Shifts to the Trenches of the Holy Trinity , where the last aristocrats are besieged by the revolutionary army. This culminates in a famous ideological debate between Henryk and Pankracy. Key Characteristics
The leader of the revolutionary camp, an atheist who believes a "paradise" can only be built on the ruins of the old world through total destruction. Structure of the Drama The play is typically divided into two distinct parts:
The title is a direct polemic against Dante’s Divine Comedy , framing human history as a "hellish" comedy of errors rather than a divinely ordered journey.