
Set in a comfortably furnished West End sitting‑room, the play opens on an evening caught between Christmas and New Year. The Culver household—Mr. and Mrs. Culver, their daughter Hildegarde, and their son John—hosts a small gathering of friends and acquaintances, each slipping in and out of the room’s two doors as the night unfolds. The intimate setting becomes a stage for witty repartee, domestic concerns, and the lingering shadows of wartime Britain.
Hildegarde, pen in hand, balances her writing with the chatter of Tranto, a recent visitor whose polite curiosity quickly turns to sharp observation. John, lounging with a newspaper, offers a sardonic take on the home front, poking fun at the family’s attempts to appear efficient while the war looms large. Their banter—about food‑economy articles, the absurdities of bureaucracy, and the role of the press—captures a blend of humor and social commentary that feels both timeless and distinctly post‑war.
Over three short acts, the characters’ interactions evolve from polite greetings to increasingly tangled conversations, promising a lively exploration of family dynamics, duty, and the comic side of everyday survival.
Language
en
Duration
~2 hours (116K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Jonathan Ingram, David McLachlan and PG Distributed Proofreaders
Release date
2004-06-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1867–1931
A sharp, observant English novelist and critic, he brought the everyday life of the Potteries to the page with unusual warmth and detail. His fiction, journalism, and practical essays made him one of the most widely read literary figures of his time.
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