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read the excerpt from act ii, scene iv of romeo and juliet benvolio her…

Question

read the excerpt from act ii, scene iv of romeo and juliet
benvolio here comes romeo, here comes
romeo
mercutio without his roe, like a dried herring o
flesh, flesh, how art thou fishified! now is he for
the numbers that petrarch flowed in: laura to his
lady was but a kitchen-wench; marry, she had a
better love to be-rime her: dido a dowdy,
cleopatra a gypsy, helen and hero hildings and
harlots, thisbe, a grey eye or so, but not to the
purpose. signior romeo, bon jour! theres a
french salutation to your french slop. you gave
us the counterfeit fairly last night.
romeo good morrow to you both. what
counterfeit did i give you?
how does mercutio offer comic relief in this excerpt?
20
○ by explaining romantic figures from history
○ by speaking in different languages
○ by refusing to treat romeo’s romance seriously
○ by complaining about his own love interest

Explanation:

Brief Explanations

To determine how Mercutio offers comic relief, we analyze his dialogue. He mocks Romeo's romantic feelings by trivializing famous romantic figures (e.g., calling Laura a "kitchen - wench," Dido "dowdy") and not taking Romeo's romance seriously. Option A is incorrect as he mocks, not explains, romantic figures. Option B is wrong as he uses French phrases but not different languages. Option D is incorrect as he doesn't complain about his own love interest. So the correct option is the one about not treating Romeo’s romance seriously.

Answer:

C. by refusing to treat Romeo’s romance seriously