The Wits and Beaux of Society - Volume 1 by Philip Wharton;Grace Wharton
page 161 of 349 (46%)
page 161 of 349 (46%)
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Dryden, and by him and others prepared for representation, so that it
was well fathered. It was successful enough, and Congreve thus found his vocation. In his dedication--a regular piece of flummery of those days, for which authors were often well paid, either in cash or interest--he acknowledges a debt of gratitude to Lord Halifax, who appears to have taken the young man by the hand. The young Templar could do nothing better now than write another play. Play-making was as fashionable an amusement in those days of Old Drury, the only patented theatre then, as novel-writing is in 1860; and when the young ensign, Vanbrugh, could write comedies and take the direction of a theatre, it was no derogation to the dignity of the Staffordshire squire's grandson to do as much. Accordingly, in the following year he brought out a better comedy, 'The Double Dealer,' with a prologue which was spoken by the famous Anne Bracegirdle. She must have been eighty years old when Horace Walpole wrote of her to that other Horace--Mann: 'Tell Mr. Chute that his friend Bracegirdle breakfasted with me this morning. As she went out and wanted her clogs, she turned to me and said: "I remember at the playhouse they used to call, Mrs. Oldfield's chair! Mrs. Barry's clogs! and Mrs. Bracegirdle's pattens!"' These three ladies were all buried in Westminster Abbey, and, except Mrs. Cibber, the most beautiful and most sinful of them all--though they were none of them spotless--are the only actresses whose ashes and memories are hallowed by the place, for we can scarcely say that they do _it_ much honour. The success of 'The Double Dealer,' was at first moderate, although that highly respectable woman, Queen Mary, honoured it with her august presence, which forthwith called up verses of the old adulatory style, though with less point and neatness than those addressed to the Virgin |
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