It tells us that Mercutio has a very active and fast imagination and an offbeat sense of humor. It also tells us that he finds dreams to be silly and don't reveal anything about your life. "I talk of dreams, which are the children of an idle brain that is doing nothing."
It gives the impression that Juliet's thoughts are more noble and more clearly thought out, since they are more carefully expressed.
It's a poison, and she is probabbly very happy that she will finally be with Romeo in a place of peace.
The characters in the story were figments of William Shakespeare's imagination, or more accurately, the figments of the imagination of the people who had thought up the story which Shakespeare adapted. There really were two families in Italy called the Montecchi and Capelletti, from whom the Montagues and Capulets may have been drawn, since they are referred to in Dante's Divine Comedy. The Romeo and Juliet story is, however, pure fiction.
A soliloquy is basically a monologue to oneself, or talking out your thoughts to yourself. Romeo has many of these in Romeo and Juliet.
It probably depends on what you think the mold was. However, if you are thinking of the mold created by Aristotle which suggested that all tragedies ought to resemble Oedipus Rex as closely as possible, Romeo and Juliet certainly does break it by not having a tragic hero.
Juliet is initially embarrassed that Romeo overheard her private thoughts, but she ultimately expresses her love for him and accepts that their feelings are mutual. She is touched by his presence and connection to her emotions.
A soliloquy is a dramatic monologue where a character speaks their thoughts aloud, often revealing their innermost feelings or intentions. Juliet's soliloquy in Romeo and Juliet is different as she is addressing the audience directly and questioning the importance of names, whereas most soliloquies in literature are more introspective and reveal the character's internal struggles.
Juliet reveals her private thoughts that she would not have told romeo to his face
he is in love with Juliet and wants to marry her
Obviously there was no such thing as e-mails when Shakespeare was writing. What you have been asked to do is to imagine what Romeo and Juliet might say to each other if they had the technology to send e-mails. You have to use your imagination to put yourself in their place of Romeo and Juliet. If you haven't got an imagination you are in deep trouble.
Romeo says this line in Act 2, Scene 6 of "Romeo and Juliet". He is expressing his belief that the outward appearance of love should be reflected in one's thoughts and words.
The script does not specify. Use your imagination. They slept together all night.
Romeo and Juliet is a work of fiction, the source of which was the imagination of the author, William Shakespeare. While Shakespeare was undoubtedly influenced by many earlier works of fiction as well as many actual historical events, there is no specific source for this play other than Shakespeare's imagination.
She worries that the Friar may have given her a deadly poison instead of a knock-out potion.
"Methinks" is an archaic way of saying "I think" or "I believe." In Romeo and Juliet, Shakespeare uses this phrase to convey a character's thoughts or opinions.
In "Romeo and Juliet," Romeo and Juliet are the only ones who know the details of their conversation on the balcony. Romeo overhears Juliet speaking her thoughts aloud, and the two lovers share a private exchange where they declare their love for each other and make plans to be together.
It gives the impression that Juliet's thoughts are more noble and more clearly thought out, since they are more carefully expressed.