When Borachio finishes telling the story of his villainy in the service of Don John, Don Pedro says to Claudio, "Runs not this speech like iron through your blood?" Claudio replies, "I have drunk poison whiles he utter'd it." So it seems that he is shocked. But is he remorseful? A little later he tells Leonato, Hero's father, that Leonato may choose his own revenge, but adds, "yet sinn'd I not / But in mistaking."
dressing
He is bewildered at first and thinks that they must mean something else. But eventually he believes them and gets angry with Hero. His first reaction is to believe them and say his daughter is dead to him.
Many readers have difficulty accepting the romantic relationship between Hero and Claudio. After all, they have barely met before they fall in love and decide to get married, and then Claudio betrays Hero viciously. But the idea of love at first sight was popular in Shakespeare's day. Romeo and Juliet, for instance, fall in love at first sight. Moreover, Claudio's methods of courting Hero through other people would have been an accepted tactic among Elizabethan nobility. Claudio's belief that Don John's trick is reality is a much bigger problem. Some readers feel that it is impossible to sympathize with Claudio after he rejects Hero in the church. One fact that defends Claudio is that he is young and inexperienced. Also, Don John is very clever-even the older, more experienced Don Pedro is deceived by his ruse. Hero's willingness to forgive Claudio is just as disturbing as Claudio's rejection of Hero. She does not challenge his behavior toward her but instead marries him willingly. In the end, though, Claudio is awestruck and delighted by Hero's unexpected reappearance. What is hard to take is perhaps not so much that Claudio believes that Hero was sleeping with someone else on the night before her wedding, but the cruel and public way that he refuses to marry her as a result. But even though he is cruel to her, it is possible that he may still love her. Not everyone in love has a perfect relationship with the beloved. Claudio and Hero's relationship may be characterized by Claudio being easily jealous and violent toward her, and Hero being a doormat. That's not a good combination--it may in time lead to spousal abuse, unless both of them do a lot of maturing.
In Act 1 Scene 1, Don Pedro first hears about Claudio's love for Hero from Benedick. Don Pedro replies that "the lady is very well worthy." To this Benedick responds "That I neither feel how she should be loved nor know how she should be worthy, is the opinion that the fire cannot melt out of me: I will die in it at the stake." He goes on a few lines later to a general condemnation of women, not Hero particularly, ending with the line "I will live a bachelor".
In the story "Much Ado About Nothing," Hero lives up to her name and is the hero of the story for many different reasons. One reason is that Hero doesn't argue nearly as much as anyone else in the story. Beatrice and Benedick argue so much in the story, and Hero doesn't argue at all. She isn't sarcastic, and doesn't talk badly about other people. Another reason why she's the hero of the story is that she remains faithful to the man she loves even after heartbreak. When Claudio's extreme suspicion led him to believe the false lies that Hero was sleeping around with another man, he publicly shamed her at their wedding. But Hero didn't give up, and had a plot to get him back. When she pretended to be dead, she knew Claudio would feel sad and miss her, and after a while, she showed up and got married to him in the end.
Don Pedro has gone to ask Leonato whether Claudio can marry Hero (Yenta the Matchmaker is apparently unavailable at this time). Don John tells Claudio that Don Pedro has really gone to ask to marry Hero himself. Because Claudio is very gullible and very jealous, he believes him and is very grumpy until he is told that Hero has in fact agreed to marry him.
you need to feel it
"Trust is the mother of deceit" suggests that when people place their trust in others, it can create opportunities for betrayal and manipulation. It implies that trust can be exploited, leading to situations where deceit flourishes because individuals feel safe to act dishonestly. Essentially, the phrase highlights the vulnerability that comes with trusting others, indicating that trust can be a fertile ground for dishonesty.
it feels really awesome and you feel really brave, but it also feels scary too.
=== === I also like him but he is like me hero he is hott and stuff but he is also my hero i got a pillow of him and if i am sad and stuff the pillow makes me feel better so he is my hero!
Katnis feels like she is a hero and she loved Peet’s
No, he didn't fit what I feel is the classic definition of a hero, but that does not mean he was not an admirable man. There is no doubt that he was successful and did some great things.