Much Ado About Nothing
Some say that opposites attract, some say that you have to have somethings in common. In the story Much Ado About Nothing, there are two characters who kind of resemble each other. Those two characters are Beatrice and Benedick. Beatrice and Benedick are an ideal couple because they are both worthy of attention. They are both roughly equal in wit and intelligence because they are both worthy of attention. I find that their attitude towards love and courtship is more satisfying than Claudio and Hero’s, because Beatrice and Benedick didn’t instantly fall in love when they met. Before Benedick fell in love with Beatrice, he spent most of his time railing against marriage. Benedick obviously feels like this when he says
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“go to, I faith, an thou wilt needs trust thy neck into a yoke, wear the print of it, and sig away sundays”(1.1.193-198). Benedick obviously didn’t want to get married because he didn’t want to be tied down. When he heard that Beatrice might love him, he decided to change his mind about love and marriage. Beatrice and Benedick are two different people but they both kind of mirror each other.
Benedicks whole attitude towards love starts to change when he starts to come around Beatrice. Benedick was the first of the pair to confess that he was in love. He confessed that he was in love after Beatrice invited him in for dinner. Beatrice was willing to give up love for Hero’s reputation and Benedick was willing to giving up his friendship with Claudio over Beatrice’s love. Beatrice expresses approval of the good lord for alliance as she says “I may sit in a corner and cry heigh-ho for a husband”(2.1.311-313). In this quote Beatrice expresses that she will never get a husband unless she cries for one. She thinks that a husband would come to her if she cries for one. Hero met her husband because he walked in with Don Pedro and …show more content…
Benedick. When Claudio met Hero, they instantly fell in love.
After they fell in love they decided to get married. Claudio says “I would scarce trust myself, though I had sworn the contrary, if Hero would be my wife”(1.1.191-192). In this quote Claudio explains to Benedick that he probably wouldn’t trust himself if he wasn’t married to Hero. On the night before their wedding, Don John took Claudio to where he claims that he saw Hero cheating on him. Don John says “ I will disparage her no farther till you are my witnesses. Bear it coldly but till midnight , and let the issues show itself”(3.3.121-123). Don John is basically trying to make Claudio think that he is telling the truth about Hero. The next day on their wedding day, Claudio did not want to marry Hero anymore because he still thinks that she cheated on him with someone else. When Hero’s father Leonato found out, he got mad at Hero, he started yelling, screaming, and he punched her in the
face. Claudio and Hero’s relationship is not the same as Beatrice and Benedicks relationship. Their relationships are different because Benedick and Beatrice always insult each other in a funny way. Hero and Claudio didn’t insult each other because they cared too much for each other’s feelings. Claudio only insulted Hero for a couple of days, because he was under the impression that she cheated on him with someone else. While he was still under the impression of Hero cheating on him, Leonato and Friar were coming up with an idea to tell people that Hero basically killed herself. When Leonato told everyone, Claudio started crying because he felt bad for the way that he treated her. He did not know that Leonato made up that lie just to see how he was going to react. Claudio felt bad because he found out that Hero was not cheating on him. He found out that Don John lied to him about Hero cheating on with someone the night that he told him. Verges and Dogberry found the two people who were all involved in this situation. When those two were captured, Don John had returned to Messina. He was arrested as soon as he returned to town. Claudio basically apologized to Hero by marrying her at their second wedding. After he married her, Benedick asked Beatrice for her love. They both started to insult each other in a funny way and then they went to go dance with everyone else at the wedding.
In was in Act 2 Scene 3, when Don John came up to both Claudio and his brother Don Pedro to discuss what he saw, Hero “supposedly” cheating on Claudio with another man the night before their wedding. Even though Claudio is naturally very gullible and naive, he first trusted Don John, who is known as the “Bastard,” when he was told that Hero was cheating on him and not Hero, herself. Also, in Act 4 Scene 1, the actual wedding day is when Claudio confronted her in front of an entire audience when Hero clearly states that what he speaks is completely false information given by Don John. Hero said, “I talk’d with no man at the hour, my lord.” (85) The non-exist amount of trust and loyalty they have for each other is unimaginable
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.
In Shakespeare’s Much Ado about Nothing, there are the usual characters that show up in most of Shakespeare’s pieces. For instance the characters Hero and Claudio could easily be compared to Romeo and Juliet. Both Hero and Juliet are innocent, quite, and beautiful young women who fall in love instantly without conversing with the other person. Likewise, Claudio and Romeo decide to marry these women within twenty-four hours. Because of these characters’ lack of unique and interesting qualities, I am intrigued by Beatrice.
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...
Beatrice asks, Does it make any sense to write and tell him I love you when I have always treated him with scorn?” (2.3.31-34). In this quote all Claudio was saying was that Hero had told him that Beatrice had confessed to her that she was in love with Benedick but was not sure how to let him know That all changed when family and friends helped them both realized they have always been in love with one another. As for Claudio and Hero they are a couple who see eye to eye knowing they are perfect for one another. Even though they had an antagonist that did not want to see them happily married such as Don John, they were able to let it pass and end up happily
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.
During the time of Shakespeare a powerful woman ruled over England and all of its empire and yet the average woman in society was often brushed aside and disregarded. These conflicting images of woman where depicted throughout Shakespeare's plays from stichomythia we see between King Richard and his mother and the disregard we see for Ophelia in Hamlet but these contrasts are best encapsulated in his comedies Much Ado About Nothing and Measure For Measure Woman. Woman of the time where considered weak and weak willed and yet Beatrice and Isabella each brave their societies views when they are faced with the persecuted of someone they love. This love causes them to fight against their oppressors without sacrificing their beliefs and eventually be a martyr to save those that they love. In this paper I will discuss the parallels of Beatrice and Isabella and the love, loss, and battles they face and how despite their actions they still end up losing but for a purpose they believe in. These woman each have their own view and struggles yet in the end they will fall back into the societal obligations that fall upon them but not without saving their loved one.
The next day Claudio does exactly as he had said, degrading Hero in front of all her family and friends. Because she did not cheat on him, she did not expect that kind of reaction. She is so dejected that she faints, and everyone assumes she is dead. Eventually Borrachio is overheard talking about Don John’s plan, and Don John is arrested. Later Claudio learns that Hero is not actually dead, and they are finally married.
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.
Both of them despise marriage, are witty, and are each their own people. These, however, are not the reasons why they come together. They are brought together by their respective companions who conspire to tell each of them that the one loves the other as the two misdirected lovers listen in. In his speech directly after this, Benedick is swayed to a life that he previously would have avoided at all costs. In hearing of Beatrice’s supposed affection, he immediately changes his entire outlook on perpetual bachelorhood and pronounces a love that is not real or his own, but comes secondhand from trickery.
Shakespeare’s play ‘Much Ado about Nothing’ has two main female characters, Beatrice and Hero, who are cousins. Both appear to be completely different in the beginning of the play but, as things progress and their characters develop, there are also some very obvious similarities between them. Hero and Beatrice have a very close relationship; they are best friends. Leonato is Hero’s father but Beatrice has no parents, which gives her greater freedom. Where Hero is polite, quiet, respectful and gentle, Beatrice is feisty, cynical, witty, and sharp.
In the play, Don John wanted to break Claudio and Hero up. For example, when he told Claudio to go look at the window and watch Hero the night before the wedding.
In the book Don John plans on sabotaging the wedding of Claudio and Hero by making Claudio believe that she is having affairs with Borachio. In the book Don John goes and shows Prince and Claudio what it seems that is Hero having sex with Borachio. But it wasn't Hero it was Margaret (Hero's cousin) having affairs with Borachio, but Borachio made it seem like it was Hero just so Claudio will get mad and ruin the wedding. On the wedding day that's when Claudio refuses to marry Hero because of what he saw. Claudio exclaims “Not to be married, Not to knit my soul to an approved wanton”(Act IV, Scene I, 44-45).