Furthermore, as the plan involving Beatrice develops, Hero gives up on Beatrice. She says how Benedick will ‘consume away’ and ‘waste inwardly’ if he is to love Beatrice. Hero seemingly wants to hand Beatrice over to Benedick, and get rid of her. Again, Shakespeare’s use of negative language defies all sense of the play being a sole comedy. Hero is describing the state Benedick will be in once he falls in love with Beatrice, and words such as ‘consume away’ and ‘waste inwardly’ do not depict the typical image of a person in love.
3;1 is not all tragic however. The scene is, in actual fact, a main part of the gull, and the actions of the characters provide humour. In one part, humour is conveyed via the use of animal imagery. Before coming into clear sight where Beatrice can hear Hero and Ursula’s conversation, Hero orders Ursula to look where Beatrice ‘like a lapwing runs’. Typically, a lapwing makes short bursts of rapid running, then stops short to look ad listen. Although it is only something Hero has said, the image of Beatrice running like a lapwing is enough to make the audience laugh. It almost foreshadows the coming scene, in which Beatrice does in fact listen and believe the trickery