Healthy Relationships In Much Ado About Nothing
In order to have a healthy relationship you need respect, kindness, communication, and honesty. I do not believe that Beatrice and Benedick’s friends have shown these traits. In Act 3, Scene 1, Hero and Ursula are talking about Benedick’s “love” for Beatrice. They want to make it seem that they do not know Beatrice is listening in. Instead of doing this, the two women could have directly gone to Beatrice and discussed the topic. Benedick, under almost the same circumstances, was talked about by Claudio, Don Pedro, and Leonato while they knew he was listening.
In my experience, if someone is disrespectful or unhonest, I would directly confront them on the matter. After this, I would show them
In the beginning of the play, Benedick vows to never marry someone, however, this changes when Claudio, Don Pedro and Leonato trick Benedick into thinking that Beatrice loves him. This leads Benedick into confessing his love to Beatrice in hope that she will tell him she loves him back. Benedick takes the opportunity to tell Beatrice about his love and tells her, “I do love nothing in the world so well as you. Is that not strange?” (IV.i). At this point of the play, the characters are facing both confusion and anger. To ease the tensions steaming inside Beatrice, Benedick admits his love so she knows that he loves her back. So, when Benedick asks Beatrice if loving her is “strange”, he expects her to say that it is not and that she feels the same way. However, after Benedick reveals his love, Beatrice is shocked. In response, she tells Benedick that his love is not “strange”, but she cannot think about loving someone while her cousin was in so much pain after the devastation Claudio causes her at their wedding. Although it seems bizarre that Benedick would bring up his love for Beatrice at this time in the process of a relationship falling apart, but Benedick would most likely argue that it made sense to mention his love to Beatrice to either get her mind off of Hero or she would not even comprehend what he said because her mind is too busy thinking about what to do about
In Shakespeare’s play, Much Ado About Nothing, written in the early 15th century, the relationships between Benedick and Beatrice and Hero and Claudio are the key to the play and create a lot of tension and comedy. The two relationships are interesting in different ways, and this essay will explore this in terms of the language used, the plot, characterisation and how the two relationships stand thematically.
Don Pedro and his men return from the war and visit the house of Leonato and his brother, Antonio. This sudden meeting reunites Beatrice with her archrival, Benedick, and it is here that Claudio and Hero fall in love.
Beatrice is also very sociable with other people and seems to be a shrew just when talking about Benedick and other males. Not unlike Katharina, who was told she would marry Petruchio (2.I.260-268), Beatrice does not consent to marry Benedick directly. Beatrice has to be entrapped with the love sonnets that Hero stole from her pocket (5.IV.88-90). Even at the conclusion of the play, it seems as though Beatrice will not change her attitudes, just her status as an unmarried woman.
'No; and he were, I would burn my study' she indicates that she has a
Although Beatrice and Benedick are not yet shown as in love, a Shakespearian audience would not have thought it usual for a woman like Beatrice to be speaking as she was about Benedick. However, today it is perfectly normal for Beatrice to be talking like she is, so at the moment, the two relationships are more satisfying to the different audiences. Beatrice and Benedick's relationship has another problem. They both like to use their wit and intelligence to try and outsmart people, and mainly themselves.
In this Shakespearean comedy ‘Much Ado about Nothing’ two similarly obstinate characters of Beatrice and Benedick are presented between the rather normal relationship of characters Hero and Claudio. Shakespeare presents Beatrice and Benedick’s obstinacy towards the rather obligatory act of marriage and also their particularly similar personalities that cause reason for their familiar act of squabbling; he does this whilst also presenting two characters that are completely interested in marriage and who are hardly intellectually capable of squabbling in a similar manner. As the play unfolds both characters remain combative with one another but as love becomes the better of them, they begin to reveal that somewhat secretive sensitivity
"By my own spirit; for I should flout him, if he writ to me; yea
All throughout the beginning of the play, both Beatrice and Benedick use sarcasm and hide their true feelings for each other, which is the first example of tricky in their relationship. Both of them have vowed never to marry anyone; Benedick stating: "Because I will not do them the wrong to mistrust any, I will do myself the right to trust none; and the fine is, for the which I may go the finer, I will live a bachelor." (1.1.232–35), while Beatrice says, "No, uncle, I'll none. Adam's sons are my brethren, and truly I hold it a sin to match in my kindred." (2.1.59–60.) Their friends see that they are the perfect match for one another, and plan to trick them into confessing their love for each other. When Benedick is in the orchard, he overhears Don Pedro, Claudio, and Leonato talking about how Beatrice is in love with him but is afraid he will mock her if she tells him. Benedick believes them, saying, "This can be no trick." (2.3.217.) He then goes on to say, "I will be horribly in love with her." (2.3.230–31.) Later, Beatrice hears Hero and Ursula talking about how they can't tell her that Benedick loves her because she is a scornful person. After Hero and Ursula leave, Beatrice states:
Beatrice and Benedick continually butt heads and are always arguing. After five acts, the two finally admit their love for eachother. In the book “Much Ado About Nothing” by William Shakespeare Beatrice is the foil of Benedick thus causing... frequent arguments and having them wait to admit their love.
In the play the audience is also told in so many words that there has
However, upon hearing of Beatrice’s love for him he is suddenly perplexed and it does not take him long to decide that he will give that affection back in return. How easily persuaded Benedick is. This may come from the way Claudio, Don Pedro, and Leonato (Benedick’s associates) depict Beatrice as the most wonderful woman in Messina. They talk of Beatrice as if she were the most magnificent woman so that Benedick will do exactly what he does indeed do. When Benedick hears of this he must be thinking of what he has said before about his desire for the perfect woman. In his speech he says that “the lady is fair . . . / . . . And virtuous. . . / . . . And wise[,]” which is exactly what Benedick demands in the woman that he will choose to be his wife. However, Benedick only believes these things about Beatrice because of what Claudio, Don Pedro, and Leonato have said about her. They only said them to convince Benedick that Beatrice was deserving of him and that she loved him with all her heart. They told Benedick just what he wanted to hear. It is a scheme made of lies, but it works because Benedick is persuaded and begins to agree with what they have said. By doing this he is already influencing himself to follow the opposite path from the one that he has adhered to for years. Here he is already starting to fool himself into believing Beatrice is the one for him
Like many of Shakespeare's other heroes, Benedick has a comic and serious side. I think he combines everything Shakespeare seems to like in a character; he is amusing (his witty banter with Beatrice is where most of the humour in this play revolves around) and he is also able to laugh at himself- he takes in good humour like the teasing of his friends about his cynicism about matrimony. He is loving too, (an example of this is his poem to Beatrice) and also deadly serious is his love for her- he renounces his male comradeship to "kill Claudio" as she demands- he is prepared to give up his current, enjoyable way of life for her. He is also loyal to the prince, in that he despises Don John, but he is most loyal to the one he loves, something the majority of Shakespearean heroes personify (even those who go astray eventually return to their love- Romeo never wavers from his purpose in loving Juliet). His relationship with Beatrice is another ideal held up to us by the playwright. Beatrice chooses Benedick, she pleases herself, not her family, and as a result, their relationship is much more equal and evenly balanced. It is this relationship, and not the other, quite stereotypical romance, which Shakespeare makes the main thread of this drama.
Benedick and Beatrice, however, are well-versed in the intricacies of illusion. They disguise their affection with verbal sparring, creating a façade of animosity. They are successful only at fooling themselves, and it is this self-delusion that brings them into the realm of believability. By far, Benedick and Beatrice are more realistic than Claudio and Hero because they work, just as we all do, in the realm of illusion.
The Love between Benedict and Beatrice is a strong love hate relationship after their previous ties had failed between each other. Heros plan is to trick Beatrice into entering the orchard and overhearing their conversations about her. Through their conversation Hero, Ursula praises the virtues of Benedick and to point out the flaws in herself(Act 3 Scene 1). By doing this Hero is able to convince Beatrice to her love of Benedick. However the same time Claudio and Don John are talking of Beatrice's secret love for Benedick. After this occurred both characters realize their true feelings and began to fall for one another through the deception played out by Hero and