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Reference
>
Cambridge History
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The Age of Dryden
>
The Restoration Drama
> Sir Charles Sedley
Etherege and his Place in the History of Restoration Drama
Lacy
CONTENTS
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VOLUME CONTENTS
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INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
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BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes
(190721).
Volume VIII. The Age of Dryden.
V.
The Restoration Drama
.
§ 20. Sir Charles Sedley.
The closest immediate follower of Etherege in comedy is Sir Charles Sedley, whose earliest comedy,
The Mulberry Garden,
1668, is based, in part, on Molières
LÉcole des Maris
and is written in that mixture of prose and heroic couplets which Etherege introduced in his
Comical Revenge.
An intimate in the chosen circle of the king, Sedley was as famous for his wit as he was notorious for the profligacy of his life. Nevertheless, he appears to have been a capable man of affairs and, as a writer, gained a deserved reputation alike for the clearness and ease of his prose and for a certain poetic gift, more appreciable in his occasional lyrics than in the serious parts of his dramas.
The Mulberry Garden,
no bad comedy in its lighter scenes, is bettered in
Bellamira, or the Mistress,
1687, which, though founded on the
Eunuchus
of Terence, presents a lively, if coarsely realistic, picture of the reckless pursuit of pleasure of Sedleys day.
The Grumbler,
printed in 1702, is little more than an adaptation of
Le Grondeur
of Brueys and Palaprat. Sedleys tragedies call for no more than the barest mention. His
Antony and Cleopatra,
1667, reprinted as
Beauty the Conqueror,
is among the feeblest, as it is the latest, of heroic plays written in couplets. His
Tyrant King of Crete,
1702, is merely a revision of Henry Killigrews
Pallantus and Eudora,
little amended in the process.
70
28
Note 70
. On this topic, see Genest,
u. s.,
vol.
X,
p. 158, and Lissner, M., in
Anglia,
vol.
XXVIII,
pp. 1803.
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CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
Etherege and his Place in the History of Restoration Drama
Lacy
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