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Land of Cockaigne Cockayne

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COCKAIGNE (COCKAYNE), LAND OF, an imaginary country, a mediaeval Utopia where life was a continual round of luxurious idleness. The origin of the Italian word cocagna has been much disputed. It seems safest to connect it, as do Grimm and Lithe, ultimately with Lat. coquere, through a word mean ing "cake," the literal sense thus being "The Land of Cakes." In Cockaigne the rivers were of wine, the houses were built of cake and barley-sugar, the streets were paved with pastry, and the shops supplied goods for nothing. Roast geese and fowls wan dered about inviting folks to eat them, and buttered larks fell from the skies like manna. There is a 13th-century French fab liau, Cocaigne, which was possibly intended to ridicule the fable of the mythical Avalon, "the Island of the Blest." The 13th-cen tury English poem The Land of Cockaygne, is a satire on mon astic life. The term has been humorously applied to London, and by Boileau to the Paris of the rich. The word has been frequently confused with Cockney (q.v.).

See

D. M. Meon Fabliaux et contes (18o8), and F. J. Furnivail Early English Poems (Berlin, 1862) .

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