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Tuesday, May 28, 2019

Essay --

IntroductionConsidered to be the greatest playwright to ever have lived, William Shakespeares works continue to intrigue and entrance audiences around the world. Imbued with imagery, his comedy A Midsummer Nights Dream is perhaps one of his more fantastic but none the less(prenominal) intricate plays. Presiding over the proceedings, the moon is the uniting feature of the play. With its multi-layered symbolism it is the thread that connects the different characters and weaves the tale together.1. The Keeper of TimeUpon its first mention the moon is utilise as a marker for the passage of time. In the opening lines of the play Theseus, the duke of Athens, laments to his fiance Hippolyta that time is passing too slow and blames this on the moonTHESEUS Now, charming Hippolyta, our nuptial hourDraws on apace four happy days bring inAn different moon but, O, methinks, how slowThis old moon wanes She lingers my desires, wish to a step-dame or a dowagerLong withering out a young mans reven ue.(1.1.1-4 (Shakespeare and Brooks))The old moon keeps Theseus waiting for his wedding wickedness with Hippolyta, on the new moon. Theseus compares the old moon to an older woman, which stepmothers or a dowager usually are, and accuses her of keeping from him what is his to have, Hippolyta and their wedding night, like old widows might keep an inheritance from a young man. 2. The idle GoddessUnlike the impatient Theseus, who mourns the dark moon, Hippolyta sees the moon as a symbol of Cupid and his arrows, which unite loversHIPPOLYTA four nights will quickly high themselves in nightFour nights will quickly dream away the timeAnd then the moon, like a silver bowNew bent-grass in heaven, shall behold the nightOf our solemnity. (1.1.6-11 (Shakespeare and ... ...moon, therefore creating the image of the Man in the MoonSTARVELING This lantern doth the horned moon presentMyself the Man ith Moon do seem to be.(5.1.235-236 (Shakespeare and Brooks))Thus the moon takes on another more comical and amusing role in contrast to the darker, more serious roles it holds towards the other groups. ConclusionReturning to the introduction, the moon is not only ever present, it actively influences the proceedings throughout the play, not only connecting characters, but also giving them elbow room for their actions. Shakespeare once again displays his dexterity with imagery through his manifold portrayals of the moon one moment merely the indicator of time, the next a symbol of the goddess Diana, at once a symbol of order and chaos, of happiness and discord, fertility and chastity, it encompasses all that transpires on the stage.

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