The first plot in the play is the court party of Theseus; Theseus the duke of Athens is preparing to marry Hippolyta, the queen of the Amazons, after he won her in battle. He plans to have four days of merriment and amusement and arranges for some entertainment. During this Egeus, one of the noblemen, arrives asking Theseus to punish his daughter Hermia if she refuses to marry Demetrius in favor of the man loves, Lysander.…
Lysander and Hermia were star-crossed lovers and they were planning on escaping Athens to get secretly…
-Egeus says that if his daughter, Hermia, does not marry Demetrius she can either be a nun for the rest of her life or die.…
Later on tonight me and Lysander plan to meet in the nearby wood and run off to Lysander’s aunt’s house and get secretly married. I know that Helena, my beloved friend, is upset about mine and Demetrius’ marriage but I will tell her that me and Lysander are planning to elope, which will mean that Demetrius will remain single and free for Helena.…
Lysander and Hermia, both young and well-off, are unpermitted, according to the Ancient Privilege, to wed each other without the approval of Hermia’s father, Egeus. However, not quite prepared to end their relationship, the lovers very ambitiously and suddenly run into a nearby forest. They have done so without considering the consequences, and as a result, find themselves lost. Lysander suggests this, when he says, “Fair love, you faint wandering in the wood, and in truth, I have forgot our way,” (II. ii. 41-42). Later in the play, the duke of Athens, Theseus, overbears Egeus’ will, and insists Lysander and Hermia wed each other on his marriage day. Hermia, in quickness and happiness, agrees, without considering her father’s reaction. By doing so, she may be sacrificing her relationship with him. In both situations, the young Athenians pay no attention to the consequences of their relationship, which supports the idea that love ignores all…
Comparing this with Egeus, Hermia’s father in A Midsummers Night Dream, Egeus clearly insists that he wants Hermia to marry her suitors, Demetrius, yet he does not persistently enforce this throughout the play. Egeus is absent during Hermia’s journey with Lysander, the man she truly loves. Although both of the fathers motivation to have their daughters marry a certain man stem from slightly different reasons based off their social class, their fathers’ aided their marriages because of their obliviousness to each their daughters sneaky actions even though it may be assumed that the fathers hold a great deal of power.…
Demetrius is more of a cold soul, but that is transfigured in the final bits of the play, and Lysander is the hopeless romantic of the play. He spoils Hermia with little knacks and treats and even sings to her at her window sill in the night “Thou hast by moonlight at her window sung/ With faining voice verses of feigning love[...]” (1,1:31,32). Though it is quite obvious that the two men are tremendously different, there also are some similarities, more so near the end of the play as opposed to the beginning/middle. Both men find a partner in which they marry. In the final act, Lysander and Demetrius lock away their differences, and resolve the conflict between the…
He wants her to marry Demetrius but she is in love with Lysander. Her father demands Theseus, the Duke of Athens, to apply the Athenian law which states a daughter must marry the suitor chosen by her father, or else face death, but Theseus said she also has the choice of being a nun. Later in the play when she is in the forest, Lysander treats her rough by saying that he does not love her anymore and he asks Helena talking about Hermia, “Who will not change a raven for a dove?” (II.ii.121) He thinks that Hermia is a raven because she is an ugly creature. Even in Hermia’s dream he treats her poorly because the serpent eating her heart in the dream is him rejecting her. Finally, once Theseus and Egeus find the lovers in the forest, Theseus has the say in what happens in the marriage. Since Lysander receives the antidote he is in love with Hermia again, yet Demetrius still contains the potion. Now Theseus decrees that Hermia no longer has to marry Demetrius, showing that a man takes charge in her…
The disapproval of sexually liberated women is also apparent in Theseus’ punishment of Hermia in the scene of her introduction to the audience subjected to either death or living as a nun, ‘Withering on the virgin thorn’, and therefore living a sexually suppressed life as a punishment for her passionate feelings for Lysander. Not only do Egeus’ actions set a precedent of male superiority as he shows that the fate (and life) of his daughter lay almost entirely in his hands, but the compromise offered by Theseus (which can be seen as another of his more caring and charitable moments) are almost a Hobson’s choice, not providing viable alternatives for a young woman to live by, with each option looking equally as unappealing to Hermia. The options…
Egeus, Hermia's father, declares Demetrius shall wed Hermia in four days. Hermia refuses to marry Demetrius because she is in love with Lysander. Under Athenian law, if a daughter disobeys her father she can be executed. Lysander devises a plan to marry Hermia and rescue her from death. Lysander tells Hermia he has a widowed aunt who lives outside Athens where they can stay. Hermia can then marry Lysander and run away.…
Hermia defiantly denies her father’s attempts at an arranged marriage, in favor of her whirlwind romance with and marriage to Lysander. She does not want to marry Demetrius even though her father has pretty much told her it is that or death. She already know that if she against her father willing to marry Demetrius, she will be punished, she might be killed but she takes the risk and…
Egeus demands that she should marry Demetrius, but their love is not real. He would rather see his daughter, Hermia, die or be a nun than marry Lysander. Theseus, the Duke of Athens, gave Hermia till his wedding day to make a decision. This is another way Shakespeare uses the moon as a clock to countdown till Hermia has to make a final decision and their wedding day.…
LYSANDER, in love with Hermia: Lysander’s relationship with Hermia shows the theme of the difficulty of love. For example, he cannot marry her openly because Egeus, her father, wishes her to wed Demetrius, and when Lysander and Hermia run away into the forest, Lysander becomes the victim of misapplied magic and wakes up in love with Helena.…
This first plot is very complicated in itself. Egeus, a friend of the duke's, has a daughter Hermia who is to be married to a young man named Demetrius. Demetrius loves her dearly, but Hermia is in love with another man, Lysander. Hermia's best friend, Helena, likes Demetrius but Demetrius despises Helena. Hermia must marry Demetrius or she will have to become a nun or be put to death, yet she still refuses to be his wife. So one night, she and Lysander run of into the woods together so they can get married later on. Helena sees this and wants to get brownie pionts with Demetrius, so she goes and tells him what has happened and he runs off into the woods to find them, with Helena trailing behind.…
Whilst furiously searching high and low for my true love, I stumbled upon a rat. Better known as Demetrius. Knowing how he loves me so, I assumed that he must have killed Lysander in his sleep in an attempt to remove Lysander from the equation. Having possibly already taken Lysander’s life, I insisted that Demetrius should just take the plunge and take mine as well. I shall be with my lover in life and in death after all. Then a possibility, one that I had not even considered, crept into the back of my mind and reared its ugly head. What if my dear Lysander left me? There is no way that Lysander would have possibly left me! He loves me and very much so. For him to have up and left is simply impossible. I would only believe that he truly left me “... As soon this whole Earth may be bored, and that the moon may through the center…