Thursday, May 30, 2019

Free Merchant of Venice Essays: The Role of Shylock :: Merchant Venice Essays

Perhaps The Merchant of Venice, by William Shakespeare, is neither pro-Jewish, nor pro-Christian, since the illustrations which show neither the Jew nor the Christian to be perfect are countless.  After having suffered through The Merchant of Venice, and sightedness how unjustly poor Shylock was treated by his Christian contemporaries, I cant help but wonder if Shakespeare was actually trying to show the world how hypocritical members of any religion could be, be it Jewish, Christian, or anything else.  For, although these buggers disliked each other based mainly on differences of religious doctrine, they had more in common than haemorrhage when pricked, laughing when tickled, or dying when pois aned.             As stated in the book of Timothy (vi, 10), The love of money is the floor of all evil.  Its not money that is the root of all evil but the  love of it that is pure evil and causes so many problems.  The prin cipal characters do love their money, dont they? From Portia to Bassanio,  Antonio to Shylock, Martin to Lewis.              Shylock, in particular, keeps babbling on and on about those precious ducats of his, as if they could actually be more important than his own flesh and blood (and, considering his daughters deviation, they probably were).  As for that bozo Antonio, he was one who loved money, but, in a different way than Shylock, for he seemed to get more of a buzz out of loaning/giving it to others than out of squirrel away it, but, nevertheless, he certainly felt an incessant need to have it, as demonstrated by his appeal to deal with the cunning Shylock.              Unfortunately, Shylocks cunning didnt match up to his greed, as he was bested by a woman, of all things.  Yes, folks, that pesky Portia, who was hot for Bassanios bod (lust, after all, is a type of g reed, is it not?), used her wily ship canal to help destroy the Jews empire.  Bummer.  Of course, Shylock really didnt lose it all, since Antonio allowed him to keep the half he was to have been allotted, provided Shylock give it to his unworthy daughter upon his passing from this plane.  What a sweetheart.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.