[Footnote 48: Lettere, vol. ii. 34.]
[Footnote 49: Ibid. pp. 7-62, 80-93.]
[Footnote 50: We are met here as elsewhere in the perplexing problem of Tasso’s misfortunes with the difficulty of having to deal with mutilated documents. Still the mere fact that Tasso was allowed to correspond freely with friends and patrons, shows that Alfonso dreaded no disclosures, and confirms the theory that he only kept Tasso locked up out of harm’s way.]
And brain-sick Tasso was, without a shadow of doubt.[51] It is hardly needful to recapitulate his terror of the Inquisition, dread of being poisoned, incapacity for self-control in word and act, and other signs of incipient disease. During the residence in S. Anna this malady made progress. He was tormented by spectral voices and apparitions. He believed himself to be under the influence of magic charms. He was haunted by a sprite, who stole his books and flung his MSS. about the room. A good genius, in the form of a handsome youth, appeared and conversed with him. He lost himself for hours together in abstraction, talking aloud, staring into vacancy, and expressing surprise that other people could not see the phantoms which surrounded him. He complained that his melancholy passed at moments into delirium (which he called frenesia), after which he suffered from loss of memory and prostration. His own mind became a constant cause of self-torture. Suspicious of others, he grew to be suspicious of himself. And when he left S. Anna, these disorders, instead of abating, continued to afflict him, so that his most enthusiastic admirers were forced to admit that ’he was subject to constitutional melancholy with crises of delirium, but not to actual insanity.’[52] At first, his infirmity did not interfere with intellectual production of a high order, though none of his poetry, after the Gerusalemme was completed in 1574, rose to the level of his earlier work. But in course of time the artist’s faculty itself was injured, and the creations of his later life are unworthy of his genius.
[Footnote 51: A letter written by Guarini, the old friend, rival and constant Court-companion of Tasso at Ferrara, upon the news of his death in 1595, shows how a man of cold intellect judged his case. ’The death by which Tasso has now paid his debt to nature, seems to me like the termination of that death of his in this world which only bore the outer semblance of life.’ See Casella’s Pastor Fido, p. xxxii. Guarini means that when Tasso’s mind gave way, he had really died in his own higher self, and that his actual death was a release.]
[Footnote 52: Tasso’s own letters after the beginning of 1579, and Manso’s Life (op. cit. pp. 156-176), are the authorities for the symptoms detailed above. Tasso so often alludes to his infirmities that it is not needful to accumulate citations. I will, however, quote two striking examples. ’Sono infermo come soleva, e stanco della infermita, la quale e non sol malattia del corpo ma de la mente’ (Lettere, vol. iii. p. 160). ’Io sono poco sano e tanto maninconico che sono riputato matto da gli altri e da me stesso’ (Ib. p. 262).]