Tiffany Liang Ms. Maher Period 1 2/7/16 Much Ado About Nothing Double Entry Journal Act I Scene Quote/Passage Analysis Citation 1 O Lord… he be cured. In this passage, Beatrice uses simile to compare Benedick to a disease. This shows how she sees Benedick-- an unwanted, irritating, detrimental pestilence, with the ability to drive people downright insane. On the contrary, Beatrice thinks well of Claudio, especially compared to Benedick.…
After a few wedding problems, Benedick and Beatrice finally declare their love for each other and get married alongside Hero and Claudio. In the play, Hero is the respectable and polite maiden just wishing she could have a husband to love. On the other hand, Beatrice is a stubborn and feisty woman who could do without a husband until the day she died. Even though they are complete opposites, they found ways to love each other as friends and they both highlight their characteristics as well. In the play, “Much Ado About Nothing”, by William…
Character foils are present in almost any book, and Beatrice and Benedick from Much Ado About Nothing, by William Shakespeare, is no exception. This book focuses mainly on this huge situation that consists of a chain of events that could’ve been avoided completely if approached in an entirely different manner. Many of the characters are on a quest to find love, including Benedick and Beatrice. The two, at the beginning of the play, had a burning hatred for the other, until a friend of Benedick’s put together a plan to have Benedick and Beatrice to realize their true feelings for one another and fall in love. Needless to say, this plan worked.…
Influential Women: Beatrice Stands Up To So Called Powerful Benedick In the comedy Much Ado About Nothing by William Shakespeare, women play a powerful role. Beatrice, a major character in the story, is a woman who is very strong, very loyal, and very passionate. Her feisty character and caring personality add to the plot, as she learns to love but also as she stands up for herself and others. In Act IV.i, Beatrice tells Benedick to kill Claudio because he has humiliated her cousin, Hero. Benedick refuses to kill his friend, so Beatrice reveals her unhappiness by vowing that if she were a man she would kill Claudio for mortifying her own cousin.…
Have you ever read “Much Ado About Nothing”, a play by William Shakespeare? This play is set in the early 1500’s in Messina, Italy, and is brought on after a small war between two brothers occurred. The two main characters Beatrice and Hero are cousins which have love stories that are intertwined with each other. Even though they both end up finding true love in the end of the play, their views of love are completely different.…
They fall hopelessly in love through the act of deception. This causes confusion and drama between the group, but ultimately ending in the traditional ‘happily ever after’. In Much Ado About Nothing by William Shakespeare, Beatrice serves as the foil character of Hero…
Benedick says to Beatrice, “Then is courtesy a turncoat. But it is certain I am loved of all ladies, only you excepted; and I would I could find in my heart that I had not a hard heart, for truly I love none” (Cite act1 scene1). He tells Beatrice he loves no one, yet he is attracted to her, giving mixed feelings. One wrong move and your life could be changed forever. The feeling of love can turn into despise real quick,…
Likewise, the women do the same to Beatrice and trick her into believing that Benedick loves her. The outcome is that they are tricked into thinking the other has feelings and they profess their existing love. One critic contends the characters have “an obsession with appearances”, and “So many of the characters in Much Ado about Nothing base their actions on how others will respond to them” (McClinton-Temple 956). This is stressed in not only Beatrice and Benedick’s responses but also with the false…
In Shakespeare’s Much Ado About Nothing, the presence of jealousy is one of the main driving forces of the development of the plot. Don John is jealous of his brother’s reputation and takes it out on Claudio. Claudio then undergoes strong envious feelings after Don John’s jealous rage leads him to tricking Claudio. These men are taken over by the ‘green eyed monster’, jealousy, which eventually turns out to do them only harm.…
In this play, the warrior Claudio falls in love with the damsel Hero, and wins her hand in marriage. Hero fits the…
“Much Ado About Nothing” is set in Messina, the Isle of Sicily where Shakespeare depicts Hero as a typical unmarried Elizabethan character. Shakespeare shows that Hero comes from a wealthy background with an important family. In this essay I am going to write about: Hero’s contrast to Beatrice, her relationship with Leonato and Claudio, as well as things she says, which is minimal.…
Furthermore, Don Pedro’s perfect approach to deception creates an influential effect on Beatrice. Like Benedick, Beatrice also overhears a conversation meant to persuade her thinking, and she reflects on what she heard: “And Benedick, love on; I will requite thee, / Taming my wild heart to thy loving hand” (III.ii.117-118). While Benedick’s line, when he overhears a similar conversation, and Beatrice’s line are in completely different sections of the play, they almost seem like a call and response. Shakespeare sets up this parallel to emphasize how the deception used on them has brought them together; they think and feel the same way–even when they are not in the same place. Soon after she admits her newfound love for Benedick, Beatrice states, “For others say thou dost deserve, and I /…
The art of deception is something that all humans are familiar with. For many people, falling victim to this action will happen quite a few times throughout one's lifetime. The question can be how to react to such an instance when the reality of the situation comes to life. Especially once it is realized that while one can blame the action on another, the true deception took place within the mind of the victim. Humans tend to create scenarios and formulate lies about the situation or relationship at hand based on the actions and words of those around them.…
"The courtship of Benedick and Beatrice has a beautiful observed reality, a poise and maturity, a refreshing humour which makes the operatic main plot seem absurdly unreal. " It is clear that Beatrice and Benedick are in love from the first we see of them; it is not simply through the Prince's intervention that the seeds of love are sown between them. When Beatrice is informed that Don Pedro and his party are coming to Messina, her first thought is for her 'Senior Mountanto'. Within four spoken lines of his arrival Benedick is quarrelling with his 'Lady Disdain'. From the very beginning then their thoughts and speeches are occupied with each other.…
The portrayal of love in Much Ado About Nothing is divided among many characters relationships; love is depicted to be a complex series of events starting with an initial honeymoon stage, followed by deception driving the relationship into failure and then giving it strength to regain its allure. In the various relationships within the play, Shakespeare implies a period of love in which both counterparts have faith in the relationship and are full of love for each other, seeing no failure up ahead. Shakespeare uses Hero and Claudio throughout the book as a principal couple, Hero is an ideal wife and Claudio is the most perfect man in Messina. Claudio decides he has been in love with Hero for a long time, and was merely distracted with the…