Those are the most material incidents in the life of our poetess; a lady, who was born with high powers from nature, which were afterwards cultivated by enjoying the brightest conversation; the early part of her life was unfortunate, she fell a sacrifice to a seducer, who laid the foundation for those errors she afterwards committed, and of those sufferings she underwent; she had a high relish for the pleasures of life; she was extremely susceptible of the passion of love, and treated it with a peculiar vivacity.
Her dramatic works are
1. The Lover, or The Jealous Husband; acted at the Theatre-Royal 1696. This play did not succeed in the representation.
2. The Royal Mischief, a Tragedy; acted by his Majesty’s Servants in the Theatre in Lincoln’s-Inn-Fields 1696. This was exhibited with general applause.
3. Lucius, the First Christian King of Britain, a Tragedy; acted at the Theatre-Royal in Drury-Lane by his Majesty’s Servants, and dedicated to Sir Richard Steele. She has written several poems, and we shall select, as a specimen, an Epistle to the Countess of Bristol, which will shew how much she possessed the power of delicate numbers; she has also in print a volume of Letters, the second edition of which was published in 1713. She died July 11, 1724.
To the Right Honourable the
Countess of Bristol.
Long had my mind, unknowing
how to soar,
In humble prose been train’d, nor
aim’d at more:
Near the fam’d sisters never durst
aspire
To sound a verse, or touch the tuneful
lyre.
’Till Bristol’s charms dissolv’d
the native cold;
Bad me survey her eyes, and thence be
bold.
Thee, lovely Bristol! thee! with pride
I chuse,
The first, and only subject of my muse;
That durst transport me like the bird
of Jove,
To face th’ immortal source of light
above!
Such are thy kindred beams—
So blessings, with a bounteous hand they
give,
So they create, and make creation live.
When charming Felton, of a
beauteous race,
Adorn’d in blooming youth, with
ev’ry grace;
First saw the lovely Suffolk Swain her
prize,
The noblest conquest of the brightest
eyes!
How many wretched nymphs that union made,
What cold despair the warmest hearts invade!
What crouds of lovers, hopeless and undone,
Deplore those charms which brought their