TABLE.
| Pages. | |
| Préface. | I |
| ACTE PREMIER.—Don Salluste. | 3 |
| ACTE DEUXIÈME.—La reine d’Espagne. | 51 |
| ACTE TROISIÈME.—Ruy Blas. | 97 |
| ACTE QUATRIÈME.—Don César. | 133 |
| ACTE CINQUIÈME.—Le Tigre et le Lion. | 187 |
| Note. | 209 |
A humble servant is elevated by a vindictive noble as part of a scheme to disgrace the court, then unexpectedly succeeds in gaining political authority and popular esteem. He pursues earnest reforms and becomes consumed by an impossible love for the queen, placing personal passion against public duty. When the conspiracy and his true origins are exposed, the resulting collision of honor, social hypocrisy, and thwarted desire produces a tragic denouement that punishes both the manipulator and the man caught between two worlds.
| Pages. | |
| Préface. | I |
| ACTE PREMIER.—Don Salluste. | 3 |
| ACTE DEUXIÈME.—La reine d’Espagne. | 51 |
| ACTE TROISIÈME.—Ruy Blas. | 97 |
| ACTE QUATRIÈME.—Don César. | 133 |
| ACTE CINQUIÈME.—Le Tigre et le Lion. | 187 |
| Note. | 209 |