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J. Stirling Coyne

(Coyne, J. Stirling (Joseph Stirling), 1803-1868)

Image, prior to 1868, of Joseph Stirling Coyne, credited to Lombard and Co, reproduced at Project Gutenberg
Image from Wikimedia Commons

Joseph Stirling Coyne (1803–1868) was a humorist and satirist in the tradition of Jonathan Swift and Alexander Pope. One of the most prolific British playwrights of the mid-nineteenth century, he wrote more than sixty plays; his twenty-seven farces are surpassed in number only by John Maddison Morton's ninety-one and T. J. Williams's thirty. Coyne brought to the stage accomplished comedic interchanges, puns, irony, exaggerated character traits, ludicrous plot situations, and surprising outcomes. His plays reveal a deft ear for dialogue and an ability to create characters suited to the talents of specific actors. As a journalist Coyne contributed humorous pieces to many widely circulated journals and newspapers. (From Wikipedia)

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