Chapter 1: | ‘The Fulsom Gingle of the Times’ |
Her description of a young man using his wealth to win favours from the ladies in her short story in the style of Scarron, Memoirs of the Court of The King of Bantam, published in 1698, was probably inspired by the visit of the ambassadors from Bantam in the East Indies in 1682, but it could have been a portrait of some of the hangers-on around the court.7
Her Love-letters From a Nobleman to His Sister is a fictionalised account of real events—the scandal of Lord Grey of Werke, who absconded with his sister-in-law and was brought to trial—and she clearly expects her readers to understand the allusions. She wrote several other short stories and many poems, but almost all Behn’s early writing was for the theatre. How and why she chose this route to attempt to support herself is merely another teasing question mark among the many that surround that enigmatic woman. The king’s edict that actresses should be used instead of the boys for women characters would have already set a climate that could accept a female writer, and Lady Davenant had, at least nominally, taken over the Duke’s Company upon her husband’s death in 1668, which may have helped the presentation of Behn’s first play by that company.