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・ Lovers Rock (disambiguation)
・ Lovers Rock Tour
・ Lovers Speak
・ Lovers Vanished
・ Lovers Walk
・ Lovers Who Wander
・ Lovers Who Wander (album)
・ Lovers' Concerto (film)
・ Lovers' Kiss
・ Lovers' lane
・ Lovers' Lane Halt railway station
・ Lovers' Park
・ Lovers' Post Office
・ Lovers' Requiem
・ Lovers' Rock (film)
Lovers' Vows
・ Lovers, Fighters, Sinners, Saints
・ Lovers, Friends and Strangers
・ Lovers, Liars & Lunatics
・ Loversall
・ Lovertits
・ Loverval
・ Loves Corner, Illinois
・ Loves Me Like a Rock
・ Loves Me Not
・ Loves Me, Loves Me Not
・ Loves Me, Loves Me Not (TV series)
・ Loves Music, Loves to Dance
・ Loves of a Blonde
・ Loves of an Actress


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Lovers' Vows : ウィキペディア英語版
Lovers' Vows

''Lovers' Vows'' (1798), a play by Elizabeth Inchbald arguably best known now for having been featured in Jane Austen's novel ''Mansfield Park'' (1814), is one of at least four adaptations of August von Kotzebue's ''Das Kind der Liebe'' (1780; literally "Love Child," or "Natural Son," as it is often translated), all of which were published between 1798 and 1800. Inchbald's version is the only one to have been performed.〔(A Celebration of Women Writers )〕 Dealing as it does with sex outside marriage and illegitimate birth, Inchbald in the Preface to the published version declares herself to have been highly sensitive to the task of adapting the original German text for "an English audience." Even so, she left the setting as Germany.
The play was first performed at Covent Garden on Thursday, 11 October 1798, and was an immediate success: it ran for forty-two nights, "making it by some distance Covent Garden's most successful venture of that season," and went on to be performed in Bristol, Newcastle, Bath, and elsewhere.〔Baines and Burns xxv.〕 It was likewise successful as a print publication, though it also aroused controversy about its "levelling" politics and moral ambiguity. Anne Plumptre, who translated Kotzebue's play as ''The Natural Son'', wrote (perhaps not disinterestedly as the production of Inchbald's work effectively precluded the production of her own) that Inchbald had transformed the character of Amelia into a "forward country hoyden."〔Moody 265〕 Others, however, defended the morality of the play. And indeed, various characters indulge in considerable moralizing about charity, honour, and forgiveness.
== Original cast ==

(as credited in the published version〔(Project Gutenberg )〕)
Baron Wildenhaim. . . . . Mr. Murray.

Count Cassel. . . . . . . Mr. Knight.

Anhalt. . . . . . . . . . Mr. H. Johnston.

Frederick . . . . . . . . Mr. Pope.

Verdun the Butler . . . . Mr. Munden.

Landlord. . . . . . . . . Mr. Thompson.

Cottager. . . . . . . . . Mr. Davenport.

Farmer. . . . . . . . . . Mr. Rees.

Countryman. . . . . . . . Mr. Dyke.

Huntsmen, Servants, &c.

Agatha Friburg. . . . . . Mrs. Johnson.

Amelia Wildenhaim . . . . Mrs. H. Johnston.

Cottager's Wife . . . . . Mrs. Davenport.

County Girl . . . . . . . Miss Leserve.


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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