Daniel Sullivan, Irish counter-tenor, sings "God Save the King" in Bath, England. According to David Garrick he is looking "gay and sensible" as usual, though Mrs. Delaney calls him "a block with a very fine voice" who puts Handel "mightily out of humor". Back in his home town of Dublin Sullivan leases the Crow Street Music Hall for a concert serties but quarrels with his partners Storace and Lee, with the result that the lease is cancelled and the hall occupied by an anatomical waxworks.