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  1. Viola, disguised as Cesario, meets O. Sir Toby and Maria are married. Discuss Viola's use of her disguise in Shakespeare's Twelfth Night. After the shipwreck, Viola resolves to make the best of her situation and be taken into Orsino's service. As a young eunuch named Cesario, she will be safe from male attentions.

  2. Twelfth Night develops its theme on two levels. The main plot, written mostly in blank verse, shows the nobility in pursuit of love. The subplot features lower characters, who speak in prose and ...

  3. Shakespeare uses many rhythmic variations in this line The first is the classic trochaic inversion at the beginning of the line. The second is the pyrrhic caesura that reinforces the shift in mood as Orsino ends the music. The third is the spondee in the last foot, and the last is the relatively unusual masculine ending (the extra stressed ...

  4. Twelfth Night: Entire Play. Twelfth Night. ACT I. SCENE I. DUKE ORSINO's palace. Enter DUKE ORSINO, CURIO, and other Lords; Musicians attending. DUKE ORSINO. If music be the food of love, play on; Give me excess of it, that, surfeiting, The appetite may sicken, and so die. That strain again! it had a dying fall: O, it came o'er my ear like the ...

  5. In other words, he does not view her as a human being. Orsino's use of hunting as a metaphor for love—comparing himself to a deer and his desires to hounds in pursuit—also illustrates that he is more interested in the pursuit of love than he is in Olivia herself. Unlock explanations and citations for this and every literary device in ...

  6. Orsino (Act 1 Scene 1) - metaphor connotes harmony, beauty, emotion and pleasure of love and music. - spondee shows how overwhelmed Orsino is by idea of being in love. 'That strain again'. Orsino (Act 1 Scene 1) - suggests music has dropped in cadence. - sexual innuendo. 'like the sweet sound'. Orsino (Act 1 Scene 1)

  7. Jan 2, 2015 · Examining the Text: Twelfth Night. Shakespeare uses figurative language as he speaks with metaphors, similes, and personification. Recognizing when his characters are speaking figuratively helps in understanding the play. A metaphor is the application of a word or phrase to somebody or something that is not meant literally but to make a comparison.

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