About This Book
The essay examines the long-standing mystery of a prisoner kept for decades behind an iron mask, surveying competing historical accounts and literary treatments. It weighs motives for such extraordinary secrecy, arguing political necessity rather than mere cruelty, and notes that officials' careful treatment suggests high rank or innocence. The author critiques both scholarly disputes that overvalue documentary minutiae and dramatic writers' tendencies toward sensationalism, endorses a particular interpretive scheme as the most persuasive, and explains how theatrical interest and moral presumption shaped his own approach to dramatizing the episode while acknowledging persistent evidentiary uncertainty.
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