Accordingly, there has risen among wise and farsighted men a perception of the need for setting certain departments of human activity entirely free from legal interference. This has nothing to do with any sympathy these liberators may themselves have with immoral views. A man with the strongest conviction of the Divine ordering of the universe and of the superiority of monarchy to all forms of government may nevertheless quite consistently and conscientiously be ready to lay down his life for the right of every man to advocate Atheism or Republicanism if he believes in them. An attack on morals may turn out to be the salvation of the race. A hundred years ago nobody foresaw that Tom Paine’s centenary would be the subject of a laudatory special article in The Times; and only a few understood that the persecution of his works and the transportation of men for the felony of reading them was a mischievous mistake. Even less, perhaps, could they have guessed that Proudhon, who became notorious by his essay entitled “What is Property? It is Theft” would have received, on the like occasion and in the same paper, a respectful consideration which nobody would now dream of according to Lord Liverpool or Lord Brougham. Nevertheless there was a mass of evidence to show that such a development was not only possible but fairly probable, and that the risks of suppressing liberty of propaganda were far greater than the risk of Paine’s or Proudhon’s writings wrecking civilization. Now there was no such evidence in favor of tolerating the cutting of throats and the robbing of tills. No case whatever can be made out for the statement that a nation cannot do without common thieves and homicidal ruffians. But an overwhelming case can be made out for the statement that no nation can prosper or even continue to exist without heretics and advocates of shockingly immoral doctrines. The Inquisition and the Star Chamber, which were nothing but censorships, made ruthless war on impiety and immorality. The result was once familiar to Englishmen, though of late years it seems to have been forgotten. It cost England a revolution to get rid of the Star Chamber. Spain did not get rid of the Inquisition, and paid for that omission by becoming a barely third-rate power politically, and intellectually no power at all, in the Europe she had once dominated as the mightiest of the Christian empires.
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