Explanation - I swear to thee by Cupid's strongest bow, by his arrow with the golden head, by the simplicity of Venus's doves, by that fire which burn'd the Carthage queen when the false Trojan under sail was seen
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There are 3 classes showed in Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream. Shakespeare has made a “voice” for each of the classes that make them particular and exceptional. Hermia and Helena, the youthful admirers of the story, talk in rhyming couplets. No different characters in the play, up until the point when the minute we meet these young ladies, talk along these lines. The first occasion when we are acquainted with this sort of dialect, the two young ladies are infatuated. Hermia has recently chosen to steal away with her adoration, Lysander and Helena is pining over Demetrius who, lamentably for Helena, has affections for Hermia. The main display of rhyming couplets starts on line 171 in Act Ist Scene Ist when Hermia says.
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