The Cousins

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The Cousins is a play attributed to James Sheridan Knowles (1784-1862)[1]

The original text

No mention of a Knowles play by this name has been found anywhere, except in F.C.L. Bosman's 1980 history of South African theatre, where it is referred to as "Reminiscenses of Sherdidan Knowles' The Cousins".

It was probably, given the phrasing, a performance of a selected scene from one of Knowles' plays - he was fond of using cousins as characters. A good candidate would have been the comic scene from Knowles' best known play, The Hunchback, in which Helen teaches her cousin and lover Modus how to woo, for it could very well have been played as a short interlude.

There is also extant in the British Museum the manuscript of a comic opera in two acts (18th century) by anonymous author called The Cousins, or Love and Fear[2], while The Cousins, or A Woman's Promise and a Lover's Vow, a novel in 3 volumes by "Mrs. Ross" (), appeared in 18**. . The Cousins may of course have been adaptations of either one of these texts, and merely attributed to Knowles by the company or by Bosman.

Translations and adaptations

Performance history in South Africa

1871: Performed (according to Bosman, 1980, as "reminiscences of Sheridan Knowles's The Cousins") four times by the D'Arcy Read Company in the Mutual Hall, Cape Town (on 9, 11, 16 and 23 October), with The Ring and the Keeper (Wooler) and Belgravia, or Servantgolism ()

Sources

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Sheridan_Knowles

F.C.L. Bosman. 1980. Drama en Toneel in Suid-Afrika, Deel II, 1856-1912. Pretoria: J.L. van Schaik: pp.250-251

Order of the Trustees. 1877. Catalogue of additions to the manuscripts in the British Museum in the year mdcccliv-mdccclxxv (1861-1875), Oxford University[3]

Facsimile version of The Cousins, Or, A Woman's Promise and a Lover's Vow by "Mrs Bell" (A.K. Newman, 1811)[4]


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