It is at the end of this scene, in which Romeo and Juliet have first kissed and fallen in love, that they discover that their families are enemies of one another. That's a pretty tense moment. == Romeo and his mates have gatecrashed the ball wearing masks knowing that they are unwelcome guests and could be killed. That seems pretty tense to me.
In Act III Scene I, Shakespeare begins with Benvolio:
"I pray thee, good Mercutio, let's retire. The day is hot, the Capulets abroad, And, if we meet, we shall not scape a brawl, For now, these hot days, is the mad blood stirring."
What Benvolio means is:
"Please Mercutio, let's go. It's hot, the Capulets are around, and if we meet them, there'll be a fight. This hot weather makes tempers flare!"
Right there, when Benvolio mentions a fight, you know something horrible is to happen in this act. Mercutio doesn't care, even when Tybalt appears. Mercutio actually challenges Tybalt to start a dual, or fight, with him. Mercutio doesn't care if the Prince catches them fighting because if a member of the Capulet or Montague family is caught fighting, they'll be put to death. It works, and Tybalt, unfortunately, kills Mercutio.
Additionally Shakespeare also builds up tension for
1) Forshadowing the deaths
2) The word quarrel is reapeated
3) Dramatic Irony
In Act III Scene I, Shakespeare begins with Benvolio:
"I pray thee, good Mercutio, let's retire. The day is hot, the Capulets abroad, And, if we meet, we shall not scape a brawl, For now, these hot days, is the mad blood stirring."
What Benvolio means is:
"Please Mercutio, let's go. It's hot, the Capulets are around, and if we meet them, there'll be a fight. This hot weather makes tempers flare!"
Right there, when Benvolio mentions a fight, you know something horrible is to happen in this act. Mercutio doesn't care, even when Tybalt appears. Mercutio actually challenges Tybalt to start a dual, or fight, with him. Mercutio doesn't care if the Prince catches them fighting because if a member of the Capulet or Montague family is caught fighting, they'll be put to death. It works, and Tybalt, unfortunately, kills Mercutio.
Additionally Shakespeare also builds up tension for
1) Forshadowing the deaths
2) The word quarrel is reapeated
3) Dramatic Irony
He shows the hatred between the two opposing families of the story by making them fight. He then amplifies it by bringing in the Prince and having him command that the next time either family spills the blood of the other it would mean death for the perpatrator and quite possibly the entire family.
Romeo and Juliet begins in media res. This means that the scene starts in the middle of a conversation/action. As is the case with Romeo and Juliet, the first scene opens in a battle. This immediately grabs the attention of the audience since fight scenes are usually sources of suspense and capture the attention of the audience. Since the fight is between Montague and Capulet men, it is also the beginning of the action/feuding between the two families for the play which creates suspense since the audience waits and expects similar encounters to occur as the play progresses. The fight in scene one also gives the audience an understanding of the tension and hate that exists between these two families which guarantees suspense for the rest of the play.
short sentences
how the emotion is put across
look at the scene sentence by sentece- think about irony
think about temper
Please specify which play.
yo
In order to build suspense or create humor.
The dramatic irony builds up suspense in Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet in the sense that neither of the main characters knows what the other is doing, which leads the tragic ending.
From trees.
Shakespeare did not build the Globe Theatre and did not get the wood. The carpenter's name was Peter Street, and the timber came from the old Theatre Playhouse, the property of Richard and Cuthbert Burbage. Although the Burbages brought the wood and most of the money, Shakespeare kicked in some cash to buy plaster, nails, paint, etc.
It took 10 years to build in 1997,however is only a replica called Shakespeare's globe theater
The stormA lion being looseFire from the sky
yes he did
united kingdom
Cleopatra herself had no temple, but she did build one to Julius Caesar which was in Alexandria. She also put some finishing touches on her father's temple at Dendera.Cleopatra herself had no temple, but she did build one to Julius Caesar which was in Alexandria. She also put some finishing touches on her father's temple at Dendera.Cleopatra herself had no temple, but she did build one to Julius Caesar which was in Alexandria. She also put some finishing touches on her father's temple at Dendera.Cleopatra herself had no temple, but she did build one to Julius Caesar which was in Alexandria. She also put some finishing touches on her father's temple at Dendera.Cleopatra herself had no temple, but she did build one to Julius Caesar which was in Alexandria. She also put some finishing touches on her father's temple at Dendera.Cleopatra herself had no temple, but she did build one to Julius Caesar which was in Alexandria. She also put some finishing touches on her father's temple at Dendera.Cleopatra herself had no temple, but she did build one to Julius Caesar which was in Alexandria. She also put some finishing touches on her father's temple at Dendera.Cleopatra herself had no temple, but she did build one to Julius Caesar which was in Alexandria. She also put some finishing touches on her father's temple at Dendera.Cleopatra herself had no temple, but she did build one to Julius Caesar which was in Alexandria. She also put some finishing touches on her father's temple at Dendera.
The parthenon. . . i think the columns are bent at an angle so they look straight from far away. No, Julius Caesar did not design the Pantheon, that came much later. Julius Caesar built the temple of Venus and the forum bearing his name.
Cleopatra's most notable building projects included the restoration of Egyptian temples, such as the Temple of Dendera and the Serapeum in Alexandria. She also commissioned the construction of the Caesarium in Alexandria, a temple dedicated to her lover Julius Caesar. Additionally, Cleopatra embarked on ambitious building projects in order to elevate Alexandria's status as a center of culture and learning.
Julius Caesar did not plan to build a huge basilica to the Basilica Sempronia. He demolished the Basilica Sempronia (which was named after Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus, who built it in 169 BC). He replaced it with the Basilica Juliua. It was not built by Augustus instead. Caesar undertook the project in 54 BC (ten year before his assassination). He carried out most of the construction work himself and inaugurated in 46 BC. The construction was not complete. What Augustus did, was the completion of the work.
Cleopatra did not build any monuments. The only thing that could be remotely considered a monument was the temple to Julius Caesar that she had built in Alexandria.
Cleopatra was not known as a builder. She only built one temple and that was a temple to Julius Caesar in Alexandria.
Augustus did build a library, but not the first. The first library in Rome was build by Asinius Pollio. He was a writer himself and an ally of Julius Caesar. The precise date that he built the library is unknown, but his collected works were the source that Plutarch used.
Scene 4 of Act II in "Julius Caesar" takes place on the morning of March 15 (the Ides of March), shortly before Caesar's murder in the Senate House. Portia is concerned because she knows her husband, Marcus Brutus, is involved in something secretive and potentially dangerous (the conspiracy to assassinate Caesar), although she does not know exactly what it is. She is sending their servant Lucius to find out what is going on. The primary function of this scene is to build suspense leading into Act III.
build suspense, have it decrease in the middle of the story, and have it build again. ~APEX approved~