Romeo and Juliet | Mercutio's Queen Mab Speech
A discussion of the meaning and significance of Mercutio's Queen Mab speech in Act I, scene iv. Touches on the speech in light of Mercutio's character and within the wider context of the play.
Mercutio’s speech about Queen Mab in Act I, scene iv, seems to have nothing to do with Romeo and Juliet whatsoever. In fact, some Shakespearean scholars have argued that it was added to the script during the printing of the Second Quarto and was not, therefore, a part of the play as it was originally written. Other scholars argue that even if the speech was in the original script, it contradicts what we know of Mercutio: a hot-tempered and lusty youth who has no patience for the dreams and visions discussed in the Queen Mab speech. The Queen Mab speech, however, does hold consistent with...
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- Romeo and Juliet: Introduction
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- Act I, Scenes 3-5: Summary and Analysis
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- The Capulet - Montague Feud
- Fate and Free Will in Romeo and Juliet
- Light and Dark in Romeo and Juliet
- Mercutio's Queen Mab Speech
- The Balcony Scene in Romeo and Juliet
- Why does Friar Laurence's plan fail?
- Character Analysis of the Nurse
- The Growth of Shakespeare's Tragic Technique in Romeo and Juliet
- The Character of Mercutio Analyzed
- Romeo and Juliet: An Analysis of the Main Characters and Their Views on Love
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- Evolution of Love in Romeo and Juliet
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- Romeo and Juliet in Old Vic Theatre production (1960)
- Romeo, the Nurse, and Mercutio in Oxford University Dramatic Society production (1935)
- Romeo and Juliet by Frank Dicksee
- Romeo's description of the apothecary and his shop by Henry Fuseli
- Juliet and Romeo in film adaptation (1968)
- Friar Lawrence, Romeo, Juliet, and Paris by James Northcote
- Act I, Scene i: Street skirmish (illustration)
- Romeo and friends wear masks to the Capulet Ball (illustration)
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- How genuine is the reconciliation of the Capulet and Montague families at the play's end?
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