Travels with a Donkey in the Cévennes recounts Robert Louis Stevenson's 120 mile.
The Imaginary Invalid is a three-part comedy about a miser who imagines illnesses for himself.
The Ancient Greek Euripides wrote the play Hippolytus, a tragedy based on the myth.
Charles Wesley Emerson's book The Evolution of Expression was a central text in the Monroe.
Samuel Taylor Coleridge said of Ben Jonson's The Alchemist that it had one out of the three.
The School for Scandal debuted at Drury Lane Theater in London in 1777.
One of Henry James' greatest novels, The Ambassadors is a dark comedy from 1903.
Dead Souls is a socially critical black comedy.
Written in 1919, George Bernard Shaw's Heartbreak House is equal parts tragedy and comedy.
The Cherry Orchard was written by Chekhov as a comedy, but directed by Stanislavski as a tragedy on its premier.
The School for Husbands (L'École des maris) is a work by Molière (the stage name of Jean-Baptiste Poquelin), a French playwright who is often considered to be one of Western literature's great masters of comedy.
Oscar Wilde's play An Ideal Husband is a comedy about politics, blackmail and corruption.
Arms and the Man was George Bernard Shaw's first commercially successful play.
The Importance of Being Earnest is the last play Oscar Wilde ever wrote, and remains his most enduringly popular.
What does laughter mean? What is the basal element in the laughable?