Page:Great Men and Famous Women Volume 3.djvu/240

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164 STATESMEN AND SAGES straint on account of their astronomical doctrines ; nor had Galileo, until this period of his life, incurred ecclesiastical censure for anything which he had said or written. But the Inquisition now took up the matter as heretical and contrary to' the express words of Scripture; and in 1616, Copernicus's work, " De Revo- lutionibus," Kepler's " Epitome," and some of Galileo's own letters, were placed on the list of prohibited books ; and he himself, being then in Rome, received formal notice not to teach that the earth revolves round the sun. He returned to Florence full of indignation ; and considering his hasty temper, love of truth, and full belief of the condemned theory, it is rather wonderful that he kept si- lence so long, than that he incurred at last the censures of the hierarchy. He did, however, restrain himself from any open advocacy of the heretical doctrines, even in composing his great work, the " Dialogue on the Ptolemaic and Coper- nican Systems." This was completed in 1630, but not printed till 1632, under license from officers of the church, both at Rome and Florence. It is a dialogue between Simplicio, an Aristotelian, Salviati, who represents the author, and Sa- gredo, a half convert to Salviati's opinions. It professes " indeterminately to propose the philosophical arguments, as well on one side as on the other ; " but the neutrality is but ill kept up, and was probably assumed, not with any hope that the court of Rome would be blinded as to the real tendency of the book, but merely that it would accept this nominal submission as a sufficient homage to its authority. If this were so, the author was disappointed ; the Inquisition took cognizance of the matter, and summoned him to Rome to undergo a personal examination. Age and infirmity were in vain pleaded as excuses ; still, through the urgent and indignant remonstrances of the Grand Duke of Tuscany, he was treated with a consideration rarely shown by that stern tribunal. He was allowed to remain at the Florentine ambassador's palace, with the exception of a short period, from his arrival in February, until the passing of sentence, June 21, 1633. He was then condemned, in the presence of the Inquisitors, to curse and abjure the "false doctrines," which his life had been spent in proving, to be con- fined in the prison of the Holy Office during pleasure, and to recite the seven penitential psalms once a week during three years. The sentence and the abjura- tion are given at full length in the "Life of Galileo," in the " Library of Useful Knowledge." "It is said," continues the biographer, "that Galileo, as he rose from his knees, stamped on the ground, and whispered to one of his friends, ' e pur si muove,' it does move though." Galileo's imprisonment was not long or rigorous, for after four days he was reconducted to the Florentine ambassador's palace ; but he was still kept under strict surveillance. In July he was sent to Sienna, where he remained five months in strict seclusion. He obtained permission in December to return to his villa at Arcetri, near Florence : but there, as at Sienna, he was confined to his own prem- ises, and strictly forbidden to receive his friends. It is painful to contemplate the variety of evils which overcast the evening of this great man's life.- In addi- tion to a distressing chronic complaint, contracted in youth, he was now suffering under a painful infirmity which by some is said to have been produced by torture,