
In a lively courtroom that exists only in the imagination, three flawed protagonists—Maurice, the ambitious entrepreneur; Adolphe, the weary intellectual; and Henriette, the restless lover—stand accused of crimes that never appear in any legal code. Their alleged offenses are not theft or murder but betrayals of the spirit: indulging in vanity, surrendering to despair, and neglecting the deeper currents that move human souls. The play’s comic tone, punctuated by witty exchanges and absurd testimonies, masks a serious inquiry into what it means to be morally and spiritually accountable.
As champagne bubbles lift Maurice toward flamboyant triumph, it also propels him into a dizzying fall, illustrating the intoxicating allure of success and its hidden costs. Strindberg weaves together humor, mysticism, and a touch of occult philosophy, inviting listeners to contemplate the unseen forces that shape desire, hope, and redemption. The first act sets the stage for a journey from chaotic longing toward a tentative, if playful, search for inner certainty.
Language
en
Duration
~2 hours (121K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Text file produced by Nicole Apostola, Charles Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team HTML file produced by David Widger
Release date
2004-01-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1849–1912
A restless, fiercely original writer, this Swedish author helped reshape modern drama with psychologically intense plays and fearless self-examination. His work moves from sharp realism to dreamlike experimentation, and it still feels startlingly alive.
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