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The Story of Milan

CHAPTER VII
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the opening of the gate

“il duca perse lo stato e la roba e la libertà, e nessuna sua opera si finì per lui.”—leonardo da vinci.

if the great movements of history could ever be said to turn on the existence of an individual, one might regard as the paradoxical result of galeazzo maria’s death the loss of italy’s freedom. the young milanese brutus, in his noble rage against tyranny, little foresaw the three centuries of dark and hopeless servitude which by the unimpassioned workings of fate his blow would indirectly bring upon his country. the exclamation of the cynical sixtus iv. at the news of the murder—to-day is the peace of italy dead,—showed a clearer vision. the scheming pope saw and gauged the unstable elements in the situation—the ambition of naples and venice, the helplessness of duke galeazzo’s ten-year-old successor, the contagion of disorder throughout italy; remembered the aggressive turk in the east, the adventurous frank in the north, and forthwith set to work to precipitate the inevitable upheaval in the interests of his own family.

the trouble ahead was, however, as yet hidden. milan kept calm. the air-bubble expectations of the conspirators had perished at the touch of reality. there was no attempt at a rising. the widowed duchess assumed without opposition the supreme authority as regent for her son, the child gian galeazzo, with cecco simonetta as her chief minister. 148the dead duke’s brothers, sforza, duke of bari, and lodovico il moro, were absent in france, ascanio the priest in rome. but the situation was pregnant with danger, as simonetta well knew. he suspended all galeazzo maria’s works of embellishment in the city, set the engineers and builders to construct new defences, threw a strong garrison into the castle, and adopted every precaution against revolt. the chief menace came from the nobles of the old ghibelline party. they hated simonetta, who was a sicilian and the creature of francesco sforza, with no interest apart from his master’s house, which he strengthened by depressing the great feudatories. the veteran minister was unpopular with the people too, because he was a foreigner, and because of the heavy taxes. sforza and lodovico, hurrying back from france, and joined by ascanio, found a powerful party, headed by the fiery and restless soldier, roberto di san severino, ready to support them in overthrowing the government. but simonetta was on the watch. he seized one of the chiefs of the disaffected party, and filled the city with troops. san severino promptly fled to naples, and the three princes retreated to a little distance, ready to escape. their youngest brother, ottaviano, a youth of eighteen, who was involved in their plot, also rode hastily out of the city, and finding himself pursued, leapt into the swollen adda, and was washed off his horse and drowned. a formal decree banishing the elder princes was issued, and for the moment the danger was over and simonetta triumphed.

naples, however, ambitious for a foothold in milan, embraced the cause of the exiles, and sent san severino with an army to worry the ducal territories. the brothers themselves, from their different places of refuge, kept up communications with their partisans in the city, and intrigued against the government. 149simonetta’s power depended upon the will of the duchess bona, a lady ‘of little good-sense,’ according to commines. though she left the guidance of affairs entirely to the minister, his influence could not compete with the charms of her handsome ferrarese secretary, antonio tassino, to whom she could deny nothing. the inordinate presumption of this favourite soon conflicted with simonetta’s authority. lodovico sforza, who far away had eyes and ears everywhere, was quick to profit by the dissension between these two powers at court. the death, in 1479, of the elder brother sforza—from excessive fat—helped to clear the path for the ambition of the moro, who was now created duke of bari by the king of naples, in succession to sforza. to him the rebellious spirits in milan looked henceforth as their leader. a number of the great nobles, the borromei, the da pusterla—those old foes of the dukes of milan—the marliani and others, aided the upstart tassino to turn the duchess against her husband’s faithful old servant. beatrice da este, wife of lodovico’s half-brother tristan, and other ladies in her intimacy, plied her with complaints of simonetta, and entreated her to dismiss him and recall the banished moro, who with the mercenaries of naples was now preying on her territories. tassino whispered the same persuasions between the endearments which she permitted from him. at last, one day lodovico himself knelt before her, having at great risk returned to the city and made his way secretly through the gardens into the castello. heedless of his disobedience to her decree of banishment, the thoughtless woman received him with the utmost joy, and the whole city burst into a frenzy of welcome. simonetta’s clear vision read the future. most illustrious duchess, said he, i shall lose my head, you your state. deaf to his warning, bona committed 150the government to her brother-in-law. three days later simonetta was arrested and carried to the castle of pavia, where, after he had lain a whole year in captivity, he was brought to trial, before one of the most vindictive of his personal enemies, on a charge of enormous crimes against the ducal house. he was tortured, and finally beheaded in the castle yard. for putting him to so merciful an end, bona took much credit to herself in an official notification of his trial and death sent to the various courts of italy.

the minister disposed of, the turn of the favourite came. from being lodovico’s ally and tool, tassino was now become a serious hindrance to lodovico. his arrogance was overweening. he had boundless power over bona, and was rapidly making himself absolute master in the palace. the crisis arrived in a struggle over the rocchetta, the inner keep of the castle of milan, which, with its strong garrison and impregnable defences, gave its commander virtual dominion of the whole city. tassino persuaded the duchess to appoint his father as castellan, in the place of filippo eustachio, who had been put in charge of it by duke galeazzo. but filippo, a staunch adherent of lodovico’s, disobeyed her repeated commands to give up the keys, and sturdily resisted all her efforts to remove him, defying her threats and sentences, until the moro had prepared a swift and sudden stroke. one day, at lodovico’s bidding, filippo and gio. francesco pallavicino entered the apartments of the little duke, at an hour when most of his attendants were out of the way, and snatching up the child, carried him across the narrow bridge which led from the corte ducale into the rocchetta, and delivered him into the custody of his uncle. with the person of the sovereign in his possession, behind the defence of drawbridges, portcullises and artillery, and a strong 151body of soldiers faithful to himself, the moro could dictate terms to the duchess. she had no alternative but to surrender to him the regency and the guardianship of her son. as for tassino, seeing himself overreached, he fled incontinently, to escape a worse fate, and stripped of everything but his perfumes and ivory combs, which were bundled after him, he disappears ignobly out of history. bereft at once of lover, son and sovereignty, bona was a piteous figure of helpless rage and grief. she declared she would abandon the duchy, even if she had to climb out of the windows and cross the moat at the risk of her life. lodovico, however, gently detained her in the castle of abbiategrasso, a virtual prisoner, until the subsidence of her shallow passion enabled her to submit to the new order of things and settle down, without power or authority, to a quiet life with her children, in the castello of milan again.

thus, by a series of successful palace intrigues, lodovico sforza made himself supreme in milan. he had still, however, to cope with the resentment of the nobles who had helped him to power, and now found themselves denied any share in it. like all usurpers, lodovico found ingratitude necessary to self-preservation, and from the first he studied to depress his more powerful subjects, choosing foreigners and men of modest degree as his ministers and advisers. roberto di san severino with many other nobles now took up arms against him. but they were completely defeated by constanzo sforza, an able general and a kinsman of the reigning house, and the turbulent san severino, transformed into the moro’s bitterest foe, quitted the duchy, and went off to serve venice in the war against ferrara.

the masterly craft by which lodovico sforza had achieved his triumph, roused the admiration and fear 152of all italy, which increased as, with the progress of time, he became the most conspicuous figure in italian politics. about the enigmatic personality of this prince, history has confused our minds with contrary judgments, which romance has translated into a various caricature. his peculiar association with italy’s greatest glory and greatest shame has thrown an exaggerated light and shade upon his memory. the italian historians of this period make him the scapegoat for that calamity of italy, which no one man, but the ancient and inherent sin of the whole nation, brought about. guicciardini, while recording his many virtues of mind and heart, is glad to believe him guilty of the worst crimes of ambition and perfidy, and to discover in him a fatal self-conceit. paolo giovio speaks of him as born for the undoing of italy. modern inquirers have modified the traditional view of the moro, by showing the baselessness of some of the worse charges against him, and by a diligent prying into all the details of his domestic existence, they have at once humanised and belittled the old picture of the man. yet still the real lodovico seems dark to us. it is not for nothing that the name of il moro—the moor—given to the dark-skinned boy in his childhood, has clung to him through history; it shows the conviction of his contemporaries and of posterity that it fitted not only his bodily appearance, but the complexion of his soul.

by his actions he must be judged. in the italy of the quattrocento, to do evil that good might come was excellent morality. the best men practised it, and differed only from the worst in the ends they pursued. lodovico’s usurpation of power had its immediate justification in the salvation of the state. the prestige of his name, and his fine statesmanship, could alone avert the civil war and anarchy which bona’s government 153was leading to, and oppose a barrier to the greed of venice and naples for lombardy. the deposition of a weak woman by a strong and able man was an act unsingular in a country where beneath all law and convention reigned the tacit conviction that character was the true legitimacy. once in power, he found that internal peace necessitated the sacrifice of the turbulent elements of which he had served himself to climb, and personal ingratitude became a public virtue. freed from the prepotence of these restless spirits, the citizens could pursue their occupations undisturbed, and the prince could devote himself to his great schemes for the improvement of agriculture, the facilitation of commerce and the humanising of the people. it is these things—in which he carried on the noblest tradition of the sforza domination—which are the moro’s apology for much wrong-doing; it is these and not his ceaseless political activity, and immense prestige as a statesman, which make the story of milan great during his reign, a period brilliant, joyous and prosperous beyond compare.

though in title only regent for the young duke, lodovico was absolute sovereign. his extraordinary activity, resource and subtlety, backed by the boundless wealth of milan, soon made his influence felt abroad. for the first year or two his cares at home kept him from interfering much in general affairs. the balance of power in italy, deprived of the weight of milan, wavered in consequence, and sixtus iv., naples and venice did their utmost to swallow up florence. the safety of the great tuscan republic, secured partly by the courage and address of lorenzo de’ medici, but more by the timely knock of the turk at the door of italy, at otranto, was further assured by the fast-rising power of the new ruler of milan, who by uniting his state in 1484, in a fresh alliance with florence 154and naples, restored to italy that equilibrium which had been first established by his great father, francesco.

the eleven years that followed the peace of bagnolo (1484-95) were the most splendid in the history of medi?val italy. they were the culmination of a great ascent, preceding as great a downfall. pressing upwards through the continual struggles, amid the phantoms and shadows of the earlier centuries, the chosen spirits of humanity had at last emerged upon a height, where, as in the light of unclouded morning, the whole world seemed spread out before and behind them, heaven itself within their reach, the gods themselves their fellows. in the general material prosperity out of which the fine flower of italian civilisation in the quattrocento had sprung, as in the cultured and artistic joy of life which was its highest expression, milan, led by lodovico sforza, held a foremost place. whatever may have been his secret motives, this prince exerted himself ceaselessly to conceive and carry out projects of enduring benefit to the country. summoning the greatest brains in italy to his service, he set on foot immense hydraulic works, by means of which wildernesses were converted into fruitful tracts, and new ways opened for the passage of merchandise and general traffic. he widened his father’s famous canal, the naviglio martesana, and the naviglio encircling the city, employing the inventive genius of leonardo da vinci, to overcome the difficulty of the different levels by a system of locks, still existing in milan to this day. he joined these canals with the ancient channel between milan and pavia, thus forming a navigable waterway between the adda and the ticino. large districts hitherto unfertile owed their after prosperity to this enlightened ruler. he fostered agriculture, founding model farms and introducing improved breeds of cattle and horses. his pleasaunces and orchards round the castello at milan, 155and his country palaces and villas were so beautiful and fruitful that they were called earthly paradises. after a brief half century of the sforza rule, the duchy of milan was become a vast garden, supporting an enormous population of hardworking peasants. commerce flourished more than ever, every way being opened to it by wise and considerate measures. in the higher branches of industry the moro’s vitalising interest and enthusiasm was as effective. his splendid patronage of art and letters made this city of prosperous traders the richest centre in italy of the ?sthetic culture of the renaissance. attracted by his liberality and large ideas, the rarest genius of the age was at his command. bramante of urbino spent many years at milan, building cupolaed temples and colonnaded palaces, and transforming the old medi?val city of the visconti into the fair renaissance vision of the moro’s desire. for lodovico and for milan, leonardo da vinci did his greatest works. perugino painted for the moro the splendid madonna with the archangels, now in the national gallery, and in the stimulating atmosphere a number of native artists of considerable distinction sprang up. lodovico equally favoured men of letters and scientific inquirers. he invited them to milan, and gave them great rewards, and did his utmost by grants and personal care to raise the university of pavia and the schools founded at milan by galeazzo to a flourishing condition.

canal, via san marco

156but the merits of the moro’s government were obscured to the people by his tyrannic methods. the peasants, groaning under the oppression of forced labour and of heavy and unjustly distributed taxation, were too preoccupied by their immediate grievances to care for the rich harvest which would ensue some day from the sacrifice of their sweat and their scanty gains. in their belief the prince sought only self-glorification and the increase of the already fabulous ducal treasure. their simple lamentations sound in the pages of the chroniclers like a dull threatening undertone in that wonderful symphony of rich and various instruments which the life of the milanese court was at this time.

157

canonica of st. ambrogio

one of the worst characteristics of a tyrant was, however, conspicuously absent in lodovico sforza. he was not cruel. galeazzo’s horrible ways of enforcing the law no longer prevailed. the gallows vanished; fragments of quartered traitors adorned the gates no more, and such pains as justice or policy necessitated were administered out of the sight and, if possible, knowledge of the moro. even guicciardini describes the moro as mild and merciful. the sight of bodily suffering hurt his fastidious delicacy, his love of fair and seemly appearance, his fine sensibilities. his shrinking from blood was perhaps a sign of what may explain much that seems dark in his history—fear; of the decadence which fatally awaits races risen too swiftly to greatness. however that may be, his mildness did not win the hearts of the people for a sovereign who addressed them from behind the protection of iron bars and never admitted them to free and friendly audience. an ever-widening gulf divided their lives of elemental want and passion from the exquisite existence of subtle and various delight within the impassable 158walls of the castello. it was for the moro, we remember, that leonardo sketched the plans of an ideal city, with an upper system of streets in which the sovereign and his chosen society of nobles and courtiers might pass, uncontaminated by the breath and odour of the multitudes below.

to the princes of the quattrocento the people were but the necessary foundation of existence, ‘the mud on which proud man is built.’ and how incomparable was the fair fabric, so based, and composed of all the rarest elements of life. the story of the moro’s court is well-known to english readers. the joyous figures that peopled it are familiar to us, and the gorgeous pageants, the processions of princes and potentates and fair ladies, the stupendous display of wealth and beauty, the tourneys, feasts and dances, are tales oft told in biography and romance. in 1489 the long arranged marriage of the young duke with isabella of aragon, granddaughter of king ferrante of naples, was celebrated with extraordinary pomp, and two years later the festivities were renewed for the double nuptials of the regent himself with beatrice da este, daughter of the duke of ferrara, and of her brother alfonso, heir-apparent of ferrara, with anna sforza, sister of gian galeazzo. all these splendours were far overpassed, however, in 1493, when the moro’s diplomacy was rewarded by an imperial alliance for the house of sforza, and bianca maria, the duke’s remaining sister, rode forth from the castello in a chariot of gold to her marriage with the emperor maximilian. the imagination reels with the descriptions of the rich robes and jewels, the pavilions and triumphal arches, the garlands, the blazoned hangings, the allegorical masques, the noise of music and of applauding crowds on these occasions. one would feel that milan must have suffered an intolerable surfeit of colour and delight, did we not know 159that the gorgeous riot was shaped into symmetry and order by the supreme decorative taste of the italian quattrocento. all the beautiful neo-pagan conceits, the new vision of the gods of olympus granted to that age, inspired these brief spectacles. leonardo—bramante—fashioned those gorgeous edifices of an hour, built up that wonderful seeming, ephemeral as the glories which it celebrated, and stayed those passing moments for ever in the history of the world.

though it was the desire to outdo every other princely m?cenas which impelled lodovico to bid highest for the services of great artists and scholars, it was not merely his liberality which held such a man as leonardo at milan, but rather his large appreciation, his sympathy with great and original ideas, his rare wisdom in leaving genius free to work in its own way. he had this, moreover, in common with that unique among the sons of the italian renaissance, that he, too, was a far seeker and the designer of things never to be finished. leonardo came to milan about 1483. there exists a copy, apparently in his own handwriting, of a letter recommending himself to the moro, in which he enumerates all his qualifications for employment, beginning with his skill in the invention of military engines, and ending with his capacity to carry out any work in sculpture or painting as well as any other man, be he who he may. vasari tells us that on his arrival in milan he offered lodovico a silver lute which he had fashioned himself in the form of a horse’s head, and in such a manner that in beauty and sonority of tone it surpassed every other instrument at the court, and that the prince quickly became enamoured of his admirable gifts and conversation. the more intimate knowledge of the man revealed in his own notebooks has, however, changed the traditional picture of leonardo as a fine 160courtier and brilliant wit and conversationalist, the centre of attraction at the court, enjoying great revenues from the moro and dissipating them in splendid living. we see him, instead, secluded with his pupils in the pleasant home which lodovico gave him on the outskirts of the city, beside the castello gardens, poring over some problem of construction or hydrostatics, striving to create a flying-machine or other novel engine. or passing rapidly, according to his mood, from modelling the great horse to his painting in the refectory of sta. maria della grazie, or tracing the exquisite contours of those beautiful favourites of the moro, cecilia gallerani and her successor, lucrezia crivelli, mocked and allured in each shadowy face by that inscrutable smile of woman in which the secret of life seemed to hide itself. he evidently cared little to mingle with the social life of the court, where perhaps he was neither able nor willing to express to a circle, alive to intellectual interests but enslaved by pedantry and charlatanism, those occult thoughts which even in his writings he hid in left-handed hieroglyphics. yet he must have been a familiar presence in the palace, where he was constantly summoned for some work which to us seems strangely disproportioned to his genius—the arrangement of the water-supply for the duchess’s bath, the designing of triumphal arches for a wedding pageant, or the costumes and accessories of some spectacular joust. whatever it was, he did it with the interest of one for whom there is no great nor small, and for whom a moment as much as countless centuries holds eternity, and little things and big manifest alike the divine law of necessity.

leonardo’s figure overshadows for us all others of lodovico il moro’s milan. there were many others besides him, however, of highest reputation at the time in the chosen circle of the court. the moro, in his 161care for the intellectual improvement of his subjects, imported poets from tuscany to teach them the art of composing sonnets. ancient prejudice against all things lombard withheld many of leonardo’s countrymen from accepting the sforza’s offers of honours and emoluments. but the sunshine of court favour, come whence it might, was greedily accepted by the florentine bernardo bellincione, whose gift for stringing together appropriate and flattering verses secured him the position of court poet for many years at milan. nor could any small local passion restrain that bare-boned vagabond genius, antonio camelli—called il pistoia after his native city—from quenching his perennial famine at the ducal table. but though he played the fool to amuse his patrons, il pistoia was of much rarer stuff than bellincione. behind his cloak of buffoonery the tragedy of a serious and prophetic spirit hid itself, and a fine satire inspired the sallies of his fantastic muse. an irrepressible sonneteer, he poured forth streams of verse at milan. a number of his sonnets allude to the politics of the day, and are of great interest.

these professors of poesy were very successful in propagating their art in milan. francesco tanzi, one of the many versifiers at court, declared that after the example of bellincione, milan was full of sonnets, and all the rivers and canals ran with the water of parnassus. the poetic frenzy had invaded the whole of society, so that every young knight who desired the favour of ladies and princes had needs be skilled in making rhymes and improvising to the music of his lute. a flourishing school of poetry rewarded the moro’s patronage and encouragement, and its most distinguished graduates were young nobles of the first rank—gaspare visconte, of the same stock as the old ducal house, and antonio di campo fregoso, of a famous genoese house. a 162singer of older and still higher repute in the ducal circle was that mirror of the graceful and cultured chivalry of the day, niccolò da correggio, who as the son of beatrice da este, wife of tristan sforza, was constantly at milan, in devoted attendance upon his cousin, the younger beatrice da este. marchesino stanza, girolamo tuttavilla, galeazzo di san severino, galeotto di caretto, a lettered noble and chronicler of montferrato, all swelled the tuneful choir. the moro himself is said to have included sonnet-making among his myriad activities. around these distinguished figures hovered a host of lyrists of various rank and accomplishment, both natives and pilgrims attracted from afar to this now famous shrine of the muses. men of other occupations added their voices in moments of leisure. among these was bramante, who, in the intervals of his labours as architect, engineer, painter and master of revels, competed eagerly for the laurel wreath.

the chief theme of their song, and the object of the gallant adoration and service of all, was the younger beatrice da este, who at fifteen came to milan to be the moro’s bride. to this child of tuneful ferrara, trained from childhood upwards in all the ?sthetic traditions of its famous court, an atmosphere of poetry, music and art was as natural as the air she breathed. with that full and eager vitality which she shared with her father, duke ercole, and her sister, isabella of mantua, she sought all beautiful and joyous things. in the court of her rich and indulgent lord she could satisfy every desire. for the rich equipment of her person and her surroundings she had the rarest talent at her command. leonardo da vinci devised curious girdles for her. that finest of goldsmiths, caradosso, carved the beautiful gems which she wore, and spent his most delicate workmanship on pax or reliquary for her oratory. to create her presentment 163in marble she could choose a gian cristoforo romano, most cultured and graceful of young sculptors. her love of sweet melody was fed by the crowd of skilled musicians who frequented this court, where their art was traditionally welcome. besides the flemish priest cordier, and the other ultramontane singers of duke galeazzo’s celebrated choir, there were here the viol player, jacopo di san secondo—the apollo of raphael’s parnassus—whose strains were able to soothe the moro in moments of fever and pain, atalante migliorotti, the friend and companion of leonardo, and others numberless, nameless to us now. an incomparable craftsman, lorenzo di pavia, made instruments for her of purest tone, in cases of ivory and ebony most exquisitely worked. she played herself upon these, and had a sweet voice. many a time with her devoted knight, galeazzo di san severino, model of all fashionable graces, and himself an accomplished singer, and her favourite daino, most musical and delightful of fools, she and her ladies would make harmonious concert. as became a daughter of este, beatrice extended a princely patronage to scholarship and serious literature. her secretary, the learned vincenzo calmeta, tells us that she engaged men suitably gifted to read aloud to her the divina commedia and the works of other italian poets. she would give serious attention to literary debates, such as the lively poetic contention we read of between bramante and gaspare visconte, on the respective merits of dante and petrarca.

such encounters of sharp-sworded wit, so much in vogue at that time, were conducted at milan with less pedantry and self-conceit than in courts ruled by more strictly humanistic traditions. a freedom, gaiety and freshness animated the intellectual atmosphere here. the moro’s extraordinary activity of mind and wide interests, beatrice’s ardour, and capacity for enjoyment, 164fired all around them. the duchess’s eagerness for culture was tempered by her love of sport and outdoor life. her hawks and her hounds were a primary passion in this ferrarese princess, and many a fair morning was passed in adventurous chase of the wild creatures in her husband’s vast hunting demesnes. she was a splendid horsewoman, and had unbounded courage. the lively sports in which she indulged with her ladies and cavaliers were not always of a refined order. the gaiety of the fifteenth century was ministered to by jests and practical jokes of incredible coarseness, and by all the obscenities of the allowed fools and monstrosities of nature who capered in grotesquely brilliant garb round every renaissance princess. yet into this full life the duchess herself carried a redeeming innocence. in spite of her free intercourse with the young nobles, no lightest shadow ever rested on her fair fame.

the society in which she passed her bright, pure existence had, however, but lately had galeazzo maria for leader and example, and had forgotten all moral restrictions. when beatrice came first to milan she found her husband’s mistress, the beautiful poetess cecilia gallerani, installed in the palace itself. the whole of milan was rotten beneath its fine vestures and its art and learning. wealth and luxury had encouraged the love of pleasure natural in the people, and the ideal of freedom in thought and manners, the search for novel experience and sensation, the worship of the new old gods, born of the revived knowledge of antiquity, had induced immorality and corruption more than elsewhere in this city where voluptuous tastes were not restrained, as in the florentines, by natural temperance. everywhere in the midst of the joyous revels lust and evil passions were heaping up sins ready for the retribution to come. corio, an eyewitness 165of these times, preludes his story of the great catastrophe by a vivid picture, adorned by the fashionable pagan conceits, of milanese life during these years before the fatal 1495, when it seemed to the city and its lord that everything was more firmly established in peace than ever before. no one thought of other than accumulating riches. pomps and pleasures ruled the hours. the court of our princes was splendid exceedingly, full of new fashions, dresses and delights. nevertheless, at this time virtue was so much lauded on every side that minerva had set up great rivalry with venus, and each sought to make her school the most brilliant. to that of cupid came the most beautiful youths. fathers yielded to it their daughters, husbands their wives, brothers their sisters, and so thoughtlessly did they thus flock to the amorous hall that it was reckoned a stupendous thing by those who had understanding. minerva, she too, sought with all her might to adorn her gentle academy. wherefore that glorious and most illustrious prince lodovico sforza had called into his pay—as far as from the uttermost parts of europe—men most excellent in knowledge and art. here was the learning of greece, here latin verse and prose flourished resplendently, here were the poetic muses; hither the masters of the sculptor’s art and those foremost in painting had gathered from distant countries, and here songs and sweet sounds of every kind and such dulcet harmonies were heard, that they seemed to have descended from heaven itself upon this excelling court.

we who know the after days of milan watch the golden hours gliding by towards the darkness ahead, and the glory centring round the two doomed figures of lodovico and beatrice is pregnant for us with tragedy and grief. corio continues with a description of these princes, in this so vain felicity, passing their time in divers pleasures, and speaks of the magnificent jousts and 166tournaments and military shows, and of the homage paid by the poets to the moro as lord both of war and peace. yet, he adds, with all this glory, pomp and wealth, which seemed as though nothing could be added to it, lodovico, not content, or unaware of his felicity, must needs reach higher still, that his fall might be the greater. and the chronicler, preparing himself to compose the cruel and unheard-of tale, fears that compassion will not suffer him to arrive at the piteous end without tears.

the moro’s power was in fact unstably based. his was the right of natural ability to rule. but beside him the lawful sovereign had grown to manhood during these years. gian galeazzo sforza—the engaging little boy reading cicero in bramantino’s fresco, now in the wallace collection—showed with advancing years little desire or capacity to govern. amiable, weakly, and self-indulgent, he was perfectly content to leave the power to his uncle, for whom he had a love and admiration which are a touching element in the relationship of the two men—usurper and legitimate prince. had they only been concerned, the moro’s peculiar difficulties might never have arisen. he seems to have regarded himself sincerely at first as the vicegerent of his nephew. dum vivis tutus et laetus vivo. gaude, fili, protector tuus ero semper. these words, in the mouth of nephew and uncle, are the motto on a miniatured page in the history of francesco sforza, by gio. simonetta, printed in 1490. the picture shows lodovico and gian galeazzo kneeling on the edge of a lake; in the midst of the water a ship with a youth in it and a moor at the helm, and in the background a mulberry-tree (moro) spreading wide branches. this allegory—one of many such that we read of—may have expressed some real affection as well as self-exaltation in lodovico, though after-events give it a strange irony.

167but the respective marriages of the two princes introduced another element into the situation. beatrice da este was not only the joyous spirit of festival and sport and all artistic delight, but a woman of strong character and intelligence. she quickly gained influence over her husband, and asserted herself in state affairs. the very narrowness of her youth and sex gave her power over the complex and wide-minded moro, who adored her spirit and courage, and yielded to her as his great sire francesco had yielded to bianca maria. beatrice wanted the semblance as well as the substance of sovereignty, and the birth of her son, in 1492, added the new ambition of a mother to her desire. isabella of aragon, on her side, had a royal spirit; her soul swelled with rage and offended pride when the regent showed no intention of relinquishing the government to her husband. in vain she urged gian galeazzo to assume his rights; her exhortations only passed straight from the confiding boy into lodovico’s ears. her sense of wrong was further exasperated by beatrice, who usurped the homage and consequence which should have been isabella’s as consort of the sovereign. the rivalry between the princesses began very soon after beatrice’s appearance on the scene, and that playful boxing-match of which we read, in which the duchess of bari knocked down her of milan, was the symbol of a contest which involved fatal issues reaching far beyond the two women themselves.

influenced by his wife’s ambition, and the birth of his son—also perhaps by the impossibility, when the hour came, of relinquishing the sweets of power and sacrificing his vast projects and the fruits of his past incessant labours to the claim of mere primogeniture represented by the feeble and already failing gian galeazzo—lodovico was evidently scheming, after 1490, to make himself duke of milan. from the time of the moro’s marriage 168the ceremonial homage which had been paid till then to the young duke was gradually lessened. the tutelage which had been proper in his boyhood was now used to emphasize his incapacity. no single office or dignity was at his disposal. ministers of state, captains of fortresses, generals and magistrates, all were appointed by lodovico. at no point did his subjects come into contact with their real sovereign. he was dependent for all supplies upon the moro, who kept absolute control of the immense sforza treasure. the birth of his heir was but scantily celebrated, while that of lodovico’s a little later was made the occasion of the most pompous rejoicings. the halls of the sovereigns in the corte ducale were gradually deserted, while lodovico and beatrice’s apartments in the rocchetta were thronged. the self-seeking courtiers knew well where their devotion was most profitably placed. besides, it was melancholy in the chambers of a sickly prince and a sad princess ever brooding over her wrongs. the two appeared less and less in public, and finally retired altogether to the castle of pavia, and their pathetic figures were almost forgotten on the joyous stage of milanese life.

but they existed—a constant menace to the moro, a weapon for his thousand enemies in the state, and for jealous italy outside. isabella’s piteous complaints to her grandfather, whom she implored to right her husband, inflamed the long-standing aragonese hatred of the sforza. the other powers—venice, baulked in her greed of conquest by the strong hand of the moro, and ever nervous for the cities which she had wrested from milan in filippo maria’s time; pope alexander vi., who allowed no gratitude to the sforza, although through cardinal ascanio they had been the means of his election, to interfere with his schemes for a new borgian italy; florence, politically and commercially 169jealous of the lombard state—all would have gladly seen the moro overthrown and milan depressed.

during these years of peace and of expansion for milan, the suspicious fear with which the disproportionate prosperity of one power was always regarded by the rest of italy had concentrated itself upon lodovico sforza. his extraordinary success and untiring activity, his powers of intrigue, his ability and resource, were the theme of every tongue. the extravagant adulations of his court poets were repeated and unwillingly credited throughout italy. with the vast wealth of milan at his command what might he not do? fear of milan was an old habit. was it she that should give italy a master after all? was this dark prince, mysteriously potent, to be the destroyer of her liberty at last?

had men looked more closely into the monster of their imagination, they might have perceived that it was not lodovico’s ambition that was most to be apprehended. the fatal situation which now developed seems to have been the product of two opposing fears. the moro’s faith in himself and in his good fortune was a superstition which supported itself upon the lying prophecies of the astrologer ever at his side, and was at the mercy of every ill omen. his intrigues were often the devices of a man on the defensive, rather than the confident moves of a conqueror. to give a colour of justification to his now almost complete usurpation, he set casuists to work and evolved a specious doctrine, pronouncing himself lawful successor of his father, as the first son born to francesco after he became duke of milan. by means of this argument, and the better persuasion of an enormous gift of gold, he obtained from the emperor maximilian the promise of the investiture of the duchy, an obsolete legality which neither francesco or galeazzo had troubled to 170obtain in confirmation of the right won by the sword. these devices, however, aroused only derision and scandal in his own country, nor could they quiet his own uneasy mind. he felt italy against him and was afraid. his particular dread of the house of aragon never slept. though old king ferrante urged with pathetic sincerity the maintenance of the league which had preserved the peace of italy for so many fortunate years, he might at any moment be succeeded by alfonso of calabria, who did not disguise his hatred of the moro and his longing to right his daughter and son-in-law. lorenzo de’ medici had died in 1491, and peace was already threatened by the injudicious policy of his son piero. the covetousness of venice, the faithless selfishness of the pope, completed a situation of general peril, which might easily beget a great combination to crush lodovico and reinstate gian galeazzo, to be followed by a scramble for the states which all knew the young duke incapable of governing.

the moro resolved to anticipate the blow. with fatal confidence in his power to control the force which he was evoking, he opened the gate which it was milan’s sacred duty to keep shut against the foreigner. he invited charles viii. of france to lead an army into italy against the princes of aragon, and to recover the kingdom of naples for the house of anjou.

lodovico’s act did not perhaps at the time wear the magnitude of guilt which subsequent events gave it. italy was so disunited, so lacking in any general principle of patriotism that her various tyrants had not scrupled to appeal at times to france or the empire in their needs. men were used to sporadic attempts of the princes of anjou to overthrow the aragonese dynasty in naples. but now that the angevin claims were vested in the king of france, such attempts must be more perilous for italy. naples was not the 171only state to which france had pretensions. louis of orleans—next in succession to the throne of france after the sickly charles and his infant son—claimed the duchy of milan itself through his ancestress valentina visconte. the success of the french enterprise in naples could scarcely fail to be followed by a vindication of this other claim. nothing but that strange and fatal belief in himself, which not only inspired lodovico but had infected his contemporaries, could have blinded the moro to the madness of his proceedings and induced venice, florence and the pope to abet his projects at first by forming a new league with him and abandoning naples to its fate. there was some strange glamour about this remarkable man which deluded his own generation. the renaissance spirit felt itself represented and fulfilled in him. its boundless confidence in human possibilities was exemplified by the reputation of almost superhuman powers with which it invested lodovico sforza. god in heaven and the moro on earth, so dared il pistoia to sing, and the prince to hear. the tragic fall which awaited this exaltation is a part of the inward as well as outward history of an age when pride built so high, only to be smitten with incompleteness. strangest of all, perhaps, was the self-deception of lodovico himself, shown by the persistence in him, throughout his hopeless captivity, of this superstitious faith, after it had utterly failed him in the crisis of his life, so that in his last moments, in his prison at loches, he could attribute his overthrow to nothing less than the direct intervention of god, to punish him for his sins, since only the sudden might of destiny, he said, could have subverted the counsels of human wisdom.

in inviting charles, lodovico doubtless thought to produce a temporary diversion, which should weaken naples and produce a political upheaval, amid which 172he should be able to secure the ducal throne, and once seated in it, readjust by adroit diplomacy, the balance of power in the peninsula after the retirement of the invader in due course. but he had left out of account the respective conditions of france and italy—the pent-up military fury in the noble classes in the first country, which raged for an outlet, the fatal weakness of disunion in the second, and the enervation which peace and unparalleled prosperity had produced in its people. he may have hoped to achieve his ends by the mere threat of french invasion, and counted on the indecision of the young king and his own subtle craft to keep the matter from going any further. charles, however, whose weak head swam with the flatteries of venal councillors, and with romantic ideas imbibed from the tales of the paladins, was easily persuaded to undertake the conquest of naples as a preliminary step to the redemption of christendom from the turk.

but the preparations for the expedition were very dilatory, and more than two years passed before they were completed. during this time of suspense italy was full of doubts and fears. lodovico’s allies began to hesitate, and there were daily shiftings of policy in the various states, now in favour of naples, now of france, all actuated by self-interest, which guided them finally in this crisis of their country’s fate to a despicable neutrality, waiting upon events. the moro’s own policy was shifting and tortuous, even displaying at times an anxiety—little credited by his neighbours—to save naples from the catastrophe which he himself was bringing upon her. already he was working for a reaction against the french in the event of their success in italy. but his advances to the opposite party won for him only the distrust of his friends, and in france many warned charles of the 173folly of relying upon this man, homme sans foy, s’il voyoit son profit pour la rompre, as commines pronounces him.

meanwhile, careless apparently of the future, italy continued her wild dance of pleasure. in milan, gaiety and licence reigned supreme. yet there are many signs that a sense of sin and of a reckoning at hand had begun to awaken. the sonnets of il pistoia grew grave with prophecies to laughing italy of the much weeping which time would soon draw from her, and of the shortness of the hours between her and her immense, irreparable sorrow. the superstitious moro himself must have been shaken by the blind friar who is said to have appeared in the piazza of milan at the time of his negotiations with the french king, crying—prince, show him not the way, else thou wilt repent it. from florence came the echo of savonarola’s annunciation, gladius domini super terram cito et velociter. more poignant still to ears that could hear was the tremulous voice of the octogenarian king of naples, warning pope and moro, again and again, of the peril clear to the terrible prevision of the dying—he who will may begin a war, but stop it, no!

but the voices cried in the wilderness. king ferrante’s was spent by death early in 1494, and in the following autumn charles appeared at last at the head of a splendid host, and was welcomed with immense pomp and revelry by lodovico and beatrice at pavia. there in the castle the young duke lay dying. the king visited him, and the piteous spectacle roused the sympathy of the monarch and his followers, for whom the person of legitimate sovereignty had a sacredness unfelt by the italians. charles was, however, much embarrassed by the duchess isabella, who besought him to have mercy on her father, the king of naples. she had better have prayed for herself, who was still a young and fair lady, observes commines.

174the invaders passed on, finding their path cleared before them, and their progress already an assured triumph. their cruelty when they had first entered the country had terrified all inclination to oppose them out of the italians. piero de’ medici’s shameful surrender, florence’s welcome, the inactivity of the pope, the speedy fall of naples, all the details of the pitiful story are well-known. charles had not gone far when gian galeazzo died. the cruel report at once arose, and was widely believed by both french and italians, that lodovico had had him poisoned, and the moro’s memory has come down to our day loaded with this detestable sin. modern inquiry has, however, shown how little foundation there is for the charge, disproving the preliminary accusations against lodovico of starving and ill-treating the ducal couple, and making it clear that gian galeazzo was surrounded by physicians and carefully tended. it is evident that lodovico’s temperament was incapable of such a crime—that he would have been repelled by the mere idea of murdering this nephew whom he had brought up, and who loved him with a pathetic fidelity to the last. gian galeazzo’s longing on his death-bed for the uncle, who was far away, riding in splendour beside the french king, his touching questions to one of lodovico’s gentlemen whether he thought his excellency the moro li volesse bene—loved him, gian galeazzo—and whether he seemed sorry that he was ill, go far to dissipate the cruel suspicion. nevertheless, the young duke’s death relieved lodovico’s conscience of its last scruple with regard to the dukedom. he hastened back to milan and had himself invested with the ducal mantle, cap and sceptre, in the midst of a stupendous pomp.

meanwhile, the success of the french was producing the result anticipated by the moro. venice, 175awaking to the danger which the terrible prestige of the conqueror’s arms meant for all italy, was ready to listen to lodovico’s proposals for a remedy. the invaders were now to add to their experience of italian pusillanimity an acquaintance with the craft which had superseded brute courage in this advanced nation. scarcely had the french king turned his back on lombardy, when the venetian ambassadors were treating with the new duke of milan for an alliance against him. a few months later, charles and his knights, sick with the southern delights of their newly-conquered realm, and longing like homesick children for france, found their return barred by a powerful coalition of their late ally with venice, the emperor, the king of spain, and nearly all the minor states of italy. the story of their homeward march, more like a flight, need not be repeated here. at the approach of the french to his dominions, the faithless lodovico trembled in his palace, in spite of the mighty host of allies which was awaiting them, while his people, beside themselves with fear of the cruel northerners, and exasperated by the grievous taxation imposed upon them to oppose this evil which the moro had himself provoked, murmured against him as the murderer of gian galeazzo, and the oppressor of the widowed duchess and her son. lodovico well knew that he could not lean upon his subjects in adversity. but the battle of fornuovo (1495) relieved lombardy of all fear of the french for the time, though the italians let slip their chance of annihilating the hungry and enfeebled enemy, and crushing the northern terror for ever. the irresistible conqueror of a year back, having with miraculous good fortune escaped with the best part of his troops to asti, was compelled to negotiate for peace with milan and venice. at the meetings of the duke and the 176venetian ambassadors with the representatives of charles, lodovico was accompanied by his young wife, who took part in all the discussions, and astonished everybody by her intelligence and wisdom. all through this critical period of the french invasion, beatrice was the true helpmeet of her husband, sustaining by her courage and will his more sensitive temperament under the fears and doubts which assailed it.

peace at last concluded, the french finally made their way home, leaving so weak a hold on naples that the aragonese quickly reinstated themselves. in the universal joy at the disappearance of the invaders it appeared to all that the moro had saved italy. his prestige, of late clouded, was now more brilliant than ever. securely seated on the ducal throne, strong in the new alliance in which his initiative had bound italy, he seemed indeed to have succeeded in all his calculations and schemes. those seeds of future danger—the fatal knowledge of italy’s weakness, which the french had acquired, the declaration of the duke of orleans, that he should return to conquer his rightful heritage of milan—were unheeded. in his new exaltation the moro vaunted himself the child of fortune, and believed himself to be, as astrologers, poets, courtiers, ambassadors told him, arbiter of the destinies of italy, and incarnation of almost divine wisdom and prudence. he put his trust more and more in destiny, and prompted by his venal astrologer, ambrogio da rosate, thought to read in the stars his triumph. as if blinded by the gods in preparation for the sacrifice, he passed all bounds in his arrogance. the old jealousy and distrust of his fellow-sovereigns now revived with new force. his jester’s vainglorious trumpeting—the pope is my chaplain, venice my treasurer, the emperor my chamberlain, and the king of france my courier, was repeated in every city of europe, as if lodovico himself had seriously spoken it. the many guests at the castello of milan told everywhere of the painting on the walls there, depicting italy as a queen, and the moro, with a scoppetta—his personal emblem—brushing the dust from her robes, whereon were inscribed the different italian cities. these boasts of exaggerated self-confidence rankled in his contemporaries. but while they hated him, they feared him too. more than ever now all italy waited upon his motions.

lodovico il moro, by boltraffio (trivulzio collection)

to face p. 176.] ???? [anderson, rome

177the months that followed the conclusion of peace with charles were joyous beyond compare. in the summer of this year (1496) the duke and duchess had a meeting with the emperor, and returned loaded with honours, which added a new lustre to lodovico’s fame.

suddenly, at the height of his fortune, fate struck her first blow at the moro. beatrice died (1497).

the golden days of milan changed all at once to gloom. silence shut down upon the dancing and sweet music. the duke, to whom even his children and state seemed no longer worth living for, sat for nine days in a darkened chamber alone, refusing all comfort, while in sta. maria delle grazie the monks chanted incessant masses for beatrice’s soul. the moro was overwhelmed. he who had ever lived happy, now began to feel great anguish, says the venetian sanuti. the fabric of his dreams had crashed upon him. what were kingdoms to him without that clear-sighted and dauntless spirit at his side? not only was his strong affection rent, but his profound faith in his good fortune was awfully shaken. as if the evil augury had to declare itself unmistakably, on the night of beatrice’s death a large part of the walls of the vast pleasaunce which he had created round the castello fell with a great crash, ruined by no storm or 178wind, or agency perceptible to human sense. from this moment, so much is man’s destiny affected by his own spirits, all lodovico’s misfortunes began. he entered on that downward course which was to drag so much to ruin with it—and to the husband’s loss of the blessing of this beatrice, the poet of the italian renaissance ascribes not only the fall of moro, sforza, and visconte snake together, but the captivity of italy.

‘beatrice bea, vivendo, il suo consorte,

e lo lascia infelice alla sua morte.

anzi tutta italia, che con lei

fia trionfante e senza lei, captiva.’[3]

3. ariosto, orlando furioso, canto xlii.

the gate which the moro had thought to shut so easily upon the departed stranger was once more ajar. a second french expedition threatened italy, and milan in particular. early in 1497, the great captain gian giacomo trivulzio, head of the party in milan hostile to the sforza, and a bitter personal foe of the moro, who had abandoned his country and was high in the french service, made a raid into the ducal dominions. at the same time his partisans stirred up the discontent of the people, and inspired their volatile minds with desire for a change of masters. and soon the league began to show its internal weakness. the interests of the two chief parties in it were fatally opposed. venice found her designs on pisa thwarted by lodovico and in her rage began to ponder the advantages of making friends with the french. out of the struggle for naples now renewed between the french garrison and the aragonese she might by a prudent policy, when both combatants were exhausted, secure the sea-kingdom of the south, and might not a second descent of the french king, lasting long enough to overthrow the sforza and no more, put rich lombardy 179at last within her reach? with such hopes the grave senators flattered their ambition and forgot their faith to italy. the pope, for his own interests, had turned his back on the sforza, and was parleying with the common foe, while in florence the frate and the people still looked to charles for the establishment of the kingdom of god on earth and the restitution of pisa.

the king, however, swayed by opposite counsels, let the months go by, and the moro, with desperate trust in his own statesmanship, still hoped to save his dukedom. in spite of his anxieties and embarrassments, his unconquerable instinct of order maintained the fair aspect of his dominions. but on the great artistic projects of his triumphant days an arresting spell was laid. the resources of the state were exhausted in war and defensive preparations. the people were already taxed to rebellion, and no supplies were forthcoming for his painters and sculptors. leonardo asked in vain for the bronze for casting the statue of francesco sforza. the clay model, raised in front of the castello in 1493, on the occasion of bianca maria’s marriage with maximilian, had remained there since, and it seemed more and more likely that this high thought of prince and artist combined would never take on any but an ephemeral form.

the brief, uneasy quiet was broken by a stroke of fate. charles viii. died suddenly (1498), and was succeeded by the duke of orleans. louis xii. had no sooner ascended the throne than he announced his immediate intention of invading milan.

once more put to the trial, italy proved again unfaithful to herself. and the pity of it was that the fault lay in her long-rooted political conditions, not in the will of the people. the sentiment of patriotism was strong in the country, and bon italiano was the current expression for one who hated and opposed the french. 180yet it could not avail to overcome the conflict of interests among the different states, which was, after all, the blind continuous struggle of the national instinct, whether represented for the moment by republic, hereditary tyrant or military usurper, towards the creation of a single and united kingdom. this time venice was the arbiter of the situation. answering the moro’s piteous and self-humiliating appeals for help and protection only by cruel taunts of perfidy, the republic concluded an alliance with the french (1498).

the moro’s old disloyalties were now repaid to him tenfold. he looked round him in vain for a friend. the reward of usurpers and short tyrannic dynasties based on force, not love, met him in an alienated people, who refused to endure hardship or make sacrifices to save him, but looked instead to any change of government as desirable. his armies, composed chiefly of foreigners, were undisciplined and rebellious, serving only for pay. they were badly generaled by the duke’s favourites. lodovico, with all his ability, had little judgment in his choice of servants. he was led by his affections, which betrayed him. chief among his trusted officers were the san severini brothers—the conte di caiazzo, galeazzo, famous champion of the tourney-lists, and the moro’s son-in-law, and the gruff gaspare, better known as fracasso. they were the sons of roberto di san severino, but lodovico had kept them always beside him and heaped honours and places upon them. galeazzo, the prime favourite, had the chief command of his army. francesco bernardino visconte, antonio maria pallavicino, antonio trivulzio and the rest, all were alike unprepared in heart to sacrifice themselves for the sovereign in whose sunshine they had warmed themselves. the slight tie that bound together the various elements of the state could not endure against fear, ambition, greed and hereditary hate. the 181situation was further aggravated by the arrogance and exactions of the ducal favourites which excited the rage of the people and increased lodovico’s unpopularity.

events moved rapidly. in march 1499 the treaty between france, venice and the pope was publicly proclaimed. louis was to conquer milan, and venice, as the price of assistance, was to share the spoils. florence was nominally the moro’s ally, but had neither means nor will to help him now. naples was too weak to count, and lodovico’s one friend, the unstable and spendthrift maximilian, gave only empty promises. the duke was left to make his desperate defence alone. in spite of his energetic preparations the presage of doom lay heavy on his soul, and affected all around him. he believed that fortune, once his friend, was now contrary, and that god was angry with him.

in june the french army arrived in asti, and immediately invaded the ducal territories. every obstacle fell before them. treachery and fear delivered castles and cities one after another into their hands. the conte di caiazzo made secret terms with them, and withdrew his troops from action. the rapid progress of the invaders brought them soon to the strong city of alessandria, in which galeazzo di san severino and the main milanese army lay to check their advance upon the capital itself. here they met a promise of resistance, but the place had not been besieged many days when for some extraordinary and unexplained reason it was delivered to them. some say that galeazzo was seized with despair, others that he was deceived by a forged order to retire. anyhow, one morning before daybreak he stole out with a few other nobles and galloped to milan, and his army, when they found their general gone, incontinently fled in all directions.

no obstacle now remained between the enemy and 182milan. with the same fatal spirit of despair which had undermined the whole defence, lodovico gave himself up for lost. though his great castle at milan was the strongest fortress in europe, its garrison nearly three thousand, its artillery enormous in number and size, its munitions of war and all necessaries infinite, he could see no salvation except in abandoning the city and seeking aid in person from the emperor. there may have been something of the instinct of bending before the storm in his decision. he knew that he could not hold the city, where the insurgent mob was already sacking the palaces of his favourites. if the citadel only stood firm, however, there was every chance of some revolution of the political wheel carrying him back before long. but blinded again by affection, he made a fatal mistake in his choice of a castellan. in spite of many warnings he confided the entire command of the castle to one bernardino da corte, whom he had brought up from childhood and loaded with favours, charging him to guard it faithfully against the enemy, and promising to relieve him before three months were past.

lodovico sforza’s departure from the city which his father had won and he himself had ruled gloriously for many years; the tears and kisses with which he parted from his little motherless sons, sending them before him into germany; his last visit, attended by weeping monks, to the tomb of his wife in sta. maria delle grazie; his rapid ride out of the city next morning, after a night of fever and anguish, accompanied by a very few friends and followers, while the people’s cry changed from ‘moro, moro’ to ‘franza, franza,’ even as he passed—these things are all recorded with deep compassion by corio, whose chronicle sadly concludes with this downfall of the house which he had served from boyhood.

183behind lodovico’s back, amid the flames and smoke of the burning palaces, the streets and squares broke out into a garish splendour of decoration to welcome his conqueror. four days later gian giacomo trivulzio rode in at the head of the french, amid the wild enthusiasm of the mob. the general, elated at his triumphant return to his native city, promised them anything and everything in the name of their rich, powerful, and all benign new master, the king of france. they believed that the millennium was come.

they soon learnt their mistake. meanwhile, fate had dealt the decisive blow to the domination of the sforza. the rock of their fortunes, the impregnable castello, provided by the extreme care and thought of the moro with every necessary for a lengthy siege, was after a few days basely sold to the enemy by the traitor castellan. on reception of the news in his distant retreat lodovico is said to have remained as if mute, and to have finally uttered these words only—since judas was there never a greater traitor than bernardino curzio.

this condemnation was echoed by the whole world, and with especial emphasis by the french themselves, who were amazed at such treachery and cowardice. but the castellan was not the only traitor. bernardino fr. visconte and others of lodovico’s great ministers were his accomplices, and partakers of the spoil. hardly was the old master gone, ere they bent before the new. louis xii. followed his army in person to milan, and entered in great state, wearing the ducal beretta, and greeted by the same artistic demonstrations of joy and loyalty as had so often celebrated the pompous occasions of the moro’s rule. after a short stay he departed to france, leaving trivulzio as governor, an imprudent choice, which inflamed the old faction spirit. most of the nobles were trivulzio’s hereditary enemies. they began at once to scheme 184his overthrow, aided by the french guards, who could not bear to see gian giacomo preferred before them to such high place. in the populace discontent soon reawakened. they found themselves in worse case than before. their master was different, but the taxes remained the same, and in addition they had to endure the cruelties and excesses of the french troops. the partisans of the sforza worked insidiously upon their minds and excited them to cries of ‘moro, moro,’ once again. the city seethed with intrigue and sedition. every day tumults arose, and the brave trivulzio, beset with snares and embarrassments, tried vainly with his frank methods and simple soldier’s choler to rule this mass of conflicting passions, greeds, sufferings and cunning ambitions.

while the way was thus being prepared in milan for his restoration, lodovico, in his exile at innsbrück, was using every means to accomplish it, even to the desperate expedient of inciting the turk to attack the venetian state. at the same time he gathered together a strong body of swiss and german mercenaries, and prepared to start for italy as soon as he learnt from his friends in milan that the moment was come. the french strength in the duchy had been greatly diminished by the departure of large detachments for naples and the romagna, when the report ran through milan that the moro was come back and had retaken como (1500). the whole city was immediately in an uproar, and the mob surged round the palace of the governor, who, after vainly endeavouring to quiet them, was forced to hide from their insults and threats. a few days later he left milan. immediately after, lodovico’s forerunners, cardinal ascanio and two of the san severini, rode in at the head of four thousand swiss. messer galeazzo, flowering once more in the sunshine of his lord’s success, had arrayed himself all in white, 185with a great feather on his head, and a pair of shoes on his feet much more fitted for the service of venus than of mars, as a sarcastic chronicler observes. the duke himself followed a day later and re-entered his capital in state. but his triumph was only apparent. the castello was now the bulwark of his enemy. it stood with its huge bastions and vast squares of parapets furnished with a thousand engines of war, frowning over the defenceless city. even as the moro paced in stately procession through the streets the bells rang out, and a terrified cry arose that the french had sallied from the fortress. the duke was not strong enough to attempt its reduction, and unwilling to face the constant peril of its presence, he left the city, which he was never to see again, and removed to pavia.

the same sickness of doubt, indecision and fear, the same presentiment of failure which had attended the moro for so long, now seemed to attack this great adventure for the redemption of his fortunes. he neglected to strike a decisive blow at the french before they could be reinforced, and contented himself with retaking a few cities with as little shedding of blood as possible. in vain fracasso and his bolder captains exhorted him to more energetic steps. his fierce swiss mercenaries, to whom he refused the satisfaction of sacking the conquered towns, grew violent and rebellious. his treasury was exhausted, nor could all the expedients of cardinal ascanio in milan, even the appropriation of the treasure of the duomo and the other great churches, raise enough money to content the voracious swiss, of whom new hosts were continually swarming into the city on their way to the camp, clamouring for employment and pay. the citizens, terrified by these rude allies, squeezed of every penny to supply the duke’s necessities, found their plight worse than ever. hearing of the great reinforcements 186even now pouring down from the mountains to swell the french army, they trembled with fear of the consequences of their rebellion against louis xii. in novara, where the moro now lay, despair and confusion prevailed among the leaders, while the temper of the swiss mercenaries grew daily more ominous.

the french army, gradually increasing in number and strength, was encamped at mortara, a few miles away, and constantly made bold dashes up to the very walls of novara. a battle could no longer be avoided. on the 4th of april the enemy advanced to within a mile of novara and challenged the italians to the combat. lodovico’s army issued forth in noble array, but it was nothing more than hollow show. the whole of the swiss, who formed its greater part, refused to fight, on the pretext that they could not shed the blood of their fellow-countrymen engaged in the french ranks. their leaders had in fact secretly treated with the enemy. returning into novara, followed in wild confusion and panic by the rest of the army, they proceeded to arrange terms of capitulation with de ligny, the french commander. the promises, entreaties, tears even of the unhappy moro, could not move them from their purpose. all he could obtain was a promise that they would carry him into safety disguised in the midst of their ranks when they abandoned novara. and even this small mercy was a sham and a treachery. someone among them warned the french generals of the arrangement, and a careful scrutiny of the troops, as in accordance with the agreement with the french they marched out unmolested, soon detected the duke by his well-known features and complexion and the undisguisable height and majesty of his person. with him were captured also galeazzo di san severino and one or two other nobles.

thus unbloodily, as if by the decree of fate, fell 187lodovico sforza. we watch his dark and mournful figure—more dignified in adversity than when tossed amid the rude and difficult circumstances of active war—as it passes slowly out of italy in its vesture of tragedy, conducted with respectful compassion by the chivalrous french, taunted and reviled by his own countrymen. it bears a significance reaching far beyond the immediate event and the immediate victim. so much was passing away with it. italy, that fair queen whose robes the too-aspiring prince had desired to brush free from every stain, was a captive with him, befouled and bloodied by the ignorant barbarian, and all the joy and exaltation of her wonderful quattrocento was to fail, and her new-found strength and hope, with its sky-aspiring projects but half realised, to be bound down in the sad fetters of disillusion, despair, and a new spiritual tyranny, while the grand ideal of the renaissance was to travel away with her freedom and find its perfect fulfilment elsewhere.

as lodovico sforza was the first to utter the fatal invitation to the french, he was fitly the first scapegoat. but, not alone in his sin, he was not alone in the punishment. if we condemn him for starting the ruin of his country by delivering naples to charles, what shall we say of venice, florence and the pope, who each for their own selfish interests completed it by selling milan to louis? the inexorable retribution did not fail to fall upon them also. the first years of the sixteenth century are its history. alexander, dying, dragged down that son and that earthly dominion for which he had given his soul. venice, shaken nigh to destruction in her turn, by an iniquitous combination, had to forget her wide dreams of empire and be content with a narrow liberty, passing into stagnation and decay. julius, continuer of alexander’s worldly policy, may well have seen with prophetic eye, 188when death called him too, his unaccomplished scheme of a renovated church,—papacy and empire in one, head of a new heaven on earth, which should lay the sword of temporal and spiritual victory at the feet of the purified venus, madonna with her son upon her knee, shrink to the monastic ideals and the rigid excluding tyranny of the catholic reaction. last of all, florence, most constant of the lovers of liberty, with her most melancholy fall filled up the cup of expiation and sealed the final subjugation of the country.

scopetta of lodovico il moro

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