CELEBRATED CRIMES
Author: Alexandre Dumas,
Pere
CONTENTS NOTE: INTRODUCTION *THE
BORGIAS* PROLOGUE CHAPTER I CHAPTER II CHAPTER
III CHAPTER IV CHAPTER V CHAPTER VI CHAPTER
VII CHAPTER VIII CHAPTER IX CHAPTER X CHAPTER
XI CHAPTER XII CHAPTER XIII CHAPTER XIV CHAPTER
XV CHAPTER XVI EPILOGUE *THE CENCI—1598* *MASSACRES
OF THE SOUTH—1551-1815* CHAPTER I CHAPTER II CHAPTER
III CHAPTER IV CHAPTER V CHAPTER VI CHAPTER
VII CHAPTER VIII CHAPTER IX *MARY
STUART—1587* CHAPTER I CHAPTER II CHAPTER
III CHAPTER IV CHAPTER V CHAPTER VI CHAPTER
VII CHAPTER VIII CHAPTER IX CHAPTER X *KARL-LUDWIG
SAND—1819* *URBAIN GRANDIER—1634* CHAPTER I CHAPTER
II CHAPTER III CHAPTER IV CHAPTER V CHAPTER
VI CHAPTER VII CHAPTER VIII CHAPTER IX CHAPTER
X CHAPTER XI CHAPTER
XII *NISIDA—1825* *DERUES* *LA
CONSTANTIN—1660* CHAPTER I CHAPTER II CHAPTER
III CHAPTER IV CHAPTER V CHAPTER VI CHAPTER
VII CHAPTER VIII CHAPTER IX *JOAN OF
NAPLES—1343-1382* CHAPTER I CHAPTER II CHAPTER
III CHAPTER IV CHAPTER V CHAPTER VI CHAPTER
VII CHAPTER VIII *THE MAN IN THE IRON MASK [An
Essay]* *MARTIN GUERRE* *ALI PACHA* CHAPTER
I CHAPTER II CHAPTER III CHAPTER IV CHAPTER
V CHAPTER VI CHAPTER VII CHAPTER VIII CHAPTER
IX CHAPTER X CHAPTER XI *THE COUNTESS DE
SAINT-GERAN—1639* *MURAT—1815* I—TOULON II—CORSICA III—PIZZO *THE
MARQUISE DE BRINVILLIERS* *VANINKA* *THE MARQUISE DE
GANGES—1657*
NOTE:
Dumas’s ’Celebrated Crimes’ was
not written for children. The novelist has spared no language—has minced no
words—to describe the violent scenes of a violent time.
"In some
instances facts appear distorted out of their true perspective, and in others
the author makes unwarranted charges. It is not within our province to edit
the historical side of Dumas, any more than it would be to correct the
obvious errors in Dickens’s Child’s History of England. The careful, mature
reader, for whom the books are intended, will recognize, and allow for, this
fact.
INTRODUCTION
The contents of these volumes
of ’Celebrated Crimes’, as well as the motives which led to their inception,
are unique. They are a series of stories based upon historical records, from
the pen of Alexandre Dumas, pere, when he was not "the elder," nor yet the
author of D’Artagnan or Monte Cristo, but was a rising young dramatist and a
lion in the literary set and world of fashion.
Dumas, in fact, wrote
his ’Crimes Celebres’ just prior to launching upon his wonderful series of
historical novels, and they may therefore be considered as source books,
whence he was to draw so much of that far-reaching and intimate knowledge of
inner history which has perennially astonished his readers. The Crimes were
published in Paris, in 1839-40, in eight volumes, comprising eighteen
titles—all of which now appear in the present carefully translated text. The
success of the original work was instantaneous. Dumas laughingly said that he
thought he had exhausted the subject of famous crimes, until the work was
off the press, when he immediately became deluged with letters from
every province in France, supplying him with material upon other deeds
of violence! The subjects which he has chosen, however, are of
both historic and dramatic importance, and they have the added value
of giving the modern reader a clear picture of the state
of semi-lawlessness which existed in Europe, during the middle ages.
"The Borgias, the Cenci, Urbain Grandier, the Marchioness of
Brinvilliers, the Marchioness of Ganges, and the rest—what subjects for the
pen of Dumas!" exclaims Garnett.
Space does not permit us to consider
in detail the material here collected, although each title will be found to
present points of special interest. The first volume comprises the annals of
the Borgias and the Cenci. The name of the noted and notorious Florentine
family has become a synonym for intrigue and violence, and yet the Borgias
have not been without stanch defenders in history.
Another famous
Italian story is that of the Cenci. The beautiful Beatrice Cenci—celebrated
in the painting of Guido, the sixteenth century romance of Guerrazi, and the
poetic tragedy of Shelley, not to mention numerous succeeding works inspired
by her hapless fate—will always remain a shadowy figure and one of infinite
pathos.
The second volume chronicles the sanguinary deeds in the south
of France, carried on in the name of religion, but drenching in blood
the fair country round about Avignon, for a long period of years.
The
third volume is devoted to the story of Mary Queen of Scots, another woman
who suffered a violent death, and around whose name an endless controversy
has waged. Dumas goes carefully into the dubious episodes of her stormy
career, but does not allow these to blind his sympathy for her fate. Mary, it
should be remembered, was closely allied to France by education and marriage,
and the French never forgave Elizabeth the part she played in the
tragedy.
The fourth volume comprises three widely dissimilar tales. One
of the strangest stories is that of Urbain Grandier, the innocent victim of
a cunning and relentless religious plot. His story was dramatised
by Dumas, in 1850. A famous German crime is that of Karl-Ludwig Sand,
whose murder of Kotzebue, Councillor of the Russian Legation, caused
an international upheaval which was not to subside for many years.
An
especially interesting volume is number six, containing, among
other material, the famous "Man in the Iron Mask." This unsolved puzzle
of history was later incorporated by Dumas in one of the
D’Artagnan Romances a section of the Vicomte de Bragelonne, to which it gave
its name. But in this later form, the true story of this singular man
doomed to wear an iron vizor over his features during his entire lifetime
could only be treated episodically. While as a special subject in the
Crimes, Dumas indulges his curiosity, and that of his reader, to the
full. Hugo’s unfinished tragedy,’Les Jumeaux’, is on the same subject; as
also are others by Fournier, in French, and Zschokke, in German.
Other
stories can be given only passing mention. The beautiful poisoner, Marquise
de Brinvilliers, must have suggested to Dumas his later portrait of Miladi,
in the Three Musketeers, the mast celebrated of his woman characters. The
incredible cruelties of Ali Pacha, the Turkish despot, should not be charged
entirely to Dumas, as he is said to have been largely aided in this by one of
his "ghosts," Mallefille.
"Not a mere artist"—writes M. de Villemessant,
founder of the Figaro,—"he has nevertheless been able to seize on those
dramatic effects which have so much distinguished his theatrical career, and
to give those sharp and distinct reproductions of character which alone
can present to the reader the mind and spirit of an age. Not a
mere historian, he has nevertheless carefully consulted the original
sources of information, has weighed testimonies, elicited theories, and . .
. has interpolated the poetry of history with its most thorough
prose."
*THE
BORGIAS*
PROLOGUE
On the 8th of April, 1492, in a
bedroom of the Carneggi Palace, about three miles from Florence, were three
men grouped about a bed whereon a fourth lay dying.
The first of these
three men, sitting at the foot of the bed, and half hidden, that he might
conceal his tears, in the gold-brocaded curtains, was Ermolao Barbaro, author
of the treatise ’On Celibacy’, and of ’Studies in Pliny’: the year before,
when he was at Rome in the capacity of ambassador of the Florentine Republic,
he had been appointed Patriarch of Aquileia by Innocent VIII.
The
second, who was kneeling and holding one hand of the dying man between his
own, was Angelo Poliziano, the Catullus of the fifteenth century, a classic
of the lighter sort, who in his Latin verses might have been mistaken for a
poet of the Augustan age.
The third, who was standing up and leaning
against one of the twisted columns of the bed-head, following with profound
sadness the progress of the malady which he read in the face of his departing
friend, was the famous Pico della Mirandola, who at the age of twenty could
speak twenty-two languages, and who had offered to reply in each of
these languages to any seven hundred questions that might be put to him by
the twenty most learned men in the whole world, if they could be
assembled at Florence.
The man on the bed was Lorenzo the Magnificent,
who at the beginning of the year had been attacked by a severe and
deep-seated fever, to which was added the gout, a hereditary ailment in his
family. He had found at last that the draughts containing dissolved pearls
which the quack doctor, Leoni di Spoleto, prescribed for him (as if he
desired to adapt his remedies rather to the riches of his patient than to
his necessities) were useless and unavailing, and so he had come
to understand that he must part from those gentle-tongued women of
his, those sweet-voiced poets, his palaces and their rich hangings;
therefore he had summoned to give him absolution for his sins—in a man of
less high place they might perhaps have been called crimes—the
Dominican, Giralamo Francesco Savonarola.
It was not, however, without
an inward fear, against which the praises of his friends availed nothing,
that the pleasure-seeker and usurper awaited that severe and gloomy preacher
by whose word’s all Florence was stirred, and on whose pardon henceforth
depended all his hope far another world.
Indeed, Savonarola was one of
those men of stone, coming, like the statue of the Commandante, to knock at
the door of a Don Giovanni, and in the midst of feast and orgy to announce
that it is even now the moment to begin to think of Heaven. He had been born
at Ferrara, whither his family, one of the most illustrious of Padua, had
been called by Niccolo, Marchese d’Este, and at the age of twenty-three,
summoned by an irresistible vocation, had fled from his father’s house, and
had taken the vows in the cloister of Dominican monks at Florence. There,
where he was appointed by his superiors to give lessons in philosophy, the
young novice had from the first to battle against the defects of a voice
that was both harsh and weak, a defective pronunciation, and above all,
the depression of his physical powers, exhausted as they were by too
severe abstinence.
Savonarala from that time condemned himself to the
most absolute seclusion, and disappeared in the depths of his convent, as if
the slab of his tomb had already fallen over him. There, kneeling on the
flags, praying unceasingly before a wooden crucifix, fevered by vigils
and penances, he soon passed out of contemplation into ecstasy, and began
to feel in himself that inward prophetic impulse which summoned him
to preach the reformation of the Church.
Nevertheless, the reformation
of Savonarola, more reverential than Luther’s, which followed about
five-and-twenty years later, respected the thing while attacking the man, and
had as its aim the altering of teaching that was human, not faith that was of
God. He did not work, like the German monk, by reasoning, but by enthusiasm.
With him logic always gave way before inspiration: he was not a theologian,
but a prophet. Yet, although hitherto he had bowed his head before
the authority of the Church, he had already raised it against the
temporal power. To him religion and liberty appeared as two virgins
equally sacred; so that, in his view, Lorenzo in subjugating the one was
as culpable as Pope Innocent VIII in dishonouring the other. The result
of this was that, so long as Lorenzo lived in riches, happiness,
and magnificence, Savonarola had never been willing, whatever
entreaties were made, to sanction by his presence a power which he
considered illegitimate. But Lorenzo on his deathbed sent for him, and that
was another matter. The austere preacher set forth at once, bareheaded
and barefoot, hoping to save not only the soul of the dying man but also
the liberty of the republic.
Lorenzo, as we have said, was awaiting
the arrival of Savonarola with an impatience mixed with uneasiness; so that,
when he heard the sound of his steps, his pale face took a yet more deathlike
tinge, while at the same time he raised himself on his elbow and ordered his
three friends to go away. They obeyed at once, and scarcely had they left by
one door than the curtain of the other was raised, and the monk, pale,
immovable, solemn, appeared on the threshold. When he perceived him, Lorenzo
dei Medici, reading in his marble brow the inflexibility of a statue,
fell back on his bed, breathing a sigh so profound that one might
have supposed it was his last.
The monk glanced round the room as
though to assure himself that he was really alone with the dying man; then he
advanced with a slow and solemn step towards the bed. Lorenzo watched his
approach with terror; then, when he was close beside him, he cried:
"O
my father, I have been a very great sinner!"
"The mercy of God is
infinite," replied the monk; "and I come into your presence laden with the
divine mercy."
"You believe, then, that God will forgive my sins?" cried
the dying man, renewing his hope as he heard from the lips of the monk such
unexpected words.
"Your sins and also your crimes, God will forgive
them all," replied Savonarola. "God will forgive your vanities, your
adulterous pleasures, your obscene festivals; so much for your sins. God will
forgive you for promising two thousand florins reward to the man who should
bring you the head of Dietisalvi, Nerone Nigi, Angelo Antinori, Niccalo
Soderini, and twice the money if they were handed over alive; God will
forgive you for dooming to the scaffold or the gibbet the son of Papi
Orlandi, Francesco di Brisighella, Bernardo Nardi, Jacopo Frescobaldi,
Amoretto Baldovinetti, Pietro Balducci, Bernardo di Banding,
Francesco Frescobaldi, and more than three hundred others whose names were
none the less dear to Florence because they were less renowned; so much
for your crimes." And at each of these names which Savonarala
pronounced slowly, his eyes fixed on the dying man, he replied with a groan
which proved the monk’s memory to be only too true. Then at last, when he
had finished, Lorenzo asked in a doubtful tone:
"Then do you believe,
my father, that God will forgive me everything, both my sins and my
crimes?"
"Everything," said Savonarola, "but on three
conditions."
"What are they?" asked the dying man.
"The first,"
said Savonarola, "is that you feel a complete faith in the power and the
mercy of God."
"My father," replied Lorenzo eagerly, "I feel this faith
in the very depths of my heart."
"The second," said Savonarola, "is
that you give back the property of others which you have unjustly confiscated
and kept."
"My father, shall I have time?" asked the dying
man.
"God will give it to you," replied the monk.
Lorenzo shut his
eyes, as though to reflect more at his ease; then, after a moment’s silence,
he replied:
"Yes, my father, I will do it."
"The third," resumed
Savonarola, "is that you restore to the republic her ancient independence and
her farmer liberty."
Lorenzo sat up on his bed, shaken by a convulsive
movement, and questioned with his eyes the eyes of the Dominican, as though
he would find out if he had deceived himself and not heard aright.
Savonarola repeated the same words.
"Never! never!" exclaimed Lorenzo,
falling back on his bed and shaking his head,—"never!"
The monk,
without replying a single word, made a step to withdraw.
"My father, my
father," said the dying man, "do not leave me thus: have pity on
me!"
"Have pity on Florence," said the monk.
"But, my father,"
cried Lorenzo, "Florence is free, Florence is happy."
"Florence is a
slave, Florence is poor," cried Savonarola, "poor in genius, poor in money,
and poor in courage; poor in genius, because after you, Lorenzo, will come
your son Piero; poor in money, because from the funds of the republic you
have kept up the magnificence of your family and the credit of your business
houses; poor in courage, because you have robbed the rightful magistrates of
the authority which was constitutionally theirs, and diverted the citizens
from the double path of military and civil life, wherein, before they were
enervated by your luxuries, they had displayed the virtues of the ancients;
and therefore, when the day shall dawn which is not far distant," continued
the mark, his eyes fixed and glowing as if he were reading in the future,
"whereon the barbarians shall descend from the mountains, the walls of our
towns, like those of Jericho, shall fall at the blast of their
trumpets."
"And do you desire that I should yield up on my deathbed the
power that has made the glory of my whole life?" cried Lorenzo dei
Medici.
"It is not I who desire it; it is the Lord," replied Savonarola
coldly.
"Impossible, impossible!" murmured Lorenzo.
"Very well;
then die as you have lived!" cried the monk, "in the midst of your courtiers
and flatterers; let them ruin your soul as they have ruined your body!" And
at these words, the austere Dominican, without listening to the cries of the
dying man, left the room as he had entered it, with face and step unaltered;
far above human things he seemed to soar, a spirit already detached from the
earth.
At the cry which broke from Lorenzo dei Medici when he saw
him disappear, Ermolao, Poliziano, and Pico delta Mirandola, who had
heard all, returned into the room, and found their friend
convulsively clutching in his arms a magnificent crucifix which he had just
taken dawn from the bed-head. In vain did they try to reassure him
with friendly words. Lorenzo the Magnificent only replied with sobs; and
one hour after the scene which we have just related, his lips clinging
to the feet of the Christ, he breathed his last in the arms of these
three men, of whom the most fortunate—though all three were young—was
not destined to survive him more than two years. "Since his death was
to bring about many calamities," says Niccolo Macchiavelli, "it was
the will of Heaven to show this by omens only too certain: the dome of
the church of Santa Regarata was struck by lightning, and Roderigo
Borgia was elected pope."
CHAPTER I
Towards the
end of the fifteenth century—that is to say, at the epoch when our history
opens the Piazza of St. Peter’s at Rome was far from presenting so noble an
aspect as that which is offered in our own day to anyone who approaches it by
the Piazza dei Rusticucci.
In fact, the Basilica of Constantine existed
no longer, while that of Michael Angelo, the masterpiece of thirty popes,
which cost the labour of three centuries and the expense of two hundred and
sixty millions, existed not yet. The ancient edifice, which had lasted for
eleven hundred and forty-five years, had been threatening to fall in
about 1440, and Nicholas V, artistic forerunner of Julius II and Leo X,
had had it pulled down, together with the temple of Probus Anicius
which adjoined it. In their place he had had the foundations of a new
temple laid by the architects Rossellini and Battista Alberti; but some
years later, after the death of Nicholas V, Paul II, the Venetian, had
not been able to give more than five thousand crowns to continue the
project of his predecessor, and thus the building was arrested when it
had scarcely risen above the ground, and presented the appearance of
a still-born edifice, even sadder than that of a ruin.
As to the
piazza itself, it had not yet, as the reader will understand from the
foregoing explanation, either the fine colonnade of Bernini, or the dancing
fountains, or that Egyptian obelisk which, according to Pliny, was set up by
the Pharaoh at Heliopolis, and transferred to Rome by Caligula, who set it up
in Nero’s Circus, where it remained till 1586. Now, as Nero’s Circus was
situate on the very ground where St. Peter’s now stands, and the base of this
obelisk covered the actual site where the vestry now is, it looked like a
gigantic needle shooting up from the middle of truncated columns, walls of
unequal height, and half-carved stones.
On the right of this building,
a ruin from its cradle, arose the Vatican, a splendid Tower of Babel, to
which all the celebrated architects of the Roman school contributed their
work for a thousand years: at this epoch the two magnificent chapels did not
exist, nor the twelve great halls, the two-and-twenty courts, the thirty
staircases, and the two thousand bedchambers; for Pope Sixtus V, the
sublime swineherd, who did so many things in a five years’ reign, had not
yet been able to add the immense building which on the eastern side
towers above the court of St. Damasius; still, it was truly the old
sacred edifice, with its venerable associations, in which Charlemagne
received hospitality when he was crowned emperor by Pope Leo III.
All
the same, on the 9th of August, 1492, the whole of Rome, from the People’s
Gate to the Coliseum and from the Baths of Diocletian to the castle of Sant’
Angelo, seemed to have made an appointment on this piazza: the multitude
thronging it was so great as to overflow into all the neighbouring streets,
which started from this centre like the rays of a star. The crowds of people,
looking like a motley moving carpet, were climbing up into the basilica,
grouping themselves upon the stones, hanging on the columns, standing up
against the walls; they entered by the doors of houses and reappeared at the
windows, so numerous and so densely packed that one might have said each
window was walled up with heads. Now all this multitude had its eyes fixed on
one single point in the Vatican; for in the Vatican was the Conclave, and as
Innocent VIII had been dead for sixteen days, the Conclave was in the act of
electing a pope.
Rome is the town of elections: since her foundation
down to our own day—that is to say, in the course of nearly twenty-six
centuries—she has constantly elected her kings, consuls, tribunes, emperors,
and popes: thus Rome during the days of Conclave appears to be attacked by
a strange fever which drives everyone to the Vatican or to Monte
Cavallo, according as the scarlet-robed assembly is held in one or the other
of these two palaces: it is, in fact, because the raising up of a
new pontiff is a great event far everybody; for, according to the
average established in the period between St. Peter and Gregory XVI, every
pope lasts about eight years, and these eight years, according to
the character of the man who is elected, are a period either of
tranquillity or of disorder, of justice or of venality, of peace or of
war.
Never perhaps since the day when the first successor of St. Peter
took his seat on the, pontifical throne until the interregnum which
now occurred, had so great an agitation been shown as there was at
this moment, when, as we have shown, all these people were thronging on
the Piazza of St. Peter and in the streets which led to it. It is true
that this was not without reason; for Innocent VIII—who was called the
father of his people because he had added to his subjects eight sons and
the same number of daughters—had, as we have said, after living a life
of self-indulgence, just died, after a death-struggle during which, if
the journal of Stefano Infessura may be believed, two hundred and
twenty murders were committed in the streets of Rome. The authority had
then devolved in the customary way upon the Cardinal Camerlengo, who
during the interregnum had sovereign powers; but as he had been obliged
to fulfil all the duties of his office—that is, to get money coined in
his name and bearing his arms, to take the fisherman’s ring from the
finger of the dead pope, to dress, shave and paint him, to have the
corpse embalmed, to lower the coffin after nine days’ obsequies into
the provisional niche where the last deceased pope has to remain until
his successor comes to take his place and consign him to his final
tomb; lastly, as he had been obliged to wall up the door of the Conclave
and the window of the balcony from which the pontifical election
is proclaimed, he had not had a single moment for busying himself with
the police; so that the assassinations had continued in goodly fashion,
and there were loud cries for an energetic hand which should make all
these swords and all these daggers retire into their sheaths.
Now the
eyes of this multitude were fixed, as we have said, upon the Vatican, and
particularly upon one chimney, from which would come the first signal, when
suddenly, at the moment of the ’Ave Maria’—that is to say, at the hour when
the day begins to decline—great cries went up from all the crowd mixed with
bursts of laughter, a discordant murmur of threats and raillery, the cause
being that they had just perceived at the top of the chimney a thin smoke,
which seemed like a light cloud to go up perpendicularly into the sky. This
smoke announced that Rome was still without a master, and that the world
still had no pope; for this was the smoke of the voting tickets which were
being burned, a proof that the cardinals had not yet come to an
agreement.
Scarcely had this smoke appeared, to vanish almost
immediately, when all the innumerable crowd, knowing well that there was
nothing else to wait for, and that all was said and done until ten o’clock
the next morning, the time when the cardinals had their first voting, went
off in a tumult of noisy joking, just as they would after the last rocket of
a firework display; so that at the end of one minute nobody was there where
a quarter of an hour before there had been an excited crowd, except a
few curious laggards, who, living in the neighbourhood or on the very
piazza itself; were less in a hurry than the rest to get back to their
homes; again, little by little, these last groups insensibly diminished;
for half-past nine had just struck, and at this hour the streets of
Rome began already to be far from safe; then after these groups followed
some solitary passer-by, hurrying his steps; one after another the doors
were closed, one after another the windows were darkened; at last, when
ten o’clock struck, with the single exception of one window in the
Vatican where a lamp might be seen keeping obstinate vigil, all the
houses, piazzas, and streets were plunged in the deepest obscurity.
At
this moment a man wrapped in a cloak stood up like a ghost against one of the
columns of the uncompleted basilica, and gliding slowly and carefully among
the stones which were lying about round the foundations of the new church,
advanced as far as the fountain which, formed the centre of the piazza,
erected in the very place where the obelisk is now set up of which we have
spoken already; when he reached this spot he stopped, doubly concealed by the
darkness of the night and by the shade of the monument, and after looking
around him to see if he were really alone, drew his sword, and with its point
rapping three times on the pavement of the piazza, each time made the sparks
fly. This signal, for signal it was, was not lost: the last lamp which still
kept vigil in the Vatican went out, and at the same instant an object thrown
out of the window fell a few paces off from the young man in the cloak: he,
guided by the silvery sound it had made in touching the flags, lost no time
in laying his hands upon it in spite of the darkness, and when he had it
in his possession hurried quickly away.
Thus the unknown walked
without turning round half-way along the Borgo Vecchio; but there he turned
to the right and took a street at the other end of which was set up a Madonna
with a lamp: he approached the light, and drew from his pocket the object he
had picked up, which was nothing else than a Roman crown piece; but this
crown unscrewed, and in a cavity hollowed in its thickness enclosed a letter,
which the man to whom it was addressed began to read at the risk of being
recognised, so great was his haste to know what it contained.
We say
at the risk of being recognised, for in his eagerness the recipient of this
nocturnal missive had thrown back the hood of his cloak; and as his head was
wholly within the luminous circle cast by the lamp, it was easy to
distinguish in the light the head of a handsome young man of about five or
six and twenty, dressed in a purple doublet slashed at the shoulder and elbow
to let the shirt come through, and wearing on his head a cap of the same
colour with a long black feather falling to his shoulder. It is true that he
did not stand there long; for scarcely had he finished the letter, or rather
the note, which he had just received in so strange and mysterious a manner,
when he replaced it in its silver receptacle, and readjusting his cloak so as
to hide all the lower part of his face, resumed his walk with a rapid
step, crossed Borgo San Spirito, and took the street of the Longara, which
he followed as far as the church of Regina Coeli. When he arrived at
this place, he gave three rapid knocks on the door of a house of
good appearance, which immediately opened; then slowly mounting the stairs
he entered a room where two women were awaiting him with an impatience
so unconcealed that both as they saw him exclaimed together:
"Well,
Francesco, what news?"
"Good news, my mother; good, my sister," replied
the young man, kissing the one and giving his hand to the other. "Our father
has gained three votes to-day, but he still needs six to have the
majority."
"Then is there no means of buying them?" cried the elder of
the two women, while the younger, instead of speaking, asked him with a
look.
"Certainly, my mother, certainly," replied the young man; "and it
is just about that that my father has been thinking. He is giving
Cardinal Orsini his palace at Rome and his two castles of Monticello and
Soriano; to Cardinal Colanna his abbey of Subiaca; he gives Cardinal Sant’
Angelo the bishopric of Porto, with the furniture and cellar; to the
Cardinal of Parma the town of Nepi; to the Cardinal of Genoa the church of
Santa Maria-in-Via-Lata; and lastly, to Cardinal Savelli the church of
Santa Maria Maggiore and the town of Civita Castellana; as to
Cardinal Ascanio-Sforza, he knows already that the day before yesterday we
sent to his house four mules laden with silver and plate, and out of
this treasure he has engaged to give five thousand ducats to the
Cardinal Patriarch of Venice."
"But how shall we get the others to
know the intentions of Roderigo?" asked the elder of the two
women.
"My father has provided for everything, and proposes an easy
method; you know, my mother, with what sort of ceremonial the cardinals’
dinner is carried in."
"Yes, on a litter, in a large basket with the
arms of the cardinal far whom the meal is prepared."
"My father has
bribed the bishop who examines it: to-morrow is a feast-day; to the Cardinals
Orsini, Colonna, Savelli, Sant’ Angelo, and the Cardinals of Parma and of
Genoa, chickens will be sent for hot meat, and each chicken will contain a
deed of gift duly drawn up, made by me in my father’s name, of the houses,
palaces, or churches which are destined for each."
"Capital!" said the
elder of the two women; "now, I am certain, all will go well."
"And by
the grace of God," added the younger, with a strangely mocking smile, "our
father will be pope."
"Oh, it will be a fine day for us!" cried
Francesco.
"And for Christendom," replied his sister, with a still more
ironical expression.
"Lucrezia, Lucrezia," said the mother, "you do
not deserve the happiness which is coming to us."
"What does that
matter, if it comes all the same? Besides, you know the proverb; mother:
’Large families are blessed of the Lord’; and still more so our family, which
is so patriarchal."
At the same time she cast on her brother a look so
wanton that the young man blushed under it: but as at the moment he had to
think of other things than his illicit loves, he ordered that four servants
should be awakened; and while they were getting armed to accompany him, he
drew up and signed the six deeds of gift which were to be carried the next
day to the cardinals; for, not wishing to be seen at their houses,
he thought he would profit by the night-time to carry them himself
to certain persons in his confidence who would have them passed in, as
had been arranged, at the dinner-hour. Then, when the deeds were quite
ready and the servants also, Francesco went out with them, leaving the
two women to dream golden dreams of their future greatness.
From the
first dawn of day the people hurried anew, as ardent and interested as on the
evening before, to the Piazza of the Vatican, where; at the ordinary time,
that is, at ten o’clock in the morning,—the smoke rose again as usual,
evoking laughter and murmuring, as it announced that none of the cardinals
had secured the majority. A report, however, began to be spread about that
the chances were divided between three candidates, who were Roderigo Borgia,
Giuliano delta Rovera, and Ascanio Sforza; for the people as yet knew nothing
of the four mules laden with plate and silver which had been led to Sforza’s
house, by reason of which he had given up his own votes to his rival. In the
midst of the agitation excited in the crowd by this new report a
solemn chanting was heard; it proceeded from a procession, led by the
Cardinal Camerlengo, with the object of obtaining from Heaven the speedy
election of a pope: this procession, starting from the church of Ara Coeli at
the Capitol, was to make stations before the principal Madannas and the
most frequented churches. As soon as the silver crucifix was perceived
which went in front, the most profound silence prevailed, and everyone fell
on his knees; thus a supreme calm followed the tumult and uproar which
had been heard a few minutes before, and which at each appearance of
the smoke had assumed a more threatening character: there was a
shrewd suspicion that the procession, as well as having a religious end
in view, had a political object also, and that its influence was
intended to be as great on earth as in heaven. In any case, if such had been
the design of the Cardinal Camerlengo, he had not deceived himself, and
the effect was what he desired: when the procession had gone past,
the laughing and joking continued, but the cries and threats had
completely ceased.
The whole day passed thus; for in Rome nobody
works. You are either a cardinal or a lacquey, and you live, nobody knows
how. The crowd was still extremely numerous, when, towards two o’clock in the
afternoon, another procession, which had quite as much power of provoking
noise as the first of imposing silence, traversed in its turn the Piazza of
St. Peter’s: this was the dinner procession. The people received it with
the usual bursts of laughter, without suspecting, for all their
irreverence, that this procession, more efficacious than the former, had just
settled the election of the new pope.
The hour of the Ave Maria came
as on the evening before; but, as on the evening before, the waiting of the
whole day was lost; for, as half-past eight struck, the daily smoke
reappeared at the top of the chimney. But when at the same moment rumours
which came from the inside of the Vatican were spread abroad, announcing
that, in all probability, the election would take place the next day, the
good people preserved their patience. Besides, it had been very hot that day,
and they were so broken with fatigue and roasted by the sun, these dwellers
in shade and idleness, that they had no strength left to complain.
The
morning of the next day, which was the 11th of August, 1492, arose stormy and
dark; this did not hinder the multitude from thronging the piazzas, streets,
doors, houses, churches. Moreover, this disposition of the weather was a real
blessing from Heaven; for if there were heat, at least there would be no sun.
Towards nine o’clock threatening storm-clouds were heaped up over all the
Trastevere; but to this crowd what mattered rain, lightning, or thunder? They
were preoccupied with a concern of a very different nature; they were waiting
for their pope: a promise had been made them for to-day, and it could be seen
by the manner of all, that if the day should pass without any election
taking place, the end of it might very well be a riot; therefore, in
proportion as the time advanced, the agitation grew greater. Nine
o’clock, half-past nine, a quarter to ten struck, without anything happening
to confirm or destroy their hopes. At last the first stroke of ten
was heard; all eyes turned towards the chimney: ten o’clock struck
slowly, each stroke vibrating in the heart of the multitude. At last the
tenth stroke trembled, then vanished shuddering into space, and, a great
cry breaking simultaneously frog a hundred thousand breasts followed
the silence "Non v’e fumo! There is no smoke!" In other words, "We have
a pope."
At this moment the rain began to fall; but no one paid any
attention to it, so great were the transports of joy and impatience among all
the people. At last a little stone was detached from the walled window
which gave on the balcony and upon which all eyes were fixed: a general
shout saluted its fall; little by little the aperture grew larger, and in
a few minutes it was large enough to allow a man to come out on
the balcony.
The Cardinal Ascanio Sforza appeared; but at the moment
when he was on the point of coming out, frightened by the rain and the
lightning, he hesitated an instant, and finally drew back: immediately the
multitude in their turn broke out like a tempest into cries, curses,
howls, threatening to tear down the Vatican and to go and seek their
pope themselves. At this noise Cardinal Sforza, more terrified by the
popular storm than by the storm in the heavens, advanced on the balcony,
and between two thunderclaps, in a moment of silence astonishing to
anyone who had just heard the clamour that went before, made the
following proclamation:
"I announce to you a great joy: the most
Eminent and most Reverend Signor Roderigo Lenzuolo Borgia, Archbishop of
Valencia, Cardinal-Deacon of San Nicolao-in-Carcere, Vice-Chancellor of the
Church, has now been elected Page, and has assumed the name of Alexander
VI."
The news of this nomination was received with strange joy.
Roderigo Borgia had the reputation of a dissolute man, it is true,
but libertinism had mounted the throne with Sixtus IV and Innocent VIII,
so that for the Romans there was nothing new in the singular situation of
a pope with a mistress and five children. The great thing for the
moment was that the power fell into strong hands; and it was more important
for the tranquillity of Rome that the new pope inherited the sword of
St. Paul than that he inherited the keys of St. Peter.
And so, in the
feasts that were given on this occasion, the dominant character was much more
warlike than religious, and would have appeared rather to suit with the
election of some young conqueror than the exaltation of an old pontiff: there
was no limit to the pleasantries and prophetic epigrams on the name of
Alexander, which for the second time seemed to promise the Romans the empire
of the world; and the same evening, in the midst of brilliant illuminations
and bonfires, which seemed to turn the town into a lake of flame, the
following epigram was read, amid the acclamation of the
people:
"Rome under Caesar's rule in ancient story At home
and o'er the world victorious trod; But Alexander still extends his
glory: Caesar was man, but Alexander God."
As to the new pope,
scarcely had he completed the formalities of etiquette which his exaltation
imposed upon him, and paid to each man the price of his simony, when from the
height of the Vatican he cast his eyes upon Europe, a vast political game of
chess, which he cherished the hope of directing at the will of his own
genius.
CHAPTER II
The world had now arrived at
one of those supreme moments of history when every thing is transformed
between the end of one period and the beginning of another: in the East
Turkey, in the South Spain, in the West France, and in the North German, all
were going to assume, together with the title of great Powers, that influence
which they were destined to exert in the future over the secondary States.
Accordingly we too, with Alexander VI, will cast a rapid glance over them,
and see what were their respective situations in regard to Italy, which they
all coveted as a prize.
Constantine, Palaeologos Dragozes, besieged by
three hundred thousand Turks, after having appealed in vain for aid to the
whole of Christendom, had not been willing to survive the loss of his empire,
and had been found in the midst of the dead, close to the Tophana Gate;
and on the 30th of May, 1453, Mahomet II had made his entry
into Constantinople, where, after a reign which had earned for him
the surname of ’Fatile’, or the Conqueror, he had died leaving two sons,
the elder of whom had ascended the throne under the name of Bajazet II. |
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