However it was, as soon as he reached Bologna before he had taken
off his boots, he was conduct~d by the Pope's servant to his
Holiness accompanied by a bishop from Cardinal Soderini the cardinal
himself being ill. Arrived in the Pope's presence, Michael Angelo
knelt down and his Holiness looked at him severely as if in anger,
saying, "Instead of coming to us, you have waited for us to come to
you," meaning that Bologna was nearer to Florence than Rome. Michael
Angelo humbly begged pardon, saying he had not done it to offend,
but that he could not endure to be driven away in such a manner. And
the bishop who had brought him in began to excuse him, saying that
such men were ignorant, except in matters of art, and were not like
other men. Upon this the Pope grew angry, and with a stick he had in
his hand he struck the bishop, saying, "It is you who are ignorant
and speak evil of him, which we did not do." So the bishop was
driven out from his presence by the lacquey, and the Pope, having
vented his anger upon him, blessed Michael Angelo, and showered upon
him gifts and promises.
He was employed to make a bronze statue of Pope Julius, five
braccia high, for the city of Bologna. The attitude is most
beautiful, having great dignity, and in the drapery there is
richness and magnificence, and in the countenance vivacity and
force, promptness and terrible majesty. It was set up in a niche
over the gate of S. Petronio. It is said that while Michael Angelo
was working upon it, Francia the goldsmith and also a most excellent
painter came to see it, having heard much of him and his works, and
never having seen any of them. Gazing upon the work with
astonishment, he was asked by Michael Angelo what he thought of it,
and he answered that it was a very beautiful cast and a fine
material. Michael Angelo, thinking that he was praising the bronze
rather than the artist, said, " I am as much obliged to Pope Julius
who gave it to me as you are to the men from whom you get your
colours for painting," adding before some gentlemen that he was a
fool.
Michael Angelo finished this statue in clay before the Pope left
Bologna for Rome, and his Holiness went to see it. He asked what was
to be in his left hand, and whether the right hand, which was raised
with so haughty a gesture, was blessing or cursing. Michael Angelo
replied that he was advising the people of Bologna to conduct
themselves well, and prayed him to decide if he should put a book in
his left hand, but he answered, "Put a sword, for I am not a man of
letters." This statue was afterwards destroyed by Bentivogli, and
the bronze sold to Duke Alphonso of Ferrara, who made it into a
cannon called the Julia, but the head is still preserved.
When the Pope was returned to Rome, Bramante (a friend of
Raffaello's, and therefore little a friend to Michael Angelo) tried
to turn his mind from finishing his sepulchre, saying it was an evil
augury and seemed like hastening his death to make his own grave;
and he persuaded him that on Michael Angelo's return he should set
him to paint the ceiling of the chapel in the palace, in memory of
Sixtus his uncle. For Bramante and Michael Angelo's other rivals
thought to draw him away from sculpture, in which they saw he was
perfect, and make him produce less worthy works, not to be compared
with Raffaello's, knowing he had had no experience in painting in
fresco. So when he was returned and proposed to the Pope to finish
his tomb, he desired him instead to paint the ceiling of the chapel.
Michael Angelo sought in every way to shift the load off his back,
proposing Raffaello instead. But the more he excused himself, the
more impetuous the Pope became. So seeing that his Holiness
persevered, he resolved to do it, and the Pope ordered Bramante to
make the scaffold. He made it hanging by ropes passed through holes
in the ceiling, which when Michael Angelo saw, he asked Bramante how
the holes were to be stopped up when the painting was finished. He
answered, "We must think of that afterwards, but there is no other
way." So Michael Angelo knew that either Bramante was worth little
or that he was no friend to him, and he went to the Pope and told
him the scaffolding would not do. So he told him to do it his own
way. He therefore ordered it to be made on supports, not touching
the wall, and he gave to a poor carpenter who made it so many of the
useless ropes that by the sale of them he obtained a dowry for one
of his daughters.
The Pope having resolved that the pictures which had been painted
there by the masters before him in the time of Sixtus should be
destroyed, Michael Angelo was forced by the greatness of the
undertaking to ask aid, and sent to Florence for men. And having
begun and finished the cartoons, and never having coloured before in
fresco, he brought from Florence some of his friends to aid hlm, and
that he might see their method of working in freseo, among whom were
Granacci, Bugiar~ini, and others. So he set them to begin the work,
but their efforts being far from satisfying him, one morning he
resolved to destroy all that they had done, and shutting himself up
in the chapel, would not open the door for them, nor show himself to
them at home. They therefore, after this had gone on some time, were
offended, and took leave and went back to Florence with shame. Then
Michael Angelo prepared to do the whole work himself, and brought it
to a successful termination with great labour and study, nor would
he let any one see it, by which means the desire grew strong in all.
When the half was done and uncovered, all Rome went to see it, the
Pope the first; and Raffaello da Urbino, who was excellent in
imitating, having seen it, changed his manner. Then Bramante sought
to persuade the Pope to give the other half to Raffaello. But the
Pope, seeing every day the powers of Michael Angelo, judged that he
should finish the other half. So he brought it to an end in twenty
months by himself without even the help of a man to grind the
colours. Michael Angelo complained that from the haste of the Pope
he could not finish it as he would, for the Pope constantly asked
him when it would be finished. Once he answered, "It will be
finished when I have satisfied myself." "But we will," replied the
Popes "that you should satisfy us in our desire to have it quickly."
And he added that if it was not done soon he would have him thrown
from his scaffold. The Pope used often to tell Michael Angelo to
make the chapel rich in colour and gold, but Michael Angelo would
answer the Holy Father, "In those times men did not wear gold, and
those whom I am painting were never very rich, but holy men
despising riches."
The work was done in great discomfort from constantly looking up,
and it so injured his sight that he could only read or look at
drawings in the same position, an effect which lasted many months.
But in the ardour of labour he felt no fatigue and cared for no
discomfort. The work has been, indeed, a light of our art,
illuminating the world which had been so many centuries in darkness.
Oh, truly happy age, and oh, blessed artists, who at such a fountain
can purge away the dark films from your eyes. Give thanks to Heaven,
and imitate Michael Angelo in all things.
So when it was uncovered every one from every part ran to see it,
and gazed in silent astonishment; and the Pope, inspired by
it and encouraged to greater undertakings, rewarded him libera.lly
with money and rich gifts. The great favours that the Pope showed
him proved that he recognised his talents, and if sometimes he did
him an injury, he healed it with gifts and signal favours; as when,
for instance, Michael Angelo once asked leave of him to go to work
in S. Giovanni in Florence, and requested money for the purpose, and
he said, "Well, and this chapel, when will it be finished?" "When I
can, Holy Father." The Pope having a stick in his hand struck
Michael Angelo, saying, "When I can! when I can! I will make you
finish it!" Michael Angelo therefore returned to his house
and prepared to leave for Florence, but the Pope in haste sent his
chamberlain after him with five hundred crowns to pacify him, and
ordered him to make his excuses and say it was all done in love and
kindness. And he, seeing it was the nature of the Pope and really
loving him, took it in good part and laughed at it, finding also
that it turned to his profit, for the Pope would do anything to keep
him his friend.
But when the chapel was finished, and before the Pope died, he
gave orders to Cardinal Santiquattro and Cardinal Aginense, his
nephew, that in the case of his death they were to complete his
monument, but after a less magnificent design than the first. So
MichaeJ Angelo returned again to his work upon the tomb, hoping to
carry it out to the end without hindrance, but it was to him the
cause of more annoyance and trouble than anything else he did in his
life. At that time befell the death of Julius, and the whole plan
was abandoned upon the creation of Pope Leo X For he having a mind
and talents no less splendid than those of Julius, desired to leave
in his native city, of which he was the first pontiff, such a
marvellous work in memory of himself and of the divine artist, his
fellowcitizen, as a great prince like himself was able to produce.
So he gave orders that the facade of S. Lorenzo in Florence, a
church built by the house of Medici, should be erected, and he
commanded that the sepulchre of Julius should be abandoned that
Michael Angelo might prepare plans and designs for this work.
Michael Angelo made all the resistance he could, alleging that he
was bound to Santiquattro and Aginense for the tomb. But the Pope
replied that he was not to think about that, for he had already
considered that, and had procured their consent to his departure. So
the matter was settled to the displeasure both of the cardinals and
Michael Angelo, and he departed weeping. He consumed many years in
procuring marble, though in the meantime he made models in wax and
other things for the work; but the matter was so delayed that the
money set apart for it was consumed in the war of Lombardy, and the
work was left unfinished at the death of Leo.
At this time, in the year 1525, Giorgio Vasari was brought as a
boy to Florence by the Cardinal of Cortona and put with Michael
Angelo to learn the art. But he being called by Pope Clement VII to
Rome, determined that Vasari should go to Andrea del Sarto, and went
himself to Andrea's workshop to recommend him to his care.
When Clement VII was made pope he sent for Michael Angelo, and he
agreed with the Pope to finish the sacristy and library of S.
Lorenzo, and to make four tombs for the bodies of the fathers of the
two Popes, Lorenzo and Giuliano, his brother, and for Giuliano,
brothcr of Leo, and Duke Lorenzo, his nephew. At this time befell
the sack of Rome and the banishment of the Medici from Florence.
Those who governed the city desired to refortify it, and made
Michael Angelo commissarygeneral of all the fortifications. He
surrounded the hill of S. Miniato with bastions and fortified the
city in many places, and he was sent to Ferrara to view the
fortifications of Duke Alfonso, who received him with much courtesy,
and prayed him at his leisure to make some work of art for him.
Returning to Florence, and engaged again upon the fortifications, he
nevertheless found time both to make a painting of Leda in tempera
for the duke, and to work upon the statues for the monument in S.
Lorenzo. Of this monument, partly finished, there are seven statues.
The first is Our Lady, and though it is not finished, the excellence
of the work may be seen. Then there are the four statues of Night
and Day, Dawn and Twilight, most beautiful, and sufficient of
themselves, if art were lost, to restore it to light. The other
statues are the two armed captains, the one the pensive Duke
Lorenzo, and the other the proud Duke Giuliano.
Meanwhile the siege of Florence began, and the enemy closing
round the city, and the hope of aid failing, Michael Angelo
determined to leave Florence and go to Venice. So he departed
secretly without any one knowing of it, taking with him Antonio Mini
his pupil, and his faithful friend Piloto the goldsmith, wearing
each one their money in their quilted doublets. And they came
to Ferrara and rested there. And it happened because of the war that
Duke Alfonso had given orders that the names of those who were at
the inns and of all strangers should be brought him every day. So it
came about that Michael Angelo's coming was made known to the duke.
And he sent some of the chief men of his court to bring him to the
palace, with his horses and all he had, and give him good lodging.
So Michael Angelo, finding himself in the power of another, was
forced to obey and went to the duke. And the duke received him with
great honour, and making him rich gifts, desired him to tarry in
Ferrara. But he would not remain, though the duke, praying him not
to depart while the war lasted, offered him all in his power. Then
Michael Angelo, not willing to be outdone in courtesy, thanked him
much, and turning to his two companions, said that he had brought to
Ferrara twelve thousand crowns, and that they were quite at his
service.
And the duke took him through his palace and showed him all his
treasures, especially his portrait by the hand of Titian, which
Michael Angelo commended much; but he would not stop at the palace,
and returned to the inn, and the host where he lodged received from
the duke an infinite number of things with which to do him honour,
and command to take nothing from him for his lodging.
He proceeded thence to Venice, but many desiring to make his
acquaintance, for which he had no wish, he departed from the
Giudecca where he had lodged. It is said that he made a design for
the bridge of the Rialto at the request of the Doge Gritti, a design
most rare for invention and ornament.
But Michael Angelo was recalled by his native city, and earnestly
implored not to abandon her, and they sent him a safe conduct. At
last, overcome by his love for her, he returned, not without peril
of his life. He restored the tower of S. Miniato, which did much
injury to the enemy, so they battered it with great cannon, and
would have overthrown it, but Michael Angelo defended it, hanging
bales of wool and mattresses to shield it.
When the peace was made, Baccio Valore was commissioned by the
Pope to seize some of the ringleaders, and they sought for Michael
Angelo, but he had fled secretly to the house of a friend, where he
lay hid many days. When his anger was passed, Pope Clement
remembered his great worth, and bade them seek him, ordering them to
say nothing to him, but that he should have his usual provision and
should go on with his work at S. Lorenzo.
Then Duke Alfonso of Ferrara, having heard that he had
completed a rare piece of work for him, sent one of his gentlemen to
him that he might not lose such a jewel, and he came to Florence and
presented his letters of credence. Then Michael Angelo showed him
the Leda, and Castor and Pollux coming out of the eggbut the
messenger of the duke thought he ought to have produced some great
work, not understanding the skill and excellence of the thing, and
he said to Michael Angelo, "Oh, this is a little thing." Then
Michael Angelo asked him what was his trade, for he knew that none
are such good judges of a thing as those who have some skill in it
themselves. He replied contemptuously, "I am a merchant," thinking
that Michael Angelo did not know he was a gentleman; and so, being
rather offended by the question, he expressed some contempt for the
industry of the Florentines. Michael Angelo, who perfectly
understood his meaning, answered, " You have shown yourself a bad
merchant this time, and to your master's damage; take yourself off."
Afterwards, Anton Mini, his pupil, having twc sisters about to be
married, asked him for the picture, and he gave it to him willingly,
together with the greater part of his drawings and cartoons, and
also two chests of models. And when Mini went into France he took
them with him there, and the Leda he sold to King Francis, but the
cartoons and drawings were lost, for he died in a short time and
they were stolen.
Afterwards the Pope desired Michael Angelo to come to him in Rome
and paint the walls of the Sistine Chapel. Clement wished that he
should paint the Last Judgment and Lucifer driven out of heaven for
his pride, for which many years before he had made sketches and
designs. However, in 1533 followed the death of Pope Clement, and
Michael Angelo again thought himself free to finish the tomb of
Julius II But when Paul III was made pope, it was not long before he
sent for him, and desired him to come into his service. Then Michael
Angelo refused, saying he was bound by contract to the Duke of
Urbino to finish the tomb of Julius II. But the Pope in anger cried
out, "I have desired this for thirty years, and now that I am Pope I
will not give it up. I will destroy the contract, and am determined
that you shall serve me." Michael Angelo thought of departing from
Rome, but fearing the greatness of the Pope, and seeing him so old,
thought to satisfy him with words. And the Pope came one clay to his
house with ten cardinals, and desired to see all the statues for the
tomb of Julius, and they appeared to him miraculous, particularly
the Moses; and the Cardinal of Mantua said this figure alone was
enough to do honour to Pope Julius. And when he saw the cartoons and
drawings for the chapel, the Pope urged him again to come into his
service, promising to order matters so that the Duke of Urbino
should be contented with three statues the others being made from
his designs by good masters. The new contract, therefore,
being confirmed by the duke, the work was completed and set up, a
most excellent work, but very far from the first design; and
Michael Angelo since he could do no other, resolved to serve Pope
Paul, who desired him to carry out the commands of Clement without
altering anything. When Michael Angelo had completed about three
quarters of the work, Pope Paul went to see it, and Messer Biagio da
Cesena, the master of the ceremonies, was with him, and when he was
asked what he thought of it, he answered that he thought it not
right to have so many naked figures in the Pope's chapel. This
displeased Michael Angelo, and to revenge himself, as soon as he was
departed, he painted him in the character of Minos with a great
serpent twisted round his legs. Nor did Messer Biagio's entreaties
either to the Pope or to Michael Angelo himself, avail to persuade
him to take it away. At this time it happened that the master fell
from the scaffold, from no little height, and hurt one of his legs,
but would not be doctored for it. Thereupon Master Baccio Rontini,
the Florentine, his friend and a clever doctor, feeling pity for
him, went one day and knocked at his door, and receiving no answer,
made his way to the room of Michael Angelo, who had been given over,
and would not leave him until he was cured. When he was healed,
returning to his painting, he worked at it continually, until in a
few months it was brought to an end, and the words of Dante
verified, "The dead seem dead and the living living." And when this
Last Judgment was uncovered, he was seen to have vanquished not only
all the painters who had worked there before, but even to have
surpassed his own work on the ceiling. He laboured at this work
eight years, and uncovered it in the year 1541, on Christmas Day, I
think, to the marvel of all Rome, or rather all the world; and 1 who
went that year to Rome was astounded.
Afterwards he painted for Pope Paul the Conversion of S. Paul and
the Crucifixion of S. PeterThese were the last pictures he painted,
at the age of seventyfive, and with great fatigue, as he told me;
for painting, and especially working in fresco, is not an art for
old men. But his spirit could not remain without doing something,
and since he could not paint, he set to work upon a piece of marble,
to bring out of it four figures larger than life, for his amusement
and pastime, and as he said, because working with the hammer kept
him healthy in body. It represented the dead Christ, and was left
unfinished, although he had intended it to be placed over his grave.
It happened in 1546 that Antonio de Sangallo died, and one being
wanted in his place to superintend the building of S. Peter's, his
Holiness sent for Michael Angelo and desired to put him in the
office, but he refused, saying that architecture was not his proper
art. Finally, entreaties availing nothing, the Pope commanded him to
accept it, and so, to his great displeasure and against his will, he
was obliged to enter upon this office. Then one day going to S.
Peter's to see the model of wood which Sangallo had made, he found
the whole Sangallo party there. They coming up to him said they were
glad that the charge of the work was to be his, adding that the
model was a field which would never fail to provide pasture. "You
say the truth," answered Michael Angelo, meaning to infer, as he
told a friend, " for sheep and oxen, who do not understand art." And
he used to say publicly that Sangallo held more to the German manner
than to the good antique, and besides that fifty years' labour might
be spared and 300,000 crowns' expense, and yet the building might be
carried out with more grandeur and majesty. And he showed what he
meant in a model which made every one acknowledge his words to be
true. This model cost him twentyfive crowns, and was made in fifteen
days. Sangallo's model cost more than four thousand, it is said, and
took many years to make, for he seemed to think that this building
was a way of making money, to be carried on with no intention of its
being finished. This seemed to Michael Angelo dishonest, and when
the Pope was urging him to become the architect, he said one day
openly to all those connected with the building, that they had
better do everything to prevent him having the care of it, for he
would have none of them in the building; but these words, as may be
supposed, did him much harm, and made him many enemies, who were
always seeking to hinder him. But at last the Pope issued his
commands, and created him the head of the building with all
authority. Then Michael Angelo, seeing the Pope's trust in him,
desired that it should be put into the agreement that he served for
the love of God and without any reward. But when a new Pope was
made, the set that was opposed to him in Rome began again to trouble
him; therefore the Duke Cosimo desired that he should leave Rome and
return to Florence, but he, being sick and infirm, could not travel.
At that time Paul IV thought to have the Last Judgment amended which
when Michael Angelo heard he bade them tell the Pope that this was a
little matter, and might easily be amended; let him amend the world,
and then the pictures would soon amend themselves.
The same year befell the death of Urbino his servant, or rather,
to speak more truly, his companion. He had come to him in Florence
after the siege in 1530, and during twentysix years served
him with such faithfulness that Michael Angelo made him rich, and
loved him so much that when he was ill he nursed him and lay all
night in his clothes to watch him. After he was dead, Vasari wrote
to him to comfort him, and he replied in these words:-
"MY DEAR MESSER GIORCIO,-It is hard for me to write;
nevertheless, in reply to your letter, I will say something. You
know that Urbino is dead, to my great loss and infinite grief, but
in the great mercy of God. The mercy is that dying he has taught me
how to die, not in sorrow, but with desire of death. I have had him
twentysix years, and have found him most rare and faithful; and now
that I had made him rich, and hoped that he would have been the
support of my old age, he has left me, and nothing remains but the
hope of meeting him again in Paradise. And of this God gave me
promise in the happy death he died, for he regretted, far more than
death, leaving me in this treacherous world with so many
infirmities, although the chief part of me is gone with him, and
nothing remains but infinite misery."
Until this time Michael Angelo worked almost every day at that
stone of which we have spoken before, with the four figures, but now
he broke it, either because the stone was hard or because his
judgment was now so ripe that nothing he did contented him. His
finished statues were chiefly made in his youth; most of the others
were left unfinished, for if he discovered a mistake, however small,
he gave up the work and applied himself to another piece of marble.
He often said this was the reason why he had finished so few statues
and pictures. This Pieta, broken as it was, he gave to Francesco
Bandini. Tiberio Calcagni, the Florentine sculptor, had become a
great friend of Michael Angelo's through Bandini, and being one day
in Michael Angelo's house, and seeing this Pieta broken, he asked
him why he had broken it, and spoilt so much marvellous work. He
answered it was because of his servant Urbino's importunity, who was
always urging him to finish it, and besides that, among other
things, he had broken a piece off the Virgin's arm, and before that
he had taken a dislike to it, having many misfortunes because of a
crack there was in it; so at last, losing patience, he had broken
it, and would have destroyed it altogether if his servant Antonio
had not begged him to give it him as it was. Then Tiberio spoke to
Bandini about it, for Bandini desired to have a work of Michael
Angelo's, and he prayed Michael Angelo to allow Tiberio to finish it
for him, promising that Antonio should have two hundred crowns of
gold, and he being content, made them a present of it. So Tiberio
took it away and joined it together, but it was left unfinished at
his death. However, it was necessary for Michael Angelo to get
another piece of marble, that he might do a little carving
every day.
The architect Pirro Ligorio had entered the service of Paul IV,
and was the cause of renewed vexation to Michael Angelo, for
he went about everywhere saying that he was becoming childish.
Indignant at this treatment, Michael Angelo would willingly have
returned to Florence, and Giorgio urged him to do so. But he felt he
was getting old, having already reached the age of eightyone, and he
wrote to Vasari saying he knew he was at the end of his life, as it
were in the twentyfourth hour, and that no thought arose in his mind
on which death was not carved. He sent also a sonnet, by which it
may be seen that his mind was turning more and more towards God, and
away from the cares of his art. Duke Cosimo also commanded Vasari to
encourage him to return to his native place; but though his will was
ready, his infirmity of body kept him in Rome.
Many of his friends, seeing that the work at S. Peter's proceeded
but slowly, urged him at least to leave a model behind him. He was
for many months undecided about it, but at last he began, and little
by little made a small clay model, from which, with the help of his
plans and designs, Giovanni Franzese made a larger one of wood.
When Pius V became pope, he showed Michael Angelo much favour,
and employed him in many works, particularly in making the design of
a monument for the Marquis Marignano, his brother. The work was
entrusted by his Holiness to Lione Lioni, a great friend of Michael
Angelo's, and about the same time Lione pourtrayed Michael Angelo on
a medallion, putting at his wish on the reverse a blind man led by a
dog, with the words, "Docebo iniquos vias tuas, et impii ad te
convertentur," and because the thing pleased him much, Michael
Angelo gave him a model in wax of Hercules and Antaus. There are
only two painted portraits of Michael Angelo, the one by Bugiardini
and the other by Jacopo del Conte, besides one in bronze by Daniello
Ricciarelli, and this one of Lione's, of which there have been so
many copies made that I have seen a great number in Italy and
elsewhere.
About a year before his death, Vasari, seeing that Michael Angelo
was much shaken, prevailed upon the Pope to give orders concerning
the care of him, and concerning his drawings and other things, in
case anything should befall him. His nephew Lionardo desired to come
to Rome that Lent, as if foreboding that Michael Angelo was near his
end, and when he fell sick of a slow fever, he wrote for him to
come. But the sickness increasing, in the presence of his physician
and other friends, in perfect consciousness, he made his will in
three words, leaving his soul in the hands of God, his body to the
earth, and his goods to his nearest relations, charging his friends
when passing out of this life to remember the sufferings of Jesus
Christ; and so, on the seventeenth day of February, at twentythree
o'clock of the year 1563, according to the Florentine style, which
after the Roman would be 1564, he expired to go to a better Jife.
Michael Angelo's imagination was so perfect that, not being able
to express with his hands his great and terrible conceptions, he
often abandoned his works and destroyed many of them. I know that a
little before his death he burnt a great number of drawings and
sketches. It should appear strange to none that Michael Angelo
delighted in solitude, being as it were in love with art.
Nevertheless he held dear the friendship of many great and learned
persons, among whom were many cardinals and bishops. The great
Cardinal Ippolito de' Medici loved him much, and once, having heard
that Michael Angelo was greatly pleased with a Turkish horse of his,
he sent it to him as a gift with ten mules' burden of hay and a
servant to keep it. He loved the society of artists, and held
intercourse with them; and those who say he would not teach are
wrong, for he was ready to give counsel to any one who asked. But he
was unfortunate with those pupils who lived in his house; for Piero
Urbano was a man of talent, but would never do anything to tire
himself; Antonio Mini would have done anything, but he had not a
brain capable of much, and when the wax is hard you cannot get a
good impression; Ascanio dalla Ripa Transone worked very hard, but
nothing came of it: he spent years over a picture of which Michael
Angelo had given him the drawing, but at last all the great
expectations that had been formed of him went off into smoke, and I
remember Michael Angelo had so much compassion for his difficulty in
painting that he helped him with his own hand.
He has often said to me that he would have written something for
the help of artists, but feared not being able to express in writing
what he wished. But he delighted much in reading the poets,
particularly Dante and Petrarca, and in making madrigals and
sonnets. And he sent much, both in rhyme and prose, to the
illustrious Marchioness of Pescara, of whose virtues he was greatly
enamoured, and she of his. Many times she went from Viterbo to Rome
to visit him, and Michael Angelo made many things for her. He
delighted much in the sacred scriptures, like the good Christian he
was, and held in veneration the works of Fr. Girolamo Savonarola,
having heard him preach. In his manner of life he was most
abstemious, being content when young with a little bread and wine
while at his work, and until he had finished the Last Judgment he
always waited for refreshment till the evening, when he had done his
work. Though rich he lived poorly, never taking presents from any
one. He took little sleep, but often at night he would rise to work,
having made himself a paper cap, in the middle of which he could fix
his candle, so that he could have the use of his hands. Vasari, who
often saw this cap, noticed that he did not use wax candles, but
candles made of goats' tallow, and so he sent him four bundles,
which would be 40 lbs. His servant took them to him in the evening,
and when Michael Angelo refused to take them, he answered, "Sir,
carrying them here has almost broken my arms, and I will not carry
them back again; but there is some thick mud before your door in
which they will stand straight enough, and I will set light to them
all." Upon which Michael Angelo answered, "Put them down here, then,
for I will not have you playing tricks before my door." He told me
that often in his youth he had slept in his clothes, too worn out
with his labours to undress himself. Some have accused him of being
avaricious, but they are mistaken, for he freely gave away his
drawings and models and pictures, for which he might have obtained
thousands of crowns. And then, as for the money earned by the sweat
of his brow, bv his own study and labour-can any one be cailed
avaricious who remembered so many poor as he did, and secretly
provided for the marriage of many girls, and enriched his servant
Urbino? He had served him long, and once Michael Angelo asked him,
"If I die, what will you do?" He answered, "I shall serve another."
"Oh, poor fellow!" answered Michael Angelo, "I will mend your
poverty." And he gave him at once two thousand crowns, a gift for a
Caesar or a great pontiff.
He had a most tenacious memory; he could remember and make use of
the works of others when he had only once seen them; while he never
repeated anything of his own, because he remembered all he had done.
In his youth, being one evening with some painters, his friends, it
was proposed that they should try who could make a figure without
any drawing in it, like those things that ignorant fellows draw on
the walls, and the one that could make the best should have a supper
given him. He remembered having seen one of these rude drawings on a
wall, and drew it as if he had it in front of him, and so surpassed
all the other painters-a difficult thing for a man to do who had
such knowledge of drawing.
He felt very strongly against those who had done him an injury,
but he never had recourse to vengeance. His conversation was full of
wisdom and gravity, mixed with clever or humorous sayings. Many of
these have been noted down, and I will give some. A friend of his
was once talking to him about death, and saying that he must dread
it very much because he was so continually labouring in his art; but
he answered, "All that was nothing, and if life pleased us, death
was a work from the hand of the same Master, and ought not to
displease us." A citizen found him once at Orsanmichele in Florence,
looking at the statue of S. Mark by Donatello, and asked him what he
thought of it. He answered that he had never seen a more honest
face, and that if S. Mark was like that, we might believe all that
he had written. A painter had painted a picture in which the best
thing was an ox, and some one asked why it was that the painter had
made the ox more lifelike than anything else? Michael Angelo
answered, "Every painter can pourtray himself well."
He took pleasure in certain men like Il Menighella, a common
painter, who would come to him and get him to make a drawing for a
S. Rocco or a S. Antonio, which he was to paint for some peasant.
And Michael Angelo, who could hardly be persuaded to work for kings,
would at once lay aside his work, and make simple designs suited to
Il Menighella's wishes. He was also attached tc, Topolino, a
stonecutter, who fancied hin1self a sculptor of worth. He resided
for
many years in the mountains of Carrara for the purpose of
sending marble to Michael Angelo, and he never sent a boatload
without three or four roughly hewn figures of his own carving, which
used to make Michael Angelo die with laughing. After he came back
from Carrara he set himself to finish a Mercury which he had begun
in marble, and one day, when it was nearly completed, he asked
Michael Angelo to look at it and give him his opinion on it. "You
are a fool," said Michael Angelo, "to try to make figures. Don't you
see that this Mercury is the third part of a braccio too short from
the knee to the foot-that you have made him a lame dwarf?" "Oh, that
is nothing! If that is all, I will soon remedy that." Michael Angelo
laughed again at his simplicity, but when he was gone Topolino took
a piece of marble, and having cut Mercury under the knees, inserted
the marble, joining it neatly, and giving Mercury a pair of boots,
the top of which hid the join. When he showed his work to Michael
Angelo he laughed again, but marvelled that ignorant fellows like
him, when driven by necessity, should be capable of doing daring
things which sculptors of real worth would not think of.
Michael Angelo was a very healthy man, thin and muscular,
although as a boy he was sickly. When grown up he had also two
serious illnesses; nevertheless he could support any amount of
fatigue. He was of middle height, wide across the shoulders, but the
rest of his body in good proportion.
Certainly he was sent into the world to be an exarnple to men of
art, that they sholld learll from his life and from his works; and
I, who have to thank God for felicity rare among men of our
profession, count among my greatest blessings that I was born in the
time when Michael Angelo was alive, and was counted worthy to have
him for my master, and to be treated by him as a familiar friend, as
every one knows.