5Love, Nature, and Fairies: A
Midsummer Night’s Dream
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William Shakespeare’s A Midsummer
Night’s Dream is one of his most popular comedic plays that, “in one guise
or another, has held the stage ever since it was first produced” (Shakespeare
Online). It is also one with an interesting history. It was printed in
1600, yet had been mentioned as early as 1598. The reasons behind the creation
of the play are a mystery even still today. Some have said he wrote it for the
entertainment of Elizabeth I; others, for a wedding. It has also been
controversial, having been “suspected of being the comedy which brought the
Bishop of Lincoln into disgrace in 1631” (Shakespeare Online).
To briefly summarize the play,
before the wedding of Duke Theseus and Hippolyta, Lysander and Hermia declare
their love for each other and their wish to marry. Egeus, Hermia’s dad, wants
her to marry Demetrius, whom Helena loves unrequited. The young lovers resolve
to run away to the forest. Helena informs Demetrius of this in an attempt to
win his love, which backfires on her. Meanwhile, a group of mechanics decide to
rehearse in the forest a play for the Duke’s wedding. And if there isn’t enough
activity happening in the forest, Oberon, King of the Fairies, is angry at his
wife Titania. In retaliation toward her, he enlists the help of his servant,
Puck to use a potion on her to trick her into falling in love with a beast.
Oberon then spies Helena, takes pity, and tells Puck to use the same potion on
Demetrius. Puck mixes it up and gets Lysander, who now falls for Helena. He
tries to correct it by actually getting Demetrius, so both now love Helena.
Helena is confused; Hermia is angry. Titania, under the potion falls for one of
the mechanics, Bottom, whom Puck has given a donkey’s head. After the high jinx
have commenced, Oberon tells Puck to set everything right, which he does. This
leads to all the humans to believe it was a dream, and Helena’s love is
returned by Demetrius. The Duke and Hippolyta marry, along with Lysander and
Hermia, and they all watch the mechanics’ play, Pyrimus and Thesby.
Part of the plays popularity is its
structure as a comedy of errors. There is a great deal of activity going on in
one location that was bound to cause chaos when all these factions crossed
paths. But what is the meaning of all the craziness that commences? The central
through line for all the main characters’ is love, where forbidden, dejected or
vengeful. So if love causes so much strife in all of their lives, why are they
so dogged in their pursuit of it? Because you cannot fight a naturally
occurring phenomena. “Love is an act of nature” is the major theme of A
Midsummer Night’s Dream, as shown by the Fairy King and Queen, and the
young lovers.
The play depicts Puck, and to a
lesser degree Oberon, as Elizabethan Age Cupids. Alan Lewis states, “The figure
of Cupid flits through…, a mythological agent of desire whose varied
portraiture contributes to the staging of the subversion of the subject through
his desire…Cupid figures in an authorial meditation on the nature of the
lover's desire and its relations to cultural ideals of Love and
masculinity…Cupid is described at an originary scene of desire, as the cause of
desire and sometimes as the phantom object of desire…” (177). By portraying
love as personified, this takes the control of love out of the hands of the
characters. Basically, they cannot control who they love, because “love” or
Cupid decides this for them. In the case of our young lovers, this task befalls
the main male fairies. It is through these “creatures of nature” that the love
triangles not only get more complicated, but can resolve to their beneficial
conclusions.
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Oberon’s weapon of choice in his
love power plays are the flowers of the forest. “Oberon maintains that topical
applications of the juice of the wild pansy (Viola tricolor, called
'love-in-idleness' in the play) ... The potion proves highly effective…
Shakespeare also suggests that other substances from "Dian's
bud"--variously identified as a species of wormwood (Artemisia spp.) or
chaste tree (Vitex agnuscastus, a species not native to England but long known
for its anti-libidinal properties) --could reverse the neurobiological results
of the pansy.” (Ehrenfeld 1079). Oberon uses the different flowers to get what
he wants from Titania. Yet he also uses it on Demetrius, which produces a
welcome effect for Helena, as well as happily for Lysander and Hermia who now can
marry. It thought the juices of these plants and flowers, produced by and found
in nature, that brings stability to the young lovers’ lives.
Through Oberon works his fairy magic
to reconcile the young lovers’ issues, he is not immune to his own troubles in
love. This is shown by his quarreling with wife Titania. Michael Taylor
observes, “Oberon and Titania seem more typical of a husband and wife in the
real than in the fairy world. Their squabbling is trivial... The king and queen
are only reconciled through Oberon's subduing Titania to his wishes, and it
seems that masculine hegemony is as traditional in fairy-land as it is in the
human world. This… is even more ironically exact when Oberon accuses Titania of
an improper interest in Theseus; while she in turn accuses him of harboring
base thoughts about Hippolyta… Oberon's and Titania's quarrel is comic and
private. It appears not to have consequences beyond the purely local situation,
just as, normally speaking, any minor flare- up between husband and wife”
(263-64). Thought supernatural creatures, the author here uses the Fairy King
and Queen to demonstrate some of the “darker” aspects of love and coupling. The
jealousy that arises between them shows that they still do care for each other,
despite the bickering, lack of compromise and fits of jealousy. That the
fairies are as susceptible to these petty traits of marriage normally
attributed to humans demonstrates that they are natural to all relationships in
general.
It is fitting that the quartet of
young people cannot resolve their love issues within the confines of the city.
It is not possible to do so. “The court, or city, represents stability, common
sense, and sophistication. But formalized structures and attributes rarely help
in matters of love which typically are irrational. So, often the scene in a
comedy alternates between court and forest. The natural setting seemingly
provides the innocence and healing ethos which allow the solving of personal
problems, particularly those concerning love” (Gianakaris). The couples cannot
find resolution in the Duke’s court because love, by its nature, can be
illogical. It must be examined outside of the bounds of law and logic, and
within the forest where love can “take its course.” Love is not something that
can be governed, such as Hermia being ordered to marry Demetrius. This is
against the natural state of love.
Yet, it can be said that there is a
pattern to nature, explained through science. So if love is a natural thing, is
it rational? “To this question A Midsummer Night's Dream perhaps
suggests no kind of answer beyond the fact that such true loves do exist, are
distinct from the fancy-dominated aberrations that mark inconstancy, and when
properly terminating in marriage are part of the natural-and, in that sense,
rational-order of things.” (Dent 118). Though love may seem to be irrational
and chaotic, as shown during the evening in the forest, it is a natural thing
and, by its nature, therefore a rational thing. It is symbolic that the lovers
come to reason and harmony with love in the natural setting of the forest, as
opposed to the Duke’s manor.
Love is not something that can be
found by laws, arranged marriages and compatibility quizzes. It is not
something that possesses any logical path, or can be explained by conventional
means. It is a natural thing, and will defy explanation or better judgement. It
will grow out of the most unusual of places. A Midsummer’s Night’s Dream
shows the audience the strange, indecisive, chaotic, messy, irrational
wonderfulness that is love.
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Works
Cited
Bressler, Charles E., ed. Literary
Criticism: An Introduction to Theory and Practice. 5th ed. London: Pearson,
2011. Print.
Dent, Robert. “Imagination in A
Midsummer Night's Dream.” Shakespeare Quarterly. Vol. 15, No. 2
(1964): 115-129. JSTOR. Web. 28 Oct. 2013
Ehrenfeld, Joan G. "Idea of a
love drug was no mystery to Shakespeare." Nature 457.7233 (2009):
1079. Academic OneFile. Web. 28 Oct. 2013.
Gianakaris, C.J. "A
Midsummer Night's Dream: Overview." Reference Guide to English
Literature. Ed. D. L. Kirkpatrick. 2nd ed. Chicago: St. James Press, 1991. Literature
Resource Center. Web. 2 Nov. 2013.
Lewis, Alan. "Reading
Shakespeare's Cupid." Criticism 47.2 (2005): 177+. Academic
OneFile. Web. 28 Oct. 2013.
Shakespeare, William. Shakespeare's
Comedy of A Midsummer Night's Dream. Ed. Katharine Lee Bates. Boston:
Leach, Shewell, & Sanborn, 1895. Shakespeare Online. 20 Dec. 2009.
28 Oct. 2013
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