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the civilization of the renaissance in italy-第9章

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n the southern part of the  ecclesiastical dominion; and in a few other districts; a direct tenure  of land prevailed; and no hereditary powers were permitted by the law。  The great Alfonso; who reigned in Naples from 1435 onwards (d。 1458);  was a man of another kind than his real or alleged descendants。  Brilliant in his whole existence; fearless in mixing with his people;  dignified and affable in intercourse; admired rather than blamed even  for his old man's passion for Lucrezia d'Alagno; he had the one bad  quality of extravagance; from which; however; the natural consequence  followed。 Unscrupulous financiers were long omnipotent at Court; till  the bankrupt king robbed them of their spoils; a crusade was preached  as a pretext for taxing the clergy; when a great earthquake happened in  the Abruzzi; the survivors were compelled to make good the  contributions of the dead。 By such means Alfonso was able to entertain  distinguished guests with unrivalled splendor; he found pleasure in  ceaseless expense; even for the benefit of his enemies; and in  rewarding literary work knew absolutely no measure。 Poggio received 500  pieces of gold for translating Xenophon's 'Cyropaedeia' into Latin。 

Ferrante; who succeeded him; passed as his illegitimate son by a  Spanish lady; but was not improbably the son of a half…caste Moor of  Valencia。 Whether it was his blood or the plots formed against his life  by the barons which embittered and darkened his nature; it is certain  that he was equalled in ferocity by none among the princes of his time。  Restlessly active; recognized as one of the most powerful political  minds of the day; and free from the vices of the profligate; he  concentrated all his powers; among which must be reckoned profound  dissimulation and an irreconcilable spirit of vengeance; on the  destruction of his opponents。 He had been wounded in every point in  which a ruler is open to offence; for the leaders of the barons; though  related to him by marriage; were yet the allies of his foreign enemies。  Extreme measures became part of his daily policy。 The means for this  struggle with his barons; and for his external wars; were exacted in  the same Mohammedan fashion which Frederick II had introduced: the  Government alone dealt in oil and corn; the whole commerce of the  country was put by Ferrante into the hands of a wealthy merchant;  Francesco Coppola; who had entire control of the anchorage on the  coast; and shared the profits with the King。 Deficits were made up by  forced loans; by executions and confiscations; by open simony; and by  contributions levied on the ecclesiastical corporations。 Besides  hunting; which he practiced regardless of all rights of property; his  pleasures were of two kinds: he liked to have his opponents near him;  either alive in well…guarded prisons; or dead and embalmed; dressed in  the costume which they wore in their lifetime。 He would chuckle in  talking of the captives with his friends; and make no secret whatever  of the museum of mummies。 His victims were mostly men whom he had got  into his power by treachery; some w ere even seized while guests at the  royal table。 His conduct to his prime minister; Antonello Petrucci; who  had grown sick and grey in his service; and from whose increasing fear  of death he extorted 'present after present;' was literally devilish。  At length a suspicion of complicity with the last conspiracy of the  barons gave the pretext for his arrest and execution。 With him died  Coppola。 The way in which all this is narrated in Caracciolo and Porzio  makes one's hair stand on end。 

The elder of the King's sons; Alfonso; Duke of Calabria; enjoyed in  later years a kind of co…regency with his father。 He was a savage;  brutal profligate; who in point of frankness alone had the advantage of  Ferrante; and who openly avowed his contempt for religion and its  usages 。 The better and nobler features of the Italian despotisms are  not to be found among the princes of this line; all that they possessed  of the art and culture of their time served the purpose of luxury or  display。 Even the genuine Spaniards seem to have almost always  degenerated in Italy; but the end of this cross…bred house (1494 and  1503) gives clear proof of a want of blood。 Ferrante died of mental  care and trouble; Alfonso accused his brother Federigo; the only honest  member of the family; of treason; and insulted him in the vilest  manner。 At length; though he had hitherto passed for one of the ablest  generals in Italy; he lost his head and fled to Sicily; leaving his  son; the younger Ferrante; a prey to the French and to domestic  treason。 A dynasty which had ruled as this had done must at least have  sold its life dear; if its children were ever to hope for a  restoration。 But; as Comines one…sidedly; and yet on the whole rightly  observes on this occasion; '_Jamais homme cruel ne fut hardi_': there  was never a more cruel man。 

The despotism of the Dukes of Milan; whose government from the time of  Giangaleazzo onwards was an absolute monarchy of the most thorough… going sort; shows the genuine Italian character of the fifteenth  century。 The last of the Visconti Filippo Maria (1412…1447); is a  character of peculiar interest; and of which fortunately an admirable  description has been left us。 What a man of uncommon gifts and high  position can be made by the passion of fear; is here shown with what  may be called a mathematical completeness。 All the resources of the  State were devoted to the one end of securing his personal safety;  though happily his cruel egotism did not degenerate into a purposeless  thirst for blood。 He lived in the Citadel of Milan; surrounded by  magnificent gardens; arbors; and lawns。 For years he never set foot in  the city; making his excursions only in the country; where lay several  of his splendid castles; the flotilla which; drawn by the swiftest  horses; conducted him to them along canals constructed for the purpose;  was so arranged as to allow of the application of the most rigorous  etiquette。 Whoever entered the citadel was watched by a hundred eyes;  it was forbidden even to stand at the window; lest signs should be  given to those without。 All who were admitted among the personal  followers of the Prince were subjected to a series of the strictest  examinations; then; once accepted; were charged with the highest  diplomatic commissions; as well as with the humblest personal services  both in this Court being alike honorable。 And this was the man who  conducted long and difficult wars; who dealt habitually with political  affairs of the first importance; and every day sent his  plenipotentiaries to all parts of Italy。 His safety lay in the fact  that none of his servants trusted the others; that his Condottieri were  watched and misled by spies; and that the ambassadors and higher  officials were baffled and kept apart by artificially nourished  jealousies; and in particular by the device of coupling an honest man  with a knave。 His inward faith; too; rested upon opposed and  contradictory systems; he believed in blind necessity; and in the  influence of the stars; and offering prayers at one and the same time  to helpers of every sort; he 
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