In the spirit of the anonymous animal tales I read last summer, I read Beware the Cat, a work written in 1553 (though not published till later because of its anti-Catholic sentiments) that some academics have argued as the first novel written in English. That does depend a lot on the working definition of a novel, but novel or not, it’s a fascinating and captivating work.
It starts with a later rhyming introduction, implying that the cat in the title refers to Cat-holics, and that they hide their sharp claws under their fluffy exteriors. This prepared me to read the book as anti-Catholic allegory, but it turns out the cats in the book actually have a different function and that we must beware them for a different reason.
Then the dedication has the author say that he’s passing on a story told by a Gregor Streamer, and that he’s written it so accurately to the way it was told to him that the reader will “dout whether he speaketh or readeth”. (This book is written in the nonstandard spelling of the time but is not too difficult, certainly not Morte D’Arthur levels of difficult).
The story starts on the 28th of December 1552 and a group of men are having a sleepover around the house of the King’s Master of Revels, George Ferrers. This man really existed and the book includes a number of real people, fictional people and fictionalised versions of real people in one big stew - an interesting, almost meta-fictional element to this early piece of fiction. The lads of all had their first sleep, back in the days when sleep was split into two parts, and they spend the time before the next sleep in discussing whether animals, and cats in particular, have their own kind of intelligence.
There are stories about cats talking, of them hearing of the death of one ‘Grimalkin’ (a name often used for witches’ familiars) and even on taken revenge on her death. There’s a lot of talk of superstition, of Ireland, especially the gullibility of the Catholic Irish but members of the sleepover really attest they heard stories of witches and talking cats from unimpeachable sources. There’s talk about witches being able to inhabit cats nine times, hence the cat having nine lives. Other talk about people who swap between being wolves and humans every other seven years, and talk of cats eating people alive and of other people roasting cats.
Streamer, a fictional character, says he has the final word on cat intelligence and he will tell the story on the proviso that nobody interrupts him. He says how he was staying with John Day a (real) Tudor printer who had premises near Aldgate. There’s a creepy, almost gothic-tale build up of the place as the gate has the preserved torsos of traitors, a practice he declares as against Biblical law. While he is there he is kept awake by the yowling of cats and he creeps into an empty room to watch them.
What he sees looks like a law court, with a grave, judge cat and a hyperactive cat for the defence. A roof tile falls and disturbs this court, at which Streamer “whip’t into” his room because he’s worried the cats might think he threw it at them and come after him. He becomes obsessed with divining what the cats are saying to each other and he gets a book by (real writer) Albertus Magnus so he can create a means to understand them.
How he creates his mixture is my favourite part of the book, it’s ludicrous and gory and ridiculous. He goes into St John’s Wood, which is till a wood at this point, to get a dead fox, a dead kite and various other dead animals. He upsets some hunters by mentioning hedgehogs, because apparently they are the result of witches - a superstition I’d never heard before. As he does these things he does them with special magic words like, “Shavol swaghameth gorgono liscud” and Iulsheley huthotheca liscud’” - I really enjoyed the silly magic words. He’s also doing this in accordance with various astrological principals, which he describes. Then he takes all the guts, livers, spleens and such and strains, pulps, fries, drinks, distills and does all sorts of disgusting things with them. At one point he tricks a small boy into eating ‘a cat’s toord’ and laughs at him, which seems hypocritical when considering all the gunk he’s ingested.
He then makes special ear pillows, which he straps to his head. These boost his hearing so he can hear everything and these are described in a wonderful, rhyming list;
“The barking of dogs and grunting of hogs,
The wailing of cats and the rumbling of rats,
The gaggling of geese and the humming of bees,
The rousing of bucks and the gaggling of ducks,
The singing of swans and the ringing of pans,
The crowing of cocks and the sewing of socks,
The cackling of hens and the scratching of pens,
The squeaking of mice, and the rolling of dice,
The calling of frogs and toads in the bogs,
The chirping of crickets and shutting of wickets,
The screeching of owls and fluttering of fowls,
The routing of knaves and snorting of slaves,
The farting of churls and fizzling of girls,
And many things else, such as ringing of bells,
And counting of coins and mounting of groins,
The whispering of lovers, the snaring of plovers,
Of groaning and spewing, and baking and brewing,
Of scratching and rubbing, and watching and shrugging”
Having got his enhanced hearing under control, he listens to the cat court. They are trying a cat for not being promiscuous and she’s given the extenuating circumstances. There’s a story about a secret Catholic priest and a madam who shrives herself frequently so she can carry on her exploitative ways. She even involves the cat in her deception, blowing pepper in the cat’s face to make it cry so she can claim the cat in a woman transformed for not seeing to her husband often enough.
Some of the stories the cat tells have a Chaucerian bawdiness to them. A prankster glues walnut shells to her feet and the tap-tapping is interpreted by the superstitious secret Catholics as a devil. This involves a who kerfuffle with a frightened bare-arsed boy and a priest, where the priest ends up with his face up the boy’s arse as he shits himself with fear. She also exposes a cheating love by biting and scratching his testicles as he hides behind an arras, so the husband sees a “bare ars’t gentleman strangling me with his stones in my mouth”. Some of these stories reminded me of later books like The Surprising and Singular Adventures of a Hen or Pompey the Little.
The conclusion is reached, that we should beware the cat because they see all our “noughty living” that we try and hide, and they tell each other about it. It’s not that cats are an allegory for Catholics, it’s that they are domestic spies and, if they wanted to, they could tell all our secrets.
The version I had was an Amazon print on demand thing. Although repackaging out of copyright works and flogging them on Amazon is a bit of a con, when they are done well and formatted nicely (as this one was) they are so much better than the old print on demand classics or bad scans where the pages were sometimes unreadable. The only thing missing from this copy were the glosses in the margin, which apparently add gags and fun stuff, but I don’t have the hundreds of pounds for a more accurate copy - and this was very readable and full of good stuff.
I’m not sure whether it counts as a novel, it’s a far looser, baggier thing than that but it is a striking work that feels remarkably fresh. While some of the attitudes are very much of their time (it does take part in that charming genre of fiction, misogynist literature) the handling of speech, character and frame feel bright and modern. As for whether cats can speak, I did once live in a place where the cat next door’s meow sounded very much like my name. I never found out what the cat wanted with me though.