Event Comment: Gift for ye Sufferers by ye fire in 
Cornhill (
Cross).  [A column and a half "Letter to 
the Author" appeared in 
the General Advertiser this day, laying historical background for 
Ford's 
Lover's Melancholy].  
The history of 
the stage before 
the Restoration is like a Foreign Land, in which no 
Englishman had ever travelled; we know 
there were such things as Playhouses, and one 
Shakespear a great writer, but 
the historical traces of 
them are so imperfect, that 
the manner in which 
they existed is less known to us, than that of 
Eschylus or 
the theatres of 
Greece.  For this reason, 'tis hoped that 
the following Gleaning of 
Theatrical History will readily obtain a place in your paper. 'Tis taken from a Pamphlet written in 
the reign of 
Charles I, with this quaint title, "Old Ben's Light Heart made heavy by young John's 
Melancholly Lover"; and as it contains some historical anecdotes and altercations concerning 
Ben Johnson, 
Ford, 
Shakespear, and 
the Lover's Melancholy it is imagined that a few extracts from it at this juncture, will not be unentertaining to 
the Public.  [
The substance of 
the remainder retails 
Jonson's critical cantankerousness and his wounded pride at 
the failure of 
the New Inn, quoting some epigrams made at Jonson's expense on his allegation that Ford was a plagiary.  This second "puff" for 
the play, presumably also written by 
Macklin, formed 
the basis for a 
Steevens-
Malone controversy late in 
the century, centering on 
the existence or nonexistence of 
the pamphlet referred to by Macklin as "Old Ben's Light Heart made Heavy, &c."  A summary account of 
the evidence appears in 
the Dramatic Works of John Ford, by 
Henry Weber (
Edinburgh, 1811) I, Intro. XVI, XXXI.]  Receipts: #210 (
Cross); #208 1s. (
Powel)