Summary, Analysis, and Original Text by Scene

Act II: Scene 3

The main purpose of Scene Three is to announce the death of Sir John Falstaff, and the manner of that announcement by Hostess Quickly contains as much humane feelings from these comic characters as we are to find from them in the entire play. We should remember from the earlier plays that Hostess Quickly did have a strong admiration for the marvelous fat knight. Her misused words and phrases are comically absurd, but they nevertheless possess a charm that is missing in the rest of the drama that concerns them.

Once Sir John's death is announced, Pistol expresses the common concern for greed and gain which the lower characters in this play have and their decision to join their king:

Come, let's away. . . .

Yoke-fellows in arms

Let us to France; like horse-leeches, my boys,

To suck, to suck, the very blood to suck!

(49-58)

As noted earlier, the low characters will now function mainly as looters or bloodsuckers.


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