“Aggressive: I, sir, if that nose were mine, I’d have it amputated-on the spot! Friendly: How do you drink with such a nose You ought to have a cup made specially. Descriptive: Tis a rock-a crag-a cape- A cape Say rather, a peninsula!” Cyrano de Bergerac is a heroic comedy, a play which is light and humorous and is composed of jokes, satire, and humorous performance. In this play, Cyrano humors the audience by making jokes about his own physical appearance. This play comes very close to being a tragedy, a work in which the main character is brought to ruin or suffers extreme sorrow, especially as a consequence of a tragic flaw, a moral weakness, or an inability to cope with unfavorable circumstances.
In this play Cyrano suffers the consequence of a tragic flaw. Cyrano speaks with Roxane after speaking with Christian and finding out that Roxane has really fallen in love with him and not with Christian. While talking with Roxane, Christian sets out on a mission and dies. Cyrano never gets to tell her that it is really him that she has fallen in love with and it was he who wrote the letters because their conversation was interrupted when Christian is brought back dead. Not telling Roxane that it was him and not proclaiming his love to her then was Cyrano’s tragic flaw and he suffered tremendously because of it. In this play Cyrano is also a hero.
He is a hero because he helps many people including the baker and Christian. He helps the baker fight one hundred men in order to get into his house and he helps Christian by writing letters to Roxane and talking to Roxane for him. Cyrano also takes very little credit for the deeds he has done and this is another thing that makes him a hero. “I Know that it will to today, My own dearly beloved and my heart Still so heavy wit love I have not told, And I die without telling you! No more Shall my eyes drink the sight of you like wine, Never more, with a look that is a kiss, Follow the sweet grace of you. I remember now the way You have, of pushing back a lock of hair With one hand, from your forehead and my heart Cries out Cries out and keeps crying: Farewell, my dear, My dearest. My own heart’s own, My own treasure My love I am never away from you.
The Essay on Cyrano The Bergerac Love
... writer and 'wishes to make Christian his interpreter' (II, 85). Both Christian and Cyrano love Roxane but Roxane loves only the person that has ... play actually achieved love. Christian, who was one of the main characters who was loved by Roxane, did not find love. 'She does not love ... it was Christian. Cyrano had said, '... And we two make one hero of romance.' (II, 85) Since Cyrano was suffering ...
Even now, I shall not leave you. In another world, I shall be still that one who loves you, loves you Beyond measure, beyond” In the end, because of this letter, the play ends up not being a tragedy. Cyrano begins to read this letter before he dies and Roxane figures out that it was he who wrote the letters and he she had spoken to that night on the balcony even thought Cyrano still denies it and his love for her.