CHAP. IS.J THE ARREST AND' WHAT PRECEDED IT. him rehearse, he had given an engagement before he left irtii. London of three pounds a week for three years, appeared M. 36. on that day in Beaumont and Fletcher's Philaster, and took the audience by storm. Foote is described to have been the only unmoved spectator.* The rest of the audience were not content with clapping; "they stood up and shouted," says Walpole; and Foote's jeering went for nothing. "Walpole describes the scene with what seems to be a satisfied secret persuasion (in which Goldsmith certainly shared) that Garrick had at last met a dangerous rival. He calls the new actor " what Mr. Pitt called my Lord Clive," a heaven-born hero;f says the heads of the whole town are turned; and describes all the boxes taken for a month. Powell's salary was at once raised to ten pounds a-week, George Garrick consenting on the part of his brother; and such was the anxiety of the town to see him in new characters, and the readiness of the management in giving way to it, that in this his first season, from October '63 to May '64, he appeared in seventeen different plays, to a profit on the receipts of nearly seven thousand pounds.! His most successful efforts indicate the attractive points of his style. In Philaster he appeared sixteen times, in Posthurnus eleven, seven times in Jaffier, six in Castalio, and five in Alexander. Garrick himself had meanwhile written to him from Italy to warn him against such characters as the latter, and restrain him from attempt- ing too much.§ The advice was admirably written, and * Davies's Life of GarncTc, ii. 71. + Letters to Mann, i. 167. $ See Boaden's prefatory memoir to Gar. Oorr. i. sQii. § " I am very angry with Po-well," he writes to Colman, "for playing that *' detestable part of Alexander. Every genius must despise it, because that, and 11 such, fustian-like stuff, is the bane of true merit. If a man can act it-well, " I mean to please the people, he has something in him that a good actor should " not have. He might have served Mrs. Pritchard, and himself too, in some good " natural character. I hate your roarers." Rome, April 11, 1764 Memoirs of Mm, and Pope took it as he did those of others in advancing. Reynolds,