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In King Henry Iv, How Has Shakespeare Portrayed the Similarities and Differences in the Characters of Prince Harry and Hotspur?

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Hal and Hotspur are the two most compared characters in Shakespeare’s King Henry IV: Part 1 because of the many similarities and differences that are portrayed by Shakespeare. The audience is presented with many aspects about each character very early on in the play, and it is then that they create expectations which can either be confirmed or contradicted as the play goes on. Shakespeare usually portrays a character through the use of literary and dramatic techniques throughout his work, either subtle or obvious. In this particular text, he has used a range of textual techniques to portray the characteristic of arrogance shared by both, portray Hotspur’s great honour, as well as Hal’s notable dishonour, and the ways that the two contrast. …show more content…

Another way that Shakespeare portrays Hotspur as being an honourable character is in the very way that he speaks. Throughout the play, Hotspur talks in the sophisticated prose form, an example being ‘But I remember when the fight was done,/ When I was dry with rage and extreme toil,/ breathless and faint, leaning upon my sword…’ The fact that Shakespeare has chosen for Hotspur to use prose when he talks suggests to us that he is able to speak very well with such a fiery passion about honourable things, like battles. In the given example, Hotspur uses such a colourful description of the aftermath of a battle, not to say how extremely well he fought, but giving a more modest account on how worn out he was, thus Shakespeare reinforces the aspect of honour in his character. Shakespeare has utilized techniques like foreshadowing, contrasting, setting and language to portray Hal as dishonourable. Shakespeare portrays Hal from the beginning as being dishonourable and unruly through the use of foreshadowing that is used by other characters. After talking about how honourable Hotspur is, King Henry IV contrasts him with his own son; ‘riot and dishonour stain the brow/ of my young Harry.’ The heavy contrast here foreshadows Hal’s character as being that of dishonour because we have just been given an image, through foreshadowing, about how grand Hotspur’s honour is, then King Henry gives and

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