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Done By:
Daniel Koh
Liew Shan Yao
Andre Lim
Loh Sheng Hng
Tan Jiahao
Contents Page
 Definition of Key Concepts
 Appearance VS Reality in:
 Casket Scenes
 Jessica’s Elopement
 Portia’s Cross-Dressing
 Shylock’s Deception
 Relevance / Significance
Definition of Key Concepts
 Compact Oxford Dictionary defines:
 Appearance as the way that someone or something
looks or seems
 Reality as a thing that is actually experienced or seen /
the quality of being lifelike
 In our terms,
 Appearance is what you see, which might not
necessarily be actual
 Reality is the actual look / essence / behaviour of a
particular thing or charcter
Casket Scenes
 “All that glitters is not gold –
Often have you heard that told.
Many a man his life hath sold
But my outside to behold.”
- Act 2, Scene 7, Lines 65 – 68
 Although gold is shiny, what really “glitters [might] not
[be] gold”. Similarly, “my outside” might cause “a man[‘s]
life [to be] sold”, showing that the appearance of
something, might not be what the essence of it might
be. What matters is the reality of the object, not the
appearance
Casket Scenes
 “Some there be that shadows kiss;
Such have but a shadow’s bliss”
- Act 2, Scene 9, Lines 66 to 67
 The “shadows kiss” signifies the embracing of illusions
rather than the reality, and also of someone’s image,
rather than his true self, or his true “bliss”.
 Appearance of “bliss” / happiness, not the reality
Casket Scenes
 “So may the outward shows be least themselves;
The world is still deceived with ornament
In law, what pleas so tainted and corrupt,
But seasoned with a gracious voice,
Obscures the show of evil?”
- Act 3, Scene 2, Lines 73 to 77
 There are things that are deeper in life than what “the
outward shows” and people everywhere are lead by false
appearances. An example being a lawyer can justify what
is wrong with sweet false appearances.
Jessica’s Elopement
 “To see me thus transformed into a boy”
- Act 2 Scene 6 Line 39
 “In the lovely garnish of a boy”
- Act 2 Scene 6 Line 45
 She dressed up as a boy so as to escape the attention of
other when she elopes with Lorenzo.
Jessica’s Elopement
 “Must I hold a candle to my shames”
- Act 2 Scene 6 Line 41
 “I should be obscured”
- Act 2 Scene 6 Line 44
 Her disguise also hid her shame from eloping with a
Christian.
Portia’s Cross-Dressing
 Portia dressed as a man so as to help her husband
Bassanio, save his best friend Antonio.
 This is ironic, because at that time, female
characters were played by men, or boys. The
fact that a male character has to play a female
character acting as a male character is ironic
Portia’s Cross-Dressing
 Evidence
 Act 5 Scene 1, Lines 269-271:
- “There you shall find that Portia was the doctor, Nerissa
there her clerk. Lorenzo here Shall witness I set forth as soon
as you.”
The Bond
 Portia, when playing the part of the lawyer, made
Shylock believe that his bond was foolproof,
making him stick to his bond, before turning it
around on him, trapping him in his own cage.
 Portia uses the foolproof appearance of the bond
to trick Shylock into believing it actually is
foolproof, yet in reality, it isn’t
Portia – Lawyer/Wife
 Portia appears as a lawyer, although she is
just Bassanio’s wife.
 Those who do not know this see the lawyer
and Portia as 2 different people, and they did
not associate Portia with the role of the hero.
However, in reality, Portia is the one who
saves the day, although in reality she isn’t a
lawyer.
Shylock’s Deception
 In act 1 scene 3, Antonio wants to borrow a loan from Shylock.
Shylock agrees to the bond, under the condition that Shylock gets
a pound of Antonio’s flesh for each pound he cannot return.
 Shylock also describes the bond as a “merry bond”. A merry bond
is defined as an unserious bond, a very happy and flexible bond,
where everyone expects Shylock to be understanding to Antonio
when he cannot return the loan on time.
 Shylock seems to have created this bond without interest due to
his love and friendship for Antonio, as he states: “I would be
friends with you, and have your love…” Shylock continues to
flatter Antonio like “Antonio is a good man” and wants to be
friends with him.
 Appearance only
Shylock’s Deception
 However, Shylock’s real intention is to "catch him once upon
the hip, I will feed fat the ancient grudge I bear him,” and to
get a pound of flesh from Antonio, which in other terms to kill
him. As Antonio “hates our sacred nation”, which means he hates
Jews, Shylock uses deception to lure Antonio into his deadly trap.
 “He hath disgraced me and hindered me half a million,
laughed at my losses, mocked my gains, scorned my nation,
thwarted my my bargains, cooled my friends, heated my
enemies- for what reason- I am a Jew.” Here is the reason that
Shylock states that why he wants to kill Antonio and despised
him, as he looked down on Jews and treated them like animals.
 Real reason (reality) of treating Antonio well in Act 1 Scene 3
Relevance / Signigifcance
 Have came in the forms of
 Lies
 Deception
 Disguise
 Trickery
 Uses:
 Thickens the plotline
 Makes it more engaging and exciting
 Create the mood and atmosphere of suspense
 Some use of dramatic irony (boy playing as a woman,
playing as a man, in Portia and Jessica’s case)
Thank you for your kind
attention.
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