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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: EUD-FAT |
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FARQUHAR, GEORGE (1677-1707) , British dramatist, son of William Farquhar, a clergyman, was born in Londonderry, Ireland, in 1677. When he was seventeen he was entered as a sizar at Trinity College, Dublin, under the patronage of Dr Wiseman, bishop of Premiere. He did not long continue his studies, being, according to one account, expelled for a profane joke. Thomas Wilkes, however, states that the abrupt termination of his studies was due to the death of his patron. He became an actor on the Dublin stage, but in a fencing scene in Dryden's Indian Emperor he forgot to exchange his sword for a foil, with results which narrowly escaped being fatal to a fellow-actor. After this accident he never appeared on the boards. He had met Robert Wilks, the famous comedian, in Dublin. Though he did not, as generally stated, go to London with Wilks, it was at his suggestion that he wrote his first play, Love and a Bottle , which was performed at Drury Lane, perhaps through Wilks's interest
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Orrery a lieutenancy in his regiment, then in Ireland, but in two letters of his dated from Holland in 1700 he says nothing of military service. His second comedy, The Constant Couple: or a Trip to the Jubilee
pilgrimage to Rome in the Jubilee
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Meanwhile one. of his patrons, said to have been the duke of Ormond, had advised Farquhar to sell out of his regiment, and had promised to give him a captaincy in his own. Farquhar sold his commission, but the duke's promise remained unfulfilled. Before be had finished the second act of The Beaux' Stratagem he knew that he was stricken with a mortal illness, but it was necessary to persevere and to be " consumedly lively to the end." He., had received in advance 30 for the copyright from Lintot l;'ne bookseller. The play was staged on the 8th of March, and Farquhar lived to have his third night, and there was an extra benefit on the 29th of April, the day of his death. He left his two children to the care of his friend Wilks. Wilks obtained a benefit at the theatre for the dramatist's widow, but he seems to have done little for the daughters. They were apprenticed to a mantua-maker, and one of them was, as late
receipt of a pension of 20 solicited for her by Edmund Chaloner, a patron of Farquhar. She was then described as a maidservant and possessed of sentiments " fitted to her humble situation." The plots of Farquhar's comedies are ingenious in conception and skilfully conducted. He has no pretensions to the brilliance of Congreve, but his amusing dialogue arises naturally out of the situation, and its wit is never strained. Sergeant Kite in the Recruiting Officer, Scrub, Archer and Boniface in The Beaux' Stratagem are distinct, original characters which had a great success on the boards, and the unexpected incidents and adventures in which they are mixed up are represented in an irresistibly comic manner by a man who thoroughly understood the resources of the stage. The spontaneity and verve with which his ad-venturous heroes are drawn
Farquhar's dramatic works were published in 1728, 1742 and 1772, and by Thomas Wilkes with a biography in 1775. They were included in the Dramatic Works of Wycherley, Congreve, Vanbrugh and Farquhar (1849), with biographical and critical notices, by Leigh Hunt. See also The Dramatic Works of George Farquhar, with Life and Notes, by A. C. Ewald (2 vols., 1892) ; The Best Plays of George Farquhar (Mermaid series , 1906), with biographical and critical introductions, by William Archer; The Beaux' Stratagem, edited (1898) by H. Macaulay Fitzgibbon for " The Temple Dramatists "; and D. Schmid, " George Farquhar, sein Leben and seine Original-Dramen " (1904) in Wiener Beitrdge zur engl. Philol.End of Article: FARQUHAR, GEORGE (1677-1707) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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