<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XII" id="CHAPTER_XII"></SPAN>CHAPTER XII.</h2>
<p>This was the second year of the scarcity; in the preceding
one, the provisions, remaining from past years, had supplied
in some measure the deficiency, and we find the
population neither altogether satisfied, nor yet starved;
but certainly unprovided for in the year 1628, the period
of our story. Now this harvest, so anxiously desired,
was still more deficient than that of the past year, partly
from the character of the season itself (and that not only
in the Milanese but also in the surrounding country),
and partly from the instrumentality of men. The havoc
of the war, of which we have before made mention, had
so devastated the state, that a greater number of farms
than ordinary remained uncultivated and deserted by the
peasants, who, instead of providing, by their labour, bread
for their families, were obliged to beg it from door to
door. We say a greater number of farms than ordinary,
because the insupportable taxes, levied with a cupidity
and folly unequalled; the habitual conduct, even in
time of peace, of the standing troops (conduct which the
mournful documents of the age compare to that of an invading
army), and other causes which we cannot enumerate,
had for some time slowly operated to produce these
sad effects in all the Milanese,—the particular circumstances
of which we now speak were, therefore, like the
unexpected exasperation of a chronic disease. Hardly had
this harvest been gathered, when the supplies for the
army, and the waste which always accompanies them,
caused an excessive scarcity, and with it its painful but
profitable concomitant, a high price upon provisions; but
this, attaining a certain point, always creates in the mind
of the multitude a suspicion that scarcity is not in reality
the cause of it. They forget that they had both feared
and predicted it: they imagine all at once that there must
be grain sufficient, and that the evil lies in an unwillingness
to sell it for consumption. Preposterous as these
suppositions were, they were governed by them, so that the
speculators in grain, real or imaginary, the farmers, the
bakers, became the object of their universal dislike. They
could tell certainly where there were magazines overflowing
with grain, and could even enumerate the number of sacks:
they spoke with assurance of the immense quantity of corn
which had been despatched to other places, where probably
the people were deluded with a similar story, and made to
believe that the grain raised among <i>them</i> had been sent to
Milan! They implored from the magistrate those precautions,
which always appear equitable and simple to the
populace. The magistrates complied, and fixed the price
on each commodity, threatening punishment to such as
should refuse to sell; notwithstanding this, the evil continued
to increase. This the people attributed to the
feebleness of the remedies, and loudly called for some of a
more decided character; unhappily they found a man that
was willing to grant them all they should ask.</p>
<p>In the absence of the Governor Don Gonzalo Fernandez
de Cordova, who was encamped beyond Casale, in
Montferrat, the High Chancellor Antonio Ferrer, also a
Spaniard, supplied his place in Milan. He considered
the low price of bread to be in itself desirable, and vainly
imagined that an order from him would be sufficient to
accomplish it. He fixed the limit, therefore, at the price
the bread would have had when corn was thirty-three
livres the bushel; whereas it was now as high as eighty.</p>
<p>Over the execution of these laws the people themselves
watched, and were determined to receive the benefit of
them quickly. They assembled in crowds before the
bakers' houses to demand bread at the price fixed; there
was no remedy; the bakers were employed night and day
in supplying their wants, inasmuch as the people, having a
confused idea that the privilege would be transient, ceased
not to besiege their houses, in order to enjoy to the utmost
their temporary good fortune. The magistrates threatened
punishment—the multitude murmured at every delay
of the bakers in furnishing them. These remonstrated
incessantly against the iniquitous and insupportable weight
of the burden imposed on them; but Antonio Ferrer replied,
that they had possessed great advantages in times
past, and now owed the public some reparation. Finally,
the council of ten (a municipal magistracy composed of
nobles, which lasted until the ninety-seventh year of the
century just elapsed,) informed the governor of the state in
which things were, hoping that he would find some remedy.
Don Gonzalo, immersed in the business of war, named a
council, upon whom he conferred authority to fix a reasonable
price upon bread, so that both parties should be
satisfied. The deputies assembled, and after much deliberation
felt themselves compelled to augment the price of
it: the bakers breathed, but the people became furious.</p>
<p>The evening preceding the day on which Renzo arrived
at Milan, the streets swarmed with people, who, governed
by one common feeling, strangers or friends, had intuitively
united themselves in companies throughout the city. Every
observation tended to increase their rage and their resentment;
various opinions were given, and many exclamations
uttered; here, one declaimed aloud to a circle of bystanders,
who applauded vehemently; there, another more
cautious, but not less dangerous, was whispering in the ear
of a neighbour or two, that something must and would be
done: in short, there was an incessant and discordant din
from the medley of men, women, and children, which composed
the various assemblages. There was now only required
an impetus to set the machine in motion, and reduce
words to deeds; and an opportunity soon presented itself.
At the break of day little boys were seen issuing from the
bakers' shops with baskets on their heads, loaded with
bread, which they were about to carry to their usual customers.
The appearance of one of these unlucky boys in
an assembly of people was like a squib thrown into a gunpowder
mill. “Here is bread!” cried a hundred voices
at once. “Yes, for our tyrants, who swim in abundance,
and wish to make us die in hunger,” said one, who drew
near the boy, and seizing the basket, cried out, “Let us see.”
The boy coloured, grew pale, trembled, and would have
entreated them to let him pass on, but the words died on
his lips; he then endeavoured to free himself from the
basket. “Down with the basket” was heard on all sides;
it was seized by many hands, and placed on the earth:
they raised the napkin which covered it, and a tepid fragrance
diffused itself around. “We are Christians also,”
said one; “and have a right to eat bread as well as other
people:” so saying, he took a loaf and bit it; the rest
followed his example; and it is unnecessary to add, that
in a few moments the contents of the basket had disappeared.
Those who had not been able to secure any for
themselves were irritated at the sight of their neighbours'
gains, and animated by the facility of the enterprise, went in
search of other boys with baskets; as many, therefore, as
they met were stopped and plundered. Still the number who
remained unsatisfied was beyond comparison the greatest,
and even the gainers were only stimulated by their success
to ampler enterprises; so that simultaneously there
was a shout from the crowd of “To the bake-house! to
the bake-house!”</p>
<p>In the street called the <i>Corsia de' Servi</i> there was, and
is still, a bakery of the same name,—a name that signifies
in Tuscan the <i>Shop of the Crutches</i>, and in Milanese is
composed of such barbarous words, that it is impossible to
discover their sound from any rule of the language.<SPAN class="tag" name="tag4" id="tag4" href="#note4">[4]</SPAN> To
this place the throng approached: the shopkeepers were
listening to the sad relation of the boys, who had but just
escaped with their lives, when they heard a distant murmur,
and beheld the crowd advancing.</p>
<p>“Shut, shut! quick, quick!” some ran to ask aid from
the sheriff; others in haste closed the shop, and barricadoed
and secured the doors from within. The throng thickened
in front, and cries of “Bread, bread! open, open!”
were heard from every quarter. The sheriff arrived with
a troop of halberdiers. “Make way, make way, friends!
home, home! make way for the sheriff,” cried they. The
people gave way a little, so that they could draw themselves
up in front of the door of the shop. “But, friends,”
cried the sheriff from this place, “what do you do here?
Home, home! have you no fear of God? What will our
lord the king say? We do not wish you harm; but go
home. There is no good to be gained here for soul or
body. Home, home!” The crowd, regardless of his expostulations,
pressed forward, themselves being urged on
by increasing multitudes behind. “Make them draw back,
that I may recover breath,” continued he to the halberdiers,
“but harm no one—we will endeavour to get into the
shop—make them keep back, and knock at the door.”—“Back,
back,” cried the halberdiers, presenting the but-ends
of their arms; the throng retreated a little; the
sheriff knocked, crying to those within to open; they
obeyed, and he and his guard contrived to intrench themselves
within the house; then, appearing at a window
above, “Friends,” cried he, “go home. A general pardon
to whoever shall return immediately to their houses.”</p>
<p>“Bread, bread! open, open!” vociferated the crowd in
reply.</p>
<p>“You shall have justice, friends; but return to your
houses. You shall have bread; but this is not the way
to obtain it. Eh! what are you doing below there? At
the door of the house! hah! hah! Take care; it is a criminal
act. Eh! away with those tools! take down those
hands! hah! hah! You Milanese, who are famous
throughout the world for your benevolence, who have always
been accounted good citi—— Ah! rascals!”</p>
<p>This rapid change of style was occasioned by a stone
thrown by one of these good citizens at the sheriff's head.
“Rascals! rascals!” continued he, closing the window in
a rage. The confusion below increased; stones were
thrown at the doors and windows, and they had nearly
opened a way into the shop. Meanwhile the master and
boys of the shop, who were at the windows of the story
above, with a supply of stones (obtained probably from the
court-yard), threatened to throw them upon the crowd if
they did not disperse. Perceiving their threats to be of no
avail, they commenced putting them in execution.</p>
<p>“Ah! villains! ah! rogues! Is this the bread you
give to the poor?” was screamed from below. Many were
wounded, two were killed; the fury of the multitude increased;
the doors were broken open, and the torrent
rushed through all the passages. At this, those within took
refuge under the shop floor; the sheriff and the halberdiers
hid themselves beneath the tiles; others escaped by the
skylights, and wandered upon the roofs like cats.</p>
<p>The sight of their prey made the conquerors forget their
designs of sanguinary vengeance; some rushed to the chests,
and plundered them of bread; others hastened to force the
locks of the counter, and took from thence handfulls of
money, which they pocketed, and then returned to take
more bread, if there should remain any. Others, again,
entered the interior magazines, and, throwing out part
of the flour, reduced the bags to a portable size; some
attacked a kneading trough, and made a booty of the dough;
a few had made a prize of a bolting cloth, which they raised
in the air as in triumph, and, in addition to all, men, women,
and children were covered with a cloud of white powder.</p>
<p>While this shop was so ransacked, none of the others in
the city remained quiet, or free from danger. But at none
had the people assembled in such numbers as to be very
daring; in some, the owners had provided auxiliaries, and
were on the defensive; in others, the owners less strong in
numbers, and more affrighted, endeavoured to compromise
matters; they distributed bread to those who crowded
around their shops, and thus got rid of them. And these
did not depart so much because they were content with the
acquisition, as from fear of the halberdiers and officers of
justice, who were now scattered throughout the city, in
companies sufficient to keep these little bands of mutineers
in subjection. In the mean time the tumult and the crowd
increased in front of the unfortunate bakery, as the strength
of the populace had here the advantage. Things were in
this situation, when Renzo, coming from the eastern gate,
approached, without knowing it, the scene of tumult.
Hurried along by the crowd, he endeavoured to extract
from the confused shouting of the throng some more positive
information of the real state of affairs.</p>
<p>“Now the infamous imposition of these rascals is discovered,”
said one; “they said there was neither bread,
flour, nor corn. Now we know things just as they are, and
they can no longer deceive us.”</p>
<p>“I tell you that all this answers no purpose,” said another;
“it will do no good unless justice be done to us.
Bread will be cheap enough, 'tis true, but they will put
poison in it to make the poor die like flies. They have
already said we are too numerous, I know they have; I
heard it from one of my acquaintances, who is a friend of
a relation of a scullion of one of the lords.”</p>
<p>“Make way, make way, gentlemen, I beseech you;
make way for a poor father of a family who is carrying
bread to five children!” This was said by one who came
staggering under the weight of a bag of flour.</p>
<p>“I,” said another, in an under tone, to one of his companions,
“I am going away. I am a man of the world,
and I know how these things go. These clowns, who now
make so much noise, will prove themselves cowards to-morrow.
I have already perceived some among the crowd
who are taking note of those who are present, and when all
is over, they will make up the account, and the guilty will
pay the penalty.”</p>
<p>“He who protects the bakers,” cried a sonorous voice,
which attracted the attention of Renzo, “is the superintendent
of provisions.”</p>
<p>“They are all rogues,” said a neighbour.</p>
<p>“Yes, but he is the chief,” replied the one who had first
spoken.</p>
<p>The superintendent of provisions, elected every year by
the governor from a list of seven nobles formed from the
council of ten, was the president of the court of provision,
which, composed of twelve nobles, had, with other duties,
that of superintending the corn for the citizens. Persons
in such a station would naturally, in times of starvation and
ignorance, be considered as the authors of all the evil.</p>
<p>“Cheats!” exclaimed another; “can they do worse?
They have had the audacity to say that the high chancellor
is a childish old man, and they wish to take the government
into their own hands. We ought to make a great coop,
and put them in, to feed upon dry peas and cockleweed, as
they would fain have us do.”</p>
<p>While listening to such observations as the above, Renzo
continued to make his way through the crowd, and at last
arrived in front of the bakery. On viewing its dilapidated
and ruinous state, after the assault just sustained, “This
cannot be a good deed,” thought he: “if they treat all the
bake-houses in this manner, where will they make bread?”</p>
<p>From time to time, some were seen issuing from the
house, loaded with pieces of chests, or troughs, or a bench,
basket, or some other relic of the poor building, and crying,
“Make way, make way!” passed through the crowd.
These were all carried in the same direction, and it appeared
to a place agreed upon. Renzo's curiosity being
excited, he followed one who carried a bundle of pieces of
board and chips on his shoulder, and found that he took
the direction of the cathedral. On passing it, the mountaineer
could not avoid stopping a moment to gaze with
admiring eyes on the magnificent structure. He then
quickened his steps to rejoin him whom he had taken as
a guide, and, keeping behind him, they drew near the
middle of the square. The crowd was here more dense,
but they opened a way for the carrier, and Renzo, skilfully
introducing himself in the void left by him, arrived with
him in the very midst of the multitude. Here there was
an open space, in the centre of which was a bonfire, a heap
of embers, the remains of the tools mentioned above; surrounding
it was heard a clapping of hands and stamping of
feet, the tumult of a thousand cries of triumph and imprecation.</p>
<p>He of the boards threw them on the embers, and some,
with pieces of half-burnt shovel, stirred them until the
flame ascended, upon which their shouts were renewed
louder than before. The flame sank again, and the company,
for want of more combustibles, began to be weary,
when a report spread, that at the Cordusio (a square or
cross-way not far from there) they were besieging a
bakery: then was heard on all sides, “Let us go, let us
go;” and the crowd moved on. Renzo was drawn along
with the current, but in the mean while held counsel with
himself, whether he had not best withdraw from the fray,
and return to the convent in search of Father Bonaventura;
but curiosity again prevailed, and he suffered himself to be
carried forward, with the determination, however, of remaining
a mere spectator of the scene.</p>
<p>The multitude passed through the short and narrow
street of Pescheria, and thence by the crooked arch to the
square de' Mercanti. Here there were very few, who, in
passing before the niche that divides towards the centre the
terrace of the edifice then called the College of Doctors, did
not give a slight glance at the great statue contained in it of
Philip II., who even from the marble imposed respect, and
who, with his arm extended, appeared to be menacing the
populace for their rebellion.</p>
<p>This niche is now empty, and from a singular circumstance.
About one hundred and sixty years after the
events we are now relating, the head of the statue was
changed, the sceptre taken from its hand, and a dagger
substituted in its place, and beneath it was written <i>Marcus
Brutus</i>. Thus inserted it remained perhaps a couple of
years, until one day, some persons, who had no sympathies
with Marcus Brutus, but rather an aversion to him, threw a
rope around the statue, pulled it down, and, reducing it to
a shapeless mass, dragged it, with many insulting gestures,
beyond the walls of the city. Who would have foretold
this to Andrea Biffi when he sculptured it?</p>
<p>From the square de' Mercanti, the clamorous troop at
length arrived at the Cordusio. Each one immediately
looked towards the shop; but, instead of the crowd of
friends which they expected to find engaged on its demolition,
there were but a few, at a distance from the shop,
which was shut, and defended from the windows by armed
people. They fell back, and there was a murmur through
the crowd of unwillingness to risk the hazard of proceeding,
when a voice was heard to cry aloud, “Near by is the
house of the superintendent of provision; let us do justice, and
plunder it.” There was a universal acceptance of the proposal,
and “To the superintendent's! to the superintendent's!”
was the only sound that could be heard. The
crowd moved with unanimous fury towards the street
where the house, named in such an evil moment, was
situated.</p>
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