Event Comment: Mainpiece Written by the late 
Mr Congreve.  Benefit 
Mrs Mills.  Tickets to be had of Mills at his house in 
Nassau St., 
Soho.  To the Author of the 
General Advertiser: It is with great Pleasure I find by the Publick Papers that a tragedy founded on 
Voltaire's 
Mahomet is now in rehearsal at 
Drury Lane Theatre.  The Original was by Authority forbid to be played in 
France on account of the free and noble sentiments with regard to Bigotry and Enthusiasm, which shine through it; and which that Nation found as applicable to itself, as to the bloody propagators of 
Mahomet's Religion.  Indeed the Fable on which it is built demanded such sentiments; the design of it being to shew the dreadful effects of Bigotry and Enthusiasm, even upon minds naturally well inclined when work'd up to such a pitch, as a beautiful concurrence of amazing, yet probable Circumstances hath there carried them to: So that it was equally impossible for the poet, by cutting and mangling his play, to lop it to their standard of 
Orthodox poetry, as it were for their Inquisitors, by torturing and burning a poor 
Protestant, to convince him of their 
Christian love and charity....They foresaw that the most obvious Reflection, that every sensible Spectator could not but make, would be, that he every day saw the same effects produced from two the most different causes, 
Mahometanism and 
Christianity; and the consequence must be, either that they were both alike Imposters, or that a crafty, mercenary, and cruel Clergy had dared to add a spirit to Christianity, which Christianity never knew.  It is not doubted but these every Sentiments, which in France, prevented the Representation of this piece, will, in 
England speak loudly in its favor (providdd our 
English poet is not unequal to his subject) especially since so audacious an attempt has been lately made by the Common Enemy of 
Europe to establish at once a Civil and Spiritual Tyranny over those injur'd Nations, by the old Mohametan and 
Roman Arguments of Fire and Sword.  I am, &c