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Saturday, March 23, 2019

Comparing A Midsummer Nights Dream and Romeo and Juliet :: comparison compare contrast essays

A Midsummer Nights Dream is, in a way, Romeo and Juliet turned inside come in--a tragedy turned farcical. The tragedy both ar based on is the story of Pyramus and Thisbe. In one, Ovids story is treated as a melodrama (in Romeo and Juliet) and in another, it is fodder for comedy (in A Midsummer Nights Dream).   The description of Pyramus and Thisbe is simply told in Book IV of Metamorphoses. The title characters are in love with one another, still they cannot be together because they are confused by a wall. More importantly though, they are degage by their parents who forbid the relationship to progress. The two lovers will not be denied and so plan to meet in secret one night. However, each arrives at the arranged r extirpateezvous point at different times, and this complicates things. Pyramus arrives after Thisbe, plainly she is hidden from sight at that moment, and he believes she has been eaten by a social lion because he finds a bloody scarf of hers, so he kills himse lf. When Thisbe comes out of hiding, she finds her beloved dead and, too, commits suicide.   All this is certainly very sad and pathetic. So what better story to base a melodramatic play on? Shakespeare does just that in Romeo and Juliet. He uses Pyramus and Thisbe, borrowing their plight of being separated by parents, their clandestine relationship, and their suicides.   Through this, he satisfies the qualities of melodrama. Romeo and Juliet wrings a good telephone out of audience members probably every time it is performed. That is because it is easy to distinguish with the star-crossed lovers and the fact they are kept from what they want most. Empathy plays a major role, as much as any of the characters. It almost makes the audience part of the play. The spectator is part of the action in essence, rooting for the good guys, for us, and not them, the ill guys.   However, the protagonists do not win in the end. This is yet another melodramatic quality found in bot h Pyramus and Thisbe and in Romeo and Juliet. It seems that they should, and will, be together in the end and be allowed to love each other freely, but that is not the way it turns out. Instead, the young lovers are dead by plays end because of pride and hate. The entire audience watching this spectacle is left feeling the homogeneous way and asks, But why couldnt they just be together?

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