The nurse remembers Juliet as a pretty fool because she is young and naive, often acting impulsively and making decisions based on her emotions rather than logic or experience. Juliet's beauty and innocence contribute to the nurse's perception of her as a "pretty fool."
There is no court fool character in Romeo and Juliet. The play features characters like Romeo, Juliet, Mercutio, and Friar Laurence, but the role of a court fool is not present in this Shakespearean tragedy.
You're a fool for doing that
You're a fool for doing that
Wormwood. The nurse says, "But, as I said, when it did taste the wormwood on my nipple of my dug and felt it bitter, pretty fool, to see it tetchy and fall out with the dug." Wormwood is bitter and when baby Juliet tasted it on the nurse's breast (that's what "dug" means), she lost interest in breastfeeding. She and the breast have a cooling of affection; that's what "fall out with" means.
But she does, just not onstage. The nurse would not be able to take her message to Romeo in Act II Scene 4, nor have any reason to warn Romeo not to lead Juliet into a "fool's paradise" or "deal double" with her if she didn't know how Juliet cared for Romeo. Nor would she tease Juliet in Scene 5 by withholding Romeo's plan to marry her if she didn't know how desperately Juliet was waiting to hear just this news.
Romeo and Juliet
Friar Lawrence says this line in Act 5, Scene 3 of Romeo and Juliet. He is referring to Romeo expressing his grief over Juliet's death and stating that he would rather be considered a fool if he were "married" to Juliet's grave (forever mourning her).
O, I am Fortune's Fool!
Nobody did. The quotation "I would the fool were married to her grave" is from the play Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare.
He ran to Friar Lawrence's cell, there to await developments. He is there when the Friar brings news of his banishment. He is also there when the nurse comes looking for him with news of Juliet.
"Oh I am fortunes fool!"
O, I am Fortune's Fool.