Most Shakespeare characters who pay attention to deviations from normal stock characters do not have clear goals or incentives. While Claudio is impulsive and Beatrice and Benedict are influenced by their stubbornness and trying to control their lives while others are thinking about things and things while he is not considering him before promising them I will try to oppose it. Behavior These are just examples of role motives. However, there are still some characters that are difficult to understand in the play.
How we learned the title "not doing anything" by Love Shakespeare's personality in "knowledge" caused academic discussion about its importance for decades. Some say that this is a drama on the word "caution", but it develops around various fraudulent themes (Rossiter 163). There is nothing (Vaughn 102) as others claim to be more relevant to those of all men who are fake. - Love's discovery and conflict did not solve anything about Shakespeare's relaxed drama written between 1598 and 1600, and nothing at all. It is said to be one of his "more mature romantic comedies" (Bevington, 216). This play focuses on two different relationships consisting of two pairs of lovers. The way people marry at the time and the current way are similar in several respects.
At the early stage of Shake Spear's theater, there are many people who do not know that the difference between Beatrice and the main character "Theater of Shake Spear:" Nothing happens ". cousin. These two seem to be completely different at the beginning of the game, but as the situation develops and characters develop, there are some very obvious similarities between them. Heroes have a very intimate relationship with Beatrice; they are best friends. - Despite the strong domination of Queen Elizabeth in the middle of the 16th century, British women of the modern age had little social, economic and legal rights. According to the British chest system, married men and women become one under the law and hence "all the legal rights and responsibilities that a woman must assign to her husband when she gets married" (McBride-Stetson 189 )