Charles Dickens did not have fond memories of The Village Coquettes, an operetta he wrote with composer John Pyke Hullah.
When he was later asked if he owned a copy of it, he reportedly replied, "if I knew it was in my house and could not get rid of it in any other way, I would burn the wing of the house where it was."
Dickens's previous play, The Strange Gentleman, had been a success at the St. James Theatre, then under the direction of the famous tenor John Braham. That had been based on one of his stories in Sketches by Boz, though. The Village Coquettes was doing something decidedly different from his previous work.
The play takes place in an English village in the autumn of 1729. Setting the play more than a hundred years in the past allowed Dickens to present customs and mores considerably different from those of his own days. The plot involves two charming village girls who slight their accepted beaux in favor of a local squire and his foppish friend, Flam.
The character of Lucy was played by the soprano Elizabeth Rainforth, a relatively unknown actress who gained considerable attention for her performance. Lucy is betrothed to the humble farmer George, but gains the attentions of the squire. He urges her to forget George, but she still loves him, and sings some touching lyrics:
Love is not a feeling to pass away,
Like the balmy breath of a summer day;
It is not--it cannot be--laid aside;
It is not a thing to forget or hide.
It clings to the heart, ah, woe is me!
As the ivy clings to the old oak tree.
Lucy's cousin Rose is attached to another young man of humble origins, John, but is flattered by Flam, who is the villain of the piece. Rose admits she enjoys "a little flirtation as much as anyone" and defends her youthful enthusiasm for men in the song "Some Folks Who Have Grown Old."
Eventually, both young women come to realize that they're better off with simple men from the country rather than the rich squire and his unscrupulous city friend. Lucy later tells the squire "call me coquette, faithless, treacherous, deceitful, what you will" but she now sees that George is the "noblest heart, that ever woman won."
For his part, the squire realizes that his life has been dissipated by visits to crowded cities and sings "A Country Life" which has a pleasant and sentimental melody. This elevation of country life over urban values seems strange for Dickens, who wrote so memorably about cities.
After the plot resolves itself and Flam is sent on his way, the play ends with a dance and musical finale. Though the operetta is quite different from the novels that made Dickens famous, it speaks to the engagement the author had with the theatre.
Incidentally, I will be attending a symposium by the Dickens Society next week in Boston, and delivering a paper on the writer's portrayal of audiences. More on that to come!