Pelléas et Mélisande, play in five acts by Maurice Maeterlinck, published in French in 1892 and produced in 1893, that is considered one of the masterpieces of French Symbolist drama. Set in an imaginary land in medieval times, it centres on the tragic love of Pelléas for Mélisande, who is married to Pelléas’s brother. Maeterlinck emphasizes atmosphere over plot in this dreamlike fairy tale about the terrifying power of love. Impressionistic dialogue conveys an aura of melancholy and magic; words evoke emotions, not ideas, and the characters’ speeches are marked by silences and many repetitions of phrases, creating the effect of a litany. In 1902 Claude Debussy wrote an opera based on the play, and Arnold Schoenberg composed a symphonic poem on the same subject in 1902–03.