vowed they would use it whenever they found anyone
to conduct them; but now, when the favorable circumstances
occurred, and they found those who were ready to lead
them, they stared at each other like men stupefied,
and would wait till those who were endeavoring to
recover for them their liberty were slain, and their
own chains more strongly riveted upon them; they wondered
that those who were wont to take arms upon slight occasions,
remained unmoved under the pressure of so many and
so great evils; and that they could willingly suffer
such numbers of their fellow-citizens to be banished,
so many admonished, when it was in their power to
restore the banished to their country, and the admonished
to the honors of the state. These words, although
full of truth, produced no effect upon those to whom
they were addressed; for they were either restrained
by their fears, or, on account of the two murders which
had been committed, disgusted with the parties.
Thus the movers of the tumult, finding that neither
words or deeds had force sufficient to stir anyone,
saw, when too late, how dangerous a thing it is to
attempt to set a people free who are resolved to be
slaves; and, despairing of success, they withdrew
to the temple of Santa Reparata, where, not to save
their lives, but to defer the moment of their deaths,
they shut themselves up. Upon the first rumor
of the affair, the Signory being in fear, armed and
secured the palace; but when the facts of the case
were understood, the parties known, and whither they
had betaken themselves, their fears subsided, and
they sent the Capitano with a sufficient body of armed
men to secure them. The gates of the temple were
forced without much trouble; part of the conspirators
were slain defending themselves; the remainder were
made prisoners and examined, but none were found implicated
in the affair except Baroccio and Piggiello Cavicciulli,
who were put to death with them.
Shortly after this event, another occurred of greater
importance. The Florentines were, as we have
before remarked, at war with the duke of Milan, who,
finding that with merely open force he could not overcome
them, had recourse to secret practices, and with the
assistance of the exiles of whom Lombardy was full,
he formed a plot to which many in the city were accessory.
It was resolved by the conspirators that most of the
emigrants, capable of bearing arms, should set out
from the places nearest Florence, enter the city by
the river Arno, and with their friends hasten to the
residences of the chiefs of the government; and having
slain them, reform the republic according to their
own will. Of the conspirators within the city,
was one of the Ricci named Samminiato; and as it often
happens in treacherous practices, few are insufficient
to effect the purpose of the plot, and among many secrecy
cannot be preserved, so while Samminiato was in quest
of associates, he found an accuser. He confided
the affair to Salvestro Cavicciulli, whose wrongs