Event Comment: Paid 3 day's salary at #100 12s. 6d. per diem #301 17s. 6d. Salaries short-paid last week #168 8s. 6d.; Tabor and Pipe #3 13s. 6d. 
Louchre [
Lauchery] #8 8s. 
Mr Abington #2; 
Mr King #3; (Treasurer's Book).  [
The payment to King was 
the first of 37 similar ones for extra salary amounting to #111.  That to Mrs Abington was 
the first of weekly payments for her clo
thes account, amounting to #60 for 
the season.  No fur
ther mention will be made of 
these items.]  Receipts: #265 9s. 6d. (Treasurer's Book).  [From 
the Middlesex Journal (7-9 Oct.) quoted by 
Hampden, 
Eighteenth Century Journal: "
The Way of the World, though confessedly replete with wit and character, is not 
the most entertaining play in representation.  It is so full of plot and intrigue, that it demands an Unusual degree of attention in 
the performers and audience to excite admiration.  On Saturday 
they seemed averse to assist 
the author.  Mr King in 
Witwou'd was as entertaining and full of spirits as usual.  
Mr Jefferson in 
the gay admired 
Mirabel (independent of 
the antique mode of his wig, and formal cut of his clo
thes, which surely were both uncharacteristic) seemed in attempting to be quite natural, to keep 
the entire plot of 
the play in his own bosom, looked more like 
the fa
ther than 
the Mirabel of 
Congreve.  
Mr Reddish was a contrast to his friend Mirabel; he seemed attentive nervous, and played 
the latter part of his character well....Mrs Abington's person, manner and dress were fashionable and elegant; but though 
the character was certainly a fine one, 
there was a want of that spirit best calculated to call her powers into action: her delivery was tediously formal; and had 
the audience been deprived of 
their sight 
they would conclude that 
Capt. Bobadill had got into petticoats.  Her dress was no more decent than 
Madam Hidou's was on her first appearance last year; stays so low cut before puts modesty to 
the blush; and will not be countenanced by an 
English audience, though made after 
the French fashion....
Mrs Greville, to convince 
the town that she could keep a secret, whispered it to only a few friends in 
the Pit....her indifference is intolerable, and should be noticed by her employer."