0,91 €
According to Wikipedia: "Ebenezer Cooke (ca. 1665 – ca. 1732), a London-born poet, wrote what some scholars consider the first American satire: “The Sotweed Factor, or A Voyage to Maryland, A Satyr” (1708). He has been fictionalized by John Barth as the comically innocent protagonist of The Sot-Weed Factor, a novel in which a series of fantastic misadventures leads Cooke to write his poem. As Barth explained, The Sot–Weed Factor began with the title and, of course, Ebenezer Cooke's original poem. . . . Nobody knows where the real chap is buried; I made up a grave for Ebenezer because I wanted to write his epitaph.' "
Das E-Book können Sie in Legimi-Apps oder einer beliebigen App lesen, die das folgende Format unterstützen:
Seitenzahl: 33
Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2018
In which is describ'd
The Laws, Government, Courts and Constitutions of the Country, and also
the Buildings, Feasts, Frolicks, Entertainments and Drunken Humours of
the Inhabitants of that Part of America .
In Burlesque Verse.
Published by Seltzer Books
established in 1974
offering over 14,000 books
feedback welcome: [email protected]
First Drafts: Obscure but Fascinating Books that Inspired Well-Known Novels and Movies, available from Seltzer Books:
Confessions of Nat Turner by Nat Turner (cf. Styron)
Sot Weed Factor by Ebenezer Cooke (cf. Barth)
Stories by Mary Hallock Foote (cf. Angle of Repose by Stegner)
A Touch of the Sun and Other Stories
A Touch of the Sun and Other Stories
The Desert and the Sown
In Exile and Other Stories
History of a Lie by Bernstein (cf. The Prague of Cemetery by Eco)
Mysteries of Paris by Sue (cf. The Prague Cemetery by Eco)
The English Governess at the Siamese Court by Leonowens (cf. The King and I)
Brother to Dragons and Other Old Time Tales by Rives (cf. Robert Penn Warren)
LONDON:
Printed and Sold by D. Bragg , at the Raven in Pater-Noster-Row .
1708. (Price 6d.)
Preface
THE Sot-Weed Factor; Or, a Voyage to Maryland, &c.
Footnotes
GLOSSARY.
We have no means of knowing the history of Master "Ebenezer Cook, Gentleman," who, one hundred and forty-six years ago, produced the Sot-Weed Factor's Voyage to Maryland. He wrote, printed, published, and sold it in London for sixpence sterling, and then disappeared forever. We do not know certainly that Mr. Cook himself was the actual adventurer who suffered the ills described by him "in burlesque verse." Indeed, "Eben: Cook, Gent." may be a myth--a nom de plume . Yet, there is a certain personal poignancy and earnestness about the whole Story that almost forbid the idea of a secondhand narrative. Nay, I think it extremely probable that it was "Eben: Cook, Gent." or, some other equally afflicted gentleman assuming that name, who--
" Condemn'd by Fate to wayward Curse,
Of Friends unkind and empty purse ,"--
fled from his native land to become a Sot-Weed factor in America.[1]
The adventures and manners described are ludicrous and certainly very unpolished. Although Mr. Cook calls his poem " A Satyr ," there is, in his account of early habits in Maryland, so much resemblance to what we observe in the rude society of all new settlements, that it is possible the story is not so much a Satire as a hightened description of what an unlucky traveler found in certain quarters of the colony, Anno Domini, 1700. When "Mr. Cook," with an anathema in his mouth, makes a final bow to his readers, he expressly adds, in a note, on the last page, that "the Author does not intend by this any of the English Gentlemen resident there;" still, excepting even all these select personages, he doubtless found un -gentlefolk enough among the rough farmers and fishermen of obscure "Piscato-way" and the adjacent country, to justify his discontent. At all events, we may, I imagine, very reasonably
suppose "Eben: Cook" to have been a London "Gent:" rather decayed by fast living, sent abroad to see the world and be tamed by it, who very soon discovered that Lord Baltimore's Colony was not the court of her Majesty Queen Anne, or its taverns frequented by Addison and the wits; and whose disgust became supreme when he was "finished" on the "Eastern-Shoar,"[2] by
"A pious, Concientious Rogue"