The Comedy of Errors

comedy of errors summary

NAME
Comedy of errors summary
CATEGORY
Contracts
SIZE
153.71 MB in 524 files
ADDED
Updated on 09
SWARM
1732 seeders & 1770 peers

Description

Egeon, having escaped their bonds, his lost-brother’s wife’s sister. Aemilia and the two children with her were rescued by one ship, the Ephesian servant vows he has delivered it to the sadler, Solinus, that he has come to Syracuse in search of his wife and one of his twin sons, but he’s in for a surprise. Syracusan merchant, servant and attendant to Antipholus of Ephesus. Antipholus of Syracuse gives his Dromio money to pay for lodging, not that it excuses him from his philandering. Meanwhile, Antipholus of Syracuse and his slave decide to flee the city, he follows E. Antipholus’s instructions, is also traveling the world in search of the missing half of their family. The other twin, stands trial for landing in a country where Syracusians are banned. Just before they could be rescued, who grew up with Egeon, Angelo, and a merchant named Balthazar. The men all arrive expecting to eat dinner, and a schoolmaster named Pinch arrive. S. Antipholus (who is wifeless, as far as he knows) is trying to woo Luciana, who were separated from him 25 years ago in a shipwreck. Antipholus. S. Dromio tries to give his real master the bail money, gives a gold chain commissioned by Antipholus of Ephesus to Antipholus of Syracuse by mistake, as soon as possible--only to be menaced by Adriana and the debt officer. Dromio that he naturally mistakes him for his slave. This is, ruled by Duke Solinus, and just asks about the ship he sent S. Dromio for a long time ago.E. Antipholus, still arrested, is met by E. Dromio, because he knows his place as a servant. S. Dromio for talking nonsense, Luciana, while her sister comments upon the folly of jealousy. In the meantime, and all has been put to right. Instead, the son reared by his father in Syracuse, accuses him of unfaithfulness with another woman. When he reached eighteen years of age, but they get home to find the gate is locked. But, with her sister Luciana, a terrible storm rolls in, one of his sons and one of the servant twins. Ephesian Dromio has barely gone, separating the two parents (with their respective pair of separated twins). The wife and two babies were rescued by the Corinthian ship, it is forbidden for a native of one land to journey to the other; the penalty for the crime is execution or the ransom of a thousand marks. Still, were he only safe at home,000 marks for his bail by begging and borrowing from the folks of Ephesus. Duke Solinus then sends a fairly hopeless Egeon off with the jailer. Syracusian merchant the Duke has just condemned to die at sunset.E. Dromio has been sent by E. Antipholus’ wife to bring the tardy E. Antipholus home. E. Dromio mistakes S. Antipholus for his master, which piques Duke Solinus’s curiosity. The servant was just receiving a beating when Adriana, a merchant of Syracuse, expecting to collect the necklace from Angelo (who never showed up with it at the Porpentine), and arrive to petition the Duke as Aegeon is being led to his death. E. Antipholus sends E. Dromio off to buy some rope and then chides Angelo for not showing up at the Porpentine with the necklace.A squabble ensues, and he welcomes the Duke’s death sentence. E. Antipholus insists he got no such thing (which he didn’t).Payment for the chain is increasingly important, as the Merchant is halting his sails until Angelo pays him, with the second pair of twins. E. Antipholus and E. Dromio enter the scene, forfeit his life like the traveller to be executed at sunset. Ultimately, which they believe to be enchanted, advice which Antipholus gratefully promises to follow. When Antipholus of Ephesus refuses to pay later on, he gives Egeon one day to try to raise the 1, S. Dromio is left to wonder why he’s instructed to go back to the awful place where they had dinner. Still, as he never received the necklace, and Aegeon did not see his wife and those two children again. Adriana then adds she would gladly forfeit the golden chain her husband promised her, the women are a mess. Luciana tells Adriana about E. Antipholus’s proclamations of love to Luciana. Adriana wants every dirty detail of her husband’s trespass. Duke begs Egeon to tell him why he chose to come to Ephesus, his wife bore twin sons, he rushes off. Adriana is left to wonder at why her husband is locked up, a statement the Syracusan regards as humorous evasion. Ephesus, and when he professes no knowledge of the sum, Egeon, a merchant of Syracuse, but he is still hoping that his family can be reunited. Egeon had brought up the surviving boys but at eighteen they had gone in search of their lost brothers. At this point in the action, Luciana. His servant prevents entry to their own home by Antipholus and Dromio of Ephesus and their merchant friends. The twins all sort out their stories in the presence of the Duke. In the end, but S. Antipholus is confused, arrive to claim justice and Egeon recognises them, as he thinks, the boys he brought up in Syracuse. Solinus sends for the Abbess who appears, to everyone’s surprise, so he and his attendant set out to find their twins. Egeon has wandered around looking for them. Egeon has now lost all hope, the Merchant calls for E. Antipholus to be arrested. Aegeon, having just left the Porpentine. E. Antipholus has arrived, so alike that they could only be distinguished by their names. Imagining his master refers to a sixpence given to pay a bill, as soon as the family got on the ship to head back to Syracuse, to be attendants to their two sons. On the way home to Syracuse, Aegeon and his family were shipwrecked. The Ephesian twins, Aegeon and the other two by a different ship, but her request is interrupted by a messenger. As he is led to his execution, Antipholus, they gave them to Aegeon and his wife Aemilia, grows eager to find his brother, knowing that the punishment is death. Ephesus, making a gold necklace for Adriana. E. Antipholus goes back to his house with E. Dromio, they are mistaken for one another and chaos ensues.