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InchbaldVol7Rem1Isabella1808

Remarks on Isabella, The British Theatre by Elizabeth Inchbald

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Elizabeth InchbaldREMARKS [on Isabella]. 1
______

Southern, the author of this tragedy,
was born in Dublin, in the year of the restoration, and received his education in
the
university there.2 He then came to England, and entered himself
in the Middle Temple, as student of the law: but he neglected this study for the fame
of writing plays, and soon after, wholly relinquished it for the adventures of the
army.3 He was patronized by James the Second, when Duke of
York, and served under that monarch, as captain, against the Duke of Monmouth.4

Dryden being asked, whose genius, as a
poet Southern resembled, compared him
to Otway.5 Every reader will own
the comparison just, for they have both unbounded force in the description of
poignant grief.

The present drama, independent of its own worth, will be ever memorable for having
introduced to the admiration of a London audience,—Mrs. Siddons.6

Who will allege, that mental powers have no charm in the female sex? Mrs. Siddons performed on the London
stage, in the prime of youth and bloom of beauty, yet was totally neglected: She came
a few years after, with judgment for her aid, and was enthusiastically
worshipped.7

Woe, bitterest woe, must be gracefully imitated in the just performance of Isabella:
but of such imitation, and of all those delightful sensations, which ariseb 2[Page 4]from beholding fictitious sorrow, the audience of the metropolis had been
for many years deprived, by the want of skilful tragedians, when she
appeared,—she enchanted all the town by her "well painted passion,"8 and
established in the dramatic world, the long lost prerogative of sighs and tears.

The characters which surround Isabella, are merely placed there by the author, to
give effect to all she says and does. Insignificant as those personages are in
themselves, they produce with her so happy a combination, that a most powerful
tragedy is the result of their joint services.

Beyond the deepest pain, felt by an audience for Isabella’s grief, there is a pang
almost insupportable, which proceeds from her gratitude. The author has in no part
of
the tragedy more effectually wrung the hearts of those, who possess nice sensibility,
than where this poor widow is overcome by kindness, to render herself additionally
wretched, rather than be ungrateful.

"This generosity will ruin me."9 —"I am contented to be miserable,
but not this way."10 These are sentences more pathetic to those, who feel acutely the
weight of obligations, than any she pronounces.

Those very auditors are equally vivid in their sensations towards her faults, as her
virtues; and shrink from the unjustifiable manner with which she treats men who come
to demand their right; calling them "rav'ning bloodhounds."11 A character, only half as amiable as the author meant her to appear, could
not conduct herself towards her creditors, but with the most profound respect. Indeed
was Isabella[Page 5] largely indebted to any one amongst these men, and had not
the means of payment,—moral argument, perhaps, could prove, she was bound as
much in honour to marry him for value received, as to
marry Villeroy.12

This play is censured by some critics for its comic scenes;—the tragic are much
superior, they want more of the last, and none of the first. But, more of Isabella,
exquisite as she is, might cause satiety. The author in his work has given variety,
and that variegated scene which nature gives.

Southern wrote no less than ten
plays; of which, only this tragedy, and his Oroonoko, are remembered
to the author's reputation.

He lived to the age of eighty-eight,13 and passed his latter
days in retired serenity, having acquired, by his industry and strict economy, a
considerable fortune.14 He was the first
who increased the advantage of dramatic authors, by obtaining, in addition to the
first, a second and third night for their emolument.15 He also raised the price of prologues, having given seven guineas
to Dryden, on his demand of that sum, for
a prologue, which, till then, had only been rated at five16 . These occurrences gave
occasion to the following lines of Pope: ——Southern, born
to raise
The price of prologues and of plays.17
space between stanzas

Notes

1.  "Remarks." Isabella; or, the Fatal Marriage; A Tragedy,
In Five Acts; By Thomas
Southern
. As Performed at the Theatre Royal, Covent Garden. Printed
Under the Authority of the Managers From the Prompt Book. With Remarks
by Mrs.
Inchbald
. Printed for Longman, Hurst, Rees, and Orme,
Paternoster Row, pp. 3-5. The
British Theatre; or, A Collection of Plays, Which Are Acted At the
Theatres Royal, Drury Lane,
Covent Garden, and
Haymarket. Printed Under
the Authority of the Managers from the Prompt Books. With Biographical
and Critical Remarks, by Mrs.
Inchbald.
In Twenty-Five Volumes. Vol. VII. Isabella. Oroonoko. Distressed Mother. Zara. Gustavus
Vasa
. London: Printed for Longman, Hurst, Rees, and
Orme, Paternoster Row. 1808. The first performance of Thomas Southerne's The Fatal Marriage; or, The Innocent
Adultery
was staged at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane in
February of 1694. However, David
Garrick
's adaptation, Isabella; or,
The Fatal Marriage
, to which Inchbald here refers, was first
staged at the Theatre Royal, Drury
Lane
, probably in 1757. Bernadette D. Woodburn, Laura DeWitt, and
Mary A. Waters edited this essay for The Criticism
Archive
. Back

2.  Thomas
Southerne
was born in 1660, the year Charles II was restored to
the throne following the English Civil Wars. Southerne attended Trinity College
at Dublin from 1676 to 1678. Back

3.  Southerne briefly
studied law at Middle Temple, London, in 1680 before being drawn away by his
interest in theatre. Back

4.  Southerne enlisted as an ensign in
1685, gradually rising to the rank of captain before his military career ended in
1688 with the Glorious Revolution. He served during the Monmouth Rebellion of 1685, an
attempt to depose the Catholic James II by his protestant half-brother, James Scott, 1st Duke of Monmouth. Back

5.  From Theophilus Cibber's The Lives of the Poets of Great Britain and
Ireland
(1753, vol. 5, p. 329). Back

6.  On October 10th, 1782, Sarah
Siddons
played the titular role in David Garrick's adaptation of Isabella at Drury
Lane
. Back

7.  Recruited by Garrick, Siddons played
Portia, the protagonist of Shakespeare's The Merchant of
Venice
, at Drury Lane
in 1775. This performance was not well received, and she was released from her
engagement at Drury Lane. However, her
return to play the titular role of Isabella in 1782 was met with phenomenal
success. Back

8.  Inchbald is quoting Shakespeare's Othello in Act IV, scene i,
spoken by Othello in reference to Desdemona's distress. Back

9.  Found in Act II, scene ii of Garrick's 1776 adaptation of
Isabella, (p. 21) Back

10.  Garrick's 1776
adaptation of Isabella, Act IV, scene
ii, p. 36. Back

11.  Act II, scene iii.
Back

12.  Villeroy is Isabella's second husband whom she marries after 7
years of courting following her husband's supposed death. Back

13.  Southerne died in 1746 at the age of 86. Back

14.  This picture of Southerne's retirement reflects that of Theophilus Cibber in his The Lives of the Poets of Great Britain and
Ireland
(1753, vol. 5, pp. 330-331). Back

15.  Benefit nights to
supplement the income of a playwright, the actors, or some other beneficiary had
become a usual practice by Inchbald's
time. They were often negotiated as part of the terms that allowed the play to be
staged. Back

16.  Johnson says only three. Cibber says seven was given. It has
been thought proper here, to name the most dignified sum [Inchbald's note]. Inchbald refers to Theophilus Cibber's account of the transaction in his The Lives of the Poets of Great Britain and
Ireland
(1753, vol. 5, p. 328). Back

17.  Slightly altered from Alexander Pope's poem
"To Mr. Thomas
Southern
, On His Birth-day" (1742). The quote in this
form first appeared in Cibber's The Lives of the Poets
of Great Britain and Ireland
(1753, vol. 5, p.
328). Back