The Sot-weed Factor

Ebenezer Cook
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Title: The Sot-weed Factor: or, A Voyage to Maryland
In which is Describ'd The Laws, Government, Courts and Constitutions of the Country
Author: Ebenezer Cook
Release Date: May 7, 2007 [EBook #21346]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
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Produced by Bryan Ness and the Online Distributed?Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was?produced from images generously made available by the?Library of Congress)
Transcribers Notes
1. The original spellings of words have been retained.
2. Typos or suspected typos have been noted by [_sic_.].
3. The long "s", which appears as an "f" with the right part of the cross missing, has been replaced with "s".
4. Lines joined with brackets in the original have been indented three additional spaces.
5. Quote marks at the beginning of successive lines have been changed to the modern convention of one opening double quote and one ending double quote at the end of the quoted text.
6. Footnotes appear as lower-case letters in parentheses. They are alphabetical from (a) to (oo) and have been grouped at the end of the book.
_S H E A' S_
_EARLY SOUTHERN TRACTS._
_No. II._
THE
Sot-weed Factor:
Or, a Voyage to
MARYLAND.
A
SATYR.
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.
By _Eben. Cook_, Gent.
LONDON:
Printed and Sold by _D. Bragg_, at the _Raven_ in _Pater-Noster-Row_. 1708. (Price 6d.)
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"
who, taking advantage of his incapacity for trade, cheated him out of his cargo and sent him home without a leaf of the coveted "Sot-weed!" This poem is, very likely, the result of that homeward voyage. With proper allowance for breadth and burlesque, angry exaggeration and the discomforts of such a "Gentleman" as we may fancy Master Cook to have been, it is well worth preservation as hinting, if not photographing, the manners and customs of the ruder classes in a British Province a century and a half ago.
The "Sot-Weed Factor" was first printed in London, in 1708, in a folio of twenty-one pages. It was reprinted, with a poem on Bacon's Rebellion, by Mr. Green, at Annapolis, Maryland, in 1731. Mr. Green cautiously reminds the reader that it was a description written twenty years before, and "did not agree with the condition of Annapolis at the time of its publication!"
The edition,
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