Juliet
You might have felt sad and touched.
he felt excited
The nurse tells Juliet to "get on with her life" so -to-say. The nurse recommended that Juliet get married to Paris since Romeo had been banished from Verona, and that Juliet would never see him again, so she should move on and forget about him. Juliet's opinion of the nurse changed because she thought that the nurse was on her side, and wanted Juliet to be with romeo, so she felt somewhat "betrayed" when the nurse said this. By saying that it is alright to marry Paris, the nurse is saying that Juliet is not really married to Romeo, that their wedding was a sham and their wedding night a roll in the hay. To Juliet, who considers herself to be Romeo's wife, this is an outrage.
When Romeo learned Juliet was 'dead' he bought some poison and went to Verona to kill himself because he felt he couldn't live without her.
This quote is attributed to William Shakespeare in his play Romeo and Juliet. It reflects the sentiment that heaven is found in the presence of Juliet, highlighting the intense love felt by the character Romeo.
Capulet has no idea that Romeo had married Juliet or that he even intended to until after they both were dead. At that time he was of course unhappy that Juliet was dead, but felt that he would rather have her alive and married to Romeo, who he agrees to build a statue to.
Romeo and Juliet met the night of Romeo over hearing Juliet and her feelings about him but I was astonished that she felt this way all though she just met him and it was quite romantic
She felt sorry for her cousin but she still loved Romeo. Kind of both sided.
English 10, Romeo and Juliet, Paragraph Topics. Act I, Scenes 3-5: 1. Compare the love that Romeo feels for Juliet to the love that he felt for Rosaline. (2.) Trace how fate has brought the two lovers together.
She's a teenager. It's a rare teen that is not uncomfortable in this situation. Remember that Romeo is the first boy she has felt this way about.
Her mother, particularly. The Nurse didn't exactly reject her, but her advice as to how to solve Juliet's problem was so unsatisfactory that Juliet treated it as a rejection. It was the kind of advice that showed that the Nurse did not understand Juliet at all.
The line "He jests at scars that never felt a wound" is spoken by Romeo in William Shakespeare's play Romeo and Juliet. It appears in Act 2, Scene 2, during Romeo's conversation with Juliet. This phrase reflects the idea that those who have never experienced pain or suffering may be quick to mock or make light of others' hardships.