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4.3
78 reviewsDon Marquis introduced Archy into his daily newspaper column at New York's Evening Sun. Archy, whose name was always written in lower case in the book titles, but was upper case when Marquis would write about him in narrative form, was a cockroach who had been a free verse poet in a previous life, and took to writing stories and poems on an old typewriter at the newspaper office when everyone in the building had left.
Archy would climb up onto the typewriter and hurl himself at the keys, laboriously typing out stories of the daily challenges and travails of a cockroach. Archy's best friend was Mehitabel, an alley cat. The two of them shared a series of day-to-day adventures that made satiric commentary on daily life in the city during the 1910s and 1920s.
Because he was a cockroach, Archy was unable to operate the shift key on the typewriter (he jumped on each key to type; since using shift requires two keys to be pressed simultaneously, he physically could not use capitals), and so all of his verse was written without capitalization or punctuation. Writing in his own persona, though, Marquis always used correct capitalization and punctuation. As E.B. White wrote in his introduction to The Lives and Times of Archy and Mehitabel, it would be incorrect to conclude that, "because Don Marquis's cockroach was incapable of operating the shift key of a typewriter, nobody else could operate it." There was at least one point in which Archy happened to jump onto the shift lock key, a chapter titled "CAPITALS AT LAST".
The Lives and Times of Archy and Mehitabel includes the three books about these characters:
· Archy and Mehitabel
· Archy's Life of Mehitabel
· Archy Does His Part