In
the wood, Puck interrogates a fairy who serves the Fairy Queen. When
Puck hears that Titania the Queen is coming, he says she better not get
within sight of Oberon. Oberon is angry with her because she has a
changeling boy (a mortal child stolen by fairies), and Oberon wants the
boy as a knight of his train. Titania refuses to give him up, so now,
whenever Titania and Oberon meet, they quarrel.
The
fairy recognizes Puck as a mischievous sprite known as Robin Goodfellow,
and Puck tells of some of the tricks he performs on unsuspecting humans
for the amusement of Oberon.
Oberon
and Titania enter. Titania says slyly that since Oberon has always been
a protector of Hippolyta, she guesses that he is there to bless her
marriage to Theseus. Oberon replies that he knows about Titania's love
for Theseus, so she is in no position to cast aspersions about him.
Titania dismisses his comment, and points out that because she and
Oberon have not performed their usual harmonious dances together since
the beginning of midsummer, the weather has been terrible. There have
been fogs and floods, and farming has been badly affected. It seems more
like winter than summer; the seasons have all changed places, and people
are confused. She blames their quarrel for all these bad effects in
nature. Oberon tells her that the power to make amends lies in her; all
he asks is that she give up her changeling boy. Titania refuses, saying
that his mother was a member of her order and died giving birth to the
boy. Titania now raises him for her sake, and will not give him up.
After
Titania exits, Oberon says he will make her suffer because of her
defiance. He summons Puck and tells him to fetch him a flower known as
"love-in-idleness," explaining that if the juice from that flower is
put on the eyelids of a sleeping person, that person will fall madly in
love with the next living creature he or she sees. As Puck departs on
his errand, Oberon says he will drop the juice from the flower into
Titania's eyes as she sleeps, and he will not lift the spell until she
has given up the changeling boy.
As
Oberon watches, Demetrius enters, with Helena following him. Demetrius
impatiently tells Helena to go away and stop following him. He says he
cannot love her, but this only has the effect of making her love him
more. She says that the more he spurns her, the more she will fawn on
him. After more of this, Demetrius says he will run away and leave her
to the mercy of wild beasts. When he exits, Helena follows, still
determined to pursue him and hoping for a change of heart.
Puck
enters, and Oberon takes the flower from him, promising to himself that
he will anoint Titania's eyes with it. Then he tells Puck to take the
flower and anoint the eyes of Demetrius, at a moment when the next thing
he is likely to see will be Helena.
Analysis
This
scene introduces the third plot and the third set of characters. It also
sets up the plot that will lead to the comic situations in the wood. The
quarrel between Titania and Oberon is significant. In Shakespeare's
worldview, disorder at one level of the universe leads to disorder
everywhere else, which is why the fairies' quarrel disrupts the normal
patterns of weather at the earthly level. Another theme developed in
this scene is that of the irrationality of love. The more Helena is
scorned, for example, the more she loves. This theme will be developed
further through the device of the flower-juice.
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