THOMÆ CORIATO DE ODCOMBE.

The following panegyric on the hero of Odcombe, Thomas Coryate, a pedantic coxcomb, with just brains enough to be ridiculous, to whom the world is much more indebted for becoming “the whetstone of the wits” than for any doings of his own, and the particulars of whose life and peregrinations may be found in every collection of biography, is printed in the Odcombian Banquet, 1611, 4to. sign. I. 3.

The Latin lines have been omitted in the former impressions of Bishop Corbet’s poems.

SPECTATISSIMO, PUNCTISQUE OMNIBUS DIGNISSIMO,
THOMÆ CORIATO DE ODCOMBE,
PEREGRINANTI,
PEDESTRIS ORDINIS, EQUESTRISQUE FAMÆ.

Quod mare transieris, quod rura urbesque pedester,

Jamque colat reduces patria læta pedes:

Quodque idem numero tibi calceus hæret, et illo

Cum corio redeas, quo Coriatus abis:

Fatum omenque tui miramur nominis, ex quo

Calcibus et soleis fluxit aluta tuis.

Nam quicunque cadem vestigia tentat, opinor

Excoriatus erit, ni Coriatus eat.

IN LIBRUM SUUM.

De te pollicitus librum es, sed in te

Est magnus tuus hic liber libellus.