One of this play's protagonists states his feelings for a woman by saying, “If I do not love her, I am a Jew.” After returning from war, a man in this play asks “Lady Disdain” if she is alive, and is told that disdain “should not die…with such meet food.” That same man in this play is called "the prince's jester: a very dull fool" to his face at a masquerade ball. In a song from this play, (*) Balthasar sings that “Men were deceivers ever” and that ladies should “Sigh no more.” Don John's plot to ruin a wedding in this play is foiled by the bumbling nightwatchman Dogberry, who asks a notetaker to “remember that [he] is an ass.” To test the loyalty of her lover, a woman in this play orders him to “Kill Claudio,” her cousin Hero's fiance. For 10 points, name this Shakespeare play that ends with the marriage of Beatrice and Benedick. ■END■
ANSWER: Much Ado About Nothing
<Jay Kim, British Literature>
= Average correct buzz position