46
educated at Harrow. Later on he developed connections with the theatrical world. He was
twenty-three when his first comedy “The Rivals” (1775) was staged.
The action of the play unfolds itself within two parallel intrigues. Julia,
a girl of quiet
temperament, has a jealous and mistrustful lover. His character gives rise to a number of petty
quarrels and conflicts, which are happily settled
towards the end, when the lovers are united.
The other heroine Lydia is a girl full of romantic fancies. A legitimate marriage seems too
prosaic for her; besides she prefers an admirer without social standing. Therefore, Lydia’s suitor,
Caption Absolute (a sober young man) decides on a trick to capture the girl’s fancy – he
introduces himself to her in guise of a poor lieutenant. When the deception is discovered, Lydia
at first refuses to marry him, but finally agrees to become his wife.
The most interesting characters of Sheridan’s art are two comic characters in this play. One of
them is Bob Acres, a coward who is forced by circumstances to fight a duel. The resulting scene
is highly comical. The second is Lydia’s aunt, Mrs. Malaprop. The most characteristic feature of
this pretentious woman is her love for long foreign words which she uses incorrectly. For
example, she says epitaph instead of “epithet” etc. A funny fondness
for high sounding words
and their incorrect usage, so wittily ridiculed by Sheridan, has since been given the name of
“malapropism”. Such personages as Sir Anthony, Bob Acres, and, above all, Mrs. Malaprop, are
classic figures in English comedy.
Sheridan’s tribute to the vogue of the day was his comic opera “The Duenna” (1775). Its plot
shows the influence of Molliere and the Spanish comedy. In 1777 he wrote “The
School for
Scandal”. The latter is the best artistic work of the English drama of the 18
th
century and one of
the best English comedies of all times. In his comedy Sheridan boldly criticizes the bourgeois
aristocratic society of England. He created the English social comedy. It exposes the hypocrisy,
cruelty and egoism of bourgeois-aristocratic circle in England.
Sheridan discontinued playwriting to become a partner in, and later on a sole proprietor of the
Drury Lane Theatre.
In 1780, Sheridan went in for politics and became a famous orator. Some of Sheridan’s
political speeches delivered within this period are regarded as a classical example of English
oratory art. In 1780, he became a member of the English parliament. By turns he filled the posts
of undersecretary
for foreign affairs, secretary of the exchequer, and, finally, treasurer of the
Admiralty.
In 1787, he delivered his famous speech against Hastings, the Governor-General of India. In
his speech during the long trial that lasted for six hours, he held to shame the English policy in
India.
The second half of Sheridan’s life was overshadowed
by two misfortunes; the death of his
wife in 1792 and the loss of his property – the Drury Lane Theatre – which was burnt to the
ground. The catastrophe, however, did not rob Sheridan of his natural cheerfulness. A witness’
evidence has it that during the fire Sheridan was calmly drinking wine in a coffee-house opposite
and indulging in witticism about the burning theatre. The last years
of Sheridan find him in
reduced circumstances. He had contracted many debts, and at the same time of his death there
were bailiffs at his house.