Twelfth Night: Key Quotations (Edexcel GCSE English Literature): Revision Notes
📚 Revision Notes
Twelfth Night: Key Quotations
Love as a Cause of Suffering
- Orsino: "If music be the food of love, play on." (Act I, Scene i)
- Orsino's opening line highlights his obsession with love, portraying it as a powerful but insatiable desire that consumes him.
- Olivia: "Even so quickly may one catch the plague?" (Act I, Scene v)
- Olivia likens falling in love to catching a disease, showing love as sudden, uncontrollable, and painful.
- Viola: "My state is desperate for my master's love." (Act II, Scene ii)
- Viola's unrequited love for Orsino highlights the anguish caused by suppressed emotions, particularly when her disguise prevents her from expressing her feelings.
Gender and Identity
- Viola: "Disguise, I see, thou art a wickedness." (Act II, Scene ii)
- Viola acknowledges the complications her male disguise has caused, reflecting the fluidity of gender and identity in the play.
- Orsino: "Make no compare / Between that love a woman can bear me / And that I owe Olivia." (Act II, Scene iv)
- Orsino's statement reflects societal views of women as inferior in love, yet his affection for Cesario suggests he is unconsciously attracted to Viola's true self.
- Viola (as Cesario): "I am all the daughters of my father's house, / And all the brothers too." (Act II, Scene iv)
- Viola's confession hints at her true identity, blending male and female roles and highlighting the tension between her external disguise and inner truth.
Ambition
- Malvolio: "Some are born great, some achieve greatness, and some have greatness thrust upon them." (Act II, Scene v)
- Malvolio's reading of Maria's forged letter exposes his arrogance and blind ambition to rise above his social station.
- Malvolio: "I'll be revenged on the whole pack of you." (Act V, Scene i)
- Malvolio's humiliation and bitter vow for revenge show the darker consequences of unchecked ambition.
- Maria: "The letter, at Sir Toby's great importance, / In recompense whereof he hath married her." (Act V, Scene i)
- Maria's cunning allows her to rise socially by marrying Sir Toby, contrasting with Malvolio's failure and reinforcing the theme of ambition.
Disguise and Deception
- Viola: "Conceal me what I am." (Act I, Scene ii)
- Viola's decision to disguise herself as a man sets the stage for the comedic misunderstandings and dramatic irony that drive the play.
- Maria: "I can write very like my lady." (Act II, Scene iii)
- Maria's skill in deception drives the subplot involving Malvolio, highlighting the comedic potential of disguise and trickery.
Madness and Chaos
- Malvolio: "I will be strange, stout, in yellow stockings, and cross-gartered." (Act II, Scene v)
- Malvolio's gullible acceptance of Maria's fake letter leads to behaviour that others perceive as madness, symbolising the chaos caused by ambition and deception.
- Sebastian: "What relish is in this? How runs the stream?" (Act IV, Scene i)
- Sebastian's confusion at being mistaken for Cesario reflects the chaotic humour created by mistaken identity.