Oberon
beacaue she is let the potion innto her eyse and he is tricking her
Oberon instructs Puck to find a flower called Love-in-idleness, whose juice can cause a person to fall in love with the next creature they see. He wants Puck to fetch this flower while he goes to anoint Titania's eyes with the magical potion. Oberon plans to use the potion to distract Titania and gain control over her. Ultimately, Puck's task is essential to Oberon's plan to manipulate the love dynamics in the forest.
He is first excited that titania had fallen for such an ugly creature but then he starts to feel guilty about it.
When Titania awakens in Shakespeare's "A Midsummer Night's Dream," she sees Bottom, who has been transformed to have the head of a donkey by Puck. Under the influence of the love potion, she falls deeply in love with him, despite his ridiculous appearance. This unexpected romance is part of the play's comedic exploration of love and perception.
Oberon instructed Puck to fetch the flowers because he wanted to use their juice, which has magical properties, to create a potion that would make Titania, the queen of the fairies, fall in love with the first creature she sees upon waking. Oberon sought to distract Titania and gain possession of a changeling boy she was caring for. This act initiates a series of comedic misunderstandings and romantic entanglements in Shakespeare's "A Midsummer Night's Dream."
beacaue she is let the potion innto her eyse and he is tricking her
Oberon's magic potion is ironic because although the potion is a potion of love, he uses the potion to get revenge on his wife and to get his own way with the changeling boy. Because he uses the potion in a selfish way, one can question whether he truly loves Titania or not. He also uses the potion to help "fix" the situation between Helena and Demetrius. His meddling in their affairs, however, results in chaos not love, and although the characters seem to all be happy in the end, the reader knows that Demetrius only loves Helena because of the potion in his eyes. The reader is left questioning whether his love is real and whether or not a love that is forced is even love at all.
The quote "What angel wakes me from my flowery bed?" comes from the play "A Midsummer Night's Dream" by William Shakespeare. It is spoken by the character Titania, the Queen of the Fairies, when she awakens from a love potion-induced slumber.
Titania, Lysander and Demetrius. Titania and Lysander get the antidote.
Titania and Oberon are two characters in Shakespeare's "A Midsummer Knight's Dream". Oberon asks Titania to take the child twice. The second time, Titania again refuses and leaves. Oberon vows revenge, creating a potion that will cause her to fall in love with the first thing she sees. This, of course, is used on the wrong person.
Oberon instructs Puck to find a flower called Love-in-idleness, whose juice can cause a person to fall in love with the next creature they see. He wants Puck to fetch this flower while he goes to anoint Titania's eyes with the magical potion. Oberon plans to use the potion to distract Titania and gain control over her. Ultimately, Puck's task is essential to Oberon's plan to manipulate the love dynamics in the forest.
Bottom's reaction to Titania's advances in Shakespeare's "A Midsummer Night's Dream" is one of bewilderment and delight. Under the influence of the love potion, Titania becomes infatuated with him, treating him as a king and showering him with affection. Bottom, who is comically unaware of the magic at play, is flattered and enjoys the attention, although he remains oblivious to the absurdity of the situation. His interactions with Titania highlight the play's themes of love's irrational nature and the interplay between reality and illusion.
Puck put the potion into the eyes of Demetrius while he was under the influence of Oberon's commands in "A Midsummer Night's Dream" by William Shakespeare. This caused Demetrius to fall in love with Helena instead of Hermia.
Felix Felicis, which is the name of a potion not a character. Felix Felicis is the liquid luck potion used in Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince.
Oberon wants Titania to fall in love with something so that he can distract and manipulate her. He does this as a form of revenge for refusing to give him a changeling boy she has in her care. Oberon uses a love potion to make Titania fall in love with Bottom, a Weaver transformed into a donkey.
He is first excited that titania had fallen for such an ugly creature but then he starts to feel guilty about it.
use polyjuice potion