CXIV
TWO days afterwards the Cardinal Cornaro went to beg a bishopric fr the Pope for a gentleman of his called Messer Andrea Centano. The Pope, in truth, had prised him a bishopric; and this being now vacant, the Cardinal reminded him of his word. The Pope acknowledged his obligation, but said that he too wanted a favour fr his most reverend lordship, which was that he would give up Benvenuto to him. On this the Cardinal replied: “Oh, if your Holiness has pardoned him and set him free at my disposal, what will the world say of you and me?” The Pope answered: “I want Benvenuto, you want the bishopric; let the world say what it chooses.” The good Cardinal entreated his Holiness to give him the bishopric, and for the rest to think the matter over, and then to act according as his Holiness decided. The Pope, feeling a certain amount of shame at so wickedly breaking his word, took what seemed a middle course: “I will send for Benvenuto, and in order to gratify the whim I have, will put him in those ros which open on my private garden; there he can attend to his recovery, and I will not prevent any of his friends fr cing to visit him. Moreover, I will defray his expenses until his caprice of mine has left me.”
The Cardinal came he, and sent the candidate for this bishopric on the spot to inform me that the Pope was resolved to have me back, but that he meant to keep me in a ground-floor ro in his private garden, where I could receive the visits of my friends, as
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