g<*.^'%'^'%''^'0-'^'^'%''*^' ^'%^'%'^'^ <%''%- p] 5 LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. J| \ ^/^J/ CD ^ B 5" I ^^^. ^ /T/w^. I ^d UNITED STATES OF AMERTCA.j Bl^lSrC^ C^PELLO J^ TRJ^G-EDY BEING IN COMPLETION OF THE FIRST VOLUME OF THE DRAMATIC SERIES LAUGHTON OSBORN / Ct USHETV YORK / MOORHEAD, SIMPSON & BOND 1868 .0 ^3E> f Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1868, by LAUGHTON OSBORN, In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States for the Southern District of New York. AGATUYNIAN PBES8. BIAJSrOA CAPELLO MDCCCLV CHARACTERS Primary Francesco-Maria de' Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany. Cardinal Ferdinando de' Medici, ) t . -, ,-, ' \ Ins brothers. Don Pietro de' Medici, ) Malocuore, a Gentleman of the Grand-duM s household^ and his confidant. Pietro Bonaventuri, at first a Clerk in the hanking-ho^ise of Salviati in Venice, hut subsequently the Grand-duke's Favorite and Intendant. LucA Sennuccio, his fellow-clerk and friend, and subsequently of the G. Duke's household. Carlo Antonio del Pozzo, Arch- bishop of Pisa, — at one time Auditor of the Treasury^ . both of the Ottavio Abbioso, Coadjutor- Bish- i Grand-duke's Cabinet. op of Pistoia and Florentine \ Secretary at Venice^ J BiANCA Capello, at first toife of Bonaventuri. Grand Duchess of Tuscany, Donna Isabella de' Medici, the Grand-duke's sister. Signora Malocuore, wife of Malocuore. Secondary Paolo G-iordano Orsini, Duke of Bracciano, husband of Isa- bella de' Medici. Bartolommeo Capello, Senator of Venice, Bianca's father. YiTTORio Capello, her brother. G-RiMANi, Patriarch of Aquileia, her uncle. 204 TiEPOLO, I Venetian Senators, special Ambassadors /ram tin MiCHiELi, S Repuhlic. Baccio Baldixi i -r, ^ > Court Physicians. PlETRO CaPPELLI, J ^ scherano, ^ Masnadiere, ! ' y assassins. Malandrino, I Sgherro, J Cagnotto, T) r armed servants of the Favorite. Brenna, ' -^ Donna Eleonora di Toledo, wife of Don Pietro. Donna Virginia de' Medici, the Grand-dulce' s haJf-sisfet ^ betrothed and subsequently married to Don Cesar e d ' Este Bonaventuri's MoxnER. AiA, Biancas Governess. Count Ulisse Bentivoglio. A Page in Bonaventuri's household. Two Assassins. Mute Persons Pellegrina, Bianca^s Davghter, wife of Bentivoglio. Don Ce- SARE d' Este. Seyiators. Magistrates. Lords and Ladies of the Court. Venetian Nobles. Pages. Soldiers. Servants. Scene. In the First Act, in Venice ; in a portion of the Fourth, in Rome ; for the rest of the play, in Florence, until the catastrophe, — which taJces place at Caiano, in the neighborhood of Florence. Costumes. Those of the latter half of the 16th Century. BIANCA CAPELLO Act tee First Scene I. A room in tlie Apartment of Bonaventuri in the C'asa Salviati in Venice. BONAYENTUKI. SeXNUCCIO. Senn. Capello's daughter ? Thou art doubly mad! Bonav. All passion is but madness. Why not mme? Senn. All passion is not madness — not as thine. Thou art in impulse, act, and object mad. To love the flower of all Venetian maids, That was not sane : why ! art thou not, as I, But Salviati's servant, and low-born? — Bonav. What has ? Senn. To dare to make thy passion known, That was still madder. — Bonav. Could I will it else ? 206 BIANCA CAPELLO Can? Senn. But to seek What dost thou seek in fine? Bonav. Nothing. Wilt hear me speak? Thou art no more Luke my companion, friendly although rough, And counseling like an elder brother ; thou Speak'st without pity, hast no sympathy, Though 't was for that, and through the show of that Alone, I utter'd what no human ear Should otherwise have learn'd. Thou did'st seduce me By thy great urgence and thy tone of love To throw myself upon thy offer' d breast, And then brok'st from me, with a shout and laugh. Senn. A shout, Pietro\ if thou so must phrase it. For I was sore amaz'd ; but not a laugh. Bonav. Yes, with a laugh. For what is it but scorn That makes thee treat my passion as insane ? I look'd for sober counsel, — for reproof; But yet for pity, — not for mockery. Senn. No. Nor hadst it. Canst thou not allowance make For my surprise ? It seem'd so strange a things When I beheld thee pining and cast down. Thy sparkling eyes grown heavy like a girl's Sick of her maidhood, and thy jocund laugh, That had at times contagion even for me, Turn'd to a melancholy vacant smile. As if thy soul were in the topmost clouds, And oft in answer to my happiest speech Heard thy inapplicable words, or met, As often quite, thy start, and stare, and " Luke, ACT I. SO. 1. 207 Forgive me ! Do not think me rude ! I am Scarce well " : it seem'd so strange a thing, To learn at last thou wast heart-sick for one So high above thee, and so rarely bright, It was as though thou sighedst for the moon. — Bonav. Endymion did. Senn. That was in fable. Bonav. JSTot In fable though, the Moon return'd his sighs. That was the natural sequel of true passion. Which fires in turn. Senn. Thou hast the fable wrong. It was the Moon lov'd him, who slept through all. Thou may'st be handsome as the Latmian boy. Like him, thy moon consoles thee but in dreams. Bonav. ISTot so, by Heaven ! for I am wide awake, And [checking himself. 1 Senn. Barest not say, that thou art lov'd in turn? Bonav. I dare not say it, but Senn. Thou look'st it I Now, This is sheer lunacy ! Moonstruck Pietro ! Art thou then well awake ? Bonav. I am awake : Awake to find that I have dream' d of things Not less unreal than Diana's kisses ; As of thy heart for' instance, and the place Methought I held in it ; awake to learn, And learn to my dismay, that souls as calm And as profound as thine may stir with envy. 208 BIANCA CAPELT.O Senn. Pietro I — But so be it. It is well That I should read my nature. It may be That thou divinest right. Our friend's self-love Jars harshly on the quick sense of our own. 'T is Heaven's foresight. — But, if envy's gust EuflQe the surface of my graver spirit, Thy vain presumption surges fathom-deep. Bonav. Vain ? and presumption ? It is kindly said! Senn. 'T is said, at least, in no disdain of thee. Capello's blood flows from the mountain rill ; Thine is like mine, the puddle : so men think. Senn. But what of these distinctions knows the heart, Or asks ? Love is no herald ; flesh and blood, Not gules and argent, are his lore : nor can The Doge's bonnet, did its jewel'd band Grleam on Capello's haughty forehead, throw The terror of his function round his child. She is herself alone ; lov'd for herself. Senn. 'T is thus thine eyes behold her. But for hers Bonav. They look not through her father's robe of state. Besides, I am not sure Bianca knows Senn. Bianca ? Eeally ! Bonav. Wherefore not? I would I had not so betray'd me ! But thus far Since thou hast brought me to confess, hear on. Hear on ? No ! read ! Read there ! Handing a note to Sennuccio, after kissing it luith rapture. Then J eagerly loatcliing his countenance as he reads, BoNAVEXTURi contiuucs triumphantly : ACT I. SC. 1. 209 Art dumb ? Is that Diana*s beam? And am I yet asleep ? JSenn. I see no signature — no name without. Comes this indeed from her ? from her to thee? Bonav. To me from her. Senn. It passes all behef ! Is there no fraud ? Women have snar'd ere now. What means this mystery ? [indicating a i^ce on the note. Bonav. First give it voice. Eead out. Let my ears drink the rapture that my eyes Have ten times in the hour past reel'd with ; let My heart renew its triumph. Eead ! Eead all I JSenn. [reading. " Surprise — I would not say distrust or fear — Made me, perchance, seem harsher than I meant. I would amend my fault, if one have been. Does thy petition, in thy friend's behoof, Bear to be urg'd again, so let me hear it : That with prepared ears I may decide, If with my quality and maiden shame It suit to grant it. She who bears thee this Will tell thee more. Thou mayst confide in her, As I do in thy nobleness." — And WgH ? Bonav. Wilt thou without rude hindrance hear me through? Sennuocio nods gravehj. Eesolv'd to speak or die, I chose an hour When Blanche's governess came from her prayers, And told her that a case of life and death 210 BIANCA CAPELLO Depended on the favor of her ward ; "Whose intercession in a friend's behalf I must implore in person. The good dame, By my strong urgence mov'd — how could she else ? I pray'd as to a saint, — at last consented That on the morrow I should be receiv'd Into their barge, and to her lady's ear Breathe out my supphcation. Senn. And thou went'st? Pietrol Bonav. Hush 1 — I went. Bianca's hand — 'T could be no other there, so small, so white 1 From the Capello's gondol-window wav'd A kerchief. 'T was a minute. In the next, I stood before her — knelt. Her veil was dropp'd, Even as I entered, by her guardian's hand. Senn. 'T was well the hag had some small conscience. Bonav. Luke ! — — At my mute look and motion of reserve, Bianca made the dame some steps retire. Then softly bade me rise and speak. "^ me I The voice took from me all my power. Perhaps The innocent young creature redd the cause Of my fresh agitation, if already Looks, gesture, attitude had not betray'd My soul's true object ; for her own sweet speech Trembled a little, as, with downcast mien, She bade me gain composure, and once more Enjoin'd me rise, if I would have her hear. ACT I. SC. 1. 211 My thoughts came back. I told her the deceit My friend's despairing passion made me practice ; That not upon her father's hps, but hers, Hung the decision of his fate; and then, When I had pour'd forth all my passionate thoughts, Which no more broke in the utterance, but rush'd One rapid torrent, of such musical flow That my own senses vibrated, and love Took from the echo of itself new force, — Then did I pray that I might see the face That had wrought such sweet mischief. S]:ie complied. OLuke! Senn. Take breath, Endymion. Bonav. Would'st thou hear ? Senn. Ay ! But expect no sympathy. Bonav. Not now. I end the tale but to excuse myself. — Transported, madden'd if thou will, by charms Which gained by nearness, and whicii pudency Color'd to make transcendent, I avow'd My friend and I were one. And now in haste Comes up the governess, and with reproaches Lets down her lady's veil and bids me go. I rose — for still I had knelt. "And shall my friend,'' I ask'd, "dare then to hope?" — "Hope all men may,' Bianca said : " They who are right, hope always." Senn. A most sententious maiden ! — Well, so far, The mystery is solv'd. But this remains. Think'st thou the lady knows thee not her peer ? 212 EIANCA CAPELLO She writes, " Thy nobleness." What means that phrase ? Bonav. For one so patient, thou art much in haste. Give me the note. — Thou hast heard I left abruptly. I fear, alas ! she knows not what I am. \ivith dejection, Senn. Fear^ say'st thou ? By St. Luke ! 'tis nobly said ! I too did fear, Pietro. {extending his liand^ which Bona' venturi does not touch. Bonav. \]iaughtily .'\ What then? Senn. This: Thy honorable nature had succumb'd. No ! \as Bonav. is going. in this mood thou leav'st me not. Bonav. [endeavoring to free himself.^ Why stay, When from thy coldness and distrustful thoughts I fly to Paradise ? and not to play The Serpent, as thou Senn. As I do not think. Thou shalt stay till thou hear'st me ; for 'tis thou That wrong'st me, not I thee. Do I not know thee ? Daring, impetuous, yet of kindly heart, Who among men hath honor, if not thou ? But what is human honor ? This one thinks, Not for wide worlds he would commit a theft. Yet plots, cabals, o'erreaches, undermines, And calls it policy. This, who the rare And precious gift enjoys to never lie, Save in surprise or fright of shame, belies His conscience daily by complaisant smiles, And in the exaction of his self-love feigns ACT I. SC. 1. 213 Desires lie feels not 1 Affluence clips the wings Of honesty, which flies distress ; ^ and longing ludulg'd melts virtue that was cold as snow. Thou art as open as the broad sun-light, And all a man ; yet what ensures thy soul, When passion makes it agony to part, And happiness, and pride, and dread of shame, And pity itself, all urge thee to defer? Bonav. My present action. She who brought this billet — Given me this morn at mass — a fortnight gone Since in the gondola I knelt and sigh'd — Comes at the night's fifth hour — 'tis now at hand — [looking off the scene. To lead me to Bianca — to her home. Senn. At the Capello's palace ? Bonav. At the palace. Senn. Whither thou goest, to ? Bonav. Tell Bianca all : To end the dream which laps, perhaps, her senses, But is no dream for mine. Senn. This thou wilt do ? Bonav. I will, [with dejection^ yet firmly. Senn, Now Heaven make thee blest, Pietro I Happen what may, thou 'It bear no self-reproach On the charg'd conscience. Yet, ah be advis'd I Subdue this love ? To what end can it lead ? Know'st thou not Venice and the dreaded Ten ? Let but her sire denounce thee to the Signory, Thy life is not a summer's day. 214 BIAXCA CAPELLO Bonav. So be it. Clock ivlthin strikes Five. Hark, from the clock-tower ! [Exit precipitately. Senn. Rash, but gallant heart ! Thou goest downright to manifest destruction : For my cold counsel tempers not thy pulse. Thou hast call'd it envy. Envy! Can it be? So. Let me sift m'yself. I would not make One of another class Avith those I sketch'd ; Men who sin not themselves, nor play the fool, But grudge the mirth and joy of those who do. [Exit — thougliifally. ACT I. SC. 2. 215 Scene II. In the Casa CajyeUo. A room in Bianca's AjMrtment. BiANCA and the Governess. Bianca ivalhing up and down in agitation. She stops to look ojf the scene. Gov. 'T is but two minutes. Tliink ! Bian. 'T is but the street Between us. Two are twice too much. Were I As he, I should not be so long. And yet She ceases to address her attendant. How ardent was he ! Had he not been so, I had not ventur'd. But what will he think ? Gov. What matters ? He is noble ; then, must see How you have suffer' d. Bian. Yes, could he but know That for the last ten days I scarce have slept, Fearing a thousand things, and hoping more Why came he not to the house ? He must have seen How well he pleas'd me. Could he else, so made ? Gov. That may you say. And such a generous hand I Pure, all pure gold, the purse he- gave me leaving. It is a right rich house. Bian. Four minutes more I 216 BIAKCA CAPELLO he is laggard 1 Hark but ! On the stair I Now 1 — Now I — The door, good nurse ! Enter Bonaventuri. BiANCA runs up, as if to throw herself into his arms, hut stojpSy sinks on a seat, and extends her hand, which Bona- venturi, kneeling, takes and kisses. Bonav. gentle lady I — Dare I once more ? 'T is what I scarce had hoped ! Bian. You speak to chide me. Have I been too bold ? Bonav. Bold ? 'T was an angel's impulse ! But for this, How could I, so unworthy, dare again ? — 1 could but silent suffer, as till now, Through the long weary fortnight, since the hour I knelt and ventur'd in another's name To tell you I ador'd you, I have suffer' d. But this one minute, were it now to end, Eepays me, for all I for all 1 [kissing tenderly and rapturously her hand. Bian. Alas! And I But rise, [withdraiuing gently her hand. — I fear'd 1 know not well What 't was I fear'd. Is it, I was unkind ? I would not be, believe me. If in error, In the surprise, the if I said too little, Or, ! too much, forgive me, and forget All that is wrong in what I said or wrote, ACT I. SC. 2. 217 For it lias much annoy' d me. Bonav. This for me ? I have not merited that thou shouldst lose One half-hour's rest, shouldst feel one moment's care, For such as I. Forgiveness ? Let me pray, Once more upon my knees, to be forgiven For the deceit through which this hour is mine. 1- Thou smilest. Best, as brightest of thy sex I i Hast thou been conscious of my long, long love, ^ And find'st it not so criminal ? Indeed, I could no longer bear it ; I had died, Had I not spoken. [ZTe tahes her hand. Biancaj m her reply ^ folds the other over Ms, Bian. Wherefore died? Seem'd then Bianca so ungentle, when thine eyes From thy sad window watch' d her going out, And waited her return ? Didst thou not think, Vain man ! the eloquence of those wistful looks Made echoes sometimes in the maiden heart That knew as yet no love but that of friends And parents ? Henceforth thou wilt not despond ? Thou hast stolen an easy way to Blanche's heart I Live then to guard it; live for her, live with her. Bonav. Forever ! such life were one long dream Of Paradise, with no forbidden fruit, No serpent, and no Must I not despond ? The dream already breaks ; the cherub stands Before the portal with the flaming sword. And Heaven's decree admits of no reversal. ^ 218 BIANCA CArELLO Bian. What mean'st thou ? Bonav. Can this night endure forever? Wouklst thou permit, or could I dare request Again admittance to th}^ chamber ? Bian. No! Why shouldst thou need ? My father Bonav. my God! Springing lip ^ he comes forward^ and Bianca /oZ- loivs him to the front of the scene. The Governess also comes nearer^ though heeping still in the hachground. Bian. What is it ails thee ? In my father's name Should be no terror. Thou art not his foe ? Bonav. no ! But in thy father's blood is that, Though both are mortal, will not mix with mine. Bian. Yet thou art noble Bonav. Noble ? Bian. And thy house 7s one whose stem might be entwin'd Avith ours. Bonav. My house ? Whom tak'st thou me for ? — my fears ! Bian. Wo 's me ! — Art thou not Salviati? Bonav. No ! Bian. Nor of his kin ? Bonav. Alas! nor of his kin. Bian. Heaven ! — Speak out! Thou would'st not tor- ture me Who have been kind to thee ? Say what thou art. Bonav. Bonaventuri, Salviati's clerk. ACT I. SC. 2. 219 BiANCA sinJiS on a cJcair, icMcli the Governess has Irowjld Aer, and covers lier face luith both hands, BoNAVENTURi kiieels soflly hefore her. Oh clearest lady ! whom I have so wrong'd Not of my will, think not too hardly of me I Not by surprise, not from reluctant lips This truth was wrung; believe me, believe 1 I fear'd your error, and I came to tell. To tell you all. Do not be angry with me! Bonav. Alns ! I have no anger, only sorrow, Sorrow for both of us. — [*S'/^e drops her hands. — Bonaventuri ! — [with a faint smue. Thou seest I fear not to pronounce thy name — "What I have said can never be recall'd; "What I have done, that will not be forgotten : If it will soothe thy anguish at this parting. To know I share it, be it even so. And now — farewell ! [extending her hicnid. Bonav. Not yet! In pity, no! Thou canst not so dismiss me ! Think, think, Of the long hours where hope shall never more, " Never, make day for me ! Think of the past. The month on month my yearning heart liath hunger' d, Feeding itself upon the single thought Of such an hour as this, which thou wouldst shorten Thou dost not seem to scorn me : let me then Lie at thy feet, and, for some minutes still, Dream I 'm in TTcavcu. 220 BIANCA CAPELLO Bian. To awaken where ? Since part we must, why struggle to obtain A respite that at best can be but brief? Bonav. Because it is my life, and all beyond Is death and darkness. Bian. Hast thou then for me No thought? Canst thou bear nought for my sake? Bonav. prising quickhj.\ Yes ; An age of heartache, will it give you ease. I was but selfish : I will go. I go. [moving sadly away., with his eyes still on Bianca, who rises. Gov. [laying her hand on Bonaventuris arm. Come then, young man, since you are no one now. It is high time that you were gone. Bian. How now ! Aia, know better thine own place, and mine ; And, where I honor, learn to show at least Some sign of reverence. Gov. [low, to herself. ] What a change is here I She was a child this morning ! Bian. ^Mind her not : I am the mistress here. — Look not so mournful I [giving her hand. And yet I cannot bid thee not remember. Bonav. Could I obey ? — Wilt thou remember me ? Wilt thou mourn for me, if Bianca! (so — Permit me — 't is the only time — to call thee) Whatever happen, thou wilt not condemn me ? Thou wilt not mix my errors with my birth, ACT I. £C. 2. 221 And deem me all unworthy ? Bian. Seem I sucli? What mean'st thou ? Bonav. Heaven bless thee ! and — Farewell ! As he is goinc/, Biaxca, ivJio has seemed a moment stujpefied^ suddenly hastens to him. Bian. Bonaventuri ! Bonav. Why command me back ? I thought it past. Bian. \taldng his hand^loohs fixedly and anx- iously in his face.] What didst thou mean by that ? There is a desperation in thy look That should not be there. Art thou not a man ? Is love the only object of man's being ? There be far nobler aims ; and thou art young, Ardent, and bold. Live that I may not blush To have shown thee favor, live because thou hast Thy life thou knowest not why, and hast no right To squander it as if it were thy choice. More, thou didst lay it at my feet : 't is mine, If thou concede it not, as fits thee rather. Thy country's, and thy fellow-men's, thy God's 1 Why art thou silent ? Why that stony look Of passionless despair ? Thou dost not love me I Thou wouldst not else Bonav. Bianca ! \slov)ly. . Bian. Promise then Thou wilt do nothing desperate, thou wilt Do nothinET till thou hear'st from me. Thou canst 222 BIAXCA CAPELLO Never more enter here Gov. {wJio has looJced on Bianca all the while with amazement.'] Not by my will ! Bian. Aia ! — But thou shalt hear from me, thou wilt Write to me by the messenger, and send. Dost thou then promise — solemnly ? Bonav. I do — By all Grod's holy angels 1 — thou art one. Bian. Stoop ! — With this kiss [kissing him solemnly Oii the forehead. thou hast Bianca's — friendship. I vow it — hear, Heaven ! So long as thou do nought To forfeit it. Now go at once ; go quickly. The Mooress waits without to lead thee down. BoNAVENTURi Mssing passionately Bianca's hand^ presses it^ clasped^ a moment to his heart, then moves to the door, his face still turned on Bianca. Gov. \as she conducts him out. Mary be prais'd ! here never to come more. [^Exeunt Bonav. and Gov. Bianca gazes a moment fixedly on the door, then wrings her hands in a paroxysm of grief. Bian. Now he is gone, I am a child again. Mary Mother ! St. Mark ! and gentle Luke ! [hneeling. All angels and good saints ! pray, pray for me ! Aid me against myself ; I have no strength To make the sacrifice which Heaven commands. She buries her face in the cushion of the chair, sohhing hitterly. — Scene closes. ACT I. SO. 3. 223 Scene III. A room in Sennuccio's apartment, in the Casa Salviati. Sennuccio sitting at a tahle reading. Enter Bonaventuri. Sennuccio looTcs up, then resumes his occupation. . BoNAVENTURi loohs at him for some moments, then lays hefore him an open letter. Bonav. Read. Senn. From Bianca ? [loohing at the signature. Bonav. Ay. But read aloud. iSenn. [reading. " Thou ask'st in vain. There are no means. Not one. My governess is proof to prayers and gold. She threatens even, if I give not o'er, To expose us to my father. What to do ? I am so watch'd, by day as well as night, I cannot meet thee elsewhere, and here now . Would put thy life in peril and my fame. Write me no more such letters, in pity ! They burn into my brain. My nights are frightful ; And from brief slumbers and distracting dreams I wake to weep, to ponder our sad lot. To see perhaps thy wan face at 'the casement, 224 BIANCA CAPELLO Think on thy anguish, which redoubles mine, And deem sometimes 't were better both were dead. I thought myself more strong when thou wast by, But in thy absence fmd myself the weaker. Have then, I pray, compassion on us both." Thou wilt have, wilt thou not ? Bonav. It is too late. I have already written, three days since. iSenn, And was that generous ? Bonav. It was simply just. I had compassion on herself and me. ■Senn. Explain. Bonav. For that I come ; and for thy aid. — I wrote to say, I would receive her here, Here in my rooms, in Salviati's house. Bonn, [starting up. They hoth come forward. Art thou distracted ? Bonav. Desperate alone. I never spoke more sanely in my life. My plan is for salvation. [^Senn. atout to interrupt. Hear ! then judge. I told her I would watch for three whole nights, Until the day broke. Coming, she should be Sacred before me as an enshrin'd saint Before its votary. This I truly vow'd. By her dead mother, by her living self. But coming not, I cast off hope forever. And with it my young life, then nothing worth. Two nights have pass'd in vain. This early morn ACT I. sc. 3. 225 I saw her at a window. so wliite ! So suppliant with those melancholy eyes I "Whose deep-sunk and impurpled orbits show'd Long watching, passion, and the pine of care, — That my fast purpose trembled. But it holds. The third night comes : and with it — comes Bianca. I feel it in my soul. Senn. Thou tak'st her for ? Bonav. Capello's child, high-thoughted and most pure ; Yet a deep-loving woman. She will trust me. Senn. And thou? Bonav. Will keep my oath. I swear it here, As I have sworn it on my knees to God. Witness ye saints ! my sister, now in Heaven, Would not be more immaculate by me Than she shall be this night ! Senn. What then your aim ? Bonav. To marry her. Thou 'It aid me ? Senn. No ! Bonav. Thou wilt. Thou wouldst not scruple to give life to both. Senn. Ay, must I do it wrongly. But this life ! To take her from the lap of luxury, to expose her, This delicate child, soft-niirtur'd, and high-plac'd, This daintiest flower of all Venetian land, To the bleak winds of penury, transplanted To an ungcnial and a barren soil : BoNAVENTURi wallcs alovt impatiently. Is this — Stop ! listen to me ! — this your life ? 228 BIANCA CAPELLO Better to slay her outright, and to die for 't ! That were a crime, but 't would be truer mercy. But this is idle talk : for, say she come. How know'st thou she is reckless as thyself ? 'T is a long leap, a marriage ! Bonav. She will take it, When there is no way left her but to leap. Senn. Ha! Bonav. Wilt thou aid me, Luca ? 'T is not much. Senn. Let me hear further. Bonav. When Bianca comes. She leaves the portal of her house ajar. So that she may steal softly back unseen. Now, were it slily clos'd behind her Senn. WeU? Bonav. There is but left, her ruin or to fly. Luke ! dearest Luke I I will be all my life Bound to thee, wilt thou do me this slight office. Senn. Hast thou then done ? — Is this indeed thyself? Speak'st thou of real purpose ? Art thou truly Pietro Bonaventuri ? If thou art, Then am I Luke Sennuccio ; and no man Durst ever call on me before to do A thing so base. Bonav. Have patience I Senn. Hear now me. If thou do not abandon this vile plan, I will report thee to the lady's sire — Or no ! I will not put in risk thy life ; ACT L SO. 3. 227 I will expose thee to Bianca's self. Bonav. [haughtily.'] Who gave you right to hold this talk to me? Senn. Nature, and threaten'd innocence, which finds In every true man a defender. Bonav. Luke! I thought thou wast my friend. Senn. I am thy friend. Thou never hadst a truer. I dare say Thou never wilt have one so true again. Por I will not, to pander to thy passions, Stain thy immortal soul. I will not suffer What doubtless now to thy distemper'd blood Seems venial craft, but one day will appear. When the film leaves thine eyes, atrocious guilt. Bonav. Thou didst allow me honor. Senn. I do still. Said I not too, alas for human honor ? Alas, that somewhere it has aye some flaw I Passion, ambition, indigence, all serve To lend it pretexts to excuse its fall. Thou, in the hunger of thy famish' d love, Dost clutch at bread that is not fairly thine. Thou shalt not have it. Bonav. Thou dost bear me hard. Thou art no lover, and thj cold resolve Cuts off the last resource of both our lives. For Blanche will pine to death, nor I survive. S&nn. So all youth think. And very few think right. 228 EIANCA CAPELLO The storm blows, and the Hly stoops her head, But hfts it soon, and with the cahii revives. But, be it otherwise : hast thou not heard Thou shalt not evil do that good may come ? Be honest, do thy duty : the result Is with the All- Powerful, not the feeble will Of circumscrib'd and narrowsighted men. Pietro ! end this matter as it may, Thou art not sinless, knowing from the first Well who thou art, which knew this virgin not.- Thou hast repair'd that errd", like the brave • And honest soul thou art. Wilt thou fail now ? I will not think it. Get thee to thy chamber. Ask if thou lov'st Bianca or thyself. And on the altar of a true affection Burn up thy guilty wishes. Angels will Inhale with joy the incense, God approve That truest hero, him who conquers self. Bonav. [Throwing himself on Sennuccio's hreasf, and iviih emotion. Luke ! had I thy spirit ! Senn. [caressingly.] And my blood? Virtue, believe, is not to know not sin, But the soul's victory when tried by sin. Be thou thus virtuous, I will say thy love Honors Bianca, were she born a queen. [Exit Bonav. Luke, leaning with his hent hand on the tahle^ gazes on him seriously as he retires. And Scene closes. ACT I. sc. 4. 229 Scene IY. In the Cas:i Capello. A room hung ivith ^portraits. On a iahle^ two lighted candles. Capello. Goverxess. Gov, I meant, your Excellence, to speak of this. Cap. Hast thou then notic'd this sad change ? Since when ? Gov. 'T is some weeks gone since first my lady droop'd. I thought it nothing serious, still believing A little time would make all well again. — Cap. Complain'd my daughter? Sought she for no aid ? Gov. Alas ! your Excellence, 't is not the body : This is some sore distemper of the mind. Cap. What mean'st thou ? Gov. I would pray to be forgiven If I offend ; but my young lady Cap. Speak ! Gov. I fear, has something heavy on her heart. Cap. Mean'st thou, in fme, my daughter is in love ? Gov. May it please your Excellence, 't is nothing less. Cap. Be but the object worthy of her love, I were well pleas'd that it were nothing more. Who is it then ? Gov. Your Excellence must know My lady would not make of me her friend. 230 BIANCA CArELLO Cap. Tliou art her goYcrness : if, as I am loatli To even conjecture, there is wrong in tliis, Thou only art to blame. Thou hast my child, Daily and nightly, under thy sole care. What can transpire that thou shouldst not observe ? Gov. Heaven is my judge, that I in this have done My proper duty. Till the last two days, I hop'd that all was well. But yesterda}^, ISTor less the one before, the livelong night, My dear young lady never press'd her bed, "Walking unquictly from time to time Her chamber through. Cap. And where Avast thou the while ? Gov. Twice went I to the door. She thank'd me kindly, But bade me leave, as wanting not my help. Cap. How is 't to-night? Gov. She has retired early ; And all is quiet in her chamber. Haply She will sleep well to-night, being so much worn. Cap. 'T is likel}^, very likely. God so grant ! I will not break this salutary rest. But on the morrow bid her be prepar'd For solemn question. — my darling child I lie ceases to notice the Governess. Let not my colder age efface the sense Of my once passionate youth. When thou wast born, I pray'd thai error of the old might not One day be mine. Yet is the lesson hard For a fond parent's heart ! The child is his, ACT I. SC. 4. 231 But not lier passions. At the age when most She needs his guidance, when new-born desire Makes the first object welcome, and the soul Takes cognizance of only things extern. Then may he least command ; then, child no more, And yet not woman, she escapes his hand. Before her unfledg'd sense has power to fly. Hast thou done so, Bianca ? Is this love Which fevers th}^ young blood, then this unrest, This secret sorrow marks a sense of shame, Or unrequited or forbidden passion. See ! Turning to the ]}ictures. In so doing^ he ohserves the Governess. Thou needst not wait, good Aia. It is now Past midnight. Listen at my daughter's door, Ere thou retirest ; but disturb her not. — [Exit Gov, Regards again the oidures. Kext to my father Carlo the ambassador's Hangs thy sweet image, my Bianca ! 'T is One of the best from old Yecelli's hand. How his soft pencil and his dulcet grace Have beautified and made the canvas live ! The blood is in those cheeks ! those eyes are moist 1 From those just-parted delicate lips I seem To feel the warm breath, and my own in turn Might almost wave those airy threads of gold That shape thy ringlets ! Magic power of color I Yet Titian vow'd thou didst surpass his art, As did the light its symbol on his board.'* 232 BIAXCA CAPELLO Such do not sigh in vain. Thou sorrowest then For a forbidden passion which is shame ; And my old house Thou shalt not dim its pride F Forget thou the Gapcllo, and a veil Shall hide thy forfeit station, like Falier's, "Who too forswore his birthright. 'T is a thought To keep me waking. Let me drive it hence. He lifts one of the candles towards the incture^ One nearer look, my child, before I go. Scene chse9. ACT I. sc. 5. 233 Scene Y. A street^ with a canal crossing it ahove ; ichere, hij a "bridge which spans the canal, are ohscurely seen, in the faint morning -iwiliglit, the prows of gondolas. Forwardj on either side the street, facing each other, the Casa Capello and the Casa Sdlviati. From the ported of the hitcr Enter BiANCA and Boxavextuei, the latter having a small dark-laut.rn, . which he masks. Bian. See ! the gray dawn ! Farewell ! A last — Wo 's me, I cannot say again — Farewell! Bonav. [pressing her to his hreast. Haply, 't is not forever. Heaven bless thee ! Thy word i-emember, Bian. Never, never, never To be another's, if not thine. Farewell ! jEmhraeing. Bianca crosses over to the p)ct,lc(cs on the right. But c hnost insianily, coming hack in terror : Ruin I ruin ! God ! the door is clos'd. 234 BIAXCA CAPELLO Bonav. Hast tliou no key ? Bian. Xone, none ! And if I had^ I durst not use it for the noise. Bonav. Stay here. I will essay. Perhaps tlie door will yield. Bian. Ko, no I Try not. There is no help but flight. Bonav. Whither? Bian. Hast thou no parents? Bonav. Ay, but poor.. Bian. No matter; I can Avork. They shall be mine. Come Bonaventuri ! Come, my husband ! Come \ Bonav. Alas, Bianca ! all my worldly means Lies in this httle purse. The rest was given, How gladly ! for that first blest scene with thee Which costs thee now so dear. Bian. Be it small or great^ It must be. My few rings will eke it out. Tarry not. Every moment here is fraught With more than death. I cannot face again My father. Come. Art thou a man ? Must I Entreat thee to do that, which not long since Thou wouldst have thought salvation ? Bonav. 'T is for thee. Wilt thou meet poverty and honest shame Bian. Bather than what awaits me here ? That, that, Canst thou ask that ? hnger not I Each minute Is so much lost to flight that must be quick. Eoi they will follow us. It is thy death. ACT I. SC. 5. 235 Bonav. Come then, Bianca ; now mine, life or ^eatli 1 To tlie first gondola. Once out of Yenice, The first priest, if thou wilt, shall make us one. Bian. Yes. my father ! Bonav. Hush, Bianca ! Come. He takes up the lantern. They move up the scene in the shadow of the houses. The Drop falls. 236 BIANCA CAPELLO Act the Second ' Scene I. A cJiamher in the Pitti Palace ai Florence, TnE Grand Duke seated^ leaning on a table in a pensive attitude. Malo- cuoRE standing apart, a little hefore him. Mai. \in a tone of deferential inquiry. My lord the Duke is not so well to-day. A ijause. With still more deference.'] Will my lord pardon his poor servant's zeal, And give command the hunt shall not take place ? G. D. {without looking up. For my ill-humor Avhy should hundreds lack Their custom' d pleasure ? Let the order stand. Again a pause. Mai. 'T was from the last hunt that my liege came back "With that strange sorrow which still wounds our hearts. A long -r pause. G. D. Thou art a courtier, Malocuor. Men say Thou hast sharp eyes, seest quickly and seest far. Thou boastest of tlij zeal in our behalf. Forget thy art.^ What whisper stirs the court Touching our strangeness? ACT II. sc. 1. 237 Mai. Some ascribe the cause To depravation of the humors, bile, Infarction of the spleen, — such natural ills ; Some to the weight of heav}^ cares of state ; Others — your Highness bids that I should speak — To discontent with your Archducal spouse. G. D. [hastihj. They do me wrong : I hold her — in esteem. Mai. Which often is the antipodes of love. G. D. And to M'hich guess does Malocuore lean ? Mai. The last, with some admixture of the first. Your Highness' malady is of the heart. G. D. Ha ! — Men say well : thou hast keen eyes. Mai. AYould then The royal patient deign to state his case. Perhaps the surgeon might propound a cure. The Q. D. rises and icalks to and fro. G. D. [after a pause. Hear then. But can I trust thee ? Mai. Shall I prove That I am worthy ? Shall I state, myself. Your Highness' symptoms, with the when and where, And how, of the attack ? G. D. What know'st thou ? Speak ! Mai. 'T was at the last hunt. As the cavalcade Swept through the suburbs, and the people fxock'd To door and window to behold their Prince, In a small cottage with a vine-clad porch. That stood secluded M'liere the highway turns, 238 EIAXCA CAPELLO Lean'd from a narroAV casement next the roof, A fair young creature of some eighteen years, So strangely beautiful, and with a mien . So far above the seeming of her place, The Great Duke, starting, drew his bridle short, To gaze G. D. Art thou the Devil ? Mai. I am but Your Highness' humble subject — with sharp eyes. G. D. ISTo more ! Thou hast thy monarch's secret. He ? Mai. His subject's instant aid, so he will deign Graciously to command it. G. D. Instant? Then Sawest thou not, with all thy sight, what I Saw and will vouch. This is no peasant maid, Simple and uninstructed ; far less one Of that most numerous class in evesy life, Whose vanity throws out perpetual lures. Tempting temptation. Else the glance that pierc'd Had made me whole. But thou dost not believe In virtuous women ? Mai. Ay, as in wall'd towns. Many are strong, but none impregnable, A vigorous siege and obstinate resolve Will batter down or bring a Troy to terms. Where open combat fails, some wooden horse Lets in the troop that makes the stronghold ours. Is it your Highness' will, this very day The chance is given you to assault the place. ACT IT. SC. 1. 239 G. D. What sayst thou ? Mai. Be it not ascrib'd a fault, That I have dar'cl anticipate your -will. G. D. Who gave thee orders ? Mai. Will my lord but hear ? I have ventur'd only to make clear the approach, By which yom- Highness might lay siege in form. G. D. Speak plainly, Malocuor, and leave thy cant. I like it not. Here is no vile intrigue ; And shall be none. Mai. Returning from the chase. The Sovereign lifted up his e3'es again, Unto the cottage-windoAV. But no more The star was burning there that made the day ; And over his visage came like darkness. This, "Wlien I saAV this, and mark'd from day to day The sadness lessen not ; when, furthermore G. D. \impatiently . Well, well! we have admitted thou hast eyes. Mai. Pardon, your Grace ! — ]\Iy spouse, by mj com- mand, Made easily acquaintance with the dame Who is this angel's mother, then herself. She has seen her often, finds still some pretence To do her kindness, — though, unlike the dame, The daughter is both proud and strangely shy. » G. D. How speaks your spouse her bearing otherwise? Mai. Modest, reserv'd; but, like her voice and mien, Above her sphere. 240 BIAXCA CAPELLO G. D. And beauty ? Mai. Marvelous. G. D. [taldng his hand. All, Malocuore ! And this priceless maid ? Ifal. So rarely worthy of a monarch's love; Has then my lord no wish to see her near ? G. D. Wouldst drive me mad ? Speak on ! Mai. No wish to be Beside her — and alone — and even now ? G. D. What! what! Thou didst mdeed promise instant aid! Mai. This very hour my spouse will bring her home. G. D. To thine own house ? Mai. To mine: my sovereign's house, Will he so grace it. G. D. And this very hour ? He rests his hand on Malocuor's shoulder. Dear Malocuore ! This is too much joy ! What shall I do to compensate thy love ? Thou hast indeed thy keen eyes us'd right well. — Thou wilt attend mc. — Saidst thou not, this hour ? — Bid come our Chamberlain. — [Exit Mai. How bright the day ! Sitting down hg the table. It seems to me as now I first had life. * Rising J he ii asses through a door ahove^ and Scene closes. ACT II. SO. 2. 241 Scene II. In Malocuores Jiouse. The dressing-room of Signora Malo- cuore. BiAxcA. Tlie Signora. The latter displaying her jewels and finery. Sign. You are a strange fair creature. One -svould think These toys had been your playthings all your hfe. Yet that is not a long one either. Bian. Why Should usage only breed indiiFerence ? Eather It is the innate relish or distaste For such things makes them valued or despis'd. Age pranks itself therein like lighter youth. Sign. You are a young philosopher. Bian. I know The difference betwixt folly and good sense. It were not wise in me to covet what, Even were 't attainable, would not fit my place. Sign. That place may better; and these jewels then Bian. Would still have little value in my eyes. I dress to please my husband ; and his taste Is well contented with this simple garb. 242 - BIAXCA CArELLO Sign. In sooth, it does not misijecome j6u. I have known [sign ificantJif^ A sovereign prince to admire as plain a robe. Pray let me hang this chain about your neck. Thus, you are lovely. Do not take it off. It well relieves the ivory of that skin. Bian. {tranqidlJy removing the chain. But is in painful contrast to the rest, Signora, to oblige my husband's mother More than yourself, I have let you bring me hither.. Thanking your courtesy, suffer me to leave. Sign. \JooJdng off the scene, as if healing something. A little longer. I have yet to show you, Gentle Bianca, what is worth this all. [Exit. Bian. It must be greatly so, if thou v/ouldst dazzle The rich Capello's child. Capello ! Father ! Mourn'st thou Bianca yet ? Or has just anger Stifled all sorrow for thy truant girl ? Who has one only grief, the thought that thou Art unforgiving and yet unconsol'd.® J^nter the Grand Duke — eagerly, hut hecomcs at once emharrassed, u-hile Bianca holes siuyriscdj hut steady. G. D. Pardon ! I [siammering. Bian. Sic'nora Malocuoro ACT II. SG 2. 243 Has stepp'd out for a moment. G. D. The gignora Shall be exciisM. Her al3sence gives me room To make, without the encumbrance of a third, The acquaintance of the loveliest of her sex. Bian. This cannot be the master of the house. G. D. The master's master, and your beauty's slave. Bian. Ah! — It is 'T is ! I see now. The Grand Duke ? G. D. Francis of Medici, who Do not stoop 1 'T is I should rather kneel, wouldst thou permit, Fairest Bianca. Bian. Speak not so, my lord ! That tone becomes not either you or me. — I have an earnest prayer to make your Grrace. 'T is a small matter, but concerns me much. G. D. Else first. Now, what is there that thou canst ask, , Saving his honor and his people's weal, That Francis will not grant ? Think it then granted, So thou wilt one accord to me in turn, Bianca, and my love Bian. My lord! my lord I I am — a marry' d woman. G. D. lilarry'd ? Well ! Am I not marry'd too ? Alas ! the heart Cannot be bound so easily as the hand. Bian. But the will may, and should when reason bids. G. D. Reason now bids me to obey my will. The flame thy beauty kindled thy sense fans. 244 15TANCA CAPELLO I had not lie;wd thy speech, when on my eyes, Lovely Bianca, Bian. Pardon me, my Hege. That I dare interrupt, impute it solely Unto my duty, to you and to myself. If I could ever listen, plac'd as now, To such wild words as these from such as you, — As I do not believe I ever should, — Yet is n?y will not free as yours ; my heart Is, like my hand, my husband's. G. D. Every w^ord But adds new motive to my passion, showing How rightfully 't is plac'd. Thou shouldst be silent, Wouldst thou not foster feelings, which, in sooth. Needed no nourishment. Bian. Then let me hence. Such protestations — pardon me, my liege — Demean yourself, 3^our august spouse, and me. [ Offering to go. lie stops her, G. D. Art thou insensible ? Thou art not vain. But hast thou no compassion ? Bian. I have more. You are my Prince, albeit I was not born Your subject. Men report, and I believe. You are among the noblest of crown' d heads. My eyes have noted in your form and mien What women value ; and m}^ ears have found Sense in the tone and purport of your speech. Thus amiable, thus gifted, so high-plac'd, ACT II. SC. 2. 245 Tou cannot lack for dames in all your court Fairer than your poor handmaid, noble too, Who would joy in your homage, and respond Haply unto your love, if — let me dare To speak thus — you will do yourself that wrong To offer it. G. D. And are they such as thou ? Thy very words prove otherwise. If such. They would not listen more than thou. Ko, thou, Thou only, who, believe me ! since these eyes First saw thy fatal beauty, hast alone Been mistress of my senses and my thoughts, Thou only, fair • Bian. My lord, I must, I can not, AYill not listen longer. All the honor. The reverence that I owe you, that I render; But my first duty is to God. Permit me Thus to perform it. \Jier hand on the door. G. D. \sto2jping her. ^ No. If it must be, "T is I will go. Bianca, have me not, I pray, in disesteem. Let Francis hold The next place in thy bosom, if thou canst, To thy most happy husband. Thou slialt not Say I abus'd my privilege. In love I am like other men, and, loving so. Like any gallant man I take my leave. [Exit^ lowing with sad deference. Bian. A noble prince. Not conscious, surely, lie 246 BIxVNCA CAPELLO Of this vile plot. Ah! the arch-plotter comes. Enter the Signora, ivith a cashet. Sign. I have kept you too long Availing. Pardon. — Here Is what Tv^ill wake your wonder. [piDening the casket. Bian. That was done During your absence bravely. Shut the box. Sign. What! Have you seen the Duke? I thought as much. He often takes us by surprise. I hope You have seiz'd the occasion, to present your prayer ? Bian. Was it for that^ you urg'd me to come hither ? Sign. No. But I promised access to His Highness; And I am happy, have you us'd this chance. Sweet, look not grave : and do not haste away. Bian. I do not like surprises : and this one Has brought me no advantage. I will not Trouble you longer. Sign. Nay, you shall not go As you were angry. I shall see you home. lExeunt ACT II. SC. 3. 24T Scene III. An Aiitechamler in the Jioiise of MaJocuore. Enter from one side the Gr. Duke, as passing through, escorted hy Malocuor. The Gr. D. stops shorty laying his hand on his follower's arm^ G. D. I have gfccn her, heard her, touch'd her. All my nerves Tmgle with pleasure. Yet my heart is sad. Mai. Is it that all is won ? Accomplish' d hope Often brings sadness. G. D. Since it nothing leaves To feed expectance ? or, the goal once reach' d, We find the prize not Avorth the strain and sweat ? My longing is misated, my bright prize Grows brighter on my vision, like the sun As day advances. Yet my heart is sad : For — all is lost. Mai. Then is it the first time Your Highness has been vanquish'd. G. D. The first time Defeat is dearer to my heart than victory. Thou look'st surpris'd. I tell thee, Malocuor, 548 BIAXCA CAPELLO All thou liast saidj all that thy spouse has told, All that in heat of fancy I have drcam'd, Fall short to picture beauty, sense and worth. That have no rivals save themselves. She is The loveliest, best, and wisest of her sex. .Mai. May I infer, the most obdurate too ? G. D, What else? I said, '• the best" : and she is wed. 2Idl. 'T is the fii'st trial. When we shake the tree, The apples fall not. But we lend our strength To newer efforts; and they drop in time. O. D. That is your over-ripe, and worm-gnaw'd fruit. Bianca's stem is tough. Mai. Let royal favor Pour sunshine on the treasure of the tree. The crude pulp mellows, and the stubborn stem, Now useless, withers up. Invite the lady To grace your Highness' Court. G. D. That would I gladly. But not to rot the virtue I admire. The tree shall bear its honors in our midst, And its fruit give out fragrance undespoifd. 'T is something still to see her, hear her, know That she is near me. Once beyond my reach, I should be wretched, fearing she were lost. Know'st thou her husband ? To be lord of her, He should be not ignoble. Mai. Not in mien. The man is fair to look on, and well-spoken. My lord might give him place about his person. ACT II. SC. 3. 240 G. D. See it be done. Promise him what thou wilt, So it be not a place of public trust. Mai. Your Grace shall be obey'd, and, more — be happy. They resume their luay through the antechcuriber^ Mai.ocuore ceremonioushj conducting^ and Exeunt^ Scene IV. A 'poorly furnished chamber in the house of Bonaventuri^ s Parents. BONAVENTURI. His MoTHER. Moth. 'T is as thou sayest, Pietro, and our luck Is surely blossoming. And glad am I, If only for Bianca's sake, 't is so. To see that delicate creature, night and day. Toiling with those soft hands, that ne'er were made For menial labor, makes my heart bleed. Bonav, Yet She does not murmur. Moth. More an angel she. An angel is she. Oft I wonder, son, Though thou art brave and comely, thou couldst win 250 BIANCA CAPELLO So rare a maiden. But I wonder not, Once won, thou gav'st up all to make her thine. Bonav. She gave up all too, mother ; and that all Was more a thousand times. Moth. The heavier then Her loss. I fear she feels it so. Her brow, Methinks, grows sadden' d, and her cheek more pale, I would she had less care on her young heart. Bonav. What can we do ? Our money is all spent. Until the Duke's protection be procur'd, I dare not stir abroad to seek for work, I wonder that Bianca was so bold To gaze from window when the Court rode by. Moth. 'T was but an instant, from the upper floor. Thou shouldst not blame her. Bonav. And I did not. Yet The risk w^as great. And therefore I rejoice In this court-lady's favor. If nought else, The Duke may shield us. That is one care less. Was not that wheels ? [listening. Moth, [opening the casement. The gracious dame herself,. In her brave equipage, has brought her back ! Bonav. She comes. Bianca 1 Ente?^ Bianca. She throws herself into her husland's arms. Bian. 0, let us begone I ACT II. SC. 3. 251 Bonav. Whither ? What is the matter ? Has the Duke Eefus'd his safeguard ? Motli. Have you seen His Grace ? Bian. Tes, I have seen him, and Avill not again. Bonaventuri ! mj husband ! Bonav. Speak ! What is it ? Bian. Ruin ! Euin, if we stay ; Hope, safety, happiness, all things in flight. Let it be instant ! Bonav. Whither ? And the means ? Venice can reach us elsewhere. As well here. Bian. ISTo ! not as m'cII. This place is bann'd of Heaven. The world elsewhere is all for us to choose. BoxAYEXTURi /o/c7s Ms avms about her as she hangs on his breast, — the Mother looking on in / speccliless iconder, and the Drop falls. 252 BIANCA CAPELLO ACTTHETniRD Scene I. As in Actll. Sc. II. SiGNORA MalOCUORE. ' Entei\ in festival dress, Malocuore. Se flings himself weariedly on a couch, without removing his hat. Mai. 'T is monstrous ! Florence stands agape. Fools ask : Is this a Prince ? or some great hostile king's High servant sent to ratify a peace ? And wise men answer low : " Bianca's brother." Just as thou seest me, wearied unto death, So see a hundred nobles, dragg'd in state To swell the triumph of Vittorio, son Of a Venetian Senator, [flinging his hat off in disdain. Sign. And who But thou to blame ? Of all thy fine-wove schemes To advance thyself, and stretch thy purse and mine, What is the upshot ? O'er thee, step by step, Strides Bonaventuri ; and the prude, his w*ife. Rides over me and all. Mai. Peace ! Fret me not. ACT III. sc. 1. 253 I am not now in mood. Sirjn. To list the truth ? . 'T is wholesome though. Thy aching bones are part Of thy just penance ; and my knoit}^ facts Shall lash thee to new virtue. Mai Well; proceed. Only hear me in turn. ;S'.''^/?. Bianoa houses Not in the suburbs in a cottage now, But near the Trinitd^ in palace-walls That shame our own : her low-born husband rolls In wealth beyond his trading master's, holds His head above the nobles, with a pride Mai Will one day hurl him headlong. But his spouse Is gentle stih. Why shouldst thou carp at her ? JSign. She treats me with an insolent disdain, Or looks me over. Mai Ay ; she knows thee well- Sign. Ha! Mai Was 't not thou that pander'd to the Duke ? Sign. At whose base prompting ? If my palm is black, Thou- art in to the elbow. Was it I That brought Iter to the Court ? I had left her poor. Her natural pride"' now swollen by all this pomp, With courtiers cringing at her dainty feet Who scarcely kiss'd the crown'd Joanna's hand, She trifles with the Duke, and plays the chaste, While he, the more she frowns, the more adores. Is not that so ? 254 EIAXCA CAPELLO Mdl. It is ; but sliall not be ; Thougli I deem not, as thou, Bianca feigns. Sign. "What neAv plan toward ? [disdainfulhj. Mai. Thou knowest the hopes I built On the bold Favorite's amour with the Princess ? Sign. The base was quicksand. So the fabric fell. The dissolute Duchess makes the wife's cheek pale, But not her heart. It still beats for her lord, Or seems to. IFal. I have what will change its pulse. \_Going. If site resist this! [holding up for a moment^ at a distance^ a sealed letter^ Even then I hope. A mine will spring the tower which stands a siege. [Exit. Sign. Subtle maligner ! Thou mayst fathom man, But hast no plummet to explore our sex. Thou think'st I know thee not. Thou had'st better trust me ! Thy dallying with the Cardinal I see. Beware ! A crafty priest has double craft. The mine thou digg'st against Bianca's faith May split the rock whereon the miner stands. [She turns, as going. And Scene closes. ACT III. SC. 2. 255 Scene II. A room in the Old Medici Palace (the residence of Don Pietro.) Isabella. Eleonora. Isa. Content tliee. That I fling away my hours On Francis' pet, is not the man is bold, Or young, or handsome — though I weigh the worth Of all these qualities — but that I hate His wife. Ulco. [in great surprise. I thought thou favoredst the Capello ! Isa. As thy dear lord, my brother does. In heart I loathe her. Eleo. And for what ? Isa. Because I loathe her. What matters it ? ISTot always do we know Our cause of hate. Eleo. Not always care to know. Isa. Or care to know. Be it as thou wilt. So say, I am her rival; say, that men desert Calypso's isle of dainties for the web Of chaste Penelope ; is 't not too much The hypocrite should make both thee and me 256 BIAXCA CAPELLO Odious before our lords, and in the court Teacli men to estimate our freer lives By her stiff model ? Harmless as a dove Fools may esteem her ; but the serpent's wisdoms Prompts her mock coyness. If Joanna, whom , My brother Ferdinand so loves (because Her weak spine promises the Duke no heir That long shall live.) in her now-coming throes^ "Which threaten peril, die, behold a chance Bianca may improve ! EJeo. Thou art not serious ? Isa. Our sire was, who in his later day Married Camilla. She was not the peer In beauty, worth, or birth of this Capello, Francis has cloister'd her,^ but not the less Will do as his sire, mad for love as he. Eleo, Ah ! this is why the Cardinal and my lord Precipitate the ripening of our plot. Isa. It will not do. Bernard' Girolami, The two Capponi, linger yet in France; The Alamanni, Machiavelli, all, Though eager, wait their secret coming, ripe, f et unresolv'd. The Cardinal But hush!" Here comes a doubtful friend. Eleonor', Watch well your lips. Enter Malocuore. • What passes in the town, ACT III. sc. 2. 257 Oood Signor Malocuor ? MaJ. May it please your Grace, The storm breaks not as yet ; but tliunder rolls At tlie horizon. Now the peace is over Between the Cardinal and our Sovereign Lord, His Eminence' agents stir the popular mind With satires on the adventuress, and psalms In praise of good Joanna, whose near death Must come of Yictor's triumph ! ^ The Capello Will not go down to future times a saint. If my lord's foes can help it. — Going hence, Left my lord Cardinal any charge for me ? Isa. None. But be watchful. Thou wilt hear from him Perhaps from Rome. Mai. I humbly take my leave. \_Exit — hy the side he had entered. The tivo princesses Exeunthy opposite side."' 258 BIANCA CAPELLO Scene III. Room in the Pitti Palace. As in Act II. So. I. GrRAND Duke. Don Pietro de' Medici. Duke of Bracciano. The Grand Dulcc seated. Brae. Your Highness has a twofold stake in this. Your sister is my spouse, your insolent favorite — So let me call him — is her open lover. Does Isabella's conduct shame your House, His prodigal pomp and measureless assumption Wound your chief nobles' pride, and tempt j^our people- To mutin}^, clamorous that they are not heard. Don P. My liege and brother : Bracciano's words Express his wish and motive : my resolve Is fix'd. Eleonora shall not make My name a byword. G. D. [rising.] That thyself hast done. Thy wantonness and license are unmatclrd. Nor canst thou fling one stone against thy spouse Should not rebound on thee. Don P. My luxury Is not fed from thy treasure. For my spouse, ACT III. .^c. 3. 259 • The Arcliducliess' wrongs ra-e not so secret. G.D. Ha! — Brother, the cleft betwixt us vaAvns too wide To need distension. This much is to say : I would not have the Duke of Alba wroth. Eleonora's death Don P. May drive him mad. What then ? it is my C|uarrel, none of thine. I reck not the Toledos. Mov'd I not Don Pedro in this matter ? With what boot ? He let not even his sire, Garzia, know. But screen'd his strumpet sister in my spite." The G. Duke walks up and down a few moments in anxious tJioughf, then, turning to the Duke of Bracciano : G. D. Orsini, will it not suffice for thee To shut up Isabella ? Cloister'd life Leaves her repentance, yet concludes thy shame. Brae. But gluts not vengeance. Sure, my liege o'erlooks The Orsini's honor. G. D. ITot so, Duke, not so. Have not the Medici shed blood enough Of kindred veins ? Wouldst thou exact this too ? She was my fatlier's darling. It is hard. Walks up and down with signs of agitation. Then, addressing hoth : 26(5 BIANCA CAPELLO For Boiiaventuri — Let me frankly speak : I trust to both jour honors — If I wink At his egregious folly, think ye then My pleasure goes with my forgiveness ? No, He should have died ere this ; but men would say — I slew him to ascend Bianca's bed. Don P. We will provide for that, so thou wilt promise To hold us not to answer for the deed. The G. D. stands tliougldfid for a moment. G. D. Pietro, our brother Don Giovanni died Like rigkteous Abel. The assassin fell, Stabb'd by his father, in his mother's arms. I will not imitate my brother's crime, Nor my stern father's vengeance. Brae. And for me ? G. D. My sister is thy spouse. I cannot punish What, plac'd as thou, I might myself have done. [lie hows in sign of dismissal, and Exeunt Don P. and Brac^ The Grand Duke lool:s after them a moment thovghtfuUi/j then moves slowJij toivards the chair — and scene changes to ACT III. SO. 4. 261 Scene IY. A magnificent room in the palace of Bonaventiiri. Enter Bonayenturi, leading in with great animation Sexxuccio, who follows with marlced reJuctance. Bonav. Welcome once more ! A thousand, thousand times, Welcome to Florence ! Make this house thy home. Command me every way. Why art so grave ? Thou v^ouldst have fled me in the public street. Couldst thou then think Pietro could be.else To Luca than Pietro ? Senn. Yea. And there Perhaps I did thee wrong. But elsewhere too ? Why didst thou flee from Yeniijc? That bad scheme Thou wouldst persuade me to ? Bonav. [changing color.'] Dost ask me hert^ If I be lawful master of my own ? Senn, No ; for thou art not. Thou didst steal thy wife. Bonav. Sennuccio, I bear much from thee. Senn. Is 't not True thou didst rob the old man of his child, Wlien thou didst suff'er me to think thou wouldst not? Bonav. But not to beggary I bore her. Lo ! 262 BIANCA CAPELLO Tlie amends is ample, and the sire appeas'd. This day thou sawest her brother, hke a prince Attended, ride in triumph to my house ; Where he now gladly dwells. Senn. The more his shame^ Enowing how it was got. Bonav. Thou dar'st ! Senn. Not say One word that is not truth. Wilt thou maintain This palace was given by the Duke to thee ? Bonav. I do. It is ray meed, and fits my place. I have risen in his service step by step. All know I am his Favorite. Senn. And thy wife ? Bonav. His G-raco adores her. But that hurts her not. Senn. No ? Yet they say in Florence Bonav. What is said ? Senn. [hesitating. tJienj shwlij. She is to Francis, what Camilla was To Cosmo ere he wed her. Bonav. 'T is a he 1 The atrocious slander of the Grand Duke's foes, Led by the intriguing Cardinal. Bianca From the first warn'd me — still would have me fl3^ Senn. Yet thou remainest? — [looJdng at him icith aston- ishment Let me see thy wife. Bonav. Gladly. Come now. Thou then wilt do me right. Thou then . ACT III. SC. 4. 263 Enter a Page. Well ? Page. Be not aiigry^ sir ! The note I was bearing to the Duchess, by mischance, Or stolen, is lost. I am sure 't is not my fault. I miss'd it only when I reach' d the door. Bonav. Thou art very careless. Get thee back at once. Tell to her Highness thy mishap, and say, I will be shortly with her Grace. [Exit Pcuje. — iSTow, Luke. [cibout to lead him off. Senn. Stay yet. What is this Duchess? I have heard Strange tales to thy dishonor. Men assert, The dissolute Isabella Bonav. [luith confusion, yet luitJi vanity. a freak ! Her Highness shows me favor. Senn. As she does Her lord's own kinsman. Have a care ! Thou goest Straight to thy fldl. Beware the Orsini ! Bonav. [impatiently.'] Come. As he is leading Sennuccio off^ Bonaventuri stops. Say nothing of this letter to Bianca. Senn. She then ? Bonav. Still loves me dearly. It might grieve her. Senn. And is that true? Then thou deserv'^t to fall. [Exeunt. 264 BIANCA CAPELLO Scene Y. Another Apartment in the Same. BiANCA discovered in a dejected attitude. Bian. And this is splendor ! this is pleasure ! this The world calls happiness! Would I could exchange All that is now for v/hat alone was ours, When in that humble home I toil'd all day, As never yet my father's handmaids toil'd ! Then slept I well ; niy cheek was pale indeed, But not with sorrow; for my husband's heart Was all my own. [Com.cs forward. And is it no more mine ? Haply, his vanity alone is mov'd. Wealth, luxury, the notice of the great, All swell his pride. Alas! he will not see There be distinctions which arc far from honor. Sure of my heart, Avhich well he knows is his. He glories in the Duke's mad passion, and counts Its harvest only, reckless that the world Deems it is gather'd from his partner's shame. He comes. And with a stranger. Enter Bonayenturi and Sennuccio. A grave face ACT III. sc. 5. 265 That pleases me. Bonav. Bianca, Avelcome bid To Luke Sennuccio, my old Venice friend. Bian. All of my husband's friends are welcome here. But a true friend, as I have heard you call'd, Sits next my heart. From heart then welcome, sir. [giving her hand, Bonav. Adieu, awhile. Bianca, I have wrung Consent from Luke to make liis quarters here. ^cnn. But Bonav. Nay, revoke not ! I shall hold thee bound. Keep him engag'd, love, till my spon return, [going. Bian. Why must thou go ? Must it be every night ? Bonav. 'T is nothing — a mishap. 'T is not for long. [ExAt hastily, Sennuccio holes after him luith indignation, and with j^tg on Bianca. Bian. [observing the loolx. Pray, mind me not. I ought not to be vex'd. I [Recovering with an effort. Sir, you are fresh from Venice. Left you then The Adriatic in my brother's train ? JSenn. JSTo, I have idled in my native town Some days. Bia7i. And came not once to see my lord ? Signer ! And he thought so much of you ! JSe7in. I knew not that his feelings were not chang'd. The gay, rich courtier, favorite of the Duke, Was not my fellow-clerk of former days. 266 BIANCA CAPELLO Bian. You do liim wrong ; his heart is still the same. Have you not found it so ? Senn. But could I know it ? What gave me right to press on his new fortune The reminiscence of a rusty time ? Bian. Old friendship, and the knowlege you had had Of his brave heart. Senn. Alas, Signora! when I saw in mien the outward man so chang'd, ISTeeds must I credit what the people said. Bian. What said they? Tell me 1 ^ Senn. Can you bear the truth ? Bian. Your quality of plainness I have heard of; Oft, for my husband's sake, have wish'd it near. I hear nought but from lying lips ; my eyes, They serve me, painfully and well. What say The folk of Bonaventuri ? Senn. Let me first, Signora, put a question. Is it true, That you have pray'd your husband flee from here ? Bian. It is, I think, my daily prayer. Senn. And why? A pause, Bian. Here is not safe for either him or me. ' Senn. [soJemnli/.'] It is not safe for either you or him. Bian. What mean you ? Ah ! 't is this that I would ask. What say the people of us ; of us both ? The wrong they do my honor can I help ? It is his will, and I submit to bask me ACT III. SC. 5. ?67 In the hot sunshine of the Court. But oh ! For the old shadow of my humble life ! Not for my father's roof — I Avould not be Other than wed, — but for the humble shadow Where liv'd my husband all in all to me, For I to him was all ! [iyee/95. Senn. And is it now Too late for this ? Bian. For him — not me. He loves Too well the pomp of this most wretched life. Senii. Wretched indeed 1 where every breath he draws Is deadly-perilous to himself, and blasts — Pardon ! — the good name of his spouse. jBian. 'T is franlc This thou hast heard. This is the common fame I too have learn'd to read in all I see ; For not a whisper yet invades my ears. I read it in the wicked eyes, that flash Malignant triumph when not bent on mine, Then suddenly, Avlien my gaze encounters theirs, Look meek as angels', or grow loving-soft. I know how busy are the Grand Duke's foes. They sow thick calumnies, and the poison-seed Will sprout when I am dead. Bianca's name Shall be enroU'd with all that in her sex Is impudent, artfal, — it may be, debauch'd ; And all because the husband that she lov'd Was weak. Senn. And selfish. 268 BIANCA CAPELLO Bian. No, no; say not that! His heart is good : he knows not that I suffer. Enter a Page. Page. The Signor Malocuore. Bian. Let him wait. [Page about to go. JSenn. Rather, I take my leave, [going. Bian. Go not, I pray. Beheve me, I have not Ivnown such relief, ISTot since this weary prison-life at Court. Or, if you Avill go, you will soon be back ? You will not disappoint my husband's hope And mine ? Senn. I will not : for you are sincere. Lady, for your sake, here a day or two I will sojourn, Bian. So you shall make these walls To me more sufferable. [Exit JSeiimiccio, lowing with an air of deep respect and sympathy. To Page.] Show the courtier in. [Exit Page. A brave good man ! How his unburnish'd gold Makes vile the tinsel of such knaves as this ! Enter Malocuore. Mai. Most excehent lady ! if I should intrude Bian. At this unwonted hour for him, what brings The Grand Duke's confidant ? ACT III. sc. 5. 269 Mai. The present matter Looks rather to your houor'cl spouse, than you. Taldng from his vest a letter. This Avriting- is his hand, I thiuk. The ackh'css Is known to you. [gives it. BiAXCA regards the letter ivith agitation; Malocuore Hatching her Luith ruaiignant ijltasure. Bian. [with an effort.'] How came this to your hands ? 2Ial. "What matters it ? Tlie purport you will find. Concerns you nearly^ Bian. [recovering^ and luitli sternness. Brought it you for that ? And hop'd you I would read it? [flings the letter on a table. Mai. Ilop'd you would, In justice to yourself, here ascertain The measure of your wrongs. Bian. [u-ith increasing sever itg and ivith scorn. That with your master I might consent to right them ! Mai. The redress Lies with yourself, Madonna. But, to know How grossly you are cozen'd by joiw lord Bian. Sir, touch him not ! It is a dastard's part To vilify the absent. Med. [discomposed. Then, gravely : I have done 270 BIAXCA CAPELLO My duty toward a lady whom I honor, My lord adores, and my own spouse holds dear. [about to go. Bian. And has your duty further prompted you To ope this missive ? [lifting it. Mai. [commanding himself. See, madam, for yourself. The silken thread, the seal, are still unbroken. Bian. Then shall they so remain. [She holds the letter in the flame of a candle. Mai. What would you do ? Bian. Destroy forever wdiat 't wquld shame my lord To think I kneAV of, and prevent in you The hope that in your absence I would read it. 'T is done. You know me better now. Good night. [Exit — with an expression of deep despite — Mai. Oh Bonaventuri ! And for thee, for this, I gave up all ! [clasping her hands in anguish. My heart ! my heart ! my heart ! [Buries her face in her hands^ soiling. And Scene closes. ACT III. SC. 6. 2 VI Scene VI. A sireetj having others crossing it. If is starlight On the right, a tvhiter portion of the shrf shows the moon to he rising. Enter Sgherro, Masxadiere, Scherano, Malandrino, and other Assassins. JSgher. Sclierano, Malandrino, get you quickly To the Orsini palace, for the task That 's laid out there. The knave that keeps to-night The gate will smooth your way. Whisper my name. — Make a clean job. You are to use no weapons. Ply but your fingers. Malan. Captain, let me stay. Here is more manly work. Sgher. But pays no better. Why, thou art nice ! Is not Bravone gone To Cafaggiolo, with the bold Lucchesan, To rid Don Pietro of his Spanish wife ? Malan, But hast thou men enough ? The fop, they say,- Is full of mettle ; and the two stout fellows. That follow him, look as they would use their swords^ JScher, One of them may. The other is bought off. '272 BIANCA CAPELLO Sgher. "Which makes us six to tvv^o. They must indeed Be devils to match us. To thy proper work. [^Exeunt ScJier. and Malan. Here comes a lantern. 'T is our game. This way. The Assassins secrete themselves in one of the cross streets. Enter BoNAVENTURi, preceded hy Brexna with a Janiern^ and followed hy Cagnotto: hoth icell-armed. ■Bren. We are beset ! [falling hach on the others. Bonav. Stand by me, men. Bren. {running off.l ISTot I ! They are two to one. \_Exit. Bonav. Base coward! Cagnot. Traitor rather: He has carried oiF the light. Bonav. We shall not need it. The moon is o'er the houses' tops enough To let us see their blades. They are on us now. Back to the wall, Cagnotto. During this dialogue, the Assassins, ■who had spread themselves out so as to p)revent escape^ come forward, Sgherro in advance, to the two, who stand with their oachs to the wall. Sgher. [to Cagnotto?^ Get thee gone. One is our man. . That is not thou. ACT iir. sc. 6. 21^ Cagnot. [cut'inj liim doiun.'] It is For thee. An Assassin. Thou hast made me, Captain, Thanks! . [wounding Cagnot. , who falls^ Cagnot. Master, I have done yon service. See me paid. . [Dies^ Bonav. {running the assassin tlirougli. 'T is done, m}^ brave. So, [disahling another. Halt, yon other three j What would you ? Money ? Take it. Let me hence^ And ten times o'er the amount is yours to boot. Ifasn. Coin thy blood into ducats if thou Al41t, 'T is in thy- veins alone we seek them. Thus. All three remaining Assassins rush on Boxayenturi at oncCj. luhOj after an animated resistance and repeated . wounds^ falls. Bonav. Bianca ! Thou 'rt — aveng'd ! JIasn. The Orsini too. Quiet? [leaning over the hodg. Assass. This will make sure, [raising his lueapon. Masn. Ko ! 'T is cnougli^ He has fought bravely, and our work is done. The Ifoonj now risen over the houses^ tops^ throws its light upon the group. The Assassins disperse, leading off their wounded comrade, and Scene closes. 274 BIANCA CArELLO Scene YII. In the Orsini Palace. The hedchamber of Isabella. Isabella asleep. Beside the led, on a stand, a taper and a silver hand-bell. Enter, a-tiptoe, ScHERANO and Malandrino. They speah in an wider-tone. Sche}'. Shall I awake her ? Malan. Ko, 't is better thus. Going to the bed.'] A most fair creature ! Scher. Let us wake her then, And hear her prayers. What ho ! Your Highness ! Up ! Isa. Who are you ? Ah ! \she starts up and rings the bell. Scher. Cry, ring. There are no ears. The Duke has taken especial care of that. Isa. [ivildlg.] Has my lord sent to murder me ? Malan. Even so. Isa. Let me escape 1 I am not fit to die. I will make j^ou richer far than he will do. My brothers too will heap wealth on you both. Scher. Which of them ? Don Pietro's wife even now By her lord's will is gomg where you shall go. ACT III. sc. T. 275 Isa. [sinl-ing hacl\] Accursed House of Medici ! Scher. Ay, so Say I! Amen! I would we were well-rid Of all the race. Isa. Have mercy ! Take this ring. *T is worth a thousand ducats. Malan. [taking it] 'T will not save you. Sche)\ Quick to 3'our prayers. Your lover by this time Is well carv'd up. Isa. Troilo Orsini ? Malan. No, Bonaventuri. Isa. [falling hack again.] God is just! Scher. [pressing a pillow over her face.] Why so; 'T is a good prayer. — Thou dost nought, Malandrino I Malan. [sullenhj. My hands were made to clutch an iron sword-hilt, Not to choke women. Seller. Only take their rings. *T is nice distinction ! Isa. Oh! Scher. "What! not yet done? Thou art strong, to be so fair. [A piciuse. He lifts the pillow. Still now. Malan. Come then. I 'd rather kill ten men than do this over. Exeunt — Malan. looking hack npon the heel, as he moves. 276 BIANCA CAPELLO Scene YIII. In Bonaventiiri's palace. As in Scene V. BoNAVENTURi lying on a couch. At Ins Jieadj one on either side, the Couj^t Phijsicians: Baldini and Cappellt. Btanca hnceling hy the Couch^ holding his hand clasped in hers. Sennuccio standing at the foot. Bian. Thou sbalt have justice ! Thou shalt hear it vow'd By his own hps! Thy spirit shall go down, . Unto the biding-place of all the dead, Appeas'd ! Vittorio will bring back the Duke. He has pray'd me test his friendship. I have kueel'd But once for favor ; I will kneel once more, And thy poor bleeding wounds, belov'd Pietro, Shall cry with rae for vengeance. — Bonav. [feebly. ] He will come — Too late : my life — ebbs fast. Bian. Have mercy, God ! Sustain him jet awhile, renow^n'd Baldini 1 Master Cappelli,^" is all art in vain ? Bald, [feeling the lurist of the hand, Bianca abandons to hinx. Alas, Signora ! all that art can do ACT m. SC. 8. 277 Is now to watch its own prognostications Fatally realiz'd. Capp. [feeling the other icnsf. If your honor'd spouse, Lady, has aught at heart he fain would utter, Let him be quick. This draught will give him strength, Tet a brief space. [Bonav. drinls. Bonav. Bianca! Bian. [kissing his hand. Speak, beloved ! Thy will shall be my law. Bonav. [reviving. Canst thou — forgive me ? Bian. Thou hast done no wrong; none that I ever ponder'd With aught but sorrow — sorrow for thyself. Bonav. Thou knowest not all. That night — we fled from Venice Puiise me. — Still higher. Doctor. Thank you. — Then, When on the stairs I left you — to make sure, ^ I said, that all was safe — I stole away " To — shut the portal of 3*our father's house, That barr'd return for aye. Breath! breath, God ! BoxAVEXTURT, panting. — A brief pause. Bian. Be sooth'd. 'T was passion made thee to forget Duty and honor. I have not repented. Save for my father's sake, to have fled from home. I have liv'd happy, till — till 278 EIAXCA CAPELLO Bonav. Till I wrong'd tliee. I am justly punisli'd. Seek not — to avenge me. Sennuccio Oh ! — The draught ! the draught, Cappelh ! Drinks again. Pause. Quickly ! My last sand 's running out. Bianca — Take to thy heart — Sennuccio. A true friend, He did abhor my — treachery. Let him be — Warmly commended — to my lord the Duke. He will — well serve him — as I — ne'er have done. Enter Tittorio Capello. Bian. [starting up eagerly. Is his Grace coming? Vitt. News had rcach'd the Palace, The Lady Isabella and the spouse Of Don Pietro suddenly were dead. — Bonav. Murder'd ! — Heaven's justice ! — Murder'd ! Falls hacJcj gasping^ info the arms of the attendants, Vitt. The Grand Duchess, Hearing, was seiz'd with travail premature, And cannot live beyond the hour. Tlie Physicians, already in excitement, hastily resigning Boxaventuri to Sennuccio, make for the door, hut pause on the sill, as Bonavexturi, springing up half-erect, exclaims to Bianca: ACT III. sc. 8. 279 Bonav. ^ly star Is set! I see — ascend the whitening sky, Lord of the duy — thy planet ! Hail, Grand Duchess ! Falls bad'. Thus — Bonaventuri's murder — is aveng'd — And thou — art rccompens'd. [Dies. Senn. It is all over. • ' With a piercing shrieh^ Bianca throws herself upon the hodij. The Physicians, one instant more lingering, hurry from the scene, ViTTORio, ivith hands folded, holes from the foot of the couch upon the corpse, and Sennuccio at the head bends over it, and slowly The Drop falls.'' 280 BIANCA CAPELLO AcTTnEFoURTII Scene I. A saloon in in the Pltli Palace. DoNXA Virginia and Sigxora Malocuore. Sign. How does your Highness like licr for a sister ? Virg. Well. Sign. "Well? But for a mistress? Virg. Even as much. I find hor nothing chang'd. Our Sovereign Lady Is the Signora Bonaventuri still. Sign. Ay, so I think her. She can never bo Aught but the widow of a banker's clerk, Virg. But that is not my meaning. She was ever More than the Favorite's wife. A noble lady, Who still has been the pattern of our sex, — Whose virtues have no rivals but her graces, — And those scarce match'd. ^ly brother lias done well. Did not the proud liepublic this day crown her Their royal daughter, she were still his peer. Sign. You do surprise mo. Have her witch's-arts Enchanted too your Highness ? ^' Virg. You forget, Signora !Malocuor, of whom you speak. The Grrand Duke's bride, Bianca, has no art3 ACT lY. SC. 1. 281 Save those wliicli nature tauglit lier. I had thought The rabblement alone boUev'd such tales. Sign. I did but jest. I was, knovv'S not your Grace? Donna Bianca's first and fastest friend. Well pleas'd am I to find your Highness' heart, So far as the young prince, Don Caesar's right Permits, is given so well. But may I ask, Does the Grand Duchess give hers in return ? Virg. She does to all who love her. Even her foes May boast her kindness. Sign. Yet your Highness' mother — Pray pardon me — is pining, cloister'd still. Yirg. That is my brother's fault, not hers. Sign. She has The power however to move that brother's heart. She us'd it for the Cardinal, her foe. Why not for you ? Virg. My mother was as kind. And for the Cardinal did what she has done, Open'd the royal coffers. Why has not The Cardinal, who pretends to love my mother, In gratitude mov'd the Duchess to this act ? Sign. Haply for that he knew it were in vain. Virg. I will essay. In this high festal time, Fill'd to the brim with joy and happy pride, The Duke's heart may flow over Sign. But not her3» Virg. [ivitJiout noticing the interruption. — And the rich superflux make glad the heart 282 BIAXCA CAPELLO Of Cosmo's lonely widow. — Do not stir. [as Sign, attends her goin^, I need you not, Signora. [Exit. Sign, [returning^ after seeing Virginia ceremonious'ly through the door.l ^Vhy not say : " Of the Grand-duchess dowager " ? Artless fool I That hast a child's heart with a woman's head. The daughter of Camilla, thou dost well To take Bianca's part : thy upstart dam Was such another mushroom, vain and proud, And beautiful as she. Come but the day That Ferdinand shall mount his brother's throne, The fate of the new Duchess is like hers, — Or hapl}'- worse, for the proud Churchman hates her. And yet — methinks — he loves her too, with love After his fashion, like his father's son. I must watch this. Camilla freed or not, St. Mark's new daughter shall not win thereby. [Exit, ACT IV. SC. 2. 283 Scene II.« A hall in the same. Enter J from opposite sides, Don Pietko and the AiicnEisnop of Pisa. The lait'.r stojjping ceremonioushj for the Prince to pass, Don Pietro goes up to him. Don P. Well met, Archbishop. 'T is a glorious day For the Ca23cllo. Archb. And for you, my lord ? Don P. Even as you see. I, with the bastard John, ^vlarshaVd the guard of honor at the Gate Right Avillingiy, By Heaven! it was a show I You, who with Abbioso and the rest Met at Firenzuol the pompous train," Can Avitncss that. And when the pageant pass'd Petween our glittering lines, amid the roar Of cannon, and the peal of all the bells, I thought how Cardinal Ferdinand Avould wince; And that was joy for me. Archl). Alas, my lord I That you will visit with this evil will Your pious brother I 28i BIAKCA CAPELLO Don. P. My pious brother! Is 't Of Cosmo's son you speak ? Or think you well I take for holy all a Churchman's cap, Mitre or hat may cover ? You do right Perhaps to love lum. 'T was his hand that laid The first step in your scale of fortune. "What Have I to thank him for ? That he was got Before me ? He has cause to dread, and hates, Bianca : she may bear Francesco sons. I have no cause for either fear or hate. Dies the Grand Duke without heirs male, upstarts My Cardinal brother, doffs the purple, and takes His coveted place. Sometimes he makes me blind To his dark views, and presses me to marry. But now and then comes daylight, and I see Clearly — as now. Archb. Your Grace will yet admit His Eminence is sincere, when once consider'd 'T is not the Duke's new marriage is oppos'd, But marriage with the Intendant's widow, unmeet For Cosmo's heir and Cosmo's ancient blood, Unmeet to follow union with the House Of Hapsburg. To succeed the late Grand Duchess, The Emperor Eodolph gladly had bestow'd A child of Archduke Charles. Such match had pleas'd My lord the Cardinal, Don P. Think you so ? What then ? What is our blood that it should scorn Capello*s ? Is it so many more than tenscore years, ACT IV. sc 2. 285 Since AveradOj son of the Lucclicsan, PortionVl his mighty fortune, got by trade, Between his six sons ? whence arose our House. Not then the triple flower-de-luce emblaz'd The middle roundle of our shield in chief. Our power was all, — nor that without dispute; Our rank a usurpation ; and our title ? Why, know not all men, fifty years agone Our l)cnst still ramp'd where gleams the lilied crown ? " Ood's might ! the throne of Clement's bastard son, ^Founded by perfidy on public wrong, Is all too new, that his unlineal heirs Should in the second generation vaunt A scarce-acknowledg'd royalty." 'T is trick I By holy John, as patent as this hand I Bid Ferdinand scorn Camilla ? Yet was she No equal of Bianca. Lo, this day, Adopting her the daughter of the State, The proud Republic crowns our Duchess queen, Peer of the Queen of Hungary and her Who sat in Cyprus. Why is he displeas'd ? Because her lord is Cosmo's eldest son. 'Camilla could not bear a male should be His senior. No, Archbishop, it is not The Archduchess Ferdinand would choose, but one He knows the Grand Duke would not choose. Arclib. My lord, I cannot credit this. The Cardinal Prince Is holy. 286 EIAXCA CAPELLO Don p. You may say so. Eut you are A man, Del Pozzo, of no common mind. You know the Cardinal is a worldly princo And an unmatcli'd dissembler. Erder Abbioso. Is 't not so, Good Bishop ? Ahh. Pleases it your Grace to speak Of what and whom ? Do7i P. Of my pure brother, pious Cardinal Ferdinand. Holdst thouliim a saint ? Ahh. My 02:)inion of the Cardinal is known. I love him not. Don P. With reason. Late at Pome He holp to make St. Peter's Yicar loath To hoist thee to the half Pistoian see : Ah, Abbioso ? Get thee quickly hence To the Lagunes. In thy new function there, Bland Secretary, serve thy liege lord Francis, Near the Pregadi.*' Here thou shalt not quarrel With Holy Churck Archh. I would, your Grace, that none Might quarrel here. Our sovereign is the lord Of his own will. What pleases him to do, In his born right, that should content us also. And Avith a virtuous and high-bred fair dame, As is our Lad}^, even the Cardinal must ACT IV. sc. 2. 287 In time be pleas'd. Don P. So let him be or not. Philip of Spain approves. Though Austria murmur, Spite the whole College and the Pope to boot Others will show like sense. — But time calls off. We must prepare us to attend in pomp Tire -solemn crowning of the titular Queen, And the rcnew'd high nuptials. How will like Your Cardinal that? Abb. He has sent one gentleman To watch the game and make report ; himself Too busy with affairs of Heaven to come. Z>on P. An impotent insult. Laugh you not, Archbishop? Archb. I knov/ nouglit impotent in the hand or head Of the lord Cardinal. {^Exit Don Pietro. Abb. No ; nor in his fangs. The Medici are venom'd serpents all. Archb. Have care, Ottavio ! I am known no traitor^ Or thou hadst never risk'd that thrust. Abb. I hope The new-create Grand Duchess may not prove Its point prophetical. Let her, I say. Beware the Cardinal Medici's venom'd fang! -" I Exeunt at opposite sides. 288 BIAXCA CAPELLO Scene III. The Grand Duchess's Apartment in the same. BiANCA, magnificenthj arrayed, hut without the royal mantle. Virginia, tvho has her hand in Blanco's. On their ri'jhtj a little behind, Bianca^s daughter Pellegrina U'i'yi her husband Eentivoglio. On the left, at a like dis- tance, SiGNORA MaLOCUORE. Enter Capello, luith the Patriarch o/Aquileia. Behind them, Vittorio. Bian. It shall be so, Yirginia. Doubt it not. Virginia retires beside the Signora — on luhom she looks triumphantly. O my dear father ! Uncle ! May I deem This day makes full requital for the past ? ^' The sorrow that I caus'd thee, the dishonor Brought, though I meant it not, upon thy House ? Cap. Tso more of that, my child. 'T was not thy crime. The good Sennuccio has disclos'd me all. Know'st thou, Bianca — did thy brother tell thee, How I had hung thy picture all with black, That day I lost thee ? how the veil was drawn, When the Duke's favor shining on thy spouse ACT IV. SC. 3. 289 Made him thy equal ? But when Sforza came^ Praying- the Senate to receive as son Of Venice the Great Duke himself; and when, Like Catharine Cornaro, thou wast made The Child of the Republic, and a Queen ; Then did I cause a crown surmount the frame. But 't was not needed : Titian, had he liv'd, Had pointed to the air of native pride "^ That dignifies thy beauty, and had said : ^' Superfluous decoration ! jSTature gave A better diadem. And that I drew. Lo, where in every trait the destin'd Queen I " Is it not true, Grimani ? my child ! Thou wast my darling ever, my best joy ; Thou art my glory now, my House's pride. Pair. The will of Heaven works oft by humble ways. That jewel his bold subject stole and wore The Duke hath made the centre of his crown. Keep thou, gem, thy lustre without flaw ! So shall the people bless thee. — Francis comes. Enier tJte Gkaxd Duke, attended hy Sexnuccio. The G. D. is spJendidly attired^ hut luitliout his roles of state. Senxuccio also, Wee all the other persons present^ is in fall costume as for some extraordinary occasion of Court-festival. Cr. D. Good morrow, friends. — Bianca ! My fair Queen ! — 290 BIANCA CAPELLO Senxuccio, icitli Capello, cDc, tahes his place ivith the other personages in the hachgroimd. How well tliis pomp becomes thee ! Thou art now A jewel fitly set. And yet, believe, Thy lustre shines not more m Francis' eyes Kow than that morn, when, from the little window, Like a rich picture in a sorry frame, That sweet face dawn'd a moment on his gaze ; ISTot more ador'd than when, a twelvemonth since, Thy heart first open'd to the houseless love That long had knock'd in vain to be let in. ■ Yet do I joy, for thy sake, joy for mine, ^^ Joy for the oJTspring, hope of which I nurse . For my throne's heritage, our love's glad contract This day shall ratify before the world. And thou, whose worth needs not the gilt of rank, Shalt by thy country, even for that worth, Be dower'd with those distinctions which alone The world will value. Thy true crown is here. \]iis hand 07i his hreast. Bian. There will I strive to wear it. But, my lord. We who live in the world, and for the vrorld Live chiefly, must our living even so rule That the world shall not say we live not well. That w^e do right, should satisfy ourselves. And may, we hope, the Almighty; but, for men. One thing is needed more, — that, doing right, We seem to do so. "■* When Your Highness' brother, The Cardinal Ferdinand, found me at your side ACT IV. SC. 3. 291 111 your sick hour, not knowing wc were wed, His wrath was rous'd. Even so the hard-judging world, Untaught, had frown'd on my best act of duty ; And your own love, that should have rais'd its object, While blessing, would have robb'd her of her fame. But for this cause, believe me, dear my lord, Bianca had been happy unacknowledg'd, Blest in thy love, content to be thy spouse. " Twice happy am I now my fatherland. Not for my merits,- but to honor thee. Hath given me, for the thousand gifts I ov^-e Thy matchless love, to make some small return, Lifting me to thy side more like thy mate. Thou shalt not find me derogate. Was I aught As humble Bonaventuri's w^ife, I shall Be ten times more, high-plac'd as Francis' spouse, Endeavoring so to live, as not to shame Thy crown, nor that which Venice this day gives. G. D. But worthier in thyself, than didst thou v\'ear A crown imperial. Come ; the hour is nigh Shall tell the world, not me, what thou deserv'st. Sweet, let us to the robing-room. Bian. Yet first I have a grace to sue. Wilt grant it, love ? G. D. What canst thou ask, that Francis will not grant? Bian. Virginia's mother, twelve long years confin'd In a dull cloister : set her free, my lord. And make Virginia happy, and herself. 292 EIAXCA CArELLO G. D. Knowcst thou -what this mother was ? In league With Ferdinand, using aye in his behoof The power o'er Cosmo's doting- heart she never Once turn'd to good account, fomenter still Of discord 'twixt us brothers, and betwixt Our sire and us, now let her out thou add'st Another to thy secret foes and mine. But I have never yet deny'd thee aught. I will not now, this happy hour. — Virginia ! That day thy hand is given, as thy heart, To the young lord of Este, shall thy mother Revisit the gay world. Let her beware So to employ her freedom, that the gift Be not revok'd. Nay, kneel not unto me; Kiss the Grand Duchess' hand. And bid thy mother Remember it is she unbars the door, Not Ferdinand. — ^5 YiRGixiA attempts to Jcneelto Bianca, and Jciss her Jianclj Bianca draws her to her hosomj and kisses heron the forehead. Ah, gentle love ! — Noav come. Exeunt Omnes: the Gr. D. and Bianca leading ; behind them the Patriarch and CArELLo; behind these Yirgixia and Vittorio ; the7i Pellegrixa and Bextivoglio; andjlnally Sexnuccio and Sigxoka Malocuore. ACT IV. sc. 4. 293 Scene IV. A cabinet in tlie Cardinal d^ Medici's palace at Rome. The Cardinal, walking to and fro ivith signs of discomposure. Malocuore, standing. Card. Go on. Mai. I fear your Eminence will lose Your patience. Card. Patience ? Hast tliou liv'cl so long To wear a beard, and know'st not, what affects The heart with sudden sorrow, or wounds self-love, Falls with as passionate impulse on the sense As news that flatters vanity ? By how much Hate is of more vitality than love, By so much lend I now the readier ear In that thy theme offends me. On ! go on ! Mai. When the Ambassador, Count Mario Sforza* Of Santa Flora Card. Spare me. ISTeed'st thou specify His titles ? Add then, Francis-Mary's minion, And the Yenet his Venice woman's tool. Mdl. — Brought back the State's diploma of paternity, My lord despatch'd the Prince, Don Giovannino, To thank the Senate. Card. A boy but twelve years old! 294 EI.VNCA CAPELLO Apt messenger for sucli unworthy errand ! Mai. Then, Two of her foremost senators were sent By Venice, Tiepolo and Michieli, To invest her daughter with the parent's rights. With these ambassadors came ninety nobles, Both of the sea-girt city and the main ; Such a proud troop as never the Repubho Even in her pahiiiest fortune sent before. What but hke pomp should answer it ? The Court, The Cabinet, all Florence boasts of great Or noble, throng'd to meet the imposing train ; Whereof, not least conspicuous for glad zeal, Shone out my lord, the Prince, Don Pietro. Card, [stopping ill his ivalk.'] Ah! Say'st thou ? 'T is most hkely. In an under hut hitter tone, and re- suming his luallc.'] Renegade ! Afal. All the Capello's house and kin were there, From the G-rand Duchess' sire and uncle down To tl?e last gentleman that boasts their blood. You had thought them monarchs, conquerors at the least. Thunder'd the cannon, and the bells rung out From every tower, as the Sovereign's guests Enter'd the Sovereign's Palace. Card. Who? Mol The House And Idn of Senator Capello. ACT IV. sc. 4. 295 Card. All? Mai. To the last gentleman that boasts his blood. Card. What! IsTot enough to house the sire and brother? Must the herd batten \Yhere my father fed ? Hal. The sire goes back : but not the brother ; Avho gets A pension his male issue will inherit, — His daughter to be dower'd. Card. Holy Paul I This passes all endurance. What ! must I, His father's son, be scanted and put off In my emergence, that a foreign vermin May pierce the fisc at Avill ? — Vriiat more ? Mai. 'T is said^ The expenses of the marriage, reckoning all, Erom the first mission to the crowning-rite, Will make three hundred thousand ducats told. Card. That while a dearth is pressing sore the land, And his born subjects pine for simple bread ! Lord, how long shall the crown'd sons of pride Abase their loan'd prerogatives, and make The sad earth doubt Thy justice ? MaJ. And for one Not meriting such fortune. Card, [roiigldy.] Who is that? By Heaven, thou ! Correcting himself.] Thou mistak'st me much. I meant Not to impute the fault to her. Mai. [iiisimiatingJi/.] I thought Your Eminence had hated the Grand Duchess. 296 BIAXCA CAPELLO Card. Should that prevent my knowledge of her due ? Her natural gifts of To the tale. Proceed. Mai. '^ The Ambassadors exprcss'd the Senate's joy, That the two cities, henceforth close afiin'd Card. Pass all that, — as in time it all will pass. Mai xVnd giving to the daughter of the Stafe, In the paternal name, a most rare jewel Card. And tliat. Come to the crowning act. Mai The crown ? Card. Conferr'd this day, I think, Mai. About this hour, In the Great Hall, most lavishly adorn'd. Before the Eight and Forty of the Senate, The Grand Duke, on his throne, receives the Duchess, Who enters royally array'd, led in By the Ambassadors, the wdiole gorgeous train Of Venice nobles following. She takes Her seat beside him. The diploma redd, And ratify'd, of the conceded honors. The diadem is set on her fair brow, The nuptial ring is interchang'd anew. And, Avearing still the crown, the titular Queen, Her lord beside her, marches to the Church, The heroine of a triumph Card, \_musuighj, and resuming his luaJh 'T is too late Now to regret. I should have lik'd to see it, Afal. Ay, it will prove a rare burlesque. Card. Burlesque! ACT IV. 9C. 4. 207 Wliat mcan'st thou ? She will well become the crown — I mean in beauty and in gentle pride. MusihfjJij. Methinks I sec her now ; her gliding step, "Which scarce Avas motion, settled to a pace 'Of quiet majesty ; her radiant smile, So proud *yet sweet withal, though beaming still, Yet less dillusive in its light; her eyes Ah, there the ethereal fire, which Earth subdues "With its most tender passions ! that soft flame Which might convince an infidel, for there The Soul and Heaven give out immortal signs During tins spol^en meditation^ the Cardinal has turned his back on Malocuork. Now starting, as if recollecting Jtimsclfjie faces suddenly about and sees Malocuork watching him intentlg, tcho at once drojjs his eges; and the Cardinal resumes. Thon scem'st to think it strange I can admire "What all men must admire. 'T is not to love. Besides this lady still has been for me Most amiable and wooing. Mat. T have thought But pardon me, your Grace. I did forget. Card. What wouldst thou say? I pardon no reserve. Mai Yet, my lord's station, and our Holy Church Card. Is 't that ? Were not the Apostles flesh and blood? Thou 'dst speak, I see, of me and of Biaiica. 298 BIA^X'A CAPELLO What hast thou seen ? Speak out ! Thou hast thought — thou saidst — Mai. I have thought at times, m}- lord, your brother's spouse MeasurM your lair pi'oportious Avith an eye Of capable relish. The Grand Duke is comely; But my loid Cardinal's youth and finer features Card. Thou art a serpent. Thiuk'st thou I am Adam? I hanker not for the Forbidden Fruit. Dream'st thou I do ? Mai. My lord would not, I sec, Admit me to his confideuce. Card. Ilecausc I have no seci'ct. The Venetian is Mv i)rothei-"s spouse. That he has made this choice Displeases me, because it v.Tongs our House, And mars its inlluence with foreign Courts. Thei-efbi-e I view her with such evil will As may beseenr a Christian and a prince Of Holy Church. I do admire her too, — Esteem her worthy even of a ciown, Were that not what it is. But love her ! — I Forgive thee, Maloeuorc. We will talk Further anon. [Exit Malocuor. The Cardinal looJxs after him a moment icith an expression of triumph and disdain. Make thee my confidant I — I will, so far as suits me ; not so far ACT IV. sc. 4. 299 As make thee, dog I my master. Xo, let fools Unlock their hearts to knaves. The key to mine Lies only in my keeping, and shall ever. — And to betray a love I shame to own Even to myself! Xot that Bianca is My brother's spou?e. ''' My father lov'd my sister : And his last Avife raethinks was fond of me. And but I Avas too young, perhaps in turn I had lov'd her too. I put her though to use. She was my reservoir ; I drew from her The gold Francesco could not, and for which He hated me. But I should shame to own I love his Favorite's widow, when for like love I scorn him, as I hate him doubly too. If aught indeed can double hate like mine. "^ And her too I shall use — if not for pleasure, For profit. What imply those words that came, "Wrapp'd with the picture I had pray'd to have? Talrs, from a draiuGr of an open tvritlng -table ^ a miniature^ incased^ and a letter. Opening the latter he appears to read in it. Then: ^ She cannot live without me f [pause. — Lives in me f [pause. Is it the simple passion of her nature Lends her these phrases; for her way is loving And tender unto all ; or ? We shall see. This coronation over Would the crown 300 BIAXCA CAPELLO Were fire to burn lier temples, tliongh I would So gladly ieel them beat against my heart! This over, she shall see me at her wish, [pause. '" jSTo, it were better first to wTite. I will — Will test her kindness. She shall use her hold .*)n my weak brother's heart to unlock his treasure. I need fresh means. His hand, which never shuts "When a show 's promis'd or an artist sues, Closes, perhaps instinctively, to me, As if he felt his gold would prop the lever That shakes his throne. Ah ! when that throne shall crumble To pieces at my touch, to be rebuilt For a more resolute ruler; when the wrong Which nature did me when she made him hrst. Though I was meant for government As yet See I but darkly what my soul bids do To rectify this wrong ; but what I do Shall be so done 't will not need doing over. When I throw off this purple which I hate But where wilt then fJiou be ? [gazing on the miniature. Or being, luhafj What wilt thou then be? — Mine thou shalt be, or! I hate thee as I love thee [l-issiug i^^^'^'sionafelg the glass.]: 't seemeth now, As I gaze on that proud, yet winning smile, Which woos yet mocks me, seems it to me now, As I could kiss and choke thee at one breath. ACT lY. SC. 5. 301 Accurs'd enchantress ! Such my tools have made The credulous crowd believe thee. And thou art ! Thou art ! But thy enchantments are all here. Gazing on the miniature a moment, lie closes the case, and walks up to the luriting-tablej to replace ifj and Scene closes. Scene Y. Florence. The Great Hall in the Piiti Palace. The Grand Duke, icearing the grand-ducal crown and roheSj and seated on his throne, surrounded hy the Senate of Forty-eight, and the Magistrates in a semicircle on either side. Within the crescent, on his right, Don Pietro, the Duke of Bracciano, Don C^sar d' Este, Arch- Bisnop of Pisa, Abbioso, 'CA CArELLO 361 not mistake the pictured expression, is such as docs not accord with low profligacy, much less with the despicable traits which Galluzzi imputes to her, who indeed thereby contradicts his own description. "Assai potenti," he has said, speaking of Bianca when Francesco was yet but Prince, " erano le attrative di questa giovine, poiche oltre i meriti della bellezza aveva ancora ottenuto dalla natura un ingegno tale che somministrava tutte le arti per renders! 1' arbitra del suo amante. Le grazie, la vivacith congiunta con una certa faconcUa,^^ ec. (pp. 87, 88, t. c.) This fascination the pubUc were tauglit to consider tlie result of magic arts and of philters ; and the eulogist of the Cardinal Orand-duke has not hesitated gravely to record the scandal. See in Ajij^endix II. " y. 1576," 4th paragraph. Titian, who (as said in Act I. 8c. 4.,) actually painted Bianca, (See Append. III.) died three years before the point of time in the text. 23.— P. 290. Joy for the offsirring, hope of which I nurse— } From this line to the close of the passage, the Stage will substitute : For my throne's heritage, thou this day shalt be Dower'd by thy country with those honors which The world will value. Thy true crown is here. 24.— P. 290. When Your Highness- brother— '\ Omit from here to *' But for tills cause,"— seventh line below. of the three princesses took airay suspicion from her living in the Palace. Had Bianca yielded her favors already, there had been no need of a private mar- riage, and if her amour with the Duke were notorious, there could have been, in the first place, no occasion for avoiding suspicion, and secondly, if attempted by such an artifice it would not have been successful. Xot to say, that a known mistress of the Grand-duke would not have been appointed guardian to his female childien, although, as in the case of Mad. de Genlis, a liai>son simply suspected would offer no impediment. But all argument falls to the ground if it be fact that Don Antonio de' Medici, whether really her son or only imposed upon the Grand-duke as such (as Galluzzi would have it), was publicly recognized as ille- gitimate. See Appendix II. y. 1576 ; also ih. note 24, p. 408. 362 NOTES TO 2.5.— P. 291. TldIcs lia2)py^ etc.] Omit liere five lines. 2G.— P. 298. Tlie Ambassadors — ] Omit from here to "About this lioiu'," (niiitli line below.) 27.— P. 299. My father, etc.] Omit to " But I should shame to own." 28.— P. 299. And her too—'] Omit to "This coronation over,"— seven verses. 29.— P. 299. She cannot live., etc.] The most difficult point for mo to get over in the biased statements of the hostile historians is Bianca's expressions to the Cardinal at the close of the y. 1580 (in a letter) : " lo vivo pill a lei che a me, poiche vivo in lei, per il che senzaleinon posso vivere, ec.^''—{Granduc. ii. 344, ) See, besides the CardinaVs own doubts in the succeeding lines, what turn Bianca is made to give to them in Act V. Sc. I. They are however too extravagant, I will not say to be genuine, (for I have known at least one spmtual and viva- cious woman of high breeding and of proud temper, and who possessed that very fluency of language which Galluzzi ascribes to Bianca, to indulge in quite as extravagant terms of affection in vrriting to a stranger to her blood, neither husband nor lover, and with even less motive)*— but too extravagant to seem genuine ; and the malice that did not hesitate to blacken her in other respects would find no com- punction against such a counterfeit. But supposing them to be truly of Bianca's writing, and that they are not to be interpreted by any vivacity of disposition and vanity of eloquence, what follows ? That there was more than a legitimate attachment between the Cardinal and his brother's wife. And this is to concede the whole point in dis- cussion, and to justify, even historically, the part I have, equally with the romancer (or romancers,) assigned to the Cardinal. V. Ap- pend. I. * One tiling is worth observing ; such persons cannot be sincere. If Ehmca dicJ write that letter, she was wanthig in candor. EIA2sXA CAPELLO 363 30.— P. 300. Xo, it were better^ etc.] Omit to ''As j'et,"— eleventh line below ; then omit tlie words '' To rectify this wrong." 31.— P. 309. From taint by such a traitor— traitor, ay .'] Which may read, at the option of the Theatre : From taint by such a traitor. Card. Traitor! Bian. Ay! 32.— P. 310. Death! ^ I should sink to this!] Or, avoiding the ellipsis : "Death ! Am I come to this !" 33.— P..320. She might have had, etc.] This was his mistress, a handsome woman, whom he had brought back with him from Madrid in 1584. The Prince in his profligacy seemed to expect that she Avould be admitted at Comt, and was displeased when Bianca, as was natural and proper, refused to receive her. V. Granduc. II. 3S7. 34._p. 322. The Pope gives dispensation — ] See A2:>pcndix II. at y. 1585. Immediately before the verse (in Act III. Sc. 4.), " T\'hen I throw off this purple which I hate," occurred in the first MS. the following three verses. They were superfluous, therefore weak. I introduce them here simply to illus- trate the text above, and, historically, the Cardinal's ambitious and intriguing character, which was in fact the character of a true chui'ch- man where ambitious, — profligately so. The Pope is my creation, hence my creature. For he sees not, weak man, that not of love, But for my ends, I help'd to heave him up. 33.— P. 326. Virought by the Duchess and a Jewish hag Confeder- ate in her sorceries, etc.] See Appendix II., y. 157G. 36.— P. 32S. Waiter brings wine and glasses, is paid and retires.] 364 NOTES TO But to keep up the life and variety of the j^iciure in the background, he moves about in the discharge of his functions, carrying flasks etc. to the different tables. — The Stage requires hints of this kind, but I am sorry to tliink is not likely to observe them. 37.— P. 331. JH'ot CinVs surgery — ] Cini \Yas the Cardinal's physician. 38. — P. 332. Whose lightning, hurilcd by the lion's cub, etc.] Or, for the Stage : "Whose lightning, hurl'd by Peter Leoncil, Whom men call Cardinal Farnese's son, Frightens the confines with its devious blaze. *' Lion's cub" is an allusion to the name Lioncillo (leoncello.) This miscreant was actually at the head of the large number of men named in the text. The historian tells us, that brigandage and assas- sination had come to be considered knightly service. As now-a-days in Italy the Church has been, from political motives or from indiffer- ence to the public welfare, the great supporter of such wretches, so in those times it was the Church-feudatories chiefly that had them in service. See Aj^pend. 11. y. 1580, IT 2, — also y. 1575, IT 2. As men above the vulgar herd joined these blood-bands, the language at least attributed to the assassins in the text is not greatly beyond their degree, whatever may be thought of their sentiments. 39. — P. .''.32. They put wise Ilachiavelli to the rack — ] This was nearly a century before. Machiavelli died in 1527, sixty years before the time of the Scene. But the condition of things was not much changed from that of his troubled day, and his was a name not easily to be forgotten, any more than that of '' Antichrist" (Clement VII.) 40.— P. 337. Sign,] For the Stage, commence: ''Donna Virginia absent etc. ? " 41.— P. 338. Then seriously.] Omit to "my well-loving spouse," and read the passage : EIAXCA CAPELLO 365 Then seriously, thus. My loving spouse Seem'd etc. After which, make the last two linos of the part : In the blue hangings of the SilverM Room, more pleasM To glad etc. 43.— P. 339. Who lias not seen — ] Omit to "It is said," ninth line below, reading the verse : To cloud the unwary brain. 'Tis freely said. Then omit, from "Did yom' Grace,-' thirty-one lines, reading thus, from the commencement of the alteration : And made your parting mournful. Yijg. Yet I doubt The Duchess'' heart etc. Or in fine, omit, in the performance, the entire Scene, which was written merely to interpose time between the revelation of Malacuor's design and its perpetration. But our English Stage (as I have else- where had occasion to remark) sets time and space at defiance ; and the accustomed audience rarely protests against any violation of probability that saves them from fatigue. ADDITION TO NOTE 18. The influence of a family of wealth will depend greatly upon its numbers and Its ramifications. Galluzzi, as an evidence of the potency of the Medici, records this fact, that even after the pestilence of 1348, there were no less than fifty males of that House surviving. Inirod. xi. Without this numerical preponderance, it may be questioned whether, notwithstanding their riches and their talents, their ambition could have made head against the determined opposition of their rivals and of the better lovers of their country. Of the Capelli, Bern. Segni, who wrote under Francesco, particularizes the am- bassador Carlo, mentioned in the text {Act. I. So. IV.), who, he tells us, raised in Florence a monument to his horse, which was standing in his, the historian's day. Siorie Fior. vol. i. ed. Milan, (1805, in 8°) p. 225. We may suppose the Car- dinal Grand-duke, in his anxiety to remove every object that might recall the memory of Bianca {Append. II. prope fin.), ordered this monument, whatever it was, to be destroyed. Another Capello (Vincent) is mentioned by the same his- torian as being General of the Venetians. lb. ii. 151. \: APPENDICES Tlie foUoicing observations, intencled at the time as the sole appendix to the play, were loritten six years after the completion of the latter^ ichen I had forgotten that I had so fully illustrated in my text evenj particular that tears upon the story, as to render any comment or ex- planation needless. Still, as a brief analysis of the historic question involved, they may not be uninteresting to the general reader. The footnotes are of the date of the transcription. For many of the incidents, and even for tlie groundwork or sug- gestive type of some of the characters in Bianca Capello, I am largely indebted to the romance of the same name by A. G. Meissner {Leipz. in ICto, 1784), who probably obtained his particulars from the collec- tion of Celio Malespini of Verona, Part. II. Isov. 84, which I have not seen, but iind particularized by Galluzzi as conspicuous among several written on Bianca's fortunes. (1) (1) Granducato, ii. p. S5. The historian speaks of Mondragone and his wife as intermediary, in the romance, between the Grand-duke and Bianca, but, with his usual inconsiderate or malevolent bias, only to cast a slur upon the latter by remarking that the Duke had found no need of go-betweens. Francesco might have, and, with still more likelihood, would have found the need, in his position, even were Bianca the " vile seducer " that Galluzzi and his copyists make her» 368 BIANCA CAPELLO The character of Biauca will always perhaps be a subject of historical doubt. The weight of authority is against her. She was probably weaker than I have made her (2); but I do not believe she was de- praved or grossly criminal. The historian of the Grand-duchy of Tus- cany has spared no pains to render her atrocious. His large work, But that is not the point. Ifondragone is introduced by that very name, and ■with his wife, in that very function, by Meissner. He is the Jialocuore of the Tragedy. In B.oscoq's Italian Novelists, vol. III. (Lond. in S°. 1S36), some specimens are given of Celio, but not the story of Bianca. Celio Malespini, who held, ■we are told, the post of Secretary to Francesco, is supposed to have begua •writing his numerous little novels soon after 1575. P.oscoe translates after the edition in 4to. Ve7iesin 16Q9. " In many instances,'' he says {Infrod. ibi,) "the mention of persons and of particular times and places, is introduced. It is thus he alludes to Bianca CappcUo, afterwards consort of Francesco de' Medici, grand duke of Tuscany, whose nuptials were celebrated in 1579, and are very minutely described by the novelist." — It will depend upon the time when his novel was written and the place where published whether the whole story is told by Celio or not. If the above-mentioned edition was the first, we may well suppose it, for the Cardinal Grand-duke died in that year, and the volume it will be seen bears the imprint of Venice. — Meissner would seem to refer to some unedited memoir, 6ome private scandalous chronicle, as the chief source of his materials. " Jenes benifne Manuskript von der geheimen Geschichte des Hauses Medizes, welches Orrery nutzte, und worauf Sansovino, nebst noch manchem anderm baute, mag allerdings f.'.r den wahren Ilistoriker und Biographen uichtzuHnglich sicher seyn ; fur den Ilalb-Koman hat es eine trefliche Eigenschaft, — Interesse. " Vorerinn. "Was this done to conceal his obligations to the Italian romancer ? (2) See subnote on p. 360 sq. Bonaventuri was killed in 1570. The Duchess Joanna died in 1578. In all that interval, a widow, besieged by the passionate assiduities of a royal lover, and surrounded by courtly examples both of unchas- tity and of the indifference with which it was regarded, in an age of very general profligacy, she would have been indeed a Penelope (as Isabella, calls her in mockery,)— no, more — if she had not yielded. But there are two sides to the story of Penelope as well as of Bianca, and some ancient writers J:ave made the wife of Ulysses the common mistress of all her suitors. Cs. App. II, note 5. APPEXDIX I. 369 written expressly to glorify the duchy and its petty sovereigns, (3) enters into details which waken more than incredulity, and few thoughtful persons can rise from his discolored and distorted portrait- ure of the fair Venetian and his carefully toned miniature of the Cardinal Ferdinand, without a conviction that the pictures in their general effect might change places. The Cardinal, a false brother and a bad man (4), in a family where murder and incest were familiar crimes, had cast a longing eye on the grand-ducal crown, which the physical infirmity of his brother's spouse made it more than probable would one day be his own. When Bianca, by no other means that I can see or suppose, than the magic of her beauty and her manners, ascended the throne as the legitimate successor of Joanna, all his schemes seemed to be blown to the winds. (3) And -written under tlie patronage and by the command, as he himself ex- presses it, of the then reigning monarch, a younger son of the House of Austria, whose lofty name he puts upon the very title-page, withholding reverently his own. The favor of this prince (Peter-Leopold, afterwards Emperor of Austria,) would certainly not be forfeited by an endeavor to blacken the character of the Arch- duchess' rival. And here I may as well state, in preparation for the whole of the Appendix fol- lowing, that Galluzzi claims to have drawn his material exclusively from the Medicean Archives, . . ^'tutte estratte fedelmente dalV ArcJihno Jfediceo.'''' In the same brief advei tisement, however, he alludes to the existence of popular fallacies as to certain events, and tells us he enters into minuteness of detail there- in, for the very purpose of correcting these errors of belief and of tradition, — of course by the Archives. Kow, are the Archives infallible? Are they, in fact, entire ? or in their entirety, veritable ? Would the Cardinal have been likely to leave anything that would tend to inculpate him in the matter of Eianca and the Grand-duke, or not to give prominence as well as permanence to inventions which would account morally for his detestation of the former, and palliate, with most men, the atrocity of his unchristian and unprincely efforts to blacken for ever her memory ? He had the power to tamper with the xirchives, and he was not a man to leave it unnsed. Consult, in Appendix II., Note 12, also 19. (4) See below, in Note 15, what Sismondi says of him. 16* 310 Bi a:\ca capello And when finally, as Grancl-duchess, she was about to become a mo- ther, he resolved to rid himself by one blow of both obstacles to his ambition. Bianca's great v/eakness, as well as 'doubtless one of her principal attractions, seems to have been a benevolent amiability. She did her best at all times to reconcile her lord with the Cardinal, whose profligate intrigues and importunate avarice had alienated his clucal brother. And she succeeded only too well. The Cardinal is invited to a banquet. He refuses to partake of the blancmange which was his inviter's favorite dish, and when both Bianca and the Grand- duke, after eating freely of it, are seized at the very table with pangs that denoted poisoning, he prevented all assistance from being ren- dered to either, had them shut up indeed in a disfurnished and gloomy chamber of the villa, and took measures even before their death to secure possession of the fortresses and put down by armed force any attempts that should be made to prevent his becoming master of the city, (o) Proclaiming loudly that the Dake and Duchess had attempted to poison him and by mistake had swallowed their own bane, he re- tracted this absurd invention by declaring there was no poison in tho case at all, that the Duke and Duchess had both died of a surfeit. (6) As this story was more absurd, if possible, than the other, since tho deaths were nearly simultaneous, and the preceding symptoms had indicated some sudden and violent action upon the vitals, he had tho bodies opened. Now at that day science had not advanced so far as to make the detection of the secret administration of poisons, espe- cially if of a vegetable origin, in all cases possible. Indeed even at the present time, it is known, and we have authority for the assertion, that there are venene substances whose operation cannot be traced after death. (7) And this must be particularly the case, to ocular in- (5) There was no hesitancy on his part. The commander of the citadel at Log- horn showing some unwillingness to acknowledge his authority, the Cardinal had him hung. See Appendix II., Note 24. (6) See Appendix II., y. 15S7, second paragraph. (7) I have mislaid a newspaper quotation from a lecture bj'our town-mm Prof. APrEXDix I. 371 spection, where the poison has been slow in its effects, because, in the first place, of its probable elimination from the system, (8) and, second- ly, of the liability to confound its indications with those of natural dis- ease. Now, if the account which Galluzzi gives of the tertian fever with its vehement t]iirst{d) which seized the Duke and Duchess so sin- Doremus, beaiing directly upon this point. Eut it will be sufficient to cite the following, in respect to metallic poisons, which can be traced : — ... " It is known, that three or four grains of arsenic, a quantity insiifficient to produce any striking local changes, will destroy a person under all the usual symptoms of poisoning by this substance. The same may be said of corrosive sublimate : — three or four grains of this poison icovld siiffice, to kill an adv.lt; and yet^ivom this small quantity, ^Ae local changes woxdd he barely percep- tihle.'" Taylor, 07i Poisons in relat. to Med. Jxir. &c. (Phil. ed. 8°. 3848) p. 27. And again : '• That death should ever take place in poisoning, without any physical changes being produced on the body, is not more wonderful than that it should occur under attacks of tetanus or hydrophobia, in which diseases, as is well known, no post-mortem appearances are met with sufficient to account for their rapidly fatal course." {Jb^ But this is still more complete : . . . "To take arsenic as an example, — if the dose has Veen (>mall, and the person has survived the effects for a certain period, it is not likely that the poison uill l>e detected in the soft organs of the body. Tlie deceased may have survived long enough for the whole of the poison to te expelled. According to Eriand, after ten, twilce, or ffteen days, not apo.rticle of arsenic or tartarized antimony tcill he discovered in the bodies of animals poisoned by either of these substances. {lb. p. SO.) See further on same page. The subject is resumed in Append. II., Note 22. (S) As I have shown in Note 7, Briand gives te?i, twelve. And ffteen days for the complete disappearance of the poison. Orfila himself {Traite de Toxicol. 5« ed. Paris, in 8°.; t. l.p. 427) assigns f/wn tadve to ffteen. The Grand-duke sur- vived eleven and Bianca ten days, — according to the Archives. (9) See, in Appendix II., y. 15S7, and footnote. — The Cardinal Ippolito de' Medici was affected similarly, and died after four days' illness ; that is, according to Varchi ; but six, as I compute it ; for he was attacked on the 5th of August and expired on the lOth, (1535.) The moment after he had eaten the troth in which 872 BIAXCxV CAPELLO gulaily, and so conveniently for tlie Cardinal, within two days of each other, and terminated, with an interval of a single day, in the death the poison TS'as conveyed, the Cardinal began to suffer. He grew rapidly worse, " and went on wasting little by little and having coniinually a verTj slight and sloio fever.'''' {Stor. Fior. v. 131, 132.) He was poisoned, as some supposed, by his cousin Duke Alexander(a), as others, by Pope Paul Ill.(b) That most fear- (a) The most probable hypothesis. And if what Segni appears inclined to believe, although he cites the story merely as a rumor of the day, be true, viz., that Ippolito had previously tried to blow up the Duke with gunpowder {tioI. ii. f. 85), the latter might, if the rumor were current before the death of Ippolito, have satis- fled his own conscience by the supposition of its truth, if afterward, he might himself have originated it as an offset to his own atrocity. One scarcely knows what to hold to, in so contradictory accounts ; but such a crime, besides that it is plausible to attribute the attempt to the known political enemies of Alessandrc, who were many of them zealous but not over-scrupulous friends of liberty, one of whom finally effected bis assas- sination, such a crime is inconsistent with the character of the young Cardinal, who, though passionately ambitious, and openly resentful of the injustice done him in the elevation of hia junior, Alexander, had nothing in his impetuous, candid, and generous character which allows us to impute to him the design of a coward and a murderer. Unfit to be a churchman, partial, almost ostentatiously, to arms and to the chase (see Appendix III.), he led the life of a gay but not dissipated prince, and died, according to Segni himself, with unaffected piety and with the modest charity of a Christian — as a Christian should be. This local historian tells us, very differently from Varchi, that the ill-fated young man expired in thirteen hours after the attack, and that two of his friends died subsequently ; for, according to Segni, instead of the Cardinal's being indisposed and in bed when the poisoned broth was brought to him, he and his friends were sujping- together gaily at Itri. — Such is history ; Varchi, writing under Cosmo, and Segni under his successor ; yet, in so tragical an incident, varying both as to the inception and the termination of the affair ! It is, that, in such a case. Rumor, never perhaps single-voiced, has more than the usual number of tongues. The latter writer continues : The friends of the Duke ascribed the murder to Pope Paul, "come quegli che, desideroso' de' gran benefiti pcsseduti da lui per dare al Card. Farnese, 1' avesse in questo modo fatto morire." Some indeed ascribed the event to the pestilential air (as Bianca and Francesco's death was attributed to inter- mittent fever.) Segni considers it the truest and most certain report, which lays it at the door of Duke Alexander. (IS. 83, sq.) (b) Alessandrc da Farnese, Cardinal d' Ostia, — who succeeded Clement VII. in that i hair whose existence- still remains, but will probably not much longer, the opprobrium of human sense and of manhood, and should make a Christian blush to throw imposture in the teeth of Mohammedans, — the so-called seafrof St. Peter, who never put a round in it. According to Varchi (an historian of rare ingenuousness) Paul III. was a finished dissembler, concealing his real vices by outward decorum and sanctity, (ii. 69.) It is likely ; it belonged to his profession and his place. He died, this man who could be suspected in his eld age of causing:- a cowardly assassination, to swell by misappropriation, not to say robbery, the state and splendor of his reprobate bastard son* and of his grandchildren (see again Varchi in loo. cit. 134, 5. The detail, after his faulty but interesting manner, is curious. Also, from p. 2fO to end of the vol.)— he died, this Vicegerent of Christ, with the words : If my family had not ruled me, I should be stainless. Everybody remembers what Hildebrand's last words were, what Cardinal Wolsey's, what perhaps those of a dozen gallows-birds, as well as princes of the Church, have been. When a man has lied and dissembled all his life, he will not be likely to want a good name after death, if an additional falsehood can buy it for him. The vulgar superstition * It is useful to my vindication of the character of Bianca, to note here another striking historial discrep- ancy. This scapegrace, who, according to Galluzzi, had all the vices of Duke Valentine [Caesar Borgia] with- out his talents {IntT . liv.), and of whom Varchi tells in detail that revolting personal outrage which ended in the death of the gentle Bishop of Fano (S. F. ap.finem), is described by Segni (an intelligent as well as honest writer) as not without learning and well able to behave himself (HA. 13".— u. iii. p. 14.) Again, on the other hand, his father, Paul III., who, Eli-like, encouraged his profligacy by his criminal indifference or impolitic leniency, was, according to the first-named author, a man of rare talents and of extraordinary sagacity ! (lb. liii.) 1 wish to enforce on the reader's sense these continual dissonances in judgment and in fatl-record, and must be pardoned for a little irrelevancy. APPENDIX I. 373 of both, be correct(lO), the former was eleven days suffering, and the latter ten, and the difficulty of detection would be very greatly in- creased. Besides, these investigators, if they were such (for there is no mention of anything more than the opening of the bodies and a ful, because least evitable, mode of assassination, whicli in the beginning of tlie century had flourished under the auspices and with the cooperation of the Holy See, was still horribly familiar to the great. Trancesco himself was suspected of practising it, and Cosmo was, as mentioned in the text, accounted "a subtle poison-mixer," (See Appendix II. ad init.) Yarchi has several stories of the kind, as e. (/., besides that of the Cardinal Ippolito, the remarkable one of the beautiful Luisa Strozzi, wife of Luigi Capponi, poisoned by her own relatives on mere suspicion of the likelihood of her falling a victim to the libertinism of Duke Alessandro (v. 104-106), but according to Segni by the Duke himself, be- cause she had refused to yield to his desires(c). Stoi'ie Flor. I. 7'^. (vol. II. p. €5, sq. ed. Mil. 1S05, in 8''.) (10) But I have argued that the record of the Medicean Archives cannot in the story of Bianca be accepted as correct and is not likely to be even truthful. Xoie (3) : also various places in Append. II. It is said that in the Introduction of the work cited in Append. II. Note 4, Miss Strickland, on the authority of Evelyn, ac- cuses Burnet of destroying liistorical autographs. Yet the Bishop of Sarum was both a good man and a virtuous prelate. The Cardinal Grand-duke was neither, even in the eyes of Sismondi, and he hated Bianca with a hatred which he took no pains to conceal. Append. II. pr.finem. which beVieves that in the death-hour nothing ran be nitored but the truth is a convenient one, nor will either Paul III. be the last vicious personage, nor Elizabeth Surratt the last convict, whose final declaration will be accepted by a partial historian, or be availed of by a cunning barrister, as evidence of innocence. (e) Yet Segni, whose honesty as a writer is unquestioned, claims for such a monster, who he tells iis (ii p 20) corrupted even the sacred virgins and committed in the very sanctuary (like the diabolical Pope John XII., or the corsair-pope, the 23rd of that pontifical name) "assai vergcgne nefande ", both abilities and good dispositions, and attributes {fTiis unphilosophically, if not absurdly) his immeasurable licentiousness to evil counsels. It had been more rational to ascribe it to the gift of his mother, aided by that profligate in purple the Cardinal Giulio — or by the Cardinal's coachman. But in conclusion he admits, that he was " uni- versally hated", because, notwithstanding his even-handed justice, high courage, and resolute will, "he had •withal acquired the name of cruel, of voluptuous and impious, to such a degree that he had become an object of disgust to everybody." (lib. 8°. frope init.) All of which furnishes one of many instances of the diffi- culty which attends the search for truth in history. I may add, as being of interest and not ungerman to my text, what Segni has to say of Alexander's illegiti- macy. It appears that a third party, as 1 have just hinted, might have put in a claim for priority with the two Medici. . . "Alessandro de' Medici, il quale era figlio naturale di Lorenzo, nato d' una schiava ehiamata Anna, la quale avendo avuto ancora che fare con Giulio Priore di Capua e poi Papa CKmente, ed ancora con tin vttturale, che tenevano in casa quando erano ribcUi, era inccrto di chi fosse figliuolo." ^t. i. ed. cil. p. 165. 374 BIANCA CAPELLO simple inspection of the viscera,) avouIcI understand it was the Car- dinal's pleasure they should not find anything to confirm suspicion, and it would have been a miracle of independence and moral courage had they dared under the circumstances to disappoint him. (11) Here the infamy of this vile churchman does not end. Giving orders for the sumptuous burial of his brother, he had Bianca thrown upon the common heap of bodies of the abandoned poor and vicious. This might have been done to confirm in men's minds the opinion he had diligently disseminated of her utter wortlilessness and of his disgust and hatred of an adventuress and " sorceress " who had dishonored temporarily his family. But there was something more than this in his conduct ; it evinced a rage that was savagely vindictive ; the rage of a bad man who had been more than disappointed, who was con- scious that he had betrayed himself and hated the involuntary posses- sor of his degrading secret. In short I believe, that, as I have painted him, and the romancers before me, the Cardinal had offered love to his brother's wife (it was quite in the mode of the family) and to his dismay been rejected. The indications of this doubly criminal passion can not have escaped historians. The Capello family, one of the rich- est and most distinguished noble liouses in Venice, was as good as the Medici in its origin, and the Venetian Republic in its desire to exalt Bianca (which it would not have shown — despite the insinu- ation of Boita( 12) — were lier life infamous) had made her Queen of (11) In the case of the Cardhial Ijipollto, the body lifter deatli became discolored, and, on opening it, the omentum (caul) was found corroded. But his household were interested in finding the traces of poison. Those who performed the like operation on Francesco and Bianca were interested in not finding such evidence^ and the examination on then- part was probably one for form, as on the part of the Cardinal Duke it was a challenge to the suspicion of his enemies. See Ap- pendix II. Note 22. (12) Who, as an historian, should have had knowledge enough of liumanity to understand what was going on everywhere around him. A change of fortune for the better obliterates at once, or at least veils over for the time being, all previous APPENDIX I. 375 Cyprus. Thus put on a par with the Grand-duke, what plea could the Cardinal have found for making that immeasurable distinction between them after their common death ?(!?>) In the rage of his hatred, this prince of the Christian Church furnished one of the verj' best facts in evidence of a criminal passion whose repulse had outraged his ex- travagant pride and Avoiuided past cure a self love Avhich was the most vital part of his spirit. Like Philip II. of Spain, and, I may add, Henry Till, of England, the Grand-duke Ferdinand of Tuscany is represented with smooth face and fair and efTemiuate features. They were the mask of a character which had the revengeful malice, the remorseless cruelty, the treach- erous cunning and hypocrisy, and the immeasurable ambitionof a bad and masculine woman. (1 4) And yet this man made a wise, a politic, and even, it is sai;l, just sovereign. (15) The case is not singular either in Europe or in the disadvantages, and when Botta sneers at tlie eagerness with which both the Capello family and the Venetian Eepublic made ha^te to acknow edge and to glorify the adventuress as Grand-duchess whom as a fuj:itive they had proscribed and proclaimed for punishment, he forgets one of the commonest of the traits of the human character. Woul 1 he not himself have found splendor in the risen sun if its rays fell on his stand-place, or would lie have got out of its warmth in winter? The dogs are wiser, and the moth, though it rushes to its own destruction, has a better instinct. I affirm that Bianca's f;imily acted in both instances precisely as every other family would have acted, and were in neither poshion mean or un- reasonable. (13) If it be said, because he held her to be worthless, the " possiraa Bianca " he afterwards declared her {v. Append. II. op.^'n.), then his brother should have shared the same fate, and their common father before them. Where was Isabella buried ? (14) All of which traits happen to have been the moral features, UL;ly to de- formity, of the Medici m general. (15) Sismondi says, and well, of Ferdinand: "He had as much talent for gov- ernment as one can have without virtue, and as much pride as one can preserve V ithcut nobleness of soul." liejx If. (Paris, 1840, in 8°.) f. x. p. 227. We have seen (p. 376 BIANCA CAPELLO East. The Mogul Emperor, Aurungzebe, attained the throne on which he sat so nobly, by the murder of more than one brother. August IG, 1861. II. Being extracts from memoranda taken during the preparation for Ads III.^ lY.^ and V., ivith additions and comments subsequently made. Cosmo bore the reputation of being a subtle maker of poisons ; y. 1574:. and it is certain he endeavored to destroy Strozzi by them. But Strozzi did the same for him. Galluz. Granduc. ii. 185. The historian's language is positive : " E certo che egli tento di usarne contro lo Strozzi." Yet observe the high character which he gives to Cosmo, after this charge and the assertion that his criminal laws, founded on the Spanish maxims then prevalent in all Italy, were ab- solutely destitute of every sentiment of humanity, and "egli venerava lo istruzioni e i consigli del suoi congiunti Vice Re Don Pietro di Toledo(l) e Duca d' Alva, che furono i due piii sanguinari Ministri che abbino conculcato 1' umanita " {ih.) ; and then see to what amounts the like charge against Francesco. S'smondi, who says that Cosmo S7o, subnote (■) that even-h(indecl justio3 is assigne 1 to that infamous profligate, Duke Alexander. Here are the very words of Pegni, and in detail : " le quali [sc le faccende pubbliche] . . . egU amniinistrava da si' stcsso con grand' aniino e con molta risoluzione, ed avrebbc soddisfatto in gran parte alia giustizia, perche la faceva al piccolo come al grande, ed udiva volentieri le povere genti, se i piaceri giovenili noir avessonodistrattopur troppo da questi consigli, ecy Stor. Fior. lib. 6°. t. 11. p. 19. (1) This D. Pietro dl Toledo, Viceroy of Naples, confessed la 1553 to a Secretary of Duke Cosmo's, that, after his possession of the government, there perished in the single city of Naples by the hands of justice eighteiu tJioiisand persons. Granduc. Tiitrod. p. 2. APPENDIX II. 377 had established a manufactory of poisons in his palace under the pre- tence of making chemical experiments, (the passage is quoted under y. 1578,) is more consistent, although we shall see that in his summing- up of the character of Francesco, he contradicts not only Galluzzi, but certain facts which do not depend upon the allegations of historians. And Botta, we shall find, does just the same. See note 20. A year after the death of Cosmo. — The conspiracy against 1575. Cosmo, and for which Pandolfo Pucci had atoned with his life in 1560, was renewed against his successor, and by the son of this very Pucci, Orazio, whom the Grand-duke by numerous benefits had endeavored in vain to make forget Ms father's merited execution. [Here again Galluzzi gives a trait that does not agree with his picture of Francesco. See under 1578.] The Cardinal at Eome learning of the plot informed Francesco of it [which Galluzzi considers generous, al- though, as the conspiracy was directed in the name of the ancient liberty against the whole reigning family, he was to have been one of the victims,] and advised the arrest of Pucci. About twenty youths in all were complicated, and the confiscations amounted to 30,000 ducats. This severity and the fiscal exactions irritated the people and rendered hostile all the connections of the young nobles. Granduc. ii. 248. Masnade [bands of predatory soldiers, brigands or assassins ac- cording to circumstances, and serving as instruments both of rapine and revenge] increased fearfully ; the nobles having them in pay for their feuds and vengeance. Ih. 2G5. — Sismondi writes in relation to the extent of brigandage after 1563 (the year of Bianca's arrival in Florence) : Alfonso Piccolomiui, Duke of Monte Marciano, and Marco Sciarra, in Komagna, the Abbruzzi, and the Campagna of Eome, com- manded several thousands of men. JRepub. Ital. t. 10, p. 218 sq. The administration of the criminal laws frightened the innocent 1576. as much as the guilty, and flattered the powerful with hopes of easily elucing them. " Quindi e che le risse, le prepotenze e gli 378 BIxiNCA CAPELLO assassinamenti crcbbero a dismisura." In eighteen months from the death of Cosmo, tliere were counted in Florence alone one hun- dred and eighty cases of deaths and wounds by assault. Granduc. ii. 2G5. Don Pietro de' Medici profligate and depraved. His beautiful wife Eleonora di Toledo imitated him. Her brother refused to listen to his complaints, and prevented their reaching Don Garzia her father. The Spanish chivalry put the husband up to avenge his dishonor, and he murdered her by night, July 11, with repeated blows of his poniard, at Caffagiolo, an ancient villa of the Medici {ib. 2G7.) Her death at- tributed to disease of the heart. Isabella, both beautiful and accomplished. Favored the amours of her brother with Bianca. Duke, her husband, especially jealous of his own kinsman Troilo Orsini ; strangles her with a cord at his villa of Correto on the morning of the 16th July. Court informed that she fell dead in the arms of her attendants while washing licr head {ih. 269.) — Botta tells us that Troilo himself killed with his own hand the Grand-duko's page, bet\\een whom and this licentious princess there was a mutual passion. The picture given by this last modern his- torian, of the two royal ladies, D. Pietro and, united with the godly group, Duke Cosmo, is done with that relish with which he seems to paint extreme depravity in high places, sparing no feature, and height- ening without mercy the ugliness of all. Let me make a copy of the ori- ginal, as certain touches will not bear transferring to an English panel. ^'•Eleonora . . '-giovanegraziosaedimaravigiiosabellezza. Corsero romori, e ne fu anclie fatto fede dalle cronache contemporanee, che Cosimo, invaghito di tanta bellezza, con scellerato amore si fosse con esso lei mescolato, per modo che gravida di se alle nozze del figlluolo la mandasse. D. Pietro poi oltraggiava i due sessi, 1' altro abbandonando e del proprio abusando.(2) Infame tresche erano queste, ne anco (2) Cosmo, who affected a regard for morality and for religion, or betLer Lad a politic respect for both, enacted laws of great severity against this revolting vice and against the sin of blasphemy. (It is Segni who classes them thus together in APPENDIX II. 379 celate : il pubblico le sapeva, s' aggiungeva lo scaudalo al misfatto. Pietro frequentava i bei giovani ; Eleonora presto 1' orrecliio a chi la vaglieggiava." Slor. 0? Ital. Libr. 14°. (Milauo, in 12<^, 1843. t. iii. p. 166.) "Delizia della Corte e quasi fiore di Firenze per gioventu, bellezza, grazia, ornamento di poesia, perizia di musica, moltiplicita di favelle era donna Isabella de' Medici, figiiuola del Duca Cosimo. Ma tali sorti di fiori nella Medicea Corte si contaminavano e si lasciavano •contaminare." [The reader will please recall wiiat I observed of Bianca, surrounded by and inhaling such an atmosphere of moral cor- ruption. But in the instance of Isabella the " flower'- shriveled and blackened by no outward influence of the elements ; it had de.struction at its core. The e^^ of the caterpillar was deposited before the germ had begun to develop itself on the parent plant. It was the pernicious •blood of the Medici in Cosmo, and haply, on the mother's side, of the Toledo. (3) Observe what follows.] "Porto la fama che Cosimo the snme sentence.) But the law fell into disuse from the indifference of the magistrates, — perhaps from their knowledge to what degree this unmentionable bestiality prevailed among the highest order. Pandolfo Pucci was one of those who thus sinned against nature, and did it without any particular concealment {'■'^ (t/dceiafamenie.'^) It seems he knew what to calculate upon. Through the influence of his brother Ruberto, lately made Cardinal by Paul III., he was par- doned. But Giov. Bandini, for the same classical atrocity, was kept in a dungeon at the bottom of a tower for nineteen years, — rather, as Segni thinks and well, for his abusive words of the Duchess Madama Lponora than for the crime. Sior, Mor. ed. cit. ii. 272. (3) Cosmo, who, according to honest Segni, was censurable for the same sub- iservience to the Emperor(a) that Galluzzi accuses Francesco of towards the King (a) " Non faccva altro che intratcnersi per amico e per buon suddito (per parlar meglio) dell' Imperadore." ,(ii. 255.) The language, in its sense, not tone, is forcible. — So also in the matter of his nuptials, this pattern Cosmo, — who, by the by, Segni, who must have been aware of the niceties and morality recounted in an after age by Botta, tells us " nel Tiver sao era molto onesto," {ib. 270,) — celebrated them with great magnificence, although a famine was prevailing at the time, occasioned chiefly by his own avarice, — "cagionata dal tem- porale, e molto piu dair aver 1' anno innanzi il Duca dato la Iratta a'grani, de' quali cavb scudi 50,000, e Becco tutti i granai del dominio." (Ib. 215, sq.) Thus in hoth these instances, of a degrading policy and an extravagance of pomp which mocked the necessities of his people, and insulted their sufferings, the great Cosmo set the example which his son and successor is reproached for having followed. That this was »o does •not excuse the latter, but it makes the censure of the historians in his precisely parallel case if not malevolent, yet altogether partial. And it is for this reason that I have cited these instances of selfish and ignoble error 380 BIAXCA CArELLO stesso Iroppo piii V amasse clie a padre si conveniva." {Id. 167.) Who has not heard the story of the artist, who from his scaffolding beheld The Cardinal's words of soliloquy in Act IV. So. 4 are gloss enough in English. For thirteen years the Duke had been enamored of Bianca, with a passion growing every day more ardent. Nothing too good for her : palaces, delightful gardens, etc., etc. —his very brothers paying her court — sole dispenser of favors. A Jewish woman said to assist her in incantations and the composition of philters to increase the Duke's passion. But let me c^uote, as I wish to examine this point in full. After indulging in the expression " orgogliosa impudenza della Cap- pello" {haughty impudence of the CaiJello.,) —to which on the suc- ceeding page he adds hlach perfidy ("nera perfidia,") Galluzzi pro- ceeds in this fashion: "La Bianca, cui troppo premeva sempre piii accenderlo e mantenerlo costante, non risparmiava veruno di quelli artiflzi che son comuni alle femmiiie del suo carattere., senz-a omettere 1' uso dei filtri, del prestigi, e di tutto cio che la credulita donnesca(4) ha saputo imaginare d' inganni in tal genere ; una donna Giudea era la fedele ministra di questi incantesimi, e il pubblico clie imaginava i of Spain, espoused at his suggestion, instead of the .\rchduchess he aspired to,. Leonora di Toledo, sister of that very Viceroy of Naples whose atrocious in- humanity is cited in note (1). She brought him a son or a daughter every year. As D. Pietro married the daughter of D. Garzia, who was brother to tliis lady, it follows that in the person of his wife he poniarded also his cousin-german. (4) The E. of Bothwell had certainly nothing icomanish in his composition, though much that was devilish, yet we find him on his death-bed making a confes- sion of having used "witchcraft" {prestigi) and "sweet-water" {filtri) to excite the Queen's affections. See Miss Strickland's letters of Mary Q. of Scots, etc. Vol. III. I have been unable to procure a copy, and cite from a newspaper re- view of 1S43. Mary was the contemporary of Bianca. The credtiUiy we might say was that of the age, did we not know what is going on in our own skeptical century, and in our matter-of-fact country, not to speak of France, where, succeed- ing to the spiritualism of Home, a common soldier of Jewish origin performs the miracles on sick and lame and blind attributed to Christ. APPENDIX II. 381 piu sti'avaganti niezzi per eseguiiii concepira semprepm del orroreper il di lei perversa caratterey (16. 271.) Now let us hear what Botta says : " Bianca Capello, uata al monclo per mostrare la potenza degll attrativi femmmiU [observe throughout the parts I have itaUcized], e la laidezza di ua uomo a cui era da Die comandato non solo di governare, [I cannot see that Heaven had anything to do with it ; the government of the Medici was, as Botta himself has shown, an ab- solute usurpation founded in perfidy and corruption, and the family that administered it, from Alessandro down, were mostly worthless as princes and despicable or detestable as men,] ma di ediflcare un popolo atto ad ogni gentil creanza, [Yarchi, who knew them better, being of them, in the reign of Cosmo, has ascribed to the Florentines no such aptitude,] fuggiva nel 15G3, ec. Bella e spiritosa e dl grazie moUiformi dotata (imperciocche o die sclierzasse^ o sopra se stesse, o il leggiadro volto con semhianza dl mestlzia annuvolasse, sempre ris- plendeva in lei un cotal lume dl avvenenza lusingldejn^ dl vaghezza gliiotta, Che V uom raplva) aveva, ec." {uU cit. p. 1G9.) Yet after this description of a beauty and grace that must have been all but irresist- ible and that he himself affirms transported everybody^ — 2i description which, if we may judge by one trait, the " vaghezza ghiotta" {charms that kindled appetite), easily discernible in her portraits, (r. App. III.), is a faithful, though a lovely picture, — he pretends to say she had re- course to philters and to incantations to increase the passion of a man not yet forty ! However, of that presentl.v. — The historian, with his usually sarcastic and often terrible pen, tells us that their loves were shamelessly open. ''Xon sentivano vergogua nell' amore : in fronte del popolo con modi scoperti il Principe il confessava, impudicizia ed impudenza regnavano. (5 ) Cosimo Tammoniva " • a precious mon- (5) I ask again, if their loves were so impudently sLamele.'s, how came it that, after the death of Joanna, Bianca was admitted to the palace under the plea of guardianship for the young princesses, and why the secret marriage ? These facts cannot be reconciled, as before observed (p. 360,) with open impudicity.(a)— But (a) In that place, it is true, I expressed more than a doubt of my heroine's chastity in her widowhood. It seemed to me at the time incredible, that even the Cardinal in his " declaratory act " should have falsified 382 BIANCA CAPELLO itor, even were there no Camilla ! {v. Botta's own words on p. 378), • "la principessa sposa piangeva" that is but supposition, a fancy family-picture, though painted with an eye to nature(6), " e suppose they can ; suppose the Prhice did indeed unveil his passion to the public gaze ; when have princes done otherwise, in evcny land, and to our very day? In moral, or at least morality-boasting, England, the children of law- less royal love, whether gotten on a duchess or an actress, are ennobled, and the bend sinister or I)ato?i coupe of the Earl or Duke stands not in the way of lawful marshaling by pale or quarter with the proudest escutcheons. But in Italy ! and at that time! when half the petty thrones were filled by bastards, and where, not forty years before, the child of three fathers, bejrotten on a wanton household- drudge, was the first acknowledged sovereign of the '■Illustrissima Casa"l GaUmatiafi ! (6) Not because the princess-spouse bewept his infidelity, for she knew that offence was common with all princes, but because she felt it a reproach to her ■own ill-favored vi^sage, its pallor, and her dwarfish form. The whole picture, in- cluding the monitions of the saintly Cosmo, is drawn from models of the imagin- ation, and is what the reader has been familiar with in the nursery : " In vain his father's kind .idvice, In vain his mother's care," etc, I have no idea of apologizing for incontinence, much less adultery ; bat I do m;iintain that had Francesco been guilty of nothing worse than seeking solace with the widow Bonaventuri, he would be judged at least as leniently' as his contemporary ^nd posthumous son-in-law, that darling of all true hearts, the great Henry IV. of France, who, but for his Minister, would have committed the stme folly as Fran- cesco (if in Francesco it was a folly to marry Bianca), and who, had he not had that Minister, but a false and aspiring brother to shape for men his reputation, might have come down to us in more questionable form, his vices all exaggerated, and his frank, generous and valiant heart shrunken under their swollen heap to a pitiful littleness. As it was, it is observable that the most mischievous aspersion of his character came from the pen of his blood-relation tlie Princess of Conti.(a) the date as weil as other particulars of D. Antonio's birth. But when I consider what appears to have been done in the account of the Duke and Bianca's illness, I see no good reason why, in the very face of the peoplei that arch-maligner should not misrepresent the point of time in one case as wall as in the other. See (24); also subnote to (6). (a) The handsome and talented Louisa-Margaret of Lorraine (granddaughter of that magnanimous and valiant captain, Francis of Lorraine, Duke of Guise) in her Uistoirc dcs Amcurs du grand Alcandre, which APPENDIX II. 383 gli dava esempio d' ogni virtu" ^Yhat were tiicy ? She could not 'but of cliastity, or she were as foul as her sister-in-law, who was nei- ther pallid, nor diminutive, nor ill-favored, to render chastity easy, " ma nulla giovava, perche la Bianca, col suo volto, non so se mi dehha dire angelico o diaholico, era piu forte del padre, della moglie, e di quanto 11 mondo pensasse o dicesse." {ib. 170, sq.) All of which is merely rhetorical. And now for the absurd story of the philters, and told thus absurdly : " Oltre le grazie della persona And what were these physical attractions^ besides which, etc. ? Beautiful and spiritual 'and endowed idth manifold graces (these are his own words, above quoted,) — since, ichether sJie was mirthful or grave, or clouded her elegant and charming visage with a semblance of sadness, there always shone out in her such a light of seductive attractions, of appctiUebeautu, And who does not know what that very Minister, that virtuous Sully, whose friend- ship as well as administration honored both reciprocally, who does not know what lie has told of the effect of Henry's amours, leading him, as they do every man, the honest and the good not excepted, into subterfuge and even falsehood? Un- happily for Francis-Mary, he had not what the historian of the Medicean duchy assigns him, every quality that is desirable in a sorereign. Had he had, and been gracious and heiievolent to his subjects, he might have said at least what Henry said, who said most things wittily and well : " I am myself the best assur- ance for my people. My predecessor feared you and loved j^ou not ; but I love you, and 1 have no fear of you.''' And in that case History would have looked, though sorrowfully, yet gently on his vices of habit and temperament, over- shadowed as they were by those of Henry, both an inveterate gamester and, to the very last, incorrigible — I cannot say libertine ; it is not a word that suits a man like him, who probably fyund women lewJ, not made them so ; but — to his latest day intemperate woman-lover. bears the same satirical relation to the Court of Henry IV. as Bussi's Histoire amoureuse to the not less licentious one of Louis XIV. She too in h^r widowhood made, like Bianca, what the French call a marriage of conscience with one of her lovers, the famous Marshal Bassompierra : a fact worth noticing as tending to confirm by similitude of instance what, notwithstanding the brand of illegitimacy put upon Don Antonio, was perhaps the true state of things between the G. Duke and Bianca. Bianca was too scrupulous, or too proud, or too artful, whichever you will, to submit to his embraces except after a secret ceremony which satisfied the conscience. Unless it was performed from a moral and religious motive, or to cover her good name, I cannot see what was the use of sach a rite. The public espousals could not in decency take place two months after the death of Joanna, but the secret nuptials did. 384 BIAJSrCA CAPELLO as ravished the heholder ^'Oltre le grazie clella persona, iisava Bianca, per fomentare la passione del Grancluca, i filtrl, iprestigi edil ministerio di una Giudea, cui 11 mondo credeva esperta d' incantesimi^ ed era veramente d' ingauni. La fattuchiera Isorceressl era Bianca^. non la Giudea." (i&. 171.) Thus, either from Galluzzi (for he uses the same expressions), or directly from those Cardinalized archives which awakened no suspicion with the former, we have Botta repeat- ing with emphasis this puerile storj^ without at all being conscious that in ascribing to Bianca such marvelous beauty and such entranc- ing manners, he makes it nearly impossible, whatever her self-delusion as to the actuality of sorcery, that she could have resorted to its falla- cious assistance. What would be the object ? If she already held the Duke a slave to the double enchantment of her person and her mind,. — and Galluzzi tells lis that his passion was continually increasing, — where was the need of anything beyond ("oltre") ? And i^hllkrs r for whom ? The Duke on the day of his death was but forty-seven years of age, or forty-nine, computing after Segni(7) ; and Botta is- (7) "Who tells us Francesco was nine years old when sent to meet at Genoa the Emperor's son Don Philip (afterwards Philip II. of Spain). And this was in the year 1547. — St. Fior. t. ii. p. 379. It has not escaped me, that the historians may mean that Bianca plied these arts to keep the Duke from inconstancy. Indeed Galluzzi says as much {mp. 380), and Muratori tells us, after a contemporary, that in the popular rumor which ascribed the poisoning to Bianca, she was thought to have been urged by jealousy, being " a woman of proud spirit." See infra 27. The Duke was then no longer under her influence. Where then was his infotuation, or what was become of Bianca's power ? If they still existed, then she had no need of drugs and magic charms ; if they did not, and he became her slave to the degree which we shall shortly see asserted, then his chains were forged by magic, and the eyes of the angelia visage "'rained influence " by the drugs! In fact, nothing can be more contradictory than the accounts of both historians. Galluzzi, besides his prejudice, is blinded by the Cardinal Grand-duke's Archives ; Botta is guided by that satiric spirit and prejudgment which see evil rather than good and find a delight in making the picture more effective by its shadows, although APPENDIX II. 385 writing of a period eleven years earlier ( 157G). He was consequently at that time but thirty-six or at most but thirty-eight years old ; and if Bianca's sorcery was so notorious as to fill the city with horror, the Duke must have known of it. Are we to suppose then, that in the full vigor of his best manhood he suffered such practices ? If he had oc- casion for them, then his passion could not have gone on increasing ; for love the least sensual, as the most of it is wholly so, diminishes under such circumstances, if it does not become at once extinct. As- for Bianca herself, we are told it was in 15G3 that she fled from Venice. Supposing she was then eighteen, — though I would rather believe she was two or even three years younger, for women at eighteen are not. so easily led astray by a first passion as when its stimulus is still a new and almost uncontrollable sensation, — supposing her to be eighteen at that period, she was then in 157G but thirty-one. Where then, I re- peat, was the use of sorcery and love-potions to urge a man deeply enamored, himself in the flower of his manhood, to greater passion for a woman who could not have lost a beauty that was at any time re- puted marvelous, and who is said to have had such ravishing grace of manner and so seductive sweetness of look, that, whatever the mood she might be in, or might assume, she transported every heart? But, not to carry mere argument too far on a point which so little deserves it, let us adduce the force of a parallel example. About a centui-y and a half before this time, Yalentina of Milan, Duchess of Orleans, a v/oman like Bianca beautiful and intellectual, was said to owe her influence over her brother-in-law, the unhappy Charles VI., to sorcery. She was even obliged to forsake the Court for some time to escape the insults of the populace, who probably were stimulated by the King's uncles and their wives, as in the case of Bianca they at the expense too often of real nature and the observation of historic truth. It is to be observed, that it was after all the villany ascribed to her by both these waters, that they chronicle the secret marriage and the subsequent grand espousals with the coronation, both of which acts are the strongest evidence tliat the Grand duke's passion had not abated. 11 386 BIANCA CAPELLO were by the artifices of tlie Duke's brother. Cahimny did not stop here, and to want of chastity in favor of the insane king added even the report of her poisoning him for the benefit of her husband !(8) But we are in the 19th centui-y, three hundi^ed years since Bianca lived and loved, and was adored— although we should hardly suppose it from the number of fortune-tellers wlio under various styles adver- tise the black art in the journals, — we are in an era of very general instruction and greatly increased freedom from superstition, yet what €omes to us, even now while I write, from the land where the beau- tiful Venetian lived and was adored and finally suffered ? The spread of cholera is attributed to the malignity of evil-disposed persons, and an unfortunate woman in Naples who professed to be of the trade of Bianca's Jewess is actually cut into pieces as having been instrumental in its propagation. See then the people of Florence wondering at the extent of Bianca's influence, precisely as in that earlier age the people of Paris did at the elegant Visconti's, and in their Wind amazement prompted to an easy explanation after their own mode of thinking by the Cardinal's agents, and you have the story. (0) The Jewess may have been a sorceress like her ancient compatriot, but was probably •some female-nostrum vender, or woman's-doctor, possessed of (or so (S) It was the handsome, dissipated, and ambitious Louis of France, her husband, •u-hose actual dabbling witli the fallacious art gave a color of truth-lilceness to these scandals. Martin calls him " adept.e temeraire des arts damnahle^ de la magie.*' Hist, de France. (Paris, in 8°, 1S44) t. vi. p. 29S. See too ih. p. 269. And Henry lY. of England, in the last of his 'despatches, did not hesitate to ac- cuse-him, not her, of causing the malady of Charles Yl. by sorceries et diahleries. Id.i^.SO\. (9) If the people Avere HV.ed with horror at Hianca's supposed practicos, what protected her from their fury any more than Valentina ? Tlje fanaticism of a mob is the hideous growth of no peculiar age or country. The deformed and bloodthirsty giant was the same in the 16th as in the 14th century, and is the same in the 19th that he was in the 14th. Lola Montes was hooted and pelted in Munich, and so was her royal lover, who was neither stupid nor criiel, nor a Medici ; yet nobody ascribed his infatuation to anything supernatural. APPENDIX II. 387 clairaiug) secrets of embellishmeut and rejuvenation, a priestess of the thaumaturgy of the toilet ; but the stories set afloat are like, both in themselves and in their origin, those circulated, more than a hun- dred and fifty years before, against the fair and Intellectual grand- mother of Louis XII. ( 10) In fine, if Bianca was the victim of the seLf- delusion ascribed to her, her practices under it were to increase or secure the aflections of her husband, of infidelity to whom there is not breathed against her even a suspicion. It is rather remarkable that while uuwilhng to ascribe the Grand-duke's excessive passion for Bianca to anything but her nefarious arts (how many would be glad to know them !) there is no thought of attacking Camilla Martelli for a like infatuation on the part of Cosmo, — Cosmo, the strong-minded, (10) In Bianca's day, the belief in magic was still prevalent even among the educated. Not to cite again the creduUty of Botliwell (who was however little more than a rude soldier), that popinjay of a Icing, yet gallant cavalier, half woman, half man, Henry III. of France, ashamed of his fantastical grief for Mary of Cleves, Princess of Conde, ascribed its excesses to enchantment. This was about the very period now in question, while, twenty-two years earlier, books on astronomy and geometry had actually been condemned in England as treatises of magic, notwith- standing the advances made there as elsewhere in both those sciences. In the intervening age between Yalentina and Bianca, or about a century before the latter's empoisonment, we find the usurper Eichard laying his withered arm to the witchcraft of unhappy Shore. And less than a score of years after the latter, or in the first decade of the 17th century, Mary Stuart's son, James I. of England, a man something more than educated, was a good believer in witches; while in France Eleonora Galigai, the foster-sister and favorite of Mary of Medici (Francesco's daughter), was put to death, although in reality for her insolent pre- sumption and the venal abuse of her influence, yet on the charge of practising sor- cerj'.(a) And this was about the time when Galileo stood up in the Inquisition, before the slaves of ignorance and the children of superstition, to defend by sub- terfuge, or by fables which he believed not, the conceptions of his God-inspired mind. (a) It is a coincidence that the chief point in the accusation against her was that she consorted with a JeviHh doctor, familiar with the art. 388 BIANCA CAPELLO politic, and resolute,— who was so mastered by his love that even his physicians could not keep him from that enchantress. (Gall. ii. 176.) We now come to the '■'■nera perfidia.'''' The Duke was anxious to have male children, and rather than not have any was contented they should be illegitimate. Bianca set to work to gratify him ; but her body being rendered unfruitful by sickness and dissipation (''disor- dini ") she contrived this scheme. Three women of the vilest class (Gall.) or of vulgar standing (Botta), about to be coulined, were en- gaged to part with their offspring. One of them only (providentially — in two respects) brought forth a male. This was carried, in a lute, to the bedchamber where lay the Duchess affecting, like our Mrs. Cunningham, a mother's throes. (The reader has heard of a musical in- strument before as a vehicle of supposititious children to royal houses. ) As the Duke was perpetually with Bianca we are told, up to the last moment, when on some pretext she sent him off, we are left to wonder by what subtilty of contrivance and by what good fortune she could deceive him as to her situation. I need not explain my meaning. Every man will comprehend it, M^thout being -read in gestation. Thus much however. A woman may feign pregnancy to strangers, but not to her husband. The "outward and visible signs" are such, that un- less he were deprived of his eyes or had his arms amputated, the imposition would be impossible. Besides, the Duke in his ecstacy of expectation would have been the last man not to satisfy himself, in the innocent way that all curious expectant fathers do. I dare say he did a hundred times. (Mensihus graviditatisjamferme exactis, superimposita prwgnantis abdomini manu^ motiuncida^ quasi foetus tantillmn suh- sidtantis, sensibilis creberrime fiet.) But let us suppose a miracle, and that the Duke could through six months be kept away from any con- tact with the woman he adored. Was the Cardinal too deceived ? We shall see presently how he acted upon the Duke's death. Botta how- ever finds nothing wonderful in the transaction ; for, according to liim, Bianca had the effrontery to tell the Duke himself of these false pretensions and that the little Antonio was but the son of a common man and woman of llie counti-y ! And the Duke, — it was all one.y APPENDIX II. 389 says that historian, /or the stupid and cruel- Medici ( . . fii tuttuno per lo stiipido e crudele Medici,") — was perfectly satisfied ! He might well add, in this belief, "Se Francesco fosse piii vile, o Bianca piu furba, io nol saprei." (r. cit. p. 172). Now this stupid Medici (the epithet of cruel was out of place in the present matter) is pronounced by Galluzzi, in very positive language, to have been the most accom- plisUed as icell as talented monarch of h is time / ( 11 ) Let me make then (11) Cs. infra (20.) — It will there be also found, that Sisraondi, like Botta, de- prives him of all talent as well as virtue. Where does the truth lie? What be- comes of his known patronage of the arts ? of science ? of letters ? Speaking of his taste and magnificence in the adornment of Florence, Galluzzi says : " II gusto particolare de erigere nuove fabbriche e rlparare e ingrandire le vecchie si distinse- nel G. Duca Fi-ancesco superiormente alle altre sue inclinazloni." ii. 4T3 .... Consequently^ he continues, the fine arts flourished loith no less splendor than in ti.6 reign of Cosmo ^ and elegance and good taste spread themselces ever if day more and more among private citizens, ib. 474. In the text I have- alluded to the famous Benvenuto Cellini. Galluzzi particularizes, in architecture, Ammanato and Buontalenti, in painting Allori and Poccetti (he might have mentioned others), and Giovanni Bologna in sculpture. The Grand-duke's dis- position for these arts he chronicles as "slngolare." 475. . . "Egli stesso, come intelligentissimo delle medesime, sovente ne ragionava con gli artefici e con i gentiluomini della sua Corte ad oggetto d'' inspirare nel puhblico il gusto di favorirle e V inclinazione di professarle.'''' {ih.) To him was owing the increase of the reputation and consequent growth of the Florentine Academy, out of which arose by separation, as in some organic creatures the offspring from the parent, in 15S2 the Crusca. "Alio spulto nazionale ormai indirizzato da Cosimo alia letter- atura e alii studi siaggiungeva l' inclikaziose particolare del G. Dlca Fran- cesco PER LE letters e PEE I DOTTi. lAJce Jiis father^ he lotted the domestia and familiar conversation of the most esteemed [among the learned — " i dotti "}, and took pleasure in maintaining ^cith the absent a confidential correspond- ence; and therefore he failed not to honor, succor, and protect them in their occasions" . . . 477 sq. The Grand-duTce was 'versed in I^attiral History, and among its branches applied himself with especial diligence to 3Iiner~ alogy and to Metallurgy. 478. So with Botany. — He appreciated and favorecJ writers of history. The two Universities of Tuscany flourished under him despite 390 BIAXCA CAPELLO this remark. A man may be wise, aucl learnecl, and have even knowl- •edge of tlie world at large and of the female sex in particular, and yet become the slave of passion. Bill, " in vain," as we are told, " the net is spread in the sight of any bird " ; and he would have needed to be more than stupid, an idiot, a human beast, to give sane- lion to a trick which, apart from its disgusting wickedness, left still the grand desire of his heart unsatisfied ; for Francis wanted not an adopted child, the product, although male, of unknown parents, but a son of his own, and born to him by the woman he loved. And I may say it would have been imi)0ssihle, had Bianca revealed the truth, that he would have sought to buy for this vulgar bantling a principal- ity in Naples. Yet that he did this we are told by Botta, and Galluzzi goes still further. Philip of Spain had thoughts of conferring Siena on the strumpets-brood. Philip of Spain was not a fool, if history can be tortured into satire to make Francesco one. "What then could Jjave perverted his judgment, or seduced his not too easy faith (at least in matters not religious) ? Was there then any doubt as to the illegiti- macy of Don Antonio ? May he not have been born after the secret marriage of the Duke, and the Archives have been made to tell another story ? The Cardinal's generosity was, to say the least, suspicious. See (24). It was in allusion to this rumor of Philip's intention that there occurred at first, in the scene between the Cardinal and Don Pietro {Act V. Sc. III.), this passage : More, thou art wrong'd in the present: our sire's wealth Must make the nest warm for the cuckoo's brood. the Inquisition, and, what deserves commendation, he himself conferred^ from his men knoicleclge of pei'soiis and cf the rcqu'n-emenU of science, the jprofessor- ■sJtips. When asked in 1531 by a monk {Fj-afe) for the Chair of Philosophj' in Siena, he wrote back with his own hand that he did not icant monks i7i such 'lectures (" Frati in tal lezione.'") ii. ad fin. How with such evidence before him, and by himself recorded, Galluzzi could so far forget his own portraiture of this enlightened Prince as to libel his entire reign, can be explained only by a want of that philosophy which with benevolence is the joint parent of charity. APPENDIX IT. 391 IIow stands tJits Jesehers bastard son Antonio ? Held by the people seco.id to the throne, WitJi sixty tlioKsand dacatu annual income. Fiefs, palaces, villas. A rt thou foucu'J ? Why so ; ''Twas icell reminded. Hear then thi.^. From Spain Ilearii Xing Philip ici/'l bestoic Siena 071 this same brat, whoflaunt.'i ivith borroufd right Our boasted name. Don P. That is not true. Card. Ask else Thy friend Dovara. Wilt thou not aicalce ? I thoiiglit tlio CardiuaFs language would be ascribed, as I meant it, to bis evil disposition and unprincipled designs. It was the band of an unscrnpnlous enemy painting the object of his hatred with the dark- est colors furnished by malevolence to his imagination. The passage however had to be sacriflccd, because the words of Bianca in the final Scene, " I bear within me what might blast thy hopes, Could I but live so long to give it life," would have given verity to the imputation that this D. Antonio was born before her marriage with the Duke. But with these facts, taken from Galluzzi himself, of the extraordinary honor in which this boy was held, and of the wealth that was heaped on him, and which it will be seen the Cardinal Grand-duke did not take away, and of the prin- cipality designed for him by Philip, is it possible to suppose, that, let alone a positive illegitimacy, any such abominable transaction had taken place as that wherewith, through the malignancy and pohcy of Bianca's arch-enemy, the records have furnished Galluzzi and the inadequately perspicacious historians who with credulity or careless- ness have adopted his views ?(12) (12) And it is not impossible that history, whose record is as often made up of falsehoods as of truths, if not oftener, has lent undesignedly its dangerous distor- tion, to what was already counterfeit, by copying without consideration the studied Bcandals of the times. "What has our war of the Rebellion taught us? If, two 392 BIAXCA CAPELLO But let us follow the amazing story further. Bianea, who had con- fessed her shameless duplicity and to the great content of the stupid Duke, yet wants to get rid of her accomplices in a secret action that was no longer secret and whose results were satisfactory on all sides, but the CardinaFs. So she has two of them secretly put to death and their assistants removed by exile. But the chief person, a Bolognese governess, is retained. By and by, she wishes to get rid of her also. So she sends her back to Bologna •, and, on the way, soldiers from Florence set upon her, and she is mortally wounded. Her statement, taken juridically, was to the effect that site recognized the assassins as Florentine soldiers and cui-iliroats of Bianea .'(13) This from the lips of a dismissed servant — a woman too ! and a woman utterly un- principled by her own confession, if, as she pretended, she had been employed by Bianea to superintend the execution of her frauds. And the precious document (observe !) is sent, not to Francis, but to the Cardinal Ferdinand at Rome ! How it got into the Archives and re- mained there, was best known doubtless to the personage in whose behoof it was concocted, — that is, if it was more than the revengeful malice of an unworthy servant, sent away in disgrace. Certainly, it w^as a roundabout way for Bianea to take with this one woman, Bianea the " artful " as well as '^spiritual," when she had so noiselessly rid herself of all the rest.(U) In what court of the United States, or of hundred years hence, some historian should have had nothing to copy from but the atrocious calumnies of Jefferson Davis and his so-called Ministers, and should have found confirraation of the same in the congenial malice of most of the news- papers of Great Britain and of France, Avhat would be the record of the Union Government ? (13) . . '■ di aver conosc!uto che il suo feritore con altri C07npagni era.no sol- dati Fiorentini e sicarj delta Bianea." Gall. ii. 273. — For what other purpose did her lady use them? The Governess did not say. She must have been her- self the supervisor of more iniquities than child-coinage, to be familiar with the faces of the assassin-servants. And that simpleton Bianea, not to employ new ones! (14) It is not to be at all supposed that a woman of the Governess's position, if APPENDIX II. 393 Great Britain, is it, tliat sucli testimony would be talven as proof suffl clenfc of tlie guilt of the suspected party, and the latter too unheard " Yet it is precisely this ex-parte evidence that comes down to us as his- any other, would travel from Florence to Bologna, a journey then of several days, alone, much less^at a time when the whole confines were Bwarming as we have seen with freebooters. Even if without companions, she must have had a vettu- rale, or a guide and attendant if riding a mule. (a) At all events she could not have been alone ; for we are told she caused herself to be carried to Bologna, being •doubtless so far on her way thither as to be in the very midst of the masnadieri. What became then of her companion, escort, driver, or companions ? Supposing that her murder was intended, it is evident that when one man could do the job effectually it would hardly have been committed to more than two (for that there were several is implied in the very words of the narrative). Yet they left her merely wounded! She had power still to travel, and strength when she arrived to make her deposition ! This was bungling work. The truth of the story may be conjectured to be this: — The party of which the govei'ness made one (travelers in those days, as now, or lately, in Italy, if they had no partj'-, waited for their oppor- tunity to join one, but rarely if ever journeyed by themselves) were attacked by one of those bands of brigand-soldiers of which we have spoken as among the pests of Francesco's inefficient reign. Shots were fired to stop the party, or because of their resistance, as they probably traveled armed, and one of them — archihu- sata{h) — struck the woman. This Avas a fine opportunity for revenge on her part, (a) It was about this time that coaches began to be of anything like frequent use in traveling; but even then they were reserved for persons of rank, and the introduction of them was looked upon with displeasure fcy sovereign princes, some of these forbidding their general employment by edict. When Segni speaks of a " vetturale " {vetturino) in the story of the origin of Duke Alexander, the man's employers were princes. Henry of Navarre, when King of France, had but one carriage, and was obliged to do without, as he said on ere occasion, when the Queen was using it. (b) The arquebuse,* the first form of the musket, was a most uncertain, as clumsy and unwieldly weapon. Those that Philip II., of Spain, introduced into his army, required a forked rest to steady them ; and it is reasonable to suppose that these huge matchlocks, carrying a very heavy ball, were the kind adopted by Francesco. This adds to the absurdity of the idea of sending out assassins so armed. Poor Bianca ! they will not allow thee even sense in thy diablery ! Fancy a band of these arquebusiers making ready to shoot a :governess, who of course stands still to accommodate them, while, perched on eminences in the various long ly I miglit say, took the name of hollow or tube bow, *' Archibuso : cioe arco bugio, ovvero bucato. Area, perclie succeiK- alle balestre, e a' verretoni, e agli archi degli antichi." Ahdt. S.il.VI.M. Not. nel Tratt. 7°. della Ling. Tosc. del Buommattei. ed. Mil. 1807. I. 268. 11* 394 BIANCA CAPELLO tory, unsustaiaecT eveu ou its own side by one solitary proof of actual guilt. And for this, alas, we read in life-dictionaries, some of them of great repute, of the artful and cruel Bianca ! — Herein she is more unfortunate than her unhappy contemporary Mary Stuart, whose imputed complicity in the assassination of her husband has more than one rebutting evidence coexistent with the cftarge itself ( 15 ) even if she were not put up to her yillanous aspersion by an agent of the Car- dinal's, who appears to have had emissaries and secret servants everywhere. (15) "What Hallam has said of a corresponding character of the 14th century, is worth observing. "The name of Joan of Xaples has suffered by the lax repeti- tion of calumnies. * * * xhe charge .of dissolute manners, so frequently made, is not warranted by anj^ specific proof or contemporary testimony."" State of Europe, etc. v. i. p. 46T (X. Y. in S°. 1S63.) Between Joanna and Mar^^ Stuart there is considerable resemblance, both in individual traits of person and of character and in certain conspicuous points of their histories. Each was suspected of conniving at the murder of her husband, and each confirmed the suspicion with most minds (but, I think, illogically,) by marrying the principal assassin.(^a) And between all three of the personages before us, the contemporaries Mary and Bianca and their quasi-prototype of two centuries before, there is the common point of a calumniated character. Yet Joanna whom Hallam thus partially exculpates was probably the most condemn- able of all three. Does not everybody know of his own experience private in- stances of detraction, and of misapplied accusation of crime or misconduct whereof the really guilty party escapes all censure ? History is but a repetition on a large scale and before the world of what transpires in the narrow and obscure circle of familiar intercourse. (a) This is not the place to argue such a point, but, writing for the future, I t.ike up space to assert that a w Oman, who had been privy to the murder of her husband, would not, — except she were of the very lowest order of humanity and of the most degrading associations, — have consented, of free will, to marry his assassin. Shakspeare, in a grotesquely unnatural scene, makes t,aiy Anne to be won by G!oster even while the usurper confesses to have killed her husband. This is natural enough in the result of his wooing, as com- mented on in his soliloquy, and only unnatural because of the exaggeration in brevity of time, and that lack of every consideration of propriety of language, manner, and sentiment which is a frequently occurring fault of that great poet. It is natural, I say, so far as the influence of such a suit on the mind of a vain, ambitious and weak woman ; but then Anne of Warwick had not been privy nor consenting to the murder of Edward. A case absolutely to the point; for the widow of Prince Edward did marry his chief murderer. And tha tyrant would have also had the Princess Elizabeth his niece, had the latter consented; for her mother was willing to betroth her to the butcher of her own three sons and of her husband. Yet none would be so mad as even to suspect Anne or the Queen Dowager of complicity in any of these assassinations. APPENDIX II. 395 Remember, all these foul accusations are made, not against a vulgar, ignorant, and low-minded woman, but one who by the united testi- mony of her v/orst defamers was, like Mary herself, gifted with intellect as well as beauty,- and was moreover of a lofty spirit, although what to one writer is simply lofty becomes, in the vituper- ation of another, haughtiness and insolent presumption. Add to this, that Francis, whether "cruel" or not, was still a Medici, that he had suffered, if not sanctioned, the assassination of his own sister and of his brother's wife for their debauchery, and would hardly have en- dured, above all he a man not indifferent but passionately enaiyored, therefore liable to jealousy, and one who, according to Galluzzi, never forgave^ any departure from chastity by Bianca. As I have said, there is no suspicion breathed against her except what may be gathered from a vague and uncertain epithet or phrase. (16) Had there been cause, a single example, the historians would not have failed to (IG) All of Gallur^zi's terms and epithets show what a view he had taken of Bianca's character ; and Sismondi follows him without distrust (•' rartificeuse et debauchee ") ; while Botta, according to his manner, with intensity of accumula- tive sarcasm, treats us to this extraordinary satirical climax, on the occasion of Bianca's coronation : " Addi dodici d' ottobre la scappata di Yenezia, la doppia adultera d' un marito legittimo e di una moglie legittima(a), la stipendiatrice di" un' Ebrea ribalda, V ucciditrice di tre donne chiamate da lei a finto parto(b) fa portata trionfalmente con la corona in testa." t. c. 174. One would think that where Eleonora and Isabella lent examples of royal dissoluteness, where Con Pietro sinned against nature, and Francesco (as said) retailed the poisons of his father's private shop, Eianca might have been reserved for the middle tints of tho picture, nor made to bear its broadest sunlight and intensest shadow; but the (a) One instance is not proyej. For tlie other, nine hundred and ninety-nine -woraen out of a thousami would in the same circujistanccs have done as I suppose the widow of Bonaventuri may have done, and the thousandth vrould have thought she was doing no harm in committing adultery with the eyes. This, in any age and any country. And Botta, if he knew manliind as he ought to have known, must have been aware of this, call it weakness, or depravity, (and it is both). Why then launch into such special vituperation against this one calumniated head / Christ would have turned round on her accusers and written in the sand. (b) I need not repeat, where was the use of slaying them, if Bianca did not hesitate to reveal the plot I Botta here, in his love of verbal painting and epigrammatic force, forgets probability, if not ignores hisowu assertions. BIAXCA CAPELLO quote it, and we may rest assured that in lier relations as Grand-duchess she did nothing to lessen the devotion of her lord, a devotion which taking the archival record of his death as veritable (which I do not) was evidenced, even in the belief of his enemies, by his latest breath. Cons. y. 15S7. One word more. The account of Bianca's foisting a spurious off- spring on the Grand-duke is renewed, in the form of a suspicion, on every recuiTence of her pregnancy. The historians endeavor to jus- tify their aspersion by her supposed sterility, a supposition which ap- pears to rest on no reasonable foundation. Bianca, to have the grace that is ascribed to her by her calumniators, must have been perfectly well-made, and was therefore fitted by nature for reproduclion. She had born a daughter (Pellegrina) to her first husband. What ground was there for supposing that married to the Duke, a member of a pro- lific family, and who had had children by the feeble, stunted and pallid Joanna, she should suddenly lose fecundity ? v. under jj. 15S6, 1587. Galluzzi, we have seen, says she had become sterile through the use of medicines and by dissipation ; and Botta repeats, with an addition, — *' Per medecine, per disordini, per corrutela." These assertions must be, at the strongest, conjectural ; but what do they mean ? There is, I repeat, no one charge, no suggestion even of incontinence on her part, not a word said of intemperance : and merely high-living would not produce sterility, nor would obesity, unless it were natural and not the result (if it ever be) of intemperate living. Are such vague charges to be admitted without one syllable of proof ? and of ail the contemporary writers, edited and unedited, is there none to back these attestations with a single instance ? Let them then be dis- missed as the malice of her arch-enemy and the inconsiderate abuse of those who are not her friends. To prove Bianca sterile there was a powerful motive ; to assert that she was so is not to prove it. Tkis spirit of the dead Cardinal hovered over the name he had made infamous and sought to obliterate, and added liis immortal hatred to tlie sarcasm of a pen cruel at times as the poison, the halter, or the knife, of the writer's hated Medici. Ari^EXDix II. 397 talk of sterility caused in amarriiMlwoinanof thirtjfby her dissipation may do for the 16th century, but will not for this. ( 17) If Bianca, after producing Pellegrina, really was incapable of bearing more children, it was the defect of her organization and had nothing to do with her course of life. But the probability is, that that vile poisoner, the second son of the poisoner Cosmo, Avas only at his father's practices. What were the colic spasms vrhich took olf, once before, his brother's hope of issue by Bianca ? It may have been even that the premature de- livery of Joanna (see y. 157S) was some of his doing. (18) He knew not then that his brother would wed Bianca ; and it is certain that his rage at that disappointment of his hopes was greater than was decent. See, as before, yy. 1586, 7. Tliese terms '■'■ disordini," '■' coruttela," '' medi- cine," were, I little doubt, invented by the Cardinal or his partisans to substantiate the accusation of the plot, and to justify the assertion that her various pregnancies were simulated. Finally, the Duke, who, according to Botta, knew that this was a supposititious child, recommends him, according to Galluzzi, to the care of the Cardinal, and the Cardinal Grand-duke, as I have twice implied and as will be seen presently, takes care of him, and sutTers him to enjoy the name he thought too good to be defiled by a child of the Senator Capello ! In fact, the wiiole thing is an absurd jumble. I be- lieve the facts are just as I have given them in the play. If that bo romance, never did romance in my opinion come so near to history, as surely in this episode of the House of Medici never did history bor- row so much from romance. ■ Joanna died the 11th of April, 1.j7S, — ■' attraversatosi il feto gih 1578 morto nell' utero,'' — not having strength to sustain the remedies of art. {Granduc. ii. 299.) This was nearly two years o/Xer the deaths of Isabella and Eleonora. Noble, whom for obvious reasons I have followed in the text, says she died April 6, 1578, in premature (17) Witness the present Queen of Spain. (IS) I am speaking with due reflection, when I say I do notbelieve the Car^linal was in anywise too good to have abused his intimacy for that purpose. 398 BIANCA CAPELLO labor, shocked hy the murder of Isabella and Eleonora, wno were both strangled on the same day. Galluzzi would have it that the honors paid to Yittorio (Bianca's brother) on coming to Florence contributed to Joanna's death. (19) . . " Era [Joanna] di piccola statura, di faccia pallida, e di aspetto non vago." {ib. p. 299.) The Cardinal a great favorite of Joanna's. [We may suppose him therefore fomenting the dissatisfaction of the people, who, we are told, libeled the Duke while they praised the Duchess.] This period was the epoch of the fiercest discord between the brothers, "non piu velata dalla dissimulazione ma ratificata al pubblico da molte apparenti dimostrazioni." {ih. 300.) Antonio e Piero Capponi and Bernardo Girolami, the most distin- guished of the rebels who had acted with Pucci and Ridolfl, fled to France, where they openly defamed Francesco. And the Cardinal maintained constant relations with that countr3\ (i&.) Here too Gal- luzzi shows a spirit of animosity to Francesco ; for he says that the desire of vengeance, "passione predominante nelli spiriti deboli," [a false assumption and contradicted by his own example, not to say of the Cardinal, yet of Cosmo, whose mind was anything but a weak one] animated him.to put an end to the chief conspirators there. [Yet he had endeavored to disarm Orazio Pucci by numerous benefits, and it was the Cardinal who suggested the arrest of this hereditary rebel.] Curzio Picchena da Colle was Secretary of tlie Embassy, a young and enterpris- ing man. He was provided with poison, etc. Forty thousand ducats promised for each death, besides eA^enses ! {ib. 301.) This too Sis- mondi, who adds : "II lui [le G.-d. a Picchena] fit passer des poisons subtils, dont Cosnie 1" avait etabll dans son palais une mannfacture^ (19) "We are reminded of the avowal or bonst, — "all extracted faithfully from the Medicean Archives." The singleness of his sources of information tends to render Galluzzi's volumes unreliable as a historj\ It will be elsewhere seen, that a modt-rn writer lias found in the same Archives evidence sufficient to overthrow all, and absolutely, the opinions previously formed as to tlie character of that abominable woman, Caterina de' Medici ! They must be, as he says, a jyrecious deposit of historical documents! APPENDIX II. 399 qu'il pretenclait etre un atelier cle chiaiie pour les experiences " ; and so on, after Galluzzi. Eepub. Ital. t. 10. p. 22G sq. — Girolami died, and tlie rest [mark this j] lay the murder on tlie Duke ; of whose crim- inality Galluzzi adduces no one proof. They, the conspirators, dis- persed themselves in France and England ; but the cut-throats of the Grand-duke followed them and ''in course of time gave him all the satisfaction he desired.'" (2 )) A Florentine assassin, broken on the (20) We have seen howBotta speak? of Francis, — the -stupid and cruel 3Iedici. SismoncU's summing-np of his cliaracter is as follows: "•Frangois, tout aussi per- fide, tout aussi cruel, que son pere, mais bien plus dissolu(a), Lien plus vaniteux', (a) Thnn Cosmo I who was said, on more than suspicion, to have debauched both his own daughter and the betrothed of his snn. Where are the victims of Francesco's lust ? We hear of none but Bianca, who is reproached with having mcde him hers I And for her his passim, which in 157G had already lasted thir- teen years, showed no abatement. This in itself is inconsistent with the charge of dissoluteness, which sup- poses indulgence in various amours, and cannot apply to one attachment, whether sanctioned by the Church or not. In note (11) I quoted largely from a special chapter of G::lluzzi's showing that in the particulars that made Cosmo's reign illustrious Francesco's was not less splendid than his.* We are told there, besides, that the former spent whole days in the galleries of his art-collections. With such a record, he could not have been dissolute were he married to half a dozen Biancas and enamored of them all. In dissoluteness man gives np bis brain. The abuse of those life-energies which God designed, as with other animals, but for the reproduc- tion of the kind, is incompatible with continued study and such application to the interest of the artj and of learning as we have seen ascribed, with compulsory trnth, to the G. Duke Francis. In every drawing of an historical character, consideration should be had to the manners of the time. We shall presently see what were the morality ajid decency of the Court of Catharine of Medici. The Bassompierre incidentally mentioned in apreviouspassage, who bridges over for us in this relation the end of the 16th and the beginning of the 17th century, is an evidence that the profligacy of persons of rank in the era I am busy with was not evanescent either in its grossness or its excessive turpitude. That favorite of Henry IV., and ornament of the Court of Louis XIII., confessed to a ruffianly complicity in the most brutal of all outrages; an act for ■which he came nearly being stoned, as he deserved to be fully, by the people of the place of the occurrence.t This was in ICOI, seventeen years after the death of Francesco, who is handled by historians as if he were the only sinner, where in his position there was scarcely any other class. So with his alleged cruelty : it was the characteristic of the age. Henry III. of France, a prince w ho, though debauched by the devilish artifices of a bad mother — a Medici, was not without virtues, got rid of two dangerous enemies, the Duke and the Car- dinal of Guise, by assassination. This was in 15t8. In l£g9, he was himself murdered.! In 1£84, William of Orange underwent the same fate in the Netherlands. Not thirty years before (15.i5-6) occurred in England the burning of the heretic bishops and other reforming clergy, while Scotland was defiled in 1547 by the : of Cardinal Beaton, of Kizzio in 1566 and of Darnley in 1567. In 1520 took place the massacre of the ' lam rot claiming for it beneficence, nor wisdom. The money bestowed in collecting, at extravagant prices, treasures of ancient art in statuary and in medals al"np, should have been ratlier devoted to his jeo- ple's solid advantages. But neither was Cosmo in the least degree benefcent ; and compared with his reign ■who bears the e| ithei of Great, in what is Francis' less honorably conspicuous, even by Galluzzi's own acknowl- edgment? The strong animal blood of the Medici was as productive of vices and of crimes (taking the record at the worst) in one as in the other. t Ha| pilv, the viUany designed was not consummated, although the outrage was. See his own Memoirs, av- Pet toti t. XIX. (Paris lb22) p. 3-:3. As he was rewarded for his vile com) laisanre by an honor that gratif.cd his viiiity as a courtier, we may suppose that his compunction — ("cc ?ueje/s oyronfi rearer, etces pauvris flics r leuroient " — ) was stifled by one of the meanest of motives. I To the great jov of his Catholic subjects, and of the Pope, Sixtus V., who '■ feared not to sanction in cold fclood, irfull consistory, the regicide . . and elevating the name of .lames Clement above those of Judith and Eleazar Maccabeus, compared the m/ra^aJoKS event to the Incarnation and the Resurrection of the Lord " t Martin (after De Thou) : Hist, de France, ed. c, t. xi. p. 210, note. 400 BIANCA CAPELLO wheel, confessed to having been sent expressly into France by the G. D. to murder Troilo Orsini [one would have thought the D. of Bracciano had been the more likely instigator] for six thousand ducats, and after- bien plus irascible que lui [how does this accord with his dissimulatiou, as Galluzzi states it ^jUhtvait aucun des talents par leifavorable side of Francesco's character as displayed (after the manner of his day) toward his in- veterate and dreaded political enemies, j-et it will not explain his devotion to his friends. A man who in his dying hour has forethought for all who are dear to him, particularizing each one, who, with that magnanimity which belongs to delicate and noble souls alone, exaggerating ia his own eyes his own errors and losing sight entirely of the grosser offences of otliers toward him, could ask forgiveness of the brother who had persistently maligned, intrigued against, as well as hated him, and insulted the woman he passionately loved, such a man was more truly Christian than those who, forgetful of charity, emblazon but his errors and mag- nify his crimes. In thus speaking, it will be seen I assume the record copied by Gallnzzi to be correct. But my belief, I beg leave to reiterate, is positively to the contrary. I do not credit one word of this death-bed scene. (24) . . "il quale now tardi a farsi ricono:^cere per padrone; perciocche, avendo mostrato il Castellano di Livorno alqiianto di renitensa a consegnare quella Fortezza ad un gentiluomo da lui inviato cola con contrassegno, 4^ /eca impiccare.'"' Mtjratoki, nM cit. The haste of the Cardinal, it will -be observed, is not more remarked by Muratori than by Galluzzi. It is a precious passage that, " The Cardinal, comforting Mm, sent, &c." Now, if the Cardinal was beloved of the people {Galluzzi), and if Francis died (c) "In case of arsenical poisoninfr, the liver ... is generally more strongly impregnated with arsenic than the other soft organs. The proportion of absorbed arsenic found in it is, according to M. Flandin, nint tenths of the wltole quantity carried into the circulation. Where arsenic is not found in the contents of the stomach, and death has taken place within the usual period, it may commonly be detected in the liver." Taylor, p. 29. Orfila, on the contrary, who frequently condemns the opinions of Flandin, scarcely mentions the UveT. if at all, among the viscera attacked. Further, he prescribes bleeding {after vomiting) : i. 79. 408 BIAMCA CAPELLO Bishop Abbioso, Bianca's claugbter Pellegriua, and Ulysses Benti- voglio her son-in-law, were charged with the care of Bianca. She died on the 2fJth of October. (25) to the imdiisembled joy and with the universal hatred of his subjects {Sismo7idi), why did the former make such haste to seize the fortresses ? to seize them even before the bi-eiith was out of his brother's body ? Of whom was he afraid ? Was not the throne yet firmly settled? Or was there any doubt of the illegitimacy of Don Antonio, whom he had made by a most atrocious plot to be, and still makes the world believe to have been, foisted on the Grand-duke, while a modern historian, to cap the climax of absurdity, declares him to have been, t7t,e stupid Medici, perfectly satisfied when the Grand-duchess with a sublime effront- crj^ avowed the treasonous imposition ? Again, if the Cardinal was persuaded by his documents, received from the judicial examination of tlie Bolognese Governess, and which he took care to have preserved in the Medicean Archives, that Don Antonio was tut a sprout from the soil of the people, having no claim to any con- sideration other than that of an innocent victim of the venality of his mother, why did he continue the Grand-duke's benefactions to him, so immeasurably beyond his occasions even were he noble ?(a) It is obvious that there must have been doubt and uneasiness in the popular mind, or where was the need to publish that act declaratori/ of the nativity of D. Antonio? And by the by, assuming the account above to be correct, that on his death-bed the Grand-duke recommended this very youth to his brother's care, how came Botta by the story that the Grand- duke knew all alaout his origin ? Seldom does history ofi"er us such trumpery as is comprised in the account of the rise and fall of the Grand-duchess Bianca. But the Cardinal was able to make history for himself, and I verily believe he did it. (25) In the second month of this same year, Mary of Scotland was murdered in another way. The coincidence is worth noting. Both nearly of an age, but Mary a little theolder(b); both handsome, and with a fascination of manner that enhanced the beauty from which chiefly it was derived ; both amiable, yet not (a) "A Don Antonio de Medici conserv6 il trattamento e le onorificanze assegnateli da Francesco." Granduc. ii. 432. The idea that he should have Bone this out of regdrd, not only to his brother's memory, hut to the innocent hoy whose more than bastardy he -was proclaiming in his very face, is preposterous. D. Antonio was prob- ably as legitimate as Elizabeth of Kngland, who too was the product of a secret marriage, and, moreover, b/ an act of bigamy. (b) Bianca fled from Venice in 15C3. If she was then eighteen, she was forty-two years old when poisoned. Mary, born Dec. 8, 1512, on February 18, 1587, when she was beht^aded. was but a htUc over forcy-four. APPEXDIX II. 409 Taking this account to be accurate, we liave tliese remarkable facts, that two persons, husband and wife, were seized with intermittent fever within two days of each other, and that, in despite of the re- sources of art, —for we are not told that the Duke prescribed for Bianca " a suo modo ", — died within a day of eachother, conveniently to make the Cardinal sovereign. It were easier to believe the mur- derer himself, who said (as imputed to him), that Bianca, having tried to get rid of him, had the remarkable stupidity to poison the very dish her husband was sure to eat ofVand of wliich she herself was known to be fond, and that unable, without exciting suspicion, to prevent the Duke's indulging his appetite, herself, in her desperation and dis- witliout pi-ide and s[.irit ; both intellectual, and one accomplished; the lives of both romantic, but one (Maiy) knowing little else than misfortune, the other for- tunate until her death; both calumniated, but. Bianca having added to her imputed crimes the sin of witchcraft, the latter charge being reversed in Mary's case, for it was her husband who confessed be tried its futile practices upon her, while Eianca employed it, according to the Archives, on her husband, and (wonderful to relate!) with her husband's perfect knowledge. And (may I add without pre- sumption), as in the case of Mary Stiiart(2L\ so some future tragic poet may- reverse the picture of Bianca Capello, and paint her, not such as the Grand-duke loved her, but as the Cardinal hated. The change would be still easier than with Mary, and the tragedy would be more effective. But the poet would pervert, not history, but that truth which lies often hidden in the midst of history and is only to be found by those who independently seek it out for themselves. (a) I understand that Mr. Swinburne, in his drama of Ckastdard, has adopted, and with earnestness, the popular view against her. It woul 1 be difficult perhaps for an Englishman to do otherwise. Were I to write a tragedy on a theme which has been consecrated by the pen of Alfleri and of Schiller, I should, and with conviction, take the other side. The greatest source of Mary's misfortunes, and of her partial guilt, or at least of errors that partook of guilt and are arraigned as such, was her light, pliant, and thus inconstant temper. If she pardoned Both- well, it should be remembered that she forgave too the insolent, the treasonable murder of Rizzio, although in the passion of the moment she had declared she would avenge it. In fact, she was unfitted to be a queen by those very feminine qualities whioh would have made her loved, honored and admired in private life, pre- cisely as Elizabeth, by the very opposite, more than respectable as a sovereign, would have been detestabia as a simple matron. The greatest real blot upon the character of the Queen of Scots is probably that which is suggested by the name of the drama above-mentioned. The vanity of Chalelard had not carried him so far in his presump- tion had he not misredd the encouragement in Mary's eyes. And she suffered him to be sacrificed to save her reputation. In this too she was purely feminine, women who are very women feeling no more regret for those who perish by their coquetry than for the moth which singes its wings in the candle they dress by. 18 410 BTANC.V CAPELLO appointment, had the courage to perform a kind of internal 4iari- kari ! As the Duke's body was ordered to be opened, it was carried on the evening of that day to Florence with private honors, met at the gate by the clergy of San Lorenzo, the German guard and a number of his courtiers, and taken to the Church. For Bianca, Serguidi [Vittorio's successor in the Cabinet] was ordered to keep the body untouched till evening^ and then to have it opened in the presence of the daugh- ter, her husband, and the physicians. [The torchlight would not facil- itate an inspection which otherwise was not intended to be more than formal. What passed in the minds of the daughter and husband, if not of the physicians, may be conjectured.] It was carried in the same way as the Duke's to Florence on the 21st, then buried in tlie vaults of S. Lorenzo, in such a icay as not to leave anymemory of her : " non voile il Cardinal Granduca che si ammettesse fra i sepolcri dei Medici, ma lo fece seppellire nei sotterranei di S. Lorenzo in modo tale che al pubblico non restasse di lei veruna memoria." ih. 420. Was either Isabella or Eleonora buried in the public vaults ? Yet both were notoriously guilty of many adulteries, for which finally they died, and one of them besides was said to have committed incest with her own father, and the other to have gone to her virgin nuptial-bed al- ready pregnant by her father-in-law. Bianca did not lend an ear to every one icho ogled her, nor indulged in mean amours with her hus- band's pages. Yet History passes lightly over those godly actions of the princesses, or touches them witli a pencil which has no caricature or a pen which writes no syllable of reproach, while for Bianca there is no abusive name too foul. Historian vies with historian to redouble epithets of contumely and to charge the picture of her imputed mis- demeanors with the exaggerated traits of sarcasm. Why is this ? Because, like Mary of Scots, she had personal enemies, (2(3) and the (26) As the Cardinal, her lord's brother, was her adversary, at whose instigation and by whose machinatiims, aided often by the money he had solicited and ob- tained (0 the meanness ! and the perfidy !) through her aid, came all the evil APPENDIX II. 411 arcliives of her husband's family have passed through fingers which had the power to subtract and multiply at will. Implacable in his vindictive hate, the quarterings of Bianca's arms were removed by order of the Cardinal Grand-duke, and for them sub- stituted those of Joanna. He could not bear to hear her even called Gi^and-ducliess. "Egli, irritato di tanti artifici ed intrighi di quella donna, nonpote contenersi piu liingamente nella simulazione. Ordino- pertanto estinguersi ogni memoria che esistesse al pubblico della sua persona, e che si togliessero dai luoghi pubblici le di lei armi inquar- tate con quelle de Medici con sostituirvi quell© di Giovanna d' Austria. In iirogresso nel doversi far menzione di lei, non pote soffrire die li si attrihuisse il titolo di GranducJiessa^ ed egli stesso in un atto de- claratorio dei natali di D. Antonio voile che si denominasse replicata- mente la pessima Bianca." 425, 6. The historian goes on then to relate what he calls the imagincmj ac- counts. Bianca wanted to poison the Cardinal by a tart. The Car- dinal had a ring which changed color, and warned him. He would not partake of the tart. Francis, not aware of the danger, ate of it, and that accompanied her latter days and survived her in an infamous renown, so it was the natural brother of Queen Mary (Earl of Murray) who was the secret in- stigator and promoter of all the schemes of her Protestant enemies. Muratori^ ad ann. 1587, records the tragical result in this manner : — " L'anno fu poi questo, in cui Elisabetta, Eegina Eretica d' Inghilterra, con eterna sua infamia, condanno alia morte Maria, Regina Cattolica di Scozia, non suddita sua, dope la prigionia di moltissimi anni. F^t ella e prima e dipoi oppressa da infinite calunnie de* moi nemici, per tentar pure di giustificar 1' atto barbaro e tirannico d' Elisabetta^ riprovata da chiunque portava il titolo di Principe(a)." Annal. cZ' Italia (in 4to, Napoli, 1773), t. x. p. 462, Exception being made to his undissembled preju- dice against the heresiarch Elizabeth, his remarks are just, and would apply, mutatis imitandis, to Bianca. (a) This is an error. It was arFroved, as an act of policy, (as if policy could ever sanction crime, or lend more than the shadow of palliation to usurped power and to injustice !) by two or three, among whose names, if my memory does not deceive me, was the honorable and ever to be honored one of Henry of ITavarre. 412 BIANCA CAPELLO Bianca, fearful of the consequence, partook, ih. " Imaginary," so far as this statement goes. But whence came the narrative which reverses all this, and which Noble gives, and I have adopted in the play ?(27) This account says, that there was served at the repasfblayicmange, of which the Duke AVas extremely fond. Ferdinand would not eat of it, pretending illness and disordered stomach. The poisoned pair were removed, in convulsions, to the only gloomy apartment in the whole villa. After their death, and then only, the Cardinal threw open the ■doors. He pretended Bianca wished to poison him, but, seeing her husband eat of the entenomed sweetmeat, etc: (as above.) Here, it will be perceived, there is nothing in the detail that partakes of the marvelous or appeals to popular superstition. And it is perhaps for that reason, which adds to Its probability, that Galluzzi avoided men- •tionlng it, for it certainly was as worthy of record, even if based on vulgar fallacy, as its fellow-tradition. But in fact, this story has a particularity as well as plainness and naturalness of description which will not allow us, when considering all the circumstances preceding and following, and the ambitious and rancorous character of the Car- dinal, — a dissembler even by the acknowledgment of his eulogist, forever plotting, and as unsciupulous as untiring in his schemes of per- gonal aggrandizement, — will not allow us, I say, to ascribe it wholly to the ordinary invention and exaggeration of popular rumor ; although, were it otherwise, tlie story, accepted by writers of that (27) In Muratori we are toll, the Grand-duke died of an affection ("inferniitj."') ■supposed not to be dangerous, and Bianca fifteen hours after. According to a contemjjorary, many believed that Bianca, " donna di altero si)h-ito," poisoned the Grand-duke out of jealousy, and then herself; others, that the Cardinal poi- soned both. Adiud. cf It. t. c. p. 461. It is plain enough, that the supposition of empoisonment, whether a murder or both murder and self-murder, was widely prevalent, if not the universal belief in Florence. The circumstances of the twofold death, and of the malady preceding it, were then such as to excite this belief or suspicion. Consequently, if we set aside the nearly simultaneous attack an! its results, they could not have boon such as detailed in the Archives. APPENDIX III. 413 and subsequent times, is sufficient for the purpose of tlie dramatist •who believes, as I do, tliat he does not pervert the truth and give, to the great names of liistory, characters, M'hether for good or evil, that are undeserved. III. Portraits of Bianca, etc. Having alluded in the text to a picture of Bianca by Titian, I have thought it would interest the reader to be told of certain portraits, both of her and of the Grand Buke, still extant in Italy. At the time the tragedy was written, I did not know that the im- mortal colorist had really given to the world a likeness of its heroine. I merely supposed so probable a fact to aid the costume, — that is, to invest the scene with those adventitious circumstances which lend it reality, and make a picture of Venetian life, for example, seem truly such by local accidents, whicli recall from time to time the place and ■era to the spectator's mind. But it appears that there is actually such a painting extant, and that it is, as I pretended, " One of the best from old Vecelli'S hand." v. infra, p. 416, sqq. In Count Litta's costly work (Fam. Gel. Ital., Milano 1825, in fol.), in Vol. II., is a bust-portrait of Bianca after Bronzino (Gallery of Flor- ence). It is in colors. The face is very full, with the golden-tinged fair hair which Titian and Giorgione loved and understood so well to paint, very regular, long and delicately-arched eyebrows, full and expanded forehead(l), eyes large and blue, and lively in expression, (1) Too much so for beauty. This is partly owing to the manner of dressing the hah-, which is reverted on all sides, but partly may arise from the bad judg- ment of the painter in exaggerating its surface, — as many English artists do, ab- sui-dly and untrutlifully, the size of the eyes. 414 BIANCA CAPELLO nose not delicate though regular, (there seems to be a defect in the drawing, or in the copy, Avhich has thrown it a little to one side), and rather too large in the nostrils, lips curved and in proportion, but not handsome, and with an expression not agreeable ; the contour of the face more round than oval, — indeed of a faulty oval. There is nothing of the pride which Noble saw, or thought he saw, in the pictures at Strawberry Hill, nor yet of dignity, but rather of good humor and a slight degree of mischievousness and jocoseness. You see from the complexion and from the fulness and morhidesse of the flesh, that she must have been a voluptuons-looking blonde, one of that kind of women whose flesh is very white and delicate in the skin, but not firm, with eyes of a true blue, red lips, and faultless teeth, who more than any others have power both to v/aken passion and to keep it lively in the amorous. • It is probable that this polychrome is a bad miniature of an unfaith- ful picture ; for, as I have implied, there are faidts in it which will indicate, to any one moderately familiar with the art, that the portrait "was not true to nature, and that its faults have been exaggerated by the copyist-designer. It is true, the picture is of the Grand-duchess, not of the blooming maid whom Bonaveutuii, witli a fortune that makes his name seem almost the adaptation of fiction, snatched from her native soil to transplant where at a future day she should become the adornment of a royal garden, but even thus regarded, over ex- panded and partly faded, there is something clumsy, so to say, about the face, whicli cannot be Bianca. I am the more disposed to believe this from the fact that in Litta's plates the engraving after Titian of the Cardinal Ippolito in Hungarian costume difiers strikingly in the expression as well as in the eyes from the copy of the same work in the collection known as the Pitti Gallery. (2) Here we have the eyes (2) TaUeauy, etc. de la GuU. de Florence et dii Palais nttl : in fol, Paris 1814. T. III. Tab. 12.— This and all the works consulted in the Appendix ■will be found in that Library which the fur-reaching judgment and the munifi- cence of Mr. Astor ordained to be somethmg more than an ornament of our city. APPENDIX III. 415' placed at a normal distance apart ; but in tlic former tliey are so close together as to add very unpleasantly to the sharpness of the face in general, wliich is handsome but rather etreminate.(3) (3) As the Cardinal is mentioned with some particularity in both the preceding^ Appendices, and is an interesting character in himself, especially to those who consider what might have been the fortunes of Tuscany, had he, instead of his- cousin, been chosen to grace the unlawful title of Duke, with Cosmo thus shut ou* perhaps forever from the opportunity of an election, a description of his picture will not be amiss, although it bears but a remote connection with the text, and in • an illustrative point of view is valuable solely from the light it throws upon tha ' Eomish rank of Cardinal conferred upon the younger sous of princes or the bas- tards of men of power, without regard to character or qualifications or age, as a provision and a probable steppingstone to the Papacy. In this same casual light we are to consider the ecclesiastical function of the Cardinal Ferdinand, who, equally unqualified, though in another way, took it up as if it were but the mantla. of a dead man, when his brother, D. Giovanni, on whom it was originally bestowed^ came to his untimely end. The Cardmal Ippolito is represented with both mace and sword, and on the- ugly hat or toque, red like the rest of the habit, is a variegated plume, the prin- cipal feather of which is green. We are told that this portrait was taken at Bo- logna in 1530, when Titian went thiiher to paint Charles V. Ippolito was then ia his twentieth year, an age when foppery is pardonable in a handsome man, nor is- to be repressed though you wed him to the Church. Titian at the time was in alt the splendor of his power, and Vasari ranks this among the best of his portraits. The nose is delicate and rather sharp, the mouth well -formed, but, contrasted with the nose, sensuous. The expression of the eyes, as of the character of the face, is that of a generous, amiable, gentlemanly fellow, but who was not wanting in irasci- bility. There is no appearance of that pride which Yarchi says he had in excess^ neither in the style of his head nor its carriage, nor yet in the attitude, which, by the by, is without dignity, if not awkward, the habit moreover being to the last degree ungraceful. ( There is another picture of Ippolito done by Pantormo. He is here in armor^ and a legend tells us he was then in his eighteenth year. He looks eight and twenty, even in the beard, which may be called an impossibility in so mere a youth. It is a fine face, manly, very regular, very handsome. One hand rests oa 416 BIAXCA CAPELLO On the same folio with Bianca is a portrait of tlie Grand Diike Fran- •cis, after Rubens, "witli an air decidedly distinguished, the face good and regular, if not handsome. You woidd take the subject, if in the ordinary costume of our own day, to be a man of consequence and of high fashion, and somewhat of a free liver. It resembles much the picture of Cosmo Jby Bronzino, in the Pitti, not merely in feature but in the style of the head. In this latter picture, by the by, the expres- sion of Cosmo is not wliat one would have anticipated from his char- acter, but is positively good, as well as amiable, and highly intellec- tual. Another bust-portrait of Francis, by Bronzino, is in the Pitti Gal- lery. The head large and intellectual, with great breadth and height of forehead ; eyes somewhat stern ; lips well-formed and full, and perhaps sensual ; nose, good ; the face oval. In the same Gallery again (I speak of course of the engraved col- lection) is a portrait which is only supposed to be that of Bianca Capello. This also is by Bronzino. There is the same Avant of oval in the face as mars the one given by Count Litta ; the forehead is very high, but not so broad, nor are the eyebrows so long. The nose is heavy, but regular, the mouth well-formed. The style of the face cor- responds to what I have ascribed to the other. In the explanation of the Plate (29th of the Gallery : T.i/i.), we are told: "Nous avonsun autre portrait de Blanche par le Titien^ qui est tres-different de ^elui-ci, et la gravure, due au burin de F. Clerici, en a ete publiee par A. Locatelli, edi- teur (Hel'lconographie ItaUcnne cles homines et des femmes illustres.{i) liis helmet, the other on bis favorite dog. This id the picture that best reminds me of Yarchi's repeated eulogies ; but, considering Titian's mastery in portraiture, this, which differs ■widely from his, may be sujiposed to be no true likeness. (4) After my death, when my countrymen may condescend to read these dramas, I hope that some one interested in their publication will procure this work of Loca- telli's, and, if the picture be as fine as represented, which may be supposed, being "by Titian and of a woman, cause a careful copy to be taken for the play. I should