The Fair Quaker of Deal or, The Humours of the Navy is a 1710 comedy play by the British writer Charles Shadwell. A popular hit running for thirteen nights, it was revived a number of times.
The play was dedicated to "my generous and obliging friends of the County of Kent".[2]
List of Characters
Flip - The Commodore, illiterate tar, hates the Gentlemen of the Navy, gets drunk with his Boats-Crew, and values himself upon the brutish Management of the Navy.
Mizen - a cynical Sea-Fop, a mighty reformer of the Navy, keeps a visiting day and is Flip's opposite.
Worthy - a Captain of the Navy, a gentleman of honour, sense and reputation.
Rovewell - a gentleman of fortune, and true lover of the Officers of the Navy.
Sir Charles Pleasant - Worthy's Lieutenant, a man of quality.
Cribidge - Flip's lieutenant, a brisk young fellow.
Easy - a Lieutenant of Marines
Indent - Flip's purser
Scruple - a Corporation Justice, a canting hypocrite
^Shadwell, Charles (1715). The fair Quaker of Deal: or, the humours of the navy. A comedy, as it is acted at the Theatre-Royal in Drury-Lane. London: printed for James Knapton, Bernard Lintott, and Jonas Browne.
Bibliography
Burling, William J. A Checklist of New Plays and Entertainments on the London Stage, 1700-1737. Fairleigh Dickinson Univ Press, 1992.
Nicoll, Allardyce. A History of Early Eighteenth Century Drama: 1700-1750. CUP Archive, 1927.
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