The first time he hears that Tybalt wants to fight him in a duel, Tybalt is his cousin by marriage, although only Romeo knows this.
HOW DID ROMEO AND JULIET DIE Juliet was drugged and was waiting to be rescued by Romeo. Romeo found her but thought she was dead so he lay down beside her and drank a poison. When Juliet woke she found Romeo dead beside her so she stabbed herself in the heart with a dagger.
Tybalt recognizes Romeo's voice at the ball in Act I scene 5 of the play Romeo and Juliet. He says, "This, by his voice, should be a Montague." He cannot see Romeo's face because he is wearing a mask.
She is reacting to the news that Romeo has killed Tybalt. She has basically got the TV news version of the story, which does not give you enough details to have a reasonable reaction to the news. Her first reaction is to think that although he is good looking (he has a "flowering face"), Romeo is really evil at heart (he has a "serpent heart") for killing Tybalt. Very shortly, she will realize that it ill becomes her to jump to conclusions like this.
He says, "This, by his voice, should be a Montague." He doesn't recognize Romeo's face (it is behind a mask) but he has heard his voice before.Verona is not that big a place; you couldn't live in it without meeting just about everyone.Tybalt recognizes Romeo at the Capulet feast due to his voice, when he was talking/hitting on Juliet.
She would brave the ghost of Tybalt to be with Romeo. She makes drinking the potion a sort of toast, by which she honours Romeo by drinking it. She has become totally fixated on rejoining Romeo at whatever cost.
After he has killed Tybalt Romeo becomes an outlaw, and hides out at Friar Laurence' cell. The nurse arrives there with a message from Juliet, but Romeo is lying on the floor having a tantrum and threatening to kill himself. Both the nurse and Friar Lawrence call him a big sissy for not being able to face up to his own actions (but obviously they do it in Shakespearean English).
Tybalt swears revenge against Romeo for his presence at the Capulet masque ball, "I shall withdraw but this intrusion, now seeming sweet, shall convert to bitt'rest gall." (Act 1, scene 5) It may not be word-perfect but I know it's not far off!
In one scene in the play he wears a mask. Most of the time he does not have anything on his face.
Unfortunately you cannot face one of your Turbo Deck recipes in a Recipe Duel.
When Juliet says "O Serpent heart hid with a flow'ring face," she is expressing her realization that Romeo, who appears to be sweet and kind on the outside, actually holds deceitful intentions within his heart. She sees him as dangerous and deceptive, likening him to a serpent with a beautiful facade.
In my opinion, Friar Lawrence is guilty for Romeo and Juliet's death. I think he is guilty because he married Romeo and Juliet. He gave Juliet the potion, and because he didn't get the message to Romeo, I think that he should have met up with Romeo on the outside of Capulet's tomb. Or maybe he could of gone to Mantua and met with Romeo face to face.
No particular line, but I think that Romeo shows great courage in several places: by refusing to fight Tybalt even if it makes him look like a wimp and a coward, by remaining positive with Juliet as they part even though it is against his nature, and by keeping calm in the face of Paris trying to arrest him.