the government which for forty-two years had ruled
the city with so much glory; the citizens would then
be subject to the will of the multitude, and live disorderly
and dangerous, or be under the command of some individual
who might make himself prince. For these reasons
he was of opinion, that whoever loved his country
and his honor must arouse himself, and call to mind
the virtue of Bardo Mancini, who, by the ruin of the
Alberti, rescued the city from the dangers then impending;
and that the cause of the audacity now assumed by
the multitude was the extensive Squittini or Pollings,
which, by their negligence, were allowed to be made;
for thus the palace had become filled with low men.
He therefore concluded, that the only means of remedying
the evil was to restore the government to the nobility,
and diminish the authority of the minor trades by reducing
the companies from fourteen to seven, which would
give the plebeians less authority in the Councils,
both by the reduction in their number and by increasing
the authority of the great; who, on account of former
enmities, would be disinclined to favor them.
He added, that it is a good thing to know how to avail
themselves of men according to the times; and that
as their fathers had used the plebeians to reduce the
influence of the great, that now, the great having
been humbled, and the plebeians become insolent, it
was well to restrain the insolence of the latter by
the assistance of the former. To effect this they
might proceed either openly or otherwise, for some
of them belonging to the Council of Ten, forces might
be led into the city without exciting observation.
Rinaldo was much applauded, and his advice was approved
of by the whole assembly. Niccolo da Uzzano who,
among others, replied to it, said, “All that
Rinaldo had advanced was correct, and the remedies
he proposed good and certain, if they could be adopted
without an absolute division of the city; and this
he had no doubt would be effected if they could induce
Giovanni de’ Medici to join them; for with him
on their side, the multitude being deprived of their
chief and stay, would be unable to oppose them; but
that if he did not concur with them they could do
nothing without arms, and that with them they would
incur the risk of being vanquished, or of not being
able to reap the fruit of victory.” He
then modestly reminded them of what he had said upon
a former occasion, and of their reluctance to remedy
the evil when it might easily have been done; that
now the same remedy could not be attempted without
incurring the danger of greater evils, and therefore
there was nothing left for them to do but to gain
him over to their side, if practicable. Rinaldo
was then commissioned to wait upon Giovanni and try
if he could induce him to join them.