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  1. role in “Love’s Labour’s Lost”. In Love’s Labour’s Lost. The play opens as Ferdinand, the king of Navarre, and three of his noblemen—Berowne (Biron), Longaville, and Dumaine (Dumain)—debate their intellectual intentions. Their plans are thrown into disarray, however, when the Princess of France, attended by three ladies ...

  2. The king of Navarre’s park. Scene 2. The same. Act II. Scene 1. The same. Act III. Scene 1. The same. Act IV. Scene 1. The same. Scene 2. The same. Scene 3. The same. Act V. Scene 1. The same. Scene 2. The same. Characters (19 total) Click on a name to see all of that character's speeches. Biron, lord attending on the king; Boyet, lord ...

  3. He serves important functions in the plot, announcing the ladies' arrival and tipping them off to the imminent visit of the Russians. Not quite fatherly, he can certainly keep up with the ladies and helps shape their expectations of masculinity. He is the whetstone on which they sharpen their wits. Back. More.

  4. Play Summary. The King of Navarre and his followers, Biron, Longaville, and Dumain, vow to devote themselves to the celibate life of scholarship for three years. Their counterparts, the Princess of France and her attendant ladies, Rosaline, Maria, and Katherine, are refused entry to the city when they arrive, and therefore they decide to force ...

  5. Love’s Labor’s Lost begins with the young King of Navarre anticipating the “disgrace of death,” when he and his courtiers will succumb to “cormorant devouring time” and become “heirs of all eternity” (1.1.3–7); the play ends with the stunningly dramatic entrance of Marcade, whose brief “tale” () announces the death of the old King of France, and with the futile efforts of ...

  6. Letters are exchanged, hijinks ensue, and the King and lords who said they’d give up women end up falling in love with the Princess and her ladies. The Shakescleare translation of this play disentangles its complex comic plot, and illuminates some of Love’s Labor’s Lost ’s most noteworthy quotes, including “Love is familiar. Love is a ...

  7. Longaville is one of the main characters in William Shakespeare's play, Love's Labour's Lost. He is a young nobleman and a close friend of the King of Navarre, along with Berowne and Dumaine. Longaville is portrayed as a well-mannered and intelligent individual, known for his wit and loyalty.

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