Event Comment: On this day
Charles II died. Although the order to close the
theatres was not issued until 20 Feb. 1684@5 (L. C. 5@145, p. 153), acting Probably ceased on Thursday 5 Feb. 1684@5. At this time
John Crowne's
Sir Courtly Nice was in rehearsal.
John Dennis gives a dramatic account of the la
st day of rehearsing: The Play was now ju
st ready to appear to the World; and as every one that had seen it rehears'd was highly pleas'd with it; every one who had heard of it was big with the Expectation of it; and
Mr Crown was delighted with the flattering Hope of being made happy for the re
st of his Life, by the Performance of the King's Promise; when, upon the very la
st Day of the Rehearsal, he met
Cave Underhill coming from the Play-House as he himself was going towards it; Upon which the Poet reprimanding the Player for neglecting so considerable a Part as he had in the Comedy, and neglecting it on a Day of so much Consequence, as the very la
st Day of Rehearsal: Oh Lord, Sir, says Underhill, we are all undone. Wherefore, says Mr
Crown, is the Play-House on Fire? The whole Nation, replys the Player, will quickly be so, for the King is dead. At the hearing which dismal Words, the Author was little better; for he who but the Moment before was ravish'd with the Thought of the Pleasure, which he was about to give to his King, and of the Favours which he was afterwards to receive from him, this Moment found, to his unspeakable Sorrow, that his Royal Patron was gone for ever, and with him all his Hopes. The King indeed reviv'd from his Apoplectick Fit, but three Days after dyed, and Mr
Crown by his Death was replung'd in the deepe
st Melancholy (John
Dennis, Original Letters, 1721, I, 53-54). [It is not clear whether the la
st sentence refers to the day on which
Crowne had seen the King and had assurances from His Maje
sty, the King dying three days later, or whether there was a false rumor of the King's death on 3 Feb. 1684@5.