The Escape; Or, A Leap For Freedom: A Drama, in Five Acts

audiobook

The Escape; Or, A Leap For Freedom: A Drama, in Five Acts

by William Wells Brown

EN·~1 hours·10 chapters

Chapters

10 total
1

THE

0:30
2

AUTHOR’S PREFACE.

1:34
3

CHARACTERS REPRESENTED.

0:44
4

THE ESCAPE.

0:00
5

ACT I.

24:26
6

ACT II.

17:42
7

ACT III.

17:53
8

ACT IV.

7:27
9

ACT V.

23:12
10

OPINIONS OF THE PRESS.

1:54

Description

Set on a Mississippi river plantation in the 1850s, this five‑act drama opens in the sitting‑room of Dr. Gaines, a country physician whose practice thrives on the health of both his family and the enslaved laborers he tends. A casual conversation about fever and profit quickly reveals the uneasy coexistence of ambition, religion, and disease that shapes life. As guests arrive and the household routine unfolds, the audience sees a vivid portrait of a world where medical knowledge, economic pressures, and moral contradictions intersect.

The play introduces a cast ranging from the compassionate yet complicit Dr. Gaines and his wife, to the outspoken Reverend Pinchen, opportunistic slave traders, and the enslaved individuals whose voices linger beneath the surface. Through their interactions, the drama examines the harsh realities of chattel slavery, the limited agency of those bound to the land, and the yearning for liberty that simmers beneath polite conversation. Written with regional detail and experience, the piece invites listeners to reflect on a chapter of American history while following the characters toward an uncertain, hopeful escape.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~1 hours (91K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Nick Wall and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This book was produced from scanned images of public domain material from the Google Books project.)

Release date

2021-06-05

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

William Wells Brown

William Wells Brown

d. 1884

Born into slavery and later becoming a leading abolitionist, this groundbreaking writer helped open new paths in American literature. He is especially remembered for Clotel, widely recognized as the first novel published by an African American.

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