[The Palmy Days of Nance Oldfield by Edward Robins]@TWC D-Link book
The Palmy Days of Nance Oldfield

CHAPTER IV
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In the first place, he probably looked upon his players as an encumbrance, since he was in the vein for operatic entertainments just then, and, furthermore, he pictured himself as a future monopolist controlling the destinies of two houses.

For he never dreamed, did this haggling, pettifogging lawyer, that Swiney would swerve from the old time allegiance to him, and he felt so secure on this point that he privately encouraged the desertion of his own forces.

He made one exception, however, by stipulating that Cibber should remain at Drury Lane.

Colley was too experienced, too versatile a man to be lost with impunity; he could do everything in a theatre, from acting to writing good plays and bad poetry, and while the wily Rich chiefly depended upon his singers and dancers, he said "it would be necessary to keep some one tolerable actor with him, that might enable him to set those machines a going." It so happened that Cibber was one of the men that Swiney needed most, and, while the new manager of the Haymarket apparently acquiesced in the exception insisted on by Rich, it was not long before he showed his hand.

It was a better hand than that of his whilom associate, who had been foolish enough to think that he held the trump card in the game.


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