
A vivid portrait of Victorian courtroom drama unfolds as the narrative re‑creates the charged atmosphere of the Old Bailey in 1895. Readers hear the clash of brilliant, flamboyant counsel and the stern, baffled judge while Oscar Wilde, keenly observant yet uncomfortably exposed, takes his place among the spectators. The opening scenes trace the flimsy evidence, the tangled authorship of a controversial story, and the prickly personalities that converge in a trial that will echo through literary history.
Against this backdrop, the book weaves together legal strategy, social scandal, and the sharp wit that defined its era. It offers listeners a steady stream of dialogue and description that feels as immediate as a modern courtroom podcast, yet retains the ornate language of the period. By the close of the first act the stakes are clear, the characters fully drawn, and the audience is left anticipating how the conflict between art, morality, and law will unfold.
Full title
The Priest and the Acolyte With an Introductory Protest by Stuart Mason
Language
en
Duration
~41 minutes (40K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by M.K., David Wilson and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This book was produced from images made available by the HathiTrust Digital Library.)
Release date
2019-09-03
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
1873–1928
An Oxford undergraduate turned churchman, he is remembered for a small but striking body of late-Victorian writing that caused far more noise than its size would suggest. His name is most closely linked with The Chameleon and with a story that later became entangled in the public scandal around Oscar Wilde.
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