
Molière’s one‑act comedy roasts the fashionable Parisian salon world of the mid‑seventeenth century, where a self‑styled elite of “precious” ladies prattle in an artificial, over‑refined language. The play opens in a drawing‑room bustling with witty repartee, as these women turn everyday conversation into a parade of grandiose phrases and hollow affectations. Their pretensions are laid bare through clever banter, exposing how the pursuit of elegance can devolve into absurdity.
Through the eyes of a sharp‑tongued servant and a few more grounded characters, the audience watches the pretentious façade crack under gentle mockery. Molière’s brisk dialogue and keen observation illuminate the gap between true wit and the hollow show of cultured manners, inviting listeners to laugh at the timeless folly of anyone who confuses polish with substance.
Language
en
Duration
~1 hours (67K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2004-09-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1622–1673
Best known for sharp, funny plays that still feel alive onstage, he turned comedy into a way of exposing vanity, hypocrisy, and social pretension. His work helped shape French theater, and titles like Tartuffe, The Misanthrope, and The Imaginary Invalid remain classics.
View all books
by Molière

by Molière

by Molière

by Molière

by Molière

by Molière