The pun: "Prick love for pricking, and you beat love down" (1.4.28). In Mercutio's view, Romeo's love-sickness is caused by a lack of sex; if he's just have some, he'd get over thinking that he needs to be in love.
'Jests' from the play Romeo & Juliet means "makes jokes" and is used in the quote, 'He jests at scars that never felt a wound.' What is meant here is that, Mercutio is laughing/sneering at Romeo's short lived love for Rosaline and Romeo thinks that Mercutio who has never experienced love himself laughs at Romeo's experiences in love when really he has no right.
Once upon apon of time, there was a stupid person looking up this and everyone died. The End
Mercutio is enjoying himself by making dirty jokes about Romeo and Rosaline, imagining Romeo dreaming of having sex with her: "O, that she were an open arse and you a pop'rin (sounds like pop 'er in) pear!" Romeo's reply in scene 2 of Act 2, "He jests at scars who never felt a wound", contemptuously dismisses Mercutio as someone who sneers at something because he doesn't understand it. His feelings for Juliet (about which Mercutio knows nothing) are far beyond the physical lust Mercutio is talking about. Even before the balcony scene we have a notion that what is going on with Romeo is much more powerful than his playing at being in love with Rosaline.
He is a prankster, or a guy that makes jokes all the time. He says them in a pun.
Mercutio. This is in Act II.
Well, we see Romeo hanging out with his buddies and making dirty jokes. Juliet doesn't have much opportunity for entertainment, except dancing at the party her father threw.
'Jests' from the play Romeo & Juliet means "makes jokes" and is used in the quote, 'He jests at scars that never felt a wound.' What is meant here is that, Mercutio is laughing/sneering at Romeo's short lived love for Rosaline and Romeo thinks that Mercutio who has never experienced love himself laughs at Romeo's experiences in love when really he has no right.
He is hanging around when the Nurse comes to make the wedding arrangements and annoys her with his dirty jokes.
Romeo takes love seriously; Mercutio does not.
The nurse is prolonging the situation by not giving Juliet a straightforward answer about the marriage to Romeo. She is also being insensitive and trivializing Juliet's feelings by making jokes and not taking the matter seriously. Additionally, the nurse's lack of urgency and focus on materialistic aspects of the marriage is frustrating Juliet.
Before Romeo and Juliet plays had been either Tragedies - about very angry and very fierce Warriors killing each other; or else Comedies - silly stories about Love with lots of songs and jokes in. We don't know if Romeo and Juliet was the very first Romantic Tragedy - but it probably was. (If it wasn't, it was one of the first). People had never seen a 'weepy' before: Shakespeare invented them.
Once upon apon of time, there was a stupid person looking up this and everyone died. The End
Mercutio is enjoying himself by making dirty jokes about Romeo and Rosaline, imagining Romeo dreaming of having sex with her: "O, that she were an open arse and you a pop'rin (sounds like pop 'er in) pear!" Romeo's reply in scene 2 of Act 2, "He jests at scars who never felt a wound", contemptuously dismisses Mercutio as someone who sneers at something because he doesn't understand it. His feelings for Juliet (about which Mercutio knows nothing) are far beyond the physical lust Mercutio is talking about. Even before the balcony scene we have a notion that what is going on with Romeo is much more powerful than his playing at being in love with Rosaline.
The main characters in "Romeo and Juliet" are Romeo, Juliet, Friar Lawrence, and Lord Capulet. Romeo and Juliet are the young lovers whose tragic romance drives the play's plot, while Friar Lawrence plays a key role in their secret marriage. Lord Capulet, Juliet's father, also plays a significant part in the story's events.
He is a prankster, or a guy that makes jokes all the time. He says them in a pun.
Mercutio. This is in Act II.
She likes to hear herself talk, she likes dirty jokes but is terrible at telling them because she repeats the punchline over and over, she had a husband and daughter called Susan and they are both dead, and she was Juliet's wetnurse when Juliet was a baby.