
THE DOCTOR’S DILEMMA - By Bernard Shaw - 1906
In a tidy London consulting room, a young assistant named Redpenny juggles letters, test tubes and the endless chatter of an eccentric housekeeper, Emmy. Their daily routine is a mix of scientific minutiae and the odd interruptions that come with a bustling practice, setting the stage for the moral questions that will soon arise. The atmosphere is richly detailed, from the marble console to the green‑veiled windows, giving listeners a vivid sense of early‑20th‑century medical life.
Enter Dr. Ridgeon, a celebrated physician whose skill has earned him a steady stream of affluent patients. When a brilliant yet destitute young woman seeks his expertise, the doctor is torn between his oath to heal and the tempting security of a wealthy patron’s generosity. The play’s opening lays bare this conflict, inviting the audience to consider how far ambition and financial pressure can sway a healer’s conscience.
Language
en
Duration
~3 hours (179K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2004-02-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1856–1950
A razor-sharp Irish playwright and critic, he turned comedy into a tool for questioning politics, class, religion, and social habits. Best known for plays like Pygmalion and Saint Joan, he wrote with wit that still feels fresh.
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by Bernard Shaw

by Bernard Shaw

by Bernard Shaw

by Bernard Shaw

by Bernard Shaw

by Bernard Shaw

by Bernard Shaw

by Bernard Shaw