MACHIAVELLI AS HUMANIST:
Machiavelli
was a Florentine humanist, was employed as a diplomat by the Florentine
Republic until 1512 when the Medici were restored. Unlike humanists working for
the Pope in Rome, Machiavelli was hostile to the Papacy, which he saw as the
major cause of Italian political fragmentation and weakness. Also it is
important that his true allegiance was to the republican form of government,
and he expresses this preference in The Discourses on Livy.
When he wrote The Prince on the other hand he was
trying to get a job with the Medici, and so aimed his advice at the new ruler
of
Letter from Machiavelli to
Francesco Vettori
This letter describes Machiavelli’s life after his exile from
10 December 1513 Magnificent Ambassador,
Francesco Vettori
I am living on my farm, and since I had my
last bad luck, I have not spent twenty days, putting them all together, in
I get up in the morning with the sun and go
into a grove I am having cut down, where I remain two hours to look over the
work of the past day and kill some time with the cutters, who have always some
bad-luck story ready, about either themselves or their neighbors. And as to
this grove I could tell you a thousand fine things that have happened to me, in
dealing with Frosino da Panzano
and others who wanted some of this firewood. …Leaving the grove, I go to a
spring, and then to my aviary. I have a book in my pocket, either Dante or
Petrarch, or one of the lesser poets, such as Tibullus, Ovid, and the like. I
read of their tender passions and their loves, remember mine, enjoy myself a
while in that sort of dreaming. Then I move along the road to the inn; I speak
with those who pass, ask news of their villages, learn various things, and note
the various tastes and different fancies of men. In the course of these things
comes the hour for dinner, where with my family I eat such food as this poor
farm of mine and my tiny property allow. Having eaten, I go back to the inn;
there is the host, usually a butcher, a miller, two furnace tenders. With these
I sink into vulgarity for the whole day, playing at cricca
and at trich-trach, and then these games bring on a
thousand disputes and countless insults with offensive words, and usually we
are fighting over a penny, and nevertheless we are heard shouting as far as San
Casciano. So, involved in these trifles, I keep my
brain from growing moldy, and satisfy the malice of this fate of mine, being
glad to have her drive me along this road, to see if she will be ashamed of it.
On the coming of evening, I return to my
house and enter my study; and at the door I take off the day's clothing,
covered with mud and dust, and put on garments regal and courtly; and re-clothed
appropriately, I enter the ancient courts of ancient men, where, received by
them with affection, I feed on that food which only is mine and which I was
born for, where I am not ashamed to speak with them and to ask them the reason
for their actions; and they in their kindness answer me; and for four hours of
time I do not feel boredom, I forget every trouble, I do not dread poverty, I
am not frightened by death; entirely I give myself over to them.
And because Dante says it does not produce
knowledge when we hear but do not remember, I have noted everything in their
conversation which has profited me, and have composed a little work On Principalities (The Prince),
where I go as deeply as I can into considerations on this subject, debating
what a princedom is, of what kinds they are, how they are gained, how they are
kept, why they are lost. And if ever you can find any of my fantasies pleasing,
this one should not displease you; and by a prince, and especially by a new
prince, it ought to be welcomed. Hence I am dedicating it to His Magnificence
Giuliano. Filippo Casavecchia has seen it; he can
give you some account in part of the thing in itself and of the discussions I
have had with him, though I am still enlarging and revising it.