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Reference
>
Cambridge History
>
From Steele and Addison to Pope and Swift
>
Lesser Verse Writers
>
The Beggars Opera
and
Polly
John Gay and his early literary efforts;
Rural Sports; The Shepherds Week; The What D ye Call it; Trivia;
Gay and the Queensberrys
Gays love of ease; His Friends
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes
(190721).
Volume IX. From Steele and Addison to Pope and Swift.
VI.
Lesser Verse Writers
.
§ 12.
The Beggars Opera
and
Polly
.
Whenever he was off duty with the Queensberrys, Gayalways inoffensivesought the society of Congreve, Prior, Arbuthnot and, above all, of Swift. To Swifts visit to England in 1736 was, in part, due Gays next venture,
The Beggars Opera,
whichunless an exception be made in favour of Lillos
London Merchant
(1731)may be described as the first popular success of the modern English stage.
29
It ran for the unprecedented, though not uninterrupted, space of sixty-two days, beginning 29 January, 1728, and continued a triumphant career in Bath, Bristol and other towns in the country, and even in the colonies. Like not a few
jeux desprit
of the day, it sprang from a saying of Swift, who observed to Gay that a Newgate pastoral might make an odd pretty sort of thing; and Gay wrote most of it at Twickenham when in the same house with Pope and Swift, whose opinion was that it was either very bad or very good. As often in comic opera, it was one of the numbers,
O ponder well! be not severe
that turned the scale and made the play an irresistible success, out of which Gay gleaned about £800.
20
Polly became the town darling, her songs were painted on fans and the actress who performed the part captured a duke for life. The factions of the day recognised Walpole (who led the applause on the first night) and Townshend in Peachum and Lockit.
The Beggars Opera,
it was said, made Gay rich, and Rich (the manager) gay. Its literary value is very small, except historically as a link between the masque and the vaudeville. For the time, it superseded French and Italian opera, and made a new opening for English lyric on the stage. A sequel was prohibited by the lord chamberlain, and was promptly printed, the fortunate author making £1200 by
Polly
(as it was called), to which the duchess of Marlborough contributed £100 for a single copy.
21
Note 29
. For a retrospective account of the progress of the drama in England, and the place occupied in it by
The Beggars Opera,
see Vol. XI,
post.
[
back
]
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
John Gay and his early literary efforts;
Rural Sports; The Shepherds Week; The What D ye Call it; Trivia;
Gay and the Queensberrys
Gays love of ease; His Friends
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