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Michael Angelo Buonarroti
by Charles Holroyd
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Montevecchio; Cardinal, 63

Montorsoli, 194

Moscheroni: Flemish merchants, 29

Moses: marble statue, the Tomb of Julius, 33, 67, 68, 129, 167, 182, 225

Mother: of the Master, see Francesca

Mould on the Vault, 46, 161

Mozza: Via, 184

Nanni di Baccio Bigio: his intrigues, 242, 244, 247

Naples: copy of the Day of Judgment, 253

National Gallery, 116, 157, 204, 265, 292, 330, 331

Neptune: proposed statue of Andrea Doria as, 190, 191

Nero, 275, 285

New Sacristy of San Lorenzo, 192, 208, 293

Nicholas V.: Pope, 34

Nicolo di Bari: the ark of San Domenico, 105

Nicolo: San, beyond Arno, 203

Night: marble statue, New Sacristy, 58, 194, 203, 204, 209, 213, 214, 293

Noah: the Sacrifice of, Sistine Chapel, 44, 45

Novella: S.M., the first art school of the master, 99

Oil painting; the master's opinion of 217

Ollanda: see Francesco

Onofrio: San, the master's workshop at, 124

Operai: of the Duomo, 115, 120

Orcagna, 99

Orvieto, 221

Ottavio Farnese: the marriage of, 306

Ovid, 299

Oxford: drawings at, anatomy students, 16; after two destroyed frescoes, 166; design for alterations at San Lorenzo, 198, 230

Padua, 290

Palla: Giovanni Battista della, 105

Paolina: Cappella, 224

Paolo Galli: owned the Bacchus and the little Cupid, 25

Paris: the Leda goes to, 204

Parma, 3, 291

Parmigiano, 291, 327

Paul: St., conversion of, fresco, 73, 101

Paul III.: Pope, elected, 66; visits the master, 67; orders him to proceed with the Day of Judgment, 70, 73, 78, 80, 84; appoints the master chief architect, 216; his answer to Messer Biagio, 223; orders the frescoes for his chapel, 224, 225, 237, 239; death, 242, 248, 276, 314

Paul IV.: Pope, 223

Pavia: Cardinal of, 132, 141, 147

Penseroso: Il, 203

Perino del Vaga, 127, 238, 270, 291, 327

Perspective, 82

Perugino, 77, 166, 216

Peruzzi: Baldassari, 238, 240, 242, 292, 295, 327

Pesaro, 290

Pescara: Marchioness of, see Colonna

Pesellino: studies from, 105

Peter: St., a blocked out statue, 259

Peter: St., crucifixion of, alfresco, 73

Peter's: the church of St., new design for, 25, 33, 83; plans altered to embrace the project of the Tomb, 129; the master undertakes the works, 238, 243, 244, 245, 249, 259, 291, 292, 305

Petrarca, 19; and Tuscan rhyme, 76

Petronilla: Santa, the Madonna della Pieta placed in the church of, 25, 112

Petronio: San, a marble statuette finished by the master, 105

Petronio: San, the master hears mass in the church of, 39

Phaeton: a drawing, 231

Phidias, 156, 294

Piacenza: the ferry revenue goes to the master, 216

Piecolomini: Cardinal Francesco, orders fifteen statues, 114

Pico della Mirandola, 102

Pier Luigi: Gaeta, 247

Piero di Cosimo, 103, note, 116

Pierre Mariette: the fate of the Leda, 204

Pieta: a drawing, 259

Pieta: of S.M. del Fiore, 73, 233, 236, 262

Pieta: the Palazzo Rondini, 237

Pieta: Viterbo, by Sebastiano, 265

Pieta: see Madonna della Pieta

Pietra: Santa, marble quarries, 52, 53, 183-185

Pietro Matteo d'Amelia, 150

Pietro: San, in Montorio, wall painting by Sebastiano, 101, 265, 292

Pietro: San, in Viticula, the Tomb of Julius II. set up, 67, 129, 182

Pietro: San, Maggiore, Florence, 260

Pietro Urbano: a workman, 133

Pietro Urbino, 187, 264

Pilote: goldsmith, 264

Pinti: Borgo, the master's house in, 120

Pintoricchio: Bernardino, 166

Piombo: see Sebastiano

Pisa: fortifications, 202; picture by Buggiardini, 158; 291

Pisa: see Cartoon

Pisani: pulpits of the, 103

Pisano: Giovanni, 177

Pistoia: San Andrea at, 177; 264

Pitti: Bartolomineo, 121

Pius III.: Pope, see Piccolomini.

Pius IV.: Pope, elected, 245; confirms the master in his office, 247, 250

Pius V.: injures the Day of Judgment, 228

Plato, 75, 87

Plutarch, 286, 326

Po: the river, 193; revenue of a ferry, 216

Poggibonsi, 35

Pole: Cardinal, a friend of the master, 84

Polidoro, 292, 327

Poliziano: recognises the master's lofty spirit, 13, 102, 103

Pollaiuolo: Salvestro del, nephew of Antonio, 139

Pollaiuolo: Simone il, 131

Polvaccio: Roman quarry, 187

Pompey, 286, 310

Ponte: Maestro Bernardo dal, helps to cast the Colossal Bronze, 136, 139

Ponte Rotto, 245

Pontormo: Il, 127, 264

Porta del Popolo, 251

Porta Pia, 251

Portraits of the master, 252, 263

Praxiteles, 294

Prophets: Sistine Chapel, 42, 45, 164, 166-170, 176-178, 211

Protogenes, 325

Psyche: the Story of, by Raphael, 292

Pulci: Luigi, 102

Raffaellino: offers to come as assistant, 149

Raffaello da Monte Lupo: his autobiography, 121; the Madonna for the Tomb of Julius, 224-226

Raising of Lazarus: by Sebastiano, the master's design for, 265

Raphael: da Urbino, proposed by the master as painter of the Sistine, 41, 47; studies the style of the master, 77; he is praised by the master, 89; his painting of Doni, 122; studied the Cartoon, 126; his manner with his assistants, 155; the proposition of Bramante, 164; cartoons for tapestry, 167; his composition of the Sacrifice of Noah, 173; Sibyls at S.M. della Pace, 177; a putto, 178, 197, 221, 238, 240, 242, 256, 263, 271, 292

Ravenna, 184

Realdo: physician, 91

Redemptions of Israel, 166, 169, 178

Reggio, 3

Rembrandt, 172, 224

Reynel: King of France, 293

Riccio: Luigi del, nurses the master when ill, 227

Ricordi: the vault finished, 165; the facade of San Lorenzo abandoned, 185; marbles for the sacristy, 187; 192; Gondi hides goods in the New Sacristy, 201

Ridolfi: Cardinal, 85

Ridolfo Pio of Carpi: Cardinal, letter to, 241; the Brutus for, 249

Ridolfo: see Ghirlandaio

Rimini: a post on the Chancery bestowed on the master, 216

Risen Christ: see Christ

Robertet: Florimond, secretary, receives the bronze David, 119, 120

Rocco: a San, drawn for Minighella, 264

Rondini: Palazzo, Pieta in, 237

Rontini: Baccio, cures the master from the effects of his fall, 219

Romans: claim him as a citizen, 260

Rome: the master's first visit, 29, 30 37, 41, 107, 109, 111, 121, 128 130, 184, 185; the sack of, 200, 205; the master returns finally, 216, 237, 240, 246, 247, 253, 256, 260, 270, 291, 305, 314

Rosselli: Cosimo, 116, 166

Rosselli: Piero di Jacopo, plasters the vault, 149

Rosselli: Pietro, letter to the master, 130

Rosselmini: Count Guarlandi, 106

Rosso: II, worked from the Cartoon, 127

Rovere: see Julius II.

Rovezzano: Benedetto da, 119

Rovano: Cardinal, see Dionigi

Royal Academy: see Diploma Gallery

Rucellai: recommendation to, 24

Ruffilni: Alessandro, groom of the Chamber, 83

Sacrarium: at San Lorenzo, design, 198

Sacrifice of Noah, 172, 173

Sacristy of San Lorenzo: see Medici Tombs

Sack of Rome, 200, 205

Salt-cellar: design for, 217

Salvestro da Montanto, 226

Salvestro: jeweller, 116

Salviati: Alamano, 30

Salviati: Cardinal, 244

Salviati: Cecchino, rescues fragments of the arm of the David, 117

Salviati: Michael Angelo, father of Cecchino, 117

Salviati: Jacopo, 192

Sanazzaro, 76

Sangallo; Antonio da, 34, 47, 85, 116, 237, 238, 240-242, 259

Sangallo: Aristotele, assistant, 151

Sangallo: Ginliano da, 116, 141

San Gallo: Porta, 200

Sansovino: Andrea del Monte a, 27

Sansovino: Jacopo, 263

Santa Croce: Cardinal, 84

Santa Croce: Florence, 253, 260-262

Santarelli: sculptor, discovers a statue, 108

Santiquattro: Cardinal, 61, 52

Sarto: see Andrea

Savonarola: the master's affection for, 87; his sermons, 106

Scaffolding: designed by the master, 82; drawing of, 98; fall from, 218

Schongauer: see Martin Scipio, 84

Scourging of Christ: drawn for Sebastiano, 101, 265

Sebastiano del Piombo, 101: a walk in Rome, 121; letters from, 185, 187, 188, 205; portrait of Doria, 191; letter to, 197; prepares the wall for the Day of Judgment, 217, 231, 238, 253, note; his genial humour, 264; designs for, 265, 292, 314, 327

Setta Sangallesca, 237, 242-245

Settignano: the master nursed at, 6

Sibyls, 42, 45, 164, 166-170, 176-178; by Raphael, 177

Siege of Florence, 201, 205

Siena, 273, 292, 327

Sigismondo: a brother, 109

Signorelli: Luca, pictures in the Uffizi, 123; and Sistine Chapel, 166; slight influence of, 123, 124

Silvester: San, at Monte Cavallo, 271-327

Simone da Canossa: ancestor, 4, 6

Sin of Ham, 164, 170, 174, 179

Sistine Chapel, 41-49, 167-180, 210

Sixtus IV.: Pope, 41

Slaves: the two, marble statues, given to Strozzi, 89, 129, 116; 182, 216, 225, 227

Snow: a statue in, 15

Socrates, 87

Soderini: Cardinal, 39

Soderini: Pier, Gonfaloniere, 28, 36, 37, 96, 97; his criticism of the David, 118, 132

Solari: Cristoforo, Il Gobbo, 113

Spain, 200, 312, 313

Spanish Chapel, 99

Spedalingo: head of the hospital of S.M. Nuova, 157, 181, 182

Spina: Giovanni, to pay a provision to the master, 192; letter to, 194

Spirito: Santo, a crucifix for, 16

Spoleto, 256

Staccoli: Hieronimo, his letter to the Duke of Camerino, 217

Stairway to the Library, 250

Stanze: of the Vatican, 263, 270, 271, 292

Stefano: di Tomaso, 191, 192

Strozzi: Filippo, a sword hilt given to, 136

Strozzi: Giovan Battista, verses on the Night, 218

Strozzi: Lorenzo, 161

Strozzi Palace: the Hercules there until the siege, 105

Strozzi: Roberto, Slaves given to, 88, 89, 227

Stufa: Luigi della, a colossus to spoil the front of his palace, 198, 199

Sword-hilt: designed for Aldobrandini but given to Strozzi, 186

Tapestry: Raphael's cartoons for, 167

Tasio: wood-carver, 197

Taro: river, 193

Te: Palazzo del, 263

Teridade: King, 294

Terribilita: the master's, 101, 117

Teyler Museum: Haarlem, 253

Tiber, 193

Tiberio Calcagni, 249; letter to Lionardo, 257, 258

Ticino: river, 193

Titian: his later work, 230, 290, 327

Tityos: drawing, 231

Tolemei: Claudio, 85

Tomaso: see Cavalieri

Tomaso: of Prato, attorney, 62

Tomb of Julius: first design, 30-33, 128, 129; description, 67; moneys received for, 69, 183, 186; the master's desire to complete it, 191; and trouble concerning it, 194, 205, 207

Tondi: see Madonna and Child

Topolino: Domenico Fancelli, letter to, 190; 264

Torrigiano: strikes the master, 91; his history, 92; a St. Francis by, 114

Tribolo: studied the Cartoon, 127

Trinita de' Monti, 253

Tromboncini: Bartolomeo, music to the madrigals, 207

Turk: The Grand, invites the master, 37, 78

Uffizi: Florence, the painted tondo, 29, 122; the dancing Faun, 175; Signorelli's pictures 123; drawings, 193

Urbino: Francesco, 255, 256, 273, 314

Urbino: Francesco Maria, Duke of, finds fault with the slow progress of the Tomb of Julius II., 55, 62-64; Paul III. arranges a new contract, 67, 69, 207; final contract, 225, 226, 290

Urbino: the master thinks of retiring to, 66

Urbino: the Palace of the Duke, 290

Valdarno, 264

Valori: Baccio, the Apollo presented to, 205, 207

Valentino: Duke, sends the god of Love to Mantua, 22, 23

Valerio Cioli, 262

Valerio de Vincenca, 270

Valpaio: Benvenuto, 207

Valuation of works of art, 314

Vansitelli, 251

Varchi: Lectures and criticisms on the sonnets, 86; oration, 262

Vari: see Metello

Vasari: Giorgio, his famous book, 92, 97, 98; preserves the broken fragments of the arm of the David, 117; the story of the Gonfaloniere, 118; the St. Matthew, 120; the tondi, 121, 122; the Cartoon, 126; seventeen statues for the Tomb of Julius completed, 130; a list of assistants, 150, 151; his fable of the vault, 158, 163; the Apollo, 204; he completes the works at San Lorenzo, 209, 211; how Sebastiano prepared the wall, 217; the master's fall, 218; the Day of Judgment, 222; the Cappella Paolino, 232; he sees the master working at night, 235; a Pieta, 237; the cornice, 238; St. Peter's, 241; plots, 243; the bridge of Nanni, 245; the church for the Florentines in Rome, 249; the medal of Leone, 252; he holds another Buonarroto at the font, 255; a letter to, referring to the death of Urbino, 255, 256; the master's will, 269; he receives the master's body in Florence, 260; and describes the opening of the coffin in Santa Croce, 261; and the obsequies at San Lorenzo, 262; he designs the Tomb, 262; and enumerates the pupils, 263

Vauban: studies the fortifications at San Miniato, 203

Vault: of the Sistine Chapel, 41-49; works begun, 149; painting begins, 151; assistants dismissed, 156; mould on the fresco, 161; exposed to view, 163; finished, 165; a description, 167-179, 291

Vecchio: Palazzo, 116; cartoon for, 124; Bandinelli's Hercules and Cacus, 204

Venice: the master invited to, 78; flees to, 202; Sebastiano refers to, 206, 290, 327

Venusti: see Marcello

Victory: the, a marble statue in the Bargello, 129, 228

Vincenzo: see Borghini

Vinci: see Lionardo

Vincula: San Pietro in, Bramante's work needs support, 32; the Moses placed in, 33 Virgil, 76, 298, 303

Vitelli: Alessandro, 60

Viterbo: Vittoria Colonna visits, 85, 240; the Pieta by Sebastiano, 265

Vitruvius, 237

Vittoria: see Colonna

Volterra: Cardinal, letter from Soderini to, 132

Volterra: see Daniele

Windsor: drawings, 230

Works of art in the house of the master when he died, 259

Zanobi: Via San, 184

Zanobi: Mona, land near her estate, 135

Zapata: Diogo, 289

Zeuxis, 315



Printed by BALLANTYNE, HANSON & CO.

London & Edinburgh



1 For convenience of reference the chapters in the two parts are divided so as to cover the same periods of time in the life of the master.

2 Count Alessandro da Canossa acknowledged relationship to Michael Angelo in a letter, dated October 4, 1520 (Gotti, i. 4), addressing the master as "honoured kinsman," but the relationship cannot now be proved. The ancestors of Michael Angelo have been traced to one Bernardo who died before the year 1228, and they played their part as citizens of Florence, no mean city, for more than two hundred years—a noble pedigree even for Michael Angelo.

3 A paid magistrate or mayor, generally from a neighbouring town or country and not a citizen of the place where he was on duty.

4 Caprese is made up of scattered hamlets and farmhouses near Arezzo, upon the watershed between the Tiber and the Arno.

5 Upon March 6, 1475, according to our present reckoning, Lodovico wrote in his note-book:

"I record that on this day, March 6, 1474, a male child was born to me. I gave him the name of Michael Angelo, and he was born on a Monday morning four or five hours before daybreak, and he was born while I was Podesta of Caprese, and he was born at Caprese; and the godfathers were those I have named below. He was baptized on the eighth of the same month in the Church of San Giovanni at Caprese." Then follow the godfathers; there are ten of them.

6 Maestro Francesco only taught Michael Angelo to read and write in the vulgar tongue, for his pupil complained in after life that he knew no Latin; this was not Francesco's fault, for his pupil soon followed his friend's—another Francesco—influence and neglected literature for the art that made him famous.

7 Ghirlandaio, born 1449, died 1494.

8 Martin Schongauer, born at Colmar about 1450, died 1488.

9 When Michael Angelo was thirteen years old Lodovico gave in to his wishes and apprenticed him to Domenico Ghirlandajo (he was called Ghirlandajo because as a goldsmith he had made garlands of golden leaves for the brows of the Florentine ladies) upon the unusual terms set forth in the following minute from Domenico's ledger under the date 1488:

"I record this first of April how that I, Lodovico di Lionardo di Buonarrota, bind my son Michael Angelo to Domenico and Davit di Tommaso di Currado for the next three ensuing years, under these conditions and contracts: to wit that the said Michael Angelo shall stay with the above-named masters during this time, to learn the art of painting, and to practise the same, and to be at the order of the above-named; and they for their part, shall give him in the course of these three years twenty-four florins (fiorini di Sagello, L8 12s.); to wit, six florins in the first year, eight in the second, ten in the third, making in all the sum of ninety-six pounds (lire)."

A note of April 16, 1488, records that two florins were paid to Michael Angelo upon that day. The total sum is estimated by Gotti (p. 6, note) to equal 206.40 lira present value—about L8 12s. It was usual for apprentices to pay a sum to their masters rather than to be paid.

10 Drawings, even by old masters, were of no pecuniary value in those days; they were merely kept for use in the workshop. The fashion of collecting drawings for their own sake was invented by Giorgio Vasari some sixty years later.

11 There is a mask of a grinning faun to be seen in the Bargello at Florence, attributed to Michael Angelo and said to be this his first work in sculpture. It does not correspond with either the account of Vasari or of Condivi; it is a poor and ugly piece of work, and shows no sign whatever of the early style of Michael Angelo, but is more likely a work of a later period by some one who had seen the mask under the left arm of "The Night" on the tomb of Lorenzo at San Lorenzo.

12 "During this time Michael Angelo received from the Magnifico an allowance of five ducats per month, and was furthermore presented for his gratification with a violet-coloured mantle. But, indeed, all the young men who studied in the gardens received stipends of greater or less amount from the liberality of that Magnificent and most noble citizen, being constantly encouraged and rewarded by him whilst he lived." (Vasari.)

13 Many motives from antique gems may be traced in the art of Michael Angelo, such as the Judith and her maid, some of the athletes the Leda, and even the Adam.

14 Lorenzo died upon the eighth day of April, 1492.

15 Equal to-day to 20.60 lire—about seventeen shillings.

16 Nineteen and a quarter inches according to the measurements of Heath Wilson ("Michael Angelo and his Works," p. 17, ed. 1881). This relief is in the Casa Buonarroti, Florence.

17 We have no record of this work, and its whereabouts is not known.

18 The boy, Michael Angelo, probably enjoyed this frolic and its attendant festivities as much as Piero, he could not have done much other work in the dungeon-like studios of Florence in such cold weather. This incident has been regarded as an insult to the artist and a sign of Piero's want of taste. Michael Angelo cannot have felt aggrieved as he stayed on at the palace. Condivi relates that he remained "some months." Piero should rather be blamed for not employing his artist guest upon some more lasting work also.

19 Nothing is known as to the fate of this work, it is not now in the church.

20 Vasari states that Michael Angelo devoted much time to the study of anatomy. "For the church of Santo Spirito, in Florence, Michael Angelo made a crucifix in wood, which is placed over the lunette of the high altar. This he did to please the Prior, who had given him a room wherein he dissected many dead bodies, zealously studying anatomy." (Vasari.)

A pen drawing at Oxford shows us two students studying anatomy at night; the body of the subject supports the torch; one student holds a pair of compasses in his right hand for measuring the proportions.

21 Michael Angelo left Bologna hastily under fear of personal violence from the sculptors and native craftsmen, who said he was taking the bread out of their mouths, rather a strong compliment to a boy of twenty.

22 The dealer Baldassari del Milanese paid Michael Angelo thirty ducats for this work, and sold it to Raffaello Riario, Cardinal di San Giorgio, as an antique for two hundred ducats, an evidence, not of the Cardinal's foolishness, but of Michael Angelo's careful study of the antique.

23 The Cardinal S. Giorgio made Messer Baldassari refund the two hundred ducats and take the Cupid back, so Michael Angelo got nothing for his journey. Cesare Borgia presented this Cupid to Guidobaldo di Montefeltro, Duke of Urbino. After Cesare Borgia sacked the town of Urbino in 1592 he sent the Cupid to the Marchioness of Mantua, who wrote on July 22, 1592, describing the Cupid as "without a peer among the works of modern times." There is a sleeping Cupid at Mantua in the Museo Civico, but it is not by Michael Angelo. Signor Fabriczy holds that a Cupid preserved in the museum at Turin may be Michael Angelo's original work, but the translator has not seen it.

24 Michael Angelo arrived in Rome for the first time at the end of June 1496, and wrote in July to Lorenzo di' Pier Francesco de' Medici. The letter bears a superscription to Sandro Botticelli; historians presume from this that it was not safe to write openly to any of the Medici.

"2nd day of July, 1496.

"Magnificent Lorenzo,—I only write to inform you that last Saturday we arrived safely, and went at once to visit the Cardinal di San Giorgio; and I presented your letter to him. It appeared to me that he was pleased to see me, and he expressed a wish that I should go immediately to inspect his collection of statues. I spent the whole day there, and for that reason was unable to deliver all your letters. On Sunday the Cardinal came into the new house, and had me sent for. I went to him, and he asked me what I thought about the things I had seen. I replied by stating my opinion, and certainly I can say with sincerity that there are many fine things in the collection. Then he asked me if I had the courage to make some beautiful work. I answered that I should not be able to achieve anything so great, but that he should see what I could do. We have bought a piece of marble for a life size statue, and on Monday I shall begin to work. On Monday last I presented your other letter of recommendation to Rucellai, who offered me what money I might want; also those to Cavalcanti. Afterwards I gave your letter to Baldassare, and asked him for the child (the sleeping Cupid), saying I was ready to refund his money. He answered very roughly, swearing he would rather break it in a hundred pieces; he had bought the child and it was his property; he possessed writing which proved that he had satisfied the person who sent it to him, and was under no apprehension that he should have to give it up. Then he complained bitterly of you, saying that you had spoken ill of him. Certain of our Florentines sought to accommodate matters, but failed in their attempt. Now I look to coming to terms through the Cardinal; for this is the advice of Baldassare Balducci. What ensues I will report to you. No more by this. To you I recommend myself. May God keep you from evil.

"Michael Angelo, in Rome.

"To Sandro Botticelli, at Florence."

(Gotti, ii. 32.)

25 This ugly, but marvellously-finished statue is now in the western corridor of the Uffizi, in Florence. See p. 107.

26 See p. 108.

27 The work is now in the first chapel on the right in the nave of the Basilica of Saint Peter's.

28 Now in the Accademia delle Belle Arti of Florence, where it was placed for its better preservation in 1831.

29 The Office of Works.

30 Documents, copies of which are to be found in "Gaye," vol. ii. pp. 454-464, go to prove that this sculptor was Agostino di Antonio di Duccio, who was born in 1418 and died in 1481. He was the author of the relief illustrating the life of S. Gemignano upon the facade of the Duomo at Modena, and some of the beautiful and delicate marble reliefs set in the polychromatic front of the Oratory of S. Bernardino at Perugia, and the fairy-like low relief (bassissimi rilievi) panels that decorate the interior of the temple of Malatesta at Rimini.

31 The Madonna and Child in the church of Notre Dame at Bruges, identified as this work, is in marble. Vasari also states that the work for the Moscheroni, Merchants of Bruges, was a bronze, but both accounts were written fifty years after the event. Albert Duerer saw this work in the church and mentions it as a marble statue in his "Netherlands Diary," 1520-21.

32 Now in the Tribuna of the Uffizi, Florence.

33 Michael Angelo received payment for the cartoon probably in Florence on February the 28th, 1505 ("Gaye," ii., p. 93), and he went to Carrara in April of that year, so the delay was only two months, a short enough time to prepare his great design.

34 The right bank of the Tiber below Rome. On the opposite shore is the Marmorata, where blocks of marble were unloaded in the times of the ancient Romans; some are there to this day.

35 The covered way from the Vatican to the Castle of Saint Angelo.

36 Heath Wilson estimates the area it would have covered as 34-1/2 ft. by 23 ft. (p. 74).

37 Michael Angelo fled from Rome during the week after Easter, 1506. He relates the circumstances in a letter of October 1542, No. c. d. xxxv. "Le Lettere p. 489," which corroborates Condivi's story word for word, and is another proof of the autobiographical nature of these memoirs.

38 No fragments of this cartoon remain; perhaps the best copy is that in possession of the Earl of Leicester at Holkham Hall. See also p. 124.

39 Like the good Catholic he was, he went to hear mass as soon as he had completed his journey; he always behaved as a good son of the Church.

40 This composition is generally known as the "Sacrifice of Noah," see p. 172. Condivi evidently did not refer these descriptions to the master, they are so full of curious individualities of his own.

41 That is the picture right.

42 The picture right, i.e., the spectator's left.

43 "To bloom," as a painter of to-day would say.

44 See p. 163.

45 See pp. 147-165 and 183. The first half may be estimated to have taken eight months and a few days, and the second half from January 1510 to October 1512, with intervals for journeys to Florence, to Bologna, and other interruptions.

46 That is professional assistance by artists or pupils. Workmen were employed to plaster each day's section of work, writers to do the lettering, and even decorative workmen for architectural details.

47 These quarries are in the Alpi Apuane near Viareggio, we are informed by a modern Florentine sculptor that this marble is of excellent quality.

48 See pp. 183-185.

49 This column was still lying in the Piazza of San Lorenzo in 1888; it has now been removed.

50 Michael Angelo's love for Lorenzo the Magnificent never abated, and these tombs may be regarded as a tribute to his early patron's memory. He worked upon them in secret during the siege itself.

51 Condivi had not seen this sacristy and described it merely from the fragmentary recollections of the master.

52 Possibly in the Duke's collection there may have been an antique gem engraved with the story of Leda which influenced Michael Angelo in his choice of this classical subject for the picture he painted for the Duke.

53 The best version of this picture is in one the offices of the National Gallery, London; it is probably the much restored original which was supposed to have been destroyed by order of M. Desnoyers. See p. 204.

54 Francis I.

55 Afterwards Cardinal Pole, Papal Legate in the time of King Henry VIII. and Queen Mary I., born at Stourton Castle, Staffordshire, 1500; died November 18, 1558.

56 The Slaves, now in the Louvre, Paris.

57 The ox, in Italian banter, appears to have taken the position of the ass with us in England, as a dull, heavy beast, a fool. Michael Angelo's answer was, as it were: "It is according to the asses you mean; if it be these asses of Bolognese doubtless they are much bigger; if ours of Florence they are much smaller. You are bigger asses in Bologna than we are in Florence."

58 Piero Torrigiano gave his version of the affair to Benvenuto Cellini long afterwards: "This Buonarroti and I used, when we were boys, to go into the Church of the Carmine to learn drawing from the Chapel of Masaccio. It was Buonarroti's habit to banter all who were drawing there, and one day, when he was annoying me, I got more angry than usual, and, clenching my fist, I gave him such a blow on the nose that I felt bone and cartilage go down like biscuit beneath my knuckles; and this mark of mine he will carry with him to his grave." Cellini adds—"These words begat in me such hatred of the man since I was always gazing at the masterpieces of the divine Michael Angelo, that, although I felt a wish to go with him to England, I now could never bear the sight of him."

Torrigiano worked for Henry VIII. of England in Henry VII. chapel, Westminster, and at Hampton Court. Afterwards he went to Spain and came to a bad end there, as Condivi says. He died in the prisons of the Inquisition, he had been condemned for destroying a figure of the Madonna of his own carving; his patron paid him insufficiently, so he went to the house, hammer in hand, and destroyed the statue, with this unfortunate result. He starved himself to death in prison as a worse fate awaited him. See Vasari.

59 Can this refer to the Second Edition of "The Lives of the Painters, Sculptors, and Architects," by the kindly Giorgio Vasari?

60 —The Temptation of Saint Anthony, from the engraving by Martin Schongauer.

61 Ghirlandaio.

62 There is a drawing in the Louvre of a faun's head, in pen and ink, by Michael Angelo, over a red chalk drawing by an inferior hand. It does not appear to be this drawing mentioned by Vasari, but a caprice possibly of the same period, in which the master has undertaken to draw a head with a pen, in which the projections and indentations of the profile shall contradict the outline of the conventional red chalk drawing below.

63 Vasari tells us that one of these pulpits had not been placed in its position in the church even when Michael Angelo's funeral service was held there in 1564, so it is quite likely that it was still in the workshop in 1489.

64 That is the Hellenic work of the degenerate Greeks in Italy: all that was to be seen in his day.

65 Page 10.

66 All the works of Michael Angelo, whether sculpture, painting, or drawing partake of the nature of bas-relief, that old Tuscan art developed to such good purpose by the Florentines. The marks of his chisel hatch out the forms and develop the planes just as the parallel strokes of his pen cut out the reliefs of his drawings from the paper. His method of sculpture in the round was that of a carver of bas-reliefs. He gradually cut away the background more and more until the relief was actually the highest relief possible, the round. Every piece of sculpture Michael Angelo executed is the better for a background, whether niche or wall, for they all partake of this bas-relief nature; and his paintings and drawings may every one of them be thought of as bas-reliefs, and so it is with all the works of the Florentines, his contemporaries and predecessors. Space and distance never entered into their calculations before the time of Piero di Cosimo and his pupil Andrea del Sarto, and even then with but indifferent results. They were all content with the flat bas-relief effects familiar to them in the gates of the Baptistry and the jewel-like decorations of the Campanile. Their favourite problem was the expression of force by form, and no art was so useful for that purpose as bas-relief, because of its fixed main lines of composition and its absolute power of expressing the detail of the action of muscle and bone.

67 Leonardo may have shown it to Vasari also as an early work of the master's; Condivi does not mention it.

68 The cast of an angel from this shrine at the Victoria and Albert Museum, South Kensington, is not from the one carved by Michael Angelo, nor is it of his school as the label states; it is probably by Nicolo del Arca. Michael Angelo's figure is the companion angel on the other side of the altar.

69 See p. 21.

70 Probably because it was dangerous to write to any member of the Medici family. It proves to us that Michael Angelo and Sandro Botticelli were on confidential terms.

71 See p. 24.

72 See p. 25.

73 Vol. i. p. 22.

74 The "Monte di Pieta" is a savings-bank and pawn-broker's, established by the state or city.

75 Le Lettere, ii. p. 4.

76 Gotti, ii. p. 33 (Archivio Buonarroti).

77 Nine cubits = 5.31 metres, or 13 feet 6 inches.

78 Agostino di Duccio.

79 Gotti estimates six golden florins at 57.60 francs, or about L2 6s.

80 S.C. 1504. See "Le Lettere," &c., p. 620.

81 A contemporary account, Gotti, vol. i. p. 29.

82 Firenze: Le Monnier, 1857, p. 197.

83 Perkins "Tuscan Sculptors," vol. ii. p. 74.

84 This reason given by Vasari for the use of various mediums is just the sort of reason he would have had himself for using them. Michael Angelo merely used different materials because it was the best way of getting the different effects he wanted, or, sometimes possibly, because they happened to be handy.

85 We know how difficult it is to get facts about the works done a few decades ago, even though the artists be still living; for instance, how little we know of the cartoon competition held in Westminster Hall in 1843, or the fresco of Justice painted by Mr. G.F. Watts, R.A., in the New Hall of Lincoln's Inn.

86 Gotti, i. p. 46 (in the Archivio Buonarroti).

87 Gaye, vol. ii. pp. 83, 84, 85, 91, 93, gives all the correspondence.

88 Lettere, No. ccclxxxiii.

89 About fourteen feet, that is to say, at least three times the size of life, as it was a sitting figure.

90 Lettere, No. xlviii. p. 61 (in the British Museum).

91 Le Lettere, No. 1. p. 65 (in the Archivio Buonarroti).

92 That is, Dame Zanobia.

93 Le Lettere, No. iv. p. 8 (in the British Museum).

94 We should like to see it; we have nothing of Michael Angelo's which can help us to imagine what this work was like.

95 Le Lettere, No. lx. p. 76 (in the British Museum).

96 Le Lettere, No. lxii. p. 78 (in the Archivio Buonarroti).

97 Le Lettere, No. lxiii. p. 79 (in the British Museum).

98 Le Lettere, No. lxiv. p. 80 (in the Archivio Buonarroto).

99 Nephew of Antonio del Pollaiuolo.

100 Le Lettere, No. lxv. p. 81 (in the Archivio Buonarroto).

101 Le Lettere, No. lxxii. p. 88 (in the British Museum).

102 Le Lettere, No. lxxv. p. 91 (in the Archivio Buonarroti).

103 Lettere, No. ccclxxxiii. p. 426 (in the Archivio Buonarroti).

104 Le Lettere, No. c. (Ricordi) p. 563 (in the British Museum).

105 In the Buonarroti Archives; quoted by Heath Wilson, p. 123.

106 .Ibid. p. 124.

107 Le Lettere, No. vii. p. 13 (in the British Museum).

108 The head of the hospital of Santa Maria Nuova in Florence, where Michael Angelo banked his money.

109 L'Indaco.

110 Le Lettere, No. x. p. 17 (in the British Museum).

111 Le Lettere xvii. p. 27 (in the British Museum).

112 Lorenzo Strozzi, to whose wool-shop Buonarroto went.

113 Lettere, No. lxxx. p. 97 (in the British Museum).

114 Lettere, No. lxxxi. p. 98 (in the British Museum).

115 Albertini, Mirabilia Urbis, quoted by Grimm vol. i. p. 523. Albertini's words are pars testudinea superior.

116 Director of the hospital of Santa Maria Nuova, where Michael Angelo banked his money.

117 Le Lettere, No. xxi. p. 31 (in the British Museum).

118 J.A. Symonds. "The Sonnets of Michael Angelo and Campanella," No. lvi. p. 90.

119 Milanesi Lettere, Contratti, &c., xiv. p. 641.

120 The director of the hospital where Michael Angelo banked his money.

121 Milanese, Le Lettere, No. xcvii. p. 115.

122 Michael Angelo wrote a postscript to letter No. cxvi.: "Oh, cursed a thousand times the day and hour when I left Carrara! This is the cause of my utter ruin. But I shall go back there soon. Nowadays it is a sin to do one's duty."

123 Milanese. Ricordi, &c., p. 581.

124 Milanese. "Les Correspondants de Michel Ange," p. 24.

125 .Ibid. p. 24.

126 The letters of Vari are in the Buonarroti Archives, Cod. xi., No. 740-761; Symonds, vol. i. p. 362.

127 Le Lettere, No. ccclxxx., p. 423 (in the Archivio Buonarroti).

128 Le Lettere, No. xliv., p. 55 (in the British Museum).

129 Le Lettere, No. cccxc. p. 437. Milanese dates this letter August 8, 1524. Michael Angelo to Giovanni Spina; he signs it "at San Lorenzo."

130 Several are by the hand of Michael Angelo, but some are done in the mannered style of the architectural draughtsman of the period, and suggest a Florentine assistant.

131 Gotti, i. 158

132 Lettere, Nos. cd. and cdii. pp. 450, 453.

133 Le Lettere, No. cccxciv. p. 442 (in the Archivio Buonarroti).

134 Le Lettere, No. cd. p. 450 (in the Archivio Buonarroti).

135 Le Lettere, No. cccxcvii. p. 446 (in the Archivio Buonarroti).

136 Surnamed Dini; he fell in the sack of Rome.

137 Le Lettere, No. cccxcix. p. 448 (in the Archivio Buonarroti).

138 The gate called San Gallo, which remained open until daylight.

139 Vol. i. p. 207.

140 Gotti, i. 199. San Nicolo is a little church on the way to San Miniato; the tower forms the foreground in the view from the top of the hill.

141 See p. 61.

142 The letter is in Gaye, ii. 229.

143 Any one who has spent a winter day drawing there will confirm Paolo in this statement.

144 "Correspondants," pp. 108-112.

145 Vol. ii. pp. 89, 122.

146 In the Archivio Buonarroti, Codici xi. No. 765; Bottari, Lettere Pittoriche, vol. iii. pp. 78-84; and Symonds, vol. ii. p. 25.

147 See p. 66.

148 Gotti, ii. p. 123.

149 Gotti, ii. p. 125.

150 See Gaye, iv. 289-309, and "Lettere," &c., pp. 709-712.

151 Lettere, No. cdxxxiii., dated July 20.

152 Lettere, p. 715.

153 Lettere, No. cdxlv. p. 505 (in the "Biblioteca Nazionale," Florence.)

154 Bottari, Lett. pitt. iii. 796.

155 Heath Wilson, p. 449.

156 Archivio Buonarroti, Cod. vii.

157 Le Lettere, No. cdlix. p. 519 (in the Archivio Buonarroti).

158 "The Sonnets of Michael Angelo." By J.A. Symonds. No. lxv.

159 Le Lettere, No. cdlxxiv. p. 535, written in 1555 (in the Archivio Buonarroti).

160 If the traveller has no luggage, or has sent it on before, he can walk from the Trastevere station, past the Ponte Rotto, past the Temple of Janus to the Forum, and see Rome for the first time so.

161 Le Lettere, No. cdxc., under date 1560, p. 554 (in the Archivio Buonarroti).

162 Gotti, i. 309.

163 Le Lettere, No. ccxxxi. (December 21st), p. 260 (in the British Museum).

164 Le Lettere, No. cdlxvi. (October 1549), p. 527 (in the Archivio Buonarroti).

165 Gotti, i. 311.

166 Le Lettere, No. cdlxxv. p. 537 (in the Archivio Buonarroti).

167 Le Lettere, No. cccii., dated February 13, 1557, p. 333 (in the Archivio Buonarroti).

168 Le Lettere, No. cdxciv. p. 558 (in the Archivio Buonarroti).

169 Le Lettere, No. cccxiv., dated July 15, 1559, p. 345 (in the Archivio Buonarroti).

170 Le Lettere, Nos, cdlxxxv., cdlxxxvi. pp. 548, 550.

171 Gotti. i. 351.

172 Florence.

173 Reproduced in Yriarte's Florence, p. 280, English edition.

174 See Frontispiece.

175 May we not hope that Michael Angelo's good friend, the Frate Sebastiano del Piombo, painted a portrait of him during their long friendship, and that it will come to light one of these days?

176 Le Lettere, cxci.-cxciii. pp. 217, 219, are on this subject (in the British Museum).

177 A hospital in Florence for the benefit of the Poveri Vergognosi, poor folk who have come down in the world.

178 Le Lettere, No. cclxix. p.299 (in the British Museum).

179 Le Lettere, No. cdlxxv p. 539.

180 Cellini.

181 Le Lettere, No. cdlxxix. Dec. 28, 1556, p. 541.

182 "Carte-Michelesche Inedite," p. 41.

183 Gotti, i. 354.

184 A little after 8 P.M.

185 Four o'clock in the afternoon.

186 Gotti, i. p. 354.

187 Clement VII. used to say, "When Buonarroti comes to see me I always take a seat and bid him be seated at once, feeling sure that he will do so without leave or licence otherwise."—TRANSLATOR.

188 Albert Duerer.

189 Parmigiano.

190 Assisi (?).

191 The Farnesina.

192 Now in the Vatican Gallery.

193 The church of Santa Maria della Pace.

194 Sebastiano del Piombo; the picture was the Raising of Lazarus, No. 1 in the National Gallery.

195 Chiaroscuro, monochrome.

196 Baldassare Peruzzi.

197 Bandinelli(?).

198 Baldassare Peruzzi.

199 Piazza Navona?

200 In 1538.

201 Ottavio Farnese.

202 Margarite of Austria, natural daughter of Charles V.

THE END

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