Well, what do you think? It's late at night, Juliet is only half-dressed, they are not supposed to be seeing each other, and yet they are so full of each other, so wrapped up in each other's presence that time seems to stop for them, that they forget where they are or what time it is. You might say the mood is magical, if you consider love to be magical. It's as breathtaking, wonderful, astonishing as love can be.
It starts out being informative with "in fair Verona where we lay our scene" although it becomes more emotionally laden with lines like "whose misadventures, piteous o'erthrows". At the end, the last two lines have a grovelling tone.
Romeo and Juliet experienced a wide range of feelings in the balcony scene. The feelings that Romeo and Juliet experienced was lust, frustration, growing love, despair, and secrecy.
Love, of course. It's the most famous love-scene ever.
the theme of that scene is simple Shakespeare was trying to show how overly dramatic and often irrational young love can be
Romantic but dramatic at the same time.
romantic and dramatic.
Romantic
Romeo and Juliet was a story, adapted into verse by Arthur Brooke. William Shakespeare wrote his play based on Brooke's poem. The play has been the inspiration for innumerable screenplays, operas, songs, pieces of orchestral music and ballets. But no novels. There is no Romeo and Juliet novel.
Love.
Communication is important. A+
yes, most stories do
A feud rather than a moral weakness destroyed Romeo and Juliet.
Romeo and Juliet was a story, adapted into verse by Arthur Brooke. William Shakespeare wrote his play based on Brooke's poem. The play has been the inspiration for innumerable screenplays, operas, songs, pieces of orchestral music and ballets. But no novels. There is no Romeo and Juliet novel.
Love.
Well, love probably.
Our love
Communication is important. A+
The Balcony Scene in Cyrano de Bergerac showcases themes of unrequited love, inner conflict, and self-sacrifice. It highlights Cyrano's deep feelings for Roxane, despite knowing that she loves someone else, and his willingness to put her happiness above his own.
The prologue of "Romeo and Juliet" sets the scene by summarizing the entire play in a poetic form. It introduces the feud between the Montagues and Capulets, foreshadows the tragic fate of the young lovers Romeo and Juliet, and highlights the theme of love and conflict. The prologue serves as an introduction to the play's themes and prepares the audience for the unfolding tragedy.
The song is called "A Time for Us" by Henry Mancini and performed by various artists for the 1968 film adaptation of Romeo and Juliet.
I'm looking for the answer now
yes, most stories do
A feud rather than a moral weakness destroyed Romeo and Juliet.
In Act V, Scene 3, Juliet's lines echo the sentiment from the prologue by emphasizing fate and the idea that Romeo and Juliet's tragic love was predetermined. She refers to their love as "death-marked" and states that they were "star-crossed lovers," reinforcing the theme of destiny and the inevitability of their tragic end.