Romeo gives his servant a letter to deliver to Romeo's father, detailing his plan to attend the Capulet ball in disguise.
He gives him a letter explaining everything that happened and why Romeo is committing suicide. It's a suicide note.
Romeo gives a letter to his servant to take to Friar Laurence, not Romeo's father. The letter contains instructions and details regarding Romeo's plan to reunite with Juliet.
"Here, take this letter. Early in the morning see thou deliver it to my lord and father."
a note telling his father he had comitted suicide, because at the time it had seemed like Juliet was dead, and that was his one true love, that he just possibly couldn't live with out, so he bought poision from a poor man and made him reach to get the bottle of poison that would eventually kill him.
whether to trust romeo. Wether to marry Romeo, Whether to forgive romeo for killing her cousin and hearing her side, whether she would give her virginity to Romeo, wether shed go through with the plan and stay true to romeo, wether shed kill herself for romeos death
In Act I Scene ii of Romeo and Juliet, Capulet gives his servant a list of the people he wants to invite to the party, ordering him to ask all of those people to come. Unfortunately the servant is illiterate.
It confirms the story that Friar Lawrence tells the families. It tells what has happened over the four days that only Romeo, Juliet, Nurse, and Friar Lawrence knew. About how Romeo and Juliet fell in love and married, etc.
The slave of Lord Capulet is sent to give people on a list invatations. Unfortunatly the slave can not read so he asks Romeo to read it for him.
balthasar, a servant to romeo, was keeping an eye out for romeo in Verona. and when he found out that Juliet was supposedly dead he went and alerted romeo
The illiterate servant in Act 1 may indeed be the same person as Peter in Act 2 or at the end of Act 4, although the texts do not give his name. The illiterate servant is illiterate and has to deliver a notice to everyone on a written list which Capulet has given him. Clearly he needs help from someone who can read, and Romeo and Benvolio appear to fit the bill, and do.
The illiterate servant in Act 1 may indeed be the same person as Peter in Act 2 or at the end of Act 4, although the texts do not give his name. The illiterate servant is illiterate and has to deliver a notice to everyone on a written list which Capulet has given him. Clearly he needs help from someone who can read, and Romeo and Benvolio appear to fit the bill, and do.
the rising action in romeo and Juliet is when lord Capulet tells the servant to give the invitations to all the people that are on the guest list, since the servant doesn't know how to read he tries to find a person who can help him. just then romeo and his friend show up and the servant not knowing they were from the montegue family which the capulets hate, he asks them to read the list and invites them to the party.