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Essay on Twelfth Night - Analysis Of Fools
This is the first 1,000 characters of 1376 words (5.5 pages) in the essay titled Twelfth Night - Analysis Of Fools
Twelfth Night - Analysis of Fools
A fool can be defined in many meanings according to the Oxford English Dictionary On Historical Principles. The word could mean “a silly person”, or “one who professionally counterfeits folly for the entertainment of others, a jester, clown” or “one who has little or no reason or intellect” or “one who is made to appear to be a fool” (word originated from North Frisian). In english literature, the two main ways which the fool could enter imaginative literature is that “He could provide a topic, a theme for mediation, or he could turn into a stock character on the stage, a stylized comic figure”. In William Shakespeare’s comedy, Twelfth Night, Feste the clown is not the only fool who is subject to foolery. He and many other characters combine their silly acts and wits to invade other characters that “evade reality or rather realize a dream”, while “our sympathies go out to those”. “It is natural that the fool should be a prominent & attractive figure and make an important contribution to the action” in forming the confusion and the humor in an Elizabethan drama. In Twelfth Night, the clown and the fools are the ones who combine humor & wit to make the comedy work.
Clowns, jesters, and Buffoons are usually regarded as fools. Their differences could be of how they dress, act or portrayed in society. A clown for example, “wa
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