Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Twelfth NightViola. Like most of Shakespeare’s heroines, Viola is a tremendously likable figure. She has no serious faults, and we can easily discount the peculiarity of her decision to dress as a man, since it sets the entire plot in motion. She is the character whose love seems the purest. The other characters’ passions are fickle: Orsino ...

  2. Feb 4, 2020 · Viola is the heroine of Twelfth Night, and along with Olivia, the play’s centre. However, whereas Olivia is more of a passive character (characters fall in love with her, and pursue her), Viola is active throughout: the catalyst who drives the plot on. This is even true in the one instance where Olivia is truly the active one: namely, when ...

  3. Viola. Viola is one of the major characters of the play Twelfth Night and the play develops further with her actions. It is because of her role that the play ends in a celebration of marriage which makes it a romantic comedy. A lot of other themes also emerge from her actions. She is the link between the plots involving the court and the shipwreck.

    • Extended Character Analysis
    • Viola as Cesario
    • Viola and The Irrationality of Love
    • Viola as Viola

    Viola is the protagonist of Shakespeare’s comedy TwelfthNight. She is an aristocrat who disguises herself as a young man namedCesario after being shipwrecked on the coast of Illyria. Viola is witty,resourceful, and charismatic. She shows self-control and dignity in contrast tothe bombastic, overly sentimental performances of Orsino and Lady Olivia....

    Viola’s disguise brings confusion and duplicity into other characters’ livesas well as her own. As Cesario, Viola also provides insight into characterssuch as Lady Olivia and Duke Orsino. Although Viola is well-meaning, sherealizes that her disguise leads to ill consequences. For example, Orsino, whois infatuated with Lady Olivia, orders Cesario to...

    The revelry of love is a primary theme in Twelfth Night. Viola isin the midst of much amorous wildness, with Duke Orsino’s excessive pining andLady Olivia’s quick infatuation with Cesario. Even Viola finds that she isfalling in love with Duke Orsino, despite her precarious situation. Lady Olivia’s declaration of love for Cesario shows love’s irrati...

    At the end of play, Viola is reunited with Sebastian. After making sure heis truly her twin, she then reveals that she is a young woman in disguise.Viola then expresses her love to Duke Orsino, who agrees to marry her, despitehaving been supposedly in love with Olivia for the majority of the play. Thelovesick characters are all married, putting an ...

  4. The protagonist of Twelfth Night. An aristocratic woman, she is tossed up on the coast of Illyria by a shipwreck at the beginning of the play and disguises herself as the pageboy, Cesario, to make her way. Throughout the play, Viola exhibits strength of character, quick wit, and resourcefulness. Although her disguise puts her in an impossible ...

  5. Oct 31, 2023 · Viola: The Fulcrum of Action. The dramatic world of Twelfth Night is essentially built up on a constant conflict- between imagination and reality, disguise and actuality. Within such a framework, the characters act and interact to generate the essential comic vision of Shakespeare. Viola, in this context, is presented as the fulcrum of action ...

  6. People also ask

  7. Viola rebukes Olivia for rejecting Orsino, and for insisting on remaining single. Viola says that since Olivia is so beautiful, it would be a shame for her to remain single (and thus, presumably childless). If Olivia never has children, her beauty will die with her, which Viola thinks would be a shame. The quote is important because Viola is ...

  1. People also search for