The Way of the World
by William Congreve
Audire est operae pretium, prcedere recte
Qui maechis non vultis.--HOR. Sat. i. 2, 37.
- Metuat doti deprensa.--Ibid.
TO THE RIGHT HONOURABLE RALPH, EARL OF MOUNTAGUE, ETC.
My Lord,--Whether the world will arraign me of
vanity or not, that I
have presumed to
dedicate this
comedy to your
lordship, I am yet in
doubt; though, it may be, it is some degree of
vanity even to doubt
of it. One who has at any time had the honour of your
lordship's
conversation, cannot be
supposed to think very meanly of that which
he would prefer to your perusal. Yet it were to incur the
imputation of too much sufficiency to
pretend to such a merit as
might abide the test of your
lordship's censure.
Whatever value may be
wanting to this play while yet it is mine,
will be
sufficiently made up to it when it is once become your
lordship's; and it is my
security, that I cannot have overrated it
more by my dedication than your
lordship will
dignify it by your
patronage.
That it succeeded on the stage was almost beyond my
expectation; for
but little of it was prepared for that general taste which seems now
to be predominant in the palates of our
audience.
Those
characters which are meant to be ridiculed in most of our
comedies are of fools so gross, that in my
humble opinion they
should rather
disturb than
divert the well-natured and reflecting
part of an
audience; they are rather objects of
charity than
contempt, and instead of moving our mirth, they ought very often to
excite our com
passion.
This
reflection moved me to design some
characters which should
appear
ridiculous not so much through a natural folly (which is
incorrigible, and
therefore not proper for the stage) as through an
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affected wit: a wit which, at the same time that it is
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affected, is
also false. As there is some difficulty in the
formation of a
character of this nature, so there is some
hazard which attends the
progress of its success upon the stage: for many come to a play so
overcharged with
criticism, that they very often let fly their
censure, when through their rashness they have
mistaken their aim.
This I had occasion
lately to observe: for this play had been acted
two or three days before some of these hasty judges could find the
leisure to
distinguish betwixt the
character of a Witwoud and a
Truewit.
I must beg your
lordship's
pardon for this digression from the true
course of this
epistle; but that it may not seem altogether
impertinent, I beg that I may plead the occasion of it, in part of
that excuse of which I stand in need, for recommending this
comedyto your
protection. It is only by the
countenance of your
lordship,
and the FEW so qualified, that such who write with care and pains
can hope to be
distinguished: for the prostituted name of poet
promiscuously levels all that bear it.
Terence, the most correct
writer in the world, had a Scipio and a
Lelius, if not to
assist him, at least to support him in his
reputation. And
notwithstanding his
extraordinary merit, it may be
their
countenance was not more than necessary.
The
purity of his style, the
delicacy of his turns, and the justness
of his
characters, were all of them beauties which the greater part
of his
audience were
incapable of tasting. Some of the coarsest
strokes of Plautus, so
severely censured by Horace, were more likely
to
affect the
multitude; such, who come with
expectation to laugh at
the last act of a play, and are better
entertained with two or three
unseasonable jests than with the artful
solution of the fable.
As Terence excelled in his performances, so had he great
advantages
to
encourage his undertakings, for he built most on the foundations
of Menander: his plots were generally modelled, and his
characters
ready drawn to his hand. He copied Menander; and Menander had no
less light in the
formation of his
characters from the observations
of Theophrastus, of whom he was a
disciple; and Theophrastus, it is
known, was not only the
disciple, but the immediate
successor of
Aristotle, the first and greatest judge of
poetry. These were great
models to design by; and the further
advantage which Terence
possessed towards giving his plays the due ornaments of
purity of
style, and justness of manners, was not less
considerable from the
freedom of conversation which was permitted him with Lelius and
Scipio, two of the greatest and most
polite men of his age. And,
indeed, the
privilege of such a conversation is the only certain
means of attaining to the
perfection of dialogue.
If it has happened in any part of this
comedy that I have gained a
turn of style or expression more correct, or at least more
corrigible, than in those which I have
formerly written, I must,
with equal pride and
gratitude,
ascribe it to the honour of your
lordship's admitting me into your conversation, and that of a
society where everybody else was so well
worthy of you, in your
retirement last summer from the town: for it was immediately after,
that this
comedy was written. If I have failed in my performance,
it is only to be regretted, where there were so many not inferior
either to a Scipio or a Lelius, that there should be one
wantingequal in
capacity to a Terence.
If I am not
mistaken,
poetry is almost the only art which has not
yet laid claim to your
lordship's
patronage. Architecture and
painting, to the great honour of our country, have flourished under
your influence and
protection. In the
meantime,
poetry, the eldest
sister of all arts, and parent of most, seems to have resigned her
birthright, by having neglected to pay her duty to your
lordship,
and by permitting others of a later extraction to prepossess that
place in your
esteem, to which none can
pretend a better title.
Poetry, in its nature, is
sacred to the good and great: the
relation between them is reciprocal, and they are ever propitious to
it. It is the
privilege of
poetry to address them, and it is their
prerogative alone to give it
protection.
This received maxim is a general
apology for all
writers who
consecrate their labours to great men: but I could wish, at this
time, that this address were exempted from the common
pretence of
all dedications; and that as I can
distinguish your
lordship even
among the most deserving, so this
offering might become remarkable
by some particular
instance of respect, which should assure your
lordship that I am, with all due sense of your
extreme worthiness
and
humanity, my lord, your
lordship's most
obedient and most
obliged
humble servant,
WILL. CONGREVE.
PROLOGUE--Spoken by Mr. Betterton.
Of those few fools, who with ill stars are curst,
Sure scribbling fools, called poets, fare the worst:
For they're a sort of fools which fortune makes,
And, after she has made 'em fools, forsakes.
With Nature's oafs 'tis quite a diff'rent case,
For Fortune favours all her idiot race.
In her own nest the
cuckoo eggs we find,
O'er which she broods to hatch the changeling kind:
No
portion for her own she has to spare,
So much she dotes on her adopted care.
Poets are bubbles, by the town drawn in,
Suffered at first some
trifling stakes to win:
But what
unequalhazards do they run!
Each time they write they
venture all they've won:
The Squire that's buttered still, is sure to be undone.
This author,
heretofore, has found your favour,
But pleads no merit from his past behaviour.
To build on that might prove a vain presumption,
Should grants to poets made admit resumption,
And in Parnassus he must lose his seat,
If that be found a forfeited estate.
He owns, with toil he
wrought the following scenes,
But if they're
naught ne'er spare him for his pains:
Damn him the more; have no commiseration
For dulness on
mature deliberation.
He swears he'll not
resent one hissed-off scene,