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.
There was no fairy queen. Mercutio does have a long speech about a fairy queen called Queen Mab, but unlike the fairies in A Midsummer Night's Dream, she does not appear in the play.
Queen Mab. She is, however, not a character in the play but someone Mercutio talks (rather too much) about.
queen mab- in other words a fairy who makes you dream of your desires
The fairy is named "Queen Mab."
Queen Mab
queen mab
queen Mab
Queen Mab
Mercutio says that dreams are the product of an idle brain.
Mercutio says this to Romeo in Act I Scene IV of Romeo and Juliet.
Quite a lot really. Just about everything Mercutio says in Act I Scene IV is in response to Romeo's "heaviness".
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."
Mercutio says this about Tybalt.
Queen Mab, Queen of the Fairies.
queen mab the dream fairy who comes to you in your sleep
Mercutio says that dreams are the product of an idle brain.
Mercutio says this to Romeo in Act I Scene IV of Romeo and Juliet.
Romeo
Quite a lot really. Just about everything Mercutio says in Act I Scene IV is in response to Romeo's "heaviness".
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."
Mercutio says this about Tybalt.
mercutio
dreams are not always answers
Mercutio says that "dreamers often lie"
In Act 1, Scene 4 of "Romeo and Juliet," Romeo says, "I fear too early, for my mind misgives. Some consequence yet hanging in the stars shall bitterly begin his fearful date with this night's revels and expire the term of a despised life closed in my breast by some vile forfeit of untimely death." This quote suggests that Romeo fears that his dreams may foretell a tragic fate.