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The Bravo
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02 January 2024
A novel of early eighteenth-century Venice that Cooper called "in spirit, the most American book I ever wrote."
The Bravo (1831) takes place in early eighteenth-century Venice, when the "Serene Republic" had lost much of its glory, leaving its oligarchs struggling to hold on to their family wealth by manipulating the government and people through secret councils and a figure-head doge. In 1844, Cooper called it "in spirit, the most American book I ever wrote" because of its depiction of the masses duped by demagoguery and the attempts of Congress to rein in President Jackson, who Cooper saw as representing the popular will. In the novel, the low-born hero, Jacopo Frontoni, is forced to become an agent of the state because his unjustly imprisoned father languishes in the infamous state prison. On the last page, Jacopo is executed as a scapegoat for the crimes attributed to him of which he is innocent, rendering his beloved insane. Only in a subplot does a noble couple escape Venice to enjoy marriage.
The present text is based on all extant manuscript witnesses (including a lengthy deleted section) and offers extensive explanatory notes.
"…a beautiful and imposing volume that wears its scholarly scruples on its sleeve … It is an edition whose weight—scholarly, aesthetic, and literal—seems to canonize the novel and make it impossible to ignore." — Early American Literature
Acknowledgments
Historical Introduction
Illustrations
Preface [1831]
Preface [1834]
The Bravo
Explanatory Notes
Textual Commentary
The Manuscript and Its Transcription
A Note on the Amanuensis Copy
Emendations
Rejected Readings
Textual Notes
Word-Division