Dramatization Selections From English Classics Adapted in Dramatic Form

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Curtain 42 Dramatization [Third Tew TALES OF A WAYSIDE INN Henry Wadsworth Longfellow PREFATORY NOTE Longfellow's Prelude to the Tales of a Wayside Inn, like Chaucer's Prologue to the Canterbury Tales, offers the opportunity for a unique type for dramatization. As in the case of the Prologue, the first scene here presents a series of stage pictures or groupings of characters; but unlike the situation in the Prologue, when the curtain rises, the guests are all assembled. The Reader stands far fo
...rward to one side, and while he reads the description of the character, the Landlord, in some way, singles out the person who is being described and makes him the center of interest for the moment. Hints for staging are contained in the 6rst part of the Prelude. The Reader opens with the description of the happy group. He then sketches each character, beginning with the Landlord. Only very minor changes in the text are necessary. The descriptions are all abridged more or less; the expository and narrative bits are turned into stage directions; and an occasional word is changed or line invented.

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