Hircocervus

19th century engraved reproduction of "The Trusty Servant".

The hircocervus (Latin: hircus, "billy goat" + cervus, "stag") or tragelaph (Greek: τράγος, tragos, "billy goat" + έλαφος, elaphos, "stag"), also known as a goat-stag or horse-stag, was a legendary creature imagined to be half-goat, half-stag. In his work De Interpretatione, Aristotle utilized the idea of a fabulous goat-stag to express the philosophical concept of something that is knowable even though it does not really exist.[1] In Plato's Republic, Socrates speaks of his own image-making as similar to that of painters who paint goat-stags, combining the features of different things together (488a).

The word hircocervus first appears in the English language in a medieval manuscript dating from 1398 (now at the Bodleian Library).[1]

A hircocervus is depicted in a wall-painting called The Trusty Servant, painted by John Hoskins in 1579. dating from the 1580s.[2] It hangs outside the kitchen of Winchester College in Hampshire, England.[1] The author Arthur Cleveland Coxe described "the time-honoured Hircocervus, or picture of 'the Trusty-servant,' which hangs near the kitchen, and which emblematically sets forth those virtues in domestics, of which we Americans know nothing. It is a figure, part man, part porker, part deer, and part donkey; with a padlock on his mouth, and various other symbols in his hands and about his person, the whole signifying a most valuable character."[3]

The painting had a didactic function: it is accompanied by allegorical verses that associate the hircocervus servant's various animal parts with distinctive virtues that the college's students were meant to follow.[4]

The Latin verses have been translated into English as:

A trusty servant's picture would you see,
This figure well survey, who'ever you be.
The porker's snout not nice in diet shows;
The padlock shut, no secret he'll disclose;
Patient, to angry lords the ass gives ear;
Swiftness on errand, the stag's feet declare;
Laden his left hand, apt to labour saith;
The coat his neatness; the open hand his faith;
Girt with his sword, his shield upon his arm,
Himself and master he'll protect from harm.[1]

  1. ^ Quoted in Howard Staunton, The Great Schools of England (Strahan. 1869), 61n.

Umberto Eco refers to a hircocervus in his novel The Island of the Day Before.[1]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Quinion, Michael (2009). "Hircocervus". World Wide Words. Retrieved February 8, 2009.
  2. Pattern Histories: The Trusty Servant accessed 29 May 2007
  3. Arthur Cleveland Coxe, Impressions of England. (Google Books)
  4. Mark Thornton Burnett, Constructing "monsters" in Shakespearean drama and early modern culture (New York: Macmillan, 2002), 139.