
In this sharp‑witted one‑act, a young Napoleon Bonaparte finds himself a guest at a rustic inn in Italy, sharing a table with the boisterous proprietor Giuseppe Grandi. The scene crackles with banter as the future emperor, half‑absorbed in a hastily drawn map, trades barbs about blood, wine, and the cost of conquest. Shaw uses the cramped dining room to expose the absurdities of military grandeur and the thin line between ambition and folly.
Through witty repartee, Giuseppe probes Napoleon’s self‑image, suggesting that destiny is less about heroic destiny and more about the petty choices of everyday men. The dialogue teeters between reverence and ridicule, revealing how power can be both intoxicating and trivialized by simple human concerns. Listeners are drawn into a lively clash of ideals that hints at the larger forces shaping Europe, while staying firmly rooted in the intimate, comic moment of an inn’s kitchen.
Language
en
Duration
~1 hours (90K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Eve Sobol. HTML version by Al Haines.
Release date
2003-05-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1856–1950
Known for witty, talkative plays that poke at class, politics, and human vanity, he helped reshape modern drama. His work ranges from sharp comedies to serious social critique, with "Pygmalion" remaining one of the best known.
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