In Act 1 Scene 1, Montague asks Benvolio to give an account of how the fight in the marketplace began. He asks, "Speak, nephew, were you by when it began?" but Benvolio says "Here were the servants of your adversary and yours, close fighting ere I did approach." He wasn't there to see how it started.
In Act 3 Scene 1, Benvolio is again called upon to be the witness to how a fight started. The Prince says to him "where are the vile beginners of this fray?" and Benvolio answers at length, describing with accuracy what had just happened.
Benvolio is Romeo's cousin.
Benvolio tries to stop the servants fighting.
Benvolio
Yes. Benvolio is Romeo's cousin in Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet.
Benvolio hopes that Romeo will realize that there are plenty of other women he could choose to be with. Romeo and Juliet was written by William Shakespeare.
Benvolio
Benvolio is the peace-loving person in Romeo and Juliet... He doesn't like fighting. And he hates the dispite about the Capulets and the Mong. SO there is your answer Benvolio is
Benvolio is Romeo's cousin.
Benvolio tries to stop the servants fighting.
Benvolio
Benvolio
Yes. Benvolio is Romeo's cousin in Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet.
If Benvolio is Romeo's cousin, then Montague (Romeo's father) must be his uncle.
Benvolio
Mercutio does. It's ironic because Benvolio is peace-loving and it it Mercutio who has the quarrelsome temperament.
Benvolio hopes that Romeo will realize that there are plenty of other women he could choose to be with. Romeo and Juliet was written by William Shakespeare.
He doesn't.