Midsummer

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    change from writing events as they happened, to reflecting on events and writing them much later. Midsummer Eve is where this elated mood reaches a climax. After this section, she becomes extremely depressed, changing her character and writing methods once more. This change in tone throughout the book, especially in the Midsummer Eve and church sections, signifies Cassandra’s coming of age. Midsummer Eve is an extremely important day to Cassandra When Cassandra opens the section on page 199 she says

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    Midsummers Night Dream

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    How does the ‘play within the play’ enhance your enjoyment of the rest of A Midsummer Night’s Dream? If not, why not? I would argue that A Midsummer Night’s Dream is one of Shakespeare’s greatest comedies. Comedy is in abundance in A Midsummer Night’s Dream, especially in ‘the play within the play’. ‘The play within the play’ is a key characteristic in A Midsummer Night’s Dream and deserves a thorough analysis as it holds a tight link to the main plot of this play. This part of the play takes

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    Midsummer Night's Dream

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    Midsummer Night’s Dream is a Shakespearian comedic play with three separate, converging story lines. The story lines consist of a love feud, chaos in the fairy kingdom, and a group of struggling actors in Athens. The love arc consists of four lovers: Lysander, Hermia, Demetrius, and Helena. Lysander and Demetrius both love Hermia and Hermia wants to be with Lysander, meanwhile, Helena hopes to regain Demetrius’s affection. The fairy arc is a feud between king Oberon and Queen Titania; the two accuse

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    Antagonist In A Midsummer Night

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    shall go ill; The man shall have his mare again, and all shall be well.”(Midsummer Night’s Dream Act III, Scene II, Lines 462-477) At this moment in the tale Puck is mixing some of the havoc he caused by placing the juice on Lysander’s eyes so he was again will love Hermia. When finally the right man is in love with the right woman the play will be allowed to move towards its conclusion. Unlike the tale of Othello, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, ends with joyfulness and wedding nuptials. Puck does show

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    Midsummer Night's Dream

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    The distinction between reality and dreams can be a fine line, often confounding our perceptions of what is real and what simply appears to be. Shakespeare’s mystical play A Midsummer Night’s Dream examines this concept as the worlds of law and desire struggle against each other. The four main storylines of the play: the royal wedding, the four lovers, the fairies, and the rude mechanicals quickly become entangled in a mix of magic and love. At the head of this chaos is Puck, the fairy servant who

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    Midsummer Night's Dream

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    A Midsummer Night’s Dream has several themes but there is one that stands out to me. There are many conflicts throughout the play but a majority of them are caused by one character. In A Midsummer Night’s Dream, William Shakespeare brilliantly displays how love is never clear cut by his use of Puck’s character (who is always muddling everything up). *ADD QUOTES* (after every line break, you need a slash) Puck is a character that is meant for disaster. He is in the story to be a comedic relief

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    Does the play A Midsummer Night’s Dream lean toward reality or dreams? There are many ways to look at this play, but one cannot help but wonder if the magic that takes place is meant to be seen as real or just a dream. In the end, the world of dreams wins. The first act begins with a fairly realistic tone as it opens with Theseus and Hippolyta talking. Throughout the play they represent daylight—the mature reality of love. Theseus has just won Hippolyta’s hand in marriage through war. There

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    Midsummer Night's Dream

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    In A Midsummer Night's Dream, the supernatural helps to produce both negative and positive outcomes in the play. The supernatural in A Midsummer Night's Dream is represented through the activity of fairies, magic, and gods such as Cupid. The supernatural works to join the imperfect world of mortals while at the same time upholding the dreamlike state of the ideal world. The conflict begins when Oberon punishes his wife, Titania, for not obeying him and refusing to surrender the Indian

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    Midsummer Night's Dream

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    A Midsummer Night’s Dream: The Romantic Comedy Written by William Shakespeare in the year 1595, A Midsummer Night’s Dream is one of William Shakespeare’s featured play’s that utilizes elements of comedy. Throughout the play, various forms of comedy are used to captivate the reader, and further immerse him/her in the play to the point where the reader can’t help but to keep reading to find out what happens next. In Acts I, III, and V we see a strong element of character comedy. Character comedy

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    Midsummer Night's Dream

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    How the real and the imagined worlds are explored in a Midsummer Night’s Dream. “A Midsummer Night’s Dream” written by William Shakespeare in 1595, shows us fantastical elements and a griping narrative that demonstrations the values of both the real and imagined world and what links them together. The play has been read and watched for the four decades. Values are very important in both the real and imagined world. In the real world (Athens) there are values that we would see today such as, following

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