I was surprised to see that Alexander Pope was familiar with the most popular cuisine served in Texas: barbecue. You’ll find his reference in “The Second Satire in the Second Book of Horace Paraphrased”:
“Oldfield, with more than Harpy throat endu’d,
Cries, ‘send
me, Gods! a whole Hog barbecu’d!’”
In a note to
the poem, Pope writes of Oldfield that “this eminent glutton ran through a
fortune of fifteen hundred pounds a year in the simple luxury of good eating.”
In Texas, barbecue is a religion. I am not observant though I’ve witnessed heated
arguments over what constitutes the proper preparation of barbecue, Texas style.
The magazine Texas Monthly has a barbecue editor. The word is a borrowing from
the Spanish barbacoa and in the late
seventeenth century originally referred in English to the framework or grill holding
meat over a fire. In his dictionary, Dr. Johnson defines barbecue as both a noun and a verb:
“A term used
in the West-Indies for dressing a hog whole; which, being split to the
backbone, is laid flat upon a large gridiron, raised about two foot above a
charcoal fire, with which it is surrounded.”
The couplets
that follow Pope’s reference to barbecue are worthy of his scatologically
minded friend Jonathan Swift:
“O blast it,
South-winds! till a stench exhale
Rank as the
ripeness of a rabbit’s tail.
By what
criterion do you eat, d’ ye think,
If this is
prized for sweetness, that for stink?
When the
tired glutton labours thro’ a treat,
He finds no relish in the sweetest meat.”
Barbecue was one of Long John Silver's nicknames; suitable for a cook of course, but not on a wooden sailing ship...I don't know that Stevenson ever explained this choice.
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