PLAYS OF TO-DAY AND TO-MORROW LADY PATRICIAPLAYS OF TO-DAY AND TO-MORROW. DON. By Rudolf Besier. “Mr. Besier is a man who can see and think for himself, and constructs as setting for the result of that activity a form of his own. The construction of ‘Don’ is as daring as it is original.”—Mr. Max Beerbohm in The Saturday Review. “It is a fresh and moving story ... and full of good things.”—Mr. A. B. Walkley in The Times. “‘Don’ is a genuine modern comedy, rich in observation and courage, and will add to the author’s reputation as a sincere dramatist.”—Mr. E. F. Spence in The Westminster Gazette. “If the essence of drama be conflict, the wrestle of will, then ‘Don,’ by Rudolf Besier, comes as near as any play I know to essential drama. It is a sparring match in heaven knows how many rounds.”—Mr. William Archer in The Nation. THE EARTH. By James B. Fagan. “A magnificent play—at one and the same time a vital and fearless attack on political fraud, and a brilliantly written strong human drama. Moreover, the lighter interludes are written with a brilliance and a polished humour with which one had not credited Mr. Fagan hitherto”—The Daily Chronicle. “‘The Earth’ must conquer every one by its buoyant irony, its pungent delineations, and not least by its rich stores of simple and wholesome moral feeling.... The credit may be equally divided between the vivacity and iridescence of its witty and trenchant dialogue and the tenacious grip of its searching and most substantial issues.”—The Pall Mall Gazette. “An interesting and remarkable achievement.”—The Westminster Gazette. LONDON: T. FISHER UNWIN. LADY A COMEDY IN THREE ACTS BY NEW YORK: DUFFIELD & COMPANY TO (All rights reserved.) |