
THE HUBBLE-SHUE.
A peculiar fragment of eighteenth‑century theatre opens with a whirlwind of cryptic names and half‑spoken action. A sword‑bearing Gustard bursts onto the stage, his purpose as elusive as a cat slipping beneath a bed, while the mute Lady Gundie glides across the scene like a phantom, leaving listeners to fill the gaps with their own imagination. The language is deliberately obscure, inviting a curious ear to tease out meaning from the riddling dialogue and biting satire that peppers the early moments.
Interwoven with the drama are brief, lyrical interludes—a tender “Basket of Flowers” song and a melancholy lament for a doomed Mary—offering a lyrical contrast to the theatrical chaos. This blend of dense verse, theatrical oddities, and historical flavor creates a listening experience that feels like stepping into a forgotten manuscript, where every line beckons a deeper, often humorous, contemplation of human folly and fleeting friendship.
Language
en
Duration
~16 minutes (15K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Charlene Taylor and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
Release date
2011-01-22
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1763–1786
A little-known Scottish poet of the late 18th century, she published anonymously as “a Lady” and left behind a small body of work that hints at a life shaped by friendship, loss, and the practical realities of earning a living. Her surviving poems and satire offer a rare, personal glimpse of a writer who is still partly hidden by history.
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