To answer the question we need to know what money and from what or whom.
Here's the situation: Antonio borrowed 3000 ducats from Shylock the moneylender. He hoped to repay it from the sales of the cargos of one of a number of ships he was expecting. The sale of the cargo from any one ship would have been enough to cover the loan. However, none of the ships came in on time. Is the question how Antonio might have got back the money from the lost ships? He couldn't; insurance had not yet been invented.
Also, Antonio gave the 3000 ducats he borrowed to his friend Bassanio who blew it all on chatting up Portia. He couldn't get the money back from Bassanio, at least not at the time he needed it.
Of course, later some of his ships came in late and Bassanio successfully married the rich Portia so he had money galore but by then it was too late--Shylock was already claiming his pound of flesh.
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 title character is usually understood to be the Loan-Shark Shylock, who is obviously a Jewish businessman. However, it actually refers to Antonio who borrows money from him. The "Merchant of Venice" is a play written by William Shakespeare in sometime in the 1590s. The story involves a merchant in Venice named Antonio, who borrows money from a Jewish money-lender named Shylock. Shylock wants revenge against Antonio because Antonio had insulted Shylock and spat on him for being Jewish, so he gets Antonio to agree that if the money was not repaid in time, Shylock would be allowed to take a pound of Antonio's flesh. Antonio needed the money badly enough that he agreed to the condition, which he did not believe would be a problem. When Antonio could not repay the money as agreed, Shylock insisted on taking his pound of flesh. A woman lawyer, Portia, defended Antonio before the ruler of Venice, who after hearing both sides ruled that.......(If you want to know the outcome, you'll have to read the play. Believe me, it is worth it.)
They did all the usual things people do with money: earned it, saved it, spent it, loaned it, invested it, and left it in their wills. The Merchant of Venice in Shakespeare's play is Antonio, who was in a cash flow bind because he had invested all of his money. Shylock was not a merchant; he was a moneylender.
The Merchant of Venice grossed $18,765,585 worldwide.
antonio was the hero of the play,he lend money for bassanio from the jew shylok who was the villan of merchant of venice,antonio was a good person with some bad quality,overall he was the person who play the character from act1 to full last so, he was the main character of the merchand of venice.
half of Shylock's money goes to Antonio and Shylock MUST become christianEither that or he has to DIE
Bassanio tells his friend Antonio that he wants to court Portia, but has no money. Antonio has, so to speak, maxed his credit cards but agrees to see if he can get a loan from the moneylender Shylock.
Antonio borrows some money from Shylock the moneylender and promises that if it is not repaid on time, Shylock can have a pound of flesh from anywhere on Antonio's body. They have this written up and notarized in the form of a bond.
In "The Merchant of Venice," the rising action begins with Bassanio seeking financial help from Antonio to court Portia. Antonio, unable to provide the money himself due to his ships being at sea, borrows 3,000 ducats from Shylock, agreeing to a bond that could cost him a pound of flesh if he fails to repay. As the stakes rise, the tension escalates with Shylock's animosity towards Antonio and the impending peril of the bond, setting the stage for the climax of the play. This series of events builds anticipation and conflict, leading to the dramatic courtroom scene.
In Act 1, Scene 1 of "The Merchant of Venice," Antonio is financially troubled because his wealth is tied up in merchant ships that are currently at sea. He states that he feels sad and empty, which could also suggest that his emotional state affects his financial situation. Additionally, his friends suggest that he has invested in risky ventures, leaving him without liquid cash at the moment.
Bassanio is a central character in William Shakespeare's play "The Merchant of Venice." He is a young Venetian gentleman and a close friend of Antonio, the titular merchant. In the play, Bassanio seeks to court Portia, a wealthy heiress, and borrows money from Antonio to participate in a contest for her hand. His character embodies themes of friendship, love, and the pursuit of wealth.
In "The Merchant of Venice," the rising action begins when Bassanio seeks financial help from his friend Antonio to court Portia. Antonio, whose wealth is tied up in shipping ventures, agrees to borrow money from Shylock, a Jewish moneylender. The tension escalates as Shylock, harboring resentment toward Antonio, demands a pound of flesh as collateral for the loan. This sets the stage for a conflict that intertwines themes of mercy, justice, and revenge, ultimately leading to the pivotal courtroom scene.