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قراءة كتاب A Decade of Italian Women, vol. I (of 2)

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A Decade of Italian Women, vol. I (of 2)

A Decade of Italian Women, vol. I (of 2)

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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conduct in the midst of loose-lived princesses;—the nobly-born adventuress, every step in whose extraordinary excelsior progress was an advance in degradation and infamy, and whose history, in showing us court life behind the scenes, brings us among the worst company of any that the reader's varied journey will call upon him to fall in with;—the equally nobly-born, and almost equally worthless woman, who shows us that wonderful and instructive phenomenon, the Queen of a papal court;—the humbly born artist, admirable for her successful combination in perfect compatibility of all the duties of the home and the studio;—and lastly, the poor representative of the effeteness of that social system which had produced the foregoing types, the net result, as may be said, of the national passage through the various phases illustrated by them:—all these are curiously distinct manifestations of womanhood, and if any measure of success has been attained in the endeavour to represent them duly surrounded by the social environment which produced them, while they helped to fashion it, some contribution will have been made to a right understanding of woman's nature, and of the true road towards her more completely satisfactory social development.


CONTENTS.


ST. CATHERINE OF SIENA.

Born, 1347. Died, 1380.

CHAPTER I.
  PAGE
Her Birth-place 1
 
CHAPTER II.
The Saint's Biographer 9
 
CHAPTER III.
The Facts of the Case 18
 
CHAPTER IV.
The Church View of the Case 32
 
CHAPTER V.
St. Catherine as an Author 51
 
CHAPTER VI.
Catherine's Letter to the King of France 67
 
CHAPTER VII.
Dupe or Impostor? 77
 
CHAPTER VIII.
The Secret of her Influence 83
 

CATERINA SFORZA.

Born, 1462. Died, 1509.

CHAPTER I.
  PAGE
Of Catherine's father, the Duke, and of his magnificent journey to Florence 90
 
CHAPTER II.
A Franciscan Pope and a Franciscan Cardinal.—A notable illustration of the proverb concerning mendicants' rides.—The Nemesis of Despotism 102
 
CHAPTER III.
Catherine's marriage.—"Petit Courrier des dames" for 1476.—Four years of prosperity.—Life in Rome in the fifteenth century.—A hunting party in the Campagna.—Guilty or not guilty.—Catherine and her husband leave Rome 121
 
CHAPTER IV.
From Rome to Forlì with bag and baggage.—First presentation of a new lord and lady to their lieges.—Venice again shows a velvet paw to a second Riario.—Saffron-hill in brocade and ermine.—Sad conduct on the part of our lieges.—Life in Rome again.—"Orso! Orso!"—"Colonna! Colonna!"—A Pope's hate, and a Pope's Vengeance.—Sixtus finally loses the game 140
 
CHAPTER V.
The Family is founded.—But finds it very difficult to stand on its Foundations.—Life in Rome during an Interregnum.—Magnificent Prince short of Cash.—Our Heroine's Claims to that Title.—A Night Ride to Forlì, and its results.—An Accident to which splendid Princes are liable 166
 
CHAPTER VI.
Catherine in trouble.—"Libertà e Chiesà!" in Forlì.—The Cardinal Savelli.—The Countess and her Castellano perform a comedy before the lieges.—A veteran revolutionist.—No help coming from Rome.—Cardinal Legate in an awkward position.—All over with the Orsi.—Their last night in Forlì.—Catherine herself again.—Retribution.—An octogenarian conspirator's last day 182

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