A Midsummer Night*s Dream by William Shakespeare

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Transcript A Midsummer Night*s Dream by William Shakespeare

A Midsummer Night’s Dream
by William Shakespeare
Key facts
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Type: Romantic comedy
Time: Remote antiquity
Locale: Athens
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First presented: 1595
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THE SETTING:
In the forest outside of Athens, Greece…
The characters
The plot
The main plot:
Theseus is getting married to Hippolyta.

Egeus complaints that his daughter, Hermia 
refuses to marry the man he has chosen for her.
Theseus tells Egeus that she must marry
Demetrius or choose between death and
becoming a nun.

A group of workmen is planning to perform a
play in honor of Theseus and Hippolyta’s
wedding.

Paths of the plot
The plot of Midsummer follows three paths, the
marriage between Theseus and Hippolyta, the four
Athenian lovers, and the fairies.
All three overlap at times, with a final convergence
at the end of all three with the many marriages and
Oberon and Titania back together.
Basic sub-plots
Sub-plot A: The Lovers
Hermia loves Lysander, but is being forced to ◦
marry Demetrius.
Demetrius loves Hermia, but she does not love ◦
him.
Helena loves Demetrius, but he no longer loves ◦
her.
Helena tells Demetrius that Hermia and Lysander ◦
plan to meet in the forest and run away together,
hoping this will make him favor her.
Demetrius heads into the forest to find them. ◦
Helena follows Demetrius into the forest. ◦
Sub-plot B: The Fairies
Meanwhile, in the forest… Oberon is arguing with –
Titania because he wants to adopt the orphan child
she has raised from infancy.
He devises a plan to use a magic flower to trick –
Titania into giving him the child.
He sends his servant, Puck, to find the magic flower –
and use it on Titania.
When the nectar from the flower is placed in –
someone’s eyes while sleeping, they fall in love with
the first person they see upon waking.
– While Puck is obtaining the flower, Oberon
overhears Helena and Demetrius arguing and
decides to help them resolve their dispute
with the powers of the magic flower.
– He instructs Puck to find Demetrius and place
some flower nectar in his eyes too.
Sub-plot C: The actors
The workmen go into the forest to rehearse the play –
they are performing for Theseus and Hippolyta’s
wedding.
At this point all three groups are in the woods: the –
lovers, the fairies, and the actors.
A series of mix-ups occur, when Puck places the –
love potion from the magic flower in Lysander’s
eyes instead of Demetrius’s.
The Theme
1- Dreams
As the title suggests, dreams are an important theme 
in A Midsummer Night’s Dream.
The theme of dreaming recurs predominantly when 
characters attempt to explain bizarre events in which
they are involved.
Shakespeare is also interested in the actual workings 
of dreams, or how events occur without explanation
At the end of the play, Puck extends the idea of 
dreams to the audience members themselves, saying
that, if they have been offended by the play, they
should remember it as nothing more than a dream.
2- Magic and Fairies
The fairies’ magic is another element central to the –
fantastic atmosphere of A Midsummer Night’s Dream.
Shakespeare uses magic both to embody the almost –
supernatural power of love (symbolized by the love
potion) and to create a surreal world.
Although the misuse of magic causes chaos, magic –
ultimately resolves the play’s tensions by restoring love
to balance among the quartet of Athenian youths.
3- The difficulty of love
“The course of true love never did run smooth,” comments –
Lysander, articulating one of A Midsummer Night’s Dream’s
most important themes—that of the difficulty of love
(I.i.134).
Though the play involves a number of romantic elements, it –
is not truly a love story; it distances the audience from the
emotions of the characters in order to poke fun at the
torments and afflictions that those in love suffer.
The theme of love’s difficulty is often explored through the –
motif of love out of balance
The prime instance of this imbalance is the asymmetrical –
love among the four young Athenians: Hermia loves
Lysander, Lysander loves Hermia, Helena loves Demetrius,
and Demetrius loves Hermia instead of Helena.
4- Duty
Duty is more absent than present in A Midsummer –
Night’s Dream.
The play is full of relationships that require duty: –
father to daughter, friend to friend, lover to lover. Yet
these relationships are put by the wayside as soon as
something more interesting emerges.
For example, Hermia eschews duty by escaping her –
father, and feuding with her best friend, Helena.
4- Transformation
Transformation is important –
in the play in a literal and
metaphoric sense.
Hermia must transform her –
will and marry a man she
doesn’t love or become a nun.
Hippolyta has been captured –
and made to marry Theseus,
so she might as well like it.
Other times, transformation –
is the result of enchantment,
such as falling in love based
on a love potion.
Symbols
The Love Potion
The love potion is made from the juice of –
a flower that was struck with one of
Cupid’s misfired arrows
it is used by the fairies to the young –
lovers
the situation of the young Athenian lovers –
becomes increasingly chaotic and
confusing as a result of that potion
The love potion thus becomes a symbol –
of the unreasoning, fickle, erratic, and
undeniably powerful nature of love, which
can lead to inexplicable and bizarre
behavior and cannot be resisted.
Review
Questions
1- What kind of drama is “A Midsummer Night’s
Dream”?
A comedy
2- Which of the young Athenians is first affected by the
love potion?
Lysander
3- What are Hermia’s choices if she refuses to marry
Demetrius?
She can become a nun or be put to death
4-What effect does it have when the juice of this flower is
put on someone’s eyes?
They fall in love with the first person/thing they see when
they wake up.