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The LONDON MAGAZINE:

Or, GENTLEMAN's Monthly Intelligencer. For JANUARY, 1756.

To be Continued. (Price Six-Pence each Month.)

Containing, (Greater Variety, and more in Quantity, than any Monthly Book of the fame Price.)

1. Account of the Apprentice.

II. Dr. Whytt of Senfibility, &c.

III. Derbyshire Quacks expofed.
IV. Story of a Pifs-Prophet.
V. Curious Recipe.

VI. Our Right to Nova-Scotia.
VII. Propofal, by a Lady.
VIII. Flintfhile defcribed.

IX. The JOURNAL of a Learned and Political CLUB, &c. continued: Containing the SPEECHES of P. Furius Philus and C. Numifus on the Bill for a Nightly-Watch for Bristol.

X. Sad Effects of Luxury.

XI. Man's Superiority to Brutes.
XII. Obfervations on the Marriage A&t.
Xill. Account of a Coal that never smokes.
XIV. Simple Carriages.

XV. Refentment and Revenge different.
XVI. Of Tinmouth Canle.

XVII. Servants (poiled by their Masters.
XVIII. Vanity of Ancestry.
XIX. Pedigree of a Footman.

XX. Satire on extravagant Neatnefs.
XXI. Account of the British America.
XXII. New-England fettled.

XXIII. Of the Plan of Lisbon.

XXIV. Affecting Diftrefs.

XXV. Huxham on Antimony. XXVI. Story of a King of Egypt. XXVII. Original Letter from Wales. XXVIII. POETRY. Elegy in a Winter's Day; Ode to Love; to Mr. Murphy, by Mr. Rider; Ifabel; New Year's Qde; to a Lady, with Dodfley's Memorandum Book; Prologue and Epilogue to the Apprentice, a new Song, fet to Mulick, and a Minuet.

XXIX. The MONTHLY CHRONOLOGER : Petition for a Bridge prefented; River loft; Phenomenon in Westmoreland ; more Earthquakes; Advices from me. rica; Lift of Sheriffs; Notorious Chest, to restore Iron Furnaces; Cure for the Dropfy; Semons at the Old-Bailey, Fives, Execution, &c. &c. &c.

XXX. Marriages and Births, Deaths, Promotions, Bankrupts.

XXXI. Alterations in the List of Parliament.
XXXII. FOREIGN AFFAIRS,
XXXIII. A Catalogue of Books.
XXXIV. Letter from the French Secretary

of State to Mr. Fox, with his Anfver. XXXV. Scheme for rafing two Millions. XXXVI. Prices of Stocks.

XXXVII. Monthly Bill of Mortality.

With a Corre& MAP of FLINTSHIRE, a PLAN of LISBON and Map of its Environs, and a beautiful PROSPECT of TINMOUTH CASTLE, elegantly engraved on Copper.

MULTUM IN PAKP G.

LONDON: Printed for R. BALDWIN, at the Role in Pater-Noiler-Row; Of whom may be had, compleat Sets from the Year 1733 to this Time, neatly Bound, or Stitch'd, or any tingle Month to compleat Sets.

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If zubat Contemplator mentions be approved of, it shall be inferted. S. T.'s favour is ri ceived. Mary pieces in prose and verse are pofiponed to next month.

A

In January was Published,

NAPPENDIX to the LONDON MAGAZINE for 1755, with a Beautiful FRONTISPIECE, a General TITLE curioufly engraved, Compleat INDEXIS, and feveral other Things, neceffary to be bound up with the

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is intended as a fatire on thofe young mechanicks, who neglect the bufinefs of their trade to attend to the diverfions of the ftage to ridicule prentice kings and handicraft tragedians; and is indeed very well calculated, in the words of the prologue,

To check thefe heroes, and their laurels

crop,

[hop. To bring them back to reafon and their

But we cannot help obferving, that if the fatire had come from any other hand than that of a perfon who is himself on the ftage, the players would probably have looked on the piece as an affront to their profeffion. The characters reprefented are:

Wingate, a paffionate old fellow, a great mifer, and ridiculously fond of arithmetick.

Dick, his fon, bound to an apothecary, and mad after plays, in love with Charlotte.

Gargle, Dick's master. Charlotte, daughter to Gargle, in love with Dick.

Simon, fervant to Gargle,

January, 1756.

A

B

D

Scotchman, Irishman, and other mem bers of the Spouting Club, Catchpole, a bailiff.

Porter, watchmen, &c.

A& I. The farce opens with a scene between Wingate and Simon, by which it appears that Dick has eloped from his mafter, and been miffing above a month. Wingate fufpe&ts Simon to be in the plot, but at last finding he can make nothing of him, fends him to fetch his mafter. Simon goes out, but foon returns with a letter, which, he fays, the post brought to the door just as he was going out. This proves to be a formal epifle from Ebenezer Broadbrim, a quaker at Brif tol, informing Wingate that his fon came there with a company of ftrollers, who were taken up by the magistrate, and committed as vagabonds to jail: But that Ebenezer had taken Dick out of confinement, and fent him up to town in the waggon. By the time Wingate has read this letter arrives Gargle, who tells him Dick is below ftairs, Where, fays he, I judged it proper to leave him till I had prepared you for his reception." For which purpofe Gargle harangues Wingate in the language of a true apothecary, preferibes lenitives, gentle alteratives. the lofs of zo ounces of blood, with a cephalic tincture. This enrages Wingate ftill more, and tho' Gargle affures him

Inflammatories may be dangerous," he continues in a violent paffion. In the midst of his fury enters Dick, who throws himself into an attitude, and in a tragedy tone fays to Wingate, from Hamlet, A 2 "Now

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ACCOUNT of the APPRENTICE.

"No, my good father, what's the mat-
ter ?" In this fcene Dick's whole conver-
fation is from plays, but his father, who
knows nothing of Shakespear and Ben
Thompson, as he calls him, takes moft
of what he fays as coming from himself,
tho' he is fometimes at a lofs what to

make of his behaviour. However, Dick A
is at length difiniffed to go and change his
drefs, and return to his business, and it is
settled by the two old men, that as foon
as he is out of his time he shall marry
Charlotte. It is to be obferved, that the
whole dialect in which Dick, Wingate,
and Gargle converfe is entirely characte
riftick. Dick's difcourfe is downright
fpouting: Wingate talks of nothing but B

D

fractions and Cocker's arithmetick: And
Gargle converfes in the language of the
preferiptions on his file, and the difpen.
fatory. The two old fellows no fooner
difappear than Dick, who was ordered to
go home and change his dress, enters
again with Simon, and forms a defign of
changing his dress before he returns home. C
This he puts in execution by breaking
open his father's clofet, where it feems
the old curmudgeon has always fome
jemmy thing locked up, as a pawn for
moncy lent. "In a dark corner of his ca-
binet" Dick finds a paper, which proves
to be a note of hand of his father's for
71. 145. 7d. value received, but alas !
"The name's torn off-because the note
is paid." After the difpatch of this bu
finefs he borrows fixpence of Simon,
[which appears to be the fifteenth on
fcore] with a promife to pay him all at
his benefit; and then fends him down to
open the street deor. In the mean while
Dick amufes himfelf with a foliloquy,
representing to himfelf how happy he E
shall be when he gets on the stage; but
recollecting that, being club-night, the
Spouters are all mct, he determines to go
to them, and afterwards to an affignation
he has made with Charlotte. Thus ends
the first act; but I cannot conclude my
obfervations on it without taking notice
of the infinite humour difplayed by Mr.
Woodward in his performance of Dick,

and even in his manner of dreffing the
character. There was also a certain na-
tive, genuine fimplicity in Vaughan's
matiner of acting, very feldom to be met
with on our flage, which made Simon a
perfon of no mean confequence in this
little drama.

F

A II. At the beginning of this aft G the curtain rifes and difcovers the Spout. ing Club, the members feated, roaring out bravo! drinking, &c. In the midit of thus theatrical not enters Dick, who is received with great transport by his compam, appears to be a principal man

Jan.

among them, and is called The Genius. There is fome humour in the notion of the broad-mouthed North- Briton's giving a fpecimen of elocution, and the Irishman's boddering them with Othollo, buɛ on the whole one might have expected more from this fcene, which we are taught to wait for as the principal one in the farce. At length the fpouters all iffue forth, full of tragedy and wine, into the Street; where they infult the watch, by whom they are all taken, except Dick, who after being once knocked down makes his efcape.

The fcene then changing to the street where Gargle lives, Dick re-enters with a lanthorn and a ladder, in order to keep his attignation with Charlotte, and concert her escape with him from her father's. Charlotte foon appears at the window, and is very ready to go cff with him immediately, but Dick infits on their acting the garden-fcene first; on her refufal of which he is determined to act Ranger, and tho' Simon is to let her thro' the fhop, " up he goes, neck or nothing," and gets in at the window to come out again immediately at the street door, merely becaufe he is determined to go thro' with his part. Juft as Dick goes off with Charlotte, enters a bailiff and his follower in purfuit of him, and after affuring them felves that he is the man they are after, go out different ways in order to dodge him. The watchman then coming his rounds, difcovers the ladder at Gargle's window, and alarms the family. Simon takes this opportunity of rehearing his part of Scrub, which (it feems) Dick was to teach him, by crying out. "Murder, thieves, Popery ! &c." In the midst of Gargle's uneatinefs at the lofs of his daughter, enters Wingate, and this perhaps is the heaviest and flatter part of the farce, as the action feems to tand fill, and the feene contains very little humour to engage the attention. Wingate and Gargle are indeed but very indifferent company; however, we are at length relieved from their dull converfation by the arrival of a porter, who brings a letter for Gargle. This proves to be an heroick epiftle from Dick, made up of odds and ends from various trage.dies. It is put together with a good deal of humour; but our dramatick genius had expreffed himself in fuch fublime terms that Wingate and Gargle cannot conceive what it means, till the porter informs them he brought it from a spung, ing-house, whither Gargle refolves to go to him.

The fcene then changes to the fpunging-house, where Dick and Charlotte are

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