![]() | An Apology for the Life of Mr. Colley Cibber, Volume I | ![]() |
THE PREFACE.
Much has been Writ of late pro and con, about the
Stage, yet the Subject admits of more, and that which has
not been hetherto toucht upon; not only what that is, but
what it was, about which some People have made such a
Busle. What it is we see, and I think it has been
sufficiently display'd in Mr. Collier's Book;
What it was in former Ages, and how used in this Kingdom,
so far back as one may collect any Memorialls. is the
Subject of the following Dialogue. Old Plays will be
always read by the Curious, if it were only to discover the
Manners and Behaviour of several Ages ; and how they
alter'd. For Plays are exactly like Portraits Drawn in the
Garb and Fashion of the time when Painted. You see one
Habit in the time of King Charles I. another quite
different from that, both for Men and Women, in Queen
Elizabeths time; another under Henry the Eighth
different from both; and so backward all various. And in the
several Fashions
of Behaviour and Conversation, there is as much
Mutability as in that of cloaths. Religion and Religious
matters was once as much the Mode in publick
Entertainments, as the Contrary has been in
Some may think the Subject of this Discourse trivial, and the persons herein mention'd not worth remembering, But besides that I could name some things contested of late with great heat, of as little, or less Consequence, the Reader may know that the Profession of Players is not so totally scandalous, nor all of them so reprobate, but that there has been found under that Name, a Canonized Saint in the primitive Church; as may be seen in the Roman Martyrology on the 29th of March; his name Masculas a Master of Interludes, (the Latin is Archimimus, and the French translation un Maitre Comedien) who under the Persecution of the Vandals in Africa, by Geisericus the Arian King, having endured many and greivious Torments and Reproaches for the Confession of the Truth, finisht the Course of this glorious Combat. Saith the said Martyrology.
It appears from this, and some further Instances in the following Discourse, That there have been Players of worthy Principles as to Religion, Loyalty, and other Virtues ; and if the major part of them fall under a different Character, it is the general unhappiness of Mankind, that the Most are the Worst.
![]() | An Apology for the Life of Mr. Colley Cibber, Volume I | ![]() |