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The Prince of Parthia

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166:, the King of Parthia, has illicit feelings for Evanthe. The plot then moves into Act Two; when Vardanes and Lysias hear Arsaces tell Bethas that he loves Evanthe, they decide to tell King Artabanus that Arsaces is a traitor for sympathizing with Parthian enemies. And that is all; like most plays with a five-act structure, there are usually one or two acts that are just one scene. This keeps the five-act structure, but does not mess with the believability of the plot. 174:
about who actually killed the king. Arsaces has been accused of the regicide and thrown in prison along with Bethas. They bond over their fear for Evanthe’s safety. Thermusa enters the prison to kill Arsaces, but she sees a bloody ghost of King Artabanus, which causes her to “brain” herself against the wall, committing suicide. Barzaphernes appears and releases Arsaces. Together, they plan to get Vardanes and make Parthia right once more.
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against Arsaces, Barzaphernes, Phraates, Gotarzes and their men. Cleone, Evanthe’s maid, watches the battle from a window. Cleone believes Arsaces was killed in the battle by Vardanes, but it was really Phraates. Cleone tells this to Evanthe, who drinks a vial of poison. When Arsaces, who has taken down Vardanes, hears of Evanthe’s death, he impales himself on Barzaphernes’ sword. In the end, only Barzaphernes and Gotarzes live.
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Act Four takes a sharp plot turn, which causes some incongruities. Phraates tells Gotarzes that he overheard Vardanes and Lysias talking about how they killed King Artabanus in his sleep. Vardanes and Lysias plan on blaming Arsaces, while Phraates and Gotarzes plan on telling the general Barzaphernes
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It mostly follows the unities of time (happens in a short amount of time, usually 24 hours), place (happens in one place) and plot (one or few plot lines). It also has a five-act structure, and most of the characters follow decorum. However, with verisimilitude (or, the appearance of truth), the play
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King Artabanus. Artabanus decides to let Arsaces have Evanthe because he promised Arsaces anything he wanted for being such an awesome child. Evanthe tells Arsaces that King Artabanus loves her, to which he replies that he loves her more. Vardanes then tells King Artabanus that Arsaces is a traitor.
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In the exciting conclusion of Act Five, Vardanes comes on to Evanthe, but she does not like it. Before Vardanes can hurt Evanthe, Lysias runs in and tells Vardanes that Arsaces has escaped and knows of Vardanes’ plot. Then, a huge battle occurs, pitting Vardanes, Lysias and all of their followers
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By the time the plot reaches Act Three, Thermusa is very angry because she knows King Artabanus is lusting after someone else. She tells this to Vardanes, who decides to use this to destroy Arsaces and take the throne of Parthia for himself. Arsaces asks for Evanthe’s hand in marriage in front of
258: 162:, decide to use Thermusa’s vengeance to destroy Arsaces. Meanwhile, Evanthe, whose father, King Bethas, has been imprisoned, is in love with Arsaces, but 158:, Arsaces’ stepmother and the Queen of Parthia, wants to avenge her son Vonones who was killed by Arsaces for treason. Vardanes and his officer, 309: 304: 206: 163: 314: 299: 143: 264: 99: 294: 139:
is lacking. The idea that the entire plot line could happen within 24 to 48 hours is astonishing.
278: 202: 119: 53: 127: 103: 288: 111: 92: 123: 154:, the brother of Gotarzes and Arsaces, is jealous of Arsaces' marital successes. 196: 253: 151: 107: 231: 155: 147: 95: 273: 159: 150:’ triumphal return from foreign wars. But there is trouble at home. 115: 198:
America's Longest Run: A History of the Walnut Street Theatre
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In the first act, Phraates, an officer at court, and
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in the 1st century A.D. during the Arsacid dynasty.
126:. It was first published in 1765. It is set in the 76: 68: 60: 49: 34: 26: 21: 238:(2nd ed.). New York: The Century Company. 8: 18: 187: 7: 14: 252: 201:. Penn State Press. p. 14. 1: 233:Representative American Plays 229:Quinn, Arthur Hobson (1922). 310:Plays set in the 1st century 118:, on April 24, 1767, at the 305:Plays set in ancient Persia 146:, a prince, discuss Prince 331: 114:by a professional cast of 265:Full text at Google Books 38:April 24, 1767 110:to be presented in the 195:Davis, Andrew (2010). 274:The Prince of Parthia 259:The Prince of Parthia 88:The Prince of Parthia 22:The Prince of Parthia 102:and was the first 16:1765 American play 279:Project Gutenberg 257:The full text of 120:Southwark Theatre 84: 83: 61:Original language 54:Southwark Theatre 322: 281: 256: 240: 239: 237: 226: 220: 219: 217: 215: 192: 45: 43: 19: 330: 329: 325: 324: 323: 321: 320: 319: 315:Parthian Empire 285: 284: 271: 249: 244: 243: 228: 227: 223: 213: 211: 209: 194: 193: 189: 184: 136: 128:Parthian Empire 80:Parthian Empire 50:Place premiered 41: 39: 17: 12: 11: 5: 328: 326: 318: 317: 312: 307: 302: 300:American plays 297: 287: 286: 283: 282: 269: 267: 262: 248: 247:External links 245: 242: 241: 221: 207: 186: 185: 183: 180: 135: 132: 106:written by an 100:Thomas Godfrey 82: 81: 78: 74: 73: 70: 66: 65: 62: 58: 57: 56:, Philadelphia 51: 47: 46: 36: 35:Date premiered 32: 31: 30:Thomas Godfrey 28: 24: 23: 15: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 327: 316: 313: 311: 308: 306: 303: 301: 298: 296: 293: 292: 290: 280: 276: 275: 270: 268: 266: 263: 261:at Wikisource 260: 255: 251: 250: 246: 236: 234: 225: 222: 210: 208:9780271030531 204: 200: 199: 191: 188: 181: 179: 175: 171: 167: 165: 161: 157: 153: 149: 145: 140: 133: 131: 129: 125: 121: 117: 113: 112:United States 109: 105: 101: 97: 94: 93:Neo-Classical 90: 89: 79: 75: 71: 67: 63: 59: 55: 52: 48: 37: 33: 29: 25: 20: 272: 232: 224: 212:. Retrieved 197: 190: 176: 172: 168: 141: 137: 124:Philadelphia 87: 86: 85: 295:1765 plays 289:Categories 182:References 104:stage play 42:1767-04-24 27:Written by 164:Artabanus 156:Thermusa 152:Vardanes 144:Gotarzes 108:American 214:July 7, 148:Arsaces 96:tragedy 77:Setting 72:Tragedy 64:English 40: ( 235:  205:  160:Lysias 116:actors 91:is a 69:Genre 216:2023 203:ISBN 134:Plot 277:at 122:in 98:by 291:: 218:. 44:)

Index

Southwark Theatre
Neo-Classical
tragedy
Thomas Godfrey
stage play
American
United States
actors
Southwark Theatre
Philadelphia
Parthian Empire
Gotarzes
Arsaces
Vardanes
Thermusa
Lysias
Artabanus
America's Longest Run: A History of the Walnut Street Theatre
ISBN
9780271030531
Representative American Plays 

The Prince of Parthia
Full text at Google Books
The Prince of Parthia
Project Gutenberg
Categories
1765 plays
American plays
Plays set in ancient Persia

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