
MORDRED.
ACT. I. - SCENE I.—A Hermitage in the Woods.
ACT II. - SCENE I.—The forest of Bracliande.
ACT III. - SCENE I.—Arthur, Mordred, Dagonet, and Nobles.
ACT IV. - SCENE I.—(Rise outer curtain.) Passage near the Queen’s apartments. Enter Dagonet.
ACT V. - SCENE I.—(Rise outer Curtain.) Enter two Soldiers.
HILDEBRAND
ACT I. - SCENE I.—(Rise outer Curtain.) An Inn-yard in Milan. Two Burghers discovered seated at a table, drinking.
ACT II. - SCENE I.—A room in the Papal Palace at Rome. Enter Hildebrand as Pope and Peter Damiani, a fanatic.
ACT III. - SCENE I.—(A deserted camp.) Enter Henry alone.
A sweeping retelling of the Arthurian myth, this five‑act tragedy centers on King Arthur’s inner turmoil as he confronts a hidden, shameful secret that threatens the very soul of his reign. In the opening scene, the monarch seeks confession from a hermit, laying bare a youthful transgression that haunts his conscience and colors his vision of a hopeful Britain. The language is richly lyrical, echoing the ancient tales while pulling the listener into a world where personal guilt collides with the weight of destiny.
Surrounding Arthur are familiar figures—Sir Lancelot, the wizard Merlin, the steadfast Guinevere, and a chorus of knights and common folk—each adding layers of loyalty, rivalry, and yearning. As the drama unfolds, the audience is drawn into a tense atmosphere of looming betrayal and the fragile balance between honor and downfall. The play’s poetic dialogue and vivid character sketches promise an immersive experience that captures the timeless struggle between greatness and the shadows that pursue it.
Language
en
Duration
~4 hours (236K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Ian Crann and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This book was produced from images made available by the HathiTrust Digital Library.)
Release date
2020-05-18
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

d. 1918
A Canadian poet and writer linked with the Confederation Poets, he became especially known for nature lyrics that celebrate the landscapes of Ontario and the Lake Huron–Georgian Bay region. He also worked as a clergyman and later as a civil servant, writing across poetry, fiction, drama, and criticism.
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