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sing figures of bearded old men. There is a strong reminiscence, too, of the saint's attitude in one of the most wonderful of extant Veroneses--that sumptuous altar-piece _SS. Anthony, Cornelius, and Cyprian with a Page_, in the Brera, for which he invented a harmony as delicious as it is daring, composed wholly of violet-purple, green, and gold. CHAPTER II _Francesco Maria della Rovere--Titian and Eleonora Gonzaga--The "Venus with the Shell"--Titian's later ideals--The "Venus of Urbino"--The "Bella di Tiziano"--The "Twelve Caesars"--Titian and Pordenone--The "Battle of Cadore"--Portraits of the Master by himself--The "Presentation in the Temple"--The "Allocation" of Madrid--The Ceiling Pictures of Santo Spirito--First Meeting with Pope Paul III.--The "Ecce Homo" of Vienna--"Christ with the Pilgrims at Emmaus_." Within the years 1532 and 1538, or thereabouts, would appear to fall Titian's relations with another princely patron, Francesco Maria della Rovere, Duke of Urbino, the nephew of the redoubtable Pope Julius II., whose qualities of martial ardour and unbridled passion he reproduced in an exaggerated form. By his mother, Giovanna da Montefeltro, he descended also from the rightful dynasty of Urbino, to which he succeeded in virtue of adoption. His life of perpetual strife, of warfare in defence of his more than once lost and reconquered duchy, and as the captain first of the army of the Church, afterwards of the Venetian forces, came to an abrupt end in 1538. With his own hand he had, in the ardent days of his youth, slain in the open streets of Ravenna the handsome, sinister Cardinal Alidosi, thereby bringing down upon himself the anathemas of his uncle, Julius II., and furnishing to his successor, the Medici pope Leo X., the best possible excuse for the sequestration of the duchy of Urbino in favour of his own house. He himself died by poison, suspicion resting upon the infamous Pier Luigi Farnese, the son of Paul III. Francesco Maria had espoused Eleonora Gonzaga, the sister of Titian's protector, Federigo, and it is probably through the latter that the relations with our master sprang up to which we owe a small group of his very finest works, including the so-called _Venus of Urbino_ of the Tribuna, the _Girl in a Fur Cloak_ of the Vienna Gallery, and the companion portraits of Francesco Maria and Eleonora which are now in the Venetian Gallery at the Uffizi. The fiery leader of armies had, it s
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