William Congreve: Difference between revisions
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== '''Life''' == | == '''Life''' == | ||
In 1674 Congreve's father | In 1674 Congreve's father joined the garrison at Youghal, in Ireland and so the family moved to Carrickfergus, where Congreve, was sent to school at Kilkenny (the Eton of Ireland) in 1681. Five years later, he entered Trinity College, Dublin. In 1690 Congreve's father became estate agent to the earl of Cork and in the following year, Congreve became a law student at the Middle Temple and started writing and publishing. He rose to some fame instantly and thus the great [[John Dryden]] made him his protégé. They even published a translation of the satires of Juvenal and Persius together. In early 1693 Congreve’s production ''The Old Bachelour'' at the Theatre Royal in Drury Lane earned him some respect. Congreve claimed to have composed this play to amuse himself during convalescence. In 1695 he became a manager of the new theatre in Lincoln's Inn Fields. | ||
When Congreve's masterpiece ''The Way of the World'' failed to be successful in 1700, he refrained from writing plays. But he did not, desert the stage entirely, writing librettos for operas and collaborating on a translation of [[Molière]]'s ''Monsieur de Pourceaugnac'' in 1704. | |||
Due to his substantial income Congreve was able to pass the rest of his life quietly. His interest for the stage probably decreased because of his plays failing and due to the so-called Collier-attack, which was launched against him by Jeremy Collier, criticizing the immorality of the Restoration stage. Congreve is also notorious for his affairs with several women. He finally died after a carriage accident in 1729. | |||
When Congreve's | |||
== '''Works''' == | == '''Works''' == | ||
Revision as of 13:30, 11 July 2009
Born 24 January 1670, Bardsey, Yorkshire, England. Died 19 January 1729, London. Restoration playwright.
Life
In 1674 Congreve's father joined the garrison at Youghal, in Ireland and so the family moved to Carrickfergus, where Congreve, was sent to school at Kilkenny (the Eton of Ireland) in 1681. Five years later, he entered Trinity College, Dublin. In 1690 Congreve's father became estate agent to the earl of Cork and in the following year, Congreve became a law student at the Middle Temple and started writing and publishing. He rose to some fame instantly and thus the great John Dryden made him his protégé. They even published a translation of the satires of Juvenal and Persius together. In early 1693 Congreve’s production The Old Bachelour at the Theatre Royal in Drury Lane earned him some respect. Congreve claimed to have composed this play to amuse himself during convalescence. In 1695 he became a manager of the new theatre in Lincoln's Inn Fields. When Congreve's masterpiece The Way of the World failed to be successful in 1700, he refrained from writing plays. But he did not, desert the stage entirely, writing librettos for operas and collaborating on a translation of Molière's Monsieur de Pourceaugnac in 1704. Due to his substantial income Congreve was able to pass the rest of his life quietly. His interest for the stage probably decreased because of his plays failing and due to the so-called Collier-attack, which was launched against him by Jeremy Collier, criticizing the immorality of the Restoration stage. Congreve is also notorious for his affairs with several women. He finally died after a carriage accident in 1729.
Works
Drama
Being born after the Restoration proper, William Congreve belongs to the second generation of writers, together with Richard Steele, George Farquhar and John Vanbrugh. Congreve's comedies are similar in their polished brilliance to George Etherege's comedies of manner.
His main themes are the manners and behaviour of the upper and middle classes, the tensions between love and money, obedience to one's parents and the wish to live one's own life; the need to lie in society and the wish to be honest.
Congreve's first play The Old Bachelour(1693) was an enormous success, running for the then unprecedented length of a fortnight and commended even by the great writer John Dryden. Congreve's next play, The Double-Dealer, played in November or December of the same year at Drury Lane did not meet with the same applause. People criticised that the villain was too villainous and that his monologues were too artificial. Love for Love, which was first performed in 1695, almost repeated the success of his first play. It was the first production staged for the new company in Lincoln's Inn Fields, which was opened after protracted crises of the United Company at the Theatre Royal.
Congreve failed to carry out his promise of writing one play a year for the Lincoln's Inn Fields company, so the theatre staged his next play The Mourning Bride in 1697. Although it is now his least regarded drama, this tragedy increased his reputation enormously and became his most popular play. No further dramatic work appeared until March 1700, when Congreve's masterpiece, The Way of the World, was produced and at first met with criticism. This is often attributed to the complexity of the plot. The Way of the World ropes around the lovers Mirabell and Millamant who have to overcome several difficulties in order to marry and secure Millamant's substantial inheritance. It is not only difficult to follow the plot, but it is also difficult to find out who is a villain, a fool or a hero. Fainall, the bad guy, at first resembles hero Mirabel. The three fools Witwoud, Petulant and Sir Wilfull Witwoud sparkle with puns and bonmots. After a while, however, the audience started to like The Way of the World and it became a comedy classic.
Poetry
In 1695 Congreve began to write his more public occasional verse, such as his pastoral on the death of Queen Mary II and his Pindarique Ode, Humbly Offer'd to the King on his taking Namure. He also wrote a considerable number of poems, some of the light social variety, some scholarly translations from Homer, Juvenal, Ovid, and Horace, and some Pindaric odes. The volume containing these odes also comprised his Discourse on the Pindarique Ode (1706), which brought some order to a form that had become wildly unrestrained since the days of the poet Abraham Cowley.
Sources
Corman, Brian. “Comedy” in The Cambridge Companion to English Restoration Theatre. Ed. D. Payne Fisk. Cambridge: CUP, 2003.
Korninger, Siegfried. The Restoration Period and the Eighteenth Century. 1660 – 1780. München: Österreichischer Bundesverlag Wien, 1964.
"Congreve, William." Encyclopædia Britannica. 2009. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. 22 May 2009 <http://www.search.eb.com/eb/article-1477>.