
A sparkling comedy that helped redefine the English farce, this three‑act play bursts onto the stage with brisk dialogue and a cast of delightfully eccentric characters. From the bustling Court Theatre of the 1880s to modern listeners, its clever satire of respectability and the absurdities of legal life still feels fresh, promising laughter that rolls as confidently as the gavel in the magistrate’s hand.
The story opens in the tidy Bloomsbury home of the well‑meaning but befuddled Mr. Posket, a magistrate whose respectable façade begins to wobble when family secrets surface. His wife, a lively lady with a past that refuses to stay hidden, and a host of relatives—including a young music teacher, a retired colonel, and a mischievous nephew—converge, setting off a cascade of mistaken identities and comic misunderstandings that threaten to upend the household’s order. Listeners will be drawn into the charming chaos as each character’s motives clash, creating a whirlwind of humor that propels the action toward the next act’s escalating hijinks.
Language
en
Duration
~2 hours (139K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Paul Haxo from page images generously made available by the Internet Archive and the University of California, Berkeley and Cornell University libraries.
Release date
2013-01-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1855–1934
A major force in British theatre, this Victorian and Edwardian dramatist helped move the stage from farce toward sharper, more realistic social drama. His best-known plays include The Magistrate, The Second Mrs Tanqueray, and Trelawny of the 'Wells'.
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