Merope is Voltaire's classical tragedy of royal identity, maternal grief, political danger, and the violent recovery of justice. Drawn from the ancient story of Merope, queen of Messenia, the play centres on a mother who believes her son lost, a usurper who threatens both throne and family, and a young stranger whose hidden lineage changes the fate of a kingdom.
Voltaire shapes the material into a disciplined eighteenth-century tragedy: formal, urgent, politically alert, and emotionally concentrated. The drama's force lies in its collision of private anguish and public power, as Merope's maternal devotion becomes inseparable from questions of legitimacy, tyranny, succession, and revenge. For readers of French classical drama, Enlightenment literature, tragic theatre, and adaptations of ancient myth, Merope offers a clear example of Voltaire's dramatic ambition beyond his philosophical and satirical writings.
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