A Midsummer Night's Dream, quote response/analysis

Essay specific features

 

Issue:

Book Reports

 

Written by:

Derrick B

 

Date added:

March 16, 2017

 

Level:

University

 

Grade:

A

 

No of pages / words:

3 / 620

 

Was viewed:

9796 times

 

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Essay content:

What's the news with thee?" The characters speak in a formal tone with each other which dignifies that the Athenian court is very aristocratic. Also the language spoken by the characters of the Athenian court is spoken in blank verse, which is unrhymed verse based on the iambic pentameter, "Now, fair Hippolyta, our nuptial hour Draws on apace; four happy days bring in Another moon: but O, methinks, how slow This old moon wanes! She lingers my desires, Like to a step-dame or a dowager Long withering-out a young man's revenue...
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This use of language by Shakespeare states that the Athenian court is a noble, and aristocratic world exclusive to the upper class. Through the language of the rude mechanicals, Shakespeare creates an atmosphere of coarseness and the ordinary and reveals the working class side of Athens. The mechanicals, appropriately enough, speak in prose, except when they try their hand at the rhymed verse of "Pyramus and Thisbe...
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