Puck announces everything was just a dream. It is very hard to tell because he is using Shakespeare's confusing language.
There are a bunch of weddings.
He is a boy that was ment to marry Hermia but loves Helana and marrys her in the end
Titania and Oberon and all the other fairies.
There are three weddings in William Shakespeare's "A Midsummer Night's Dream." The play surrounds the festival that Theseus, the Duke of Athens, plans to celebrate his marriage to Hippolyta. His daughter, Hermia, marries her love, Lysander at the end of the place, while her former suitor, Demetrius, marries his new love, Helena.
Robin Starveling plays the moon for Peter Quince's makeshift group of actors. He tells his audience that the lantern he holds is the moon and he is the man in the moon. Quince's whole play--based on the tale of Pyramus and Thisbe--is slipshod and melodramatic, especially because Nicholas Bottom, who plays Pyramus, drags out his monologues and misspeaks several times. The whole play is comical, a fitting end to "A Midsummer Night's Dream," one of Shakespeare's comedies.
go watch it.. -___-
Nobody dies in a midsummer night's dream. In the end Hermia and Lysander are together. Helena and Demetruis are together. the fairy king and queen are back together. And theseus and hippolitta get marryed.
These lines are spoken by Puck at the end of Shakespeare's play "A Midsummer Night's Dream" as part of his closing monologue. Puck is addressing the audience directly to reassure them that if they were offended by the play, they should think of it as just a dream and all will be resolved.
Peter Quince is a character in William Shakespeare's play "A Midsummer Night's Dream." He is a carpenter and the leader of the group of amateur actors called the Mechanicals who perform the play within the play at the end of the story. Quince is responsible for organizing the actors and their roles in the performance.
A Midsummer Theatre ended on 1958-09-05.
At the start of "A Midsummer Night's Dream," the two lovers who are in love with each other are Hermia and Lysander. They face obstacles due to Hermia's father's disapproval of their relationship and end up becoming entangled in the magical forest mischief orchestrated by Oberon and Puck.
There are many references to dreams in A Midsummer Night's Dream. Some examples are when Bottom wakes up after being turned into a donkey, he thinks it was all a dream. Also, the four lovers, once waking up near the end of the novel, think that their adventures were all a dream, too. And, in the last line of the play, Puck tell the audience that if they didn't like the play, pretend that the entire thing was just a bad dream. Also in the play, one of the characters had a bad dream about a snake attacking her.