English, asked by Anonymous, 10 months ago

Character sketche of Prince of Morocco of Merchant of Venice...
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Answers

Answered by Anonymous
1

Morocco (Morochus) is an African prince and an unsuccessful suitor of Portia. Faced with the choice between three coffins ordered by the father of Portia, Morocco rationalizes this choice in a long speech (2.7.13-60) which presents a point of view that the piece as a whole invalid. Morocco is attracted by the wealth of the gold coffin that promises "what many men desire" (2.7.5), but there is an image of a skull and a roll whose message begins with the line now familiar "All mirrors are not gold" (2.7.65) Morocco fails because it equates appearance with inner value and can not imagine risking everything, unlike Bassanio , who wins Portia by choosing the lead coffin, and Antonio, who risks everything for his friend by accepting the perilous loan from Shylock.Portia does not like the prospect of marrying Morocco.In 2.1, it ensures it politely that she recognizes her virtues as a man and a prince, but after her defeat, she is relieved.The Merchant of Venice is a play that recognizes and uses Elizabethan prejudices, not only is he clearly anti-Semitic, but the two pretenders that fail - both presented as examples of going their erroneous - are a black man and a political enemy of England, the Spanish ARRAGON. In the Quarto and First Folio editions of the play, the name of Morocco is translated into Latin, Morochus and some modern editions follow this practice.

Answered by walia04044
3

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