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27 - Sixteenth-century travel writing

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 May 2011

Wes Williams
Affiliation:
Oxford University
William Burgwinkle
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
Nicholas Hammond
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
Emma Wilson
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
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Summary

The Renaissance is often characterised as the golden age of exploration: new worlds were discovered both due west and within the self. Montaigne serves as an exemplary witness to this process, as his Essais (like the Journal de Voyage he left unpublished at his death) record both the incessant ‘vagabondage’ of his restless mind, and the experience gained from his own travels, whether on diplomatic business, pilgrimage, or in search of relief and perhaps even a cure. The argument in favour of travel which he presents in the essay on the education of children begins and ends positively:

Le commerce des hommes y est merveilleusement propre, et la visite des pays estrangers, non pour en rapporter seulement, à la mode de nostre noblesse Françoise, combien de pas a Santa Rotonda, ou la richesse des calessons de la Signora Livia, ou, comme d'autres, combien le visage de Neron, de quelque vieille ruyne de là, est plus long ou plus large que celuy de quelque pareille medaille, mais pour en rapporter principalement les humeurs de ces nations et leurs façons, et pour frotter et limer nostre cervelle contre celle d'autruy.

(Mixing with men is in this respect wonderfully useful, as is visiting foreign countries, not merely to bring back, in the manner of our French noblemen, knowledge of the measurements of the Santa Rotunda, or the richness of Signora Livia's drawers, or how much longer or wider is Nero's face on some old ruin there than on some similar medallion, but more importantly to bring back with us the moods and the customs of these nations, and to rub and polish our brains by contact with those of others.)

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2011

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