Now that you have learned about various rules of grammar and explored some archetypes in A Midsummer Night's Dream, it is time t
o demonstrate your understanding. In the space below, write an analysis of one character from A Midsummer Night's Dream, exploring what archetype they represent. Use examples from the text to support your claim. In addition to thoroughly analyzing the text, use at least one example of each of the grammar skills you have studied in this lesson, including: a participle, an infinitive, an example of active voice, an example of passive voice, a nonrestrictive clause, and a verb that expresses subjunctive mood. Highlight or bold each example in your response. Your response should be between two hundred fifty and three hundred words.
Answer:Also known as Robin Goodfellow, Puck is Oberon’s jester, a mischievous fairy who delights in playing pranks on mortals. Though A Midsummer Night’s Dream divides its action between several groups of characters, Puck is the closest thing the play has to a protagonist. His enchanting, mischievous spirit pervades the atmosphere, and his antics are responsible for many of the complications that propel the other main plots: he mistakes the young Athenians, applying the love potion to Lysander instead of Demetrius, thereby causing chaos within the group of young lovers; he also transforms Bottom’s head into that of an butt.