The most notable is a plant called "love-in-idleness" which, when squeezed on someone's eyes, makes them fall in love with the next thing they see.
Lots of other plants are also referred to. One of Bottom's fairy attendants is called Mustardseed. Oberon's speech "I know a bank where the wild thyme grows" contains the names of a whole bunch of plants.
Love-in-idleness
pie
A Midsummer Night's Dream begins with two sets of lovers, Lysander and Hermia and Helena and Demetrius.
i dont know im doing a project and i need da anser
Bottom the weaver has tons of lines and is a very funny character if you play him right
The play doesn't say and your guess is as good as anyone else's. These are fairies we are talking about; for all I know he is three hundred.
a mid summer nights dream
pie
"Are you sure that we are awake? It seems to me that yet we sleep, we dream." -William Shakespeare, A Midsummer Night's Dream.
A Midsummer Night's Dream begins with two sets of lovers, Lysander and Hermia and Helena and Demetrius.
He doesn't have anything to do with them until Act V when he entertains them.
I usually don't let my bottom near bones, they hurt.
i dont know im doing a project and i need da anser
Bottom the weaver has tons of lines and is a very funny character if you play him right
He asks for tongs. The "tongs and the bones" were musical instruments sort of like musical spoons.
The play doesn't say and your guess is as good as anyone else's. These are fairies we are talking about; for all I know he is three hundred.
The play does not really have a protagonist or antagonist. It's just not structured that way. In a sense, Egeus is an antagonist to Lysander and Hermia, but that is part of one of three plotlines.
It doesn't have a name. It is referred to as "the palace wood, a mile without the town" by Peter Quince, "the wood, a league without the town" by Lysander, and "the wood" by Helena.