Benvolio Flashcards
1
Q
‘for now, these hot days, is the mad blood stirring’ - benvolio, act 3 scene 1
A
- Benvolio begins act 3 with this observation about the dangerous, irrational, violent world of Verona.
- 5 act structure used which means that act 3 is the climax thus high tension + threat of banishment from prince.
- It’s also the peripeteia (protagonist’s fortunes shift from good to bad).
- Pathetic fallacy acts as a warning to what is about to occur
- Benvolio is saying here that it is the hot weather which makes men more inclined to fight, so much so that it is inevitable.
- To an English Elizabethan audience Verona would have been known for its hot weather and stereotypical Italian passion.
- Another interpretation could be that battle is inevitable on a social level as to reject a battle would have been detrimental to a man’s status infringing on his masculinity in the eyes of society.
2
Q
‘take thou some new infection to thy eye, And the rank poison of the old will die’ - benvolio, act 1 scene 2
A
- Benvolio is saying that when Romeo meets a new lady then his old love for Rosaline will die.
- Benvolio calls Rosaline’s hold over Romeo as an “infection”, this is an extended metaphor which demonstrates how lovesick Romeo is.
- Shakespeare also uses foreshadowing here as he calls Juliet’s love a “poison” - at the end Romeo dies by taking poison.
3
Q
‘come, he hath hid himself among these trees / to be consorted with the humorous night’ - benvolio, act 2 scene 1
A
- Benvolio recognises the Petrarchan isolation into which Romeo has retreated and the futility of attempting to coax him out of it.
- His allusion to Romeo’s isolation among the “trees” and the “night” heightens the sense of isolation.
- Romeo has completely cut himself off from human contact, retreating wholly into nature.
- This also conjures a bathetic (an unintentional anti-climax) image of Romeo sitting in a stop among the trees and the damp (“humourous”) night; Benvolio’s tone is disparaging in his description of Romeo isolated in the trees.
4
Q
‘go, then; for ‘tis in vain / to seek him here that means not be found’ - benvolio, act 2 scene 1
A
- Benvolio’s sentiment here recognises again the extent of Romeo’s self-imposed solitude.
- It is impossible to find a character who “means not to be found”, demonstrating the dramatic extent of his isolation.
- Indeed, the fact that Benvolio and Mercutio exit after this line cements and augments his isolation -Romeo’s refusal to engage in a discussion with these others perpetuates his solitude.
5
Q
‘not Romeo, prince, he was mercutio’s friend. his fault concludes but what the law should end, the life of tybalt’ - benvolio, act 3 scene 1
A
- Benvolio talks on behalf of Romeo.
- Benvolio is saying here that Romeo is justified for his actions.
- This also reflects the laws of time as revenge was thought to be a kind of justice, and so the actions of Romeo were justified.