Love in Shakespeare

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WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE

Shakespeare has captured the spirit of love, its highs and lows, and the beauty of falling in love in some of
the most poetical lines ever written. He wrote 38 plays and the word love is mentioned in each one of
them. In some, it is very frequent: The Two gentleman of Verona – 162 times, Romeo and Juliet – 120, As
you like it – 104, A Midsummer Night’s Dream – 103, Much Ado About Nothing – 89.

Love in Shakespeare is a recurrent theme. The treatment of love in Shakespeare’s plays and sonnets is
remarkable for the time: the Bard mixes courtly love, unrequited love, compassioinate love and sexual love
with skill and heart. Shakespeare does not revert to the two-dimensional representations of love typical of
the time, but rather explores love as a non-perfect part of the human condition.

Love in Shakespeare is a force of nature, earthy and sometimes uneasy.

Here are some key resources on love in Shakespeare:

Love in 'Romeo and Juliet'

One cannot talk about love without immediately recalling the story of Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet, a
story unsurpassed in world literature as a celebration of young love – innocent and pure, love at first sight,
strong and passionate. Although Shakespeare rarely invents the plots of his plays, he has created here an
exceptionally powerful image of young love: Shakespeare’s treatment of love in this play is masterful,
balancing different representations and burying them at the heart of the play.
Love is a smoke rais’d with the fume of sighs;
Being purg’d , a fire sparkling in lover’s eyes;
Being vex’d, a sea raging with lover’s tears;
What is it else? A madness most discreet,
A choking gall and a preserving sweet.

But love in Shakespeare is not always tragic, unrequited or hurtful. In three of his early romantic comedies
(A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Twelfth Night and Much Ado About Nothing) love is a source of pleasantry
and amusement, sporting and playfulness.

The Twelfth Night

The forest is a place of freedom and at night the lovers are free to be themselves. But Shakespeare reminds
us that this is a bit of a dream and true love, however beautiful, is not always possible. In Shakespeare’s
time there was a view that youth, beauty and love are short lived so they should be enjoyed while they last.
And this is what the clown’s song suggests in Twelfth Night. Just like in the other comedies, love in Twelfth
Night is a game. It is never constant, is subject to suggestions, works its magic and not always results in a
marriage. It makes characters love-sick and carries them through a labyrinth of confusing circumstances.
Shakespeare pokes gentle fun around them and their attitude to love. In contrast, Duke Orsino is in love
with the idea of love. It was fashionable at the time that noble men should admire women’s beauty from a
distance and without really getting to know the objects of their desires ( ‘If music be the food of love, play
on….’.), making them appear sick and melancholic. Love between a woman and a man in Shakespeare
reaches its culmination in marriage, seen as a natural state of happiness.

Shakespeare is very realistic in his view of love in Romeo and Juliet and the three early comedies. He has
sensed its grand power and transformational force, but he has not yet given its right place in the grand
scheme of things in life. But just as in real life, Shakespeare mixes feelings with thoughts on hypocritical
love, unfaithful nature of women and the ugliness of false marriages.

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