The Frank Story of an Amazing Life
February 13, 2020Benvenuto Cellini |
Benvenuto Cellini (1500–1571).
Autobiography.
At the age of
fifty-eight Benvenuto Cellini shaved his head and retired to a
monastery to write his own story of murder, passion, and great deeds
of the Renaissance. His life is a vivid picture of the most colorful
period in history, a period when statecraft and religion and black
magic and assassination were naïvely mingled in men's lives.
Vol. 31, pp. 68-80 of
The Harvard Classics
XXXIV
THE WHOLE world
was now in warfare. 1 Pope Clement had sent to
get some troops from Giovanni de’ Medici, and when they came, they
made such disturbances in Rome, that it was ill living in open
shops. 2 On this account I retired to a good
snug house behind the Banchi, where I worked for all the friends I
had acquired. Since I produced few things of much importance at that
period, I need not waste time in talking about them. I took much
pleasure in music and amusements of the kind. On the death of
Giovanni de’ Medici in Lombardy, the Pope, at the advice of Messer
Jacopo Salviati, dismissed the five bands he had engaged; and when
the Constable of Bourbon knew there were no troops in Rome, he pushed
his army with the utmost energy up to the city. The whole of Rome
upon this flew to arms. I happened to be intimate with Alessandro,
the son of Piero del Bene, who, at the time when the Colonnesi
entered Rome, had requested me to guard his palace. 3 On
this more serious occasion, therefore, he prayed me to enlist fifty
comrades for the protection of the said house, appointing me their
captain, as I had been when the Colonnesi came. So I collected fifty
young men of the highest courage, and we took up our quarters in his
palace, with good pay and excellent appointments.
Bourbon’s
army had now arrived before the walls of Rome, and Alessandro begged
me to go with him to reconnoitre. So we went with one of the stoutest
fellows in our Company; and on the way a youth called Cecchino della
Casa joined himself to us. On reaching the walls by the Campo Santo,
we could see that famous army, which was making every effort to enter
the town. Upon the ramparts where we took our station several young
men were lying killed by the besiegers; the battle raged there
desperately, and there was the densest fog imaginable. I turned to
Alessandro and said: “Let us go home as soon as we can, for there
is nothing to be done here; you see the enemies are mounting, and our
men are in flight.” Alessandro, in a panic, cried: “Would God
that we had never come here!” and turned in maddest haste to fly. I
took him up somewhat sharply with these words: “Since you have
brought me here, I must perform some action worthy of a man;” and
directing my arquebuse where I saw the thickest and most serried
troop of fighting men, I aimed exactly at one whom I remarked to be
higher than the rest; the fog prevented me from being certain whether
he was on horseback or on foot. Then I turned to Alessandro and
Cecchino, and bade them discharge their arquebuses, showing them how
to avoid being hit by the besiegers. When we had fired two rounds
apiece, I crept cautiously up to the wall, and observing among the
enemy a most extraordinary confusion, I discovered afterwards that
one of our shots had killed the Constable of Bourbon; and from what I
subsequently learned, he was the man whom I had first noticed above
the heads of the rest. 4
Quitting
our position on the ramparts, we crossed the Campo Santo, and entered
the city by St. Peter’s; then coming out exactly at the church of
Santo Agnolo, we got with the greatest difficulty to the great gate
of the castle; for the generals Renzo di Ceri and Orazio Baglioni
were wounding and slaughtering everybody who abandoned the defence of
the walls. 5 By the time we had reached the
great gate, part of the foemen had already entered Rome, and we had
them in our rear. The castellan had ordered the portcullis to be
lowered, in order to do which they cleared a little space, and this
enabled us four to get inside. On the instant that I entered, the
captain Pallone de’ Medici claimed me as being of the Papal
household, and forced me to abandon Alessandro, which I had to do,
much against my will. I ascended to the keep, and at the same instant
Pope Clement came in through the corridors into the castle; he had
refused to leave the palace of St. Peter earlier, being unable to
believe that his enemies would effect their entrance into
Rome. 6 Having got into the castle in this way,
I attached myself to certain pieces of artillery, which were under
the command of a bombardier called Giuliano Fiorentino. Leaning there
against the battlements, the unhappy man could see his poor house
being sacked, and his wife and children outraged; fearing to strike
his own folk, he dared not discharge the cannon, and flinging the
burning fuse upon the ground, he wept as though his heart would
break, and tore his cheeks with both his hands. 7 Some
of the other bombardiers were behaving in like manner; seeing which,
I took one of the matches, and got the assistance of a few men who
were not overcome by their emotions. I aimed some swivels and
falconets at points where I saw it would be useful, and killed with
them a good number of the enemy. Had it not been for this, the troops
who poured into Rome that morning, and were marching straight upon
the castle, might possibly have entered it with ease, because the
artillery was doing them no damage. I went on firing under the eyes
of several cardinals and lords, who kept blessing me and giving me
the heartiest encouragement. In my enthusiasm I strove to achieve the
impossible; let it suffice that it was I who saved the castle that
morning, and brought the other bombardiers back to their duty. 8 I
worked hard the whole of that day; and when the evening came, while
the army was marching into Rome through the Trastevere, Pope Clement
appointed a great Roman nobleman named Antonio Santacroce to be
captain of all the gunners. The first thing this man did was to come
to me, and having greeted me with the utmost kindness, he stationed
me with five fine pieces of artillery on the highest point of the
castle, to which the name of the Angel specially belongs. This
circular eminence goes round the castle, and surveys both Prati and
the town of Rome. The captain put under my orders enough men to help
in managing my guns, and having seen me paid in advance, he gave me
rations of bread and a little wine, and begged me to go forward as I
had begun. I was perhaps more inclined by nature to the profession of
arms than to the one I had adopted, and I took such pleasure in its
duties that I discharged them better than those of my own art. Night
came, the enemy had entered Rome, and we who were in the castle
(especially myself, who have always taken pleasure in extraordinary
sights) stayed gazing on the indescribable scene of tumult and
conflagration in the streets below. People who were anywhere else but
where we were, could not have formed the least imagination of what it
was. I will not, however, set myself to describe that tragedy, but
will content myself with continuing the history of my own life and
the circumstances which properly belong to it.
Note
1. War had broken out in 1521 between Charles V and Francis I,
which disturbed all Europe and involved the States of Italy in
serious complications. At the moment when this chapter opens, the
Imperialist army under the Constable of Bourbon was marching upon
Rome in 1527.
Note
2. These troops entered Rome in October 1526. They were disbanded
in March, 1527.
Note
3. Cellini here refers to the attack made upon Rome by the great
Ghibelline house of Colonna, led by their chief captain, Pompeo, in
September 1526. They took possession of the city and drove Clement
into the Castle of S. Angelo, where they forced him to agree to terms
favouring the Imperial cause. It was customary for Roman gentlemen to
hire bravi for the defence of their palaces when any extraordinary
disturbance was expected, as, for example, upon the vacation of the
Papal Chair.
Note
4. All historians of the sack of Rome agree in saying that
Bourbon was shot dead while placing ladders against the outworks near
the shop Cellini mentions. But the honour of firing the arquebuse
which brought him down cannot be assigned to any one in particular.
Very different stories were current on the subject. See Gregorovius,
Stadt Rom., vol. viii. p. 522.
Note
5. For Renzo di Ceri see above. Orazio Baglioni, of the
semi-princely Perugian family, was a distinguished Condottiere. He
subsequently obtained the captaincy of the Bande Nere, and died
fighting near Naples in 1528. Orazio murdered several of his cousins
in order to acquire the lordship of Perugia. His brother Malatesta
undertook to defend Florence in the siege of 1530, and sold the city
by treason to Clement.
Note
6. Giovio, in his Life of the Cardinal Prospero Colonna, relates
how he accompanied Clement in his flight from the Vatican to the
castle. While passing some open portions of the gallery, he threw his
violent mantle and cap of a Monsignore over the white stole of the
Pontiff, for fear he might be shot at by the soldiers in the streets
below.
Note
7. The short autobiography of Raffaello da Montelupo, a man in
many respects resembling Cellini, confirms this part of our author’s
narrative. It is one of the most interesting pieces of evidence
regarding what went on inside the castle during the sack of Rome.
Montelupo was also a gunner, and commanded two pieces.
Note
8. This is an instance of Cellini’s exaggeration. He did more
than yeoman’s service, no doubt. But we cannot believe that,
without him, the castle would have been taken.
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