Answer:
1. Malvolio's love for Olivia is a one sided love, and it can be described as Malvolio desire for Olivia's money and power instead of true love. Malvolio always daydream about Oliva marrying him and him ordering Sir Toby around, as he thinks too highly of himself. However, Viola is dressed up and disguised as a man, and she was in love with Orsino, despite the fact that Orsino does not realise that Viola was actually a girl, Orsiono also loves Olivia and sent Viola to express his love to Olivia, which hurted Viola. In the end of the story, Orsino finally realizes that Viola is a girl and they fell in love.
2. Malvolio will fail because Olivia only treated him as his steward, Malvolio also thinks too highly of himself, which leads him into making foolish actions.
Answer: I knew the answer but I don’t remember it
Explanation:
The superego. It is the moral part of the brain according to him.
Within The Tempest it is demonstrated that contact with native populations is rarely an even exchange; the native people are usually exploited in some way. This is demonstrated by the way that the "invaders" in the form of those who are shipwrecked at the beginning of the play attempt to change the islanders, little suspecting that one of them is the usurped Duke of Milan - now in the form of the wizard/magician Prospero.
To some extent it could also be argued that Prospero himself has already changed the nature of the island by being there. He has introduced magic, captures the monster Caliban and lies to his own daughter (allbeit it to protect her).