I W. H.LOWDERMIUftCO., Standard. Choice and Rare Law and Miscellaneous Books, Oovernment IfublicaiionB, W ashington, D. C. ^TM.^ OO THE WILLIAM R. PERKINS LIBRARY OF DUKE UNIVERSITY HISTORICAL ILLUSTRATIONS OF THE FOURTH CANTO OF HISTORICAIi ILLUSTRATIONS THE FOURTH CANTO 3 C0NT&lNI5a DISSERTATIONS ON THE RUINS OF ROME: AN ESSAY ON ITALIAN LITERATURE, BY JOHN HOBHOUSE, Esq. av TRINITY KOLLKGE, CAMBRIDGE, M. A. A^P F. R. JVEJV-YORK: PUBLISHED BY WILLIAM B. GILl.F.r, NO. 92 BROADWAY. Printed by William A. Mercein. 1818. S^76'H- ADVERTISEMENT. The reader of the Illustrations is requested to bear in mind the object with which they were originally Written, and not expect to find in them a plan or order which can be discovered only with reference to the Fourth Canto of Childe Harold. They follow the progress of the Pilgrim, and were, indeed, as well as the notes now appended to the Canto, for the most part written whilst the noble author was yet em- ployed in the composition of his poem. They were, with the exception of the three or four last articles, put into the hands of Lord Byron, much in the state in which they now appear; and the partiality of friend- ship assigned to them the same place which is oc- cupied by the notes detached from them. But the writer, on his return to England, considered that the appendix to the Canto would thus be swelled to a disproportioned bulk, and that the numerous readers of the poetry would be better pleased if the choice, whether or not they were to be furnished with a vo- lume of prose, were to be left altogether to them- selves. Under this impression, such only of the no- tices as were more immediately connected with the text of the poem, were added to that work, and per- haps the writer may, even in the present instance, have to apologize for not being contented with less copious extracts. Some of the longer notices of this volume are, it will be seen, dissertations not at all requisite for the VI intelligibility of Childe Harold, although they may illustrate the positions or the objects therein con- tained. The writer did not like to touch upon the topics connected with a view of the ruins of Rome, without recurring to the best authorities on that sub- ject. His researches naturally made him diffuse, and he will be well pleased if they have not made him desultory and tedious. He must own himself not to have been idle during the time employed in his in- vestigation, which occupied several months of his residence at Venice; but he will also confess, that it is very likely he ought to have protracted that time, and more carefully revised his compilation. Those who may discover the errors of these notices, are entreated to remember, that in questions depending upon the consultation of authorities, the most as- siduous attention may overlook a book, a phrase, or a word, which may change the whole face of the con- troversy; that industry and fairness may be demanded from all writers, but that the endless details of eru- dition forbid the antiquarian inquirer to hope for any other than qualified applause. It is trusted, however, that the information here collected is such as a traveller in Italy would wish to find prepared for him; and such also as those whose voyages are confined to their libraries may esteem, if not a substitute for an actual survey, at least an addition to their stock of knowledge on subjects which will never lose their interest, until the example of the greatest, the best, and the wisest of mankind, shall be found too painful and impracticable a lesson for modern degeneracy. CONTENTS. Page Attachment of the Italians to their distinguished Fellow- citizens n Essay on the Imprisonment of Tasso 13 Anecdotes of Alfieri 29 Account of the Ruin of the Temple on the Clitumnus 31 Ignorance of the Antiquaries in Italy — the Site of the Ban- dusian Fountain 35 The approach to Rome 37 Character of some Antiquaries who have treated of Rome .... 40 A Dissertation on the Destroyers of the City of Rome, and an Account of the gradual disappearance of the Ruins 44 Tomb of the Scipios Ill Destruction of the Tombs near Rome 113 Doubts respecting the Circuit of the Walls of old Rome, and the Ruins in general 117 Remains of Republican Rome, and the comparative want of Interest attached to the Cesarean City 127 Noticeof the Tomb of Cecilia Metella 130 Doubts respecting the Destruction of the Palace of the Cae- sars. Desolation of the Palatine 133 The Column and Forum of Trajan 138 Memoir on the Destruction of the Capitol '. 144 The Roman Forum. — Doubts respecting the Remains in that Quarter 150 Notices on the Romans of the middle Ages. — Of Coladi Ri- enzi. — Of the modern Senate and Government of Rome 159 The Destruction qf the Coliseum 168 The Pantheon 182 VIU Page Inquiry respecting the Story and the Site of the Temple of the Roman Piety 187 On the Castle of St. Angelo 190 Roman Catholic Religion, and the Ceremony of the Flagel- lants. — Probable Effects of Despotism in Italy 200 Account of some sepulchral Vases lately discovered in a Rock at Albano 207 ESSAY ON THE PRESENT LITERATURE OF ITALY, and a general Character of the Lives and Writings of Cesarotti, Parini, Alfieri, Pindemonte, Monti, and FoscoLO 221 Letters of Torciuato Tasso never before published, with Translations 306 et seq. Letters written by Cola di Rienzi, Tribune of Rome, never before published, with Translations 326 etseq. Fac Simile of Tasso's Hand-writing Drawings of the Albano Vases....,,.....,. Mi,,....«..i....«f. HISTORICAL ILLUSTRATIONS OF THE FOURTH CANTO OP CHILDE HAROLD. stanza XXXI. And His their pride — »4n honest pride — and let it be their praise, To offer to the passing stranger's gaze His mansion and his sepulchre. A. HERE is no country which can contend with Italy in tlic honours heaped upon the great men of past ages : and the pre- sent race accuse themselves of living upon the labours of their ancestors, and, as is the usual reproach of heirs, of find- ing in their transmitted wealth an inducement to inactivity. The territorial divisions and subdivisions which contributed to the emulation of these luminaries themselves, has tended to the preservation of their fame ; and the jealousy of each little district guards the altar of its individual divinity, not only as the shrine which is to attract the pilgrims of united Europe, but as the birthright which is to distinguish it amongst the children of the same mother, and exalt it to a preference above its im- mediate neighbours. Italian rivalry, in default of those con- tests which employed the arts and arms of the middle ages, now vents itself in the invidious comparison of individual fasti, and in the innocent ostentatious display not of deeds but names. Thus it is that there is scarcely a village in which the traveller is not reminded of the birth, or the residence, or the death, or the deeds of one or more of the offspring of a 12 soil, fruitful in every production, but more especially the land of men. The affection with which even the lower classes appropriate the fame of their departed countrymen is very striking to a foreigner; and such expressions as " our Corre- gio," and " our Ariosto," in the mouth of a peasant, revive, as it were, not only the memory, but the man himself. When Napoleon made his progress through his Italian dominions, the inhabitants of Reggio received him with a fete, the principal decoration of which was a temple of immortality, painted at the end of a gallery, adorned with a double range of tablets, to the honour of those worthies for whose existence the world had been indebted to the dutchy of Reggio. The pretensions of Reggio may exemplify those of the other provinces of Italy, and the reader may not object to survey the pompous list. Boiardo, Signore di Scandiano, epico, del secolo xv. Guida da Lazara, giureconsulto, del secolo xiii. Ludovico Ariosto, nato a Reggio, da Daria Maleguzi, Reg- giana, lirico, comico, satirico, epico, del secolo xiv. Domenicho Toschi, Cardinale, Reggiano, giureconulto, del secolo xvi. Filippo Caroli, Reggiano, giureconsulto, del secolo xiv. Antonio Pacchioni, Reggiano, anatomico, del secolo xvii. Cesare Magati, Scandianese, medico e chirurgo, del secolo xvii. Gianntonio Rocca, Reggiano, matematico, del secolo xvii. Antonio Allegri, detto il Corregio da Corregio, pittore, del secolo xvi. Tomaso Cambiatori, Reggiano, giureconsulto, oratore, poeta, del secolo xvi. Sebastiano Conradi di Arceto, grammatico e critico, del se- colo xvi. Lelio Orsi, Reggiano, pittore, del secolo xvi. Vincenzo Cartari, Reggiano, tilologo, del secolo xvi. Rafaello Motta, Reggiano, pittore, del secolo xvi. Guido Panciroli, Reggiano, giureconsulto, storico, filologo, del secolo xvi. Ludovico Parisetti, Reggiano, poeta Latino, del secolo xvi. Gasparo Scaroffi, Reggiano, ceconomista, del secolo xvi. Luca Ferrari, Reggiano, pittore, del secolo xvii. 13 Domenico Ceccati, da Stiano, scultore ed intagliatore, del secolo xvii. Antonio Vallisnera da Scandiano, medico, naturalista, del secolo xvii. Pelegrino Sallandri, Reggiano, poeta, del secolo xviii. Agostino Parradisi, Reggiano, oeconomista, oratore, poeta, del secolo xviii. Francesco Fontanesi, Reggiano, poeta, del secolo xviii. Jacopo Zannoni da Montecchio, botanico, del secolo xvii. Lazari Spalanzani da Scandiano, naturalista, del secolo xviii. Laura Bassi di Scandiano, fisica, del secolo xviii. Carlo Antonioli da Corregio, filologo, del secolo xviii. Francesco Cassoli, Reggiano, poeta, del secolo xviii. Luigi Lamberti, Reggiano, filologo e poeta, del secolo xviii: Antonio Gamborini, Reggiano, teologo, del secolo xviii. Bonaventura Corti, Reggiano, fisico, del secolo xviii. Stanza XXXVI. And Tasso is their glory and their shame. Hark to his strain ! and then survey his cell I In the hospital of St. Anna, at Ferrara, they show a cell;, over the door of which is the following inscription : Rispettate, O Posteri, la celebrita di questa stanza, dove Torquato Tasso infermo pru di tristezza che delirio, ditenuto dimora anni vii mesi II, scrisse verse e prose, e fu rimesso in liberta ad instanza della citta di Bergamo, nel giorno vi Luglio 1586. The dungeon is below the ground jfloor of the hospital, and the light penetrates through its grated window from a small yard, which seems to have been common to other cells. It is nine paces long, between five and six wide, and about seven feet high. The bedstead, so they tell, has been carried off piecemeal, and the door half cut away by the devotion of those whom " the verse and prose" of the prisoner have brought to Ferrara. The above address to posterity was inscribed at the instiga- 14 lion of General Miollis, who filled Italy with tributes to her great men, and was not always very solicitous as to the authen- tic application of his record. Common tradition had assigned the cell to Tasso long before the inscription : and we may re- collect, that, some years ago, a great German poet was much incensed, not at the sufferings of the prisoner, but at the pre- tensions of the prison. But the author of Werter need not have felt so insulted by the demand for his faith* The cell was assuredly one of the prisons of the hospital, and in one of those prisons we know that Tasso was confined.* The pre- sent inscription, indeed, does exaggerate the merits of the chamber, for the poet was a prisoner in the same room only from the middle of March, 1579, to December, 1580, when he was removed to a contiguous apartment much larger, in which, to use his own expressions, he could philosophize and walk about.! His prison was, in the year 1584, again en- larged-l It is equally certain, also, that once, ia 1581, he was permitted to leave the hospital for the greater part of a day,§ and that this favour was occasionally granted to him in the subsequentyears of his confinement. |( The inscription is incor- rect, also, as to the immediate cause of his enlargement, which was promised to the city of Bergamo, but was carried into effect at the intercession of Don Vincenzo Gonzago, Prince of Mantua, chiefly owing to the unwearied application of Antonio Constantino, a gentleman in the suite of the Florentine em- bassy.** But the address should not have confined itself to the re- * The author of the historical memoir on Italian tragedy saw this dun- geon in 1792, and, in spite of some hints from the English biographer of Tasso, was inclined to believe it to have been the original place of the poet's confinement. See Black's Life of Tasso, cap. xv. vol. ii. p. 97 : but the site will not correspond with what Tasso says of his being re- moved to a neighbouring apartment, " assai piu commoda" — there is no such commodious neighbouring apartment on the same level. f La Vita di Torquato Tasso, scritta dall' abate Pierantonio Serassi, Hcconda edizione. ... in Bergamo, IT&O, pp. 34 and 64, torn. ii. I La Vita, &.c. lib. iii. p. 83, torn. ii. ^ La Vita, &.c. lib. iii. p. 68, torn. ii. )| Vide p. 83, ut sup. ** La Vita, fee. lib. iii. p. 142, torn. ii. 15 spect due to the prison : one honest line might have been al- lotted to the condemnation of the gaoler. There seems in the Italian writers something like a disposition to excuse the Duke of Ferrara by extenuating the sufferings, or exaggerating the derangement of the poet. He who contemplates the dun- geon, or even the hospital, of St. Anna, will be at a loss to re- concile either the one or the other with that " ample lodge- ment" which, according to the antiquities of the house of Este, the partiality of Alfonso allotted to the man " whom he loved and esteemed much, and wished to keep near his per- son."* Muratori confesses himself unable to define the offence of the patient; and in a short letter devoted expressly to the subject, comes to no other general conclusion, than that he could not be called insane,! but was confined partly for chastisement, partly for cure, having probably spoken some indiscreet words of Alfonso. He makes no mention of the disease of the prince ; nor is it easy to discover that free ex- ercise of his understanding for which Mr. Gibbon has some- where praised this celebrated antiquary.^ Indeed, in his no- * " Ma perciocche questo principe I'amava e stimava forte, e non voleva privarsene elesse di alimentalo in quell' ampio luogo, con desiderio che ivi fosse curate anche il corpo suo." Antichilil Estensi, parte sec. cap. xiii. p. 405, ediz. fol, Mutin. 1740. f Lettera ad Apostolo Zeno, vide Tasso's Works, voJ. x. p. 244. " Ne mentecatto ne pazzo," are Muratori's words. See also p. 242 and p. 24S. He is a little freer spoken in this letter, but still says, "the wise prince did not give loay to hia anger''' Muratori's Annals were attacked on their first appearance, as " uno de' libri piu fatali al principato Romano ;" to which the librarian replied, that " truth was neither Guelf nor Ghibelline.*' If he had thought that she was neither catholic nor protestant, he would not liave slurred over the massacre of St. Bartholomew as an event which gave rise to many exaggerations from the Hugonots. " Lascer6 io dispu- tare ai gran Dottori intorno al giustificare o riprovare quel si strepitoso fatto ; bastando a me di dire, che per cagion d'esso immense esagerazioni fece il partito de gli Ugonoti, e loro servi di stimolo e scusa per ripigliar I'armi contra del Re." Annali ad an. 1572, torn. x. p. 464. In page 469, ibid, he talks of the great loss of France by the death of the murderer Charles IX. who, if he had lived, would have " extirpated the seed of heresy." \ For a fine and just character of Muratori, see, however, "the Anti- quities of the House of Brunswick," p. 641 , vol ii. quarto. Gibbon's Misr. Works- 16 tice of this injustice, the librarian of the Duke of Modena, so far from seeming to forget the interests of the princely house which pensioned his labours, suggests rather the obvious re- flection, that when a wriler has to obtain or repay any other patronage than that of the public, his first and paramount ob- ject cannot be the establishment of truth. Even the subject of an absolute monarchy is an unsafe guide on almost every topic. The over-rated La Bruyere was base enough to reckon the dragooning of the protestants amongst the most commendable actions of Louis XIV.* Manso, the friend and biographer of Tasso, might have been expected to throw some light upon so important a portion of his history, but the five chapters devoted to the subject only encumbered the question with inconclusive discussion. What is still more extraordinary, it appears, that of seven or eight cotemporary Ferrarese annalists, only one has mentioned that Tasso was confined at all, and that one, Faustini, has as- signed a cause more laughable than instructive.! The later librarian of Modena was equally disingenuous with his prede- cessor, and had the confidence to declare, that by prescribing a seven years confinement Alfonso consulted only the health, and honour, and advantage, of Tasso, who evinced his con- tinued obstinacy by considering himself a prisoner.| But, with the librarian's leave, the suspicion was justified by the apprehension of his Italian cotemporaries, who, in their sup- * The same writer declares " homage to a kin^" to be the sole sufficing virtue of every good subject in a monarchy, " where there is no such thing as love of our country — the interest, the glory, and the service of the prince, supply its place." De la Republique, chap. x. For which sentiment our great obsolete poet has made honourable mention of him amongst his dunces, [The Dunciad, book iv. v. 522.] with whom he might be safely left, did he not belong rather to the rogues than the fools. f " II Duca Alfonso II. il fece rinchiudere per curarlo di una fistola che lO travagliava." Vid Tiraboschi Storia della Letter. Ital. lib. iii. part iii. lom. vii. p. 1210, edit. Venet 1796. i Credette cgli perci6 che e all' onore e alia salute del Tasso niuna cosa potesse esser piu utile che il tenerlo non gia prigione, ma custodito intanto procurava con rimedj di calmarne I'animo e la fantasia. Ma cio che Alfonso opero al vantaggio del Tasso non servi che a renderne sempre peggiore la conditione — Gli parve esser prigione." Tiraboschi, Storia, 8ic. lib. iii. torn. vii. par. iii- p. 1£13, edit. Venet. 1796. 17 plications lor his release, seldom gave him any other name. The same writer announced, in the first edition of his History of Italian Literature, that he had made the long-looked-for discovery as to the cause of Tasso's confinement, and had in- trusted the documents found in the archives of the house of Este, to the Abate Serassi. In his second edition he declared that his expectations, and those of all the learned world, had been answered by the life of the poet published by the Abate in 1785:* but the antiquary, still faithful to his patrons, did not mention, that it appears from every page of the biography, that the imprisonment must be attributed rather to the ven- geance and mean apprehensions of the prince, than to the ex- travagance of the pt)et. The Abate Serassi was acknowledged to be a perfect master of the " cinque cento," and he has perhaps spoken as freely as could be expected from a priest, an Italian, and a frequent- er of the tables of the great. He shows that he is labouring with a secret, or at least, a persuasion, which he is at a loss in what manner honestly to conceal ; and which, in spite of an habitual respect for the best of princes and the most illustrious * Storia, Stc. p. 1212, utsup. The English author of the Lifeof Tasso seems half inclined to believe in the love of his poet for Leonora. [Black, chap. viii. vol i. p. 188, and chap. xiii. vol. ii. p. 2,] and quotes a passage in a letter to Gonzaga, omit- ted by Serassi, in which he talks of the princess having but little corres- ponded to his attachment [lb. chap. xiv. vol, ii. p. 59.] Mr. Walker, in his historical memoir, was bold enough to follow the old story even in the face of Serassi, who does, however, appear to have completely set- tled the question. Poetical gallantry will account for all the phenomena. Dr. Black himself wisely rejects that passion as the adequate cause of Torquato's insanity : but we may not perhaps subscribe to his opinion, that the poet lost his senses on account of the objections made to his Jerusalem [chap. xv. vol- ii. p. 91.] The biographer presumes him posi- tively mad, and argues on his case out of Pinel and Haslam, and others [chap. xii. vol. i. p. 808.] On this ground he supposes the harsh con- duct of the duke was adopted as necessary for the cure of Tasso [chap. XV. vol. ii. p-87, and chap, xvi, vol. ii. p. 113 :] and, if his meaning has not been mistaken, he almost apologizes for the prescription of Alfonso. It is no objection to Dr. Black's work, that the biographical details are trans- cribed from Serassi : but this circumstance must excuse the writer from having cited the original rather thin the English author. 18 of cardinals, is sufiiciently apparent to confirm our suspicion of Alfonso's tyranny. The Duke had not the excuse of Tas- so's presumption in aspiring to the love of the princely Leo- nora. The far-famed kiss is certainly an invention, although not of a modern date. The English were taught by a cotem- porary writer to believe that the Lydian boy and the goddess of Antium had precipitated Torquato into his dungeon,* and Manso hinted the same probability, but with much circum- spection. The tale was at last openly told in " The Three Gondolas,^'' a little work, published in 1662, by Girolamo Brusoni, at Venice, and immediately suppressed.! Leonora of Este was thirty years old when Tasso came to Ferrara ; and this perhaps, notwithstanding that serene brow, where Love all armed was wont to expatiate, reconciled him to the reverence and wonder which succeeded to the first feelings of admiration and delight.| It is true that neither her age, nor the vermilion cloud which obscured the eyes of Lucre- tia,§ rendered his Muse less sensible to the pleasure of being patronised by the illustrious sisters. Perhaps his intercourse with them was not altogether free from that inclination which * Mutis ahditiis ac nigris tenebris In quas prsecipitem dedere caeci Infans Lydius, Antiique Diva; See some Hendecasyllables of Scipio Gentilis. Serassi la Vita del Tasso, iLc. lib. iii. p. Si. torn. ii. f Serassi calls it an operaccia. La Vita, &tc. lib. ii. p. 169. torn. i. Mu- ratori in his letter to Apostolo Zeno, p. 240. loc cit. tells the story from Carretta, who had heard it from Tassoni ; and though he hesitates about the kiss, seems to believe Tasso was in love with Leonora, p. 242. Mr. Gibbon [Antiquities of the House of Brunswick, p. 693.] turns the story to good account — he believes and makes a period. f E certo il primo di, che '1 bel sereno Delia tua fronte agli ochi miei s' offerse, E vidi armato spaziarvi 1' Amore, Se non che riverenza allor converse E meraviglia in fredda selce il seno Ivi peria con doppia morte il core. Canzone. La Vita, he. lib. ii. p. 148. torn i. ^ Questa nebbia si bclla e si vermiglia. Tass. Oper. vol. vi. p. 27. I-.a Vita, Sic. lib. ii. p. 150. torn. i. 19 the charms of any female might readily excite in a tempera- ment too warm to be a respecter of persons. But his heart was devoted to humbler and younger beauties 5 and more particularly to Lucretia Bendedio, who had also to rank the author of the Pastor Fido amongst her immortal suitors.* Of this passion the princess Leonora was the confidante, and as- pired to the cure, by the singnlar expedient of persuading him to become the encomiast of one of his rivals.! It appears then that the biographer is justified in exclaiming against the scandal, which is incompatible with the rank and piety of a princess who was a temple of honour and chastity, and a single prayer of whom rescued Ferrara from the anger of heaven and the inundation of the Po.| It is, also, but too certain that Leonora deserted the poet in the first days of his distress ; and it is equally known that Tasso, who would not have forgotten an early flame, did not hang a single garland on the bier of his supposed mistress. § The biographer has left it without doubt that the first cause of the punishment of Tasso was his desire to be occasionally, or altogether, free from his servitude at the court of Alfonso, and that the immediate pretext of his imprisonment was no other than disrespectful mention of the Duke and his court. In 1575 he resolved, notwithstanding the advice of the Dutchess of Urbino, to visit Rome, and enjoy the indulgence of the jubilee, and this " error increasing the suspicion already entertained at court, that he was in search of another ser- vice," was the origin of his misfortunes. || Alfonso detained * La Vita, Uc. lib. ii. p. 157. torn. i. j La Vita, ut sup. Pigna was this rival. \ Quando del P6 tremar 1' altere sponde Ferrara dannegiando e dentro, e fuora; Un sol prego di te, casta Leonora, Spense 1' ire del ciel giuste e profonde. Sonetto di Filippo Binasciii. See La Vita, &c. lib. ii. p. 170. torn. i. 5^ La Vita, &c. lib. iii. pp. 12, 48, 50. torn. ii. II " Perciocchfe da un si fatto errore si pu6 dir die avessero origine le sue disavventure, essendosi con ci6 accresciuto a dimisura il sospetto, che gia si aveva alia corte, eh' pgli cercasse altro servizio." — La Vita, Sec. lib. ii. pp. 232, 233. torn. i. .3 20 him at Feiraia hy the expectation of unrcaHzed favours,* and also hy withholding his Jerusalem, which he would not allow the author to cany with him to Venice, nor, although he had promised the delivery of the manuscript to Cardinal Albani, would consent to restore after the flight of Tasso to Rome.t An habitual melancholy, a morbid sensibility, irritated by the injuries of his rivals and the treachery of his friends, had driven him into an excess against an individual of the court: but Alfonso did not punish him for drawing his knife : he was merely confined to his apartment, and from this confinement and the medicine, which he equally dreaded, found means to escape.l But he felt an anxiety to recover his manuscript, and, although the Cardinal Albano and Scipio Gonzaga dis- suaded him from trusting himself at the court of Alfonso, re- turned to Ferrara. lie there found that the Jerusalem had been put into other hands, and that the Duke, after refusing to hear him mention the subject, denied him, at last, all access to himself and the priiicesses. The biographer presumes that this treatment is to be partly charged upon the poet, who, instead of putting himself into a course of medicine, ate and drank to excess ; but he candidly owns that Tasso had a right to his own property, the fruits of his own genius. § He again retired, and again returned, in opposition to the entreaties of the Marquis Philip of Este, and others, who were better ac- * " II Diica m' hfi fatto molti favori, ma io vorrei frutti e non fiori." — In a letter from Tasso to Scalabrino. La Vita, &c. lib. ii. p. 245. torn. i. t " Forse perche incresceva al duca e alle principesse il perdere dopo la persona del poeta anche i suoi pregiati componimenti." — An innocent observation of the Abate's. La Vita, &,c lib. iii. p. 7. torn. i. I " Intanto il Tasso cominci6 a lasciarsi purgare, ma di malissirao animo." La Vita, he- lib. ii. p. 283. torn. i. Poor Tasso thought the ex- cellence of a physician consisted in prescribing medicines not only saluti- ferous but agreeable : " Perche come V. S. sa, 1' eccellenza de' medici tonsiste in buona parte in dar le medicine non solo salutifere, ma piace- vole." — Tass. Oper. vol. x. p. 360. Lettera a Biaggio Bernard!. La Vita, fee. lib. iii. p. 81. torn. ii. ^ "Per altro sebbene sia da credersi che molte di si fatte cose fossero soltanto effetto della sua imaginazione, e ch' egli anzi avesse irritato quell' ottimo principe col non aver voluto prestarsi afl una purga rigorosa ad '.'gni modo sembra, che se gli >iovesse almeno restituire il suo poema." La Vita, &tc lib. iii. p. 13. torn. ii. 21 quainted than himself with the character of Alfonso.* The Duke now refused to admit him to an audience. He was re- pulsed from the houses of all the dependants of the court; and not one of the promises which the Cardinal Albano had ob- tained for him were carried into eifcct. Then it was that Tasso, "after having suffered these hardships with patience for some time, seeing himself constantly discountenanced by the Duke and the princesses, abandoned by his friends, and derided by his enemies, could no longer contain himself within the bounds of moderation, but giving vent to his choler, publicly broke forth into the most injurious expressions ima- ginable, both against the Duke and all the house of Este, as well as against the principal lords of the court, cursing his past service, and retracting all the praises he had evQr given in his verses to those princes, or to any individual connected with them, declaring that they were all a " gang of poltroons, in- grates, and scoundrels." These are the words of Serassi;t and for this offence was Tasso arrested, and instead of being punished, such is the hint of his biographer, was, by his "ge- nerous and magnanimous" sovereign, conducted to the hos- pital of St. Anna, and confined in a solitary cell as a madman. From repeated passages in his letters, from the intercessions made in his favour by so many of the Italian potentates,! from the condition annexed to his release, by which the Duke of Mantua stipulated that he would guarantee against any lite- rary reprisals from the poet against his persecutor,§ there can be no doubt but that these injurious expressions, and these alone, were the cause of the con uiement of Tasso: so that, as the unwillingly convinced biographer is obliged to ex- * La Vita, &.c. lib. iii. p, 31. torn. ii. t " Che tutti in quel momento space io per una ciurma di poltroni, in- grati, e ribaldi." La Vita, &.c. lib. iii. p. 33. torn. ii. I La Vita, fcc. lib. iii, p. 128. torn. ii. Bergamo tempted Alfonso by the present of an antique fragment, p. 1£8. ut sup. b " Ma riflettendo, che i poeti sono di loro natura genus irritahiie, e te- mendo perciocheTorquato, trovandosi libero, non volesse coll' armi for- midabili della sua penna vendicarsi ildla lunga prigionia, e de' uiali trat- tamenti ricevuti a quella corte, non sapea risolversi a lasciarlo uscire da' suoi stati, senza prima essere assicurato, ch' ei non tenterehbe cosa alcuna contro r onore e la riverenza dovuta a un si gran principe com' egli era.'' — La Vita, kc. lib. iii. p. 128. torn. ii. 22 claim, it appears extraordinary that so many fables should have been dreamt of to account for the motive of his long im- prisonment.* Had that which Montaigne called " his fatal vivacity" directed itself against any others than the Duke and court of Ferrara, or had it preyed, as the Frenchman thought, upon himself alone,t a prison would not have been the prescription for such harmless extravagance. It has been before mentioned that he was only nine months in the first dungeon allotted to his crime, or, as his tyrant called it, his cure; but to one whose disease was a dread of solitude, and whose offence was a love of liberty, the hos- pital of St. Anna was, of itself, a dungeon. J It is certain that for nearly the first year he endured all the horrors of a solitary sordid cell, and that he was under the care of a gaoler whose chief virtue, although he was a poet and a man of letters, was a cruel obedience to the commands of his prince. § Whatever occasional alleviations were allowed to his distress, he was a prisoner to the last day of his abode in the hospital, and he felt that there was perpetually a door barred between him and the rehef of his body and his soul.|| His misfortune was * " Cosicchfe sembra cosa strana, come altri abbia potuto sognare tante favole, come si e fatto intorno al raotivo della sua lunga prigionia." La Vita, &c. lib. iii, p. 34. torn. ii. f " N' a t' ii pas de quoi savoir grfe a cette sienne vivacite meurtrifere,'' Uc. &c. Essais, &,c. liv. ii. cap. xii. p. 214. torn. ii. edit, stereot. 1811. X " E '1 timor di continua prigionia molto accresce la naia mestizia ; e 1' accresce 1' indegnita, che mi conviene usare ; e lo squallore della barba. e delle chiome, e degli abiti, e la sordidezza, e '1 succidume fieramente m' annojano: esovra tutto m' afflige la solitudine, miacrudele e natural nemica, della quale anco nel mio buono stato era talvolta cosi molestato che in ore intempestive m' andava cercando, o andava ritrovando com- pagnia." Letter from Tasso to Scipio Gonzaga. Oper. vol. x. p. 386 La Vita, fcc. lib. iii. p. 35. torn. ii. ^ " Sed neque cui parvo est virtus in corpore major " Mustius, obsequiis intentus principis usque." His name was Agostino Mosti. See La Vita, k,c. lib. iii. p. 38. torn. ii. Tasso saj's of him, in a letter to his sister, "ed usa meco ogni sortedi rigore ed inumanit^." See Opera, vol. ix. p. 183, and La Vita, kc. lib. iii. p. 40. torn. ii. Baruffaldi tries to defend him, by saying that Tasso was guilty of high treason, and Mosti was only doing his duty. Vita di M. L. Ariosto, nb. iii. p. 244. This avowal is every thing for the point wished to be proved. (1 " O Signor Maurizio, quando sara quel giorno ch' io possa respirar 23 rather aggravated than diminished by the repeated expecta- tions held out to him of approaching hberation. His calami- ties gathered upon him with his confinement, and at no time was his condition more deplorable than in the last months of his detention.* Amongst the diseases of his body and his mind, the desire and despair of freedom so constantly preyed upon him, that when the order for his departure had been ob- tained, his friends were cautious not to communicate the glad tidings to him too abruptly, for fear of some fatal revulsion. We must then deduct something from the harmonious praise which our eloquent and courtly countryman claims for the splendid patronage of the house of Este. The liberality, the taste, the gratitude of Cardinal Hippolyto, may be collected from the poet whom he degraded into a courier, whose Or- lando he derided, and whose services he requited with dis- dainful neglect.! The magnificence of his brother, the duke, assigned to Ariosto a pension of 21 lu-e a month, and food for three servants and two horses; a salary with wliich the poet sotto il cielo aperto, e che non mi veda sempre un uscio serrato davanti, quando mi pare di aver bisogno del medico o del confessore.'' This pa- thetic letter was written to his friend Cataneo a few months before hif release. Opera, vol. ix. p. 367. La Vita, lib. iii. p. 139. torn. ii. * " Sappia che per 1' infermita di moiti anni sono smemoratissimo e per questa cagione dolentissimo, benche non sia questa sola ec, c' i la de- bolezza di tutti i sensi e di tutte le membra, e quasi la vechiezza venuta innanzi a<;li anni, e la prigionia, e 1' ignoranza delle cose del mondo, e la solitudinc, la quale ^ misera e nojosa oltre 1' altre, raassimamente s' ella non 6 d' uomini, ma d' amici." A solitude to which all the unhappy are condemned. Letter to Monsig. Papio. dated Sept. 1585. Opera, vol. r. p. 313. La Vita, Ub. iii. p. 133. X Non mi lascio fermar molto in un luogo E di poeta cavallar mi feo. Ariost. Sat. vi. Jtfessej" Ludovico dove avete mm trovate tante fanfalmhe ? was the famous speech of the cardinal to Ariosto on first reading the Orlando. Hipolyto dismissed him from his service without any recompense : he had before encouraged Ih.^ contiposition of the Orlando, by telling the author, "che sarebbegli stato assai piii. 4 28 lity in a dependant. To this ignorance of the arts of courtljr dissimulation, his biographer does not hesitate to attribute his misfortunes,* and the inference must be dishonourable to his Ferrarese competitors. It appears that Tasso was in part the victim of a household conspiracy, formed by those who were totally incapable of appreciating either his virtues or his failings ; and who thought themselves interested, if they did not find, to prove him insane. For this purpose every little extravagance of action was carefully watched and noted down. Not onlj^ his words were submitted to the same cha- ritable interpretation, but his thoughts were scrutinized, and in pursuit of the same evidence of his derangement and dis- affection to his duties, his books, his papers, and his corres- pondence were explored in those repositories which are safe against all but domestic treachery ;t affection for his person, and admiration for his talents, were the pretext for every pro- ceeding against his liberty and his fame ; and so far did this insulting hypocrisy proceed, that a report was industriously spread, that it was the kind resource of pity to pronounce him not guilty but mad. This rumour caused and excused the de- sertion of one whose relief seemed hopeless. Remonstrance was an aggravation, concession a proof, of his delinquency. Both were unavailing, and the voice of friendship could give no other counsel than to be silent and to submit. His disaster was considered as his decease ; and his cotemporaries usurped and abused the rights of posterity. Compositions, some unfinished, and none of them intended for the light, were devoted to the greedy gains of literary pirates ; and on such documents, no less garbled than the representation of his actions, did his enemies proceed to judgment. These calamities would have overwhelmed guilt, and might confound innocence. But the tried affection of an only sister, the un- shaken though unserviceable regard of former associates, and more than all, his own unconquerable mind, supplied the mo- tive and the means of resistance. He had lost the hope of mercy, he cherished the expectation of justice. This con- * La Vita, &c. p. 277. t Ibid. lib. ii. p. 258. torn. i. Plutarch tells us that Romulus allowed only three causes of dirorce, drunkenness, adultery, and false keys. 29 fidence preserved the principle of life ; and the sensibility of misfortune gave an irresistible edge and temper to his facul- ties whenever his spirit emerged from distress. The rays of his genius could not dissipate, but they burst, at intervals, through the gloom of his seclusion, and his countrymen soon found that their poet, although hidden from their sight, was still high above the horizon. Stanza LIV. Here repose Angela's, AlfierVs bones, Sfc. The following anecdotes of Alfieri are from an authentic source, and appear worthy record. The poet was one evening at the house of the Princess Carignani, and leaning, in one of his silent moods, against a sideboard decorated with a rich tea-service of china, by a sudden movement of his long loose tresses, threw down one of the cups. The lady of the mansion ventured to tell him that he had spoilt her set, and had better have broken them all ; but the words were no sooner said, than Alfieri, without replying or changing countenance, swept off the whole service upon the floor. His hair was fated to bring another of his eccentricities into play ; for, being alone at the theatre at Turin, and hanging carelessly with his head backwards over the corner of his box, a lady in the next seat on the other side of the partition, who had, on other occasions, made several attempts to attract his attention, broke into violent and repeated encomiums on his auburn locks, which were flowing down close to her hand. Alfieri spoke not a word, and continued in his posture until he left the theatre. The lady received the next morning a parcel, the contents of which she found to be the tresses she had so much admired, and which the count had cut off close to his head. There was no billet with the present, but words could not have more clearly expostulated, " If you like the hair, here it is, but for heaveri's sake leave me alone.'^'' Alfieri employed a respectable young man at Florence to assist him in his Greek translations, and the manner in which that instruction was received was not a little eccentric. The 30 tutor slowly read aloud and translated the tragedian, and AU fieri, with his pencil and tablets in hand, walked about the room and put down his version. This he did without speak- ing a word, and when he found his preceptor reciting too quickly, or when he did not understand the passage, he held up his pencil, — this was the signal for repetition, and the last sentence was slowly recited, or the reading was stopped, un- til a tap from the poet's pencil on the table warned the trans- lator that he might continue his lecture. The lesson began and concluded with a slight and silent obeisance, and during the twelve or thirteen months of instruction, the count scarcely spoke as many words to the assistant of his studies. The Countess of Albany, however, on receiving something like a remonstrance against this reserve, assured the young man that the count had the highest esteem for him and his services. But it is not to be supposed that the master felt much regret at giving his last lesson to so Pythagorean a pu- pil. The same gentleman describes the poet as one whom he had seldom heard speak in any company, and as seldom seen smile. His daily temper depended not a little upon his fa- vourite horse, whom he used to feed out of his hand, and ordered to be led out before him every morning. If the ani- mal neighed, or replied to his caresses with any signs of pleasure, his countenance brightened, but the insensibility of the horse, was generally followed by the dejection of the master. The tomb of Alfieri in the Santa Croce, is one of the least successful productions of Canova. The whole monu- ment is heavy, and projects itself into the aisle of the church more prominently than becomes the associate of the more modest but richer sepulchres of Michael Angelo and Machiavelh. The colossal Cybele of Italy weeping over a medallion in low relief, shows the difficulty of doing justice to the mourner and the monument, and may besides be mis- taken for the princess of the house of Stolberg, whose name and title have left little room on the inscription for Alfieri himself. They show a little step opposite to the monument, on which the princess herself periodically contemplates her own work and that of Canova. The grief of an amiable woman for the loss ©f an accomplished man. may be ex- 31 pected to endure ; and, to say the truth, the other sex hai too long wanted a " pendant" for the twice retold tale of the Ephesian niatron. Stanza LXVI. But thou, Clitumnus, in thy sweetest wave. The Clitumnus rises at Le Vene di Campello, or di Piscig- tucno. In the territory of Trevi and that of Foligno, it is called the "Clitunno," and lower down in its course assumes the name of La Timmia. Antiquaries have been careful to measure the exact size of its original fountain, which they find to be eleven Roman palms and ten inches long, and one palm seven inches and a half wide. This source pours from beneath a blind arch in the high road from Foligno to Spoleto, half a mile from the post-house of Le Vene, and gushing into a thousand blue eddies, is soon lost in a bed of giant reeds. The peasants of the neighbourhood say that the stream has many fountains, and although no where in the immediate vicinity it is wider than a mill-brook, is in many places un- fathomable. The Clitumnus has been sung by most of the poets from Virgil to Claudian. The Umbrian Jupiter bore the same name; and either he or the river-god himself inspir- ed an oracle which gave answers by lots, and which was con- sulted by Caligula.* There were festivals celebrated by the people of the neighbouring Hispellum in honour of this deity.t When Pliny the younger saw and described the Cli- tumnus, the fountain spread at once into a considerable river,J capable of bearing two laden boats abreast ;§ but it is thought to have been shrunk by the great earthquake in 446, which shook Constantinople for six months, and was violently felt in * Sueton. in Vita Calig. t Gori. Mus. Etrus. torn. ii. p. 66. " CJitumnalia sacra apud Hispel- lates in ejus honorem celebrata fuisse, constat auctoritate hujus vetustae arse, eidem dedicata, quae inter Gudianas vulgata est." Edit. Florent. 1737. t " Fons adhuc et jam amplissiraum flumen." Epist. ad Romanum, lib. Tiii. epist. viii. ^^"Navei amen ne heic intelligas majores sed scaphas tantum." P. Cluverii Italia Antiquae, lib. ii. cap. 10. torn. 1. p. 702. edit. Elzev, 32 many parts of Italy. The " glassy Fucine lake, the sea- green Anio, the sulphureous Nar, the clear Faberis, and the turbid Tiber," are, with the cold Clitumnus, known to have been affected by this tremendous convulsion.* Hence, per- haps, the holes which are said to be unfathomable. It has, however, been always honourably mentioned amongst the rivers of Italy ;t and if the little temple on its banks was not thrown down, the effects of the earthquake could not have been very important. With respect to this temple, now a church, dedicated to the Saviour, which is seen a few paces before you come to the principal source, some doubts have been enter- tained of its antiquity by a late English traveller, who is very seldom sceptical out of place, j Fabretti, in his inscriptions, § had before asserted that it had been built from ancient frag- ments by the Christians, who baptized it, sculptured the grapes on the tympanum, and added the steps. Mr. Forsyth's objection can, however, in this instance, perhaps be removed by the mention of a fact with which he appears to have been unacquainted. The inside of the temple described by Pliny was " bescratched with the nonsense of an album," and of this record no vestiges were seen by our acute traveller : they could not, for the whole of the interior of the chapel is allow- ed to have been modernized when the altar niche was added at the conversion of the structure, and any ancient remnants then left within were carried away when it was reduced to its present appearance in the middle of the last century. The sculpture of the columns, singular as it is, can scarcely be made a valid objection. Palladio calls it most delicate and beautifully various,]] and if what appears in his drawings vine * Sidori. Apollinar. lib. i. epist. 5. t Boccaccio de Flum. in verb. Clitum. " Clitumnus Umbrise fluvius apud Mevaniana et Spoletum defluens, ex quo (ut quidam volunt,) sicon- fertim postquam concepitboa bibat ; album pariet. Quam ob rem Ro- mani magnas hostias Jovi immolaturi ad hunc locum per albis tauris mittebant. Hunc alii fontem alii lacum dicunt" in fin. Lib. de geneal. deorum. edit. Princ. I Remarks on Italy, fcc. p. 320. Sec, edit. C; Inscrip. p. S8. See Osservazioni, &tc. p. 61. ut inf. |[ " Lavorate delicatissimamente e con bella varieta d'intagli." Incho- nog. de'Tcmp. lb. iv. p. 2. cap. 1^5. del tempio ch' e sotto Trevi. Tom. vi. p. 10. Vcn. 1745. The plates are not at all recognizable. 33 leaves, be in reality, as Venuti asserts,* and as they seem to be, fish scales, the workmanship may have some allusion to the river god. The above great architect saw this temple entire, and made five designs of it.t What remains, which is only the western portico and the exterior of the cell, is certainly a part of the temple seen by him, and called by Cluverius one of the Fanes of Jupiter Clitumnus.J It appears the Fane preserved the form copied by Palladio down to 1730, when an earthquake broke off apiece of the cornice, and even in 1739 it had not been reduced to the ruin in which Venuti saw it, and which seems to differ but little from its present con- dition. § The chapel belonged formerly to the community of Trevi, but about the year 1420 they lost it together with the castle of Piscignano, and it became a simple ecclesiastical be- nefice of ten or twelve crowns annual rent attached to the Dateria at Rome. In 1 730 it was intrusted to a brother Hila- rion, who, under the pretext of repairing it, made a bargain with Benedetti bishop of Spolcto, to furnish him with a por- tion of the columns and marbles for three and twenty crowns. The community of Piscignano opposed this spoliation for some time, and an order was even procured from Pope Cle- ment XII. to prevent it. But Monsignore Ancajani, tbea bishop of Spoleto, confirmed the sale, laughed at the injunc- tion, and said the marbles were but old stones ;|| consequently the hermit, brother Paul, who had been left by Hilarion, fell to work, demolished great part of the porticoes, and sold four of the columns for eighteen crowns to the Signore Fon- tani of Spoleto, who used them in building a family chapel in * Osservazioni sopra il fiume Clitunno, dall' Abate Rldolpho Venuti, Cortoneae, a Roma, 1753. t See Ichonog. ut sup . I P. Cluverii Italise Antiquaj, ut sup. Sacraria ista nulla alia fu^re, nisi quae ab initio ad varios Clitumni fontes variis Jovis Clitumni nomini- bus numinibusque posita, ea baud dubie postea in ChriStianEe religionis usum convei-sa. His annotator Holstenius also believed it most ancient, Annot. ad Cluv. Geog- pag. 123. ^ " La facciata che vedesi verso Ponente e I'unica che sia rimasta illesa dal furore degl' ignoranti." See ut sup. pag. 45. II Quale se ne rise, dicendo essere ea^sacci, e scguito il fratc a dcmolire e portar via. See Osservazioni, ut sup. 34 the Philippine church of that town.* In 1748 the same brother Paul, looking for a fancied treasure, broke his way through the interior of the chapel, and tore up part of the subterranean cell, of which pious researches there are the marks at this day. Whatever remained of marble in the inside of the structure was then carried away, and it was with much difficulty that the remaining portico was saved from the hands of the hermit.t The reader is requested to bear in mind this transaction of two bishops and two holy brothers, executed in spite of the most respectable opposition in the middle of the last century. It may assist his conjectures when he comes to estimate the probable merits of the Chris- tian clergy who are said to have been so instrumental during the dark ages in preserving the relics of Rome. The Abate of Cortona talks with indignation of the offence,J and con- cludes with a prayer to Benedict the Fourteenth to recover the pillage, and replace the columns and marbles on their an- cient base. Indeed the spoilers were guilty not only of a crime against the antiquary, but of sacrilege. Clitumnus could not be expected to deter brother Hilarion and brother Paul, but the name of our Saviour might. Benedict the Fourteenth did not listen to the Abate, and we see the temple as it was left by the honest hermit. It should seem then that the little portico and the form at least of the cell belong to an ancient temple, and probably to that of the Clitumnus, if not to one of the many chapels which were near the principal fane.§ There were formerly * " Distruttore di questa fabbrica e stato un certo Eremita Chiamato Fra Paolo, che le ha vendute (4 colonne) per soli diecidotto scudi ai Fon- tanini di Spoleto, che se ne sono serviti per fare una loro cappella in onore di St. Filippo." Lettera MS. del conte Giacomo Valenti, ap. Venut. os- servazioni, fee. page 49. + " . . . and the statue of the god (the Clitumnus) has yielded its place to the triumphant cross. This circumstance is rather fortunate, as toj it the temple owes its preservation. " Classical Tour through Italy, chap. ix. torn. 1. p. 321 . Sd edit. Mr. Eustace was innocent of all knowledge of the above fact : otherwise, though a zealous crusader, he would not have stuck his triumphant cross on the Clitumnus. t " E quelle non hanno fatto i Goti nelle incursione, I'hanno fatto quelli, che non s'intendono d'antichita. Osservazioni, &c. ut sup. ^ " Sparsa sunt circa sacella complura." Plin. epist. fcc. 35 vestiges of two other small ancient structures,* which had not entirely disappeared when Venuti wrote, and had given to a spot above the church the name ad sacraria. The counts Valenti di Trevi found also the statue of a river god near the chapel, and placed it> in their collection. Add to this that the naraest still seen on the roof of the subterranean cell belonged probably to those who had consulted the oracle, and that there can be no doubt of the antiquity of that adytus, although it is half blocked up and defaced by the excavations of brother Paul. The cypress grove which shaded the hill above the source of the river has disappeared, but the water still preserves the ancient property of producing some of the finest trout to be met with in Italy. Stanza LXXVII, Yet fare thee well ; upon Sorade's ridge we part. The pilgrim may take leave of Horace upon Soracte ; not so the antiquary, who pursues him to the city and country, to Rome and Tivoli, and hunts him through the windings of the Sabine valley, till he detects him pouring forth his flowers over the glassy margin of his Bandusian fount. Before, however, the discreet traveller girds himself for such a tour, he is re- quested to lay aside all modern guide books, and previously to peruse a French work called " Researches after the house of Horace." This will undeceive him as to the Bandusian foun- tain, which he is not to look for in the Sabine valley, but on the Lucano-Appulian border where Horace was born* Lucanus an Appulus anceps. The vicissitude which placed a priest on the throne of the Caesars has ordained that a bull of Pope Paschal the second should be the decisive document in ascertaining the site of a fountain which inspired an ode of Horace|. The traveller * Holstenius Annot. ad Geog. Cluv. pag. 12S. f T. SEPTIMIVS BIDIA. L. F. PLEBEIVS POLLA The temple of the oracle of Memnon in Upper Egypt was full of such inscriptions. See Osservazioni, &.c. page 56. 4 Coafirniamu? siquidem robis Csenobiuna ipsum et omnia, quae ad 5 36 must not be alarmed at the three or four volumes which coiiji- pose these researches after a single house : the establishment of identity in these cases is absolutely necessary even as a basis for the enthusiasm of v/hich classical recollections arc the cause, or at least the excuse. The fixing localities and de- termining the claims of those antiquities whose chief interest is derived from the story attached to them, is generally supposed the peculiar province of dull plodding writers : but as the man most willing to give scope to his imagination would hardly choose to have any other foundation for his feeling than truth, and as he would be incensed at having been entrapped by an ignorant enthusiastic declaimer into an admiration of objects whose authenticity may be questioned by the first cool ex- aminant, it is but fair that he should accept the labours of the professed topographer and antiquary with their due share of complacency and praise. The common opinion that blind belief is the most convenient viaticum, is contradicted by the experience of every traveller in Italy. He who begins his journey with such entire confidence in common fame and Common guide books, must have the conviction of impos- ture and mistake forced upon him at every turn. He is likely then to slide into the contrary extreme, and, if he is averse to all previous examination, will subside at last into complete scepticism and indifference. We may apply a lite- ral sense to the words of Erasmus in praise of Italy. " In that country the very walls are more learned and more eloquent than our nieii.^^*' But the immense variety of antiquarian objects, the innumerable details of historical topography be- longing to every province, the national inclination to fable, and, it may be said, to deception, suggest themselves to every considerate traveller, and induce him to a caution and reserve which, with wonders less multiplied and guides more faithful, illud pprtiiiont, monastoiia sive celias cum suis peilincntiis: videlicet EcclcHiam S. Salvatoiis rum aliis ecclesiis de Custelio Bandusii. The bull is addressed to the Abbot Monaslerii Baniini in Apulia Acheruniin, and enumerating the churches, goes on, Ecclesiam sanctorum martynim Gervasii ct Protasii in Bandusino fontc apud Vcnusiam. The date of the hull is May £2, llOS. [See Bullarium Romanum, Paschalis, P, P. ftecundu?, num. xvii. torn. ii. pag. l!£3, edit. Roma, 1739,] *Lib. 1. epist. 4. to Rob. Fisher. 37 he might deem superfluous and embarrassing. A very little experience is suflicient to convince him how small is the pro- portion of those antiquities whose real character has been entirely ascertained. From his first view of Soracte he ra- pidly advances upon Rome, the approach to which soon brings him upon debateable ground. At Civita Castcllana he will find himself amongst the Veians when in the market- place of Leo the Tenth, but going on the town bridge he is told by Pius the Sixth that he is at Falerium. After he has caught the first view of St. Peter's from the height beyond Baccano, he hopes that the remaining fifteen miles may fur- nish him at every other step with some sign of his vicinity to Rome : he palpitates with expectation, and gazes eagerly on the open undulating dells and plains, fearful lest a fragment of an aqueduct, a column, or an arch, should escape his notice. Gibbets garnished with black withered limbs, and a monk in a vetturino's chaise, may remind him that he is approach- ing the modern capital ; but he descends into alternate hol- lows, and winds up hill after hill with nothing to observe ex- cept the incorrectness of the last book of travels, which will have talked to him of the flat, bare, dreary waste he has to pass over be to re arriving at the Eternal City. At last, how- ever, he is stopped at a sarcophagus, and told to look at the k)mh of Kero : a hardy falsehood, which may prepare him for the misnomers of the city itself, but which, notwithstanding the name of c. vibivs marianvs is cut upon the stone, was so exactly suited to the taste and learning of the J)resident Dupaty, that he pointed a period of his favourite starts and dashes, with this epigram, on the approach to ruined Rome, " c'est h tombemi de Neron qui Pannonce.''''* Stanza LXXVIII. O JRo??!e .' my country, dty of the soibl. The downs which the traveller has passed after leaving Monterosi, sink into green shrubby dells as he arrives within * The writer having thrown the book in the fire, cannot quote chapten and T^r?« fr>r this nonsense, but it is to be found in Dupaty's travels. 38 five or six miles of Rome. The Monte Mario stretches for- ward its high woodj platform on the right. The distant plain of the Tiber and the Campagna, to the left, is closed by the Tiburtine and Alban hills. In the midst Rome herself, wide spreading from the Vatican to the pine-covered Pincian, is seen at intervals so far apart as to appear more than a sin- gle city. Arrived at the banks of the Tiber, he does not Und the muddy insignificant stream which the disappointments of overheated expectations have described it, but one of the finest rivers in Europe, now rolling through a vale of gardens, and now sweeping the base of swelling acclivities clothed Drith wood, and crowned with villas and their evergreen shrubberies. The gate of the city is seen immediately on crossing the river at the end of a vista two miles in length ; and the suburb is not composed of mean dwellings, but a fine road with a wide pavement passes between the walls of vine- yards imd orchards, with here and there neat summer-houses- or arched gateways rising on either hand, and becoming more frequent with the nearer approach to the city. The Flami- nian gate, although it is thought unworthy of Rome and Mi- chael Angelo, will content those who are not fastidious. Aa entrance, not an arch of triumph, is sufficient for the modern capital. The stranger, when within that gate, may ascend at once by the new road winding up the Pincian mount, and en- joy from that eminence the view of a city, which, whatever may be the faults of its architectural details, is, when seen in the mass, incomparably the handsomest in the world.* The pure transparent sky above him will seem made, as it were, to give brilliancy to the magnificent prospect below. The new climate will indeed add much to his delight, for although amongst those branches of the Apennines which approach within forty miles of the city, he may have been chilled by the rigours of a Lombard sky, he is no sooner in the plain of the Tiber, than his spirits expand in an atmosphere, which^ in many Seasons, preserves an unsullied lustre and exhilarating • Doivalus prefers the site, the Sjtreets, and as far as the church of St.. Peter's is considered, the edifices of the modern to those of the ancient city. Roma Vutus, lib. i, cap. SiD. The town is much improved since the time of Urhan VilL to whom Donatus dedicated his work. '4 3« warmth from the rains of autumn to the tempests of the ver- nal equinox. What has been said and sung of the tepid winter of Italy, is not intelligible to the north of Rome ; but in that divine city, for some transport may be allowed to the recollection of all its attractions, we assent to the praises of Virgil, and feel his poetry to have spoken the language of truth. " Hie Ter assiduum atque alienis mensibus astas." This must have been written at Rome. The banks of his frozen Mincio would have inspired no such rapture.* But not the superb structures of the modern town, nor the happy climate, have made Rome the country of every man and " the city of the soul." The education which has qualified the traveller of every nation for that citizenship which is again become, in one point of view, what it once was, the portion of the whole civilized world, prepares for him at Rome enjoyments independent of the city and inhabitants about him, and of all the allurements of site and climate. He will have already peopled the banks of the Tiber with the shades of Pompey, Constantine, and Belisarius, and the other heroes of the Milvian bridge. The first footstep with- in the venerable walls will have shown him the name and the magnificence of Augustus, and the three long narrow streets branching from this obelisk, like the theatre of Palladio, will have imposed upon his fancy with an air of antiquity conge- nial to the soil. Even the mendicants of the country asking alms in Latin prayers, and the vineyard gates of the suburbs inscribed with the ancient language, may be allowed to con- tribute to the agreeable delusion. Of the local sanctity which belongs to Athens, Rome, and Constantinople, the two first may be thought to possess, perhaps, an equal share. The latter is attractive chiefly for that site which was chosen for the retreat and became the grave of empire. The Greek capital may be more precious in the eyes of the artist, and, it may be, of the scholar, but yields to the magnitude, the * Rome had fallen when Rutilius said of her climalc, Vere tuo nunquam mulceri desinit annus Deliciasque tuas victa tueter hyems. CI. Rut. Num. It*^. 40 gi'andeur, and variefy of the Roman relics. ITie robe of the Orientals has spread round Athens an air of antique preserva- tion, which the European city and the concourse of strangers have partially dispelled from Rome. But the required soli- tude may be occasionally found amongst the vaults of the Palatine, or the columns of the great Forum itself. Ancient and modern Rome are linked together like the dead and liv- ing criminals of Mezentius. The present town may be easi- ly forgotten amidst the wrecks of the ancient metropolis ; and a spectator on the tower of the capitol may turn from the carnival throngs of the Corso, to the contiguous fragments of the old city, and not behold a single human being. The general effect of such a prospect may be felt by any one ; and ignorance may be consoled by hearing that a detailed ex- amination must be made the study rather of a life than of a casual visit. Stanza LXXVIII. Come and see The cypress, kear the owl, and plod your way O^er steps of broken thrones and temples. The traveller who is neither very young nor very incu- rious, may inquire what previous instruction or present guides will enable him to understand the history as well as to feel the moral effect of " these broken thrones and temples." To this question no satisfactory answer can be given. The earlier notices of the Roman antiquities abound with errors, which might be expected from the infancy of a study requi- ring so much discretion. Petrarch, who was himself an anti- qiiaiT, and presented a collection of gold and silver medals to the Emperor Charles IV. in 1354, called the pyramid of Cestius, the tomb of Remus; and Poggio, whois surprised at such an error,* has indulged in exaggerations which very much reduce the value of his lamentation over the fallen city. * Dc fortuiise vaiietate urbis Romaj «;t de ruinis ejusdem descriptio Ap. Salleiigre Nov. Thcsaur. Antiq. Roman. Venct. 1735, torn. i. p. 501 41 The ill-tempered Florentine has also told us what to expect from his cotemporary Ciriacus of Ancoua, whose forty days ride in Rome, with his tablets in hand, has procured for him no better names than an impostor and a dunce.* Flavius Blondus, who dedicated to the patron of this latter writer, to Eugenius IV., contented himself with a description rather df the ancient city, and hazarded so few conjectures on it? comparative topography, that he owns he could hardly disco- ver the seven hills on the most minute inspection.! When less doubtful, he is not less erroneous, and amongst other instances, may be selected his assertion that Theodoric per- mitted the Romans to employ the stones of the Coliseum for the repair of the city walls. | In the end of the same cen- tury (XVth), Pomponius Lastus made a collection of antiques on the Quirinal, and distinguished himself in exploring the ruins ; but the forgery of the inscription to Claudian§ renders the authority of the restorer of the drama more than sus- pected. Sabellico Peutinger, and Andreas Fulvius, both of the school of Laetus, will throw little light on a survey of Rome. The character of Marlianus may be given from his * See an account of him in Tiraboschi. Storia della liStt. torn. vi. par. i. lib. i. p. £C4 et seq. edit. Venet. 1795. He rode on a white horse, lent him by Cardinal Condolmieri, afterwards Eugenius IV. Tiraboschi defends Ciriacus. t Roma instaurata, edit Taurin. 1527, in a collection, lib. i. fol. 14. t Ibid. lib. iii. fol. 33. See note on the Coliseum. ^ Claudian had a statue in the forum of Trajan, but the inscription was composed by Pomponius Laetus. See Tiraboschi Storia, fcc. torn, ii. lib. iv. It imposed on all the antiquaries, and was believed even by Nardini. See Roma Antic, lib. v. cap. ix. Considerable caution is re- quisite even at this time in reading inscriptions either on the spot or copied. That on the horse of Auielius was written at a venture, when that monu- ment was transported from the Luteran to the capitol in 1538, by Paul III. Faunas, Gruter, Pagi, Smetius, Desgodetz, Piranesi, gave an incorrect copy of the inscription on the Pantheon. Marlianus, Faunus, and Nardini, have done the same by the inscription on the Temple of Con- cord. Seethe Abate Fea's dissertation on the ruins of Rome at the end of his tran?\at.ion of Winrlfcl man's Storia delle arti, ^c, lorn. ii). ]yp. 294. 298. 42 annotator Fulvius Ursinus.* He does not treat frequently of the modern town, and despatches the curiosities of the Capitol in twenty lines. The arbitrary rashness which dis- pleased Ursinus is, however, shown in instances more decisive than the one selected by his annotator. Lucius Faunus is occasionally quoted by later writers, and generally for the sake of correcting his errors.t The studious but unlearneH Ligorius, the erudite obscure Panvinius, have received their estimation from Montfaucon.J Pancirolus does not attempt to be a modern guide, and Frabricius, where he runs into the contrary extreme, and gives ancient names to disputed rem- nants, is to be admired only for the boldness of his conjec- ture.§ Donatus and Nardini are indeed of a very superior quality, and the last is to this day the most serviceable conductor. The exception made in their favour by the more modern writers, is not however unqualified.)] Mont- *Fulviusis angry with Marlianus for placing the temple of Jupiter Tonans near the Clivus Capitolinus, but it is placed there again by the antiquaries of our own day. " Atque fortasse minus est admirandum quod ita factus est homo hie ut arbitratu suo teraere omnia tractet." See Marliant «rbis Romae topographia, ap. Grsev. Antiq. Roman, torn iii. lib. ii. cap. S. p. 141. notes. Marlianus dedicated his treatise to Francis I. whom he styles liberator Romce. 7 De Antiq. urb. Romae. ap. Sallengre. Nov. Thesaur. &c. torn. i. p. 217. IDiarlum Italicum, edit. Paris, 1703, cap. 20. p. 279. "Sequitur Onuphrius Panvinius, qui onanes quotquot antea scripserunt eruditis suis lucubrationibus obscuravit." He is given in the third vol. of Grseviiis. ?^ They are both to be found in the third vol. of Greevius. Descriptio tirbis Roma;. Descriptio Romae, p. 462. George Fabricius wrote in 1550. Panvinius dedicated his description of Rome, which he added to the old regionaricB, to the Emperor Ferdinand, in 1 558- Fabricius him- self mentions some early writers in his first chapter, and lays down a useful canon. " In cognoscendis autem urbis antiquitatibus sermo vulgi audiendus non est." II « E quibus, (that is, all the early topographers) si hos binos posterio- res exceperis, nemo est, qui in turpes errores non impegerit, quamquani nee isti quidem immunes sint » Jul. Minutuli, dissertatio iii. de urbis Romse topographia. Syllabus auctorum, ap. Sallengre Supp , &;c p. 40. ^ ' ' 43 ^ucon, in the en3 of the XVIIth century, found them and many others who had passed nearly their whole Uves in at- tempting a description of the city, far from satisfactory ;* and neither he nor his cotemporaiies supplied the deficiency. A hundred years have not furnished the desired plan of the •city. Detached monuments have been investigated with some success ; and whenever Visconti has shone out, we have had reason " to bless the useful light." But whoever should attempt a general view of the subject, would have to brusli away the cobwebs of erudition, with which even the modern discoveries are partially obscured. Venuti hardly deserves the praise conferred upon him by our most intelligent modern traveller.! His style and argument are in many places such as not to allow of his being divined, and he generally leaves us, even when most positive, to balance doubts and choose between difficulties. If the Abbe Barthelemy had pursued his original plan of writing an Italian Anacharsis for the age of Leo X., he might have been more useful at Rome than he is in Greece. As it is, the Abbe's cursory but learned obser- vations are distinguished by the quotation of a very singular document, the original of which has never been found,! and * Montfaticon says of Donatus, " quamvis plura pratermittat quam scribit." Of Nardini, " laudatum opus a laudatis viris," but " videturque -sane nihil pensi habere, dura dubia et difficultates perpetuo injiciat, ubi ne vel umbra difficultatis fuerit." Diarium Italicum, &c. cap, 20. p. 281. edit Paris, 1702. f Mr. Forsyth, after touching on the inadequacy of former topogra- phers, as general guides, says, " Venuti has sifted this farrago." If he has, the chaff flies in our eyes. Remarks, fcc. on Italy, p. 129, sec. edit. X It refers to the Coliseum, and will be remarked in its pniper place. See Mem. de I'academit- des belles lettres, torn xxviii. pp. 519. 599. A separate volume has been printed. Mr. Millin has published four volumes on Upper Italy, (Voyage en Savoie, en Piemont, i Nice et a Genes, 181€; and Voyage dans le Mi- lanais a Plaisance, Parme, kc. 1817.) and i« to continue his work down to the straits of Messina, and into Calabria, He should be warned that he is charged by the Italians with never having been in some of the spots he describes as a spectator. His compilation does not apply to present appearances. It is as clear that he never has been at Parma, as that Buonaparte was at the battle of Lodi, which, by the account given 6 44 Ibis ingenious countrymen had not extended their hterary em- pire to the illustration of sites and monuments in their rival Ita- ly, until their political dominion had embraced the soil itself. Our own writers^ with the exception of Mr. Forsyth, whose sketch makes us regret the loss of the taste and learning he might have brought to bear on a regular survey, have done nothing in this laborious line, absolutely nothing. The last of them seems to have thought it of little importance that the capitol was ever inhabited by any others than the monks of Ara cceli, or that the court of Augustus preceded that of the Popes. The insufficiency of all latter labours, and the necessity of some new guide, may be collected from the expedient at last adopted of republishing Nardini.* What has been said of the embarrassment of a stranger at Rome, must appear more sin- gular when it is recollected, that besides the casual efforts of natives and foreigners, there is an archaeological society con- stantly at work upon the antiquities of the city and neighbour- hood, and that not a few persons of liberal education are in the exercise of a lucrative profession, having for object the instruction and conduct of travellers amidst the wrecks of the old town and the museums of the new. Stanza LXXX. The Goth, the Christian, fyc. A Comment on these verses will naturally embrace some remarks on the various causes of the destruction of Rome, a subject on which, it is said with the utmost deference, the last chapter of our great historian has furnished a hasty out- line rather than the requisite details.! The inquiry has par- taken of the fate of all disputed points. The exculpation of by this conserver of the king's medals, it would appear he was not. See Voyage dans le Milanais, kc, pp. 57, 58. chap. xvi. * It has been undertaken by Mr. Nibby, a respectable young man, one of the professional antiquaries of Rome, who is likewise employed on a translation of Pausanias. The volume on the Basilica of St. Paul, under the name of Monsignor Niccolai, is by this gentleman. t Let it not be thought presumptuous to say that this last chapter should have been his first composition, Avritten while his memory was 45 the Goths and Vandals has been thought prejudicial to the?. Christians, and the praise of the latter regarded as an injus- tice to the barbarians ; but, forgetting the controversy and following the order prescribed in the cited verse, perhaps we shall find both the one and the other to have been more active despoilers than has been confessed by their mutual apologists. A learned Tuscan, a friend of Tasso, wrote a treatise ex- pressly on this subject, and positively asserted that from Alaric to Arnulphus no damage was done by the barbarians to freshly stamped with the image of the ruins which inspired his immortal labours. In the present case his researches do not bear the mark of hav- ing been at ail corrected by his Italian travels ; and indeed, in more than one instance, his erudition has completely effaced his experience. It is not meant to attach undue importance to trifles, but an author, whose accuracy was his pride, and who is generally allowed to have descended to the minutest details, particularly in topography, might hardly be «'X- pected to have made the following mistake : " The Roman ambassadors were introduced to the tent of Mtila as he lay encamped at the place when the slow winding Mincius is lost in the foaming Benacus, and trampled with his Scythian cavalry the farms of Catullus and Virgil ;" and below, note 63, " The Marquis Maffei ( Verona illustrata, part ipp. 95, 129, 221, partii.pp.2, — 6.) has illustrated with taste and learning this interesting topography. He places the intervieiu of Altila and St Leo near Ariolica or Ardelica, now Peschiera, at the conjlux of the lake and the riverJ*^ De- cline and Fall, cap. XXXV. p. ISI. tom. vi. oct. Extraordinary! The Mincius flows from the Benacus at Peschiera, not into it. The country is on a descent the Avhole way from the Veronese hills, according to thft quotation from Virgil cited by BIr. Gibbon himself: qua se subducere coUes, Incipiunt. More strange still is the reference to Maffei, who, so far fiom alluding to a conflux of the river and lake, says at the close of the very sentence re- specting the interview between Attila and St. Leo, " Chi scrisse il luogo di cosi memorabil fatto essere stato ove sbocca il Mincio nel Po, d'autorft antico non ebbe appoggio." Verona illustrata, parte i. p. 424. Verona 1732. The other references, parte ii. p. 3, 10, 11, of the same edition* say nothing of the course of the river. It is just possible Mr. Gibbon thought Maffei meant to deny that the Mincio fell into the Po : but at aU events he might have seen at Peschiera that it runs through sluices out of the Benacus. Maffei, however, in another place actually mentions the qutlet of the lake into the Mincio : " Peschiera .... alV mHq del lago svi Mincio J" Veron. illust. p^ir. iji. )>. 510. edit. cit. 46 iany of llie public edifices of Rome.* Heowned that such an opinion would appear paradoxical, and so indeed will it be found after a cursory survey, and even as he treats the inqui- ry. It is certain that Alaric did burn a part of Rome. Oro- sius,t by making the comparison between the former great lires and that of the Goths, shows that such a comparison might be suggested by the rhagnitude of the latter calamity. He adds also that after the people were returned the confla- gration had left its traces, and in relating the partial destruc- tion of the Forum by lightning, makes it appear that the brazen beams and the mighty structures which were then con- sumed would have fallen by the hands and flames of the bar- barians, had they not been too massive for human force to overthrow.]: It should be remembered that the supposed piety redeemed the actual violence of the Goths, and that respect for the vessels of St. Peter's shrine made Orosius al- most the apologist of Alaric. The lamentations of St. Jerome are too loud to allow us to suppose the calamity did not affect the buildings.§ He ^ Ane;clio Piefro da Barga de privaiorum puhUcorumque (zdificiorum iirbis RoiiKE eversorihus epistola ad Petrum Usimbardum, &tc. Ap. Grsev. Antiq Roman, torn. iv. p. 1870- Edit. Venet. 1732. " sed tamen quod ?d piiblicorum aedificiorura et substructionum ruinas pertinet nihil omnino incoraiTiodi passa est." r " Tcrtia die- Barbari, quam ingressi fuerint urbem, sponte discedunt, facto quidem aliquantarutn aedium incendio, sed ne tanto quidem, quan- tum septingesimo conditionis ejus anno casus effecerat." He compares tlie Gallic and Neronic fires, and says thej- were greater than the Gothic- Hist. Lib. vii. cap. xxxix. " Cujus rei quamvis recens raemoria sit, turn &i quis ipsius populi Roman! et multitudinem vidcat et vecera audiat, nihil factum, sicut ipsi etiam fatentur, arbitrabitur, nisi aliquantis adhuc existen- tibus ex incendio ruinis forte doceatur." Lib. vii. cap. xl. 1" Quippe cum supra humanas vires asset, incendere aeneas trabes, et- subrucre magnarum moles structurarum, ictu fulminum Forum cum iina- ginibus variis, quae superstitione miserabili vej deum vel hominemmentiun- tur, abjectum est : horuraque omnium abominamentorum quod iramissa perhotitera flamma non adiit, missus e Cfcio ignis evertit." Lib- ii- cap. 15' 5^ See Epist. cxxvii. ad Principiam ; Epist. cxxiii. ad Agruchiam. pp.. 903 — 909. torn, l Hieron. Opera. Veron. 1731. 47 calls the city " the sepulchre of the Roman people," andl particularizes that "the walls were half destroyed."* More confidence might be attached to his account of the ruin and restoration of Rome, if he had not attributed the latter to the profession of virginity by a single noble lady.t In subsequent times we find the strongest expressions ap» plied to the sack of Rome, by Alaric. Pope Gelasius in a letter to the senator Andromachus (A, D. 496) has the words " when Alaric overturned the city."J Procopius§ confines the fire to the quarter near the Sala- rian gate; but adds that tlie Goths ravaged the whole city. The despoiling edifices of ornaments, many of which must have been connected with their structure, could not fail to- hasten their decay. Marcellinus mentions that a part of Rome was burnt, and delays the departure of the barbarians to the sixth day.|| Cassiodorus,** a much better and earlier authority in every respect than the three last writers, assures us that " many of the wonders of Rome were burnt." Olympiodorus talk* * " Urhs tua quondam orbis caput Romani populi sepulchrum est Semiruta urbis Roinante mcmia." Epist cxxx. ad Demetriadem, p. 914. torn- 1. t He says the victory of Marcellus at Nola did not so- raise the spirits of the Rornans, afflicted by the battles of Trebia, Thrasymene,- and Cannae, as this vow of chastity : " Tunc lugubres veates Italia muta- vit, et semiruta urbis msenia, pristinam ex parte recepere fulgorem," Epist. cxxx. ut sup- X " Cum urbem Alaricus evertit." See Baronii Annales Ecclesiast cum critice Pagi, ad an- 496- torn- viii. pag. 60G. Luca; 1740. Y (Sa'KcnxJtiov, tov pwjitatoijro rtaXaibv tr^v tc-to^Kw y^d-^avtoi' ^5 5iy ta rty.ciota- ^l*fXOA)ta %a(, ii ins tottixt' t'jjv ti noXiv o%r^v T-Jjifja/ifpot, xo< pufiauM tw^ rtXtt'tffovj Sio^^Eipoi-rf J, ^po(j» e;uwpow. Procop. Bell. Vand. Lib. i. pag. 93. Edit. Hoeschclii- Aug. II " Alaricus trepidam urbem Romaminvasit, partemque ejus crema- vit incendio, sextaque die quam ingressus fuerat depredata urbe egressus est" Chronic, ap. Sirmond. Opera Varia, tom. ii. pag. 274- Venet. ** " Romam venorunt, quam vastantes, plurima quidem miraculorum ejus igne concremaverunt-" Hist* Ecclesia$t. Tripar. Lib, xi. cap. 9. pag, 368. tom. 1, Rothonaagi 1679. is ^ly* of the infinite quantity of wealth which Alaric carried away ; but we may collect from him also how great was the disaster, when he tells us, that on the repeopling of the city fourteen thousand returned in one day. The Gothic historian who says that fire was not put to the town is no evidence, being directly contradicted by the above quoted and other authorities.! The words of the ecclesiastical historians are of strong im-, port : one of them talks of fire and the city lying in ruins ;{ another repeats the expression of Cassiodorus, that many of the wonders were destroyed ;§ and a third that the Basilica of St. Peter's was alone spared from the universal rapine. || That the city partially recovered itself is of course to be allowed. Albinus was active in his attempts at restoration, and the poet Rutilius, who was prefect in 417, not only extols the uninjured remains of antiquity, but prophesies the repair of every ruin.** But the whole of his beautiful verses are an hyperbole. He says that Brennus only delayed the chastise- ment that awaited him, that Pyrrhus was at last defeated, and that Hannibal wept his success ; therefore the downfal of Alaric might be safely foretold. The blazing temples of the capitolj the aerial aqueducts,- the marble sheltered groves, * "E| r,i xp^i^ata. ti attitpa l^sxofiiaB. Ap. Phot. Bibliot. edit. Rotho- mag. 1653. pag. 180. Albinus wished to restore the city, but people were wanting, p. 188. t " Ad postiemura Ruraam ingressi Alarico jubente spoliant tantum, non autem, ut solent gentes, ignem supponunt, nee locis sanctorum in ali- quo penitus injuriaRi irrogari patiuntur." Jornandes de reb. Get. cap. XXX. p. 85, 86. Lugd. Bat. 1697. I Kao to svtiv^sv ifyji 'toaaiiitr,^ 6o|«jt. to fttytOos xdt to t^i SvvdfitCii Af piww* ftov, a7.xd$D7i.oi- ftv^ xa] li^oj rCoTiifitov. xat at;^jiia7tui(Jca xatifispi^sto /SapjSapo;. iv spftrtioij Sc Wjj TtuXsi^i xstj.uvrii A^uptxoi .... Philostorgii Eccl. Hist. Lib.. xii. A p. Phot. Bibliot. num. 3. pag. 534. torn. ii. edit, ut sup. § TtXoj t£ trjv ViLfir^v xateT^ajiov xai rtop^r^savtci a.vti]v to, /x)v /toT^Ka, fw* Oavi-iaatuv ixUvuv diai^dtcov xatexavaav. Socrat. Hist. Ecclesias. Lib. vii? tap X. p. 283. [i Sozomen, Hist. Ecclesias Lib. ix. cap. 9. •XTt (( Astrorum flammse renovent occasibus ortus Lunam fiuiri cernis ut incipiat." CJ. Rut. Num. Iter. 49 might still be praised ; but he confesses that Rome had suffer- ed that which would have dissolved another empire ;* his pro- phecies of repair w^ere those of a poet, and the ruins of the palace of Sallust remained to contradict them in the time of Procopius.t The injury done by Genserick (A. D, 455) was not so great as that of the Goths, and Da Barga despatches his invasion in a few sentences. Jornandes, however, apphes the expression devastation to his entry.J AH the writers§ are of accoid that the Vandals in their fourteen days residence emptied Rome of her wealth; and as we are informed, of the robbery of half the tiles of the temple of the Capitohne Jupiter, and of all the treasures of the Temple of Peace, and the palace of the Caesars, II it is reasonable to suppose that the precious metals were extracted and torn down from all the structures, public and private, a violence which, without the use of fire or en- gines, must have loosened many of the compact masses, and been totally destructive of smaller edifices. An ecclesiasti- cal historian twice mentions that Genserick set fire to RomCj * Illud te reparat quod csetera regna resolvit Ordo renascendi est crescere posse m;ilis. Claud. Rutilii. Numant. Iter. ver. 140. f Bell . Vandal, in loc. cit. X " Quod audiens Gizericus rex Vandalorura, ab Africa arnaata class* in Italiam venit, Romamque ingressus cuncta devastat." Jornand. de reb. Get. cap. 45. pag. 417. sub fin. Cassiod. oper. fol 1679. 5^ Conscenderat arces Evandri massyla phalanx, montesque Quirini Marmarici pressere pedes, rursusque revexit Quae captiva dedit quondam sstipendia Barche. Sidon. Apollin. carmen vii. Paneg. Avit. vers. 441. " Gizericus sollicitatus a relicta Valentiniani, ut malum fama dispergit, priusquam Avitus Augustus fieret, Romam ingreditur, direptisque opibus Romanorum Carthaginera redit." Idatii. Episcop. Chronic, ap. Sirmond. opera varia "Venet pag. £39. torn. ii. " Gensericus rex invitatus ex AfricJi Romam ingressus est e^ue urbe rebus omnibus spoliatu," fac. Marcellini Chronic, ap. Sirmond. Tom. ii. pag. !274. II Bell. Vandal, pag. 97. edit, citat. 'Ovis x^^X'^^ w^e oXKm oiowv tv ■60 hut the silence of other writers has discredited hig autho- rity.* The sack of Rome by Ricimer (A. D. 472) is generally overlooked by the apologists of the early invaders ; but it should not be forgotten that the " Barbarians, Arians, and In- fidels" were indulged by the patrician in the plunder of all but two regions of the city.t Considerable stress has been laid upon the grandeur of the structures which still remained, after the above calamities, to be admired by Theodoric, but the praise of what is left does not include a proof that little has been lost : were it so, Rome tvould appear to have not suffered much even in the middle ages, when her fragments were the wonder of the pilgrims of every nation. It must, besides, be remarked, that the larger monuments, the Forum of Trajan, the Circus Maximus, the Coliseum, the Capitol, the Theatre of Pompey, the Palace of the Caesars, are those particularly recorded by the minister of the Gothic monarch, and of those the two latter were in want of repair. J A palace partly in ruins§ on the Pincian mount, marbles and square blocks every where lying prostrate, || the desertion and decay of many houses, must, partially at least, be attributed to the fire of Alaric ; the spoliation of the Van- dals, and the sack of Ricimer. To Vitiges, who came down on Rome like a raging hon,** must be ascribed the destruction ■''■ A7iuo. fr^v ;to?.n/ ytDprtoX^tfoj ftdvtati %y;'i:adfievoi — — fjji/ *p»^}jv tfiitt- itpija^ai. Evagrii Hist. Eccl. lib. ii. cap. vii. p. 298. t Annali d'ltalia, vol. iii. p. 222. 3Iiian 1744. " Ed ecco I'amaro frutto dell' aver gl' Imperadori voluto per lor guardie, o per ausiliarj, gente Bar- bara, Ariana, e di niuna fede. i Cassiodori. Variar. episL 51. lib. iv. epist. v. Kb. vii. ^ " Ut marmora quje de domo Pinciana constat esse deposita ad Ra* vennatem urbem per catabulenses vestra ordinatione dirigantur." Epist. 10. ad Festum. lib. iii. torn. 1. pag. 4S edit- cit- II " Et ideo illustris magmficentia tua marmorum quadrates qui passim diruti negliguntur et ornent aliquld saxa jacentia post ruinas.'''> Epist. vii. lib. i. pag. 26. torn 1. edit. cit. In another place he says, *• Fa- cilis est sedificiorum ruina incolarum subtracta custodia," &c. **^' Quod audiens Vitiges, ut leo furibundus omnem Gothorum exerci- tum Ravennaquc egressus Romanas arces obsidione looga fatigat." Jornand. de rebus Geticis, cap. 00. pag. 178. edit. 1697, 51 q£ the aqueducts, which rendered useless the immense ther- mae ; and as these appear never to have been frequented af- terwards, their dilapidation must be partially, but only par- tially, ascribed to the Goths. Vitiges burnt every thing with- out the walls, and commenced the desolation of the Cam- pagna.* Totilat is known to have burnt a third part of the walls, and although he desisted from his meditated destruc- tion of every monument, the extent of the injury inflicted by that conqueror may have been greater than is usually sup- posed. Procopius affirms, that he did burn " not a small por- tion of the city," especially beyond the Tiber.J An author of the Chronicles records a fire, and the§ total abandonment of the city for more than forty days : and it must be men- tioned, that there is no certain trace of the palace of the Cae- sars having survived the irruption of Totila.|| It must have been at his second entry that this monarch " lived with the Romans as a father with his children," and not at the first, as might be thought from the Annals of Italy.** In the five cap- * St. Anaatasii, de vitis. Pontific Rom. edit. Bianchini. Romae 1731. is vit. S. Silverii. pag. 84. t Tvoiii Si tav-ta 6 Twi'iXaj* tyva (tiv pdfitjv Md^(%ilv ij tSa^oi i^v [lev ovv ttipi^oXov Iv x*^p'-OH rt,o%>joit t'oX^.oT; toaovtov xo^ftXcc, wsw t$ HpftrilMpiov fov ftavtoi (idxiara, i/iftirtfxw is ts t^v oixoBofJUum to, xdjAiati n xo.\ alfroXoytdf afo, iHiXXi 'putiMjv Sf /wyXo/Jorof xar'adT'^SfO^t .... Bellum Gothic, rj ' p. 289. edit cit- X Ibid. lib. iv. cap. 2^ and cap. 33. ^ " Totila dolo Isaurorum ingreditur Rornam die xvi. kal. Januarias, ac evertit nauros, domos aliquantas comburens, ac omnesRomanorumres in prsedam accepit. Ho9 ipsos Romanos in Campaniam captivos ab- duxit ; post quam devastationem xl aut amplius dies Roma fuit ita deso- lata ut nemo ibi hominum nisi bestise morarentur. Hinc veniens Belisa- rius murorum partem restaurat, venienteque Totila ad pugnam resistit." Marcellini. Chronic, ap. Sirmond. p- 295. edit cit. II See a note on the Palatine. ** Muratori seems to confound the two captures. Annali d'ltalia, torn iii. p 410.41 1, ad an. 456, and p. 420. ad an. 549. As the Isaurians were the traitors on both occasions, the confusion was the more natural ; but it certainly was of the second capture tliat Anastasius spoke in the follow- ing words : " Die autem tertia decima Totila introivit in civitatem Roma- nam indict. 14. (IS) per portam sancti Pauli. Tota enim nocte fecit buc- ciaa claogi usque dum cunctus populus fugeret, aut per ecclcsias se ceta- 52 tures of Rome (Aom 536 to 552) in which she was both at* tacked and defended by Barbarians, it is impossible but that many of the architectural ornaments of the city must have been utterly destroyed or partially injured; and the particular mention made by Procopius of the care taken by Narses to restore the capital, is an evidence of the previous injury.* With Totila, the dilapidation of Rome by the Barbarians is generally allowed to terminate. The incursion of the Lom- bards in 578 and 593, completed the desolation of the Cam- pagria, but did not affect the city itself. Their king Liut- prand in 741 had been absolved from his supposed violence;! but Astolphus in 754 did assault the city furiously, and what- ever structures were near the walls must be supposed to have suffered fiom his attack. J From that period Rome was not forcibly entered, that is, not after a siege, until the fall of the Carlovingian race, when it was defended by Barbarians in tlic name of the emperor Lambert, and assaulted and taken by Barbarians, commanded by Arnulphus, son of Carloman of Bavaria (A. D. 896). It has been agreed not to give this in- vidious name to the Germans under the Othos, the Henries, and the Frederics, or to the Normans of Guiscard ; but it is hoped that, without including these spoilers, enough has been said to show that the absolution of the earlier Barbarians from all charge of injury done to the public edifices of Ronje, is only one of the many paradoxes which are to be cleared from the surface of Italian literature. § vet ne gladio Romani vitam finirent. Ingressus autem rex habitavit cum Romanis quam pater cum filiis." In vit. Vigllii. edit- citat. pag- 89. Mu- ratori mentions that the Isaurians opened the Jlsinarian gate at the first capture, and the gatt of St- Paul at the second, and yet he applies the clemency of Totila to his entry by the first, not, as Anastasius says, by the second gate. * De Bell. Gothic lib. iv. cap. 34. The bridges of Narses over the Anio remain to attest his diligence. f Annali d'ltalia, tom. iv. pag. 234. X Annali, fee. tom. iv. pag 312. J^ " In cio nondimeno che appartiene a' pubblici edificj di Roma, doU- biam confessare a gloria de' Barbari stessi, che non troviam prova alcana che da essi fossero rovinati o arsi." Tiraboschi. Storia della Lett. 8tc. lorn. ii. par. i. lib. i- pag- 74. After such an assertion, the learned librariaii need not hare been surprised that the author of the M^moires pour la vie 53 Stanza LXXX. — the Christian- The injuries done by the Christian clergy to the architec- tural beauty of Rome, may be divided into two kinds : those which were commanded or connived at by the Popes for use- ful repairs or constructions, and those which were encouraged or permitted from motives of fanaticism. It will be easy to make the distinction without the division, and very different feelings will be excited by dilapidations for the service of the eity and for that of the church. The conversion of Constantine cannot be denied to have changed the destination of many public buildings, and to have excited a demand for the ornaments of the baptized Basilica, which, we have ocular proof at this day, was satisfied at the expense of other edifices. If an arch of Trajan was despoil- ed to adorn his triumph, other structures were robbed to con- tribute to the splendour of his conversion.* The figure and the decorations of buildings appropriated to the new religion, necessarily were partially changed, and that such a change was detrimental to their architecture, the early Basilical churches still exist as an evidence.! The temples of Rome were not universally shut until the edict of Honorius (A. D. 399), but an Italian writer| has shown, with some sue- de P^trarque (p. 514) exclaimed, " II faut avouer qu'il y a dans votre litte- rature dos choses singulieres et tout a fait incoiicevables." See Storia, Sic torn. V. par- 1 1 . lib. iii. pag. 460- * Nardini, Lib. vi. cap. xv. seetns to doubt or not to determine this, but owns the sculpture is of the time of Trajan. A part of this arch was dug up near the column of Trajan in the time of Vacca. t Look at the church of St Agnes without the walls. The Christians took or imitated ornaments o/'all kinds from the temples. In that church the pomegranates of Proserpine, the emblem of mortality, are on the ba- lustrades of the high altar. A thousand years afterwards, Leda and the Swan were still thought appropriate figures for the bronze doors of St. Peter's. I Pietro Lazeri, discorso della consecrazionc del Panteone fatta da Bo- nifa2{iQ IV. Roiria, 1749. pp. 39, 40. 54 cess, that Christianity had been actively employed before that period in destroying the symbols and haunts of the ancient superstition. A law of Theodosius the Great ordered the destruction of the temples at Alexandria,* and though it has been trium- phantly quoted in favour of christian forbearance, that St. Am- brose! found the baths, the porticos, and the squares of Rome full of idols in 383 ; yet another saint boasts, that in 405 ajl the statues in the temples were overthrown.^ The sale of the idols in Greece had begun with Constantine.§ The law of Honorius, which forbade the destruction of the edifices themselves, proves, if any thing, that such an outrage had been perpetrated, and was to be apprehended. A prohibitory edict must suppose an offence. It is not easy to interpret, in more than one way, the following words of St. Jerome : " The golden Capitol has lost all its splendour ; the temples of Rome are covered with dust and cobwebs ; the very city is moved from its foundations, and the overflowing people rush before the half torn-up shrines to the tombs of the martyrs."|| The squalid appearance of the Capitol is mentioned in another pas- sage of the same writer,** where the temples of Jove and his * Socrat. Hist. Ecclesias. lib. v. cap. xvi. The bishop Theophilui marched about the town carrying in triumph the phalli taken from the Serapeon. t " Non illis satis sunt lavacra, non porticus, non plateae occupatie sirau- lacris ?" D. Ambros. epist. cont Symmach. Lugd. Bat. 1653. p. 455. " Eversis in urbe Roma omnibus simulacris." Serm. de verb, evang. cap. 10. n. 13. in fin- oper. torn. v. par. 1. col. 547. X Dissertazione sulle rovine di Roma, dall' Abate Carlo Fea, Storia delle Arti, &c. torn, iii p. 267 to 416. edit Rom. 1784. The Abate strangely quotes St. Ambrose against St. Augustine, who talks of Rome eighteen years afterwards. § "Ert Si xat iuv E^X»;vwv j'oovj xy.Uutv xa) xav>aipiZv xai Snjnogitvuv to, iv aivtw.i oyaJLjuafo. Socrat. Hist. Eccles. lib. i. cap. iii. II " Auratum squalot Capitolium. Fu%ine et araneorum telis omnia Romae templa cooperta sunt- Movetur urbs sedibus suis, et inundans po- pulus ante delubra serai ruta currit ad martyrum tumulos." Epist. cvii. ad Laetara, Hieron. opera, torn. i. p. 672. Veron, 1734. Yet this was before Christianity could be traced back two generations in Rome. "Fiunt non nascuntur Christiani," says the same saint in the same place. ** " Squalet Capitolium, templa Jovis et caeremoniac conciderunt." Lib. 2. advere. Jovinian, torn. ii. p. 384- S5 ceremonies are said metaphorically, or actually, to have fallen down. In the year 426, Theodosius the younger ordered the destruction of the temples and fanes. A commentator* has endeavoured to reason this away, and another writer has been eager to show, that the mandate was addressed to the eastern Illyricum. To this it may be replied, that it is to be inferred, that province was thought most attached to paganism, arid that the temples had been preserved there, when in the capitals they had been overthrown. An ecclesiastical writer, only twelve years after this law, talks of the order, or of the effect of it, as being general ; saying, that " the destruction of the idolatrous fanes was from the foundation, and so complete, that his cotemporaries could not perceive a vestige of the former su- perstition,''^] The same author has a much stronger expres- sion in another passage : " Their temples are so destroyed, that the appearance of their form no longer remains, npr can those of our times recognise the shape of their altars: as for their materials, they are dedicated to the fanes of the martyrs.^ ''I The opinion of the Cardinal Baronius is positive to the zeal and the destruction. " As soon as this long desired permission of breaking the idols was obtained from the christian prince, the just zeal of the christian people broke out at last in the throw- ing down and breaking of the pagan gods." And he before * Godefroy, [Gottofredus] — Dissertazione sulle Rovine, Sic. p. £84. note(C). The words are, " cunctaque eorum fana, templa, dclubra, si- qua etiam nunc restant Integra, prsecepto magistratuum destrui, conloca- tioneque venerandae Christianae religionis signi expiari praecipinaus." Co* dex Theod. lib. xvi. tit- 10. de Pagan, sacrif. et templis leg. 18. t Tovtov S'^ 'ivtxa xai avta, tCHv itSuXixuv eijxCJv ta Xtvrtofuva ix jSa^pwi^ waSHae^vai jtpootf otlfv <3(J*t tolj fii9' ijf»,a,i iaof*,ivavi fit^Bev ixvoi i^i rtpo- nipai itattdttji ^taaaoetan. Theodoriti Episcop. Cyri. Ecclesias. Hist. lib. V. cap. 37. p. 243. edit Amstelod. 1695. He published his history about 439. See the preface by Valesius. X " Horura namque templa sic destructa sunt ut ne figurarum quidem permansit species, nee ararura formam hujus saeculi homines sciant : ha- rum autem materia omnis martyrum fanis dicata est." From Theodo- refs eighth discourse on the martyrs. The translation of Sirmond is <}uoted, the origiaal Bot being before the writer 56 exclaims, '• It is incredible with what animosity the Faithful at Rome leapt upon the idols.* After this law, no mention is made in the codes of temples or their materials, and if these edifices were legally protected up to the time of Justinian, they must be supposed to be in- cluded under the head of public buildings. Their protection is, however, very doubtful. Temples are not found amongs^ the wonders admired by Theodoric, except the half stripped Capitoline fane is to be enumerated: and Procopius confines his notices to the Temple of Peace, which he alludes to cur- sorily, as being in the Forum of that name,t and to the Tem- ple of Janus, J whose doors there was still enough of pleasantry or paganism left in Rome to attempt to open during the dis- tress of the Gothic siege. Stilicho§ found no law to prevent him or his wife from partially stripping off the ornaments of the Capitoline Temple, and the burning of the Sybilline books by the same christian hero, evinces the temper of the times. In the reign of Justinian, a widow was in possession of the ruins of a temple on the Quirinal, and made a present of eight co- lumns to the Emperor for his metropolitan St. Sophia. || The temples then were partly in private hands, and therefore not universally protected as public edifices. The pagan struc- * " Haec semel a christiaiio principe idola frangendi inipetrata diu op- tata licentia, exarsit christiani populi Justus zelus in desturbandis confrin- gendiscjuc deorum gentilitium simulacris vix credi potest qnanta animositate Fideles Romse in idola insilierint" Annales Ecclesias. cum critice Pagi, torn- vi p. 51- Lucse. 1740. The cardinal talks of a pe- riod rather prior even to the date of Theodoret- Temples, in certain pre- cincts, were perhaps saved from violence- " Claudian boasts that Hono- rius was guarded in the Palatine by the temples of the gods." " Tot cir- cum delubra videt" fcc See note on the Palatine. f Lib- iv. Bell Goth. cap. xxi. Maltrito interprete. X Lib. i. cap. 2.0. ibid. v^ " Nam Zosimus tradit cum Theodosius Romam venit, hoc scilicet anno, Stiliconem ducem utriustjue militise e foribus Capitolii laminas au- reas abstnlisse, ejusque wxorem Serenam nomine, detraxisse o colloRhese deorum matri mundum muliebrcm suoque ipsius illigasse collo." Baron. Ann. Eccl- ad an. 389. in loc et edit citat. For the burning the Syblllrne books, see the same place, and the Iter of Rutilius. II Winkelmann, Osservazioni suU' architettura degli anticht. cap. ir. sec. 4- p. 88. note (B). DissertaaofK". Stc- p. S02- note (D), tora. iii. of Fea's translation. 37 lures would naturally suffer more at the first triumph of Chris- tianity than afterwards, when the rage and the merit of destruc- tion must have diminished. And after the danger of a relapse was no longer to be feared, it is not unlikely that some of the precious vestiges of the ancient worship might be considered under the guard of the laws. In this way we may account for the permission asked in one instance to despoil a temple for the ornament of a church ;* a circumstance which is quoted to show the care of those structures, but which is surely as fair a proof of their neglect.! The consecration of the Pantheon did not take place until 609 or 610, two hundred years after the shutting of the temples ; and that event is allowed to be the first recorded instance of a similar conversion. If many of the immense number of fanes and temples had been preserved en- tire until that time, it is probable that the example would have been followed in more cases than we know to have been adopt- ed. The Christians found the form of the Basilica much more suitable to their worship than that of the temple. They did not consecrate a single sacred edifice for more than two hun- dred years after the triumph of their religion. They cannot be proved to have ever taken the entire form of more than four or five. I What was the fate of the remainder ? We hear oi" fifty-six churches built upon the sites, or supposed sites, of temples. § Is it then too rash to believe that so many struc- tures which we know to have disappeared at an early period; which were abandoned, which were regarded as an abomina- tion, and which tradition declares to have stood upon the sites * " Hie coopcruit ecclesiam omnem ex tegulis aereiis quag levarit dc tenaplo, quod appellatur Romse [Romuli] ex consensu piissimi Heraclei imperatoris." Anastas. in vit. Honorii I. p. 96. torn. i. edit, citat. The temple is called the temple of Romulus in Via Sacra, in the life of Paul I. p. 175. torn. i. he- The church which gained by the robbery was St- Peter's. t Dissertazione, he p. 286. t The Pantheon, Cosmas and Damianus, St- Theodore, St- Stephano in Rotundis (perhaps), St Maria, Egizziaca (doubtful), the supposed tem- ple of Vesta on the Tiber, St- Hadrian (the facade torn off). Can any other be mentioned ? < ^ See De templis gentilitium in templa divorura mutatis, cap. ix. Georg. Fabricii, Descriptio Romae ap. Graev. Aatiq. Roman, torn. iii. p. 46»; 5B of churches, were despoiled, for the most part, by the zeal of the early Christians, and their materials employed to the ho- nour of the triumphant religion ? It is particularly told of Gregory III. that he finished a chapel to certain martyrs in ruins.* Most of the lives of the early Popes inAnastasius con- sist of little else than the building of churches. Those of Ha- drian I., Leo III., and Gregory IV., occupy many pages with the mere enumeration of their names.! Both piety and eco- nomy would prompt the spoliation of the nearest ancient struc- tures connected with the old superstition 5 and the only indul- gence shown to the pagan deities was, when their baptism might, by a little distortion, intrust their fanes to the protec- tion of a similar saint.^ The more prominent symbols of the ancient religion would hardly be suffered to stand after the temples were shut. Da Barga asserts as a fact, that there were marks on the obelisks of their having been all overthrown, with the exception of one, which was not dedicated to any of the false gods of an- tiquity. § However, Constantius erected one of these monu- ments, || and two were standing in the IXth century, if we are to credit a barbarous regionary of that period.** Da Barga * " CEemeterium beatorura martyrum Januarii, Urbani, Tiburtii, Vale- riani, et Maximi, et eorura tecta in ruinis posita perfecit." Anastas- in vit. Gregor. Ill- p- 145. torn. i. edit, citat We find Pope John III. after- wards livin?; in this cemetery. f See an account of the rapid building of churches by the Popes after Gregory TIL in Donatus. Roma vetus, lib. iv. cap. viii- J Thus Romulus and Remus became Cosmas and Daraianus. Romu- lus, a foundling and a warrior, and a healer of young children, was changed for St- Theodore, a foundling and warrior, and also healer of children. Mars had not a violent metamorphosis to reappear as St. Mar- tina ; but there is some doubt of the latter conversion. ^ That of the Vatican. See de privatorum publicorumque, &c. p. 1891, in loco citato. " Neque enim existimare possumus cseteros obe- liscos vel terrae raotu vel fulmine dejectos esse cum vectium et ferramen- torum vestigia, quibus eversi sunt adhuc extant in infimse partis lateribus quje basim spectant." H That now standing before the Lateran. ** The pyramid of Sallust, and the pyramid near St. Lorenzo in Lnci- aiia. The regionary is quoted afterwards. 69 extends his praise of the pontiffs to the destruction of the theatres and circuses, the frequenting of which, dedicated as they were to false gods, Lactantius and Tertullian thought equally nefarious with sacrificing to Jove or Serapis. We know that an attempt was made to put the Circensian games at Rome under new patronage, but that they were entirely discontinued in the year 496, when the people declared they would not have Jesus Christ in the place of Mars, and the provision for the festival was distributed to the poor.* The same writer, after a diligent study of the fathers, and having commenced with the contrary opinion, is convinced that Gregory the Great was the chief instrument of this destruc- tion, and notably of the Circus Maximus, near which he built a church. t The Circus, however, is recorded by the region- ary of the IXth century.J The baths, a greater abomina- tion, he is also convinced owed their destruction to the same piety, and those of Diocletian and Caracalla showed in his time evident marks of human violence. He adds, that there is no proof of these immense structures having been ruined by earthquakes, and to this it may be subjoined, that when the Roman families of the middle ages had occupied the Coliseum and other ancient monuments, they did not take possession of the baths, with the exception of those of Constantine on the Quirinal. The last mention of them in any way that can make us suppose them entire, is in the regionary of the IXth century. Their precious materials, statues, and marble coat' ings and columns, would naturally be carried away when the baths had ceased to be frequented ; but sorae violence must have been necessary to throw down so large a portion of their masses : nor could this be done for tlie sake of grinding down their materials, which are of brick. So early as the tenth century, there were three churches built in the Alexandrine * Baronius, Annal. Ecclesias. ad an. 496. p. 606. torn. viii. edit, citat. f De privatorum publicorumque, &c. p. 1889. \ The last vestiges of the Circus Maximus were carried away about the time of Paul V. Sec Vedute degli Antichi Vestigj di Roma di A16 Gio- vanniii,. in the plate representing those ruins. 8 baths,*' which must therefore have been previously in ruing* It must be confessed, at the same time, that the evidence against the Christians is not equally strong when applied to the theatres and thermae, as it appears to be referring to the temples. As the defence of Gregory the Great has been suc- cessfully undertaken against his principal accuser, it is of lit- tle moment to mention that a Monsignor Segardi, in a speech which he recited in the Capitolt in 1 703, was bold enough te state and enforce his belief of all the charges made against the saint, none of which can be traced higher than nearly six centuries after his death. | The discouragement of mathesis^ tvhether it meant magic or profane learning in general, would be only a presumptive proof of the tasteless ignorance or cre- dulity of the pontiff; and a more satisfactory argument than the silence of his biographers may be deduced from the be- lief that Gregory had but little time or means for the build- ing of churches, and consequently for the spoliation of an- cient edifices. He is not to be suspected of wanton violence, for the destruction of buildings is the subject of one of the complaints with which he bewails the wretchedness of the limes. § A large column was, however, transferred in those days, (608) from some other structure to the Forum, and de- * Roma ex ethnica sacra. Martinelli, cap. ix. p. 167, quoted in Dis- sertazione, fee. p. 358. t Prose degli Arcadi, torn. i. p. 126. Dissertazione, p. 287, note (H.) I Jacob. Brucker, Historiee criticse philosophise, from page 633 t* page 672, edit. Lips. 1768. sect. iii. de nat. et indole et modo Phil. Schol. "in appendlce. Do what he will, Brucker cannot trace any of the stories, the suppression of mathesis, the statue-breaking, or library-burning, higher than John of Salisbury. He made a great mistake in calling Gre- gory the master of John Diaconus, who lived two centuries afterwards, and is reproved by Tiraboschi. Storia, fee. torn. iii. lib. ii. p. 99 to p. 114. edit. Venet. 1795- The story of his throwing down the statues can only be traced to Leo of Orvietto, a Dominican writer of the XlVth century. See Testimonia quorundam veterum scriptorum de St. Gregorio Papa, at the end of the Venice edition of St. Gregory's works ; and St. Gre- gorius Magnus vindicatus, by Gian Girolamo Gradenigo, in the xvith volume. '^ " Ipsa quoque liestrui sedificia videmus.'* Horailia in Ezecbielenj< lib. ii. hom. vi. p. 70. 4om. v. 0pp. omn. Venet. 1776. 61 bleated to the murderer Phocas. The successors of Gregory were less scrupulous, it should seem, than himself. We have seen that Honorius I. removed the gilt tiles from the temples of Romulus. Gregory III. employed nine columns of some ancient building for the church of St. Peter.* The rebuilding of the city walls by four Popes in the same century (Vlllth), Sisinius, Gregory II. and III. and St. Adrian I. was an useful but destructive operation.! Their lime-kilns must have been supplied from the ancient city. It is to a presumed necessity, and not to superstition, that the succeed- ing spohation of the ancient works of art by the Popes must chiefly be attributed ; but it will be observed that the embel- lishment of the christian churches was the chief motive for this destruction, and consequently ranks it in the class at pre» aent under examination. Pope Hadrian I., by the infinite la- bour of the people employed during a whole year, threw down an immense structure of Tiburtine stone to enlarge the church of St. Maria in Cosmedin.| Donus I. (elected in 676) had before stripped the marble from a large pyramid be- tween the Vatican and the castle of St. Angelo, vuJgaily known by the name of the tomb of Scipio.§ The spoil was laid on the floor of the atrium of St. Peter. The history of the middle ages cannot be supposed to have preserved many such precise records ; but the times after the return of the * Anastas. in vit. St. Greg. II. •j- " Qui et calcarias pro restauratione murorum jussit decoqucre.'' Anastas. in vit. Sisinii, p. 127. torn. i. edit, citat. He was Pope in 708^ ** Hie exordio Pontificatus sui calcarias decoqui jussit, et a porta sancti Laurentii inchoans liujus civitatis muros restaurare decreverat, et aliquam partem faciens emergentibus incongruis, variisque tumultibus, praspiditus est." Ibid, in vit. St. Gregorii II. who was Pope from 714 to 731, " Hujus temporibus plurima pars murorum hujus civitatis Romanae re^ stuarata sunt." Ibid, in vit. Gregorii III. p. 145. See also the same in vit. St. Hddriani, p. 210, Gregory was Pope from 731 to 740 — Hadrian from 772 to 794. X '* Nam maximum monumentum de Tiburtino tufo super earn depen- dens per anni circalum plurimum multitudinem populi congruens multo- rumque lignorum struem incendens demolitus est." Anastas. in vit. St. Hadriani, 1. p. £14. edit, citat: he repeats it in the next page. ^ Nardini, Roma Ant. lib. vii. cap. xiii. 62 Popes from Avignon are sufficiently eloquent. Paul II.* em- ployed the stones of the Coliseum to build a palace. Sixtus IV. took down a temple, supposed by Pomponius Lsetus that of Hercules, near St. Maria, in Cosmedin ;t and the same pontiff destroyed the remains of an ancient bridge to make 400 cannon balls for the castle of St. Angelo.J Alexander VI.§ threw down the pyramid which Donus had stripped to make a ^;ay for his gallery between the Vatican and the cas- tle of St. Angclo. Paul III. and his nephews laboured in- cessantly at the quarry of the Coliseum. This pope applied himself to the Theatre of Marcellus, to the Forum of Tra- jan, to a temple usually rallad of Pallas, opposite the Temple of Faustinj^ to that teiUplc itself, to the Arch of Titus, and to a large mass of ancient work which he levelled to the ground in the Piazza del Popolo,|'[ and had not the excuse of piety for this wide devastation. Sixtus V. carrAjd away the remains of the Septizonium of Severus for the service of St. Peter's, and a cotemporary positively mentions that he threw down certain statues still remaining in the Capitol.** Urban VIII. took off the bronze * See Donatus, Roma Vetus, lib. iv. cap. ix, for Paul II. who reigned from 1464 to 1470. f Donatus, he. lib. £. cap. 25. J Stephen. Infessura, Diar. Urb. Rom. says this happened in 1484. The bridge was called that of Horatius Codes, " e le dette palle furono fa- bricate a raarmorata dove fu finito di distruiggere un ponte di travertin© rotto, il quale si chiamava il ponte di Orazio Codes." Scriptores Rer. Italic, torn, iii part ii. p. 1178. 5^ The pyramid was bigger than that of Cestius, was mentioned by Bloiidus, Fulvius, and Marlianus, and is seen on the bronze doors of St, Peter's. Nardini. lib. vii cap. xiii. Alexander reigned from 1490 to 1503. II Venuti, Roma Moderna. Rione x- p. 353. torn. ii. Donatus, lib. iv. cap ix. Dissertazione sulle rovine, &c. p. 399. Paul III began to reign il) 1533, and died in 1549. ** Da Barga. Coraraentarius de Obelisco. ap. Grsev. Antiq. Roman, in loc. citat pag. 19r)l. He mentioned this to the honour of Sixtus, to whom he dedicated his commentary, and he believed it an imitation of thi- conduct of Gregory the Great and others. " Quorum pietatem Pius V. et Sixtus V. Pontifices Max. sic imitati sunt, ut eorum alter 03 from the portico of the Pantheon* to make cannon for the castle of St. Angelo, and to construct the confessional of St. Peter. He took away also some of the base of the sepulchre of Cecilia Metella for the fountain of Trevi.t Paul V. re- moved the entablature and pediment of a structure in the Forum of Nerva for his fountain on the Janiculuin, and trans- ported the remaining column of the Temple of Peace to deco- rate the place before St. Maria Maggiore.J Lastly, Alexander VII. took down the arch commonly called " di ?ortogallo" in order to widen the Corso.§ A little more taste and ingenui- ty might surely have preserved the monument and yet im- proved the modern street. The inferior clergy were, it is probable, much more guilty than the pontiffs, and a volume of no inconsiderable bulk has been composed by one of their own order to enumerate the pagan materials applied to the use of the church. || As long as the ancient monuments were fex ledibus Vaticanis bujusmodi omnes statuas alio amandare cogitaverat, alter e turre capitdlina incredibili sua cum laude dejici jusserit." See his Treatise on the Destroyers of Rome, &.c. p. lo87. in loco citat. * See note on the Pantheon. I Echiiiard. Agro. Romano, p. 295. edit. 1750. Yet Mr. Gibbon says he has nothing else to allege against this pope than the punning saying, *' Q,uod non fecerunt barbari fecerunt Barbarini." Cap. Ixxi. p. 424. torn. xit. J Venuti Roma Moderna. Rione. I. p. 47. tom. i. ^ The remains of this arch are seen in Donatus, fig 32. He (lib. iii.) thought it of Drusus, but without reason. See Nardini, (lib. vi. cap. ix.) Alexander VII. was so proud of this destruction that he chose to record it by an inscription which is here given, because it is esteemed the best specimen of lapidary writing in Rome. Alex. VII. Pontiff. Max. Viam latara feriatse inbis hippodronnim Qua interjectis ffidificiis impeditam Qua procurrentibus deformatam Liheram rectamque reddidit Publicse commoditati et ornamcnto. Anno. Sal Mnc. lxv. The has reliefs on the arch are now in the Capitoline palace of the Con- servatori. y Marangoni, delle cose gentilesche e profane trasporte ad vso e ornamento ddle rhiese ; see also Fioravante Marfin«!lli. Roma, ex ethnica sacra. 01 considered the property of that church, it does not appear that any protection was granted to them, and a writer, who is in some degree an advocate for the clergy, has been obUged to confess that when the ruins were in possession of the mo- dern senate and people, they were less subject to spoliation than in preceding periods.* The superstition of the clei^ and people at large prevented them from attributing a pro- portionate value to objects not connected with their eccle- siastical legends ; and when the relics of the ancient city had begun to be regarded with s >mewhat less indifference, they teem to have been respectable from some pious fablet attach- ed to their sites rather than by any antiquarian importance. Even the great Sixtus Quintus could not restore an obelisk without affixing an inscription devoted to the purposes of re- ligious imposture.! The very study of the ancient relics is perverted, and rendered subservient to church fable. Cardi- nal Baronius, for the sake of finding St. Peter's prison at St. Niccolas in carcere, distorted the position of the Roman Fo- rum : and Nardini himself, in other respects so incredulous, affirms that there is a certain tradition of the confinement of •that apostle in the Mamertine dungeon, and of the fountain springing up for the baptizement of his jailer.§ What were the merits of the latter pontiffs in the preservation of the an- cient fabrics will be seen in another place : the above remarks * The Abate Fea in his dissertation. •)• See the above cited collection of desigas, entitled Vedute degli Anti- chi "Vestigj di Roma, di Alo Giovannili, drawn in the time of Paul V. : every picture is enlivened by a massacre of martyrs^ or a miracle, or a dedication of a church. The Vestal with her sieve, and Curtius leap- ing into the gulf, are the only heathen fictions or facts honoured with any notice. X Christum. Dominum Quem Augustus De Virgine Nasciturum Vivens adoravit Seque deinceps Dominum Dici vetuit Adoro. (^ Nardini, lib. v. cap. xi. See a note on the Roman piety. may have served to show how far their predecessors and thei religion of which they were the chiefs are to be taken into account in treating of the ruin and neglect of these ven- erable monuments. Stanza LXXX. THme, war, flood, and fire Have dealt upon the seven-hilled city^s pride. The agency of the Barbarians and of the catholic religion is far from being an adequate cause for so little being left of that city which was called the epitome of the universe.* It is proposed, therefore, to take a cursory view of the general progress of decay arising from other causes of destruction. A tremendous fire in the year 700 or 703 of the city had made it necessary to rebuild the greater part of Rome.t This was undertaken by Augustus, and the famous eulogium on the grandeur of his restorationj shows what materials were a prey to the fire of Nero, from which only four regions es- caped untouched, and which was fatal to the most venerable fanes and trophies of the earlier ages.§ We may conclude from a passage of Tacitus, that so early as the reign of Vi- tellius a work belonging to the time of the republic was a rare object.)| The fire and civil war which destroyed the Capitol during that reign, that which raged for three days and nights under Titus,** the conflagration in the thirteenth * 'EHtTfofv^ 'trfi o/xsjLttj/jjf is an expression of Athenaeus, quoted in one of the topographers, Julius Minutulus. t Orosii, Hist. lib. vi. cap. xiv. and lib. vii. cap. ii. Fourteen vid were consumed. X " He found it brick, he left it marble ;" or, as Dion says, T^v 'I'l!^>^^.r^v yi^ifjjv jtopoXajSwr Xt^iVijv ifu,v xataXsCjiu. Hist. Rom. lib. Ivi. pag- 829. torn. ii. edit. Hamb. 1750. What is said of Theraistocles is a much finer eulogium. "Oj sTtowjfj* ^i^v rto'Kw intZiV ii(at':^v ivpuv ircvx^t'f^v- Aristopb. Equit. V. 811. " He made our city full, having found it empty." ^ Sueton. in vit. Neronis. Tacit. Annal lib. xv. cap. SB, 39, 40, 41. II " Lutatii Catuli nomen inter tanta C«esarura opera nsque ad Vitelliuro anansit." Hist. lib. iil. cap. 72. ** Sueton. in vit,Tifei» (66 year of Trajan, which consumed a part of the Forum and of the golden liouse of Nero,* must have contributed to the obhteration of the ancient city ; and if there was scarcely any relic of republican Rome when Tacitus wrote, it may be suspected that the capital even of the first Csesars had begun to disappear at an earlier period than is usually ima- gined. The temples under the Capitol bear witness to the falls and fires which had required the constant attention and repair of the senate, t and became more common after the transfer of the seat of government to Constantinople. Po- pular tumults were then more frequent and injurious. In one which occurred in the year 312 the Temple of Fortune was burnt down.J The Palace of Symmachus,§ that of the prefect Lampadius, in 367, and, it is probable, the Baths of Constantine, each suffered by the same violence ; and an in- scription which records the repair of the latter informs us also how small were the means of the senate and people for restoring the ancient structures. || The destruction must not * G. Sincellus in Chronog. p. 347. quoted in Dissertazione, &c. p. £?93. t D. N Constantino . Maximo . Pio . Felici . ac . Triumphatori . sem- per . Augusto . ob . amplificatam . toto . orbe . rem . publicam . factis . consiliisque . S. P. Q. R. Dedicante . Anicio . Paulino . Juniore . C V. Cos. ord. Prsef urhi- S. P. Q. R. iEdem . Concordiae . vetustate . collapsam . in . meliorem . faciem . opere . et • cuitu . splendidiore . restituerunt Tliis inscription was found near the ruins under the Capitol, and trans- ferred to the Lateran, ■whence it has disappeared The words now remaining on the frieze of the same supposed Temple of Concord are Senatus Populusque Romanus Incendio consumptum Restituit. The other temple of three columns, called now Jupiter Tonans, has the letters estitver. I Annaii d' Italia, ad. an. 312. torn. ii. p. 312. ^Muratori quotes Zosimus, lib. ii. c 13. and would make ns ptit this fire to the charge of religion. ^ Amm. Marceilinus, lib. xxvii. cap. iii p. 523. edit. Lugd Bat 1693. " Hie prasfectus [Lampadii] exagitatus est motibus crcbris, uno omnium maximo cum coliecta plebs infima, domum ejus prope Constantinianum lavacrum injectis facibus incendei-at et malleolis," &-c Ibid. II Vid- Nardini, lib. iv. cap vi " Petronius Perpenna magnus Quadra- tianus V C et Inl. Prsef Urb. Constan'ioianas thermas loiiga incurii et abolendse civilis vel potius fcialis cladis vastatione vehementur adflictas 67 be confined to one element. The Tiber, which Augustus* cleansed, which Trajan deepened, and AureUan endeavoured to restrain by a mound,t rose not unfrequenlly to the walls, and terrified the pious cruelty of the Romans into persecu- tion.! The repeated notices of inundation will be seen to form part of the melancholy annals of the declining capital ; but the decay of the city was hastened not only by these na- tural evils and by the violence of hostile conflicts within the w^alls,§ but by the silent dilapidation of ancient structures, both private and public, which appears to have been a de- linquency as early as the beginning of the fourth century, and to have been prohibited afterwards by successive imperial laws. The removal of the emperors to Constantinople en- couraged the spoliation, and if it were possible to ascertain the list of all the ornaments of Rome which were transferred to the seat of empire, there might be a better justification for those who attribute the ruin of the old to the rise of the new capital. II The departure of many of the principal families for the banks of the Bosporus had emptied a portion of the patrician palaces. The public structures we know were not entirely spared, when it was requisite to record the triumph of Constantine ;** and the debasement of the arts having left the Romans no other resource than the apphcation of former trophies to their present sovereign, the same flattery which robbed an arch of Trajan may have despoiled many other ita ut agnitione sui ex omni parte perdita desperationem cunctis repara- tionis adferrent deputato ab amplissirao ordine parvo sumptu quantum publicae patiebantur anguf^tiae ab extremo vindicavit occasu et provisione iargissima in pristinam faciem splendoremque restituit" * Sueton. in vit. Augusti- cap. xxx- t " Tyberinas extruxi ripas.. Vadum alvei tumentis effodi" Vopisc. in vit. Aureliani, p. 215. Aid. edit 1519. t " Tybevis si ascendh ad msenia ; si Nilus non ascendit in arva : si uoelum stetit, si terra movit, si fames, si lues, statim Christianos ad Leones." Tertull. Apclog. cap. xlii. v^ A battle was fought on the Caelian hill in the reign of Aurelian. De- cline and Fall, cap. xi. torn. ii. oct. p. 51. II " Ut non immerito dixeris, non a barbaris, sed prius a Constantino CTersam fuisse Romam." Isa. Vossii de magnitudine Roma; Veteris. aj?. GraeV. Antiq. Roman, torn. iv. p. 1507. p. 1516. cap. vii. ** See page 72, note 1. 9 monuments to decorate the chosen city of the conqueroi'. The laws of the codes* speak of ruins and edifices in decay, Avhich, we may collect from prohibiting clauses, it was the Custom not to restore hut to pillage for the service of new buildings. Such was the disorder in the reign of Valens and Valentinian, that private individuals had seized upon the public granaries : columns and marbles were transported from one city to another, and from one service to another. A law above referred to for the year 364, when quoted in the Jus- tinian code, contains a singular expression not before remark- ed, by which it would appear that at an early period there was an old distinct from a new Rome.t The regionaries do not notice the distinction, and the commentators object to the phrase ; but it seems very probable that the migration from the mounts to the Campus Martius had commenced after the repeated sack and sieges of the city, and the causes of decay before commemorated, had encumbered the ancient site with " XI. Impp- Valentinianus et Valens A A ad Symmachum P. U. " Intra urbeni Romam eternani nullus Judicum novum opus informet: quotiens serenitatis nostrse arbitria cessabunt : ea tamen instaurandi quae jam dcformibus ruinis intercidisse dicuntur universis licentiam damus" Dat. viii. kalend. Jun. Philippis. Divo Joviano et Varroniano Coss. [A. D. J364] lib. XV. tit. 1. Codex Theodos- edit. Mant. 1768. p. 261. The law is repeated the next year. The next law mentions the seizure of the gra- naries. By several other laws of the code under the same title, it appears that the public buildings in the provinces were also falling to decay. The following law speaks more strongly of the decay and the spoliation at Rome- XIX. Impp. Valens, Gratianus, et Valentinianus A A A ad senatum. Nemo prsefectorum urbis aliorumve judicum, quos potestas in excelso locat, opus aliquod novum in m-be Roma inclyta moliatur, sed excolendis veteribus intendet animum. Novum quoque opus qui volet in urbe moliri, suc\ pecunia, suis opibus absolvat, non contractis veteribus emolumentis, non effossis nobilium operum substructionibus, non redivivis de publico saxis, non marmorum frustis spoliatarum sedium reformatione convulsis. Lecta in Senatu. Valente V. et Valentiniano. A A. Coss. [A. D. 876.] Read deformatione, according to three editions, p. 269. The Lawsxxvii. and xxix. of the same title are to the same purpose. t Vid. Cod. Justin, lib. viii. tit xii. torn- ii. pag. 471. edit Gotting. 1797. which repeats the law above, beginning " Intra urbem Romam veterem et novam,^^ and inserts "nisi ex suis pecuniis hujusmodi opus constnir* voluerit." 69 ruins. The Campus Martius had been surrounded by tht wall of Aurelian, and from that time it may be supposed tha the vast fields, the groves of the Augustan mausoleum, th= innumerable porticos, the magnificent temples, the circus and the theatre of that district,* were gradually displaced or choked up by the descending city. As late as the reign o. Valentinian III. we find mention made of the Campus Mar- tins as if it were still an open place.! Yet it is possible that the quarter preserved the name, as at present, long after it had lost its original appearance and destination. It is not to be overlooked, that in the reign of Constantius, the architectural wonders of the city were still sufficient to astonish a stranger ;| that when the regionaries wrote under Valentinian, § a pompous list of public monuments might still be collected for the admiration and confusion of posterity ;|| that when Alaric' took the town, the private houses contained the buildings of a whole city •,** and that even after that cala- mity the old age of Rome was more attractive than the youth of any other capital. There was, doubtless, still enough left to confer the palm upon the ancient metropolis,!! *whose ruins at this day form a striking contrast Avith the few relics of the second capital. The stranger could not per- * See a beautiful description of it in Strabo, lib. v. f He was killed in the Campus Martius, according to Cassiodorus and Victor Tutonensis ; but Prosper, in his Chronicle, names another place called the two Laurels. Annali d'ltalia, ad an 455. tom- iii. p. 163- t " Deinde intra septem montium culmina, per acclivitates planitieni- que posita urbis membra collustrans et suburbans, quiquid viderat pri- mura, id eminere ante aiiacuncta sperabat," Stc he. Amm. Marcel, lib. xvi. cap. X. p. 145. Lugd. Bat. 1693. } He was elected Emperor in 364, and died in 375. II The two regionaries, Rufus and Victor, occupy twelve pages, in double column, of the folio Thesaurus of Grsevius, tom. iii. ** 'Ott, Ixaotos tZiv (/.lyoXuv oixiov tr^i 'Puifitji, wj ^<3i,v artavta tt-xiv iv iavtqt, oftoea rto^ij avfifistpoi ^Bvvato txi»*>' Olympiod. ap Phot. Biblioth. edit. 1653, p. 198. E/5 hofwi aatv fti'Kiv, rtoXtj a^ea f^vpia xcv^et, — ft Manuel Chrysoloras made a comparison between Rome and Con- stantinople : he did not believe what he had heard of Rome, but found that her very ruins were a sufficient proof of her former superiority This was in 1464, at least his book has that date. See .Aluseum Itall yt. 96, tom. i. 1724. 70 ceive what was lost : the native still flattered himself that every injury might be repaired ; and such was the stability of the larger monuments, that to the poet 'and consul Ausonius, at the end of the fourth century, Rome was still the golden, the eternal city.* In the panegyrics, however, of her last admirers, we may trace her decay. The private palaces, which are celebrated by Olympiodorus, have no encomium from the poet who survived the ravage of Genserick, and who still extols the baths of Agrippa, of Nero, and of Dio. cletian.t The care and admiration of Theodoric were di- rected to those objects whose solidity or whose position pro- tected them from sudden dissolution, but which were still shaken by violence of age.J Cassiodorus confesses that his master, the lover of architecture,§ the restorer of cities, could only repair decently the tottering remnants of anti- quity. || He owns, also, the partial abandonment, whilst he laments the rapid decay and fall of the ancient habitations.** In the interval between the encomiums of Cassiodorus and the notices which Procopius has left of the miracles of Rome,tt the aqueducts had been broken ;i| the thermae, the araphi- * Epij;rammata quatuor, fee. Auson. Op. pp- 78, 80, edit. Burdigal. " Prima urbes inter Divuin domus, aurea Roma." Clarae urbes, p. 195. f " Hinc ad balnea non Neroniana " Nee quae Agrippa dedit, vel ille eujiis " Bustum Dalmaticse vident Salonfe," kc. Sidon. Apoll. Carmen ad Conseptium, 23. written 466. Dissertazione, &e. p.271. t The Palatine had been occupied by the troops of Genserick, the Theatre of Pompey had been injured by fire, and was in decay — quid non solves O senectus, quae tam robusta quassati? Cassiod. var. lib. iv- epist. 51. ^ "Araator fabriearum, restaiirator civium." Excerpta de Theod. auctoris ignoti in fine Amm. Marcell- II " Et nostris temporibus videatur antiquitas decentius innovata." Var< epist. 51. lib. iv. ** " Facilis est sedificiorum ruina incolarum substracta custodia et cito vetustatis decoctione resolvitur, quod hominum praesen tia non tuetur." ft De Bello Gothico, lib. i. cap. xix. XI The population must have been much diminished, since the Tiber was esteemed insalubrious, and the wells of Rome had been found in- sufficient for the people of Rome since the year 441, A. U- C See Jul. Frontin- de acquaeduct. lib. i. ap. Graev. Antiq. Roman, torn. iv. 71 theatre, the theatres, had all been abandoned, and the ad- miration of the historian is confined to the tomb of Hadrian,* to the infinite number of statues,t the works of Phidias, Lysippus, and Miron, and to the solicitude with which the Romans preserved as much as possible the more stable edi- fices of their city, and, amongst other objects, a venerable relic of their Trojan parent.:}: Even these detached orna- ments must have been much diminished during the Gothic sieges. The Greek soldiers were not restrained from fling- ing down the statues of the mole of Hadrian on the heads of their assailants ;§ and Belisarius must have demolished not only such smaller materials, but many a contiguous structure, for his repeated rebuilding of the walls. We have other decided proofs of the early desertion and decline of the Caesarean city. An edict of Majorian specifies as a common offence, that those who built houses had recourse to the an- cient habitations, which could not have been dilapidated in the presence of a resident population, and which we know by the same edict to have been abandoned to the feeble pro- tection of the laws. II The same fact is deducible from an- other prohibition, which forbade the extraction of precious metals from the ancient structures, a crime noticed before * De Bello Gothico, lib. i. cap. xxii- f De Bello Gothico, lib. iv. cap. xxiii. J " '■ 0«. yt xai TloTjvv twa iSc/SapapujUcrcu aiwva, tditt jfoXtu; iuauaavfo oixoSofuai, scat Tu>v iyxaXJuUTiiaiMi/tuv to, TiXttata oaa ovov ti mT XP'*^^ ** •toaovttft tofiTJxoi, xai tci afttifitXiia^ai, SI Ofstriv fwv rtirtoi^fievuv dvtexii'' t'tifuv •toi jtai oaa fMnjfuui, tov yivovf iXsXtift'to stt ' iv fotj xcu ij vaivi avviiov, iov -giji }to\tos olxtstov, xai «tj -toBc xHtai, ^/a^a rtavrf^wj dftistov. rotOixi^ijS'. pag. 353. edit. 1607. cap. xxii. of the translation. The due weight must be given to these words : but the solidity of the structure seems, after all, the chief pretection of the buildings. §De Bello Gothico, lib. i- cap. xxii. The Faun was found when Urban VIII cleansed the ditch of the castle. II Majorian reigned from 457 to 461. " Antiquarum asdium dissipatur speciosa constructio ; et ut aliquid reparatur, magna diruuntur. Hinc Jam occasio nascitur ut etiara unusquisque privatum aedificium con- «truens, per gratiam judicum prsesumere de publicis locis neces- saria, et transferre non dubitet." This is quoted in the Decline and Fall, &tc. cap. xxxvi. p. 175. vol. ti. oct. note-8. 72 the end of the fourth century,* and one of the evils whicit the regulations of Theodoric were intended to prevent.1 This rapine supposes a solitude. In the subsequent periods of distress, when every precious object had been removed from above ground, the plunderers searched for subterranean treasures, and tore up the lead of the conduits.J The mere necessities of existence became the only care of a wretched population, fi'om whom it would be unreasonable to expect either taste or» attachment to the trophies of their former grandeur. That many of the works of sculpture fell where they stood, has been proved by the spots where they were found, after centuries of neglect. The same indifference "which allowed the baths of Titus to be gradually buried beneath the soil, prevented the Laocoon from being removed from the niche which it originally adorned. § The Toro, the Hercules, the Flora, the Callipygian Venus, were all found in the baths of Caracalla, of which most probably they had been the ornaments. The condition of the Romans may account for their ne- glect of monuments, which the elements themselves conspire to destroy. An earthquake shook the Forum of Peace for seven days, in the year 408 ;|| but such were the convulsions of nature in the succeeding century, that Gregory the Great** naturally * In 567 Lampadius, the praefect, took all the lead, and iron, and brass, so collected, without any remuneration to the plunderers. Ainm- Mar- cellini, lib. xxvii. cap- iii. pag. 524. edit. 1693. •j- Praeterea non minimum pondus, et quod facillimum direptioni est mollissimum plumbum de ornatu msenium referuntur esse sublata. Varlar. epist. lib. iii. cap. xxxi- pag. 50. edit. 1679. I " Et confestim centenarium illud, quod ex eadem forma in atrio ec- clesiae Beati Petri decurrebat, dum per nimiam neglectus incuriam plum- bum ipsius ccntenarii furtim jam plurima ex parte exinde ablatum fuisset" Anastas. in vit. S. Hadriani L He is talking of the repair of the aqueduct and pipe of the Acqua Sabbatina. { Pliny (Nat. Hist. lib. xxxvi.) s:ij'S, the Laocoon was in the house of the Emperor Titus. " Laocoonte qui est in Titi Imperatorisdomo." They show the red cellular niche in the baths or palace of Titus, in which this groupe is said to have been found. II Romae in foro pacis per dies septem terra mugitum dedit. Merecellini Comitis, Chronic, ap. Sirmond. tom. ii. p. 274. '"^■^ St. Gregory, in his Dialogues, lib. ii. cap. xv. reports and confirms a 73 supposed the evils of which he had himself been witness t© be the principal cause of the ruin around him. To these 'earthquakes, tempests, and inundations, he attributed not only the depopulation of the city, but the fall of her dwell- ings, the crumbling of her bones.* The rise of the Tiber is specified as having overthrown many of the ancient editicest Pestilence and famine within the walls, and the Lombards without, had reduced her to a wilderness, and it is to be believed that the population shrunk at that period from many spots never afterwards inhabited. An important no- tice, hitherto never cited for the same purpose, informs us, that at the second siege of Rome by Totila, there was so much cultivated land within the walls, that Diogenes, the go- vernor, thought the corn he had sown would be sufficient to supply the garrison and citizens in a protracted defence. J The district of the Forum, however, had not yet become a solitude. A column, erected to the emperor Phocas, is an evidence that the ancient ground plan had not been buried in the year 608. And the same may be said of the Forum of Trajan, upon evidence not quite so precise. § The accretion prophecy of St. Benedict. " Cui vir dei respondit : Roma gentilus non exterminabitur, sedtevipesttaihus coruscis,turh{nibus,ac ttrrCR inotu faiigata marescet in semet ipsa. Cujus prophetise mysteria nobis jam facta sunt luce clariora, qui in hac uibe dissoluta msenia, eversas domos, destructas ecclesias tuibine cernimus ; ejusque a;dificia longo senio lassata quia ruinis crebrescentibus prosternantur videmus." The reader may recol- lect how Mr. Gibbon has disposed of the prophecy. * " Quid autem ista de hominibus dicitnus cum ruinis crebrescentibus ipsa quoque dcstrui sedificia videmus quia postquam defecerant homines, etiam parietes cadunt ossa ergo excocta sunt, vacua ardet Roma . . . ." 18 Homil. in Ezechiel. lib. ii. hom. vi. pag. 70. torn. v. opp. omn. Venet. 1776. This was in 592. f " Tanta inundatione Tyberis fluvlus alveum suum egressus est tan- tumque excrevit, ut ejus unda per muros urbis influere atque iu ea maxi- inam partim regionis occupavit ita ut plurima antiquarura sedium msenia dejiceret." St. Gregor. Vita, per Paul. Diacon. torn. xv. p. 253. opp., S. Greg. See also Paul Diacon- de gestis Langob. lib- iii- cap- xxiii. for the pistis inguinaria- I Procop. de Bello Gothico, lib. iii. cap. xxxvi. Nardini, lib. i. cap. viii. has made the remark, but with another object in treating of the walls. \ The biographers of St. Gregory mention the Forum. " Idem ver© 74 cil' soil in the vklleys, and even the mounts of Rome, could not liave taken place under the foot of a population which was never entirely lost, and it is only from the total desertion of these buried sites that we must date the forma- tion of the present level.* It appears that in 825 there were within Rome itself cultivated lands of considerable extent.t The contiguity of the immense ancient fabrics, when once in decay, must have been dangerous during earthquakes, which might shake them down, or in inundations, when the water might be confined, and prevented from retiring by the walls of buildings as large as provinces. X Such open spots as were decorated by single monuments were hkely to be first over- whelmed by the deposite left by the water, and collected round those monuments. On this account the Forums, and even the Palatine, although an eminence, being crowded with structures, appear to have been buried deeper than the other quartei's, under the deposite of the river, and the materials of perfectissimus et acceptabilis Deo sacerdos, cum quadam die per forum Trajani, quod opere magnifico constat esse extractum procederat." Paul. Diacon. in loc cit- pag. 262. " Quod Gregorius per forum Tra- jani, quod ipse quondam pulcherrimis tedificiis venustabat,'' fete. Joan. Diacon. in loc cit. p. S05. Paul Wanefrid was a Lombard of Forli, and taken prisoner by Charlemagne ; the other deacon wrote in 872. Vid. (\(i triplici S- Gregorii magni vita in loc. cit. pag- 246. * Mr. Gibbon, cap. Ixxi. p. 405- tom. xii. singularly gives Addison the nu-'vit of a discovery, which any one who had seen a picture of the half- buried ruins under the Capitol, and the hole in which the column of Tra- jan was sunk, might, and must, have anticipated. f The monastery of Farfa in 825 obtained from the Emperor Lo- tliaire I. the confirmation of a grant to Pope Eugenius of two farms. " De duabus massis juris monasterii Sanctae Bibianse, quod est positum infra nobilissimam urbem Romanam, vel quae ad easdem massas perti- uere dignoscitur, quarum una Porapejana, et alia Balagai nuncupata" Chronicon Farfense, ap. Script. Rer. Italic, tom. ii. par. ii- pag. 383. edit. 17ii7. We know S. Bibiana to have been in Rome. Muratori says, " Dalla Chronica Farfensa apprendiamo, avere Papa Eugenio donate al inonastero di Farfa due masse, appellate Tuna Pompeiana, e I'altra Bala- gai, poste infra nobilissimam Urbem Romanam : il che ci fa conoscere, die entro Roma stessa si trovavano de' Buoni Poderi coltivabili." Annali d'ltalia ad an 825. torn. iv. p. 533. Perhaps his translation and conclusion are rather licentious- I " Lavacra in modum provinciarum structa" astonished Constantius. 4rnm. Marccll. lib. xvi. cap. x. ^5 the crumbling edifices. The latter accumulation must be taken into the account, when it is recollected, that the bro- ken pottery of the old city has, at some unknown period,* been sufficient to form a mount of 150 paces high, and 500 paces in length. The population was too languid to dig away •the obstructions, and employed their remaining strength in transporting the smaller materials to the more modern and secure quarter of the town. It is impossible to assign a precise date to the total deser- tion of the greater portion of the ancient site ; but the ca- lamities of the seventh and eighth centuries must have con- tributed to, if they did not complete the change. A scarcity! in the year 604, a violent earthquakej a few years after- wards, a pestilence§ in or about the year 678, five tremen- dous inundations of the Tiber|| from 680 to 797, a second fa- * De eo perpetuum apud antiques silentium. Donati Rom^Vet.lib. iii. cap.xiii. The most reasonable account of the Testacean mount seems to be that of Lucius Faunus, lib. iii. cap. iii. de antiquit Urbis Romse, ap. Sallengre, torn. i. p. 248. There was a college of potters established by Numa. The vicinity of the water made them fix themselves in the meadow on the banks of the Tiber. Is was strictly forbidden to fling any obstructions into the river. The mound rose by degrees, and there- fore unnoticed. It is strange, however, that the regionaries should not mention it. t " Eoque tempore fuit fames in civitate Romana grandis." Anastas. invit. Sabiniani. pag. 134. X " Eodem temporfe factus est terrae motus magnus mense August! in- dictione undecima." Ibid, in vit. S. Deusdedit. He was pope from 614 to 617. 5j " Similiter mortalitas major, atque gravissima subsecuta est mense suprascripto, Julio, Augusto, et Septemb. inurbe Roma, qualis nectem- poribus aliorum Pontificum esse memoratur." Ibid, in vit. S. Agathon, pag. 142. Paul. Diaconus says, " Tantaque fuit multitudo morientium ut etiam parentes cum filiis, atque fratres cum sororibus apud urbem Ro- mam ad sepulchra deducerentur." De gestis Langob. lib. vi. cap. v. (|In685— 710— 717— 791— 797. Of that in 717, it is mentioned, "Per dies autem septemaqua Romam tenebat perversara." Anastas. in vit. S. Gregor. ii. p. 155. Paul. Diaconus tells, " His diebus Tyberis fluvius ita inundavit, ut alveum suum egressus multa Romanse fecerit exltia civitati j ita ut in via L soever quantity of the precious metals could be collected in a residence of twelve days. He had the gleanings of Gen- serick, but he still left the bronze of the portico to be plun- dered by Urban VIII. and many other metallic decorations, to be melted into bells for the churches in the subsequent rise of the modern town, and for other pious uses of the Popes.* The period of the exarchate and of the Lombard domina- tion is that of the lowest distress of Rome.t The most dili- gent inquiry has been unable to discover who were her ac- knowledged masters, or what was the form of her domestic government. J Subsequently to the extinction of the exarchate by Astolphus in 752, she had been abandoned, but was never formally resigned by the Greek Caesars. After Gregory II. in 728 or 9, and Gregory III. in 741, had solicited the aid of Charles Martel against the Lombards,§ and against the ico- * The Abate Fea (Dissertazionc, |>. 407, et seq.) allows that whatever was saved was saved hy miracle, and probably because buried under some heavy ruin, as the gilded Hercules, the Wolf, the Belvedere Pine. The bronze doors of Cosmas and Damiatius were saved because they be- longed to a church ; those of St. Hadrian were carried away to the Late- ran. There was a statue of bronze, a bull, in the Forum Boarium in the time of Blondus- " . . • . A foro Boario ubi sereum taurum aspicimus." Roma inst. lib. i- fo. 10. t " Ipsa urbium regina Roma, quamdiu Langobardorum Regnum vi- guit, summis calamitatibus exagitata, atque in pejus ruens ex antique splendore decidebat." Antiq. Med. ^vi, torn- ii- p. 148 dissertatioSl. X Annali d'ltalia, torn. iv. pag. S04. ^ Annali d'ltalia, torn. iv. pag. 281, 280. Mr. Gibbon has observed that " the Greek writers are apt to confound the times and actions of Gregory the 2d and 3d," (cap. xlix. p. 132, note 20. vol. ix. octavo.) and by some accident the following extraordinary er- ror has been left in his text. " In his distress the first Gregory had im- l)lored the aid of the hero of the age, of Charles Martel." (cap. xlix. pag. 147. vol. ix. octavo.) The first Gregory had been dead more than a century. The historian could hardly mean the first of the 2d and 3d, which would be too equivocal an expression : besides which there was but a letter written, and there are some doubts as to the embassy of Gregory II. to Charles Martel ; and the decided, perhaps repeated suppli- cation to him was from Gregory III. (See Muratori, torn. iv. pag. 286, ad an. 741) Nor does the mistake look like an error of the press, to be read, " Gregory had first implored," &c..sjnce the application to Pepii\ \vas made by Stepheo II. 78 noclast tyrants of Constantinople, it might be thought that the supremacy of the Greek empire hcid ceased to be recognised. Yet a certain respect, at least, for the successors of Constan- tine, not only from the Romans but from their new patricians, Pepin and Charles of France, may be shown to have endured within two years of the coronation of the latter hero* in the year 800. It is certain, however, that about this period the Romans had recurred to the memory of their former institu- tions, and had composed a corporation of uncertain form and number, advised rather than commanded by the Pope, who had silently usurped the sovereign title of our Lord. By this senate or this spiritual master had the Byzantine title of Consul or Patrician been offered to Charles Martel and con- ferred on Pepin. A letter is still preserved from the Senate and People to Pepin, Patrician of the Romans,! and the reply of the Frank monarch, recommending a deference to their bishop Paul I. must imply that the domestic sovereignty was divided between the pastor and the community at large. This mixed government, which must have sometimes assum- ed the appearance of anarchy, and at others degenerated into despotism, was contemplated with horror by those who re- called the lawful imperial sway of the Caesars,]: and either to the people or the popes was applied the opprobrious regret that Rome was subject to the slaves of slaves, and to a barba- rous populace drawn together from all the corners of the earth. The twelfth line of the following verses is the same read backwards as forwards, and is quoted from Sidonius Apol- * " Viene a fortificarsi la conghiettura proposta di sopra, cioe che dura- va tuttavia in Roma il rispetto all' Imperador Greco, ed era quivi ricono- sciuta la sua autorita." Annali d'ltalia, ad an. 708. torn. iv. pag. 492. Gregory III. is usually called the first of the independent popes, but he certainly acknowledged the superiority of Eutichius exarch of Ravenna, to whom, as Anastasius tells us, he applied for permission to use six co- lumns of some structure for St. Peter's church. t The S6th letter of the Codex Carolinus, "scritta da tutto il senato e dalla generalita del Popolo Romano al re Pippino Patrizio de' Romani.'' See — Annali d'ltalia ad an. 763. torn- iv. p. 381, X Saint Gregory himself made the distinction between the republican subjects of an Emperor and the slaves of a King. " Hoc namque inter- reges gentium et republicae Imperatores distat, quod reges gentium, do- mini servorum sunt, Imperatores vero Reipublicse doraini liberorum." Lib. xiii. epist. 31. 79 linaris to denote the retrograde fortune of Rome ; " e do- ue^e," says Muratori, " M/ia volta parere qualche meravigliosa Nobilibus fueras quondam constructa patronis Subdita nunc servis. Heu male Roma ruis Deseruere tui tanto te tempore reges : Cessit et ad Graecos nomen honosque tuum In te nobilium rectorum nemo remansit Ingenuique tui rura Pelasga colunt. Vulgus ab extremis distractum partibus orbis Servorura servi nunc tibi sunt domini, Constantinopolis florens nova Roma vocatur Moenibus et muris Roma vetusta cadis. Hoc cantans prisco prsedixit carmine vates Roma tibi subito motibus ibit amor. Non si te Petri meritum Paulique foveret Tempore jam longo Roma misella fores Mancirihussubjecta jaccns macularis iniquis Inclyta quae fueras nobilitate nitens.* A boasted descendant of Camillus was still left at the begin- ning of the fifth century ;t but the unknown author of the above ^.omplaint would lead us to believe that the last relics of the lloman race had in his time disappeared. When the history of the pontiffs becomes all the history of Rome, we find each moment of peace and prosperity employ- ed in rebuilding the walls, in burning lime, in constructing churches and shrines of martyrs, the materials of which must, it is evident, have been supplied from the deserted ruins. * See— Antiq. Med. ^vi. edit. 1739. tom. ii. p. 148, 149. dissertat. 21. Muratori warns us not to think that the servorum servi alludes to the popes. The title may not yet have been used, but to whom do the words allude ? The phrase is singular, and has been applied to only one character of antiquity, to Sextus Pompey ; " Libertorum suorum Hber- tus, servorumque servus" Veil. Patercul. Hist. lib. ii. cap. 73. The slave of slaves had become the king of kings, when a dedicator to Sixtns Quintus told him " Ingentcs si facta decent ingentia reges Te regum regem Sixte quis esse neget." Da Barga, Comm. de obelisco, ap. Grsev. tom. iv. p. 1931. f St. Jerome had a female correspondent who was a descendant of Ca- millus ; and St. Gregory was of the patrician family of the Gordians. See — Bayle's Dictionary, article Camillus. 80 The repair of former damages, and the increasing population after the establishment of the Carlovingian princes, augment- ed the application to the same common quarry. The recon- struction of an aqueduct to convey the acqua Vergine to the Vatican by Hadrian I. at the end of the eighth century, seemg to prove that the Campus Martius, and the quarter about St. Peter's, were then chiefly inhabited.* The altar of the apos- tles had gathered round it a crowd of votaries who became ?!ettlers, and for whose protection Leo IV.t surrounded with a wall the suburb of the Vatican. Respect for the mother of the churches, and the supposed scene of the baptism of Con- stantine, had preserved the inhabitants in the other extremity near the Lateran,J and the greater was the population at these opposite points, the more complete must have been the desertion of many immediate quarters within the vast circuit of the walls. It has been already observed that some of these spots had become cultivated lands in the beginning of Che ninth century. The edifices of old Rome are lost for more than 200 years, but reappear in a regionary of the eighth or ninth century, who might make us suspect that the abandonment had not yet reached the Forum. His notice includes the following monu' ments, which he divides amongst the regions after tlie exam- ple of former itineraries. § The Thermae of Alexander, of Commodus, of Trajan, of Sallust, with his pt/r amid, of Diocle- tian, of Constantine, and some baths near St. Silvestro in ca- pite, a temple of Minerva, the temple of Jupiter,|| the Roman Forum, the Forum of Trajan, the three Circuses, Maximus, * Anastas. in vit. Had. p. 189. j He was Pope from 847 to 855. \ Another aqueduct, the Claudian, was repaired for the service of the Lateran. The Marcian water was also again brought to Rome by Hadrian I. It seems that these streams and the acqua Trajanahad been before par- tially recovered, it is uncertain by whom, and had again fallen into decay. ^ See — Bianchini's edition of the lives of the popes. Opusculum XV. prolegomena ad vitas Roman. Pontificum, torn. ii. pag- cxxii. Bianchini calls him a regionary of the eighth or ninth century. The date 875 has been assigned to him- See — Dissertazione suUe rovine, fee. p. 326. II Bianchini calls this the temple of the Capitoline Jupiter, without giv- ing any reason. 81 Flaminius and Agonalis, the arch of Drusus called recordailo- nis, the Arch of Severus, that of Titus and Vespasian, and of Gratian, Theodosius, and Valentinian, the Flavian Amphithe- atre, that called Castrense, the Capitol, the Septizonium of Se- verus, a Palace of Nero, another attributed to Pontius Pilate, and a third near Santa Croce in Gerusalemme, the Theatres of Pompey and of Marcellus, the Pantheon, the Mica Aurea, the Antonine and Trajan Columns, a NymphtEum, an Obelisk near S. Lorenzo in Lucina, the Horses of the Baths of Constantine, the Horse of Constantine, the Elephant called Herbarium, a statue of the Tiber, several aqueducts, and nameless porticos. It is worth while to observe how many of these monuments have been partially preserved up to this day, so that one might suspect that those of a slighter construction had already yield- ed to violence and time, and those only had remained which were to be the wonder, perhaps, of many thousand years. It is impossible to determine in what state were these monuments, although they might be supposed entire from the epithet broken being applied to the aqueducts,* At the same time we know- that the Theatre of Pompey had been in decay three hundred years before, and that the ThermaB had been altogether disused for the same period, and must therefore have been in ruins. t The Baths of Sallust were, it may be thought, partially de- stroyed when the fire of Alaric was fatal to his palace. It is probable that many of the above objects served merely as land- marks amongst the many churches which form the chief mcmo- rabilia of this ecclesiastical pilgrim, who adorns the twelfth re- gion with the head of St. John the Baptist. In the same man- ner the Forum of Trajan is noted by two authors of the; twelfth and thirteenth centuries, although it must have been in ruins previous to either of those dates. | * The aqueducts are called Formoe., a name whicli Cassiodorus gives them. Variar. lib. vii. Form vi. torn, i- pag. 1 15. t We find mention of baths in the lives of the popes, as in that of St. Hadrian, " In balneis Lateranensibus ;" but the Tlierma; had never been frequented since the siege of Vitiges. The total change of manners in mo- dern Rome has left it without a single bath open to tlie public ; nor is this a usual commodity in private houses. i Benedicti Beati Petri Canonici, liber Pollicitus, ad Guidonem deCas- tello, written, says Mabillon, ante annum mc.xliu quo Guido iste ad pon- 82 Tiie rising importance of the new city accelerated the ruin of the old. From the time that Rome again became worth a contest, we find her citizens in arms, sometimes against each other, sometimes against the pretenders to the imperial crown. The spirit of feudalism had distracted her inhabitants. Adal- bert and Lambert, the Dukes of Tuscany and Spoleto, were invited to inflame the civil furies,* and in the beginning of the tenth century, Alberic, Marquis of Camerino, had obtained the dominion of Rome, and the hand of the famous Marozia.t The expulsion of Hugo, king of Burgundy and Italy, the last of the three husbands of that " most noble patrician," by Alberic the son of the first, and the repeated assaults of the city by the ex- pelled tyrant, arc not to be forgotten amongst the causes of di- lapidation. J The assumption of the imperial c "own by the first Otho, in 962, and the revolts of the Roman captains, or pa- tricians, with that of Crescentius, against Otho the Second and tificatus assumptus est, dictus Celestinus 11- see — Ordo Romanus XI. ap. Mabill. Museum Italicuni, torn. ii. pag. 118. edit. Paris 1724. See — Liber de rairabilibus Romae ap. Mootfaucon. Diarium Italicutn, cap. XX. p. 28S to p 301. edit Paris 1702. In the year 1162, there was a church with gardens and houses called St. N^ccolo alia colomia Trajana. (Dissertazione suUe Rovine, pag. S55.) Flavius Blondus, without mentioning his authority, says that Synamachus 1. built two churches there. Syramachus was pope in 500, " In ejus fori excelsis mirabilibusque ruinis Symmachus primus Papa ecclesias S. Ba- silii et item S. Silvestri et Martini extruxit- Rom. instaurata, lib. ii. fo. S8. edit. Taurin 1527- * A. D. 878, according to the Annali d' Italia. t A. D. 910 to 925. } Mauratori calls Marozia " Nobilissima Patricia Romana," and ap- pears to disbelieve a part of the " laidezze e maldicenze" charged to her by Luitprand, the repository of all the pasquinades and defamatory libels of the times. Annali d' Italia ad an. 911 torn. v. p. 267. Marozia had one lover a Pope, Sergius UI., and her son by him, or more probably by her first husband, Alberic, was John XL, Pope from 931 to 935. Guide, her second husband, Duke or Marquis of Tuscany, was master of Rome from 925 to 929 ; and Hugo, her third husband, from 929 to 932- Alberic her son reigned as patrician and consul from 932 to 954 ; beat away Hugo from Rome in 932, in 936, and perhaps 941, and although he had married the king's daugliter, contributed to his expulsion from Italy in 946. His son OctHvian reigned as patrician, or as Pope John XIL, until 962. 83 Third,* had renewed the wars in the heart of the city, and it is probable had converted many of the larger structures into ruins or strong holds. The next appearance of the monuments is when they had. become the fortresses of the new nobility, settled at Rome since the restoration of the empire of the west.t Some of these monuments were perhaps entire, but it is evident that bome of them were in ruins when they first served for dwell- ings or forts : such must have been the case with the theatres of Marcellus and of Pompey. How they came into the hands of their occupiers, whether by grant of the Popes, or by seizure, or by vacancy, is unknown ; one instance has reached us in which Stephen, son of Ilildebrand, consul of Rome in 975, gave to the monks of St. Gregory on the Caelian mount an ancient edifice called the Septem solia minor, near the Septizonium of Severus, not to keep, but to pull down.f The character of those to whom the present was made, and the purpose for which it was granted, will account for the ruin of the ancient fabrics in that period. The monks were after- wards joint owners of the Coliseum, § and the columns of Tra- * Rumani capitanei patriciatus sibi tyrannidem vindicav^re — See — Ro- muald Salem. Chronic. Miiratoii- aniiali. torn. v. p. 480. ad an. 987. The Romans rovultcd in 974 987. 995, 996. Crescentius stood a siege against Otho III., and was beheaded in 998 ; and another revolt took place in 1001, at the coronation of Conrad II. In 1027, the Germans and Romany again fought in the city. f The Frangipani, the Orsiiii, the Colonni, were certainly foreign, and perhaps German families, although they all pretended a Roman de- scent The first when reduced, in the beginning of the seventh centurj-, to Mario, a poor knight, Signorof Nemi, publi.'jhed their tree to identity their family with that of Gregory the Great, '• del quale si prova il prin- cipio e il fine mi vi fc una largura di 200 anni in mezzo." See — Relation di Roma del Aimaden, p. 139 edit. 1672, which may be consulted for some short, but singular notices, respecting the Roman families. t Mittarelli, Annali Camaldolesi, torn. i. Append, num. xli Coll. 96_ " Donatio templi de Septem soliis minoris facta a Stephano Jilio quondam Ildebrandi considis et duds eidem Johanni abbah. Id crft illud meuin templum, quod septem solia minor dicitur, ut ab hac die vestrse set potes- tati et voluiitati pro tuitione turris vcstra; quae septem solia major dicitur ad destrucndum et suniplus deprimendum quantum vobis ^lacuerit." P. 9G. edit. 1755 =tJM left upon the summit. X rt naii d' itilia, d an. 1105. p. 344. torn. vi. ^ See — a note on the Pantheon. 85 of armies encamped on the Aventine, and moving from the tomb of Hadrian to the Lateran, or turning aside to the Co- liseum or the Capitol, as if through a desert, to the attack of the strong posts occupied by the respective partisans of the Pope or the Empire. Gregory VII. may have the merit of having founded that power to which modern Rome owes all her importance, but it is equally certain, that to the same pontiff must be ascribed the final extinction of the city of the Cassars ; a destruction which would have been classed w th the havoc of religious zeal, did it not belong more properly to ambition.* The Emperor Henry IV., the troops of the Pope's nephew, Rusticus, and the Normans of Robert Guis- card, were more injurious to the remains of Rome, from 1082 to 1084, than all the preceding Barbarians of every age. The first burnt a great part of the Leonine city, and ruined the portico of St. Peter : he destroyed also the long portico from the Ostian gate to the church of St. Paul. In his last irruption he levelled a part of the Septizonium to dislodge Rusticus, razed the fortresses of the Corsi on the Capitol,! and battered the mole of Hadrian. The Normanst and Sa- * Annali d'ltalia. ad an. 1082, 1083, 1084. torn. vi. p. 273 to 282. t '' Domos Corsorum subvertit, dehinc septem s(»lia, quihus Rusticus nepos prsedicti Pontificis continebatur, obsidere cum ninltis machinis bellicis attcntavit, de quibus quamplurimas columnas siibvortit " Baroniis. Annales Ecclesiast ad an. 1084. torn. xvii. p. 551. Lucae 1740 t " Robertus autem dux Romam cum exercitu noctu ingressus dum ad ecclesiam Sanctorum Quatnor Coronatorum adveni«si!t ex con^ilio Cincii Romanorum Consulis ignem urbi injecit: Rom:ini igitur rii novU tate perculsi dum extinguendo igni toti incumbennt, Dux ad arcf m St. Angeli continuo properans.'^ • . . Leo Ostiensis. (a cotemporary ) ap Barou. p. 553 in loc cit. Bertholdus has these stronger words : " Robertus Guiscardus, Dux Northraannorum in servitium Sancti Petri post kal- Maii Romam armata raanu invasit, fugatoque Henrico totam urbem Gregorio Papai rfbellem f)enitus expoliavit, et magnam ejus partem igni consumpsit, eo quod Ro- mani quendara ejus militem viilneraverunt." Ap Baron loc. citat. p. 552. A poet, Hugo Flaviniacensis, says only, " Quil)usdam sedibus incensis." — Another author, " Immo ipse cum suis totam regionem illam, in qua Ecclesia Sancti Silvestri, ct Sancti Laurentii in Lucina sitse sunt, penitus destruxit, et feread nihilredegit Regiones illas circa Lateranum et Colisajum positas igne coraburere." C*u'din. do Ardgonia et aJiur. yacens of Guiscard's army, with the papal faction, burnt the town from the Flaminiau gate to the Antonine column, and laid waste the sides of the Esquiline to the Lateran ; thence he set fire to the region from that church to the Coliseum and the Capitol, or, according to some authorities, to the Tiber. He attacked the Coliseum for several days, and finished the ruin of the Capitol. It is reasonable to believe that the flames were arrested by the wilderness which had before existed to the south of these positions, and, indeed, in other quarters. Besides the former notice of farms in Rome, we find that there were lands cultivated and uncultivated in the ninth re- gion of the city, about the Thermas of Alexander, so early as the year 998.* The conflagration of Guiscard created or confirmed a soli- tude much more extensive than is embraced by that " spa- Vitae Pontif. Rom- Ap. Script. Ror. Ital. torn. iii. p. 513. — And other tvriters, " Per diversa Inca civitatis misccre jubet incendia Ipsis erpo superatis, et civitatn in ma^na sui parte coliisa." Anonymi Vatican!. Historia. Sicula. ap. Scriptor. Ker. Ital. torn viii. p. 773. It is not knowa uhen he lived. " L'ux itaquc Romara ingressvis cepit maxiraam partem urbis, hostiliter incendfns tt vastans a Palatio Laterani usque Castellum S. Angeli, ubi Papa Gregorius oppugnabatur." Romualdi Salernitani Chronicon. ap. Sciiptor Rer- Ital toin. vii. p 175. He Avas archbishop of Salerno from 1153 OP 1154 to 1181. "II che forse non uierita niolta credenza :" so Muratori think?, Annali ad an. 10t54. '■'' Urbs majsima ex parte incendio, vento admixto accrescente, consu- mitur " Gauferdi Malatcnse, ibid. torn. v. p 5oo. Hist Sicula Landulfus Senior, the Milanese historian, whom the Avriters all attack, because he declared aj;;iinst the mad ambition and celibacy of Gregory VII., and for the introduction of « hom in his collection, Muratori thought himself obliged to make an apology, has these strong expressions on Guiscard's fire. " Quid multa ? tribus civitatis partibus, mullis que pa- latiis Regum Romanorura adustis, Gregorius demum fillis male crisraa- tis filiabusque pejus consecratis, cui jam spes ulla vivendi in civitate non crat ab urbe exilitns cum Roberto Salernum profectus est. Ubi per pauca vivens tempora taniquam malorum paenam emeritus est" Hist. Mcdiol. lib- iv cap iii Script- Rer- Itji lie torn. iv. p. 120 Landulphus was a coteraporary writer. ^ There were three churches also in these precincts rising amongst crypts and fragments of columns : a sign to whom the destruction ^ould be- referred. See — Dissertazione, &tc. p. 357. 87 cious quarter between the Lateran and the Cohseum," to which it is confined by our own historian. From that period at least must be dated the desolation of a great part of the Esquiline, and all the Viminal, and much of the Ccelian hill, including the irretrievable ruin perhaps of the Coliseum, and Certainly of many of the remaining structures of the Fo- rums and the Sacred Way.* A cotemporary writer! says, that all the regions of the city were ruined ; and another •pcctator, who was in Romej. twelve years afterwards, la- * There was a proverb, even in this day, which speaks the beauty of the Roman edifices : " Unde in proverhiuin dictum est : Mediolanum in dericis, Papia in deliciis, Roma in (Edificiis, Ravtnna in ecdesiis." Lan- dulfi, Sen. lib. iii cap. i. p. 96. Flavins Biondus quotes the epistles of Gregory VII., and his biogra- pher Pandulphus, above cited, for the battles of the Coliseum, but they are not mentioned in the first, they may be in the second. He attributes the desolation of Rome, as he saw it, to Guisc;ird ; this, however, was not Caesarean Rome, but that restored by the Popes. " Ea nos et ;ilia Henriri quarti temporibus gesta considerantes, conjiciraus urbera Roraa- nam quae Pontificum Romanorum beneficio imminutas longe supra vires non parum instauraverat, tunc prima ad banc quae nostris inest tempori- bus rerum exiguitatem esse perductara." Quoted in Dissertazione, fete, p. 842. Query instauratu erat. f Boninzone, bishop of Sutri, in Dissertazione, p. S'lO. X Hiidebert, archbishop of Tours, was in Rome, 1106. William of Malmsbury, De gestis Rer. Angl. lib. iii p. 1S4, gives the following elegy- Par tibi Roma nihil, cum sis prope tota ruina Quam magna fueris integra fracta doces. Proh dolor ! urbs cecidit cujus dum specto ruinas Penso statum, solitus dicere ; Roma fuit. Non tamen annorum series, non flamma, nee ignis Ad plenum potuit hoc abolere decus. Tantum restat adhuc, tantum ruit, ut neque pars stans ^quari possit, diruta nee refici. Confer opes, ebur, et marmor, superumque favorem Artificum vigilent in nova facta manus. Non tamen aut fieri par stanti fabrica muro Aut restaurari sola ruina potest. Cura hominem potuit tantani componere Romam Quantum non potuit solvere cura deum. Hie 5uperum formas superi mirantur et ipsi, Et cupiunt fictis vultibus esse pares. naents, that although what remained could not be equalled what was ruined could never be repaired. What chiefly ex- cited his astonishnient was the beauty of the statues, which the gods themselves might survey with envy, and which, in his opinion at least, were worthy of being worshipped on the sculptor's account. WilUam of Malmsbury, who reports the elegy of the latter writer, also informs us, that, comparatively speaking, Rome was now become a little town. In those times the rage of the conflicting factions was often vented against the houses of their enemies, and their destruction must have involved that of the neighbouring monuments, or of those in which the towers of the Roman nobles were, in many instances, built. In 1116 the citizens revolting against Pope Paschal II., threw down* several of the dwellings of the Pietro Leone family. The Emperor Lothaire II. in 1133 or 1134, pitched his camp on the Aventine. Innocent II. was in possession of the Lateran, the Coliseum, and the Capitol ; and the partisans of the anti-pope, Anaclete, had tne Vatican, the castle of St. Angelo, and many other strong plaoes of the cityt. In the annals of the Xllth century these strong places of Rome are mentioned as if they stood not in a city, but in a province. The struggles between the pontiffs and the people, the revolution of Arnold of Brescia4 renew- Non potuit natura deos hoc ore creare Quo miranda deum signa creavit homo Vultus adest his numinibus, potiusque coluntur Artificum studio quam deitate sua. Urbs felix si vel dominis urbs ilia careret Vel dominis esset turpe carere fide. George Fabricius gives a part of this elegy in his Epistola Nuncupatoria prefixed to his Descriptio Romae, ap. Greev. torn. iii. * Annali d' Italia, torn, vi, p. 384. f Mr Gibbon says, " I cannot recover in Muratori's original lives of the Popes (Script. Rerum Italicarum, torn. iii. p. 1-) the passage that at- tests this hostile partition," namely, "whilst ©ne faction occupied the Vatican and the Capitol, the other was intrenched in the Lateran and the Coliseum," cap. Ixxi. p. 420. vol. xii. The division is mentioned iu Vita Jnnocentii Papje II. ex Cardinale Aragonio, Script. Rer. Ital. torn. iii. part i. p. 435, and he might have found frequent other records of it at other dates, t It began in 1143, and was matured in 1145. 89 <»d the contests of Vitelliiis and Sabinus for the Capitol, from which were alternately driven the adherents of the new se- nate and friends of the Pope. The Basilica of St. Peter's was fortified for the people, and in those commotions (in 1145) it is recorded that many of the towers and palaces of the Roman nobles were levelled with the ground.* Antiquaries have been able to catch a glimpse of the ruins fifty years subsequently to the fire of Guiscard, in some ac- count of the ceremonials and processions of the papal court, written by a canon and chorister of St. Peter's,t who, besides those monuments whose names are recognisable, mentions several objects disfigured by the barbarism of the times. The caution before given must be repeated. There is good reason to suspect that many of the monuments which he mentions were not entire, but were noted as landmarks, as they might be at this day. The same canon gives us to un- derstand, that the roads in the city were then so bad, that in the short days the Pope was obliged to conclude his proces- * Annali d' Italia, torn. vi. p. 481. t Benedict!. Beati. Petri. Canonici, &tc. quoted before. He mentions the Arch of Gratian, Theodosius, and Valentinian, near the iEiian bridg;e ; the Obelisk of Nero ; the Circus of Alexander, in the. Piazza Navona ; the Temple of Concord, near the Arch of Severus ; the Arch and Temple of Nerva (Nervije) ; a Temple of Janus ; the Forum of Trajan ; the Forum of Csesar ; the Arch of Titus and Vespasian, called Septem Lucernarum ; the Arch of Constantine ; the Coliseum ; the Theatre of Pompey; the Pantheon, which he is thought to have called Porticus Agrippinse, though in fact he calls it Sancta Maria Rotunda, Militioe, Tiberianae, on the Quirinal ; the Arch of Piety ; the Memoria, or Tem- ple, or Castle of Adrian ; the Templum Fatale, near the Temple of Concord ; the Pine, near the Palatine ; the Arcus Manus Carncae ; the Mamertine dungeon ; the Asylus, through the flinty road, (Silicem) where Simon Magus fell, and near the Temple of Romulus ; the Meta Sudans ; the Sepulchre of Romulus, near the Vatican ; a Portico of the Gallati before the Temple of the Sybil ; the Temple of Cicero ; the Portico of the Comori, or Crinori ; the Basilica of Jupiter ; the Arch of Flaminius ; the Porticus Severinus ; the Temple of Craticula ; the island Milit ena and the Draconorium ; the Via Arenula ; the Theatre of Antoninus ; the Palace of Cromatius, where was the Holomitreum, or Oloritreum ; the Macellus Lunanus, or Eumanus (an Arch, probably that of Gallimus); the Temple of Blarius, called Cimber ; the Merulana ; the arcus in La- thone ; the house of Orpheus. )See — Musonni. Italicinn, tarn. ii. p. 118 to 157, edit. Paris, 1724-. 9a sion before he came to the station prescribed by the ritual.* The language in which these ceremonies are described, is as barbarous as the ceremonies themselves ; of which a cardinal, who transcribed another ritual belonging to the same century, has also preserved an extraordinary specimen. It would be difficult to find a more deplorable picture of human vicissitude than that afforded by the contrast of the triumph of Pompey through republican Rome, and the progress of a Pope of the twelfth century, on the day of his coronation, preceded by his sub-deacon with a spitting-towel, followed by the new senators with their provision of wine, meat, and towels, and picking his way, amongst fallen fragments, from shrine to shrine, and ruin to ruin.t The monuments are occasionally mentioned in the struggle^ between the pontiffs and the emperors of the house of Suabia, and the intestine factions of the nobles, in which the strong places, the Coliseum, the Septizonium, the Mole of Hadrian, the Palatine castle of the Frangipani, were repeatedly as- saulted and taken. In 1150 the people attacked and took certain towers belonging to the adherents of the Pope and William of Sicily. We find, in the Annals for 1167, that the Germans of "^ " Sed propter parvitatem diei et difficultatem vise, facit slationem ad Sanctam Mariam Majorem, et vadit in secretarium.'' Ibid, num- 17, p. 126 The triumph of Aurelian lasted so long that it was dark before he reached the palace, but from a very different jeason. "Denique vix nona hora in capitoliiim pervenit. Sero autem ad palatium," Vopisc. in Vita Aurelian. f " Ante dominum Papam aliquantulum sequestratus incedit prior subdiaconus re<;ionarius cum toalea, ut cum voluit dominus Papa spuere posbit illo gausape os suum mundare." Ordo Romanus XII by Oriciu» de Sabellis, cardinal and chamberlain to Celestine III He was after- wards Honorius III The ritual was used before the year mcxcii. See — Museum Italicuni, torn, ii p 165 to p. 220. " Senatores, quando comedunt, habere debent lavinam mediam vini et mediam claret i in unaquaque die coronationis. Eiisdem etiam dntur toalea, ubi comedunt, a panetariis, et postmodum redditur ipsis Pro quadragintacomeslionem rccipiunt unaquaque die coronationis" Onufrius Panvinius renders lavinam " psalraam, or salmam, quo nomine saginji seu onus ac sarcina equi aliusque animalis oniferi intelligitur." Ibid- num- xxxvi. p. 202. As the new senators had food for foiiij allowed, them, we may guess at their usual number, which has been so uncertain. 91 Frederic Barbafossa assaulted the Vatican for a week, and the Pope saved himself in the Coliseum.* The Colonna were driven from the mausoleum of Augustus. After the Popes had begun to yield in the unequal contest wilh the senators and people, and had ceased to be constantly resident at their capital, the field was left open for the wars of the senators, that is, of the nobles themselves. The Colonna and Ursini then appear amongst the destroyers of the city ; and when, to arrest their violence, the people elected the senator Brancaleone (in 1252), the expedient of the Bolog- nese magistrate was to throw down not only 140 of the towers of the refractory nobles,! but, if we are to believe the Augustan historyj of Henry VII., " many palaces of kings and generals, the remains of ages since the building of the city, the thermae, the fanes, and the columns," of the old town. If this were the case, the tumults and tlie repose of Rome were alike destructive of her ancient fabrics. This record » Annali, torn. vi. p. 576, et seq. t " Brancaleo interim senator Roraanus, turres nobilium Romanorum diruit et eorundem dominos incarceravit." Mat. Paris. Henric III p. 972, edit. Lond. 1640. " Eodem quoqne anno senator Romanus Brancaleo videns insolentiam et superbiam nobiliinn Romanorum non posse aJiter reprirai nisi castra eorum, qui erant quasi spoliatorum carceres, prosternerentur, dirui fecit eorundem nobilium turres circiter centum et quadraginta, et solo tenus complanari." Ibid. p. 975. " Fuerat enim superborum potentum et malefactorura urbis malleus et extirpator, et populi protector et defensor, veritatis et justitia; imitator, etamator." lb. p. 9tiO. i " Nee hactenus subsistlt viri audentis [Jacob-Joannis-Arloti degli Stephanesci] acerbitas ut si quidem Brancaleonem, Bononiensem (qui regum, ac dutum per tot ab urbe condita soecula palatia, thermas, fana, columnas, verterat in ruinas) ipse memorabiliter sujieraret." Alberti Mussati, historia Auj^usta, de gestis. Henrici VII. lib xi. rubrica xii. ap. Scriptores Rerum Itaiicarum, torn. x. p. 508, edit Mediol. 1727. Mus- satus was a Paduan, born about the year 1260, a laureate poet, and an historian. See the preface by Muratori, prefixed to the collection, torn. X. kc Mr. Gibbon (cap. Ixix. p. 286 to 288, vol. xii. oct.), who has copio ' the eulogy of MatthcAV Paris, does not seem at all aware that Brancaleone applied his hammer to the ancient fabrics. Mussatus, however, was * contemporary. 12 92 iBust, however, t^ believed with gome reserve ; and, indeed, the same history informs us, that there were relics which escaped the vigour of this administration, and which a rival of the fame of Brancaleone (in 1313) intended to destroy. But his labours were confined to a single tower, which im- peded the passage of the people across the Tiber, at the bridge of Santa Maria. There were intervals between the death and choice of the Popes, when the city seems to have been unprovided with any recognised authorities, and the senate itself had no re- presentative. Such an interregnum occurred after the death of Nicholas IV. in 1291, and six months of civil war* are de- scribed by a spectator as having reduced Rome to the condi- tion of a town besieged, bombarded, and burnt. The petraricB, or engines for discharging stones, which unfortunately sur- vived the loss of other ancient arts, had arrived in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, to the pernicious perfection of dart- ing enormous masses, perhaps of 1 200 pounds weight. They are noted amongst the instruments of destruction employed at Rome in this and the subsequent period, and were erected on the basilicas and towers.t A year previously to the attempt of the second Brancaleone, J * " Assumpti popiUi capitolia jussu Ascendunt : sed morte ducis vis annua raense Clauditur Ursini, timidoque furentis in arma Descensu, dum scripta petit, dum fossa sigilla. Quo gradior ? quid plura sequor, quae texere iongum ? Hoc dixisse sat est ; Romam caruisse senatu. Mensibus exactis, heu! sex, belloque vocatum In scelus, in socios, fraternaque vulnera patres. Tormentis jecisse viros immania saxa reii'odisse domos trabibus^ fecisse ruinas Jgnibus, inceijsas turres " See — Vita Ceiestini Papse V. opus metricum. Jacobi Cardinalis S. Georgii ad velum-aureum. Cosevi et in Papatu familiaris. Script. Rer. "Ital. torn. iii. p. 621, cap. iii. This classical cardinal chooses to correct velabro, the actual old word, into velum-aureum. The fra6c5 were bat- tering rams, called gatii, cat's-head. t Antiq. Med- ^Evi. Dissert. 96, p. 432, tom. 1. Italian edition. The Romans used them in the ninth century- t His name was James- John -Arloti-Stephanisci. See the above note 93 flie Emperor, Henry VII. had found that all the towers had not been thrown down by the Bolognese senators, for he was obliged to drive the Annibaldi from the Torre de' Militii, from the tower of St. Mark, and from the Coliseum ; and, so late as the reign of Martin V. there were forty-four towers in one borgo of the city.* The coronation of the Emperor Henry VII. was attended with battles fought in every quarter of the city from the Vati- can to the Lateran ;t and whilst he received the ensigns of universal empire in the latter church, his rival John, the bro- ther of Robert of Naples, was in possession of the fortress (the church) of St. Peter's, and of several other posts in thef heart of Rome. The fall of houses, the fire, the slaughter, the ringing of the bells from all the churches, the shouts of the combatants, and the clanging of arms, the Roman people rushing together from all quarters towards the Capitol — this universal uproar was the strange, but not unusual, pre- lude to the coronation of a Caesar. A spectator of these disasters records, J that they continued after the emperor had retired from Rome to Tivoli, and that the cardinals appre- hended the total destruction of the city. It is doubtful to what period to assign an account of the ruins which a pilgrim saw and described before this last calamit}'. The book on " the Wonders of itome" "which has been before cited, should appear to have been written before Brancaleone 1, p. 135. The Abate Fea, Dissertazione, &.c. p. 861, 362, seems to overlook that this Stephanisci and his adherents did not succeed. " Sed secus ac prKmedStati sunt, fortuna, successusque vota eorum distraxere," says Mussatus, in loc citat- The Abate believes he discovers signs of modern work on the portico of the temple of Faustina, and above the arch of Pantani, which he thinks were thrown down by Brancaleone- * Dissertazione 26, sopra le Antichita Italiane, p- -146. torn. i. edid- Mi- lan, 1751. t " Historia Augusta, Albert. Mussati in loc. citat. lib. viii. Rubrica rV. conversatio Cxsaris cum Ronianorum principibu^, et cohortatio ad dandas fortiiitias." Henry made a speech to these prujces, and called them '« QutnVfes." See Rubrica V. X See — Iter Italicum Henrici VII. Imperat. Nicolai episcopi Botron- tinensis ap. Scriptores Rerum Italicarum, torn. ix. p. 835. "Rebus quas narrat interfuit," Muratori says, in his preface, " Deinde Cardinales videntes commotionem populi et urbis eontHi«»m destructionem." Ibid. p. 919. 94 had commenced his operations against the towers of the no- hles, for there are a great many of such objects noticed by the pilgrim. The eyes and ears of this " barbarous topogra- pher"* are not so valuable to us as Mr. Gibbon appears to have supposed ; for notwithstanding his use of the present tense, he speaks certainly of many objects either partially ruined or totally overthrown. The number of the theatres and arches seen by him is nearly equal to that in the plan of old Rome : he talks of an imperial palace in the Palatine, of a palace of Romulus, and, in other respects, is ambitious of telling what he had heard, rather than what he had seen.t Of his antiquarian lore our historian has given a specimen in his account of the Capitoline bells and statues ;t and to this may be added, that he calls the Fasti of Ovid the martyrolo- gy, because it contains mention of nones and kalends. The pilgrim was as learned as the people of Rome, some of whom, in the next century, believed that the sports of the Testacean mount, and the rolling cart-loads of live hogs down that hill, were the festal amusements of Cato and Cicero. § The absence of the popes from the year 1306 to 1376 has been esteemed peculiarly calamitous to the ancient fabrics : but this supposition is founded upon the apparently false con- ception, that the bishops of Rome protected the monuments, and that the integrity <3f many, even of the larger structures, was protracted to the fourteenth century. The only protec- tion of which the remains of the old town could boast, during the middle ages, proceeded from the popular government, * Decline and Fall, kc cap. Ixsi. p. 399, vol. xxl. oct. f " Palatia magna imperatorum ista sunt, palatium majus in Palentio monte positum." See — Montf. Diar. Ital. in loc. citat. p. £G4. " Palatium Romuli inter S. Mariam novum et S. Cosmatem ubi sunt duae sedes pietatis et concordiae, ubi posuit Romulus statuam suam auream dicens." " Non cadet nisi virgo paret ; statim ut parturit viigo, statua ilia corruit.'' Ibid. X Decline and Fall, cap. Ixxi. p. 395, torn. xii. octav. ^ "Ludi fiunt agonales, aut in campo quern Testaceum appellant, quem nonnulli hodie ex vulgo putant veturum senatorum gestamen extitisse." See — Frederici III. advent. Rom. ap. Museum Italicum, torn. i. p. 258, edit. 1724. ♦ 95 which on one occasion prohibited the injury of the column of Trajan under the pain of death.* The senate and the peo- ple were invested with the nominal guardianship of the edi- fices not occupied by the nobles, and in much later times may be discerned to have shown some respect to the memorials of their ancestors. A northern German, who came to Rome in the pontificate of Pius IV. and whom Flaminius Vacca calls a Goth, applied to the apostolic chamber for permission to ex- cavate at the base of some of the ancient structures, in search of treasure, which his barbarous ancestors were supposed to have left behind them in the precipitancy of three days plun- der. The German was told that permission must be obtain- ed from the Roman people, to whom the monuments belong- ed. It seems that he procured leave to commence his la- bours ; but having been observed to dig deeply, the populace, alarmed at his progress, which endangered their arch, and in- dignant that the Goths should return to complete the spoliation" of Alaric, drove the excavator from his labours, with a vio- lence which proved nearly fatal to him. t Had it been possible to establish the popular government which was the aim of Rienzi, during the absence of the popes, the Romans, whose love of liberty was to be kept alive by a constant reference to the institutions of their ancestors, would have been taught to venerate, though bhndly, the trophies of their former glory. The tribune would not have partaken with Colonna alone the pride and pleasure to be derived from the study of those eloquent remains. Notwithstanding their pastor had deserted them, and they were a prey to the disor- ders occasioned by the struggles of their ferocious nobles, the period of the exile at Avignon is distinguished for the decency and magnificence with which their public functions were per- formed.! In proportion as they shook off the papal yoke, * See note, p. 84. t Mcmorie di Flaminio Vacca, p. xvi. num. 103. The Memoirs were written in 159t,andareat the end of oneof the Italian editions of Nardini. t " Veniva la persona del Senatore con maesta a cavallo sopra bianca chinea, he. " Veniva il Gonfaloniere del Popolo Romano: e questo dignita si in pace, corae in guerra porta lo standard© grandc della liherta Roniana, il quale era di tabi creraesino con Ic Icttere -}- S. P. Q. R." 96 they appear to have recovered some portion of their ancient splendour, and a change has been observed to have taken place in their manners so early as the middle of the thirteenth centiu ry. They received the unfortunate Conradin* in 1268 with a state which surprised his suite. The desolation of the city during the papal residence at Avignon has been selected from ages of more rapid destruction, because it has been trans- mitted to us in all the colours of eloquence. Petrarch, how- ever, has been unfairly. quoted as a proof of what Rome suf- fered by the absence of the popes.! It should be remember- ed, that his first wish was the establishment of the republic of Rienzi, and the second, the reign and presence of an em- peror at Rome : whilst the reconciliation of the shepherd with his flock was only the last resource which remained for a patriot and a Roman who had lost all hope of liberty or em- pire. J One of those shepherds. Innocent VI., thought Pe- trarch a sorcerer. The poet of the Capitol§ was overwhelm- ed first with delight and then with regret. He complained that the very ruins were in danger of perishing ; that the nobles were the rivals of time and the ancient barbarians ;|| See Ordine e magnificenza de i magistrati Roraani nel tempo che la Corte del Papa stava In Avignone. Antiq. Med. JEvi. torn. ii. p. 855, Dissert. 29. The wi-iter praises not only their scarfs and velvets, but their justice, and virtue, and republican pride. * Antiq. Med. ^vi. dissert. 23. torn, ii. pag. 313. Muratori, accord- ing to the old way of thinking, talks of " quel ladro del lusso." f By the Abate Fea in his dissertation. X Decline and J^'ali, c Ixx. pag. 363. torn. xii. oct. See also M^moires pour la vie de Fetrarque, liv. iii. torn, ii p. 335. for Rienzi : also liv. iv. torn, iii- pag. 66. for the emperor Charles. For what he thought of the church, see liv. iv. p. 277. torn. iii. edit. Amsterdam, 1747. v^ For the surprise of Petrarch, when he first came to Rome, see his letter to John Colonna, de reb. familiarib. epist. lib. ii. ep. xiv. pag. 605- edit. Basil, 1581, "ab urbi Roma quod expectat," &c. Colonna, how- ever, had told him not to expect too much. " Solebas enim, memini, uie vcniendo dehortari hoc maxime prtetextu, nc ruinosoe urbis aspectu iiimse non respondente atque opinioni meee, ex libris conceptae, ardor meus ille lentesceret." Colonna's evidence is better than Petrarch's, who would be astonished now, as we are, at what still remains. [j Nee te parva raanet servatis fama ruinis- Quanta quod integrse fuit olim gloria Romce 97 and that the columns and precious marbles of Rome were de- voted to the decoration of the slothful metropolis of their Neapolitan rivals. Yet it appears that these columns and marbles were taken from palaces comparatively modern, from the thresholds of churches, from the shrines of sepulchres, from structures to which they had been conveyed from their original site, and finally from/a//m ruins.* The solid masses of antiquity are not said to have suffered from this spoliation, and the edifices, whose impending ruin affected the laureate, were the sacred Basilicas then converted into fortresses.! The great earthquake of 1349 may have been more pemi- Reliquiee testantur adhuc ; quas longior setas Frangere non valuit ; non vis aut ira cruenti Hostis, ab egregiis franguntur civibus, heu ! heu ! Quare rabies occurre malis, hoc scilicet unum. Quod ille [Hannibal) nequivit Perfecit hie aries — tua fortia pectora mendaz Gloria non moveat, &.c. Carmina Latina, 1. ii. epist. Paulo Annibalensi, xii. pag. 98. Petrarch presumed that the ruins around him had been occasioned by the mischiefs which he saw, and which wure partly the cause of dilapidation. * The distinction is carefully to be observed. The words of Petrarch are: " Denique post vi aut senio collapsa pallatia, quae quondam ingentes tenuerunt viri, postdiruptos arcus triumphales (unde majores horum for- sitan corruerunt) de ipsius vetustatis ac propriae impietatis fragminibu3 vilem questum turpi mercimonio captare non puduit." See — Epistolahortatoria ad Nichol.Laurentium. Trib. P. Q. R. de eapessenda libertate, pag. 536. " Sed quo animo, da quaeso misericors Pater temerariae derotioni meac veniam, quo inquam, animo, tu ad ripam Rhodani sub auratis tectorum laquearibus soranium capis, et Lateranum humi jacet et ecclesiarum ma- ter omnium tecto carens, et ventis patet, ac pluviis, et Petri ac Pauli sanctissiraae domus tremunt, et apostolorum quae nunc sides fuerat jam ruina est." Petrarch wrote this to Urban V. who began his reign in 1352- Epist. rer. sen. lib. vii. epist. i. opera, pag. 815. torn. ii. f " Quod templa celeberrima, et sanctissima in Christianitate, augusta ilia monuraenta pietatis Constantini Magni, ubi Surami Pontifices, cum insignibus supremae suae dignitatas capiunt possessionem Sedis Apostolicae penitus neglecta maneant, sine honore, sine ornamentis, sine iiistaura- tione, etomni ex parte ruinas minentur." This was the complaint of a deputation from the senate and Roman people to the cardinals in 1378. Dissertazions «ulle rovine, ha- p. 369. ciousthan human violence, and would appear, from Petrarch* and from another authority,! to have thrown down some of the ancient monuments ; and an inundation of the Tiber in 1345 is faithfully recorded amongst the afflictions of the times. The summits of the hills alone were above the water, which converted the lower grounds to a lake for eight days.| The absence of the popes might have been fatal to the mo- dern city, jind have reduced it to a solitude ;§ but such a soli- tude would have protected many a fragment, which their re- turn and the subsequent rapid repopulation have for ever an- nihilated. Their return|| was the signal of renewed violence. The Colonna and Orsini, the people and the church, fought for the Capitol and towers, and the fortress of the popes, the re- titted mole of Hadrian, repeatedly bombarded the town.** * " Cecidit eedificiorum vetenim neglecta civibus, stupenda peregrinis moles," says Petrarch, lib. x. epist. 2. He confines, however, his indi- vidual mention — to the Tor de' Conti — to the fall of a good part of the church of St. Paul, and of the roof of the Lateran. "Turns ilia totoorbe unica, quae Comitum dicebatur, ingentibus ruinis laxata dissiluit, et nunc velut trunca caput superbi vertids honorem solo effusum despicit," lib. x. epist. ii. oper. It may be suspected Petrarch did not distinguish exactly between the old Roman remains and the buildings of the papal town. The Tor de' Conti was built in 1205. t "In uibe vero cecidit quadam columna de marmore quse sustinebat ccclesiara Sancti Pauli cum tertia parte vel circa cooperti ipsius ecclesiae, et multa; alia; ecclesia; ibi et sedificia mirabiiiter ceciderunt" See — Chronicon Mutinense auctore Johanne da Bazano. Script. Rer. Italic, tom. xv. pag. Gt5. \ HistoriseRomanae fragmenta, cap. xv.de lo grannissirao diluvio e plena de acqua de lu Fiume Tevere. See — Antiq. Med. JEn tom. iii. p. 392. 5j " Perche Roma senza la presenza de' Pontefici e piuttosto simile a una solitudine che a una citta," says Guicciardini, on the occasion of Adrian Vlth's entry into Rome. See — Dell' Istoria d' Italia, lib. xv. p. 1015. fol. II In 1378, in the reign of Urban VI. the great schism began. ** In 1404, after the death of Boniface IX.— also in 1405 — and again in the civil war between Innocent VII. and tlie Romans. " E in quello su- bito lo castello di Sant' Angelo si ruppe co i Romani e comminci6 a bom- bardare per Roma." See — Stephan. Infessura. Scriba del senato e po- polo Romano. Diario dellu citta di Roma, ap. Script. Rer. lUl- tom. iii p ii. pag. 1115. 99 During the great schism of the West, the hostile entries of Ladislaiis of Naples,* and the tumultuary government of the famous Perugian Braccio Montone,! are known to have de- spoiled the tomb of Hadrian. | Perhaps they were fatal to other monuments. Yet that violence Was probably less pernicious than the peaceful spoliation which succeeded the extinction of the schism in the person of Martin V. in 1417, and the suppres- sion, in 1434, of the last revolt of the Romans by his successor Eugenius IV. From this epoch must be dated the consump- tion of such marble or travertine as might either be stripped with facility from the stable monuments, or be found in iso- lated fragments. A broken statue, a prostrate, or even a stand- ing column, in the habitable part of the town, and the larger structures yet remaining in the vineyards, were considered by the owners of the land, within and without the walls, as their own property, and to be applied to their own use. The re- * Ladislaus came peaceably into Rotne, on the 1 5th of September, 1404 ; on the 20th of August, 1405, three thousand of his horse entered Rome, and a battle was fought in the streets near the castle. In April, 1408, Ladislaus besieged the city by sea and land, and was put in posses- sion of all the strong places. The Colonnas and other banished nobles attacked the town in June. The Duke of Anjou and Paul Orsiii, with 23,000 troops, endeavoured, in 1408, to expel Ladislaus, but retired. Or- sini, however, returned in December, and Ladislaus was driven out. In 1413 Ladislaus returprd, broke down the walls at the gate of the Lateran, and got possession of the city and castle. He died in 1414 : his title was, " hujus almae Urbis Illuminator illustris." Fieri, in his diary, relating his death, says, " Cujus anima benedicatur per contrarium." See — Vendet- tini serie cronologica de' Senatori di Roma, p. 75. edit. Roma, 1778. I The exploits of Braccio di Montone are contained in six books, a bi- ography written by John Antony Campano, bishop of Temi. He flou- rished from 13C8 to 1424. See— Script. Rer. Ital. tom. xix. In 1417, he entered Rome with his troops, and attacked the castle of St. Angelo, which was in possession of the queen of Naples, Joanna, and was obliged to retreat. (Ibid. pag. 545.) He was captain of the people for seventy days, and when forced to retire, out of spite to the Romans, broke the banks of the lake Pedelupo, pie" di Lup, in the Reatine territory, which caused a tremendous inundation of the Tiber, in 1422. According to Step. Infessura, Diar. Uc. p. 1 122. loc citat. Braccio Was killed in battle OB the 2d of June, 1424. I See— a note on the Castle of St. Angelo. 13 ^ 100 pairs commenced by Martin V., and carried on more vigor- o\is\y by Eugenius,* required a supply of materials, and of ce- ment, which was obtained from the ruins. The triumph of supcistition conspired with the ignorance and individual necessities of the Romans, to render them more indifferent to the relics of pagan antiquity. Whatever nationali- ly and patriotism they had evinced in the times of turbulence, were degraded into a blind veneration for the shrines of the apostles, and for the person of their successor. A secretary of the Popes, an antiquary, and one who may be surely cited as a favourable specimen of the better class of citizens, mo- destly confesses, that there was some difference between the Rome of Eugenius IV. and that of Pompey and the first Cae- sars. " jit the same time,'*'' says he, " our Pontlfcx is indeed a jjerpetual dictator, not the successor of Ccesar, but the successor of the fisherman Peter, and the vicar of the Emperor Jesus Christ.] Besides,'''' he adds, " there are still at Rome most high and admirable objects which can be seen no where else. For this very city has the threshold of the apostles and the earth purple with the blood of the martyrs. It has the handkerchief of St. Veronica / it has the place called ' Domine quo vadis,' where Christ met St. Peter, and left the marks of his feet in the stone. It has the heads of Peter and Paul, the milk of the Virgin, the cradle and foreskin of our Saviour,\ the chains of * " Sed collapaa defArmaf^qMP. fiilifiria miiltis ip locis maximo instauras reficisque impendlo" Prsefatio ad Eugenium IV. Pont. Max. Flavii Blondii- Roma instaurata, edit Taur. 1527. t Flavii Blondi. Roma Instaurata. "Dictatorem nunc perpetuum, nou Csesaris sed Piscatoris Petri successorem et Imperatoris prsedicti Vica- rium Pontificem, &.c." Lib. iii. fo. 41. edit. Taurin. 1527. I This relic was shamefully neglected whilst the popes were at Avig- non. At last the Virgin appeared to St. Brigith, exclaiming, " O Roma, Roma, si scires, gauderes utique, immo si scires fleres incessanter, quia habes thesaurum mihi carissimum, et non honoras ilium." " E forse,** says iMarangoni, writing in the middle of the eighteenth century ! " che la madre di Dio stessa indirizz5 questo lamento agli ultimi secoli, e special- mente alio scorso XVI. nel quale, essendo quasi che spenta la venerazione, e memoria di questa Divina Reliquia in Roma, questa Citta ricevette il •astigo di esserne privata." The relic was stolen by one of the heretics and loose livers of Bourbon's army, forse il piu ardito e facinoroso degli joltri, but was found in an underground cell at Calcata, 20 mile* from 101 St. Peter, tite spousal ring sent from heaveilto the maiden Agnes . To see, to touch, to venerate all which and many more thinga, more than fifty thousand strangers from all parts of the world come to Rome in the time of Lent.^^ These relics certainly may have preserved the existence of Rome, but were no protection to her ancient structures. The same writer notices the daily destruction of monuments, whicli he avers to be so visible as to make him loathe the abode at tlome.* The fatal lime burning awakened the indignation of a poett to whom it appeared a new offence, and the testimo- ny of Blondus and iEncas Sylvius shows that there was some ground for the exaggeration of the angry Florentine, who hav- ing witnessed the destruction of some monuments, wonders that any remnant of antiquity should have escaped the fury and cupidity of the Romans.l Of republican Rome, Poggio reckoned the double row of vaults in the Capitol, constructed by Catulus, then converted into a public magazine for salt ; the Sepulchre of Publicius ; the Fabrician bridge over the Tiber ; an arch, over the road beneath the Aventine mount, made and approved by P. Len- tulus Scipio and Titus Quintius Crispinus ; the monuments Rome, by a noble lady, Maddelena Strozzi, after Pope Clement VII. had in vain given every order to recover it. The discovery was attended with repeated miracles, of all which an authentic account may be seen in the Istoria delta Capella di sancta sanctorum di Roma, cap. xxxix. edit. 1747 by the famous Marangoni, the author of the JVfemoir on the Coliseum. * " Cujus rei tanta singulos dies videmus exempla ut ea solum mode causa nos aliquantum Romfe fastidiat habitatio. Multis enim in locis vi» iieas videmus ubi superbissima aedificia vidimus quorum quadrat] lapidcs t£ SVA FECVNIA FECIT. " Fragmenta ad sepulc. hoc an. d. 1808, a canova. reperta ac donata^ jivs. VII. p. M. ita in perpet. servanda consuluit." 117 partly by suburban villas, and tradesmen's houses, and semi- circular seats. Thus they were frequented as public walks, and the beauty of the sepulchres, together with the religion of the people, and the wisdom of the higher orders, pre- vented any melancholy reflections from being suggested by the receptacles of the dead. Those who have seen the street of the tombs at Pompej will feel the truth of this observation. — The Appian sepulchres extend, at short intervals, for several miles — let us fill the intermediate spaces with handsome edi- fices — restore the despoiled marbles to the tombs themselves — then imagine that the same decorations adorned all the other thirty great roads* which branched off from the capital ; add to this also the banks of the Tiber, shaded with villas from as far as Otricolif on the Sabine side to the port of Ostia, — with these additions, which it appears may be fairly sup- plied from ancient notices, we shall account for the immense space apparently occupied by the city and suburbs of old Rome. Stanza LXXXI. we but feel our way to err. The -greater share of satisfaction at Rome will come to the portion of those travellers who find, like Dante, a pleasure in doubting. The stranger, when he has entered the modern city, would, at least, wish to assure himself that he knows the site of ancient Rome. He has, however, to clear his ground of some of the conjectures of the learned, even before he can persuade himself thoroughly of this fact. He soon will believe that the circuit of the present walls is somewhat bigger * There were twenty-nine according to one account, and thirty-one according to another. Fam. Nardini. Roma Vetus, lib. viii. cap. i. t Otricoli, the ancient Otriculum, is xxxvi. M. P. from Rome. Some writers thought the town stretched as far as this, but even Vossius gives up this absurdity, (De magnit. Romae Vet- cap. v. ap. Graev. Antiq- Rom. tom. iv.) the villas however might. See Nardini Roma Vetus, lib. viii. cap. ii. Donatus de urbe Roma, lib. i. cap. xvi. 118 than the region of the old Esquilias, and more than a two hundredth part of the Augustan city.* But he will not find it quite so easy to reconcile the various measurements with the actual appearance of the walls, or to undej:stand how, as Mr. Gibbon tells us, " their circumference^ except in the Vatican, has been invariably the same, from the triumph of Aurelian to the peaceful but obscure reign of the Popes.'^''] If so, it was the same, first, when Alaric took Rome ; secondly, when the dominion of the Popes was es- tablishqd ; thirdly, at this day. The circuit, diminished from the fifty miles of Vopiscus, " is reduced, by accurate measurement, to about twenty-one miles," says Mr. Gibbon, in his eleventh chapter.J This gives his measurement for the first period. But when Poggio saw them, " they formed a circumference of ten miles, in- cluded 379 turrets, and opened into the country by thirteen gates. "§ This serves for the second date. Lastly, " what- ever fancy may conceive, the severe compass of the geo- grapher defines the circumference of Rome within a line of twelve miles and three hundred and forty-five paces. "|| These words of the same historian apply to the third point of time. Now it is quite clear that all these measurements diflfer, and yet it is equally clear that the historian avers they are all the same. He says, in another place, speaking of them in the * " Vel solae Esqulliae majores erant, quam sit totum illud quod hodier- nig includitur muris spatium.'' Isa. Vossii de magnit Rom. Veteris, p. 1507. ap. Graev. torn. iv. To have a perfect notion of the logic of learn- ing, it is sufficient to read this insane treatise, which spreads the walls to 72 miles, and the inhabitants to 14 millions. There is scarcely an incon- trovertible position in all his seven chapters. Lipsius is not quite so para- doxical in his conclusions, and he is much more ingenious in his array of authorities — his Rome is £3 miles. + Decline and Fall, CHp. xli. vol. vii. oct. p. 228. X Ibid. vol. ii. oct. p. 28. See also another place. " When the capital of the empire was besieged by the Goths, the circuit of the walls was accurately measured by Ammonius the mathematician, who found it equal to twenty-one miles.'' Cap xxxi. tom. xii. oct. p. 287. <} Decline and Fall, cap. Ixxi. torn. xii. oct. p. 698. II Ibid, cap. xU. p. 227. 119 age of Petrarch, the walls " still described the old circumfer- ence."* It is true he cites authorities ; but he speaks with- out reserve, and has not attempted to account for the differ- ence between the three^ above-given dimensions. We shall find no help, therefore, from the Decline and Fall of the Ro- man Empire, unless we follow only one of these various ac- counts, and believe in the third computation, which is that as- signed by D'Anville from NoUi's map, and which coincides with the experience of two of our countrymen, who made a loose calculation! of the circuit by walking round the walls in the winter of last year, (1817). Poggio's measurement was probably nearly exact, for he did not reckon the ramparts of Urban, and, perhaps, not the Vatican ; but it is singular, that the pilgrim of the thirteenth * Ibid. cap. Ixxi. p. 411. torn. xii. Mr, Gibbon has failed to observe that the walls were dilated after Aurelian and Probus, by Constantine, who took down one of the sides of the Prsetorian camp, and made the re- maining three serve for the fortifications of the city, whose circuit therebj became necessarily somewhat enlarged. t The following is a note of their walk. They set out from the banks of the Tiber, near the Fiaminian gate (Porta del Popolo); their rate of walking was 592 paces in five minutes, and they noted the time from gate to gate. To the Porta Pinciana (shut) 18 minutes — Porta Salara 8 — Porta Pia 3 — a shut gate (Querquetulana) 12 — St- Lorenzo 8 — Maggiore 7 1-2— Lateran, or Porta St. Giovanni, 12 1-2— Porta Latina (shut) 17 1-2 — Porta Capena, or St. Sebastiano, 4 1-4 — a shut gate 3 3-4 — Porta di St. Paolo (Ostian) 14 l-2^delay 4 1-2 — within the wall, the outer circuij not being accessible, 4 3-4 — delay 7 — within the walls down to the Tiber 6 1-2 — delay 4 — bank of the Tiber within ruined wall 10 3-4 — delay occa- sioned by going across the Tiber to the opposite corner 88 1-2 — from bank of the Tiber to Porta Portese 1-2 — Porta Aureliti, or S. Panerasio, 13 1-2 — Porta Cavalli leggieri 14 1-4 — a shut gate (Porta delle Fornaci) 2 1-2— Porta Fabbrica (shut) 6— Porta Angelica 14 1-4— Porta Castello (a shut gate) 5 1-4 — round to the corner of the bastion of St. Angelo, on bank of the Tiber, 7 3-4 — along the bank of the Tiber where there are no walls, to the ferry at the Ripetta 7 1-4 — delay 10 1-4 — crossing the Tiber and walking along the bank to the corner of the walls whence they set out, 6 1-2. — The time employed in %valk was 4 hours, 38 minutes ; the delays amounted to one hour, four minutes, and a quarter. The time ta- ken walking round the actual circuit of the city was three hours, thirty- three minutes, and three quarters. Supposing the rate of walking to be about three miles and a half an hour, the measurement is twelre miles and a quarter. 120 cetitury, who undoubtedly saw the same walls, and enumerates very nearly the same quantity of turrets, should* give to them a circumference double that of the Florentine, and nearly co- inciding with that of the time of Alaric, that is, twenty-one miles. If, however, they were so accurately measured at that time, the present walls cannot possibly stand on the site of those of Aurelian ; for, since the Vatican has been included, and also the ramparts of Urban VIII., which Mr. Gibbon has overlooked, or falsely confounded with the Vatican, the mo- dern circuit being larger on one side the Tiber, and the same on the other, it is evident that the whole circumference at pre- sent must be greater than it was under Aurelian. That is to gay, twelve miles, three hundred and fifty-five paces, are more- than twenty-one miles — " xvhich is absurd.^'' The present walls may touch at points and take in frag- ments, but they cannot include the same circumference as the twenty-one miles accurately measured by the mathematician Ammonius. Some assistance might be expected from the ex- amination of the walls themselves : but here again it may be necessary to warn the reader in what manner he is to under- stand an assertion which he will find in another work, lately published, of the same author.! " Those zoho examine with attention the xoalls of Rome, still distinguish the shapeless stones of the first Romans, the cut marbles with rohich they were con- structed under the Emperors, and the ill-burnt bricks with which they were repaired in the barbarous ages.'''* Now the whole of the modern walls are of brick* with the following exceptions. There are some traces of the arched work on which the walls of Aurelian, perhaps, were raised, about the Porta Pia and the Porta Salara. There are buttresses of travertine, and, in one * " Miirus civitatis Romae habet turres 361. Castella id est merulos 6900, portas 12, pusterulas (portae minores) 5. In circuitu vero sunt mil- liaria 22, exceptis Transtiberim et civitate Leonina id est porticu St. Pe- tri." Lib. de mirabilibus Romae, in loc. citat. p. 283. t " Ceux qui examinent avec attention les murailles de Rome distin- guent encore les pierres informes des premiers Romains, les marbres bien travaiiles dont on les construisit sous les Empereurs, et les briques malcui- tes dont on les reparoit dans les siecles barbares." Nomina gentesque ao- ^quae Italise, p- 209 • 121 case (the Porta Capena), of marble, about the gateways, which are of the same imperial date. There are single shapeless fragments of marble here and there, mixed up with the more modern work, and occasionally laid upon the. top of the wails. This is all that can apply to Mr. Gibbon's description ; for aS to the shapeless stones of the first Romans, they cannot be dis- covered, except in those scarcely distinguishable mounds which are within the walls, a little beyond the Thermae of Dio- cletian, and are usually thought part of the Tullian rampart.* It must be remarked also, that there is no evidence that the walls of the Emperors were of cut marble. The authority of Cassiodorus has been followed by Marlianust and others, as af- fording a proof that they were composed of square blocks. — But it has been noted by Nardini,| on another occasion, that the Gothic minister, in making use of the word mcBnia, does not always allude to the walls of the city, but of other structures ; and in that sense we have before interpreted, in a preceding note,§ what he says of the square stones of the ruins. The same topographer justly remarks the contrary fact, that the oldest work now apparent is of brick.\\ The three sides of a square from near the Porta Pia to the Porta Querquetulana, a shut gate, seem to be the Praetorian ramparts included by Con- stantine, and not materially defaced by repairs.** The amphi- theatre for the Prastorians is also in the Aurelian circuit, near the church of Santa Croce m Gerusalemme / and some large stones, laid one on another, without cement, contiguous to that amphitheatre, are only to be ascribed to the hasty preparations * The plan in the last edition of Venuti lays down the Agger Tarquinii in the space between the Lateran and Santa Croce in Gerusalemme : re- peated search may fail in finding any trace of this Agger. Donatus posi- tively says there is none. Lib. i. cap. xiii. t Urbis Rorase topographia, lib. i. cap. ix. X Roma Vetus, lib. i. cap. viii. ?5 See note to Stanza LXXX. II " Nam vetus ilia substructio e lateribus est." Ibid. ** Donatus has observed, that the words of Zosimus will not justify this inference, but that the present appearance of this part of the walls will. Lib. i. cap. XV. Fabricius, (descriplio urbis Roma;, cap. v. and vi.) has given a plate, in which the castra prcetoria are put without the walls, to cor- respond with the old appearance. 122 of Belisarius before the second siege. The strange reticu- lated hanging wall, opposite to the gate of the villa Borghese, was anotlier ancient structure which made part of the defences of the city before the time of that general. All these three portions of the circuit are of brick, and the comparative anti- quity of other parts is easily ascertained by those accustomed to such investigations. Some of the fragments of the next date are to be attributed to Honorius,* a considerable restorer, or rather rebuilder of the walls. In the interval between his reign and thatof Theodoric, repairs had become requisite, and were undertaken by that monarch. Belisarius made them ca- pable of defence, and, in the subsequent occupation of the city, partly rebuilt that third portion which Totila had thrown down, and then helped afterwards to repair. Narses was also a restorer of the walls; and some work resembling that of the " Amphitheatre of the Camps," has been ascribed to his imita- tion of that more ancient construction.! It appears that the circuit followed by each of these restor- ers must have been very nearly, if not exactly, that of Aure- lian, or at least Honorius. | No vestiges of foundations Which could have belonged to those older walls, can be discovered be- 3'ond the present circumference ; and the same fact has been ably deduced from many concurrent arguments, especially by Donatus, who tries to prove that the Popes, who subsequently rebuilt and repaired them, also adopted the ancient line, and did not at all contract the space occupied by the old imperial fortifications. § How, then, are we to reconcile the measurement as it is stated to have been accurately taken by Ammonius, with the present circuit, which, except on the Transtiberine side, where it is larger, is evidently nearly the same as it was un- * See Claudian in VI. Cons. Honor, and an inscription over a shut gate at the Porta Maggiore. Nardiiii, ibid. A similar inscription was over the Porta Portese, which was thrown down by Urban VIII. See Donatus, lib. 1. cap. XV- f Nardini, ibid. t Nardini thinks they were shrunk backwards a little towards the Am- phitheatrum Castrense, when BeHsarius repaired them the second time. Ibid. ^ De urbe Roma, lib. i. cap. xviii. xix. xx. 123 der the Emperors ? There seems no expedient but to reject the authority of that mathematician, or rather his reporter Olympiodorus, and to bcheve that Pliny's older measurement of thirteen miles, two hundred paces,* was not so much dilated by Aurelian as is generally thought -,1 and that it in- cluded every suburban district which was surrounded with a wall, such as the Praetorian camp, and the Transtiberine region, and might therefore possibly extend itself to spots where no traces of it have been found or sought for. In that case the discrepancy between the present and the ancient circuit will be much diminished, if not altogether annihilated. To this it may be added, that as the works of Narses. and, indeed, of the Emperors, were of brick, they might, when once decayed, very easily be gradually lost ; and that when the Popes commenced their repairs, the diagonal of an irregular projection might here and tliere have been taken, instead of the former line, by which means a partial reduc- tion, sufficient to account for the above difference, may be allowed to have taken place. It should seem, that during the troubles of the exarchate, the walls had fallen down in many parts, and that the city was left naked on some points, particularly towards the gate of St. Lorenzo. The terms in which the rebuilding by the Popes, in the eighth century, are recorded, would imply almost a totally new construction. After Sisinnius and Gre- gory the Second and Third had made some progress in this useful labour, Hadrian the First convoked the peasants from Tuscany and Campania, and, with their help and that of the Romans, rebuilt from their foundations^ in many places, the walls and towers in all their circuit. Such are the strong ex- * " Msenia ejus collegere ambitu Imperatoribiis Censoribusque Vespa- sianis, anno conditse dccckxviii. passuum xnr. m.cc. complexa monies septe.m" This is tlie celebrated passage which has puzzled Lipsius and the commentators and topographers. t Nardini, ibid, has shown where the additional ground was taken in by Aurelian ; and Donatus was almost inclined to think, that that Em- peror had not enlarged the circuit. Cassiodorus and Eusebius do not talk of the walls being increased, but fortifir.d. Vopiscus, by mentioning fifty milos, has taken away all credit from himself or from hi» text- Donat lib. i cap. xix. 16 124 pressions of the papal biographer.* Leo IV. in 847, in- cluded the Borgo, that is, the Basilica of St. Peter's, and the contiguous quarter of the Vatican : and from his reign until that of Urban VIII. nineteen Pontiffs have been specifi- ed as contributing to the repairs. It is not at all surprising, therefore, that an early topographer should have declared, that the walls were indubitably not ancient. t The antiqua- ries profess to see a hundred different constructions in their mixed composition. Urban VIII. completed them as we now see them, by running his rampart along the acclivity of the Janiculum, from the Aurelian gate (Saint Pancrazio) to the angle of the Vatican, commonly called the Porta de* cavalli leggieri.\ He entirely rebuilt them from the same Aurelian gate to the Porta Portese, on the banks of the Tiber. Since that period other Pontiffs have been active in repairs, but no change has taken place in the circuit ; concerning which we may finally conclude, that it is equal, very nearly, if not quite, to the largest circumference of the ancient city, and, except on the Transtiberine side, generally follows the line of Aurelian. It is equally clear, that the exact ancient line could not always be followed. We see this from the bastion * " Verum etiam et muros atque turres hujus Romanse urbis quae diriita; erant et usque ad fundamenta destnictse renovarit atque utiliter omnia in circuitu restauravit." Anast. de Vit- Rom. Pontif. Script. Rer. Italic, torn. iii. p. 188. " Ipse vero deo, ut dicitur, protectus Prsesul conspiciens muros hujus civitatis Romanae peroiitana tempora in ruinis positos, et per loca plures turres usque ad terram eversas, per suum solertissimum studiura totas civitates tarn Tuscise, quamque Campaniae congregans una cum populo Romano, ejusque suburbanis, nee non et toto ecclesiastico patrimonio omnibus prsedicans, et dividens ex sumptibus dapibusque Apostolicis totam urbem in circuitu restaurans universa renovavit, atque decoravit." Ibid, p 194. Anastasius flourished under Hadrian II. and John VIII. He writes only to Nicholas I. The remainder of the lives were written by William, another librarian, under the name of Damasus. See — Bianchini's pro- legomena to the liber pontificalis. Both one and the other were compi- lers, not composers, of the lives. The edition in Muratori and that of Bianchini, have been used. f " Msenia urbis nunc extantia non esse antiqua sicut nulli est dubiuna ita multis argumentis apparet.'" Marlian. Urb. Rom. Topog. lib. i. cap. ix. t Dcnatus, lib. i. cap. xx. 125 of Paul III. at the foot of the Aventine, which, if it had been finished, would have probably been considered as upon that ancient line. If from the walls themselves we retire into the interior of their vast circuit, we shall be still more confounded, and " stumble o'er recollections." The names given to the monu- ments perpetually vary, according to the fancy of some pre- dominant antiquary. At one period all vaulted ruins belong to baths, at another they are portions of temples ; Basilicas are at times the favourite denomination. The consequence of this varying nomenclature is the embarrassment of those who put themselves under the guidance of the best ancient or modern topographers ; and we are often apt to reduce the monuments of all the regions to the character given by Nar- dini to those of the Aventine, which he divides into " sites not altogether uncertain, and sites evidently uncertain."* The antiquarian disputes began at an early period ; and where nothing but a name was left, there was still some plea- sure found in the struggles of conjecture. The mica aurca has not been seen since the ninth century ; but it afforded an opportunity of quoting Plutarch, Amraian, and Martial, to show, that it might have been a Greek girl, or a Bear, or a Supper-house.] The actual remains were soon found to be no less uncertain. The two vaults of the church of St. Maria Nuova were believed, by Pomponius Lastus, the fragments of a temple of jEsculapius and Health ; by Marlianus, of the Sun and Moon ; by Blondus, of ^sculapius and Apollo ; by Pog- gio, of Castor and Pollux. J They are now called the Temple of Venus and Rome, according to the opinion to which *" Situs non omnino incerti ct situs plane incerti" Lib. viii. cap. vi. The choice of Remus is peculiarly deserted. Victor alone has left any account of it In all the twelfth region, between the Circus Maximus and the Baths of Caracalla, the latter was the only monument recognisable by the eyes of the above topographer- + Nardini, lib. iii. cap viii. I Fabricii Descrip. Urb. Rom. cap. ix. ap. Grsev. Ant. torn. iii. At- tached to it is the church now called S. Fi-ancesca Romana ; and if the stranger goes for information to the modern inscription, he Avill find these words : " In queste pielre pose le ginochia S- Pietro quando i demoiij por- tarono Simonr Ma^o ptr ana." 126 Nardini seemed to incline.* See also the many names given to the temple of Santa Maria Egizziaca.t Some thought it a chapel of Patrician Modesty, some a Basilica of Caius and Lucius, some a temple of Good Fortune, others of Manly Fortune. It is now come back to Modesty.J The temple attributed to Vesta, on the banks of the Tiber, was once thought that of Hercules Victor, and also of the Sun. Pom- ponius Laetus§ called it that of Juno Matuta, others named the goddess Volupia.|| Hercules was recovering his rights during the winter of 1817. The Patrician Modesty is trans- ferred, by an inscription, to the church of Santa Maria in Cosmedin, commonly called the Schola Gra^ca ; and the same inscription asserts, that Saint Augustine taught rhetoric in this school.** Other examples of uncertainty will occur in the subsequent notices of individual monuments. It would be hazardous to give a list of those which can suggest no reasonable doubts. The Coliseum, the three Triumphal Arches, those of Drusus, of Dolabella and Silanus, of Gallienus ; the Baths of Diocle- tian, of Caracalla, of Constantine, a part of those of Titus ; the Theatre of Marcellus, the few remains of that of Pom- pey ; the two bridges of the Tiberine island ; the mauso- leums of Augustus and Hadrian ; the two historical columns ; the tomb of Cestius, the tomb of Bibulus, the tomb of the Scipioa ; the Pantheon ; the column of Phocas ; the Septi- mian arch in the Velabrum ; the inscribed obelisks ; the cas- tellum of the Claudian aqueduct ; two or three of the city gates ; the arcades of the Gloaca ; the jElian bridge ; these seem the most secure from scepticism ; and it would be diffi- * Nardini, lib. iii. cap. 2. t Donatus, lib. ii. cap. 18. Nardini, lib. vii. cap. iv. \ In the time of Fulvius, this tract about the Patrician Modesty was solely inhabited by prostitutes. Nardini, lib. vii. cap. iv. ^ Doniitus, lib. ii. cap. xxv. II "Alii Hcrculis, alii Vestse, alii deae Volupia." Montfaucon, Diarium Italicuni, p, 188. ** No trust is to be put in modern inscriptions, and sometimes not in those which have every appearance of antiquity. Doubts have been en- tertained even about the inscription on the tomb of Bibulus, by Augusti- nus, in his dialogue on ancient coins. ]27 cult to name another monument within the walls of an equally certain character. Stanza LXXXII. for never shall we see That brightness in her eye she bore when Rome was free. It was one of the complaints of Poggio* that he saw almost nothing entire, and but very few remains of the free city ; and indeed the principal disappointment at Rome arises from find- ing such insignificant vestiges of the first ages and of the re- public. Something, perhaps, might be added to the lists of them given by Mr. Forsyth : but not much. We have seen how soon those works disappeared ; but we might still have expected to find something more than a sewer, a prison, a row of vaults, a foundation wall, a pavement, a sepulchre, a half- buried fragment of a theatre and circus. The artist may be comparatively indifferent to the date and history, and re- gard chiefly the architectural merit of a structure : but the Rome which the republican Florentine regretted, and which an Englishman must wish to find, is not that of Augustus and his successors, but of those greater and better men, of whose heroic actions his earliest impressions are composed. We have heard too much of the turbulence of the Roman democracy and of the Augustan virtues. No civil tranquillity can compensate for that perpetual submission, not to laws but persons, which must be required from the subjects of the most limited monarchy. The citizens of the worst regulated re- public must feel a pride and may indulge a hope superior to all the blessings of domestic peace, and of what is called es- tablished order, another word for durable servitude. The struggles for supreme though temporary power amongst those of an equal condition, give birth to all the nobler energies of the mind, and find space for their unbounded exertion. Un- der a monarchy, however well attempered, the chief motive * " Nam ex publicis aut privatls operibus liberae quondam civitatis in- terriipta qusedara et ea parva vestigia visimtur.'' De Varietate, fcc. loc. cit^ 128 for action must be altogether wanting, or feebly felt, or cau- tiously encouraged. Duties purely ministerial, honours de- rived from an individual, may be meritoriously performed, may be gracefully worn : but, as an object of ambition, they are infinitely below the independent control of our fellow- citizens, and perhaps scarcely furnish a compensation for en- tire repose. The natural love of distinction on any terms may push ug into public hfe ; but it palsies our efforts, it mor- tifies our success, perpetually to feel that in such a career,, although a failure is disgraceful, a victory is inglorious ; " Vincere inglorium — atterl sordidum.'''' These are the sentiments of Agricola and the words of Taci- tus, and bespeak the real value of the subordinate dignity, which is all that can be attained under a Domitian or under a Trajan, under the worst or under the best of princes. As those glorious institutions which subdued and civilized the world have long seemed incompatible with the altered condition of mankind, we recur with the greater eagerness to every memorial of their former existence : and hence our re- gret at finding so little of the early city. The courtly and melodious muses that graced the first age of the monarchy have, indeed, affixed an imperishable interest to every site and object connected with their patrons or their poetry : and in default of republican relics we are content with looking on the floorings of the Esquiline palace and at the fabric dedicat- ed to him who has found a more durable monument in the verses of Virgil. The house of Maecenas and the theatre of Marcellus can boast no other attraction. It is not to be denied but that by good fortune the most vir- tuous of the Roman Sovereigns have left the most conspi- cuous monuments, and that we are thus perpetually recalled to an age in which mankind are supposed to have been more happy and content than during any other period of history. We may look at the Coliseum, the temples of Vespasian and Antoninus, the arch of Titus and the historical columns, with- out cursing the usurpation of Augustus. But it is not to worship at the shrine of the Flavian princes nor to do homage to the forbearance of Trajan, (the word is 129 not used at random,*) or to the philosophy of Aiirelius, that we undertake the pilgrimage of Rome. The men whose traces we would wish to discover were cast in another mould, and belonged to that order of beings whose superior qualities were by the wisest of their immediate successorst as well ashy the slaves of the last emperors,| acknowledged to have expir- ed with the republic. It is with the builders, and not the di- lapidators of the Roman race that we would hope to meet in the Capitol. Our youthful pursuits inspire us with no respect or affection for this nation independent of their republican virtues. It is to refresh our recollection of those virtues that we explore the ruins of the city which gave them birth ; and absorbed by an early devotion for the patriots of Rome, we are indifferent to the records of her princes. We feel no sympathy with the survivors of Philippi. We would prefer a single fragment of the Palatine house of Hortensius or of Cicero to all the lofty ruins which fringe the imperial hill. As it is, we must visit a sepulchre or a museum ; must trust to one amongst a range of doubtful busts ; must unravel an inscription, and extricate ourselves from antiquarian doubts before we are recalled to the city of the Scipios, whilst every thing around us attests the might and the magnificence of the Caesars. * Nvv Si tov ts oivov Siaxopui ttiivs, xac xat vr^foA' ip>, iv ft •I'otj ttatiSi- xMi ovSsva i%vfi*iaey. Dion. Hist. Rom. lib. 68. torn. ii. p. 1125. edit. Hamb. 1750- It may be recollected why Julian excluded Trajan from the banquet of the Csesars. t " Postquara bellatum apud Actium, atque omnem potentiam ad unum confeiri pacis interfuit ; magna ilia ingenia cessere." Tacit. Hist. lib. i. cap. i. X " Postquam jura ferox in se communia Caesar Transtulit ; et lapsi mores ; desuetaque priscis Artibus, in gremium pacis servile recessi." Claud, de bello. Gildonico. 130 Stanza CIII. Metella died, The wealthiest Roman's infe ; Behold his love or pride '. Four words and two initials compose the whole of the in- scription, which, whatever was its ancient position, is now placed in front of this towering sepulchre : C.CCILIAE . q. CRETICI- F. METfiLLAE. CRASSI. It is more likely to have been the pride than the love of Crassus which raised so superb a memorial to a wife whose name is not mentioned in history, unless she be supposed to be that lady whose intimacy with Dolabella was so offensive to Tullia the daughter of Cicero, or she who was divorced by Lentulus Spinther, or she, perhaps the same person, from whose ear the son of iEsopus transferred a precious jewel to enrich his draught.* When Mr. Bayle wanted to find another Roman matron of the same name with whom to divide the redundant vices of two or three other Cecilia Metellas, he seems to have known nothing of this wife of Crassus and daughter of the Cretic Metellus, whom, otherwise, he might have suspected of being the counterpart of his Madame D'Olonne.t The common people have been more attentive to the orna- ments of the sculptor than to the memory of the matron, for the metopes of the frieze, or a single ox's head with the Gae- tani arms, gave to this tower during the middle ages the name of Capo di Bove.J There appears to have been another * " Filius ^sopi dctractam ex aure Metellse (Scilicet ut decies solidum exsorberet) aceto Diluit insignem baccam. Hor Sat. Lib. ii. Sat- iii. ver. 239. f Dictionnaire, article ^' Metella " iNardini, lib. iii. cap. iii. appears tasay it is called Capo di Bove from a single ox's head sculptured over the door with the arms of the Gaetani which Echinard. (Agro Romano, fcc- p. 295,) also notices, but which the writer does not recollect to have seen. 131 place of the same name near Ostia in the year 953, un- less this tomb should be supposed to be the place al- luded to in an old charter of that date.* It was, indeed, an old Roman name ; for Suetonius mentions that Au- gustus was born at a spot in the Palatinate called ad capita bubulaA At what period the tomb of Metella was converted into the citadel of a fort can be guessed only by the period at which the monuments in the city were occupied by the nobles. Certain it is that the tomb was put at once to this purpose without any previous spoliation, and that the garrison uncon- cernedly dwelt over not only the mausoleum but the very ashes of Metella, for the coffin remained in the interior of the se- pulchre to the time of Paul III. who removed it to the court of the Farnese palace. J The Savelli family were in posses- sion of the fortress in 1312, and the German army of Henry VII. marched from Rome,§ attacked, took, and burnt it, but were unable to make themselves by force masters of the cita- del, that is, of the tomb, which must give us a high notion of its strength or of their weakness. The soldiers of the tomb surrendered their post upon terms, and Henry transferred the whole property to a brother of John SavelH who had mari'ied one of the Colonna, and who was to keep it until a sum of 20,000 marks due to the emperor had been discharged by the dispossessed baron. The Gaetani family became masters of the place afterwards : they raised the walls which are still seen contiguous to the tomb, and were part of their mansion and adjoining offices. To their labours is ascribed the super- structure, part of which still remains on the top of the monu- ment. * Dissertaaone sulla rovine, Sic. p. SSI. note b. f In vita August, cap. v. ^ Echinard. agro Romano, ibid- in loc- citat, not. ^ " Unde moti Romani cum Theotonicis ad unum castrum, quod voca- tur caput Bovis prope urbem ad duo milliuria, quod castrum erat Domini Johannis de Sabello, cucurrerunt, et castrum, excepta arce, violenter ac- 4eperunt, et partem combusserunt," &.c. Sic. Iter Italicum. Henrici VII. Iraper. Script. Rer. ItaL torn. ix. p- 918. 17 132 Po2frio* saw the toml) entire when he first came to Rome, but during his absence the Tlomans had ground this noble woi-k, for the most part, to hme. This demohtion, however, must be understood only of the square basement on which, hke the mausoleum of Hadrian, the round tower was raised. Nor was it complete even of the basement, which was not reduced to its present condition until the time of Urban VIII., who, we have seen, cut away some of the travertine blocks for the construction of the fountain of Trevi.t The destroyer of the adjoining fortress was Sixtus Quintus, the Hercules of modern Rome, who dislodged every Cacus and cleared the Pontifical states of their dens. The tomb has, indeed, been much disfigured, and the lower part of it retains only a few jutting blocks of its former structure ■, but it is still amongst the most conspicuous of the Roman ruins, and Mr. Gibbon must have been strangely for- getful of what he had seen when he wrote " The Sepulchre of Mddla has simk under its outioorks.^''X On the contrary, it is the sepulchre which remains and the outworks which have * " Juxta Viam Appiam ad secundum lapidem integrum vidi sepul- chrum Q. Caecilia; IMetella?, opus egrcgium, et id tot scculis intactum, ad calcem postea majore ex parte exterrainatum." De Fortunae Varietate, p, 508. loc. cit. f See note on Stanza Ixxx. X Decline and Fall, cap. Ixxi. p. 415, torn, xii- To this he has the fo^- lowing note : " I must copy an important passage of Montfaucon : Tur- ns ingens rotunda Cjeciliffi Metellae sepulchrum erat, cujus muritam solid! ut spatium perquam minimum intus vacuum supersit; et Torre di bove dicitur, a boum capitibus muro inscriptis. Huic, sequiori sevo, tempore intestinorum bellorum, ceii urbecula adjuncta fuit, cujus mcenia et turres etiamnum visuntur ; ita ut sepulchrum Metellce quasi arx oppiduli fui'i-it. FerVentibus in urbe paitibus, cum Ursini atque Colum- nenses mutuis cladibus perniciem infeirent civitati, in utriusve partis diti- onem cederet magni moment! erat." This passage, which the reader will find in the Diarium Italicum, p. 15G, surely need not have been ushered in with such solemnity, as if it related a fact to be collected no where else than in Montfaucon, or as if the occupation of Roman monuments by the factions was to be seen only at this tomb. Nothing remarkable is told by Montfaucon except the fact contradicted by the passage to which this note is appended, namely, that there ivas a great tower which had been the sepulchre of Metella, consequently that the said sepulchre had not •' sunk under its outworka." 133 sunk. The feeble labours of puny modern nerves are fast crumbling round the massive fabric which seems to promise an existence as long as the period of its former duration. It must seem singular that so little should be known of the two persons whose tombs were to survive those of so many illustrious names. Cestius is as little famous as Metella, and his pyramid is no less conspicuous than her tower. Oblivion, however, has been kind perhaps to one who has left no other present to posterity than this ambitious sepulchre ; if, as there is some reason to suspect, this Cestius, Tribune of the peo- ple, Praetor, and a Septimvir, is the same Cestius, a Praetor, and flatterer of the Augustan court, who was publicly scourged by the order of Marcus Cicero, the son, for presum- ing to defame his father in his presence.* A learned person who wrote a dissertation on this pyramid and disproved the mistake of Panvinius in supposing Cestius to be the consul of that name mentioned in the annals of Ta- citus,! asserts that there is a total silence with respect to him in all ancient authors, but that he must have died at least as early as the middle of the reign of Augustus. | The Ces- tius above mentioned did not suggest himself to the antiquary, and perhaps may be the man we want. Stanza CVII. For nil that Learning reaped From her research hath been, that these are ivalls — Behold the Imperial Mount ! "tis thus the mighty falls- The troops of Genserick occupied the Palatine and de- spoiled it of all its riches. § The ruin of the structures them- selves is involved in the most impenetrable obscurity : nor have the immense masses which remain, assisted, though they stimulated, research. Theodoric found their beauty admira- * M. Seneca. Suasor. 6. ■)■ Lib. vi. cap. 31. X " Altissimum enim de illo apud scriptores veteres silentiura est." Octavii Falconerii, de pyraraide C. Cestii Epulonis. dissertatio ap. Gtxy. Antiq. Roman, torn. iv. p. 1475. ^ Sidoi>. ApoUon. See — note to Stanza Ixxx. 134 ble,* but impaired by age. From that moment the palace of the Cassars disappears, and the labours of the antiquary have been unable to produce more than a single word to show that it was not ruined by Totila, which is the general persuasion. Anastasius, in the life of Pope Constantine, who was elected in 708, narrating a civil commotion which took place in Rome against the emperor Philip, has these words : " And it came to pass that whilst Christopher, who was duke, was con- tending on this account with Agatho and his followers, a civil war arose, so that they came to arms in the sacred way before the palaee.''''\ What a fate ! The palace may have been a fragment, or, as it now is, a word. When the Palatine again rises, it rises in ruins. A corner of the structures had served to lodge the Frangipane family. The Turris Cartularia included a portion of the Palatine mansions and the arch of Titus. J It was thrown down in 1240 by Gregory IX., was rebuilt, and shortly after destroyed by the people. The pilgrim of the thirteenth century who talks of the im- perial palace must be alluding to sites, not buildings. In the be- ginning of the fifteenth century there was not a single edifice standing on the whole mount except the church of St* Nicho- las, built by Pope Calixtus,§ which was itself in ruins. The Farnese family were ambitious of a summer house in the imperial precincts. They levelled, they built, and they planted; Michael Angelo designed, RaflTael painted, and the *" Quando pulchritiido ilia mirabilis, si subinde non refichur, senectute obrepente vitiatur." Cassiod. Variar. lib. vii. epist. v. ■f " Et factum est dum Christophorus, qui erat Dux, obhanc causam cum Agathone etsuis honiiuibus concertarent, bellura civile exhortum est, ita ut ill via sacra ante palatium sese committerent," fee. De Vitis Roman. Poiilit'. ap. Script. Rer. Ital. torn. iii. p. 153. { It was one of the strong; houses of the Frangipane to which Pope Innocent 11. retrealed in II 58 in his struggles with the anti-pope Anaclete II. See — Oniipli- Panvinius de gente Fregepanica- ap. Marangoni, Delle memorie sacre e profane dell' Anfileatro Flavio. Roma, 1746. p. 31, 52. edit 171(5 Alexand'M- III. also retired thither in 1167 ^ " Multn auiem pauciora habet integra Palatinus mons quam Capito- linus aut Aventiniis, nam prjeter S. Nicolai ecclesiam a Calixto Papa acdific.itam, i|use et male iritegra cernitur nullum is cdeberrinius moas habet aidificium." Flav. Blond- Roraa. Inst. lib. i. fo. 11. 13^ ?iasterpieces of ancient culspture, statues, reliefs, and colour- ed marbles, were drawn from beneath the ruins of Caracalla's baths and of the Flavian amphitheatre for the embellishment of the rising villa. Following antiquaries, from Donatus* to Venutijt were pleased to remark that these peopled gardens had succeeded to the solitude of the long neglected hill. The extinction or aggrandizement of the Farnese dukes strip- ped this retreat as well as the palace of the family of all its treasures. I Naples was again fated to be enriched by the plunder of Rome. The Palatine villa was abandoned, and in less than half a century§ has fallen to the ground. The naked fountain and twisted steps of Michael Angelo, and the cockle-shell incrusted walls, form a singular contrast with the lofty arcades on the Cagsarean side. The Palatine was never entirely covered with structures ; apace must be left for gardens, for a manege, and for a hip- podrome. || Antiquaries, to prove the latter, have been obliged to have recourse to the acts of the martyrs, but there are evident signs of the Course in one of the gardens. There are abundant materials for dispute in the masses of the pa- lace, which cased the whole hill in brick work, and of the many temples which lodged the gods that watched over the Emperor.** A view of the Palatine ruins, in Paul V.'s time,tt marks a temple of Orcus, a temple of Cybele, a temple of Heliogabalus, to all which other names have succeeded with equal authority. The precise details of Bianchini,|J who * *' Nunc tanta molis vel suis obruta minis est ; vel parietibus ac porti- «ibus informis vel transiit in amsenitatem Farnesiorum hortorum." Do- nat. lib. iii. cap. ii. f Roma moderna, kc. Rione xii- torn. ii. p. 396. X The great Campo Fiore palace is much neglected ; it requires a princely court to occupy it, and the Neapolitan ambassador is lost in one of the suites of one of the stories of one of the sides of the vast square. 5^ Venuti, (ibid,) seems to have seen it enfire. II St. Sebastian was shot with arrows, as we see in so many fine pic- tures, in the hippodrome of the palace. ** See quotation from Claud, in vi. Cons. Honor, in note to Stanza Ixxx. Nardini, lib. vi. cap. xiii. and xiv. reckons nineteen at least. ft Vedute degli antichi vestigj, kc. See note to Stanza Ixxx. It Palazzo de' Cesari. 136 dissected the soil and assigned to all the ruins above and be- low their distinct character and function, have retained few believers even amongst the Romans. A subterranean cell, in the vineyard of the Farnese gardens, still preserves the name of the Baths of Livia, for some reason not apparent in the construction or site. The King of Naples has kindly not stripped off all the arabesques, but left a portion to show how the whole apartments were once adorned. These paintings do not suffer so much from the oozing of the saltpetre as when exposed to the external air, as they have found in the open chambers of the Baths of Titus. The gilding preserves its freshness, and the outlines their edge, and seem liable to no injury but from the torches of the guides. Several blocks of sculptured marble above the ruins of the summer house, are honoured with the name of the Palatine Apollo. Of this temple, an early topographer thought he saw some vestiges overlooking the Circus Maximus on the other side of the hill. A contiguous portion of the Palatine is occupied by the kitchen gardens and vineyards of the Casino Spada, or Mag- nani, which the pretended frescoes of Raphael have not pre- served from ruin. Half a century ago a tower looking over the site of the Circus Maximus, and which made part of the Ca3sarean palace, was restored. But the curse of Jerusalem hangs over this hill — it is again in ruins. In this quarter is shown a suite of subterranean chambers, usually denominated the Baths of Nero ; for this Emperor being a great builder, is generally called in to father all unknown remains. An Englishman excavated these chambers in 1777, and the ground of the villa is now at the disposal of any one who chooses to pay a very moderate sum for so imperial a pur- chase, and the pleasure of experiments. The Palatine, it has been remarked, has, no less than the valleys, been encumbered with accumulated soil. These chambers were surely above ground. No descent to them was discovered, but has been since constructed. The next garden and vineyard, for so the Palatine is now divided, is in possession of the Irish college, and some rustic or playful antiquaries had. in 1817, chalked upon the g^ate- 137 way, " The Hippodrome, the Temple of Apollo, the house of the Vestals.'''' The shape of the vineyard does not resemble a place for equestrian exercises. Apollo and the Vestals may be lodged at will in any of the towering vaults or under- ground crypts of these enormous masses. You may explore for hours either above or below, through the arched corridores, or on the platforms whose stuccoed floorings have resisted a thousand winters, and serve as a roof to the ruins beneath. From the corner of this platform there is one of the most impressive views of the Coliseum and the remains of the old city, both within and without the walls. The long lines of aqueducts stretched across the bare campagna, are the arms of the fallen giant. The look of these great structures, built for some purpose which the shrunk condition of the modern city did not render apparent, made a Roman of the fifteenth century call them insane* Your walks in the Palatine ruins, if it be one of the many days when the labourers do not work, will be undisturbed, unless you startle a fox in breaking through the brambles in the corridores, or burst unawares through the hole of some shivered fragments into onfe of the half buried chambers which the peasants have blocked up to serve as stalls for their jackasses, or as huts for those who watch the gardens. The smoke of their wood fires has not hidden the stuccoes and deeply indented mouldings of the imperial roofs. The soil accumulated in this quarter has formed a slope on the side of the ruins, and some steps have been adjusted into the bank. Half way up an open oratory has been niched into a wall. Religion is still triumphant after the fall of the palace of the Caesars, the towers of feudal lords, and the villas of pa- pal princes. The church and contiguous monastery of St. Bonaventura, preserve a spark of life upon the site of the town of Romulus. The only lane which crosses the Pala- tine, leads to this church between dead walls, where the sta- tions of the via crucis divert the attention from the fall of the Caesars, to the sublimer and more humiliating sufl'erings of God himself. The tall fragments of the imperial ruins rising * " Celsos fornices et insana acquseductornm opera perlustrans," F. Blond. Roma. Inst. lib. iii. fo. 3. if he did not mean broken. 138 from a hill, which seems one wide field of crossed and trel- lised reeds hung round with vines, form the most striking por- tion of the prospect of the old town, seen from the platform of St. Pietro in Montorio, or the other eminences beyond the Tiber. They are so thickly strewn, and so massive, that it is not surprising the inhabitants of the rising town chose rather to seek for other sites, than to attempt to clear them away. But they are not without their use, for the flagging vapours of the malaria are supposed to settle round their summits, as well as those of the Coliseum, and thus to spare the modern city. Where all repair has been hopeless, the descendants of those who reared these mighty fabrics have converted the de- solation of the ancient city to the purposes of other havoc. They scrape the old walls of the Palatine, as well as those of the Baths of Titus, for saltpetre, of which a manufacture has been established in both those positions ; and thus, if the phrase may be used, ruin begets ruin, destruction propagates destruction. Stanza CX. — and apostolic statues climb To crush the imperial urn, whose ashes lay subMme, fye. Sixtus Quintus raised the statue of St. Peter on the sum- mit of the column of Trajan. A liberty has, in the above verses, been taken with the probable position of the urn of Trajan, in compliance with a tradition, that the ashes of that emperor were in the head of a spear, which the colossal statue raised on the pillar, held in his hand.* But the remains of Trajan were buried in a golden urn under the column,! and * A. medal of Vespasian has been found with a column surmounted by an urn. See — Joseph. Castalionis, de colum. triump. comment, ap. Grffiv. Antiq. Rom. torn. iv. p. 1947. t To be fov Tpaioww data h tip xiot-t dvtov xattte^tj. Dion. Hist. Rom. lib. 69. torn. ii. p. 1 150 edit. Harab. 1750. " Sunt qui in pila, quam tenebat Colossus, cineres conditos dicunt : quo fundamento adhuc re- quiro." See Comment, to lib- Ixviii. tom. ii. p. 1188, of the Xylandro- Leunclavian version. " Ossa in urna aurea coUocata sub Columna Fori quae ejus oomine 139 continued in that depository in the time of Theodoric. The value of the um was sure to be fatal to the deposite ; but we know nothing of the time when poverty and rapine had lost all respect for the remains of the best of the Roman princes. An absurd story, which was current in the English churches in the ninth century, would make us suppose that the Chris- tians condescended to. except Trajan from the usual con- demnation of pagans, and that Gregory the Great, in passing through the Forum, was moved to compassion for the emperor in purgatory, and prayed for and liberated his soul.* The diminished charity of future zeal induced Bellarmine and the graver writers to reject this narration as a putid fable, and, for the best of reasons, since St. Gregory himself, in the fourth book of his Dialogues, (cap. 44.) has declared, " that we should not pi"ay for the devil and his angels reserved for eternal punishment, nor for infidels, nor the impious de- funct."! The report, hov/cvcr, of Gregory's biographers must make us think that the ashes had not yet been removed from the column, for if they had, it might have been forgot- ten, as at present, that this monument was ever a place of lepulture. vocitatur, recondita sunt, cujus columnae altitudo in 140 pedes erigitur." Cassiod, iu Chronic, p. 388. torn. i. fo. 1679. Cassiodorus must be reckoned good authority for what he tells of the Rome which he saw, although his chronicle from the beginning of the world to the year 519, must be expected to be rather inaccurate. For a character of this writer, and for the question whether there were not two Cassiodoruses, father and son, to whom the actions of the one should be attributed, see — Tiraboschi Storia della Lett. Ttal. torn. iii. lib. i. cap. i. * Tl)e story is told by Paul the Deacon, and by John the Deacon ; the latter says he heard it in some English churches. See note to Stanza Ixxx. f " Docet orandum non esse pro diabolo, angelisque ejus setemo sup- plicio deputatis, neque pro infidelibus hominibus impiisque defunctis." See — Dissertat. v. de Romanis Imperatorib. ap. lo. Laurent. Berti. Histor. Ecclesi. fcc. torn. ii. p. 72. Bassani. 1769. Tiraboschi laughs at John of Salisbury for telling the story of Trajan's liberation from hell by Gregory ; but he praises John the Deacon, who had not mentioned the burning of the Palatine library by the Pontiff, forgetting that John had told the story about Trajan. Storia della Ictt. Ital. torn. iii. lib. ii. p. 106 and 111. 18 J 40 The Romans having performed one grelt work, chose t» commemorate it hy another. The stranger, at the first sight of the column, naturally expects to find that the inscription will refer to the virtues, or at least the victories, of the prince whose exploits are sculptured upon it, but he reads only that the pillar was raised to show how much of the hill, and to what height, had, with infinite labour, been cleared away.* The historian Dion shows he can never have read this simple inscription, when he says that the column was raised by Trajan, ^'partly for a sepulchre, as well as for an evi- dence of the labour with which the Forum was made.t" The first object does not appear to have been entertained by Trajan or the senate. No emperor had been buried within the city, and it was Hadrian who transferred his predecessor'? bones to this unusual and conspicuous position. The Forum of Trajan served, amongst other purposes, to perpetuate the memory of the good and great, or of such as, in those declining ages, could pretend to that distinction. But, lest there should be any want of subjects, young men of great promise, who had died in the flower of their age, were honoured with a statue. t We know that Marcus Aurelius erected statues in this Forum to all those who fell in the German war, and that Alexander Severus transferred thither those of other celebrated personages from other sites : amongst them was one of Augustus, ex electro, and another of Nicomedes, in ivory. § The same place was devoted to the labours and the rewards of literary heroes : here the poets and others recited their compositions, perhaps in the Ulpian library, whose treasures were transferred by Diocletian to his own Thermae ; and here their images were allowed a place amongst conquerors and monarchs. The prefect Aure- * Senatus, Populusque Romanus Imp. Caes. Divi. Nervse. F. Trajano. Aug. Germa nico. Dacico. Pont. Max. Trlb. Pot- XII. Cos. XI. P. P. Ad. Declarandum. Quantae. Altitudinis. Mons. Et. Locus. Tan- \tis. operi or ruderi] bus. Sit. Egestus. * "A^ua fiiv is •ta^'^ii somf 9 aifia Si cli irtiSsf^iv tov xata t^v dyopav ?pytf». X. t. %. Hist. Rora. lib. 68. p. 1133. torn. ii. X Plin. lib. ii. epist. vii. k E«seb. in Chronic. Lamprld. in vit Sever. Nardini, lib. v. cap. ix. J4I lius Symmachus, whom his cotcmporaries thought superior to Tally,* Claudian, and Aurelius Victor, were, we may sus- pect, the most worthy ornaments of the Forum. But the honours of the statue were conferred on inferior personages : Sidonius Apollinaris,t Marius Victorinus, the schoolmaster, Proaeresius, the king of eloquence, we know were there,| and these may have been associated with the meaner names of Minervius, Sedatus, and Palladius, with iElius Donatus, with Nonius Marcellus of Tivoli, Sextus Pompeius Festus, Ser- vius the commentator, Praetextatus the friend of Macrobius, and that more valuable writer himself. There also may have been seen, Eutropius, the lost historians Flavins Dexter, and Nicomachus Flavianus,§ the almost unknown Optatian, and Perphinius. Even in the Gothic reigns, the custom of raising statues, at least to princes, appears to have prevailed. Men- tion is made by Procopius of statues of Theodoric, and Theodatus, and Justinian, and it is probable these might have been in the Forum of Trajan.§ The sight of this Forum would furnish a singular supplement to ancient history, and rescue from oblivion many who were as much the delight and admiration of their cotcmporaries as Cicero or Virgil. Fragments of statues and pedestals were dug up in the great excavation, but only five inscriptions, of which four were copies of each other and in honour of Trajan, || were * cui cedat et ipse Tulliiis. Prudent. f Carmina, 7 and 8. X " Regina rerutn Roma Regi Eloquentiae." So tlie inscription ran. Eunap. in vit. Sophist 1. 8- ^ Cecina Decius and Albinus, the regionarics, the authors of the Tables of Peutinger and the Antonine Itineraries, and other writers, have been enumerated by the industry of Fabricius, Bib- Lat. <:j De Bello Gothico, lib. i. cap. 2 4. Here Procopius names the Forum as the place where the miraculous mosaic image of Theodoric was raised, and fell to pieces gradually with the Gothic kingdom ; the head with Theodoric, the belly with Theodatus, and the lower parts with Amala- suntha ; but in lib. iii. cap. xx other statues are mentioned. II Senatus, Populusque Romanus Imp. Cajsari. Divi N<'rva\ F. Norv=p 142 discovered by the labourers. The first of these, however, coftfirms the above remark, and has for the first time intro- duced to the modern world Flavins Merobaudes,* a person whose merits were of the most exalted description, and, so they thought in the days of Theodosius and Valentinian, com- parable to the most extraordinary characters of antiquity. It may have been seen from former remarks, that at an early period, which cannot exactly be fixed, the Forum of Trajan, the noblest structure of all Rome, had partaken of the general desolation. From the moment we find a church there, we may be sure the destruction had begun. This was as early as the beginning of the twelfth century, and as that church was probably built not on the ancient flooring, the soil had already buried the ground plan of the Forum. The three Trajano. Augusto Germanico. Dacico Pontif. Max. Tribunicia Potest. XVI. Imp. VI. cos. VI. PP. Optime de Republica Merito. Domi Forisque. * Fl. Merobaudi aeque forti et docto viro tarn facere Laudanda quam aliorum facta laudare preecipuo Castrensi experientia claro facundia vel otiosonim Studla supergresso cui a crepundiis par virtutis et elo Qiientiaj cura ingenium ita fortitudini ut doctrinae Natum stilo et gjadio pariter exercuit. Nee in umbra Vel latebris mentis vigorem scholari tantum otio Torpere passus. Inter arma litteris militabat Et in Alpibus acuebat eloquium, ideo illi cessit in prsemium. Non verbena vilis nee otiosa liedera honor capitis Heliconius sed imago sere formata quo rari exempli Viros seu in castris probatos seu optimos vatum Antiquitas honorabat quod huic quoque cum Augustissirais Roma Principibus Theodosio et Placido Valentiniano Rerum Dominis In Foro Ulpio detulerunt remunerantes in viro Antiquag nobilitatis nova; glorise vel industriam Militarem vel carmen cujus preeconio gloria Triumphali crevit imperio. Dedicata III. Cal. Aug. Coiiss. ^D . NNT Theodosio XV. et Valentiniano. IIII. 143 churches, and the three towers raised by Boniface VIII., as well as the two hundred houses which were levelled with the ground by Paul III. in 1536, were on the modern level, and as their date must have gone back to the foundation of the churches, we may fairly pronounce that long previously to the twelfth century the base of the Quirinal had begun to assume its ancient form ere it had been cleared away by the subjects of Trajan. Paul III. opened the base of the column,* and in the time of Flaminius Vacca, an arch was dug from underground, per- haps in the pontificate of the same pope, and the flooring of the Forum was discovered, but immediately shut up again.! The late excavation enables us at last to tread the floor of an- cient Rome. The replacing the fragments of the columns on their bases, and the judicious arrangement of the other mar- bles, has created an effect little inferior to the wonders of Pompej. The stranger must be much struck with the massive Greek dimensions of the fragments, when compared with the space in which so many buildings were raised. | Here we have a forum with its porticos, and statues, and tribunals ; a basi- lica, with a double internal portico on every side ; a quadran- gular court, or atrium, also adorned with enormous columns ; two libraries ; a triumphal arch ; the great column and the portion of a temple, crowded into a space not so considera- ble as one of our smallest London squares. Whatever the earth covered of these magnificent structures is now exposed to view, and the remnants are sufficient to show what must be the subterranean riches of Rome. We may find it difficult to account for there being so much or so little left. Buildings * See note to Stanza Ixxx. pag. 104. ] Memorie, ap. Montfaucon. Diar- Ital. p. 187. X The giant texture of the Forum, the work of Apollodorus, struck Constantius dumb with astonishment. " Verum cum ad Trajani forum venisset singularem sub omni ccelo structuram, ut opinar etiam numinum assentione mirabilem, hserebat attonitus, per giganteos contextus cir- cumferens mentem nee relatu ineffabiles, nee rursus raortalibus appeten- dos." Amm. Marcel, lib. xvi. cap. x. p. 145. Cassiodorus calls it a mi- racle. It was doubtless altogether the most extraordinary object in Rome. " Trajani forum vel sub assiduitate videre miraculum est." Lib. vii. p. 1 13. edit. 1679. I 144 composed of columns were certain to be soon despoiled for the service of modern edifices : but the flooring and some of the many fragments are so perfect as to make the sudden bu- rial of these parts of the city more probable than the gradual decay. The bronze statues had, however, been previously removed, if such an accident did overwhelm the Forum, for none were found. The head of the colossal statue of Tra- jan was extant in the sixteenth century.* Stanza CXII. Where is the rock of Triumph, the high place Where Rome embraced her heroes ? whei-e the sleep Tarpeian ? Ruin and restoration have entirely effaced every vestige of the domicil of all the gods. The greatest uncertainty hangs over this hill. On which side stood the citadel, on which the grestt temple of the Capitol — and did the temple stand in the citadel ?t Read every thing that has been written on the to- pography of a spot four hundred yards in length, and two hundred in breadth, and you will know nothing. Four tem- ples, fifteen chapels (aedes,) three altars, the great rock, a fortress, a library, an athenaeum, an area covered with sta- tues, the enrolment office, all these are to be arranged in the above space : and of these the last only can be with precision assigned to the double row of vaults corroded with salt, where the inscription of Catulus was discovered. The Athenaeum perhaps may have been where the prisons and senator's pa- lace now stand. The Tarpeian rock is divided, by the beg- gars who inhabit the cottages, between the two angles to- wards the Tiber ; the highest is that called Monte Caprino, behind the gallery of the Conservators' palace, and the Pa- lazzo Caffarelli ; the most abrupt is the corner at the other * Ciacconius de Colon. Trajan. + Narduii, lib. v. cap. xiv. Donatusand he are atissue. The division of Rycquius into Arx, Capitolium, and Saxuin, does not make his book a bit more clear. I 145 end of the same Conservators' palace. Which of these two is the actual precipice wlience the traitors were thrown, has not been yet resolved. The citadel may be believed to have extended along the whole side of the hill. The great capitoline temple was placed by Nardini on the Aracoeli ; but doubts have again shaken this presumption, and the Feretrean Jupiter has put in his claim to that elevation. An earlier topographer mentions a church of Saint Salvator in Maximis, looking* towards the west, as occupying the site of the temple, and such a title, if existing now, might aid us in our conjectures. But no such church now remains. The revolutions of Rome were first felt on this hill. The Sabines, the Gauls, the republicans, the imperiahsts, the ci- tizens of papal Rome, have all contended for dominion on the same narrow spot. After the repairs of Domitiant it appears that the citadel was lost in a mass of golden-roofed fanes, and the word capital seems to have been synonymous with the tem- ple. J From that time the triumphs and studies of peace were celebrated and pursued amidst the trophies of victory. Poets were crowned with oaken wreaths, § libraries were collected, schools opened, and professors taught rhetoric, from the reign of Hadrian to that of Theodosius the Younger. It is possi- ble that part of the establishment mentioned in a law pub- lished by Valentinian III. and Theodosius II. may refer to Constantinople.il There were, however, public schools in the Capitol. Three Latin rhetoricians, five Greek sophists, ten Latin and ten Greek grammarians, formed a respectable university. The change of religion bedimmed the glory of the Domi- tian Capitol, but did not destroy the structures, as Winkel- * Fabriciiis — " in ea Capitolii parte quae occasum versus forum Holito- rlum respicit." Descrlp. nrb. Roraa, cap. ix. That is, on the side exactly contrary to Aracceli. t The gilding alone cost 12,000 talents, above two millions and a half sterling. See note 45 to cap- xvi. Decline and Fall, torn. ii. p. 413- oct. I " Auratum squalet Capitolium." Hieron. in loco cit. ap. Note to Stanza Ixxx. !^ Decline and Fall, cap. Ixx. notes 10, 11. torn, xii- p. 327. P Tiraboschi, Storia della Lett. Ital torn ii. lib. iv. p. SU7. 146 mann heedlessly supposed.* The first despoilment is, how- ever, to be attributed to the piety or rapacity of Stilicho. Genzeric is the next recorded plunderer ; but Theodoric does not appear to have missed the gilding of the doors, or the tiles of the half uncovered roof of the great temple, or the chain of the goddess Rhea. In his time " the ascent of the High Capitols furnished a sight surpassing all that the human imagination could conceive. "t How long these wonders were spared is unknown. It is probable that the robbery of the emperor Constans extended to the ornaments of the capi- toline temples ; but an antiquary of great note has thought himself able to discover the temple of Jupiter as late as the eighth or ninth century. J The hill does not reappear for ages, but seems to have- been put to its ancient use, if it be true that the anti-pope, John, was thrown from the Tarpeian rock at the end of the tenth century. § It was again a strong place, and the Corsi family had fortified it, or occupied its fortifications, in the course of the next hundred years. Their houses on the hill were thrown down by the emperor Henry IV, in * Storia della arti, fee. lib. xii. cap. hi. torn. ii. p. 419. note a. He went solely on the words of St. Jerome, (quoted in note to Stanza Ixxx.) on which Baronius had observed long before. " Verum non sic. quidera concidisse affirmat Capitolini Jovis templura, quod dirutum hoc anno fuerit, sed quod ornamentis tantum modo expoliatum." Annal. Eccles. ad an- 389, torn. vi. p. 51. edit. Lucae. 1740. f " Capitolia celsa conscendere hoc est humana ingenia superata vi- disse." Cassiod. Form, comitiv. forraar- urbis, lib. vii. p. 113. t Bianchini. See note to Stanza Ixxx. p. 80. ?5 Dissertazione sulle Rovine, p. 330. note A. There seems some doubt here. Muratori, ad an- 998, tom. v. p. 509. is much amused at a story of Peter Damian's, that the anti-pope had his eyes bored out,his ears cut off, and his tongue also cut off, and being then put on an ass, with his face to tlie tail, which he held in his hand, was paraded about Rome, and obliged to exclaim, " Such is the deserving punishment of him who en- deavours to expel the pope of Rome from his seat" Damian tells this, with the exception of the tongue cutout ; a Saxon annalist tells it with the exception of the exclamation ; so that the joke is only in Muratori's confusion. 147 1084, and Guiscard soon afterwards levelled whatever re- mained of the fortress.* In 1118, however, it was still the place of assembly. The friends of pope Gelasius II. and the Heads of the regions' arc said to have mounted into the Capitol, to rescue him from Cencio Frangipane.t In that century the Capitol is crowned with churches, and in the possession of monks. Aracoeli and St. John the Baptist, the monastery of the Benedictines, (who were settled there by the anti-pope Anaclete II. about 1 130 or 1 134), some gardens and mean houses and shops had succeeded to the pagan temples and to the feudal towers.]: At the revolution of Arnold of Brescia (1143, 1144), in the same century, the Capitol was naturally selected for the restoration of the Senate and the equestrian order. The hill became the seat of the revolutionary government, and we find Lucius II. in 1145, repulsed and killed with a stone, in an attempt to drive the people from their post,§ The re- building of the capitoline citadel|| was part of the proposed reform, and appears to have been carried, partially at least, into effect. From this period the Capitol resumed something of its importance, and, if those who saw it may be trusted, of its splendour. The people held a consultation there,** before they attacked Frederic Barbarossa, in 1155. It appears in the transactions of the subsequent centuries as the centre of the city. The duties and ceremonies of the recovered Senate or Senator, were rendered more respecta- ble, by being performed on the site of ancient dominion, and whilst the tomb of Hadrian was regarded with jealousy and affright, the tenant of the Capitol was looked upon as the law- ful master of Rome. Here Rienzi planted the standard of the good estate ; here Petrarch was crowned. The popular assemblies were convoked on this hill. The bell of the great tower was the signal of alarm, and was thought to watch ovec * See note to Stanza Ixxx. p 8D. f Annali d'ltalia, torn. vi. p. 389. \ Dissertazione, &.c. p. S57, 358. ^ Annali d'ltalia, torn. vi. p. 480. II " Andava cestui (Arnold of Brescia) predicando clie si dovea rlffab- bricare il campidoglio" Annali d'ltalia, torn- vi p. 481- ** Annali, kc- torn. vi. p. 517, 19 k 148 the new liberties of the Romans. The tolling is often heard in the night of those unhappy ages. The importance of this station was fatal to the new cita- del' 'which, after being frequently assaulted and taken in the qu^rrel§ of the barons, and the people, and the popes, seems .. '{o have lost all appearance of a fortress in the beginning of • the fifteenth century. But the people were still summoned to the hill in the tumults which followed the death of King Ladislaus,* in 1414 ; and a house for the tribunals of the Se- nator and his Conservators was built upon the ancient enrol- ment office of Catulus. Hear what was then the condition of the hill from a Roman, who, after describing its ancient glo- ries, exclaims, " But nozo, besides the brick house built fur the use of the senator and his assessors by Boniface IX., and raised upon ruins, and such as an old Roman citizen of moderate for- tune would have despised ; besides the church of Aracceli, be- longing to the brothers of the blessed Francis, constructed on the foundation of the temple of the Feretrian Jupiter, there is nothing to be seen on this Capitoline, or Tarpeian mountain, adorned once with so many noble edifices.'^''] In this picture of desolation may be inserted the fragments of marble recorded by Poggio, and the cottages which served for the shops of the artisans who frequented the Wednesday market held there, until transferred, in 1477, to the Piazza Navona.]: The present state of the Capitol dates from the pontificate of Paul III. On the establishment of the papal power the castle of St. Angelo was to be the only fortress, and the ge- nius of Michael Angelo was employed to make the ancient * Vendettini- Serie chronologica, &c. p. 75, 76. f " Nunc vero prseter lateritiam domum a Bonifacio IX. ruinis superse- dificatam qualem mediocris olim fastidisset Romanus civis usibus sena- toris et causidicorum deputatam : prseter Arjecceli fratruni beati Franc, ecclesiam in Feretrii Jovis templi fundamentis extructam, nihil habet is Capitolinus Tarpeiusve mons tantis olim aedificiis exornatus." Flav. Blond. Rom. Inst lib. i. fo. 10. edit. 1527. X " Eodein anno et mense essendosi piu volte ordinate lo qonsiglio nel Palazzo de' Conservatori, che si dovesse fare lo niercato^ di Mercordi nella Piazza di Nagoni, tamdem lo raercato fu cominciato alii tredici die Settembre dello detto anno (1477)." Steph. Infess. Diar. Rom. ap. Script Rer. Ital. torn. iii. par. ii. p. 1146. 149 citadel not only accessible but inviting. The broad and easy ascent, the facade and steps of the senatorial palace, the late- ral edifices, have accomplished this object ; but they accord ill vrith our preconceptions of the Roman Capitol. It should, however, be recollected, that although the area may have been partially levelled, the principal eminence is probably as high as that of the ancient hill. The tops of the buildings below were on a level with the base of thtt Capitoline structures in the reign of Vitellius, and the ascent was by a hundred steps,* which could hardly rise higher than the 124 steps of the church of Aracoeli. Calpurnius, in his seventh eclogue, says, that the top of the Coliseum towered above the Tarpeiart rock. We can account for that rock appearing less terrific than might be expected ; since a large piece of it, as big as a house of ample magnitude,! fell down in the reign of Euge- nius IV. The Cafarelli palace and other edifices conceal the form of the summit itself. Aracoeli, whether on the site of the great temple or not, preserves the. post which it occupied eight centuries ago. The Benedictines made way for the Franciscans in 1252, and popes and cardinals have been ambitious to contribute to the dignity of the substitute. The corporation, calling itself the Roman People, | affected to emulate, in behalf of this church, the splendours of Catulus and Domitian, and gilded the whole interior roof, in gratitude for the victory obtained over the Turks in 1571. On the return of Marc Anthony Colonna from the victory of Lepanto, on the 16th of December in that year, he was received in triumph in the Capitol, and Aracoeli was the new temple which served, instead of the Jove, Best and Greatest, to receive the vows of the Chris- tian conqueror. The religious community amounted to 400, when the French dispersed them, and reduced»^i^r ti'easures to the base of the altar, which Augustus Cajsar erected to * " Scandentes per conjiincta sdificia: quse ut in multa pace, in altum edita, solum Capitolii sequabant." Ticiti. Hist. lib. iii. cap. Ixii. " Etqua Tarpeja rupes centum gradibus aditur." Ibid- t "Rupis Tarpeix, cujus pars maxima domus araplse magnitudinis srquiparanda proximis diebus collapsa est." Flav. Biond. ibid. lib. ii. fol. 22. I Venuti descrizione, kc. di Rom. Mod. torn. ii. p. 341. edit. 1766. 15d the First-born of God, and to the picture of the Virgin painted by St. Luke.* The restored remnant is only a hun- dred. The Monte Caprino, behind the Conservators' palace, is choked up by dirty cottages, through one of which you are led to look over one of the Tarpeian precipices. The height of the hill on the side of the Forum is rendered more im- posing by the clearing away of the soil, which rose to the base of the senatorial palace, and formed a platform of dirt and rubbish, over which carriages are seen driving in the old views of Romc.t As, however, the stranger cannot have the satisfaction of chmbing the Capitol by the ancient triumphal road, whose exact position has not been ascertained, he should pay his first visit on the other side, by the modern ap- proach, where the colossal figures and the trophies of Trajan in front, and the Equestrian Aurelius rising before him as he mounts, have an air of ancient grandeur suitable to the sensa- tions inspired by the genius of the place. Stanza CXII. The Foruvi, ivhere the immortal accents gloto, And still the eloquent air breathes — burns with Cicero. The reader may recollect a fine passage in Middleton's letter from Rome : " For my own part, as oft as I have been rambling about in the very rostra of old Rome, or in that tem- ple of Concord where Tully assembled the senate in Cati- Une's conspiracy ; I could not help fancying myself much more sensible of the force of his eloquence, whilst the im- pression of the place served to warm my imagination to a degree almost equal to that of his old audience.^'* The author of the Free Inquiry was no enthusiast, even in the cause of his Favourite Cicero, and the emotions which * Venuti, (ibid,) has the grace to say, " un altare che pretendesi eretto da Augusto, col titolo d^ara Priinogenili Dei." f See — Descriptio faciei variorum locorum quam prospectum vocant urbis Romae. Fifteen engravings by Livinus Cruylius, prefixed to the fourth volume of Grsevius* 1^1 he confesses himself to have felt will be assuredly partaken by any one imbued with a moderate respect for the wisest and best man of all antiquity. Every site and relic that can remind us of him must be regarded with that veneration with which he himself contemplated the porticos and seats of the Athenian philosophers : and we treasure up the little dies of the pavement which lie scattered on the Formian shore, and may possibly have been trodden by the saviour of his coun- try, with an affectionate regard scarcely inspired by the mas- terpieces of ancient art.* There is certainly no delight comparable with that derived from the sight of objects connected with the writings and ac- tions of those, who, according to the panegyric of Dryden, " Better lived than we, though less they knew — " and how fully such a delight is enjoyed at Rome may be un- derstood by the most ignorant, and is experienced by the most indifferent observer. The fear of ridicule, the vice of the age, is, in this instance, insufficient to check the honest indistinct admiration, which, it may be son>e consolation for the timid to learn from competent authority, is not the sign of folly, but of superior sense, and is the sole origin of wisdom. t The memory of the great orator was preserved at Rome even in the ages of ignorance. In the twelfth century an ancient structure was known by the name of the Temple of Cicero. He had not a temple raised to him, but no man that ever lived was so deserving of one.| We must be content with the site, for we cannot trust much to the objects of the Roman Forum. It will have been seen that when Middleton was at Rome the eight columns * Cicero is the hero of Mola di Gaeta : a tomb, a villa, &,c. are shown by the antiquaries of the inn at that town. t Ma'Xa ydp ^iXoao^ov tovto to rta'^ffj, to Oavfid^fiv, ov yap aM.ri apxy ^v%oao^iai rj iivti]. Platen. Theceteti. dialog, oper. torn. i. p. 155. The reader may remark the use the eloquent Winkelmann has made of this authority. Storia delle arti, &ic. lib. v. cap. vi. torn. i. p. 393. I Benedict, in his Ordo Romanus, says, " Mane dicit missam ad sanc- tam Anastasiam, qua finita descendit cum processione per viam juxta porticum Gallatorum ante templum Sybillse et inter templum Ciceronis et porticuna Cimorum." Ap. Mabillon. Mus. Ital. tona. ii. p. 125. nmn 16 See — note to Stanza Ixxx. p. 89. 152 under the Capitol with the inscription '■' Senatus Populus- que Romanus incendio consumptum restituit,'^ were usually supposed those of the Ciceronian Temple of Concord. In fact they had gone by that name in the fifteenth century, when seen by Poggio, who witnessed the destruction of the cell and part of the portico.* The author of the Ordo Roma- nus, in the twelfth century, places it near the Arch of Seve- rus,t a position which seems to accord with that given to the Temple of Concord by Dion Cassius| and by Servius,§ the first of whom says it was near the prisons, and the second near the Temple of Saturn on the Clivus Capitolinus. Plutarch in his life of Camillus, mentions that it looked towards the Fo- rum. An inscription found near the ruins, as Marlianus|| and Faunus** attest, and transferred afterwards to the Late ran, re- cords, that the Temple of Concord having fallen from old age, was restored by the Senate and the Roman people in the time of Constantine. Donatustt was positive of the authentic claims of the eight columns. The first to establish a doubt was NardinijII and his opinion prevailed with Winkelmann§§ * " Romani postmodum aedem totam et porticus partem disjectis co- lumnis suntdemoliti" De Variet Fortunae ap. Sallengre, torn, i- p. 501. ■f " Descendit ante privatam Mamertini ; intrat sub arcu triumphali in- ter templum fatale et templum Concordiae" Ordo Roman. Auct, Bene- dict, ap. Mab. ib. p. 143. num. 51. The author of the " De mirabilibus Romtc" also says, " Templum Corcordise juxta Capitolium, ante quod arcus triumphalis." Ap. Montfaucon Diar. Italic, cap. xx. X Hist- Rom. lib. Iviii- cap. ii. tom. ii. p. 885. Near the pri-'on, he says, that is the Mamertine, aTiX' a,v^r;iA.spbv 57 yipovaia m.yjcii,ov tov 6ixr;fxafos Ir 0 CORONATO TRIVMPHATORI SEMPER AVGVSTO SMARAGDVS EX PRAEPOS SACRI PALATII AC PATRICIVS ET EXARCHVS ITALIAE DEVOTVS EIVS CLEMENTIAE PRO INNViMERABILlBVS PIETATIS EIVS r.ENEFICIIS ET PRO QVieTE PROC\TlATA ITAL. AC CONSERj;a 20 156 •the Cow-field in the beginning of the fifteenth century, and the sacred precincts are usually known by no other name to this day. The accretion of soil is so great in the Campo Vaccino, that the excavations to the ancient level have thrown up heaps of earth, the disposal of which has become a matter of difficul- ty. The dissection has not yet led to a correct anatomy of the ancient structure. Despairing of any discoveries at the foot of the three columns, (the pretended Comitium), the Abate Fea was directing the labours of the convicts in the summer of 1317, to ascertain the actual direction by which the triumphal way ascended the Capitoline hill. The difficulty of squeezing the twenty elephants and the four stags abreast of Aurelian's car, into the space between the Arch of Severus and the sup- posed Temple of Concord, was not, however, likely to be sur- mounted by any discoveries beneath the soil.* It does not seem that any flooring similar to that of the Forum of Trajan will be found in this quarter : nor have the labours at the base of the three columns decided whether they are still to be the Comitium, or be restored to their former tenants, Castor and Pollux, or to Jupiter Stator.t They have, however, added two or three fragments to the Fasti, the original mass of which was discovered at the opposite church of Santa Maria Libera- trice. Her Grace the Dutchess of Devonshire has had as little success at the foundation of the column of Phocas, but her enterprising liberality is not the less to be praised and imita- and as Mr. Gibbon has, apparently, copied from that translation, the Go- thic king had used the words " in gregum pascua," a " pasture for cat- tle." See Decline and Fall, cap. xliii- torn. vii. at p. 369. * Vopisc. in Vit. Aurel. Hist. Aug. p. 210, edit. 1519 ; or under the arch would be equally difficult. f Nardini, lib. v. cap. iii- is positive for the Comitium ; after which we may be amused with the following opinions. " Quoique il y ait des anti- quaires qui croient que les trois superbes colonnes isolees que Ton voit dans le Forum, &,c. et I'opinion la plus commune est qii'elles sont un reste du Portique du temple de Jupiter Stator" Vasi. Itin^raire de Rome, 1316, torn. i. p 78. " Ma die sicuramente sono avanzi del tempio di Castore et Polluce." Itinerario di Roma, fee. opera dell' Antiquario Andrea Manaz- zale, Roma, 1317, torn. i. p. 44. Mr. Forsyth has hit these two antiqua- ries, " lacquey de places in print." 157 ted.* The contiguous sacred-way is a fine field of glory, and may be called virgin soil. From the church of St. Martina in tribus Foris to the corner of the Carinae, there is not an object that has not been disputed, and that may not again be- come the subject of controversy. Nardinit thought the church of Saint Hadrian might be the temple dedicated by Antoninus to Hadrian, a scandalous but probable conjecture ; just as the neighbouring S. Martinaf is more likely to have been formerly devoted to Mars than to the " Secretarium Se- natus,'^^ a name given to it on account of an inscription found near it, and copied by Gruter. The church of St. Hadrian is the Temple of Saturn in one guide book, and the Basilica of Paulus Emilius in another. § Next comes the church of St. Cosmas and Damianus, which was once set down to Castor and Pollux, then to the goddess Rome, afterwards to Romulus and Remus, then to Romulus alone, then to Remus alone. || The round vesti- bule is ancient, as are the bronze doors, although they did not originally belong to this structure, but were added by Pope Hadrian I. together with the porphyry columns. Even the modern objects change in Rome : for the famous picture in this church of the Mother of God,** which said to Saint Gregory, ^^Gregorie quare int non salutastiP^ is become God * The view of the Forum in Paul V.'s time gives a mass of brick work, called Rostra Vetera et Nova, near the Palatine ; some arched ruins, call- ed Templum Libertatis, near the Comitium ; then a single arch and two steps, like a sentry-box, Templum Deorem Penatum; and, behind these, the Curtian Lake, with four arches, partly filled up, called curia nova ad Septentrionem vergens. f Lib. V. cap. 8. X It is called in tribus foris, from the contiguity of the Roman, A.»gus- tan, and Julian forums, a proof of its high antiquity, These names of churches are the great help in adjusting topography. ?^ The same Vasi and Manazzale. II Nardini, lib iii. cap. iii. — Fabric. Descrip. Rom. cap. ix — ^Venuti Ro- ma Moderna, rione x. tom. ii. p. 354. — Donatus, lib. iii. cap. iv. He thinks the round temple might have belonged to one, and the rectangular one behind to another. *^* "They show us here an image of the Virgin which reprimanded Gregory the Great for passing by her too carelessly." liCtler from Rome. 158 the Father, with a globe in his hand, and two fingers held up in papal benediction. The two half-buried Cipollinc columns which succeed in this line, are modestly called Remains of some ancient edifice. The learned Vasi remarks, that they stand on their ancient base, and that, therefore, when an excavation was made to the foot of them, in 1735, the ground plan of the sacred way was discovered. The inscription, divo antonino et divae favstinae, on the portico of S. Laurence in Miranda, would appear deci- sive : the antiquaries, however, are cautious to remark that there were two Antonines, and two Faustinas. The three vaults of the Temple of Peace would certainly seem part of that structure which astonished Hormisdas,* and which Herodiant calls the greatest and most beautiful work in the whole city. Even Nardinlj has no doubts here. But the modern antiquaries are determined to dispute about what part of the temple these huge vaults may be said to repre- sent ; a treasury, a Pinacotheca, perhaps a bath, or any other building of the Forum of Peace. The great excavations in 1812 discovered immense masses of marble, but nothing to assist conjecture. This part of Rome must have been abandoned for many centuries, in order to form the accretion of soil at the back of these vaults, which slopes into an embankment of hanging gardens. Procopius talks of the Temple of Peace as being shattered with lightning and unrepaired. The ruins have supported modern buildings, of which fragments of towers still remain. In addition to the above-mentioned vestiges of the old city, the topographer may amuse himself with adjust- ing the many other structures which were crowded into the Sacred way.§ * Amm. Marcell- lib. xvi. cap. x. in loc. citforumque pacis. t Herodian, lib- i- ndv to t'^i EipTji/j^j teH'ivoi xatt^^ixBij, ftByiotw xai xdM.vatov ytvo^ittvov tuv tv trj }t6%ei Ipyuv. p. 58. edit. Basil- The fire by lightning happened in the reign of Commodus. % Lib. iii. cap. xii. «:) See Nardini, lib. iii. cap. xii- 159 Stanza CXIV. Then turn we to her latest tribune^s name, From her ten thousand tyrants turn to thee- For a sketch of these tyrants, and for the character and exploits of Rienzi, the reader is referred to the DecHne and Fall of the Roman Empire.* Those who have given us a portrait of the Romans of the dark ages, have represented them as uniting in their persons all the vices that can degrade the human character : but, in spite of the invectives of Liut- prandt and Saint Bernard,! those vices, with the exception of such as they shared with their barbarous cotemporaries, seem reducible to their ancient reproach, that they could not bear complete servitude, nor perfect freedom. § The barbarian * Cap. xlix. Ixix. Ixx- t Liutprand was told, at the court of Nicephorus Phocas, that he was not a Roman, although he came from the pretended Roman EmperorF» the Othos and Adelheid, but only a Lombard- It was on that occasion that the bishop of Cremona became violent, and attacked the Romans with that sentence which is extracted into the Decline and Fall, cap. xlix. note 44. If, however, the reader will consult the original, Idut- prandi legatio ad JVichephorum Phocam, ap. Scrip. Rer. Ital. torn. ii. p. 479 to 489, he will see that the insolence of the Greek Emperor, who said the Lombards were too big-bellied to fight, accusing them of " gastrt- margia,'^ was the cause of the ambassador's abuse, which was directed, perhaps, rather more against the Byzantines, who had exclusivelj^ assum- ed the name of Romans, than against the inhabitants of Rome. Liut- prand, indeed, shows he did not allude to the Roman citizens of his day particularly, though he does talk of their subjection to harlots, the Theo- doras and Marozia, for he begins his attack with Romulus. " Romulum fratricidam, ex quo et Romani dicti sunt, porniogenitum, hoc est ex adul- terio natum chronographiainnotuit." Ibid. p. 481. Nichephorus mount- ed the throne in 963, and to believe Liutprand and S- Bernard strictly, we should think that the Romans continued to be the same abandoned race for two centuries ; if so, the Saxon Emperors had not improved them. Liutprand, it is true, might fairly say, that the descendants of Romulus had forfeited their title of lords of the world, kosmocratorrs. X Decline and Fall, cap. Ixix. p 270. vol- xii. oct See also Muratori Annali, ad an. 1152, torn. vi. p. 499. \" Sed imperaturus es hominibus, qui nee totam servitutcni pati pos- sunt nee totam libertatcra." Galba said this to Piso. Tacit. TJist. lib i. cap, xvi 160 blood which had been transfused into their veins was likely to irritate, rather than allay this impatience of control ; and conceptions of original equality, to which the enslaved sub- jects of the Caesars had long been strangers, might be im- ported by their union with the savages of the north. The ambassador of a despot, and a saint, might easily be disgust- ed with the thousand horrid forms which this tormenting feel- ing would assume, and which would betray itself in violence or perfidy, in arrogance or meanness, in proportion as they were able to shake away, or obliged to submit to, the yoke. Their conduct, from the first assumption of temporal power by the Popes, must seem absurd and contradictory, if it be not regarded as the consequence of a resolution to submit to no resident master whose foreign authority might enable him to employ a foreign force for their enslavement. The ob- jection applied both to Popes and Emperors, and their his- tory, if a few broken notices may so be called, is a perpetual struggle against both, sometimes united, and sometimes sepa- rated by a temporary alliance with the people themselves, formed the same purpose of final enfranchisement. We must not feel indignant at their ill-directed efforts, be- cause they did not terminate in the independence obtained by the states of Tuscany and Lombardy. Their city had the misfortune of being the metropolis of Christianity, in which it was for the interest of the sovereigns of Europe that a priest should reign ; and, secondly, their too glorious name, and the pride of their Pontiffs, had tempted the ambi- tion of every conqueror, with a crown which could be con- ferred no where but on the banks of the Tiber. Thus they had to contend with pretenders who could never die, and who failed not to unite their efforts when the Romans thought themselves strong enough to aspire to an independence of both. It was the endeavour of the people and nobles to de- prive Leo III. of all temporal power, that made him apply to Charlemagne, and merge both the republic and the patri- cianate in the imperial title of the Frank.* * Sec — Annali d' Italia, ad an. 799, torn. iv. p- 431, 432- 161 John XII. invited Otho the Great to Rome, in 962, under pretext of assistance against Berenger and Adaihert, and re- stored the Western Empire, which had been vacant since the death of Berenger Augustus,* in 924. It was to assist Gregory V. that Otho III. marched to Rome ;t and the protection of Benedict VIII. brought down| Henry II. in 1014. The league between Adrian IV. and Frederic Barbarossa cost Arnold of Brescia his life, as the price of the Emperor's coronation. § As then the imperial and papal interests combined against the spirit of revolt, and called, in succession, Charlemagne, the Othos, the Henries, and the first of the Frederics, to Rome, so the annalists of either party have joined in the censure of every independent leader. The patrician Alberic, the son of Marozia, is handed down to us as a tyrant,|| yet he held the dominion of Rome for two and twenty years, suc- cessfully resisted the repeated sieges of the capital, and peaceably transmitted his authority to his son, a youth of seventeen years of age.** The Consul, or rather the Ccesar, CrescentiuSjtt is, in the same manner, declared " a bad man, a man blinded by ambition," whose just punishment "served * Annali ad an. 961, torn- v p- 961. 999. t Ibid, ad an 996, torn. v. p. 501. I Annali, torn. vi. p. 46. ^ Annali ad an. 1 155, torn. vi. p. 516. II " Termin6 in quest' anno il corso di sua vita Alberico Pati'izio o Principe o vogliam dire Tiranno di Romana." Annali ad an- 954, torn- V. p. 384. ** See note to Stanza LXXX. p. 82. Tt Mr. Gibbon, cap. xlix- calls him the Brutus of the Republic, but, in fact, he affected the empire. The Marquis Maffei's ^allerj' contained a medal with IMP. CMS. AUGUST. P P CRESENTIUS, on one side, round the head of the prince, and on the reverse a man on horseback ha- j-anguing soldiers, with the legend exercitus S. C, below ; and on the base, S. p. Q. R. similar to the allocutions on horseback of Hadrian, Posthumus, and others. The arts appear to have been still preserved even in those ages, if we may judge from this medal. Verona Illustrata. par. iii. p. 500. edit. 1732. Crescentiiis was put to death in May 998, and hanged, with twelve dthers, round the bastion of St Angelo. 162 to deter those who knew not how to obey Pope or Emperor.""^ If Muratori says this, what is to be expected from Baronius ? Yet the Emperor Otho III., who murdered Crescentias Un- dertook a barefoot pilgrimage to Mount Garganus to expiate his treachery.! The Guelf and Ghibeline writers are ahke unmerciful to popular leaders. The anti-popes of the people are Volponi with Muratori ; those of the Emperors sometimes a little anti -canonical, but often legitimate : there is no depth deep enough for either in the Ecclesiastical Annals. Arnold of Bresciaj is also delivered over to posterity as an heresiarch whose rebellious doctrines justly condemned him to the flamiBs of both worlds. § These doctrines, however, were not dispersed with his scattered ashes, but were con- centred in that Capitol, and by that Senate, which he re- stored ; and however the ignorance of the age may have misapplied his institutions, they served to retard, for three centuries, the confirmed establishment of religious despotism. The Romans were the last of all the people of Christendom who submitted to the Pope. The feudal wars of the city belonged to the times, and are not to be charged to the de- mocratical spirit, but to the impotence of the laws. Rienzi had the fortune to fall on better days and better tongues. With Petrarch for a poet,|| and a fellow citizen, * " Un mal' uomo, un uomo acciccato dall' arabizione, convien dire che fosse Crescenzio Console dilloma." Annali, kc torn. v. p. 504. " II che servi ad atterrir chiunque non sapeva allura ubbidire nfe al Papa ne air Iraperatore" Ibid p. 510- t Annali ad an. 1001, torn. vi. p. 1, 2. \ " Porro circiter annum Christi mcxlii. Romanus Populus ab Arnaldi Brixiani heresiarchse verbis seductis, rebellionem contra Petri successores jiistos urbis dominos primum instituit, rempublicam nempe atque Senatum prout antiquis ternporibus fuerant restituere ausus." Antiq. Med. ^vi. tonri. ii. p. 559. 5^ " Messo costui (Arnold) nelle forze del Prefetto di Roma fu impicca- to e braciato c le sue ceneri sparse nel Tevere, acciochfe la stolida plebc non venerasse il corpo di questo infarae." Muratori. Annal. ad an. 1155. lorn vi. p. 51G. jj Petr. epistola hortatoria de capessenda libertate. Opp. p. 535. 540, and the 5th eclogue. Vir magnanime, vir fortissime, Junior Brute, arc the titles he gives Rienzi. De Sade was not the first who supposed the apirto t^entil of Petrarch to be addressed to the younger Stephen Colonna ; 163 rude, but a witness of his exploits, for a biographer,* his merits have been fairly balanced with his defects ; and as those who suffered by his justice were the rebellious Barons, rather than the partisans either of the church or the empire, his half heroic, fantastic figure,! has bpen delineated with unusual partiality. The facility with which he succeeded in his first designs, shows that the allure of liberty had lost none of its charms at Rome, and that the tyranny of the nobles was equally odious with that of the Emperor or the Pope, The fall of this abortion of fortune was the fruit rather of his own intemperance than of the inconstancy of the Ro- mans.l As the overthrower of the usurpation of the nobles, as the assertor of justice, as the punisher of violence, and the projector of a splendid system which was to restore the freedom of Rome and of Italy, he did indeed " redeem cen- turies of shame." When the republican aspired to perpetu- ate his own power, when the tribune imitated the fopperies of royalty,§ when the reformer declared himself the cham- and that eulogy has been also claimed for Giordano de' Sabelli ; but the Italian editors have, for the most part, recognised the gentle spirit in Cola di Rienzi- [See Castelvetro's edition, Venice, 1756, p. 132, et seq.] Our London editor has rejected the French hypothesis. Zotti, torn. i. p. 1 12. Mr. Gibbon [chap. Ixix, ad fin. and chap. Ixx. p. 588, 4to.] follow- ed his favourite Abb6. * Historise Romanse fragmenta. Antiq. Med. JEvi. torn. iii. p. 399 to p. 480, and 509 to 546. t " Costui era uomo fantastico ; dall' un canto facea la figura d' eree, dair altro di pazzo." Annali ad an. 1347, torn. viii. p. 250. t Giovanni Viliani seems inclined to divide the disgrace between the tribune and the people. " Nessuna signoria mondana dura E la vana speranza t' ha scoperto II fine della fallace ventura." Hist. Fiorentinae, lib. xii. cap. civ. Script. Rer. Ital. tom. xiii. p. 982. ?j The account of the feast given by Rienzi in the Lateran palace, is a singular picture of the magnificence and luxury of those times, as -well as of the vulgar profusion of the tribune. " Sweetmeats of various kinds ; a great abundance of sturgeon, a delicate fish ; pheasants, kids. Every one was allowed to pocket what he liked." " Confietti de divisate ma- nere. Fonce abbonnantia de storione (lo pescie delicato) ; fasani, capretti. Chi bolea portare lo rifudio, se lo portava liberamente." Hist Rom. Fragmenta, cap. xxvii. p. 453, ibid. Stephen Colonna told Rienzi that 21 164; pion of superstitFon* and the church, he lost his distinctive character, and, Hke a more celebrated personage of our own times, left a convincing proof, that a revolution can be main- tained only by the maxims, and even the very forms, by which it was at first ushered into life. The modern Capitol retains two objects which recal the memory of Rienzi. The horse of Aurelius,t called, former- ly, the horse of ConstantinCy which stood before the Lateran, and from whose right nostril the tribune poured a stream of wine on the day of his ridiculous knighthood ;X and the bronze table, usually called the lex regia, conferring the privileges of dominion on Vespasian, which Rienzi expounded to the populace, and, by a strange distortion of meaning, cited a» a proof of the majesty of their ancestors. § The inscription the decent garments of a plebeian were more becoming the tribune than those pompous robes which he affected. Ibid. cap. xxviii. Some origf- nal letters of Rienzi, never before published, are inserted at the end of these notices. * Instead of the Holy Roman Emj^re, Rienzi called it the Holy Ro- man Republic in his title. " Nicola Severo e Clemente, de libertate, de pace, e de justitia Tribuno, anco de la Santa Romana Repiubbica Lib- beratorc Illustre." It was in this spirit that his word of battle was the Holy Ghost, Cavaliers ! " E ordinal le battaglie, e fece li capitani delle vattaglie. E deo lo nome Spirito Santo Cavalieri" Hist. Rom. Frag, cap. xxxii ibid. When he came from Avignon, he came as senator of the Pope. t " A stream of wine flowed from the nostrils of Constantine's brazen horse : no complaint, except of the scarcity of water, could be heard." Decline and Fall, cap. Ixx. tom. xiii. oct. p. 848. A trifling mistake in the masterly sketch of Rienzi's life. Wine flowed from the right, water from the left nostril. "In quella die continuamente de la matina nell' alva fi a nona, pe le nare de lo Cavalfo de Constantino, che esse de vronzo pe canali de piommo ordenati jescio pe froscia ritta vino roscio, e pe froscia manca jescio acqua e cadea indiflcicntemente ne la conca piena.** Hist. Rom. Fragm. cap. xxvi. p 451. loc. cit. I " Vitiosa bufifonia," is the title given to the ceremony by the anony- mous author of the Fragments. Rienzi excuses it in a letter to his friend Raynald Orsini. See — the MS. at the end- ^ Rienzi was not quite so ignorant as Mr. Gibbon has made him : he did not use the word liberty, but viajesty. " Signori tanta era la majes- tate de lo popolo de Roma, che a lo imperatore dare I'autoritate." Ibid. cap. iii, Mr. Gibbon calls the table " stUl extant in the choir of the church af St. John Lateran." He evidently forgot, or did not know, that botk 165 was once in the Lateran, and is now in the Capitoline Ma- seum. The horse was called the horse o( Constantine, by mistake^ in the time of Theodosius II. In the regionary of the eighth or ninth centurj, tlie Caballus Constantini is near the Tem- ple of Concord, and was removed from the Forum to the Lateran in 1 187, by Clement III. It was so much neglected when Sixtus IV. put it in a more conspicuous situation before the Lateran, that Flaminius Vacca, writing of it, says, it wa« found in a vineyard near the Scala Santa, which has been mistaken for a disinterment, but it was never underground. Paul III. in 1538, transferred it to the Capitol. But what Winkelmann says* of a nosegay given annually by the senator to the chapter of the Lateran as an acknowledgment of right, is not true. Michael Angelo made the pedestal out of a piece of the frieze and architrave of the Arch of Trajan. t Winkelmann has also mistaken in saying the man was not on the horse in Rienzi's time. The Conservator's palace exhibits vestiges of the reform of Arnold of Brescia, and of his re-established senate. In apartments contiguous to that which contains the old Fasti, the modern series of inglorious magistrates is ranged, in hum- ble imitation of the venerable list of ancient conquerors and triumphs. The initials of the modern title are so given, that what must be read Conservators looks like Consuls. It does not seem to be known at what precise period the modern se- nate of Rome diminished from a council,^ which at one time amounted to fifty-six persons, to a single magistrate ; njar does it appear, that after that reduction the government of the city was invariably trusted to one alone. § The senate, in the this table and the horse were in the Capitol when he wrote. The author of the Fragments says that Rienzi was the only man in Rome who could read or interpret the table. * Storia delle Arti, torn. ii. p. 395. t See Dissertazione sulle rovine, &c. p. 410, ad fin. X See — Serie cronologiea de' Senator! di Roma dal Conte Antonib Vendettini in Roma, 1778. V* E primieramente vediamo dall' elenco medesimo che i Senatori 166 modern sense, was an office exercised by one or more per- sons, for a term which was at first annual ; and we read of this senate long after the duties had been exercised by an in- dividual.* Notwithstanding the re-establishment dates from 1 1 43, the chronological series does not begin before the year 1220, with Parenzio Parenzi. The names for the next year will sound powerfully to our ears — 1221, Hannibal and Napoleon. Napoleon of the Orsi is a frequent name in the early fasti. The chief magistrate was assisted by three Assessors, to ad- minister criminal and civil justice ; but the next in dignity and power to those or to him who composed the senate, were the three Conservators ; and in addition to these the same list contains the names of the Capo-Rioni, who are often enrolled with the Conservators. There were marshals also, of whom one is recorded, and Praefects, or Notaries of the praefecture. In an interregnum, or during the absence of the senators, the Conservators exercised the functions, unless they were in- trusted to those who under various names of Reformers of the Roman republic — Chamberlains — Good men — Deputies of the people, supplied the place of the regular government, and were sometimes dependent on the bene placitum of the Pope, sometimes derived their authority from the people. The law by which an alien alone could be chosen for sena- tor, does not apply to those first on the list, who are specified as Romans, nor did it constantly obtain, in subsequent periods, until the reform of the statutes in 1580. When Brancaleone was elected, in 1252, this was the usage, but in the next century the office was divided frequently be- tween the Colonna and Orsini. Muratorit mentions, that the custom of choosing foreigners for magistrates, was intro- ora erano piu, ora un solo, e prima di questo tempo or uno or due." Ven- dett. Inc. citat. * His title was lllusiris first, and then lUustrissimus, with the addition Dei gratia. t Dissertazione sopra le antichita Ital. diss. xlvi. p. 67. torn, iii 167 duced into Italy before the year 1 1 80. The choice of fo- reign arbitrators in the controversies of states and princes, seems to have been the fashion of the thirteenth century. Thus the Enghsh referred to Philip of France. Thus the kings of France and Arragon, and other princes — the Scotch for instance — submitted their claims to the judgment of King Edward I.* The ancient statutes have been traced back to the year 1364. Every vestige of the popular government,! which those statutes were meant to preserve, has been gradually abolish- ed ; and the Senate and Roman people, after nearly seven centuries of feeble, dubious existence, are now at their last gasp. One of the operations of the Cardinal Gonsalvi's mi- nistry has been to give an unity to the papal government, by depriving the Conservators of some feudal jurisdictions which they still held at Viterbo. The senatorial palace of the Ca- pitol has probably seen the last tribunal of the expiring ma- gistrates. The pageant, however, remains. The three Conservators act certain parts in certain ceremonies : they stand on the se- cond step of the papal throne, and they have a right to carry the sacramental vessels between the high altar and his holi- ness, on Easter Sunday. The Senator of Rome bears a still more conspicuous part in these scenes of humiliation. When the Pope pontificates, the Senator stands amidst a seated as- sembly, but stands at the right hand of the hierarch, on a level with the throne, and a step above the Conservators. His cloak of golden brocade, and his depending rolls of borrow- ed hair, suit well with the meek ministerial attitude of the * See — Hume, Hist, of England, Edw. I- cap. xiii. f For a short account of the statutes and government of Rome, see the Decline and Pal), cap. Ixx. p. 380, torn xii. oct. What has been said above, was inserted merely in explanation of the modern Fasti Consu- lares. The civil and criminal justice of Rome, previously to the late re- volution, was esteemed, and with reason, the most iniquitous in Italy. The Cardinal Gonsalvi has attempted some reforms, since the restora- tion of the Pope appeared likely to revive all the defects of the old go- vemraent. 168 gentleman-usher ; but they are dwindled into nothing amidst the purple of the cardinals, and the seven-fold robes of the holy father : even his patient resignation is obscured by the incense and awful bustle of that pious pantomime. The half-starved porters of the Campidoglio make their boast to strangers, that their Senator is placed for life, and cannot be degraded from his office, even by the Pope him- self. But the Pontiffs have shown their conviction of hit impotence, by dispensing with the statute which enacted that no one but an alien could be chosen. His present Holiness did not think it expedient to nominate a relation, as Rezzo- nico had done, but gave the idle title to the young Patrizzi, the representative of a noble Siennese family transplanted to Rome. The eloquent initials of the S. P. Q. R. are still to be seen multiplied on all the escutcheons and inscriptions of the mo- dern city ; and the same ambitious formula has been imitated hj the little tributary towns of the pontifical state. We read, on the stuccoed gateway at Tivoli, of a modern " Se- riate, and Tiburtine People." Stanza CXLV. Whik stands the Coliseum^ Rome shall stand. " Quandiu stabit Colysaeus, stabit Roma ; quando cadet Colysasus, cadet et Roma ; quando cadet Roma, cadet et mundus." These words are quoted by Mr. Gibbon* as a proof that the Cohseum was entire when seen by the Anglo- *Cap.lxxi.tom.xii.oct. p. 41 9. One of the most picturesque descriptions of the effect of the Coliseum is given by Ammian,who calls it a solid mass of stone-work, to whose summit the human eye can scarcely reach. *' Amphitheatri molem solidatam lapidis Tiburtini compage, ad cujus summitatem acgre visio humana conscendti," lib- xvi. cap. x. p. 145 ; a structure where there was sitting room' for 87,000 spectators, besides place for more than 23,000 others, was the first amphitheatre of the kind ever raised, for that of Statilius Taurus is not to be reckoned. Pompey's theatre, a hollowed mountain, was also the first theatre made of stone. The Romans in both these works rose at once to perfection; the efifect was instantly discovered to be insurpassable. 169 Saxon pilgrims at the end of the seventh or the beginning of the eighth century. At the same time, as they extended their admiration to Rome, which was then partially destroy- ed, it is not impossible that the amphitheatre may have been in some degree dilapidated even in that early period. The fire which, about the year 219, destroyed the upper wooden works, in which, amongst other conveniences, there were brothels,* occasioned the repairs of Heliogabalus and Alexander Severus and Gordian ; and the frequency of such restorations may be concluded from the different forms and materials lately discovered in the excavations of the substruc- tures of the area. Mention is made of a fire under Decius.t It was certainly in all its glory in the reign of Probus, and the seven hundred wild beasts, and the six hundred gladiators which he exhibited at once, could not occupy a twelfth part of the arena. The number of wild beasts which might stand together in this arena has been calculated to be ten thousand seven hundred and seventy-nine,! so that it may be no exag- geration to say that Titus showed the Roman people five thousand in one day,§ or that Probus, unica missione exhibited four thousand ostriches, boars, deer, ibexes, wild sheep, and other graminivorous animals, amidst a forest which had been transplanted into the amphitheatre. || Perhaps it is not to be understood that they were slain at once.** The Coliseum was struck by Hghtning in the reign of Con- stantine, but repaired ; for the laws for abolishing gladiato- rial shows were not observed until the reign of Honorius ;tt and even after that period, men fought with wild beasts, which seems to have been the original purpose of the amphi- * Lampridius mentions this in his life of Caracalla. •f In the Eusebian Chronicle. See — Maffei. Verona. Illustrata. part iv. pp. 36, 37. edit. 1731. X By T. B. Nolli. See — delJe menoorie sacre e profane dell' aufiteatro Flavio dal Canonico. Giovanni Marangoni. Rom. 1746. pp. 33, 34. ^ " Atque uno die quinque millia omne genus ferarum." Sucton- m vit. Tit. K Vopisc. in Tit. Prob. p. 233. Hist. Aug. edit. 1519. ** Marangoni, ibid p. 41. ^t S«« note to Stanza CXLI. in the notes to Cbilde Harold. 170 theatre, rather than the combats of gladiators.* The fight- ing and hunting continued at least until the end of Theodo- ric's reign, in 526, and the seats of the principal senators were jealously preserved.! Maffei had heard of an inscription mentioning a restoration by that monarch, but was not able to find such a record. J As there is no notice of his repairs, and as his admiration of it is particularly specified, the dilapidation of the structure could not have been begun either by Alaric or Genseric. It is just possible that some of the holes which now dis- figure the whole surface, may have been made by the extrac- tion of the metals used for clamps, which we have remarked to have been a practice of the Romans even before the Go- thic invasion ;§ but Montfaucon|( is strangely mistaken in call- ing the Barbarians the sole and sufficing cause of all these holes : no less is another writer deceived in saying they were all made by artisans. Joseph Maria Suarez, who has written expressly on this subject, actually proves nothing with all his seven causes, and has made a gross mistake in supposing Vo- lusian had occupied a part of the amphitheatre as a strong hold in the reign of Theodoric.** It was a box at the shows he had seized, not a fortress. tt The true account seems to be given by the editor of Winkelmann, who believes that the greater number of the holes were made for the extraction of the metals, and only a few, comparatively, for the insertion of the beams and staples necessary for forming chambers and di- * Verona Illustrata, part iv. pp. 2, 3. MafiFei notices that Cassiodorus calls it theatrum venatorium- True : but gladiators had |l)een abolished some time before, therefore the authority is not conclusive. t Cassiod. Variar. epist. 42. lib. v., the bishop lamented the enormity of the sport ; " actu detestabilis, certamen infelix," spectaculum tantum fabricis. Ibid, epist 42. lib. iv. X Verona Tllust. ib. p. 37. 5^ See note to Stanza LXXX. II Montr diar. Jtal. " Unam germanamque causam foraminum," p. 23d. See note 50. Decline and Fall, tom-xii- p. 419. ** Jos. M. Suaresii de foraminib. lapid- diatriba. addressed to a Bar- berini in 1651. ap. Sallengre, torn. i. p. 318. ft " Haccrudeli surreptione captata turrem circi, atque locum amphi- tbeatri illustris recordatlonis patris eorum detestabili ambitu a vcstri* suggerujat fascilius expeditum." Variar. lib. iv. epist- 42. 171 visions, when the ruin was made a place of defence, in the first instance, and afterwards, perhaps a magazine of manufactu- rers.* The first plunder may have been begun in war, but was more the labour of peace, and was actually continued in the time of Theodorict The thieves worked in the night. The lead is still seen in some of the holes. The larger cavi- ties are to be attributed to the other cause. Totila is said to have exhibited the equestrian games of the Circus: but nothing is told of his reviving those of the amphitheatre. Justinian abolished the latter in every part of his dominion : and from that period, so Maffei thinks, the at- tacks of time and man began to be injurious. | The great mass of the external structure might, however, have been entire when it appeared to the pilgrims as durable as the world itself; but abandoned to neglect and exposed to the floods and earthquakes of the seventh century, much o( the lower and more fragile part of the work must have been de- faced, and it seems probable that some of the mass itself had fallen when it was occupied by the Frangipane family in the twelfth century or earlier.§ Its decay would facilitate the conversion by the supply of fallen materials. The author of the memoir on the amphitheatre|| ascribes the ruin of the arcades towards the Caelian mount to Robert Guiscard : who, if he destroyed the structures between that mount and the Capitol,** must necessarily have fallen upon the Coliseum. What is certain is, that for more than two centu- ries and a half the buildings dedicated to the amusement con- tributed to the distresses of Rome. Donatus, and after him » Dissertazione sulle Rovlne, pp. 277, 278. t Var. Epist. lib. ii- epist. 7. lib. iii. epist 31. X Verona Illust. ibid. p. 60. " Allora fu, cheil grand' anfiteatro di Tito leso inutile comminci6 a soffir gl' insulti e del tempo e degli uomini." ^ Onufrius Panvinius in his MS. memoirs de gente Fregepanica quoted by Marangoni, ibid. 49. thinks this occupation took place after the year 1000. II Ibid. p. 50. *• " Et majorem urbis partem Coelium inter et Capitolium sitam evertit." These words of Leo Ostiensis (Ap. Baron, ad an- 1084) are quoted by Marangoni, but the Abate Fea, Dissert p. 895 finding no cer- tain memorial, hesitates. 22 172 ' Mr. Gibbon, have made a mistake in supposing that a manu- factory of silk weavers was estabhshed there in the twelfth century. The Bandonarii or Banderarii of the Coliseum in 1 1 92, noticed by a cotemporary writer,* were the officers who carried the standards of their school, and preceded the pope in his coronation. No such employment was exercised in the Coliseum, which was now become a regular fortress. Innocent II. took refuge there in 1130; and the Frangipani were shortly after expelled, but made themselves masters of it a second time. Alexander 111. retreated thither from the Ghibeline faction in 1165. In 1244 Henry and John Frangipane were obliged to cede the half of their intrenchment to the Annibaldi ; but by the authority of Innocent IV. recovered entire possession in the course of the same year. The Annibaldi, however, succeed- ed in driving out their rivals ; and held the Coliseum up to I he year 1312, when they were compelled to yield it to the emperor Henry VII. In the year 1332 it was the property of the Senate and Roman people. This is the date of the bull- feast of which Ludovico Monaldesco has left an account! * See — Ordo Roraanus xii. auct- Cencio Camerario. ap Mabill. Mu- seum Italic, torn. ii. p. 195. num. 52. " Bandonarii Colosffii et Cacabarii, quando dominus Papa roronatur, in cundo et redeundo ipsum cum vexil- lis praecedunt, quasi etenimuna schola est, et eadem die debent comedere cum eodem domino Papa.'' Tiiey were certain trained bands of the dif- ferent quarters, as we see by this expression in Villani, cap. xiv. lib. vii. Itiner. Greg. X. " Currebant Banderarii Romani velut dementes tubis clangentibus." See also Ducange verb. Banderarii. — Marangoni. p. 49. The mistake of Donatus is at lib. iii. cap. vi., that of Gibbon at cap Ixxi. p. 419. oct. vol. xii. t " Annali di Ludovico Monaldesco. ap. Script. Rer, Ital. torn xii. p. 5£9, 542. A modester memorialist was never met with. This is all he says of himself: " I, Lewis, of Bonconte Monaldesco, was born in Or- vietto, and was brought up in the city of Rome where I li»'ed. iwas born m the year 1327 in the month of June, at the coming of the emyje- ror Lewis ; and now I will relate all the story of my times, for 1 lived in the world a hundred and fifteen years without any sickness e\cept at my birth and death, and I dit'd of old age, having been bed-.ndden a twelve- month. Sometimes I went to Oivietto to see my relations." The narra- tion of his own death is found j all the MS-'> and judiciously inserted by Muratorl, who bears testimony to the authenticity of this posthumous writer. 173 transcribed into the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire. The contrivance of such an exhibition has given rise to a per- suasion that the amphitheatre was then entire ; but the adap- tation of a range of benches round the area would not be dif- ficult even now ; and indeed it will be observed, it was re- solved to renew the bull-fights even at the end of the seven- teenth century. It is generally agreed that the porticos on the south side were the first to give way : and those who assign the earliest date to the destruction of the exterior range of arcades in this quarter and towards the Arch of Constantine, do not descend lower than the famous earthquake in 1349. It is certain that in the year 1381, a third part of the building and a jurisdiction over the whole was granted by the Senate and Roman people to the religious society of Sancta Sanctorum, who probably formed their hospital in the higher arches blocked up by the Frangipani, of whose walls traces are yet apparent towards the Lateran. Their privileges continued until the year 1510, and their property was recognised in the beginning of the se- venteenth century.* The arms of the S. P. Q. R. and of the above company, namely, our Saviour on an altar between two candlesticks, are still seen on the outside of the arcades to- wards the church of St. Gregory and the Arch of Constantine, which must, therefore, have been, as they are now, the exter- nal range ; but which, before the outer circles had fallen down, were, in fact, the internal arches of the first corridore. This proof seems decisive, that as early at least as the middle of the fourteenth century, the exterior circumference had ceased to be " entire and inviolate," so that Mr. Gibbon, by following, or rather by divining the mysterious Montfaucon, has made a mistake of two hundred years in assigning that state of pre- servation even as low down as the middle of the sixteenth century.t * Marangoni, ibid. p. 55. et seq. They seem to have made a claim so late as 1714, which was not attended to. Ibid. p. 72. f " The inside was damaged ; but in the middle of the sixteenth century, an era of taste and learnins;, the exterior circumftrence nf IGI'2, feet was still entire and inviolate, a triple elevation of fourscore arches, which rose to the height of 1 OH feet- Of the present ruin, the nepheus of Paul III. are the 174 A letttr in the Vatican library from the bishop of Orvietto, legate to Pope Urban V., about the year 1362, is said to inform tliat pontiff that the stones of the CoHseum had been offered for sale, but had found no other purchaser than the Frangi- pane family, who wished to buy them for the construction of a palace. The editor of Winkelmann was, however,* unable to find this letter : and it is somewhat singular that no search has as yet been able to discover the document which Barthel- emy saw in the archives of the Vatican, and which contained a common privilege granted to the factions of Rome, of " dig- ging out" stones from the Coliseum.! The author of Ana- eharsis, however, can hardly be suspected of an imposture ; and the exaggeration of Poggio, who says that in his time the greater part of the amphitheatre had been reduced to hme,J bespeaks some terrible devastation not at all reconcileable with that integrity which Mr. Gibbon affirms to have been preserved up to the time of Paul III. The historian quotes both the document of Barthelemy and the lamentation of the Florentine, and there is no way of accounting for his error ex- cept by supposing that he applied all dilapidation previous to that period solely to the interior elevation, which, however, would be also a mistake. Blondus has besides left a memo- rial of the ruin a hundred years before the pontificate of Paul guUly agents :" Decline and Fall, cap. Ixxi. [)• 424. and note 63. ^fter measunng the priscus amphitheutri gyrus, Montfaucon, p. 142, only adds that it was entire under Paul III. Tactndo clamat. Muratori, Annali d' Italia, torn- xiv. p. 37 1, more freely reports the guilt of the Famese popt and the indignation of the Roman people- Look into Muratori, you find these words : " Per fabbricare il Palazzo Famese gran guasto diede all anfiteatro di Tito. Fece gridare il cIpio e i Popoli siioi per le gravezze loro accresciute." Annali. ad an. 1549. torn- x. p. 335. The indignation of the people was for the taxes, not tiie destruction of the Coliseum. * Dissertazione, &c. p. 399. t " Et prseterea, si ornnes concordarent de faciendo Tiburtino quod es- set comnnune id quod foderetur." Memoires de I'academie des inscrip- tions, torn- xxviii, p. 585. also published separately. J " Ob stultitlam Romanorum majori ex parte ad calcem redactum." De Variet. Fortun. in loco cit Poor Marangoni interprets this folly to be their rebellion against, not the amphitheatre, but the pope. " Non oscu- ramente attribuendo queste rovine alia stoltezza de' Roraani ribeUaii con- tro il Pontefice." Ibid. p. 47. 175 • III.* In fact we have seen that Paul II. had before employ- ed many of the blocks of travertine for his palace of Saint Mark; and Cardinal Riario for that of the Chancellery.! Theodoric thought a capital city might be built with the wealth expended on the Coliseum,^ and indeed some of the noblest palaces of modern Rome have been constructed out of a small portion of the ruins. There appears to have been a sale of some of the stones in 1531, and in the next century others were employed in one of the buildings on the Capitol. § But all lesser plunder has been obhterated by the more splendid rapine of the Farnese princes. The Baths of Con- stantine, the Forum of Trajan, the Arch of Titus, the Temple of Antoninus and Faustina, the Theatre of Marcellus, added their marbles to the spoils of the Coliseum: and the accounts of the Apostolic chamber record a sum of 7,317,888 crowns expended between the years 1541 and 1549 upon the gigantic palace of Campo di Fiore alone. || Whether the progress of decay was anticipated and aided, or whether such blocks only as had already fallen were applied to the purposes of con- struction, is still a disputed point. Martinelli** has dared to believe in the more unpardonable outrage, whilst Marangoni has stepped forward to defend the Popes, but candidly owns * Both he and Lucius Faunus and MartineHi attributed the ruin to the Goths, mistaking an order of Theodoric to repair the Avails of Catania with the stones of an amphitheatre, as if it applied to the Coliseum. Ma- rangoni, ibid. p. 44- t " Paulus II. aedes adhuc Cardinalis ad S- Marci amplissimas extruere ceperat : quas deinde cum Pontifex aedificaret ex aniphitheatri minis uti postea Raphael Riarius et Alexander Farnesius fecisse dicuntur" Dona- tus, lib. iv. cap. ix. This is but a delicate phrase, if Paul III- had really thrown down the outside ranges. J Cassiod. epist. xlii. lib. iv. ^ In 1604: these facts are stated from the documents in Marangoni, p. 56. II Dissertazione, kc p. 399. note c. The mention of the Theatre of Marcellus has been added from Venuti Roma Moderna, in his account of the Farnese palace. ** Roma Ricercata nel suo sito. giorn. 6. Marangoni, ibid. p. 47. Mar- tineHi says, Paul 11- cut down the arches toicards St. John and St, Paul ; butPlatina, who had been imprisoned by that pontilTand would not havt; been silent, {perhaps,) notices no such attack in his life of Paol. 176 ^ that Paul HI. and Riario may have thrown down many of the inner arches. Amongst the projects of Sixtus Quintus, was that of estab- lishing a woollen manufactory in the Coliseum, which had be- fore given shelter to the artisans of periodical fairs, and ac- cording to what we can collect of the plan from Fontana,* it appears that if it had been carried into execution, the arcades of the Coliseum would have been entirely closed up. and the whole mass have been converted to a circuit of dirty dens Tike the Theatre of Marcellus. Mabillon, who says that if Sixtus had lived a year longer, we should have had the Coli- seum entirely restored, t talks as if he had never been at Rome, or opened a single book on the subject. In 1394, some of the upper arches were occupied by me- chanics,! who paid a pound of wax quit-rent to the arch con- fi-atemity of the Roman Gonfalonier. The papal government must be charged with neglect, if not with spoliation. Of the wall said to be built round the Coli- seum by Eugenius IV., there is no authentic record. Mr. Gibbon quoted it from Montfaucon, who took it from Flami- nius Vacca, who lived more than a hundred years after Euge- nius, and reported it on hearsay. § This majestic relic, which had been protected as a barrack, a hospital, and a bazar, and which more enlightened ages considered only as a convenient quarry, seems never to have been estimated in its true cha- racter, nor presei'ved as the noblest monument of Imperial Rome, until a very late period. Piety had interfered but feebly, notwithstanding the claims of the amphitheatre to vene- * Some of the earth was cleared away and excavations made in the area, and Sixtus had already advanced 15,000 crowns to merchants to '• establish the manufactory." Fontana — di alcune Fabbriche fatte in Roma da PP. Sisto V. Marangoni, ibid. p. 60, Gl. f " Vixisset Sixtus V. et amphitheatrum, stupendum illud opus, inte- gratum nunc haberemus." Iter. Ital. num. xxix. Mus. Ital. torn- i. p. 74. X Marangoni, ibid. p. 71, 72. i^ Intesi dire, fee. Vacca heard it from certain Olivetan monks of San- ta Maria Nova; but Marangoni looked over their archives, and found no huch record, nor have the Olivetans yiretciided to the property, ibid. p. 58. 177 ration. Fontana, in his work,* had intended to give a list of the martyrs who suffered there, but employed a person to fur- nish his catalogue who is owned to liave been of no very criti- cal capacity, and to have inserted names to which this arena could not pretend. The more judicious Maranconi, who will follow no blind guides, nor any less respectable authority than the Roman martyrology, or the sincere acts of Ruinart, or Su- rio, or Peter de Natalibus, thinks it a supportable conjecture, that Gaudentius was the architect who built it, and was put to death for his Christianity by Vespasian. The excellent Vi- centine Canon forgot that he had just mentioned that the com- pletion of the work took place after the death of that empe- ror. He will, however, positively name no more than eigh- teen martyrs of the male sex, beginning with Saint Ignacius, and ending with Telemachus, together with six females, four of whom are hardly to be reckoned amongst the triumphs of the arena, as the lions refused to injure them,t and they were reserved for less discriminating executioners. The hst is considerably swelled with two hundred and sixty " anonymous soldiers," who, after digging an arena without the Salarian gate, were rewarded with death, which the Christian fasti call martyrdom, on the first of March, in the reign of Claudius II. j Marangoni avers that no memorial remains of the exact contrivance by which the sufferers were exposed to the wild beasts, although there are so many left of the conversion of * L'Anflteatro Flavio descritto, e deiineato, dal Cav. Carlo Fontana. Hag. 1725. Marangoni, ib. p. 25. t S. Martina, S. Tatiana, S. Prisca, were all exposed to lions, who lick- ed their feet: also, " S. Daria verg. sposa di S. Crisanto, come crede il Martinelli, fu esposta dal Tiranno all' ignominia, sotto le volte dell' anfitea- tro, ove da un lione fu difesa la di lei castita," ibid. p. 25. Then comes much learning to prove there were brothels in the amphitheatre, which appears certain ; but that there were lions in waiting may want confirma- tion. The lions being found good Christians, at least where females were concerned, virgins were condemned to worse than death from the vio- lence of men, and it became a proverb, " Christiani ad leones virgines ad lenones" See — Aringhi Roma Subtcrranea, lib ii- cap. i. tom. i. p. 197. num.23, edit. 1651. \ " Dugento, e LX. MM. anonimi soldati, sotto lo stesso Claudio II." kc. Ib. iH. 178 tlic lions : but he might have seen the small bronze reliefs at the Vatican found in the Catacombs, where the lions are seen chained to a pilaster, and the martyr unarmed and half naked at their feet. That some Christians suffered amongst other criminals is extremely probable. We learn from Marshal,* that the amphitheatre was a place of execution, and that un- der Domitian the spectators were glutted with burnings and crucifixions. Those who had the noble courage to die for their faith, would be punished and confounded, except by their own sect, with other rebellious subjects of the empire. It appears that the condemned were brought in at the close of the day, and that the gladiatorial shows were terminated with these horrors. The Canon, in order to show how much the Coliseum was always esteemed by the pious, relates that St. Philip Neri was tempted by the devil there in the shape of a naked wo- man,! and that a friend of Saint Ignatius Loyola had a hun- dred gold crowns given to him b y a messenger from the mar- tyrs who had suffered there, and who were the peculiar ob- jects of Loyola's devotions. | Moreover, Pius V. used to say, * Epig. 24. lib. X. Epig. 7. ibid. 37. f The story is told from Father Bacci's life of Saint Philip Neri, lib. i. cap. V. n. viii. ; but Marangoni, in relating it, does not observe that the devil must have been as fond of the Coliseum as the saint. Neri was a ver}^ considerable person in his day, and raised several people from the dead, particularly a youth of the Massimi family, on the 17th of the ka- lends of April in 1583. This family, one of the noblest, and descended (so it is thought) from the Fabii, have attested the fact, by building a chapel in their own palace, and by performing an annual service there, when they distribute pictures of the miracle, drawn in 1761 by order of Camillus Marquis Massimi, with a subjoined account of it just as it hap- pened, in the presence of the father and many witnesses. Very nearly the same time that Neri was raising the dead in Rome, Lord Bacon was spreading his philosophy in London. t John Cruccius was the man's name — the messenger disappeared, ;ifter giving the crowns. Cruccius came home and told Ignatius, " II S. Padre tosto rese grazie a Dio, senza dimostrare alcun segno di raaravig- lia, forse avendone avuto alcun lume superiore : ma quanto alia circos- tanza del luogo, che fu I'anfiteatro, sembra potersi credere, che seguisse anchc per intercessione de' SS. Martiri, de' quali S. Ignazio fu divotissi- 179 that he who wanted relics should take some earth from the arena, which was cemented with so much holy blood :* and Cardinal Uderic Carpegna always stopped his coach opposite to the Coliseum, and repeated the names of all the martyrs who had been sacrificed on that spot.f His eminence's pa- tience and piety were not, as we have seen, put to any very severe test. Yet, in spite of the sanctity of the earth, the structure itself was little benefited. At the end of the sixteenth century a little church, with a bell and a contiguous hermitage, were consecrated by Julio Sansedonio, patrician of Sienna, and bishop of Grossetto, and this structure was repaired, in 1G29, in those arches where the hermitage and chapel are now seen. It was above the site of this church, on a wide platform which had been left entire over the arches of the old steps of the amphitheatre, that, from sometime in the fifteenth century, the " Passion of our Saviour" had been perfomned on every Good Friday, by expert actors, to an audience which Panciro- lus, in his " Hidden Treasures, "J affirms was equal to that of the ancient games. We have notice of the " Resurrection" written by Julian Dati, the Florentine, also performed at the Cohseum, although the date in which that sacred farce (they are Tiraboschi's words§) was composed, cannot be precisely assigned. It might be contemporary with the Abraham and Isaac, acted at Florence, in 1449, with the " Balaam and Josa- phat," " the Conversion of Saint Paul," and other mysteries brought upon the stage in the latter half of the fifteenth cen- tury. These representations continued in the Coliseum until the mo." Marang. ib 63. This is the way that books, and very good books too, are written at Rome. * lb. 64. t " Ed a tempi nostri, son io testimonio, chc ogni quaJunque volto sono ivi passato col Signoi' Cardinale Ulderico Carpegna. quf?3to piissimo Sig- nore ha fatto sempre fermare la carozza con fare la commemorazione d«' SS. Martiri, che ivi gloriosamente trionfarono.'' Ib. 64. I Tesori nascosti, ibid. 59. ^ " Non possiamo accertare quii-ido quella sacra f;irsa fosse da lui composta." Storia della Lett. Ital. torn. vi. par. iii- lib. iii. p. 814. 23 180 reign of Paul III., whose prohibition to continue them be- speaks him perhaps guilty of devoting the building to his own purposes of plunder. With the exception of the above-mentioned chapel-build- ing,* we lose sight of the destination of the amphitheatre, until 1671, when permission was obtained from Cardinal Al- tieri, and the Senate, to represent bull fights in the arena for the space of six years, and this would have certainly taken place had not Clement X. listened to the deprecations of Carlo Tommassi, who wrote a treatise to prove the sanctity of the spot.t In consequence, the pontiff employed the less pious zeal of Bernini, and by some arrangements of that ar- tist set apart the whole monument to the worship of the martyrs. This was in 1675, the year of the jubilee. | The measure then taken to prevent the entrance of men, and ani- mals, and carriages, by means of blocking up the lower arches, and to put a stop to nightly disorders, were, however, found insufficient, and Clement XL, in 1714, employed Bi- anchini in repairing the walls, and finding other methods of closing the arcades ; and about that time were also erected the altars of the Passion. A short time afterwards was paint- ed the picture of Jerusalem and the Crucifixion, still seen within the western entrance. The Romans were not pleased with being excluded from their amphitheatre, and in 1715 made an application for the * Bramante Barsi got permission to excavate there in 1639- t The senate granted the permission, reserving a box for themselves, holding twenty persons, " senza pagamento alcunc" See the document in Marangoni, p. 72- i One of the inscriptions affixed on that occasion runs thus — " Amphitheatrnm Flavium Non tam operis mole et artificio ac veterura Spectaculorum memoria Quam Sacro innumerabilium Martj'rum Cniore iUustre Venerabundus hospes ingredere Et in Augusto magnitudinis Romanfe monuments Execrata Cajsarum sa;vitia Heroes Fortitudinis Christianae suspice Et exora Anno Jubilaji. MDCLXXV. 181 keys, which the pope refused. The neglect of the interior may be collected from a petition presented in 1727, to alirw the hermit to let out the grafts which grew on the surface of the arena.* A solitary saint had been established in the ruins at the first building of the chapel, and it is to a respect for one of his successors that we owe an interposition in favour of the Coliseum, which it would perhaps never have command- ed on its own account. An attempt was made in the night of the 11th of February, 1742, to assassinate the hermit, Fran- cis Beaufort, and it was expressly on that occasion that the accomplished Lambertini was induced to renew the conse- cration of the Cohseum.t His enclosures and edicts cleared it of murderers and prostitutes, and repaired the fourteen altars, and erected the cross : but in spite of this judicious interference, and whatever were the cares of the truly anti- quarian Braschi, half a century seems to have much hastened the progress of decay, and in 1801 the most intelligent of our countrymen foresaw the speedy dissolution of the whole structure. I The great earthquake in 1 703, which threw down several large masses towards the church of St. Gregory, § most pro- bably loosened other portions of the ruin. The late govern- ment has propped the tottering fragment, and the immense buttress, which is modestly marked with the name and num- ber of Pius VII., and is said to have cost seventy thousand crowns, will help to secure the yawning rents on the side towards the Lateran. Sentinels have been found a more effectual protection than Uie hermit, or the cross, or the walls. * Marangoni, ib. p. 73 t The author of the memoir attributes the profanations suffered by the CoJiseum to the devil himself. " Ma poichfe i'infernale inimico continua- mcnte procura," fcc- p 67- Bt-nedict's edict bears date 1744- I See — Forsyth's Remarl.atj,. Ibid. tt Cap. Ixxi. torn. xii. p. 418. 192 base, and would, conformably to their decree, have torn down the round tower itself, but were unable from the compact solidity of the fabric. The authority of Poggio alone, whom Mr. Gibbon cites and misinterprets, is decisive.* " The other [sepulchre]," says the Florentine, "which they commonly call the castle of " Saint Angelo, the violence of the Romans, hath, in a great " measure, although the title of it is still extant over the door, *' defaced : and, indeed, they would have entirely destroyed " it, if, after having taken away many of the great stones, thej " had been able to pull to pieces the remainder of the Mole." The resistance of the naked tower, when actually exposed to the triumphant rage of a whole people, must augment our respect for this indissoluble structure. The elforts of the Romans are still visible in the jutting blocks which mark where the corresponding portion of the basement has been torn away. The damage must have been very great, and have totally changed the appearance of the monument. In fact a cotempoi-ary writer,! one of Dante's commentators, talks of the " sumptuous work" being de- stroyed and laid prostrate, ; and another writer of the same * " Alterum quod castrum sancti Anpjeli vuljio dicunt, magna ex parte Romanorum injuria, licet adhuc titulus supra portum oxtet integer, distur- faavit ; quod certe funditus evevtissont, (id enim pulilice decreverant) si eorum manibus pervia, absumtis grandibus saxis relinqua moles extitis- set." De Fortun. Varict. Urb Romap Sallengre, torn. i. p. 507. f " Sed proh dolor ! istud sumptuosumopus, destructum etprostratum est, de anno praesenti, 1389, per populum Romanum, quia fuerat aliquan- do detentum per fautores Roberti Cardinalis gebennensis" Benvenuto de' Rambaldi da Imola. Comment in Dant. cant xviii- ver- 28. torn. i. p. 1070. Oper Dant. Tiraboschi (Storia, lac. torn. v. partii. lib. iii. num. xi. p. 463.) has cor- rected this date to 1379, making, at the same time, the following shame- ful mistake : " Perciocche parlando del Campidoglio dice," (ib. p. 1070.) " sed proh dolor istud sumptuosum," fcc. which shows that he never could have read the commentary itself, which says nothing about the Capitol, and where the castle of St. Angelo is specified in the words im- mediately preceding the above quotation. " Ideo denominatum est ab isto cventu Castrum Sancti Angeli, sed proh dolor, fcc. The necessity of consulting originals is no where so obvious as in turning over the great Italian works of reference. 1 193 times,* records that the Romans did so handle it, and £0 dis- mantle it, that from that time the goats came to pasture about it. The usual uncertainty obscures tlie original form of this structure. The Augustan historians have left us only two short notices, by which we know that the Tomb of Hadrian was at the foot of the bridge built by that Emperor. The restored figure given in the Itineraries, the triple range of columns, the sculptured marbles, the gilded peacocks, the brazen bull, and the Belvedere pine, date no farther back than the description of Pietro Manlio, who wrote about the year 1160, and who did not tell what he saw himself, but quoted a homily of Saint Leo.t Manlio himself saw it as a fortress, with a church, perhaps, on the top, as described by Luitprand, a little before the time of Otho III. J Yet the description of Manlio was followed by the anonymous pil- grim of the thirteenth century, and also by the sculptor of the bronze doors of St. Peter's in 1435, which furnish the * " E si lo ebbero e tanto lo disfecero che a tempo dappoi ci givano le eapre a pascare." Steph. Infess- Diaiio. ap. Script. Rerum Italic, torn, iii. parts, p. 1115. f " Est et Castellum, quod fuit memoria AdrJani imperatoris slcut legi- tur in sermone S. Leonis Papse de festivitate S- Petri ubi dicit Adriani Im- peratoris mirae magnitudinis templum constructum quod totum lapidibus coopertum et diversis historiis est perornatum : in circuito vero cancellis aeneis circumseptum, cum pavonibus aureis et tauro seneo ; ex qiiibus (pavonibus) duo fuerunt de illis qui sunt in cantharo Paradisi. In quatuor partes templi fuerunt quatuorcahalli jenei deaurati, in unaquaque front© portse aeneae : in medio giro fuit sepulchrum porphyreticum quod nunc est Latferanis in quo sepultus est Innocentius Papa IL cujus coopertorium est in Paradiso B. Petri super sepulchrum Praefecti" See — Historia Basilicse Antiquse S. Petri Apost. in Vatic, cap. vii. p 50. ad beatiss. pat. Alexand. III. Pont. Max. apud Acta Sanctorum, torn, vii partii- p. 37. edit 1717. Ant. Alexander was elected in 1159: there are interpolations in this history from the pen of a Roman canon of the Vatican, Paul, de Ange- lis. See — Prefat- p. 36. } " In ingressu Romanae urbis quaedam est miri operis miraeque fortitu- dinis constituta munitio munitio autem ipsa, ut cetera desinam, tantae altitudinis est, ut Ecclesia quae in ejus vertice vjdetur in honore summi et caelestis militiae principis Archangeli Michaelis fobricata dicatur Ecclesia sancti Angeli usque ad ccslits." De rebus per Europam gestii, Yib. iii. cap. xii, fo. 51. edit. 1514. 194 original of the pictures seen in all the guide books. The oldest description to be relied upon, that of Procopius, is much more simple. " Without the Aurelian gate," says he, " a stone's throw from the walls, is the tomb of the Emperor Hadrian, a striking and memorable work. For it is composed of Parian marble, and the stones adhere compactly together, although without cement. Each of the sides is in breadth a stone's throw, and the four sides are equal one to another : the height exceeds that of the walls. On the top are seen many admirable statues of men and horses of the same mar- ble ; and because this tomb seemed, as it were, a strong-hold over against the city, the ancients joined it to the walls by two branches, which connected it with the town wall : it looks, therefore, like a high tower protecting the neighbour- ing gateway."* If then there was any colonnade similar to that of the plans, it must have disappeared before the time of Procopius : and the editor of Winkelmann, who avers that there are still evident traces of the adjustment of a vault, which sprang from the tower and terminated on the circular portico, asks whether it is probable, that the pillars of the lower range may have been employed in forming the great portico which led to the Vatican, or in building the Vatican Basilica itself.t By this query, it is presumed, he thinks such a conjecture is probable, notwithstanding the columnar ornaments of the sepulchre are merely traditional, and are falsely supposed to have enriched St. Paul's, without the walls, with her paonazzetto pillars, and the Lateran with those of verd- antique. A more correct judgment could have been formed before the destruction in 1379, than can be deduced from the present naked skeleton of peperine, surrounded as it is by the * Procop. in loc. sup. cit. f " Sarebbe mai probabile il dire, che le colonne piu grandi abbiano servitoal mentovato gran portico, che dalla mole giugneva fine alia basi- lica Vaticana, restaurato, e ampliato di molto dal Pontefice S. Adriano* O che siano state impiegate nella stessa Basilica Vaticana ?" Dissertazione sulle rovine, k,c. p. S88, If so, the church has another plunder to be noted of the monuments of Rome. I 195 repairs and outworks of successive pontiffs : for it should be borne in mind by the spectator, that, excepting the circular mass, he sees nothing which dates earlier than the beginning of the fifteenth century : and that even the round tower itself has been much changed by the explosion of the powder maga- zine in 1497, the final reparation of which reduced the for- tress to its present form. The fate of the modern city, and even of the papal power, has in some measure depended upon the castle of Saint Angelo ; and by a lamentable coincidence, the tomb of one of their despots has helped to perpetuate the subjection of the Roman people. Of such importance was this fort to the pontiffs, that the taking of it is, by an ecclesi- astical writer, ranked with a famine, an eclipse, and an earth- quake.* At one time it commanded the only entrance into Rome on the Tuscan sidc.t The seizure of it by the Patrician Theo- dora, in the beginning of the tenth century, was one of the first steps towards the establishment of the power of herself and the more famous Marozia, her daughter: and the pos- session of it enabled her lover. Pope John X., after her death probably, to expel from Rome Alberic, Marquis of Camerino, the husband of the same Marozia.J The daughter, how- * " Eodeni anno per totum orbera magna fames fuit, ita quod exinde multi homines mortui sunt : et sol eclypsini passus est, castnim S. Aii' geli captumest, terra motaest." Vit. Pontif. Card, de Aragon. et aljor, ap. Script. Rer. Italic, torn. iii. p. 313. speaking of the year 1084. t Luitprand, in loc. sup. cit. I There are some doubts and difficulties respecting these two persons whom Mr. Gibbon calls sisters (cap. xlix, vol. iv. oct. p. 197.) Marozia had a sister, Theodora, whom Baronius, by a great mistake, calls the wife of Adalbert II., Duke or Marquis of Tuscany (Annali d'ltalia, ad an. 917. tom. V. p. 282.): but the lady to whom the exploits of a Theodora seem to belong, was the mother of Marozia, and she who placed her lover, the Bishop of Ravenna, on the papal throne, under the name of John X. in the year 914. This is the scortum impudens of Luitprand, who says of her, " Romanse civitatis non inviriliter monarchiam obtinebat." (Annali ad an. 914. ib. p. 273.) Mr. Gibbon tells us, that "the bastard son, the grandson, and the great grandson of Marozia, a rare genealogy, were seated in the chair of St. Peter," (ibid. p. 198 ;) but John XI. was the son of her husband, Alberic, not of her lover, Pope Sergius III, as Muratori has distinctly proved (Annali ad an- 911. torn. t. p. 2^8) Her grandson 25 196 ever, was mistress of the castle in 925, and handed it ovcfA with the sovereignty of Rome, to her second and third hus- liands, Guide and Hugo. Her son Alberic drove away the latter, who was obliged to drop down from the battlements npon the town wall. The castle stood two sieges against Hugo, and passed into the hands of the Patrician, Pope John XII. That pontitr and Adalbert, son of King Berenger, en- deavoured to hold it against Otho the Great (A. D. 963,) but were compelled to retire.* The Saxon emperor came to Rome and deposed John for " hunting and calling on Jove and Venus, and other demons, to help him when he played at dice, besides other irregularities."! Otho addressed him- self to the assembly in Saxon, not being able to speak Latin. Benedict VI. was murdered in the castle by Cardinal Boni- face Francone (in 973) who was driven from Rome by. Be- nedict VII., but kept the Mole by means of a band of ruf- fians, and thus enabled himself to return from Constantinople, when he put to death another pope, John XIV. This was in 984 or 985. 1 It was in the succeeding pontificate of John XV. that the Caesar Crescentius seized and re-fortified the castle so strongly, that it was called afterwards his rock or tower, and all the etforts of an imperial army, commanded by Otho III. in person, were insufficient to dislodge him. His surrender was, we have seen,§ the effect of treachery, not of force. The next memorable notice of the castle is the two years blockade of the anti-pope Cadaloo, in the time of Alexander Octavian, otherwise called John XII., Avas pope ; but a great grandson cannot be discovered in any of the succeedinj^ popes, nor does our his- torian himself, in his subsetjuent narration, (pag. 20:2.) seem to know of one. * The dates of some of these events will have been seen in note to •Stanza LXXX. Luitprand is the authority for Hugo King of Burgundy's method of escape. f " In ludo aleae Jovis Veneris cjeterorumque daemonum auxiliuna poposcisse dixerunt." Luitprand, lib, vi. cap. vii. fol. xc. He was ac- cused also of turning the Lateran into a brothel; in short, of every t'hinj: but the real offence, his opposition to Otho. t Muratori has the first, Baronius tlie second date ^ See note to Stanza CXIV. 197 n.j in the years 1063 and 1064.* Gregory VII. defended himself in the fortress against the Roman partisans of Henry IV., and in this transaction also the Mole appears to have been impregnable. The people and the Germans could not force their way into it, and the only effort made wa? to pre- vent Gregory from getting out. He was liberated by the army of Guiscard •, but the castle fell into the hands of his enemies. The troops of the countess M.itilda put it in pos- session of Victor III., whose garrison held it against the par- tisans of the anti-pope Guibert, in 1087. It was attacked by the people, and yielded by Urban II., not, however, in con- sequence of a violent assanltt (A. D. 1091). It was then resolved to level this " lasting shame" with the ground ; but the anti-pope, Guibert, Clement III., retained it for his own service, and defended it for seven years against his oppo- nents. The army of the crusaders, in 1096, assaulted it in vain. Urban recovered it by composition in 1098. Another anti- pope Anaclcte II. wrested it from the hands of Innocent II., who returning with the Emperor Lothaire III., tried, with- out success, to recover it. This occurred in 1137, and in the following year, after the death of Anacletc, and the de- position of Victor IV., Innocent was again master of the Mole.f The Peter Leone family guarded it for the succes- sive pontiffs, Celestine II., Lucius If., and Eugcnius III., up to the year 1 153,§ when the new senate occupied this and the other fortresses. It stood a siege for Alexander III. against Frederick Barbarossa, in 1 167 ; but fell into the hands of the senate after the retreat of that pontiff. The subsequent popes, however, seem to have been the nominal masters of it, even when they had lost nearly the * Annali d'ltalia, ad an. cit. There is a short histoiy of the castle of St Angelo in Donatus, lib. iv. cap. vii. which being founded chiefly on Baronius, seems very incorrect, especially as to dates. Baronius would make it appear so. See — Annali ad an. 1091, tonr. vi. p SOS X Annali, torn. vi. p. 461- )^ Ibid, ad an. cit- 198 whole of the temporal power at Rome,* and after the re- treat to Avignon. A legate was governor at the elevation of Rienzi, and after his fall the Tribune remained for a month securely posted in the citadel. Innocent VI., hearing of the death of his Tribune-senator Rienzi, was alarmed lest the barons should seize the Mole, and accordingly delivered it into the keeping of Hugo Lusignan, king of Cyprus, then appointed Senator. On the return from Avignon it received Gregory XI. (1376) ; but his successor. Urban VI., lost it in the hurry of the election. The opposing cardinals would not deliver it into his hands, and the captain of their anti-pope, Clement VII., defended it, as already described, until 1378, the date of its destruction. It remained dismantled until 1 382, when two Romans said to Boniface IX. " If you wish to maintain the dominion of Rome, fortify Castle Saint Angelo.t He followed their ad- vice, and a great antiquary records the consequence. " Bo- niface IX., the pontiff, first fortified the Mole of Hadrian, and established the pupal pov)er.''''\ The people petitioned In- nocent VII. to restore to them their liberty, the Capitol, the Milvian Bridge, and the Mole, and seized, for a moment, all but the latter, which they assaulted, but were repulsed by the pontifical troops, and totally routed in the gardens of Nero, in the Vatican. Ladislaus, of Naples, expelled Pope John XXIIL, and left the castle in the possession of his daughter, Johanna II. It now stood another siege from Braccio Montoni§, and was soon afterwards delivered to Pope Martin V. During the reign of Eugenius IV. a plan was laid for mur- dering the governor, and when that pope was driven from the city, the people attacked it furiously, but were unable to pre- vail. Sixtus IV. renewed the practice of naming cardinals * Donatus, lib. iv. cap. vii. p. 890. Script. Rer. Ital. torn. iii. t " Se tu vuoi raiinteucro lo state di Roma acconcia castel Sant' An- gelo." Steph. Infess. diario. ibid. p. 1115. loc. cit. t "Bonlfacius IX. Pontif. max. primus, mole Hadriani munita Roma- norum Pontificum ditionem stabilivit." Onuf- Panvinii Descrip. Urb. Romse. ap. Gr;€v. torn, iii p. 2!)9. ?^ The dates will have been seen in n»te to Stan2ia LXXX. 199 to the praefecture of the castle. Nicholas V. added some- thing to the fortifications ; but Alexander VI. constructed the brickworks on the summit, and also the bastions in front of the Tiber. These additions enabled it to withstand the Im- perialists of Charles V. for seven months : and it was not finally taken by assault, but surrendered, by Clement VII. and his thirteen cardinals, upon terms. Paul III. and Pius IV. adorned and strengthened it ; but the great engineer was Urban VIII. ; he added a mound, a ditch, a bastion, and a hundred pieces of cannon of different calibre, thereby mak- ing it evident, as Donatus quaintly observes, that " his bees (the Barberini arms) not only gave honey, but had stings for the fight."* Since the modern improvements in artillery, it is clear that the castle, commanded, as it is, by all the neighbouring hills, could never resist a cannonade. It was surrendered during the late war of 1814, after an idle menace from the French captain, that the angel on the top should sheath his sword be- fore the garrison would capitulate. Yet it has completely answered the intention of Boniface, and tlie Tomb of Hadrian has served for the basis of a modern throne. This must magnify our conceptions of the massive fabrics of ancient Rome : but the destruction of the memorial would have been preferable to the establishment of the mo- narchy. The interior of the castle is scarcely worth a visit, except it be for the sake of mounting to the summit, and enjoying the prospect of the windings of the Tiber. The memorials of Hadrian are reduced to a bust, and a copy of it shown in the principal saloon, whose frescoes are very little attractive, af- ter the sight of the masterpieces in that art. The size, how- ever, of the room, is so considerable, that a tragedy was re- presented there under the direction of Cardinal Riario in pre- * " Nimirum apes non solum inel conficiunt sed etiam aculeatse arman- tur ad pu^nam." Lib. iv. cap. vli. ibid. Books were written to sliow how it stiould be fortified ; so the writer found somewhere : he believes ia Guicciardini. 200 sence of the whole papal court.* The living still continue td be entombed in the repository of the dead, and the exploit of Cellini, which a view of the fort makes less surprising, has been repeated by a late prisoner. Stanza CLIV. Majesty, Power, Glory, Siren^th, and Beauty, are cdl aisled In this eternal ark of worship undefded. The ceremonies of a religion must, except where they are aanguinarj^, be considered the most harmless part of it : if, however, our notions of primitive Christianity be at all cor- rect, nothing can so little resemble it as the present worship at Saint Peter's. A noisy school for children in one corner ; a sermon preached to a moveable audience at another ; a concert in this chapel ; a ceremony, half interrupted by the distant sounds of the same music, in another quarter ; a ceaseless crowd sauntering along the nave, and circulating through all the aisles ; listeners and gazers walking, sitting, kneeling ; some rubbing their foreheads against the worn toes of the bronze of Saint Peter, others smiling at them ; con- fessors in boxes absolving penitents ; lacquey de places ex- pounding pictures ; and all these individual objects and ac- tions lost under an artificial heaven, whose grandeur and whose beauties delight and distract the eye. Such is the interior of this glorious edifice — the Mall of Rome ; but religious sentiments are, perhaps, the last which it inspires. Where man has done such wonders, the ungrate- ful mind does not recur to the Deity ; and it is not at all un- charitable to conclude, that the worship of the early Chris- tians, condensed in the damp crypts and catacombs, was per- * Tiraboschi, Storia, kc. torn. vi. par. iii. lib. iii. p. 816. This was about the year 1492. Innocent VIII. was spectator, and the academi- isians of Pomponins Lsetus were the actors. The plays were performed also in the cardinal's house, and " in media Circi cavea," probably the Co- liseum. 201 formed with a fervour which evaporates under the aerial vault- of Saint Peter's. His present holiness, talking to an Englishman of the church of Rome, said to him, "You are good Catholics in your country ; here of is all talk (grido)." Pius had, at the same time, the discernment to attribute the superior earnest- ness of the Catholics of the United Kingdom, to their la- bouring under certain political disadvantages, which made their piety a point of honour and of pride. It has, in truth, been long before discovered, that penalties are little less ef- fectual than premiums, in keeping alive an absurd supersti- tion, which can fall into disuse only by entire toleration and neglect. The indifference of the Italians, however, must be under- stood under certain limitations. It may be true of the loun- gers at Saint Peter's, of the company which throngs the pa- pal shows, most of whom are foreigners, or of the higher classes, and perhaps of the clergy themselves. But the very old of both sexes, the peasantry, the greater part of the fe- males of all classes, but more in the higher than the middling orders, may be considered, in the whole, sufficiently obedient to the easy injunctions of their religion ; and, as far as faith is concerned, cannot have been much surpassed by the most devout of their ancestors. In all those conditions of mankind most readily exposed to danger or distress, and most easily affected by a sense of weakness, by a hope of the better, by a fear of the worse, the ancient superstition has recovered whatever influence she may have lost by the French invasion. At Rome the days of mi- racles are returned, and these miracles are solemnly examined, and, what is not a whit more ridiculous, substantiated ac- cording to the rules of the council of Trent. If they coin- cide with this test of the sixteenth century, they are then ra. tified by the signature of cardinals, and published in the Court Gazette. It should be told that this last condition is prudent ; for a miracle at Rome is resorted to like a fire at Constanti- nople : and on the notification of an exorbitant impost, the Madonnas open their eyes, in order, it" such a phrase may 202 be allowed, to open those of the people. This took place ia the spring of 1817; but the imprisonment of thiee or four priests soon restored both the statues and their worshippers to their usual insensi])ility. When the images do not declare themselves against the government, their animation is father encouraged than forbidden, and superstition is allowed its full play. The new constitution which the enlightened Gonsalvi has proposed does not apply to the spiritual condition of the people. Pius VII. himself underwent, more than once, a partial ti'anslation in 1811, at Savona, as we find by a picture now circulated in his capital.* When his Holiness returned to Rome in 1814, the people went out to meet him, with palms in their hands, and bearing full length portraits of him ; which is an honour never permitted except to the Beati, on their road to an apotheosis. Shortly after the happy event the city was solemnly lustrated by holy water and missions, that is, sermons in the streets, to purge away the contagion of the French. There are still the above-mentioned missions at Rome and elsewhere, when the audience are preached into the imme- diate conflagration of their Metastasios or other pernicious volumes ; and, stranger still, pious whippings are still publicly performed in addition to the discipline enjoined amongst the penances of the convents. The reader may not object to a short account of this extraordinary exercise, such as it is now administered in the oratory of the Padre Caravita and in another church at Rome. The ceiemony takes place at the time of vespers. It is preceded by a short exhortation, during which a bell rings, and whips, that is, strings of knotted whip-cord, are distributed (luietly amongst such of the audience as are on their knees in the middle of the nave. Those resting on the benches come to edify by example only. On a second bell, the candles are extinguished, and the former sermon having ceased, a loud voice issues from the altar, which pours forth an exhortation * With this legend : Pius . Sept . Pont . Max . Savonae. in Ecstasim Uerum raptus die Assumptionis, B. M. V. 15ta Augusti, 1811. His Ho- liness i3 in the air. 203 to think of unconfessed, or unrcpcnted, or unforgiven crimes. This continues a sufficient time to allow the kneelers to strip off their upper garments : the tone of the preacher is raised more loudly at every word, and he vehemently exhorts his hearers to recollect that Christ and the martyrs suffered much more than whipping — " Show, then, your patience — show your sense of Chrisi^s sacrifice^ — sJiow it with the whip,'^^ The fla- gellation begins. The darkness, the tumultuous sound of blows in every direction — " Blessed Virgin Mary, pray for us !" bursting out at intervals — the persuasion that you are surrounded by atrocious culprits and maniacs, who know of an absolution for every crime — the whole situation has the effect of witchery, and so far from exciting a smile, lixes you to the spot in a trance of restless horror, prolonged beyond expectation or bearing. The scourging continues ten or fifteen minutes, and when it sounds as if dying away, a bell rings, which seems to invi- gorate the penitents, for the lashes beat more quickly than be- fore. Another bell rings, and the blows subside. At a third signal the candles are re-lighted, and the minister who has dis- tributed the disciplines, collects them again with the same discretion ; for the performers, to do them justice, appear to be too much ashamed of their transgressions to make a show of their penance, so that it is very difficult to say whether even your next neighbour has given himself the lash or not. The incredulous or the humourest must not suppose that the darkness favours evasion. There can be no pleasantry in doing that which no one sees, and no merit can be assumed where it is not known who accepts the disciplines. The fla- gellation does certainly take place on the naked skin; and this ferocious superstition, of which antiquity can furnish no example,* has, after being once dropt, been revived as a salu- tary corrective of an age of atheism. The former proces- * The priests of Cybele consented to that mutilation on which the monastic institutions have refined. Those of Bellona slashed tiiemselves with knives, or appeared to do so : and Commodiis, who suspected some deceit, insisted on a performance of the ceremony in his presence, and took care that the wounds should be given in good earnest. But in both these instances the sufferers were priests. The wounding and cutting wcr»i for- ■26 204 sions of flagellants have not yet been renewed, but the crowds which frequent the above ceremony, leave no doubt that they would be equally well attended. Such an innovation may be tolerated, and perhaps applaud- ed, in the days of barbarism, when the beating of themselves was found the only expedient to prevent the Italians from the beating of each other ; but the renewal of it at this period must induce us to fear that the gradual progress of reason is the dream of philanthropy, and that a considerable portion of all societies, in times the most civilized as well as the most ignorant, is always ready to adopt the most unnatural belief, and the most revolting practices. It is singular, however, that the humane Pius and the intelligent Cardinal-secretary, do not perceive the objectionable part of an institution which was prohibited at its first rise, by some of the wisest Italian princes, and is now allowed no where but at Rome. Flagellation began to be accounted amongst the duties of piety about the year 1260. It originated in Perugia, travel- led thence to Rome, and in a short time the high-roads of Italy were crowded with processions of penitents, two by two, sometimes nearly naked, sometimes in sackcloth, scourging themselves from city to city, and preaching the correction of vice, and peace. Twenty thousand Bolognese, with their Gonfalonier at their head, whipped themselves all the way to Modena. The Modenese made a similar voyage : and the Chronicles tell us,* that there was at the same time " a great jlogging for the love of God,'''* in Parma and Reggio, and in other cities of Lombardy. Manfred, however, king of the two Sicilies, the signors of Milan, of Brescia, of Ferrara, " the sons and masters of iniquity,"! objected to receiving the dis- cipline : they shut their gates against the flagellants, who, on their march towards Milan, were scared by the sight of six malities, not a penance ; and the people did not, as in the whipping, partake in such atrocious fooleries, * " Fuit scovamentum magnum pro amore dei in Parma et in Regio et Mutina, «t alibi etiam per Lombardiam, et paces inter homines habentes guerras facta sunt" Chron. di Parma, ap. Murat. Dissertaz- sopra H antic. Ital. 75. p. 602. T " Iniquitatis filii et magistri renuerunt accipere disciplinam." Ibid. 205 hundred gibbets erected by the Torriani, Lords of the country , and whipped themselves back to whence they came.* With such opposition, the practice would have expired upon the highways, had not the pious foundling of fanaticism been caught up and cherished in the warm bosom of mother church. Flagellation was no longer vagrant on the roads, but still flourished in the streets of cities, and in churches, and in con- vents. It became also the bond of union and the consolatioa of many lay confraternities, as well as religious foundations, wa* enriched by papal indulgencies, and transmitted, with unim- paired favour, from generation to generation. The French government had other uses, not so absurd, but more pernicious, to which to apply the nervous arms of their subjects, penitent and impenitent. Self-whipping was abolish- ed — it might have been thought for ever — but Pius VII. ha* returned, and seems to forget that he is not Clement IV. The scattered funds for idleness have been, as far as possible, recollected in the Roman states, and some other parts of Italy ; and religious orders re-established, in many instances, to the regret of the communities themselves. The education of youth is, we have seen, again put into the hands of the re- suscitated Jesuits,! whose suppression is now recognised amongst the causes of the late convulsions of Europe. These views are powerfully seconded by the House of Aus- tria, whose possessions, under various branches of the same * " Sed volentibus venire Mediolanum per Turrianos sexcentae furcae parantur, quo viso retrocesserunt." Ibid. p. 600- torn. iii. of the Italian ■edition. f Hume, the friend of all establishments, and who owns the miscon- duct of the Jesuits to have been much exaggerated, has this passage. " This reproach, however, they must bear from posterity, that from the very nature of their institution they were engaged to pervert learning, the only effectual remedy against superstition, into a nourishment of that infirmity ; and as their erudition was chiefly of the ecclesiastical and scholastic kind (though a few members have cultivated polite literature), they were only the more enabled by that acquisition to refine away the plainest dictates of morality, and to erect a new system of casuistry, by which prevarication, perjury, and every crime, when it served their ghostly purposes, might be justified and defended." History of England, Elizabeth, cap. Ixj. 206 family, now stretch from the Apennines of Cortona to the Po and the Alps. The Tuscans, since the reign of Cosmo III., have received the bent of superstition, and are distinguished, particularly the Florentines, for a disposition to credulity which will now return with ail its force. Yet Pignotti, only a few years past, could still disperse his liberal opinions through his engaging history. The literary journal of Lom- bardy is revised by the pensioners of the court ; yet, in the same precincts, the author of the Aristodemus still lives and writes. A Geratian has been placed at the head of the uni- versity of Padua, yet the Italian Odyssey has just added another wreath to the poet of the neighbouring Verona. Yet, if the present depression shall continue to weigh upon the Ita- lians, such proofs of the unextinguishable genius of the soil will become daily more rare. All the elements which, under the creative encouragement of a free, or even an independent government, might compose a great and enlightened nation, will mingle into their primitive confusion, and sedate ignorance establish, upon the inert mass, her leaden throne. A ray of light may struggle through the darkness, another Canova may arise after a dreary interval, and a faint voice remind some future age, that Italy was once the land of poets. " In vain, in vain, the all-composing hour Resistless falls: the Muse obeys the power. She comes ! she comes ! the sable throne behold, Of night primeval, and of Chaos old ! Before her, Fancy's gilded clouds decay, And all its varying rainbows die away ; Wit shoots in vain its momentary fires, The meteor drops, and in a flash expires. Nor public flame nor private dares to shine, Nor human spark is left, nor glimpse divine. Lo ! thy dread empire, Chaos ! is restored, Light dies before thy uncreating word : Thy hand, great Anarch ! lets the curtain fall. And universal darkness buries all. 207 Stanza CLXXIII. Lo, Kemi ! navelled in the woody hiUi. Stanza CLXXIV. And near Albano^s scarce divided waves, tfc. ifc Nemi, that is, the Arician grove, and the Alban hill, come within the tour comnnonly made by travellers ; and a descrip- tion, in the usual style, will be found in all the common guide- books. No one should omit to visit the two lakes. The tunnel, or emissary, cut nearly two miles through the moun- tain, from the Alban lake, is the most extraordinary memorial of Roman perseverance to be found in the world. An Eng- lish miner would be at a loss to account for such a perfora- tion made without shafts. It has served to carry off the re- dundant water from the time of the Veian war, 398 years be- fore Christ, to this day, nor has received, nor is in want of re- pairs.* When the traveller has wandered amongst the ruins of vil- las and tombs, to all of which great names are given,! he may examine the productions of a discovery which has been lately made, and which, if there be no deception, has brought to light a society possessed, apparently, of all the arts of ancient civilization, and existing before the arrival of j^neas in Italy j a society which was buried in the convulsion that changed the volcano of Albano into a lake. Doctor Alexander Visconti has enabled us to judge of this prodigious discovery, by publishing a memoir on the subject, * All that Livy says of this great work, after mentioning that it had been prescribed by a Tuscan soothsayer and the oracle of Apollo, is, " Jam ex lacu Albano aqua emissa in agros." Lib. v. cap. liv. It was completed in a year. It is three feet and a half wide, and six feet in height. \ Bere you have Pompey's villa, Porapey's tomb, or, if that will not serve, the tomb of the Horatii and Curiatii, or, since that may not be bold enough, the tomb of Ascanius, in another quarter. Some, who are not content with tombs, call them villas. At the bottom of the hilJ, the antiquaries know the verj' cavern where Milo killed Claudius. 208 and the reader may like to see the fact stated plainly, and di- vested of the solemn whimsical pedantry of the antiquary, and of the legal involution of the attached affidavits. It appears, then, that the Signor Carnevali, a gentleman of Albano, had found, in January, 1817, a considerable quantity of cinerary vases, in turning up the ground for a plantation, near the road from Castel Gandolfo to Marino. On the 28th of the same month, one Signor Tomasetti, breaking up a continued mass of peperine which covers the declivity of the hill near the road to Marino, on the ground called Montecucco, when he came to the distance of five hundred and seventy-one Roman canes from the spot where Signor Carnevali had discovered his vases, suddenly found several cinerary vases, all of them bro- ken excepting one. These were under the layer of peperine. The two gentlemen above-mentioned resolved then to make farther excavations, and, in presence of several respectable witnesses, on the 4th of the following February, broke up another mass of the same pepenne, which measured one hun- dred and fifty-nine and a half Roman canes in square surface. They cut downwards through about a palm and a half of com- mon soil, and then lower, to the depth of two palms of pepe- rine, and came to some white cretaceous earth, the layer of which they found to be a palm and a half deep. In this layer they found a terra cotta, figured, vase, broken in many pieces. The vase was seen in its bed by all the witnesses, previously to being taken up. Other similar fragments were discovered as the labour continued ; and it was observed that the mass of peperine became much thicker, and covered the surface to the depth of four palms. Pieces of a conduit pipe of some size were also found, and that not in mass, but separated from one another. The fragments of vases produced from this ex- cavation, were not of sufficient size to furnish any conjecture as to the form of the vessels : but from the bottom of one, more entire than the rest, they were thought to have had the shape of a pila, or water cistern. It should be told that, at different periods, four and three years before, other fragments of vases had been found under the peperine • and that under the same mass of peperine cer- tain stone-cutters had found pieces of iron, appearing to them 209 to be nails. Of these discoveries affidavits were made a little after the period of the present excavation, in March. The Signor Carnevah tells his visiters of a metal mirror also found in the same position, but the affidavits make no mention of it. The whole of ihe fragments found on the fourth of February were carefully collected, and, the next day, in presence of the former witnesses and a notary public, were examined and compared with the entire vases found in January by the Sig- nor Carnevali. The consequence of this comparison was a solemn judgment that ihe fragments and the entire vases were of the same composition and materials. This identity being established, the same value was, of course, attached to the vases of the Signor Carnevali, which had been found not under the peperine, as to that of Signor Tomasetti, and to the fragments discovered on the fourth of February, under the rock. As, therefore, the Tomasetti vase and the fragments were in themselves in nowise curious, the antiquaries proceeded to the examination of the Carnevali vases with the same satisfaction as if they had been found un- der the rock with the others. The Doctor Visconti addressed the above letter to his friend, Signor Carnevali, in April ; and the memoir having been read in the Archasological Society at Rome, was shortly after published, together with the affidavits before alluded to. This memoir discusses the contents found in the Carnevali vases, which are indeed so curious, that it has been thought worth while to give a drawing of them, which, after personal examination, the writer can aver to be very correct. The whole memoir goes to prove that the vases and the nails, and all the Alban fragments, belong to a state of society existing in this mountain before the volcano of Albano was ex- tinguished, that is, at some unknown period before Ascanius founded Alba Longa, in the year 1176 before the Chri;;tian era. It is premised that the peperine under which the Tomasetti vase, and (by induction) all the vases, were laid, was originally a volcanic substance thrown up at the great convulsion, and gradually formed into stone. These burials, then, did noi take place after, but before, the present snrface was formed. 210 therefore they belong to a people who lived at Alba before the lake was formed, and the crater became extinct ; these peo- ple Visconti calls Aborigines. With this foundation the Ro- man antiquary endeavours to show, that the burials may have belonged to a people even of the extreme antiquity requisite for such a gup}>osition. For the burnt bones are no objection : burning the dead was practised by the very ancient Greeks, by the very ancient Tro- jans, by the very ancient Thebans, by the very ancient Ro- mans, and the very ancient Gauls, also by the modern Indians. The vessels of earth are no objection, for the tomb of Be- lus contained a vase of glass, therefore clay must be much more ancient ; besides which Numa had a college of potters ; and, in the time of Julius Caisar, the colonists at Capua disco- vered some very old monumental vascida of pottery, with some inscribed brass tablets, saying they belonged to the tomb of Capys ; add to this, these very ancient pottery works were of a dark colour, as are the Carnevali vases, as if tinged with the oxid of iron, and their composition differs from the com- mon clay by the addition of a certain quantity of volcanic sand, and according to a chemical analysis, they are thus combined in every 100 parts. Silicious earth ...... 63^^ Aluminous do 21 i Carbonate of lime 4^ Water lOi 100 The different contents of the dcposite are no objection, for the large outward jar, the cinerary urn, the ointment vase, and the metal ornaments within the cinerary vase, the cale- factorium, the perfume vase, the vase called guttus, the five other vases, perhaps, for wine, and milk, and honey, the bowl and the three platters, may be all shown to be of most an- cient usage. The same may be said of the funereal lamp of rough workmanship, and moie especially of a little rude idol which seems to be one of the Oscillce, a sacrifice to Dis, in place of the human victim, and of that sort which Rachel 211 stole from her father. " Erat Laban ad tondendaa oves, et Rachel furata est idola patris 5?/t." As for the bronze utensils, they are also of the highest an- tiquity, for brass was the first metal employed ; the fibula may have pinned the amianthus or other cloth in which the ashes were wrapped, a conjecture more probable from its being made without soldering : the elegance of the work- manship does not surpass that of the coin of Servius Tullius. Tubal Cain was a worker in all works of brass and iron. The small wheel, the little lance head, the two hooks, the stylus, were part of the sepulchral munera buried with the dead ; the spoked wheel was as old as the time of Homer ; the stylus also having the obliterating part moveable, differs from the usual form, and, therefore, is of great antiquity ; styli were used at Rome in the time of Porsenna. The Doctor Visconti attempts no explanation of the forked instru- ment in terra cotta, seen in the first drawing. The mysterious figures and points observable in the second drawing, may be letters, of which, " according to Pliny, the Pheniciajis were the inventors,'''' and were appropriately added to a monument, quia monet nos. So far the Roman antiquary. It is now our turn to make a few remarks. In the first place, then, it should be told that in the month of May, following the discovery, the ground whence the interments were extracted was covered up and shown to no one even upon inquiry. An English na- turalist who visited the spot, was unable to discover the pre- cise excavation ; and it was the opinion of the same gentle- man, that the stone called peperine was, in fact, a tufo gra- dually formed by the sand and water crumbling down the de- clivity from the summit of the hill, and not a volcanic forma- tion, of which he discerned no signs. According to this sup- position, there is no necessity for having recourse to the ex- treme antiquity assumed by the Doctor Visconti. In the second place, although there was only one entire vase actually found under the rock, and that vase was of much more simple workmanship, and contained none of the curious implements of the others, the Signer Carnevali, in showing bi« museum, makes no distinction between the two •2.7 212 discoveries, but, on the contrary, endeavours, both by his si- lence, and, when he is pushed, by his assertions, to confound the two, assuming that his whole museum is of equal anti- quity with the said Tomasetti vase. This remark becomes more important, although more in- vidious, when it is told that the articles of the museum are for sale, the price of a complete interment being fifty louis- d'ors. This incomprehensible dispersion of such treasures does not quite agree with the following innocent conclusion with which Visconti perorates. " Dear Friend, " These monuments are come into your house, ' Data sunt ipsis quoque fata sepulchris :' it seems to me that the most venerable antiquities strive to get into your hands, for a few days since you have acquired that very ancient ces grave, never yet published, weighing four pounds and a half, with an anchor on one side, and a tripod on the reverse : perchance it is the destiny of tripods to fall into the hands of the best of men. I recommend to you these innocent utensils* that have lasted for so many years, more precious than gold and than silver, since they were made in times when, according to Pliny, gold and silver were worked not for men, nor even for the gods themselves. Take care that they are not broken nor lost, but pass down from age to age like the stars. What a number of fine things you have — and you may yet possess ! ! but your heart is re- fulgent above all, and if your modesty did not snatch the pen from my hand, how much I should write on that topic : I wait then for your other agreeable commands, that I may show you by deeds that I am," &.c. The owner may think he follows his friend's advice, by re- taining one or two of the best specimens. Thirdly, the museum contains a great variety of articles, all of them inferred to have been laid under the rock, but * " Vi raccomando questi InnoceDti stoviglie." Lettera, iac- p. 29. I 213 for which circumstance there is no guarantee, even in the affidavits attached to the memoir ; the bronze implements in great number and of every shape, are of as elegant and elaborate workmanship as is to be found in the specimens which are seen in the other museums of Europe, and which confessedly belong to a much later age than that assumed by Visconti. These bronze implements are frequently discover- ed in Italy and Greece, and certainly do not agree with the pottery of the large jar, or of the cinerary vase, which is of a form much more rude than suits with their shape and make. They do however agree well enough with the lamps and lacrymatories, which are entirely of the kind discovered every day in Greek and Roman burials. It is possible then, and, all things considered, probable, that the interments have been completed and adjusted since the discovery, and that part of the pottery may belong to one period, and the imple- ments and the other part of the pottery to another. The styli are in great variety, and belonged to a people whose alphabet was less rude than the pretended letters on the vases-r— one of the fibulae has not altogether lost the spring. It must not be deemed too uncharitable to hesitate before we believe that all the articles were found in the Alban vases. In the fourth place : the larger pottery is neither Roman nor Tuscan. It is not altogether unlike that found in other places, and supposed to be the work of the early inhabitants, whom it is usual to call Indigenes. The most learned Roman writers, Porcius Cato, Caius Sempronius, and others, were of opinion that the Aborigines, or, as others called them, the Aberrigines, were Greeks from Achaia, who had migrated to Italy many years before the Trojan war : and Dionysius says, that, in that case, they were Arcadians who accompanied CEnotrus and Peucetius seventeen generations before the Trojan war,* some of whom settled in Umbria,t and sent out colonies to the Corniculan or Tiburtine mountains.]: These Aborigines were joined by the Pelasgi, colonists originally from Argos,§ and the two nations, about three generations before the Trojan war, were * Lib. i. cap. xi. f Ibid. cap. xiii. t Ibid. cap. xvi- ^ Ibid. i. cap. xvii. xviii. xx. 214 in possession of all the country from the Tiber to the Liris ;* but the Pelasgi were extinct at the end of that war,t or were mingled with the Aborigines.^ According to this account we have Greeks settled for ages in these hills before the coming of iEneas to Italy ; but that these Greeks were Uttle better than barbarians, we may collect from the same authority, which tells us that the Arcadians under Evander, who settled on the Palatine hill about sixty years before the Trojan war,§ were the first that introduced the Greek letters, Greek music, and Greek manners into Italy. || Besides these Greek Aborigines, Dionysius seems to talk of certain indigenal na- tives who assisted them and the Trojans in founding Alba Longa. But who these Indigenes were, except they were Tuscans, whom he inclines to beUeve natives of Italy,** does not appear from his account. Whoever were the makers of the bronze implements, and some of the lesser vases, they must be supposed in a state of civilization superior to that which Evander improved by the introduction of Greek arts and letters, and which must have belonged to the people living there before the mountain as- sumed its present shape. The pottery is sufficiently rude for that age, but unless all the articles were found together, and in the pretended position, nothing can be argued with safety from any of the phenomena. Viscontihas gained nothing by showing the remote antiquity of similar manufactures. No one doubted that fact, but the question evidently reduces it- self to the assigning these individual interments to a time and nation to which they may be reasonably referred. The inquiry undoubtedly is, supposing the whole discovery to be established, and that nothing has been interpolated, what people ever lived on the Alban hill at any period who might have made these vases ? Since the return of the writer to England he has heard the suggestion of an English antiquary, which is certainly more ingenious, and it may be thought more satisfactory than the researches of Visconti. That which puzzled the Italian most * Lib. cap. \x. f Ibid. cap. xxiv. X Ibid. cap. XXX. ^ Ibid. cap. xxxi. U Ibid. cap. xxxiii. ** Ibid. cap. xxix. 215 has furnished the Englishman with the clue of his conjecture ; for those figures which Visconti thinks may be letters, or, perhaps, whole words, like the Chinese characters, have in- duced him to come to a very different conclusion. It will be seen that the root or germ of each of these figures is a cross, and it is not a little singular that they bear a very close re- semblance to a certain Runic character, or magical sign, found upon many northern monuments, and which is con- sidered as denoting the hammer, or rather the battle-axe, of the Scandinavian Thor. The weapon of Thor was figured by a cross in very remote ages. When the horn of mead was passed to Hako the Good, he made the sign of the cross over the vessel. " What !" exclaimed a heathen Earl, " will not the king worship our gods ?" " Nay," answered Earl Sigurd, *' the king does as we do, he blessed the liquor in the name of Thor, by making the sign of the hammer over it, before he quaffed it." The cruciform hammer takes various shapes, of which the following are specimens. 12 3 4 S « 7 8 9 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6. On medals, or amulets, in the Museum ot' the Royal Academy at Copenhagen, on all of which is also a figure of Thor riding in his chariot, drawn by his Goats. 7. On a Runic monument lately discovered at Snoldelev. 8. At the end of a line of Runic characters engraved on a rock in Gothland. 216 9. On a Runic monument in the parish of Skeftuna, in Upland. The similarity between these Runic " hammer crosses,'* and the marks on the vases of Alba Longa, is so great, that one might be tempted to maintain their identity ; and there is, perhaps, some connexion between both, and the crux ansata of the Egyptian monuments. It is certain that the mythology of the Asi, although its doctrines may have been clad in another guise, was not confined to the Scandinavian race. And it seems that a character bearing a close affinity to the Runic alphabet, was once widely diffused throughout ancient Europe. The national enthusiasm of the northern antiqua- rians has too often outstripped their judgment ; and many of the fanciful analogies of such really excellent authors as Pe- rugakioled and Rudbuck, must unfortunately be reckoned amongst the dreams of the learned ; yet the truths which they have discovered may be easily separated from their de- lusions. Perhaps a Celtic origin may be ascribed to the tomb. Of the Celtic Taranus we know little ; yet there are Roman inscriptions which show that he was worshipped as the Roman Jupiter. And it cannot be denied but that the deity whom the Romans knew as Jupiter, was the thunderer of the Northmen. If the superincumbent body of peperino is to be considered as a proof of the remote antiquity of the tomb, it must be referred to the Celtic aborigines of Italy ; but if the bed can be considered as a formation of compara- tively recent date, then the vase may contain the ashes of some Gaulish chieftain, or of a heathen Goth or Lombard. A character resembling the hammer of Thor is seen in inscriptions discovered in Spain, and which resemble the le- gends of the medals which the Spaniards call the " medallas desconocidas." The same character also lurks in many magical books, though under other combinations. A diagram, or figure to which it bears some affinity, is often drawn by boys in Italy ; I ^TT^^/J they do not however ascribe any meaning to it. It may be considered as a wild speculation . / 2J7 to discover the traces of ancient mythology in a school-boy's scrawl ; but a remarkable instance can be given of the strange stubborn vitality of these vestiges of the superstitions of the elder day. We often see English shepherds cutting the pen- talpha )Cf^ in the turf, although they never heard of Anti- ochus, or saw his coin, and although they are ignorant of its mystic power. It may finally be observed, that supposing the state of re- mote society to have existed, which the Italian antiquary as- signs to the hill, and supposing these relics to have been sud- denly overwhelmed by the volcano in those unknown ages, some other vestiges besides sepulchral deposites would have been found to attest the same industry and skill in the arts which is manifested in these specimens. Notwithstanding however these difficulties, and a division of opinion even amongst the Romans, the discovery of the Alban vases has been considered of much importance, and has transported the antiquaries into ages and amongst nations, where, having no guide to lead, and no witnesses to contra- dict them, they may form leisurely a world of their own. ESSAY ON TBK PRESENT LITERATURE OF ITALY. 28 ESSAY PRESENT LITERATURE OF ITALY It is the boast of the Italians, that their hterature has flourish- ed with unequal, but uninterrupted brilliancj, from the thir- teenth century to the present day. The progress of time alone would naturally have produced and obliterated many innovations, but the frequent domestic revolutions, the repeated irruptions, the arms and the arts of strangers, succeeding each other rapidly and imperceptibly, and bringing with them new laws, and manners, and opinions, have occasioned in Italy more vicissitudes than are to be found in the literature of any other country. Thus it is that their critics have been able to point out at least ten different epo- ques when it has assumed certain characteristics, or, to use a single word, a physiognom}^, altogether distinct from that of any preceding or subsequent period. The average duration assigned to each of these epoques,' has been laid down at about half a century. This is the utmost length that any in- dividual taste and mode of writing can be discovered to have prevailed. The above remark is purposely premised to a short account which it is intended to give of the present state of Italian literature ; that is to say, of the character of the actual epoque, which embraces not only those writers at present in existence, but others who have powerfully contributed to form the taste and the tone which will continue to prevail until 222 succeeded by another revolution in the repubUc of letters. The latter Italian authors may be expected to form a diversi- ty more distinct than those of any other generation, when it is recollected, that whilst they wrote, the most extraordinary change was prepared and consummated, that had ever affect- ed the moral or pohtical world. That the great convulsions which shook not only " mightiest monarchies," but also the mind of man, in all the countries of Europe, should commu- nicate itself to these authors, was inevitable, and will be dis- covered in the works, the principles, the character, and the estimation, of the most celebrated amongst them, whom it is proposed to examine and portray. These authors will be their poets ; who are selected, first, because the verse of eveiy country is the depository of the language, the taste, and the manners, of the times ; secondly, because this is found more particularly the case in those nations whose ima- gination is their predominant faculty ; and, in the third place, because the writers chosen on this occasion, are in part dis- tinguished for their compositions in prose. This method of illustration might be liable to objections in any other country than Italy, where the few men of superior genius are separated from the crowd of writers by a barrier, which in other nations is rarely visible until poste- rity has pronounced the final decision. In Italy the judg- ment is in some sort formed and given by their cotempora- ries ; and thus, although the struggle to attain the eminence may be more serious and protracted, there is less danger of future degradation. An intimate acquaintance is, however, requisite, to per- ceive the difference between the esteemed and the popular author : for, otherwise, the above-mentioned singularity of Italian literature would be reduced to a shade only of dis. tinction from that of other countries. A book may be in the hands of all readers, and, during some years, be the study and the talk of all. This was the case with the animali par- lantl of Casti : but the author had no pretence or right to renown. On the other hand, a work which few compara- tively shall peruse, because every one cannot understand, having obtained the suffrages of those distinguished above the 223 common class of readers, acquires for the author an estabUsh- ed name, which the people themselves are soon taught to re- peat with respect, although entirely ignorant or insensible of the specific merit which has obtained their applause. Such esteem may be compared to the blind honours conferred up- on a successful general by the peaceful peasantry, who wish no other signal or reason for their shouts than the gazette, but it is not less devoted. If we endeavour to account for this characteristic in the literature of Italy, a partial, or perhaps a sufficing, reason may be found, in the difference between countries like England and France, and one in which, as there is no single capital, there are, comparatively speaking, none of those court in- trigues, none of those party passions, none of those fashiona- ble cabals and tribunals, which are called into play and em- ployed in Paris and London, in deciding the fate of authors. It is not that there are no reviews composed by the personal enemies or friends of the respective writers ; it is not that fashion has no voice ; but the injustice of criticism, or the folly of a coterie, which may sway the public opinion for a while in one of the great cities, is inevitably corrected be- fore it has run through the mass of disinterested readers, and travelled the wide circle of Venice, Bologna, Parma, Verona, Milan, Turin, Florence, Naples, and Rome. The same in- stances of undeserved neglect and elevation may be found in each of those towns, as are the constant complaint through- out the vast extent of our own country. But even in any single capital the error is more speedily corrected by the justice of many rival, or, what is better, impartial neigh- bours : and as for the whole of Italy, there cannot be an in- stance of that rapid rise, and as sudden precipitation, of which we have seen so many examples in our times, and which are to be attributed solely to what we call the fashion of the day. You do not even hear the expressions usual with us, applied to their national writers. The favourite of the to7on would be an absurd solecism in a country where there are twenty towns with distinct literary interests and pretensions, and where the attachment of one city secures the opposition of another ; nor. as it has been before men- 224 tioned, can some of the most established authors be said to be most in vogue, for they are certainly not the most read. A reviewer may irritate the public curiosity, a lady of high rank may give a letter of recommendation, but neither the one nor the other can raise those phantoms of fashion, who, al- though they come and depart like shadows, walk the whole round of our united kingdoms, with all the honours and at- tributes of substantial existence. If, then, we find any living author enjoying very nearly the same character in all the provinces of Italy, we can safely prognosticate that he has received his final estimation — that the just appreciation of his merits alone having raised him, will prevent him from ever sinking into total neglect ; that he has become one of the national writers, subject, indeed, to the fluctuations which, as it has been before remarked, affect more especially the literature of Italy, but always to be rank- ed amongst the classics of his country. The above circumstance furnishes the foreigner with a criterion not found in other countries : his survey is facili- tated by being contracted to a narrower space ; and when he has collected the judgment pronounced upon a very few, he need not embarrass himself with the multitude of writers, but be assured that he has seized the traits that are at pre- sent, and will always be esteemed, characteristic of the lite- rature of the age. — Of the writers, then, whose influence may be more or less discerned in the formation of the pre- sent taste and style, it may be sufficient to enumerate six : Melchior Cesarotti, Joseph Parini, Victor Alfieri, Hippolitus Pindemonte, Vincent Monti, and Hugo Foscolo. The three first are, it is true, no longer alive, but they clearly belong to the present day, and are no less to be taken into an actual survey than their surviving cotemporaries. There is nothing bold in pronouncing that these are decidedly the authors of the day ; but it is an endeavour of great difficulty, and no little danger, to attempt to show the specific reputation which each of them enjoys, and to describe their respective per- formances so as to give, on the whole, the acknowledged re- sult of their effects upon the opinions of their countrymen. Such an effort has, however, been made in the following 225 sketches of these distinguished Italians, and so much of theii' hiography has been added as appeared serviceable in illustra- ting the motives that inspired, and the occasions that called forth, their various compositions. CESAROTTL Melchior Cesarotti was a Paduan, and died, in extreme old age, in the year 1808. Bold, fruitful, eloquent, and deeply versed in ancient and modem literature, this writer impressed his readers' with the conviction of his genius : and yet, al- though he resembled no one of his predecessors or cotempo- raries, there was something more of novelty than originality in all his compositions. He was brought up in the ecclesiastical seminary of Padua which prides itself, and with some justice, on the constancy and success with which it has preserved the latinity of the purer ages. Indeed the Latin verses of Cesarotti are a proof no less of his talents than of the merit of this celebrated insti- tution, which, had he continued to pursue the same studies, would have produced a new rival of Vida or Fracastorius. But he no sooner entered into holy orders and quitted the seminary, than he declared war against the poets of antiquity, and, more especially, of Greece. An Englishman passing through Venice, made him acquainted with Ossian, at that time the delight, or at least the wonder, of the transalpine critics : and Cesarotti lost no time in translating into blank verse, accompanying his version with notes, for the most part, against Homer. Ossian transported the Italians, who did not, generally speaking, embarrass themselves with the exa- mination of the authenticity of the pretended epic. Palmi- eri of Placentia, and a few others, ventured to contest the antiquity of the poet, but the mass of readers, seduced by the authority of Blair, or by their inclination to be pleased with their Itahan Ossian, were resolved to discover the genuine son of Fingal in the spurious offspring of Macpherson. Some there were who still defended the heroes of the old school, 226 and exclaimed against a precedent fatal to the reputation of the ancient models, and to the purity of the modern lan- guage. But they read the work, and they admired the transla- tor. His verses, in truth, are harmonious, are soft, are imbued with a colouring, and breathe an ardent spirit, altogether new ; and, with the same materials, he has created a poetry that appears written in a metre and a language entirely differ- ent from all former specimens. His superiority was evinced by the want of success in those who endeavoured to imitate him, and whose exaggerations and caricatures were received with a ridicule that, by little and little, was attached to their model, and partially diminished his fame. The translation of Ossian will, however, be always considered as an incon- trovertible proof of the genius of Cesarotti, and of the flex- ibility of the Italian tongue. The reputation into which he thus leapt, as it were, at once, encouraged him to still bolder innovations ; and being raised to the Greek professorship in his own university of Padua, he translated Demosthenes and others of the Greek orators, subjoining criticisms full of learning and ingenuity, the chief aim of which was to convince the world that the veneration with which they read those orators was derived more from their antiquity than their intrinsic excellence. His next work was a translation of the Iliad. But the magic of his Ossian was not transfused into his Italian Homer. This work is in ten large octavo volumes : each book is translated literally into Italian prose, and almost every pas- sage is illustrated by the compared opinions of the critics of every nation, from Aristarchus to those of our own days. He invariably cites the adversaries of Homer, and often opposes them with the partisans of the poet. When he subjoins his own decision, it very rarely inclines to the favour of his ori- ginal. To every book thus translated and commented upon, he adds his own poetical version, which, as it was intended to Correct the errors discovered in the original, changes, omits, and transfers from one book to another, whole passages of the text. These alterations were so many and so material^ 227 that, in the end, he resolved to change the title of the poerii and his Iliad reappeared as the " Dealh of Hector.^'' The bold style, and the harmonious numbers of this ver- sion, procured for it many readers, and the work was ap- plauded by a public accustomed to admire the author. The journalists, who in Italy are frequently without learning, and almost always without genius, exalted the translation as an extraordinary and successful effort, and the harmony of the blank verse of the Death of Hector, became in a short time proverbial. But some few literary men of real merit and discernment, whose voice it is much more difficult totally to suppress in Italy than in any other country, prognosticated that the work, at some future day, would be more frequently cited than read. Their prophecy is now fully verified. In his treatise on the Itahan language, Cesarotti stepped forward to defend the privilege assumed by certain authors, of enriching, by new words and combinations, their native lan- guage. His positions are undeniable, his observations pro- found, and his deductions exceedingly just. The didactic form of his treatise has not deprived it of the elegance ne- cessary for the attraction of his readers. The style is pre- cise, yet ornamented : and very few authors have so happily combined the language of evidence and of metaphysical dis- quisition ; very few have made a grammatical discussion so alluring, or have arrayed materials so abstruse in eloquence so engaging. This is the only work of Cesarotti's that has pre- served its original reputation up to this day. The author himself abused, however, the privilege which he claimed for all writers, and in one of the reviews then most esteemed in Italy, it was asserted that the preacher of liberty had awakened a spirit of licentiousness, and yet might easily raise himself to the dictatorship.* The truth was, that Cesarotti was, by his partisans, regarded as infallible, and was the ter- ror of his opponents, whose censure was confined to the adoption of a practice contrary to his powerful example. His prose is endowed with all the qualities that constitute a * " Predicando la liberty letteraria aveva suscitato la liccnza e per6 gli fu facile ad erigcrsi in dittatore." See Annali di scienze e lettere, An. ISll.Numero. iii. article on the OdiMlflk 228 superior writer. The depth is no obstacle to the clearness of his ideas ; his manner is free, his phraseology abundant, his periods are harmonious. He is Hvely, yet graceful ; he is not so copious as to be tedious, nor so brief as to be ob- scure ; he is full of pleasantry, which never degenerates into affectation, or is applied to the purposes of malicious con- troversy. But those who were obliged, had they not been willing, to discover these excellencies in Cesarotti, were re- lieved from unqualified admiration, by finding that all' of them were spoilt and rendered inefficient ; in the first place, by the intemperate and systematic use of gallicisms ; and, secondly, by their being lost upon discourses either critical or metaphysical,- and such as could not interest the general reader. It was in his power to have furnished a model of the oratorical style in his translation of Demosthenes ; but his deliberate purpose and all his efforts in this work were directed to fritter down his original, and, with this unaccountable de- sign, he has affected a style scrupulously Cruscan and pe- dantic. His Familiar Letters, published after his death, have dis- covered to us an excellence and a defect that might not be col- lected from his other writings : for they show him to have been an indulgent cncourager of the talents of others, as well as very liberal of his own information ; but at the same time he appears so over prodigal of his praises as to incur the sus- picion of premedidated flattery. His conversation was distinguished by its eloquence and its amenity ; his ideas were rapid and clear, and he gave a cer- tain grace and embellishment to the most abstruse arguments. He took delight in the education of those who attached them- selves to his opinions, and were loyal to their literary faith, more especially when he discovered in them any signs of fu- ture excellence ; and although he was far from rich, it was not unusual with him to receive his pupils as his domestic guests. His confidence went so far as to intrust them with his secrets. Nevertheless, notwithstanding his kind patron- age, and their devoted attachment, his most constant disciples attained to no reputation : either because imitation is, in it- self, incapable of rising abo^mediocrity, or because there 229 was in the system of this great writer something rather per- nicious than conducive to success. This circumstance, so painful for the head of a sect, did not, however, sour his temper, or diminish his regard. He was the same affection- ate noble-minded man to the last, and his friends had just rea- son to praise him and to lament his loss. His political conduct was not distinguished for its constancy. The revolution found him more than a sexagenary — devoted to literary pursuits — a priest — and one who had never wan- dered beyond the narrow confines of his native country, which for more than a century had enjoyed the most profound calm. Buonaparte had read and re-read the Italian Ossian, and at his first occupation of Padua he eagerly sent for Cesarotti, and named him one of the chiefs of the new government. Our author took that opportunity of publishing a small trea- tise on the rights and freedom of mankind, on the duties of the magistrate, and the character of the people. Three or four years afterwards the chances of war brought him into the hands of the Russians and the Austrians, and he was forced, if such an expression may be applied to such an exertion, to compose a short poem in praise of the victorious potentates. Finally, when Buonaparte had become Emperor, and was again master of the Venetian states, he created Cesarotti a knight commander of one of his orders, assigning to him, at the same time, a pension, which was meant to ensure his gratitude and his praise. Napoleon was not mistaken ; his pensioner published his poem, called Pronea, or Providence, a most extravagant performance, where the style of Lucan, of Ossian, and of Claudian bewilders the reader, already lost amidst the mazes of metaphysics and of theological allegory. The work, from the first to the last page, was such as might be expected from a systematic innovator, from a devotee trembling on the brink of the grave, and from a poet who wrote by commission. He survived this effort too short a time to enjoy his pension, but not before his poem had been consigned to oblivion. Had this writer been born in other times ; had he expanded his ideas, and escaped from the circle of his'own metaphysi- 230 cal speculations, by visiting other countries and mixing with other minds ; had he encountered greater obstacles in his as- cent to fame ; but, above all, had he devoted himself to original composition, and made a more judicious use of his acquaintance with foreign literature, it is probable that Cesarotti would have taken a prominent place amongst the classical authors of his country. As it is, the Italians accuse his system, and accuse his example ; but whilst they pro- nounce both the one and the other to have been highly pre- judicial to his native literature, they are all willing to allow that he was possessed of great natural ability. Angelo Mazza, the school-fellow and the friend of Cesarotti, may be fairly subjoined to a mention of that poet. He is still alive, and enjoys a green old age at Parma. His first essay was made in the year 1764, when he translated the Pleasures of the Imagination, and convinced the Italians that the compressed style of Dante was capable of being applied to their blank verse, which as yet was little more than a string of sonorous syllables. The poetry published by him in a maturer age consists in great part of lyrical pieces on Harmony, They are to be found in two small volumes ; and Saint Cecilia is the inspirer and patroness of two of his best odes. It was not likely that he should equal the invention of Dryden ; he wisely, there- fore, was contented with trying a version of that poet, and his translation of that lyrical masterpiece has the merit of having extended the fame of our laureate to every corner of Italy. The imitations, and even the translations of Mazza, have a certain air of originality impressed not only on their style, which is extremely energetic, but even on the ideas which appear generally drawn from a metaphysical turn of mind. He excels much in the poetical array of abstract images, and what the Theodicea of Leibnitz is in prose, he sometimes contrives to execute in verse. In spite, however, of the in- spired tone of some of his verses on the Universe, and the wisdom of the Creator, displayed, according to Mazza, in the harmony of all things, and notwithstanding he has re- presented this same harmony under aspects entirely new and 231 beautiful, the poet has failed no less than all others who have attempted to embellish these sacred subjects, in keeping alive the interest of his reader, and has succeeded only in attract- ing the admiration of those who are delighted to see objections encountered and difficulties overcome. His odes are com- posed of stanzas, the melody of which is often sacrificed to what the musicians call contrapunto, which is calculated to surprise more than please, and he has even adopted those difficult rhymes which the Italians call sdrucciole, or slippery, and which not only lengthen the eleven syllabled verse into twelve syllables, but change the position of the accent, as appears from the following specimen extracted from the same Mazza : A me le voci di concento gravid e, A me la forme dello stil Pindarico, Date a me I'ispirata arpa di Davide. The only work of Mazza which has been often printed, and has hit the taste of the Italians, is a poem in thirty pages, addressed to Cesarotti, in which he gives a masterly sketch of the great poets of every nation, and has placed the Eng- lish on a distinguished eminence amongst the immortal brotherhood. It is only the women, who affect our endemic melancholy, and the younger readers, who occasion the im- mense demand for Young's Night Thoughts, translated as they are into poor verse, or ampuUated prose ; for the more en- lightened Italians study Milton and Shakspeare. Mazza is remarkable for the candour with which he has treated his cotemporaries, even those attached to a system totally different from his own. This discretion, however, has not silenced the voice of criticism, and in spite of his own reserve, his partisans and his opponents have carried on a war of words, which is seldom to be equalled by English polemics, and is outrageous even in a country distinguished by the pedantry, the fury, and the illiberality of its literary quarrels. The foreigners who have by turns usurped the Italian provinces, have extended their claims to all the pro- ductions of that fruitful soil : not only the corn, and the wine, and the oil are put in requisition, but the tythe of the poetry is claimed by the conquerors. Mazza, in his quality of per- 232 petual secretary of the academy of Parma, has composed th'e usual complimentary sonnets for the successive governments of his country, but he has cautiously avoided all political topics, and left his opinion still uncomprised and unknown. It is generally reported that he has long finished, although he has never ventured to publish, a translation of Pindar. The Itahans are impatient, but they are also fearful, for the result. The Greek poet has had many happy imitators in this country, and especially in the days of Chiabrera, of Fili- caja, of Menzini, and of Guidi ; but his translators have failed here no less than in all other countries. Mazza, besides his poetical reputation, has the character of a scholar profoundly versed in ancient and modern languages, and the acquisition of the latter is the more singular, as he has never been out of Italy, and indeed has seldom quitted his native town. JOSEPH PARINI. Parini was almost the only Italian poet of the last century who dared to conceive, and certainly he was the only one who was capable of completing the project of directing the efforts of his art towards the improvement of his fellow-citi- zens. If by moralizing Ms song, he has failed to correct his cotemporaries, he has, however, acquired a reputation much more valuable than can be the share of those whose talents are devoted solely to the amusement of the public. His parents were peasants on the borders of the lake Pusi- ano, the Eupilis of Pliny, about twenty miles to the north of Milan. It is usual in Italy to choose from the poorest classes those destined to supply the humblest and most laborious duties in the church, whilst the valuable benefices are reserved for the younger sons of noble families. When one of these children of poverty shows signs of superior talent, the monks endea- vour to attach him to their community, and the charity of the bishop provides him a gratuitous education. In this way Parini was sent to study in the capital of Austrian Lombardy. He applied to his scholastic pursuits until nearly his twentieth year, when his constitution, feeble from the beginning, almost fiunk under an attack which took away the use of his lower 233 limbs, and occasioned his retreat from the seminary in a con- dition that seemed to deprive him of all hopes of aspiring even to a country curacy. All that medical care, all that time could do for the improvement of his health, from his youth to the day of his death, barely enabled him to crawl along by the help of a stick, or by leaning on the arm of a friend. Some of the verses published in his posthumous works, are painfully affecting, from the picture which they afford of the extreme indigence in which he languished even after he had arrived at years of maturity. His whole livelihood, and that of an aged mother, were derived from composing arti- cles for a newspaper. He speaks thus in requesting an inti- mate friend to send him relief: La mia povera madre non ha pane Se non da me, edio non ho danaro Da mantenerla almeno per donutne.* He had already published some poetry which had dropt after the partial applauses that usually succeed the first essays of every author, that are not bad enough for ridicule, nor good enough for envy. Parini would never allow these specimens to be reprinted. It was not until his thirty-fifth year that he published the first canto of that poem, which rendered him formidable to the most powerful families around him, and established him in the eyes of the literary world as the founder of a new school in poetry. This poem is called the Day (// Giorno), and is divided into four cantos — Morning (Mattino) ; Noon {Meriggiu) ; Evening (Vespro) -^ and Night (J^otte) — and it Contains a satirical description of the manner in which the Italian nobles contrive to waste away the four and twenty hours of an existence for the most part truly despicable. Before we enter into an examination of this poem, a word or two may be requisite on the author. The literary history of every nation abounds with instances of the distresses and ill success of those endowed with the finest abilities ; and it is a painful truth, that the union of the se- verest virtue with those abilities is no shield against the ar- rows of Fortune. * Parini, Oper. vol. iii. 234 The case of Parini, however, is not to be confounded with these examples. Infirm, indigent, without the advantage of a regular education, struggling against the obscurity of his birth, and the disgrace of poverty, he lived in a city where the nobles are not only more rich, but are perhaps more haughty and more ignorant than in any other town in Italy. At that time they were important from their influence, direct and indirect, and formidable from the impunity with which they could give a loose to their revenge. It is universally known, that before the revolution the Ita- lian nobles enjoyed a sort of prescriptive right of employing assassins ; but it is more wonderful still, that at this day, and in the face of the new noblesse, created by Buonaparte, there is not a single instance of the daughter or wife of any but those in possession of ancient titles being admitted to the ball-room or drawing-room of a Milanese Patrician. The same absurd distinction prevails at Turin. At Venice, at Bologna, at Florence, at Rome, the exclusion is not so strictly observed, and a few young females of the middling ranks are allowed to, stand in the same dance with the daughters of barons and of counts. Such was the state of society that Parini undertook to cor- rect. And this difficult, this dangerous task he adventured upon, by boldly reproaching the nobles with their vices and their crimes. He raised his own reputation by the depression of a whole order, which, in spite of their being essentially more despicable than in any other country of Europe, were, owing to the ignorance and extreme poverty of the lower classes, in fact more respectable. The care taken by Parini to conceal his personal allusions, could not prevent the dis- covery that his portraits were all drawn from living charac- ters ; and if his originals recognised their likeness only now and then, the public were never mistaken. There was not a single Milanese who did not see, in the chief personage ol the poem, the Prince Belgiojoso, of the reigning family ol Este, the eldest brother of the Field Marshal of the same name, who was Austrian Ambassador at our court, and Go- vernor of the Low Countries. It should be here observed, to the honour of Parini, and \ 235 indeed of the Italian authors in general, that, let a work be ever so much admired, it never brings the writer money enough to defray the expense of the first edition. There is but a very limited number of readers in Italy ; and though a work may receive from their applause a character which se- cures the esteem of the whole nation, a multitude of pur- chasers, such as we are accustomed to, is not to be procured by any merit, or any accident. Twelve hundred names to a subscription are reckoned an extraordinary instance of public patronage, and it is hazardous to demand more than three francs (half a crown) for any new production in a single vo- lume under the quarto size. The copyright law can hardly exist in a country divided into so many small governments, and the booksellers find it no difficult matter to elude the prosecutions, which must be transferred from one state to another before they can be brought before any competent tribunal. After the revolution, an effort was made to correct this abuse ; but it was found almost impossible to change the practice of a whole class of tradesmen, long habituated to consider all literary profits their own, and to esteem every mercenary art a fair branch of speculation. Those accustomed to the liberality of English publishers, which aflfords a decent subsistence to those whose talents and whose fame do not rise above mediocrity, will hardly believe that the best authors in Italy think themselves fortunate if they find a publisher to take the expense of printing ofT their hands. In that country the booksellers are also printers, and have it in their power to multiply indefinitely the copies of any edition, without accounting for the ac(iruing profits. The swearing of the printer, and our other protections of literary property, are unpractised and unknown. Alfieri, in a sort of a preface, in verse, prefixed to the se- cond edition of his tragedies, complains that his eagerness for renown has cost him a portion of his health, of his intellects, of his peace of mind, and, above all, of his fortune ; the lat- ter having been sacrificed to the rapacity of the bookseller. Profonder tuttoin Hnde stampe il viio, E per clit altri mi compri, accattar io : 30 236 Soffrire il revisor che Vuomo strazia ; Appiccicarmi i masnadier libraj Che a credenza ricevon efan grazia ♦Ve metallo perfoglio rendon mai. There were, however, certain coincidences favourable to the bold project of Parini. A sort of colony of French En- cyclopedists had settled at Milan, and four or five Patricians having taken to reading, dared also to disseminate in writing the principles of the approaching revolution. The Marquis Beccaria had recently published his work on Crimes and Pun- ishments, which effected an important change in the criminal jurisprudence of his own country, and extended its beneficial influence to many other nations, where torture prevailed, and was consequently abolished. Joseph II. had himself began those innovations, which ended by diminishing the prepon- derating influence of the Lombard nobles. Count Firmian, the governor of those provinces, when questioned as to the publication of the poem of Parini, exclaimed, " Let him make haste ; we want it mightily !" — Qu'tV se hate, nous en avons une necessite extreme. In addition to such a powerful ally, Parini was backed by all the middling classes of society, which, generally speaking, are certainly the most moral and the most enlightened por- tion of civilized mankind. Some individuals amongst them having quarrelled with the church-rectors of certain collegiate establishments, found in Parini a champion who overwhelmed their adversaries with a few strokes of his pen. Parini publish- ed a pamphlet on that occasion, which, in the cooler hours of revision, appeared to him too violent, and he would not suffer it to proceed to a second edition : but this work introduced him to notice before the publication of his poem, and those whose cause he had advocated, continued his friends to the last moments of his melancholy existence. The Day is in one continued strain of irony, from the first line to the last. The author assumes the character of precep- tor to a nobleman, and teaches him how to devote his morn- ing to the toilette, his noon to the serious occupations of the table, his afternoon to the public walks, and his night to the Conversazioni, The most frivolous actions, the most contempti- 237 ble vices, the most ridiculous follies, and sometimes the most atrocious crimes, are detailed with minuteness, and always with the pretext of recommendation. The " Advice to Ser- vants" is carried into the highest departments of society, and a magnificence of diction and of images is tastefully employ- ed, instead of the familiar tone of Swift, to portray the lux- ury and the pride which the Italian nobility carefully wrap round the naked wretchedness of their hearts. The variety of the objects, and the numerous portraits of individuals, all in the higher classes of every age arid sex, engage the attention, whilst the faithful and fine-spun descrip- tion of manners keeps alive the curiosity of the reader. The poet has shown no little address in contrasting the ef- feminacy of the actual race of nobles, and the industry and the courage of their ancestors, who, in the middle ages, re- stored the civilization of the South, and, with unshaken con- stancy, defended the hberties of the Italian republics. This contrast naturally transported Parini to the days of Romance; and the wild life of the military patricians, the old castles, and the glittering arms of the half barbarous ages, were a happy reHef for the silken barons, the palaces, and the em- broidered suits of his cotemporaries, whom it was necessary to amuse in order to instruct. The ruins of dungeons and towers neglected by the heirs of those who raised them, en- abled the poet to employ his fancy in restoring them to their ancient splendour, and he thus threw in those sombre shades and colourings which the Germans afterwards appropriated to themselves, and were believed to have formed a new and na- tional school of poetic fiction. With this mixture of romance Parini also recurred to the characters and allegories of the old mythology, the favourite resource of the Italians, who still think it the only fabulous system whose images combine the truth of real nature with the charms of ideal grace. But even in this department of his art, which an Englishman would abandon as hopeless, our author contrived to give an air of reality to his classical fables, by applying them to the practices and principles of his own times. Thus it is that his Cupid and Hymen are introduced. They are engaged in a war to all appearance interminable. 238 hut they agree to treat, and peace is made on condition that Cupid shall reign all day, and Hymen all night. An English reader would not be much struck with this invention; but who- ever meets a handsome Italian matron, decently pacing be- tween her husband and her Cavalier Servente, will instantly remember the Love and Hymen of Parini, and the graceful solemn air with which his verses march majestically along. Our own nation can hardly have a just idea of this species of poetry. The Italians who admire it the most compare it to the Georgics ; and the Giorno has certainly more than one property in common with the poem of Virgil. Both the one and the other are employed in dignifying topics essentially common and familiar. Both one and the other display their poetical vi- gour in frequent episodes ; and the Italian perhaps has gone less Out of his way for those embellishments than the Latin poet. It was the misfortune, not the fault, of Parini, that he could not employ the hexametral structure ; and owing, partly to the same defect of language, and partly, perhaps, to real in- feriority, he was not able to adorn every picture with those images, nor lend to every word that harmony, which are the constituent excellence of Virgil. If Parini's style does not rival that of Virgil, it is some comfort fo*- the Italians to think, that their poet has approached that great master nearer than any other follower. " longo sed proximus intervallo." His countrymen are, besides, hardy enough to suppose, that in the grouping, in the invention, in the connexion of all the parts with the whole, the pictures of the Giorno are supe- rior to those of the Georgics. It is not, certainly, too ha- zardous to assert, that no one can learn farming from the verses of Virgil, but that much instruction may be gained by avoiding the follies which characterize the hero of Parini. If the Sopha of Cowper were a little more varied, and tinc- tured with satire, it would, in the dom^-stic details, and the easy flowing versification, be a tolerable counterpart of the Gjorno — at least we cannot furnish a stronger resemblance. The versification of Parini is not altogether unlike the Latin, and is entirely different from that of the other authors 239 who in this age particularly distinguished themselves by try- ing every variety with which they could rival each other, and improve the structure of Italian verse. This has been already remarked in the articles on Cesarotti and Mazza, and the same truth will be deduced from the subsequent notices of this essay. The imagery, the expressions, the numbers, the very words of Parini, have a certain solemnity which they never altogether lay aside ; and the melody and change of tone so conspicuous in the soft and varied descriptions of the Greek and Latin epics, arc, in the verses of the Italian poet, not so much recognised at once, as they are imper- ceptibly felt by the reader. It may be sufficient to give a short example of the distinc- tion here alluded to. The poet conducts his hero to the public walks : the time chosen is the night-fall : he leaves his mistress alone in her carriage, and slipping through the crowd, steals quietly into the carriage of another lady, who has also been abandoned by her Cavalier. Such a scene re- quired some delicacy to portray. A loose or a careless poet would hardly steer clear of indecent images : but Parini is not less adroit with his carriage and his night, than is Virgil with the cave and the storm, that were so fatal to the hap- piness of Dido. He invokes the goddess of Darkness with his usual irony, and prays her to arrest her progress, that he may contemplate at leisure the exploits of his chosen hero. " Ma la Notte segue Sue leggi inviolabili, e declina Con tacit' ombra sopra 1' emispero ; E il rugiadoso pife lenta movendo, Rimpscola i color varj, infiniti, E via gli sgombra con 1' immense lembo Di cosa in cosa : e suora de la moite Un aspetto indistinto, un solo volto, Al suolo a i vegetanti a gli animali A i grandi ed a la plebe equa permette ; E i nudi insieme e li dipinti visi Delle belle confonde, e i cenci, e 1' oro : Ne veder mi concede all' aer cieco Qual de cocchj si parta o qual rimanga Solo air ombre segrete : e a me di mano Tolto il pcnello, il mio Signore avvolge Per entro al tenebroso umido velo." 240 Nevertheless it is evident that this kind of poetry, beauti- ful as it is, and recalling to us some of the most delicate pas- sages of the Rape of the Lock, is addressed rather to the ima- gination than to the heart. Yet Parini has occasionally proved himself a master of the pathetic, and he calls forth tears of regret when he shows us a servant, after twenty years of faithful attachment, dismissed, persecuted, and re- duced to beggary, for no other offence than slightly beating a favourite dog that had bit him. We may be here reminded of some of the efforts of Mr. Crabbe, when he is most harmo- nious and most tender : but the Italian awakes, by the same picture, feelings more allied to indignation than to pity, and his sleepless irony somewhat fatigues the attention, and helps to counteract the general effect. The perpetual aggrandize- ment and decoration of objects, in themselves little and mean, display a curious felicity, and succeed in exciting the pro- posed ridicule ; but the effect diminishes as the effort is con- tinued, and concludes in being mistaken for affectation. A single pebble set tastefully in diamonds may amuse the spec- tator, but a whole cabinet of such curiosities would hardly be worth attention or examination. Another deficiency will be apparent to the foreign reader of Parini. The poet never saw any other city than Milan. His infirmities and his poverty confined him entirely at home. It was thus impossible that he should not give too much im- portance to objects which those accustomed to a wider sphere of action would consider unworthy of regard. It was natural, also, for the same reason, that his style, formed altogether on the classical writers, should occasionally degenerate into pe- dantry. What could be performed by an exquisite and cul- tivated taste has been done by Parini, but he is not to be classed with the inspired poets. The great defect of the Giorno is the little interest excited by the hero of the poem, who is contemptible from his entrance to his exit. Yet even this capital objection seldom occurs to those absorbed in ad- miration at the effect produced by the address and execution of the author. The great merit of Parini lies in the dignity, not only of his style, but of his conduct in wielding the weapons of satire. — 241 His poem has nothing of that impotent rage against the pow, erful, of that invidious detraction of the wealthy, of that plain- tive accusation against patronage and ingratitude, which have been the favourite topics of all satirists, from Horace to the Enghsh Imitator of Juvenal. The vices of the great he con- templates with a pity worthy the noblest of their own order; he does not indulge himself with epigrams ; he never degene- rates into obscenity ; he will not condescend to be the buf- foon, nor to administer to the bad passions of the multitude. There is a grandeur in the expression of his censures which casts, as it were, a shield between those whom he condemns, and the anger and hatred of the people. He respects human nature ; he is not misanthropic ; and he takes care to attri- bute the depravity of the nobles to their total idleness. — Throughout his whole satire he shows himself bent upon the generous project of repairing the disgrace of his country, and never incurs the suspicion that he would only satisfy his pri- vate animosities. Soon after the appearance of this poem, all those of easy circumstances in the middle classes,^ and the few patricians who, being addicted to literary pursuits, were the natural op- ponents of the great body of the nobles, interested themselves with the Austrian government in providing for Parini. They persuaded that government to found a professorship of elo- quence expressly for their favourite, who justified the high ex- pectations entertained of him; and, by his efforts in his new capacity, gave a stability to his rising reputation. He was indeed by nature qualified more than any one, perhaps, of his cotemporaries, to give lessons on the belles lettres, and to per- form that task in a way totally different from that usually em- ployed in the Italian schools. There was a gravity, and at the same time an ease, in his eloquence, which enabled him to cite the examples of former great writers with a powerful effect, and to illustrate them with new and brilliant observa- tions. He applied the various theories of the sublime and beautiful not only to the productions of the pen, but to all the creations of nature ; and many of his cotemporaries, al- ready in possession of literary renown, were not ashamed to put themselves to the school of Parini. Those persons, and 212 readers in general, were perhaps surprised to find, vrhen they came to peruse his dissertations in print, that the ideas, al- though just, were seldom very profound : that a clear method, a chaste style, and an ingenious view of the subject, were their chief merit ; but that the flow of words, the soul, the fire of expression and sentiment, had vanished with the delivery, and that the genius, and even the polished correctness of the poet, were not to be recognised in the discourses of the rheto- rician. Parini was so painfully scrupulous, and at the same time so idle a writer, that he never published more than the two first cantos of his poem, the whole of which does not amount to four thousand lines. The two last cantos were published after his death, and they contain several half-finished verses, a great many variations, and two large chasms, which a long life was, it seems, too short to enable him to fill up to his satisfac- tion. This severity of taste he applied to others as well as to himself; and it was his favourite expression, when speaking even of Virgil and Horace, " fVe should study them in those passages where they are i^t inortal men like ourselves^ From such a master the youth of Milan imbibed a delicacy of taste bordering upon affectation, and these scruples were easily cherished in a people less given to poetry than any other of the inhabitants of Italy. Indeed Parini himself is the only dis- tinguished poet that this city has produced from the revival of letters to the present day. In addition to this individual propensity, it may be remark- ed, that a severity of judgment prevails more or less with all the Italians, who are, as it were, saturated with poetry, and are besides accustomed to disregard the matter in comparison with the manner of metrical expression — a feeling deducible from the surpassing variety and beauty and strength of their language. Add to this, that they judge all modern composi- tions with a reference to their most ancient poets, whom they worship with a veneration almost superstitious. Parini was not remarkable for his erudition, and knew but very little Greek. He could not write Latin, but he felt all the beauties of the Roman writers, and made them percepti- ble to his audience. His favourite Italian studies were 243 Dante, Ariosto, and the Aminta of Tasso ; yet he imitated none of these great writers; and it may be said of him as of our own Swift, that it would be difficult to point out a single idea that he has borrowed from his predecessors. He may be called an imitator, inasmuch as he sedulously traced back to their great constituent causes the effects produced by the old writers, and then made use of his discovery ; but his manner is altogether his own ; is inspired by his own genius, and at- tempered by his own inexorable taste. He followed the rule of Horace, which inculcates the sacrifice of every thought, however noble, which is found incapable of embellishment ; and he renounced the adoption of those beauties, which vulgar readers are apt to call natural, but which in fart are obvious and common-place. Treatises upon the fine arts, and more particularly the lives of celebrated artists, were his favourite and constant study. Amongst the few books which he possessed at the time of his death, his executors found two copies of VasarPs Biography. both of them worn away by repeated perusal. He never ap- plied either to drawing or to music, but he was perfectly well acquainted with the theory, and sensible to the charms, of both, and the most celebrated professors had frequent re- course to his advice. His posthumous works furnish us with the ideas, the composition, and even the details of several pictures which he had communicated to distinguished artists, and which are now to be seen, faithfully executed according to his directions, in many of the palaces at Milan. Parini employed, indeed, his whole hfe in carrying into practice the maxim ihdX poetry should he painting ^ for, with the exception of Dante, the other Italian poets have only occasional pic- tures : all the rest is but description. Parini effected by dint of meditation that which was the natural production of the wonderful genius of Dante, and it would be diiiicult to point out ten consecutive lines in the poem of the Milanese from which a painter might not extract a complete picture, with all the requisite varieties of attitude and expression. Parini also published in his lifetime about twenty odes, of which the Italians covi?,\ Aer four as inimitable, six or seven of the others tolerable, and the remainder absolutely bad. The 31 244 whole of them bear a nearer resemblance to those of" Horace than of Pindar, but neither of them has a shadow of likeness with the lyric poetry of Petrarch, or of Chiabrera, or of Guidi. Not only the style, but even the language appears quite differ- ent. It is his constant practice here, as in the Giorno, to avoid detailed descriptions, and to throw out his images in mass and at one stroke of his pencil. He has also the same object in view; namely, the correction of national manners. The ode addressed to a young woman of eighteen, who had adopted the Parisian fashion, then called " robe a la guillo- tine,'''' is written in a style more than usually intelligible for a foreign reader. The beauty and the innocence of the maiden are presented under colours <^hat contrast admirably with the depravity of mind and manners which the poet foresees must be the consequence of imitating so vile an example. " Da scellerata scure Tolto h quel nome ; infamia Del secolo spietato E die funesti augurii Al femminile ornato E con le truci Eumenidi Le care Grazie avvinse E di crudele immagine La tua bellezza tinse. He digresses to the history of the ancient Roman females, from the earliest times to those days of cruelty and corruption when they thronged the gladiatorial shows, and a Vestal gave the signal for the slaughter. Potfe all' alte patrizic Come alia plebe oscura Giocoso dar solletico La soffrente natura. Che piii ? Baccanti e cupide D'abbomminando aspetto Sol dair uman pericolo Acuto ebber diletto, E da i gradi e da i circoli Co' moti e con le voci Di gia maschili, applausero A i duellanti atroci : 245 Creando a sft delizia .. , E de le membra sparte, E de gli estremi aneliti, E del morir con arte. The poet has contrived that the progress of his ideas shall correspond with the gradual corruption with which the impru- dent imitation of novelty seduces by little and little the incau- tious female into the worst practices of debauchery. The biographer of Parini, who has furnished the greater portion of the preceding account, has been accused of swell- ing out the works of his author into six volumes, although those published during his lifetime scarcely occupy two hun- dred pages.* It may be added, that of all the posthumous works, the two last cantos of his Giorno is the only one which deserved to be rescued from that obscurity to which they had been consigned by their scrupulous author. Not that they are deficient in affording instruction to those who delight in the study of human nature, and love to watch the developement of the mind. The odes which are reckon- ed Parini's best were composed in his old age ; and such of the verses as appear in their first form, and as were not in- tended for publication, are remarkable chiefly for their good sense, and for their unaffected taste. But their imagery is not abundant ; their style has little warmth, and the turns are commpn-place and trite. They enable us then to form some conception of the time and thought employed in the elevation and constant support of a style which frequently borders upon sublimity. His commerce with mankind laid open to him the most secret recesses of the heart, and furnished him with that acquaintance with our natural foibles of which he discovers so intimate a knowledge in his principal poem, and in his odes. In the same manner his continued and minute con- templation of nature in all her varieties furnished him with the beauties necessary for his poetical purposes, and enabled him to recognise their recurrence in the old classical writers, and to demonstrate their existence to others. * See — Opere di Giuseppe Parini, publicate ed illustrate da Francesco Reina, vol. vi. in 8vo. Milano, 1801. 246 The result of study and cultivation was never more con- spicuous than in the example of Parini. It had all the ap- pearance, and produced all the effects of genius : and yet his was, doubtless, one of those minds rather capable of culture, than naturally fruitful. The soil might have brought forth none but barren plants, had not care, and labour, and pa- tience, qualified it to receive the seed, and supply the nou- rishment of the richest productions. The Milanese nobles did not dare to revenge themselves openly for the boldness of Parini. There is a story current of an attempt to assassinate him, but this, perhaps, is an in- vention suggested by the ancient manners of Italy. His enemies took another course. The emoluments of his pro- fessorship amounted only to 3000 francs, a little more than one hundred pounds a year. Leopold II., on a visit to Milan, was struck with the phy- siognomy of an old man, lame, and moving slowly along, hut with an air of dignity. He asked his name, and being told that it was Parini, ordered the municipal council to increase his pension sufficiently to enable him to keep a small carriage. But the verbal command of a foreign monarch is seldom strictly obeyed in distant provinces, where the nobles have an interest or a will distinct from their duty. Parini con- tinued without any other prop than his stick. The poet whom the Milanese pointed out to strangers as the pride and glory of their city, was often pushed into the dirt, and was repeatedly near being run over by the carriages, in streets where there is no pavement for foot passengers. In an ode, which he calls the Caduta, the Fall, he describes the accidents which happened to him in rainy and foggy days ; and although this production is not in the first rank of his poetry, it can never be perused without delight, nor be quoted without exciting our admiration at the profound pathos, the honest pride, and the philosophy with which it abounds. The French, on their arrival in Italy, soon understood the active part which the literary classes had played in the revo- lution. They employed many of these individuals, and amongst others Parini, who found himself all at once amongst the chiefs of the republican government, with no other 247 qualification or capital for such an elevation, than what was derived from a love of liberty, a habit of speaking the truth, an unbending character, and a total disregard of all selfish in- terests. He felt the embarrassment of his situation, and hav- ing often spoken harshly to the French generals, it was not difficult for him to obtain permission to retire, after a few weeks of thankless employment. His name and his integrity commanded respect, and the opposition of a whole life against the nobles, made him regarded by all the lower classes as the great partisan of the democracy. This influ- ence was not lost even when he opposed the follies of the populace. They still show a square at Milan, opposite to the great theatre, which was one day filled by a large mob of idle fellows, who ran about crying, " Long life to the Republic — death to the Aristocrats /" Parini issued from a coffee-house and exclaimed, " Viva la Republica — e morte a nessuno ; Ca- naglia stolta /" The crowd ^instantly dispersed. Whatever may be the honours acquired by poetry in England, we cannot form an idea of the influence enjoyed by a man who has ob- tained a great literary reputation in a country where the largest portion of the people cannot read. He is listened to with a sort of religious obedience. The circles at Milan were afraid of every word that might drop from Parini, and he now and then abused his acknow- ledged ascendancy. But his intolerance never extended to his friends : with them he was indulgent to the last degree, and his severity was laid aside for a sort of infantine joviality. He was pleased with the company of those young people who were distinguished by the fire, the frankness, and t^e etourde- rie of their age : but he was incensed somewhat extravagant- ly against those who either affected, or were naturally in- clined to, gravity. He was complaisant and affable to strangers who came, even without introduction, to visit him ; but if they unfortunately ventured to praise him, they did not escape without a reprimand, and found his door shut against them ever afterwards. His philosophy, strengthened as it was by the useful alliance of disease and age, did not, however, defend him against the attacks of love ; and the odes written towards the end of his 248 life, are sufficient proof that he never looked upon female charms with impunity. He confesses this truth, and perhaps has adopted the safest course to avoid ridicule, by declaring openly, that his good genius, which had preserved him from the tortures of ambition and avarice, had still left him accessi- ble to the soft torment of the most tender and most disin- terested of all the passions.* Those high-born dames who were often the objects of his affection and of his poetry, were much flattered by his pre- ference, and forgave him all that he had said of their hus- bands and of their Cavalieri Serventi. With these he never made peace. And although he was an inmate in many great houses, he staid not a moment after he saw that he was re- quired to submit to condescensions incompatible with his principles, and unbecoming his character. After all that has been said of the liberality of the great, it is clear that the precedence granted to genius does not commence during the lifetime even of the most fortunate writer. It was by a noble perseverance that Parini, indigent, unknown, imperfect, and perpetually boasting of his paternal plough, succeeded so far as to make himself respected by those powerful classes whose vices he decried ; and maintained the dignity of his character and calling in a country where flattery, common as it is else- where, is found more base and abject amongst the men of letters than in the other orders, where the poets are very often the buffoons of their society, and where the tutors of boys of rank are confounded with the domestics of the family. At the time that almost all the Italian rhymesters., an innumerable class, were dedicating their canzoni and their sonnets to their respective patrons, Parini refused to recite a single verse at the table of any great man.t He is to be exactly recognised in the portrait which he has given of himself. " Me, non nato a percotere Le dure illustri porte, Nudo accorra, ma libero, II Regno della morte.t" * See the two most celebrated odes, II Messag^o, and II Pericolo. f See the ode entitled La Recita d€ Vtrsi. I See his ode La Vita Rustica. 249 *- He preserved his dignity and his poverty, the strength of his mind and the powers of his genius, to his seventieth year. He had been employed a few days in projecting some verses,* and one morning he dedicated them to a friend. Having read them over, he said that he was satisfied with them, and begged his friend to get them printed. He then retired into his bedchamber, and, in half an hour afterwards, expired. VICTOR ALFIERI. The life of this author has been written by himself. His tragedies have been criticised in every European language. There still remain some notices on his death, and some opinions on his other works, which may be new to the English reader. His connexion with the Countess of Albany is known to all the world, but no one is acquainted with the secret of that long intercourse. If they were ever married, Alfieri and the Countess took as much pains to conceal that fact, as is usually bestowed upon its publicity. Truth might have been spoken on the tomb of the poet, but even there we only find that Louisa, Countess of Albany, was his onli/ love — " quam unice dilexit" — A church, perhaps, was not the place to boast of such a passion ; but after every consideration we may con- clude, that the Abate Caluso, who wrote the epitaph, and received the last sighs of Alfieri, knew, and did not choose to tell, that his friend was never married to the widow of Charles Edward Stewart — " Tacendo clamat''^ — ^his silence is eloquent. Alfieri, in the languor of a protracted agony, which the presence of Caluso assisted him to support, received the last visit of a priest, who came to confess him, with an affabihty for which he was not distinguished in the days of his health : but he said to him, " Have the kindness to look in to-morrow ; I trust that death will wait for twenty-four hours." The ec- clesiastic returned the next day. Alfieri was sitting in his arm-chair, and said, " At present, I fancy, I have but a few * It is the last copy of verses at page 44 of the second volume of Parini's works. 250 minutes to spare :" and turning towards the Abbe, entreated him to bring the Countess to him. No sooner did he see her than he stretched forth his hand, saying, " clasp my hand, my dear friend, I die."* The rehgious opinions of Alfieri cannot be collected from his writings. His tragedies contain here and there a sarcasm against the Popes, and in his fugitive pieces may be found some epigrams against the monastic orders, but more parti- cularly against the cardinals. Not a word, however, has ever escaped him against the Christian doctrines. It is only upon close inspection that we find, in a treatise on tyranny, that auricular confession, and the indissolubility of marriage, have contributed to the enslavement of Italy. His latter years were divided between a haughty irascibility and a deep me- lancholy, which afflicted him by turns, to a degree which rendered him scarcely accountable for his actions. Alfieri was then not unfrequently seen in the churches from vespers to sunset, sitting motionless, and apparently wrapt up in lis- tening to the psalms of the monks, as they chanted them from behind the screen of the choir. The way in which he died would, however, lead us to conjecture, that his meditations were not those of religion, and that he chose such a retreat in search of that solemn tranquillity which alone promised him a temporary repose from the relentless furies that preyed upon his heart : Due fere Donne, anzi due Furie atroci Tor' non mi posso — ahi misero ! — dal iianco ; Ira e Malinconia. The complaint is from one of his own sonnets. He print- ed, during his own life, but he could never be persuaded to publish, some prose works, and amongst them the treatise before mentioned, " Delia Tirannide,''^ and another entitled, " // Principe e le Lettere.'^'' They are in two small volumes. The first is a series of close arguments and severe remarks against monarchy. The second is written to prove, that poets, historians, and orators, can flourish only amongst a ^ Stringetemi, cara arnica ! lu mano, io muojo- 251 free people, and that tyranny is in(erei«ted in the advance- ment only of the sciences, and more especially of medicine and jurisprudence. In both these works he has shown that his address lay chiefly in the vigour of his attack ; his pre- parations for defence were less skilfull}' disposed. Indeed, he seems to forget that he was liable to a retort. Thus it is that he may confinn the partisans of freedom, but he cannot hope to make a convert from the opposite opinion. The Italians look upon the prose of AHieri as a model of style, particularly on political subjects. It is simple and en- ergetic ; his ideas are not abundant, but they are clear and precise, and connected according to the exactest rules ol" reasoning. It corresponds well with a metaphor employed for its description by one of his own countrymen — '* I suoi pensieri in prosa sono non tanto vagamentc dipinti quanto profondamente scolpiti." His language is pure, and founded upon that of the oldest writers, but is free from the pedantry and the rust of antiquity. No man, therefore, was more qualified than Alfieri for the translation of Sallust. In fact, his version of that historian is reckoned a masterpiece. He tells us, in his preface, that this translation cost him many years of painful application. The whole of his works, indeed, bear the mark not only of laborious effort, but of retouching, repeated, and indefatigable. In the latter half of his own memoir, he had not time to be equally scrupulous, and that part is written in a style occasionally careless, and in a language not always remarkably correct. Alfieri, however, was not born to be the translator of Virgil. Could perseverance have obtained his object, his success was certain ; for he sat down to his task with the same constancy with which he commenced pupil in the Greek language, after he had passed his fortieth year. He translated the whole of the iEneid three times over ; and yet the version published after his death, generally speaking, gives us but the contents of Virgil. The harmony, the glowing style, have no repre- sentative in the Italian epic. Alfieri was a perfect master of his language ; his words were admirably adapted to the ex- pression of sentiments which flowed warm from his heart ; but which, being invariably animated by the same ardent tem- 32 2ij2 perature, absorbed his imagination, and left no room for those finer and varied graces which constitute the charm of poetry. Above all, he was extremely deficient in that branch of his art, in which his original is so consummate a master — the ele- vation of a mean subject by the happy use of metaphor. He could not •' Throw about his manure with dignity." This must appear the more surprising, since the Italian lan- guage is essentially metaphorical, and is by that very quality capable of being adapted to such an astonishing variety of styles, according to the invention, the taste and the imagina- tion of each succeeding writer. Alfieri was not quite so unfwrtunate in his translation of Terence ; but even there his simplicity is studied, not natu- ral ; and even in his happiest effort he betrays the secret that he had no genius for comic writing. The six comedies found amongst his posthumous works are compositions extravagant in the extreme. It is possible that some may admire them for their originality : but the sober reader is much more astonished at the perseverance with which the poet pursued such unprofitable labour. One only, entitled The Divorce, is a satire on Italian marriages. The others cannot possibly be adapted to the theatre. They are in the manner of Aristophanes, and all turn on political sub- jects. The One {UUno) is a satire against monarchy. The Few (IPochi), and The Too Many (7 Troppi), attack the aris- tocratic and the popular government. A fourth is meant to teach that the One, the Few, and the Too Many, should be mixed together, and may then compose a system somewhat tolerable. The other comedy, called // Finestrino, is a satire partly against religious impostures ; but more against the philoso- phers who invent no good religion, but yet would destroy all the old creeds, although (so thinks Alfieri) a bad one is bet- ter than none at all. One of the principal persons of the drama is Mahomet. The verse and the language of these comedies are still more extravagant than their original conception. In short, they 253 are seldom read, and are regarded, except by a very few, as unworthy the genius of Altieri. His posthumous works contain also some translations from the ancient di-amatic writers ; the Frogs, the Persians, the Philoctctes, and the Alceste. To the latter he added another play of his own composition on the same subject, and formed exactly on the Greek model. He pleased himself with the innocent assertion that the new Alceste was a translation from a recovered manuscript, which might fairly be attributed to Euripides. It is the happiest of his latter efforts, and is only not fit for the modern stage. In the closet it affects u? by that pathetic tenderness with which Alfieri either could not or Avould not embellish his other tragedies, constructed as they were expressly for the purpose of bracing the relaxed vigour of his effeminate fellow-countrymen. With this noble design he composed a sort of drama, alto- gether new, which he called a mdo-tragedy. His object here was to unite the music which the Italians look upon as a con- stituent part of the theatre, with the grandeur and pathos of tragedy. He chose the Deai/t o/* ^6e/ for his subject, and he adopted that repeated change of scene which his countrymen would have regarded as a monstrous innovation, although it is one of the characteristics of their opera. Angels and demons are part of the persons of the drama, and are the singers of the play. The poetry of their songs is composed in different metres. Adam, Eve, and their two sons also discourse in verse, but in blank verse, and without' music. This composition has some brilliant passages ; but is, on the whole, devoid of interest. As an experiment it would perhaps be unproducible on the Italian stage, where the opera has formally excluded all display of ideas or sentiments, and almost of words, and is solely devoted to the musician and the ballet master. The satires of Alfieri will cherish the melancholy of every unwilling member of human society. They are directed against every condition. Kings and nobles, rich and poor, priests and philosophers, physicians, lawyers, merchants, none are exempt ; all of them, in fact, are made the subject, and furnish the title of a separate censure. The satirist is 254 free from personality, and even all individual allusion ; he strives no farther than to convince his reader, that whatever nafay be bis place or pursuit, he runs a great risk of being un- happy, and wicked, and contemptible. Of the women alone he says nothing good, and nothing bad. His satire on them is contained in a very few verses, and resolves itself into the maxim, that the stronger is responsible for the vices of the weaker sex. There are, however, certain of his satires which are recom- mendable from their wit, and from their acquaintance with human nature. We may select the Cavaliere Servente Vete- rano^ I Pedanti, — UEdiicazionc — and // Duello. In the lat- ter he steps forward, like another Johnson, in defence of a practice necessary for the protection of the man of honour, from the intrigues, and calumnies, and assaults cf the coward and the bully. Another of the same class, / Viaggi, is de- voted to the censure of himself, and of the nobility, and of those who travel for want of occupation. This satire is in terza rlma^ and is the best specimen of that harshness of versification which the warmest admirers of Al- fieri allow to be indefensible. He was seduced into this error by a wish to shun the opposite defect which characterized the poets of the preceding generation. The plant had been so warped and drawn to the earth on one side by Metastasio, that Altieri thought he could never recover its position without bending backwards as much on the other. The tree is not yet upright. Yet his strange words, and his capricious innova- tions in phraseology, profusely as they are spread over his satires and his comedies, will be forgotten or forgiven, and the force and purity of his diction will ever recommend the prose of Alfieri to the study of his countrymen. It is worthy of remark, that the Paris edition of his tragedies, which he printed at the press of Didot, is partially exempt from that harshness of versification observable in all his former editions. The errors of a man of genius are not unfrequently of service to the cause of literature. Mr. Bellotto, in his tran- slation of Sophocles, chose Alfieri for his model, as far as re- garded his method and general style ; but he softened the diction, he harmonized the numbers of his prototype, and 255 thus succeeded in producing a work which had been long ex- pected, and often essayed in vain. Alfiori, a little after the year 1 790, and before his return to Italy, printed at Kell some specimens of lyrical poetry in two volumes. The first contains an ode on the taking of the Bastille, and a poem, comprising five odes on the emancipa- tion of America. The one addressed to Washington is the best ; but bespeaks, after all, only the originality of the poet. It no less shows that he had misdirected his genius ; for his ode is in the same harsh, dry style which spoils his translation of Virgil. The eulogist of America could not be expected to spare the English ; but his dislike was confined to the mi- nister of the day — the nation which he has praised so often in his memoirs he did not degrade in his poetry. Indeed his ode on the Bastille contains an appendix with which we cannot but be content. This is a short apologue, in which the English are the hees, the French the Jlies, of the fable. The other volume of his lyrics consists in great part of ama- tory sonnets, almost all addressed to the same person. The delicacy of his sentiments, the fire of his passion, and the novelty of his turns of thought, redeem the want of elegance and harmony, which must be regretted in the whole perfor- mance, and may, perhaps, be discovered in the following spe- cimens. The first was written in the Album, at Petrarch's house, at Arqua. O Cameretta, che gia in te chiudesti Quel Grande alia cui fama h angusto il mondo. Quel gentile d'amor mastro profondo Per cui Laura ebbe in terra onor celesti. O di pensier soaveraente mesti Solitario ricovero giocondo ! • Di che lagrime amare il petto inonde In veder che ora innonorato resti ! Prezioso diaspro, agata, ed oro Foran debito fregio e appena degno Di rivestir si nobiie tesoro. Ma no ; tomba fregiar d'uom ch' ebbe regno Vuoisi, e por gemme ove disdice alloro : Qui basta il nonae di quel Divo Ingegno 256 The other is on the tomb of Dante. O gran padre Allighicr, se dal ciel miri Me non indegno tuo discepol starmi, Dal cor traendo profondi sospiri, Prostrate innanzi a tuoi funerei marmi ; Piacciati, deh ! propizio a' bei desiri, D'un raggio di tua raente illuminarmi : Uom che a perenne e prima gloria aspiri Gontro invidia e vilt^ dee stringer I'armi? Figlio, i' le strinsi, e ben men dnol, che dikdi Nome in talguisaa gente tanto bassa Da non pur calpestarsi co'miei piedi — Se in me fidi, tuo sguardo non abbassa ; Va, tuona, vinci, e niun di costor vedi, Non che parlarne ; ma sovr' essi passa. His work, called the Misogallo, of which he speaks with so much complacency in his own memoirs, was not printed until the year 1814, ten years after his death, and just as the French evacuated Italy. One might have thought the period well chosen ; and yet the editors were obliged to leave gaps in certain passages, particularly where he told truth of the Popes. The Misogallo is a mixture of prose and of epigrams. These latter would be a wretched effort, even in a middling author — they betray the rage of impotent sarcasm. As for the book itself, it is also seasoned more with spite than wit — a remark that holds good of some other epigrams published during the life-time of the author. Mr. Forsyth has cited two that are just in point.* The prose of the Misogallo contains two pieces worthy of perusal : one is the defence which Al- fieri would have put into the mouth of Louis XVI. in pre- sence of the Convention. The other is the apology of the author himsfelf, for his detestation of the French revolution, as having ruined the cause of liberty ; that cause to which Al- (ieri had dedicated all his talents, and the better portion of his fortune and his life. Amongst the ancient and modern poets of Italy, no one has furnished so many pictures and busts as Alfieri. Fabre, who excels in portraits, and was his friend, has taken four likenesses * Remarks, &c. on Italy, p. 62, edit- 2d. 257 in oil ; all of them much esteemed, and, it should seem, justly. There is also a profile, having for inscription the son- net in which he describes both his person and his character. " Sublime Specchio di veraci detti Mostranii in corpo ein aniraa quul sono. Capelli or radi iti fronte, e rossi pretti ; Lunga statura e capo a terra prone. Sottil persona su due stinchi schietti ; Bianca pelle, occhio azzurro, aspetto buono, Giusto naso, bel lubbro, e denti elttti, Pallido in viso piCi che un Re sul trono. Or diiro acerbo, ora pieghevol mite, Irato sempre e non maligno inai, La mente e il cor meco in perpetua lite ; Per lo piu mesto, e talor lieto assai, Or stimandorai Achille, ed or Tersite, Uom, sei tu grande, o vil ? Mori e il saprai." Compare the Orestes, the Virginia, the Myrrha, the Saul, and some other of his tragic masterpieces, with his comedies and his Misogallo, and we shall almost think it was the voice of conscience that told him he was sometimes the Achilles, sometimes the Thersites of authors. His example has confirmed the opinion, that genius is the distinctive merit of poets. Alficri, whose education was verj much neglected, and whose youth was sunk in the loosest dis- i*ipation {dissipatissima*), rose, in a few years, to the highest literary distinction, and was ranked amongst the great writers of his country. His perseverance and his ardour were, it is true, such as are rarely seen. Yet the same perseverance, the same ardour, were employed in the production of his latter writings : his learning was greater, his knowledge of the world more extensive, and his understanding more en- lightened by the progress of years, and by that revolution of which he was an eye-witness, and which sharpened even very inferior intellects. Neither was he, at any period of his life, too advanced in age for mental exertion, for he was not fifty- three when he died. It is incontestable, however, that the suppression of the greater part of his posthumous publica- * See his letter to Mr. Calsabjgi, printed in the preface to hie tragedies. 258 lions would have been of infinite service to his fame. Per- haps he was born to shine in tragedy, and in tragedy alone ; and perhaps the prodigious exertions of his first efforts ex- hausted his vigour and depressed his spirit, and condemned his latter years to languor and to regret. He might exclaim, with the ancient, " Non sum qualis eram : periit pars maxima nostri Hoc quoque, quod superest languor et horror habent." It is affirmed by those who knew him, that between his fits of melancholy, Alfieri conversed with warmth, but always with a certain tincture of bitterness ; and it is distressing to be told that he studiously avoided all those whom he had not known for several years. He carried this aversion to new intimacies to such a length, that a letter addressed by any other than a well-known hand, and under any but the seal of a friend, was thrown into the fire unopened. It need hardly be added, that he had but two or three correspondents. The public journals and periodical papers he never once looked into for many of his latter years. Thus he had no means of becoming acquainted with his own share of that glory which had been the principal object of his life. Nor did he believe himself arrived at the station which he actually occupied in the eyes of his countrymen, and of all Europe. His melan- choly divested the vanities of life of all their charms, and he refused to cherish the only illusion that could console his existence. Count Alexander Pepoli, who inherited the wealth and the name of that powerful family, which, during the middle ages, made themselves masters of Bologna, and alarmed the princes of Italy, was the cotemporary, and, it may be said, the 'rival of Alfieri. He wrote tragedies, he wrote comedies : both the one and the other were applauded on the stage ; both the one and the other now slumber in the libraries. He aspired to the invention of a new drama, which he thought Shakspc- rian, and which he called Fisedia — a compliment to our poet, and a tacit reproof to all other writers for the stage, from iEschylus downwards. His Representation of Nature pleased both the people and the actors, but never came to a second edition. Like Alfieri, he also was passionately fond of horses, 259 and he was bolder than our poet, for he drove a Roman car, a quadriga, at full gallop over the ascents and descents of the Apennines. He built a theatre for the representation of his own tragedies ; he founded the magnificent printing press at Venice, from which, under the name of the Tipografa Pepo- llana, have issued many works, and particularly several edi- tions of the Italian historians. His daily occupations were divided, with a scrupulosity which they hardly merited, be- tween his studies, his horses, and his table. His guests con- sisted of men of letters, of buffoons, of people of fashion, and of parasites. His nights were devoted to the pursuits of gallantry, in which he was sufficiently successful ; for he was handsome and he was rich. His amours were occasionally postponed for his billiards, at which he lost large sums of mo- ney, in the pursuit of an excellence which he would fain have attained at all games of skill. His great ambition was to be the first runntr in Italy, and he died in 1 796, before he was forty, of a pulmonary complaint, which he had caught in a foot-race with a lacquey. He merits a place in this memoir, not for the brilliancy of his compositions, but for the ^hade of relief which they furnish to the similar and successful efforts of Alfieri. HIPPOLITUS PINDEMONTE. The Marquis John Pindemonte, eldest brother of him who will be here treated of, is a proof of the preliminary observa- tion, that a man of literature may be very popular in Italy, and yet be without that settled reputation which owes its origin to the suffrages of the learned class of readers. This nobleman, in conjunction with Pepoli, kept for some time possession of the stage. The tragedies of John Pindemonte, which are now almost forgotten, brought crowds to the theatre at the time that Alfieri was listened to with impatience. Hippolitus Pindemonte has perhaps less imagination than his brother, but he was naturally endowed with a certain delicacy of taste, the developement of which, by an education truly classical, has secured for him the highest distinctions of literature. It is, however, a fact which any one will verify 260 by a careful inquiry, that the poetry of Hippohtus Pindemonte is not rehshed by the generaUty of readers, who are neverthe- less obliged to repeat bis praises, having been taught that lesson by the learned distributors of literary fame, and by those who are by tacit consent allowed to possess the most cultivated taste. The same obedient crowd throng the play- houses, to see the tragedies of his elder brother, but the fear of the same censors prevents them from praising the composi- tion of their favourite dramas. Hippolitus has also written a tragedy on the death of Armi- nius, the German hero, whose conspiracy against the liberties of his country was punished with death, from the hand of his own relations. The style of this piece is much applauded ; the pJan of it is on the model of Shakspeare, without, how- ever, a total abandonment of those ancient rules which the Italians will allow no writer to violate with impunity. He has introduced chorusses sung by young warriors and maidens, and has thus combined, with some success, the English, the Greek, and the Italian drama — as to the French plan, the example and the system of Alfieri have created a persuasion that it is irreconcilable with the Italian theatre. Whether the Arminius has stood the great test, does not appear in the published play. Perhaps it has been never acted, and per- haps it may be as little qualified for any stage as the Caractacus and the Elfrida would be for our own. The works of Pindemonte which are most esteemed, are some lyncal poems, and particularly his epistles in verse. These last contain a happy assemblage of qualities not easily combined. The Italians behold in them the amenity of Horace, the tenderness of Petrarch, and a certain gravity of ideas and sentiments, for which, perhaps, he is indebted to his acquaintance with English poetry. A similar transfusion of our style was before attempted by Mazza. The epistles are in blank verse, the favourite metre of the present day. This writer has not only borrowed the English style, but many individual passages of our poets, more particularly of Milion and of Gray. The plagiaries, if they may so be called, are inserted with considerable taste and effect. A great part of his youth was spent in travelling, and he lived 261 long enough in England to become familiar with our literature. His Campestri contain some copies of verses addressed to Englishmen. He speaks with enthusiastic admiration of their country ; and it may be pleasing to see a fine description which he gives of a park, one of the characteristic beauties of England. Speaking of the practice of raising tombs in gardens, ho continues, " Cos! eletta dirnora o si pietosa L' Anglo talvolta, che profondi e forti Non meno che i pensier, vaota gli' affetti, A\W. piii amate ceneri destina Nelle sue tanto celebrate ville, Ova per gli occhi in seno, e per gli orecchi Tanta ra' cntra\ a, e si innocente ebbrezza. Oh chi mi leva in alto, e chi mi porta Tra quegli ameni, dilettosi, immensi Boscherecci teatri ! Oh chi mi posa Su que' verdi tappeti, entro que' foschi Solitarj ricoveri, nel grembo Di quelle valli, ed a que' colli in vetta ! Non recise cola bellica scure Le gioconde ombre ; i conseuti asili lA non cercaro invan gli ospiti augelli : Ne Priraavera s' ingannft, veggendo Sparito dalla terra il noto bosco, Che a rivestir venia delle sue frondi. Sol nella man del giardinier solerte Mand6 lampi cola 1' acuto ferro, Che rast il prato ed ajcguagliollo ; e i rami Che Ira lo aguardo, e le lontane scene Si ardivano frappor, dotto corresse. Prospetti vaghi, inaapettati incontri, Bei sentieri, antri freschi, opachi seggi, Lente acque e mutft all' erba e ai fiori in mezzo, Precipitanti d' alto acque tonanti, Dirupi di sublime orror dipinti, Campo e giardin, lusso erudito e agreste Semplicita — Quinci ondeggiar la messe, Pender le capre da un' aerea balza, La valle mugolar, bellare il colic : Quinci raarmoreo sovra 1' onde un ponto 262 Ciirvarsi, e un tempio biancheggiar tra il verde ; Straniure piatite frondeggiar, che d' ombre Spargono Americane il suol Brittanno, E sii ramo, che avea per altri augelli N.ilura ordito, augei cantar d'Europa- Mentre superbo delle arboree corna Va per In selva il cervo, e spesso il capo Volge, e ti guarda ; e in mezzo all' onda il cigno DttI pie fa remo, il collo inarca, e fende L' argentt'O lago. Cosi bel soggiorno Sentono i briUi stessi, e delle selve Scuoton con istupor la cima i venti. D'"h per^ch non poss' io tranquilli passi Muovere ancor per quelle vie, celarmi Sotto 1' intreccio ancor di que' frondosi Rami ospitali, e udir da lunge appena Mngghiar del Mondo la tempesta, urtarsi L' uu contro 1' altro popolo, corone Spozzarsi, e scettri ? oh quanta strage ! oh quanto Scavar di fosse, e traboccar di corpi E ai condottiel- trafitti alzar di tombe !" It was, however, neither our parks nor our learned leisure that awakened such lively feelings, and called forth such ar- dent vows forhis return to England. Our women must share the merit of the inspiration ; for Pindemonte has given the initial of some nymph who had the good fortune to be the ob- ject of his first real, as well as his first poetic, passion. It may perhaps be flattering to this person, if she is still in existence, to know that the poet's verses to Miss H * * * are esteemed by the Italians as some of his best, and not unworthy of com- parison with those which have immortalized the charms of Laura. They are in the form of a canzone, in the manner of Petrarch, and the two first stanzas are as follows : " O Giovenetta, che la dubbia via Di nostra vita, pellegrina allegra, Con pie non sospettoso iraprinii ed orni ; Sempre cosi propizio il ciel ti sia ! Nfe adombri mai nube improvvisa e negra L' innocentcseron de' tuoi bei giorni. Non che il Mondo ritnrni A te quanto gii dai tu di dolcezza, Gh' egli stesso ben sa non poter tanto- 263 Valle fe questa di pianto £ gran dan no qui spesso b gran bellezza, Qui dove perde agevolmente fama Qual pid vaga si chiama : Come andra I' alma mia giojosa e paga Se impunemente esaer potrai si vaga ! " II men di che pu6 donna esser cortese Ver chi I' ha di sfe stesso assai pi" cara Da te, vergine pura, io non vorrei : Veder in te quella che pria m' accese Bramo, e sol temo che men grande e cara Ci6 ti faccia parere agli occhi miei. Nfe volontier torrei Di spargerti nel sen foco amoroso, Chfe quanto b a me piu noto il fiero ardore Delitto far maggiore Mi parria se turbassi il tuo riposo. Maestro io primo li sard d' affanno ? O per me impareranno Nuovi affanni i ttioi giorni, ed interrotti Sonni per me le tue tranquille notti ?" The w^ole of the remainder of this canzone gives a flat- tering picture of the beauty, of the modesty, and of the unaf- fected graces, of the Enghsh young women of that day ; and the dehcacy of such a passion redounds not less to the credit of the poet than of the lady, who must either have been na- turally exempt from the ambition of coquetry, or must have taken great pains to conceal it. The same author has published a romance in prose, which, as far as regards the apparent purpose of the work, reminds us of Rasselas. But Pindemonte's Abarite has failed to pro- cure him the reputation of a distinguished prose writer. For purity, for erudition, for polish, it is not inferior to his verses, but it wants the charm of those pleasing compositions. His prefaces, his literary correspondence, and his little biographies, have never been seriously criticised, and are perhaps not worth it. He Jias been assailed, like all other writers, by repeated criticisms ; but those criticisms have made little noise, and, however they may have really affected him, have not disturb- 264 *d his apparent tranquillity. The baseness of flattery, the bitterness of censure, will not be found in the personal allu- sions of Pindemonte. His writings, like his conversation, are those of an accomplished gentleman. He has always in theory been devoted to the cause of liber- ty ; but at the coming of the French he laid down for his con- duct one inviolable maxim — Hide thy life ; notwithstanding that his eldest brother and many of his friends have been active- ly engaged with different political parties.* He has confined himself to some poetical complaints of the ravages and de- gradation which the sword of the stranger has for so many ages inflicted on his unhappy country. From the beginning of the Revolution he has passed his time between Venice and Verona, his native town, and chiefly employed upon a translation of the Odyssey. There are many Italian translations of Homer, but not one has yet obtained that complete success which the voice of the nation, and the sanction of the learned world, alone can bestow. Pinde- moate has, it is probable, judiciously selected this poem in preference to the Iliad, which would have required more ima- gination and more energy than are the characteristic? of his style. The two first books were published some time ago, and Italy was as impatient as such a prospect can make her, for th? remainder of the performance. The whole translation appeared at the close of the last year, but what was the effect or judgment resulting from it, cannot, of course, yet be known. The poet's health has of late years been much on the decline, and obliged him to proceed leisurely with his oc- cupation. He has passed his sixtieth year, and age and infir- mity have made him devout. His spiritual exercises occupy a considerable portion of his time, and plunge him into that consuming solitude which a more rational religion would teach him to exchange for the active duties and social amusements of life. This author is not ranked amongst the men of surpassing genius which Italy has produced, and, perhaps, ought not to be : but the assiduity of his studies ; the consummate skill * See his own declaration in the preface to his Epistles, published at Verona, in the year 1805. 265 with which he has known where to employ, and how to deve- lope his superior abilities ; the sleepless care with which he has watched over the rise, and preserved the integrity of his fame ; the decorum both of his life and writings ; have se- cured for him the undisputed possession of the first place in the intermediate class, between the great masters of the art, and those who write to captivate the multitude. The English reader will understand this place by recurring to the author of the Pleasures of Memory, and perhaps that gentleman may accept as much of the comparison as the just ambition of a poet will allow him to think consistent with the pretension to unqualified excellence. This rntermediate class, although, as in the present instance, it occasionally produces an author, is composed for the most part of those who may be called ra- ther learned readers than learned writers. Such a class has sprung up partially amongst ourselves, but with this difference, that our critics, although they do not condescend to advance in the regular uniform of writers, still appear in print, and that not unfrequently ; whereas in Italy they seldom take up the pen, and acquire by that discretion a dignity which gives more weight to their oral judgment. These persons have received what we call a regular education, are familiar with, and form- ed upon, the classical writers, both ancient and modern ; and, by an habitual application of the prescribed rules to every popular performance, are the self-instituted, but undisputed, arbiters of taste. There are five or -six of these in every con- siderable town ; and one set, some of whom are perhaps au- thors, presides over all the provincial critics : not even the writers of a respectable class dare to pronounce their opinioo without a previous inquiry at the national oracle. A great compiler, Tiraboschi for instance, would not have ventured to speak of a cotemporary until he knew what decision had been pronounced by Bettinelli or Roberti. These persons establish, by the union of their suffrages, a reputation which is sure not to be ephemeral. But there is yet another class of readers, whom it is prudent to gain be- fore an author can promise himself " The life to come in every poet's creed." 266 These are the men of cultivated minds, the men of the world; a vague phrase, but which will he understood, although it cannot be precisely defined. With the combined verdict of the former as the guardians of the language, and of the latter as the organ of the feelings of his countrymen, the Italian author may be secure that the common readers will follow in a crowd, and, like the Romans to Augustus, raise frequent altars to his living merit. VINCENT MONTI. This poet has always enjoyed, and still enjoys a sort of pre- eminence, of which, notwithstanding all the world seems agreed upon his claims, he has often been very nearly de- prived. His subjects have, for the most part, been popular and occasional. He has laid hold of the most interesting events of the moment : he has sustained the preponderating opinions, and he has invariably advocated the interests of the succeeding reigning powers. With such advantages, it is not strange that he should have found many willing and eager readers ; nor is it more strange that all the various govern- ments, one after the other, should have continued to rank him amongst their partisans. It may excite somewhat more surprise to remark the air not only of enthusiasm, but of sin- cerity, with which he has delivered his contradictory pane- gyrics, and to admire the address, with which he appears rather repentant than changeful, and converts the dictates of interest into a case of conscience. By turns flattering and irritating every party, he has not only roused the passions of his cotemporaries. but has given them a direction towards himself. His real merit, and the advantage derived from his powerful pen by the triumphant faction, have protected hira from neglect 5 and that prostitution of talents which would have rendered him either odious or ridiculous in England, has been less contemptible in a country where there is more indifference, and less intelligence employed, in the view of political transactions. For three centuries not a single Italian poet had raised his voice against the will or the wish of the powerful. Alfieri and Parini had made the first noble exception to this submis- 267 »ion, and it was more easy to admire than imitate so rare an example. Monti, independent of the difTerencc of natural disposition, was not born to the wealth of Alfieri, nor was he thrown into the same juncture of circumstances that had favoured the Milanese poet ; neither had he been formed by that independent education which both the one and the other had enjoyed. In a word, Monti was brouglit up at the court of Rome. The charm of Monti's poetry consists in a pleasing union of the soft and the strong. His ideas are strikingly apparent, his sentiments are full of fire, his verses are truly melodious, and his imagery is highly embellished, and has received the last finishing and decoration of taste. He has, indeed, touched nothing that he has not adorned. If his polish is confined to the surface, not only himself but his readers are content with- out inquiring into the depth of his capacity. Monti owed the first diffusion of his reputation to his Aristo- demus, a tragedy which, to use the language of the stage, is a stock play in constant acting, notwithstanding the passion and interest are totally confined to the chief character. The dia- logue was found to have more warmth, and colouring, and energy, than that of Metastasio, who was then in possession of the stage ; and the audience were not terrified even by the shadow of that harshness, and violence, and obscurity, which characterized the tragedies of Alfieri, who was just emerging into notice, and regarded as a wild irregular genius, scarcely within the pale of literary civilization. Monti then was the tragic writer of Italy, and was confidently hailed as the suc- cessful candidate for an eminence as yet never occupied. He afterwards published two other tragedies : Galcotto Man- fredi, which is not only far below his Aristodemus, but beneath the talents of the author, and Caius Gracchus. Some fine pas- sages constitute the sole merit of the last tragedy, into which he has introduced some scenes that the Italians are pleased to call by far too natural — ^' assai troppo naturali.^^ These scenes were expressly imitated from Shakspeare, and succeeded at first — nobody, however, dared to applaud them in the subse- quent representations. The critical spectators near the or- chestra, and the closet-judges, having once condemoed that 34 26d which appears t6 mihtate against classical authority, their sentence is irrevocable : — the people have not a voice ; or, il" they dare to speak, are not heard. The defects of Monti's tragedies are reducible to the insignificance of his characters, to the irregularity of his plot, and to a style sometinjes too ly- rical, sometimes too tame. These were discovered by the audience, and perhaps by the poet, for he laid no further claim to the throne of Melpomene. The work of his which has made the most noise, is the " Cantica in morte di Ugo Basville,'^'' published in Rome in 1793, when the author was about thirty-five years of age. — This poem is even now considered superior to the subsequent productions of this fruitful writer, who has never laid aside, and still holds the pen. An edition of it has been published ill London by Mr. Matthias, with the title La Revoluziont Franceze, and another appeared at Paris with another name, Le Dante Ingentilito. It would be difficult to guess at the mo- tive for these changes, with which it is probable the poet was not made acquainted ; and it would be more difficult still to justify the usurpation of rights which appear to belong only to the author. Hugh Basville was a man of letters, employed on a mission at Rome by the National Convention. His object was, pro- bably, to sow the seeds of democracy, and to watch the con- duct of the papal government in the approaching revolution. Others there are, however, who affirm that he was only on his return from the court of Naples, where he had been secretary of the French Legation, and that he was charged with no such commission. This is asserted in one of the numbers of the Gazette des Maires, published at Paris by Captain de Bas- ville, who has undertaken to justify his father's memory. The Roman populace, however, looked upon him as a Jacobin spy, murdered him, and pillaged his house. The capital of the world indulged in a savage triumph at this ex- ploit, and the ministers of the pope, by their inactivity to punish, were suspected of participating in the crime. But Pius VL was generous enough to save the wife and child of Basville from the rage of the multitude. On this occasion Monti wrote his poem. 269 According to the anecdotes contained in some pamphlelc, and, amongst others, in one called Esame su le accuse contro V. Monti, pubhshcd at Milan in 1798, Monti was the friend of Basville ; and it is certain, that in the greater part of his sub- sequent writings he showed himself a friend of the revolution. His poem justified the court of Rome, perpetuated the name of his friend, and saved himself from the perils of his late intimacy with a Jacobin. The plan of this work is very simple. Bas- ville repents and dies, and is pardoned by the Almighty. An angel conducts his spirit across those kingdoms of the earth which had been desolated by the wars and crimes of the French revolution. They arrive at Paris at the moment that Louis XVI. is mounting the scaffold. The spirit of the king, ascending to heaven, meets the shade of Basville, and the an- gel makes them known to each other. The king questions him, and Basville narrates the cause and the manner of his death. La f route sollevo, rizzossi in piedi Uaddolorato spirto ; e le pupille Tergendo, a dire i comincid : Tu vedi, Signor, nel tuo cospetto Ugo Basville Dalla Francese Liherta mandato Sul Tehro a suscitar Vempie scintille, Stolto ! eke volli con V immobil fato Cozzar della gran Roma, onde ne porto Rotta la tempia e ilfianco insanguinato. Che di Giuda il Leon non anco e morto Ma vive e rugge / e il pelo arruffa e gli occhi Terror d^Egitto, e d''Israel conforto : E se monta in furor, Paste, e gli stocchi Sa spezzar Je' nemici ; e par che gride " SON LO SDEGNO DI DIG : NESSUN MI TOCCHI." Here Basville confesses the crime which brought him to his end, and lauds the vengeance of Rome and of the Lion of Ju- dah. But the above quotation suggests another remark, which will be found more or less true of all Monti's works ; namely, that he has not scrupled to insert the ideas, and the turns of 270 expression of former poets in his best verses. The beginning of this canto reminds us of that of Dante's Ugolino ; I La bocca solIev6 dal fero pasto Quel peccator — Poi comraincid : Tu vuoi — and the last verse is evidently from Petrarch, " Son del Cesare mio : nessun mi tocchi." Monti indeed regards it as a portion of his art, and a proof of his talents, successfully to employ the fine thoughts, and the phrases of the great writers. No modern author has, per- haps, so freely imitated others as Monti ; but no modern au- thor has so frankly confessed his obligations, and his gratitude. His notes abound with the passages from which he has bor- rowed, and he has the praise of sometimes improving upon his originals, and of always introducing them in proper time and place. So far from accusing him of plagiary, we are rather agreeably surprised by the new aspect which he gives to beau- ties already familiar to every reader. The fourth canto of the poem prepares us for the war of the coalesced potentates to revenge the death of Louis XVI. The soul of Basville is condemned by the poet to expiate his crime, by beholding the horrors of the Revolution, and by wandering without the precincts of Paradise until France shall have received the punishment of her regicide : Finche noD sia di Francia ultro ii delitto. According to this plan, Monti had opened an unbounded field for his exertions, and by merely following the progress of events, he would have avoided those difficulties, with which the necessity of inventing and arranging a series of fictions, has embarrassed the greater part of all poetical writers. He would only have had to select the most remarkable traits in the astonishing history of our times, and to divide them, accord- ing to the rules of his art and the power of his genius, into pictures which should command the delight and wonder of posterity. The difficulty of handling a cotemporary topic, was not too great for the capacity of Monti, and had he con- 271 tinued his Basville to the victory of Waterloo, he might have occupied, next to Dante, that place which Virgil possesses in the vicinity of Homer. The voyage of the angel with the shade of Basville, is taken from that of Dante with the spirit of Yirgil. The terze rime, a metre perfected by the father of Italian poetry, was, in the true sense of the word, ennobled (ingentilito) by Monti. It is true that he has not the same harmonious variety, nor the same boldness of expression, nor the same loftiness of thought as are found in his model. But he is more equal, more clear, more finished in every part : his images have not only the sta- ble grandeur, but even the glossy whiteness of Parian sculp- ture ; and although they succeed each other with astonishing rapidity, and force, and boldness, preserve an elegance pecu- liar to themselves, more especially in the tcrze rime, which no one has ever employed with the same success. It is probable that Monti will never be surpassed in this metre : but in the heroic stanza he could not come into the field against Ariosto, and Tasso ; and in blank verse, Cesarotti, Parini, and Fos- colo, have been more adventurous and more successful. Monti had scarcely published the fourth canto of his poem, (which, such as he left it, does not amount to 1500 lines,) when the French conquered Lombardy. Perhaps it was fear, perhaps it was interest, or more likely still inclination, that seduced him from Rome, and settled him in the capital of the new Cisalpine republic. On this occasion he quitted the ser- vice of the Duke of Braschi, the nephew of Pius VI. Pre- lates, cardinals, and even Popes, had begun by being secreta- 'ries like himself, but Monti was a married man — he was a poet, and he was not besides in the good graces of his Holi- ness. He one day presented Pius with a magnificent edition of his poetry, and the Pontiffcondescended to accept it : but added, at the same time, after quoting some verses of Metas- tasio, " Ab one, now-a-days, writes like that great poet. '^ Monti was now the poet of the popular assemblies, of the armies, of the democratic dinners, which rose together at the institution of the new Republic ; and his patriotic hymns have, almost alone, survived the innumerable copies of verses, in- spired by occasio ns so animating. But he did not confine him- 272 aelf to songs ; he wrote with sober severity against the priests : such are his Superstizione, and his Fanatismo, and his Visione, in which the shade of Louis XVI. is changed from the martyr of his Basville into a hideous spectre. Neither his labours nor his devotion could, however, obtain for Monti the confi- dence or even the pardon of the friends of the revolution : We learn this from his own lips ; for he complains of it, and leaves nothing untried to convince his fellow-citizens of his sincerity, and begs at least for pity, in the opening of one of his poems, in which he brings himself upon the stage, and as- sumes the imploring pathetic attitude of the father of a family. Stendi dolce amor mio, sposa di letta, A queir arpa la man, che la soave Dolce fatica di tue dita aspetta ! Svegliami I'armonia ch' entro le cave Latfebre alberga del sonoro legno, E de' fortl pensier volgi la chiave- These were to Monti days of humiliation, and of bitterness, and of danger. The legislative council passed a severe and unjust law against those who, before the Italian Revolution, had written in favour of tyranny ; and it was seen that this law was directed more particularly against the author of the Basvilliana. The low retainers of literature, under the pre- text of patriotism, now gave vent to their jealousy, and as- sailed Monti with scurrilities equally violent and mean. His friends had procured him a place in the commissariat of Romagna : but he was accused of peculation, and carried before a tribunal. The calumny was proved, and the de- fendant acquitted, but no steps were taken to punish the calumniators. Such were the dangers of his position, or such was the in- constancy of his soul, that Monti disgraced himself beyond the wishes of his rivals. Pius VI. was carried off from Rome by the French, and the poet chose this forced migration of his former master for the occasion of an invective imitated from that ode of Horace, in which the Roman republic is compared to a ship tossed by the wind and waves, and steer- 273 ing for the harbour. J*Jo protestant pen has ever traced in- vectives more severe against the Great Harlot than are pour- ed forth by the repentant secretary. Di mala merce e di dolor vai carca^ O Nave, che dal Tosco al Sardo lito Porti il gran Pescator, che in irifiniio Mar di colpe ha di Pier rotta la barca : Vedi come Cinsegue e il dorso inarca Uonda irata ? Jc' venli odi il ruggiio ? Prendi porto, sollecita il pentito Remo e di tanto peccator ti scarca. Dante had before called upon the islands of Capraja and Gor- gona to block up the mouth of the Arno, and drown the in- habitants of Pisa, for their cruelty to the children of Ugo- lino ; and Monti now invoked Sardinia, and told it to fly away, that the last. of monsters might not find even a tomb to shelter him. E drittofora Non dar di tomha ne d"* arena tin velo AW ultimo rfe' mostri. Monti at least revenged himself of Pius for placing him be- low Metastasio. It was but a short time afterwards that Suvaroff and the Austrians made themselves masters of Italy. Monti fled to France, and tlie distresses of his exile gave a new vigour and a dignity to his exertions. Mascheroni, a mathematician, much esteemed in Italy, and a writer of verses admired for their elegance, had distinguish- ed himself for his enthusiastic love of liberty, and, what was much more rare, by his noble integrity of character and purity of manners. He also had escaped, on the same occa- sion, to Paris, where he died. Monti thought this a good op- portunity for writing another poem, which he called Tht Death of Mascheroni (In Morte di Mascheroni), on the plan of his Basville. The spirit of his hero is in like manper made 274 to traverse the earth, and in his view of the changes of Italy beholds the advantages of Hberty and the pernicious effects of popular licentiousness. The political aim of this poem is more useful, and the subject is better handled, than in the Death of Basville ; but the author could not refuse himself the satisfaction of consigning to perpetual infamy the names of his demagogue persecutors. The Italians discover a greater variety and interest in the scenes presented to the notice of Mascheroni than in those of Basville. They think the style less pointed, but more rich and more graceful, and they look upon the terze rime as less monotonous and more harmonious than any of his former specimens. The plan was equally vast with that of his first poem, and it was, like Basville, also stopped at the fourth canto : for Buonaparte became Emperor of the French and King of Italy, and Monti hastened to publish six cantos of another poem : these were to be the first part of a long work which he called The Bard of the Black Forest (II Bardo della Selva Nera.) It must be owned that the conception of this poem is vast- ly puerile. The author is obliged to imagine that there are bards who deal in verse and prophecy yet to be found by those who look for them ; and just such a one as Caesar and Lucan saw in the depths of Germany is discovered by Monti in 1805, hidden somewhere in the Black Forest. This bard has a daughter, Malvina, who is surprised into a sentimental passion for a French officer, who has been wounded in the battle of Albeck. The victories of Napoleon are chanted forth by the same oflicer, who, it seems, succeeds in persua- ding the bard of the advantages of imperial despotism ; for he prophesies the absolute monarchy of the triumphant war- rior. This poem is in different metres ; in blank verse, in hero- ical and in lyrical stanzas ; a mixture which has had great success with us, but is far from agreeable to the Italians, who have been taught by Dante to run into any embarrassments rather than facilitate the art of poetry. Monti left this poem also incomplete ; and Napoleon, to en- courage the continuation of a prophecy so flattering, created 275 him a knight of two orders, and gave him a thousand louis d'ors. The emperor also assigned him a pension, and made him his historiographer. The foregoing censure of the Bard of the Black Forest should be accompanied with the confession that it contains some admirable passages. Such is the description of the night after a bloody battle. Pallido intanto su P Ahnobie riipi H Sol cadendo, raccogliea d''intorno Dalle cose i colori, t alia pietosa Motte del moiido concedea la cura ; Ed ella del regal suo vela eterno Spiegando il Umbo, raccendea negliastri La morta luce, e la spegnea sid volto Dfgli stanchi mortali. Era il tuon queto De^ fulmini guerrieri, ene vagava Sol per la valle ilfumo atro, confuso ' Qolle nebbie de' boschi e de^ torrenti : Evan quete le selve, eran delP aure Queti i sospiri f ma lugubrl e cupi S'udian gemiti e grida in lontananza Di languenti trajitti, e un calpestio Di cavalli e difanti, e sot to il grave Peso de'' bronziun cigolio dirote Che mestizia e terror met tea nel core. Monti, in this poem, has with his usual taste profited by the Ossian of Cesarotti and the French prose translation of Gray's odes, and of Shakspeare. He does not read English, but he is as ardent an admirer of our great dramatist as he is of Dan- te. The writer has heard him pronounce his decided judg- ment, that the world has produced but three poets, properly so called ; and Homer, with the two just mentioned, form his triumvirate. The two following stanzas will be seen to have been copied from the speech of Ulysses in Troilus and Crt ssi- da, where the necessity of a monarchy is deduced from the pre- eminence of the sun above the stars. 35 276 Delle sidle monarca egli s^asside Sul trono della luce ; e con cterna Unica legge il moto, e i rai divide Ai seguaci pianeti, e It governa. Per lui JS/atura sifeconda e ride ; Per lui la danza armonica s' alterna Delle stagion ; per lui nullo si spia Grano dipolve che vital non sia. E cagion sola del mirando effetto E la costante eguale unica legge Con che il raggiante impcrador I'aspetto Delle create cose alto corregge. Togli questa unild, togli il perfetto Tenor de' varj vioti, onde si regge Uarmonia de'frenuti orbi diversi, jG tutli li vedrai confusi e spersi. Monti undertook a translation of the Iliad ; and he under- took it, confessing that he knew nothing of Greek, but copied, after the literal interpretations in Latin, the various commen- tators, and the poetical versions of all his predecessors. He depended solely upon his talents for versification, and the charms of his style. His readers were equally confident with himself: and their previous persuasion secured him the first applauses with which his translation was welcomed even by the Greek scholars, who were happy to accept of so powerful an ally in their contest with Cesarotti. It was, however, dis- covered, that a translation made by one who was ignorant of the original could not be depended upon. The distrust spread even to those who were themselves equally unacquainted with the Greek text ; and the censures of the learned were heard and multiplied in every quarter. They have by degrees been pushed to an extreme equally unjustifiable with the first praises of this translation. Monti had heard of the simplicity of Homer : he wished to imitate this quality, which is so much eulogized, and so little capable of defijiition. To accomplish this project, he sprinkled his phrases Avith Italian idiotisms, and he moreover was prodigal of words from the Latin, which, although they have a certain classical air, and are well chosen, expressive, and clear, and enrich the language, give^ however, a prosaic and pedantic air, that renders his manner 277 disagreeable and dry. He has almost always faithfully given the meaning of Homer, but he has frequently omitted to lay hold of those minute and accessory beauties which form in fact the exclusive merit of great writers, and which, as they are rather felt than seen, are the despair of the most expert translator. Monti has given an agreeable colouring to the pictures of the Iliad ; but he has not always been sufficiently exact in his representation of him, who is, as it were, the master of de- sign, and the father of all the great artists. He is simple and he is easy, but he is not natural : he has more fire than strength. It must still be allowed, that the verses and style of Monti renders his Ihad more agreeable than it appears in the meagre translation of Salvini, or in the rifaccimento of Cesarotti. He may at least pretend to the double merit of having done better than others, and of having excited others to do better than him. As to the general method, his style is founded upon the ex- quisite example furnished by Virgil in his imitations of the Greek poet ; and, as far as respects the versification, he has studied the translation of the Eneid by Hannibal Caro, which Monti considers as the purest model of blank verse, and the true depository of the riches and the elegance of the Italian language. His version, like that of his prototype, is, in fact, invariably flowing, and derives its chief excellence from periods well rounded, and a cadence always agreeable. The numbers and the accents of each verse are comparatively neglected. This manner of writing flatters the ear, and is not so varied as to be fatiguing, but it is liable to the monotony which offends us in Ovid, and is still more striking in a lan- guage more melodious and less sonorous than the Latin, and whose heroic verses have not the advantage of the hexametral length. Monti has also translated Persius, and has given to him a clearness of idea and a softness of expression not to be found in the most obscure and the harshest of all the ancient poets. Yet he has rendered some satires line for line, and bound himself by the test before applied by Davanzati to Tacitus. This translation has ceased to be spoken of, except to cite 278 ' those notes which were composed by the author in 1803, ia the height of his enthusiasm for republics, and of his detestatioa of the vice and tyranny of the Roman Emperors. The talents of Monti were devoted, with a constancy pro- portioned to the duration of the French power, to the praise of Napoleon, his unwearied patron. But neither the attach- ment of the poet, nor the liberality of the Emperor, con- tributed, in the expected degree, to the reputation of the author or to the glory of his imperial Mecaenas. When Napoleon, after the battle of Jena, sent the sword of Fre- deric II. to Paris, Monti wrote a poem in one canto, and called it the Sword of Frederic. But La Spada di Federico had some defects, not only of composition and style, but even in the versification, which the partisans of Buonaparte themselves could not pardon, and, accordingly, attacked with a success dangerous to the superiority of Monti, who ran a second risk of losing his pre-eminence, by a poem which he published two or three years afterwards, and called the Palingenesis. This Regeneration was the system of Pythagoras demonstrated in the metamorphoses produced in the world bj the genius of Buonaparte ; and the apparent object of Monti was to rival the Pronea of Cesarotti. Monti had not the same excuse as the Paduan poet ; he was not very aged, nor did he write at the express order of the Emperor. But his Palingenesis was not more fortunate than the Pronea. The odes published by Monti on the usual occasions of victories and treaties of peace, on the marriages and the births of princes, and which he struck off at a heat with in- conceivable rapidity, are most of them finished to perfection. Even those which are on the whole but middling perform- ances, contain stanzas cited by the Itahans as masterpiece? in tliis way of writing. " Lassu, dov'' anco II muto arriva Gemer del verme che calcato spira ; Del Xume al Jianco 279 Siede una Diva, Che chiusa in negro ammanto Scrive i delitti coronati, e aW ira Di Dio presenta delle genti il pianto^^ The series of Monti's poems would not be completely cited without mentioning three of considerable length ; II Prometeo, La Musogonia, and La Feroniade, of which he has published only the first cantos and some fragments. The second of these is an imitation of Hesiod. The allegory of Prometheus furnishes a clear and poetical developement of the merit and the perilous course of that superior order .of beings who dedicate their lives to the enlightening of the human race, and displays the ingratitude of the people towards the defend- ers of their liberty, and the despotism which is the closing scene of every political drama. La Feroniade, a name bor- rowed from that of the nymph cited by Virgil and Horace, and who was one of the Roman deities that had a temple in the Pontine Marshes, was a poem composed for Pius VI., who had undertaken to drain and cultivate, and people those marshes. The enemies of Monti republished some passages of these three poems, to show that he had substituted the eulogy of his new protectors by the erasure of those ori- ginally inserted in praise of the Pope. The prose of Monti is distinguished for the ease, the clear- ness, the harmony, and the metaphorical richness which cha- racterize his verses ; but the style is unequal, and now and then infected with Gallicisms, The poetical diction of Italy has, by the efforts of many great writers, retained its purity through the revolutions of five centuries ; but the prose has been subject to the changes of time, and to the invasion of foreign arms and foreign literature. Monti has been lately occupied with a laborious work, meant to supply the void left by the Cruscan academicians in their dictionary, and to coun- teract the prejudices of the too rigorous adherents of the old school, and the bold dogmas of licentious innovators. It is thought that in this work, the offspring of his cooler reflection, and directed to aims more useful, he will avoid those inaccu- racies of haste and passion which disfigured his previous per- formances, and degraded them into mere personal controver- 280 Bies. An exception should be made in favour of two or three discourses, published when he was professor at Pavia, One of them is much praised, and perhaps not a little owing to the subject of which it treats, namely, Of the scientific disco- veries which foreigners have usurped to themselves, in prejudice of the Italian inventors, Monti showed his patriotism in this treatise, but much could not be said of his knowledge or of his equity. Even his eloquence was more lively than vigor- ous. He threw down his glove in defiance of all foreigners, but more especially of the French, and was backed by his countrymen, who have fallen into the absurdity of depre- ciating the present merit of other nations, by comparing it with the past glories of their ancestors. Monti has never been wise enough to laugh at silly criti- cisms, nor was he ever known to spare a powerless adversa- ry. Having been rudely attacked, he has always defended himself rudely. He seems to have looked upon a censure of his writings as an obstacle thrown maliciously in the way of his fortune, hi this temper he told the Abate Bettinelli, " It is not the poet that these people roant to attack; no, it is the historiographer of J\''apoleon ; and they conspire to make me appear in his eyes a contemptible writer,'''^* He tried, therefore, to persuade the court and the ministers to prosecute his adversaries : but it should be told, that he employed the same inlluence in the promotion of his friends. Towards them Monti is truly the warmest and the most de- voted of men, and is ready for every generous sacrifice as long as he feels assured that he has no reason to suspect the loyalty of their attachment. His violent literary disputes with his distinguished cotem- poraries, with Mazza, Cesarotti, and Bettinelli, have all ter- minated by a solicitation of their friendship : and he has not refused to restore his confidence to others who, having griev- ously offended him, have entreated to be reconciled. It has happened to him to quarrel with, and to pardon, the same in- dividual several times. The habit of writing on temporary topics may explain, perhaps, the care which he takes to acquire renown by efforts * Lettera all' Abate Bettinelli, Milano, 1809. 281 which, in the end, frequently terminate in the loss of it. He is afraid of the very newspaper writers, and is ambitious of their suffrages. He keeps up a regular correspondence with all the men of letters in Italy, and barters with them the usual commodity of mutual adulation. He is, however, sin- cere enough with those young writers who ask his advice, and contrives to encourage them without flattery, and to instruct them without arrogance. He repeats verses inimitably : he is eloquent in his conversation, which is generally of the softer kind ; but the slightest contradiction provokes him to a vehement defence of positions which he abandons the next day with perfect indifference. It is probable that the inconstancy, as well as the momen- tary eagerness of certain individuals, is to be attributed less to education than to nature. The life of Dryden can scarce- ly be compared in a single instance with that of Monti ; nor is the poetry, nor even the character of the English laureate at all similar to that of the Italian. The above disgraceful quality they have, however, in common with each other. Both of them have degraded the literature to which they owe their fame, by making it subservient to their private in- terests, at the expense of truth and of honour. Both of them have been systematic flatterers of the powerful and the great, and both of them have wanted the requisite consola- tions of old age. Monti had pursued the Austrians with the war of words, after each of their repeated defeats. When they re-appeared as conquerors, they deprived him of almost all his pensions . but they bargained at the same time for a cantata from his pen, which was set to music and sung in the theatre, to wel- come their ruturn to Italy. It is neither a hazardous nor a severe reflection to assert, that this poet must lookback with feelings of bitter regret upon sixty years of laborious and brilliant exertions, which are about to end for ever; and which have left him in the enjoyment neither of an indepen- dent fortune nor of a spotless reputation ; nor of those fixed principles, without the possession of which no one can, with- out trembling, dare to contemplate the close of his career. 282 A splendid example and a warning for an apostate genera- tion — Petite hinc juvenesque senesque Finem animo certum, miserisque viatica canie. HUGO FOSCOLO. When the revolution of 1795 gave a shock to principles for ages established in Italy, and set in motion the spirits and the interests of the inhabitants of every province, the writers before mentioned had all of them published those works which gave them a fixed reputation with their countrymen. Hugo Foscolo was at that time a youth, but not too young to profit by the friendship and the example of his distinguish- ed cotemporaries. The total change in the political condi- tion of his country, his military education, and the part which he played in public affairs, developed however his talents, and formed his character, in a manner quite different from that of his predecessors : besides, the circumstances under which he wrote arrived too late to form their style ; and being now gone by, may perhaps require a course of ages to reproduce. Foscolo laid it down for a principle, that Italian poetry had expired with Tasso, and had been re-resuscitated only in the present day. Hear his own words — " Senza I'Ossian del Ce- sarotti, II Giorno del Parini, Vittorio Alfieri, e Vincenzo Monti, la nostra poesia si giacerebbe tuttavia sepolta con le ceneri di Torquato Tasso. Da indi in qua un secola la inor- pello, e 1' altro la immiseri. L' Ossian puo far dare nello strano ; il Parini nel leccato ; I'Alfieri nell' aspro ; e il Monti nell' ornato : ma le umane virtii non fruttano senza I'innesto d''un vizio. I grandi ingegni emuleranno : i mezzani scimiot- terrano : e coloro che esplorano i propri meriti nelle altrui colpe, si getteranno simili a corvi sovra le piaghe de' gene- rosi cavalli." This passage, extracted from his Preface to an experiment for translating the Iliad, printed at Brescia in 1807,* may §erve for a specimen of his style and of his literary opinions. * Esperimento di traduzione dell' Iliade. 283 He commenced his career a year before the fall of the Ve- netian republic, with a tragedy called Tkxjestes. Being angry at the little attention paid by the Venetians to the tragedies of Alfieri, and the corrupted taste which made them prefer and applaud those of the Marquis Pindemonte and of Count Pepoli, he resolved that his drama should have only four personages ; and that the simplicity and severity of his whole composition should rival Alfieri and the Greek tragedians. With this hardy project, he contrived that his play should be acted on the same night when two new pieces from the pen of the above Marquis and Count were to be represented at other theatres of the same town. The courage and the youth of the author enabled him to triumph over his rivals, and his Thyestes received more applause than perhaps it de- served. The actors pubhshed it in the tenth volume of the " Teatro Italiano Applaudito,'''' subjoining to it an account of its great success, and a criticism written in favour of the author. Foscolo himself adopted the extraordinary proceed- ing of publishing a severe censure of his own work, the suc- cess of which he attributed solely to its conformity with the great models of antiquity. The pamphlet was ill received by the public, and the Venetians painted the portrait of the young poet in the drop curtain of the Fenice Theatre, amongst those who had a better claim to this distinction. The Thyestes is still occasionally acted, and is sustained by the warmth of the dialogue, and the strength of the dramatic passions, but the style is so harsh as to be insupportable to the reader. The learned of Italy speak neither well nor ill of the Let- ters of Ortis, which, however, has been more fi'equently re- printed in his own country than any other of Foscolo's works, and is certainly much more known on the other side of the Alps. The Germans have exhausted upon this little book all the metaphysics of criticism : they have translated it twice ; and a certain professor Luden has accompanied hii version with a whole volume of dissertations. After all, it is but an imitation of Wcrter. There is however this strik- ing difference, that the object of the Itahan is solely politi- cal. There is indeed something for all tastes in the pohtics, 36 284 *nd the poetiy, and the love of Ortis. The allusions to the downfal of the Venetian republic, and the introduction of living interlocutors, such as Parini at Milan, give a reality to the fable which must be highly interesting to the Italians, and is attractive even to strangers. There is a melancholy pa- triotism in every word in which he mentions Italy, that makes the author respectable in the eyes of every generous reader. There are some pictures of small objects that evince a con- siderable knowledge of the human heart, and are extremely affecting. The little dog of the lady who falls in love with Ortis may be mentioned as one. The author is in his proper element when he breaks forth into his ethical reflections : how truly he says, " That we are too proud to give our compas- sion when we feel we can give nothing else." The love of Ortis is, perhaps, the least interesting portion of the work 5 there is not importance enough attached to his existence, to make it natural that so much importance should be attached to his end. It was difficult, perhaps, to give many attractions to the adventures of an obscure politician ; but it is still possible that those of an age and sex more ac- cessible to the tender feelings may be touched by the mis- fortunes and the heroic despair of the Italian Werter. But Ortis may boast of having been the first book that induced the females and the mass of readers to interest themselves in public affairs. This was a mighty exploit in a country where one maxim had been for ages the ground-work of education for all classes of society, De Deo parum, de Principe nihil. It is difficult at this day to find in Italy an edition of the Let- ters of Ortis altogether exempt from those mutilations which the revisers of one kind or another have inflicted on this ro- mance. In spite, however, of all their prudent efforts, it has been found impossible to emasculate every page which launches forth invectives against the corruption of the old government, against the foreign usurpation of the new, and lastly against the treachery with which the French general bought and sold the republic of Venice. Chiari and Piazza, and other common writers, had before published some hundreds of romances, which had been the delight only of the vulgar reader ; for those of a more re- 285 fined taste had resorted to the foreign novels. The Letters of Ortis is the only work of the kind, the boldness of whose thoughts, and the purity of whose language, combined with a certain easy style, have suited it to the taste of every reader. It cannot be too often remarked, that it is princi- pally the style which in all works attracts the admiration of the Italians ; and it may here be mentioned, that their critics have laid it down as a rule, that the elements of their prose are to be collected only in the period between Dante and Machiavelli. This is the opinion of Alfieri.* Foscolo has followed this rule in his Ortis, and more scru- pulously still in the Sentimental Journey, which he has tran- slated with the words and phrases of the fourteenth century ; not, however, to the prejudice of the conversational ease of our Yorick. This work, so popular in all foreign countries, had been twice before translated into Italian ; but the tor- pidity of their style, and their repeated Gallicisms, had con- signed these preceding versions to contempt. Focolo pub- lished his translation under the name of Didimo Chierico : and in one of his many notes he gives us the following re- marks on his native language. " Le dontie gentiti insegnarono al Parroco Yorick, e ame suo Chierico, a sent ire, e quindi a par- lare men rozzamente ; cd io per gratitudine aggiungero questo avviso per esse. La lingua Italiano e un bel metallo che bisogna ripulire della ruggine delP antichita, e depurare della falsa lega della moda ; e poscia batterlo genuine in guisa che ognuno possa riceverlo e spend erlo con Jiducia, e dargli tal conio che paja nuovo e nond,imeno tutti sappiano ravvisarlo. Ma i letterati vostri non raccattano dagli antichi se non se il rancidume^ e gli scienziaii vi parlano franciosamente. 1 primi tion hanno mentr, gli altri non hanno cuore ; e per quanti idiomi e'' si sappiano, jion avranno mai stile. The preponderance of French power during the reign of Louis XIV. and even in that of Louis XV., had infected the Italian language with an infinity of French phrases and idioms. The consciousness of the extreme corruption induced by the revolution has given rise to a zealous spirit of reform, which * See his answer to Calsabigi, in the edition of his tragedies by Didol, 286 has itself degenerated into a superstitious worship of the ancients, and has rather augmented than diminished the h- censc of the opposite writers. We consequently find many works composed solely of phrases almost or entirely obsolete, and distinguished neither for the energy of the old writers, nor for the ease of the new. Others, and they are the majority, terrified by the study of a language, the abundance of whose words, and the variety of whose combinations, render it al- most insuperable, affect the sort of style now so common throughout Europe, which they are pleased to call philosophi- cal, and which, in fact, is but a jargon neither Itahan nor French, but a bad mixture of both. If, therefore, good writers are rare in all countries, they are more especially so in Italy ; for they have to connect the generic characteristics constantly inherent for five centuries in the Italian language, with the specific characteristics of their own times ; and this amalgamation, not depending upon any fixed rules, must be contrived solely by the individual talents of each author. This accounts for the surprising di- versity which foreigners are apt to observe in the manner of writing employed by the various authors of the same age ; and perhaps this same diversity is more remarkable in the prose of Foscolo than of other writers. The Italian author also makes it an article of faith to vary his style according to his subject. Thus there is no less a difference between the letters, the romances, and the orations, than between the history and the epic or lyric poetry of these varied composi- tions. The Ortis and the Sentimental Journey resemble each other very Httle : notwithstanding that the author has followed the same rules of composition, and has always pre- served the traits peculiar to his style. As for his Discourse for the Congress of Lyons^ it appears evidently written by the same man, but iiva different language. He wrote this Discourse at the injunction of his government, when Buonaparte, in the year 1801, convoked at Lyons the Notables of the Cisalpine RepubUc. The directions given to the orator were to pronounce a panegyric ; but Foscolo adopted a different course. He presented a moving picture of the wretched state of the laws, of the armies, of the 1^ 287 finances, and of the moral condition of the new repubUc. The sects, both old and new, that distracted their country — the priests, the nobles, the democrats, the partisans of foreign usurpation, the adulatory writers, the libelists, the defraudcrs of the public revenue, the monopolists, who profited by the sale of the national property, are all handled with the sam« severity. The following description of the masters of the republic, if it degrades the nation in one respect, exalts it on the other hand ; for there must be something great in a peo- ple which can produce a single man who dares, in the cause of virtue, to paint his countrymen in such colours. " Uomini nuovi ci governavano, per educazione nh politici, ni guerrieri {essenziali doti ne* capi delle republiche) ; aniichi schiavi, novelli tiranni, schiavi pur sempre di se stessi e delle circonstanze che 7ie sapeano ne volcano domare ; fra i pericoli e V amor del potere ondeggianti, tutto perplessamente operavano ; regia autoritd era in essi, ma per inopia di coraggio e d''ingegno, ne violenii ne astuti ; conscj de"" propri vizj, e guindi diffidenti, discordi addossantisi scambievoli vituperj ; datori di cariche, e palpati, nan temuti : alia plebe esosi come potenti ; e come imhecilli, spregiati : convennero conjatanza di publico bene e Uridine di primeggiare ma ne pensiero pure di onore ; vili con gli andaci, audaci coi vili, spegneano It accuse coi benejicj e le querele con le minaccie; e per la sempre im- minente rovina, di oro puntellati con la fortuna, di brighe con i proconsoli, e di tradimenti con i principi stranieriy The chief cause of this general depravity he attributes to the absence of Buonaparte in Egypt, which allowed the French Directory to tyrannize over Italy, and to pillage her provinces, not only by their own missions and generals, but by the appointment of magistrates, timid, ignorant, and avar ricious, some of whom were to be found in that government which had assigned to Foscolo the pleasing duties of pro- nouncing their panegyric* The praises bestowed by the orator upon the hero who was to remedy their national wrongs, magnificent as they are in some respects, are still associated with the boldest maxims, and with predictions which are seldom hazarded in the hour of victory. With what satisfaction may Foscolo now look back upon the following prophetic warning ! * See his Dedication—" Ai Membri del comitato del Govemo." 2Hii " A ciascuno di tuoi pregi la sioria contrappone e Tiberio solenne politico, e Marco Aurelio Iinperadore Jilosofo, e Papa Leone X. ospite delle letters. Che se molti di questi soinmi, scarchi non vanno di delitti, uomini e mortali erano come sei tu, e non le speranze o il tremore rfc' contemporanei, ma la irnperterrita posterita le lor sen- tenze scriveva su la lor sepultura. Infiniti ed illustri esempj hanno santijlcata oramai quella massima de^ sapienti : niun uomo doversi virtuoso predicare e beato anzi la morte." After describing the distress of his country, the speaker, who calls himself Giovine non affatto lihero, proposes certain remedies, and those he would apply not only to Italy, but to maintain the renown of that hero whose future glory he de- clares to depend principally on the durable independence of a nation which he had rescued from the slavery and disgrace of ages. Foscolo afterwards pubUshed this Discourse, with the following motto from Sophocles : — " my soul groans for MY COUNTRY, FOR MYSELF, AND ALSO FOR THEE." This discourse is not more than eighty pages : and notwith- standing it is an historical composition, maintains a certain impetuosity and gravity of style which overwhelm and fatigue the attention. The events are hinted at, not detailed ; the developement concerns only their causes and their results. This brevity might be agreeable to those who had been spec- tators of, or actors in, the short and transitory scene ; but foreign readers, and even those Italians removed by time or place from the original action, are left in the dark. It would be difficult to prove that the style of Tacitus, which Foscolo has not only copied but exaggerated with the devotion of a youth enchanted by his model, can be well adapted to this sort of composition. The English, who have perhaps run into the opposite extreme, will be astonished to hear that this Discourse was particularly esteemed by the critics, on ac- count of its close resemblance to the Latin. We should call this pedantry : but it appears a meritorious exploit in the eyes of a nation, which, havinoj for two hundred years diluted its language to insipidity, now lays it down for a maxim, that for the graces of style, the early Tuscan authors are to be con- sulted ; and for the strength, and, if the word may be used, the nobility, of the language, the Latins are the only safe 289 model. It must be confessed, that the origin of the language admits of this union. It is not unnatural that when they would discourse of liberty, they should have recourse to the manner of their Roman ancestors. Buonaparte, at the congress of Lyons, changed the name of the Cisalpine into that of the Italian Republic. He ap- pointed himself president of this new state, and promulgated a constitution which he continued to violate at will up to the other change which converted the Republic into a Kingdom, and placed the administration of Upper Italy in the hands of a French viceroy. The only effect of Foscolo's discourse was to stop his own military promotion : but the loss of for- tune was more than compensated by the public gratitude, which pointed to him as the man who had spoken the sense of the people, who had told the courageous truth, and had stood forward as the champion of national independence. It seems, however, that he continued in the army some time after this effort. The date of the preface to his Sentimental Journey shows that he was, in 1805, at Calais with one of the Italian regiments which Buonaparte had united to his Army of England. His dedication of the works of Montecuculi, pub- lished in 1803 and 1809, which is addressed to General Caffa- relli, minister of war of the Italian kingdom, tells us that he was aid-de-camp to that officer. Foscolo published his edition of Montecuculi in two vo- lumes, in folio, from the manuscripts discovered in the ar- chives of the last Prince Trivulzio, by Serassi, the biographer of Tasso ; and more recently, by other inquirers. These manu- scripts were more complete than those of the old incorrect edition, made just after the death of the author, which had never been reprinted, and was so much forgotten that Monte- cuculi was known only throughout the French and German translations. The object of Foscolo was more than literary: he wished, by the example and precepts of an illustrious fel- low-citizen, to inspire the Italians with a portion of his mar- tial spirit, as well as to replace the author in his due rank amongst the best classical writers. He placed Montecuculi by the side of Machiavelli, and the compressed commanding style of the great rival of Turennc facilitated the labours of 290 his editor in filling up the many blanks of the manuscript. Foscolo was commended for these supplements, and for his happy imitation of the original style; but he was accused of having been too licentious in his emendations of the text.* Montecuculi wrote his commentaries and his military aphorisms when the use of artillery was but imperfectly known, and when a great part both of the infantry and cavalry fought with pikes and halberds, and the principal object of every war was the attack and defence of fortified towns. Fos- colo illustrated his author with notes of two kinds ; some of them consisting of passages from the classics, serving to show the Greek and Roman art of war, and the others relating to the system of Frederic II. and of Napoleon. By this plan the editor meant to apply each precept of Montecuculi to the three principal epochs in the history of military art : the an- cient, the middle, and the modern period. To each volume he subjoined dissertations written with precisely the same ob- ject : he calls Napoleon il maggiore guerriero delle eta moder- ne, an eulogium which must be allowed far from extravagant, at the time that the two senates of France and of Italy de- clared him the Thunderer of the Earth, (" Jupiter foudroyant sur la terre,") and all the kings of Europe confessed the title to be fairly earned and duly bestowed. The Viceroy Eugene had about this time won a battle of no great importance, against the Archduke John, in Hungary. The French chose to exalt this victory to a parallel with that of Montecuculi, who after two years of perseverance, and with an army of seven thousand men, had defeated seventy thousand Turks at a time when they were yet formidable in the field ; this was at the famous battle of San Gothard. The bulletins observed that the Viceroy had been victorious on the same spot already illustrated by the exploits of Montecuculi, and had rivalled the skilful manoeuvres of the Italian marshal. Foscolo devotes one of his dissertations to refute this enco- mium, and proves that neither the circumstances, nor the po- sition, nor the place were the same ; and he concludes by * Ha supplito alle lacune con lo stile del Monttcucoli : ma Montecucolt nel propria testo parla spesso con lo stile di Foseolo. See — Giornale della Societa d' Incorrajgiarnento, ao. 1809. 291 insinuating that such exaggerations might be injurious to the merit actually acquired by the Viceroy. Foscolo was now sent as professor of literature to Pavia, to replace Monti, who had been appointed historiographer. The new professor opened his course of lectures by an essay on the Origin and the duties of Literature,* It was his grand position, that " as society could neither be formed originally, nor afterwards kept together, except by the use of words, every abuse of this distinctive human faculty must tend ne- cessarily to the corruption of all social ties. Consequently, that the men of letters, being especially endowed with the power pf words, are traitors to their duty whenever they ne- glect by their writings to excite the generous passions, to de- monstrate useful truths, to add charms to virtue, and to di- rect the public opinions to the promotion of national pros- perity." He goes on to place his men of letters as independent me- diators between the government which applies to force alone, and has a natural tendency to despotism, and the people, who have no less a natural inclination towards licentiousness and slavery. He looks for the proof of these principles in the history of all nations ; and the more he exults in the utility of literature, the more he declaims against the vanity and the baseness both of those who sell their abilities to a tyrant, and of those who employ tKem in administering to the odious passions and the capricious follies of the multitude. It was an old and constant practice in Italy to insert an eulogy of the actual government in the opening discourses of every professor. Foscolo departed from this ceremony, and sub- joined a note, saying, " that it belongs to history alone to speak in a becoming manner of great sovereignsj^^ He then cited a decree of Augustus Caesar, which forbad the small poets and orators to disgrace his name by their ephemeral praises. The professorships of literature not only at Pavia, but also at Bolognat and Padua, were forthwith suppressed by the * Deir Origine e deU'Ufficio della Letteratura.— Milano, 1809. t On this occasion the celebrated Mezzophanti, professor of Oriental languages, and the most extraordinary linguist in existence, was deprired of his chair, and reduced to an income of 750 franaa. 37 292 government. Many other professorships underwent the same fate ; namely, those for the Greek and for the Oriental lan- guages, for history, for the knowledge of medals, and, in short, for all those branches of study not strictly belonging to medicine, to jurisprudence, and to the mathematics. Foscolo retained his chair only two months ; and about twenty-four other professors, who had not involved themselves in the guilt of preaching his principles, were also deprived of their emoluments, after many years of literary labour. It would be hazardous to say whether the discourse of Foscolo pro- voked this measure, or whether it had been some time in agitation, but, at all events, the Italians Avere struck with the verification of the words of their own Alfieri, who had told them that absolute monarchs hate the historian, and the poet, and the orator, and give preference to the sciences.* Perhaps it may not be uncharitable to add, that the scientific, com- pared with the literary writers of every nation, repay with corresponding submission the partiality of royal patronage. Padua, Pavia, and Bologna, beheld the sudden decline of the institutions, which had been the ancient ornament of their towns. Four and twenty lyceums were founded in the re- spective departments of the Kingdom, with the pretext of reinstating some of the professors ejected from the three universities ; but it was impossible to find a sufficient number of learned individuals, or adequate salaries for all these es- tablishments, in every branch of science and of literature j and the consequence of this dispersion, as well as of the multiplied foundations, was, that the place of professor was degraded from those high privileges and that respectability of character which had made it for centuries an object oi Italian ambition. The Cavalier Lamberti, a declared adversary of this wri- ter, and one of those before alluded to, who possess the re- putation of great scholars, examining the works of Foscolo, calls them, tmehrose per certo stile lorproprio di oscurite miste- riosa e cZ' idee affollate e appena acceymate, a d'' eloquenza * See the article on Alfieri. 293 compressa sdegnosamente ; quasi che questo autore non voglla per leitori che i suoi pari.^' Hippolitus Pindemonte reproaches him with the same de- fect, but in the tone more of a poet than a critic, and less of a censor than of a friend. " Your style," he says, " resem- bles the Rhone, which flows rapidly from the limpid lake of Geneva, and is lost under the Alps, to the regret of the traveller, who knows not how it has disappeared, and who finds himself obliged to wander on for some distance before he again beholds its azure current, and hears the sound of its rapid stream. "t The political topics which have been gene- rally selected for the subject of his performances, have, per- haps, induced this writer to leave us to guess that which he did not like to say openly. It is, however, equally true that the constant intensity of thought which he requires of his readers must be traced either to the peculiar mode in which his ideas are originally conceived, or to his wish to give them a new turn. ' Indeed all his writings bear the mark of medita- tion, although much forethought cannot be discovered in his familiar conversation, in which he gives a loose to all his ideas as they first present themselves. A literary lady has described him as parlatore felicissimo e fecondoX, and this co- pious eloquence is accompanied with an incessant agitation of limb and body ; which, however, is, when he harangues in public, converted into an absolute inactivity. It is told of him that he has spoken for hours at the councils of war with his hands fixed on the back of a chair, without indulging in the slightest action. This fact, incredible as it may be to such as have seen Mr. Foscolo only in private society, will not be lost upon those who please themselves with discriminating between the differ- ent modes of intellectual exertion, and who will be obliged to account for so singular a discrepancy by recollecting that Foscolo may have deliberately preferred this motionless elo- quence. The truth is, as we find in his Discourse upon Litera- * See — in the Milanese Review — the Poli|rrafo, tho articles signed Y. f See — Piadenionte's epistit- in verse add; i ^^^^ed to Hugo Foscolo. t Ritratti scritta dalla Contesea Isabella Albnzzi. 294 ture, that he decries the quackery of the latter orators of Athens by praising the more ancient speakers, who harangued in the manner of Pericles, wrapped up in their clamys, with- out gesture or melody : Peroravano avvolti, alV uso di Perichj nella clatnide, senza gesto ne melodia. The published poetry of this writer is confined to two odes, and a little work called / Sepolcri, written when it was for- bidden to bury the dead in family tombs. Pur nuova legge impone oggi i sepolcri Fuor de' guard! pietosi, e il nome a' morti Contende. According to the provisions of this new law, all bodies, with- out distinction, were to be interred in public cemeteries without the towns, and the size of the sepulchral stone was prescribed, and the epitaphs were subject to the revision and approval of the magistrates. The aim of Foscolo in this poem appears to be the proof of the influence produced by the memory of the dead on the manners and on the inde- pendence of nations. It may be sufficient to quote a specimen which will be more easily understood by those who have visited the church of Santa Croce at Florence. lo quando il monumento Vidi ove posa il corpo di quel grande Che temprando lo scettro o' regnatori Gli allor ne sfronda, ed alle genti svela Di che lagrime grandi e di che sangue ;* E r area di colui che nuovo Olimpo Alz6 in terra a' celesti ;t e di chi vide Sotto. V etereo padiglion rotarsi PiU mondi, e il Sole irradiarli immoto,\ Onde aW Anglo che tanta ala vi stese^ Sgombro primo le vie del Firmamento ; Te beata .' gridai, per lefelici Aure pregne divita, e pe'' lavacri Che da suoi gioghi a te versa Apennino : * Machiavelli. t Michael Angelo. 1 Galileo. k Newton- 295 Lieta delV aer tuo, veste la Luna Di luce limpidissima i tuoi colli Per vendemmia festanti ; e le convalli Pdpolate di case e d* oliveti Mille dijiori al del mandano incensi : E tu prima, Firenze, udiviil carme Che allegro V ire al Ghibellin fuggiasco ;^ E tu i cari parenti e T idioma Desti a quel dolce di Calliope labbro] Che Amore in Grecia nudo, e nudo in Romu jD' un velo candidissimo adomando Rendea nel grembo a Venere Celeste. J\/Ia pin beata che in un tempio accolte Serbi le hale glorie (ultime forse .') Da ch". le malvietate Alpi e Valterna Onnipotenza delle umane sorti Armiy e sostanze t' invadeano, ed are E Patria, e, tranne la memoria, tutto. This poem contains only three hundred lines, but it called forth pamphlets and criticisms in every shape, and from all quarters. The younger writers tried to imitate it : the critics pronounced it to have brought about a reform in the lyrical poetry of Italy. The academy of Brescia proposed a prize for the best Latin translation, and awarded their premium to the professor Frederic Borgno, who soon after published his version in hexameters, accompanied with a dissertation, a passage of which may be quoted to show the tone of Italian criticism. " It is the business of lyrical poetry, properly so called, to present to us interesting facts so as to excite oiir strongest feelings, and to promulgate those opinions which tend to the prosperity of nations. Any ten verses which do not furnish the painter with images sufficient to compose an historical picture, which do not shake the soul by the noble recollections they recal, by the generous passioiis they awaken, which do not engrave in luminous characters some useful truth upon the mind — these verses may, I confess, be admirable in their kind, but they do not belong to lyrical poetry. The prophetic portion of the Bible, some of the hymns attributed to Homer, Pindar, Catulhis in his marriage of Peleus, the sixth eclogue of Virgil, the episodes ■^' Dante. t Petrarch^ 296 in the Georgics, a dozen of the odes of Horace, six of the canzoni of Petrarch, a few of Chiabrera, of Guidi, of Filicaja, those of Dry- den, and two of Gray, are really lyrical. All the other poetry of Petrarch, and of those called lyrical, may be justly praised, and may charm a greater number of readers even than those above cited, but it is necessary to adopt the ,division of Cicero, in his distinction between poetae lyrici et melici. Pindar belongs to the first ; Sappho^ Anacreon, and Simonides, to the second." The Italians are fond of these classifications, and indulge in them more than we should esteem profitable to the studj of language. But it is also true, that their critics seldom praise even their favourite aulliors with the indiscriminate fury of our eulogists. Mr. Borgno subjoins to his notice of Chiabrera, Guidi, and Filicaja, a list of exceptions to their merits which might surprise a foreigner, accustomed to think of the name, rather than the works of their authors. Ac- cording to this authority, sonorous words, and a magnificence of verse and of phrase, are substituted by these writers for the requisite variety of harmony and of imagery, whilst they are totally deficient in the chiaroscuro of poetry, and have chosen subjects which either are not national, or, what is as bad, are totally incapable of interesting their nation. Mr. Borgno quotes other poetical works of Foscolo, which appear to be inihe same style, and, amongst others, his Al- ceus, which describes the political vicissitudes of Italian po- etry from the fall of the eastern empire to the present day. He alludes, also, to The Graces, a poem, in three cantos. Both the one and the other are, however, inedited, and are known only by some fragments. The blank verses of Foscolo are totally different from those of any other author. Each verse has its peculiar pauses and accents placed according to the subject described. His melancholy sentiments move in a slow and measured pace, his lively images bound along with the rapid march of joy. Some of his lines are composed almost entirely of vowels, others almost entirely of consonants ; and whatever an Eng- lishman may think of this imitation of sense by sound, (a decried effort since the edict of Dr. Johnson), the Italian poet has at least succeeded in giving a different melody to c^a,ch verge, and in varying the harmony of every period. 297 It is perhaps necessary to be an Italian to feel the full effect of these combinations ; but the scholar of every coun- try may perceive that Foscolo has formed himself on the Greek model, not only in this particular, but in other branches of his art. In fact he was born in the Ionian islands, as he himself tells us at the end of one of his odes. " Fra 1' IsQie Che col selvoso dorso Roinpono agli Euri, e al grande lonio il corso, Ehbi in quel mar la culla : Ivi erra ignudo spirito Di Faon la Fanciulla ; E sejil notturno Zefiro Blaiido sui (lutti spira Suonano i liti un lamentar di lira.*' Two tragedies, the Ricciarda and the Ajax, by the same author, were stopped by the government after the first repre- sentation. They excited a great curiosity from motives not altogether poetical. It was reported that Moreau was his Ajax, that Napoleon was to figure in his Agamemnon, and that his holiness the Pope would be easily recognised in Chalcas. The known principles of Foscolo facilitated the recognition of these originals, who, after all, perhaps, never sat to the poet for their likenesses. Whatever were his intentions, he received immediate orders to quit the kingdom of Italy, and to reside in some town of the French empire. Pie accord- ingly fixed his abode at Florence, at that time a department of France. Foscolo has lived and written in a state of open war with the writers of the day, and the reigning political parties. It is not surprising, therefore, that he has been severely handled in publications of every kind, and particularly in the journals, which will be found to contain imputations against him not confined to his literary life. He was never personal in his first attacks •, and he never replied to the personalities of others. He even affected so complete a contempt for them as to republish and distribute some of the libels written against himself. Perhaps he is not aware that this apparent 298 moderation is any thing rather than aproof of his indiflference to attack. In England these demonstrations of contempt would be suspected, and would be ridiculous : and even in Italy Mr. Foscolo has been justly charged with pushing them to an un- just exposure of men who were the most disposed to be his literary friends and admirers. He published nearly 300 pages in large octavo, upon the translated elegy of Catullus, De Coma Berenices : the whole lucubration being a grave and continued irony on the verbal criticisms of the commentators. Some of the learned fell into the snare ; and Foscolo, who had issued only a few copies, now added a Farewell to his readers, in which he repays their praises by exposing the mysteries and the abuses of the philological art. Those whom he had deceived must have been not a little irritated to find that his frequent citations were invented for the occa- sion, and that his commentary had been purposely sprinkled with many of the grossest faults. Neither the merit nor the success of such a pleasantry can be intelligible to an English reader : but it should be told that Foscolo, with the same pa- triotism which seems the devouring passion of his soul, con- trived this deception partly to warn the commentators that it was their duty also, as well as that of other writers, to devote themselves to the excitement of generous sentiments in the bosom of their countrymen.* Foscolo is an excellent scholar : his knowledge of Greek is far superior to that of many of his most distinguished fel- low-countrymen : he writes Latin with facility and elegance. A little book in that language, called Didymi Clerici ProphetcB Minimi Hyperculypseos^ liber singularis^ has been attributed, and, it is believed, justly, to his pen. It appears to be a sa- tire against the journalists, the learned pensioners of the court, the Royal Institute, and the senate of the kingdom of Italy ; but it is an enigma from beginning to end to any one not furnished with the key to the individual allusions. This ob- scurity showed at least, that he did not care to engage the * See — La Chioma di Berenice, Milano, 1803. La Bibliotheque Ita- lianne, a French review, published at Turin, and 11 Diario Ilaliano for No- vember and December of the same vear. 299 multitude on his side, and that he was indifferent as to th« dispersion of his own feehngs of contempt for the men of letters of the Itahan court. The lady whose opinions have been before quoted, talks of the literary intolerance of Foscolo as the offspring of his re- flection, not of his disposition. " A warm friend, but sincere as the mirror itself, that neither deceives nor conceals. Kind, generous, grateful ; his virtues appear those of savage nature, when seen in the midst of the sophisticated rcasoners of our days. He would tear his heart from his bosom, if he thought that a single pulsation was not the unconstrained and free movement of his soul."* Although Foscolo had studied under Cesarotti, and had been encouraged by the voice of that generous master, he loudly disapproved of the translation of Homer, and more decidedly still of the Pronea. He was a long time nearly connected with Monti, who frequently mentions him with applause ; and, in his illustrations of Persius. foretells that his young friend will, one day or the other, be the first poet of the age. In the last years of the French ^government, an intimacy with Foscolo was not favourable to court promotion. Monti and the future Corypheus of the poets became cool to each other, and would not willingly meet in the same society ; but either reciprocal fear, or the memory of their ancient alliance has not allowed any written attack from either ad- versary. An Englishman wished, when at the Scala theatre at Milan in 1816, to give the Death of Ortis as a subject for an improvisatore ; but a friend said to him, " It will not ht chosen : Monti is behind the scenes, and will hear nothing said in favour of Ortis or of Foscolo.^^ The same influence, joined to that of the police, was pronounced fatal also to the ^Apo- theosis of Alfieri.t There is a story current respecting the last interview of these two poets, which may illustrate and * Intollerante pih per reflessione che per naiura : aviico fervido ; ma siv- cero come lo specchio, che non inganna, ne illude. Pietoso, generoso, rico- noscente, pare un selvaggio in mezzo a'JUosoJi de' nostri d\ Si strapperebbe U cuore dal petto se liberi non gli paressero i nsalti tutti del suo cuore. See — ^Ritratti scritti dalla Contessa Isabella Albrizzi t See— note t^ Stanza LTV. of Chiide Harold, Canto IV 18 300 ceiitrast the character of both. They were dining at the house of Count Veneri, minister of the pubUc treasury : Monti, as usual, launched out against Alfieri, according to the court tone of the day : " All his works together," said he, " are not worth a song of Metastasio's" " Stop there, Sir,'''' interrupted Foscolo, " or Iroill twirl round ^ou and your party as vjell as ever top was whipped by a schoolboy.'''' As far a* respects his other great cotemporaries, he has never spoken of Pindemonte but with esteem, nor ever names Alfieri with- out admiration. The instructions he received from Parini have mingled a tender recollection with the reverence with which he dwells upon his character, in the letters of Ortis. In spite of bis opposition to the French, and of his repeated declaration, that the representative rights belong only to the landed proprietors, it is easy to discern that Foscolo is a pupil of the Revolution. In truth, he imputes the misfor- tunes of Italy to the cowardice, the ignorance, and the ego- tism of the nobles. He owes his popularity rather to his con- duct than to his maxims, or even to his works ; for the first are not qualified to obtain the favour of the majority, and the second are above the common class of readers. The admirers of Napoleon may behold in this author a re- bellious subject, but a sincere eulogist wherever he has thought fit to praise. The truth is, that Napoleon conferred upon Italy all the benefit that a country divided and enslaved could possibly expect from a conqueror. To him she owed her union ; to him, her laws and her arms : her new activity, and her recovered martial spirit, were inspired by his system. But Foscolo was a citizen of the Venetian republic which Na- poleon destroyed, and there exist in Italy a very numerous class, who consider the independence of their country as the first indispensable step towards her regeneration. Foscolo,. as well as some others, who, when the Italian republic was degraded into a subsidiary kingdom, were named amongst the electoral colleges, contrived never to attend, because he would not take the oath of allegiance. But he did not find it impossible to live under the dominion of the French. The Austrians in their turn required from him personally an oath of fidelity to their Emperor. Foscolo refused to them what 301 he would not grant to Napoleon. But he could not breathe under their depressive system. He became a voluntary exile, and his adieus to his countrymen are couched in the language of proud resignation. Let not the minister of the Austrian police continue to persecute me iri my Swiss asylum ; tell him that I am far from wishing to excite the hopeless pas- sions of my fellow citizens. We were in want of arms ; they were given to us by France, and Italy hod again a name amongst the nations. In the access of our inflammatory fever, the loss of blood could not harm us, and the death of a single man 7Vould have inevitably produced changes favourable to all the nations who should have courage to profit by the happy junc- ture. But it was ordained otherwise: the affairs of the tvor Id have been turned into another and an unexpected channel. The actual disease of Italy is a slow lethargic consumption, she will soon be nothing but a lifeless carcass ; and her generous sons should only weep in silence, without the impotent complaints and the mutual recrimination of slaves. *^ ' CONCLUSION. It is hoped that the preceding pages may have furnished a general notion of the state of literature in Italy during the last fifty years. More extensive limits would have comprised more copious extracts from the cited authors, would have no- ticed other M-riters, and would have included not only a view of the education of the Italians, but of their style and taste, and present productions in all the branches of literature ; lit- tle indeed has been done in comparison of what remains to do, * Senza querele impotenti, nt recriminazioni da Servi. This was in- serted in the Lugano Gazette, for April 14, 1815, in an article written to answer a book with the title Memoria storica delta Rivoluzione diMilano, seguiio il