Contents
- 1 What is Mercutio saying about Benvolio in lines 15 31?
- 2 What does Mercutio accuse Benvolio of in lines?
- 3 What is ironic about Mercutio’s answer?
- 4 What does Mercutio assert Benvolio’s piece loving will bring?
- 5 What does Benvolio think the hot water will cause?
- 6 What is Mercutio’s threat as he dies?
What is Mercutio saying about Benvolio in lines 15 31?
In lines 15- 31, what is Mercutio saying about Benvolio? Mercutio says Benvolio says he will not do something and then ends up doing it anyways. Mercutio may be talking in an angered or serious tone.
What does Mercutio accuse Benvolio of in lines?
What does Mercutio accuse Benvolio of in lines 15-30? Mercutio accuses Benvolio of being quick to pick a fight. When Tybalt and Mercutio first begin arguing, what does Benvolio try to get them to do? Because he married Juliet so now him and Tybalt are family and he doesn’t want to fight his family.
What does Mercutio tease Benvolio about at the start of Act 3?
In the beginning of Scene 1, what is Mercutio teasing Benvolio about? Mercutio says Benvolio is easily moved to anger, although this is not actually the case. They are just fooling around, and Benvolio is going along with it. M says B will fight people for a series of stupid reasons (ex: beard longer than his).
What does Mercutio and Benvolio tell Romeo?
Mercutio leaves with Benvolio, and Romeo tells the Nurse that Juliet should meet him at Friar Laurence’s cell at 2 p.m. that afternoon to be married. However, his speech is ironic because he still believes that Romeo is in love with Rosaline, and he never discovers Romeo’s love for Juliet.
What is ironic about Mercutio’s answer?
Mercutio’s death in Shakespeare’s play Romeo and Juliet is ironic because he has not attached himself to either the Montagues or the Capulets and does not take part in their feuding and fighting. Romeo declares that his love for Juliet has made him effeminate, and that he should have fought Tybalt in Mercutio’s place.
What does Mercutio assert Benvolio’s piece loving will bring?
Benvolio, he asserts, will start a fight with a man over the number of hairs in his beard, or quarrel with another for cracking nuts “having no other reason but because thou hast hazel eyes.” He will pick an argument with one who coughs in the street or wakes up his dog when it was sleeping in the sun.
Why does Mercutio keep repeating a plague?
Why does Mercutio keep repeating,”A plague o’ both your houses”? Mercutio keeps repeating “A plague o’ both your houses” because if romeo would have fought he wouldn’t be dying. Romeo calls himself “fortune’s fool” because when he had dream before going to the ball it showed death.
What does Mercutio accuse Romeo of doing?
As a way of mocking what he believes is Romeo’s overwrought love for Rosaline, Mercutio takes the part of Romeo and compares Rosaline to all the most famous beauties of antiquity, finding Rosaline far superior. Then Mercutio accuses Romeo of abandoning his friends the previous night.
What does Benvolio think the hot water will cause?
What does Benvolio think the hot weather will cause? Benvolio thinks that the hot weather will cause a fight.
What is Mercutio’s threat as he dies?
What is Mercutio’s threat as he dies?-Mercutio’s threat is for the plague to strike the Capulets and the Montagues and curse them forever. “A plague o’ both your houses!