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قراءة كتاب The Lady of Lyons; Or, Love and Pride

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The Lady of Lyons; Or, Love and Pride

The Lady of Lyons; Or, Love and Pride

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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THE LADY OF LYONS

or, LOVE AND PRIDE


By Edward Bulwer Lytton



                               To the author of "Ion."

                               Whose genius and example have alike contributed
                               towards the regeneration of The National Drama,

                               This play is inscribed.
                         






Contents

PREFACE.

DRAMATIS PERSONAE.



THE LADY OF LYONS

ACT I.

ACT II.

ACT III.

ACT IV.

ACT V.






PREFACE.

An indistinct recollection of the very pretty little tale, called "The Bellows-Mender," suggested the plot of this Drama. The incidents are, however, greatly altered from those in the tale, and the characters entirely re-cast.

Having long had a wish to illustrate certain periods of the French history, so, in the selection of the date in which the scenes of this play are laid, I saw that the era of the Republic was that in which the incidents were rendered most probable, in which the probationary career of the hero could well be made sufficiently rapid for dramatic effect, and in which the character of the time itself was depicted by the agencies necessary to the conduct of the narrative. For during the early years of the first and most brilliant successes of the French Republic, in the general ferment of society, and the brief equalization of ranks, Claude's high-placed love; his ardent feelings, his unsettled principles (the struggle between which makes the passion of this drama), his ambition, and his career, were phenomena that characterized the age, and in which the spirit of the nation went along with the extravagance of the individual.

The play itself was composed with a twofold object. In the first place, sympathizing with the enterprise of Mr. Macready, as Manager of Covent Garden, and believing that many of the higher interests of the Drama were involved in the success or failure of an enterprise equally hazardous and disinterested, I felt, if I may so presume to express myself, something of the Brotherhood of Art; and it was only for Mr. Macready to think it possible that I might serve him in order to induce me to make

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