The last scene in Act III is the closet scene in which Hamlet kills Polonius, Gertrude recognizes that Claudius may have murdered Hamlet Senior and the Ghost makes a reappearance telling Hamlet to get on with it.
Act IV, Scene iv in Hamlet ends with his soliloquy. He muses about his motivations and how he needs to move forward with his revenge. At the end of the speech, he steels himself to only focus and act on his bloody thoughts (those that drive him toward his revenge on his uncle). However, later Hamlet will show that this resolve is only in his words and not his actions.
Yes, lots. It starts at about line 10 of the first scene when Barnardo asks, "Have you had aquiet guard" and Francisco replies "Not a mouse stirring". It ends around line 400 of the last scene when Fortinbras says, "and for his passage the soldiers' music and the rite of war speak loudly for him."
She is in Act 1 Scene 2 ("Hamlet, cast thy nighted colour off."), Act 2 Scene 2 ("I doubt it is no other but the main: his father's death and our o'erhasty marriage"), Act 3 Scene 1 ("And for your part, Ophelia, I wish that your good beauties be the happy cause of Hamlet's wildness"), Act 3, Scene 2 ("The lady doth protest too much methinks"), Act 3, Scene 4 (The Closet Scene, her big scene "O Hamlet thou hast cleft my heart in twain!"), Act 4, Scene 1 ("Mad as the sea and wind when both contend"), Act 4 Scene 5 ("So full of artful jealousy is guilt it spills itself in fearing to be spilt"), Act 4 Scene 7 ("There is a willow grows aslant the brook"), and Act 5 Scene 2 ("No, no, the drink, the drink!") That's nine of the twenty scenes--she's on stage a lot.
Act III, Scene 2.
What happens right before the scene ends is that the friar says, "you shall not stay alone till holy church incorporate two in one." What happens right after the scene ends is that Romeo and Juliet get married offstage.
What happens right before the scene ends is that the friar says, "you shall not stay alone till holy church incorporate two in one." What happens right after the scene ends is that Romeo and Juliet get married offstage.
In Act 2, Scene 3 of Romeo and Juliet, the event where Friar Laurence agrees to marry Romeo and Juliet takes place last in his cell.
Almost all of the scenes of Romeo and Juliet are important to the dramatic experience in some way, but the story could be told in much abbreviated form using the following scenes: Act 1 Scene V The party scene. Romeo meets Juliet. Act 2 Scene II The balcony scene. They declare their love for each other. Act 2 Scene VI The wedding scene. They are married. Act 3 Scene I Romeo kills Tybalt and is banished. Act 4 Scene I Juliet goes to Friar Lawrence with her problem. Act 5 Scene III They die and the play ends.
After Act 2, Scene 6 of a play, the next scene typically continues the unfolding of the plot, character development, or conflict resolution. It depends on the specific play, but the following scene could introduce new characters, further complicate the existing conflict, or provide a resolution to a particular storyline.
Romeo and Juliet hold conversations in Act I Scene 5, Act II Scene 2, Act II Scene 6 and Act III Scene 5.
There is : Act 1 scene 1 Act 1 scene 2 Act 1 scene 3 Act 1 scene 4 Act 1 scene 5 Act 2 scene 1 Act 2 scene 2 Act 2 scene 3 Act 2 scene 4 Act 2 scene 5 Act 2 scene 6 Act 3 scene 1 Act 3 scene 2 Act 3 scene 3 Act 3 scene 4 Act 3 scene 5 Act 4 scene 1 Act 4 scene 2 Act 4 scene 3 Act 4 scene 4 Act 4 scene 5 Act 5 scene 1 Act 5 scene 2 Act 5 scene 3 x meikaah
William Shakespeare wrote the line "Is love a tender thing?" in his play "Romeo and Juliet." The line is spoken by Juliet in Act 2, Scene 2 as she contemplates the nature of love.
There is a tender family feeling at Laertes's departure with dark undercurrents, particularly in the way Ophelia is treated by her father and brother.
The prologues are not part of the action of the play and so belong to no act or scene. Act 1 scene one starts when the first prologue ends. Open up a copy of the play and look at the first page. The prologue starts with the words, "Two households, both alike in dignity."
Act V, Scene III. It is the last scene in the play.
"act IIII scene V" or "Act IV, scene V"