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"That heaven finds means to kill your joys with love,"
Foreshadowing
Do you mean "What are Balthazar's lines?" or "What does he say?" He appears in Act 5 of the play. In scene 1 he has a speech of moderate length which starts with "Then she is well and nothing can be ill" and two other shorter lines. In Scene 3 Romeo tells him to buzz off, and he has a short line saying he will and then the aside "For this same, I'll hide me hearabout. His looks I fear, and his intent I doubt." He then has six mostly short lines when he leads Friar Lawrence to the tomb, the shortest of which is "Romeo" and the longest "I dare not sir. My master knows not but I am gone hence and fearfully did menace me with death if I did stay to look on his intents." He has one more line, a six-line speech explaining to the Prince what he knows about the tragedy. So there you have it. Balthazar has an even dozen lines to say in the play.
The fight between Tybalt and Romeo takes place in Act 3 scene 1 lines 113-121 (Cambridge Schools Shakespeare)
In Act 1, Scene 1
"That heaven finds means to kill your joys with love,"
Juliet has about 12 speeches in this scene, from one-liners like "Oh God! Did Romeo's hand shed Tybalt's blood?" to a couple that are about 30 lines long.
Their first lines together, in scene 5, form a sonnet.
Romeo and Tybalt fight in Act 3, Scene 1 of Shakespeare's play "Romeo and Juliet." The lines exchanged during the fight include Tybalt's "Romeo, the hate I bear thee can afford, No better term than this,--thou art a villain," to which Romeo responds, "Tybalt, the reason that I have to love thee doth much excuse the appertaining rage."
Everything Romeo says during the balcony scene when he is spying on Juliet is an aside. I'm thinking of such lines as "she speaks!"
Foreshadowing
Romeo says this famous line in William Shakespeare's play "Romeo and Juliet". He says this line in Act 2, Scene 2 when he sees Juliet on her balcony.
Do you mean "What are Balthazar's lines?" or "What does he say?" He appears in Act 5 of the play. In scene 1 he has a speech of moderate length which starts with "Then she is well and nothing can be ill" and two other shorter lines. In Scene 3 Romeo tells him to buzz off, and he has a short line saying he will and then the aside "For this same, I'll hide me hearabout. His looks I fear, and his intent I doubt." He then has six mostly short lines when he leads Friar Lawrence to the tomb, the shortest of which is "Romeo" and the longest "I dare not sir. My master knows not but I am gone hence and fearfully did menace me with death if I did stay to look on his intents." He has one more line, a six-line speech explaining to the Prince what he knows about the tragedy. So there you have it. Balthazar has an even dozen lines to say in the play.
Susan. Act 1, Scene 3, Lines 20 and onwards
Sure! One famous declamation piece from Romeo and Juliet is Romeo's soliloquy from Act 2, Scene 2, where he declares his love for Juliet while on her balcony. This speech includes lines such as "But, soft! what light through yonder window breaks?" and "It is the east, and Juliet is the sun." It's a passionate and iconic declaration of love.
The first four lines of the prologue rhyme the words "dignity", "scene", "mutiny" and "unclean".
The fight between Tybalt and Romeo takes place in Act 3 scene 1 lines 113-121 (Cambridge Schools Shakespeare)