three thrusts of the foils, which we know are so I have observed that in all our tragedies, the The words of a good writer, which describe it lively, will make a deeper impression of belief in us than all the actor can insinuate into us, when he seems to fall dead before us; as a poet in the description of a beautiful garden, or a meadow, 4 will please our imagination more than the place itself can please our sight. When we see death represented, we are convinced it is but fiction'; but when we hear it related, our eyes, the strongest witnesses, are wanting, which might have undeceived us; and we are all willing to favour the sleight, when the poct does not too grossly impose on us. They therefore who imagine these relations would make no concernment in the audience, : are deceived, by confounding them with the other, which are of things antecedent to the play: those : painting of the hero's mind were not more pro- Segnius irritant animos demissa per aurem, For he says immediately after, Non tamen intus Digna geri promes in scenam; multaq; tolles Among which many he recounts soine : That is, those actions which by reason of their same before him in his Eunuch, where Pythias makes the like relation of what had happened within at the Soldier's entertainment. The relations likewise of Sejanus's death, and the prodigies before it, are remarkable; the one of which was hid from sight, to avoid the horrour and tumult of the representation; the other, to shun the introducing of things impossible to be believed. In that excellent play, THE KING AND NO KING, Fletcher goes yet farther; for the whole unravelling of the plot is done by narration in the fifth act, after the manner of the ancients; and it moves great concernment in the audience, though it be only a relation of what was done many years before the play. I could multiply other instances, but these are sufficient to prove that there is no errour in choosing a subject which requires this sort of narrations; in the ill management of thein, there may. But I find I have been too long in this discourse, since the French have many other excellencies not cominon to us; as that you never see any of their plays end with a conversion, or simple change of will, which is the ordinary way which our poets use to end theirs. It shews little art in the conclusion of a dramatick poem, when they who have hindered the felicity during the four acts, desist from it in the fifth, without some powerful cause • A KING AND NO KING is one of the few plays in which Fletcher had the aid of Beaumont. It was acted at court in 1613, two years before Beaumont's death. 1 to take them off their design; and though I deny not but such reasons may be found, yet it is a path that is cautiously to be trod, and the poet is to be sure he convinces the audience that the motive is strong enough. As for example, the conversion of the Usurer in THE SCORNFUL LADY, seems to me a little forced; for, being an Usurer, which implies a lover of money to the highest degree of covetousness, and such the poet has represented him, the account he gives for the sudden change is, that he has been duped by the wild young fellow; which in reason might render him more wary another time, and make him punish himself with harder fare and coarser clothes, to get up again what he had lost: but that he should look on it as a judgment, and so repent, we may expect to hear in a serinon, but I should never endure it in a play. • I pass by this; neither will I insist on the care they take, that no person after his first entrance shall ever appear, but the business which brings him upon the stage shall be evident; which rule, if observed, must needs render all the events in the play more natural; for there you see the probability of every accident, in the cause that produced it; and that which appears chance in the play, will seem so reasonable to you, that you will there find it almost necessary: so that in the exit of the actor you have a clear account of his purpose and design in the next entrance; (though, if the scene be well wrought, the event will commonly |