A Capulet servant could not read the guest list to the party that his master gave him. So coming upon Romeo and Benvolio, he asks Romeo if he could read. Romeo read the list for the servant and sees Rosalins's name. He asks the servant where they will be and the servant says that '...if you be not of the house of/ Montague, I pray come and crush a cup of wine...' and so they would have been invited to the party if they weren't Montagues. Which of course they were.
Romeo was not invited to the Capulets' party. He crashed it. So did Benvolio. Both of these guys were Montagues and were not invited or expected to attend. Mercutio, on the other hand, is a relative of the Prince and was invited (his name is on the guestlist if you want to check it out). It is possible that Romeo and Benvolio got in on Mercutio's ticket. Or it is possible that the security at the door wasn't very tight.
A servant of the Capulet's encounters Mercutio, Romeo, and Benvolio on the road. He asks them to read the party list since he can't read (bit stupid of the Capulets, don't you think) and Romeo spots Rosaline's2 name on the list, and asks to be invited. The servant doesn't know that they were Montagues, so they were invited.
2 Romeo liked Rosaline before he met Juliet!
Romeo decides to go to the party to see his the girl he loves, Rosaline.
to see juliets cousin rosaline who he had a crush on
no he sneaks in with Benvolio and Mercutio
Funny question because they actually didn't get invited, they crashed the party!
He jumps over a wall.
Juliet never doubts that Romeo will come for her. She does have doubt about Friar Lawrence and that he might have changed the potion to poison.
It doesn't mean anything. You scrambled it. Shakespeare has Juliet say,"Romeo, I come! this do I drink to thee."You see, Juliet thinks Romeo is dead. She wants to be with him in death. She tells Romeo she is coming, and drinks the poison, toasting dead Romeo with it.
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Juliet says, "Romeo, I come! This do I drink to thee!" and she drinks Friar Lawrence's potion.
Juliet I think both. Romeo is in a hurry to get married to Juliet and asks Friar Laurence to marry them shortly after they've met. Juliet, shows she's impatient when she is waiting for the Nurse to come back and give her news about the plans to get married to Romeo
Romeo got invited to the party through a servant who was handing out the invitations on the streets. Romeo happened to come across the servant and the servant mistakenly asked Romeo to read the invitation list, leading to Romeo being invited to the party.
Romeo approaches Juliet at the party and they engage in flirtatious banter. They share romantic words and end up kissing, expressing their immediate attraction to each other.
At the beginning of the scene in "Romeo and Juliet," there is foreshadowing of a tragic event to come through the ominous talk of Tybalt seeking revenge on Romeo for attending the Capulet party. This foreshadowing hints at the escalating conflict that will ultimately lead to the deaths of Romeo and Juliet.
The nurse reveals to Juliet that Romeo is banished from Verona. She also gives Juliet a ring that Romeo sent as a token of his love. She advises Juliet to be patient and wait for Romeo to come back to her.
The Nurse.
Juliet never doubts that Romeo will come for her. She does have doubt about Friar Lawrence and that he might have changed the potion to poison.
He has come to put flowers on Juliet's grave.
She promises to find Romeo so he can come to Juliet.
Romeo is the boy, and Juliet is the girl in the tragic love story of "Romeo and Juliet" by William Shakespeare. They come from feuding families, the Montagues and the Capulets, and their love ultimately leads to their tragic demise.
"Romeo and Juliet" would come second in a card catalog. The title "Romeo and Juliet" follows the alphabetic order of "Raven, The" as "R" comes after "J" in the English alphabet.
Foreshadowing in Romeo and Juliet is when hints or clues are given early in the play that suggest what will happen later on. For example, Romeo and Juliet's discussion about their deaths foreshadows their tragic fate. This literary device helps build tension and anticipation in the story.
Paris believes that Romeo has come to Juliet's tomb to cause trouble or desecrate the site, as he is unaware of Romeo and Juliet's relationship and thinks Romeo is a Montague seeking to disrupt the Capulet tomb. This misunderstanding leads to a confrontational encounter between Paris and Romeo at Juliet's tomb.