About This Book
Set in wartime New England, the play stages domestic and public scenes that expose local piety, petty cruelty, and the gap between reputation and conduct. A figure widely regarded as a libertine astonishes his community by an act of unexpected moral courage to shield an apparently respectable clergyman, provoking mistaken identities, sharp ironies, and social confusion. Through witty exchanges and ironic reversals, the drama probes themes of honor, hypocrisy, sacrifice, and the difference between outward respectability and inward nobility, prompting a reassessment of characters and communal values.
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