INTRODUCTION
The term the “Comedy of Manners” is generally applied to
the group of comic plays that flourished in England during the
restoration period. The play wrights depicted the social melieu
of the time without trying to disturb its complacency for which
Leslie Stephen called the comedy of manners as “ a comedy
written by blackguards for blackguards”. Thematically this
comedy puts emphasis on the life. Manners, love intrigues and
foppery of the upper and aristocratic classes of the then
society. In the restoration sense “manners”, means something
brilliant about men and women of the elegant society,
something graceful and sparkling about them. It does not refer
to the country clouts but to the grace, culture and refinement
of the fops and fashionable ladies of the time. The comedy of
manners presents on the stage the shamelessly emancipated
people and mercilessly exposes the         artificiality of their
relationships.   Traditional   comedy   deals   with   lower-class
persons. But Restoration comedy concentrates only on the
activities, intrigues and amorous exploits of the gay, frivolous,
rakish young men and women of the upper class society and
this marks it off from its predecessors. Its comic effect is
essentially an outcome of the meticulously cultivated and
deliberately   contrived   manners   displayed        by     the   main
characters. It represents the superficial veneer of the artificial
society with its boasted pride in refinement and culture and
lack of faith in the essential goodness of human heart. The
institutional of marriage is ridiculed and snobbed and is
usually/commonly       /made    an    object     of        uncharitable
/uncomplimentary load laughter . It mainly preoccupies itself
with the depiction of sensual/ biological love , especially with
the exploits and sex intrigues and sexantagonisms existing in
the contemporary high society . Love is presented primarily as
a physical appetite/ biological instinct . Free love is perfected
to conjugal love and if marriage is contracted at all it become a
marriage of convenience or a bargained matrimony. It paints a
heightened     picture of obscenity and immorality prevalent in
the life of the age.
     Formally the genre tends to have loosely constructed plots
through at times the plotting becomes a little in intricate and
confusing. The characters who man the plots are mostly of
degenerate, stock-in-trade, flat and tidal nature. That’s why the
overall impression and impact it creates is almost dull and
uninteresting. What enliven such an atmosphere are the
brilliant wit and humour and the sparkling dialogues, repartee
being the very soul of the exchanges. Its appeal is more to the
intellect than to the heart. The subterranean tone running
through the comedy is critically satirical but at the surface
level it expresses itself more through a tone of flippancy and
levity than the sober tone of the Elizabethan comedy. Critics
like Bonamy Dobree. Miss Kathleen M Lynch, John palmer and
Henry Ten Eyck perry in their various critical discussions on
Restoration Comedy mostly agree and opine that these
comedies    are   artificial   by   nature.   They   deal   with   the
fashionable manners not with the morals of the time. Their
significance lies in the polished style, the satire on social follies
and the truthful/realistic picturization of the 17th century high
life. the principal dramatists of the age were sir George
Etherege (1634-91), William wycherly (1640-1716), Georage
farguhar (1677-1707), sir John Vanbrugh (1664-1726) and
William Congreve (1670-1729).
      William congreve’s the way of the world, represent the
hallmark, the peak and the perfection of this type of comedy.
This play was published (1700) shortly after Jeremy collier’s
short view on “The Immorality and profaneness of English
Stage ” , published in 1698. It presents a kaleidoscopic view of
the morals, behaviours, habits, fashions, affectations etc. of
the elegant ladies and gentleman wits of the London society of
the 17th century. The middle and lower strata are totally shut
off from the play.
      The artificiality of the social game that these Gallants and
ladies play is frequently alluded to in this play. There is much
malice and ugliness behind the mask of elegance and
respectability these characters put on. From the beginning we
have a conscious feeling of rivaliry and hostility beneath the
simulated    friendship   between   fainall   and   miraball.   The
artificiality of social relationship comes out clearly in the 2nd
act    when Mrs. Marwood and Mr. Fainall talk of their
abhorrence and accuse each other of infidelity. During this
confrontation the mask of sophistication drops off easily and
reveals the ugliness of violent, uncontrolled passions. The
refined and civilised stamp of Restoration-life is more apparent
than real. All the characters appear to live only in the image
which they are intent upon presenting to the world. For an
example Mrs. Marwood’s nature is imperctly conealed by the
social mask she wears and we see the brittle surface of her
sophistication crack and fall off in st james park, whre she
blasts off;
“I care not – let me go – break my hands,
do – I’d leave’em to yet loose ”
(II-i-233-34)
     The devices petulant employs to attract attention provide
The devices petulant of the superficiality with which this
society lives.
The licentiousness of this society and its pervasive immorality
are amply demonstrated in the ply     when Final explains     to
Mrs. Mar wood why he ignores the relationship of his wife with
Mirabel.
     “I was for my ease to oversee willfully neglect the
     gross Advance made to him by my wife ; that by
     permitting her to be engaged, I might continue
     unsuspected in my pleasure; and take you oftener
     to my Arms in full security”
     (ll-i-148-152).
     The cynicism displayed here symbolizes the              rank
opportunism of the Restoration . Mirabel. the hero himself is
not free from this blemish .He pretends to be in love with Lady
wishfort      and use this sham courtship as a make-
believe/decoy to channel his real love for her niece, Militant.
     The play seems to be concerned with the social problems
like human adjustment and human responsibilities, but in real
terms displays an obsession with sex ; sexual promiscuity and
sex antagonism. The ply ridicules both sham love and marriage
by exposing the worldly wise ness          , rank materialism and
hypocrisy which operate as ulterior           motives     behind all
superficial    shows.   Most   of   the   characters    are   sexually
promiscuous and treat love and marriage as sport. They put on
their marks before their partners but the masks come off
naturally and effortlessly whenever they are with their
paramours .They disclose before them their plans or strategies
freely and frankly and make a clean breast of their real feeling
towards their legal spouses. There is no true love but a
semblances of it. It is a world of deception. There is no mutual
adjustment /understanding as the fake lovers try their best to
serve their own self-centered private interests. The purity of
love has on place at the altar of amorous intrigues and
immoral       encounters . The professing lovers keep changing
partners easily, effortlessly and remorselessly and evince no
responsibility towards each other .Take for instance , the love
play of Mirabella and Arabella, the marriage of Mr. Final and
Arbela the love affair of Mr. Faunal and mrs.             Mar wood,
with one exception of course the love of Mirabella and
Millament which testify to and speak eloquent of the truth.
     Mirabel is    the central character of the ply the master
plotter and is directly responsible for all the plots and
counterplots. But at the same time he is the cohesive force that
keeps the social fabric intact. He has an illicit and illegitimate
love affair with Arabella. She loves him with her heart and
soul. While still a window as Mrs . Languish, she goes on
satisfying her carnal desire with him, till she apprehends the
unwanted pregnancy as a consequence and calls a halt to their
illegal liaison. In the   meanwhile mirabell seems to have lost
his heart to millament and apparently feels guilty of his gross
sinful conduct. Hence he dose not leave her to suffer ignominy
and shifting his responsibility manages to foist her on Mr.
fainall, a man of loose morals, who believes in enjoying life,
exploiting others physically, materially andwhich-so-ever way it
pleases him. Mirabell is very well aware of his responsibility
and does nit flee like a betrayer and devises a way out to save
his lover’s reputation. On the whole their relationship which
did not lead them to the altar is a complex one, they seem to
have no regret, no moral compuctions; rather they trust each
other and plan strategies together to overcome difficulties in
their respective way.
     The marriage of finall and Arabella proves to be a
marriage of convenience and a great failure Arabella marries
fainall to cover up the supposed ill consequence of her illicit
affair with mirabell and to save her own moral repute and the
family’s as well. They are an ill assorted pair. They not vibe
together, their mental wave-lengths being quit different. Fainall
is a false designing lover. He is not a cheat and has his own set
of morals and seems to suffer from no conscience prick and
persists with his adulterous esipades. His rapacious egoism
feeds on everything it finds but as he has no moral values it is
only material advantages that he seeks. He marries Arabella for
the sake of her wealth, through he had been romantically
involved with mirabell. He refers to his marriage as “a scurvy
wedlock” (II-i-643). There not an ounce of common humanity in
him. His wife to him “an old and worthless animal; a Leaky
Hulk, which he will set adrift to sink or swim” (v-i-443-45).
They suffer and stand each other only to nurse their private
interests. But in public, they are quite nice to each other and
exchange sweet nothingness’s. Fainall addresses her as “Dear”
and she cooes in reply “my soul” (II-i-91-92).
     What a hypocrisy ! His true colour comes to the force only
when he makes some bitter comments about her and confesses
before Mrs. Mar wood what he feels about her and ;
          “My wife has played the jade with me well
          that’s over too-I never loved her or if I had
          that would have been over too by this time”
          … (III-i-685-87)
     Similarly the love play or Mrs. Mar wood and Mr. Fainall
represents   another   striking   example   of   an   exploitative
relationship. Mrs. Mar wood is a widow, malicious and
vindictive . She was in love with Mirabell to whom she made
advance but was thwarted by him.
     Anger fed on disappointment ,but she dissembled her
aversion towards him. This secret unfulfilled ,rather frustrated
and reciprocated love now becomes the motivating force behind
all her scheming villainous pursuits. Her pride thus wounded,
mirabell’s foe and courts finally sheer desperation and enjoys
sensual pleasure living with him as his mistress. Her motto is.
          “My youth may wear and waste but is shall
          never rust in my possession (II-i-18-19)
     She is cut to quick when fainall accuses her of loving
mirabell inwardly while professing loyalty/ allegiance to him
outwardly. He doubts her bonafides and says to her face that
she is false and claims to have seen through all her little arts.
His allegation deeply upsets Mrs. mar wood and she threatens
to expose their illegitimate/illicit affair and wins the day.
          “I’ll publish to the world , the injuries
          you have done me, both in my fame and
          Fortune. With both I trusted you , You
          Bankrupt     in   Honour    as   indigent   of
          wealth” (II-i-201-204).
     He goes down on his knees and placates her to calm
down and keep her cool and silence as he thinks that her
threatening will one day upset his future plans to enrich
himself by blackmailing Lade Wish fort, so he buys peace and
ensures a temporary truce of hostility with Mrs. Marwood. If
not a union of convenience, what else is it? What a piece of
immaculate dissimulation ! What a clever repartee ! Their
relationship thrives on mutual monetarily as it is evident from
his own admission. He loves her only to make “a Lawful Prize
of a ricj Widow’s Wealth”. (II-i-213-14) and ultimately makes
her an accomplice to acquire the lawful possession of Lade
Wishfort’s property. Mrs. Marwood, on her part, nurses her
wounded ego while enjoying the adulterous lialison to her, best
advantage and wants to take revenge on Mirabell making
Fainall a pun. They are no less than scheming villains.
     Lady Wishfort, the old widow of fifty-five is also sex-
hungry. She is the central female character who controls the
fortunes of all the rest. She hankers after youthful pleasures
and lives in a make-believe world – a life replete with sensual
fantasy. She deludes herself imagining that Mirabell loves her
passionately and subsequently believing that Sir Rowland was
prepared to marry her. Never can she free herself from
Mirabell’s hypnotic charm. When Millament informs her that
Mirabel would go away forever, she heaves a sigh of both relief
and regret and yells out: ‘Shall I never see him again.” (v-i-
353). Her regret shows her romantic enchantment towards this
young man, who is no less responsible for making her suffer
such delusions by making sham address to her, which were
really meant for Millament.
     But the love of Mirabell and Millament is of a quite
different   nature/stuff.     Though      Mirabell   is   sexually
promiscuous and accused of moral lapses she accepts his love
for her as genuine. Millament laughingly teases him and aptly
calls him “Sententious Mirabell”. He has no complaint against
Millament as she is unsullied. He admits:
     I like her with all her faults; nay like
     her for her faults”. (I-i-164-165)
     Similaly Millament’s love for him is also true as she has
no illegitimate liaison with anyone else. There is no place for
misunderstanding between the two. Millament knows that her
lover was at one time deeply involved with her cousin. But
evidently she does not mind a lover with such a past as she
has studied Mirabell’s emotions very well. She expresses her
cherished feelings/emotions about her love to Mrs. Fainall in
these words;
“Well if Mirabell should not make a good
Husband, I am a lost thing – For I find, I
love him violently”. (IV-i-321-23)
     It will not be fair wide off the mark to say that Millament’s
plea is a pioneering precursor of the agenda of women’s
liberation. She fights for the equality of the sexes and
advocates for individual sexuality. Despite their mutual respect
and sincere feelings for each other, they brook no interference.
Their union is not going to be a complete sell-out as they want
to maintain their own independent existence even after their
nuptials or coming together. This aspect of their understanding
is well brought out in the proviso-Scene or the Bargaining
Scene.
     The Proviso-Scene is a convention continued. It serves a
dual purpose (i) of providing rich romantic entertainment and
(ii) laying out a solid foundation on which the lover’s
harmonious married life can stand and prosper avoiding those
pitfalls and blunders which plaque most marriages. It brings
the principal love affair in the story to ahead. Here Mirabell
and Millament bargain with each other for mutual non-
interference,   the   conditions   under    which    each   might
contemplate matrimony. They meet each other not as lovers
but as rational human beings. Millament bargains for her
privileges for her library and right to privacy, for her freedom to
meet whom she pleases. She is very well aware of the
disillusionment that comes to people after marriage. She says
that she would not like to be “free from the agreeable fatigues
of solicitation”. (IV-i-171-172) Secondly, her individual liberty
should be preserved. She would like to get up when she
pleases to give reigns to her morning thoughts. Furthermore,
she would not like to be addressed by such names as:
“Wife, Spouse, My Dear, Joy, Jewel, Love
Sweetheart and the rest of that Nauscous
Cant in which Men and their wives are so fulsomely familiar”.
(IV-i-202-204)
     She also demands the freedom to pay and receive visits, to
weite and receive letters, to keep away from Mirabell’s friends if
she does not like them. Mirabell on his part also demands of
his wife, “not to have a confidante, no she-friend to screen her
affairs, no fops to take her to the theatre secretly”. (IV-i-242-
43). He prohibits the use of masks for the night made of “oiled-
skins, Hog’s bones, Hare is gall, Pig-water and the Marrow of a
roasted cat”. (IV-i-255-57). He disapproves the use of tight
dress during pregnancy and he forbids the use of alcoholic
drinks. The spirit of give and take along with the beguiling fun
and gaiety of Mirabell and Millament enhances and advances
mutual understanding and furthers the chances of a happy
and successful married life.
     Enough of self control, intellectual discrimination and
sense of decorum entered into the agreement ultimately
reached at. This augurs well for the level-headed, no-nonsense,
rational and conscientious pair of lovers who are surrounded
on all sides by a mad world obsessed with sex intrigues.
     The title “The Way of The World” is apt and highly
significant as the characters are part and parcel of the social
milieu and swim and sink with the time-flow and never bother
to go against it, save a few exceptional ones despite their
blemishes and moral lapses.
     They symbolise a saving grace and remind one that the
world is not yet completely lost.
     Conforming to the tradition of the genre this play is also
replete with brilliantly refined, subtle wit and polished humour.
We are dazzled by what Bonamy Dobree calls the “Verbal
pyrotechniques” of the characters. Even Foible has her moment
when she tells Lady Wishfort with delightful irony;
          “A little Art one made your picture like
          your; and now a little of the same Art
           must make you like your picture”. (II-i-135-55)
     There are also many witty remarks of the other characters
as well. Here are a few of them to corroborate the point made.
“cabal Nights where that come together like a Corner’s Inquest
to sit upon the murdered Reputations of the weak,” says
Fainall to Miorabell in I-i-56-59. A ittle letter, “I wonder there is
not an Act of Parliament to save the credit of the Nation and
prohibit the Exportations of Fools, “Mirabell retorts to Fainall
in I-i-232-14. “A Fellow that lives in a wind mill, has not a
more whimsical dwelling than the heart of a man that lodged in
a women, Mirabell tells to Millament in II-i-501-03. Even the
false wits, witwoud and Petulant occasionally make remarks
which are truly witty. Witwoud for an example says;
“Friendship without freedom is as dull as
Love without Enjoyment or wine without Toasting” (I-i-366-68)
Millament as a true wit remarks;
“A woman’s cruelty gives her a sense of power and when she
parts with her cruelty, she parts with her power”.
(II-i-395-97)
Mirabell retorts, “The Beauty of a woman is a gift to her from
her   lover”.   (II-i-404-05).   Prompt   comes   the   reply   form
Millament.
“Beauty, the Lover’s Gift ! Lord what is a
lover that it can give”. (II-i-412-13)
      The list can continue and entertain us to no end but we
dispense with the luxury and end our discussion with a
modern critic’s remarks on congreve’s wit’
      “It is a Toledo Blade, sharp and wonderfully supple for
steel, cast for dwelling; restless in the scabbard, being so
pretty, when out of it. To shine, it must have an adversary”.
      Critics have generally accepted “The Way of The World” as
a comedy of manners, but to some the play is first and
foremost, a comedy of characters. The episodes and events of
this play, perform minor roles but the characters of this play
lend vitality, charm and force to the play. The characters are
mainly flat and typal. They show no progress, no development
hence lack roundedness. Some characters are animated by a
greatness which is above circumstance, which seems to be its
own end. The style of the play is inimitable, flawless and
perfect. Every sentence is replete with sense and satire
conveyed in the most polished and pointed terms. Every act of
the play presents a bouquet of brilliant conceits. William
Hazlitt befittingly comments; “The Way of the world”: has an
essence almost too fine and the sense of pleasure evaporates in
an aspiration after something that seems too exquisite ever to
have been realised. After ingaling the spirit of congreve’s Wit
and tasting Love’s thrice reputed nectar’ in this work, the head
grows giddy in turning form the highest point of rapture to the
ordinary business of life (Hazlitt-91)
     Now it’s time to wind up and conclude. In the foregoing
paragraphs we have made a thorough and exhaustive textual
study of the play and critically analysed the thematically and
formally relevant and corroborating facts with a sample of the
prevalent critical opinion and on the basis of the evidence
available, we justifiably feel inclined to conclude that the play
richly deserves to be called a comedy of manners.
RELATIONS OF MEN AND WOMEN IN MARRIAGE
    Love and Marriage as the central subject. Restoration
comedy    was   almost    exclusively    concerned   with   sexual
relations. The central subject of most Restoration comedy s
was love and marriage. In this respect, Restoration dramatists
aimed at portraying the manners and modes of aristocratic
society. Congreve’s comedies, more than the plays of Etherege,
WycherJey, and Dryden, seem to be subtle comments on love
and marriage. In fact, it is by keeping this in view that we can
defend the best comedies of that period from the charge of
triviality, for the relationship of the sexes is the acid test of a
civilization. "The immediate, natural and necessary relation of
one human being to another is that of man to woman. From
the character of this relationship, it can be seen how far man
has developed." If we agree with this view of Karl Marx, we
would not dismiss The Way of the World as a comedy pure and
simple but would regard it as a play with a serious purpose,
having as its theme the relations of men and women not only
in marriage, but out of marriage also.
    Witty dialogue, but a serious purpose, in the play. The Way
of the World primarily engrosses us by its witty dialogue. Not
only are the hero Mirabell and the heroine Millamaut brilliant
in their wit, but there are fireworks in the conversation of even
the subsidiary characters.
       The element of wit indeed dominants the play. But what is
the theme round which the plot is built up and round which
most of the witty dialogue centres? The theme is undoubtedly
the relations of men women, illicit love-affairs, adulterous,
relations, true and false wooing and courtship, unhappiness in
marriage and the desire for divorce, a hankering after
marriage, marriage for the sake of money and marriage for the
sake of love, the terms and conditions governing what may be
regarded as an ideal, or as or nearly ideal, marriage. Love and
Marriage are the subjects which occupy the minds of all
characters, although we should not forget that wealth and
property also occupy an important position in relation to both
love and marriage. It may seem to us that the play ridicules
both    love   and   marriage   by   exposing   the   worldliness,
materialism, and hypocrisy which operate as motives behind
them, but a distinctly serious social purpose in the writing of
the play is clearly perceptible. Congreve seems here to be
subjecting- the relations of men and women to close and
searching scrutiny in an effort to arrive at some kind of basis
that can make a happy marriage possible.
      The past love-affair of Mirabell and Lady Wishfort's
daughter. The principal love-affair in the play is the one
between    Mirabell   and   Millament.     The   Restoration   was
historically a period of loose morals, and every young man of
the upper classes thought it legitimate to sow his wild oats.
Accordingly, Mirabell, contrary, to our conventional idea of a
hero, has already had a love-affair. He had sexual relations
with Lady Wishfort's daughter when the latter was a widow.
He,        however,         her      got         married        to
Mr. Fainall as soon as she feIt that she had probably become
pregnant. In arranging this match, Mirabell had obviously no
qualms of the conscience because, according to our present
standards of morality, he should have himself married the
woman. As was to be expected, her marriage with Mr. Fainall
proves to be a failure. Thus we find that the relationship of
Mirabell and Lady Wishfort’s daughter, in carrying on a love-
affair not leading to marriage, is obviously a false relationship.
The woman does not seem to have protested at all against
Mirabell's strategy. In other words, she acquiesced in her
loveless marriage with Mr. Fainall. This is a mockery of love,
but it appears that both Mirabell and his mistress had treated
their love-affair merely as a sport. The present relationship
between the two is purely one of friendship, even though one
particular remark by Mirabell makes us suspect that the love-
affair is still continuing. (Mirabell holds in trust the entire
property or his ex-sweetheart, and he fully and honestly,
discharges his obligations in this respect.)
    The Marriage of Mr. Fainfall and Lady Wishfort’s daughter.
The marriage of Lady Wishlfort’s daughter (whom we have
described above as the ex-sweetheart and present friend of
Mirabell) with Mr. Fainall proves an utter failure. Here is
another false relationship. Lady Wishfort's daughter agrees to
marry this man in order to cover up her illicit relations with
Mirabell and the suspected pregnancy resulting there from. Mr.
Fainall agreed to marry this woman for the sake of her wealth.
Mr. Fainall , it would seem , had an inkling before-hand that
the woman he was going to marry had previously been sexually
involved with Mirabell. Mrs. Fainall’s bitterness is reflected in
her remark, early in the play, that if she and her husband were
seen talking to each other publicly they would he creating a
sensation. (This remark shows that they are known in their
social circle as not getting on well with each other). Mr. Fainall
shows his bitterness against his wife in the course of his
conversation with Marwood. He describes his wife to Marwood
as “a very arrant, rank Wife, all in the way of the world." He
calls, himself "an anticipated cuckold, a cuckold in embryo,”
He refers to his marriage as a "scurvy wedlock". Reviewing his
married life, Mr. Fainall says: "My wife has played the jade with
me; well, that's over too. I never loved her, or if I had, that
would have been over too by this time," (Act III, Lines 597-
6OO). Continuing this account, he says that his wife came to
him after having lost all her reputation. Nor does he claim that
his own conduct before marriage was exemplary. Mr. Fainall’s
motives were purely mercenary.
     Mr. Fainall's love-affair with Marwood. The love-affair of
Mr. Fainall and Marwood represents another example of a false
relationship. Marwood was originally in love with Mirabell to
whom she made advances but without any success. She is
thus a frustrated woman; but a woman never forgets a rebuff
from the man whose love she has vainly sought. She would
therefore like to avenge herself on Mirabell. It would seem that
she                           has                            turned
to Mr. fainall in sheer desperation and not because she is
deeply or genuinely in love with him. Mr. Fainall suspects that
she is still in love with Mirabell, and he frankly tells her his
suspicion. He Says that he can see through all her little arts,
His allegation deeply annoys Marwood and she threatens to
expose his affair with her. However, he quickly seeks
reconciliation with her and promises to make amends to her in
every possible way. The exposure of his love-affair with
Marwood would seriously upset his future plans to enrich
himself, and so he tells her: “I’ll hate my wife yet more, damn
her! I’ll part with her, rob her of all she's worth, and we'll retire
somewhere, anywhere to another world. I’ll marry the; be
pacified.” All this is really funny, and Congreve is obviously
ridiculing a relationship such as this. The basis of this illicit
love- affair is money so far as Marwood is concerned, and lust
combined with money so far as Mr. Fainall is concerned.
Marwood, a born schemer as she is, suggests to Mr. Fainall a
plan by which he can blackmail Lady Wishfort. Mr. Fainall
accepts the plan, promising to share the booty with her. The
indications are that, soon after the two of them make their exit
from the stage a little before the end of the play, Mr. Fainall
would carry out his previous threat to divorce his wife. He
would then most 'probably get married to Marwood. We can,
however, easily speculate that their marriage too would prove a
failure because they would constantly be devising methods to
make easy money and would probably be quarrelling most of
the time.
    The love-affair of Mirabell and Millament. We now come to
the core of the play, namely the love-affair between Mirabell
and Millament. Millament knows that her lover was at one time
carrying on a love-affair with her cousin who is now married to
Mr. Fainall. But evidently she does not mind a lover with such
a past. There can be no doubt that both Mirabell and
Millament love each other truly. Mirabell tells Fainall that he
likes Millament with all her faults; may he like her for her
faults.           He            says           that          her
faults have now become as familiar to him as his own frailties
and
that, in all probability; he will like them equally well. As for
Millament, she frankly tells Mrs. Fainall : “Well, if Mirabell
should not make a good husband, I am a lost thing for I find I
love him violently."
      The proviso scene and the conditions of marriage. It is the
proviso scene that provides us with a clue to the serious
purpose of the play, From this scene emerge the conditions
that Congreve thought to be necessary for the success of a
marriage between men and women in love. r t is made clear to
us her ': that love alone cannot sustain a marriage. This scene
is                          pure                         comedy
and contains a brilliant display of wit by both Mirabell and
Millament. And yet it is a profoundly serious scene from which
we can draw much instruction, Millament does not want that a
lover's appeals and entreaties should end with the marriage
ceremony, She would like to be "solicited" till the very moment
of marriage; and she would like to be, “solicited" even
afterwards; she, would not like "to be freed from the agreeable
fatigues of solicitation.” It is obvious that Millament knows the
disillusionment that comes to people after marriage.
    She has known the unhappy experience of her cousin, Mrs.
Fainall, and so she wants to be sure that Mirabell would not
take her for granted after marriage. Her next condition is that
her individual liberty should be preserved. She would like to
get up when she pleases, to give free reins to her morning
thoughts, and so on. Furthermore she would not like to be
addressed by such names as “wife, spouse, my dear, joy, jewel,
love, sweetheart, and the rest of that nauseous cant, in which
men and their Wives are so fulsomely familiar.” She makes fun
of couples who appear to be proud of One another the first
week and ashamed of one another ever after. For this reason,
she suggests that she and Mirabell should maintain a certain
distance and a certain reserve between them after marriage.
Millament also demands the freedom to pay and receive visits,
to write and receive letters, to keep away from Mirabell's
friends if she does not like them. Mirabell, on his part,
demands that his wife will not have a confidante, no "she-
friend to Screen her affairs", no fop to take her to the theatre
secretly.
    Lady Wishfort's matrimonial schemes. Nor must we forget
Lady Wishfort’s craving to get married. This widow of fifty-five
hankers after youthful pleasures. That is the reason why she
easily believes, first, that Mirabell loves her passionately and,
then that Sir Rowland is anxious to marry her. Both Mirabell
and Sir Rowland arc false suitors. Lady Wishfort exists in the
play as an example of a woman who is superannuated but who
yet experiences what may be called a false appetite which
creates embarrassing situations for her. Congreve treats Lady
Wish fort's desires in a satirical manner, because her marriage
with a younger man (and she does seek a younger man) would
be a false relationship. Congreve also treats Sir Wilfull's role as
Millament's suitor in a satirical light, because such an alliance
between a highly, sophisticated town girl with a country yokel,
his homely intelligence notwithstanding, would be a false
relationship too.
WORKS CONSULTED
1. Baugh, A.C. A Literary History of England.
  London : Routledge and Kegan Paul Ltd. 1967
2. Dobree, Bonamy. Restoration Comedy
  London : Oxford University Press, 1924
3. Hazlitt William. Lectures on The English Comic Writers.
  London; Oxford University Press, 1951
4. Legouis E & Cazamian L. A History of English Literature.
  New York : The Macmillan & Co. 1995
5. Sengupta K. The Way of The World By William Congreve.
  Delhi: Oxford University Press, 1998
6. Stephen Leslie. English Literature and Society in the
  Eighteenth Century.
  London: Dukeworth & Co. 1910