
Set against a war‑torn Flanders, the play opens with a tangled web of ambition and loyalty. Wolfort, a self‑styled usurper, has seized the earldom while the rightful heir lies in childhood, and his ruthless rise has left the province teetering between chaos and uneasy peace. Into this volatile mix step a colorful cast—Hubert, an honorable lord torn between duty and friendship; Gerrard, the self‑appointed “King of the Beggars” with his own schemes; and a parade of merchants, captains, and disguised gentlemen whose motives are as varied as their disguises.
The first act establishes a comic clash of high politics and low‑brow antics, as characters barter favors, exchange sharp wit, and navigate a landscape where alliances shift as quickly as the tide. With clever repartee and a steady undercurrent of satire, the drama invites listeners to watch power plays unfold amid farcical misunderstandings, promising laughter as the characters grapple with honor, greed, and the absurdities of courtly life.
Full title
Beggars Bush: A Comedy From the Works of Francis Beaumont and John Fletcher (Volume 2 of 10)
Language
en
Duration
~2 hours (118K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2004-04-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1584–1616
Best known for his lively partnership with John Fletcher, this Jacobean dramatist helped shape the English stage with plays that blend wit, romance, and sudden turns of feeling. His work includes "The Knight of the Burning Pestle," still admired for its playful, surprising take on theater itself.
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1579–1625
A leading dramatist of the Jacobean stage, he helped shape English theater after Shakespeare and is still best known for his lively collaborations with Francis Beaumont. His plays mix romance, wit, and sudden turns of feeling in a way that kept audiences coming back.
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