Westonci.ca connects you with experts who provide insightful answers to your questions. Join us today and start learning! Join our Q&A platform and get accurate answers to all your questions from professionals across multiple disciplines. Connect with a community of professionals ready to provide precise solutions to your questions quickly and accurately.

"What dares the slave, come hither, coverd
with an antic face, To fleer and scorn at our
solemnity?...Uncle, this is a Montague, our
foe, a villain that is hither come in spite, To
scorn at our solemnity this night" (Act 1,
Scene 5).
Analyze what this scene means.


Sagot :

Answer:

Just in case we’d forgotten that there’s a feud on, here’s Tybalt, clearly not about to forget all his troubles on the dance-floor, but rather looking for a fight. A nice note that they’ve left their rapiers off for the party (some rapiers had blades many feet long – not at all conducive to safe dancing). Tybalt seems to be angry all the time: he addresses his page as boy (fine; sirrah would be more cheerful, perhaps?) and describes Romeo as a slave and a villain. Tybalt is anxious about status (maybe because he doesn’t have his ‘rapier’ and he’s Over-Compensating?) He regards Romeo’s presence as a personal affront as much as an insult to his family honour (he’s partly insulting Romeo in class terms); he assumes that to do such a thing – gate-crash a party – is an act of spite and scorn, rather than a bit of a laugh, a dare, an adventure with the boys. (The suggestion is that, were Tybalt to do such a thing, scorn would be his only possible motivation.) It helpfully confirms that Romeo’s wearing a mask: Tybalt can recognise his voice, even though he’s wearing an antic face. Even Capulet, who will prove to be well capable of a decent bit of storming, thinks that Tybalt’s being over the top: what’s up, what are you getting so worked up about?

Post navigation