He thinks that it is the lark, a bird that sings in the morning. That would mean that it is time for him to sneak out. But she, of course, wants him to stay and argues that no, it is the nightingale. She says this because if it was the nightingale, he would not have to leave yet.
Maybe love words
Early Monday afternoon. The nurse goes to meet Romeo at nine and they chat and then she returns and talks to Juliet, taking her sweet time about it. By the time Juliet got there it would be probably just after noon. It is mid-afternoon when Romeo has his run-in with Tybalt.
I suppose you are asking about the conversation which Romeo and Juliet have in Act 3, Scene 5 after they wake up after their first night together. This is hardly "at first" after their wedding which takes place in the last scene of Act 2, about a day earlier. At the very beginning of this scene Juliet says, "It was the nightingale and not the lark which pierced the fearful hollow of thine ear."
Act 4 is all about the planned wedding between Juliet and Paris, how Juliet first objects, then consults the friar, then agrees to the wedding, then takes the potion the friar gave her and is found and taken for dead on the morning she was to have married Paris.__________________________________________________________________A quick overview in bullet points:Juliet encounters Paris at Friar Laurence's cellFriar Laurence and Juliet hatch a planJuliet consents to marry ParisJuliet feigns her own death
He thinks it would look bad to have a large party given Tybalt's death. It would look as if they were not giving him the proper respect. Also when you decide Wednesday night to have a wedding on Thursday morning, you don't have time to make complicated arrangements.
Juliet was at first supposed to drink the potion on Wednesday night because the wedding was supposed to be Thursday. Of course they then put the wedding up to Wednesday, so she had to drink it Tuesday night.
Juliet claims that Romeo hears the morning lark singing when she wants to convince him that it is not yet dawn and he does not need to leave.
Early Monday afternoon. The nurse goes to meet Romeo at nine and they chat and then she returns and talks to Juliet, taking her sweet time about it. By the time Juliet got there it would be probably just after noon. It is mid-afternoon when Romeo has his run-in with Tybalt.
The nurse finds Juliet dead first.
I suppose you are asking about the conversation which Romeo and Juliet have in Act 3, Scene 5 after they wake up after their first night together. This is hardly "at first" after their wedding which takes place in the last scene of Act 2, about a day earlier. At the very beginning of this scene Juliet says, "It was the nightingale and not the lark which pierced the fearful hollow of thine ear."
Act 4 is all about the planned wedding between Juliet and Paris, how Juliet first objects, then consults the friar, then agrees to the wedding, then takes the potion the friar gave her and is found and taken for dead on the morning she was to have married Paris.__________________________________________________________________A quick overview in bullet points:Juliet encounters Paris at Friar Laurence's cellFriar Laurence and Juliet hatch a planJuliet consents to marry ParisJuliet feigns her own death
In Act 1 of Romeo and Juliet, in the morning, Romeo is feeling lovesick over Rosaline. In the afternoon, Romeo and his friends crash the Capulet's party where he first sees Juliet and falls in love with her. In the evening, Romeo and Juliet meet and share their first kiss.
Moves up the wedding day.
He thinks it would look bad to have a large party given Tybalt's death. It would look as if they were not giving him the proper respect. Also when you decide Wednesday night to have a wedding on Thursday morning, you don't have time to make complicated arrangements.
Juliet was at first supposed to drink the potion on Wednesday night because the wedding was supposed to be Thursday. Of course they then put the wedding up to Wednesday, so she had to drink it Tuesday night.
Lord Capulet throws a huge feast in "Romeo and Juliet" where Romeo and Juliet first meet each other.
NO! You shouldn't do that unless your wedding day was the morning before.
Do you mean when he took the wedding night from the groom? It was called "first night" and any lord could claim that night from any bride on her wedding night. This was done a lot in Scotland and Ireland by the English as an insult.