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APHRA BEHN (otherwise AFRA, APHARA or...

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Originally appearing in Volume V03, Page 657 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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APHRA

BEHN (otherwise AFRA, APHARA or AYFARA) (164o-1689)  ,
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British dramatist and novelist, was baptized at Wye, Kent, in 164o . Her
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father, John Johnson, was a barber . While still a child she was taken out to Surinam, then an
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English possession, from which she returned to England in 1658, when it was handed over to the Dutch . In Surinam Aphra learned the
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history, and acquired a
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personal knowledge of the
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African prince Oroonoko and his beloved Irnoinda, whose adventures she has related in her novel, Oroonoko . On her return she married Mr Behn, a
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London merchant of Dutch extraction . The wit and abilities of Mrs Behn brought her into high estimation at court, and—her
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husband having died by this time—Charles II. employed her on secret service in the
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Netherlands during the Dutch war . At Antwerp she successfully accomplished the
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objects of her
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mission; and in the latter end of 1666 she wormed out of one
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Van der Aalhert the design formed by De Ruyter, in
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con-junction with the DeWitts, of sailing up the
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Thames and burning the English
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ships in their harbours . This she communicated to the English court, but although the event proved her intelligence to have been well founded, it was at the time disregarded . Disgusted with
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political service, she returned to England, and from this period she appears to have supported herself by her writings . Among her numerous plays are The Forced
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Marriage, or the Jealous Bridegroom (1671); The Amorous Prince (1671); The
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Town Fop (1677) and The Rover, or the Banished Cavalier (in two parts, 1677 and 1681); and The Roundheads (1682) . The coarseness that disfigures her plays was the fault of her time; she possessed
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great ingenuity, and showed an admirable comprehension of stage business, while her wit and vivacity were un-' failing . Of her short tales, or novelettes, the best is the story of Oroonoko, which was made the basis of Thomas Southerne's popular tragedy .

Mrs Behn died on the 16th of

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April 1689, and was buried in the cloisters of Westminster Abbey . See Plays written by the
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Late Ingenious Mrs Behn (1702; re- Eiinted, 1871); also "Aphra Behn's Gedichte and Prosawerke," by P . Siegel in Anglia (Halle, vol.
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xxv., 1902, pp . 86-128,329-385) ; and A . C . Swinburne's essay on " Social Verse " in Studies in
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Prose and
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Poetry (1894) .

End of Article: APHRA BEHN (otherwise AFRA, APHARA or AYFARA) (164o-1689)
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