Everyone's very happy. Romeo says "come what sorrow can, it cannot countervail the exchange of joy". Friar Lawrence thinks everyone is TOO happy: "Love moderately" he says.
In Scene 1 of Act 2 of Shakespeare's "Romeo and Juliet," Romeo refers to the earth as "dull" because he is contrasting it with Juliet's beauty and brightness. To him, Juliet is like the sun, illuminating everything around her, while the earth seems uninspiring and ordinary in comparison.
Romeo says this in Act 1, Scene 5 of William Shakespeare's play "Romeo and Juliet." He uses this metaphor to describe Juliet's beauty when he first sees her at the Capulet's party.
"shrieks like mandrakes torn out of the earth" (scene 3)
Romeo and Juliet. When Juliet, who is a Capulet, finds out Romeo is a Montague, she is torn because of her feelings toward him, and the feelings her family has towards his family, or in this case, his name. She is saying the feelings she has shouldn't change just because she learned his last name. Everyone knows what a rose is and how it smells, but what if we called it something we know to be ugly and capable of hurting you, like a cactus? It would still be pretty and smell wonderful, making a name just that....a name.
The nurse says to Romeo: "if you should deal double with her, truly it were an ill thing to be offered to any gentlewoman and very weak dealing." The nurse would like to warn Romeo against trifling with Juliet but she has some difficulty visualizing what the adverse consequences for Romeo might be. The warning therefore falls rather flat.
The final farewell scene between Romeo and Juliet parallels their first meeting at the Capulet's party, where they first fall in love. Both scenes showcase the intense emotions and deep connection between the two characters.
Juliet says this line in Act 1, Scene 3 of Romeo and Juliet. She is speaking to her mother about the idea of marriage and expresses her willingness to try to like whoever her parents choose for her to marry.
Juliet will return to Friar Lawrence's cell to ask for a way to reunite her with Romeo after he has been banished. It's like they are to be remarried.
What I like about Romeo and Juliet is the part where they bite their thumbs. That's what you get for asking me.
Depends, in the movie Romeo sees Juliet next to the nurse, her fiance and her mother. Like this, right away he figured out she was a Capulet. In the book, Romeo is told by the nurse that Juliet belongs to the Capulet Family.
This line is from Act 1, Scene 4 of "Romeo and Juliet." Mercutio uses it to describe Tybalt, highlighting his confrontational and aggressive nature. It reflects the tension between the Capulets and Montagues in the play.
This is Romeo, having caught his first glimpse of Juliet at the Capulet's party in Act 1 Scene 5 of Romeo and Juliet. The idea of someone beautiful being like a bright light is a common image in this play, as in the next line "she hangs upon the cheek of night like a rich jewel in an Ethiop's ear", the famous "What light from yonder window breaks? It is the sun, and Juliet is the moon", and Juliet's "he will make the face of heaven so fine that all the world will be in love with night and pay no worship to the garish sun."