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William Shakespeare 's Romeo And Juliet

Decent Essays

Though the play is titled Romeo and Juliet, the character Mercutio who is witty, crude and knavish steals the show up until the moment of his death despite a limited role. This sentiment is due in large part to Mercutio’s direct contrast to Romeo, a character known for emotional turmoil along with stale and somewhat ridiculous Petrarchan proclamations of love. All of these factors allow Romeo’s closest friend to also be portrayed as the foil. Mercutio plays this role through comparing the high class and pristine love for which Romeo pines to his own view of sexuality: one of sexual objectification and loose morals. In fact, the wit and charm of Mercutio is such that until being killed, the story of Romeo and Juliet resembles a romantic …show more content…

Mercutio begins this vital monologue with the assertion that “Queen Mab hath been with you” (1.4.51) with “you” referring to Romeo. By saying this Mercutio is claiming that Romeo’s sudden infatuation with love comes not from the heart but rather the spells of a questionable fairy. When reading the speech, the lack of any negative outcomes for the dreamers is also noticeable. Mercutio suggests that the dreams granted by Mab always present the dreamers with only the best case scenario. Returning to the soldier example, there is no mention of the very real possibility that the soldier could die the next day in battle. In the same vein, Romeo is unable to see the potential downsides of chasing after love so recklessly.
Mercutio’s foreshadowing is brought together with the conclusion of his speech where he claims, the dreams procured by Queen Mab are “begot of nothing but vain fantasy,/which is as thin of substance as the air/and more inconsistent than the wind” (1.4.96-98). This quote, while harsh, is startlingly accurate in describing Romeo’s mental state. Throughout the play Mercutio is presented as a tether to the physical world, seeing every event in a primal, carnal manner. In this way he is the complete opposite of Romeo, and therefore balances out the reckless and insubstantial nature of Romeo’s idealistic

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