Capulet tries to diffuse the situation by telling Tybalt to calm down and not cause trouble. He also reminds Tybalt that Romeo has a good reputation for behaving peacefully and is not worth fighting with.
At the time of him finding out Romeo and his posse being at the party, he's is too happy (possibly drunk) to do anything about it. He just wants everyone to have a good time. This leads to Tybalt trying to convince his uncle to challenge them and the Capulet then tells the nephew to leave immediately.
Cheating on our test with a smart phone? Very crafty
Lord Capulet handles Tybalt's anger at the party by threatening him
He reacts by threatening him at the. Party.
He says that Tybalt is crazy for thinking that there are such things as Montagues.
"Thou art a saucy boy; go to, go to!"
Tybalt becomes upset when he recognizes Romeo at the Capulet party, as he sees it as a direct challenge to his family's honor. Capulet responds by scolding Tybalt for causing a scene and tells him to calm down and let Romeo enjoy the party, not wanting any disruption to the event.
He gets all fired up. He wants to go confront Romeo and fight him for coming to a Capulet party, but Lord Capulet tells him to shut up and be nice. He doesn't want the Prince coming and ending people for starting a fight.
Sociopaths are likely to respond to exposure with rage, threats, and hurtful communication.
"The continuance of their parents' rage, which, but their children's end, naught could remove." The deaths of Romeo and Juliet end the feud between the families. Montague promises to raise a golden statue of Juliet, and Capulet promises to do the same for Romeo.
Shakespeare does not prepare us for Capulet's towering rage in Act IV in earlier parts of the play. In his Act I conversation with Paris he makes clear that he has no intention of forcing Juliet to marry, yet in Act IV there he is doing just what he said he would not.
RAGE, as a noun, is intense anger, or a state of intense anger. (He was stricken by rage/His rage frightened the class.) As a verb, it means to express anger, either by violent words or deeds. (He RAGED on about the vote/The bear RAGED through the campsite, scattering tents and camping gear.) A RAGE is also a type of music-and-drug party, or a trend or fashion fad. The word or term rage refers to violent uncontrollable anger.
They put on an act to suck you in. They mirror you. Deep down inside they are full of rage, etc., and cannot feel. They feel through the way you respond.
the rage: carrie 2
Neither. Rage is a noun. ...and a verb. He flew into a rage. Rage, rage against the dying of the light.
Panthers rage because they have only a sense of rage
No, rage is a noun. Rage can be used as a verb, for example.. To rage against the dying of the light.
rage