Twelfth Night
Twelfth Night | Chaos and Order in Twelfth Night
Essay examining the significance of the play's title, as well as the setting of Illyria.
The only reference to Twelfth Night during Shakespeare’s own lifetime is to a performance on February 2, 1602. A law student named John Manningham wrote in his diary about a feast he attended at the Middle Temple in London where he was a law student and where “we had a play called Twelfth Night; Or, What You Will." 1 This was likely to have been an early performance since it is generally agreed that the play was probably written in 1601. In 1954 Sir Leslie Hotson’s book, The First Night of Twelfth Night, sought to identify the exact date of the first...
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- Twelfth Night: Introduction
- William Shakespeare Biography
- Reading Shakespeare
- List of Characters
- Historical Background
- One-Page Summary
- Summary and Analysis
- Act I, Scene 1 Summary and Analysis
- Act I, Scene 2 Summary and Analysis
- Act I, Scene 3 Summary and Analysis
- Act I, Scene 4 Summary and Analysis
- Act I, Scene 5 Summary and Analysis
- Act II, Scene 1 Summary and Analysis
- Act II, Scene 2 Summary and Analysis
- Act II, Scene 3 Summary and Analysis
- Act II, Scene 4 Summary and Analysis
- Act II, Scene 5 Summary and Analysis
- Act III, Scene 1 Summary and Analysis
- Act III, Scene 2 Summary and Analysis
- Act III, Scene 3 Summary and Analysis
- Act III, Scene 4 Summary and Analysis
- Act IV, Scene 1 Summary and Analysis
- Act IV, Scene 2 Summary and Analysis
- Act IV, Scene 3 Summary and Analysis
- Act V, Scene 1 Summary and Analysis
- Quizzes
- Act I, Scene 1 Questions and Answers
- Act I, Scene 2 Questions and Answers
- Act I, Scene 3 Questions and Answers
- Act I, Scene 4 Questions and Answers
- Act I, Scene 5 Questions and Answers
- Act II, Scene 1 Questions and Answers
- Act II, Scene 2 Questions and Answers
- Act II, Scene 3 Questions and Answers
- Act II, Scene 4 Questions and Answers
- Act II, Scene 5 Questions and Answers
- Act III, Scene 1 Questions and Answers
- Act III, Scene 2 Questions and Answers
- Act III, Scene 3 Questions and Answers
- Act III, Scene 4 Questions and Answers
- Act IV, Scene 1 Questions and Answers
- Act IV, Scene 2 Questions and Answers
- Act IV, Scene 3 Questions and Answers
- Act V, Scene 1 Questions and Answers
- Themes
- Character Analysis
- Sir Andrew Aguecheek (Character Analysis)
- Sir Toby Belch (Character Analysis)
- Fabian (Character Analysis)
- Feste the Clown (Character Analysis)
- Malvolio (Character Analysis)
- Maria (Character Analysis)
- Olivia (Character Analysis)
- Orsino (Character Analysis)
- Sebastian (Character Analysis)
- Viola (Character Analysis)
- Antonio (Character Analysis)
- Other Characters (Analysis)
- Principal Topics
- Essays
- Criticism
- Selected Quotes
- Suggested Essay Topics
- Sample Essay Outlines
- Modern Connections
- Pictures
- Sir Toby Belch and Maria
- The Duke, Viola, Antonio, Olivia, and the priest
- Olivia, Maria, and Malvolio
- Illustration: Orsino in Act I, Scene I
- Illustration: Viola and a Sea Captain (Act I, Scene 2)
- Illustration: Sir Toby and Maria (Act I, Scene 3)
- Illustration: Maria, Sir Toby, and Sir Andrew
- Illustration: The Clown and Maria in Act I, Scene 5
- Illustration: Sebastian arrives in Illyria
- Illustration: Cesario and Malvolio
- Illustration: Music in Act II, Scene 3
- Illustration: Cesario and the Duke in Act II, Scene 4
- Illustration: Malvolio picks up the letter
- Illustration: Cesario and Olivia in Olivia's garden
- Illustration: Sir Toby, Sir Andrew, and Fabian
- Illustration: Sebastian and Antonio
- Illustration: Malvolio speaks to Olivia
- Illustration: Sir Andrew, Sebastian, and Sir Toby
- Illustration: Malvolio and the Clown (dressed as Sir Topas)
- Illustration: Olivia, Sebastian, and the Priest (illustration)
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