Some months after
Joanna Baillie had completed the three plays included in the first
volume of the Plays on the Passions, she wrote an Introductory
Discourse as preface to the volume. In it she explained at length
her dramatic theory, and outlined the task that she had set for
herself. As her work developed, she added details in later prefaces,
but did not modify her belief in any essential matters. As a basis
for an estimate of her dramatic works, the following resume of her
theory is given: Curiosity and
its results.
From that strong sympathy which most creatures, but the human above
all, feel for others of their kind, nothing has become so much an
object of man's curiosity as man himself. The child learns about
human beings by studying those around him; in the same manner, grown
people spend much time in observing the dress and manner of those
about them.
From this universal interest may spring two results: ‘the rich vein
of the satirist and the wit' and the type of conversation which
degenerates into trivial and mischievous tat ling/ The habit of
observation is usually restricted to externals, as to recount
superficial impressions requires less reasoning power than would an
attempt to establish a character-analysis. In our ordinary
intercourse with society, this curiosity is exercised upon men under
the common occurrences of life, in which the whimsical and ludicrous
will strike us most forcibly and which gives rise to the genuinely
comic in every type of literature. If the same power is exercised
upon 'extraordinary situations of difficulty and distress' a genuine
tragic interest will be aroused.
The desire to see a man put forth all his strength to resist
adversity, or bodily suffering, or natural emotion, is powerful and
universal. It is at the bottom of the desire for revenge; to it,
also, may be traced that fear which leads us to dread direct
intercourse with the world of spirits. 'No man wishes to see the
Ghost himself, which would certainly procure him the best
information on the subject, but every man wishes to see one who
believes that he sees it, in all the agitation and wildness of that
species of terror.' Our interest is equally keen when the evil with
which he contends is in his own breast, and no outward circumstance
awakens our pity. We are deeply affected by the sight of a man
struggling in this way against emotions which we also have
experienced in some degree; we watch eagerly for signs of fear or
anger.
This divinely implanted curiosity is our best and most powerful
instructor. By it we are taught the proprieties and decencies of
ordinary life, and are prepared for distressing and difficult
situations Unless it is accompanied by malevolent passions, we
cannot well exercise it without becoming more just, more merciful,
and more compassionate. This sympathy fits a man for interesting and
instructive writing; the man- who has sympathy with others will make
a permanent impression upon us. .
This sympathetic curiosity is essential for success in all branches
of literature. In history, the writer depends upon this human touch
for the permanence of his effect. Without it, battles and reforms do
not remain in our memory; with it, all is animated. In philosophy,
the skilful author dwells largely upon the justice of his argument;
but he makes his point quickly intelligible by illustrations drawn
from nature, and from the habits, the manners, and the characters of
men. 'An argument supported with vivid and interesting illustration
will long be remembered, when many equally important and clear are
forgotten; and a work where many such occur, will be held in higher
estimation by the generality of men, than one, its superior,
perhaps, in acuteness, perspicuity, and good sense.'
The romance, the tale, and the novel supplement the historian’s
picture of man in public life. In them much that was absurd, and
unnatural, and horrible was offered to us, and was accepted
temporarily. In spite of this fact, 'into whatever scenes the
novelist may conduct us, what objects soever he may present to our
view, still is our attention most sensibly awake to every touch
faithful to nature; still are we upon the watch for every thing that
speaks to us of ourselves.’
In epic and pastoral poetry we are often so attracted by the
loftiness and refinement, the decoration and ornament, that we are
tempted to forget what kind of beings we are. But 'let one simple
trait of the human heart, one expression of passion, genuine and
true to nature, be introduced, and it will stand forth alone in the
boldness of reality, whilst the false and unnatural around it fade
away upon every side.’ The greatest pleasure we gain from poetry
arises from our sympathetic interest in others. 'Were the grandest
scenes which can enter into the imagination of man, presented to our
view, and all reference to man completely shut out from our
thoughts, the objects that composed it would convey to our minds
little better than dry ideas of magnitude, colour, and form; and the
remembrance of them would rest upon our minds like the measurement
and distances of the planets.’
To the historian, the philosopher, the novelist, and the poet, the
study of human nature is a powerful auxiliary; to the dramatist * it
is the centre and strength of the battle/ Other excellencies may
atone for the lack of Human sympathy in other types of literature,
but in the drama nothing will supply the place of faithfully
delineated nature. The poet and the novelist may represent to you
their great characters from the cradle to the tomb. They may
represent them in any mood or temper, and under the influence of any
passion which they see proper, without being obliged to put words
into their mouths. They tell us what kind of people they intend
their men and women to be, and as such we receive them. But in the
drama the characters must speak directly for themselves. 'Under the
influence of every passion, humour, and impression; in the
artificial veilings of hypocrisy and ceremony, in the openness of
freedom and confidence, and in the lonely hour of meditation, they
speak We expect to find them creatures like ourselves; and if they
are untrue to nature, we feel that we are imposed upon.'
Theatrical representations are, consequently, the favorite amusement
of all civilized nations. If the drama had not sprung up in the
Bacchic rites of Greece, it would soon have developed else where.
This Grecian origin of drama has determined its character. The
Greeks were familiar with the epic long before the drama arose, and
were accustomed to sit for long periods of time, listening to the
recitals of bards. As a result they were content with a form of
drama in which there was little action, and bursts of passion were
few. Without their influence drama ‘would have been more irregular,
more imperfect, more varied, more interesting.'
Tragedy.
Tragedy naturally developed first, as
every nation delights in the brave struggles of its forefathers,
which would certainly have been the most animating subject for the
poet, and the most interesting for his audience, . . . the first
child of the Drama, for the same reasons that have made heroic
ballad, with all its battles, murders, and disasters, the earliest
poetical compositions of every country.'
In tragedy we see the passions, the humors, the weaknesses, the
prejudices of our heroes and great men. As the middle and lower
classes of people show most plainly the common traits of human
nature, we shall find works dealing with them most interesting. To
tragedy it belongs, first, to show men in elevated positions exposed
to great trials, and, secondly, to unveil to us 'the human mind
under the dominion of those strong and fixed passions, which,
seemingly unprovoked by outward circumstances, will, from small
beginnings, brood within the breast, till all the better
dispositions, all the fair gifts of nature, are borne down before
them.'
Dramatists of the past have applied themselves chiefly to the first
part of this task, and even here have not been entirely successful.
They have preferred the 'embellishments of poetry to faithfully
delineated nature,' and have followed too closely the examples of
their predecessors. ‘Neglecting the boundless variety of nature,
certain strong outlines of character, certain bold features of
passion, certain grand vicissitudes and striking dramatic
situations, have been repeated from one generation to another;
whilst a pompous and solemn gravity, which they have supposed to be
necessary for the dignity of tragedy, has excluded almost entirely
from their works those smaller touches of nature, which so well
develop the mind.' The heroes have been such models of virtue and
valor, so free from all human weaknesses, that they seem far above
our comprehension, as though the writers ‘had entirely forgotten
that it is only for creatures like ourselves that we feel, and,
therefore, only from creatures like ourselves that we receive the
instruction of example.' Warriors are represented as too proud,
generous, and daring; lovers as too amiable, affectionate, and
gentle; tyrants as too monstrous, treacherous, and deceitful to
serve as examples for us. ‘This spirit of imitation, and attention
to effect, has likewise confined them very much in their choice of
situations and events to bring their great characters into action:
rebellions, conspiracies, contentions for empire, and rivalships in
love, have alone been thought worthy of trying those heroes; and
palaces and dungeons the only places magnificent or solemn enough
for them to appear in.' The second part of the task has been
neglected by even the greatest writers of tragedy. They have made
use of the passions to mark their several characters, and animate
their scenes, rather than to open to our view the nature of those
great disturbers of the human breast, with whom we are all, more or
less, called upon to contend. To trace them in their rise and
progress in the heart seems but rarely to have been the object of
any dramatist. On the contrary, characters are usually introduced at
the height of the emotion, from which we can only guess the
decisions and indecisions by which it has advanced. The passions
that may be suddenly excited, and are of short duration, as anger,
fear, and oftentimes jealousy, may be fully represented in this
manner.. The more permanent passions, however, are developed from
within, and are best shown as contending with the opposite passions
and affections. Those great masters of the soul, ambition, hatred,
love, every passion that is permanent in its nature, and varied in
progress, if represented to us but in one stage of its course, is
represented imperfectly/ To such passion belongs lofty language
embellished with figures. If it is used commonly for less crucial
situations, its power is gone when it is most needed. 'This,
perhaps, more than anything else has injured the higher scenes of
Tragedy. For, having made such free use of bold, hyperbolical
language in the inferior parts, the poet, when he arrives at the
highly impassioned, sinks into total inability.'
As a result of this strong belief in the importance of the passions
to drama, and in the failure of her predecessors, Joanna Baillie
decided to write a series of tragedies 'of simpler, construction,
less embellished with poetical decorations, less constrained by that
lofty seriousness which has so generally been considered as
necessary for the support of tragic dignity, and in which the chief
object should be to delineate the progress of the higher passions in
the human breast, each play exhibiting a particular passion.'
Passion was to be recognized in its early stages. The result of such
tragedies upon the spectators was to be a true Greek catharsis.
We cannot, it is true, amidst its wild uproar, listen to the voice
of reason, and save ourselves from destruction ; but we can foresee
its coming, we can mark its rising signs, we can know the situations
that will most expose us to its rage, and we can shelter our heads
from the coming blast In checking and subduing those visitations of
the soul, every one may make considerable progress, if he proves not
entirely successful. Comedy.
It is the province of comedy to exhibit
men in the ordinary intercourse of life, to show the varied fashions
and manners of the world, and to trace the rise of the stronger
passions under conditions that detract from their sublimity. The
comic writer may portray the smallest traits of character under the
most intimate circumstances. Comedy, too, has been led away from the
description of nature. In this case the trouble has been the desire
to be satirical and witty, and to arouse curiosity and laughter. The
most interesting and instructive class of comedy, therefore, the
real characteristic, has been neglected; and satirical, witty,
sentimental, and, above all, busy or circumstantial comedy have
occupied most dramatic writers.
Satirical Comedy usually has a simple plot, and the few events are
neither interesting nor striking; its interest depends on the clever
dialogue. ‘The persons of the drama are indebted for the discovery
of their peculiarities to what is said of them, rather than to any
thing they are made to say or do for themselves.' Witty Comedy
usually has a feeble plot, and aims only to amuse; it has no desire
to interest or instruct. Sentimental Comedy treats of mild
“embarrassments, difficulties and scruples' in a generally
uninteresting manner. Instead of having a moral effect, it is
helping to produce 'a set of sentimental hypocrites.' In Busy or
Circumstantial Comedy all those ingenious contrivances of lovers,
guardians, governantes, and chambermaids; that ambushed
bush-fighting amongst closets, screens, chests, easy-chairs, and
toilet-tables, form a gay, varied game of dexterity and invention.'
It entertains the indolent or studious man, as he does not need to
think, only to look. The moral tendency of it, however, is very
faulty. The constant mockery of age and domestic authority, has a
bad effect upon the younger part of an audience; and the continual
lying and deceit in the main characters, which are necessary for the
plot, are most pernicious. Characteristic Comedy shows the world in
which we live under familiar circumstances, and offers a wide field.
Its aim is to show distinctions in character which may be found
among all classes of society, and which are therefore universally
interesting. 'It stands but little in need of busy plot,
extraordinary incidents, witty repartee, or studied sentiments.... A
smile that is raised by some trait of undisguised nature, and a
laugh that is provoked by some ludicrous effect of passion, or
clashing of opposite characters, will be more pleasing to the
generality of men than either the one or the other when occasioned
by a play upon words, or a whimsical combination of ideas.' The
monotony in comic heroes is owing to the convention of making love
the universal passion. As a result, men who are too old for lovers,
but who are still in the full vigor of life, are not sufficiently
emphasized. In real life we are pleased with eccentricity, but
resent its being carried to an extreme in the drama. Minor comic
writers distinguish one man from another by some strange whim, which
influences every action of his life.
In comedy the stronger passions, love excepted, are seldom
introduced. When they are, the result is a serio-comic drama, which
does not produce upon our minds a unified effect. Inferior persons
in a comedy are often influenced by passion, but such characters
affect us slightly, as our chief interest is not in them. A complete
exhibition of any passion, with its varieties and its progress, has
seldom been attempted in comedy. Even love, though the chief subject
of almost every play, has been portrayed in an imperfect manner. The
lover is generally introduced 4 after he has long been acquainted
with his mistress, and wants but the consent of some stubborn
relation, relief from some embarrassment of situation, or the
clearing up some mistake or love-quarrel occasioned by malice or
accident, to make him completely happy/ This stage of the passion is
the least interesting and least instructive, and one stage of any
passion must show it imperfectly.
In accordance with this belief in the real value of comic drama,
Joanna Baillie decided to write a comedy on each passion as a
companion to the tragedy. Such comedy should be entertaining to
everyone, and instructive to those on whom the passions have not
secured a firm hold. Influence
of the Theatre.
‘The theatre is a school in which much
good or evil may be learned.’ Through it the great middle class is
instructed in a very effective manner. Every author who attempts to
improve the mode of this instruction should be praised for the
attempt, even if 'want of abilities may unhappily prevent him from
being successful in his efforts.’
In order to succeed in exhibiting the growth and character of each
of the stronger passions by means of tragedy and comedy, the
dramatist must meet certain requirements. 'The passions must be
depicted not only with their bold and prominent features, but also
with those minute and delicate traits which distinguish them in an
infant, growing, and repressed state. . . . The characters over whom
they are made to usurp dominion must be powerful and interesting,
exercising them with their full measure of opposition and struggle,
for the chief antagonists they contend with must be the other
passions and propensities of the heart, not outward circumstances
and events.’ The passions must be 'held to view in their most
baleful and unseductive light; and those qualities in the
impassioned which are necessary to interest us in their fate, must
not be allowed ... to diminish our abhorrence of guilt.’ The
passions will be most clearly shown in the heroes if the plot is
kept simple, and if secondary characters are calm and unagitated.
Such a simple plot can escape monotony only by having great force
and truth in the delineations of nature. The depths of passion are
most often touched when a man is alone. Hence by means of soliloquy
an actor will often show the development of the passion he is
portraying. He should give to the solitary musing of a perturbed
mind, that muttered, imperfect articulation, which grows by degrees
into words; that heavy, suppressed voice, as of one speaking through
sleep; that rapid burst of sounds which often succeeds the slow
languid tones of distress; those sudden, untuned exclamations,
which, as if frightened at their own discord, are struck again into
silence as sudden and abrupt.
The Passions.
The passions which Joanna Baillie chose for treatment are love,
hatred, ambition, fear, hope, remorse, jealousy, pride, envy,
revenge, anger, joy, and grief. Some of these she later decided to
omit for various reasons: anger, joy, and grief are too transient to
become the subjects of dramas of any length; pride would be very
dull, unless used merely as a groundwork for a more turbulent
passion; envy meets with the least sympathy of all the passions, and
could be endured only in a comedy or farce; envy and revenge are so
frequently exposed in drama that they may be excluded.
Love is the subject of the first two dramas on the passions, Basil
and The Tryal. ‘Love is the chief groundwork of almost all our
tragedies and comedies' but in these plays the passion is shown in
an unbroken view from the beginning to the climax. The characters
chosen for the exhibition of the passion are ‘men of a firm,
thoughtful, reserved turn of mind' with whom it has its hardest
struggle. In the comedy strong moral principle is made to conquer
love, in order to teach restraint.
Hatred is next treated in two dramas, De Monfort and The Election.
Hatred, as it is conceived here, is entirely distinct from the sense
oi wrong which is a result of injury, and also from revenge. It is
rather ‘that rooted and settled aversion which, from opposition of
character, aided by circumstances of little importance, grows at
last into such antipathy and personal disgust as makes him who
entertains it, feel, in the presence of him who is the object of it,
a degree of torment and restlessness which is insufferable.’ Envy is
here a component part of hatred, and helps to increase our dislike
of the passion. It should be carefully noted that 'the passion and
not the man is held up to our execration. In both characters hatred
is balanced by good traits, as we could have little sympathy with
the entirely bad man.’ In the comedy, hatred is shown in a different
situation, and in a character of less delicacy and reserve.
Ambition is the subject of the next three plays, Eth-wald, Parts I
and II, and The Second Marriage, in all of which more time elapses
than is usual in dramas. The story of Ethwald is extended to an
unusual length, because compared with Ambition, perhaps all other
passions may be considered as of a transient nature .... To give a
full view, therefore, of this passion, it was necessary to show the
subject oi it in many different situations, and passing through a
considerable course of events.’ To do this within the ordinary
limits of one play was impossible, as that play must have been so
entirely devoted to this single object as to have been bare of every
other interest. The aim of the comedy is to give a view of ambition,
as it is generally found in the ordinary intercourse of life,
excited by vanity rather than by the love of power.
Fear is the dominant passion in the three next dramas, Orra, The
Dream, and The Siege. ‘ It has been thought that, in Tragedy at
least, the principal characters could not possibly be actuated by
this passion, without becoming so far degraded, as to be incapable
of engaging the sympathies and interest of the spectator or reader.'
Even fear, however, as it is, under certain circumstances and to a
certain degree, a universal passion, may be made interesting in the
tragic drama, as it often is in real life. Fear of the supernatural
and fear of death are the actuating principles in the two tragedies.
The Dream breaks two laws of tragedy, as it consists of only three
acts, and is written in prose. It is short, in order to avoid mixing
any lighter matter with a subject so solemn; it is in prose, 'that
the expressions of the agitated person might be plain, though
strong, and kept as closely as possible to the simplicity of
nature.' In the comedy, cowardice has been developed by indulgence
in a selfish, conceited man, who might have been trained into useful
and honourable activity. Fear, in a mixed character of this kind, is
a very good subject for comedy.
Hope is exhibited in a serious musical drama, The Beacon. This
passion, when it acts permanently, loses the character of a passion;
and when it acts violently is, like Anger, Joy, or Grief, too
transient to become the subject of a piece of any length. It seemed
. . . neither fit for Tragedy nor Comedy.' At one time she
considered omitting it entirely, but its 'noble, kindly, and
engaging nature' attracted her. The drama can be called neither
tragedy nor comedy, for hope belongs to both. As this passion is not
so powerfully interesting as those that are more turbulent, and was
therefore in danger of becoming languid and tiresome, the drama is
relieved by several songs. Only the inferior characters sing,
however, and these sing in situations in which it is natural for
them to do so. The songs are not spontaneous expressions of
sentiment in the singer, but, like songs in ordinary life, are the
compositions of other people, and are only generally applicable to
the situation.
Jealousy is the passion shown in Romiero and The Alienated Manor,
and remorse in Henriquez.
Stage-craft. In
addition to these statements in regard to dramatic theory and
material, the introductions include several discussions of
stage-craft. All of the dramas were intended for the stage, not the
closet, and were published because the author possessed no likely
channel to dramatic production. ‘Upon further reflection' she says,
‘it appeared to me, that by publishing them in this way, I have an
opportunity afforded me of explaining the design of m;y work, and
enabling the public to judge, not only of each play by itself, but
as making a part likewise of a whole; an advantage which, perhaps,
does more than overbalance the splendour and effect of theatrical
representation.' The desire for stag e-production was so strong that
the author decided to publish only the first three volumes of her
plays, and leave the others in manuscript foim during her life, in
the hope that later dramatic conditions would enable her heirs to
produce them at some smaller London theatre. In 1836 she abandoned
all hope of their being presented, and published the final volume.
In the preface to volume three, published in 1812, Miss Baillie
described at some length the theatrical situation in London. A
choice was offered to the public between legitimate drama and
splendid pantomimes, in the first of which lay her interest. It
would take a very genuine love for drama to make the former
preferable, as the words could be heard only imperfectly by
two-thirds of the audience, and the finer and more pleasing traits
of acting were lost altogether by a still larger proportion.
The size of the London theatres was the main circumstance that was
unfavorable to the production of these plays, as nothing that is
indistinctly heard and seen can be truly relished by the most
cultivated audience. Shakespeare’s plays and some of the other old
plays succeeded because they were familiar, and so could be followed
easily by an audience who heard imperfectly. But difficulty of
hearing was not the only drawback in these large theatres. Few of
the spectators could appreciate the finer shades of expression on
the faces of the actors. Mrs. Siddons, and the other actors who had
won favor at that time, had been brought up in small theatres. There
they were encouraged to express in their faces the variety of fine,
fleeting emotion experienced by the characters they represented. The
actors in these large theatres considered an audience removed from
them to a greater distance, and attempted only such strong
expression as could be perceived at a distance. Hence they used
exaggerated expressions, and the feeling itself, as well as the
expression, became false. Such exaggerated feeling will be used
where it is not needed, because real occasions for strong expression
do not occur frequently enough to satisfy an audience which can only
see. This danger is more critical with women than with men, as their
features and voices are naturally more delicate than those of men.
The depth and the width of a stage should be proportionate. It
should be deep enough so that the action does not seem to occur in a
long, narrow passage, through which the characters pass in a
straight line. * When a stage is cf such a size that as many persons
as generally come into action at one time in our grandest and
best-peopled plays, can be produced on the front of it in groups,
without crowding together more than they would naturally do anywhere
else for the convenience of speaking to one another, all is gained
in point of general effect that can well be gained/ On a large
stage, individual figures appear diminutive, and the grouping is
straggling. The effect of such dimensions is particularly
objectionable in comedy, in domestic scenes, and in the scenes of
tragedy where only two or three people appear at a time.
The lighting of a very high and lofty stage, again, is a difficult
problem. The more solemn scenes of tragedy, which ought to be dimly
seen by twilight, are shown in the full blaze of light, and lack the
deeper shades which give a partial indistinctness to the scene.
Lamps on the front of the stage throw a strong light, and the effect
is very unfavorable to the appearance of the individual actors, and
to the general effect of the groups. 'When a painter wishes to give
intelligence and expression to a face, he does not make his lights
hit . . . upon the under curve of the eyebrows, turning of course
all the shadows upwards. He does the very reverse of all this;. ..
From this disposition of the light in our theatres, whenever an
actor, whose features are not particularly sharp and pointed, comes
near the front of the stage, and turns his face fully to the
audience, every feature immediately becomes shortened, and less
capable of any expression, unless it be of the ludicrous kind. This
at least will be the effect produced to those who are seated under
or on the same level with the stage, making now a considerable
proportion of an audience; while to those who sit above it, the
lights and shadows, at variance with the natural bent of the
features, will make the whole face appear confused, and, compared to
what it would have been with light thrown upon it from another
direction, unintelligible. . . . Stage-scenes generally are supposed
to be seen by daylight; but daylight comes from heaven, not from the
earth; even within-doors the whitened ceilings throw reflected light
upon us. This difficulty might be rectified by ‘bringing forward the
roof of the stage as far as its boards or floor, and placing a row
of lamps with reflectors along the inside of the wooden
front-piece.' Such lighting 'I have never indeed seen attempted in
any theatre, though it might surely be done in one of moderate
dimensions with admirable effect.' With such a system of lighting it
would be necessary to do away with the boxes upon the stage, but
their removal would be a great advantage. ‘The front-piece at the
top; the boundary of the stage from the orchestra at the bottom; and
the pilasters on each side, would then represent the frame of a
great moving picture, entirely separated and distinct from the rest
of the theatre: whereas, at present, an unnatural mixture of
andience and actors, of house and stage, takes place near the front
of the stage, which destroys the general effect in a very great
degree.'
A second important reason for the unpopularity of the legitimate
drama was the conscientious objection of many grave and excellent
people. In their eyes, dramatic exhibition was unfriendly to the
principles and spirit of Christianity. ‘The blessed Founder of our
religion, who knew what was in man, did not contradict nor thwart
this propensity of our nature, but . . . made use of it for the
instruction of the multitude, as His incomparable parables so
beautifully testify. The sins and faults which He reproved were not
those that are allied to fancy and imagination, the active
assistants of all intellectual improvement, but worldliness,
uncharitableness, selfish luxury, spiritual pride, and hypocrisy. In
those days, the representation of Greek drama prevailed in large
cities through the whole Roman empire; yet the apostles only forbade
their converts to feast in the temples of idols, and in sacrifices
offered to idols We cannot, therefore, it appears to me, allege that
dramatic representations are contrary either to the precepts or
spirit of the Christian religion.'
The objections were probably founded upon the dubious character of
the plays and playgoers. The manager of a successful theatre will
supply the dramas that suit the taste of the most influential part
of the audience. If it demands scurrility and broad satire, he will
provide them, for they are more easily procured than wit, and
require less skill to produce than do depictions of higher or more
virtuous society. ‘Will a manager, then, be at pains to provide
delicate fare for those who are as well satisfied with garbage.' The
objection in regard to the class of people with which one comes in
contact at a theatre applies only to young men, as young women of
respectable families are carefully chaperoned. Formerly families
attended dramatic productions in a group; 'now the stripling goes by
himself, or with some companion equally thoughtless and imprudent;
and the confidence he feels there of not being under the observation
of any whom he is likely to meet elsewhere, gives him a freedom to
follow every bent of his present inclination, however dangerous.'
'How far the absence of the grave and moral part of society from
such places tends to remedy or increase the evils apprehended, ought
also to be seriously considered.' |