ecclesiastical State, already weak and poor, the duchy
of Spoleto and other wealthy properties, that he might
make them fiefs to us; he confided to our weak hands
the vice-chancellorship, the vice-prefecture of Rome,
the generalship of the Church, and all the other most
important offices, which, instead of being monopolised
by us, should have been conferred on those who were
most meritorious. Moreover, there were persons
who were raised on our recommendation to posts of great
dignity, although they had no claims but such as our
undue partiality accorded them; others were left out
with no reason for their failure except the jealousy
excited in us by their virtues. To rob Ferdinand
of Aragon of the kingdom of Naples, Calixtus kindled
a terrible war, which by a happy issue only served
to increase our fortune, and by an unfortunate issue
must have brought shame and disaster upon the Holy
See. Lastly, by allowing himself to be governed
by men who sacrificed public good to their private
interests, he inflicted an injury, not only upon the
pontifical throne and his own reputation, but what
is far worse, far more deadly, upon his own conscience.
And yet, O wise judgments of God! hard and incessantly
though he toiled to establish our fortunes, scarcely
had he left empty that supreme seat which we occupy
to-day, when we were cast down from the pinnacle whereon
we had climbed, abandoned to the fury of the rabble
and the vindictive hatred of the Roman barons, who
chose to feel offended by our goodness to their enemies.
Thus, not only, we tell you, Caesar, not only did
we plunge headlong from the summit of our grandeur,
losing the worldly goods and dignities which our uncle
had heaped at our feet, but for very peril of our
life we were condemned to a voluntary exile, we and
our friends, and in this way only did we contrive
to escape the storm which our too good fortune had
stirred up against us. Now this is a plain proof
that God mocks at men’s designs when they are
bad ones. How great an error is it for any pope
to devote more care to the welfare of a house, which
cannot last more than a few years, than to the glory
of the Church, which will last for ever! What
utter folly for any public man whose position is not
inherited and cannot be bequeathed to his posterity,
to support the edifice of his grandeur on any other
basis than the noblest virtue practised for the general
good, and to suppose that he can ensure the continuance
of his own fortune otherwise than by taking all precautions
against sudden whirlwinds which are want to arise
in the midst of a calm, and to blow up the storm-clouds
I mean the host of enemies. Now any one of these
enemies who does his worst can cause injuries far
more powerful than any help that is at all likely to
come from a hundred friends and their lying promises.
If you and your brothers walk in the path of virtue
which we shall now open for you, every wish of your
heart shall be instantly accomplished; but if you take