Ludovico’s auxiliaries declared that in fighting
against their Swiss brethren they would be acting
in disobedience to the Diet, and would risk capital
punishment in the end—a danger that nothing
would induce them to incur unless they immediately
received the arrears of their pay. The duke,
who a spent the last ducat he had with him, and was
entirely cut off from his capital, knew that he could
not get money till he had fought his way through to
it, and therefore invited the Swiss to make one last
effort, promising them not only the pay that was in
arrears but a double hire. But unluckily the
fulfilment of this promise was dependent on the doubtful
issue of a battle, and the Swiss replied that they
had far too much respect for their country to disobey
its decree, and that they loved their brothers far
too well to consent to shed their blood without reward;
and therefore Sforza would do well not to count upon
them, since indeed the very next day they proposed
to return to their homes. The duke then saw
that all was lost, but he made a last appeal to their
honour, adjuring them at least to ensure his personal
safety by making it a condition of capitulation.
But they replied that even if a condition of such
a kind, would not make capitulation impossible, it
would certainly deprive them of advantages which they
had aright to expect, and on which they counted as
indemnification for the arrears of their pay.
They pretended, however, at last that they were touched
by the prayers of the man whose orders they had obeyed
so long, and offered to conceal him dressed in their
clothes among their ranks. This proposition was
barely plausible; far Sforza was short and, by this
time an old man, and he could not possibly escape
recognition in the midst of an army where the oldest
was not past thirty and the shortest not less than
five foot six. Still, this was his last chance,
and he did not reject it at once, but tried to modify
it so that it might help him in his straits.
His plan was to disguise himself as a Franciscan monk,
so that mounted an a shabby horse he might pass for
their chaplain; the others, Galeazzo di San Severing,
who commanded under him, and his two brothers, were
all tall men, so, adopting the dress of common soldiers,
they hoped they might escape detection in the Swiss
ranks.
Scarcely were these plans settled when the duke heard
that the capitulation was signed between Trivulce
and the Swiss, who had made no stipulation in favour
of him and his generals. They were to go over
the next day with arms and baggage right into the
French army; so the last hope of the wretched Ludovico
and his generals must needs be in their disguise.
And so it was. San Severino and his brothers
took their place in the ranks of the infantry, and
Sforza took his among the baggage, clad in a monk’s
frock, with the hood pulled over his eyes.
The army marched off; but the Swiss, who had first
trafficked in their blood, now trafficked in their
honour. The French were warned of the disguise
of Sforza and his generals, and thus they were all
four recognised, and Sforza was arrested by Trimouille
himself. It is said that the price paid for
this treason was the town of Bellinzona; far it then
belonged to the French, and when the Swiss returned
to their mountains and took possession of it, Louis
XII took no steps to get it back again.