Feste in Twelfth Night The Elusive and Mystical Fool in Shakespeare’s Festive Comedy © Jem Bloomfield Sep 2‚ 2007 Feste in Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night‚ is an fascinating character: a fool who seems to know more than most of the people around him. Feste‚ the Fool in Twelfth Night‚ is a very different character from the Fools in other comedies such as Two Gentlemen of Verona and The Merchant of Venice. Launce and Speed (from Two Gentlemen) and Launcelot Gobbo (from The Merchant of Venice)
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Personal Response (Twelfth Night) O time‚ thou must untangle this‚ not I!/It is too hard a knot for me to untie! (2.2.39-40) The book Twelfth Night by William Shakespeare contains some interesting quotations that may seem unreasonable in this present era‚ but was totally normal when this book was written. In that time period people use to leave certain things to fate‚ such as William Shakespeare. This is an ideal demonstration of his belief in fate. Viola’s realization of Lady Olivia
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Throughout act I of Twelfth Night written by William Shakespeare we are introduced to a lot of events going on between different characters in the play. In act 1 we are introduced to a lot of characters one of which is named Viola. We learned that she is a quick thinker and is determined to change her appearance. She does this because it gives her more options and more social mobility after she believes that her brother did not survive the shipwreck they encountered. In scene one‚ she was talking
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play. Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night is no different as parallelism is scattered all throughout the story in many different forms and through many different characters. These characters may seem similar to one another in a lot of ways‚ but their outcomes at the end of the play are often very different. These characters- Orsino and Olivia‚ Feste and Viola‚ and Viola and Olivia- help emphasize the thematic issues of the play through this parallelism‚ many of which revolve around love and the characters’
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Identity is often misinterpreted in common films and novels. These originated from Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night about a girl named Viola‚ who washed ashore and dresses as a man so she can raise money to return to her land. One of the films that is based off the idea of deception through appearance is Some Like it Hot‚ two men searching for employment in a band dress as girls‚ cloaking themselves from a mob. Deception in appearance is common throughout these two stories in several ways. Disguise
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.Twelfth Night Section - Vocab Act | Word | Definition | I | Cloistress | A nun in religious seclusion or in a convent | I | Brine | Water with salt as in tears | II | Cozier | Shoemaker; cobbler | II | Inure | To make less sensitive: harden; to become advantageous | III | Feign | Pretend | III | Rave | To talk irrationally or incoherently; to praise | III | Incredulous | Incredulous |
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Throughout Twelfth Night‚ William Shakespeare portrayed a story of unreciprocated love‚ misunderstanding‚ and a happy ending that ties all the loose ends together. However‚ he also offered a detailed depiction of many relationships‚ particularly those involving Orsino‚ Olivia‚ Viola‚ Cesario‚ and Sebastian. By examining the dynamics between these characters as well as a few others through the lens offered throughout this play‚ it becomes quite clear that certain relationships are consistently stronger
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Do you believe in love at first sight? To define this phenomenon‚ it is the sudden solid feeling that a person is meant to be with you as a partner for life upon your initial sighting of them. While this may be claimed by many couples‚ love is most often cultivated in moments where a person finds - and may be surprised by - themselves acting and/or changing oneself drastically in favor of the other party. Whether it be a change of appearance or the disobeyment of rules‚ this sultry‚ insidious creature
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MalvolioIn the play‚ Twelfth Night‚ most of the characters seem to go through many changes‚ particularly to their personalities. However‚ the one character that does not go through any changes to their personality is Malvolio. He was a very strict‚ self-righteous servant of Olivia. It appears he changes almost completely into the opposite of himself‚ but these changes were engineered to garner what he thought would be more power for himself. At first glance it may look like there is a change in him
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Shakespeare’s romantic comedies such as As You Like It & Twelfth Night are all full of various love-relationships. The central pair of lovers in As You Like It comprises Rosalind & Orlando‚ and the love is an example of love at the first sight which‚ nevertheless‚ does not run smooth. The love originates in the Duke’s Court during the wrestling bout won over by Orlando. It‚ however‚ matures in the pastoral setting of the Forest of Arden‚ where Rosalind takes the initiative by being disguised as
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