There is another reason, quite unconnected with the susceptibilities of authors, which makes it undesirable that a member of the King’s Household should be responsible for the character and tendency of plays. The drama, dealing with all departments of human life, is necessarily political. Recent events have shown—what indeed needed no demonstration—that it is impossible to prevent inferences being made, both at home and abroad, from the action of the Lord Chamberlain. The most talked-about play of the present year (1909), An Englishman’s Home, has for its main interest an invasion of England by a fictitious power which is understood, as it is meant to be understood, to represent Germany. The lesson taught by the play is the danger of invasion and the need for every English citizen to be a soldier. The Lord Chamberlain licensed this play, but refused to license a parody of it. Shortly afterwards he refused to license another play in which the fear of a German invasion was ridiculed. The German press drew the inevitable inference that the Lord Chamberlain was an anti-German alarmist, and that his opinions were a reflection of those prevailing in St. James’s Palace. Immediately after this, the Lord Chamberlain licensed the play. Whether the inference, as far as the Lord Chamberlain was concerned, was justified, is of no consequence. What is important is that it was sure to be made, justly or unjustly, and extended from the Lord Chamberlain to the Throne.
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