Cause Suffrage And Identity In Shakespeare's Twelfth Night

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In Twelfth Night the reader learns a lot through mistaken identity and the effects it has on human behavior and Relationships. We can best see this impact on the characters Olivia, Orsino, Viola, and Antonio. What the reader learns is that mistaken identity can cause Suffrage, and conflict through confusion. These effects end up showing the ultimate theme in the story in which love ultimately ends up causing suffrage. In the play the reader knows that the hidden character viola who plays Orsino causes a lot of mischief and suffrage in the play. Not only to others but to herself. One of the first examples the reader can see this suffrage is in Olivia. Olivia in the story ends up in love with Cesario who we all know is actually Olivia. …show more content…

The reader sees that during the length of the play conflict through confusion was another effect that comes from this whole mistaken identity. The first person to really experience this is Antonio when he believes that Sebastian has betrayed him. We see this when he says, “But oh, how vile an idol proves this god! Thou hast, Sebastian, done good feature shame. In nature there’s no blemish but the mind. None can be called deformed but the unkind. Virtue is beauty, but the beauteous evil Are empty trunks o 'erflourished by the devil” (pg. 107). In that part of the play the reader sees that Antonio truly believes that viola is Sebastian and says that he is a trader and he is not as good as he seemed to be. This shows how mistaken identity causes conflicts through confusion because Antonio mistook Viola for Sebastian, and because of this “betrayal” a very good relationship took a turn for the worst. This can also be seen between Orsino and Violas characters. After Orsino hears that apparently Cesario married Olivia he says, “O thou dissembling cub! What wilt thou be when time hath sowed a grizzle on thy case? Or will not else thy craft so quickly grow that thine own trip shall be thine overthrow? Farewell, and take her; but direct thy feet where thou and I henceforth may never meet” (pg. 135). When Orsino says this we see that the mistaken identity has caused a

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