登陆注册
15441800000015

第15章 Part III(2)

Florence, as yet, had only to endure degradation and extortion, to submit to the mandates of foreign powers, to buy over and over again, at an enormous price, what was already justly her own, to return thanks for being wronged, and to ask pardon for being in the right. She was at length deprived of the blessings, even of this infamous and servile repose. Her military and political institutions were swept away together. The Medici returned, in the train of foreign invaders, from their long exile. The policy of Machiavelli was abandoned; and his public services were requited with poverty, imprisonment, and torture.

The fallen statesman still clung to his project with unabated ardor.

With the view of vindicating it from some popular objections, and of refuting some prevailing errors on the subject of military science, he wrote his "Seven Books on the Art of War." This excellent work is in the form of a dialogue.

The opinions of the writer are put into the mouth of Fabrizio Colonna, a powerful nobleman of the ecclesiastical State, and an officer of distinguished merit in the service of the King of Spain. Colonna visits Florence on his way from Lombardy to his own domains. He is invited to meet some friends at the house of Cosimo Rucellai, an amiable and accomplished young man, whose early death Machiavelli feelingly deplores. After partaking of an elegant entertainment, they retire from the heat into the most shady recesses of the garden. Fabrizio is struck by the sight of some uncommon plants. Cosimo says, that, though rare in modern days, they are frequently mentioned by the classical authors, and that his grandfather, like many other Italians, amused himself with practising the ancient methods of gardening. Fabrizio expresses his regret that those who, in later times, affected the manners of the old Romans, should select for imitation the most trifling pursuits. This leads to a conversation on the decline of military discipline, and on the best means of restoring it. The institution of the Florentine militia is ably defended, and several improvements are suggested in the details.

The Swiss and the Spaniards were, at that time, regarded as the best soldiers in Europe. The Swiss battalion consisted of pikemen, and bore a close resemblance to the Greek phalanx. The Spaniards, like the soldiers of Rome, were armed with the sword and the shield. The victories of Flaminius and Aemilius over the Macedonian kings seem to prove the superiority of the weapons used by the legions. The same experiment had been recently tried with the same result at the battle of Ravenna, one of those tremendous days into which human folly and wickedness compress the whole devastation of a famine or a plague. In that memorable conflict, the infantry of Aragon, the old companions of Gonsalvo, deserted by all their allies, hewed a passage through the thickest of the imperial pikes, and effected an unbroken retreat, in the face of the gendarmerie of De Foix, and the renowned artillery of Este.

Fabrizio, or rather Machiavelli, proposes to combine the two systems, to arm the foremost lines with the pike for the purpose of repulsing cavalry, and those in the rear with the sword, as being a weapon better adapted for every other purpose. Throughout the work, the author expresses the highest admiration of the military science of the ancient Romans, and the greatest contempt for the maxims which had been in vogue amongst the Italian commanders of the preceding generation. He prefers infantry to cavalry, and fortified camps to fortified towns. He is inclined to substitute rapid movements and decisive engagements for the languid and dilatory operations of his countrymen.

He attaches very little importance to the invention of gunpowder. Indeed, he seems to think that it ought scarcely to produce any change in the mode of arming or of disposing troops. The general testimony of historians, it must be allowed, seems to prove that the ill-constructed and ill-served artillery of those times, though useful in a siege, was of little value on the field of battle.

On the tactics of Machiavelli we will not venture to give an opinion, but we are certain that his book is most able and interesting. As a commentary on the history of his times, it is invaluable. The ingenuity, the grace, and the perspicuity of the style, and the eloquence and animation of particular passages, must give pleasure, even to readers who take no interest in the subject.

"The Prince" and the "Discourses on Livy" were written after the fall of the republican government. The former was dedicated to the young Lorenzo de' Medici. This circumstance seems to have disgusted the contemporaries of the writer far more that the doctrines which have rendered the name of the work odious in latter times. It was considered as an indication of political apostasy.

The fact, however, seems to have been, that Machiavelli, despairing of the liberty of Florence, was inclined to support any government which might preserve her independence. The interval which separated a democracy and a despotism Soderini and Lorenzo, seemed to vanish when compared with the difference between the former and the present state of Italy, between the security, the opulence, and the repose which she had enjoyed under its native rulers, and the misery in which she had been plunged since the fatal year in which the first foreign tyrant had descended from the Alps. The noble and pathetic exhortation with which "The Prince" concludes shows how strongly the writer felt upon this subject.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 跟乐嘉学性格色彩

    跟乐嘉学性格色彩

    《跟乐嘉学性格色彩》这本工具书简便、实用、易学、能触动人心最底部。让你可以搞定一切你想搞定的人。文雅点就是,与谁都能友好相处并且可以达成你的目标。乐嘉首先带你进入性格色彩的世界,告诉“性格”与“个性”的区别,“行为”与“动机”的不同。然后依次带你进入性格色彩的情感世界、帮你分析性格色彩的职场关系、然后把握生活,最后教你性格色彩的钻石法则。当女人说“我不要你管”的时候,你知道她心里真正的想法吗?当你想和老板谈加薪的时候如何能顺利谈成。不同性格色彩如何理财……
  • 神凡涅

    神凡涅

    少年自蛮荒走出,以巨人之躯,演绎传奇,走上抗神之路。自命为神,有何高贵之处!凡人之躯亦可通神,吾才是神!
  • 辰霄拳刹

    辰霄拳刹

    热血少年成长之路,一代拳刹成长记,在广袤的现代异界大陆所向无敌!
  • 镇魂界之守护灵

    镇魂界之守护灵

    这个世界,有人天生为王,有人落草为寇,谁也不知道下一个旅途究竟在哪,下一站脚步是否会停止不前,宿命天生,强者为王"镇魂界中,守护灵,群雄争霸,恶灵横生,而故事才刚刚开始...
  • 月老,我的冰箱男神

    月老,我的冰箱男神

    他,专门负责牵线的月老。却被她套住心弦....她,曾经神界的小公主,负责爱恋的爱神,21世纪最强的女杀手,却被冰箱里钻出的他牢牢套住...他们,一条红线...他们,不同身份...他们.....
  • 风雪诗集

    风雪诗集

    此夜红尘风吹寒,半幅小窗终南见。曾将梦里霁雪看,何期岁月黄昏残。我行千年多壮怀.我歌当时笑千山。长安道短曾难行,千秋重来谁牵袢。暮雪菲菲杨柳远,诗经远去谁曾看。风云变幻古长安,流云飘散谁家院。何年桃花曾盛开,何年柴扉佳人看。人面一去当年远,今日重来李郎叹!叹息盛世不常在,叹息繁华难永远!曲江往事皆飘散,大唐风流谁人传,唯有一曲长恨歌,琵琶浔阳唱旧年。
  • 笑靥千秋

    笑靥千秋

    这一场清宫里的美丽战争,始于欲念,终于孽缘。披挂上阵的红粉佳人,她们为出人头地、为复仇、为报恩、为自保,最简单的世俗欲望,恰是最强大的斗争动力。紫禁城里的困兽之斗,就是这班后宫女人的终极命题。
  • 终极帝弑天

    终极帝弑天

    苍天有泪,霸主无情。一方天帝应天道而生,救万民于水火。解除封神印,放神界众神而出,造福天下。天外有天,楼外有楼。天外天妖孽横行,吾应天道之令,诛其万魔,灭其苍天。诸神听令,随吾百万天兵,弑天灭魔。
  • 冬日暖阳

    冬日暖阳

    凝聚所有温暖与伤痛的暖伤之作,暖伤小天后锦年用过去和现在织就悲歌,用微笑和眼泪讲述离伤。青梅竹马的感情在时间的消磨中变得模糊,细水长流的温暖也渐渐消散。她站在十字路口,却找不到一个有光亮的方向,只有钢琴为伴。年少时的爱恋化为心底最深沉的伤,成长时默默相伴的人成了不可触及的痛。这一年冬阳光温暖,她似乎也看到了未来和光亮。
  • 化生诀

    化生诀

    一个自出生起就注定不平凡的人,至亲之人的不断离世,让他成为一个可怜的孤儿,可是身怀异能的他怎么可能就此没落?看他如何从一个乡野农夫成为人上人,看他怎样从屌丝到游刃有余的穿梭在众多美女,御姐身边。我孤身一人,又有何惧!!!