Every actor knows there are no small parts!
The smallest part in A Midsummer Night's Dream is the character of Moth, who appears in Act 5, Scene 1 as a fairy attending the fairy king Oberon. Despite being a minor character, Moth contributes to the magical atmosphere of the play.
Starveling plays the part of Moonshine in A Midsummer Night's Dream.
Flute, who played the part of Thisbe in the Pyramus and Thisbe play.
The verses anthologized as A Fairy Song are in fact part of the dialogue from Shakespeare's play A Midsummer Night's Dream which he wrote around 1595 or so. The last thing Shakespeare would have expected is that they would be torn from their context, given the silly title "A Fairy Song" and treated as if they are serious poetry.
Bottom, a character in "A Midsummer Night's Dream," gets transformed into a donkey by the mischievous Puck as a result of a spell cast by Puck on behalf of Oberon, the Fairy King. This transformation is part of the magical mischief and chaos that occurs in the play, adding to the comedic elements and misunderstandings that drive the plot.
He is a sort of part-time assistant to Oberon the fairy King and full-time troublemaker.
The wall is a character in "A Midsummer Night's Dream" that is part of a group of artisans putting on a play for the Duke's wedding. The wall is portrayed as a literal wall in their play within the play, and its role is to separate the lovers Pyramus and Thisbe. It adds a comical element to the play.
Shakespeare wrote A Midsummer Night's Dream in about 1595, at about the same time he wrote Romeo and Juliet. The Lord Chamberlain's Men were newly formed then. This was one of Shakespeare's most original plots, and featured a great part for Will Kempe in Bottom. Some people have tried to connect the play to somebody's wedding, but weddings are a standard feature of all Shakespearean comedies, and not particularly of this one. There is no reason to think it was composed for a special occasion.
A Midsummer Night's Dream does not have an Introduction, at least not the way Shakespeare wrote it. Usually the editors of a particular edition of the play will write an introduction to it, but that's not Shakespeare, it's not part of the play, and it's different from edition to edition. The only Shakespeare play which has an Introduction (it's called an Induction) is The Taming of The Shrew. Some of them (Romeo and Juliet, Henry IV Part II, Henry V, Pericles) have Prologues, but A Midsummer Night's Dream doesn't have one of those either.
Nick Bottom, a weaver, takes up the role of the bellows-mender in the play within a play performed by the craftsmen in "A Midsummer Night's Dream." He is one of the comic and bumbling characters in the play.
These are lines spoken by Demetrius in Act 3, Scene 2 of "A Midsummer Night's Dream" by William Shakespeare. Demetrius utters this line while expressing his impatience with how slowly the night is passing.
Puck transforms Bottom's head into that of a donkey as part of a prank orchestrated by Oberon in Shakespeare's "A Midsummer Night's Dream." Bottom is then seen by his friends, who are terrified by his new appearance.
Abraham Lincoln had a dream a few nights before his death of him being dead and returning to the place where he lived. That's the cool part about his assassination; or before it, actually. That was his dream. And he used to watch his young dead son every night just lying in his coffin, thinking. But not thinking about his death.So my answer is no; but he did have a dream about his death a few nights before he was assassinated.