The persistent notion that a theatre is an Alsatia where the king’s writ does not run, and where any wickedness is possible in the absence of a special tribunal and a special police, was brought out by an innocent remark made by Sir William Gilbert, who, when giving evidence before the Committee, was asked by Colonel Lockwood whether a law sufficient to restrain impropriety in books would also restrain impropriety in plays. Sir William replied: “I should say there is a very wide distinction between what is read and what is seen. In a novel one may read that ‘Eliza stripped off her dressing gown and stepped into her bath’ without any harm; but I think if that were presented on the stage it would be shocking.” All the stupid and inconsiderate people seized eagerly on this illustration as if it were a successful attempt to prove that without a censorship we should be unable to prevent actresses from appearing naked on the stage. As a matter of fact, if an actress could be persuaded to do such a thing (and it would be about as easy to persuade a bishop’s wife to appear in church in the same condition) the police would simply arrest her on a charge of indecent exposure. The extent to which this obvious safeguard was overlooked may be taken as a measure of the thoughtlessness and frivolity of the excuses made for the censorship. It should be added that the artistic representation of a bath, with every suggestion of nakedness that the law as to decency allows, is one of the most familiar subjects of scenic art. From the Rhine maidens in Wagner’s Trilogy, and the bathers in the second act of Les Huguenots, to the ballets of water nymphs in our Christmas pantomimes and at our variety theatres, the sound hygienic propaganda of the bath, and the charm of the undraped human figure, are exploited without offence on the stage to an extent never dreamt of by any novelist.
Short Plays
Chapter List-
Short Plays
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Preface
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Preface
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Dramatis Personae
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ActI
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ActII
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SceneI
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SceneII
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ActIII
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Note on Modern Prizefighting
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How He Lied to Her Husband
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Preface
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Chapter_14
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Chapter_15
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Dramatis Personae
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How He Lied to Her Husband
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Passion, Poison, and Petrifaction
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Preface
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Dramatis Personae
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Passion, Poison and Petrifaction
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The Interlude at the Playhouse
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Dramatis Personae
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The Interlude at the Playhouse
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The Fascinating Foundling
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Dramatis Personae
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The Fascinating Foundling
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The Glimpse of Reality
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Dramatis Personae
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The Glimpse of Reality
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The Showing-Up of Blanco Posnet
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Preface
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Chapter_33
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Chapter_34
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Chapter_35
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Chapter_36
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Chapter_37
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Chapter_38
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Chapter_39
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Chapter_40
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Chapter_41
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Chapter_42
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Chapter_43
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Chapter_44
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Chapter_45
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Chapter_46
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Chapter_47
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Chapter_48
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Chapter_49
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The Rejected Statement—PartI
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Chapter_51
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Chapter_52
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Chapter_53
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Chapter_54
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Chapter_55
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Chapter_56
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Chapter_57
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Chapter_58
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Chapter_59
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Chapter_60
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Chapter_61
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Chapter_62
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Chapter_63
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Chapter_64
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PartII
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Chapter_66
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Chapter_67
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Chapter_68
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Chapter_69
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Summary
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Preface Resumed
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Chapter_72
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Chapter_73
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Chapter_74
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Chapter_75
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Chapter_76
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Chapter_77
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Chapter_78
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Chapter_79
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Chapter_80
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Chapter_81
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Chapter_82
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Chapter_83
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Chapter_84
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Chapter_85
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Dramatis Personae
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The Showing-Up of Blanco Posnet
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Press Cuttings
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Chapter_89
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Dramatis Personae
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Press Cuttings
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The Dark Lady of the Sonnets
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Preface to the Dark Lady of the Sonnets
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Chapter_94
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Chapter_95
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Chapter_96
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Chapter_97
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Chapter_98
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Chapter_99
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Chapter_100
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Chapter_101
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Chapter_102
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Chapter_103
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Chapter_104
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Chapter_105
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Chapter_106
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Chapter_107
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Dramatis Personae
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The Dark Lady of the Sonnets
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Overruled
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Preface to Overruled
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Chapter_112
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Chapter_113
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Chapter_114
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Chapter_115
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Chapter_116
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Chapter_117
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Chapter_118
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Chapter_119
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Chapter_120
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Chapter_121
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Chapter_122
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Chapter_123
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Chapter_124
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Dramatis Personae
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Overruled
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The Author’s Apology for “Great Catherine”
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The Author’s Apology for “Great Catherine”
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Dramatis Personae
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TheFirstScene
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TheSecondScene
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TheThirdScene
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TheFourthScene
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The Music Cure
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Chapter_135
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Dramatis Personae
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The Music Cure
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The Inca of Perusalem
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Preface
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Dramatis Personae
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Prologue
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The Play
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Augustus Does His Bit
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Preface
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Dramatis Personae
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Augustus Does His Bit
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O’FlahertyV.C.
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Preface
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Dramatis Personae
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O’FlahertyV.C.
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Annajanska
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Preface
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Dramatis Personae
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Annajanska
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Endnotes