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FAIR PENITENT.

THIS Tragedy has the usual characteristics of Rowe -Suavity-Pomp-a sententious Morality-little action, less passion. He wins upon the ear-he never irresistibly seizes on the heart.

Dramatically, Rowe must be considered as the founder of a subordinate idea of the nature of Tragic structure-He is content to be graceful, and occasionally aims to be grand-his characters sooth and satiate they are wearisomely uniform-Sympathy he has seldom the secret to command-SHORE does draw tears, and only Shore.

This play bespeaks Italian reading, and yet of Italian, Rowe knew so little that he sounds SCIOLTO a trissyllable. What is his merit it may be asked?—moral purpose? not always. Versification is nearly the whole of it. But though majestic and harmonious, it is not the versification best adapted to the Stage.—It is too perpetually polished-his lines are not sufficiently broken by pauses.

PROLOGUE.

LONG has the fate of kings and empires been
The common business of the tragic scene,
As if misfortune made the throne her seat,
And none could be unhappy, but the great.
Dearly, 'tis true, each buys the crown he wears,
And many are the mighty monarch's cares:
By foreign foes and home-bred factions prest,
Few are the joys he knows, and short his hours of rest,
Stories like these with wonder we may hear;
But far remote, and in a higher sphere,
We ne'er can pity what we ne'er can share:
Like distant battles of the Pole and Swede,
Which frugal citizens o'er coffee read,
Careless for who should fall or who succeed.
Therefore an humbler theme our author chose,
A melancholy tale of private woes :
No princes here lost royalty bemoan,

But you shall meet with sorrows like your own:
Here see imperious love his vassals treat
As hardly as ambition does the great;
See how succeeding passions rage by turns,
How fierce the youth with joy and rapture burns,

And how to death, for beauty lost, he mourns.

If

Let no nice taste the poet's art arraign,

some frail vicious characters he feign:

Who writes, should still let nature be his care,

Mix shades with lights, and not paint all things fair,
But shew you men and women as they are.
With def'rence to the fair, he bade me say,
Few to perfection ever found the way:
Many in many parts are known t' excel,
But 'twere too hard for one to act all well;
Whom justly life would through each scene commend,
The maid, the wife, the mistress, and the friend;
This age, 'tis true, has one great instance seen,
And Heav'n, in justice, made that one a queen.

Dramatis Personae.

DRURY - Lane.

SCIOLTO, a nobleman of Genoa

ALTAMONT, a young lord, in love with

Calista

HORATIO, his friend

LOTHARIO, a young lord and enemy to Al

tamont

ROSSANO, bis friend

CALISTA, daughter to Sciolto

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LAVINIA, sister to Altamont, and wife

to Horatio

LUCILLA, confident to Calista

Men.

Mr. Aickin.

Mr. Barrymore.
Mr. Bensley.

Mr. Palmer.

Mr. Williames.

Women.

Mrs. Siddons.

Mrs. Ward.

Miss Palmer.

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HORATIO, his friend

LOTHARIO, a young lord, and enemy to Al

tamont

ROSSANO, his friend

CALISTA, daughter to Sciolto

LAVINIA, sister to Altamont, and wife to

Horatio

LUCILLA, confident to Calista

Servants to Sciolto.

Mr. Harley.

Mr. Holman.
Mr. Evatt.

Women.

Miss Brunton.

Miss Chapman.
Miss Stuart.

SCENE, Sciolto's palace and garden, with some part of the street

near it, in Genoa.

THE

FAIR PENITENT.

ACTI. SCENE I.

A garden belonging to SCIOLTO's palace. Enter ALTA-
MONT and HORATIO.

Altamont.

LET this auspicious day be ever sacred,

No mourning, no misfortunes happen on it :
Let it be mark'd for triumphs and rejoicings;
Let happy lovers ever make it holy,

Choose it to bless their hopes, and crown their wishes,
This happy day, that gives me my Calista.

Hor. Yes, Altamont; to-day thy better stars
Are join'd to shed their kindest influence on thee;
Sciolto's noble hand that rais'd thee first,
Half dead and drooping o'er thy father's grave,
Completes it's bounty, and restores thy name
To that high rank and lustre which it boasted,
Before nngrateful Genoa had forgot
The merit of thy god-like father's arms;
Before that country, which he long had serv'd
In watchful councils, and in winter-camps,

Had cast off his white age to want and wretchedness,

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