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Arthur

Chapter 2: TO SIR JOHN AND LADY MARTIN HARVEY
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About This Book

A poetic tragedy set in the Arthurian court that traces the unraveling of royal order after the return of a celebrated knight whose secret liaison with the queen undermines loyalty, provokes factional plotting, and triggers violent confrontation. Courtroom ceremonies, secret confidences, and shifting loyalties expose moral ambiguity in heroic ideals; scheming relatives exploit the scandal to seize power, leading to civil war, personal ruin, and fatal consequences for leaders and lovers. The drama emphasizes themes of honor, betrayal, duty, and the collapse of chivalric values through tightly wrought scenes and formal verse, concluding with the kingdom's fragmentation and the poignantly human costs of pride and divided allegiance.

TO
SIR JOHN AND LADY MARTIN HARVEY

With what names should I inscribe this play but with yours? Yet what right have I to dedicate to you what is already so much your own? Memory goes back to that June day, now long ago, when first I undertook to write for you a play out of Malory’s pages on a theme long pondered by you both. And many days come back to me, in London or by the sunny Channel, when time was forgotten in ardent work and interchange of ideas; in thinking out and talking over crucial situations; in rejecting and recasting; in the search for essential structure. How much the play owes to you, both in framework and in detail, none knows so well as I. Give me leave, therefore, to write these words in grateful acknowledgment of that initial trust, of much fruitful suggestion and inspiriting counsel, and of all I have learnt from you of the playwright’s patient craft.

LAURENCE BINYON.