English, asked by Ellina, 1 year ago

Character sketch of portia in 1500 words

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
39

\textbf{\large{Answer -}}

Portia is one of the most mature and prominent heroine of Shakespeare's play, The merchant of Venice. She is decribed rich, beautiful, intelligent, and a girl with high standards who follows the rules of his father's will and also was in love with Bassanio.

She was bound to marry with the man who could find her portrait and a scroll in one of the three caskets which were made up of gold, silver and lead. There was a condition for the people who would come there and it was that they will never seek to any other women after they lose.

Prince of Morocco and Aragon lose the challenge and get unsuccessful in seeking Portia's hand. Portia wanted to marry Bassanio who was a Venetian noble but couldn't help him as per the will. Later on in the play she also helps in saving life of Bassanio's friend Antonio.



Answered by gayatrikumari99sl
11

Answer:

Explanation:

                Character sketch of Portia

Portia is a woman with a positive outlook on life. She exhibits a sharp sense of humour right away and keeps doing so right up until the very end. She also has a brilliant, scintillating wit. She only expresses sadness and even world-weariness once throughout the entire play.

Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice features Portia as a strong, self-assured character who has found a suitable suitor in Bassanio. Bassanio must select one of three caskets before Portia's wedding; only that one will allow him to be with her. Portia must watch him while he makes his decision.

Regarding each of these four suitors, Portia has something hilarious to say. She made a funny quip about her English suitor. She then adds that the Englishman may have purchased his doublet in Italy, his round hose in France, his bonnet in Germany, and his behaviour everywhere across the world. She then proceeds to demonstrate her sense of humour by starting the Rings story and finishing it, which causes much laughing and mirth. Portia's observations of her many suitors demonstrate both her acute observational skills and her insightful character analysis.

Portia also exhibits her wisdom in other ways. She shares some wise words in a well-phrased maxim during her dialogue with Nerissa at the play's very beginning. For instance, she claims that a good god is one who obeys his own commands. Additionally, she claims that it would be simpler for her to instruct twenty people than it would be for her to follow her own advice. She actually speaks to Nerissa in this instance in a sequence of aphoristic comments that are filled with nuggets of knowledge. She repeats similar statements later on in the play, demonstrating her wisdom and depth of understanding of both the universe and human nature.

She had wealth, wit, and intelligence. She was her father's daughter , and she married the winner of the contest he had set up to find the right partner. She was married to Bassanio, a noble young man from Venice.

The protagonist of The Merchant of Venice is Portia, who prevents Antonio from losing a single pound of flesh, guides her lover Bassanio toward the desired personality change, and ensures the play's joyful conclusion.

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