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Friday, March 14, 2008

#72 , SHAKESPEARE'S PLOTS AND THEMES, QUESTIONS 711 TO 720

Shakespeare wrote 38 plays.

Here is the list of the 38 plays written by Shakespeare.

The ten questions 711 to 720 list out brief ideas about the plots and themes in ten of his dramas. Just identify the drama in which the plot/theme in the given question was used.

You can check up the answers at Click to see mcquestansyb.blogspot.com/search/label/#2372.

LIST OF SHAKESPEARE'S 38 PLAYS
1. All's Well That Ends Well
2. A Midsummer Night's Dream
3. Anthony and Cleopatra
4. As You Like It;
5. Coriolanus
6. Cymbeline
7. Hamlet, Prince of Denmark
8. Julius Caesar
9. King Henry IV, part I
10. King Henry IV, part II
11. King Henry V
12. King Henry VI, part I
13. King Henry VI, part II
14. King Henry VI, part III
15. King Henry VIII
16. King John
17. King Lear
18. King Richard II
19. King Richard III
20. Love's Labours Lost
21. Macbeth
22. Measure for Measure
23. Much Ado About Nothing
24. Othello, Moor of Venice
25. Pericles, Prince of Tyre
26. Richard III
27. Romeo and Juliet
28. Taming of the Shrew
29. The Comedy of Errors
30. The Merchant of Venice
31. The Merry Wives of Windsor
32. The Tempest
33. Timon of Athens
34. Titus Andronicus
35. Troilus and Cressida
36. Twelfth Night (What you will)
37. Two Gentlemen of Verona
38. Winter's Tale


711.
Brothers loving sisters. Protagonist disguising as man. Antagonists repenting. Brothers marrying the sisters at the happy end.


712.
Protagonist's impoverishment by generosity. Ingratitude of courtiers and friends. Retiring to forests, unable to pay debts. Sending a small army to punish wrong doers, paying from gold mine found in the forest. Protagonist living a naked life. Faithful servant visiting master. Wrong doers approaching the protagonist for rescue. Protagonist refusing and cursing.


713.
Protagonist, brave. But suffers from jealousy. Elopes with his beloved and marries her. Later suspects his faithful wife, at the instance of the wicked antagonist. Murders his beloved. Commits suicide.


714.
Protagonist, a Prince. Hurt by the amorous behavior of his mother, who gets her husband killed by his brother (antagonist); mother living with his uncle. Protagonist urged by the ghost of his father to take revenge. The protagonist delays decesion, pretending to be a mad person. His beloved becomes insane and dies. Mother and friend die. In the end, he kills the antagonist. The protagonist also dies, hurt in the fencing match.


715.
Protagonist and his associate, both Lords. They love two cousins. Interruption of the marriages by the plans of the antagonist. The protagonist doubting the integrity of his beloved. Feigned death of the female protagonist just before marriage. A police constable smelling the rat, catching the antagonist and exposing the villainy. Clearance of misunderstandings. Happy marriages.


716.
Banishment of a rightful, studious Duke together with his little daughter to the mercies of Sea, by his cruel brother (Antagonist). The little daughter grows up into the female protagonist. The Duke with magic spells takes control of a fairy spirit and a deformed monster. The young protagonist's father was the King. Gales sweeping the antagonist, the King, his son the protagonist all to the same island in which the banished Duke was living. The protagonist and his beloved coming together. The Duke using the fairy spirits to teach a lesson to his wrong doers. Forgiving them afteer their repentance. Happy marriage and back to the Dukedom.


717.
Lendor asking for his pound of flesh. The female protagonist saving the protagonist (her lover) from the wicked plot of the lendor, turning the tables against him in the Court room scenes. Happy end.


718.
Two daughters of a king treacherous. One daughter modest and unpretentious. Daughters mislead the king to believe their love as genuine. King banishing his third daughter. The King of France marrying the banished daughter. Betrayal of the father's trust by the two daughter. The third daughter coming to the rescue of the king. Happy end.


719.
Protagonist a king leaves his country appointing a regent, to save himself from antagonist. Swept by Sea waves to a new country, marries the Princess of that country. Sailing to his own country with his wife, hearing that his enemies were dead. Wife giving birth to a daughter. Believing his wife to be dead, dropping her body into the Sea locked in a box. Sea taking the box to a new country. Rescuing of the queen by the Governor of that country, opening the box. Wife becoming a Priestess of Goddess Diana. Distressed protagonist against venturing into the Sea leaving the custody of his daughter to a Governor. Governor's wicked wife selling the daughter as slave. The protagonist getting deeply distressed, not finding his daughter, and again venturing into the Sea, in a depressed State. The grown up daughter revives him by her dirges. The protagonist meeting his wife also at the end.


720.
A Duke in love with a Countess, who does not reciprocate. Sends his courtier as an emissary to the Countess, to win her hand. The Countess falls in love with the emissary. The emissary turns out to be a lady in a man's dress. The emissary's brother also looks exactly like her. Some confusion about "who is who". End: The Countess marries the emissary's brother. The emissary marries her master, the Duke. Happy end.

page numbers

multichoi

From Nov. 14, 2009.

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