In the original Shakespeare plays, Othello kills Desdemona when she is about to asleep, and Juliet kills herself when she wakes up to find Romeo dead.
Now that, in the end, Constance has saved them from death, Desdemona can fall asleep and live (Goodnight) and Juliet can wake up and not die (Good Morning).
The morning (A Lark is a bird typically heard calling in the morning); after Romeo and Juliet's wedding night.
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.
Juliet was given the sleeping potion on Tuesday, and was supposed to drink it on Wednesday night, but Lord Capulet changed the wedding date to Wednesday so Juliet drank it Tuesday night. Juliet woke up late Thursday night or early Friday morning and killed herself. So she was sleeping for about two days, forty-two hours to be exact.
The nightingale, a bird that sings in the night and the lark, a bird that sings in the morning.
Scene 4 of Romeo and Juliet takes place at dawn. At the beginning of the scene, Romeo and Juliet debate over whether the birds song they hear is a nightingale or a lark.. This means the night was just turning to morning.
Birds. Specifically the nightingale (a night bird) or a lark (a morning bird).
The morning (A Lark is a bird typically heard calling in the morning); after Romeo and Juliet's wedding 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.
Romeo spends his last night in Verona consummating his marriage with Juliet before he is banished. He then waits until the morning to flee to Mantua, where he will eventually learn of Juliet's apparent death.
All of these are names for some of the smaller satellites of Uranus, which were discovered by the Voyager 2 flyby. Many (but not all) of the moons of Uranus are named for characters in Shakespeare plays.
Juliet sends a messenger to Romeo in the morning to find out if he still wants to marry her as they had discussed the night before. She is eager to know his intentions and is anxious to hear his response.
The lark sings in the morning and so is a symbol of morning. The nightingale sings at night and is therefore a symbol of night. The lovers wish that it were still night so they did not have to part, so the nightingale represents wishful thinking. It actually is morning, however, so the lark represents cold reality.
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.
Juliet was given the sleeping potion on Tuesday, and was supposed to drink it on Wednesday night, but Lord Capulet changed the wedding date to Wednesday so Juliet drank it Tuesday night. Juliet woke up late Thursday night or early Friday morning and killed herself. So she was sleeping for about two days, forty-two hours to be exact.
The nightingale, a bird that sings in the night and the lark, a bird that sings in the morning.
She tells him that the bird they hear is not a lark (a morning bird) but rather a nightingale (a night bird).
Scene 4 of Romeo and Juliet takes place at dawn. At the beginning of the scene, Romeo and Juliet debate over whether the birds song they hear is a nightingale or a lark.. This means the night was just turning to morning.