The Merchant of Venice — Act 5: The Ring Episode and Resolution
Overview
Act 5 returns to BELMONT — the world of love, music, and moonlight. After the intensity of the trial scene, Shakespeare provides COMIC RELIEF through the ring episode. 'But the shadow of Shylock's fate HANGS over the celebration. ICSE examiners love asking: does Act 5 provide GENUINE resolution — or is the comedy UNDERMINED by what happened in Venice?'
Scene 1 — Belmont. Moonlight.
Lorenzo and Jessica's Love
The act opens with Lorenzo and Jessica in Portia's garden. They compare themselves to FAMOUS lovers:
| Lovers | Story | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| Troilus and Cressida | Troilus SWORE faith — Cressida was UNFAITHFUL | 'The lovers can't quite find a PERFECT example of constancy' |
| Pyramus and Thisbe | Died for love — but through a TRAGIC misunderstanding | Love that ENDS in death |
| Dido and Aeneas | Dido KILLED herself when Aeneas left | Abandoned love |
| Medea and Jason | Medea HELPED Jason — he ABANDONED her | Love BETRAYED |
'Why does Lorenzo list TRAGIC lovers on this happy night? ICSE scholars suggest: their own love is BUILT on betrayal — Jessica betrayed her father. The subtext is UNEASY.'
The Music Speech
Lorenzo delivers a famous speech:
'The man that hath no music in himself, / Nor is not moved with concord of sweet sounds, / Is fit for treasons, stratagems, and spoils.'
Meaning: Those who do not RESPOND to music have NO SOUL. 'Shylock famously hated music. "Let no sound of music enter my house," he ordered in Act 2. This contrast is INTENTIONAL — Shylock is EXCLUDED from the harmony of Belmont.'
The Comedy of the Rings
Portia and Nerissa Return
Portia and Nerissa arrive home JUST before their husbands. They 'discover' their rings are MISSING.
The Accusation
Portia (to Bassanio): 'What ring gave you, my lord? / Not that, I hope, which you received of me.' Nerissa (to Gratiano): 'What, are you changed your mind? Did you not promise me a ring?'
Bassanio and Gratiano are CAUGHT. They try to lie — 'I gave it to a lawyer's clerk.' But Portia KNOWS the truth.
The Lovers' Quarrel
Bassanio: 'I was beset with shame and courtesy.' Portia: 'If you had known the VIRTUE of the ring… You would not then have parted with the ring.'
'This scene is COMEDY — but it tests a SERIOUS theme: fidelity. Portia gave the ring as a SYMBOL of her love. Bassanio gave it away. Does his WEAKNESS undermine the happy ending?'
The Revelation
Portia reveals the TRUTH: 'I was the lawyer. Nerissa was the clerk.'
- Bassanio is SHOCKED — and RELIEVED
- Gratiano: 'Was I condemned to death for giving away MY ring?'
- Peace is RESTORED
The Resolution — Antonio's Ships
The Happy News
Antonio receives a letter: his ships — thought LOST — have SAFELY returned. He is NOT ruined.
Antonio's Role
Antonio is the THIRD CHARACTER in every romantic pair:
- Portia and Bassanio — united
- Nerissa and Gratiano — united
- Jessica and Lorenzo — will inherit Shylock's wealth
Antonio's ships RETURN — but his isolation REMAINS. He is the play's TRUE outsider now that Shylock is gone.
The Play's Ending
Portia's Final News
Portia reveals: Jessica and Lorenzo will inherit Shylock's wealth.
The Final Lines
Gratiano speaks the play's LAST words:
'While I live I'll fear no other thing / So sore as keeping safe Nerissa's ring.'
This is a DIRTY JOKE — 'ring' has a DOUBLE MEANING (engagement ring AND the female anatomy). 'Shakespeare ends a play about ANTI-SEMITISM, justice, and mercy with a SEX PUN. This is DELIBERATE. The play REFUSES to take itself too seriously — OR it's a way of DEFLECTING the uncomfortable questions the play has raised.'
Does Act 5 Resolve the Play?
| Element | Resolved? | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Antonio's debt | YES | Ships returned, he is wealthy again |
| Bassanio's marriage | YES | Reconciled with Portia |
| Shylock's fate | NO | He is BROKEN — forced conversion, stripped of wealth |
| The ring quarrel | YES | Revealed as a TEST, not a real threat |
| The THEMATIC conflict | NO | Justice vs Mercy remains UNRESOLVED |
Key Quotes for ICSE
- 'The man that hath no music in himself' — Lorenzo on harmony and soul
- 'How sweet the moonlight sleeps upon this bank!' — Lorenzo — SETTING the romantic mood
- 'I was the lawyer. Nerissa was the clerk.' — Portia's revelation
- 'For here we read of Constancy' — Portia, FINALLY satisfied with Bassanio's constancy
- 'While I live I'll fear no other thing / So sore as keeping safe Nerissa's ring' — Gratiano's closing pun
Common Mistakes in ICSE Answers
| Mistake | Correction |
|---|---|
| Ignoring Act 5 | It IS ON THE SYLLABUS — rings, resolution, Lorenzo-Jessica |
| Treating the ring episode as PURE comedy | It tests FIDELITY — a SERIOUS theme |
| Forgetting Antonio's ships return | This is KEY to the happy ending |
| Ignoring the LORENZO-JESSICA opening | The moon/pigeon/lover catalogue is IMPORTANT |
| Calling the ending 'perfect' | The ending is AMBIGUOUS — Shylock's shadow remains |
ICSE Exam Focus — Marks Blueprint
| Question Type | Marks | Frequency |
|---|---|---|
| The ring episode — how does it resolve? | 6-8 | Very High |
| Lorenzo and Jessica — their role in Act 5 | 4-6 | Medium |
| Is the ENDING satisfactory? | 8-10 | High |
| Contrast Belmont (Act 5) with Venice (Act 4) | 6-8 | High |
| The significance of MUSIC in Act 5 | 4-5 | Medium |
Self-Test
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Theme: How does the ring episode SERVE as both comedy AND a serious test of character?
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Character analysis: Why does Bassanio give away the ring? Is he WEAK — or was he right to honour the 'lawyer'?
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Symbolism: What does the MOONLIGHT in Act 5 symbolise? Contrast this with the LIGHTNING and tension of Act 4.
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Comparative: The play opens with Antonio saying 'I know not why I am so sad.' At the end, he is SAVED but still alone. Does Antonio CHANGE in the play?
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Critical: 'The play should have ended with Act 4.' — Do you agree? Argue for AND against including Act 5.
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Character: How does Portia's behaviour in Act 5 differ from her behaviour in Act 4? Is she STILL testing Bassanio — or genuinely angry?
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Thematic: 'The happy ending is a MASK for the play's dark questions.' Discuss with reference to Shylock's fate AND the ring episode.
Answers to Self-Test (Key Points)
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COMEDY: the husbands' panic, the mistaken identities, the puns. SERIOUS: tests whether Bassanio VALUES the ring (Portia's love) above all else.
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Antonio PERSUADED him — 'Let him have the ring.' Bassanio is CAUGHT between loyalty to Portia and gratitude to the lawyer who saved Antonio. WEAKNESS or DILEMMA — argue both sides.
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Moonlight = HARMONY, love, music, peace. Contrasts with the HARSH daylight of the Venetian courtroom. The SETTING reflects the MOOD.
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Antonio begins SAD, ends SAD. He is saved FINANCIALLY but remains ALONE. He is the play's MOST STATIC character — he does not marry, he does not change.
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FOR: Act 4 is the DRAMATIC climax — Act 5 is anticlimax. AGAINST: Act 5 provides COMIC RESOLUTION and thematic CONTRAST. 'Shakespeare WROTE Act 5 deliberately — the comedy is PART of the meaning.'
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In Act 4: SERIOUS, disguised, control. In Act 5: PLAYFUL, testing, ultimately RECONCILING. She is not genuinely angry — she is testing AND forgiving.
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Yes — Shylock is DESTROYED. The marriages are happy but BUILT on his ruin. The ring comedy DISTRACTS from the injustice. 'The ending is deliberately AMBIGUOUS.'
