Juliet's response to Paris trying to get her to admit her love for him.
She would rather admit her love to Friar Lawrence.
The number of "cunning cooks" the servant will find.
20
Scene 3: The reason Juliet sends her mother and Nurse away.
She needs to be lone when she drinks the vial.
The big event happened in this scene.
Nurse found Juliet dead the morning of the wedding.
The name of the friend who visits Romeo in Mantua.
Balthazar.
What Juliet wants to do instead of marrying Paris.
Kill herself.
Lady Capulet worries about the short amount of time after Lord Capulet changes the wedding from Thursday to Wednesday. This is Lord Capulet's response.
He will stay up all night and "play the housewife" (lone 45) by getting things together.
Scene 4: The reason the servants need to replace the logs.
They got wet and they can't light wet logs to start cooking the food for the wedding.
The order in which they found Juliet.
Characters: Friar Laurence, Lady Capulet, Paris, Lord Capulet, Nurse, and musicians.
Nurse - Lady Capulet - Lord Capulet - Friar Laurence, Paris, and musicians.
The honorable thing Romeo does after he kills Paris.
He puts Paris in the tomb next to Juliet.
This is Friar Laurence's plan.
Juliet is to go home and agree to marry Paris. Then she is to go to bed alone and take the vial of liquid. This will make her appear dead for 42 hours. Romeo will be there to take her back with him to Mantua when she wakes.
Juliet's response to Lord Capulet telling her to go to Paris and tell him the news of her agreeing to the marriage.
She saw Paris in Friar Laurence's cell and already spoke to him.
Or
"I met thy youthful lord at Laurence's cell" (Line 26)
Scene 4: Why does Capulet call his wife a "jealous hood" (line 14)?
It means she is jealous when she wears the jealous hood (think about the green monster of jealousy).
The significance of the musicians' and Peter's conversation at the end of Act 4.
It's for comic relief after the emotional scene of finding Juliet dead.
Explain Romeo's and Juliet's deaths.
Romeo drinks the poison from the apothecary. Juliet kills herself with Romeo's dagger.
Translate:
"Juliet: God join'd my heart and Romeo's, thou our hands" (Line 56)
God allowed them to fall in love, Friar Laurence married them.
The "knot" Lord Capulet plans to have done tomorrow morning. (Line 25)
The marriage of Paris and Juliet.
Scene 3: Juliet's fears as she takes the vial.
1. The potion won't work and she'll have to marry Paris in the morning.
2. Friar Laurence meant to poison her because he performed the marriage.
3. Romeo won't be there when she wakes up and she will suffocate.
4. She'll wake up surrounded by her dead family. She will go crazy and will "dash out" her brains with the Tybalt's bone.
The "promotion" Friar Laurence talks about after Juliet's death (line 74).
Her promotion from earthly life to Heaven.
The reason Friar John could not send the letter about Juliet's "death" to Romeo.
Because he couldn't get a messenger through while he was stuck in a house that was quarantined due to a breakout of the plague.
Translate:
"Juliet: If I do so, it will be of more price, Being spoke behind your back, than to your face." (Lines 28-29)
Translate: "Marry, sir, 'tis an ill cook that cannot lick his own fingers. Therefore he that cannot lick his fingers goes not with me." (Lines 6-8)
A bad cook will not taste their own food. Anyone who doesn't taste his food, will not be hired for the wedding.
Translate:
"Juliet: Shall I not be stifled in the vault, to whose foul mouth no healthsome air breaths in, and there die strangled the time that Romeo come to redeem me?" (Lines 35-38)
What if I am stuck in the vault and suffocate before Romeo comes to find me?
Lord Capulet's small monologue in lines 86-93.
The wedding celebration is not a funeral for Juliet.
Translate:
"Prince: Where be these enemies? Capulet, Montague, see what a scourge is laid upon your hate, that heaven finds means to kill your joys with love! And I, for winking at you, discords too, have lost a brace of kinsmen. All are punish'd."
He calls Lord Capulet and Lord Montague to his side and points out that their fued took their children from them. He then reminds them that even he lost someone because of their fued (Mercutio).