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      • Juliet appears at her window, sometimes a balcony, and Romeo watches her from below saying, ’But, soft! what light through yonder window breaks? / It is the east, and Juliet is the sun’. Romeo listens as she talks about him and eventually speaks to her.
      www.rsc.org.uk/shakespeare-learning-zone/romeo-and-juliet/story/scene-by-scene
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  2. Juliet’s first meeting with Romeo propels her full-force toward adulthood. Though profoundly in love with him, Juliet is able to see and criticize Romeo’s rash decisions and his tendency to romanticize things. After Romeo kills Tybalt and is banished, Juliet does not follow him blindly.

    • A+ Student Essay

      Though the Prologue offers the first and perhaps most famous...

    • Juliet Quotes

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    • Mercutio

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    • Nurse

      When Romeo is banished, the Nurse suggests that Juliet would...

    • Character List

      But, until a disagreement near the play’s end, the Nurse is...

    • Friar Lawrence

      Romeo and Juliet frequently emphasizes pairs coming together...

    • Romeo

      As Romeo approaches Juliet’s bedroom, he describes her in...

    • Full Play Analysis

      Romeo and Juliet is a play about the conflict between the...

  3. Overcome by love, Romeo responds that he will stay with Juliet, and that he does not care whether the Prince’s men kill him. Faced with this turnaround, Juliet declares that the bird they heard was the lark; that it is dawn and he must flee.

  4. Just before Romeo and Juliet met, Romeo had an intuition that his life was about to take a tragic turn. In this scene, which is the lovers’ last scene alive together, it is Juliet’s turn to foresee their tragic fate.

  5. Quick answer: Juliet asks Romeo not to swear by the moon, because the moon changes its shape every night and is thus an ironically poor symbol of constancy.

  6. Romeo begins to tell Juliet about his feelings, swearing to them by the “blessed moon,” but Juliet urges him not to swear by the changeable, “inconstant” moon and instead swear by himself, as he is “the god of [her] idolatry.”

  7. Jul 31, 2015 · Act 3, scene 3. Friar Lawrence tells Romeo that his punishment for killing Tybalt is banishment, not death. Romeo responds that death is preferable to banishment from Juliet. When the Nurse enters and tells Romeo that Juliet is grief-stricken, Romeo attempts suicide.

  8. As a young woman, Juliet knows she has limited options, and her choice to take her own life at the end of the play—often attributed to her desire to follow Romeo into death—may actually have more to do with her confusion, shame, and fear about her social standing in the wake of Romeo’s demise.

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