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Book FirstPart XCIV
Part XCIV
I had formed the resolution, as I said a short while back, to go toward
France; partly because I saw that the Pope did not hold me in the same esteem
as formerly, my faithful service having been besmirched by lying tongues; and
also because I feared lest those who had the power might play me some worse
trick. So I was determined to seek better fortune in a foreign land, and
wished to leave Rome without company or license. On the eve of my projected
departure, I told my faithful friend Felice to make free use of all my effects
during my absence; and in the case of my not returning; left him everything I
possessed. Now there was a Perugian workman in my employ, who had helped me on
those commissions from the Pope; and after paying his wages, I told him he
must leave my service. He begged me in reply to let him go with me, and said
he would come at his own charges; if I stopped to work for the King of France,
it would certainly be better for me to have Italians by me, and in particular
such persons as I knew to be capable of giving me assistance. His entreaties
and arguments persuaded me to take him on the journey in the manner he
proposed. Ascanio, who was present at this debate, said, half in tears: "When
you took me back, I said I wished to remain with you my lifetime, and so I
have it in my mind to do." I told him that nothing in the world would make me
consent; but when I saw that the poor lad was preparing to follow on foot, I
engaged a horse for him too, put a small valise upon the crupper, and loaded
myself with far more useless baggage than I should otherwise have taken. ^1
[Footnote 1: He left Rome, April 1, 1537.]
From home I travelled to Florence, from Florence to Bologna, from Bologna
to Venice, and from Venice to Padua. There my dear friend Albertaccio del Bene
made me leave the inn for his house; and next day I went to kiss the hand of
Messer Pietro Bembo, who was not yet a Cardinal. ^2 He received me with marks
of the warmest affection which could be bestowed on any man; then turning to
Albertaccio, he said: "I want Benvenuto to stay here, with all his followers,
even though they be a hundred men; make then your mind up, if you want
Benvenuto also, to stay here with me, for I do not mean elsewise to let you
have him." Accordingly I spent a very pleasant visit at the house of that most
accomplished gentleman. He had a room prepared for me which would have been
too grand for a cardinal, and always insisted on my taking my meals beside
him. Later on, he began to hint in very modest terms that he should greatly
like me to take his portrait. I, who desired nothing in the world more,
prepared some snow-white plaster in a little box, and set to work at once.
The first day I spent two hours on end at my modelling, and blocked out the
fine head of that eminent man with so much grace of manner that his lordship
was fairly astounded. Now, though he was a man of profound erudition and
without a rival in poetry, he understood nothing at all about my art; this
made him think that I had finished when I had hardly begun, so that I could
not make him comprehend what a long time it took to execute a thing of that
sort thoroughly. At last I resolved to do it as well as I was able, and to
spend the requisite time upon it; but since he wore his beard short after the
Venetian fashion, I had great trouble in modelling a head to my own
satisfaction. However, I finished it, and judged it about the finest specimen
I had produced in all the points pertaining to my art. Great was the
astonishment of Messer Pietro, who conceived that I should have completed the
waxen model in two hours and the steel in ten, when he found that I employed
two hundred on the wax, and then was begging for leave to pursue my journey
toward France. This threw him into much concern, and he implored me at least
to design the reverse for his medal, which was to be a Pegasus encircled with
a wreath of myrtle. I performed my task in the space of some three hours, and
gave it a fine air of elegance. He was exceedingly delighted, and said: "This
horse seems to me ten times more difficult to do than the little portrait on
which you have bestowed so much pains. I cannot understand what made it such a
labour." All the same, he kept entreating me to execute the piece in steel,
exclaiming: "For Heaven`s sake, do it; I know that, if you choose, you will
get it quickly finished." I told him that I was not willing to make it there,
but promised without fail to take it in hand wherever I might stop to work.
[Footnote 2: I need hardly say that this is the Bembo who ruled over Italian
literature like a dictator from the reign of Leo X onwards. He was of a noble
Venetian house; Paul III made him Cardinal in 1539. He died, aged
seventy-seven, in 1547.]
While this debate was being carried on I went to bargain for three horses
which I wanted on my travels; and he took care that a secret watch should be
kept over my proceedings, for he had vast authority in Padua; wherefore, when
I proposed to pay for the horses, which were to cost five hundred ducats,
their owner answered: "Illustrious artist, I make you a present of the three
horses." I replied: "It is not you who give them me; and from the generous
donor I cannot accept them, seeing I have been unable to present him with any
specimen of my craft." The good fellow said that, if I did not take them, I
should get no other horses in Padua, and should have to make my journey on
foot. Upon that I returned to the magnificent Messer Pietro, who affected to
be ignorant of the affair, and only begged me with marks of kindness to remain
in Padua. This was contrary to my intention, for I had quite resolved to set
out; therefore I had to accept the three horses, and with them we began our
journey.
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