Saturday, May 2, 2015

marplot

Maybe it's just because I'm making my way through a book of critical essays on Tristram Shandy, but I've come across this word which I'm not familiar with. Marplot. Still, it doesn't seem a rarefied academic sort of word, and maybe everyone would have known and understood it in an earlier era.

...Well, yes, I have read it before, and in all likelihood, you have too. I say this with some confidence, because you won't just find it in literary critiques, but in Little Women, David Copperfield, and Our Mutual Friend. Here's the Little Women quote:

A restless movement from Laurie suggested that his chair was not easy, or that he did not like the plan, and made the old man add hastily, "I don't mean to be a marplot or a burden."

And here's the one from David Copperfield:


Which you haven't, you Marplot,' observed my aunt, in an indignant whisper.

So what is a marplot? According to the Free Dictionary, it is

A person who spoils a plot or who ruins the success of an undertaking or process.

But where does it come from?. Well, actually, this is quite interesting. It comes from a play called The Busy Bodie, written my one Susannah Centlivre, a woman playwright born sometime around 1669 and dying in December of 1723. She is noted as the most successful woman playwright of the 18th century, and the woman second only to Aphra Behn as a woman playwright of the English stage. If it got to Louisa May Alcott, you know The Busy Bodie must have traveled. And in fact it has traveled all the way to the 21st century, as this blogpost gives witness to. 



You don't have to rely on The Bent Quill Players or for that matter me to give the thing life. You can just head on over to Project Gutenberg and read the text of The Busy Bodie your own self. 







5 comments:

  1. I have never heard of marplot before, but I like it for the same reason I like scapegrace. It has that good, old Germaniic vigor, even though I think at least one of its constituents is of Romance origin.

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  2. Yes, it seems like one that should be revived somehow.

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  3. Seana, I always enjoy your writing, but I wanted to mention that I find this blog particularly entertaining and instructive!

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  4. Thank you, Jeff. I am not sure if you are one of the several Jeffs I know in person or not, but in any case, I appreciate it!

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  5. Actually, I just dug a little deeper into your profile and now I know that you are the Jeff I thought you were. Will be adding your blog on music to my blog roll promptly.

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