CHAPTER XIV
(i$34)
Cellini finds Angelica at Naples.—He visits the antiquities of the
city, and is well received by the Viceroy, to whom he sells a
diamond.—He abandons Angelica, and returns to Rome to the
house of Cardinal Ippolito de' Medici.—He presents to the Pope
a medal bearing the figure of AVaw, and receives a commission
to make another reverse for it representing an episode in the
HEN Solosmeo had inspected his works at Monte
V V Casini we proceeded together towards Naples.
When we had arrived at about half a mile from Naples,
there met us an innkeeper, who invited us to his inn, and
told us that he had lived many years in Florence with
Carlo GinoriC and that if we went to his inn he would
have the very best entertainment made for us because we
were Florentines. To that innkeeper we replied many
times that we did not wish to go with him. This man,
however, sometimes passed before and sometimes fol-
lowed behind us, frequently repeating to us the same
things, that he would like to have us at his inn. Where-
fore since he became an annoyance to me, I asked him
if he knew where to direct me to a certain Sicilian
i Carlo di Lionardo Ginori, Gonfaloniere of the Florentine Re-
public during the first two months of 1527. VASARI alludes to him
many times as a friend of the Fine Arts and a protector of artists.
AMMIRATO, HA, Lib. XXX.
(i$34)
Cellini finds Angelica at Naples.—He visits the antiquities of the
city, and is well received by the Viceroy, to whom he sells a
diamond.—He abandons Angelica, and returns to Rome to the
house of Cardinal Ippolito de' Medici.—He presents to the Pope
a medal bearing the figure of AVaw, and receives a commission
to make another reverse for it representing an episode in the
HEN Solosmeo had inspected his works at Monte
V V Casini we proceeded together towards Naples.
When we had arrived at about half a mile from Naples,
there met us an innkeeper, who invited us to his inn, and
told us that he had lived many years in Florence with
Carlo GinoriC and that if we went to his inn he would
have the very best entertainment made for us because we
were Florentines. To that innkeeper we replied many
times that we did not wish to go with him. This man,
however, sometimes passed before and sometimes fol-
lowed behind us, frequently repeating to us the same
things, that he would like to have us at his inn. Where-
fore since he became an annoyance to me, I asked him
if he knew where to direct me to a certain Sicilian
i Carlo di Lionardo Ginori, Gonfaloniere of the Florentine Re-
public during the first two months of 1527. VASARI alludes to him
many times as a friend of the Fine Arts and a protector of artists.
AMMIRATO, HA, Lib. XXX.