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Key points

A Midsummer Night’s Dream is a play by William Shakespeare that tells the story of confused lovers and fairy magic.

Themes are the main ideas that appear repeatedly in a play. Some of the important themes in A Midsummer Night’s Dream are:

  • Love - romantic love causes problems and conflicts in the play.
  • Appearance and reality - things are not quite what they seem in a play that includes magical worlds, tricks and confusions.
  • Order and disorder - there are different types of disorders but order is restored by the end.
Three circles labelled love, order and disorder and appearance and reality. The circle labelled love contains a heart with an arrow through it. The circle labelled order and disorder shows a flower with some of its petals falling off. The circle labelled appeared and reality has an image of a human man with the head of a donkey chewing on a piece of wheat.

Did you know?

Shakespeare often uses similar themes across his plays. For example, Romeo and Juliet is a tragedy that also deals with the theme of love.

Images of a quill and ink pot, purple question mark and William Shakespeare above an open book.
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Love

Watch this video about love in A Midsummer Night's Dream:

In A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Shakespeare explores the problems and conflicts that can be caused by love.

Unrequited love
Helena and Demetrius suffer from love at the start of the play. Helena is in love with Demetrius, but he doesn’t love her back. Demetrius loves Hermia, but she also does not return his affections.

Jealousy
Helena is jealous of Hermia because Demetrius loves Hermia, and Helena loves Demetrius. When both Demetrius and Lysander are in love with Helena because of Puck’s love potion, Hermia is jealous.

Lysander describes love as:

… swift as a shadow, short as any dream, brief as the lightning…
A Midsummer Night's Dream, Act 1, scene 1

What literary device is being used in this quotation?

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Order and disorder

Watch this video about order in A Midsummer Night's Dream:

The disruption of order creates many comical, as well as serious, moments in the play.

There is disorder within the fairy world because Titania and Oberon are in conflict. Titania claims that her dispute with Oberon about the changeling boy has created disorder in nature and changed the weather. Shakespeare often shows the natural world being affected by the actions of the characters.

Puck creates disorder in the human world, by making a mistake with the love potion and making Lysander fall in love with Helena. By the end of the play there is a happy ending for the four couples in the play. The fairy couple, Oberon and Titania, are reunited and stop arguing. The young lovers, Hermia and Lysander and Helena and Demetrius, are married alongside Theseus and Hippolyta.

What is Titania describing in this passage?

The spring, the summer,
The childing autumn, angry winter change
Their wonted liveries, and the mazed world
By their increase now knows not which is which.
A Midsummer Night's Dream, Act 2, scene 1

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Appearance and reality

Watch this video about appearance and reality:

In the play, the line between appearance and reality becomes confused. The human world cannot see the fairy world and most of the magical characters remain invisible to the human characters.

Tricks and confusions
Titania is given a love potion and falls in love with Bottom, who has been given the head of a donkey by Puck. She appears to be in love with Bottom, but in reality she is the victim of Oberon and Puck’s trick.

Oberon and Puck also create confusion in the world of the lovers. Lysander appears to be in love with Helena, but in reality he is the victim of Puck’s love potion.

Titania, who is wearing a Tudor style dress and ruff collar, holds a flower in one hand and leans towards bottom, who is wearing human clothes but has the large head of a donkey.
Image caption,
Judi Dench as Titania and Oliver Chris as Bottom in a 2010 production of the play

The play within the play
The mechanicals struggle to understand how an audience will react to their play. They worry that the audience will think the events are real and be scared by their lion. This creates lots of comical moments for the audience.

Dreaming
At the end of the play, all the lovers think the events have happened in a dream. Puck also speaks to the audience directly and tells them to think of the play as their own dream.

Did you know?

Not everyone loved A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Samuel Pepys, a writer famous for his diaries recounting the Great Fire of London and the Great Plague, saw it in 1662. He recorded in his famous diary that the play was “the most insipid ridiculous play that ever I saw in my life”, although he also commented that he liked the dancing.

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