Two more hours passed, while his partisans tried in
vain to combat his refusals. At last, as night
was coming on and the people grew ever more and more
impatient and their murmurs began to assume a threatening
tone, Bonvicini declared that he was ready to walk
through the fire, holding nothing in his hand but
a crucifix. No one could refuse him this; so
Fra Rondinelli was compelled to accept his proposition.
The announcement was made to the populace that the
champions had come to terms and the trial was about
to take place. At this news the people calmed
down, in the hope of being compensated at last for
their long wait; but at that very moment a storm which
had long been threatening brake over Florence with
such fury that the faggots which had just been lighted
were extinguished by the rain, leaving no possibility
of their rekindling. From the moment when the
people suspected that they had been fooled, their enthusiasm
was changed into derision. They were ignorant
from which side the difficulties had arisen that had
hindered the trial, so they laid the responsibility
on both champions without distinction. The Signoria,
foreseeing the disorder that was now imminent, ordered
the assembly to retire; but the assembly thought otherwise,
and stayed on the piazza, waiting for the departure
of the two champions, in spite of the fearful rain
that still fell in torrents. Rondinelli was taken
back amid shouts and hootings, and pursued with showers
of stones. Savonarola, thanks to his sacred garments
and the host which he still carried, passed calmly
enough through the midst of the mob—a miracle
quite as remarkable as if he had passed through the
fire unscathed.
But it was only the sacred majesty of the host that
had protected this man, who was indeed from this moment
regarded as a false prophet: the crowd allowed
Savonarola to return to his convent, but they regretted
the necessity, so excited were they by the Arrabbiati
party, who had always denounced him as a liar and
a hypocrite. So when the next morning, Palm
Sunday, he stood up in the pulpit to explain his conduct,
he could not obtain a moment’s silence for insults,
hooting, and loud laughter. Then the outcry,
at first derisive, became menacing: Savonarola,
whose voice was too weak to subdue the tumult, descended
from his pulpit, retired into the sacristy, and thence
to his convent, where he shut himself up in his cell.
At that moment a cry was heard, and was repeated by
everybody present:
“To San Marco, to San Marco!” The rioters,
few at first, were recruited by all the populace as
they swept along the streets, and at last reached
the convent, dashing like an angry sea against the
wall.
The doors, closed on Savonarala’s entrance,
soon crashed before the vehement onset of the powerful
multitude, which struck down on the instant every
obstacle it met: the whole convent was quickly
flooded with people, and Savonarola, with his two
confederates, Domenico Bonvicini and Silvestro Maruffi,
was arrested in his cell, and conducted to prison amid
the insults of the crowd, who, always in extremes,
whether of enthusiasm or hatred, would have liked
to tear them to pieces, and would not be quieted till
they had exacted a promise that the prisoners should
be forcibly compelled to make the trial of fire which
they had refused to make of their own free will.