Event Comment: An unidentified letter, 22 March 1693@4. 
There is hardly anything now to make it acceptable to you, but an account of our winter diversions, and chiefly of 
the new plays which have been 
the entertainment of 
the town.  
The first that was acted was 
Mr Congreve's, called 
The Double Dealer [see October 1693].  It has fared with that play, as it generally does with beauties officiously cried up: 
the mighty expectation which was raised of it made it sink, even beneath its own merit.  
The character of 
The Double Dealer is artfully writt,  but 
the action being but single, and confined within 
the rules of true comedy, it could not please 
the generality of our audience, who relish nothing but variety, and think any thing dull and heavy which does not border upon farce.--
The criticks were severe upon this play, which gave 
the author occasion to lash 'em in his Epistle Dedicatory, in so defying or hectoring a style, that it was counted rude even by his best friends; so that 'tis generally thought he has done his business, and lost himself: a thing he owes to Mr Dryden's treacherous friendship, who being jealous of 
the applause he had gott by his 
Old Batchelour, deluded him into a foolish imitation of his own way of writing angry prefaces.  
The 2d play is 
Mr Dryden's, called 
Love Triumphant, or Nature will prevail [see 15 January 1694].  It is a tragi-comedy, but in my opinion one of 
the worst he ever writt, if not 
the very worst: 
the comical part descends beneath 
the style and shew of a 
Bartholomew-fair droll.  It was damn'd by 
the universal cry of 
the town, 
nemine contradicente, but 
the conceited poet.  He says in his prologue, that this is 
the last 
the town must expect from him; he had done himself a kindness had he taken his leave before.  
The 3d is 
Mr Southern's call'd 
The Fatal Marriage, or the Innocent Adultery [see February 1693@4].  It is not only 
the best that author ever writt, but is generally admired for one of 
the greatest ornaments of 
the stage, and 
the most entertaining play has appeared upon it 
these 7 years.  
The plot is taken from 
Mrs Behn's novel, called 
the Unhappy Vow-Breaker.  I never saw 
Mrs Barry act with so much passion as she does in it; I could not forbear being moved even to tears to see her act.  Never was poet better rewarded or incouraged by 
the town; for besides an extraordinary full house, which brought him about 140 #. 50 noblemen, among whom my 
Lord Winchelsea, was one, give him guineas apiece, and 
the printer 36 #. for his copy.  This kind usage will encourage desponding minor poets, and vex huffing Dryden and Congreve to madness.  [For 
the fourth play, see 21 March 1693@4; 
Edmond Malone, 
Plays and Poems of William Shakespeare (
London, 1821), III, 162-64.