See
Thomas Urquhart
1611–1660
Introduction
Urquhart's Papers
The proud and eccentric Scottish knight Sir Thomas Urquhart (or Urchard, as his name was sometimes spelled), a writer perhaps best remembered as translator of Rabelais and who dreamed of a universal language, certainly claims a place among Britain's more colourful literary characters, with all his immodest exuberance, flamboyancy, and Quixotic zest for enterprise. He saw several of his works in verse and prose through the press during his lifetime, but, according to his own testimony, these were but a fragment of his actual literary achievement. When he was captured by Cromwell's forces after the Battle of Worcester in 1650, so he claims in his Jewel, the contents of three large trunks containing nearly three thousand sheets of his manuscripts (in 642 quinternions
) were ransacked, scattered … over the floor
and then borne away by the soldiers, some subsequently suffering the inexorable rage of Vulcan
, the tobacco pipes of the musketeers, or even the ultimate indignity of posterior uses
. This circumstance — exacerbated, perhaps, by the Commonwealth authorities' seizure of his papers in May 1652 — may, indeed, furnish at least one reason why so few of Urquhart's manuscripts, of any kind, can be recorded today.
One fortunate exception, however — and not the least striking autograph literary manuscript of the seventeenth century — is the huge, seemingly interminable folio volume of his sententious but coarse (and sometimes amusing) Epigrams (*
Letters and Documents
Sir Thomas's unmistakably bold, sprawling handwriting is found chiefly in seven extant letters by him, which are given entries below (*
A few other examples of Sir Thomas's hand have been recorded elsewhere, although not traceble at present. The editor of The Works of Sir Thomas Urquhart of Cromarty, Knight, printed for the Maitland Club (Edinburgh, 1834), records (p. x) the existence of a charter chest
of old papers and title-deeds of the House of Cromarty … in the possession of Urquhart of Craigston
, among them two unimportant private deeds which are subscribed by him
. He prints a facsimile of one of these signatures, a monogram of Th Urchard
, which, given the variant spelling, conforms to the elaborate style of signature on the first of the letters noted above and can therefore be confirmed as being that of the author.
The same facsimile signature is reproduced elsewhere. First of all it appears in 1899 in Willcock (p. iv), who records further (p. 57) the existence of a book from Urquhart's sequestered library containing his signature
— a very fragile
exemplum of Arthur Johnston's Latin poems, printed at Aberdeen by Raban, 1632 … in the possession of the Rev. J.B. Craven, Kirkwall
(see *
The legal signature next reappears in Hugh C.H. Candy, Milton, N.LL, and Sir Tho. Urquhart, The Library, 4th Ser. 14 (1933-4), 470-6 (p. 473), where, quite understandably, Candy has some difficulty in reconciling it to another, somewhat more conventional, signature of Tho. Urquhart
(which he reproduces on p. 472). There can, in fact, be no doubt about the authenticity of that discovered by Candy, which — from the clear evidence of his facsimile — conforms to those in Urquhart's letters (of which Candy was unaware). Urquhart's signature is here subscribed to an exemplum of an otherwise anonymous printed quarto pamphlet then in Candy's possession, Reasons why the Supreme Authority of the Three Nations (London, 1653) [Wing N6], a subscription which indicates fairly clearly that he was the author of this work (see *
The same monogram-signature, Th Urchard
, is reproduced also in Tayler, p. 44, where the document to which it is affixed is, in fact, identified as a legal paper whereby Urquhart appointed Adam Smith to be his servitor and special errands bearer
to Sir James Fraser, 1 April 1642, a document among family papers
. The muniments of the Urquhart family of Craigston, incorporating much relating to Cromarty, are now indeed preserved by the Urquhart family at Craigston Castle, Turriff, Aberdeenshire, and have been briefly calendared by the National Archives of Scotland (NRA (Scotland) 2570; NRA (London) 10739). It is quite likely that the document cited by Tayler is still among these muniments, possibly in one of the 17th-century bundles of legal documents such as Bundle 177. In addition to other items relating to him (such as a letter to Urquhart by the Magistrates of Taine, 5 May 1659), the NRA list mentions the presence in Bundle 190 of a letter of procuratory by Urquhart, narrating the history of a contract made by his father in 1635, and appointing his own brother, Alexander Urquhart of Dunglas, to act as his procurator for the redemption of lands as specified in that contract, the letter signed in London, 15 February 1643[/4]. The family muniments would presumably be worthy of further exploration by any future biographer of the author, as might, perhaps, be the Inverness Local Records
(records now in the custody of the Highland Council Archive, Inverness Library), where Tayler (p. 47) records the presence of an order by the committee of Royalist Lairds, concerning Sir James Fraser, signed by Urquhart and others, 24 February 1649[50].
A few other papers concerning Urquhart and his family (including
Abbreviations
- Jack & Lyall
- The Jewel, ed. R.D.S. Jack and R.J. Lyall (Edinburgh, 1983).
- Luttrell
- A Challenge from Sir Thomas Urquhart of Cromartie, [ed. C.H. Wilkinson], Luttrell Society Reprints No. 4 (Oxford, 1948).
- Tayler
- Henrietta Tayler, History of the Family of Urquhart (Aberdeen, 1946).
- Willcock
- John Willcock, Sir Thomas Urquhart of Cromartie Knight (Edinburgh & London, 1899).
Verse
An edition of Epigrams: Divine and Moral, comprising three books of 132 epigrams in all, published in London, 1641. Reprinted in London, 1646. Most of Urquhart's epigrams unpublished.
Autograph MS of ten books of epigrams.
Containing over 1000 epigrams, on 266 large folio leaves (measuring c.35 x 24 cm and irregularly paginated 1-542), with a dedication to James, Marquess of Hamilton (pp. 1-6), an epistle lectural
to the Reader (pp. 7-10), a title-page (p. 19: Ten Books of Epigrams, the Curiositie whereof, for Conception, stile, instruction, and other mixtures of show, and substance, being no lesse fruitfull, then pleasing to the diligent peruser, are intituled Apollo, and the Muses: Written by the right Worshipfull Sir Thomas Urchard knight), an Introduction
(pp. 20-8), a prolog
(pp. 29-30), and an invocation To Apollo and the Muses
(p. 30); the various books also ushered in with separate title-pages, dedications (to the Marquess of Huntley, Earls of Arundel, Northumberland, Pembroke, Dorset, Holland, Newcastle, Strafford, and Lords Craven and Gowran), epistles to the judicious
or gracious
Reader, and invocations (to the Muses: Apollo, Clio, Euterpe, Thalia, Melpomene, Urania, Terpsichore, Erato, Poly[hi]mnia, and Calliope); concluding with an epilog
(pp. 361-2), fareweil to the Patrons
(pp. 362-3), adiew to Apollo and the Muses
(p. 364), and a Corollarie
including prose introduction, verse dialogue, prose Animadversion
, draft notes and more verses (pp. 367-95), A Consertarie from the Printer (p. 396), A Table
under alphabetical headings (pp. 397-449), a list of words (pp. 450-2), a prose advertisement
(p. 452), An explicatarie index of the harshest and most difficult words contained in the preceeding epigrams
(pp. 453-77), a prose conclusion
(pp. 478-9), the aftershot
(p. 480), another catalogue of words (pp. 481-94), and a prose essay Of Lust, and anger followed by further draft epigrams (pp. 485-542); the text including a chronogram of this present year 1640
.
Owned in 1683 by George Ogilvie, Master of Banff. Sotheby's, 17 November 1920 (John Ferguson sale), lot 949, to Bain.
This MS discussed in Charles Whibley, Studies in Frankness (London, 1898), p. 245; Willcock (1899), pp. 5, 40-1, 109, 116-17, with quotations and (after p. 116) a facsimile example; Kelsie B. Harder, Sir Thomas Urquhart's Definition of Wit, N&Q, 199 (April 1954), 154-5; and Jack & Lyall, pp. 6, 38. Complete microfilm in the Bodleian (MS Film 86). Facsimile example also in Laurence Witten, Contemporary Collectors XXIII: James Marshall Osborn, The Book Collector, 8 (Winter 1959), 383-96 (after p. 392); and see Facsimile XVII in IELM, II/2.
Prose
Urquhart's letter to Sir Robert Farquhar, Laird of Cromarty, 1 July 1658, first published in Luttrell (1948).
Copy on fourteen quarto leaves (plus partly unopened blanks), badly stained.
Headed (later) Sr Thomas Wrquhart his Letter to the Laird of Cromartie
.
This MS extensively quoted in HMC, 6th Report (1877), Appendix, pp. 686-7, and in Tayler, pp. 55-8. Edited from this MS in Luttrell, with a facsimile example after p. 12.
First published in Ekskubalauron: or the Discovery of a Most Exquisite Jewel, Found in the Kennel of Worcester-Streets, Anno 1651 (London, 1652). Willcock (1899), pp. 215-39. The Admirable Urquhart, ed. Richard Boston (London, 1975), pp. 65-96. Jack & Lyall (1983), [pp. 100-37].
Copy, headed Taken out of a little book found in the channill, in the street after the fatall battle of Worcester, written by Sr Thomas Vrquhart of Cromarty knight…
.
A quarto composite miscellany, in Latin and English, associated with Oxford University, iii + 68 leaves.
In three parts, the first (ff. 1-20) owned in 1669 and probably compiled by Francis Philips (b.1651) of Brasenose College, Oxford; the second (ff. 21-46), c.1663 or so; the third part (ff. 47 onwards) 19th-century.
Once owned by the Rev. Philip Bliss (1787-1857), antiquary and book collector. Sotheby's, 2 August 1858 (Bliss sale), lot 172. Purchased from the executors of Dr John Griffiths (d.1885) in May 1886.
See
An anonymous printed quarto pamphlet signed by Urquhart, the likely author of the work.
Later owned by Hugh C.H. Candy (fl.1930s).
Recorded, with a facsimile of the signature, in Candy, Milton, N.LL, and Sir Tho. Urquhart, The Library, 4th Ser. 14 (1933-4), 470-6 (p. 473).
Letters
A letter of procuratory by Urquhart narrating the history of a contract made by his father in 1635, and appointing his own brother, Alexander Urquhart of Dunglas, to act as his procurator for the redemption of lands as specified in that contract, the letter signed in London, 15 February 1643.
Letter by Urquhart, to Robert Farquhar of Mounie, the text in the hand of an amanuensis and signed by Urquhart (in partly elaborate monogram form), from Cromarty, 18 December 1648.
Edited in Jack & Lyall, p. 42.
A letter by Urquhart, to Robert Douglas, Moderator of the General Assembly, the text in the hand of an amanuensis and signed by Urquhart, from Chanonrie of Ros
, 14 November 1649.
Among the working papers and collections of Robert Wodrow (1679-1734), ecclesiastical historian.
Edited in Jack & Lyall, p. 43.
Autograph letter siigned by Urquhart, to Robert Farquhar of Mounie, from London, 30 July 1653.
Recorded and briefly quoted in HMC, 6th Report (1877), Appendix, p. 687, and in Tayler, pp. 53-4. Facsimile in Luttrell (1948), facing p. xvii. Edited in Jack & Lyall, p. 44.
Autograph letter signed by Urquhart, to John Macronald, Advocate, from London, 9 December 1653.
Edited (from photostats at Yale) in Jack & Lyall, p. 44-5.
Autograph letter signed by Urquhart, to John Macronald, Advocate, from London, 14 January 1653/4.
Edited (from photostats at Yale) in Jack & Lyall, p. 45.
A letter by Urquhart, to Alexander, Earl of Leven, the text in the hand of an amanuensis and signed and subscribed by Urquhart, from Middelburg, 10/20 September 1655.
Edited in Jack & Lyall, p. 46.
Documents
A legal paper whereby Urquhart appoints Adam Smith to be his servitor and special errands bearer
to Sir James Fraser, bearing the monogram-signature Th Urchard
, 1 April 1642.
Reproduced in Tayler, p. 44.
Books from Urquhart's Library
A printed exemplum allegedly signed by Urquhart.
Owned in the late 19th century by the Rev. J.B. Craven of Kirkwall.
Recorded in Willcock, p. 57.