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JOHN CROWNE (d. c. 1703)

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Originally appearing in Volume V07, Page 519 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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JOHN CROWNE (d. c. 1703)  ,
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British dramatist, was a native of Nova Scotia . His
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father " Colonel " William Crowne, accompanied the
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earl of Arundel on a
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diplomatic
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mission to Vienna in 1637, and wrote an account of his journey . He emigrated to Nova Scotia where he received a grant of
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land from Cromwell, but the French took possession of his
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property, and the home government did nothing to uphold his rights . When the son came to England his poverty compelled him to act as gentleman usher to an
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Independent lady of quality, and his enemies asserted that his father had been an Independent minister . He began his
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literary career with a
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romance, Pandion and Amphigenia, or the
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History of the coy Lady of Thessalia (1665) . In 1671 he produced a romantic
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play, Juliana, or the Princess of Poland, which has, in spite of its title, no pretensions to rank as an
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historical drama . The earl of Rochester procured for him, apparently with the
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sole
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object of annoying Dryden by infringing on his rights as poet-laureate, a commission to supply a masque for performance at court . Calisto gained him the favour of Charles II., but Rochester proved a fickle
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patron, and his favour was completely alienated by the success of Crowne's heroic play in two parts, The Destruction of Jerusalem by Titus
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Vespasian (1677) . This piece contained a thinly disguised satire on the Puritan party in the description of the
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Pharisees, and about 1683 he produced a distinctly
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political play, The City Politiques, satirizing the Whig party and containing characters which were readily recognized as portraits of Titus Oates and others . This made him many enemies, and he petitioned the king for a small place that would release him from the necessity of writing for the stage . The king exacted one more
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comedy, which should, he suggested, he based' on the No pued esser of Moreto . This had already been unsuccessfully adapted, as Crowne discovered later, by
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Sir Thomas St Serfe, but in Crowne's hands it
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developed into Sir Courtly
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Nice, It Cannot Be (1685), a comedy which kept its place as a stock piece for nearly a century .

Unfortunately Charles II. died before the play was completed, and Crowne was disappointed of his

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reward . He continued to write plays, and it is stated that he was still living in 1703, but nothing is known of his later
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life . Crowne was a fertile writer of plays with an historical setting, in which heroic love was, in the fashion of the French romances, made the leading motive . The prosaic level of his style saved him as a
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rule from the rant to be found in so many contemporary heroic plays, but these pieces are of no particular
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interest . He was much more successful in comedy of the kind that depicts " humours." The History of Charles the Eighth of France, or The Invasion of Naples by the French (1672) was dedicated to Rochester . In Timon, generally supposed to have been written by the earl, a
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line from this piece—" whilst sporting waves smil'd on the rising sun "—was held up to ridicule . The Ambitious Statesman, or The Loyal Favourite (1679), one of the most extravagant of his heroic efforts, deals with the history of Bernard d'
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Armagnac, Constable of France, after the
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battle of Agincourt; Thyestes, A Tragedy (1681), spares none of the horrors of the Senecan tragedy, although an incongruous love story is interpolated; Darius, King of
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Persia (1688), Regulus (acted 1692, pr . 1694) and Caligula (1698)
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complete the list of his tragedies . The Country Wit: A Comedy (acted 1675, pr . 1693), derived in
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part from Moliere's Le Sicilien, ou l'amour peintre, is remembered for the leading character, Sir Mannerly Shallow; The
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English Frier; or The
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Town Sparks (acted 1689, pr . 1690), perhaps suggested by Moliere's Tartuffe, ridicules the court Catholics, and in Father Finical caricatures Father Petre; and The Married Beau; or The Curious Impertinent (1694), is based on the Curioso Impertinente in Don Quixote . He also produced a version of Racine's Andromague, an adaptation from Shakespeare's Henry VI., and an unsuccessful comedy, Justice Busy .

See The Dramatic

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Works of John Crowne (4 vols., 1873), edited by James Maidment and W . H . Logan for the Dramatists of the Restoration .

End of Article: JOHN CROWNE (d. c. 1703)
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