Dawn of the sixteenth century...
Rome the whore spreads wide her legs
for Luxury, Lechery,and their bloody
corollary...
Hypocrite town built on heathen grounds,
welcome the foulest clan...
Caesar, Rodrigo and Lucretia,
the orgiac
Borgias...
On the outside, the Duke Caesar is an accomplished gentleman,
but he's two-faced, his kindness is all on the
surface,
and according to scandalmongers, he's even crueller than clever.
Black eyes, black hair and dark velvet
contrast with
the cadaveric whiteness of his flesh.
His father's nothing less than the Supreme Pontiff,
a master in the art to fornicate with
the Immaculate,
a profligate, despite his functions - fraud of god -
who meets fleshly Maries in a boudoir next to the
sanctuary.
These two baroque monsters share the same lust for power,
seeking to reunite a divided Italy under their unique
authority.
They transform the court of Vatican in a place of delights and elegance
where several crowned heads discover the
corrosive virtues
of a platter seasoned to poison...
Campaign after campaign, they conquer;
those who don't surrender are
swiftly sent six feet under.
With despotic politics and diplomacy,
they amass riches and resentment of many enemies.
Amidst
all this depravity, young Lucretia's an oasis of purity,
although the noble mob and rightful crooks, skilled in sycophancy,
covet
her hymen through nebulous hymns...
Slave of her malefic lineage, crushed by a ceremonial gown,
the poor child, used and
abused,
copes three alliances of tribulations.
But soon, on an afternoon, after a dinner with a friend,
the pope suffers from
severe stomach burns.
Some days later, he dies in his bed full of sweat,
leaving behind him only troubles and confusion...
The
empire he bequeaths to his son
dissolves as dew under the sun.
The House is abolished,
but the name remained in history
as
a synonymous of treachery.