Various

The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 02, No. 10, August, 1858


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had I Shadwell's second bays,

      Or, Tate! thy pert and humble lays,–

      Ye pair, forgive me, when I vow

      I never missed your works till now,–

      I'd tear the leaves to wipe the shrine,

      That only way you please the Nine;

      But since I chance to want these two,

      I'll make the songs of Durfey do."

      And in a far more venomous and violent style, the noteless mob of contemporary writers.

      Shadwell, after all, was very far from being the blockhead these references imply. His "Third Nights" were probably far more profitable than Dryden's.23 By his friends he was classed with the liveliest wits of a brilliant court. Rochester so classed him:–

      "I loathe the rabble: 'tis enough for me,

      If Sedley, Shadwell, Shephard, Wycherley,

      Godolphin, Butler, Buckhurst, Buckingham,

      And some few more, whom I omit to name,

      Approve my sense: I count their censure fame."24

      And compares him elsewhere with Wycherley:–

      "Of all our modern wits, none seem to me

      Once to have touched upon true comedy,

      But hasty Shadwell and slow Wycherley.

      Shadwell's unfinished works do yet impart

      Great proofs of force of nature, none of art;

      With just, bold strokes, he dashes here and there,

      Showing great mastery with little care,

      Scorning to varnish his good touches o'er

      To make the fools and women praise them more.

      But Wycherley earns hard whate'er he gains;

      He wants no judgment, and he spares no pains," etc.

      And, not disrespectfully, Pope:–

      "In all debates where critics bear a part,

      Not one but nods, and talks of Jonson's art,

      Of Shakspeare's nature, and of Cowley's wit;

      How Beaumont's judgment checked what Fletcher writ;

      How Shadwell hasty, Wycherley was slow;

      But for the passions, Southerne, sure, and Rowe!

      These, only these, support the crowded stage,

      From eldest Heywood down to Cibber's age."25

      Sedley joined him in the composition of more than one comedy. Macaulay, in seeking illustrations of the times and occurrences of which he writes, cites Shadwell five times, where he mentions Etherege, Wycherley, and Congreve once.26 From his last play, "The Stockjobbers," performed in November, 1692, while its author was on his death-bed, the historian introduces an entire scene into his text.27 Any one, indeed, who can clear his mind from the unjust prejudice produced by Dryden's satire, and read the comedies of Shadwell with due consideration for the extemporaneous haste of their composition, as satires upon passing facts and follies, will find, that, so far from never deviating into sense, sound common-sense and fluent wit were the Laureate's staple qualities. If his comedies have not, like those of his contemporaries just named, enjoyed the good-fortune to be collected and preserved among the dramatic classics, the fact is primarily owing to the ephemeral interest of the hits and allusions, and secondarily to "MacFlecknoe."

      [To be continued.]

      THE ROMANCE OF A GLOVE

      "Halt!" cried my travelling companion. "Property overboard!"

      The driver pulled up his horses; and, before I could prevent him, Westwood leaped down from the vehicle, and ran back for the article that had been dropped.

      It was a glove,–my glove, which I had inadvertently thrown out, in taking my handkerchief from my pocket.

      "Go on, driver!" and he tossed it into my hand as he resumed his seat in the open stage.

      "Take your reward," I said, offering him a cigar; "but beware of rendering me another such service!"

      "If it had been your hat or your handkerchief, be sure I should have let it lie where it fell. But a glove,–that is different. I once found a romance in a glove. Since then, gloves are sacred." And Westwood gravely bit off the end of his cigar.

      "A romance? Tell me about that. I am tired of this endless stretch of sea-like country, these regular ground-swells; and it's a good two-hours' ride yet to yonder headland, which juts out into the prairie, between us and the setting sun. Meanwhile, your romance."

      "Did I say romance? I fear you would hardly think it worthy of the name," said my companion. "Every life has its romantic episodes, or, at least, incidents which appear such to him who experiences them. But these tender little histories are usually insipid enough when told. I have a maiden aunt, who once came so near having an offer from a pale stripling, with dark hair, seven years her junior, that to this day she often alludes to the circumstance, with the remark, that she wishes she knew some competent novel-writer in whom she could confide, feeling sure that the story of that period of her life would make the groundwork of a magnificent work of fiction. Possibly I inherit my aunt's tendency to magnify into extraordinary proportions trifles which I look at through the double convex lens of a personal interest. So don't expect too much of my romance, and you shall hear it.

      "I said I found it in a glove. It was by no means a remarkable glove,–middle-sized, straw-colored, and a neat fit for this hand, in which I now hold your very excellent cigar. Of course, there was a young lady in the case;–let me see,–I don't believe I can tell you the story," said Westwood, "after all!"

      I gently urged him to proceed.

      "Pshaw!" said he, after kindling his cigar with a few vigorous whiffs, "what's the use of being foolish? My aunt was never diffident about telling her story, and why should I hesitate to tell mine? The young lady's name,–we'll call her simply Margaret. She was a blonde, with hazel eyes and dark hair. Perhaps you never heard of a blonde with hazel eyes and dark hair? She was the only one I ever saw; and there was the finest contrast imaginable between her fair, fresh complexion, and her superb tresses and delicately-traced eyebrows. She was certainly lovely, if not handsome; and–such eyes! It was an event in one's life, Sir, just to look through those luminous windows into her soul. That could not happen every day, be sure! Sometimes for weeks she kept them turned from me, the ivory shutters half-closed, or the mystic curtains of reserve drawn within; then, again, when I was tortured with unsatisfied yearnings, and almost ready to despair, she would suddenly turn them upon me, the shutters thrown wide, the curtains away, and a flood of radiance streaming forth, that filled me so full of light and gladness, that I had no shadowy nook left in me for a doubt to hide in. She must have been conscious of this power of expression. She used it so sparingly, and, it seemed to me, artfully! But I always forgave her when she did use it, and cherished resentment only when she did not.

      "Margaret was shy and proud; I could never completely win her confidence; but I knew, I knew well at last, that her heart was mine. And a deep, tender, woman's heart it was, too, despite her reserve. Without many words, we understood each other, and so–Pshaw!" said Westwood, "my cigar is out!"

      "On with the story!"

      "Well, we had our lovers' quarrels, of course. Singular, what foolish children love makes of us!–rendering us sensitive, jealous, exacting, in the superlative degree. I am sure, we were both amiable and forbearing towards all the world besides; but, for the powerful reason that we loved, we were bound to misinterpret words, looks, and actions, and wound each other on every convenient occasion. I was pained by her attentions to others, or perhaps by an apparent preference