Theme Of Metaphors In A Midsummer Night's Dream

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Wonderful Shakespeare paper Everything is not what it seems in A Midsummer Night’s Dream, which is essentially how Shakespeare creates the plot, signifies the relationships between the characters, and accentuates various themes. The element of surprise and the play’s atmosphere of chicanery expressed through a multitude of metaphors leave the plot and relationships on uncertain terms. One metaphor, personifying the word serpent, relates to the theme of uncertainty and surprise and accentuates the vivid characters and their relationships. The character Hermia, about her love Lysander, cries out the metaphor: “Help me, Lysander, help me! Do thy best To pluck this crawling serpent from my breast Ay me, for pity. What a dream was here! Lysander, look how I do quake with fear. Methought a serpent eat my heart away, And you sat smiling at his cruel pray.” (A Midsummer Night’s Dream, 2.2. ` 145-150) Lysander and Hermia have just woken up from falling asleep together in the forest, to which Lysander had professed his love to Helena because of the love potion put in his eyes. Hermia awakes, one can guess from hearing Lysander’s profession of love for Helena and disdain for Hermia, and cries out that she had just suffered a terrible love nightmare. The element of uncertainty, as well as disorientation, is reflected in Hermia’s state as she awakes. Is
The metaphor is used in the same context as the chosen one above. Another element of the serpent is included, “for with doubler tongue” comes from the idea of the “serpents tongue”. This is identified as “vulgarly supposed to be the sting, allusively used for venomous speech” (serpent, n." OED Online. Oxford University Press, September 2016. Web. 4 October 2016) . Hermia is alluding to the fact that Demetrius’s harsh words about Lysander were able to kill his character and that he physically harmed him as

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