View Static Version
Loading

LOVE'S LABOUR'S LOST SYNOPSIS WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE

The King of Navarre, and his three friends - Berowne, Longaville, and Dumaine - all swear themselves to three years of study, abstaining from all distractions, including any relationships with women. They are frustrated when, upon signing the vow, Berowne remembers that the Princess of France and her three ladies, Rosaline, Maria, and Katharine, attended by Boyet, are on an embassy to Navarre’s court.

Don Armado, has decided to arrest Costard for being in the company of a woman—the woman being Jaquenetta, who Armado himself is in love with. The ladies arrive, and the King and his lords fall in love with them. Armado frees Costard on the condition he delivers a love letter to Jaquenetta; Berowne asks Costard to deliver his letter to Rosaline, and the two letters get mixed up.

The four lords enter one by one and despair about their love for their respective love interests, and one by one are overheard by the others. After realizing they are all in love, they decide to tear the oath up and woo the ladies. They disguise themselves as Russians, but Boyet tells the ladies beforehand, and the ladies change identities with each other. The lords enter and woo the wrong women. They leave, and on their return are mocked by the ladies.

Don Armado approaches the schoolmaster Holofernes and Curate Nathaniel to join with him, Costard, and the page, Mote, to present the "Nine Worthies" as entertainment to the nobles. This provides them with many opportunities for comment and laughter. The mood changes when Marcade, a messenger from France, brings news that the Princess’s father has died. As the ladies prepare to leave, the lords affirm that all their expressions of love were genuine, but the Princess claims that everything was in jest. The ladies tell the lords that, if they are serious, they must carry out certain tasks for a year, and then return to offer marriage. The lords agree.

©2005-2012 PlayShakespeare.com. Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this information under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation. Terms at http://www.playshakespeare.com/license

Credits:

Liz Lauren

NextPrevious