93 pages 3 hours read

Emma Orczy

The Scarlet Pimpernel

Fiction | Novel | Adult | Published in 1905

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Background

Literary Context

The book is an adaptation of the author’s play of the same name. In a play, each scene takes place on a separate set, followed by another scene on another set. The book reflects this structure: Several chapters in a row take place in one location, followed by several more in a different location, and so on. The first such “scene” is The Fisherman’s Rest inn, which dominates Chapters 2-9; Chapters 10-19 take place almost entirely in three scenes, in sequence: the opera at Covent Garden, the grand ball at the Foreign Office, and the Blakeney mansion. Chapters 20-31 happen at The Fisherman’s Rest, at an inn near Calais, on a coastal road, and at a cliffside beach hut. It’s easy to imagine the set changes at the theatre as the story shifts from one scene to the next.

The play’s shape also can be sensed in the dramatic entrances and exits of the various characters. There’s a good deal of coming and going through doorways, which corresponds to the entrances and exits of players on a stage.

With more freedom to move from scene to scene, the book inserts transitions, especially when characters travel by carriage or boat from one place to the next.