Importance Of Helena In Midsummer Night's Dream Essay

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    With as much as literature and entertainment have evolved in the past 400 years since the honored genius William Shakespeare popularized theatre and genres such as the Tragedy and Comedy, people still remember his work by reading and seeing it performed from time to time. People are even shown techniques he pioneered on his own such as words he invented and comic relief. In the play Macbeth, it has been debated for years about the value of the Porter’s scene and whether or not it is comic relief…

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    In A Midsummer Night’s Dream by William Shakespeare, there are two prominent settings with opposing forces that are central to the context of the play. These two different settings explain Shakespeare’s underlying messages and themes that he wanted to convey to his audience. The setting the readers are introduced to first, Athens, is meant to represent the harshness of the real world, while the other main location, the forest, has a more lovable and happier notion. In A Midsummer Night’s Dream,…

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    blind” (1.1234-35). Love is an irrational emotion, able to change as quickly and suddenly of the wind. People, in the name of love, are willing to overlook much in order to rationalize the actions and words of the subject of their affection. A Midsummer Night’s Dream by William Shakespeare uses wild pansies, night, and dynamic relationships to portray differing definitions of romantic love as a passionate, sometimes, irrational force able to blind lovers to the reality of the world. The first…

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    In Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream, Puck serves as Shakespeare's voice in the play. He is no regular character, shown by the fact he is the only single person in the play, taking him out of both the fairy and mortal world. Puck not only uses the characters to his liking, but also his audience. Puck is the mischievous sprite who serves Oberon, the Fairy King. Puck or Robin Goodfellow is a sprite or fairy who plays annoying tricks on people or helps them out with their chores…

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    In William Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream, The Great Chain of Being is a concept demonstrating that everything in the universe has a place in a “divinely planned hierarchal order” (The Great Chain of Being). God is at the top of the hierarchy and it descends, from kings to peasants, to husbands andto wives. All four female characters women break The Great Chain of Being in different ways: Hermia goes against her father’s wishes and runs away with Lysander, Helena seeks after Demetrius…

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    Quixote of Dela Mancha, Spain is obsessed by reading books of chivalry, medieval, magician, princesses and religion. He grew old with his obsession that leads to his development of lance and sword as if he is one of the knights in shining armor. His dream is to be remembered by the next generation because of their great adventures and explorations. Using Rocinante his donkey, he went for an adventure to help the needy and save them from the wicked people; he also asked the service of an ignorant…

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    In the play “A Midsummer’s Night Dream” love and marriage are important themes that dominate the entire play. Shakespeare is known for revolving his ideas around love, whether it being in a comedy or a poem. In A Midsummer Night 's Dream, love becomes a force that characters cannot control, especially after the love potion is in effect, which turn people into desperate lovers towards someone that may not be right for them. Throughout the play, there are several challenges that the characters…

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    through generations of scholars, students, graduates and even writers in search of writing knowledge. Shakespeare made many plays, but not all were the same. Two interesting and captivating plays of his are the one of “King Lear” and “A Midsummer Night 's Dream.” The play King Lear, first performed on stage in December 26, 1606. King Lear is a play by William Shakespeare that took place in a tragic setting in which many conflicts…

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    takes things in many different ways. Some people don’t let it affect them and let it roll off their back, others may dwell on what was said, and let it affect them in some aspects of their life, or in every aspect of their life. In the book A Midsummer Night’s Dream there are many times when Hermia is treated unfairly, especially by the people who are significant in her life. “My daughter Hermia...Hath consent to marry him...Lysander...Hath bewitched the bosom of my child...with cunning hast…

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    In Midsummer Nights Dream by William Shakespeare three stories are combined to make a comedy. One of these includes Oberon, king of the faries, has a jester named Puck. First introduced in Act 2, Scene 1, Puck loves to play tricks on people for laughter and fun. ”Sometime for three-foot stool mistaketh me; Then slip I from her bum, down topples she”(II.52-3). Puck turns into a stool and when she is sitting on it, he moves away and she falls. Later, Nick Bottom’s head was changed into a asses…

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