It sounds like you're referring to a Shakespearean quote from "Romeo and Juliet." This line means that when someone appears attractive, we tend to be attracted to them, even if we weren't looking for that attraction. It highlights the unpredictable and sudden nature of love and desire.
She says "I'll look to like, if looking liking move." That means she will do whatever her mother wants her to do. Hope that helped!
Juliet tells her mother that she will "look to like if looking liking move." Later, she refuses to marry Paris, supposedly because of her grief over Tybalt, but actually because Romeo is banished.
I'll look to like if looking liking move,But no more deep will I endart mine eye,Than your consent gives strength to make it fly.
move on
Juliet says this line in Act 1, Scene 3 of Romeo and Juliet. She is speaking to her mother about the idea of marriage and expresses her willingness to try to like whoever her parents choose for her to marry.
She has no problems with them. If they think she should marry Paris she'll look to like, if looking liking move. Her problems start at the end of Act 1 when she finds that the guy she was kissing is a Montague
try to move on by liking someone else,try to distance yourself from them for a while,think about why NOT to like them.
Look. It's English, remember. Look is look. "I'll look to love if looking liking move." (Romeo and Juliet) "Yon Cassius has a lean and hungry look; such men are dangerous" (Julius Caesar) "He was a man, take him for all in all. I shall not look upon his like again." (Hamlet)
This line is from "Sonnet 20" by William Shakespeare. It is part of a longer poem where the speaker is praising the beauty of the person they are addressing, who seems to blend masculine and feminine qualities. The line you provided is questioning the nature of this person's beauty.
Juliet's mother has urged her to look upon the handsome Paris has a future husband, but Juliet says, "I'll look to like, if looking liking move: / But no more deep will I endart mine eye / Than your consent gives strength to make it fly" (1.3.97-99). Lady Capulet's speech to Juliet started from the assumption that because Paris is good-looking, Juliet would be attracted to him, but Juliet seems to have her doubts. The first line of Juliet's reply means, "I'll try to like him, but only if when I look at him this arouses some attraction." "Move" means "cause" or "arouse". In the next line, to "endart" means to shoot like a dart or arrow. Juliet is saying that she will fix her eye upon Paris because her mother is encouraging her to do so; but, by using the words "no more", she indicates that her only motivation to look at Paris is her mother's encouragement. This is Juliet's way of saying: "I'll give it a try, but I'll only really go for it if you think I should."
Or maybe not. Perhaps he was positioning himself to get a better look at some other girl. A better sign of his liking you -- or at least being attracted to you -- would be his looking at you and smiling. Other than that, I wouldn't read too much into his seat move.
In William Shakespeare's play "Romeo and Juliet," when Juliet's mother, Lady Capulet, asks her to consider marrying Paris at the party, Juliet responds with obedience but does not fully commit to the idea. She says: "I'll look to like, if looking liking move, But no more deep will I endart mine eye Than your consent gives strength to make it fly." In simpler terms, Juliet is saying that she will try to like Paris if her mother wants her to, but she won't let her feelings go any further than her mother's approval allows.