0% found this document useful (0 votes)
1K views18 pages

As You Like It Summary

Rosalind and her cousin Celia flee into the Forest of Arden after Rosalind is banished from court by her usurping uncle Duke Frederick. In the forest, Rosalind disguises herself as a young man named Ganymede and helps her love Orlando woo her to cure him of his love. Meanwhile, other characters like Oliver, Phoebe, and Touchstone work through their own romantic entanglements. At the end, Rosalind reveals her true identity and several marriages take place, including between Rosalind and Orlando.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
1K views18 pages

As You Like It Summary

Rosalind and her cousin Celia flee into the Forest of Arden after Rosalind is banished from court by her usurping uncle Duke Frederick. In the forest, Rosalind disguises herself as a young man named Ganymede and helps her love Orlando woo her to cure him of his love. Meanwhile, other characters like Oliver, Phoebe, and Touchstone work through their own romantic entanglements. At the end, Rosalind reveals her true identity and several marriages take place, including between Rosalind and Orlando.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 18

AS YOU LIKE IT SUMMARY

& CHARACTERS

Rosalind and her cousin escape into the forest and find Orlando, Rosalind’s
love. Disguised as a boy shepherd, Rosalind has Orlando woo her under the
guise of “curing” him of his love for Rosalind. Rosalind reveals she is a girl
and marries Orlando during a group wedding at the end of the play.

Act I
Orlando, the youngest son of the recently-deceased Sir Roland de Boys, is
treated harshly by his eldest brother, Oliver. Bitter and angry, Orlando
challenges the court wrestler, Charles, to a fight. When Oliver learns of the
fight, Oliver tells Charles to injure Orlando if possible.

Duke Frederick has recently deposed his brother, Duke Senior, as head of the
court. But he allowed Senior’s daughter, Rosalind, to remain, and she and
Celia, the new Duke’s daughter, watch the wrestling competition. During the
match, Rosalind falls in love with Orlando, who beats Charles. Rosalind
gives Orlando a chain to wear; in turn, he is overcome with love.

Act II
Shortly after, Orlando is warned of his brother’s plot against him and seeks
refuge in the Forest of Arden. At the same time, and seemingly without
cause, Duke Frederick banishes Rosalind. She decides to seek shelter in the
Forest of Arden with Celia. They both disguise themselves: Rosalind as the
young man Ganymede and Celia as his shepherdess sister Aliena.
Touchstone, the court fool, also goes with them.

ACT III

In the Forest of Arden, the weary cousins happen upon Silvius, a lovesick
shepherd. Silvius was in the act of declaring his feelings for Phoebe, a
scornful shepherdess. Ganymede buys the lease to the property of an old
shepherd who needs someone to manage his estate. Ganymede and Aliena set
up home in the forest. Not far away, and unaware of the newcomers, Duke
Senior is living a simple outdoor life with his fellow exiled courtiers and
huntsmen. Their merriment is interrupted by the arrival of Orlando, who
seeks nourishment for himself and his servant. The two men are welcomed
by the outlaw courtiers.

Ganymede and Aliena find verses addressed to Rosalind hung on the forest
branches by Orlando. Ganymede finds Orlando and proposes to cure Orlando
of his love. To do this, Orlando will woo Ganymede as if he were Rosalind
(even though “he” really is . . . Rosalind). Orlando consents and visits
Ganymede/Rosalind every day for his lessons. In the meantime, the
shepherdess Phoebe has fallen for Ganymede while the shepherd Silvius still
pursues her.  Furthermore, Touchstone, the court fool, has dazzled a country
girl, Audrey, with his courtly manners. Audrey deserts her young suitor,
William, for him.

All the world’s a stage.


— AS YOU LIKE IT, ACT 2 SCENE 7
Act IV
When Duke Frederick hears Orlando disappeared at the same time as
Rosalind and Celia, he orders Oliver to the forest to seek his brother. In the
forest, Orlando saves Oliver’s life, injuring his arm in the process. Oliver
runs into Ganymede and Aliena in the forest and relates this news. Rosalind
(disguised as Ganymede) is overcome with her feelings for Orlando. Celia
(disguised as Aliena) and Oliver quickly fall in love with one another.
Rosalind decides that it is time to end her game with Orlando and devises a
plan in which everyone will get married.

Act V
As Ganymede, Rosalind promises Phoebe that they will marry, Celia will
marry Oliver, Touchstone will marry Audrey, and Orlando will marry
Rosalind. She makes Phoebe promise that if they, for some reason, don’t get
married, Phoebe will marry Silvius instead.

On the day of the wedding, and with the help of the god Hymen, Rosalind
reappears in her female clothes. Duke Senior gives her away to Orlando,
while Phoebe accepts Silvius. Orlando’s other older brother returns from
college with the news that Celia’s father, Duke Ferdinand, has left court to
become a hermit. Thus, everyone is happy (except maybe Phoebe, who
marries someone she doesn’t love and Silvius, who marries someone who
doesn’t love him). The play ends with a joyful dance to celebrate the four
marriages.
AS YOU LIKE IT
 

Character List
 

CHARACTERS CHARACTER LIST
 

Rosalind –  The daughter of Duke Senior. Rosalind, considered one of


Shakespeare’s most delightful heroines, is independent minded, strong-
willed, good-hearted, and terribly clever. Rather than slink off into defeated
exile, Rosalind resourcefully uses her trip to the Forest of Ardenne as an
opportunity to take control of her own destiny. When she disguises herself as
Ganymede—a handsome young man—and offers herself as a tutor in the
ways of love to her beloved Orlando, Rosalind’s talents and charms are on
full display. Only Rosalind, for instance, is both aware of the foolishness of
romantic love and delighted to be in love. She teaches those around her to
think, feel, and love better than they have previously, and she ensures that the
courtiers returning from Ardenne are far gentler than those who fled to it.
 
Orlando –  The youngest son of Sir Rowland de Bois and younger brother of
Oliver. Orlando is an attractive young man who, under his brother’s
neglectful care, has languished without a gentleman’s education or training.
Regardless, he considers himself to have great potential, and his victorious
battle with Charles proves him right. Orlando cares for the aging Adam in the
Forest of Ardenne and later risks his life to save Oliver from a hungry
lioness, proving himself a proper gentleman. He is a fitting hero for the play
and, though he proves no match for her wit or poetry, the most obvious
romantic match for Rosalind.
 
Duke Senior –  The father of Rosalind and the rightful ruler of the dukedom
in which the play is set. Having been banished by his usurping brother,
Frederick, Duke Senior now lives in exile in the Forest of Ardenne with a
number of loyal men, including Lord Amiens and Jaques. We have the sense
that Senior did not put up much of a fight to keep his dukedom, for he seems
to make the most of whatever life gives him. Content in the forest, where he
claims to learn as much from stones and brooks as he would in a church or
library, Duke Senior proves himself to be a kind and fair-minded ruler.
 
Jaques –  A faithful lord who accompanies Duke Senior into exile in the
Forest of Ardenne. Jaques is an example of a stock figure in Elizabethan
comedy, the man possessed of a hopelessly melancholy disposition. Much
like a referee in a football game, he stands on the sidelines, watching and
judging the actions of the other characters without ever fully participating.
Given his inability to participate in life, it is fitting that Jaques alone refuses
to follow Duke Senior and the other courtiers back to court, and instead
resolves to assume a solitary and contemplative life in a monastery.
 
Celia –  The daughter of Duke Frederick and Rosalind’s dearest friend.
Celia’s devotion to Rosalind is unmatched, as evidenced by her decision to
follow her cousin into exile. To make the trip, Celia assumes the disguise of a
simple shepherdess and calls herself Aliena. As elucidated by her extreme
love of Rosalind and her immediate devotion to Oliver, whom she marries at
the end of the play, Celia possesses a loving heart, but is prone to deep,
almost excessive emotions.
 
Duke Frederick –  The brother of Duke Senior and usurper of his throne.
Duke Frederick’s cruel nature and volatile temper are displayed when he
banishes his niece, Rosalind, from court without reason. That Celia, his own
daughter, cannot mitigate his unfounded anger demonstrates the intensity of
the duke’s hatefulness. Frederick mounts an army against his exiled brother
but aborts his vengeful mission after he meets an old religious man on the
road to the Forest of Ardenne. He immediately changes his ways, dedicating
himself to a monastic life and returning the crown to his brother, thus
testifying to the ease and elegance with which humans can sometimes change
for the better.
 
Touchstone –  A clown in Duke Frederick’s court who accompanies
Rosalind and Celia in their flight to Ardenne. Although Touchstone’s job, as
fool, is to criticize the behavior and point out the folly of those around him,
Touchstone fails to do so with even a fraction of Rosalind’s grace. Next to
his mistress, the clown seems hopelessly vulgar and narrow-minded. Almost
every line he speaks echoes with bawdy innuendo.
 
Oliver –  The oldest son of Sir Rowland de Bois and sole inheritor of the de
Bois estate. Oliver is a loveless young man who begrudges his brother,
Orlando, a gentleman’s education. He admits to hating Orlando without
cause or reason and goes to great lengths to ensure his brother’s downfall.
When Duke Frederick employs Oliver to find his missing brother, Oliver
finds himself living in despair in the Forest of Ardenne, where Orlando saves
his life. This display of undeserved generosity prompts Oliver to change
himself into a better, more loving person. His transformation is evidenced by
his love for the disguised Celia, whom he takes to be a simple shepherdess.
 
Silvius –  A young, suffering shepherd, who is desperately in love with the
disdainful Phoebe. Conforming to the model of Petrarchan love, Silvius
prostrates himself before a woman who refuses to return his affections. In the
end, however, he wins the object of his desire.
 
Phoebe –  A young shepherdess, who disdains the affections of Silvius. She
falls in love with Ganymede, who is really Rosalind in disguise, but Rosalind
tricks Phoebe into marrying Silvius.
 
Lord Amiens –  A faithful lord who accompanies Duke Senior into exile in
the Forest of Ardenne. Lord Amiens is rather jolly and loves to sing.
 
Charles –  A professional wrestler in Duke Frederick’s court. Charles
demonstrates both his caring nature and his political savvy when he asks
Oliver to intercede in his upcoming fight with Orlando: he does not want to
injure the young man and thereby lose favor among the nobles who support
him. Charles’s concern for Orlando proves unwarranted when Orlando beats
him senseless.
Adam –  The elderly former servant of Sir Rowland de Bois. Having
witnessed Orlando’s hardships, Adam offers not only to accompany his
young master into exile but to fund their journey with the whole of his
modest life’s savings. He is a model of loyalty and devoted service.
Sir Rowland De Bois –  The father of Oliver and Orlando, friend of Duke
Senior, and enemy of Duke Frederick. Upon Sir Rowland’s death, the vast
majority of his estate was handed over to Oliver according to the custom of
primogeniture.
Corin –  A shepherd. Corin attempts to counsel his friend Silvius in the ways
of love, but Silvius refuses to listen.
Audrey –  A simpleminded goatherd who agrees to marry Touchstone.
William –  A young country boy who is in love with Audrey.
Posted by degmateng.blogspot at 23:15 No comments: 
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to TwitterShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
THE MERCHANT OF VENICE
SUMMARY & CHARACTERS
 

THE MERCHANT OF VENICE


SUMMARY &   CHARACTERS
Antonio, an antisemitic merchant, takes a loan from the Jew Shylock to help
his friend to court Portia. Antonio can’t repay the loan, and without mercy,
Shylock demands a pound of his flesh. The heiress Portia, now the wife of
Antonio’s friend, dresses as a lawyer and saves Antonio.

More detail: 3 minute read


Act I
In Venice, a merchant named Antonio worries that his ships are overdue. As
his colleagues offer comfort, his young friends—Bassanio, Graziano, and
Lorenzo—arrive. Bassanio asks Antonio for a loan, so that he can pursue the
wealthy Portia, who lives in Belmont. Antonio cannot afford the loan.
Instead, he sends Bassanio to borrow the money on the security of Antonio’s
expected shipments.

At Belmont, Portia and her maid, Nerissa, discuss the suitors who have come
in response to Portia’s father’s strange will. The will says Portia may only
marry a man who chooses the correct casket made from three possible
options: gold, silver, and lead. Much to Portia’s distress, all her suitors are
unsatisfactory. However, she does fondly remember a time when Bassanio
came to Belmont, and that leaves her with some hope.

Bassanio approaches Shylock, a Jewish moneylender, about the loan.


Shylock holds a grudge against Antonio for his lending practices and
apparent antisemitism. Still he offers Bassanio the loan. Instead of charging
interest, seemingly as a kind of joke, he asks for a pound of Antonio’s flesh if
the loan isn’t repaid within three months. The bond is agreed to (who
wouldn’t agree to that?) and Bassanio prepares to leave for Belmont with his
friend Graziano.

All that glisters is not gold


— MERCHANT OF VENICE, ACT 2 SCENE 7
Act II
Meanwhile, one of Shylock’s servants, Launcelot, wishes to change masters
and persuades Bassanio to employ him. Shylock’s daughter, Jessica, also
longs to leave home. She wants to become a Christian and marry Antonio’s
friend Lorenzo. Before he departs to serve his new master, Launcelot takes a
letter to Lorenzo that contains plans for Lorenzo and Jessica to elope that
night. When Shylock goes out, Jessica escapes to elope, taking gold and
jewels with her. The following day, Bassanio sets sail for Belmont, while
Shylock rages over the loss of his daughter and the treasures she has stolen.

In Belmont, one of Portia’s suitors (the Prince of Morocco) chooses the


golden casket, while another (the Prince of Aragon) selects silver. Both chose
the wrong casket and are unsuccessful. As Aragon leaves, Bassanio is
announced. Portia eagerly goes to greet him.

If you prick us, do we not bleed?


— MERCHANT OF VENICE, ACT 3 SCENE 1
Act III
After a few days, Shylock hears that his daughter Jessica is squandering her
stolen wealth in Genoa. He begins to rail bitterly against Christians. He
reminds Antonio’s friends that if the loan is not repaid on time, he will insist
on the original agreement of one pound of flesh.

Back in Belmont, Bassanio chooses the lead casket, and in so doing, he wins
Portia. His friend Graziano asks for Portia’s maid Nerissa to be his wife.
Portia gives her ring to Bassanio, making him promise never to give it to
another. As Lorenzo and Jessica come to Belmont, news arrives that
Antonio’s ships have been lost at sea, and he is now bankrupt. They are also
told Shylock insists on the fulfilment of his bond and has had Antonio
arrested. Bassanio and Graziano leave in haste to help Antonio. Portia and
Nerissa resolve to follow afterwards, disguised as lawyers.

ACT IV

In the court in Venice, Shylock demands his pound of flesh. The Duke,
presiding over the court, seeks legal advice from the lawyer “Balthazar,” who
is Portia in disguise. Portia pleads for Shylock to have mercy on Antonio.
Bassanio offers his wife’s money, which would more than pay the debt, but
Shylock refuses to accept. Antonio’s death is only prevented as Balthazar
explains the bond is for flesh but not for a single drop of blood. So Shylock
cannot collect the pound of flesh.
For threatening the life of a Venetian, Shylock forfeits his goods to Antonio
and Bassanio. Antonio refuses his share of compensation and asks for it to be
put in a trust for Lorenzo and Jessica. He also demands that Shylock becomes
a Christian. Broken and in submission, Shylock leaves the court. Bassanio
and Graziano thank the lawyers, who ask for their rings as legal fees.
Bassanio and Graziano refuse until Antonio intervenes and makes them give
the rings to the lawyers.

ACT V

Undisguised, Portia and Nerissa return home at night to find Lorenzo and
Jessica enjoying the tranquillity of Belmont. When their husbands arrive,
Portia and Nerissa scold them for giving away their rings, pretending they
had been given away to other women. Before long, they reveal themselves as
the lawyers from the trial. Antonio receives news that his ships have returned
safely after all (looks like we didn’t need to go through all this mess in the
first place!). The play ends as the three couples prepare to celebrate their
marriages.

Character List

THE MERCHANT OF VENICE


 
 

CHARACTERS CHARACTER LIST
Shylock – A Jewish moneylender in Venice. Angered by his mistreatment at
the hands of Venice’s Christians, particularly Antonio, Shylock schemes to
eke out his revenge by ruthlessly demanding as payment a pound of
Antonio’s flesh. Although seen by the rest of the play’s characters as an
inhuman monster, Shylock at times diverges from stereotype and reveals
himself to be quite human. These contradictions, and his eloquent
expressions of hatred, have earned Shylock a place as one of Shakespeare’s
most memorable characters.
 
Portia – A wealthy heiress from Belmont. Portia’s beauty is matched only by
her intelligence. Bound by a clause in her father’s will that forces her to
marry whichever suitor chooses correctly among three caskets, Portia is
nonetheless able to marry her true love, Bassanio. Far and away the most
clever of the play’s characters, it is Portia, in the disguise of a young law
clerk, who saves Antonio from Shylock’s knife.
 
Antonio – The merchant whose love for his friend Bassanio prompts him to
sign Shylock’s contract and almost lose his life. Antonio is something of a
mercurial figure, often inexplicably melancholy and, as Shylock points out,
possessed of an incorrigible dislike of Jews. Nonetheless, Antonio is beloved
of his friends and proves merciful to Shylock, albeit with conditions.
 
Bassanio – A gentleman of Venice, and a kinsman and dear friend to
Antonio. Bassanio’s love for the wealthy Portia leads him to borrow money
from Shylock with Antonio as his guarantor. An ineffectual businessman,
Bassanio proves himself a worthy suitor, correctly identifying the casket that
contains Portia’s portrait.
 
Gratiano – A friend of Bassanio’s who accompanies him to Belmont. A
coarse and garrulous young man, Gratiano is Shylock’s most vocal and
insulting critic during the trial. While Bassanio courts Portia, Gratiano falls in
love with and eventually weds Portia’s lady-in-waiting, Nerissa.
Jessica – Although she is Shylock’s daughter, Jessica hates life in her
father’s house, and elopes with the young Christian gentleman, Lorenzo. The
fate of her soul is often in doubt: the play’s characters wonder if her marriage
can overcome the fact that she was born a Jew, and we wonder if her sale of a
ring given to her father by her mother is excessively callous.
 
Lorenzo – A friend of Bassanio and Antonio, Lorenzo is in love with
Shylock’s daughter, Jessica. He schemes to help Jessica escape from her
father’s house, and he eventually elopes with her to Belmont.
 
Nerissa – Portia’s lady-in-waiting and confidante. She marries Gratiano and
escorts Portia on Portia’s trip to Venice by disguising herself as her law
clerk.
 
Launcelot Gobbo – Bassanio’s servant. A comical, clownish figure who is
especially adept at making puns, Launcelot leaves Shylock’s service in order
to work for Bassanio.
 
The Prince Of Morocco – A Moorish prince who seeks Portia’s hand in
marriage. The prince of Morocco asks Portia to ignore his dark countenance
and seeks to win her by picking one of the three caskets. Certain that the
caskets reflect Portia’s beauty and stature, the prince of Morocco picks the
gold chest, which proves to be incorrect.
 
The Prince Of Arragon – An arrogant Spanish nobleman who also attempts
to win Portia’s hand by picking a casket. Like the prince of Morocco,
however, the prince of Arragon chooses unwisely. He picks the silver casket,
which gives him a message calling him an idiot instead of Portia’s hand.
 
Salarino – A Venetian gentleman, and friend to Antonio, Bassanio, and
Lorenzo. Salarino escorts the newlyweds Jessica and Lorenzo to Belmont,
and returns with Bassanio and Gratiano for Antonio’s trial. He is often
almost indistinguishable from his companion Solanio.
Solanio – A Venetian gentleman, and frequent counterpart to Salarino.
 
The Duke Of Venice – The ruler of Venice, who presides over Antonio’s
trial. Although a powerful man, the duke’s state is built on respect for the
law, and he is unable to help Antonio.
 
Old Gobbo – Launcelot’s father, also a servant in Venice.
 
Tubal – A Jew in Venice, and one of Shylock’s friends.
 
Doctor Bellario – A wealthy Paduan lawyer and Portia’s cousin. Doctor
Bellario never appears in the play, but he gives Portia’s servant the letters of
introduction needed for her to make her appearance in court.
 
Balthasar – Portia’s servant, whom she dispatches to get the appropriate
materials from Doctor Bellario.
Posted by degmateng.blogspot at 23:14 No comments: 
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to TwitterShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest

Macbeth Summary and characters


 Macbeth Summary
 
Three witches tell the Scottish general Macbeth that he will be King of
Scotland. Encouraged by his wife, Macbeth kills the king, becomes the new
king, and kills more people out of paranoia. Civil war erupts to overthrow
Macbeth, resulting in more death.
ACT I

On a bleak Scottish moorland, Macbeth and Banquo, two of King Duncan’s


generals, discover three strange women (witches). The witches prophesy that
Macbeth will be promoted twice: to Thane of Cawdor (a rank of the
aristocracy bestowed by grateful kings) and King of Scotland. Banquo’s
descendants will be kings, but Banquo isn’t promised any kingdom himself.
The generals want to hear more, but the “weird sisters” disappear.
Soon afterwards, King Duncan names Macbeth Thane of Cawdor as a reward
for his success in the recent battles. The promotion seems to support the
prophecy. The King then proposes to make a brief visit that night to
Macbeth’s castle at Inverness. Lady Macbeth receives news from her
husband about the prophecy and his new title. She vows to help him become
king by whatever means are necessary (*ominous music*).

ACT II

Macbeth returns to his castle, followed almost immediately by King Duncan.


The Macbeths plot together to kill Duncan and wait until everyone is asleep.
At the appointed time, Lady Macbeth gives the guards drugged wine so
Macbeth can enter and kill the King. He regrets this almost immediately, but
his wife reassures him. She leaves the bloody daggers by the dead king just
before Macduff, a nobleman, arrives. When Macduff discovers the murder,
Macbeth kills the drunken guards in a show of rage and retribution. Duncan’s
sons, Malcolm and Donalbain, flee, fearing for their own lives; but they are,
nevertheless, blamed for the murder.

ACT III

Macbeth becomes King of Scotland but is plagued by feelings of insecurity.


He remembers the prophecy that Banquo’s descendants will inherit the
throne and arranges for Banquo and his son Fleance to be killed. In the
darkness, Banquo is murdered, but his son escapes the assassins. At his state
banquet that night, Macbeth sees the ghost of Banquo and worries the
courtiers with his mad response. Lady Macbeth dismisses the court and
unsuccessfully tries to calm her husband.

ACT IV

Macbeth seeks out the witches who say that he will be safe until a local
wood, Birnam Wood, marches into battle against him. He also need not fear
anyone born of woman (that sounds secure, no loop-holes here). They also
prophesy that the Scottish succession will still come from Banquo’s
son. Macbeth embarks on a reign of terror, slaughtering many, including
Macduff’s family. Macduff had gone to seek Malcolm (one of Duncan’s sons
who fled) at the court of the English king. Malcolm is young and unsure of
himself, but Macduff, pained with grief, persuades him to lead an army
against Macbeth.

ACT V

Macbeth feels safe in his remote castle at Dunsinane until he is told that
Birnam Wood is moving towards him. Malcolm’s army is carrying branches
from the forest as camouflage for their assault on Macbeth’s stronghold.
Meanwhile, an overwrought and conscience-ridden Lady Macbeth walks in
her sleep and tells her secrets to her doctor. She commits suicide. As the final
battle commences, Macbeth hears of Lady Macbeth’s suicide and mourns.

In the midst of a losing battle, Macduff challenges Macbeth. Macbeth learns


Macduff is the child of a caesarean birth (loophole!), realises he is doomed,
and submits to his enemy. Macduff triumphs and brings the head of the
traitor Macbeth to Malcolm. Malcolm declares peace and goes to Scone to be
crowned king.

Character List
 

CHARACTERS CHARACTER LIST
Macbeth – Macbeth is a Scottish general and the thane of Glamis who is led
to wicked thoughts by the prophecies of the three witches, especially after
their prophecy that he will be made thane of Cawdor comes true. Macbeth is
a brave soldier and a powerful man, but he is not a virtuous one. He is easily
tempted into murder to fulfill his ambitions to the throne, and once he
commits his first crime and is crowned King of Scotland, he embarks on
further atrocities with increasing ease. Ultimately, Macbeth proves himself
better suited to the battlefield than to political intrigue, because he lacks the
skills necessary to rule without being a tyrant. His response to every problem
is violence and murder. Unlike Shakespeare’s great villains, such as Iago
in Othello and Richard III in Richard III, Macbeth is never comfortable in
his role as a criminal. He is unable to bear the psychological consequences of
his atrocities.
 
Lady Macbeth –  Macbeth’s wife, a deeply ambitious woman who lusts for
power and position. Early in the play she seems to be the stronger and more
ruthless of the two, as she urges her husband to kill Duncan and seize the
crown. After the bloodshed begins, however, Lady Macbeth falls victim to
guilt and madness to an even greater degree than her husband. Her
conscience affects her to such an extent that she eventually commits suicide.
Interestingly, she and Macbeth are presented as being deeply in love, and
many of Lady Macbeth’s speeches imply that her influence over her husband
is primarily sexual. Their joint alienation from the world, occasioned by their
partnership in crime, seems to strengthen the attachment that they feel to each
another.
 
The Three Witches –  Three “black and midnight hags” who plot mischief
against Macbeth using charms, spells, and prophecies. Their predictions
prompt him to murder Duncan, to order the deaths of Banquo and his son,
and to blindly believe in his own immortality. The play leaves the witches’
true identity unclear—aside from the fact that they are servants of Hecate, we
know little about their place in the cosmos. In some ways they resemble the
mythological Fates, who impersonally weave the threads of human destiny.
They clearly take a perverse delight in using their knowledge of the future to
toy with and destroy human beings.
 
Banquo – The brave, noble general whose children, according to the
witches’ prophecy, will inherit the Scottish throne. Like Macbeth, Banquo
thinks ambitious thoughts, but he does not translate those thoughts into
action. In a sense, Banquo’s character stands as a rebuke to Macbeth, since
he represents the path Macbeth chose not to take: a path in which ambition
need not lead to betrayal and murder. Appropriately, then, it is Banquo’s
ghost—and not Duncan’s—that haunts Macbeth. In addition to embodying
Macbeth’s guilt for killing Banquo, the ghost also reminds Macbeth that he
did not emulate Banquo’s reaction to the witches’ prophecy.
 
King Duncan – The good King of Scotland whom Macbeth, in his ambition
for the crown, murders. Duncan is the model of a virtuous, benevolent, and
farsighted ruler. His death symbolizes the destruction of an order in Scotland
that can be restored only when Duncan’s line, in the person of Malcolm, once
more occupies the throne.
 
Macduff – A Scottish nobleman hostile to Macbeth’s kingship from the start.
He eventually becomes a leader of the crusade to unseat Macbeth. The
crusade’s mission is to place the rightful king, Malcolm, on the throne, but
Macduff also desires vengeance for Macbeth’s murder of Macduff’s wife and
young son.
 
Malcolm – The son of Duncan, whose restoration to the throne signals
Scotland’s return to order following Macbeth’s reign of terror. Malcolm
becomes a serious challenge to Macbeth with Macduff’s aid (and the support
of England). Prior to this, he appears weak and uncertain of his own power,
as when he and Donalbain flee Scotland after their father’s murder.
 
Hecate – The goddess of witchcraft, who helps the three witches work their
mischief on Macbeth.
 
Fleance – Banquo’s son, who survives Macbeth’s attempt to murder him. At
the end of the play, Fleance’s whereabouts are unknown. Presumably, he
may come to rule Scotland, fulfilling the witches’ prophecy that Banquo’s
sons will sit on the Scottish throne.
 
Lennox – A Scottish nobleman.
 
Ross – A Scottish nobleman.
 
The Murderers –  A group of ruffians conscripted by Macbeth to murder
Banquo, Fleance (whom they fail to kill), and Macduff’s wife and children.
 
Porter – The drunken doorman of Macbeth’s castle.
 
Lady Macduff –  Macduff’s wife. The scene in her castle provides our only
glimpse of a domestic realm other than that of Macbeth and Lady Macbeth.
She and her home serve as contrasts to Lady Macbeth and the hellish world
of Inverness.
Donalbain –  Duncan’s son and Malcolm’s younger brother.
Posted by degmateng.blogspot at 23:13 No comments: 
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to TwitterShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest

Julius Caesar Summary and characters


 Julius Caesar Summary
Jealous conspirators convince Caesar’s friend Brutus to join their
assassination plot against Caesar. To stop Caesar from gaining too much
power, Brutus and the conspirators kill him on the Ides of March. Mark
Antony drives the conspirators out of Rome and fights them in a battle.
Brutus and his friend Cassius lose and kill themselves, leaving Antony to rule
in Rome.

Act I
The tribunes of Rome, Marullus and Flavius, break up a gathering of citizens
who want to celebrate Julius Caesar’s triumphant return from war. The
victory is marked by public games in which Caesar’s protégé, Mark Antony,
takes part. On his way to the arena, Caesar is stopped by a stranger who
warns him that he should ‘Beware the Ides [15th] of March.’

Fellow senators, Caius Cassius and Marcus Brutus, are suspicious of


Caesar’s reactions to the power he holds in the Republic. They fear he will
accept offers to become Emperor. He has been gaining a lot of power
recently and people treat him like a god. Cassius, a successful general
himself, is jealous of Caesar. Brutus has a more balanced view of the political
position. The conspirator Casca enters and tells Brutus of a ceremony held by
the plebeians. They offered Caesar a crown three times, and he refused it
every time. But the conspirators are still wary of his aspirations.

Act II
Cassius, Casca, and their allies plant false documents to manipulate Brutus to
join their cause to remove Caesar. After doing so, they visit Brutus at night in
his home to persuade him of their views. There they plan Caesar’s death.
Brutus is troubled but refuses to confide in his devoted wife, Portia. On 15
March, Caesar’s wife, Calpurnia, urges him not to go to the Senate. She has
had visionary dreams and fears the portents of the overnight storms.

The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars, but in ourselves.


— JULIUS CAESAR, ACT 1 SCENE 2
Act III 
Caesar is nevertheless persuaded by flattery to go to the Capitol. At the
Capitol, he is stabbed by each conspirator in turn. As Brutus gives the final
blow, Caesar utters the famous phrase:

Et tu, Brute?
— JULIUS CAESAR, ACT 3 SCENE 1
ACT III
Against Cassius’s advice, Brutus allows Mark Antony to speak a funeral
oration for Caesar in the market place. He is allowed under the condition that
first Brutus must address the people to explain the conspirators’ reasons and
their fears for Caesar’s ambition. After Brutus speaks, the crowd becomes
calm and supports his cause. However, Antony, in his speech, questions the
motives of the conspirators and reminds the crowd of Caesar’s benevolent
actions and of his refusal to accept the crown. He also reads them Caesar’s
will, in which Caesar leaves public land and money to each Roman citizen.
Antony’s speech stirs the crowd into a murderous riot, and the conspirators
are forced to flee from the city.

Act IV
Brutus and Cassius gather an army in Northern Greece and prepare to fight
the forces led by Mark Antony. Antony has joined with Caesar’s great-
nephew, Octavius, and with a man called Lepidus. Away from Rome, Brutus
and Cassius are filled with doubts about the future and quarrel over funds for
their soldiers’ pay. After making amends, they prepare to engage Antony’s
army at Philippi, despite Cassius’ misgivings about the site. Brutus stoically
receives news of his wife’s suicide in Rome. He then sees Caesar’s ghost as
he tries to rest and is unable to sleep on the eve of the conflict.

Men at some time are masters of their fates.


— JULIUS CAESAR, ACT 1 SCENE 2
Act V
In the battle, the Republicans (led by Brutus) appear to be winning at first.
But when Cassius’ messenger’s horse seems to be overtaken by the enemy,
Cassius fears the worst and gets his servant to help him to a quick death.
After finding Cassius’s body, Brutus commits suicide. He believes this to be
the only honourable option left to him. Antony, triumphant on the battlefield,
praises Brutus as ‘the noblest Roman of them all’ and orders a formal funeral
before he and Octavius return to rule in Rome.

CHARACTERS
Brutus – A supporter of the republic who believes strongly in a government
guided by the votes of senators. While Brutus loves Caesar as a friend, he
opposes the ascension of any single man to the position of dictator, and he
fears that Caesar aspires to such power. Brutus’s inflexible sense of honor
makes it easy for Caesar’s enemies to manipulate him into believing that
Caesar must die in order to preserve the republic. While the other
conspirators act out of envy and rivalry, only Brutus truly believes that
Caesar’s death will benefit Rome. Unlike Caesar, Brutus is able to separate
completely his public life from his private life; by giving priority to matters
of state, he epitomizes Roman virtue. Torn between his loyalty to Caesar and
his allegiance to the state, Brutus becomes the tragic hero of the play.
Julius Caesar –  A great Roman general and senator, recently returned to
Rome in triumph after a successful military campaign. While his good friend
Brutus worries that Caesar may aspire to dictatorship over the Roman
republic, Caesar seems to show no such inclination, declining the crown
several times. Yet while Caesar may not be unduly power-hungry, he does
possess his share of flaws. He is unable to separate his public life from his
private life, and, seduced by the populace’s increasing idealization and
idolization of his image, he ignores ill omens and threats against his life,
believing himself as eternal as the North Star.
Antony – A friend of Caesar. Antony claims allegiance to Brutus and the
conspirators after Caesar’s death in order to save his own life. Later,
however, when speaking a funeral oration over Caesar’s body, he
spectacularly persuades the audience to withdraw its support of Brutus and
instead condemn him as a traitor. With tears on his cheeks and Caesar’s will
in his hand, Antony engages masterful rhetoric to stir the crowd to revolt
against the conspirators. Antony’s desire to exclude Lepidus from the power
that Antony and Octavius intend to share hints at his own ambitious nature.
Cassius – A talented general and longtime acquaintance of Caesar. Cassius
dislikes the fact that Caesar has become godlike in the eyes of the Romans.
He slyly leads Brutus to believe that Caesar has become too powerful and
must die, finally converting Brutus to his cause by sending him forged letters
claiming that the Roman people support the death of Caesar. Impulsive and
unscrupulous, Cassius harbors no illusions about the way the political world
works. A shrewd opportunist, he proves successful but lacks integrity.
Octavius – Caesar’s adopted son and appointed successor. Octavius, who
had been traveling abroad, returns after Caesar’s death; he then joins with
Antony and sets off to fight Cassius and Brutus. Antony tries to control
Octavius’s movements, but Octavius follows his adopted father’s example
and emerges as the authoritative figure, paving the way for his eventual
seizure of the reins of Roman government.
Casca – A public figure opposed to Caesar’s rise to power. Casca relates to
Cassius and Brutus how Antony offered the crown to Caesar three times and
how each time Caesar declined it. He believes, however, that Caesar is the
consummate actor, lulling the populace into believing that he has no personal
ambition.
Calpurnia –  Caesar’s wife. Calpurnia invests great authority in omens and
portents. She warns Caesar against going to the Senate on the Ides of March,
since she has had terrible nightmares and heard reports of many bad omens.
Nevertheless, Caesar’s ambition ultimately causes him to disregard her
advice.
Portia – Brutus’s wife; the daughter of a noble Roman who took sides
against Caesar. Portia, accustomed to being Brutus’s confidante, is upset to
find him so reluctant to speak his mind when she finds him troubled. Brutus
later hears that Portia has killed herself out of grief that Antony and Octavius
have become so powerful.
Flavius – A tribune (an official elected by the people to protect their rights).
Flavius condemns the plebeians for their fickleness in cheering Caesar, when
once they cheered for Caesar’s enemy Pompey. Flavius is punished along
with Murellus for removing the decorations from Caesar’s statues during
Caesar’s triumphal parade.
Cicero – A Roman senator renowned for his oratorical skill. Cicero speaks at
Caesar’s triumphal parade. He later dies at the order of Antony, Octavius,
and Lepidus.
Lepidus – The third member of Antony and Octavius’s coalition. Though
Antony has a low opinion of Lepidus, Octavius trusts his loyalty.
Murellus – Like Flavius, a tribune who condemns the plebeians for their
fickleness in cheering Caesar, when once they cheered for Caesar’s enemy
Pompey. Murellus and Flavius are punished for removing the decorations
from Caesar’s statues during Caesar’s triumphal parade.
Decius – A member of the conspiracy. Decius convinces Caesar that
Calpurnia misinterpreted her dire nightmares and that, in fact, no danger
awaits him at the Senate. Decius leads Caesar right into the hands of the
conspirators.

You might also like