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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."
In Shakespeare's play "Romeo and Juliet," the fairy queen is Queen Mab. Mercutio delivers a monologue describing her as a mischievous and whimsical figure who influences people's dreams with her fantasies.
queen mab the dream fairy who comes to you in your sleep
Queen mab was mention by Mercutio in scene vi, who was mocking about Romeo's believe in dreams.
The fairy queen or "Queen Mab" was the dream fairy who could supposedly make you belive whatever she wanted.
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.
Oh, I don't know. Cinderella is one person, Romeo and Juliet is two? Cinderella lives happily ever after with the Prince, and Juliet dies? Cinderella is an orphan, both Romeo and Juliet have both their parents? Cinderella has step-sisters, neither Romeo nor Juliet have any siblings? Cinderella is a fairy tale, Romeo and Juliet is a play? Cinderella has a magic fairy godmother, Juliet has the nurse?How about just about everything? There is hardly any similarity.
He tells Romeo that she makes people dream what they want to dream, not what is true. In this sentence he explains to Romeo that the dream fairy teaches women to lose their virginity to any man and become pregnant. He is telling Romeo not to believe in true love but to realize that women are only useful to take control of and make them women of good carriage
Queen Mab is a fairy in the play Romeo & Juliet. She is described as a midwife who help sleepers to conceive their dreams. She is also described as a miniature creature who drives a chariot into the brains of people while sleeping to make them experience dreams of fulfillment.
According to Mercutio, the fairy queen, Queen Mab, is a fairy mid-wife. She is responsible for causing dreams. Mercutio is a character from Romeo and Juliet.
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.
queen Mab