<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXVIII" id="CHAPTER_XXVIII"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXVIII.</h2>
<p>After the famous sedition on St. Martin's day, it may be
said that abundance flowed into Milan, as if by enchantment.
The shops were well stored with bread, the price
of which was no higher than in the most fruitful years;
those who, on that terrible day, had howled through the
streets, and committed every excess in their power, had
now reason to congratulate themselves. But, with the cessation
of their alarm, they had not resumed their accustomed
quiet; on the squares, and in the inns, there were
congratulations and boastings (although in an under tone)
at having hit on a mode of reducing the price of bread.
However, in the midst of these popular rejoicings, there
reigned a vague apprehension and presentiment that this
happiness would be of short duration. They besieged the
bakers and vendors of flour with the same pertinacity as
during the period of the former factitious and transient
abundance, produced by the first tariff of Antony Ferrer.
He who had some pence by him converted them immediately
into bread and flour, which was piled in chests, in
small casks, and even in vessels of earthen ware. In thus
attempting to extend the advantages of the moment, their
long duration was rendered, I do not say impossible, for it
was so already; but even their momentary continuance
thus became still more difficult.</p>
<p>On the fifteenth of November, Antony Ferrer, “<i>by
the order of his excellency</i>,” published a decree in which it
was forbidden to any one, having any quantity of grain or
flour in his house, to purchase more; and to the rest of the
people to buy bread beyond that which was necessary for
two days, “<i>under pecuniary and corporal penalties at the
discretion of his excellency</i>.” The decree ordered the <i>anziani</i>
(officers of justice), and invited every body, as a
duty, to denounce the offenders; it commanded the judges
to cause search to be made in every house which might be
mentioned to them, issuing at the same time a new command
to the bakers to keep their shops well furnished with
bread, “<i>under penalty of five years in the galleys, and still
greater punishment at the discretion of his excellency</i>.” A
great effort of imagination would be required to believe
that such orders were easy of execution.</p>
<p>In commanding the bakers to make such a quantity of
bread, means ought to have been afforded for the supply of
the material of which it was to be made. In seasons of
scarcity, there is always an endeavour to make into bread
various kinds of aliment, which, under ordinary circumstances,
are consumed under other forms. In this way rice
was introduced into the composition of a bread which was
called mistura.<SPAN class="tag" name="tag33" id="tag33" href="#note33">[33]</SPAN> On the 23d of November, there was a
decree issued, which placed at the order of the vicar and
twelve members of provision the half of the rice that each
possessed; under penalty for selling it without the permission
of those lords of the loss of the entire commodity, and
a fine of three crowns the bushel.</p>
<p>But this rice had to be paid for at a price very disproportioned
to that of bread. The burden of supplying this
enormous difference was imposed on the city: but the
council of ten resolved to send a remonstrance to the governor,
on the impossibility of sustaining such a tax; and
the governor fixed, by a decree of the 13th of December, the
price of rice at twelve livres the bushel. It is also probable,
though nowhere expressly stated, that the maximum price
for other sorts of grain was fixed by other proclamations.
Whilst, by these various measures, bread and flour were
kept at a low price in Milan, it consequently happened that
crowds of people rushed into the city to supply their wants.
Don Gonzalo, to remedy this inconvenience, forbade, by
another decree of the 15th of December, the carrying out
of the city bread to the value of more than twenty pence;
the penalty was a fine of “<i>twenty-five crowns, and in case
of inability, a public flogging, and greater punishments still,
at the discretion of his excellency</i>.”</p>
<p>The populace wished to procure abundance by pillage
and conflagration, the legal power wished to maintain it
by the galleys and the rope. Every method was resorted
to to accomplish their purpose, but the reader will soon
learn the total failure of them all. It is, besides, easy to
see, and not useless to observe, that these strange means
had an intimate and necessary connection with each other;
each was the inevitable consequence of the preceding, and
all, in fact, flowed from the first error, that of fixing upon
bread a price so disproportioned to that which ought to
have resulted from the real state of things. Such an expedient,
however, has always appeared to the populace not
only conformable to equity, but very simple and easy of
execution; it is then very natural that in the agonies and
misery which are the necessary effects of scarcity, they
should, if it be in their power, adopt it. But as the consequences
begin to be felt, the government is obliged to
repair the evil by new laws, forbidding men to do that
which previous laws had recently prescribed to them.</p>
<p>The principal fruits of the insurrection were these; the
destruction or loss of much provision in the insurrection
itself, and the rapid consumption of the small quantity of
grain then on hand, which should otherwise have lasted
until the next harvest. To these general effects may be
added, the punishment of four of the populace, who were
hung as leaders of the sedition, two before the baker's shop
of the crutches, and two at the corner of the street in
which was situated the house of the superintendent of provision.</p>
<p>The historical relations of this epoch are handed down
to us with so little clearness, that it is difficult to ascertain
when this arbitrary tariff ceased. But we have numerous
accounts of the situation of the country, and especially the
city, in the winter of that year and the following spring.
In every quarter shops were closed; and the manufactories
were, for the most part, deserted; the streets afforded a
terrible spectacle of sorrow and desolation; mendicants by
profession, now the smallest number, were confounded with
the new multitude, disputing for alms with those from
whom they had formerly been accustomed to receive them;
clerks and servants, dismissed by the merchants and shopkeepers,
hardly existing upon some scanty savings; merchants
and shopkeepers themselves failing and ruined by
the stoppage of trade; artificers wandering from door to
door, lying along the pavement, by the houses and churches,
soliciting charity, and hesitating between want and shame,
emaciated and feeble, reduced by long fasting, and the rigours
of the cold which penetrated their tattered clothing;
servants, dismissed by their masters, who were incapable of
maintaining their accustomed numerous and sumptuous
establishments; and the numerous dependents upon the
labour of these various classes, old men, women, and children,
grouped around their former supporters, or wandered
in search of support elsewhere.</p>
<p>Among the wretched crowds also might be distinguished,
by their <i>long lock</i>, by the remnants of their magnificent
apparel, by their carriage and gestures, and by the traces
which habit impresses on the countenance, many <i>bravoes</i>,
who, having lost in the common misery their criminal
means of support, were reduced to an equality of suffering,
and with difficulty dragged themselves along the city that
they had so often traversed with a proud and ferocious
bearing, magnificently armed and attired; they now extended
with humility the hand which they had so frequently
raised to menace with insolence, or to strike with
treachery.</p>
<p>But the most dense, livid, and hideous swarm was that
of the villagers. These were seen in entire families; husbands
with their wives, dragging along their little ones,
and supporting in their arms their wretched babies, whilst
their own aged and helpless parents followed behind,—all
flocked into the city in hopes of obtaining bread. Some,
whose houses had been invaded and despoiled by the soldiery,
had fled in despair; some, to excite compassion,
and render their misery more striking, showed the wounds
and bruises they had received in defending their homes;
and others, whom this scourge had not reached, had been
driven, by the two scourges from which no corner of the
country was exempt, sterility and the consequent increase
on the price of provisions, to the city, as to the abode of
abundance and pious munificence. The new comers might
be recognised by their air of angry astonishment and disappointment
at finding such an excess of misery where they
had hoped to be themselves the peculiar objects of compassion
and benevolence. Here, too, might be recognised,
in all their varieties of ragged habiliments, in the midst of
the general wretchedness, the pale dweller of the marsh,
the bronzed countenance of the plain or hill countryman,
and the sanguine complexion of the mountaineer, all,
however, alike in the hollow eye, ferocious or insane countenance,
knotted hair, long and matted beard, attenuated
body, shrivelled skin and bony breast,—all alike reduced to
the lowest condition of languor, of infantine debility.</p>
<p>Heaps of straw and stubble were seen along the walls,
and by the gutters, which appeared to be a particular provision
of charity for these unfortunate creatures; there their
limbs reposed during the night; and in the day they were
occupied by those who, exhausted by fatigue and suffering,
could no longer bear the weight of their emaciated bodies;
sometimes, upon the damp straw a dead body lay extended;
sometimes, the miserable spark of life was rekindled in its
feeble tenement by timely succour from a hand rich in the
means and in the disposition to do good, the hand of the
pious Frederick.</p>
<p>He had made choice of six priests of ardent charity and
robust constitution; and, dividing them into three companies,
assigned to each the third of the city as their charge;
they were accompanied by porters, laden with food, cordials,
and clothing. Each morning these worthy messengers
of benevolence passed through the streets, approached
those whom they beheld stretched on the pavement, and
gave to each their kindly assistance. Those who were too
ill to be benefited by temporal succour received from them
the last offices of religion.</p>
<p>Their assistance was not limited to present relief: the
good bishop requested them, wherever it was possible, to
furnish more efficacious and permanent comfort, by giving
to those who should be in some measure restored to strength
money for their future necessities, lest returning want
should again plunge them into wretchedness and misery;
and to obtain shelter for others who lay exposed in the
street in the neighbouring houses, by requesting their inhabitants
to receive the poor afflicted ones as boarders, whose
expenses would be paid by the cardinal himself.</p>
<p>Frederick had not waited for the evil to attain its height,
in order to exercise his benevolence, and to devote all the
powers of his mind towards its amelioration. By uniting
all his means, by practising strict economy, by drawing
upon the sums destined to other liberalities, and which
had now become of secondary importance, he endeavoured
to amass money, in order to employ it entirely for those
who were suffering from hunger and its consequences. He
bought a quantity of grain, and sent it to the most destitute
parts of his diocese; but as the succour was far from
adequate to the necessity, he sent with it a great quantity
of salt, “with which,” says Ripamonti<SPAN class="tag" name="tag34" id="tag34" href="#note34">[34]</SPAN>, relating the fact,
“the herbs of the field and the leaves of trees were made
food for men.” He distributed grain and money to the
curates of the city; and he himself travelled over it, administering
alms, and secretly aiding many indigent families.
In the episcopal palace, rice was boiled every day,
and dealt out to the necessities of the people, to the extent
of 2000 measures. Besides these splendid efforts of a
single individual, many other excellent persons, though with
less powerful means, strove to mitigate the horrible sufferings
of the people: of these sufferers, thousands struggled
to grasp the broth or other food provided at different quarters,
and thus prolong for a day, at least, their miserable
lives; but thousands were still left behind in the struggle,
and these generally the weakest,—the aged women and
children; and these might be seen, dead and dying from
inanition, in every part. But in the midst of these calamities
not the least disposition to insurrection appeared.</p>
<p>The void that mortality created each day in the miserable
multitude was each day more than replenished; there was
a perpetual concourse, at first from the neighbouring villages,
then from the more distant territories, and, finally,
from the Milanese cities.</p>
<p>The ordinary spectacle of ordinary times, the contrast of
magnificent apparel with rags, and of luxury with poverty,
had entirely disappeared. The nobility even wore coarse
clothing; some, because the general misery had affected their
fortune; others, because they would not insult the wretchedness
of the people, or because they feared to provoke the
general despair by the display of luxury at such a time.</p>
<p>Thus passed the winter and the spring; already had the
Tribunal of Health remonstrated with the Tribunal of
Provision on the danger to which such mass of misery
exposed the city. To prevent contagious diseases, a
proposal was made to confine the vagabond beggars in
the various hospitals. Whilst this project was under
discussion, some approving and others condemning, dead
bodies incumbered the streets. The Tribunal of Provision,
however, proposed another expedient as more easy and
expeditious, which was, to shut up all the mendicants,
healthy or diseased, in the lazaretto, and to maintain them
there at the expense of the city. This measure was resolved
upon, notwithstanding the remonstrances of the
Tribunal of Health, who objected that, in so numerous an
assemblage, the evil to which they wished to apply a
remedy would be greatly augmented.</p>
<p>The little order that reigned in the lazaretto, the bad
quality of the food, and the standing water which was
drank plentifully, soon created numerous maladies. To
these causes of mortality, so much the more active from
operating on bodies already exhausted or enfeebled, was
added the unfavourableness of the season; obstinate rains,
followed by more obstinate drought, and violent heat. To
these physical evils were added others of a moral nature,
despair and wearisomeness in captivity, desire for accustomed
habits, regret for cherished beings of whom these
unfortunate beings had been deprived; painful apprehension
for those who were living, and the continual dread of
death, which had itself become a new and powerful cause
of the extension of disease. It is not to be wondered at
that mortality increased in this species of prison to such a
degree as to assume the appearance and deserve the name
of <i>pestilence</i>. The number of deaths in the lazaretto soon
amounted to a hundred daily.</p>
<p>Whilst within these wretched walls, grief, fear, anguish,
and rage prevailed, in the Tribunal of Provision, shame,
astonishment, and irresolution were equally apparent.
They consulted, and now listened to the advice of the Tribunal
of Health: finding they could do no better than to
undo what they had done, at so much expense and trouble,
they opened the doors of the lazaretto, and released all who
were well enough to leave it. The city was thus again
filled with its former cries, but feebler, and more interrupted;
the sick were transported to Santa Maria della
Stella, which was then the hospital for the poor, and the
greater part perished there.</p>
<p>However, the fields began to yield the harvest so long
desired, and the troops of peasants left the city for their
long prayed for and accustomed labours. The ingenious
and inexhaustible charity of the good Frederick still exerted
itself; he made a present of a giulio<SPAN class="tag" name="tag35" id="tag35" href="#note35">[35]</SPAN> and a sickle to
each peasant, who solicited it at the palace.</p>
<p>With a plentiful harvest, scarcity ceased to be felt; the
mortality, however, continued, in a greater or less degree,
until the middle of autumn. It was on the point of ceasing,
when a new scourge overwhelmed the city and country.</p>
<p>Many events of high historical importance had occurred
in this interval of time. The Cardinal Richelieu, after
having taken Rochelle, and made a treaty of peace with
England, had proposed, effected by his powerful influence
in the councils of the French king, that efficacious aid
should be sent to the Duke of Nevers; he had also persuaded
the king to lead the expedition in person. Whilst
the preparations were in progress, the Count of Nassau,
imperial commissary, suggested to the new duke in
Mantua the expediency of replacing his states in the hands
of Ferdinand; intimating that, in case of refusal, an army
would be immediately sent by the emperor to occupy
them. The duke, who in the most desperate circumstances
had rejected so hard a condition, encouraged now
by the promised succours from France, was determined
still longer to defend himself. The commissary departed,
declaring that force would soon decide the matter.</p>
<p>In the month of March, the Cardinal Richelieu with
the king, at the head of an army, demanded a free passage
from the Duke of Savoy; he entered into treaties for the
purpose, but nothing was concluded. After a rencounter,
in which the French obtained the advantage, a new treaty
was entered into, in which the duke stipulated that Don
Gonzalo de Cordova should raise the siege of Casale, engaging,
in case of his refusal, to unite with the French, and
invade the duchy of Milan. Don Gonzalo raised the siege
of Casale, and a body of French troops entered it, to reinforce
the garrison. The Cardinal Richelieu decided to
return to France, on business which he regarded as more
urgent; but Girolamo Soranzo, envoy from Venice, offered
the most powerful reasons to divert him from this resolution.
To these the king and the cardinal paid no attention;
they returned with the greatest part of the army, leaving
only 6000 men at Suza to occupy the passes and maintain
the treaty.</p>
<p>Whilst this army departed on one side, that of Ferdinand,
commanded by the Count of Collato, advanced on
the other. It had invaded the country of the Grisons,
and the Valtelline, and was preparing to come down on
the Milanese. Besides the usual terrors which such an
expectation was calculated to excite, the report was spread,
that the plague lurked in the imperial army. Alessandro
Tadino, one of the conservators of the public health, was
charged by the tribunal to state to the governor the frightful
danger which threatened the country, if this army
should obtain the pass which opened on Mantua. It appears
from all the actions of Gonzalo, that he was possessed
by a desire to occupy a great place in history; but,
as often happens, history has failed to register one of his
most remarkable acts, the answer he returned to this Doctor
Tadino; which was, “that he knew not what could
be done; that reasons of interest and honour, which had
induced the march of the army, were of greater weight
than the danger represented; that he would, however, endeavour
to act for the best, and that they must trust to
Providence.”</p>
<p>In order, then, to act for the best, their two physicians
proposed to the tribunal to forbid, under the most severe
penalty, the purchase of any articles of clothing from the
soldiers who were about to pass. As to Don Gonzalo, his
reply to Doctor Tadino was one of his last acts at Milan,
as the ill success of the war, which had been instigated and
directed by him, caused him to be displaced in the course
of the summer. He was succeeded by Marquis Ambrosio
Spinola, who had already acquired the military celebrity in
the wars of Flanders which still endures.</p>
<p>Meanwhile the German troops had received definite orders
to march upon Mantua, and in the month of September
they entered the duchy of Milan.</p>
<p>At this epoch armies were composed, for the greater
part, of adventurers, enlisted by <i>condottieri</i>, who held their
commission from some prince, and who sometimes pursued
the occupation on their own account, so as to be able to
sell themselves and followers together. Men were drawn
to this vocation much less by the pay which was assigned
to them, than by the hope of pillage, and the charms of
licence. There was no fixed or general discipline; and as
their pay was very uncertain, the spoils of the countries
which they over-ran were tacitly accorded to them by their
commanders.</p>
<p>It was a saying of the celebrated Wallenstein's, that it
was easier to maintain an army of 100,000 men than
one of 12,000. And this army of which we are now
speaking was part of that which in the thirty years' war
had desolated all Germany; it was commanded by one of
Wallenstein's lieutenants, and consisted of 28,000 infantry,
and 7000 horse. In descending from the Valtelline towards
Milan, they had to coast along the Adda, to the
place where it empties into the Po; eight days' march in
the duchy of Milan.</p>
<p>A great proportion of the inhabitants retired to the
mountains, carrying with them their most precious possessions;
some remained to watch the sick, or to preserve
their dwellings from the flames, or to watch the valuable
property which they had buried or concealed; and others
remained because they had nothing to lose. When the
first detachment arrived at the place where they were to
halt, the soldiers scattered themselves through the country;
and subjected it at once to pillage; all that could be eaten
or carried off disappeared; fields were destroyed, and cottages
burnt to the ground; every hiding-place, every method
to which people had resorted, in their despair, for
the defence of their property, became useless, nay, often
resulted in the peculiar injury of the proprietor. Strict
search was made throughout every house by the soldiers;
they easily detected in the gardens the earth which had
been newly dug; they penetrated the caverns in search of
the opulent inhabitants, who had taken refuge there, and
dragging them to their houses, forced them to declare
where they had concealed their treasures.</p>
<p>At last they departed; their drums and trumpets were
heard receding in the distance, and a temporary calm succeeded
to these hours of tumult and affright; but, alas!
the sound of drums was again heard, announcing the arrival
of another detachment, the soldiers of which, furious
at not finding booty, destroyed what the first work of desolation
had spared; burned the furniture and the houses,
and manifested the most cruel and savage disposition towards
the inhabitants. This continued for a period of
twenty days, the army containing that number of divisions.</p>
<p>Colico was the first territory of the duchy that these
demons invaded; they then threw themselves on Bellano,
from which they entered and spread themselves in the
Valsassina, whence they marched into the territory of Lecco.</p>
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