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Adrien wished to bring the
Romans back to the simple and austere manners of the early Church, and with
this object pushed reform to the minutest details. For instance, of the hundred
grooms maintained by Leo X, he retained only a dozen, in order, he said, to
have two more than the cardinals.
A pope like this could not
reign long: he died after a year's pontificate. The morning after his death his
physician's door was found decorated with garlands of flowers, bearing this
inscription: "To the liberator of his country."
Giulio di Medici and Pompeo Colonna were again rival candidates.
Intrigues recommenced, and the
Conclave was once more so divided that at one time the cardinals thought they
could only escape the difficulty in which they were placed by doing what they
had done before, and electing a third competitor; they were even talking about
Cardinal Orsini, when Giulio di Medici, one of the rival candidates, hit upon a
very ingenious expedient. He wanted only five votes; five of his partisans each
offered to bet five of Colonna's a hundred thousand ducats to ten thousand
against the election of Giulio di Medici. At the very first ballot after the
wager, Giulio di Medici got the five votes he wanted; no objection could be
made, the cardinals had not been bribed; they had made a bet, that was all.
Thus it happened, on the
18th of November, 1523, Giulio di Medici was proclaimed pope under the name of
Clement VII. The same day, he generously paid the five hundred thousand ducats
which his five partisans had lost.
It was under this
pontificate, and during the seven months in which Rome, conquered by the
Lutheran soldiers of the Constable of Bourbon, saw holy things subjected to the
most frightful profanations, that Francesco Cenci was born.
He was the son of Monsignor
Nicolo Cenci, afterwards apostolic treasurer during the pontificate of Pius V.
Under this venerable prelate, who occupied himself much more with the spiritual
than the temporal administration of his kingdom, Nicolo Cenci took advantage of
his spiritual head's abstraction of worldly matters to amass a net revenue of a
hundred and sixty thousand piastres, about f32,000 of our money. Francesco
Cenci, who was his only son, inherited this fortune.
His youth was spent under
popes so occupied with the schism of Luther that they had no time to think of
anything else. The result was, that Francesco Cenci, inheriting vicious
instincts and master of an immense fortune which enabled him to purchase
immunity, abandoned himself to all the evil passions of his fiery and
passionate temperament. Five times during his profligate career imprisoned for
abominable crimes, he only succeeded in procuring his liberation by the payment
of two hundred thousand piastres, or about one million francs. It should be
explained that popes at this time were in great need of money.
The lawless profligacy of
Francesco Cenci first began seriously to attract public attention under the
pontificate of Gregory XIII. This reign offered marvellous facilities for the
development of a reputation such as that which this reckless Italian Don Juan
seemed bent on acquiring. Under the Bolognese Buoncampagno, a free hand was
given to those able to pay both assassins and judges. Rape and murder were so
common that public justice scarcely troubled itself with these trifling things,
if nobody appeared to prosecute the guilty parties. The good Gregory had his reward
for his easygoing indulgence; he was spared to rejoice over the Massacre of St.
Bartholomew.
Francesco Cenci was at the
time of which we are speaking a man of forty-four or forty-five years of age,
about five feet four inches in height, symmetrically proportioned, and very
strong, although rather thin; his hair was streaked with grey, his eyes were
large and expressive, although the upper eyelids drooped somewhat; his nose was
long, his lips were thin, and wore habitually a pleasant smile, except when his
eye perceived an enemy; at this moment his features assumed a terrible
expression; on such occasions, and whenever moved or even slightly irritated,
he was seized with a fit of nervous trembling, which lasted long after the
cause which provoked it had passed. An adept in all manly exercises and
especially in horsemanship, he sometimes used to ride without stopping from
Rome to Naples, a distance of forty-one leagues, passing through the forest of
San Germano and the Pontine marshes heedless of brigands, although he might be
alone and unarmed save for his sword and dagger. When his horse fell from
fatigue, he bought another; were the owner unwilling to sell he took it by
force; if resistance were made, he struck, and always with the point, never the
hilt. In most cases, being well known throughout the Papal States as a
free-handed person, nobody tried to thwart him; some yielding through fear,
others from motives of interest. Impious, sacrilegious, and atheistical, he
never entered a church except to profane its sanctity. It was said of him that
he had a morbid appetite for novelties in crime, and that there was no outrage
he would not commit if he hoped by so doing to enjoy a new sensation.
At the age of about
forty-five he had married a very rich woman, whose name is not mentioned by any
chronicler. She died, leaving him seven children--five boys and two girls. He
then married Lucrezia Petroni, a perfect beauty of the Roman type, except for
the ivory pallor of her complexion. By this second marriage he had no children.
As if Francesco Cenci were
void of all natural affection, he hated his children, and was at no pains to
conceal his feelings towards them: on one occasion, when he was building, in
the courtyard of his magnificent palace, near the Tiber, a chapel dedicated to
St. Thomas, he remarked to the architect, when instructing him to design a
family vault, "That is where I hope to bury them all." The architect
often subsequently admitted that he was so terrified by the fiendish laugh which
accompanied these words, that had not Francesco Cenci's work been extremely
profitable, he would have refused to go on with it.
As soon as his three eldest
boys, Giacomo, Cristoforo, and Rocco, were out of their tutors' hands, in order
to get rid of them he sent them to the University of Salamanca, where, out of
sight, they were out of mind, for he thought no more about them, and did not
even send them the means of subsistence. In these straits, after struggling for
some months against their wretched plight, the lads were obliged to leave
Salamanca, and beg their way home, tramping barefoot through France and Italy,
till they made their way back to Rome, where they found their father harsher
and more unkind than ever.
This happened in the early
part of the reign of Clement VIII, famed for his justice. The three youths
resolved to apply to him, to grant them an allowance out of their father's
immense income. They consequently repaired to Frascati, where the pope was
building the beautiful Aldobrandini Villa, and stated their case. The pope
admitted the justice of their claims, and ordered Francesco, to allow each of
them two thousand crowns a year. He endeavoured by every possible means to
evade this decree, but the pope's orders were too stringent to be disobeyed.
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