Marriage à-la-Mode, comedy by John Dryden, performed in 1672 and published in 1673.
The play has two unrelated plots. One, written in heroic couplets, concerns the princess Palmyra of Sicily, whose usurper father has never seen her, and her childhood sweetheart Leonidas, the rightful heir to the throne. The young pair were raised together in the isolated countryside and have fallen in love; their marriage will right the wrong of Palmyra’s father. The other plot is comic. After two years of marriage Rodophil and Doralice have lost interest in each other. Rodophil is attracted to Melanthe, whose affectations annoy her fiancé, Palamede. To complete the square, Palamede is attracted to Doralice. Complications ensue, and in the end the characters find that they prefer their original partners after all.