the entire play takes place over four days | true |
the actors are afraid that the lion will frighten the ladies watching the play | true |
hermia is taller than helena | false |
hermia and lysander secretly marry at his aunt’s house | false |
hippolyta is concerned that the actors will make fools of themselves | true |
bottom thinks that the donkey head/ titania experience was a dream | true |
oberon is the last one in the play to speak | false |
one of the actors plays the wall that separates pyramus and thisbe | true |
egeus believes that his daughter should face a consequence – even death – if she doesnt whom he chooses for her | true |
oberon and titania showed jealously over each other’s infidelities | true |
what does oberon and titania’s fighting negatively affect on earth | the weather |
what is puck’s full name | robin goodfellow |
why does helena become so upset with hermia in the woods? | because helena thinks hermia is mocking her |
how does bottom end up having a donkey’s head for awhile? | puck does it |
which of the following is NOT a part in the play the actors put on? | tree |
why does oberon first get involved with the young lovers? | he pities helena because he sees demetrius treating her badly |
what do the actors do after they have finished showing their play to the newlyweds? | they dance |
at the beginning of the play, which young man loves helena? | neither loves her |
what happens to the young lovers in the acotors’ play? | they both kill themselves |
who treats the lovers’ stories of enchantment and fairies with much skepticism? | theseus |
“if we shadows have offended, think but this, and all is mended.” | puck |
“for aught that i could ever read, could ever hear by tale or history, the course of true love never did run smooth.” | lysander |
“love looks not with the eyes, but with the mind, and therefore is winged cupid painted blind.” | helena |
“over hill, over dale, thorough bush, thorough briar, over park over pale, thorough flood, thorough fire, i do wander every where.” | fairy |
“fetch me that flower, the herb i shewed thee one, the juice of it on sleeping eyelids laid will make or man or women madly dote on the live creature that it sees.” | oberon |
“how low am i, thou painted maypole? speak, how low am i? i am not yet so low but that my nails can reach unto thine eyes.” | hermia |
“do i entice you? do i speak you fair? or rather do i not in plainest truth tell you i do not nor i cannot love you?” | demetrius |
“methinks i have a great desire to a bottle of hay: good hay, sweet hay, hath no fellow.” | bottom |
“what visions have i seen! methought i was enamored of an ass.” | titania |
“i will hear that play. for never anything can be amiss when simpleness and duty tender it.” | theseus |
English final (a midsummer night’s dream)
July 14, 2019