Event Comment: Tickets deliver'd out by 
Miss Copin for 
the Merchant of Venice will be taken to 
the Conscious Lovers (
General Advertiser).  This day is publish'd, Price 1s., 
A Letter of Complaint to 
the Ingenious author of a Treatise on 
the Passions, so far as 
they regard 
the stage; with a critical Enquiry into 
the theatrical merit of Mr G-k, Mr Q-n, and Mr B-y, &c. With some fur
ther remarks on Mr M-n.  And a few hints on our modern Actresses, particularly Mrs C-r and Mrs P-d.  
Magna est Veritas, & pravalebit.  Printed for 
C. Corbett, over against 
St. Dunstan's Church, 
Fleet St. (
General Advertiser).  [Illuminating discussion of actors' abilities]: 
The Stage is much indebted to Mr M- for his incessant successful endeavours; he not only grac'd it with his own personal merits, but rais'd up several Branches who tho' 
they have not yet quite eclips'd Mr 
Giffard's Nursery from 
Goodman's Fields, will certainly in time prove stars of 
the first magnitude.--(p. 28).  Touch Messrs. 
Giffard and 
Ryan and give 
them better voices; 
there is nothing else wanting.  Help 
Mr Delane to a 
new manner and judgment to display 
the best pipe that ever was heard.  Polish a little 
the rough Beauties of 
Mr L. Sparkes, give 
the sensible 
Mr Havard a few more spirits; and mend 
the Humour of 
Hippisley, 
Chapman, 
Barrington, and 
Blakes if you can.  Poor 
Yates wants nothing but a front of brass, a necessary self-sufficient Manner of pushing himself upon a Publick.--(p. 31).  If 
Mrs Giffard's Manner was equal to her understanding, she wou'd compell everybody to acknowledge her a surprising Performer.  In 
Lady Macbeth she is excellent; and 
Hermione was very near eclipsing a much more popular actress; in short in every Part she performs, 
the severest of her enemies cannot but own she is more than decent.--(pp. 32-33).  [Gives two pages each to discussion of 
Mrs Clive, 
Mrs Woffington, 
Mrs Cibber, and 
Mrs Pritchard.