Fugitive Print: Robert Southey and S. T. Coleridge’s Devil-Ballad

R. Rix
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Abstract

The article examines the print history of Robert Southey and S. T. Coleridge’s co-written but anonymously published ‘The Devil’s Thoughts’ (1799). Over more than three decades, the ballad was transcribed, reprinted, and imitated. Most notably, an illustrated edition of 1830—erroneously ascribed to the classical scholar Richard Porson—enjoyed much popularity in the market for print, allegedly selling fifteen-thousand copies. The satirical poem aims its barbs at lucrative but immoral professions (lawyers, apothecaries, and booksellers), but government policies on prisons and support for war with France are also criticised. The article aims to discuss the poetical and political reasons why the two poets were reluctant to acknowledge the authorship of the satire. Examining the ballad’s various reproductions provides an illuminating case study of how nineteenth-century print culture could exploit popular texts that were placed in the public domain. The discussion will be divided into three sections. The first section will examine the poem’s genesis and unpack its most significant allusions in the context of contemporary print satire. The second section will document the reproduction trajectory of a Romantic-period poem that was dispossessed for most of its popular lifespan. The final section will critically examine how entrepreneurs in the book market cashed in on the popularity of the illustrated version (1830) by publishing several derivative compositions in hasty succession.
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逃亡的印刷品:罗伯特·索西和s·t·柯勒律治的魔鬼歌谣
这篇文章考察了罗伯特·索西和s·t·柯勒律治合著但匿名出版的《魔鬼的思想》(1799)的印刷历史。在三十多年的时间里,这首歌谣被转录、重印和模仿。最值得注意的是,1830年的插图版——被错误地认为是古典学者理查德·波森(Richard porson)的作品——在印刷市场上非常受欢迎,据称卖出了1.5万册。这首讽刺诗的矛头直指利润丰厚但不道德的职业(律师、药剂师和书商),但政府的监狱政策和对法战争的支持也受到了批评。本文旨在探讨两位诗人不愿承认讽刺作品作者身份的诗学和政治原因。考察这首歌谣的各种复制品提供了一个有启发性的案例,研究19世纪的印刷文化如何利用公共领域的流行文本。讨论将分为三个部分。第一部分将考察这首诗的起源,并在当代印刷讽刺的背景下揭示其最重要的典故。第二部分将记录浪漫时期诗歌的复制轨迹,这首诗在其流行的生命周期中大部分时间都被剥夺了。最后一节将批判性地考察图书市场上的企业家是如何利用插图版(1830年)的流行,通过仓促地连续出版几部衍生作品来赚钱的。
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Anna Mercer, The Collaborative Literary Relationship of Percy Bysshe Shelley and Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley (London: Routledge, 2019) Fugitive Print: Robert Southey and S. T. Coleridge’s Devil-Ballad Hrileena Ghosh, John Keats’ Medical Notebook: Text, Context, and Poems (Liverpool: Liverpool University Press, 2020) Angela Wright, Mary Shelley, Gothic Authors: Critical Revisions (Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 2018) Reading Frankenstein in 1818: From Climate Change to Popular Sovereignty
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