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Reference
>
Cambridge History
>
Colonial and Revolutionary Literature; Early National Literature, Part I
>
The Early Drama, 17561860
> Romantic Tragedy
Types of Drama
Historical and National Plays
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes
(190721).
VOLUME XV. Colonial and Revolutionary Literature; Early National Literature, Part I.
II.
The Early Drama, 17561860
.
§ 13. Romantic Tragedy.
Of greatest distinction as literature are the tragedies. About eighty of these were performed, forty of which are extant, and they belong usually to the type known as romantic tragedy. In many cases there is an additional historical interest. Among those dealing with ancient history the most significant are Paynes
Brutus
(1818), Birds
Gladiator
(I83I), David Paul Browns
Sertorius, the Roman Patriot,
acted by the elder Booth in 1830, and
Waldimar
by John J. Bailey, produced by Charles Kean in 1831 and based on the massacre at Thessalonica in the fourth century A.D. Dunlaps
Leicester
(1794), Barkers
Marmion
(1812), and Conrads
Jack Cade
(1835) are the best of the dozen dealing with English history, while the historical interest is also definite in such tragedies as John Burks
Female Patriotism or The Death of Joan
DArc (1798), Dunlaps
Virgin of the Sun
(1800), Mrs. Ellets
Teresa Contarini
(1835), a venetian tragedy, Epes Sargents
Velasco,
laid in Burgos in 1046, and acted by E. L. Davenport in 1837, and
Bianca Visconti,
by Nathaniel Parker Willis, based on the career of Francesco Sforza. This play won the prize competition offered by Josephine Clifton, who produced it in 1837 in the principal cities of this country. It held the stage as late as 1852. George H. Miles prize play of
Mohammed,
performed in 1851, and
Leonor de Guzman
and
Francesca da Rimini
of Boker belong also to this group. Even in the historical tragedies, however, it is the unhappy lot of the main character and the interest of the unfamiliar that hold the attention rather than the background, and there is no clear line to be drawn between those which are historical and those which are not. To the latter class belong Birds
Broker of Bogota,
and a tragedy of peculiar interest,
Octavia Brigaldi,
by Mrs. Conner, in which she acted in the title role in 1837. The play was repeated often in this country and was successfully produced in London. It was based on the killing, in 1828, by Colonel Beauchamp of Kentucky, of Colonel Sharpe, who had seduced Beauchamps wife before their marriage.
19
Mrs. Conner transfered the scene to Milan at the close of the fifteenth century. This preference for foreign scenes, especially in Spain or Italy, remains one of the significant features of this type of play. There has been a tendency to criticize these playwrights for failing to confine themselves to national themes, which in view of the existence of
Hamlet, Julius Caesar, and Othello
seems beside the point. But there is nothing so satisfactory in a review of our early drama as the steady progress in romantic tragedy from
The Prince of Parthia
in 1767 to
Francesca da Rimini
in 1855.
21
Note 19
. Trent, W.P.,
William Gilmore Simms,
1892, p. 117. W. G. Simms wrote two novels,
Beauchampe
(1842) and
Charlemont
(1856), upon this event, and C.F. Hoffman his
Greyslaer
(1840).
Beauchampe
was dramatized in 1856 by John Savage under the title of
Sybil,
which was frequently played.
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CONTENTS
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VOLUME CONTENTS
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INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
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BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
Types of Drama
Historical and National Plays
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