BONDUCA
:
OR
,
The
British
Heroine
,
A
TRAGEDY
.
Acted
at
the
Theatre
Royal.
BY
His
MAJESTY's
SERVANTS
.
With
a
New
Entertainment
of
MUSICK
,
Vocal
and
Instrumental
Never
Printed
or
Acted
before
.
LONDON
,
Printed
for
Richard
Bentley
,
in
Russel-Street
near
Covent-Garden
,
1696.
TO
THE
RIGHT
HONOURABLE
,
The
LORD
JEFFEREYS
,
BARON
of
WEM
,
&c.
My
Lord
,
THE
fairest
Excuse
I
can
find
for
this
Presumption
,
is
,
That
the
Modern
Publications
of
Plays
,
are
like
the
Roman
Buildings
,
under
the
Umbrage
of
some
Houshold
Deity
,
Erected
over
some
Portico
,
to
Fence
and
keep
all
safe
within
.
And
indeed
,
as
Plays
are
but
Piles
of
Wit
,
the
Structure
of
Ingenuity
,
a
Noble
Name
in
the
Frontispiece
,
is
much
the
same
Domestick
Guardian
;
at
least
,
for
my
own
part
,
I
have
made
the
most
proper
Choice
of
such
a
Tutelar
Power
in
your
Lordship
.
For
where
shou'd
the
Muses
seek
Covert
and
Protection
,
but
there
,
where
both
Apollo
and
Minerva
are
Your
Lordships
Hereditaries
;
whilst
you
spring
from
those
Veins
that
so
entirely
Entitle
and
Quality
You
for
a
Mecoenas
?
And
whilst
Bonduca
stands
so
shelterd
under
Your
Lordships
Protection
,
I
must
say
,
't
is
a
Fabrick
of
Antiquity
;
a
Foundation
of
that
Celebrated
Poetical
Architect
,
the
Famous
Fletcher
:
But
with
several
Alterations
,
besides
the
two
First
Acts
New
Writ
.
But
whilst
I
make
this
bold
Address
to
Your
Lordship
,
there
are
two
Considerations
requisite
to
an
Epistle
Dedicatory
:
The
Present
,
and
the
Hand
that
makes
it
.
For
the
First
of
these
,
't
is
the
Off-spring
of
Beaumont
and
Fletcher
,
I
lay
at
Your
Lordships
Feet
;
and
under
that
Name
,
the
very
Parentage
stamps
that
Merit
upon
it
,
as
should
carry
its
own
Safety
;
for
methinks
when
Great
Authors
revive
,
they
should
have
no
Ordeal
to
pass
either
to
the
Stage
or
the
Press
.
Both
Censure
and
Malice
should
stand
Awed
and
Silenced
there
;
insomuch
that
instead
of
Supplications
,
either
to
the
Audience
,
or
Readers
good
Humour
and
Smiles
;
on
the
contrary
,
they
should
enjoy
all
the
Benefits
of
the
Great
Dead
,
be
past
any
Danger
of
the
Criticks
Purgatory
,
in
an
immediate
state
of
Felicity
:
And
consequently
by
the
Canons
of
the
Muses
,
as
well
as
the
Churches
Rubrick
,
to
be
above
the
want
of
Prayers
.
Besides
,
as
the
Present
I
make
Your
Lordship
,
is
all
our
own
Native
Growth
;
the
History
of
a
British
Heroine
;
it
carries
some
more
favourable
Recommendation
to
your
Lordships
Acceptance
:
For
where
can
our
Noblest
English
Memoirs
be
more
gracefully
or
more
suitably
lodged
,
than
in
the
Hands
of
the
Noblest
English
Honour
?
And
it
has
this
further
Advantage
,
as
being
an
English
Story
;
That
the
Glory
of
Worthies
and
Heroes
sounds
sweetest
,
where
the
Musick
is
Tuned
at
Home
.
But
for
the
Unworthy
Hand
that
makes
the
Present
(
my
other
Dedicatory
Consideration
)
There
even
Poetry
it self
is
at
aloss
for
an
Apology
;
nay
the
very
Player
almost
Blushes
too
.
'T
is
true
,
my
Lord
,
Your
Lordship
has
vouchsafed
to
Grace
and
Encourage
our
willing
Endeavours
with
Extraordinary
Smiles
,
being
that
Condescension
and
Goodness
in
You
,
that
shew
Your
Lordship
is
resolved
not
to
suffer
the
Gemms
of
your
Nobleman's
Coronet
,
to
outdazle
the
Sparks
of
the
Gentleman
,
that
Shines
thro'
your
whole
Conversation
.
And
to
tell
the
Truth
,
my
Lord
,
You
have
so
Exalted
and
wrapt
us
up
with
Your
Lordships
Generous
Favours
;
that
as
Pride
is
naturally
its
own
Trumpet
;
my
,
very
Vanity
alone
is
Argument
and
Encouragement
sufficient
to
make
this
Publication
to
the
whole
World
,
of
the
Infinite
Obligations
due
to
Your
Lordship
,
from
,
My
LORD
,
Your
Lordships
most
Humble
,
and
Most
Obedient
Servant
GEO.
POWELL
.
TO
THE
READER
.
I
Must
make
room
for
one
Page
more
,
to
tell
you
how
our
Bonduca
set
Foot
upon
the
Stage
.
The
Value
of
the
Original
is
not
unknown
to
those
who
have
read
it
in
Fletcher
:
A
Value
that
has
often
times
been
prized
so
high
,
that
the
whole
Brotherhood
of
the
Quill
have
for
many
Years
been
blamed
for
letting
so
Ingenious
a
Relick
of
the
Last
Age
,
as
Bonduca
,
lie
dormant
,
when
so
inconsiderable
an
Additional
Touch
of
the
Pen
was
wanting
,
to
make
it
fit
for
an
Honourable
Reception
in
This.
This
Consideration
prompted
a
Friend
of
mine
,
a
much
abler
Hand
than
my
own
,
to
attempt
it
;
not
that
his
Leisure
,
Attendance
or
Inclinations
,
would
permit
him
to
make
any
long
Toil
of
it
.
For
to
tell
the
Truth
,
the
whole
Play
was
revised
quite
through
,
and
likewise
studied
up
in
one
Fortnight
.
This
Undertaker
,
who
beslow'd
but
Four
Days
Labour
upon
it
,
being
above
the
Interest
Part
of
an
Author
;
and
likewise
a
Person
of
that
Modesty
,
as
to
affect
no
Plumes
from
Poetry
,
he
was
generously
pleased
to
put
it
into
my
Hands
to
usher
it
into
the
World.