Salerio
Who knows? The Duke of Venice is not a character in the play The Merchant of Venice. In Othello, yes. But not in the Merchant of Venice.
You will find Portia and Shylock in the play of Hamlet.
Launcelot Gobbo (a clown, first Shylock's servant and then Bassanio's) says this to Gobbo, his father in The Merchant of Venice (act 2 Scene 2). He has just encountered his father, who does not recognize him.
Shylock, a character in Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice, was a Jew.
the line is from a play called the merchant of Venice
Salerio
Who knows? The Duke of Venice is not a character in the play The Merchant of Venice. In Othello, yes. But not in the Merchant of Venice.
You will find Portia and Shylock in the play of Hamlet.
1.Merchant of Venice 2.Antonio 3.Bassanio
The Merchant of Venice was written by William Shakespeare. It is considered a comedy. The main character is Antonio, the merchant.
Launcelot Gobbo (a clown, first Shylock's servant and then Bassanio's) says this to Gobbo, his father in The Merchant of Venice (act 2 Scene 2). He has just encountered his father, who does not recognize him.
Shylock, a character in Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice, was a Jew.
Although Shylock is the best-known character from the play, Shylock is not a merchant. He is a usurer-which is the only job Jews were allowed to have in Venice back then. A usurer is a person who lends money and makes money from it by charging interest. The merchant in The Merchant of Venice is Antonio. A merchant sells and trades.
The Merchant of Venice is set, surprisingly enough, in Venice.
He is a comic character. He is likeable but we are not supposed to take him too seriously.
the line is from a play called the merchant of Venice
Brutus is in Julius Caesar not Merchant of Venice.