Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. For Romeo and Juliet it disregards Shakespeare's use of the tradition of the religion of love and its doctrine of the lovers' paradise. If it seems strange that dramatic use of this tradition was accepted by the Christian Elizabethans, it should be remembered that it originated in the Christian Middle Ages.

  2. Jul 31, 2015 · When the Prince, the Capulets, and Montague arrive, Friar Lawrence gives an account of the marriage of Romeo and Juliet. Their deaths lead Montague and Capulet to declare that the families’ hostility is at an end.

  3. Juliet is unconvinced. Romeo, son to Montague, missed the brawl. His family and friends wonder where he is. He tells of his unrequited love for Rosaline, and is persuaded to attend the Capulet ball, disguised by a mask, in the hope of meeting Rosaline. Instead he meets and falls in love with Juliet. Act Two After the feast, Romeo overhears ...

  4. It argues that Shakespeare’s rejection of the idea that Romeo and Juliet would share a heavenly afterlife—an idea that runs throughout his sources for the play—helped him to shape a new mode of tragic power, one that depended upon insisting that love is mortal.

  5. Quick answer: Juliet marries Romeo in Act 2, Scene 5, the day after they meet at the Capulet party. They impulsively decide to marry, driven by their intense emotions. The marriage,...

  6. Fate - Juliet is faced by the challenge of arbitrary fate: she is a Capulet and Romeo is a Montague, she has been arranged to marry Paris, and she is a woman who has very little freedom to make her own choices in life.

  7. People also ask

  8. Capulet for Juliet’s hand in marriage. However, at this point in the play Lord Capulet doesn’t act like a normal Elizabethan father, instead he wants his daughter to be older before she marries and also wants Juliet to marry someone she loves.