"O, I am fortune's fool!"
Act II, Scene 2 - line 33
"Than this of Juliet and her Romeo."
Are you trying to say "Wherefore art thou Romeo?", Juliet's famous line from Romeo and Juliet? It means "Why are you Romeo?"
The line "Is she a Capulet?" is said by Romeo in William Shakespeare's play "Romeo and Juliet". He utters this line when he first sees Juliet at the Capulet's party and realizes she is from the rival Capulet family.
It is as the last and noble but cursed descendant of a cursed line that Antigone thinks of herself in "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, Theban Princess Antigone comments to her sister Ismene that to bury or not to bury their brother Polyneices will show them to be nobly or basely born. She decides to honor Polyneices' death. But all notions of nobility ultimately move over to share space with Antigone's observations during her death march to her live burial. She states that she is the last cursed descendant of a the cursed Theban royal house of Labdacus.
Romeo is the first of the two to speak in Rome and Julietby William Shakespeare. Romeo's first line is, "Is the day so young?"
Romeo speaks first with the line "is the day so young"
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This line from Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet means that if Romeo were not called "Romeo," he would still be the same person. It suggests that a name does not change who someone truly is.