many classical tragedies modeled on those of ancient Rome. The drama of the eighteenth century
does not reach the same high level as the novel. One has to wait late in the century for Goldsmith
and Sheridan, to find writers who make any permanent contribution to the English stage. Of a
number of reasons which might be invented in explanation it is at least
certain that the Licensing
Act of 1737 restricted the freedom of expression by dramatists and drove a number of good men out
of the theatre. Further, it was clear also that the middle-class commercial classes were gaining
sufficient ascendancy to impose their obtuse views on the themes that would be acceptable in the
theatre.
Outstanding in the early decades of the century is John Gay’s “Beggar’s Opera”, a play with
ballads (1728); Oliver Goldsmith’s “She Stoops to Conquer”, and Richard Brinsley Sheridan’s
“Rivals” and “School for Scandal”. The play, with its moral emphasis and its melodramatic theme,
made a wide and immediate appeal. It was recognized that a new element had entered into drama,
even if the dramatist who introduced it was obviously not of the first rank.
The innovation is far
more important than the play, for this way leads, however indirectly,
to the modern social and
realistic drama.
The main literary trends of the age of the Enlightenment in England were classicism,
realism, sentimentalism and early romanticism, out of which, sentimentalism
is a very English
phenomenon. Sentiment may be defined as feeling, and in the eighteenth century, against the
background of its many crudities and barbarities, there developed both
in life and in literature
movements such as Methodism, in social life in an increasing realization of the hardships, which
the majority of mankind had to suffer. Its dangers are obvious, for it leads to emotionalism instead
of mysticism, and to charity instead of genuine reform. It clouds the reason, substitutes pathos for
tragedy, and obscures the harder issues of life in a mist of tenderness. In literature its effects were
numerous, and, in comedies disastrous. An early exponent of sentimentalism was Richard Steele.
The depths of sentimentalism were reached by some dramatists
who showed how every human
issue could be obscured in the welter of emotion. From such depths the drama was rescued by
Oliver Goldsmith and Richard Sheridan. The XVIII century gave the world such brilliant English
writers as Alexander Pope,
Daniel Defoe, Jonathan Swift, Henry Fielding, Samuel Richardson,
Tobias Smollet and famous dramatist Richard Brinsley Sheridan.
Eighteenth-century England
is also often called
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