Finished this play a few weeks ago but held off writing a review due to Thanksgiving and general poor time management. "La cuarterona," which I guess would translate into English as "the quadroon" is Tapia y Rivera's contribution to the anti-slavery writings of the nineteenth-century Caribbean, and it stages its critique of the institution in a comedy of manners that can be summarized thusly: White bookish dude wants to marry bookish slave woman he grew up with who is "black" but not overly so. White dude's mama is widowed and looking to ensure her retirement by marrying her son into a wealthy (white) family. Bookish slave woman must now decide whether to reveal her feelings for her master, knowing they could never be happy, or forever hold her peace. Misunderstandings, broken feelings, and deceptions ensure. It's an enjoyable romp -- perhaps too enjoyable to be taken seriously as a critique of slavery.