The Tyranny of Tears: A Comedy in Four Acts

Nonfiction, Religion & Spirituality, New Age, History, Fiction & Literature
Cover of the book The Tyranny of Tears: A Comedy in Four Acts by Charles Haddon Chambers, Library of Alexandria
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Charles Haddon Chambers ISBN: 9781465611024
Publisher: Library of Alexandria Publication: March 8, 2015
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Charles Haddon Chambers
ISBN: 9781465611024
Publisher: Library of Alexandria
Publication: March 8, 2015
Imprint:
Language: English
“The Tyranny of Tears,” a comedy of the emotions, is most ingeniously constructed on the simplest lines; it is a triumph of the commonplace. Played virtually by five characters, and with but one change of scene, it has that specious appearance of ease which is due to dexterity of craftsmanship. It is refreshing, free from theatrical expedients, and save perhaps for the somewhat accelerated wooing in Act Four, knots which we are accustomed to see snipped by the scissors of an erratic fate are here gently untangled by the fingers of probability. The germ of it, a matter of fortunate selection, is a human foible so universal that if a man is not conscious of it in his own proper person, he has not failed to smile over it among his neighbors: that combination of fondness and egoism out of which tyranny is legitimately born. This is the keynote; it announces itself speedily upon the raising of the curtain, and it is never for a moment after obscured by those modern subtilties calculated to provoke discussion among the elect. The hearer equipped with ordinary experience finds himself listening to it with an acquiescent stream of running comment. He knows this alphabet. It spells familiar words, and they come frequently. Here are commonplaces which he has failed perhaps to formulate; but now they flash upon the inward eye with a convincing vividness. This, he sees at once, is a picture of pink and white tyranny, the triumph of the weak. Domestic life has been caught and fixed at the culmination of a strain: one of those dramatic moments when the cord snaps because it has been for a long time fraying. One party to the contract has drawn up a code and imposed it upon his mate. The tyrant has some piquancy; she disarms suspicion because, although a despot, she is masquerading as something else. Another sort of bully we know: the buckram female, loud-voiced, militant, announcing herself, like the mosquito, by a vicious trumpeting. Invulnerability sits on her helm; her armor clanks a little while she strides. But this new tyrant wears another mien. Behold her! a soft-cheeked, gentle-handed ministrant, who would have husbands happy, provided they show the chivalrous courtesy of becoming so in woman’s way. She knows the rules of the game according as her sex interprets them, and it never enters her ingenuous mind that “in marriage there are two ideals to be realized.” Thus does she make her gentle progress, the victim beside her crowned with garlands, but yet a victim. She is the arch destroyer, the juggernaut in muslin.
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
“The Tyranny of Tears,” a comedy of the emotions, is most ingeniously constructed on the simplest lines; it is a triumph of the commonplace. Played virtually by five characters, and with but one change of scene, it has that specious appearance of ease which is due to dexterity of craftsmanship. It is refreshing, free from theatrical expedients, and save perhaps for the somewhat accelerated wooing in Act Four, knots which we are accustomed to see snipped by the scissors of an erratic fate are here gently untangled by the fingers of probability. The germ of it, a matter of fortunate selection, is a human foible so universal that if a man is not conscious of it in his own proper person, he has not failed to smile over it among his neighbors: that combination of fondness and egoism out of which tyranny is legitimately born. This is the keynote; it announces itself speedily upon the raising of the curtain, and it is never for a moment after obscured by those modern subtilties calculated to provoke discussion among the elect. The hearer equipped with ordinary experience finds himself listening to it with an acquiescent stream of running comment. He knows this alphabet. It spells familiar words, and they come frequently. Here are commonplaces which he has failed perhaps to formulate; but now they flash upon the inward eye with a convincing vividness. This, he sees at once, is a picture of pink and white tyranny, the triumph of the weak. Domestic life has been caught and fixed at the culmination of a strain: one of those dramatic moments when the cord snaps because it has been for a long time fraying. One party to the contract has drawn up a code and imposed it upon his mate. The tyrant has some piquancy; she disarms suspicion because, although a despot, she is masquerading as something else. Another sort of bully we know: the buckram female, loud-voiced, militant, announcing herself, like the mosquito, by a vicious trumpeting. Invulnerability sits on her helm; her armor clanks a little while she strides. But this new tyrant wears another mien. Behold her! a soft-cheeked, gentle-handed ministrant, who would have husbands happy, provided they show the chivalrous courtesy of becoming so in woman’s way. She knows the rules of the game according as her sex interprets them, and it never enters her ingenuous mind that “in marriage there are two ideals to be realized.” Thus does she make her gentle progress, the victim beside her crowned with garlands, but yet a victim. She is the arch destroyer, the juggernaut in muslin.

More books from Library of Alexandria

Cover of the book The Romance of Golden Star by Charles Haddon Chambers
Cover of the book The Colonial Mortuary Bard; Reo, The Fisherman and The Black Bream of Australia by Charles Haddon Chambers
Cover of the book Yankee Girl at Fort Sumter by Charles Haddon Chambers
Cover of the book The Golden Threshold by Charles Haddon Chambers
Cover of the book The Broncho Rider Boys Along the Border: The Hidden Treasure of the Zuni Medicine Man by Charles Haddon Chambers
Cover of the book Signers of the Declaration: Historic Places Commemorating the Signing of the Declaration of Independence by Charles Haddon Chambers
Cover of the book Drugging a Nation: The Story of China and the Opium Curse by Charles Haddon Chambers
Cover of the book The Tower of London: A Historical Romance by Charles Haddon Chambers
Cover of the book Tales from the Gesta Romanorum by Charles Haddon Chambers
Cover of the book Heralds of Empire: Being the Story of One Ramsay Stanhope, Lieutenant to Pierre Radisson in the Northern Fur Trade by Charles Haddon Chambers
Cover of the book A Preliminary Study of the Emotion of Love Between the Sexes by Charles Haddon Chambers
Cover of the book Old People and the Things That Pass by Charles Haddon Chambers
Cover of the book Old Cookery Books and Ancient Cuisine by Charles Haddon Chambers
Cover of the book The History of Currency, 1252 to 1896 by Charles Haddon Chambers
Cover of the book Chantecler: Play in Four Acts by Charles Haddon Chambers
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy