The nightingale. JULIET
Wilt thou be gone? it is not yet near day:
It was the nightingale, and not the lark,
That pierced the fearful hollow of thine ear;
Nightly she sings on yon pomegranate-tree:
Believe me, love, it was the nightingale.
ROMEO
It was the lark, the herald of the morn,
No nightingale: look, love, what envious streaks
Do lace the severing clouds in yonder east:
Night's candles are burnt out, and jocund day
Stands tiptoe on the misty mountain tops.
I must be gone and live, or stay and die.
The nightingale, a bird that sings in the night and the lark, a bird that sings in the morning.
Larks sing at daybreak. Nightingales sing at night.
I think you are asking in an oblique way about the bird songs Romeo and Juliet hear when they wake up in bed after their wedding night. They discuss whether it is a nightingale (who sings at night) or a lark (who sings in the morning). This is important because Romeo must be out of town before dawn.
The nightingale sings at night; the lark sings at daybreak. If what Romeo and Juliet are hearing is the nightingale, it's ok, they can canoodle a bit longer. If it's the lark, Romeo had better get out of there because if the law catches him he's dead.
the song that dawn sings in romeo and juliet, so the word is dawn song!
The nightingale, a bird that sings in the night and the lark, a bird that sings in the morning.
Larks sing at daybreak. Nightingales sing at night.
I think you are asking in an oblique way about the bird songs Romeo and Juliet hear when they wake up in bed after their wedding night. They discuss whether it is a nightingale (who sings at night) or a lark (who sings in the morning). This is important because Romeo must be out of town before dawn.
Des'ree sings this song!
The nightingale sings at night; the lark sings at daybreak. If what Romeo and Juliet are hearing is the nightingale, it's ok, they can canoodle a bit longer. If it's the lark, Romeo had better get out of there because if the law catches him he's dead.
the song that dawn sings in romeo and juliet, so the word is dawn song!
They argue about whether it is still night or whether it is now day. The argument centres on whether a bird who they hear singing is a nightingale (who sings at night) or a lark (who sings early in the morning). Romeo must leave Verona before dawn or risk being captured and put to death. Juliet wants to pretend that it is still night so she can get another cuddle, until she realizes that she is putting Romeo's life at risk.
"Night's candles" is a metaphor used by Juliet to describe the stars in the night sky. She is expressing her longing for Romeo and comparing his eyes to the brightness of the stars in the darkness of the night.
The identity of the bird in "Romeo and Juliet" matters because it is used symbolically to signal the approaching daybreak and the separation of Romeo and Juliet. The lark's song marks the end of their night together and serves as a reminder of the challenges their love faces. The contrast between the lark's song and the nightingale's song also highlights the conflict between light and darkness, hope and despair in the play.
Romeo dreamed the night before his death that Juliet kissed him and all was right in the world.
He went to Mantua.
In Act 3, Scene 5 of "Romeo and Juliet," Shakespeare uses the lark as a symbol of the morning and the nightingale as a symbol of the night. The lark's song signals morning and Juliet's plea for Romeo to stay, while the nightingale's song signals night and Romeo's need to leave before dawn. These birds serve as a reminder of the urgency and limitations of Romeo and Juliet's love.