acquaintance with some of them,
and as the scope of the present work does
not allow of a systematic exposition of the
then prevalent belief in spirits, the narrative
of Palingenius may be given as one instance
out of many.
At San Silvestro, on Soracte, he had been
receiving instruction from a pious hermit
on the nothingness of earthly things and
the worthlessness of human life; and when
the night drew near he set out on his way
back to home. On the road, in the full light
of the moon, he was joined by three men,
one of whom called him by name, and asked
him whence he came. Palingenius made answer:
'From the wise man on the mountain.' 'O fool,'
replied the stranger, 'dost thou in truth
believe that anyone on earth is wise? Only
higher beings (Divi) have wisdom, and such
are we three, although we wear the shapes
of men. I am named Saracil, and these two
Sathiel and Jana. Our kingdom lies near the
moon, where dwell that multitude of intermediate
beings who have sway over earth and sea.'
Palingenius then asked, not without an inward
tremor, what they were going to do at Rome.
The answer was: 'One of our comrades, Ammon,
is kept in servitude by the magic arts of
a youth from Narni, one of the attendants
of Cardinal Orsini; for mark it, O men, there
is proof of your own immortality therein,
that you can control one of us: I myself
shut up in crystal, was once forced to serve
a German, till a bearded monk set me free.
This is the service which we wish to render
at Rome to our friend, and he shall also
take the opportunity of sending one or two
distinguished Romans to the nether world.'
At these words a light breeze arose, and
Sathiel said: 'Listen, our messenger is coming
back from Rome, and this wind announces him.'
And then another being appeared, whom they
greeted joyfully and then asked about Rome.
His utterances are strongly anti-papal: Clement
VII was again allied with the Spaniards and
hoped to root out Luther's doctrines, not
with arguments, but by the Spanish sword.
This is wholly in the interest of the demons,
whom the impending bloodshed would enable
to carry away the souls of thousands into
hell. At the close of this conversation,
in which Rome with all its guilt is represented
as wholly given over to the Evil One, the
apparitions vanish, and leave the poet sorrowfully
to pursue his way alone.
Those who would form a conception of the
extent of the belief in those relations to
the demons which could be openly avowed in
spite of the penalties attaching to witchcraft,
may be referred to the much-read work of
Agrippa of Nettesheim 'On secret Philosophy.'
He seems originally to have written it before
he was in Italy, but in the dedication to
Trithemius he mentions Italian authorities
among others, if only by way of disparagement.
In the case of equivocal persons like Agrippa,
or of the knaves and fools into whom the
majority of the rest may be divided, there
is little that is interesting in the system
they profess, with its formula, fumigations,
ointments, and the rest of it. But this system
was filled with quotations from the superstitions
of antiquity, the influence of which on the
life and the passions of Italians is at times
most remarkable and fruitful. We might think
that a great mind must be thoroughly ruined,
before it surrendered itself to such influences;
but the violence of hope and desire led even
vigorous and original men of all classes
to have recourse to the magician, and the
belief that the thing was feasible at all
weakened to some extent the faith, even of
those who kept at a distance, in the moral
order of the world. At the cost of a little
money and danger it seemed possible to defy
with impunity the universal reason and morality
of mankind, and to spare oneself the intermediate
steps which otherwise lie between a man and
his lawful or unlawful ends.
Let us here glance for a moment at an older
and now decaying form of superstition. From
the darkest period of the Middle Ages, or
even from the days of antiquity, many cities
of Italy had kept the remembrance of the
connection of their fate with certain buildings,
statues, or other material objects. The ancients
had left records of consecrating priests
or Telestae, who were present at the solemn
foundation of cities, and magically guaranteed
their prosperity by erecting certain monuments
or by burying certain objects (Telesmata).
Traditions of this sort were more likely
than anything else to live on in the form
of popular, unwritten legend; but in the
course of centuries the priest naturally
became transformed into the magician, since
the religious side of his function was no
longer understood. In some of the Virgilian
miracles at Naples, the ancient remembrance
of one of these Telestae is clearly preserved,
his name being in course of time supplanted
by that of Virgil. The enclosing of the mysterious
picture of the city in a vessel is neither
more nor less than a genuine ancient Telesma;
and Virgil, as founder of Naples, is but
the officiating priest who took part in the
ceremony, presented in another dress. The
popular imagination went on working at these
themes, till Virgil became also responsible
for the brazen horse, for the heads at the
Nolan gate, for the brazen fly over another
gate, and even for the Grotto of Posilippo--all
of them things which in one respect or other
served to put a magical constraint upon fate,
and the first two of which seemed to determine
the whole fortune of the city. Medieval Rome
also preserved confused recollections of
the same kind. At the church of Sant' Ambrogio
at Milan, there was an ancient marble Hercules;
so long, it was said, as this stood in its
place, so long would the Empire last. That
of the Germans is probably meant, as the
coronation of their emperors at Milan took
place in this church. The Florentines were
convinced that the temple of Mars, afterwards
transformed into the Baptistery, would stand
to the end of time, according to the constellation
under which it had been built; they had,
as Christians, removed from it the marble
equestrian statue; but since the destruction
of the latter would have brought some great
calamity on the city--also according to a
constellation--they set it upon a tower by
the Arno. When Totila conquered Florence,
the statue fell into the river, and was not
fished out again till Charlemagne refounded
the city. It was then placed on a pillar
at the entrance to the Ponte Vecchio, and
on this spot Buondelmonti was slain in 1215.
The origin of the great feud between Guelph
and Ghibelline was thus associated with the
dreaded idol. During the inundation of 1333
the statue vanished for ever.
But the same Telesma reappears elsewhere.
Guido Bonatto, already mentioned, was not
satisfied, at the refounding of the walls
of Forli, with requiring certain symbolic
acts of reconciliation from the two parties.
By burying a bronze or stone equestrian statue,
which he had produced by astrological or
magical arts, he believed that he had defended
the city from ruin, and even from capture
and plunder. When Cardinal Albornoz was governor
of Romagna some sixty years later, the statue
was accidentally dug up and then shown to
the people, probably by the order of the
Cardinal, that it might be known by what
means the cruel Montefeltro had defended
himself against the Roman Church. And again,
half a century later, when an attempt to
surprise Forli had failed, men began to talk
afresh of the virtue of the statue, which
had perhaps been saved and reburied. It was
the last time that they could do so; for
a year later Forli was really taken. The
foundation of buildings all through the fifteenth
century was associated not only with astrology
but also with magic. The large number of
gold and silver medals which Paul II buried
in the foundation of his buildings was noticed,
and Platina was by no means displeased to
recognize an old pagan Telesma in the fact.
Neither Paul nor his biographer were in any
way conscious of the mediaeval religious
significance of such an offering.
But this official magic, which in many cases
only rests on hearsay, was comparatively
unimportant by the side of the secret arts
practiced for personal ends.
The form which these most often took in daily
life is shown by Ariosto in his comedy of
the necromancers. His hero is one of the
many Jewish exiles from Spain, although he
also gives himself out for a Greek, an Egyptian,
and an African, and is constantly changing
his name and costume. He pretends that his
incantations can darken the day and lighten
the darkness, that he can move the earth,
make himself invisible, and change men into
beasts; but these vaunts are only an advertisement.
His true object is to make his account out
of unhappy and troubled marriages, and the
traces which he leaves behind him in his
course are like the slime of a snail, or
often like the ruin wrought by a hailstorm.
To attain his ends he can persuade people
that the box in which a lover is hidden is
full of ghosts, or that he can make a corpse
talk. It is at all events a good sign that
poets and novelists could reckon on popular
applause in holding up this class of men
to ridicule. Bandello not only treats this
sorcery of a Lombard monk as a miserable,
and in its consequences terrible, piece of
knavery, but he also describes with unaffected
indignation the disasters which never cease
to pursue the credulous fool. 'A man hopes
with "Solomon's Key' and other magical
books to find the treasures hidden in the
bosom of the earth, to force his lady to
do his will, to find out the secret of princes,
and to transport himself in the twinkling
of an eye from Milan to Rome. The more often
he is deceived, the more steadfastly he believes....
Do you remember the time, Signor Carlo, when
a friend of ours, in order to win a favour
of his beloved, filled his room with skulls
and bones like a churchyard?' The most loathsome
tasks were prescribed--to draw three teeth
from a corpse or a nail from its finger,
and the like; and while the hocus-pocus of
the incantation was going on, the unhappy
participants sometimes died of terror.
Benvenuto Cellini did not die during the
well-known incantation (1532) in the Colosseum
at Rome, although both he and his companions
witnessed no ordinary horrors; the Sicilian
priest, who probably expected to find him
a useful coadjutor in the future, paid him
the compliment as they went home of saying
that he had never met a man of so sturdy
a courage. Every reader will make his own
reflections on the proceedings themselves.
The narcotic fumes and the fact that the
imaginations of the spectators were predisposed
for all possible terrors, are the chief points
to be noticed, and explain why the lad who
formed one of the party, and on whom they
made most impression, saw much more than
the others. but it may be inferred that Benvenuto
himself was the one whom it was wished to
impress, since the dangerous beginning of
the in- cantation can have had no other aim
than to arouse curiosity. For Benvenuto had
to think before the fair Angelica occurred
to him; and the magician told him afterwards
that love-making was folly compared with
the finding of treasures. Further, it must
not be forgotten that it flattered his vanity
to be able to say, 'The demons have kept
their word, and Angelica came into my hands,
as they promised, just a month later' (I,
cap. 68). Even on the supposition that Benvenuto
gradually lied himself into believing the
whole story, it would still be permanently
valuable as evidence of the mode of thought
then prevalent.
As a rule, however, the Italian artists,
even 'the odd, capri- cious, and eccentric'
among them, had little to do with magic.
One of them, in his anatomical studies, may
have cut himself a jacket out of the skin
of a corpse, but at the advice of his confessor
he put it again into the grave. Indeed the
frequent study of anatomy probably did more
than anything else to destroy the belief
in the magical influence of various parts
of the body, while at the same time the incessant
observation and representation of the human
form made the artist familiar with a magic
of a wholly different sort.
In general, notwithstanding the instances
which have been quoted, magic seems to have
been markedly on the decline at the beginning
of the sixteenth century--that is to say,
at a time when it first began to flourish
vigorously out of Italy; and thus the tours
of Italian sorcerers and astrologers in the
North seem not to have begun till their credit
at home was thoroughly impaired. In the fourteenth
century it was thought necessary carefully
to watch the lake on Mount Pilatus, near
Scariotto, to hinder the magicians from there
consecrating their books. In the fifteenth
century we find, for example, that the offer
was made to produce a storm of rain, in order
to frighten away a besieged army; and even
then the commander of the besieged town,
Niccolo Vitelli in Citta di Castello had
the good sense to dismiss the sorcerers as
godless persons. In the sixteenth century
no more instances of this official kind appear,
although in private life the magicians were
still active. To this time belongs the classic
figure of German sorcery, Dr. Johann Faust;
the Italian ideal, on the other hand, Guido
Bonatto, dates back to the thirteenth century.
It must nevertheless be added that the decrease
of the belief in magic was not necessarily
accompanied by an increase of the belief
in a moral order, but that in many cases,
like the decaying faith in astrology, the
delusion left behind it nothing but a stupid
fatalism.
One or two minor forms of this superstition,
pyromancy, chiromancy and others, which obtained
some credit as the belief in sorcery and
astrology was declining, may be here passed
over, and even the pseudo- science of physiognomy
has by no means the interest which the name
might lead us to expect. For it did not appear
as the sister and ally of art and psychology,
but as a new form of fatalistic superstition,
and, what it may have been among the Arabs,
as the rival of astrology. The author of
a physiognomical treatise, Bartolommeo Cocle,
who styled himself a 'metoposcopist,' and
whose science, according to Giovio, seemed
like one of the most respectable of the free
arts, was not content with the prophecies
which he made to the many people who daily
consulted him, but wrote also a most serious
'catalogue of such whom great dangers to
life were awaiting.' Giovio, although grown
old in the free thought of Rome 'in hac luce
romana'--is of opinion that the predictions
contained therein had only too much truth
in them We learn from the same source how
the people aimed at in these and similar
prophecies took vengeance on a seer. Giovanni
Bentivoglio caused Lucas Gauricus to be five
times swung to and fro against the wall,
on a rope hanging from a lofty, winding staircase,
because Lucas had foretold to him the loss
of his authority. Ermes Bentivoglio sent
an assassin after Cocle, because the unlucky
metopOscopist had unwillingly prophesied
to him that he would die an exile in battle.
The murderer seems to have derided the dying
man in his last moments, saying that Cocle
himself had foretold him he would shortly
commit an infamous murder. The reviver of
chiromancy, Antioco Tiberto of Cesena, came
by an equally miserable end at the hands
of Pandolfo Malatesta of Rimini, to whom
he had prophesied the worst that a tyrant
can imagine, namely, death in exile and in
the most grievous poverty. Tiberto was a
man of intelligence, who was supposed to
give his answers less according to any methodical
chiromancy than by means of his shrewd knowledge
of mankind; and his high culture won for
him the respect of those scholars who thought
little of his divination.
Alchemy, in conclusion, which is not mentioned
in antiquity till quite late under Diocletian,
played only a very subordinate part at the
best period of the Renaissance. Italy went
through the disease earlier, when Petrarch
in the fourteenth century confessed, in his
polemic against it, that gold-making was
a general practice. Since then that particular
kind of faith, devotion, and isolation which
the practice of alchemy required became more
and more rare in Italy, just when Italian
and other adepts began to make their full
profit out of the great lords in the North.
Under Leo X the few Italians who busied themselves
with it were called 'ingenia curiosa,' and
Aurelio Augurelli, who dedicated to Leo X,
the great despiser of gold, his didactic
poem on the making of the metal, is said
to have received in return a beautiful but
empty purse. The mystic science which besides
gold sought for the omnipotent philosopher's
stone, is a late northern growth, which had
its rise in the theories of Paracelsus and
others.
Part Six MORALITY AND RELIGION General Spirit
of Doubt With these superstitions, as with
ancient modes of thought generally, the decline
in the belief of immortality stands in the
closest connection. This questiOn has the
widest and deepest relations with the whole
development of the modern spirit.
One great source of doubt in immortality
was the inward wish to be under no obligations
to the hated Church. We have seen that the
Church branded those who thus felt as Epicureans.
In the hour of death many doubtless called
for the sacraments, but multitudes during
their whole lives, and especially during
their most vigorous years, lived and acted
on the negative supposition. That unbelief
on this particular point must often have
led to a general skepticism, is evident of
itself, and is attested by abundant historical
proof. These are the men of whom Ariosto
says: 'Their faith goes no higher than the
roof.' In Italy, and especially in Florence,
it was possible to live as an open and notorious
unbeliever, if a man only refrained from
direct acts of hostility against the Church.
The confessor, for instance, who was sent
to prepare a political offender for death,
began by inquiring whether the prisoner was
a believer, 'for there was a false report
that he had no belief at all.'
The unhappy transgressor here referred to--the
same Pierpaolo Boscoli who has been already
mentioned--who in 1513 took part in an attempt
against the newly restored family of the
Medici, is a faithful mirror of the religious
confusion then prevalent. Beginning as a
partisan of Savonarola, he became afterwards
possessed with an enthusiasm for the ancient
ideals of liberty, and for paganism in general;
but when he was in prison his early friends
regained the control of his mind, and secured
for him what they considered a pious ending.
The tender witness and narrator of his last
hours is one of the artistic family of the
Della Robbia, the learned philologist Luca.
'Ah,' sighs Boscoli, 'get Brutus out of my
head for me, that I may go my way as a Christian.'
'If you will,' answers Luca, 'the thing is
not difficult; for you know that these deeds
of the Romans are not handed down to us as
they were, but idealized (con arte accresciute).'
The penitent now forces his understanding
to believe, and bewails his inability to
believe voluntarily. If he could only live
for a month with pious monks he would truly
become spiritually minded. It comes out that
these partisans of Savonarola knew their
Bible very imperfectly; Boscoli can only
say the Paternoster and Ave Maria, and earnestly
begs Luca to exhort his friends to study
the sacred writings, for only what a man
has learned in life does he possess in death.
Luca then reads and explains to him the story
of the Passion according to the Gospel of
St. John; the poor listener, strange to say,
can perceive clearly the Godhead of Christ,
but is perplexed at His manhood; he wishes
to get as firm a hold of it 'as if Christ
came to meet him out of a wood.' His friend
thereupon exhorts him to be humble, since
this was only a doubt sent him by the Devil.
Soon after it occurs to the penitent that
he has not fulfilled a vow made in his youth
to go on pilgrimage to the Impruneta; his
friend promises to do it in his stead. Meantime
the confessor--a monk, as was desired, from
Savonarola's monastery--arrives, and after
giving him the explanation quoted above of
the opinion of St. Thomas Aquinas on tyrannicide,
exhorts him to bear death manfully. Boscoli
makes answer: 'Father, waste no time on this;
the philosophers have taught it me already;
help me to bear death out of love to Christ.'
What follows, the communion, the leave-taking
and the execution--is very touchingly described;
one point deserves special mention. When
Boscoli laid his head on the block, he begged
the executioner to delay the stroke for a
moment: 'During the whole time since the
announcement of the sentence he had been
striving after a close union with God, without
attaining it as he wished, and now in this
supreme moment he thought that by a strong
effort he could give himself wholly to God.'
It is clearly some half-understood expression
of Savonarola which was troubling him.
If we had more confessions of this character
the spiritual picture of the time would be
richer by many important features which no
poem or treatise has preserved for us. We
should see more clearly how strong the inborn
religious instinct was, how subjective and
how variable the relation of the individual
to religion, and what powerful enemies and
competitors religion had. That men whose
inward condition is of this nature, are not
the men to found a new church, is evident;
but the history of the Western spirit would
be imperfect without a view of that fermenting
period among the Italians, while other nations,
who have had no share in the evolution of
thought, may be passed over without loss.
But we must return to the question of immortality.
If unbelief in this respect made such progress
among the more highly cultivated natures,
the reason lay partly in the fact that the
great earthly task of discovering the world
and representing it in word and form, absorbed
most of the higher spiritual faculties. We
have already spoken of the inevitable worldliness
of the Renaissance. But this investigation
and this art were necessarily accompanied
by a general spirit of doubt and inquiry.
If this spirit shows itself but little in
literature, if we find, for example, only
isolated instances of the beginnings of biblical
criticism, we are not therefore to infer
that it had no existence. The sound of it
was only overpowered by the need of representation
and creation in all departments-- that is,
by the artistic instinct; and it was further
checked, whenever it tried to express itself
theoretically, by the already existing despotism
of the Church. This spirit of doubt must,
for reasons too obvious to need discussion,
have inevitably and chiefly busied itself
with the question of the state of man after
death.
And here came in the influence of antiquity,
and worked in a twofold fashion on the argument.
In the first place men set themselves to
master the psychology of the ancients, and
tortured the letter of Aristotle for a decisive
answer. In one of the Lucianic dialogues
of the time, Charon tells Mercury how he
questioned Aristotle on his belief in immortality,
when the philosopher crossed in the Stygian
boat; but the prudent sage, although dead
in the body and nevertheless living on, declined
to compromise himself by a definite answer--and
centuries later how was it likely to fare
with the interpretation of his writings?
All the more eagerly did men dispute about
his opinion and that of others on the true
nature of the soul, its origin, its pre-
existence, its unity in all men, its absolute
eternitY, even its transformations; and there
were men who treated of these things in the
pulpit. The dispute was warmly carried on
even in the fifteenth century; some proved
that Aristotle taught the doctrine of an
immortal soul; others complained of the hardness
of men's hearts, who would not believe that
there was a soul at all, till they saw it
sitting down on a chair before them; Filelfo,
in his funeral oration on Francesco Sforza,
brings forward a long list of opinions of
ancient and even of Arab philosophers in
favour of immortality, and closes the mixture,
which covers a folio page and a half of print,
with the words, 'Besides all this we have
the Old and New Testaments, which are above
all truth.' Then came the Florentine Platonists
with their master's doctrine of the soul,
supplemented at times, as in the case of
Pico, by Christian teaching. But the opposite
opinion prevailed in the instructed world.
At the beginning of the sixteenth century
the stumbling-block which it put in the way
of the Church was so serious that Leo X set
forth a Constitution at the Lateran Council
in 1513, in defence of the immortality and
individuality of the soul, the latter against
those who asserted that there was but one
soul in all men. A few years later appeared
the work of Pomponazzo, in which the impossibility
of a philosophical proof of immortality is
maintained; and the contest was now waged
incessantly with replies and 'apologies,'
till it was silenced by the Catholic reaction.
The pre-existence of the soul in God, conceived
more or less in accordance with Plato's theory
of ideas, long remained a common belief,
and proved of service even to the poets.
The consequences which followed from it as
to the mode of the soul's continued existence
after death were not more closely considered.
There was a second way in which the influence
of antiquity made itself felt, chiefly by
means of that remarkable fragment of the
sixth book of Cicero's 'Republic,' known
by the name of Scipio's Dream. Without the
commentary of Macrobius it would probably
have perished like the rest of the second
part of the work; it was now diffused in
countless manuscript copies, and, after the
discovery of typography, in a printed form
and edited afresh by various commentatOrs.
It is the description of a transfigured hereafter
for great men, pervaded by the harmony of
the spheres. This pagan heaven, for which
many other testimonies were gradually extracted
from the writings of the ancients, came step
by step to supplant the Christian heaven
in proportion as the ideal of fame and historical
greatness threw into the shade the ideal
of the Christian life, without, nevertheless,
the public feeling being thereby offended
as it was by the doctrine of personal annihilation
after death. Even Petrarch founds his hope
chiefly on this Dream of Scipio, on the declarations
found in other Ciceronian works, and on Plato's
'Phaedo,' without making any mention of the
Bible. 'Why,' he asks elsewhere, 'should
not I as a Catholic share a hope which was
demonstrably cherished by the heathen?' Soon
afterwards Coluccio Salutati wrote his 'Labors
of Hercules' (still existing in manuscript),
in which it is proved at the end that the
valorous man, who has well endured the great
labors of earthly life, is justly entitled
to a dwelling among the stars. If Dante still
firmly maintained that the great pagans,
whom he would have gladly welcomed in Paradise,
nevertheless must not come beyond the Limbo
at the entrance to Hell, the poetry of a
later time accepted joyfully the new liberal
ideas of a future life. Cosimo the Elder,
according to Bernardo Pulci's poem on his
death, was received in heaven by Cicero,
who had also been called the 'father of his
country,' by the Fabii, by Curius, Fabricius
and many others; with them he would adorn
the choir where only blameless spirits sing.
But in the old writers there was another
and less pleasing picture of the world to
come--the shadowy realms of Homer and of
those poets who had not sweetened and humanized
the conception. This made an impression on
certain temperaments. Gioviano Pontano somewhere
attributes to Sannazaro the story of a vision
which he beheld one morning early while half
awake. He seemed to see a departed friend,
Ferrandus Januarius, with whom he had often
discoursed on the immortality of the soul,
and whom he now asked whether it was true
that the pains of Hell were really dreadful
and eternal. The shadow gave an answer like
that of Achilles when Odysseus questioned
him. 'So much I tell and aver to thee, that
we who are parted from earthly life have
the strongest desire to return to it again.'
He then saluted his friend and disappeared.
It cannot but be recognized that such views
of the state of man after death partly presuppose
and partly promote the dissolution of the
most essential dogmas of Christianity. The
notion of sin and of salvation must have
almost entirely evaporated. We must not be
misled by the effects of the great preachers
of repentance or by the epidemic revivals
which have been described above. For even
granting that the individually developed
classes had shared in them like the rest,
the cause of their participation was rather
the need of emotional excitement, the rebound
of passionate natures, the horror felt at
great national calamities, the cry to heaven
for help. The awakening of the conscience
had by no means necessarily the sense of
sin and the felt need of salvation as its
consequence and even a very severe outward
penance did not perforce involve any repentance
in the Christian meaning of the word. When
the powerful natures of the Renaissance tell
us that their principle is to repent of nothing,
they may have in their minds only matters
that are morally indifferent, faults of unreason
or imprudence; but in the nature of the case
this contempt for repentance must extend
to the sphere of morals, because its origin,
namely the consciousness of individual force,
is common to both sides of human nature.
The passive and contemplative form of Christianity,
with its constant reference to a higher world
beyond the grave, could no longer control
these men. Machiavelli ventured still further,
and maintained that it could not be serviceable
to the State and to the maintenance of public
freedom.
The form assumed by the strong religious
instinct which, notwithstanding all, survived
in many natures, was Theism or Deism, as
we may please to call it. The latter name
may be applied to that mode of thought which
simply wiped away the Christian element out
of religion, without either seeking or finding
any other substitute for the feelings to
rest upon. Theism may be considered that
definite heightened devotion to the one Supreme
Being which the Middle Ages were not acquainted
with. This mode of faith does not exclude
Christianity, and can either ally itself
with the Christian doctrines of sin, redemption,
and immortality, or else exist and flour;
sh without them.
Sometimes this belief presents itself with
childish naivete and even with a half-pagan
air, God appearing as the almighty fulfiller
of human wishes. Agnolo Pandolfini tells
us how, after his wedding, he shut himself
in with his wife, and knelt down before the
family altar with the picture of the Madonna,
and prayed, not to her, but to God, that
He would vouchsafe to them the right use
of their property, a long life in joy and
unity with one another, and many male descendants:
'For myself I prayed for wealth, honour,
and friends; for her blamelessness, honesty,
and that she might be a good housekeeper.'
When the language used has a strong antique
flavor, it is not always easy to keep apart
the pagan style and the theistic belief.
This temper sometimes manifests itself in
times of misfortune with a striking sincerity.
Some addresses to God are left us from the
latter period of Firenzuola, when for years
he lay ill of fever, in which, though he
expressly declares himself a believing Christian,
he shows that his religious consciousness
is essentially theistic. Hie sufferings seem
to him neither as the punishment of sin,
nor as preparation for a higher world; they
are an affair between him and God only, who
has put the strong love of life between man
and his despair. 'I curse, but only curse
Nature, since Thy greatness forbids me to
utter Thy name.... Give me death, Lord, I
beseech Thee, give it me now!'
In these utterances and the like, it would
be vain to look for a conscious and consistent
Theism; the speakers partly believed themselves
to be still Christians, and for various other
reasons respected the existing doctrines
of the Church. But at the time of the Reformation,
when men were driven to come to a distinct
conclusion on such points, this mode of thought
was accepted with a fuller consciousness;
a number of the Italian Protestants came
forward as Anti-Trinitarians and Socinians,
and even as exiles in distant countries made
the memorable attempt to found a church on
these principles. From the foregoing exposition
it will be clear that, apart from humanistic
rationalism, other spirits were at work in
this field.
One chief centre of theistic modes of thought
lay in the Platonic Academy at Florence,
and especially in Lorenzo il Magnifico himself.
The theoretical works and even the letters
of these men show us only half their nature.
It is true that Lorenzo, from his youth till
he died, expressed himself dogmatically as
a Christian, and that Pico was drawn by Savonarola's
influence to accept the point of view of
a monkish ascetic. But in the hymns of Lorenzo,
which we are tempted to regard as the highest
product of the spirit of this school, an
unreserved Theism is set forth a Theism which
strives to treat the world as a great moral
and physical Cosmos.
While the men of the Middle Ages look on
the world as a vale of tears, which Pope
and Emperor are set to guard against the
coming of Antichrist; while the fatalists
of the Renaissance oscillate between seasons
of overflowing energy and seasons of superstition
or of stupid resignation) here, in this circle
of chosen spirits, the doctrine is upheld
that the visible world was created by God
in love, that it is the copy of a pattern
pre- existing in Him, and that He will ever
remain its eternal mover and restorer. The
soul of man can by recognizing God draw Him
into its narrow boundaries, but also by love
of Him expand itself into the Infinite--and
this is blessedness on earth.
Echoes of medieval mysticism here flow into
one current with Platonic doctrines and with
a characteristically modern spirit. One of
the most precious fruits of the knowledge
of the world and of man here comes to maturity,
on whose account alone the Italian Renaissance
must be called the leader of modern ages.
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