The Dramatic Works of John Dryden, Volume 1 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 442 pages of information about The Dramatic Works of John Dryden, Volume 1.

The Dramatic Works of John Dryden, Volume 1 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 442 pages of information about The Dramatic Works of John Dryden, Volume 1.

[70] Vol. xviii.

[71] It is now No. 43.

[72] Vol. vii.

[73] [The unfavourable accounts of Lady Elizabeth’s temper after marriage are not much better founded than those of her maidenly or unmaidenly conduct before it.  Dryden’s supposed to almost all his contemporaries in belles-lettres.  There is no sign in his letters of any conjugal unhappiness, and Malone’s “respectable authority” is family gossip a century after date.—­ED.]

[74] [Transcriber’s note:  “P. 85” in original.  This is to be found in Section II.]

[75] These are—­1.  Latin verses prefixed to Lord Roscommon’s Essay on Translated Verse. 2.  Latin verses on the Death of Charles II., published in the Cambridge collection of Elegies on that occasion. 3.  A poem in the same language, upon Lord Arlington’s Gardens, published in the Second Miscellany. 4.  A translation of the seventh Satire of Juvenal, mentioned in the text. 5.  An English poem, on the Happiness of a Retired Life. 6.  A pretty song, printed by Mr. Malone, to which Charles Dryden also composed music.

[76] The prologue was spoken by the ghosts of Shakespeare and Dryden; from which Mr. Malone selects the following curious quotation:—­“Mr. Bevil Higgons, the writer of it, ventured to make the representative of our great dramatic poet speak these lines!—­

“These scenes in their rough native dress were mine; But now, improved, with nobler lustre shine The first rude sketches Shakespeare’s pencil drew, But all the shining master strokes are new. This play, ye critics, shall your fury stand, Adorned and rescued by a faultless hand.”

To which our author replies,

  “I long endeavoured to support the stage,
  With the faint copies of thy nobler rage,
  But toiled in vain for an ungenerous age. 
  They starved me living, nay, denied me fame,
  And scarce, now dead, do justice to my name. 
  Would you repent?  Be to my ashes kind;
  Indulge the pledges I have left behind.”—­MALONE.

[77] [Transcriber’s note:  “Page 206, and vol. ix.” in original.  This is to be found in Section V.]

[78] Mr. Malone says, “Edward Dryden, the eldest son of the last Sir Erasmus Dryden, left by his wife, Elizabeth Allen, who died in London in 1761, five sons; the youngest of whom, Bevil, was father of the present Lady Dryden.  Sir John, the eldest, survived all his brothers, and died without issue, at Canons-Ashby, March 20, 1770.” [The subsequent history of the family is as follows:—­Elizabeth Dryden, the “present Lady Dryden” referred to by Scott, married Mr. John Turner, to whom she carried the estates.  Mr. Turner assumed the name and arms of Dryden in 1791, and was created a baronet four years later.  The title and property passed successively to his two sons, and then to the son of the younger, the present Sir Henry Dryden, a distinguished archaeologist.—­ED.]

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