Theme Of Love In A Midsummer Night's Dream

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Love is a very complicated factor of life, yet love also is also an important driving force in the course of a person’s life. There are however variables concerning love, most notably being the concept of “true” love and “infatuated’ love. This is an important part of the theme within William Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream as it is focused upon two different series of conflict involving young and ancient love. The only way to differentiate between love and not love are to look closely at a person’s actions and tone in a relationship.
The first case of conflict in the reading is shown when the reader is introduced to Hermia, Lysander, and Demetrius. Hermia becomes the main focus as her father, Egeus, appeals to Duke Theseus to invoke ancient law so that his daughter will marry Demetrius and not Lysander. The problem with the situation is that Hermia is in love with Lysander, and him with her. Demetrius claims that he loves Hermia as well, even saying that he deserves her love since he is from noble birth, “...yield thy crazed title to my certain right.” (Act I, Lines 91-92). The tone that is used by Demetrius through the few times that he speaks through the scene however portrays a sense that he does not truly love Hermia, but is marrying her to appease her father and increase his own reputation. A person truly in love would fight till the end to protect their …show more content…

No where does he say that finding love is easy or that it is easy to tell if the love is true or not however, he does draw a clear line between the two. His work within A Midsummer Night’s Dream challenged the social and political world with the concept of accepting non-arranged noble marriages for the sake of love instead of political influence. Despite the society he faced, Shakespeare revealed the flaws in love and forever reshaped the morals of future

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