In this play the man, a person of ideals and real ability, who is none other than Strindberg himself in one of his matrimonial predicaments, fails to extricate himself from the snare, and ends-both literally and figuratively-by being put into the straitjacket.
"Prophets of Dissent Essays on Maeterlinck, Strindberg, Nietzsche and Tolstoy"
Otto Heller
At a crucial moment, his brain had failed him, and now people would have to come in and cart him away and put him in a straitjacket.
"Out Like a Light"
Gordon Randall Garrett
She has insisted upon putting the individual in a straitjacket, she has never recognized that growth is the secret of life, that the clothes of one man are binding on another.
"The Inside of the Cup, Volume 5"
Winston Churchill