Considering that it follows about a minute after they first meet, there isn't much suspense--about a minute's worth. This minute of suspense is filled with Romeo and Juliet flirting in blank verse, using religious imagery, and in the shape of a Sonnet. If you are perceptive enough to recognize the Sonnet form when you first hear it, you will wonder what will happen when they reach the final couplet. And sure enough, at the very moment the sonnet is completed, Romeo and Juliet share their first kiss.
Considering that it follows about a minute after they first meet, there isn't much suspense--about a minute's worth. This minute of suspense is filled with Romeo and Juliet flirting in blank verse, using religious imagery, and in the shape of a Sonnet. If you are perceptive enough to recognize the sonnet form when you first hear it, you will wonder what will happen when they reach the final couplet. And sure enough, at the very moment the sonnet is completed, Romeo and Juliet share their first kiss.
yes
Romeo and Juliet first kiss at the masquerade party hosted by the Capulets' as a way for Paris to "woo" Juliet. "You kiss by th' book" --Juliet (1.5.111)
first off it is with a kiss i die not you because romeo dies and romeo says that.
Romeo says this line to Juliet during their first encounter and their first kiss. He compares their lips to blushing pilgrims ready to kiss in a metaphorical and poetic manner.
Romeo is Juilet's eniemies son who she does not know until after they kiss.
In Act 1 of Romeo and Juliet, in the morning, Romeo is feeling lovesick over Rosaline. In the afternoon, Romeo and his friends crash the Capulet's party where he first sees Juliet and falls in love with her. In the evening, Romeo and Juliet meet and share their first kiss.
Act I Scene V. Romeo goes to a masquarade party held by Capulet and manages to kiss Juliet, who thinks he is Paris.
Almost the first moment she sees him. Within minutes of their meeting and sharing their first kiss, she describes him as "my only love".
"Good pilgrim, you do wrong your hand too much, which mannerly devotion shows in this, for saints have hands that pilgrims' hands do touch and hand to hand is holy palmers' kiss." A palmer is a pilgrim, generally to the shrine of Santiago de Compostella in Spain.
In "Romeo and Juliet," a holy palmer's kiss refers to a kiss exchanged between Romeo and Juliet. The term "palmer" refers to a pilgrim who has returned from the Holy Land. It represents a pure and sacred exchange of affection between the young lovers.
The holy pilgrim in "Romeo and Juliet" is Friar Laurence. He plays a significant role in the play by marrying Romeo and Juliet in secret, providing guidance, and trying to help them reunite.