be marked by humour, or an affectation of singularity
of manners, speech, and behaviour. Dryden, on
the other hand, was no great admirer either of Jonson’s
plays in general, or of the low and coarse characters
of vice and folly, in describing which lay his chief
excellency; and this opinion he had publicly intimated
in the “Essay of Dramatic Poesy.”
In the preface to the very first of Shadwell’s
plays, printed in 1668, he takes occasion bitterly,
and with a direct application to Dryden, to assail
the grounds of this criticism and the comedies of
the author who had made it.[17] If this petulance
produced any animosity, it was not lasting; for in
the course of their controversy, Dryden appeals to
Shadwell, whether he had not rather countenanced than
impeded his first rise in public favour; and, in 1674,
they made common cause with Crowne to write those Remarks,
which were to demolish Settle’s “Empress
of Morocco.” Even in 1670, while Shadwell
expresses the same dissent from Dryden’s opinion
concerning the merit of Jonson’s comedy, it
is in very respectful terms, and with great deference
to his respected and admired friend, of whom, though
he will not say his is the best way of writing, he
maintains his manner of writing it is most excellent[18].
But the irreconcilable difference in their taste soon
after broke out in less seemly terms; for Shadwell
permitted himself to use some very irreverent expressions
towards Dryden’s play of “Aureng-Zebe,”
in the Prologue and Epilogue to his comedy of the
“Virtuoso;” and in the Preface to the same
piece he plainly intimated, that he wanted nothing
but a pension to enable him to write as well as the
poet-laureate.[19] This attack was the more intolerable,
as Dryden, in the Preface to that very play of “Aureng-Zebe,”
probably meant to include Shadwell among those contemporaries
who, even in his own judgment excelled him in comedy.
In 1678 Dryden accommodated with a prologue Shadwell’s
play of the “True Widow;” but to write
these occasional pieces was part of his profession,
and the circumstance does not prove that the breach
between these rivals for public applause was ever
thoroughly healed; on the contrary, it seems likely,
that, in the case of Shadwell, as in that of Settle,
political hatred only gangrened a wound inflicted
by literary rivalry. After their quarrel became
desperate, Dryden resumed his prologue, and adapted
it to a play by Afra Behn, called the “Widow
Ranter, or Bacon in Virginia."[20] Whatever was the
progress of the dispute, it is certain that Shadwell,
as zealously attached to the Whig faction as Dryden
to the Tories, buckled on his armour among their other
poetasters to encounter the champion of royalty.
His answer to “The Medal” is entitled
“The Medal of John Bayes:” it appeared
in autumn 1681, and is distinguished by scurrility,
even among the scurrilous lampoons of Settle, Care,
and Pordage. Those, he coolly says, who know Dryden,
know there is not an untrue word spoke of him in the