Helena, A Lover.

Helena

A Lover, in love with Demetrius.

She loves Demetrius, and at one time he returned her love. But before the play begins, he fell in love with Hermia and left Helena in despair. Because of Demetrius’s abandonment of her, Helena lacks self-confidence and self-respect, going so far as to tell Demetrius that she’ll love and follow him even if he treats her like his dog. She’s also a bit conniving and desperate, willing to betray her friend Hermia’s confidence in order to try to win back Demetrius’s love. Physically, she’s tall and blond. (Source)

Among the quartet of Athenian lovers, Helena is the one who thinks most about the nature of love—which makes sense, given that at the beginning of the play she is left out of the love triangle involving Lysander, Hermia, and Demetrius. She says, “Love looks not with the eyes, but with the mind,” believing that Demetrius has built up a fantastic notion of Hermia’s beauty that prevents him from recognizing Helena’s own beauty (I.i.234). Utterly faithful to Demetrius despite her recognition of his shortcomings, Helena sets out to win his love by telling him about the plan of Lysander and Hermia to elope into the forest. Once Helena enters the forest, many of her traits are drawn out by the confusion that the love potion engenders: compared to the other lovers, she is extremely unsure of herself, worrying about her appearance and believing that Lysander is mocking her when he declares his love for her. (Source)

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