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Classic and Contemporary Poetry


ARVIRAGUS AND PHILICA, REVIVED: PROLOGUE by JOHN DRYDEN

Poet Analysis

First Line: WITH SICKLY ACTORS & AN OLD HOUSE TOO
Last Line: YOU'D LESS GOOD BREEDING OR HAD MORE GOOD NATURE.
Subject(s): ACTORS & ACTRESSES; PLAYS & PLAYWRIGHTS ; THEATER & THEATERS; ACTRESSES; DRAMATISTS; STAGE LIFE;

WITH sickly Actors and an old House too,
We're match'd with glorious Theatres and new,
And with our Ale-house scenes and Cloaths bare worn
Can neither raise old Plays nor new adorn.
If all these Ills could not undo us quite,
A brisk @3French@1 Troop is grown your dear delight;
Who with broad bloudy Bills call you each day
To laugh and break your Buttons at their Play;
Or see some serious Piece, which we presume
Is fall'n from some incomparable plume;
And therefore, @3Messieurs@1, if you'll do us Grace,
Send Lacquies early to preserve your Place.
We dare not on your Priviledge intrench,
Or ask you why you like 'em? They are @3French@1.
Therefore some go with Courtesie exceeding,
Neither to hear nor see, but show their Breeding:
Each Lady striving to out-laugh the rest;
To make it seem they understood the Jest.
Their Countrymen come in, and nothing pay,
To teach us @3English@1 where to clap the play:
Civil, @3Igad@1; Our Hospitable Land
Bears all the Charge, for them to understand:
Mean time we languish, and neglected lye,
Like Wives, while you keep better Company;
And wish for our own sakes, without a Satyr,
You'd less good Breeding or had more good Nature.



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