Art in Theory. Группа авторов

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all of silver of the same size, also two rooms full of the armour of the people there, and all manner of wondrous weapons of theirs, harness and darts, very strange clothing, beds, and all kinds of wonderful objects of human use, much better worth seeing than prodigies. These things were all so precious that they are valued at 100,000 florins. All the days of my life I have seen nothing that rejoiced my heart so much as these things, for I saw amongst them wonderful works of art, and I marvelled at the subtle Ingenia of men in foreign lands. Indeed I cannot express all that I thought there.

      In the ale‐houses tobacco or a species of wound‐wort are also obtainable for one’s money, and the powder is lit in a small pipe, the smoke sucked into the mouth, and the saliva is allowed to run freely, after which a good draught of Spanish wine follows. This they regard as a curious medicine for defluctions, and as a pleasure, and the habit is so common with them, that they always carry the instruments on them, and light up on all occasions, at the play, in the taverns or elsewhere, drinking as well as smoking together, as we sit over wine, and it makes them riotous and merry. […] And they first learned of this medicine from the Indians, as Mr Cope a citizen of London who has spent much time in the Indies, informed me; I visited his collection with Herr Lobelius, a London physician, and saw the following objects.

      This same Mr Cope inhabits a fine house in the Snecgas; he led us into an apartment, stuffed with queer foreign objects in every corner, and amongst other things I saw there, the following seemed of interest.

      1 An African charm made of teeth.

      2 Many weapons, arrows and other things made of fishbone.

      3 Beautiful Indian plumes, ornaments and clothes from China.

      4 A handsome cap made out of goosefoots from China.

      5 A curious Javanese costume.

      6 A felt cloak from Arabia.

      7 Shoes from many strange lands.

      8 An Indian stone axe, like a thunder‐bolt.

      9 Beautiful coats from Arabia.

      10 A string instrument with but one string.

      11 Another string instrument from Arabia.

      12 The horn and tail of a rhinoceros, is a large animal like an elephant.

      13 A fan made out of a single leaf.

      14 Curious wooden and stone swords.

      15 The twisted horn of a bull seal.

      16 A round horn which had grown on an English woman’s forehead.

      17 An embalmed child (Mumia).

      18 Leathern weapons.

      19 The bauble and bells of Henry VIII’s fool.

      20 A unicorn’s tail.

      21 Inscribed paper made of bark.

      22 Indian stone shears.

      23 A thunder‐bolt dug out of a mast which was hit at sea during a storm; resembles the Judas stone.

      24 A stone against spleen disorders.

      25 Artful little Chinese box.

      26 Earthen pitchers from China.

      27 Flying rhinoceros.

      28 (Caterpillar) Hairy worm, sidopendra.

      29 Flies which glow at night in Virginia instead of lights, since there is often no day there for over a month.

      30 A small bone implement used in India for scratching oneself.

      31 The Queen of England’s seal.

      32 Turkish Emperor’s golden seal.

      33 Porcelain from China.

      34 Falcon’s head made of fine feathers.

      35 Many holy relics from a Spanish ship which he helped to capture.

      36 A Madonna made of Indian feathers.

      37 A Turkish pitcher and dishes.

      38 An Indian chain made of monkey teeth.

      39 A sea‐halcyon’s nest, sign of a calm sea.

      40 A pelican’s beak, the Egyptian bird that kills its young, and afterward tears open its breast and bathes them in its own blood, until they have come to life.

      41 A mirror which both reflects and multiplies objects.

      42 Crowns made of claws (ungulis).

      43 Heathen idols.

      44 Saddles from many strange lands; they were placed round the top on stands.

      45 Two beautifully dyed Indian sheepskins with silken sheen.

      46 Remora. A little fish which holds up or hinders boats from sailing when it touches them, likewise another species called ‘torpedo’ which petrifies and numbs the crews’ hands if it so much as touches the oars.

      47 A sea mouse (mus marinus).

      48 Numerous bone instruments.

      49 Reed pipes like those played by Pan.

      50 A long narrow Indian canoe, with the oars and sliding planks, hung from the ceiling of this room.

      He possessed besides many old heathen coins, fine pictures, all kinds of corals and sea‐plants in abundance. There are also other people in London interested in curios, but this gentleman is superior to them all for strange objects, because of the Indian voyage he carried out with such zeal.

      Montaigne’s essays have become a byword for an early modern form of enlightened humanism. Recent scholarship has, however, tended to situate Montaigne more firmly within the beliefs and conventions of his own day than to see in him

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