Coryat's Crudities

The title page of Coryat's Crudities, printed in 1611.

Coryat's Crudities: Hastily gobled up in Five Moneth's Travels is a travelogue published in 1611 by Thomas Coryat of Odcombe, an English traveller and mild eccentric.

History

The book is an account of a journey undertaken, much of it on foot, in 1608 through France, Italy, Germany, and other European countries by Thomas Coryat of Odcombe. Among other things, it introduced the use of the fork to England[1] and, in its support of continental travel, helped to popularize the idea of the Grand Tour that rose in popularity later in the century. It represents a contemporary account of the music of Giovanni Gabrieli performed in the Scuola di San Rocco. It was likely the earliest English rendering of the legend of William Tell. It was only twice reprinted before modern facsimiles (1776 & 1905, those including the later trip to Persia & India, where Coryat died), and the first edition is quite rare today.

Coryat (sometimes also spelled "Coryate" or "Coriat") conceived of the 1,975-mile (3,175 km) voyage to Venice and back in order to write the subsequent travelogue dedicated to Henry, Prince of Wales, at whose court he was regarded as somewhat of a buffoon and jester, rather than the wit and intellectual he considered himself. The extent to which Coryat invited such ridicule in pursuit of patronage and court favor is unclear.[2] The title, however, implies the use of crudity related to "imperfectly digested" or "indigestible" (Oxford English Dictionary).

"Commendatory" verses

A custom of Renaissance humanists was to contribute commendatory verses that would preface the works of their friends. In the case of this book, a playful inversion of this habit led to a poetic collection that firstly refused to take the author seriously; and then took on a life of its own. Prince Henry as Coryat's patron controlled the situation; and willy-nilly Coryat had to accept the publication with his book of some crudely or ingeniously false panegyrics. Further, the book was loaded with another work, Henry Peacham's Sights and Exhibitions of England, complete with a description of a perpetual motion machine by Cornelis Drebbel.[3]

Coryat, therefore, was jokingly mocked by a panel of contemporary wits and poets of his acquaintance. At the behest of the teenage prince, a series of verses was commissioned, of which 55 were finally included for publication. The authors of these verses, which included John Donne, Ben Jonson, Inigo Jones, and Sir Thomas Roe, among others, took especial liberties with personal anecdotes, finding Coryat's self-importance a ripe source of humour. The literary men known to Coryate were typically courtiers, or those whom he had met through Edward Phelips of the Middle Temple, a patron from Somerset.[4] A full list of the authors (translated from Latin originals) is given in the margin in a 1905 edition.[5]

There were poems in seven languages. Donne wrote in an English/French/Italian/Latin/Spanish macaronic language. Peacham's was in what he called "Utopian", which was partly gibberish, and the pseudonymous Glareanus Vadianus (tentatively John Sanford) wrote something close to literary nonsense. The contribution of John Hoskyns is called by Noel Malcolm "the first specimen of full-blown literary English nonsense poetry in the seventeenth century".[4]

Coryat had to take this all in good part. The book appeared with engravings by William Hole, and the author received a pension.[6] Shortly a pirate version of the verses appeared, published by Thomas Thorpe, under the title The Odcombian Banquet (1611).[7]

Modern analogues

British travel writer and humourist Tim Moore retraced the steps of Coryat's tour of Europe, as recounted in his book Continental Drifter.

References

  1. Strachan, Michael (2013) [2003]. "Coryate, Thomas (c. 1577-1617)". In Speake, Jennifer. Literature of Travel and Exploration: an Encyclopedia. Volume 1: A to F. London and New York: Routledge. pp. 285–287. ISBN 978-1-579-58247-0.
  2. Pritchard, R.E. (2014) [2004]. Odd Tom Coryate, The English Marco Polo. Stroud, Gloucestershire: The History Press. pp. 154–155. ISBN 978-0-7524-9514-9.
  3. Strong, Roy (2000). Henry Prince of Wales and England's Lost Renaissance. Pimlico. p. 162. ISBN 978-0-7126-6509-4.
  4. 1 2 Malcolm, Noel (1997). The Origins of English Nonsense. HarperCollins. p. 13. ISBN 978-0-0063-8844-9.
  5. Coryat, Thomas (1905). Coryat's Crudities. Glasgow: James MacLehose and Sons. pp. 22–121.
  6. Strong (2000), p. 24
  7. Kathman, David. "Thorpe, Thomas". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/27385. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)

Further reading

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 4/11/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.