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Love and tea: A comedy-drama of colonial times in two acts cover

Love and tea: A comedy-drama of colonial times in two acts

Chapter 46: Transcriber’s Notes
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About This Book

Set in a colonial village home during the opening phase of the Revolutionary conflict, the play tracks a stern spinster who publicly joins a ladies’ boycott of taxed tea while secretly drinking it. Her niece discovers the habit and leverages the secret to secure approval for her engagement to a young Minuteman. The aunt’s longtime attachment to a Tory judge is challenged when he casts his lot with the Patriot cause and is falsely reported arrested; her defense of him kindles both love and newfound political zeal. A faithful domestic supplies comic relief as the piece examines loyalty, social pressure, and shifting allegiances.

Transcriber’s Notes

A few minor errors in punctuation and spelling were fixed.

Page 12: Ellipses were added after “Why—why” where there was just a gap of white space in the original text.

The cover image was repaired to remove a library sticker and is placed in the public domain.