None so deaf as those who won't hear : A comedietta in one act

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None so deaf as those who won't hear : A comedietta in one act

by Herbert Pelham Curtis

EN·~48 minutes·11 chapters

Chapters

11 total

Plays for Colleges and High Schools

2:12

DRAMATIS PERSONÆ.

0:13

NONE SO DEAF AS THOSE WHO WON’T HEAR.

38:05

HITTY’S SERVICE FLAG

1:09

THE KNITTING CLUB MEETS

0:40

GETTING THE RANGE

0:37

LUCINDA SPEAKS

0:54

WRONG NUMBERS

0:30

FLEURETTE & CO.

0:31

Plays for Junior High Schools

1:50

Description

In a neatly furnished parlor that looks out onto a garden, a restless young woman named Eglantine vents her boredom and frustration. She complains that her father, a well‑meaning but hard‑of‑hearing gentleman, has left her isolated, while her servant Jane struggles to keep the household running and her own voice from fading. Their banter quickly reveals a sharp, witty clash of social expectations and the absurdities of a family that keeps its doors shut.

The play unfolds as a lively one‑act comedy, with Eglantine’s melodramatic sighs and Jane’s dry humor sparking a series of amusing misunderstandings. As the two women grapple with unwanted suitors, stale flowers, and a deaf patriarch, the audience is treated to clever dialogue that lampoons the constraints placed on young women of the era. By the end of the act, the characters’ attempts to break the silence promise even more hilarious entanglements to come.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~48 minutes (46K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Dianna Adair, Paul Clark and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)

Release date

2013-08-22

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Herbert Pelham Curtis

Herbert Pelham Curtis

Best known for the lively one-act comedy None so Deaf as Those Who Won't Hear, this 19th-century writer brought a light, playful touch to stage dialogue. His life also ranged far beyond literature, including legal training at Harvard and service as a Union officer during the Civil War.

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