How does capulet respond to juliets death




















He resorts to name-calling, cursing, and a threat of disowning Juliet as he yells in rage against her disobedience. How does Juliet explain her obedience to her parents? He says they should be joyous that she has returned to heaven, but he deems their grief as being selfish. How does Friar Laurence try to comfort them? The nurse is partly to blame for the deaths of Romeo and Juliet because she helps Juliet deceive her parents and because she enables Juliet to see Romeo.

Not really, no. Lady Capulet is not what I would call a good mother. At first, he seems like a pretty good dad. She will stab herself. Does Juliet ever doubt that Romeo will come for her?

S1- What news does Balthasar bring Romeo? Balthasar arrives in Mantua and tells Romeo that Juliet is dead. This statement refers to fate. Why does Juliet dismiss both the nurse and her mother from her chamber?

She needs to be alone inorder to intiate the first step of the plan. Juliet is dead. The two lovers exchange vows of love, and Juliet asks if his intentions are honorable. Later in the Act the nurse calls for Juliet and Juliet is afraid Romeo will be found out. Paris believes that she is talking about him. She is really talking about Romeo. The reason that he is going to talk to the friar is because the friar is supposed to marry Paris to Juliet in just a few days.

Paris is presumably there to make plans about the wedding. Friar Laurence is kind of reluctant to do this because he knows that Juliet is married to Romeo. Happy,because he trust Friar L. Capulet decides that Juliet needs to marry Paris. When she refuses her father, he becomes irate and threatens that he will disown her — and throw her out of the house — if she does not obey him.

She changed her mind because she met Romeo and she found out that she actually liked him. And she wants to marry Romeo because she kissed him. Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment. Press ESC to close. Wikipedikia Editors 7 Min Read. After Capulet and Lady Capulet storm away, Juliet asks her nurse how she might escape her predicament. The Nurse advises her to go through with the marriage to Paris—he is a better match, she says, and Romeo is as good as dead anyhow.

If the friar is unable to help her, Juliet comments to herself, she still has the power to take her own life. To combat the coming of the light, Juliet attempts once more to change the world through language: she claims the lark is truly a nightingale.

Where in the balcony scene Romeo saw Juliet as transforming the night into day, here she is able to transform the day into the night. But just as their vows to throw off their names did not succeed in overcoming the social institutions that have plagued them, they cannot change time.

As fits their characters, it is the more pragmatic Juliet who realizes that Romeo must leave; he is willing to die simply to remain by her side. In a moment reminiscent of the balcony scene, once outside, Romeo bids farewell to Juliet as she stands at her window.

Here, the lovers experience visions that blatantly foreshadow the end of the play. Her decision to break from the counsel of her disloyal nurse—and in fact to exclude her nurse from any part in her future actions—is another step in her development. Having a nurse is a mark of childhood; by abandoning her nurse and upholding her loyalty toward her husband, Juliet steps fully out of girlhood and into womanhood. Indeed, Juliet feels so strong that she defies her father, but in that action she learns the limit of her power.

Strong as she might be, Juliet is still a woman in a male-dominated world. One might think that Juliet should just take her father up on his offer to disown her and go to live with Romeo in Mantua. That is not an option. Juliet, as a woman, cannot leave society; and her father has the right to make her do as he wishes. Though defeated by her father, Juliet does not revert to being a little girl.



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