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Question
read the excerpt from act i, scene i of romeo and juliet. romeo: a fair assembly: whither should they come? servant: up. romeo: whither? servant: to supper; to our house. romeo: whose house? servant: my master’s. romeo: indeed, i should have asked you that before. servant: now i’ll tell you without asking. my master is the great rich capulet; and if you be not of the house of montagues, i pray, come and in this excerpt, the servant is a comic figure because he unknowingly invites his master’s enemy to join the feast he accidentally offers secret information about capulet’s wealth he mistakenly reveals to the montagues where the capulets live he carelessly offends his master’s guests with his questions
The servant in this excerpt from Romeo and Juliet is comedic because he unknowingly invites Romeo (a Montague, the enemy of the Capulets) to the Capulet's feast. Let's analyze the options:
- The option about revealing Capulet's wealth is incorrect as the servant doesn't discuss wealth.
- The option about revealing where Capulets live is incorrect; he invites to the feast, not just reveals the address.
- The option about offending with questions is incorrect as the servant's questions aren't the comedic part.
- The correct option is the first one: he unknowingly invites his master’s opponent (Romeo, a Montague) to join the feast.
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A. he unknowingly invites his master’s opponent to join the feast