Quotes from work
The Wild Goose Chase

The Wild Goose Chase

The Wild Goose Chase is a late Jacobean stage play, a comedy written by John Fletcher, first performed in 1621. It is often classed among Fletcher's most effective and best-constructed plays; Edmund Gosse called it "one of the brightest and most coherent of Fletcher's comedies, a play which it is impossible to read and not be in a good humour." The drama's wit, sparkle, and urbanity anticipated and influenced the Restoration comedy of the later decades of the seventeenth century. The term "wild-goose chase" is first documented when used by Shakespeare in the early 1590s, but appears as a term with which his audience would be familiar, as there is no attempt to define its meaning.


John Fletcher photo

“Come, sing now, sing; for I know you sing well;
I see you have a singing face.”

The Wild Goose Chase (c. 1621; published 1652), Act II. 2.

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