Do Benedick And Beatrice Have A Healthier Relationship Than Hero And Claudio?
What are some key components of a healthy relationship? Trust, communication, time, affection and understanding are some that may come to mind. In William Shakespeare's Much ado About Nothing, the partnerships between many of the characters are missing key components of a healthy bond. Some relationships are healthier than others in the play. There are two we can focus on, Benedick and Beatrice and Hero and Claudio. These two partnerships are different, because one shares more components that make a healthy alliance. Benedick and Beatrice are healthier together than Hero and Claudio because they are not blinded by love, they have better communication skills, and
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Claudio's trust in Hero is far less than the trust Benedick has in Beatrice. After Claudio assumed Hero was cheating on him, he lost all trust and respect for her. He proved this by shaming her at the wedding. Also, when Hero woke up she wasn't angry at him, she just knew he was wrong. This shows Hero is also too blinded by love to even have any true trust or respect for Claudio. Benedick and Beatrice have a strong bond of trust in their relationship. They show this when Beatrice asks Benedick to kill Claudio, she trusts him to take care of this task. Also Benedick shows trusts in Beatrice when he asks if killing Claudio is really what is necessary, he trusts in Hero and her opinions on what is right. Benedick and Beatrice's love and trust seems to grow over time, while Claudio and Hero seem to lose trust throughout the relationship.
A healthy relationship requires many different characteristics. Benedick and Beatrice have a healthier relationship than Hero and Claudio because they share more of the attributes that create a well working partnership. The trust and communication skills Benedick and Beatrice share are greater than those of Hero and Claudio. While Hero is wearing “rose-colored glasses”, Beatrice is aware of the bad and good in her relationship. Ten years down the road, Benedick and Beatrice will most likely be happily together, while Hero and Claudio are solely wishing to see other
I find it more satisfying because their relationship is easier to understand. They are always cracking jokes and calling each other names in a friendly manner. Claudio and Hero’s relationship is easier to understand, but they get into a big argument that makes them fall apart. Benedick and Beatrice argue constantly as a sign of showing that they secretly have a “ thing ” for each other. While Claudio and Hero have a more love at first sight which is not a real love that is full of
The difference between Beatrice,Benedick,and the other two Claudio and Hero though is that, these two are very headstrong characters with a different outlook on love, but have very much love for one another. Benedick believes in just being a bachelor and spending the rest of his life messing with as many women as he pleases, well as for Beatrice she believes there is no man good enough and willing to show her the love she wants so she much rather be left alone. But the fact that they honestly want to believe what they say is what makes this get way more interesting. What they don’t know is that they are going to soon become curious trying to figure out what they truly feel for one
Benedick and Beatrice both benefit from the deceit that they encounter. At first, both are enemies in a battle of insults and wit, until they are each fooled into thinking that the other loves them. When Benedick hears that Beatrice is supposedly attracted to him, he thinks that it is “a gull, but that the white-bearded fellow speaks it: knavery cannot, sure, hide itself in such reverence” (111). Little does he know, Leonato, the "white-bearded fellow," is also in on the joke (111). Benedick starts to admire her when he is aware that Beatrice might actually be attracted to himself, as well. She is also astonished when she first hears that he loves her. However, when Beatrice comes to terms with their affection, she hopes "Benedick [will] love on... And [she] Believe it better than reportingly" (134). In other words, she falls in love with Benedick as soon as she believes that he, too, is fond of her. They each start to fall in love with one another under the pretense that other was hiding their affection from them. Now that they are both in love, they start to open up to each other and prove that the deception they endured was worth it in the end.
When Benedick hears that Claudio has fallen in love for Hero, he is enraged. He thought that Claudio would live a bachelor’s life like him. Benedick tells him that men who are in love are not masculine. Near the end of Act IV, Benedick’s complete change is evident when Benedick chooses love over friendship. Benedick challenges Claudio, previously his closest friend in the world, to duel to the death over Claudio’s accusation as to Hero’s unethical behavior. After Beatrice complains to him about Claudio’s mistake, Benedick gives in, “Enough, I am engaged. I will challenge him.” At this point, there is no doubt that Benedick has switched his allegiances entirely over to Beatrice. But then again, Benedick was relieved that Hero was proved guilty so he would not have to fight his close friend Claudio.
Shakespeare’s introduction of the other couple in question is in stark contrast to the way in which Beatrice and Benedick were introduced. Claudio and Hero are amorously receptive to one and other from the very start. Upon laying eyes on Hero, Claudio remarks of her to Benedict “is she not a modest young lady?” (1.1.125). Clearly, by having Claudio express his fondness of Hero to Benedick, the playwright directly compares the older and more cynical to the more young and naive, allowing the reader to see the contrasting personas of the two men. This is reinforced by Benedick, who after finishing listening to Claudio’s rhetoric on the charms of the young Hero (“in m...
Telling her gentlewomen that Benedick loves Beatrice is her secret and it just so happens that Beatrice overhears, because it was. all planned that she should overhear. In this scene, Hero is dominant. in the conversation and says whole paragraphs instead of a few words that she says sporadically throughout the play, like in Act 1 scene 1. where she only says one line in the whole scene, "My cousin means Signor Benedick of Padua. " Page 5, line 27.This is because she needs.
Renaissance society. “O that I were a man for his sake! Or that I had
Elizabeth Bennet and Mr. Darcy are the two main characters in Pride and Prejudice. Mr. Darcy is presented as pride and Elizabeth prejudice but, that's not entirely true. Darcy is prejudice to the people lower than him which builds up his pride. Elizabeth is proud of who she is and also takes pride in her family even though they are considered poor. She's very prejudice against Darcy and judges him before she even knows him.
adds to the comedy of the rest of play. It is obvious to the audience
Beatrice's courtship with Benedick greatly contrasts with the courtship of Hero and Claudio. Hero gladly and willingly submitted to marriage, and she accepted the role of the relatively powerless woman. In contrast Beatrice chose her submission after openly criticizing the institution of marriage.
...he other hand, Beatrice and Benedick are comedy-makers and Beatrice is not ruled by her father as Hero clearly is. It does take Don Pedro’s benevolent plot to bring Benedick and Beatrice together, however. A modern audience would prefer Beatrice to Hero as she is her own self and admirable. The relationships also differ because Benedick and Beatrice’s relationship slowly grew whereas Claudio and Hero’s relationship was love at first sight. Perhaps it was a little hasty as we see in Act 4 how their love turns sour.
... heart in the marketplace.” (A4; S1; L 315-321). When Hero was wrongly accused is when Beatrice showed this the most. She believed that because of what he had done, Claudio deserved to be dead. She wanted no bad deed to go unpunished and what she seen fit was for Benedick to challenge Claudio to a dule and she didn’t want Benedick to stop until he was dead.
H.O.T. Questions Can you identify the relationship between Beatrice and Benedick and how it played an important role in the story? Beatrice & Benedick have a love-hate relationship Their relationship contributes to the numerous lies that are told throughout the story Their relationship also helps to bring Claudio & Hero back together after the alleged “betrayal” Can you assess the significance of the masks in the beginning of the play used in the ball in relation to the theme of the story?
In the play Much Ado About Nothing by William Shakespeare, love is a very important and a consistent theme; which the play is based on. The theme if love is important because, from a very young age people feel love. We want to know what love is. Where does it come from? How do I get it? What does it feel like? When will I have it? What do I need to have love? Love is something we wait for. We imagine our first kiss. Our first “I love you.” Our first heartbreak. The truth is love is made up of many things: Pain, Joy, Compassion, understanding, longing, and tears. Shakespeare uses the notion of love to show how important trust and loyalty are in any relationship.
“Relationships are what make up our world today, they shape the ways we see things and the way that we do things, relationships affect how we see the world today”. I believe supporting what your partner does, having a great sum of trust and showing your affections towards your partner is what will make a healthy relationship great.