“To see sub exuviis leonis onagrum, a filthy
loathsome carcass, a Gorgon’s head puffed up by parasites, assume this unto
himself, glorious titles, in worth an infant, a Cuman ass, a painted sepulchre,
an Egyptian temple? To see a withered face, a diseased, deformed, cankered
complexion, a rotten carcass, a viperous mind, and Epicurean soul set out with
orient pearls, jewels, diadems, perfumes, curious elaborate works, as proud of
his clothes as a child of his new coats [and so on for another sixty-one words
and three catalogs for the rest of the paragraph].”
Coluccio
Salutati (1331-1406) was a leader of the Italian humanist awakening in the
generation after Petrarch and Boccaccio. He served as chancellor of the
Florentine Republic and was author of On
the World and Religious Life (pub. c.
1381; trans. Tina Marshall, 2014). Books in the I Tatti Renaissance Library series,
published by Harvard University Press, are beautiful to look at, hold and read.
English translation on the right faces the Latin original on the left. Before I
started reading this volume I had never heard of Salutati. He too is a master
of the literary catalog two centuries before Burton.
The book was
written for a friend of Salutati’s, Niccolò Lapi of Uzzano, a lawyer who left secular
life to enter the Camaldulensian monastery of Santa Maria degli Angeli in Florence.
Lapi asked him to write a treatise supporting his decision and encouraging him
to persevere in his monastic rigors. In his introduction to the volume, Ronald G. Witt
notes that the medieval strain in Salutati’s thought sometimes verges on the
Manichean, as in this epical list:
“The world,
then, is the most unwholesome hold of turpitude, deceptive birdlime, baleful
happiness, false joy, empty exultation, a threshing floor of tribulations, a
pit of miseries, shipwreck of virtues, kindling for evils, incitement to crime,
a blind journey, a rugged path, a ravine of plots, a horrible prison, a stage
of iniquities, an arena of labors, a theater of disgraces, a spectacle of
wrongs, a horrible precipice, a house of anxieties, a turbid sea, a vale of
calamities, the home of hardships, the mirror of vanities, the corruption of
minds, the snare of souls, the parent of death, the inferno of the living, and
a pile of transient things.”
Many items
on the list remind me of unlikely but sorely needed collective nouns, as in “a
threshing floor of tribulations.” Here is one more sample of Salutati’s
list-making: “The world is indeed a factory of vices. . . . Here are committed
acts of pleasurable fornication, deflowering debauchery, violent rapes, acts of
incest corrupting reverence for blood ties, adulteries that plot against the
nuptial bed, sacrilegious pollution of women dedicated to God, wicked sexual
intercourse with contrived sterility, and whatever the monstrous poison of sex
excites in us.”
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