Contemporaries singled out
The City Heiress as one of Behn's "good" and lucrative comedies, although few modern critics have discussed it at length.
The City Heiress was one of Behn's plays singled out by satirists for scorn. Referring to the
epilogue,
Robert Gould sarcastically asked, :"The City Heiress, by chast
Sappho Writ: :Where the Lewd Widow comes, with brazen Face, :Just reeking from a Stallion's rank Embrace :T'acquaint the Audience with her Filthy Case. :Where can you find a Scene for juster Praise, :In
Shakespear,
Johnson, or in
Fletcher's Plays?" --
The Play-House, a Satyr Behn's play has been called "a comedy of
libertine complicity: her characters act as though they believed in order, authority, true love, and marriage even though they celebrate for the better part of five acts their license to disbelieve". Other
Restoration comedies were as frank with their sexuality, and others had women choosing their lovers on the basis of their wit (while wits choose theirs on the basis of money), but Behn's characters do not moderate their desires in their comedic solutions. Further, Treat-all's punishment is poverty and subjugation, rather than being hanged; and Wilding's goal is luxury, rather than moral justice. The distinctions are subtle, but it was not merely Behn's sex that made the play offensive to moralizing poets of the 1690s and the first decade of the 18th century. ==References==