After several scurrilous but ineffectual attacks by the Jesuit party, in
1607 a new and more successful attempt was made. Scaliger's weak point was his pride. In
1594 Scaliger had published his
Epistola de vetustate et splendore gentis Scaligerae et JC Scaligeri vita. In
1601 Gaspar Scioppius, then in the service of the Jesuits published his
Scaliger hypototimaeus ("The Supposititious Scaliger"), a
quarto volume of more than four hundred pages, written with consummate ability in an admirable and incisive style, with the entire disregard for truth which Scioppius always displayed, and with all the power of his accomplished
sarcasm. Every piece of scandal which could be raked together concerning Scaliger or his family is to be found there. The author professes to point out five hundred lies in the
Epistola de vetustate of Scaliger, but the main argument of the book is to show the falsity of his pretensions to be of the family of
La Scala, and of the narrative of his father's early life. "No stronger proof," says Pattison, "can be given of the impressions produced by this powerful
philippic, dedicated to the defamation of an individual, than that it had been the source from which the biography of Scaliger, as it now stands in our biographical collections, has mainly flowed."
To Scaliger the blow was crushing. Whatever his father Julius had believed, Joseph had never doubted to be a prince of Verona, and in his
Epistola had put forth with the most perfect good faith, and without inquiry, all that he had heard from his father. He immediately wrote a reply to Scioppius, entitled
Confutatio fabulae Burdonum. It is written, for Scaliger, with unusual moderation and good taste, but perhaps for that very reason had not the success which its author wished and even expected. In the opinion of Pattison, "as a refutation of Scioppius it is most complete"; but there are certainly grounds for dissenting from this judgment. Scaliger undoubtedly shows that Scioppius committed more blunders than he corrected, that his book literally bristles with pure lies and baseless calumnies; but he does not succeed in adducing a single proof either of his father's descent from the La Scala family, or of any single event narrated by Julius as happening to himself or any member of this family prior to his arrival at Agen. Nor does he even attempt a refutation of the crucial point, which Scioppius had proved, as far as a negative can be proved, namely, that William, the last prince of Verona, had no son Nicholas, who would have been the alleged grandfather of Julius.
But whether complete or not, the
Confutatio had no success; the attack of the Jesuits was successful, far more so than they could possibly have hoped. Scioppius was wont to boast that his book had killed Scaliger. It certainly embittered the few remaining months of his life, and it is not improbable that the mortification which he suffered may have shortened his days. The
Confutatio was his last work. Five months after it appeared, on
January 21, 1609, at four in the morning, he died in Heinsius's arms. In his will Scaliger bequeathed his renowned collection of manuscripts and books (
tous mes livres de langues étrangères, Hebraiques, Syriens, Arabiques, Ethiopiens) to
Leiden University Library.