Twelfth Night
Shakespeare's play Twelfth Night is an Elizabethan situation comedy. Each character has a problem to solve, and each one finds a different way to attempt to solve it. For most of the characters their difficulties revolve around members of the opposite sex. By the time the play has been completed, it is the female characters who have accomplished their goals to the satisfaction of all the parties involved. Olivia, Viola and Maria all demonstrate their ability to accomplish their romantic goals far better than the men in the play can on their own.
Orsino, a man of high birth, believes himself passionately in love with Olivia. He believes his love to be the most passionate, most sincere and most ardent of any man alive. The fact the Olivia does not return his affection has no effect on his emotions, and as it turns out, he is more in love with the notion of love than with Olivia. When another admirable woman comes along, he is able to develop real feelings for her instead of wallowing in an obsessive, unrequited love. However, it takes a woman -- Viola -- to bring this about.
Viola is the survivor of a shipwreck cast on the shore of the island of Illyria while traveling with her twin brother, Sebastian, who looks remarkably like her for a young man. She fears her brother has drowned, and even if he has not, is not present to help protect her in this unknown place. Calling herself "Cesario," she disguises herself as a young man for her own protection and enters Orsini's service. While this would be an odd contrivance today, it shows Viola to be a level-headed young woman who can take care of herself in an emergency.
Olivia, the original object of Orsino's affections, is like him in some...
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