The Closet of Sir Kenelm Digby Knight Opened

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by Kenelm Digby

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Title: The Closet of Sir Kenelm Digby Knight Opened

Author: Kenelm Digby

Editor: Anne MacDonell

Release Date: August 5, 2005 [EBook #16441]

Language: English

Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1

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[Illustration: Sir Kenelm Digby Knight. After the Painting by Sir Anthony

Vandyke in His Majesty's Collection at Windsor Castle]

THE CLOSET OF SIR KENELM DIGBY KNIGHT OPENED:

NEWLY EDITED, WITH INTRODUCTION, NOTES, AND GLOSSARY, BY ANNE MACDONELL

LONDON: PHILIP LEE WARNER

38 ALBEMARLE STREET, W. 1910

The design on the front binding of this volume reproduces a contemporary

Binding (possibly by le Gascon?) from the library of the Author, whose arms

it embodies.

CONTENTS

PAGE

INTRODUCTION ix

THE CLOSET OF SIR KENELM DIGBY OPENED:

TITLE PAGE OF THE FIRST EDITION 1

TO THE READER 3

RECEIPTS FOR MEAD, METHEGLIN, AND OTHER DRINKS 5

COOKERY RECEIPTS 111

THE TABLE 263

APPENDIX I. SOME ADDITIONAL RECEIPTS 271

II. THE POWDER OF SYMPATHY 272

III. LIST OF THE HERBS, FLOWERS, &C.,

REFERRED TO IN THE TEXT 274

NOTES 277

GLOSSARY 283

INDEX OF RECEIPTS 287

_The frontispiece is a reproduction in photogravure after the portrait of

Sir Kenelm Digby by Sir Anthony Vandyke in His Majesty's Collection at

Windsor Castle, by permission._

INTRODUCTION

With the waning of Sir Kenelm Digby's philosophic reputation his name has

not become obscure. It stands, vaguely perhaps, but permanently, for

something versatile and brilliant and romantic. He remains a perpetual type

of the hero of romance, the double hero, in the field of action and the

realm of the spirit. Had he lived in an earlier age he would now be a

mythological personage; and even without the looming exaggeration and

glamour of myth he still imposes. The men of to-day seem all of little

stature, and less consequence, beside the gigantic creature who made his

way with equal address and audacity in courts and councils, laboratories

and ladies' bowers.

So when, in a seventeenth-century bookseller's advertisement, I lighted on

a reference to the curious compilation of receipts entitled _The Closet of

Sir Kenelm Digby Opened_, having the usual idea of him as a great

gentleman, romantic Royalist, and somewhat out-of-date philosopher, I was

enough astonished at seeing his name attached to what seemed to me, in my

ignorance, outside even his wide fields of interest, to hunt for the book

without delay, examine its contents, and inquire as to its authenticity. Of

course I found it was not unknown. Though the _Dictionary of National

Biography_ omits any reference to it, and its name does not occur in Mr.

Carew Hazlitt's _Old Cookery Books_, Dr. Murray quotes it in his great

Dictionary, and it is mentioned and discussed in _The Life of Digby by One

of his Descendants_. But Mr. Longueville treats it therein with too scant

deference. One of a large and interesting series of contemporary books of

the kind, its own individual interest is not small; and I commend it with

confidence to students of seventeenth-century domestic manners. To

apologise for it, to treat it as if it were some freak, some unowned sin of

Digby's, would be the greatest mistake. On the contrary, its connection

with his life and career is of the closest; and I make bold to assert that

of all his works, with the doubtful exception of his _Memoirs_, it is the

one best worth reprinting. It is in no spirit of irony that I say of him

who in his own day was looked on almost as Bacon's equal, who was the

friend of Bacon, Galileo, Descartes, Harvey, Ben Jonson, Cromwell, and all

the great spirits of his time, the intimate of kings, and the special

friend of queens, that his memory should be revived for his skill in making

drinks, and his interest in his own and other folks' kitchens. If to the

magnificent and protean Sir Kenelm must now be added still another side, if

he must appear not only as gorgeous Cavalier, inmate of courts,

controversialist, man of science, occultist, privateer, conspirator, lover

and wit, but as _bon viveur_ too, he is not the ordinary _bon viveur_, who

feasts at banquets prepared by far away and unconsidered menials. His

interest in cookery--say, rather, his passion for it--was in truth an

integral part of his philosophy, and quite as serious as his laboratory

practice at Gresham College and Paris. But to prove what may seem an

outrageous exaggeration, we must first run over the varied story of his

career; and then _The Closet Opened_ will be seen to fall into its due and

important place.

Kenelm Digby owed a good deal to circumstances, but he owed most of all to

his own rich nature. His family was ancient and honourable. Tiltons

originally, they took their later name in Henry III's time, on the

acquisition of some property in Lincolnshire, though in Warwickshire and

Rutland most of them were settled. Three Lancastrian Digby brothers fell at

Towton, seven on Bosworth Field. To his grandfather, Sir Everard the

philosopher, he was mentally very much akin, much more so than to his

father, another of the many Sir Everards, and the most notorious one. Save

for his handsome person and the memory of a fervent devotion to the

Catholic faith, which was to work strongly in him after he came to mature

years, he owed little or nothing to that most unhappy young man, surely the

foolishest youth who ever blundered out of the ways of private virtue into

conspiracy and crime. Kenelm, his elder son, born July 11, 1603, was barely

three years old when his father, the most guileless and the most obstinate

of the Gunpowder Plotters, died on the scaffold. The main part of the

family wealth, as the family mansion Gothurst--now Gayhurst--in

Buckinghamshire, came from Sir Everard's wife, Mary Mulsho; and probably

that is one reason why James I acceded to the doomed man's appeal that his

widow and children should not be reduced to beggary. Kenelm, in fact,

entered on his active career with an income of £3000 a year; but even its

value in those days did not furnish a youth of such varied ambitions and

such magnificent exterior over handsomely for his journey through the

world. His childhood was spent under a cloud. He was bred by a mother whose

life was broken and darkened, and whose faith, barely tolerated, would

naturally keep her apart from the more favoured persons of the kingdom.

Kenelm might have seemed destined to obscurity; but there was that about

the youth that roused interest; and even the timid King James was attracted

by him into a magnanimous forgetfulness of his father's offence.

Nevertheless, he could never have had the easy destiny of other young men

of his class, unless he had been content to be a simple country gentleman;

and from the first his circumstances and his restless mind dictated his

career, which had always something in it of the brilliant adventurer.

Another branch of the Digbies rose as the Buckinghamshire family fell. It

was a John Digby, afterwards Earl of Bristol, who carried the news of the

conspirators' design on the Princess Elizabeth. King James's gratitude was

a ladder of promotion, which would have been firmer had not this Protestant

Digby incurred the dislike of the royal favourite Buckingham. But in 1617

Sir John was English ambassador in Madrid; and it may have been to get the

boy away from the influence of his mother and her Catholic friends that

this kinsman, always well disposed towards him, and anxious for his

advancement, took him off to Spain when he was fourteen, and kept him there

for a year. Nor was his mother's influence unmeddled with otherwise. During

some of the years of his minority at least, Laud, then Dean of Gloucester,

was his tutor. Tossed to and fro between the rival faiths, he seems to have

regarded them both impartially, or indifferently, with an occasional

adherence to the one that for the moment had the better exponent.

His education was that of a dilettante. A year in Spain, in Court and

diplomatic circles, was followed by a year at Oxford, where Thomas Allen,

the mathematician and occultist, looked after his studies. Allen "quickly

discerned the natural strength of his faculties, and that spirit of

penetration which is so seldom met with in persons of his age." He felt he

had under his care a young Pico di Mirandola. It may have been now he made

his boyish translation of the _Pastor Fido_, and his unpublished version of

Virgil's _Eclogues_. As to the latter, the quite unimportant fact that he

made one at all I offer to future compilers of Digby biographies. Allen

till his death remained his friend and admirer, and bequeathed to him his

valuable library. The MSS. part of it Digby presented to the Bodleian. A

portion of the rest he seems to have kept; and though it is said his

English library was burnt by the Parliamentarians, it seems not unlikely

that some of Allen's books were among his collection at Paris sold after

his death by the King of France.

But Kenelm was restlessly longing to taste life outside academic circles,

and already he was hotly in love with his old playmate, now grown into

great beauty, Venetia Anastasia Stanley, daughter of Edward Stanley of

Tonge, in Shropshire, and granddaughter of the Earl of Northumberland. If I

could connect the beautiful Venetia with this cookery book, I should

willingly linger over the tale of her striking and brief career. But though

the elder Lady Digby contributed something to _The Closet Opened_, there is

no suggestion that it owes a single receipt to the younger. Above Kenelm in

station as she was, he could hardly have aspired to her save for her

curiously forlorn situation. Mother-less, and her father a recluse, she was

left to bring herself up, and to bestow her affections where she might. To

Kenelm's ardour she responded readily; and he philandered about her for a

year or two. But his mother would hear nothing of the match; and at

seventeen he was sent out on the grand tour, the object of which, we learn

from his _Memoirs_, was "to banish admiration, which for the most part

accompanieth home-bred minds, and is daughter of ignorance." Kenelm proved

better than the ideal set before him; and the more he travelled the more he

admired.

Into this tale of love and adventure I must break with the disturbing

intelligence that the handsome and romantic and spirited youth was in all

probability already procuring material for the compilation on _Physick and

Chirurgery_, which Hartman, his steward, published after his death. It was

not as a middle-aged _bon viveur_, nor as an elderly hypochondriac, that he

began his medical studies, but in the heyday of youth, and quite seriously,

too. The explanation brings with it light on some other of his interests as

well. When he set out on the grand tour, his head full of love and the

prospects of adventure, he found the spare energy to write from London to a

good friend of his, the Rev. Mr. Sandy, Parson of Great Lindford. In this

letter--the original is in the Ashmolean--Kenelm asks for the good parson's

prayers, and sends him "a manuscript of elections of divers good authors."

Mr. Longueville, who gives the letter, has strangely failed to identify

Sandy with the famous Richard Napier, parson, physician, and astrologer, of

the well-known family of Napier of Merchistoun. His father, Alexander

Napier, was often known as "Sandy"; and the son held the alternative names

also. Great Lindford is two and a half miles from Gothurst; and it is

possible that Protestant friends, perhaps Laud himself, urged on the good

parson the duty of looking after the young Catholic gentleman. Sandy

(Napier) was also probably his mother's medical adviser: he certainly acted

as such to some members of her family. A man of fervent piety--his "knees

were horny with frequent praying," says Aubrey--he was, besides, a zealous

student of alchemy and astrology, a friend of Dee, of Lilly, and of

Booker. Very likely Kenelm had been entrusted to Allen's care at Oxford on

the recommendation of Sandy; for Allen, one of his intimates, was a serious

occultist, who, according to his servant's account, "used to meet the

spirits on the stairs like swarms of bees." With these occupations Napier

combined a large medical practice in the Midlands, the proceeds of which he

gave to the poor, living ascetically himself. His favourite nephew, Richard