Monday, December 2, 2019
Midsummer Nights Dream And Love Essays (408 words) - Love, Hermia
  Midsummer Nights Dream And Love    What Makes Us Love? What makes us love? This question has been studied for  centuries by philosophers, scientists, and even writers in search of a sensible  answer. Shakespeare, for one, explored many ideas to justify love. In his play,    "A Midsummer's Night Dream", he lists various thoughts on what he thinks  causes people to love. Some are overwhelmingly ridiculous, while others make  some sense. One of his far-fetched answers as to how people fall in love was    Cupid. He believed Cupid would shoot his arrows of love into individuals, and  they would magically fall for the next person they saw. "Cupid all armed. A  certain aim he took/At a fair vestal throned by the west,/ and loosed his  love-shaft smartly from his bow (2.1.163-65)." After the shot, the person  wouldn't know what hit them. He intertwines this thought with the concept that  one falls in love after looking in another's eyes. After missing a shot, one  of Cupid's arrows hit a flower, tainting it with his powers to make people  fall in love. When placed in a person's eyes, they will be infatuated with the  next thing they see. For example, after being placed in his Lysander's eyes,  his immense love for Hermia grows weak with just one look into Helena's eyes.    Shakespeare's thought here is that eyes have all the power over who we fall  for. Do not misunderstand him, though. His usage of this enchanting juice is not  to be taken seriously. He is trying to make a point, and at that, a good one.    Looking into someone's eyes had a certain power over one's feelings. You  just get a strong feeling in your heart. It is uncontrollable, and sometimes, it  truly is one of the main reasons we fall in love. However, he contradicts  himself in act one when Helena says, "Love looks not with the eye, but with  the mind (1.1.240)." He now states that the mind is what the person falls in  love with, and not the eyes. It is true, however; you have to love a person's  thoughts and ideas before you can feel that special passion for them. That is  the key to true love. Although he had extremely different thoughts on the  reasons we fall in love, they all made some sense. By contradicting his  explanations, he, in my opinion, is making a point. He's pointing out the fact  that he, too, doesn't really know the answer to the question of what makes us  love. And he knows that no one ever will.    
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