Event Comment: Afterpiece: By Desire.  Boxes #62 10s. 6d.  
Macklin's fifth above charges came to #25 2s. 11d.  Paid for sundry clo
thes from 
Voelcher #30 10s.  Paid 
Blackmore a Bill for 
Rich #29 10s. and a Bill for 
the Theatre from 19 April last: #84 (Account Book).  [On 1 Feb. one 
H. F. of 
the Middle Temple wrote to Macklin suggesting two things to insure 
the success of 
the Married Libertine.  
The first was practical, "bring in a claque of friends to counteract 
the noise of 
the Scots 
Lords who are opposing it."  
The second was revisional: "
The play is too long,--shorten it and give 
the house notice that you have so done.  
The scenes wherein 
Lady Belville is solemn, grave, complaining and moral may be much abbreviated; this will...take away that heavy, lazy and sleepy (however just) part which makes your friends languish and grow cold, and gives your enemies an opportunity to improve 
their rancor and malignity.  This observation may be applied to every recital, narrative or description which is not absolutely necessary or descriptive,--I mean necessarily connected with 
the frame, contexture & execution of 
the drama, or something designed or painted with uncommon poetic fire and enthusiasm.  Pray consider whe
ther that serious, moral and sentimental part in 
the character of 
Angelica might not be curtailed, or entirely omitted.  I would have your young captain fully employed in action without ever standing still to moralize or harangue, however sensibly and poignantly he may do it.  After all this 
there will remain a rich and uninterrupted vein of true comic humour and lively representation in short, a well connected series and succession of business which I am convinced would keep 
the audience so attentive and so entirely possessed that 
there would be no room for languor or malice to produce any effect to your detriment." (
Memoirs of Macklin [
Harvard Theatre Collection, extra-illustrated edition, I, part 2, p. 414.]  Receipts: #188 14s. 6d. (Account Book)