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Romeo & Juliet
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Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

Mar 31, 2015

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Page 1: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

Romeo & Juliet

Page 2: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

Look for…• Puns• Allusions• Metaphor• Personification• Oxymorons• Paradoxes• Foreshadowing

Page 3: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

PunsA pun is a humorous play on words.

Mercutio – “Nay, gentle Romeo, we must have you dance.”

Romeo – “Not I, believe me. You have dancing shoes / With nimble soles; I have a soul of lead…” (Act I Sc. 4)

Page 4: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

AllusionsAn allusion is a reference to a well known work of art, music, literature, or history.

“At lovers’ perjuries, they say Jove laughs.” (Act II, Sc. 2)

Jove is another name for Jupiter, the Roman King of the Gods.

Page 5: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

PersonificationPersonification occurs

when an inanimate object or concept is given the qualities of a person or animal.

Juliet— “For thou wilt lie upon the wings of night / Whiter than new snow on a raven’s back. / Come, gentle night, come, loving, black-brow’d night” (Act III Sc. 2)

Page 6: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

ParadoxesA paradox is statement or situation with seemingly contradictory or incompatible components.

Juliet – “O serpent heart, hid with a flowering face!” (Act III Sc. 2)

Page 7: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

ForeshadowingForeshadowing is a

reference to something that will happen later in the story.

Juliet – “Give me my Romeo; and, when he shall die,Take him and cut him out in little stars,And he will make the face of heaven so fineThat all the world will be in love with nightAnd pay no worship to the garish sun.” (Act III Sc. 2)

Page 8: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

PROLOGUE

Two households, both alike in dignity,

    In fair Verona, where we lay our scene,

    From ancient grudge break to new mutiny,

    Where civil blood makes civil hands

unclean.

    From forth the fatal loins of these two foes

    A pair of star-cross'd lovers take their life;

    Whose misadventured piteous overthrows

    Do with their death bury their parents'

strife.

Page 9: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.
Page 10: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

PROLOGUE--cont

The fearful passage of their death-mark'd love,

    And the continuance of their parents' rage,

    Which, but their children's end, nought could

remove,

    Is now the two hours' traffic of our stage;

    The which if you with patient ears attend,

    What here shall miss, our toil shall strive to mend.

Page 11: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

What can we learn from the

PROLOGUE?•Verona, Italy (Setting, 14th Century)•Montagues –VS- Capulets: (Characters)

–Generations of Hate–Kids fall in love (Basic Plot)–Secret marriage–*Suicide–Families overcome the hate at a tragic cost

* (Foreshadows the deaths of R & J)

Page 12: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

ACT I

• Purpose–Exposition of the Play

Characters

Setting

Conflict

Page 13: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

ACT I, scene 1

• Old hatreds are rekindled between:

– The servants of Capulets and Montagues– Tybalt and Benvolio– The Capulets & Montagues (Fathers)

All it took was one airy word or gesture “Do you bite your thumb at us sir?”

Page 14: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

Offensive

Gestures

Page 15: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

“If ever you disturb our streets again, your lives shall pay the forfeit of the peace” (I.1.104)

Prince of Verona

decrees:

Page 16: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

ACT I, scene 1• Sycamore = Sick amore

(love-sick)• Romeo Montague is

heart-sick because he’s been rejected by Rosaline.

• He asks his friend Benvolio, “…teach me how I should forget to think!” (I.1.241)

Page 17: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

ACT I, scene 1Benvolio encourages, “By giving liberty unto thine eyes. Examine other beauties” (I.1.225-226) translated: there are plenty more fish in the sea

Page 18: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

Shakespeare’s Purpose

• Introduce the age-old feud between the Montagues & Capulets

• Introduce Romeo as a romantic, moody teen who is sulking because of a breakup

Romeo = Romantic

Page 19: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

ACT I, scene 2

Paris, a young Count, related to the Prince, asks Lord Capulet permission to marry his daughter Juliet

You can call me Prince

Pedophile

Page 20: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

ACT I, scene 2

• Capulet asks Paris to wait until Juliet is a bit older than her present age—almost 14

• He then invites Paris to a party at his home to woo Juliet

Page 21: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

ACT I, scene 2

• Capulet asks his illiterate servant to deliver invitations to the party

• The servant happens upon Romeo and his pals, and asks them for assistance in reading the invitations

Comedy Relief

Page 22: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

ACT I, scene 2

• Romeo sees Rosaline’s name on the invitation and decides to attend

Thou art cordially invited to attend the festivities at the Capulet castle:

MercutioRosalineTybalt

Page 23: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

ACT I, scene 2• Problem: The Capulets and

Montagues are bitter enemies

• Benvolio promises that he’ll assist Romeo in comparing Rosaline to other more beautiful women, and “…make thee think thy swan a (I.2.94)

• Romeo pouts that he’ll attend but have no fun

crow”

Page 24: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

Shakespeare’s Purpose

• Plot device:– Used to shape the love

triangle, bringing Romeo, Juliet and Paris together

– Used to bring Romeo into enemy territory—a Montague in the Capulet home

Page 25: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

ACT I, scene 3• Lady Capulet asks her daughter, Juliet, to

“check out” Paris as a potential husband

Page 26: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

ACT I, scene 3

• Juliet respectfully complies, but lets her mother know that marriage is not something she’s been thinking about

Page 27: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

ACT I, scene 3

• We meet Juliet’s nanny (comic relief), the Nurse, who is especially protective of her

• We also find out that Juliet’s 14th birthday is approaching in a fortnight—Lammas Eve

Page 28: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

Shakespeare’s Purpose• The audience knows

that Juliet is aware of Paris’ intent to marry her—love triangle

They also know that

there may be a brawl

at the party b/c Romeo

and his friends are in

enemy territory

Page 29: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

ACT I, scene 4• Romeo, Benvolio, &

Mercutio are about to crash the Capulet party

• Romeo vows he won’t have any fun because he’s depressed about Rosaline’s rejections

• She has vowed to remain chaste (he’ll get nun)

Page 30: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

ACT I, scene 4

• “You have dancing shoes with nimble soles; I have a soul of lead” (I.4.14-15)

• “I am too sore enpierced with his (Cupid’s) shaft to soar with his light feathers…under love’s heavy burden do I sink” (I.4.19-22)

• Pun—a play on words

Page 31: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

ACT I, scene 4• A discussion about love

ensues

• Romeo’s interpretation of love:– Emotional & Spiritual

• Mercutio’s interpretation of love: – Physical & lusty

Foils

Page 32: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

ACT I, scene 4

• Romeo begins to tell his pals about a portentous dream he had

• Mercutio mocks him with a fairy tale about Queen Mab who visits people in their dreams

Page 33: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

ACT I, scene 4

• Romeo rebukes him, and then tells Benvolio about his dream, which makes him reluctant to go to the party

• Foreshadowing

Page 34: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

ACT I, scene 4

• In other words:

–Romeo feels Fate has predetermined that some event tonight will cost him his life

• More foreshadowing

Page 35: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

ACT I, scene 5• Lord Capulet begins

the party, inviting all to dance

• Romeo spies Juliet, and immediately falls heavily in love with her, instantly forgetting about Rosaline

Love at first sight

Page 36: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

ACT I, scene 5

• “O, she doth teach the torches to burn bright! It seems she hangs upon the cheek of night as a rich jewel in an Ethiop’s ear—Beauty too rich for use, for earth too dear! (I.5.45-48)

Page 37: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

ACT I, scene 5

• Hot-tempered Tybalt, Lady Capulet’s nephew, overhears Romeo’s voice, recognizes him as a Montague and prepares to kill him

• Lord Capulet orders Tybalt to “endure” Romeo’s presence, recalling the Prince’s decree.

• Tybalt obeys grudgingly, but will seek revenge at another time:

Page 38: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

ACT I, scene 5

• Tybalt remarks after Lord Capulet has exited:

– “I will withdraw; but this intrusion shall, now seeming sweet, convert to bitter gall” (I.5.101)

Page 39: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

ACT I, scene 5

• The Infatuation

• The Kiss

• The Enemy

Page 40: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

ACT I, scene 5

• Romeo and Juliet’s attraction is immediately electric—love at first sight!

• Yet, when they kiss they do not know each other’s identity

Page 41: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

Yo, Baby. What’s your name?

Page 42: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

ACT I, scene 5

• Juliet’s nurse breaks the news to each

• Romeo’s reaction: – “Is she a Capulet? O dear account! My life is

my foe’s debt” (I.5. 118-119)

• Juliet’s response: – “My only love, sprung from my only hate!...

Prodigious love it is to me that I must love a loathed enemy” (I.5.140-143)

Page 43: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

Shakespeare’s Purpose

• Foreshadow the death of Mercutio at the hands of Tybalt

• Introduce the conflict that sets the plot in motion

– Ironically Romeo & Juliet, whose families are embroiled in a bitter feud, fall madly in love

Page 44: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

ACT II

Prologue----pg. 1020

–Summarizes Act I

–Hints that Romeo and Juliet will find a way to be together

Page 45: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

ACT II, scene 1

• Romeo’s friends, Mercutio and Benvolio, go looking for Romeo

• They think that

Romeo is still in

love with Rosaline

Page 46: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

ACT II, scene 1 & 2

• After much joking around, Mercutio and Benvolio give up and go home to bed

• Scene 2

• Romeo climbs over the Capulet garden wall and hides in the garden below Juliet’s window

Page 47: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

O Romeo, Romeo!

Wherefore art thou Romeo?

I’m down here!

Page 48: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

ACT II, scene 2

• He overhears Juliet talking to herself– Juliet says that she will

disown her family so she can be with Romeo

– Juliet hates the name “Montague” not the person “Romeo”

– …a rose/by any other name would smell as sweet

Page 49: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

–a rose/by any other name would smell as sweet

Page 50: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

ACT II, scene 2

• Romeo answers– He is willing to change his

name just to be with Juliet – “Had I it written, I would tear

the word”

• Juliet says that she is afraid that her family will kill Romeo if they find him

Romeo

Page 51: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.
Page 52: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

ACT II, scene 2

• Romeo says he would rather die than live without Juliet

• After hearing Romeo speak words of love, Juliet: – Believes that Romeo loves her and

– Wonders if their love came too quickly and easily (Remember, they have only just met)

Page 53: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

ACT II, scene 2• Romeo proposes & Juliet accepts

• Juliet says that if Romeo is serious about marriage, he must arrange the wedding—shewill send for his answer tomorrow at 0900 hrs

• Romeo goes to Friar Laurence to arrange the marriage

Page 54: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

Parting is such sweet sorrow

Page 55: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

STOP

Page 56: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

ACT II, scene 3• Friar Laurence is alone in his garden

• Soliloquy:

– He says that nothing is completely good or evil. It is how it is used. They can heal or kill. – This speech shows his knowledge of herbs and drugs

Page 57: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

ACT II, scene 3• Romeo arrives and explains

that

– He no longer loves Rosaline – He is now in love with Juliet – He asks Friar Laurence to

marry them

Page 58: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

ACT II, scene 3

• Friar Laurence tells Romeo– Young men love with their

eyes not with their hearts

– He still has tear

streaks on his face

from Rosaline

Page 59: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

ACT II, scene 3• Friar Laurence isn’t sure

this is a good idea but

– He only agrees to marry them

– Because he thinks it will stop the feud between the two families

Page 60: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

ACT II, scene 4• Mercutio and Benvolio are out

walking in the town square. They discuss:

– That Tybalt sent a challenge to Romeo to duel

– They say that Tybalt is an expert at dueling (fencing, sword fighting) Prince of

Cats

Page 61: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

ACT II, scene 4

• After arranging the marriage, Romeo meets them and he is in a much better mood

• Nurse (and Peter) comes

and finds Romeo at noon• not 0900 a.m.

Page 62: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

ACT II, scene 4

• Romeo tells the nurse about the plan for the wedding

1. Juliet is to go to shrift (confession) at Friar L. cell that afternoon

2. They will be married there3. Romeo’s servant will give a rope ladder to

the nurse4. Romeo will use it to climb into Juliet’s

room for their wedding night

Page 63: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

ACT II, scene 4 and 5

• The Nurse tells Romeo that– She thinks that Paris would make a better

husband– Juliet doesn’t agree with her

• Act II, scene 5• Juliet is very nervous as she waits for the

nurse to return from meeting Romeo. She is 3 hours late—12:00

Page 64: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

ACT II, scene 5

• Nurse teases Juliet by not giving her Romeo’s message immediately

• Juliet goes to Friar Laurence to get married

Page 65: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

ACT II, scene 6

• Before Juliet arrives, Romeo and Friar L talk– Friar L prays that God will bless the wedding

regardless of what else happens to the couple– Warns that “things” that happen so fast often

end just as quickly (and explosively)

Page 66: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

ACT II, scene 6• When Juliet arrives, Romeo uses a lot of

poetic words to describe her and their love

• Juliet

--worries that Romeo only talks about love;

--is afraid that he doesn’t really understand love

• Romeo and Juliet get married

Page 67: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

Start here

Page 68: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

Act III: Banishment• Central Issue:

– Romantic love –vs.- family loyalty

• Theme:– Love as a brutal emotion, leading to defiance

of family, religion, & society

Page 69: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

Act III, scene 1

• Mercutio baits Tybalt who’s looking to duel Romeo

I love you, man. • Romeo arrives but will not duel Tybalt

because he is now his kinsman through his secret marriage– “I never injured thee, but love thee

better than thou canst devise (understand)…”

Page 70: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

Act III, scene 1• Tybalt is unaware of the

marriage, so he rejects Romeo’s peace offering

• Mercutio steps in to duel Tybalt

• As Romeo tries to break up the fight, Tybalt slays Mercutio

Ratcatcher!

Page 71: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

Act III, scene 1

• As he is dying,

Mercutio curses

both the warring

families, saying:

“Ask for me tomorrow and you shall find me a grave man” and “A plague on both your houses”

Page 72: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

Act III, scene 1

• Romeo is irate that he has allowed his love for Juliet to make him “effeminate”

• He savagely avenges Mercutio’s death

Page 73: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

Act III, scene 1

• Recognizing what he has done (murdered his wife’s cousin) Romeo blames his actions on Fate:

“O, I am fortune’s fool!”

Page 74: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

Act III, scene 1

• The Prince banishes Romeo from Verona, a penalty much less severe than he decreed

                                                         

Page 75: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

Act III, scene 1

• If Romeo is found in the city, he’ll be killed

Page 76: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

Act III, scene 2• Juliet’s soliloquy:

– She impatiently awaits Romeo, so they may consummate their marriage

–Come, night: come, Romeo, come: thou day in night: For thou wilt lie upon the wings of night Whiter than new snow on a raven’s back.

Page 77: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

Act III, scene 2

• Juliet’s nurse finally tells her the sad news about Tybalt’s death at the hands of Romeo

• At first Juliet is angry with Romeo, then elated that he is alive, and finally suicidal because she fears she cannot live without him

Page 78: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

Act III, scene 2

• Juliet declares that, although married, she will die a maid (virgin)

• And that death will be her husband

(Personification)

Page 79: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

Act III, scene 2• The Nurse assures her that

Romeo, who is hiding in Friar L’s cell, will be with her tonight

• Juliet asks Nurse to take a ring to Romeo, as a symbol of her undying love for him

– Notice that Juliet sees no middle ground in her life. She lives with Romeo, or she will take her life.

Page 80: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

Start Here

Page 81: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

Act III, scene 3• Friar Lawrence explains to Romeo that the

Prince has banished him from Verona for killing Tybalt, an act of mercy

• Romeo see banishment as a

punishment worse than death

Page 82: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

Act III, scene 3

What does “Thou cuttst my head off with a golden axe” mean? Or “You’d complain if you were hung with a new rope”?

Page 83: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

Act III, scene 3

• Friar Laurence: “O, then I see that madmen have no ears.”

• Romeo: “How should they, when that wise men have no eyes?”

Page 84: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

Act III, scene 3• Juliet’s nurse arrives at Friar’s cell

• Romeo is so sickened by his

actions (destroying his marriage)

that he attempts suicide

• Friar scolds him for his rash,

weak response, chiding him to

stop whining like a wench and to

act like a man

Page 85: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

Act III, scene 3

• Friar Laurence (the optimist) reminds Romeo of the “…pack of blessings” he has

1. Juliet is alive and waiting for him

2. Romeo has killed Tybalt, an enemy bent on killing him

3. The Prince has spared his life

Page 86: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

Act III, scene 3• Romeo, too, sees no middle ground in life. • Friar reveals his plan to Romeo and Nurse:

– Romeo will sneak to Juliet’s room tonight– Consummate their marriage – Escape to Mantua until their – Make their marriage public– Seek a pardon from the Prince*Nurse gives Romeo the wedding ring from Juliet.

His spirits lift—for now

Page 87: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

Act III, scene 4• Capulet and Count Paris again discuss the

possibility of marriage (Thursday?)

• Paris: “These times of woe afford no time to woo”—(poor timing

to pick up chicks)

• Paris is excited

ited

Hey, Baby. Watch' a

doing after the funeral?

Page 88: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

Act III, scene4

• Lord Capulet asks his wife to let Juliet know that she’ll be marrying Paris on Thursday morning. It’s currently Monday evening

– Ironic: Sunday (yesterday), Lord Capulet denied Paris’ request to marry Juliet because she was too young

Page 89: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

Act III, scene 5

It is dawn. Romeo & Juliet

have spent their first night

together as a married couple

• Warning: Nudity Alert!

• Juliet is reluctant to let

Romeo go to Mantua,

teasing him that it is only

the nightingale, not the lark.

Page 90: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

Act III, scene 5

• Romeo replies, “I must be gone and live, or stay and die” (3.5.11)

• As he departs a Juliet has a premonition, “Methinks I see thee…as one dead in the bottom of a tomb” (3.5.56-57)

– Ironically, this is the last time the two will see each other alive

Foreshadowing

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Page 92: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

Act III, scene 5

• As Romeo sneaks away, Lady Capulet enters Juliet’s room

• She brings news that Thursday Paris will make her a joyful bride

• Juliet rejects this, telling her mother that if she marries, it will be Romeo (her enemy)

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Act III, scene 5• Upon hearing this, Lord Capulet is furious

and swears that if Juliet refuses this secure marriage to Paris:

• “…you (Juliet) shall not house with me…hang, beg, Starve, die in the streets, for, by my soul, I’ll ne’er acknowledge thee”

(3.5.220-222)

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Act III, scene 5

• Desperate and suicidal, Juliet appeals to her mother for help, but Lady Capulet replies:

– “Do as thou wilt, for I have done with thee”

• Next Juliet appeals to her Nurse,

who advises her to take the secure

option and marry Paris

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Act III, scene 5

• Juliet feigns agreement and pretends to go to Friar Laurence to make her (confession)

• In her soliloquy, Juliet reveals her thoughts:

– She no longer trusts her nurse and will not confide in her again

– She’ll seek advice from Friar Laurence– If he cannot help her, she can always take her life

Backup Plan

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Purpose• Shakespeare has moved Juliet from

childhood into adulthood, both sexually and socially (all in two days)

• She’s exerting her independence from her parents and her nurse (love-vs.-family)

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STOP

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ACT IV

• A Wedding

Becomes a

Funeral

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Dramatic Irony

– A contradiction between what a character thinks and what the reader or audience knows to be true

– Example: Act II, scene 4: Lord Capulet announces that Juliet will wed Paris on Thursday, unaware that she married Romeo on Monday

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Dramatic Irony

• Another Example: Act III, scene 1, Romeo will not duel Tybalt because the two are now kinsmen through marriage. However, Tybalt is unaware of Romeo and Juliet’s’ secret marriage

• Purpose:– Create suspense & tension– Draw the audience into the action of the story

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Act IV, scene 1-Tuesday

• Paris confides to Friar Laurence that Lord Capulet has hastened the wedding date to cheer Juliet, who continues to mourn “Tybalt’s” death

– (dramatic irony: Why does Juliet weep?)

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Act IV, scene 1-Tuesday

• Juliet arrives at Friar’s to “make her confession.”

• She and Paris exchange polite but guarded words

• He promises to wake her Thursday morning, then leaves

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Act IV, scene 1-Tuesday

• Juliet pleads with Friar for a way out of Thursday’s wedding to Paris (prefers bears to Paris). Her desperate plea is laced with threats of suicide:

– “If in thy wisdom thou canst give no help, do thou but call my resolution wise and with this knife I’ll help it presently” (4.1.59-61)

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Act IV, scene 1-Tuesday

• “…Out of thy long-experienced time, give me some present counsel: or, twixt my extremes and me this bloody knife shall play the umpire…” (4.1.69-70)

• “Be not so long to speak. I long to die…”(4.1.73)

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Act IV, scene 1-Tuesday• Juliet’s desperate plea leads to a risky

plan: • Friar Laurence proposes:

– “If rather than to marry County Paris, thou hast the strength of will to slay thyself, then it is likely thou wilt undertake a thing like death to chide away shame…” (4.1.79-82)

(recall the potion Friar made from the flower in Act II, scene 3)

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Act IV, scene 1-Tuesday

• Friar Laurence’s Plan: – Juliet will return home & happily consent to

wed Paris– Wednesday evening she will drink the potion,

which causes her to appear lifeless– Paris will arrive Thursday morning to find her

dead– Her body will be taken to the Capulet vault

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Act IV, scene 1-Tuesday

• Friar Laurence’s Plan:--cont.

– Meanwhile, Friar will send word of the plan to Romeo in Mantua

– Friar & Romeo will meet in the vault and await Juliet’s awakening (42 hours)

– Romeo & Juliet will escape to Mantua (and live happily ever after)

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Act IV, scene 2-Tuesday

• This is what actually happened: • Juliet returns home, apologizes to her

father and happily agrees to marry Paris• She tells her father that Friar has set her

straight• Capulet praises Friar L. for his sage

advice and moves the wedding to Wed

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Act IV, scene 3-Tuesday

• Juliet asks for privacy from her mother and Nurse on the eve of her wedding night to atone for her disrespectful behavior

• Lady Capulet and Nurse exit

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Juliet’s soliloquy

• “Farewell! God knows when we shall meet again. I have a faint cold fear thrills though my veins that almost freezes up the heat of life” (4.3.16-17)

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Juliet’s soliloquy

• She fears that the potion

may be poison

• She imagines she sees Tybalt’s corpse pursuing Romeo

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Act IV, scene 3-Tuesday

• She fears that she’ll wake up before Romeo arrives and suffocate from the stench of Tybalt’s rotting corpse

• Frantic with fear, Juliet drinks the potion

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Act IV, scene 4

• Capulet household cheerfully bustles with wedding preparations (mouse-hunt = woman chaser)

• Paris arrives to wake his soon-to-be bride

– (dramatic irony—happy household / dead daughter and Paris coming to wake her)

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Act IV, scene 5-Wednesday

• Nurse discovers Juliet’s “dead” body• Lady Capulet’s reaction: “…My child, my

only life, revive, look up, or I will die with thee” (4.5.22-23)

• Lord Capulet’s reaction: “Death lies on her like an untimely frost upon the sweetest flower of all the field” (4.5.33-34)

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Act IV, scene 5-Wednesday

• Capulet tells Paris of the Juliet’s death:

– “O son, the night before thy wedding day hath death lain with thy wife (personification). There she lies flower as she was, deflowered by him:

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Act IV, scene 5-Wednesday

• Capulet laments that the wedding celebration has turned into a funeral feast

• Friar Laurence blames the Capulet’s for the death of their daughter– “The heavens do low’r upon you for some ill;

move them no more by crossing their high will” (4.5. 105-106)

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Act IV, scene 5-Wednesday

• Scene 5 ends with Peter and a musician arguing over which song to play for this tragic situation

• They make musical puns (fa, re, silver sound and sound for silver)

• Example of Comic Relief

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Start Here

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Act V, scene 1

• Takes place in Mantua– Romeo Has Not received a letter from Friar L– Balthasar brings the news of Juliet’s death to

Romeo– Romeo wants to leave immediately for Verona– Balthasar tries to get him to wait for more

news

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Act V, scene 1

• Romeo– Plans to go to Verona– Kill himself and– Lie forever in the Capulet tomb with Juliet

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Act V, scene 1

• Romeo needs to get some fast acting poison– The poison is illegal in Mantua– Anyone who sells it can be executed– The very poor and desperate apothecary will

probably sell this illegal poison– Romeo tries to buy the poison but– The apothecary doesn’t want to break the law

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Act V, scene 1

• Romeo points out that the apothecary is already starving to death, so what is there to be afraid of

• Apothecary needs the money so he sells the poison to Romeo

• Romeo pays the man• Romeo says that the “gold” is a poison

that kills men’s souls

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Page 124: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

Act V, scene 1

• So “gold” is worse than the poison• Romeo says that he is the one breaking

the law by selling a deadly “poison”• Romeo equates the poison to a cordial (a

drink believed to be good for the heart)• He sees his death as something joyous,

not evil

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Act V, scene 2

• Takes place in Verona• Friar John was suppose to deliver a letter

to Romeo– He did not go to Mantua because– He was quarantined in a house– He couldn’t even give the letter to anyone

else to deliver

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Act V, scene 2

• Friar Laurence realizes that– Juliet will wake in 3 hours, so– He must go and free her

• Friar Laurence plans to send another letter to Romeo, telling him– That Juliet is alive– Hiding in Fr. Laurence’s room, and– Romeo must come and get her

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Act V, scene 3

• Paris and a servant go to the graveyard– Paris want to put flowers at Juliet’s tomb– Paris tells his servant to hide and watch for

anyone who might be coming– The servant signals (whistles) that someone

is coming– Paris hides and waits to see who it is

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Act V, scene 3

• Romeo and Balthasar arrive– Balthasar is to forget everything he sees and– To not interrupt Romeo– Give a letter to Romeo’s father

• Romeo tells Balthasar that– Romeo is going to open the tomb to retrieve a

very important ring– Romeo tells Balthasar to leave or he will tear

him to pieces

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Act V, scene 3

• Balthasar– Doesn’t believe Romeo’s excuse for opening the tomb– In an aside, we learn that he plans to hide and wait

• Paris sees Romeo enter the graveyard– He thinks that Romeo is responsible for Juliet’s death– is there to desecrate the tomb– Paris tries to stop him

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Act V, scene 3

• Romeo says– He is there to kill himself– Paris should leave the graveyard and live – *Romeo does not recognize Paris at this point

• Paris refuses and fights Romeo• Paris’s servant

– See the fighting and– Goes to get the guards

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Act V, scene 3

• Romeo kills Paris– Recognizes Paris and decides to bury him with Juliet

• Romeo– Enters the tomb with the crow bar– expresses the beauty of Juliet– Drinks the powerful poison and Dies– “Thus with a kiss I die”

• Friar Laurence arrives• Balthasar tells him that Paris and Romeo fought

Page 132: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

Act V, scene 3

• Friar Laurence enters the tomb– Finds Romeo and Paris dead– Juliet wakes up– He tries to get Juliet to leave the tomb

because the guards are coming– He plans to hide Juliet in a convent– Juliet refuses to leave– Fr Laurence leaves and hides

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Act V, scene 3

• Juliet stays with Romeo– She finds the vial– She tries to drink from the empty vial– She kisses Romeo hoping that some poison remains

on his lips– None of this works– She hears the guards– She grabs Romeo’s dagger and – Stabs herself– She dies (Climax)

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Page 135: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

Act V, scene 3

• The Guards arrive– They find three dead bodies– The Chief Guard sends another guard to find

the Prince and the families– The other guards find Balthasar and Fr L.– They are to be held until the Prince arrives

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Act V, scene 3

• Juliet’s parents and the Prince arrive• The Prince wants to know what happened• Lord Montague arrives and tells them that

his wife died of grief b/c Romeo was banished

• Friar Laurence knows what happened– He also says he is both guilty and innocent for

the deaths– He tells the entire story of Romeo & Juliet

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Act V, scene 3

• Balthasar– Fills in the holes in the story– He gives Romeo’s letter to the Prince– The letter confirms everything that Friar

Laurence said

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Act V, scene 3

• The Prince– Tells both families that they are responsible

for the deaths– Their hate caused this– The Prince also blames himself because– He should have enforced the law and stopped

the feud

Page 139: Romeo & Juliet. Look for… Puns Allusions Metaphor Personification Oxymorons Paradoxes Foreshadowing.

Act V, scene 5

• Lord Capulet and Lord Montague– See what damage they have caused– They end their feud– Lord Montague will build a pure gold statue of

Juliet so that all may know of her love and loyalty