Monday, April 4, 2011

Oxford, Comedy, and 'This Galant Je Ne Sais Quois'

[The] galant air does not consist precisely in having a great deal of wit [esprit], judgment and knowledge; it is something so particular and so difficult to acquire when one does not have it, that one does not know where to find it or to look for it...It is true that there is no greater agrément in the realm of wit than this galant and natural character that is capable of giving a pleasing je ne sais quois to things that are the least capable of pleasing, and adds a certain secret charm to the most everyday conversations that satisfies and diverts. Finally, this galant je ne sais quois - which pervades every part of the person who possesses it both in their wit, in their words, in their actions and even in their dress - this is what the honnêtes gens achieve and what makes them liked...The galant air in conversation consists principally in thinking of things in an easy and natural manner, leaning more towards gentleness and playfulness than towards the serious and brusque, and finally *speaking simply and in proper terms without affectation*. -- Mlle de Scudéry, Le Grand Cyrus



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A DISCOURSE OF WIT.
BY David Abercromby, M. D.
Qui velit ingenio cedere rarus erit.
LONDON, Printed for John Weld at the Crown between the two Tem|ple Gates in Fleetstreet, 1686.




3. I cannot then pretend to give you a true and genuine Notion of Wit, but an imperfect, and rude inchoate description thereof, yet so general and comprehensive, that it contains all such Creatures, as without any violence done to the Word, we may truely call Witty. Yet shall I not say with a great Man of this Age, that Wit is, un je ne scay quoy, I know not what: For this would be to say no|thing at all, and an easie answer to all difficulties, and no solution to any. Neither shall I call it a certain Liveliness, or Vivacity of the Mind inbred, or radicated in its Nature, which the Latines seem to insinuate by the word Ingenium; nor the subtlest operation of the Soul above the reach of meer matter, which perhaps is mean't by the French, who concieve Wit to be a Spiritual thing, or a Spi|rit L'esprit. Nor with others, that 'tis a certain acuteness of Undestanding, some men possess in a higher degree, the Life of discourse, as Salt, with|out which nothing is relished, a Ce|lestial Fire, a Spiritual Light, and what not. Such and the like Expressi|ons contain more of Pomp than of Truth, and are fitter to make us talkative on this Subject, than to en|lighten our Understandings.

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It seems that French court culture of the seventeenth century had begun to adopt the classical values of simplicity and self-restraint. Even in England, Ben Jonson was eulogized as having ushered in a 'learned age' to replace the 'ignorant' one he found. If _Cynthia's Revels_ can be taken as a guide, aristocratic court culture of pre-civil war England  appears to have been less bound to 'rules' of correct behaviour.

FALKLAND, Jonsonus Virbius




...How in an IGNORANT, and learn'd age he swaid,

(Of which the first he found, the second made)

How He, when he could know it, reapt his Fame,

And long out-liv'd the envy of his Name:



Humanist scholars Gabriel Harvey attacked precious manners as deformed and ridiculous. Harvey's attack on Oxford, and Jonson's satirical depiction of courtly manners in _Cynthia's Revels_ appear similar to the negative depictions of 'precious' manners in seventeenth century France:
"False minds seek to distinguish themselves by singularities; that is, they do not have a refined understanding of true merit and of that which can please reasonable people. They only like outrageous and extraordinary things, when good connoisseurs are only touched by what is natural. Phenice [a précieuse] believes that she would lose part of her reputation if she humanized herself and spoke as others do. It seems that she fears she will be understood and searches for elaborate turns of phrase and big words to express the most simple things. There are people whose lives are but a perpetual caprice and who are naturally enemies of order: the greatest pleasures do not move them if they are not bizarre or extravagant...they do not eat, dress, or house themselves like others; they exceed the ordinary manners of the rest of men in everything they do, and they want to distinguish themselves by the extravagance of a bizarre and particular taste." -- Morvan de Bellegarde

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Satirizing the affected manners of the Earl of Oxford:


Speculum Tuscanismi (1580) Gabriel Harvey


Since Galateo came in, and Tuscanism gan usurp,

Vanity above all: villainy next her, stateliness Empress

No man but minion, stout, lout, plain, swain, quoth a Lording:

No words but valorous, no works but womanish only.

For life Magnificoes, not a beck but glorious in show,

In deed most frivolous, not a look but Tuscanish always.

His cringing side neck, eyes glancing, fisnamy smirking,

With forefinger kiss, and brave embrace to the footward.

Large bellied Cod-pieced doublet, uncod-pieced half hose,

Straight to the dock like a shirt, and close to the britch like a diveling.

A little Apish flat couched fast to the pate like an oyster,

French camarick ruffs, deep with a whiteness starched to the purpose.

Every one A per se A, his terms and braveries in print,

Delicate in speech, quaint in array: conceited in all points,

In Courtly guiles a passing singular odd man,

For Gallants a brave Mirror, a Primrose of Honour,

A Diamond for nonce, a fellow peerless in England.

Not the like discourser for Tongue, and head to be found out,

Not the like resolute man for great and serious affairs,

Not the like Lynx to spy out secrets and privities of States,

Eyed like to Argus, eared like to Midas, nos'd like to Naso,

Wing'd like to Mercury, fittst of a thousand for to be employ'd,

This, nay more than this, doth practice of Italy in one year.

None do I name, but some do I know, that a piece of a twelve month

Hath so perfited outly and inly both body, both soul,

That none for sense and senses half matchable with them.

A vulture's smelling, Ape's tasting, sight of an eagle,

A spider's touching, Hart's hearing, might of a Lion.

Compounds of wisdom, wit, prowess, bounty, behavior,

All gallant virtues, all qualities of body and soul.

O thrice ten hundred thousand times blessed and happy,

Blessed and happy travail, Travailer most blessed and happy.

Tell me in good sooth, doth it not too evidently appear

that this English poet wanted but a good pattern before his eyes,

as it might be some delicate and choice elegant Poesy

of good Master Sidney's or Master Dyer's

(our very Castor and Pollux for such and many greater matters)

when this trim gear was in the matching?



'Tell me in good sooth, doth it not too evidently appeare, that this English Poet wanted but a good PATTERNE before his eyes, as it might be some delicate, and choyce elegant Poesie of good M. Sidneys, or M. Dyers (ouer very Castor, & Pollux for such and many greater matters) when this trimme geere was in hatching: Much like some Gentlewooman, I coulde name in England, who by all Phisick and Physiognomie too, might as well have brought forth all goodly faire CHILDREN, as they have now some ylfavoured and DEFORMED, had they at the tyme of their Conception, had in sight, the amiable and gallant beautifull Pictures of ADONIS, Cupido, Ganymedes, or the like, which no doubt would have wrought such deepe impression in their fantasies, and imaginations, as their children, and perhappes their Childrens children to, myght have thanked them for, as long as they shall have Tongues in their heades."

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Shakespeare, dedication V&A:


But if the first HEIRE of my inuention proue DEFORMED, I shall be sorie it had so noble a god-father : and neuer after eare so barren a land, for feare it yeeld me still so bad a haruest, I leaue it to your Honourable suruey, and your Honor to your hearts content, vvhich I wish may alvvaies ansvvere your ovvne vvish, and the vvorlds hopefull expectation.

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Jonson, Affected Language

De vere argutis. - I do hear them say often some men are not witty, because they are not everywhere witty; than which nothing is more foolish. If an eye or a nose be an excellent part in the face, therefore be all eye or nose! I think the eyebrow, the forehead, the cheek, chin, lip, or any part else are as necessary and natural in the place. But now nothing is good that is natural; right and natural language seems to have least of the wit in it; that which is writhed and tortured is counted the more exquisite. Cloth of bodkin or tissue must be embroidered; as if no face were fair that were not powdered or painted! no beauty to be had but in wresting and writhing our own tongue! Nothing is fashionable till it be DEFORMED; and this is to write like a gentleman. All must be affected and PREPOSTEROUS as our gallants’ clothes, sweet-bags, and night-dressings, in which you would think our men lay in, like ladies, it is so curious. - Jonson, _Discoveries_
 
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...It is the end of playing, says Hamlet, to show the age in which we live, and the body of the time, it's form and pressure; to delineate exactly the MANNERS of the age, and the particular HUMOR of the day. (Malone)


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C Y N T H I A 'S R E V E L S,


O R,

The Fountain of Self-Love.

TO THE

SPECIAL FOUNTAIN of MANNERS,

The Court.

Thou art a Bountiful and Brave Spring, and waterest all the Noble Plants of this Island. In thee the whole Kingdom dresseth it self, and is ambitious to use thee as her Glass. BEWARE THEN THOU RENDER MENS FIGURES TRULY, and teach them no less to hate their DEFORMITIES, than to love their Forms: For, to Grace, there should come Reverence; and no Man can call that Lovely, which is not also Venerable. It is not Powd'ring, Perfuming, and every day smelling of the Taylor, that converteth to a Beautiful Object: *but a Mind shining through any Sute*, which needs no False Light, either of Riches or Honours, to help it. Such shalt thou find some here, even in the Reign of C Y N T H I A, (a C R I T E S and an A R E T E.) Now, under thy P H oe B U S, it will be thy Province to make more: Except thou desirest to have thy Source mix draw upon thee as welcom a Discovery of thy Days, as was then made of her Nights.

Thy Servant, but not Slave,

BEN. JOHNSON.

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Jonson, Cynthia's Revels


He that is with him is Amorphus a Traveller, one so made out of the mixture and shreds of forms, that himself is truly DEFORM'D. He walks most commonly with a Clove or Pick-tooth in his Mouth, he is the very mint of Complement, all his Behaviours are printed, his Face is another Volume of Essayes; and his Beard an Aristrachus.

(Jonson, Cynthia's Revels,III,ii)

Amorphus. That's good, but how Pythagorical?

Phi. I, Amorphus. Why Pythagorical Breeches?

Amo. O most kindly of all, 'tis a conceit of that fortune,

I am bold to hug my Brain for.

Pha. How is't, exquisite Amorphus?

Amo. O, I am rapt with it, 'tis so fit, so proper,

so happy. --

Phi. Nay do not rack us thus?

Amo. I never truly relisht my self before. Give me

your Ears. Breeches Pythagorical, by reason of their trans-

migration into several shapes.

Mor. Most rare, in sweet troth.


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Art out-dooing Nature:


De Vere:

For what more difficult, more noble, or more magnificent task has anyone ever undertaken than our author Castiglione, who has drawn for us the FIGURE and model of a courtier, a work to which nothing can be added, in which there is no redundant word, a PORTRAIT which we shall recognize as that of a highest and most perfect type of man. And so, although NATURE herself has made nothing perfect in every detail, yet THE MANNERS OF MEN exceed in dignity that with which NATURE has endowed them; and he who SURPASSES others has here SURPASSED himself and has even OUT-DONE nature, which by no one has ever been SURPASSED.

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Male deformities’: NARCISSUS and the Reformation of Courtly Manners in Cynthia’s Revels in Ovid & the Renaissance Body


By Goran V Stanivukovic

Mario Digangi

(snip)

...N this essay I want to pursue such an analysis by focusing on Ben Jonson’s early comedy Cynthia’s Revels (1600), which offers particular insight into the social and political implications of the Narcissus myth for early modern English culture. Originally entered in the Stationer’s Register as NARCISSUS, or the fountain of self-love, this quirky satire of courtly manners represents Jonson’s ‘only extended use of Ovidian material.: Jonson’s uncharacteristic recourse to Ovidian subjects in Cynthia’s Revels suggests his recognition of the Narcissus myth’s theatrical viability as a vehicle for satire. While Narcissus never appears as a character in the play, the Narcissus myth provides Jonson with vivid material for exposing the transgressive bodily practices of unauthorized courtiers, especially through the character of Amorphous (“the deformed”), whose affected manners violate orthodox prescriptions for male aristocratic comportment. The play’s ridicule of courtly affectation thus accords with early modern interpretations of the Narcissus myth that primarily associate self-love not with homoerotic desire but with effeminate MANNERS: a clear sign of social, economic and political transgression. By contrast, the virtuously ‘masculine’ comportment of the true gentleman, according to a particular strain of early modern political ideology, justifies his status and exercise of power. Exposing illegitimate courtiers as effeminate narcissists, Cynthia’s Revels reveals the importance of an ideology of ‘civilized’ masculinity to early-seventeenth-century constructions of *political legitimacy*.


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Upon Ben: Johnson, the most excellent of Comick Poets.


Mirror of Poets! Mirror of our Age!

Which her wholE Face beholding on thy stage,

Pleas'd and displeas'd with her owne faults endures,

A remedy, like Those whom Musicke cures,

Thou not alone those various inclinations,

Which Nature gives to Ages, Sexes, Nations,

Hast traced with thy All-resembling Pen,

But all that custome hath impos'd on Men,

Or ill-got Habits, which distort them so,

That scarce the Brother can the Brother know,

Is represented to the wondring Eyes,

Of all that see or read thy Comedies.

Whoever in those Glasses lookes may finde,

The spots return'd, or graces of his minde;

And by the helpe of so divine an Art,

At leisure view, and dresse his nobler part.

*NARCISSUS conzen'd by that flattering Well,

Which nothing could but of his beauty tell,

Had here discovering the DEFORM'D estate

Of his FOND MINDE, preserv'd himselfe with hate*,

But Vertue too, as well as Vice is clad,

In flesh and blood so well, that Plato had

Beheld what his high Fancie once embrac'd,

Vertue with colour, speech and motion grac'd.

The sundry Postures of Thy copious Muse,

Who would expresse a thousand tongues must use,

Whose Fates no lesse peculiar then thy Art,

For as thou couldst all characters impart,

So none can render thine, who still escapes,

Like Proteus in variety of shapes,

Who was nor this nor that, but all we finde,

And all we can imagine in mankind.

E. Waller

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Alciato's Book of Emblems


Emblem 69

Self-love

Because your figure pleased you too much, Narcissus, it was changed into a flower, a plant of known senselessness. Self-love is the withering and destruction of natural power which brings and has brought ruin to many learned men, who having thrown away the method of the ancients seek new doctrines and pass on nothing but their own fantasies.

http://www.mun.ca/alciato/e069.html
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Cartwright, William, Jonsonus Virbius


...Blest life of Authors, unto whom we owe

Those that we have, and those that we want too:

Th'art all so good, that reading makes thee worse,

And to have writ so well's thine onely curse.

Secure then of thy merit, thou didst hate

That servile base dependance upon fate:

Successe thou ne'r thoughtst vertue, nor that fit,

Which chance, and th'ages fashion did make hit;

*Excluding those from life in after-time*,

Who into Po'try first brought luck and rime:

Who thought the peoples breath good ayre: sty'ld name

What was but noise; and getting Briefes for fame

Gathered the many's suffrages, and thence

Made commendation a benevolence:

THY thoughts were their owne Lawrell, and did win

That best applause of being crown'd within..

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From To the Deceased Author of these Poems (William Cartwright)

by Jasper Mayne

…And as thy Wit was like a Spring, so all

The soft streams of it we may Chrystall call:

No cloud of Fancie, no mysterious stroke,

No Verse like those which antient Sybils spoke;

No Oracle of Language, to amaze

The Reader with a dark, or Midnight Phrase,

Stands in thy Writings, which are all pure Day,

A cleer, bright Sunchine, and the mist away.

That which Thou wrot’st was sense, and that sense good,

Things not first written, and then understood:

Or if sometimes thy Fancy soar’d so high

As to seem lost to the unlearned Eye,

‘Twas but like generous Falcons, when high flown,

Which mount to make the Quarrey more their own.

For thou to Nature had’st joyn’d Art, and skill.

In Thee Ben Johnson still HELD Shakespeare’s Quill:

A Quill, rul’d by sharp Judgement, and such Laws,

As a well studied Mind, and Reason draws.

Thy Lamp was cherish’d with suppolied of Oyle,

Fetch’d from the Romane and the Graecian soyle. (snip)

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hold

4. To impose restraint upon; to limit in motion or action; to

bind legally or morally; to confine; to restrain.

We can not hold mortality's strong hand. --Shak.

Death! what do'st? O,hold thy blow. --Grashaw.

He hat not sufficient judgment and self-command to

hold his tongue. --Macaulay.

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He was, indeed, honest, and of an open and free nature, had an excellent phantasy, brave notions, and gentle expressions, wherein he flowed with that facility that sometimes it was necessary he should be *stopped*. "Sufflaminandus erat," as Augustus said of Haterius. His wit was in his own power; would the *rule* of it had been so, too.


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...No rotten talke brokes for a laugh; no page


Commenc'd man by th'instructions of thy stage;

No bargaining line there; no provoc'tive verse;

Nothing but what Lucretia might rehearse;

No need to make good count'nance ill, and use

The plea of strict life for a looser Muse:

No Woman rul'd thy quill: we can descry

No verse borne under any Cynthia's eye:

Thy Starre was Judgement onely, and right sense,

Thy selfe being to thy selfe an influence.

Stout beauty is thy grace: Sterne pleasures do

Present delights, but mingle horrours too:

thy Muse doth thus like Joves fierce girle appeare,

With a faire hand, but grasping of a Speare...

William Cartwright, Jonsonus Virbius

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-- CARTWRIGHT, WILLIAM, 1647,


Upon the Dramatick Poems of Mr. John Fletcher.

...Shakespeare to thee was DULL, whose best jest lyes

I'th Ladies questions, and the Fooles replyes; [70]

Old fashion'd wit, which walkt from town to town

In turn'd Hose, which our fathers call'd the Clown;

Whose wit our nice times would obsceannesse call,

And which made Bawdry passe for Comicall:

Nature was all his Art, thy veine was free

As his, but without his scurility...

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Mirth Making_, Chris Holcomb


In his Ethics, Aristotle suggests that *changes in stylistic and substantive predilections indicate advances in civilization*. While enumerating the differences between the jesting of a buffoon and a witty gentleman, Aristotle compares each character type to Old and New Comedy, respectively: "The difference (between a buffoon and a gentleman) may be seen by comparing the old and modern comedies; the earlier dramatists found their fun in obscenity, the modern prefer innuendo, which marks a great advance in decorum; (4.8.6). This comparison suggest that smutty humor is less civilized than the more refined humor delivered through innuendo. (footnote pp. 199-200)

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Jonson, _Timber_


The parts of a comedy and tragedy. - The parts of a comedy are the same with a tragedy, and the end is partly the same, for they both delight and teach; the comics are called διδασκαλοι, of the Greeks no less than the tragics.

Aristotle. - Plato. - Homer. - Nor is the moving of laughter always the end of comedy; that is rather a fowling for the people' s delight, or their fooling. For, as Aristotle says rightly, the moving of laughter is a fault in comedy, a kind of turpitude that depraves some part of a man' s nature without a disease. As a wry face without pain moves laughter, or a deformed vizard, or a rude clown dressed in a lady' s habit and using her actions; we dislike and scorn such representations which made the ancient philosophers ever think laughter unfitting in a wise man. And this induced Plato to esteem of Homer as a sacrilegious person, because he presented the gods sometimes laughing. As also it is divinely said of Aristotle, that to seen ridiculous is a part of DISHONESTY, and foolish.

The wit of the old comedy. - So that what either in the words or sense of an author, or in the language or actions of men, is awry or depraved does strangely stir mean affections, and provoke for the most part to laughter. And therefore it was clear that all *insolent and obscene* speeches, jests upon the best men, injuries to particular persons, perverse and sinister sayings (and the rather unexpected) in the old comedy did move laughter, especially where it did imitate any DISHONESTY, and SCURRILITY came forth in the place of wit, which, who understands the nature and genius of laughter cannot but perfectly know.

Aristophanes. - Plautus. - Of which Aristophanes affords an ample harvest, having not only outgone Plautus or any other in that kind, but expressed all the moods and figures of what is ridiculous oddly. In short, as vinegar is not accounted good until the wine be corrupted, so jests that are true and natural seldom raise laughter with the beast the multitude. *They love nothing that is right and proper. The farther it runs from reason or possibility with them the better it is*.

Socrates. - Theatrical wit. - What could have made them laugh, like to see Socrates presented, that example of all good life, honesty, and virtue, to have him hoisted up with a pulley, and there play the philosopher in a basket; measure how many foot a flea could skip geometrically, by a just scale, and edify the people from the engine. This was theatrical wit, right stage jesting, and relishing a playhouse, invented for scorn and laughter; whereas, if it had savoured of equity, truth, perspicuity, and candour, to have tasted a wise or a learned palate, - spit it out presently! this is bitter and profitable: this instructs and would inform us: what need we know any thing, that are nobly born, more than a horse-race, or a hunting- match, our day to break with citizens, and such innate mysteries?

The cart. - This is truly leaping from the stage to the tumbril again, reducing all wit to the original dung-cart.

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Francis Meres adjudged Oxford as one of 'the best for Comedy amongst vs'

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Scurra/Shakespeare/Oxford


Mirth Making. The Rhetorical Discourse on Jesting in Early Modern England


Chris Holcomb

...Associations between social status and certain forms of jesting appear as early as the Nicomachean Ethics, where Aristotle classifies different modes of jesting according to three social types: the boor, the buffoon, and the witty man of tact. Aristotle has little to say about boorish men except that they never say "anything funny themselves and take offense at those who do" (4.8.3) Instead, Aristotle dwells on differences between the buffoon and man of wit, and in differentiating these two social types, he associates indecorous jests with those of the lower-class buffoon and decorous ones with those of a gentleman. 'Those who go to excess in ridicule are thought to be buffoons or vulgar fellows, who itch to have their joke at all costs, and are more concerned to raise a laugh than to keep within the bounds of decorum' (4.8.3). The buffoon often jests in a 'servile' and often obscene fashion (4.8.5-6), he 'cannot resist a joke,' he will 'not keep his tongue off himself or anyone else, if he can raise a laugh,' and he 'will say things which a man of refinement would never say' (4.8.10). Those 'who jest with good taste,' by contrast, will say 'only the sort of things that are suitable to a virtuous man and a gentleman; (4.8.5). They prefer to jest by way of 'innuendo, which marks a great advance in decorum,' and they will never stoop so low in their jesting as to say anything 'unbecoming to a gentleman' (4.8.6-7). The line Aristotle draws here is not simply one between the indecorous and decorous; it is also one between the lower and upper classes. And while Aristotle couches his distinctions in more or less descriptive (although elitist) terms, they do have prescriptive force. If a speaker is to show himself as a 'man of refinement,' he must limit his jesting behaviours and avoid the excesses of the buffoon.

Cicero and Quintilian adopt Aristotle's method of classifying decorous and indecorous jests along class lines, and they both use the buffoon and well-bred man of tact to define forms of jesting befitting an orator (the boor, as often happens in everyday life, is left out of their discussions of jesting). But they add to the ranks of the buffoon (or SCURRA, in Latin) a cast of characters familiar from the Roman stage, street performances, and entertainments provided at a gentleman's dinner party - characters including the mime (mimus), pantomime (ethologus), and clown (sannio). Cicero says that 'an orator must avoid each of two dangers: he must not let his jesting become buffoonery or mere mimicking (scurrilis...aut mimicus)' (2.58.239). Like Aristotle's buffoon, the Latin scurra violates proprieties of time. Cicero says he jests "from morning to night, and without any reason at all" (2.60.245). He also shows no restraint in his selection of objects of ridicule, and his jests, like a scattergun, will often strike 'unintended victims' (2.60.245). He will even turn himself into an object of ridicule if he thinks he can raise a laugh (Quintilian, 6.3.82). Most important, the scurra is a member of the lower classes, a parasite who would often perform at a gentleman's dinner party for table scraps, and his antics almost always bespoke his lowly position. For all of these reasons, especially the last, Cicero and Quintilian repeatedly insist that orators avoid all likeness to buffoons, and toward this end, they offer a set of strictures limiting the jesting practices of orators so that those practices accord with the orator's gentlemanly status. With respect to proprieties of time, Cicero says, "Regard then to occasions, control and restraint of our actual raillery, and economy in bon-mots, will distinguish an orator from a buffoon (oratorem a scurra)" (2.60.247). As we have seen, orators should also be careful in their selection of comic butts and avoid targeting the excessively wretched or wicked and the well-beloved. Moreover, they must never turn themselves into objects of laughter for, as Quintilian says, "To make jokes against oneself is scarcely fit for any save professed buffoons and is strongly to be disapproved in an orator" (6.3.82). Presumable, orators should keep the audience's laughter off themselves and direct it only at their opponents. Above all, the orator should only jest in ways that befit a gentleman or liberalis. He should avoid obscenities in his jesting, which are 'not only degrading to a pubic speaker, but also hardly sufferable at a gentleman's dinner party (convivio liberorum)' (De oratore, 2.61.252), and 'scurrilous or brutal jests, although they may raise a laugh, are quite unworthy of a gentlman (liberali)' (Quintilian, 6.3.83). In an allusion to his famous formulation or the orator as a good man, or vir bonus, skilled in speaking, Quintilian sums up his attitudes toward buffoonery, a summation that will serve for Cicero's views on the subject as well: 'A good man (vir bonus) will see that everything he says is consistent with his dignity and the respectability of his character (dignitate ac verecundia); for we pay too dear for the laugh we raise if it is at the cost of our own integrity (probitatis)' (6.3.35). (Holcomb,pp.39-40)



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Probitas






Latin probitas HONESTY, probity, uprightness.





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"To My Book" by Ben Jonson





It will be looked for, book, when some but see

Thy title, Epigrams, and named of me,

Thou should'st be bold, licentious, full of gall,

Wormwood, and sulphur, sharp, and toothed withal;

Become a petulant thing, hurl ink, and wit,

As madmen stones: not caring whom they hit.

Deceive their malice, who could wish it so.

And by thy wiser temper, let men know

Thou are not covetous of least self-fame.

Made from the hazard of another's shame:

Much less with lewd, profane, and beastly phrase,

To catch the world's loose laughter, or VAIN gaze.

*He that DEPARTS with his own HONESTY

For VULGAR PRAISE, doth it too dearly buy.*