About This Book
In a one-act rural comedy a household prepares provisions for a needy neighbor while women recall past hardship and a second marriage that brought security; domestic routine and tenderness toward the poor are established. A visiting gamekeeper describes a wandering vagabond who has damaged pheasant nests and nearly started a fire, provoking a dispute over whether to punish or show mercy. The action contrasts private charity and communal suspicion, examines social judgments about poverty and responsibility, and moves between intimate family reminiscence and a public moral debate about outsiders.
About the Author
More Books by This Author
4 picks
You May Also Like
6 picks









