XXXIV
THE WHOLE world was now in warfare. Pope Clement had sent to get se troops fr Giovanni de' Medici, and when they came, they made such disturbances in Re, that it was ill living in open shops. On this account I retired to a good snug house behind the Banchi, where I worked for all the friends I had acquired. Since I produced few things of much importance at that period, I need not waste time in talking about them. I took much pleasure in music and amusements of the kind. On the death of Giovanni de' Medici in Lbardy, the Pope, at the advice of Messer Jacopo Salviati, dismissed the five bands he had engaged; and when the Constable of Bourbon knew there were no troops in Re, he pushed his army with the utmost energy up to the city. The whole of Re upon this flew to arms. I happened to be intimate with Alessandro, the son of Piero del Bene, who, at the time when the Colonnesi entered Re, had requested me to guard his palace. On this more serious occasion, therefore, he prayed me to enlist fifty crades for the protection of the said house, appointing me their captain, as I had been when the Colonnesi came. So I collected fifty young men of the highest courage, and we took up our quarters in his palace, with good pay and excellent appointments.
Bourbon's army had now arrived before the walls of Re, and Alessandro begged me to go with him to reconnoitre. So we went with one of the stoutest fellows in our Cpany; and on the way a youth called Cec
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