Event Comment: Robert Shirley to
Thomas Coke,
Chartly, 21 Jan. 1695@6: I must agree with you that Wit and Sense seem this winter to have suffered an eclipse, and
the dramatic writers more especially have showed how little
they consulted ei
ther. I do assure you, I have not of
late met with more of both than in your ingenious diverting letter to me, so that I am satisfied Wit is not retired out of town, but has only forsaken
the stage. We that live in
these nor
thern parts are forced to range over fields and woods to find subjects of diversion, for in
the frozen season of
the year,
there is nothing that is more so in
the country than conversation. In my last ramble, ei
ther my own innate fancy, or
the aversion I had to see such plays wrote in
English as would hardly bear
the reading, made me imagine I met with one of
the Muses that had left
the town, and by her discourse seemed to be Patroness of Dramatic Poetry. You know, Sir, to meet with a Nymph in
the desert was no rarity in some countries heretofore, but yet I vow and swear between us, I asked her
the occasion of her leaving
the town, to which she made this sudden answer: @Neglected Wit is silent at a time@When puns, or bombast, stuff each doggrill rhyme.@In comic strain when
they'd describe a fool,@
The author proves
the only ridicule.@In tragic verse while o
thers fain would boast,@Landing some thousand Romans on
the coast,@In what
they would express
themselves are lost,@Make Romans cowards, and make English great,@And make Bonduca valiant, to be beat.@Would Congreve or would Blackmoor now engage,@
They might with manly thoughts reform
the stage:@ ... As for
Mr Southern's play, I have not yet seen it, so that I cannot at present give you my thoughts on it (
HMC, 12th Report, Appendix, Part II,
Cowper MSS., II, 359-60)