The king himself, to nuptial rites a slave,

No bad example to his poets gave;

And they, not bad, but in a vicious age,

Had not, to please the prince, debauched the stage.

Wife of Bath's Tale.

"Limberham" was acted at the Duke's Theatre in Dorset-Garden; for, being a satire upon a court vice, it was deemed peculiarly calculated for that play-house. The concourse of the citizens thither is alluded to in the prologue to "Marriage-a-la-Mode." Ravenscroft also, in his epilogue to the "Citizen turned Gentleman," acted at the same theatre, disowns the patronage of the courtiers who kept mistresses, probably because they Constituted the minor part of his audience:

From the court party we hope no success;

Our author is not one of the noblesse,

That bravely does maintain his miss in town,

Whilst my great lady is with speed sent down,