John Arden's Serjeant Musgrave's Dance is one of the curios of the "Angry Young Man" era of the 1950s, when writers like Arden, John Osborne and Harold Pinter transformed the British stage from a theatre of tasteful dramas and witty comedies into a forceful, subversive, often surreal lampooning of national decline, complacency and class strictures. Musgrave is a bizarre parable about a squadron of British soldiers, fresh from a Victorian military campaign, who arrived in a hardscrabble mining town. Ostensibly planning to recruit for their regiment, their leader in facts plans to punish the town in imitation of his unit's atrocities abroad, bringing the sharp edge of "Rule Britannia" home. Arden's play is very much of its moment in British theatre; angry, artful, but also crude and sometimes ill-structured, more fond of Brechtian alienation devices (an endless parade of marching and drinking songs) and striking symbolism (the climactic scene features Musgrave's squad aiming a Gatling gun straight at the audience) than coherent plotting. Written at a moment when the Suez Crisis and colonial wars in Kenya and Malaya were still fresh in the British mind, Arden's play at least captures the uncertainty and betrayal of postwar Brits who realized that the old patriotic slogans wouldn't avail them of much in a postcolonial world. Whether it works as drama (and to be fair, such a symbolism-laden play is hard to fully capture on the page) is up to the individual reader, or audience member.