Friday, May 31, 2019

Merchant Of Venice :: Free Merchant of Venice Essays

The Storytellers in The merchandiser of Venice     In this play two characters have a bigger role than one might imagine. Salerio and Solanio are the storytellers in The Merchant of Venice. They fill in important entropy that the audience needs to full understand the play.      First, the two names differ by only a hardly a(prenominal) letters, they are so close that one might confuse the two and think that they are the resembling person. I feel that this is Shakespeares intention in this play. He makes the two similar so that they are non very important to the plot of the play. At the same time they are two different people, not just a narrator. I feel that Shakespeare does this so that he can have the two characters speaking to each other. It is through their, Salerio and Solanio, interactions that the audience learns important information to the plot of the play.     At the opening of the play three characters are on stage, Antonio, Salerio, and Solanio. Through the dialogue, Salerio informs the audience of Antonios ships "Your mind is tossing on the ocean/There where your argosies i.e., great merchandiser ships with portly i.e., stately sail (I.i. 8-9). While in the same position Solanio helps the audience establish that Antonio has no major love interest "Why then you are in love," to which Antonio replies, "Fie, fie" (I.i. 46-47). Through their conversations, the two have given the audience a basis for the play that Antonio is a merchant and that he is not concerned approximately being in love.      An entire scene (viii) in Act II is given completely to a conversation between Solanio and Salerio. Here they tell of many an(prenominal) events that have happened Bassanios ship setting off and Gratiano going with him Shylocks reaction to Jessica and his ducats being gone a Venetian ship that is wrecked in the English blood and also the parting bet ween Antonio and Bassanio. Here, through the conversation of Solanio and Salerio the audience is told what has happened. Thus they have only one way to obtain the information. They all have the same thoughts about what has happened since they did not see the scenes and were only told about them.      Solanio and Salerio are the storytellers in the play but they are only used for about two thirds of the play. The scene that either one of them is in is scene ii of Act III.

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