The Merchant of Venice Act 1 Scene 1 Discussion and Quotations
The Merchant of Venice Act 1 Scene 1 Discussion and Quotations
The Merchant of Venice Act 1 Scene 1 Discussion and Quotations
The play begins with Antonio speaking to Solanio and Solarino about his mysterious sadness. They
cannot find the cause of this melancholy. Gratiano and Bassanio come on scene with Lorenzo. The
men embrace, happy to see one another. Gratiano tells Antonio to be happy. Bassanio asks Antonio
to lend him some money so that he can woo Portia, a rich heiress with whom he is in love. Antonio
cannot lend Bassanio the full amount because his money is tied up in investments, but he promises
to guarantee any loan he can find.
Knowledge Check
Try to answer these questions from memory:
3. Why is Antonio not worried about his 7. Why does Bassanio need to borrow
wealth at the beginning of the play? money from Antonio at the beginning of
(a) All of his wares are insured. the book?
(b) He cares not for money. (a) To hide his identity.
(c) His wares are on more than one ship. (b) To save some time.
(d) He has more than enough money. (c) To woo a woman.
(d) To reach his home.
4. What does Antonio compare life on
this earth to? 8. Who is Bassanio in love with?
(a) A book. (a) Prenatia.
(b) A dream. (b) Placius.
(c) A staged play. (c) Pattea.
(d) A living legend. (d) Portia.
Understanding and Interpretation
These questions require a little more thought. Skim and scan to find the relevant information, and try to
express your ideas in short answers.
1. How does Antonio feel at the beginning of the play, and why?
• Significance:
• Significance:
3. What does Bassanio need money for? What does this tell you about society at the time
Shakespeare wrote the play?
• Significance:
• Significance:
• Significance:
Discussion Point: making predictions
What elements of foreshadowing exist in this scene? Based on what the characters have said so
far, can you make any predictions as to what might happen later in the play? Are any themes
becoming apparent?
The Merchant of Venice opens on a street in Venice where Antonio, a Venetian merchant, complains
of a sadness he can't quite explain. His friends suggest they'd be sad too if they had as much
merchandise to worry about as Antonio. Apparently, all of his money is tied up in various sea
ventures to exotic locales. But Antonio is certain it's not money that's bothering him.
In the very first lines of the play Shakespeare establishes a dominant stylistic feature – his characters
see the world through the prism of trading, mercantilism and commerce. The language they use to
express their thoughts and feelings is suffused with the culture of trading and negotiation. In
Antonio’s first lines he speaks about sadness as if it is a tangible object that can be held, or passed on
like a commodity: “But how I caught it, found it, or came by it/ What stuff ‘tis made of, whereof it is
born/ I am to learn.”
At the time of writing The Merchant of Venice, the titular city was an important center of European
trade; everything from silks to spices to exotic animals to gold passed through this flourishing port.
Fortunes were made and lost by the signors and burghers of the city, who profited from the Duke’s
permissive tax laws, corruption and opportunities that trade presented. The way the characters speak
in this scene reveals both their obsession with money, their fear of chance and mischance, and the way
their minds are always ‘tossing on the ocean’ – away with their ships and cargoes rather than centered
on the here and now.
Find four lines in the opening scene that suggest the thoughts of the men in Venice are tied up in their
trading, business ventures and money:
Quotation Bank
If you only remember three lines, remember these…
Based on your own reading of Act 1, Scene 1 and / or your classroom discussion, add two more
memorable lines to this table, and provide analysis comments for each: