The Lives of the Poets of Great Britain and Ireland (1753) - Volume III by Theophilus Cibber
page 64 of 351 (18%)
page 64 of 351 (18%)
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alter'd, with a new title; and after the king's return, it seems the
poet obtained leave to have it acted, but it had the misfortune to be damned by the audience, which Mr. Flecknoe stiles the people, and calls them judges without judgment, for want of its being rightly represented to them; he owns it wants much of the ornaments of the stage, but that, he says, by a lively imagination may be easily supplied. 'To the same purpose he speaks of his Damoiselles à la Mode: That together with the persons represented, he had set down the comedians he had designed should represent them; that the reader might have half the pleasure of seeing it acted, and a lively imagination might have the pleasure of it all entire. 5. The Marriage of Oceanus and Britannia, a Masque. Our author's other works consist of Epigrams and Enigmas. There is a book of his writing, called the Diarium, or the Journal; divided into twelve jornadas, in burlesque verse. Dryden, in two lines in his Mac Flecknoe, gives the character of our author's works. In prose and verse was own'd without dispute, Thro' all the realms of nonsense absolute. We cannot be certain in what year Mr. Flecknoe died: Dryden's satire had perhaps rendered him so contemptible, that none gave themselves the trouble to record any particulars of his life, or to take any notice of his death. |
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