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Arthur Murphy

 

Murphy, Arthur (1727-1805), actor and dramatist. Born in Cloonyquin, Co. Roscommon, the son of a merchant who died at sea, he was educated in France at St Omer Jesuit College, 1738-44, and spent two years clerking in Cork, 1747-9. He left Ireland and found employment with a banking house in London. During 1752-4 he launched and edited the Gray's Inn Journal. He qualified as a barrister at Lincoln's Inn and practised successfully until 1788, when deafness forced his retirement. In 1756 he wrote a Drury Lane farce called The Apprentice and earned £800 by it. This was followed by An Englishman from Paris (1756). The Upholsterer, or What News? (1757) was a farce on tradesmen meddling in politics. Murphy tried his hand at tragedy with The Orphan of China (1755). His later plays include The Way to Keep Him (1760), The Citizen (1761), and Three Weeks After Marriage (1776). He also attempted classical themes in Zenobia (1768) and Arminius, a pro-war play which secured him a royal pension in 1798. Murphy made little overt use of his Irish background, beyond a stage-Irishman in The Apprentice who declaims Othello in Hiberno-English. His Latin scholarship found expression in translations such as the Works of Sallust (1793).

Bibliography

Richard B. Schwartz, The Plays of Arthur Murphy (4 vols., 1979).

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A 1777 portrait of Arthur Murphy by Nathaniel Dance

Arthur Murphy (December 27, 1727 – June 18, 1805) was an Irish writer, who was also known by the pseudonym "Charles Ranger." He was born at Clooniquin, County Roscommon, Ireland, the son of Richard Murphy and Jane French. A barrister, journalist, actor, and playwright, he edited Gray Inn Journal between 1752 and 1754. As Henry Thrale's oldest and dearest friend, he introduced Samuel Johnson to the Thrales in January 1765. He was appointed Commissioner of Bankruptcy in 1803. Murphy is best known for three biographies: his 1792 An Essay on the Life and Genius of Samuel Johnson, his 1762 Fielding's Works and his 1801 Life of David Garrick. Murphy is thought to have coined the legal term "wilful misconstruction" whilst representing the Donaldson v. Becket appeal to the House of Lords in 1774 against the perpetual possession of copyright. He died at Knightsbridge, London, and was buried at Hammersmith, London. A biography was written in 1811 by Dr. Jesse Foote. Nathaniel Dance painted his portrait which is thought to now be in the Irish National Portrait Collection.

Contents

Murphy's drama

Title page and scene from 1823 printing of The Citizen, produced in 1761.

An example of Murphy's theatrical writings is The Citizen, a farce, first produced at Drury Lane in 1761. Philpot, a wealthy skinflint, has bargained with Sir Jasper Wilding, a foxhunter, for his son Young Philpot, a buck and wastrel, to marry Maria Wilding, and for his daughter Sally to marry Wilding's son, for settlements and twenty thousand pounds paid to Sir Jasper. Young Philpot has lost a fortune, but borrows money from his father and embarks on an insurance fraud involving shipwrecked goods. Maria plans to marry Beaufort, who loves her. As Young Philpot tries to propose, she convinces him she is half-witted, and he spurns her. In the second act, Philpot senior is visiting Corinna, a lady of loose virtue, but hides under the table when his son calls upon her. He overhears as Young Philpot tells her how he has cajoled the money out of his father. Maria's brother surprises them, and old Philpot is also discovered, to their mutual shame. In the final scene Sir Jasper with a lawyer obtains Philpot's signature to the agreements, but meanwhile Maria, an educated girl, shows her strong character to Young Philpot and he again refuses to propose. Having signed away his rights old Philpot offers to marry her, but the lawyer reveals himself as Beaufort, and explains that he has swapped the deeds, so that Philpot has unwittingly signed his agreement for Maria to marry Beaufort.

Works

Dramas

All dates refer to the play's first production, except where otherwise stated.[1]

  • The Apprentice (1756)
  • The Upholsterer (1758)
  • The Orphan of China (1759), tragedy (a translation of L'Orphelin de la Chine (1755) by Voltaire, which itself was a translation of Orphan of Zhao)
  • The Way to Keep Him (1760), comedy
  • The Desert Island (1760), dramatic poem
  • The Citizen (1761)
  • All in the Wrong (1761), comedy
  • The Old Maid (1761)
  • No One's Enemy But His Own (1764)
  • Three Weeks After Marriage (1764)
  • The Choice (1764)
  • The School for Guardians (1767)
  • Zenobia (1768), tragedy
  • The Grecian Daughter (1772), tragedy
  • Alzuma (1773), tragedy
  • News from Parnassus, A Prelude (1776)
  • Know Your Own Mind (1777), comedy
  • The Rival Sisters (written 1783), tragedy

Biographies

Notes

  1. ^ Titles and dates of first productions taken from "A List of the Several Pieces Contained in This Edition", which appears at the start of volume one of The Works of Arthur Murphy (Murphy 1786).

Sources

  • Emery, John Pike. 1946. Arthur Murphy: An Eminent English Dramatist of the Eighteenth Century. University of Pennsylvania Press. ASIN B0006AQYEA.
  • Murphy, Arthur. 1786. The Works of Arthur Murphy, Esq. in Seven Volumes. London: Cadell. (Volume One is available to download on Google books.)
  • Spector, Robert Donald. 1979. Arthur Murphy. Twain. ISBN 0805767517.

External links


 
 
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Irish Literature Companion. The Concise Oxford Companion to Irish Literature. Copyright © 1996, 2000, 2003 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
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