<span> Mercutio is a young gun and having fun. He doesn't take anything too seriously, even women. He is young and reckless for the most of it, yet like all young men, there is a budding man underneath. </span>
<span>Mercutio will not tolerate injustice, is very loyal to his friends and ultimately he delivers "a plague on both your houses" - this pivotal delivery wouldn't come from a fellow who thought that fate and destiny are a lot of cobs wobble or outside of his control. </span>
<span>He is a young gun and having fun, though he is also a pretty layered character. I think he does believe in fate and destiny to a degree, though like most of us, doesn't spend too much time placing his fate in the hands of the gods, he creates his destiny by creating his destiny - until his fate is taken outside of his control.</span>
The correct answer here is forensic. Forensic is not a form of
a persuasive speech of any kind, instead it refers to according to Aristotle, in his
On Rhetoric, speech and discussion of a past action and in contrast to deliberative
rhetoric and epideictic rhetoric has no bearing on discussion regarding future
and present actions. Forensic rhetoric is also used in legal discourse which
represents the primary setting for this kind of rhetoric.
Answer:
Can you give more information? :(