The citizens did not appreciate it. They had nothing to do with the ongoing feud but yet it impacted their day to day lives. Mainly because all the fights that would break out in public square and how it would disrupt them.
Lady Capulet supports Juliet's marriage o Paris.
Capulet was surprisingly tolerant of the fact that Romeo had gate-crashed. Although Tybalt wanted to throw Romeo out, Capulet told him to let Romeo stay and enjoy the party.
He speaks exactly eight times in the play: five times in the first scene of the play and three times in the last. This is not a lot of material to work with. He appears to be a genuinely affectionate man who is concerned for his son, although we never see them on stage together. He shows grief at the loss of his wife (well, he would do that even if he didn't feel it). Apart from his outburst when he gets into a shouting match with Capulet, he seems unconcerned with the feud. It is Montague who suggests that he will pay for a golden statue of Juliet, which attests to his open and kindly nature.
He believes it will help her feel better after the murder of her cousin, Tybalt.
Your question is not clear: do you mean to write a soliloquy to be said by Lady Montague, or by someone else about Lady Montague?The thing is, at the time Romeo dies, his mother is already dead. She has died of grief arising from his exile--"Grief of my son's exile hath stopped her breath" as Montague says. She never knows about his death, which is probably as well, considering what knowing about his exile did to her.That means that unless you change the story, Mrs. Montague cannot deliver this soliloquy. Perhaps Montague could do it since he is actually alive after he hears about Romeo's death.So, how do you write a soliloquy? Well, a soliloquy is a speech which is delivered to the audience, sharing the inmost thoughts of the character. So, if this is Montague talking, how does he feel about the death of his wife? What would he have to say about it? Choose whether he is coherent or not, emotional or not, depressed or not.
Lady Capulet supports Juliet's marriage o Paris.
Outraged and somewhat betrayed.
He has misgivings about it. He has a feeling that no good will come of it.
Capulet was surprisingly tolerant of the fact that Romeo had gate-crashed. Although Tybalt wanted to throw Romeo out, Capulet told him to let Romeo stay and enjoy the party.
Cocoa butter
Many people are interested in working in a senior care position because they like older people. They like spending time with senior citizens and making them feel good.
He speaks exactly eight times in the play: five times in the first scene of the play and three times in the last. This is not a lot of material to work with. He appears to be a genuinely affectionate man who is concerned for his son, although we never see them on stage together. He shows grief at the loss of his wife (well, he would do that even if he didn't feel it). Apart from his outburst when he gets into a shouting match with Capulet, he seems unconcerned with the feud. It is Montague who suggests that he will pay for a golden statue of Juliet, which attests to his open and kindly nature.
The study of how individual citizens think, feel, and act politically is called <!--[endif]-->behavioralism.
The Romans were very patriotic.
yes
He believes it will help her feel better after the murder of her cousin, Tybalt.
It depends on what kind of pony it is, or how old it is. If it, younger, it doesn't feel as soft as older ponies. It often has short and thinner hair than an older horse.