
ESPERANTO
The piece opens in the dimly lit home of Pericles, where the poet‑philosopher Sophocles and the sharp‑tongued Protagoras meet. Their exchange crackles with vivid, almost visual language as they argue over the nature of ego, honor, and the looming clash between Spartans and Athenians. The dialogue is rendered in a lyrical Esperanto, giving the ancient conflict a fresh, almost musical quality.
As the conversation unfolds, listeners hear the characters wrestle with questions of power, morality, and the role of tragedy itself as a tool for judgment. The play’s language swings between the grandiose and the grotesque, painting scenes of battling families, serpents coiling around hearts, and the bitter taste of ambition. By the end of the first act, a palpable tension builds, hinting at a larger confrontation that will test the ideals each speaker defends, while the audience is drawn into the storm of philosophical provocation.
Language
eo
Duration
~3 hours (204K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Andrew Sly, Kirill Shvedov and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
Release date
2014-05-21
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1849–1938
A sharp, restless voice of Polish Positivism, he wrote fiction, essays, and journalism that pushed hard for reason, education, and social reform. His work brings together literary storytelling and a lifelong argument with the habits and injustices of his time.
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