It's 'Dramatic irony', wikipedia explains it succinctly:
Dramatic irony is the device of giving the spectator an item of information that at least one of the characters in the narrative is unaware of (at least consciously), thus placing the spectator a step ahead of at least one of the characters.
dramatic
The ironic part is that Juliet drank a potion to make it look like she was dead. While Romeo drank a poison to actually kill himself, both poisons and potions come from plants which is what friar Laurence was explaining in act 1.
A bird. Romeo says, "I would I were thy bird" and Juliet says "Sweet, so would I".
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Elizabethan
dramatic
The ironic part is that Juliet drank a potion to make it look like she was dead. While Romeo drank a poison to actually kill himself, both poisons and potions come from plants which is what friar Laurence was explaining in act 1.
A bird. Romeo says, "I would I were thy bird" and Juliet says "Sweet, so would I".
The excerpt from Romeo and Juliet does not seem to be provided.
Romantic.
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Cloistered. The only time she gets out of the house is to go to church.
Forbidden love.
Elizabethan
Romeo is a character in the play "Romeo and Juliet" by William Shakespeare. The play is a tragedy and is considered one of Shakespeare's most famous works. Romeo is the male protagonist who falls in love with Juliet, leading to a series of tragic events.
Love as Religious WorshipCall me but love and I'll be new baptized" (2.2.4). -Romeo says to Juliet as a way to suggest that Juliet's love has the potential to make him "reborn."When the pair first meets, Romeo calls Juliet a "saint" and implies that he'd really like to "worship" her body (1.5.2).Not only that, but Romeo's "hand" would be "blessed" if it touched the divine Juliet's (1.5.1). Eventually, Juliet picks up on this "religion of love" and declares that Romeo is "the god of her idolatry" (2.2.12).Conclusion; Romeo is making love into a religious type of worship of worship with Juliet.
Well, we see Romeo hanging out with his buddies and making dirty jokes. Juliet doesn't have much opportunity for entertainment, except dancing at the party her father threw.