[start of p. 55]
5 
THE DEATH OF CARNIVAL 
THERE
 ARE two characters in the triumphal procession who are rather hard to 
account for. They are the lowest of the trumps and the wild card known 
as the Fool. The Fool has no place in the procession, either with the 
four ordinary suits or among the trumps. 
We find that the lowest
 trump is named Bagatino. This Bagatino was one of the Carnival clowns, 
and later became the "Little Juggler" of the commedia dell'arte.
 In our procession he is the Carnival King, and the real object of the 
whole procession is to lead him to his execution. He is one of Cupid's 
captives because Carnival is a great time for love as well as farce. He 
is also the principal victim of the triumph of Death, and he rises 
hopefully from the grave in the triumph of Eternity. (1)
The Fool
 has no place among the seventy-seven regular cards because they are not
 his world at all. Like the six unnumbered cards of the minchiate pack, 
he is "out of this world." He has his own world, the approaching season 
of Lent, from which he comes in advance to warn all the gay figures of 
Carnival that they have but a short time to enjoy themselves. (2) 
Carnival,
 like a noble wedding or a solemn entry, was one of the favorite 
occasions for triumphal processions. In particular, there would be a 
procession to greet King Carnival before the beginning of Lent. This 
took place just after Christmas, when he would be the highest and most 
victorious of the triumphs. At the close of the pre-Lenten season his 
position would be reversed, for he then had only one day to live. 
The
 mock execution of King Carnival is a vestige of the ancient Saturnalia,
 when the man who had acted as king of the revels was actually put to 
death at the end of his reign. This practice continued in parts of the 
Roman army well into Christian times. We read of a soldier who refused 
to act as king of the Saturnalia because he was a Christian, and was 
martyred (anyway) in consequence. The stubborn persistence 
_____________
[note 1 originally on p. 58; note 2 originally on p. 59]
1. For the identification of Il Bagatino and Il Matto as Carnival King and Lent see the notes for those two cards. 
2. For the Carnival triumphs see Burckhardt (Civilization) Pt V ch 8: "The Festivals." 
[start p. 56]
of
 this grisly human sacrifice is all the more remarkable when we remember
 that it had been forbidden by the Roman Emperor Tiberius centuries 
before. (3) 
The Saturnalia was a winter festival commemorating 
the golden age of Saturn, the age when the fruits of the earth were 
bountiful and men were at peace. There was no money in that time, and 
therefore no greed for gold. No man was a slave, and all property was 
held in common. Good King Saturn died, and the golden age was dead 
except when brought to life again for a few days each year during the 
festival. For that short time slaves and masters were equal. Slaves were
 permitted to speak as boldly as they wished, to get drunk, issue orders
 to their masters, and in general be excused for behavior which would 
have been fatal at any other time. Psychologically speaking, it was an 
excellent safety valve. But it had its dark side. In the earliest times 
the man elected to play the part of King Saturn during the festival had 
to die at its close. When the actual death was prohibited in later days,
 no doubt there was an execution in effigy, as in the medieval Carnival.
 
The early Christians would have nothing to do with the winter 
revels of Saturnalia. But to Christians of a later age, compelled by 
civil law to observe numerous ecclesiastical precepts, something was 
again needed as a safety valve. This must have been especially true 
during the late Middle Ages and early Renaissance, when many of the 
clergy, the very class which insisted on Christian behavior, were openly
 seen to be acting in direct opposition to the principles they preached.
 Then, as the temporal power of the Church declined, so did the 
necessity for the Carnival, and today it is given, at best, only token 
observance in a few sections of the Christian world. (4) 
We have
 a glimpse of the Carnival in its heyday from the program of a Carnival 
at Rome in 1891, which was celebrated in the medieval manner. (5) The 
Carnival season began on January seventeenth, and from that date it was 
lawful to wear any costume and to cover the face with a mask. The formal
 celebrations began two weeks later, and lasted for ten days, from 
February first to the tenth. The official Carnival was inaugurated by 
the grand Senatorial Procession, with participants wearing costumes of 
the fourteenth century. This procession started at two o'clock in the, 
afternoon at the Piazza del Popolo and moved by way, of the Corso and 
the Via Nazionale to the Costanzi Theater. It was a procession of 
men-at-arms, cavalcades, heralds, and trumpeters, preceding the Senator 
of Rome and his suite.
____________
[originally on p. 59]
3. For Saturnalia and Carnival see the abridged edition of The Golden Bough,
 by Sir James George Frazer (New York, Macmillan 3.440) 383-587 and 
301-307. Our bibliography lists T. H. Caster's revised abridgment, The New Golden Bough, which seems not to object to these passages, and Professor Homer W. Smith, in his Man and his Gods (New York, Grosset 1952) 138-139, says practically the same thing as Frazer about the Saturnalia. See also Bernheimer (Wild) p 53ff — who is, however, to inclined toward the idea of a secret society being involved, I think. 
4.
 The resentment of the laity against the clergy during our period 
appears in the tarocchi themselves, which make the Pope and Popess 
captives of Cupid, and again and again in the secular literature of the 
time. See Huizinga (Waning) p 178f and Burckhardt (Civilization) pt VI eh 2: "Religion in Daily Life." 
 5. The description of the Carnival of 1891 is from Carnival at Rome. 
[start of p. 57]
When it arrived at the theater, the first grand veglione
 (masked ball) of the Carnival began. This was a children's party, with 
prizes for the best costumes. In the evening there were two more veglioni in other theaters. 
The
 next day, Monday, featured a band contest and a fete at the Wine Show. 
Here too, prizes were awarded for the best costumes. On Tuesday there 
was a parade of the Senatorial Cortege, the race in which the rioni (the
 various quarters of the city) competed, and a horse race. There was 
throwing of red chalk in the Corso, and in the evening a veglione
 with prizes. On Wednesday the horse races continued, and there was a 
grand artistic fancy dress ball in the evening, with prizes again for 
the best costumes. An added attraction was a great chess board in one of
 the theaters, on which the pieces were living people. This chess game 
was played by two members chosen from the Roman chess society. 
On
 Thursday, February fifth, a traditional triumphal procession was held, 
with decorated vans, masqueraders on horseback and on foot, all 
competing for prizes. A battle of flowers took place from two o'clock 
until dusk. In the evening there was a grand illumination of the Piazza 
del Popolo by Messrs FantappiƩ and Sons from Florence. In it were twenty
 colossal transparent Chinese fans lighted with various colors: and 
twenty streams of light from the top of the obelisk. Two separate veglioni were held, each with prizes. The next evening there was a "white" veglione at the Costanzi Theater, to which only masqueraders in white were admitted. 
The program for Saturday the seventh included another battle of flowers, more racing, and the usual veglione. On Sunday there was a parade of two-horse carriages and a veglione.
 Monday, the last day but one of the Carnival, was marked by the award 
of prizes for the most elegantly decorated balconies along the Corso, 
the route by which the Senatorial Cortege proceeded to the racing in the
 Piazzo del Popolo. In addition, there was a wine fair, and of course, a
 veglione in the evening. People were advised that the best time to see this veglione was from midnight until two. 
The
 Carnival ended on Tuesday with a battle of flowers and a repetition of 
all the previous parades. In the final triumphal procession was a 
colossal statue of Justice on a float eight yards long, another huge 
float with a statue of Rome, and the Wedding of Romulus and Tazia on a 
third. In the evening there was the special candlelight display called 
[start of p. 58]
the moccoletti,
 with a procession of bengal lights and illuminated vehicles. The 
evening concluded with the cremation of King Carnival, fireworks, and a 
balloon ascent. 
From the historical evidence we have gathered, we may quite logically deduce that the commedia dell'arte
 was an outgrowth of the fifteenth-century Carnival. This type of 
farcical comedy improvised by skilled actors on the basis of a written 
plot could easily have developed from the sort of procession which 
appears in the Visconti-Sforza tarocchi. (6) If we imagine the Fool, the
 representative of Lent, running alongside the procession and calling 
his warnings to the riders in the cars, we can assume that they talked 
back to him. Happy bits of repartee would please the crowds and 
encourage the actors to do even better. Finally the representative of 
Lent might invite King Carnival to leave the safety of his car and fight
 like a man. (7) Then we would have a scene such as Breughel shows us in
 his painting "The Battle between Carnival and Lent," where jolly fat 
Carnival sits on a wine barrel. With a spitted goose for his weapon, he 
fights the representative of Lent, in this case an old woman like the 
Popess of the tarocchi, who had to take the place of the Fool when the 
latter eventually assumed the guise of Carnival King. In Breughel's 
painting we see in one corner a comedy troupe engaged in playing "The 
Dirty Bride", and observe that they look very much like characters who 
were originally part of our triumphal procession. 
The 
metamorphosis of the Fool into the Carnival King can be seen quite 
plainly in later tarocchi packs and in other paintings. His rags and 
patches became gayer and gayer, as did the feathers in his hair. At some
 time or other he may have won his battle with the Carnival King, or 
more likely, he was such a dominant figure in the gaiety that people 
forgot he had not always been the Carnival King. (8) 
So even in 
the tarocchi we have the old story of the sacred king, who has a merry 
reign for a short time and then is put to death by his successor, The 
Carnival King is the first of the trumps, and his successor, King Lent, 
is just outside the door, waiting to dethrone him and take over his 
staff of office. The King is dead! Long live the King! 
__________________
[originally on p. 59]
6. The best books I have found on the commedia dell'arte are Smith (Commedia) and Lea (Italian), which is much more detailed than Smith. Enci spett
 has good articles on "Carnevale" and "Commedia dell'arte." I suspect a 
connection between the tarocchi characters and those of the commedia because they are so similar; Smith (p 59, note) gives as the list of essential characters in the commedia two
 lovers, three women, one Scaramouche who plays the part of the braggart
 Captain, Pantalone, the Doctor of Law, Mezzetin, and Harlequin. The 
boastful Captain says that he once took prisoner Love, Death, and the 
Devil, and went to Hell to steal Proserpina. The Moon forgot Endymion 
for him, and he conquered Cupid in battle. (Smith 93-95). See also the 
first paragraph of the Notes for Il Bagatino, the first of the trumps, 
who was a character of the commedia. Pictures of the Carnival characters and the commedia characters can hardly be distinguished, and there is the same slapstick in both. 
7. See the reconstruction in my "Undocumented Prologue," above. 
8. For the metamorphosis of the Fool see the notes for that card. 
Scan of pp. 58-59 (Notes): viewtopic.php?f=11&t=1168&start=30#p19080
 
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