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George Farquhar |
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ÃöÁä¦rµü¡GRestoration dramatist;Restoration drama;Seminar on Restroation Drama (Spring,1997) |
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George Farquhar
George Farquhar
1678 - 1707
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Provider:
Marguerite Connor / ±d¼}´@
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Called the "greatest
writer" of the period 1698-1710 and the "most successful writer of
humane comedies" by Hume. Of the four major "transitional" writers
1685-1710 (Southerne, Congreve, Vanbrugh and Farquhar), he was the only
one to successfully jump to the Augustan mode.
"Even
art his most escapist, Farquhar retains the saving grace of clear
sight. The school of 'reform' comedies which flourishes in
these years relies on reversals and assumptions not much removed from
the conclusion of The Beaux Strategem,
but almost never exhibits that al-important skeptical tinge, an
awareness of self-indulgence. Instead of being realistic but
genial, these plays tend simply to be blindly and delusively benvolist
in their assumptions." (Hume, The Development of English
Drama in the Late 17th Century, 467
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Farquhar's
view of comedy: condemned "unnaturalness," but didn't want reality
either:
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The poet does not impose
Contradictions upon you, because he has told you no Lie; for that only
is a Lie which is related with some fallacious Intention that you
should believe it for a Truth; now the Poet expects no more that you
should believe the Plot of his Play, than old Aesop design'd the World
shou'd Think his Eagle and Lyon
talk'd like you and I.... If you are so inveterate against
improbabilities, you must never come near the Play-house at all; for
there are several Improbabilities, nay, Impossibilities, that all the
Criticisms in Nature cannot correct (From "Discourse Upon Comedy," The
Complete Works of George Farquhar, ed. Charles Stonehill, 8
vols, 2.340-1).
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He also
believe that comedy should instruct:
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Comedy is no more at
present than a well-fram'd Tale, handsomely told, as an agreeable
Vehicle for Counsel or Reproof . . . .Where shou'd we seek a
Foundation, but in Aesop's symbolic way of moralizing upon Tales and
Fables... and as he would improve Men by the Policy of Beasts, so we
endeavour to reform Brutes with the Examples of Men (Works,
2.336) |
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