Setting:
The story happened on Sixteenth
century. France, primarily the fictional Forest of Ardenne.
Characters:
Rosalind - The daughter of Duke
Senior. Rosalind, considered one of Shakespeare’s most delightful heroines, is
independent minded, strong-willed, good-hearted, and terribly clever.
Orlando - The youngest son of Sir
Rowland de Bois and younger brother of Oliver.
Duke Senior - The father of Rosalind and
the rightful ruler of the dukedom in which the play is set.
Jaques - A faithful lord who accompanies Duke Senior
into exile in the Forest of Ardenne.
Celia - The daughter of Duke Frederick and Rosalind’s
dearest friend.
Duke Frederick - The brother of Duke Senior
and usurper of his throne.
Touchstone - A clown in Duke
Frederick’s court who accompanies Rosalind and Celia in their flight to
Ardenne.
Oliver - The oldest son of Sir Rowland de Bois and sole
inheritor of the de Bois estate.
Silvius - A young, suffering
shepherd, who is desperately in love with the disdainful Phoebe.
Phoebe - A young shepherdess, who disdains the
affections of Silvius.
Lord Amiens - A faithful lord who
accompanies Duke Senior into exile in the Forest of Ardenne. Lord Amiens is
rather jolly and loves to sing.
Charles - A professional wrestler in
Duke Frederick’s court.
Adam - The elderly former servant of Sir Rowland de
Bois.
Sir Rowland de Bois - The father of Oliver and
Orlando, friend of Duke Senior, and enemy of Duke Frederick.
Corin - A shepherd. Corin attempts to counsel his
friend Silvius in the ways of love, but Silvius refuses to listen.
Audrey - A simpleminded goatherd who agrees to marry
Touchstone.
William - A young country boy who is
in love with Audrey.
Climax:
Rosalind promises to marry
Orlando and gets Phoebe to agree to marry Silvius, should things go awry with
her beloved Ganymede, who is actually Rosalind in disguise.
Rising action:
In order to teach Orlando how to be a proper husband to
her, Rosalind disguises herself as a young man named Ganymede and instructs him
in the ways of love.
Falling
action:
Rosalind,
appearing as herself, marries Orlando, and Phoebe marries Silvius.
Denouement:
The concluding scene, The light tone,
continued to the end, and I rejoiced in the happy ending which is altogether
"as I like it."
Plot:
Sir Rowland de Bois has recently died, and, according to the custom of
primogeniture, the vast majority of his estate has passed into the possession
of his eldest son, Oliver. Although Sir Rowland has instructed Oliver to take
good care of his brother, Orlando, Oliver refuses to do so. Out of pure spite,
he denies Orlando the education, training, and property befitting a gentleman.
Charles, a wrestler from the court of Duke Frederick, arrives to warn Oliver of
a rumor that Orlando will challenge Charles to a fight on the following day.
Fearing censure if he should beat a nobleman, Charles begs Oliver to intervene,
but Oliver convinces the wrestler that Orlando is a dishonorable sportsman who
will take whatever dastardly means necessary to win. Charles vows to pummel
Orlando, which delights Oliver.
Duke Senior has been usurped of his throne by his brother, Duke Frederick, and
has fled to the Forest of Ardenne, where he lives like Robin Hood with a band
of loyal followers. Duke Frederick allows Senior’s daughter, Rosalind, to
remain at court because of her inseparable friendship with his own daughter,
Celia. The day arrives when Orlando is scheduled to fight Charles, and the
women witness Orlando’s defeat of the court wrestler. Orlando and Rosalind
instantly fall in love with one another, though Rosalind keeps this fact a
secret from everyone but Celia. Orlando returns home from the wrestling match,
only to have his faithful servant Adam warn him about Oliver’s plot against
Orlando’s life. Orlando decides to leave for the safety of Ardenne. Without
warning, Duke Frederick has a change of heart regarding Rosalind and banishes
her from court. She, too, decides to flee to the Forest of Ardenne and leaves
with Celia, who cannot bear to be without Rosalind, and Touchstone, the court
jester. To ensure the safety of their journey, Rosalind assumes the dress of a
young man and takes the name Ganymede, while Celia dresses as a common
shepherdess and calls herself Aliena.
Duke Frederick is furious at his daughter’s disappearance. When he
learns that the flight of his daughter and niece coincides with the
disappearance of Orlando, the duke orders Oliver to lead the manhunt,
threatening to confiscate Oliver’s lands and property should he fail. Frederick
also decides it is time to destroy his brother once and for all and begins to
raise an army.
Duke Senior lives in the Forest of Ardenne with a band of lords who have
gone into voluntary exile. He praises the simple life among the trees, happy to
be absent from the machinations of court life. Orlando, exhausted by travel and
desperate to find food for his starving companion, Adam, barges in on the
duke’s camp and rudely demands that they not eat until he is given food. Duke
Senior calms Orlando and, when he learns that the young man is the son of his
dear former friend, accepts him into his company. Meanwhile, Rosalind and
Celia, disguised as Ganymede and Aliena, arrive in the forest and meet a
lovesick young shepherd named Silvius who pines away for the disdainful Phoebe.
The two women purchase a modest cottage, and soon enough Rosalind runs into the
equally lovesick Orlando. Taking her to be a young man, Orlando confides in
Rosalind that his affections are overpowering him. Rosalind, as Ganymede,
claims to be an expert in exorcising such emotions and promises to cure Orlando
of lovesickness if he agrees to pretend that Ganymede is Rosalind and promises
to come woo her every day. Orlando agrees, and the love lessons begin.
Meanwhile, Phoebe becomes increasingly cruel in her rejection of
Silvius. When Rosalind intervenes, disguised as Ganymede, Phoebe falls
hopelessly in love with Ganymede. One day, Orlando fails to show up for his
tutorial with Ganymede. Rosalind, reacting to her infatuation with Orlando, is
distraught until Oliver appears. Oliver describes how Orlando stumbled upon him
in the forest and saved him from being devoured by a hungry lioness. Oliver and
Celia, still disguised as the shepherdess Aliena, fall instantly in love and
agree to marry. As time passes, Phoebe becomes increasingly insistent in her
pursuit of Ganymede, and Orlando grows tired of pretending that a boy is his
dear Rosalind. Rosalind decides to end the charade. She promises that Ganymede
will wed Phoebe, if Ganymede will ever marry a woman, and she makes everyone
pledge to meet the next day at the wedding. They all agree.
The day of the wedding arrives, and Rosalind gathers the various
couples: Phoebe and Silvius; Celia and Oliver; Touchstone and Audrey, a
goatherd he intends to marry; and Orlando. The group congregates before Duke
Senior and his men. Rosalind, still disguised as Ganymede, reminds the lovers
of their various vows, then secures a promise from Phoebe that if for some
reason she refuses to marry Ganymede she will marry Silvius, and a promise from
the duke that he would allow his daughter to marry Orlando if she were
available. Rosalind leaves with the disguised Celia, and the two soon return as
themselves, accompanied by Hymen, the god of marriage. Hymen officiates at the
ceremony and marries Rosalind and Orlando, Celia and Oliver, Phoebe and
Silvius, and Audrey and Touchstone. The festive wedding celebration is
interrupted by even more festive news: while marching with his army to attack
Duke Senior, Duke Frederick came upon a holy man who convinced him to put aside
his worldly concerns and assume a monastic life. -Frederick changes his ways
and returns the throne to Duke Senior. The guests continue dancing, happy in
the knowledge that they will soon return to the royal court.
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