A man wishes to have a child after years of a sterile marriage. He will achieve it, with the help of a supposed doctor (in love with the lady), by giving his wife a mandrake potion, but which will poison the first person who approaches her. They seduce a stranger (who is the doctor himself in disguise) and take him to the woman's room. From there arises the comic plot, which crystallizes in a magnificent definition the game of carnal mockery, describing the daily reality of society, articulating figures and stage games. In this work Machiavelli uses comedy as a means to brutally reveal a world that, beneath its social veneer, is revealed to us to be corrupt to the root. It is governed by the reverse side of the Renaissance coin: it puts the human being in the foreground, but not in his beauty, in his similarity to God or to the mythological models of Olympic perfection, but in his soc...read more