Saturday, October 26, 2019
A Comparison of Romantic Love in A Midsummer Nights Dream, The Tempest
Romantic Love in A Midsummer Night's Dream, The Tempest, and Twelfth  Night       In all of  Shakespeare's plays, there is a definitive style present, a style he perfected.  From his very first play (The Comedy of Errors) to his very last (The Tempest),  he uses unique symbolism and descriptive poetry to express and explain the  actions and events he writes about. Twelfth Night, The Tempest and A Midsummer  Night's Dream are all tragicomedies that epitomise the best use of the themes  and ideology that Shakespeare puts forth.      Naturally, one of the most reoccurring themes in Shakespeare is romantic  love. It is perhaps not a coincidence that he put so much emphasis on this  elusive and enigmatic emotion. In the Elizabethan age when he was writing, the  arts were being explored more fervently, and thus raw human emotions began to  surface in the mainstream culture. In Twelfth Night, love is a confusing and  fickle thing, as demonstrated in the relationships between Duke Orsino and  Olivia; Olivia and Viola/Curio; Malvolio and Olivia (she certainly has an effect  on men doesn't she?); Duke Orsino and Viola/Curio. However, the characters seem  to have a love-hate relationship with Cupid. Within the first line of the play,  it is glorified: "If music be the food of love, play on..." (Duke Orsino, I:I).  And while Olivia is annoyed with Orsino's affection, she craves Curio's.      However, Shakespeare also picks on love. Not only did Malvolio's confusion  about his and Olivia's relationship prove to add to the comedy, but it rather  showed how one can play with love, and use it for another's harm. Apart from  this example, love is depicted as a light and lovely emotion.      In A Midsummer Night's Dream, love is used to cause misch...              ...ok. London:  Macmillan Press Ltd, 1992. 222-43.     David, R. W., ed. Shakespeare: Love's Labour's Lost. London: Methuen,  1981.     Davidson, Frank. "The Tempest: An Interpretation." In The Tempest: A  Casebook. Ed. D.J. Palmer. London: Macmillan & Co. Ltd., 1968. 225.     Hillman, Richardà   The Tempest as Romance and Anti-Romance Shakespeare  Quarterly. 34 (1983), 426-432.     Palmer, D.J. Shakespeare's Later Comedies: An Anthology of Modern Criticism.  Harmondsworth, Penguin, 1971.     Potter, Lois. Twelfth Night: Text & Performance. London: Macmillan,  1985.     Schanzer, Ernest.à   "_A Midsummer-Night's Dream."à   26-31 in Kenneth  Muir, ed. Shakespeare: The Comedies: A Collection of Critical Essays.à    Englewood Cliffs: Prentice-Hall, 1965.     Shakespeare, William. The Norton Shakespeare. Edited Stephen Greenblatt et  al. New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 1997.     à                        
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