[Ads-l] "Afric" -- not in poetry, 1778 (and probably 1744)

Joel Berson berson at ATT.NET
Thu Apr 7 19:34:03 UTC 2016


Poetic use hadn't occurred to me.  I wonder whether "Afric" will be found in prose ...

“... and to give up all their claim to the islands between Italy and Afric...”. M. T. Cicero’s CatoMajor, or Discourse on Old Age. ... With Explanatory Notes. By BenjaminFranklin, LL. D.  London:Printed for Fielding and Walker, Pater-Noster Row.  1778.  Page39; and on five other pages.  [Harvard’sHollis says of this “Translated and annotated by James Logan. The prefatorynotice by Benjamin Franklin has been so altered from the 1744 original (printed by "Honest Ben" Franklin) as tomake him appear to be the translator.”] Google Books shows other prose uses as a place-name between 1700and 1799.  And afew (plus some poetry) in the late 17th century.

Joel


      From: Laurence Horn <laurence.horn at YALE.EDU>
 To: ADS-L at LISTSERV.UGA.EDU 
 Sent: Thursday, April 7, 2016 2:02 PM
 Subject: Re: [ADS-L] "Afric" -- Gaps in OED3
   
Note that in each of the examples here the bisyllabic (and trochaic) rendering of "Afric" as against the standardly trisyllabic (dactylic) version in "Africa" is metrically motivated.

LH

> On Apr 7, 2016, at 1:35 PM, Joel Berson <berson at att.net> wrote:
> 
> For "Afric", noun, OED3, updated Sept. 2012, has only the definition as a person.  The quotations have the customary lack of 18th-century examples, with a long gap from 1606 to 1821.  There is no definition for "Afric" as a place.
> 
> For "Afric", adj., OED3 has a gap between 1733 and 1834.
> 
> 
> The following all arose from Manisha Sinha, The Slave's Cause, A History of Abolition (Yale University Press, 2016).  I have not traced sources, so I have few primary source titles or page numbers.
> 
> 
> I.  Noun.
> 
> A.  Person: Mind the gap.
> 
> 
> 1773.  "MNEME begin. Inspire, ye sacred nine, / Your vent’rous Afric in her great design."  Phillis Wheatley, "On Recollection".  Sinha, page 30, par. 1.
> 
> B.  Place: No quotations.
> 
> 
> (1)  1773.  "I, young in life, by seeming cruel fate / Was snatch'd from Afric's fancy'd happy seat".  Phillis Whealey.  [Poem title not known to me.]  Sinha, page 31, last par.  In Phillis Wheatley, Poems on Various Subjects.
> 
> 
> (2)  [Circa 1775.]  "But how, presumptuous shall we hope to find / Divine acceptance with th' Almighty mind -- / While yet (O deed ungenerous!) they disgrace / And hold in bondage Afric's blameless race?"  Phillis Wheatley.  Unpublished.  Sinha, page 32, par. 3.  Probably in Phillis Wheatley, The Collected Works of PhillisWheatley, ed. John C. Shields (OxfordUniv. Press, 1988), page 149.
> 
> 
> C.  Adjective: Gap.
> 
> 
> 1771.  "Shall [Whitefield’s] due praises be so loudlysung / By a young Afric damsels virgin tongue? / And I be silent!l".  Jane Dunlap.  [Untitled.]  Sinha, page 30, par. 3.  Probably in Dunlap, Poems Upon Several Sermons, page 17.
> -----
> Other examples from the 18th century should be locatable in the usual suspects -- er, databases (including EAI), and perhaps earlier uses of "Afric" as a place name can also be found.
> 
> 
> Joel
> 
> 
> 
> 
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