|  |   CHAPTER VI
            
            FLORENCE 
            
            
             
          II 
            
          MACHIAVELLI 
            
            
            
             
            
           BY the year 1512
            the downfall of the Florentine Republic was complete. Her failure was due to a
            variety of causes. A form of government which had worked satisfactorily while
            remaining outside the general stream of European politics, proved incapable of
            readjustment to novel conditions, and became an anachronism, more and more
            discredited as time went on. The character of the Florentine constitution
            rendered almost impossible any continuity of aim or persistence in policy. The
            Signoria changed every two months: the Dieci della guerra, who had de
            facto the largest control over foreign politics, changed every six months. No
            State could repose confidence in a government, in which political secrets could
            not be kept and where it appeared impossible to fix responsibility on anyone.
            From time to time efforts were made at Florence to remove this source of
            weakness, and the appointment in 1502 of a Gonfaloniere holding office for life
            seemed to many men, including Machiavelli, to have at last furnished some real
            guarantee for a stable policy. Not only, however, was the notion of a permanent
            official at variance with the theories of political liberty accepted at
            Florence, but the new Gonfaloniere, Piero Soderini, was in reality unequal to
            his position, and maintained his authority only at the cost of much unnecessary
            friction. He was firm only in his allegiance to France. Louis XII on his part
            was indifferent to the real interests of the city, though ready to make what
            use he could of Florentine assistance in his Italian expeditions. When the
            French were ultimately forced to withdraw from Italy, Florence was left
            isolated and impotent. 
          
         It was not merely
            the inherent defects of her constitution that weakened Florence; in the city
            itself there was never during these years any real union. The death of
            Savonarola neither removed the causes of internal discontent, nor mitigated the
            animosity of faction. The quarrels of individuals and of parties rendered it
            difficult to maintain order in the city or to conduct the daily business of
            government. The adherents of the Medici family were numerous, rich, and
            unscrupulous, and in the end proved successful. They were ready at any moment
            to cooperate with any foreigner or Italian, who might be an enemy of the
            Republic. The result was to create general distrust, and to render impossible
            any combined effort on a large scale. 
          
         A city so
            situated could only maintain its independence, if its military strength
            supplied more than a counterpoise to its constitutional weakness. An adequate
            army and trustworthy commanders were indispensable, and Florence possessed
            neither. The practice of hiring professional soldiers was general in Italy, and
            was adopted at Florence. It became the cause of incalculable evil. Not only was
            the city liable to be deserted or betrayed, even during a battle, by her
            mercenary troops, but the system necessarily involved a vast outlay of public
            money and a heavy taxation. By 1503 the financial crisis had in consequence
            become so acute that it was necessary to levy a tithe upon all real property.
            The evil was mitigated, but not removed, by the military reforms of 1506.
            Machiavelli, who carried into effect the new system, though the idea did not
            originate with him, was able, by means of his indomitable diligence and
            enthusiasm, to muster a force of about 5000 citizen soldiers; but in the end
            they proved to be of little service 
          
         Florence was,
            moreover, set in the midst of many and great enemies. In the North, Ludovico il
            Moro at Milan, whether as open enemy or insidious friend, did what he could to
            damage the State, until he was taken prisoner by the French in 1500 and finally
            disappeared from Italian history. Venice had long ago abandoned her traditional
            policy and been seeking to acquire an inland empire, and, until the battle of
            Agnadello in 1509 crushed her power, harassed and impeded the Florentines at
            every turn. At Rome both Alexander VI and Julius II were indifferent or hostile
            to Florentine interests, and Cesare Borgia was believed, probably with reason,
            to include among his designs the incorporation of Tuscany with his other conquests.
            And besides the opposition of the larger Italian States, Florence had during
            this period to struggle against the hostility of nearly all the smaller towns
            in her neighborhood. Pisa in particular was a source of endless trouble. From
            1494, when Pisa, thanks to Charles VIII, threw off the Florentine dominion and
            became a free State, until 1509, Florence was at war with her; and any other
            Power, whose object was to damage Florence, was sure to intervene from time to
            time in the struggle. 
          
         To meet the
            dangers which threatened them from outside and the embarrassments and
            perplexities within the city, the Florentines possessed no statesmen of
            commanding ability or acknowledged preeminence, and no generals with real
            military genius. There were skillful diplomatists and mediocre captains in
            abundance, and even men who, like Antonio Giacomini and Niccolo Capponi, might
            under more favorable conditions have proved efficient commanders; but, speaking
            broadly, at Florence, as in most cities of Central Italy, intellect had outrun
            character, and the sterner virtues were almost unknown. The
            "corruption" of which Machiavelli complained so often and so
            bitterly, was to be found everywhere; and, though its effects were naturally
            most obvious in the military class, it was equally a source of weakness in the
            political world. The defensive attitude which was forced upon the city by the
            movements of the larger European Powers, and the constant vigilance and
            diplomatic maneuvering necessary to combat the shifting designs of Italian
            neighbors, prevented any elevation of view, and rendered inevitable the
            employment of all the familiar resources of small and weak States in extremis. 
          
         In the great
            events of the years 1499-1512 Florence played but a subordinate part. When
            Louis XII was preparing his expedition against Milan, Florence held aloof,
            awaiting the result of the struggle. While Louis XII was at Milan, ambassadors
            arrived from Florence. The hesitation of the city to declare her intentions
            before the event had aroused some distrust in the French; but it would have
            been obviously undesirable, in view of the proposed expedition against Naples,
            to alienate the Florentines, and hence an arrangement was without difficulty
            concluded, by which Florence was to receive aid from Louis for the war against
            Pisa, and in return to supply him with troops and money (October 12, 1499).
            Thenceforward the fortunes of Florence were intimately linked with the fortunes
            of France. 
          
          
            
           In the campaign
            of Cesare Borgia against Imola and Forli there was nothing which directly
            menaced Florence; and when the Pope secretly endeavored to influence Louis XII
            against the city, he was unsuccessful, and Louis gave definite instructions
            that Cesare was to do nothing detrimental to Florence. But it was becoming
            clear that the Borgian policy, in so far as it tended to consolidation, was a
            menace to the Republic: for even if Tuscany were not directly to suffer, one
            strong neighbor would take the place of many feeble ones. 
          
         While these
            events were in progress, the Florentines had devoted their best energies to the
            war against Pisa; but they were unable to make any real progress towards the
            capture of the town. In the summer of 1498 they had hired Paolo Vitelli as
            their general, and in 1499 it seemed as though Pisa would be forced to
            capitulate. But Vitelli failed at the last moment, and paid for his blunder
            with his life. Things became still worse when, in accordance with the agreement
            concluded at. Milan, October 12, some Swiss and Gascons were sent by Louis XII
            to the assistance of the Florentines. The Gascons soon deserted, while the
            Swiss mutinied; and Louis XII blamed the Florentines for the fiasco. It was in
            connection with these events that Machiavelli was. sent to France. He was
            unable to obtain any satisfaction, and it was not until three years later
            (1504), when the French had been defeated at Naples and the danger threatened
            by Cesare Borgia had passed away, that Florence was able to resume operations
            with any vigor. 
          
         After the
            settlement of the Milanese question, Louis XII was occupied with the
            preliminaries of his expedition against Naples. The treaty by which he and
            Ferdinand of Aragon agreed to conquer the Neapolitan territory and to divide it
            between them, was concluded on November 11, 1500, and ratified by the Pope on
            June 25 of the following year. It affected Florence in so far as it implied an
            assurance that Cesare Borgia would not be molested by France in prosecuting his
            designs. But Louis XII hardly yet perceived the scope of Borgian ambition, and
            there was for the moment at least no certainty that a collision with Florence
            was impending. At the end of September Cesare started for the Romagna, and,
            after a series of successes which placed him in possession of Pesaro, Rimini,
            and Faenza, sent to Florence to demand provisions and a free pass through
            Florentine territory. Without, however, awaiting a reply, he advanced to
            Barberino and there renewed his demands, at the same time requiring the
            Florentines to alter the government of their State. His object was to secure
            Piero de Medici more closely to his interests. This demand was not, however,
            insisted upon, as the restoration of the Medici was hardly practicable at this
            juncture, and, even if practicable, appeared likely to throw more power than
            was compatible with Cesare’s interests into the hands of Vitellozzo Vitelli and
            the Orsini. But he pressed his demand for a condotta from Florence, and
            this was conceded, the Florentines also undertaking not to hinder his
            enterprise against Piombino. Such was the position of affairs when he started
            for Rome in June, in order to join the French army now advancing towards
            Naples. His work was successfully continued by his captains, and he returned
            early in the next year (1502) to take formal possession of Piombino. The next six
            months witnessed a further development of the Borgian policy, and the
            Florentines began at length to realize in what peril they stood. It is not
            possible to determine with precision how far Cesare Borgia's movements during
            the year were definitely premeditated; considering the complexity of the
            conditions under which he was working, his actions could not be settled long
            beforehand, but were necessarily adjusted day by day in the face of momentary
            opportunities or emergencies. From Piombino he returned to Rome, leaving
            military operations in the hands of Vitellozzo Vitelli. Acting in conjunction
            with Piero de' Medici, Vitellozzo was able to effect the revolt of Arezzo, and
            rapidly made himself master of nearly all the places of any importance
            northwards as far as Forli and southwards as far as the shores of Lake
            Trasimeno. At Florence the news of the revolt was received with consternation,
            and the alarm became general. It was clear that the city itself was being
            gradually and systematically shut in. Cesare’s idea was to bring under his
            control all the country which lay, roughly speaking, between four
            points-Piombino, Perugia, Forli, Pisa : the lines of country and towns which
            connected these four points were now practically secured to him. For on the
            south, the district between Piombino and Perugia was already won, and Pandolfo
            Petrucci, Lord of Siena, who, situated about midway between the two points and
            a little to the north, might have hampered his designs, had been brought over
            to his interests in 1501. The country along the eastern line from Perugia to
            Forli was won by the rebellion of Arezzo and the Valdichiana. On the north,
            from Forli to Pisa, his hold was not quite so secure, but Pistoia, ever rent by
            faction, could offer no effective resistance, Lucca was avowedly Medicean, and
            the Pisans definitely offered their city to Cesare Borgia before December 1502.
            About the coast-line from Piombino to the mouth of the Arno, there was no need
            to trouble. It seemed, therefore, as though everything were ready for an
            immediate and crushing attack upon Tuscany. 
          
         The situation of
            Florence was not, however, so desperate as it appeared to be. There were still
            a few places of importance lying outside the eastern line from Forli to
            Perugia, which might at any moment prove troublesome to Cesare. Of these the
            most notable were Urbino, Camerino, and Perugia. The latter he could afford to
            disregard for the moment, as the Signore, Giovan Paolo Baglioni, was serving in
            his army and at the time seemed trustworthy. But Urbino, which blocked his way
            to the eastern coast and might cut off communication with Rimini and Pesaro
            which he had held since 1500, had to be subdued. The same could also be said of
            Camerino, as the point of junction between Perugia and Fermo. Cesare was, moreover,
            already aware that he could not trust to the loyalty of his mercenary captains.
            Seeing how town after town fell before him, it was inevitable that they should
            reflect how their own turn might come next. They distrusted their employer, and
            he distrusted them. Conspiracy and treachery were bound to ensue; the notions
            of right and authority had ceased to be regarded on either side, and the vital
            question was, who would have the dexterity and cunning to overreach his
            antagonist? 
          
         Lastly, Louis XII
            was still the most important factor in the impending struggle. There had
            recently been some grounds of dispute between the Florentines and France, Louis
            complaining that he had not received proper assistance from the city during his
            Neapolitan campaign. But the misunderstanding had been removed by a new
            agreement (April 12, 1502); and the King had undertaken to supply troops for
            the defense of Florence whenever necessary. The French had no intention of
            allowing the Borgia to become masters of Florence; in that event, the road to
            Naples would have been blocked by a new Power commanding Central Italy from sea
            to sea. The capture of Urbino by Cesare Borgia at the end of June was an
            unmistakable revelation of his designs. It was at this juncture that France
            intervened, and obliged him to suspend operations. It became necessary to
            temporize, and he entered into negotiations with Florence. Arezzo and the other
            places which he had conquered in Tuscany were reluctantly restored to the
            Republic. But at the end of July he went in person to Milan to have an
            interview with Louis XII, and succeeded in effecting a complete reconciliation
            with him. Florence was, however, relieved from immediate apprehension. 
          
         It was at this
            critical moment that the threatened conspiracy of Cesare Borgia’s captains
            broke out. The exasperation which the Borgian projects had aroused at Florence
            led the conspirators to hope that the Republic would espouse their cause; and,
            after making themselves masters of the Duchy of Urbino, they appealed to
            Florence for assistance. But as soon as the existence of the conspiracy had
            become known, both the Pope and his son had in their turn applied to the
            Florentines and asked that ambassadors might be sent to confer with them.
            Machiavelli was deputed to visit Cesare Borgia, and remained with him till the
            end of the following January (1503). The arrival of French troops, for which
            Cesare Borgia applied to Louis XII and which were readily furnished, forced the
            recalcitrant captains to come to terms, and they were allowed to take service
            with him as before. But the hollow reconciliation deceived no one, and
            Machiavelli in particular had opportunities day by day to trace the stages by
            which Cesare Borgia, who never trusted twice to men who betrayed him once,
            lulled his opponents into a false sense of security, and finally took them
            prisoners at Sinigaglia (December 31). The ringleaders, including Vitellozzo
            Vitelli, were put to death by his orders. Thence he withdrew to Rome, where he
            arrived early in the following year (1503). 
          
         The year's work
            had not been, on the whole, unfavorable to the Borgias. Florence on the other
            hand had suffered seriously, and the incompetence of the government was
            generally obvious. The reform of 1502, which, carried as a compromise and
            supported by academic reasoning, provided for the election of a Gonfaloniere to
            hold office for life, did something to revive the spirits of the inhabitants,
            and met the wishes of Louis XII; but it added nothing to the real strength of
            the Republic. In the Neapolitan territory disputes had arisen between the
            French and the Spaniards, and all Northern Italy watched with anxiety the
            progress of the war. The defeat of the French at the battle of Cerignola (April
            28, 1503) had a marked effect upon the policy of the Pope, who began in
            consequence to incline towards Spain; but on August 18 all the Borgian designs
            were cut short by the sudden and unexpected death of Alexander VI. His son was
            ill at the same time, and unable to do anything. The politics of the Italian
            States were thus completely disorganized, and Florence in common with the
            others looked anxiously for the election of the new Pope. Pius III's short
            reign of less than a month was without real influence upon the position of
            affairs. On November 1 he was succeeded by Julius II, whose election Cesare
            Borgia had not been able to prevent. With Julius II a new period begins not
            only in the history of Italy but of Europe. 
          
         Florence had now
            nothing to fear from Cesare Borgia. On the death of his father, he lost all his
            possessions except the Romagna, which remained faithful to him for about a
            month. He had governed the district with justice and integrity, and won the
            affections of the inhabitants. But his inopportune illness was fatal to his
            prospects. The Venetians, always on the watch for opportunities to enlarge
            their inland empire, obtained possession of Faenza and Rimini; Pesaro returned
            under the rule of its former Lord; Imola and Forli surrendered themselves to
            the Pope. By the end of January, 1504, Cesare Borgia was forced to sign an
            agreement by which he abandoned to Julius II all his claims to the Romagna, in
            return for permission to withdraw wherever he might wish. In the spring he
            arrived at Naples and, taken prisoner by Gonzalo, was conveyed to Spain. He was
            killed in battle in Navarre (1507). 
          
         But whatever
            advantages the Florentines might have derived from the disappearance of Cesare
            Borgia, they were more than counterbalanced by several other events. The final
            defeat of the French at the battle of the Garigliano (December 28,1503) placed
            the whole of southern Italy in the power of Spain; and the movements of
            Gonzalo, who was known to be willing to help Pisa, were a source of constant
            anxiety to the Republic. The presence of the Venetians in the Romagna, the ignorance
            which yet prevailed as to the intentions of the Pope, and the want of troops
            and of money, combined to produce a situation of extreme gravity at Florence.
            Within the city itself there was much discontent with the government of
            Soderini. He was, it is true, acceptable to the masses, having been able by
            rigid economy to lighten somewhat the burden of taxation; but the leading
            families in the State were irritated by neglect and by the filling up of the
            Signoria and Colleges with persons who were either nominees of the
            Gonfaloniere, or too insignificant to offer an effective opposition to his
            designs. His chief supporters were to be found among the younger men recently
            embarked upon political life and beginning to win a reputation for themselves.
            Among these Machiavelli in many unpretentious ways was of immense service to
            Soderini and, though sometimes disagreeing with him, proved ready to
            subordinate personal opinions to what seemed the general interest of the State.
            This was clearly seen early in 1504, when an attempt was made to reduce Pisa to
            extremities by diverting the course of the Arno. The plan had been strongly
            urged by Soderini and was supported by Machiavelli in his official capacity,
            though he had little hope that it could prove successful. Ultimately it had, of
            course, to be abandoned. 
          
         The French defeat
            at Naples naturally aroused hopes that they might be driven from Milan also.
            The Cardinal Ascanio Sforza, brother of Ludovico il Moro, was now at Rome and
            bestirring himself vigorously to win assistance in recovering the duchy. The
            project could not succeed if Florence blocked the way, and Soderini was too
            devoted to France ever to entertain the idea. Ascanio therefore turned for help
            to Gonzalo, and an arrangement was made by which Bartolommeo d'Alviano, one of
            Gonzalo's condottieri, was to invade Tuscany and to restore Giovanni and
            Giuliano de Medici to Florence; when this was accomplished, the Medici were to
            help to reinstate Sforza at Milan. This intrigue had hardly been matured, when
            Ascanio Sforza died. Bartolommeo d’Alviano, however, continued to advance, but
            was defeated by the Florentines in the summer of 1505, the Republic thus
            escaping from a very serious danger. So elated were the Florentines by their
            victory, that they followed it up by an attempt to storm Pisa; but Gonzalo sent
            a force of Spanish infantry to defend the town and the attack had to "be
            abandoned. 
          
         The regular
            failure of so many repeated attempts to overpower Pisa disheartened the
            Florentines, but their hatred was insatiable. Everything tended to confirm the
            opinion, to which many men had been long inclining, that success could only be
            achieved by a thorough reform of the military system. The year 1506 witnessed
            the actual carrying out of a scheme which was to supersede the employment of
            mercenary troops. Machiavelli was the leading spirit in the whole movement; he
            was supported both by Soderini and by Antonio Giacomini. A national militia was
            instituted and a body of troops enrolled from the Contado; they numbered about
            5000, and were mustered before the close of the year. A new magistracy with the
            title Nove della milizia was formed to manage all affairs connected with
            the militia in time of peace, while the authority in time of war would as usual
            rest with the Dieci della guerra. Machiavelli was in January, 1507,
            appointed chancellor of the Nove della milizia, and the main bulk of the
            work connected with the levy and organization of the new troops fell to him. 
          
         During the
            following years Florence enjoyed a period of comparative repose, while Julius
            II was occupied with designs which did not directly concern Florence. The
            subjection of Perugia and Bologna, the War of Genoa, and the early operations
            of the War against Venice, left Florence to pursue her own designs, unattacked
            and unimpeded. But when in 1510 Julius decided to make peace with Venice, the
            consequence was a collision with France, and it was also clear that the
            Florentines would become involved in the struggle. To this they might, however,
            look forward with some measure of hopefulness; for they had at last (1509)
            reduced Pisa to submission, and one long-standing cause of weakness and waste
            was thus removed. 
          
          
            
           Florence
            and the Holy League. [1510-12 
          
          
            
           The year 1510
            witnessed the first stages of the conflict between the Pope and France. At
            Florence it was common knowledge that Julius II was hostile both to Soderini
            and to the Republican government, and that he already entertained the idea of a
            Medicean restoration. The difficulties of the situation were not lightened by
            Louis XII’s demand that the city should definitely declare her intentions. The
            danger from the papal troops was at the moment more directly pressing than any
            other: to declare for France would not only have exposed the Florentine
            territory to an immediate attack, but would have also alienated the sympathies
            of all those citizens who dreaded a conflict with the head of the Church, and
            wished also to stand well with the Medici. The city was full of antagonistic
            parties and irreconcilable interests, and an abortive conspiracy was formed to
            murder the Gonfaloniere. In order to gain time Machiavelli was sent upon a
            mission to France. On his arrival at Blois in July, 1510, he found Louis XII
            eager for war and inclined towards the idea of a General Council, which should
            secure the deposition of the Pope. This Council actually met in the following
            year (September), and although consisting of only a handful of members, held
            three sessions at Pisa, the Florentines allowing the use of the town for that
            purpose. It was powerless to harm Julius II, who replied by giving notice of a
            Council to be held at the Lateran, and thus ipso facto disqualified the Council
            of Pisa. It served, however, to embitter the Pope against Florence; and both
            Florence and Pisa were placed under an interdict. 
          
         During the winter
            of 1510-11 Julius II successfully continued his military operations, until his
            progress was checked by the appointment of Gaston de Foix to the command of the
            French forces, in conjunction with Gian Giacomo Trivulzio. Throughout the
            spring reverse followed reverse, and by June the Pope was back in Rome; indeed,
            if Louis XII had permitted it, Trivulzio might have followed him unhindered to
            Rome itself. Had he done so, France would have commanded the whole of Northern
            and Central Italy, and once more cleared the road to Naples. Knowing this,
            Ferdinand of Aragon had, so early as June, 1511, made proposals to Julius for
            the formation of. a league to check the progress of the French. The idea,
            momentarily delayed by the illness of the Pope in August, was realized in
            October; and on the fifth of that month the Holy League was published at Rome.
            The contracting parties were Julius, Ferdinand and the Venetians: the
            ostensible object was the defense of Church interests and the recovery of
            Church property. The command of the allied forces was entrusted to the Viceroy
            of Naples, Ramon de Cardona. 
          
         Whichever side
            proved victorious in the inevitable struggle, the result would be equally
            disastrous to the Florentine Republic. Soderini still represented what might be
            considered the official policy of the State-friendship with France: but his
            authority was growing steadily weaker, and the collision of parties made any
            combined action impossible. It was the battle of Ravenna (April 11,1512) that
            finally cleared the situation. Though the French were victorious, the death of
            Gaston de Foix deprived them of their most efficient general, and they were
            henceforward helpless. By the end of June they were driven from Lombardy and
            ceased for the time to exist at all as factors in the politics of Italy.
            Florence was at the mercy of the confederates. The supreme moment had come. 
          
         By the expulsion
            of the French the object for which the Holy League had been really formed was
            accomplished, and it was necessary for the allied Powers to readjust their
            policy and to determine their future movements. For this purpose they held a
            congress at Mantua in August, at which among other subjects the reconstitution
            of the Italian States was discussed. It was decided to restore the Medici at
            Florence. This had been the Pope's avowed object since 1510, and he was not
            likely at this stage to see that it was, from his point of view, an impolitic
            blunder. The work was entrusted to Ramon de Cardona, who joined his army at
            Bologna and began to march southwards. He arrived without resistance at
            Barberino, about fifteen miles north of Florence. From there he sent to the
            city to demand the deposition of Soderini and the return of the Medici as
            private citizens. The Florentines refused to depose Soderini, though willing to
            receive the Medici on those terms. At the same time they sent a force of troops
            to garrison Prato. Ramon de Cardona therefore continued his advance; Prato was
            captured on August 30, and its inhabitants were with ruthless barbarity
            tortured, debauched and butchered. Further resistance was impossible. On
            September 1 Soderini was deposed, and on the same evening Giuliano de' Medici
            entered Florence, to be followed on the 14th by Giovanni and other members of
            the family. Nothing remained but to fix the form of the new government. The
            Consiglio Grande and the Dieci were abolished, as well as the Nove della
            milizia and the national militia; Accoppiatori were appointed to select the
            Signoria and Colleges a mano, and it was resolved that the Gonfaloniere should
            henceforth hold office for two months only. During the close of the year
            Florence settled down quietly under Medicean rule. The revolution was
            accomplished with more moderation than might have been expected; and even those
            who, like Machiavelli, had been zealous servants of Soderini, suffered as a
            rule no more than loss of official employment or temporary banishment. 
          
         These years, in
            which the fate of Florence was decided, while the Republic was dragged helpless
            in the chain of events, helpless to determine her own fortunes, were the period
            in which Machiavelli’s term of political activity was comprised. 
          
         Niccolò
            Machiavelli was born at Florence in 1469, and died, comparatively young, in
            1527. For about fourteen years he was employed by the Florentine government in
            a subordinate official capacity, and even his intimate friends hardly
            recognized that he was a really great man. Although his position as Secretary
            to the Died kept him constantly in touch with political movements in Central
            Italy, and although he was employed almost without intermission from 1499 till
            1512 upon diplomatic missions, he exerted hardly any influence upon the course
            of events; if he were known only by his official letters and dispatches, there
            would be little in his career to arrest attention. It is only as an author that
            Machiavelli has any abiding place in the world's history. He has a claim upon
            the attention of the modern world because, living at a time when the old
            political order in Europe was collapsing and new problems both in State and in
            society were arising with dazzling rapidity, he endeavored to interpret the
            logical meaning of events, to forecast the inevitable issues, and to elicit and
            formulate the rules which, destined henceforth to dominate political action,
            were then taking shape among the fresh-forming conditions of national life. 
          
         His natural gifts
            marked him out as peculiarly fitted to be an intellectual pioneer. He has more
            in common with the political thinkers of later generations than with the bulk
            of his contemporaries, on whom still pressed the dead hand of medievalism. It
            is true, of course, that he did not stand alone; both in Italy and in trance
            there were a few men who worked along the same lines and were approaching the
            same goal. Commines had nothing to learn from Machiavelli; and Guicciardini,
            his equal in ability and his superior in moral detachment, was harder and
            colder, and more logical. And there were men of lesser note, Vettori and
            Buonaccorsi and the long line of eminent historians from Nardi to Ammirato, who
            helped, each in one way or another, to break the fetters of tradition and to
            usher in the modern world. But there is no one among them all, except
            Machiavelli, who has won ecumenical renown. And the ultimate reason is that,
            although the area which he was able to observe was small, the horizon which he
            guessed was vast; he was able to overstep the narrow limits of Central Italy
            and Lombardy, to think upon a large scale, and to reach some real elevation of
            view. He made, it is true, many mistakes, and there is much in his writings
            that is indefensible; but, on the whole, later history has done much to justify
            him, and the view which is most essentially Machiavellian, that the art of
            government, like the art of navigation, is out of relation to morals, has
            hardly ever lacked authoritative support. 
          
         It was in 1513
            that Machiavelli, then living in retirement near San Casciano, began the
            composition of those works which were to make his name famous. They are not
            intelligible except when considered in relation to the historical background of
            his life, and to the circumstances in which they were written. But for many
            generations the ideas which they contained were censured or defended by men who
            were at least partially ignorant of the epoch and of the country in which they
            arose, and were often mere controversialists or the accredited champions of
            some branch of the Church. As the doctrines of which Machiavelli was the
            earliest conscious exponent were so important and so comprehensive, it was
            inevitable that attempts should be made to appraise their absolute value; they
            appeared to involve not only an unfamiliar, if not wholly novel, conception of
            the State, but to imply also the substitution of some new standards of judgment
            and principles of action which, while overriding the traditional rules and the
            accepted authorities in the political order, might be understood to apply also
            to the conduct of society and to the ordinary affairs of men. The consideration
            of these ideas and the attempt to gauge their effects upon religion or morals
            or politics, and to elicit the conclusions to which they appeared to lead,
            engrossed attention so largely, that their historical origin was forgotten,
            their classical antecedents were ignored, and step by step, for more than a
            century, criticism drifted away from Machiavelli and concerned itself with an
            ill-defined and amorphous body of doctrine known loosely under the name of
            Machiavellism. No fair judgment of Machiavelli's works is possible, unless they
            are separated from the literature and the controversies which have grown up
            around them. It is true that the accretions of later thinkers have an
            importance of their own, but they are of hardly any value in Machiavellian
            exegesis. All the necessary materials for judgment are to be found in the
            writings of Machiavelli and of his contemporaries. 
          
         The doctrines of
            Machiavelli are not systematically expounded or adequately justified in any one
            of his books. It is only by piecing together the scattered notices in different
            writings and by comparing the forms in which similar ideas are presented at
            different periods, that there emerges slowly a general conception of the
            character of the whole. Some of these ideas were not original, but as old as
            the beginnings of recorded thought. In certain cases they were part of the
            intellectual heritage transmitted by Greece and Rome, adapted to a new setting
            and transfused with a new potency and meaning. Sometimes they were common to
            other contemporary publicists. Often they were provisional solutions of
            primitive problems, claiming no universal or permanent validity. Often, again,
            they were the expression of beliefs which among any people and at any period
            would be regarded as innocuous and inoffensive and perhaps even as obvious.
            Efforts have often been made to summarize them all in a single phrase, or to
            compress them within one wide generalization. Such attempts have been always
            unsatisfactory, because much that is essential cannot be included. Machiavelli
            himself is not rightly viewed as, in the strict sense, a doctrinaire; he had no
            systematic theories to press. There was at no time anything rigid or harshly
            exclusive in his views: they were formed after slow deliberation, as experience
            and study widened his range or quickened his insight. They embrace elements
            which come from many sources, and, though they are on the whole fairly
            consistent, his writings contain many indications of the diffident and
            tentative steps by which the conclusions were reached. 
          
         Portions of
            Machiavelli’s works were intended to form a contribution to general questions
            of politics and ethics: there are other portions which were more directly
            determined by the pressure of an unusual problem and of ephemeral conditions.
            In nearly all his writings the dispassionate, scientific temper of the
            historian or thinker who records and explains is combined with the earnestness
            and the eagerness of the advocate who is pleading a cause. Aspiration and
            emotion were not foreign to the genius of Machiavelli, and at appropriate
            moments found impassioned utterance. Discussions of general principles of
            history and of the art of government are everywhere applied and enforced by
            examples of contemporary failures or successes, and the reasoning is thus
            brought home “to men's business and bosoms”. In the Discourses an Livy the
            doctrinal and scientific interest predominated: in The Prince, which became the
            most influential of all his books, the local and temporary problems lay at the
            root of the whole discussion. It is therefore necessary to separate, within the
            limits of a legitimate analysis, the two elements found combined in his
            writings; and though no firm line can or ought to be drawn between the two
            parts, which at nearly every point touch and supplement each other, a divided
            discussion will best conduce to the clearness from which truth most quickly
            emerges. 
          
         The writings of
            nearly all the Florentine historians and publicists of the sixteenth century
            involve certain fundamental beliefs or hypotheses, upon which the whole
            structure of their reasoning rests; these are rarely stated totidem verbis in any passage, although implied in nearly all. The general body of their work
            forms a perpetual commentary upon a text, which is only incidentally
            enunciated; the method employed is expository only in appearance, but in
            reality genetic; the ultimate principles of the argument are the final result
            at which the reader arrives, .and not a guide which he has with him from the
            beginning. Even with an author like Machiavelli, who was not averse to
            repeating himself, and less reticent than many others, it is not always easy to
            be certain that the latent hypotheses and scattered hints have been correctly
            elicited and grouped. Still, it is in any case clear that what controlled his views
            of the movement of events, whether in his own day or in earlier times, and of
            the lessons which they convey, was, in the last analysis, a specific notion of
            man's nature as a permanent force realizing itself and imposing itself upon
            external things, shaping and subjecting them. The conception of human nature to
            which he adhered was used as the foundation for a definite theory of history as
            a whole. Then the process of reasoning was reversed, and from the collective
            activity of national life a return was made to the isolated unit or individual,
            and an ethical supplement added, thus completing a general conspectus of man
            both in the State and in society. For though Machiavelli inferred that ethics
            and politics are distinct, and that the art of government is out of relation to
            morals, he founded both upon the same assumptions. The ethical portion of his
            work is, of course, of little importance in comparison with the political, and
            is usually wholly ignored. 
          
         The conception
            which had the widest influence upon Machiavelli's teaching is that of the
            essential depravity of human nature. Men are born bad, and no one does good,
            unless obliged. This he regarded as a necessary axiom of political science. It
            was contested by a few of his contemporaries, but on the whole the political
            speculation of the Renaissance and the theological teaching of the Reformation
            issued, in this respect, in the assertion of the same truth. The result at
            which theologians arrived in their efforts to settle the controversies
            connected with original or “birth” sin, was reached by Machiavelli through the
            study of the past, and with the object of obtaining a fixed basis for
            discussion. For the most part he limited himself to an emphatic iteration of
            his belief, without attempting analysis or defense beyond a general appeal to
            the common experience of mankind. It is not certain through what channels the
            view was conveyed to him; he shared the belief with Thucydides. “Men never
            behave well”, he wrote, “unless they are obliged; wherever a choice is open to
            them and they are free to do as they like, everything is immediately filled
            with confusion and disorder. Men are more prone to evil than to good. As is
            shown by all who discuss civil government, and by the abundance of examples in
            every history, whoever organizes a State, or lays down laws in it, must
            necessarily assume that all men are bad, and that they will follow the
            wickedness of their own hearts, whenever they have free opportunity to do so;
            and, supposing any wickedness to be temporarily hidden, it is due to a secret
            cause of which, having seen no experience to the contrary, men are ignorant;
            but time, which they say is the father of all truth, reveals it at last”. This
            view involved the corollary, that human nature could not be depended upon to
            reform itself; it is only through repression that evil can be kept below the
            suicidal point. 
          
         Combined with
            this conviction was another, resting also upon an assumption and likewise
            applied as a general principle to explain history. The maxim “Imitation is
            natural to man” would express it in its crudest and most vague form. “Men
            almost always walk in the paths which others have trodden and in their actions
            proceed by imitation, and yet cannot keep entirely to other men’s paths, nor
            attain to the excellence which they imitate”. The idea is often enforced
            directly by Machiavelli, sometimes expanded or spoken of in a figure. His
            meaning was that all men, at any given period, must necessarily be in the debt
            of the dead; the masses cannot help following the beaten paths; the tendency of
            history is not to initiate, but to reproduce in a debased form. Men, being
            lazy, are more willing to conform than to pioneer; it is less inconvenient to
            tolerate than to persecute. Of course such repetition as history appeared to
            reveal would still be, in the main, not the result of conscious imitation, but
            the inevitable product of the permanent passions in man, which he believed to
            have a larger power in determining events than the rational and progressive
            elements. “The wise are wont to say, and not at random or without foundation,
            that he who desires to foresee what is going to take place, should consider
            what has taken place; because all the things in the world, at all periods, have
            an essential correspondence with past times. This arises because, as they are
            the work of men who have and always have had the same passions, they must of
            necessity produce the same effects. In all cities and among all peoples there
            exist the same appetites and the same dispositions that have always existed”. 
          
         The uniformity of
            the forces at work in history might be expected to produce a monotonous
            movement in events, a mere recurring series in the life of nations. This is not
            the case, because whatever, whether in the intellectual or material order, is
            the outcome of man's activity is subjected to a law similar to that which
            controls the progress and decay of the individual life; everything contains
            within itself the seeds of its own dissolution; “in all things there is latent
            some peculiar evil which gives rise to fresh vicissitudes”. No struggle against
            the tendency to corruption and extinction can be permanently successful, just
            as no man can prolong his existence beyond a certain point. But while decadence
            is in progress in one part of the world, the corresponding principle of growth
            may predominate elsewhere. In every case, when the highest point has been
            reached, the descent begins. Machiavelli did not flinch from the consequences
            of this reasoning, when translated into the moral order: evil is the cause of
            good, and good is the cause of evil. “It has been, is, and always will be true
            that evil succeeds good, and good evil, and the one is always the cause of the
            other”. On this assumption, the variety, of history became no more than the
            displacement or dislocation of permanent elements: “I am convinced that the
            world has always existed after the same manner, and the quantity of good and
            evil in it has been constant: but this good and this evil keep shifting from
            country to country, as is seen in the records of those ancient Empires which,
            as their manners changed, passed from the one to the other, but the world
            itself remained the same: there was this difference only, that whereas Assyria
            was at first the seat of the world's virtue, this was afterwards placed in
            Media, then in Persia, until at last it came to Italy and Rome: and though
            since the Roman Empire no other Empire has followed which has proved lasting,
            nor in which the world has concentrated its virtue, nevertheless it is seen to
            have been diffused throughout many nations, in which men lived virtuously”. And
            what is true of institutions and civilization in general, is a valid law also
            in the political world, where forms of government recur in a series which can
            be calculated upon. Monarchy passes into tyranny, aristocracy into oligarchy,
            democracy into anarchy: “so, if the founder of a State establishes in a city
            any one of these three governments, he establishes it for a short time only;
            for no remedy can be applied to prevent it sliding off into its opposite, owing
            to the resemblance which exists, in this case, between the virtue and the vice.
            This is the circle within which all States have been and are governed”. Many
            revolutions of this nature would exhaust the vitality of a State, and render it
            the prey of a stronger neighbor; but if any people could possess adequate
            recuperative power, the circular movement might continue forever: “a State
            would be able to revolve for an indefinite period from government to
            government”. Considering the inherent defects of each of these constitutional
            forms, Machiavelli accorded unreservedly a theoretical preference to a
            "mixed" government, while rejecting it as practically unsuited to the
            condition of Italy in his own day. 
          
         The next step was
            to consider, how this tendency to become corrupt and, ultimately, extinct, made
            itself manifest in a State; what were the symptoms of decay and what the more
            immediate causes which determined it; and, lastly, what were the methods by
            which the process of national dissolution might be, at least temporarily,
            arrested. Machiavelli furnished an answer by a reference to a primitive bias of
            human nature, a congenital failing in all men. Power breeds appetite; no rulers
            are ever satisfied; no one has ever reached a position from which he has no
            desire to advance further. 
          
         “Ambition is so
            powerful in the hearts of men that, to whatever height they rise, it never
            leaves them. The reason is, that nature has created men so that they can desire
            everything, but they cannot get everything; thus, as the desire is always in
            excess of the power of gratifying it, the result is that they are discontented
            and dissatisfied with what they possess. Hence arise the vicissitudes of their
            fortunes; for as some desire to have more, and some fear to lose what they have
            already, enmities and wars ensue, which lead to the ruin of one country and the
            rise of another. 
          
         “That which more
            than anything else throws down an empire from its loftiest summit is this: the
            powerful are never satisfied with their power. Hence it happens that those who
            have lost are ill-contented and a disposition is aroused to overthrow those who
            come off victors. Thus it happens that one rises and another dies; and he who
            has raised himself is forever pining with new ambition or with fear. This
            appetite destroys States; and it is the more extraordinary that, while everyone
            recognizes this fault, no one avoids it”. 
          
         The primary
            impulse towards evil thus comes from within the ruler: the direction in which
            political changes tend is not determined by the progress of general
            enlightenment among the citizens, by the growth of new ideas, or by the
            development of new needs in a country. Machiavelli deemed the individual
            supreme: a “new prince”, brought into existence an artificial structure, formed
            on arbitrary lines, and called a State: under this his subjects had to live. He
            also by his personal and individual failings led the way to ruin. On the other
            hand, having regard rather to the general body of citizens than to their
            rulers, Machiavelli believed, like Bacon, that wars were necessary as a
            national tonic; peace is disruptive and enervating; “war and fear” produce
            unity. So long as a community continued young, all would be well; but “virtue
            produces peace, peace idleness, idleness disorder, disorder ruin. Virtue makes
            places tranquil; then, from tranquility results idleness; and idleness wastes
            country and town. Then, when a district has been involved in disorder for a
            time, virtue returns to dwell there once again”. 
          
         The periods
            within which these inevitable revolutions are accomplished, might, with certain
            limitations, be regulated by human effort. Man, inasmuch as he is by nature a
            disorderly being, needed, whatever the form of the government, to be held under
            control by some despotic power; hence the necessity of law. The rights, the
            duties, and even the virtues of individuals are the creatures of law. The
            duration of any constitutional form and the life of any State is in large
            measure determined by the excellence of its laws. "It is true that a Power
            generally endures for a larger or a shorter time, according as its laws and
            institutions are more or less good. 
          
         “Let Princes know
            that they begin to lose their State at that hour in which they begin to violate
            the laws, and those customs and usages which are ancient and under which men
            have lived for a long time”. 
          
         If the laws are
            inadequate or unsound, or if they can be ignored with impunity, the obligations
            hitherto resting upon the citizens are simultaneously removed. Machiavelli,
            however, believed that there can be extremely few cases in which a man is
            entitled to judge for himself of the working of law. “Men ought to give honor
            to the past, and obedience to the present; they ought to wish for good princes,
            but to put up with them, whatever their character”. Innovation is hazardous
            both for the subject and for the ruler. True political wisdom will be revealed
            in the organization of government on a basis so firm that innovation becomes
            unnecessary. “The safety of a republic or a kingdom consists, not in having a
            ruler who governs wisely while he lives, but in being subject to one who so
            organizes it that, when he dies, it may continue to maintain itself”. Some
            element of permanence in the source of authority is the more indispensable, because
            there is a point in the career of every society at which laws would otherwise
            be too feeble to cope with the general corruption: “there are no laws and no
            institutions which have power to curb a universal corruption. Laws, if they are
            to be observed, presuppose good customs”. 
          
         Machiavelli by no
            means overestimated the power of laws; alone, they could never be an adequate
            instrument of empire. Their severity required to be mitigated, and their
            restraining force to be supplemented, by some influence potent to control not
            men’s acts only but their minds. There was a sense, therefore, in which the
            State could not with advantage be separated from the Church; both were to
            cooperate to create national customs and habits of thought, not less than to
            enforce order and maintain the stability of society. Without confounding the
            domains of politics and theology, Machiavelli urged the familiar view that any
            community, which has lost or misdirected the religious sentiment, has greatly
            weakened itself and imperiled its own existence. “The observance of the
            ordinances of religion is the cause of the greatness of commonwealths; so also
            is their neglect the cause of ruin. For where the fear of God is wanting, a
            kingdom must either go to ruin, or be supported by the fear of a Prince as
            compensating for the lost influences of religion. Rulers of a commonwealth or
            kingdom ought to preserve the existing foundations of religion; if they do
            this, it will be easy for them to keep their State religious, and consequently
            virtuous and united”. 
          
         A politician is
            not called upon to examine the truth or the absolute value of religion; in some
            cases it may even be incumbent upon a prince to protect a form of religion
            which he believes to be false; and thus religious toleration would rest, in the
            first instance, upon a secular sanction. The ruler must be careful to preserve
            his intellectual balance, and to allow neither religion nor sentiment to
            intrude inappropriately. Politics and paternosters are distinct. If the
            auspices are unfavorable, they must be set aside. On the other hand no
            ceremonies and no creed can of themselves secure success. 
          
         “The belief that
            if you remain idle on your knees, God will fight for you in your own despite,
            has ruined many kingdoms and many States. Prayers are, indeed, necessary; and
            he is downright mad who forbids the people their ceremonies and devotions. For
            from them it seems that men reap union and good order, and upon these depend
            prosperity and happiness. Yet let no man be so silly as to believe that, if his
            house falls about his head, God will save it without any other prop; for he
            will die beneath the ruins.” When the supports of law and of religion collapse,
            a State is approaching its dissolution. It is possible, indeed, that a reformer
            may be equal to the work of regeneration; but on the other hand it is”very easy
            for a reformer never to arise”. Under such conditions abnormal methods find
            their justification; recourse must be had to “extraordinary remedies” and
            “strong medicines”; the diseased members must be cut away, to prolong, though
            but for a season, the life of a State. 
          
         Such, in broad
            outline, were the chief views of Machiavelli concerning the nature of man and
            the general movement of history, separated from the limitations of any
            particular time and place. At first sight they might perhaps appear visionary,
            remote, unreal; vitiated in some degree by ambiguities in the meaning of the
            terms employed and by hasty generalization; academic in character, and out of
            relation to the storm and stress of a reawakening world. This impression would
            be only partially true. Machiavelli, living at a period of transition,
            endeavored, in the presence of an unusual problem, to push beyond its barriers,
            and to fix the relations of what was local and temporal to the larger and more
            universal laws of political societies in general. It was only by enlarging the
            area of analysis, and embracing the wider questions of history and ethics, that
            it was possible to frame a scientific basis on which to erect the structure of
            practical politics. The theoretical foundation was essential. Interest was
            naturally most largely centered in that portion of his works which was the most
            unusual; but in reality it is hardly intelligible by itself. Ideas, long
            familiar in classical literature, may seem in their new context to bear little
            relation to what has come to be regarded as Machiavelli's main object; in
            reality they are not extraneous nor incidental, but the logical end of the
            whole construction. Whoever began without securing his foundations, was obliged
            to secure them afterwards, though, as Machiavelli reflected, with discomfort to
            the architect and danger to the building. It was his conception of human nature
            and of history that logically entitled him to use the experience of the past as
            a guide for the future; to justify his rejection of constitutional reform where
            the material to be worked upon was thoroughly corrupt, and virtue imputed for a
            capital crime; to create new standards, to which appeal might be made in
            judging practical questions; to throw aside the fetters of medievalism and to
            treat politics inductively. It was thus that he was led to look to the past,
            and especially to ancient Rome, for examples and models. Often he repeated with
            enthusiastic emphasis his abiding conviction, that in his own day the teaching
            of the Romans might still be applied, their actions imitated, their principles
            adopted. He was criticized on this ground by Guicciardini and others, who, as
            they admitted only partially the postulates involved in Machiavelli’s
            conception of history, rejected the appeal to ancient Rome as logically
            invalid. 
          
         This specifically
            historical theory required an ethical complement. Machiavelli had. formed
            definite opinions upon some of the fundamental questions of moral science. He
            has recorded his views upon what is now called the origin of morality, and also
            attempted to determine the real nature of good and evil. Believing men
            naturally bad, and holding therefore that morality is non-natural, in the sense
            that it is distasteful to the untrained impulses in men and not to be arrived
            at by evolving anything of which perhaps they are, in some unexplained way,
            capable, the question confronted him, How is right action to be enforced? Where
            does the obligation reside? Only one answer could be consistent, In the laws.
            To explain this a reference was made to the origins of society. “In the
            beginning of the world, as the inhabitants were few, they lived for a time
            dispersed after the manner of wild beasts; afterwards, when they increased and
            multiplied, they united together, and in order the better to defend themselves,
            they began to look to that man among them who was the strongest and bravest,
            and made him their head and obeyed him. From this arose the knowledge of things
            honorable and good, as opposed to things pernicious and evil; because, seeing
            that, if a man injured his benefactor, hatred and pity were aroused among men,
            and that the ungrateful were blamed and the grateful honored, reflecting,
            moreover, that the same injury might be done to themselves, they resorted to
            making laws and fixing punishments for whoever violated them: hence came the
            knowledge of justice. Consequently, when they had afterwards to elect a ruler,
            they did not seek out the strongest, but the most wise and the most just. There
            is a saying that hunger and poverty make men industrious, and the laws make
            them good.” 
          
         
             
           The
            obligation of morality and the nature of right.
            
           
             
           Thus moral action
            in a civil society meant for Machiavelli chiefly conformity to a code; the moral
            sense is the product of law or, in the last analysis, of fear. The sanction of
            conduct was derived from positive institutions; where no law existed, no action
            could be unjust. This admitted, the next stage was to interpret the notion of
            right, and to ask specifically, What is right ? Machiavelli replied in words
            that furnished at once a moral criterion and a positive conception of right: “I
            believe good to be that which conduces to the interests of the majority, and
            with which the majority are contented”. The scope and consequences of such a
            statement were not perhaps fully realized by him; yet the conception exercised
            some measure of control, possibly almost unconscious, upon his other views, and
            might be considered to furnish a sanction for much that is eccentric or
            immoral; even as an isolated and incidental utterance, it remains a curious
            forerunner of more modern theories. It is further possible to construct from
            Machiavelli's data a list of the particular virtues which, though not free from
            the vice of cross-division, nor to be regarded as exhaustive or scientific,
            helps to widen and complete the conception of his teaching. 
          
         The virtues, the
            possession of which would in his judgment be most praiseworthy, are these:
            liberality, mercy, truthfulness, courage, affability, purity, guilelessness,
            good-nature, earnestness, devoutness. The last was indeed of supreme importance
            to all members of society, and so essential to a ruler that whosoever was not
            reputed religious had no chance of success, and was therefore forced to
            preserve, as the absolutely indispensable minimum, the appearances at least of
            a religious believer. For the masses do not discriminate between religion and
            morality; it is from religion that moral truths are believed by the uneducated
            conscience of mankind to derive their ne varietur character. Speaking
            more specifically of Christianity, Machiavelli was aware that it had effected a
            very fundamental change in ethical conceptions. 
          
         “Our religion has
            glorified men of humble and contemplative life, rather than men of action.
            Moreover, it has placed the summum bonum in humility, in lowliness, and
            in the contempt of earthly things; paganism placed it in high mindedness, in
            bodily strength, and in all the other things which make men strongest. And if
            our religion requires us to have any strength in us, it calls upon us to be
            strong to suffer rather than to do”. 
          
         Christianity, as
            understood by medieval society, appeared to add to the difficulties of
            combining the characters of the good man and the good citizen. Machiavelli
            looked for power: “whereas this mode of living seems to have rendered the world
            weak, and given it over as a prey to wicked men, who can with impunity deal
            with it as they please; seeing that the mass of mankind, in order to go to Paradise,
            think more how to endure wrongs than how to avenge them”. Such opinions
            provoked criticism, and were attacked at an early period; afterwards they were,
            without offence, excused, defended or outbidden. 
          
         When the original
            obligation of morality and the standard of action had been fixed, it remained
            to enquire whether men were able to do what was right, i.e. whether they were
            free agents. The constant recurrence of the question in Machiavelli’s writings
            is the measure of the importance it possessed for him. He gave much
            consideration to this primitive problem, which he called il sopraccapo della
              filosofia; he perceived that it was at least necessary to devise some
            intellectual compromise which, while in no way claiming to offer a logical
            solution, should be clear and manageable enough for practical life. His
            examination was neither thorough nor profound; he did not distinguish the
            senses which the word freedom may, in this context, assume; and his reasoning
            was complicated by the intrusion of ideas originating in a mythological and
            figurative conception of Fortune, and in some measure by the lingering
            influences of astrology. Through all his writings runs the idea of a
            personified Fortune, a capricious deity, who is not merely the expression in a
            figure of the incalculable element in life, but a being with human passions and
            attributes. Here the suggestions and examples of classical authors, and
            especially of Polybius, were decisive for Machiavelli, in whom after the manner
            of his age ancient and modern modes of thought were fancifully blended. “I am
            not unaware”, he wrote, “that many have held and still hold the opinion that
            human affairs are so ordered by Fortune and by God, that men cannot by their
            prudence modify them; rather, they have no remedy at all in the matter; and
            hence they may come to think they need not trouble much about things, but allow
            themselves to be governed by chance. This opinion has gained more acceptance in
            our own times, owing to the great changes which have been seen and are seen every
            day, beyond all human conjecture. I have sometimes thought about this, and have
            partly inclined to their opinion. Yet, in order that free-will may not be
            entirely destroyed, I believe the truth may be this: Fortune is the mistress of
            half our actions, but entrusts the management of the other half, or a little
            less, to us”. This is the solution which, running all through Machiavelli’s
            works, gave a special propriety to the repeated antithesis fortuna and virtù.
            The same meaning would be expressed in modern phraseology by the statement that
            men determine their own lives, but only under conditions which they neither
            themselves create nor are able largely to control; or, that the will makes the
            act, but out of a material not made by it. 
          
         Upon the basis of
            these data Machiavelli attempted to fix some general rule of conduct for the
            guidance of the individual, applicable amid all the diversified conditions
            under which action can take place. Considering the relation in which the agent
            stands to the forces among which he has to assert himself, an ideal of conduct
            was needed which should enable a man, who could have but a limited power of
            control over the conditions of his life, to succeed. Failure was the seal of
            Divine disapproval, and to Machiavelli, as to all Italian politicians at his
            time, the one unpardonable sin. The essential requisite for success was, in his
            judgment, a constant adaptation between the individual and the surroundings of
            his life. Sufficient versatility of character, thus understood, would imply a
            perpetual adjustment of means to the needs of the moment, the ability to
            reverse a policy or a principle at the call of expediency, and a readiness to
            compromise or renounce the ideal. The world is rich in failures, because
            character is too rigid. The truism "Circumstances alter cases, it was
            interpreted by Machiavelli to mean that the pressure of external forces is
            usually stronger than the resistance of individual principle. This formed the
            rational basis of his complaints that no one who attempted to govern in Italy
            would alter the courses to which his genius inclined him, when facts had
            altered; yet anyone who was sufficiently versatile would always have good
            fortune, and the wise man would at last command the stars and fate. In
            political life such reasoning led to the rejection of morality, as the plain
            man understands it. A ruler was to remember that he lived in a world which he
            had not made, and for which he could not be held responsible; he was not
            obliged to act on any one principle; he was not to flinch if cruelty,
            dishonesty, irreligion were necessary; he was exempt from the common law; right
            and wrong had really nothing to do with the art of government. In furnishing
            what appeared a reasoned justification for such tenets, Machiavelli interpreted
            to itself the world of contemporary statecraft, and fixed upon politics the
            stamp of irremediable immorality, a result to which the rejection of medieval
            ideas need not necessarily have led. 
          
         Such are the
            general principles which lie at the root of all Machiavelli’s teaching, and
            which serve to universalize all the particular rules and maxims with which his
            books are crowded. They have, with hardly an exception, their roots in the
            ancient world, and in nearly every case it can be shown how they were transmitted
            to him, and how by him the old material was forged and molded into new shapes.
            It remains to enquire how they were applied to the necessities of his own age
            and country. In 1513, Machiavelli was ruined and discredited, ready to despair
            of Fortune’s favor, and willing to accept even the humblest position which
            would enable him to be of use to himself and his city. Employment was slow in
            coming, and during enforced leisure he devoted himself to literature. The
              Prince and The Discourses were begun in 1513; The Art of War was published in 1521, and the eight books of The Florentine Histories were
            ready by 1525. All these works are closely related; in all the same principles
            are implied; no one of them is any more or less immoral than any of its fellows;
            they supplement each other, and by precept and example enforce the same
            conclusions. There is reason to believe that Machiavelli himself considered The
            Art of War the most important of his books, but his fame in later generations
            has rested almost wholly upon The Prince. 
          
         The contents of The
            Prince were little, if at all, affected by Machiavelli’s altered fortunes,
            though he hoped that if the book was read by the Medici, they might employ him
            in some official position, for which his past life qualified him. This did not
            prevent him from developing, without any reserve, the conclusions which his
            studies and experience had enabled him to mature. He was primarily concerned
            neither with his own interests nor with the Medici family, but with the
            problems presented by the condition of Italy in 1513. Ten years previously he
            had written the words: “Go forth from Tuscany, and consider all Italy”. His
            early writings, and in particular his diplomatic letters, are crowded with
            suggestions of the form which the conclusions would ultimately take. Slowly,
            through at least fourteen years, his mind had moved in one direction, and new
            ideas of a wide compass and a lofty range had taken shape and asserted their
            claims to recognition. He had been a Florentine of the Florentines, hating Pisa
            and exulting over Venice. By 1513 he was almost persuaded to become an Italian,
            to merge the local in the national. Yet, although enthusiastic and at times
            even visionary, he was under no permanent delusion; the hope of an ultimate
            unity for Italy could not under the circumstances assume for him any precise
            form; only as a far-distant aspiration, a pervasive thought, it formed the
            large background of his speculation. He knew that union was not possible then;
            but he held, in opposition to Guicciardini, that it was only through union that
            national prosperity becomes possible; “truly no country was ever united or
            prosperous, unless the whole of it passes beneath the sway of one commonwealth
            or one prince, as has happened in the cases of France and Spain”. When,
            however, the possibility of such a thing in his own day was suggested to him,
            he was, he said, ready to laugh; no progress could be made in the presence of a
            disruptive Papacy, worthless soldiers, and divided interests. But if autonomy and
            independence of foreign control could be secured, the question would at once
            enter upon a new stage. Machiavelli did not mistake the problem; but he could
            not forecast the issues of the nineteenth century. 
          
         The
            Prince, though not a complete novelty, became for many
              reasons a work of primary importance. Machiavelli was the earliest writer who
              consistently applied the inductive or experimental method to political science.
              What was new in method produced much that was new in results. The earlier
              manuals of statecraft rested upon assumptions transmitted through the medieval
              Church. In Dante’s time and long afterwards no man dared to discard the
              presuppositions of Christianity. Private judgment in politics, scarcely less
              than in theology, was disqualified, not because it might be incompetent, but as
              always ex hypothesis wrong, wherever authority is recognized. Abstract
              principles of justice, duty, morality, formed the foundation upon which the
              political theories of the Middle Ages had been constructed. The reasoning from
              final causes was almost universal. So long as these primary postulates were not
              revised, speculation trod and re-trod the same confined area. What Machiavelli
              did, was to shift the basis of political science and, consequently, to
              emancipate the State from ecclesiastical thralldom. Henceforward, the fictions
              of the Realists, which had controlled the forms of medieval thought in nearly
              all departments, were set aside; the standard was to be no philosophic summum
                bonum, nor was the sic volo of authority to silence enquiry or
              override argument. An appeal was to be made to history and reason; the
              publicist was to investigate, not to invent, to record, not to anticipate, the
              laws which appear to govern men’s actions. Machiavelli’s method of reasoning was
              a challenge to existing authority, and was believed to entail the
              disqualification, at least in politics, of the old revealed law of God, in
              favor either of a restored and revised form of natural law, or at any rate of
              some new law which man might elicit, independently of God, from the accumulated
              records of human activity. The Prince was the first great work in which the two
              authorities, the Divine and the human, were clearly seen in collision, and in
              which the venerable axioms of earlier generations were rejected as practically
              misleading, and theoretically unsound. The simplicity and directness of its
              trenchant appeal to common experience and to the average intelligence won for
              the book a recognition never accorded to Machiavelli’s other works. 
            
           In The Prince the
            discussion of the methods, by which a "new prince" might consolidate
            his power, developed into a contribution towards a new conception of the State.
            The book not only furnished a summary of the means by which, in the
            circumstances then existing, the redemption of Italy might be accomplished;
            but, inasmuch as the conditions of life repeat themselves and the recurrence of
            similar crises in the future was always possible, recommendations, primarily
            directed to the solution of an immediately pressing difficulty, were enlarged
            in scope, and came to have the intention of supplying in some measure and with
            perhaps some minor reservations a law of political action in all times. Beneath
            the special rules and maxims new principles were latent, and, though obscured
            occasionally by the form in which they are expressed, they can be disengaged
            without serious difficulty. 
          
         Machiavelli,
            though his sympathies were republican, knew that the times required the
            intervention of a despot. He had no hesitation in deciding the relative merits,
            in the abstract, of the democratic and the monarchical forms of government:
            “the rule of a people is better than that of a prince”. When the problem was,
            not how to establish a new government in the face of apparently overwhelming obstacles,
            but only how to carry on what was already well instituted, a republic would be
            found far more serviceable than a monarchy; “while a prince is superior to a
            people in instituting laws, in shaping civil society, in framing new statutes
            and ordinances, a people has the same superiority in preserving what is
            established”. It is doubtful whether Machiavelli ever contemplated the creation
            of an enduring monarchy in Italy; the continuance of an absolute power would,
            he believed, corrupt the State. He was on the whole sanguine as to the
            possibilities of popular rule; he thought it reasonable to compare the voice of
            the people to the voice of God, and held with Cicero that the masses, though
            ignorant, may come to understand the truth. But the drastic reform contemplated
            by him could not be achieved under republican institutions, which could only
            work satisfactorily among a people whose character was sound. Corruption had
            gone too far in Italy; "it is corrupt above all other countries."
            Moreover “a people, into whom corruption has thoroughly entered, cannot live in
            freedom, I do not say for a short time, but for any time at all”. By
            “corruption” Machiavelli understood primarily the decay of private and civic
            morality, the growth of impiety and violence, of idleness and ignorance; the
            prevalence of spite, license, and ambition; the loss of peace and justice; the
            general contempt of religion. He meant also dishonesty, weakness, disunion.
            These things, he knew well, are the really decisive factors in national life. For
            the restoration of old ideals and the inauguration of a new golden age, the ex
              hypothesi looked to the State. And the State is plastic; it is as wax in
            the hands of the legislator; he can “stamp upon it any new form”. 
          
         The drift of such
            arguments is obvious. “It may be taken for a general rule that a republic or
            kingdom is never, or very rarely, well organized at its beginning, or
            fundamentally renovated by a reform of its old institutions, unless it is
            organized by one man... Wherefore the wise founder of a commonwealth, who aims,
            not at personal profit but at the general good, and desires to benefit not his
            own descendants but the common motherland, ought to use every effort to obtain
            the authority for himself alone; and no wise intellect will ever find fault
            with any extraordinary action employed by him for founding an empire or
            establishing a republic. For though the act accuses him, the result excuses
            him”. There were, besides, other reasons which led Machiavelli to believe that
            in 1513 the undivided force of a despot was needed. In every decaying State a
            class of men is to be found who, whether the degenerate survivors of the old
            feudal nobility or upstart signori, with no authoritative title at all, are the
            enemies of all reform, and who cannot otherwise be suppressed. These gentilhuomini live in idleness and plenty on the revenues of their estates, without having
            any concern with their cultivation or undergoing any labor to obtain a
            livelihood. They are mischievous in every republic and in every country; yet
            more mischievous still are those who, besides being so situated, command
            fortified places and have subjects who obey them. The kingdom of Naples, the
            territory of Rome, the Romagna, and Lombardy are filled with these two classes
            of men. For this reason there has never been in those provinces any republic or
            free State; for such kinds of person are absolutely antagonistic to all civil
            government. The attempt to introduce a republic into countries so circumstanced
            would not be possible. In order to reorganize them, supposing any one had
            authority to do it, there would be no other way than to establish a monarchy;
            the reason being this: where the body of the people is so corrupt that the laws
            are unable to curb it, it is necessary to establish together with the laws a
            superior force, that is to say, the arm of a King (mano regia), which
            with absolute and overwhelming power may curb the overwhelming ambition and
            corruption of the nobles. A republic, therefore, cannot initiate a fundamental
            reform; it is, moreover, too divided in counsel and too dilatory in action;
            “supposing a republic had the same views and the same wishes as a prince, it
            will by reason of the slowness of its movements take longer to come to a
            decision than he”. Hence the remedies which republics apply are doubly
            hazardous, when they have to deal with a crisis which cannot wait. 
          
         On these grounds
            Machiavelli, in pleading for the liberation of Italy from her “barbarian”
            invaders, addressed a prince; the work of regeneration could logically be
            entrusted only to an armed despot. It remained to investigate the methods to be
            employed, and to consider what manner of man the reformer should be. The
            general principle enforced was that all reform must be retrograde, in the sense
            that it must bring back the State to its original condition, restoring the old
            path and looking for the ideal in the past. “It is a certain truth that all
            things in the world have a limit to their existence; but those run the full
            course that Heaven has in a general way assigned them, which do not disorder
            their constitution, but maintain it so ordered that it either does not alter,
            or, if it alters, the change is for its advantage, not to its
            detriment...  Those alterations are salutary, which bring States back
            towards their first beginnings. Those States, consequently, are best-ordered
            and longest-lived, which by means of their institutions can be often renewed,
            or else, apart from their institutions, may be renewed by some accident. And it
            is clearer than the day that, if these bodies are not renewed, they will not
            last. The way to renew them is, as has been said, to bring them back to their
            beginnings, because all the beginnings of republics and kingdoms must contain
            in themselves some excellence, by means of which they obtain their first
            reputation and make their first growth. And as in the progress of time this
            excellence becomes corrupted, unless something intervenes which restores it to
            its primary condition, these bodies are necessarily destroyed”. 
          
         Such is the
            general rule for the guidance of a reformer. As isolation would involve
            failure, he must, in order to realize his object, make it his first business to
            secure the favor of the people. However difficult this might be, without some
            measure of popularity success would be an impossibility. “I reckon unhappy
            those princes who, to secure their State, are obliged to employ extraordinary
            methods, having the many for their enemies; for he who has the few for his
            enemies, readily and without serious difficulties secures himself; but he who
            has for enemy the whole people never secures himself, and, the more cruel he
            is, the weaker his rule becomes. So the best remedy within his reach is to try
            to make friends with the people”. To win popularity and yet to conduct a
            thorough reform might seem hopeless; but Machiavelli found a solution of the
            difficulty in the blind ignorance of the people, who may easily be deluded by
            the appearances of liberty. “He who desires or intends to reform the government
            of a city must, if this reform is to be accepted and carried on with general
            approval, retain at least the semblance of the ancient methods, lest it should
            appear to the people that their constitution has changed, although in reality
            the new institutions are entirely different from the old; for the mass of
            mankind is fed with appearances as much as with realities; indeed, men are
            frequently more stirred by what seems than by what is”. Populus vult decipi
              et decipiatur. There will, of course, be some few men who cannot be
            cheated; the new prince must not hesitate to kill them. “When men individually,
            or a whole city together offend against the State, a prince for a warning to
            others and for his own safety has no other remedy than to exterminate them; for
            the prince, who fails to chastise an offender so that he cannot offend any
            more, is reckoned an ignoramus or a coward”. Elsewhere the language is even
            more explicit: “he who is dead cannot think about revenging himself”. But such
            violence would only be necessary in the early stages of a reformer's career,
            and a wise prince will so manage that the odium shall fall on his subordinates;
            he may thus secure a reputation for clemency, and in any case all cruelty must
            be finished at one stroke, and not subsequently repeated at intervals. Such a
            course would be less obnoxious than to confiscate property, for men would
            sooner lose their relatives than forfeit their money. Dead friends may
            sometimes be forgotten; the memory of lost possessions always survives. 
          
         It is clear that
            the task of a reformer, as Machiavelli understood it, would require a very
            unusual combination of gifts and qualities. It appeared unlikely that anyone
            could be found with the ability and the will to act without reference to
            traditional standards, and without concession to the ordinary feelings of
            humanity. Machiavelli was not blind to the difficulties of the case. It had,
            first, a moral and an emotional side. Whoever was to accomplish the salvation
            of Italy must be ready to sacrifice his private convictions and to ignore the
            rights of conscience. The methods which Machiavelli advocated were, he readily
            admitted, opposed to the life of a Christian, perhaps even to the life of a
            human being. Were the morally good to be set side by side with the morally
            evil, no one would ever be so mad or so wicked, that if asked to choose between
            the two, he would not praise that which deserved praise and blame that which
            deserved blame. Machiavelli recognized with regret that “it very seldom happens
            that a good man is willing to become prince by bad means, though his object be
            good”. The desire for posthumous fame and the knowledge that a retrospective
            judgment would approve were powerful inducements, but, after all, something
            weightier was required. 
          
         Machiavelli was
            prepared to be logical. An extraordinary problem cannot be solved by a tender
            conscience; “honest slaves are always slaves, and good men are always paupers”.
            Deceit and cruelty and any other instrument of empire, if they led to success,
            would be understood and forgiven; “those who conquer, in whatever way they
            conquer, never reap disgrace”. Success became the solvent of moral
            distinctions, and judgment must follow results. And in the particular case of
            Italy, a further sanction for the reformer's acts might perhaps be found in the
            desperate condition of the country, and in the high end in view: “where the
            bare salvation of the motherland is at stake, there no consideration of justice
            or injustice can find a place, nor any of mercy and cruelty, or of honor and
            disgrace; every scruple must be set aside, and that plan followed which saves
            her life and maintains her liberty”. 
          
         Supposing any one
            prepared to accept this solution of the intellectual difficulties, it remained
            doubtful whether a man could be found with the practical ability and steadiness
            of nerve necessary to accomplish Machiavelli’s design. He was sometimes
            sanguine, but at other times ready to despair. The condition of success would
            be thoroughness, and in the history of Rome he found evidences that men may,
            though rarely, avoid half-measures, and “have recourse to extremities”. He knew
            that to halt between two opinions was always fatal, and that it was moreover
            not only undesirable, but impossible, to follow a middle course continuously.
            Unfortunately, human nature is apt to recoil from the extreme of evil and to
            fall short of the ideal of good; “men know not how to be gloriously wicked or
            perfectly good; and, when a crime has somewhat of grandeur and nobility in it,
            they flinch”. Yet a great crisis often brings to the front a great man, and in
            1513 Machiavelli believed the moment had come: “this opportunity must not be
            allowed to slip by, in order that Italy may at last see her redeemer appear”.
            The right man was, he believed, a Medici, who, with far greater resources,
            might succeed where a Borgia had failed. His example was Cesare Borgia, who at
            the time had alone in any sort attempted the work of consolidation, and while
            shrinking from no convenient crime had damned himself intelligently. 
          
         The Prince was
            not published in Machiavelli’s lifetime, was almost certainly never presented
            either to Giuliano or to Lorenzo de' Medici, and as a practical manifesto with
            a special purpose in view had no influence whatever. But the book summed up and
            interpreted the converging temper of political thought, and found an echo in
            the minds of many generations. When The Discourses were known only to political
            theorists, when The Florentine Histories were read only by students, and The
              Art of War had become extinct, The Prince still continued to find a ready
            welcome from men immersed in the practical business of government. Later
            thinkers carried on the lines of reasoning suggested by Machiavelli, and
            reached conclusions from which he refrained. At last it became clear, that the
            problems associated with Machiavelli’s name were in fact primitive problems,
            arising inexorably from the conditions of all human societies. They form part
            of larger questions, in which they become insensibly merged. When the exact
            place of Machiavelli in history has been defined, the issues which he raised
            will still subsist. The difficulties can only ultimately disappear, when the
            progress of thought has determined in some final and conclusive form the
            necessary relations of all men to one another and to God. 
          
           
            
            
            
            
            
           CHAPTER VII 
            
           ROME AND THE TEMPORAL POWER. 
            
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