РефератыИностранный языкA A Dream Essay Research Paper A Midsummer

A Dream Essay Research Paper A Midsummer

A Dream Essay, Research Paper


A Midsummer Night’s Dream By: A. Theseus More strange


than true. I never may believe These antic fables nor these


fairy toys. Lovers and madmen have such seething brains,


Such shaping fantasies, that apprehend More than cool


reason ever comprehends. The lunatic, the lover, and the


poet Are of imagination all compact. One sees more devils


than vast hell can hold: That is the madman. The lover, all as


frantic Sees Helen’s beauty in a brow of Egypt. The poet’s


eye, in a fine frenzy rolling, Doth glance from heaven to


earth, from earth to heaven And as imagination bodies forth


The forms of things unknown, the poet’s pen Turns them to


shapes, and gives to airy nothing A local habitation and a


name. Such tricks hath strong imagination That, if it would


but apprehend some joy, It comprehends some bringer of


that joy; Or in the night, imagining some fear, How easy is a


bush supposed a bear! (V,i,2-22) Theseus, in Scene V of A


Midsummer Night’s Dream, expresses his doubt in the


verisimilitude of the lover’s recount of their night in the forest.


He says that he has no faith in the ravings of lovers- or


poets-, as they are as likely as madmen are to be divorced


from reason. Coming, as it does, after the resolution of the


lovers’ dilemma, this monologue serves to dismiss most of


the play a hallucinatory imaginings. Theseus is the voice of


reason and authority but, he bows to the resulting change of


affection brought about by the night’s confused goings on,


and allows Hermia, Lysander, Helena and Demetrius to


marry where their hearts would have them. This place where


the line between dream and reality blurs is an important


theme of the play. Theseus is also a lover, but his affair with


Hippolyta is based upon the cold reality of war, "Hippolyta,


I wooed thee with my sword, And won thy love doing thee


injuries…"(I,i,16-17). He is eager to wed Hippolyta and


marriage is the place where reason and judgement rule. He


wins the hand of his bride through action not through flattery,


kisses and sighs inspired by her beauty. In lines 4-6 of his


monologue he dismisses the accounts of lovers and madmen


on the grounds that they are both apt to imagine a false


reality as being real. When, in I,i,56, Hermia tells Theseus, "I


would my father looked but with my eyes", Theseus


responds, "Rather your eyes must with his judgment


look."(57). Theseus has a firm belief that the eyes of lovers


are not to be trusted. That the eye of the lover "…Sees


Helen’s beauty in a brow of Egypt…"(11) is, to him, proof of


this. It precisely by enchanting the eyes of the lovers that the


faeries manage to create so much mayhem: "Flower of this


purple dye, hit with cupid’s archery, sink in apple of his eye!


When his love he doth espy, let her shine as gloriously as the


Venus of the sky."(III,ii,101-7) Puck doesn’t change


Helena’s nature, nor does he change her features. When


Lysander wakes, he beholds the same Helena that he’s


always despised and suddenly he is enthralled. For Theseus


this is merely caprice and in no means grounded in reality.


Theseus doubts even the existence of the faeries, believing


the lovers have, at a loss to explain the inexplicable changes


of heart they’ve experienced, dreamed them up: "And as


imagination bodies forth the forms of things unknown, the


poet’s pen turns them into shapes and gives to airy nothing a


local habitation and a name."(14-17) A trick of the light, an


abundance of shadows, lack of sleep, an overactive


imagination or any one of these or million other causes are


the most likely explanation. In equating lovers, poets and


lunatics Theseus gets into interesting territory and serves to


elevate lovers while he denounces them. The lunatic "…sees


more devils than vast hell can hold..? while the poet’s eye


"…Doth glance from heaven to earth, from earth to


heaven…"(9-13); thus this same imagination is responsible


for both mad ravings and great art. The concrete reality of


earth co-exists with both heaven and hell as the Faerie world


co-exists with the mortal world. A poet could, just as easily,


be a lunatic depending on the nature of his visions. That


lover’s are often (bad) poets, is prime example of this


interchangeability. "Such tricks hath strong imagination, that,


if it would but apprehend a joy, it comprehends some


bringer of that joy; or in the night imagining some fear, how


easy is a bush supposed a bear!"(18-22) Theseus describes


the faulty and incomplete reasoning employed by poets and


lovers alike. Given evidence of some thing, conclusions are


made as to the nature of that thing. This usually incorrect


conclusion, having been reached, is followed by madcap


mix-ups and hilarity- at least for the audience. While


distrusting the nature of love and its effect on people,


Theseus also recognizes the salutary effect it has, as


Demetrius and Lysander, once bitter foes, present


themselves to him as friends. He allows the lovers to marry


according to their affection and betrays his own affection and


appreciation for the intoxicating draught called love, "Here


come the lovers, full of joy and mirth. Joy, gentle friends, go


and fresh days of love accompany your hearts!"(V,i,28-30)


Word Count: 881

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