this answer is very imature and i did not like it as it is very short for a long 5-8 pages long essay. this answer is very imature and i did not like it as it is very short for a long 5-8 pages long essay.
There are five scenes in Romeo and Juliet which are scene 1.
Romeo and Juliet. When Juliet, who is a Capulet, finds out Romeo is a Montague, she is torn because of her feelings toward him, and the feelings her family has towards his family, or in this case, his name. She is saying the feelings she has shouldn't change just because she learned his last name. Everyone knows what a rose is and how it smells, but what if we called it something we know to be ugly and capable of hurting you, like a cactus? It would still be pretty and smell wonderful, making a name just that....a name.
But she does, just not onstage. The nurse would not be able to take her message to Romeo in Act II Scene 4, nor have any reason to warn Romeo not to lead Juliet into a "fool's paradise" or "deal double" with her if she didn't know how Juliet cared for Romeo. Nor would she tease Juliet in Scene 5 by withholding Romeo's plan to marry her if she didn't know how desperately Juliet was waiting to hear just this news.
In Romeo and Juliet, Juliet says this line in Act 2, Scene 2, during the famous balcony scene while she is expressing her love for Romeo. She is arguing that a name is not important and that it doesn't change the essence of a person.
Friar Lawrence says this line in Act 5, Scene 3 of Romeo and Juliet. He is referring to Romeo expressing his grief over Juliet's death and stating that he would rather be considered a fool if he were "married" to Juliet's grave (forever mourning her).
This would be a direct metaphor because of the use of "is"
ummm romeo and juliet? idiot..
The nurse says to Romeo: "if you should deal double with her, truly it were an ill thing to be offered to any gentlewoman and very weak dealing." The nurse would like to warn Romeo against trifling with Juliet but she has some difficulty visualizing what the adverse consequences for Romeo might be. The warning therefore falls rather flat.
That quote is from the William Shakespeare play Romeo and Juliet.
In the Balcony Scene, Juliet repeats the question numerous times if Romeo would leave. She knows that Romeo (a Montague) is not safe in the Capulet's garden.in the old film she wears a tiny top that clearly shows her melons.... slute !
A bird. Romeo says, "I would I were thy bird" and Juliet says "Sweet, so would I".
Shakespeare did not dramatise Romeo and Juliet's wedding night, since they would all have been arrested for putting on a lewd entertainment, and in any case having Juliet get naked on stage would have just shown that she was being played by a boy. They consummate their marriage between Act 3 scene 3 and Act 3 Scene 5, when we see them on the morning after their wedding night.