Αποτελέσματα Αναζήτησης
At the end of Romeo and Juliet’s wedding night together, why does Juliet first deny that it is day and then change her mind? Why does Friar Lawrence’s plan to help Romeo reunite with Juliet fail?
Analysis: Act 4, scenes 1–2. Friar Lawrence is the wiliest and most scheming character in Romeo and Juliet: he secretly marries the two lovers, spirits Romeo to Mantua, and stages Juliet’s death. The friar’s machinations seem also to be tools of fate.
Romeo and Juliet pay a heavy price for marrying for love—their clandestine union propels the lovers towards their tragic deaths. And maybe one of the play's lessons is that adults should let their kids have a say in their marriages.
Themes and Motifs in Romeo and Juliet: The Marriage of Love and Death. When Capulet's party is breaking up, Juliet sends the Nurse to find out Romeo's name. As the Nurse chases after Romeo, Juliet says, "If he be married. / My grave is like to be my wedding bed" (1.5.135) .
Romeo and Juliet come up with a cunning plan to get married under their parents’ noses. It seems as if the feud between their families really might end. At the end of Act Two, the lovers marry. No sooner are the lovers happily married than the play shifts from comedy to tragedy.
The central theme of “Romeo and Juliet” is the intense and all-consuming love between the two protagonists. Their love defies their families’ longstanding feud, representing the power of love to transcend societal boundaries.
Analysis. Scene 1 shows Juliet and Paris interacting for the first time. While Paris eagerly anticipates their wedding, Juliet treats him with indifference, reminding him that they are not...