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THE MERCHANT OF VENICE (last minute help)

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THE MERCHANT OF VENICE: Plot Bassanio fancies Portia, a wealthy heiress. He is desperate for a loan so that he can raise the adequate funds to appear a worthy suitor. Antonio says he ll be the loan s guarantor and Bassanio gets the money from Shylock the Jew. If Bassanio fails to repay the loan, it is agreed that Shylock will take a pound of Antonio s flesh. Bassanio wins the hand of Portia, but Shylock refuses his offer of repayment. He wants a piece of Antonio (literally) and demands to be paid in his flesh. However, having not read the small print on his own contract which demanded flesh but not blood Shylock is ordered to forfeit all he owns and convert to Christianity. Themes Anti-Semitism and the revenge thereof; social injustice; love; money; worthiness. Background While The Merchant of Venice was probably written between 1596 and 1598, the forfeiture of deadly bonds by those who had vouched for their friends was a common theme in the late 16th century. The first recorded performances were within a few days of each other at the court of King James I in 1605, but no other productions are known of until the 18th century. In a 2004 film directed by Michael Radford, Al Pacino took on the role of Shylock, with Jeremy Irons as Antonio and Joseph Fiennes as Bassanio. Key characters Bassanio: amorous young suitor, in love with Portia. Antonio: melancholic merchant of Venice. Shylock: the Jewish moneylender who hates Antonio. Top lines * I hold the world but as the world, Gratiano, A stage, where every man must play a part; And mine a sad one. Antonio reflects on his sorrow, Act 1 Scene 1 * Love is blind. Jessica utters the famous phrase, Act 2 Scene 4 * All that glisters is not gold. In a secondary plot, Portia s suitors are offered the choice of three caskets, one gold, one silver and one lead, Act 2 Scene 7 * If you prick us, do we not bleed? If you tickle us, do we not laugh? If you poison us, do we not die? And if you wrong us, shall we not revenge? Shylock defends the Jews, Act 3 Scene 1

 

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