Unfortunately, "literary" writing was not as simple and direct as
political writing. When trying to write poetry, most educated
authors stumbled into the pitfall of elegant neoclassicism. The
epic, in particular, exercised a fatal attraction. American
literary patriots felt sure that the great American Revolution
naturally would find expression in the epic -- a long, dramatic
narrative poem in elevated language, celebrating the feats of a
legendary hero.
Many writers tried but none succeeded. Timothy Dwight (1752- 1817),
one of the group of writers known as the Hartford Wits, is an
example. Dwight, who eventually became the president of Yale
University, based his epic, The Conquest of Canaan (1785), on the
Biblical story of Joshua's struggle to enter the Promised Land.
Dwight cast General Washington, commander of the American army and
later the first president of the United States, as Joshua in his
allegory and borrowed the couplet form that Alexander Pope used to
translate Homer. Dwight's epic was as boring as it was ambitious.
English critics demolished it; even Dwight's friends, such as John
Trumbull (1750-1831), remained unenthusiastic. So much thunder and
lightning raged in the melodramatic battle scenes that Trumbull
proposed that the epic be provided with lightning rods.
Not surprisingly, satirical poetry fared much better than serious
verse. The mock epic genre encouraged American poets to use their
natural voices and did not lure them into a bog of pretentious and
predictable patriotic sentiments and faceless conventional poetic
epithets out of the Greek poet Homer and the Roman poet Virgil by
way of the English poets.
In mock epics like John Trumbull's good-humored M'Fingal (1776-82),
stylized emotions and conventional turns of phrase are ammunition
for good satire, and the bombastic oratory of the revolution is
itself ridiculed. Modeled on the British poet Samuel Butler's
Hudibras, the mock epic derides a Tory, M'Fingal. It is often
pithy, as when noting of condemned criminals facing hanging:
No man e'er felt the halter draw With good opinion of the law.
M'Fingal went into over 30 editions, was reprinted for a half-
century, and was appreciated in England as well as America. Satire
appealed to Revolutionary audiences partly because it contained
social comment and criticism, and political topics and social
problems were the main subjects of the day. The first American
comedy to be performed, The Contrast (produced 1787) by Royall
Tyler (1757-1826), humorously contrasts Colonel Manly, an American
officer, with Dimple, who imitates English fashions. Naturally,
Dimple is made to look ridiculous. The play introduces the first
Yankee character, Jonathan.
Another satirical work, the novel Modern Chivalry, published by
Hugh Henry Brackenridge in installments from 1792 to 1815,
memorably lampoons the excesses of the age. Brackenridge (1748-
1816), a Scottish immigrant raised on the American frontier, based
his huge, picaresque novel on Don Quixote; it describes the
misadventures of Captain Farrago and his stupid, brutal, yet
appealingly human, servant Teague O'Regan.
POET OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION: Philip Freneau (1752-1832)
One poet, Philip Freneau, incorporated the new stirrings of
European Romanticism and escaped the imitativeness and vague
universality of the Hartford Wits.
The key to both his success and
his failure was his passionately democratic spirit combined with an
inflexible temper.
The Hartford Wits, all of them undoubted patriots, reflected the
general cultural conservatism of the educated classes. Freneau set
himself against this holdover of old Tory attitudes, complaining of
"the writings of an aristocratic, speculating faction at Hartford,
in favor of monarchy and titular distinctions." Although Freneau
received a fine education and was as well acquainted with the
classics as any Hartford Wit, he embraced liberal and democratic
causes.
From a Huguenot (radical French Protestant) background, Freneau
fought as a militiaman during the Revolutionary War. In 1780, he
was captured and imprisoned in two British ships, where he almost
died before his family managed to get him released. His poem "The
British Prison Ship" is a bitter condemnation of the cruelties of
the British, who wished "to stain the world with gore." This piece
and other revolutionary works, including "Eutaw Springs," "American
Liberty," "A Political Litany," "A Midnight Consultation," and
"George the Third's Soliloquy," brought him fame as the "Poet of
the American Revolution."
Freneau edited a number of journals during his life, always mindful
of the great cause of democracy. When Thomas Jefferson helped him
establish the militant, anti-Federalist National Gazette in 1791,
Freneau became the first powerful, crusading newspaper editor in
America, and the literary predecessor of William Cullen Bryant,
William Lloyd Garrison, and H.L. Mencken.
As a poet and editor, Freneau adhered to his democratic ideals. His
popular poems, published in newspapers for the average reader,
regularly celebrated American subjects. "The Virtue of Tobacco"
concerns the indigenous plant, a mainstay of the southern economy,
while "The Jug of Rum" celebrates the alcoholic drink of the West
Indies, a crucial commodity of early American trade and a major New
World export. Common American characters lived in "The Pilot of
Hatteras," as well as in poems about quack doctors and bombastic
evangelists.
Freneau commanded a natural and colloquial style appropriate to a
genuine democracy, but he could also rise to refined neoclassic
lyricism in often-anthologized works such as "The Wild Honeysuckle"
(1786), which evokes a sweet-smelling native shrub. Not until the
"American Renaissance" that began in the 1820s would American
poetry surpass the heights that Freneau had scaled 40 years
earlier.
Additional groundwork for later literary achievement was laid
during the early years. Nationalism inspired publications in many
fields, leading to a new appreciation of things American. Noah
Webster (1758-1843) devised an American Dictionary, as well as an
important reader and speller for the schools. His Spelling Book
sold more than 100 million copies over the years. Updated Webster's
dictionaries are still standard today. The American Geography, by
Jedidiah Morse, another landmark reference work, promoted knowledge
of the vast and expanding American land itself. Some of the most
interesting if nonliterary writings of the period are the journals
of frontiersmen and explorers such as Meriwether Lewis (1774-1809)
and Zebulon Pike (1779-1813), who wrote accounts of expeditions
across the Louisiana Territory, the vast portion of the North
American continent that Thomas Jefferson purchased from Napoleon in
1803.
NEOCLASSISM: EPIC, MOCK EPIC, AND SATIRE
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Для автора это очень важно, это стимулирует его на новое творчество!