54 - To James Boswell, London, 4 April 1773
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 December 2024
Summary
James Boswell wrote to Goldsmith congratulating him on the success of She Stoops to Conquer, and asking that Goldsmith should congratulate him on the birth of his daughter Veronica. The letter is dated 29 March, but we know from his Journal that Boswell was on his way to London the next day, and so, as Balderston speculates, he may have been deliberately misleading Goldsmith about his location so as to elicit a proper letter from the most famous playwright of the hour:
Dear Sir, – I sincerely wish you joy on the great success of your new comedy, She Stoops to Conquer, or The Mistakes of a Night. The English nation was just falling into a lethargy. Their blood was thickened and their minds creamed and mantled like a standing pool; and no wonder—when their comedies which should enliven them, like sparkling champagne, were become mere syrup of poppies, gentle soporific draughts. Had there been no interruption to this, our audiences must have gone to the theatres with their nightcaps. In the opera houses abroad, the boxes are fitted up for tea-drinking. Those at Drury Lane and Covent Garden must have been furnished with settees and commodiously adjusted for repose. I am happy to hear that you have waked the spirit of mirth which has so long lain dormant, and revived natural humour and hearty laughter. It gives me pleasure that our friend Garrick has written the prologue for you. It is at least lending you a postilion, since you have not his coach; and I think it is a very good one, admirably adapted both to the subject and to the author of the comedy.
You must know my wife was safely delivered of a daughter, the very evening that She Stoops to Conquer first appeared. I am fond of the coincidence. My little daughter is a fine, healthy, lively child and, I flatter myself, shall be blessed with the cheerfulness of your comic muse. She has nothing of that wretched whining and crying which we see children so often have; nothing of the comedie larmoyante. I hope she shall live to be an agreeable companion and to diffuse gaiety over the days of her father, which are sometimes a little cloudy.
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- The Letters of Oliver Goldsmith , pp. 123 - 126Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2018