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Title: The Merchant of Venice
Series: ----------
Author: William Shakespeare
Rating: 3.5 of 5 Stars
Genre: Play, Comedy
Pages: 140
Format: Digital Edition
Series: ----------
Author: William Shakespeare
Rating: 3.5 of 5 Stars
Genre: Play, Comedy
Pages: 140
Format: Digital Edition
Synopsis:
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A merchant of
Venice, Merchantio has all his funds tied up in ships out at sea. His
friend, Romancio, needs to borrow money to woo a rich woman from
another town. Merchantio allows Romancio to stretch his credit to the
limit with a moneylender named Shylock. Shylock hates Merchantio and
makes part of the credit deal that if Merchantio defaults Shylock
gets to cut off a pound of flesh.
Shylock's daughter
runs off with a friend of Merchantio's and takes a small fortune with
her. Shylock doesn't know which he misses more.
Things go well for
Romancio. The woman's father had setup a riddle to win her hand. If a
suitor guessed wrong, he couldn't tell anyone what he had guessed AND
he had to remain single for the rest of his life. Romancio guesses
right and marries the woman. His friend, Friendo, then marries the
maid servant.
Things go bad for
Merchantio and all his ships are sunk, pirated or go missing. Shylock
claims the Law and says he'll sue Venice and ruin her international
reputation of Law Abidingness if the Duke of Venice won't fulfill the
law.
Romancio and
Friendio run back to Venice with treble the amount owed so buy back
Merchantio's life. Unknown to them, their wives follow, dressed up as
young men and claiming to be the friends of a very important Judge.
The Duke of Venice brings the case before them. Shylock turns down
the treble payment and wants his pound of flesh.
Romancio's wife
decides in his favor and Shylock rejoices. Then she drops the
bombshell that he can only take a pound of flesh, no blood, nothing.
If he does so and Merchantio dies, then Shylock will die and all his
estates go to the City of Venice. The Duke rules that if Shylock
won't take his pound of flesh, the only way to avoid the punishment
is to convert to Christianity and give half his estates away and lots
of it to his estranged daughter. Everyone but Shylock is happy.
Then the wives
decide to be clever and cause problems for their husbands. They beg,
as the young men, to have some rings from Romancio and Friendio, who
cave like $3 bills. Then the wives meet their husbands at home and
demand to see the rings. Upon not seeing them, the wives claim they
will sleep with whoever has the rings and follow that up immediately
that it has already happened. Romancio and Friendio moan about being
cuckolds and then the wives reveal the truth, everyone laughs and
goes into a feast.
My
Thoughts:
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I
was really enjoying this up until the end. I dont' think I'm going to
ever find amusing made up drama between husbands and wives. Also,
the names completely eluded me 5minutes after I finished the book,
hence my little nicknames there.
There were boatloads of quotes that lots of people today know. When
people here them, they know they're from Shakespeare even if they
have no idea which play. It made me wonder why certain quotes have
attained that status and not others. Not all of them are epic, or
particularly wise or stand out above other bits, as far as I can see.
Just rather random.
I did laugh when Shylock's daughter ran off and became a “Christian”.
Shylock is bemoaning his loss of ducats and jewels and is complaining
to a non-Jew about it. The non-jew starts complaining about how the
price of pork is now going to rise because there is another pork
eater (because obviously it follows that to show one is a Christian
one must eat pork). It was so silly and ridiculous that I was just
grinning through the whole back and forth.
★★★☆½
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