Made by a Rascally Writing Master: Manuscripts of “The Beginning, Progress, and End of Man”

This year Cotsen acquired three manuscript turn-ups  of “The Beginning, Progress, and End of Man,” a rhymed bit of religious doggerel with metamorphic pictures which was virtually unknown until the research of Penn State Professor Jacqueline Reid-Walsh established that it was in circulation from the end of the English Civil War until late in the nineteenth century.  It survives mostly in versions made by American, English, and Scottish children with their engaging illustrations, a subject of a previous post.This category of manuscripts is usually considered a kind of outside art by children, but this new group of related ones, prove that some were made by professional artists.  Two of the three are signed and priced by Salathiel Court, a writing master.

Salathiel Court signature in the Fisher manuscript turn up

Court signature in the Fisher manuscript turn up.

Signature of Salathiel Court on the Dixon family copy of a manuscript turn up.

Court’s signature with the price of 2 shillings.

The vertical format of his turn ups is somewhat unusual. The more usual horizontal orientation allows for folding the sheet into panels with flaps and opening one at a time until the entire sequence is revealed.  All three of these new acquisitions are stitched into in stiff drab paper wrappers with leather backstrips; two have flaps with “buttonholes” for the fasteners opposite.  They are similar enough to suggest that Court may have sold his handiwork bound.The three manuscript turn ups in stiff paper coversOne was produced before 1753, when a William Fisher wrote his name in it.

William Fisher's dated signature in a Salathiel Court manuscript turn up of The Beginning End and Progress of Man.

Fisher’s dated signature

The brightly colored illustrations are spirited, the lion and eagle being two of the best.

The lion in the Fisher manuscript turn up

The lion in the Fisher manuscript turn up

The eagle and baby in the Fisher manuscript turn up

The eagle and the baby in the Fisher manuscript turn up

The rich man in the Fisher manuscript turn up

The rich man in the Fisher manuscript turn up.

It is an understatement to say that second of the Court turn ups was almost loved to death.  Most of the folds are over stitched to keep them from falling apart.   Although not quite as detailed or vigorous as the figures in the William Fisher turn up, they are clearly by the same hand.

The lion in the Dixon manuscript turn up

The lion in the Dixon manuscript turn up

The eagle and baby in the Dixon manuscript turn up

The eagle and baby in the Dixon manuscript turn up

The rich man in the Dixon family manuscript turn up

The rich man in the Dixon family manuscript turn up

The flap illustrated with the mermaid’s tail has the signatures of the children John and Hannah Dixon, probably members of a well-known Hexhamshire, Northumberland family.  Signatures of an Edward and Robert Dixon are written elsewhere. Children's signatures in the Dixon manuscript turn upThe third example was made by Martin Bell in 1836; it was sold with the Dixon one.  It rather looks as if Martin copied the Dixon family copy, but added his own touches.

The signature sheet of the Martin Bell manuscript turn up of The Beginning Progress and Eng of Man

Martin Bell’s signature sheet

Martin Bell's drawing of the skeleton

Martin Bell’s drawing of the skeleton

The skeleton in the Dixon manuscript turn up

The skeleton in the Dixon manuscript turn up.

Who was their creator, Salathiel Court?  More than a little something is known about him because he was a “very singular and eccentric character” who rated a section in Bulmer’s History & Directory of Cumberland (1801).   Perhaps if he had not had an extraordinary turn for wit and humour,” he would not have tumbled precipitously into vagabondry, running up debts and associating with “low company.”   Being a thirsty man, he was “a living sign of dissipation,” sometimes creating signboards for inns and pubs—whether to pay outstanding bills or to get drinking money is unknown.  A  story about a job painting a lion signboard survives:

He requested to be allowed to represent it chained, but the man would not go to the expense  of such a security. Salathiel, to punish the parsimony of the host, painted the sign in water colours, so that on the first shower of rain…the lion vanished. Being accused of unfair dealing, he replied that “the lion had indeed run away, but it was what might be expected in a wild beast – without a chain.”

During a stint as the town crier, he attracted crowds with this public announcement about a lost wallet:

A big, fat Frenchman lost his purse,
And he can’t find it, which is worse;

He that lost it, let him seek it,
He that found it, let him
keep it.”

The Frenchman’s English wasn’t good enough to understand the joke and kept whispering to Court “Ce bien, dat well.”  The man recovered his purse in spite of Court’s waggery.  One wonders how long he kept that job.

What brought Court down was the performance of illegal marriages, such as unions between people related by marriage. One such couple came before the magistrate, who demanded a copy of the missing marriage certificate.  When the husband asked Court for another one, he quoted a quip by Jonathan Swift about a clandestine marriage he performed:

Behind this hedge in stormy weather,
I joined this —– and rogue together,
Let none but He that rules the thunder,
Part this —– and rogue asunder.

Eventually the officials caught up with Court and in the summer of 1760 he was sentenced to be deported to America for fourteen years.  After that Court’s trail in Ancestry Library goes cold.

Play the Board Game: A Race Game through a Magical Hand-drawn Shared World

Two weeks ago the Princeton Board Games Club visited Special Collections to look at a selection of Cotsen’s board games.  Here they are battling it out over Election: The Game of the Day, a 1950s board game very loosely based on Monopoly where players try to win seats in the House of Commons.  The battle for voters in Coventry and Bedford was spirited.

But when they walked into the large classroom, they made a beeline to the game shown in the foreground of the photograph and asked what it was?  The playing surface appears to be a drawing covering four sheets of paper which have been mounted on board, varnished, and hinged with fabric. The only evidence for the materials that were used if the label shown to the left pasted on the back. The creator didn’t sign the front anywhere obvious, although it’s possible a name could be concealed somewhere among all the figures.  Sometimes the rules for published board games are printed down the vertical sides, but this feature was not copied.  Perhaps they were written out and made into a little booklet. The tokens and dice probably went missing decades ago.

Was this pastime based on Snakes and Ladders or is it a variation of the Game of the Goose, the most popular race game of all?  There’s no way to know unless players line up at the castle in the upper left hand corner and advance down the track.

[Antique Manuscript Board Game]. [London?, 1920s?]. (Cotsen)

Like any version of the Game of the Goose, players lucky enough to land on certain squares  get a leg up on their competitors.  The Bull of Norway from the fairy tale waits at number 88 to carry the player to number 111.Among the obstacles to advancement is a fiery salamander, who will detain a play until a six is thrown. There two dragons to avoid…  Land on number 25 (notice that there’s one in bold in a circle and another above) and the knight kills the lion waiting to maul travellers and the the player can jump over the scaly brute to number 35. The second dragon can be slain if Excalibur is pulled from the stone at number 93.  Otherwise it will eat the unfortunate player who lands on number 94, eliminating him or her from play.  The satyr facing it is perhaps piping a tune to improve its digestion.  The elves to the right look disinclined to intervene. 
Tramp through the Forest of Sherwood and meet  Dick Turpin, the highwayman, who will relieve the player of unnecessary baggage.  Avoid  him and there’s a chance of nabbing the Seven League Boots that will skip ahead to number 73.
Hurry down to the sea and sail a tall ship around Neptune and bypass Long John Silver on Treasure Island.Turn north to head for home, a stately country home.  Perhaps it is a picture of a real place, the actual site where this quirky shared world cum board game  was made.  So far there aren’t enough clues to figure out who drew the game board, although it seems a good guess that the person lived in England before the first World War and was very familiar with the classics of Victorian literature.    When it’s digitized and up in the Cotsen module of DPUL, the board game club can figure out how it’s played!