[The Life of Michelangelo Buonarroti by John Addington Symonds]@TWC D-Link book
The Life of Michelangelo Buonarroti

CHAPTER V
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Be the first to fly." The Buonarroti did not take his advice, but remained at Florence, enduring agonies of terror.

It was a time when disaffection toward the Medicean princes exposed men to risking life and limb.
Rumours reached Lodovico that his son had talked imprudently at Rome.
He wrote to inquire what truth there was in the report, and Michelangelo replied: "With regard to the Medici, I have never spoken a single word against them, except in the way that everybody talks--as, for instance, about the sack of Prato; for if the stones could have cried out, I think they would have spoken.

There have been many other things said since then, to which, when I heard them, I have answered: 'If they are really acting in this way, they are doing wrong;' not that I believed the reports; and God grant they are not true.

About a month ago, some one who makes a show of friendship for me spoke very evilly about their deeds.

I rebuked him, told him that it was not well to talk so, and begged him not to do so again to me.
However, I should like Buonarroto quietly to find out how the rumour arose of my having calumniated the Medici; for if it is some one who pretends to be my friend, I ought to be upon my guard." The Buonarroti family, though well affected toward Savonarola, were connected by many ties of interest and old association with the Medici, and were not powerful enough to be the mark of violent political persecution.


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