Katlynne Davis
Dr. Teresa Coronado
English 226
13 December 2012
The
New World Versus the Old World
The genre of early American literature can conjure up
images of Separatists fleeing religious persecution, preachers spewing out
fiery sermons to cowering congregations, and many an Indian meeting death and
destruction at the hands of English colonists. Undoubtedly, these issues portrayed
by early American authors are crucial in understanding the country’s beginnings.
Despite his status as a lesser-known American author, Ebenezer Cooke contributes
his own unique and equally valuable perceptions to the American canon. Cooke
and his poem “The Sotweed Factor; or, a Voyage to Maryland. ASatyr” both bring a
rather unorthodox component to the colonial table: humor. In “The Sotweed
Factor”, Cooke uses his satirical approach to express how these colonists were
perceived by their English brethren, and also how they have deviated from
English culture by way of their new lives in America. Cooke’s comical poem is
not only a refreshing change, but it is also a text that provides readers with
a window into life in the early American colonies.
Although many works have been written about “The Sotweed
Factor” as a piece of literature, biographical information concerning Ebenezer
Cooke’s life is sparse. Ever since the 1660’s, Cooke’s family, beginning with
his grandfather Andrew Cooke, had traveled back and forth between England
and
the Maryland colony in America (Cohen 7). In 1662, Cooke’s grandfather
purchased 200 acres of land in Maryland where he later built his home (Cohen
7). Both Cooke’s grandfather and his
father resided temporarily at this residence, which was known as “Cooke Poynt”
(Cohen 7). According to historical evidence, Ebenezer and his other siblings
are considered Maryland natives who were, for the most part, raised in England
(Cohen 8). It is possible that while in England, Cooke had been trained for a
career in law, though no concrete evidence documenting his formal education
exists (Cohen 9). Historical
records also suggest that Ebenezer Cooke had traveled to Maryland, perhaps
around 1700 (Cohen 9). Unbeknownst to the author, this journey into the New World
would ultimately produce the poem that defined his literary career.
After
returning to England, Cooke published his work, “The Sotweed Factor”, in 1708
(Cohen 29). He then returned to the Maryland colony, where he was appointed to
work as a deputy for Colonel Henry Lowe (Cohen 29). Although Cooke had sold his
share of “Cooke Poynt” in 1717, he remained in Maryland for many years after
(Cohen 29). Documents dating from the early 1720’s refer to Cooke as a
“‘gentleman’ of Cecil County”, and in 1728 Cooke became a practicing attorney
in the courts of Prince George’s County in Maryland (Cohen 36). At the end of some
of his poems and in many of his other works, Cooke is referred to as the “Poet
Laureate” of Maryland (Cohen 40).
However, there is, once again, a lack of historical evidence to
substantiate whether or not Cooke had officially earned this title (Cohen 40).
Cooke’s other works included the lesser known “Sotweed Redivivus”, a sequel to
“The Sotweed Factor”, and a handful of elegies written in remembrance of close
friends. In 1731, a curiously edited third edition of “The Sotweed Factor” was
published in a collection known as The
Maryland Muse (Cohen 70). In this edition, Cooke recants some of the
harsher language and judgments of the colony that were included in the earlier
version (Cohen 70). After 1732, Cooke’s name abruptly disappeared from any and
all historical documents (Cohen 93). Although the end of his life is shrouded
in some mystery, the legacy of Cooke’s “The Sotweed Factor”, along with its
contributions to American literature, are undeniable.
The
most renowned and recognized of all of his poetry, Cooke’s “The Sotweed Factor”
is largely significant in understanding American colonial life because of one
key component: humor. However, the humor in Cooke’s “The Sotweed Factor” does
not solely exist to entertain or criticize. Through the cynical eyes of the protagonist,
Cooke reveals the transformations that have taken place between the now
American colonists and their British counterparts. For the Factor, the two
groups might as well be worlds apart, and in essence, they truly are. In the
beginning of the poem, the Factor recognizes that he is leaving one cultural
sphere and entering something completely new: “With heavy heart, concern’d that
I / Was forc’d my Native soil to fly. / And the Old World bid good-buy” (Cooke 1). A factor was an agent of an
English merchant who would travel to the colonies with products to trade (Cohen
10-11). A “sotweed” factor would trade his goods specifically for
American-grown tobacco (Cohen 10-11). When the factor reached his destination,
he would trade most of his cargo for a large quantity of tobacco, and then
return to England (Cohen 11). Therefore, bound to his occupation, the Factor is
“forc’d” to leave behind his home in England for the New World. The factor
doesn’t find his financial prospects in America to be hopeful, but rather
thinks he is “Condemn’d by Fate to way ward Curse” (Cooke 1). This journey
across the Atlantic is more of a burden to the Factor than a blessing.
When
he arrives in Maryland, the Factor is shocked by the people that he encounters.
These colonists, once citizens of England, have strayed so far from British
culture as a whole that they are not even recognizable to him. The factor
ridicules the colonists, claiming that they have become a complete joke to
humanity:
Figures
so strange, no God design’d,
To
be a part of Humane Kind:
But
wanton Nature, void of Rest,
Moulded
the brittle Clay in Jest (Cooke 2).
The Factor finds these
people to be separate from mankind because they have changed so much that they
are now “strange” to him and his culture. The colonists are not a product of
God’s creation but rather a frivolous product of Nature, who has made them only
“in Jest”. In her article on “The
Sotweed Factor”, Sarah Ford claims that through his satire, Cooke dissolves any
ties that the colonists and British may share; the British view the uncivilized
colonists as outsiders who have cut themselves off completely from British
values and principles (1). In the Factor’s eyes, the colonists are a new and
bizarre breed of people who contain no trace of their British cultural past. Once
one and the same, Cooke recognizes that the colonists have grown away from the
British colonizers to develop their own distinct American culture.
As the Factor travels through the Maryland colony, he discloses
some reasoning as to why he believes the colonists have become so estranged
from their English homeland. When he ventures out with a local planter, he
expresses the same surprise upon encountering an Indian as he does when
surveying the raucous planters:
His sable Hair in Satchel ty’d,
Shew’d Savages not free from Pride:
His tawny Thighs, and Bosom bare,
Disdain’d a useless Coat to wear (Cooke 7).
The colonists are not
the only strange inhabitants of the Maryland colony; the Factor finds the
“tawny” Indian truly peculiar with his odd customs and dress. He ties up his
hair and chooses to wear no clothing, which is radically different from British
standards. Consequently, the Indian, like the colonists, must be of a savage
nature that is altogether foreign to the British mind. Cooke makes the
comparison between the colonists and the Indians in more than one place,
stating in the beginning of the poem that the planters of Maryland appear “In
Hue as tawny as a Moor:” (Cooke 2). The tanned skin color of the planters who
toil outdoors adds to their peculiarity, just as the Indian is gawked at for
his bare “tawny” thighs. At the end of his journey, the Factor utters his
ill-wishes towards the colony: “May they sustain the Fate they well deserve: /
May they turn Savage or as Indians Wild,”
(Cooke 17). According to the Factor, the distance between colonial behaviors and
the descent into a savage Indian lifestyle is quite short. Cooke’s choice of
language reveals that by living in a country populated with “savage” Indians,
the colonists run the risk of becoming just as untamed, and perhaps they
already are. Through the comparison to the Indian, the colonists are even
further alienated as “outsiders” to the English culture. More importantly, Cooke’s
satirical correlation between the two groups shows the prevailing attitudes of the
English toward the American colonists in the early 18th century.
Cooke does not reserve his satire exclusively for the
Maryland colonists. He also criticizes the English sotweed factor for his incapacity
to understand and adapt to this emerging American culture. Sarah Ford claims
that Cooke’s humor is targeted at both the colonists and the English as the Factor
“reveals himself to be a buffoon unable to negotiate life in the New World”
(1). Ford’s concept of a “dual satire” is applicable in many comical situations
that crop up throughout the poem (1). In the aforementioned experience
concerning the Indian, the Factor is struck with panic and alarm as he
encounters the strange native: “…surpriz’d with Fear, / I spur’d my Horse as he
drew near:” (Cooke 8). Just as the Factor tries to make a quick escape, his
newly-made acquaintance greets the man, convincing the Factor that, in truth
the “…Brute was civel” (Cooke 8). Cooke’s protagonist unknowingly plays the
fool in this instance, frantically urging his horse to carry him away from a virtually
harmless situation. This situation demonstrates how little he actually knows about
the American colony. He struggles to assimilate to the radical change of
environment, but only succeeds in revealing his own inadequacies in
understanding colonial life. Where the Factor was once the criticizer, he later
assumes the role of the criticized. This instance of Cooke’s satirical poem further
illustrates the divide that was growing between the English and the colonists
by showing how the Old World English citizen grapples with New World colonial
life.
While Cooke’s humor in “The Sotweed Factor” is
entertaining, it is closer to being a witty exaggeration rather than a genuine
account of colonial life. As the Factor reluctantly trudges onwards, he is
appalled when he becomes entangled in the crooked dealings of the Maryland
courts. The colony’s legal system is just as untamed and wild as the colonists
themselves: “The Jury, Lawyers, and their Clyents, / Contending, fight like
earth-born Gyants:” (Cooke 10-11). Apparently the planters of Maryland cannot
be civil, not even in court. Despite many popular assumptions
among the English, Edward Cohen reveals that the colonial courts were often
equal to their local counterparts in England (18). Cooke creates a caricatured
image of colonial life through his exaggerated humor, an image that, although
amusing, is not wholly true to life. However, further research confirms that
Cooke and his sotweed factor are not alone in making unfounded assumptions
about colonial life. In an 1844 letter to his mother and father, English
immigrant Edwin Bottomley writes about his new life in the Wisconsin territory.
Although Bottomley is writing nearly 140 years after Cooke, his letter proves
that these exaggerations of American life die hard. Bottomley describes a
friend of the family, Joseph Nobles who rumors that the Sabbath is not kept in
Wisconsin territory. Edwin urges his parents to disregard this statement: “If
you have heard of it, I hope you won’t believe him. The Sabbath is kept just as
it is in England” (Bottomley June 27 1844). Not unlike Cooke’s example, Joseph
Nobles assumes that in this wild American territory, religious customs are
completely disposed of. Settlements in American territories receive the same
scrutiny that the English colonies did almost a century and a half earlier,
demonstrating the ongoing differences between a unique American identity and
the English identity.
“The Sotweed Factor” is a testament to the
confliction, albeit a humorous confliction, between two different identities:
the English identity versus the newly-forming American identity. Cooke provides
a highly critical portrait of the American colonists that is based on his own personal
experiences in Maryland while simultaneously revealing the prevailing attitudes
that these two groups held toward one another. The English Factor views his colonial
brethren as crude and inferior, but the colonists see the factor’s struggles in
their world as his inability to assimilate and ultimately become American. Exaggerated
at times, the sotweed Factor’s facetious journey through the Maryland colony exposes
the early beginnings of America. The Old World that had colonized America was
giving way to a distinctly American culture in the New World.
Works
Cited
Bottomley,
Edwin. Bottomley Papers. 27 June
1844. M.S. University of Wisconsin-Parkside Archives.
Cohen,
Edward H. Ebenezer Cooke: The Sot-Weed
Canon. Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1975.
Cooke,
Ebenezer. “The SotWeed Factor; or, a Voyage to Maryland. A Satyr.” Early Americas Digital Archive. John
Murphy Company, 1900. Web. 29 Oct. 2012.
Ford,
Sarah. “Humor’s Role in Imagining America: Ebenezer Cook’s The Sot-Weed
Factor”. Southern Literary Journal.
35.2 (2003): 1-12. MLA International
Bibliography. 17 Nov. 2012.
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