MACHIAVELLI, NICCOLO
Encyclopedia Britannica
11th Edition, Vol 17, pp. 233-237
John Addington Symonds
MACHIAVELLI, NICCOLO (1460-1527), Italian statesman and
writer, was born at Florence on the 3rd of May 1449. His ancestry claimed blood
relationship with the lords of Montes pertoli, a fief situated between Val di
Pesa and Val d'Elsa, at no great distance from the city. Niccolo's father,
Bernardo (b. 1428), followed the profession of a jurist. He held landed
property worth something like £250 a year of our money. His son, though
not wealthy, was never wholly dependent upon official income.
Of Niccolo's early years and education little is known. His works show wide
reading in the Latin and Italian classics, but it is almost certain that he had
not mastered the Greek language. To the defects of Machiavelli's education we
may, in part at least, ascribe the peculiar vigour of his style and his
speculative originality. He is free from the scholastic trifling and learned
frivolity which tainted the rhetorical culture of his century. He made the
world of men and things his study, learned to write his mother-tongue with
idiomatic conciseness, and nourished his imagination on the masterpieces of the
Romans.
The year of Charles VIII's invasion and of the Medici's expulsion from Florence
(1494) saw Machiavelli's first entrance into public life. He was appointed
clerk in the second chancery of the commune under his old master, the
grammarian, Marcello Virgilio Adriani. Early in 1498 Adrian became chancellor
of the republic, and Machiavelli received his vacated office with the rank of
second chancellor and secretary. This post he retained till the year 15!2. The
masters he had to serve were the dieci di liberia e pace, who, though
subordinate to the signoria, exercised a separate control over the
departments of war and the interior. They sent their own ambassadors to foreign
powers, transacted business with the cities of the Florentine domain, and
controlled the military establishment of the commonwealth. The next fourteen
years of Machiavelli's life were fully occupied in the voluminous
correspondence of his bureau, in diplomatic missions of varying importance, and
in the organization of a Florentine militia. It would be tedious to follow him
through all his embassies to petty courts of Italy, the first of which took
place in 1499, when he was sent to negotiate the continuance of a loan to
Catherine Sforza, countess of Forli and Imola. In 1500 Machiavelli traveled
into France, to deal with Louis XII. about the affairs of Pisa. These embassies
were the school in which Machiavelli formed his political opinions, and
gathered views regarding the state of Europe and the relative strength of
nations. They not only introduced him to the subtleties of Italian diplomacy,
but also extended his observation over races very different from the Italians.
He thus, in the course of his official business, gradually acquired principles
and settled ways of thinking which he afterwards expressed in writing.
In 1502 Machiavelli married Marietta Corsini, who bore him several
children, with whom, in spite of his own infidelities, he lived on good terms,
and who survived him twenty-six years. In the same year Piero Soderini was
chosen gonfalonier for life, in accordance with certain changes in the
constitution of the state, which were intended to bring Florence closer to the
Venetian type of government. Machiavelli became intimately connected with
Soderini, assisted him in carrying out his policy, suggested important measures
of military reform which Soderini adopted, and finally was involved in ruin by
his fall.
The year 1502 was marked by yet another decisive incident in Machiavelli's
life. In October he was sent, much against his will, as envoy to the camp of
Cesare Borgia, duke of Valentinois. The duke was then in Romagna, and it was
Machiavelli's duty to wait upon and watch him. He was able now to observe those
intricate intrigues which culminated in Cesare's murder of his disaffected
captains. From what remains of Machiavelli's official letters, and from his
tract upon the Modo che tenne il duca r'ale,itino per aflirnazzar
l'itc"ozzo Vitetli, we are able to appreciate the actual relations
which existed between the two men, and the growth in Machiavelli's mind of a
political ideal based upon his study of the duke's character. Machiavelli
conceived the strongest admiration for Cesare's combination of audacity with
diplomatic prudence, for his adroit use of cruelty and fraud, for his
self-reliance, avoidance of half- measures, employment of native troops, and
firm administration in conquered provinces. More than once, in letters to his
friend Vettori, no less than in the pages of the Principe, Machiavelli
afterwards expressed his belief that Cesare Borgia's behaviour in the conquest
of provinces, the cementing of a new state out of scattered elements, and the
dealing with false friends or doubtful allies, was worthy of all commendation
and of scrupulous imitation. As he watched Cesare Borgia at this, the most
brilliant period of his adventurous career, the man became idealized in his
reflective but imaginative mind. Round him, as a hero, he allowed his own
conceptions of the perfect prince to cluster. That Machiavelli separated the
actual Cesare Borgia, whom he afterwards saw, ruined and contemptible, at Rome,
from this radiant creature of his political fancy, is probable. That the Cesare
of history does not exactly match the Duca Valentino of Machiavelli's writings
is certain. Still the fact remains that henceforth Machiavelli cherished the
ideal image of the statesman which he had modeled upon Cesare, and called this
by the name of Valentino.
On his return to Florence early in January 1503, Machiavelli began to
occupy himself with a project which his recent attendance upon Cesare Borgia
had strengthened in his mind. The duties of his office obliged him to study the
conditions of military service as they then existed in Italy. He was familiar
with the disadvantages under which republics laboured when they engaged
professional captains of adventure and levied mercenary troops. The bad faith
of the condottiere Paolo Vitelli (beheaded at Florence in '409) had deeply
impressed him. In the war with Pisa he had observed the insubordination and
untrustworthiness of soldiers gathered from the dregs of different districts,
serving under egotistical and irresponsible commanders. His reading in Livy
taught him to admire the Roman system of employing armies raised from the body
of the citizens; and Cesare Borgia's method of gradually substituting the
troops of his own duchy for aliens and mercenaries showed him that this plan
might be adopted with success by the Italians. He was now determined if
possible, to furnish Florence with a national militia. The gonfalonier Soderini
entered into his views. But obstacles of n( small magnitude arose. The question
of money was immediately pressing. Early in 1503 Machiavelli drew up for
Soderini speech, Discorso sulla provisio, te del danaro, in which the
duty anc necessity of liberal expenditure for the protection of the state were
expounded upon principles of sound political philosophy. Between this date and
the last month of 1506 Machiavelli laboured at his favourite scheme, working
out memorials on the subject for his office, and suggesting the outlines of a
new military organization. On the 6th of December 1506 his plan was approved by
the signoria, and a special ministry, called the nove di ordinansa e
milizia, was appointed. Machiavelli immediately became their secretary. The
country districts of the Florentine dominion were now divided into departments,
and levies of foot soldiers were made in order to secure a standing militia. A
commander-in-chief had to he chosen for the new troops. Italian jealousy shrank
from conferring this important office on a Florentine, lest one member of the
state should acquire a power dangerous to the whole. The choice of Soderini and
Machiavelli fell, at this juncture, upon an extremely ineligible person, none
other than Don Micheletto, Cesare Borgia's cut-throat and assassin. It is
necessary to insist upon this point, since it serves to illustrate a radical
infirmity in Machiavelli's genius. While forming and promoting his scheme, he
was actuated by principles of political wisdom and by the purest patriotism.
But he failed to perceive that such a ruffian as Micheletto could not inspire
the troops of Florence with that devotion to their country and that healthy
moral tone which should distinguish a patriot army. Here, as elsewhere, he
revealed his insensibility to the ethical element in human nature.
Meanwhile Italy had been the scene of memorable events, in most of which
Machiavelli took some part Alexander VI. had died suddenly of fever. Julius II.
had ascended the papal chair. The duke of Valentinois had been checked in
mid-career of conquest. The collapse of the Borgias threw central Italy into
confusion; and Machiavelli had, in 1505 to visit the Baglioni at Perugia and
the Petrucci at Siena. In the following year he accompanied Julius upon his
march through Perugia into the province of Emilia, where the fiery pope subdued
in person the rebellious cities of the Church. Upon these embassies Machiavelli
represented the Florentine dieci in quality of envoy. It was his duty to keep
the ministry informed by means of frequent despatches and reports. All this
while the war for the recovery of Pisa was slowly dragging on, without success
or honour to the Florentines. Machiavelli had to attend the camp and provide
for levies amid his many other occupations. And yet he found time for private
literary work. In he autumn of 1504 he began his Decennali, or Annals of Italy,
a poem composed in rough terza rima. About the same time he composed comedy on
the model of Aristophanes, which is unfortunately lost. It seems to have been
called Le Masschere. Giuliano de' Ricci tells us it was marked by stringent
satire upon great ecclesiastics and statesmen, no less than by a tendency to
"ascribe all human things to natural causes or to fortune." That
phrase accurately describes the prevalent bias of its author's mind.
The greater part of 1506 and 1507 was spent in organizing the new militia,
corresponding on the subject, and scouring the country on enlistment service.
But at the end of the latter year European affairs of no small moment diverted
Machiavelli from these humbler duties. Maximilian was planning a journey into
Italy in order to be crowned emperor at Rome, and was levying subsidies from
the imperial burghs for his expenses. The Florentines thought his demands
excessive. Though they already had Francesco Vettori at his court Soderini
judged it advisable to send Machiavelli thither in December. He traveled by
Geneva, all through Switzerland, to Benzen, where he found the emperor. This
journey was an important moment in his life. It enabled him to study the Swiss
and the Germans in their homes; and the report which he wrote on his return is
among his most effective political studies. What most remarkable in it is his
concentrated effort to realize the exact political weight of the German nation,
and to penetrate the causes of its strength and weakness. He attempts to grasp
the national character as a whole, and thence to deduce practical conclusions.
The same qualities are noticeable in his Ritrati della cose di Francia,
which he drew up after an embassy to Louis XII. at Blois in 1510. These notes
upon the French race are more scattered than the report on German affairs. But
they reveal no less acumen combined with imaginative penetration into the very
essence of national existence.
Machiavelli returned from Germany in June 1508. The rest of that year and a
large part of 1509 were spent on the affairs of the militia and the war of
Pisa. Chiefly through his exertions the war was terminated by the surrender of
Pisa in June 5505. Meanwhile the league of Cambray had disturbed the peace of
Italy, and Florence found herself in a perilous position between Spain and
France. Soderini's government grew weaker. The Medicean party lifted up its
head. To the league of Cambray succeeded the Holy League. The battle of Ravenna
was fought, and the French retired from Italy. The Florentines had been
spectators rather than actors in these great events. But they were now destined
to feel the full effects of them. The cardinal Giovanni de' Medici, who was
present at the battle of Ravenna, brought a Spanish army into Tuscany. Prato
was sacked in the August of 1512. Florence, in extreme terror, deposed the
gonfalonier, and opened her gates to the princes of the house of Medici.
The government on which Machiavelli depended had fallen, never to rise again.
The national militia in which he placed unbounded confidence had proved
inefficient to protect Florence in the hour of need. He was surrounded by
political and personal enemies, who regarded him with jealousy as the
ex-gonfalonier's right~hand man. Yet at first it appears that he still hoped to
retain his office. He showed no repugnance to a change of masters, and began to
make overtures to the Medici. The nove della milizia were, however,
dissolved; and on the 7th of November 1512 Machiavelli was deprived of his
appointments. He was exiled from Florence and confined to the dominion for one
year, and on the 7th of November was further prohibited from setting foot in
the Palazzo Pubblico. Ruin stared him in the face; and, to make matters worse,
he was implicated in the conspiracy of Pier Paolo Boscli in February 1513.
Machiavelli had taken no share in that feeble attempt against the Medici, but
his name was found upon a memorandum dropped by Boscoli. This was enough to
ensure his imprisonment. He was racked, and only released upon Giovanni de'
Medici' s election to the papacy in March 1513. When he left his dungeon he
retired to a farm near San Casciano, and faced the fact that his political
career was at an end.
Machiavelli now entered upon a period of life to which we owe the great works
that have rendered his name immortal. But it was one of prolonged
disappointment and annoyance. He had not accustomed himself to economical
living; and, when the emoluments of his office were withdrawn, he had barely
enough to support his family. The previous years of his manhood had been spent
in continual activity. Much as he enjoyed the study of the Latin and Italian
classics, literature was not his business; nor had he looked on writing as more
than an occasional amusement. He was now driven in upon his books for the
employment of a restless temperament; and to this irksomeness of enforced
leisure may be ascribed the production of the Principe, the
Discorsi, the Arte della guerra, the comedies, and the
Historie fiorentine. The uneasiness of Machiavelli's mind in the first
years of this retirement is brought before us by his private correspondence.
The letters to Vettori paint a man of vigorous intellect and feverish activity,
dividing his time between studies vulgar dissipations, seeking at one time
distraction in low intrigues and wanton company, at another turning to the
great minds of antiquity for solace. It is not easy to understand the spirit in
which the author of the Principe sat down to exchange obscenities with
the author of the Sommario della storia d'Italia. At the same time this
coarseness of taste did not blunt his intellectual sagacity. His letters on
public affairs in Italy and Europe, especially those which he meant Vettori to
communicate to the Medici at Rome, are marked by extraordinary fineness of
perception, combined, as usual in his case, with philosophical breadth. In
retirement at his villa near Percussina, a hamlet of San Cascitino, Machiavelli
completed the Principe before the end of 1513. This famous book is an
analysis of the methods whereby an ambitious man may rise to sovereign power.
It appears to have grown out of another scarcely less celebrated work, upon
which Machiavelli had been engaged before he took the Principe in hand,
and which he did not finish until some time afterwards. This second treatise is
the Discorsi sopra la prinra deca di Tito Livio.
Cast in the form of comments on the history of Livy, the Discorsi are
really an inquiry into the genesis and maintenance of states. The
Principe is an offshoot from the main theme of the Discorsi,
setting forth Machiavelli's views at large and in detail upon the nature of
principalities, the method of cementing them, and the qualities of a successful
autocrat. Being more limited in subject and more independent as a work of
literary art, this essay detaches itself from the main body of the Discorsi,
and has attracted far more attention. We feel that the Principe is
inspired with greater fervency, as though its author had more than a
speculative aim in view, and brought it forth to serve a special crisis. The
moment of its composition was indeed decisive. Machiavelli judged the case of
Italy so desperate that salvation could only be expected from the intervention
of a powerful despot. The unification of Italy in a state protected by a
national army was the cherished dream of his life; and the peroration of the
Principe shows that he meant this treatise to have a direct bearing on the
problem. We must be careful, however, not to fall into the error of supposing
that he wrote it with the sole object of meeting an occasional emergency.
Together with the Discorsi, the Principe contains the speculative fruits of his
experience and observation combined with his deductions from Roman history. The
two works form one coherent body of opinion, not systematically expressed, it
is true, but based on the same principles, involving the same conclusions, and
directed to the same philosophical end. That end is the analysis of the
conception of the state, studied under two main types, republican and
monarchical. Up to the date of Machiavelli, modern political philosophy had
always presupposed an ideal. Medieval speculation took the Church and the
Empire for granted, as divinely appointed institutions, tinder which the
nations of the earth must flourish for the space of man's probation on this
planet. Thinkers differed only as Guelfs and Ghibellines, as leaning on the one
side to papal, on the other to imperial supremacy. In the revival of learning,
scholarship supplanted scholasticism, and the old ways of medieval thinking
were forgotten. But no substantial philosophy of any kind emerged from
humanism; the political lucubrations of the scholars were, like their ethical
treatises, for the most part rhetorical. Still the humanists effected a
delivery of the intellect from what had become the bondage of obsolete ideas,
and created a new medium for the speculative faculty. Simultaneously with the
revival, Italy had passed into that stage of her existence which has been
called the age of despots. The yoke of the Empire had been shaken off. The
Church had taken rank among Italian tyrannies. The peninsula was, roughly
speaking, divided into principalities and sovereign cities, each of which
claimed autocratic jurisdiction. These separate despotisms owned no common
social tie, were founded on no common jus or right, but were connected
in a network of conflicting interests and changeful diplomatic combinations. A
keen and positive political intelligence emerged in the Italian race. The
reports of Venetian and Florentine ambassadors at this epoch contain the first
germs of an attempt to study politics from the point of view of science.
At this moment Machiavelli intervenes. He was conscious of the change which had
come over Italy and Europe. He was aware that the old strongholds of medieval
thought must be abandoned, and that the, decaying ruins of medieval
institutions furnished no basis for the erection of solid political edifices.
He felt the corruption of his country, and sought to bring the world back to a
lively sense of the necessity for reformation. His originality consists in
having extended the positive intelligence of his century from the sphere of
contemporary politics and s special interests to man at large regarded as a
political being. He founded the science of politics for the modern world, by
concentrating thought upon its fundamental principles. He began to study men,
not according to some preconception, but as he found them-men, not in the
isolation of one century, but as a whole in history. He drew his conclusions
from the nature of mankind itself, ascribing all things to natural causes or to
fortune." In this way he restored the right method of study, a method
which had been neglected since the days of Aristotle. He formed a conception of
the modern state, which marked the close of the middle ages, and anticipated
the next phase of European development. His prince, abating those points which
are purely Italian or strongly tinctured with the author's personal
peculiarities, prefigured the monarchs of the 16th and 17th centuries, the
monarchs whose motto was L'etat c'est moi! His doctrine of a national
militia foreshadowed the system which has given strength in arms to France and
Germany. His insight into the causes of Italian decadence was complete; and the
remedies which he suggested, in the perorations of the Principe and the
Arte della guerra, have since been applied in the unificationof Italy.
Lastly, when we once have freed, ourselves from the antipathy engendered by his
severance of ethics from the field of politics, when we have once made proper
allowance for his peculiar use of phrases like frodi onorevoli or
scellerarezze gloriose, nothing is left but admiration for his mental
attitude. That is the attitude of a patriot, who saw with open eyes the ruin of
his country, who burned above all things to save Italy and set her in her place
among the powerful nations, who held the duty of self- sacrifice in the most
absolute sense, whose very limitations and mistakes were due to an absorbing
passion for the state he dreamed might be reconstituted. It was Machiavelli's
intense preoccupation with this problem-what a state is and how to found one in
existing circumstances- which caused the many riddles of his speculative
writings. Dazzled. as it were, with the brilliancv of his own discovery,
concentrated in attention on the one necessity for organizing a powerful
coherent nation, he forgot that men are more than political beings. He
neglected religion, or regarded it as part of the state machinery. He was by no
means indifferent to private virtue, which indeed he judged the basis of all
healthy national existence; but in the realm of politics he postponed morals to
political expediency. He held that the people, as distinguished from the nobles
and the clergy, were the pith and fibre of nations yet this same people had to
become wax in the hands of the politician - their commerce and their comforts,
the arts which give a dignity to life and the pleasures which make life
liveable neglected - their very liberty subordinated to the one tyrannical
conception. To this point the segregation of politics from every other factor
which goes to constitute humanity had brought him; a this it is which makes us
feel his world a wilderness, devoid of atmosphere and vegetation. Yet some such
isolation of the subject matter of this science was demanded at the moment of
its birth just as political economy, when first started, had to make a rigid
severance of wealth from other units. It is only by a gradual process that
social science in its whole complexity can be evolved We had hardly yet
discovered that political economy has unavoidable points of contact with
ethics.
From the foregoing criticism it will be perceived that all the questions
whether Machiavelli meant to corrupt or to instruct the world, to fortify the
hands of tyrants or to lead them to their ruin, are now obsolete. He was a man
of science- one who by the vigorous study of his subject matter sought from
that subject- matter itself to deduce laws. The difficulty which remains in
judging him is a difficulty of statement, valuation allowance. How much shall
we allow for his position in Renaissance Italy, for the corruption in the midst
of which he lived, for his own personal temperament? How shall we state his
point of departure from the middle ages, his sympathy with prevalent classical
enthusiasms, his divination of a new period? How shall we estimate the
permanent worth of his method, the residuum of value in his maxims?
After finishing the Principe, Machiavelli thought of dedicating it to
one of the Medicean princes, with the avowed hope that he might thereby regain
their favour and find public employment. He wrote to Vettori on the subject,
and Giuliano de' Medici, duke of Nemours, seemed to him the proper person. The
choice was reasonable. No sooner had Leo been made pope than he formed schemes
for the aggrandizement of his family. Giuliano was offered and refused the
duchy of Urbino. Later on, Leo designed for him a duchy in Emilia, to be
cemented out of Parma, Piacenza, Reggio and Modena. Supported by the power of
the papacy, with the goodwill of Florence to base him, Giuliano would have
found himself in a position somewhat better than that of Cesare Borgia; and
Borgia's creation of the duchy of Romagna might have served as his model.
Machiavelli therefore was justified in feeling that here was an opportunity for
putting his cherished schemes in practice, and that a prince with such
alliances might even advance to the grand end of the unification of Italy.
Giuliano, however, died in 1506. Then Machiavelli turned his thoughts towards
Lorenzo, duke of Urbino. The choice of this man as a possible Italian liberator
reminds us of the choice of Don Micheletto as general of the Florentine
militia. To Lorenzo the Principe was dedicated, but without result. The
Medici, as yet at all events, could not employ Machiavelli, and had not in
themselves the stuff to found Italian kingdoms.
Machiavelli, meanwhile, was reading his Discorsi to a select audience in
the Rucellai gardens, fanning that republican enthusiasm which never lay long
dormant among the Florentines. Towards the year 1519 both Leo X. and his
cousin, the cardinal Giulio de' Medici, were much perplexed about the
management of the republic. It seemed necessary, if possible in the gradual
extinction of their family to give the city at least a semblance of
self-government. They applied to several celebrated politicians, among others
to Machiavelli, for advice in the emergency. The result was a treatise in which
he deduced practical conclusions from the past history and present temper of
the city, blending these with his favourite principles of government in
general. He earnestly admonished Leo, for his own sake and for Florence, to
found a permanent and free state system for the republic, reminding him in
terms of noble eloquence how splendid is the glory of the man who shall confer
such benefit upon a people. The year 1520 saw the composition of the Arte
della guerra and the Vita di Castruccio.
The first of these is a methodical treatise setting forth Machiavelli's views
on military matters, digesting his theories respecting the superiority of
national troops, the inefficiency of fortresses, the necessity of relying upon
infantry in war, and the comparative insignificance of artillery. It is
strongly coloured with his enthusiasm for ancient Rome; and specially upon the
topic of artillery it displays a want of insight into the actualities of modern
warfare. We may regard it as a supplement or appendix to the Principe
and the Discorsi, since Machiavelli held it for fundamental axiom that
states are powerless unless completely armed in permanence. The peroration
contains a noble appeal to the Italian liberator of his dreams, and a parallel
from Macedonian history, which read by the light of this century, sounds like a
prophecy of Piedmont.
The Vita di Castruccio was composed at Lucca, whither Machiavelli had
been sent on a mission. This so-called biography of the medieval adventurer who
raised himself by personal ability and military skill to the tyranny of several
Tuscan cities must be regarded in the light of an historical romance. Dealing
freely with the outline of Castruccio's career, as he had previously dealt with
Cesare Borgia, he sketched his own ideal of the successful prince. Cesare
Borgia had entered into the Principe as a representative figure rather
than an actual personage; so now conversely the theories of the Principe
assumed the outward form and resemblance of Castruccio. In each case history is
blent with speculation in nearly the same proportions. But Castruccio, being
farther from the writer's own experience, bears weaker traits of personality.
In the same year, 1520, Machiavelli, at the instance of the cardinal Giulio de'
Medici, received commission from the officers of the Studio pubblico to
write a history of Florence. They agree to pay him an annual allowance of 100
florins while engaged upon the work. The next six years were partly employed in
its composition, and he left a portion of it finished, with a dedication to
Clement VII., when he died in 1527; In the Historie Fiorentine
Machiavelli quitted the field of political speculation for that of history But
having already written the Discorsi and the Principe, he carried
with him to this new task of historiography the habit of mind proper to
political philosophy. In his hands the history of Florence became a text on
which at fitting seasons to deliver lessons in the science he initiated. This
gives the work its special character. It is not so much a chronicle of
Florentine affairs, from the commencement of modern history to the death of
Lorenzo de' Medici in 1492, as a critique of that chronicle from the point of
view adopted by Machiavelli in his former writings. Having condensed his
doctrines in the Principe and the Discorsi, he applies their
abstract principles to the example of the Florentine republic. But the
History of Florence is not a mere political pamphlet. It is the first
example in Italian literature of a national biography, the first attempt in any
literature to trace the vicissitudes of a people's life in their logical
sequence, deducing each successive phase from passions or necessities inherent
in preceding circumstances, reasoning upon them from general principles, and
inferring corollaries for the conduct of the future. In point of form the
Florentine History is modeled upon Livy. It contains speeches in the antique
manner, which may be taken partly as embodying the author's commentary upon
situations of importance, partly as expressing what he thought dramatically
appropriate to prominent personages. The style of the whole book is nervous,
vivid, free from artifice and rhetoric, obeying the writer's thought with
absolute plasticity. Machiavelli had formed for himself a prose style, equalled
by no one but by Guicciardini in his minor works, which was far removed from
the emptiness of the latinizing humanists and the trivialities of the Italian
purists. Words in his hands have the substance, the self-evidence of things. It
is an athlete's style, all bone and sinew, nude, without superfluous flesh or
ornament.
It would seem that from the date of Machiavelli's discourse to Leo on the
government of Florence the Medici had taken him into consideration. Writing to
Vettori in 1513, he had expressed his eager wish to "roll stones" in
their service; and this desire was now gratified. In 1521 he was sent to Carpi
to transact a petty matter with the chapter of the Franciscans, the chief known
result of the embassy being a burlesque correspondence with Francesco
Guicciardini. Four years later, in 1525, he received a rather more important
mission to Venice. But Machiavelli's public career was virtually closed; and
the interest of his biography still centres in his literary work. We have seen
that already, in 1504, he had been engaged upon a comedy in the manner of
Aristophanes, which is now unfortunately lost. A translation of the
Andria and three original comedies from his pen are extant, the precise
dates of which are uncertain, though the greatest of them was first printed at
Rome in 1524. This is the Mandragola, which may be justly called the
ripest and most powerful play in the Italian language.
The plot is both improbable and unpleasing. But literary criticism is merged in
admiration of the wit, the humour, the vivacity, the satire of a piece which
brings before us the old life of Florence in a succession of brilliant scenes.
If Machiavelli had any moral object when he composed the Mandragola, it was to
paint in glaring colours the corruption of Italian society. It shows how a bold
and plausible adventurer aided by the avarice and hypocrisy of a confessor, and
familiarity with vice, achieves the triumph of making a gulled husband bring
his own unwilling but too yielding wife to shame. The whole comedy is a study
of stupidity and baseness acted on by roguery. About the power with which this
picture of domestic immorality is presented there can be no question But the
perusal of the piece obliges us to ask ourselves whether the author's radical
conception of human nature was not false. The same suspicion is forced on us by
the Principe. Did not Machiavelli leave good habit, as an essential ingredient
of character out of account? Men are not such absolute fools as Nicia, nor such
compliant catspaws as Ligurio and Timoteo; women are not such weak instruments
as Sostrata and Lucrezia. Somewhere, in actual life, the stress of craft and
courage acting on the springs of human vice and weakness fails, unless the hero
of the comedy or tragedy, Callimaco or Cesare, allows for the revolt of
healthier instincts. Machiavelli does not seem to have calculated the force of
this recoil. He speculates a world in which virtu, unscrupulous strength of
character, shall deal successfully with frailty. This, we submit, was a
deep-seated error in his theory of life, an error to which may be ascribed the
numerous' stumbling blocks and rocks of offence in his more serious writings.
Some time after the Mandragola, he composed a second comedy,
entitled Clizia, which is even homelier and closer to the life of
Florence than its predecessor. It contains incomparable studies of the
Florentine housewife and her husband, a grave business-like citizen, who falls
into the senile folly of a base intrigue There remains a short piece without
title, the Commedia in prosa, which, if it be Machiavelli's, as internal
evidence style sufficiently argues, might be accepted as a study for both the
Clizia and the Mandragola. It seems written to expose the corruption of
domestic life in Florence, and especially to satirize the friars in their
familiar part of go-betweens, tame cats, confessors and adulterers. Of
Machiavelli's minor poems, sonnets, sapitoli and carnival songs there is not
much to say.
Powerful as a comic playwright, he was not a poet in the proper sense of the of
the term. The little novel of Belfagor claims a passing word, if only because
of its celebrity. It is a good- humoured satire upon marriage, the devil being
forced to admit that hell itself is preferable to his wife's company. That
Machiavelli invented it to express the irritation of his own domestic life is a
myth without foundation. The story has a medieval origin, and it was almost
simultaneously treated in Italian talian by Machiavelli, Straparola and
Giovanni Brevio.
In the spring of 1526 Machiavelli was employed by Clement VIIn. to inspect the
fortifications of Florence. He presented a report upon the subject, and in the
summer of the same year received orders to attend Francesco Guicciardini, the
pope's commissary of war in Lombardy. Guicciardini sent him in August to
Cremona, to transact business with the Venetian proveditori. Later on in the
autumn we find him once more with Guicciardini at Bologna. Thus the two great
Italian historians of the 16th century, who had been friends for several years,
were brought into relations of close intimacy. After another visit to
Guicciardini in the spring of 1527, Machiavelli was sent by him to Civitaz
Vecchia. It seemed that he was destined to be associated in the papal service
with Clement's viceroy, and that a new period of diplomatic employment was
opening for him. But soon after his return to Florence he fell ill. His son
Piero said that he took medicine on the 20th of June which disagreed with him;
and on the 22nd he died, having received the last offices of the Church.
There is no foundation for the legend that he expired with profane sarcasms
upon his lips. Yet we need not run into the opposite extreme, and try to fancy
that Machiavelli, who had professed Paganism in his life, proved himself a
believing Christian on his deathbed. That he left an unfavorable opinion among
his fellow citizens is very decidedly recorded by the historian Varchi. The
Principe, it seems, had already begun to prejudice the world against him; and
we can readily believe that Varchi sententiously observes, that "it would
have been better for him if nature had given him either a less powerful
intellect or a mind of a more genial temper." There is in truth a
something crude, unsympathetic, cynical in his mental attitude toward human
nature, for which, even after the lapse of more than three centuries, we find
it difficult to make allowance. The force of his intellect renders this want of
geniality repulsive. We cannot help objecting that one who was so powerful
could have been kindlier and sounder if he willed. We therefore do him the
injustice of mistaking his infirmity for perversity. He was colour-blind to
commonplace morality, and we are angry with him because he merged the hues of
ethics in one grey monotone of politics.
In person Machiavelli was of middle height, black-haired, with rather a
small head, very bright eyes and slightly aquiline nose. His thin, close lips
often broke into a smile of sarcasm. His activity was almost feverish. When
unemployed in work or study he was not averse to the society of boon
companions, gave himself readily to transient amours, and corresponded in a
tone of cynical bad taste. At the same time he lived on terms of intimacy with
worthy men.
Varchi says that "in his conversation he was pleasant, obliging to his
intimates, the friend of virtuous persons." Those who care to understand
the contradictions of which such a character was capable should study his
correspondence with Vettori. It would be unfair to charge what is repulsive in
their letters wholly on the habits of the times, for wide familiarity with
correspondence of similar men at the same epoch brings one acquainted with
little that is so disagreeable.
Among the many editions of Machiavelli's works the one in 8 vols., dated
Italia, 1813, may be mentioned, and the more comprehensive ones published by A.
Parenti (Florence, 1843) and another by A. Usigli (Florence 1857). P. Fanfani
and L. Passerini began another which promised to be the most complete of all;
but only 6 vols. were published (Florence, 1873-1877): the work contains many
new and important documents on Machiavelli's life. The best biography is the
standard work or Pasquale Villari, La Storia di Niccolo Machiavelli e de'
suoi tempi (Florence, 1877 Eng. trans. by Linda Villari, (London, 1892), in
vol. ii. there is an exhaustive criticism of the various authors who have
written on Machiavelli. See also T. Mundt, Niccolo Machiavelli und das
System der modernen Politik (3rd ed., Berlin, 1867); E. Feuerlein,
"Zur Machiavelli-Frage" in H. von Sybel's Histor. Zeitschrift
(Munich, 1868); P. S. Mancini, Prelezioni con un saggio sul Machiavelli;;
F. Nitti, Machiavelli neda vita e nelle opera (Naples, 1876). O.
Tomasini, La Vitae e gli scritti di Niccolo Machiavelli (Oxford, 1891).
L. A. Burd, Il Principe, byh Niccolo Machiavelli (Oxford, 1891); Lord
Morley, Machiavelli (Romanes lecture, Oxford, 1897). The Cambridge
Modern History, vol. i. (Cambridge 1903), contains an essay on Machiavelli
by L. A. Burd, with a very full biography.
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