Über The Poems and Verses of Charles Dickens
About the year 1834, when the earliest of the Sketches by Boz were appearing in print,
a young composer named John Hullah set to music a portion of an opera calledThe
Gondolier, which he thought might prove successful on the stage. Twelve months later
Hullah became acquainted with Charles Dickens, whose name was then unknown to
those outside his own immediate circle, and it occurred to him that he and ¿Boz¿ might
combine their forces by converting The Gondolier into a popular play. Dickens, who
always entertained a passion for the theatre, entered into the project at once, and
informed Hullah that he had a little unpublished story by him which he thought would
dramatise well¿even better than The Gondolier notion; confessing that he would
rather deal with familiar English scenes than with the unfamiliar Venetian environment
of the play favoured by Hullah. The title of The Gondolier was consequently
abandoned, and a novel subject found and put forward as The Village Coquettes, a
comic opera of which songs, duets, and concerted pieces were to form constituent
parts. Dickens, of course, became responsible for the libretto and Hullah for the music;
and when completed the little play was offered to, and accepted by, Braham, the
lessee of the St. James¿s Theatre, who expressed an earnest desire to be the first to
introduce ¿Boz¿ to the public as a dramatic writer. A favourite comedian of that day,
John Pritt Harley, after reading the words of the opera prior to its representation,
declared it was ¿a sure card,¿ and felt so confident of its success that he offered to
wager ten pounds that it would run fifty nights!¿an assurance which at once decided
Braham to produce it.
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