Crust and crumb est locutio Anglica (Latine possumus "crustulam et frustulum" dicere) qua significatur sive "panis omnis" sive "res tota". His verbis usus est Laurentius Sterne, qui in libro The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy in persona narratoris Tristani Shandy (vol. 8 cap. 11) de amore aut muliere aut sexu exclamat:

No; I shall never have a finger in the pie (so here I break my metaphor) --
Crust and crumb
Inside and out
Top and bottom -- I detest it, I hate it, I repudiate it -- I'm sick at the sight of it ...[1]

Post quem poetae duo saeculo XIX omnino aliter usurpantur. Levius Edmundus Gosse in carmine Augustino Dobson misso, titulo "The Poet at the Breakfast-Table", de ientaculo cantat:

... The loaves are beautiful and fair
(As Wordsworth puts it), crust and crumb;
The coffee hath an odour rare ...[2]

Gravius Gulielmus Blake in carmine post mortem divulgato, incipit "Let the brothels of Paris be opened", stropham de fame inserit:

The king awoke on his couch of gold
As soon as he heard these tidings told:
"Arise and come, both fife and drum,
And the famine shall eat both crust and crumb."[3]

Nor crust nor crumb recensere

 
Leopoldus Bloom ab auctore Iacobo Joyce pictus

Iam antea negativa locutionis forma in litteris Anglicis reperitur. Saeculo XV ineunte in opere The pilgrimage of the lyf of the manhode verba leguntur For I entermeted me nevere to make crust ne cromme ne nevere bred I sette.[4] Gulielmus Shakesperius in fabula King Lear verba quae sequuntur scurrae attribuit:

Yes, forsooth, I will hold my tongue. So your face bids me, though you say nothing. Mum, mum!
He that keeps nor crust nor crum,
Weary of all, shall want some (act. 1 sc. 4 vv. 187-190).[5]

Crustcrumbs recensere

Ex hac locutione sumitur neologismus Iacobi Joyce, qui in Ulysse sic gustús herois Leopoldi Bloom describit:

Mr Leopold Bloom ate with relish the inner organs of beasts and fowls. He liked thick giblet soup, nutty gizzards, a stuffed roast heart, liverslices fried with crustcrumbs, fried hencods' roes. Most of all he liked grilled mutton kidneys which gave to his palate a fine tang of faintly scented urine.[6]

Notae recensere

  1. p. 499
  2. Vide p. 99
  3. Vide p. 24; Textus
  4. Vide p. 25
  5. Textus; Fabula docta
  6. Ulysses cap. ii ad initium. Vide e.g. hic


  De hac re nexus intervici usque adhuc absunt. Adde, si reppereris.