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more consequence;-surely the reason that Lysander gives to Euanthe,-(but I, Euanthe, partial to thy will, SOUGHT THEE IN VAIN,)-for being shut up in the city, is a very weak one, and almost amounts to the ridiculous. What! not find a lady of her quality, who is under the protection of the king, and lives in the palace? This certainly must be altered.* I was thinking whether the scene between them in the third act might not pass before the gates are shut, and that upon leaving her he finds his going to the camp obstructed by the sudden order of Amphares, that then he may return to her in the helot's dress, which would very naturally and forcibly bring on the fine capital scene in the third act, between him, her, and Amphares. I am speaking at random, and therefore you must make what use you please of these my loose thoughts. Is not there too little matter in the second act? the whole consists of that very long scene between Agis and Lysander, the entrance of a Senator, the procession, and the soliloquy, (which is a very fine one) of Amphares. I cannot as yet see what use we can make of Sandane; she is very insignificant hitherto, and unless she has something to do in the two last acts, she will appear to have no business in the tragedy. I am called away, and can only say,

* It was, however, not altered.

that the more I read of Agis, the more I like it; and if the pathos rises to a proper height in the two last acts, l'affair est faite. It will be a most unspeakable pleasure to me to convince you how much I regard and esteem you.

"I am, dear Sir,

"Most sincerely,

"Your friend and very humble servant,

"D. GARRICK.

"Mrs Garrick presents her best compliments to you; she has cry'd at you already. You have written some passages in these three acts, more like Shakespeare than any other author ever did."

Yet the objections of Garrick to this tragedy as a play to be acted, seem to me to be well founded. The two first acts lag so much, and have so much of mere languid declamation, that it would be hardly possible for any performer to keep up the attention of the audience during this pause of the main action, and the barrenness of incident which attends it. The poetry, however, is in general smooth and flowing, and the sentiments striking and well expressed. There is much of the favourite spirit of the author, the admirer of martial glory, in the short speech of Rhesus, characterising his brother, the second in command in that Thracian army,

which was to awe the Spartans, and destroy their

king:

"Next in command my brother Euxus stands,

A youth to Mars devoted; for he loves
Danger itself, not danger's rich reward."

And the sentiment of Lysander, when his prince wishes him to leave him in Sparta, and provide for their future safety by repairing to the army, is happily expressed, without being overloaded, like those many other dramas, with unnecessary words :

of

"Things past belong to memory alone,
Things future are the property of hope;
The narrow line, the isthmus of these seas,
The instant scarce divisible, is all

That mortals have to stand on.".

Nor is the reflection of the calm and philosophic Agis without its peculiar merit, and is sufficiently appropriate both to the character and the situation.

"In times like these, of a declining state,
Baseness infects the general race of man;
But yet these trying times rear up a few
More excellent, refined, and conscious spirits,

More principled, and fit for all events,
Than any in the good, but equal mass,
Of a far better age."

The following may be thought too bold, and the

figure is somewhat open to ridicule, in respect of the picture which it presents:

"On the insect wing

Of a small moment, ride th' eternal fates."

Yet I have heard it admired at the time; and even now, in that vague extravagant sort of sublimity, begotten by Genius upon Nonsense, which has distinguished some recent productions, it would, I doubt not, excite admiration and applause.

In the third act occurs the incident of which, as I have formerly mentioned, the author was so proud, and which Garrick foresaw would strike the audience so much, that in which the villain Amphares disarms Lysander, by the threat of stabbing his much-loved Euanthe, if he continues to resist. Mr Home has repeated it, with scarce any variation, in one of the closing scenes of his Fatal Discovery.

The fourth act does not ill sustain, in the importance of its events, and the spirit of its dialogue, the interest which was excited in the third. The Athenian Lysander, bred in the academic school, may be excused, when, amidst the perils of his situation, he utters the following philosophical, but generous exclamation :—

*

"If man is like the leaf,

Which, falling from the tree, revives no more,
I shall be shortly dust, that will not hear

Euanthe's grief, nor see the shame of Sparta!

Now I am a living man, my mind is free;

And whilst I live and breathe, by Heaven, I'll act
As if I were immortal!"

One line, uttered by the same person in this scene, attracted the particular applause of the audience, from a circumstance in the conduct of the Seven Years' War, which had then recently happened. Our troops had been foiled in an attempt on the French coast, and the dispatch, if I recollect right, of the commander of that detachment, had mentioned the danger which had deterred him from landing, or longer maintaining his position on the coast. In the play, Euxus proposes to Lysander immediately to leave Sparta, and depart for the army. "Your stay," says he,

"Your stay is full of danger, risk it not."

Lysander replies,

"All necessary dangers must be risk'd."

Some one in the pit exclaimed, "Bellisle," and there was a loud and continued plaudit.

The fifth act but ill supports the spirit of the two former, though there is some interest excited by the uncertainty which hangs over the fate of Lysander, till the scene in which he kills Amphares, and rescues Euanthe. But the audience, when I saw this piece represented, felt the languor

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