Tuesday, September 3, 2019
The Theme of Love in William Shakespeares Twelfth Night Essay
 The Theme of Love in William Shakespeare's Twelfth Night       In Twelfth Night, Shakespeare focuses strongly on the theme of love;     romantic love, friendship, brotherly and sisterly love, unrealistic     love and self-love. In this essay I am going to explore these aspects     and write about the different sides of love in the play, such as     humour and suffering. We find that in Twelfth Night love is a very     complicated thing and confusion often occurs.       At the beginning of the play we find Orsino talking dramatically of     his love for Olivia but actually seems to be in love with the idea of     love itself. This shows that his feelings are not actually true and     that he is very self-indulgent. He uses exaggerated language whilst     lying in rose beds, listening to music and talking constantly to his     servants of Olivia's beauty. He also compares his love to food and in     this quote he is saying how he hopes his appetite will simmer when it     all gets too much and he can no longer handle it.       Orsino says, 'If music be the food of love, play on; give me excess of     it, that surfeiting, the appetite may sicken and so die.' (I.i.1-3).       Orsino seems to be rather in love with himself and assumes that Olivia     will return his feelings for her.       He says 'Her sweet perfections with one selfsame King!' (I.i.39). Here     he compares himself to a King, which shows his self-love and     arrogance.       Viola's love is an example of true love in the play and she also shows     no self-love unlike Orsino, Olivia and Malvolio. In scene ii, Viola is     shipwrecked on the Illyrian coast and is distraught as her brother     Sebastian disappeared during the storm. She shows strong love for her     b...              ...s he is so close to Sebastian.       There is a lot of confusion and swapping of feelings in Twelfth Night.     I feel that the only true love is Viola's love for Orsino as this is     the only man she loves during the whole play and is the one she ends     up marrying. I think Olivia seems to fall in love too easily as she     thinks she can have any man. Also, Maria and Sir Toby seem to marry     just for the sake of it as they are close and have no one else to     really be with. Feste remains self-contained and is not driven by love     or ever gets distressed by it.       In Twelfth Night, Shakespeare explores love with great detail and     explains it extremely well. I think that his thoughts on love and the     way in which he writes about all the tangles and confusion give a lot     of interest to the play making it a great play to read and also act     out.                        
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