The Merchant of Venice: summary
Basic info
The Merchant
of Venice is a 16th-century play
by William Shakespeare in which a merchant in Venice must default on a large
loan provided by a Jewish moneylender. It is believed to have been written
between 1596 and 1599. Though classified as a comedy in the First Folio
and sharing certain aspects with Shakespeare's other romantic comedies, the play is most remembered for its dramatic scenes, and it is best
known for Shylock and
the famous "Hath not a Jew eyes?" speech on humanity. Also notable is
Portia's speech about "the
quality of mercy". Critic Harold Bloom
listed it among Shakespeare's great comedies.
He hath disgraced me and hindered me half a million, laughed
at my losses, mocked at my gains, scorned my nation, thwarted my bargains,
cooled my friends, heated mine enemies—and what’s his reason? I am a Jew
Wikipedia—
Antonio disgraced Shylock, laughed at his loses, mocked at
his gains, scorn his nation, damaged his bargains. Tried to destroy his
business by lending money free of interest, heated Shylock enemies. All Antonio
did because- Shylock was a Jew.
“Hath not a Jew eyes? Hath not a Jew hands, organs,
dimensions, senses, affections, passions? Fed with the same food, hurt with the
same weapons, subject to the same diseases, healed by the same means, warmed
and cooled by the same winter and summer as a Christian is?”
Shylock says to Salarino in Act 3 Scene 1
Summary—
The Merchant of Venice opens with
Antonio, a
Christian merchant, in a depressed state. His friends try to cheer him up, but
nothing works to make him feel better. Finally his friend Bassanio, an
aristocrat who has lost all of his money, comes and asks Antonio to loan him
some money.
Antonio, who has
tied up all of his money is seafaring ventures, is unable to give Bassanio a
direct loan. Instead he offers to use his good credit to get a loan for
Bassanio. Bassanio finds Shylock, a
Jewish moneylender, and convinces him to give a loan of three thousand ducats
as long as Antonio will sign the contract. In a rather unusual twist, instead
of charging the Christian men interest, Shylock agrees to waive it as long as
Antonio promises him a pound of his flesh as collateral. Antonio, thinking this
is a "merry sport," accepts the condition of the bond (contract) and
signs it.
Bassanio takes the
money and prepares to go visit Portia, a
wealthy heiress living in Belmont. She is unmarried because her father has
decreed that all suitors must first select one of three caskets in order to
marry her. The caskets, one made of gold, one of silver, and one of base lead,
all contain different messages. Only one of these caskets contains a picture of
Portia. The suitor who picks that casket will be granted permission to marry
her.
Prior to
Bassanio's arrival the Prince of Morocco tries his luck in choosing among the caskets. He picks the gold casket
because it contains an inscription reading "Who
chooseth me shall gain what many men desire", Instead of Portia's picture, he finds a skull which
symbolizes the fact that gold hides corruption. As part of losing the suit, he
is further sworn to never propose marriage to any other woman, and must return
to Morocco immediately.
The next suitor,
the Prince of Aragon, selects the silver casket which bears an inscription "Who chooseth me shall get as much as he
deserves",. Inside is a picture of
an idiot, indicating that his self-centered approach was foolish. He too leaves
in shame.
Back in Venice, Jessica, the
daughter of Shylock, has fallen in love with Lorenzo.
They plan to escape one night when Shylock is invited to eat at Bassanio's
house. After Shylock leaves Lorenzo goes to his house with two friends. Jessica
appears at a window dressed as a boy and tosses a chest of money and jewels
down to them. She then emerges from the house and runs away with Lorenzo. Shylock, upon discovering that his daughter
has run away with a lot of his money, blames Antonio for helping her escape.
At the same time there are rumors developing
in Venice that many of Antonio's ships, with which he expected to repay Shylock
for the loan, have sunk or been lost at sea. Shylock begins to revel in the
news that Antonio is losing everything because he wants to exact his pound of
flesh in revenge for the many insults Antonio has dealt him throughout the
years.
Bassanio arrives
in Belmont and meets Portia. She remembers him as the dashing soldier with whom
she fell in love several years earlier. Portia begs Bassanio to wait before
choosing among the caskets, but he demands the right to start immediately.
Without even properly reading the inscriptions, Bassanio selects the lead one
because he considers it a threatening casket. "Who chooseth me must give and hazard all he hath" inscribed on it. It contains a portrait of Portia
inside it. Portia is overjoyed when he finds her portrait inside. She gives him
a ring to seal their engagement and they prepare to get married the next day. Graziano,
who has accompanied Bassanio to Belmont, tells him that he and Nerissa
(Portia's friend) wish to be married as well.
A messenger
arrives and hands Bassanio a letter from Antonio in which he informs Bassanio
that he has lost all his money and must forfeit a pound of flesh to Shylock.
Bassanio immediately tells Portia what has happened.
She orders him to
take six thousand ducats and return to Venice where he can pay Shylock and
cancel the contract. After Bassanio and Graziano have left, Nerissa and Portia
depart for Venice disguised as men.
Shylock has
Antonio arrested and brought before the Duke of Venice,
who presides over a court of justice. The Duke pleads with Shylock to forgive
the contract and let Antonio go free. When he refuses, the Duke asks him how he
expects any mercy if he is unable to offer it. The Duke then tells the gathered
men that he is waiting for a doctor of the law to arrive.
Nerissa enters the
court and hands a letter to the Duke which notifies him that a Doctor Bellario
has sent an educated young doctor in his place. Portia arrives disguised as the
Doctor Balthasar.
She informs the Duke that she has studied the case and will preside over it.
She first asks Shylock for the contract and looks it over.
Bassanio offers to
pay Shylock the six thousand ducats, but he refuses to accept the money,
preferring instead the revenge of killing Antonio. Unable to find any
loopholes, Portia grants Shylock his pound of flesh. Shylock, overjoyed at
winning his case, holds a knife ready to cut into Antonio's breast.
Portia stops him
by asking if he has a surgeon present to suppress the flow of blood. Shylock
tells her that the bond said nothing about providing a doctor. She informs him
that he may have his pound of flesh, but that if he sheds a single drop of
blood then Venice can take away his lands and wealth according to the law.
Shylock, clearly unable to comply with this law, asks instead that he be given
the six thousand ducats. Portia refuses his request, explaining that she has
already ruled according to the contract, and that it must be carried out.
Portia then starts
to read the contract literally, reaffirming that Shylock must take exactly one
pound of flesh, no more and no less, or he will violate the contract and die.
Shylock tells the
court that he wishes to completely drop his case and forgive Antonio the entire
three thousand ducats. Portia again refuses his request, explaining that the
law in Venice states that if any foreigner conspires against the life of a
Venetian, half his wealth is to be given to the man against whom he conspired,
and half is taken as a fine by the state. In addition, the Duke is granted the
power of life and death over him.
When Shylock is
pardoned by the Duke, he informs the court that he would prefer death rather
than lose everything he owns. Antonio asks the court to return the fine of half
of Shylock's wealth provided Shylock converts to Christianity. In addition,
Antonio declares he will keep his share in a trust for Jessica and Lorenzo.
Portia agrees to this, and also makes Shylock promise to give all his money to
Lorenzo upon his death.
After the trial
Bassanio thanks "Dr. Balthasar" (Portia) for "his" good
work and offers "him" anything "he" desires. Portia asks
him for the ring she had given him earlier as a token of their love. He is
upset about giving it to her since he thinks she is "Balthasar."
However, after Antonio points out that he nearly lost his life for Bassanio,
Bassanio pulls off the ring and hands it to her.
Portia and Nerissa
return to Belmont dressed normally. Lorenzo and Jessica have been living there,
enjoying the comfortable life Belmont offers. Soon after the two women arrive,
Bassanio and Graziano also return from Venice. The happy reunion is destroyed
when Portia asks Bassanio about the ring (which he gave away). She forgives him
only after Antonio vouches for Bassanio's fidelity.
Portia then gives
Antonio the ring and has him hand it to Bassanio. He is shocked to see it is
the same ring he gave "Balthasar". Portia finally tells him the truth
about Balthasar. The play ends with three happy couples: namely Lorenzo and
Jessica, Nerissa and Graziano, as well as Portia and Bassanio. However, Antonio
and Shylock remain outcasts, separated from the happy ending.
Bassanio is married with Portia
Gratiano is married with Nersia
Lorenzo is married with Jessica
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