[129] Maruccelli MSS. C. No. 308. See [App. No. VIII.] for statistical notices of this period.
[130] The state of feeling in the duchy, even under the comparatively beneficent sway of its native pope, Clement XI., may be inferred from an incident of trifling moment. Having obtained trace of a petition or remonstrance addressed to that Pontiff among the MSS. of the Bibliotheca Borbonica at Naples, I was refused a sight of it by the Archbishop then at the head of that library, on the ground of its injurious allegations against the authorities. Verily such overcaution may defeat its own end, by leaving an exaggerated impression of the mischief it would veil. So Gergorovius was turned out of the Vatican Library.
[131] Mariotti's Italy, II., p. 177.
[132] See [vol. II., p. 112].
[133] Lettere di Bernardo Tasso, edit. 1733; vol. I., pp. 14-22 and 427-30.
[134] In proof of this I give in [IX. of the Appendix] a letter of introduction, of which I was bearer, from one of the most accomplished professori of Rome.
[135] This has also been imputed to Francesco di Giorgio, to Sanmichele, and to Bartolomeo Centogatti of Urbino.
[136] Grossi, Uomini Illustri di Urbino.
[137] It is printed in the Raccolta Calogeriana, XIX., 140.
[*138] Cf. Madiai, Il Giornale di Francesco Paciotti da Urbino in Arch. St. per le Marche e per l'Umbria, vol. III., p. 48 et seq.