Antony and Cleopatra
Antony and Cleopatra
Antony and Cleopatra
LESSON 16.3
Shakespearean Tragedy: Selection
Table of Contents
Introduction 1
Objectives 2
DepEd Competencies 2
Warm-Up 2
Learn about It 3
Key Points 10
Photo Credit 14
Bibliography 14
English
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Lesson 16.3
Shakespearean Tragedy: Selection
Fig. 1. Shakespeare wrote some of the greatest tragedies in the world, including
Antony and Cleopatra.
Introduction
1
English
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Objectives
At the end of this lesson, you should be able to:
● Identify the characteristics of Elizabethan drama (tragedy).
● Explain the uniqueness of Shakespeare’s dramas.
DepEd Competencies
At the end of this lesson, you should be able to do the following:
● Determine tone, mood, technique, and purpose of the author
(EN9LT-IVa-17).
● Analyze literature as a means of understanding unchanging values in a
changing world (EN9LT-IVf-2.2.3).
Warm-Up
Think-Pair-Share
Materials
● pen
● paper
Procedure
1. Find a partner.
2. Search references, online or in a traditional library, about the lives of Cleopatra and
Mark Antony.
3. Write all the relevant and important information and present it in class.
2
English
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Guide Questions
1. When were Antony and Cleopatra born? When did they die?
2. What were their positions or designations in their respective countries? Were they
powerful or ordinary people?
3. What did they contribute to their countries?
Learn about It
Antony and Cleopatra is one of the greatest works of William Shakespeare. It is about love,
power, and betrayal. Read the excerpt and find out why it is regarded as a masterpiece.
Answer the guide questions that follow:
Vocabulary
woe
grief or misfortune
(noun)
lament
to express sorrow
(verb)
scepter
a decorated stick carried by royalty
(noun)
naught
nothing
(adjective)
vanquish
to defeat thoroughly
(verb)
Essential Question
How does a playwright instill views and ideas in a play?
3
English
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Read the excerpt from the play Antony and Cleopatra and answer the guide questions that
follow:
CLEOPATRA.
CLEOPATRA.
O sun,
Burn the great sphere thou mov'st in!—darkling stand
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English
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Peace!
Not Caesar's valour hath o'erthrown Antony,
But Antony's hath triumph'd on itself.
CLEOPATRA.
O, quick, or I am gone.
CLEOPATRA.
5
English
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A heavy sight!
ANTONY.
6
English
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CHARMIAN.
O, quietness, lady!
7
English
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IRAS.
Lady!—
IRAS.
Madam!—
CHARMIAN.
8
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Guide Questions:
1. What was Cleopatra doing in the monument?
2. Who came to see Cleopatra? Why did he want to see her?
3. What was Cleopatra’s visitor’s attitude as he faced death?
4. What did Cleopatra’s visitor reminisce about?
5. What did Cleopatra mean by this statement?
Let’s Check In
What was Antony’s final request?
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English
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Key Points
● A person seeks love until the very end, as Antony asks for a kiss as he dies.
● Honor is more important than life. Antony asks Cleopatra to surrender, but she
refuses. She would rather die than be an enslaved person or enemy prisoner.
Write true if the statement is correct and false if the statement is incorrect.
____________ 1. Cleopatra did not want to see Antony despite his condition.
____________ 3. For Cleopatra, life without Antony is compared to a life worth living.
____________ 4. Antony wants Cleopatra to run away from Caesar as much as she can.
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English
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Antony
Writing Prompt
Do you agree with Cleopatra's choice of death over being captured by an enemy? Justify
your answer. Your answer will be graded using the rubric provided.
Content (50%) The focus on The focus on The focus on The focus on
Clear and the topic is the topic is the topic is the topic is
evident focus
unclear. Most, somewhat sufficiently very clear.
on the topic.
Relevance of if not all, clear. Some clear. Answer Answer is
ideas. statements are statements are is mostly completely
irrelevant. irrelevant. relevant. relevant.
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Language There are four There are two There is one There are no
(25%) or more to three language language
Spelling,
language language error. errors.
mechanics,
grammar, and errors. errors.
word usage
Total Score =
Watch the 1972 movie adaptation of Antony and Cleopatra. Choose one character
and write a character analysis of him/her. Relate this character to an important
person in the present.
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English
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Bibliography
Abrams, M.H., and Geoffrey Galt Harpham. 2015. A Glossary of Literary Terms. 11th ed.
Stanford, CT: Cengage Learning.
Akande, Victor. “Drama/Theatre and Society: What Relevance?” The Nation Newspaper,
August 22, 2014.
https://thenationonlineng.net/dramatheatre-and-society-what-relevance/.
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