The boast of blood. — Cacciaguida continues his discourse concerning the old and the new Florence.
O thou small nobleness of our blood! If thou makest folk glory in thee down here, where our affection languishes, it will nevermore be a marvel to me; for there, where appetite is not perverted, I mean in Heaven, I myself gloried in thee. Truly art thou a cloak which quickly shortens, so that, if day by day it be not pieced, Time goeth round about it with his shears.
With the YOU,1 which Rome first tolerated, in which her family least perseveres,2 my words began again. Whereat Beatrice, who was a little withdrawn,3 smiling, seemed like her4 who coughed at the first fault that is written of Guenever. I began, “You are my father, you give me all confidence to speak; you lift me so that I am more than I. Through so many streams is my mind filled with gladness that it makes of itself a joy, in that it can bear this and not burst.5 Tell me then, beloved first source of me, who were your ancestors, and what were the years that were numbered in your boyhood. Tell me of the sheepfold of St. John,6 how large it was then, and who were the people within it worthy of the highest seats.”
1 The plural pronoun, used as a mark of respect. This usage was introduced in the later Roman Empire.
2 The Romans no longer show respect to those worthy of it.
3 Beatrice stands a little aside, theology having no part in this colloquy. She smiles, not reproachfully, at Dante’s vainglory.
4 The Dame de Malehault, who coughed at seeing the first kiss given by Lancelot to Guenever. The incident is not told in any of the printed versions of the Romance of Lancelot, but it has been found by Mr. Paget Toynbee in several of the manuscripts.
5 Rejoices that it has capacity to endure such great joy.
6 Florence, whose patron saint was St. John the Baptist.
As a coal quickens to flame at the blowing of the winds, so I saw that light become resplendent at my blandishments, and as it became more beautiful to my eyes, so with voice more dulcet and soft, but not with this modern speech, it said to me, “From that clay on which Ave was said, unto the birth in which my mother, who. now is sainted, was lightened of me with whom she was burdened, this fire had come to its Lion1 five hundred, fifty, and thirty times to reinflame itself beneath his paw.2 My ancestors and I were born in the place where the last ward is first found by him who runs in your annual game.3 Let it suffice to hear this of my elders. Who they were, and whence they came thither, it is more becoming to leave untold than to recount.
1 — Mars
As he glow’d like a ruddy shield on the Lion’s breast. — Maud,
part III. The Lion is the sign Leo in the Zodiac, appropriate to
Mars by supposed conformity of disposition.
2 Five hundred and eighty revolutions of Mars are accomplished in a little more than ten hundred and ninety years.
3 The place designated was the boundary of the division of the city called that of “the Gate of St. Peter,” where the Corso passes by the Mercato Vecchio or Old Market. The races were run along the Corso on the 24th June, the festival of St. John the Baptist.
“All those able to bear arms who at that time were there, between Mars and the Baptist,1 were the fifth of them who are living. But the citizenship, which is now mixed with Campi and with Certaldo and with Figghine,2 was to be seen pure in the lowest artisan. Oh, how much better it would be that those folk of whom I speak were neighbors, and to have your confine at Galluzzo and at Trespiano,3 than to have them within, and to endure the stench of the churl of Aguglione,4 and of him of Signa, who already has his eye sharp for barratry!
1 Between the Ponte Vecchio, at the head of which stood the statue of Mars, and the Baptistery, — two points marking the circuit of the ancient walls.
2 Small towns not far from Florence, from which, as from many others, there had been emigration to the thriving city, to the harm of its own people.
3 It would have been better to keep these people at a distance, as neighbors, and to have narrow bounds for the territory of the city.
4 The churl of Aguglione was, according to Benvenuto da Imola, a lawyer named Baldo, “qui fuit magnus canis.” He became one of the priors of Florence in 1311. He of Signa is supposed to have been one Bonifazio, who, says Buti, “sold his favors and offices.”
“If the people which most degenerates in the world1 had not been as a stepdame unto Caesar, but like a mother benignant to her son, there is one now a Florentine2 who changes money and traffics, who would have returned to Simifonti, there where his grandsire used to go begging. Montemurlo would still belong to its Counts, the Cerchi would be in the parish of Acone, and perhaps the Buondelmonti in Valdigreve.3 The confusion of persons has always been the beginning of the harm of the city, as in the body the food which is added.4 And a blind bull falls more headlong than the blind lamb; and oftentimes one sword cuts more and better than five. If thou regardest Luni and Urbisaglia,5 how they have gone, and how Chiusi and Sinigaglia are going their way after them, to hear how families are undone will not appear to thee a strange thing or a bard, since cities have their term.6 Your things all have their death even as ye; but it is concealed in some that last long, while lives are short. And as the revolution of the heaven of the Moon covers and uncovers the shores without a pause, so fortune does with Florence. Wherefore what I shall tell of the high Florentines, whose fame is hidden by time, should not appear to thee a marvellous thing. I saw the Ughi, and I saw the Catellini, Filippi, Greci, Ormanni, and Alberichi, even in their decline, illustrious citizens; and I saw, as great as they were old, with those of the Sannella, those of the Area, and Soldanieri, and Ardinghi, and Bostiebi.7 Over the gate which at present is laden with new felony8 of such weight that soon there will be jettison from the bark,9 were the Ravignani, from whom the Count Guido is descended,10 and whosoever since has taken the name of the high Bellincione. He of the Pressa knew already bow one needs to rule, and Galigaio already had in his house the gilded hilt and pummel.11 Great were already the column of the Vair,12 the Sacchetti, Giuochi, Fifanti, and Barucci, and Galli, and they who blush for the bushel.13 The stock from which the Calfucci sprang was already great, and already the Sizii. and Arrigucci had been drawn to curule chairs.14 Oh how great did I see those who have been undone by their pride!15 and the balls of gold16 made Florence flourish with all their great deeds. So did the fathers of those who always,when your church is vacant, become fat, staying in consistory.17 The overweening race which is as a dragon behind him who flies, and to him who shows tooth or purse is gentle as a lamb,18 already was coming up, but from small folk, so that it pleased not Ubertin Donato that his father-in-law should afterwards make him their relation.19 Already had Caponsacco descended into the market place down from Fiesole, and already was Giuda a good citizen, and Infangato.20 I will tell a thing incredible and true: into the little circle one entered by a gate which was named for those of the Pear.21 Every one who bears the beautiful ensign of the great baron22 whose name and whose praise the feast of Thomas revives, from him had knighthood and privilege; although to-day he who binds it with a border unites himself with the populace.23 Already there were Gualterotti and Importuni; and Borgo24 would now be more quiet, if they had gone hung for new neighbors. The house of which was born your weeping,25 through its just indignation which has slain you, and put an end to your glad living, was honored, both itself and its consorts. O Buondelmonte, how ill didst thou flee its nuptials through the persuasions of another! 26 Many would be glad who now are sorrowful, if God had conceded thee to the Ema27 the first time that thou camest to the city. But it behoved that Florence in her last peace should offer a victim to that broken stone which guards the bridge.28
1 If the clergy had not quarrelled with the Emperor, bringing about factions and disturbances in the world.
2 “I have not discovered who this is,” says Buti.
3 The Conti Guidi had been compelled to sell to the Florentines their stronghold of Montemurlo, because they could not defend it from the Pistoians. The Cerchi and the Buondelmonti had been forced by the Florentine Commune to give up their fortresses and to take up their abode in the city, where they became powerful, and where the bitterness of intestine discord and party strife had been greatly enhanced by their quarrels.
4 Food added to that already in process of digestion.
5 Cities once great, now fallen.
6 Cities longer-lived than families.
7 All once great families, but now extinct, or fallen.
8 Above the gate of St. Peter rose the walls of the abode of the Cerchi, the head of the White faction.
9 The casting overboard was the driving out of the leaders of the Whites in 1302.
10 The Count Guido married Gualdrada, the daughter of Bellincione Berti.
11 Symbols of knighthood; the use of gold in their accoutrements being reserved for knights.
12 The family of the Pigli, whose scatcheon was, in heraldic terms, gules, a pale, vair; in other words, a red shield divided longitudinally by a stripe of the heraldic representation of the fur called vair.
13 The Chiaramontesi, one of whom in the old days, being the officer in charge of the sale of salt for the Commune, had cheated both the Commune and the people by using a false measure. See Purgatory, Canto XII.
14 To high civic office.
15 The Uberti, the great family of which Farinata was the most renowned member.
16 The Lamberti, who bore golden balls on their shields.
17 The Visdomini, patrons of the Bishopric of Florence, who, after the death of a bishop, by deferring the appointment of his successor grew fat on the episcopal revenues.
18 The Adimari. Benvenuto da Imola reports that one Boccacino Adimari, after Dante’s banishment, got possession of his property, and always afterward was his bitter enemy.
19 Ubertin Donato married a daughter of Bellincion Berti, and was displeased that her sister should afterwards be given to one of the Adimari.
20 There seems to be a touch of humor in these three names of “Head in bag,” “Judas,” and “Bemired.”
21 The Peruzzi, who bore the pear as a charge upon their scutcheon. The incredible thing may have been that the people were so simple and free from jealousy as to allow a public gate to bear the name of a private family. The “little circle” was the circle of the old walls.
22 Hugh, imperial vicar of Tuscany in the time of Otho II. and Otho III. He died on St. Thomas’s Day, December 21st, 1006, and was buried in the Badia, the foundation of which is ascribed to him; there his monument is still to be seen, and there of old, on the anniversary of his death, a discourse in his praise was delivered. Several families, whose heads were knighted by him, adopted his arms, with some distinctive addlition. His scutcheon was paly of four, argent and gules.
23 Giano della Bella, the great leader of the Florentine commonalty in the latter years of the 13th century. He bore the arms of Hugh with a border of gold.
24 The Borgo Sant’ Apostolo, the quarter of the city in which these families lived, would have been more tranquil if the Buondelmonti had not come to take up their abode in it.
25 The Amidei, who were the source of much of the misery of Florence, through their long and bitter feud with the Buondelmonti, by which the whole city was divided.
26 The quarrel between the Amidei and the Buondelmonti arose from the slighting by Buondelmonto dei Buondelmonti of a daughter of the former house, to whom he was betrothed, for a daughter of the Donati, induced thereto by her mother. This was in 1215.
27 The Ema, a little stream that has to be crossed in coming from Montebuono, the home of the Buondelmonti, to Florence.
28 That victim was Buondelmonte himself, slain by the outraged Amidei, at the foot of the mutilated statue of Mars, which stood at the end of the Ponte Vecchio.
“With these families, and with others with them, I saw Florence in such repose that she had no occasion why she should weep. With these families I saw her people so glorious and so just, that the lily was never set reversed upon the staff, nor had it been made blood-red by division.”1
1 The banner of Florence had never fallen into the hands of her enemies, to be reversed by them in scoff. Of old it had borne a white lily in a red field, but in 1250, when the Ghibellines were expelled, the Guelphs adopted a red lily in a white field, and this became the ensign of the Commune.