Wan-Ting Lin
Blog Post #2: A Midsummer Night's Dream Act IV-V
The focus of this play is not only
about the madness of love, but also the coincidence. The love potion makes the
characters fall in love with the one they see after the potion takes effect.
The four lovers (Demetrius, Lysander, Helena and Hermia) are by chance bumped
into the difficulty of love. The love potion makes them become suspect to each
other. However, the coincidence in a huge part is performing by Puck, the servant
of king Oberon. He misunderstands his king’s word and makes a big mistake,
torturing the four young lovers for one night. Shakespeare makes fun of love by
creating the love potion which is affected by Cupid’s arrows, expressing that
love is blind, mad and by chance.
Puck is the dominator of the love
potion who acts as God to control the love inside the play. He pushes through
the result of coincidence, making lovers confuse their true feelings. He is
smart and magical. He uses his magic to affect the characters in play, making a
funny trick to Bottom by turning his head into an ass and letting the four lovers
fall into sleep. Actually, Puck is not the main character of this play, but he
is very important throughout the whole plots. He functions as the bridge of the
real world and the Green World. He deals with the four lovers and the fairy
king and queen. Shakespeare expresses the difficulty of love in this play, and
Puck is the one who makes the love between lovers become difficult but somehow
ending with happiness. Puck’s magic softens the love difficulty between
Demetrius and Helena, leading them to a happy marriage. Shakespeare wants to
show audience about the chance of love, but Puck somehow comprises the elements
of love which makes us think about love is not only by chance but choice. Puck
chooses who to be affected by the love potion, making every character feel
happy in the end.
Puck: Captain of our fairy band,
Helena is here at hand,
And the youth, mistook by me,
Pleading for a lover’s fee.
Shall we their fond pageant see?
Lord, what fools there mortals be!
Oberon: Stand aside.
The noise they make
Will cause Demetrius to awake.
Puck: Then will two
at once woo one;
That must needs to be sport alone.
And those things do best please me
That befall prepost’rously.
In act 3 scene 2, Puck and Oberon
have an interesting conversation about the mistaken of the love potion. Puck is
amazed by the ridiculous love of the young lovers, feeling that mortal beings
are crazy in love. In the Green Wood, fairies do not take love seriously. They
make fun of the lovers who chase each other in the wood, thinking that their
concentration and seriousness toward love is exaggerated. This passage shows
that the mistake which Puck has made and the results of the mistake are not
taken seriously. The mistake is somehow being caused by chance, but it can also
be seen as an intentional act. That is, Puck not randomly chooses Lysander but
by the coincidence which Lysander just presented as the description which
Oberon gave Puck. The last line of this conversation shows the result is
actually out of natural order. Shakespeare uses Puck’s words to reveal that the
consequence of the love potion is out of control. That is, love is madness and
blindness in real world.
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