This is a foreshadowing of what actually happens in the rest of the play. A fateful chain of events ("consequence") does begin its appointed time ("date") that night, and that chain of events does terminate the duration ("expire the term") of Romeo's life with premature ("untimely") death. But, despite his premonitions, Romeo does go into Capulet's house. He says that he is doing so because he is entrusting his fate to "He, that hath the steerage of my course." "He" is presumably God, but Romeo seems more melodramatic than religious. Mercutio has lightheartedly urged him to be lighthearted, but Romeo has steadfastly held onto his image of himself as a victim of hopeless love and implacable fate.
Benvolio calls on the drum to strike, and they all march around the stage once to indicate that they have entered Capulet's house. Then servants appear, carrying away the remains of the supper, and the next scene begins.
Mercutio uses the Queen Mab speech to symbolize the happy-go-lucky "good dream" that quickly turns dark.
So, dreams can be happy and frivolous, but dreams can also be dark and frightening.
From the play Romeo and Juliet-William Shakespeare-Queen Mab is a fairy in a dream dreamt by Romeo's best friend Mecurtio. She visits people when they are sleeping and fufills wishes via dreams. She is significant because when Mecurtio recites his dream, it reflects Mecurtio's character, it forshadows the ending of Romeo and Juliet, and gives the love story a splash of reality.
Mostly nothing, as Romeo says. Mercutio is fantasizing about a little fairy that rides on top of people when they are dreaming and makes them dream about whatever it is they dream about. But so what? It's really the detail which Mercutio goes into in describing the fairy and the different kinds of dreams people have that makes the speech interesting.
The people that Queen Mab drives over all represent different characters in the book.
Mercutio describes Queen Mab as the "fairies' midwife" in his famous Queen Mab Speech.
Queen Mab is the Queen of the fairies in a long speech delived by Mercutio in the play Romeo and Juliet. There may also be other works which have the name of this fairy as a title. But if you are thinking of the speech, it was written by William Shakespeare.
The speech about Queen Mab is Mercutio's comment on the uncertainty of love and the ways in which love and dreams can lead men astray. It relates to the rest of the play by showing that love is not always a positive thing; love results in Romeo and Juliet committing suicide. The speech about Queen Mab is Mercutio's comment on the uncertainty of love and the ways in which love and dreams can lead men astray. It relates to the rest of the play by showing that love is not always a positive thing; love results in Romeo and Juliet committing suicide.
Presumably you mean his "Queen Mab" speech in Act 4, which is about dreams, and how different people have dreams. It is a long speech with curiously little point to it. As Romeo says, "Thou talk'st of nothing."
In Mercutio's Queen Mab speech in the play Romeo and Juliet he says that lovers dream of love. He adds that courtiers dream of curtsies and lawyers dream of fees.
The only Queen described in Romeo and Juliet is Queen Mab, the "fairies' midwife", described by Mercutio in a very long speech in Act 1 Scene 4.
Mercutio describes Queen Mab as the "fairies' midwife" in his famous Queen Mab Speech.
Queen Mab is the Queen of the fairies in a long speech delived by Mercutio in the play Romeo and Juliet. There may also be other works which have the name of this fairy as a title. But if you are thinking of the speech, it was written by William Shakespeare.
Dido was the Queen of Carthage in Roman mythology. In Mercutio's speech from Romeo and Juliet, he references Dido in a somewhat cynical and mocking way to portray the idea of unrequited love and its consequences.
In Mercutio's speech in Romeo and Juliet, it's Queen Mab. In A Midsummer Night's Dream it's Titania.
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Queen Mab is traditionally depicted as the queen of fairies in English folklore, not as the queen of bad dreams. In Romeo and Juliet, Shakespeare portrays Queen Mab as a mischievous and whimsical figure who is responsible for bringing dreams to people while they sleep.
The speech about Queen Mab is Mercutio's comment on the uncertainty of love and the ways in which love and dreams can lead men astray. It relates to the rest of the play by showing that love is not always a positive thing; love results in Romeo and Juliet committing suicide. The speech about Queen Mab is Mercutio's comment on the uncertainty of love and the ways in which love and dreams can lead men astray. It relates to the rest of the play by showing that love is not always a positive thing; love results in Romeo and Juliet committing suicide.
There is no fairy queen in Romeo and Juliet. Mercutio has this incredibly long speech about "Queen Mab" who he describes as "the fairies' midwife" and who rides over people's bodies in a coach made from a hazelnut, but she is just a creature of Mercutio's imagination. And she does not ride across the sky.
The character who was a fairy queen in "Romeo and Juliet" is Titania. However, Titania is a character from William Shakespeare's play "A Midsummer Night's Dream," not "Romeo and Juliet."
Presumably you mean his "Queen Mab" speech in Act 4, which is about dreams, and how different people have dreams. It is a long speech with curiously little point to it. As Romeo says, "Thou talk'st of nothing."
"O'er ladies' lips, that straight on kisses dream." It's from Mercutio's Queen Mab speech.