Aphra Behn Stages the Social Scene in the Restoration Theatre
Powered By Xquantum

Aphra Behn Stages the Social Scene in the Restoration Theatre By ...

Chapter 1:  ‘The Fulsom Gingle of the Times’
Read
image Next

The public records of the time and the letters she sent from Antwerp in 1666 to people at court (including Thomas Killigrew) make this quite clear.4 There are seventeen letters from her and from William Scott. These are fascinating letters, written as one might imagine her speaking—not self-conscious, although meant to be reports on her activities for high officers of state, darting from one thought to another, displaying, as time went on, her growing disillusion with the fair-weather promises that had been made to her, but showing throughout her determination to do her duty as she saw it by and for the king. They show us an impetuous, courageous, honest woman, perhaps not very prudent, but certainly not inclined to consider her own safety or her own comfort. Here she describes to Lord Arlington’s man Halsall—in her own idiosyncratic spelling and grammar—the boastful Thomas Corney, employed by, amongst others, Sir William Temple as an agent and informer on behalf of Charles II.

Mr. Corney came to Antwerp: & came (like an impudent ffellow as he is) wheare I was: & affter he had raild against SCOT & Vow’d his death, a thousand times, though in the Church he began to see w[ha]t he could gett out of me: & seeing himself no wiser then he was before: affter his usiall Custom: he went behind my back & spoke many thing of SCOT & I: as that he beleevd I would be clapd up if you should know in England that I held corispondancy w[I]th a Rogue: & a thousand things more & Mr nepho presantly saide, this prating ffellow would spoyle all: in fine Sr, since he can not guess at my buseness, he has writ into Holland to euery creature he knows: & has giuen them an acoumpt of my being heare…in fine Sr, he talks so much of the King & what great buseness he has to do for me: that I am uery confident he will ruen all if he be trusted for you neuer heard on talke so in y[ou]r life. & that before any body, & tells how my Ld Arlin[gto]n: writs to him…& euer body dreads him & none abids him, he is so insufferable a scandalous Lying prating ffellow: & I am sure they do not Loue his Maj[es]ty intrest that trust him w[i]th the least of secritt Sr Pardon this long no ration, ocationed by a true desire I haue to serue you: wh[i]ch forces me to asure you that if som speedy check be not giuen to his tongue he will not only ruen all he has to do: but all others yt have any, in these parts:5