Plays by August Strindberg, Second series by August Strindberg
page 302 of 327 (92%)
page 302 of 327 (92%)
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striking antithesis of everything a scientist used to stand for in
poetry--is much less interesting as a superman _in spe_ than as an illustration of what a morally and mentally normal man can do with the tools furnished him by our new understanding of human ways and human motives. And in giving us a play that holds our interest as firmly as the best "love plot" ever devised, although the stage shows us only two men engaged in an intellectual wrestling match, Strindberg took another great step toward ridding the drama of its old, shackling conventions. The name of this play has sometimes been translated as "The Outcast," whereby it becomes confused with "The Outlaw," a much earlier play on a theme from the old Sagas. I think it better, too, that the Hindu allusion in the Swedish title be not lost, for the best of men may become an outcast, but the baseness of the Pariah is not supposed to spring only from lack of social position. PARIAH AN ACT 1889 PERSONS MR. X., an archaeologist, Middle-aged man. MR. Y., an American traveller, Middle-aged man. |
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