she doesnt the nurse knows and helps her and romeo be together and keeps the secret whereas the mother know nothing at all and thinks Juliet is going to marry that guy that they arranged the marriage for until Juliet ' dies ' to be with romeo
The nurse told Juliet that her mother needed her. When Juliet left, Romeo asked "Who's her mother?". The nurse responded that Juliet's mother was Lady Capulet.
Juliet is close to her nurse because while her mother occupies herself with her duties with Lord Capulet, the nurse acts as Juliet's actual mother. In other words, the nurse is Juliet's caretaker. I can't believe I just did your homework for you.... ;)
Nurse loves Juliet because she has cared for her since she was born. Nurse was like a mother to Juliet, and Nurse's own daughter died, so she replaced her deceased daughter with Juliet, since they were the same age.
its when the mother sent the nurse to called her and she stand beside her mother than romeo realized that she was a Capulet and then the nurse told her that he was the enemy [ in movie] Romeo: Asked the nurse when Juliet was called by her mother. Juliet: The nurse and when he leaves and his people were spotted. [in book] two versions neither is wrong =)
Early in the play, the answer is the Nurse. Juliet was born when her mother was quite young, and was turned over to the Nurse who breastfed Juliet, and basically raised her as her own daughter. The Nurse is a mother to Juliet. She has had little communication with her real mother. Shakespeare shows us this in Act 1 by having Mrs. Capulet send the Nurse away so she can talk privately to Juliet and then call her back in a panic when she realizes that she has no idea how to talk to Juliet. As a result, it is the Nurse Juliet trusts, not her mother.Later in the play, Juliet will not trust either of them.
the nurse in the story is her best friend because the nurse has taken care of her since she was a young girl and she tells and gives Juliet advice and is always on the side of Juliet. Juliet has only her nurse to talk to of her problems and the nurse is more of a mother to her
The Nurse
This is from the point of view of having played the role of Juliet. Juliet loves her mother in a dutiful daughter way, but they do not have a warm, close relationship. She respects her mother, and wants to live up to her mother's expectations, but finds she must rebel in order to keep the sanctity of her (secret) marriage to Romeo. Juliet's relationship with the nurse is much warmer. It is the nurse who breastfed Juliet (probably until she was three or so); it is the nurse who cares for Juliet when she is sick, who sits on her bed and holds her hand when Juliet is afraid, who helps her get dressed for parties, who listens to all her girlish chatter. The nurse is much more of what we, nowadays, would think of as a mother. However, the nurse is also foolish and fickle, and these characteristics cause Juliet to eventually turn from her nurse, and realize that she is truly alone in the world.
She no longer trusts the nurse with her secrets. She tells the nurse that her advice has been comforting but this is a lie, and Juliet is just trying to get rid of the nurse at this point.
She no longer trusts the nurse with her secrets. She tells the nurse that her advice has been comforting but this is a lie, and Juliet is just trying to get rid of the nurse at this point.
Lady Capulet is Juliets mother BUT the nurse brought Juliet up. Juliet was raised in Italy in the house of Lord and Lady Capulet, her parents. But largely by her Nurse and servant Angelica.
Juliet tells her nurse and mother that she needs to be alone to pray and prepare herself for her wedding night with Romeo. She asks them to leave her be so she can have some privacy before the ceremony.