In any case, this current poem, which deals with opposing political reactions to a particularly ridiculous mob action against a tax collector, has fallen into columns, each with its own spelling and typeface peculiarities. The poem is dated 1786, so the spelling and type variations are typical of the time period. But setting them face to face across the page gives them a partisan grouchiness and separation that, of course, links to my contemporary cynicism about our own wretched Congress. The rebels in the Whiskey Rebellion were mostly drunks who didn't want to pay taxes on liquor, but they were manipulated by government and special interests. The Tea Party parallels are legion. None of this is imagination, yet creating a page arrangement that mirrors the situation has helped me imagine the speaking characters: two pompous old farts trying to describe a mob action in a way that supports their individual preconceptions.
Here's a sample of a stanza pair. Blogger isn't very reliable when it comes to columns, so you'll have to pretend that the righthand one is evenly flush left. If the poem is ever typeset for publication, I hope the designer will find a way to more accurately replicate the old-fashioned "f" for internal "s" style. For now I do the best I can.
The Mob then slic’d off his queue A perfon of fairer character
and arrange’d his Hair in a manner and
greater difcretion
that render’d him Most conspicuous. would
have been neceffary
In the above Plight he was march’d for
the fuccefsful difcharge of that truft,
to the frontiers of Westmoreland-County. but
fuch did not apply.
1 comment:
Love what your doing with your source materials, Dawn. And your priceless descriptions to introduce them.
Post a Comment