This, an amazing read, first person history written by one who was there. Benvenuto Cellini, 1500-1571, jeweller, goldsmith and sculptor, contemporary of Michel Angelo, Leonardo Da Vinci, Donatello, Vasari, Raffaello, and many, many others. A Florentine by birth he worked in Florence, Rome, and for the King of France under the same terms as Michel Angelo.
Now, interesting in that at this time “Italy” as it’s now known was more a group of city-states, Florence, Rome, Venice, etc all subject to their own petty governances, wars and feuds.
To review his life in it’s entirety would take as long as it did to read, so I’ll try and keep my notes brief and to the point:
- he sure liked stabbing people. With his sword, his poignard, a dagger, he took every precaution with his rather quaint ideas of “honour” and managed to murder (??) how many people, always throwing himself at the feet of the Pope afterwards for absolution. While he excuses himself of the animosity of his rivals and peers sooner or later it becomes apparent to the reader he’s not nearly as reasonable as he makes himself out to be (note that other biographers, while finding fault, did not find him to be so bad. Again, like Casanova, a product of his time).
- his notes as to the treasures the peasants find in ploughing the vineyards, Roman and Etruscan seals, cut gems, which he bought for a fraction of their worth…(which make me rather want to do a tour in a vineyard working the plough…)
- his notes on the Sack of Rome, and his (probably) exaggerated military contributions therein
- his revolving popularity with the many dukes, Cardinals and Popes - his survival doubtless due solely to his genius at his craft
- his credulous descriptions of contemporary marvels, eg: working upon setting a Unicorn Horn as a cup
- his various love affairs and scandals - being accused by one (or more) lovers of having a taste for the “Italian Style”….
- his adventures in Necromancy, and attending ceremonies in the Coliseum that saw it filled with devils and (unrealized) attempts to make visible the treasures buried in the earth…
- QUOTE: LXIV
IT happened through a variety of singular accidents that I became intimate with a Sicilian priest, who was a man of very elevated genius and well instructed in both Latin and Greek letters. In the course of conversation one day we were led to talk about the art of necromancy; apropos of which I said: “Throughout my whole life I have had the most intense desire to see or learn something of this art.” Thereto the priest replied: “A stout soul and a steadfast must the man have who sets himself to such an enterprise.” I answered that of strength and steadfastness of soul I should have enough and to spare, provided I found the opportunity. Then the priest said: “If you have the heart to dare it, I will amply satisfy your curiosity.” Accordingly we agreed upon attempting the adventure.
The priest one evening made his preparations, and bade me find a comrade, or not more than two. I invited Vincenzio Romoli, a very dear friend of mine, and the priest took with him a native of Pistoja, who also cultivated the black art. We went together to the Coliseum; and there the priest, having arrayed himself in necromancer’s robes, began to describe circles on the earth with the finest ceremonies that can be imagined. I must say that he had made us bring precious perfumes and fire, and also drugs of fetid odour. When the preliminaries were completed, he made the entrance into the circle; and taking us by the hand, introduced us one by one inside it. Then he assigned our several functions; to the necromancer, his comrade, he gave the pentacle to hold; the other two of us had to look after the fire and the perfumes; and then he began his incantations. This lasted more than an hour and a half; when several legions appeared, and the Coliseum was all full of devils. I was occupied with the precious perfumes, and when the priest perceived in what numbers they were present, he turned to me and said: “Benvenuto, ask them something.” I called on them to reunite me with my Sicilian Angelica. That night we obtained no answer; but I enjoyed the greatest satisfaction of my curiosity in such matters. The necromancer said that we should have to go a second time, and that I should obtain the full accomplishment of my request; but he wished me to bring with me a little boy of pure virginity.
I chose one of my shop-lads, who was about twelve years old, and invited Vincenzio Romoli again; and we also took a certain Agnolino Gaddi, who was a very intimate friend of both. When we came once more to the place appointed, the necromancer made just the same preparations, attended by the same and even more impressive details. Then he introduced us into the circle, which he had reconstructed with art more admirable and yet more wondrous ceremonies. Afterwards he appointed my friend Vincenzio to the ordering of the perfumes and the fire, and with him Agnolino Gaddi. He next placed in my hand the pentacle, which he bid me turn toward the points he indicated, and under the pentacle I held the little boy, my workman. Now the necromancer began to utter those awful invocations, calling by name on multitudes of demons who are captains of their legions, and these he summoned by the virtue and potency of God, the Uncreated, Living, and Eternal, in phrases of the Hebrew, and also of the Greek and Latin tongues; insomuch that in a short space of time the whole Coliseum was full of a hundredfold as many as had appeared upon the first occasion. Vincenzio Romoli, together with Agnolino, tended the fire and heaped on quantities of precious perfumes. At the advice of the necromancer, I again demanded to be reunited with Angelica. The sorcerer turned to me and said: “Hear you what they have replied; that in the space of one month you will be where she is?” Then once more he prayed me to stand firm by him, because the legions were a thousandfold more than he had summoned, and were the most dangerous of all the denizens of hell; and now that they had settled what I asked, it behoved us to be civil to them and dismiss them gently. On the other side, the boy, who was beneath the pentacle, shrieked out in terror that a million of the fiercest men were swarming round and threatening us. He said, moreover, that four huge giants had appeared, who were striving to force their way inside the circle. Meanwhile the necromancer, trembling with fear, kept doing his best with mild and soft persuasions to dismiss them. Vincenzio Romoli, who quaked like an aspen leaf, looked after the perfumes. Though I was quite as frightened as the rest of them, I tried to show it less, and inspired them all with marvellous courage; but the truth is that I had given myself up for dead when I saw the terror of the necromancer. The boy had stuck his head between his knees, exclaiming: “This is how I will meet death, for we are certainly dead men.” Again I said to him: “These creatures are all inferior to us, and what you see is only smoke and shadow; so then raise your eyes.” When he had raised them he cried out: “The whole Coliseum is in flames, and the fire is advancing on us;” then covering his face with his hands, he groaned again that he was dead, and that he could not endure the sight longer. The necromancer appealed for my support, entreating me to stand firm by him, and to have assafetida flung upon the coals; so I turned to Vincenzio Romoli, and told him to make the fumigation at once. While uttering these words I looked at Agnolino Gaddi, whose eyes were starting from their sockets in his terror, and who was more than half dead, and said to him: “Agnolo, in time and place like this we must not yield to fright, but do the utmost to bestir ourselves; therefore, up at once, and fling a handful of that assafetida upon the fire.” Agnolo, at the moment when he moved to do this, let fly such a volley from his breech, that it was far more effectual than the assafetida. [1] The boy, roused by that great stench and noise, lifted his face little, and hearing me laugh, he plucked up courage, and said the devils were taking to flight tempestuously. So we abode thus until the matinbells began to sound. Then the boy told us again that but few remained, and those were at a distance. When the necromancer had concluded his ceremonies, he put off his wizard’s robe, and packed up a great bundle of books which he had brought with him; then, all together, we issued with him from the circle, huddling as close as we could to one another, especially the boy, who had got into the middle, and taken the necromancer by his gown and me by the cloak. All the while that we were going toward our houses in the Banchi, he kept saying that two of the devils he had seen in the Coliseum were gamboling in front of us, skipping now along the roofs and now upon the ground. The necromancer assured me that, often as he had entered magic circles, he had never met with such a serious affair as this. He also tried to persuade me to assist him in consecrating a book, by means of which we should extract immeasurable wealth, since we could call up fiends to show us where treasures were, whereof the earth is full; and after this wise we should become the richest of mankind: love affairs like mine were nothing but vanities and follies without consequence. I replied that if I were a Latin scholar I should be very willing to do what he suggested. He continued to persuade me by arguing that Latin scholarship was of no importance, and that, if he wanted, he could have found plenty of good Latinists; but that he had never met with a man of soul so firm as mine, and that I ought to follow his counsel. Engaged in this conversation, we reached our homes, and each one of us dreamed all that night of devils.
Note 1. 'Fece una istrombazzata di coregge con tanta abundanzia di merda.'
- his many fevers and the one time in particular where - for quite a period he’s certain he’s on death’s door and all the while he’s being pulled by Charon into his boat, only he can see him, and this, the penultimate in deathbed visitations…
- the remarkably poor character of most of the Popes and other aristocrats, who’s sole purpose seems to be in commissioning art to celebrate their petty accomplishments and short reigns of terror. That said, without their need to celebrate their trifling accomplishments, where would we be? No Michel Angelo, Da Vinci, or a 100 other artists who have so far raised the bar in the history of art….
- his notes upon the “French Disease”, which generally affects only the better class of priests (and himself, from time to time…)
- how frequently he oversubscribed himself, committing to projects he couldn’t hope to complete given a dozen lifetimes, and the just skepticism of his patrons…
- his polite recognition in Michel Angelo’s “assistant” of one who contributed nothing to the world of art (but perhaps a great deal to Michel Angelo’s well being)
- the continuing fevers and plagues that swept Rome and the other cities of the region…
- his imprisonment, and the irony of the attempts to poison him with a crushed diamond while he was imprisoned (he was a jeweller and goldsmith, remember), as well as his notes on the madman that ran the prison, and his flights of fancy that saw him believe he was a bat…
- following his subsequent escape and recapture and then later release his claims that his imprisonment somehow ennobled him, that he was now surrounded by an “Aurole of Glory”, or Halo, and his attempts to persuade his friends of his newfound divinity…
- his stay in Paris, working for the King of France, being gifted a Castle to work in being forced to defend it against the tenants he evicted, like a muppet on the tower with stones, pikes and an arquebus
- his apparent indifference to his children, who are seldom mentioned and even then only in passing…
- his encountering of an unprepared rival - “fear not, vile coward, I do not condescend to smite you….”
- the congratulations and admiration paid him by Michel Angelo
- and finally, the misadventures of his old age, the gradual loss of his wits and increasing poor decisions.
Wikipedia on his life: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benvenuto_Cellini
View the World’s Most Famous Salt Cellar here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cellini_Salt_Cellar
Read the book here online: https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/4028