easily have assembled forces and taken other precautions, if the enemy
   had been close upon them, as they did while he was at a distance.
   Besides this, many would have been disposed to quiet their
   apprehensions of Niccolo, by concluding a peace; particularly, as the
   contest was likely to be of some duration. The desire of the Count di
   Poppi to avenge himself on the inhabitants of San Niccolo, long his
   enemies, occasioned his advice to Piccinino, who adopted it for the
   purpose of pleasing him; and this caused the ruin of both. It seldom
   happens, that the gratification of private feelings, fails to be
   injurious to the general convenience.
   Niccolo, pursuing his good fortune, took Rassina and Chiusi. The Count
   di Poppi advised him to halt in these parts, arguing that he might
   divide his people between Chiusi, Caprese, and the Pieve, render
   himself master of this branch of the Apennines, and descend at
   pleasure into the Casentino, the Val d'Arno, the Val di Chiane, or the
   Val di Tavere, as well as be prepared for every movement of the enemy.
   But Niccolo, considering the sterility of these places, told him, "his
   horses could not eat stones," and went to the Borgo San Sepolcro,
   where he was amicably received, but found that the people of Citta di
   Castello, who were friendly to the Florentines, could not be induced
   to yield to his overtures. Wishing to have Perugia at his disposal, he
   proceeded thither with forty horse, and being one of her citizens, met
   with a kind reception. But in a few days he became suspected, and
   having attempted unsuccessfully to tamper with the legate and people
   of Perugia, he took eight thousand ducats from them, and returned to
   his army. He then set on foot secret measures, to seduce Cortona from
   the Florentines, but the affair being discovered, his attempts were
   fruitless. Among the principal citizens was Bartolomeo di Senso, who
   being appointed to the evening watch of one of the gates, a
   countryman, his friend, told him, that if he went he would be slain.
   Bartolomeo, requesting to know what was meant, he became acquainted
   with the whole affair, and revealed it to the governor of the place,
   who, having secured the leaders of the conspiracy, and doubled the
   guards at the gates, waited till the time appointed for the coming of
   Niccolo, who finding his purpose discovered, returned to his
   encampment.
   CHAPTER VII
     Brescia relieved by Sforza--His other victories--Piccinino is
     recalled into Lombardy--He endeavors to bring the Florentines to
     an engagement--He is routed before Anghiari--Serious disorders in
     the camp of the Florentines after the victory--Death of Rinaldo
     degli Albizzi--His character--Neri Capponi goes to recover the
     Casentino--The Count di Poppi surrenders--His discourse upon
     quitting his possessions.
   While these events were taking place in Tuscany, so little to the
   advantage of the duke, his affairs in Lombardy were in a still worse
   condition. The Count Francesco, as soon as the season would permit,
   took the field with his army, and the Venetians having again covered
   the lake with their galleys, he determined first of all to drive the
   duke from the water; judging, that this once effected, his remaining
   task would be easy. He therefore, with the Venetian fleet, attacked
   that of the duke, and destroyed it. His land forces took the castles
   held for Filippo, and the ducal troops who were besieging Brescia,
   being informed of these transactions, withdrew; and thus, the city,
   after standing a three years' siege, was at length relieved. The count
   then went in quest of the enemy, whose forces were encamped before
   Soncino, a fortress situated upon the River Oglio; these he dislodged
   and compelled to retreat to Cremona, where the duke again collected
   his forces, and prepared for his defense. But the count constantly
   pressing him more closely, he became apprehensive of losing either the
   whole, or the greater part, of his territories; and perceiving the
   unfortunate step he had taken, in sending Niccolo into Tuscany, in
   order to correct his error, he wrote to acquaint him with what had
   transpired, desiring him, with all possible dispatch, to leave Tuscany
   and return to Lombardy.
   In the meantime, the Florentines, under their commissaries, had drawn
   together their forces, and being joined by those of the pope, halted
   at Anghiari, a castle placed at the foot of the mountains that divide
   the Val di Tavere from the Val di Chiane, distant four miles from the
   Borgo San Sepolcro, on a level road, and in a country suitable for the
   evolutions of cavalry or a battlefield. As the Signory had heard of
   the count's victory and the recall of Niccolo, they imagined that
   without again drawing a sword or disturbing the dust under their
   horses' feet, the victory was their own, and the war at an end, they
   wrote to the commissaries, desiring them to avoid an engagement, as
   Niccolo could not remain much longer in Tuscany. These instructions
   coming to the knowledge of Piccinino, and perceiving the necessity of
   his speedy return, to leave nothing unattempted, he determined to
   engage the enemy, expecting to find them unprepared, and not disposed
   for battle. In this determination he was confirmed by Rinaldo, the
   Count di Poppi, and other Florentine exiles, who saw their inevitable
   ruin in the departure of Niccolo, and hoped, that if he engaged the
   enemy, they would either be victorious, or vanquished without
   dishonor. This resolution being adopted, Niccolo led his army,
   unperceived by the enemy, from Citta di Castello to the Borgo, where
   he enlisted two thousand men, who, trusting the general's talents and
   promises, followed him in hope of plunder. Niccolo then led his forces
   in battle array toward Anghiari, and had arrived within two miles of
   the place, when Micheletto Attendulo observed great clouds of dust,
   and conjecturing at once, that it must be occasioned by the enemy's
   approach, immediately called the troops to arms. Great confusion
   prevailed in the Florentine camp, for the ordinary negligence and want
   of discipline were now increased by their presuming the enemy to be at
   a distance, and they were more disposed to fight than to battle; so
   that everyone was unarmed, and some wandering from the camp, either
   led by their desire to avoid the excessive heat, or in pursuit of
   amusement. So great was the diligence of the commissaries and of the
   captain, that before the enemy's arrival, the men were mounted and
   prepared to resist their attack; and as Micheletto was the first to
   observe their approach, he was also first armed and ready to meet
   them, and with his troops hastened to the bridge which crosses the
   river at a short distance from Anghiari. Pietro Giampagolo having
   previous to the surprise, filled up the ditches on either side of the
   road, and leveled the ground between the bridge and Anghiari, and
   Micheletto having taken his position in front of the former, the
   legate and Simoncino, who led the troops of the church, took post on
   the right, and th 
					     					 			e commissaries of the Florentines, with Pietro
   Giampagolo, their captain, on the left; the infantry being drawn up
   along the banks of the river. Thus, the only course the enemy could
   take, was the direct one over the bridge; nor had the Florentines any
   other field for their exertions, excepting that their infantry were
   ordered, in case their cavalry were attacked in flank by the hostile
   infantry, to assail them with their cross bows, and prevent them from
   wounding the flanks of the horses crossing the bridge. Micheletto
   bravely withstood the enemy's charge upon the bridge; but Astorre and
   Francesco Piccinino coming up, with a picked body of men, attacked him
   so vigorously, that he was compelled to give way, and was pushed as
   far as the foot of the hill which rises toward the Borgo d'Anghiari;
   but they were in turn repulsed and driven over the bridge, by the
   troops that took them in flank. The battle continued two hours, during
   which each side had frequent possession of the bridge, and their
   attempts upon it were attended with equal success; but on both sides
   of the river, the disadvantage of Niccolo was manifest; for when his
   people crossed the bridge, they found the enemy unbroken, and the
   ground being leveled, they could man?uvre without difficulty, and the
   weary be relieved by such as were fresh. But when the Florentines
   crossed, Niccolo could not relieve those that were harassed, on
   account of the hindrance interposed by the ditches and embankments on
   each side of the road; thus whenever his troops got possession of the
   bridge, they were soon repulsed by the fresh forces of the
   Florentines; but when the bridge was taken by the Florentines, and
   they passed over and proceeded upon the road, Niccolo having no
   opportunity to reinforce his troops, being prevented by the
   impetuosity of the enemy and the inconvenience of the ground, the rear
   guard became mingled with the van, and occasioned the utmost confusion
   and disorder; they were forced to flee, and hastened at full speed
   toward the Borgo. The Florentine troops fell upon the plunder, which
   was very valuable in horses, prisoners, and military stores, for not
   more than a thousand of the enemy's cavalry reached the town. The
   people of the Borgo, who had followed Niccolo in the hope of plunder,
   became booty themselves, all of them being taken, and obliged to pay a
   ransom. The colors and carriages were also captured. This victory was
   much more advantageous to the Florentines than injurious to the duke;
   for, had they been conquered, Tuscany would have been his own; but he,
   by his defeat, only lost the horses and accoutrements of his army,
   which could be replaced without any very serious expense. Nor was
   there ever an instance of wars being carried on in an enemy's country
   with less injury to the assailants than at this; for in so great a
   defeat, and in a battle which continued four hours, only one man died,
   and he, not from wounds inflicted by hostile weapons, or any honorable
   means, but, having fallen from his horse, was trampled to death.
   Combatants then engaged with little danger; being nearly all mounted,
   covered with armor, and preserved from death whenever they chose to
   surrender, there was no necessity for risking their lives; while
   fighting, their armor defended them, and when they could resist no
   longer, they yielded and were safe.
   This battle, from the circumstances which attended and followed it,
   presents a striking example of the wretched state of military
   discipline in those times. The enemy's forces being defeated and
   driven into the Borgo, the commissaries desired to pursue them, in
   order to make the victory complete, but not a single condottiere or
   soldier would obey, alleging, as a sufficient reason for their
   refusal, that they must take care of the booty and attend to their
   wounded; and, what is still more surprising, the next day, without
   permission from the commissaries, or the least regard for their
   commanders, they went to Arezzo, and, having secured their plunder,
   returned to Anghiari; a thing so contrary to military order and all
   subordination, that the merest shadow of a regular army would easily
   and most justly have wrested from them the victory they had so
   undeservedly obtained. Added to this, the men-at-arms, or heavy-armed
   horse, who had been taken prisoners, whom the commissaries wished to
   be detained that they might not rejoin the enemy, were set at liberty,
   contrary to their orders. It is astonishing, that an army so
   constructed should have sufficient energy to obtain the victory, or
   that any should be found so imbecile as to allow such a disorderly
   rabble to vanquish them. The time occupied by the Florentine forces in
   going and returning from Arezzo, gave Niccolo opportunity of escaping
   from the Borgo, and proceeding toward Romagna. Along with him also
   fled the Florentine exiles, who, finding no hope of their return home,
   took up their abodes in various parts of Italy, each according to his
   own convenience. Rinaldo made choice of Ancona; and, to gain admission
   to the celestial country, having lost the terrestrial, he performed a
   pilgrimage to the holy sepulcher; whence having returned, he died
   suddenly while at table at the celebration of the marriage of one of
   his daughters; an instance of fortune's favor, in removing him from
   the troubles of this world upon the least sorrowful day of his exile.
   Rinaldo d'Albizzi appeared respectable under every change of
   condition; and would have been more so had he lived in a united city,
   for many qualities were injurious to him in a factious community,
   which in an harmonious one would have done him honor.
   When the forces returned from Arezzo, Niccolo being then gone, the
   commissaries presented themselves at the Borgo, the people of which
   were willing to submit to the Florentines; but their offer was
   declined, and while negotiations were pending, the pope's legate
   imagined the commissaries designed to take it from the church. Hard
   words were exchanged and hostilities might have ensued between the
   Florentine and ecclesiastical forces, if the misunderstanding had
   continued much longer; but as it was brought to the conclusion desired
   by the legate, peace was restored.
   While the affair of the Borgo San Sepolcro was in progress, Niccolo
   Piccinino was supposed to have marched toward Rome; other accounts
   said La Marca, and hence the legate and the count's forces moved
   toward Perugia to relieve La Marca or Rome, as the case might be, and
   Bernardo de Medici accompanied them. Neri led the Florentine forces to
   recover the Casentino, and pitched his camp before Rassina, which he
   took, together with Bibbiena, Prato Vecchio, and Romena. From thence
   he proceeded to Poppi and invested it on two sides with his forces, in
   one direction toward the plain of Certomondo, in the other upon the
   hill extending to Fronzole. The count finding himself abandoned to his
   fate, had shut himself up in Poppi, not with any hope of assistance,
   but with a view to make the best terms he could. Neri pressing him, h 
					     					 			e
   offered to capitulate, and obtained reasonable conditions, namely,
   security for himself and family, with leave to take whatever he could
   carry away, on condition of ceding his territories and government to
   the Florentines. When he perceived the full extent of his misfortune,
   standing upon the bridge which crosses the Arno, close to Poppi, he
   turned to Neri in great distress, and said, "Had I well considered my
   own position and the power of the Florentines, I should now have been
   a friend of the republic and congratulating you on your victory, not
   an enemy compelled to supplicate some alleviation of my woe. The
   recent events which to you bring glory and joy, to me are full of
   wretchedness and sorrow. Once I possessed horses, arms, subjects,
   grandeur and wealth: can it be surprising that I part with them
   reluctantly? But as you possess both the power and the inclination to
   command the whole of Tuscany, we must of necessity obey you; and had I
   not committed this error, my misfortune would not have occurred, and
   your liberality could not have been exercised; so, that if you were to
   rescue me from entire ruin, you would give the world a lasting proof
   of your clemency. Therefore, let your pity pass by my fault, and allow
   me to retain this single house to leave to the descendants of those
   from whom your fathers have received innumerable benefits." To this
   Neri replied: "That his having expected great results from men who
   were capable of doing only very little, had led him to commit so great
   a fault against the republic of Florence; that, every circumstance
   considered, he must surrender all those places to the Florentines, as
   an enemy, which he was unwilling to hold as a friend: that he had set
   such an example, as it would be most highly impolitic to encourage;
   for, upon a change of fortune, it might injure the republic, and it
   was not himself they feared, but his power while lord of the
   Casentino. If, however, he could live as a prince in Germany, the
   citizens would be very much gratified; and out of love to those
   ancestors of whom he had spoken, they would be glad to assist him." To
   this, the count, in great anger, replied: "He wished the Florentines
   at a much greater distance." Attempting no longer to preserve the
   least urbanity of demeanor, he ceded the place and all its
   dependencies to the Florentines, and with his treasure, wife, and
   children, took his departure, mourning the loss of a territory which
   his forefathers had held during four hundred years. When all these
   victories were known at Florence, the government and people were
   transported with joy. Benedetto de' Medici, finding the report of
   Niccolo having proceeded either to Rome or to La Marca, incorrect,
   returned with his forces to Neri, and they proceeded together to
   Florence, where the highest honors were decreed to them which it was
   customary with the city to bestow upon her victorious citizens, and
   they were received by the Signory, the Capitani di Parte, and the
   whole city, in triumphal pomp.
   BOOK VI
   CHAPTER I
     Reflections on the object of war and the use of victory--Niccolo
     reinforces his army--The duke of Milan endeavors to recover the
     services of Count Francesco Sforza--Suspicions of the Venetians--
     They acquire Ravenna--The Florentines purchase the Borgo San
     Sepolcro of the pope--Piccinino makes an excursion during the
     winter--The count besieged in his camp before Martinengo--The
     insolence of Niccolo Piccinino--The duke in revenge makes peace
     with the league--Sforza assisted by the Florentines.
   Those who make war have always and very naturally designed to enrich
   themselves and impoverish the enemy; neither is victory sought or
   conquest desirable, except to strengthen themselves and weaken the
   enemy. Hence it follows, that those who are impoverished by victory or
   debilitated by conquest, must either have gone beyond, or fallen short
   of, the end for which wars are made. A republic or a prince is