
Produced by Daniel Fromont
L'AMOUR - ET LA RAISON, - COMEDIE EN UN ACTE, - PAR M. PIGAULT-LEBRUN;
NOTICE - SUR M. PIGAULT-LEBRUN.
PERSONNAGES.
L'AMOUR - ET LA RAISON, - COMEDIE. - SCENE PREMIERE. - HORTENSE, MARTON.
MARTON.
MARTON.
HORTENSE.
MARTON.
HORTENSE.
A lively one‑act comedy opens in a fashionable Parisian drawing‑room, where a clever young woman wrestles with the expectations of her family and the sudden appearance of a handsome but contradictory suitor. The dialogue crackles with the kind of wit that made the playwright a celebrated disciple of Marivaux, turning ordinary social niceties into a sparkling battlefield between affection and prudence. As the characters volley between flirtation and duty, the audience is invited to watch the delicate dance of desire and decorum.
The piece balances tenderness with satire, offering a portrait of late‑eighteenth‑century courtly life that feels both familiar and fresh. Its humor derives less from slapstick than from the subtle manipulation of language, revealing how reason can be both a shield and a trap. Listeners will find themselves smiling at the clever twists of conversation, while quietly pondering whether love truly triumphs over logic.
Language
fr
Duration
~56 minutes (54K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2008-10-07
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1753–1835
Known for lively, irreverent fiction and a famously turbulent life, this French writer helped shape a popular style of comic, fast-moving storytelling at the turn of the 19th century. His books were widely read in their day, even as critics often argued over their taste and morals.
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