<h3><SPAN name="chap_1" id="chap_1"></SPAN>CHAPTER I.</h3>
<h5>THE QUARRY.</h5>
<p><span class="scs">I</span>. <span class="sc">Since</span> the first dominion of men was asserted over the
ocean, three thrones, of mark beyond all others, have been set
upon its sands: the thrones of Tyre, Venice, and England.
Of the First of these great powers only the memory remains;
of the Second, the ruin; the Third, which inherits their greatness,
if it forget their example, may be led through prouder
eminence to less pitied destruction.</p>
<p>The exaltation, the sin, and the punishment of Tyre have
been recorded for us, in perhaps the most touching words ever
uttered by the Prophets of Israel against the cities of the
stranger. But we read them as a lovely song; and close our
ears to the sternness of their warning: for the very depth of
the Fall of Tyre has blinded us to its reality, and we forget,
as we watch the bleaching of the rocks between the sunshine
and the sea, that they were once “as in Eden, the garden of
God.”</p>
<p>Her successor, like her in perfection of beauty, though less
in endurance of dominion, is still left for our beholding in the
final period of her decline: a ghost upon the sands of the sea,
so weak—so quiet,—so bereft of all but her loveliness, that we
might well doubt, as we watched her faint reflection in the
mirage of the lagoon, which was the City, and which the
Shadow.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page002"></SPAN>2</span></p>
<p>I would endeavor to trace the lines of this image before it
be for ever lost, and to record, as far as I may, the warning
which seems to me to be uttered by every one of the fast-gaining
waves, that beat, like passing bells, against the <span class="sc">Stones of
Venice</span>.</p>
<p><span class="scs">II</span>. It would be difficult to overrate the value of the lessons
which might be derived from a faithful study of the history
of this strange and mighty city: a history which, in spite
of the labor of countless chroniclers, remains in vague and disputable
outline,—barred with brightness and shade, like the
far away edge of her own ocean, where the surf and the sand-bank
are mingled with the sky. The inquiries in which we
have to engage will hardly render this outline clearer, but
their results will, in some degree, alter its aspect; and, so far
as they bear upon it at all, they possess an interest of a far
higher kind than that usually belonging to architectural investigations.
I may, perhaps, in the outset, and in few words,
enable the general reader to form a clearer idea of the importance
of every existing expression of Venetian character
through Venetian art, and of the breadth of interest which
the true history of Venice embraces, than he is likely to have
gleaned from the current fables of her mystery or magnificence.</p>
<p><span class="scs">III</span>. Venice is usually conceived as an oligarchy: She was
so during a period less than the half of her existence, and that
including the days of her decline; and it is one of the first
questions needing severe examination, whether that decline
was owing in any wise to the change in the form of her government,
or altogether, as assuredly in great part, to changes,
in the character of the persons of whom it was composed.</p>
<p>The state of Venice existed Thirteen Hundred and Seventy-six
years, from the first establishment of a consular government
on the island of the Rialto,<SPAN name="FnAnchor_1" href="#Footnote_1"><span class="sp">1</span></SPAN> to the moment when the
General-in-chief of the French army of Italy pronounced the
Venetian republic a thing of the past. Of this period, Two
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page003"></SPAN>3</span>
Hundred and Seventy-six<SPAN name="FnAnchor_2" href="#Footnote_2"><span class="sp">2</span></SPAN> years were passed in a nominal subjection
to the cities of old Venetia, especially to Padua, and in
an agitated form of democracy, of which the executive appears
to have been entrusted to tribunes,<SPAN name="FnAnchor_3" href="#Footnote_3"><span class="sp">3</span></SPAN> chosen, one by the inhabitants
of each of the principal islands. For six hundred years,<SPAN name="FnAnchor_4" href="#Footnote_4"><span class="sp">4</span></SPAN>
during which the power of Venice was continually on the increase,
her government was an elective monarchy, her King or
doge possessing, in early times at least, as much independent
authority as any other European sovereign, but an authority
gradually subjected to limitation, and shortened almost daily of
its prerogatives, while it increased in a spectral and incapable
magnificence. The final government of the nobles, under the
image of a king, lasted for five hundred years, during which
Venice reaped the fruits of her former energies, consumed
them,—and expired.</p>
<p><span class="scs">IV</span>. Let the reader therefore conceive the existence of the
Venetian state as broadly divided into two periods: the first
of nine hundred, the second of five hundred years, the separation
being marked by what was called the “Serrar del Consiglio;”
that is to say, the final and absolute distinction of the
nobles from the commonalty, and the establishment of the
government in their hands to the exclusion alike of the influence
of the people on the one side, and the authority of the
doge on the other.</p>
<p>Then the first period, of nine hundred years, presents us
with the most interesting spectacle of a people struggling out
of anarchy into order and power; and then governed, for the
most part, by the worthiest and noblest man whom they could
find among them,<SPAN name="FnAnchor_5" href="#Footnote_5"><span class="sp">5</span></SPAN> called their Doge or Leader, with an aristocracy
gradually and resolutely forming itself around him,
out of which, and at last by which, he was chosen; an aristocracy
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page004"></SPAN>4</span>
owing its origin to the accidental numbers, influence, and
wealth of some among the families of the fugitives from the
older Venetia, and gradually organizing itself, by its unity and
heroism, into a separate body.</p>
<p>This first period includes the rise of Venice, her noblest
achievements, and the circumstances which determined her
character and position among European powers; and within
its range, as might have been anticipated, we find the names of
all her hero princes,—of Pietro Urseolo, Ordalafo Falier,
Domenico Michieli, Sebastiano Ziani, and Enrico Dandolo.</p>
<p><span class="scs">V</span>. The second period opens with a hundred and twenty
years, the most eventful in the career of Venice—the central
struggle of her life—stained with her darkest crime, the murder
of Carrara—disturbed by her most dangerous internal
sedition, the conspiracy of Falier—oppressed by her most fatal
war, the war of Chiozza—and distinguished by the glory of
her two noblest citizens (for in this period the heroism of her
citizens replaces that of her monarchs), Vittor Pisani and Carlo
Zeno.</p>
<p>I date the commencement of the Fall of Venice from the
death of Carlo Zeno, 8th May, 1418;<SPAN name="FnAnchor_6" href="#Footnote_6"><span class="sp">6</span></SPAN> the <i>visible</i> commencement
from that of another of her noblest and wisest children,
the Doge Tomaso Mocenigo, who expired five years later.
The reign of Foscari followed, gloomy with pestilence and
war; a war in which large acquisitions of territory were made
by subtle or fortunate policy in Lombardy, and disgrace, significant
as irreparable, sustained in the battles on the Po at
Cremona, and in the marshes of Caravaggio. In 1454, Venice,
the first of the states of Christendom, humiliated herself to
the Turk: in the same year was established the Inquisition of
State,<SPAN name="FnAnchor_7" href="#Footnote_7"><span class="sp">7</span></SPAN> and from this period her government takes the perfidious
and mysterious form under which it is usually conceived.
In 1477, the great Turkish invasion spread terror to the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page005"></SPAN>5</span>
shores of the lagoons; and in 1508 the league of Cambrai
marks the period usually assigned as the commencement of the
decline of the Venetian power;<SPAN name="FnAnchor_8" href="#Footnote_8"><span class="sp">8</span></SPAN> the commercial prosperity of
Venice in the close of the fifteenth century blinding her historians
to the previous evidence of the diminution of her internal
strength.</p>
<p><span class="scs">VI</span>. Now there is apparently a significative coincidence
between the establishment of the aristocratic and oligarchical
powers, and the diminution of the prosperity of the state. But
this is the very question at issue; and it appears to me quite
undetermined by any historian, or determined by each in accordance
with his own prejudices. It is a triple question:
first, whether the oligarchy established by the efforts of individual
ambition was the cause, in its subsequent operation, of
the Fall of Venice; or (secondly) whether the establishment of
the oligarchy itself be not the sign and evidence, rather than
the cause, of national enervation; or (lastly) whether, as I
rather think, the history of Venice might not be written
almost without reference to the construction of her senate or
the prerogatives of her Doge. It is the history of a people
eminently at unity in itself, descendants of Roman race, long
disciplined by adversity, and compelled by its position either to
live nobly or to perish:—for a thousand years they fought for
life; for three hundred they invited death: their battle was
rewarded, and their call was heard.</p>
<p><span class="scs">VII</span>. Throughout her career, the victories of Venice, and,
at many periods of it, her safety, were purchased by individual
heroism; and the man who exalted or saved her was sometimes
(oftenest) her king, sometimes a noble, sometimes a citizen.
To him no matter, nor to her: the real question is, not so
much what names they bore, or with what powers they were
entrusted, as how they were trained; how they were made
masters of themselves, servants of their country, patient of
distress, impatient of dishonor; and what was the true reason
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page006"></SPAN>6</span>
of the change from the time when she could find saviours
among those whom she had cast into prison, to that when the
voices of her own children commanded her to sign covenant
with Death.<SPAN name="FnAnchor_9" href="#Footnote_9"><span class="sp">9</span></SPAN></p>
<p><span class="scs">VIII</span>. On this collateral question I wish the reader’s mind
to be fixed throughout all our subsequent inquiries. It will
give double interest to every detail: nor will the interest be
profitless; for the evidence which I shall be able to deduce
from the arts of Venice will be both frequent and irrefragable,
that the decline of her political prosperity was exactly coincident
with that of domestic and individual religion.</p>
<p>I say domestic and individual; for—and this is the second
point which I wish the reader to keep in mind—the most
curious phenomenon in all Venetian history is the vitality of
religion in private life, and its deadness in public policy.
Amidst the enthusiasm, chivalry, or fanaticism of the other
states of Europe, Venice stands, from first to last, like a
masked statue; her coldness impenetrable, her exertion only
aroused by the touch of a secret spring. That spring was her
commercial interest,—this the one motive of all her important
political acts, or enduring national animosities. She could
forgive insults to her honor, but never rivalship in her commerce;
she calculated the glory of her conquests by their
value, and estimated their justice by their facility. The fame
of success remains, when the motives of attempt are forgotten;
and the casual reader of her history may perhaps be surprised
to be reminded, that the expedition which was commanded by
the noblest of her princes, and whose results added most to her
military glory, was one in which while all Europe around her
was wasted by the fire of its devotion, she first calculated the
highest price she could exact from its piety for the armament
she furnished, and then, for the advancement of her own private
interests, at once broke her faith<SPAN name="FnAnchor_10" href="#Footnote_10"><span class="sp">10</span></SPAN> and betrayed her religion.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page007"></SPAN>7</span></p>
<p><span class="scs">IX</span>. And yet, in the midst of this national criminality, we
shall be struck again and again by the evidences of the most
noble individual feeling. The tears of Dandolo were not shed
in hypocrisy, though they could not blind him to the importance
of the conquest of Zara. The habit of assigning to religion
a direct influence over all <i>his own</i> actions, and all the
affairs of <i>his own</i> daily life, is remarkable in every great
Venetian during the times of the prosperity of the state; nor
are instances wanting in which the private feeling of the citizens
reaches the sphere of their policy, and even becomes the
guide of its course where the scales of expediency are doubtfully
balanced. I sincerely trust that the inquirer would be
disappointed who should endeavor to trace any more immediate
reasons for their adoption of the cause of Alexander III.
against Barbarossa, than the piety which was excited by the
character of their suppliant, and the noble pride which was
provoked by the insolence of the emperor. But the heart of
Venice is shown only in her hastiest councils; her worldly
spirit recovers the ascendency whenever she has time to calculate
the probabilities of advantage, or when they are sufficiently
distinct to need no calculation; and the entire subjection
of private piety to national policy is not only remarkable
throughout the almost endless series of treacheries and tyrannies
by which her empire was enlarged and maintained, but
symbolised by a very singular circumstance in the building of
the city itself. I am aware of no other city of Europe in
which its cathedral was not the principal feature. But the
principal church in Venice was the chapel attached to the
palace of her prince, and called the “Chiesa Ducale.” The
patriarchal church,<SPAN name="FnAnchor_11" href="#Footnote_11"><span class="sp">11</span></SPAN> inconsiderable in size and mean in decoration,
stands on the outermost islet of the Venetian group,
and its name, as well as its site, is probably unknown to the
greater number of travellers passing hastily through the city.
Nor is it less worthy of remark, that the two most important
temples of Venice, next to the ducal chapel, owe their size and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page008"></SPAN>8</span>
magnificence, not to national effort, but to the energy of the
Franciscan and Dominican monks, supported by the vast
organization of those great societies on the mainland of Italy,
and countenanced by the most pious, and perhaps also, in his
generation, the most wise, of all the princes of Venice,<SPAN name="FnAnchor_12" href="#Footnote_12"><span class="sp">12</span></SPAN> who
now rests beneath the roof of one of those very temples, and
whose life is not satirized by the images of the Virtues which
a Tuscan sculptor has placed around his tomb.</p>
<p><span class="scs">X</span>. There are, therefore, two strange and solemn lights
in which we have to regard almost every scene in the fitful
history of the Rivo Alto. We find, on the one hand, a deep
and constant tone of individual religion characterising the
lives of the citizens of Venice in her greatness; we find this
spirit influencing them in all the familiar and immediate concerns
of life, giving a peculiar dignity to the conduct even of
their commercial transactions, and confessed by them with a
simplicity of faith that may well put to shame the hesitation
with which a man of the world at present admits (even if it
be so in reality) that religious feeling has any influence over
the minor branches of his conduct. And we find as the natural
consequence of all this, a healthy serenity of mind and
energy of will expressed in all their actions, and a habit of
heroism which never fails them, even when the immediate
motive of action ceases to be praiseworthy. With the fulness
of this spirit the prosperity of the state is exactly correspondent,
and with its failure her decline, and that with a closeness
and precision which it will be one of the collateral objects of
the following essay to demonstrate from such accidental evidence
as the field of its inquiry presents. And, thus far, all
is natural and simple. But the stopping short of this religious
faith when it appears likely to influence national action, correspondent
as it is, and that most strikingly, with several characteristics
of the temper of our present English legislature, is
a subject, morally and politically, of the most curious interest
and complicated difficulty; one, however, which the range
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page009"></SPAN>9</span>
of my present inquiry will not permit me to approach, and for
the treatment of which I must be content to furnish materials
in the light I may be able to throw upon the private tendencies
of the Venetian character.</p>
<p><span class="scs">XI</span>. There is, however, another most interesting feature
in the policy of Venice which will be often brought before us;
and which a Romanist would gladly assign as the reason of its
irreligion; namely, the magnificent and successful struggle
which she maintained against the temporal authority of the
Church of Rome. It is true that, in a rapid survey of her
career, the eye is at first arrested by the strange drama to
which I have already alluded, closed by that ever memorable
scene in the portico of St. Mark’s,<SPAN name="FnAnchor_13" href="#Footnote_13"><span class="sp">13</span></SPAN> the central expression in
most men’s thoughts of the unendurable elevation of the pontifical
power; it is true that the proudest thoughts of Venice,
as well as the insignia of her prince, and the form of her chief
festival, recorded the service thus rendered to the Roman
Church. But the enduring sentiment of years more than
balanced the enthusiasm of a moment; and the bull of Clement
V., which excommunicated the Venetians and their doge,
likening them to Dathan, Abiram, Absalom, and Lucifer, is a
stronger evidence of the great tendencies of the Venetian
government than the umbrella of the doge or the ring of the
Adriatic. The humiliation of Francesco Dandolo blotted out
the shame of Barbarossa, and the total exclusion of ecclesiastics
from all share in the councils of Venice became an enduring
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page010"></SPAN>10</span>
mark of her knowledge of the spirit of the Church of Rome,
and of her defiance of it.</p>
<p>To this exclusion of Papal influence from her councils, the
Romanist will attribute their irreligion, and the Protestant
their success.<SPAN name="FnAnchor_14" href="#Footnote_14"><span class="sp">14</span></SPAN> The first may be silenced by a reference to the
character of the policy of the Vatican itself; and the second by
his own shame, when he reflects that the English legislature
sacrificed their principles to expose themselves to the very
danger which the Venetian senate sacrificed theirs to avoid.</p>
<p><span class="scs">XII</span>. One more circumstance remains to be noted respecting
the Venetian government, the singular unity of the families
composing it,—unity far from sincere or perfect, but still admirable
when contrasted with the fiery feuds, the almost daily
revolutions, the restless successions of families and parties in
power, which fill the annals of the other states of Italy. That
rivalship should sometimes be ended by the dagger, or enmity
conducted to its ends under the mask of law, could not but be
anticipated where the fierce Italian spirit was subjected to so
severe a restraint: it is much that jealousy appears usually unmingled
with illegitimate ambition, and that, for every instance
in which private passion sought its gratification through public
danger, there are a thousand in which it was sacrificed to the
public advantage. Venice may well call upon us to note with
reverence, that of all the towers which are still seen rising like
a branchless forest from her islands, there is but one whose office
was other than that of summoning to prayer, and that one was a
watch-tower only: from first to last, while the palaces of the
other cities of Italy were lifted into sullen fortitudes of rampart,
and fringed with forked battlements for the javelin and
the bow, the sands of Venice never sank under the weight of a
war tower, and her roof terraces were wreathed with Arabian
imagery, of golden globes suspended on the leaves of lilies.<SPAN name="FnAnchor_15" href="#Footnote_15"><span class="sp">15</span></SPAN></p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page011"></SPAN>11</span></p>
<p><span class="scs">XIII</span>. These, then, appear to me to be the points of chief
general interest in the character and fate of the Venetian people.
I would next endeavor to give the reader some idea of
the manner in which the testimony of Art bears upon these
questions, and of the aspect which the arts themselves assume
when they are regarded in their true connexion with the history
of the state.</p>
<p>1st. Receive the witness of Painting.</p>
<p>It will be remembered that I put the commencement of the
Fall of Venice as far back as 1418.</p>
<p>Now, John Bellini was born in 1423, and Titian in 1480.
John Bellini, and his brother Gentile, two years older than he,
close the line of the sacred painters of Venice. But the most
solemn spirit of religious faith animates their works to the last.
There is no religion in any work of Titian’s: there is not even
the smallest evidence of religious temper or sympathies either
in himself, or in those for whom he painted. His larger sacred
subjects are merely themes for the exhibition of pictorial rhetoric,—composition
and color. His minor works are generally
made subordinate to purposes of portraiture. The Madonna in
the church of the Frari is a mere lay figure, introduced to form
a link of connexion between the portraits of various members
of the Pesaro family who surround her.</p>
<p>Now this is not merely because John Bellini was a religious
man and Titian was not. Titian and Bellini are each true representatives
of the school of painters contemporary with them;
and the difference in their artistic feeling is a consequence not
so much of difference in their own natural characters as in their
early education: Bellini was brought up in faith; Titian in
formalism. Between the years of their births the vital religion
of Venice had expired.</p>
<p><span class="scs">XIV</span>. The <i>vital</i> religion, observe, not the formal. Outward
observance was as strict as ever; and doge and senator
still were painted, in almost every important instance, kneeling
before the Madonna or St. Mark; a confession of faith made
universal by the pure gold of the Venetian sequin. But observe
the great picture of Titian’s in the ducal palace, of the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page012"></SPAN>12</span>
Doge Antonio Grimani kneeling before Faith: there is a
curious lesson in it. The figure of Faith is a coarse portrait
of one of Titian’s least graceful female models: Faith had
become carnal. The eye is first caught by the flash of the
Doge’s armor. The heart of Venice was in her wars, not in
her worship.</p>
<p>The mind of Tintoret, incomparably more deep and serious
than that of Titian, casts the solemnity of its own tone over the
sacred subjects which it approaches, and sometimes forgets
itself into devotion; but the principle of treatment is altogether
the same as Titian’s: absolute subordination of the religious
subject to purposes of decoration or portraiture.</p>
<p>The evidence might be accumulated a thousandfold from
the works of Veronese, and of every succeeding painter,—that
the fifteenth century had taken away the religious heart of
Venice.</p>
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