Season 2 Episode 4
The fourth episode of The Magnificent explored the tragedy of Volterra, said to be a stain in the legacy of Lorenzo de Medici. The writers also used the episode to explore Clarice’s growing unhappiness in the marriage, due to Lorenzo’s affair with Lucrezia. Clarice promised Lorenzo that she would remain a dutiful wife, though her heart would remain closed to him for as long as he carried on with his affair. When Lorenzo was at his lowest point, horrified that his efforts to avoid war ended in the sacking of Volterra, Clarice came to him, tenderly bathing the dirt and blood off of him, speaking words of comfort. ‘I’ve been a fool’, Lorenzo murmured, as he realised how his wife quietly helped him with his problem with Venice, as he looked at the woman he married as though he was seeing her for the first time. Deeply devout, without the sexual experience of Lucrezia, Clarice nonetheless continued the string of strong, fiercely intelligent women who married into the Medici family (Lorenzo’s grandmother Contessina and mother Lucrezia). It was also a nice mirror of how, in Masters of Florence, Cosimo and Contessina’s hands would find each other when faced with trials. Just as with Cosimo and Contessina, Lorenzo and Clarice’s arranged marriage had flowered into a union of genuine respect and affection.
The fourth episode of The Magnificent explored the tragedy of Volterra, said to be a stain in the legacy of Lorenzo de Medici. The writers also used the episode to explore Clarice’s growing unhappiness in the marriage, due to Lorenzo’s affair with Lucrezia. Clarice promised Lorenzo that she would remain a dutiful wife, though her heart would remain closed to him for as long as he carried on with his affair. When Lorenzo was at his lowest point, horrified that his efforts to avoid war ended in the sacking of Volterra, Clarice came to him, tenderly bathing the dirt and blood off of him, speaking words of comfort. ‘I’ve been a fool’, Lorenzo murmured, as he realised how his wife quietly helped him with his problem with Venice, as he looked at the woman he married as though he was seeing her for the first time. Deeply devout, without the sexual experience of Lucrezia, Clarice nonetheless continued the string of strong, fiercely intelligent women who married into the Medici family (Lorenzo’s grandmother Contessina and mother Lucrezia). It was also a nice mirror of how, in Masters of Florence, Cosimo and Contessina’s hands would find each other when faced with trials. Just as with Cosimo and Contessina, Lorenzo and Clarice’s arranged marriage had flowered into a union of genuine respect and affection.