Love, or what is more commonly known as love, can take hold in an instant and feel very much like magic that is being put over you. It can make you do things that you would never of done and makes you feel like your floating in air. It hits you without you knowing that it's going to happen and there is nothing you can do to stop it. That is what A midsummer Night's Dream mostly consists of. But who speaks more completely, eloquently, and most compassionate in this play about love? Before you can come to a conclusion, you have to look at all the kinds of love there is in this play. One of the kinds of love that is really not love but many people mistake it as is infatuation or commonly known as lust. This isn't being in love with the other person but in love with one of there charecteristics. This can be shown with the relationship between Demetrius and Hermia. Demetrius only wants Hermia for the chase and not for who she is. Another type of love that can be presented is an unrequited relationship. This can be expressed by Helena and Demetrius. Helena loves Demetrius with all of her heart but he doesn't want anything to do with her because there is no chase. It's a one way kind of love. The last love that is shown in this play is true love. This can be shown with Lysander and Hermia. They love each other with every once of their body and nothing can stop them from being together. (Except love in Idleness) That is what true love is and that's why people say that true love is the most powerful thing in the world. It can also be show in what Lysander says in Act. 1 sc. 1 161-164 " There, gentle Hermia, may I marry thee, And to that place the sharp Athenian law Cannot pursue us. If thou lovest me, then, Steal forth thy father's house tomorrow night;" In order for them to be together is to run away and that is what they do. In my opinion, I think that Hermia is the one that speaks more completely, eloquently, and most compassionate in this play about love then any other person. ".. Now much beshrew my manners and my pride If Hermia meant to say Lysander lied. But, gentle friend, for love and courtesy, Lie further off, in humane modesty. Such separation as may well be said Becomes a virtuous bachelor and a maid, So far be distant; and good night, sweet friend. Thy love ne'er alter till thy sweet life end." This shows that Hermia is most eloquent in Act. 2 sc. 2 54-61 when she talks about love to Lysander. Another example is in Act. 3 sc. 2 262-264 "Why are you grown rude! What changed is this, sweet love?" This proves that Hermia is most compassionate in her love to Lysander. That is why I believe that Hermia is the best person in A Midsummer Night's Dream that speaks more completely, eloquently, and most compassionate in this play about love.
When love is in attendance it brings care, faith, affection and intimacy. This is proved true in the spectacular play A Midsummer Night's Dream written by William Shakespeare. This play displays the facts about lust, hatred, jealousy and their roles in something powerfully desirable. It is entitled love. Love is present everywhere, in every form, in every condition and even when one least expects it.
Several relationships begin true love such as Hermia and Lysander’s and Hypolyta and Thesus’ but some that did not begin in true love, end as true love such as Helena and Demetrius’.
Love is a powerful emotion, capable of turning reasonable people into fools. Out of love, ridiculous emotions arise, like jealousy and desperation. Love can shield us from the truth, narrowing a perspective to solely what the lover wants to see. Though beautiful and inspiring when requited, a love unreturned can be devastating and maddening. In his play, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, William Shakespeare comically explores the flaws and suffering of lovers. Four young Athenians: Demetrius, Lysander, Hermia, and Helena, are confronted by love’s challenge, one that becomes increasingly difficult with the interference of the fairy world. Through specific word choice and word order, a struggle between lovers is revealed throughout the play. In A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Shakespeare uses descriptive diction to emphasize the impact love has on reality and one’s own rationality, and how society’s desperate pursuit to find love can turn even strong individuals into fools.
Hermia’s father is attempting to arrange the marriage of Hermia and Demetrius, which was common during Ancient Greece. (Rymer) Hermia’s father obviously favors Demetrius over Lysander even though they are of the same social status. Hermia openly shows her love for Lysander despite the fact that her father threatens to have her killed if she does not conform to what he wants. She also stays true to him when he falls in love with Helena. During this part of the play, she shows that she will both emotionally and physically fight for his love. The two lovers make sacrifices for each other throughout the play. Lysander’s statement, “The course of true love never did run smooth…”(I.i.134) shows that he is confident in their relationship and knows that they will remain true to each other through hard
Shakespeare creates a situation in which two pairs of young lovers, Lysander and Hermia, are forced to elope from the oppressive authority of their Elders, here we see Lysander asking Hermia to flee to the woods, “there gentle Hermia may I marry thee; and to that place the sharp Athenian law cannot pursue us” Freedom is not permitted in Athens, therefore the two lovers plan to escape into the woods. Hermia has two options given from her oppressive father, ‘either to die the death, or to abjure for ever in society of men’. She disobeys his commands. Shakespeare uses images to reflect Athens, and to magnify and to solidify Lysander and Hermia’s love for each other, which is strong and cannot be broken, without the use of magic. ‘Withering on a virgin thorn, grows, lives, and dies in single blessedness’.
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In A Midsummer Night’s Dream, the main conflict is between love and social relations. The play revolves around the magical power of love which transforms many lives. As a result of this, it gets the reader’s emotionally involved through ways of reminding us of love’s foolishness and capabilities, as well as violence often followed alongside of lust. This play shows passion’s conflict with reason. For example, the father presented in the play Egeus, represents tradition and reason while Hermia represents passion for love and freedom. Egeus wants Hermia to marry Demetrius and accuses Lysander of “bewitching” Hermia with love charms and songs. This is one way love’s difficulties are presented in the play between father and daughter. Additionally, Helena recognizes love’s difficulties when Demetrius falls in love with her best friend Hermia. Helena argues that strong emotions such as love can make extremely unpleasant things beautiful. This is another way the play presents love’s difficulties between lovers and capricious emotions.
"The course of true love never did run smooth." Love, as one of the worlds biggest motivators, is the driving force for many decisions and actions. Love can make you a fool, feel lost, betrayed, disheartened, devastated, and many other emotions. In greek mythology, love caused the Trojan War, which destroyed the city of Troy, all because a man named Paris had a desire for love, which ended in Paris’s death. A Midsummer Night’s Dream is a story with a plot fueled by love. Most of the motivations for the characters are based on love, and how love is never certain or simple. I believe this story is satirical towards love, and how it holds little value, and how it can change so easily. A Midsummer Night’s Dream deals with love in a way that shows how it is sporadic and indecisive, much like any other emotion.
Love, lust and infatuation all beguile the senses of the characters in this dreamy and whimsical work of Shakespeare, and leads them to act in outlandish ways, which throughly amuses the reader. True love does prevail in the end for Hermia and Lysander, and the initial charm of infatuation ends up proving to have happy consequence for Helena and Demetrius as well. Even when at first the reader thinks that, in theory, the effects the potion will wear off and Lysander will once again reject Helena, Oberon places a blessings on all the couples that they should live happily ever after.
To start off, my favorite character in A Midsummer Night’s Dream is Hermia because she is loving. At the beginning of the play, Hermia’s father is ordering her to marry a man she doesn’t love. When she hears this news, yes she is very, very troubled and sad, but she doesn’t have an emotional freak out in front of everyone. Once they leave the room, she and Lysander plan to escape so they may be married. Leaving her family and everything behind was a huge risk, but she was willing to do it for her undying love for Lysander. You could really see how much these two loved one another. In A...
Love plays a very significant role in this Shakespearian comedy, as it is the driving force of the play: Hermia and Lysander’s forbidden love and their choice to flee Athens is what sets the plot into motion. Love is also what drives many of the characters, and through readers’ perspectives, their actions may seem strange, even comical to us: from Helena pursuing Demetrius and risking her reputation, to fairy queen Titania falling in love with Bottom. However, all these things are done out of love. In conclusion, A Midsummer Night’s Dream displays the blindness of love and how it greatly contradicts with reason.
In "A Midsummer Night's Dream," William Shakespeare explains the difficulties of the nature of love. Both false love and true love prevail in the end, leading the reader to come to the conclusion that all types of love can triumph. Hermia and Lysander represent the existence of a "true love", while Helena and Demertrius represent the opposite extreme. Shakespeare presents the idea that love is unpredictable and can cause great confusion. Love is something that cannot be explained, it can only be experienced. Shakespeare challenges us to develop our own idea of what love truly is.
Is love a remedy to one’s sorrow or the unfortunate reason of their unhappiness? Love is a feeling that overtakes a person when they are around something or someone they admire. It is present everywhere, in every form, in every condition and even when one least expect its. Although love is said to bring happiness to a person’s life; in the play, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, it led the characters into a world of confusion and misunderstanding. Love is chaotic, unpredictable, and leads to sorrow. It is a hard concept to compromise with and if there are any misunderstandings, it could lead to a complicated and difficult life. In the play, Hermia has her heart broken by Lysander; Helena is confused about the sudden love events of her life, and Titania unfortunately falls in love with a man with a head of an ass. Therefore love is revealed as an inevitable, difficult phase of life.
One seeks to change his or her identity, or to create a new one, in order to find love. In both Dickens’ novel and Shakespeare’s play, the two protagonists, driven by love, flee from their normal lives in order to search for a better existence. Shakespeare illustrates that when love consumes people, they will do whatever it takes to protect it: “There my Lysander and myself shall meet, and thence from Athens turn away our eyes to seek new friends and stranger companies” (Shakespeare I.i.222-224). Shakespeare asserts that the two characters Lysander and Hermia must protect their love, so they choose to run away into the forest. In order to protect their love the two possess a mindset that they must flee from their home and create new identities. They wish to create an identity for the both of them that their love produces. In order to develop their perfect identity, they flee from Athens and seek out a new life with new friends and new places in which their love can grow and flourish. Shakespeare tells the audience that when people love each other, endless