登陆注册
5191400000017

第17章 THE STATE AS A WORK OF ART(17)

In so artificial a world only a man of consummate address could hope to succeed; each candidate for distinction was forced to make good his claims by personal merit and show himself worthy of the crown he sought.Their characters are not without dark sides; but in all of them lives something of those qualities which Italy then pursued as its ideal.What European monarch of the time labored for his own culture as, for instance, Alfonso I? His travels in France, England, and the Netherlands we re undertaken for the purpose of study: by means of them he gained an accurate knowledge of the industry and commerce of these countries.It is ridiculous to reproach him with the turner's work which he practiced in his leisure hours, connected as it was with his skill in the casting of cannon, and with the unprejudiced freedom with which he surrounded himself by masters of every art.The Italian princes were not, like their contemporaries in the North, dependent on the society of an aristocracy which held itself to be the only class worth consideration, and which infected the monarch with the same conceit.In Italy the prince was permitted and compelled to know and to use men of every grade in society; and the nobility, though by birth a caste, were forced in social intercourse to stand up on their personal qualifications alone.But this is a point which we shall discuss more fully in the sequel.The feeling of the Ferrarese towards the ruling house was a strange compound of silent dread, of the truly Italian sense of well-calculated interest, and of the loyalty of the modern subject: personal admiration was transferred into a new sentiment of duty.The city of Ferrara raised in 1451 a bronze equestrian statue to their Prince Niccolo, who had died ten years earlier; Borso (1454) did not scruple to place his own statue, also of bronze, but in a sitting posture, hard by in the market; in addition to which the city, at the beginning of his reign, decreed to him a 'marble triumphal pillar.' Acitizen who, when abroad in Venice, had spoken ill of Borso in public, was informed against on his return home, and condemned to banishment and the confiscation of his goods; a loyal subject was with difficulty restrained from cutting him down before the tribunal itself, and with a rope round his neck the offender went to the duke and begged for a full pardon.The government was well provided with spies, and the duke inspected personally the daily list of travellers which the innkeepers were strictly ordered to present.Under Borso, who was anxious to leave no distinguished stranger unhonored, this regulation served a hospitable purpose; Ercole I used it simply as a measure of precaution.

In Bologna, too, it was then the rule, under Giovanni II Bentivoglio, that every passing traveller who entered at one gate must obtain a ticket in order to go out at another.An unfailing means of popularity was the sudden dismissal of oppressive officials.When Borso arrested in person his chief and confidential counsellors, when Ercole I removed and disgraced a tax-gatherer who for years had been sucking the blood of the people, bonfires were lighted and the bells were pealed in their honour.With one of his servants, however, Ercole let things go too far.The director of the police, or by whatever name we should choose to call him (Capitano di Giustizia), was Gregorio Zampante of Lucca, a native being unsuited for an office of this kind.Even the sons and brothers of the duke trembled before this man; the fines he inflicted amounted to hundreds and thousands of ducats, and torture was applied even before the hearing of a case: bribes were accepted from wealthy criminals, and their pardon obtained from the duke by false representations.Gladly would the people have paid any sum to their ruler for sending away the 'enemy of God and man.' But Ercole had knighted him and made him godfather to his children; and year by year Zampante laid by 2,000 ducats.He dared only eat pigeons bred in his own house, and could not cross the street without a band of archers and bravos.It was time to get rid of him; in 1496 two students, and a converted Jew whom he had mortally offended, killed him in his house while taking his siesta, and then rode through the town on horses held in waiting, raising the cry, 'Come out! come out! we have slain Zampante!' The pursuers came too late, and found them already safe across the frontier.Of course it now rained satires some of them in the form of sonnets, others of odes.

It was wholly in the spirit of this system that the sovereign imposed his own respect for useful servants on the court and on the people.

When in 1469 Borso's privy councillor Lodovico Casella died, no court of law or place of business in the city, and no lecture-room at the University, was allowed to be open: all had to follow the body to San Domenico, since the duke intended to be present.And, in fact, 'the first of the house of Este who attended the corpse of a subject'

同类推荐
  • 诫初心学人文

    诫初心学人文

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 重订囊秘喉书

    重订囊秘喉书

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 公门果报录

    公门果报录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • Of Money

    Of Money

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 蜀乱述闻

    蜀乱述闻

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 青少年应该知道的寺庙建筑(阅读中华国粹)

    青少年应该知道的寺庙建筑(阅读中华国粹)

    我国寺庙的数量众多,建筑风格多样,艺术价值极高,千百年来,承载与记录着中国古代文化的发展和兴衰,不仅是我国的艺术瑰宝,散发着独特的艺术魅力,更是我国悠久宗教历史文化的代表与象征。我国的寺庙文化源远流长,它完整地保存了我国各个朝代的历史文物,在国家公布的全国文物保护单位中,寺庙及其相关设施约占一半,说它是“历史文物的保险库”,可谓当之无愧。我国的寺庙建筑与传统的宫殿建筑形式相结合,具有鲜明的民族风格和民俗特色。
  • 神女天降:魔皇大人,轻点宠

    神女天降:魔皇大人,轻点宠

    【全本免费】一朝穿越从天而降,砸中魔皇从此羁绊一生。谁说只有武功和灵力才能在这幻世立足?她毫无灵力且武功全无,依然能呼风唤雨叱咤江湖!驭风雨,契神兽,踏神结,持神器,四界之内,凌驾于众生之上。谜一样的身世背后竟然牵扯出一个惊天大阴谋。当真相一步步被揭露,记忆一点点被寻回,她剑指苍穹八方相助!弑神诛仙,只在一念之间;缘深缘浅,早已命中注定。
  • 河流:大地的滚滚动脉

    河流:大地的滚滚动脉

    科学是人类进步的第一推动力,而科学知识的学习则是实现这一推动的必由之路。在新的时代,社会的进步、科技的发展、人们生活水平的不断提高,为我们青少年的科学素质培养提供了新的契机。抓住这个契机,大力推广科学知识,传播科学精神,提高青少年的科学水平,是我们全社会的重要课题。
  • 青鸟晨歌

    青鸟晨歌

    世上最动人的时刻往往很短暂,自然与人的融合同样短暂。5分钟后,它不再响应,牢牢紧贴树干不动,似听出或看出我非同类。为安全计,它完全化身树的一部分。如此做法,属自保习性,往往在天敌眼前蒙混过关。我叫啊叫啊,叫了很久。同样,它把自己当成树也当了很久。最后我看看表,已过两小时,实在挺不住,举相机迈前一步。一直背对我的它像脑后长了眼睛一样,马上振翅起飞,落在10米外的小树上一动不动。只有10步远,还过去吗?它明摆着想引诱我再过去,用它那一动不动的魔法跟我再耗两小时。这才明白它真用心,它鸣叫并非表达愉悦情绪,而是向伴侣报警并兼有吸引我注意力的作用。
  • 万水千山走遍

    万水千山走遍

    我国地大物博,奇观胜景美不胜数,自古就引得文人政客“江山如此多娇”的赞叹。能将这些美景一一游览,实为人生莫大的荣幸与乐趣。然而,一个人的精力毕竟有限,多数人都要借助他人的画笔去欣赏心中的风景。郁达夫说:“江山亦需文人捧。”为此,《悦读季·名家经典:万水千山走遍》特意精选了朱自清、老舍、张抗抗、舒婷等名家的这类作品,但愿这些锦绣华章绘成的画卷能够定格天南地北、五湖四海那些最美的风景,伴你足不出户纵心游览万水千山!
  • 地藏菩萨十斋日

    地藏菩萨十斋日

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 菩萨行方便境界神通变化经

    菩萨行方便境界神通变化经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 锦瑟华年是情痴:李商隐诗传

    锦瑟华年是情痴:李商隐诗传

    本书是唐代著名诗人李商隐的传记。李商隐与杜牧合称“小李杜”,与温庭筠合称“温李”,他是唐朝行将灭亡时的一位诗歌巨星,他给唐朝诗歌画上了完满的句号。他的诗以细腻严谨、意境灵妙为长,千百年来深受后人追捧喜爱。本书以李商隐的诗歌为经纬,全面细致地描绘了李商隐沉郁多情的一生。作传者的文字十分精巧,富有韵律感,读来清风拂面,近于吟哦。本书成功地将纪实文体的严谨和诗歌的优雅结合为一体,能引人进入绝妙的美学佳处。
  • 影响世界青少年的101个心理寓言(101个心理学寓言)

    影响世界青少年的101个心理寓言(101个心理学寓言)

    为什么有五种本领还输了——学会克服“贪婪”心理、随手将“金子”丢进海里——学会面对习惯心理、爱找借口的狼——改正“找借口”的错误心理、蚂蚁的追星梦——改正盲目崇拜的错误心理等。
  • 张司马定浙二乱志

    张司马定浙二乱志

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。