his society, at all events at the beginning of the sixteenth century,
was a matter of art; and had, and rested on, tacit or avowed rules of
good sense and propriety, which are the exact reverse of all mere
etiquette. In less polished circles, where society took the form of a
permanent corporation, we meet with a system of formal rules and a
prescribed mode of entrance, as was the case with those wild sets of
Florentine artists of whom Vasari tells us that they were capable of
giving representations of the best comedies of the day. In the easier
intercourse of society it was not unusual to select some distinguished
lady as president, whose word was law for the evening.
Everybody knows the introduction to Boccaccio's 'Decameron,' and looks
on the presidency of Pampinea as a graceful fiction. That it was so in
this particular case is a matter of course; but the fiction was
nevertheless based on a practice which often occurred in reality.
Firenzuola, who nearly two centuries later (1523) pref- aces his
collection of tales in a similar manner, with express reference to
Boccaccio, comes assuredly nearer to the truth when he puts into the
mouth of the queen of the society a formal speech on the mode of
spending the hours during the stay which the company proposed to make
in the country. The day was to begin with a stroll among the hills
passed in philosophical talk; then followed breakfast, with music and
singing, after which came the recitation, in some cool, shady spot, of
a new poem, the subject of which had been given the night before; in
the evening the whole party walked to a spring of water where they all
sat down and each one told a tale; last of all came supper and lively
conversation 'of such a kind that the women might listen to it without
shame and the men might not seem to be speaking under the influence of
wine.' Ban- dello, in the introductions and dedications to single
novels, does not give us, it is true, such inaugural discourses as
this, since the circles before which the stories are told are
represented as already formed; but he gives us to understand in other
ways how rich, how manifold, and how charming the conditions of society
must have been. Some readers may be of opinion that no good was to be
got from a world which was willing to be amused by such immoral
literature. It would be juster to wonder at the secure foundations of a
society which, notwithstanding these tales, still observed the rules of
order and decency, and which knew how to vary such pastimes with
serious and solid discussion. The need of noble forms of social
intercourse was felt to be stronger than all others. To convince
ourselves of it, we are not obliged to take as our standard the
idealized society which Castiglione depicts as discussing the loftiest
sentiments and aims of human life at the court of Guidobaldo of Urbino,
and Pietro Bembo at the castle of Asolo The society described by
Bandello, with all the frivolities which may be laid to its charge,
enables us to form the best notion of the easy and polished dignity, of
the urbane kindliness, of the intellectual freedom, of the wit and the
graceful dilettantism, which distinguished these circles. A significant
proof of the value of such circles lies in the fact that the women who
were the centers of them could become famous and illustrious without in
any way compromising their reputation. Among the patronesses of
Bandello, for example, Isabella Gonzaga (born an Este) was talked of
unfavorably not through any fault of her own, but on account of the
too-free-lived young ladies who filled her court. Giulia Gonzaga
Colonna, Ippolita Sforza married to a Bentivoglio, Bianca Rangona,
Cecilia Gallerana, Camilla Scarampa, and others, were either altogether
irreproachable, or their social fame threw into the shade whatever they
may have done amiss. The most famous woman of Italy, Vittoria Colonna
(b. 1490, d. 1547), the friend of Castiglioni and Michelangelo, enjoyed
the reputation of a saint. It is hard to give such a picture of the
unconstrained intercourse of these circles in the city, at the baths,
or in the country, as will furnish literal proof of the superiority of
Italy in this respect over the rest of Europe. But let us read
Bandello, and then ask ourselves if anything of the same kind would
have been possible, say, in France, before this kind of society was
there introduced by people like himself. No doubt the supreme
achievements of the human mind were then produced independently of the
help of the drawing-room. Yet it would be unjust to rate the influence
of the latter on art and poetry too low, if only for the reason that
society helped to shape that which existed in no other country--a
widespread interest in artistic production and an intelligent and
critical public opinion. And apart from this, society of the kind we
have described was in itself a natural flower of that life and culture
which was then purely Italian, and which since then has extended to the
rest of Europe.
In Florence society was powerfully affected by literature and politics.
Lorenzo the Magnificent was supreme over his circle, not, as we might
be led to believe, through the princely position which he occupied, but
rather through the wonderful tact he displayed in giving perfect
freedom of action to the many and varied natures which surrounded him.
We see how gently he dealt with his great tutor Politian, and how the
sovereignty of the poet and scholar was reconciled, though not without
difficulty, with the inevitable reserve prescribed by the approaching
change in the position of the house of Medici and by consideration for
the sensitiveness of the wife. In return for the treatment he received,
Politian became the herald and the living symbol of Medicean glory.
Lorenzo, after the fashion of a true Medici, delighted in giving an
outward and artistic expression to his social amusements. In his
brilliant improvisation--the Hawking Party--he gives us a humorous
description of his comrades, and in the Symposium a burlesque of them,
but in both cases in such a manner that we clearly feel his capacity
for more serious companionship. Of this intercourse his correspondence
and the records of his literary and philosophical conversation give
ample proof. Some of the social unions which were afterwards formed in
Florence were in part political clubs, though not without a certain
poetical and philosophical character. Of this kind was the so-called
Platonic Academy which met after Lorenzo's death in the gardens of the
Rucellai.
At the courts of the princes, society naturally depended on the
character of the ruler. After the beginning of the sixteenth century
they became few in number, and these few soon lost their importance.
Rome, however, possessed in the unique court of Leo X a society to
which the history of the world offers no parallel.