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THE AGE OF IMPOLITENESS: GALATEO: OR, A TREATISE ON POLITENESS AND DELICACY OF
MANNERS (1774 EDITION)

Giovanni della Casa, Galatea: or, A Treatise on Politeness and Delicacy of
Manners, trans. Richard Graves (London: printed for J, Dodsley, 1774).

In the 1770s, a contagion was sweeping England and women were in danger: the
danger of “contracting habits entirely opposite to their natural delicacy”. Take
Belinda, for example, who after dinner, equipped with a linen napkin, “rummages
the most remote cavities of her mouth and gums”, all the while thinking this
behavior reflects “an infallible mark of her familiarity with the bon ton of
fashionable life.” The contagious disease of bad manners did not discriminate by
sex, however. It also infected fathers, with their eighteenth-century dad jokes:
the man who “render[s] his whole family miserable, by making them dependent on
his humour or caprice”. It corrupted the man-spreading public schoolboy, who,
when in coffeehouses amid the public, “spreads himself before the chimney, and
‘gropes his breeches with a monarch’s air’”. Inoculation was possible, and the
vaccine came in book form: a 1558 treatise by Giovanni della Casa, newly
translated and prefaced by Richard Graves (who wrote the words above) in 1774:
Galateo: or, A Treatise on Politeness and Delicacy of Manners.



Il Galateo, as it is known in Italian, had been making waves in England for
centuries by the time this edition was released. The work — first translated
into English in 1576 by Henry Peterson — was immediately taken up by young
Oxbridge scholars, who wanted to ditch their reading lists for practical
knowledge that would serve them at the Elizabethan court. Gabriel Harvey, for
example, in a 1580 letter to Edmund Spenser, reports what Cantabs were
clandestinely consuming in their sets: “Machiavell a great man: Castilio of no
small reputation, Galateo and Guazzo never so happy.” It makes sense that a new
translation would be needed in the late-eighteenth century, an era marked by
unprecedented mobility. The nascent Industrial Revolution created a burgeoning
middle class of merchants and employees who found themselves attempting to
ascend the greased rungs of an increasingly nuanced social hierarchy. The Earl
of Chesterfield described the situation four years after Graves’ translation of
Galateo hit bookshelves: “An aukward country fellow, when he comes into company
better than himself, is exceedingly disconcerted. He knows not what to do with
his hands, or his hat”. Unlike bloodlines, however, good behavior can be aped,
and the popularity of etiquette books in this period — not to mention the rise
of the novel — speaks not only to a desire for pecuniary emulation but also
social mimicry.



The takeaway from Galateo is simple — politeness is the art of pleasing others.
Some examples of virtuous behavior are easy to enact. Well-bred men neither take
“monstrous strides” nor let their hands “hang dangling down”. Indecent and
improper men make a habit of “thrusting their hands into their bosoms, or
handling any part of their persons which is usually covered”. Loud and messy
sneezers were as detested in Della Casa’s time as our own, those people who
deign to “sputter in the very faces of those that sit near them”. Spittle, the
public paring of fingernails, and flatulence are held in eternally low esteem.
Pages are devoted to table manners. Toothpicks make one look “like a bird going
to build his nest”; only “inn-keepers and parasites” express great pleasure when
consuming food and wine. Other examples are less accessible, such as the
prohibition on smelling anything you intend to eat or drink. One emergent theme
is a kind of social prophylaxis for the sensorium. The politest personages in
Galateo are those that keep the mouth, ears, and eyes free of offensive stimulus
— protecting their own bodies and those of their peers. The motif is taken to
ends that seem initially odd, at least to the modern-day reader, who is told
that it is rude to peruse personal correspondence in front of guests. The logic
makes sense, however, for one should never portray themselves as bored, idle, or
distracted in the company of others: the affront of an acquaintance checking
text messages over drinks predates smartphones by several centuries, it seems. ※

※Indexed under…
 * HandsEtiquette involving

In addition to prohibitions of the body, there are dicta regarding the spirit.
Men must not be too “thoughtful” — “wrapt up in your own reflections” — or
exceedingly sensitive, for to socialize with the latter kind of person is like
being “surrounded with the finest glass ware; to which the slightest stroke may
be fatal”. Discussing dreams is boorish, for most people are not “wise men
amongst the ancients” but see only “trifling and frivolous” images thrown
against the screen of sleep. Lying is bad. Arrogance is bad. Gossip should be
reined in by a government of the tongue. No one ever wants unsolicited advice.
People who subject others to “jingling puns” mistake wit for the shopworn speech
of the low and vulgar. A prostitute should never be described as such — “an
immodest woman” will do just fine. Galateo ends with a bit of rhetoric that
evinces its author’s grace and manners: “because each of the particulars
hitherto mentioned is marked but with a slight degree of error, therefore there
can be no great harm in neglecting the whole”. What could be more gauche than
instructing a stranger how to act?



Giovanni Della Casa (1503–1556) was a Florentine humanist and cleric, born into
mercantile wealth with aristocratic origins. After a libertine youth in which he
penned obscene poems, he leveraged family connections, which trumped his shaky
religious convictions, and found himself appointed Archbishop of Benevento.
Initially angling after a cardinalate, the change of papal regime led Della Casa
to take retirement, living “in tranquility, rest, and idleness amongst my
books”. Here he set about composing, among other texts, what we now would call
an etiquette manual, addressed to a young nobleman. Written between 1552 and
1555, Il Galateo was completed just a year before his death. In the months of
his final decline, Della Casa asked a nephew to incinerate his compositions, but
— thanks again to a network of family and friends — Il Galateo was published
posthumously, seeing French, Spanish, German, and Latin editions circulating
before the century’s turn, and dozens of others since. The work’s subsequent
influence was so great that it inspired envy and impolite admonishments from
other writers: Laurence Sterne in Tristram Shandy wonders how Della Casa managed
to compose such a work — spending, as he did, “the greatest part of his time in
combing his whiskers”.



For another Italian book of manners from the sixteenth century, see our post on
Baldassare Castiglione’s The Book of the Courtier (1528).


Text by Hunter Dukes

Medium

 * Books

Theme

 * Customs & Culture

Genre

 * Thought, Reflection & Theory

Type

 * Non-fiction

Epoch

 * 16th Century
 * 18th Century

Tags

society3italy7


INDEXED UNDER…

H

 * HandsEtiquette involving



SourceInternet Archive

 * More Internet Archive content on PDR (680)

Underlying Work RightsPD WorldwideDigital Copy Rights

Unclear

 * Internet Archive has CC BY-NC-SA default which this might fall under
 * We offer this info as guidance only

DownloadPDF

Published

Feb 27, 2024

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