¶ … Shakespeare's Much Ado About Nothing, Claudio demonstrates an immature attitude toward love and romance. Claudio's initial attraction to Hero is based mostly on physical attraction; he seems to be only slightly interested in her financial status and is not concerned with Benedick's criticism of Leonato's daughter. Unlike Beatrice and Benedick, Claudio and Hero never get to develop a relationship based on respect and friendship. The romance between Claudio and Hero is sudden and spontaneous. As soon as Claudio spots the "sweetest lady that" he ever saw, he becomes determined to marry her. However, Claudio's romantic longing in the first act of Much Ado About Nothing is a genuine love, for it does not wane by the end of the play. Claudio marries Leonato's "niece" without the same spark of enthusiasm he had for Hero at the beginning of the play. It is clear that he values marriage as an institution, but that he would prefer to be united with the woman of his dreams, Hero.
Claudio's greatest weaknesses are his gullibility, naivete, and his poor judgment. In Act One, Scene One, Claudio's conversations with Don Pedro foreshadows the action that will ensue during the course of the play. Claudio, smitten with Hero, allows his friend to construct an elaborate plan involving masks and deception. Claudio doesn't feel capable of wooing Hero on his own…
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